Indianapolis Times, Volume 34, Number 151, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 November 1921 — Page 4

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Jttttmm Jlato Sftmes INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA. Dai'y Except Sunday, 25-29 South Meridian Stret. Telephones—Main 3500, New 28-351. MEMBERS OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS. ... i Chicago, Detroit. Bt. Louie, Q. Logan Payne Cos. Advertising offices j Kew y Boeton. Payne, Borne A Smith, Inc. VIYE FOCH! JUST WHAT function do several hundred vice presidents perform at a political meeting? A GOOD RULE for confidence men seems to be to make their schemes obviously Impossible. PLANS are being made to give the policewomen additional room. Wouldn’t fewer policewomen be a better solution? ITALIAN MARINES guard envoys’ liquor supply— headline. This fact probably will be used as recruiting publicity in Rome. SENATOR LA FOLLEITE is not always wrong. For instance, he is demanding that publicity be given the proceedings of the disarmament conference. WHAT DIFFERENCE does It make to the miner who actually digs coal whether his dues are taken out of his wages by his employer or he pays them himself? A WASHINGTON DISPATCH said that President Harding went golfing with Sir Harry Lauder. The score was not mentioned, but It is probable the odds were on the Scotchman. Vote Against These — Charles Barry, Marie Haslep, Adolph Emhardt, Charles Yoke and Fred Bates Johnson constitute a slate formed and backed by the reactionaries of this community for school commissioners. Their platform was formulated for them by those persons who can never forgive the present school board for failing to keep George C. Hitt in the position of business director after he had proved incompetent. The platform was designed for the purpose of catching votes and with absolutely no regard to the possibilities of fulfillment. It pledges the candidates against selling school bonds for less than par, although the bonds are 5 per cent securities and can nfever be sold at par. It pledges the candidates not to change text books in the school, although the text books are selected by the State board of education and no member of the Indianapolis school board has a word to say about them. It pledges the candidates to provide a seat for every pupil in a fire proof building, but the proponents of the 6late are the influences that have this year, through the 'state tax board, blocked the erection of three school buildings that were most needed in Indianapolis. There isn't a single redeeming feature about the candidacies of the persons constituting this slate. Barry is an obstructionist of the worst type; Marie' Haslep, a physician who knows nothing about school business; Emhardt. a politician, who, as chairman of the Democratic party, conducted a losing campaign four years ago; Yoke, an unknown quantity, whose only activity has been to declare “me too,” and Fred Bates Johnson is a former member of the Indianapolis News staff who is now taking employment with utilities whose taxes will be affected by the erection of good schools. This is the sorry array that has been set up with much abuse of the present members of the school board, as a slate which is acceptable to a designing newspaper. The election of it will nfean neglect of school building, control of the schools, by a scurrilous newspaper of doubtful ownership, and the eventual deprivation of thousands of children of a proper education. These five candidates never should receive any part of the votes of the electors of the school city. An Amazing Woman When the Federation of Women's Clubs in New York passed resolutions favoring the purpose of the conference for the limitation of armament, Mrs. William Cumming Story, formerly head of the D. A R., made a fight against the adoption and gave utterance to the following: “I view with great alarm the tendency of many of our women to ask for peace at any price and to work for pacifism. We do not wish to reduce our taxes at the expense of the safety of our country; we do not wish to feel that our men in the war died in vain.” All of which is a striking illustration of crooked thinking based on inadequate information and misdirected by a stunted moral sense. No one is asking for peace at any price, and Mrs. Story voice', the views of the jingoes, who prefer war at any price. A pacifism .hat is international and universal hurts no nation, and if it is so disgusting, then Christianity is a miserable cloak for hypocrites. And her reference to what o>Y men in the war died for is especially stupid. They died to end war— on war—to wipe out militarism and navalism—not alone in Germanjvout in all other nations. And they died to end the criminal policy of putrid people in high places who devote 93 cents out of every dollar wrung from the people through taxation to the purposes of war and strife. Mrs. Story evidently took too much to heart the jingo stuff passed out as patriotism by the saadiot demagogues of the last campaign.—Ft. Wayne JournalGazette. Up to Watson Senator Thomas E. Watson of Georgia has made charges concerning the American expeditionary forces which he must prove or retract, regardless of the senatorial privilege under which they were made. He has charged officers of the expedition with premeditated murder, by hanging, of men under their command and for whom they were responsible. The indictment is too horrible to be forgiven unless, contrary to all opinion, it can be substantiated. Either Seuator Watson has disclosed that he is not a fit man to appear in the hall of the Senate or he has done an inestimable service to the Nation by exposing that which no American could tolerate. It is not yet disclosed that the Watson charges are based on anything and they sound so preposterous that only the proof thereof could influence this Nation to give them credence. It is up to Mr. Watson to substantiate the assertions he has made Blurring the honor of our army, blasting the character of our officers, besmirching the flag under which they served, or stand before the people of the United States as a man unfit to live among them. For Foch and France! Today the citizens of Indianapolis offer, from their own deep sense of appreciation, a tribute to a great Boldier, the nature of which i# deeper than ordinary because there Is no hint of duty about it Visitors from foreign shores have been warmly welcomed in Indianapolis before. Great men have found the city hospitable and appreciative. But there is a difference in today’s ovation that Marshal Foch must appreciate. The Hoosier State is welcoming the great French leader, not because It feels a sense of duty to him as a great personage, but because it regards him and the valiant nation he represents with love and admiration. The thousands who gathered around the monument today came to show their feeling for a nation of heroes as well nation’s hero, and they demonstrated that regardless of national alliances, the American heart beats always in sympathy with valiant France. Mr. Frear's Position Representative James A Frear of Wisconsin writes the Times to say that a statement credited to him in a news story and used in an editorial in this paper was never made by him, and he sends eight pages from the Congressional Record to prove it. The statement had reference to a bill pending in Congress and Mr. Frear. was credited with saying that under that bill the American taxpayers can rest assured that they will not be ■ cheated out of 1 cent owed to them by Europe. He declares that ha “has made such an absurd statement” It is pleasing to know that Representative Frear did not make n?h a statement, which, as he says, is absurd. The American people are far more interested in business and industrial prosperity than they are in collecting a sum of dollars which might mean further depression of commercial affairs. a .

IN THE REALM WHERE WOMAN REIGNS

Keeping House With the Hoopers [The Hoopers, an average American family of Are. Ilyins in a suburban town, on a limited income, will tell the readera of the Dally Timea how tha many present-day problems of the home are solved by working on the budget that Mrs. Hooper has evolved and found practical. Follow them dally In an Interesting review of their home life and learn to meet the conditions of the high cost of living with them.} FRIDAY. “I suppose were are ready to continue our dlscuMion on the item of operating expenses,” announced Mrs. Chapin as she called the household economic section of the Woman's Club to order, “and that each one of you have worked out the amount of money that you will be able to spend each week for the expenses of running your house on the basis of yonr Income and the percentage of It that should be allowed for that purpose.” "Before we absolutely leave the subject of the clothing budget,” said one of the women, “I want to remark that I think that item Is the most difficult of any jo manage and I believe It Is the one that will need the greatest amount of discussion when Mrs. Hooper returns next week.” “I o- Ite agTee with that,” said a second clubwoman. “It does seem to me that $7 a vrek out of an income of sb<>, which Is what ws are following as a pattern and which Is the amount that the greater number of us seem to have to work on, Is entirely too little to keep a family of five supplied with clothing, unless one is an extraordinarily good manager.” . “That Is exactly what I have concluded,” remarked a third woman, “and what I want particularly to ask Mrs. Hooper when we return to the subject of clothes, la whether one would not be justified In skimping on the food allowance or the operating expenses, both of which sums seem more than adequate with the right management, and adding it to the dress budget." **l think that Is a question that will afford much opportunity for discussion when Mrs. Hooper takes charge of the section,” replied Mrs. Chapin. I like yourselves, am far from expert In the management of my household and 1 can t begin to settle these matters as she can. Shall we proceed then with the operating expenses and hear what Mrs. Campbell has to say about her experience in managing on the percentage of her Income allotted to that Item?” “Well,” admitted Mrs. Campbell, “as I have a modest house, simple furnishings and good equipment—what there Is of it, —I find no difficulty in managing on that amount. I allow for a woman only occasionally to help me clean as I find with the system of keeping everything in order and done up properly Ve TOWNE GOSSIP Copyright, 1031. by Star Company. By K. C. B. Dear K. C. B.—The lines below are just a little friendly letter to you, not fit for publication, but to show my appreciation of your dally article. Your nonsense Jtrings laughter, your little undercurrents —tears —the highest praise I know. ANNA MULLANE. 1221 Milwaukee Ave., Chicago. DEAR K. C. B. • • • I BEAD the lines. • o o ABOUT TOUR prayers. • • • SO AM sending those. • • • FEW WORDS to say. • • • IF I wars you. • • • I'D NOT ’Tay off.” • • • FOR IF you do. • • • IN TOUR busy life. I• • • TOU MAY forget. • • • W7IAT HK did for you. • • • 'BOUT THE swimming rare. • • • AND MICKEY'S cramp*. • • • AND BABE Kuth s arm. • • • AND CHICK'S home run. • • • SO EF I were you. • • • DEAR K. C. B. it# MOST EVERY day. • • • I'D BREATHE a prayer. • • • JUST A little one. • • • REAL SOFT and low. cXm • • FOR WE never know. • • WHEN DAYH may come. • • * THAT WE'LL be jrlad. • • * WE- KEPT In touch. • • • WITH THE Master Mind, • • # WHO THE Scriptures say. • * * GIVES TO hlgrh and low. • • • TO GREAT and small. • • • THE THINGS we ask. 000 IN HIS own way. AND I nearly forpot. • • • TO SAY to you. * * * DON'T BE afraid. • • • THAT HETL “overdo. ’* * • * I THANK you.

BRINGING UP FATHER.

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INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, iwi.

Men Y©o May Marry By ETHEL R. PEYSER Has a man like this proposed to you? Bymptoms: About 22; correct as a book of etiquette; never oversteps; you can hardly hear him talk, and you miss his eyes in the graceful droop of his well-groomed head. He makes his way In spite of himself, because he looks good and with men his head is tilted up a bit more. He is reliable, has good taste, is a bit cautious, but terribly shy. IN FACT , He shies at most everything. Prescription to hi* bride: UL/ Be decisive and deal in rosy colors when putting IT, anything before him. Be patient, he is a good ** F friend. Don’t tell him he’s shy. Absorb This: NEVER SAY “SHYI“ (Op? right, mu

every day, the cleaning of the house is not the Job I once made of It.” “If you have a maid, her wages will nave to come out of this item, and she will add one more person to your family in the matter of calculating for fdod,” volunteered Mrs. Chapin. “You will not be figuring properly if you say you have three In your family and a maid, and then figure on food for three In your budget. So many budget makers go wrong there.” “Well, as a permanent maid Is out of the question and a laundress or an occasional cleaning woman the only thing possible on an allowance of 19 a week for operating expense*. 1 don’t think we need to go Into the question of servants,” said one of the club women. “Except as it may concern the few Daily Fashion Hints S Ch e\ o ~x BY AGNES AYRES. Star In Paramount Picture*. Never have we been more enthnslastle about three-piece suits, and certainly there is ground for enthusiasm. A onepiece drees of cloth, warm and becoming, with a little coat just right in line and length to slip on over it when you go out is a combination of comfort and charm not to be despised. I found the accompanying three-piece suit in one of the good shops last week. It was of a lovely dark red cloth, wine or bnrgundy, though it probably has a brand new name, and was trimmed with great pieces of squirrel fur. The frock Itself was rather simple, onepiece, a little low In the neck end a little gathered, and It had very brief sleeves and a loose sash, ending in the longest and heaviest tassel I have ever seen, of red and gray Bilk. Underneath the eoat the frock Is heavily embroidered with red and gray. But the wide band of squirrel at the hem of the rather short skirt, making it warm and heavy and bouffant, is what pleases me most. There is a wide collar of squirrel on the little coat to match. The dress may be simple, but not so the little coat. It has. besides Its huge squirrel collar, two pointed tabs of cloth hanging from under the collar and completely surrounded by a heavy fringe of red and gray silk. And then it has short sleeves, elbow length sleeves. And It is not the first coat or wrap I have seen with them either. Glove makers and furriers—rejoice 1

who are figuring on the basis of larger incomes, and who are trying to disentangle themselves from the servant situation, which is the most complicated one that a woman has to meet these days, and which Is one of the penalties of having an income presumably big enough to keep them,” laughed Mrs. Chapin good-naturedly. “It Is quite true,” remarked another member whose husband had a very lsrge salary compared with the Incomes of the others, “that keeping house on £SO a week Is a simpler proposition than trying to manage on three times that else, and really needs less regulating to make it work properly.” Many of the women present showed by their expressions that they believed the lady was wrong but Mrs. Chapin smiled at het sympathetically. “The thing that makes the heaviest drain on this department of the budget,’observed the bride, “Is the purchase of new equipment. Most of us are trying to fit our houses with as many laborsaving devices as possible for the sake of the time saved and the greater ease with which work Is accomplished, and It i Is very difficult to know Just how to do It with only $9 a week to cover everything.” “The big question for discussion along that line when Mrs. Hooper comes back is whether the Installment plan is a good one as a solution of that problem, and also how much of that nine dollars It is possible to conserve each-.week to put Into equipment and furnishings,” said Mrs. Chapin. “Another thing that greatly affects ex- 1 pendlture for operating expenses is the , kind of heat and its control,” observed Mrs. Owen. “And along that line don’t forget the electric light which needs constant vigilance to keep it from mounting up,“ was the reminder of a third as tha members prepared to adjourn. The menus for the three meals on Saturday are: BREAKFAST BAked Apples Cereal Poached Eggs French Toast Coffee LUNCHEON Baked Beans Bye Bread and Butter Grapes Cocoa DINNER Vegetable Soup Creole Shin of Beef Lettuce Salad Buttered Beets Baked Potato’s Apple Tie CREOLE SHIN OF BEEF. Wash four pounds of shin of beef, rub with salt and paprika and pises in an earthenware crock. Add a stalk of chopped celery, one onion and a carrot thinly sliced, cover tha crock closely and bake in a slow over four hours (This should really be cooked la a fireless cooker). Meanwhile cook together two cupfuls of canned tomatoes, one chopped green pepper, u chopped onion half a bay leaf, <ne scant tableapocmful pt sugar, one-quarter teaspoonful of cinnamon and half a teaspoonful of salt for twenty minutes. Remove the meat from the bone. Add the meat liquor In the crock to the sauce. Stir In fonr tablespoonsfnl of dried bread crumb* and pour over the meat on a hot platter,— Copyright, 1621. MOCK TURTLE SOUP. One calf’s head, six cloves (ends pinched out), one small carrot, diced, two hard-boiled eggs, two-thirds cup flour, on# enp stewed and strained to- ; mato, one-half teasponful of peppercorns. ©no small onion sliced, two and one-half cups brown stock, one-fourth cup butter, Jules of one-half lemon. Wash and clean calf's hetd. Boak from one to two hours In cold water to cover. Cook until tender in three and one-half qnarts of salted boiling water, to which the seasoning and vegetables have been added. Remove head, boll stock until reduced to on# quart, strain and cool. Melt and brown butter, add flour and stir until well browned, then pour on slowly brown stock. Add head stock, tomnto and one enp force meat cut In dice and lemon Juice; also egg balls mads from yolks of eggs. Heat very hot and serve at once. FILLET OF BEEF ROASTED. The long fillet of beef is found under the loin of the beef, and the short fillet under th* rump. When the long

i fillet is removed, there are no porterhouse steaks, and for this reason it is more expensive than the short. To prepare, you remove all fat, veins and tendons. Skewer Into shape, and lard up- : per side with the grain of the meat ; Place on rack in pan and sprinkle with ; salt and pepper and dredge lightly with I flour. Place a few pieces of Balt pork in the bottom of the pan. Bake thirty minutes In hot oven, basting several times. Remove to hot platter; take out skewers and garnish with parsley and small red radishes or watercress, with yolks of eggs sprinkled over them by pressing the egg through a potato ricer. FRIED CAI-LIFLOWER. Prepare by placing In cold water for thirty mlnntes. Separate into flowerets, shape stalks and boll in salted water for ten minutes or until tender. Drain, roll in bread crumbs, then in beaten egg mixed with two tablespoonfnls of water, then back to the crumbs again. At time for serving, fry in deep fat, drain and serve. This makes a nice entree, with a thick tomato sance, with sweet green peppers In the sauce. BERMUDA ONION SALAD. Cut a Bermuda onion in half the long way, and slice very thin, and place in ice water for one hour. Drain and dry and dress generously with oil until thoroughly coated. Add salt, pepper and paprika, and lastly one tablespoonfnl of Tarragon vinegar and one tablespoonfnl of cider vinegar. Serve on lettuce leaves, with boiled or cold meats of any kind. NUT CAKES. One half pound English walnuts, chopped fine; one-half pound brown sngar; one-half teaspoonful baking powder: one saltspoonful salt; one-third cupful flonr; three whites of eggs. Pound nut meats and mix with flonr. egg whites until stiff and yolks until lemon color and thick. Drop on Un sheet on buttered paper, allowing tablespoonful to each cake. Place far enough apart to allow for Bpreading. PUSS IN BOOTS JR. Br David Cerr Now let me see. Where did I leave off In the last Btory? Oh, yes: I reI member now. Little Pass Junior had fallen asleep In the house where Little Boy Blue lived. Yes; Puss had fallen 1 asleep In front of the fireplace over I which hung the silver horn that called j the cows from the fields of corn. Well, the next morning the horn began blowing all by itself, and this of course woke up everybody in the house. So Puss washed hla face and pawa and curled his whiskers, and pulled on his red-topped boots, and after that he was ready for breakfast. Then Mrs. Boy Blue came downstairs with Little I Boy Blue. He was only three y;ars old, : but be could blow on a horn, but I i don't think the cows paid any attention i to him, for they knew he was only doing it la fun, you see. Well after breakfast Puss Junior bid them all good-by and mounted hi* good gray horse, and by and by. after he had ridden many a mile, be came to a queer ' place—lt was called Alphabet Town. But the strangest thing of all was that the Alphabet was alive. Yee, from A to Z It was alive, and Puss was so interested that he drew rein at the gates of Alphabet Town, because, he said to himself if I expect to get through New Mother Goose Land, X must learn the Alphabet, and the sooner I learn It the sooner I shall see my dear father, so be went up to the school house and this is what he learned: A was an Ant who worked all the day, B was a Butterfly flitting away. C was a Cherry that hung on a tree, D was a Daisy that grew on the lea. E was an Elm that stood by the school, F was a Frog that lived In a pool. G was a Goat with a beard on his face, n was a Horse that won a fine race. I was an Insect that fed on a peach, J was a Jay Bird whose song was a screech. K was a Kitten that played with a string, L was a Lambkin that browsed In the spring. M was a Magplo that stole a gold spoon, N was a Nest where she slept ’neath the moon. O was an Oak Tree that held safe the nest. t* was a Pigeon with soft purple vest. Q was a Quail that was shot with a gun, R was a Rooster that woke up the sun. S was a Snail that was awfully slow, T was a Turtle no faster, you know. U was a Unicorn, of him yon have heard, V was a Vulture, a ra-pa-clons bird. W was a Wren that made a sweet noise, X was a Xmas tree covered with toys. Y was a Yule Log dragged through the snow. 7, was a Zero when Winter winds blew. And I think when I tell ycta that Puss learned this alphabet In less than half an hour, you will agree with me he was a very bright cat. (Copyright, 102 L) To Be Continued. IRVINGTON WINS BOOK HONORS Mips Carrie E. Scott, supervisor of children's work in the Indianapolis public library, reports that in the “Further Adventures In Bookland,” the summer reading contest, Irvington branch library again is ahead, as last year, with 192 contestants and a total number of LOCB books read. The total number of children enrolled in the contest from all over the city was 827, 379 of whom received diplomas for reading the required number of ten books and reporting them to the librarian. Os these 20fi read more than the required number, and sixteen ambitious readers read all fifty books on the list from which ten were to be selected. Almost ■even thousand books were rend for the contest. One littlo girl, leaving town, was so eager to be in the contest that 1 she read the books and sent back to the librarian written reports of the books as she read them. A general request has come to the librarians from the children that another reading contest bo given next summer.

MOVIES HELPED MAKE ALICE BRADY A Dramatic Success on the Legitimate Stage

An actress cannot “four-flush” oh the screen. She may be able to fool some of the people part of the time, and part of the people all the time, but she can't fool the lens of the camera at any time. That Impartial critic shows her up just as she is “without any plea.” In other

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ALICE BRADY. words, the motion picture camera plays no favorites and they who posture before its bright eye must ,in the Broadway vernacular “have the goods.” It was her long training in motion picture work that helped Alice Brady, who comes to the Murat Monday night for the first half of the week in “Forever After,” to firmly establish herself as an emotional actress of exceptional ability. Those who had watched the career of Miss Brady were amazed at the unsus-

Washington Briefs

Rpeclal to Indiana Daily Time* and Philadelphia Public Ledger. WASHINGTON, Nov. 4.—Members of the “advisory committee” to the American delegation at the armament conference are by no moans to be merely decorative figures. It is at any rate the plan of the President and Secretary Hughes that they shall be useful as well as ornamental. Their primary function, It appears, will be to serve as the speak lng trumpets through which the hopes, wishes and suggestions of the American people at large shall be made articulate to our delegation at the conference. Both at the White House and the State Department the . makeup of the advisory committee is considered ideal for that purpose. All “key” branches of American life are represented—finance, commerce, agriculture, labor and women's activities. The three pre-eminent faiths in the United States —Protestantism, Roman Catholicism and Judiasm have adherents among the advisory twenty-one. Geographically, each section of the Union Is provided for. Some surprise was expressed In Washington today that Senator Borah Is not on the committee. • • • It would be lmposible to exaggerate tha disappointment that fills Washington over definite suggestions that David Lloyd George will be unable to attend the armament conference. There are still hopes in official circles that the British prime minister will yet find It possible to be here. It has always been understood that his coming was altogether problematical. Washington knows that Mr. Lloyd George keenly desires to participate In the conference and Is certain he will do so If at all within the range of practical possibilities. By general consent much of the electricity of the parley will be missing If “L. G." and his Celtic temperament are absent. • • • Thomas W. Lamont was In Washington today to confer with the President and Secretary Hughes regarding his recent activities In Mexico. Although the New Y'ork tanker was not able to report the conclusion of negotiations with the Obregon government regarding Mexico's financial obligations In the United States and Europe, it is understood Mr. Lamont assured both the White House and the State Department that the way to agreement Is rtill open. The Junior member of the Morgan firm—himself a graduate of the reportorlal profession—could not be persuaded to unburden himself when he emerged from the White House offices. “Mr. Harding and I discussed the flora and fauna of Mexico,” he said, leaving It to the Imagination of his interrogators ns to the classification In which the Obregon government belongs. • • • Washington fills up from hour to hour with foreign gentry. The streets are beginning to look and sound cosmopolitan. Hotels an'd shops are flinging the flags of conference nations to the breeze and evolving picturesque show window effects combining their colors. At the daily audience with the chiefs of executive departments newspapermen rrom abroad now are almost as numerous as Washington correspondents. It Is easy to discern, from the eagerness of visiting journalists to meet them that the three big “Hs” of the Administration, Harding, Hughes and Hoover —are the American statesmen in whom foreigners art most interested. After the President, the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Commerce, the liveliest interest is entered in Senator Borah. * • • Prince Lvoff, the first prime minister of democratic Russia, who has teen In Washington on conference affairs, had a genuine thrill during his visit to the congressional library. In Czarist days when the hated and reactionary Russian .minister of the Interior, Stolypln, ruled

pected ability of this young star whefli she appeared in Broadway in the spoket drama her long apprenticeship iii iho “movies.” But, after all, there is nothing particularly amazing about it, as Miss Brady la one of the hardest workers on th stage. She is tireless and indefarigabH adn long ago determined that she was going to "arrive” some day “witu both feet,” as the saying goes. That she has kept that promise to herself, is dne not only to native ability as an actress, but to the fact that she has played every sort of emotional ptfrt in moving pictures, “There is no question that the movies have helped me tremendously in the spoken drama,” said Miss Brady recently in discussing “Forever After.” “Work before the camera shows an actress what not to do as well as what to do. It 1* a training In pantomime that will always be one of a player’s most valuable assets if he or she takes acting serlonalyi “How do I explain what sncceaa I have had as a legitimate actress in tha spoken drama?” asked Miss Brady, "Frankly, there Is no mystery about It. The movies gave me an opportunity td develop all of the pantomlne possibilities In my body. In studying so many different sorts ot roles, I learned to throw overbonrd many things that the screen, showed me were unessential After all, you know, you don’t have ta *tca- passion to shreds’ in order to ‘get overi big emotional moments. People In real Ufa; particularly during the war, did no* throw a fit when the big test cam* Nor is It necessary in the drama. Yon can convev suffering and poignant emotion by your facial expression without having A stage fit. __ "So yon see, it is very simple. By seeing myself on the screen, aa other* saw me, I learned many things and am still learning, and I try to carry th knowledge of these things Into my work on the legitimate stage,” she contend*. -I- -i- 4* ON VIEW TODAY. The theaters today are offering the following attractions: "The Birth of 8. Nation,” at English’s; “The Four Horae*; men of the Apocalypse” at the Murat;' Eddie Ross at B. F. Keith’*; “Different”! at the Lyric; "The Son of Wallingford” at the Ohio; “Two Minutes To Go” at! the Circle; “The Queen of Sheba" at Loew’s State; “Never Weaken” at the Alhambra; “Clay Dollars” at the Colonial; “Everything for Sale” at Misters Smith’s; “What Women Win Do" at tbej Isis; “Desperate Trails” at the Regent}: “Some Wild Oats” at the Keystone and “The French Frolics” at the Park.

with an Iron hand, Prince Lvoff wrote a remarkable book dealing with Siberia. Stolypln suppressed it and confiscated every copy his minons could lay hands on. Out of sheer curiosity and not dreaming it would be there, Prince Lroff asked the librarian of Congress whether he had a copy. “Let’s see,’” said an official. An Index was consulted and the volume produced within three minutes. The prince’s consternation was profound. ** • • The Japanese continue on the elart in Washington setting a pace no other conference power—sot even the United States—has yet attempted to followBaron Shidehara, the imperial Japanese ambassador, has issued invitations to* the entire press of Washington—domestic and foreign correspondents alike, a j brigade of several hundred—to meet Prince Iyesato Tokugawa and Admiral Tomosaburo Kato, his fellow delegates, at a reception at the Shoreham on Saturday evening. The Nipponese Intend to practice intensively the principle of conference publicity. They have caused it to be known that from top to bottom the delegation is at the service of the newspaper fraternity and that there Is no possible question journalistic inquisitors can launch that they are not ready to aaswe*. * • • Charles G. Dawej, director of the budget, has temporarily redonned his brigadier general’s regimentals. The occasion is the meeting in Washington this week of the “Military Board o * failed Supply,” formed In France In 1918 under the chairmanship of General Dawes. The board has reassembled, probably for the last time, to check up on outstanding matters. Among those In attendance are General Payot and Colonel Ciomenson of France, General MeHardy and Colonel Daubney of Great Britain, Colonel Lazxi of Italy and Colonel Comonnt of Belgium. The board is meeting in General Pershing’s palatial offices In the State, War and Navy building. • * * M. Arlstido Brland, prime minister of France, who will lead his country’s delegation at the armament conference, cannot speak English. Daring the past few weeks, however, he has been taking lessons in the language, and hopes to have mastered a sufficient smattering, by the time he reaches Washington, to indnlge at least In the social amenities of the conference. It is related of M. Polncaire, former president of the French Republic, "hat he set himself the task,, even during his war time presidency, ofl acquiring the other language of the entente cordlale, with the result that when he left the Elysees Palace last year he spoke English fluently. * • • Statesmen In Washington who are given to peevishness over the failure of allied Europe to pay even the Interest on the $10,000,000,090 it owes the United States have coined, anew quip. It rone: “Oh, debt, where is thy 6tingl” • • * President Harding has addressed to Paul M. Pearson, of Swarthinore, president of the International Lyceum and Chautauqua Association, an important letter conveying the Administration’s ideas as to what lyceum and chantanqna speakers can do to promote the success of the armament conference. The letter has not been made public but It 1* understood to express approval of any a*. tivities designed to educate the pubMo intelligently on conference problem While deprecating the propagation of a belief that “millenlal” results are cither pro* Jected or obtainable.—Copyright, 1921* by Public Ledger Company.

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