Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 168, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1923 — Page 5
TUESDAY, NOV. 27, 1923
TOINT OF VIEW’ IS WOMAN'S GIFT TO GMCAFFAIRS Federation Officers Are Honored at Dinner by Club. "A woman’s point of view combined with the commercial point of view constitute woman’s definite contribution to civic affairs of today,” said Miss Elinor Coonrod, national executive secretary of the Federation and Professional Women’s Clubs, Monday night at a dinner in her honor at the Woman’s Department Club. Miss Adelia Prichard, national president of the Federation, and Miss Coonrod have been in the city making plans for the 1924 Federation convention in July at West Baden. Miss Mamie Larsh, chairman Business and Professional Women s section of the Woman's Department Club, presided at the dinner. Other speakers: Mrs. Mary Stubbs Moore, of the Woman’s City Club; Mrs. S. E. Perkins, Miss Pearl B. Forsyth of the T. W. C. A., Miss Ida Anderson and Miss Merica Hoagland. •’Cooperation is the essential thing in such an organization,” said Miss Prichard. "Business Women’s Clubs are doing a concrete work because of their organization. Otherwise, they would be as weak as the weakest link in the chain of memoers.” Miss Prichard will confer tonight' with the board of directors and chair-' men of committees of the Indiana ; Federation at a dinner at the SpinkArms. Mrs. E. C. Bailey of Franklin, State president, will preside.
QOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
I j RCHID and yellow chrysanIf }j them urns decorated the rooms t I of the home of Mrs. G. F. Kleder, 120 Hampton Drive, today when she entertained with a charmingly appointed luncheon bridge in honor of Mrs. J. W. Mahley and Mrs. Fred Wagner of Terre Haute, house guests of Mrs. J. H. Laird, and Mrs. Frank Swan of Chicago, house guest of Mrs. Alonzo Chapman. The guests were served at seven small tables arranged with center baskets of yellow or orchid chrysanthemums and tied with tulle of the same color. Covers were marked by dainty place hand painted with yellow chrysanthemums and tied with orchid and white ribbons to the favors which were tiny silk vanity bags of yellow and orchid. Assisting Mrs. Kleder were Mrs. Ross A Moore, Mrs. C. E. Parsons, Mrs. J. H. Laird and Mrs. F. H. Moore. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Krelte, 2227 Broadway, will entertain Mrs. Laird's guests at dinner Thanksgiving day. • • • Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Miller, 3101 N. Delaware St., are holding open house today and tonight for friends and relatives of Mrs. Miller's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius F. Reinecke, in honor of their golden wedding anniversary. The rooms are profusely decorated with baskets of gold chrysanthemums and American Beauty roses, many of which are remembrances from Mr. and Mrs. Reinecke’s friends in the city. Mrs. Reinecke has always lived in Indianapolis. Her husband came here when a youth. They were married here fifty years ago in a little Lutheran church which has since passed out of existence. Pouring coffee in the dining room are Mrs. Anna Weidler and Mrs. Charles J. Orblson. Assisting are Mesdames Fred Hiss of Columbus, Irtd.; Gustav Miller, R. T. Rathfon, Bertha Miller, Theodore Weiss, Dorothy Danke and William C. Jasper. Little Miss Ruth Danke, dressed in a frock of gold georgette and lace, prevents each guest with a gold chrysanthemum. * * The senio:; <if Gamma chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority at Butler college were honor guests Monday night at the monthly “spread” given by the Gamma Alumna Club, at the chapter house, 215 S. Butler Ave. The seniors are Misses Helen Myers, Lucille Hodges, Maty Ann Miller, Mildred Benton, Ann Moorhead, Gladys Sudbrock, Jessie Brown, Martha Lucas, Mary Bear, Edith Fitzgerald. Grace Hackleman and Velma Gentry, and Mrs. Katherine Schell. Hostesses for the meeting were Mesdames Joseph W. Mullane, Walter C. Holmes, Clifford Harrod, George W. Kline, George O. Rafert, Byron C. Young, Maxwell B. Bailey, Scott R. Brewer, Misses Marjory Gordon, Hazel Van Wie. Helen Hand, lone Wilson. Katherine Kenney and Jean Stewart. The senior girls entertained their hostesses with a musical program. The rooms were' decorated in Thanksgiving colors. The junior class will be honor guests Dec. 17. • • • The Lavelle Gossett post. No. 908, Sons of Veterans, will have a card party tonight at the hall, 902 N. Pershing Ave. • • • Mrs. C. W. Urmston and Mrs. N. H. Gilman entertained with a bridge luncheon today at the Spink-Arms. The guests were served at one large j table which was arranged with a centerpiece of Mrs. Aaron Ward roses and lighted with lavender tapers in crystal holders. Mrs. Aaron Ward rose buds were the favors. There were ten tables for bridge in the Palm room. Mrs. E. A. Platter and Mrs. M. Gumble of Mt. Vernon, Ind., were out-of-town guests. • • • The members of the Butler College j committee for the College Melting Pot I bazaar met this afternoon at the home • of Sire. F. R. Kautz, 4059 N. Pennsyl- j vania St. Reports of the bazaar were j given and the business of the com- ' mittee was completed. • • • Mrs. George Class entertained at! .her home, 1215 State Ave.^a*nrday
Southern Club Auxiliary Leaders
mm '4 fIHHK.v
MRS. F. H. WINDATE
Mrs. F. H. Windjate, 778 Middle Dr., Woodruff Place, Is president of the Southern Club Auxiliary, which will entertain with a Christmas luncheon Dec. 6 at the home of Mrs. Judson D. Moschelle, Broadway and Forty-sixth St. Mrs. Frank Flanner will be assisting hostess. Mrs. Charles I. Smith, 3315 Ruckle St., is secretary and treasurer.
evening, with a surprise miscellaneous shower In honor of Miss Myrtle Freeberg, whose marriage to Raymond P. Ellis, will take place soon. The guests included members of Kappa Phi Delta Sorority. • • * The board of directors of Jewish Council of Women met today at the Temple, N. Delaware and Tenth Sts. • • • Miss Ruth Reedy, who is attending Illinois University, will arrive tonight to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Reedy, 1332 Bellefontalne St. * • • Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Gold, 3448 N. Capitol Ave., entertained Monday evening with a dancing party in celebration of the birthday of their son. Edwin Br Gold. Mrs. Gold was assisted by her daughter, Mrs. Charges Buchanan. • • • The community welfare section of the Woman’s Department Club met today at the clubhouse, Seventeenth and Meridian Sts., for luncheon. Mrs. George Van Dayke was chairman of the luncheon committee, assisted by Mrs. John A. Connor. • • • William P, Hapgood spoke on the work of the Columbia Conserve Company of Indianapolis at noon and Lawrence V. Sheridan, city consultant on city planning, spoke In the afternoon on “City Planning. What It Involves.” ' Mrs. G. Quincey chairman of the section, presided. • • •. The Ladies’ Auxiliary to the National Federation of Post Office clerks will give a dance at the Dennison Thanksgiving night. Howard's orchestra will play. • • • Mrs. Richard Coleman, 1847 Koehne St., was hostess this afternoon for the Amicltia Club. The rooms were decorated with yellow chrysanthemums and ferns. The dining room table was prettily decorated with a center arrangement of red roses and lighted with Christmas candles in crystal holders. Miss June Gray spoke on the Christmas seal sale for the tuberculosis hospitals and arrangements were made for making Christmas stockings for candy for the Riley Hospital children. Mrs. Alexander Goodwin and her ltitle grandson gave an interpretation of "Over the Hill and Far Away.” Little Miss Harriett Cracraft sang a Thanksgiving song. Assisting the hostess was Mrs. E. B. Cracraft. • • • Mrs. Emma Knowlton Doney was the speaker for the Fortnightly Literary Club this afternoon at the Propylaeum. She read a paper on “The Expressionists,” including in her talk Rebecca West, May Sinclair and Sherwood Anderson.
* fl home or on thi road DR. CALDWELL'S fa gm%SYRUP PEPSIN him in good health
Clogged-Up? Here’s Quick Aid
NEY ER mind what you are using now for constipation. For all you know there is a better remedy! The next time vou are clogged up try Dr, Caldwells Syrup Pepsin, a laxative *ucessfull y used for 30 yean, the largest selling liquid laxative in the world. Mra. John A. Goins of Butlerville, Ind., constipated all her life, her stomach injured from years of pill taking, is now functioning daily since taking Syrup Pepsin; and Mr. David O'Connor of Canton, Ohio, suffering steadily for three years, got relief after a few doses. The list of successful users of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is naturally large as over 10 million bottles are sold annually. Formula on Every Package Get yourself a bottle at a drug store, the cost being less than a cent a dpse. Take a spoonful at bedtime for a few nights and
we guarantee that the most chronic consti- ] pation will be relieved, | or refund your money. | A few doses in succession soon train the stomach muscles to act for themselves. Many, however, take it once
—Photos by Dexheimer, MRS. CHARLES I. SMITH
The auxiliary was formed during the war to sew for hospitals and do relief work for the Red Cross. The Southern Club is a social group composed of persons of southern birth. The night club will entertain NewYear’s eve with a formal dance at the Woman’s Department Club.
WOMEN WILL SAVE LABOR Conunittee of Interstate Public Service Company to Use Devices. Members of the women’s committee of the Interstate Public Service Company will promote the use of labor saving devices in the home in compliance with the advice given by Mrs. W. P. Evans, chairman of the Great Lakes division of the National Electric Light Association. Mrs. Evans spoke Monday night at a dinner in her honor at the Lincoln. Mias Marie Tudor presided at the meeting. .Talks were made by A. E. Scott, public relations director of the company; Miss Mary Whitney, Miss Rose Ronlncfwitz and Miss Mary Jane Breen. Miss Pauline Wilson, accompanied by Miss Doris Wilson, sang a group of songs. BETA FROLIC WEDNESDAY Minstrel Show and Vaudeville on Program for Banquet A minstrel show and vaudeville acts are to feature the sixtieth annual state banquet of Beta Theta PI. In the Travertine Room at the Lincoln Wednesday night, Harlan D. Wilson, president of the Indianapolis Alumni Association, said today. Speakers will be Howard W. Adams, United States trade commissioner to Holland; James C. Glpe, former district chief of Beta Theta Pi; Harry H. Martin .district chief: Charles P. Benedict, former Marion County prosecutor: Frank C. Dailey, former district attorney. Albrecht Kipp, local attorney, will have charge of the minstrels. PASTORATE IS ACCEPTED Ohio Minister Hopes to Take Up Duties at. Church Jan. 1. The pastorate of the North Park Christian Church has been accepted by the Rev. J. A. Long, Wilmington, Ohip, conditionally on his ability to get a release from his present congregation, A. A. Honeywell, chairman of the pulpit committee of the North Park Church, announced today. The Rev. Long conferred with Honeywell in Indianapol.s Monday. The new pastor, who hopes to take up his duties here by Jan. 1, will fill the place left vacant by the death of the Rev. J. D. Garrison. Cones Employes to Dine. A custom of more than twenty years’ standing will be observed when th% C. B. Cones & Son Manufacturing Company, 18-24 N. Stffiate Ave., entertains its employes at a Thanksgiving turkey dinner Wednesday noon. Talks will he made by E. L. Patrick, president and general manager; Frank A. Butler secretary and members of the employes’ organization.
a week ana in that way keep the bowels reg ularly open. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, unlike harsh physics suen as calomel, “candy cathartics,” salt waters and powders, is a simple vegetable laxative composed of Egyptian senna and pepsm with tasty aromatics whicn are entirely harmless. This Remedy Guaranteed It has been accurately proven that a constipated person is only 75 per cent efficient. It slows you up; makes you dull and lazy. Take Syrup Pepsin the first day you do not have complete bowel movement. Take it, guaranteed, for constipation, torpid liver, dyspepsia, biliousness, sour stomach, headache, lack of appetite. A spoonful at the first sneeze or sniffle will kill a cold overnight. Half the ailments of winter start with constipation followed by a cold.
><lf You Want to Try It Free Before Buying.*.. | "Sryup Pepsin,” 517 Washington St., I Monticello, Illinois. / rued a goad laxative and would like lo prove what i you say about jl. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin by actual lest. I Send ms a free isdal bottle. Address to I Same j Address | Not mors than one free triaj bottle to a taouiy
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Make Him Bind Option on Heart With Proposal
Deposited: A few kisses and a lot of “bull,” in return for an option on the heart of Miss F. G. F. G. stands for “Foolish Girl.” For surely it is only a foolish girl who would give any man an option on her heart, unless he binds the option with a proposal of marriage.
There are many F. G.’s in the world today. This particular kind lets a man call oft her twice or three times a week "steady,” and declines the company of other possible suitors at his command. The “steady” need not propose to keep his standing. It is understood that if he ever wants to marry the F. G. he may have her. But if he tires of her, or decides that she’s all right as a “date,” but would not satisfy as a wife? Then he may give up his option, after hanging on to it as long as he wishes. The girl has left her option. But, if it has been running for a very long time chances are she will have a hard time finding another man who wants it. - , Ah Ha, He’s Jealous Miss Lee: I o with a girl my own age. I have gone with her about eight months. Lately sh? has been going with other boys. Fhe promised, to go with me steady, but it dots not look as if she is. What would you do if you were in n>y shoes! Heinember, I love her very much. What would you do to see how much she loved you? TENDERFOOT MAKNY. Sensible girl! Sites’ not going to give any man an option of her heart, without the binding ring. Os course, she should not have made the promise. Are you ready to ask this girl to be your wife? Are you in a position to marry? If you are not, you have no right to question her love. You must just take your chance with her other men friends. Growing Up My Dear Miss Lee: “We are a ‘‘gang’’ of rirls who aro ardent sport lovers. We all are considered attractive, although we -are nothing for fancy clothes and use no makeup. We are from 15 to 17 years old. We like boys a* companions and pulb. Please advise us how to impress upon boys the fact that we want them only a* pals not as sweethearts We think we are too young to have dates Do you think it is wrong for us to join ihe boys' games. such as baseball and basketball? We think it will give us good prartlee for our own team Some of our parents think it is unladylike to care so much for sports. How can we convince them they are wrong ? 2. One girl has begun to use rouge and lipstick and has a steady beau. She is only 16 She will not listen to reason. Shall we let her have her own way. or her from our gang? She 1* very fond <n sports but we think she is beginning to like boys better. The boy she goes with is not good enough for her How can we convince her that if she must go with boys, she ought to choose a better ono? ( S. S. R H. 1. You sound line normal, unusually wholesome girls to me. Your parents should be glad you choose to ?oin the boys in sports, and so &c cept them as pals. Instead of having "dates’’ with them. 2. You girls are getting to the point when some of the older ones
A Store With a Host of Gift Suggestions
MATERIALS for MAKING GIFTS A complete stock of all materials needed for making the most charming and artful gifts Is here at all times. Plain or stamped parchment shades are 50<? to 97.00. Tin and wood boxes to decorate are 15C to 55^. 19 Brilliant colors of bronze for weed painting and al’. decorative work are 20c per package. Liquids for mixing paints are 2ounce bottles for 20<'; 8 ounces, 40<*. 8 Metallic colors, per package. For Mail Orders Please Add Parcel Post Charges. • • • Free instructions In ail phases art decorating every Tuesday, Wedr.esdav and Thursday afternoons from 2 to 4:30, Mr. Davidson, Third Floor.
PERSONAL GREETING CARDS Should Be Ordered Now To assure the best work and service, it is best to have all personal Christmas greeting cards engraved now. Prices are from $7.50 to S6O per hundred and will be engraved in units of 25 and up.
The H. Lieber Cos. 24 West Washington Street
AMUSEMENTS.
BROADWAY ALL THIS WEEK BURLESQUE VAUDEVILLE ADMISSION 25c and 50c PLUS TAX. This coupon and Hie entitles Ijiriv to "bo'rc Sent Anv Mat. Except Holiday.
CAPITOL Washington St. and Capitol Ave. Matinee AJtJt Every Daily THIS Night at 2:18. WEEK at 8:15, COLUMBIA BURLESQUE “Youthful Follies” WITH EDDIE COLE and The Famous Youthful Chorus 24 CHORISTERS 24 ADIFS 6 * 4 th * “ c *PiLrtDILJ t „i„ habit. Go every weeh. ThU coupon and 23c will admit lady to bent reserved seat, any matinee.
Martha Lee Says
will begin to think of boys. Your sports, and the fact that you have known the boys as pals, should keep you from taking them too seriously and letting them be your whole lives. Unless you want to drive this one girl straight to this boy, don’t "renounce” her. Don't make her defend the boy against your attacks, either, instead, pass this affair off lightly, as if you know she has too much sense to let any boy occupy her whole thoughts. And, regarding the “makeup,” let your own skins, contrasted with hers, show her that outdoor sports will give her a 1 better complexion than it is possible for rouge and lipstick to do. Homeless Bride My Dear Martha Lee: lam a girl of 16 and have been married six months. Mv husband always wants to live with some one. We are living with one of hi old sweethearts and her folks. I am not afraid iof her. She is a very nice girl. We throe Igo to dances. Wherever we go. she is with us. My husband is .13 and be thinks so much of me I don't have to be. worried about any girl beating my time Can you please give me some advice so we can live by • ourselves ? BROWN-J-.YKD BLOND While you have so much influence over your husband is the time for you to convince him you should have a home of your own. You might use a little truthful flattery, telling him how proud you would be to furnish the home he provided, and to entertain your friends and his In it. Remember, though, that you will have to accept responsibilities far beyond those a girl of 16 should have. You brought that on yourself by marry- ! ing so young. You cannot shirk now. NO COAL RATE CUT SOON Month Needed to Decide Freight Case, Despite Appeals. At least one month will be required, j in the judgment of members of the | public service commission, to decide the Intrastate coal rate case, it was said today. , R. B. Coapstick, traffic manager of the Indiana State Chamber of Commerce, aided by representatives of the Indiana Bituminous Coal Operators Association, the Terre Haute Chamber of Commerce and several city attorneys, argued for an immediate reduc- i tion to insure successful competition ! of domestic operators. Protest was made against the tentative schedule of A. B. Cronk, the commission’s traffic expert. Cronk's reductions were insufficient. It was charged.
In a five-drawer cabinet, ■ tile und bamboo set, is priced 9818. Other bamboo and tile arts at 819.50 to 875. An all-bamoo set, attractively decorated, in a tin box. 88.50. A wood set with most attractive indestructible composition faces, is very topular at Well made and good looking American sets are priced at 815. BZS 835.
Having Favorite PICTURES FRAMED is a pleasing way to express the Christmas spirit. Photographs or fine prints framed at Lieber's are put in artistic frames individually suited to each picture. To visit our picture gallery on the second floor is a delight and presents many gift suggestions.
OPEN 10:45 A. M.
A Romantic Drama of the Days When America Was Young MARION DAVIES In the Most Delightful Photoplay of the Year “Little Old New York” Every Man, Woman and Child in Indianapolis Should See It PERFORMANCES START AT 11:00 A. M., 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00 P. M. FIFTH WEEK C. SHARPE-MINOR Playing “Little Old Indianapolis” Come Early and Avoid Waiting DOORS OPEN AT 10:45 A. M.
LETTER FROM LESLIE PRES COTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER I wonder if every woman has secrets in her inmost heart that she | must keep zealously from her hus- j band. You never having been married, little Marquise, will probably answer that when a man and womart are married they are one and have no secrets from each other. I think you are wrong, little Mar-' quise. In the first place, by no possibility can two people ever be one. Not even in the case of the Siamese twins who lived all their lives bound together with an inseparable bond of flesh was there one personality, one individuality, one soul. Yet we poor mortals, back somewhere in our subconsciousness, are always thinking that when some man has said over a man and woman a few magic words and performed certain they will be or.e, "Which One?” A smart woman friend asked the other day. when I said something like this to her, “Which one?” Isn’t it strange that we get such ideas into our heads? It leads to such mixups. If at the present moment Jack and I were one, I would have no fear of telling him all ajjout the pearl beads and he would help me unravel the puzlp. He would tell r>e all about our baby and if it be rSnlly true that his friend Syd is the father of it I would perfectly understand and love the baby all the more for, being one, we would not on'y have a single thought, but we would have the same outlook on all things and the same way of solving oqr problems. If we were one, little Marquise, instead of being frightened almost to death when Jack caught me reading that perfectly innocent cable from Karl, I would have handed it <•> him for it would be just like having another pair of my own eyes read It and another half of mv own brain trying to solve the mystery. Instead I know that I made myself look like a guilty Idiot in Jack’s eyes. I could see suspicion coming into them as I partly tore that cable up and now that I cannot find it all I am almost sure Jack found it. and has kept it. “Not One” No, little Marquise, no matter how much married a man and woman may be they are not one. In fact, they are not only two, but sometimes they are as far apart in everything except the material bonds of man riage as though they were at opposite poles. Jack does not dare tell me about what he is concealing from me for his friend Sydney and I am afraid to tell him about the pearls, espe-
Mah Jongg Sets Promise to Be One of the Most Popular Gifts This Season
KODAK ENLARGEMENTS Enlargements may be made from the smallest negatives or parts of negatives into sizes from 3*4x&Vi inches to 20x24 inches. Enlargements priced 25<* to $3.50. Quotations will be gvien on larger sizes.
MOTION PICTURES
C I RU LE? TH.EATRE,^
c ßmgle
Chines* sets of good quality bamboo and tile in ti two-drawer wooden l ox, are 815. Composition ivory. all white or white combined with black, are priced 825 and 835. Mtdget Mah Jongg sets, complete with racks, are 81.75. Mah Jongg Table Tops of mahogany and green felt are 89. and Babcock's Book of Rules for playing Mah Jongg are 82.50. Racks of all kinds are hero at 81.50 to 87.
OPEN 10:45 A. M.
daily since Karl Whitney has cabled me about them, for fear he will think that perhaps I have been and might be again in love with Karl. You see, we are all mixed up, little Marquise. After getting a letter both from the blackmailer and Karl’s lawyer I just don’t know what to do. Oh, I wish John and I were really one. There would be no more trouble. As it is, 1 think I must tell Ruth. (Copyright, 1923, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: The letter, continued—ln gorgeous negligee. ODD FELLOWS OFFICIATE "Funeral of John McCord to Be Wednesday In Kennard. Odd Fellows will officiate at • the funeral of John McCord, 73, who died at his home in Kennard, Ind. Mr. McCord was the father of Herman McCord, an interior decorator, whose office is in the Traction Terminal Building here. Mr. McCord was formerly a resident of McCordsville. His death followed an attack of pneumonia about a Aveek ago. The funeral is to be held at 10 a. m. Wednesday at the Methodist Church. Kennard, of which he was a member. Surviving: The widow; a son, Herman McCord of Indianapolis: a daughter, Mrs. Bertie Woods, Kennard, Ind.; two sisters. Mrs. Charles M. Cannaday, Indianapolis, and Mrs. S. J. Klepfer, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and a brother, Wallace McCord, of Oaklandon, Ind. For Cold on the Chest Musterole is easy to apply and it does not blister like the old-fashioned mustard plaster. Musterole is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Simply massage It in gently with the finger tips. You will be delighted to see how quickly it brings relief. To Mothers: Musterole Ls now made in milder form for babies and small children. .Ask for Children’s Musterole. 33 St 3o in jar* * tubes; hospital siss, $3.
Better Than A Mustard Plaster —Advertisement, n AMUSEMENTS. Wlu'r'a'T Toiiiglitr I.j& 1 .j& Mat? no* Tomorrow jEStjr* Mat*. Cf| Plus Tax jfci ***** I >ll (J Balcony Jj® Soat “ ,vw 50c, *I.OO. Rs F-dvrird L. Bloom p r sent k! SPICE OF 1922 | By JACK LAIT fe The Roy no That Startled Broad- ■ way. Exactly a * Presented at W York Winter Garden. 33 Scene*— 100 People. Price.— 3 ToniEht, 30c *I.OO. *1.50. ** Op '■ 50.
f: KEITH’S JOE FEJER AND HIS FAMOUS HUNG A RIA NO RCHESTRA SYBIL VANE LITTLE WELSH I* RIM A DONNA RAYMOND | WILBUR BOND * CO. i MACK & CO. ALYN MANN & CO. "A Whirl of Dance” FOUR I DREON ADLONAS | SISTERS WATTS & HAWLEY "l-augli. Coated With Melodic*" PATHK NEWS. TOPICS, FABLES
FOLLOW THE CROWDS TO THE LINCOLN SQUARE IHEATRE (FORMERLY THE RIALTO) VAUDEVILLE and Pictures ('omplftc Change of Bill Sunday and Thurnday Continuous Performance, 1 to 11 p. m. 10c and 20c WAR TAX INCLUDED
ENGLISH’S =£■£>•• Thanksgiving Matinee. 2:45 Prices: Eve.. 50c to k .‘.50: Both Mats., 50c to *1.50. I’lua Tax Scuta Selling. C/re AcitO dork. G/ofys Ghc-atnis original Production of the World famous tlusical Comedy 7R IN COMPANy7R # W inciuOiho- # VaT THE SUNBEAM GIRLS THE SENSATIONAL DANCERS TRON LONDON Naxt MONDAYS™ Mail Orders Now The Gold Medal Musical Gem which Broke All Records for Attendance last year.
LONG-RUN NEW YORK CAST. 1 CHORUS AND ORCHESTRA Nights, 50c to $2.50. Wed .Mat.. 50c to $1.50; Sat. Mat., 50c to $2. Plus Tax
SHELBY COUNTY WOMAN CLAIMS HUSKING TITLE Gathers Forty Bushels in Four and One-Haif Hours. Bu Times Special SHELBYVILLE, Ind., Nov. 27. Mrs. Herbert Courtney comes forward with a claim tlb the corn husking championship of the county, under women’s rules. According to her story she went with her husband to the field at noon and remained until 4:30 p. m. husking forty bushels of corn.
Thanksgiving Dinner (By Appointment Only) 12:30 to 8 P. M., $1.50 Polly Prim Tea Room 1100 N. Penn. Cl rcle 1929.
America’s Greatest Charge Account House sells you the season’s Beautiful Styles at fl down, $1 a v/eck on sl4 purchase, or $2 down, $2 a week on S3O purchase and does not charge extra Jo r CREDIT JIM U.nu.
AMUSEMENTS.
A THANKSGIVING TREAT “Love Fables” A Romance of Song and Dance LILLIAN a HENRY ZIEGLER ARTHUR HARRY FRAZEE & BUNCE In “Doubles Troubles” WRIGHT and. DEITRICH STUART MILDRED CASEY & WARREN AND CO. “THE FOCP’ PHOTO FEATURE “THE MAN BETWEEN” WITH AN ALL-STAR CAST
LYRIC.H Special Thanksgiving Week Show HEAPED BY ROMIOss DANCING DOLLS TUNES AND STEPS FROM TOYLAND Ed. Redmond & Cos. "NAPOLEON" Clarke & O’Neil SYNCOPATED SONGSTEBS Dorothea Neilson PREMIER NORWEGIAN VIOLINIST. WITH OTIS FRANCIS. ACCOMPANIST. Clinton Sisters CARTOONING IN PANCEi LAND Jones & Johnson Two Color'd Gentlemen AL GOLEM & CO. Onlv Per* an Entertainer* in Amrrlca Dancing in the Lyric Ball Room, Afternoon and Evening
MOTION PICTURES
APOLLO TOM MIX In Zane Grey's “The Lone Star R:nger” Our Gang Comedy “JULY DAYS” VIRGIL MOORE’S APOLI.O orchestra
NOW SHOWING “The GOLD DIGGERS” The screen version of the famous Bela.ro hit that ran ,continuously on Broadway for two years. SPAT FAMILY COMEDY LET’S BUILD PA THE NEWS lesteiTTTuff PLAYING New Concert Organ New Ohio Orchestra
NEXT WEEK MARY PICKFORD IN “ROSITA”
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