Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 309, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1932 — Page 7
MAY 5, 1932.
Patterns PATTERS' ORDER BLANK Pattern Department. Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis. Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- C Q T tern No; 3 0# Slue Street City - State Name
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r DARLING LITTLE FROCK
Small girls' clothes of good taste, necessarily remain simple, as this cunninK French ..iodel illustrated. It's fascinating in pale blue cotton broadcloth with white dots and white bias Mnding trim. Note th circular cut of the skirt that per nits of perfect freedom and gives an empire effect, attached to a brief yoke, front and back. It may be made with long sleeves. If desired. It's especially easy to launder. Style No. 587 is designed for sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Size 4 requires 14 yards of 39-inch material w;th 9*4 yards of bias binding or ribbon. Dimity prints, dotted swiss, cotton broadcloth prints, gingham checks, pique and wool challis prints are perfect mediums, • Order our new Fashion magazine, to show you the way in design, colors. etc. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cent* in stamps or coin (coin is preferred*. Wrap coin carefully. BRIDGE CLUB~\VI~LL CLOSE ITS SEASON T. A. T. bridge club will close its season with a dinner tonight at the Kopper Kettle. Hostesses will be Misses Sarah M. May, Pearl Malcolm, Elsie Cox and Alberta Schakel.- ' Wrist corsages of sweet peas will be given to each guest. A historyof the year's activities, bound in book ,orm in gold and orchid, also will be gift*.
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Convention of P.-T. A. to Start Soon Local and state delegates to the thirty-sixth national convention of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers to be held in Minneapolis. Minn.. May 15 to 20. include Mrs. S. M. Myers, president of the Indianapolis federation; Mrs. John Askren. president of the Marion county association, and Mrs. W. J. Hockett, Ft. Wayne, president of the Indiana congress. Mrs. M W. Biair. Terre Haute, vice-president of the Indiana congress. and Mrs. Thomas Ross, Evansville, treasurer of the Indiana congress, will also attend the convocation which will have as its theme, 'Safeguarding Childhood Through This Crisis." Homemaking on Program This theme will be presented from the standpoints of safeguards In the home, school and community. Constructive measures to protect children from permanent detrimental effects likely to result from the present economic depression will engage the attention of parents, teachers and others interested in child welfare. A comprehensive view of home economics as seen by leaders in the field will be given in a national conference on homemaking on Monday, May 16. under the direction of Dr. William John Cooper. United States commissioner of education. Dan Educational Sessions Educational conferences conducted by trained leaders and addresses given by nationally known speakers will be included in the program of the session. The general session on Tuesday afternoon. May 17, will be broadcast over the Columbia broadcasting system from 1:45 to 2:45.
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DIRECTOR BUILDS REAL HOTEL ON LOT •‘Grand.Hotel,” With Greta Garbo, John and Lionel Barrymore, Opens Saturday Afternoon at the Ohio. IN few other film productions has so much importance been attached to studio settings as was the case with the picturesque interiors for “Grand Hotel.” all-star production which begins a special engagement. Saturday afternoon, at the Ohio. According to Cedric Gibbons. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer art director, the importance of settings here was largely due to the fact that the Berlin hotel in which the entire drama was enacted became a personality rather than a mere background, in the unfoldment of the Vicki Baum story. The Grand hotel. Gibbons explains, is not an actual place. It is entirely mythical. It just happens to be in Berlin and therefore has a
German influence. Otherwise it might be in any other cosmopolitan center anywhere on the globe. It is. in fact, a symbol of life itself. It is the world in which we all are transient guests, with “someone else sleeping in our beds when we leave." Those who saw the cinema settings. spread over several of M-G-Ms‘ biggest sound stages, marveled at the striking excellence of the architecture and appointments. It is a strictly modern hotel, suggesting the German, yet wholly individual in character. Its personality is its very own. "Motion picture settings usually serve the purpose of a background to the action of the picture,” Gibbons declared. “Here, however, the sets take the place of an actor, one of the central figures in the story. The ‘Grand Hotel’ is bigger than all the people who come and go within its walls. “We therefore went about designing the sets with the view of bringing the background forward on the same plane as the players. The set is a distinct character. The human characters are important. But in this story the hotel is even more so. “Our settings were created to represent the most modem progress in hotel facilities and appointments
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—something very modem but not modernistic. The mail chutes all bear an airplane emblem, symbolic of the type of sendee expected in a ‘Grand Hotel.’ In the lobby the telegraph counter offers radio senice to all ships at sea. “Asa cosmopolitan institution there is every facility available for translation or stenographic work in any language. There is an international scope about It that makes it at once the stopping place of all kinds of people from all corners of the earth. “People are always coming and going. No one stays very long. As Vicki Baum wrote, ’there are a hundred doors on every corridor and no one knows his neighbor.’ That is the feeling we tried to express.’’ ana GEORGE AND MIRIAM ARE TOGETHER NOW George Bancroft and Miriam Hopkins are together on the talking screen for the first time as a co-starring team in Paramount’s new picture entitled “The World and the Flesh,’’ which is to open Friday at the Indiana. They appear in a story dealing with Russia during the Red uprising. Bancroft appears as a burly sea-
man who is a dominating figure among the revolutionary forces in the Black sea region, while Miss Hopkins portrays a beautiful dancer. Although of peasant origin, she is accepted by nobility as an aristocrat. The plot of "The World and the Flesh" is concerned with the tumultuous romance which develops when the two meet under unusual conditions at the height of the revolution. Against this stormy background, the story of the romance unfolds with the principals becoming dangerously involved in the tangle of the conflict several times. Bancroft and Miss Hopkins appear in “The World and the Flesh" under the direction of John Cromwell. They are supported by George E. Stone, Harry Cording, Mitchell Lewis, Oscar Apfel, and Alan Mowbray. A cartoon comedy and other film novelties will also be on the same bill at the Indiana. * • * Indianapolis theaters today offer: “So Big" up to 11 p. m. and then special premiere of "The Trial of Vivienne Ware" at the Apollo. “Scarface" at the Palace. “Sky Bride" at the Circle up to 9 p. m. and then special premiere of “The Famous Ferguson Case." “A Modern Virgin" at Keith’s. Esther Ralston at the Lyric. “Ladies of the Jury" at the Indiana, “Mrs. Partridge Presents" at the Civic, and burlesque at the Colonial. u a a Neighborhood theaters tonight offer: Reaching for the Moon" jffid “Tomorrow and Tomorrow" at the Mecca, "The Big Shot" at the Belmont. “Business and Pleasure at the Talbott and Garfield. “Cheaters at Play” at the Stratford. “Man Who Played God" at the Rivoli, "Devotion” at the Hollywood. “The Menace” at the Daisy, “Corsair" at the Emerson. "Strangers in Love" at the Tacoma, and “Guilty Hands’ at the Hamilton.
BOY SCOUT HONORED Joseph Eastman Awarded an Ealge Badge. Insignia of the highest award of Boy Scoutdom rested on the uniform of Joseph Eastman. Troop 18, today, following his qualification as an Eagle scout at the court of awards Wednesday night. He is the second of his troop to achieve the honor. Troop 80 took first place in collection of merit badges at the court, gathering a total of twenty- | seven; Troop 34 scored twenty-six.
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Forty-nine troops were represented, and 218 merit awards made. Eastman led individual honors, followed by Eagle Scout Fred Grumme. Troop 90. who attained
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an eagle palm; Clarence Gardner, Troop 34. Wilbur Elliott, Troop 54, and John Brandon. Troop Bfi. who won life scout badges. The rank of Star scout was given ten youth*
