Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 222, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 February 1929 — Page 18
PAGE 18
RIOT OF COLOR IN INDIANA OFFERING Singer's Midgets Are Talented Performers, With Their Own Jazz Band and Entertainers. BY JOHN T. HAWKINS TOYLAND come to life reign* at the Indiana this week in the company of Singer's Midgets. Scenes such as the midgets appear in would make a perfect setting to stage Gulliver's travels among the Lillipute, provided any one reads Gulliver’s travels any more. Perfect little men and women in miniature. They are talented performers have their troupe of elephants, their jazz band, strong man and several tiny dancers. Settings are a riot of color. Milton Sills and Thelma Todd, in "The Crash,” have made a fast moving and highly interesting movie of the life of a railroad wrecking boss and the wife he picks from the chorus of a wandering burlesque show'.
The story opens with the show train stalled and the wrecking crew present to remedy the trouble. Miss Todd, as the belle of the chorus, is tired of listening to the show manager's left handed proposals of marital bliss and when she accidentally becomes acquainted with
the boss of the wrecking crew’her heart is gone. Her lream of a cosy home looks like it nay come trile. And Sills, as the hardboiled ooss, is equally ;mitten and in a few days his home town is startled with the news of anew wife to take her place in local society. But the big hitch is in the treatment accord-
Milton Sills
ed the new wife by her fellow townsmen. In their eyes nothing good can come out of the chorus, and she is included. For a while the pair are happy In their little home and then the unforeseen happens and they split. A dramatic climax is reached when the former wrecking boss, now out of a job, hears that his wife's train is wrecked. He forgets their quarrel. She does too—later—and we are led to believe that once more a matrimonial wreck has been cleared away from life’s sidings. At the Indiana. tt u * MONTE BLUE IN ADVENTURE TA.LE After a lopg, long absence Monte Blue is back in town in a thrilling tale of love, adventure and airplane
polar exploration. Blue, with H. B. Warner, Lois Wilson, Edmond Breese, and Tully Marshall, enact a story of the love of two young arctic explorers, who desire the same girl. Blue and Warner are the two explorers and they set out on a trip to conquer the southern polar wastes by
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Monte Blue
airplane. They get close to the South Pole and the plane is wrecked. Blue is injured and his partner, thinking of the girl back home, leaves him to die in the wilderness. But wandering Eskimos, or whatever they are, find the disabled member of the party and nurse him back to health. But he is gone many months before he fights his way back to civilization again. And so when he, Blue, returns to the girl he loves he finds that his treacherous companion has marrired her and has taken the honors heaped upon him for the polar dash. Out of his love for the girl, played by Miss Wilson, Blue does not expose the true story of the exploration party. When he does get back, however, Blue finds out that it was him the girj loved and not the man she married. She had thought him dead in the antarctic. Time passes and the two men again make at attempt for the south pole by airplane. This time they succeed. The American flag is dropped on the axis of the world
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and the return trip started for the supply ship. Again Blue's companion tries to kill him and the plane is wrecked. Blue is merciful enough though to take his ungrateful partner on his back and carry him to safety. There is more to the story, and it will please. Blue does some fine work here, and it is the first time a talking picture of his has been shown in Indianapolis, and that should be enough recommendation. At the Apollo. a u YOU WILL LOVE
THE FLYING FLEET Here is a picture that will make you happy and excited. Am telling you about "The Flying Fleet” with Ramon Novarro, Anita Page and Ralph Graves.
Here is a story that young men will like. It is the story of how six fine young men attempt to become fliers for Uncle Sam after graduating from Annapolis. Novarro is cast as one of those guys who, when he likes a fellow, would go to death for him. That is Novarro’s attitude for the character that
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Ramon Novirro
Graves plays. Both are buddies. Tommy, played by Novarro, and Steve, played by Graves, both fall in love with Anita Page. Steve doesn’t always play fair, but Tommy does. The love theme is beautifully handled on the part of the trio. Here is a story that will make your heart go pitter patter because it is so human. , The scenes devoted to how Uncle Sam makes hardboiled and loyal flyers out of his men are wonderfully done. This picture is blessed with wonderful photography, and the very best possible direction. The scenes showing a giant airplane trying to
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make a Pacific ocean flight are wonderful. And when the plane falls and the rescue ships and planes start—well, you will be on the edge of your seat. Here is a picture for the entire family. All young men should see this one. Now at Loew’s Palace. a a IRISH ATMOSPHERE AND SONGS AT CIRCLE A nice, docile film that may or may not stare that common moviedisease known as the “squirms'” is Mother Machree, at the Circle this week. Those of Irish ancestry will find a surfeit of old Erin’s songs and Belle Bennett, Victor McLaglen and Neil Hamilton. From a slow, hesitating start that rings in the question of whether it is a sea drama or Irish folk-lore, Mother Machree takes Belle Bennett—in the title role —to America, Victor McLaglen, a wandering troubadour, follows her to “land of the free and the home of the roll-your-own.” At this juncture Mother Machree takes on sideshow ways w T ith the cussing McLaglen of “What Price Glory” fame becoming a tatooed man and Belle Bennett a "half-lady” for a circus. Mother Machree puts her son in boarding school and pays his tuition out of her sideshow proclivities. The boarding school finds out her occupation—her son is chased from the school. Later he’s adopted by the boarding school madam when Mother Machree's desire to raise him a gentleman overcomes her maternal instinct. The film shoves off at this point into Mother Machree's trials and tribulations to earn a living as a scrub-woman—without her boy. She takes work in a wealthy home. Her son, Neil Hamilton—and grownup —comes a courting the daughter Li the home. Mother Machree helps him. Belief that the film may wear itself out in this fashion is given a rude shock when “blooey”— war with the customary Mars flourishing his broadax—or whatever it is —slips over the horizon. Mother Machree’s boy joins up. So does McLaglen, who trades his patrolman’s uniform for the more natural garb of khaki. Belle Bennett gets in a few tender farewells, McLaglen swears out of the comer of his mouth, Hamilton looks pretty—and the sound-organ plays “Mother Machree.” They go to war—and to please the pacifists—both of them come back without doing any “movie” fighting. Naturally everyone finds his proper mate—and the film ends with spectators desiring to crucify the “powers that be” in filmdom for giving McLaglen, Belle Bennett, such a
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vehicle for their arts or rather making Mother Machree such a limp film-lady. A Fox movietone reel with two other sound specialties close the program. At the Circle. On view at other theaters today are George Arliss at English's; vaudeville at the Lyric and burlesque at the Mutual. ARREST 300 IN CHICAGO Third Raid in Three Weeks Staged on Crime Hannts. Bu United Press CHICAGO, Feb. 4.—For the third successive week-end, police raiding squads sw r ept through Chicago's underworld. Nearly 300 men and women w’ere arrested. Fourteen robbery victims identified eight prisoners as holdup men. Two others, seized in the raids, may solve more than .thirty robberies police said.
STOMACH MADE LIFE MISERABLE Had Constant Back-ache, Too. Tells How She Regained Health. “It's wonderful to be well again,” writes Mrs. N. Tomsic, 855 W. Bridge St. Kankakee, HI., in telling of her quick recovery after year- of ill health. "I suffered dreadfully from indigestion, constipation, and backache, since 1922,” she says. “At times, my heart would palpitate and pound so hard I couldn’t work. I was weak, dizzy and all worn-out. I couldn’t sleep and often felt so ill I had to get out of bed and sit in a chair. My kidneys pained me constantly, and every joint in my body felt sore. I tried one remedy after another without any real benefit, until at last I began taking Viuna. I got relief right away, and steadily grew better ev<jry day. Today I am entirely rid of stomach trouble, back-ache and head-ache. The heart pounding and dizzy spells are things of the past. lam sleeping fine, fating heartily, and doing my work without the least distress. The first and only relief I ever had in all those years of suffering, came from Viuna.” Thousands of hopeless sufferers from kidney trouble, back-ache, stomach trouble and rheumatism, have been restored to perfect health by this wonder medicine. Why shouldn’t it do as much for you? Try one bottle of Viuna under positive guaranty. $1 at druggists or mailed postpaid by Iceland Medicine Cos., Indianapolis, Ind. VIUNA The Wonder Medicine
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ASKS LIFE FOR KIDNAPER Terre Haute Mothers Back Proposed Bill In General Assembly. A sheaf of telegrams, letters and notes all asking mat his bill making kidnaping a life imprisonment crime will be presetned to the committee on me organization of courts Tuesday by State Represenative Louis R. Markum of Indianapolis when mat committee considers the bill. _ The majority of the messages are from Terre Haute mothers who are haunted by the disappearance of Edith May Dlerdorf.
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MR. JOHHNY PERRY —Photo by National Studio
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