Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 288, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 April 1931 — Page 9

APRIL 13, 1931.

TWO V. F. OF W, POSTS IN STATE ARE ORGANIZED New Groups to Be Instituted This Week; Chief of Staff Coming. Two new Veterans of Foreign Wars posts will be instituted this week, announced Edward G. Schaub. Indiana depart.nent commander, today. Lebanon institution work Friday will be in charge of Harry Jacks, William V/. Walker, Adolph Hehmann and Omer Bowen of Kokomo. It is the fourteenth post organized by the Indianapolis department since last fall. Initiatory ceremonies for a post composed exclusively of Pennsylvania railroad employes will be given Friday night in the Pennsylvania gymnasium. Word has been received from James E. Van Zant, national chief of staff, that he will be present. Van Zant is an agsnt for the Pennsylvania railroad in Washington. Ritual will be conferred by the state team headed by Schaub. Those assisting in organizing the post are E. A. Fox, Edward H. Tabut, Gerald Frazier and John P. McNally. Membership drive which started April I and ends June 30 has indications of a double in membership in the en 1 "' p state. Schaub said, "‘Keen ’ fest is being shown by the r rs of Veterans of Foreign Pla. r distribution of 600,000 Buddy i pies throughout the state in the \\ jk prior to Memorial day have been completed. Indiana department will ask the Governor and city mayors to make proclamation of the purpose of the sale of Buddy poppies and observance of the week, said Arthur G. Gresham, deputy for Indiana. POCAHONTAS DEGREE WILL BE CONFERRED District 1 to Held Meeting in Red Men’s Wigwam Here. Past Pocahontas degree will be conferred at a meeting of District 1 of the degree of Pocahontas, Improved Order of Red Men, with Alfarata Council 5, in Red Men’s Wigwam, Capitol avenue and North street, Friday afternoon. Bessio Meadows of Wolcott, great Pocahontas, will preside. Regular Alfarata council officers will preside at the meeting Friday night. Degree staff of Moapa council of Mooresville will initiate a class named in honor of Louise Hale, candidate for great keeper of wampum in the great council election, Oct. 22. District Deputy Minnie Reese expects many will attend.

PREPARE FOR MASONIC PICNIC ON JULY 18 Degrees to Be Given at Meeting at Broad Ripple Tonight. Annual Masonic picnic has been set for July 18 at Nassau. Second annual Biue Lodge-Chapter ball game will be held at this time. Fellow Craft degree will be conferred April 24 .at Broad Ripple Lodge 643, F. & A. M. Mark Master and Past Master degrees will be given tonight by Broad Ripple chapter, 146, F. & A. M. Most Excellent Master degree work will be given April 20. SISTERS TO ELECT Pythian Group Will Name Chiefs for Year. Officers will be elected at the Marion County Pythian Sisters Association meeting in Irvington K. of P. hall, 2:30 Wednesday. Installation will be in charge of Arbor Vitae temple of Erownsburg. Degree work will be exemplified by all temples in Marion county. Banner temple 37 drill staff will present a fancy drill. Balloting will be taken care of by Myrtle temple 7. Danville temple 158 will drape the charter. Mrs. Nell C. McCurry of Goodland, general chief of Pythian Sisterhood, will be an honor guest at the elections and at a covered dish dinner at 6:30 when Irvington temple 411 will be host. ‘TOURING’ BIBLE HERE Started From Columbus, 0., It Has Visited 11 States and Canada. Bible of the Eastern Star, which will be carried through most of the countries of the world, will be used by Dr. William A. Shullenberger, pastor of Central Christian church, in services Sunday morning. The Bible was started on its tour from R. T. King chapter, O. E. S., of Columbus, O. It has been present at grand chapter sessions in eleven states and Canada. When the signature of every grand chapter in the general grand chapter jurisdiction has been recorded, it will be returned to Ohio. DR. MAGNES TO TALK Chancellor of Hebrew University, Terusalem, to Be Honored at Dinner. Dr. Judah L. Magnes. chancellor of the Hebrew university in Jerusalem, will be honored by leaders of the Indianapolis Jewish community at a dinner tonight in the Columbia Club. Dr. Magnes will lecture at 8:30 tonight in the Kirshbaum Community Center. Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht will preside at the dinner. SUPPER TO BE HELD Corned Beef and Cabbage Fete 1 Sponsored by Legion Star. A Jiggs corned-beef and cabbage supper will be sponsored by Brookside auxiliary of Legion Star Tuesday night at Brookside hall, Tenth and Gray streets. Mrs. C. F. Johnson, chairman of the committee in charge, announced that the supper will be open to the public. Circle to Give Party Capitol City Circle 176, Protected Home Circle, will give a dance, euchre and bunco party in Woodman’s hall, 322 East New York street, at 8 Friday night.

INSTALL HEAD OF D. O. K. K. TEMPLE

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William F. Qualls

South Bend Order Third in Indiana to Receive Rite. William F. Qualls, royal vizier of northern Indiana, will be installed Wednesday as head of the new D. O. K. K. temple of South Bend, which will serve as Knights of Pythias headquarters in northern Indiana and southern Michigan. Imperial Secretary A. L. Frey of Columbus, 0., and Carl R. Mitchell of Indianapolis, deputy imperial prince, will be in charge of ceremonies. The South Bend temple will be the third erected in Indiana, one being in Indianapolis, the other in Evansville. District and local meetings will be held throughout the state this week. Tonight there will be initiation of rank of esquire in Bloomington. Visitors will be present from Logansport, Delphi and other cities. Chancellor Commander Clyde Longston will attend. District 3 will meet at Elkhart Tuesday night. E. J. Will, district deputy from Michigan City, will be in charge. St. Joseph and La Porte counties will send representatives. District 12 will meet at Lafay-

BILL SEEMS TO HAVE REAL HIT THIS TIME

Haines Is Seen to Better Advantage in 'A Tailor-Made Man’ Than in Some of His Recent Pictures. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN PROBABLY a good play is always a good play even when it jumps from the stage to the talking screen. Some good plays have been butchered when brought to the screen and so changed around that nothing but the title remained. The director has not taken too many liberties with “A Tailor Mads Man,” which was corking good fun on the stage. I am not a William Haines fan, but the boy this time handles his comedy scenes in fine style. It is one of those roles which Haines likes to play.

As John Paul Bart, a presser in , Huber’s clothes pressing parlor, l Haines gives the role the jaunty air that it should have. For the first time, I felt that Haines was

giving us a characterization and not just being Bill Haines, the smart and wisecracking chap of the movies. He makes John Paul a lovable cuss who steals a dress suit, goes to a swell party and sells his ideas to the richest merchant in tow n. But John Paul’s world tumbles when he is forced to admit that he is just

William Haines

a pants’ presser. But the sun shines again for him when he proves that he does know something about big business. I believe that Haines gives a polished and an amusing characterization of the young upstart. There are times when it looks that Joseph Cawthorn as Huber, the tailor, was walking away with the comedy honors. Here is sweet character w’ork because Cawthorn knows his theater. Dorothy Jordan is just sweet as Tanya, daughter of Kubcr. lan Keith does well as Dr. Von Sonntag, who is John Paul’s rival for the hand of Tanya. Here is pleasant, lively and smart entertainment. Now at the Palace. an SPY STORY NOW ON INDIANA SCREEN. Last season the so-called spy novel and biography had an important spot among the best sellers and it is not surpr.smg that the screen would reflect such stories. In “Dishonored,” Marlene Dietrich starts out as a street walker

who becomes a famous spy during the war. She uses her brains as well as her sex appeal to land her victims. And when her story is told, the spy is shot to death for aiding in the escape of a male spy, played by Victor McLaglen. The story is not a strong one, but it gives this woman a chance to prove that she is a good actress. It will hold your

1 I

interest although very few have any sympathy for the spy when she faces the firing squad. McLaglen j gives a good account of himself, | although the burden of the work falls on Miss Dietrich. Here is an interesting woman who knows how to give a lot of color to a role. The type of character she plays this time is not a pleasant one, tut fiction lately has been full of women spies of the late war. "Dishonored" has been well directed and photographed. Something new in the way one scene sort of trails into another scene. This method is interesting, but was rather confusing to me at first. The three outstanding hits of the stage show are Prank Gaby, his dummy and his "plant" in the audience; the way the orchestra plays a hot collection of pieces and the

ette Wednesday night for the conferring of rank of knight. Work in rank of knight also will be done at the Jonesboro district 7 meeting Thursday. Frank Raquet of Marion is district deputy. Indianapolis D. O. K. K. ceremonies will be held in Shambah temple 139, 119 East Ohio street, at 8 p. m. Friday. Presiding officer will be Royal Vizier George P. Kibbe. A. L. Frey, imperial secretary, and Carl R. Mitchell, deputy imperial prince, will attend. At a meeting in Cincinnati Saturday, further plans will be discussed for a Pythian Chautauqua and mass convention of all departments and auxiliaries of the Order of Knights of Pythias in Cincinnati the week of Aug. 10. Mitchell will make the trip. Spectacular festivities of the international convention will be ol - maxed by a mammoth parade in which local Pythian uniformed organizations will take part. Committee in charge of arrangements for the Cincinnati meeting is headed by James Dunn Jr. of Cleveland, O. Other members are Carl R. Mitchell of Indianapolis. White L. Moss of Louisville, Ky., and Norval R. Daugherty of Pittsburgh, Pa.

harmony work of Tommy Reilly and Billy Comfort. Jack Crawford has a good show this week. Probably should mention the opening dance number. Here is something new. Now at the Indiana. SHE WAS A GOOD* GIRL IN A TOUGH SPOT The heroine of “Ten Cents a Dance” is a good girl in a tough spot. The title smacks of box office and when that is said, the most

for this movie has been said. Os course, the presence of Barbara Stanwyck commands some attention, but the role of the girl who works in a cheap dance hall by dancing with the male patrons for so much a dance, just does not ring true. Here is one of those modern suffering and m i sunder - stood he ro ines

who always is getting in bad.. Our heroine picks a lemon for a husband. Os course, the very rich man, played by Richard Cortez, always is on hand. Os course, these rich guys have loads of time to saunter into a 10-cent dance hall. Anyway, they always seem to have time in the movies. But rich pockets treat our heroines on the square when he discovers that she is one of those good gals. Things get pretty mixed up when the husband of the 10 cents a dance girl steals a large sum of money. Os course the poor little wife goes t 6 the apartment of the rich man, but she comes home still pure. But the husband is showed up as the cad he really is. Monroe Owsley is cast as the worthless husband. All the leads are better played than this type of a story deserves. I saw this picture at a private screening some time ago and I consider it just another picture. Be your own judge. Now at the Circle. The Arthur Casey Company got underway for a twenty weeks stock season at English’s with “Apron Strings.” It will be reviewed Tuesday. Other theaters today offer: Moran and Mack at the Lyric, Buddy Kane at the Colonial, burlesque at the Mutual and “Fighting Caravans” at the Ohio. Will Rogers is in his second week at the Apollo in “The Connecticut Yankee.”

Marlene Dietrich

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Carl R. Mitchell

Barbara Stanwyck

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BETK-EL CLUB MEETING WILL DRAWTHRONG Mrs. Demarchus Brown to Address 500 Persons at Session. Approximately 500 persons are expected to attend the gala “‘Egyptian Night” meeting of the BethE 1 Men's Club Wednesday night in the vestry room of the Beth-El temple, Thirty-fourth and Ruckle streets. Mrs. Demarchus Brown, noted Indianapolis travel lecturer, will address the meeting on “Up the Nile to the Tombs of Kings.” All previous meetings of the Men’s Club have been purely “stag” affairs, at which nationally prominent speakers have made addresses. Wednesday night, however, wives of members and members of the Temple Sisterhood have been provided ■with tickets and a record breaking attendance is anticipated. An additional surprise program, featuring Egyptian novelties, has been arranged, according to Max M. Plesser, president of the organization. The Beth-El Club was formed late last year with an original charter roll of fifty members. Since that time the club has grown to a membership of over two hundred. Such prominent speakers as the Rev. Father McGuire, of St. Viator’s college, 111.; A. L. Sacher of the University of Illinois; and Boyd Gurley, editor of The Indianapolis Times, have addressed the organization at its past monthly meetings.

RED MEN TO GETBEGREES District 17 Meeting to Be Held at Linton. Red Men of District’l7 will continue the district meetings which have been in progress for the past two weeks, with a meeting at Linton Friday. All tribes of Green, Vigo, Clay, Owen, Sullivan, Monroe, Martin, Davis, Knox and Vermilion counties have been invited to attend. Large delegations are expected. Outstanding feature of this meeting will be degree work on a large class of candidates from the various tribes. The work will be given by degree teams from Arizona Tribe 52, of Bloomington, and Tammany Tribe 39, of Terre Haute. Deputy Great Sachem George Stafford of Linton will be chairman of the meeting. Great Sachem Russell Evans of Spencer, Great Senior Sagamore Irvin Pryor of Worthing; Great Prophet Eli G. Lee of Terre Haute, and Great Chief of Records Hobbs of Indianapolis will attend this meeting. Saturday night the Pocahontas of Connersville will entertain the degree team of Leolo council of Dayton, O. This team will be in charge of Past Great Sachem Ed C. Wilcox of Dayton. A large crowd will be present. ORDER PLANS DANCE United American Workers Sponsor Entertainment. Dance and vaudeville entertainment sponsored by supreme lodge members cf United Order of American Workers will be given at 8:45 Wednesday night at M. W. A. hall, 1025 Prospect street. Vaudeville performers from downtown theaters will entertain between dances. Prize waltzes and old-time dances will be featured. The entertainment is open to the public. Committee of arrangements include C. D. Hill, H. G. Johnson, Inez Dunning, Elsie McClure, Bennett McKibbcn and Harry Johnson. A card and bunco party by Golden Rule Lodge 3 will be held at the hall, 8 p. m., April 22. Officers will be installed April 29. How to End RHEUMATISM New Medicine Drives Rheumatic Poisons frem Joints and MuScles. EASES PAIN FIRST DAY Poisons settling in the joints and muscles cause rheumatism. You cannot get rid of rheumatic agony till every trace of these dangerous poisons is driven out of your system. That’s why external remedies and pain deadening drugs only give tempfirary relief. What you need is RU-MA, the new medicine now sold by all druggists; that acts directly on the liver, kidneys and Mood, and helps expel through the natural channels of elimination the dangerous poisons that cause rheumatic misery. No long waiting for your suffering to stop. RU-MA eases pain the first day and is the one rheumatism remedy guaranteed to frea muscles and joints from all painful stiffness, swelling and lameness, or nothing to pay. Walgreen’s has so much confidence in Ru-Ma that they want every rheumatic in town to try it and guarantee money-back if it does not end rheumatism.—Advertisement.

LOANS ON DIAMONDS WATCHES and JEWELRY Yf t - ‘ Typewriters, Musical Instruments, 'Shotguns, Gcnf .Clubs,' Aiitoi Tires, TEtc. Chicago J “S'" 20(3 E. Washington St. Opposite Courthouse

Lodge Speaker

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Frank P. Baber

Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker will be the after-dinner speaker on Past Masters’ night at Calvin W. Prather lodge, No. 717, F. &; A. M., Friday at Prather Masonic temple, College avenue and Fortysecond street. Conferring of the Master Mason degree, beginning at 2 p. m., will be followed by a dinner at 6:30. Past masters and affiliated past masters of Prather lodge giving the second section of the Master Mason degree are: Fred G. Buskirk, Harry H. Harlan, Paul G. Winter, Russell R. Hinesley, Robert W. Thompson, Carl A. Ploch, Clarence S. Armstrong, J. Lewis Bray, Clifford Suites, Albert C. Nobes, Denzil C. Barnhill and Edwin F. Burrows. Pierce E. Cummings is worshipful master of Prather lodge; George H. Drechsel Jr., senior warden, and Joseph W. Kaercher is junior warden. DEGREE TO BE GIVEN Ben Hur Candidate to Receive Metiers Rite at Banquet. The Melters, fun degree of Ben Hur lodge, will be given a large class of candidates tonight at Ben Hur hall, 135 North Delaware street. A banquet at the Denison hotel will precede the initiatory ritual. Dancing and cards will follow the degree work. Regular meeting and dance will be held Thursday night.

MOOSE GRIEFS TO DEFLECTED Several Candidates in Field; Meeting Tuesday. New officers for Moose lodge will be elected Tuesday night. Several candidates are in the field for some of the offices. Leo Kaminsky will speak on affairs connected with the new fraternal credit union that is being formed by members of the lodge. Indianapolis branch cf Hoosier Heart Legion will hold an initiation and frolic May 2. A frolic also is scheduled at Kokomo Saturday night. Women of Mcoseheart Legion will help celebrate “Better Homes” week of April 26 to May 2. This is a nation-wide event; prizes are offered by Better Homes, an organization in Washington, D. C., for the most fitting and appropriate programs. ELKS ARRANGE PROGRAM Flan Reception for American Legion at August Convention. By Times Special ANDERSON, Ind., April 11.— Special committees appointed by Ralph Wildridge, exalted ruler of Anderson Elks* ledge, will arrange the reception and entertainment of visitors to the annual convention of the Indiana department of the American Legion here Aug. 24-27. A special program will be given in the Elks club room.

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Delightful Spring Cruises to the WEST INDIES An interesting and instructive sightseeing cruise in the blue waters of the Caribbean—the palm-fringed islands of the West Indies —the Isthmus of Panama—the old world cities of South America. Complete details may be obtained from RICHARD A. KURTZ, MANAGER TRAVEL BUREAU The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis fi*UNION TRUSTS 120 East Market SL Riley 5341

MENS and WOMENS CLOT ♦LOW PRICES - EASY TERMS ♦ RITES CLOZ SHOP .Swiss!?

EAGLES LODGE TO GIVE GUEST ENTERTAINMENT Pep Session Is Preparatory to Initiation of Three Classes. A pep meeting for Indianapolis Eagles and their guests, preparatory to initiation of three Mother’s day classes April 27, May 4 and 11. will be held tonight at Eagles hall, 43 West Vermont street. Special program arranged by the trustees, Bert Duke, Frank Rhees and Richard Berry, includes an address by Boyd Gurley, editor of The Times. Hawaiian music and numbers by the Eagles quartet will be given. There will be twelve rounds of boxing for which five surprise awards will be made. Serving of refreshments and a smoker will close the program. The lodge meeting will open at 7:30, a half hour earlier than usual to give time for the varied entertainment. President J. Pierce Cummings announces that plans are near completion for a Mother’s day program at English’s opera house May 10. The feature of this program will be unveiling of a tablet commemorating the first public appeal for na-tion-wide observance of the day. A tablet of bronze to be placed on i seven-foot marble slab just inside the entrance to the opera house records the first public appeal for national recognition of a day to honor mothers. The appeal was made by Frank E. Hering of South Bend, former president of the Eagles. The tablet is the work of Fred Erizer, Cincinnati sculptor.

ODD FELLOWS WILLCONVENE Delegates From Six Counties to Meet at New Albany. Odd Fellow delegates from six counties in District 8 will convene at New Albany Tuesday. Between four and five hundred members are expected. New’ Albany is the home of subordinate Lodge 1, Encampment 1 and the first Rebekah ledge . Officials attending include grand secretary, superintendent of the Odd Fellcw home, in Greensburg, and deputy grand master. Subordinate lodges of Rebekahs will hold a county meeting at Petersburg today. The afternoon meeting will be open to the public. Rebekahs and subordinate lodges will conduct a closed meeting at night when degree work will be done. George Bornwasser of Indianapolis and other high officials will be present. Rebekahs of Marion count;/. District 6, will meet at Municipal Cardens Wednesday afternoon and night for degree work and a banquet. An Odd Fellow meeting will be held at Springport Saturday. The oldest set of bells in the United States is a set of four, bearing the date 1682, which hangs in the Moorish belfry of the Spanish cathedral in St. Augustine, Fla.

AMUSEMENTS mmm SES Happy Audiences Agree g A LANDSLIDE §j I “APRON STRINGS" | SSE Bright as a Rockefeller dine. s TOMIGHT : H S5 Ladies’ Bargain /n ids Night, best seats 01/C Ls Thrift Matinees 5 Wed. and Thurs., 5Cc |E IllilillillllllilliilllllllliililililllililH

Staff Chairman

XijlrtjfT >s ; jSj

Harry G. Werkhoff

One of the largest council gatherings of Indiana Masonry will convene at the Masonic temple in Indianapolis April 25. More than 500 members will witness the conferring of the superexcellent masters degree to a large number of initiates. The degree has not been exemplified in Indianapolis ; since 1929. It will be given as au- | thorized and adopted by General j Grand Council, Royal and Select : Masters of the United States, Sept. ! 27, 1927. Meetings this week include reI hearsals at the Masonic temple on April 15, 20 and 24. Indianapolis , super masters’ staff presenting the ; work is recognized as one of the outstanding degree staffs of the country. Harry G. Werkoff, general chair- | man of arrangements, was also in ; charge during the conferring of | most excellent masters degree last i October. LODGES WILL INSTALL Indianapolis, Anderson Chapters to Meet at Ramona Grove Hall, Joint installation meeting of Ramona Grove Lodge 63 of Indianapolis and Rainbow Grove 64 of Anderson, Ind., will be held at Ramona Grove hall, 230314 West Michigan street, at 8 tonight. Sovereign Myrtle Summers will preside as installing officer. A luncheon will be served after the meeting. AMUSEMENTS Bliis Week gj O ows ICK N riLLE HALLJ 53ASTIAN 8 Romance m ring Rails 9 lcst 7, | ll*J MOTION PICTURES jut | No. 3—Loiw’s April Shower of Hits!l Minn f'M Starting Saturday NORMA SHEARER ! ROBERT MONTGOMERY g in “Strangers May Kiss” i spsuS THE EK3 ONES PLAT ! I Positively Last Week! The King of Funsters | In His Greatest Hit—- ! jf A Conrixtieutfl NEXT SATURDAY EL BRENDEL-FIFI DORSAY In “MR. LEMON of ORANGE ”

Crowds! Crowds! CROWDS! Friday, Saturday, Sunday—They came by the thousands —and NEVER have we heard such praise! You, too, will be just as enthusiastic when you see glorious ..... Marlene DIETRICH In her new Paramount triumph “DISHONORED” WITH VICTOR McLAGLEN WARNER OLAND —pixs— A gorgeous stage spectacle that’s a “thing of beauty and a joy forever.” JACK CRAWFORD and his famous radio trio presenting “ILLUSTRATIONS” with FRANK GABY U/f ; Dr rnnnv • ••*<> many had to wait for teats Saturday and fir nr all nil T Sunday, ar.d respectfully invite you to come early llb life VWIIIII roday—by doing o. you’ll enjoy prompt seating. rgCDfANA £Eo°wTrf<££ Richard ♦Bartheimess in “The Finger Points”

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BENEFIT DANCE WILL BE HELD BY JOODMEN Lodges Unite to Send 500 Members to Sunday School Class. All Modem Woodmen lodges of the city are uniting to enlist a body of 500 members who will attend the Christian ( Men Builders’ class of the Third Christian church. May 3, under direction of J. Raymond Trout, district deputy. Two years ago, 400 persons participated in a similar attendance at the church. Trout is assisted by field deputies, including Dr. Golden P. Silvers, trustee of Maple Camp No. 5565, who recently was appointed a deputy. Silvers has been a member of the lodge for several years. A public benefit dance is to be sponsored Thusday night by the Ladies’ Club of Marion Camp No. 3558 a the Woodmen's hall, 322 East New York street. Person bringing groceries for the poor will be admitted to the dance free. Others will pay a small admission fee which will go to the lodge’s relief fund. Monthly card party of Marion camp will be held at the East New York street hall Tuesday night. Cards and other entertainment to start at 8 p. m. are scheduled. Trout has announced that two orchestras have been engaged for the benefit dance. Both oldfashioned and modern dances will be played. George Brown is chairman oi the Maple camp entertainment committee. Blubbers now is believed to be the equipment that enables -hales to withstand the pressure of great sea depths.

NOW GOING ON REALTORS’ HOME COMPLETE SHOW Indiana’s Greatest Show —celebrating its lOtn anniversary with a bigger, more beautiful, more educational show than ever before. New features, unusual decorations, new ideas. ADMISSION 50c Mfg. Bldg., State Fairgrounds Open Daily 11 A.M.-10:30 P.M. MOTION PICTURES nn'TT7Tj| | :> “Who Wants Me Next?"' I II I’ll Danes lor a Dime!” Ip 1 1 Glamorous Star of “ILLICIT” wj j Hg in Columbia's Triumph ||; f j I “10c a Dance” 11 W,oVr l OAB0 A B OW C S LET K, ! 1 jfll What a Show 1 j) !'jj| Starting Friday! Ij \| two big s' W First Run. Full Length ■ | FEATURES j | Gary Cooper ui Ja*i Grey* 1 “HGHTIMG cabmms I