Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 124, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 October 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
AUTOMOTIVE NEWS HIGHLIGHTS
SCHOTT FIRM DISPLAYS 1935 AUBURN LINES New Models Available in Sixes and Eights With Lycoming Motors. Auburn’s new 1935 lines of straight eights and six-cylinder automobiles are now on display at the Schott Automobile Company, distributor for the Indianapolis territory. Roadability, ease of steering and handling, economy of operation and upkeep, quietness, luxurious finish and appointments with an unexcelled performance are the recog-
nized features of these models. Earl Schott, head of the company, says: "Those who have ridden in these cars report being particularly impressed with the quality of ride' which they say is not only ’different’ but is far advanced. "Four models
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are being offered in the straight eight line, a five-passenger two-door brougham, two-passenger convertible cabriolet with nimble seat and a five-passenger convertible sedan. ’ Four models of the same body types are available in the sixcylinder line. All models are of the custom type. Dual ratio may be had on any model at a slight additional cost. Roominess Featured "These 1935 cars are remarkably big and roomy, luxuriously finished and designed to give the impression of class. The wheelbase of the six is 120 inches, one inch longer than last year's six. while the straight eight has been advanced to 127 inches, likewise an inch longer than its last year's forerunner. "Through the deft handling of de- . sign lines the cars appear even longer and bigger than they really arp. "In general appearance the new! Auburn reflects the present tendency toward streamlining. Through the use of longitudinal lines the hoods of the cars appear extra long and the distinctive radiator design augments this length. This hood, coupled with the wing and torpedo type fenders and slanting top lines of the body, give an appearance of! smart distinction. Body of Welded Steel “Chromium plate and stainless. steel is much in evidence. Headlights, bumpers, louvre beads, running board trim, radiator grill, window separators, hub and tire cover edging are all in bright finisn “Mechanically, the cars contain! such features as all-steel unit welrij body structure, new and improved, shock absorbers, controlled venti- ! lation system, sound-proof insula- j tion. hydraulic brakes. X-plus-A chassis frame construction, downdraft carburetor, sixteen-inch wheels on the eight and needle-bearing universal Joints. "Dual ratio may be had on all models. The eight line is powered with a 115-horse power straight eight Lycoming engine. The horse power of the Lycoming six engine is eighty-five.”
Electric Motorcycle A motorcycle constructed by a Parisian inventor uses electricity for power with a storage battery supplying the current. The cycle can run more than forty miles on one charging of the battery. Men of 50 Drive Best Statistics show men of 50 to be the safest drivers. CALLOUSES rm Try thit wonde-fulrelief. Stop* H pain at cxvr; quickly, safely ■ . sens and removes callouses, IP LJjoing out OF TOWN? Leaving for Boston, Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, St. loms or New York? In these cities you need "take a chance" on your hotel —you can stay at a Statler (in New York, the Pennsylvania). You'll be sure of all the conveniences, all the comforts that mean complete hotel satisfaction. Even "little things"* — neglected by many hotels —are important to the Statlers. •Example: A pin rush inn truh __ buttons, pins, and threaded H| n+mile.s —in every room. h{ • CLEVELAND 52.5€ M • DETROIT 2.50 IZZJ • ST. LOUIS 2.50 f--l • BOSTON 3.50 era • NEW TORN 3.50 (Hotel PeMsylvMia) Room mlet nl price* Wn 20-MO.NTHS TO PAY! CMeago Jewelry Cos. Oppnalrp Courthouse. Est. 40 Tear*. 203 E. Washington. LI-8603.
ROSE TIRE COMPANY ESTABLISHES BUDGET DEPARTMENT
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DRIVERS SEEK SAFETY PRIZE Indianapolis Represented in Campaign of Goodrich Firm. More than 600 drivers of trucks, busses and taxicabs in the Indianapolis district have entered the race for the Silvertown Safety League awards since the program was inaugurated a little more than a year ago by the B. F. Goodrich Company, it is announced by Mr. L. L. Sowers, district manager. A large number of aw’ards to drivers who have operated their vehicles for a year without an accident already have been made in the Indianapolis district, and a still larger number presented drivers who have operated six months without an acicdent, Mr. Sowers says. Upon completion of six months without an accident for which they are responsible, each driver receives a Silvertown Safety League silver lapel medal and a Silvertown Safety League emblem for his vehicle. After operation of his vehicle for a, year he is given a gold medal. A certificate is presented every fleet operator, or independent owner upon completion of a year’s driving without accident. OLDS CHIEF HONORED C. L. McCuen to Head Division in Community Fund Drive. Itit 1 1 mi n Special LANSING, Mich., Oct. 3 —C. L. McCuen, president of the Olds Motor Works, has been appointed chairman of the industrial division of soliciting groups working for the Lansing Community welfare iund campaign, to be conducted Oct. Bto 15. Assisting him will be Don E. Bates, president of the Reo Motor Company. Cause of Wheel Shimmy Unequal pressure in tires will cause front wheels to shimmy.
Mr. Schott
FLIER TO VISIT CITY
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Captain Jimmie Haizlip, noted speed pilot and assistant manager of the aviation department for the Shell Petroleum Corporation, will arrive at Indianapolis airport tomorrow at 10:30 a. m.. central standard time, according to C. W. Manville. Indiana division manager for Shell. Captain Haizlip. who is bringing the winners of the national Shell service station contest back from A Century’ of Progress exposition, is scheduled to go on the air over WFBM at 11:30 for a ten-minute talk on ' Speed in the Air” and plane racing. Following the broadcast a luncheon will be held for Captain Haizlip. after which he will take off from the airport for Louisville. Studio Couch $17.50 Makes double, single or 2 twin beds. 3 Pillows included. SI Weekly
Louis F. Scott
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Art Rose
Art Rose, head of the Rose Tire Company, 930 North Meridian street, pioneer in the merchandising of automotive supplies on the budget plan, announces the opening of a special budget department. This department will be operated as a division of the business. Extensive remodeling has been done to provide special quarters where the necessary arrangements can be made in complete privacy. C. V. Serfass, with many years of experience in budget selling, will be manager. Louis F. Scott will assist him. "We were forced to install this new department,” Mr. Rose stated, "in order to handle the greatly increased number of budget transactions more efficiently. When we established the budget pay plan in 1926, the store manager personally handled all transactions along with his many other duties. However, each year this business has shown a substantial increase until we now feel that in justice to our customers it is deserving of a special department of its own and a special manager who can give his personal attention to each customer and provide the plan best suited to the individual income. "The budget play plan department of today is a far cry from that of years gone by,” he asserted. “We have simplified the plan and eliminated all unnecessary details. Establishment of an account requires but little more time than the recording of a cash transaction. Tires, auto radios, auto batteries and auto heaters are available under this convenient arrangement.” The regular cash departments of the business will continue to be operated as heretofore. The Rose Tire Company is one of the largest independent distributors and retailers of automotive supplies in the country, although its business history covers only eight years. OIL BUSINESS EXPANDS Tide Water Company Will Build Large Terminal. By Times Special NEW YORK, Oct. 3. One of New York state’s largest gasoline and oil terminals will be erected immediately in Syracuse by the Tide Water Oil Company, according to an announcement by E. L. Shea, president of the company. This is the second terminal expansion to be announced by Tide Water within a month, the other being the forty-five acre marine terminal now’ being built in Boston.
DIVIDEND TO BE PAID • Houdaille Hershey Distribution Set for Oct. 15. Hit 'l imes Special DETROIT, Oct. 3.—Houdaille Hershey Corporation has declared a dividend of $1.25 on the $2.50 cumulative preferred class A stock, playable Oct. 15 to stock of record Oct. 10. A dividend of $1.25 was paid on the class A preferred stock, June 12, last. The dividend to be paid Oct. 15 represents regular accumulations which were due Jan. 1, 1933 and April 1, 1933. SPARK TESTED Lead Pencil Can Be Used to Show Condition of System. A spark plug tester may be made out of an ordinary lead pencil by sharpening both ends and drilling a small hole through it at its middle. The projecting lead at one end is held against the terminal on top of the spark plug, while the other end is grounded against the motor head. If a spark jumps across the gap, the plug is functioning. Acetylene Men to Meet Bp Times Special PITTSBURGH, Oct. 3.—Preparations are fast assuming final form for the annual meeting of the International Acetylene Association, which will be held at the William Penn hotel, Nov. 14, 15 and 16. Continue Exhibit Bp Times Special CHICAGO, Oct. 3.—Because of its success as a farm week attraction, the special display of pnuematictired motorized farm equipment is continued ty Firestonfc until the end of the world's fair. Speed Consumes Oil Speed has a great deal more effect on oil consumption than any possible change in the type of oil. The average car driven continuously at sixty miles an hour uses ten times as much oil as it does at thirty miles an hour. Loose. Broken Plates New Kites repaired) WHILE you WAIT , broken. 11l- c 4 cn ! plates made 9 1 iew. low as I aerate Our Own i Jinorstory 2ND FLOOR LEMCKE feLDG. I Cor. Penn, and Market Sts. LI-4110
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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C. V. Serfass
JERITZA WILL SIN6FOR FORD Viennese Soprano to Be on Air Sunday With Detroit Orchestra. Maria Jeritza will be guest star with the Ford Symphony orchestra pn the first Ford Sunday Evening Hour, Oct. 7. The noted Viennese soprano will sing a group of solos, one with the twenty-four voice chorus, which will be featured during the entire thirty-nine-week series of broadcasts. The new Ford programs under the direction of Victor Kolar, w’hich will be broadcast from Orchestra Hall in Detroit, w’ill be carried over the coast-to-coast network of Columbia stations. The programs will last an hour, beginning at 8, eastern standard time. The personnel of seventy members of the orchestra for the Ford programs is identical with that of the Detroit Symphony orchestra, which Victor Kolar conducted this summer in Ford Symphony Gardens at the world's fair, Chicago. During this period, the orchestra played more than 600 different selections and, counting repetitions, a total of 1,450 compositions. Mr. Kolar left the conductors’ stand only four times during the series, three times when Ossip Gabrilowitsch took over the baton from his associate and once when the orchestra was led by Ilya Scholnik, the concert master, as a reward for his W’ork in the violin section. Mr. Kolar w’as born in Budapest of Slovak-German parentage, and received his early musical training as w’ell as his general education in Prague, where he was a pupil of Anton Dvorak. He traces hie love and mastery of music to both his mother and father, the latter having been the outstanding oboe virtuoso of Europe in his day. At 17, the musician came to America where he began as a violinist with Walter Damrosch’s New York Symphony orchestra. Later he became assistant conductor of the Pittsburgh symphony, and for some years has been associate conductor with Gabrilowitsch in Detroit. 3 ARMY FLIERS KILLED Bodies of Crash Victim.. Taken From Huge Bomber. Hp United Tress RIVERSIDE, Cal., Oct. 3—Bodies of three army fliers who crashed to their deaths in an isolated section of the Sierra Nevada mountains north of here were removed today from the wreckage of their giant bombing plane. Searchers found the wreckage last night. The victims were Captain Robert E. Seliff, 39; Second Lieutenant Clifford C. Hoffman, 25, and Private Le Roy Hitchcock, 21.
SALESMEN REGISTERED San Francisco Ordinance Otherwise Controls Used Car Sales. A strict San Francisco municipal ordinance requires used car dealers to register all salesmen and file bond of SSOO with the chief of police, take out a license to sell used cars, keep a record of all transactions and report within forty-eight hours when a used vehicle is acquired. AUTO PRICE DECREASES Average of $720 in 1921 Declined to $472 Last Year. The average wholesale price of a passenger car in 1921 was $720, while in 1933 it had declined to $472. The decline was even more pronounced in the truck field, the 1921 average being $1,035 and the 1933 figure $482. Changes Approved Hu Times Special WILMINGTON. Del., Oct. 3.—At a special meeting held here stockholders of General Motors Corpora*tion approved the revision and modification of General Motors management corporation plan as adopted by the board of directors. The vote was 28.568,440 shares in favor of the revision and 16,955 shares opposed to it. Headlights Made Safer Through use of reflecting mirrors, an inventor has devised a set of headlights which will eliminate the menace of one-eyed cars. Should one bulb burn out, the remaining one would supply light to each headlamp. Soap Stops Squeaks Annoying squeaks and rattles, that sometimes develop under the hood at the cowl and radiator frames, may be eliminated by rubbing ordinary hand soap on the fabric lacings. Tires Ventilated Through the evolution of anew method of tread design, one of the i larger rubber companies has placed on the market a self-ventilating truck tire. _
FATIGUE TESTS SHOW EFFECTS ON MOTORISTS
Physiologist Makes Unique Research in Field of Automobile. An intriguing promise of revelations for the automobile-minded comes from Chicago, where the in--1 ternationally famed physiologist, Dr. j Andrew H. Ryan, has just finished j a series of tests which, according to advance information, will interest every person concerned, as designer, engineer, owner, driver or ! passenger, with motor cars.
I Dr. Ryan is an investigator who for years has devoted his energies to the scientific study of human fatigue. Many of his researches, especially those made during the World war, have led to the farreaching changes in manufacturing methods, working conditions, hours
Dr. Ryan.
of employment and other occupational factors. Early this year, Mary B. Warner, an associate of Dr. Ryan in his fatigue work, had occasion to drive automobiles of several different makes. She became acutely conscious of the fact that some of the cars were, or seemed to be, more comfortable, less fatiguing than others. " Having the observation brought to his attention, Dr. Ryan perceived anew line of research, promising worthwhile results. So, early this spbing plans and instruments were ready, a special laboratory had been fitted out, a crew of men and women driver-subjects had been enlisted, test cars of different makes had been requisitioned, routes and time schedules had been established, and the work was on. Now, after nearly six months of painstaking scientific tests of men and women drivers, a prominent automobile manufacturer is reported to be ready to divulge what may prove surprising news of automobile riding qualities such as were ascertained by Dr. Ryan and his staff in their experiments. LEGION INTERESTED IN HOME MODERNIZATION Auxiliary Meets This Afternoon to Hear Details ofPlan. Presidents of Twelfth district units, American Legion auxiliary, were to gather this afternoon at the legion’s national headquarters, 777 North Meridian street, to interest themselves in the property repair and modernization program being sponsored here by the Chamber of Commerce and the Construction League as part of the government’s housing drive. Legion post commanders of the same district will hear a discussion of the program tomorrow night and it is the hope of the chamber and the league that the full force of the legion’s organized thousands will be put back of the housing campaign. TWO CITY SCOUTS TO GET EAGLE RANKING Other Honors to Be Awarded at Court Tonight. Two boys, Allen Vestal, Troop 9, and Chester Stayton, Troop 90, will be raised to the rank of eagle scout at the Boy Scout court of awards in Cropsey auditorium of the central library at 8 tonight. A gold eagle palm awarded for ten merit badges acquired above the eagle rank will be presented to John G. Cross, Troop 21. The star rank will be conferred on Richard Emmelman and Harry Myers, Troop 2; Jack Siegesmund, Troop 3; Hal Schornstein, Troop 10; James Johnson, Troop 39, and Frank King, Troop 55. HIGH MASONS TO OPEN SERIES OF LUNCHEONS Members, Friends Invited to Event Tomorrow. The first of a series of Thursday luncheon meetings will be held at the Scottish Rite cathedral tomorrow. All members of Murat Temple and their friends have been invited to attend. The program for tomorrow’s meeting has been arranged by Lloyd Claycombe, October entertainment committee chairman. RADIO SETS ARE STOLEN Two More Machines Taken From Homes, Police Told. The activities of burglars with a fondness for radios continued yes- ■ terday with a set valued at $265 stolen from the home of J. Brooke Clawson, 2537 North Pennsylvania j street, and another set being pari of loot valued at slls which was j taken from the home of Mose Pat-! terson, 54, Negro, 529 Bowman j street.
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- The Theatrical World - Walter Connolly Rises to Heights in Picture BY WALTER D. HICKMAX
ONE of the pictures I will put in my list of the ten best pictures of 1934 is Columbia's "Whom The Gods Destroy.” It is one of the most sensitively photographed and acted pictures we have had in many a moon. The theme is "dynamite” because it turns a highly talented and respected business man into a coward
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who is forced to change his name, identity and even his business to live down his shame. John Forrester, recognized as the most resourceful and successful producer of legitimate plays on Broadway, sails for London after producing his most successful play. The great ocean liner meets with an accident and sinks. In the
terrible excitement that follows, Forrester, played by Walter Connblly, gives his lifebelt to a New York society woman. He turns to aiding the ship's officers in placing women and children in the lifeboats, keeping the men on the sinking ship. A male passenger goes mad, attempts to knife Forrester in his desperate attempts to get into a lifeboat. The captain shoots dow’n the
WANTED: AT ONCE! TON OF BICARBONATE FOR BIG EATER KING
By United Press ROUEN, France, Oct. 3. Charles Vienot, weight 826 pounds, was crowned king of the big eaters of Normandy today, after the annual gastronomic contest. Vienot enjoyed this menu: Fish—2 '.2 pounds. Chicken—2 u 2 pounds. Mutton—2ls pounds. White beans. A whole cheese. Twenty-nine assorted pieces of cheese. Six apple tarts. Two bottles of Alsatian wine. Two bottles of Burgundy. Four bottles of Normandy cider. RAID ON NARCOTICS IS FOILED BY DRUG CLERK Customer, Apparently Addict, Flees After Breaking Lock. Apparently crazed with the desire for drugs, a man walked boldly into the Chaplin pharmacy, 4601 College avenue, late yesterday and broke open the lock on'the narcotic counter before he was chased out by the soda fountain clerk, William Charlie. The man entered a car with New York license plates and drove away, according to witnesses. FALL VICTIM IMPROVES Indiana U. Co-ed Removed From Hospital to Her Home. Her condition greatly improved, Miss Marguerite E. Halbing, 18, who fell from a third-story window of Residence hall at Indiana university, Bloomington, in May, has been returned from the Robert W. Long hospital to her home, 1125 Belle Vieu place. Miss Halbing fell when a screen gave way as she was leaning against it.
“Brisk, bright and mirthPtj ful!” —Whitworth, News. & MIRIAM HOPKINS £ | JOEL McCREA 3 I ‘ The RICHEST GIRL 2 B In THE WORLD” J| Wk> with FAY WRAY GS "WjL REGINALD DENNY r-' J '~NOW! 1 rhMiurs = {Cleopatra i 3l CLAUDETTE COLBERT = j WARREN WILLIAM i HENRY WILCOXON f a cast of 8,000
Von Too—Will Say It Is His Greatest Picture . . . 1 40c - With STEPIN FETCHIT
crazed man as he lunges at Forrester. In that frenzied moment, something “cracks” in Forrester as he thinks of his wife and son at home in New York. Suddenly he sees the discarded coat and hat of a woman, puts them on. Asa “woman,” he is carried to safety. When the fishermen in a small village discover that a man had donned woman's clothes while other men had gone to watery graves, he is branded a coward and denied the companionship of all except Alec, as played by Hobart Bosworth. * * t> THEN follows the most tremendously effective portrayal of mental, physical, and even spiritual suffering that the screen has presented in many years. This role makes Walter Connolly one of the ten best character actors on the screen. His suffering, as he struggles with poverty and his disguise, to make a great producer out of his own son, is tremendous acting. I know that Walter Connolly held me for the sixty-nine minutes that it took to present it. It is big movie theater. Never have I seen shipwreck scenes directed and photographed as realistically. These scenes will make you sit on the edge of your seat. Without any doubt, “Whom The Gods Destroy.” is one of the finest pictures of the year and deserves to be listed as one of the very best of the year. It is on view now as a first-run offering at the Ambassador. 000 OTHER theaters today offer: “Judge Priest,” at the Apollo; “Outcast Lady,” at Loew’s Palace; “Cleopatra,” at the Indiana; “The Richest Girl in the World,” at the Circle; vaudeville and movies at the Lyric. 63 ARE ENROLLED IN GYMNASTIC COLLEGE Six City Student* Are on List of Freshmen. Sixty-three students have enrolled for the year’s course in the Normal college of the American Gymnastic Union, it was* announced today by Dr. Carl B. Smith, president. Among freshmen are Jane Fletemeyer, Washington high school graduate and five Shortridge high school graduates: Carl F. Gaines, Ruby Lou Lillard, Mary Alice Shively, Marguerite White and Thomas D. Miller. The college opened yesterday for the training of teachers of health and physical education. §25,000 Damage Suit Filed Demand for $25,000 damages for alleged personal injuries resulting from a traffic mishap has been made by Milton M. Vawter in a suit filed in superior court, room two, against Julius H. Helden.
Hobart Bosworth
I|sl TC :#j|| SWANSON I vjj jjfei Out JI/GHT OFjQy£ 4' “Utterly exciting! Grace jfe Moore’s exq u isite voice, beauty and charming personality make this picture enchantHH| ing! I was thrilled by it!” jjjßßi
U^VsesentATlONS' NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS I
NORTH SIDE TALBOTT v Double Feature “MURDER IN THE PRIVATE CAR" —THE GREAT FLIRTATION" n |nprw Illinois at 34tb Kll/, Double Feature Ronald Colman BULLDOG DRCMMOND STRIKES BACK* “LAUGHING BOY” UPTOWN Ilouble* Feature _ Helen Twelvetreea “SHE WAS A LADY” _ “CRIME W ITHOUT PASSION” w-v-pv *1 4 m 2361 Station St. I IKK AM Double Feature LHVGflitl y. c Fi(|di "TILLIE AND Gl'S” “WHERE SINNERS MEET” o . . r 1 l!)th and Collere Stnmnrrl Family Nite JliailUlU Double Feature "LET’S TRY AGAIN”’ “REVENGE AT MONTE CARLO” . Noble at Mass. MECCA FamlW Nite iTIEAjU>rV Double Feature “THE BIG RACE" “LET’S TRY AGAIN" 4 nnicu/ Illinois si <tb CARRICK Doable Feature U/Al\l\lUil\ Jimmie Durante “STRICTLY DYNAMITE” "DOUBLE DOOR" _ totb A Northwestern RFX Family Nite Ann sothern “THE HELL CAT” nrr /~11 4in St-Clair at Ft. Wayne ST. CLAIR ess.'BSS “BORN TO BE BAD” “THE GREAT FLIRTATION’ ZARING •wSf BST “THE KEY” “IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT” EAST SIDE pirn A XTIX 1352 E. Wash. St. STRAND OMIr Today JEAN HARLOW “GIRL FROM MISSOURI” u f riri nc “The Old Fashioned Way” SCRAPPY CARTOON mttAl 1 Dearborn at 10th KIVIIKI Double Feature IX4 T Katherine Hepburn “LITTLE WOMEN” "PARIS INTERLUDE” iniriAlC’ M* l * Wash 81 IRVING D “ P n , b o ',* ssar* "AFFAIRS Or A GENTLEMAN” THE GREAT" . TACOMA “BLACK MOON” “W’ERX RICH AGAIN”
.OCT. 3, 1934
ROTARY ELECTS NEW DIRECTORS; REVUEJTAOED President's Term Satirized in Program at Club 4 Session. The climax of the Indiana polil Rotary Club year was reached last night with election of officers and a musical extravaganza revue. "Jim's Jams,” which satirized the term of James Duane Dungan as president. New directors are Ray F. Croin, Arthur R. Baxter. Howard R. Johnson. Marshall D. Lupton. Ernest C. Ropkey, Curtis H. Rottger. Guy A. Wainwright and J. H. Erbich. These directors will meet with the holdover directors within a few days toelect officers. A highlight of the revue, written by Dr. Arthur C. Burrell, directed, by Ralph H. Edgerton and managed by Don A. Morrison, was a chorus, of ten girls from Butler university and Shortridge high school under the direction of Miss, Dorotny Jane Atkins and Miss Clemence Marie Dow. Music was provided by Mrs. J* Harry Green and Mrs. S. E. Fenstermaker, soloists, and a ten-piece orchestra. Featured players in the revue cast w’ere Walker W. Winslow as Mr. Dungan. F. Durward Staley as the medicine show’ man. Audley S, Dunham as the magician, Charles McCormick as Dr. McCormick, Stuart Dean as an old soldier, Edwir* R. Hisey as a preacher, Don A. Morrison as “Mrs. Kathryn Turney Morison,” Paul Moffett as himself, Albert Worm as a visiting Rotarian, Arthur R. Baxter as the bartender. Harmonica players were C. D. Alexander, William Zeller, Ward Hunt Dea’i, Otto Krauss, J. Harry Green, Sidney E. Fenstermaker, Omar S. Hunt, Robert Kelly, Dr. Harry W. Parr, Charles F. Zwick and Dr. Marion E. Clark. “Dancing nymphs” were Carletoil W. Starkey, E. Park Akins, William. T. Peacock and Frank H. Langenskamp. The revue choruses included - Winifred Ward, Katherine Lewis, Maizie Tyner, Adile Dunn, Marian Carter, Susan Shirk, Afton White," Mildred Grayson, Roberta Turner and Janet Shuman. Miss Dow and Miss Atkins gave solo dances. The holdover directors are Arthur Conley Burrell, Luther L. Dickerson, Hal E. Howe, Roy Sahm, Raymond E. Siebert, Walker W. Winslow’, William M. Zeller and James Duane Dungan.
DANCE TONIGHT k LADIES FREE & (100 service charge, I NCI,. CHECKING) t- w 't GENTLEMEN 15c Before 9:00 |gj INDIANAROOT
EAST SIDE EMERSON <fi3 ° E lenth s ‘ " SPECIAL FEATURE ATTRACTION •Xis TV I? INCA New York TUXEDO “KISS AND MAKE UP” ‘‘MURDER ON THF. BLACKBOARD” HAMILTON H. B. Warner “SORRELL AND SON" “AFFAIRS OF A GENTLEMAN" Paramount ""fiflyn “CHANGE OF HEART” 4 ni/i'in 2930 E. Tenth St. rAKKKK Double Feature nmnun Family Nite “SPITFIRE” “WEST OF THE DIVIDE" r* -*”• E WM.iinrtop KIJaY Double Feature 1 Shirley Temple “BABY TAKE A BOW “MEANEST GAL IN TOWN” SOUTH SIDE FOUNTAIN SQUARE Jean Harlow "GIRL FROM MISSOURI” SANDERS “GAMBLING LAnY” “LIFE OF YERGIE WINTERS" GARFIELD £!►?*!!.& : v,ilul Marion Davlea “OPERATOR 13" "CALL IT LUCK" All ir\TT t I s Meridian ORIENTAL “ "THE KEY" . . 1 x-vai ! ’rap’t. ai Chur matt AVALON Jmea Cayner ai ilLiy/n Ruhr Kee>r “FOOTLIGHT PARADE" . WEST SIDE npi 11 / h yif* W Huh. at Belmont BELMONI Family Nite UFi.3 I Double Feature “THE NOTORIOUS SOPHIE LANG” “COCKEYED CAVALIERS’ Lindbergh Kidnaping Newt r, 4 iov 2540 W Mich. 81. lIAI.NY Double Feature uaIJ 1 H. B. Warner “SORRELL AND SON” “MERRY WIVES OP RENO” J yirp 4 rpy> 2709 W. Tenth 81. S I A 1 K Double Feature VJ Ala A MS Irene Dnnne “THIS MAN IS MINE" “MURDER ON TUI CAMPIS”
