Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 June 1930 — Page 6
PAGE 6
RIVERSIDE PARK GOES IN FOR SPORT EVENTS THIS SEASON
Broad Ripple Is Making a Feature of Its Midway, With Many Rides for Children and a Modern Bathhouse for Swimmers This Summer. FREE boxing and wrestling will feature the entertainment at Riverside amusement park tonight. In addition to several mat bouts between professional grapplers, a number of ambitious amateur mitt artists have been lined up and will be given opportunity to show their stufT—if any. The athletic feature will be staged on the huge platform in the center of the park and will be under the direction of Jimmie McLemore, who promotes the regular Monday night mat show's at Riverside. Sunday afternoon another free athletic feature will be presented in the new sports arena. This will consist of workouts and training stunts participated in by a number of local boxing celebrities.
A number of training bouts with the big gloves will be included in She workout session. It will be the first opportunity for many persons to watch pugs in training, and it is expected many sports followers, as well as others, will look in on the boys as they shadow-box, skip the rope or trade wallops in the arena xing. Riverside park now is proving a Mecca for picnic parties, who spread their lunches in the shady grove, where scores of tables and benches are provided. Excellent drinking water is at hand, a deep-driven well being located right in the grove. The children’s playground and the pony track are crowded with youagsters every afternoon. a a a BROAD RIPPLE HAS BIG PARADE Never in the history of Broad Ripple park, in the opinion of William Mahoney, manager, has there been better indication of a successful season at the big amusement park than at present. Even though weather conditions have been anything but conducive to large patronage. Broad Ripple has started off the season with record crow'ds. New rides have been installed, which, in addition to those already in place, the patrons of the park opportunity to appease their whims and fancies to the fullest. Another new feature of the park is the magnificent and imposing new entrance, which attracts the attention of patrons immediately they arrive within seeing distance in any direction from the park.
The building, which is of Spanish architectiure, is topped by a lofty tower which can be seen at a great distance, especially at night, when it is lighted from top to foundation by a myriad of lights. The big bathhouse which fittingly complements the big swimming pool is of new construction along the same lines of architecture as the entrance building. Here is to be found every modern contrivance for the convenience and pleasure of the swimmers—several thousands individual steel lockers, modern, sanitary plumbing, electric hair dryers and other items too numerous to list. The zoo, which has always proved one of the big attractions at the park, this season is bigger than ever, ar. numerous additions have been made to the wild animal family. Among the additions are to be found two baby South American boa constrictors and several other reptiles of the venomous specie, an additional honey bear, a member of the bear fahiily rarely on exhibition. Among the free attractions at the park is to be found the roller skating rink where one may skate to his heart’s content without charge. Free instructions in skating also will be available. Dancing in the big Moonlite pavilion also is free, with instructions \in the latest steps by E. W. MushVush, one of the foremost dancing instructors in the’ country. These , professional instructions also are to be had Without fee. A minimum gate charge is made for adults; children are admitted free at all times.
Sunday School Lesson
The International Uniform Sunday School Lesson for June 22. The Great Commission. Matt. 28:1-1(1. BY WILLIAM E. GILROY. D. D. Editor of the Congregationalist THE great commission was the commisson from our Lord to the disciples to go forth into the world and make disciples of all i nations' in His name and in His fellowship. In the fulfillment of mhls commission the disciples were assured of the spiritual presence the Master. "Lo, I am with you always, even unto the ends of the wo^ld." The power of that commission has been manifest in the growth and , progress of the Christian church. Judged from the supremacy of the church's ideal, and from the standpoint of the condition of the world in which the church has to perform its work, it might seem at times that the progress of the church and of the Gospel has not been great. But when one looks back over the years and sees the conditions under which the Christian church began, the immensity of the forces of ignorance and of evil with which the church has had to contend, the marvel is that even in nineteen centuries such progress should have been achieved. Where Science Has Failed In our own day it is true that the progress of science in its revolutionizing of life seems immense. But science has not been particularly successful in solving many of the deeper problems associated with its own service. Where it ought to be. in harmony with its own principles. constructive, it has been, in large measure, destructive. Its implements and its agencies have been used too often not to benefit, but to destroy men and to make the conditions of their life not easier, but harder. But the preaching and the living of the Gospel have been vital factors and forces despite all the shortcomings and defects of the religion of which this earnest preaching and practice have been a part. Wherever the Gospel has been fulfilled and earnestly proclaimed, it has produced much the same results, whether it be among savages in the heart of Africa, in the slum regions of a great city or in social and intellectual circles of the more highly favored and called. The man of wealth who hears the rail of Christ becomes an humble and earnest servant of his fellow* men;’the man of education, a teach- i er of his fellowmen. With the secularization of so much j of our life and education today we
Circus to Be Here Next Week Gentry Brothers Show Is Sponsored by Legion Posts of City. GAY, variegated posters placed in the city and vicinity by advance advertising trucks, today heralded the coming of the Gentry Brothers circus to Indianapolis for an entire week’s engagement, beginning Monday. Cars used by the advance fleet are forerunners of a mammoth group of a hundred new, modernly equipped and vividly decorated G. M. C. trucks which comprise the main section of the three-ring and motorized circus. It is the only large circus in the world traveling entirely in such fashion.
Five Indianapolis posts of the | American Legion dnd the women’s j auxiliary drum corps of the Seventh district are sponsoring the week’s engagement of the show. The circus will play in six dis- : ferent sections of the city. MonI day, June 23, it will open with a matinee and night performance at South Keystone and English avenue. . June 24, it will be at Tenth street and Emerson avenue, and June 25 at Illinois and Thirtyeighth streets. On Thursday, June 26, it will play at West Michigan and King avenue; June 27, at Morris and Pennsylvania streets, and Saturday, June 28, at Fall Creek boulevard and West Michigan street. Besides the drum corps, the following five Legion posts are sponsoring the circus which will play here in its entirety, Bruce Robinson, Firemen’s, Madden-Nottingham, Policemen’s and Irvington. A parade will be given in the downtown business district Monday morning, and morning parades will be given in the various neighborhoods where the circus is to show.
Swings Fists
A double optic attraction furnished entertinnment for 110 extra players during the filming of dock front scenes for “Safety in Numbers,” Paramount’s new Charles (Buddy) Rogers starring picture. Rogers and Francis McDonald were the principals in the main event. Paoul Paoli and Ernest Adams were the supporting battler*. The Paoll-Adams bout provided the comedy scenes while Rogers and McDonald were furnishing action melodrama. Paoli, until last season shotput and discus champion of France, weighs well over 200 pounds and is six feet two inches tall while Adams tips the scales at a scant 135 pounds. Rogers and McDonald were well matched.
are apt to forget the source from which these deepest influences in our civilization were derived. We do not always find it easy to see how closely the Gospel, in its proclamation and its living, has been associated with the betterment of human life, yet it is not too much to say that the great fruitful streams of our civilization have for the most part had their source of religious conviction and in the response to the commission such as Jesus gave to His disciples. Work That Isn't Finished The task that still is before the world is the task of realizing and fulfilling that commission. Because the difficulties are great, there is today a tendency to recoil from the world-wide nature of the Christian task. Because the problems of the foreign mission field are more acute and complex;than ever before, we tend to withdraw and leave nonChristian nations subject to all the evil and wocse influences of the socalled Christian nations, but without a strong and clear manifestation of the things that are most worth while in our civilization. Such an attitude is weak and cowardly; far better the spirit of a Judson. or el Livingstone, or a Paton, perceiving the place and the need of the Gospel in all contacts of our life with the life of others. The great commission of Jesus still is real for His followers, and their response to it still is the great test of the reality of their faith in Him and the courage and quality of their discipleship. Irene Really Stood Up Irene Rich stood up for one entire day this week. A black velvet gown which the actress wears in | “On Your Back” is cut tight to the knees, where it flares away in long train and flounces. To preserve the line. Miss Rich stood during the entire day, until her scenes were completed. "Now I know how it feels to eat off a mantle,” she remarked as she sank into a chair at 5 o’clock. Louise Goes on Location Louise Fazenda is packing to go on location. Asked where, Louise replied "Yuma.” She is not on any picture going there, but Louise says when it turns hot, she is always sent to Yuma. “I hear about all these grand location trips to Alaska, New York, etc., but the best I do is Yuma in August,” says Miss Fazenda. A-...
Pupils to Appear in Recitals Willard MacGregor Plans Extensive Trip to Europe. MRS. MARY WILHITE, organist of Broadway M. E. church, and Myra G. Clippinger of the Meridian Street M. 3. church, both members of the faculty o' the Arthur Jordan Conservatory *of Music, will leave for New York City July 1 to study with Dr. Charles Doerman, dean of pipe organ in Columbia university. They will be accompanied by Mi-s. C. A. Brockway, organist of AH Souls Unitarian church, who also will study with Dr. Doerman.
Seventy-five faculty members of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music attended a picnic in the grounds of the main building on North Delaware street Wednesday evening in honor of Willard MacGregor and Boris Rosenfield, artist piano teachers, who, next season, will not be with the conservatory. MacGregor sails in July for Europe to coach, study and concertize. Rosenfield will teach in Oberlin college, Oberlin, O. Edwin Jones, violin teacher in the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, left Saturday for Falls Village, Connecticut, to spend the summer studying violin repertoire and ensemble playing with Jacques Gordon. The certificate winners of the Pcco-a-Poco Piano Society, pupils of Lillian Carr Green of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music piano faculty, will give a recital Friday, June 27, at 8 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Greene, 1311 University court. Miss Virginia Harbaugh will play two solos. Those to receive certificates are: First preparatory: Dorothy Jane Blake, Mary Elizabeth Hesseldens, Denoe Wolfard and James Meng. Second preparatory: Charlotte Carl, Alvamay Mitchell and Ina Naomi Stanley. Third preparatory: Barbara Baas, Loydlovella Cook and June Richardson Ross.
Carlton Gauld, former pupil of Glenn Friermood, who has been in Europe for several years, working with the late Jean De Reske, is visiting his home in Crawfordsville, and gave a recital there on Friday The special summer term for supervisors in music opened Monday at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music with the largest enrollment in the history of the school. There were also a large number of former students who registered. The fifth school term will begin Monday, June 23. bub PUPILS TO GIVE RECITAL Pupils of Mary Ellen Galbraith, teacher of piano, will give a recital at the William McKinley school, No. 39, State and Lexington avenues, Tuesday evening, June 24 at 8:15 p. m. Miss Galbraith, who is an accomplished musician, will be assisted in the recital program by her brother, Dallas Galbraith, baritone soloist, who will sing a group of songs, including “The Hills of Kerry,” “He and She” and “Don Juan’s Serenade.” Those who will take part in the recital are Louise Craw, Bernice Patrick, Frances Carlin, Bernadeen Patrick, Ossie Correll, Howard Manning, Freda Littell, Burnelle Bailey and Arnold Kelly. ' BUB RECITAL TO BE GIVEN AT CHURCH The following pupils of Mrs. Naomi Gray will be presented in a piano recital June 27, at 8 p. m. at the Woodruff Place Baptist Church. Francis Peterman. Dortha Jean James, Ruth Margaret Farrington, Peggy Sellmer, Jean Pedigo. Hardy Westfall. Iva May Henning. Billy Hixon. Billie Kaltwasser, Bobby Williams. Charles Pedigo. Roberta Ehlers. Margaret Louise Bales. Jack Zoschke. Mary Hook. Lorene Shull, Jack Young. Regina Koch. Audrey Jane Bales. Frances Bryant. George Birck. Juanita Caldwell. Mary Louderback. Betty Jane Beem. Esther Eagon. Jane Harrington. Margaret Basev, Robert Burns, Rose Marie Bales. Virginia James. Rose Ellen Gray. Robert Miller. Edna Birck. Paul Remmeter. Betty Jare Ramsav, Idaiee Burns. Eleanor Grepp. Gladys Bauserman, Robert Felts. Ruth Maiden. Dorothy Kepper, Carrol Williams. Mary Kathryn Miles, Mary McColloch. Alice Yates. Mary Bell. Fredrick Base. Betty Baker. Melva Shull and Doris Craig. B B B DALE YOUNG TO PLAY THE ORGAN Dale Young, organist, will give a recital, assisted by Miss Helen Ealand, soprano, on next Tuesday night at the Grace M. E. church. The public is invited without charge. Program follows: i Organ—- " Gloria” Mozart "Prelude and Fugue in B flat Major" Bach "Pilgrims Chorus" Wagner Mr. Young. Vocal—"Mv Heart at Thv Sweet Voice” Saint Saens Miss Ealand. II Organ—"Finlandia" Sibelius "Londonderry Air” Annonymous "Taccata” Lemmens Mr. Young. Vocal —"Sun of My Soul." "Ten Virgins” Gaul 111 Organ—- " Cathedral Meditation Lemare "Gavotte” Thomas Mr. Young. Vocal—" The Rosary” Nevin Miss Ealand. IV Organ—" Grand Offertoire de St. Oecile” Batiste Mr. Young. Alice B. Cooper of the Irvington School of Music will present her pupils in a series of recitals to be given at the school at 5657 East Washington street on the following dates: Student recital, June 23;
RIVERSIDE Free Boxing and Wrestling TONIGHT See the city’s favorite boxers in training in the new sports arena Sunday afternoon. Spend the Week-End at Riverside “Just for Fun”
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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1— Charlie Davis, who is now on t jut with a stage unit, is announced to -etum for a great week at the Indiana soon. 2 Bud and Eleanor Coll are'present on the new bill at the Lyric.
Races Slated
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Speed Green
Walnut Gardens takes on sporting interest Sunday when Speed Green starts managing a season of dirt track racing on the track which was built last year. For Sunday he announces a number of races, the cars to be piloted by Negro drivers. He states that many improvements have been made on the track, giving it more speed. The races start at 2:30 p. m. Sunday. morning musicale, June 26; junior artist recital, June 27, and a musical tea, July 2. Helene Warrum Chappell will give a recital Sunday night at the BookCadillac hotel in Detroit for the national convention of Veterans of Foreign Wars. LEIVE TO PRESENT PIANO PUPILS WEDNESDAY Mabel Wiley Leive will present her pupils in a piano recital next Wednesday night at 824 North Pennsylvania. Program follows: “Little Boy Blue” Livsey George Grove. "Largo” (arr. by Spaulding) Handel "Surprise Symphony” (arr. by Spaulding) Haydn . Valda Russom. "Blue Danube” (arr. by Spaulding) .Strauss "Humoreske” (arr. by Spaulding) .Dvorak Elizabeth Ann Trittipo. "April Showers” Livsey George Laughner. "Fairy Whipers” Krogmann Priscilla Keeler. “The Pirate Bold” Blake Elmer Schloot. "Tarantelie” Risher Janet Isenhour. "Symphony No. 1” Haydn Mrs. Elmer J. Graber, Margaret Gallagher. “Will o' Wisp” Jungmann Eloise Robertson. "The Ghost Story” Kullak "Opening Petals” May Lillie Klezmer. "Melody” Brown Lillian Klezmer. "Tarantella” Pieczonka Betty Lou Keys. "Sea Gardens” Cooke Ernestine Graber. "Sonata Op. 27 No. 2" Beethoven Edith Stroup Grove. “Sonata Erolca" (Ist m) MacDowell Margaret Gallagher. "Converto” (Ist movement)... .Rubinstein Max Klezmer. Orchestral accompaniment on secodn piano Dorothy Dauner. BUB STUDENTS TO HAVE COMMENCEMENT The piano students of Francis H. Topmiller will be presented in their commencement exercises on Tuesday evening, June 24, at 8 p. m. in the Englewood community hall, 37 North Rural street. The following will take part: Lucille Clark, Katherine Quinn, Harriet Cracraft, Ruth Williams, Kathryn Means, Clay Hall, Phyllis Smith, Mildred Twietmeyer, Paul Bogard. Dorothy Garritson, Neva Stiff, Robert Amick, Doris Goodman. The Rev. Ambrose Agaerter of the Beville Avenue Evangelical church will present the diplomas.
Title Change The title of the Arthur Hammerstein picture has been changed from “Lottery Bride” to “The Lottery Bride.” Jeanette MacDonald, Joe E. Brown. John Garrick and Robert Chisholm are in the cast. Paul Stein directed.
AMUSEMENTS
ROUNDING ROUND THEATERS D.^VICKMAN
LAST night at the Civic Theater we had the dance done as a show. Not just a dance recital but the theater of the dance. And thatis all lam concerned with when I go to “dance recital.’’ So many of these so-called recitals have so much so-called technique and not enough real theater in the proceedings. Arthur Corey in presenting his first pupil dance recital at the Civic last night had that idea in presenting his pupils. He stated very frankly that it was a “show” and that he hoped those present would like it. He stated that he had only two months to train his pupils and that some were just beginners.
What I have to say regarding this program is just theater and is not intended to lie considered in any sense a comparison with any other dance schools in this city. Corey last night took his many dancers, using them in solo and ensemble numbers, building them around his own dance talents and those of Miss Myrna Celete, his protege and partner during his last vaudeville tour. Corey gave up the stage to establish his own school in this city. He stated that he moved his furniture down to Indianapolis and that he was going to stay. The outstanding piece of fun in the program was an “Up-to-Date Fairy” as done by Ethel Braun in gorgeous satirical fun. This dance about stopped the show. There were numerous youngsters just about old enough to dance about as well as more advanced students. The lights were well handled and Corey knows how to dress his stage to get the effect of the true theater. A better musical background would have helped the general effect. I know that orchestras are expensive but a piano to me just doesn’t fill the bill. But Corey gave us the theater of the dance last night in his first pupil recital and that is a big accomplishment. B B B Have been asked to discuss the Negro spiritual and modern dance music and the like over my Tuesday time over WKBF. Numerous requests of this nature has resulted in my decision to ask William Lewis with Alvin Wall and his Club Bagdad orchestra on the Indiana Roof to give me a musical interview. Lewis has composed several classical numbers and is considered an able authority on the spiritual and is keenly interested in the way such music is being treated today. So starting at 1 p. m. Tuesday over WKBF there will be something different along a musical interview. B B B Have received from Jack Pfister of Hollywood, Cal., regarding the movie success of Carl J. Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Walker of 850 1 z Virginia avenue of Indianapolis. Walker is now taking a vacation in Portland, Ore., after being out six weeks on location near Seattle and the mountains in making a picture. Walker has appeared with William Haines in “Navy Blues” and with Paul Whiteman in “King of Jazz.” He now holds a two-year contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer, according to Pfister. So another Indianapolis boy has made good in the talkers.
Some Record
Last week Grace George gave her 200th performance of “The First Mrs. Fraser” at the Playhouse, New York, thus already reaching a milestone in her run on Broadway passed by few stars. A glance at statistics reveals that the Broadway record of Katharine Cornell in “The Age of Innocence” was 207 performances, in “The Green Hat,” 231; Ina Claire in “The Last of Mrs. Cheyney,” 252; Ethel Barrymore in “The Constant Wife,” 298; Jane Cowl in “The Road to Rome,” 440; Leonore Ulric in “Kiki,” 600; Jeanne Eagels in "Rain,” 648; Laurette Taylor in “Peg o’ My Heart,” 692.
AMUSEMENTS
COLONIAL Illinois and New Tork Sts. Fastest Show in Town GEO. (BUTTONS) FARES And His Own Big BURLESQUE with Helen Margon, Flo Rich, Irish Smith, Maxine Audry, Jack King, Andy Anderson. Chorus on Runway —ON THE SCREEN— All-Talking Feature “THE RAMPANT AGE” Midnite Show
3—Josephine Martin of Martin and Martin will appear ail next week with the Gentry circus, to be in the city all next week, stajting Monday.
Society Will Give a Dance Sigma Phi Gamma Will Be Hostess at a Gay Affair. THE Sigma Phi Gamma Sorority has subleased the Indiana Roof Ballroom for a convention dance to be given tonight, according to an announcement coming from the ballroom office. Admission tickets for the dance may only be obtained through members of the sorority. Jack Berry and his Around the World Orchestra, a local unit, are to furnish the dance music. The announcement stated that dancing would be resumed in the ballroom on Saturday, Sunday, Wednesday and Friday nights, without interruption after tonights rental. Bor ra h Minevitch, nationally known as “King of the Harmonica” will judge a Harmonica Contest in the Roof Ballroom next Wednesday night. The contest will be open to all person enterting the ballroom, including children accompanied by either a parent or guardian. Person entering the contest must furnish their own harmonica, however, according to the ballroom announcement. A cash prize of $lO will be given the winner of the Harmonica Contest, who will broadcast during the ballroom’s program over radio station WFBM, following the contest. Minevitch is apearing on the Indiana Theater stage with his harmonica orchestra, which is said to be the only one of its kind in existence. . He has judged many contests such as the one to be held Wednesday night. Alvin Wail and his Club Bagdad Creoles continue as the Roof feature.
Always Comfortably Cool—Not Cold—at the Lyric & ii c Giggle with Gililly \S> lingwater: Howl SI I*|E .A W- <* / with Hoyt: Go £9(9 ftv ..-*<>*/ ft vK'* ,*t* Gleeful with Hag y Gleason! Make jHiH BB Merry with 3ler- \\ wb^'V - cer: Laugh with r£v ■IM / : e the Lovers- 11 HOSE v'* Armstrong and |HI §tef Kent’. gpp&r. ■■.— ■ - George O’Brien in “Rough Romance” -“l
Opens Sunday
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Betty Compson
Sanders theater will reopen Sunday with new RCA equipment, the first of this type of -sound projection to be installed in this city, it is claimed. The feature will be Betty Compson in “The Street Girl.”
A New Stunt
For the first time in the comparatively brief history of sound recording a microphone has been set up in the white winter fastness of the Cascade Ranges, and recorded there the tense, primitive, open air drama of a simple story of the great north woods. Such is the report from Hollywood, where completion of “Rough Romance,” the all-talking Fox Movietone production directed by A. F. Erickson, which has been completed recently. George O’Brien, Helen Chandler, Antonio Morena and Noal Francis, a Broadway stage celebrity, have the leading roles in this picture. Wobbcr Returns to Paramount Herman Wobber, pioneer film industry leader of San Francisco and the west, hase been appointed general distribution representative of Paramount Public Corporation . for the western states. The appointment marks Wobber’s return to the distribution staff after a year’s service as Publix director-general on the Pacific coast. Buchanan Makes Trip to London Jack Buchanan is making a hurried trip to London on a matter of business that may demand but half a day to complete. Buchanan, English stage and screen favorite, left Hollywood immediately after completing his role in Ernst Lubitsch’s new Paramount production, “Monte Carlo.”
AMUSEMENTS
.JUNE 21, 1930
Mercer Is in Cast of Big Movie ‘Dumbbells in Ermine’ Opens Today at the Lyric. “T'VUMB-BELLS IN ERMINE.’ Warner Brothers latest Vitaphone comedy drama which begins its engagement of one week at the Lyric today, is said to be an uproariously human chronicle of the difficulties experienced by a handsome young pugilist and a prett* tied-to-mother’s-apron-strings girl in overcoming objections of said mother, and eliminating a bluenosed gentleman she has chosen for the girl’s mate. Robert Armstrong, who has portrayed many prize-fighting roles, plays the part of Jerry Malone, the pugilist, who falls in love with Faith Corey, played by Barbara Kent. Faith’s foxy grandmother and her outrageous old uncle—who are having a rather rheumatic romance of their own—do their best to help the youngsters. These parts are said to be gloriously interpreted by Beryl Mercer, former local favorite with the Stuart Walker Stock Company, and Claude Gillingwater. Arthur H ,'t as the blue-nosed reformer, becomes engaged to Faith and plans to take her to the Congo as a missionary. The plans of the pious hyprocrite are comically upset by one of the crowd of visiting showgirls whom he has had arrested. The more or less dumb belle sends him vamoosing with coat tail rampant. Julia Swayne Gordon and Mary Foy are also prominently cast. The dialog was written by James Gleason, the playwright, who also plays Mike, the fighter's cocky trainer. Augmenting the above feature picture are four Radio-Keith-Or-pheum vaudeville acts featured on the stage. Howard Smith and Mildred Barker offer as the stellar attraction their latest comedy satire. “The Fakir.” It was written by Edwin Burke and is presented by the pair in five colorful scenes. Don Galvan, who is heralded as “The Spanish Banjo Boy” promises music, song and comedy of the first order. He is clever with the guitar, banjo and also possesses good vocal ability. “Youth and Talent” is the way that Bud and Eleanor Coll announce themselves. They go in for novelty stepping, comedy singing and patter. Some fancy acrobatics and comedy tumbling will be offered by Beehee and Rubyette, accomplished gymnasts and comedians. The Pathe News, talking comedy and a scenic review rounds out the program. Colman Arrives Home Ronald Colman arrives in Amsterdam this week after a 1,200mile auto tour on the continent. Since his return to Europe he has spent less than four hours in London. He expects to visit relatives in the north of England for a few weeks before embarking for New York. His arrival in New York will coincide with the opening __ of “Raffles,” Colman’s newest picture, at the Rivoli or Rialto theaters.
Another Blue Another blue has found favor among the fashionable of Hollywood—heaven blue. Shading softly between tones of turquoise and aquamarine, heaven blue creates the ideal color for the summer frock. For her starring role in Paramount’s production, “Love Among the Millionaires,” Clara Bow uses this new blue for a chiffon dinner gown and a silk crepe sports costume.
INDIANAPOLIS m JUNE 23 6 DAYS—6 LOCATIONS Monday—S. Keystone and English. Tuesday—E. Tenth and Emerson. Wednesday—:sßth and Illinois. Thursday—W. Mich, and King Aye. Friday—Morris and Pennsylvania St. •Saturday—Northwestern Aye. and Fall Creek Blvd. Auspices American Legion Posts Bruoe Robinson, Firemen’s, Irvington. Policemen’s, Madden, Nottingham, .Memorial, Ladies Auxiliary, Brum Corps, Seventh District. WATCH FOR DATE IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD k ImmmfmmmrnmmmB wmmmmmmmmsm PARADE 11* ; Performances 2-8“ I IS-Admtsskm-SO 4
