Indianapolis Times, Volume 33, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1920 — Page 11
BURY 2 OF AUTO DEAD AT BRAZIL ifuneral for Third Victim of Crash to Be in East. Funeral services for John H. Zeller and Harry E. Snyder, two of the men who, ■with Frank J. Coffey, were killed Saturday afternoon when the autimoblla In which they were riding turned over on Bluff road near Glen's Valley, "twebe miles from Indianapolis, will be held tomorrow. Serrlces for Mr. Zeller will be con- ; ducted from the home of his parenta, Mr. and Mrs. ■William Zeller, North Meridian street, Brazil, at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning and bnrial will bo made In BraalL I . Funeral services for Mr. Snyder will be held at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. ~J. Snyder, North Meridian street, Brazil, at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, and burial will be made in Highland Lawn cemetery in Terre Hante. The body of Mr. Coffey was shipped by Flanner & Buchanan, undertakers, to the home of his father, James C. Coffey of Worcester, Mass. The accident occurred when the automobile, driven by Mr. Snyder, struck a rough piece of road near Glenn's Valley, when the men were motoring to Bloomington to witness the Indtana-lowa football game. v Mr. Zeller was 31 and was secretary of the American Coal Mining Company, 1303 Trust building. Hit residence was at 3416 Broadway, this city. He Is survived by his wife, who was formerly Miss Lucy Brattin of Brazil, and two children. Jane.ffl 3, and John, 0 months; his father and mother and four i brotner# Simon and Lawrence. Btpknell; William, Sooth Bend; Richard, Bloomington. He was a graduate of Purdue University. Mr. Snyder, who was 29. was sales manager for the American Coal Mining Company, and resided at the home of Mrs. Adah G. Galbraith, 1620 North Pennsylvania street. He is survived by his parents and one sister, Mrs. Ike Hall of Brazil. He was a graduate of St. Lute's School, Wayne, Pa., and later attended Cornell University and the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. Coffey was employed as branch manager of the Worcester Stamped Metal Company. He was 83 and lived at 1620 North Pennsylvania street. Demonstrate Voting Machine at Library The McCarty Branch Library, McCarty and Chadwick streets. Is equipped a voting machine and the branch librarian, Miss Nina Keppel, will give instruction in the use of It This is the beginning of a citizenship school which will be held at the branch library. _ AGED WOMAN DIES FROM BCBXS. MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. 4.—Mrs. Elizabeth Dothan, 83, who was fatally burned Saturday, when a coal oil stove exploded In her home. Is dead at a local hospital.
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‘FOR SOUL OF RAF A EL’ IS THE CAMEO OF MOVIES Sargent Reflects Real Youth — O’Brien at Colonial—Mix at Regent
The cameo of the movies. i That's "For the Soul of Rafr.el,” the new Clara Kimball Young movie. , Webster defines cameo as “a gem tnnd e x cepticnal p b ot o g r aphy so projects the characters In the movie that one is given the Impression that the seven reels of this movie is a magnificent cameo. f . “For the Soul of Rjfael" Is sustained, dignified } ■ 4 drama, at times a *>V ' ■ y stwT * 4 nevertheless an apI M pealing recital of a 1 ' J| great love and a [•* 0 sacred vow of Ss* A ‘ Marta Raquel Es%X'> even t 0 watch oTer the soul of Rafael Artega, a pleasureClara Kimball loving good-for-l’oung. nothing, temperamental Spaniard, who mixes wine and women in large quantities. This movie Is atmospheric as it breathes of the life of the old Spain In the days when California was young, and gives the most natural" and colorful view of the Indian seen In many a day. Into this atmosphere of romance, death, love and beauty comes Clara Kimball Young as Marta, who makes a vow at the time of the'death of Ddna Luisa that Marta will become the wife of the pleasure-loving Rafael. It Is the opinion of the reviewer that Clara Kimball Young as the patient and devout Marta has presented a character, grand and big In its conception; powerful, but weak, in yielding to a vow which destroys her own happiness for a while at least, but In the end the vow is kept; Rafael is dead and she yields to the embraces of Keith Bryton. In passing we must not neglect to speak of the splendid wofk done by En genie Beaserer s the stately Dona Luisa, who hears the great vow of Marta to protect the soul of Rufael. Miss Besserer stages a death scene which Is dramatic and so realistic that it will stand as an everlasting tribute to the sterling worth of this actress of the sliver screen. Bertram Grassby, as the wild, pleas-ure-loving Rafael, with warm blood in his veins, Is another sterling characterization. and although you will “hate” the character, you will marvel at the effective acting of Grassby. “For the Soul of Rafael” is a photographic dream of beauty, and in the setting Is placed the physical beauty of one of the most charming women of the screen—Clara Kimball Yonng. Opinion: “For the Soul of Rafael” la the love story supreme of the screen, and although there Is not a grin or a smile In this tragedy of hearts, yet If reacts upon one as if a master was playing an echo of the heart on a pipe organ. May and should be seen at the Ohio all this week. W.—®. H. -|- -I- -ISARGENT FORTRAY9 THE REAL YANKEE BOY. Lewis Sargent, the youthful actor, yho
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sprang Into fame over night when he appeared in Mark Twain’s story, “Huckleberry Finn,” scores another tremendous hit In “The Soul of Youth.” at the Alhambra the first pai.t of this week. “The Soul of Youth” Is a picture with a universal appeal and should prove the young star’s stepping stone to better things. The picture Is rich In pathos and hurVJffe x mor, half comedy |L nnd half drama, and 'irfgafclr s Sargent rises to bis opportunity on V ”*>>s 'CM 6 * er s r occasion. /. Young Sargent r ! plays the part of an / unwanted and un- ' A loved boy, the goat of an orphan v X f 2) asylum, hut oue ?- A\/ | j ; who is quick to l W,, 4 grasp the opportunlties offered him Xv . 4 and speedily rises w,**to a prominent place Lewis Sargent. In the affairs of meu of the world. The picture portrays minutely the life of the average American boy with his joys and his sorrows, his disappointments and his dlsillusionments. Sargent Is surrounded by a cast that would assure tho success of the picture j even though his work was not 100 per cent perfect, including Lila Lee. Clydo Fillmore, William Collier, Jr., Fred Hunt- j ley, Betty Schade and J. Russell Powell son of George Powell, one time chief of police- of Indianapolis. “The Soul of Youth” was written by Julia Crawford Itbs and the picture is directed by William D. Taylor, who also supervised .he making of "Huckleberry Finn.” She picture is choekfull of entertainment and registers ICO per cent entertainment and theatijy-goers will likely display more than a passing interest in the struggle Cor recognition and the battle against environment which Sargent portrays. Opinion: A picture that Is bound to appeal to every one, directed with a finesse unequaled in any boy picture heretofore and excellently photographed. -f- -I- -ICAMERA TRICKERY BEEX IN O BRIEX MOVIE. Did you ever see a man shake hands with himself? Eugene O'Brien does It at the Colonial this week in “The Wonderful Chance,” with the aid of some of the best photography we have seen. In addition to shaking hands with himself O'Brien unbinds himself from a chair where he has been tied by a gang of crooks, uugags himself and changes clothes with himself In such a manner It is impossible to detect the double exposure. In reality the photography Is the most interesting thing about **”The Wonderful Chance.” The feminine sex expect love making ! from Eugene and when he goes through an entire picture, as he does In "The Wonderful Chance,” without a single sottl-kls* or a single blasted female heart, it lacks what his followers want to see. In the picture O'Brien plays the dual
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INDIANA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1920.
role of Swagger Barlow, a crook, whose efforts to ‘’go straight” form the plot, and -does some really good work as “Lord Birmingham,” an English nobleman who Is making his first visit to America. O'Brien impersonates the nobleman, an accomplishment that Is easy for Eugene, and the nobleman Impersonates the crook. The star Is not exactly our Idea of i what a crook should be, even a gentle- ! man crook, -bat he registers a distinct 1 hit In his Impersonation of the nobleman. Martha Mansfield, former star of the Follies, plays opposite Mr, O’Brien, and, despite the fact she appears In only a small portion of tho picture, does some very credible work. Miss Mansfield is charming and moves through her part of the picture easily and naturally. Others in the cast include Rudolph De Vantlno, Tob Blake, Warren Blake and many other well known screen lights. Opinion—A picture that is worth seeing not alone because of the genuine merit tha plot contains, but because of the wonderful photography. A Itolln comedy, "June Madmen,” and the Selznlck news weekly complete the : program. -|- -|. -I"MAN AND HIS WOMAN” ON VIEW AT MISTER SMITH’S. In “Man and His Woman,” now on view at Mister Smith's, Herbert Rawlinson has the role of a doctor whose discovery of a teuberculosls serum makes him one of the most sought after men on earth. When the doctor's fiancee is untrue to him lip loses faith In humanity and becomes a derelict and he attempts to take revenge out on the world. When he Is nearly down and out there comes into his life a good woman and she is able to revive In the doctor the sparks of manhood which again restores him as a useful servant to mankind. In the cast besides Rawllnson are Enlalle Jensen, Charles Kent, Warren Chandler, Louis De.an and others. The bill includes a comedy, “Four Times Foiled." .1. -|. .!. AT THE CIRCLE. The appearance of Lionel Barrymore on the stage or the silver screen Is an event of such Importance that It demands attention because Barrymore Is a recognized artist of ability on both'the speaking stage and the screen. Barrymore Is doing some highly creditable work this week at the Circle !In a movie version of "The Master ! Mind,” which attracted attention on the stage a season or two ago. To appreciate this tnorie one must be held In suspense and the story will not be related here. Gypsy O'Brien lends substantial support to the star as does Ralph Kellerd, Charles Brandt, Marlon Ebotwejl, I Well, Charles Edwards and Bernard j Randell. ■h -I- -I- ---! TOM MIX AT THE REGENT. | Tom Mix, who Is fast becoming a pop- | ular star under the Fox. banner, Is on view this week at the Regent In “The ! Untamed.” a movie tnadi from the novel Iby Max Brand. ' The atory la, of coarse, t the West and
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nature as usual is the background of the story, which is the case in moat of the movies In which Mix appears. In the cast la George Selgman, who plays the role of Jim Silent, an outlaw; Frank M. Clark, Joe Connelly, Sid J6rdon and others. . It is a story of cattlemen, bandits, wild riding and even gunplay and a principal figure la Jim Silent, the “lone rider,” and also an outlaw, who declares a feud with Whistling Dan, played by Mix. A horse, a dog and a girl are the principal objects of the feud and In relating the story a number of thrilling stunts are staged. | The bill Includes a Snub Pollard comedy, “Doing Time.’ ’ -I- -I- -I----AT THE ISIS. Dorothy Dalton la on view at the Isis the first half of the week In “Guilty of Love.” This picture Is Interesting not so much of Miss Dalton’s appearance but of the number of children taking part In It. It is certainly a talented bunch of natural youngsters In this movie, which has been discussed In this space before. -I- -I- !- THE STAGE. Interest centers this week on the stage because of a number of important offerings. The “Passing Show of 1919,” which was so prosperous In Chicago that it could not afford to open the Murat’s season on Labor day, opens at the Murat tonight for a week's engagement. “Maid to Love,” anew musical com- \ edy not yet seen on Broadway, but backed with much approval of critics la other cities, opens a week’s engagement at English's tonight. Olga Petrova and Jack Osterman are among the big names on B. F. Keith's bill this week. “At the Old Turnpike,” a rube comedy with music. Is the feature at the Lyric. Harry Fields in “French Frolics” Iz this week's offering at the Park. A musical comedy with twenty people is the main event at the Rialto. Anew vaudeville show is on view at the Broadway this week. Jail Delivery Plans Fail at Ft. Wayne Special to The Times. FT. WAYNE, Ind., Oct. 4.—Annonoce- | ment that a wholesale Jail delivery had ! been prevented at the dounty Jail baa been i made by Sheriff Gillie. i According to the sheriff, seven of the prisoners, with the use of twelve hack saws, sawed the bars of the cell corridor and gained admittance to the bull pen. The officers had been "tipped off” that a delivery was under way, and at the critical period rushed In and overpowered the prisoners and forced them back into their cells. Michigan Town Fire Loss Reaches SIOO,OOO I j DOWAIGLAC. Mich.. Oct. 4.—Ten bust, ness houses were wiped out and eight families made homeless here by a fire | which Sunday swept an entire block. The damage will reach SIOO,OOO, it was estimated. The fir* started in a bakery shop and { • high wind whipped the (lames through I the other frame structures.
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ESCAPED AN - OPERATION Bv Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com* pound. Many Such Cases. Cairo, 111.—“ Sometime ago I got so bad with female trouble that I
thought I would have to be operated on. I had a bad displacement. My right aide would pain me. I was so nervous I could not bold • glass of water. Many times I would have to atop my work and ait down or I would fall on the
floor in a faint. I consulted several doctors and every one told me tha same but I kept fighting to keep from having the operation. I had read so many times of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it helped my sister so I began taking it I have never felt better than I have since then and I keep house and am able to do all my work. The Vegetable Compound is certainly one grand medicine. —Mrs. J. R. Matthews, 3311 Sycamore Street, Cairo, 111. Os course theTe are many serious cases that onlv a surgical operation will relieve. „tVe freely acknowledge this but the above letter, and many others like it, amply prove that many operations are recommended when medicine in many cases is all that is •ended.
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