Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 133, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1933 — Page 16
PAGE 16
FARM LEADERS WILL SPEAK AT STATE MEETING Federal Agricultural Aid to Discuss Produce Curtailment. George N. Peek and other leaders Jn administration of the agricultural adjustment act are scheduled as speakers on the two-day program of the annual Indiana Farm Bureau Federation convention, Nov. 15-16, in the Odd Fellows building. Discussion of details of the government’s farm products production curtailment program will be lead by Mr. Peek. Other speakers include Francis W. Peck, co-operative local commissioner under the farm credit act; Edward A. Neal, president of the American Farm Bureau, and Lieu-tenant-Governor M. Clifford Townsend, state commissioner of agriculture. A flve-day membership drive will be launched it was announced by Secretary L. L. Needier.
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Ely Culbertson’s Bridge ! Series Opens at Apollo ‘Murder at the Bridge Table’ Tells in Both Comedy and Dramatic Form Why People Quarrel at Cards. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN THE second that Ely Culbertson decided to put ’ theater" into his bridge series for the movies, the expert had a big-sized hit on his hands. The trouble with so many of the bridge movies I have seen is thajL they sounded like a lecture or a lesson instead of entertainment. , In each of the six chapters of the series, a complete story is told and why certain plays, situations and the like caused certain things to happen. Take the first one, for example, which opens at the Apofto today. It is called "Murder at the Bridge ’J’able.” During a game of contract bridge, a wife murders her husband alter he had quarreled with her regarding an alleged dumb play.
The game is analyzed by Mr. Culbertson during the trial of the wife in court. His testimony results in a verdict of not guilty for the defendant. Here is not only expert card playing and a discussion of the merits of certain plays, but here is fine dramatic theater as well as comedy at times. This one runs a little over twenty-one minutes. Others in the series are: ‘‘A Forced Response,’’ "Society Cheaters,” "Transatlantic Bridge Tricks,” "Three Knaves and a Queen,” ,and "What Not to Do in Bridge."
You will find that both Mr. Culbertson and his wife are good actors. Here is the smartest bridge entertainment in movie form I H&ve ex- ; perienced. a a a Indianapolis theaters today offer: j Mae West in “I’m No Angel” at the' j Circle. Wallace Beery, Jackie Cooper and George Raft in “The Bowery” at the Palace, "Walls of Gold” I and the first of the Culbertson 1 bridge series at the Apollo, Lionel 1 Barrymore on the screen in "One
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
| Man’s Journey” and Ted Mack and • his band onUhe stage at the In- j diana. "Pilgrimage” at Keith’s, j "Damaged Lives” at the Ohio, and burlesque at the Mutual and the Colonial. nun The deadline in the scrambled I photo contest conducted by The ! Indianapolis Times in connection 1 with the showing of "The Bowery" at the Palace, is midnight tonight. ! i All exhibits must be in the hands I of the Scrambled Photo Editor at that time, or bearing a postmark showing that it was mailed before j the deadline. RAILROAD ENGINEER 56 YEARS, RETIRES Veteran Has Piloted Train More Than 2,764,000 Miles. By United Pres* NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 13.—Locomotive engineer W. J. (Dad) Furlong has retired after driving locomotives 2,764,000 miles over the run from New Orleans to Lafayette, La., in fifty-six years of continuous service. : Sickness has kept Furlong off the • job only three hours and not even • one minor accident has occurred ’ when he was at the throttle. The 1 veteran still has the travel urge and l wants to ride his old train, the : Golden West, to California.
SOVIET UNABLE TO SHIP WHEAT; ! FACE HIGH LOSS Millions of Bushels Lay Rotting at Stations of Railroads. Bi/ T. nitrd Frrts MOSCOW. Oct. 13—Millions of bushels of wheat, lying unprotected , on statioh platforms throughout the i Soviet Union, are threatened by de- | struction and decay unless the grain | can be shipped rapidly to markets, it was revealed today Estimates showed that 300,000 carloads of grain, totaling approximately 5.000.000 tons, had accumu--1 lated at railway stations from Si- ■ berian farms to the southern w’heat L areas of the Caucasus. [ A large part of the grain is ly- !! ing unprotected in direct danger of [ | being spoiled by rains unless moved :; promptly. Winter already is setting in northern areas, and millions
of bushels may be frozen and destroyed. The Gudok, official organ of the commissariat cf railroads, warned that unless the situation improved a large portion of the Russian bumper wheat crop would be destroyed. MUSEUM PURCHASES 3 ANCIENT CARVINGS Heads Believed to Date Back to Twelfth Century. j By United Press ST. LOUIS. Oct. 13. —Three heads, carved from stone, and believed dating back to the twelfth I century, were purchased recently by | the City Art Museum. The price paid was $6,930. Although the heads have been j on display for nearly a year, acj tual purchase was not made until ; recently. Intense interest of the j public prompted museum officials to ' make the purchase. Although the heads are not | identified, one resembles the famous j "Beau Dieu” of Amiens, a masterpiece of several centuries ago. The other two pieces of art work apparently are of a saint or a j prophet of the twelfth century and ( a saint of the fourteenth or fifteenth century.
MONTREAL U. MAY CLOSE Government Aid Necessary to Keep Doors Open After Dec. 1. By United Peru MONTREAL. Oct. IT—Unless the University of Montreal receives a grant of $200,000 from the Quebec government the institution will be £a Great Eastern serves more territory \|f and a larger population than any other bus company in the world! CHICAGO 53.75 COLUMBUS $4 LOUISVILLE 2.30-ST. LOUIS $5 -PITTSBGH 7.2S ; NEW YRK 13.75 - PHILAPHIA 12.25 - DAYTN 2.75 1 CINCIN TI 2.75 • WASHTN 12.25-LS ANGLS27.SO | —savings to hundredsof other cities. ! Write, or phone RILEY 9666 UNION BUS STATION 125 WEST MARKET ST. gjTy tlL-hix
.OCT. 13, 1933
forced to close its doors on Dec. 1, university officials announce. The earth is pitted in numerous places where meteorites have struck. New Discovery Routs Body Odor In This Hard Water Science has made anew discovery about body odor. It is caused by stale perspiration curds, and requires deeppore cleansing. It cannot be ended bv ordinary soaps,*because their sluggish lathers cannot reach into the pores and cleanse them. Instead the soap combines with the waste material and forms clogging curds! Kirk’s Coco Castile soap works in an entirely different way. No matter how hard the water, this 100 "r pure vegetable oil soap breaks instantly into a searching, bubbly lather. This bubbly lather cleans deep into the pores, actually remove* the embedded stale perspiration curds —then rinses out completely, and in a flash. Thus it ends body odor at it* *ource 1 Delightful to use. Kirk’s Coco Castile is entirely free from M.S. medicine smell). And stimulating to the ukin. A big generous cake, half again larger than the average toilet soap, and now at the lowest price in history! At this new reduced price, it is America’s outstanding soap bargain. Be sure to ask for Kirk’s Castile by name—at your grocer's.
