Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1936 — Page 6
~ ‘Park, Fla;
Jury yesterday awarded $14,000 dam- ~ ages to Iva Howard in her suit | against Illmo Service Truckmg Co. for injuries suffered two years ago at Terre Hauté. The suit was ven-
er Members Honored y, State Organization at Wawasee.
Special
‘LAKE = WAWASEE, ily: 10—
condemnation of proposals
States
Speaking at the opening “ol the
fortieth annual association meeting,
“Mr. Gause, former Indiana Supreme
Court justice, defended the right
the Supreme Court to determine
‘the constitutionality of laws en-
with public
3 ‘questions should take the lead in
impressing the public with the soundness of American -constitutional government, he said. “Constitutional guaranties obviously are safer in the hands of an independent judiciary than if left to the will of Congress operating under pressure of political influ-
ence,” Mr. Gause said.
Charter Members Present Members of the association were
‘hosts to the 17 surviving charter . members of the association.
One hundred and ten barristers formed the association in 1893.
Ninety-three are deceased. Benja-
min Harrison, later President of the United States, was the first president of the association, Guest speakers are to be Prof. Roscoe T. Steffen, Yale University; Prof. Zechariah Chafee Jr., Harvard Law School, and George F. Mulligan, Chicago. The surviving charter members
are Ed K. Adams, Shelbyville; Sam=~
uel Ashby, Indianapolis; George W. Brill, Danville; T. B. Cunningham, Kentland; Frank E. Gavin, Indianapolis; Leonard J. Hackey, Winter William A. Hough, Greenfield; Frank McCray, Indianapolis; David A. Myers, Greensburg;
_ Samuel Parker, South Bend; Sam-
uel O. Pickens, William A. Pickens, Charles F. Remy and William L. ‘Taylor, all of Indianapolis; John W. Spencer, - Evansville; Theodore J. Louden, Bloomington, and William C. Smith, Delphi.
JUNIOR ‘Y’ MEMBERS OPEN CAMP TODAY
Week-End Outing at Speedway City Site Arranged.
Junior Y. M. C. A. members are to leave at 4 p. m. today for a week-end outing at a camp site near Speedway: City. Swimming, hiking and fishing are
‘scheduled, according to James
Stroud and V. D. Parker, who are 10 be in charge. Each boy is to carry camp equipment. Fresh food su es will be
‘taken to the camp daily and pre- ~ pared by the campers. Worship
service Sunday morning, and wa‘ter sports in the afternoon are to
~ close the outing.
JURY AWARDS DAMAGES
Woman Injured Two Years Ago Wins. $14,000 Suit.
Times Special - NOBLESVILLE, Ind, July 10.—A
ued here from Marion County.
Lowden to Stump for Landon ‘By United Press i TOPEKA, Kas. July 10.—Former v. Frank O. Lowden of Illinois ay promised to take the stump for the farm program offered by
v. Alf M. Landon of Kansas, Re- ||
.
Hannah, Claire’s housekeeper, arrives. Pat, trying to solve some of the myss teries of the place, wanders into a degserted mine. An unseen oppenent ate tacks him and Pat falls, unconscious. Claire sees Suzie enter the root cellar, but when she follows Susie seems to have vanished. Later: Claire questions her and is aware that Susie’s answers are unirue. Alone, in the library, Chiire hears a strange, tapping noise. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER EIGHT 8 Claire, thoroughly alarmed, listened to the tapping noise, other ears besides hers also noted the sounds. Pat had shaken loose from the unconsciousness caused by his sudden fall down the winze of the old mine. Painfully he fished . the . cigaret lighter from his pocket and flashed on the feeble ray of light. The damp walls of another tunnel met his gaze, branching off from the shaft down which he had fallen. Because ‘there was no hope of climbing the smooth, slimy walls of the raise without a ladder, he got up and started fo walk along this lower level. 2 For what seemed an interminable distance, he fumbled his way in the darkness to save his lighter. All sense of direction was lost in the blackness, but the footing seemed solid and fairly dry, and the air was still fresh, as though otner shafts cut in from above. Pat felt: certain he had come a long way and was" just flashing on the lighter again when the tapping sound that Claire was listening to in the library of the House of Long Shadows, came faintly to his ears. # # # HAT was it? Were his nerves beginning to crack from the | horrible darkness? Pat shook himself free from his dark thoughts and pressed forward. Presently he was coming into another, larger part of the mine. The place was quite dry and by carefully selecting fragments of wood, Pat soon had a bundle of torch material which would last for {some time. He also found a rusty pickax. re Carrying the tool, and with the aid of the heartening flame of the torch, he pushed on in the direction from which he had heard the sounds. At last he came to-a blank wall. Pat drove the pick into the wall to test its solidity. Immediately and so loudly that it made him an answering sound came
there! . . Halloo!” _.he shouted at the top of hig lungs. But only the words rushed back. For' an hour<=py-his—wateh (which, miraculously, had escaped injury) Pat dug ‘away at the tunnel's end. His watch told him it was almost evening, and there seemed no immediate prospect of being able to dig himself out. Wearily, his eyelids drooped shut. Just 40 winks—then he'd go at it again. ® sn rd >
EANWHILE, Claire had run
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tone was triumphant. “She's in cahoots. with that fellah and.don't you be forgettin’ it! I'll bet the two of ’em are on the track of the .same thing you're after, and, if the truth was known, she ain't any too glad to have you showin’ up here. Yet your Uncle Lyman -Jeft her ‘something when he died, didn't he?” 2 = 8 1 “ VERY generous ncome or the rest of her life,” answered Claire. “And he stipulated that Susie and Eb should have the care of this house, if we were agreeable. to that arrangement.” . “An’ yet she ain't satisfied!” Hannah snorted. “Do you think I ought to force her to tell what she knows?” Claire looked at the older woman with a perplexed frown. “I thought it might be better not to let her know I suspected anything.” Hannah pondered this for a minute, then nodded her head in agreement. “You stay with Mr. Steele and I'll go down and have a look around. If Dan Dallas is coming back from the village, he ought to be here mighty soon.” “If Pat would only come!” sighed Claire. She turned slowly back to the sickroom, and Hannah went downstairs, her large white apron rustling starchily as she strod: along. u t ” RUE to her prediction, Dallas’ tall figure could be seen swinging off the main road and coming toward the house. Hannah watched him a minute from the porcir. then, as though she had come to a sudden decision, she walked quickly to the aspen grove, broke off a small stick from one of the trees, and went on to his cabin.
she stepped behind it, unfastening her big apron. In a few minutes the man’s footsteps. crunched on the gravel outside. Then he stood framed in the open door. . As he turned to close it, with an astonishingly quick movement, Hannah's apron was thrown over his head. At the same time, Hannah's large foot tripped him. The nex{ instant he was on the floor with the wom-
Something hard prodded his chest as Hannah commanded sternly: “Lay still now, or you'll wish you had. Better do as I say!” “Okay.” Dan's . voice sounded smothered. “Only, for gosh ‘sake, get off my neck. I'll come. across You got the drop on me.”
OR a moment Hannah hesitated Then she got up and. pulled the apron off, holding if over her arm to conceal the aspen stick she carried. “Just keep both h ds on ®- She directed him to a chair at the table nearby Dallas looked at her with new respect. “That was mighty. neat
“What'd T tell you?” Hannah's
Opening the door of the cabin, |
an’s muscular weight on his head. |
had bhi bothering his rh
Hannah sniffed, : disbelievingly.
“And that would be when?”
“The afternoon Miss Fosdick and |
her friends came up here.” “An’ when’d you get it back?” |
“Susle’ brought 46 back ‘to. me
early the morning after Miss Fos- |.
dick had been fired at, though she
never mentioned it at the time.]
I didn’t know what had happened until the men and Eb: came {6 my cabin. They found the gun had been fired, but Eb didn’t have any chance to explain then. It was when he went down to the tool house after breakfast, that hé told me he hadn’t used the gun: himself, and didn't know who had. He'd left it out in the barn so it would be’ handy and near the chicken coops.”
“And you think that sounds like
a good alibi?” ‘asked ‘Hannah sarcastically. “No,” he answered. “1 don’t. Bit it’s the truth, just the same.” ; “Do you know Where Eb Spratt
# What a =. sider Wedding seen th
‘Dallas let..that go by without changing expression, only. shrugged his shoulders slightly. After waiting a minute for him to speak, Hannah backed toward the.door, evidently satisfied that she could get nothing further from him. - He watched her with a grin. “Good-by,” he said. “Come again. Maybe next time we'll both know more than we do now.”
the young: people alone, "Tenderly
Nick Baum took. both the girls
ne. you anything to tell me vet, ey he asked, looking deep down into her eyes. “I've missed you so.while you've been. Hiling from, me up here.”
(To Be Contianed)
Hoosier Dies in Wyoming Crash Times Special ROCK SPRINGS, Wyo., July-10.— W. H. Utter, 31, Cory, Ind. was
Rena ~OR answer Hannah slammed the, door behind her and’ walked away, feeling a little ridiculous.
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