Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 102, Hammond, Lake County, 18 October 1917 — Page 12
THE TIME3
Thursday, October 18, 191 ' im f in.ljBi.lPi.i.wip;ii,iu.ini romJK,,
fr0 have the leading role in one of I the year's most ambitious phoJL toplay productions at the age of seventeen is the remarkable distinction which has fallen to the lot of Mildred Harris. Here if a girl who possesses the most desirable combination of good looks, rare histrionic ability and the freshness of youth, and Lois Weber, who chose her for her seven-reel feature production, "The Price of a Good Time," considers her a real "find." Miss Harris first attracted attention as the ingenue in "The Old Folks At Home," In which Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree was starred under D. W. Griffith's direction Her work as Linnie the department store heroine, in "The Trice of a Good Time." is wonderfully impressive and f i "y Justifies Miss Weber's confidence in r-.er ability.
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NEW YORK'S NEW PHOTOPLAY llorSR The roof is now over New Ycrk's palatial new moving picture theatre which has been under construction at Broadway Und Forty-ninth street for the past several months. Now comes the interesting announcement that the destinies cf the new house are to be guided by S. L. Kothapfel, at present managing director of the Ilialto. It devslops that Mr. Kothapfel has been wo: king quietly for several months on a scheme of decoration and stage settings and the theatre will embody many advanced ideas, particularly in color illuminations. The Kothapfel musical standard, a source of delight to Rialto patrons, will be upheld in the new theatre by an orchestra of fifty pieces under the direction of Hugo Keisenfeld. The house will seat approximately 2,500. THEIR MARRIAGE PRESERVED If wedding bells had pealed for you and a few days after the marriage you had been invited to see the whole ceremony and all the attendant festivities on a moving picture screen you would be both surprised and delighted, wouldn't you? That's what happened recently to Eugena Spear- , man, son of Frank H. Spearman, the well-known author of thrilling railroad stories which Helen Gibson interprets in Bison pictures. The elder Spearman is a close friend of Henry McRae, Manager of Production at Universal City, Cal., and the latter,
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TO DARKEN HAIR
Sage Tea and Sulphur Turns Gray, Faded Hair Dark and Glossy.
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unbeknown to the young couple, sent a cameraman to Hollywood to take pictures of the wedding. After the Honeymoon tho wedding party was invited to see it all over again in the projection theatre at Universal City, after which the film was presented as a wedding gift to the newlyweds. Quite a novel idea, what? CAMOUFLAGE At the Hotel Knickerbocker in New York the other evening Clara Kimball Young entertained a number of friends in the main dining-room at a birthday dinner party. A huge cake which adorned the center of the table shared with the charming hostess the attention of many curious onlookers. It held twenty-seven candles. Another real. romance among the reel romancers. Emory Johnson and Ella Hall are honeymooning.
Almost everyone knows that Sasre Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded, 'jrlnss back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, atreaked or pray. Years ago the only way to i?et thl mixture was to make It at '.lome. which Is musny and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ask at any drug- store for "Wyeths Sasro and Sulphur Compound." You will gret a largo 'bottle of this cld-tjtne recipe Improved y the addition of other Ingredients, ftt very little coat. Everybody uses .his preparation now. because no one an possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as It does It so naturally xand evenly. You dampen a sponro or oft brush with It and draw this throvdh your hair, taking: one small strand at a time: by morninK the gray '.ialr disappears, and after another applic4i'in or two, your hair becomes
rbeau'ifully dark, thick and fflossy and
you ,ook years younger. AVyeth s Saifa and Sulphur Compound Is a delightful 'toilet requisite. It is not Intended for the cure,, mitigation or prevention Vf disease Adv.
Gas, Gas, Indigestion, Sourness, Upset Stomach-Pape's Diapepsin Instant Relief! Neutralizes stomach acids, stopping dyspepsia, heartburn, belching, distress. Read!
Time it! In five minutes your sour, acid stomach feels fine. No indigestion, luartburn, cr belching of gas. or eructations of undigested food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache. I'ape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed In sweetening upset stomachs. It Is the surest, quickest and most certain stomach antacid in the wholo world and besides, it is harmless. Millions of men and women now eat their favorite foods without fear they know Pape's rie.pepsin will save them from such misery. Please, for your sake, get a large
fifty-cent case of Pape's Diarepsin from any drup store and put your stomach right.y Don't keep on being miserable life is too short you are not here long, so make your stay agreeable. Kat what you like and enjoy it, without dread of acid fermentation in the stomach. Pape's Diapepsin belongs in your home anyway. Should one of the family eat something which don't agree with them, or in case of an attack of indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis or stomach derangement due to fermentation and acidity, at daytime or during the night, it is handy to give the quickest, surest relief known. Adv. -
V - I 3 War lews
Mailed By U. P. Men To The Unitgd States
The Times Is always glad to get Sporting News of events in the Calumet
BY WltilAil PHIXIP Slums (United Press Staff Corrspoadont) WITH THE BIUTISH ARMIES IX FRANCE. Sept 27. (By Mail) It is not only the smart dog that knows how to "Play dead and roll over." Battleplane pilots out here do it every day, both Hritish and German. It frequently happen;; that it is only by playing dead that they ketp alive. When planes are fighting high up in the air and One suddenly finds himself in a tight coiner, he "plays dead." That is. he shoots vertically up into the air, turns over on his back and literally falls head first, rolling over and over, simulating ali the motions of a plane whose pilot has been killed and which Is utterly out of control. So deceptive are these movements that it is impossible to tell the di.Terence very often from the real thing. Today I saw a good example of how this 'playing dead" works out. Lieut. A. flying at an altitude of three miles, well above the clouds, encountered two enemy machines. He dived at the nearest and at short range fired a short burst into it from his machine-gun. It nltcheri
on its nose, and with smoke coming out of its fuselage, went plunging and spinning Into tho clouds below. It so happened that a pilot belonging to an entirely different squadron happened to be patrolling under the clouds above which the fight took place. In his report he mentioned seeing an enemy plane, of a certain type, fall in flames out- of tho clouds over his head. and.
burning fiercely, crash to the earth at such and such a spot. As both time and place and the circumstances coincided exactly with the report of Lieut. A.. Lieut. A. was credited with bringing down the German plane. But for thi3 accident his fight would have netted his record nothing. "Whenever possible tho victor in a fight In the air follows the falling plane to the ground and actually sees it smash to bits. When'-, this happens, to onlookers on the ground. It appears exactly as if both planes are falling for the one which follows must put his plane into a ' nose-spin" and fall in the wake of tne other like a stone. It is only when the persuing plane sees his victim crash that he. at only a few hundred feet from the ground "fattens out" and goes ip into the sky again. Sometimes, to make sure, the pursuer fires R0 or 100 rounds at his falling opponent as he falls in his wake to make sure that the ppln is real and not just a wily pilot "piaylnr: dead." So it sosietlmes happens that a fall begins by a pilot "playing dead" and ends in it becoming genuine. In these cases the victorious pilot will never know whether he was firing at an enemy trying to escape or into the back of a dead man.
region but
must be news not comment nor personalities.
Another Viewpoint. Come to the house pretty tired In tho evening nfter the long day? But do not overlook tho fact that the wife's day has been Just as hard as yours und some- longer. exchange.
CHILD GETS SICK CROSS, FEII1SH IF CONSTIPATED
"California Syrup of Figs
can't harm tender stom ach or bowels.
A laxative today tBes a sick child tomorrow. Children simply will not tak the time from play to empty their bowels, which become clogged up with waste, liver gets sluggish; Btomach laour. Look at tho tongue, mother If t-oated, or your child is listless, cross.
feverish, breath bad, restless, doesn't 'eat heartily, full of cold or has sore jthroat or any other children's ailment. give a teaspoonful of "California ! Syrup of Figs." then don't worry, be
cause It is perfectly harmless, and in
a few hours til this constipation poi
son, sour Due ana lermenting waste
will gently move out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. A thorough "lnsida cleansing" Is oftimes all that Is necessary. It should e the first treatment given In any
psickness.
Beware of counterfeit fig syrups.
Ask your druggist for a 60-cent bot
tle of "California Pyrup of Figs.
which has full directions for babies.
Lhildren of all ages and for grown-ups
m i plainlv printed on tne Dome, look
tlllZSZZZtttttiQ-rStTfT'llVlt't SI gSffSgy-gtfSagfygSSat Wf WISf Carefully and see that it is made by "" , t IVhe "California Fig Syrup Company." Kadv.
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"The
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586 OAKLEY AVENUE.
SELLING THE COMPLETE LINE OF STORY & CLARK SOLO ACTION PLAYERS. WILFRED M. HUGHES, Proprietor. OPPOSITE POSTOFFICE.
Quality"
HAMMOND, IND.
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