Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1940 — Page 13
y
yw PRISONER,
+ HOOSIER, HOME
Bern Man Says Food Is
Poor, Water Scarce in Nazi Prison Camp. FT. WAYNE, Ind., Dec. 2 (U. P).
“== A journey that began three * months ago at the gates of a Ger-
man military prison camp ended today when Louis William Wehrle re-
. turned to Ft. Waype “to stay a
while. 3
Mr. Wehrle, 43, a native of Berne,|
Ind, joined the American Volunteer ambulance corps in France as a driver last spring. In May he was reported dead.; Later, the German
+ ‘Government announced officially he
had been captured. The U. S. State Department and
"the Red Cross negotiated his re-
lease after he had spent 100 the prison camp. . Mr. Wehrle said the camp, composed of 18,000 prisoners, was divid-
Says in
ed into three sections; his section]:
included 6000 French officers and men. Water was scarce, he declared, and food poor. - The daily menu was a fifth of a loaf "of bread, a small portion of soup, one vegetable an an occasional cup of Ersatz cofee,
PERS Croquign 5 Permanent*compiete with nalr cut, shampoo, push-up wave and ringlet $1 up is BEAUTY SHOP ' 628 Masiachussua Ave.
The VICTOR does everything Humanly possibie tosave youmoney.....
WHEN YOU ARE in the market for something A rurntture Stare sells. , ..
VISIT .....
Victor Furniture Co. at 231 W. Washington St.
INSPECT..... VICTOR VALUES!
IS A LoL EN o Te
Kindergarten Party Wednesday— A Christmas party for the mothers will be given at the regular meeting of the Emerson Heights kindergarten, Wednesday in the kindergarten room.
Jobs Daughters to Install Queen— Miss Betty Jean Van Camp will be installed as honored queen of Bethel 1, Order of Job’s Daughters, at a public ceremony at 3 p. m. Dec. 14 at Castle Hall. Other officers to be installed are Mary Alys Werkhoff, senior princess; Alice Jean Little, Miss Van Camp junior princess; ‘Dorothy Ann Billeter, guide; Lou Ann Pfaff, marshall; Rosemary Selmier, recorder; Patricia Bryant,. treasurer; Betty Jenner, chaplain; Mary Jean Mercer, librarian; Helen Woods, musician; Dorothy Ruby, Evelyn Imel, Rajean Carpenter, Kathryn Favey, and Joan Zickendrath, messengers; Betty Felknor, senior custodian; Evelyn Perkins, junior custodian; Patricia Gentry, inner guard, and Eleanor Grant, outer guard. Miss Juanita Caldwell will be installing officer.
Hostesses Named for Luncheon— A covered dish luncheon and a gift exchange will be features at a meeting of the Social Club of Monumental Division 128, Auxiliary to Locomotive Engineers, at the home of Mrs. F. M. Simms, 1957 Central Ave. Thursday. Mrs. J. A. Fulmer and Mrs. -C.. C. Livingston will act as hostesses.
This time of the year—the holiday season—is when the police force doesn’t get holidays. Days off, according to the annual custom, are revoked so that the downtown area can be better policed for the shopping threngs. When schools let out for the Christmas vacation, even more officers will be relieved on traffic detail and put into the downtown area, Inspector Ed Helm said today.
Service Star Legion Chapter to Meet—The Hamilton-Berry chapter, Service Star Legion, will meet tomorrow at 2 p. m. at the home of ‘Mrs. O. M. Green, 2227 Broadway. Mrs. Charles K. McDowell, president,
will preside.
Ask to se our Luxe
air-cell BETTER GRADE De numbers.
de to Fit Any hape Table
Floyd County Society to Meet — The Floyd County Society will hold its first- weekly luncheon Wednesday at the Whitney Grill, 111 Monument Circle. .The society plans to hold noon meetings every Wednesday during the Winter.
Doctors to Elect—The Indianapolis Medical Society of Marion County will hold an election and hear committee reports at 8:15 p. m. tomorrow at the Indianapolis Club.
William Lowell Harritt, Tech High School graduate and member of the U. 8. Navy, has become eligible for the Naval Aecademy Preparatory College. Enlisting in the Navy May 4, 1939, he was as=signed to the U. S. S. California, flagship of the fleet. While en route to Hawaii he passed the N. A. P. C. examination. Following study at Mr. Harritt the college, he will enter the Naval Academy at Annapolis. He is .the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harritt, 1353 N. Olney St.
Stated Meeting Set — Southport Chapter, 442, O.E.S., will hold a stated meeting at 8 p. m. Wednesday in the Southport Masonic Temple.
Mrs. Ruth Brock is worthy matron
and William Talbert is worthy patron.
Sons of Veterans to Dine—Auxiliary 10, Sons of Union Veterans, will have a dinner at 6 p. m. tomorrow at Ft. Friendly. A meeting and inspection will follow. Friends Night Set—The Speedway Chapter, Order of Fastern Star, will have a Friends Night in the Lynhurst Masonic Hall at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow. Guest officers from other chapters will serve,
Wives to Be Club Guests—Wives of Rotary Club members will be guests at the club’s luncheon tomorrow in the Claypool Hotel Riley Room. The program will include a style show presented by L. S. Ayres & Co., and impersonations by Dean Murphy.
Tndiana-Towa Game to Be Shown —A 40-minute movie of the In-diana-Iowa football game, showing the touchdown run of Red Zimmer of I. U., will be shown to the Lions Club Wednesday noon. Assistant Coach Paul Hagrell of I. U. will give a running account of the game,
Club to Nominate—Nomination of officers wil be made by Townsend Club 9 at a meeting at 8 o'clock tonight in the I. O. O. F. Hall, Hamilton Ave, and E. Washington St.
MADE WITH ASBESTOS
reversible and
Christmas fipecial
sj-19
324 Bankers Trust Bldg.
Phone o
0 No att See full line of super
3 INDIANAPOLIS TABLE PAD CO.
ur representative will eall, day or night, for measurements,
reversible heavy and wood grain pads.
CLERICAL PROJECT REOPENED BY NYA
The NYA state-wide clerical and stenographic. work project has been reopened, according to Robert S. Richey, state administrator. Part of the out-of-school work program, the project operates in more than 50 counties of the state and normally employs about 1000 of Indiana's youth.
YOU CAN GET A
$100 HONOR LOAN
IF YOU CAN PAY BACK 6.22 A MONTH
No security required—You merely give your prom--fise to repay—No questions asked of friends or relatives about your credit—Quick, friendly service
| OULD you like to get a
cash loan without having
to -ask friends or relatives for a vor? At Household Finance ou can borrow $20 to $300— ithout endorsers or guarantors if you can make small monthly payments on your loan. We re«quire no security of any kind.
Choose yourown payment plan See, in the table below, how you may repay your Honor Loan in convenient monthly installments which fit your own income. You may repay in small installments spread over 20 months. Or you may repay sooner to reduce the charges. Suppose that you need a $100"
i ; CHECK OUR RATES AND PAYMENTS BEFORE YOU GET A LOAN ANYWHERE
CASH LOAN"
“amouny YOU PAY BACK EACH MONTH Including All Charges
&
vou
6 GET months
loan
z months loan
8 months loan
10 12 16 months | months °| months loan loan
$532 |$364 .65 4,54 8 5.45 10.64 7.27 13.30 9.09
» 10.91
15.96 18.62 | 12.72 13.63
19.95 14.54
21.28 23.94 | 16.36 18.18
26.60 22.72
33.25 39.91 | 27.26 46.49 | 31.76 53.07 | 36.23 59.61 | 40.69 45.12
66.15 72.63 | 49.55
79.21
$ 2¢
53.98
$ 2.79 3.49 . 4.19 5.59
41.37
$1.95 2.44 2.93 3.91 4.88
5.86 6.84 7.33 7.81 8.79
9.77 12.21 14.65 17.06
©1943 21.79 * 24.13 26446
28.79
$20 to $50 loaned only for 12 months or less
$ 4.61 5.38 5.76 6.14 6.91
7.68 9.60 11.52 13.40
15.25 17.09 18.91 20.71
9.65 11.22
12.76" 14.28 15.78 17.28
22.51 | 18.77
* loan ahead ts include charges at
, when payments are made on schedule. You will pay | oe time y, ousehold’s rate
of 214% per month on that part of a balance : A not exceeding $150, and 14% pes Month. on : that part, pia ip excess of 5150 B.E.MENDERSON. PRESIDENT]! ND, Ph
WE UARANTEE the total amount figured by using this table 2 the full amount
if you pay your have the money.
Personal Loans $20 to $300
joan. You find this amount in the first column of the table. Then read across picking out the monthly payment which you wish to make. You will see, for instance, that monthly installments of $9.77 each will repay a $100 loan in full in 12 months. Or, if . you wish smaller payments, as
little as $6.43 a nionth for 20 |
- months will also repay a $100 loan.
Same rate fo everyone Installments in the table cover everything. They include charges at Household’s rate of 214%, per month on that part of a balance not exceeding $150, and 149, per month on that part of a balance in excess of $150. Household - has only this one rate—the same for everyone—whether new customer or former borrower. ny
No one else need know
When you borrow at Household, there is no need to ask friends or fellow-workers to sign the loan papers with you. So that your loan may remain your private affair, we do not ask friends or relatives about your credit. If you should be faced with sickness or unemployment while paying on an Honor Loan, Household will show you every consideration. Last year legal action against assets was resorted to on . only one out of each:20,000 loans —an action taken then only as protection against fraud. ; "If a loan will help you, you are urged to look at the table.again.
‘Then phone or visit us for further |
information. You will be under
no obligation to borrow. Copyright, Household Finance Corp, 1940 .
HOUSEHOLD FINANCE
3rd Fl, Illinois Bldg., 17 Ww. ‘Market & Cor. Illinois St., H. S. Meeker, Mgr., Phone: Riley 5404
6th Fl., Merchants Bank Bldg., Washington & Meridian, M. J. Scott, Mgr., Phone: Riley 1471 LOCALLY MANAGED OFFICES IN PRINCIPAL’ CITIES. ©
&
|HOLLYWOOD
‘By PAUL HARRISON Times Special Writer
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2.—Behind the screen: / The Hays office, stung by reports that censorship has been growing more lenient—and spurred by protests from people who want stern standards in movie morality—has been cracking-down. Stills, costumes and dialog. : It was decided, for instance, that “Tin Pan Alley” was guilty of indecent exposure in some of the harem scenes and the verdict was sustained by the Eastern board when the studio appealed. So a
| few of the scenes were cut out, al-
though the chorus girls’ costumes weren’t changed. Metro has been having bathtub trouble, not only with Lana Turner in “Ziegfeld Girl,” but with Bob Taylor in “Flight Command” and Clark Gable in “Comrade X.” 1 don’t know what's so offensive about a man taking a bath, but there always has been trouble about these partial-immersion shots. In
Willie Winkie,” they chopped out Victor McLaglen’s rain-barrel ablutions. Stranger yet was the killing of an entire comedy sequence in which Joe E. Brown, as an inventor,
* |sat in a well-filled tub and pushed
buttons which caused mechanical arms to hand him soap, brushes and towels.
Wants Sally to Return
Speaking of exposure: Cecil DeMille is trying to persuade Sally Rand to do her bubble dance for his nickel-in-the-slot movies. . . . Earl Carroll is planning a big skinpageant for the Hollywood Bowl. . The picture magazines, such as Peep, Snoop and Leer, are complaining about the leg-art layouts. provided by the studios. Many of the photographed cuties, identified as starlets, have been fired and forgotten by the time the periodicals are off the press. And speaking of the Hays office: Hollywood keeps hearing Harry Hopkins is a likely choice as the next movie czar. Will Hays’ contract expires next spring, and the producers need somebody who can bend a few ears in Washington. : The captive red balloons which float over studios to warm away noisy airplanes have been mentioned before in this space as being of very little benefit. They're worse than useless now. Pilots testing military ships are using the balloons as pylons for speed trials.
. Tip to Politicians
Oomphy Annie Sheridan continues to. relax on suspension—and on George Brent’s yacht—while Olivia de Havilland takes over the Sheridan lead in “Miss Wheelwright Discovers America.” Warners offered to double her salary, but Annie wants a four-picture-a-year starring deal. ... Many of the colony's glamorists (I'm told) are wearing red knitted whatchamaycallums. Only they call ’em “draft dodgers.” Mickey Rooney’s really moony about Linda Darnell. . . . And Franchot Tone and Carole Landis are, as Hollywood says, “out of this world.” . . . Hedy Lamarr and Reginald Gardiner are a renewed twosome, beginning again from the point where Gene Markey came in, If you haven’t seen the new Kay Kyser comedy, “You'll Find Out,” I commend the °marvels of the Sonovox, which makes its bow in the picture. With this contraption, a person can transform any sound vibration into words; wind talks, and a vocalist sings lyrics in the timber and pitch of various band instruments. Incidentally, it’s a good thing for the Democrats that Wendell Willkie didn’t know about the Sonovox. With this device and a recording of a Roosevelt speech, he could have saved his own voice and made his addresses with the identical, compelling resonance of his opponent.
Schedule Film Of T. R.'s Life
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2.— “Teddy and the Boys,” a film biography of the late President, Theodore Roosevelt, has been tentatively scheduled for production during the coming season by Warner Bros. Suggested by the studio’s prizewinning two-reel subject, “Teddy, the Rough Rider,” the story will deal with the Roosevelts’ home life, and will be played in the mood of the .current stage hit, “Life With Father.” Sidney Blackmer, who portrayed the President in the short subject, iy being considered for the proposed m.
FOLLOW EACH OTHER
The Marx brothers celebrate their birthdays on the 21st (Groucho), 22d (Chico), and 23rd (Harpo) of the month. Groucho was born in October, Chico’s birthday is in March, Harpo’s in November.
a LNs
HOME OWNED - HOME OPERATED DAYS
{cA FREES | HARMO wo |
Career Means More Than
as innocuous a picture as “Wee
: Jeter I Po
i Love Affair, Says Singing Star.
-NEW YORK, Dec. 2 (U. P)— Carol Bruce, Broadway's find of this year, opened her blue eyes to their: very widest today, swallowed a teaspoon of honey for her throat and declared that as far as she knew being an actress was as innocent as being a buttonhook. “You used to hear a lot of stuff about how dangerous the show business is. Well, as far as I'm concerned, this is one of the world’s tamest professions,” she said in a backstage interview. the musical comedy, “Louisiana Purchase.” “I've yet to see a real stage-door Johnny waiting to lure me astray,” she continued. “All I ever find waiting for me after shows is a bunch of high school kids. You know, autograph hounds. They're just too sweet for anything—though
the market price is on my autograph, “Show business just isn’t what it used to be. You can’t get by on just sex, or just talent, or just looks these days. You've got to have everything. Even an I. Q. Not that I think I have everything, you understand, I'm just facing facts.” Miss Bruce, who is barely old enough to vote, has been in the show business since she wore pigtails. Now she has a five-year Hollywood contract. “After all,” she said, “show business is like any other business. If you conduct yourself with dignity, youll ‘get along. If you act in a silly manner, or do things without thinking—well, you've only yourself to blame if people start whispering béhind your back.” -
Carol Bruce, the Darling of Broadway, Puts Heart on Ice|
She stars in|
I've never dared to ask them what]:
so much that if she ever has to choose between love and the stage, she’ll choose the stage, she said.
—but right now ‘I'm keeping my heart on ice until I get out to Hollywéod,” she said. looks like I'm going to spend a good part of my life there, and I don’t want to have any cross-coun-try love affairs.”
June,
Carol Bruce . . . doesn’t want any cross-country love affairs.
She wants to be a good actress,
“Im very impulsive emotionally
“After all, it
Miss Bruce goes to Hollywood in
Warburg Head of Movie Arbitration
NEW YORK, Dec. 2 (U. P).— Paul Felix ‘Warburg, a partner in the brokerage. firm of J. S. Bache & Co., has been appointed chairman of a nation-wide arbitration system for the settlement of disputes between motion picture producers and exhibitors, it was ahnounced here today. A consent decree signed Nov. 20 by Federal Judge Henry Warren Goddard terminating the (Govern-
ment’s anti-trust suit against five of the eight major picture produc-
WHEN DOES IT START?
. CIRCLE “Tin Pan Alley,” Jin, Alles oA] Betty Grable, Jack Payne, at 12:38, 3.55, Sidney rae ve TIC Weaver, at nes 'oler, rjo. . 11:44, Ts :50, 5:56 and 9:02.
INDIANA a" My Love,” with Claudette colbert; ga Ray. Millard, 10:05. Abel, at 12:14 an De iti Grace
“D 2 a D MDancing Robert Paige, Virginia Dale, at 11, 2:17. 5:34 and 8:51. LOEW’S | e,” with Norma Shearer, Bo $e TayIor. Al 12 Nazimova, at 12:15,
8:50 and 1 “” Bui 3 S9ith Ann Sothern, Ian unter! Tolknd ‘Young. at il. 2:18, 5:30 and 8:45.
“Esca
YN
ille, _with mund Low Py Lawrence oe and grehestra, on stags ¢ at 12:23, 2: 3 an 3 “Fast of the River,” with John Garfield. Brenda Marshall. Marjorie
Rambeau, at 11: 5, 1:25, 3:45, 6.05,
ing companies named the American
8:25 and 10:43
Arbitration Association ‘as official administrators of the new system. R. K. O. Radio Pictures; Inc., 20th
“Bad Man.”
Wallace Beery’s newest picture is
Century-Fox Films Corp.; Paramount Pictures, Inc, Warner Brothers and Loew’s are the producers affected by this cour ruling. The decree in essence eliminated block booking, under which theater owners were obliged to buy as many as 50 pictures in a single deal, and the former practice of “blind selling.” Pictures can now be sold in blocks of five and no film can be offered for sale without firs; having
Ind _. a ., #* Boris Karloff “THE APE” - Keye Luke ‘Phantom of. Chinatown”
ETOALAMO
First Ind rn Showings * d the Sacramento” Gang of Mine’ Satan”—Late A
“Mysterious Dr.
been completed and shown, to the trade. The arbitration system outlined in this decree is intended to settle out of court all disputes which might grow out of these newly-cre-ated trade practices. :
INDIAN LN
oncing on a Dime Grace McDonald
EAST SIDE Teter 8507
RIE - %. 200.6
Cary Grant—Martha Scott:
“HOWARDS OF VIRGINIA”
las. Stewart—Rosalind Russell
“NO TIME FOR COMEDY”
Open 5:45 aculis Tin 6 206 Thru
HELD OVER V3 t O’Brien—Gale Page—Ron. Ri
KN UTE ROCKNE"
Plus Don Ameche-Betty Grable
con: “Down Argentine Way”
TTR A WS ee ee enna, EMERSON r. loth 54 200
a 6 Clark Gable “STRANG GO’ Deanna Durbin VSERING SARSDE"
Sheridan 6116 E. Washington
Doors Open
Powell-Loy “I LOVE YOU AGAIN” Henry Fonda “Return of Frank James”
PARKER Do hon” at. :48
> l1<Loy “I LOVE YOU AGAIN” Ioneey A “Sing, Dance, Plenty Hot”
The Mecca Wasi. 20C
Myrna Loy “I LOVE YOU AGAIN” Ani Sothern “GOLD RUSH MAISIE”
Wm. Powell “I LOVE YOU Joan Pat © O’Brien “FLOWING G 2116 = SA
G PA Deanna Durbin Victor Mature “CAPTAIN CAUTION”
F-VVN T1018), SEAR PS
Adults 15¢ ALWAYS—RKifldies 1c
Sisetis 100 on BREAN ARE ouglas as,
Bs Una M «COMIN: "ROUND THE M THE HS UNTAIN®
REX
“BLONDIE HAS SERVANT TI TROUBLE”
TALBOTT ESQUIRE
THRU WED. Rn Li Zz Ed para
| DAISY Sov
BELMONT
¥. CLA ie 122
Frm “THE SEA HAWK” reen O’Hara—Louis Hayward
__ “DANCE, GIRL, DANCE” 20¢ Northwestern Wm. Powell “I LOVE.YOU AGAIN”
College at 63ro
\V) 0 Po U 3 Free Parking Lot
“KNUTE ROCKNE—ALL AMERICAN" ___ “MONEY AND TE AND THE WOM oe Talbott - 22nd Maureen O'Hara Louis Hayward “DANCE, GIRL, DANCE ___ Don Ameche “SWANEE RIVER” Doors Open el 45 P. M, Clark Gable “STRANGE CARGO” Jane Withers “GIRL FROM GENDE A”
CINEMA 16th and. Open Daily
Delaware mt 1:30 P, M. John Garfield “FLOWING GOLD" — “ANNE OF WINDY a
ANAK
Held Over! Thru Wed.! a Scott Hg ARDS © F VIRGINIA” Grable
Ameche—Bett E WAY”
"DOWN ARGENTI
“NO TIME “FOR “COMEDY”
WEST SIDE i. Mickey "Rooney pid an Judy Garlan T! “OUT WEST wits THE PEPPERS”
STATE "3, 20C aay Tin
Anv Time lind Russell “HIRED » er tiold “FLOWING Jorn
Spee dway Speedway City
oper Walter Brennan
“THE WESTE Shirley Temple “YOUNG PEopLE" B8eimonm &
C. Giant, on. a “HOWARDS OF (Horiba gol of “KNUTE ROCKNE—ALL , AMERICAN”
SOUTH SIDE _
GREEN HO ORNET ES Brenda So am r Roanre “GAY CABALLERO” “HOWARDS OF VIRGINIA”
NORTH SIDE
. | CI SOUTH SIDE SHOWING!
THUR. 0 FINGER, LEFT HAND” ;
Doors O Show
ToB vg at 7
“ at TE RO Kl » “ALL-AMERICAN” 5 “Plus! “MONEY AND THE WOMAN"
Central at Fall Crk.
ZARING Fi ‘O'Brien
KNE—. AMERI AN" ONEY & THE WOMAN”
Stratford ‘Coliexs 20C Tae]
TTI prospect spencer SR
Hed
Play at End
Of 1th Year
"Tobacco Road’ Goes nia 2970th- Performance.
NEW YORK, Dec. 2 (Ue P)— “Tobacco Road,” Broadway’s alltime marathon champion, will end its seventh year in New York tomorrow night with its 270th per-
§ | formance.
Thumbed down by the critics after
| its opening on Dec. 3, 1933, the Jack
Kirkland play has grossed about $5,000,000 since then-—with an esti-
| | mated profit of $2,000,000. Nearest
competitor in the long-run field is Ann Nichols’ Abie’s Irish Rose,”
which ran for 2327 performances.
'
Couldn’t Close It
Tobacco Road’s” producer announced the play’s closing last August. But business picked up immediately afterward, and the New
York company has been averaging] four capacity houses a week since|
then. Consequently no,one knows now when the final curtain will e down. ive actors have played the leading part of Jeeter Lester here since the play opened. James Barton has the longest stretch to his credit, with 1899 performances. The present Jeeter, Will Geer, has done the part 412 times. The only member of the original cast still in the play is Edwin Walter, with 2930 performances. Thus far the play’s various actors have munched 31,000 turnips.
Touring Company To Return Here
The touring company of “Tobacco Road,” headed: by James Barton, will pay its sixth and “farewell” visit (according to Publicist Carlton Miles) to English’s during Christmas week. The four-day engagement
will commence with a Christmas|
matinee. Mr. Barton has played Jeeter here in the play’s last four engagements, while Lillian Ardell (Grandma Lester) and Walter Ayers banker) have been with the company each year since 1935.
JEANETTE'S BOOKLET
Jeanette MacDonald's secretary estimates that 80,000 copies of the little pamphlet called “No Royal Road to Song” written by Miss MacDonald, have been sent to aspiring singers.
(the |;
USES MAYOR'S GAVEL.
The gavel used by the first real
mayor in “Men of Boys Town. Tony Villone, the: original mayor
original gavel.
CIRCLE
ALICE ENN INR HIT
JACK OAKIE JOHN PAYNE
mayor of Boys Town will be used by Mickey Rooney, who plays the
and now technical consultant on the picture, is letting Rooney use the
IN THE BRILLIANT
i + LR
: bl Evening" Come Seo
JACK CHAPMAN
i And His Versatile Orchestra Featuring Russ Morrison, soloist;
Maxine & Clayton
Famous dance duo with eir own modern interpretations
Delicious Seashore Dinners Charcoal Grilled Steaks
DANCING TILL 1 A. M. . . NO COVER CHARGE
Visit the Bronze Room Indiana’ '¢ Smartes; Ba) Bar and
Enisrtainment Nightly \» ne x
COMRAIE
starring
CLARK GABLE
A Metro-Goldwyn - Mayer Hit!
HEDY LAMARR
Coming Soon!
ENGLISH + WED. SAT. DEC. 4-5- 61
[SEATS NOW
The PLAYWRIGHTS COMPANY and
The one THEATRE
| eiir i
J, ~ ROBERT ESHERNOOS Great Ply
ENGLISH 3 DAYS
THE THEATRE GUILD in associative with
$2.75, $2. ».3
EVENINGS: *".%%!
[ENGLISH
Indiazapolis
02 s
32.83,
5% -De SYLV.
“BOOM 7 IN
BEG. MON. The epoch-making play by the most widely discussed ~ author af this generation. Greeted by New York and Chicago critics with unanimous shouts of acclamation!
_ WILLIAM SAROYAN'S 4
EDDIE DOWLING . JULIE HAYDON ¥, Edward Anjzens, Arthur Hunnecutt, Tom }
Tully, Leo Chalze]l and 25 other comedians | from the Guild Theatre, New York. G
SAT. MAT. —$1.10 & $2.75
GUI ¥D aril
SEAT SALE OPEN TUES.
GAY- MAD
ofl N PULITZER PRIZE od
NED, MAT, om ei sua
THURS.—FRI. —SAT.
og 12-1 S14
Shots of Best got El
Prtgot
Te WER er
TRISY®D ou1SHoTRT
Pm rawe
35
awl Ci) 2 a el Hl C—O ET WE
