Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 219, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1935 — Page 6

PAGE 6

DR. C. E. COX INSTALLED M SHRINEJ.EADER Murat Temple Elects New Illustrious Potentate, Other Officers Dr. C. E Cox today is the illustrious potentate of Murat Temple cf the Mystic Shrine following his election at the annual business meeting last night. Other new officers are Clyde E. Titus, chief rabban; Edwin E. Temperley, assistant rabban; Clifford L. Harrod. high priest and prophet Granville Richey, oriental guide; Obie J. Smith, treasurer, and Charles S. Barker, recorder. Mr. Barker begins his 19th year as recorder of the local Shrine organization. Dr. Cox. H. M. Tebay. Arthur S. Kimber and Carson B. Harris, Bloomington, were named as delegates to the imperial council meeting to be held in June m Washington. Edward J. Scoonover and Leslie J. Clancy, past potentates, conducted brief installation services. At a meeting of the Murat Temple Association. Arthur V. Brown, Paul Q. Richey and Fred Krauss were elected trustees. The association is the holding company for Shrine property. The new potentate received r:is degrees in Broad Ripple Lodge No. 642, Free and Accepted Masons, and is a member of the Scottish Rite, Murat Patrol and Gatling Gun Club. HEARING SLATED FOR OLEOMARGARINE TAX House Committee to Hear Arguments on Proposal Tomorrow. After deferring decision on bills providing payment of taxes without penalties for delinquencies and issuance of auto and drivers’ licenses by county treasurers, the House Ways and Means committee late yesterday fixed tomorrow night as the time for a hearing on the Linke bill levying a 15-cents a pound tax on oleomargarine. The hearing will be held in the. Appellate Court chambers at 7:30. OFFICERS ARE ELECTED BY UNIVERSITY CLUB Edward J. Bennett Is Chosen President of Group. Edward J. Bennett today was president of the University Club, elected yesterday by the directors. C officers selected were John Kingnan. first vice president; Ralph G- Lockwood, second vice president; Oscar P. Welborn, treasurer; Cornelius O- Alig, secretary, and Arthur A. Stettler. assistant treasurer.

Now Take Off Fat a Pound a Day on a Full Stomach

Do Just These Two Simple Things Fat Melts Away—Costs only a Day

NO tiring exercise, no starvation. Instead, a full stomach and never a hungry moment! Yet fat melts away. You can easily lose from four to seven pounds weekly, see the coarse lines of fat replaced by the refined lines of slenderness —and feel better than you ever felt before in your life.

WHAT YOU DO

There are just two simple things you do: Clear your system and keep it clear of waste matter, toxins and depleting poisons with Condensed JAD Salts obtainable at any drug store. Start with a teaspoonful in a full glass of water tomorrow morning—a sparkling and pleasant drink. Then EAT YOUR FlLL— as much as your appetite can stand —of meals consisting of the following foods: At breakfast eat two oranges, or the juice of two oranges. Eat also two slices of toasted whole wheat or bran bread. Eat rolled oats (with milk, not cream).

Fi, '■ ** r|| Eiery Fat '* SO JHouMlih Bk * i " ■ - - \ ■

At luncheon eat a good-size piece of lean meat, then see how much spinach, lettuce, sauerkraut, boiled cabbage, green peas, broccoh or fresh turnips you can ear. EAT ALL YOU CAN COMFORTABLY HOLD of these foods. For dessert eat any fruit. Substitute turnips for potatoes. Substitute lean meats—beef, chicken, veal, white fish, trout, bass, etc.— for pork or any f meats. At night, have another FILL-UP-FULL meal at above. Cut down on 1 butter snd sweets—eat half o. what you eat now. That’i easy. For with stomach full of other toods,

IVX M Tv/

From the smiling valleys a mile below where flowers bloom and orange groves thrive, this queen will lure her subjects to snowclad peaks for the famed winter sports carnival on Los Angeles county playground at Big Pines. There Miss Jane Frances Mullen will reign over the snow pastimes, including ski championships, starting Feb. 2.

Book Law Cost to City Estimated at $175,000 First Year Figure Listed by C. of C.; Annual Charge Thereafter Is Placed at $50,000. Enactment of H. B. 96, providing for free school books for all school children, would mean a cost of from $150,000 to $175,000 the first year and $40,000 to $50,000 annually thereafter to the Indianapolis School Board.

This is the estimate given in a legislative bulletin issued yesterday by the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce to its members. Under the bill, introduced last week by Rep. William J. Black <D., Anderson) and thirty others, the price paid for text books by any school unit would be that fixed by contract between the state board of text book commissioners and the school book contractors. To finance the purchase of text books, either a special tax levy could be made by the school authorities, or the money provided out of the special school fund. The Indianapolis School Board

llllilk, llßr ' ■ jure Silft Person > ('• . - to Hate _ I * ivViljL*

The Figure £ -9 Every Fat Person \WroaldLiketoHave I

you’ll never notice it. Drink water or not as you like.

4 TO 7 POUNDS GONE IN WEEK

At the end of a week, you’ll see the scale down four to seven pounds—according to how much overweight you are —from what you weighed the day you started. Your health, too, will be better. You'll be more active, more vigorous than perhaps for years. our friends wiil soon begin to notice your increasing slenderness. ou 11 soon avoid the embarrassment of being called fat or bulky. And you’ll do it with NEVER A HUNGRY MOMENT I If in doubt about this safe andsimple wav, ASK ANY DOCTOR. Show him this article. Ask him whether or not it is safe and sure. It marks the latest findings of scientific men in the field of weight reduction. For it performs two necessary and importantfu notions. The Condensed JAD Salts clear the bowels andsystem of the excessive toxins most overweight people have. *The changeindiet —the FILLINGOFTHE STOMACH TO ITS LlMlT—with foodsthat turn to energy instead of fat, decreases the weight day bv day. The salts build up your health. The change *n food eases off the fat. Start today. Get big package of Condensed JAD Salts at any drug store. 30-day supply for only 60d 1 ’Note particularly—the salts are urged purely as a poison-banishing ■gent —not as a reducing. The change in food does the work. —Adv.

QUEEN OF SNOW CARNIVAL

now sells to sch-x)l pupils at cost about one-fourth the books required for each term, the bulletin sets out, the remainder being supplied by second-hand purchases by children and by passing on books within a family. While the bill, if enacted into law, would increase expense to the school city, there would be an offset in the amount of school books furnished children of indigent families from relief funds, it is pointed out. This item amounted to $10,500 in the school year 1932-33 and $6295 for 1933-34, payable out of township relief funds, according to the bulletin. Fountain Pen Inventor Dies By United Press BLOOMSBURG, Pa., Jan. 22. Paul Esterly Wirt, 87, inventor of the fountain pen, died at his home yesterday. Mr. Wirt, an attorney, was said to have experimented with an ink-retaining pen after being annoyed because he often spilled ink on legal papers.

MSI n ■ TONIGHT. 8:20 U R AT AVED. NIGHT, 8:20 Matinee Wednesday 2:20 SAM. H. HARRIS PRESENTS DOROTHY ETHEL STONE WATERS fn tka MusicJßoxSettstdiorL+r Seats on Sale at Murat. Phone El. 6588. Eves., 83.30, $2.75, $2.20, $1.65, sl.lO Wed. Mat., $2.75, $2.20, $1.65, sl.lO Including Tax

II BRENT I §!■■ JOSEPHINE | II HUTCHINSON W* sr^Sj I Fri., “Spices of 1935” I

mum TODAY , 12— BIG FEATURES—3 Geo, Raft-Mlriam Hopkins •ALL OF ME” “THE CIRCUS CLOWM ' ll l "J

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

GARNISHEE LAW REPEALER STIRS SHARPDEBATE Merchants, Labor Groups Clash at Hearing Held by House Group. Further hearing on the House bill to repeal the present Indiana garnishee law was to be conducted this afternoon by the House Judiciary A Committee, following a public hearing held last night. Representatives of both merchants and laboring groups took part in the hearing last night, labor’s representatives charging that the present garnishee law Ls class legislation which works an injury to workers of the state. Bookkeepers from various Lake County steel companies were to testify on operation of the law at the session this afternoon. The present law is the only protection the smal' retail merchant has in collection of accounts, Franklyn George, Newcastle attorney, said in defending the present law and opposing H. B. IS. If a man is unable to pay the 10 per cent garnishment, under the present law, he can file a petition in court and get the amount reduced, he said. The various representatives of merchant associations said that the law as it now is used, is merely a weapon to hold over the heads of dishonest people who do not intend to pay their, bills. Seen as Aid to Worker “If the wage earner wants credit,” said Senator Elias C. Swihart '(D., Elkhart), “this law really acts as collateral for him. It is to the honest workers’ advantage to have this law, since a repeal of the present measure would mean a tightening of credit, and w r ould put more people on relief.” H Others who advocated the retention of the law were: Dr. E. A. Parker, Ft. Wayne; Fred K. White, Ft. Wayne Association of Credit Men; C. J. Steiss, Ft. Wayne, Indiana Retail Grocers and Meat Dealers Association secretary; C. C. Finnefrock, H. P. Wasson & Cos., and L. F. Shuttleworth, executive secretary, Associated Retailers of Indiana. Charging that the 1925 act is a demoralizing and a nuisance law, Rep. Edward P. Barry (D., Indianapolis), author of the proposed repeal measure, said that as a matter of special justice the present law must be repealed. Alex Gordon and M. H. Miller, representing the railroad brotherhoods, charged that the garnishee law has allowed merchants to oversell customers. Old Warning Is Recalled Mr. Gordon said that at the time the law was passed the merchants said they had a 2 per cent loss on credit, and that now they claim they have a 5 per cent loss. “We told them in 1925 that if this law were passed merchants would extend credit to irresponsible people,” he said. Joseph Timpko, Terre Haute, president of District 11, United Mine Workers, said that the present law has allowed high pressure salesmen to oversell workers and then plaster a garnishee on them, sometimes without their knowledge of what was going on. “The worker should have the same protection that business has in the bankruptcy law,” he added. Rep. Carl Wood (D„ Indianapolis); Adolph Fritz. Indiana State Federation of Labor secretary; Frank D. Morgan, Ft. Wayne, Indiana Federation of Labor vice president; Rep. William C. Morris (D., G*ry), and Ramsey Wilson, a Princeton miner, spoke for repeal of the law.

will be the bed-lavedpictuU al 1935 Because it is a moving and laiihiul screen drama-> tization of one of the great romances of all time —two years of intensive research before a camera turned—' all the vast resources of the M-G-M studios poured into its production! .... Because Hugh Walpole, noted .English novelist,"supervised the adaptation, and George Cukor," who so successfully captured the spirit of "Little Womendirected*^**..Be 'ause. a notable Watch lor <cast c f 55 players portray thejimmortal.characters ~n n SEQUOIA jj u8 t as~youTrememberithem. s Oneiof the grandest M-G-M s spe- stories of love and adventurereverftold is brought tot cialattractions: the screenjas Charles. Dickens himself would wish it!’ 'Produced by David O. Selznick Directed by Georg? Cukor' Adaptation by Hugh Walpole Continuity by Howard Estabrook A METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER picture W. C. FIELDS EDNA MAY OLIVER , ALLAN JEANCADEtL J i LIONEL BARBTMORE LEWIS STONE , f ROLAND YOONG JESSIE RALPH MADGE EVANS PRANK LAWTON (/ / / ) SASIt RATH BONE LENNOX PAWL* *■ MAUREEN O'SULLIVAN PRKDDIE BARTHOLOMEW • * L SA IANCHESTEB VIOLET K-EMSLK-COOPER ■; 1 ....... V * r STARTS nBPW gBW^fl "Ty i fTy^ ; T' 11 FRIDAY IMI \ aKB fIU 1 FRIDAY

The Theatrical World ‘As Thousands Cheer’ Is Smartest Show in Years

THE King and Queen of England, the Prince of Wales, Herbert Hoover and Mrs. Hoover, Barbara Hutton, Joan Crawford, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Mahatma Gandhi, Aimee Sample MacPherson and many others who make the headlines are in town. Os course, they're not here in person, but a splendid collection of men and women of the stage give their impression of them. In other words, “As Thousands Cheer” is on view at the Murat, with Dorothy Stone and Ethel W’aters as the stars. Clifton Webb and Helen Broderick left the cast several weeks ago, because of illness. Margaret Irving has played Miss Broderick's roles during her absence from the cast, and triumphs as Mrs. Hoover, Aimee MacPherson and Queen Mary. The same can be said of Albert Carroll as Gandhi and John D. Rockefeller Sr. Both are triumphs in makeup and the spoken word. Dorothy Stone, popular dancing star, also excels in her role. This is the smartest revue from the standpoint of material in sketches that I have seen in the last 10 years. Some weeks ago I went to Cincinnati to see “As Thousands Cheer,” and after seeing it again last night with two major cast changes, I still maintain it is the best all-round entertainment buy on tour today—and for many days to come. The material is present and the show moves just as well, has as many laughs and shoots as many darts of satire as when Helen Broderick and Clifton Webb were in the cast. tt tt MY two favorite sketches are the ones dealing with the Hoovers moving out of the White House and the one about the royal family of England holding a family conference concerning an alleged flirtation by the Prince of Wales. There are laughs galore when John D. Rockefeller observes his birthday and declares it was a “dirty trick” for his family to give him costly Radio City for a present. I always have considered Ethel Waters a great artist. She wins more honors in the “Heat Wave” song in the sketch poking fun at “Green Pastures.” There is something that will interest every one in “As Thousands Cheer” because there is something to please all tastes. The Easter parade number is a triumph in stage pictures. The costumes and scenery, after all of these months, appear new and fresh. The mechanical devices are the same used in New York during its long run. Here is a revue that has class, talent and brains. “As Thousands Cheer” is just as safe a buy here as it was in New York. Because of the repairs being made backstage at English’s, this revue is being shown at the Murat. In the line of service, it is pointed out that during the remainder of this engagement all seats ai’e on sale at the Murat box office. The regular English theater telephone number will get the Murat box office for this show. We have not had a better buy in years in this city. At the Murat tonight, tomorrow afternoon and night. tt tt a OTHER theaters today offer: “The Lives of a Bengal Lancer,” at the Indiana; “The County Chairman,” at the Apollo;' Benny Meroff and his band, at the Lyric; “Biography of a Bachelor Girl,” at Loew’s Palace, and “Affairs of Cellini” and “365 Nights in Hollywood,” at the Ohio.

BY WAI.TER D. HICKMAN

STARS IN REVUE

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Dorothy Stone One of the bright stars with “As Thousands Cheer,” now at the Murat, is Dorothy Stone. She not only appears in several of the sketches but also dances.

Musical at Circle "QWEET ADELINfc” is another of those show-within-a-show musicals. The hero is the composer of the music and the heroine is the leading lady in the show. Irene Dunne sings a great deal in

r

Irene Dunne

Adeline, the girl he loves, to sing the songs in the show he writes. But Adeline’s father, played by Joseph Cawthorn with good humor, doesn’t care for the song writer, and prefers that his daughter marry Maj. Day, an Army officer. The leading lady whom the show director has engaged becomes enraged when Adeline sings the songs at rehearsal much better than she, and attempts to murder her by cutting a rope while Adeline is on a

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huge swing during one of the show numbers. Louis Calhem plays the part of Maj. Day. The bitter realization of his strictly dishonorable intentions brings Adeline to her feet and makes her appreciate Sid for the first time. The music of the piece Is more entertaining than the story. The lyrics and music were written by Jerome Kern ahd Oscar Hammerstein 11, and are :n the conventional musical comedy manner. The best of the songs are “Why Was I Born?” and “Don’t Ever Leave Me.” The outstanding ensemble number is the one in which a huge

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Unusual G A L A I Novelty OPENING!! I Numbers tub I I 1 ™ E Scintil- | FAMOUS . latjng If ASA REY 1 [ORCHESTRA Distinctive cover- 30 f! CHARGE j Dance Dancing From 9 P. M. to 1 A. IVI. |[_RhythmsJ HOTEL ANTLERS | I TALLY-HO 1(00311 “INDIANA'S SMARTEST RENDEZVOUS”

a nice manner, and [is graciously attractive in the dra[matic sequences of the picture. She jplays Adeline Schmidt, whose father owned a beer garden back in the cays when an auto [was an oddity and ; horses drew the street cars. 'Donald Woods is Sid Barnett, the composer who wants

NORTH SIDE Rv n> rw Illinois at 34th I /, Double Feature A " W. C. Fields -IT’S A GIFT” “HAVE A HEART’* m 4 f is/\rvvn Talbot & 22nd TALBOTT "sS fitly* TTf\trAiir\T 42nd & Colics® UPTOWN “THE WHITE PARADE” n t . 2361 Station St. DREAM d ssi* e.;.”’ “JUDGE PRIEST” “EMBARRASSING MOMENTS _ Z , . , 19th & College Stratford mi “UNKNOWN BLONDE” “THE LAST TRAIL” —. Noble & Mass. MECCA D "," b £ S.T “WILD GOLD” “AGAINST THE LAW _ , _ _ Illinois & 30th rARRIIiK Double Feature U/vIVIVIvIV Loretta Young “CARAVAN” “CAPTAIN HATES THE SEA* _ 3()th & Northwes tern IV Jl/ As Janet Gaynor “CHANGE OF HEART’* Warren William AVS Claudette Colbert “IMITATION OF LIFE” ~ . ... St. Clair &Ft Wavne CT n AIR Double Feature D A • VIL/illis Warner Baxter “HELL IN THE HEAVENS” “KANSAS CITY PRINCESS EAST SIDE ctd aNn 1352 E - Wash - stJ 1 l\Ai' VJ Double Feature Joe Fenner “COLLEGE RHYTHM” James Cagney “ST. LOUIS KID” “BEAUTIFUL SWITZERLAND” in Color, f) iit/yi I . Dearborn at 10th KIVUL/1 Eddie Cantor “KID MILLIONS” if, , IkVIAIt Double Feature 11V T IiVVJ James Cagney “ST. LOUIS KID” “STRAIGHT IS THE WAY’* TACOMA “ELINOR NORTON”

TIMES WANT ads lew a& fi&i wcMl RILEYSSSI

_JAN. 22, 1935

chorus of girls in fluffy frocks are swinging in high, invisible swings. The effect ls that of seeing the girls float in rhythm back and forth in a starlit summer sky. Phil Regan is the best of the singers and Ned Sparks and Hugh Herbert lend the fun element to the show. Lacking only unity in continuity and big time "sparkle,” “Sweet Adeline” is nevertheless refreshing and cheering. Now at the Circle. (By J. TANARUS.)

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EAST SIDE fry ]v ri 1 \/"v 4020 E. New York 1 UaLUO Family Night IL/iILO/V/ Loretta Young “CARAVAN” r i tr 17 r 2930 E. Tenth St. rAKKKK Double Feature 1 mviVLdV Warren William “DRAGON MURDER CASE” “THE MERRY WIDOW” _ ___ HAMILTON s~l “I AM A THIEF” „ “Trans-Atlantic Merrv-Go-Round R4*v r 2721 E. Wash. St, || \ Y Double Feature U Jw X Maurice Chevalier “THE MERRY WIDOW” “THUNDER OVER TEXAS Hollywood lr Z*7Z" “365 NIGHTS IN HOLLYWOOD” ___ EMERSON “FLIRTATION WALK” “PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS” n New Jer. & E. Wash. Paramount oubl e Feature l aiUimJUUI David Manners “MOONSTONE” “POT LUCK PARDS” SOUTH SIDE "FOUNTAIN SQUARE Dick Powell Rubv Keeler “FLIRTATION WALK” . uTryian O Prospect S: Shelby SANDERS six; ass “THE HUMAN SIDE” • “ONCE TO EVERY WOMAN” GARFIELD “THE GAY DIVORCEE” “I SELL A AT A I /\\l Prospect-Churchman AVALUIN Double Feature “HIS GREATEST GAMBLE” “HAROLD TEEN” /v j. ITs\ino 4 i 1105 S. Meridian ORIENTAL Vel’iS Ha%‘er “WHAT EVERY’ WOMAN KNOWS” “HAPPINESS AHEAD” Roosevelt Diana Wynward “ONE MORE RIVER” WEST SIDE nfsf igrWTT IV. Wash. Sc Belmont KLLMON 1 Double Feature ULdjiTlVjn 1 Claudette Colbert “IMITATION OF LIFE” “I AM A THIEF” D a wo XT 2210 W. Mich. A I S Y Double Feature X kj i Marion Marsh “A GIRL OF THE LIMBERLOST” “HOLD THAT GIRL” Sm >m P 8702 w - 10th St. I A I K Double Feature x IX X Spencer Tracy “MARIE GALANTE” “GIFT OF GAB”