Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 74, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 August 1930 — Page 14
PAGE 14
3 STATES VOTE ON CANDIDATES IN SENATE RACE Capper, Allen, Glass Are Probable Nominees in Kansas, Virginia. B>J Serippt-Hotcard yctctpaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Aug. s.—Within the next eight days nine senatorial primaries will take place which are hkely to result in designation of several new senators. Three of these primaries are set for today, one on Thursday and five next Tuesday. ... Voters in Kansas. Missouri, Virginia and West Virginia went to the polls today, but unless all signs fail the only new senator to be nominated today will come from West Virginia, where a spirited scramble followed the announcement of Senator Guy D. Goff that he was retiring to private life. In Kansas Senator Capper will be renominated without opposition, while Senator Allen was fortunate in that he had two opponents and the opposition is likely to be divided. Both senators are Republicans and the nominations are equivalent to election. . . , In Missouri there is no senatorial primary and no contests for congress which are attracting unusual attention. In Virginia Senator Carter Glass, Democrat, will be nominated without opposition and is slated for an easy election. Virginia Democrats are staging two interesting congressional contests. one across the river from Washington in George Washington’s home territory where the wet and dry question is a prominent issue. In the Norfolk district, now represented by a Republican, a woman. Mrs. Sarah |iee Fain, described as a Virginia beauty, is seeking the Democratic nomination with former Congressman Deal a? her opponent. Blocked Agreement In West Virginia, former Senator Henry Neely will win the Democratic nomination without opposition. but. the Republicans are involved in a five-cornered fight. All reports are that Neely will be elected. regardless of who Is his opponent. Tennessee Democratic voters on Thursday will choose between Representative Cordell Hull, tariff authority and former chairman of the Democratic national committee, and Andrew L. Todd of Murfreesboro. a legislator. Paul E. Divine, a Johnson City lawyer, is winning the Republican senatorial nomination without opposition. In Tennessee, the Democratic nomination is regarded as equivalent to election, despite the large Republican vote in East Tennessee. The congressional fight of Representative B. Carroll Reece and Sam R. Price is attracting attention. Reece blocked a congressional agreement on Muscle Shoals, contending that liis attitude was that of President Hoover’s. Recently he published a l itter from Hoover indorsing his stand. It was the first time that Hocver had interfered in a primary election. Gore in Run-Off
On Tuesday of next week voters in Alabama. Oklahoma. Arkansas. Nebraska and Ohio will nominate senatorial candidates. Alabama Democrats probably will choose Representative Bankhead to oppose Senator J. Thomas Heflin who was read out of the party because he deserted A1 Smith. Heflin will seek re-election as an Independent. In Oklahoma former Senator Thomas Gore, "the blind senator.” finds himself in a run-off primary, with Senator Pine, Republican, as his eventual opponent, if he wins. In Arkansas, Senator Joseph TRobinson, Democratic leader of the senate, is having his first contest in eighteen years. His opponent is alleging that he was untrue to his senatorial oath when he consented to go to London as one of President Hoover’s delegates to the naval conference. He also is being criticised for having accepted the Democratic vice presidential nomination when Al Smith, a "Tammany Catholic,” was the presidential nominee. AWARD WELL CONTRACT New Effort for Airport Water Supply Will Be Made. The board of works Monday took another chance on finding water at the city airport, letting a contract for a ten-inch drlten well to James W. Hensley and Company. Hensley agreed to accept $4 a foot in event he is unable to strike sufficient water. The contract provides for $8 a foot if water is obtained. Several weeks ago the board drilled a well but found no water supply.
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Storu COPvgtGUT 1930 /& HI A SEQVCE Inc, h ERNEST LYNN /,
BEGIN HERE TODAY DAN RORIMER. former New York ne*BD*D*r man. who 1* now writing scenario* for Continental Pictures in •Hollywood. Rets a letter from an old friend In New York teWnajiifcto look un a nrl named ANNE WINTER, who has come from Tulsa. O'tla.. to crash the Dictum.” Dan complies reluctantly, but Anne Droved to be charming. She has had stage experience—ln 6tock compmnje*. Anne gathers that he is a little dissatisfied with thing: at Continental. For one thing, he thinks they have miscast the star whom they select to Dlay In the Rictifre that Is to be made from • tary e had -vrltten before coming to HollyThe ‘allowing Monday rehearsals team on his picture. That evening he learns that Anne Is to work the following morning, making the second time she has found extra employment. After her first day at Grand United studios. Dan takes Anne for a ride to the beach. There she tells him she has met a likable girl, also an extra, aod she li thinking of Hying with this girl and her nresent acartment mate, whom Anne nas not vet met. TOe girl's name Is MONA MORRISON: her friend s. EVA harlex. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER SEVEN ANNE let his arm stay where it was; appeared not to notice it, even. But a moment or two later, when Rorimer tried to draw her toward him, he encountered firm resistance. and Anne said, ’’Hadn’t we better start back? What time is it?” “Oh, I keep my promises. 11l set you back by 10,” he replied. “It’s no more than 9 now.” “I didn’t see you look at your watch.” Dan brought up his wrist, squinted in the semi-darkness. “Well, then, 9:15,” he admitted, grinning. “What’s fifteen minutes?” And he added, “On a night like this?” Anne Winter smiled at him. “Romantic Uncle Dan!” she jeered softly. , . “Yeah? Forget that, young lady, I'm not your uncle.” “You were a few minutes ago.’ “But I don’t feel so-so avuncular now; or platonic, either, for that matter.” , , . Anne dropped the subject; and Rorimer, feeling her impersonal dismissal of It. fell silent He offered her a clgaret, and this time she took one. Leaning back in his seat, he regarded her through half-closed eyes and wondered if she had ever given a man her love. Certainly, he thought in admiring approval of her, there must have been many who bad tried to win it. Perhaps there was a young man back in Tulsa; and if there was, Dan was thinking, he was plenty lucky. He began presently to whistle softly, but thinking of something else, checked himself and urged: "Sing for me, Anne.” “Sing for you?” she repeated re-, garding him curiously. “Why?” “Because I like to hear you sing. ...Sing that thing I was trying to whistle.” “‘Why Was I Bon: ’...But that’s so plaintive anr’ so forlorn.” “That’s just tl.e way I feel, somehow. Does the c cean at night affect you that way?” It did, she agreed. “I feel a little homesick.”
nan DAN said he had been away from his family too long to know homesickness again, but that he felt a longing, and a curious aloneness that was hard to explain. He started the car, backed it onto the road, and headed it up the grade, and rolling back toward Hollywood, with the ocean behind them. Anne leaned back in the seat and began to sing: "Why was I born? Why am I living? What do I get? What am I giving? Why do I want a thin* I daren’t hope for? What ran I hope for? I wish I knew..." Plaintive . . . forlorn . . . the song of a lonely heart. And Anne's voice, low and sweet and tremulously exciting, carrying right into his blood. . . . “Why do I try to draw you near me? Why do I cry?—you never hear me. I'm a poor fool, but what can I do? Why was I born to love you?” The wind rushed past them, whipping at his hair before it fled, carrying the last echoes of her song with it. Dan felt contentments, contentment curiously mixed with the stirrings of voiceless longing and unrest. Why do I want the things I daren’t That w°as the thing that life was lived for, he told himself—to want the things one daren’t hope for. Only, you did hope for them somehow, no matter how forlornly, even
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if they were way off somewhere beyond the frozen stars. “Sing some more, Anne. Sing to me again.” “Do you like to be sung to?” He said simply, staring straight ahead. “I love to hear you sing.” And Anne turned on him a curious smi 2 at the strange emphasis in his voice; but he was still looking away and missed itShe began: “I'm * dreamer —aren't we aUt Juitt dreamer—aren tie all and sang it through to the end. And not once did Rorimer turn his eyes from the roadway ahead of them. He was thinking that he had heard a voice like hers before, over the radio. A contralto who sang ballads and “blues” with a smooth ease and lowness that made you shut your eyes and imagine things. Only, Anne’s singing was not so trained; not so professional. It had, he thought, striving for the right word, an uncaptured quality in it that left him a little shaken. At the end of the song he turned to look at her. She sat still beside him, her head back against the cushioned seat, eyes half-closed. “If she gets a break,” he said to himself, “she’ll go'a long way.” Provided, of course, the camera and the microphone did not do strange things to her; that had been known to happen. u n u THEY were on her street now, and when he stopped the car in front of her apartment he asked if he might pick her up again in the morning and take her to the Grand United lot. •‘lt’s no trouble, Anne, and you can sleep longer if you don’t have to wait for a bus.”
“All right, Dan; you’re certainly kind.” He walked down the hallway with her, and when they stopped at her door he showed her the time* “See, Anne? Only four minutes of 10. Am Ia man of my word or not?” “You’re just marvelous,” she said, laughing, and gave him her hand. And Dan suddenly drew her to him and kissed her. Just as suddenly he knew he had done the wrong thing. Anne was not angry; he would have felt better if she had shown her anger. But she was plainly hurt, and he said contritely, “I’m sorry, Anne.” “I hope you won’t do that again,” Anne said. The dark eyes were level and calm enough, but bright spots flamed in her cheeks. Dan said again, “I’m sorry, Anne. I’ll remember.” He added that he hoped he hadn’t made her change her mind about riding with him in the morning. “You can at least trust me in the day time,” he said with a lame little laugh. Anne's faint smile heartened him. “You said you’d remember,” she said, "and you’re a man of your word. . . . Good night.” “Good night, Anne. You’re a good sport.” ... A darned good sport, he thought, climbing into his car. “Why was I born? Why am I Uvlne?’* He drove to Henry’s, and thre he found Johnny Riddle, sitting alone over coffee and a sandwich. Johnny said, “Hello, stranger. Who was the lady I saw you with the other night? ‘That wasn’t no lady; that was my —’ Who was she, Dan? And what did you do with the little O’Neill girl—little Mildred?” Dan said, studying his menu: “Mildred's a blond.” “Not a real one; Milly bleached her hair because it photographs better.” “Are there any real blonds?” Dan asked, his eyes still on the card. “What a cynical young man you turned out to be! Why, of course! See the lady over there, for instance? Over there to your leftin the corner. There’s a blond—and how! That’s Sylvia Patterson.” Dan swung around in his chair
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
FRANGO-ITALIAN WAR PREDICTED Only Britain Able to Avert Clash, Says Writer. Bv Timet Special NEW YORK, Aug. s.—War between France and Italy now can come at any moment, with little or no warning, as suddenly as the onset of the world conflict sixteen yeans ago, in the opinion of Frank H. Simonds, widely known war correspondent and authority on international relations. Simonds, among the most widely quoted observers attending the recent London- naval conference, believes that the London meeting proved a climactic point in the relations of Italy with France and revealed their differences to be irreconcilable. Writing in the Review of Reviews for August, he virtually predicts a war begun by Italian aggression against France, which will involve most of the nations of continental Europe, unless Great Britain acts to forestall such a conflict. “The single real guarantee against Italian attacks upon France, not perhaps today or tomorrow, but eventually, as the result of some incident which is inevitable in the circumstances, would seem to be a clear declaration of British policy,” he declares. “Even Fascist Italy would hesitate to risk a war if it were clear that Great Britain would act against an aggressor.” and stared brazenly. “So that’s Sylvia,” he said. “Is that hair real?” “Absolutely. Os course, she probably sees to it that it doesn’t get any darker.” “It’s almost pure white,” said Dan. “She’s a beauty, my boy—one of my very best clients. I’d take you over and introduce you, only she has company.” “That man with her,” Dan said with sudden interest; “is that Garry Sloan?” “That’s Garry.” # an
RORIMER found occasion from time to time to look at Sloan. He was big and bronzed and powers looking, and he had a vast mop of wiry yellow-brown hair—hair, Dan thought, that suggested an intense vitality. Johnny Riddle w f as one of Hollywood’s better gleaners of gossip. Pau’ Collier, when he had brought the two together, had informed Dan that “Hollywood hides no secrets from little Johnny.” Riddle was medium-sized and compact looking, and he had laughing gray eyes, and hair that kept falling down over his forehead into one eye. When the waitress departed with Rorimer’s order Johnny Riddle leaned across the table say that he had heard Sloan’s wife was divorcing him. "Can’t say that I blame her,” Dan remarked, “if some of the tales about Sloan are true. What’s he going to do—marry Sylvia Patterson?” Johnny Riddle shrugged. “Is Sloan In love with her?” Dan asked. Riddle said, “Sloan’s in lov- with himself, and that’s why he expects every woman he meets to be crazy about him. ... But he’s one swell director!” “Is Sylvia crazy about him?” Dan pursued; and Ridd’e said he didn’t think so. “Sylvia’s a swell girl, Dan; but Sylvia is ambitious—and she can be diplomatic.” (To Be Continued)
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TIMES CONTEST IN LAST WEEK Prizes Are Offered for Vacation Letters. With announcement today of $5 prize winneis for vacation contest letters and snapshots published last week, The Times holds the contest open for its final lap this week, with last winners to be announced next Monday. From last week’s letters, that of Mrs. W. A. Collins, R. R- 10, Box 269, was selected for the week s prize of $5. Mrs. Collins described a vacation in a mountain cabin, away from the need of repeating injunctions to four children. “Please wash your ears!” For his snapshot of the White river near Bedford, a contrast in lights and shadows, Russell Collier, 2320 East Sixteenth street, was declared the winner of the $5 prize for the best vacation photo published. The checks are being mailed. Now for the last week. Send your letters, not more than 100 words, to The Times Vacation Contest Editor, describing: “Why I think my vacation was best from the standpoint of mental and physical benefit I derived.” On the back of vacation snapshots jot down the names o\ places or persons pictured. Photos will not be returned. To be considered in the final week’s judging, pictures must be in the hands of the contest editor by Thursday night, Aug. 7. The deadline on vacation letters is Friday night, Aug. 8. Winners in both divisions will be announced in The Times of Monday, Aug. 11. HOGSTON TO PROSECUTE FOREST FIRE STARTERS - —— ✓ Carelessness Costly During Drought. Warns State Marshal. State Fire Marshal Alfred E. Hogston today threatened arrest on arson charges for anyone carelessly or maliciously causing grass or forest fires during the drought epidemic. The announcement followed one Saturday by Governor Harry G. Leslie urging great care to prevent fires. The statehouse north lawn was burned over Saturday afternoon through a carelessly dropped cigaret. New Home Demonstration Agent LOGAN SPORT, Ind., Aug. 5. Miss Bertha Cook, South Bend, has assumed her duties in Cass county as home demonstration agent, a post to which she recently was appointed by Purdue university.
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OREGON'S LAST WILD HORSES DRIVEIS HELD Roundup for Stockyards Is Likely to Decimate Range Herds. BY EARL H. LEIF United Pres* SUIT Correspondent SALEM, Ore., Aug. s.—Oregon’s last drive of wild horses, destined to take their place in sausages or on the dinner plates of gourmets in sundry parts of the world, has just taken place over the prairies and plains and high desert country of eastern Oregon. For the last several weeks the hardiest cowboys of Oregon and some from Idaho and Wyoming have been riding the ranges of Harney and Malbour counties, gathering up horses that never have been corailed and many of which never have before seen a human being. Ready for Shipment George F. Cockley, meat packer of San Jose, Cal., has been in Union and Bend preparing for loading and shipment of twenty-five carloads of L; rses to his California packing plant About 600 head of wild horses were trailed over the plateau in what is believed will be the last drive of these animals in this state. The wild horse probably never will be extinct in the Oregon country, but their numbers will be so reduced that ft would not be profitable to hold a roundup and ship them anw distance. In Oregon where the wild horses grow, horse steak is not fancied, says Cockley, but in California it is considered as good as beef and in many parts of the world horse meat is eaten with considerable gusto by exacting gourmets with jaded appetities. Ponies Are Best Ponies make the finest steak and are in greatest demand, he says. Horse meat of the better grade retails at a much lower price than beef. It is sold under its own name and is used as well in sausage and other prepared meats, always identified. The horses are inspected carefully
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by federal agents before they are slaughtered. The culls of the range are used for fish food and are not offered for human consumption, according to Cockley. Humane societies object to the slaughter of wild horses for eating
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purposes, but vanotoars and fanners in the more remote sections of Oregon are glad to rid the nearbjf ranges of the wild horse, which often becomes a nuisance and a' pest
