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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 14

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE INDIANAPOLIS.NEWS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 17 1332. A ifecis it When Uncle WlcgHy hopped Into hla hollow stump bungalow out of the rain cue day his wile met him at the door and ealdt Why, Wigzy, didn't you have an. "No, mydear he answered, "I didn't. 1 forgot all about taking an umbrejla and I was caught In the storm.1 I'm afraid I'm a little wet." ho said, and he eouldnt twinkle hla 'pink nose because there was a drop cf water cn It. "A little wet! exclaimed lira.

Lor.jeara. "why, Wlggy, you're all wetl And you're making a puddle here In the Irorit hall! Please go Into the kitchen. Nurse Jane will help you get dry." So Mr; Lors gears hopped out to the kitchen, where Nurse Jane bad a warm, hot fire and coon he was quite dry and his pink nose began to twin kle a little. Then he felt better, except he had a pain In his left hind leg. i.

"It's rheumatism, I guess," he said. rheumatism always hurts when I get wet. Then we must rub you with ketchup," declared Mrs. Longears, who had come out to the kitchen to see how her husband was getting along. "Get the bottle of ketchup.

Nurse Jane!" "Why ketchup?" asked Uncle Wig ketchup Is red hot." said the rabbit lady, "and anything red hot 1s good for rheumatism a et the bottle. Nurse please." Bo the muskrat lady housekeeper and Uncle Wlgglly's wlfe rubbed his left hind leg w)th the red hct ketchup 3 I lilt I A. I'm i little uet and he felt much better, except he had to limp a little when he hopped around the bungalow. Cut that didn't matter much. "You Just sit still in your easy chair, Unkle Wig." said Baby Bunty, the orphan rabbit, 'and well bring you everything ycu need.

Then you won't have to hop and hurt your rheumatism." Bo Bunty and the other rabbit. chU dren, from Jingle and Jangle to Bus ter and Custer, brought vUncle Wigglly his slippesa, his book to read and his glasses and even a cup of sassafras tea which Nurse, Jane made for him. "I guess youH have stay in the bungalow a few days, now," said Mrs. ongears to her huVUnd when he Bruges Away Gray Hair Kseps Permanent Wave "Now you can really look tears younter. Simply brush away those an lghii streaks or patches of tray' It' Is so ssy to do and at home with Brow intone.

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First cut a lock of hair from your head aod apply a little of this famous tlni; If Brown stone does aot sire your eray, streaked, dull or faded hair its natural color, youth and. sheen, your money back. Only SOc. All drosttsta. How Da Clubwomen Manage? The active head of an important society, the moving spirit in several and a full social calendar.

Such women can't pause because cf monthlv oeriodal So, the knowing woman relies on a preparation called MidoL This truly amazing discovery of the. specialists keeps her perfectly comfortable tvtrv cinute ci cer time to menstruate. Midol is not a narcotic. It doesn't a at interfere with the normal menstrual rrocess. It just blocks all possibility cf any pain.

It can't fait Jfacta.in fi to seven minutes I Tiny tablets in a tiny box to tuck away inyonr bag. Just ask the druggist for MtdoL WOW. I 7 (lUUuiiiVv II THAT OFFENDS stained teeth are not natural. I or pre start usirs Kolroos a half' inch ti this scientific dental cream on a dry twice daily. In 3 days your tznh will look fully 3 shades whiter! Th; 3 rcrnarkatledental ere am cleans tr ih much whiter than other prcp srsiicr.1 you've used because it con i 3 1 remarkable ingredients.

One the f.r.est cleansing agent known foarr.3 into and cleans out every f.s i ure, removes dfbrw, era try tartar and yellow. While :or.d irrf client kills millions cf i Cat A oxa into the nouth WUI'Jrottnd thrown Vv MR. AND MRS. Wtth the turning of the sixtieth year of their married lives. Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Mcam. 42 North BevUle avenue, will celebrate their anlrersary Wednesday. The family dinner In their honor will take place Sunday. Mr.

Mcaill, who Is seventy eight years old, war a drummer boy for the Lenoxbuig (Kj.) home guards during the cvftll war. Too young to accompany the marching troops, he "did his part by playing the bass drum for the young patriots of his community. He vividly recalls the day when the news flashed over the countryside that Abraham Lincoln had been assassinated. "I was just a boy when, that happened, but I remember the day." Mo Olll saltL "Father had taken me with him to Foster. Ky on the Ohio liver.

About 4 o'clock the packet Magnolia came up the river with its flag at half mast. Everybody crowded around the landing to see what had happened. When the steamer pulled up, the eaptahl caned out, 'Abraham Lincoln has been And then we got the newspapers off the boat and read all about the President's death." Prom the river the word spread through the town and over the countryside from jnouth to mouth, McOiU's father, Anthony McOIH, was one of the early resident of the Blue Orass state. He 'went there to went to bed. "YouTl be too lane from your rheumstism to go adventurlng.N 'Tm afraid so." he said.

Yesni have to sUy.ln. Bo you can imagine how surprised Mrs. JLongears was next day, when little Bub, the rainbow boy, called for Uncle Wigglly, to hear her husband say: Tes Xlttle Bub, Hi be right outt Why, Wlggyl said els wife. "You cont go out today! You know you have the rheumstism and are lame 1 You toust stay "OK rm much better, said the rabbit gentleman with TMy rheumatism doesnt hurtj: that is hardly any. guess XJttlev Bub cured lUi'All rlght Bub, rm he shouted, tor the rainbow boy was call ing again.

"Oh, dearl What shall do with sighed Mrs. Longears as. she saw her husband hepping out of the bungalow to meet Little Bub. fy The best thing to oo." squeaked Nurse, Jane. ls to let him get another pain from trying to hop on his rheumatic leg and that will teach him a lesson." "Perhaps agreed the rabbit lady.

"Uncle Wigglly seemr never able to tell Little Bub he can't come out. He's very fond of that boy." "And Little Bub loves Uncle Wig said Nurse Jane. Trying to forget all about his rheumatism, though It still pained him. Uncle Wigglly hopped over the fields and through the woods with the rainbow boy. They went uphill and they went downhill and soon they came to the duck pond.

"Now well have fun!" exclaimed the rainbow and he began to throw stones in the water. "Ker plunk! Ker plank! Ker plink the stones splashed in the water. Now, whether some water splashed on Uncle Wigglly or whether It was Just the dampness from the pond I dont know, but. all of a sudden the rabbit gentleman's legs got very, stiff so he could hardly hop and he said: "Oh, Little Bub, what am 'I going to Co? We can't have an adventure If I cant hop after one. What shall we dor "Walt until I throw another stone in the pond, answered the rainbow boy.

8o he threw in another stone, "ker brnko," and then, all of a sudden, a big. black, ugly creature bobbed up out of the water and said: "Here! Here! Why are you throwing stones at me?" "Oh. it's Big Snap, the mud turtle," cried Uncle Wigglly. and so it was. And something very strange happened You shaQ hear about It tomorrow if the rubber ball will stop bouncing on the head of cabbage when It ought to be playing tennis.

The story will be or Uncle Wlggtly's queer ride. (Copyrieht. X033 EASY a shado a day i and cause most tooth and gum trou 1 ties. 1 cut the mouth and teeth era quickly cleaned right down to the beautiful, natural white enamel with out injury. Now if you want gleaming white teeth free from decay, and firm, pink sums free from disease start usintr Kolynoa, with Its unique Dry Brush Technique.

YouTl never regret it Buy a tube today. DEnTAL CHEAf.1 i mmtm i AcAsens; nmti ROBERT 110111 live in 1831. after buying fifty acres of ground at $8 an acre. Ha paid off his debt by chopping cord wood for the owner who lived three miles away. At night he split rails and fenced hi his ground.

Mrs. Eva Combln McOiU. age seventy seven, was born Foster. She and Mr. McOUL who lived five miles away, were: married October 19.

1872. iae two uvea on a farm for several years and then moved to Covington and later to Cincinnati. Six years ago tney came to Indianapolis. Mcaill is a horticulturist and gardener. Mr.

and Mrs Mcaill have been readers of The Indianapolis News since first coming to this city. "Sixty years Is a long time for two people to live together," McOlll said, with a twinkle, in his eye. he added, "but we always got along. You see, make her do what she wants to do. And when we agree, we compromise and She gets her way." Mr.

and Mrs. Mcaill are the parents of nine children, seven of whom are living. They are Homer Mcaill, Los Angeles; Charles and Lawrence Mc Olll. Cincinnati; Mrs. Julia Calhoun and Mrs.

Jceph xoung, Indianapolis: Dessle Franz, Cincinnati, and Mrs. 4 William Wiley, California, O. There are twenty three grandchildren and one great giandchud. Members of the family win attend the dinner honoring the parents, sun day. EVERYDAY SUBJECTS Dtscostad by on.

a. cacma Conyrtsbted Brieial. Ceaa. views tsaareaalTO What are dreaauf ewr My opinion is that modren dream literature has created a rather morbid Interest in these nocturnal wanderings of the mind. 'Any excess In Introspection is bad for body or souL Let us suppose you dream vivdly of a wonderful city with marble palaces and gardens of bewitching beauty.

The colors and the perfumes ae' those of paradise, and you experience' moments of ecstasy. Then you awake. Zt Is Monday morning, and you must catch the 7:30 as usual to begin the daily grind at the office. Assuming this to be an impressive dream. should say that it satisfies your desire for that which you do not find in everyday existence.

It Is the fulfillment of a wish. But If you had been taken through a series of hells such as Dante describes, it would have been the mental objectifying of your I ears; the panorama of disasters you had Imagined In your waking moments, i Dreams may be impressive as mar velous echoes of conscious desires, hopes or fears, but they are no more than eacboes, and distorted at that, for sleep the mind appears to be largely destitute of the will's control. it astonishes me that many women and some men still consult dream books. They may not be very serious about it: nevertheless, these manuals of guidance to the perplexed appear to have large sales. It can be reason ably assumed that the more intelli gent a person is the less notice he or she takes of an irresponsible realm wherein fancy supplants Jmaglnation, and the Impossible masquerades as the real.

DaUaa, Tea. Waal the British think Gears WashiBftea la this hieeateaalal year el hia hirth? They think very highly of him as a world hero who had no posturings for people to ridicule, no meanness for them to gossip about, no weakness for them to condone. When he died he left behind no victims to cry out MENUS OF THE DAY (By Mrs. Aleisnaer Gear re Bread Padding Recipe. (Well flavored) Breakfast.

Orange Juice Cooked Wheat Cereal Cream Soft Cooked Eggs Buttered Toast Coffee Luncheon. Bean Soup Crackers Fruit cookies Apple Sauce Tea Dinner. Baked Hash Baked Squash Biscuit Honey Pear Salad, Bread Pudding Lemon Sauce Coffee Beaa Saaa (Servlac Sla). a cups navy beans 4 eupe water 1 3 cup chopped celery 2 tablespoons chopped onion 4 caps boUins water ft teaspoon powdered cloves 1 teaspoon salt teaspoon pepper 2 teaspoons cbopped Thoroughly wash beans and add cold water. Let soak two hours or Add rest of Ingredients and simmer for two and one half hours In covered pan.

Bake Bash. fuse Leftovers) cape cbopped' .2 tablaapoons eoolted meat cbopped onions IVr caps cbopped cap cooked cooked potatoes i peaa teaspoon salt Vm cup gravy Mix Ingredients and pour Into buttered baking dish. Bake twenty minutes in moderate oven. Other leftover vegetables can be used in place of peas. Bread raddla (Sorrla Bis).

2 enps bread. 14 teaspoons crumbed vanilla 3 cups not milk teaspoon 2 3 cup aatar a lemon extract 2 fca, beaua 3 tablespoons teaspoon a butter, saelted Mix bread and milk Let stand ten minutes. Mix well and add rest of ingredients. Pour into buttered bak Ine dish. Set in nan of hot water (and bake forty five minutes in moderately slow oven.

Serve warm or 'chilled. PAGE HOLE (WOOD SIGHTS jvj SOUNDS Br BkMa Cstl HOLLYWOOD. October 17. There Is a colony of "beards" down by the railroad tracks in Loa Angeles which now helps Hollywood In one of its once difficult casting problems. There wae a time when a call for ten, twenty or thirty "beards" meant a city wide quest, the corralling of any passerby whose face boasted a fairly respectable thatch.

There were, of course, men who shied from the razor as a matter of business principle, to be ready for movie work: fat an emergency. The rise of front parlors society drama sent down the market value of beards. however, and when a picture required any unusual number of "beards' there was the hurried expedition to the highways and byways in search) of.bewhlskered talent. 4 No more That colony down by the railroad tracks provides "beards" of all varieties and lengths. Once a eucalyptus studded hillside, it now Is adorned with scrubby shacks occupied by men who have little else to do except watch their whiskers grow.

Mike Sleber. a studio character who knows the "beards" by intimate acquaintance and In fact In his long career In Pictures often has had op portunity to serve as one on two weeks notice Informs me of the comparatively simple procedure of signing up a group of "beards" for picture work. Mike steered the casting office down there when they needed an unusual assortment 500 I believe for Ruth Chatterton's "Common Oround." and the results were amazing. According to Mike, one simply' approaches the hillside and Whistles there Deinc no telephones and shouts "Beards Beards!" and they come running out of their shacks, ready and eager for service. Useful service, at that A production that needs a quan tlty of "beards" today needs them to day, and has not time to wait a week or two weeks for unrazored nature to take its course.

That unusual call, for 600 "beards" was cause for ftasting and rejoicing on the shack dotted hill. And that night beards of every color and shape short, stubby beards, long gray beards, bristly black beards, bel ligerent red beards, as well as a few amateurish, adolescent fuzzes were wrapped around steaks and bacon and beans with the Joyous abandon that xomes with good fortune and recogni tion. For the "beards" are recognised when pictures need beards. against hla injustice or tyranny. He was supreme In an age of command ing personalities.

His contemporaries were fiercely jealous of each other, but they candidly conceded 'him the premier place. He seemed to men such ss Talley rand. Burke and Pitt like a reincar nation of one xf Plutarch's figures, without flaw and blameless In all his public endeavors. Despite the fact that he was unfortunate In his early biographers, his reputation, and better still, his actual character, have grown in the esteem and reverence of Britons of every political complexion. They have erected his statue in Lodon's finest square, where it is sur rounded by the monuments of other but lees famous worthies.

It is said that the Athenians tired of hearing Aristides called "just." but English speaking men. wherever found, are not wearied of Washington's illus trlous name. For whatever his faults may be the Briton is not an ungenerous foe. He clearly understands that the cause for which our first President adventured all he was or had con tained a signal contribution to Brit Tintcx Equals Professional Oyoing For a Feiv Pennies! Quick, Easy, Perfect It Saves Much Llcney For Smart Womsn! Economical Tin tea haa replaced expensira professional dyeing in muliona of budgets I It is ao easy to restore "iuBt out of the shop color to faded fabrics with Tin tea I So easy to aire anj article in the wardrobe or home new and different colors It is no more trouble than ordinary rinsing and so inexpen aire yet Tintex gives flawless results without streaks or spots. See the Tintex Color Card at an Drug Store or Notion Counter.

Make' your selection from the 35 fascinating colors it offers. Then try Tintex and save money ever after! THE TBSTEX GROUP Tintex Crmy Box Tint and dyes all materials. Tintex Blue Box Foe lace trixnmed silks tinu the silk, lace reatsins original color. Tintex Color Kemover Remorea eld dark color from any material so it caa be dyed a new light color. JTTutexK bluing for restoring white neas to all yellowed white materials.

At ell drug and notion counters wr TINTS AND DYES FOR THE As 'ITT 5WsV i ijaci av i ENTIRE IBr WraUss GalMs NSW YORK, Octoba 17. Broad way's social season got under way with the opening of the Plerrett Dansante Club, which stages its swanky supper dances .2 one of Park avenue's grand hotels. society has a headline representa ain Is future freedom, and for this reason alone that country Is profoundly grateful to him as one of the chief creators of modern constitutionalism. The heartiest tributes to hia memory have been given by anch historians as Maeauiey. arereiyan and Bryce, ana such statesmen' as Burke.

Beacons field and Gladstone. There Is no discord abroad to mar the chorus of raise and thanksgiving we raise at ome In this commemorative year 1832. rCopyrlsht 1S3X New York Tribune. tne IT'S A OF' WEEK FAiWILl S.E Sixteen years! A lot has happened in Indianapolis since 'Armourand. Company opened its plant here.

People have grown; th boys and girls of sixteen years ago now have families of their own. Indianapolis has grown; it has become t3 more beautiful, more comfortable city than most of us dreamed it wouldb.e sixteen years ago. And the Armour plant has grown; grown with Indianapolis and Indianapolis people, because we have served Indianapolis; we are Indianapolis people. From a small beginning, the original plant has expanded until it now covers 11 acres of ground, and ranks as one of the most important packing houses in the world. Every day this week, the leading retail meatdealers and grocery stores will feature delicious, tempting Armour Foods.

Go to these Armour dealers they are the outstanding dtalirs in theirs communities who have served you and They carry Armour, products, because they know that 'Armour quality is always the same. And this week it Is especially fitting! that you should enjoys these Armour. Foods. v. :5 ED tkn at these Saturday night affairs, and some of the town better known artists and writers mingle with the stage folk.

The board of governors Includes such names as Jeanne Au bert. Howard Chandler Christy. Walter P. Chrysler. Jr, Pegyy Fears, Bert LyteH.

Herbert Marshall. 3. H. Roth afeL Lenore Ulrie and Mrs. Julius Walsh.

One sees all of these, and dozens of other Uttering eharacters at the oancea. There a always a spTinkhng of debutantes on hand. The Inevitable star gazers and auto graph hunters hang around the doors to watcn the famous come and go. On the opening night this awe smitten assemblage was treated to the sight of one of the vivacious debbles sliding down the brass rail of the ARMOUR'S 16th YEAR IN INDIAW APOtaGZ OF SPECIAL VALU EslTOlYMlil to what this plant consider the Today, this Armour plant employs an average of 38(1 men and women of Indianapolis, pur payroll this year amounts to about $750,000. Practically every cent, of this sum Is gpent ia Indian apolis for the necessities and luxuries of life, fl i We purchase about $500,000 worth of supplies ce, lumberretCe largely from Indianapolis business hpusesVfyery yeare tij We paid nearly $200,000 last year to the farmers raisers of Indiana for The operation oS our Indianapolis plant has created a contUnt flow of money from the East to Indian pockets because it is largely in the East that our products Our employees are the nature of our occur.

We operate ti ir lb I grand stairway. Just Inside the Park avenue entrance. Into the arms of her escort. Such fun! i The road ahead looks rosy for Kath erme Hepburn now, since the Broadway actress scored a Hollywood triumph in her picture with John Bar rymorsv But behind SXlss Hepburn's screen and stage success is a story of heartbreak that only a determined and talented young woman could have brought to such a happy sequence. A Hartford (Conn.) girl, she was graduated from Bryn Mawr and.

It seemed at first, was destined to step right Into Broadway prominence. She had cut cults a figure In school dramatics. was possessed of undeniable beauty and an attractive personality. A Baltimore stock company manager, ambitious to make the Broadway grade himself, gave her a good start in a show he was brtngtmr here. Miss Hepburn played the part for one performance in a Great Neck tryout "Amateur was written all over her.vv In the next three years she.

had a couple" of understudy, jobs, but waited hi vain 'for an opportunity to play. When she landed roles In other productions, either she failed mcans.to Indianapolis following facts: cattle, aheepr and assured of regular; employment. business, complete shutdowns every week in the year. (0) to make the grade herself cr show Reeled over Cjuickly. rvtn th show which fiat''y brought her to the attention Broadway.

The vYarrior'a of last seaaoo. she was dropped trzi the cast as unsatisfactory. Lut i happened that the girl who took 1 1 place was le liked by the man menu Production had to be rurt 1. There was no time to rehearse anei." tr newcomer, so Mi lieobum was called. AU at once she found herself.

When Tha Warriors Kurbard cpened C.a scored a personal hit. Xhc mark cf the amateur was gone I Herman ShunJln the producer, wut 1 teU you that thirteen is his lucky number. way of Clustrstion ha offers the following facts: He produced "the Last MUe" cn February 11 "4 Twelve persons in the cast had thirteen letters in their names. He bought "Orrnd Hotel on a nth. ft opened or a 12th.

There are thirteen letters In hla name. i IU thinks lia was his lucki.st year, and the digits added give thir teen. i and livestock Becaust ef simply; can't ii (0) p) i.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1869-1999