Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 26, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1922 — Page 9
JUNE 10,1922.
HOLIDAYS OF RUSSIANS IS BIG HANDICAP Americans Forced to Fire Many Russians for May Day Absence. MOSCOW, June 10.—Russo-American relations. If there be any relations, haTe been strained by the love of the Russian 'worker for his holiday. The American Relief Administration hired s number of Russian workers, and everything went along merrily for a time, but the Russian workers began absenting themselves frequently, and their only excuse was that they were celebrating a national holiday. It appeared to the heads of the A. R. A. that every third day was a holiday in Russia and the crisis came on May Day. Indeed It was a crisis, such a crisis that
Y7T <iiw ,l V^ liA^ L r Mssencidu / a 9 picture house ,4^51 w £md NOAH BEERY SPECIALIST' 7 SilOWlTlfK onltf A ROMANCE—in a Turkish Harem—different from /7 JLv** > fl n y Mary Miles Minter picture you have ever seen. trie UIQQ&E What happens when a blonde American beauty up■■productions Bets a Sultan ’ s harem? J Who falls for whom when a chic city flapper invades ▼ a sleepy country town in search of love and adventure? * rnn//?c/ You’ll be surprised—when you see this sparkling OLfl<*L IrlA- CUUfL OL drama of thrills, romance, and snappy eyefuls. t£IOGLLl r O INTERNATIONAL News Weekly—All the latest news • t Tin pictures and always on the job. in town gDDIE Lyons comedy—“Oh, Daddy." AROLD Lloyd comedy—“ Billy Blazes, Esq."
Tomorrow A POSITIVE SENSATION Tomorrow For All Lovers of Clean, Wholesome Entertainment , JANE NOVAK ROBERT I>ORE BERT EIGENIE EKB IS S. MILORKO WALLACE ■ ,s th* girl CORI.OS DAVIDSON tTOODRIFF BKHSERKR STONE ™ K ' RV * as the boy who who loves as Lap n Math- as the wldo>„ * BEERY who sacrtnces will not under- mankind more er, the grand who learns to as Father as the foolish 9 _ •>,„ eoward lore. stand. than money. old man. kiss the cross. Brian Kelly. sister. Bring Your Mother, Dad, Sister, Brother and Sweetheart to See This Page From the Book of Life OTHER SCREEN ATTRACTIONS Matinees. 15c-25c - T *r~y <-im & { o Sunday and Holiday E, ras . 25C40C LOEW’S STATE - ' ■- ' " ' - "
Pravda, the leading soviet organ, used It as the text for a lengthy editorial sermon. “Capjtain Tonrtillot, director of the food remittance division of the American Relief Administration, ordered all his employe. to come to work on the first of May,” Pravda explained, “even though there was no urgency In the work. The purpose was to Ignore our international prelotarlan holiday.” This was the last straw. The Russian workers claimed they bad been working through too many holidays, and they just refused to appear on the job on May Day. “This brought them to work on May 2. before the terrible judgment of their exploiters in the persons of Captain Tourtillvit and Mr. Renshaw,” Pravda explained. The upshot of the whole situation was that several holiday loving Russians lost their jobs. “Let this be exemplary proof of the fact that the Americans, the same as other capitalists in Europe, came to Russia not In order to save the starving or to improve the workers’ condition,” continued Pravda. “Oh, no! They weld the
chains for the working class—they are preparing the noose for the workers l “And, therefore, workers, be on your guard, If, due to economic conditions caused by our state of ruin, you should be forced to work together with the bourgeoisie of Europe and America we must be on guard, and at their first at> tempt to throw the chains and noose upon us we must do that very thing to them. “Long live the proletariat holiday! We will never allow it to be abolished!” And so the incident is ended. Several Russians have lost good jobs, but the Russian workers’ holidays will continue. Greek Tears Up His $3,000 Roll NASHUA. N. H., June 9. —Alienists are watching Athosls Grezelnitos. Athosls was found standing at the foot of the Soldiers’ Monument here earing up a roll of bills that originally represented $3,000. He had an enthusiastic and appreciative audience, which fought for the scrapped bills.
MOTION PICTURES
INDIANA DAILY TIMES
ROMANCE OF RICH WIDOW Former Beach Employe, Who Wed Heiress, Back on Job. NEW YORK, June 10.—Eidle Zimmerman, most celebrated lifeguard of New York’s shore, is back at his post after a year's absence. And three blocks away from Manhattan Beach stands the closed empty boarded, $120,000. villa of Eddie’s multimillionaire wife, Mrs. Lane Zimmerman, open only to a caretaker and a real estate agent who has It for sale. Down In a Philadelphia suburb an even costlier house, which she had bought In the hope of distracting Eddie’s wistful thoughts of the fascinating beach life, where he had passed fifteen happy-go-lucky summers, Is young Mrs. Zimmerman in the act of packing for a trip to Europe. A romance that was like a red, red rose has dropped on Its stem. A break has come that both Mr. and Mrs. Zimmermnn reluctantly confirm. Mrs. Zimmerman first came to the ap-
proving attention of Manhattan Beach in 1916. She was Mrs. Cornelius A. Lane, wife of a millionaire printer of Philadelphia. They built a $120,000 villa that is one of the show places of the beach. Lane died a few months after the house-warming in 1916. Eddie Zimmerman has entered the picture a few years before. Eddie became a lifeguard at the age of 16. He taucht the Lane children to swim and every summer found him enjoying longer conversations with Mrs. Lane, who also became his bathing pupil and developed into a first-rate swimmer. Not quite a year ago they were married. DANCE? NO SHOES. DEPWADE, England, June 10. The country guardians have refused to issue free shoes to indigent parents who let their daughters attend dances.
MOTION PICTURES DOUBLE lfj IwRIM jilL PROGRAM—A Drama With More Speed Than a Tornado, and More,Power Than an Earthquake AND BEN TURPIN IN MACK SENNETT’S [jpfS@j9 NEW COMEDY RIOT C lin BtfljPi-f • rorward! jpgli A Dizzy Trolley Car j
1 ' —CAST INCLUDES— . I Betty Blythe, Nigel Barrie 641N \O-If? * -1 and Herbert Rawlinson 1 HALL ROOM BOYS COMEDY *m ft flp/y/ M “Breaking Into Jail” • j&A L gp Ajk i FOX NEWS WEEKLY Jffiikt I | NEXT ’
LOVES DOCTOR; SHE SUES HIM Admitting Indiscretions, Woman Asks $20,000 for Alienation. MILWAUKEE, June 10—Dr. Frank C. Studley, prominent in local medical circles and superintendent and manager of a local sanitarium, has been ihade defendant in a $20,000 damage suit by Mrs. Elizabeth Bolzendahl, who holds the physician responsible for the loss of her husband's love as the result of Studley’s
attention to her while a patient at the sanitarium. Mrs. Bolzendahl admits Indiscretions with Dr. Studley, setting forth that only four days after she entered the hospital for a surgical operation Dr. Studley began to make love to her. i PARADISE FOB SPORTSMEN. ST. LOUIS, June 10—The 375,000-acre Bartlett ranch In New Mexico, recently bought by Western capitalists for $2,500,000, Is to be turned into a vast hurtling preserve. \ THIRTY WEDDINGS AN HOUR. LILLE, France, June 10.—The mayor of Lille broke all records when he married 120 couples In four hours.
MOTI ON PICTURES. ’S The Little House Showing Big Pictures MISTER SMITH’C lfl THEATRE PRESENTS kJ tihUleh TUB drama that gives I IT" HE creation of master tongue to the silent artists, painting love, art, to express a force dls tr a st, romance, the greater than the play of world’s emotions, on the words. | living canvas of the screen. The Distinctive Dramatic Presentation by a Cast of Notables
Radio Stations of Help to Farmers WASHINGTON. Juno 10.— Forty-ena radiophone broadcasting stations axe used by the Department of Agriculture in transmitting to farmers weather, crop and market news, according to department officials here. This service has expanded rapidly since It was inaugurated eighteen months ago, the four latest additions tc the department's list of stations being Memphis, Tenn.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Roswell, N. M., and Milwaukee, Wis.
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