Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 82, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 August 1933 — Page 4

PAGE 4

AIRMEN WILL HELP IN STATE NRAjAMPAIGN Blue Eagle Will Be Taken by Plane to 27 Cities in Indiana. (Continued From Pare One l Wells announced today. The Governor told Wells that he and Senator Frederick VanNuys will contact President Roosevelt and General Hugh S Johnson, national recovery administrator, today. Johnson to Be Invited McNutt and VanNuys either will talk on the long distance telephone to Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Johnson or send a long telegram urging them to co-operate in the Indianapolis celebration The President will be asked to broadcast a message and Johnson will be Invited to visit the city personally. A feature of Recovery day parade will be a contingent of women on horseback representing the Indiana branch of the National Woman's Party, it was announced at recovery headquarters today. Mrs. Hereford Dugan, legislative chairman of the organization, said that one of the horsewomen will be dressed in shining armor, to represent St Joan of Arc. Recruits Are Enlisted The Federation of Jewish Women will hold two meetings Wednesday and Thursday to enlist recruits for the parade and the work of surveying the city for re-employment and investigation of violations of the NRA. Mrs Emma Kominers and Mrs. John L. Goodwin will have charge of the meetings. More than 150 floats will take part in the parade. John B Hudson of Lafayette, recovery chairman for Tippecanoe county, announced that a "large delegation—three blocks long”— would represent his county in the parade. Lrtt?rs were received today from Danville. Columbus, Michigan City j and Lafayette, announcing co-oper-ation with floats and delegates for the big event. Meeting Is Called McNutt called a meeting of members of the state recovery board for i 10 o'clock Thursday morning at his offices. He sent telegrams to Daniel j Wertz. Evansville; Adolph Fritz, Indianapolis; Rudolph Leeds. Rich- j mond; Joseph M. Cravens. Madison; j M M. Dunbar. Indianapolis: G. M.; Leslie, Ft Wayne; Frederick Kroger. Anderson, and Charles Templeton. Terre Haute. From Washington Monday came instructions to report immediately detailed information concerning infractions and violations of the NRA code here. At the same time Charles W. Chase, president of the Indianapolis Railways. Inc., and "generar of the local recovery forces, said that the ; Indianapolis recovery committee on code compliance would call upon j persons who have signed agreements and have failed to live up to the terms of the covenant. Chase who spent the last week-

Wednesday & Thursday l 9 In Id A. M. Knrh Dny lj||| SftlOc as 10t 2nd Floor ■ w ; 'lain I Ini.r t to 4 P. M. Knrh liny I 1 Wx,J SANITARY I PILLOW- A Q A A CASES |I C 2 Pkgs. I ||c | Fine qiinllly 9 M R in pnrknci*. I I 2nd Floor Main Floor i Final Clearance! 75-s3-98 55.98 Summer ®'Wi Dresses sd.oo yV'; l' / *V<l —Many smart styles. fVVA } —l ovely colors—Fin- M | 1 *\v J ish up the season *l nt 1 * I Avl with one of these fl| I fc 'j % clever dresses, choice * “ 2nd Floor I.ar- Tub* Milk <*“ "• 1 Masnr.u jt a Rummage .J ft ■ paste lOc L-.JvW 1 0 C 1 Main Floor rhundlro. Choice. m j 11 A. M. to IP. M. Wed. II !MV llottle 40, S(l and no. M ja Watt Klectrle m an “bino" in bulbs in Intrct Killer I JC I 3 FOR— Iyc I tnd Moor ™ Main Floor ® Men's White Men'. Summer caps in r 2? in r I llp ~m- IU c diiln Floor I /A. Clearance of 200 Pair a mr~\ Women's SUMMER SHOES A Odds and Ends : V of our hi S hor x'V priced Foot- ■ S C 1 \lT\^ —wear. Table soiled and W \\\ \ broken sites. While & # ™ a * ry l * s ‘~ fc A

HERE’S RESULT AFTER CELLULOID GASES CAUSE BLAST

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This is all that remains of the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Phillips, Devon and Michigan streets, eight miles east of the downtown district, after an explosion early today.

end in Washington conferring with national NRA officers, joined Louis J. Borinstein, chairman of the general recovery committee, in expressing an opinion that violators immediately will comply with their covenants or cease to display the blue eagle. Chase and Borinstein agreed that many cases of alleged violations are due to ignorance or failure to understand obligations assumed by signing the code. Chase said that in his opinion most violators will remove the blue eagle voluntarily when violations are brought to their attention. Industrialists who have signed the agreement and continued to operate as in the past while waiting for permanent codes of their industries to be approved have failed to understand that once having signed the agreement they are obligated to live up to the terms of the blanket code pending approval of the code affecting their own industry. Chase said. Additional information concerning the group agreements of merchants to shorten hours was received by Wells from Washington Monday. The instructions from the national recovery administrator stated that any such group agreements on limiting hours were in direct conflict with the President's covenant. Mrs. Lenore Bussel of Greenfield was named state chairwoman of the NRA program in Indiana by Governor Paul V. McNutt Monday. Mrs. Bussel will appoint county chairwomen in each of the ninety-two Indiana counties. ELEVEN ARE PAROLED BY CLEMENCY BOARD Case of Miami Man Accused in Swine Theft Decided. The state clemency commission today granted eleven paroles, denied sixteen, communted one sentence and continued one case. Among the cases decided was one involving Leroy Burdine, who was sentenced in Miami county on Feb. 7 for one to five years for stealing three shoats, which weighed 75 pounds each. Burdine was convicted of taking the shoats home and butchering them for food. The Miami county prosecutor informed the clemency board that Burdine’s family Is in serious financial straits, and that his help is needed In supporting the home.

Parts of the house were hurled several yards. The Philipses were en route home from a visit in the neighborhood when they saw their home go up in smoke and flames.

News Item Not So Elusive, Touring Reporter Learns

Yarns Aplenty Appear After He Takes Oath to Shun Typewriter. BY H. ALLEN SMITH United Prraa Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug. 15.—A New York reporter, under oath to stay away from all typewriters for a period of two weeks, returned from his vacation today with various things to report about the state of the nation. News Items, It may be said, prevail throughout the United States, and it frequently was trying to the touring reporter, especially when he found telegraph offices on all sides. There was the case of the man who swallowed the bedspring, the arrival of fifty turtles in an Indiana town, the story of the man with five sets of twins, and the drinking habits of the Hoosiers. There won’t be room to set it all down. A state trooper in Havre De Grace, Md„ told about the bedspring incident, and his recital needs no dresisng up: Across the Susquehanna river from Havre De Grace is a government hospital for mental cases. Has “Swallering” Epidemic "They had got,” said the trooper, “an epidemic of swallering. It all started when one of the patients got in the habit of eating everything he could lay his hands on. "He swallered nails and tinfoil and bolts, and everything but razor blades. "Then the other day a patient came to the doctor, and said he* had just swallered a teaspoon. The doctor said that was impossible, but took an X-ray and sure enough, there was the teaspoon. They had to operate. “Well, the very next day another patient swallered a whole bedspring. They had one hell of a time getting it out of him.” In Huntington, Ind., where enthusiasm for NRA is rampant, the publisher of the Herald-Press was in a sweat because some man in Oaklahoma had shipped fifty turtles to the newspaper. The Oklahoma man attached no explanation and the publisher, called upon this correspondent for information as to the feeding habits of turtles.

Capitalizes On Family The only suggestion that was made was that they be given allbran in the morning and steak sandwiches in the evening. If they are still alive at this writing, the publisher is to be congratulated. In the same town there is a man who has five sets of twins and one odd child. All of the twins are boys, save one, and the odd child is a boy. The father is unemployed, and is thinking about capitalizing on his family. He thinks it would be best, however, to have all the twin boys, so he is taking the odd child and working him in as a twin in place of the girl. This sounds very complicated but |he assured the traveling reporter i that it would work out all right when he gets uniforms on all the : kids. •WHO’S WHO’ LISTING MORE COLLEGE WOMEN Increasing Number of Graduates Yearly Gaining In Prominence. 841 Printcc Service YONKERS. N. Y„ Aug. 15.—An Increasing proportion of the women successful enough to have attained a listing in ' Who's Who in America-' are women who have attended college, Bertha Beach Tharp reported in an article in the current I issue of the Scientific Monthly. Only 32.25 per cent of the women listed in the 1903 edition ol I "Who's Who in America" had had college training, as compared with j 51.5 per cent of those in the 1929 edition. The proportion for the different occupations varied in 1929 from less than 20 per cent of women musicians and actresses to 100 per cent of the lawyers and physicians. CORONER’S OFFICE IS SETTING FOR WEDDING Location Is Chosen as Only Available Place in Courthouse. Grim shadows of tragedy were routed Monday at the coroner s office and romance came into the room where grief is the every-day setting. With no other quiet place in the courthouse for their wedding, William Goodall and Mary Scoggins, Negroes, found a haven in the coroner's office and were married there, with the Rev. A. M. Moses of Zion Baptist church, officiating. POLICEMAN GETS FINE Failure to Carry Shotgun In Cruiser Draws Chiefs Ire. fly E'nifrd Petit FRESNO. Cal.. Aug. 15.—From now on. Patrolman G. M. Kemble probably will carry a shotgun in his radio police car. He was fined $25 by Police Chief Frank Truax for failure to have the weapon In the cruiser one night when a burglar escaped his revolver shots. Paving Contract Awarded The state highway commission today awarded a contract to Roger Daust. Defiance. 0.. for the paving of State Road 24, west of Logansport, 2.7 miles of concrete. The 1 contract price was *103.860.22.

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The explosion jarred the neighborhood. One hundred eighty pounds of celluloid In a cedar chest was believed the cause of the blast.

Airy Retort Airplane Passenger Loses the Last Word to Stewardess.

By United Prrut KIRKSVILLE. Mo., Aug. 15 A stewardess aboard a Kansas City-Chicago air liner asked a passenger to put his light out, and go to sleep. He didn’t. The stewardess asked him to take another seat to let other people sleep. He wouldn't. “I’ll have to stop the plane,” said the stewardess, "and have you put off.” The passenger laughed at the Idea. “Stop the plane, indeed, what nonsense! ” Later, he told authorities who rushed to the emergency landing field here, that the stewardess acted like boss of the plane. “And she was.” he said as he took his brief case, and rode back to town. JESSE JAMES TACTICS USED IN BUS ROBBERIES Bandits In West Steal Baggage While Vehicle Is In Motion. By United Preen SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Aug. 15. —With nerve rivaling that cf the notorious Jesse James, bandts have attacked several Omaha Rapid Transit busses, bound to Denver from Salt Lake City, stealing baggage on the roof of the busses while they were in motion. O. M. Harvey, manager, reported to police in the same manner twice during the past few weeks. Approximately SI,OOO worth of baggage was taken in one loot, he said. The bandits drove alongside the bus as it traveled at a rate of 45 miles per hour. A man standing on the running board of the robbers’ car, extended a board from the roof of the coach to their machine. Then he crawled to the bus and tossed baggage into the outlaw car. The company recently stationed a man with the baggage. When the bandits attempted to make the connection. he struck them down with a club. WATER YIELD OF LAND RAISED BY DEFORESTING _______ Opposing View to Accepted Belief Result of Tests by Engineers. By Science Service WASHINGTON. Aug. 15—Stripping off the forest cover does not I decrease the water which can be obtained from a given area of land; cotnrary to widely accepted beliefs, it actually increases the water yield. This disagreement with orthodox forestry creed is presented by W. G. Hoyt and H. C. Troxell, hydraulic engineers of the United States geological survey, as the result of experiments which have been conducted in two typical watersheds in i the west, one of which was deliberately deforested, while the other lost' a chaparral cover accidentally; through fire. By measuring the water yields before the forest cover was removed, immediately afterward while the; ground was still bare, and through! several subsequent years while the areas were growing up in brush, a considerable mass of comparative data was accumulated. MRS. H. F. FORTNER IS TAKEN BY DEATH Wife of Shell Petroleum Cos. Manager Succumbs After Hlnes. Mrs. Helen F. Fortner, 33. of 4721 Park avenue, died today at Methodist hospital following a week’s illness which had developed into pneumonia. Mrs. Fortner was the wife of Joseph A. Fortner, district manager of the Shell Petroleum corporation. Formerly of Bartlesville, Okla., they moved to Indianapolis in January, 1932. Survivors are the husband, two children, Joan. 11, and Mary Margaret, 7, and the parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Prescott, Springfield, Mo. Burial will be Thursday at the home of the parents in Springfield. Mrs. Fortner was a member of the Baptist church. The north magnetic pole of the earth is in northern Canada, 1,400 miles from the north pole.

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TWO YOUTHS TO BE MASTERS OF HUGEFORTUNES Lives of Young Vanderbilt and Astor Parallel in Many Ways. BY H. ALLEN SMITH Untied Press Staff Corrfipondrnt NEW YORK, Aug. 15.—The wheel of time turns this summer to bring two American boys, scions of this country's front line aristocracy, into fortunes which were accumulated as the nation developed. John Jacob Astor 111 became 21 Monday, and now assumes control of immense wealth. His friend, Alfred Gwvnne Vanderbilt Jr., will not reach his majority until Sept. 22. when he, too, comes into a fortune. The coincidence of their ages is by no meaas the only parallel in their lives. Each lost his father in a major marine disaster. Jack's father. John Jacob Astor, died when the Titanic sank in 1912, and Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt Sr. met death in 1915, when a German submarine topedoed the Cunard liner Lusitania off the Irish coast. The wealth of the elder Astor, who died some four months before the birth of his son, was estimated two years after his death at $87,218.791. Os this sum, Vincent Astor, half-brother of Jack, received $69,000,000. Drawn Before Disaster In one of the few instances of its nature on record, the elder Astor made provision in his will for the unborn child, having drawn up the testament a short time before he sailed on the Titanic. The Astor millions came mainly from real estate In New York, after old John Jacob, the immigrant from Waldorf, had established its foundations in the fur trade. Young Vanderbilt, in September, inherits a share in a $17,360,522 fortune. The Vanderbilt wealth, which came principally from railroads, was merged with the Emerson Bromo Seltzer fortune when Alfred Gwynne’s father married into the Emerson family. Neither of these two young heirs has attended college. They have led sheltered lives, shunning all manner of publicity. They are not known to the hot spots of Broadway, and they remain pretty much in seclusion.

Doubts College Value Jack Astor, when he returned last winter from a world cruise, described his trip as being the equivalent of university training. “I begin to doubt,” he told ship news reporters, ‘‘the value of wasting time in qpllege.” He lives with his aunt, Mrs. Lorillard Spencer, at Newport, R. 1., and is of athletic bent, going in for races, hunts, tennis and other sports. His mother, the former Madeline Talmadge Force, was his father’s second wife. In June, 1916. Mrs. Astor married William K. Dick, and by the terms of the Astor will relinquished $5,000,000 and the palatial home on Fifth avenue. Recently she divorced Dick and there has been some talk of a romance with a prize fighter, Enzo Fiermonte. who once was hired to give young Jack instructions in selfdefense. Young Vanderbilt at present is engaging himself racing a stable of horses at Saratoga. HOME LOAN OFFICES TO OPEN WEDNESDAY Six Branches in Various Parts ot State to Be Heady. Coincident with the opening of the Indianapolis office of the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation in the old Farmers Trust Company at 8:30 Wednesday morning, branches in six other state cities also will be ready for business. E. Kirk McKinney, state manager, was to return from Washington tonight to handle opening of the offiass. It is expected that a large crowd will be on hand, seeking federal aid. The policy of the institution will be to aid only those persons in distress who are in danger of losing their homes, due to financial difficulties. Other offices will open at Ft. Wayne, Evansville, South Bend, Gary. Richmond and Terre Haute.

DRAUGHT BEER Beer Faucets, Blocktin Pipe and Coils, Also Fittings Bar Drainers. Brass Rails. Dispensing Equipment Repaired and Plated To draw a sparkling glass of beer, coils must be kept clean and sanitary, which can be accomplished by the use of our Sanitary Pipe Cleaner and Compound. 227 E. South St. LI. 6538

TWO-CENT DAY TOMORROW (WEDNESDAY) RIVERSIDE SPONSORED BY BUTTER CRUST PIE CO. In saw of Ruin the Picnic Will Be Held the Following Day.

Circus Readies City for Two Big Performances

Open up another barrel of • adjectives and tear the dictionary into shreds. Put on your Sunday best and array the urchins in their best bib and tucker, and come along, for we’re going to the circus, and from a ringside seat study the latest fads and frills in clowning. To really prove who enjoys the colorful dash of the canvas showworld a panorama of the circus campus at the old ball park on West Washington street, where the gigantic Ringling and Barnum & Bailey circus is showing its wares [this afternoon, and will again tonight repeat its Golden Jubilee year program at 8 o’clock, will probably show- gray-haired grandpap leading little Ernest about with big Clarence and the missus trailing behind. As an inseparable part of the American scene, the circus takes the biscuits every time. Early this morning while the greater part of the city slept, four trainloads of spangled glories, clowns, tents, elephants, animals, horses, performers, giant ant eaters,

CIRCUS FAN’ INJURED Bov, 14, on Way to Grounds, Hurt in Fall Off Truck. Lure of the circus brought injuries today to George Beweley, 14. of 552 North Belmont avenue. He hopped a ride on a truck to carry him to the site on South Belmont avenue, where the Ringling Brothers’ show is unloading. En route, the truck struck a bump, hurling the boy to the pavement. He incurred bruises. Charles E. Dike, 41. of Princton, driver, said he was not aware that | the boy had boarded the truck.

MOTION PICTURES | I I bolako|

COMFORTABLY COOL.. .MOT COIO APOLLON WHERE BIG PICTL’KKS VX.VY || j Hurry! Hurry! Last 3 Days I Doris Kenyon- Alan Dlnehart NEXT FRIDAY At last SI MMERVHXE and PITTS have a picture worthy af showing at THE APOI.LOSllm Zasu - RUMMERYTLLE-PITTS In “HER FIRST MATE”

EH Playing R STAGE M. An 4 AMO Intertainers IRGEOUS illtLS! Screen o Say Yes” \nng— Lyle bot Ml INGS sc, Orch. 40c lUdren'ii

Scenes at the Tented City

giraffe-necked misses from Burma, freaks, gilt, glitter and what have you pulled into Indianapolis from Kankakee and proceeded to install its encampment at the show grounds with half the bother that usually attends a May day moving. But early as the circus arrived, the usual reception committee composed of the younger social set was on hand to greet the red wagons, and in many a home this morning dads announced, “Drat it all, howcan anybody sleep with that kid galloping around the house at such an unearthly hour?” and then sidled out the side door to catch up with little Elmer, half a block from the house, to join him on his pilgrimage to the circus grounds. It's all here, wide awake and raring to go, with what has everywhere been characterized as the best performance ever given under the Ringling-Barnum aegis. New features are as plentiful as huckleberries in August, and the great new spectacle of the Delhi Durbar, which starts the circus ball a’rolling, is the most pretentious offering ever made under canvas. This way to the big show!

MOTION PICTURES j 111- A Mar. IS* Now Thru Wednesday! “I COVER THE WATER FRONT” CUI DBTTK ( (iI.UKUT I.AI KKI, A HARI>Y COMEDY

INDIANAPOLIS TUES V* AFTERNOON AND NIGHT 1 W Show Grounds. Old Ball Park I I f* 'w"w|L wt s i \ - Hi\<, iu\ v i ukkt HUla ■ vßn This war Celebrating the RINGLING BROTHERS’ GOLDEN JUBILEE with 1000 AMAZING NEW WORLD. WIDE FEATURES INCLUDING THE MOST STARTLING DISCOVERY OF THE CENTURY! PADAUNG GIRAFFE-NECK WOMEN BU^MA POSITIVELY PRESENTED IN MAIN PERFORMANCES OF THE BIG SHOW THE DURBAR, Magnificent New Spectacle of the Orient 1600 People. 800 Arenic Star*. 1 CO Clowns, 1009 Menagerie Animals, 50Eiephants.700H''r** Twice Daily: 2 <t 8 P.M. Door. Open at 1 & 7 P.M. PRICES (Admitting to Circus. Menagerie ?"n*^ er ori A^?? ,5 , , !?, n v, S n* , iL, Adul, i- 7 * e -. CH,LURKN UNDER 12 YEARS, SOc. GRAND STAND CUAIU T~Jtcts 75c AdditionaL ALL PRICES INCLUDE TAX TIC KETS ON SALE CIRCUS DAY AT CLARK & SON DRLG STORE, CLAYPOOL HOTEL BLDG.

' TONI&HTI #^^^ientatioNS: J-, f\ NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERf %

NORTH SIDE Talbott'; T rm‘i*Ni2 ,d - -* Joan Blondetl "BROADWAY BAD" STRATFORD ——— Boot, Mallory "HUMANITY" am _ a Noble at Maas. MECCA . Family Nile ’ 1 Junior Durkin MAN HINT” 111. at 30th CrARBirU Double Feature VMrVM Ve TV lilt Hamita "GOLDII GETS ALONG” LILA LEI m f hLSE FACES” R 1 ■"■ —, —rj rr ifch A Northwestern F X Ld*. G Robinson - Richard Arlen TllitK SHARK” ■ _— ■ HI. at Stth RIT T_ Double Feature n 1 * * lame. Dunn "BOLD ME TIGHT" FAY WRAY m "WOMAN I STOLE” ___________ 4-nd anil College tIPTOWM Loretta Yount ■ aAw r, IM.■„ Gene Kavmond "ZOO IN BUDAPEST" • —st Clair at Ft W Tyne ST.CLAIR '* nalratFt Wayne -—'■ A ictory Jury "TRIC K FOR TRICK" EAST SIDE ta/A. a " Dearborn at lWb~~ HI YULI Lee Tracy • Till. NCISANCE" V'.; - _ MM E~ Tenth EMERSON Feature - ■ ■■■ Paul Lukas "GRAND SLAM" Charlie Rustles—Greta Maaen "MELODY CRUISE" WOMAN I STOLE" SI I* E. IStfe 8L nAIYi I LI On Double feature '*'**" 11 ■—Phil Harris "MELODY CRITSE" Loretta Young ta "ZOO IN BUDAPEST"

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‘CHERRY LEAF’ BABY TEST IN HIGH DISFAVOR Artificial Reproduction of Human Beings Flouted by Biologists. Bi> Science Service WASHINGTON Aug 15—Biologists. skeptical to the last degree of the effort of Earl E. Dudding of Huntington. W. Va.. to produce a child by injecting a cherry leaf extract into his wife’s blood stream, see in his project merely a pseudoscientific attempt to bring about in a human being an event that t.% fairly common among certain lower organisms—the type of birth known as parthenogenesis. Parthenogenesis, or the production of young by unmated females, never has been known to occur in human beings or among the higher backboned animals, including all mammals, birds and reptiles. Frogs Without Fathers It has been artificially provoked In unfertilized frogs' eggs by stimulating them with chemicals, electrict current and needle pricks; full-grown frogs have been thus produced. But natural parthenogenesis is unknown even among frogs. Parthenogenesis is exceedingly common among certain groups of Insects, notably the aphids or ' plant lice.” It also occurs among bees when all the drones or male bees have by some mischance been killed off. It Is common among numerous type of marine animals, including some of the tunlcates. which are degenerate relatives of the lowest backboneed animals—what might be called spineless vertebrates. Common Progress in Plants A process analogous to parthenogenesis is also found in plants, and among the highest forms of plants at that. But in spite of all these well known examples of birth without natural fatherhood in which the lower world of life abounds, there is no case of par'.henogensis. either natural or scientifically induced, among human beings. Even should Mrs. Dudding give birth to a child in October, as predicted by her husband, biologists will insist on regarding him, and not a cherry tree, as its father. “I Suffered 10 Years With Itching Eczema” ”... and after spending hundreds of dollars to clear it up, I tried Zemo and got relief." writes G. C. G. of Texas. Soothing and cooling Zemo relieves itching in five seconds because of its rare ingredients not used in other remedies. Also wonderful for clearing Rash. Pimples, Ringworm and other irritations. Zemo is worth the price because you get relief. All druggists,' 35c. 60c, sl. —Advertisement.

MOTION PICTURES Mario DRESSLER Wallace BEERY In the Metro-Golilwyn-Mayer hit ANNIE’’ I‘OKETTA YOUNG ylW* RICARDO CORTEZ Cgfppr Hi \ NCHOT TONE in “Midnight Mary”

EAST _J* ,DE TACOMA *F. 2 mfiV Sf,?* 7 " 11 1 Kiv Franrla "JEWEL RORHI RY L>TmHP Rebe Danlela ••COCKTAIL HOUR” ’aBRUUiKJ' 9S E. mth St. ORPHEUIWP Kiehard Arlen ■■ Mary Brian SONG <ll THE FAt.I t a 'JtfT 1 - H i Sr,rk~ TUXEDO i Family Nitr ' — 1 Bela Lu*ol "NIGHT OF TERROR" ~ ____ SOUTH SIDE ~mm nij ur aa a afR %t Fountain JF JKOA*r Mi Double Feature ■AC. U Che.ter Morns “TOMORROW AT SEVEN” Irene Dunn-.fnel Met ren "THE SILVER CORD^ _ _ i Proaoeet and ShrdbT ’JAM DENY W i I PINGS" Leo Carrillo • MEN ARF SCCH FOOI-8 - ORANAPA" r " •THE NUISANCE” OSIENTSL "STORY or TEMPLE PEAKE" GARFIELD atcanr Bela Lufoat NIGHT OK TERROR WEST SIDE ELMONT W rSm'y v‘t. * eL ' Far Wray CARVER'S PROFESSION" _ SMB W. Mleh. DA S Y * Family NIU .....ffTICT ff * • Irene Dunn "THE SIL\EE COED" —■ at _r w. WliT at Halaaei PRINCESS . Jack Buchanan •MAGIC NIGHT"