Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 41, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1928 — Page 14

PAGE 14

INDIANA PAYS THOUSANDS IN t IMPORTTAXES Close to $1,000,000 Taken j in During Year by Two Customs Officers. Two-thirds of a million dollars in customs were paid by Indianians on imports in the last twelve months, the annual report compiled in the office of collector of customs here discloses. The exact amount, $650,047.76, was collected at the two ports of entry in the' State—lndianapolis and Evansville—and is not far short of the record collections of 1924, $591,937.79. ‘'lmports in Indianapolis are holding their own, but are falling off somewhat at Evansville,” said George M. Poland, collector of customs. ‘‘Here collections amounted to $360,496.52 and at Evansville $289.551.94. Many Products Imported "Imports at Evansville are tobacco almost exclusively. The H. Hendrick Tobacco Company there imports large quantities of tobacco from Sumatra, Dutch East Indies and Cuba, the customs being paid as quantities of the tobacco are withdrawn from the Government warehouse. “Drugs form an important item of import here, however. Contributing lesser amounts are chinaware, j dresses and silks for the larger department stores, mahogany and satinwood, beans from Canada, almonds and English walnuts. Already toys are coming in for the Christmas trade from the toy shops of Germany, France, Italy and Czechoslavakia.” Imports consigned to Indianans in the vicinity of Indianapolis come in all manner of cases, bales 'and boxes to the customs warehouse in the Federal building. Attached is the invoice. Inspectors check the contents of every shipment before finally setting the amount of duty to be collected. Sometimes Refused Occasionally consignees refuse | acceptance because the duty proves surprisingly high. These refused shipments then are listed carefully and at intervals auctioned off, duty free, to the highest bidder. The cost of collecting $650,047.76 in customs in the twelve months ended June 30, was $21,125.93, or about four and one-third cents for each dollar collected, the annual report showed. ORDER GAS RATE BOOST Sheridan Company Also Is Permitted to Issue Securities. Sheridan Gas, Oil and Coal Company is permitted to issue $65,000 in securities and increase rates on artificial gas at Sheridan, Ind., under an order handed down by the public service commission. Rate increases also were granted to the Batesville Water Company. Votes Tri-County Park Bonds Bu United Pros BRAZIL, Ind., July 9.—Another etep toward establishment of the new tri-county State park was taken today when the Clay County board of commissioners here ordered a $35,000 bond issue with which the county’s share of the land for the park will be bought. The park will be the fourth largest in the State. It will border on Clay, Sullivan and Greene Counties.

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THIS HAS HAPPENED BERTIE LOU WARD, on the eve of her wedding to ROD BRYER, feels a premonition of trouble when shs receives a dagger-like paper knife from LILA MARSH, who has turned Rod down because he is not wealthy. But she courageously resolves not to be jealous of Rod’s past love affair since his future is in her keening. She also accidentally overhears one brides, maid ask another if she thought the bride liked being second choice. The pain in her heart vanishes when Rod whispers “My wife” with a world of adoration in his eyes. They spend an ideal honeymoon ir a mountain resort, and Bertie Lou forgets the shadow cast bv the ex-sweetheart until they return and find Lila acting as dictator in their apartment, because she “knows what Rod likes.” The newlyweds settle down in their little home, but entertainment and the demands of hospitality deplete their finances. Bertie Lou is worried both about her budget and Lila's persistent annoyance. So she is happy when Rod accepts a position in New York, which has been offered him bv an old friend. TOM FRASER. But the serpent is not cast out of their Eden yet. for just as they are saving farewell at the station. Lila announces her intention of seeing them soon in New York, for she is going to visit MOLLY FRASER. Bertie Lou is anxious to make a good impression at first, so thev go to an expensive hotel to live until they can find an apartment. Moilv recommends that she buy “smart clothes.” and Bertie Lou is amazed at the cost of everything. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY

| CHAPTER X. MOLLY hesitated over her reply to Bertie Lou. She wasn’t quite sure what to say. Tom had told her about* Rod’s being once engaged to Lila. After their dinner party in Wayville she had asked him if there could be anything .behind Lila's declaration that she was Rod’s ex-sweetheart. And Tom had told her all he knew It wasn’t much. His correspondence with his relatives in the town was very sketchy and Wayville gossip did not reach him in the city. Had Molly taken the trouble to accompany him oftener on'his trips back home she might have learned for herself how Lila loved to meddle with Bertie Lou’s happiness. Instead, Molly visited her own home, a neighboring town, when Tom went to Wayville. It was larger than Tom’s birthplace. Molly looked down upon Wayville, called it a “hick town.” And cared little or nothing for Tom’s family or old friends. Thus she had not heard the current gossip concerning Wayville’s most interesting possible triangle. Still, Tom had told Molly enough about Rod and Lila to cause her to suspect now that Bertie Lou’s casual inquiry concerning Lila’s proposed visit was not so casual as it seemed. And however little she might care for Bertie Lou she thought Rod was a “brick.” For his sake she was reluctant to tell Bertie Lou that her rival was indeed coming to New! York. “Oh, she may,” she said off- | handedly. “But she will want to shop most of the time, I guess. Lila’s a swell dresser, don’t you think?” She was saying, in her way, that she beleved Lila would be too busy to interfere with anyone. “I think she’s too flashy,” Bertie Lou answered honestly and was in stantly sorry. Molly's taste corresponded very much with Lila’s, she remembered. “But of course she can get away with it,” she added, hoping to appease. Her mother had preached to her that there was no virtue in frankness that wounded others unnecessarily. Bertie Lou was always having to curb her tendency to make straightforward answers. Molly’s nose took an upward tilt. “Well, I admire her,” she said shortly. Bertie Lou had nothing to say

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to that. One thing she was not going to do was play sychopant to Molly Fraser just because her husband had given Rod a good position. Refraining from further comment on Lila’s taste was as far as she would go in consideration of Rod's best interests. “Shall we take a taxi to your shop?” she asked, when they reached the sidewalk. She’d heard that half New York rides in cabs and she wanted to “do right by Molly,” as she put it herself. “It’s just round the corner,” Molly informed her a trifle acidly. “I’ll be glad to get a warmer coat,” Bertie- Lou remarked, shivering a little in a wind that danced bits of paper filong the street. “I left my winter coat in Wayville. It was an old one anyway.” “You may not find anything quiet enough for your taste at Madam Lamore'sMolly dug at her. “Her things are very modish and snappy.” **Just so they aren’t loud,” Bertie Lou replied hopefully. Fortunately they arrived at Madam Lamore’s shop in a few minutes or Bertie Lou might seriously have jeopardized Rod’s future with Tom Frazer's firm. Molly was almost ready to explode. Molly Introduced her to Madam Lamore with a request to show her ‘the sort of thing you sell to small town customers, if you have any,” Madam ran an appraising eye over Bertie Lou’s figure. “But zis young lady is nevair from ze small town,” she said, her head on one side and her eyes alight with admiration of the attractive girl before her. "You see,” Bertie Lou laughed, turning to Molly. “I’ve got ‘chick’.” Molly said seriously: “You mean ‘chic,’ don’t you?” She hadn’t the slightest idea that Bertie Lou had beer, getting even with her by pretending to very lack of smartness Moiiv h?d nought to attribute to he . Bertie Lou smiled. vlolly was too thick to have- any fun with. She was being kind, though, giving her time this way. j Bertie Lou felt a little ’contrite. “Oh, I do want something attrac- j tive,” sl*e said to Madam. “And certainly not small town. Show I me what you think Mrs. Fraser would like.” What Mrs. Fraser would like turned out to be a great surprise to Bertie Lou. In the matter of price. “Does everything cost like this In New York?” she whispered to Molly when Madam’s back was turned. “Oh, of course, if you want something cheap ...” “It’s the first time I’ve bought anything with Rod’s money,” Bertie Lou put in hastily. “Naturally I didn’t mind what things cost before I was married, but you know what Rod’s salary is,” she laughed, as though $65 a week had not seemed like a munificent sum to her before this shopping began. She was entirely truthful. She gpAMlifß Call or write at once for full lnformation. Naiura. Method, no tlmx beat or hand-swing. Established 35 year.,. 10,000 cases suceessfullly treated. Day and evening classes. Results guaranteed. MILLARD INSTITUTE OF NORMAL SPEECH WlUlam A. Craig, Principal, Suite Ne. 1 Darrach Bldg., 1505 N. Illinois. Indianapolis, Ind. Lin. 7654.

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had always dressed well. Most of her salary as stenographer went for clothes. It was not her fault if Molly, thinking in the terms of a New York wardrobe, understood her to mean ' she’d had a great deal of money to spend. Again Molly told herself that Bertie Lou’s parents must have money. But she wondered why no one ever had mentioned the fact to her. She decided to be frank. “You can pay anything you want to for clothes in New York, but if you’re used to smart things you won’t pay less anywhere else than here,” she explained. “Tom isn’t exactly a millionaire,” she added, explanatorily. "I don’t patronize the most expensive shops.” Bertie Lou thought perhaps she couldn’t do better. And she did need a warmer coat to go apartment hunting. Molly was a little disappointed because she bought the brown check camel’s hair instead of the coat with the red and black striped border. Next she bought a beige Vagabond felt that pleased the salesgirl too sell and grieved Molly, who preferred the tight hat with the ear feathers. "Now let’s go out and find an apartment, quick,” Bertie Lou said, when they were on the street again. “I want to get settled so I can explore New York at my leisure.” “It will take weeks before you get your furniture,” Mollie reminded her. “Rod’s arranged to have It sent special.” Bertie Lou explained. “It ought' to be here in a day or two after we send for it. And we need some new pieces, any.ay. We can get those and sort of camp out until the furniture comes.” “Have you decided what you want to pay for an apartment?” “Why. we thought ...” Bertfe Lou was about to say SSO a month, but what she’d learned already of prices in New York stopped her- “ What do you think we ought to pay?” she asked. “Well, if you want to live nicely, and I assume you do, you must pay at the very least SIOO a month. Tom and I pay $175.” Bertie Lou all but exclaimed aloud. Why, that much money would buy a house in Wayville, with a barn thrown in. Before she found a place she would live In she knew that New York and Wayville had nothing in common in the matter of living conditions. Rod was aghast because, finally, she took three rooms at SBS. More than a week’s salary! “But I’ll save carefully on my household allowance. And you won’t always be working for only $65 a week,” Bertie Lou told him encouragingly. "Only $65,” Rod groaned. "It seemed like a swat king’s income a little while ago. Well, when do we move? If we don’t get out of this place soon I’ll have to leave in a

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barrel. And I’m tired of eating in a beanery just to walk through a marble lobby to go to bed.” “We’re going to the Frasers for dinner tonight,” Bertie Lou an-* swered quietly. “And Rod, I think we’d better leave early. Molly doesn’t like me and somehow I always manage to say something to annoy her ” (To Be Continued) SUMMERALLJO FORT Army Chief of Staff to Inspect Citizen Soldiers. Training plans of the C. M. T. C. at Ft. Benjamin Harrison were shifted today to prepare for the visit next Friday of Maj. Gen. Charles P. Summerall, chief-of-staff of the Army. He will make an inspection of the 11th Infantry and the citizen soldier units during a two-hour visit, commencing at 2 p. m. Field training, which included a practice hike with an overnight field camp, scheduled for Thursday and Friday, has been abandoned. Maj. Gen. Robert H. Allen, chief of infantry, is scheduled to visit the camp Wednesday. More than 3,000 persons Sunday witnessed the Army polo team defeat the Rolling Ridge Club, 7-6. Child Health Week Opens met Special I NONA LAKE. Ind., July 9. Child health week opened here today under auspices of the child hygiene division, Indiana State board of health, cooperating with the United States Department of Labor. The program includes examination of children, lectures and demonstrations for mothers. Purdue Employs Engineer Ba Time* Special HARTFORD CITY, Ind., July 9. W. T. Miller has resigned as chief engineer of the Ft. Wayne Corrugated Paper Company heer to accept a position with Purdue University, Lafayette. Dissolve Greek Parliament. Bu United Pre* ATHENS, July 9.—The chamber of deputies was dissolved today in accordance with the demand of premier Venizelos, who plans an early election.

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COOLIDGES KEEP CLOSE TO HOME ON WETSUNDAY Brave Rain in. Morning to Hear Sermon by Blind Pastor. .BY ROBERT MOOREFIELD United Press Staff Correspondent CEDAR ISLAND LODGE, Wis, July 9.-r His fourth visit to the little frame church at Brule was the occasion of President Coolidge’s only appearance outside of the lodge Sunday. Rain and mist kept the presidential family inside after the return from church in the morning. The President, Mrs. Coolidge and their son John, heard the blind unerdained pastor of the church, John Taylor, preach on the "Prophecy oi Jonah.” The Rev. W. B. Holmes, pastor ot the First Presbyterian Church of Hopkinsville, Ky., a friend of Col. E. W. Starling, offered a prayer as the only departure from the regular routine of the simple Sunday service. Reports that the President is contemplating a trip to Yellowstone Park were denied by members of his staff today. Following a week of beautiful weather, rains have again set in. The temperature was 66 in Superior but it was ‘ much warmer at the summer White House. It was reported that former Senator William M. Butler, Massachusetts, might be named Secretary of Commerce, to succeed Secretary Herbert Hoover, but there was no confirmation of the report. Regain your health under care of experienced nurse and dietitian. See Special Notices in the Want Ad Section.

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