South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 273, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 30 September 1919 — Page 7
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
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ARTISTS SERIES
BEGINS SATURDAY
Gall! Curci Opens Season of Concerts Arranged by Musician's Club.
Amelita. Gall Cure! sins hre on Oct.. 4 aa the first number of the Musician club series. This will without doubt be the most brilliant evpnir.c :'outh Ucnd ha.s experienced In ji-ars. Galli Curci is today the leading soprano of the world, thfre ha
r.fv r been a voice that comparts with hers plnce the days of Iatti rr Jf-nny Llnd, and In some respects GalM Ourci la an oven Kreatur artist than either of these. Galli Curci Is not Just a singer, she is an epoch, and those who fall to her her will trAi ono of tho roost remarkable concerts it is possible to har. With hr will be Homer Samuels, accompanist and tamuel IJuerener, flutist. Ganz and Van Vlk t Corning. Tho. Joint concert of Rudolph Oanz and Comeliu.s Van Vleit brings to Fowth Hend two of the greatest artists of the day. Ganz is a sane, shot t-haire3. man's pianist, without mannerisms and affectations. His playing is most powerful and he in me of the three or four greatest artists playing the piano today. The program which he will play here will please even the most unmusical person. With him will appvar t'orr.?llu Van Vlelt, a cellist with fev wrjuals in the world. South Hend audiences have heard him aa soloist with the Minneapolis orchestra, and will welcome him back. The combination of these two great masters means another capacity house as the pecond number of the series. Their concert will be on Jan. 20. Ilolm llallot to Close. In the Holm Russian ballet. South Hen'! will fce one of the most sensational and spectacular attractions ever presented in this city. No greater nor more attractive organization will be touring America next season. Holm i.s the world's jrreatest male dancer, and with him is a corps de ballet from the Metropolitan Opera company. New York. The orchestra which appears in conjunction with the ballet, is the famous Darrerc Little sympony, George Barrere, conductor. This orchestra will play a program that will be a concert, in itself, of the highest enjoment, and in combination with the Holm dancers, this production will exceed even the most optimistic expectations. The scenery for all the ballet is designed by Joseph Ur1 ban, the most famous tape decorator. A ppecial train will carry the company to South Bend. The dances ami ballots will rancc nil the way from a Greek frieze in flat sllt houette to a Russian revel, a riot " of motion and color. As the closing number of the series the Holm ballet will appear in April. Season ticket purchasers will have their same seats for all three attractions, nsurins: them of a season of three wonderful events.
I ALDERMAN HOTEL AT
GOSHEN IN NEW HANDS
Special to Th Newn-Tlroe : GOSHKX. Ind.. Sept. CO. W. Y. Hackett and his son, I F. Hackett. of Plqua. Ohio, who have the. Plaza hotel in that city, today bought the
interior lurnihninjirs oi ine aiu'thui.:
hotel in Goshen of Augusta NobleAlderman, widow of GeorK' Y. Al
derman, and her daughter, Elizabeth,
Alderman-Keliy. for about 120,000. The hotel building has been leased by Mrs. Alderman and Mrs. Kelly to Messrs. Hackett for 15 years at ,- 000 per annum, tho owners retaining thdr living apartments. Possession will be glen the purchasers and lessees Nov. 1. The hotel, widely known, will be continued as the Alderman and W. Y. Hackett will come here from Piqua to manage it. Ruilt originally in 1853, the hotel has ben known as the Violet Housp, Hotel Hascall and Tho Alderman. Recently it underwent reconstruction. For many years George Y. Alderman w;u Identified with the hotel.
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hit hard enough to create uproar- j ious laughter from all parts of the
house. Jimmy also deserves another medal, in addition to the many he now wears, for getting away from the "Mother-in-law." "Father" and "My Wife" methods to provoke laughter. He has discarded all the old ones and his ideas are modern. Jimmy served his time in the army camps of this rountry as an entertainer and judging from the complimentary letters and photos he has In his scrap-book he was an appreciated visitor where the boys were training. Wears German Tnlfonn. He looks like he had just swiped all the medals of a German general before cllmblnsr out of the trenches.
The uniform he wears In his act was sent over from France, during the war, by his brother-in-law, CplSellincrer, of 64fith aerial squadron. He says the . uniform was removed from a dead German soldier of the Uhlan division- There was an iron cross attached to it which it was sent to Jimmy with the uniform. He wants It understood that he is the "soldier's champion." He entertained at over 500 benefits for soldiers, war funds and Red Cross drives during the war. He sold over $500,000 worth of Victory bonds, not to mention his work in the previous issues. Having appeared in so many camps during the time he was giving entertainments, he claims to
know the soldier's trouble? almost as well as tha soldier himself hence his dramatic finish after, convulsing his audience for 12 minutes.
Reduce Your Fat Without Dieting
Yenrs ncr the formula for fat reduction 'dirt" 'exercise." Today It 1 "Take Mnrmol.i Prescription Tablets." Friend tell frier-df doctors tell tlielr pntientf. until thousand knovr and this convenient, harmless method. They eat what tar like, lire aa thej like, and Ptlll lose their two tnTee or four pounds of fat a wcfk. Simple, effective, harm-
! k Mnrmola Prescription Tablets are ! sr-ld by nil drutrclst a large caw for j !. fr if you prefer you may write di
rect to the M.irmola Company, srA Woodward Ave., I Stroit, Mich. Adv.
Orpheum Actor Uses Material That Pleases Soldiers and Delights Civilians.
The bravest man in show business is now playing at the Orpheum. It is Jimmy Lyons, billed as the Hebrew Soldier Statesman, who delivers a monologue on the late war. prohibition, the high cost of living and other topics and uses a nearGerman dialect and Sam Bernard's twisted English to put over his jokes. Rut he puts them over and they
MORE L0WRYS MAKE BIDS FOR ESTATE OF MAYOR
JJpeH-O to The New-Times: GOSHEN. Ind.. Sept. 30 More Rowrys appeared today to take action looking toward claiming the 575, 0C0 estate of Alfied Lowry. former Goshen mayor, who did not leave a will and who is without known legal heirs. John Lowry is the first prospective heir to make a trip to Goshen. He lr a resident of Huntington. Ind. Coming here he went over records ani conferred with C. Fdwln Stout, R'.khart County Trust company secretary, administrator of the estate. He Vi anxious to establish blood relationship with the former mayor. Isaac Lowry of Montpclier, Ind. has written in regard to the Lowry possessions and especially regarding the claim to heirship made, by R. G. Lowry of Cedarville, Ohio. Clara K. Wilkinson. S2, a widow, raiding at Austin, Ind., writes she is the tnly heir of Alexander Lowry, who camo to the United States from Scotland more than 100 years agoi He was once, a member of the Indiana legislature, she says. Mrs. Wilkinson thinks she may be an heir to the Alfred Lowry estate. She wants things investigated.
:-OWNC.;;:;x
THE SHAPPY LIME DRINK
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ANXOrxCE3fi:XT. Opening of The Kllsworth Store "Music Salon" Introducing the famous Aeolian Vocalion graphnphono and records. The Ellsworth Store. ö 0 j 5 -1 .
Ambition Pills For Nervous People The great nerve tonic the famcus Wendell's Ambition Pills that win put vigor, vim and vitality into r.ervous tired out, all in. despondent reople in a few days in many Intanets. Anyone can buy a box for only 50 cents, and Wet tick's Cut Hate Medicine Store Is authorized by the maker to refund the pureha-se price if anyone is dissatisfied with the first tox purchased. Thousands praise them for general debility, nervous prostration, mental depression and unstrung irvfs caused by over-indulgence in licohol. tobacco, or overwork of any Kind. For any affliction of the p.er-ous :ysteni Wendell's Ambition 1" are unsurpassed, while for hysteria, trembling and neuralgia they are Imply splendid. Fifty cents at WetUck'a Cut Rate Medicine Store and 3'fr rrThr, d"t.
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and then hear her records on the
VICTROLA
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Hear especially these records
74552 The Brilliant Bird
74558 In Sweetest Accents 74594 One of Whom I Dream 74499Caro Nome (Rigoletta) 74512 Romeo and Juliet (Waltz Song) . . 74509 Mad Scene from "Lucia" 74557 Proch's Air and Variations 74500 La Partida
.Galli-CurrI .Galli-Curci .Galli-Curci .Galli-Curci .Galli-Curr : .Galli-Cur . Galli-Curci . Galli-Curci
74511 Home, Sweet Home Galli-Curci Remember you can hear her every evening at the
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MUSIC SHOP
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Open Evenings.
228 S. Michigan St.
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Wheelock & Company
Wheelock & Company
LI-CURCI
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THE THREE GREATEST ATTRACTIONS EVER BROUGHT TO SOUTH BEND SEASON TICKETS AT $4, $5, $6 AND $7 ADD WAR TAX BOX OFFICE OLIVER THEATER
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Those Who Have Made Reservations Should Call for Their Tickets at Once.
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GALLI-CURCI, famu operatic star, marvel of her generation, sings exclusively for the Victor. No Victor RecoiJ Library is complete if it does not include reproductions of this golden voice. A few selections from our list of Galli-Curci records: 64669 Laughing Song from Manon Lescaut $1.00 64748 Marriage of Figaro (I Know Not What I'm Doing) $1.00 64807 Twilight S1-00 74541 Barbiere (A Little Voice I Hear) $1.30 74552 Pearl of Brazil (Thou Brilliant Bird) $1-50 74594 Traviata (The One of Whom I Dreamed) $1.50 74500 Partida L'd (The Departure) $1-0 74509 Lucia (Mad Scene) Flute Obligato $L50 74536 Last Rose of Summer $1.0 74532 Dinorah (Shadow Song) $1.50 Victor Products Exclusively George H. Wheelock & Company
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