Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 164, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1927 — Page 2

PAGE 2

BLEAK PICTURE PAINTED IF U. S. BOWS TO WETS Struggle Between Cities and Rural Regions, Says | Church Dry Leader. T BY RAY TUCKER WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—The 1928 election will subject prohibition to its greatest crisis since the dry laws were enacted, in the opinion of Deets Pickett of the Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals of the Methodist Church. ■* He believes the struggle will lie between teh cities and the rural districts, or, as he puts it, Broadway *tnd Main Sts. ‘The newcomers to the city Streets, to the sidewalks of New York, or Chicago and other cities,” said Pickett, “are said to believe that the aspirations and principles of the Little Brown Church in the Vale and the men and women of Main St. have been too long in the frscendant.” He paints a black picture of conHitions should the enemies of prohibition triump. In his words: “It will mean nothing less than this: “In politics the triumph of Tamftiany or of the equally corrupt Republican machines of such cities as Philadelphia. On the stage it would mean the triumph of the nakedness of Earl Carroll, of the blasphemy, vulgarity, obscenity and filth of Broadway’s problems plays. “In literature it would mean the barbarism of Mencken, the salacious dirt of Greenwich Village novels and the vulgarism of the worst of the cheap magazines. In religious faith it would mean the blank despair of no faith.” REPORT THREE MISSING Three persons were reported missing by police today. Ben Gauker, 13, of 111 E. Sixteenth St., Apt. 3, was reported absent by his aunt, Mrs. Nora McCord. Mrs. Thelma Glazier, 18, of 1256 W. New York St., was reported missing by her husband, William Glazier. Margaret Greeson, 15, 840 Dennison St., left home Wednesday. MOTION PICTURES

Plj A COMEDY OF LOVE AND AVIATION MAURICE HOLLYWOOD .PUBUX PR-eSENTS OKielamf WITH^ Charlie Davis Band JM Joe Penner JM Kentucky Choir /M

APOLLO THE THRILL OF THE YEAR! FRED THOMSON “JESSE JAMES” Charlie Chase Comedy, Fox News, Ray Winnings, Emil Seidel’s Apollo Merrymakers.

AMUSEMENTS ENGLISH’S ■tIWBIWM W MAT gAT h RUSSELL JAMEY'S I.MEW SUCCESS The. most, I thrilling musical plcu; ever produced.. 100—N. Y. Casino Company—loo. Featuring: Carolyn Thomson, Edward Nell Jr., Will H. Philbrlek, H. Cooper Cliffe. Nights: ¥3.30 to ¥l.lO. Boxes, $3.85. Mats., Wed-Sat.: $3.75 to sl.lO. week com. Monday; nov. 21st j MATINEES WED.. THANKSGIVING DAY AND SAT. i THE NIGHT" CijUß CLASSIC WMf Eves., 75c to $2.75; Wed. Mat., 50c to $1.65; Thurs. and Sat. Mats., 50c to ¥2.20. Tax Included. SEATS SEELING.

MUTUAL Burlesque Theater “THE NIGHT HAWKS” A MUTUAL SHOW With DIXIE MASON —Bed Hot— Let’s Go

AN AMUSEMENT LANDSLIDE Now Breaking Seventeen Years of ATTENDANCE RECORDS Come Early!—Attend the Matinees NEW PRICES—NEW POLICY—PERFECT SERVICE Indianapolis’ Favorite Amusement Theatre

WILLIAM BOYD in “Dress Parade” Other Screen Features 500 Seats, ■ r Daily and Sunday IDC Mats., Exeept Sun. Ot!_ Os - jnd Holidays CsUCf J3C sssr.n 40c, 60c

HEY, HOLLYWOOD! * — * British Babes to Storm Movies

|;

Claudette, Claudine and Angela—the Mawby children.

BY MARIAN HALE NEA Service Writer p— riEW YORK, Nov. 17.—Three N diminutive Nordic fairies— Claudette, Claudine and Angela—marched down the gangplank of an incoming trans-At-lantic liner. After .them came Dad and Mother Mawby—and a lot of baggage. MOTION PICTURES

Circle the show place of Indiana

The Collegiate "Romance! MARION DAVIES hu The Fair Coed JCaughs LAUGHS J^aughs ro On the Circle Stage JMadamcj ELSA STRALIA Dramatic Soprano r* Spectacular Presentation Butler College GIRLS GLEE CLUB 100 Voices Under 'Direction Franklin N. Taylor Overtures "Rose of Algeria” ED RESENER, conducting Circle Comedy, Chats and, ~N^sps

fQHicj;

VICTOR jkI’LAGLEN, DOLORES DEL RIO. EDMUND LOWE, in the World’s Greatest Motion Picture, “WHAT PRICE GLORY” CONNIE AND HIS BAND.

AMUSEMENTS

Jg£fe\ u i'. PRINCE LEI UNI —AND HIS— Royal Samoans “A TRIP TO HOLLAND” WITH THE VANDENBEBGB WORLD’S GREATEST YODELERS ELSIE CLARK NELSON STORY AT THE PIANO OTHER BIG NEW ACTS

COLONIAL | USt “SOME BABY” FAREWELL WEEK With lIIABELLE ARNOLD and MILTON BYRON and Entiro BERKELL Cast MATINEES—Wed.. Tlinrs., Sat., 2:15. NlTES—B:ls—Popular Prices Seats now selling tor entire Farewell Week. Phone or Mall your order with remittance.

Kcith-Albee Vaudeville Carl Freed and Band Other Great Acts

Keiths

And if premonitions at that moment didn’t seize upon Hollywood as though an ague, then Hollywood has become blase to the point of insipidity . tt St tt iE’RE just taking a sportYY7 ing chance, Mother Mawby V* told me, in a matter-of-fact way. “We sold our home and furniture and just about everything else we had, and here we are”—in New York, which, between London and Hollywood, is approximated half way. /‘We haven’t any contracts, and we don’t know any movie magnates,” Dad Mawby put in. There’s English confidence for you! nun see. now. Claudette and Claudine are the twins, I believe. Five years old—and Angela 6. For ten days during each year they like to tell people that their ages are the same. That’s from Aug. 10, when the twins have their joint birthday, to Aug. 20, when Angela has hers. Such wee, fair persons! tt tt a I "INGELA may paint when | A she. grows up. She isn’t l*l sure. Claudine would like to be a circus. And Claudette? “I want to be a lady, like Mamma,” she said, with emphasis on the last syllable. It was a year ago last Easter that they made their first public appearance. They stopped traffic in London’s Hyde Park. They’re now “the most photographed children in England. Dad Mawby was connected with the London stock exchange when the Hollywood idea materialized. In the World War he was a British captain. u tt BF premonitions, I repeat, didn’t set Hollywood all atremble the moment the Mawbys marched down the gangplank at this half-way mark of their journey, then Hollywood must have become far worse than just blase. It must be positively petrified! Funeral Directors Meet Bit Times Svecial COLUMBUS, Ind., Nov. 17.—The Southern Indiana Funeral Directors’ Association is holding its annual convention here today. Judge Julian Sharpnack, Columbus, and the Rev. George W. Winfrey, Alexandria, are principal speakers.

Aims to Live 100 t Pittsburgher Uses a Rare Herb Remedy to Keep the Youthful Fires Burning. Believe it or not, but here is the story H. H. Von Schlick, prominent manufacturer of Pittsburgh, Pa., tells: ’’For the past 25 years I have used an old Bulgarian herb prescription with such marvelous results that today at the age of 60 I feel as young and fresh as I did at 30. The rich vitalizing herb juices extracted from these precious horbs taken once or twice a week not only keep me healthy but give me the power and vigor of youth. To the millions who suffer from constipation, stomach, liver, kidney, rheumatic and blood trouble, this old Bulgarian Herb prescription may be just the remedy needed to back Into your life once more the chefer and sunshine of good health. Further—just to break up a bad cold, avoid pneumonia or influenza, it is worth ten times its small cost.” Don’t wait, if you feel the weary drag of 111 health or old age, see your druggist at once. Ask him for Bulgarian Herb Tea. Insist on getting it. Price 35c, 75c and ¥1.25. Should he be sold out I will send my large family size (3 months') treatment for the special price of SI.OO. NOTE: For your convenience I will send it C. Y). D. and you can pay the postman. Address H. H. Von Schlick, President. Department 8, Marvel Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.—Advertisement,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .

6 WEEKS LEFT TO GETBQNUS' Veterans Must Apply Before Jan. 1, Legion Warns. More than $10,000,000 will be lost to the World War veterans in Indiana .unless those who have not already done so make application for adjusted compensation by Jan. 1. Paul V. McNutt, commander of the Indiana department of the American Legion said today in an urgent appeal to bring in the stragglers. More than 15,000 Hoosier erservicemen are throwing away the award of the Government by failing to make application, McNutt said. In the United States 500,000 veterans have not applied. Adjusted compensation is a certificate falling due twenty years after date of issuance. Veterans may borrow on the compensation certificate in an emergency. Application blank smay be obtained from legion posts, the postoffice or the United States Veterans’ Bureau. The application should be forwarded immediately to Washington. MURDER TRIAL NEAR Arthur Walser to Face Court at Marion During Coming Term. Bn Times Svceial MARION, Ind., Nov. 17.—Arthur Walser will go on trial for murder in Grant Circuit Court here during the November term, beginning Monday, for his alleged part in the slaying of his wife’s cousin, Clifford Cox, 7, at Fairmount last June. Walser’s girl-wife, Dorothea, is serving a term of two to twenty-one years in the woman’s prison at Indianapolis after being convicted of manslaughter in connection with the death of the boy.

J 7 your next 'sJmfWM Door . , Neighb or/

SO many women have already changed from ordinary loaves to this new extra-long (and extra good!) Wonder Bread loaf that you needn’t look far for the reason! Just ask your next door neighbor! She will tell you she likes not only its new extra-long shape but its delicious flavor and fine, firm texture. Extra milk and sugar make Wonder Bread unusually appetizing. Make it a healthful, more nourishing loaf, too, —the kind that careful mothers choose. And the new long shape makes it so convenient and jtffigL economical—gives more slices to every loaf. Even the Wonder Bread wrapper is strikingly distinctive! Look for this wrapper with the bright u Wonder Balloons" Get a loaf today Wonder Bread c 'Always fresh from your grocer

Ford Makes Air-Yacht for Millionaire

■ 1.1. .. - ...■ nOn- ■ ■ ■■■ ~ ~ ———

Here is the Ford tri-motor, all-metal air yacht built for J. H. Rand, Jr., president of the Remington-Rand corporation. It will carry Mr. Rand from New York to Florida for the winter. Seating capacity is ten passengers. It has a main cabin and there are two side seats that may be used as berths. The forward cabin can be used as a baggage compartment or will accommodate passengers. The plane is the standard Ford-Stout design, manufactured by the Stout Metal Airplane Corporation.

PLEDGE JURY SERVICE Kiwanians Call on Cili/ens to Do Duty. Kiwanians pledged themselves to the acceptance of jury service and called upon all citizens for like acceptance in a resolution adopted Wednesday. It was presented by Bernard R. Batty, club member, who was on the jury that convicted ex-Mayor John L. Duvall. The resolution deplored the “growing disposition among business men and prominent citizens to evade service, especially in criminal cases,” and concluded: "Therefore, Be it resolved by the Kiwanis Club of Indianapolis that we urge all members of our club as well as all citizens, whenever called upon by the courts of our land to serve upon juries in criminal and civil cases that they assume such duty and responsibility unless prevented by strict legal cause comply with the requirement of such service, to the end that the institution of the jury system remain effective and of value, and that justice may be fairly and impartially ad-

ministered and the rights of our citizens in their property and lives be safeguarded.” KIWANIANS NOMINATE Two Slates Are Selected for Annual Election. Two slates of nominees were before the Kiwanis Club today as candidates for 1928 officers. Nominated by the committee of which Bernard R. Batty was chairman are Richard A. Shirley, president; Ace Berry, vice president; Carl S. Wagner, trustee; Dwight A. Murphy, treasurer, and Elmer A. Steffiin, Louis J. Borinstein and Reuben O. Jackson, directors. Oppoosing candidates, nominated by the conpnittee of which Dr. B. K. Westfall was chairman, are Julian Wetzel, president; C. E. Durnel£ vice president; Cecil Crabb, trustee; Robert H. Sturm, treasurer, and O. A. Miller, Howard S. Young and George M. Bookstahler, directors. ~ When You Feel a Cold Coming On Take Laxative BKOBO QUININE Tablets to work off the Cold and. to fortify the system against Grip or Influenza. A Safe and Proven Kemedy. Look for signature of E. W. Grove on the box. 30e. —Advertisement.

PULLS GUNjj25 FINE Dangerous Weapon Although Relic, Judge Rules. Although it was an old revolver, a relic, he said, from Germany for which shells can’t be bought in tfyis country, it cost Alphon Kirch, 35, of 315 Sanders St., $25 to draw it on his mother and sister. Municipal Judge Paul C. Wetter fined him that sum on a drawing a deadly weapon charge. His mpther, Mrs. Barbara Kirch, 75, and his sister, Mrs. Rena Hemmel, 409 Parkway Ave., testified that he came home Tuesday night and threatened them with the gun, declaring he would shoot them if they didn’t quit nagging him. They signed the warrant for his arrest. He chased her around the room and pushed her 6-year-old daughter to the floor when she tried to interfere, Mrs. Hemmel testified. Kirch said his mother and sister complained against "him coming home late and using lights.

NOV. 17,11927

STOUT HANGAR CONTRACT LET SIO,OOO Structure Will Be Started Friday. Work will start Friday on the new SIO,OOO commercial hangar at Stout flying field, according to William H. Kershner, adjutant general. Contract was awarded Wednesday by the State Armory board to the Steffco Steel Company of Michigan City*, Other Stout field improvements include installation of flood lights, and grading. Three commercial firms and the 113th air squadron of the National Guard have planes stationed at the field. The recently organized Indiana Air Transit Company will be incorporated for SIO,OOO. The Merz Engineering Company, organized Wednesday by the transit company, will be incorporated for $50,000. Officers of the transit company are Melvin B. Osborne, president; Ralph N. Recker, vice president, and Charles C. Tyner, secretary-treas-urer. Incorporators of the engineering company are to be Charles C. Merz, Douglas Wheeler, John T. Cannon, A. Gordon Murdock and H. J. Raffensperger. DRENCH PARKED CARS Plan Followed by Firemen to Educate Motoristr Bit United Press CHICAGO, Nov. 17.—The Chicago fire department has adopted a novel plan to prevent motorists from parking automobiles near fire plugs. The plan is called the “Water Cure.” As soon as the department finds a car parked too near a plug, the automobile is immediately given a This practice is followed even though no fire is in the vicinity.