Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 July 1936 — Page 13

FROM CITY WIN * SCHOLARSHIPS

Butler University Announces Awards for School's Upper Classmen.

Fifty-two Indianapolis students are among the 67 Butler University upper classmen who have been awarded scholarships and grants-in-aid at the’ Fairview institution for the 1936-37 school year. Prof. A. Dale Beeler, university scholarship committee chairman, announced the successful applicants today. The awards will become effective Sept. 10 when the university opens for its eighty-second annual school year. ; Local students on the list were: Winifred Andrews, Lucinda Barlow, .» Sarah Frazer, Francis J. Funke, Eugene Grueling, Betty Lutz, Leona Nelson, William Nelson, Edith Marie Overtree, Dorcthy Reasoner, Louise Rhodehamel, Charles L. Smith, Barbara Ballinger, Charlotte Cox, . Lee Brayton, Joy Dickens and Grace Fairchild.

Mary Alice Hicks, Virginia Hoffman, Roy Johnson, Anna Louise Lorenz, Donnie Jean McKechnie, Elizabeth Meyers, Marjorie Newman, Frances Patton, Caroline Rehm, Mildred Rugenstein, Marjorie Schoch, Ina Stanley, Dorothy Wasson, Wilma Williams, Edwin Allender, Robert Bill, Helen Ellis, Janet Ernst, Barbara French and Hildred Hume.

Alexander Kahn, Lorita Kastings, Claudene Kimes, Marie Kuntz, Lois LaFara, Ruth Luckey, Margaret McKenzie, Mary Lou Over, Mildred Poland, Betty Schissel, Marie Schubert, Barney Stephens, Thomas Swindoll, Bernard Weber anc Charles Weber. ~ Out-of-town students who will receive the awards are Geraldine Broyles, Pittsboro; Marilynn - Knauss, LaGrange; Robert Ake, Fort Wayne; Marjory Andrews, Huntington; Richard Davis, Logansport; Rosemary, Dobson, New Augusta; Viola Williams, Brookville; Margaret Amos, Rushville; James Comstock, Noblesville; Robert Conreaux, Anderson; Raymond Due, Sandborn; Martha Finney, Cambridge Springs, Pa.; Elizabeth Henderson, Chicago; Mary J. Gatten, Columbus, and Harriet Lindley, Eilwood.

. NEW LOCAL OFFICE TO TRANSFER HELP

Resettiement Bureau to Employ Few Indianapolis Persons.

Few, if any, jobs will be open when the Resettlement Administration regional office is moved

here about Aug. 1 from Champaign, 111, William Lightfoot, personnel director, said today. “Practically all the regional staff specialists expect to transfer to Indianapolis,” he said. “Therefore, Po is no reason for Indianapolis rsons seeking jobs to write the Champaign office now for employment, If additional help is needed ater, Indianapolis persons will be ' notified so they may make application.” , Mr. Lightfoot's statement was prompted by a flood of applicafons from Hoosier job seekers, he aid. s

HUNTS BROTHER HERE

Woman ‘Seeks Trace of John D Orr 34 Years After Separation.

Mrs, James B, Fyfe, Washington, D. C., today was in Indianapolis seeking her brother, John D. Orr, whom, she said, she hasn't seen for 34 years. | She said she last saw her brother in Indianapolis :when she was 10. After their separation she lost trace of: his whereabouts.

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE LAIRE went to Eb and laid her 4 hand on his arm to attract his attention. He was evidently in a half-frenzied condition. “Eb,” she said. “Tell us where you've been. What happened?” : Again the menacing finger pointed accusingly at Susie. “Ask her,” Eb said grimly. “She can tell you

{how she brought me food down in

that room of Lyman Fosdick's. But oll the time I was tied, hands dnd feet. All I could do was kick against the wall in hope some one would hear me. For a while I thought some one did hear me, but I guess I was wrong. If the tree hadn’t been struck I'd been there yet. Sawed the ropes off on a bit ot sharp stone.” “Lyman Fosdick’s room!” began Claire. “Eb, was ii under the pine tree? B8it down there and tell us.”

“Yes. Where Lyman Fosdick used to keep his blasted jewels,” the old man explained. “I allers said they'd bring him no good, nor Susie titner.” All eyes turned to Susie, but she only tossed her head. “He’s out of his mind. T've said so before and now you can see for yourself, He—"

B'S cracked voice rose almost to a scream as he sprang to his feet. “Then ask-him!” He pointed at Nick Baum. “Ask him what's between him and this wicked sister 0’ mine!” Susie shrank back. “No. It ain't so! Nicky never had nothing to do with it. I was the one wanted to find the jewel. I—" “But he’s the man who pushed me down the mine shaft,” broke in Pat. “When he offered to light my cigaret just now, I noticed the little finger of his hand is cut off at the second joint. And the guy who fought with me in the tunnel was shy a joint of one of his little fingers.” For a moment Nick Baum’s handsome face held a suspicion of fear. Then he turned to Claire. “Is this the way you usually treat your guests? Of course it is perfectly absurd—" Dan Dallas unexpectedly took command of the situation. “Not so absurd as it seems, Baum, when they know that you're Susie’s son.” One hand was goncealed in- his pocket, and now that pocket showed a menacing bulge. “The time Susie spent in the city when she was young was long enough for her to have a son by some unknown father. It was not hard to discover that that son was still living, and now, of course, grown. That made a workable basis for the theory that Baum and the son were the same person. Then when I discovered Susie was hunting for another treasure of Lyman Fosdick’s, what more natural than that she should enlist her son’s help?” ” ” ” IERCELY Susie faced Dan Dallas. “If Nicky is my son, that doesn’t prove he’s done anything wrong, does it?” she demanded. “Nothing, except attempting murder in the case of both these young men,” Dallas told her. “Only luck and an unusual series of events foiled him each time. With the apprenticeship in crime he served in the underworld of an eastern city, it’s hard to say what would have happened if he had succeeded in his plan to become master cf this place.” . Claire shuddered as she looked at Nick’s dark face which had lost all its handsome charm. “Now see how you've messed things up!” he snarled at Susie. “You and your talk about the damned jewel. It is hadn't

finality of a curtain line. Susie gave one agonizing cry. Claire looked at her half curiously. Of course Susie would scream like that. Claire herself was only conscious of a strange feeling of relief. Later, with the remembrance of Susie’s agonized weeping still ringing in her ears, Claire stood in the library of the House of Long Shadows where Pat and Bob and Dan Dallas were grouped about the fireplace that bore the sign of the broken arrow. “Uncle Lyman must have known about Nick,” Claire said in a low voice. “Maybe that was why he suspected Smsie would not be satisfied with the money he left her, and might try to find this last treasure. He knew, too, that she would never look in books. So he left them specifically to me.” Dan Dallas walked to the bookcase and looked at it closely. “Has it always stood out from the wall like this?” he asked. . “Why, no!” Clair answered. “It must have moved. Maybe when I was fussing with it—" . ” ” ”

‘HE did not finish, for at the S pressure of Dan's fingers, the bookcase swung slowly forward, showing a doorway with a flight of narrow stairs leading downward. «To the secret room, Ill bet! Come on!” Pat said excitedly, and started down, Another very low door 3: the opened directly in e BO place Eb had described, with the gaping hole which the tree roots had torn open at one side. This second door was concealed by an old-fashioned safe which stood in front of it, and so close that only an opening wide enough to admit a person could be made. “Um, this connection with the library is evidently one thing Susie did not know about,” Dallas decided. “No, she came through the cellar. Look at that, will you!” Dallas threw the ray from his electric torch on the opposite wall. : The shock of the tree's fall had wrenched the big, wooden cupboard in the cellar room from its place, disclosing the solid back of the shelves, hinged to swing open to make another entrance into the secret room. “The old boy went in for hidden doors in a big way, didn’t he?” re-

marked Pat. “This place must have |’ been built when the house was, and |.

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“YP UL there's nothing in the safe

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» ” . now! Even the door is unlocked,” said Claire, disappointedly. “It might make a fine prison for Eb, but—-" Log F of “He said he heard me in the tunnel.” Pat took the torch and went over to inspect the outside. “Why, of course, -he did—see here!” Only a thin wall of earth sepa-

other cut where Pat had dug his way out of the old mine. “And we're stiil directly under the house, the library and the cupo1a side,” Pat went on. “Do you suppose this is where he hid his wonderful jewel?” Clair: locked about her rather blankly. “Yes.” Bob Steelt answered positively. He hid been examining one of the walls. “See here, and there? There’s no telling how pure this stuff will run. Your uncle’s jew?l was a gold mine, Claire, and what

a mine!” : Hannah sniffed. “Your Uncle Lyman would be sure to go at it just

! “There’s still one thing that hasn't been explained,” Claire remarked. “The tapping noise I heard

that night I was up in Uncle

Lyman’s room.” “It was probably either Susie or Nick doing a little investigating on their own, Miss Fosdick,” said Dan Dallas. “Your party arriving unexpectedly must have added an extra spur to their efforts. Baum was undoubtedly the one who put the log across the road to block your way. Didn't he leave before you did?” “1 suppose he did,” she answered. “1 stopped to talk to Hannah and change my clothes. Yes, he would have had plenty of time to be quite a way ahead of me, And he knew I was coming.”

» » #

“o\NE thing I still can’t under-

“If he was going to marry you, why did he bother to pull all this stuff, with the danger of getting caught?” He looked at her closely as he put the question. For a mniute she did not. reply. Then she looked straight back at him. “Nick knew he would never marry me, I think, Pat.” “Weil, this is no place for a sick man. Mr. Steele, you better be getting back where it's warm,” Hannah’s practical voice broke in. Without more ado she herded Bob and Dan Dallas out of the room and up the steps. Pat caught Claire’s hand and drew her back for a minute. “You mean you didn’t love him, Claire?”

he asked eagerly.

“How could I after I met you, Pat? Oh, do I have to throw myself at you?” Pat's arms closed about her, and

rated the secret room. from the],

that way. Gettin’ us all ‘most

stand, Claire,” insisted Pat.

Three Cases Are Continued at Hearings in City

and a Alling gation at 2947 W. 16thSt.

: ! Charges of visiting house a gaming

lingsworth, 19, of 16 E. Arizona-st; Harry Wong, 21, of 722 S. Noble-st, and Clifton , Whitley, 19, of 742

Three Others Discharged

Jacob Chenoweth, 37, of 1346 Kappes-st, and Joseph P. Lynch, 37, of 2116 W. Morris-st, accused of keeping a gaming house, and Roy Woodall, 47, of 1438 Hiatt-st, who

his lips crushed hers. But in a minute he reminded her, “I'm poor and you're rich now that you've got the mine.”

“But the mine won't buy me happiness, and if I haven't that, I'd rather the old tree was still making it the House of Long Shadows, with Uncle Lyman’s jewel hidSep under its roots. Please, Pat, don’t stand there and say you won't have me, just because I've got something that was almost the end of us all.” She smiled and added, “I never thought I'd have to do the proposing when I got a husband.” Pat grinned. SE ” s »

HEY walked out through the cellar and, as they came slowly up the steps, a shaft of moonlight touched the cupola of the old house with a silvery glow. Claire looked up at it with a smile. “See, Pat, dear, the shadows have gone. From now on it’s going to be the house of long life and happiness.”

Greer-st. §

- THE END.

LEY

A rival who's trying to edge you out of the picture is apt to knife you.

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is alleged to have visited a gaming place, were discharged. Cases of Frank Dougherty, 61, and Frank Dougherty Jr. 28, both of 6106 E. 11th-st, and Frank Phelan, 32, of 1229 N. Pennsylvania-st, were continued to Aug. 21 when the complaining witness failed to appear. - Farb, Norton Kuffman, an employe, and Morris Hollowitz, visitor, were arrested and released on bond. A race horse machine, a poker slot machine and 77 bottles of beer were seized on W. 16th-st. Carl Hines, 27, manager of the place, was charged with violation of slot machine and beverage laws.

Chargeseof gaming and congregating were placed against five alleged “curbstone bookies” yesterday. They were: Thomas Mayes,

Negro, 444 N. Senate-av; Gene In- |

gall, of Sullivan, Ind.; A. E. Grisley, 751 E. McCarty-st; Robert Risley, 1204 Hoefgen-st, and Abraham Klish, 3055 Ruckle-st.

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BY 3 GROUP Universal, Kiwanis, Lions Clubs Aid City at Roberts Building. The Universal, Kiwanis and Lions

Clubs have made gifts to the new

James E. Roberts School for crippled children, now under construc-

{tion at 10th and Oriental-sts.

A. B. Good, business director of the public schools, reported to the School Board at its meeting last night that the Universal Club donated six etchings by George Mess, Indiana artist, which won the Frank S. Cummingham prize in the Hoosier Salon at Chicago. The Kiwanis Club is to spend more than $600 to carry out appointments of the dining room, and the Lions Club is to donate approximately $200 to equip the lounge with draperies and furniture.

Appreciation Is Expressed

School Board members expressed appreciation of the gifis. Several weeks ago the Rotary Club announced that it would equip the medical unit of the new school. The James E. Roberts School is to be a $240,000 structure, constructed with funds provided by a bequest of Mrs. Roberts, the Federal government and a scaool bond issue. The School Board last night approved an increase in the salary of the secretary from $3300 to $3600.

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