Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 67, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1933 — Page 10
PAGE 10
O'BRIEN DEATH ' IS SHARP BLOW TO DEMOCRATS Beloved Downstater Active 50 Years in Affairs of Party. Hoosier Democracy today mourned the parsing of the last of the “old guard” Democrats William H. O Brien. 78. Lawrenceburg. A prominent figure In Indiana Democratic politics for half a centurv. Mr. O Brien died at his home Ttiur'day, following a lone illness Former mayor of Lawrenreburg, he was one-time auditor of state and a close friend and personal adviser to the late Senator Thomas Taggart. Having served in the state senate and as Democratic state rhairiribr., Mr. O'Brien one time refuaed the nomination for Governor. Ex-National Treasurer He was a former treasurer of the Democratic national committee and a colorful figure at national conventions. where he wieided considerable power A staunch, pioneer supporter of President Roosevelt, he was visited by Mr. Roosevelt, then governor of New York when the latter attended the Governor s conference at French Lick two years ago Messages of condolence came to sorrowing relatives today from those high in party councils throughout ♦he country Governor Paul V McNutt sen* the following from the west coast: “To five men does the opportunity come for more varied or more important public service than William H. O Brien was called upon to render in many posts of honor over a long period of years. To none has there come in greater measure the real distinction of public service, the honor of having served with unfailing courtesy, great ability and unquestioned integrity in whatever capacity his fellow citizens sought to employ his great talents. leaves Great Void For many decades an outstanding figure in the social, religious, political and business life of the state he loved so well, his passing leaves a void in Indiana that many will feel can not be filled. - ' Funeral services will be Saturday at Lawrenreburg. Mr. O'Brien was born in Dearborn county in 1855. He was graduated from De Pauw university in 1874 and three years later purchased the Lawrenceburg Register with W. D.! Hunter The paper was continued until 1885 At his death. Mr O'Brien was president of the Peoples State bank j at Lawrenceburg He was a proml-! nent member of the Methodist' church and a trustee of Purdue university. Surviving him are the widow; three sons, Cornelius O Brien, president of A. D. Cook, Inc., of Lawrenceburg; Lieutenant Commander W. H. O Brien Jr. of the navy, re-I tired: Lieutenant Colonel Robert E.! O'Brien, stationed at Atlanta. Ga..! and three daughters. Miss Frances O'Brien. Lawrenceburg; Mrs. Calvin Derity, Middletown, O. and Mrs. Dan Ingwersen. Chicago. PASTOR TO BE HONORED Homecoming Day to Be Observed at Carrollton Avenue Church. “Homecoming day” will be observed Sunday at the Carrollton Avenue Reformed church. 800 East Forty-fourth street, to welcome the Rev. E. G. Homrighausen. pastor, and Mrs. Homrighausen. who will return to the city Saturday after spending several weeks in Europe. Dr. and Mrs. Homrighausen attended the world alliance meeting of Presbyterian and Reformed churches in Belfast. Ireland, in June, and then visited in England. Scotland and several nations on the continent. While in Germany, the pastor visited leading churchmen and is bringing back an interesting viewpoint on the new religious situation in Germany under the Hitler regime 3 HURT AT PLAYLOTS Girl. 13, Suffers Broken Arm in Fall From Tree. Three children were injured Thursday afternoon in mishaps at city playgrounds Geraldine Drew. 13. of 1501 Linden street, suffered a broken right wrist and sprained ankle, in a fall from a tree at Garfield park. An injured left wrist was suffered by Elsie Leavitt. 8. of 425 North Oxford street, in a fall from a horizontal ladder at Brookside park, and a possible fracture of the left arm was incurred by Carey Gaughan. 10. of 262 North Pershing avenue, when he fell while running on the Rhodius park baseball diamond. 40.000 GET PAY RAISE Chevrolet. Pontiac Announce 15 Per Cent Increase, Effective Aug. 1. By I'nitf’l Hr i DETROIT. July 28.—Chevrolet and Pontiac motor companies today announced a 15 per cent increase in hourly rate paid 40 000 workers in their twenty plants, effective Aug. I.
ANOTHER SPECIAL GIFT OFFER TONIGHT KO-WE-BA Melody Men
the \e\l deal in pictures—no. 2 DAT Text by John M. Gleissner —Sketches by Don Latin XXn vJ i X XXI/ X3 v-/ vJ X-i X
TT J 1 ~ ** gress restore some benefits, but not as many as Congress ’ When President Roosevelt took office federal e*penditures Congress authoriied the president to cut large sums from demanded. A long struggle ensued, which was ended by Congress also voted salary reductions ot 15 per cent far exceeded revenues, and the government faced huge expenditures for veterans, and set up anew and reduced compromise, correcting some admitted injustices in the throughout the federal establishments, authorized consolideficits. The president, in asking economy legislation, system ot pensions, designed to save J 460.000.000. This bill, and making it more liberal than the president had dation of bureaus, and compulsory retirement and turpointed out the danger of destroying government credit provoked a bitter protest from veterans throughout the asked. Veterans injured in actual combat were fully pro- loughs. Iftouid tht budget Temain unbalanced. country, although the president tried lo protect war-injured. tected. BEXT: Beer Comes Back.
Radio Dial Twisters
FRIDAY —5:30 P M NBC -Pastoral to WJZ KYW Uo2oi Stem s orches- WENR 'B7O >—Organist. WMAQ 1670 -Sports. Ber- tra NBC—Soloist to WJZ. CBS -Golden Countrv Club !);.yfi p. m. —.*i;n P M— VBB.M i77oi Grier s orches- KYW ■ 1020)—Fisher's orCBS Boake Carter !• tra chestra N WEAF h ' Ool<Sbfr * s t 0 N^EAF 0r ' and * DlaV * rS t 0 -BS- Lombardo s orchestra. ■ —; p. m.— NBC Shield's orchestra: P "Sr." 6 ’ !0, ~ BtTme s er * CBS Nir.o Martin: and Co- NBC Shield s orchestra: NBC Plshe ,. s orchestra to lumbia_Svmphonv. Phil Baker to WJZ. WEAF orenestra to NBC lM Concert - Organist to WJZ u,Xi*‘ es °* the Titans' ... _ .. WMAQ 670)—Dance proW : I 4, _ . . r ' gram .2'a hours'. WLS B.o' Fisher s orches- KYW < 1020 i— Russell Claves tra band — ,n W^?mhle* 70 ‘ ~ o,lllcchl ° WBBM .170.-Hans revue K y.™ , r ' 1020| - Can,on or * WGN . 7201 Jan Garbers thestra —:l P M.— orchestra CBS—Martin's orchestra. W'EBM < 770■ Sport review —H P. M.— WENR < 870• —Roger s orWp} 1870 t Roger's orenes- kyw i 1020i—Globe Trotter. chestra. rowan cm w quarte’ NBC—Dream Singer: Olvv.mau '070) Morin Sisters CBS Lou Holtz. Grace sen s orchestra to WEAF. —:.l P. M.— Moore Havton s orretv-s- WGN .720)—Sheasbv s orCBS Bar X Davs and -.,lL a TT h . nrf , n chestra. -to u S WEAF b and NBC—Mills Plavbovs. Ethel 70 HamP * or ' NBC First Nighter to WJZ Water and Geo Dewev WON *72o)—Sheasbv s or . WMAQ ,670. -Mr Twister Washington to WJZ. rheatra —H:t5 F. M. — —10:15 P. M.— NBC Potash and Perl- WBBM (TTOi—Gerun s or- WGN i*2oi Agnew s orrmitter'' to WJZ chestra chestra W chestra ,6Jo, ~ P,SherS ° r ‘ —8:80 P. M.— KYW ilo2ot Russell Glaves' WBM CSO)-Ensemble Four CBS Jane Froman. Renard s orchestra. Pals. orchestra. 1 —10:30 P. M.— —6:15 p. M NBC Lum and Abner to KYW . 10201— Fisher s or"’.jfestr'a 770 ' Ted Lewls ' or ' WMAQ .670,-Northern con- Nlcho j s orc . lts . WON <72oi—Rube Apple- NBC—Musical feature to tra berry sketch WJZ ;NBC- Stern's orchestra to Vocal and comedv R-15 P M— WEAF. duo to WJZ CBS—Edwin Hill. WJR (7501-Ruups orchesKYW (1020)—Lopez orches- ''mhestra" 0 ' NBC—Messner s orchestra to tra WGN (720) Coles orchesCHS trvin Cobb and Gcod- tra — lt P. M.— tvnn s 7-n hPS ,'. ra NB 9 ~??* Hear! KYW (10201-Canton onjhesWBBM ,770. Harris’ revue Throbs to WJZ ira MM Tom Howard Jeanmr j M WBBM (7701—Around the Lang. Salters orchestra town quartet to WEAF KDKA < 9BO. - Sports; Mer- WENR - ,8701—Weems' orWGN .720, Troubadora and off * orchestra chestra Lawrence Salerno CBS Rich s orchestra. WON 720. -Garber s orNBO Phi! Harris' orchestra NBC Mever Davis' orches- " bUl'' 20 ' aart,cr 5 or Leah Rav to WJZ. tra to WEAF _- 1, P .. WON 1720i —Bridge Club; —ll3O P. M c, ' ' ' ! Dream Ship. KYW 11020'— Lopez orchesrL, linger. NBC' Vocal trio to WJZ. tra: Stem s orchestra. WBBM . lOl—Arnheim's or-NBC Amos n' Andv to I WENR 870>—Golden Pheaschestra t WENR. WDAF. WSM. ant orchestra.
WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (Indianaoolif Power and Light Come^ay) P M FK,DAV 530 Records 5 LV Ballad bovs, 6 00 Columbians fCBB. J ‘j? Brown County Revelers. 6 3b Walter Hardv. 6 45 Records 7:ob Irun S Cobb 'CBS'. . 15 Street S.nger iCBS* 3b Meiodv men. 7 45 Earl Gordon nianologue 8 no Chesterfield nrocram >CBS). o .J i 3 /"* froman and orchestra .CBS,. 8 45 Edwin C Hill .CBS, 9 on Columbia symphony .CBS. 930 < l 'cßS lOmbard ° ” nd Roval Car| a<Lans jn bn Freddie Martin orchestra <CBS' 10 3n Tom Gerun orchestra .CBS' 11 no Bohemians 11 15 Around the town from Chicago 11 45 Bohemians 12 00 Midnight—Sign off. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (IndianaDotis Rroadcaiting. las.) P M FRIDAY I 29 —Twilight treasure hour. 4 30 Tea time tunes 4 45—To be announced. 5 00—Dinner melodies. 5 3b Mirth parade 5 45—Orchestra 5 30—Radio reporter 6:ob- Knothole gang 6 15 Dinner dances 6 30—Cecil and Sally. 645 The Sportslight 700 Trio and baritone 7 15—Dick Green and his uke. 7 30 Jimmy Bover 7 45—Marvel Mvers Bno Dick Hatold 8 15 Bill Warren 830 Lum and Abner's sociable .NBC . 9 00- Harry Bason 9 13 The Indiana Sportsman. 9 30 Steiner's mandolin sextet. in no—Connie's orchestra lo 30—Gordon Carper s orchestra. II 00—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati FRIDAY P M 4 OO—Tarzan of the Apes. 4 15—Walkathon orchestra. 4 30—Musical highlights 4 45—Lowell Thomas .NBC'. 500 Amos n' Andv (NBC'. 5 13 - Mooney Bros 5 30 Boh Newhall 5 45 Dog talk bv Dr Glenn Adams. 6 00—Gene BurcheU's dance orchestra. 6 30—Detective* Black and Blue. 6 45—Dr J Holbert Bvrarn and Lloyd Shaffer dance orchestra 7 00—Musical grocery store iNBC>. 7 30—Curtain ca’ls 8 00 U S Navy band iNBCi. 8 30 Puddle family R 45 Castle Farm orchestra. 9 00 Zero hour 930 Unsolved mvsterv, '.O 00 Cotton Club orchestra 'NBC'. 10 30 Coney Island orchesira 11 CO Lotus Gardens orchestra NBC', r 30 Golden Pheasant orchestra .NBC'. t'J 00 Midn:ght Moon river. A M 12 15 Walkathon orchestra ;? 3o Castle Farm dance orchestra. 1 00 Sign off
Fishing the Air
Edgar Allan Poe a world-famous story. The Gold Bug will be presented in a special radio adaptation during the Tales of the Titans broadcast Friday at 6 p m over WLW and an SBC network A program of contemporary American works will be offered bv Mark Wirnow when he appears as guest conductor of the Columbians Friday from to <1:30 p. m over WFBM and the Columbia network. Irvin F Cobb, who described himself as a man who's got two extra chins in front and carrying a spare on behind." will be heard over WFBM and the Columbia network Friday from 7 to 7 15.
HIGH SPOTS OF FRIDAY NIGHTS PROGRAM 5 00—Columbia—Morton Downer. 6 30—Columbia- Bar X Davs and nights. 7 00-NBC iWEAF —Tom Howard. Columbia—lrvin S Cobb and Goodman s orchestra NBC ,WJZ—Phil Harris and orchestra. 7 30— NBC tWJZi— Phil Baker. 8 00—Columbia—Lou Holtz Grace Moore and Havton s orchestra NBC WJZ The First Nighter drama Indian Gold ” NBC WEAF —C S Navv band. 8 30 -NBC .WEAF -Lum A: Abner s Friday night sociable. Columbia-Jane Frohtnan and show queer.*.
Isn : This a Night for Love." or* of the hit numbers from Melody Cruise.' will be sung bv Paul Small during the Vanity Fair program Friday, at 7 30 p m . ever WENR and an NBC network. Grave Moor* will again offer a Purcini aria, rarely heard on the air. when she sings tbe Addin. Miiul's farewell song to her lover, Rodolph. in Act 3 of "la Bohrme." during tUe variety program to be broaden! over WFBM
ard the Columbia network at R p. m., Friday. Lovely Jane Froman. soprano star featured with Jncoties Renard's orchestra, will smg the popular "Morning. Noon and Night'' in her program over WFBM and the Columbia network from 6:30 to 8:45 j p. in.. Friday. AYRES MODERNIZING SIDEWALKS AT STORE Concrefp Sections Two Decade Old Are Being Replaced. L. S. Ayres & Cos., carrying on a modernization program, is tearing out eleven sections of solid concrete j and glass sidewalk fronting the ! store along Washington street and south to Pearl street on Meridian, which was laid in 1905. when the structure was erected. The downstairs store of L. S. Ayres was lighted by a street walk i filled with hundreds of ' bull's eyes.” An average of twice a year workmen would plug leaks. Today Brandt Brothers are laying a reinforced, waterproof, solid concrete runway with a four-inch concrete base, topped with a three-inch slab of granite. Temporary frames and roofs have been constructed in the downstairs store, so that business may continue. SAFETY COUNCIL MEETS Police Chief, Former Mayor Speakers at Stereopticon Show. At a meeting of the Indianapolis Safety Council Thursday night in the Hitzelberger restaurant. Troy i avenue and the Bluff road, stereopticon slides of safety statistics proi vided by the Indianapolis Power and Light Company were shown. Chief Mike Morrissey and L. Ert Slack, former mayor, spoke. Sergeant Timothy J. McMahon of the police accident prevention bureau presided.
MOTION PICTURES rn MOON-what? W eSair The sCreen discusses the love-problem of a jjwK# million married couples who are afflicted Tggsa ; < with “mother-in-taw” trouble! Helen Hayes v: i| as the bride who found her love torn .... .' asunder by her husband’s relatives! Bob jt> v :{ Montgomery as the boy who discovers that P. : ‘ ; K&S and .“relatives” do not mix! J||§3 m. 5F51, , helen Jr I|M^ A y ES lf Sjr^ Robt.MONTGOMERY Mgk ■ “ANOTHER 1 f| LANGUAGE” j| I \i>i't i it \it hi ir j*g||§r I Silly Syniphony Color < artm>n f HKAKST METROTONE NEWS
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BARBERS ADOPT PRICE INCREASE Haircut to Cost 50 Cents, i Shave 25 Cents Here Under New Code. Price of haircuts and shaves will be advanced in Indianapolis. Haircuts will cost 50 cents and j shaves 25 cents in all shops, as result of action at a meeting of owners and operators of barb?r shops in the Claypool hotel Thursdaynight. The price increase will become effective as soon asvfull information is received and organization perfected to carry out provisions of the barbers' code of the national recovery act. A uniform operating rule also was adopted, fixing the hours from 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. No barber will be employed more than forty hours a week. Minimum wage£ will be j $14.50. as specified by the national recovery act. The new schedule will become effective Aug. 1. NIRA signs will be displayed in all shops adopting the rulings, i Twelve hundred barbers and shop owners attended the meeting, which was held under auspices of the Journeymen Barbers International. Union. Speakers included William C. Birthright, general secretary; Leon 1 Worthal. organizer; James C. Shan- j easy, president; and Fred Hoffmark, counsel. “Increase in prices is necessary i because of the boost in wages.” i Wcrthal said. “Barbers, at 20 cents for shaves and 35 cents for haircuts, have, in many cases, worked as high as seventy hours for $8 to $lO a week.’’ LEAVE ON RATIONS TRIP 16 Trucks Go to Ft. Knox for Camp Food Supplies. Sixteen trucks today are enroute from Ft. Harrison to Ft. Knox. Ky., |to obtain rations for the conservation corps camps in Indiana. Inspection of temporary construction and water installation of the camps in the southern part of the state was made this week by l Colonel Charles R. Petit, engineer officer of the Fifth corps area, and Captain Joseph H. Stevenson, engineer corps. CADETS TO TAKE HIKE Six-Mile March Today Event in Month Training Period. C. M. T. C. cadets at Ft. Harrison were to take their first long ■ hike of the thirty-dav training period at 1:30 this afternoon when they will march six miles to a large j pasture on the reservation. After carrying a full pack and i an individual weapon, the cadets will be assigned to shelter tents for the night. BROAD RIPPLE BIG WATER SHOW TALKIES "THE THIRTEENTH OIEST” DANCING Martin* Siiniln.v — "Original Drawn HndtHetl”
Indiana Is Far Down List in Consumption of Beer
State Ranks Fourteenth in Nation With Total of 26.358 Barrels. A couple of the boys were sitting in a local case today, holding their glasses of beer before them, and weeping silently into the amber brew. For three months now. the boys have been boasting of their beerconsuming abilities. Never a day do they miss. But today, alas, they found that all has been in vain. A blot has been put upon their name. For they learned that figures released today by the United tSates Brewers' Association lists Indiana far down among the beer-drinking states of the nation, and that even little states like Maryland are far ahead of old Indiana when it comes to putting away beer. New York, the figures showed, led
CALL FOR BIDS ON 7 NEW STATE BRIDGES Highway Commission Sets Aug. 15 as Receiving Date. Seven bridge projects were advertised by the state highway commission today, bids to be received Aug. 15. It also was announced that on Aug. 10 bids on from one to three road disks or road planers mounted on pneumatic tires to be pulled bytruck or tractor will be received. On Aug. 11 bids will be received for from one to three paving ele-. vators or mud jacks. Following are the bridges: Allen county, two bridges on road 14. 6.5 miles, and 5.3 west of Ft. Wayne; Brown county, two bridges on read 35, 1.5 and 1.6 miles north of Bean Blossom; Cass county, bridge on road 24. 2.7 miles west of Logansport; Jackson county, two bridges on
MOTION PICTURES |m They Be True to Each ; \ ' T** / y.l Other! 'Cause He j fl&wm THAT MAMJ Paramount's lusty, gustv hit with CDmiMD LOUIC hr} mL V lIAIXy <ARROU W- - j\ wiwnimw DOROTHY BURGESS -barbershop” WARREN HYMER threexsistkks Grant Mitchell I "'Sing, Sifter* >ing” • Lew Cody Hear Speech by k y• {_ _President Koosevelt Paramount
I 't/AeSMASH ** A : I I c ■’ \ | • rsTaw ■ ffal 12 STAPS inc/udm^\jk3F( Tj if ” U Leo Carrillo # i 1 BIAUm/l Jack Denny 2 || CM/Nif Alexander Gray \\ WL H y * Frank and Milt
the nation in May. the first month for which complete figures are available, by downing 539.133 barrels of 3 2 brew Earnest Wisconsin, taking its work seriously, as always. was second with 355.348 barrels. And Indiana was fourteenth. Indiana put away only 26.358 barrels. Ls it not to weep? Little Maryland, twenty-eighth in population in the nation to Indiana's ranking of eleventh, was twelfth, more than 6,000 barrels ahead of the dear old Hoosier state. Louisiana, twenty-second in population, was tenth, and Missouri, twenty-third in population, was seventh with 101.942 barrels. But there was hope left, the boys in the case found. For in June, the output and sale of beer in the nation increased by 351.570 barrels over May. "We drank a lot of beer in June.” said Jim “I bet we pulled the state up a few notches.”
road 50. 8.6 and nine miles west of Brownstown; Madison county, bridge over Pipe creek at Alexandria; Marshall county, two bridges on road 10. 1.5 and three miles west of Argos: Morgan county, three bridges on road 35. .3, .5 and 1.2 miles south of Morgantown: Vigo county, new superstructure and abutment repairs to forty-six foot bridge on road 46, 4.1 miles southeast of Terre Haute. In early days of the canning industv. about a century ago. a skilled tinker turned out about fifty tin cans a day.
1 Dance Tonight C RIVERSIDE One Regular Admission Plus lc Admits TWO. , 10c Before 8:30.
"Well, anyway.” chimed in Joe. if we had draught beer, we'd probaDly be first.”
YOU'LL WA M) AGAIN! THE WORLD S FUNNIEST MAN! Eddie in o fever over e* hundred gorgeous girlefl y __ Here's.fun and'songß j> ja&bS in o dazzle of color to( -'cheer you up. !<9 you an 4 buck you up. Millions. ! ToPNIjr f '* ,Contor t All Technicolor ( Hobby Jones J Circle News
\\ AMBASSADOR & | /SEEFACTS!\ "WHAT PRICE / .Lr.r- \ INNOCENCE?” JSS ES to Tell the \ / TH't R THI Til ... . \ 15c till fr—Adults Only! t iai outer
ills.at ohio lO' BLAMOItSi • SUNt HOLIDAYS
SOLO WAX 0 U MOMENTS It) OmUTIT|
ENT/m ONS \L §|\ NEIGHBORHOOD THEATER?
NORTH SIDE *rw Talbot A 22nd If.l I Drift Site Spencer Tracy “Face in the Sky” ■ Itith e College Bllil'Ddl|il*l Anita Page Re-'i Tooney ‘‘Soldiers of the Storm” Noble Double Che-t • r Morril Infernal Machine” Mae Clarke "PAROLF. GIRL” I at Wth vHffi I" in TM.-ndeli ■iH_LsXLU.iXJa.KM Ri-he-''o Corlei “Broadway Bad” H'th A Northwestern .St-iAJH ;T •% Mgeßßi ii ••. Pa-.| Luca* “Grand Slam” til. at 3tth WMMam *%: s?.v* T • BELOW THE SEA" “ELMER THE GREAT' - ■rrmrnrTneH it. Clair at Ft. Wayne HLXCILUAmUJJHI D'.uMe Feature Erie Linden "PAST OF MARY HOLMES’* Lorretta Young. "GRAND SLAM” EAST SIDE Dearborn at imh iBUIAAft-lILI** Double Feature Miriam Hopkins. "Story of Temple Drake;” Fav H rat._ Below the Sea." ■hTTXHTM ** f Tenth WM * * ; Pi*J line! lij.n.ir Henry Garat “ADORABLE” MHtnnjraj zm e. ith st. (JJjyQUal Double Fea'ure Slim Summerville. "Out All Night:” Tim Met ov. ‘ Man of Action." ■■wi lirpr.Rmm vv>7 E. Wash. Adolphe M-njou Greta Nissen “Cirrus Queen Murder” WUIIUB Boyd “Oliver Twist”
GRANT DEATH i STAY ON PLEA OF HAMILTON Convicted Jackson Killer Is Given Time to Make Appeal. Stay of execution until Nov 24. has been granted Louis Hamilton, sentenced to the electric chair at. Indiana state prison Hamilton and Charles Vrrnon Witt were convicted of the murder of Lafayette Jackson, fmn.de. of the Standard grocery stores, during a holdup The supreme court granted the stay for Hamilton's attornevs to complete appeal He was sentenced to die Aug 15. The Witt death date is Nov. 25, also, stay having been granted previously to act on a petition for rehearing. Witt's case has been affirmed by the high court. The famous Tyrian purple, worn by kings, came into use about fifteen centuries before Christ
MOT lON PM H RES
EAST SIDE I Wish ■ W■ ■ Maurice ( he. alter sOsiuliiiaaß IMen Tweivetreee “Bedtime Story? Btl iri'H I 12 F~tVash~sir' ■KLLULLni Double Feature • liic vile "Dimgeroiia ( rovarnade’* Diekie Moore "Oliver Twi -' • I.l*nn!lVf 2930 F. l"th st. - I*J.l!isla'lL.l trie linden "PASI ()l MART HOLMES'* SOUTH SIDE niMVIoMM At Fountain Square la ’ ; lH?Tli|-|U-l Doublr Featurr • John Wayne “HAUNTED GOLD” Lorretta Young—Gene Ra>;nond “ZOO OF BUDAPEST” Comedy—Mickey’s Charity Prosper! and Sbr.by Double feature Leo Carrillo RACE TRACK "TRADING THF M1.1.1K iHtfJ.’M.n w ■■ .pgja. **■ Sidnev Murrav “COHENS AM) KI LLS IN TROI BLf Tom Keene 'SON OF THE BORPt K - e r Ih.uble MIM'lt Tom Keene “CHEYENNE KID ' rim sbeibr st ICtTfilial ll Maenre (he.alier O Jallill *1 *■ Helen Tweivetreee “Bedtime Story” WEST SIDE __ fcmotoTArw w wash. Vm. U 1 r>ji U Thrtt Nite ™ Irrne Dunn “Silver Cord” Joe Brown “Elmer the Great” *Jordan ” '■llUldTfM Alexander Klraiand , “Bondare"
JULY 28, 1933
