Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 213, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1935 — Page 8

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LEGION GROUP LAUNCHES NEW ESSAY CONTEST Constitution Topics Chosen for Pupils of 6 Public High Schools. Second annual Constitution Essay Contest in the six Indianapolis public High benools was launched today by Hayward-Barcus Post, 55, American Legion. .subjects on which pupils may '•rite a>e: "The Makers of the Constitution of the United States,'’ or ‘‘The Compromise in the Federal Constitution,” or ”H< May I Support the Federal Constitution?” An individual medal is to be awarded the pupil writing the winning essay in each school and the high school of the winning pupil in the final judging is to be given temporary possession of a large silver loving cup, awarded by the post. The medals and cup now are on display m a window of the Indianapolis Power A: Light Cos. Tech Pupil Won Last Year Winning essay in each high school must be in possession of Russell V. Sigler, Shortridge history instructor, by Jan. 31. Technical High School won possession of the cup last year. Miss Mary Mae Endlsey contributing the winning essay. School committees, named by the principals, were announced by Arthur F. G. Gemmer, post Americanism committee chairman, as follows: Technical: Preliminary judging committee, O. S. Flick, chairman; Miss Mabel Goddard and Charles C. Martin; final judging committee. Miss Eva H. Lycan, chairman; Bjorn Winger. Miss Jeanne B. Eastland, Ralph O. Minnick and William Shirley. Broad Ripple: Edgar Stahl, chairman; Miss Ruth B. Carter, and Miss Margaret Coombs. Crispus Attacks Committee Crispus Attucks: Mrs. T. R. Wharton, Mrs. H. H. Anderson, Mrs. N. Powell, Miss Mary Thornton, J. C. Carroll and liven Armstrong. Manual Training: Rules and regulations, Ross Williams, chairman; Miss Adelaide Thale and Miss Rosana Hunter; judging, Mrs. Ada Bing, chairman; John Moffat and Miss Elizabeth Hodges. George Washington: Miss Martha Dorsey. Charles H Money. Arthur Shumaker, Lowell H. Good and Miss Myrtle M. Johnson, chairman. Shortridge:Advisory, Joel W. Hadley. chairman; A1 J. Kettler and Willard Cambold: judging, J. C. ; Beane, chairman; Mrs. Winifred Craig and Miss Ruth O'Hair. ELECTS IRA HOLLAND Indiana Field Examiners Association Makes Him President. Ira Holland, Indianapolis, has been elected president of the Indiana Field Examiners Association, succeeding Jack Hayes. Other new officers are Walter D. Schreader, Evansville, vice president; Ure M. Frazer, Indianapolis, .irut iriiy treasurer, and George Carlisle. Waldron; Joshua Crandall, New Albany and Edward Scott, Columbia City, directors. HONOR UNION PLUMBER James L. Kinney Presented With Gold Membership Card. James L. Kinney, a charter member of Plumbers Union. Local No. 73, was honored for 44 years’ continuous union activity at a local meeting last night in Plumbers Hall. A former chairman of the Central Labor Union, Mr. Kinney was presented with a gold life membership card by the plumbers’ local, JOB COURSE AT Y. M. C. A. Six Weeks' Campaign Planned by Earl Schmidt. “Helps in Finding a Job” is the, subject of a six weeks' course to be ! conducted at the V. M. C. A. by Earl Schmidt, Hamilton. Harris Cos. sec-retary-treasurer. The discussion has been designed especially for recent high school graduates. Black-Draught’s Refreshing Relief Don't neglect constipation! Tak* Black-Draught at the first sign you need something to help restore regular elimination. “I feel like Black-Draught is a mighty good medicine and don't know how I would get along without it.” writes Mrs W. D. Jowers, of Minden. La. ”1 take it for constipation and biliousness. When I let myself get constipated, I feel dull, sluggish and drowsy: can't settle down to my work for that tired feeling. I take a small dose of BlackDraught at bedtime for several nights and soon feel fine. If I am bothered with a tight feeling, or gas on the stomach, I take a pinch of Black-Draught after meals.” Black-Draught costs less than most medicines for constipation. Get a 25-cent package, today!— Advertisement. Fiery. Smarting CHAFED SKIN „ \ # It is rnsy to re- \ M lieve this torment 1 m and restore comfort ■ I to the irritated skin 1 I with soothing Resinol. I V Its action is quick, J % and it is safe for a tenderest skins. M ISA VE MOSEY j OS QUALITY PAINT at the 1 \l\ WCI l\l\! CO % FACTORY'I STORES - lIUMI *IM

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BFGIN HFRF TODU Dunn, secretary Don?.:d MonIT delays h*r answer when Booby *va!ac*v automobile salesman, a*** her to marrv him. •V rhp Golden F*aher nigh*, club ah* meets Sandy Harkins whose business connection ; vague. Sandv introduces Bobby and Jean *o a Mr and Mrs Lewi*. Bobby sells some bonds for Lewis, who buys a car Larry o>nn. Federal az*nt. is trailing A.nav Lewis bank robber H* learns about th* bond transaction and qupstiOn* Bobby. The bond-, wer* stolen Larrv believes th* car Lewis bought is armored Bobby undertakes to And out. Tean zoes home for a acation Sandv romp- to ree her and she agrees to a secret engagement The har.k of which her father is president is robbed. Larry starts a search for th- robbers. NOW GO ON WITH THF STORY CHAPTER THIRTY TT did not occur to Jean Dunn—- •*- until it was far too late to make any difference—that the robbery of her father's bank was to be a profoundly important event in her own life. Her father wrote to her about it, and she saw accounts of it in the newspapers; but although Jean shivered pleasantly as she read, and wrote a long letter to her father bubbling over with thankfulness that he had not been hurt—still, it did not seem to be anything that really tourhed her. A few days after it had happened she was going her way just as she had before. She had other things to think about. She had promised Sandy to become his wife, at some hazy, unsettled time in the future. She had spent a miserably unhappv evening explaining to Bobby Wallace that she could not be his wife—and the misery had flared up into an outright quarrel when Bobby, learning at last that she loved Sandy, had tried, once again, to tell her that Sandy was a shady character. Afterward, to justify herself in her own mind, Jean had assured herself that she did love Sandy, deeply and truly, and that her affair with Bobby had been, after all, only a boy-and-girl romance. With things standing thus, four or five days after the holdup, she answered her desk buzzer one morning and went into Mr. Montague’s office with pencil and notebook in hand, expecting to take dictation. Instead, she found Mr. Montague looking at her with grave sympathy. Sandy Harkins, he told her, had been painfully hurt in an accident. She gasped with surprise. No, Mr. Montague did not know any of the details—it was a traffic accident, apparently, somewhere down in the southwestern corner of the s tate, Sandy was in a critical state, and he wanted Jean to come to him. Long afterward, Jean remembered an odd thing about here own emotions at, this moment. She remembered that instead of feeling a sudden outpouring of racking anxiety and fear she had been chiefly concerned with the thought, My lover has been hurt and he needs me—l mustn’t let him down, i mustn't?

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fail to be properly worried about him.” In other words, she felt the need of emotion, rather than emotion itself. But it was a long time before she bothered to analyze hei feelings in this way. tt O tt TkJTR. MONTAGUE was asking her if she wanted to go to see Sandy—she nodded, her face pale—well, then, it just happened that Mr. Montague had a small sheaf of pap°rs which he was anxious to get into Sandy’s hands. If Jean wished, she could take a day or two off. go down and see him, and take the papers with her. That. :aid Mr. Montague, would be more satisfactory, as far as he was concerned, then entrusting them to the mails, anyway. Would Jean care to do it? . She would; so Mr Montague made the arrangements. Sandy, it seemed, was in a little totvn named Midlothian—far off on a branch railroad line, inconvenient to reach by train. By a lucky chance, Jean's friend. Mrs. Lewis, was staying at the town of Plainfield, which was halfway between Dover and Midlothian. If Jean cared to take a train to Plainfield, her employer would see that Mrs. Lewis met her there with an auto and drove her the rest of the way to Midlothian. And now if Jean wanted to hurry home and pack an overnight bag, he would prepare the sheaf of papers that she was to take to Sandy, and she could catch a train well before noon. a a a SO it happened that at about 2 o'clock that afternoon Jean Dunn got off a train at the junction city of Plainfield and met Eve Lewis, who Was waiting on the platform. Eve led her to a roadster, parked beyond the station, and slipped behind the wheel. As Eve started the car. Jean turned to her anxiously. 'Have you—have you seen Sandy?” she asked. ‘Sure,” said Eve. "Where’d you think I’ve been?” ‘How is he? Is he badly hurr?" “Not so badly. Just a bullet through the shoulder.” “A bullet!” Her voice was so startled, and her face, when Eve glanced over at her, was so suddenly white and shocked, that Eve bit her lip and fruitlessly wished she had not spoken. "Why, yes,” she said, somewhat uncertainly. “I thought you knew.” Jean was still staring at her. “No,” she said, her voice hardly above a whisper, “I thought he had been in an accident.” Eve smiled, rather grimly. "He has,” she said. “I mean an auto accident.” "Oh.” Eve paused. ‘‘No—” Jean’s hand was on Eve's forerm.

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"Eve. please tell me what happened.” Eve disengaged her arm. Watch out—you'll make me swerve off the road,” she said. Then, more gently, she added, "I don't know the details. Jean. We’ll be there in an hour or so. Then you can ask him. I really don't know.” a a a THEY drove on, with Jean huddled in her corner of the seat in a dismayed, bewildered silence. Once she asked, almost timidly, 'Do you know what—what kind of an accident it was? And Eve answered, ‘‘Honest, Jean, I don't. I didn't mean to startle you. Anyhow, don't worry we'll be there pretty soon.” There was another silence—a rather long one. Once Jean asked if Eve's husband was with Sandy in Midlothian. Learning that he was, she asked, “Are they in business together? I've always wondered. You know, I never did quite understand just what Sandy does.” Eve looked at her, wide-eyed, and seemed about to speak; but she checked herself, smiled softly, as if she had some private joke, and at last added, "Yes, they’re more or less in business together.” And a minute later she unexpectedly reached over and patted Jean's hand and said, “You're a good kid, Jean.” Late in the afternoon they passed through Midlothian, a tiny, sleepy farming community. A short distance beyond the town Eve turned off the road into a little lane and abruptly pulled to a halt before a pleasant white farm house. “Here we are, kid,” she said. There was a lawn in front of the house, an orchard on one side of it and a corn field on the other. A man came down from the porch A Clear Complexion Ruddy cheeks —sparkling eyes—most women can have. Dr. F. M. Edwards for 20 years treated scores of women who suffered from constipation. During these years he gave his patients a substitute for calomel made of a few well-known vegetable ingredients, naming them Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. Know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the bowels, causing a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter in one’s system. If you liavp a pals face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches. a listless, no-good feeling, all nut of sorts, inaetive bowels, take one or two of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets at night for a week and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women and men take Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets —now anti then—to keep fit. 15c, 30c and fiOc.—. Advert isement.

to greet them. He was Mr. Lewis, Eve's dapper little husband. “How's Sandy?” Jean asked anxiously. as he nodded to her. H? grinned and said, "Oh, he's dying—to see you.” Then he stopped grinning, looked at the heavy manila envelope which Mr. Montague had given her to take to Sandy, and said, "Got it?” She looked down. following his glance, and saw the envelope in her hand. She had been unconscious of its existence. “Oh, yes,” she said. “I don't know what it is. but it seems to be important. Mr. Montague told me to give it to Sandy.” "Yeah,” said Lewis. "Well, come on in and see him.” n a a HE led them into the house. A stout, red-faced woman in a faded house dress was setting the table in the dining room; as they passed Lewis called to her to set

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two more places. Then they went up a flight of stairs and entered a cool, pleasant bedroom; and there, propped up among pillows in a big bed. lay Sandy.

Jean ran to him, bent over, and kissed him. He reached up with one brawny arm and hugged her; and as she raised her head he looked fondly into her face, the old, half-mocking light dancing in his eyes again, and she felt her doubts and worries fall away. "So there you are.” he said. “I knew you'd get here.” RHEUMATIC Pains —Agony Due to Excess Uric Acid One supremely good, swift acting prescription for rheumatism, neuritis, sciatica and lumbago, when caused or aggravated hy excess uric acid is well known to druggists all over America as Allenru —often the pain and agony are gone in 4$ hours- you'll make no mistake when von put your faith in this safp and swift acting prescription ask f or and get S ounces preseription Allenru.—Advertisement.

All she could find to say was, "Sandy—are you badly hurt?” He grinned, and pointed to a bandage that swathed his left =houlder, visible beneath his pajama coat. "I'm all right.” he said. "Kind of sore, but that's all.”

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“How did it ever happen, Sandy?” He grinned again. “Oh,” he said, "another guy and I were out doing some shooting and he just pointed his gun in the wronj direction ” (To Be Continued)