Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 81, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 August 1923 — Page 3

WEDNESDAY, AEG. 15,1923

HOGGINGS PROBED AS TROOPS GUARD TULSAJTREETS Partial Law Rules, Though Residents Protest Enforcement of Order. ?y United Press TULSA, Okla., Aug. 15.—Meetings Df Tulsa residents called to protest against enforcement of martial law svere postponed today by order of Gen. B. H. Mark Lam. While tro. 1-- trol the streets. General Markham s conducting an ex--1 haustive investigation into the “reign of terror” which Governor Walton declared existed as a result of many whippings and floggings when he ordered the militia to take over law enforcement in Tulsa. Police and sheriff’s forces functioned as usual, with the heads of the departments reporting to the Army officers in command. All streets were cleared of unnecessary traffic at 11 p. m. and all who could not give a good acount of themselves were sent home by soldiers and police. Markham summoned many witnesses to tell what they knew of abductions and whipping by masked mobs. MENTAL CLINICS URGED State Committee on Defectives to Attend Charity Conference. Recommendations for the establishment of psycopathic hospitals, mental clinics for the courts, laws prohibiting the confinement of insane persons in county jails and mental examination of school children will be made by the State committee on mental defectives at the annual conference on charities at Anderson, Sept. 29. Plans are under way for the annual conference on mental health, to be held in Indianapolis late this fall in conjunction with the meeting of the Indiana Society of Mental Hygiene. Investigators, at a recent meeting of the committee, reported the feebleminded increasing twice as rapidly in proportion to their numbers as those of normal mentality. One of the big problems the committee faces is the development cf adequate preventive treatment, likely through the establishment of local clinics. NEW C. L. U. HEAD NAMED Community Fund Committes to StudyBudgets John E. Smith, newly-elected president of the Central Labor Union, has been named on the Community Fund budget and distribution committee to succeed Charles W. Kern, ex-president of the Union. The West Park social service house has applied for admission to the fund. Budgets of welfare organizations seeking support from the fund will be allotted to eight committees, each headed by a member of the budget executive committee, for study. Credit Men to Picnic Aug. 29 The Indianapolis Association of Credit Men will hold its annual picnic Aug. 29 in Broad Ripple Park. The program Includes games, dancing and a boat ride in the evening.

Summer Find You Tired and Achy? Do You Suffer Daily Backache—Feel Weak, Tired, All WornOut? Then Profit by the Advice of These Indianapolis Folks!

AKE you dragging around this summer feeling weak, miserable—half sick? Does every little task leave you tired and worn? Do you suffer throbbing backache and knife-like twinges when you stoop or lift? Are you dull, nervous and depressed—too utterly weary to share in the good times around you? There must be a cause! What is it? How about your kidneys? Have you given them any thoi%ht? Likely you haven’t. Yet hidden kidney weakness robs many folks of health and comfort. Your blood constantly passes through

“Use Doan’s, ”Say These Indianapolis Folks:

WM. GRIFFIN, 712 E. Pratt St., Says: “Some time ago my kidneys were in a weak and disordered condition. I had attacks of backache and a soreness across my kidneys. When I stooped, it was hard to straighten and my kidneys acted too often. The use of Doan’s Kidney PUIS soon rid me of the backaches and put my kidneys in good order.”

Doan’s Kidney Pills At all dealers, 60c a box. Foster-Mfilburn Cos., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y.

Yessir, Folks It’s Real Wine

ESL’ m&uMm v, > •••• M ■ h * WjjSSSmB Bg i

NO, THIS ISN’T A PICTURE TAKEN BEFORE MR. VOLSTEAD BEGAN TO ATTRACT ATTENTION. IT WAS TAKEN A FEW DAYS AGO. BUT IT WAS IN MEXICO CITY. THERE SEEMS TO BE NO FEAR OF A SHORTAGE.

Pola Negri Hasn’J Yet. Displayed Her Gifts

By JACK JUNGMEYER. HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 15.—“ The Cheat,” Pola Negri’s second picture for Lasky-Paramount, is considerably better than her first, “Bella Donna.” It presents her, however, more the glamorous woman than the great actress of "Passion” and earlier triumphs. She has yet to find the American vehicle and director to evoke her full gifts. Pola displays some of her old fire and in spots real power in the por-! trait of “Carmelita De Cordoba," an | heiress who impulsively weds a man of modest Income, Is disinherited, deceives her husband to get the finery he can't provide, plays into the design of an amatory assailant and has her duplicity tragically exposed She handles the high spots of the play with vigor and discretion—the scene of her branding by Charles De Roche as the enraged woman-baiting art swindler; the auctioned kiss at a charity bazar; her confession to her husband. Jack Holt, of the mess she’s made and her motives and the display of her seared shoulder to the Jury In the courtroom finale. -I- -I- -1But. she is the cheat, deceiving both husband and pursuer In her lust of luxury, by play *of circumstance t rather than by any essential soul warp. A woman who n -ver ceases to love her husband, who never Is grossly disloyal, who doesn't so much as flirt with the sybarite, who is liar rather than cheat with Its more complicated depravity'. Her characterization never quite compasses the Implications of the title, but probably to restrictions of the story' as screened and its superficial handling by Director George Fitzmaurice. Ribher shading of the role would have made It more memorable. It lacks the deep Imprint of terror, malice, relished cunning, ecstacy or what not which makes a character or a picture indelible. Handling of “The Cheat” permits Miss Negri to be good, but not great, and one expects something better than good from her. -I- -!• *l- - has the ivory and jet allure of the Polish actress been more beau-

the kidneys to be rid of body poisons. When the kidneys weaken, part of these poisons are held in the system. That’s why summer finds so' many folks tired, worn-out and discouraged—tortured with never-ceasing backache and sharp, stabbing rheumatic pains. You may have headaches, too, dizzy spells and perhaps some annoying bladder irregularities. Don’t wait for more serious kidney sickness. Get back your health while you can! Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Doan’s have helped thousands. They should help you. Ask,your neighbor!

MRS. EMMA EUBANKS, 1427 Oliver Ave., says: “My kidneys caused me to suffer a great deal. If I overworked or took cold, it settled in my kidneys and I almost got down with backaches. When I did my washing my back ached as if it would break and the action of my kidneys was too free. I used Doan's Kidney Pills from Wither’s Drug Store, and they Strengthened my back and kidneys. I felt better in every way.”

tifully photographed, ensemble or close-up. Gowns, simple and bizarre, she parades with exquisite * grace, from the wedding rehearsal in a Paris atelier through a succession of spectacular house parties on Long Island. Perhaps no other screening so well understands the dramatic values of dress, especially the cape. But It is this very lavish accoutrement of person and setting which blurs the focus of her Impersonation. Despite its faults of omission, here pehaps hypercritically considered, the picture, to be released In September. Is of more than ordinary merit and definietly recoups some of Pola’s lost prestige in “Bella Donna.” -i- -I* -IA sharper popular definition of what constitutes a “bad woman” would facilitate comparison of Pola’s performance In the two Americanmade films. It would provide an audience gauge for the actions and reactions of the crooked woman as she porarys her In both roles, the one a positive sinister creature, the ether a negative weakling. In “The Cheat,” the Hector Turnbull story being less familiar than Hitchens’ novel, the public will have more latitude to estimate Miss Negri's understanding of the “bad woman" by its own diverse standards. And so it may be very' well be that Pola's refusal to make “Carmelita” either positively detestable or pitiable may be generally accepted as an unusually adroit depiction of the type. For. after all. how many creatures of vice In real life have left a lasting trace upon their time and place? -I- -I* -\- On View in Local Theaters Today Atractions on view here today Include: “The Bad Man" at the Murat; “The Speeders" at the. Lyric; Rose and Moon at the Palace: "The Fog” at the Ohio: “The Shock” at the Apollo; “The Birth of the Nation” at the Rialto: “Bright Lights of Broadway” at the Circle; "Good-By GlrlB” at Mister Smith’s and “Don Quickshot of the Rio Grande" at the Isis.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Johan Bojer Makes Plea for Parents to Allow Children Their Pretty Dreams

By WALTER D. HICKMAN. 1 ET THE CHILDREN DREAM! That is the advice ot Johan Ir*. I Bojer, Norwegian author, in an account of his life, which is being distributed with the compliments of his publishers, the Century Company. “The best education for any child is a window through which it may gaze out upon some fairy world,” the great Norwegian states in the story of his life as written by himself for the Century Company. “I believe there is a connection between our dreams during our first years and our achievements when we grow up,” he contends. “When today I love beautiful buildings better than books, when I enjoy a canter on horseback better than music, and when shooting and skiing through large forests give me the richest mental impulses, I believe it is so because all these things belong to the paradise of my childhood glimpsed from the window of a gray cottage.” Permit Bojer to Dream His Youth for You Bojer dreams of his youth is as follows: “The fisherman’s hut where I grew up was gray like the sea and the sand on the beach—like the rocks around. But if I kneeled upon the wooden seat under the window I saw far away the read, yellow and white painted houses of the well-to-do. It was like'a bit of Paradise to stare at, ; and it was evident to mjC"mind that ! the people living In those bright j houses must be bright and beautiful,!

Women’s $5 Knife Pleated Skirts $9.95 Colors Are Tan, Gray and White.

Thursday—A Great One-Day Sale slooands7s Sealine Coats Astonishingly Low Priced <§gfe J High-Grade Sealines / are featured , as well as natural yStl WwL' Muskhare and many other quality dressy styles. While they last.

Stout Women’s Dress Sale

BOYS’ WASH PANTS Cool summer wash pants of khaki) A and beach cloth; strong and serv- ■ lceable. Priced for Thursday, ) * Sale Wash Suits SUp to $2.00 Qualities Sizes I Q A w 1551 c Their making and styling denote their superior quality. Mothers who know values will appreciate this offering.

, and that I must have a house like j that when I grew up. “Out there near the sea, where the ! winter gales rages, the rocks were [ bare and a fy-ee was a rare sight, but from that seat beneath the window I glimpsed faraway hills forest-clad with spruce, fir and silver birch. Fairy tales, fairy world. Imagine the crowd of birds and beasts that they must harbor. I should have to go there when I grow up. Out there near the sea the soil was poor, few families possessed more than a cow or two and milk was a costly thing. “But from the window seat I saw large farms in front of the forest, and there would be flocks of cattle and sheep and horses. There the people woulld drink milk with 'their porridge, not water sweetened with treacle; they would have enough wool to weave good clothes for themselves, and need not shiver with cold. And just imagine the quantities of meat and bacon and real butter there must be—these people surely did not eat fish and fish and fish again every day of their lives as we did. It was evidently an absolute necessity for me to have a farm like that when I grow up. “So great and so dazzling may the world be when seen from such a window, and so happy may childhood be when there are such wonderful things at which to gaze,” he writes. Wrote Many Books But One Is Best Liked “The Great Hunger” of 1919 probably will be the most popular story 1

Store Open Saturday Until 9 P. M.

■FAi^stolFjFßfl

“The Store of Greater Values''

Clean-Up of Stout Women’s $lO Summer Dresses Beautiful /K JBU/tti i Slenderizing Models ) \ Styles that In a Final will surely Clean Up l a H i please, In size* Sale Thursday / \ 43 to 55. Stout Canton Crepe Dresses High-Grade Dresses stunning \ d* mA beaded, draped and embroidery ( $ 9 models for large women. Sizes ( 42% to 64%. )

New Fall Silk Crepe Dresses $13.75 Designed for stout women, navy, brown and black. Sizes 42 to 64.

| written by this author. He comes to us by translation. Century lists him as the author of | “The Last of the Vikings,” “The Great Hunger,” “The Power of a Lie,” “The Face of the World,” “Treacherous Ground” and “Life.” Remember titles because he will give you some great joy. I love his dreams. You will also if you will meet him. Do not be afraid of Bojer. Get acquainted with him. JAILED; COMMITS SUICIDE .Alleged Forger Drinks Poison When Locked in Ceil. Bv Times Special FT. WAYNE, Ind., Aug. 15.—Two minutes after he had been locked in his cell, C. F. Holthouse, 40, living just outside the city limits, committed suicide swallowing poison. Holthouse had been arrested and placed in jail on a charge of forgery In connection with passing bad checks. Cramps Cause Drowning By Times Special CORYDON, Ind., Aug. 15. —Seized with an attack of cramps, Joseph Stephens, 21, was drowned in a pond near his home at New Salisbury. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Chaxlea D. Stephens.

Clean-Up Stout Women’s Tub Dresses $1.95 Slenderizing styles for stout women. Sizes 42% to 44. While they last.

Quality Undermuslins fi/ 63c Jh Gowns Bloomers fI Y \ Chemise Petticoats \i Step-Ins I ixSw Women who love dainty unJ£bE||||L dergarments will bee Specially pleased with this showing at so low a price. Lay in a xWwvl jfjß. supply now.

Women’s Sport Jackets SO.-95 Colors Are Red, Green and Copen.

New Books New books of fiction at the Indianapolis Public Library include; “The Alaskan,” by James O. Curwood; “Gift of the Desert,” by Randall Parrich; “The Hawkeye,” by Herbert Quick; ‘Whose Body?” by D. L. Sayers, “Wagon Wheel,” by W. P. White. New books of religion and sociology include “Effects of the War Upon French Economic Life,” by Charles Cide, editor; “Rural Sociology,” by J. H. Gillette; “Student’s Life of Paul,” by C. H. Gilbert; “The Children’s Great Texts of the Bible," by James Hastings, editor; “The Destiny of the American City,” by J. F. Hessel; “Economic Civics,” by R. O. Hughes; “Is There a God?” by I. T. Jones; “Come Ye Apart,” by J. H. Jewett; “The Whole Armor of God,” by J. H. Jewett; “Italians in America,” by P. M. Roso; ‘“The Truth About Christian Sc'ence,” by J. H. Snowden; “Short History of Our Religion,” by D. C. Somerwell: “The Community Church,” by A. C. Zumbrunnon. New Books of biography, history and travel include: “Men of the Inner Jungle,” by W. F. Alder; “India Old and New,” by Sir Valentine Chirol: “Superior Map of Indiana,” George F. Cram Company; “London,” by C. W. Edwards.

Bruises Alternate applications of hot and cold cloths —then apply A/ICKS V Vapoßub Oxer 17 Million Jan Used Yearly

Cuticura Soap SHAVES Without Mug Cot!eon Soep u tha f srorlta for safety ruor sharing.

AMUSEMENTS

Today. Thur. MURAT 500 seats and sat. r .t 25 cThe STUART WALKER COMPANY In One of the 10 Best Plays of 1021. ‘The Bad Man’ A Story of American Border Life and First Time Here.

PALACE 1:00 to 11:00 P. M. HARRY L. COOPER and Company “BLUnBeRS” NAN LEE TRAYELINE ROSE A Songstress & With KATHERYN Personality MOON ' IN BERT “AN SLOAN MENT” HAZAKDOCB WITH WIRE ART STEPPING SORENSON ROB AL WARD BROS. As Bertie and Archie IN “PENNY ANTE” PHOTOPLAY Katherine In MacDonald “Refuge”

IVDIf “ Li Kit CR o™ s “The Speeders” A Comedy of Auto-Errors With Jack Mundy and an OCTETTE OF BEAUTIES Joe Herbert & Cos. —lN—“Honeymoon Ship” Castelton & Mack Taxie Smith, Lane & Marks Morgan & Ray Extra I Special Attraction “OUR PRESIDENT” Motion Pictures of the Natlon’s New Chief Executive Dancing In the Lyric Ballroom Afternoon and Evening

MOTION PICTURES

RIALTO showTnc I>. W. GRIFFITH’S AMERICAN INSTITUTION THE BIRTH OF A NATION

A Stirring Melodrama With a Gripping Ciimaic “THE BRIGHT LIGHTS OF BROADWAY” OVERTURE “SEMIRAMIDE” by rossini MODEST ALTSCHULER musical director A Base*ball Comedy Organ Solo “THE BUSHER” ‘Drifting Back to Dreamland' With Lee Moran Flayed by Dessa Byrd ENGAGEMENT EXTRAORDINARY! ONE WEEK ONLY. An All New Production of “THE SPOILERS” One of the Mightiest Pictures of the Year. Adapted From Rea" Beach’s Story of an Alaskan Gold Mining Camp. ENACTED BY A CAST OF lg SCREEN STABS ’ NOTF • This is an Entirely New Production and Should No* Be Confused Wfrh the Picture Made Several Years Ago.

Y .v‘ •• v .!% " BUILDS for-health Grape Nuts with milk or cream is a complete food/ , ; - Crisp, sweet and feady to eat. 7 d* “Ohere* a Reason

MOTION PICTURES

APOLLO Now! LON CHANEY ‘ The Shod*” Reginald Denny in “Round 6” Third “Leather Pusher's Series Extra Attraction “OUR PRESIDENT” Motion Pictures of the Nation’s New Chief Executive.

Thurs., Fri. and Sat. Shirley Mason —IN—“Love Bound” A Romance of Love, Crooks and a Daring Sacrifice Chas. Murray Comedy “So This Is Hamlet”

fjH |A mu I I ■ >- u V^/TIiEATBEV^/

The Fog’ MILDRED HARRIS CULLEN LANDIS LOUISE FAZENDA RALPH LEWIS DAVID BUTLER INTERNATIONAL NEWS Showing Views of the Late President Harding's Funeral at Washington and Marlon. HALL ROOM BOYS COMEDY MIAMI LUCKY 7 COMING NEXT WEEK IN CONJUNCTION WITH OUR REGULAR PICTURE PROGRAM THE GREAT KARA ORIGINAL MYSTERY MAM OF INDIA The World’s Foremast MIND READER AND CRYSTAL GAZER and His SBO,OOO Production of Oriental Splendor "A NIGHT IN THE ORIENT"

3