Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 308, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1928 — Page 14
PAGE 14
WOMEN NAMED IN INDIANA FOR WATSON DRIVE Mrs. B. S. Rose of Evansville Appointed Chairman of State Group, Mrs. Eleanor Barker Snodgrass, Manager of the women’s division Os the Watson-for-President organization today announced appointment of Mrs. B. S. Rose of Evansville as chairman of a State Neman’s executive committee. Mrs. Rose then announced appointments of these members of her committee: Mrs. Charles A. Smith. Logansport; Mrs. Walter Grim, Salem: Mrs. Hazel L. Workman. Indianapolis: Mrs. P. B. Chester, Valparaiso; Mrs. Florence Riddick Bovs, Pl.t mouth; Miss Eva Ellison, Winslow; Mrs. E. E. Hoskinson, Evansville; Mrs. Hugh Lett. Washington; Mrs. Pearl Geither, Shoals; Miss Faye Cothran. Spencer; Mrs. Emma Funk. English; Mrs. Joe Zellers, Cannelton: Mrs. Nell McCallum, Batesville; Mrs. Margaret District, Lawrenceburg; Miss Lillie Demaree, Madison; Mrs. Belle Whitlock, Rising Sun; Mrs. Charlotte Kerr, Brazil. Mrs. Charles E. Combs, Bloomfield; Mrs. Mark Nebeker, Clinton; Mrs. James Larmore. Anderson; Miss Nancy Hitch. Evansville; Mrs. Esther H. Leonard. Mt. Vernon; Mrs. Union W. Youngblood. Boonville: Miss Mary Sleeth, RushviUe; Mrs. B. F. Chambers. Lyons; Mrs. Thomas P. Hanna. Bloomington; Mabel Brewer, New Lebanon; Mrs. John Clapp, Huntingburg; Mrs. Charles Richardson, Bedford; Mrs. Agatha B. Everitt, Scottsburg; Miss Bertha Emig. Columbus; Mrs. Margaret Rankin. Greeusburg; Mrs. Ernest Bland. North Vernon: Mrs. Charles Boyce, Versailles; ■ Mrs. Cora Vestal. Plainfield; Mrs. Hazel Jla'nbo. Greencastle. Mrs. Nell McCallum. Batesville; Mrs. Catherine S. Mills, New Castle; Mrs. Catherine Rowland, Crawfordsville; Mrs. Carrie Pauline Weaver, Auburn; Mrs. James B. Gernble, Princeton; Miss Emma Feigie, Kockport; Mrs. Charles E. Combs. Bloomfield; Mrs. D. M. Parry, Indianapolis; Mrs. Izola Wallace, Vincennes. Mrs. Julia Michael, Martinsville; Mrs. Mary Holden, Jeffersonville; Mrs. Anna Oltman, New Albany; Mrs. Harold Stipp, Paoli; Mrs. Asa Dennis. Salem; Mrs. Ben Douglas, Trevlac; Miss Adda Fudaly, Seymour; Mrs. Clara Hanneman, Franklin; Mrs. Pearl Cotton Banta, Vevay; Mrs. Jessie Buchanan Judson; Mrs. Faber Park, Newport; Mrs. Ralph Walsh, Cicero. Mrs. Emma Herber, Terre Haute; Mrs. Bertha H. Van Camp. Brockville; Mrs. Florence Hinchman Hamm, Knightstown; Mrs. Frank Craft, Liberty; Mrs. James Larmore, Anderson: Mrs. C. E. Bendum, Muncie; Mrs. Z. E. Malcomb. Bluffton; Mrs. Ralph Burroughs. Frankfort; Mrs. Emma K. Johnson, Sheridan: Mrs. Neil Ccnley, Fowler; Mrs. M. E. Graves, Morocco; Mrs. Bernice Johnson. WilliamspoYt; Mrs. Prudence Ratts. Butler: Mrs. Ada Butz. Angola: Mrs. Clem R. Miller. Rochester; Mrs. Alfred E. Martin. South Bend; Mrs. A. K. Deets, Anderson: Mrs. Jonn Moorman. Knox; Mrs. W. Nottingham, Muncie; Mrs. Nina Semple. Muncie; Mrs. James Allen Turner. South Bend: Mrs. William Grimelsparker, Logansport. Mrs. Catherine Mills, New Castle; Mrs. Daisy Harland, Greenfield; Mrs. Willard Amos. RushviUe; Mrs. Charles Teeter, Hrgerstown; Mrs. William Butler. Decatur; Mrs. Metha Vance, Anderson: Mrs. Catherine Rowland. Crawfordsville; Miss Nellie V. Ward. Delphi; Mrs. Walter Gcnkle, Kokomo; Mrs. Frank Howard, Remington; Mrs. Roy Beach, Valparaiso: Miss Blanche Mcßeth, Monticello; Mrs. Marion Hinkley, Lagrande; Mrs. Etta Eisaman. Columbia City; Mrs. E. W. Parker, Warsaw; Mrs. Claude S. Steel. Knox; Mrs. James Barnes, Logansport: Mrs. Don Sipe. Muncie: Miss Clara Gilbert, Kendallville; Mrs. Wilbur Warner, South Bend; Mrs. Robert Hillts, Logansport. Mrs. Eugene Turner. Connersvllle; Mrs. Florence Thornburg, New Castle; Mrs. Hazel Spurlin, ShelfayviUe; Mrs. Katherine Emmons. Portland; Mrs. George Laggett. Winchester; Mrs. John Frost, Lebanon; Mrs. Margaret Rinn, Covington; Mrs. Wray Thorne. Tipton; Mrs. Peter J. Davis. Hammond; Mrs. Slgel Brown Lafayette; Mrs. Nellie Stillpass, Ft. Wayne; Miss Viola Giannis, Wolcottville; Mrs. Rov Berlin, Nappanee: Mrs. Eva Hatfield, Bremen; Mrs. Russell B. Titsworth, Rushville; Mrs. E. N. Cook, Plymouth; Mrs. John Burkholder, Muncie; Mrs. Della Ford, Muncie: Mrs. Gall Roberts, Terre Haute; Mrs. Arthur McKinsey, Frankfort; Mrs. Roy Romdebush, French Lick. 600 Chickens Die in Fire COLUMBUS, Ind., April 21.—Six hundred fowls—4oo baby chicks and 200 hens—were killed when fire destroyed a brooder and poultry house on the farm of Harry Dickey, five miles east of here.
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THIS HAS HAPPENED DAVID NASH, college student vand athlete, who is working on the Clem CARSON farm for the summer, hits Carson a crushing blow because he makes remarks about David's friendship for Hi-year-old SALLY FORD, ward of the state orphanage who has been “farmed out” to Carson for the summer. Sally and David flee, and join a carnival train, David as cook’s helper and Sally in a sideshow disguised as "Princess Leila,” crystal gazer. In Capital City, where Sally spent many years in the orphanage. Sally escaped detection under her disguise as Princess Lalia until the orphans come trooping in to the show and one little girl recognizes her. GUS, the barker, quickly diverts attention and the frightened Sally is saved. She is fascinated by the beautiful woman who is playing “Lady Bountiful" to the orphans and hears lier called Enid. That night a terrible storm comes. Sally learns that the carnival safe is robbed and that David and Nita arc missing. Sally pleads with BYBEE, carnival owner, not to put the police after David, and he reluctantly agrees. Sally goes out to find David, and just at daybreak sees him coming toward her, a wound in his shoulder. He tells of having recovered the money, which he hides in a barn. David will take no credit for the recovery, saying the police have not forgotten the Carson affair and that publicity may lead to their detection and Sally's compulsory return to the orphanage. That evening as Sally reads fortunes in her crystal, she hears the intriguing voice of the man who rescued her during the storm. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXIII SALLY’S sapphire eyes blazed at thfe man she knew only as “Van,” but since they were veiled with anew scrap of black lace to replace the one lost in the storm, the nonchalant New Yorker did not appear to be at all devastated by their fire. “Thank you for saving my life,” she said stiffly, but the man’s mocking, admiring attention was fixed upon the deliciously young, sweet curves of her mouth, rather than upon the tone of her voice. “I wonder if you know,” he began confidentially, leaning lightly upon his inevitable cane, “that you have the most adorable mouth I have ever seen? Os course there are other adorable details in the picture of complete loveliness that you present, but really, your lips, like three rose petals—” “Oh, stop!” Sally cried with childish anger, her small, redsandled foot stamping the platform. “Why are you always mocking me, making fun of me? I’ve begged you to let me alone—” “Such ingratitude!” the man sighed, but his narrowed eyes smiled at her delightedly. “If you weren’t even more delicious when you’re angry, I should not be ablo to forgive you. But really, Sally Ford—” his voice dropped caressingly on name, as if to remind her that he shared her secret with her—“the way you persist in misunderstanding me is very distressing. “I’m not mocking you, my dear child! I’m mocking myself—if anyone. It recurs to me continually that this is an amazing adventure 1 that Arthur Van Home, of New York, Long Island and Newport is so sedulously engaged upon! To paraphrase your own delightful defense, I’m really ‘not that kind of man.’ I assure you I’m not in the habit of making love to show girls, no matter how adorable their mouths may be!” and he smiled at her out of his narrow eyes and with his quirked, quizzical mouth, as if he expected her to share his amusement and amazement at himself. “Then why don’t you let me alone?” Sally cried, striking her little brown-painted hands together in futile rage. “I wonder!” he mused. “I make up my mind that I’m a blighter and an ass and that I shan’t come near the carnival. I accept invitations enough to take up every minute of my last days in Capital City, and then —without in the least intending to do so—l find myself back in the Palace of Wonders, humbling myself before a pair of little red-sandaled feet that would like nothing better than to kick me for my impudence. Do you suppose, Sally Ford, that I’m falling in love with you? There’s something about you, you know—” “Please go away,” Sally implored him. “It’s almost time for my performance. Gus is ballyhooing Jan now and I come next.” “As I was saying, when you interrupted me,” Van Horne reproved her mockingly, “there’s something about you, you know. Last night when I had the honor of saving your life and of seeing your adorable little face washed clean of the brown paint, I was surprised at myself. I really was, I give you my word! “Do you know what I wanted to do? I wanted to swing you up into my arms, you amazingly tiny thing, and run away with you. If you hadn’t looked so young and—pure, I believe the favorite word is—l’d have yielded to the impulse. I suppress so few of my unholy desires that I suppose this discipline is good for my soul— Now, what the devil are you looking at, instead or listening to the confessions of a young man?” he broke off with a genuine note of irritation in his charming voice ‘Who Is that beautiful woman?” Sally asked in a low voice, her eyes still fixed upon the golden-haired woman whom Van Horne had called “Enid,” and who had just entered the tent alone, her small body, clad in the green knitted silk sports suit, moving through the crowd with proud disdain. “Again, I am forced to forgive you,” Van Horne sighed humorously. ‘!I seem always to be forgiving you, Sally Ford? You are merely asking a question which is inevitably asked when Enid Banfirst bursts upon a startled public. “She is probably the most beautiful blond in New York society. Those industrious cold cream advertisers would pay her a fortune for the use of her picture and endorsement, but it happens that she has two or three large fortunes of her own, as well as a disgustingly rich husband. Yes, unfortunately for her adorers, she is married, Courtney Barr—even out here you must have heard of Courtney Barr —being the lucky man.” “I wonder what she’s doing here?” Sally whispered, fright widening her eyes behind the black lace. “Oh, I think Courtney’s here on political business. The Barrs have always rather fancied themselves as leaders among the Wall Street makers of presidents. He’s hobnobbing with my cousin, the Governor, and Enid is probably amusing herself by collecting Americana.”
“She must be awfully good,” Sally whispered, adoration making her voice lovely and wistful. “She brought all the orphanage children to the carnival yesterday, you know'.” “Yes,” Van Horne shrugged, arching his brows quizzically. “I confess I was rather stunned, for Enid doesn’t go in for personal charity. Huge checks and all that sort of thing—she’s endowed some sort of institution for ‘fallen girls,’ by the way—but it has never seemed to amuse her to play Lady Bountiful in person. Os course, she may be nursing a secret passion for. children, and took this means to gratify it where her crowd could not rag her about it.” “Hasn’t she any children of her own?” Sally asked. “But I suppose she’s too young—” “Not at all,” Van Horne laughed. “She’s past 30, certainly, though she would never forgive me for saying so. She’s never had any children: been married about thirteen years, I think.” "Oh, that’s too bad!” Sally’s voice was tender and wistful. “She’d make such a lovely mother—” Van Horne interrupted with his throaty, musical laugh, and was in turn interrupted by Gus the barker's stentorian roar: “Right this way, la-dees and gen-tle-men! I want to introduce you to Princess Lalla, who sees all, knows all! Princess Lalla, worldfamous crystal-gazer, favorite—” Sally straightened in her thronelike chair, her little brown hands cupping obediently about the “magic crystal” on the velvetdraped stand before her. Van Horne, with a last ironic chuckle, melted into the crowd, which had surged toward Sally’s platform. When Gus’ spiel was finished, the rush began. At least a dozen hands shot upward, waving quarters and demanding the first opportunity to learn “past, present and future” from “Princess Lalla.” She worked hard, conscientiously and cautiously, for she was vividly conscious that both Van Horne and Enid Barr were somewhere in the tent listening, perhaps, whispering about her.
Sunday School Lesson
The Internationa! Uniform Sunday School Leason for April 22. Jesus ana the Home. Mark 10:1-16. , BY WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Editor of The Congregationaliit A LESSON dealing with the Christian family, and the home ideals associated with the teaching of Jesus, brings us to the very heart of one of the most acute problems in American life today. One need only study the statistics of marriage and divorce in the various States to discover that this is true. The proportion varies from about one divorce in ten marriages in the States with the best record to as serious a situation as one divorce to two or three marriages in the States with the worst record. As happens in almost every similar social situation there are those who would seek the cure in encouraging what others would regard as at best a milder form of the disease. This would seem to be involved in the scheme of “companionate marriage” proposed by Judge Lindsey of Denver. Can the disease that affects the home and that has weakened the sanctity of the marriage relation be cured by concession to human weakness or by arrangements that have temporary ends in view? Sense of Obligation Can a home, with all that the finest tradition has imparted to that word, be established and maintained where there is no deeper sense of obligation between individuals and in joint relation to society, than is involved in companionate marriage or in any scheme that lessens the sanctity or weakens the bond of marriage as it has attained its climax in Christian ideals? One does not need to take the view that mistakes are never made, and that, having been made, they should never be rectified, to believe that in general there is little hope of the establishment of a sound home life except upon the principles of love and loyalty, of mutual confidence, mutual responsibility, and mutual sacrifice—the things that are all enshrined in the teaching of Jesus. There are situations where divorce Is the commonsense solution for a situation that cannot be otherwise improved, and it is no strength or support to the institution of marriage to make its sanctity depend upon merely formal things rather than upon the inner ideals. Nor is there anything sacred about a marriage that in practice traduces all the canons of love and righteousness. A proper recognition of this would
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Most of her fear of Enid Barr, which had resulted from the connection of the golden-haired woman with the orphanage children the day before, had evaporated. It was absurd to think that a woman of such wealth and beauty, whose philanthropy had undoubtedly been a gesture of boredom, was seriously interested in one lone little girl who had run away from charity. It did not even seem odd to Sally that Enid Barr should have paid a second visit to the carnival. Probably Capital City afforded scant amusement for a woman of her sophistication, and the carnival, crude and tawdry though it was, was better than nothing. Since Princess Lalla was not a side show all by herself, but only one of many attractions in the Palace of Wonders, Gus never made any attempt to cajole reluctant “rubes” into surrendering their quarters for a glimpse of "past, present and future,” but always hustled his crowd on to the next platform— Pitty Sing's—as soon as the first flurry of interest had died down and the crowd had become restive. By this method, those who were faintly or belligerently dissatisfied with Sally's crystal-gazing, at which she was becoming more adept with each performance, were quickly placated by the sight of new wonders, for which no extra charge was made. Sally was straightening the black velvet drapery which covered the crystal stand, preparatory to returning to the dress tent for a rest between shows, when a lovely, lilting voice, with a ripple of amusement In it, made her gasp with surprise and consternation. “Am I too late to have my fortune told?” Enid Barr, gazing up at Sally with her golden head tilted provocatively to one side, was immediately below the startled crystal-gazer, one of her exquisite small hands swinging the silverygreen felt hat which Sally had so much admired the day before. “Oh, no!” Sally fluttered, both delighted and frightened at this opportunity to talk with the most beautiful creature she had ever seen. Just in time she remembered her accent: “Weel you do me ze honor to ascend the steps?” Laughing at herself, and looking
help very much toward sane reconstruction of marriage upon a Christian basis. We suffer too much today both from the theorists who would weaken or disrupt the institution on the basis of radical assumptions and from those who meet all the ills and evils of home and married life with the assumption that there is something that makes a marriage sacred, even when no sense of love and holiness is present in the minds and experiences of those who have assumed it as a legal obligation. If we perceived more clearly the one sure spiritual foundation of true marriage and home life, we should address ourselves more vigorously toward building up right ideals and right practice rather than to more superficial manipulation of laws either for radical or for conservative ends. Here, as in the whole range of his teaching. Jesus brings us back to elemental truth and the elemental laws that govern right living. There is no miraculous power that will make the homes of a nation great, or that will make married and family life beautiful, if those who are responsible for these homes neglect their duties and their privileges of love. Os course one must recognize that many of the most serious evils in the home arise from present conditions, economic and social. It would be interesting to discover how many of the jars and disruptions of family life center around the question of money and of inadequate wages to support one’s home and family with reasonable comfort. But even, here the world is apt to forget that many of the happiest marriages and of the truest homes have been established and maintained under conditions approaching poverty. The Children One only needs to read the records of the divorce courts to see that in married life money is not a great promoter of happiness. Perhaps we touch the deepest of all things in relation to the home in the attitude of Jesus toward the children. Where there is no love of children, no appreciation of the meaning and beauty of child life, such as is forever beautifully typified in the attitude of the Master, there cannot be the conditions for an ideal home.
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over her shoulder to see that she was not observed by anyone who knew her, Enid Barr ran lightly up the steps and slipped into the little camp chair opposite Sally. Her small white hands, with their exquisite nails glistening in the light from the center gas jet, hovered over the srystal, touching it tentatively, with the curiosity of a child becoming acquainted with anew toy. Sally leaned forward, her own hands cupped about the crystal, her eyes brooding upon it behind the little black lace veil, her mouth pursed with sweet seriousness. “You are—what you call it? — psychic,” Sally chanted in the quaint, mincing voice with which she had been taught to make her revelations. “Ze creeystal, she is va-ry clear for you. I see so-o-o much!” She hesitated, wondering just how much of Van Horne s confidences about this beautiful woman she dared appropriate. Wpuld Van Home give her away? Then, as if drawn by a powerful magnet, she raised her eyes suddenly and met those of Van Home, who was leaning nonchalantly against the center pole of the tent. He nodded, smiled his curious, quizzical smile and slowly winked his right eye. She had his permission—- “ Please hurry t,” Enid Barr commanded arrogantly. “I’m just dying to know what you see about me in that crystal!” "I see a beeg, beeg city," Sally intoned dreamily, her eyes again fixed upon the crystal. “I see you there, in beeg, beeg house. Much moneys. And behind you I see a man—your husband, no?” “Yes, I am married,” Enid Barr laughed. “Since you see so much, suppose you tell me my name.” “I see—” Sally frowned, but her heart was pounding at her audacity, “ze letter E and ze letter R —no, B! I see a beeg, beeg place—net your house—with ma-ny, ma-ny girls holdig out zeir amis to you. You help zem. You are va-ry, va-ry good.” “Rot!” Enid Barr laughed, but a bright flush of pleasure spread over her fair face. “One has to do something with ‘much moneys,’ doesn’t one? Listen, Princess Lalla, if that is really your name: prove to me you are a real crystal-gazer! Tell me something I'd give almost anything to know—” She leaned forward tensely, her violet-blue eyes darkening with excitement and appeal until they were almost the color of Sally’s. “And what’s that, Enid?” a mocking, amused voice inquired. “Do vou want to know whether I really love you? How can you ask! Os course I do!” Enid Barr sprang to her feet so hastily that the camp stool on which she had been sitting overturned, anger and something like fear blazing in her eyes. (To Be Continued) What was it. Enid Barr wanted to know? Read the next chapter.
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POLICE WITHOUT FUND TO OBTAIN EMERGENCY CAR Fire Equipment Badly in Need of Repair and Replacement. Replacement of the police emergency auto which was wrecked in the accident at Twenty-First and Illinois Sts., several weeks ago has been delayed by lack of funds in the police equipment fund, City Purchasing Agent Joel A. Baker said today. The police department is badly in need of another emergency but transfer of funds by council or a bond issue is needed before the purchase can be ordered. It is understood the Marmon officials have presented the city with a better price than the Stutz plant. The safety board has not decided which car to buy. Another problem facing the board is to find funds to buy 2,500 feet of fire hose for reserve in event of emergency, Secretary Howard E. Robertson said. The city usually carries about 2,500 feet in reserve but the stock is down to about 500 feet at present. Some of the department’s hose has been in use since 1915 and is likely to need replacement any time. The 1928 appropriation was inadequate, Robertson said. Usually the city buys 6,000 feet annually but the 2,000 feet already purchased depleted the fund. Several fire engine houses need roofs, painting, shades and gutters but the city is without funds to make necessary repairs.
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