Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 196, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 December 1931 — Page 10
PAGE 10
FUND BALANCE AND RECEIPTS PASS MILLIONS Disbursements for Year by Community Chest Reach $959,278.30. f Tot -al cash balance and receipts Indianapolis Community i*und for the fiscal year ended Oct. 31, 1931, amounted t $1,043,139.03, according to an audited report announced today by Edward A. Kahn president. Disbursements for the fiscal year amounted to $959,278.30. The fund president said that disbursements were made to thirty-eight social service agencies, as well as a total of $30,000 to the emergency work committee for its “made work.” procram to relieve unemplovment in the city. Overhead expenses of the ComTnunty Fund, including campaign expenditures and year-around administration, collection and accounting, was less than 7 cents on tiie dollar, according to the report. The audited report, made by the George S. Olive firm of certified public accountants, follows: btatement of cash receipts and disbursements Year Ended Oct. 31, 1931 Balance Nov. 1. 1930 $97,598.60 . , —Receipts— Ad ,vance payments on 1932 subscriptions. $ 76.225 37 Payments on 1931 subscriptions 709.898.70 Payments on 1930 subscriptions 22 283 67 Payments on suspended subscriptions 3,270 2* Interest on bank d P?sits 789.19 Miscellaneous refunds, etc 73 26 Special donations ... 12 500 00 Proceeds of bank loans •. • .$120,500.00 945,540.43 Total receipts and cash balance $1,043,139.03 —Disbursements— (To Member Organizations, 1931 Accounts) Alpha Home Assoelation $ 4,600.00 American Settlement Association.. 8.024.00 Bovs’ Club Assoelation 13,000.00 Boy Scouts of America, 20.527.00 Camp Fire Girls. .. 5,762.00 Catholic Community Center 32,804.50 Catholic Women’s Association 2,500.00 Chrlstamore House.. 13,251.00 Family Welfare So-
ciety 246.214.68 Planner House, 21,328.00 Florence Crlttenton Home 8.000.00 Girl Scouts 7,566.00 Hawthorne Social Service House 7,235.00 Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays 400.00 India nap 011 s Day Nursery Assooclation * 8,166.00 Indianapolis Flower Mission 780.00 Indianapolis Home for Aged Women.. 4,000.00 Indianapolis Orphan Asylum 9,100.00 Indianapolis Travelers’ Aid 8,000.00 Jewish Federation of Indianapolis 52,000.00 Old Folks Home (Altenhelm) 4.000.00 Public Health Nursing Association .. 34,000.00 Red Cross (Indianapolis Chapter*.;. 30,000.00 St. Elizabeth’s Home 9.000.00 Salvation Armv 31,526.55 Social Service Department Ind i anapolis Church Federation 6,000.00 Bociety of Good Shepherd 3,000.00 Theodora Home 4,254.73 Volunteers of America 16,027.93 Wheeler City Rescue Mission 13,000.00 Woman’s Improvement Club 4.200.00 Y. M. C. A. (Central branch) 57,461.00 Y. M. C. A. (Colored Branch) 10,274.92 Y. W C. A. (Central Branch) 35.700.00 Y. W. C. A. (Colored Branch) 20.700.00 Y. W. C. A. (Alabama St. Branch). 3,600 00 Total paid to member organizations $756,003.31 E Campaign 0f ... 1931 $ 30,361.78-$ 16.814.93 (Deduct 13,546.85 amount advanced prior to Nov. 1, 1930) Administration, ColCouncil of Social Agencies 10,149.47 Centralized Service to Agencies Publicity 3,031.13 —Other Disbursements — Repayment of bank loans and interest.s 88.853.94 Eouipment purchases 240.66 Annual meeting 281.16 Case work survey .'. 1.566.99 A p<Tn n s C es d 16,019.67- 106.962.42 Total disbursements $959,278.30 Balance Oct. 31. 1931 a.583,860.73
REORGANIZE STAFFORD ENGRAVING COMPANY (same Officers Head Firm; Old Company Filed in Bankruptcy. Reorganization of the Stafford Engraving Company, Inc., has been announced, with all officers of the new corporation men who were identified with the old firm with the exception of V. Ernest Field, vicepresident and general manager. The officers are; Earl E. Stafford, president; Everett N. Stehman, vice-president and sales manager, and Elmer F. Schad, secretary and treasurer. Field is senior partner, with Ralph G. Elvin, in the Field Advertising Service, established in 1914. The Stafford Engraving Company was established in 1893. Recently it filed voluntary bankruptcy proceedings. Capital stock of $60,000 —$40,000 common and $60,000 preferred—has been authorized. The common stock will not be sold at this time, it was announced. LAST RITES TODAY FOR MRS. MINNIE PFLUEGER Resident of City Thirty Years Succumbs in Hospital. Funeral services for Mrs. Minnie May Pflut ger, 50, will be held at the home, 508 t incoln street, at 1:30 Friday alternoon and in Christ church at 2. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mrs. Pflueger was a resident of Indianapolis thirty years. She died Tuesday in St. Vincent’s hospital after a week's illness. Survivors are the husband, a daughter, Miss Ruth Pflueger of this city; her mother. Mrs. Sarah Roads of Atlanta, Ga.; a sister, Mrs. Theresa Wagener of Noblesville, and two brothers, Rex Roads and Cecil Roads, both of Atlanta. Shelbyville Wife Sued By Times Special SHELBYVILLE, Ind., Dec. 25. Bertie Anderson, real estate dealer, charges that false accusations of his wife. Mrs. S. Bernice Anderson, damaged his reputation and business, in a divorce suit on file in Shelby circuit court. He also charges the defendant has destroyed love of three children for their father. The couple was married in 1914.
BELIEVE IT or NOT
j j| • 1931. King Featara Syndicate, Inc.. Great Britain right, reserved. Signature: of O j jjp -o* Trinity College,Mor4,Conn.l krJffiQ's w*****om . (N PLUN\ PuOOINQ J tn a college game TTtERE is a SakTa claus/ (in S RAf4 90 'i os. & l ? , ‘ . - M£K*y CHRISrnA S —-*/2-2 5’
STAGE FOLK KNOW THERE IS AJSANTA Members of Berkell Company Give Reasons Why They Know Certain Thing Is All Very, Very True. IF you are one of those blase and skeptical individuals who still doubt if there is a Santa Claus, an interview with the members of the Berkell Players ■who will put in this festive day busily rehearsing “Rebound” in which they will open their season of dramatic stock at Keith’s theater Monday night, may serve to help in removing your doubts. The question: “Is there a Santa Claus?” was put to each .member of the company and here is what each had to say: Margery Williams (leading woman)—Merry Christmas! And certainly there’s a Santa Claus. He showed up this morning garbed as an expressman bringing five trunks of stage wardrobe which I had shipped
to Indianapolis last week, and which, until yesterday, could not be located, much to my dismay. Now the trunks are here. All my fretting was for naught. And that is why I say, ’Certainly there’s a Santa Claus.’ Phillip Brandon (leading man) — Sure there’s a Santa Claus! He handed me whit I think is a dandy part in ‘ Rebound”, the show we are going to do next week. And here we are, a most congenial company, about to open anew season in a fine theater in a mighty fine city. How could I help saying, ‘Sure there’s a Santa Claus.’ ” Beatrice Leiblee, Rose Philliber and Margaret O'Brien (in chorus) — We hung oifr stockings up last night. Yes, there is a Santa Claus. Milton Byron (director) —I must give Santa Claus credit for my again being back in Indianapolis with The Berkell Players. Every old friend and acquaintance that I see here looks like Santa Claus to me. I'm happy to be here and heartily wish every man, woman and child in Indianapolis a very ‘Merry Christmas.’
Bob Fay—What Milton said goes for me, too. Since it is impossible for me to spend this Christmas with my home folks back in old New England, there isn’t any place on earth I would rather be than here in Indianapolis. Merry Christmas to everybody. William J. Maloney and William Pollard —We’ll string along with Milton and Bob. From what they tell us about Indianapolis, Santa Claus makes this his headquarters the year 'round. James Le Roy—lndianapolis is my home town. I’m mighty proud of it. And this is the first Christmas in a number of years that I have been so lucky as to be here. That is why I insist there is a Santa Claus. Charles Berkell —Is there a Santa Claus? Say, from the ticket order!? that have been piling into the box office at Keith's the paSt few days I know that there is not only one Santa Claus but hundreds of him. Merry Christmas to all Indianapolis! n u tt Indianapolis uptown theaters today offer; ‘'Delicious” at the Apollo, “Her Majesty, Love,” at the Indiana, | ‘‘Sooky” at the Circle, “Ben-Hur” at the Palace, “Touchdown” at the Ohio, and Marion Sunshine at the ; Lyric. tt it a Neighborhood houses today offer: ; "Beloved Bachelor” at the Emer- | son, “Penrod and Sam” at the Princess, “Murder by the Clock” at the Mecca, “Huckleberry Finn” at the Tacoma, “Fifty Fathoms Deep” and “The Fighting Sheriff” at the Garfield, “Devotion” and “Honeymoon Lane” at the Hamilton, “The Runaround” at the Orpheum, “Local Boy Makes Good” at the Belmont, "Salvation Nell” and “Skippy” at the Roosevelt, “Huckleberry Finn” at the Tuxedo, “The Cisco Kid” at the Talbott, “Caught Plastered” at the Irving, “Mother's Millions” at the Stratford, “Rich Man’s Folly” at the Fountain Square, and “Border Law” at the Granada. NAB NEGRO WOMAN Police Board Interurban, Arrest Newcastle Robbery Suspect. Responding to a plea from Newcastle police, an Indianapolis patrol boarded an inbound interurban car at city limits Thursday night and arrested Miss Thelma Moore, 30, Negro, who gave her address as 521 North senate avenue. She is wanted by Newcastle police for question'ng in connection with a robbery th ere, local polig& said.
On request, sent with stamped, addressed envelope, Mr. Ripley will furnish proof of anything depicted by him.
WATCH BORDER FOR DONNELLY ABDUCTOR Authorities J Say Marshall Depew May Try to Enter Canada. By United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo., Dec. 25. Search for Marshall Depew, steam shovel operator who turned kidnaper, today centered at the Canadian border at Buffalo as police sought a speedy roundup of abductors of Mrs. Nell Donnelly, millionaire Kansas City garment manufacturer. The fugitive’s wife, Mrs. Ethel Depew, was held in Bloomsburg, Pa., and will be returned here to face charges of kidnaping, a capital offense in Missouri. She will waive extradition, police said. Three other alleged members of the gang have been arrested. Police were searching for an Italian, Vic Bontura. Charles Mele, 29, Italian, and two Kansas farmers, Lacy Browning and Paul Scheldt, are in custody. Browning and Scheldt confessed, but pleaded not guilty.
ORPHAN DIES IN YULE EVE CRASH: TWO HURT Bus Carrying Forty Children Hits Pole, Top Is Caved In. By United Press SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 25.—Two children were in a hospital today and a third was dead as the result of a Christmas eve accident in which a bus carrying forty orphans to a holiday party skidded into a telephone pole and w T as wrecked. Mickey Bobotes, 6, was killed almost instantly when the heavy bus top caved in. Lester Griffiths, 8, and Lester Sharrard, 11, received cuts. and bruises, but the other children escaped unharmed. Ray Madigan, bus driver, said he was climbing a steep hill when the wheels began slipping on wet pavement. Rather than roll backward into a crowded intersection, Madigan guided the heavy machine into the pole. The top collapsed, pinning the youngsters inside. Enforced Fasting Charged By Times Special COLUMBUS, Ind., Dec. 25.—Mrs. Dorothy Christian, seeking a divorce from Mort Christian, charges that for two days in succession he would forbid her to eat. She asks alimony of S3OO and the custody of a daughter.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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Following is the explanation of Ripley’s “Believe It or Not,” which appeared in Thursday’s Times: Made a Ilole-in-One on a Bet— Royal G. Warren of 1416 Stanford street, Houston, Tex., on June 16, 1931, made a wager with W. M. Gaston ($5 to SSO) that he could make a within one hour’s time, shooting as many balls as he could within that time. The hole was to be about 135 yards. Warren and four of his associates went to the Brae-Burn Country Club in Houston, and chose the second hole for the test. Warren shot with various clubs, and finally sank the 100th ball in exactly 53 minutes, using a midiron. The winning of the tvager was witnessed and verified by the loser and three other players. Captain Johnsen Sailed Alone Across the Atlantic —On Aug. 21, 1876, Captain Alfred Johnsen landed at Liverpool, England, completing a sixty-six-day voyage from Gloucester, Mass., alone. His small boat Centennial, was one of his own make, of three-quarter ton measurement. The vessel was decked over, except standing room and hatchway, fitted with two water-tight compartments, and had a single mast which could be hoisted or lowered at will. Her full canvas was a mainsail, two jibs, and a square sail. Though lone mariners still are undertaking lengthy cruises, some even going around the world, there are few, if any, who ever succeeded in a craft as small as Captain Johnsen’s. The City of Mud-Eaters—Yezd, in Central Persia, is situated in the midst of a vast salt desert extending thousands of miles in all directions. The nearest inhabited place is Ispahan, which is more than 200 miles away. The solitude in which Yezd is situated makes it one of the strangest human settlements on earth. The city in its entirety is built of mud, roughly moulded and dried in the sun. Its fifty mosques, sixty-five public baths, eight schools, all the houses, furniture, grain receptacles, etc., are all made of mud. So are’ the goods displayed on mud shelves, and even its bakers’ ovens down to the very doors. Mud is the chief article of diet of its inhabitants (numbering about 45,000) and is cooked and enjoyed in a variety of ways. Saturday—“A Mayor Who Quit His Job to Clean Streets.” Hawaii expects a record sugar crop this year due to favorable growing conditions on the islands for the last two years.
Zaiser & Zaiser Incorporated Brokers Unlisted Securities 129 E. Market LI. 8375 Rl. "161
AMUSEMENTS MURAT THEATER TUES., DEC. OD NITE ONLY Princeton University TRIANGLE CLUB Presents a Laughing, Chaffing, Romantic Musical Comedy “SPANISH BLADES” Cast and Chorus Includes 45 PRINCETON STUDENTS Orch. $3, $2.50, $2. Bal., $2, 51.50, fl Lower Boxes, each $25. Upper Box Seats, $3 MURAT THEATER. Tel. LI. 8948
mU Phone Rl. 7277 Seats Now Selling BERKELL PLAYERS Opening Next Monday Night In “REBOUND” pricks Ficor r 60c. Bal. 35c-25c MATINEES WED.. THURS., SAT. ENTIRE LOWER FLOOR, 35e. ENTIRE BAL., Sse. Mafl Orders >ll led Promptly— Make Season Reservation* Now!
HOOVER SHUNTS DAWES, PINCHOT FROM HIS PATH Acts of President Seen as Plan to Assure His Renomination. By Bcripps-Haward Setespaper Alliance WASHINGTON, Dec. 25.—President Hoover is playing Santa Claus for himself in order to insure that a renomination will drop into his political stocking next year. Besides revising the system of selecting delegates so as to give him a stronger grip on party machinery, the President and Republican bosses apparently are making sure that the two men most prominently advanced as possible rivals will be eliminated from the race. They are Charles G. Dawes, ambassador to Great Britain, and Governor Gifford Pinchot of Pennsylvania. Ambassador Dawes, for whom a quiet movement has been started by anti-Hoover interests in the west and east, has been named head of the American delegation to the Geneva disarmament conference in February. Simultaneously with this announcement, Henry L. Stimson,‘secretary of state, warned the delegates to prepare for a seven-months’ stay in Switzerland. This means that Dawes is almost certain to remain in office and can hardly permit his name to be used, even surreptiously, and also that he will be absent from the country through the period when presidential primaries, political arrangements and the conventions will be determing the fate of Hoover or anybody who may seek to oppose him. Pinchot, according to present plans of Pennsylvania politicians, including Senator David A. Reed and Andrew W. Mellon, secretary of the treasury, will be included among the delegates-ai;-large to the Republican convention from that state. This is regarded as an offering of the olive branch to the ex-Bull, Mooser, who has been prominently mentioned as one who might contest even in certain western primaries against Hoover. If Pinchot accepts, it presumably must be on the basis that he will favor Hoover’s renomination, for he would not be chosen otherwise. In the past the Pennsylvania executive has not been so honored. In fact he made a fight for a place among the “big seven” in 1928, but was defeated by the Reed-Mellon group. It is not believed the Pennsylvania politicians would have let their program become known unless they were assured the Governor would go along. Moreover, Mrs. Pinchot may have the regulars’ backing in her plan to oppose Represetnative Louis T. McFadden for renomination next April.
_ AMUSEMENTS iwiißuay wwftamftaif^ fm 'wmmm (jM IftSßP' LEW AYRES g|Rj£gr “HEAVEN ON EARTH" —On (he Stage— MARION SUNSHINE XMAS KIDDIES’ REVUE and Other Star RKO Acts |jpr Doors Open Today, 12:00 First Show at 12:15 I I o n the Stage -r “" 1 Whoopee! |’, Beloved Scamp of the Screen COLBY and | Watch for j||| “SCOOTER” MURRY REVUE new M LOWRY WAN-WAN-SAN EV e fg Original Tough Gny of CHINESE I FROLIC Onr Gang Comedies _____ 33a (IN PERSON) REYNOLDS and 11 1,000 IHI II All New Songs and Dances WHITE SEATS DALTON &~CRAIG LITTLE PIPIFAX qe! ■ ‘This and That” and Company OjC
TtF fflbaßPgoiSSriONS ii 11 ill N EUarHBORHPQ & THEATER* ~~
NORTH SIDE mwmm MARY ROBSON' and JAMES HALL in “MOTHER’S MILLIONS” Matinee—Novelty and News. GRTCT Noble at Mass. BILL BOYD in 1 "MURDER BY THE CLOCK.” Matinee—Comedy Cartoon. t 9 l fsj J Talbott at 22d WARNER BAXTER in "THE CISCO KID.” Matinee—Comedy—Serial. SOUTH SIDE IIDItH VHfrl 1429 s ’ Meridian RALPH GRAVES in ‘‘SALVATION NELL." Matinee—Comedy. Matinee waaftHESZiLUGEO. BANCROFT in “Rich Man’s Folly.” Kidfi’es Xmas Party Tonight pnwivni at Fountain Sq. BUCK*JONES in “BORDER LAW” 2503 Shelby wULUywU Matinee \ Two Features: •’FIFTY FATHOMS DEEP” and “THE FIGHTING SHERIFF”
KIND WORD OFTEN AIDS JOBLESS MAN
Indianapolis Foundation Report Shows Many Helped Here. Persons who take trivial woes too seriously have been cheered by the Indianapolis employment bureau, a free service maintained by the Indianapolis Foundation, said a report today. This is but one of the duties undertaken by the bureau, however. It is considered a vital function. “An encouraging remark sometimes goes a long ways,” George E. Gill, director, said. "Months afterward an applicant will tell one of our staff how a suggestion started him thinking—and serious thought will work wonders.” The bureau served 5,830 persons. In the year ending 1930, more than 19,430 return calls were made to the bureau by persons who have registered during the seven years of its activity. Eight hundred fifty persons obtained jobs out of 2,302 persons referred to 1,602 positions. Nearly 3,400 new applicants were registered and information and advice was given to 2,448 persons who did not register. The bureau serves office, sales and professional men and women, factory and domestic women, and boys who are out of work. Officers and the board of directors of the bureau are: John F. White, chairman; C. C. Winegardner, vice-chairman; Rhoda M. Morrow, secretary; Eugene C. Foster, treasurer; W. R. Allen, Earl Buchanan, Harry E. Calland, Jack L. Evans, W. A. Hacker, W. B. Harding, J. I. Holcomb, Joseph A. Kebler, D. B. Luten and D. H. Winers. OFFICIALS FACE " TRIAL Lake County Treasurer and Two Commissioners Accused. HAMMOND, Ind., Dec. 25.—Trials of Hazel K. Groves, Lake county treasurer, and Commissioners William Linton and James Black were set on the Lake criminal court calendar Thursday. Linton and Black, charged in grand jury indictments with negligence in allowing claims, will be tried Jan. 7. Groves, who was president of the American State bank, East Chicago, now closed, is charged with overdrafts by Prosecutor Robert G. Estill after a grand jury failed to indict him. His trial was set for Jan. 11.
MOTION PICTURES I TO “touchdown” 1
EAST SIDE Double Feature: “DEVOTON” and ‘‘HONEYMOON LANE”,. fTTn7 # l B ■ 3155 E. 10th JOAN BLONDEL in “BLOND CRAZY." MAJiiAtixt JOHNNY HINES in “THE RUNAROUND.” Comedy 4630 E. 10th PAUL LUCAS in , , “Beloved Bachelor”—Matinee —Serial. UlflaAlMs] MaUnee BERT WHEELER in “CAUGHT PLASTERED” TOTOTC *-,&£: ™ JACKIE COOGAN in “HUCKLEBERRY FINN” .Is 1 dfcdjMJUe JACKIE COOGAN in “HUCKLEBERRY FINN." Matinee 10c. WEST SIDE w - wash, and Belmont JOE E. BROWN in “LOCAL BOY MAKES GOOD.” Matinee—Serial. Birwry*! 3540 w. Mich. KadmAUCsHaJH Matinee JEAN HARLOW in "PLATINUM BLOND”’ Ceatedy. Novelty and News
WESTERN POLICE HUNT LOS ANGELES CLUBMAN Wife Fears Raymond Reeve. Former Dartmouth Star, Met Disaster. By United Press LOS ANGELES, Dec. 25—At the request of his wife, who feared he had met with disaster, police soughs through three states and along the Mexican border today for Raymond O. Reeve, prominent clubman and former Dartmouth football star. Reeve, a vice-president of the Southern California Dartmouth Club, disappeared a week ago with a man supposed to have been an official of the six companies builders of Hoover dam but who, Mrs. Reeve said she learned Thursday, was an impostor. He supposedly left for Las Vegas, Nev„ and Boulder City, but failed to arrive. A check revealed his companion had given a false name, Mrs. Reeve told police. QUIZ WOUNDED MAN Tells Cops He Was Shot in Cheek during Argument Thursday. Police are holding Calvin Danforth, 39, of 229 West Thirteenth street, on vagrancy charges while they investigate the shooting of Danforth in the cheek Thursday night. Danforth said Pete Smith of the 200 block on Smith street shot him in an argument. Danforth was treated at city hospital. His wound is not serious.
MOTION PICTURES imwi _ LAST TIMES TODAY PICTURE THATUVESTrifiOULH THE Iben-hurl NOW IN SOUND f? TOMORROW ([ NORMA mm ROBERT j Montgomery I "'PamUcXmks'' I A Metro-foWuy'i-Mtyer Pictmc They battled their wav through a rough-and-tem-ble romance to divorce! But they still loved each T W other. “OUR GANG KIDS” COMEDY HEARST METROTONE NEWS LEW WHITE ORGANLOGUE
MARILYN rt 1 ILVrcr. mtuesTY L O V ■€• J| HI BEN LYON, LEON ERROL, W. < . FIELDS I fH§ I Ford Sterling. Chester Conklin and Others! 91 '^* B9HII I Doubi.e f*** ; ** mm ~ I HI NfiW TriCkS! “Nursery Rhymes” II cfWRZ/e I H |T PATH KOLA I ■ I nAtllvX • / IN PERSON Plus H B yuv I 3 V\y euctlle sisters II I \ ■■ Schlrlitl’a Wnnderetfes ;Jk, . and his own Eg Itarhurina and Pal i££ JOY GANG M Novelty Clinton I in "Musical Wheel” Sunkist Beauties IPublix Kiddies’ Free Dancing Class, I Ballroom, Tomorrow 10 A. M. |
BBfeflßMMlfin Our Xmas MDuHSsII f-ift to ah Indianapolis! STjanet FARRELL® m fl WENDCL * Musk b< GCOSGf GBWHWIN sf “SE.I'ON’B GREETINGS” in ' lv and thrili I MOVIETONE NEWS that will . apth\c I K Be— >"
DEC. 25, 1931
OWNER OF CAFE SUES FOP. CURB Seeks to Bar Neighbors’ Interference With ‘Frolic.’ Suit for an injunctiqp to prohibit eleven adjoining residents from interfering with operation of the “Midnight Frolic” in Hendricks county, was filed this week in Morgan county circuit court, it w'as learned today. The suit was filed in behalf of the receiver of the business, owned formerly by Mrs. Dorothy M. Dye, whom, it is alleged, was forced into receivership because of the “ill favor and animosity of those who favored law’ violations.” Twenty-four alleged acts by the defendants are set out in the suit. Defendants are Theodore Harman, S. Hamilton, Lloyd Turpin, Henderson Turpin, Luelle Turpin, Ruth Harvey, Woodson Feltmer, Lee Marsh, John Fletner, E. L. Pierson and Albert H. Kennedy.
MOTION PICTURES flftflElS [TODAY— CHRISTMAS JOY!J I JACKIE COOPER I again as “Skippy” himself ■ ROBERT COOGAN I I in title role of dear ’Sooky jg I Skippy and Sooky together I hagain as pals in new id- 1 I ventures in Shantytowul ■ D6//0 ijffi IiJUVRp f ™ ORGAN SOLoI/H .$1 M!CKEY|| n% MOUSE ISL| Christmas Cartoon
