Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 142, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1926 — Page 6

PAGE 6

,The Indianapolis Times UOY W. HOWARD, President. BOYD GURLEY, Editor. VVM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Scrlpps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • * * Client of the United Press and the NEA Service . • • * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published 'daily except. Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 W Maryland St.,lndianapolls • * * Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week • *.• PHONE—MA'in 3500.

No law shall be passed restraining the free interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print freely, on any subject whatever.—Constitution of Indiana.

AID FOR FLORIDA Florida calls to Indianapolis for help and Indianapolis should be quick to respond. The Indianapolis chapter of the Red Cross has received word from national headquarters that tremehdous funds are needed to meet the emergency in the southern city. Contributions of money should not be delayed. The effectiveness of relief work already begun by this great national organization will depend on the swiftness with which sympathetic citizens in this and cities come forward with financial aid. Send or take your money to the Red Cross at the American Legion Bldg. In this hour of distress’ the country has cause for gratitude in the very existence of a nation-wide organization equipped for rescue work on the scale galled for. Those who otherwise \VouM be forced to sjt helpless are enabled to help. If you fear for the safety of loved ones in the stricken region or if you are moved only by pity for ativ who may suffer anywhere you can move most directly to the Red Cross through the agency of the Red Cfoss. All supplies that are needed and all facilities for getting them to the devastated districts are being made available to the Red Cross. Its resources are limited only by the generosity of the American people and on that, so far as Indianapolis is concerned, let there be no limit while the present tragic emergency lasts. ' WHEN NATURE STRIKES Today the Nation stands aghast and appalled by :he< extent of disaster and death which has come to me of the favored spots of earth. Where but yesterday there were happy people, jopeful and optimistic, great buildings to delight the ;ye and magnificent homes to content the soul, there js Nvilderness and waste. And death, too, has come to many. Almost as if to mock' the puny efforts of man. Hother Nature in an unkindly mood, has struck. And when she unlooses her terrific and terrible 'orces, the works of man dwindle and disappear. The great heart of this city is peculiarly touched y the misfortune which has come to the sunny lands 1 if Floyida. For this city, built by the sons of pioneers, sent nany of her pioneering sons and daughters to that and which had anew discovery'only so brief a time i go. ; They went, as their fathers and mothers went icfore them, to new places, when > opportunity ■ocmed to beckon just,as tlte sons of Indiana will ilways be found wherever and whenever adventure lends its challenge. Today they are in that stricken zone and hearts ire heavy with misgivings and £reat is the concern 'or friends and relatives. Here is a situation which ever and always unites luman hearts in ono great bond of sympathy q,nd leep oftneern. There is need there, and there Will be need lor nany days to come. It is the same need which other'eities haVe felt vhen Nature, inexplicable and inscrutible, grows ingry. ' ! ~ # It is the. same need which sent a sympathetic vorld to Shn Francisco when the earth trembled and housands £elt the weight ot woe and loss. # It is the same need which stirred the hearts for Pokio when the seas rose and blotted opt life. It is the same need which years ago sent trains if aid and comfort to a strtfcken Dayton. And jet us not forger'that. even Indiana, favored .s it is, has felt the shock of such disasters and its 'eople, gladly and gratefplly have received the symiathy and aid in such an hour. .There was Newcastle and • New Albany and Princeton, all stricken by a similar fate, and in that lour the people of more fortunate communities sent ;heir succor and aid to stricken cities. Today that call comes from Florida and there nen stand appalled at the extent of the blow which las been received and the heart is numbed by the sudden taking of human life. Men dojiot understand why these things happen., Wan has beep able-to change the current of events n many respects, Man has not yet learned how to control the winds and the waves. Some day, perhaps, when we learn more about life we may understand how t p guard against Jhese iisasters which stir our souls and make us kin But today tile mind and the hearriurns not to the loss of property, not. to the leveled cities, not to the magnificent homes that are no more, but to the men and women who may be in dire need,of aid. To them goes the sympathy, and to them ihust go the aid. Ii t / Before such calamities men can only marshall a united front of kindly care. > ( The anger of Nature is a call to the deepest emotions of the human soul. . ' I • ' ~jT“ r “— THEY LAUGHED AT STEVENS A hundred years ago a man John Stevens gave America a hearty laugh* He wanted to build a railro and. The: man went up and down the country seeking- charters. He wrote endlesjilly to public men Arying to get them interested In his project. Among those who'doubted were such astute charac--4

thrs as Thomas Jefferson, Rufus King, DeWitt Clinton and others. A monument .remains to Stevens, for a great part of the Pennsylvania Railroad was built under Charters that he dbtained from unwilling lawmakers. If Jefferson, King or some of the others who scoffed at Stevens could scan the reports of the railroads’ business now! The Bureau of Railway Economics places net operating income for Class I roads in July of this year at approximately $177,000, vOOO, or the equivalent of an annual rate of return of 6.62 per cent. And the July showing is only slightly better than for previous months this year A It would do John Stevens’ heart good if he could sit and scan those figures! ONE GOOD RESULT When Dr. E. E. Shumaker, head of the AntiSaloon League, criticised one of the Supreme Court judges and told a gathering of preachers that he should not be re-elected, he accomplished one good result. For he at last brought out from cover the partisans of that judge who denounce, when they reply to Shumaker, the whole .system of Indiana prohibition with its purpose and Intent to destroy all of the constitution except the Eighteenth Amendment. This particular judge is now lauded because he has. on occasion, rendered decisions which protect the individual in his right from unlawful and arrogant search and violation of his home. \ The defense of the judge is that the constitution guarantees to every citizen of the State the freedom of his person and his liojne from the snooping and inquisitivte officers of the law who may suspect that he has a little liquor hidden there. It is unfortunate that the same zealous defenders of a candidate did not rise ia their wrath when their members of the Legislature were voting, without reading, the law that tries to take away this right. It is an open secret that the law in Indiana, the most arrogant of any sumptuary law upon the books of any State, was dictated by the dry leader and passed at the orders of a gentleman who is now a permanent guest of the State in its penitentiary. It is an open secret that the dry law was used as a cloak of virtue by this man who dictated laws and senatorial appointments in order to distract attention from other laws, quite as vicious but less popular, which he desired. Now, perhaps, the people will have a chance to ask themselves whether they wished so drastic a law, whether they wished to toss the traditional rights of security of home and person overboard in order to enforce their will in the matter of iiquor upon all others. For the defense of the judge in question by such an argument is an attack on the Wright law itself. * \ Uls a charge that the law violated the rights of citizens to be free, Ipom official espionage and invasion* i • Perhaps those who now find the words of the dry leader objectionable will be really logical and demand tlxat the next Legislature repeal the law which triers to do the very things which they declare this judge has resented. If we really- want our homes and persons to be free from these attacks and invasions, we ought to wipe out the law that very plainly tries to take away those rights. The dry leader is more logical. His reasoning is that any one who violates tho liquor laws has no rights and that any one who does not ought not to object to official search at any time and any place. If judges still remember some othei; parts of the' constitution and recollect some ancient rights asserted by the founders, that is their misfortune. They simply do not understand that we repealed most of the constitution in order to get Volsteadism. Football’s back and those who failed to get hurt last season hope to do better this year. While the fellow with a poker face may get along, there are times when most of us think It needs poking. Most of the things you think are necessary wouldn’t be missed at all if you didn't think they were necessary. The fellow who realljf Is boss in his own home needs one thing and that is to get married. A majority of ('he voters can name more members of any baseball league than of the League of Nations. Some have nerve ehough to go ahead and accomplish what others have too much sens’e to attempt. Spain seems to have so many revolutions per minute. WOMEN AND RELIGION By, Mrs. Waflter Ferquoon ■. , In spite of the fact that the majority of women have stronger faith than men, they are the ones who give up their creeds in marriage. For women think little of the forms of religion. They believe in God and a future state, and are willing to leave the rest to Heaven, Juei. as they have always been In the habit of leaving their temporal problems to the men. In marriages contracted by persons of different faiths It is the girl who is expected to give up her church and go into that of her husband. Men, when they do have opinions about religion, cling to them like grim death, Women, on the contrary,.have long learned from life to be amenable. They have accilStomed themselves to guidance from their men, and religion as closed out by husbands has been Swallowed by wives for long ages. Os the two, woman has by far the most sublime faith. Somehow, being a mother, she realizes, that God will not hold her to blame and she knows that, after all, creed Is but the husk of religion. Love is woman’s faith and she gives her all for it. Contentions about form mean nothing to her. This is the reason why a great 'many people insist that women are less religious than men. Because they are able to see the beauty of reality behind the bulwark of clumsy creed with which man has surrounded his church, they are often accused ofVelng’ irreligious. What is not always understood is their grea/ter depth of faith. For they are the .ones who have kept the love of God alive in the heart’of the world. While men have battled for the tenets of a faith, women v have kept the altar fires burning before the shrine df love because they khow that love, after all, is God. Without this service of women, no church could survived. For woman, strangely, is both the Martha and the Mary of present-day religion. She toils that the stair carpet may be paid for, and she somehow kdeps/a sublime trust living forever in the midst of turmoil aqd sin. Hers is the religion of love and service, the same religion as that practiced by Jesus Christ.

THE INDIANAPOLfS TIMES

Tracy Story of Galveston Over 1 . Again in Florida’s Tragedy,

By M. E. Tracy For Monday it is the story of Galveston over again, the story of Corpus Christi, Indianola, Clarksville and Bagdad. ‘ Those who have been through it can shut their eyes and get the picture. A gulf storm, whether it hits at Vera Cruz or Miami. No inland tornado this, cutting a mile swath across the landscape, but a whirl of wind' big as all outdoors and carrying thunder and rain. For four, five, six perhaps eight hours, the gusts are on a crescende, each harder than the last, and It takes them just as long to die o.it. At first y<ju are optimistic, saying to yourself in every lull, ‘'That must have been the last.” Then you begin to fonder if there is any limit and finally you get the notion that, no matter how hard It bjows, the worst Is yet to come. *1- -I* -INot a Stake Stands At the mouth *of the Rio Grande, the salt grass gives way to wld'b beaches smooth as a boulevard and stretching far as the eye can reach in both directions. < Here once wero cities—Clarksville on the American side and Bagdad on the Mexican—but not a stake is left standing to mark their location. Old timers will tell you how they boomed during the Civil War, how contraband cotton, draft evaders, gamblers and foreign gold combined to make- them prosperous, and then they will tell you of the storm of ’74. + + -IGround Gained In 1900 Galveston was struck, Tilth 8,000 dead, ships high and dry on Pelican Island, tne great causeway gone and a third of the city in tangled ruins. I have talked with hundreds, who went through the tragic experience. Rich Spillane, arnqpg the rest, who was first to get out with the grim news, and Dr. Young who grabbed the lintel of a second story outside door as he fell, his house collapsing, and ficated away into the darkness. They picked up bodies for a month along then Texas const and it took nearly as long to find all the dead amid the wreckage, 23.000 folk* and more went through that night in Oalvtstory, unscarre-1, if not unscathed, ready to rebuild the town. When,v.he worst storm hit in 1915, it found Galveston raised ten feet and buttressed by a four-mile concrete wall. There was damage, of course, and loss ot life to the extent of 200 or so.' but the fact that Galveston stood shows what modem engineering can do even against measureless wind and tidal waves. -|- -|- -|. A Terrible Fight , I was 1n Houston during the 1915 storm. Houston Is fifty miles inland from Galveston and twentyfive miles from the shore of Galveston Bay. It began to blow hard about 6 in the aftemqon and kept it up for more than twelve hours. The cars stopped runlng at 6 and the lights went, off at 8. We occupied a two-story frame house at the corner of Baker and Morgan Sts., and felt reasonably sepure until the windows began to blow out, which Vas about midnight, when I took Mrs. Tracy under one arm and my little daughter under the other and made for a bungalow next Vloor. Both houses stood all right, as did practically all those in the city, but out on the prairie, where the wind had a clear sweep .many were demolished, + T + Changeable The gulf storms make tip the Yucatan Channel. They .pbey influences that are not well understood as yet, however,’ and it is practically Impossible to tell where they will strike even after they appear to have taken a definite course. In 1919 the weather bureau traced a storri) to tvithin 300 miles of Texas p.nd then lost It. At that time it seemed to he moving in such a direction as would take it up the mouth of the Mississippi. The next anybody knew it had hit Corpus Christi, 500 miles to the southwest. •I- +l- - Has. a Chance Now comes Miami, suffering her affliction like the rest — affliction which is common to that quarter of the world, and ivhich is Just as apt to strike Florida as TAmpico. The surprise of the thing is what really hurts, and that is due far more, to a hopeful kind of advertising than to the facts of the case. Everybody should have realized thjt Florida would suffer from one of those storms ?ooner or latter, especially the promoters. They have seen storms pass east, west and south of them. They should have ; known that one would hit some time, and should have J?ullt with that possibility in mind. There is generally a way to meet and beat nature if you take aceount of her whims and vagaries. But there is Tio way if you do not. Cities and ports that study these storms and prepare for them are liable do damage, but no't to mortal injury. Miami will now take account of her exposed position, something she has not done hitherto, and be a better town for it, just a i Galveston dnd Corpus Christi are. These storms are violent and last a long while, but they include no such a concentrated devilment ,as does the inland tornado. They make development of the gulf coast a. little harder, but represent no insurmountable difficulty. What does Rudolph mean? j KJa/of Teutonic origin and means "actiVA”

Camera Tricks and Powerful Acting Makes variety’ a Screen Sensation

By Walter D. Hirkinan Strange camera positions plus powerful,acting on the part of Emil Jannings, Lya de Puttl and Warwick Ward makes “Variety" a screen sensation. \ It is seldom that a picture knocks me out, so to speak, but "Variety”

handed me such a wallop in every foot of film that I was actually on the edge of my seat nearly all tbe time. Rather expected that to happen when I was in New York last week, this movie was still the talk of the street. Three times I attempted to get into a theater on Broadway to see “Variety” and three times I failed because so

Lya de Putti

many people were standing in line to see it. And when I can not get into a theater there must be a flood or a fire. So I decided to wait until yesterday wfcen the Apollo opened its presentation of "Variety.” The camera work, meaning the strange placing of the camera, helps to make "Variety” the sensation that it is. Why can not the eye of thd camera be placed as the eye of an aerilist when he leaves one trapeze for another? Why can’t the eye of the camera become an electric light_looking down upon the heads of an audience? Why can't the camera reflect what the artist sees when he is doing his stuff? All this is answered in “Variety” in the affirmative. It is this strange but practical handling of the position of the camera which causes this photoplay not only to be a novelty but an advance step forward in the industry. The story is one of criminal Jealousy—the selfish and self-consuming love of a carnival trapeze artist by the name of Boss for his wife and trapeze companion, Bertha. Jealousy is caused when Artinelll, the world’s greatest trapeze artist, takes in Boss and his wife as partners. Os course both Bertha and Artinelli are cheats, but the interesting effect of such acts is the way the eye of the camera registers it upon the braih and personality of Boss. The natural ending of course, is murder and even this act is so skilfully suggested that it is not necessary to photograph the act. Therq was a lot of real creative brains back of this picture. In "Variety” you will find Jannings jifst as great an artist as he was in "The Last Laugh,” but in an entirely different kind of part. You first see Jannings as “Number 28.” serving his sentence for murder. The reasons for the crime are presented as a flash back story, really giving Jannings two roles, or rather the | presenting a character at various ages. Jannings is such an artist that he is able ~to permit the eye of the camera to reflect the very soul of Boss, his every mood and at times even his thoughts. Probably as gigantic a piece of “soul” acting a* the screen has ever reflected. Jannings has a mighty powerful [ dramatic opportunity it) this picture and he mounts to these scenes as only a great artist can. Here is

more than satisfactory work—lt is a compliment to the screen, k Am sure that you will be vitally iterested in the work of Lye de Putti, who plays the part of Bertha, who on Broadway would be a gold digger. Bertha is Just weak, common clay in her private life. She played her husband for a boob, but she found out that honest love cannot be trifled with. At times she gives one the Impression that she is keeping back her emotional side and then suddenly she lets it out in all of his fury. Warwick Ward as the cheating Artinelll as a correct imitation of such a critter. Powerful although unpleasant acting. A little theatrical at times, but Artirielll's emotions were theatrical. "Variety” slapped me all over the lot, so to speak. So much so that I want to sep it again, so I can devote more time to study of the method used to photograph this masterpiece. Don’t let anybody talk you out of seeing "Variety'' this week. The bill includes Lester Huff in a pleasing arragement of melodies on the organ; music by Emil Seidel and his orchestra and screen events. At the Apollo this week. -I- ■!• JA HARP ENSEMBLE AND A CORKING GOOD COMEDY Have been told that it is dangerous to tell the world that anything on the stage or screen is educational. Am going to take the chance and focus attention upon the Me* Quarrie harp ensemble. Here is a musical organization that is both educational and at the same time an example of highly artistic musical entertainment. This harp ensemble has the services of seven women harpists and a vocalist. Mary Moore, and a violinist, Helen Hughes. '* Wm /< Not only is each ' yy. member a skilled > hajpist but the i act la Presented * : ln such & ood taste ln BUC^ I are chosen ln C : more than good jjM taste, You will fe mWyAnd no cheap theHTW ■-"ii'M trivals here, only artistry, ability x and flhe music. Laura La Plante Such an ensemble dignifies any photoplay theater /hat is seeking to give the public more than mil sic—good music. TJhe day of better music is with us in the moviel theater. 'Thank the stars for that. 'This organization by its own accomplishments deserves every line of praise that I aqi giving it. It is not often that we have an opportunity to enjoy harp music a it should be presented. The Marie MacQuarrie harp ensemble and assisting artists is doing this.

Will tell you right off the bajl that "Pol’er Faces” is a whizz sis a comedy, nicely acted on the pajrt of Edward Everett Horton, a sort of a dramatic edition of Buster Kgaton and on the part of La Plante. Not going to tell you the story of this pleasant little comedy, because you want the fun to creep upon you as the players unfold the story. Take my word for it that here is a ! film comedy which will make £ou laugh. In the vvoijds of the street, “Poker Faces" delivers' fun every second that it is being presented. And watch the method used by Horton in putting over his comedy scenes. -Not hokum, but high grade comedy acting with a needed touch of farce. | This picture is abbut everything that it should bei Bill includes orchestral music and screen events. At the Colonial all week. -I- -I- -I- ' CORINNE GRIFFITH IN \ RUSSIAN ROLE AT CIRC LE A dramatic impression of Imperial Russia before the power of the Czar was overthrown is portrayed In “Into Her Kingdom” with Corlnne Griffith at tfie Circle for the week. ~AII the splendor of former royal family IS shown in the first

part of the picture and then the chaos resulting from the revolution transforms everything. The picture does not deAl so much with the revolution. just enough to bring in the action, needed, but centers mostly on the romance of the young peasant, played by Einar Hanson the beautiful Grand Duchess Tatiana, Corlnne Griffiith. Corinne Griffith is every bit the

Corinne Griffith %

royal Princess and has a charming stately air about her. Hanson as the peasant who finally becomes one of the bolshevik leaders is also convincing although just a trifle too well mannered for the role he plays In the early part of ths story. As the story goes the peasant youth has *t the Grand Duchess up In his dream as his fairy princess. One day he meets her through the efforts of his unclle and so he is talk- | ing to her is dragged- atvay by the j Cossacks and put into prison for lnI suiting the Czar. He reaches mani hood in the prison and when liberated by the mvolutiopists JS made one of the high officers of the Bolshevik organization. The whole royal family is sentenced to die, including the Grand Duchess, now a beautiful princesk. By a trick of fate the Duchess’ life Is spared and her maid gives her life for her mistress. Then the love affair between the peasant and the princess has its beginning. The picture is excellently well done. There are many dramatic scenes of the recent turmoil in Russia and the whole thing is handled in an entertaining manner. Stolarevsky this week has arranged a potpourri of Russian melody and music arid offers a varied program of music native to Russia. Dessa Byrd has another feature with a popular melody and the bill includes the regular News Reel and comedy. At the (Circle all week. (By J. T. H.)

A List of Popular Quotations

In every question after the first a quotation is given eithfr from a well- j known writer or the Bible. For your [ answer give the writer’s name or I the Old or New Testament. The cor- j rect answers are on page 14: 1. What important writer is shown in the accompanying picture? 2. “Early to bed and early to rise Makes a man healthy, wealthy and wiset” 3. “Great men are ndt always wise.” 4. “Be swift to hear, slow to speak slew to wrath.” 5. “Tell me not in mournful numbers. ' ‘Life is but an empty dream!’'' For the soul Is dead tjiat slumbers And things are not what they seem~” / 6. “The* love of money Is the root of f*U 7. “A thing of beauty Is a joy forever/’ 'N 8. “Should auld -acquaintance be forgot > And never brought to mind?” i !>. “Love thy neighbor as thyself.” % 10. "Neither a borrower nor a lender be.” | How can one tell the age of a canary? There really is no way to find out the exact age of a canary except by his general appearance. An experiI enced breeder can guess their ages j fairly accurately. Thp ' tough, 1 cracked skin of the legs and feet is one way to judge.

CLARA BOW LIKES TO FLIRT AT THE OHIO \. Easter just had to flirt. And life up in the backwoods pf Canada was Just

übout thejone place where flirting was an unnecessary a cc o m plishment. Clara Bow as A1 verna the wife of Joe Easter, played Oy Ernest Torrence, gives an exceedingly well done "flap perish” Impression of what a young and good looking manicurist of MinI neapolis would do :f married to a real •"Tie toian” of the north woods. To

J y IT * , - A

be seen at Uie Ohio in "Mantrap” this week. v The excitement all starts when Joe Easter the proprieter of a 'bmall trading post in the wilds of Canada decides that he must let work go for a while and journey down to civilization and get a glimpse of the latest thing in ankles. While’’ in Minneapolis Joe meets and fays in love with Alverna a High powered little manicure. Alverna decides she has had enough of city weaklings and ties on to Joe as his wife. She goes back with him and takes up life in the small/ trading post. Everything is all right until Prescott a New York lawyer cames north for a vacation. Alverna’s vamping tactics then come to the front with all force and a tangle Is the result. Starting this week Charlie Davis and his orchestra are back at the Ohio with several new faces and some clever specialties by the different members of the orchestra. One new /ace Is that of Dick Powell, a soloist, singer, who Joined . from Louisville. From all appearances Mr. Powell Is going to be very much of a hit with Ohio patrons this winter. He has a good voice for tlje Sbngs he sings, and he knows how to use It. "Doc" Stults is with the orchestra again and has another one of his comedy solos, the one this week being an "Insane Blues” or something like that. Other features with the orchestra this week are a dance by Jimmy McClure, a very clever youngster, and some songs by Sylvia Tschudi and Kathleen Jefry. All in all the Ohio has a very fine bill this week and Is offering plenty in entertainment. At the Ohio all week. (By J. T. H.) • * • Other theaters today offer: Caranas and Barker at the Lyric; “The Test.” at the Palace; “Band Box Revue,” at the Broadway; “Out of. the West,” at the Isis, and Lon Chaney In ‘ Outside the Law,” at the Uj town. Who played the leading female role in the movies, “The Snob” and “The Tower of Lies”? Norma SChcarer.

; fV (rs° r ]l #Umen j j ts i | New Fall j S Shoes & Oxfords | \ ~ J On Sale Tuesday \ ? in Marott’s Downstairs Dept. j f ° r I | DIFFERENT STYLES ' | All Real Values S i 3 9 iS ' These new fall shoes and oxfords are of the cplIV' . legian type with storm Blacky w elt soles of the best m styles and solid leather construction. They are J , or s real comfortable j Broivn oxfords that will be well fitted and that will give good service. j j, E*tabiishe4 4&e^ l> * ! p 18 and 20 East Washington Street

Eigrkt Floort of Shoc Service

SEPT. 20, 1926

Questions and Answers

You can zet an answer to any question cf lin-t or InformMJon bv wntinz to Tho lmflanawiUt* Time* Washington bureau. 1322 New York Ave.. Washington. JJ. C.. inclosing 2 cents in sta'npa for reply. Medical legal and marital idrtce cannot bo riven nor can extended research bo undertaken. All other -guentirns will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requeata cannot lie answered. All letters axo confidential.—Editor. Is'the speed of German express trains greater than the average train speed in the United States? The average speed of -German express trains before the war was from 60 to 56 miles an hour. In 1924 it was 45 to 50 miles an hour. In the United States fast trains averse from 35 to 48 miles per hour on regular trains. Has the offspring bom In the United States of Dutch parents who were not naturalized, a right to vote? All persons born in the United States, except children of diplomatic representatives of foreign governments, are natural born citizens, and have all the rights of American citizenship. / What arg the titles of books describing life'lrt Libby and Andersonville prisons during the Civil War? "A Narrative of Andersonville," by Spencer; “The. Southern Side of Andersonville,” by Stevenson; "Dark Days of the Rebellion,” by Benjamin F. Booth; "Libby Life,” _ Frederic Fernandez Cavada; "Horrors of Andersonville Rebel Prison," In Chipman & Rhodes History of the United States, volume 5. Can you give me a recipe for tun. tie soup? M Boil a turtle until |:he flesh leaves the bones. Add a grated carrot and one sliced onion, soup herbs, a spoon of allspice ,a saltspoon of paprika and salt to taste. 801 l for one hour, take from the fire, strain, thicken with two teaspoons of butter, rub in as much flour, which has ben browned, add a teaspoon of kitchen bouquet and when the soup is thickened, add the juice of a lemon and serve at once.

Movie Verdict APOLLO—In "Variety” the screen has one of Its finest examples of blending great acting with powerful photography. One of the finest Intellectual entertaining treats of the season. COLONIAL —A corking good comedy is “Poker Faces,” delightfully acted In a light comedy way on the part of Laura LaPlante and Edward Everett Horton. . ClßCLE—Corinne Griffith has ' an exceedingly fine to 1 portray a beautiful member of Royalty and she does It charmingly In “Into Her Kingdom.!’ An entertaining picture of romance. i \ OHlOi—“Mantrap” Is very realistic Irama on what happens when a high powered flapper is taken out of her sphere. Clara Bow and Percy Marmont do some good things in this picture.