Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 293, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1927 — Page 9
MARCH 15, lb>Z <
II SHORTRIDGE ’ PUPILS, NAMED ON mus LIST Honor Students for First Marking Period Given Out by Faculty. Eleven Shortridge High School students were on the A-plus honor roll for the first marking period of the second semester.
They were: Edward Efroymson. Mildred Grayson. Thurston Haxrison. Frank Keerer. Jeanette La Saulnier. Paul Maey. Frank Oliphant. Ruth Marie Price. Nellie Sielken. Lucille Wade. Warman Welliveh. Those on the A list: Martha Adams. Ruth Akers. Lyle Anderson, Goldie Andrews. Dorothea Arbuckle. Georria Baumann.. Janet Baumann, Evelyn Bently. Margaret Billman. Ebner Blatt. Charles Bouslog. Rosemary Bretzman. William Harris Breunig. Helen L. Briggs. Frieda Brill. Charlotte Bruoe, Catherine Butz. _ . . _ Frances Cameron. Robert Cavanaugh. Henry Chapin, Dvera Cohen, Walter Cohn. Emma A. Coleman. Leslie Colvin. Nelson Cooper, Jane Crabb. Ruby Lee Creager. Frederick Cretars. Elizabeth Dalman. Josephine Davidson. Sewell Davidson, Robert Deupree. Irma Dirks. Margaret Dirks. Marguerite Doriot. AUine Driscoll. Dorothy Dugdale. Harold Dunkel. Meyer Efroymson. John Elam. Edmond ' Engelking. Kathryn Fitchey. Thelma Flack. Lena Fleischmann. Meta. Fogas John Forney, Harold Fraley. Vivian Friedman, Mildred Maxine Gardner. Evelyn Goldsberry. Evalyn Hall. Jane Hall. Robert Hamill. Alice Hanna. Esther Hanning, Nicholas Hatfield. Kathryn Heath. Virginia Hetherington, Mary Margaret Hill. Virginia Hill. Gertrude Hoch, Jane Hodges. Lois Ann Hodgin, Caroline Hofft. Frances Holliday. Tris Hollis. Norris Houghton. Eliner Howe, Holland Huestis, Mary Elizabeth Huff. Ester Hulsetl. Sidney Kauffman. Claude Kelley. Ruth King. John Kitchen. Dorothy Kohlstaedt. Krystal Kegerreis. _ _ _ Helen Langston, Bennie Lees. Evelyn Lee. Marcella Long. Elizabeth Lupton, Marjorie Lytle. Pearce McClelland. Alene McComb. Constanace McCullough. Betty Marglleth, Helen Mattlce. Josephine Meloy.
But Gentlemen MJRRY Brunettes M Message of Cheer from Lorelei Lee Dictated to Mnita Loos
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A Woman Reporter to Whom the Chicago Gunmen Talk Frankly
Patricia Dougherty, of the Chi-cagoHerald-Examiner,takes you behind the scenes in an astonishing situation —a war among bootleggers in which machine guns have been used and 102 lives sacrificed. She has seen men sprawling on the steps of a Cathedral, dying of machine-gun
bullets. She has heard certain gang Her account, in April Cosmopolitan, is a leaders declare new wars and she has comment on Today which every person delivered pleas for peace from others. She interested in Today should read.
“The Mating Calf' A New Novel with the Florida Boom as a Background by Rex Beach
R THOtT^H C vnriWHT //.. J WHY GIRLS THE BIRD IN MARRIED ■ M Afld as LEAVE HOME THE BUSH Os aMm m, Felt the Cabaret Girl ; n . . Tie Smjc/Jje brncent & The Sury cfa Discontented Touch of Spring by Adda Rogers i\ fl fiVt \ffIWPQ ’ "i Man tje by Arthur Somers Roche St. Johns JUI KjlbUll/ /£/%} • by Rupert Hughe by Gouverneur Morns THE TOO MANY KISS IN THE LO!SE A MILD-MANNERED LOVE A WOMAN WHO TINY TOREADOR DREAMS DARK FOUNTAIN MURDERER IN PARIS NEEDED KILLING A Love Story from Os a Girl Who Lived About an Unintentional eif A Beautiful Story by the A Very Different Mystery A Whimsical Story which From the Loneliest Place Happy Valley in a Castle Flirt Author of 'The Virginian"' Story Needs No Translation in Africa by Peter B. Kyne by William J. Locke by Leila Warren by Owen Wister by E. Phillips Oppenheim by Leonard Merrick by Margery H. Lawrence
v . , April Now on Sale
Gets the “Jump” on Straw Season
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The season’s “first” straw hat •worn in Indianapolis. At least that is the boast of J. D. Oliver, 54, of 529 N. Liberty St. “I’m first every year. For ten yea® I have put on a straw on March 10,” declared Oliver.
Inez Mercer, John Millett, Muriel Millett Alvamay Mitchell. Naniy.Moorp Moms Morris. Delight Momson. Marcie Mormon, Sidney Muehl. Charles Myers, Mildred Myers. Mary Phyllis Oneil, John Orton. John Pedigo, Thelma Porter. Jean Potter. James Henry Prescott. Ava Louise Reddick. Eleanor Roedger, Roy A. Rogers. Virginia Sanders. John Schmidt. Doris Schoen. Gwendolyn R. Schort. Angelina c hanefl, Ruth Sipe. Clark Smith. Dorothea omock. Mary Sommer. Mildred Sommer. Ester Stamm. Elizabeth Stone. Donald Taylor, Harry Taylor. Mareelia Taylor, Ed Terry, Emma Lou Thombrough. Catherine Thurston, Pearl Todd. Russell Townsend. Margaret Tracey. Enos Troyer, Lucile Tuck. Dorothy Tucker. Martha Tutwiler. Fred Vedder, Charlotte Wainwright. Harold Warren, Edward Wright.
This—for the time being, at least, the final word from the naively humorous Lorelei—appears in April Cosmopolitan. But there will be successors to Lorelei and Dorothy, and as fast as they trip from the typewriter of Anita Loos, they will make their bow to the public in the pages of this magazine. And how well they fit in the company there! For these pages carry the humor and the philosophy of
“DANGEROUS BUSINESS” A Novel of Today by Edwin Balmer .... which tells vividly and relentlessly the effect on individuals —especially on women —and on business itself of the growing tendency to substitute social efficiency for business efficiency.
PLAN GOLDSTEIN PLEA Judge Baltzell to Hear Petition for Clemency, March 24. March 24 has been set by Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell for the hearing of a petition for suspension of sentence for Nathan Goldstein, 6, St. Louis Insurance man sentenced to two years in the Federal penetentiary at Leavenworth and fined $5,000 for complicity in the famous Jack Daniels liquor conspiracy. Goldstein’s petition > was accompanied with letters and affidavits from Probate Judge Charles W Holtcamp and Circuit Judge H. A. Hamilton of St. Louis, together with several prominent St. Louis business men and physicians, asking the suspension be granted. The action followed the United States Supreme Court’s refusal to review the case. VETS TO VISIT SHILOH Arrangements Made for River Trip From St. Louis April 2. Indiana Civil War veterans, survivors of the Battle of Shiloh, have been invited by Commander Mahlon D. Butler, 1814 Park Ave., to join in the Shiloh Association pilgrimage to the historic battlefield. The party will leave St. Louis by boat, April 2, at sp. m. Stops will be made at important Mississippi River towns en route to Pittsburg Landing. Memorial service will be held at Shiloh, April 6. The trip will then be resumed to Muscle Shoals, where the huge power dam will be visited. The round trip Is to cost each veteran only $35 under arrangements made by the assosclation. FOR COLDS. GRIP OR INFLUENZA and as a Preventive, take Laxative BROAIO QUININE Tablets. A Safe and Proven Remedy. The box bears the signature of E. W. Grove. 30c.—Advertisement.
has seen the police of a city of three million people made powerless by the gangs. And the "men behind" have discussed their business and their battles with her as frankly as your green-grocer would discuss the day’s produce with you.
Umsts International ' combined with
MR. FIXIT Boy Troubled Over Place ' to Play Ball.
Mr. Fixit is The Times representative at the city hall. He will be glad to present your case to the proper city officials. Write him in care of The Times, signing full name and address. Letters are treated as confidential is requested. And now a boy comes to Mr. Fixit for help. He asked that Mr. Fixit find out what the rules are for playing ball in the parks. He declared that the boys had no place to play, as their back and front yards were too small. He said that the boys do not know whether to play in the parks. They do not want to break a rule, but they do want to play ball. The letter: Dear Mr. Fixit: I would like to know the rules regarding the playing of baseball and football and other sports in the parks. I have special reference to the strip of parkway running on the south side of Fall Creek Blvd. at Guilford Ave. As you know at this time of the year it is the natural thing for boys to want to play baseball, and for our safety we cannot play in the streets. Our back and front yards are too small to play in and the only logical place is in the park. We are not allowed to play there, but why we do not know, as the "hard-boiled” park policemen refuse to tell us. 1 would be very glad if you would throw some light on the situation. JACKSON W. Mr. Fixit is very sorry to inform the youth that there Vis a rule that games of any sort shall not be played in any park only on certain specified areas. R. Walter Jarvis, park superintendent. told Mr. Fixit that this rule had to be enforced to protect the grass and shrubbery in the
ANITA tOOt
W ith the Coolidges in the White House by their Former Housekeeper
TH K JJNJJ-LAiNAPOUiiS XiMUfc
Irvin S. Cobb, George Ade, Ring Lardner,o.o. Mclntyre,Montague Glass, H.C.Witwer, and that other newcomer, Milt Gross. That Anita Loos joins the writers for Cosmopolitan is in keeping with a policy based on a determination to maintainastandard not only of excellence but of alertness which always will keep the publication in a field of i rs own —a Class Magazine voith More than a Million and a Half Circulation.
President Coolidge takes a nap .every afternoon: Hesmokescigars. He is a light eater. He rarely talks, or smiles. He seldom goes to the theater. He plays no games. He never touches liquor. He has more clothea than any President in the past five administrations has had. Mrs. Coolidge is warm,
friendly. She lets nothing interfere with her They are devoid of sensation, but packed happiness. These are observations by Eliza- with importance for the person interested beth Jaffray made during the last of her in the affairs of bis nation.
parks and running over these does not help them. Dear Mr. Fixit: Please see if you can get our garbage collected for us. We have a regulation garbage can with lid. Our garbage hasn’t been collected for three weeks. Truly Nolen, superintendent of collections, promised Mr. Fixit that he would have the garbage collected within twenty-four hours.
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**\ TTE were quite alarmed about mother. She wouldn’t V V eat, was terribly constipated, bilious, and seemed to be fading fast. We thought it due entirely to her 86 years of age. But a neighbor brought over a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin and it was really remarkable how she picked right up, and now she can even dance around with her grandchildren. Now we are never without Syrup Pepsin in ,the house.” (Name and address furnished upon request.) | Regulates Rowels of Old Folks ffciSll Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is so palatable, set3 so well in the stomach, works so easily, so gently, so kindly with old folks as to accomplish its purpose without r— — gripe, pam or other distress. Tor biliousness, sour *t .at | stomach, coated tongue, constipation, and the lassitude, whether r\ of children, parents or those in the evening of life, Syrup ur aweii Pepsin is recommended everywhere. It is so hi by all druggists. SYHUP For a free trial bottle send name antbaddreu to DFDCIM Pepsin Syrup Company. Monticello, Illinois.
He also said that he would see that it did not happen again. WASHINGTON.—Chairman Borah of the Senate foreign relations committee has declined to accept the $3,500 a year salary increase voted by the Senate. He says he was elected to a $7,600 a year position and feels he would break faith with his constituents to take more now.
And then Grandma Danced
17 years as housekeeper of The White House. “Altogether,"she says, "these two are, to my way of thinking, the strangest couple that have ever occupied the White House." , Asa historical document of Today, nothing has equaled these memoirs of Mrs. Jaffray.
“The Bacchante ” A Novel of a Woman with Dual Motives at War in her Soul by Robert Hichens
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