Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 208, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 November 1935 — Page 6

PAGE 6

ELIMINATE ALL BUT 25 STATE ROAD DETOURS

Highway Commission Lists Hazards to Guide Motorists. Completion of the major part of the 1835 highway improvement program has resulted in elimination of ail but 25 detours from the state highway system, James D. Adams. State Highway Commission chairman, announced today. Four detours were eliminated this week from Road 37 in English, on Road 43 south of Greencastle, on Road 60 from Wilson to Bennettsvllle, and on Road 121 from Road 52 to Connersville. One detour was established, on Road 36 north of Pendleton. Seven short detours on city streets are in effect. They include: Road 3 Shouider con/tructton so v h o t Axilla drive rrU'.dtour north of De-Kalb-Noble County line 10 mile* over good gravel road. Road 9 Detour over city street* in Shelbyville detour from Junction Road 67 near Pendleton to a point two miles south Junction 236 south of Anderson, shoulder construction north of Marion, drive slowly. Road 12 Detour over city streets In East Chicago Road 15 rinsed between Wabash snd Road 111. d.>u,ur marked over Roads 13, 213 and il4 Roe-j 20- Shoulder construction west of LaOranao, drive slowly. Road 21 —Bridge out Just south of Converse, detour marked vest and north 2'a miles over county road. Road 24—Detour over city tUett? In Roanoke. Road 30—Traffic drive slowly between Orovertown and Etna Green and between Warsaw and Columbia City due to shoulder construction, detour east of ■Warsaw Is 2 1 a miles; shoulder construction Zulu to Ohio line. U. S 31. —Drive slowly over city streets In Beymour, road under construcMon. U. B. 36—Closed between Indianapolis and Pendleton; detour over Road 40 to Greenfield and Roads 9 and 67 through Pendleton—Detour from Pendleton east and north Is 1 2 miles. Road 37—Detour In Faoli and Oolitic Over city streets. Road 39—Detour In Delphi and south Is two miles, U. S. 40—Detour 37 miles between Dunrelth and Richmond over Ptoad 3. 38 and U 8. 35; open to local traffic between Dunrelth and Cambridge City. V. 8 41 Closed from Cook north to Road 30; car detour 19 miles starting at Cook over county road to Crown Point, then over Roads 53 and 30; truck delour 22 miles starting at Junction Road 2 and county road to Crown Point then Roads 53 and 30. Road 43—Detour from a point Just south of Westvllle to Michigan City is 14 miles. Road 44- -Bridge ronstruction In Connersville detour U mile. Road 49—Detour from Chesterton north to Road 20 Is four miles. Road 60 — Drive slowly west of Shoals due to settlement of road, bridge runaround north of Aurora. U. S. 52 -Closed between Indianapolis snd Lebanon detour over Roads 29 ana 32; detour between Junction Road 38 and Lafayette, marked over Road 38. county road and Road 26 Road 61 Bridcre out six miles southeast of Vincennes, detour marked from near Monroe City west and north 6' 2 miles over county road. Road 62 Detour from Edwardsville to New Albany is 14 miles by way of Galena over countv road and Road 150. Road 66 Bridge run-around near Wadesville. Road 67—Drive carefully between Switz City and Spenrer, men working; detour over city streets in Indianapolis; closed between Indianapolis and Anderson; detour marked over Road 13 to Noblesvllle and Road 32 to Anderson. Road 115 -Closed between Road 24 and Road 15, detour marked over Roads 24, 13, 213 and 114. Road 234 Detour from Junction Road 41 north and east is five miles. STUDENT VOLUNTEERS MEET HERE DEC. 28 Arrangements for Convention Arc Made at Club Luncheon. Arrangements for the twelfth quadrennial convention of the Student Volunteer Movement, to be held here Dec. 28 to Jan. 1, were made at, a luncheon meeting yesterday in the Columbia Club. Guests oi the sponsoring committee weir Dr. John A. Mackay, a secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church, ar.d E. Fay Campbell, general secretary of the Yale University Christian Association. Waller C. Marmon is honorary chaiiman and Henry R. Danner is active chairman of the Indianapolis committee. Women's Problems Is Topic Problems of women are to be discussed by Miss Beatrice Shields, Chicago Trade Union worker, when she speaks at 8:30 tonight at the John Reed Club forum in Castle Hall Building, 230 E. Ohio-st.

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by Robert Bruce O mi NEA s.-.,., L

BEGIN HEBE TODAT Jean Dunn, secretary to Donald Montagu . lawyer, dcla - . s her answer when Bobfc7 Wallace, au’omobUe salesman, asks her to marry him. , , , . At The Golden pcarher night club she meet* Pap-tv Harkins whose business conneojon .% vague Sandy introduces Bobbv ar.d Jean to Mr. ar.d Mr*. Lewis ar.d teobby arranges -o sell some bonds for lew >s. He sells them to Dona.d Mon-ague. Lewis buys a car. Larry Glenn, federal agent Is trrir.g o locate Wingy Lewi*, bank robber. He .earn- about the bond transaction ar.d ques-lons Bobby. The bonds were t-oier.. Larrv believes the car Lewis bough- was armored. Bobby undertakes to nr.d out. Jean gop- to her home town for a vaca ion. Sandv comes to see her and she agrees to marry him. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORE CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX THE little valley opened about 100 yards from Pulaski road. The driveway led downward, swinging sharply to the left and then to the right again in a barren region that seemed almost desert-like. Once out of sight of the main highway, Bobby could see nothing but the bleak, grimy hillocks. There was no grass; here and there a stunted, sootblackened bush clung to a slope: ! otherwise there was not e. sign of life. The driveway kept on going down hill; and at last it made one more turn and came out in a queer little hollow. At the other side, a few rods away, there was a precipitous bank, crowned by a long row of gone-to-seed dwellings; on the right hand and on the left a similar bank hemmed the place in. And in the center cf the hollow there was a long, ancient building of red brick with a time-stained roof of galvanized iron. Nestling against the banks were broken-down ruins of oddlooking conical brick structures. “A brick yard!” said Bobby suddenly. That, obviously, was what the place had been—once. A deposit of workable clay must have been dug out of this hoilow, at one time. The remains of the kilns were still in evidence. It was perfectly clear that no bricks had been made here for many a year. But it was equally clear that the central building was still in use. A freshly painted black chimney rose from the farther end, with a wisp of smoke threading its way up toward the evening sky; and surrounding the whole thing there was anew, business-like fence of woven wire, seven feet high, with barbed-wire strands on the top and a substantial gate at the point where the driveway entered. Inside this gate three or four cars were parked. a a a AS Bobby drove up, a man got . up from a seat beside the gate. He let himself out and strolled up to Bobby's car with insolent slowness, his thumbs hooked in his belt. He wore no coat, and his vest was unbuttoned; and beneath his left armpit the black butt of a revolver,

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tucked away in a shoulder holster, was plainly visible. He was a hard-looking proposition, this man, and as Bobby stopped the car the man bent a distinctly unfriendly look upon him. ‘‘What do you want?” he asked. Bobby did his best to look confused and lost. “Why,” he said, “I was looking for a short-cut over to—to Grand River-blvd. I thought this was it.” “Well, it isn’t,” said the man. “Oh,” said Bobby. He looked at the building with what he hoped was just the right degree of innocent interest. “What is this?” “Never mind what it is,” said the man. "This's a private road, and you’re trespassing. Scram!’’ He casually moved his vest back, to give Bobby a better look at the revolver. Bobby grinned suddenly. “Okay, partner,” he said. He backed up and swung around, while the guard stood watching him with sullen suspicion. Then, casting a last glance at the erstwhile brick plant, Bobby drove up the roadway to Pulaski road again. On his way back to town Bobby was the prey of a pleasurable excitement, not unmixed with an even more pleasurable feeling of selfcongratulation. Was this the place Mark Hopkins and MacFarlane had visited the afternoon before? Where else could they have gone? If their goal had been some place on Central-st they would not have used Pulaskird at all; if they had gone to the steel mill they would have used Turney-rd, which led directly to the front entrance. The reddish dust on Hopkins’ car testified that they had gone along Pulaski-rd back of the steel mill; and if they had done that, this queer place back in the hollow seemed to be the only conceivable goal. “I've got something!” Bobby told himself jubilantly. “I’ll bet a dollar to an old doughnut that’s the place Larry Glenn’s looking for. Had I better tell Larry about it right off—or should I try to find something more before I do? Gosh, I wish I could get just a little more dope before I tell him. Maybe I can. Waiting another week won’t hurt anything. . . . Anyhow, I’ll go see him tonight.” He returned the car to the rental agency, walked to a drug store, entered a telephone booth, and rang Larry's office in the Federal Building. Larry was still in. He greeted Bob warmly and invited him to have dinner with him. tt a a THEY ate at a pleasant little restaurant near the Federal building, and there Bobby guilefully told Larry just enough about Mark Hopkins’ mysterious trip to whet the Federal man’s interest. He did not tell him of having found the pecu-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

liar budding in the hollow off Pu-laski-rd, but he told him enough to convince him that he was on the trail of something. “That's fine,” said Larry. “As soon as you get anything definite, let me know’ so I can gat some of our men working on it. Ycu see, Bobby—all I want from you is just a hint; no more than that. We can run it down. If our suspicions are correct, running the thing down may be rather dangerous, and I don't want you to run any risk of getting hurt. Will, you promise me to call me as soon as you have anything we can work on?” He looked at Bobby with his keen gray eyes and BobDy solemnly promised. He felt a trifle guilty about concealing his knowledge; but he was determined to vindicate himself in the elder man’s estimation for his lamentable flier in stolen bonds; and, besides, he rather enjoyed the thrill of amateur detective w’ork. Their food was served and they began to eat. Larry carved off a bite of steak and ate it thoughtfully; then he laid down his fork and knife and leaned forward confidentially. “I'm going to tell you something that you're not really entitled to know about,” he said. “I wouldn't do it, except that it concerns Jean.” Bobby looked up, startled. “We raided the apartment your friends the Lewises were occupying,” said Larry. “They’d got put before we got there, but we did get plenty of fingerprints. Today I got the identifications back from Washington, and I want you to know about them. “To begin with, your friend Lewis —the man who so kindly put that bond deal in your way—is a known criminal. He used to be a confidence man, out wrest—specialized in selling bogus oil and gold stocks, and did time in Colorado for swindling, some six or eight years' ago. A year or so ago he fell in with the Red Jackson gang of bank robbers. Since then he's been one of Jackson’s right-hand men. And this may interest you—it seems he specializes in disposing f the ‘hot’ securities that the gang picks up in its travels.” He looked at Bobby with a grimly humorous expression. Bobby could only murmur, “Good Lord!” a a a LARRY went on, “But that isn’t the most important part. It’s this chap Harkins I wanted to tell you about, because he’s been seeing more or less of Jean, I guess. Listen. (To Be Continued)

DE PAUW PLANS ARMISTICE DAY PEAGEPROGRAM Student Speakers to Urge Neutrality ‘Because of Crisis.’ Timet Special GREENCASTLE, Nov. B.—An allstudent peace program is to be held at DePauw University Monday in observance of Armistice Day. Speakers are to be Jack Wallace, senior class president, and Paul Yinger. Greencastle. Ralph Roessler, chairman of a campus committee sponsoring the event, has announced that it had

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been planned now “because of the international crisis we are facing.'' Passage of the Nye-Kvale bill making R. O. T. C. training optional instead of compulsory, and furtherance of American neutrality in the Italo-Ethiopian conflict, will be urged. . BLOOMINGTON. Ind., Nov. 8 Dr. Ernest Fremont Tittle, Evanston, 111., is to address Indiana University students at an Armistice Day convocation Monday. Dr. Tittle, a chaplain of the American Expeditionary Force during the World War, is to speak on “The Path to Peace.” robs good Samaritan Boy, Given Warm Shelter, Loots Gas Station Till. A, boy asked John D. Bushwiler last night if he could go into his gas station at 69 N. West-st and get warm and Mr. Bushwiler said he could. While Mr. Bushwiler was busy at work outside the boy rifled : the cash drawer of $35 and disap- ; peared.

ARRANGE JOINT SERVICE Legion Posts to Honor Fireman Slain in World War. Joint Memorial services are to be held Sunday at 2 in Crown Hill

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! Cemetery by Indianapolis Firemen s | ar.d Madden-Nottir.gham Poets. ' American Legion, in honor of Robert Madder., only Indianapolis flre--1 man to lose his life during the World War. All Legionnaires and friends are urged to attend.