Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1937 — Page 7

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SATURDAY, OCT. 16, Civic Season | Has Promise | In First Play

———— {

New Director Provides | Solid Basis for Drama's Wit.

(Another Story, Page Five) By JAMES THRASHER The infant Civic Theater season | g arrived on schedule, the next | is to stand off and ad-| new and eagerly awaited | For it is an admirable mnt, lusty and precocious, as dis- | ed by A. E. Thomas’ “No More | Ladies,” in which the season made | bow last evening. Much of the eager floor pacing, to | be sure, sprang from the fact that! Alired Etcheverry is showing the first fruits of his new labors as Civic director this - production. Mr. Etcheverry made an impressive debut “No More Ladies” was cast and prepared rather hurriedly, but ] result presents considerably | more finish than one might expect. es of this “sophis.iv” lost nothing in their cast, well chosen and which delivered them and evident enjoyment. ers found their way about

13S

in

Etcheverry has included | n hrewd bits of “business” in ne production. nd to top it off, | Raymond Gregg has designed and executed a brace of handsome sets. Single Standard Falls hose who recall “No More! Ladies” on stage and screen—two | forms in which most successful | I find themselves nowadavs— | recall that the action revolves | two voung people who make | host of bargain. | consigns

an indi ff ., h an inaifferent Presumably the ladles” to a VX

ag

title usual, the single

the more

an aii=

emot 1 jealousy | the ev i Briefly, the X of man {1 young woman, and bored, who decide to expect the worst. Around them they see twood of numerous matrimonial wrecks. In fact, Sheridan bridegroom) himself has scuttled one of the barques.

Monogamy Becomes Monotony

Jeiore is a young wealthy | marry and | the

iri f Lid

tha ne

3 y | They proceed rather happily, how- |

ever, until the day that Sheridan's

1937

101 PRIZES

No. 13

Identify the star whose silhouette appears above. Then keep the accompanying photo as an aid to identification of another star whose silhouette will also appear.

and send them to the Silhouette Contest Times when you have the complete set identified the star in the silhouette write

ing questions:

all silhouettes and photos Editor of The Indianapolis of 28. After you have in answers to the foilow-

Keep

Star's Film Name .cevevnnnnne

torian limbo at the |.

Birth Place ««.uieevvuvienuivien

Name one film this star was in.

EP TPT ITE I EIT IEEE E TIE IE NCEA NCR Err

Name not more than three films in which this star will appear in this coming season. (Note: Complete list of coming films and stars appeared in the special Hollywood Forecast Section of The

Times Oct. 13.

If the star's name did not appear in that section

leave the space blank. If the star appears in only one or two films, specify them only. Any coming films not mentioned in the Hollywood Forecast Section will NOT be considered in the judging.)

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AWAIT SILHOUETTE CONTEST WINNERS

PEAT SRY

PAGE 7

ks a

he ,

Dusky Trio Brightens

Droll Back With Hallett

Entourage.

named the “Harlem Maniacs,” is

age, who headline the stage bill.

in the flood-benefit show at the Indiana. They have the same act as then, and it continues to be extremely amusing. Like Buck

other, Mr. Hallett has a no-better-than-

are two singers, a bass player named

funny, and a good pianist. Also

some extraordinary ladder-balanc-ing, and equally tricks with a paper cone. | “Danger—Love at Work"—which | has nothing to do with highway construction or Federal projects—is the Lyric picture. The authors, James Grant and Ben Markson, must surely have seen “You Can't, Take It With You” before they set to work. For they have assembled

Identify the star whose silhouette appears above. Then keep |a family every bit as mad as the the accompanying photo as an aid to identification of another star whose silhouette will also appear. Keep all silhouettes and photos and send them to the Silhouette Contest Editor of The Indianapolis

Times when you have the complete set of 28.

After you have

identified the star in the silhouette write in answers to the follow-

ing questions:

Star's Film Name ...ceevven

Birth PEGE «.vunereenunin

oe

Name one film this star was in.

Sess EEE RIE EERE EEE LEE Ee

I EE ses ere ren

Name not more than three films in which this star will appear in this coming season. (Note: Complete list of coming films and stars appeared in the special Hollywood Forecast Section of The

Times Oct. 13.

If the star's name did not appear in that section

leave the space blank. If the star appears in only one or two films, specify them only. Any coming films not mentioned in the Holly wood Forecast Section will NOT be considered in the judging.)

| famous Sycamores. | Mamma (Mary Boland) is a scat-ter-brained dowager, and Papa | (Etienne Girardot) specializes | shattering atoms and the family's

| peace of mind. Uncle Alan goes in |

for stamps, Brother Herbert does

surrealistic paintings on the win- |

dow panes, and so they go. Ann Sothern, who plays the daughter, | inherits most of the family's ec- | centricities. | The picture revolves about the | phight of Jack Haley, meek and | wealthy young man, who goes to { get the family’s signatures to a le-

| gal document and winds up with |

| winning the daughter's hand instead. Edward Everett Horlon is also in the cast. The picture is more than tolerably amusing.

‘ROSA PONSELLE TWEAKS AN EAR

and | Bubbles, they take turns in play- | ing the piano and ‘‘ribbing” one an- |

Joe Cabonaro, who is corpulent and | present is Paul Kirkland, who does |

amazing balance |

in |

Lyric's Bill

'Harlem Maniacs’ #

That droll and dusky trio, mis- |

back at the Lyric this week to aug- | ment Mal Hallett and his entour- |

These boys played the same the- | ater last winter, and also took part |

In her first Indianapolis appear= ance, Helen Jepson, Metropolitan Opera and radio star, will be heard at English's Monday night in the first of the Martens Concerts subscription offerings.

Flashlight Gal in Spot

average band and stage show. There |

And She Gets the Star in

| Circle Film.

Bringing the humble movie usheret Please,” now at the Circle, attempts | to throw some light on the hither- | to unappreciated careers of the polite young ladies with the flashlights. Principal players are Charles | (Buddy) Rogers, public honey- { mooner No. 1; Betty Grable, who is

| cember; Mary Livingstone of radio

| fame; Fibber McGee and Molly, of |

same; Ned Sparks, and sundry

| others. Their skimpy

all of

efforts add up to a

portion

an illogical variation on the stand- |

ard “success-story” requirement for pictures with music. Buddy is a philandering, popular | band leader in a movie house. Miss | Grable is an usheret with aspirations to sing, dance and win Mr. Rogers’ heart. For her mooning admiration she is fired. Then he is | fired. Then she is hired back to | take Mr. Rogers’ place. | Ned Sparks, a press agent, con-

out of the dark, “This Way, |

to be honeymooning herself in De- |

entertainment. | The pedestrian story drags through |

Styles Win Over Plot

At Loew's

'Vogues of 1938" Appeal Is Directed at Women.

If you are by chance interested | in seeing the very latest in women’s | gowns and women Who can wear (them to the greatest advantage, | you'll enjoy the current offering at |

Loew's. In other words, “Walter Wanger’s | Vogues of 1938” is distinctly a wom an’s picture. After two hours the most unending parade of beautiful, extravagantly clothed manne=quins becomes almost too much for the average male. The picture is filmed in technicolor and this fact alone compensates greatly for the | deficiencies of a rather timeworn plot. The usual adjectives can't describe adequately the gorgeous= ness of the settings and gowns and the loveliness of Joan Bennett. Suffice to say that the film is appealingly colorful without being | gaudy. | The less said about the plot the better. Warner Baxter is cast in the role of George Curson, a New York dressmaker, who is struggling to eliminate a rival competitor and former employee who threatens and almost succeeds in putting Curson { out of business. Error in Marriage As so often happens in the movies Baxter finds himself married to the wrong woman. This, of course, adds to his troubles. When Joan Ben nett, as Wendy Van Klettering, | comes to work for Curson after | jilting her fiance at the altar, Cur- | son realizes that it is she whom he really loves. But he is true to his wife, Helen Vinson, and demon=- | strates this to the extent of putting | all his money into a show to star { her—only to have the show fail. Instead of being grateful to him and sorry about the affair, she throws him over for another man. { In the meantime Curson is having financial troubles, too, what | with Wendy's jilted suitor, Alan | Mowbray, determined to get re- | venge on her by ruining her em- | ployer. Mowbray backs a rival | dressmaker, Mischa Auer, who is i on the verge of completing Curson’s | ruin when the “big” idea comes to | Curson.

Show Saves the Day

“monotony and monogamy” become confused and meet at the infinity of | boredom. It that Marcia (the bride) the Earl of Moulton, his wife, the wife's former husband, James Salston, and] Sheridan's latest night-club enamorato for the week-end. Since Sheri- | dan i eflv in Lady Moul- | te Salston and the tion patently is as Sycamores famous

ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 16 (U. P,).— |ceives the idea of reconciling the| He stages a super-extravagant | warring lovers. 1

| Rosa Ponselle, opera star, stopped | Buddy proposes, | style show with the crooning of a concert last night to tweak the | then leaves the bride waiting at the joys songs and all the other trapear of her accompanist, Stuart Ross, altar in the movie house, where a| ings of musical shows thrown in. because he was playing in the | Public wedding is to take place.| aj jn his own establishment. The wrong key. Wien Sb am Ne Ooi stunt is, of course, a huge success, . & 3 " he ra] tor | a e op 'S er bi pies toe 3 cori paid in and the wedding proceeds. = { 1Stea the soprano ar-| If ever a wife missed her spouse, | . Sm tive Facilnn we 2 rangement for Miss Ponselle, left it is Miss Livingstone. Without | SUP eme in the fashion world. the stage and returned in a few Husband Jack Benny, she is almost | The usual Yiahpy ending Js in minutes with the right copy of the pathetically unamusing. Fibber and store for Curson and Wendy, who | music. Miss Ponselle then had Mr. stuck by him, when Curson

Molly portray themselves in the | Nas XE es : | Ross take a bow. She winked at | picture. It isn't much help. The | earns his wife has divorced him. the audience and continued the

others labor valiantly, but to no| Lhe story serves the purpose concert. avail. J. T). [ mainly of making plausible the

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'RULES--

1. Identify the silhouette (not the vhln which appears daily 2 Keep all photos and silhoucttes and the judging. send them together with answers to the 5. Emplovees and their families of The Silhouette Contest Editor of The Indianap- Indianapolis Times. Scripps-Howard Newsolis Times, following completion of «he papers. American Airlines or of any movie contest. Send with them the name of vour concern. branch or local theater are barred

EEE EEE EE EE

101 SILHOUETTE CONTEST PRIZES

First Prize—Roundtrip plane trip to Hollywood via American Airlines, with tour of

JUDGE ENVIOUS OF FILM SALARY

HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 16 (U. P).—

Any coming films not mentioned not be considered in

Oct. 13 . . i th dition will night with n this editio i forgetting

And of course,

out all husband,

ous

ally is patched up. loses on a hopeful, too promising future. 11 this is leaving out Mrs. TownMarcia’s grandmother. Mrs. | is a delightful dowager | are out of Godey's| Book and whose philosophy 1 rad of Havelock Ellis. Elizabeth Schofield it excellent It would be a hard part to] fire on, vet Mrs. Schofield does han let it play itself. Horace Hill Is Best Gloria Geddes, who plays Marcia in her first Civic part, 1 welcome addition to the roster. > has an lent pleasing appearance and knows her way about the Horace Hill, as Sheridan. undoubtedly is the lion of the evening. He polishes off a true feeling for the character with a great many histrionic niceties one doesn’t | usually look for in “home talent.” | Of the other principals, Edward Green gets over the British Earl particularly well. And a lump of praise is due R. Kirby Whyte, Har- | riet Hull, Holils Hull and the rest of

send, Townsend

owns

miss

more t

voice, a

stage. But

the cast. “No More Ladies” is of conseuence because it backs some sparkling conversation with a group of | understandable and believable persons, and that is worth an evening of anyone's time in the theater. i

WAIT 'TIL HE FINDS OUT

Frank McHugh, inveterate cigar | smoker, won't know until he reads this that that new brand of cigars | his wife bought him and which he

likes so well, are de-nicotined.

WHAT, WHEN, WHERE

APOLLO for Madame,” and Joan Fontaine, at 7:26. 10:13

“Music with Nino ! Martini t n.,

" with James . at 12:45,

“This Way Please,” with Buddy Rogers, Betty Grable and Ned Sparks, at 11. 1:48. 4:38, 7:27. 10:16 “On Such a Night,” with Grant | Richards To Morley. at 12:36, | J.09.

2.92 14

3:25, 6:14, CIVIC THEATER

“No More Ladies,” by A. E. Thomas. Curtain at KEITH'S

with Saxon=9:20

comedy

Vaudeville on = ttes. at 1° 4 6

kes Flight,” with Bruce || Roberts, at 12, |

| stogie-smoking comic, Joe

Blond Gloria Rich, 18-year-old dancer, today had a movie contract approved by a judge who noted that it will pay her as much as & jurist earns.

She starts at $75, but later gets | ARE Ly

$650 a week. Superior Judge Emmet Wilson gave the approval that is required on contracts for players of minor age.

favorite movie star and an essay of not more than 100 words telling why. 3. Judging will be based on: A. Correctness of identification.

B. Correctness and completeness answers to questions in coupon.

Most meritorious 100-word essays,

of C.

1 4 to the question concerning coming pictures in which the stars will appear can be gleaned from the list of coming pictures which appeared in the

. Answers

| Hollywood Forecast Section of The Times,"

IN NEW YORK —#; croret ross

Pert Lady Ziegfeld Steps in Where Angels

Often Fear to Tread—Broadway.

: EW YORK, Oct. 16.—A lady Ziegfeld has moved into town and

invaded the inviolable male domain; she is going to produce musical shows. And personally look after all the details. That ‘means midnight rows with authors, composers and temperamental principals . .

imbroglios with eccentric customers, scenic designers and chorus a = the!

It means a man’s job, withal Moreover, Alice Alexander, lady Ziegfeld in point, is 23 years

old, blond, quite beautiful and is

forever being taken for a showgirl in her own show. She could double for one if she ever had to—to the

optical delight of baldheaded row. |

Alice is not merely an executive in name. ing about backstage. She is using her own bankroll. Win or lose, it is her own, private gamble. Born to wealth and blue blood in a Boston Beacon Hill family, this

youthful and vivacious blond early |

gravitated toward the footligh's. When she was 14, she joined the Frisco, and in the capacity of stooge accompanied him on a barnstorming tour of the United States. At 18 she paused in California and invested

land holdings. The gusher is providing Alice with her wherewithal for her Ziegfeldian activities. Incidentally, she has more than one thing in common with the late glorifier of American girls. Like him, she collects ivory elephants; carries one constantly about in her purse. Never knew until she was told the other day that the great glorifier harbored the

same superstition.

= =n ” HERE the Gay White Way

turns right on Fifty-Second |

There ave no angels hover- |

girls.

the residential tastes of socially elegant families. And now— Swing is king along 52d St. until the 3 a. m. curfew. It is the street that deals in “hot pash,” served on | the off-beat, incessant din, dense smoke and over-congestion. For the | average night club along Swing Alley is so small that the head- | waiter lets in the latecomers with a shoehorn. The service is terrible, | the dance floor could be amply covered, in lieu of a rug, with a dime. The entertainers heckle the cus- | tomers as if they—the customers— were paid stooges. And nobody minds. No, indeed. ¥or they are having fun.

u un 5 T= saddest hot-spot about town during World Series week was Jack White's “18” Club, an intimate

| her pay checks in real estate. One | hjve for midnight revellers. day oil gushed up from one of her |

The reason is this:

|

{been his custom for years to post | the score of the day when his Giants {won the game. When the Giants

lost, his scorecard read, “No Game |

Today.” For three successive days the sign lin White's noisy oasis read, “No {Game Today.” But it seems that i row beneath that light-hearted bulletin.

The zany |

from participating . 6. In case of a tie, equal prizes will be | awarded, | 7 Upon entering this submission of answers, the contestant accepts these rules as binding and agrees that the decision of The Times in all matters affecting the conduct of the contest

contest and by

| and making of awards shall be final and |

conclusive. The Times will not be re-

sponsible for submissions or communica- |

tions unduly delayed or lost in the mail. Fach entry and submission becomes the property of The Times and will not be returned

‘Follies’ Go

For $28,000

Title to 72 Productions Sold |

| At Public Auction.

WHITE PLAINS, N. Y, Oct. 16 (U. P.).—The Florenz Ziegfeld es- | tate’s right and title to the books lof 72 plays and extravaganzas | staged by the late producer from {1907 to 1932 was sold at public auction today for $28,000. | Howard E. Reinheimer, New York attorney representing Irving Berlin, | Jerome Kern, Sigmund Romberg,

| Otto Harbach and Oscar Hammer- | stein II, was the purchaser. He said | his clients were seeking to clear

| their respective titles to the plays|

and songs they contributed to the various Ziegfeld productions. Second highest bidder was Jacob J. Schwebel, attorney for Holly|wood Plays, Inc., who dropped out | after offering $27,950. Before bidding started counsel for | the Select Theaters Corp. which | represents the Shubert interests, announced that his client and Billie Burke, the producer's widow, owned

not included in the auction.

BOREALIS FILMED

The famed Northern Lights will be one of the photographic features of “Spawn of the North,” picturiza-

tion of Barrett Willoughby's action | drama of pirate fishermen. A cam-

| even he could not conceal the sor- (era crew is filming scenes for the!

| picture in Alaska.

the use of the name Ziegfeld Follies. |

Jack White is the most rabid Giant | Right to use the name, however, was |

| fan in the neighborhood. And it has |

studios. Second—$100 in cash. Third—$50 in cash. Fourth—Vacation trip to Chicago via air. Fifth—$25 in cash, Sixth—$10 in cash. | Next 10 Prizes—$5 each. Next 10 Prizes—$3 each. | Next 75—Pair of theater tickets each.

Film Course Set "For Dartmouth

HANOVER, N. H,, Oct. 16 (U. P.). | —The Dartmouth College English | department announced today that | through the efforts of Walter | Wanger, movie director and Dart-

| . : ( mouth alumnus, a motion picture

course wouid be introduced into the |

| academic curriculum, The course includes instruction | in script writing, a systematic study | of scripts of movies about to be re- | leased and showing of films in va- | rious stages of completion and of | films that have gone through the | cutting process. | First-hand instruction will be given by script writers, producers, directors, actors, cameramen and | others to be sent here from Hol- | lywood during the year by Wanger.

| | a——————

BRINGS 27 TRUNKS TO FILM CAPITAL

HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 16 (U. P.).— Fernand Gravet, French actor who came here to make American

movies, was hunting a Hollywood apartment with closets of warehouse proportions today. He brought 27 trunks from Paris.

w= MARTENS CONCERTS, INC. = ENGLISH—NEXT MONDAY EVE.

Opening Concert of Season HELEN

Nino Martini Again Sings His Way Out of Trouble

At the Apollo, Nino Martini, hero of “Music for Madame,” once | again falls among thieves and sings his way out of trouble, just as he

did in “The Gay Desperado.”

This present picture isn't nearly as good as its predecessor, but it | Mr. Martini's voice always sounds

For one thing, it of

| has its moments. better on the sound track than really is—such is the magic | Hollywood. Alan Mowbray does a burlesque of a famous blond orchestra conductor, now in Holly- | wood. And Billy Gilbert, bless him, is cast as the conductor's “stooge” who is allergic to flowers. So he can sneeze to the audience's hearts’ content. Mr. Martini, appropriately, is cast as a young Italian tenor who | becomes the unwitting tool of crooks in a jewel robbery. He has

delicious

‘SOVIET PLAYERS TO HONOR MUNI

| HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 16 (U. P).— |

[ Paul Muni has accepted an invita- | tion to be guest star with the famous Moscow Art Players, consid- | ered the world’s finest thespians, { Warner Bros. Studio announced to-

day. He is en route to Europe now.

| NOW! 25c to 6

WARNER BAXTER

JOAN BENNETT

sin

some gay times with the police, the | district attorney and a music-lov=- | before |

Hale) straightened

(Alan finally

ing detective | everything is

{ out. Joan Fontaine is the girl in|

| the case. «J. T)

| D =——TONIGHT sD | A PAUL COLLINS A | AND HIS ORCHESTRA | E ADMISSION 40c¢ | Ba ATL.

MARY LIVINGSTONE Fibber McGee and Molly Charles “suddy” Rogers 1,

aie

NTI ~ a NVR

Orley

| frequent entrance of so many beautifully dressed women. It is a magenificent style show with the story a necessary evil to make the thing merely to make the thing hang together, (C. CJ)

IEC

Adolph Zukor presents

c A OP ER

|

Syncopator

ALLE ORCHESTRA |»

HARLEM MANIACS

with Paul Harris ND PAUL KIRKLAND "30 “Stepping Hig

GIRL MEETS BOY... BOY MEETS FAMILY BOY LOSES MIND!

| St., lies Swing Alley, also known as | | America’s Montmartre and Barbary | | Coast, which you will learn about soon from a talkie. : | Here's a word preview: To the | highbrows, this tumultous thorough- | fare between Fifth and Sixth Aves, | is known as Bedlam Boulevard and | Raucous Row. To the lowbrows as! | Gutbucket Grotto. Even to the uninitiated Fifty-Second St. is familiar {as the birthplace of “The Music | | Goes Round and Around” (recall?), “I'se a Muggin” and the “Skit Skat | | Skeet.” | This is the 52d St. which spoke | easily when Volsteadism was in | flower and the password at every iron gate was “Open up, Charley sent me” (remember that, too?). It is the block of high-stooped and statelv brownstones that once matched | Cork’s

S K Y Orchestra

ADDED FEATURE BASS VIOL

Sat.. 60c couple before 9:30: couple 9:30 to 12:00; 50c counle after 12:00, Sun. 35¢ couple before 9:15 Couple After 9:15 South Municipal Airport

ENGLISH, 3 DAYS

BEG, THURS., OCT, 21—MAT. SAT. ALFRED DE LIAGRE JR., presents the Comedy Hit by Mark Reed

ode [YF

LID NXE 3 \ ® MONTHS ON BROADWAY oe Le : «« FLORENCE REED y R20 Te bog

MAIL ORDERS NOW-—SEATS OCT. 18

Eves., $2.75, $2.70, $1.65, $1.10, 55c. Sat, Mat., $2.20, $1.65, $1.10, 53c. Incl. Tax

RL FL CAXALA Lyric Soprano of Opera, Radio, Screen. Limited Number of Good Seats Still Available Seats on Sale Martens Office, 201—33 Monument Circle Prices $1.10, $2.20, $2.75, $3.30 Tickets for All Concerts Under Martens Direction NOW ON SALE

a ; “Walter Waneer's Vegues of 1938.” WX JOM 4 (VN ith Jarner Baxter and Joan Ben- y at 12:30. 3:40. 6:50, 10 f ‘London By Night,” with George irphy and Rita Johnson. at 11:15, 5:35. 8:50 LYRIC Vaudeville on stage with Mal Hallett’s orchestra, at 1:09. 3:46, 6:43, 9:30 Work,” with Everett Horton at 11:32, 2:09.

WARNER OLAND

CLLRCTLI

Room

< py D bee 1684

SAN:

“Danger—Love at ley, Edward Ann Sothern, 7:53. 10:30

OHIO «Jt Happened Out West,” with Paul Kelly i Judith Allen. Also “New with Joe Penner and

HEIDI

VISRAVY-YN

STARTING AT MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT

SUNY A smiles SLANE

THE 10,000 DOLLAR BEAUTY

! GIRLS * FOLLIE

MAT. 2:15 TWO SHOWS AT NIGHT 4:15 AND 9 P. M.

CONTINUOUS ON SUNDAY GET UP A PARTY AND ATTEND OUR MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT

Plus—

LONDON BY NIGHT ceo. Murphy rita Johnson

ASSADOR

“Souls at Sea,” Ww nd George aft

an shot,” with

ith Gary Cooper aft. Also “The Big Guy Kibbee. ALAMO “You Can't Have Everything,” wit Don Ameche, Alice Faye. Als “Ranger Steps In,’ with Gene Autry

GRANADA

1045 Virginia Ave. Tonight! Sunday!

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E GUARANTEE TO TEACH YOU UICKLY '‘N TEN LESSONS FOR ONLY $750, PAYABLE IN CONVENIENT TERMS. JOIN OUR NEW BALLROOM CLASS MONDAY AT 8:30 P. M.

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16th & Illinois Sts RI-1610. : ill Admit Your “Indiana’s Largest and Finest School \ ka COMO ry ParY of Dancing | EXTRA HIT! 10¢ At 25¢ Per Person AS . [x H N J ) i

Richard Cromwell “The Road Back”

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N AL JOLSON'S ‘MAMMY * LAST 3 DAYS

Midwest Sports, Inc., Presents

OLLER DERBY

Reg. U. S. Pat. Office

COLISEUM

Gen. Admission 40¢, 65¢, $1

Harold

Dance Saturday Sundav

ON SCREEN RUCE won

IT HAPPENED OUT WEST NEW FACES OF 1931

50c One Block