Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 195, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 January 1929 — Page 18
PAGE 18
UNDERSTUDY MUST ‘PINCH HIT’ FOR 12 John Galton Is Versatile in ‘My Maryland/ Opening a Week’s Stand Monday at English’s. THE name of John Galton does not appear on the program of the operetta “My Maryland,” yet Mr. Galton is one of the most important persons in the company. He is general understudy to all the male characters in the operetta, and must be prepared to play any of their parts at a moment’s notice There are tweh important male characters in “My Maryland” and Galton is thoroughly familiar with every word in every one of their roles. If something should prevent Louis Henderson from appearing at the theater some night John Galton would promptly step into his part for that performance. Henderson plays the role of Mr. Frietchie, father
of Barbara, and he is supposed to be a man about fifty. Peter Lang plays the part of Colonel Negly, an old southern officer. about seventy, and Rolland Grimes portrays Jack Negly, his son. a vouth of twenty. Yet Galton requires but a few moments to make up, and he is ready to step upon the stage as a lad of twenty, as a man of seventy, or, for that matter, as General Stonewall Jackson or a sergeant in his division. He attributes his success in this most unusual field primarily to his remarkable memory. It is no uncertain thing for him to recite en-
y JKTng^TVQnnQQH y///v r//£ //£A#r of r//f s/sosp/yvo z?/sr/?/cr*A Pork rrc<Z Chuck U Shoulders " Roasts ra H Wbo,e £hou,ders ’ T rday 31c yoPVLTiu- fl kJ not IP. only u i M EH shanks ... IDC 20c Pork Creamery Cream LI U Sausage Butter Cheese fl Genuine 11 Saturday a r Sat ° nly LJ ■ pure pork. 11C only . * DC 29c B WcinefS Best Value □ Frankforts Breast ..15c COF F c.E j H Saturday IP Roast...22c ■ 10C Chops ..30c □ fl LAMB VEAL BACON U LEGS Roast... 20c Sugar Cured ||| Genuine on Chops . .25c U fl Lamb Steak ..30c yTIS. ILUHWSST' ‘OPENIW^^^
ANNUAL JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE Discontinued Broken Lots and Slightly Shopworn Merchandise at Very Special and Attractive Prices HThis merchandise assortment includes unusual VACUUM CLEANERS LAMPS—WASHERS RADIO ODDS and ENDS And other very attractive bargains priced at figures which are exceptionally low—some below cost. All offered for quick disposal. Outstanding Specials! 11| Model S-S % SERVEL REFRIGERATORS J and Reconditioned ALADDIN CLEANERS V If you are anticipating the purchase of any electrical appliance, gSSpfil it will be well worth your whiie to come to our ‘'Daylight Corner” j| ? store where you will find your desired needs priced at a figure which will amount to a great saving. INDIANAPOLIS MIL POWER AND LIGHT 4S rVVVyiD A MV “DAYLIGHT CORNER” MONUMENT CIRCLE LWlVlr /AITI I WASHINGTON and MERIDIAN
tire plays by Shakespeare from memory. In addition to this he is an excellent acte,. He played with stock companies for years, and was requird at times to play as many as three roles every week throughout an entire season. During one of his stock engagements which lasted twenty weeks he played sixty parts. He estimates that he has appeared as not less than six hundred different characters in his theatrical career. Mr. Galton has had but one opportunity to play a part in “My Maryland” all last year and this
ESSAY PRIZES OFFERED Butler Students to Compete for Illinois Central Awards. An essay contest open to students of Butler university w r as announced today by L. A. Downs, president of the Illinois Central railroad. First prize in the contest, on “The Future of the Railroads” will be $25, and the winning Butler manuscript will be eligible for the grand prize of SIOO for which students in all colleges in territories served by the Illinois Central lines are eligible. The purpose of the contest is to make a test of student interest in the rail system’s educational advertising. was in New York occurring when Mr. Henderson, who resides on Long Island, was delayed by a derailed train. When the curtain rose that night the general understudy went blithely upon the stage and gave such a faithful performance of the part, that even the manager of the theater was not aware of Henderson’s absence. Mr. Galton is but one of many important persons in the “My Mar 'and” company who are unknovu to the general public, who are unsung and who are, withal, absolutely indispensable. “My Maryland” opens next Monday at English’s for the week. Indianapolis theaters today offer: Vaudeville at the Lyric; Charlie Davis at the Indiana; “On Trial” at the Apollo; “A Woman of Affairs” at the Palace; "Bare Facts” at the Mutual; “Tire Barker” at the Circle; “Wings” at the Granada, Buddy Kane at the Colonial. COLLEEN STOWAWAY WINS WAY TO IRELAND Passengers Make Up Purse After Girl Works Across Atlantic. Bn Times Special LONDON, Jan. 4.—Twelve hours after the Canadian Pacific liner Montroyal sailed from St. John, New Brunswick, a 20-year-old Irish colleen was brought before its captain and confessed that she was Margaret Patricia Rogers and a stowaway. Shaking her shingled head for emphasis she sought to excuse her act by this statement: “I am desperately homesick, and that’s the truth.” The captain ordered that she receive some sewing to do, and she was put in charge of a stewardess. But when the passengers learned of her plight and heard her tell in her captivating Irish brogue of how she had worked her way across Canada, stolen aboard the ship and locked herself in a cabin, they passed around a hat and collected enough money to pay her steamer fare and railway ticket to her home. Joynson-Hicks Takes Vacation Bii Vnited Press LONDON, Jan. 4.—Sir T ohn Gilmour, secretary of state for Scotland, will act* as home secretary during the absence of Sir William Joynson-Hicks in Mentone, France.
TTTE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Prize Recipes by Readers
Hamburger on Toast Place one pound of hamburger in a dry skillet and brown, stirring constantly. Add one teaspoon ct butter and salt and pepper to season. Cover with milk and let come to a simmer. Thicken with flour until it is a thick cream sauce. Serve over toast while hot. MRS. R. D. PARKS. 1220 North Illinois street, Apt. 4, city. Yorkshire Pudding One cup flour, VS teaspoon baking powder, teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon butter, or other shortening, slightly melted; 1 cup sweet milk, 2 egg yolks, 2 egg whites, stiffly whipped; meat drippings and stock. Sift flour, baking powder and salt together several times to make light. Combine melted shortening, milk and the egg-yolks, beating till wellblended; add this slowly to the flour mixture, stirring well to k?ep smooth; carefully fold in the whipped egg w’hites. Have ready casserole or earthenware bakingdish, well covered with drippings from roast fowl, or other meats; pour pudding batter into this and set in hot oven, 400 degrees Fahrenheit and allow to rise. Then baste frequently with hot meat drippings and stock till well done —20 to 25 minutes. Serve as an individual dish, or with any kind of meals. This is an excelle- way to use left-over meat drippings and stocks, and makes a most delicious dish for the holidays. MRS. JAMES SIMMS. R. 2, Columbus. Bechamel Meat Sandwiches Two tablespoons butter, 3 tablespoons flour, V 2 cup sweet milk, mixed with V 2 cup meat stock; salt and pepper to taste; 1 cup cookeu meat, chopped fine, chicken, veal or beef, and slices of bread, or toast. Melt butter in saucepan; stir in the flour and continue to stir till flour is nicely browned. Add milk and stock, and seasoning, stirring till it begins to thicken like gravy, Add the chopped meat and continue to stir till meat is thoroughly heated. Serve over the bread or toast. This is an excellent way to use leftover meats. IMOGENE BEVILHEIMER. 825 West Second Street, Anderson. Stuffed Sweet Potatoes Four medium-sized, smooth sweet potatoes; salt and pepper to taste; 1 tablespoon butter, 2 tablespoons sweet cream, 1 tablespoon sugar, %
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cup seedless raisings and 8 marshmallows. Scrub sweet potatoes thoroughly and bake in pan in moderately hot oven .375 F., till tender; cut with sharp knife, lengthwise the potato, being careful not to break the skin. Scoop out the inside and mash well. Add butter and sweet cream and whip till light; refill the shells, sprinkle with sugar; add raisins to top of each, pressing down very gently; add marshmallows which have been cut v into halves. Return to oven to brown slightly. Serve very hot. MRS. MARY MEYER. 110 East Howard street, Shelbyville. Orange Bavarian Cream One tablespoon gelatin, dissolved in % cup cold water, juice and pulp of 1 orange, % cup sugar, 1 cup thick, sweet cream, Stiffly whipped; a few candied cherries, or nut meats. Add sugar to orange and allow to stand till sugar is dissolved; add this to the gelatin, stirring well when it begins to thicken, fold in one-half the whipped cream, and pour into fancy pudding mold (or into individual molds) that have been wet with cold water to prevent cream from sticking. Set in cold place to become firm. When ready to serve, add a spoonful of whipped
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cream and a few cherries or nut meats to each portion. Other fruits may be substituted for the oranges—pineapple, peaches, bananas of any kind of berries, sweetening each to taste. BERNICE WIMMER. 1602 Nichol avenue, Anderson. ALL U. S. DAMS SAFE, ENGINEERS REPORT Two Boards Complete Survey of Reclamation Projects. Bn Vnited Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 4.—Every one of the seventy reclamation service dams in the United States is declared safe in two engineering reports made independently of each other to Elwood Mead, commissioner of reclamation. Ever since the collapse of the St. Francis dam in California over a year ago, the government has two board of engineers conducting separate surveys of reclamation dams. One board was composed of army engineers; the other consisted of two eminent engineers in civil life, A. J, Wylie of Boise, Idaho, and A. C. Henry of Portland, Ore. Final reports have been received from each survey and the results according to Dr. Mead, coincide.
Germah Strike Peace Move Fails Bn Vnited Press BERLIN, Jan. 4.—Attempts by German Minister of Labor Rudolf Wissel to reconcile employers and workers in their conflict in the shipyard strike have failed. Wis-
Slim silhouette condemned by physicians Undereating leads to tuberculosis and other diseases Hlf the mothers and young girls of this country could have heard the addresses before tho Annual Philadelphia Tuberculosis Conference, something would be done and done quickly to stamp out the dangerous under-dieting by young girls. The addresses of this meeting were mode public through the Philadelphia Public Ledger. “The most difficult problem facing us in combating tuberculosis among high-school girls, and particularly among the young women of today, is Hie vicious habits they practice to retain or acquire a slim and graceful figure.” “We don’t seem to be able to save them,” says ... “tho problem of nutrition is the one we have to face in our examination of girls of this age. It is at this age that girls are most susceptible to tuberculosis and other diseases.” Parents must put an end to the dangerous dieting of younc people. Thousands of older women have bqen seriously ana permanently injured by extreme dieting to reduce weight. It It even more serious so growing girls to starve themselves. Tempt the appetites of your family with deliciously sweetenad cereals and fruits for breakfast, with abundant canned and frash vegetables sweetened to taste, and with fresh, driad and Ctnaad fruits for desserts. The Sugar Institute. —Advertisement.
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sel Is understood to contemplate declaring as binding the arbitral award he made recently. Blood flows through the bones of very young children almost as freely as through the veins.
