Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 114, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1933 — Page 17
SEPT. 21, 1933_
6 Tilts on State Card Eight Hoosier Schools Open Football Campaigns This Week. The 1933 football season will get under way in Indiana this week with eight Hoosier secondary college teams scheduled to play in six games. The encounter between Butler and Franklin here Friday night tops the card. Franklin will be trying to avenge a 14-0 defeat at the hands of Butler last season. The only other state team to see action Friday is Evansville, en route now to Cape Girardeau, Mo., to meet Southeastern Missouri State Teachers college. Indiana's only secondary college to win all its games last season will return to the gridiron Saturday, when Valparaiso entertains Illinois State Normal. The Uhlans have won seven straight, but are entering a lengthier schedule than in 1932 Central Normal of Danville will begin the season Saturday against West Liberty Teachers college at West Liberty, O. They did not meet last season Two games are schedul°d for Terre Haute Saturday. Indiana State Teachers college will test the n*v Gary Junior college eleven. After two years’ absence while doing post-graduate work, coach Wally Marks again will be directing the Sycamores. The other game on the banks of the Wabash is between Rose Poly and Oakland City. The Oaks were beaten. 33 to 0. last year by Poly. The week's schedule follow's: f RIDAV Franklin at Butler Indianapolis. Evansville at S. E Mo. State, Cape Girardeau. Mo. SATIRDAT Oakland Citv at Rose Polv. Terrr H*t;te. Gary at Indiana State Teachers Colleee. Terre Haute Central Normal at West Liberty. 0.. Teachers College Illinois State Normal at Valparaiso.
Along Big Ten Sidelines
ANN ARBOR. Mich.—Michigan's first scrimmage indicated that the Wolverines again will be one of the strongest Big Ten teams. The varsity made four touchdowns in Wednesday's scrimmage, three on running plays and one on a pass. Renner, Rudness and Schmidt stood out among the backs. COLUMBUS, O.—Coach Sam William was disappointed in Ohio State's first scrimmage, in whirh the Buckeyes scored only one touchdown on the reserve team, composed mostly of sophomores. Tommy Keefe scored on a twenty-five-yard run. The punting and passing of Clyde Phillips, sophomore quarter hark, featured for the reserves. a a a MINNEAPOLIS Shifts in the Minnesota lineup were contemplated today bv Coach Bernie Bierman. He told tne players Wednesday they had to improve 100 per cen f to wtn many games this fall. Pug Lund, half back, and George Svedsen. sophomore tackle are nursing injuries. a a a CHICAGO—Barton Smith, Long Beach, Cal., who played end last year until his leg was broken against Yale, has been shifted to full bark in the Chicago lineup by Coach Clark Shaughnessy. He probably will alternate with Wally Vvquist. sphomore. at that postion. a a a EVANSTON, ILL.—Chilly Sutton, full back understudy to Ollie Olson, promises to give Northwestern's kicking ace a close raße for the regular job, Sutton was the star of Wednesday's scrimmage, in which he ran thirty yards for a touchdown. a a a lOWA CITY. la—lowa mav open the Big Ten season agamst Northwestern with an all-sophomore backfieid Coach Ossie Solem has shifted Robert Rook from end to half back and Russell Fisher from half back to Quarter back Dick Cravne. full back., was the chief ground-gainer in Wednesday's scrimmage, in which the varsity scored nine touchdowns on the reserves. a a a MADISON. Wit.—Search for a competent passer continued in Wisconsin’s ranks today. The Badgers engaged in their fifth straight scrimmage Wednesday with the line showing up well. Kundert, liSl half back, surprised with his fine play. CHAMPAIGN. 111.—Illinois’ backfield for a practice game against the freshmen Saturday will be composed
Sunday Night Sept. 24 Onlv SHOWBOAT Indianapolis’ Finest Night Club PRESENTS The Queen of Jazz BLANCHE CALLOWAY and Her Orchestra Admission 7">c. Plus Tax For Reservations Phone Wash. 3918
MOTION* PICTURES I 15c till D. m ITA 1i i U l V" 1 UISjIMaPJ rw^ ll' i VI "wkiT Ii ] JI•kI Hp ]• I ind I •] I kl Comedy j ‘‘THE LITTLE GIANT” j , Starting Saturday I James Cagney In • Picture Snatcher"
f (RuiWv *MM \RABBE I AU SEATS '* See • 25c Complete I to I r. M. Show Every 1 after • r. m. ru- l (tmw m SAIS FL., Wc imy Auer ■ balcont. u School at cMfiSSTlte
Tiger Star
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ONE of the veterans on whom Coach Raymond E. Neal is depending for the success of his 1933 De Pauw university football team is Bob McCullough, an Indianapolis boy. McCullough is a husky from Shortridge high school who played his first season at full back and then was shifted to tackle, where he proved a mainstay all last season. He will be playing his senior year and is one of twelve lettermen back for the team.
Major Leaders
LEADING BATTER* G. AB R. HI Pet. Klein. Phillies 141 562 94 207 .368 Foxx. Athletics ... 140 537 120 190 .354 Davis. Phillies.. . 131 465 46 158 .340 Manush, Senators 146 635 112 212 .334 Simmons, White S. 142 590 83 195 .331 HOMS RUNS Foxx. Athletics .. 46 Klein. Phillies. .. 27 Ruth. Yankees . 30 Berger. Braves ... 26 Gehrig. Yankees.. 30
of Beynon, quarter back; Froschauer and cook, half backs; and Captain Walser, full back. Antillo, tackle, is granted the best chance among the sophomores of starting Saturday’s game. % SOUTH AFRICAN HEAVY FACES GYM TRIAL Bji Cnitrd Prrt ., NEW YORK. Sept. 21.—Don McCorkindale, South African heavyweight champion, may be forced to display his fistic wares in a gymnasium test before being permitted by the boxing commission to meet Patsy Perroni of Cleveland at Madison Square Garden on Oct. 9. The commission cabled the British board of boxing control for information on McCorkindale, who arrived from London Wednesday on the Aquitania.
MOTION PICTURES The VII%V>JL£L l 0 ™"™ From* Mainei to _ California, critics unite to'acclaim Lady for a Day one of the greatest jaW "Whata story! What'acting! WhatidirectionLA grand picture! Award /. .—Liberty Magazine I JBP’J "You will scream with delight!" . j 1 | "It will be a wow when It hits Broadway!" j "Only one word can describe this picture •, Its swell!. Award .. A AAA." —Screen Play Magazine - K s hotll V.olumbia Picture
CAMPAIGN WILL INTRODUCE NEW | PROGRAM OFT Association to Sponsor Health and Happiness Drive to Begin Oct. 2. A Health and Happiness crusade will be conducted by the Young Men’s Christian Association Oct. 2 to 11, it was announced today by Fermor B. Cannon, crusade general chairman. The crusade is intended to introduce the new program of club and physical activities featured by the Y. M. C. A. in response to the demands of increased leisure on the part of Indianapolifc men and young men. More Activities Listed Many new activities have been added by the physical, education and social departments. Additional health groups under competent leaders have been provided for in volleyball, basketball, boxing, wrestling. swimming, diving and life saving. Gymnasiums have been made available for individual activity and general sports from 10 a. m. to 10 p. m daily. Special low membership fees will be offered on both young men's and business men’s memberships during the crusade. Leaders Announced Division leaders to have charge of the crusade, announced today by | Cannon, include: C. O. Mogg, Metropolitan Coal Company president; G. V. Carrier, Arthur Jordan Foundation secretary; Wallace O. Lee, Indianapolis Power and Light Company personnel director; Roy Salim, Bessire & Cos. secretary; J. W. Esterline, Esterline-Angus Company president, and George Van Dyke Jr., Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance i Company special agent. Each leader will have charge of | a division of five teams with a total of thirty men. Competition between I divisions and teams will start at a "kick off” dinner Monday evening, I Oct. 2. Daily reports will be made during the campaign. MISSING MAN SOUGHT City Police Asked to Aid in Hunt for Greensfork Resident. Relatives of Robert Hughes, who disappeared from his home near Greensfork Aug. 24, have requested that any one knowing his where- ! abouts notify Inis Hughes, Cambridge City. Hughes is described as being 5 feet 7 inches tall, weighs 130 pounds, has black hair, brown eyes, and a scar on the center of his forehead. Wrong Address Published The address of Gottleib Flick. 64-year-old vice-president of the South Side Turners, is 806 Yoke street in- | stead of 1509 Barth avenue, as reported Wednesday. He formerly 1 lived at the Barth avenue address.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Meet Hungry Actress Who Is Striving Only for Art Katharine Hepburn Is Such a Character That You Will Meet in ‘Morning Glory', Which Opens Friday at Indiana. By WALTER D. HICKMAN WANT you to come over and meet anew star that is not being made just because she has a pull. ; I am talking about Katharine Hepburn who is the star of "Morning I Glory” which will be reflected on the Indiana screen, starting Friday. I want you to meet this woman who within a year's time is bound | to be one of the three female sensations of Hollywood. I have received from Tom Long of the Indiana theater some re- j quested data.
This data is as follows: It had to be all or nothing. Either she was a great actress, or a terrible actress. Just being "good” would never satisfy her. That is the sort of girl Katharine Hepburn portrays in “Morning Glory,'’ which opens Friday at the Indiana. An expression hungry, ambition fired youngster, this girl would balk at no hardship to reach her goal of success. But she set that goal high. Anything less, she counted as failure. That also is the sort of girl Katharine Hepburn is in real life. Her record shows it. Time and again in her career La Hepburn had chances to achieve | moderate success. She chucked them because she couldn’t be content with j mediocrity. Sticking to her ideals, I even when it meant losing jobs, she won out, and scored a startling triumph on the Broadway stage. Her film record, made exclusively with RKO-Radio Pictures, is even more sensational, it is said. With : her first picture, “A Bill of Divorcement,” she swept to stardom, and in “Christopher Strong" she added to her laurels. Today, she is admittedly the wonder of the screen. What is the secret of Katharine Hepburn? That is the question the cinema world has been asking since this enthralling personality swept to unprecedented screen popularity. Lowell Sherman, Miss Hepburn’s director in “Morning Glory,” has an answer. Several of them, in fact. "A keen, quick intelligence. Tremendous capacity for feeling. A vital, electric personality. Amazing talent.” To those qualities Sherman attributed her unparalleled record of achievement in pictures. “She really is a great actress,” Sherman added, with unfeigned enthusiasm. “She has everything. Intelligence, sincerity, fire and talent of a rare and high order. She also brings tremendous elan to her work. A combination of qualities like that is hard to beat.” n v n “BEAUTY FOR SALE” AT LOEW S PALACE “Beauty for Sale,” the new Metro-Goldwyn-Maver daring picturization of the sensational Faith Baldwin novel “Beauty,” which starts Friday at Loew’s Palace, brings to the screen a drama of modem city life, with a particularly intimate locale behind the scenes in a fashionable beauty salon. The story which ran serially in the Cosmopolitan
1 magazine was one of the most popular of the past season. Heading an impressive all-star cast in "Beauty for Sale," are Madge Evans, Alice Brady, Otto Kruger, Una Merkel, May Robson and Phillips Holmes. In this glamorous story, a triangular j romantic situation Is developed be- i tween the characters played by 1 Madge Evans, Alice Brady and Otto Kruger. Madge Evans, one of the most popular younger screen actresses, was last seen in "The Nuisance” and “Broadway to Hollywood.” This is Alice Brady's third talkie appearance, following upon “When Ladies Meet” and Broadway to Hollywood.” Otto Kruger, who was outstanding on the New York stage, recently made his film bow in “The Strangers Return” and “Turn Back the Clock.” Una Merkel, who plays a gold digger role, should be well remembered for her work in ‘Whistling in the Dark,” “Forty-second Street” and other recent screen successes. The cast is rounded out by Eddie Nugent, Hedda Hopper, Florine McKinney, Louise Carter and many other prominent screen players. With the three beauty parlor girls providing the triple story interest, the picture has much of the flavor of “Our Dancing Daughters.” Richard Boleslavsky directed “Beauty for Sale,” his first of American locale, having last direct- ! ed “Rasputin ana the Empress” and “Storm at Daybreak.” Holding the feature spot on the supplementary short subjects program is Hal Roach’s Our Gang rascals in their newest comedy vehicle entitled “Bedtime Worries”; also a Metro-Goldwyn -Mayer cartoon presenting Flip the Frog in “Chinaman’s Chance,” and the latest issue of world news events as picturized by Hearst Metrotone News completes the screen bill for the week.
MOTION PICTURES I STARTING FRIDAY H WHICH KIND of GIRL 1 DO MEN MARRY? Can you blame them?...young and ■ J pretty... they want the good things of life! Their story is true, and ex- ’j' * RECKLESS? citing, and filled with romance and any'main wuh 'n° f” good humor! ?U&_2aMu/Uv± ©jMMir* ROMANTIC? OR W This sad-eyed beauty, Ate Bjg| ff giving everything, HHMB H aSfcC? risking everything SSsMKB BBS : 4bvel k. MWH%i " BRADY V MADGE EVANS E3. VrJms/ otto kruger PHILLIPS HOLMES SENSIBLE?/ j ;..V| MAY ROBSON * guTlty love'cVn /f\ . RICHARD BOLESLAVSKY A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Picture tpji tSfT) jt l*.#f./ * kvkMj Xg Bj pit', JH. ill ■■■ —i ...... i.--
It NEIGHBORHOOD THEATER? ;
NORTH SIDE u..'Talbot & 22nd I TALBOTT " Janet Gaynor "" 1 1 ""————• Henrv Garat ‘ADORABLE’’ ITRATFORO Neil Hamilton if * nW "TERROR ABROAD” ■■ m A'~ k.' Noble at Mass. -M K V.C A.__ Double Feature Irene Dunn "SILVER CORD” “WHAT PRICE DECENCY” GAARICK James 1 D 3 S‘n h n ME TIGHT”’ EllerS „ \ mm —=; ~y-- mm : 30th Sc Northwestern ■ ' REX W, Constance Bennett S-_Z2 Si Joel McCrea “BED OF ROSES” S- K ..." 1 'lass Illinois at 34th aT*\ liT T-iatti Double Feature 81 Edna Mar Oliver IT S GREAT TO BE ALIVE” Norma Shearer “SMILIN’ THROUGH” „ PERFECT LNDE^T r^DIN^ ,0n Chas. Haggles “MELODY CRUISE” mam "1 St ‘ Cla,r> Ft - Wayne -ST.CLAIh j 4tUii “WORKING MAN” HOLLYWOOD 'ZiTZIZ “BE MINE TONIGHT" EAST SIDE n a tcaai a i Dearborn at 10th XM.W* i Eddie Cantor •WHOOPEE’’ • i ' — 2— 4030 E. Tenth EMBOSOM. oSSf-fi. “PLEASURE CRUISE" 5507 E. Wash. Jack Oakie ■■™SsSe mfiSr?*-*
IMPROVEMENT IN BUSINESS STILL NOTEOINSTATE New Car Sales Leading '3l Record, Set Pace as Trade Increases. Business in Indianapolis continued to improve during August, according to a report made public today by the university bureau of business res*earch. More new cars were sold in August than during any other month since May, 1931, the report stated, while department store sales made more than the usual seasonal gain to a point well above a year ago and slightiy under the corresponding period in 1931. Advertising Shows Gain Newspaper advertising gained to a point well above a year ago and 29.5 per cent under theoretical normal. Drug store sales gained in August, but continued under a year ago. Post office receipts were 0.6 per cent above a month ago ago and 3.4 per cent under a year ago. Freight car loading failed to make the usual seaspnal upturn. Bank debits made more than the seasonal decline to a point 1.2 per cent above a year ago and 35.8 per cent under normal. The building trades were slightly more active, but total construction was 75 per cent under theoretical normal. Employment Greater Total employment in all lines ot trade and industry gained 11 per cent during August to a point 19.6 per cent above a year ago. Figures were available to show how much of the upturn was made by firms under NR Abut it could not be determined how much of the upturn was the direct result of NRA and how much the normal result of increased business activity.
SHOW BOAT Indianapolis’ Finest Night Club Presents Les Shepard The Rajah of Rhythm and his orchestra Tonight and Every Night Keystone Ave. & Allisonville Rd. For Reservation Ph. WA-3918
I EAST SIDE u , . |rr .--. 211S E. 10th U A 1f sCaF* Double Feature iEtnaf* IMVH.- Elissa Landi “I LOVED YOU WEDNESDAY” Bela Lugosi “THE DEATH KISS” ~, 2930 East 10th PRPHBgWtt SSSSSKf | o„ K, o s 4,S E . F ISoSf & 1 I 13X2 E " ash " “WORKMAN MAN” ,pg|ppg|| 3442 E.^W'ash.^ | “SUPERNATURAL” P ..., . • jesss 4020 E. New York ,-TfUXIS DCN§ Eddie Quillan *' " “STRICTLY PERSONAL” SOUTH SIDE wk . . SK At Fountain Square FcU2Jk l i Irene Dunn .J* SWUARE 111 j„hn Boles BACK STREET” nj .2', i Prospect and Shelby CAM DFR( ’ Double Feature - Sallr Blane “ TRICK FOR TRICK” Bob Steele TRAILING NORTH” ,TT' . _ Vir. at Fountain Sq. FtRANABA ! Marie Dressier a>r Polly Moran “PROSPERITY" 3tEn*jas n r rr • WORKING MAN” eARFtiLg WEST SIDE ... W Wash * BeL BELMONT, Loretta Young “ZOO IN BUDAPEST” —- J ■ 2540 W. Mich. nA |C Nr * - J Lionel Barrrmor* '? - Miriam Hopkins “STRANGER S RETURN” mmmn* ‘"Hr" “IT’S GREAT TO BE AI4VR”
AUTO INJURES ORPHAN Boy. 16. Hurt as He Crosses Street in Front of Institution. Clarence Kmgen. 16, inmate of the Indianapolis Orphans home at 4107 East Washington street, was struck by an automobile driven by James Walters, Greenfield. Ind., today. Walters, driving west on East Washington street, accidentally hit the boy. who was running across the street in front of the home. The boy was treated at city hospital for injuries of the leg and head. Walters was not held by police.
MOTION PICTURES VHK wff/ in a Fast and Furious All Fun Show! lI W JOHNNY PERKINS Mm I ?f Indiana'* Own Ton of Fun mil RUTH PETTY THE 4 GOBS VI jfljjM if SwMt Singing Miss Can They Dance! A B DICK and EDITH BARSTON 1 ! International Dance Favorites I COOKIE BOWERS J 4 Movie Carfoon's Mouthpiece . . . sound recording artist B U Eccentric Entertainer Singing Sensation SsteW They've Got Rhythm They've Got Everythin*! and His N'eu Idea Music ls " " Personality . m 2 nd big weekTL (wjMSj ■ I Doctor I ■ BULL'■
PAGE 17
P.-T, A. WILL MEET AT PLEASANT RUN Teachers. Patrons of School to Be Entertained. First Pa rent-Teacher .Association meeting of the current term will be held by the Pleasant Rim school next Tuesday night at 7:45. Following a business meeting, a reception for teachers and patrons of th® 1 school will be held.
