Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 231, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1923 — Page 2

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EH PHILLIPS TRAILED BV FRENCH CHORUS GRL

(Copyright. 1923. bu United Press) EL PA .SO. Feb. 5. —Catherine Uribe, French beauty and former Broadway chorus girl, is leading the hunt below the Rio Grande for Clara Phillips, escaped hammer murder'-ss. She desires the apprehension of the tiger woman so she m’ay be deported to American soil in exchange for the Uribe brothers, held In a Los Angeles tail for “investigation’- following arrest on a charge of automobile stealing. The Uribe brothers are Herbert, husband of Catherine, and his brother Fernando. With Catherine they were arrested last November. Catherine put up bail in the form of a SIO,OOO diamond necklace and departed for Mexico to bring about the capture of Felip Alquin, fugitive from Los Angeles murder charge, in exchange for her husband and his brother. When the Alquin negotiations failed temporarily, Catherine got trace of Mrs. Phillips an’d determined to get her seized and exchanged instead of Alquin. The story of how GIRLS! BUTIFK HI l ONCE Try This! Hair Appears Soft, Colorful and Abundant —A Gleamy Mass 35 Cent Bottle of “Danderine” Also Ends Dandruff; Falling Hair!

A “Danderine Beauty Treatment" will immediately double the attractiveness of your hair. Just moisten a cloth with Danderine and draw it carefully through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; this will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or any excessive oil—in a few minutes you will be amazed. Your hair will he wavy, fluffy and possess an incomparable softness, luster and really appear twice as thick and abundant —a mass of luxuriant, glinty, colorful hair. Besides beautifying the hair. Panderine eradicates dandruff; invigorates the scalp, stopping itching and falling hair. Danderine is the best, cheapest and most delightful hair corrective and ionic. It Is to the hair what fresh showers of rain are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, vitalizes and strengthens them. Its stimulating properties help the hair to grow long, heavy, strong. You can surely have beautiful hair, and lots of It. if you will spend 35 cents for a bottle of Danderine at any drug store or toilet counter. It is not greasy, oily or sticky.—Advertisement. SOUR STOMACH IS CAUSED 8Y ACIDS Stay off the damp ground, avoid exposure, keep feet dr: • eat no sweets of any kind for a while, drink lots of water and above all take a spoonful of Jad Salts occasionally to help keep down uric and toxic acids. Rheumatism is caused by poison toxins, called acide, which are gene rated in the bowels and absorbed into the blood. It is the function of the kidneys to filter this acid- from the blood and cast it out in the urine. The pores of the skin are also means of freeing the blood of this inipurity. In damp and chilly, cold weather the skin pores are closed, thus forcing the kidneys to do double work; they become weak and sluggish and fail to eliminate this poison, which keeps accumulating and circulating through the system, eventually settling in the joints and muscles, causing stiffness, soreness and pain, called rheumatism. At the first twinge of rheumatism get from any pharmacy about four ounces of Jad Salts; put a tablespoonful In a glass of water and drink before breakfast each morning for a week. This Is helpful to neutralize acidity, remove body waste also to stimulate the kidneys, thus helping to rid the blood of these rheumatic poisons, Jad Salts is inexpensive, and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithia. and Is used with ecellent results by thousands of folks who are subject to rheumatism.—Advertisement*,

this former stage beauty searched through the state of Chihuahua, in communication with rurales and other government forces, on the trail first of an international desperado and later of the “tiger woman,” makes one of the most colorful chapters in bor--1 der history. Clara Makes Boast j The chapter opened when S. H. Hahn, noted criminal lawyer, went to ; Police Chief Oakes at Los Angeles and ! advised him that Catherine had , boasted she could "iand” Alquin, who Iliad killed Detective Sergeant Fitzi gerald. She was immediately turned | loose, on furnishing the SIO,OOO ball In diamonds. Going to Mexico, she enlisted te aid of Dr. J. R. Uribe, her father-in-law, I sanitary inspector of Juarez, known jas the “little czar.” She also comj municated with Governor Enriquez of j Chihuahua, and with her husband's I uncle, k justice of the Mexican Supreme Court. Thus negotiations were I put under way for return to the i States of Alquin, out the desperado j Learned of it and slipped away. Subisequently he was captured, and Jast | week was ordered deported from Mexico. Catherine Uribe, attar Alquin's temj porary escape, made twelve trips be- | tween Chihuahua City and Mexico j City, trying to pick up the trail. Early in January she learned that Clara Phillips, the “hammer slayer,” who made her get-away from the Los Angeles jail after being convicted of murdering Alberta Meadows, was hiding in Mexico. Dancer Starts Chase Catherine immediately shified her I energies in the direction of this wornjan Through Dr. Uribe confidential | circulars were sent to the rurals and secret service agents, asking for word |of her whereabouts. On Jan. 12, j Catherine, then in Chihuahua City, ob i talced word that the Phillips woman j was in Juarez in company with agents lof a drug rjng. Dr. Uribe obtained I from El Paso police necessary data to ! make identification of Clara complete. The beautiful dancer then hastened Ito Mexico City to arrange for the | slayer's deportation, hut while she was there the Juarez underworld learned ,of the plot. Clara eluded the guards I of Dr. Uribe and escaped into the in- ! terior. going to Chihuahua City. She i is supposed to be guided by one Jack | Miller, a cousin by marriage, and the ! man credited with effecting her escape j from the Los Angeles prison.

ROBINSON PROBES DEATH OF GIRL INBLEACHER CRASH

Coroner Paul F. Robinson today began investigating the bleacher crash during the Manuai-Shorti idge High

School basket-ball game at Tomlin son Hall, Dec. 15. which resulted in death early Sun day of Helen Nackenhorst. 17. of 1122 Woodlawn Avenue. Five persons were injured when •'the center section of the bleachers gave way. causing 200 spectators to fall. Miss Nackenhorst fell on top of her

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HELEN XACKENHORST

mother. Mrs. Lillian Nackenhorst. Complications followed a leg fracture. Robinson Probes The girl was a senior at Manual High School and would have been graduated last January. Her father, William Nackenhorst, is president of the Fountain Square State Bank. The Masomas Club, an .organization of senior girls, will attend the funeral in a body. Services at St. Mark's Evangelical Lutheran Church, 1157 Linden St., will be conducted by the Rev. R. H. Benning. pastor. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Thad M Gurley, assistant city building Inspector, investigated the crash the day aftei it occurred, but no report of his finding was made public.

BEWARE THE COUGH OR COLO THAI HANGS ON Chronic coughs and persistent colds lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulj Bified creosote that is pleasant to take, j Creomulsion is anew medical discovery with twofold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and kills the germ. Os all known drugs, creosote is recognized by the medical fraternity as the greatest healing agency for the treatment of chronic coughs and colds and ether forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothe and heal the inflamed mem j branes and stop the irritation while I the creosote goes on to the stomach, j is absorbed into the blood, attacks the i seat of the trouble and destroys the germs that lead to serious compli- | cations. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfac- ' tory in the treatment of chronic ! coughs and colds, catarrhal bron- ; chitis and other forms of throat diseases. and is excellent for building up - the system after colds or the flu. Money refunded if any cough or cold. : no matter of how long standing, is i not relieved after taking according to directions. Ask your druggist. Creoj mulsior. Cos., Atlanta. Ga. —Advertisement.

Cream Puffs and Sour Pickles Is Diet of Heroes in ‘Robin Hood’ Travesty

By WALTER D. HICKMAN SOUR PICKLES and creampuffs may not mix well, but King Richard, the lion-heart-ed. in Bull Montana’s travesty on “Robin Hood,” found the combination mighty pleasing. The king also found that a dash of sauerffraut over a cream puff did nothing but increase the taste of his favorite dish. Richard was fond of milk, purchased in modern sanitary bottles, and a sour pickle, but the pickle on numerous occasions did not mix well with the milk. ■!• -I- 1This strange diet is one of the many funny episodes in “Rob-Em-Good,” a movie burlesque on Doug-

las Fairbanks' “Robin H o o and,” which is one cf the features at the Oh i o this I week. The other ! feature is Malcolm I McGregor an and Colleen Moore in “Broken Chains." Bull M o n t an a takes the role of Robin Hood in the burlesque on the Fairbanks movie. Montana's merry “robbing crew does not drink ale but enjoy cream puffs

McGREGOR

and a glass of milk. The settings in the travesty or burlesque resemble those used by Fairbanks. Lady Marian in the Montana scream is a cross-eyed woman who increases her beauty with Topsy pig tails. Montana receives his love messages from Lady Marian by a telegraph messenger and the Lady warns Robin Hood not to tip the messenger. -I- -I- I The Crusaders start out to find "the rat’s meow.” All the sub-titles are :n popular slang of the day. These titles are mighty funny. The king while on the crusade for the “cat's meow" carries his own private billiard table. At night, the king uses the table for a bed. The king is stylish because he wears a nightgown over his suit of armor. It is a difficult thing to burlesque a movie and it has been done successfully only on one or two occasions. "Rob-Em Good" Is corking good fun and will he the standard for months

FOUR FLEE FROM BLAZING HOUSE (Continued Front Page 1) returned to the front room, wrapped themselves in blankets and climbed to the roof of the porch. The cold i wind struck them as the men yelled ; “Fire, tire," and neighbors sent in j the alarm. The Tennaht home also was tilled ; with smoke, but no damage was .one to that side of the house. The dam- j age was estimated by the Seidels at I about SI,OOO. Honigfeld's wife was | taken to a hospital some days ago A defective flue started a fire which ; destroyed the home of E. C. Boswell, i Michigan Road and Forty-Ninth St. at 8 a. m. It was a ten-room, two I story frame structure. Lack of water 1 prevented firemen from saving the j residence, which was outside the city 1 limits. The loss was estimated at I $15,000. Men Arrested The home of Mrs Jennie Stet:, Raymond St., west of White River, was destroyed by Are early today The flames spread from a haystack to ; barns and outbuildings and then to ; the house When Sergeant Sheehan and a squad of police reached the scene at 1 a. m., every building on the farm was on tire Mrs. Sten told police that as the lire started she saw John Grendan, a Roumanian, who lives In a shack in the rear of the Piel Broth e-si Starch Works, running away from the burning haystack, according to polie. She said that she tried three times to shoot hint but that her re volver missed fire. The police found Grendan at home and arrested him on a vagrancy charge. He was held under high bond. He denied having set fire to the Sten place, but admitted he believed the Sten woman had caused his ar rest* on a blind tiger charge a year ago. police said. Charles Sten, husband of Jennie Sten. convicted on a blind tiger charge about the same time, escaped from the penal farm and now is a fugitive from justice, police say. Two men were injured and fourteen automobiles were damaged in a fire that started in the W. J. Six garage, 437-439 E. Tenth St., at 11 p. m. Sunday. Firemen had put out the blaze early today. Six went from the office of the garage to the storage-room just as a flame shot from between two automobiles. Attempting to put out the lire, he was slightly burned about the face and the heat drove him back. City Fireman John Fox of truck company No. 5 was bruised when ho fell with a ladder which slipped on the ice. John Duncan, another fireman on the ladder, saved himself by holding to a window ledge. Mr. and Mrs. Six were In the of fice of the garage working on the books. Six fought the fire with chemicals until the firemen arrived. While the official reports of the fire stated the origin was unknown, Chief O’Brien said spontaneous combustion in oil-soaked rags probably started the blaze. Fourteen of the forty-five automobiles were damaged. The garage is a two story brick building and the flames were confined to the first floor. Robbers Steal Safe fiii Timm Special FRANKLIN, Ind., Felt. s.—Robbers broke into the interurban station this morning and carried off a small safe. A workman saw a light truck leave.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

to come in this particular field of movie work. I found the Montana movie to be great fun. The other feature on the Ohio bill is “Broken Chains” in which Malcolm McGregor and Colleen Moore do some splendid work. McGregor is cast as a coward. He nearly goes to the grave before he gets up enough courage to fight and kill for the girl he loves. The story might have been first intended to lie dramatic but the director and the actors have made it good comedy with large dashes of melodrama sprinkled through the entire movie. This movie will surprise you. There is a corking good fight at the very end of the story. This McGregor chap is a comer in the movie field. The bill this week at the Ohio is a winner. T -!- 1fn Which Eugene O’Brien Teaches Valentino a Lesson The ultimate in screen love-making has been reached by Norma Talmadge and Eugene O'Brien in “The Voice From the Minaret.” Robert Hiehens wrote a novel some time about, the warm desert and the

hot love-making which goes on there. It remained for a wise director to cast Miss Talmadge and Eugene in two of the three chief roles. An expert in movie photography was called in and the result Is that Eugeene O'Brien leaches Valentino a few tricks in the art of love mak ing. No Sheik, either in song or

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TALMADGE

i story, has anything on Eugene when lit comes to making love. This picture is the matinee movie supreme. Worn I f-n were crying and suffering beauti fully with Norma yesterday when 1 was present. Every one was so afraid that Norma woujd be forced to live with an impossible husband of titl< when Eugene was Just around the corner. The movie director has handled the l so-called "poisoned coffee" scene in tine shape. The director really makes an audience fear that the hero and heroine have been poisoned by the I crazy husband of the heroine. I am ; not poking fun at "The Voice of the Minaret" because a majority of the I audience takes It seriously. Norma Talmadge and Eugene O Brlen are the 1 best love makers on the screen today. If there has been any doubt, then this picture removes It. “The Voice From the Minaret" has ! been beautifully photographed and j splendidly acted. It is loaded down | with the atmosphere of th* Orient and

23 ARRESTED AS GAMBLERS, SCORE AS BOOTLEGGERS I In the week-end clean up twenty al i leged bootleggers and twenty-three j alleged gamblers were arrested. I One woman, Arnlda Payne, colored, 1524 K. Court St., was charged with opj era ting it blind tiger and keeping a gambling house. In tlie rail on her I home Babe Payne, colored, also was j arrested on the charge of keeping a | gambling house. i John Payne. Thomas Green. Morrison Herion and George Swalles were (charged with visiting a gambling house and gaming. Green told police j he Lost $lB in a craps game. Herion ■said he lost sl6. Four Chinese were arrested on * charges of violating the gambling I laws. Lieutenant Winkler raided a laundry ut 119 N. Alabama St. Two chests containing Ivory sticks nnrl | disc were seized. A rent receipt giving an address in | Ravenswood. found in the home or Howard Coffield, 45, of 103’a Massachusetts Ave., caused a raid, C'nffleld whs charged with operating a blind tiger. Thirty gallons of white mule were found In the Ravenswood house. Sheriff Snider assisted police. E<l Brown, colored, 306 N. Senate Ave., tootning house proprietor, was arrested by Lieut. Hudson and squad when white mule was found. Seven j negro men and six negro women were I arrested on vagrancy charges. Sues On SIO,OOO Note Suit to collect on a promissory note for SIO,OOO was tiled against Thomas I A. Lavelle, 1606 Sturm Ave., and John !M. Ryan of Chicago by Milton S. | Englert of Pittsburgh, Pa., in Federal !Court today. ASPIRIN “ Say “Bayer” and Insist! Unless you see (lie “Bayer Cross” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twentythree years and proved safe by millions for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Lneumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” i only. Each unbroken package ooni tains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the s|rade mark of Bayer Manufacture ox Monoaceticaeidester of Salicvlicacid.—Advertisement.

the desert. It is dramatic and will | hold your interest nearly all of the time. Norma suffers beautifully as the woman who is married to a man she does not love. This movie will be a money maker because it has all the attributes of being a matinee suooess. I believe that its drawing powers are unlimited. The Talmadge-O’Brien movie is the feature this week at the Circle, but there is a funny comedy, “Casey Jones | Jr.,” which is good for many laughs. There is a trick train in this comedy which is something new' in the movie comedy field. The train is so slow that when It is late, it is not marked up “four hours late," but “four weeks late.” A mighty good laugh. At the Circle all week. 1- -I- ! Lloyd Hamilton Turns Out A Comedy AVliich Is a Comedy Day by day in every way I have ; been looking for a movie comedy ' which is different from the regular j run. After many weeks of search, I ! ! found it yesterday at the Apollo in ■ I Lloyd's Hamilton’s “The Educator.” j Hamilton is cast as a tenderfoot j teacher who goes into a tough west ! ern town to teach the boys and girls ; that the letter "A"'stands for apple. The comedian takes a stagecoach ■ ! to the western town. Indians attack the coach and Hamilton defends him self by throwing banana peelings in the path of the Indians. The warriors slip on the peelings and lose the trail. New fun? Sure it is. The r.ew teacher arrives in time to see former teachers being carried away on stretchers. The boys and git-ls turn out to be fathers past fifty and “girls” way over the forty-year margin. The rough house starts. Teacher turns out to be not so much a tenderfoot as the pupils ex peeted. The comedian used an army tank to chase tho "children” back to school. It is mechanical fun, but i(*ne in anew way. This is the first time that I have taken Hamilton seriously. The other feature on the Apollo bill is Clara Kimball Young in “The Worldly Madonna," in which she plays the dual rolo of a bad sister and a good one. Miss Young is wasting her tine talents upon weak vehicles, * ueh as "The Worldly Madonna." This woman needs a good story waiter and she needs it badly. I am afraid if she waits too long that her grip on her movie public is going to slip. In some of the scenes, she Is a dope crazed woman. I guess the powers that bo are going to fill the movies full of this dope stuff. On the stage, tho craze is spreading, as such a famous actress as Mrs. Flske uses j “dope” in her latest stage play. This I picture will not Increase the popu larity of Clara Kimball Young. The music? Yes, it is mighty good and very popular. The Apollo has found a strong combination in Virgil Moore's orchestra. In Lester Huff and his organ music, and. In the Hoosier Harmony Three. Hamilton and the music makes a visit to the Apollo this week worth while. •I- -I- I “The Third Alarm" Goes Into Second Week At English's "The Third Alarm." a movie ver-

MAKES A GAIN OF FIFTEEN POUNDS Gary Citizen Declares Tanlac Has Made Him One of Healthiest Men In Town. When it comes to giving a man a solid foundation of health and | strength, Tanlac just can’t be beat,” ; said John Kuekecki. well-known car- | penter and contractor, of 1720 Penn- | sylvuniu Ave., Gary, Ind.. recently. “Besides picking up fifteen pounds ! taking Tanlac, it made me so well and strong 1 can now keep pace with the i speediest carpenters on any contract. "Indigestion hud been hammering away at my system until my appetite was almost gone, T was weight fast, and was all run had a burning feeling in my stomach, gas well-nigh smothered me. there were racking pains all my body, and at times l was terribly weak, I nervous and dizzy. j “Well, sir, it looked like iny trou- ! b!e were going to ‘floor’ me and It i was like finding gold to run across ; Tanlac. Why, my ailments are all j gone now, and I eat heartily, sleep | fine, and call myself one of the healthI lest men in this town today.” | Tanlac is for sale by all good drugI gists. Over 35-million bottles sold. —Adv. Miller’s Antiseptic OH, Known as At ops l best (. olds and Flu Quick. I Contains Coal Oil, Turpentine, Canij phor. Capsicum. Oil Eucalyptus and I other valuable Ingredients. Will pene- ! trnte tuiekrst sole leather in 3 minutes, j goes to affected parts. Quick relief assured For Rheumatism. Neuralgia, i Lumbago said to be without equal, j All druggists.- Advertisement.

Coughs Loosrns Phlegm v j Heels Membranes ' 1 * | Use BALSAMEA Now

RED PEPPER FOR RHEUMATIC PAIN Red Pepper Ruh takes the “ouch” from sore, stiff, aching joints. It cannot hurt you. ami it certainly stops that old rheumatism torture at once. When you are suffering so you can hardly get around, just try Red Pepper Rub and you will have the quickest relief known. Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers. .Tust as soon as you apply Red Pepper Rub you will feel the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Pain and soreness are gone. Ask any good druggist for a jar of Rowles Red Pepper Rub. Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Rowles on each package.—Advertisement.

sion of an old stage favorite, Is now in its second week at English’s It was decided late last week to hold the picture over for a second week because of the remarkable draw of the picture toward the end of the first week. "The Third Alarm” is melodrama hut. it is good melodrama. Mother love and the love of an old fireman for horses is mixed through the entire movie. It is always safe to put horses and children in a play or a movie. This movie appeals to children as well as to the grown ups. Any family will have a good time seeing this one. In this department last week, "The Third Alarm” was reviewed at length. We found it enjoyable entertainment. well acted and well directed. The fire scenes are the most realistic that I ever have seen on the screen. At English’s all week 1 p. m. until 11 o'clock. -I- -I- -I' Spiked lemonade Figures jin Movie at the Isis The new minister did not approve of ! "spiked” lemonades, but he was human and couldn't resist falling in love with a pretty girl, even though she ! was the daughter of a bootlegger and (the object of scorn in his own coni gregation. So he promptly invites her Ito the church bazaar. This happens in "The Bootlegger's I Daughter,” in which Enid Bennett is l starred at the Isis for the first half of j the week. i The bootlegger's daughter attends

Famous Old Recipe for Cough Syrup raeilT and cheaply made at home, but It heats them all for quick result*.

Thousands of housewives have found that they can save two-thirds of the money- usually spent for cough preparations, by using this well known old recipe for making cough syrup. It is simple and cheap. l"it it has no equal tor prompt results. It takes right hold of a cough and gives immediate relief, usually stopping an ordinary cough in 24 hours or ess. Get 2‘ a ounces of I’inex from any druggist, pour it into a pint bottle, and add plain granulated sugar syrup to make a full pint. If you prefer, use clarified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of Byrup. Either way, it tastes good, keeps perfectly, and lasts a family a long time. It's truly astonishing how quickly it acts, penetrating through every air passage of the throat and lungs -loosens and raises the phlegm, soothes and heals the membranes, and gradually but surely the annoying throat tickle and dreaded cough and "appear • ntirely. Nothing better for bronchitis, spasmodic croup or hoarseness I’lnex is a special and highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine extract known the world over for its healing effect on membrnnes. Avoid disappointment by asking your druggist for “I'-j ounces of Pln*x" w-ith full directi r;s and don’t accept anything else. Guaranteed te give absolute satisfa tion or money promptly refunded. The Plnex Cos.. Ft. Wayne, Ind.- Advertisement. Cut This Out —It Is Worth Money Cut out this siip, enclose with 5c to Foley X- Cos.. 2835 Sheffield Ave., Chicago. 111., writing your name and ad dress clearly. You will receive In return a trial package containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs, colds and croup. Foley Kidney Pills and Foley Cathartic Tablets, Sold everywhere.—Advertisement.

t It Quick! S. S. S. Will Prove to You in Your Own Csiethe “How” and “Why” of it* Remarkable Blood-Cle*nsing Power! There 1* a reason for everything that happen*. Common-sense kills misery. Common-sense also stops bolls! 8. S. 8. U the sommon-seuse remedy for boils,

Piraplsa Msy be Small BiW because It is built on reason. Scientific authorities admit its power! S. S. 8. builds blood-power, it builds red-blood cells. That is what makes fighting blood. Fighting-blood destroy* impure ties. It fights bolls. It always wins! It fights pimples! It fights skin eruptions! It builds nerve-power, thinking power, the tight-fisted power that whirls a man up into success. It gives women the health, the angelic com plaxion and the charm that moves the world! These are the reasons that have made S. S. S. today the great blood cleanser, body-builder, success builder, and It's why results have made tears of joy flow from the souls of thou sands! Mr. Y. D. Schnff, 557 15th St.. Washington, D. C., writes: **l tried for gears to get relief from a bad ease of boile. Everything failed until l took S. S. S. / am row absolutely cured, and it was S. S. 8. that did it.” Try It yourself. S. S. S. Is sold *t all drug stores in two sizes. The larger size bottle Is the mors economical. Sis c ™ akes f**. l • • like yourself ogam

CHECKS INFLUENZA TABLETS ' &7f's/rOVt

the bazaar and is not a bit more popular when she wins an auctioned pillowtop, but the minister is still “for her” and finally brings the congregation around to his way of thinking. When the bootlegger dies, the minister raises funds to buy the roadhouse which was left to the daughter. With this money she is sent to college. Three years later she comes back home “full of honors.” It is typically a “small town” picture. The program includes “Round 8” of “The Leather Pushers.” In this round the champion's most important ] battle is witnessed by his aristocratic i father. The champion almost loses his S nerve when he sees his father at the

‘Pape’s Cold Compourd” Breaks a Cold in Few Hours

Don’t stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! Take “Pape's Cold Compound” every two hours until three doses are taken. The first dose opens clogged-up nostrils and air passages of head; relieves headache, dullness, feverishness, sneezing. The

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FEB. 5, 1923

ringside. Reginald Denny Is the star. —(By the Observer.) -I- -I- -I“Tlie Bat” Opens Engagement At Murat Tonight for Week "The Bat,” a mystery play, opens a weeks engagement at the Murat tonight. Other attractions on view today* include: Tallman and Kerwin at the Lyric; the Rubeville Comedy Four at the Palace; Ruth Roye at Keith's; Malini, a magician, at the Claypool; Mutual burlesque at the Broadway; musical comedy, movies and vaudeville at the Rialto and Thurlow Lieurance in an Indian concert at Caleb Mills Hall.

second and third doses usually break up the cold completely and end all grippe misery. “Pape’s Cold Compound” is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only a few cents at drug stores. Tastes nice. Contains no quinine. Insist upon Pape’g.—Advertisement.

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