Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 153, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1924 — Page 10
10
OAST OF BUTLER PLATANNOUNCED Fred Shultz Gets Lead in 'Cappy Ricks.’ Prof. Rollo A. Tallcott. head of the Butler University department of public speaking- and dramatics, has announced the cast for “Cappy Ricks.” More than 150 tried out. Fred Shultz, senior and member of the Sigma Chi Fraternity, won the title role. His understudy is Thomas F. Smith. Miss Helen Pascoe won the leading woman's part, that of Florence Ricks, with Misses Eleanor Perkins and Martha Thompson as understudies. Other members of the east are: Matt Peasley, by Elmo Richie, with Adrian Pierce ar.d A1 Harker as understudies: Cecil, John Metzger, with Carl Turpin and Parker Wheatby, understudies: Skinner, Marion Higgin, and Alman Coble, understudy: Singleton, James Burrln; Brookfield, Fred Shick: Ellen Murry, Miss Daisy Shuitz, with Misses Lucile Tyner and Jane Ogborn, understudies: Aunt Lucy. Eleanor McCallom. with Misses Lee Zwinkle and Ocie Higgins, understudies. The Butler Dramatic Club has admitted to membership the cast and understudies. Small Measurements A half-teaspoon measure is very handy and accurate for making very small measurements. '-PHILLIPS--' 4 .(fp ! ANTACID CORRECTIVE LAXATIVE THE CHAS H PHILLIPS j CHEMICAL CO NEW VQPK, Unless you ask i . "PniWips,” you may not get the original Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years. Protect your doctor and yourself by avoiding imitations of the genuine “Phillips.'’ ___ Tontaln directions —any drug store. —Advertisement. 3 The Best Cough Syrup <; is Home-made. S Here’* an ea*y war to mrr J?, and V Q yet hare the beet rough remedy V M you ever tried. You've probably heard of this wellknown plan of making cough syrup at home, P,uf hare yon ever us*d it? Thousands of families, the world over, feel that they could hardly keep house without It. Its simple and cheap, but the way It tak*-s hold of a cough wiii soon earn it a permanent place in your home. Into a pint bottle, pour 2'j ounces of Pine*: then add plain granulated sugar syrup to fill up the pint. Or, if desired, use clarified moiasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of sugar syrup. Either way, it tastes good, never spoils, and gives you a full pint of better cough remedy than you could buy ready-made for three times tis cost. It is really wonderful now quickly this home-made remedy conquers a cough—usually in 24 hours or less. I* seems to penetrate through every air passage, loosens a dry. hoarse or tight cough, lifts the phlegm, heals the mem branes, and gives almost immediate relief. Splendid for throat tickle, hoarseness, spasmodic croup and bronchitis. I’inex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine e*tract, and has been used for generations for throat and chest ailments. To avoid disappointrant ask your druggist for "-¥• ounces of Pine*' with directions, and don't accept any thing else. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or money refunded The Pine* Cos., Ft. Wayne, Ind. —Advertisement,
HAS A WONDERFUL BASY GIRL Mrs. Crossan Gives Credit to Lydia E. Pinkhanrs Vegetable Compound Mrs. Dakan Also Tells What This Medicine Does
“I heard so much about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound that I decided to try it. I took nine bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and I never felt better in my life and I have a wonderful baby girl, I will be glad to tell what it will do. to any woman who will let me know her address.” —MRS. SA DAKAN*. 2227 S. 11th St.. St. Jo 1 >ph, Missouri. * Back to Normal Health New Orleans, La.—"l too' -yfk dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com.Tyund. I must praise It highly beca '•a I never suffered one day during that time and could do all my housework. I am still taking the Vegetable Compound because I have a weakness due to working around the house too *mn after my baby was born. But thanks again to the Vegetable pound I am getting back to nor-'fir-ljhealth once more. 1 advise any to take it."—MRS. A. MEY.V, Xouro St., New Orleans, NgJ&Bit of Trouble H&frtsdSSßMß^'-iaware. — 2 was ■“MaTand not at ali a factory .it work v.-ry a year, then
Today*s Best Radio Features
Bv United Prr WEAF, Xew Y'ork (492 M) 9 p. m., EST —Russian symponic choir. WCAE. Pittsburgh (462 M) 8:30 p. m.. EST —Schubert singers. WEBH, Chicago (370 Ml 11 p. m., CST—Chicago Civic Opera artists. WRAP, Ft. Worth (376 Ml 7:30 p. m.. CST —Ft. Worth harmony. WCAP, Washington (469 Ml 7:30 p. m„ EST —United States Army Band Concert. Hoosier Briefs E. HALL of Tipton Is opposed to sport knickers for women now. Saw what he thought tl'ere four young hunters on his farm and In rough language ordered them off. Then he saw they were girl hikers. He apologized for his language. Bluffton reports anew Halloween prank. Small boys havebeen putting water in the gasoline of autos there. Neal Boring of Xew Pennington fell while sweeping leaves off his roof and broke several ribs. C”riARRY ALLSPAW, Dwight | —| Livengood and Walter Ogborn of Lafayette, received the shock of their lives when they returned to their auto, which they had parked at Chicago Heights, en route from the Chi-cago-Purdue football game, and found a baby in their car. They left the child at a hospital there. Mrs. Margaret Haas of Wingate celebrated her ninety-third birthday recently. Mrs. Luln Farmland of Farmland, Ind., had trouble with her auto and bugged a passing car A young man :n it offered to fix it. He then invited her in to try the motor, drove her down a by road and robbed her of? 100. Kenneth Griffith. Vaughn Haiffich, Leonard Briokley, Arnold Espiok and Hershel High lern of Uniondale went to Rockereek Center to attend a has ketball game, wearing white sweat ers, En route the car boiled dry and they stopped at a farmhouse for water. The farmer mistook them for Klansmen and chased them off with a shotgun. -i POUT SPRIXGS, near V Washington, spouted moonshine, instead of water, say Martin County officers, and arrested two men and charged th*-m with blind tiger. HANDICAP IS OVERCOME Bv Tirr.fi Special WINCHESTER. Ind., Nov. 3. Thomas McElvain, 25, despite the fact that he is unable to walk. Is a successful business man, conducting an electrical and flower shop and driving an automobile to and from work. Paralyzed at the age of 13, McElvain for five years supported himself by making tatting and embroidery. Tiring of this he took a correspondence course in electrical engineering and set up an electric shop. In the primary last May he was a candidate for county recorder and was defeated by a one-armed oppon ent. Editor to Speak B. F. Hennaey Jr., of Hartford Conn., editor of sales ptiblDatior a of the Fuller Brush Company, will speak on “House Organa and Advertising,” before the. Indianapolis Advertising Club at luncheon Thursday noon at the Chamber of Commerce. Here is the solution to Tuesday's cross-word puzzle: IPjIILEI iFlQlftlE ORAL A'M.EjN Cove and e;a:d IEINIACiT) EEMDISj li.oKp.i .fi 3p| aKAEiRI IRiAiViE, PEE,P IJSEE IEIRiRiS IsiElNid
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TODAY'S CROSS-WORD
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HERE'S A STUDY IN FIVE LETTER WORDS, ALL EXCEPTING TWO ARE TO BE FOUND WITHOUT THE AID OF UNABRIDGED DICTIONARIES, ATLASES OR ENCYCLPEDIAS. THE TWO HARD WORDS ARE 20 VERTICAL AND 71 VERTICAL, BUT YOU MIGHT AS WELL ADD THESE TO YOUR VOCABULARY NOW AS LATER.
HORIZONTAL 1, Pertaining to tides. G. Bury. 9. A public automobile. 11. A coral island in the form of a ring. 13. The plant yielding aromatic aniseed. 15. A negative connective. 17. Pigment. 19. Necessary to life. 21. A kind of evergreen tree. 23, Principle of faith. 25. Part of the infinitive form of every verb. 26. A preposition. 27. Chcose by ballot. 29. Contract. 31. Accomplishment, 33. Undressed goat skin. 35. An exchange for money. 37. Not tho same. Second Mortgage Loans .City Property Only ia Securities Cos. kjh \ ’• 124 E. Market
OUR BOARDING HOUSE—By AHERN
TIIE OLD HOME TOWN—By STANLEY
39. A newlywed. 41. By. 42. To wear away. 44. To one side. 46. China’s favorite beverage. 48. A bower formed by trees or vines. 50. Treated with medicines. 62. Honor highly. 64. Persons representative of a group because of physical characteristics. 56. Do, ti, las, so fa, me, . 57. Preposition. 58. A piece of property listed as a credit. 60. Field of combat, gladitorlal or bovine. 62. Apparatus (particularly a piece of motor mechanism). 64. Past perfect of sleep. 66i Wide ribbon worn around the waist. 68. Go into. 70. A pipe used for drawing off useless water. 72. Ocean. 73. Proverb or pithy saying. 75. Brow'ned sliced bread. 77. Thick' dark, sticky substance used on roads, roofs, etc.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
75. I'ierces, as with a horn. 79. Fingered VERTICAL 1. Two thousand pounds. 2. Challenge 3. Preposition. 4. Pertaining to one place. 5. Sick. 6. Weight of container. 7. Typographical measurement. 8. A stream. 9. Wager. 10. A tower used for preserving green cattle food. 12. Learnings, particularly those handed down from father to son in stories. 14. Locations; scenes. 16. A musical compositions for eight persons. 18. A fish-eating animal of the wenzel family. 20. Refuse or waste rock. 22. Check. 24. Requires. 26. Traveling on Shank’s mare. 28. Tlie small, spicy berry of n kind of a pepper, used in medicinal cigarettes. 30. Cloaks. 52. in the lead. 34. Daily record. 36. Wear away. 38. Noises made by lions. 40. A large salt water duck, valuable for its downy feathers. 43. Clothe. 45. Portions of medicine. 47. Consumed. 49. Identical with 18 vertical. 61. To wipe out a mark. 53. Equipped with oars. 55. An open courtyard. around which a house is built. (From Spanish.) 67. A representative. 59. An official of a church. 61. Vulgar; disgusting. 63. Pure oil extracted from petalls. 65. Gentle slaps. 67. Tough; brittle. 67. Torn piece of cloth. 71. In India, a member of a wandering tribe or caste of performers. 74. Depart. 76. As. Four Workmen Hurt By Times Special FT. WAYNE, Ind., Nov, s.—Otto Ayres, steel worker, was probably fatally injured, and four other men, all employes of the Western Gas Construction Company, were hurt here when a scaffold on which they were working inside a huge gas holder collapsed, hurling them thir-ty-six feet to the floor. Mrs. Lillian Blutecker of Logans port has sued Mrs. Paulda Arnett, her mother-in-ylav-', for $5,000 damages, charging alienation of her husband’* love.
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FRECEXES AND IDS FRIENDS—By BLOSSER
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You Will Never Learn Who Really Is Elected if You Read About Some Reed Phonograph Record's
By WALTER D. HICKMAN _ ’ ri HEN we were children we all \Y/ hoard much about the apple. * ’ . In Sunday school, 1 remember that Adam and Evt> had an experience with the apple. The guy who writes music put something in melody about a man shoutin' an apple off the head of somebody. This happens in “William Toll." Apple or no apple, this music has lasted for years. More so that any one apple. Am trying to tell you about the William Tell music which has been captured in Europe. The evidence has been recovered by the Dajos Belas and his orchestra. The Odeon contribution is found in two records. Two parts on both sides from this inspiring overture. Here is my thought on this record. There is great beauty. Seldom have we a chance to hear this overture. There is haunting and inviting beauty. Charm, invitation and forgetfulness. Here Is one of tho most
With Opera
ADA SALORI On Sunday night, Nov. 16, at the Murat, the San Carlo Grand Opera Company will present "Faust,” with Salori, mezzosoprano, In on* of the ciusi roles.
OUT OUR WAY—Bv WILLIAMS
satisfying gems of great music that I keep under my own roof. Meet “William Tell,” apple, orchestra and all on this marvelous new Odeon collection of two records. More Real Music Some weeks ago I introduced you to Mario Cham lee, ja tenor new to this country. This happened on a Brunswick record. 1 now have in my library his latest Brunswick con-; tribution to the music world. On one side you will find “Ah, Moon of I My Delight” from "In a Persian Garden” and “When My Ships Come Sailing Home.” Here is a tenor voice filled with that quiet velvet melody that one expects to hear in opera. Chamlee's voice Invites attention. He even commands it. Turn this record on any time. It will quiet conversation. I have tried it. The result is the same. Both numbers increase one's admiration for the better things in
SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! f Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are ’ not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe | by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years foU i Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism jOrj Accept only “Bayer” package /QC# which contains proven directions. €T 3 Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablet* • Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggist*. IspUia t* tb* tnte mark *t 3*jrtr Mawfectw* *C Kous*cttiseM**ter at BslleyllcacM
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5, 1924
j music. i Here are some new Brunswick ; records: "Honest and Truly,” Frank Bessinger. tenor; "I’d Love You All Over Again,” vocal duet, the Radio Franks; “La Golondrina," waltz. Ash and orchestra; “Beets and Turnips" and “Weary Blues,” foxtrots, Vic | Meyers and orchestra, and “PanAmericana,” music of the late Victor Herbert, as played by the Capitol Grand Orchestra. Indianapolis theaters today present: “Belle of Quakertown,” musical comedy, worth while and highly entertaining, at Murat; Dan Sherman and company at the Palace; “Come on Red,” at Keith's; “Dance Carnival," at the Lyric; “Dangerous Money" at the Apollo; “The Story Without a Name,” at the Apollo; “Abraham Lincoln,” at the Lincoln Square; “Thundering Hoofs,” at the Isis; "Husbands and Lovers," at the Circle, and “Hearts of Oak,” at Mister Smith’s.
