Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 38, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1928 — Page 16
PAGE 16
DEMOCRATS SEE MRS. WILSON AS HARMIMFORCE Plea for Party Peace Gets Ovation; May Play Important Role. ' BY RUTH FINNEY HOUSTON, Tex., June 25.—Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, who won’t say who she would like to see nominated, nevertheless may play an important part in this convention of Democrats. __ Mrs. Wilson apparently is to be a sort of rallying point for harmony at this week’s events. All Democrats, no matter what their views on different subjects, will cheer this charming, gracious symbol of their wartime President, and it seems they are to have plenty of opportunity. As an honor guest, Mrs. Wilson will attend all events of the week, political and social. If factional trouble develops, it will be possible at almost any time for someone to introduce her gracefully, and let all the factions cheer together/ At the dedication of Sam Houston Hall Sunday, Mrs. Wilson stepped to the front of the platform and expressed simply a hope that the convention will be harmonious. The crowd gave her the biggest ovation of the day. More proof of her hold upon the imaginations of delegates is found in the reception given her at the station Sunday by crowds who had waited in broiling heat for three hours. They shouted and thronged about her as she stepped off the train and more or less ignored such celebrities as Governor Ritchie of Maryland, who came at the same time. Mrs. Wilson looked pleased and said: “This is mighty kind of you,” but when someone asked if she is for A1 Smith, she looked straight ahead and made no reply.
Rid of Awful Stomach Trouble Back-ache and rheumatism also left her. Health quickly restored. Discouraged sufferers will find a message of good cheer in a letter written by Mrs. Eva Reynolds, 149 So. West Ave., Kankakee, 111. She says: “I was in pain and misery with stomach and kidney troubles, backache and rheumatism. After every meal, gas ; pains would torture me for hours, and food felt like a rock in my stomach. I had back-ache all the time, pains around my heart, and the sharp rheumatic pains shot all through my body. I was so sick and in such agony that I was almost in despair when I finally consented to try Viuna. That was the turning point. The first week I felt decidedly better, and today every sign of pain has left me. My appetite and digestion are fine, no gas, no distress of any kind. It seems wonderful to be entirely free from rheumatism and back-ache. I am no longer constipated, my complexion has cleared up, and I am full of energy, where I used to be so weak and draggy. Viuna brought back my health, after I had given up hope of ever being well again.” Viuna acts promptly on slngglib jowels, la*y liver and weak kidney*. 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 yon re not glad yon tried Viuna, yonr money will be refunded. $1 at druggists, or mailed postpaid by Iceland Medicine Cos., Indianapolis, Ind. VIUNA The Wonder Medicine
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THIS HAS HAPPENED VIRGINIA BREWSTER is in love with an artist, NATHANIEL DANN. but she is tricked into promising to marry FREDERICK DEAN in one year if she fails to earn SIOO.OOO that he alleges her father cheated him out of. BREW. STER had lost his fortune before his eath and VIRGINIA is left destitute. She pawns some of her jewelry and OLIVER CUTTER promises to invest the money for her. She seeks work without success. She discovers that DEAN is having her watched, and that he bribed the agency not to give her work. OLIVER gains her confidence and shows her attentions which NIEL resents. but then she does not like the familiarity with which his model, CHIRI. treats him. VIRGINIA finfially obtains a position she likes. Shortly after she is charged by Cutter's wife with trying to alienate his affections. She appeals to him to explain, and demands an accounting of her investments. Then CUTTER confesses that he has not made a pennv for her, but that he will give it to her if she will go away with him. She denounces him and leaves his office. Her company offer to send her on a voyage as ship hostess. She goes to the studio to ask NIEL'S advice, but the presence of CHIRI there spoils the evening. The break between the lovers Is further widened by NIEL’S doubt of her after receiving a letter from DEAN setting forth the CUTTER charge and saying that VIRGINIA was merely dangling him on her line while she angled for money. She suffers in silence but a ray of hope comes from reading her father’s diary. CHAPTER XLII NATHANIEL maintained a strict silence in regard to Virginia’s forthcoming voyage. He was convinced that she did not dread the separation. On the contrary he believed that she looked forward to the cruise as though it were a honeymoon trip—with a millionaire husband, he reflected bitterly. Virginia’s own manner was partly responsible for his opinion. She was eager, breathlessly eager, and whenever she spoke of it her eyes held a light that chilled Nathaniel with its clearly-apparent anticipation. “Guess you like the tropics,” he said once, and Virginia started at the acrimonious quality of his voice. She gave him a searchinf look in an effort to see if there was anything in his face t© justify her in hoping that he opposed her sailing. But the mask she had come to know and apprehend -had settled over his features and she could gain no inkling of his true feelings from his expression. She believed he was indifferent. They were hopelessly at cross currents with each other, misjudging, misunderstanding, both playing a part. But they held on, each doing enough, showing enough affection to avert a complete rupture. They dined together as formerly but parted soon afterward. There was no more discussion of money, of Oliver, or of their own future. The -thought that Virginia’s coming trip Would be an aswer to all tjiose things was uppermost in the minds of both. There was no need to talk about the past. Virginia knew that her fate would be definitely settled before her return as far as Frederick Dean was concerned in it, and Nathaniel thought that it would afford Virginia an opportunity to break off with him without a fuss if that was what she wanted. It was a burning point in their lives, they Knew, and they approached it with white-lipped pain when there was no one to observe its effect. The steel of pride kept a mock smile on their faces when they were together and neither guessed what the other was suffering. Virginia’s boat sailed at noon one bleak day in November and Nathaniel was not present to bid her farewell. He had purposely gone out of town to avoid this moment. To Virginia it was a gesture of callousness. But that night, after she had done her best to be an ideal hostess, she admitted in a moaning whisper to her pillow that she couldn’t have endured the parting if Nlel had come to the boat. She spent a sleepless night and appeared on deck the next morning looking pale and exhausted. There were few to comment upon her appearance, however, and those who did take notice accounted it a result of the gale they had run into Virginia received their chaffing good naturedly and permitted them to believe she had suffered from seasickness. , She was very busy that morning.
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conscientiously trying to be faithful to her duties. As so many of her “guests” were under the influence of mal de mer she devoted most of her time to visiting the staterooms and ordering chipped beef and crackers with ginger ale, or champagne for those who preferred it. The deck steward came to her to organize a shuffleboard tournament and the swimming pool attendants wanted ideas for the races they were scheduled to arrange. A group of hardy husbands thought she ought to be around wjien the 10 o’clock bouillon was served on deck, and the dining room steward wanted her help with the flowers. Every steward and stewardess of the ship turned to her foi instructions whether or not it lay in her line of duty to advise and assist them. They were all under orders and a promise of a bonus to make the cruise a memorable one and they knew Virginia Brewster’s background and that she represented the standard of hospitality the Blue Capell wished to establish on the Agena. There was little tim'e for Virginia to think of her own troubles. For as she began to make acquaintances among the passengers she found that not a few of them expected to make her a repository for tales of woe that they considered very dreadful but which caused Virginia to smile. Trouble with servants! Trouble with obesity! Trouble with the sources of supply and what vile stuff it was when you got it. Virginia listened politely but always got away as soon as she could. She was grateful at these times for her many and varied duties that afforded her pretexts for excusing* herself. By the tim* they reached Cuba and steamed Into the historic harbor of Havana she had recovered from the first pain of Nathaniel’s failure to bid her bon voyage. Her chief emotion now was one of agonized suspense. Would she find “Oddly” Leigh? And if she did would he help her? It set her frantic when some of the passengers remarked that they wished the Agena would, stay in the harbor a few days longer than the itinerary called for and spoke of asking the captain to make the change. Haiti would be their next stop. Any unnecessary delay in getting there would be unbearable for Virginia. Her limit of endurance was already reached by the extra demands made upon her time and strength while they werq in Havana. On the last night in port there was a roof dinner given to the captain. The guest of honor showed a decided disposition to monopolize the attentions of the ship's hostess and so Virginia found herself compelled to dance with an old readog whose steps might have been perfect on a heaving deck but impossible to follow on a dance floor. She was sure it pleased certain of the wives to see her so disposed of and, accordingly made mo effort to induce him to choose another partner. It was his night and he knew it. But it filled her heart with sadness to be whirling around in his arms under the low-hung moon and brilliant stars of a land that was fashioned for romance. , If only she could close her eyes and imagine she was dancing with Niel! But when she tried it she prompt-
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ly got her toes stepped on and the illusion, if it had existed, was instantly dispelled. It was a very gay crowd, except for those who had walked too much in the tropical sun and drunk too much beer at the Tropical Gardens. The roof was a garden of palms and flowers and the delicately-col-ored buildings of the city below stretched out to a moon-shimmering sea like a water color painting. The beautiful evening dresses the women wore and the white dress suits the men had donned were in perfect harmony with the scene, but, Virginia wished she could stand a moment at the parapet and be alorie with the spirit of beauty that hovered over the city. There was laughter; there were toasts, stories and music. And far away, under a cold northern sky, a man tramped for miles and miles In a great city’s midtown park and thought of a ship at sea with a girl whose heart was laid down in worship at the feet of Mammon. And it was all so futile, he thought. For what could she buy to match the jewels of the sky? Gems were only to look at. Why did men lay down their lives to acquire precious stones when they had but to walk out into the night and look upward to see the greatest gem collection human eyes could behold? And a daisy In a window boi could mean more to a happy heart than orchids or roses to misery, Nathaniel knew. He was unable to believe that a mortal could be happy who loved material things more than his soul, and anyone who thought he could was due to make a sad discovery, he added in his minr. “If I’d lost her because she loved someone else I could still respect her,” he thought bitterly. It had cast him dearly to discover, as he believed he had, that Virginia lacked appreciation of her soul. She had been a shining light of truth and beauty to him, an inspiration, and now she had turned his heart to a lump of mud. His mural work was suffering. The face of his central figure was taking on a hard, worldly expression that Nathaniel knew wowuld ruin him if he could not correct It. And he could not. He was working now on a contract he had received as a result o\ his success with his first serious endeavor in art. It was a bad time for him to lose faith in mankind . . . the one per - son he could have staked his life upon as being real was a fraud. % His bitterness was reflected m his work. It- was driving him to dis * traction, for when he could not lose himself in his work he could net forget Virginia, even for a moment Sleep had departed and he was haggard and disheveled. His only measure of solace was
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found in tramping through the streets from dusk to dawn, as he was doing now, finally returning to the studio to drop exhausted and fully clothed upon his bed. Chiri assiduously thrust ' her sympathy upon him, persisting In spite of his rebuffs, until he paid no further attention to her. While he tramped, and followed
POWER LOBBY WILL FIGHT DAM PLANK
Utilities Aids Busy Guarding Interests in Democratic Platform. Bu Times Special HOUSTON, Texas, June 25.—The power lobby has arrived to watch proceedings at Houston, particularly the formation of a Democratic platform. Many of the same men whose activities in behalf of private power in all parts of the United States recently have been revealed by the Federal Trade Commission are here and are busy in hotel lobbies. The platform probably will mention the Federal Trade Commission inquiry, which was undertaken on resolution of a Democrat, Senator George of Georgia. But the plank in which the power representatives are most interested is that referring to Boulder Dam. 1 At Kansas City, where the resolutions committee was headed by Reed, Smoot, a long-time opponent of the Boulder Dam bill, no mention was made of this issue, Involving private or public development of hydro-lecetric resources, and friends of the measure, conceding there was no chance to get an indorsement over Smoot’s opposition, did not make an active fight for it. Here, however, the California delegation will offer a plank to the resolutions committee strongly favoring Boulder Dam. California Democrats believe this fltsln with Governor Smith’s attitude toward power development.
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a far-off ship with poignant longing, this girl who had patiently stalked the man she wanted, was waiting, knowing that sooner cr later the night would come when he would return before dawn and feel the need of someone who could understand. (To Be Continued)
DENIES STATE BOARD 'FRAMED’ SCHOOL PROBE Examiner Says Quiz on Ventilators Complied With Law. Denying that the State board of accounts has any interest in any type of school ventilation equipment, Lawrence Orr, State examiner, declared today the investigation of three Indianapolis schools by a committee appointed by the board which resulted in finding that the ventilating systems do not meet State health requirement was made only on petition as according to the law. Orr took this step after William H. Book, Chamber of Commerce civil affairs director, and school business manager when the heating and vestigating contracts were let, offered a statement indicating that Book believed the inspection was a “frame” prompted by those who wish to obtain some official recognition of C. C. Shipp & Cos., ventilating equipment manufacturers. Shipp was recently scored by the State tax board, and following the castigation the petition fop inspection of the three schools not having Shipp equipment was filed with the board of accounts. According to Orr, the board had no choice in the matter but to follow the statutes, which declare such an inspection mandatory after filing of petition.
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DEMOCRATS TO MAKE PLAY FOR FARMER VOTE Leaders Would Welcome Embattled Invasion of Agriculturists. BY RUTH FINNEY HOUSTON, June 25.—Democratic leaders would give their eye teeth to have the embattled farmers who so disturbed Republican leaders at Kansas City, march in on them here and make the same demands that were refused by the Republican convention. Several early arrivals among the senatorial Democratic group have expressed the opinion nothing but a sharp contest on the equalization fee could avert what they fear will be a sharper and more bitter contest on the dry question. No Marching and Shouting They believe marching, shouting, banner-waving farmers such as kept Kansas City in a turmoil, might divert attention from the other issues. But apparently the State of Texas is going to prevent this wish from being fulfilled. Four leaders in the farm movement arrived Friday and said farmCorns Relief in one minute In one minute that’s how quick you get relief from corn pain when you apply Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads. For Zino-pads remove the cause —friction and pressure of shoes. If applied at the fust sign of irritation caused by tight 6hoes, they positively prevent corns. Powerful liquids or caustic plasters don’t keep corns from coming back again—often cause acid burn on the toes. Zino-pads won’t harm the tenderest skin. Thin, protective, healing. At all drug, shoe and dept, stores—3s c per package. DSScholVs 7sino-pads Put one on—the pain is gonel
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ers from the grain and com growing States were unwilling to make the long journey here. The four ara Chester Davis, economist of tha federated farm bureaus; William H. Settle of Indiana; George Peek, chairman of the committee of twen-ty-two, and William Hearts, chairman of the corn belt committee. May Indorse Fee They said that while they did not feel they had the same right ta make demands on the Democrats as on Republicans, they had come to talk things over and would welcome an indorsement of the equalization fee principle in the Democratic platform. There apparently is a good chance that they may get it, while the South has never been enthusiastic over the McNary-Haugen bill, there is a growing feeling that the espousal of the farm bloc cause is too good a political opportunity to be lost.
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