Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 May 1938 — Page 12
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES TUESDAY, MAY 31, 1938
AN EXCITING DAY, FROM DAWN TO DUSK, IN THE LIFE OF OUR LITTLE HEROINE, BABY SNOOKS
Don’t worry, Daddy, about the water supply. will hit you all of a sudden.
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
The Adventures of Robin Hood,” | Errol Flynn, Olivia De Havil- |
Our little heroine finds herself cornered by a problem of alarming
As Daddy (Hanley Stafford) shaves, Snooks conceives a snappy proportions, and decides to call it a day.
| variation for the morning ablutions. 7
IN NEW YORK —¢y ceoret ros
Comes the dawn, and Baby Snooks (Fanny Brice) playfully greets
The answer probably it with a hard right to the alarm clock. |
following names: Shirley Clark Gable, Bing Croshy, { Loy, Gary Cooper, Ginger Rogers, | Dick Powell, gonja Henie, Carole | Lombard, Bob Burns, Alice Faye, | Tyrone Power, Irene Dunne, Don | Ameche, John Barrymore, Fred Astaire, Marjorie Weaver, Barbara Stanwyck, Joan Blondell, George | (Eb, Ken Maynard, Richard Dix, | Monte Blue, Frances Dee, Loretta | | Young and Bobby Breen.
Temple, Myrna
'Autog raphs on Theater Front
Three Jordan Conservatory Recitals Are Scheduled
Beginning tomorrow, the Jordan Conservatory will present citals on consecutive nights by faculty and student musicians Odeon. Tomorrow evening Tommie Wright will be heard in a recital of twopiano music with his teacher, Harold Triggs. Assisting on ihe program will be Robert Grant, cello student of Paulo Gruppe, accompanied by Mae
|
Eating Trip Around Town Would Include Every Meal Known to Civilized Man. NEW YORK, May 31.—With curiosity as his passport and enterprise |
as his ticket, any voyager can take a knife, fork, spoon and cup trip- | around-the-world right here in New York. |
land, 5 Basil, Frathoone, 3s. at 11. 1:11
3:2 44 and 9 “March of Time.”
5:04, 7:15 and 9:26
CIRCLE
Moonshine,’
a— |
ah BE Wn lai TW Anticipating the June 15 opening |
tof his Vogue Theater, Carl Niesse | | plans to give his autograph collec- | tion a permanent setting tomorrow. Mr. Niesse has collected the signa- | tures of | These have been inscribed upon a
three rein the
he at
with t aver
“Kentucky Ritz Brothers. Marjorie We 11. 1:50, 4:40, 7:30 and 10:20 “One Wild 'Night.” with June Lang Dick Baldwin, at 30, 3:2 115 and 9:05
2
“ONE WILD NIGHT”
Engle of the Jordan piano faculty. The opening two-piano group will include transcriptions of two Bach chorale preludes by Langrish and LeFieming, and the Chopin Rondo Following two movements from Boccherini's A Major Cello Sonata, the pianists will return to play the first set of Brahms’ “Liebeslieder” waltzes, Opus 52 Mr. Grant's second the Lalo Cello Concerto (two movemends), and the recital will end with three two-piano numbers the Strauss-Chasins “Beautiful Blue Danube”; Infantes “Ritmo,” and Chasing’ “Carmen Fantasy The program is at 8:30 p. m Friday at the hour, Mr. Tr present rian Laut in Progra in which he again second pianist The program includes a Sicilienne J. 8. Bach: a sonata by his son
offering will
3 be
same Mam as
night 1285 will a two-piano will appeal
by
Johann Christian; three transcrip-
tions of the elder Bach's music,
the Saint-Saens Variations on a Theme by Reethoven; Ravel's tran- | scription of Debussy’s “Nuages” and | “Fetes,” and the Infante “Ritmo.” Alice Rayburn, pianist, and Virg2inia Levenberger. cellist, will gine | joint recital Thursday night. Virginia Jefrv will be Miss Leyenberger’s assisting pianist. All are members of the Jordan faculty
a
Recital Program
as follow =
Bee:
program will be
Opus
Their onat 33 hoven a Ni ss Ra n a Cons 0 gL heme Fschaikowsky Miss Levenberger urne, Opus 15 No 1 Opus 10 No 12 Opus lo No 5
Chopin Chopin chopin 32 Chopin Miss Ravbhurn Richard
6 Strauss Tes enber ger—Mrs. Jefry
Miss
Two Former Hill Billies
| every
Any globe trotter will tell you thats
ho other | throngs on Broadway, the growing |
gastronomically speaking,
| city on the globe can offer such a | world-cruise-on-a-dinner-plate
as fabulous town. For New mecca of cooks from earth, and these] them their
can this York is the race on bring with dishes. If the urge 1s strong enough, the: diner-out can accumulate enough assorted menus for a League of Na-
| tions diet
the stalwart seftle down
For instance, the curious can corner table in a basement brauhaus and call out for the rarest Hungarian delicacies, while a nondescript pair of gypsies—their earrings still intact—play their vagabond melodies. the fourth floor of a Chinese restaurant near the Bowery and present their culinary whims directly |
to a
| to the Oriental and obliging chef. | The food will be
handsomely | best
as repared as in the
"halls of Shanghai.
Get Roles in ‘Boys Town’
HOLLYWOOD. May 31 (U.P
They can—by rounding the corner in Broadway's Forties—descend | into a room aromatic with burning
incense, where a Hindu Prepares
).—Two small boys. too young to realize |
he almost incredibly good fortune which has been theirs, romped in the |
M-G-M Eight months ago
older, were dirty-faced urchins in a squalid cabin in the Kentucky hills. Today theyre such handsome, well-mannered boys, so gay and affectionate and intelligent that they have been retained for stellar parts in the John W. Considine production, “Boys Town.” “They have surprised me.” their mentor, the Rev. Fr. Edward J. Flanagan. “I don’t like to talk about them as they were only last September and today, well, they're both little angels. All they needed was a home—and love.” Father Flanagan is the founder the internationally famous Boys an unique orphanage" he established 10 miles west of Omaha, where his charges elect their own mayor, govern themselves with laws of their own devising, and grow into men of whom the only father they know is inordinately proud. Tracy In Lead Role The studio decided several months ago to dramatize the establishment of Boys Town, with Spencer Tracy taking the part of Father Flanagan Mickey Rooney piaying one of the bovs, and Judy Garland, the girl with whom he eventually fell mm love. M-G-M made a substantial donation to Pather Flanagan's work, though he would have been glad to co-operate gratis. Two weeks ago Director Norman Taurog went to survey the establishment in Nebraska. Mr. Taurog met all of the 200 boys in Boys Town, and told Father Flanagan that of all its citizens, he thought James and Andrew would make the best movie performers. Would Father Flanagan let them come to Holywood for a few weeks? The priest answered that by bringing them here. himself. While James played with a Mickey Mouse wrist watch Mr, Taurog presented him and Andrew admired his gold | signet ring, Father Flanagan told of | their regeneration. Once Were Hill Billies “They were little hill billies,” he said. “The Red Cross found them in a squalid mountain cabin. Their father spent most of his time in jail for drunkenness. treated them none too well. were undernourished, profane, bad
of Town, Neb,
Studio today—with more good luck to come.
77-year-old An-¢& drew and his brother, James, a year |
sald |
| built
keep homeless boys out of reform schools. They needed not reforming, but homes and good nourishment and love. With the help of |
| good friends in Omaha, we rented
a place where we could care for 150 boys. “Then the citizens of Omaha | raised $200,000 and we established | Boys Town on a 160-acre tract in | the suburbs. Two hundred boys live | there now. We hope eventually to have room for 500. The boys govern themselves. Our town is no institution. There are no bars, no fences, na locks on the doors. The | horses, the cows and the pigs belong to the boys, not to me. We have a high school and a grammar school, a theater and a church, though we run the town on a nonsectarian basis. “So far we have cared for 4300! boys of all races and creeds. Some of the boys stay only a few months. Some stay for several years. I try
{to find them good homes, with fine | people.
But theyre fine boys, every so 1 insist that they have homes to match.” While Father Flanagan talked, Andrew and James were in the next ! room. examining a stack of photo-
one,
{look on while a waiter, | Cossack costume, brings on a flam-
| curries from his native form There is a wide choice of a | | places that feature the generous Smorgasbord table. In at least two | localities are restaurants where | soft-slippered Japanese devote | their lives to stirring up suki-yaki for connoisseurs. Those who care to prowl the | town can watch a swarthy Spaniard cook their Latin dinners while! waiting in his kitchen, take repast with the lamb-loving Syrians, or~ der Molle among the Mexicans and have it served as fine as they do south of the Rio Grande. They can | disguised in
ing spit with Shashlik in a Mus-
| covite setting, dine with the Dutch, the | Ru- |
the Basques, the Czecho-Slovakians manians. They can choose from
Germans, and the
| the island and find these well as- | | sorted, also, what with the Neopoli- |
tans, the Sicilians and the Milanese vving for attention.
New York's tourist season is be- | in- |
ginning, crease busses, Rad
as evidenced by the of glass-topped sight-seeing the roving bands City, the slowly
graphs showing Clark Gable flying some of the shiniest airplanes ever Andrew said he thought he'd like to be an aviator. James said he wasn't so sure. He sort of admired the ehgineer of the streamlined train that brought him here.
SHIRLEY TO LEAVE ON MOTOR TOUR
HOL LYWOOD, May May 31 (U. P.-.— Shirley Temple leaves Hollywood early this week on a nation-wide | motor tour. Accompanying the child movie star will be Mr. and Mrs. George | | Temple, her father taking a vaca- | | tion from his bank desk for the trip. A studio press agent left over the! week-end to make secret preparations for the Temples’ hotel stop- | overs.
3ra annual
SPEEDWAY FROLIC
Their mother | They |
little boys—and they were headed
for a life of illiteracy. “The Red Cross workers them away from their parents and sent them to Boys Town. Eight months there has turned them into
took |
children of whom anyone would be !
proud.”
The story of Father Flanagan's | venture into applied sociology has |
been told and told again. Here it
is, in his own words: “I started in 1917 with a good idea, but no money. I wanted to Every Nite
DANC i Except Mon.
WESTLAKE
Chuck Haug Orchestra
MARY BETH—Soloist
Broad Ripple Park
SWIM
largest outdoor ADMISSION
10c:
In world's pool. Daily,
Adults,
Swimming
Children. 25e. Dancing hu except Mondays. CHARI wE PAY and His Orchestra. REE ADMISSION AN FREE PARKING.
HIS BAND
Every Week Nite
Except Mondav
native
and
They can climb to |
banquet
hundreds | |of Italian eating places that dot |
through | treading |
| Paramount
BIJOU
BELMONT
Haas: i
| congestion in haqtel lobbies, the | steady migration across the bridges {to the World's Fair grounds in| | Flushing Meadows. The web of ways around the town complete. The Hendrik Parkway, fic of four states, and the Borough Bridge, awe and aid visiting motorists. The George Washmgton Bridge still is drawing gasps for its night-time beauty, most spectacular cabaret East-—the Riviera, | cliff over the Hudson—already
1s
m
|
streamlined highalmost | Hudson a veritable chute for traf- | Tri- |
open on the New Jersey side of it, |
The trek to Jones Beach, famed
around the world as the most lux- |
{ urious seashore resort,
| winter lethargy. On Broadway, en-
has begun. | Frank Factor, Coney Island starts to stir out of | son of Max Factor.
|
| tertainments show no sign of go- |
ing on the wane this summer. The | | sidewalk cafes have mushroomed | everywhere, and the harbor is col-
{orful with trans-oceanic liners.
| WPA THEATER | RECEIPTS SHORT
| |
NEW YORK, May 31 (U. P.).—
| Agents of the WPA Bureau of In- |
vestigation today were pressing an inquiry into alleged shortages in the receipts from Federal Theater Project shows.
| Nine WPA employees were ques- | | tioned but all were permitted to go |
The shortages were discov-
| home. noticed the
ered when officials
small receipts in contrast to packed |
houses.
| OVERSEAS DESIGNS
Rosalind Russell is taking ward- | robe designs of her own creation to
London, where she is to star
“The Citadel.”
in |
LOEW'S
“Aolidav,” with burn, Cary Gran and 10.0
Aton Brook, at
Kathari at 12:33
g Sanger, 13,
LYRIC “Crime School,” with Humohrev Bogart, "Dead End Kids.” on screen at 11:23 2 5:04. 7:45 and 10:26 “Waikiki Nights.” revue on stage at 1:04. 3:45. 6:15 and 9:25.
OHIO
for Trouhle Also “The
th Cuye 5:35 Yang
o., 11:0
Spen-
Steps
with Sheik
“Lonking
cer Tracy
Out.
FRANK FACTOR BECOMES MAX |
P.).~ second |
famous |
Hollywood makeup man, had his name changed legally to Max Factor Jr. He explained to the | judge it was for “business and | sentimental reasons.” He has been | trained to take his father’s place in| the business.
and the | — the | jutting out on a is |
HOLLYWOOD, May 31 (U -old
the
-Vvear
_ACTION FOR SLANDER 25¢ till 6
Tonight's Presentation at Your
‘Neighborhood Theaters
EAST SIDE
A507 E. Wash. “st. Double Feature mmv Kelly
IRVING
1 “ADVENT RES OF TOM SAWY ER RYBODY SING”
. 2116 E. 10th St. ‘Hamilton "mE | | “ADVENTURES OF T “DANGEROUS TO KNOW" Thursday
GOLDEN SNOW WHITE” “QUINTUPLAND” 1630 E. 10th
| EMERSON 3:43 to 6—15¢
Joe E. Brown “WID ACES’ Jessie Matthews “SAILING “ALONG
| S T R A N D Aauits ae uli 2
Jas. Stewart Lionel Baltvmore “OF HUMAN HEAR Dick Foran eT N ravis "OVER THE WALL :
6116 E. Wash. Now Through
Also
Wash,
1 E. Walter Brennan Brian
Mary “AFFAIRS OF CAPPY RICKS” Comedy and Serial 114 E. Washington Double Feature Ken Mavnard “FARGO EXPRESS Milburn Stone “FEDERAL BulLETS" “Painted Stallion.” No. 2930 E. iE St. PARKER Rolie nev’s
St.
Last RTE WwW Dis “SNOW WHITE E> Adults 20c : Children i5e RIVOLI 3135 E. 10th St 5:45 to 6—I135¢ Alice Faye—Tyrone Power Don Ameche—Alice Brady “IN OLD CHICAGO” __ “OVER THE WALL" 2442 E. Wash. TACOMA Family Nite 10¢c to Al Gary Cooper “THE PLAINSMAN”" elected Shorts 4020 E. New York TUXEDO Double Feature ommy "ADVENTURES OF TOM SAWYER” ARSENE LUPIN RETURNS” WEST SIDE rr 2302 W. 10th St. Finda Farrell ton MacLane “BLONDES AT WORK" Comedy and Cartoon _ a W. Wash. & Belmont Double Feature obt. Montgomery “THE FIRST 100 YEARS” ____ Bobby Breen "HAWAII CALLS” 2540 W. Mich. St.’ D A | S Y Double Fe Feature 0 ns “RADIO CITY REVELS' wr “BREAKFAST FOR TWO” Speedway v hs OR AND “WHO KILLED GALE
Speedway City Double Feature ayne orris
a»
“I = Ee —
ORO
yA - oy Se |
GROVE AVALON
-| ZARING CINEMA | ST. CLAIR UPTOWN
REX
SOUTH SIDE
1105 S. Meridian Double Feature chot Tone “LOVE IS A HEAD ACHE" "PRESCRIPTION FOR ROMANCE”
LINCOLN "Rui sit
Double Feature Wallace Beery “BAD MAN OF BRIMSTON Miriam Hopkins “WISE CIRL"
2203 Shelby Cuuble Feature Now Garfield neue, Fata “SERGEANT MU RPHY “I MET M¥ LOVE AGAIN”
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
Double Feature Alice Fave “IN OLD CHICAGO” TIP OFF GIRLS”
SANDERS At Fountain Square |
Palen a Feature RZAN'S REVEN
orris “IA Joan Crawford _ IANNEQU IN”
Beech Grove Double Feature Constance Bennett "MERRILY WE LIVE” Bobby Breen “HAWAII CALLS”
Pros. & Churchman Double Feature Franchot Tone HE”
LOVE IS A HEADAC “SOME BLONDES ARE DANGEROUS”
NORTH SIDE
Central at Fall Crk. | a poul Die Colbert audette Colber “BLUEBEARD’S EIGHTH WIF ____Nan Grey “BLACK DOLL”
16th & Delaware | vonble Feature - ce Fave SALLY, IRENE & MARY" Cowan CITY REV ELS” | St. Cl. & Ft. Wayne | Double Feature Gloria Stuart .“ ‘ISLAND IN THE » “BULLDOG DRUMMOND AT BAY” 42nd _& College Double Feature lice Fave “ “IN OLD tnicaco | LOVE ON BUDGET”
TALBOTT Talbott & 22nd
Double Feature vy Grable “THRILL OF A LIFETIME Fred Stone “QUICK MONEY”
30th at Northwestern | a Suble Rohinse woop SLIGHT CASE OF MURDER" PENROD AND HIS TWIN BROTHER”
D R E A M 2351 Station St
Double 1 Feature itz Bros. “THE GOI. DWYN FOLLIES” Ricardo Cortez “CITY GIRL"
R | TZ Mlinois and 24th
Double Feature . alter Huston ‘OF HUMAN HEARTS "WIDE OPEN FACES”
| Holl ywoog 1300 Roosevelt
Nimsetan e100 © mission ie = Se ON E”
“LAST Jou!
| large bronze star which is
to be
26 top-flight movie Stes, | | | |
placed in the sidewalk fronting the
| new movie
| College Ave,
house at 63d St.
and
FIRST TO ENLIST
Walter Pidgeon portrays a draft dodger in “The Shopworn Angel,”
JUNE LANG LYLE TALBOT DICK BALDWIN
25¢
TILL vet he was one of the first men in| . LL 8
The bronze star will contain the | Canada to enlist in the World War. | TRY | A Ww ANT AD IN THE TIMES
“Sometimes love comes and goes so quickly it’s lost before you know it. That must not happen to us!”
Robert TAYLOR and Margaret SULLAVAN
in a beautiful scene from
M-G-M’s “THREE COMRADES”
a picture you’ll take close to your heart. ...
In the cast: Franchot TONE, Robert YOUNG, Guy Kibbee, Lionel Atwill, Henry Hull. A FRANK BORZAGE Production. Screen Play by F. Scott Fitzgerald and Edward E. Paramore . A Metro- Goldwyn -Mayer Picture . . .
Produced by Joseph L. Mankiewicz. Directed by FRANK BORZAGE
Plus: Laurel & Hardy
in “SWISS MISS”
—_
