Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 325, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1927 — Page 4
PAGE 4
BOOM SAPP AS ROTARY HEAD Hoosier’s Name to Be Up at Belgium Convention. Bit United Press CHICAGO, April 22.—Arthur H. Sapp, Huntington (Ind.) lawyer, will toe nominated for president of Hotary international at the convention of the organization at Ostend, Belgium, June 5 to 10, according to word received at the Rotary headquarters here. His name will he presented by the Rotary club of Leeds, England. Sapp was first vice president of die organization in 1925 and was mentioned for the higher honor at the Denver convention last year. Alexander Wilkie, Edinburgh, Scotland, nominated by his own club, is the only other nominee for the post whose name has been received at the Rotnry secretary’s office. Robert Heun, Richmond, Ind., Is another Hoosier who is slated for Rotary honors. Richmond Rotary officials have announced that they will seek to have hint chosen a director of Rotary International of the United States. FIRE BOXES INSTALLED Seven Alarms Added This Year— Four New Locations Named. City Electrician William B. Griffis today planned to erect four additional lire alarm boxes within the next two weeks at Fiftieth St. and Park Ave., near Walnut St. and Riley Ave., Henry and Illinois Sts. and Hampton Dr. and Boulevard PI. Seven new boxes already have been installed this year. Griffis has a force of workmen busy repainting tire alarm boxes with a yellow band at top and bottom* with a red band in the center.
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There IS Relief! You know better than take dangerous drugs for headache. But have you heard of No-Ake, the positive remedy for pain? It conquers pain completely—even that of neuralgia—and there’s no harm or habit in this marvelous tablet. The very next time you are in a drugstore, ask about this remarkable remedy. Be prepared, and you need never suffer another half-hour with a bursting head, an aching tooth, or jangled nerves and loss of sleep. No-Ake has you all serene in a few minutes! It is real relief. It STOPS the pain. As it is quite harmless, why let any af he or pain run its course? Pf MO-AKpsgSJ AMUSEMENTS ~~ MUTUAL Burlesque Theater Formerly Broadway “NAUGHTY NIFTIES” with PRINCESS OVEDA The Famous Oriental Girl With the Fastest Shlnuny Shaking Chorus In Hurles(|iie 3|§miß2 IPplrmsv® 1 ENGLISH’S Jean Oliver—Milton Byron J \ "WHISPERING WIRES” l I* Mat. Wed., Thurs., Sat. at 2:15 ■ PRICES—2Sc, 35c, BOc. NIXES AT 8:15—25c, 50c, 90c. I Government Tax on 00c Seats Only. I Next Week. “The Little .Spltflre/^_| I One B. Talbot Fine Arts Enterprises Famous Opera Star I Opening Music Week Sunday Mav 1 Afternoon h"bCl j 0 SCHIPA Leading Tenor in America of Chicago Opera Cos. REV7S SEJ LING Ona B. Talbot, 910 llume-Mansur Prices, 93, 92.50, 92. 91.50. 91 I>lns tax "ihdTahapolis -^ TUES., MAY 18tb ANI SUGAR GROVE AVE. I TICKETS ON SALE (CIRCUS I DAY ONLY) AT CLAYPOOL I DRUG STORE I
Hoosier Aids Perfecting Puffer Fish Oil Process • •.(viiagy ■ <■ - j
Times M'nshinuton Hunan , 13£i Sew 1 ork Ami/ir •WASHINGTON, April 22.—T0 Dr. Charles E. Dills of Evansville, Ind., goes joint credit for discovering a fish liver oil which has fifteen times the value of <.ocl liver oil for preventing rickets and insuring proper bone growth in children. Dr. Ellis tested the oil while a pupil of Dr. E. V. McCollum, famous diet authority of the School of Health and Hygiene, Johns Hopkins University, according to the United States bureau of fisheries. Dr. Al-
AMUSEMENTS BIG N. V. A. SHOW NED NQRWORTH T.ATE OF ARTISTS AND MODELS WANDA* NASH FORMERLY ZIEGFELD FOLLIES ASSISTED BY MR, BENJAMIN SHAFFER WILL HIGGIE AND lIIS SIX MAGNETIC MISSES CARL ARMSTRONG & CO. GOOPE & LEIGHTON FOUR GIRTON GIRLS PHOTOPLAY RUBBER TIRES WITH HARRISON FORD N. V. A. WEEK DON’T MISS THIS GREAT 811.1. WILLMAHONEY NEW COMEDY SENSATION IN “WHY BE SERIOUS” Harry La Yaile & Sis J Dixie Hamilton ROBEY & GOULD WALERIE BERQERE & CO. In an Intense, Dramatic Playlet NEWS—TOPICS—FABI.F.S HAMEL SIS. & STROUS MITCHELL & DOVE I REBECCA ALLY" BERT ERROL INTERNATIONAL. FAVORITE IN “MODES AND MELODIES OF
ONEOFTHEEjMTIMH'iIII A “COLLEGIANS" p|ijjl %£< 8 f w|| GREAT A WOW! SHOW CORINNE GRIFFITH 1111 vitaphone in UMIR<i” BENIAMINO GIGLI IN Q HUUnO HM ROGER WOLFE KAHN ACCOMPANIMENT What Use Are the Interurbans, Anyway 'T'HE people of over 600 Parlor-Buffet C ars communities north and POUR times each day, east of Indianapolis are r special coaches leave served by one great mterurIndiana polis and Ft. ban system the UNION Wayne. Two fast routes TRACTION. It is the con > —the HOOSIERLANDS ne cting link between these via Muncie and the WA- . , T ANARUS, . BASH VALLEY FLYERS many cities and towns. It is via Peru. Easy chair and the only means by which travdining comforts are avail- elers can completely cover able for only a fraction of s prosperous trading area at a a cent a mile. minimum traveling expense. Its passenger, express and freight service has been one of the great- \ est factors in the development of \\ this rich section.
\ Puffer Fish—lnflated
fred P. Hess of New York also was concerned in the discovery. r l’he valuable liver telongs to the puffer fish of Chesapeake Bay, which formerly was reg rded as worthless for any purpose. It got its name from its habit of sucking in air and swelling up like a football whe hauled out of the water. No one yet has started producing the oil on a commercial scale. Dr. McCollum said. When this is done
MOTION PICTU RES EDDIE CANTOR JOBYNA RALSTON —inDELIVERY” HELEN & WARREN COMEDY Charlie Davis and His Gang in a “JAZZ SANITARIUM” GENE ! UrS STRATTON TURPIN PORTER’S H| COMEDY -LADDIE" if S "°;IX‘ HT CMKHI HELD OVER NEXT WEEK Beginning Sunday Matinee Owing to heavy demand for seats. Beau Geste engagement extended through next week. MATINEE DAILY at 2:30 Evenings at 8:30 All Seats Reserved Evenings—soc, 91.10, 91.65 .Matinee—soe. 875 c. 91.10 Phone Riley 6944 THE YEAR’S GREATEST MELODRAMA ■HERBERT BRENON’S PRODUCTION^ WITH TH6 CREATE6T SCREEN CAST OVER. ASSEMBLED w 1 RONALD COLMAN I NOAH BEERY ALICE JOYCE B NEIL HAMILTON MARY BRIAN I RALPH FORBES NORMAN TREVOR I § WILLIAM POWELL VICTOR MUAUEN I
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
it will become -xtremely valuable for child health, he said. Kokomo Conductor Out Talks Bandit Hu Times Special KOKOMO ,Ind„ April 22.—H. M. Emenhiser, street car conductor, while gazing into the muzzle of a revolver, argued a colored bandit out of $lO as well as saving occupants in the street car from being held up here. As the street car swung around the Crown Point’ cemetery, it was suddenly stopped and thrown into darkness when a Negro bandit jumped from his hiding spot in the cemetery and jerked the trolley pole from the wire. Boarding the street car, the gunman demanded of the conductor: “Give me all you got!” “No, I won’t give you all I got,” retorted Emenhiser. “Why not?” asked the holdup man. “If I did I won’t have enough to work with tomorrow,” the conductor explained. "Well, how much can you spare?” "Oil, about a dollar.” Emenhiser produced a dollar. The bandit took it and then as a favor put the trolley back on the wire.
Rapp & Lennox Plano Co’s Big REMOVAL SALE / Has laken the Music-Loving Public of Indianapolis By Storm! We must vacate May Ist. Only a few more days remain to take advantage of this wonderful money-saving event. Now’s yotir opportunity. Plan to be here when the doors open at Ba. m. Saturday. , A 1 Sale Makes It Pi 4(111 j Easy 10 Have - — in at Any Time 1 This Marvelous Sszisss! n 1 10 Re-conditioned Flayers! Fishei *“Ampfco” IxUilZI 1 kann I | n( .] U( ij nfr Kurtzmann, Weber-Whcclock,Apollo and others. Here are the greatest j TST% A. Player Piano 1 P la > er values we I,ave ever offered. Sale prices—- ■ 5 375 ! 250 *> ’375 I piano plete with bench and Rolls. I-■■■ ■....-i—i. , gg VaUIH ameea ... ALL USED PIANOS MUST ©Oil <t*i New Walnut or ~ „ ~„ , „„ , g 1 fi 13 1 Including the following well-known in- U* 2m Wg j&w** ''’ fM AIW" TO Oak Plavers struments: Chickering, Ellington, Weg- | | ILj. ,P! 3S P | * H 'A $*A % Made by fa ™ man, Jesse French, Waltham, Vose, S I \0 M #|l | JfL oll'iUf '!‘i' R aW, jja'M Stewart and others. Sale prices— IS J&.*3jLly Ka “® 1 i| 'VW ano'mnnn- B Beautiful brown mahogany. Vn "t'ii e uLMu! H* j A Small Down Payment Delivers Any Piano to Your Home Wonderful tone and action, lias country— been used less than year, and Grand Piano “King” Upright vsBIwII Si v wUIII^S ■ '1 ONLY $1.75 A WEEK! I ® § Chickering’Upright | RAPP&LENNOX OPEN EVENINGS j & e M"7 M PF UN iin° n and After May 2nd We DURING THIS da Hf 1 3 " fcHT I* W ■ I EL II Ha $ ■ lltt I | Will Be Located in Our New pDCAT SALF 9 Home at Mer. and North Sts. 2nd and 3rd Door South of New York St
DID RUTH COPY BECKY SHARP? (Continued From Page 1)
little stenographer. But after a while she doubtless chafed —she was meant for better things, her husband was stagnant, she was growing older—and along came Henry Judd Gray. The insurance plot opened new vistas: a blond widow with a hundred thousand dollars could go far. (And for all the descriptions of her hardness, she is attractive, decidedly attractive, and clever enough to become more so.) And it is safe to guess Gray was not included in her plans for very long after March 20. One startling paragraph leaps from the book, in reference to the death of Joseph Sedley, one of Becky’s admirers: “The solicitor of the insurance company swore it was the blackest case that has ever come before him; talked of sending a commissioner to examine into the death
DOORS OPEN AT 8 A. M—CLOSE AT 9 P. M.
and the company refused payment of the policy,” x x x x x. Not so far apart, are they, after all, Becky Sharp und 'Ruth Snyder. Names Christ First More startling still is her answer to the question: “Whom do you consider the three greatest men that ever lived?” “Christ, Lincoln and Emerson.” “Why Emerson? That cannot be explained away or accounted for anything except a personal taste.” Emerson, the sage of Concord with his diluted Plato that is still strong drink to a Crane-fed public'—what was there in his philosophy that struck an answering note in Ruth. “I do not wish to expiate, but to live.” “I must be myself.” “I will seek my own.” “So use all that is called fortune.” “Courage, fearlessness, daring, boldness, self-reliance, independence —stalwart, rugged qualities that Viking would most admire." Still Hard Whatever Ruth Snyder is, she is no weakling—this is not praise, but a statement of facts. Most women, even those capable of such a deliberately hideous plot, would
have shivered and broken down on the verge of its execution, but not Ruth —she carried it through. Most women lying alone before the gray March dawn, alone with her murdered husband and her sleeping child, would have broken in wild hysterical regret, but not Ruth —only the limited intellect that bungled the false clews finally forced her confession. And even now she sits in court, head up, eyes cold and serene, studying which juror will be to her advantage—still hard, eaculatir.g and selfish. And does she remember these bits from her Emerson: "There is no such thing as concealment. Commit a crime and the earth is made of glass.” (Copyright. 192 TANARUS, by New York Telegram > TRUANT BOY RUNS AWAY Technical Student, Absent From Classes, Disappears From Home. After playing hooky from Technical High School for a week, Lloyd Campbell, 15, of 4120 E. Twenty-First St., disappeared from his home Wednesday night, his mother reported to police.
APRIL 22, 1927
HEARING DATE PENDS _________ -: i The public service commission, meeting today, was expected to Set the date for hearing the petition of the Indianapolis Street Railway Company for authority to purohase the Peoples Motor Coach Company for $500,000 cash and other 1 considerations. Because of the ten-days notice quired by law. the petition cannot be heard bdfore May 1, when the personnel of the commission will be changed. The revamped commission will hear the purchase approval petition. AMUSEMENTS Shortridge Senior Class Presents Their Annual Play, a George M. Cohen Comedy ‘So This is London’ at the Murat Theatre Saturday Evening, April 23 Admission 50c, SI.OO, $1.50
