Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 July 1941 — Page 15

TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1041

SOWES FILM JOB TO BETTE DAVIS

HOLLYWOOD, July 15.—Richard Travis has been assigned to the role of the young newspaper reporter in

the film version of “ThesMan Who Came to Dinner,” his selection having come reputedly at the behest of Bette Davis. This is his second important role, as he was recently cast in “They Died With Their Boots On.”

CIRC LE

DON AMECHE

a BETTY

Dance Skating Easy

That's Story of Movie Ice Star, Dorothy Lewis.

HOLLYWOOD, July 15 (U. P.).— Learn to cut fancy figures on the dance floor and it will be easy to do the same on ice. That advice comes from 20-year-old, blue-eyed and brown-haired Dorothy Lewis, who is making skating pay handsomely with a starring role in Republic's “Ice-Capades.” “Merely being a good amateur skater,” said Miss Lewis, “does not necessarily mean you could be a success in professional ice revues. “I think the best‘training is danc-

| ling, which will give balance and ' lrhythm, both essentials of profes-

| | sional skating. Of course, you can’t

ane

Withers

FRIDAY—CIRCLE James Cagney ® Bette Davis In “THE BRIDE CAME C.0.D.”

—STARTS FRIDAY— Groucho—Chico—Harpo MARX BROTHERS Tony Martin in

“The Big Store"

eee PIU § ee “They Dare Not Love’

3 LAST DAYS! ON THE STAGE.

Jack Benny's Famous Maestro

IBLE

AND HIS FAMOUS

(L1H | BT

VERE ER

PATRICIA ‘Pat’ KAY

x *OTHERS *

4° ON ZZ SCREEN »

Strange thrills, exotic adventure

go from the ballroom to the ice rink in one jump, but the dancing training certainly will be a big help.” Miss Lewis said she did not start

picked it up in a hurry, mainly, she believes, because she had studied dancing as a child. She said she once took six ballet girls from a show in New York, gave them skating training for four weeks, then featured them in a new ice revue. She said they Had not skated before she started training them. “They skated as if they had been on ice for years,” she said. “And the reason they learned so easily was that they simply applied their knowledge of dancing to their skating routines” : Miss Lewis, a St. Paul girl, is 5 feet 2 inches tall and weighs 112 pounds. She is what the studio calls a “photogenic natural,” which means it’s almost impossible to take a bad picture of her. . Her work so far in “Ice-Capades” has been so good that the company has asked her not to accept bookings for more than six weeks after the picture is finished, because she may go into another immediately.

Arbitration Near In Disney Strike

HOLLYWOOD, July 15 (U. P.).— The Screen Cartoon Guild (A. F. of L.) is considering the request of J. R. Steelman, U. S. Conciliation Service director, that issues in the guild’s strike against Walt Disney productions be submitted to an arbitration board. Mr. Steelman asked that the strike, in effect since May 28, be ended immediately pending the arbitration board’s findings, which would be announced within one month. : The strikers asked collective bargaining rights and reinstatement of 19 guild members they said were discharged -for union activity. Herbert Sorrell, ‘acting business representative of the guild, said he would recommend acceptance of Mr. Steelman’s proposal.

HISTORY MAKERS

Texas longhorn cattle, which play a major role in “Texas,” teaming William Holden and Glenn Ford, are one of the only two breeds of bovines that have made American history. Buffaloes figured in the opening of the West and longhorns

“made” the state of Texas.

70 NIGHT «YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

LTA

SOUTH SIDE

SITTER COOL Jas. Stewart “POT 0° GOLD”

Horace Heidt Lew Ayres—Lionel Barrymore »

“People vs, Dr. Kildare”

SANDERS ..%". uo Prospect Landis Adolphe Menjou “ROAD SHOW” “MEET ‘THE MISSUS”

pr ————————————— A ITH Ry-Y 01: d aay HOS S. MERIDIAN ST, Wal

“FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS” “FACE BEHIND THE MASK”

SIDE

5507 COOL

: EAST IRVIN E. Wash. to 6

20¢ Pat O’Brien—Jas. Cagney

“DEVIL DOGS OF THE AIR”

Lew Ayres—Lionel Barrymore

$PEOPLE VS. DR. KILDARE”

5.45

2930 Open All PARKER 10th 5:45 Seats 0c Henry Fonda “BLOCKADE” Frederic March “TRADE WINDS” 4630 It’s Cool

EMERSON E. 1(th "Til 6--20¢

HAMILTON {i Sadi Irene Dunne “Penny Serenade”

Cary Grant Joan Blondell

“MOD EL WIFE” Dick Powell

The Py ANvr ee

Edw. G. Robinson “SEA WOLF” Bumsteads ‘BLONDIE GOES LATIN”

| EAST AN: 6116555 —GALA IRVINGTON PREMIERE— “Capt. Marvel” Serial at 7 P. M,

BILL SHIRLEY. rvinston’s Own Lad

“Rookies On Parade” Cary Grant 66

Trene Duane PENNY SERENADE” EL Ea

1300 E. WASHINGTON - « FREE PARKING LOT Richard Dix “THE ROUNDUP” “Ellery Queen’s Penthouse Myste: “RIDERS OF DEATH VALLEY” at 6*P. M.

Dunne-Grant “PENNY SERENADE” “Great American Broadcast” Alice Faye

PARAMOUNT |... Adults 15¢ ALWAYS—Kidd 1—Ralph Bellamy “MASTER DETECTIVE”

2—Ray Whitley ‘REDSKINS & REDHEADS’ 3—“TO NEW HORIZON”

(Sam

4—“WHITE EAGLE” No. 11

5—COUNTRY STORE [aan stesso fie ahaa Adi Aaiad MAAN

Pl RIVOLI:

East Side EER Theater Tonite & | Tonite

Tomorrow 5:45 to 6 20¢

Jas. Stewart—Paulette Goddard Horace Heidt & His Musical Knights

Jimmy “POT '0 GOLD”

Roosevelt's

‘PEOPLE vs. DR. KILDARE’

Lew Ayres—Laraine Day

skating until she was 15. But she]

| Broad Ripple Park Fri

~~

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Makes:

ONE OF THE BEST CUSTOMERS the telephone company has had on its lists here in sometime is Phil Harris, the big handsome bandleader. In order to converse about nothing in general with Alice Faye—just husband and wife talk—Mr. Harris estimates he is spending about $160 a week. - This might be a tall bill for some people accustomed to doing their long distance talking in clipped sentences, but for Phil, it's apparently quite ordinary. > “We talk for an hour sometimes,” Phil said. Whereupon he slipped into a yellow dressing gown and drew deeply on a cigaret. n.-.a n He's doing five shows a day at the Lyric and spends most of his spare time down in the basement known as the “green room” under the stage. £5 “I call Alice twice a day,” said Mr. Harris, taking a peek out the door to see who was next in the guest line. “I call her after I get done work (which is about 10:30 p. m.) and then again after dinner (which for people in show business falls at about midnight).” " ” ” ¢ . Alice Wasn't Mad PHIL AND ALICE were married recently in Mexico, and Mr. Harris clearly indicated that he thought it would be a ' lasting partnership. He has a picture of | her stuck in each .corner of his dressing room mirror. Many may think that marriage is a difficult proposition in Hollywood, but in Phil’s opinion it’s no different there than any place else. ; “It’s just the kids who have all the trouble,” he ventured. “Those people out there don’t play around all the time like you might think. They're serious about their work and read.and study a lot. “Take Clark Gable and Carole Lombard. They're experienced actors and know what they're doing.” When the Harris band played Omaha on the current tour, the women practically mobbed the curly-haired maestro. “You know how it is (we don’t either) —they put a lot of lipstick on you and get in pictures with you,” Mr. Harris explained in a confiding manner. But a press agent immediately reported that the incident made Miss Faye quite burned up. According to the story, she reminded him that he was, after all, a married man. But it was, she said, just a dreamed-up press agent story. “Alice got quite a kick out of it,” her husband said, indicating that she, like Miss Lombard, was not just a youngster having puppy love trouble. In other words, she knows what she’s doing. And Mr. Harris probably knows. what he’s doing too, for he’s 35 and once off stage, very much a businessman about the amusement trade. Columbia Pictures is talking about putting him in a new picture, but that’s all he knows about it

Phil Harris . . « ‘Hello, Alice’

Mr. Harris again . . . refreshment for the Linton folk.

EX-FOLLIES GIRL DOUBLE-THREAT

HOLLYWOOD, July 15 (U. P.).— Movieland gossip—working on the “Week-End for. Three” set is Frances Grant, pretty ex-Follies girl who is filling a double-threat spot as a dress extra and dance instructor. . . . She's been giving Jane Wyatt pointers for the rhumba scenes. : Billie Burke is drawing big crowds as the stage performance of “The Vinegar Tree” enters its third week at the El Capitan here. . . . Frances Langford was on hand to bid aloha to the latest batch of Naval training cadets headed for sea.

COLBERT IN SLAPSTICK

Claudette Colbert does some slapstick- while trying to make coffee in the hold of a yacht during a story at sea for her new picture, “Skylark.”

“I don’t go so good in pictures,” Phil admitted. “If I make a new one, theyll probably get a’couple of ‘strong’ people for the big parts.” But what Mr. Harris seems most interested in is the Jack Benny radio programs. It doesn’t take long to discover that Mr. Benny must be about No. 1 on Phil's list of friends. . “I think so much of Jack, I'd like to stay with him as long as

gave me my start,” Mr. Harris explained. This is the gentleman whom Mr. Benny refers to on the air as a fake and illiterate maestro. Phil has a perpetual three-year contract with Mr. Benny. As soon as one year runs out, Jack takes another year.

Howdy, Pal!

WHILE NOT on the stage or talking to Mrs. Harris, Phil spends most of his time saying howdy to his friends who come up from Linton, Ind., and vicinity. He has three uncles and two aunts there. “One of my aunts is sick now and I'm hoping I can get down

-

DANCE TONITE

Adm.—15¢c till 8:45 HAL BAILEY’S ORCH.

Open-Air Pavilion the maestro said

Over on one side of the Harris dressing room is .a big new refrigerator mostly for the benefit of the Linton people. If an old friend appears a bit thirsty and hot, he’s likely “to be presented with a bottle of beer. ‘ Phil was born in Linton while his father, a musician, was playing here at the Circle. When he was about 10 the family moved to Tennessee, which may explain where Mr. Harris. acquired that Southern accent. To this day, Phil said, he has never been in a coal mine or even seen the inside of one. To call him a former Linton coal miner, press agents please note, is wholly incorrect. : : 8 ®

Dance Tues. Sat., Sun.

SR. TALC

Pendleton Pike

Vividt Vital! Tondaot

I URSULA PARROTT'S

NEXT TIME WE LOVE

James Stewart—Ray Milland

X02 MBASSADOR

Priscilla Lane—Jeffrey Lynn «MILLION DOLLAR BABY’ N Jack Holt “THE GREAT SWINDLE” Thrilling! “Our Bill of Rights”

21 TAYE

Wallace Beery “BAD MAN” Jas. Cagney “Devil Dogs of the Air”

s Squaring Up MEANTIME, PHIL is making the Lyric management very happy. He drew in a $3550 box office Sunday, which is a new record, and he’s playing to bulky weekday matinee audiences. :

& ; COOL REX , B=.2 Northwestern Wallace Beery “BAD MAN” Walt L Disney’s “PINOCCHIO” y & I.

30th

COO

Jas. Stewart—Claudette Colbert

“It's a Wonderful World”

The Bumsteads ‘Blondie Goes Latin”

College at 63rd %ree Parking Lot

“MILLION DOLLAR BABY” “CHEERS FOR MISS BISHOP”

T ALBOTT falbott at 22nd

Marlene Dietrich - Bruce Cabot “FLAME OF NEW ORLEANS” Bette Davis “THE GREAT LIE” Westinghouse Air-Conditioned

.

NORTH SIDE

19th and

Stratford .o° 20c

Jean Arthur “DEVIL & MISS JONES” Dick Foran “HEART OF THE NORTH”

CINEMA “*.* COOL

_ Open Daily at 1:30 P. M. Adults 20c, Children, 10e—Till 6

pave “THE GREAT LIE”

Davis “Chump at Oxford” *y:!.*

Zz ARING Central at Fall Crk. 5 Jas. Stewart ' . Paulette Goddard Horace Heidt Orchestra’ “POT 0 GOLD” Warner Baxter “ADAM: HAD 4 SONS”

ud lownio ~~ Ray Milland-Wm. Holden

“] Wanted Wings”

Basil Rathbone . “THE BLACK CAT”

ews

Ara En

yay

WAYNE & ST CLAIR

DA

2

Er AABN [oe a rv [34

John Wayne—Ona Munson

“LADY FROM LOUISIANA”

Jones-Susanna Foster

Allan te: “THERE’S MAGIC IN MUSIC”

-

Speedwav City SPEEDWAY 5, Curie Jack Oakie “THE GREAT DICTATOR” Chester Morris . “Meet Boston Blackie” Pleasantly COOL at All Times Belmont and Wash, | Priscilla Lane Jeffrey LL;

~ WEST SIDE

2440 W.

DAISY 29¥. COOL

Alice Faye “Great American Broadcast” Merle Oberon “Affectionately Yours”

Which is more than right, considering what he did for the Lyric manager, Bill Mcllwain, some

SWIM

Every Day and Night

WESTLAKE DANCE

Nitely Except Monday CHARLEY PAYNE'S Orch.

Bill was out there managing a Major Bowes amateur talent unit, playing for a top price of 35 cents. Mr. Harris was on his way there to do a one-night dance stand at a $1.10 top. It turned out that everybody stayed away from the Bowes show, saving up their money to see Mr. Harris. Mr. MclIlwain said is was almost necessary for him to borrow money to get out of town.

he’s on the radio. He practically .

there for at least an hour or so,”

years ago in Idaho Falls, Idaho. =

r

Now It'll Be— Halop: Actor

Billy Thinks He Has a Real Chance in New Show.

By PAUL HARRISON Times Special Writer HOLLYWOOD, July 15.—For a veteran of 18 years of stage, circus and screen, there’s a lot of ‘bounce in the old boy yet. In fact there are times, even as he peers solemnly through hornrimmed glasses and discusses the

problems of bringing up a 7-year-old, when you'd take him for a youngster of only about 22. Mr. William Halop, whose age is sxactly 22, has done a lot of growing up since the heydays of the Dead End Kids. He'd just as soon you'd forget the Kids. Actually, their wish to free themselves from that “Dead End” association has forced a sort. of estrangement among them. Mr. Halop is a character actor now, on his own. | Halop is working in “New Orleans Blues” at Warner Brothers, and he guesses it’s about the best assignment anybody could have on account of the cast: Richard Whorf, Billy will remind you, is right out of the Lunt and Fontanne company; Elia Kazan has been called one of the theater’s finest actors ever since he played Eddie Fuselli in “Golden Boy.” Betty Field, he points out, had six personal successes on Broadway before she scored in Hollywood in “Of Mice and Men.” Lloyd Nolan—there’s a guy who has been kicked around unmercifully in pictures but is an actors’ actor if ever there was one.

[Jack Carson and Priscilla Lane are

helpful, too. And fun. Thinks He’ll Learn

“It’s like a stage show packed with stars,” said Halop. “Everybody working hard, like on an opening night, and every character different. Me—Pm the drummer in a band. This story, you know, is about the life and hard times of a little jazz band that took jazz seriously. If I don't learn a lot out of this I oughta go back to the circus or something.” The /(-year-old in whom Halop is interested is his little brother. Billy Isn't concerned about comforts. or education, because money is no object with the family. The myth about the Dead End Kids being recruited from the slums of Manhatlan’s East Side was exploded long ago. Billy's father is a lawyer, and the actor's own salary is in the plushy neighborhood of $750 a week. All he wants for the kid is a normal life—“to go to school more, and have fun and not work. I missed too much. I started on the radio when I was 4. I sang. Then I was with the rodeo and circus for four years and in New York shows. ‘Dead End’ was a big hit, so Sam Goldwyn bought it and brought out the kids in the cast. I've always felt like some sort of freak until lately. Now that I'm not cute any more, or precocious, I can just be an actor. And with this mug, I'll never have to worry about being a leading man.

Plans Hard Work

“I want to work hard,” he said. “I try to get to bed by 10 o’clock every night. When I do go out I try to date the best-looking gal in town and we go to Ciro’s and close the joint.” The aforementioned Elia Kazan sits in his dressing room these days making sad noises on a clarinet. That’s what he’s supposed to play In the picture, and he has to learn enough about the instrument so the fingering won’t look too inept. He owned the play “Hot Nocturne,” which Warners bought to make into this picture, but he wasn’t able to get it on the Broadway stage because of casting troubles. It’s a cinch in pictures, because the musical parts can be dubbed in. Kazan had no part in the adaptation for the screen; says pe doesn’t recognize any of the lines.

POLICE REPORTER HERO OF STORY

HOLLYWOOD, July 15.—Rosalind Russell and Walter Pidgeon will be

a comedy by Lionel Houser which Norman Taurog will: direct, the studio announced today. Miss Russell will play the role of a woman judge, while Mr. Pidgeon will be seen as a police reporter. .

WHEN DOES IT START?

CIRCLE “Moon Over Miami,” with Don Ameche, Betty Grable and Robert Cummings, at 12:40_3:50, 7 and 10.10. where Runoy els 2c Sith 240s , Nancy Kelly and John Sutton, at 11:20, 2:30, 5:40 and 8:50. LOEW'S “Th4y Met in Bombay,” with Clark Gable and Rosalind Russell, at 12:35,

3:50, 7 and 10 . “Adventure in Washington,” with Herbert Marshall and Virginia Bruce, at 11:05, 2:15, 5:25 and 8:40. LYRIC 3

Phil Harris and Orchestra stage), with Pat Rad: Ames. & Arno, Paul Winchell and the BillingHL at 12:39, 2:54, 5:09, 7:24 and “Pp,

(on

e from Ho! Kong” (on screen), with Lucile rban and Keith uglas, 2 11:15, 1:30, 3:45,

6, 8:13 an

co-starred by Metro in “Achilles,” |.

Travel News—

One of the highlights for vacationists going westward this summer is the Seattle “Potlatch” which will be held, according to the Great Northern Railway, July 29 to Aug. 3. A “Potlatch” was a good old Indian custom of the Puget Sound region. A big man of his tribe feeling particularly well-pleased with himself, his accomplishments or his possessions - would: call in “all his fellow tribesmen and friendly neighboring tribes. ores There would be a period of feasting and dancing, games of skill and contests. As a grand finale the Indian host would give away all his possessions to his guests—sometimes even his wife. - When the white man moved west, those who had won the Indians’ respect often were invited to join the “Potlatch.” This year the “Potlatch” will be dedicated to aviation. There will balls, a mammoth parade, and a water pageant. Part of the Pacific fleet will participate.

New Air Cruises

American Airlines has issued a new booklet, “Flagship Air Cruise Suggestions,” which describes six all-expense cruises and two extension tours. Air Cruise 1 covers Washington, Chicago, Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Boston; Cruise 2 goes to Mexico; Cruise 3 to Los Angeles, Mission Trails, San Francisco and Salt Lake City; Cruise 4, California, the Pacific Northwest, Mt. Rainier and Yellowstone Parks; Cruise 5, Mexico and Southern California, and Cruise 6, the Canadian Rockies, Banff, Lake Louise, Emerald Lake, Vancouver, Seattle and Yellowstone National Park. The two extension cruises, which can be combined with the regular cruises, take you either to Hawaii or Alaska

Lake Trips Started

. The seven-day cruise season of the Great Lakes liner S. S. Seeandbee opened Saturday with a trip from Chicago to Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo. These ports will be visited each week until the week before Labor Day. The Seeandbee leaving Chicago lon Saturday night reaches Detroit Monday morning, Cleveland Monday evening, Buffalo Tuesday, and Detroit Wednesday.

”n

Canada Opens Trout Resort

Trout fishermen will be glad to learn that the La Barriere Fish and

has been opened publicly for the first time because of the war. Selected by noted Canadian sportemen some years ago and maintained as their private preserve, the La Barriere region today is as wild as it ever was. In the 15 lakes and streams are thousands of large speckled trout. The virgin territory is reached by the Canadian Pacific Railway, automobile or bus. ” ” ”

‘Auto Camp’ at Stevens

The Stevens Hotei in Chicago has inaugurated a special “package

WELOOL

OF WISCONSIN-MINNESOTA-UPPER MICHIGAN

INVITE YOU

This vacation paradise of sparklinglakesandrivers and fragrant forests is ideal for all the family. Fish, golf, swim, sail, hike, saddle, canoe —or just loaf. Only an afternoon’sridefrom Chicago on “North Western's” air - conditioned ‘Flambeau” and “ArrowheadIndian Head Special.” Also fast overnigit service. Low Summer rail fares.Hundreds of resorts.

Ride the Streamliner “400” between Chicago - St. PaulMinneapolis (via Milwaukee). * GET THIS BIG NORTH WOODS MAP—FREE!

V. A. Hampton General Aft C. and N. W. Line 308 Merchants Bk. Bldg. Indianapolis, Ind. : Phone Riley 3110 Please send me ‘Summer Outings,” also information about a trip to

CHICAGO and

NORTH WESTERN

‘ ive Rate - oe ANY Alot AT BANFF (During Season) Jor stays of 7 days or longer. Room with -

bath and table d’hote meals. Privileges

Seattle's Annual ‘Potlatch’ To Be Dedicated fo Aviation

Game Club at La Barriere, Quebec,| B=

plan” for the convenience of vacationing motorists with all-gxpense rates applying only to them and only during the vacation season. The rates bring the cost of visiting Chicago down to where the Stevens can compete with tourist lodges. An entire floor of 130 rooms has "een set aside for the motorists. Incoming guests dressed in comfortable motoring clothes have their own entrance so they do not have to pass through the lobby. The plan includes overnight accomodations in an outside room, inside parking with pickup and delivery service, and a special Continental breakfast served ina dining room on the Motorists’ Tr.

PLAN UNIONIZATION

PAGE 15 CARTER FACES TRIAL OCT. 13 IN 5 DEATHS

LAV/RENCEBURG, Ind. July 15 (U,"P.) —Trial of Virginia (Dink) Carter, who is under grand jury indictment for the first degree murder of five members of the Johnson Agrue family, will open Oct. 13 in Dearborn-Ohio Circuit Court. Judge . Morris McManaman set the date yesterday. Judge William Ricketts of Lawrenceburg, who was to hear the case, died last week at Cincinnati.

NEW Dadiler Sic lo LOS ANGELES

via the

WEST COAST EXPRESS

OF SCHOOL JANITORS

A plan to unionize School Board janitors and other. maintenance employees was underway today. Carl G. Berg, president of Local 69 of the A. F. of L. Building Service Employees, said today that a majority of the nearly 400 janitors custodians and maintenance department employees of the schools have applied for membership in the union.

Mr. Berg said no strenuous campaign is being waged. The school group, he added, will have its own council within the union and will work out its own problems. It is planned, he said; for the group to draw up recommendations “eliminating certain inequalities in‘ the work” for submission to the School

=7 | SEE A LOT OF MEN OUT THERE WORKING ON TH . WHO ARE THEY, AN WHAT ARE THEY DOING

J RAILROAD THEVRE KNOWN AS THE . ‘WABASH HAS CREWS ALL

FARR BEG EVERY FOOT OF WABASH TRACK, EVERY DAY!

TAKE THE WABASH FOR A SWIFT -SAFECOMFORTABLE RIDE

Next time you're making a trip into the “Heart of America,” ride the Wabash for speed with safety and comfort. Wabash Lines serve Chi- , Des Moines, Detroit, Kansas , Omaha and Toledo. HAYDEN, 512 Meozchants,

’ Bank Bld., Indianapolis, Riley 6.

VW

‘SECTION GANG: MR.

If You Leave Monday: Leave Indpls. 5:10 P. M. Ar. St. Louis—11:50 P. M.

On Tuesday You'll Ar. Kansas City—17:30 P. M. On Wednesday You'll Ar, Alberquerque 9:17 A. M

On Thursday You'll Ar. Los Angeles 6:50 A. M.

Ask About Other Expresses West GREYHOUND TERMINAL Traction Terminal Bldg.—Cor. Market and Ulinois—RI-6381—Crossroads of ! BUS TRAVE

: RAVEL

to GLACIER PARK

and

PACIFIC NORTHWEST

o Like cruising on a palatial yacht, only on land, through gorgeous scenery—that’s travel on Great Northern's famous EMPIRE BUILDER between Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and the Pacific Northwest cities of Spokane, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland. And going or returning, you can stop off at the very threshold of Glorious Glacier Park. Here is everything to enjoy on a vacation.

T—

SEE AMERICA — FIRST THE WEST - Glorious Glacier Park is the nap

ural gateway fo the best of ‘the

West. Take the G EMPIRE BuiLDEg HO ig wonderful vacation Bmbinations, GLACIER PARK and / PACIFIC NORTHWE =CANADIAN ROCKIES TyALIFORNIA —_— OWSTONE ~—DUDE RANCHES ; —ALASKA : eturn via your choice Travel on credit, if you a,

later, on bud get plan, | 12 monthly installments, % 100r

For further info Ing ALL-EXPENSE ig Includ-

Ask your ticket agent or travel burecw or consult.

£. H. MOOT, Gen. Ageat, Pass's Dept

Dept. IT, Great Northern Railway Field Bldg., 142 Bo. Clark Street hicago, IIL

0 Send me information about & trip to

Go WABASH

LL

green forest paths, sandy

cool, pine-scented breezes.

4:16 PM. Ask about low round-trip fares

fr Eh

.

'

Address. City

ld . or

0

a S—— i atest at:

Relax and rest in Northern Michigan . . . the Ideal Summer Playground. Whatever your taste or hobbies, you will find the * answer to a happy, worthwhile vacation. Sporty golf courses,

: sparkling waters invite

you. No ‘city noise and heat. You will know the enchantment of

Daily service throughout the season to Petoskey, Bay View, Wequetonsing and Harbor Springs. Car to car connections in same train to Mackinac Island, Traverse City and other Michigan resorts. Leave Indianapolis

and the convenisnce and acoatmy of shisping your con

For reservations, information , etc., phone or write R. M. HARVEY, Division Passenger Adent, 211 Guarandy Bldg, Phone Riley 9331. |