Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 128, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1924 — Page 4

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The Indianapolis Times EARLE E. MARTIN, Editor-in Chief ROY W. HOWARD, President FELIX F. BRUNEII, Acting Editor WM. A. MAIBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Seri ppsTlo ward Newspaper ARlan'e • * • client of the United I*-ess, the NKA Service and the Seripps-Paine Service. • • * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 214-220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis • • Subscription Rates. Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week. • * * PHONE —-MA in 3500.

SCORE: 18 TO 1 AGAINST DAWES “"7-| NUMBER of readers have asked just what court actions A were taken in the Dawes-Lorimer bank case. The answer is written in the court records of Illinois. The suit against the Dawes hank to compel it to chip in money for the relief of the 4,000 people who lost their deposits in Lorimer’s hank, was heard twice in the Circuit Court, once in the Appellate Court and twice in the Supreme Court. There is one judge in the Circuit Court, three in the Appellate Court and seven in the Supreme Court. So. in all, nineteen judges passed on the ease. Seventeen of them found verdicts against Dawes’ bank and eighteen of the nineteen found against Dawes himself. The first time the case got to the Supreme Court, five judges found against Dawes and two found for him. "When the case came back the second time all seven found against him. In the first hearing in the Supreme Court, one judge said Dawes’ bank was not obligated to question whether the transaction was honest or not and that that was the State auditor's business. But, he said, the Dawes bank should contribute to pay the losses of innocent creditors, but that since there were some of the bank's creditors who knew about the LoriimrDawes arrangement, they were not innocent and did not deserve relief. The other judge said it was a loan from one bank to another and that there was no idea of deceit. This was the only judge out of the nineteen who held the transaction to he innocent. In a somewhat similar transaction criminal action was taken. It is the ease of People vs. Smith. A bank was organized by Smith under the State law. The capital stock was not fully paid up, so, like Lorimer's bank, it didn’t own the required cash. The bank failed. Depositors lost their money. Smith was arrested, fined and sent to jaiL SPIT AND GO TO IT |t-i I VERY once in a while the public profs a glimpse of th* poll-' 1 litical bunk and hokum of a presidential campaign. Listen. Paul V. Collins, former Republican candidate for Governor of Minnesota, and a distinguished newspaper and magazine writer, is on tour in the Northwest writing polities for the Washington Star. The Star vies with Ned McLean’s paper, the Washington Post, as chief Coolidge organ of the national capital. Writing froth Minneapolis, Mr. Collins tells; of his interview with J. E. Meyers, former Republican mayor of Minneapolis. Telling of the campaign for United States Senator between Magnus Johnson and Thomas Schall, the blind congressman. Mr. Collins quotes Mr. Meyers as follow-: “Schall knows a lot more about national politics than Johnson does, and he is making a great campaign. Jiis wife jheiping him cie\cr litfu* woman and as good a politician as Tom is. “When Tom Schall is going to address a labor meeting lie puts on a flannel shirt and little wife guides him upon the stand and places him in the right spot, where he can speak and chew tobacco and spit, and he goes to it' 1 A flannei. shirt, “the little # wife” and a chaw of tobacco, then, is the formula for saving the Coiled States Constitution in Minnesota, this year?

Sports By HAL. COCHRAN There are aJI kinds of pports that a man can enjoy, if he's wi:-e an.l will play now and then. He’s learned the ions list, one by one. since a boy and he ne'er has to learn them again. It may be that tennis appeals to him much and he plays it to pass time away. Or maybe it's golf that baa thrown him In dutch with the wife ’cause he’s at it all day. Some fellows choose baseball to furnish their fun ’cause they starred at the game in their ’teens. Another man's milder, when day's work is done, and calmly to croquet he leans. But all of the sports that we know of today will never arouse just the joys that a father can get if he’ll get out and play a couple of hours with his boys. Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) Know Indiana Who wan the first one to take active Interest in the insane of Indiana? Governor James Whitcomb, who collected the first reports in 1542. Where was the first insane home? The farm of Nathaniel Bolton, west of Indianapolis. Who was the founder of tbe blind asylum of Indiana? William H. Churchman. La Follette By EDWIN BOUCHARD, Law Faculty Yale University, One of the Greatest Living Writers on the Science of Law. It is men like Senator La Follette who give us some faith in the soundness of our institutions, for if all men were afraid of moving forward the future would ho very’ discouraging. It is a tribute to Senator LaF<*!lette's greatness that he has been able to perceive the tendencies of tbe times and the direction in which our policy ought to go. ,An examination of his record, I think, will show that most of his constructive ideas have been adopted, though tl has taken the general run of people some time to realize that he had tho vision to see further than they j did. ' He is regarded by thinking J men in the East generally. I believe, as one of the foremost of our time. *4 J

Science Einstein, fierhaps the greatest sci entist of today, has offered an interesting and rather startling theory of education for children. He believes that .all education 'should be practical, specific and defl- | nitc and never theoretical and that | tho chief instrument In teaching I should be the movies. These should be used to show children, mostly through slow motion pictures, tho crowded streets of foreign cities, birds flying, flowers growing and so on. This, he, says, will Interest them land they will retain in tliejr minds i more things that form the funda- | mentals of education. At present, he says, no matter how well a child ! may learr a certain subject because | he is compelled to do so, he will, if ! it Is very distasteful to him, forge* jit soon afterward. Therefor*-, not only has time and effort been wasted by the teacher, but the child's energy has been misused. Examinations, says Einstein, should bo Abolished and school hours reduced. The pres ent system of education, he thinks, attaches entirely too much importance to memory of a parrot-like nature and this is fostered by examinations. Tom Sims Says “The fair sex fairly stunned me,” said the J'rince of Wales. Well. r.;d toppy, that's a bally habit of theirs. | In Minneapolis, .Minn., a minister’s son is Turning for tho Senate. Very often ministers’ sons are wild. Astronomer in Bonn, Germany, j has found anew comet. All we can do is hope it isn’t coming here to i run for President. A bean king recently disappeared, .vlaybe some war veteran is chasing him. Another man has secured a divorce from a movie star. Unhitching his wagon from a star. Eve would have had a hard time tempting Adam with an apple at their present price. Crime schnoi has been found in Chicago. Every boy thinks any school is a crime. j These are tho days the fatted calf jis returning from his vacation ' tanned by the prodigal sun. The burning question will soon be “How much per ton?” The modern girl has simply decided her face can cither be her fortune or her misfortune, j Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.)

ONE A UTO FOR EVERY 8 PERSONS Number of Motors Shows Prosperity of United vStates, Times Washington Ilurcau. 1444 Sew York Arc. (T2r3 ASHINGTON, Oct. 6. —The j jyy I U. S. A. now has one pleas--1 xv 1 ure car for every eight persons, in addition to 1,831,405 | motor trucks, 74,940 taxis und 126,j v ; ,o motorcycles. There is one motor vehicle of o ie | kind or another for each 0.6 persons • j i st figures from the Hurcau of I’ub- | lie Roads of the Department of Agri- : culture. They say that during the past year ■ we have increased our worldly goods In motor cars some 20 per cent. In the Pacific States there is one motor vehicle for verey 3.4 persons. Hence, even if the ‘‘biscuits bang high” out there in California, hobos should find it “easy picking' to “bum” tides. California has 1,184,015 motor vti hides. New York and its this in point I of numbers by 1,233,362, but hasn't as many per p rson. Would lie Crowded in the Hast South Central States I there would b • a bit of crowding if j ev< rybody attempted to ride all at [once. There is onlj one, motor veI hide for eiidi 13.6 persons. ; Registration fees, licenses and perj mits bring in funds amounting to ; 8199.472,682. Os this amount, $163.- ! 011,5,84 is available by law for buildling and repairing roads, which con- ! stanttly wear down as automobiles jai.it trucks run over them. When it is realized that just a nule of good h oad vests about c 2W.000 to build, it ban be seen that funds must come j from somewhere. Gasoline taxes h**p some, too. Gross receipts from gasoline tax during tho year ending July 1, 1924, I amounted to $32,430,110. Os this | $20,065,581 is applicable to highway 1 work by or under supervision of I tiie State highvav a- ;,artien( s. Rate Is Row The Bureau of Public Roads tig [arcs that registration fees and gas j taxes hold up the motorist only one’fourth of a cent pe r mile. That is an average arr.v- l at by cons.der--1 irig the fees paid in one year as against tho average motorist's milejage of 6.900. A 1 cei.: g,v tax increases the cost of opera':! g tie- average ear or : ruck than .no te' ;h of a cent per niiie. The tax for a trip from '.Vasn.ngton to Philadeipi a would i thus be 10 v.-nt.-. From New York jto Ban Fram over tin Jdwoln highway \x< i*3l mean a tax of $2.50. Gas taxes in thirty Slates which have th-m ranged from 1 to 4 cell's : per galiou. Ask The Times f lo'.ii >n in ur t. „• Bar* au. 1 it - Im ■ Ye , Ae VV*jhlnirtoii. a C. ineW-ng: 2 rents in - sUunpH lar nplv. Miue.il. i g:v, aial marital nitvi.-.. .vv.M.t li igv, :i. i. ir ■ an . xtr: is-ii research be vnlretikm. A a of; r iiur*Hiaij:s will re ' .v- a perfunal reply Unsigned r- p, . ana >t b- answtrefi. Aii lt-llor. air reundenti,d —Editor. Is there any place besides 1 relate i where then are m snakes? i There are none in the Canary | Islands. | Is it true tii.ll a block of wood, if forced below tho surface of a | tub of <iuleks.lvei far enough to j put it below of gravity of same, will . ■> to :!;e bottom of ' the tub and remain? No; a block cither of wood or of i iron will rise to the surface of mer- • oi:• y from any depth to which it i may !>•• immersed. What do the names, Georgia, J Jessie, Kinnrt and Hattie mean? j Georgia, “landholder:” Jessie, "wealth;” rinma, ‘‘energetic;’’ llat- , tie, “head of a house.” | When did the Volcano Tam- ! wera in New Zealand have an ! eruption and were any lives lost? I An eruption of Tarawera occurred : June 10, ISX6. The native village of j Pink and Whito Terraces on the , slope of Rake Rotlmahana, being situated on the edge of the fissure —rent, wa re blown out <>f existence I and the inhabitants, eleven In number, vv-re instantly killed. 'Hie native villages at Te Wuiioa. T.e Arikl and Mourn were overwhelmed with j dust and mud. All the inhabitants ! of the last two wen* killed, namely J fifty-two natives at Be Arikl and thirty-nine at Mourn. The fourteen I killed at Te Wairoa included several Europeans. What Is the meaning of the term "a round of ammunition”? For rifles and small arms a round of ammunition is one cartridge. For largo caliber guns a round consists | of the projectile, the fuse, the powder .and primer—or tho ammunition j necessary to fire the gun one time. Does tho Army have any Curtis’s airplane motors for sale now? Not at present, but it is probable that some will he put on -ale in a short time. Apply to the War Plans and Material Disposal Section, Army Air Service. War Department, Washington, I). C., asking that you he notified as soon ns these motors are available for sale. What is the recipe for pickled peppers? Soak fresh peppers, either green or red, in strong brine for a week or two, changing every two or three days. Park in suitable jars and cover with cold vinegar. The seeds | tend to make the peppers very strong, and may be removed if less j strength is desired. A few poppers j added to pickled cucumbers improve | them very much, as the heat of the j peppers is taken out by the vinegar I and becomes blended with the cui cumbers, giving them an agreeable | flavor, I What is the maximum range of i a Drowning machine gun? 3,450 yards. When was Mary I’aker G. Eddy born and when did she die? Born July 16, 1821, and died Dec. 3, 1910.

j-Joosierisms j "*■ BY GAYI.ORI) NELSON VERY minute fire destroys property in the United States to the value of $991. Or a total of $521,000,000 a year. That was the 1922 record. We have an expensive national bontl re. And Indianapolis contributes a healthy share to make up this portly total. Oct. 5-11 is Fire Prevention week. It is being observed throughout the country for the purpose of educating people to the importance of fire prevention, and thus to reduce the nation's enormous annual fire waste. Insurance, of course, eases the feelings of the ‘property owner who beholds tho brisk combustion of his home or possessions. But insurance isn’t a free institution. A fire in.stirance company collects premiums from many to pay the fire loss of few. It also skims a profit from the transaction. At least, so intends. And insurance—while it’s a healing salvo to the purse scarred by lire —can't restore the property consumed. That is gu..c from this life. Carelessness causes the majority of fire. Matches, cigarette, accumulated trash —or the spontaneous combustion resulting from a heavy blanket of insurance policies on an impoverished business all contribute. And are preventable caused. Hence the injunction, this week, painted on many downtown sidewalks: “Stop Fire. Waste.” Indianapolis may heed the painted Injunction—or it may only wail; on them. Time will tell. Fate p- INTON A CON JR., of 2003 j N. Meridian St., loft college I’ 1 tn enter the aviation service during tho war. He reached France and was attached tn tho 94th pursuit squadron. There lie saw active service, and, as a reckless aviator with death a’ his elbow, met the Germans In the sky. IT<* come home unscathed and set tied down to peaceful civil life onlla grou: and, far from war and the dead! ‘ toll war talcs of fliers. Saturday morning a big i ‘adillae car skidded on the slippery pave nun? near Straughn and turned turtle. Them were four occupants Two escaped with minor injuries. The third had his leg broken. While the fourth occupant, Linton A. Cox Jr., was instantly kilb-d. \ a a tiler, no insurance company would have insured hi- life for a nickel. Ah a mere nr, UP *ot of an automobile on a peaceful Indiana highway, he would have been rated a p>-' h rred risk That’s an insurance company’s view of the relative hazard. But he survived the most perilous war service to die in an autoc oldie : .accident in peaceful, rural Indiana. Why he afraid? We cun calmly • pursue our daily lives, knowing i when the appointed time comes, and pot an iruitc sootier, Fate will i 0,,k its finger. We can’t hurry It or dodge it. W ater r-‘ 1 VT>f;E FF.RIIINA VD A. ’ I GEIGER he’d, the other day, J 1 that tic valuation of *ls 260,- : -P u for the Indianapolis W ater Com'puny, .is t'xed by the public service commission in November, 1923, .s too low. He considers it to he approximately ?19.firt0,nfl0. The commission thinks $15,260,400 Is enough. And city experts contend that $1 1.000.000 is more nearly correct. Obviously there is a slight difference of i 'pinion. Meanwhile the commission U on.a oned from enforcing the rate t :-i.itdished on ics November, 1925 valuation. t f course tho lowly consumer pays the bills. As for the Water Company it attends to business, noting here and there a slight pirofit from its corpora'o efforts. Still the case lias been somewhat enlightening to the slmpile citizen. Ho him learned that water Is snmeI’hing more than a mobile fluid used to fill radiators, and float navies, i He learns that, water not only covers 1 three fourths of the earth's surface, ■ I lit that it cornea right Into the ! center of an inland city and bites [ tin* pnekefbook. So, small inds. who fail to wash ] i heir nooks it behind their ears, now have a valid ex ufo 'nr their sketchy work. They can plead economy. For about the only cheap water the consumer will get will be salty i ea rs. And he’ll have tn shed them himself. The Water Company won’t. Not under Judge Geiger’s decision. Dream rfU] A REVERE CARTER, 610 Jyj State Life Bldg., has a plan l Ito beautify the city and relievo downtown automobile congestion. According to his plan the State and Marion County, respectively, would erect anew Statehouse and Courthouse on opposite sides, and facing, the memorial plaza. Their present sites to be occupied by huge garages for storing automobiles now parked on downtown streets. To cover the Statehouse site with a garage makes a subtle appeal. The land then would serve a strictly utilitarian purpose, while the value of its present use is problematical. Still most States have capitols. It. has become a habit. The plan is spacious, but difficult. The present Statehouse may not rival the Taj Mahal as an architectural triumph. Yet it. cost $2,000,006, and is a sufficiently costly edifice for housing thirty cent politicians. The people might, object to another, more costly, in the vicinity of the Memorial Plaza. Erecting anew county courthouse facing the Palaza would be a real stroke of genius. What a noble curb market thn Plaza would make! The dream plan would get the slandholders vote. To a man.

CURRENT WOULD BE PLENTIFUL Progressive Power Program Calls for Big Development. Times Washington llurcnu, 1X24 Sew Yurk Ave. r~n ASHINGTON, Oct. 6.—There's j YY/ this to be said about the —’,.1,1 Follette campaign. No other candidate for tho presidency has ever promised that if he is elected women will have to work only half us hard as they did before! The Democrats quote nursery rhymes to intrigue life women, but lhe Progressives tell the housekeeper they will make her days easier and her years longer ana happier. They expect to do this by devoting their super-power program, according to the Progressive campaign text-book. Their super power program, they promise, will enable every household land every industry to be run by Bhctrioity at one-half to one-third present costs. This would bring i plenty of energy within tho reach of I even the poorest lamilies. Cheap Current It would provide the farmer with < leci.ri • current equal to the labor of five men and a four horse team at Urn rate of 35 cents a day. It will develop hundreds of new it dustrf*-s. It will reduce the cost of transportation and double their carrying i opacity. It will eliminate the smoke nuij sauce in cities. It will Irrigate and reclaim milkens of acres '>f arid i.mds. it w:il stop destructive floods and ai l navigation. By doing all these things, It will open anew era of progress and general prosperity. Thais tiie case for the superpower program. Kill Before Congress The plan is to be worked out, it is proposed, along the lines of tho Norris Keller bill now before Core gre s which creates an Independent and permanent non - politic il com mission of three to develop a nation -wide, public power system and to supervise Federal aid to States, j cities and other p- litical stjb-divi-s; ns who want to develop their own power on a seif supporting basis. Bower would be in all cases, at The alternative to this program is j continued growth of the electric : power trust which now controls OS per cent .-f the p-. ; service power | ;n the United States and which, the ! Progressives charge, “stifles develop- ; men: by monopoly control and exNature Tho two-mil ■ deep ve which j spread ovr tlio North American i continent as far south a.*-: the lat.l- - tude of the present Ohio River 1 thousands of years ago. won prohi ably a shuddering catastrophe—if ; .any!rely lived here to shudder —but I nature evidentl produced it to benoe. ,( ir> mill!,-ins of human:; ' vpeered lat'-r. The ice -'pits stirred up the I soil and in nicking - creak thick ! masse- of new soil over th“ old. In j Indiana there were spurs which the ' ice masses didn’t touch and in such 1 places the soil Is only one-half as ! good aa aa that In farther north In- • diana which was covered with ice. •\nd only cne-fhird as good soil still | farther north in Wisconsin. Bobhj 100 Per Cent “Now. Bobby, tell me which month has twenty-nine days in it this year?” "They all have.’'--London Anwers. W UIIKUK Till: CROWDS go: j * LYRIS 1. I FRANCIS ' RENAULT Q the SLAVE OF FASHION KING & IRWIN “Coo \to w \ in vou.ro \s” I Cortelli & Dowd H ambassadors of mirth De Vine & Gould "POST TASTE’* Weston’s Models H ART ST I DIES l)E EFXE ® s Hai Yung Troupe !jy I CHINESE ACROBATIC H I MARVEI.S | JAZZMANiA REVUE Eh •S.vnropiitlon in Soiicth n-nd Danros Oanuins: in Ihf* 1..\ ru Ita.l (room Aftermon und r.vfning | IRENE BERRY Kg and Ifur | STRING QUARTETTE ssj “A Treat In Music” TOWA & D’HORTYS AssistfHl by | “THE KID” Tommy Sara II VAN & VERNON 1 EGBERT VAN ALSTYNE America’s Popular Composer Assisted by Clem Daley & John Griffin YONG WONG TROUPE CHINESE WONDER WORKERS I'HOTO I'EAY “MISSING DAUGHTERS” With Eva Novak and Pauline Starke

Shadowed!

The Bobber Shop By C. A. L. Fnl Sodburter never gets on a crowded street car because his long whiskers tempt the strap hangers. Mrs. Sherman Shimmerpate says her w ishwnman has a oujia board , that talks Georgia dialect. “it's better to bn right than] President,” a man in the end chair i “aid this morning, "hut it is barely I poreihlo to be both.” A deg with a bobbed tail floes the best It. can with what it has to wag. NEXT A Thought Pride goetli before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall. —Prov. 16:1S. • * a Pride and weakness are Siamese twins.—-Lowell. Says Pa to Ma | I want you to understand that Urn not two-faced.” ’Vertainiy not, dear. If you had two, you certainly wouldn't wear I that one.” —American Legion Week- : iy_ AMUSEMENTS EH GUSH’S—NOW Twice Daily. 2:15, 8:15. , \l\smk Not to be shotrm axtruthere else in thtt M 1 u[| city , this wnmom —SYMPHONV ORCHESTRAPUB ES—Mill., fide, 83c, sl.lO. M*ht, j #l.lO, Hftttm Soiling. TONIGHT | Blossom time VII This Week. Popular Matins*. Wednesday d*l /(" I I test Seats Jpl.Uv) Eves.—soc, sl.lO, $1.6.5, $2.20, $2.75. Nut. Mat. —50c, SI.Ir $1.65, $2.20. Bed. Mnt —V> . sl.lO, *1.1,:,. Next Week-Seats Tomorrow Mu(k. tVt‘d. and Sat. *n* §Mi rrv **~*o sSaoun KM ha Shalt cKpnr^ Komto 3tuliel with. HOLLO PETERS Prices—Eves., 83c, sl.lO, $1.65, $2.20, $2 75, $3.30; Wed. Mat., 83c, sl.lO, $1.65, $2.20; Sat. Alut.. 83c, sl.lO, 51.65, $2.20, $2.75. Including Tax. Sima 8, Mol tine Arts tmerprises ft | NEXT SUNDAY IKET.SS | [PAUL WHITEMAN |2T£ ORCHESTRA IPrirpA— $2.50. $?. $1.50. $!. Tax 10% g Extra. SEATS NOW SKLMNb. I Onit H. Talbot, 910 Hume-Mansur I Chirkerinfr Piano—Victor Records |

Father Fooled “Tour breath smells of liquor.” AMUSEMENTS CAPITOL THEATRE Columbia llnrlcftqne All Thi* ***k l*n<licK, Kverj buy, 25c. JACK REID (Himself) RECORD' BREAKERS Mothrm, Brinjr ille Children to Our IMnricrotJiid. B. nE! i :1 WORLD'S BEST VAIUKVILGK WELLIHGTOH CROSS “AWTHI Xi 511011 T HAPPEN” IIRCER, DOI'GLAS & HAFT CARL EMMY'S MAD WAGS HAMIEKS A MILLISS Ml HR AY GIRLS WILSON AI'BREV TRIO AG STRIKER MARY HAY'S Ks. Ivxcluslre Sonc I*Rth* >'fTi§, Toplm, Fable* \*LXt >V<*Pk, Alice Brady MOT| PICTURES

THOUSANDS YESTERDAY CHEERED AL and RAY ROCKETTS PRODUCTION * “ABRAHAM LINCOLN” A FIRST NATIONAL PICTURE Never in fh© lilat-ory of *il©nt drama Iti T Amrrirti had more ©ngrosfdnjr ©ntertainnn'nt been flashed upon <he s©r©©n fhan Is afforded by this picture. In this subject arc combined all the element# e*©Htin 1 to tense dramatic intercut—romance—adventure pathos thrill# tragedy —humor. So varied in its appeal that every body finds something different in it to admire and applaud. Special Musical Score Arranged by C. Bahaleinihoff—Played by The Circle Symphonic Orchestra A CIVCLE PRESENTATION ATMOSPHERIC PROLOGUE TO “ABRAHAM LINCOLN” OVERTURE “EVOLUTION OF DIXIE” BY LAKE BAKALEINIKOFF CONDUCTING PERFORMANCES START AT 12:05 SHOWN AT OUR REGULAR PRICES AMUSEMENTS 2:15 and 8:15 Lincoln Square Washington A Smashing Hit! John Fox Jr.’s “Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come” New Lincoln Square | \ PLAY | D 'Yj th y V f lter t4U Orchestra Not a Moving Fir.,,™ Pou'ter 'ate with * 1 Stuart Walker Cos. Matinee. 25c. Night**. 50c. Chi bl run, s liefer red. Phone Main 3255

“That’s funny. It didn't taste like liquor.”—American Legion Weekly. MOTION PICTURE 9 APOLLO BEBE DANIELS and RICHARD DIX —I N—“Sinners in Heaven” Imperial Comedy, ‘•BFX>W*S and DYNAMITE^ Emil Seidel and HU Orohentra I NOW SHOWING POLA NEGRI “Liiy of the Dust” Will Rogers C omedy. Whiz, Grnovi©v©’ , iegter Htiflf Solo. “The Modern A. B. C. Book" Charlie I>avl Orchestra