Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 168, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1934 — Page 32

PAGE 32

Olin Promises to Help Make Boxing Better New Champ Admits Title Fight Was Washout, but Blames Rosenbloom. RV LAWTON CARVER CmM Fr*. tlilt Corr**p®n4nt NEW YORK. Nov. 23—800 Olin start*'*! pursuit of a career headed for the bar 1 not Joes on Tony's*, switched quickly to stocks and oonds and wound up with a world boxing championship. Unt.j the last few months Olin didr. t like to fight, and did so only for the publicity to help his other business connections. Such Is a snapshot of the most complex character the light heavyweight division has known as champion. For the future Olin promises as champion to lead his divi ion out of the throes of ennui that gripped it with a stranglehold during the four-year regime of Maxie Rosenbioom. His victory over the champion last Friday night could scarcely be regarded as indicative of a return to the hell-roaring old days when Delaney, Benenbach and others of tna’ stripe Were packing customers m. and wilting them in their seats with blood and thunder.

Wants to Prove Worth Olin stood in the garden ring as his hand was raised in token of his coronation. It was a signal for a ten-minute unbroken volley of boos, inspired by the fight, and partly by the decision. Olin admits the fight was terrible. For that he blames But he thinks the decision was all right. That's the point that he intends to prove—that he is the rightful owner of the title. The new champion, a likeable Jewish iad, swears he will be a fighting champion and a credit to the division. That is as expected, so you can take it or skip it. However, with some law study In his noggin and a fairly lengthy association with the stock and bond marts, he comes near to being an inrelirctual from a pugilistic standpoint. Names Leading Contenders He has no illusions about the fight gam* 1 which, if he's lucky, might eievate him to affluence, or if he bn't careful might just as readily set him to cutting out paper dolls, and shadow boxing when he hears the gong of a street car. But Olm says when he starts taking punishment, he'll hang 'em up for keeps. So far he's been tagged only once—months ago by Martin Devandowski. Against that he offers as evidence victories over Charlie Massara. Unknown Winston. A1 Gainer. Bob Godwin, William Dix and lesser lights. Outstanding contenders in his opinion are: Joe Knight. Mickey Walker, Tony Shucco. Lou Brouilllard, John Henry Lewis and A1 Gainer. "Ard 111 be a fighting champion.” says the new champion. "Line ’em and I'll take ’em one by one—lor dough." "And don’t forget that dough." Hare'..! Fcadron. his manager, speaking now.

Basketball News mum Independent. Amateur and League Gossip.

The United Sunday School League has organized again this year and has one opening left to complete the six-team circuit. Teams in the 18 to 2i-year-old class are drared. Call Riley 3973 between 8 and 5:30 and ask for Ray. The Demaree Cleaner quintet desires games tor Wednesatv and Thursday rue;-.'' to be played on cproßen* s floor Teams interested call Looel at Hambolt 1304 The Fries wish to boeic satres with teams hat-ns acre's to * gym The Eoirs pi.or ir. ’he 13-18-. ear-od class Call Drexel 5224 between 6 a. m and 6 p m and ask lor Eddie The Indiana Home Oil fl'e. victorious In three starts, desires games with last ci'v teams having (vml O'Hara Sans. P >s Cl’ib and Crimson C - ;b> The O rr.er • .r.ced the Chrt.tamore Comets. 49-22 The O Hara Sans plaved a practice tt’t w th *he Crimson Cabs Wednesday mclv The Sar.s :!! meet the C S Tires team Sunday afternoon at 2 at th Artnarv. preliminary to the H.lcemeier Packers tame Wedretday. the Sans wit! tackle the Lebanon Independent a - Broosside a' 9pm Lebanon trimmed the Sans last vear F'r g mes with *h* O Haras cali Cherrv 1'23-W or ::■ 1130 Sort.v Dearborn s'tee'. Ir.dianap'.s The Mtckievvllle Fiver undefeated this aea.on w:h to book games with citv or s*ate quintets in ’he 16-20-year- ''ds class Cali Belmont 3324 or write Ed Smith. ST . Bella ire ayenue. Indianapolis The Flvcra will plav at "he Chri-’amore house tom. rrow night at 7 To hasse- •ea-'s of t> - r F P r' > - of the Fletcher Avenue Christian church wni open their season Monday nigh* at the church gym These ’tits will be onen to members of the church and their friends the firs* same being a f.f*eer.m.nutes fray between the older men of the church The Crimson Cubs dropped a fast cor.te.< to the Ma-'tn ■ > Ar'esians at Broo<s:de Wednesday nigh* 21 to 25 Coyle ar.d B-sslev led the .Artesian* ar.d Heckman starred for 'he Cubs. For games, call Washington 1424-rir.t: 4 after 6 p m / The Riverside Park M F P ‘ team beat the East Side Cubs. 21 to 18 and the Park A" squad trounced 'he South Side B dd:e> 45 to 24. at the Park M E gym last night BUFFALO MOVES INTO HOCKEY LEAGUE TIE DETROIT. Nov 23.—Buffalo ir.o\fd into a tip for first place in the International Hockey League last night by beating the Detroit Olympics. 8 to 3 Buffalo scored four times in the final period. Walker opened the scoring with a Detroit goal in the first. Goals by Massecar and Roth put Buffalo m the lead before the second period was half finished. Lee Aderman's goal tied the teams at two-each, as they went into the final period. Ber'.ett. Benson ar.d McDonald scored in rapid succession for Buffalo. Moffatt counted for Detroit, and Jarvis scored the final goal for Buffalo. BROWN WHIPS MEXICAN Indianapolis Mittman Takes Unanimous Derision Over Lopes. Bf Times special DALLAS. Nov 23—Willard Brown. 142. of Indianapolis, scored a cleancut decision over Vincent Lopez. 146. of Mexico, in a ten-round feature bout here last night. The Hoo6ier was awarded the unanimous decision of the two judges and the referee.

CENTRAL AND WHITING MEET FOR GRID TITLE fly l m ‘>4 pre„ WHITING. Ind . Nov 23 —Central of South Bend and Whiting high school football teams will meet here tonight to decide the championship of th Northern Indiana High School conference. Whiting, winner of the western division of the league, finished the eason undefeated and untied Central suffered two defeats, by Washington of East Chicago and Emerson of Gary, neither of which was a league contestant. BRITISH CUP GOLFER IS CENTENARY VICTOR fit r nit'4 Press MELBOURNE Nov 22 —Jack McLean of Havston. Scottish member of the British Walker Cup golf team, today captured the Centenary amateur champiopahip. defeating the former Australian national champion H W Hattersley, 11 and 9, m a thirty-six-hole final match. McLean played sparkling golf throughout the tourney, and had won his last rounds previous to todays by scores of 10 and 9, and 12 and 11. i

Critic Says Pro Gridmen Could Nip College Boys Another Believes Team Like Gophers Would Give ‘Cash and Carrys’ Battle, and Argument Is On.

BY JOE WILLIAMS Tunes Special Sports Writer N r EW YORK. Nov. 23.—What would happen if Minnesota or any of the better college teams exchanged militant grimaces with the Chicago Bears of the professional ranks? Whom would you pick, the collegians or the cash and carry stalwarts? Mr. Stanley Woodward who played himself an armful of the sport at Amherst before he become a keen critic of football writes: "I don't think Minnesota. Pittsburgh. Princeton or Yale would stand a chance with either the Bears or the Giants.”

On the other hand, our Mr. Francis Wallace whose mid-western ramblings brought him in close contact with such teams as Minnesota, Pittsburgh and Ohio State, believes the collegians, especially Minnesota, would give the professionals a whale of a battle. This in its futility is one of those could-Dempsey-have-beaten Jeffries controversies? The chances are it will never be satisfactorily solved for the simple reason that there seems small likelihood of ever getting one of the leading college teams together with one of the leading professional teams. Until this is achieved the pros and the cons must of necessity deal in misty theories. Tlie closest approach to such a game came last fall

W illiams

when a team of all-Americas, graduated the fall before. met the Chicago Bears in a night game on the lake front. The game resulted in a scoreless tie, but the collegians emerged with the greater dory. If that game can be accepted as a legitimate test, then there i- no reason to believe the professionals would run wild against any first class college team.

'T'HE fact is, this makeshift team -*■ of collegians outplayed the best team in professional football and would have won the game except for two fumbles at critical points. Among other things the collegians out rushed the professionals by a margin of 135 yards against 39. Taking it at its face value, the result was remarkable. The professionals were older, more experienced. stronger and had played together much longer. The collegians presented a scrambled lineup of stars, some of whom had never even seen the others play. They came from the east, the west, the south and the north. They had practiced together only two weeks and under different coaches. To be sure they played under their own rules which differ in several vital respects from the professional rules. But this shouldn't have made any great difference. After all. the professionals, all former college men. were weaned on the collegiate rules, so they couldn't have been seriously handicapped. tt tx a OF course, the collegians did not represent a college team in the sense that, say this year's Minnesota team, would. They did not represent a unit. They were the pick of various sections of the country. To that extent they were in personnel not much different than their professional opposition. This might have made a difference, except it is popularly argued that the professionals must be better than the collegians because they have matured more and played more football. Actually, this makeshift teem was just another college team playing one extra game. What might have happened if these all stars had collided with the Bears in a late-season game, once they had started to click as a machine, is a point that may be worthy of consideration by the defense. At the same time the allstars themselves were far from a finished machine, and it was their first game of the season too. First and last, because they abandoned immediately after the scoreless tie. The late Knute Rockne never would admit the professionals were superior to the collegians. Specifically he thought his 1930 team could have beaten any of the professional teams. Thus was one of Notre Dame's great teams and it might very well have made good the coach's boast. Bui that was 1930. The professional game is about :wice as fast and effective today as it was then. a a a IT would be hard to convince many of the 50.000 people who saw that crashing, smashing battle between the Boars and the Giants last Sunday at the Folo Grounds that any college team m the country would ■have a chance against such powerful :uon. And yet our Mr. Wallace who saw the game still insists Minnesota or Pittsburgh would be an even bet against either the Bears or the Giants. ■'The reasoning that the professionals must inevitably get better the longer they play is salacious." he says. • They also get older don't they, and that can and very frequently is a handicap to an athlete. On the average, the collegians are four or five years younger. This means they are faster and possess greater recuperative powers." Moreover. Mr. Wallace doesn't think it would be a contest if it were possible to hop a college team up . inspirationally <sav. as Yale was for Princeton) and then send it against the professionals. . . "That's one quality the professionals never can hope to have" . . . still I am told these anthropoids of Mr. Tim Mara broke down and wept like babies after losing to the Bears, which must have been a most amazing spectacle, indeed.

HELPS PLAN DANCE

John H. Blackwell Jr.

Among those supervising arrangements for the annual Knights of Columbus Thanksgiving ball at 10 Wednesday at the K. of C. hall is John H. Blackwell Jr.

Levinsky to Take on Lasky Tonight ♦ Baer Will Watch Fight in Chicago Stadium. B}t T n itetf Prow CHICAGO. Nov. 23.—Ticket sales indicated today that 12.000 fans, paying nearly $30,000. will see Art Lasky of Minneapolis meet Kingfish Levinsky of Maxwell street tonight in a bout intended to make Lasky eligible for a crack at Max Baer's heavyweight fight title. Lasky expected to weigh 199 when he climed into the ring at the Chicago stadium. Levinsky, who has trained more conscientiously than usual, will scale between 202 and 204. The Minneapolis contender outpointed Levinsky by a narrow margin in a previous bout. Baer, the champion, will see the fight from the corner of his brother, Buddie, in a fight with Frank Ketter on an all-heavyweight program. OHIO STATE NOT f(T PLAY GOPHER TEAM Bii I'nitrii Brett COLUMBUS, Ohio. Nov. 23.—The Ohio State University athetic board, through its director, L. W. St. John, announced today that there would be no post-season football game with Minnesota or any other team this fall. The statement was not enlarged upon but was taken as a final decision on a proposed chanty game between the two Big Ten teams. FIELD SHOOT CARDED AT LOCAL GUN CLUB A turkey day ‘“field” shoot will be held at the Capital City Gun Club Sunday, Nov. 25. A third trap has been added to the skeet layout as an improvement for the "field" shoot event. The club located in the center of the Capital City game preserve, one block south of Raymond street on Belmont avenue, will be open to shooters at 9 a. m. for jhe all-dav event. CITY BOXERS_TRIUMPH Lee and Breedlove Take Decisions at Quincy; Purvis Loses. By Timr Special QUINCY. 111., Nov. 23—Paul Lee. featherweight, of Indianapolis, won an eight-round decision over Dave Barry of Springfield. 111., here last night. Billy Breedlove. Indianapolis lightweight, was awarded a close and unpopular decision over Jackie Dalla of Chicago in an eight-round-er. Jackie Purvis of Indianapolis was beaten by Jack Cnarves of Chicago in another eight-round scrap. OKI'X TO SUB IN BOUT By l nited Brett NEW YORK. Nov. 23. Yale Okun. veteran heavyweight, will substitute for the ailing Patsy Perroni of Cleveland, in a ten-round bout with John Henry Lewis of California, at Madison Square Garden tonight. Perroni has the grippe. JAPAN TRACK STAR WED By Vtntrd Brest TOKIO. Nov. 23. — American hopes of seeing Takanori Yoshioka. Japan's great sprinter, in action this winter were doomed to disappointment by the ahletes marriage today. ROsIT MEETS CHALLENGER CLEVELAND. Nov. 23. Barney Ross, world's lightweight and junior welterweight champion, will defend the latter title against Bobby Pacho. young Mexican, in the main bout of a boxing show here Dec. 10.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MAYORS WARY OF TRANSFER IN RELIEFBURDEN Hopkins Is Expected to Outline U. S. Policy Today. j fixt United Press CHICAGO. Nov. 23.—Mayors and representatives of one hundred or more cities met with national offij cials today in quest on an answer to reports that the burden of unemployment relief is to be shifted back to local immunities. From Federal Relief Adminstrator Harry L. Hopkins the annual conI ierence of mayors asked a clear-cut announcement of the government's plan of caring for the jobless this winter. Above tangled discussions of staggering municipal debts and taxation methods there was sharp conjecture over recent predictions, some attributed to official Washington ; sources, that the federal government | is prepared to transfer job relief responsibilities to cities and states. Await Hopkins Speech The mayors were hopeful that Mr. Hopkins’ speech would provide a detailed outline of the social program, particularly unemployment, which will be presented to congress in January. President Roosevelt sent word to j the mayors that the next congress undoubtedly would consider proposals involving unemployment relief, public works, unemployment ini surance, old-age pensions and housj ing. The public works activities, a subS ject of deep concern among the j mayors in their discussions of financial distress and relief costs, placed their conference on record with a {proposal which virtually would l abolish interest rates on municipal debts* Debt Plan Offered The plan, calling for a constitutional amendment empowering congress to establish uniform rates, was advanced by F. H. La Guardia, fiery mayor of New York, who charged that American cities are in ‘ the strangulating grip of the money lenders.” Mayor La Guardia asked a large public works program and a reduction of interests rates on municipal borrowing to one-eighth of 1 per cent. The government would set up a new agency to provide the funds to local units and state legislatures would be called into simultaneous session, probably in February or March, to ratify the constitutional amendment allowing congress to fix interest rates, he said. Flay Police Interference Encroachment of politcis on city police activities brought demands I for a “house-cleaning.” Daniel W. Hoan, Socialist mayor I of Milwaukee, said that gang warfare is unknown in Milwaukee "simply because such crime is based on a partnership between the gangs and politicians. We have none of it.” Mayor Joseph K. Carson Jr., Portland, Ore., and Mayor Charles L. Smith, Seattle, described the paralyzing maritime strike that tied up their ports last May and said officials often have aggravated strike conditions by “playing politics.” City Represented Indianapolis was represented at the mayor's conference today by both Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and Mayor-elect John W. Kern, who will succeed to Mayor Sullivan’s office in January.

ST. VINCENT’S NURSES TO GIVE CARD PARTY Proceeds to Be Used for Purchase of School Equipment. Students of the St. Vincent’s Hospital School of Nursing will sponsor a card party at the home, Illinois and Twenty-sixth streets, Tuesday. Miss Ruth Zinkan, instructor of nurses, is chairman. Proceeds of the party will be used to buy the school additional equipment. Assisting Miss Zinkan are Dorothy Boyle, Marie Acheson, Elizabeth Howell Mary Thompson, Virginia Orvin, Mary Murphy, Irma Gallagher, Annette Hand, Dolores Friedman and Anna L. Conley.

Dance Tonight 808 NOLAN ÜBS and NBC Artist) KS And His Music §j£g Semi-Finals and sth Prelim. IfR Stretohaway (ontest lE9 23c BEFORE 9:00 gal INDIANA ROOF

TOMTE, SATURDAY A SUNDAY Servants'Entrance TODD A KELLY In '•ONE HORSE FARMERS” and Gorgeous Color Classic POOR CINDERELLA”

k i 1 \T., si \ MON. I flr&fl Buck Jones “WHEN A HAN SEES BED" TRIPLE LEAH RE SHOW HI LILA LEE M "WITHIN THE ROCK" rius ■ CHANDU SERIAL ■

I NEW M.i Hl'..* NEW WIDE RANGE SOUND NEW SCREEN ALL NEWLY DECORATED !—BIO PICTURES—* ALSO A C.OOn_COMEPT_^,

The Theatrical World Garbo Reaches Heights in ‘The Painted Veil’ BY WALTER D. HICKMAN

GRETA GARBO, bv her human work in “The Painted Veil,” moves into my “Academy of Merit” of moving picture players. To get there, a man or woman must be more than just "box office.” and sometimes it takes years to be admitted. After seeing Garbo in “The

Painted Veil,” I 2ame to the contusion that the Swedish star has grown into a really great sensitive artist capable of playing life and blood characters. Many times Garbo has been guilty of posing and keeping her characters in a cert ain emotional groove, never changing. This was

t 1 § i m 'f-

Greta Garbo

true of her work in “Queen Christina.” Now all of this has changed, which lifts the veil, so to speak, regarding the secrecy which surrounds her personal life. Miss Garbo has done a tremendous amount of studying and adapting her type of acting to the technique of the movie screen. Her work in “The Painted Veil” puts her in a position of security, that of being a truly fine and big actress. I think that the leading men that Garbo has had in the past have had much to do with putting her into a fixed mood because they maintained similar moods. Not so with Herbert Marshall as Dr Walter Fane, a specialist on cholera who did much to save the natives of China from the ravages of the disease. Marshall with his strong English accent and honest manners makes a splendid lover in the early stages of the story when he woos and wins Katherine (Garbo) in her native city in Austria. a a a WHEN he takes his bride to China, Mr. Marshall changes in mood and becomes the great doctor and humanitarian. Work and danger charge his outward mood, but his love for his wife does not diminish. Garoo, as the wife, changes and seeks love in the arms of Jack Townsend, assigned to China in a diplomatic position. Townsend is a selfish and an ambitious man and he refuses to divorce his wife so that he might marry Mrs. Fane w’hen her husband agrees to free her only on the condition that Townsend marries her. Then Fane compels his wife to go into the heart of China while he fights cholera. Here you have acting on the part of Garbo which makes her a great screen tragedienne and gives more weight to Marshall’s great talent. Watch the scene where the coffee pot is placed in the middle of the table while Garbo and Marshall, weary and exhausted, discuss their sad fate. It is one of the biggest and finest scenes I have seen in many months. George Brent is cast as Townsend and the right work is contriuu"d oy Warner Oland, Jean Hersholt, Beulah Bondi, Katherine Alexander and Fovrester Harvey The pictorial background is a masterpiece. Watch the Chinese fantasy or legend scene—a masterpiece within a masterpiece. ‘ The Painted Veil” snakes Greta Garbo one of my three emotional favorites on the screen today. See this one. Now at Loew’s Palace. a a tt THE Lawrence Township high school band and orchestra will present the first concert of the school year tomorrow' night at 7:45 in the Lawrence high school auditoiium. The orchestra wall open the first

lpirjOE PENNER • LAN.NY ROSS p-~' ' ’ Jtcnvj* I TREMENDOUS DRAMA of a mother and HH 1 daughter who loved the same man .. . jijjj ;Ji |j| • written bv the woman who knows women iijii; !* <1 ... and THE KIND OF MEN THEY LOVE’. 1 \jßUdktmm Jr^ i imitations lifeiJlt j * 1 WARREN WILUAMjgHFIp 1 Rochelle Hudson I Ned SoorHs, Henry Armetlo jjSHC "OW

■l fix, w f m T B v

part of the program by playing four numbers, while the band will furnish the second part. Last spring, both the orchestra and the band won first rating in the state contest for class C instrumental organizations in the high schools. Owen Beckley is director of both organizations. The Sponsor’s Club will serve a penny supper, starting at 5 p. m. tomorrow. a a a DR. FRANKLIN C. WARD, secretary of the General Council of the Presbyterian church, will given an illustrated lecture on "Oberammergau and the Passion Play” at 8 Monday night at the Irvington Presbyterian church. ,a a a WHAT ANN BROUGHT HOME,” a three-act comedy drama by Larry E. Johnson, w’ill be given at 8 tonight by the Central Players in the church school room of the Central Avenue Methodist church, Twelfth street and Central avenue. Those taking part will be Sam Roney, Lillian Bartlow’, Vera Davy, Laurel Rood, Ralph Hammell, Frances Allison George Switzer, Margaret Conner and Dwight Possom. a a a OTHER Indianapolis theaters today offer: “A Girl of the Limberlost,” at the Aod'Oo; “imHe on of Life,” at the Indiana; “College Rhythm,” at the Circle; “Duck Soup" and "The Lost Trial” at the Ohio, and “Flapper Revue” at the Colonial. AUSTRALIAN AVIATOR STARTS_LONG FLIGHT Captain Charles Ulm Leaves Montreal for West Coast. fix) United Press MONTREAL, Quebec, Nov. 23. Captain Charles Ulm, Australian flier who will attempt to fly from Vancouver to Australia “as soon as weather conditions permit” took off from St. Hubert airport at 8:05 a. m. today and headed westward. His plane, “The Star of Australia,” carrying a load of more than 9,000 pounds, made a perfect takeoff. A stop was planned at Detroit, where it is expected that definite plans for the rest of the flight across the continent w T ill be announced.

fWTTm jtol^i L>/ pORTEPLS | LOUISE DRESSER ///II MARIAN MARSH ligs RALPH MORGAN^^^> Waltal /

12— BIG FEATURES— 2' 4 MARX BROS. in “DUCK SOUP” It's a Laugh Biot On Same Program ZANE GREY'S NOVEL “The Last Trail” WITH GEORGE O'BRIEN ON THE WAY—SEND AY W ILL ROGERS “TOO BUSY TO WORK’’

CITY DAIRY WORKERS TO ORGANIZE UNION Brotherhood to Be Formed Here Dec. 13. Organization of the Brotherhood of Dairy Workers is scheduled to be completed at a meeting to be held m Indianapolis. Dec. 13. Herman L. Ridenour, attorney for the union, said today that more than 50 tier cent of the employes of the larger dairies in the Indian-

As You Desire Her!- S An Alluring Vibrant Garbo You’ve Never Met Before! jj I LOEW’S LEADS IN INDIANAPOLIS K with Jp HERBERT GEORGE I MARSHALL BRENT j Warner Oland Jean Hersholt B Katharine Alexander m : A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Picture —ADDED— W. CARTOON IN COLOR—SCREEN SNAPSHOTS EDWIN C. HILL IN NEWS BI I

par** kiicut< v - THEATER S3

NORTH SIDE nIT r, dllnoo •! <4O. If I I / Double Feature 4. M-J George O'Brien “THF DUDE RANGER" "HAPPY LANDING" TALBOTT ral r e w>T- • BELLE OF THE NINETIES’* l j PTO WN DoublV Feature ' b* IVzDD g. Robinson “MAN WITH TWO FACES" “ROMANCE IN THE RAIN" np CA \f 2361 S‘ a ‘ ion B *' L/IVLaiU Ann Hardinr “THE FOUNTAIN” TV" 7* V and College Stratford “20 MILLION SWEETHEARTS" “OLSEN’S BIG MOMENT” Voble at Ma **' MECCA ESS cS!S •voiOTt.ors'Sori'lfE_ ~ r , r Illinois *t 30th GARRICK "v::, ft;:."” r ,,, 30th & Northwestern Kr \ Family Nite Tim McCoy ‘ BEYOND THE LAW" <7 t n lIV/" 1 Double Feature svj Robert Yount “DEATH ON THE DIAMOND" HANDY ANDY" fxrvx /yr A TEW St. Clair at Ft. Wayne SI (, I AIK Double Feature O 1 . LLAIIv Adolphe Menjou • THE HUMAN SIDE" BIG RACE" EAST SIDE Prr<. \’|\ 1352 E. Wash. 84. SI K A \ I J Double Feature JIIVI liter Constance Bennett “AFFAIRS OF CELLINI” Richard Arlen “READY FOR LOVE” Todd-Kellv “THREE CHUMPS AHEAD” n Ilf AT ¥ lOtb RIVOLI D °l°e h c e T?aVy Ure "LEMON DROP KID" “THE Dl DE RANGER" rn yTYTp 3507 E. Wash. St. IIVVIiMj Gary Cooper “NOW AND FOREAER" TACOMA law.'lil Wynne Gibson “I GIVE MY LOVE" “RETURN OF THE TERROR" TUXEDO ‘nouUVat'urr X G itGTV V 7 p mt Patterson “LOVE TIME” “UPPER WORLD” PARKER re".\ h ar? 4 Ginger Roger* •‘UPPER WORLD" "BACHELOR BAIT”

NOV. 23. 1934

apolis milk area have Joined the union. All disagreements, he explained, are to be settled by arbitration. Objectives of the new organization are stabilization of price conditions in the industry and elimination of night delivery. Four Sentenced to Death Bn United Press MOSCOW. Nov. 23.—Four men were sentenced to death today on conviction of counter-revolution and I sabotaging the cotton crop, a dispatch from Tashkent said. They ; bring to twenty the total of those j condemned.

EAST SIDE HAMILTON “DAME*” "STRAIGHT IS THE WAY” [) /\V’ y s>7°l E Weih'nrton y\ I Double Feature John Wayne "WEST OF THE DIVIDE” “THE BOWERY” HOI IV WOOd nouble Feature " Wail.-. Beery “TREASI'RE ISI.AND” “RAINBOW RANCH” EMERSON ‘Sr.S;rai,?- . Erlna Mae Oliver MLRDER ON THE BLACKBOARD” “SHE LOVES ME NOT” Paramount Clark Gable-Mvrna Iv “MEN IN WHITE” Mary Brian “MONTE CARLO NIGHTS” Betty Boop Cartoon “Betty in Blunderland” SOUTH SIDE FOUNTAIN SOUARE Double Feature Claude Rain* “CRIME WITHOUT PASSION” • THE MOON STONE” C A VIYFTTC' Prospr-t and Shelby A A A ULK a I " u w b,r e- 1 '' a,ur l ? Dirk Crom*eH “AMONG THE MISSING" “CITY LIMITS” GARFIELD ‘THEIR BIG MOMENT” “LET’S TALK IT O’ ER” a i r a y a\i Prospect-Churchman AVAj.IIN Double Feature 1 *■ T * Paul i uka , “AFFAIRS OF A GENTLEMAN” BEAL BASHFLL” ORIENTAL "rgf “THE STAR PACKER" “WHERE SINNERS MEET” __ Roosevelt ll” 9 So Meridian “CHARLIE CHAN S COURAGE” “GRAND <AN ARY;/ VVF.SI SIDE BELMONT " u M r;,T ont “BELLE OF THE NINETIES” r-v a lp\r 2-MO W. Mich. fit. IJAINY Double Feature IJCVIJ I tredrir March “AFFAIRS OF CELLINI” “REGISTERED NURSE” pm a rrp 2'* l ? W 1 nth fit. Nl AIE Double Feature ,JA ’ rwA -' lack Hoaie “TROUBLE BISTER" “BLACK MOON” Oliver srzjr “CONVENTION CITY”