Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 149, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1934 — Page 12

PAGE 12

NAZI BISHOP TO . RESIGN; HITLER UPHOLDS FOES Ousted Prelates Ordered Reinstated to Posts, Berlin Hears. Bu I mitri BERLIN Nov. I—Resignation of Rrtchsbi'hop Ludvig Mueller. head of the Evangelical church government, was rumored today after opposition leaders won a major victory in their fight against his NazificaUon polici*Bishop Mueller was understood even before the rumor started to be ready to re-ign in the interest 'of reconciliation, the moment he leamrd H' ich; fuehrer Adolf Hitler desired it Oppositionist; won their victory, which may proie decisive, when it was announced iast night that Bishop Tiieophil Wurm of Wuerttemberg and Bishop Hans Meiser of Bavaria had been reinstated and would resume their duties todav. Both were deposed bv Reich'bishop Mueller and Augu t Jaeger, his layaid. for leading the opposition. Last night the Rev. Martin Niemoller. a pioneer oppositionist, announced to a festival meeting of 6.000 Evangelical church-goers: "I have just come from a talk with Bishops Meiser and Wurm. Who . have been in Berlin. Tomorrow they resume their offices The church government offices, question'd, said th°re was no news! there of the bi-hops’ reinstatement.! and it appeared that the order went direct from the government. JUNK YARD OWNER IS GIVEN 30-DAY TERM Pleads < .Hilly to Purchasing Stolen (•oods; Two Others Held. One man was fined and sent to the Indiana state farm yesterday by Municipal Judge Dewey Myers, and two others were held to the grand! Jury on charges of burglary and grand larceny as a result of theft of • several hundred dollars’ worth of merchandise from Baltimore A: Ohio ! railroad storage rooms. Louis Sagalowsky, proprietor of a Junk yard at 627 West Washington street, was fined $25 and costs and i sent to the farm for thirty days after pleading guilty to purchasing the merchandise. Andrew Janett, 1511 West Ohio street, and John Spurgeon. 1640 West Market street, were held to the grand jury-, Janett under $2.0n0 bond and Spurgeon under $2,500

PSYCHIATRIC NURSING SESSIONS CLOSE HERE Speaker I rges End to Politics in State Hospitals. The two-day institute on psychiatric nursing held by the central district of the Indiana State Nurses’ Association nursing service bureau will close late Hus afternoon at the Severin. The principal speaker yesterday was Miss Zolla Nicholas, Toledo State hospital superintendent, who urged political interference be removed from state hospitals for the iBWItt. She said that with competent care many psychiatric cases might become self-sustaining individuals. Other speakers were Dr. Larue D. Carter. State Medical Society on Mental Health chairman, and Dr. L H. Gilman. Mia Emma Hannanflm. nursing bureau chairman, presided at the meetings.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

Automobile* reported to police as stolen belong to E R W ilcox. Green •>!<!. Ind.. Ford V-8 coach. 2.14-116 from Franklin. Ir.d, Thoma* McAnanv. SOT Sumner street, Pontiac coach 2ii-4i from in front of home Wiliam rerrish. 1914 East Maryland Mich. 122-403. from Cincin :i iti and North streets William Elig B<H Arbor avenue. Ford touring. 7T-7 vi Irom South East street •nd the Bcii railroad William Thomas I West South street. Ford roadster 40-808. from in front of home Ed Mat Ms wood Ind.. Chevrolet coupe. 13-966. Iron: MaVWOOd Don Young. 826', N 'rth Alabama street. Ford coup. 87-391. from Ninth and Alabama Streets. Richar Rusanova. 3453 East Washington strre- Chr-role- roadster 128-779. 6000 W> W.i -.cion street. William C Hur.-er. 2608 North Mertdian afreet p,. *e coupe. 104-560. from Tenth and Meridian streets. Cieorse Bra ushion. 441 North Grav street podee 113-842 from Tenth and Meridian street*

BACK HOME AGAIN

Stolen i- .mobiles recovered by police belong to _ . H Wire, -is North Dearborn street. Ford coach found in front of 1722 Arrow htenue I :nd:e Air Products Company. 4069 Bro. d.!\ F<->rd dan. found at Shelbv end Morn* s'rcer* F*r -1 Secr et 266 North Mount street. Che role: -dan recotered bv owner A H Or ame man R R 4. Box 34 F'rri V-8 coe.-h found at 5500 West Washington s'teet Soviet Strengthens Fleet By i ■■!•• /'im TOKIO. Nov. I—Travelers returninc from Vladivostok. Russia's Siberian seaport, reported today that the Soviet government recently h?d completed forty new submarines.

BOAT NITE CLUB BIG FLOOR SHOW DE LUXE 2 -hiiw*. II IV P. M. 1:45 A. M No Vrl\ante in Cover Charge for Reservations —i\ V 3PIS Keystone & Aliisonville Rd. Em hunk—ir

NOW THRU SATURDAY ■ t-V FAR-OLD PSYCHIC MAKVKL . . . WORLD'S WONDER N•thing T** Difficult ASK HIM ANYTHING rLt * FIRST SHOWING Jackhol'F “I’LL FIX IT”

Girls Will Compete in Indiana Theater Contest

Another Step in Winner Selection Will Be Held Friday. • What constitutes a perfectly proportioned young woman?” is a question which has been asiced ! numerous times since the announcement last week that the Imdana Roof ballroom and the Stretch-A-Way Company of Chicago would ; sponsor a contest to find the most perfectly proportioned girl in the I state. i Tom Devine of the roof referred the question to the office of Sylvia Matteson, world renowned feminine culturist. who will visit Indianapolis upon her return from Europe to answer queries on feminine culture. Mr. Devine's reply read as follows: •Proportion is the determinant of the ideal figure. To determine correct measurements, first obtain the ideal bust measure according to height: For 5 feet in height .30-inch bust for 5 feet 1 inch ....31-inch bust The bust measurement exceeds thirty inches by the same number of inches that the height exceeds five feet To determine the waist measurement. subtract eight inches from the ideal bust measurement (as obtained above). To determine the hip measurement, add two inches to the bust measurement. (You are privileged with an inch leeway this way or that.) Age Limits Stated The Stretch-A-Way contest preliminaries of which are being staged on the roof each Friday night, is open to every young womn between the ages of 16 and 26, married or single, professional or nonprefessional. The last preliminary of the contest will be held in conjunction with the semi-fjnals on Nov. 23. The contest finals, in which girls from other cities throughout the state with those Indianapolis girls who have survived to the will appear for the final judging, will be held Nov. 30. The winner of the contest will be given a try out with Ziegfeld Follies when they open a f the English theater the early part of December. If satisfactory she will be tendered a contract for the balance of the season and if acceptable will be on her way to stardom vta the footlights and the Broadway stage. The winner, as well as her ten runners-up in the contest, will be privileged to submit their photographs to the casting director of Warner Brothers in Hollywood. In the event they look promising to him they will be sent to Hollywood for a screen test. Should either or all of them have the proper appeal they will be placed in the “Gold Diggers of 1935.” or some other Warner Brothers musical production in the making at the time. Several Are Entered Among the Indianapolis girls already entered in the contest are: Rosalia Johnson. 726 West Thirtyfirst street; Dolores Schmidt, 1529 Sheldon street; Deloris Fansey, 137 Kansas street; Jean Walden, 349 Sanders street; Jean Gardner, 2037 North Illinois street: Mary Lou Roesch, 3420 North Wallace street; Jane Krause, Cold Springs road; Helen Videbeck, 1437 King avenue; Elizabeth L. Jones, 1821 North Washington street, and Marjorie Clifton, 544 West Thirtieth street. In the event the winner prefers a business career to that of an opportunity with the “Follies” or Warner Brothers pictures, she will be given a position with the Stretch-A-Way

LAST TIMES TODAY AT LOEW’S PALACE JACK BENNY ‘’TRANSATLANTIC MERRY -GO - ROUND” starts i TOMORROW I W A 1 ~1 M *7*l If i I gii ~1 25c to 6

Name Age Address Height Weight Bust .... Waist Hips ...

Company of Chicago. H. L. Matteson, president of that company, who has spent the last three weeks in Indianapolis organizing the contest is the inventor of the Stretch-A-Way, anew scientific device to preserve health and to build and maintain poise. Entrants should fill out the following entry blank and take it up to the Indiana Roof office any afternoon between 2 and 4 o'clock or any night after 8, except Monday and Thursday.

T^THEM ■jOHNKXtt fIIHEMIC* MHOtKt H AUSTIN W&yJ 25c Until 6 40e After 6 L°JVI ilitVfel

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

SLUM CLEANUP TO RESTARTED Utility Withdraws Complaint Opening Way for Action. Work on the public works administration slum clearance project planned for the area bounded by Blake, Locke and Walnut streets and Indiana avenue, will be started immediately, Frank C. Dailey, the government's attorney, announced today. Mr. Dailey's announcement followed the formal withdrawal of the Indianapolis Water Company’s remonstrance against the work and the works board's official vacating of the streets involved. Mr. Dailey thanked the water company officials and said that the money for the undertaking was at hand.

The Theatrical World ‘The Merry Widow’ Will Return to Screen Here BY WALTER D. HICKMAN

THE Merry Widow,” which took . the world by storm when written by Franz Lehar in 1904 and produced in Vienna in December, 1905. still is very much alive. It is so much alive’that Metrq,-Goldwyn-Maver placed two of its best-known stars. Maurice Chevalier and Jeannette MacDonald in the two leading roles in the new movie talking \ersion. In the first stage version in 1905 in Vienna were Mitzi Guenther and Louis Traumann. The following year it was produced in German with Nora White at the Irving Place theater in New York. In 1907, Henry W. Savage launched the English-speaking production simultaneously, with Donald Brian and Ethel Jackson

and His J musical l 4*l m ►Jg SH *3 v QUEENS Ti ""l

in New York and in Chicago with George Damerel. It first was screened in 1911 when a one-reel version was filmed with Wallace Reid and Alma Rubens, with George Nichols directing. In 1925 the Von Stroheim version was filmed as a silent picture with Mae Murray and John Gilbert. In this version the story was a different one, the only detail from the original being the waltz episode. An interesting sidelight is that in the Gilbert-Murray version, a young extra appeared before the camera for the first time in his life. That extra today is famous. He is Clark Gable. Another interesting fact is that Oliver Marsh, the

cameraman who filmed the Ernst Lubitsch production with Chevalier and Miss MacDonald as the stars, filmed both the former ones. The Chevalier-MacDonald version opens tomorrow at Loew s Palace. a a '"P'HE Circle theater opens anew week today with the showing of “The Captain Hates the Sea.” starring Walter Connelly. Alison Skipworth. John Gilbert and Lean Errol. The Indiana also opens today with "Age of Innocence,” with Irene Dunne and John Boles in the leading roles. Other theaters today offer: “Trans-Atlantic M e r r y-Go-Round” at the Palace, and "Caravan” at the Apollo. Jackie Merkle. juvenile psychic, is appearing at the Ambassador in person, along with the picture. “I'll Fix It,” starring Jack Holt.

I

Smartest Place 111 Town! §tmlbe ■ *Omib 33 E. Maryland

‘;4 TO r H VMENTATIONS TH EAT ERgU

NORTH SIUE res JL I ri/\'WT' Talbot Sr 22nd. lALKOI I Double Feature A HL/UU A A Madge Evans “PARIS INTERLUDE” “ROMANCE IN THE RAIN” Illinois at 84tb RITZ ANNIVERSARY JOAN CRAWFORD— CLAEK GABLE “CHAINED” Rine Crosbv. “ONE MORE CHANCE” STEPIN FETCHIT. “SLOW POKE WALT DISNEY COI.OR CARTOON “GRASSHOPPER AND THE AN Ds NEWS EVENTS „ LAST COMPLETE SHOW 9:38 P. M. , 42nd at College UPTOWN ■ffiSSd'iu.rt” "THE CAT'S PAW” •EOVETIME DREAM Robert Montgomery “HIDE-OUT” ~ ~ 19th and College Stratford r ssifi r v “UTTLEpMAN "HATXOW? __ Noble at Mass. MECCA D# S.Ssff" “THE DEFENSE RLSJ> „ “MANHATTAN LOVE SONG GARRICK &&& “THE LADY IS WILLING” IN DANGER” npY 30th & Northwestern IVLA Sallv O'Neil •16 FATHOMS DEEP ’ TADTNir* Double Feature LAIVI.t VJ Wallace Berry “TREASURE ISLAND” •HAROLD TEEN" _ “ TVi -an it Clair at It- Wayne ST. CLAIR SKKsRSKa “ONE MORE RIVER” “NAME THE WOMAJF EAST SIDE STRAND 1352 E. W ash. St. Double Feature Cary Grant “Ladies Should Listen” Ralph Bellamy “GIRL IN DANGER” COMEDY—“SNUG IN A Jl G” _ . . . . - nearhorn at 10th D IV/M I Double Feature I\l T ' '!'• Bargain Nite • HIS GREATEST GAMBLE” •HAT—COAT AND GLOVE ' n ' N(, . tt aeh M "KING KH-LKY OF THE I V A TACOMA irVCIAUa Leslie Howard “LADY IS WILLING" • MAN WITH TWO FACE'” TUXEDO ~^ZT r “KISS AND MAKE VP”

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KIWANIS CLUB TICKETNAMED ■Shock Troops’ Presented as Cannon Roars Greeting. Candidates on the "Shock Troops” ticket of the Indianapolis Kiwanis Club were presented at the club luncheon yesterday at the Columbia Club. A miniature cannon roared greetings as each candidate was introduced. Members of the ticket are Frank V. Hawkins, for president; Biiant Sando. first vice-president; Robert Burnett. second vice-president; George S. Olive, treasurer, and Walter S. Campbell. A. B. Good and W. Mort Mari in. directors.

EAST SIDE _ HAMILTON sS TREASURE ISLAND” “I GIVE MY LOVE” “f 89311 E lenth ft. PARKER "HANDY ANDY” “THE MERRY FRINKS" PO\Y Double Frature J jane Dunn “HOLD THAT GIRI”, NO GREATER CLOMP* Hollywood 1501) Roosevelt SPEC lAL FE AT I RE ATTR AC TION j-, 11 -|i. l /, \ Ifi.tu 4 Tenth St* EMERSON ’BE? “BORN TO BE BAD” “W IT( HING HOUR” 2. New ler. at E. Wash Paramount stS'SK.. Clark Gable. William Powell, Mvrna Lov “Manhattan Melodrama Tim McCoy “BEYOND THE LAW” Hollywood on Parade SOUTH SIDE FOUNTAIN SQUARE Double Feature Warner Gland “CHAEI-IE CHAN IN LONDON” Skeets Gallager IN Till! MONEY” O * \r|’V|2 DC Prospect and Shelbv JAi>OLl\J Double Teature “NO GREATER GLORY" “SCARLET WEEK END” -Vini i\ IJ3 Shelby St. GARF ILLD "r F o • CHAK EADY C ” A WILrpNG^* GE ” AVALON Sc CbortlUDiP SPECIAL FEATURE ATTRACTION /\n IPkIT 1 I HW 8 Meridias OR lEN rAL ,S2r* s EpA “NOTORIOUS SOPHIE LANG” “IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT Roosevelt •:U) DAY PRINCESS “LIFF. OF VERGIL WINTERS” WEST SIDE n v,, aiMirtp It Wilt, at Betatfkt BELMONT W*siSS7 ••BLIND DATE” "AMONG THE MISSING” 7— —TANARUS.,. . M W. Mieta. ft. DAISY “Stvisssf “PEBSONAI.ITY KID” “I GIVE MY LOVE . „ - nil w 10th it. state ■asa.'aia* •maw**: 5 wimn 1224 Oliver At*. OLIVER .S* “STAMBOI'L QILSI”