Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 340, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1927 — Page 4

PAGE 4

The Indianapolis Times ROT W. HOWARD, President. BOYD GRLEY, Editor. WM. A. MAYBORN. Bus. Mgr. - Member of the Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • * • Client of the United Press and the NEA .Serviee * * * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published dailv except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland St.. Indianapolis * * * Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week * * PHONE—MA in 3300.

No law shall be passed restraining the freeinter change of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write or print freely, on any subject whatever.—Constitution of Indiana.

The Snyder Verdict Undoubtedly popular opinion will agree with the jury that as long as society retains capital punishment as one of its means of protecting itself that man and woman who cruelly murdered the husband of the woman as he slept, deserved to die. You may or may not believe in capital punishment. The amount of discussion aroused in Indianapolis by Will Durant’s challenge to the system of law whiefi still employs the death penalty, is insufficient indication that citizens still hold hotly to opposite opinions on the subject. This newspaper inclines to the view that such harm as society does by exacting a life for a life is done chiefly to society itself. \\ e were greatly impressed by this passage in Durant s article of last Friday: “There is an instinct of cruelty in us that lingers from the hunting stage of mankind’s infancy and gives us a stealthy delight in thoughts and acts of torture. The inquisition was popular, not with the papacy, which protested against its methods, but with the crowd that loved to witness suffering. The force of this declaration increases when we read the story of the scene in the court yesterday as Ruth Snyder and Judd Gray waited for the. verdict of the jury. “They faced judgment,” says the United Press, “in the atmosphere of a too well advertised picnic. The courtroom floor, beneath the feet of the mob, was cluttered with the paper wrappings of innumerable sandwiches* Mixed with the scent of human bodies was the odor of fried chicken and the pungent whiff of mustard on ham.” There is surely room for doubt that we have found the right way to deal with crime and criminals ■ —the way to serve ourselves best. We must think this question through. It is a grave and important matter that concerns us all, for it is in the name of us all that life is taken by the law. nav you have thought about capital punishment and Its failure, it might be well to speculate on these two are condemned to death. Was it the shocking murder that put them beyond the thought of mercy or was it the fact that when they had murdered, they became craven and tried to blame each other? Instead of the overwhelming passion which has inspired other killings in the past and will inspire other killings until human nature and human relationships are changed, these two turned upon each other and tried to save their lives at the expense of the other. There is nothing romantic in the spectacle of a man who has killed to obtain a woman trying to send the object of his desire to the electric chair. There is nothing to arouse sympathy in the sight of a woman who threw away a world for “love” coldly condemning the man she turned to. This country and every country has had a tendency to sympathize with those who love deeply or who are inspired by great passions. It has never had any use for “squealers.” They were condemned, surely and certainly, when they blamed each other for this most shocking of all crimes. * What would have been the verdict had each of these gone upon the witness stand and attempted to take all the blame, to shield each other at the sacrifice of life itself? Would the Nation, instead of condemning the “bloody blonde” to death then have been weeping in secret sympathy with her great “love”? Would it have made a hero of this cringing man who used the excuse of Adam, had he risen to heights of sacrifice just as he descended to the depths of brutality and tried to save the woman? Think it over and then think again of the use to which we put capital punishment. Are we taking life for murder or as a penalty for failing to satisfy our romantic ideals. /.Tomorrow, Will Durant will write his final comment on the Snyder case. His profound philosophical study of the brutal murder and of the sordid scenes that have followed it, offer about the only light obtainable from this turbid mess. It will pay you to read what he has to say and it will pay you even more to do some cool, dispassionate thinking of your own on the subject.

Stimson Stops Kellogg’s Show After months of muddling Washington has moved at last to put an end to an intolerable situation involving useless bloodshed in Nicaragua. Largely as a result of Secretary of State Kellogg’s misguided wire pulling at Managua, a civil war broke out some six months ago between liberals and conservatives over the presidency. Toward the end of 1926 American marines were landed on the pretext of protecting American lines and property. But we were assured they would remain perfectly neutral as between the contending forces. Immediately, however, this alleged neutrality became an international farce. We impeded the liberals at every turn. We aided the conservatives wherever possible. When the liberals were about to win a battle, we made the battlefield a neutral zone and forbade further fighting. When the conservatives had the advantage, we let the battle proceed. We sold arms to the conservatives but prevented war materials of whatever nature, even medicine, falling into the hands of the liberals. And so on. It became perfectly plain that our intervention was for the of upholding the conservative president, Diaz, whom our wire pulling had put in power, and to defeat the liberal Sacasa, constitutional president by virtue of having risen from the vice presidency upon the resignation of the duly elected chief executive. Having gotten in this deep the only half way decent thing left for Washington to do was to stop further fighting. Long ago Dr. * Sacasa told Scripps-Howard newspapers that he would lay down his arms if ordered to do so by the United States, which country he would not fight under any circumstances. Here was our cue. Hav’,-g determined that he would not allow Sacasa to be president, it became our obvious duty to quit playing the hypocritical role of neutral, which everybody sa,w through, and humanly stop the war. St was little

short of murder for us to allow the killing to go on after we had decided we would only let Diaz win. But Secretary Kellogg didn’t. The war went on. Battles were fought and many ragged Nicaraguans left their carcasses on the battlefields all to no purpose. Finally, President Coolidge seems to have decided to take the matter out of the five-thumbed hands of the Secretary of State. He sent former Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson to Nicaragua as his own personal representative and now, according to reports, peace is in sight. Following the second of the alternatives months ago suggested by this newspaper and often repeated since, namely, observe real neutrality down there or stop the war—get out or get in—Envoy Stimson, we are told, has given the liberals to understand they must quit fighting else face our marines. True to his word, Sacasa and his men seem to have yielded to this major force. Thus the liberals are not laying down their arms because they are licked or out of respect for our diplomacy. They are quitting because their leaders are unwilling to send their men to their death against impossible superior forces. This newspaper still believes that when Secretary Kellogg recognized the Diaz government and landed marines to bolster him in office ho made a blunder which will cost us dearly in prestige and respect from Texas to Tierra del Fuego. But having made that blunder the only thing left to do short of confessing our error, so it seems to us, was to take off our false face and say: “Quit killing one another; it’s no use. What we say goes, and until we give the word, Diaz will be your president.” ' Nicaragua's presidential election is scheduled for next year. And part of the peace plan is that this shall be under American supervision to secure fair play. So, while the liberals refuse to call off their feud against Diaz, dispatches indicate that they will yield before the Yankee steamroller and trust to 1928 for rehabilitation. A wise decision—things being as they are.

That Former Jury Surely some official will take interest enough in the matter of political corruption to inquire into the meaning of the report filed by the grand jury which for eleven weeks probed the Stephenson charges. That jury spent eleven .weeks probing into political corruption. It gathered evidence now available to the prosecutors. > Witnesses fled, mysteriously, when subpoenas were issued for them. Men left the State on unexplained missions. They apparently selected their own time to tell their stories. The partner of Stephenson was one of these. That body was then on the search for documents which Stephenson said he could deliver. One girl, formerly associated with Stephenson, ran away and for a week remained under an assumed name in a Cincinnati hotel. There were circumstances which strongly suggested that very powerful influences were at to prevent witnesses from talking and keeping them away from that grand jury. Then at the finish, w r hen well-defined rumor declared that four of the jurors wish to return indictments, the jury reported that its failure to indict was the only possible report it could make under the "conditions which existed within the jury.” That report w r as itself an inferential accusation that there were unusual conditions within the jury and that it prevented action which should have been taken. The people know what happened to the jury which succeeded it and which was changed with continuing the probe. Judge Collins has sentenced one man for contempt, and the contempt for which he convicted him was the offer of a bribe to a juror. The charge was that the bribe consisted of money and a city job, offered for a very definite purpose. If that happened to this grand jury, what might have happened to the former one which invited suspicion of its own surroundings and actions? If there was necessity for bribe offers now, what might have been expected under the probe of the former jury? Is it too much to ask that the members of that grand jury to asked, officially, what they meant when they said they could return no other report because of “conditions existing within the jury”? After Mother’s Day Mother’s day is now behind us. It will be nearly a year before we again enjoy the spectacle of great commercial institutions taking up the cudgels for neglected motherhood. In the interim we might, individually, take stock of ourselves. Are we the dutiful, thoughtful, loyal sons and daughters we might be? Did the flowers and candy we bought on Mother’s day go as atonement for a year of neglect? Now is the time to think of those things—not a year from now, on the next Mother's day. It takes a lot of flowers and candy and jewelry to make up for twelve months of selfish neglect.

Law and Justice By Dexter 31, Keeezer

A man made false statements about his previous health in an application for life insurance. He was a man of good reputation in the community, one whose statement could reasonably be credited. After the insurance policy was issued* he was killed in an accident. In checking up the claim for the life insurance, the company which had issued the policy discovered that he had lied in making the tppilcation. It refunded the premiums and refused to pay the insurance. The beneficiary of the insurance claimed that the false statements didn't relieve the company from its obligation to pay because the man had died as the result of an accident which would have been fatal regardless of his physical condition. HOW WOULD YOU DECIDE THIS CASE? The actual decision. A United States Circuit Court of Appeals decided thaT the insurance company was not required to pay. It said the applicant for insurance “must exercise toward the company the san\e good faith which may rightly be demanded of it.”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Says: Business Operates on Theory Impossible to Produce, Sell Too Much.

By 31. E. Tracy The National Industrial Council, which is composed of 300 trade associations with an aggregate membership of more than 75,000 employers, wants to see the production of laws and regulations curtailed. Its secretary, M. J. Hickey, estimates that 40,000 bills have been or will be introduced into the State Legislatures meeting this year, and that one fourth of them will result in new statutes. He regards the orgy of law making as mainly responsible for the crime 'wave. He says that though our courts, | lawyers and public officials are fully ! aware of the chaotic condition, they show no disposition to reduce the output. Business Theory American business operates on the theory that it is impossible to pro- j duce and sell too much. American business is forever devising ways and means to increase | consumption. i American business will not admit j that anything is useless that can be made and disposed of at a profit. American business supports a vast educational system for the express purpose of training young men to boost consumption in order to boost production. If our law makers have taken their cue from the philosophy of business who can blame them? Business has popularized the idea of measuring success by the size of the output. It has taught people to think in quantity rather than •quality. I /Not only our lawmakers, but our | schools and churches have come to i regard bigness as the important end I to seek. ; We have too much law for preclsely the same reason that we have 1 I too much of many other things. The chicken of forced production j that business hatched with such delight has come home to roost in the | legislative hall. j It is a sign of sanity that buslI ness does not like the bird. ! A "T" and a "P” ! The difficulty of distinguishing lie- } tween "T” and “P” over the tele- | phone caused the last name of j Lucretia Chapman to appear as I “Chatman” in this column yester- | i day. | | Nine letters of our alphabet—B. C, | i D, E, G. P, T. V and Z —end With j I the sound of double “e” and no one \ i can estimate the trouble they cause | In giving names over the telephone.

Too Much Heroism The greatest glory goes with the greatest hazard, and men often take unnecessary risks to make a higher bid fgr fame. St. Roman shipped his pontoons ar.d Ungesser took the air without a radio. Better by far had each. takn a little more time and provided himself with the added safegaurd. There is no need of haste in making a nonstop flight across the Atlantic. Indeed, the failures that have resulted from haste are likely to delay its real benefit. Aviation is suffering from nothing so much as heroic stunts. Smallpox Toll The United States had 33,750 cases of smallpox last year with 361 deaths. This is a humiliating but not an alarming record. * It is impossible to get excited over a disease which caused only 361 deaths among 110,000,000 people within twelve months. What hurts is the fact that ten European nations reported themselves entirely free from smallpox, with eight others reported an aggregate of only 1,000 cases. > No matter how mild or infrequent a disease may be, one does not like to think of the United States an having more of it than Sny country outside of Asia. Debt Boomerang Matthew Woll,, one of the ablest labor leaders in this country makes a splendid argument for debt reduction if not cancellation in the current issue of the American Photo Engraver. He points out that the effect of the foreign debts will be to increase our import trade and decrease our export trade, which should be obvious so anyone who has given the matter thought. The only way European nations can pay us what they owe is by selling more goods to us than they buy from us, or by selling goods to other nations and taking our market away from us. ** Our legal rights in the matter are of less consequence, perhaps than our industrial feature. We face the possibility of losing two dollars in .trade, if not more, for every dollar we collect in cash. Dry Politics Some prohibitionists want Haynes and some do not, which worries Wayne B. Wheeler and causes the average man to suspect that' there is quite as much politics in the dry fold as in any other. If the various leagues and associations desire only law enforcement, as they continually assert, what difference does it make whether Major Haynes or somebody j else is at the head of the Federal establishment, providing he believes in prohibition and has a good record? OTHER THEATER OFFERINGS Other theaters today offer: “Cabaret” at the Apollo: “Mother,” at the Colonial: “Wedding Bills,” at the Ohio”: “The Night of Love,” at the ■ Circle; “For Alimony Only,” at the • Uptown, and “Men of Daring,” at the I*is.

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Milton Byron and Robert St. Clair in ‘White Cargo’ Do Wonderful Work - ■ - By Walter I). Hickman

It can safely be said that Milton Byron and Robert St. flair never have done better work in this city than they are doing in “White Cargo." Byron this week has studied his part to such an extent that he has

lost his own personality in the role of Harry Witzel, who fought the loneliness of Africa with his own system. Witzel is dirty in appear ance and even mentally is as dirty, but even his idea of life in that hot country seems ’ogical at tiroes. It is Witzel, you recall. who does not become white cargo. In makeup, Byron has been so successful

.lean Oliver

that I did not recognize him when he made his first entrance. Byron makes Witzel a dirty human being, cruel on the surface, hut folded away somewhere in his makeup is commonsense kindness toward man. Byron at no time loses his characterization. It is a sustained piece of work, often unpleasant, but done with so much honesty that he does not offend. The fact is. he about convinces. Byron always will be remembered for his work in The Music Master.'' last season and as Witzel in "White Cargo.’’ A season or two ago I told you that Robert St. Clair had the “spark'' which makes a young man into an actor. That spark has been fanned for months and today it is a blaze. This man in “White Cargo" has his most important role of his career in Indianapolis. St. Clair as Allen Langford, a chap who becomes just dirty “white cargo,” has caught the spirit of the part to such an extent that I am willing to say It is one of the five best characterizations that the Berkell company has given this city. St. Clair is now catching the various “shades" In character, and ho is, mastering the trick of putting over these “shades." This man has ability. He is growing and studying. And that makes success. In declaring Byron and St. Clair a success I psobably should have included Herbert Dobbins as the doctor under the same head. He, too, is giving a characterization this week which will cause him to be remembered with ease. It is the doctor, you recall, who really holds the key of this tragedy. There is only one woman in the cast, Tondeleyo, played by Jean Oliver. She makes a mistake In not making her skin much darker because Tondeleyo is a common “sand walker.” Her conception of the role is not as vigorous as it should lie, but that is due to Miss Oliver's desire not to offend. Tondeleyo is a rotten character. Miss Oliver makes her less bad and more artistic. More like a magazine cover. The cast is satisfactory and includes J. F. Marlow. Tom Pawley. Larry Sullivan who is wearing ear j rings; Sidney Jerome, (splendid) and I William V. Hull. The setting is in character, in I fact mighty realistic. A better handling of the lights will bring out the realism of both the set and the dramatic atmosphere. You know my idea of this play, it is melodramatic theater, expressed ! in a sensational sex way. I “White Cargo” remains on view j all week at English’s. GAUL AND PATTERSON MAKE SEASON’S DEBUT For a better play in Hhich to bring George Gaul back to Indianapolis it would be a difficult task to find one that would please a larger audience than “Lazybones.” / Lazybones” is a character tjiat is filled with the sympathy and tenderness that Gaul can put into a role.

Easy Pickin 7

And in contrast to this characterization is that of the cruel, selfish mother of the girl "Lazybones" loves. Elizabeth Patterson made a perfect Rebecca Fanning out of this woman in the play last night. The story of this play is a cross section of the life in a small coun-

try town for a !>eriod of about twenty years. Steje Tuttle, George Gaul, in trowing up has acquired the title of “I/izybones” for his fondness of fishing and other sports that tend to keep hint from work. Steve has derided that some day when he has found a suitable job and has enough money he will get married and the girl he has picked is

Elizabeth Patterson

Agnes Fanning, the younger of the two sisters, who have for a mother a cruel, heartless, selfish person. The older daughter has been away studying music, but one day her mother has misgivings of a sort and she calls her home. On this day Steve comes homo with the biggest flsh story he has ever told. His story, and he sticks to it, is that while roaming around some secluded places in the woods he has found a baby someone has left. And ho brings home the baby as proof. Os course every one doubts the fisherman's story and a nasty bit of scandnl crops up. Steve's engagement is broken off and his life centers down to nothing, but the care of the little baby, whom he has named Kit, and his mother. The action carries along for a stretch of fifteen years and many are the things that happen in this time. Kit has grown up into a beautiful young girl and “Lazybones” has not aged a year, while the girl he was to have married shows all the marks the brooding years have caused. There is some fine drama in these last two acts, and it is of a deep and significant kind, although there are relieving breaks of comedy to keep it tempered well enough. Elizabeth Taylor as Martha Tuttle, the loving mother of “Lazybones.” who was never certain of the exactness of her statements, was a splendid characterization and the same can be said of all the rest of the company. At Keith's all week. (By Jphn T. Hawkins.)

THE RIGHT SPIRIT IS PRESENT AT LYRIC The right spirit of entertainment is present on the current bill at the Lyric. The actors are working in the right atmosphere this week because there is so much personality. The personality "bringers” include Bobby (Uke) Henshaw, Will

Rogers on the the screen, Don Valerio on the wire, the Four Covans in dances and Lou Cameron. These people at least on the bill are working in that good fellowship relation which actually guarantees a good show four times a day. Will Rogers has carried his official ambassador humor to the screen and the

h.

Helen Garty

Lyric grabbed on to this little gem% of travel fun. This week, Will is in Ireland and he sees and tells you the things which the average tourist will get a laugh. . For instance he shows a place which he teße subtitles

attracts most Americans. The sign over the place declares that tea and liquor is sold there. Rogers remarks that the "tea” is the drawing card. If 1 may judge the entire travel series by “Will Rogers in Dublin,” I can with safety predict that this series is a wow and then £ome. Bobby Henshaw is an intimate funmaker although ho uses his ”uke” only onee If 1 remember correctly. As usual he has an assistant in the audience as well as one on the stage. He is different from most mimics and comedians. He gets the laughs every time he wants them. A comedian of a different order is Lou Cameron. If I am not all wrong he Is one of the Four Camerons. now “hoofing" It with other assistants. To me he is unique as a fun getter. In fact, a riot. His fun is delicious. I did not stay for all of the Bartee Sisters Revue, but I wanted to. I got all but the closing, I think. Here is an act of melody which has class and charm. Each member works with intimate charm and understanding of entertaining values. Must tell you about Don Valerio on the wire. Here is one man on the wire that you will want to see. He does some sudden things, like the “black bottom” on the wire and a sensational split. Splendid is this man. The Four Covans are real dancers when it comes to tap dancing and kindred hard shoe dancing. An act of real merit. Cecil Alexander has an eccentric tramp act. Barrett and Clayton indulge in a sketch about a detective who must prove that he is a detective. It is some show this week. At the Lyric all week.

LOOKING OVER NEW SHOW AT PALACE Roy Rogers at the Palace the first half adds quite a few more names to his list of friends. Rogers, by a peculiar body makeup, is able to do things in an eccentric dance that are of a humorous nature that would be hard for any one else to duplicate. His characterization of a drunk is just the thing for a lot of comedy and he has no trouble in putting it across. The other members of the act are two women and another man. The women offer some song and dance specialties. “The Corner Drug Store*’ is a rather laughable sketch concerning the romance surrounding a certain drug store in a little town. The people in this act are all clever enough, but there is one woman who does some really fine work along character lines. We do not know her name, hut she takes the part of the hard-boiled young banker’s daughter who lias her eyes set on the new soda clerk. This act has a good, fast, snappy ending. Lemeau and Young are two young women who are exponents of peppy dancing and harmony. They have wmrked out a good bit of comedy in the act and get across nicely. Eccentric comedy forms the background of the act of Herbert Faye and company. Faye is most of the act, and he has comedy lines all through the act that are funny. The two women present offer some dance and song specalties and the man acts as the foil for most of Faye’s comedy. Joe Fanton and company open with some 'athletic features and offers a pleasing act of its kind. The feature picture this half, “The Yankee Clipper,” is a plcturization of the start of the American merchant marine. Although a romantic story, the picture shows the first struggles of the young republic against English rule on the ocean and the final chapter where the Stars and Stripes are assured a place on every ocean. At the Palace today and tomorrow. (By the Observer.)

MAY 10, 1927

C V eduction t Bridge byJHMon S' 1 s yJ Don't Try Poker Metliods of Figuring Your Partner's Hand,

Yesterday’s question was: Against a No Trump contract obtained by South, West leads the Deuce of Hearts which is won by South; after this two Diamonds are led, on the first of which West follows suit and on the second of which W est discards a small Spade. How many Clubs does West hold? The answer is: He has four Clubs. West, when he led the Deuce of Hearts, showed a suit of exactly four cards. He therefore had no five-card suit and, as he had but one Diamond, must have held three fourcard suits originally. Not having played a Club at the time referred to in the question, he still must have four of the suit. Today's question: Against a Heart contract, West opens with the Six of Spades. Dummy (North) has the Nine, Eight and Deuce of Spades, and Closed Hand the Ace, Queen and Seven of Spades. What is West’s Spade holding? Answer tomorrow. A correspondent writing from California recently asked for my opinion concerning hesitation and munnerisms. lam answering that question ( with the following pointer and comment: . Never use information derived from your partner's hesitation or mannerisms. , The only serious objection to the game of Bridge is that it offers opportunities for unethical practices by those willing to benefit by the thoughtless words, facial expressions or undue hesitation of a partner. There is no law to punish such offenses against the ethics and etiquette of the game—it is impossible to frame nny such law; but the code abounds in advice upon the subject. It calls offenses against etiquette unpardonable, as they are not subject to prescribed penalties; and advises that those who are habitual offenders against etiquette be ostracized from reputable Bridge games. The following are excerptu from the official code: “A player should not allow any hesitation or mannerism of his partner to Influence his own declaration or play.” “A card should not be played with emphasis nor in eurh manner as to draw attention to it.” “No player should hesitate unnecessarily.” The worst offense of all is the "hesitation bid.” By that I mean a hid made by a player whose hand does not justify it, but who makes it because his parentr’s hesitation indicates that the partner has passed with strength. Fortunately euehi practices are rare, but when they' do occur, ostracism is the effective and proper punishment.

Indiana Ave, to Be Ready for Speedway Day,

Assistant City Engineer Arthur Haufler today assured Mr. Fixit that tire condition of Indiana Ave. north of Full Creek will be repaired before the Speedway race. The repair gang quit work beyond the bridge only temporarily, Haufler said. The letter: Dear Mr. Fixit: I have sent several requests to your column about Indiana Ave. being repaired between Fall Creek bridge and Montcalm St. I notice that the repair gang has stopped work at the east end of the bridge and from all indications they are not coming over the creek, which is sadly in need of repair. I would suggest that if our traveling mayor could not see clear log have some asphalt put in those he might have a few loads of cinders dumped in the holes. Citizens of the northwest section would appreciate anything that could be done. TAXPAYER OF HARDING ST. Your request should he granted within a couple of weeks. Dear Mr. Fixit: How about trying to get the section of Morris St. between East St. and Madison Ave. repaired? There are some pretty bad holes along this stretch that should be looked after. They sure can tear up your car because you can't mis,all of them. t Also the corner of East and Moi ris Sts., on the east of East St there is a big hole that ought to he repaired. Thanks. MORRIS ST. RESIDENT The repairs will be made ns soon as the street gang reache.-: the south side. To L. J. B.: Your request for street light at Allen and W. Six teenth Sts. was denied by the city, as no new lights can be Installed fenthe time being because of lack of funds. Q. How much do movie theaters pay for films they exhibit? A. The rental depends upon the kind of production selected and also on the kind of place where it ij, exhibited. A high class theater usually pays more than one of the cheaper class, although the actual is based on the seating capacity o™ the house. The rent of a photoplay In a theater with a seating capacity of 2,000 would be considerably higher than for a theater with 1,000 capacity. "First run” pictures cost more than those of equal merit which have already been shown in the town and, are being shown again in anothMi theater. Jg