Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 208, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 January 1933 — Page 7

JAN. 9, 1933

HOOSIER' LABEL ‘STIGMA,’ SAYS ARTIST IN SUIT Elmer Taflinger to File for Change ‘in Place of Nativity.’ Petition asking that circuit court change "the place f his nativity" | was to be filed today by Elmer Taflinger. Indianapolis artist. The term Indiana artists,” as far ! as state officials are concerned, "amounts only to a stigma” in the! Hoosier state, the suit alleges. In support of this, Taflinger cites the fact that Thomas Hart Benton, New York artist, was given the contract to paint murals at the Chi- i cago world’s fair, depicting the his- j tory of the state, while Indiana artists were ignored. The contract was awarded by Richard Licber, Indiana state director of conservation and head of the Indiana world’s fair commission,! Taflinger aveis. The commission, appointed by j Governor Hurry G. Leslie, held no ; competition for the awarding of the contract, the suit declares. Lists Many Artists Indiana artists also were ignored in the Indiana World War Memorial plaza project, now near completion, Taflinger charges. A long list of Indiana artists "competent to do and perform in a highly commendable manner any kind of artistic work” is given in the petition. Taflinger charges further that Hoosier artists and craftsmen also were not recognized in contracts for the George Rogers Clark memorial at Vincennes “the only thing supplied by Indiana was the dirt,” the : suit alleges. In asking change of the site of his birth, Taflinger requests the ! court designate “some place more conductive to artistic recognition | by Indiana officials.” Worked With Belasco The petition explains, however, j "the petitioner loves the state of j Indiana and is proud of the great contribution to art which has been made by her sons and daughters.” Taflinger was born at 27 Byram place, March 3, 1891. He began his art study in the city public schools, continued it at Manual high school and at the Art Students’ League of New York. He served as art director for David Belasco for eight and one- ' hall years, and made eleven trips! to Europe. He also studied in Italy. For the last four years, he has con- j ducted life drawing and painting! classes in the Pierce building, Market and Pennsylvania streets. DRINKING DEATH PROBED Quantity of Alcohol to Be Analyzed by C oroner's Aid. Dr. John Salb, deputy coroner, today will analyze a small quantity of alcohol found in the room where a man believed to be Jack Kelly died on Sunday. The man, about 50, whose permanent address is unknown, was found | in the room of Francis Cook at a \ rooming house operated by John Price at 16 South Senate avenue. ' Police were told that Cook and Kelly had been drinking, when Kelly suddenly fell to the floor. Death was caused by acute alcoholism, Salb said. The body was sent to the | city morgue.

DENTISTS HOLD PARLEY All-Day Conference of Associations Convened Here Sunday. Broadening of the dental associations’ interest in public health and professional standards were discussed Sunday at an all-day conference of trustees and officials of the Indiana State Dental Association and component district societies in the Washington. Tentative program for the diamond jubilee convention of the Indiana association, to be held May 15, 16, and 17, in Indianapolis, was outlined. SIGN KEITH CONTRACT Socialist Leaders Complete Deal for Norman Thomas Speech. Contract for the rental of Keith's theater for the address by Norman Thomas to be given in Indianapolis j Wednesday night. Jan. 18. has been ! signed, local Socialist party lead- j ers sard today. The lecture by Thomas will be followed by seven other lectures by authorities on social and economic questions in the Y. M. C. A. building on consecutive Wednesday nights. The committee in charge of the series, which is sponsored by the League for Industrial Democracy in New' York, is composed of Gertrude Brown, Harold E. Fey, F. E. DeFranz, C. E. Knapp. Helen Swoyer, Roy Wilson and R. O. Berg. Gone, but Not Forgotten Automobiles reported to colice as stolen belone to C. H. Whitselt. Noblesvlle. Ind. Ford coupe. 590-806. uom Noolesville, Ind. Harrv Glass. R. R. 5. Bc.x 44 Beech Grove. Chetrolet coach. 119-761. Irom Market and New Jersey streets. Abe Cohen 1018 South Meridian street. Ford tudor. 81-084. from Morris and Union streets. T. A. Bowen. 2242 Broadwav. Chevrolet coupe. 7-551. from 700 Middle drive Woodruff place. R. A. Reinhard. 2814 East Sixteenth street. Pontiac coach 123-015 from Vermont ar.d Pennsylvania streets Vern W. Peacock. 246 North Mount street. Ford coupe. 68-008. from Meridian and Maryland streets Mary Hicks. 1530 North Senate avenue. Hunmobile sedan, from 1530 North Senate avenue. Dan Brown. Brownsburc Ind . Ford coune. from 900 East Morris street. Clavton Ravbuurn. 5826 West Washinu- j ton street. Buica coupe, from 2024 Roosevelt avenue. Lester L. Christian 2102 Barth avenue. Fcrd coach. 19-401. from 2102 Barth avenue j BACK HOME AGAIN Cecil A. Kiser. 5127 Washington bottle- j sard. Podee sedan, found on Hamilton countv ane west of State Roan No 3! Stolen automobiles recovered bv police belone to: Dorsev Schmk. 2239 Parker avenue. Oakland coach, found in from of 1818 Inemham street. Oliver Collins. 62' 3 North Brookville road, iouna at 1005 Church street. Henrv Adamson. Terre Haute. Ind Cl-.rvsler sedan, found rear of 1801 North Alabama street. Edward Lit;-. 1442 North Chester avenue Chrysler sedan. 27-924, found at Meridian and South street. Abe Cohen. 1018 South Meridian street. Ford tudor. found at 920 Division street Kav Gelaer. 1723 North Meridian street. Chevrolet tudor. found al Fortieth street ar.d Bvram avenue. Eueene Leonard. 2206 North Hardine i street. Ford coupe, found at rear of 423 West St. Clair street, automobile stripped. Charles Lawrence. 1002 West Thirty-fifth ; street. Ford roadster, found at Danville, j 2nd., automobile stripped. i

Sweet Land of Volstead — No. 5 THE TIDE TURNS AGAINST DRYS Huge Section of Population Clings to Gin and Brew

Forrest Dari* presents today the fifth of xlx articles on the amazing twelveTear Volxtead era and the fartorx leading up to it—a subject of increased interest with the present battle in the lame duck session of congress. BY FORREST DAVIS Timps Staff Writer 1 Copyright, 1933. hv New York WorldTclcgram Corporationi A FILE of steam tramps and . schooner-rigged sailing vessels lay sullenly off the threemile limit beyond Sandy Hook. That was Rum Row. In Chicago, Alphonse bScarface Al) Capone, recently of the Five Points, New York, had, by reliable report, 700 "guns" enrolled in his private beer militia. In California prohibition enforcement agents padlocked a Redwood tree, which innocently sheltered a still. Now and again an agent of the federal government shot a citizen suspected of transporting a few slugs of rum. Periodically, hardy guzzlers died like flies from the effects of inadequately "cooked” industrial alcohol. The newspapers and public forums had become cluttered with the utterances of red-faced gentlemen angrily seeking to prove fl) that prohibition would, if it hadn't already, prohibit; <2> that prohibition did not prohibit; (3) that Volsteadism had increased crime; '4i that Volsteadism had diminished crime; (5) that prosperity was traceable to prohibition; (6) that, prosperity was in a way related to prohibition. In spite of the Volstead act and state enforcement measures, some of which rivaled in barbarity Great Britain's penal code in the eighteenth century, speakeasies multiplied in city and village; the consumption of wine grapes, prepared malt ingredients, corn syrup and industrial alcohol leaped astoundingly. tt tt a THE country, if we were to credit the anxious assertions of the startled clergy, educators and parents, was on a prolonged jamboree. And in 1926 the late Wayne B. Wheeler announced with justifiable satisfaction that each congress s>nce 1916, which adopted the eighteenth amendment, had grown “dryer.” The American people, no matter how they voted, would not, it was obvious, give up the drink. By the end of 1923, when alarmed prohibitionists began loudly to upbraid the drinking classes for flouting the law and, especially in- 1925, when Smedley Butler retreated from his dry command in Philadelphia, the outlines of a nation-wide passive rebellion clearly could be made out. The people, increasingly, spurned the graces and fruits of prohibition. The wets, still convinced of the impossibility of political redress, redoubled their undirected attempt to drink the dry regime under. The importance of the silent, unorganized prohibition revolt can not be overemphasized. Had the citizens submitted, enforcement would have presented no problem. It was not the weakness of the

SON OF 'BIG SIX' IS HURL WIFE KILLED Plane Crash Brings Tragedy to Mathewson Jr. By f niter] rrefts SHANGHAI, Jan. 9.—Lieutenant Christopher Mathewson Jr., son of Christy Mathewson. major league pitcher, was injured seriously, and his bride of two weeks killed in an airplane crash here Sunday. Lieutenant Mathewson suffered fracture of one arm and both legs. Physicians said he probably would recover. His bride, the former Margaret Phillipps of New York, died shortly after she was taken to the county hospital, in the fashionable west end residential district of the International settlement of Shanghai.

HOLD FUNERAL RITES FOR SALEM CLARK Former State Senator Laid to Last Rest Here. Funeral services for Salem D. Clark, 62, 3076 North Delaware street, former state senator, who died Friday night of heart disease, were held at 11 a. m. today m the Flanner and Buchanan mortuary, 25 West Fall Creek Parkway. Burial was in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Clark was born in Hendricks county and attended Valparaiso university and Central Normal college at Danville. He was a state senator from Marion county in the 1909 and 1911 sessions and in 1922 was a nominee for superior court judge. He was a member of the Broadway M. E. church. Evergreen Lodge, F. and A. M.; the Scottish Rite. Sahara Grotto, the I. O. O. F„ the order of Eastern Star and the Indianapolis Bar Association. UTOIST SEVERELY HURT jar Is Struck by Train; Still in Serious Condition. Condition of Arthur Brown. 29, of near Brownsburg, who was injured in a collision with a train Saturday, remained serious today, city hospital physicians said. Brown was thrown fifty feet when his car was struck at a Brownsburg crossing by an east bound Big Four train. He regained consciousness on the way to the hospital, where it is said that his injuries are a broken leg, head bruises and an injured hand. Wreckage of the car was scattered along the track. The motor of the automobile was found 800 feet from the crossing, it was said. j

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government—although as a matter of fact congress never was willing to appropriate sufficient funds effectually to dry up the land—but the refusal of the people to accept, which nullified the eighteenth amendment. tt a a THE social, moral and economic arguments which finally brought about a reversal in this year’s general election would have gone for nothing if a vast bloc in the population had not steadily agitated in the direction of their thirsfis from Jan. 16, 1920, onward. It was a gay revolt, not morbid, and vertically distributed through the population. 111-nature generally was reserved for the orators and debaters on both sides. Mr. Wheeler, Bishop Cannon, the Rev. Deets Pickett of the Methodist Board of Prohibition, Temperance and Public Morals, fretted and stewed during the middle years. The victory of 1917 ’lB, ’2O, once so sweet, definitely had turned sour. No access of enforcement severity, no appeal to patriotism, good morals, or sportsmanship seemed able to budge the dogged rebels in all classes. They were drinking down the eighteenth amendment. The rich insisted upon cocktails, aged whiskies and vintage wines. The middle classes, economically speaking, carted bottles to country club dances, cached flasks in lockers, poured rivers of cocktails at home parties. Business men were compelled to offer a snifter to customers who before prohibition would primly have declined to drink "during business hours.” The working classes made home brew and grape wine, and drank in old-fashioned saloons in factory neighborhoods, unchanged except for name and the littered condition of the front windows. The entirely dispossessed gulped "smoke,” a low-grade “washed” alcohol mixed with water, retailing at 5 to 15 cents a shot. o tt o THE most noticeable increase in the ranks of the drinkers dur-, ing the Great Revolt came from the frailer sex. Historical students have been

Congressman Is Suicide in Grief for Dead Wife

Representative Kendall Wili Be Buried on Wednesday: Bullet Fatal. By T nitrd Press WASHINGTON, Jan. 9. The body of Representative Samuel A. Kendall. 73-year-old Pennsylvania ! Republican, will be laid to rest on I Wednesday beside that of his wife, whose death drove him to suicide. Mrs. Kendall died last August, i shortly before they would have celej brated their fiftieth weddding annij versary. The veteran congressman in a farewell note to his children said he had been "unable to throw off my grief" over her death. Sunday morning he breakfasted with his daughter, Mrs. Grace Angus, then went to his offfice in the house office building, made himself comfortable in an easy chair, and fired a .38-caliber bullet into his I brain. A note on his desk said: “My dear children: My work on earth is completed. The sudden I death of your mother was the most j severe shock of my whole life. I ; have been unable to throw off my grief. Every day has added to my sorrow, and I can not longer bear my suffering, which I have kept from you. "Your mother has been caling me ! to join her and little Van in heaven and I can no longer resist. I am going to join them.” (Van was a son who died in 1913.) Kendall had represented the twenty-fourth Pennsylvania district | since 1918. He was defeated last November, but friends said this was in no way responsible for his despondency. His home was in Meyersdale. Pa., where the funeral will be held at 2 p. m. Wednesday. In addition to the daughter. Mrs. Angus, he is survived by two sons, Samuel A. Jr. and John W. SOKOLSKY TO SPEAK Expert on Orient to Talk at Town Hall Friday Morning, Those to whom the situation in ' the far east has been a mere Chinese puzzle will have an opportunity to get a clearer understanding of the chaos there when George E. SQkolsky speaks in English's theater Friday morning. Sokolsky, speaker in the Town Hall series, is a recognized ruthority on the Orient, having lived more than thirteen years in China. State Pastors to Confer The fourth Indiana pastors’ threeday conference will open Monday, Jan. 16, in the North Methodist church with numerous religious i authorities of variout denominations ias speakers. *■

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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Rollin Kirby’s prohibition scarecrow- shows apprehension as the tide of anti-dry sentiment becomes overwhelming. fond of saj’ing that one cause for the rise of teetotal statuteism was the exclusion by the pioneer male of the women from his convivial life and resorts. Well, by no one knows what social process, prohibition opened the swinging doors wide to the women folk. Once the saloon became an unregulated, outlaw institution, the girls entered into full possession of its joy. The amazing increase in drinking among women during the Volsteadian rebellion certainly is not one of the least of its significant aspects. In the years from 1923 to 1927

New Legislators Dentist Takes Seat in 1933 Legislature

Dr. E. Millard Dill, Democrat, dentist and farmer, represents Hendricks county in the lower house of the 1933 legislature. Dill) 37. married, and the father of two children, has

practiced dentistry in Plainfield for fourteen years. While he has had no previous political experience, Di’l always lias been active in civic affairs. He is a member of the Plainfield Lions Club, Hendricks County Farm Bureau, the American Legion, and state and national dental as-

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sociations. Dill is a graduate of Moortsville high school and the Indiana university school of dentistry. DAVID LLOYD GEORGE LAUDS TECHNOCRACY ‘May Save World From Chaos,' Says Famed Briton. By United Press LONDON. Jan. 9.—Technocracy, or some similar theory put into practice, may save the world from utter chaos and "ultimate revolution,” in the opinion of David Lloyd George, England's war-time premier, expressed in an article in the Sunday Dispatch. Lloyd George is one of the numerous men high in the cofidence of the people who have been giving serious consideration to the problems created by man's competition with machinery. He wrote: “Until peace has been made between man and the machine, there will be chaos, unemployment, and ultimately revolution.” His comment was one of many in the Sunday press indicating the grip with which technocracy has seized popular imagination. The new theory has swept the British isles and Europe with a rapidity similar to that which reports indvate it has taken on in America.

the political tide had actually begun to turn in the latter year—widespread discussion developed the novel idea that national bonedry prohibition was not as irrevocably fixed in our system as had been supposed. The wets, thoughtful as well as merely indignant, summoned courage; the unnatural, hypocritical censorship so long applied to wet sentiments was relaxed. Presently, on many hands, questions were asked as to the effects of Volsteadism on crime, prosperity, health and the drinking habits of the people. There were no pat answers. Statistics generally were unreliable, satisfying the bias of whichever side collected them. The drys claimed credit for the country’s seeming good times, but disavowed thn" for the alarming increase in violent crime. a tt tt ORGANIZATIONS of disinterested wets sprang up. The Moderation League, Inc., for example. Captain William H. Stayton, Baltimore shipping man, braved the wrath of the AntiSaloon League with his association. Opposed to the prohibition amendment, which soon would be exhibiting a list of contributors from among the most highlyplaced industrialists and churchgoing men of the republic. The acrid disputation of the period did little to clarify the dilemma. But it d'd reassure the gallant drinking rebels that the eighteenth amendment bore no sacred character, and that political change might be possible. As wet leaders arose, their example stimulated others until it no longer was a signal for excommunication when a Christian brother expressed doubt of the heaven-sent nature of Volsteadism. And so swiftly did the amendment rise and decline in popular esteem, that within a few months, the drys definitely were forced on the defensive. Nation-wide bonedry prohibition was on its way to the boneyard. The rapid succession of events which culminated in the repealist victory at the polls in November will be discussed in the last article of this series.

OR. DAVID A. HOUSE, NOTED DENTIST, DIES Funeral Services to Be Held Here Tuesday. Funeral services for Dr. David A. House, 65. of 5245 North Pennsylvania street, whp died Sunday in , St. Vincent’s hospital following a brief illness, will be held at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Edward L. Mitchell, 3710 Washington boulevard, at 2 p. m. Tuesday. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Dr. House, a graduate of the Indiana university school of dentistry, was one of the most widely known members of the profession of dentistry in Indiana and was a member cf many dental organizations in the state. He also was a member of Sigma Delta fraternity, the | Scottish Rite and the Murat Shrine. FAIL TO IDENTIFY 2 SUSPECTS IN KILLING Men Arrested Sunday in Grocery Holdup. Doubt that two men arrested Sunday as suspects in the murder of Chris Wade during a grocery robbery last week could be identified positively ss the men taking part in the robbery was expressed by detectives today. George Willoughby, 21, of 222 Minerva street, and Kenneth Thompson, 20. of 817 West New York street, are held under $5,000 bond pending visits by witnesses to the shooting. Detectives said both men had been arrested on other charges and that Willoughby only recently was paroled from the Indiana state reformatory. An automobile similar to the one , used in ihe attempted robbery in which Wade was shot wah found in ! front of the home of Willoughby’s mother sn 19 North California street. impounded the car. Early Sunday morning a raiding squad headed by Lieutenant Ralph Dean captured Willoughby, who was asleep in his home. He offered no resistance. Thompson also was taken at his nome, after the capture cf Willoughby Wade was shot and killed Thursday as he stood in the grocery of Otto Alderdorf, CSO South Lyon l : avenue. Man, 75, Injured by Auto Mike Reddington. 75, of 416 West South street, was taken to City hospital this morning in critical condition after being struck by the : automobile of Charles C. Gardner, 42, of 5832 Guilford avenue, at Ken--1 tucky avenue and West street.

TED NEWBERRY, GANG GHIEFTAIN, SLAININ STATE •Ride’ Death Is Added to Long List of Unsolved Chicago Killings. By r nitrd Press CHICAGO. Jan. 9.—The ride assassination of Edward <Ted Newberry, last of the active north side gang ’big shots,” was added today to the long list of unsolved under- ’ world killings on police records. Newberry’s body, riddled with bul- i lets and shotgun slugs, was found j Saturday on a lonely road some j fifteen miles east of Gary, Ind. It lay today on a morgue slab in Chestertown, Ind., awaiting claimants. The widow was reported on the way from Miami, Fla. Gang associates of the slain man professed 1 to know nothing about her. Newberry, a soft-voiced, suave man of powerful physique, had lived I through the major era of gang dominance. He started in with Dion O’Banion. and lived to see Al Capone behind prison bars. He was memorable as the only major gangster, who ever turned traitor to one gang, and joined another, to live to profit by his perfidy. Newberry had been allied with George (Bugs) Moran and Joe Aiello prior to the St. Valentine's day massacre in 1929. He had left the garage where seven Moran gangsters were mowed down by machine gun fire only a few i*inutes before the slaughter began. He was accused of having "put the finger on” the men in return for an assignment of the north side territory by Capone's syndicate. Whether or no, he joined Capone immediately thereafter. When his body was found in a ditch, Newberry wore costly clothing, including silk underwear and a silk shirt, and had on one of the diamond encrusted belt buckles that Capone gave to his friends in his j heyday. C, OF C. COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN RENAMED Several Heads Are Chosen by Borinstein. Reappointment of several major committee chairmen has been announced by Louis J. Borinstein, Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce president. The civic affairs committee will | continue to be guided by William ! Fortune, chairman, and Dr. CarleI ton B. McCulloch, vice-chairman. Charles F. Coffin was named legal affairs committee chairman and James W. Noel vice-chairman. C. H. Rottger. City Trust Company receiver, will remain as industrial commission chairman, and Paul |Q. Richey, Russel M. Seeds Comj pany president, as marketing chairj man. Theodore B. Griffith was re- | named marketing committee vice- | chairman. j Chairmen of the five major di- ! visions of the industrial commission also w'ere named. They include Charles Brossman, engineering; George S. Olive, financial; C. L. Harrod, location; George Vonnegut, distribution, and William Higburg, chemical. Hunt Owner of Burning Home Police are searching today for Pete Stanach. 1045 Ketcham street, ! who fled from his burning home I late Sunday night while firemen were fighting the blaze. Damage of about SSOO resulted.

MOTION PICTURES Slstrrs Knpprlle AM -W Happy Moore iU,)I V. WJ. George Moore jUSr/j. . Holtr-Holtx TZjs J V an<l / 30 tdiotir | ** Entertain,'rg 1\ She takes her place among /f •nJI the GREAT WLS ’ 1\ SYLVIA SIDNEY f \ ‘ •-. jL.-, “Madame IS Butterfly” f~. /■. ~*~l f Ed X with j Hfsener \ Cary Grant and the 1 Charlie I lnd.hConem|Kules I vJj u AMUSEMENTS THE PANTHER WOMAN In ‘ISLAND OF LOST SOULS” • with : Chas. Laughton . . Dick Arlen Leila Hyams . . Bela Lugosi ■ BING CROSBY in Sennett Comedy, “Blue of Night" —Short Features—-m-T MMS “BREVITIES of 1933” The Hit of the Season with RAYNOR LEHR and HU 30—STARS—30 Here in Person Algo Other Big RKO Actg r7AM-14MTT3 on the Screen Slim Summerviile—Zasu Pitts in “They Just Had to Get Married” Entire New Show Starting Friday

HIIHO Knowing your "a, s’’ in HI-HO land Is something else again. Here's the letter A. Cut out the puzzle pieces, blacken their backs (for you may want to turn them over), and form the silhouette of the letter A by rearranging them. , i—! ... . , Tough beasts, these hippos! How many shots did you take to bag. him? Here’s the way the blocks go together to form his silhouette. ATTORNEYW IN AUTO CRASH Harold Taylor, 70, Driving in Borrowed Car, Skids and Hits Abutment. Harold Taylor, 70, of R. R. 1, New’ Augusta, prominent attorney, suffered severe lacerations of head and scalp and a painful eye injury early today when the automobile he was driving crashed into an abutment on the Stop 6 road, as he was driving into the city. He was taken to St. Vincent’s hospital, where his condition is said to be serious, due to heavy loss of blood. Merritt Smith of New Augusta, was first to reach Taylor after the accident, although he did not see the crash. Marks on the road indicated that the car had skidded and gone out of control. The automobile, a large sedan, is property of Everett McGriff, 4185 Carrollton avenue. Mrs. McGriff said this morning that Taylor was a caller at their home Sunday night, and borrowed their automobile when he w r as unable to start his own car. In the Air Weather condition at 9 a. m.: North northwest wind, 13 miles an hour; temperature, 34; barometric pressure, 30.00; general condition, overcast, light fog; ceiling, estimated 800 feet; visibility, 2 miles; field, good.

MOTION PICTURES Ivaaßwanßanßsmßan^H^BgwvHanagaHgßi Free Park—Plaza Motor Inn _ ||| MUPf Hurry! Hurry! East 4 Days KATHLEEN NORRIS' SECONDHAND ■ WIFE sally Tilers Ralph Bellamy "NEXT FRIDAY— = The Picture Selected to Open the WILLIAM O.MU hwnSes .<.• NOMRRO ■ 'The SON-DAUGHTER. A. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Picture Starts Friday RONALD COLMAN and KAY FRANCIS in “CYNARA” (Pronounced SIN-ara) TMe. &Kmbu. i3**uO£ut, oRPo/rr# tract on termihau Kona goona* AS BEEN A nd for 3 Hay* Ha* Thrilled all of Indpl*. Only 4 More Day* to See Thi* Exotic Love Story OONA -OONA For Adults Only ft Continuous .. | 10 A. M.-1Q P. M. NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS NORTH SIDE 'Talbot at 22nd St Barthrlmrx** “CABIN IN THE COTTON” Bori* Karloff—D*i, Stone • Mask of ft maxchc ■MMWMnmn Noble BB noutile Feature Rurk't • Bring ’EM BACK ALIVE” Sally Eiler* - HAT CHECK GIRL** WEST SIDE fIHHHHHSSwrWaih. A Belmont E2SSEBQI ’ssa/vsr •NIGHT AFTER NIGHT" Dour. Fairbanks Jr., Nancy Carroll ‘SCARLET DAWN”

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