Indianapolis Times, Volume 33, Number 52, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1920 — Page 7

.KEITH’S TO CLOSE ! FOR REMODELING Dark House at Theater From July 18 to Sept. 1. Improvement*, the eo*t of which are estimated at approximately SIO,OOO will he made in the B. F. Keith'* theater following the audden termination of the Bummer vaudeville season Sunday, July 18. The theater will reopen Labor day, Sept. 6. it wag announced by Roltare Eggleston, manager of the house. A. £. Graven, architect, of the firm of Oeorge Rapp & Cos., Chicago, is here consulting with Mr. Eggleston regarding the proposed plans. The seating capacity of Keith’s will be increased by removing the lower boxes and placing orchestra chairs in that space. The stage apron will be cut down and the stage will be rebuilt. This will permit the admission of extra rows of seats. The orchestra pit will be lowered and anew lighting system Installed. The entire auditorium will be redecorated and some new furnishings added. The actors have not been forgotten as the dressing rooms will be done over and a green room or lounge for them will be built in a room now used as a property room back stage. Hoosier Party Goes West in Special Car Combining business with pleasure, a number of Indianapolis men, some with their families, left todsy in a special car for a trip to Lake City, in the heart of the San Juan mountains of southwestern Colorado. The men, while on the* trip, will look after mining Interests in this district. The party will be housed at Rose’s cabin, near the Golconda mine. Those on the trip are Dr. L. T. Leach, president of the Golcofida Mines Consolidated, and includes C. W. Sedwick, tice president; E. E. Gates, secretarytrensurer; Mrs. Leach, Byron and Susan I .each, Mrs. Gates and Miss Elizabeth Gates, Mrs. Sedwick and Theodore Sedwick, Mr. and Mrs. John A. George, M. B. Wilson. J. W. Swanton. E. W. Steinhart, L. C. Spencer, R V. Swanton and J. J. Kirby of Pittsburg, Pa.; T. L. Malott and Marlon Miller of Sheridan, Ind., and Thomas Davies of Chicago. MEETINGS AND PARTIES. Fidelity Review No. 140. W. B. A. of the Maccabees, will give a dinner Thursday noon in Castle, hall, 230 East Ohio •treet, for the new'members and candidates. In the afternoon the Zouave team will give a euchre and lotto party. Mrs. Pearl Butze is chairman of the dinner and Miss Violet Wiltshire heads the card party committee. • • • Ladies of St. Catherine's parish will give a card party tomorrow night at the hall, Tabor and Shelby streets. • • • The George H. Chapman Woman's Relief corps. No. 10, will meet Tuesday afternoon in the G. A. R. hall, 222 East Maryland street. Regular meetings will be held thereafter during July and August. * • • Women of the Home Missionary society of Fletcher Place church will meet at the Methodist Settlement house. State and Pine streets. Wednesday afternoon. A shower for missions will be held. • • • Ladies of Assumption parish will give a dance Wednesday night, at the hall, 1105 Blaine avenue. * • * George H. Thomas Woman's Relief corps. No. 20. will meet Tuesday afternoon In Saks hall, Pennsylvania and Washington streets. PIERCE-PICKETT WEDDING. WINCHESTER, Ind., July 10— Miss Bernice Puckett, daughter of William Puckett and Harry Pierce, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Pierce, were married here Friday at the First M. E. church In the presence of a few friend*. The bride is well known as u musician and the groom Is a prominent business man of this city. They left immediately after the ceremony for a trip to the lakes.

WALLACE REID / Hg| \ / JIHIf• m \ / X \ / ■§ ' V \ Jr . Tgrfir 3saHi ' lUter *>,&!%. £§£l| 4 - %£:, / Bkbßߣki£& ' • .jK&JaSfeag : i I \ ~'• *• rifir' lMr y ~—* <%j v.. . ■..■/s*?****%, / UK I, i 11 RR ... .W '\,’- V N \Tmtljf 1&- , ”/ skV ;ayK••,..* 7 wp ir fc 4 .^Py.'x QJiCRrGLDea SYMPTOMS: Sinking spells, dizziness, TREATMENT: A beautiful nurse before, fluttering of the heart, sudden bursts of after, during and between meals, woe or merriment. LATEST BULLETIN: Patient rapidly _ l .^, kT ___ T ANARUS, , . . ~ growing worse. Public is called in conDIAGNOSIS: Emotional hyperstrabismus ference. Fun contagion certain. You’ll of the mental optics—or love. break out all over with laughs. With BEBE DANIELS as NURSE OUMSItIIIMPa S Tue^wSd. CHRISTY COMEDY FOX NEWS WEEKLY

RED CROSS TOUR FOR MARION CO. Interest in Health Education Object of Proposed Trip. In order to Interest women of Marion connty, outside Indianapolis, in health H education, instruccenter will make nursing, food values, and cold pack Miss June Gray. canning will be given each afternoon in the various small towns by Miss June Gray, inin home • enter, and Miss Eleanor Ferris. EB instructor in die- j&jfo. ' M v j®? Vrrange in e n t s- V. *9 f"r the trip were fltJBf JR, J made by Miss ' of* women in each the lectures, to which the public is invited. No admission Miss Jane Gray, will be charged, no collection taken and no money solicited. The schedule will be as follows: Wednesday. July 14 —Nora, high school. Thursday, July 15—Edgewood, home of Mrs. E. E. Howye, Madison road. Stop 7. Fridav. July 16—Millersville. home of Mrs. Joseph Pollard, Forty-second and Emerson. Monday, July 13 Oaklandon, high school. Tuesday. July 20—Home of Mrs. B. H. Kolff. Rockville road, Danville lnterurban. Stop 9. Wednesday. July 21—Same. Thursday. July 22 —Acton, sehoolhouse. Friday, July 23—Open. Tuesday, July 27—Southport, schoolhous£. „ Wednesday, July 28.—Flackville, M. E. church. Thursday, July 29—Beech Grove, auditorium. Friday, July 30— Center township, M. E. church. Monday, Aug. 2—Valley Mills, schoolhouse. Tuesday, Aug. 3—Open. Wednesday, Aug. 4—Ben Davis, sehooihouse. Thursday. Aug. s—Open. Friday, Aug. 6 —West Newton, schoolhouse. Anderson Cop Found Off Beat, Discharged ANDERSON, Ind.. July 10.—Since the police board started an investigation In an effort to find out why there are so many robberies and so few arrests, members of the police force are on the qul vive. Fred Stone, a patrolqjan, was found off his beat in a park by E. IV. Jackson, chief of police, at 11 p. m., and was discharged. TO OBSERVE MEMORIAL. Evergreen Lodge No. 71, I. O. O F., wil observe Odd Fellows’ memorial Sunday In their lodge hall, corner Seventeenth street and Roosevelt avenue, Sunday afternoon, June 11, at 3 o'clock. Grand Master of the I. O. O. P. of Indiana Will Ehrhardt of Greensburg will deliver the memorial address.

STRANGERS—HOME FOLK FOR HARMLESS FUN RIVERSIDE PARK INDIANA’S CONEY ISLAND

MOTION PICTURES.

fe&Qcjety A ■ —.l ” ni 'An attractive wedding of this morning was that of Miss Mariahne Copeland, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Coreland, 2041 Broadway, and Mark VanNuys, Franklin, which took place at the borne of the bride’s parents at 10 o’clock. Dr. Thomas F. Grafton of the Third Christian church, read the service before an altar of featherly fern, palms and blooming plants, behind which burned tapers set in tall cathedral candlesticks. Preceding the ceremony, Miss Ruth Jacobs of Detroit sang “At Dawning'’ and ‘‘Because,’’ accompanied by Mrs. Raymond Knoop, who also played the Lohengrin wedding march for the entrance of the bridal party. Donald Dungau of Franklin acted as best man. Miss Miriam Buttweller, maid of honor, and Miss Jean La Grange of Franklin, bridesmaid, wore frocks of yellow organdie with wide-brimmed hats to match and carried arm bouquets of Shasta daisies. Little Harriet Jane nolmes. in ruffled white organdie, enrried a French basket of rose petals, which she scattered before the bride as she entered. Master Richard Nordjke, dressed in a white suit, carried the ring in a lily. The bride wore a white taffeta gown combined with Venetian laee, made in bouffant fashion with taffeta hat to match. Her bouquet was a shower of bride roses and lilies of the valley. Following the ceremony a breakfast was served at the home. Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Dungan, Mr. and Mrs. <\ L. VanNuys, Mr. and Mrs. C. 0. Dltmnr of Franklin, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Abbott of Bedford. Miss Lois Mclntire >f St. Paul, Mrs. R. G. VanNuys of Berkeley. Cal., and Capt. C. W. Jones of Ft. Snelling, Mo. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hunter, 2317 North Meridian street have returned from a boat trip on the great lakes. Miss Emma Hunter of Johnstown, Pa„ who has beeen their house guest for several weeks, accompanied them, returning to her home from Detroit. • * Mrs. L. Mitchell, 2435 North Delaware street, leaves today for'Greenfield, where she will spend a few days prior to Joining her daughter, Miss Mary Mitchell, in Wilton, N. H. • ft Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Sommers, 3544 Central avenue, have gone to Mackinac, Mich., to spend the summer. Miss Helen Perry and Miss Betty Moorehead, who are spending the summer in their cottage at Hzveratlck park, entertained with an informal dancihg party Thursday night. The guests included Miss Edith Martin, Miss Esther Goshea, Miss Helen Routler, Miss Helen A. Archer, Miss Katherine Larkin. Mis* Loretta Cochran. Miss Olive Willlama, Miss Winifred Brown. Louis Walt hers, James Demmer, Robert Burgleln, Arthur Phillips, Russell Miller, Harold Martin. Virgil Miller, William Harvey and Aloysius I’orler De Loss. • • • Nelson Trowbridge, manager of the Murat theater, who has been in the east attending the Rotary club convention at Atlantic City, has returned home. • • • Miss Mary Alice Coleman, 3535 North Pennsylvania street, entertained with a luncheon at her home today and a theater party at the Murat this afternoon in honor of Miss Alta Robbins of Hamilton, O.; Miss Margaret Neitert of Ev. .msvllle. Miss Helen Cartwright of Dayrun. 0.. and MUs Irdlne McClure of Cos iumhus, 0., who are the bouse guests of Miss Mildred Daugherty, 127 East Forty-fourth street. The young women are all college friends of Miss Daugherty, who attend;* Western College for Women the last year. Miss Helen Prank, Mrs. Blake Frances and Miss Dorothy Daugherty completed

INDIANA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1920.

Reads Like Winter Story , but It Ain't BOSTON, July 10.—Edward J. Lord paid a fine today for falling to clean Ice and snow from his sidewalk. The mercury waa hovering around the 80 mark when the case was tried. I,t dated back to February.

the group of guests for the matinee party. ... Saul Present, 52 West Thirtieth street, has gone to Detroit to Join Mrs. Present. They will take a lake trip before returning to the city. • • • Miss Violet Clausen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Clausen, 2318 LaSalle street, and Dolph Cox were quietly married this morning at the home of Rev. Adelbert Bolster, pastor of the Calvary Baptist church. Klwood Mastern and Mrs. Mastern were the only attendants. The bride wore a dark blue tricotiue suit with hat to match and a corsage of bride roses. Mr. and Mrs. Cox will be at home after July 15 at 2318 LaSalle street.

MOTION[PICTURES. of matrimonial life that has jjg SSL •• & m/k%& sIjLORIA SWANSON,THOMAS § * llHwT' ’' BfIBE DANIELS, s kea-i£k§§l?j|?j Jjrag 1 rx' THKO. KOSLOFF AND A =

THIRD PARTY MEN MEET TO NAME TICKET (Continued From Page One.) forty-eight was called to order that its deliberations would result In a comprehensive platform upon which most of them could unite, and the naming of candidates for the presidency and vlce-presl-dehey whom they could support. Four separate conventions were scheduled to be held: The forty-eighters proper. ■* La labor party. The single tax party. The American cons.itutlonal party. The first three, even though they may not amalgamate, were expected to run along co-ordlnatedly. One element of the single taxers has declared lts opposition to Senator Robert M. Lafollette as a presidential candidate, on the ground of his “socialistic and paternalistic leanings,'* but has indicated its willingness to unite with the forty-eighters under another standard bearer. The American constitutional party, organized by William R. Hearst, Is playIng alone, having been repudiated by

H.B. WARNER —IN—“The White Dove” Could he be sure that he was the father of his own child after the confession he had heard?

AH VVeek Starting Sunday The Lost City /f\ HQ O Literary Digest Topics ™ ® ® International News Weekly THEATRE

the forty-eighters and the single taxers, and ao far. Ignored by the labor party. Principles, not candidate*, are the important things to the single tax party, It declared In opening its national convention here today. / Forty delegates, representing twenty states, cheered the declaration of National Chairman Robert McAuley, Philadelphia, that “unless the committee of forty-eight adopts In itr entirety the platform of th* single tax party, I for one will fight any attempt at amalgamation.” Delegates said neither Lafollette nor Henry Ford will be acceptable as presidential candidates; they are too radical, delegates said. After a brief opening session the party recessed to permit members to attend the committee of forty-eight convention. Variety Lt Articles Stolen From Home Paul Cherry. 736 Ft Wayne avenue, today reported to the police that wearing apparel, a typewriter and an electric fan all valued at $350 had been stolen from his home. Two men and two girls were seen leaving the house with suitcases yesterday afternoon by one of the neighbors.

Will Rogers IN “JES CALL ME JIM” There 1b an intangible something about some pictures, something that can not be described, that puts them Into the list of masterpieces. Such a picture Is “Jes Call Me Jim,” and from a great list of productions we selected it as this week’s feature. Perhaps it’s because of Its real, human appeal, its tug at the heart, its whimsical humor —anyway, “Jes Call Me Jim” is a classic of the screen. HAROLD LLOYD IN “HIGH AND DIZZY” Speed and laughter, a plot and pretty girls and Lloyd and his horn-rimmed glasses. “Modern Centaurs ,f A unique and thrilling little feature showing the deathdefying exploits of the Italian Cavalry. THE CIRCLETTE OF NEWS Including “Seeing Indianapolis With Coburn,” showing the Rotary-Kiwanls Baseball Game, Polo in Indianapolis and the Mule Riding Contest. THE CIRCLE ORCHESTRA Selections from “The Red Mill.” Week Starting Sunday m p$ j fm • TODAY LAST TIMES Norma Talmadge In “Yes or No."

BPJWI SUNDAY, IS WA MON., TUE. and WEDNESDAY HART PP “SAND” KraS robber band in the great SouthMILBURN MORANTI in “THE KICK”

MARYMILES Rr'/^^MIOTER f Love Called Her and She SacriI /THE LIBERTY QUINTETTE \ gftl , k DnuD f Mrsio distinctively different 1 oe^iuon. Pollard \NEW ORLEANS JAZZ BAND/ Newß

| Jack 1; Pickford H | J:[ —IN— I iji O. Henry’s Story |‘ “A Double- BB jjj i! Dyed Deceiver” p| j|| |! Mr. and Mrs. Carter DeHaven yß|] ;!; | in “A Model Husband” |pjj|lg jlj WEEK STARTING SUNDAY

■MB The House of Thrill. q ll P iun *’ M ° D ’’ SNUB PSLLARD >n M Tues., Wed. Don't Rook the Boat ir% ___ F~> . _ Screen Sensation of the Great t\,eX Deacn S Southwest From His Novel ‘‘HEART Os The SUNSET” THE BIGGEST WESTERN DRAMA EVER FILMED Tremendous In Its Love Interest—lts Raids on the Border—lts Adventure—lts Excitement and Reality.

MOTION PICTUREB.

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