Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 83, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 August 1921 — Page 5
ONE STROKE OF ENGINEERING TO ADMIT SHIPS Kiwanians Told How to Bring Service of Seven Seas to Central West. “The project to drown out the rapids of the St. Lawrence river with a great dam and at one stroke of engineering open the Interior of the continent to the ships of the seven seas while enormous electrical energy Is generated to replace oar wasted coal resources, is less costly. Is more urgently needed, and will have more Immediate economic advantages than any other similar enterprise In history," said Dr. R. S. McEiwee, ex-dlrer-tor of the I'nlted States bnreou of foreign and domestic commerce. In speaking today at the weekly luncheon of the Klwanls Club, In the interest of the lakes to the ocean waterway project. Dr. McEiwee Is touring the middle western State* under the auspices of the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Tidewater As aoclation. He recently returned from a tour of the proposed route. MrfH WORK DONE OX SURVEY. While director of the commerce bureau i nade a special study of the possibility 4-f obtaining access to the sea from the Great Lakes. Its influence on the transportation system of the continent, its Influence on the productive ability of the Middle West and its Influence on the export ability of inland States. In continuing his address before the Kiwanis Club today he said, in part: "The feasibility of this project Is established by the report of the engineers submitted to the International Joint commission. Few peop’e realize how much work has been done on this survey. It has comnletelv covered the ground so fat as the major outline of the plans is concerned. An Ideal site has been located for a da .! v-hirh v 11l give siaok water all the way from Lake Ontario to the International boundary, at which will be developed nearly 1.500.000 horse power. Below this dam there will be two short canals to pass the rapids In Canada. W hen this is done and the new It elland Is completed, ocean going vessels can come up to Lake Erie drawing twentyfive feet of water and above Lake Erie the present channels will acommodate vessels drawing twenty feet. POWER WILL PAY FOR JOB. "The cost is estimated at 5270.0n0.000. Including power installation. Spread over alx years and divided between the two countries in some fair proportion. It would be no financial burden. But it is perfectly feasible to finance the construction bv the same methods employed by the Province of Ontario in its great power development so it can be done without depending on appropriations from the treasury. There Is need of this power which can be marketed as fast as it is developed. The power will pay for the Job. "Our recent experience in transportation shows how urgently It is needed. “Asa transportation project It is entlrelv feasible. Nobody supposes that the present Great Lakes carriers will go to sea. They are not built for that. They will have enough to do transporting ore and coal and grain on the lakes and as commerce and Industry develop the fleet of lake carriers will be larger than It is now. "There may be In time a special type developed especially for coastwise service between lake and Atlantic ports. But commerce need not wait that. Ocean-gc-ing vessels, the same types that now carry the world's trade, can and will come up the lakes as soon as the passage of the St Lawrence Is opened. Not the great ocean greyhounds, the floating palaces. But those boats constitute only a small proportion of the merchant fleet. Even In New York they are only a small fraction of the number of vessels arriving and many great ports never see one of those vessels and could not admit them If thev came. The would'* trade is carr!ed on in boats that could come up the lakes. Three-fourths of the vessels passing through Panama are of the smaller type. The Mediterranean and Black Sea ports have no greater depths than the lake ports. And there will be hardly fiftv miles in which the boats must go slowly because of restrictued channels on limited depths All the rest is clear ssltwith ample water under the keels for full speed. CONNECTS WITH PRODUCING SECTION. "The St. Lawrence rente is as logical as the Mediterranean. Nobody thinks of shipping across Europe from the Black Sea; everything goes around by water.. When we consider that vessels go through the Kiel canal to save 400 miles around Denmark. Is there any doubt they will come up the St. Lawrence and through Its short canals to reach the greatest and richest producing section in toe world? “The vessels that come np the lakes or go down to sea from the lakes will not te competing with other vessels, bat with the interior rail haul and the very costly transfers at the Atlantic ports. Terminal expense is a larger and larger proportion of the cost of tnansportation. More than half the cost of going from Chicago to New York is in the last fifty miles and the approaches to New York terminals. It costs more than water and takes longer. ''Calculations have been made showing that with rates far less than the present rail and vessel charges, boats can make handsome profits on lake cargoes for coast points or overseas "The country needs this development, both for navigation and for power. It will make possible the development of the interior, which is now forbidden, and It will give an enormons stumnlue to Industry We are too apt to look at Immediate results and Ignore the long view. It will not do to take a thirty-day view of the United States. We must plan for the fa tv-reaching benefits to th whole people, to those now living and the future generations ”
MEETINGS. India''.apniis Auxiliary of the Esladontan f*lnh will hold an all-(lay picnic Saturday, Aug. 21. at Brookside Park. The Norwood family will hold Its seventeenth annual reunion Sunday. Aug. 28 at the home of Mr. and Mrs Herbert List, one-half mile west of Whiteland. Car* leaving the Terminal Station at 10:10 and 11:10 o'clock Sunday morning will be met at Whiteland. The George M Chapman Woman’s Relief Corps. No. 10, met yesterday and Indorsed the candidacy of Mrs. Edna E. Pauley of this city for national senior vice president. The election will be held during the encampment of the G. A. R., Sept. 25 to 30. The fifth annual reunion of the Bechert family will he held Sunday. Aug. 21. at Claffey's Woods near New Palestine. Ind.
Your Family Washing Send if ' J n OTVM.MU Sterling Laundry Drexel 6300 * ■ * IBs
Innocent; Did Time * Y -' | s fe : '* V■. t . ~ " i&lL. w* Ivfc && Gc OcXin g?. All England is Interested In the pathetic case of Mrs. Rose E. Gooding, of LitUehampton, who has been released from Portsmouth Prison, after serving more than eight months of two sentences for crimes of which she has Just been proven innocent. Mrs. Gooding, who Is the mother of two small children, was sentenced to fourteen months and twelve days on being convicted of writing libellous messages. She appealed, and a decision was rendered against her. An investigation by Scotland Yard, recently completed, proved rant It would have been impossible for Mrs. Gooding to huve committed the offenses of which she had been convicted and sentenced. She was ordered released by the Court of Criminal Appeal In London. Boston Brown Bread One cup rye meal, one -cup granulated cornmeal, one cup graham flour, two cups •our milk or one and one-half cups sweet milk, one egg, one teaspoonful salt, onehalf teaspoon soda, three-fourths cup molasses. Mix all the dry ingredients and stir well. Add molasses and milk: stir and beat well. Turn into well-buttered mould and steam for three and a half to four hours. You can use one pound bak lng powder tins to steam this In if you wish, to use It for sandwiches. In steaming, you want to place your mould In a kettle of boiling water on a trivet and alloy the water to come half way up the mould. Cover closely and see that the wafer is renewed when it bolls away. Raisin Jam Three enps rhubarb, 3 cups sugar, 0 change, 1 cup needed raisins, \ cup chopped walnut meats or blanched almonds. Cut rhubarb In small pieces. Add sugar and cook until tender. Add orange pulp and raisins, cut In small pieces. Cook until thick, about twenty minutes. Add nuts and cook about five minutes. Pour Into pastry shells for tarts or serve as jam. This may be served as a dessert with whiped cream if desired. If made in a large quantity It may be poured into sterilized glasses and sealed with parafine. Hamburg Steak One pound of lean, raw beef from round is best. Cut very fine, highly season with salt, pepper and a little onion Juice, and one egg slightly beaten. The best and most wholesome way of cooking this is to make It Into an oblong shaped loaf, and brown In a heavy frying pan on all sides, then add to the pan one tablespoonful of butter and half a cup of water with which to baste the moat Cover closely and cook slowly, basting frequently. Chocolate Ice Cream Make a costard of 1 quart of milk, 7 eggs and 4 cupfuls of granulated sugar Stir into this, while cooking, 4 table spoonfuls of grated chocoh.te VYhen this chocolate custard is cold beat in a pint of rich cream and free.e.
GIRLS! LEMONS WHITEN SKIN AND BLEACH FRECKLES
f* Squeeze the Juice 61 two lemons Into a bottle containing three ouncea of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach. Massage this aweetly fragrant lotion Into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, then shortly note the beauty and whitenes* of your skin. Famous stage beauties use th's lemon lotion to bleach and bring that soft, clear, rosy-white complexion, also as e freckle, sunburn, and tan bleach because It doesn't Advertisement
Anyone Can Have Pretty Curls and Waves
Hair tortured with the hot curling I <ron Is bound to become dry, harah and brittle, as so many know from sad experience. It's far more sensible to use the simple silmerine method, which can do no harm and which produces a eurlli ness much prettier and more natural In appearance. And the effect lasts much 1 longer, particularly in hot, moist or windy weather. Silmerine is also a fine dressing for the hair, preserving its : texture and health, keeping it delightfully soft and glossy. Liquid silmerine ts not sticky er greasy and it won’t stain or streak hair or scalp. Get a few ounces from the I druggist, pour a little Into a Raucer and with a clean tooth brush apply evenly 'to the hair Just before doing it up. Th*-> added glory to your “crowning glory” I will oe quite remarkable.—Advertisement.
PAGEANT WILL SHOW RESULTS OF TRAINING ‘Evolution of the Dance* at Brookside Park Civic Production. Tv'o months of planning and practice by oiTicials of the city recreation department and children who attend the city playgrounds will culminate tomorrow night in the third annual pageant at Brookside Park R. Walter Jarvis, director of recreation, announced today that rain bad caused him to postpone the spectacle from tonight until tomorrow night. The final dress renearsal was held yesterday afternoon In the natural amphitheater, where the spectacle Is to be held. The pageant will begin at 7:80 o'clock In the belief that the event is a valuable contribution to the aesthetic life of the community, based upon the enjoyment which thousands of citizens have gotten out of it in the last two wears, K. Walker Jarvis, director of recreation, and Miss Alice Mescall, assistant director, have spared neither pains nor reasonable expense to make this year’s pageant the greatest of them all. Motion pictures were taken at the dress rehearsal yesterday. They will be exhibited later In local theaters. MUSIC. LIGHTS AND DANCES COMBINE. The story of the "Evolution of the Dance," which Is the title of the pageant. Is unfolded through the medium ol music, lights and dances. Approximately SI,OOO has been spent upon the background before which the youthful artists will perform and some of the city's best known artists, music and dancing masters have been called to help in staging the event. Location of the setting in the natural ampltheater near the northeast end of the nark came about through recognition of the natural beauty of the spot, due to the wonderful background of trees, shrub bery and rolling hilla, and the fact that
& Co*
Open At 8:30
A Conspicuous Sale Offering in Colored Cotton Wash-Materials Printed madras, printed voiles, ginghams, percales and ehamhrays—some 5,100 yards of them—are offered at this price, to attract your immediate attention, grouped as follows: 700 Yards of 27-Inch gingham In AT.T. AT A <OO Yards of 36-tneh printed voiles plaids and stripes. A ........ ... . . nn * mTTr , __ in both light and dark grounds. 1,000 ards of printed madras in a FEATURE 32-lnch width; white grounds with 800 Yards of 36-Inch percale; white white cord, printed in two-color 6tripes. a IvieJh, grounds with checks, in red, navy, 900 1 ards of woven chambray, 27 iw light blue, green, heliotrope and yelinches wide, in Jacquard figures and 0 J j ow stripes. I / 600 Yards of 32-inch gngharo. in I / \ j 700 Yards of pla!n n K ham - 27 plain gray, lavender stripes and navy * inches wide, in yellow, cadet, pink, blue checks. the yard light blue and Copenhagen. Desirable Materials All—Suitable Particularly for School Frocks, House Dresses and Aprons. —Ayres—Wash goods dept., second floor.
New Glove Silk Bloomers Fortunately LjOW in Price This cool weather Is Just a taste of the real cold later on and suggests the needs of protection from now on. Thoughts fly to glove silk, ankle-length bloomers, but not faster, surely, than the persons Indulging In such thoughts will take advantage of this sale of— Bloomers at S3AS Three hundred new pairs or new fall glove-silk bloomers ankle length, have arrived In shades of black, navy blue, brown, green, gray, Belgian blue, wisteria and emerald. The quality of glove silk is a soft, fine quality that usually carries a correspondingly higher price. (Girls preparing school wardrobes, take special notice.) —Ayres—Street floor.
SpcciaT\. ‘) Seasonable Neckwear, 89cV< (// Avery choice collection—lncluding crisp and dainty \\\ if organdy ' vestees . new Bramley collars and cuffs for \\ I round, necks or jumper drosses, and vestees In net and \\ I lace —Is offered at this very special price. New mer- | chandise fresh from the market. Striking values. —Ayres—Neckwear dept., street floor. A Breakfast Coats of Taffeta Silk, $6.50 Jj l\\ Flounced taffeta breakfast coats In luring change- X]t\ 4\\ able and two-tone effects, such as pink and silver, #/A' EaVV violet and applegreen, electric blue and rose, and X the like. They are trimmed with self-ruch- jt ings, pockets, and flowers and fruits in con- M y trasting color. Extremely important f \ I values. Prepare, school girls and 1 Fvi=*rvNM October brides. IW \ —Ayres—Negligee section, j k\ third floor.
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1921.
New Spanish_Premier + 'mm*'' 4 £. WT ’ I Jp r-a, ZJfJ [ Reports from Madrid state that former Premier Maura is forming a cabinet to succeed that of Premier de Salazar, which resigned Aug. 11. The photo shows exPromier Maura, who will probably again head the government.
from 16,000 to 20,000 people may have a clear view of the spectacle from seats on the sloping lawns Which rise from the east end of the depression in which the i stage Is set. The diminutive dancers •will perform In a grassy circle more than 100 feet in diameter.” Rows of park benches have been placed outside the circumference. After these are filled the srpectators will find seats on the lawn back of them. Back of the circle an enclosure about 200 feet wide long seventy five feet deep where the children will await their cues
j n t f ie \f e/l ' s Store Men’s Bathing Suits Selling Now at $2.95 A good, comfortable, wear worthy bathing suit is always an asset, and next season will roll around in Just a few months. Pure, fine quality worsted.marks these as decidedly good offerings. They are all one-piece suit#, fashioned with moderate length skirts and buttoning at the shoulder. The patterns are varied; yours is a choice of effects both conservative and conspicuous, but all in the same high quality materials. —Ayres—Men s store, strqet floor.
Announcing a Sale of Boots and Low Shoes All at $6.95 the Pair
An attractive assortment of quality footwear in tan and brown kid marks this as a very worth-while opportunity. Included are brown kid lace shoes with Cuban heels, brown calf lace shoes with Cuban and
low heels, Goodyear welt sewed; tan calf oxfords, brown calf onestrap pumps, Goodyear welt sewed and with low heels. Values worth your attention at this better price. —Ayres—Shoe dept., second floor.
has been constructed. The wall of this enclosure facing the audience has been concealed with boughs. Bright colors oT the 'costUme of the performers flashing through the foliage give the effect of myriads of bright colored flow ers hanging from the branches. LIGHTING SYSTEM ELABORATE. In front of the green wall and arranged upon a segment of an imaginary circle 600 feet In diameter stands a double row of white columns, eighteen feet in height and from eighteen to twelve inches in diameter. The entire background will be lighted with a set of electric bulbs partially sunken In the ground between the columns and equipped with reflectors. The circle where the dancing and chorus numbers will be given will be lighted with flood lights thrown from a high platform at the edge of the 100 foot circle opposite the columns. The chorus of 175 school children, directed and trained by Mrs. Carroll Carr will sit in the 100-foot circle to the right of the row of columns. The children will be dressed in white. The Indianapolis Military Band, which will be specially directed by Rudolph Kafka, director of the Circle theater orchestra, will be seated to the left of the columns. Rivalry among the little dancers from the various playgrounds is keen 'fon the first, second and third best groups are to be selected by a committee composed of Herman Kotbe, Charles Wells, Mrs. Frank Chance, James H. Lowry, Robert E. Tracy and E. U. Graff. PROFESSIONALS WILL DANCE. Besides the children a number of wornen playground directors and Mme. Theo Hewes, who has trained two ballet numbers and assisted in directing the pageant, will dance. Ample space for parking automobiles Is available along the park boulevards The scene of the pageant can best be reached by street car over the East Tenth street line. The pafh leading directly ast into the valley from the car line leads to the scene. Special car service will be provided if it is necessnry. Last night's rain will not interfere with lie pageant, Miss Mescall stated. Unless there is a heavy downpour this evening, the event will be held. In case of rain tonight it will be postponed until Thursday evening, she said.
Ayres Special Peanut Butter, Pound, 15c BUTTER, Ayres’ special creamery, extra quality, pound, 46©. “Monument’’ brand, a good creamery, pound, 44©. BATAVIA COFFEE, “Ajax” brand, pound, 35©, 3 pounds 81.00. FINK SALMON, for salads or loaf, tall cans, 15©; flat cans, 10©. BREAKFAST BACON, machine sliced and derinded; “Rex” brand, 33© the pound ,* Morris's "Matchless,” 20© the pound. “SUN-MAID" SEEDLESS raisins, 15-ounce box, 32©. VAN CAMP’S PREPARED SPAGHETTI, ready to heat and serve 12© and IS© the can. SUNSHINE CAKES AND CRACKERS, 7©, 12Va© and 14© the box. —Ayres—Downstairs.
The marriage of Miss Nora Patton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Patton, 2422 North Roosevelt avenue, to Clarence E. Hamilton, 2202 Cushing street, will take place at 8 o'clock this evening at t*j home of the bride. The Rev. Harry O. Kisner will officiate and the attendants will be Miss Edith Maple, bridesmaid : Miss Helen I<Tack, cousin of the bride, ringbearer; Miss Mary West, flower girl, and Robert Hamilton, best man. Mr. and Mrs. Alva Hamilton will give a program of bridal airs preceding the ceremony and Frank Dill, pianist will play the wedding march from “Lohengrin” for the entrance of the bridal party. Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton will go for a short wedding trip following the ceremoney and will be at home after Aug. 23, at 2422 Roosevelt avenue, • • • Mrs. Robert Stephenson, Twenty-First and Pennsylvania streets, has as her house guests her mother and sister, Mrs. Hogan and Miss Hogan. W. L. Vermillion, *46 West Eighteenth street, is visiting in Chicago and will return the last of this week. • • • Miss Anna Hedges will entertain at bridge tomorrow afternoon at her home, 42 North Randolph street, in honor of Miss Hazel Durr Wann, whose marriage to Vernon A. Grlndle will take place Aug. 27 at All Saints Cathedral. Miss Wann is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. L. M ann, 2403 North Alabama street,
Watch Our Meridian Street Windows for Displays of Downstairs Store Merchandise There are Six Elevators and Four Stairways Leading to the Downstairs Store L-SAYRgs&Co. Downstairs Store 1,800 Bungalow Aprons
Close At 5:00
Downstairs Store
New Fall Frocks of Silk and Wool Styles for Now—Styles for Later Canton Beaded Rich W Wj Embroidered Satins i %/ r With Yarn, and Y Wh Straight Wool JT 188 Line and Tricotine. J i ♦ ifof| Coat Models. Choose . We Think These Dresses Are Exceptional Values at the Price —Ayres—Downstairs Store.
Exactly 1,297 Pairs of Low Shoes Oxfords and Pamps —for Women and Girls Two Groups at Greatly Reducid Prices GROUP ONE GROUP TWO 98c s i 49 636 pairs of white canvas pumps and 571 pairs pnmps and oxfords. Black Colonial pumps. Sizes 3toß in the lot. kid, patent leather, white canvas and Also about 100 pairs of children's white brown canvas. High and low heels, canvas pumps to sell at 98<*. Sizes up Sizes 3t07 in the lot. Not aIL sizes of to \\L , - * each kind. / “' , —Ayres—Downstairs Store.
One Hundred Fifty Hats Reduced to Snappy Hats of sa .49 Smart Hats in Silk, * HI Small and Satin, ■ medium size, Taffeta and H various shapes Felt. edffms* —many colors. All Good Values —A^Tes —Downstairs Store.
and Mr. Grlndle Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Grlndle of Brown County, Indiana. • Miss Ruby Smart, No. 4, 915 South Meridian street, has returned from a twoweeks’ visit in Pittsburg, Ohio, where she was the house guest of Mrs. Ray Young. • • • Mrs. Nancy Stoops, 2047 College avenue, who has been visiting her son, John Stoops, in Pasadena, Cal., will go to Seattle to visit her daughter. She will return home about Sept. 1. • • • Frank Woeher, 2417 North Meridian street, and daughters, Miss Frances and Miss Catherine Woeher, have gone to Lake Tippecanoe to spend two weeks. • • • The marriage of Miss Gladys Harrold, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Harroid, 1502 Olney street, and C. W. Isenhart of Arearo, 111., will take place the second wetk In September. Miss Katheryn Harrold. her sister, entertained fourteen guests Monday evening at a miscellaneous shower In honor of the brideelect. Next week her stater. Mrs. Otto S. Suesz, will entertain In her honor. * • • Mrs. Albert W. Lehman of the Knickerbaefeer apartments has as her houseguest Miss Nell Stephenson of Danville, Ind., who will remain several days. The business meeting of the Beta Phi Sigma, which was to have taken place tonight, has been postponed until Wednesday, Aug. 24. * V * Miss Isabel! Antrim, 3620 Central ave-
All at One Price 69c All Nicely Made of Good Percales Full and Roomy
nue, who has been spending a few weeks i In Chicago, has returned home. • * Judge and Mrs. H. O. Chamberlin, of) the Splnk-Armß, left for a two weeks* , motor trip yesterday that will include j visits at Lake Wawasee and Lake Maxin-: kuckee. • * • Miss Mary Margaret Miller, 3038 Washington boulevard, has gone to Silvan Lake, Mich., where she la the house guest of Mias Elizabeth Wales at her summer home. Deviled Lobster Two pounds lobster. 1 cup white sance. % teaspoon mustard. % teaspoon salt. Dash of Cayenne. 1 tablespoon lemon Juice. Make white sauce with one tablespoon butter, one tablespoon flour, one cup milk. Remove from fire and add mustard, salt, cayenne and lemon juice, all mixed together with the lobster meat, which should be cut into cubes. Orangeade Jntce of one orange, ona teaspoonful lemon Juice, one and one half tablespoonful syrup, crushed Ice. Pour orange and lemon Juice over the crushed Ice. Add syrup. Mix by stirring or shaking. Lemon Ice Four cups water. 1 cup lemon Juice. 2\ cups sugar. Make syrup by boiling sugar and water for twenty minutes. Strain, and freeze. Serve in sherbet cups.
51 Downstairs Store j
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