Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 140, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1934 — Page 10

PAGE 10

OTTO DELUSE HONORED FOR PENSION WORK Eagles' National President Pays Tribute to Old Age Campaign Leader. Thirteen ypars of devotion to the cause of old age pensions in Indiana was accorded high tribute yesterday afternoon at a meeting of Indianapolis Eagles Aerie in the course of an address by George F. Douglas. Philadelphia, national president of the order, who praised a predecessor in the office. Otto P. Deluxe. Indianapolis. In honor of Mr Douglas, the nene initiated a class of fifty-six candidates including both candidates for mayor of Indianapolis, John W. Kem and Walter Pritchard; August Mueller, Democratic nominee for secretary of state, and Otto Ray, Democratic candidate for sheriff. The ritual was exemplified by the national prize-winning drill team of Peru aerie, directed by Harry Temple. Fred J Snyder. Indianapolis aerie president, was in charge of the meeting. Mr. Douglas was introduced by J. Pierce Cummings. Indianapolis, a former national trustee of the order. Grover V Camden was chairman of the committee which obtained the new members. Following the meeting, a buffet supper was served by the auxiliary of Indianapolis aerie. Mrs. Dorothy Kurtz is auxiliary presi|?nt. Among the national and state eaders of the order attending the fleeting were Ray C. Brock, Kokomo trustee; Dr. Fred C. Dilley, Brazil, chief medical examiner of the Eagles insurance department; Arthur M. Follis, Wabash, state president; Charles Stewart and Joseph Humbert, Kokomo, past state presidents; Ernest E. Cloe, Noblesville, state secretary, and Ed Wilkins. Peru, state chaplain.

fA'iij BARRIE'S mo * v 9 * O r • o v % •o v * tfo ry WHAT crew WOMAN MOWS' ■n* AHERNE m.m. EVANS Metro Gi)U*yn- Go-Round” Afii ver Romance Benny

// brl l.i ,nrf inspiriting! NSHR ' Not a dull moment!" Fn r Pi — Whitirorth 'vjl'i K CL/ in The .Wire. i ASTAIRE^-1 GINGER 'iE| J R ° GEf^y The GAYW3f> DIVORCEEJf^I wM> Edward Everett JF// ,

ENTAt ip N S THEATERS ,

NORTH SIDE m | ii/\'ivr Talbot A Wnt I A I KOI I Rouble Feature iaiilA/1 1 Will Roters HANDY ANDY” MONE\ MEANS NOTHING" n Illinois at Otb |C 11/ Double Feature Bint Crosbr 'HI LOVES MI NOT” • LADIES SHOCLD LISTEN" I JPK )\V N 2SU' Feature Ur UMI IN shirler Temole •NOW AND FOREVER” "PI RSI'F.D” DREAM • TREASIRF ISLAND” jf l9th and Collete Strnftnrfl Double Feature dlldllUlU William Powell •THE KEY” “SHOOT THE WORKS" a Noble at Mass. ME( 1C A **•' riifJ.” • THE OLD FASHIONED WRY" • THE PERSONALITY KID” /s a ts is | >s|* Illinois at .tnth ItARKKiK Double Feature UAIYIYIVJIA Joan pra wford “SADIE M KEF” “COCKEYED GAY AUERS'* SOtb A Northwestern K It \ Double Feature Richard Di* HIS GREATEST GAMBLE” MANY HAPPY RETLRNS” 7 ADlXir* Double Feature tiAKLIV] Stuart Frwin “BACHELOR BAIT” “STRAIGHT IS THE WAY” ST f.l AIK Double Feature iJI. ValarLllX Ronald Coleman •RCLI-DOG DRLMMOND STRIKES BACK” "COCKEYED CAVALIERS” EAST SIDE rsresfe a K!l\ MW E Wash. SL SlKAi\Ll Double Feature 0 1 * Vi W allace Beers TRE ASI RE ISLAND” ‘ HOI'SEW IFF” n nr/ v a a Dearborn at lot la If IVI II I Double Feature IVI Harold Lloed THE CAT S PAW” “CRIME WITHOCT P ASSION" IRVING V WaS.ce*^4 tT_ T I* sVI Jackie Cooper ‘ TREASI RE ISLAND” JSSTjr^jrli/ v> a . Ml! E Wa.h.SL " TACOMA Rfs: • HERE COMES THE NAVY" • ROMANCE IN THE RAIN" tuxedo •Wvsar •OLD-FASHIONED WAT" "GIRL FROM MISSOURI"

Walter Hampden Presents Stirring Performance of ‘King Richard lIP

WALTER HAMPDEN again has come and gone after entertaining two splendid audiences with ‘ Richelieu" and Shakespeare's "Richard III.” Mr. Hampden often has presented "Richelieu" on tour, but this was the first time he has played "Richard" in Indianapolis. Mr. Hampden's victory in the role of the hunchbacked king is more pronounced because Richard is devoid of any honest emotions. Richard's utterances were not great and he is remembered only as the ruler who cried out in defeat: ‘My kingdom for a horse." Mr. Hampden knows how to inject comedy into the reading of his lines and the star seemed to be saying all the time: "Richard was a rascal, a murderer and a rake, but he was so weak that at times he was comical.” And Mr. Hampden plays the role in that manner. At times he held the audience in awe as he plotted one murder after another. Personally, I never considered “Richard T II” a great play, but only a blood-thirsty record of a man who murdered even helpless babies to wear a crown. Mr. Hampden's support was adequte with at least four individual performances which stood out. The glory of Shakespeare is in the reading of his lines and in that Mr. Hampden excells. He will be welcomed again at' English's as soon as he wants to return. a a a a a a

A Perfect Picture TEN years from now I win remember Helen Hayes as Maggie Wylie in the movie version of Sir James M. Barrie's "What Every Woman Knows." Just as I will remember all my life the work of the late great Marie Dressier in “Anna Christie,” so will I remember the quiet, sincere and appealing work of Miss Hayes in the Barrie play. Barrie is serious and gay in this play concerning how a little wife made a great man out of her big-headed husband. She knew her husband's virtues and his faults and above all she knew the value of an honest wife’s love. Maggie let John think he was the whole works, but when he faced the truth, he realized how weak he really was and how great and fine was his little wife. Helen Hayes brings some of the sweetest and mast wistful acting the screen has released in many a month. She gave a perfect performance as Maggie on Broadway in the spoken drama, and she repeats that victory in the movie version. If I were to mark down right now the ten most pleasing performances I have seen in my life time. Miss Hayes’ Maggie would be on that list. To me. this Barrie movie is a perfect picture, one of the very few that has been turned out. There is not a weak member of the cast. Brian Aherne is John, the wild, rather big-headed husband of little Maggie. He is magnificient, even to his haircut, or rather the lack of a haircut. John is not an insipid character because at times he is everyman. It is perfect acting, as perfect as that of Miss Hayes but not as sympathetic. Dudley Digges and Donald Crisp are Maggie's brothers who bargain to get a husband for Maggie. They, too, are perfect. So is David Torrence. Watch the work of Lucille Watson as the Comtess. It is one of the great delights of the season. This jlicure is for the entire family. Don’t miss it. Now at Loew's Palace.

Ii *^,|l Bin CHARLES BOYER VM |W\ LOREn^YMNfiggM^

rsii min IWHIBI THE 810 PICTUBH PUT!

W ilia Cathfr’i Tulit/pr I’rlre Novel of a Woman Who Married to Escape 1/ivf! BARBARA STANWYCK in ‘A LOST LADY’ with RICARDO CORTEX L FRANK MORGAN 1.Y1.F. TAI.BOT

EAST SIDE HAMILTON • HANDY ANDY” ‘•PERSONALITY KID” nan i■i' n ee e. Tenth at. PAKKrK Double Feature 1 ‘Al'Mljn E G Robinson "MAN WITH TWO FACES” CALL ITLCCK” n SY2I E. Washington Kl 1\ Y Double Feature 1 Eddie Cantor "WHOOPEE” “ONCE TO EVERY WOMAN” .. , 1500 Rooseselt Hollywood Ui v^ r JKS*” • SHE LEARNED ABOVT SAILORS” EMERSON 4 Xuble T F^ur S e Richard Barthelmess •MIDNIGHT ALIBI” • STAMBOIX QI'EST” n New ler at E Wash Paramount sag l * “SHOOT THE WORKS” CALL IT LI CK” SOI’TH SIDE FOUNTAIN SQUARE Double Feature E. G. Robinson ■ MAN WITH TWO F\CES” “WHOM THE GODS DESTROY” n * \ti,■x is /s Prospect and Shelbs SANDERS "GIRL FROM MISSOURI” THE KEY” /-s . nnn IS EM® Shelbv St. tiARr ILLL) Doub,r f>,ur * Warner Baxter “GRAND CANARY” “HERE COMES THE GROOM” . <• , I /\i Proxn't A (hnrrhmar \\ A LOIN Double Feature •* T ‘ Elissa Landi “THE GREAT FLIRTATION" _ MIDNIGHT ALIBI" ORIFNTAI ’K&MSS 1 vmii.itinb Jo , £ Brown ■ THE CIRCVS CLOWN" • OF HI MAN BONDAGE" WEST SIDE ' BELMONT w S&ljgip • DEFENSE RESTS” “IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT” i\ a *• W. Mich. St. ‘ LIAI> I Double Feature Robert Young “WHOM THE GODS DESTROT” "SRB LEARNED AROCT SAILORS" CT A TP *' s ** W. loth St. N I *\ I K Double Feature J George Bancroft “ELMER AND ELSIE” “SLOB WOMEN ABE DANGEROUS”

•The Theatrical World-

BY MALIER U. HICKMAN

A Great New Team THOSE who go to the movies regularly always are searching for anew movie team. Such a team is found in ‘‘The Gay Divorcee” and the couple is Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Mr. Astaire has graced many a Broadway revue in his time. Since his sister married and gave up the stage, Fred has needed a partner. He has found her in Ginger, whom we all can remember when she was just getting her start in movie stage presentations. Miss Rogers has improved rapidly until she has become one of the best dancers and one of the screen’s most pleasing personalities. This has come entirely through years of hard work. When you see Ginger and Fred dance the ‘‘Continental” you will realize that you are watching a mighty efficent dance team. And, by the way, the second you see this grand new ballroom number you will want to go right home and practice up on it. The dance fits right into the clever story of the wife who wants to get a divorce from her husband who is a college professor. Don’t get me wrong. The theme is not treated seriously at all. The structure of ‘ Gay Divorcee” is along legitimate musical lines. All the situations are bright and many of them have been given anew twist, especially when Ginger, as Mimi. meets Mr. Astaire as Guy Holden for the first time. The entire cast is smart and smacks of Broadway as it has the services of Alice Brady, Edward Everett Horton, Erik Rhodes and others. It’s a mighty gay picture and one which you can be sure will give you a grand and glorious time in the theater. Now at the Indiana. 000 Concerning 'A Lost Lady’ THE way Willa Cather’s “A Lost Lady” has been brought to the screen has resulted in a story insipid at times, and often very, very mushy. The actors struggle desperately to make

sucessful this theme of a woman g o in g from the arms, mentally speaking, of one man to another. The situations do not ring true, and I know I had the greatest c o ntempt for Marian Ormsby (Barbara Stanwyck) when she tossed aside her fine, upstand-

Miss Stanwyck

ing husband iFrank Morgan)* for a man by the name of Ellinger and

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

played by Ricardo Cortez m his most “snaky” manner. All this other man” had to offer was some ! ardent love making. It may be the way the theme has been devoloped in the movie which makes it sound so silly at times. ; There is no reason for Hollywood so often forcing down our throats stories of wives leaving perfectly wonderful and ever so perfect husbands for lounge lizards. Personally, I’m good and tired of this inane j stuff. At the beginning of the picture. | Miss Stanwyck overacts tremendously in about every scene. The Hollywood formula makes a girl suffer and suffer when her first I would-be-husband is shot down just before he is to go to the altar bei cause he was a rotter. Any sensible girl would have weli corned the gun play which prevent|ed her from becoming the wife of j a rascal. Miss Stanwyck failed to convince ' me that she was doing good acting | when she ruined the health and j career of her mighty fine husband .on the eve of his greatest legal ! battle. Miss Stanwyck does come through with a good performance when she realizes what a fool Marian has been. I blame the story for her shortcomings more than I do her. Os course Frank Morgan gives an interesting and a fine performance. But the story makes this husband even too good. This is just another movie and at times not even that. Now at the Circle. 000 Concerning Vaudeville BERGEN, ventriloquist, stands out vividly as the star of the current stage offering at the Lyric. He is a voice-throw r er W’ho not only knows his particular trick well, but couples with it the rare •knack of making his vocal “dialog” humorous. Other acts on the program, w'hich is brilliant only in sparse spots, include Bert Nagle and his company in an offering called “Midnight Serenaders”; the Andrews sisters, three-part harmony trio, which sounds much better via radio than on the stage; the six Candreva brothers, who mix some good showmanship with the unusual stunt of a six-trumpet combination; and Legs Lamont in a very acceptable bit of eccentric dancing. Miss Chic Kennedy is the mistress of ceremonies for this week’s show, but falls far short of getting the response to her quips and impersonations that she received when on the Lyric bill three weeks ago. The screen menu contains as the feature, “Kansas City Princess,” starring the champion gold-diggers of Hollywood, Joan Blondell and Glenda Farrell, witli Hugh Herbert, Robert Armstrong and Osgood Perkins in the supporting cast. Now at the Lyric (By J. W. TANARUS.) 000 j ' I ‘'HE Apollo is offering Will Rog- ; ers in “Judge Priest.” This is the fourth and last week for this wonder picture. It has been reviewed previously. Tonight at 8 at Cadle Tabernacle, Fritzi Scheff and her concert company will appear. Tonight at Kirshbaum Center, 2314 North Meridian street, Rosa Buska, soprano, will appear in concert.

COUNTY RELIEF ROLLS REVEAL BUSINESS GAIN Expected Seasonal Increase Fails to Materialize, Report Shows. An optimistic business note has been struck here with the announcement today by the Governors unempLoyment relief commission that wage relief rolls shows Marion county business conditions have improved at least 10 per cent since Oct. 1. Instead of an expected 30 per cent seasonal increase in the number of persons on the county wage relief rolls, the status now is no higher than it was in September, according to Joseph H. Crawley, county work director. Asa result of men dropping off these rolls it has become necessary for Mr. Crawley to halt operations on some of the less important relief projects in order that more important projects may be completed. Property improvements being accomplished under the federal housing administration have absorbed approximately 500 skilled workmen during the last three weeks who had been on relief, Mr. Crawley reported. Demand for material and supplies has created openings for other men who had been forced to depend on relief work, according to Mr. Crawley. The commission expected there would be 15,000 persons on Marion county wage relief lists in October but there now are only approximately 10,000 receiving aid in the county. RICHES DREAM BLASTED St. Paul Man Learns Radio Report on Dressier Heir Is Mistake. By United Press LOS ANGELES, Oct. 22—Dreams of sudden fortune were blasted today for M. T. Lunch of St. Paul, Minn. Lynch telegraphed Probate Judge Walton J. Wood that while listening to the radio he heard his named announced as an heir to the estate of the late Marie Dressier. He wanted to know if the report was correct. It wasn't.

If you tire easilywhy not reason out the cause of this unnatural condition? Your first thought may be, “1 must eat more.” That’s not all. You should enjoy what you do eat. Frequently, the blood cells are 10w... and this, perhaps, is what makes you feel weak. If this is your trouble the stomach may not be calling for sufficient food. Zest to eat may be lacking. But what a difference S.S.S. makes when taken j ust before meals. Just try it and notice how your appetite and digestion improve. S.S.S. stimulates the flow of gastric juices and also supplies the precious mineral elements so necessary in blood-cell and hemo-glo-bin up-building. Do A .ry it. It may be 4he rainbow y<r i need to brush away present dijeouragement over your health condition. tDo not be blinded by the efforts of a few unethical dealers who may suggest substitutes. You have a right to insist that S.S.S, be supplied you on request. Its long years of preference is your guarantee of satisfaction. the world’s great blood medicine

245 AIRPLANES ARE OWNED BY HOOSIERS Figures Contained in Commerce Department Survey. Two hundred forty-five airplanes, of which 150 were licensed, and twenty-nine gliders were owned in Indiana as of Oct. 1. the federal department of commerce announced today in a survey of the nation's aircraft. A total of 123 Hoosiers held transport pilots’ licenses; twenty-five, limited commercial; 106, private; j two. solo; and seventeen, amateur. “I Suffered 10 Years With Itching Eczema” . . and after spending hundreds of dollars to clear it up. I tried Zemo and got relief.” writes G. C. G ; of Texas. Soothing and cooling, j Zemo relieves itching quickly be- j cause of its rare ingredients. Also | wonderful for Rash, Pimples. Ring- : worm and other irritations. Zemo j is worth the price because you get | relief. Tested and approved by Good Housekeeping Bureau, No 4874. All druggists. 35c, 60c. $1 Advertisement.

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Bros ipen Sunda. A. oH •• Dan. sho to 1:30 , WMsgagifgp .* Wash. A Penn StKresge Bid*. Hi T ' | If INDIANA'S LARUKBI BNTAI ORGANIZATION

Campaign Whispering About Governor McNutt Unbelievable to Those Who Know Him Says The Indianapolis News * fQ Crimes. /adc FAIR pLA y Ma\ was I Seem Jt a As tbe campaign advances, charges j | and countercharges are hurled with Os cl l"*se Anri 1 J l 0 Increasing Intensity by opposing l lave cam P ai ß n orators. This Is not always she’d j Lies donc Wlth due re B ard 10 elther Bort 4 £ o j truthfulness or propriety. A limited feting 401011111 of such billingsgate can be Maie | of endured * patient people and / L charged to practice hallowed by cus- Sot *1 tom. The administrations both w uthe &c- Makes! fcts will naU<Mial and stat offer proper re m V .. . subjects of criticism. Such criticism To buj Ve iina * Y , should be welcomed However, Alt€r I Yional tnl \_ charges which are unsubstantiated f touor j i and which directly reflect upon the But 1/ 1 integrity of the Governor of the state Bhe's# f re should be accorded the contempt R^cj J (Au whlcJl they arouse - No one knowing Kno | .. Governor McNutt will give them the —Rif Vied, ¥ slightest credence. I Nobody can charge that there has \ J \ been undue h> 11 Thi* it an Actual Photo-Engraved Reproduction Taken From The Editorial Page of The Indianapolis News of October 17, 1934. —Prepared by the Indiana Democratic State Central Committee

making a total of 273 licensed pilots in the state. In addition, three glider pilots’ licenses were held. In all the country, there were 13.812 pilots and 6.798 aircraft hold-

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