Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 July 1938 — Page 11
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MONDAY, JULY 18, 1938
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CAROLE PUBLICITY DIRECTOR
She Even Puts in Calls for |
Windsor and G. B. Shaw.
By PAUL HARRISON
HOLLYWOOD, July 18.—The di- | rector of publicity at Selznick-Inter- | national Studios is, at this writing,
Miss Carole Lombard. All this, of course, stunt in itself. Nevertheless,
is a publicity | it is|
true to the extent that Miss L.om-/
bard has a big desk with two telephones, a push-button that clangs a fire-gong to summon secretaries, another push-button that sounds a siren when something BIG happens, and a large bowl of roses from Clark Gable, who wishes her luck in her week-long career.
She answers calls from correspondents who do their work by telephone, and gives them so-called news items about Joe or Josephine Zilch being added to the cast of “Made for Each Other” or other pictures. “Made for Each Other,” incidentally, is the name of the picture in which Miss Lombard soon will go to work as an actress, opposite Jimmy Stewart. Unselfishly, however, she is devoting most of her efforts to plugging “The Young in Heart,” and the recently announced castings for “Gone With the Wind.” Personally, I do not believe that Miss Lombard privately believes that Norma Shearer or Clark Gable will appear in the film, if there ever is such a film. However, like a good press agent, she stoically carries on—even to the extent of putting in long-distance calls for such remote personages as George Bernard Shaw and the Duke of Windsor, to obtain their comments, if any, on the selections for Rhett Butler and Scarlett O'Hara. Press-agentry is a fine field for Miss Lombard because it obtrudes no restraints upon her violent enthusiasms, her whooping, or her vocabulary. Of all the feminine stars I can think of, she probably is best qualified to get along amicably with the press. Her sole handicap is a predilection for complete honesty, but |
a good stunt to take over the job director.
but mavbe that's just some of Carole's publicity work. Anyway, good thing there aren't many press agents like her, for it would be difficult indeed to question the motives behind “hand-out” issued by such a personable public relations person.
Mbovie press agents usually don’t wear orchids, but here's one who's different—none other than Carole Lombard, who thought it would be
of Selznick International publicity
Selznick officials say she actually is doing the job for a week,
it's a
ideas about exploitation, advertis{ing and publicity. She herself is|
| recets ed, she believes, was the story obtained from John Barrymore giv-
she expects to overcome this before | an expert photographer of still pic- ing her credit for insisting upon his
the end of her six days of servitude.
She is just about as stupid as 63 | is |
foxes. smart.
I mean to say that she Miss Lombard has a lot of
| tures; she knows the movie business and its people, and she knows which correspondents to trust.
! The best publicity break she ever
IN NEW YORK —#y paut ross
Manhattan Is Perfect Place to Vacation: All You Need Is Time and a Little Money.
(George Ross Is On Vacation)
N° YORK, July 18.—New York
City—contrary to report—is the per-
fect place to spend your vacation when you have a little money and
lots of time. Take the matter of sports.
The Department of Parks maintains 30 |
inexpensive tennis areas with more than 200 separate courts and 10 | inexpensive ($1 a day) public golf courses.
Maybe vou like to swim? to the new Jacob Riis Beach, one of for 25 cents. clear, salty and active Brighton Beach, Rockaway Beach, Manhattan Beach, Orchard Beach | and dozens of other beaches in taten Island, Long Island, New Jersey. But suppose you're one of those | wild jitterbugs who dote on a red-| hot shag session. That's easy. On| Tuesday and Thursday nights, you can go up to The Mall in Central Park, where in a sylvan setting under the summer moon
dance free of charge in a spacious |
area to the strains of a hot jazz band, furnished by WPA.
” = 2 ERHAPS voure a highbrow and like the profound works of Bach, Brahms and Beethoven. easy, too. WPA orchestras perform | the works of the masters in Central | Park on The Mall, in Brooklyn's Prospect Park and in smaller parks! throughout the city. The charge? Your presence. Or, you can go to the Federal Music Theater on 54th St, where operas, oratorios and symphonic concerts can be heard for as little as a quarter. If you feel rich you can
go to Lewisohn Stadium where the | world’s finest artists perform. There, |
the admission price is as low as 30 cents. You can take in a couple of topnotch Federal Theater plays on | Broadway for as little as a quarter. If you watch the papers, you can
The grounds are excellently cared for. Then pete are Jones Beach, Coney Island,
| subway and elevated lines.
you can |
That's |
A 10-cent subway and bus ride brings you
the finest in the East. Lockers rent the ocean-water
| there are New York's 776 miles of | Those who know how can ride most of them for just one nickel. Then there's the Bronx Park Zoo,
one of the largest anywhere, and
|
| the Aquarium at Battery Park. No |
| charge to visit either. One of the most delightful open- ! | air dining places in town is the | terrace in the small but lovely Cen- | tral Park Zoo. A cafeteria inside | sells good food at low prices. You
| fill your tray and carry it out to the | shading | and watch the | seals play in their pool, listen to the | monkeys chatter, see the beautiful- |
There, under a
you sit
terrace. umbrella,
| plumaged birds in their cage and let the world go by. | Finally, there is the wonderland of New York itself. Anyone with | curiosity and interest in people and things can spend a highly interesting vacation wandering through it, away from the beaten path.
Is the town expensive to live in |
while doing all those things? Not
if you know how to live here at |
moderate cost, There are numerous residence-club hotels where one can obtain a clean, airy, pleasant room | for as little as $5.50 a week. And | food need not be a problem in a city where dozens and dozens of | restaurants feature a regular sup- | per for 50 cents.
catch the shows given by the Fed-|
eral Theater's four “Caravan” or itinerant theaters in one of the parks. and at no cost beyond ygur attendance, you can see vaudeville, musicals and dramas. Along 42d St. ble-bill movie grinds. If you keep! your eyes open you can catch the big movies only four to eight weeks
after they've had their first runs. |
The charge? Ten cents in the morning, about 25 cents in the evening. 2 OW, how about a nice voyage” for a nickel? At the foot of Manhattan vou can take the Staten Island ferry and spend half an hour cruising down magnificent New York harbor. For those who like just riding,
“ocean
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
“The Birth of a Baby.” wi King. Richard Gordon, at 3:15, 5:03. 6:51, 8:39 and
CIRCLE
“The Rage of Paris,” with Pantgile Darrieux, Douglas It TgsThanks 7% {oa Auer. at 43.
“Wives Under Suspicion,” with Bien. William. Gail Patrick. at
10. 6:05 and 8. The March > Time’ at 1:35 4:30,
7:28 and 10 LOEW'S
“Port of Seven Seas” with Wal. lace Beery. Frank Morgan, Maureen oul llivan, at 12:55, 3:50, 6:35 and
“Fast Company,” Pourlas, las, Plorsnce Rice, at 11:25, and
ith 1:39. 0:17.
with Melvyn 2:25,
LYRIC
Sammy Kave and his ree on stage at 1:08, 3:52. 6:48 and 9 “Men Are Such Fools,” with as Mout ie, Priscilla Lane, Humphrev Boart, on scr % at 11:43 2:29, 5:23 : BY) and 10:4
BARGAIN PERMANENTS Croa Biknole Shean
il Pe Spite x with | Hair '$ t Trim Doo 3 ol Be” Raa a n , Roberts Soany Shop 528 Mass.
there are the dou- |
STORY CHANGES IRK FILM WRITER
HOLLYWOOD, July 18 (U. P.).— Lawrence Hazard, movie scenario ! writer, was en route to Europe to- | day because “everyone in Hollywood is driving me nuts.” A lawyer appeared in divorce court in Mr. Hazard’s behalf and told that to the judge. The lawyer said Mr. Hazard left because by the time the studio rewrite men finished one of his love stories, it was a racing story, and by the time it was filmed it was a | detective story. Judge Leslie Still ordered $300 a month temporary support for Mrs. Nora Hazard pending trial of her divorce suit.
BANDIT'S RELATIVE SIGNED FOR FILM
HOLLYWOOD, July 18 (U. P.) .— Jo Frances James, 32-year-oid granddaughter of Jesse James, the desperado, was under contract to 20th Century-Fox Studio today to appear in a picture built around her grandfather's notorious career. She was signed to a five-week contract, but what role she will handle has not yet been selected. Miss James, who lives with her father, Jesse James II, is employed in the escrow department of a local bank. Tyrone Power is cast in the role of Jesse James.
| Inclusion in the cast of “True Confession.” This was a sentimental yarn with its roots in the past, | when Barrymore was in a position | to provide opportunities for Miss Lombard. And did. Her worst publicity break, she | said, was a story issued by her | home studio, Paramount, to the ef- | fect that she was disguising herself as Greta Garbo—in straight | | bob, low-heeled shoes, tailored | clothes and dark glasses—when she | appeared in public. | But the story that angered her most was the result of an interview in which she mentioned that [ her mother was ill, and in a hospital. A few hours later, her | mother, who was not too ill to | read the newspapers, learned that she was expected to die within 24 | Fis while her brave daughter, true to dramatic tradition, tinued to work in a picture.
M. G. M. to Film N.Y. Stage Hit
T' nes Special HOLLYWOOD, July 18—Two ad- | ditions, one a Broadway stage hit, | the other an original story, have | been made to the list of story prop- | erties now being assembled by Met-ro-Goldwyn-Mayer for the coming season, “On Borrowed Time,” which has just been acquired by the film company, is currently in its sixth month at the Longacre Theater. Featured in the cast of the play are Dudley Digges, T7-year-old Peter Holden, {| Dorothy Stickney and Frank Con- | roy. The play was written by Paul Osborn, and based on Lawrence E. Watkin’s novel of the same name. The other new screen property, “The Ladybird,” is an original story by William Thiele and Reginald Owen. Thiele is a Continental di-
con-
a number of the M-G-M productions during recent seasons.
HOBO KING HERE, 3 TOWNS REPORT
Bob Burns, who wants to find Jeff Davis, the hobo king, for expert advice on hoioing, learned today bit about what it means to be a |
hobo on the move. In answer to telegrams sent 40 metropolitan police chiefs, Mr. Burns received replies that Davis was in Tyler, Texas; Three Rocks, Cal, and Philadelphia. Mr. Burns wanted Davis to give | technical advice on freight yard | scenes for his Arkansas Traveler.”
BRITON ARRIVES FOR MOVIE HERE
QUEBEC, Que, July 18 (U. P). —Jack Hulbert, British motion pic-
route to Hollywood to discuss plans for his first American picture. In a brief case Mr. Hulbert had his own scenario which, he said, probably will be used for the picture. Cecily Courtneidge, his wife, will have a part in the picture, he said.
SPECIALS
THIS eek
i»
Hair,
ob air, Oily inglle hE hu Rha HE
heg OF al
——
rector, and Mr. Owen has acted in |
HOLLYWOOD, July 18 (U. P) — |
a |
picture, “The |
ture star, arrived here today en- |
CITY COUNCIL "HOUSING ACTION ASKED BY FRITZ
Plan Consideration of Pool Fee, Sewer Project at Tonight’s Session.
Faced with mounting discussion of the low-cost housing problem here, the City Council is to consider tonight a long-pending resolution that would empower Mayor Boetcher to appoint an Indianapolis Housing Authority. Councilmen also will have before them 10 other measures, including elimination of the 10-cent municipal swimming pool fee, application for a PWA grant to aid financing of the Warfleigh sanitary sewer and appropriation of $266,000 for the widening of S. East St. Adolph J. Fritz, Democratic Councilman and Indiana State Federation of Labor secretary, said he would ask for immediate passage of the housing resolution, which has | been pending since last fall. Walter E. Stanton, Indiana Hous-
i ing Authority ex=cutive secretary, is | the |
scheduled to appear before | Council to explain the functions of the proposed Authority. Councilmen appeared split or un- | decided on the tate of the resolu- | tion. They received a request from the | Indianapolis Real Estate Board for two months more delay on the resolution. The board asked the delay so it could make a survey of housing conditions. If offered a substitute plan under which housing projects would be financed privately. George T. Whelden, Real Estate Board president, announced ap-
will conduct the Board's survey. Members are Leo R. Welch, chairman; Paul L. McCord, Lewis OC. Holtegel, John A. Bruhn and Joe Rand Beckett.
No Discussion Recently
Only definite assurance resulting from these factors was that the resolution would be discussed. There has been no discussion of it in recent months. Mr. Fritz and Theodore Cable,
| Democratic Councilman, favor im- |
| mediate passage of the resolution, | which was drawn under the housing law enacted by the 1937 General Assembly. Definitely opposed to the measure was William A. Oren, Republican, who declared: “There is no need for such an authority. There are no slums here.” Other Councilmen said they wanted more time to study the proposal before deciding on its merits. Mayor Boetcher said he did not know enough about the resolution to comment on it. The proposal swimming pool fee was introduced at the last Council meeting by Edward R. Kealing, Republican. In discussing it, Mr. Kealing charged that only 2 cents of every 10-cent fee reached the City treasury. A Grand Jury investigation, demanded by the Park Board, found his charge without foundation. Proceeds of a $266,000 bond sale will be appropriated by the Council to be used to acquire property needed for the East St. widening. A PWA grant has been asked for 45 per cent of the cost of the construction work.
6 Proposals Filed
Six proposed ordinances were filed with City Clerk Daniel J. O'Neill for introduction at tonight's
Council meeting. One would authorize the Works Board to contract for rental of equipment and purchase of materials totaling $103,990 to be used in building the 38th St. storm sewer by the tunnel method. Other proposed ordinances would
nish the town of Williams Creek with fire protection for $125 a year: provide two loading zones, one of 36 feet at 17-19 S. Delaware St., for an annual fee of $50, and the other
for $25; prohibit parking on 34th St. from Meridian St. to Crown Hill Cemetery between 8 a. m. and 6 p. m, and from Meridian St. to Delaware St. between 7 a. m. and 5 p. m.; repeal the ordinance prohibiting parking on Illinois St. within 100 feet of McLean Place. and authorize the City purchasirg: agent to buy $7300 worth of canned goods to be used at City Hospital. Other measures to be before the Council are ordinances tightening restrictions on second-hand stores: | amending the 1935 taxicab ordi= | nance; repealing the 1937 pawn- | brokers regulating ordinance and | substituting a new measure designed | to meet courts’ objections to the | old law; and amending the zoning | oromer=e
NEW DEAL IS ISSUE IN MONTANA PRIMARY
HELENA, Mont., July 18 (U. P). —Representative Jerry J. O'Connell, 28-year-old New Deal stalwart, and Payne Templeton, his conservative opponent, made their final appeals to voters today in the bitter Demo- | cratic primary campaign. O'Connell seeks renomination tomorrow on his record as a cham piecn of President Roosevelt's policies. Templeton, supported by Senator Wheeler and Governor Ayers, has attacked O'Connell as a “rubber stamp” Congressman. He is superintendent of Helena schools.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
pointment of the committee which |
| 2, library,
to eliminate the]
of 18 feet at 1120 N. Delaware St.
| steam-electric power plant, | will cost about $20,000. Garrett was
BISSELL SWEEPER $3.95
50¢c Down © 50c Weekly
FURNITURE CO. ¢ KIR
215 W. Wash. Sst.
101 Roosevelt SLY
\ kt \ |
—-— PAGE 11
Officer Inspects Gun Trials
Col. Robert S. Harsh (left) of
' Trainmen Begin
RAILWAY WAGE PARLEY TO OPEN
THE LABOR SITUATION
CHICAGO-—Railway wage cut negotiations open. NEW ORLEANS—C. abandons truck strike, NEWTON, IO0WA-—Maytag rejects arbitration decision.
IL. O.
Pay Cut Parleys
CHICAGO, July 18 (U., P.).—The Brotherhood of Raiiroad Trainmen, largest of the so-called Big Five operating brotherhoods, starts nego- | tiations with representatives of the nation’s 142 Class 1 railroads today in its fight against a 15 per cent wage cut that would affect an estimated 900,000 railway workers. The conference is the fight of two scheduled within the next three days between railway management and labor. Wednesday, the Railway Labor Executives Association, representing 118 unions, begins separate
negotiations with the carriers’ joint
| conference committee,
Columbus, O., head of the 330th
reserve infantry regiment from Ohio, inspects preliminary machine gun marksmanship trials which began today for Company H candidates at | the Ft. Harrison Citizens Military Training Camp. Capt. Earl A. Hessenauer, also of Columbus, is his regimental adjutant.
2 Women &
Slugged by Burglars;
Boy, 11, Is Grabbed and Robbed
Seven persons crimes reported in Indianapolis over
the week-end.
One man was held on a vagrancy charge after Gerald Plummer, 28,
of 2170 N. Illinois St.,
reported firing several revolver shots at a burglar
he said he saw ‘ooting the Twenty-Second Street Market.
FARM GROUP PLANS | DISTRICT MEETINGS
|
‘Major Discussion to Be on
Legislative Programs. |
Future and present legislative programs and a new membership plan will be discussed in a series |
|
of district meetings of the Indiana | Farm Bureau, Inc. beginning July | 25, it was announced today. The district meetings are scheduled as follows: District 2, July 29, Christian Church, Auburn; District 3, July 27, postoffice at Delphi; District 4, July 25; District 5, July 28, Baptist Church, I.ebanon; District 6, Aug. 9, Ball State Teachers College, Muncie: District 7, Aug. Linton; District 8, Aug. 5; District 9, Aug. 3, Tell City, District 10, Community Building, Scottsburg, Aug. 4.
WHEAT LOSS TO BE
®
and |
Police also held six youths in connection with the slugging and robbing of George Lorenz, 45, of 1006 E. Maryland St. Mr. attacked by four young men at Noble and E. Washington Sts. An 11-year-old boy reported to police he was grabbed by a man at Oriental and E. Washington Sts. yesterday and robbed of 40 cents.
Life Threatened
The youth told police after the man went through his pockets and
| seized the money he threatened to | kill him if he told anyone of the
crime, Two women were slugged by burglars, police said. Miss Lila Williams, 31, of 923'; Paca St. told officers she was struck on the head by an intruder in the bedroom of her home. She said she awoke to find
|a man with a flashlight searching
through dresser drawers. When she screamed, the man hit her, she said. Miss Morton, 27, of 605 N. California St., said a man, who entered her apartment yesterday and seized her purse containing only receipts, struck her in the face before leaving. A woman, believed to be a gypsy.
UNDER ESTIMATES
First reports on the Marion County wheat yield indicate that the damage from heavy rains will not be as great as was estimated a month ago, Horace Abbott, County | Agricultural Agent, said today. Reports on the yield received from | afew scattered farms in the county indicate many of the fields that were damaged the worst are show= ing only slightly below normal production, Mr. Abbott said. Agricultural experts had estimated the damage to wheat in Marion County would be about $300,000. “I don't believe now that the loss will be that much,” Mr. Abbott said. “I believe that our $40,000 to $50, 000 estimate of vegetable loss will be too low as the result of continued decay of roots in abnormally wet
| subsoil,” he commented.
'PWA AIDS POWER
authorize the Safety Board to fur- |
PROJECTS IN STATE
Power projects at Bluffton, Goshen and Garrett were among the 24 recently approved by PWA officials in Washington, Clarence Manion, Indiana director of the National Emergency Council, announced today. Bluffton received a $9000 PWA grant for improvements in its which
awarded $17,550 for additions and alterations to its water, heating, light and power plant and for the purchase of more land. Total cost of the project is estimated at $39,000. A PWA grant of $40,000 was made to Goshen for improvements in the electric power plant, include a 1250-kilowat Diesel-elec-tric generator with auxiliaries. The cost of this project was estimated at $89,050.
OHIOAN DROWNS IN LAKE
ANGOLA, July 18 (U. P.) —Theodore Lockhart, 28, of Bryan, O., drowned at Clear Lake near here yesterday while swimming with four other men. He stepped from a sandbar into a deep hole. The body was recovered in 12 feet of water. The wife and a small son survive,
2 DAYS TO SEE 2 GREAT SHOWS SHIRLEY TE EMILE “REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM"
Ra Gn *ASlight Case of Marder’
4 LAST DAYS ~
COOL OZONIZED AIR
which are to |
who promised to drive away evil | spirits, was sought by police after Mrs. Lula M. Kemker, 55 of 2259 Broadway, reported $211 and a dia- | mond ring valued at $130 missing after the woman left. David Deal, 52, told police someone ransacked his grocery at 1728 S. | East St. and stole cigarets valued at $15, two watches and about $i5 in cash. |
GRAND JURY TO GET MILK ‘TRUST’ DATA
CHICAGO, July 18 (U. P.).—Gov- | ernment attorneys go before a Fed-
eral Grand Jury today with evi | dence gathered by Justice Departi ment agents in a year-long investi= gation of an alleged milk trust in the Chicago area. Voluminous data gathered in the investigation, part of the Justice | Department's trust-busting pro- . gram, includes a mass of records and correspondence subpenaed from | trade and union organizations. | Three hundred witnesses also will be called before the grand jury, which is expected to carry its inquirysthrough the remainder of the summer,
‘HINT DEATH CAUSED BY BRAIN ILLNESS
TORONTO, Ontario, July 18 (U. P)~Dr. G. W. Lougheed, one of three doctors conducting a postmortem examination of the nody of
| Mrs. Maybelle Horlick Sidley, Racine, Wis, heiress to the malted milk fortune, said today his examination indicated ‘degeneration of the spinal cord up through the brain,” possibly the direct cause of her death last July 6. “The condition must have been going on for some time prior to her death,” he added. “With careful staining, the time of degeneration can be determined, I believe,” he stated,
aif
(els
iT TAREE
wring Frank MORGAN Maureen O'SULLIVAN
EA i y DOUGLAS: RICE
STARTING FRIDAY
Judy Garland @ Mickey Rooney “Love Finds Andy Hardy”
CIRCLE LSE GULLY i]
LAI TS or PARIS
Tis
Lorenz told officers he was |
| nate their strike action and return were held by police today following a series of minor | to work,
| Ago,
'C. I. 0. Abandons
New Orleans Strike NEW ORLEANS, July 18 (U. P.).
—The ‘C. I. O. today abandoned its | truck drivers strike that had re- | | sulted in a month of violence, mass | | arrests and police raids on C. I. O. {union halls. Paul Heide, C. I. O. organizer, said the United Transport Workers had voted unanimously to ‘“termi-
to consolidate the union on the job and prepare for the hearing by the National Labor Relations Board.”
NEWTON, Iowa, July 18 (U. P.) .— A deadlock between the Maytag Washing Machine Co. and striking union workers over a 10 per cent wage reduction entered its 11th week today after the company refused to accept recommendations of an arbitration board.
REGISTRATIONS AT NOTRE DAME HEAVY
Times Special NOTRE DAME, July 18.—Applications for admission to the University of Notre Dame are running well in advance of last year and school officials said today they anticipated closing registration before Sept. 1. Robert B. Riordan, registrar, said 800 already have applied for admission to the freshman class, 10 per cent more than at this time a year The university limits its un-
dergraduate enrollment to 3100.
FDR APPROVES PWA GRANT FOR PURDUE
CHICAGO, July 18 (U. P.).—Pres= idential approval of a $466,363 grant for construction of a $1,000,000 men’s residence hall at Purdue University was announced today by D. R. Kennicott, regional director of the Public Works Administration. The new building will complete a group in which four structures ale ready have been erected. It will comprise the main and central sec tion of the group and include general offices as well as dormitories. Plans provide for a three-story building with a five-story tower :n the center, Purdue University will finance 55 per cent of the cost and the PWA 45 per cent.
HOOSIER DIES: FRIEND HURT IN PLANE CRASH
SOUTH BEND, July July 18 (U. P.).— Treacherous air currents today blamed for an airplane crash on a Lake Michigan Beach at St. Joseph, Mich., yesterday in which Edward , Perry, 24, Mishawaka, was killed and James Hupp, 28, also of Mishawaka, was injured critically. The plane, owned and piloted by Mr. Hupp, was flying low along the shore when suddenly it crashed to the beach before scores of bathers, witnesses said. Mr. Perry died a few hours after the crash at the St. Joseph Sanitarium where Mr. Hupp today was reported to be in a critical condition. Attendants at the Mishawaka aire port, where them en took off, said that the pair had planned to land on the beach and join a picnic party of the Kappa Phi Fraternity of Mishawaka.
‘FUGITIVE CAPTURED
BY MICHIGAN POLICE
PETOSKEY, Mich. July 18 (U. P.) —Leo Spencer, fugitive from a Missouri prison, was captured by police today while hiding in a farm house five miles west of here. Spencer, who had lost his gun while fleeing from a posse of 200 officers and American Legion members, surrendered without resistance. He was the second of two convicts who escaped from the Missouri prison at Jefferson City July 10 to be recaptured. His companion, Dore vell orey, 21, was seized Heed Savurday.
'BORAH IMPROVING;
HANDLES OWN MAIL
WASHINGTON, July 18 (U. P.), —Senator Borah (R. Ida.) is show ing continued improvement despite the current hot weather, his secretary, Miss Cora Rubin, said today. The Senator has been ill for two weeks. Miss Rubin said he was not sitting up yet, but was able to read the newspapers and attend to his correspondence.
Tonight’s Presentation at Your
Neighborhood Theaters
~ WEST SIDE 2702 W. 10th St. Double Feature Lewis Stone “JUDGE HARDY CHILDREN"
BELMONT “W. Wash. & Belmont
Double Feature sciumphrey Bogart - “CRIME a Cary Grant HOLIDAY” Speedway City
SPEEDWAY Double Feature
Victor Molasien “BATTLE OF BROADWAY” Bing Crosby “DR. RHYTHM"
SOUTH SIDE S———————————— LST LIROI
LINCOLN Double Feature
hirley Temple “REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK M” Lew Ayres
- “SCANDAL STREET" New Garfield Double Feature
eanna Durbin “MAD dsouT NORTE “OVER THE WA
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
Double Feature Ritz Bros. “KENTUCKY MOONSHINE” “LAW OF THE UNDERWORLD”
At Fountain Square SANDERS Double Feature Tommy Kelly “ADVENTURES OF TOM SAWYER” Fay Wray “JURY'S SECRET" a
Beech Grove SG R O Y I Double Feature Joe Penner “GO CHASE YOURSELF" Bette Davis “JEZEBEL"
AVALON Pros. & Churchman
Double Feature C. Fields “BIG BROADCAST OF 1938" Jane Withers “CHECKERS”
ORIENTAL 'oute Meridian “JOY OF LIVING: Donne “TRIP TO PARIS”
NORTH SIDE
TALBOTT Talbott & & 22nd
guvie Feature Stone “JUDGE HAR! “THERE'S AL dm. 10e & 150
UDELL Burns & Allen
LLEGE SWING Joan Blondel 4 NTAND- IN"
R E X 30th at Northwestern S- x 63d
Double Feature YEROOK Te “REBECCA OF SUNNYBROO FARR } LE O BRO Special Feature
Y'8 CHILDREN, y AYS A WOMAN"
Udell at Clifton
\ Oo 6 E Fr edrio March “THE BUCCANEER 2351 Station St. D R k A M Double Feature “A TR ro PARIS Clark Ga Gable “TEST PILOT" Pools Open 5:4 od "” Humphrey Bogart “GRIME SCHOOL
Vogue Variety Hour Jones Family RI TZ {llinols and Mm Cary Grant “HOLIDAY”
| Ritz By,
NORTH SIDE
Hollywood doohicsucis
Double Feature OBrien “WOMEN ARE LIKE THAT “YOU CAN'T HAVE EVERYTHING” “Central at Fall Cris
ZARING Double Feature
Meris Oberon “THE DIVORCE OF LADY J ‘‘SINNERS IN PARADISE" re — 16th & Delaware Double Feature
L autel & Hardy
CINEMA
“BEAU ___. Clark Gable AEST Prot
“St. Cl. & Ft. ‘Wavne ST. ( CLAIR Doors Open 5:45 15¢ to 6 June Lan “ONE WILD NIGHT” Errol Flynn “ROBIN HOOD"
UPTOWN 42nd & College ™
Doors. Open 5:45
‘“ NENT CKY MOONSHINE” 2 WILD NIG ————
"EAST SIDE \ 1332 E. Wash, St.
STRAN D Doors OBR 2 5:45
Ritz Ton = "Mart tin RR ENTUCKY MOONSHINE" Cary Grant__Rathatine Hepburn
__Color Cartoon—News
Paramount HE Hah.
Double Feature irley Temple “REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FA “BATTLE OF BROADWAY"
114 E. Washington B | J O U Dudble Feature Jones Family “BORROWING TR ROUBL E" _Miriam Hopkins “WISE GIRL”
P 4 A R K E R 2930 E. 10th St. =
Double Feature Katharine Hepburn “BRINGING UP BABY” Jean Parker “PENITENTIARY”
RIVOLI 3155 E. 10th St.
Comfortably fool 5:45 to 61 Ritz Bros. “KENTUCKY MOONSHINE” Cary Grant "HOLIDAY
EMERSON E. 10th
Comioriably ly Coun
“Ju SDCE HARDY'S CHILDREN" uh Jane Withers “RASCA
TACOMA 2442 E. SE ny
Double Feature Loretta Young “FOUR MEN AND "RAYER" “BATTLE OF BROADWAY’
TUXEDO 4020 E. New York
Double Feature “PAID T — Clark_Gable *
IRVING ‘Bf
“DR. RHYT Clark Gable “TEST ror
HAMILTON 2116 sk of 10th 1
bo Blondell “THERE'S ALWAYS A WOMA “JUDGE _HARDY'S CHILDREN"
GOLDEN “6116 E. Wash.
0 DA “TEST PILOT”
5507 E. Wash. St. Double Feature Crosby
Diane ware Nite ry “ADVENTURES OF MARCO Core “GAIETY GIRLS’
“Purely Personal”
If it's tax matters, a balky radio, a leaky roof or one of a dozen other problems that confront you a glance through the "Business Personal’ ads on the Want Ad Page will put you in touch with some one who can solve it.
(Accountants) JON T ANDREWE Tax Consultant 635 N. Pe 0, 203 LI1-3017 (Raion ar etor Service) Fhwretor: Lg Jnition on you - thesked 30 5 BR ANG 508 N. 1.6688, A Tanobils Repa ne) Serie at SHO! OF, "Hep p) BLE AY J SERVICE, 720 RE Dy. (Billiard jit dl 8 CE $224 Brookville Rd. IR-0012
(Body and Fender Repairing) Tenders 1d 226 N. Ala.
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(Coach Lines)
wallow a nes. eridian, DR-2476. Chartered ng)
Sueguet: 5 7129.
2322 4 Specializing in
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(Live Stock Commission a 5
TARR, DOWNS & 32 Union ek Yards
(Painting)
EXPERT painting, inside, outside, lead, ofl, Carpenter re Birin Free estimates. BE-4916-
( "(Painting Poi Pap Papering)
PAINTING-Interior, exterior. pap hanging, wall washing. Fully insured. Terms. MARKS. BE-0508.
(Radio Service)
RAPID RADIO REPAIR—IR-8136 Free e Lowest price. Any make any |, Guar, workmanship. MASTE RADIO SERVICE, Pure Oil Station, Sherman Drive-E. New York,
(Roofing)
MAKES old roofs like new, liquid roofing cement. Guaranteed against leaks for ten vears. No coal Int. 1 ARROW, TA-3902, 3162 Kenwo
INNIS CONSTRUCTION CO. BE-0308 -—CGuaranteed Roofing. Siding. RePainting. Workmen fully
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