Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 102, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1922 — Page 2
2
‘CONIINE THROUGH THE BTE' ILL AGIINJ USED Old Tune Will Lead the Grand March in Next Winter’s Dancing. JAZZ IS NOW PASSE Dancing Masters Doubt Ability of Waltz to Stage Very Strong Comeback. CHICAGO, Sept. 7. “Coming Through the Rye” has been taken off the shelf, brushed and fitted out with a few new frills to lead the grand inarch when the ballroom dancing season opens. Grandma may not recognize it as the tune to which she danced in the days of the hoop skirts, but it has lived and survived through the tango, hesitation, one step, fox trot epochs of tfhe terpslchorean world. It blossomed anew when demonstrated by R A. Campbell and Miss Marion Freeman at the Chicago Association of Dancing Masters. “The flapper and her sleek haired partner this winter ate going to dance to the strain, but not to the steps of grandmother’s day,” said Miss Freeman. Combination of Steps “The ‘new rye’ is a combination dance consisting of three distinct combinations. First, the redowa movement, which consists of sixteen measures of music, in which the dancers, in half open position, take three petite running steps commencing with the left foot, finishing with three slow walking steps to three measures of music, then merging into the ‘rye movement.’ “In short, it’s going to be the same old ‘Cornin’ Through the Rye,’ but with new and catchy steps, concluding with a waltz movement of sixteen measures." Waltz Is Questioned Dancing masters are not agreed on how strong a “come-back” the waltz will be able to make. “The waltz never has lost its place,” said R. G. Huntinghouse, a dancing master for forty-two years. “It ul ways will be the basis for smooth and easy dancing. “I believe,” he said, “that the dances of the last few years are only a sign of the times, and that when we settle down to the normal way of living, dancing will resume its former position. “This is an age of original steps and the young folk vie with each other in springing the new ones, “The waltz is not a favorite in the East,” Miss Freeman reported, “and practically no one-steps at all are danced. “Os course, the long skirts may have something to do with that, for every one is wearing them, consequently the steps in dancing are shorter. “The Argentine fox trot, a combination of fox trot and tango steps danced In syncopated rhythm, holds the first place among the new dances.”
LEGIL ACTION TO DETERMINE SEX Baby's Father Plans Court Scrap to Find Whether Child Is Boy or Girl. NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—Counsel for Edward Rich, statistician for the Underwood Typewriter Company, is preparing to take legal action to find out ■whether the baby bom to Mrs. Bertha Rich, of No. 22 Dwight St, Jersey City, on Aug. 12, was a boy or a girl, and whether her own child was returned to her by a sanitarium in which it was placed. Mrs. Rich says it was a boy. Her husband says his wife told him the baby was a boy. The officials of the Bergen Sanitarium, Clinton and Madison Aves., Jersey City, say the baby was a girl. Rich declares that the sanitarium did not give Mrs. Rich her own baby, and he has retained Charles E. S. Simpson, an attorney. According to Rich, his wife told him that Dr. David Russell said to her: "It’s a boy.” Rich told his office associates that he was the father of a boy, and mailed announcements to his friends. On Aug. 18, says Rich, Dr. Russell asked him what name he desired to give the child. Rich selected, Edward, Jr., whereupon. Rich says, the physician wrote "Edwina" on the birth record. On the same day, according to the puzzled father, Mrs. Rich told the new nurse to “give the boy a bath,” whereupon the nurse exclaimed: "It’s a girl.” “LOVE BONUS” FAILURE Wife, Seeking Divorce, Was Promised SSOO for Each Happy Year. MILWAUKEE, Sept. 7.—An experiment in a love bonus was a failure for Adolph Loose, according to an answer to his wife’s divorce petition. He is 61, she 49, and they were married In August, 1921. Loose said he and his wife signed a pre-nuptial agreement by which she was to receiva SSOO for every happiness she gave him. This bonus plan was to last ten years, but it ended in a few months and each now charges the other with desertion. READS BIBLE 46 TIMES MT. CARMEL, 111., Sept 7.—Capt W. P. Habberton of this c.ty is believed to have read the Bible through more times than any person since the evangelist, Dwight L. Moody. He has read it through forty-six times, and has now more than half completed his forty-seventh reading. Nearly half a century ago he Jeamed that by reading three chapters on each week day and five on each Sunday the reader Just gets through in a year. He adopted the plan and has followed it every year since. Mr. Moodw is said to have read his Bible through fifty times.
GOULD BRIDE ON THE HUNT
* Ijrjp £
Mrs. George J. Gould, the former Vera Sinclair, who married the American millionaire recently in Paris, photographed shooting grouse on the Gould estate in England. With her is her loader and gun carrier.
TENEMENT TENNIS
\ ' ■’’V | C S,. 1| '> I (■, \ y : '7 : : • ? ~-i \ \ i
These kids, who live in a New Y ork tenement district, stretch a net across a street to make a tennis court and make wooden paddles for rackets.
GOLD MINERS ENTOMBED
The Argonaut gold mine at Jackson, Cal. where 47 miners were entombed 4,800 feet under ground. The entrance to the shaft is at the base of the derrick showft in the picture.
'AIR-RAID BABIES' ARE JjIHAL Children Born Under Fear of Raiding Zeppelins Are Problem for Schools. LONDON, Sept. 7.—A future population which will have a number of abnormal citizens threatens London as the result of the German air raids. "Air-raid babies”—children born under the stress of Zeppelin and aeroplane raids —are now reaching the school age and are coming under observation. The London county council educational authorities are finding themselves faced with a problem with these children. Although no tabulated figures are available concerning “air-raid babies.” it is stated that the nervous systems of these children are unstable, their temper is uncertain, and the number of "difficult” children Is great. Precocity is rtrongly developed in these abnormal children and a peculiar trait is that almost all have uniformly tapering fingers. In one class of thirty-four air-raid children, all have staring eyes, as though awaiting some great catastrophe. Many of these children are found too be Incorrigible and have a spirit which constantly causes difficulties for their teachers It la reported of the cbUdr4i appear m constant §ea.v and
ANIMALS INVADE TOWN Caribous, Geese, Rabbits and Rears Killed in Vast Numbers. FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 7. Caribou, rabbits, geese and bears, which moved down from the mountains surrounding this towh, were mowed down in vast numbers by residents who joined in a community hunt. Miss Evelyn Houcke, assistant postmaster, was the target of a maddened caribou, which charged at her automobile after the girl had fired one shot. Her second shot, also her last cartridge, brought down the animal. Two hundred automobiles and all the horse-drawn vehicles In town carried hunting parties. The film men were out shooting caribou, too. Even two “chechako” professors of the new Agricultural College of Alaska, which is to open Sept. 12, got a caribou apiece. Several caribou were killed by school children. OJd-tlmers say the Invasion of wild animals at this season Is caused by approach of cold weather. SENATOR GIVEN 15 SQUAWS McGarry Undecided Over Disposal of Indian’s Bequest. ST. PAUL, Minn., Sept. 7.—Fifteen Indian squaws, ten buckets of war paint, several bales of feathers and other state regalia, were willed to State Senator Patrick H. McGarry of Walker by Chief Schmoe-Omi-Mom of the Leech Lake Reservation in northern Minnesota, who died recently, the Senator announced. Senator McGarry, who had befriended the chief, said he was undecided as to what he would do with the bequests.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
$2,000,000 LOAD
The Hon. John Jacob Astor, Jr., four-year-old son of Viscountess Astor, M. P., receives $2,000,000 as his share in the trust fund left by his grandfather. But what’s that when a fellow has a pet turtle to ride in the garden of his British home?
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
' \\ '\ f " v j . - j ' V • .. , ‘ /• V Sr
“By Chance” may not he much on looks, but he’s a prize winner Just the same. He won the first award in the English bulldog class at the Westchester Kennel Club’s annual show at Rye, N. I, and made Mrs. Bessie Lane of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., happy.
THE MORNING AFTER
What was left of T. C. Tuttle’s car after a switch engine hit it at Cincinnati, Ohio. Tuttle lifted his wife to safety as the engine struck the car. He was seriously injured. Two boys in the rear seat escaped by leaping.
EMPLOYES MAKE REAL BEER But Some Os It Got Out, and Agents Got In. Game Spoiled. DETROIT, Sept. 7. —Employes of the Farmers' Browing Company, Swawano, are plunged into gloom. The officials of the company, because of a misunderstanding of the law, have been allowing the manufacture of real beer for employes' consumption only, It was revealed at the office of the Federal Prohibition Department, and the revocation of the brewery’s permit has been reoommended to Washington by Lewis J. Brabant, head of the legal division of the department. The matter was discovered when a
'Dlk Mkiw&S&i wffwMiW
small amount of the good beer was sold to saloons by mistake and Federal dry agents took samples of It, Mr. Brabant said. The company was cited and presented as a defense at a formal hearing held recently at Green Bay the fact that they misunderstood the law. Such an excuse will not bs accepted in any case, Mr. Brabant said.
Miss Vada Masden Tells How Cuticura Healed Eczema “Eczema broke out in a sort of blister on the tips of my fingers. fit soon spread over my entire fingers and itched and burned dreadfully. Many times in the night I would wake up and ■cratch. I tried many different remedies without relief. The trouble lasted about fibres months before I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment. After using them about a week I got relief and when I had used one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment waa completely healed.” (Signed) Miss Vada E. Masden, Verdel, Nebraska, Feb. 7, 1922. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum promote and maintain skin purity, skin comfort and skin health often when J 1 else falls. •*alalMhr< -, f Mail AdrtTCTU: “Oatlw.l**•rutortM. £>•*. S, Ml4aa 4*. Man.” bit mrrrwher* S*p lie. JlntaMattt aad Me. TaleuntM. Cuticui’, Scap ikavM withmt ms-
DUBBING A KNIGHT
vrMwß&lSi
Admiral Von Horthy, regent of Hungary, dubbing one of the 740 war heroes upon whom he bestowed the ac colade of knighthood at a recent session of Hungary's new order of chi valry.
PARTNER FOR LIFE, MAYBE
Suzanne Lenglen, world’s woman tennis champ, wore an engagement ring during the tournament at Pour x file, France. Fans at the court wondered if Roger Danet (shown here with her), her partner in mixed doubles, will be her matrimonial partner.
GERMAN AMBASSADOR ARRIVES
The German ambassador to the United States, Otto Wiedfeld. and Mrs. Wiedfeld, as they looked when t hey arrived in this country on the steamship Reliance.
Just seems to rest you all over, ' that good old Beeman flavor! Try it and see! Beemans pepsin Gum American Chide Cos.
Orange Label Tea
B'dgways CHOICE a -Icea What.—kt
•'‘■J ■ t Y"'' Hidgcoays Tea k - j
DISTRIBUTOR, SCHNULL AND COMPANY
SEPT. 7, 1922
NEW INVENTION ENDS FLATNESS Device Puts Life Into Motion Pictures by Relieving Dull Tones in Projection. CHICAGO, Sept. 7.—Another new Invention to put life in moving pictures was displayed before a company of scientific men by Barnett W. Harris, a movie director. This invention is to take the flatness out of moving pictures. The new effect is accomplished with standard motion picture machinery, minor changes being incorporated in the new projector. The important steps, according to the inventor, occurred in the use by the audience of instruments patterned after the oldfashioned stereseopes, adjusted to distances. The picture is taken with two cameras, set in position corresponding to the right and left eye. In the development, the two films are doubleprinted on one film. In its projection, this film is run through a machine with a double aperture, which throws two images on the screen, one above the other, the upper one being the reproduction of the film taken by the camera representing the right eye and the lower that representing the left. The sterescope-like instrument has for eye-pieces prisms arranged so as to reflect the light rays from the upper picture to the right eye, and the rays from the lower picture to the left. The two combine, on the principle of the old sterescope, to show one picture, giving the sense of depth. Mr. Harris said that he would incorporate the two cameras into one, ith two lenses and two films, and promised that, before the first public showing, he would have a color process perfected. FIND BURNS COPY LONDON, Sept. 7.—A valuable manuscript of the poet Bums was discovered at Ayr recently in the course of a search in the archives of Ayr Sheriff Court for an old lease. It is in Bums’ own handwriting* and is a disposition and assignation by the poet in favor of his brother Gilbert. It is dated July, 1756, and is couched in legal phraseology.
CORNS Lift Off with Fingers \ A \! y J \ Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freezone"’ on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift It right off with the fingers. Truly I Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes and the calluses without soreness or Irritation-—Adver-tisement I Had Eczema writes Mrs. H. M. Kenner of Princeton, N. J., and was treated bv eminent skin specialists, but always with the same results, until I used Son River Ointment which took out the itching and Inflammation like magic. Mr. G. H. Moore of Islip, N. Y. writes that one jar almost completely healed ECZEMA on the leg and reduced swelling. At the drug store, 50c and st.oo On sale at Hook’s Dependable Drug Store* Fun River Cos., C-23, 1914 Broadway, N. Y. C.
WORNOUTAFTER SHE COOKED - ft MEAL Took Lydia E. Pinkham’® Vegetable Compound* Read the Result Cincinnati, Ohio. —“I suffered for • year with nervous troubles andirregim j 111 jll nil ularitdes before I lImSSSsbIi II to °k Lvdia E. Pinkham’s VegVgyj etable ComH/ v W pound. My back SF'-fiS -11 pained all the HT time and I was K „ k 8 unfit for houseIJk . ’ jf work. I waßworn llili ill out if I cooked a ||" : 4 v|| meal, and was unV I ” able to do mv M washing. My girl \ and my sister told me if I would take your Vegetable Compound and Liver rills I would be relieved. After taking the first bottle I felt better, and neglected it awhile, but found I could not do my work until I was stronger. So I took the Vegetable Compound again and now I am the mother of a 19 months old boy. He is fat and healthy and I am sure I could never have carried him if it had not been for your medicine. I recommend your medicine to all women although lan young to be advising someone older. ’ —Mrs. Christ. Petroff, 318 W. Liberty St., Cincinnati, Ohio.
