Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 101, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 September 1933 — Page 9
SEPT. 6, 1933
NE WS OF MOTOR WORLD
GOODRICH TIRE REPORTS CODE BOOSTS TRADE General Uptrend Is Felt by Industry, Says Spokesman. Earl, week thia column will bo devoted to comment, on a current subject applying to the automotive tndutr> by some personality Identified with the auto Held in Indianapolis. BY L. L. SOURS District Manager, Indianapolis Branch. The H F. Goodrich Rubber Company. On Aug 1 major companies in the rubber industry adopted the administrations blanket code as proposed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and now are operating under the provisions of the National Recovery Administration. In the meantime committees of the Rubber Manufacturers’ Asso-
ciation are perfecting a code for the industry for which early adoption by all units of the rubber group Is predicted. Under NRA, the rubber companies signing the agreement with the federal government generally have adopted the six hour day so that the production divisions now are working
Sours Photo Voc
four shifts daily as compared with three eight hour shifts in force before Aug. 1. The rubber industry was prepared for the transition and began mak- j ing necessary changes in schedules j several weeks before the blanket code became operative. These i changes included adjustments up- ! ward in the base and hourly rates 1 of factory personnel and a 10 per cent increase in remuneration of salaried employes on June 15. 4.667 Workers Added Representative of the industry ; the B F Goodrich Company added 4.867 factory workers during April,; May, June and July in the Akron factory alone with corresponding additions to the rolls of the com- j pany's subsidiaries. The August enrollment of the' company represents an increase of 46 per cent over the March factory total, and 1,591 people were reemployed in July in anticipation of the major provisions of NRA. Akron offices of the company now are open five days a week as compared with five and a half days in force before Aug 1. constituting another change under the blanket code. Naturally, the general improve-: ment in business conditions has been reflected in the rubber industry | since April first. Production Is Doubled Again using Goodrich as an example. our plants have been on the heaviest operating schedules since 1929. and tire production has increased approximately 200 per cent since March of this year w ith similar improvement in all divisions of the company. It is the judgment of our management that general adoption of the purposes and policies of the National Recovery Administration will bring economic relief to the United States as indicated by present improved conditions in many lines including the manufacture of rubber goods, with the administration in working We are pleased to note the cooperation of the rubber industry out problems confronting American business. E. L. WRIGHT NAMED BODY PUNT MANAGER Succeeds J. A. Jamieson as Head of Loral Chevrolet Factory, Announcement of the appointment of E. L. Wright as manager of the Chevrolet Motor Company commercial body plant in Indianapolis, was made recently by W. S. Knudsen. president cf the Chevrolet Motor Cos. and official of the General Motors Corp. Wright succeeds J. A. Jamieson, who died recently. Wright has many years of experience behind him with the Chevrolet organization. Prior to coming to Indianapolis, he opened and operated a special assembly for Chevrolet at the Chicago Worlds Fair General Motors Exhibit. This he will continue to supervise, as well as to take immediate charge of commercial body operations for Chevrolet in this territory. OLDS SALES ON RISE Four Times as Heavy as July, 1932, Deals of Company. Bp Timm Sprcial DETROIT. Sept. 6—Retail sales of the Oldsmobile Six and Straight Eight during July were more than four times the deliveries recorded in July of 1932. it was announced today by R. M. W. Shaw, Oldsmobile sales manager. • Sales rose sharply as the month progressed." said Mr. Shaw. "The second ten-day period of July showed an increase of 357 deliveries over the first period, and the third period brought a further increase of 816 new car sales over the second ten days ' PURE OIL FILLS POST A. J. Cochran Is Named Division Manager for City. Appointment of A. J. Cochran as district manager for the Indianapolis division of the Pure Oil Company. is announced by L. W. Dunham. division manager. Cochran has been with the Pure Oil organization for fourteen years, serving in similar executive capacities in the Lima (O.) and Richmond tlnd.f branches. He recently received the silver cup awarded for having the most efficiently operated branch In the central marketing division, comprising the branches in Indiana, Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky.
STOCK CAR RECORD IS BROKEN BY FORD V-8 Car Piloted by Fred Frame Wins Elgin National Trophy. All previous records for the famous Elgin national road race were shattered when a Ford V-8 won the Joseph Weidenhoff trophy race for stock cars of American manufacture in the 203-mile grind. The race was conducted under the rules of the contest board of the American Automobile Association and was sanctioned by that organization. The winning Ford V-8, piloted by Fred Frame, Indianapolis speedway champion last year, lowered the mark set in 1920. in the last previous running of the race, by Ralph DePalma. famous race driver, in a high-powered racing car. Frame's average speed was 80.22 miles an hour. DePalma s record was 79 5 miles an hour. The Ford V-8 negotiated the 203-mile course in 2 hours, 32 minutes. 6.1 seconds. Os the fifteen stock cars entered in the race, Fords took the first seven places. SALESMEN NEED TO KNOW USED CARS General Information Helps in Sales. By Times Fpertal CHICAGO. Sept. 6.—Most of the automobiles sold today are used cars and their salesmen should be as well posted as those who are in the new car departments. They need, in other words, to know the salient features of every used car in their stock, regardless of the make and year. Thomas J. Hay, president of the National Used Car Market Report. Inc., stressed these facts today in announcing the issuing of the Blue Book “Characteristic Supplement,” one of whose features is the listing of the outstanding arguments advanced by manufacturers of various makes of cars when those automobiles were new. Discussing this improvement in the latest addition of the supplement, Hay states that the points listed are “the actual quotations from the manufacturers’ catalog in the same language that was used successfully to sell cars at the time of their introduction to the public. POLICE SEEK NEGRO IN SHOOTING AFFRAY ‘Junebug’ Hunter Is Wanted on Gun Charge. Police today were hunting Henry Hunter, alias “Junebug” Hunter, 33-year-old Negro, who is accused of shooting June Harris. 36. Negro, 721 North Senate avenue, early this morning in a house at 834 Roanoke street, occupied by Jasper Allen, 24, Negro. Allen and Clarence and Fanny Thomas, Negroes, 836 Roanoke, told police that an argument started in the kitchen about a money matter and that Harris started for Hunter. The "Junebug,'’ they said, pulled a .38-caliber revolver and shot Harris in the back. Hunter then dashed for the rear of the house, pulling Allie May Stevens, Negro, 509 North Senate avenue, with him. He shoved her into his automobile and left. Police learned later that Hunter drove up to Miss Stevens' address, pushed her out, and “left in high.” Harris was given first aid by police and sent to city hospital, where his condition is described as serious. HELD IN CHECK CASE Vagrancy Prisoner Says He’s U. S. Secret Service Man. Suspected of passing a bad check, a man who says he is Samuel H. Cole, 45. Baltimore, member of the United States secret service, was arrested by police Tuesday night on a vagrancy charge. The arrest was made after a hotel manager told police he had been informed a man gave a worthless check to a member of the Indiana Hotel Association. Cole was found at West and Washington streets trying to thumb a ride in an automobile. Police said he told them he waS| on the lookout for a man wanted for passing counterfeit $5 bills. SUES SUMNER ON BOND Loan Company Charges Undue Delay in Executing Judgment. An alleged delay of nine months in executing a judgment against personal property is the basis of a suit on file in superior court three, seeking to collect SIOO on the bond of Sheriff Charles (Buck) Sumner. The suit was filed by the National Loan Company, naming Sumner and the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, defendants. According to the complaint, a judgment was obtained against Willie Mitchell July 28. 1932, for $69.89. but was returned unsatisfied, March 3, 1933.
Gone, but Not Forgotten
beiong ,n ?o bUf ® T *°° ne<l t 0 ** stolen forest Windhorst. 1115 North Keystone axenue ford roadster. 57-496, from Monrovia. Ind. VVilliam Merrlnan. Martinsville. Ind. FYird coach. 2-Z-9294 New York, from Martinsville Ind Mrs. Ruth Kirk. 3003 Bast Washington Ch *y c l*t coach, from in front of 3003 East Washington street. Willard Young. 722 Lvndhurst drive. Chrvsler coupe 36-72*. from West and Marvland streets. William Schnorr. 430 Hampton drive. Rockne sedan. 102-103. from in front of 815 North Meridian street.
BACK HOME AGAIN
Stolen automobiles recovered bv oolice belong to. Mary Williams. Dartoa. O Ford coupe, found In front of 101S Lexington avenue. Oldsmobile coach, motor number E-59235 no license plates, found in alley in rear of 630 North Illinois street. Chevrolet coach. 36-330 found in rear of 3040 Oileae avenue, automobile stripped of four Una and nna- •
FOY GIVEN POST IN U. S, AUTO C, OF C. Appointee Is Youngest Man Ever to Fill Office. Byron Foy, recently elected secretary of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce, is the youngest man ever to fill this important role on the executive board of the organization, it was stated here today. Vice-president of the Chrysler
Corporation and president of the De Soto Motor Corporation, Foy is known as one of the most agressive executives in the automobile business. Under his leadership, De Soto has made steady sales gains and today has the strongest dealer organization in its history. Starting in as a retail automobile salesman sixteen
/'■' v . '
years ago, Foy has had an amazingly successful career, embracing all forms of automotive merchandising. In his twenties, he won a nationwide contest by selling more cars of a popular make than any man in America. In his thirties, after being appointed president of De Soto, he brought this car a 36 per cent increase in sales in the most difficult year of the automobile business. FLAMING GAS SPRAYED ON CAR: ONE IS KILLED Two Others Injured Critically When Truck Hits Tanks. By United Press VEVAY, Ind., Sept. 6.—Hartman Newmeister Jr., 29, Bedford, was killed and his brother and a companion were injured critically when their truck crashed into gasoline tanks and caught fire here Tuesday. The injured men were Henry Newmeister and Charles Taylor, 35, Lawrenceburg, driver of the machine. The Newmeister brothers, stonecutters, were hitch-hiking to Cincinnati in search of work and had been given a ride by Taylor. The truck struck a tree and glanced against the gas tanks in front of a garage here. Flaming gasoline sprayed over the men. The garage partially was destroyed by the flames. COUGHLIN LAUDS NRA Detroit Radio Priest Predicts Large Scale Inflation for U. S. By United Press NEW YORK, Sept. 6.—Father Charles E. Coughlin, Detroit’s radio priest, predicted today that the United States soon will adopt monetary inflation on a large scale, that France will eb forced off the gold standard, and that Henry Ford will ignore President Roosevelt’s program. Father Coughlin arrived here on a hurried trip from Washington. He made the predictions in an interview at his hotel suite. Father Coughlin pleaded that the NRA be given a chance to operate.
Contract Bridge
BY WILLIAM E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League HERE is a question often asked me by beginners at contract bridge: “What should I do when my partner has opened the bidding and the opponents bid the suit that I had planned to bid?” The answer is simple—you should double. That is the best way of conveying this information to your partner. Let me take up the following hand with you. While it is not a difficult hand to play, it presents several Interesting angles. South, the dealer, should open the contracting with one club. Some players with West's hand would overcall with one spade. If they do, North should double, as this is his best suit. Asa matter of fact, if West had passed. North would have responded with one spade. East, realizing that his partner has been trapped, should bid tw r o hearts, and South should pass. West will pass. North reasons as follows: South, his partner, has made an original bid; as he heard the spade double, and when the opponents overcalled with hearts, he w r as unable to double hearts. He must have some strength in hearts or spades, and in addition he should have strength in diamonds to make the original bid. a a a WHILE it generally is not good policy to make a constructive no trump bid with a singleton in vour partner’s suit, in this case that becomes the best bid because you have both hearts and spades stopped. Therefore. North should bid two no trump, and South will go to three no trump. The jack of hearts is East's opening. which is won by the ace in dummy. With four diamonds to the ace in one hand and four to the queen in the other, the proper play is a small diamond to the ace. The eight dropping from East warns the declarer that the next card from East will be an honor. A small diamond is returned and East wins with the king. MELT AWAY Your Stomach Fats And You ’ll Feel Like a Billion Dollari Sleepless night*, dog-tired Says, headache*, pain* In all part* of the body—lndigestion—gas. Do you •ufler from one or all? No medicine has helped. No wonder, for you. like thousands of other! have probably been treating yourself for everything but the right thing. If your digestive Juice doesn't flow freely, then your food sours, putrlflee. stomach becomes filled with gas and acidity. From the world's greatest chemists comes l simple, pleasant mean* to make this digestive Juice flow freely, and put you on the sunny side ol life— Magnesia Oxolds. little white tablets that relearn pure oxygen. Take two Oxolda after each meal—and befon ret .ring —drink plenty of water —put your digest lv< juices to work —and you'll Jump out of your akU for joy. Such new haalab! Such robust vigor! Qgl lliirmlr Oxolda today tram your druggist. —Advertisement.
DROP SHOWN IN AUTO DEATH TOLL IN U. S. 1 Decrease Is Reported After Safety Survey by Sinclair Oil Cos. A 12.4 per cent decrease in deaths due to motor vehicle accidents was recorded in fifty cities during the past nine months, according to returns made by municipalities entered for the Sinclair national safety award. The cities reported 1,523 motor vehicle fatalities for the period irom October, 1932, to June, 1933. This total was 199 below the figures for the corresponding period a year ago. • The safety award of SIO,OOO, to be made by the Sinclair Refining Company, is offered by H. F. Sinclair, chairman of the executive committee of the Consolidated Oil Corporation, and will go to two cities and the state having the best motor vehicle safety records. Besides accident figures, the determining factors will include population, motor vehicle registration, and the element of traffic risk. The award period will close with September, 1933. CHRYSLER HAS BEST JULY IN ITS HISTORY Sales of All Divisions, at Peak of 55.119 Units. DETROIT, Sept. 6 Shipments of Plymouth, Dodge, De Soto and Chrysler passenger cars and commercial vehicles during July totaled 55,119 units, nearly five times shipments in the same month of a year ago. This was the greatest July business in the history of Chrysler Motors, it was announced here today. July this year was 29 per cent above the best previous July, which was in 1925, when 42,000 units were shipped. It was also the best July for commercial units produced by Chrysler Motors. During the month a total of 3,583 Dodge Brothers trucks were shipped. This was five and one-half times more commercial units than were shipped by the corporation in July of last year. Total shipments of Plymouth, Dodge, De Soto, and Chrysler passenger cars and trucks for the first seven months of this year total 272,888 units. This is 74 per cent ahead of the same period of last year, and already exceeds Chrysler Motors’ total 1932 sales by 23 per cent. Shipments of Dodge Brothers trucks for the last seven months totaled 16,039 units, which is to date 50 per cent more than the entire 1932 shipments of commercial vehicles by Chrysler Motors units. PONTIAC SALES RISING Increase of 7,651 Shown by Company in July. By Times Special / DETROIT, Sept. 6.—Potniac, during July registered an increase of 7,651 retail sales over deliveries in the same month of 1932, according to Sales Manager R. K. White. “Pontiac sales for the first seven months of 1933 exceed the same period of 1932 by 21,828 units,” said White. Glass manufacture uses the largest industrial furnaces in the United States.
Foy
♦ 10-7-5-3-2 VK-Q-5 ♦ A-10-6-5 *6 AA-Q-8- [NORTH] *j_ 6 4 fe 2 VJ-10-V 8-4-2 w 8 9-7-3 ♦ 7-2 5 H + K-J-8 *K-10- Dealer *9-8-2 4-3 SOUTH *K-9 VA-6 ♦ Q-9-4-3 *A-Q-J-7-5
East continues with a heart, which North wins with the queen. He now runs two diamonds, retaining the lead in his own hand. West discards a spade and a club. Declarer then leads the king of hearts and then a small club, finessing the jack, West winning with the king. The declarer is bound to make his contract as he has three good club tricks. West's best play is to return a club, and in this manner he will make two spade tricks.
INDIANA STATE FAIR GRAND CIRCUIT RACES EVERY DAY NIGHT HORSE SHOW AND POLO GAMES ADMISSION Day—Adults, 50c; Children, 25c Night—Adults, 25c. Automobiles, 25c INDIANA STATE FAIR RUSSELL E. EAST, Pres. E. J. BARKER, Sec.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
COAL DEALER IS FOUND DEAD IN FIRM'S OFFICES
Funeral for W. F. Gansberg to Be Friday at Zion Church. Funeral services for W. F. Gansberg, 67, of 2468 North Meridian street, will be held at 2:30 Friday in the Zion Evangelical church. Burial will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Mr. Gansberg was found dead by his son, William F. Gansberg Jr., in his chair,in the office of the Gansberg Coal Company. He was a member of several other local business firms. Surviving are his son; a brother, Fred A. Gansberg, and a sister, Mrs. Louise Eilring, all of Indianapolis. Hughes Funeral Today Funeral services for Mrs. Nellie Hughes, 40. 364 Beauty avenue, were to be held at 2 this afternoon in the Roscoe Conkle funeral home. Burial was to be in Floral Park cemetd:y. Mrs. Hughes died Monday at her home. She was a member of the Mt. Olive M. E. church. Surviving are the widower, Otis Hughes; a son, Raymond Hughes; a brother, George Clements of Indianapolis. and a sister, Mrs. Dora West of Louisville. Former Resident Dies Word has been received by friends in Indianapolis of the death of Ray Unde/wood. former employe of the Federal income tax division in Indianapolis, at Pine Bluff, Ark. Funeral services will be held in Stuttgart, Ark., where Mr. Underwood has been engaged in business since leaving Indianapolis. Survivors are the widow, Mrs. Lola Schubert Underwood, and a daughter, Miss Mabel Jane Underwood. CHILO STRUCK BY CAR Negro Girl, 10, Stepped From Behind Another Car, Cops Told. Crossing Sixteenth street at Columbia avenue this morning on her way to school, Charlotte Johnson, 10, Negro. 1635 Yandes street, stepped into the path of an automobile driven by Ovid Jones, 20, of 967 South Audubon road. The child suffered an injured right knee and body bruises. She was taken t ocity hospital. Wit-* nesses said the girl stepped from behind a parked car directly in front of Jones’s machine. ELECT PING-PONG HEAD George M. Binger Named President of City Association. v George M. Binger was elected president of the Indianapolis PingPong Asosciation at the annual meeting Tuesday night in the Denison. Other officers elected were Edward G. Dorey, vice-president; Bob Crawford, secretary, and Harold Justus, treasurer. Plans are being made for the annual state championship tournament.
MOTION PICTURES
033 M I*l1 3sS| BUI! ’ll' 111 iII i —MMBBW—BMI iSnAcli.i
Returned—Today, Tomorrow Only
1 SC Through Wed.Y f Constance Bennett P.Sf —also— 1 “Williamson Beneath the Sea.”
$2,200 IN BAG STOLEN Visitor Is Victim of Robbery at Union Depot. Otto M. Schnatter. Jeffersonville. Ind.. reported to police early today that he was the victim of a $2,200 theft while waging for a train at the Union depot. The loot, which was in a traveling bag, included stock and bond certificates, building and loan credit books, and clothing. Two persons told police they saw a man walk away with the bag. He was said to have been drunk. The man was described as about 35. and wore a brown suit and checked cap. NAB THEFTS SUSPECTS Negroes Found Trundling Loot in Wheelbarrow Held in Jail. It was “Three o'clock in the morning” when police found William Jefferson. 29. Negro. 1005 Colton street, and Claude Wells, 17, Negro, 1000 block Colton street, trundling a wheelbarrow in the 900 block Torbett street. Jefferson and Wells were arrested on vagrancy charges. Officers said the wheelbarrow contained sixteen window weights, electric light wire, a light fixture, pair of pliers and a screwdriver. PROWLER RETURNS FIRE Farmer Shoots When He Hears Noise; So Does Target; Both Miss. A shot fired early today by Bernard Nowakowski, 54, R. R. 9, Box 581, when he heard a disturbance among chickens at his home, brought a shot in turn, but no one was struck. Nowakowski told police he was ; awakened by the ringing of an elec- ! trie bell in the home, which serves ! as a burglar alarm for the poultry house. ENGINEER IS SPEAKER County Surveyor’s Aid to Talk on Belt Highway. Indianapolis Engineering Society will hear Le Grande Marvin, engineer in the county surveyor’s office, talk on “The Marion County Belt Highway” at a luncheon of the organization at the Board of Trade Thursday noon. Details of the plan to build the belt highway with federal aid funds will be given, as originally expressed by Bruce Short, county surveyor.
MOTION PICTURES
f^ACTT*^| B METROPOLITAN ISS iVMwmiuJi ak Hcadcd sy rut FAMOUS-
lo| 2T.C to fi r. M. Beautiful . . . Charming . . . Martene DIETRICH IN “THE SONG OF SONGS”
Starts Friday! A great picture portrayed with the genius of “DISRAELI” The heart-throb and human interest of “THE MILLIONAIRE” Plus the whimsical good humor of “SUCCESSFUL CALAMITY” GEORGE ARLISS in “THE AFFAIRS OF* VOLTAIRE”
FUTURE OF U. S. IS FORECAST IN M’NUTTS TALK Economic Fate to Be Seen in 60 Days, Governor Tells Labor Parley. By r nited Press GARY, Ind., Sept. 6. Business sessions of the Indiana Federation of Labor were resumed today following a visit to the world's fair by delegates attending the annual convention here. Highlights of the program so far was a speech by Governor Paul V. McNutt, in which he predicted the economic and social fate of the United States will be determined within the next sixty days. Re-election of Thomas N. Taylor as president of the federation for 1934 was ratified by the delegates.
%\ NPIP JlflJ"* Hurry! Last 2 Day* to See the Stage and Ms Screen Treat That Hat the Whole Town TalkMs ins! . . . ON' SCRF.EN . . . ms (ELeuubtU JUckajd. # COLBERT HR LIN BOLAND \\ f ‘THREE-CORHERED MOON’ 1 I! On Our Mightier Stage . . . STOOPNAGLE and BUDD I Famous radio and Rtage stars ■ 1\ JACK POWELL /I W, Rajah of Rhythm M KAY-KATYA and KAY M SeatsN 4 MULLEN SISTERS / “ r “ ! . \ ( \l2 ABBOTT DANCERS/ LOU \ OL FORBES j V ■w ” And His J V Entire BalconyNew Idea / Vone to Six/ simp i e human story wins \MUSIC!/^k cheers at Little Theater”... jl This headline appeared in the New York Dally News the : dav after 'One Sunday Afternoon opened last season. .ft !§ and it is still runnine on Broadway. I Gary Cooper—Fay Wray—Neil Hamilton || “One Sunday Afternoon" | g! A GIANT NEW STAGE REVUE! I
Alice Brad* I pIcTYRt \ jP^ll Madee Evans ■ ———4 Jackie Cooper 'wf& MM. TR "Srhnorrle" Tk
TONJ&HTf ■NEIGHBORHOOD THEATER? ?
NORTH SIDE TIL 'J ■■ Talbot A 2snd jrAtßorin “ANN CARVER'S PROFESSION” IIhATFONt W •IHE WOMAN I STOLE" rMEccar 7 “CIRCUS QUEEN MURDER 1 ’ >AARICKI “COHENS AND KELLYS IN TROUBLE" Warren William “MIND READER’’ •3j®1.,j4 f —oy —TM|3oth A Northwestern ** fe- .X W'* Clive Brook •CAVALCADE'’ - .1— '.j— 111. at 34th ’”22 R jcTf Zfimi Sylvia Sidney imamm Donald Cook JENNIE GERHARDT ■* ■ ■ ■■ a■'■'ST 42nd and College UP Richard Arlen — r 1 1 Jark 04kle j Clair. Ft. Wayne ST.CLAIR Chas. Ruffles Phil Harris “MELODY CRUISE" EAST SIDE Ua . ■/a i' "jflß Dearborn at 10th MV U La-'At Warned Baxter ' Elissa LandJ “I LOVED YOU WEDNESDAY" jMlßfOljg C&UnZjgnnHt 550* E. Wash. ailfTlllfTFlTfrill ' Bargain Nile Jean Parker “WHAT PRICE INNOCENCE" mVi’rnma J 7— 2930 E. 10th St. *' 3-i # ,' <■B Double Feature Ml, i l ”i ** Sally Eilera K - SAILOR'S LUCK" 4-,, |XHB Keene. “SCABLXT RmJt"
The elections were held by mail last Julv. Others named include: Frank Morgan, first vice presi-. dent; Carl Mullen, second vice, president: C. T. McPherson, third: vice president; Edward P. Barry, fourth vice president: Mary Garner, fifth vice president; Adolph Frits, secretary-treasurer, and Jake Frey and O. W. Miller, tellers. SLOT MACHINES SEIZED Barbecue Owner Faces Gaming Charge After Raid by Polire. William E Stockdale, 36. owner of the Blue Hour barbecue, 2918 West Sixteenth street, today was under arrest on a charge of keeping a gaming device after two slot machines were seized Tuesday night by Sergeant John Eisenhut. The machines, one a nickel device and the other a penny machine, were in the basement of the barbecue. said Eisenhut. Burglar Gets Silverware Silverware and clothing valued at $65 was the loot of a burglar Tuesday from the home of John Birt, 240 North Tacoma avenue.
MOTION PICTURES
EAST SIDE ifww yk’a k jm'xnrr 2110 e. mih st. JflMlllOit "SUNNY SIDE UP" St. “MELODY C R LIS [■., Harri ’ ... CQWBB 2U F | W “*it . St ” "TOMO R ROW A T SEVEN" __ 'iiua i ma l a.x!jjL"ju mu 1 4020 E. New York /ass "CHEATING BLONDES" SOUTH SIDE Wo.. W . >jar At Fountain Square Zr lattZii* Mi The Greatest Ma.i----f ral of all time. "SUNNY S IDE CP" ffl*rt>iß^ Pro =.e*"F?., S u^ ,b ' rr■ Tdia Jack Buchannan "MAGIC NIGHT” Marion Schilling "Shop Angel" * Fountain Bq‘ yrtKPwßft } Richard Arlen HUMOR" ■aiw.■ mSSjt&t 1105 S. Me*. PRHT<ag *,x *;;™ “TRICK FOR TRICK" m- ._ ■ _— 1 41?} 2203 Shelby St. jftAßWtfrj ■ “STRANGE JUSTICE" WE STRIDE w >riy Nitf 1, BriSr”? 1 W.,gj. Marlon Nixon •A PRIVAIE SCANDAL" n "1 t l fTHFf 2540 W. Mich. DAIS Family Ntte , Sallv Ellers "HOLD ME TIGHT" W. 10th at Holmes rPRINGuSI Family Mfe ..._l I Irene “THE ifaLVEl^^^j^
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