Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 199, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1935 — Page 16

PAGE 16

PARTY TO HUNT PAUL REDFERN, MISSING FLIER Explorer Believes That He Is Alive in Jungles of South America. P;/ T'nltrd Vrrtn WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—A little band of explorers and fliers is to set forth for the jungles of Dutch Guiana within a fortnight in an attempt to find Paul Redfern, longmissing aviator believed still alive and being cared for by a mysterious tribe of Indians. William Lavarre, explorer, announced today that the expedition would be headed by Maj. Willis Taylor, United States Army fiier now stationed at France Field, Canal Zone. War Department approval of the plan is expected this week. Redfern has been missing since August. lt*27. when he took off from Brunswick, Ga., on a projected nonstop flight to Rio de Janeiro. Lavarre said he was convinced as a result of a survey expedition into Dutch Guiana last summer that the aviator was alive and was living with a tribe of Trio Indians whom no white man has seen since 1905. Taylor to Get Leave of Absence Maj. Taylor, he said, would obtain a leave of absence to make the expedition. He is to be accompanied by three or four fellow fliers. The search is to be made by air from Paramaribo, cap.tal of Dutch Guiana. The Trio Indians are reported to be friendly, and Lavarre .said he had advised Maj. Taylor that it would be best to drop a man by parachute near the village where he believes Redfern is living. The flight from Paramaribo, he said, Would require about three hours. Brings Hope to Wife b't Lnitt il l’rcss CLEVELAND, Oct. 28— Reports that e.i expedition is being organized to search lor her long missing husband brought hope today to Mrs. Gertrude Redfern that he yet may be returned alive to civilization. Mrs. Redfern received news of the contemplated expedition with the quiet comment: “There have been bo many reports that he is still living that I can't help but fe:l there is some truth in them. I am glad that an expedition at last is going after him.” STOP BAD BREATH Thousands of people afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets act gently, but firmly on the bowels, stimulating them to natural action, and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. Olive Tablets bring no griping pain or any disagreeable effects. Ir. F. M. Edwards discovered tlie formula after t’H years of practice among patients afflicted with constipation with tlie attendant had breath. • •live Tablets are purely a vegetable compound; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two at bedtime for a week and note the effect. 35c, 30c, 60c.—Advertisement. I—”" ""■n—

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BEGIN HEBE TODAY. Jean Dunn, secretary to Donald Montagu* lawyer, delays her answer when Bobby \Valiac, voune automobile salesman, asks Jean to marry him. At the Golden Fea'her night club Jean n>>ets Sandy Harkins whose business connection is vague. Sandv introduces Bobby and Jean to Mr. and Mrs. Lewis, and Bobby arranges ’o seil some bonds for Lewis. He sells them to Jean's employer Larry Glenn Federal agent, long a friend of Jean's parents. Is trying to locate Wingv Lewis, bank robber. Sandy asks Jean *o marry him and she promises to give him an answer after she returns from a vacation in her home town. Larry locates some stolen bonds and questions Sonny Bovd. gambler, about them. Boyd confesses he bought them from Donald Montague. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER EIGHTEEN “At that moment, it seemed, the bonds were being held by a friend of this young man; and this friend —I told you it was complicated—was a friend of the Chicago politician. Now he was hard up; needed money for something or other, and had to cash the bonds. But, being a friend of the Chicago man, he was not willing to put them on the open market. He would sell them only on condition that the person to whom they went would agree to hold them for a mon‘h or more, until the furore out in Chicago had died down. Naturally, the ordinary buyer would not care to make any such pledge; therefore, this man was willing to let them go substantially below the market price as an inducement. “So that was how it stood. My young friend —I call him that because he seemed such a likable young chap, and because I somehow feel that I know him quite well, now—he wanted to buy the bonds and sell them, in turn, to me. He offered them to me at $11,500 — $11,500 for bonds with a face value of $14,500. Naturally, I assumed that he himself was getting them from his friend for somewhat less. Indeed, he at length admitted as much, and blurted out that the reason he was trying to put through the deal was that he wanted to marry my secretary.” He chuckled in fatherly, man-of-the-world fashion. “I told him I didn’t want to lose her, and I gave him some fatherly advice. Then I asked him about the bonds themselves. He gave me a complete description. I rang up a brokerage house, found out what they were selling for and then, after he had left, I instituted a quiet little investigation into his past and present. Everything I could learn reassured me about him. I assumed that everything was as he had respresented it—” He smiled sadly. “I know,” he said. “I was oddly uncritical and trusting. But—well, I liked the boy. I suppose I took it for granted that any intimate friend of Miss Dunn was bound to be all right. ... At any rate, I bought the bonds, intending to keep them for a few months and then sell them. A week ago I unexpectedly became pressed for money and disposed of them. That's the story.” He paused. Then he said, “I presume you would like to know the young man’s name?” “I know it already,” said Larry. "Bobby Wallace, wasn't it?” a tt a BACK in his own office, half an hour later, Larry summoned four of the agents who served under him: Tony Laßocco, former all-America tackle at Notre Dame; Tommy Waters, war veteran; A1

Peters, graduate of the New York police force, and Frank Watson, another ex-soldier. Sitting on a corner of his desk, he outlined to them the case of the stolen bonds and the suspicions he entertained relative to Evelyn Brady and her mysterious consorts. “We can't wait any longer,” he said. “We’ve got to strike. I'm going out to talk to this Wallace boy and see if I can get a lead from him about the identity of these persons who unloaded the bonds on him. Frank, you and A1 go down to the Golden Feather, buzz the drivers at the taxi stand outside, and see if you can find out where these persons live. Tony, you and Tommy are to get hold of this Art Lanning, who runs the place, put the heat on him, and find out everything he can tell you about them, “Check in as soon as you learn anything. The moment we find their hangout, we’ll raid it!” tt tt u CHAPTER NINETEEN WHEN Larry Glenn arrived at the sales rooms of the State Auto Sales, Inc., he found that Bobby Wallace was out with a prospect, and he had to wait for more than an hour before the young man returned. When Bobby finally did come in, he came over to Larry with a smile and an outstretched hand. Larry shook his hand and said quietly, “Bobby, I’ve got to have a little talk with you. Can you come outside for a while and perch in my car with me?” “Why, sure. What’s up?” They walked to where Larry’s car was parked and got into the front seat. There Larry sat for a moment, frowning at the instrument panel, while Bobby looked at him in slowly rising bewilderment. “Bobby,” said Larry at last, “I think you’ve just done the most foolish thing of your whole life, and I want you to tell me everything you can remember about it.” Bobby looked at him in utter wonder. “What on earth—” he began. “Tell me,” said Larry, “all about those bonds you sold to Don Montague.” “Those bonds—” began Bobby. He turned toward the detective, “Why, what’s wrong with them?” Larry smiled a wry smile, “Nothing,” he said, “except that they were stolen from the National Bank of Neola, a month and a half ago, by the Red Jackson gang. That’s all.” Bobby gaped, his mouth open, his vocal chords seemingly unable to function. At last he managed to gulp, "Stolen?” “Yes. Those were what we call hot bonds, Bobby. We’ve been looking for them for weeks in the hope that their appearance would lead

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us to the gangsters. And when we do find them—we discover that you yourself sold them!” Bobby still sat with his mouth open, seemingly dazed. At last he passed a hand across his forehead and said weakly, “Good Lord!” Larry eyed him for a moment. Then he said gently, “Now suppose you tell me everything about it—where you got them, how you happened to go to Montague with them, what you got for them, and everything.” It took Bobby another minute to collect his faculties sufficiently to tell his story, but at last he managed to do it In halting, uncertain sentences he told the whole story, aided by Larry's quiet, but insistent, questions. Bit by bi: Larry learned it all; the meeting in the Golden Feather, the conference at the apartment, his own notion that Montague might be willing to make the purchase, Lewis’ desire to raise money to buy anew car. tt a tt WHEN the boy finished he sat in the corner of the seat and listened to Larry's brief, succinct explanation of the true circumstances of the deal. At last he shook his head in bitter self-condemnation. “Did you ever see a bigger fool than me?” he asked miserably. Larry smiled at him. “You have been pretty much of a fool, Bobby,” he said. “I think we can arrange things so that the consequences won’t be too serious for you ” Bobby’s face suddenly became white. It had not occurred to him before that by dealing in stolen bonds he had made himself criminally liable. “—the main thing,” Larry was saying, “is to run down this gang and get them all locked up. First of all, can you remember where that apartment was that they took you to?” Bobby wrinkled his brows, then shook his head slowly. “Not exactly,” he said. “He remember it was out on the west side in an apartment hotel, but I didn't pay much attention to where we were going. It was off W. Park-blvd somewhere, I remember. “You didn't notice the name of the building?” The boy shook his head unhappily. “No. Gosh, I'm sorry.” “Think you'd know it again if you sa wit?” Bobby thought this over. “I might. Yes, I think I would.” “Well, there aren’t so many apartment hotels out that way but what we ought to be able to find it. . . . Now, about another thing, Bobby. (To Be Continued)

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tunity to become acquainted with the school homes of their children.” Community Phase Stressed The theme for the Indianapolis observance will be, “Building the Schools Into the Life of the Community.” Parents are urged to visit the schools during the week. The Teachers' Federation has published a special edition of its bulletin carrying the indorsement of the observance by the Rev. John B. Ferguson, president of the Indianapolis Ministerial Association, ana the Rev. Ernest N. Evans, secretary. Members of the American Education Week committee of the Teachers' Federation are Miss Hazel Force, School 66, chairman; Miss Adah Hill, principal. School 22; Mrs. Arda Noble, School 41; Seward Craig. Manual High School, and M. David Burgess, Technical High School. V. F. W. POST TO INSTALL NEW OFFICERS NOV. 7 Hugh H. Meyer Is Newly Elected Commander of Organization. Installation of officers at the Burns-West-Stxeibeck Post No. 2999, Veterans of Foreign Wars, is to be held Nov. 7 in the post hall, Denny and Washington-sts. Hugh H. Meyer is the newly elected commander. Other new\officers are Thomas Miller, senior vice commander; Clarence James, junior vice commander; Harold Eastman, quartermaster; Orlie Stafford, chaplain, and Roy Brooks, officer of the day! Collector Robbed, Police Told Mel Atkins, 23, of 910 E. 27th-st, a collector for the Mutual Life and Accident Insurance Cos., told police today that a Negro robbed him of SSO and his auto last night at Burton and Edgemont-avs.

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