Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 230, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 February 1933 — Page 11
FEB. 3, 1033
12 PROGRAMS SCHEDULED BY LEISURE CLUBS | Hundreds to Be Entertained Tonight in Various Neighborhoods. IXIM RE HOt R CALENDAR TONIGHT Christian Park community house. Ilctchcr Place community renter. M. Wayne and Walnut Club. Municipal Gardens. Michigan and Noble Club at School 9. at 'il Last \ermnnt street. Nebraska Cropsrv ( liib at School 2'!, at 1251 >ou'.h Illinois street. School 12 at 533 South West street. School IK at I He; West Market street. School 2 at IMI Last Sixteenth street. School ".I at Kelly and Bo.vd streets. School .it at 2030 Winter asenue. School 6*, at 3615 West Walnut street. School 67. at 3615 West Walnut -JUrcet, will be entertained at a program tonight given by Broad Ripple high school pupils, under direction of Miss Ruth Carter. The program Is in charge of L. T. Stafford and Mrs. Richard Ross. Kidnaping Betty,” a play by the Central players, under direction of Charles Smith, will be given at the Nebraska Cropsey Leisure Hour Club tonight. The club meets at School 22, at 1351 South Illinois Btreet. Other features of the program will be a trumpet quartet, composed of Theodore Bluemcl, Herbert Mascher, John Click and Robert Davis; the Hoosirrland Silver String band, with Edward Wolf ley, Roy Gibson, Charles and Guy Padgett and Kenneth Jolly as members; solo dances by Miss Rosalind Ludwig, accompanied by Miss Thelma Kasting; guitar music by Charles Hager and songs by the Lloyd Nevada troup. Three one-act plays will be presented tonight at School 16 at 1402 West Market street, by the Broadway players, under the direction of Robert Louis Oberrich. The cast will include Mary Frances Hoagland, Marjorie Brownlee, John Thurston, #farold Welch, Harry Thomas, Jessie Keller, George E. Hoagland Jr., and Martha Davis. Si Perkins’ Corn Huskers, including Charles Haase, Vernon McKinney, Vesper McKinney, John Cotvell and Ward Wolf wiil also be on the program, which is in charge of L. E. Hall. “Adventures of Grandpa,” a threeact play, will be presented tonight at, School 12, at 733 South West street, by the Garfield Players. The play is under the direction of Arthur D. Barnett,. Members of the cast are Ruth Clinge, Ruth May, Alma Queisser, Marjorie and Muriel Williams, Bill Spackey, Rudolph Clinge and Kenneth Click. >’ Sergeant Timothy McMahon will be in charge of a safety program tonight at School 34. Kelly and Boyd streets. Readings will be given by Vera Nicholi. Musical features of the program will be songs by the South Sea M;lody boys; songs by Catherine Nuench, accompanied by Catherine Otto; accordion numbers by Betty Marie Starr and Thomas Moriarty, and har- ' monica numbers by Harry Garner. A home-talent program has been announced for tonight at the Oak Hill Club at School 22 at 2030 Winter avenue. The program will be in charge of Ralph Matillo. “Indians in New Moxoco” will be the subject of a talk tonight by Kill is Howie of the Children's museum at the Christian Park Leisure Hour club. Music will be furnished by 4he Eilo Hawaiian trio, composed of Lacy Manning and Carlein and Kermit Shaw; the Golden Four quartet, including Walter Pursley, Lewcllyn Booker. John Washington and Raymond Hunter, and community singing, accompanied by Mrs Myrtle Mines. The program is under direction of Mesdames Harc'r' Daringer and Max Darmstandler. .uidiana School for the Deaf, under the direction of Dr. O. M. Pittonger, will give a demonstration of its work tonight at the Ft. Wayne and Walnut club. The program will ■lnclude tap dimeing, songs by the girls’ chours and a demonstration of communication with a student who is deaf, dumb and blind. The mothers’ chorus from School 2 will give musical numbers. Two one-act sketches will be given tonight by the Elmer Marshall Players at the Municipal Gardens Club. Mrs. Gladys White and Miss Lucille Atherton will present "The Happy Ending.” and Mrs. White will give a comedy rural sketch, in costume, entitled “The Belle of Carrot Corners.” Jimmy Commons and Charles Eberly will give “Stooges and Otherwise.” Robert Carpenter and Rex Campbell, piano pupils of , William Peacock, will play. Other music will be furnished by the Sering trio, members of which are Mary Alice and Charles Sering, and Kenneth Manners. Melvin Berryman’s play acting class will present “Dress Suits” at the Michigan and Noble Club tonight. The cast will include Max Engle, Mildred Arbuckle. Ruth Hugh and Everett Jones. Roy Allrod, Carlos Jones, James C. Sortwell and Harry Saunders, “The Odd Size Four,” will sing. Community singing will be led by George Whiteman, accompanied by Mrs. Helen Thomas Martin. Melvin and Elvin Shuppert, the , Harmony Twins, will sing
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Warner Baxter’s Latest Opens Today at Apollo Mystery and Death Figure in the Story of ’Luxury Liner’, Which Starts Engagement Saturday at Circle. 11 EARNER BAXTER and Miriam Jordan, who made her recent film W debut with him in “Six Hours to Live," are together again in "Dangerously Your.'..” Fox Film production coming to the screen of the Apollo theater, today. Briefly, the new photoplay revolves around the adventures of Baxter in the role of suave socie'y crook and Miss Jordan as a lady detective employed by an insurance company to protect its clients’ jewels from such men as Baxter. The girl sleuth sets a clever trap for the wily thief, only to be outwitted and shanghaid aboard his luxurious yacht in which he puts out
to sea. Eventually, she falls in love with the man she is supposed to bring to justice, and her solution of the problem is said to supply a surprising denouement to this fast moving story. Prominent in the cast are Herbert Mundin. popular comedian; Florence Eldridge. wife of Frederic March; Florence Roberts, Nella Walker. Will Davidson, Arthur Hoyt, Tyrell Davis and Mischa Auer. "Dangerously Yours” was adapted for the talking screen by Horace Jackson, screen author of “The Animal Kingdom.” Frank Tuttle, who produced “The Big Broadcast” directed "Dangerously Yours.” Short subjects will supplement the featured attraction on the program.
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These prices good in all Greenwood and Mooresville as well as Indianapolis city stores, Atlantic* pacific™
“LUXURY LINER”% TO OPEN SATURDAY George Brent. Zita Johann. Vivienne Osborne, Alice White. Verree Teasdale. C. Aubrey Smith and Frank Morgan head the passenger list” of "Luxury Liner” drama, which opens at the Circle on Saturday. The picture is a cross section of life aboard a magnificent steamship plying from Europe to America. In the six days of its voyage life and death take place on its decks; romantic love and passionate hatred flourish. Central figures in the drama are George Brent as a physician and Zita Johann, his nurse. Brent has secured the position of ship's doctor for the voyage to attempt to affect a reconciliation with his wife, who
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has eloped aboard it with another man. But his plans are frustrated by the frequency of the calls he receives from ailing passengers and he manages to get no more than occasional glimpses of her. Their meetings, however, are enough to drive her to extreme measures which vitally affect the : lives of every one of the passengers 1 aboard. Her ultimate step is one which leaves the doctor and the nurse, who has comforted him in his misery, free to reconstruct their shattered careers together. A world-famous financier; a successful opera singer; a girl travelling in steerage, but using her charms to get herself up to first cabin; an elevator operator who poses as an officer, and a dying
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mother travelling to New York for one last reunion with her son. are among the other important characters. Short subjects are Phil Baker in Poor Little Rich Girl,” a Newman Travelogue “High Spots" and a news reel. “Dogs of war” were no mere figure of speech in ancient time, for the Assyrians and other nations used dogs in the fighting, and often dog fought against dog when armies met.
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KIDNAPING ROBBERY PROBED BY POLICE Steal Salesman's Auto: Lock Him in Freight Car. Police today were without clews to identity of two bandits who Thursday kidnaped an automobile salesman, stole his car and locked
him in a railroad refrigerator box car and a few minutes later held up a filling station at 1140 East Washington street. L. Randall Swisshelm. partner in | the Swisshelm and Son auto agency ; at 544 East Washington street, had taken the bandit pair for a ride to demonstrate a used car. At Liberty and East streets, Swisshelm was ordered from the auto, and forced to walk with one of the gunmen to the railroad ear. The bandits then held up Laurel Yake, 37, cf 3016 South Pennsyl-
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vania street, the cas station attendant, obtaining Sls. Swisshelm was released within a few minutes by a railroad employe after his shouts were heard by several boys walking on the right-of-way. - Lecture to Be Heid Integrating forces at work in the Far East were to be described by the Rev. A Raymond Kepler of Shanghai. China, in an address today at a luncheon of the Optimist ' Club in the Columbia Club.
