Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1925 — Page 4

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The Indianapolis Times ROY W. HOWARD, President. FELIX F. BRUNER, Editor. WM A. MAYBORN. Bus. Mgr. j : Member of the Scrtpps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • * • Client of the United Press and the NBA Service • • * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214 220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis • • * Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week * * * PHONE—MA. in 3500. -

No law shall be passed restraining the free interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print freely, on any subject whatever.—Constitution of Indiana. • .

Why Catch Bandits and Let Them Go ? jq I DEFICIENTLY aroused Indiana can I j come out of lethargy and mete speedy justice. Witness the Capture and sentence of a bank bandit within twenty-four hours Friday and Saturday. ‘ ; V Indianapolis police, who captured Everett Bridgewater here Friday and Kokomo authorities who arraigned and sentenced him to ten to twenty-one years in prison Saturday deserve praise for striking one of the most telling blows in the war on bank bandits. The Indianapolis police and other officers in the State who aided in the capture of Bridgewater not only got their man, but got him with so much “goods on him’’ that there was nothing for him to do but march into court and plead guilty. If the police can round up a couple more members of the gangs which have terrorized banks in small towns and small banks in Indianapolis for four or five months and land them behind prison bars for good long stretches the youngsters who, according to detectives, have emulated the older heads and with nervous fingers on triggers perpetrated some of the boldest of the long series of hold-ups, may not be so eager to start on criminal careers. It’s pretty soft to “stick up” a small bank and walk off with a roll of three or four thousand dollars with which to play poker and the ponies for a few weeks. Being riddled by a policeman’s automatic pistol or locked up for ten years isn’t so rosy. And much as we may criticise police in the heat of a crime wave, police do catch bank robbers sometimes. Which leads to the thought that the whole job isn’t up to the police. There’s a body of august gentlemen over at the Statehouse we ought to remember when we’re wondering “why the police don’t do something.” The august body is the State board of pardons. The boaid comes into this Bridgewater affair this way. In rounding up Bridgewater the local police also arrested Clint Sims. Indianapolis remembers Sims as one of the gang which robbed the Beech Grove bank several years ago. The gentlemen at the Statehouse decided Clint had reformed and let him oijt of prison. No one appears to know whether Clint Sims was up to his old tricks, but according to detectives Clint’s company was not exactly above reproach. \ A man who will take a gun and walk into a bank to steal several thousand dollars wili use that gun with as deadly effect as he can if cornered. He ’ll do murder at the bat of an eye. Somehow, we can’t feel that a man, or

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO KNOW?

You can get an uiicwer to any question of fact or lnfomation by writing to Th' Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau. 1323 New York Ave., Waahlnton, 1). C., inclosing- 2 cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannoi be given, nor can extended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential.—Editor. Why Is the Mason and Dixon’s Line bo called? It is named for the English engineers who surveyed it in 1764-67. What is meant by the Athenian of Ephebic Oath? An oath of civic allegiance taken by the youth of Athens after the completion of his secondary education, and before entering upon his two years of military training. Who was Father Mathew? He was Theobald Mathew, apostle of temperance, born in Tipperary, Ireland, studied for the Catholic priesthood, but Joine dthe Capuchin Minorites; was in 1814 ordained a priest and located in Cork, where at sight of the cruel effects of drunk-

Evolution—Pro and Con

The subject that is uppermost In the news today; What do you know about it? Dqes the evolutionist say we are descended from monkeys? If not, what does he say? Does the theory of evolution preclude a belief in creation by God? What are the arguments that will be used in the big trial in Tennessee? What does William J. Bryan have to say on the subject?

CLIP COUPON HERE EVOLUTION Editor, Washington Bureau, The Indianapolis Times, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin, EVOLUTION PRO AND CON, and enclose herewith 5 cents In United States postage stamps or coin for same: NAME ST. & NO. or R. R CIT 7 .STATE lam a reader of Tfi Indianapolis Times. - - ,

youth, who’ll do that can be softened into docent citizenship by a few months in prison. Somel ody ought to m-ike it his business to watch the proceedings of the State board of pardons and if the parole application of a bandit—any kind of a pistol armed ruffian—comes up, raise such a commotion that the pardon board will not dare release the criminal un til his full term is served. We’ve prepared to shoot bank bandits on sight in Indianapolis. Why not keep a few of them, once we get our hands on them, where they can't shoot us just as long as we can? A Challenge to America’s Laws HICAGO had 170 murders in the first 151 not so unusual as a fourth of that number would be in any equal population in the countries from which Chicago’s inhabitants came. Compare the number of “old American” murderers with the record of England, or of the immigrant nationalities with the records of the countries from which they came, and you will find that the same numbers of the same sorts of people committed many more murders in America than in Europe. Some of the reasons are doubtless obvious, and explain if they do not excuse a part of the difference. But, even with this ellowance, the situation is a challenge to our lav.', government and institutions to vindicate themselves. Nobody Is Right All the Time ii R Mailing Week’’ served a purpose, in advertising the sorts of mailing blunders people make, and in perhaps reminding some of them not to make them so often. But it may also serve the purpose of reminding all of us of the futility of any reform which involves training the whole people to do anything right all the time. If millions of people mail letters with no address, some of those millions will occasionally look the wrong way in crossing a street, and walk into an automobile. If many of then: forget to sign or stamp their letters, some of them are going to step on the gas instead of the brake. Most of us do most things right most of the time. But nobody does everything right always. That is the reason machinery has to be made fool proof.” There are few fools. But all of us are momentary fools sometimes.

enness on the mass of people he resolved on a crusade to stamp it out; he started on this enterprise in 1827, but it took a year and a half before his mission bore any fruit, and then it was accompanied with marvelous success wherever he went. He lived from 1790 to 1856. What was the first. American newspaper? The earliest attempt to set up a newspaper in North America, or indeed in the Western hemisphere, was made at Boston by Richard Pierce, who employed Benjamin Harris to print it. The title was Public Occurrences both Foreign and Domestic. Only one copy was ever sisued (bearing date Thursday September 26. 1690) and of that number only one copy is known to exist —the copy preserved in the Colonial State Paper Office in London. The Journal was 7xll inches itn and consisted of a folded sheet, three pages of which were occupied with printed matter, two columns to a page, the fourth being left blank.

Our Washington Bureau has ready for you a bulletin on the subject, giving BOTH SIDES of the question: It gives briefly and simply the main arguments for and against the Theory of Evolution and especially the theory that man evolved from lower forms of life. Whichever side of the argument you may personally take, this bulletin gives YOUR side and the OTHER side, Fill out the coupon below and mail as directed:

From the prospectus we learn that it was the publishers’ intention to issue the paper monthly. But it so happened that the colonial authorities cast an evil eye upon the sheet, deeming it contained ‘‘reflections of a very high nature” and forthwith suppressed it. Is there any other nickname for Chicago than “the windy city”? Chicago has two nicknames. The ‘windy city” is an allusion to the high winds that prevail there, as well as to the general breeziness of the business and social atmosphere that characterizes it. Its other nickname is “Porkopolis” meaning “City of Pork" and refers to the enormous trade in hogs that is carried on in Chicago and the immense packing and meat establishments that are one of the distinguishing features of the city. Was the character of “Diana of the Crossways” as pictured by George Meredith taken from a real person? Mrs. Morton, whose married name later was Ddy Sterling-Maxwell, ! an English poetess, is supposed to have been the prototype of this character.

Yoo-Hoo By Hal Cochran Yoo-hoo there, Tommy and Willie and Jim, what say we go for a coolin’ off swim. Lot’s call our baseball game off for today and grab up our suits and be right on our way. ’Member the place down by Farmer Jones’ shed? The water is clear and It’s over yer head. Let’s fix a spring board as soon’s we arrive. Come on. kids. I’ll show ya the right way ta dive. , Any one here got a watch that is right. I gotta be home for my supper tonight. Gee, Mom gets mad when I’m late for my meals and I don’t want a lickin'; I know how it feels. . Look out for glass—you’ll be cuttin’ yer toes. Let’s all agree not to knot up our clothes. Four healthy splashes with nary a wait. Four voices shout, “Gee, the water is great.” 4 \

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Who Should Have Children ?

By Mrs. Walter Ferguson _j HEN God drove otn first par\lu ents from the Garden of Eden, according to the Bible story. He told Eve that in sorrow should she bring forth children, and He also said unto Adam, ‘‘ln the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread.” Women have become accustomed present day vituperationa from pulpit and press as to how they shirk their duty when they do not bear children, but long ago the men found it convenient to forget that their first duty to humanity is to plow and sow and reap. And there is just as much intelligence in our pretending that all men should now till the soil as there is that every married woman should

Tom Sims Says The good or bad thing about being in love is you can’t drink. A man usually gets what he deserves in this world. That’s the trouble with the world.

Blessed are the bootleggers for they have inherited a large part of this earth. Wasn’t it about this time of year when Rip Van Winkle went to sleep and slept 20 years? The differences which cause most trouble are indifferences. It’s a rong road that nas no

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turning back. / The skeleton in the aveage closet is in the bank book instead. A man who married one of the super sex last June thinks she is the supper sex now. Love they neighbor, but be not too friendly with borrowing his goods. These are the days the boss gets mad when he finds things went along nicely while he was away lishing. Here and there you hear of a stream being dragged for someone who didn’t think it was deep. Poor breaks cause auto crashes. Bad breaks cause business crashes. The honeymoon is over by the time he gets her taught that salads are not food. Now is about time to begin bad habits to swear off next New ’ ears "He who says saccharine is the sweetest thing never slept until noon on a week day. (Copyright. 1925, NEA Service, Inc.)

RIGHT HERE IN INDIANA By GAYLORD NELSON

THERE WAS NO ACCIDENT O’ IN an appeal from city court, where he had been fined speeder was 'reed from a speeding charge by a special judge in Criminal Court Saturday Two motorcycle policemen testified that the defendant, a sub-

stantial ctlzen driving a big Packard car, was making forty-six miles an hour, according to their speedometers, when arrested. The defendant said he was going between twenty and twentyfive miles per hour. There was no acciden, the Judge pointed out, and as the defendant was

Nelson

a “good citizen” he was “inclined” to think he wasn’t guilty. So he dismissed the case. Perhaps it was justifiable. But if the accused motorist instead of being a substantial citizen driving a sumptuous automobile had been a nobody operating a broken down flivver would the evidence of the arresting officers have been so treated? The speed limit established by law Is presumed to be in the Interest of safety, and to apply with equal rigor to good citizens and bad. It is the rate of speed not the character of the driver, nor whether he did or didn’t cause an accident, that Is penalized. Unless the speed law is to be enforced on all culprits without distinction It Is useless. MORE THAN~ ENOUGH SEATS SHE Indianapolis Street Rail' way presented data at tho bus hearing the other day showing that the number of passengers carried by It only averaged 59 per cent of the seating capacity of the street cars. Perhaps that proves the street car service Is adequate for the transportation needs of the city, and motor bus lines shouldn’t be allowed to compete with It. But when the railroads were started there were plenty of vacant seats In the stage coaches. The fact that railroad trains weren't filled to capacity didn’t deter the electric interurbans from entering the passenger-carrying business. Nor will pmpty seats in motor busses prevent establishment of passenger air lines. Transportation facilities are not improved because of necessity, but

be a mother. There is not enough noil to go round and already there are too many infants, so that neither contention has much sound sense. Fitness Is Consideration Every wife should not bear children. Many fine women are married to men who are neither physically nor morally fit to be fathers, and countless wives are not strong enough themselves to bring sturdy children into the world. It is idotic for us to go on prating about more children until we have learned to care for those whom we now have. It is silly to assert that women who do drudging work in dire poverty should be mothers; it is still more foolish to insist that the rich always be prolific, because in many cases the wealthy are least fitted ©f any of us to make good parents. The woman, who being married, does not feel that strong mother urge, who does not pine and ache for a downy head against her breast, or who believes that she will not be satisfied to give up other pleasures and activities to lok after a baby, had much better remain childless. Too Many Unloved The world is already overstocked with unloved children—too many unwanted. neglected babies—too many poor little tots who have everything else in life but intelligent parental care. Babies are not like hogs and calves and chickens. They must have something else save food to exist properly; life means more to them than mere breathing. We have no right to usher them into a world on.y for poverty and death. Let the men return to the plow; let them get down to hard physical labor such as God Imposed upon Adam, before they become too earnest in their denunciation of our sex. many of whom are beginning to think it small to bear children in agony into a world where their sons are killed off periodically by the cannons of war, and where their girls are often the prey of marauding males who have never done one honest day’s work. Only that man who exists solely by the sweat of his brow has any right to call the childless woman a shirker. HUSBANDS SUPREME SAO PAULO, Brazil. June 22.-—ln a small town near here the mayor decreed that any barber cutting a woman’s hair without permission of her hsuband, father or oldest male member of her family should be fined about $6. Other Attractions The Beikell Players are offering "It’s a Boy” for their week's bill at English's. Robert Reilly and company are headlined at the Lyric while the Palace is featuring the Peter Pan Revue. James E Hardy is one of the entertainers at Broad Ripple Park.

additional bus routes should be authorized in Indianapolis empty street car seats shouldn’t be given much weight. In urtermlnlng convenience and necessity the accent should be on convenience. DOG IN THE MANGER ’ \ I commission will conduct a —J hearing tomorrow on objections to erection of a $3,000,000 hotel at Fall Creek and Meridian St. as planned. 'One corner of the structure will be nearer the Fall Creek property line than the ordinance permits. Meanwhile construction work on the project is halted. Three months ago the plan commission apptoved erection of this hotel in a district zoned for residences. For two months excavation and foundation work have been in progress on the site. The city building commissioner knew of such work, but raised no objection until the foundation was completed. Then work was stopped. The hotel will he a distinct acquisition to the city. No one denies It will be a decided improvement on a lot now adorned principally by billboards and weeds. It is not claimed that one corner of the structure projecting a few feet beyond the building line established by ordinance will destroy any of the beauty of Fall Creek Blvd. But because the owners failed to request a permit for the encroachment, the work is summarily stopped until a formal public hearing can be held. If the matter was so vital why was the foundation work allowed to proceed so far without hindrance? While the plan commission is thus engaged the Chaamber of Commerce and other civic bodies are besieging the board of works to rescind its order for opening Oriental St. as part of the elevation project. The board refuses to recede from its position that this street shall be opened. Oriental St. extends only two blocks south of the tracks to be elevated. Its opening would benefit only a few residents in the immediate vicinity while its dosing would only slightly inconvenience them. But if the street is opened the Foid Motor Company assembly plants, employing 800 men, will be greatly inconvenienced. Costly alterations in the plant will be necessary. There is even prospect that Indianapolis may lose this Industry as a result. Nevertheless the board adheres to its decision to open the street. Some Indianapolis city boards seem to adopt a dog-in-the-manger attitude. They are apparently obsessed with delusions of grandeur. Instead of trying to promote the greatest good to the greatest number they seem to be more interested in vindicating their own.

/icpc conifs Those aieu/ f MAKE me waiton a corner for /neighborsof ours/ i couldn't) j j*] meVs^i>l^oo 'good tovou-V 1^ MISTAKE THAT LOOK OF SUFFERING SPUDZ ON HIS HCNPECKE.D HANDLES HER HUSBAND-HE'STHAT TROUBLE. WITH THAT BIRD IS HE LITTLE WART WHO LIVES NEXT DOOR _ \ DOESN'T KNOW HOWTO HANDLE AND THINKS HE COULD RUN THE UNIVERSE V WOMEN- I'LL HAVE TO QIVE HI \ WISH HE’D TRY RUNNING A LAWNMOU/ER f WELL-HE REFUSED TO HIRE A VI -:■ j MAID SO HIS WIFE JUST PACKED UP f ffi IS / THE CHILDREN THIS MORNING AND I A ill; 1 l WENT TO THE COUNTRV UNTIL HE Vs I fjj QJ A # 8 P / DOES HIRE ONE/.' HE KNOWS AS fyLflfl i l\ MUCH ABOUT HANDLING A WOMAN ‘ I Tl Ift j Ip \AS A BATHINCj BEAUTV KNOWS / l ® ABOUT DEEP SEA DIVING'-' / -niiAi J# V - Tin WHAT A SURPRISE THAT \ MAN ISqOINC,TOQEr - TOP

Colleen Is the Cutest Desert Flower, Dix Registers With Shock Punch

By Shaffer B. Berkshire

E 1 LL the water that this desert flower got was that included i in a barrel on top of an old shanty made out of a box car. Location is in a western desert. Am speaking of a human desert flower—Maggie Fortune as played by Colleen Moore in ‘‘The Desert Flower.” Don’t mind tellin’ you that this picture gives Colleen a chance to

wear men’s trous ers, a blacW old derby and about everything that a girl ‘‘ain't” supposed to wear. Maggie is just a pathetic little lassie of the desert. Her stepfather is a brute who presides over a rough gang of section men on a railroad. They are all tough, even the weather. Maggie has a baby sister and she has to be both mother and sister to this cute little girl. Maggie’s mother is dead.

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Colleen Moore

And Maggie can t read nor write, but she says her prayers every night asking that she save enough money to send her sister to school, that she get a handsome husband and that she is able to ride in a private railroad car like she saw once. And before this little Pollyanna story of the desert is completed, her prayers have been answered. In the hands of Miss Moore, Maggie is one of those delightful cutups that makes everybody in the world go right but her stepfather. Os course, to actually live this sort of character it would be another problem, but on the screen Colleen Moore as Maggie is the cutest sort of lassie who is up to all sorts of little tricks

“The Desert Flower’’ is a Joy movie. It will make you feel all nice, good, contented and more than willing to pay your income tax. This sort of entertainment makes you forget all about the battle of evolution and Just makes you thankful that there is clean, decent and interesting movies being made this day. And we say proudly that it is a First National picture. The “handsome htro” of the story is played by Lloyd Hughes. Thai is, he is handsonr- • when he is shaved and sober; we mean the character, not Lloyd hiitiself. In a speak easy western bar, he and the others get their hooch served in an ice cream cone. All they have to do is to flip the ice cream off and drink the contents of the cone. And the bartender is modern, too, because he is a radio fan and is constantly listening in. There are lots of new things, meaning business, in “The Desert Flower.” The character parts are well done. By this time you will have the idea that I am dippy about this cute little cutup o& a movie. Well, you are right. Barney Rapp and his recording orchestra is the opening attraction of the summer season of traveling Jazz organizations. Rapp is a happy choice for the opening. He sets a pace for the coming bands to shoot at. May they all come up to it I Rapp’s orchestra plays the soft soothing syncopated numbers or the crash-bang red hot type with equal effectiveness. He has a bunch of real musicians and unlike so many dance orchestras these boys know how to act on a stage. The act as w-ell as the music has been well directed. “Aloha Land,” a beautiful colored scenic, a news reel and a comedy complete the program. At the Circle all week. -I- -I- -IOLD AND NEW MAKE UP GOOD BILL Prince and Pauper; for centuries this combination has furnished romance and thrills for the seeker of entertainment. “The Sportirig Venus,” Blanche Sweet’s latest picture, on view at the Apollo this week, is all that could be desired in a modern ver-

THE SPITDZ FAMILY—By TALBURT

sion of the aforementioned theme. It has lords and ladies, princes and commoners, especially the last.

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Blanche Sweet

and carries through until the great fight is over, but do not get it confused with a war picture, for that is what it is not. The bill includes a picture of very" ancient vintage, shown just for the contrast between our present day “feature” and the old “moving picture” of the “Nickelodians.” One would never suspect four such characters as Mary Pickford, Henry Walthall, Lionel Barrymore and Harry Cary of all furnishing fun in one picture, but after seeing this old timer you will admit that the tragedy of that day would go very well now as burlesque. Bill also includes Fox News and Emil Seidel’s Orchestra. At the Apollo all week. -(By the Observer.) ■I- -I* -ITHE SHOCK PINCH IS A KNOCKOUT Richard Dix has done it again! What? Made another romantic comedy knockout. It is called “The Shock Punch” and can, and should, be seen at the Ohio this week. Nobody will like this picture but the men, women and children that

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Richard Dix

In order that his son may not be left behind in business deals father prepares him with a course in the art of sock 'em. It is here that Randall develops the "shock punch" that comes,, in awfully handy later. running in Central Park he meets the girl (Frances Howard). Os course she makes him give up fighting, but he doesn't forget how. Her papa is building a sky scraper which must be finished by a certain date and in order to rush it he is spending all his time on the job. In order to look after papa’s health the girl is also on the Job al! day long. And in order to be near the girl Randall gets a job as iron worker (don't know what the union thought about it, but it doesn’t hurt the picture any). Suspense? How about the hero riding slowly toward the top of the building on a girder suspended from a cable the strands of which ore slowly cracking? For thrills there is a fight on top girders of the unfinished sky scraper. It is here the girl gives him back the promise not to fight. Os course ho probably would not have been thrown off without an argument any way, but her encouragement helped him to land the shock putsch. For novelty there are some splendid views of New- York and the harbor from high in the air. If the powers continue to give Dix this sort of he-man comedies he is going

MONDAY, JUNE 22, 1925

to make a lot of theaters hang out the S. R O. Percy Moore and Theodore Babcock are the fathers of the boy and girk respectively. Walter Long is the big, bad, villain and Gunboat Smith, the old time battler, supplies the prize ring atmosphere. Lester Huff, organist, is asking the audience to entertain him this week. He plays popular numbers and asks the customers to sing them. Suspect they enjoy it more than Huff. Comedy, news reel and selections l-y the Charlie Davis Orchestra complete the bill. At the Ohio all week. -I- -I- -IA NEW WAY TO KID THE HOME OF PESTS Discovered: Anew Pied Piper. He is John T. Murray as Perry Reynolds in “Stop Flirting” this week’s feature at the Colonial. When the flirting shieks get too thick around Vivian, his wife, played

Ronald Colman plays the part of the ambitious young commoner who wishes to make a name for himself, and by this means win the hand of the beautiful Lady Grayle, portrayed by Blanche Sweet. Lew Cody as the fortune hunting Prince is not quite up to his old standards, but is entertaining, just the same. The siory starts in England shortly before the war

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Wanda Hawley

only thing in it to clink, w'as some spare silver from the dining room. If you like your movie comedies all hoked up with slap-stick you will like “Stop Flirting." It is good entertainement of its kind. Sort of like an 'overgrown “two reeler." Perry is caught in some Innocent situations by wifie and they look queer to her. She refuses to accept his alibis. Decides instead to do a little flirting herself and she does it in wholesale quantities. She has no many guests to dinner the butler '(Jack Duffy) thinks she is running a cafeteria. He even brings in the park benches for them to sit on and in order to get them fed before breakfast time he wears roller skates while serving. Vivian even Invites a fire company to stay for dinner after they had answered a false alarm at her house. “Anything in trousers," seemed to be her motto. Perry’s efforts to win her back occupy the rest of the picture. The laughing power of this movie depends upon the smart sub titles and rough house comedy. Funny if you like it. I did. Hallam Cooley, Ethel Shannon and Jimmie Adams round out a capable comedy cast. News Reel, Charles Puffy comedy and the American Harmonists are on the bill. At the Colonial all week.

see It. It has everything needed for good, breezy, hot weather entertainment. Namely laughs, thrills, romance and good old fashioned m e 1 o dramatic suspense. Dix is Randall Savage, whose fat her believes that, all things being equal, the man with the greatest physical strength to keep him going is the man who wins in a business conflict.

Movie Verdict Circle—“ The Desert Flower” with Cooleen Moore is one of those sweet little and be&utflul stories that goes right to the heart. This sort of stuff will make Colleen a great favorite In the land of makebelleve. Ohio—Richard Dix lands solidly with "The Shock Punch.” The kind of picture Dix does better than anything else and probably better than anyone else. • Apollo—“ The Sporting Venus" an up to the minute smart romance. Interesting "revival" of an ancient feature on tho bill. Colonial—" Stop Flirting" is good entertainment if you care for the hokum brand of comedy.

by Wanda Hawley. Perry gets out the old cocktail shaker and walks sedately past the slickhaired gathering With the ingredients clinking merrily. Os course, the boys all leave Vivian and follow Perry. He invitee them into the next room, slams the door, turns the key and there you are. It works nicely until wifie steals the shaker and then, alas it is discovered that the