Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 30, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1927 — Page 12

PAGE 12

RAPID GITY IN ITS GLORY AS COOLIDGE HOST Dakota Town Takes on Brisk, Swaggering Air on Eve of Big Event. BY JACK FOSTER RAPID CITY, S. D. June 15. Rapid City swaggered down Main street today, past Sweeney's hardware store and the house that advertises the largest ten-gallon hats in this part of the world, —the proudest city in these United States. Rapid City has come into its own. For 50 years it has curled up quietly in a scoop of the hills, a thriving little city, yes, even the metropolis of western South Dakota, and yet always a city out of the beaten track. Today, however, its westerly affable citizens leaned against the big hub across from the Harney hotel and chatted back and forth: “The President’s due tomorrow night, Jim." He’ll Be Surprised “Yep, Joe, and believe me he will find a lot in them thar hills that will put his eye out.” At this point their conversation is likely to be interrupted by the squeaking tune of a steam calliope and the scratching of a ferris wheel. For a carnival is here, a few blocks from Main street. A merry-go-round and all. And in the window of a delicates?ert store are hundreds of small flags with a picture of the President attached. How much? “Two bits today,” replied the proprietor prophetically, leaving one to wonder .just what they would sell for when the President actually arrives. In the lobby of the hotel are the co-mayors of the hidden city, D. J. Crabtree and George C. Lauer, earnestly discussing the policies of their municipality. They came here to mine marble

INTESTINAL FLU (Summer Trouble) Intestinal flu, typhoid and other malignant diseases of summer should be guarded against vigorously. Keep your system free from poisons caused by sluggish bowels, kidneys and impure water. Drink the delightful Mountain Valley Water regularly. It comes from the famous Hot Springs, Arkansas. Order a case today. John E. McGlothan Says: (Warrant Officer. V. 8. Army. Ft. Harrison) “I attribute my baby's fine health to Mountain Valley Water. I recommend it to any one desiring a pure medicinal water with which to raise a bottle baby." ASK VOI R ORIGGIST OR GROCER OR PHONE IS FOR MOUNTAIN VALLEY WATER From Hot Springs, Arkansas Local Distributor! 911-815 Massachusetts Arc. Phone, MA in 1259

We Pay 45%% on Savings THE MEYER.KISER BANK 128 E. Washington St.

RITE’S CLOZ SHOP 4 “ h OPEN EVENINGS Monday-Wednesday and Friday Till 8:30 CLOZ ON CREDIT! RITE’S CLOZ SHOP 43-45 South Illinois St. & Maryland Sts.

GIRLS OF SCHOOL AGE KEEP IN GOOD HEALTH They Find Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a Dependable Medicine

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LOUISE LOUTHAN ■OUT* S. CHARLESTON. ILLINOIS From the days of the polonaise to the days of the radio, mothers have given this dependable medicine to their daughters. School girls are often careless. They get wet feet. They overstudy or they tire themselves with too many dances and parties. They get run down. Many an active girl of today, like tha demure maiden of the 1870's, has found that Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is helping her to And better health and energy. "1 £vfi my girl

PURDUE GRADUATES 11 FROM MARION COUNTY Nine Who Get Degrees Are From Indianapolis. Eleven Marion county persons received degrees at the Purdue University commencement at Lafayette Tuesday. Frederick Landis, Logansport. for-; mer eleventh district Congressman, wa sthe speaker. Marion county persons who recenved degrees were Jacob Granville Harden, Greenwood: Norman Erwin Amos, Cumberland: and the following from Indianapolis: Franklin Theodore Eugene Gamage. George William Billingsley, Thomas Leo Fritzlen, Warren Edmund Phillips, Lee Adolphus Ross, Royal Bennett Kirk, Donald Alexander Campbell, Elmer Edward Elder, Albert Louis Henry Hartman. and* found not far from town the remnants of what appears to be a prehistoric settlement. One authority who visited the ruins today suggested that it looked as if it were from another world. Sleuths Are On Hand Meanwhile, in and around about, wander a detail of sepret service men who have preceded the President. There must be fifteen or twenty of them, if those who gaze at one from under sliding eye-lids and thrust their hands in terminable pockets are officers. Altogether, Main street. Rapid City, today is a colorful sight. Hundreds of flags are looped across the street. An enormous banner snaps in the wind from Hangman's Hill, at the west end of town. And up and down endlessly drift members of the National Guard, who arrived for tamp near here several days ago. Coolidge is scheduled to arrive here at 5:30 Wednesday. Hundreds of motorists who have laid by In small towns nearby will swoop Into town to see the procession down Main street, out along the newly graveled path to the lodge, 32 miles away, where the annual vacation will beign. Missouri and Tennessee have more close neighors than any other State in the Union. Each is bounded by eight States.

Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it did her a wonderful lot of good. She had been out of school for four months. I read the advertisements of the Vegetable Compound, and since she has taken it she has improved and has gone back to school again. I recommend the Vegetable Compound to other mothers with girls who are not as strong as they should be.”— Mrs. Alice Louthan, Route 2, Charleston, Illinois. “My daughter was out of school two terms. I have known about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound all my life and finally decided that she should try it. Three bottles helped her in various ways for the next couple of years.”—Mrs. W. E. Gillette, 986 E. 52nd Place, Los Angeles, Calif. “I have always been sickly, and until I was fourteen my father was very strict about my perfect attendance at grammar school. I have gone to school through hard storms and often taken cold. When I was fourteen I took to my bed and did not get up for eighteen months* Everyone thought I could not live. Just four months ago I began taking your wonderful medicine, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I could notice a great change almost at once. Now I feel like a new person. I wish all girls would try Lydia E. Pinkham’s wonderful medicine." —Mas. C. M. Smith, Ualfifl .Villas Vermont

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MORALITY ISSUE CITED TO ILLINI • Baccalaureate Address Made by Professor. B*i tufted Pirns URBANA, 111., June 15.—" Perhaps young people do not need to be urged to give up the oldfashioned morality of the past. They are supposed to be all too ready to consider their parents behind the times, but if we abandon any morality as oulgrov, n, the obligation upon us is to be sure that we have moved forward to a nobler one.” Thus Theodore Gerald Soares, professor of religious education of the University of Chicago, expressed his view's on the problem of morality and the younger generation in the annaul baccalealreate address before the senior class of the University of Illinois this afternoon. “It would be a poor interpretation of life to use the theory of moral progress as an excuse for moral carelessness," he said. “Morality is not following rules, but appreciating social relationships. Many people think that if we could teach the Ten Commandments to our children we should solve our moral problems. But they might not be any better for being able to recite the decalog. “The first question would ask about one of the commandments is: ‘What does it mean?’ ‘Thou Shalt Not Steal’ seems clear enough, but w r hat is stealing? Is it stealing if you do less than a day’s work for a day’s pay? Is it stealing if you form a trust and force up prices? Is it stealing if Mexico tries to get back the land that her politicians gave away for nothing? 'Perhaps wc need some new definitions of honesty. Legal precedent may not settle real moralities.” WHOLE CITY OF BABIES 13,000 th Infant’s Birth at Woman’s Hospital Announced. Bn t inted Press NEW YORK, June 15.—Enough babies have been born in the Woman’s Hospital, No. 141 W. 109th St., l to populate a city as large as Saratoga Springs, Tuscaloosa, Ala.; Emporia, Kan., or Redlands, Cal., says James U. Norris, superintendent, who announced -the birth of the 13,000 th baby in the hospital since 1910. The 13,000 th baby is Joseph Mortimer Kinernan, Jr., w’hose parents reside in Brooklyn. His father is a lieutenant in the Cohstruction Corps of the United States Navy. FRANCE TO MAKE GAS Synthetic Motor Mixture Highly Explosive. Bn L iiiled Press PARIS, June 15.—France no longer will be dependent upon the oil wells of other nations for motor fuel, according to announcements of government experts, who have tested a synthetic preparation made from charcoal. The new mixture, they say, is nearly the equal of gasoline in explosive efficiency.

Fishing Tfce Air BY LEONARD E. PEARSON

Editor's Note—All relerences to time i In this column are Central Standard (Indianapolis) time. Some discerning persons may wish to distinguish between fishing (at random) and dialing for stations known to come in at a given point. They probably are proud of the fact that they know what they will get even before they hear it, and often demonstrate to others their ability to pick up the desired station without having to hunt for it. Whatever records along this line may have been established in the past every radio fans start out on an equal basis this time. The new frequency assignments made by the Federal Radio Commission became effective at 3 a. m. Mapy broadcasters will not be receded at the

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Boots and Her Buddies

Freckles and His Friends

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Washington Tubbs II

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The Book of Knowledge

Inside the eartn is a raging fumec.. v oleanoes give Tins the n list's con- Sometime* wa lint) evidence of the terrific heat and force of this flame. ception of the earth's seashell on top of a One of the most wonderful of the earth volcanoes is composition, the flames mountain. These two picMount Aetna. The picture here is an imaginary view f ar down below the earth tur es show how a mighty of Mount Aetna in action. crust upheaval made a mounBT HtK THROUGH SPECIAL PERMISSION OF THE PUBLISHERS OF THE BOOK Os KNOWLEDGE. tain OU* Os A Sea bed. 61

points where they had been pre- ! viously. So it will be real fishing tonight, fishing to find where certain stations may be found, fishing for certain stations that have moved. Let s all fish tonight. Os course, we ll be busy, too, making out our new logs. For tonight, at least Fishing the Air takes on a slightly new significance. Joe Canter's Orchestra radiates I from WTAM. Cleveland, at 10 p. m. I j “Trelawney of the Wells,” in i which John Drew recently played in I this city, will be broadcast from I 8:10 to 9:10 p. m. by the WMAQ Players of that station, Chicago.

—By Ahern

Acts I and II will be given by the I radio company. I The Northwest Boy Scout and Lane Scout organizations provide , the 7:30 p. m. bill at WCCO, Min- | neapolis-St. Paul, i Beginning tonight and extending ! to Aug 3, WTIC, Hartford, will I broadcast a series of farm programs. | They are scheduled for 6:15 p. m., A. R. Merrill speaking on “Summer , Feeding Suggestions for Dairy ■ Cows.”, The Maids of Melody may be heard at 8 p. m. from WSAI. Cincinnati. The Boy Scout program comes at i 7:15 p. m. from WKBF. Indianapolis. Baseball results and news bulj letins are sent out at 5 p. m. ! The youngsters will enjoy hearing KOA, Denver, at 8:30 p. m., when

Out Our Way

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such characters as Little Boy Blue. Humpty-Dumpty and Mary of little lamb fame parade before the microphone. The entertainment includes songs and stories of their lives. Playing at Belle Isle, the Detroit Symphony Orchestra is on the air over WGHP, Detroit, from 7 to 9 p. m. i Musical comedy hits come from KFI, Los Angeles, at 10 p. m. WGY. Schnectady, radios the tune of the Remington Band at 6 p. in. Erwin Swindell plays the organ for WOC. Davenport, at 8:15 p. m. “The Radio Movie” a wireless show, is featured at 10 p. m. by CNRW, Winnipeg, Man.— The Crosley Instrumental Trio plays at 9 p. m., Joanne Grosse,

Ireland and Britain furnish evidences of tremendous eruptions from the sea beds. At one time when the J two islands were raised from the sea as one great island of chalk, volcanoes burst through and covered tl ousands of miles of the chalk with lava. The massive columns of the Giants’ Causeway tell this story. 15 (To Be Continued) ‘j

staff organist, at 10 p. m. Tune in WLW, Cincinnati. WEAF. New York, radiocasts an organ recital at 6:30 p. m. Programs carried by A and other Red network broadcasters are: 6:oo—New tales of Scheherazde. 7:oo—lpana Troubadours, playing Broad* | wav's best steppers quartet. 7:3o—Songs of the City, by National Cavaliers Male Quartet. 8:00—' Our Government" talk by David I Lawrence, president cf the United States 1 Daily. 8:10—"The Montebanks" bv National Light Opera Companv. 9.lo—Eddie Elkins and his Orchestra. Just the thing for a dinner concert—the Bankers Life Little Symphony. Get WHO. Des Moines, between 6 and 7 p. m. Vito's Radio Seven will be heard at 8 p. m. from WSM, Nashville. The Davis Saxophone Octet will include four foxtrots in its program | from WJZ, New York, at 6:30 p. m. Other stations of the Blue network

.TUNE 15,1927

—By Williams

—By Martin

—By Blosser

By Crane

SKETCHES BY BESBEY SYNOPSIS BY BRAUCHER

will sliare the the following bills with the key stations: S:o n - Musical Moods. 7:OC Michael Onrlkotf. viplUuM nr.i NatlonM Schllkret's Otchcstra no tha M-xwell hour 8:03-RCA Radlotron.v Wasn’t it jolly sport to fish for stations tonight? Did you locate many? Hope so.

Clear Yonr Skin With JsPSm Cuticura -P/f Soap to Cleonae / \ ’/ / Ointment to Heal w / .Absolutely Nothing Better

YN “THE Jt NEBCO" A t The netv Straw 11 a for this month It’ a M Knapp-felt—--96.00

19 East Ohio St. 15 N. Penn. St. 139 N. 111. St.