Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 33, Decatur, Adams County, 7 February 1934 — Page 3
Society.
CLUB ■tfCULAR MEETING ■ fIE , M..a* Chib met K. ,\.' u . ih<> homo of K' . [ oil West Mon- , Mliort Mill' r and E»o C-Mi ''‘id charge of ■ |i: ,p. Gard.-ns in All ■ , countries." K S. I'.afor played a U. .ui'l Mrs. Prank ;l vocal number. A M-'Yi- I''" lIV Mrs A’ l "' l '' ||. nils were pluyml ■L bv Mrs. David 11. ■J., mi -.. Tillman doling K< Gohlnor. ■ ~,11,,.. am’ luncheon cloths y ~~ i With Valentino’s V \ ,1,-11. ions luncheon was K/ h v 111. ho-tess. A potluck will be served tit the next ML to be held In two weeks K/lot, Mrs. Schafer on Kan avenue. H.,;. <|av mission study of the Mi-sionary Society of K-,,',.,,1 li. linen Church will M. bl ;ll .. .. church parsonage. |„ mning ai ten o’chx k. 'iiiinei will be served H, main hour. Less meeting B-p kappa sorority ■ busing' meeting of the Tri sorority was held at Hie yt>> W Guy Drown on ■ street. Tuesday evening. ■ f„ r th, future were discuss He next mooting will be a K| meeting in two weeks at K„,tn Mrs Herman Myers ■ Vr- Avon Burk will be the ■ting hostess. ■matic department ■SENTS CLUB PROGRAM K, it ' plays were present■t the W on in’s Club meeting ■, D the De atur high school aufintti Met. lay night. On account lt, fs s. two changes in the play of the first presentation were its Gra- e Coffee directed the play and characters other than I Coffee were Mrs. C. O. Porter. i Miriam Haley. Mrs. Ed Coffee Mrs. James EUierson. is i.a'.e '-i s in the second play ■ ■ .. M.-'dam-.s Clayson Cat roll A. Bosse. Palmer Eicher and b Kern ami Miss Mary Suttles. Carroll directed the play and Chest Colds U't irt '.hern get s strangle hold jit germs quickly Creomulsion comes 7 major helps in one. Powerful harmless. Pleasant to take. No narics. Your own druggist is authorized refund your money on the spot it a cough or cold is not relieved by wnulsion. (adv.)
A ReHINI} i/C— tZU if'tUHoSwooiriO
£'■ „ U ( H By HARRISON CARROLL .» ; K * Features Syndicate inc “■HOLLYWOOD, Calif —A to sell him an idea and if fam takr it up. he may consent. want the comedian to let ’ 3 • year -old
Harald Lloyd
d riay Hamid . ■ a boy n "The SBThe script of I ■f :■•■•• .-alls I 'f a ■■!<! but I is ca-ilv al- I r ano Har- I • •>''■■ i- fully I , 'ay the I >l>i e s I v l -to do the I act- I The t„,v u |. | »dy has’ap- ‘ , n tbouof feet of
Harold has . rri Photographing him ever since was a baby. argue that the motion Mature public wou!d much .; riter . |^B/ U m seeing the Lloyd heir. Hars * av ,*‘ r| ng. but he and Mildred don't want to appear to comM;™hze their family life. Harold puts it: ‘‘lf you 1 . boy, you'll have to find parts . two girls, or there'll be a oiution at my house.” trigger-mind of Lupe Velez eVen w * len s^e * 8 u P s ‘de had the peppery actress longing by her knees from a crossset °f ‘‘Hollywood ■o,i, ' . There was some minor difby with the camera and the take flayed. Routed 18 rcc^er ®very second, Lupe ■ Hurry up there. I’m not Tarzan, M" only his mate!” are said to be the only films °f dope manufacture on A rge . s S,ale k ave fallen into the ■!?? s of Walter Futter, Hollywood cer ’ *nd he is considering K • feature picture around HousL u srenes were surrepti■r:«„, P h °tographed in a certain country and were then C ’k‘ 'n t ° United States. ■ y “ av * been stolen once and re-
CLUB CALENDAR Society Deadline, 11 A. M. Mlaa Mary Macy Phonea 1000—1001 r 1 Wednesday I Presbyterian special pot luck dini ner, church, 6 p. m. prompt. Frivolity Chib, Mrs. Adrian Baker 7:36 p. tn. Zion Reformed Girls Choir, church, 7 p. m. I Decatur Ministers meeting. County Library room, In Court ! House. 10 a. tn. 'Alpha Zeta Chib, Mrs. George t , Ladies Shakespeare Club, Mrs. . ■ Harry Moltz, 2:30 p. m. Monroe Community meeting M. H. 8„ 7:30 p. m. Historical Club. Mrs. Harl Hollingsworth, 2:30 p. m. Phoebe Bible class annual banquet, Reformed church 6:15 o’clock. , K. of C Family Dance, K. of C. . Hall. Zion Walth-T League, schoolhouse, 8 p. m. St. Paul Ladies Aid Society, Mrs. Herman Ehlerding. V. B. Senior Christian Endeavor, church 7 i>. m. Thursday U. B. Young Peoples Choir. Marlowe Hoagland, 7 p. nt. prompt. Presbyterian Women's Missionary Society, Mrs. C. A. Dugan. 2:30 p. m. United Brethren W. M. S. study, church parsonage, 10 a.nt. Girls Missionary Society of the Evangelical church. Itemice Hann! I 7:30 p. m. Pinochle Club, Mrs. !>>o Teeplo, ! 7:30 p. tn. Five Hundred Club, Mrs. A. R. I Ashhaucher, Eastern Star. Masonic Hail, 7:30. Methodist Foreign Missionary Society pie and cookie sale. Mrs. R. D. Myer’s class. Miss Charlotte Elzey. 7:45 p. m. Presbyterian W. H. and F. M. S., Mrs. €. A. Dugan, 2:30 p. m. Friday , Ben Hur Tirzah Club. Mrs. John t Burk. :30 p. tn. Saturday > Zioff Reformed Mission Band, , church. 2:30 p. m. ■ Pythian Sisters cafeteria supper I K. of P. Home, 5 to 7 'P. m. I Evangelical Mission Band, Evan- . gelical church. 1:30 p. nt. Monday ! Research Club, Mrs. John Parrish. 2:30 p. in. Mrs. Raymond Kobne had charge of the make up. The Evangelical Mission Band ; will meet Saturday afternoon at one I -thirty o'clock in the Evangelical church. Cleona Elston will be the 1 leader and all members are urged to be present.
covered. Futter would call his picture, “The Kingdom of Evil.” Ramon Novarro, whose home i town, Durango (Mexico), was also that of Pancho Villa, relates this hitherto unpublished anecdote of the Mexican general. After a hard ride. Villa came into town and repaired to Durango’s ' equivalent of an American Turkish bath. Fifteen minutes later, shots were inside and the general came bolting I out with a smoking pistol in his 'hand. He had had an argument with an attendant and had rushed out in his bath costume, two bandoliers of cartridges over his shoulders and a pair of holsters at his waist. When Henry B. Walthall came up for the part of a union telegra- ■ pher in Marion Davies’ new picture. “Operator 13,” they asked him if he knew the morse code. “Do I know it!” exclaimed Walthall. “Look here.” Whereupon, he flipped out a sentence by quickly batting his eye ’ids. He was a typical hick and hotel attendants at Oakland hesitated to disturb Jean Harlow. But the fellow insisted he had been riding
B ■■ ' ’S? 1 [ *sJjj I Jean Harlow
from 3 o’clock in the morning until noon to see the star and to present her with a home-made cake and an embroidered handkerchief. Finally, a clerk, who still had a heart beating behind an immaculate s h i rt - f ront. called Jean’s room and gave her the man’s name. “Why certain-
ly I’ll see him,” she said. “I’ve been corresponding , with him for a long time. He is one ', of my best fans.” L DID YOU KNOW— That Alice White never wore stockings on the screen until recently. and then only because a scene required her to take money from her garter? i
DECATt'R DAILY DEMOCRAT
ENTERTAIN GUESTS . AT SUNDAY DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Lihy of near l Munroe entertained ut Sunday din- j ner for Mr. and 'Mrs. Harry Klop-1 fensline of Bluffton; Mr. and Mrs. I Ransome Barkley and daughters | Evelyn and Jean. Mr. and Mrs. j Menno Roth and son Dickie, Mr. I and Mrs. John McKean and Mr and Mrs. Llby. PLANS MADE FOR I REFORMED CLASSIS The Women’s Missionary Society of the Zion Reformed church met In the church parlors Tuesday afternoon. The leaders were Mra. Marvin Hostetler and Mrs. Peter Vltz. The meeting was u|>ened with Scripture reading followed with a song by a quartet comprising the Mesdames Charles Beineke, Dallas Goldner, Mervin Hostetler and I Susie Reppert. The new study book, "Eastern ( Women of Today and Tomorrow” i was introduced at the meeting and I the first two chapters were re-1 viewed by Mrs. V’itz. Plans for the < lassie to he held in April were discussed. The hostesses, the Mesdames M. F. Worthman, Susie Reppert. Ervin Miller and Albert Mutschler served a delicious one course luncheon of Vanentine appointments. PSI IOTA XIS TO ATTEND CONVENTION it business meeting of the Psi lota Xi sorority was held at the W. 11. Zwick, and .Son furniture store, Tuesday evening, at which time plans were made for the state convention to be held in Ayers tea-' 'room in Indianapolis next Saturday. Mrs. C. O. Porter and Mra. A. R. , Holthouse will represent the local chapter as delegates and Miss Eloise Lewton. grand officer, will also attend the sessions Other members of the local organization who will attend the midyear luiu'heon of the Indiana sorority will be Mrs. Gerald Smith Mrs. Alfred Beavers, the Misses Eleanor Pumphrey. Dorothy Young and Laura The Tirzah Club of the P.en Hur lodge will meet Friday at seventhirty o’clock with Mrs. John Burk on Ninth street. A pot-luck luncheon will be served and all members are asked to be present. CATHOLIC LADIES HAVE PRE LENTEN PARTY The members of the Catholic Ladies of Columbia enjoyed a preIjeuten party of Valentine appointments in the Knights of Colunrlms hall. Tuesday night. This party marked the last social event of the organization until after the Lenten season. ' A pot-luck supper was followed with games of bridge, five hundred and rhum. Prize winners in the games included, Mrs. Will Keller and Miss Virginia Laurent in bridge; Mrs. Andy Foos and Mrs. L. C. Perry in five hundred, and .Mrs. Frank Gillig and Miss Agnes Ne.sswald in rhum. The committee in charge of the arrangements included Mrs. William Schumacher, chairman, Mrs. Andy Schiraek. Mise Rose St hurger Mrs. Carl Steigmeyer, Misses Margaret and Catherine Schumacher. The Eastern Star officers are requested to be present for rehearsal at the regular meeting to be held in the Masonic hall Thursday night at seven-thirty o’clock. The Womens Home and Foreign Missionary Society of the Presby-I terian Cinirvh will meet at the home of Mrs. C. A. Dugan Thursday afternoon at two-thirty o’clock. At this meeting the annual mi.e ibox opening will be observed. The Womens Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist church will hold a pie and codkie eale at the church Thursday morning. Per-, sons wishing to order the food may call at the church during the morning. The Young Peoples Choir of the United Brethren Church will meet I Thursday night at the home of I Marlowe Hoagland, promptly at! seven o'clock. The Research (Tub will meet at the home of Mrs. John Parrish Mon-j day afternoon at two-thirty o’clock, , instead of with Mrs. Leo Saylors as ' was previously announced. The Mission Band of the Zion Reformed Church will meet at the l church Saturday afternoon at two: thirty o’clock. — The Women’s Missionary Society i of the Presbyterian Church will I meet at the home of Mrs. Charles iA. I Dugan. Thursday afternoon at two thirty o'clock. A good program has been prepared and the mite boxes will be opened. All women of the church are urged to attend. —, -o The regular monthly meeting of the Elk’s lodge will be held this evening at the Elk's home. Announcement will be made shortly of the opening of a business in the Morrison building. Grover Romey of route 1, Geneva was a visitor in this city today and subscribed for the paper for another year.
' FIFTH AVENUE FASHIONS ■— By ELLEN WORTH Slim Lines Break Into Print The right print plus the right frock will do more for your figure than weeks of dieting—and with | lots less trouble. Here are the 1 rules for smart spring prints that slenderize: dark grounds with massed or tiny bright floral motifs; geometric prints of the tiesilk variety; vertical stripes. The frock itself must be proportioned to give height and slenderness. Such frocks are hard to find—- | yet here is one that solves the problem perfectly with a deep vestee, a jabot-collar and diagonal hip seaming. Size 34 requires 3’« yards 39-inch print % yard plain. Width about 2% yards. Pattern No. 5458 is designed for sizes 34. 36. 38. 40 42, 44. 46 48 bust. © ISIS. United Feature Syndicate. Inc. No. 5458 Size. Price for Pattern 15 Cents. name street address city state Our new Fashion Book 11 out! iJend for it. Check here Q and enclose 10c extra lor book
Address orders to New York Pattern Bureau the Decatur Dallv Democrat Suite 110, 220 East tsnd St. New York City. 'Editor’s note —do not mail orders to Decatur, Indiana.) it.*l (48( ,aH .1 a* we 3 ex
Morristown Votes Municipal Plant 1 i Morristown, Ind.. Fell. 7. —(U.R> ; Construction of a municipal elec-' trie plant with a Federal loan of approximately $50,000 was voted by ■ citizens of Morristown, Shelby county, last night. J Tabulation of ballots today show- . ed 250 votes in favor of the munici-, i! pal plant and 58 opposed. The federal loan has been applied for hut not yet approved. The' ■ town now is served by the South- ! eastern Indiana Power Company. o Man Acquitted Os Shooting Neighbor 11 ■| Kokomo, Ind.. Feb. 7. — (U.R) —A • ' jury in Howard Circuit court today i i acquitted Francis Perkins, 62, on | charges of fatally shooting bis I i neighbor. James Poore, 60, Nov. 22. I j 1933. The shooting resulted from , ‘ a quarrel between the two men. • 0 ... Two Books Banned I Berlin. — (U.R) — Books recently ; banned by the government include | tlie German translation of Victor i Margueritte’s famous novel, “La ■ Garconne," and a political work by the leader oi the Pan European movement, Count R. CoudenhoveKalergi. o Cousins Lxcnange Gifts Montreal.— (U.R) —John McCabe, of Montreal, has just "got even" with his cousin, Joe, of Miami. Fla., for sending him a dead alligator as a Christmas present. He sent Jpe a Quebec skunk as a return gift.
Get Protection ■F 7 u Ft K ~w - - WPOWggfe. w Wl fc*rlF v/I *' J• J ~£ ••■•*. ■lO^x> ■'v.. • ,-|W ■flUgM*/|*•. ■ -fl' Ijiwßj■1 Fearing that they may be kidnaped and held as hostage for the release of John Dillinger from the Crown Point jail, police have order- , ed guards to protect Janice and Janet Holley, twin daughters of Sheriff Marion Holley. They are in school in Staunton, Va.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1934.
k’ y I• »> J X .• w■; > J Hr .. M j ■J-' Ih 5458
Sixty Years As Teacher HHamilton. Bermuda. (U.R) . WhaT may be a world's record for ' Sunday school teaching was tiling , up by Miss Nellie Trimingham, who I retired recently after sixty years of service as superintendent at St. Paul’s Church. Paget. She plans to continue teaching for several more years, but declined to act as superi intendent. j o ! ’ Three-Way Airplane Built 1 Leningrad.— (U.R) —A three-way ' airplane, designed to land on watI er, land or snow, has been com- ! pleted by the Scientific Aviation Research Institute here. A sevenI seater. it is built entirely of wood. • Tlie plane will serve the air lines of the Leningrad district. o Students Rap Faculty Dallas, Tex.— (U.R) -Tire faculty of Southern Methodist University got a slap on the wrist from students througn "Tlie Campus ”, stuI dent publication, for not attending j chapel, "except when convocation i makes the occasion compulsory." —o Freak Bowling Lynn. Mass.— (U.R) —While bowl ing. Policeman Frank S. Bessom had a six-pin leave, with "dead wood" to shoot at with bis second ball. When he struck tlie “dead wood" it bounced, landed on its end and stood up, leaving seven pins to shoot at with his third ball. Remembers Booth Boston.—(U.R) —One of the most vivid childhood recollections of Miss Lucy Anna Dudley, 100, is a theatrical performance at which one of the entertainers was John Wilkes Booth, slayer of Abraham Lincoln.
[senior class I TO GIVE PLAY (CONTINUED FROM PaOH ONE) disgust of her father, the ski-pllc-i ism of her mother and complele Indifference ofter younger sister, j Jean. The characters In the play are Mr. and Mrs Delany, the parents, the daughters, Jean ami Doris, Mrs. Finck, a friend of the family; Earl Finck, In r son; Mike, an electrical and radio export; Il»-IL-, who works In the same office with Doris, and Jerome Bill, a much sought after young man. DALADIER AND CABINET QUIT AS RIOTS GROW 'CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONEt the center of the confusion. Before the guardsmen H'erc withdrawn. 30 of them were severely. mauled and stoned in front of the embassy. Antercian property was respected, however. Ambassador Jesse I. Straus telephoned to President Roosevelt I acquainting him with developments and emplmsizing that there was no danger to Hie 20,001) American residents of Paris. “No employe of the Unite:! States government must be concerned with the present manifestations," tStrans said in an order Io the emltassy staff. "On leaving the embassy, they must proceed directly to their homes.” No Martial Law Washington, Feb. 7— 'U.R) — A faulty telephone connexion between the American embassy in Paris and the state department I today led Secretary of State Hull into making an erroneous an- , notincemeiit that martial law was in effect in Paris. Lambert Named To Head Blind School Indianapolis, Fell. 7. —(U.R) -Rob- , ert Lamliert, principal of the Co- ‘ . lambus, Ind., high school, today . was appointed superintendent of the State School for Blind here by Gov. Paul V. McNutt. He will succeed George S. Wilson wl#> resigned yesterday after having served as superintendent for ■ 35 years. Wilson gave as his reason For resigning the fact that there bad been too many political changes in personnel at the school. Lambert is a graduate of Indiana University and is studying for a PhD. degree at the University of Chicago. His wife, a graduate of , , Chicago who has had special train- , ing in the care of children and I . dietetics, will assist him at the! blind school. o_ Extends Deadline For Son’s Return St. Paul, Minn., Feb. 7— (U.R) — 1 Adolf Bremer, characterized as “very hopeful of his son’s return" ) today extended until Thursday night the deadline set for the kidnapers of Edward Bremer to contact him before city, state and federal authorities enter a hunt for the abduction ring. o i Revisions Made In Surtax Rate Schedule Washington. Feb. 7— (U.R) —The house ways and means committee revised .the surtax rate structure in the 6300.000,000 tax revision bill today by slightly lowering rates in the brackets between SS,OOO and $25,000. The committee also finally voted to retain in the bill the five cents a pound excise tax on cocoanut oil. regardless of whether it was used for edible products. The vote to retain the provision was 15 to 9. An effort to confine the tax wholly to oil used for edible purposes was defeated. i Will “Crack Down” On All Interferes Indianapolis, Fell. 7. —(U.R) —Fred Hoke, Indiana director of the National Emergency Council, today | laid plans to "crack down" on all politicians who attempt to interfere wit li administration of tile government's relief program. He received his instructions at a conference in Washington of NEC directors. Hoke said he planned no immediate changed in personnel of Indianapolis offices of the NRA, CM A and PWA. He will start soon, however, to set up county compliance boards of three membets each to hear complaints of' NRA code violations. o_ Get the Habit — Trade at Home <z> Modern funeral cervices in ke°piner with highest ideals a'ways. W. FL Zwick & Son Funeral Directors Mrs. Zwick, Lady Attendant Funeral Home Ambulance Service 514 N. 2nd st. Phones 303 and 61 | 1
OCAS
Mr. and Mis. Ransome Barkley arid dangliter Evelyn and Jean and Mr. and Mrs. Menno Roth and son Dickie spent Sunday afternoon in Bluffton, the geests of Mr. and Mrs. Harve McKean. Mr. and Mrs. John Gerard of Toledo and Mrs. Francis J. Robb of Fort Wayne, visited hero yesterday j with friends and relieves. The Gerard family formerly lived here. Elmore Snare line been looking after business in the city. Miss Mayme Terveer and Miss Mary Margaret Vuglewede reutrned from Indianapolis where they attended a shoe convention at the Claypool hotel. C. J. Voglewede is confined to his home witli an attack of the flu. The Alpli Phi Delta fraternity will install a ping pong table In their club rooms over the Peoples Restaurant. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Helms of Bluff- ■ ton were visitors in Decatur Tuesday evening. Orel Meyer of Bluffton was a i visitor in Decatur today. Mort FvAfee of Bluffton transacted business in Decatur this morning. The condition of Mrs. 11. F. Ehinger who was operated on yesterday is reported as very favorable. She rested well during the night i and is making as much headway as ' could be expected. She is a patient at the Adams County Memorial hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Mat Harris accompanied their daughter. Miss Flor-en-e Harris to St. Elizabeth’s hospital. East Chicago, where she is in nursing training. are busy at work on remodeling tho new Adams Thea'ter on Monroe etreet. A. force of a dozen men are remodeling tho ' building, preparatory to opening 'the new theater sometime in April. Architects McNally and Quinn of Chicago will meet with H. B. Hull, landscape architect at Purdue tomorrow. concerning the plans and general improvement of the ground of the subsistence homestead .site in this city. Jimmy Ehinger. son of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Ehinger, is suffering from a severe cut in the right hand Jimmy was in the act of turning off a shower in the l>ath room of his home when the glass knob broke. A gash across his band was inflict--
IkL-' ’. i The to a WOMAN’S HEART There’s no surer way to please sweetheart, mother, or sister than this delightful remembrance. It’s the Artstyle Red Satin heart box that sells for only $1.50. Nowhere will you find a wiser choice. You’ll find other Artstyle boxes priced from 25c to $3. Have your Rexall Druggist reserve yours NOW. ARTS T Y L E VALENTINE PACKAGES Valentine Greetings lc to 25c B. J. SMITH DRUG CO.
MAKE YOUR VALENTINE PARTY GAY AND ATTRACTIVE - - Serve CLOVERLEAF VALENTINE SPECIAL A delicious creamy vanilla brick with a heart of . pink mousse or chocolate pecan fudge center brick. Two layers of vanilla with a center of ■ rich chocolate pecan fudge. Get These Specials At Your Cloverleaf Dealers or Phone 50 or 51
Page Three
•si, requiring seven stitches to 11 mend. I Paul Graham and R. E. Moklmra ' looked after business In Fort . Wayne yesterday. i W. A. Klepper lias gone to Now York to look after business. A commlsaloner’s sale of the Alvira Cado farm located south of Decatur, Is advertised for Fe-bnmry 28. In order to clear the title to the • property the public sale of the property Is necessary, Ford L. Litterer ' attorny for the Sulisistence Home, stead project stated. The government will bid the appraised value “i of the farm, it was stated. Tlie .Rotary and Lions clubs will hold a joint meeting Thursday evening at the Rice hotel in connection with the birthday anniversary banquet of the Boy Scouts. More than a hundred reservations i have been made. S' hool boys were taking a lot | of risk today when they jumped onto autos or held onto the bumpers and were pulled along tho icy streets. No one was seriously hurt. i The corridor of the court house is being repaired. The cracked plas- ' tering is lining torn down and Impairs made. The walls and ceiling i will be repainted, in keeping with Jthe decorations in the various offices In the building. ■! H. H. High of Kirkland township was a visitor in this city today.
PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS :i i ' '■ | ■ ADAMS THEATRE 11 Tonight & Thursday SLIM SUMMERVILLE ZASU PITTS in “LOVE. HONOR and OH, BABY!” , with Lucille Gleason. Veree Teasdale. Donald Meek. The “great lovers - ' of the screen lin a grand piece of delicious I hilarity! Added-Comedv and Traveltalk. 10-15 c. FRI. A SAT. “THE INVISIBLE MAN" H. G. Wells' Fantastic Sensation! SUN. MON. TUE.—The 4 Marx Brothers in “DUCK SOUP.” THE CORT WED. - THURS. 10-15 c Its Startling—lts Magnificent—lts the Most Unusual Picture of the Year. “BERKELEY SQUARE” LESLIE HOWARD. HEATHER ANGEL. Liberfv 4 Star Picture. ALSO—“PLANE CRAZY", a Broadway Brevity with Do* - - thy Lee and a Merrie Melodie sat. — “STRAIGHTAWAY" Tim McCoy - Sue Carol. I ~ ... SUNDAY—JOE E. BROWN (The “Clown Prince" of Joy) in “SON ,OF A SAILOR." With Frank McHugh. Thelma Todd. Jean Muir, I John Mack Brown. Shelia Terry. | First Evening Show at 6:00. MOmMRMMBMMMBMKa
