Indianapolis Times, Volume 32, Number 204, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1920 — Page 8
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Society fflews
BY HAZEL BYE. Mrs. Ernest Wood of East Fall Creek boulevard entertained this afternoon with a luncheon bridge party in honor of her house guest, Miss Marian Wood of Sandusky, 0., and for Miss Gertrude Welch of Cincinnati, who is visiting Mrs. Clark Hodges. The rooms were attractively arranged with holiday decorations and the covers were marked with poinsettias. The guests included Miss Louise Mathews, Miss Katherine Morris, Miss Ethel Peterson, Miss Gladys Huey, Miss Opal Maddox, Miss Laura Cleveland, Miss Ruth Davidson, Miss Josephine Elliott, Miss Loretta Kane and Mrs. Hodges. • • • Otto Frenzel will give a dinner tonight at the Woodstock club. * • * Mr. and Mrs. Laurance Hunter will go Monday to Cleveland, 0., where they will remain for a week. * * * Miss Anna Louise Griffith, 1434 North Delaware street, will depart the first of the week for Pine Manor school at Wellesley, Mass. * • * Mrs. Ernest Clifford Barrett, 3173 North Delaware street, entertained Friday afternoon with a tea for Mrs. James j Pearson, who was Miss Mildred Barrett before her recent marriage, and for Mrs. Robert Barrett Evans, who was Miss Mary Johnson of Richmond. Christmas greenery was used in the decorations and the coffee table was adorned with a basket of roses, poinsettias and white narcissuses, and lighted with red candles. Mrs. David Layman and Mrs. Eleanor Harvey presided over the coffee table, and they were assisted by Mrs. Frank Hamilton, Mrs. Lawrence Barrett, the Misses Margaret, and Mary Hamilton and Miss Mary Hogan of Cleveland. Mrs. Charles Wiltsie and Mrs. Asher Evans presided at the punch table in the sun room. Mrs. Barrett was assisted In receiving by Mrs. Edward Evans, Mrs. James Cobb, Mrs. Morton Pearson. Mrs. E. C. Fletcher and Miss Cora fc letcher. Among the guests were Mrs Harris Smith of Washington. Mrs J. Hogan of Cleveland and Mrs. Farmer Cameron of New York. • • • Miss Josephine Jaspers has returned from a two weeks' stay with friends in New York. She will go, Monday to Chicago to spend a week with Miss Edit i Lowery, formerly city. The women’s auxiliary to the Thirtyeighth division will hold Its regular meeting Wednesday afternoon at o’clock at the Chamber of Commerce. * ♦ • The pledges of Beta Zeta chapter Delta Tau Delta, will give a dance Monday night at their fraternity house, 15 South Ritter avenue. • • The Academy of Music will give a concert Thursday night, Jan. 8, at 8.15 o’clock when the Flonzaiey quartet will be presented. This concert is for members only, and will not be followed by dancing. * • * The regular monthly board meeting of the Woman's Franchise League of In- i diana, which was to have been held Jan. 6, at the Claypool hotel, has been post- : poned. However, it will be held at an early date. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Davidson have | come from Cincinnati to spend the week , end at the home of Mrs. Inna Kuhns. j * * • Miss Ida Conway and Miss Florence j Mathers have returned from a week’s j stay in Chicago, with friends. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Neil have returned from a visit with friends in j Peoria, 111. • • • The Red Cross teaching center will resume Its advanced classes next week. Registration is progressing for the new classes to be formed. * * • Mr. and Mrs. Charles Whitaker have as their guests for the week end Mr. and Mr-3. John L. Lewis of Chicago. * Miss Josephine Rice entertained last evening with a “500” party in honor of her guest. Miss Dorothy Minsinger of Detroit. The decorations Were carried out in the holiday colors. Twenty guests were present. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cramer have gone to Detroit, Mich., where they will spend MOTION PICTURES.
. | |yj NEVER A FILM LIKE THISStory of Dolores, the swimming girl of the Canadian wilds, whose love of animals makes them her friends and protectors from men of prey more heartless than the beasts themselves. H “Back to God’s Country” : H1 |H A Tale of Love and Villainy by Janies OliverCurwood Featuring the brilliant and ______________ § gu daring swimming star , n _ . ~ NELL SHIPMAN SGiIDSU COlliedjf Winter scenes and Wapl's great fight for HI I nfjii'n TollfUr" Dolores’ life actually photographed away up In H LuUjf u IdllUl pH THE ARCTIC CIRCLE Featuring (North of 53) Ford Sterling, Harriet Ham--16 Varieties of Wild Animals The Greatest Dog Figh i of the Screen and the sennett
several weeks with Mrs. Cramer's cousin, Mrs. Fern Meyers. * * * Miss Helen Coffin has as her guest for the week end Miss Opal Reid of Terre Haute. * * V Miss Anna Louise Griffith, 1434 North Delaware street, will depart the first of the week for Pine Manor school at Wellesley, Mass. * * * Miss Leona and Miss Katherine Beaver, 430 Orange street, entertained last night ■with a dinner. The guests Included Rev. Charles Good of San FTanciseo, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stout, Miss Ella Strelow, Miss Dorothea and Mi3s Esther Taylor, Miss Lucia Frank, Miss Martha Meyer, Miss Lorene Williams, Mr. and Mjv;. Frank Kingore, Anthony Horner, Kay Lockrock and Walter Strelow. * * * The Phi Sigma sorority will hold Its next meeting Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. F. Douglas Bash, 2906 Washington boulevard. * * * Webb Egbert and daughter Ruth, who have been the guests of Dr. and Mrs. John Egbert during the holidays, have returned to their home in Cameron, K”s. * * • Mrs. V. B. Sharritfs, 2938 North Talbott street, is spending some time In New York. * * • Miss Helen Menter has gone to Cleveland, 0., where she will be the guest of Miss Dorothea Cooke for two weeks. Bertha B. Wacker, 2063 Parkway boulevard, has departed for Panama, where she will visit her sister, Mrs. Emma Firestone, at Chrlstobal. • • • Friends of Miss Carolyn Herdrich entertained with a luncheon at the Lincoln hotel, followed by a theater party at Keith’s this afternoon. Miss Herdrich leaves for Long Beach. Cal., Tuesday. The Misses Gladys Watkins, Dorothy Davis, Flora Prange, Helen and Elizabeth Redmond, Edith and Ethel Meier, Mary Crooke, Leona Chillson, Doris Jones, and Mrs. R. H. Gilmore, Mrs. Susan Brown, Mrs. M. T. Wiggers and Mrs. Ed Carson made up the party. • * • The Daughters of the Union will meet Monday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock with M rs. Charles te. Kregelo, when Mrs. Thomas Bosson will give a talk and there will be a musical program. • • Mrs. T. J. Owen entertained last night at her home, 3920 Washington boulevard, with a pretty dancing party in honor or Mr. and Mrs. W. ,T. Hogan and Mist, Mary and Miss Frances Hogan of Cleve-
MOTION PICTURES. U.IDIY—MON. „T,YL jryfeMsJXJ rUES. and WED. A PICTURE THAT STIRS THE BLOOD BEATRI2 fKmmmMm IjyjigM ANO HEft OWN COM**** In Which a Dance Kail Girl Fights Agalns* Great Odds for Love job mb The Girl Stab Her False Lover Y® I 1 The Pursuit Through the Mountains a ■ The Fight to Save the Man She Loves VP Li Li -^ e Due * With Knives—Father Against Son g SNUB POLLARD ‘THE FLOOR BELOW’
land, O. Christmas greenery waß attractively arranged throughout the rooms. • * * Miss Louise Sargent has gone to Chicago, where she will spend a month with her aunt, Mrs. John L. Kirke, formerly of this city. CONFESSIONS OF A BRIOE What was behind that Miraculous Painting in the hacienda chapel. The hacienda consisted of a cluster of buildings erected in different centuries. They were connected by arcades and tunnels, bridges and galleries. The or’glnal structure belonged to the tlm : of the Spanish conquerors, tradition said. The exquisite chapter with its miraculous portrait was the chief glory of the place. Until Ccrtets had taken possession of the property, the chapel had been a place of pilgrimage for tourists In Mexico. Like Lourdes and St. Anne Beaupre, it had its history of miraculous cures. Originally, It had been a small private chapel designed exclusively for the usecf the owner and his family It overlooked one corner of the church, and it was elevated like a mezzanine floor. What was below it? I had never considered that point. What was above it? What was behind the miraculous painting? Mystery, at least. Danger? Who could decide that without investigating? It was several days before I felt strong enough to undertake an investigation on my own account. I preferreo to pick a time when Certeis and Don Manuel were away from home. Such a time came at the dusk of a December day. 1 took Bob's flashlight from the desk in his room and followed the corridor lending to the famous chapel without a vestige of fear in my heart. The chapel was as cold as a cave when : I entered. I was glad tlat I had put j oa a long warm cloak. Dim lights burned in many corners of the chnpel. They did little to illuminate the place, but 1 gazed on them with great Interest. The flame which they carried hud come down, from taper to taper, from candle to candle, for many hundred years I I walked softly down the short aisle of the chapel and dropped into a front pew. Below the tryptleh or threo-pan-
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1320.
eled altar piece, the candles flared softly. With what pride Donna Camilla had shown me the picture of the donor sue bud told me that it had been painted centuries ago, and had bade me see that it was a perfect likeness of the present owner, Hamilton Certeis! And I hau agreed with her. I had seen, with my own eyes, that it was! Very coldly I regarded the donor’s portrait a second time from my seat in the front pew. It wasn’t a picture of Hamilton Certeis. It did not even suggest Certeis! I rubbed my eyes and
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IS IT SAFE TO MARRY A WOMAN I WITH RED HAIR? SEE ALICE BRADY I in “RED HEAD” I It's a rattling good story of New York life, with a titian-haired dancing girl as a heroine, who pf got married on a bet, and then instead of repenting it, set to work to make the best of it. * : • BROWN’S JAZZ QUINTET § ENTERTAINING INSTRUMENTALISTS OTHER ATTRACTIVE FEATURES I
U ll |i PICRcr-rH* PJCTURFS bb, “" ■i IIHFJLmiI4!H l | , Starting — t ii Sunday Leave Your Hear! at Home for Safekeeping The wonderfully sweet, vivacious, winsome CONSTANCE BINNEY star of the stage success, “39 East,” in an unusual photoplay based on Mrs. Fiske’s success, “ERSTWHILE SUSAN” a sweet, homely, happy story of a little Pennsylvania Dutch girl who rises from virtual slavery to the rank of an American queen. The play comes from HELEN R. MARTIN’S famous novel, "Barnabetta.” Success as book and stage play Is but Incidental history—CONSTANCE BINNEY in this role of a modern Cinderella will win the hearts of audiences everywhere, as she already has captivated supercritical Broadway. Liberty Quintette Tuneful, Tickling, Triumphant Entertainers American Harmonists PRIZMA—SNUB POLLARD COMEDY—PATHE NEWS
looked again. I saw a blue-eyed, curlyhaired, stout old gentleman clad In an elegant costume. I turned Bob’s modern flash full in the ancient person’s face and I feit decidedly disgusted. Evidently, Donna Camilla had made me see, on my first visit to the chapel, something which was not there at all! The likeness to Certeis had been the product of my own imagination, controlled by the old wlich’s suggestiont “That was a lesson I will not have to repeat,” I said to myself. Rather
than adding to my dismay, the discovery gave me- courage. I proceeded to study my surroundings. The chapel occupied one-third of the height of the church. It was the middle third. One ascended a stairway to enter it. What did it rest upon? What was between its carved ceiling and the roof of the church? I settled back in a corner of the pew and ~ried to work out this problem in- architecture. Suddenly, softly, a panel of carved wood near the altar opened slowly outward.
MOTION PICTURES. Norma Talmad^ All Week, Starting Sunday. Doors Open / \ ( B/F' , 'SSS^ Daily 11 A. M. Sunday 1:30 P. M. V Norma Talmadge’s First “First National Picture.” With this production Miss Talmadge joins the notable group of stars and directors who are producing pictures for the “First , y J y National Exhibitors’ Circuit," an association o America’s leading theaters, of which the Circle is .an Important factor. Henceforth ~ the pictures of Norma Talmadge will lie shown exclusively it \ fb<- Circle, ns are the productions of the other “First National" Ac stars mid directors, the list of wh’ch includes D. W. Griffith. ™ rSPT^TIII* Marshall Neilan. Charlie Chaplin, Constance Talmadge, Anita Mack Sennett Comedy “The Speak Easy”. A burlesque on the eternal pursuit of “Alcoholic Paralysis,” " j M with Charlie Murray, Marie Prevost and other f /| f I The Circlette News and Views. I j II .jjljl 'jS Estelle Carey, Soloist—Circle Orchestra. j j I ’ ’ 0 FAIRBANKS j / “WHEN THE CLOUDS ROLL BY” WmMMikA \ I | /
Some title for a picture, eh? Well, the story is every bit worthy of it. Charlie Ray is introduced in grimy overalls as a common laborer in an iron foundry. He saves the boss’s life, becomes the protege of a millionaire and has a red hot scrap to win the girl of his choice. Plenty of typical Ray humor, and < the popular star at his very best. £HikcunlM o & m™* FOX NEWS OTHER FEATURES M
like a door pushed by an unseen finger. As I expected, the old witch herself stepped from behind it. Without pausing, without looking to the right or left, she hurried out of the church! It was a most fascinating door. I regarded it much as Bluebeard’s wife must have regarded the door she hed been ordered not to unlock. I looked at it curiously a long time, then I went up to it and peered into the lighted space beyond it. Never had f seen such an exquisitely
decorated interior i Lured by its rare beauty, beyond the paneled door, stepped upon a spring, for irwra, without warning, the pane) bind me and snapped with a Hpfjifjpi. was locked. I could telk lng upon 1 had made myself a prisoner. BD And not a soul in the wide what had become of me!—Copyright, 1919, (To Be Continued.)
