Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1922 — Page 4

4

Tjnfnami Sail? Slitnes Published at 25-29 South Meridian street. Indianapolis, Ind., by The Indiana Daily Times Company. W. D. Boyce, President. Harold Hall. Treasurer and General Manager. Telephone—MA in 3500. MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS. . - . New Tork. Boston, Payne, Burns * Smith, Inc. Advertising offices. Chicago, Detroit, St. Louis, G. Logan Payne Cos. Subscription Rates: Indianapolis, 10c per week; elsewhere, 12c per week Entered as Second Class Matter, July 25. 1914, at Postoffice, Indianapolis, Ind. Under act March S, 1879. CHINA fell for a shell game—war. DIVIDING patriots gives ns pat-riots in Irelapd. IT WAS no Small Job to get that trial at Waukegan under way . THOSE Chicago labor leaders held In '. 1 might demand shorter hours. TOO MANY people are wishing their marriage licenses would expire. NEW JERSEY papers are fighting mosquitoes, but mosquitoes can’t read. / ANYWAY, it was refreshing to sit in torrid Indiana yesterday and read about that blizzard in Wyoming. IT would be neighborly of Senator Newberry to give his chair to Senator New as a "lame duck" offering. FEW of those who have observed Senator Reed's career in the Senate will be inclined to disagree when Woodrow Wilson terms him a "marplot.'’ THE LATEST excuse for delaying action on the soldiers’ bonus bill 13 that President Harding is on a week-end golfing expedition. TEAT MAN who spent 84.50 in an unsuccessful race for the nomination for Congressman from the Seventh district evidently had Truman H. Newberry's fate la mind. The Auto Killers Deaths of two Indianapolis women within the last three weeks in accidents due, according to the police, to drunken automobile drivers, have served to bring to the attention of the public a Berious situation that officials seemingly f--.il to grasp. In both cases the women were wives of the intoxicated pilots. It cannot be stressed too urgently that an automobile driven tty a man under the influence of liquor is a potential murder car, endangering not alone the lives of the occupants, but the innocent users of the highway. Every time an inebriated person takes the steering wheel of a car in his hands good fortune alone prevents a mounting toll of casualties and that Dame Fortune Is a fickle person to rely upon la such cases is demonstrated by the deaths in Indianapolis resulting from such utter disregard for human safety. If it Is true that the law, as Judge Wllmeth says, prevents him from making an object lesson of some of these wanton drivers by sending them to the penal farm, then the Legislature should see that the proper instrument of punishment is placed In the hands of gur- Judges. If a few men, arrested fog piloting a car while they were under the Influence of liquor, were sent to the penal farm, or to a rock pile. It undoubtedly would act as an excellent deterrent when temptation arose to get drunk Just before embarking upon an auto ride. Detroit .Cleveland and Los Angeles have found that Jail sentences have brought splendid results In curbing speed mar.ia. Why not give the law-abiding citizens of Indiana the same safeguards? They are entitled to protection by the law. The deaths of these two women should give the candidates for the State Legislature something to think about, and if they will seriously consider the subJeqfc there is no reason why a law cannot be placed upon the statute books next winter that will serve to curb the automobile killers. In the meantime, let Judge Wllmeth Inflict the maximum penalty at his disposal, for, light as it is, It will serve a useful purpose if he permits no mitigating legal barrier to interfere with his duty to the public.

The White House Bee Albert J. Beveridge will step from the United States Senate into President Harding s shoes at the end of the next two years if Harold Van Orman of Evansville, State Senator, has his way. Mr. Van Orman nominated Mr. Beveridge for the presidency yesterday in an address before the National Hotel and Restaurant Equipment Exposition Id Chicago and incidentally mentioned In the course of his remarks that the former Senator’s transmutation into the White House will be accompanied by treading over the dead bodies of the “doomed old guard’’ politicians. Mr. Van Orman is best remembered through the many wet speeches he made in the State Senate during the last session and by the fact that he cast a dissenting vote on the Dunn hill, designed to make the Indiana prohibition law- conform to the Vc stead act. This is not the first time that the zealous supporters of Mr. Beveridge have vociferated upon his presidential potentialities, and especially was this true In the cheering hours following his phenomenal victory over Senator New. Os course, Mr. Beveridge's silence upon the question should not be misconstrued as opposition nor ambition, for his thoughts, doubtless, are now well occupied vith the immediate necessity of first landing in the Senate. It is a tribute to him, however, that his frieuds would accord him the highest honor within the gift of the Nation. If it is true that Mr. Beveridge is looking over the dome of the capitol to the columned portico of the White House, then Indiana Indeed is blessed with Fubitious political leaders, for It Is constantly reiterated that Senator James Eli Watson also is desirous of exchanging the toga for the scepter. Mr. Watson, two years ago, entertained a ho ; e of becoming his party’s presidential nominee until he crossed with a similar ambition smouldering in the breast of former Governor Goodrich. Asa result, neither of those boomlets ever got beyond the confines of the Hotel Severin, where the Republican headquarters are maintained, but there Is no good reason, especially in view of the maneuvers of the last few days, to believe that the flowery Jim has abandoned his eternal hope. The Heartless Again Peggy Hopkins Joyce, many times married an a most famous vamp of modern times, enters the limelight as the flame that singed the moth. Just a few days ago young William Errazuriz, Chilean diplomat to Paris, shot himself in his room next to her suite because she refused to marry him after she had encouraged his affection. Now another victim of her unrequittod love, Lieut. Rivas Muntt, an attache of the Chilean legation In Paris, lies in a critical condition at Nice, the result of an attempted suicide. The doom which has befallen the victims of this beautiful “siren of the century,” as she is called, should be a warning to those who admire the vampire type of woman. “Most men are attracted by my clothes, my jewels, my face—others because I am Peggy Joyce. They don't care for the real me,” she confesses. Since aware of this, she should kindly Instruct her admirers to stroll along Fifth avenue, the Rue de la Paix or any other fashionable shopping district and gaze in the show windows at the charming but harmless wax figures, for like these inanimate models she is, apparently, heartless, and she admits that she loves flattery for Itself alone. After each incident involving her admirers, she declares she is through with men, and now calmly asserts that if she ever marries again she will tell the man (and from all reports Henri Letellier, owner of the Le Journal of Paris, •will be the unfortunate one), that she cannot give him real love, because the death of William Errazuriz awakened her to the realization that she loved him. If so, she must have some knowledge of what her many admirers have suffered. But perhaps this Is mere say-say to modify public feeling against her, just as her recent feature story delineated her innocence. \ Once again she says her philosophy of life Is charged, and that she Is coming to America to act in the movies wfljh Jack Dempsey <?f boxing fame. - \ ia<Ud, Will Hays has tome very hard problems to handle! V

GALLI-CVRCI IN RECITAL TO SING Famous Shadow Song From Meyerbeer's ‘Dinorah'

The largest audience ever assembled to j bear a singer in the history of Indian-1 apolis will gather Saturday night at the ! Cadle Tabernacle where Ainelita Gulli- i Cure! will appear in a recital with Manuel Bercnguer, flutist, and Homer Samuels, pianist. It is estimated that more than eight thousand people will hear the Stnger in addition to Gipsy Smith choir which has taken the fifteen hundred seats in tbo choir loft. Mrs. Ona B. Talbot, who is bringing the singer here, announces the following program for the Saturday night concert of Galli-Curei: I. “Nina" (old Italian) X’ergolese 'Tve Been Roaming” (old English)... Horn 11. "Comme Autrefois," from “reeheurs de Perles” Bizet 111. ‘‘Echo Song” (with (lute) Bishop IV. “Xuit d'etoles” Debussy “Carceleras" (in Spanish) Chap! "Chanson Indoue" (song of India) Rimskv-Korsakoff “II Bacio" Arditi INTERMISSION. V. ‘‘Romance" Gaubert “Serenade" Rue Mr. Borenguer. “A Widow Bird Sat Mourning*’ Treliarne "The Brownies" Loonl “When Chluris Sleeps'' Samuels VII. "Shadow Song" from "Dlnorah" (with flute) Meyerbeer The singer and her assisting artists are comiug from a Western and Southern tour, where she ins been greeted by audiences larger than the late Caruso could command. For the convenience of patrons, the management has prepared tlie following schedule to be observed Saturday: Doors open at 7:1.' p. m. Concert beg,..s at S :3d p. m. Seats for the concert on sale until 5:30 p. m, ' Saturday at the Ona B. Talbot office, 910 Hume Mansur building. After 7 p. in. Saturday remaining seats will be on sale at the ticket office of the Cadlo Tabernacle. AH a ntomobiles must approach auditorium from the north on New Jersey street. Patrons to the concert coming by motor will enter the New Jersey

Ye TOWNE GOSSIP Copyright, 1922. by Star Company. By K. C. B. : Dear K. C. R. —Going to church last Suftday 1 noticed a Collie dog tied to the church fence, resting serenely with his head between his front paws. When church was out I waited to sec what manner of man it was who brought his dug to rhur h. When he came our he was tapping a cane in front of nim and made bis way to the dog and urrried him. Then they went together, the dog leading the blind mar., until they had cross.-d the street a block away. A long block came then and the blind man took the leash off and let the dog r .mp ar.d play. At the next corner the dog came back to his leash and 1 watch- and them until they were out <>f sight. I thought of you as they went away and 1 want you to know about it. Elizabeth, N. J. JAM. MY HEAR Jam * • • WHEN I was young. A KINDLY parent • * • HAD INTENT. • • • TO MAKE of me. • A MINISTER. • • • IJCT AS I grew. • • • IT SEEMED to him AN UNWISE thing. AND DRIFTING. • • • I became a scribe. AND SO I're stayed. • • • BI T lIAD I been. • • • A MINISTER. • • WITHIN Tnr church • • • OF WHICH you write. • • • AND HAD I seen. • * • THE WAITING dog. AND HAD I known. ... WHY HE was there. • • • I WOULD have said * • • WHEN I arose. • * AT SERMON time. • • • •‘THE CONGREGATION. “WILL ARISE. “AND FOLLOW me." • • * AND OUT there. • • ON TIIE city street. • • WE WOULD haVo stood. * • • THE WHILE the blind man TArrED HIS way • • • UNTO HIS dog. • • * AND WED have watched • • UNTIL TnF.Y’D gone AND WHEN they’d gone. • • I WOULD hare said UNTO MY flock. * * * “THE CONGREGATION. “IS DISMISSED.” * AND I’D been glad. I PREACHED so well. * * • I THANK you.

BRINGING UP FATHER.

rwJ I [WI PERFECTLY ADFRA HAVE YOO z J THE. WA'f inner ONC. P . ’ © 1922 av Inti Feature Service. t** cJ f j[ 1 5~-/2 ' . i

INDIANA DAILY TIMES

HERE SATURDAY .. siiSsSElsShil .SH jjSw§k JbH Br Galll-Curcl and her husband, Homer Samuels, who will appear In concert Saturday night at the Cadle Tabernacle before tin! largest audience over assembled. It is said, In Indianapolis to hear a singer. street entrance. .411 foot passengers will enter the main entrance on Ohio street. Calll Corel will arrive In the city late this afternoon and will establish herself In a alii to at a local hotel. TO BE A HI TLER OR NOT TO BE A BUTLER. Robert McCroarty holds the world's for playing the part of butler among all actors of his age in the ‘heater today. When “The Acquittal” Is produced by the Stuart Walker Company at the Muflfct next Monday, Mr. McGroariy will again b-o on hand in his familiar capacity as household retainer. A.- a rule theatergoers r. inclined t regard butlers as very unimportant characters Indeed in the pretentious world of tii- theater, but not so in the case of "Hob" Met; reart ,v. At the first performance of the season on May 2 when Belt made his first entrance ns the butler In ‘Honors are F.v.-u" he did what is technically known u 9 “stopping tho show.” Iu the several years In which b* has been associated with smart Walker In the capacity of stage director he has played eounth ss domestic servants. Some have been old, some young, boiuu honest, some thieves, but ail butler*. Occasionally there has been n change. For Instance last season la "Mamma's Affair” he was cast for quite a different sort of part—that of a young lover And so well di-1 he play It that It received unqualified approval not only from audieices but also from critics. All of which goes to show that Mr. McGroarty is i: t ..St for butlers' parts because ho cannot play anything else, but .-dm - ty be. cause nobody ease can play them nearly so well. Besides being an notor with a "spoo laity." Mr. McGroarty 1* the man who sees that thing* go along as they should behind the scenes. 110 Is stage director for the company and assistant to Stuart Walker. ON VIEW TODAY. The following attractions nr* on view teii.iv; popular vaudeville and movies at Keith's and the lyric; "Three Live Ghosts” at the Murat; “Oh: Daddy,

Kingan s i Carton LARD For Shortening You can make delicious pie-crust and wonder- f ful' biscuits by using Kingan’s Lard as the shortening. Try it. To make sure of receiving this highest quality pure lard in the convenient full weight one pound carton, ask for Kingan’s Carton Lard. Buy by the carton Use from the carton

Oh!” at the Rialto; Jack Johnson’s road show at the Broadway ; “Orphans of the Storm" at the Ohio; “The Miracle Man” and “The Spanish Jade" at Loew's State; “The Primitive Lover” at the Circle; “Across the Continent” at the Alhambra; "Two Kinds of Women" at Mister Smith’s and “Across the Deadline" at the Isis. Five Good Books for Welders Indianapolis Public Library, Technical Department, St. Clair Square. FREE BOOK SERVICE. “Welding," by Hart. “Oxy-Acetylene Welding," by Miller. “Oxy-Acetylene Welding Manual,” by Campbell. "Gas Torch and Thermit Welding," by Vlall. “Electric Welding,” by Vlall. Unusual Folk ST. PAUL, Minn., May 12.—Mrs. John Munroe Is sheriff of Lyon County, this State. Her home Is at Marshall, tho ] county seat. Until recently the office his widow ... ■ “1 now holds was filled by Mrs. Muuroe’s husband. The county fjr commissioners named 4'. j her as his successor v’ : upon his death. Her v efficient handling of the duties of tho n|;\ \ office has already won her much praise and every prospect is for her election ■ > . g- upon the expiration ->■ of her present term woman deputy sher- & lffs In tlio United States but Mrs. MunMr. Monro*. roe, tt Is believed, la the only actual sheriff In the country. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY My God *lm!l supply all your need, according to 111* riches and glory.— l’hilip plans 4: ID. The central thought of religion Is of a peace that la beyond the unrest of life, of a harmony that transcends all Its discords, af a unity of purpose which works through all the conflict of tho forces of nature, and the still more Intense conflict of the wills of men.—Ed ward Cuird. DEFORESTATION CAUSES WASTE State Conservation Department Makes Statement. Deforestation of Indiana lauds ’’.as been a great source of waste, according to Richard Lleber, director of the State Department of Conservation, today. 1 he waste caused by the recent floods throughout Indiana and the Middle West Intensified and made more violent by the lack of trees, wu enormous, ho said. According to I.lcber tho tree roots, entangled meow the surface of tho soli, holds the roll Intact and allow s water to trickle through slowly Instead of forming, large ortfl-es and draining the land ns mo.-t as soon as tho rain hits the earth. He said this rapid drainage Is a source of waste through d>> fort 111 zing the soil, long before i's richness is exhausted by crop*. The farmer then mud buy fertilizer which Is usually not nearly so effective as that which has been lu th* land growing plants for ago*. The water flowing away rapidly carried the

particles of light, decayed material and the soluble phosphorus and potash compounds off to the rivers and streams and leaves the heavy clay. Then arises another source of waste, he said. When these substances reach the streams the streams become polluted. The particles of decayed matter are harmful to the fish. During warm weather, especially, they absorb or unite

SI.OO Buys Any Watch in 1 1/UWn Stock—Saturday Only ThU Includes AH Our South Bend Watches Standard Watches for Men and Any Bracelet Crop Watch for Women. We are going to sell watches Saturday—and lots of Jw&yu them. Here’s this unusual offer. < J Here's your chance to discard your old worn-out watch Yisa and get a brand-new, reliable timepiece. Such wellHAMPDEN HAMILTON WALTHAM SOUTH BEND FOR ONLY ======= I The nationally ad- eK _ verttsed 19 genuine sL n-oo Down 5.2r40 —- four positions, NOW And the balance on the Windsor Perfected Credit Plan. I PAY SI.OO a WEEK J WINDSOR 1 JEWELRY COMPANY JEWELRY Lyric Theater Bldg. 135 N. Illinois St. REP AIRING

Your Own Home A HOME that’s really yours! The pride of ownership—that joy of possession—* And it’s not impossible. You CAN have a home of your own. It doesn’t taxe a lifetime or sudden wealth to do it. Now and then a home is bought with sudden riches, but those are exceptions. When you and I realize that close-to-the-heart ambition, it’s the accumulated savings of a very few years that puts the deal through. DON’T give up that home! Our payment plans make saving easy. Whether you start with a dollar or a hundred, we are always glad to serve you. Set your goal NOW. Then open an account today—• And SAVE for it! 4V 2 % on Savings * J. F.Wilda Cos„ State Bank 123 East Market Street Indianapolis

By GEORGE McMANUS.

with the oxygen which the. fl*h muit breath. The water polluted by them substance* that are washed from the soil must be purified before It U fit for drinking purposes, he said. LOVESICK WIDOW’S FATE. DARLINGTON, England, May 12.—Mrs. Mary Kinlock, a widow who proposed

MAY 12,1922.

three times to a man half her age, committed suicide when rejected for the third time. TAXICAB BANDIT. CHICAGO, May 12.—A taxicab driver refused to carry Miss Nellie Hay's trunk Into her house because It was “too heavy.” When she went to get help he drove away with all her Paris gowns.

REGISTERED V. S. PATENT OFFICB