Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 8, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 May 1928 — Page 14

PAGE 14

STEAMER WILL : CARRY BREMEN f TO NEW YORK Damaged in Takeoff Try; I Will Be Repaired in Junkers Plant. 2J>/ United Press ST. JOHNS, N. F„ May 21.—The trans-Atlantic airplane Bremen, damaged in an unsuccessful takeoff attempt from Long Point, • Labrador, Sunday, will be dismantled immediately and sent by steamer to the United States, it was learned today. Fred Melchoir, who was at the controls when the airplane failed to rise Sunday, and Dr. Louis Cuisinier of the Canadian National Airways have decided to abandon the plan to fly the sturdy craft out of the north. They departed Sunday for Natashquan by motor boat. From that jpoint they will sail on a steamer for some destination that lias not as yet been learned. Ice in Straits Two mechanics have been left With the Bremen and will suprevise the dismantling and the loading on some costal steamship. This will be done as quickly as possible so that the plane soon may be reconditioned at the American Junkers factory. There still is much drift ice in the straits off Long Point and it was considered unlikely that a specially chartered freight steamer could arrive before the first week in June. Runway in Snow Nothing definite is known as to what caused the wreck. Melchoir had made a parachute landing Saturday from a United States Army airplane and was expected to fly to Fictou, N. S., to join two army airplanes there. A long runway had been scooped from the ;f.ow to permit the takeoff. It was considered possible here that the Bremen did not have sufficient room for the take off and had nosed over on the hard ice and snow before it gained sufficient speed to ascend. LABOR LEADER DROWNS ■One-Vine President Candidate Die' Aiding Boy. Bn Pnltrd Press BEND, Ore., May 21.—Frank T. Johns of Portland, Socialist-Labor party candidate for the presidency in 1924, was drowned in the Dechutes river here when he attempted to save the life of a small boy Sunday. Johns had just come from a labor meeting when he saw the boy, Jack Rhodes, 12, fall from a bridge. Jumping into the icy water, Johns succeeded in reaching the boy, but his strength was exhausted before he reached the shore and both were drowned. GIVES SCHOOL SCENERY ! Bloomington Furniture Firm Makes Donation of SI,OOO Equipment Bn Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind.,"May 21. Gifts of more than SI,OOO woi*th of stage equipment is being installed in the local high school auditorium. The donation was made by Showers Bros. Furniture Company, which is converting its auditorium into offices. Included in the gift are three drops of a front curtain, street and garden scene, wooden wings and an interior room setting. The company is loaning its grand piano to the high school. Had Years of Gas and Stomach Agony Finally Found Right Remedy. Health Perfect Now. Gaining Weight. People who dread every meal because of the stomach pains they know it means, will be glad to know how Miss Edna A. Dane, 220 N. Winnebago St., Rockford, 111., escaped from this dreadful affiction. She writes: ‘‘For three years, after every meal, I suffered agony with indigestion, gas pains, and biliousness. Food soured and nauseated me. A few months ago, I had a severe stomach attack that kept me in bed six weeks. I couldn’t hold any food on my stomach, and I got extremely weak and lost weight rapidly. Nothing seemed to help me, and I was terribly discouraged when I happened to read about Viuna and decided to try it. That was the turning point. Before I had finished the first bottle, I felt a great change for the better. Now my stomach is fine, and I can eat anything without any pain, sourness or belching. The headaches, which were terrible, have all gone, and so have the hot flashes. I am better in every way than I have been for years, and am rapidly regaining my lost weight.” Viuna acts promptly on sluggish bowels, lazy liver and weak kidneys. It purifies the blood, clears the skin, restores appetite and digestion, and brings new strength and energy to the whole body. Take a bottle on trial. Then if you’re not glad you tried Viuna, your money will be refunded. $1 at druggists, or mailed postpaid by Iceland Medicine Cos., Indianapolis, Ind. Vluni Acts promptly on slugglrt bowels, lazy liver and weak kidneys. It purifies the blood, clears the skin, restores appetite and digestion, and brings new strength and energy to the whole body. Take a bottle on trial. Then if you re not glad you tried Vlnna, your money will be refunded. $1 at druggists, or mailed postpaid by Iceland Medicine Cos., Indianapolis, Ind. r-> VIUNA The Wonder Medicine

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THIS HAS HAPPENED—NATHANIEL DEAN is engaged to VIRGINIA BREWSTER, whose father dies suddenly after losing his fortune. NIEL begs her to marry him at once, but FREDERICK DEAN and his daughter CLARISSA persuade her to make her temporary home with them. VIRGINIA becomes unhappy in her new home and resolves to tell NIEL her fears. But when she phones his studio late at night his model, CHIRI, answers. This causes doubt and a lovers’ quarrel which is later explained away happily. Meanwhile, DEAN is forced to pay blackmail to a MRS. FARLEY or face a scandal which he realized would spoil his chance it winning VIRGINIA. Hoping to get NIEL out of the way, DEAN has the president of a company he controls offer him a high-salaried position, provided he will go to San Francisco at once. NIEL is overjoyed at the offer and begs VIRGINIA to marry and go West with him. But she refuses to let him sacrifice his art study. VIRGINIA is involved in trouble with CLARISSA when the latter’s fiance, RUSSELL WAINGOULD. catches her unexpectedly in a half-drunken embrace. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XII WITHOUT a word Clarissa turned and disappeared from Virginia’s agonized sight. And by that silent gesture Virginia realized her worst fear. Clarissa had misunderstood ! The expression of utter scorn and contempt that had distorted her features as she watched the scene before her had flashed her interpretation of it to Virginia with blighting comprehension. ‘‘Let me go,” Virginia cried fiercely at Russell. “Are you mad? Let me go.” He laughed as she wrenched and tore to free her frail body. Finally she worked her hands to a position that enabled her to give him a strong shove and managed to break away. “Oh, what a fool you’ve been,” she choked. “Clarissa saw you!” “So that’s what throttled you! I was afraid you didn’t like me.” “Like you? I think you’re a beast!” “Just because I kissed you? Say, that makes me dizzy. I thought I knew how to kiss a girl and make her like it.” He spoke in the voice of a complaining child. Virginia was white and trembling now. The dread of facing Clarissa was replacing her wrath. How could she convince her friend that it was all nothing but a stupid, meaningless episode? In her heart Virginia feared she could not. “I’m going up to try to explain to Clarissa,” she told Russell in a shaken voice, “and I certainly shall make it plain as to who is the guilty person.” “You’d better give her time to cqpl off; Claret knows some pretty strong words” Russell advised. Virginia did not answer. “Well, wish you luck,” he called after her as she left the room. She went directly to Clarissa’s boudoir. At the door she paused a moment to catch her breath before rapping. Clarissa threw the door open, banging it back violently. Virginia walked into the room without an invitation to do so, quaking inwardly before Clarissa’s patent fury. “I don’t care to hear any lies, if you intend to defend yourself that way,” the latter said in a harsh, raised voice. Virginia looked at her steadily, fearlessly. The words had served to strengthen her, to free her of an unmerited sense of guilt. “There is no occasion to ile,” she replied quietly. “Then if you haven’t anything to say for yourself your presence here is an insult to me,” Clarissa declared. “But I have something to say for myself—simply the truth. I could not help what you saw, Clarissa. You must know that Russell has had too many cocktails. He lost his head. “Oh, did he?” Clarissa sneered. “Well, it wasn’t because of cocktails, let me tell you. I know how much he can drink and I know how much he had. It wasn’t enough to make him do a think like that unless he was encouraged.” “Clarissa! You know better than that. I don’t blame you for being angry, but after all it was just a foolish think that Russell did.” “Very foolish indeed, to do it right under my eyes. I wonder how you thought you could get away with it, Virginia.” “Do you really believe I wanted it to happen?” “Well, why not? If you didn’t you could have managed to avoid it. Surely you haven’t forgotten that I warned you I wouldn’t permit any trespassing where Russell was concerned. I thought you might find him more interesting than a poverty-stricken artist, Or were you

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simply adding another bow to your string because you feared Mrs. Farley?” Virginia’s eyes wavered over the stormy creature before her in absolute bewilderment. “I haven’t the faintest idea what you are talking about,” she said when she could speak. “For heaven’s sake, can’t you stop pretending to be dumb?” Clarissa cried angrily. “Don’t you suppose that I know you aren’t going to marry your precious Niel? You wouldn’t have turned him down to come here if you were. There’s only one answer to that—you aren’t such a simpleton as you let on. You know Dad’s a catch. Well, that was all right with me. I didn’t want Mrs. Farley to get him.” The woi’ds poured out like a torrent and they seemed to Virginia like debris being heaped upon her, the debris of a broken friendship. She wanted to turn and run, but the sight of Clarissa, flaming and raging, fascinated her. She ceased to hear what more was being said. Her mind was echoing the accusations already made against her. She understood now why Clrasissa had been so eager to have her in the house. Her face burned with shame. It was too dreadful that Clarissa should have thought she wanted to marry her father. And Clarissa had been willing to have the marriage, take place if only because she did not ilke Mrs. Farley. And now Clarissa thought Virginia had sought to lure Russell away from her because of fear that Mrs. Farley would prove a successful rival for Mr. Dean's fortune. The whole thing passed baldly through Virginia’s mind as she stood there, overcome with humiliation and wounded pride. Tears that she was too proud to shed smarted at the back of her eyes and hßr hands clenched until the nails bit into the palms. “You don’t seem to have anything to say now that you know you can’t pull the wool over my

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eyes,” Clarissa flung out, taunting her with her stricken silence. Virginia’s lips parted in an attempt to speak, but she succeeded only in muttering a queer, unintelligible sound of protest. Clarissa laughed harshly. It was such a thoroughly contemptuous laugh that it stung Virginia to a retort. “If you believe what you’ve just said you don’t deserve to be answered,” she declared in a voice that held as much contempt a* Clarissa’s own. She was as angry now as the other girl, but still the thought of a quarrel was as repugnant to her as it ever was. With her head held high and a disdainful light flashing from her expressiveeyes, she turned to leave the room. Clarissa stopped her. Virginia could not ignore what she said. “You’d better go down and complete your work with Russell, for I’m sure when father hears of this your chances with him won’t be anything to celebrate.” Virginia came back and stood face to face with her. % “I m ashamed—for you,” she said, so simply and coldly and sincerely that Clarissa had to give ground. The sneer left her lips and a duli flush spead over her cheeks. “It does not matter to me now whether you believe me or not,” Virginio went on, speaking slowly and with perfect control. Have Yur Glasses Charged!

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She had recovered from the attack Clarissa had launched upon her; she had brought herself to a state of cold calm for a few minutes at least, and it was now Clarissa’s turn to flinch. "I don’t think I should care to have you believe me—to want to be friends again," the stern young voice carried on. “You have changed so horribly since you spent so much time abroad. I've heard you were rushed by fortune hunters over there, Clarissa; perhaps that is why you are so suspicious and worldly. “You seem to think that everyone is ready to sacrifice decency for money. And you would have preferred me to ruin my life rather than have your father marry Mrs. Farley. But you’ve made a big mistake if you’ve thought that I feel as you do. You can go down and tell Russell Waingould that I don’t consider him worthy to speak to the man I’m going to marry—that’s how much I want to take him away from you. And as for wanting to marry your father—l’d hate myself if the idea had been mine.” The speech was almost too long for her composure. The last words came with more of natural feeling than the first had held. It proved a relief to Clarissa, who preferred a touch of temper to the quiet thrusts of truth. But she was too spoiled to accept all of Virginia’s statements as

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truth. Her innermost conviction was that she had acted a fool, but she was affronted at the portrayal of herself as a materialist, a world-ly-minded, jealous, scheming person. She lifted her chin with a great show of spirit and turned her back, accompanying the gesture with a shrug of disbelief that caused Virginia to turn and leave the room in full knowledge that the break was final. , She knew she must leave the house as well. It would be intolerable to spend another night under a roof that harbored anyone who had insulted her so grossly as Clarissa had. She would pack a few of her things and leave immediately. The thought of seeing Mr. Dean bothered her. She would have to do it, though. He couldn’t he held to answer for Clarissa and she owed him an explanation as to why she was leaving his house. In her room she rang for a maid and asked if Mr. Dean had left. A few minutes later she was on her way to the library, where her host was waiting to see her. But as she approached the door a thought as staggering as anything Clarissa had said crossed her mind and she halted abruptly, as though a physical barrier had been thrown up before her. (To Be Continued)

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RENEW M. E. BISHOP FIGHT Oppose Life Terms for Church Leaders. Bn United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., May 27. Defeated in their attempt to cut the number of domestic bishops from twenty-one to eighteen, opponents of the Episcopal system were ready today to oppose life terms of bishops. The Matter probably will be one of the first points of business at the general conference of the Methodist Church here this week. The fight to reduce the tenure of bishops from life terms to eightyear periods will precede the election of the bishops. A majority report on the committee of episcopacy recommended that the tenure be life, as at present, but a minority report of the committee demanded that the term be changed to eight years. The fourth week of the conference promises to be one of the most important of the meetings thus far. One important change in policy has been adopted—the granting of autonomy to central or foreign conferences, thus allowing them to select their own bishops—and additional changes may be approved this week. One of the foremost issues is the proposal to grant laymen delegates admittance to the annual church conferences.

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25 Graduates at Waterloo WATERLOO, Ind., May II Twenty-five graduates of the Waterloo high school will receive diplomas at the annual commencement exercises in the high school auditorium here Wednesday evening. “The Idea of Human Progress” will be the subject of the Rev. A. J. Folsom, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, Ft. Wayne, commencement speaker. Hair goes white, according to scientists, because the white corpuscles in the blood eat up the pigments which color the hair.

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