Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 107, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1921 — Page 11
IN THE REALM WHERE WOMAN REIGNS
Keeping House. With the Hoopers (The Hoopers, an average American family of live, living in a suburban town, on a limited income, will tell the readers of the Daily Times how the many present-day problems of the h pe are solved by working on the tidget that Mrs. Jlooper has evoived and found prad >ai Follow them daily iu an inters 'ag review of their home lire and lei l to meet the conditions of the hjgu coat of living with them.) WEDNESDAY. Mrs. Hooper would not have believed It possible that anxiety alone could have so thoroughly demoralized her. W hlle the doctor and the nurse. Miss Ring, wen? noncommittal as to the possible outcome of Betty’s Illness, they assured Mra. Hooper, who dared not invade the sickroom against their orders, that she was getting on quite as well as could be expected. Henry had gone to stay with his sister Belle In the city and telephoned three or four times a day for news of his little daughter, even though he knew that except in the morning ci ,evening there could be little change for better or for worse In her condition that could be recorded. Helen an® Roger followed each other dolefully about the house, doing what they could to help their mother. They worked long hours In the b3ck garden, beside doing their lessons at home, so that they would not find themselves behind their classes when they returned. Mrs. Hooper had put up a cot for Roger ton the comer of the porch, and made a tied for Helen on the couch In the livingroom, so that they were nowhere near Betty. She had moved Into Helen's room, leaving her room for the nurse and her little patient, whoso little bed occupied the porch-like alcove adjoining. Both the nurse and the doctor were delighted at all the fresh air It was possible to obtain for Betty with this arrangement, and on one or two occasions Miss Ring had complimented Mrs. Hooper by saying that the house was as easy to work in as a hospital, because everything she asked for seemed to be forthcoming without the slightest delay from the various emergency closets and shelves, where anything necessary for emergencies seemed to be packed away. Inyfplte of her terrible anxiety for Hooper tock rcu-h comfort from thl6 appreciation on the part of a trained specialist of her care In housekeeping that made it possible for her to put her hands on things that were needed at any time, without the delay of hunting all over before they were located, or having to send out for them. The routine of each day's work went on the same, affected little by Mrs. Hooper's heavy heart. There was nothing she could do to help the little sufferer In the bed upstairs and it was rather a relief than anything else to continue to cook and wash and Iron and sew as if nothing so terrible were happening as the ebbing away of the life of her little girl. There had been no sleep for her on Monday night and last night she had scarcely closed her eyes, but so great was the nervous tension that she scaroly realized as she eat almlesely mending one of Roger's shirts that she had Deen so long without rest. “Why don't you go upstairs and lie down, mother?” asked Helen, as she brought her a cup of tea; you look so awfully tired and there is nothing to be done that I can’t attend to if you
AMUSEMENTS. MM SHIBERI LAST 2 TIMES Mural t ?^ y I Today Mating and Night f Max Marc In Presents 3 Live Ghosts I The laughing hit of the decade. | One year ii> New York. PRICES-—Tonight. 50c. 75c, SI. 51.50. $2 I Sl.oo—Matinee Today—Sl.oo I TOMORROW NSGHT THURSDAY. FRIDAY, SATURDAY Matinee Saturday 2:20 p. m. 1921 EDITION Fd Rovre's Musical Hit Producer IRENE SALLY AND ZiEGFELD FOLLIES nuiaoie ca t auo tne uuippieat ..ing- I ing and dancing chorus in a dazzling . display of Hickson's Paris Fashions. Five big song hits. Popular Matinee Saturday, 50c, 75e, SI.OO, $1.50. Special augmented orchestra. PRICES —Evenings, 00c, 75c, sl. $1.50, $3
BP K'FITM ,< S 38th Vaudeville •* * iVEji IFI O Anniversary Held Over by Popular Demand—Greatest ot All VaudevlMs Attractions SINGER’S MIDGETS World's Biggest Show of Little People—3o Tiny Artists and Actors—--3 Elephants—2s Ponies—ls Dogs—lo Scenes. A Surrounding Show of Featured Stars. FLORENZ ADELAIDE AMES & WINTHROP a Thumbnail Revue, “Alice Irr Blunderland” JACK BENNY ARTHUR BARAT A MUSICAL MONOLOGUE AERIAL NOVELTY EDW. FURMAN and Wm. NASH “SCORING TOUCHDOWNS ON THE GRIDIRON OF SONG” SECOND BiG FEATURE ATTRACTION ALLEN RODGERS and LEONORA ALLEN Two Favorite Young American Singers, Dudlelgh Vernor at the Piano AESOP’S FABLES | PATHE NEWS DON’T LET THE CHILDREN MISS OUR BARGAIN MATINEE
Men You May Marry B y n E. R. PEYSER
Has a man like this proposed to you? Symptoms: Looks like a fair-baired giant. At first you fear to shake hands with sim, he seems so “mitful.” In the summer be dresses to slim off his form. Loves his slight waist —his broad shoulders. Talks continually of hii morning exercises, his tub, his endurance, the beds that hotels have to guy for him and his discomfort in the sleeping car berths. t IN FACT, He needs a wide berth everywhere. \ Prescription to his bride: Invite small men as well as tall—he likes to preij h, \ scribe to the puny. / Develop your muscles; he takes prida in them. Absorb This: GIANTS CAN AFFORD TO BE GENTLE MEN. Copyright, 1821, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate.
don’t come down in time to get dinner.” “I must wait and see what the doctor says, dear,” replied Mrs. Hooper, “he will be here at 4 o'clock.” When the doctor came ont of the sick room his message was only in a degree comforting. "It is far too soon to know what the outcome will be, Mrs. Hooper," ha said kindly, “but she is holding her own splendid and has lost no ground since yesterday. Miss Ring is a splendid nurse and you need have no fear that she w-ill leave undone anything that you might do yourself if you were there. You haven't had any sleep, havo you?" He went Into the bathroom so/ a moment and returned with a glass of water into which he had poured a few drops from a small bottle In his medicine ease. “Drink this and lie right down for half an hour, and you will feel better able to Btand what Is before us all before your baby is really out of danger. You'd better take off your clothes and be as comortable as possible while you rest.” Mrs. Hooper began a protest, but thinking better of It, did as she was told. The nfbnu for the three meals on Thursday were: BREAKFAST. Pears Cereal Broiled Bacon Coffee and Eggs Biscuits
AMUSEMENTS. V4/VNAA/V\^/VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVSA/SA/VSAAy xk~. 'ENGLISH’S h/feJL Today Mat. Nlte t'-.-wA And All Week, , itiWS# The Droll Musical V'vifijSSf Comedy Hit, MR “Abe Martin” 111 9 It’S a Mirth-Quake LB If lliii Vl of I.aughter, Based fljl‘4 i® l\ on Kin Hubbard's ii iYf h Famous Brown rNeWT) ” * County C/iaraeter .gfS*' yJitJjL j Matinees Wed. 1 ■** j and Sat. Prices:. Afternoon, 50c to SI.OO. Evening. 00c to $1.50. NEXT WEEK sat ti onL KF.AT SAFE THURSDAY Second Edition of I-net Season's “Century Midnight Whirl,” a Hit of Hits in Indianapolis. HE STAS! ViUSICAL INTO'^CAMT!! * r *‘ , ••••& •*.. 'A w up with QR\ \ OCUA2D CABLE \ \ V BLANCHE BibiG \ CHAS-WIWINGER \ WNONAMNXEB \ \ ! FArt ULt> PM* *3Bss**ry W PRICFQ NIGHTS—SOc to $2 50 T IMUIJ MATINEE—SOc to $1.50.
LUNCHEON Fish Cakes and Tomato Sauce Rye Bread and Butter _ Blackberry Tarts Iced Tea DINNER Cream of Corn Soup Lamb en casserole Baked Stuffed Tomatoes Creamed Potatoes Lettuce Salad Rice Pudding TOMATO SACCE. Peel and slice a quart of tomatoes; cook twenty minutes and strain. Season with a teaspoenful of onion juice, one of sugar, a little salt and pepper, and when It boila silr In a tableapoonful of butter cooked to roux with one of flour. Simmer two minutes and serve. FISH CAKES. If salt cod Is used, shred It finely and soak six hours. 801 l half an hour and let It cool. Mash potatoes to a cream:
The most marvelous machine in the world—and how it is neglected
AWAY back in the school books was £jl a lesson on physiology. Rather dull as a lesson. Yet it was the story of the most marvelous machine ever created —and how the machine gets its power and does its work. That machine is the human body. Some day the mechanical expert of (his machine the doctor finds out for us where we have missed the lesson and neglected the machine. GRAPE-NUTS food was made in accordance with the school book lesson on what the body needs and how its needs may best be supplied. It Is possible for a delicious food to be a scientific, “power* food. GrapeNuts is such a food. Perfecting Natural Gifts Twenty hours of continuous baking has done certain wonderful things to the nourishing properties of whole wheat and malted barley flour, from which Grape-Nuts is made —and has produced a food in the form of crisp, golden-brown granules. You chew Grape-Nuts thoroughly. The rich, sweet flavor of Grape-Nuts is the reward of chewing. Mature meant the teeth to be used. Primitive people, who keep the natural teeth sound and perfect to old age, ar e eaters of food which requires chewing. Grape-Nut gives the teeth work to da Perhaps you remember a little of the physiology lesson, now —how the salivary juices respond when the food is thoroughly chewed —and the first important step in digeation is taken.-Life-Giving Properties Wheat and malted - barley are richest
“There’s a Reason 5 ’ for Grape-Nuts
_ AMUSEMENTS. Atuntir. SWH 132 s. Illinois st. ® * Family SK2 K ROADWAY Alont TWO HOUR SHOW 88 yule ONE SOLID HOUR of I ONE SOLID HOUR of VAUDEVILLE! FEATURE PHOTOPLAYS SPECIAL / jß&k. if&c EVERYDAY LADIES' AND nH SB j®'' ||L EXCEPT CHILDREN'S _■ Wf >/ dr fe Jjf SATURDAY and MATINEE W® SUNDAY
NIGHT PRICES Children Under 12 20£ Adults 30£
ABOVE PRICES INCLUDE ALL WAR TAX PAID
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14,1921.
[allow half as much potato as you havo fish. Mix and heat by setting In a pan of boiling water over a fire, atlrrlng frequently. When hot, beat In an egg, whip the mixture smooth; let the paste get cold, make Into cakes, roll In flour and set on Ice. This should be ddhe the night before using. Fry In deep boiling beef dripping, clarified, or othfr fat. Cold fresh cod, salmon or other fish makes delicious cakes. -Proceed as with the salted cod, leaving out the soaking, and salting to taste. Serve with tomato sauce. BAKED TOMATOES. Cut the tops from large tomatoes and scrape out .the pulp. M: x with this one part of bread crumbs to two parts of minced boiled ham. Fill the tomato sheila with this mixture, put a bit of butter on the top of each, and set, s de by side. In a bake-pan. Pour a cup.ul of soup stock over and around the tomatoes, and bako until tender. RICK PUDDING. Make a white sauce by cooking together, until they bubble, a tablespoonful of flour and one of butter, and pouring on them a cupful of milk. Stir until thick and set aside to cool. When cool baat Into this sauce three-quarters of a cupful of cold boiled rice and four wellbeaten eggs. Turn Into a buttered pudding dish, put the dish Into a pan of boiling water and cook until the rpstard Is set. A quarter of at! hour should suffice. Eat with a vanilla sauce made, according to the following directions: Put a cupful of boiling water Into a sauce pan over the fire, stir Into It two teaspoonfuls of torn starch dissolved in cold water, one teaspoonful of butter, half a cupful of sugar, a teaspoonful of lemon Juice and a teaspoouful of vanilla. Stir until -.he Bauce boils and thickens. CHIU BAUSE. Peel eighteen large ripe tomotoes and sit large onions Remove the seeds from four red peppers and two grec-n peppers and chop them all finely. 801 l these wltn five cups of vinegar, two thirds of r cud of eugar and threo tablospoonfula of aalt for one hour. Add one teaspoon of ground cloves, one teaspoonful of ground allspice and one teaspoonful of grnert cinnamon and continue to boll for half ian hour longer. Put Into hot bottles and seal.—Copyright, 1921. Kenyon Committee to Sift W. Va. Mine War WASHINGTON. Sept. 14—Disregarding hfe opposition of the min# operators, the Kenyon Committee of the United Staten Senate decided today to go Into the coal fields of West Virginia this week and conduct a personal survey of conditions there which led to the rerent op.-n i warfar ebetween miners and mine j guards. *
j PUSS IN BOOTS JR. By David Cory Now let me see. We left little Puss Junior In the last story In the wicked lord's castle, and Puss had Just come out of his room to ask the little bird In the cage how he could rescue the captive maiden. "Sb-h-h-h!” said the little bird, “don’t make any noise.” So Puss kept very, very still. “Open the door of my cage,” whispered the little bird. And wasn't It strange, she wasn't the least bit afraid of Puss, although most birds are afraid of cats, you know. “Now follow me," said the little bird, and she flew up a winding pair < t stairs and then she stopped, for they v, are Just under the turret roof, yon see. “Now the key of the room hangs on the wall," sha said, and she showed Puss the key. "I will By around to the window of the maiden's room and tap on the bars. And when she itsks me what I wish, I will tell her that you have the key and will open the door If she will promise not to make a noise.” Then Puss took down the key and the little bird flew out of the stairway window and around to the the window of the maiden's room, while Puss stood quietly by the door waiting for the bird to tell him to open It. And pretty soon ho heard a tiny chirp through the keyhole, “Open the door, sir Cat.” So he turned th lock, and opened the door, and there stood the lovely maiden, only of course she was very pale and her eyes were red with crying. "Wo must find a way," chirped the lit the bird, and then she looked out of another window, up to which climbed a stont vine And as the little bird looked down, little steps seemed to grow ss If by magic out of the woody part of the vine. "Come,” said the bird, turning to the maiden. “Look at this wonderful vine ladder which grows right up to the window slll. Do you suppose you can walk down It without falling?” And then the lovely maiden bravely stopped over the sill and at once- com rneneed to climb down, while Puss followed carefully and the little bird flew near. Well, at last they reached the courtyard. But. oh, dear me; not far away stood a sentinel sound asleep. “I must get my Good Gray Horse,” whispered Puss. “Wait a mluute,” whispered the little bird, sud she flew away, and lu a few moments returned with a flower in her bill. “This is the Mr.jrlc Sleep Flower,” she said. “I will bob! It close to the sleeping sentinel and he will not awake. Go at dues and get your Good Gray Horse.” So Puss went to the stable and pretty soon he caine out riding his faithful fourfooted friend. And then the lovely maiden climbed up behind him and they went out through the castle gates, which opened of themselves when the little bird said tho magic words: “Open, open, gates to me!" And In the next story- you shall hear what happened after that.-—Copyright, 1921. (To be Continued.)
of all grains in the food elements required for human use. In GrapeNuts all the easentiala provided by nature in these grains are retained and perfected- The long, slow baking process which produces Grape-Nuts turns the grain’s starches into natural sweetness and breaks up the nutritive solids into forms easily assimilated by the body. The exceptional nourishment from Grape-Nuts is secured with no tax upon the digestion. Penalties for Mistakes When the doctor, as the mechanical expert of the bodily machine, comes to give advice in case of trouble, he finds that harm as well as good, often has resulted from food. “Starchy” foods have been :he subject of many warnings. Food which passes too slowly through the digestive tract causes disturbances to which much of the slowing down, wearing out, and failure of the bodily machine is traced. A characteristic of Grape-Nuts is that it digests quickly and completely—without fermentation in the Intestines. A World Service There is, therefore, a reason why, throughout the world, Grape-Nuts has steadily grown in favor these many years, as a food for fitness, as well as charm to taste. You can apply that reason to your own benefit. Ready to eat from the package, always crisp, naturally sweet —served wnn cream or milk and a little sugar If desired Grape-Nuts is an ideal dish for breakfast or lunch
SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS Children Under 12, Any Seat 20^ Mezzanine and Balcony 25^ Lower Floor and Boxes 35£
CIGARETTE HURTS FIFTY. POLA, Sept. 14.—More than 50 per sons were injured by an explosion In a
Women’s and Misses’ Dresses Os Tricotine c_i p $(1.75 Good and p . Desirable Serge Pr,Ce Model
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NEW SLEEVELESS G UIMP DRESSES FOR WOMEN AND MISSES of navy serge, very practical for school and office wear; an ordinary skirt would cost more than the price we are (|Q c\Q offering these values
DOMESTICS and BEDDINGS
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M PTJ °. N Pl CT UR Es : D. W. Griffith’s WAY DOWN EAST" THE GREATEST PICTURE EVER MADE NEVER BEFORE SHOWN AT LESS THAN $2 ! NOW SHOWING ! LOEW’S STATE AFTSi. EVES. 30c!50c BOX SEATS, fl .00—Including Tax. In “ONE WILD WEEK’’ ROI SANDS AND FRANCES JOHNSON IN SONO SCENES FROM "APPLE BLOSSOMS.” Al St. John in "Small Town Stuff." FOX NEWS WEEKLY Get In on the Alhambra’s World Series Baseball Contest. it's town talk! Witness the great national game series at our expense. For particulars see Mr. Young, Third Floor, Lyric Theater Building. “AMUSEMENTS. PEARLS OF PEKIN Os Pretty and Stately Models In a Bong and Dance Revue, J. K. EMMETT JR., MARY RYAN AND COMPANY 6CTHER BIG NEW ACTS D Dancing in the Lyric Ballroom Afternoon and Evening. BARK-lS" I mill 2:15-8:15 Miss NEW YORK Jr. A Bevy of Pretty Girls
hrngar at Vnllelunga, when an Italian .soldier tossed a cigarette butt into s ’heap of powder. The fire spread to
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MOT IO N PICT UR ES. A dramatic story of law--1 lessness and justice in the west—a lively tale of the old days when creoks 1 played havoc with the men who were trying to “make good” honestly. —COMEDY— ! “NINETY DAYS OR LIFE” i Today—Dustin Jarnum in “The Primal Law” “AFTER THE SHOW” -WITH- f all if Jack Holt and Lila Lee Richard Barthelmess “EXPERIENCE” I
several barges nMf tbe shore, and three of these also exploded. The smoker escaped injury, but war arrested.
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