Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1940 — Page 6

00SIER AUTO TOLL EXCEEDS

NATIONAL RATE ®

City Traffic Deaths 23 Per FS

t Higher Than 1939 For 5-Month Period.

Death on the highway in Indicaa and Indianapolis for the first half of 1940 is far ahead of the national increase of 5 per cent for the period. State traffic deaths have =isen 1” : per cent in five months of this year © over a similar period of 1939, while city traffic deaths are 23 per cent greater than last year’s total

The national total of 14,176 killed | ;

in the first six months of this year continues an upward trend of the last two years. : Thirty Killed in City

Through midnight of June 22, there have been 30 persons killed in traffic accidents in Indianapolis, compared with 23 for the same date - last year. The 1939 total death toll stood at 51.

“This year, through June 22, 1051|8

persons have been injured in local accidents compared to 1017 for the similar 1939 period. ~ Accidents for the period this year total 3366, against a 2750 total through June 22 in 1939. However, police kept records in 1939 only on accidents of more than a minor character, For the whole year of 1939, there were 7160 accidents within the city.

State Toll Jumps

State Police records show there were 10,527 accidents for five

~ months of a year ago compared to

13,986 of this year. In all of 1939 there were 29,561. : - In five months of last year, 350 persons were killed in state traffic. ‘This year 425 have died in the same time. For all of ‘1939, there were 1029 persons who lost their lives ~ in Indiana because of traffic accidents. Marion County deaths and acci- - dents are just about equal with 1939; records disclose. Through June 25 of this year, Sheriff Al + Feeney reports 18 persong- killed ™ and 179 accidents. For all of 1939 there were 376 County accidents and 36 persons killed. No break- « down for a part of last year is available at the Sheriff's office. Neither does the office keep a record of the number of persons injured.

FIRST LADY ADVISES COMPULSORY. DRAFT

RED BANK, N. J, July 1 (U. P.). —Mrs. Franklin D. Rosevelt said . last night that “if we are going to _ meet Hitler we must be just as ef- © ficient as he” but that this efficiency should be achieved “in a democratic way.” She said that although President Roosevelt feels the word “compulsory” as applied to the military training program tends to “frighten people,” it was her opinion that the program should be compulsory to “make it completely democratic.” * Mrs. Roosevelt recommended that *the physically handicapped, earning their living, should also have a programs’

part in the

RUPTURED?

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CENTRAL BEAUTY

College 209 ODD FELLOW BLDG. LIL 9721

Wherever Mrs. Stella Latta goes, there go her regal lilies. She had them with her for seven years in Kentland, when she and her husband, Homer Latta, ran a hotel there. And when they moved back here, a year or so ago, to their own home at 647 S. Roena St., she ‘brought them back. They came out profusely this year, one stem having 15 blooms and buds on it. Neighbors have accepted generous invitations to

HIGHTSTOWN, N. J, July 1 (U. P.).—The Government officially abandons its $4,000,000 co-operative farm and factory resettlement project at Jersey Homesteads this week, checking off the six-year experiment as a failure. The project's garment plant, closed since last August, reopens today as a private hat-making concern. It cost $100,000 originally and the Government bought it in for $5615 last October at an auction. Later it was leased for five years to Kartsiganer & Co. of New York, which has started employing and

Retires, Starts ‘Doing Nothing’

Ross S. Ludlow, 4555 Broadway, isn't doing anything today for the first time in 53 years. His retirement from the Indianapolis Railways became effective today. “Doing nothing seems to be the the sensible thing to me after working for 39 years and teaching school, doing postal work and political writing before that,” he said. He is a brother of Louis Ludlow, 12th district representative in Congress, and expects ‘to go to Washington next month, “just to say hello.”

WOMAN CRITICALLY INJURED IN ATTACK

SHELBYVILLE, Ind. July 1 (U.

‘| P.).—Miss Margaret Lusk, 30, of

Shelbyville, who was found lying unconscious in a street, was in a critical condition today from .injuries inflicted by an unknown attacker. Police said-they believed the woman had been placed in the street in the hope she would be run over by a car. She could recall nothing of her activities before the incident.

G. M. VACATION PAY DUE

DETROIT, July 1 (U.: P.)—All hourly rated employees of the General Motors Corp. in the United States who have been employed more than a year will receive vacation pay this year, Alfred P. Sloan Jr., chairman of the Corporation,

Dr. Eustace FOLEY

Registered Optometrist With Offices at

announced today.

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Get Out From in Under and Get in a Late

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The BIG JULY 4th

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Car

SALE

‘Mrs. Stella Latta . . . among her flowers,

Times Photo.

look at them and they generally go away with a bouquet of other flowers from the garden. & Mrs. Latta is the gardener of the family. Mr. Latta operates a filling station at 4101 W. Washington St. The Latta’s built their home in 1917 and have lived in Indianapolis, except for the Kentland residence, for 35 years. They are both natives of the Peru, Ind. area.

$4.000,000 Government Co-op Goes on the Block

training the remaining homestead residents in hat-making. The co-operative farm machinery, tools, crops and animals will be sold t auction tomorrow. There are six trucks, seven tractors, - seven cows, 7151 chickens and 462 acres of growing crops. The preject opened in 1934, populated by 850° New “York needle workers and a few farmers. It consisted of 200 houses, with schools, churches and co-operative stores in addition to the farms and factory. In 1936, when potato prices were up, the project made a profit of $17,000. The rest of the time it lost money.

RAINBOW MEN NAME OFFIGERS

Pledge Fight Against Subversive Elements as Reunion Ends.

Headed by new officers chosen at the annual reunion, the Indiana Chapter of the Rainbow Division Veterans today was pledged to join the fight against subversive and unpatriotic activities. The chapter, which closed its two-

day reunion yesterday, adopted a resolution opposing United: States entrance into European war, but at the same time calling for adequate preparedness. . The resolution urged the training ‘of skilled workers in the manufacturing of mechanized units. The resolution urged also that aviation mechanics be trained at all technical schools, under Government supervision, since the Army and Navy and other Governmental agencies have failed to accept this

‘program.

The veterans were urged to combat subversive activities by Homer Chaillaux, Americanism director of the American Legion, who said there was an “unbelievable” amount of such activities.Vaughn Cooke, Indianapolis, was elected president of the chapter. Other new officers are William Jackson, Indianapolis, vice president; Orville G. Drake, Indianapolis, secretary; Howard Maxwell, Indianapolis, sergeant-at-arms, and Paul Allen, South Bénd, chaplain. Maj. Gen. Robert S. Tyndall, who commanded the Division in the World War, paid tribute during a memorial service at the World War Memorial yesterday to members killed in the war. : /

CROSS-EYED GUNMAN ROBS GROCERY STORE

A middle-aged cross-eyed gunman today held up the manager and butcher of the Standard Grocery at State and Lexington Aves., and escaped with $20. : The manager, Wilford McKee, and the butcher, Charles L. Ratz, notifled police,

Butler University graduates of the Civil Aeronautics Authority training course will receive diplomas Sunday afternoon at Municipal Airport. Oswald Ryan, regional Authority member, will deliver the principal address at the ceremony in ‘the Municipal hangar at 3:30 p. m. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan will speak for the City, Elvan Tarkington will call the class roll, and Col. Roscoe Turner will present the diplomas. Representing the University will be Ben U. Brown and John W. Atherton, directors, and Dr. Daniel S. Robinson, president. The program is being sponsored by the Indianapolis Chambér of Commerce and Junior Chamber of Commerce. Walker W. Winslow is arrangements committee chairman and ' Emsley” W. Johnson Jr. vice chairman. Others on the committee are Dr. Seth E. Elliott, Butler avia-

tion director; the

a

Edward E. Greene, of | Commerce, and 1.J.|

— . THE IND

>

/MOVIE PEOPLE | DOMINATE 1938 SALARY LISTS

Mayer Ratds Highest Paid, Soap Maker Second, Watson Third.

WASHINGTON, July 1 (U. P)— Louis B. Mayer. motion picture magnate, and PF. A. Countway, Massachusetts soap manufacturer, were the two highest salaried men in America in 1938. : Treasury figures released today, showing that Mayer received $688,369 and Countway $469,713, disclosed that cinema stars and executives still dominated big-money brackets in 1938. salary reports. Mayer, first vice president of Metro-Goldwn-Mayer, was the nation’s No. 1 wage-earner for ‘the second consecutive. year. But his $688,369 salary was almost 40 per cent below his $1,161,753 earnings for 1937. Countway and Thomas G. Watson, president! of International Business Machine Co., took Nos. 2 and three ratings. Countway more than doubled his $205,301 salary for 1937. Watson moved from eighth to third place with $453,440.

Claudette Colbert Fourth

The nation’s highest paid woman was actress Claudette Colbert. Her $426,944 salary gave her fourth place in the complete list of about 650 persons’ with 1938 salaries and bonuses “exceeding $75,000. She was 14th 7. Shirley Temple, who retired from the movies recently, was the highest paid child. She received $307,014 and was 13th on the list.. Mayer’s salary was far below the peak figures for pre-depression 1929 when President Eugene G. Grace of Bethlehem Steel Corp. was No. 1 man with $1,645,753... Grace received $378,698 in 1938 to rank seventh. Bing Crosby was fifth with $410,000 and actress Irene Dunne was sixth with $405,222.

Mostly Movie Folk

In order behind Grace came Charles Boyer, movie star, $375,277; William Berry, actor, $355,000; Cary Grant, actor, $340,625; President George W. Hill of American Tobacco Co., $331,343; Runt Stromberg, movie producer, $328,817; Shirley Temple; Joan Crawford, actresses, $305,384; Williams 8S. Knudsen, former General Motors president and now production coordinator on the National Defense Commission, $303,400; Mervyn Leroy, film producer, $300,000; Norma Shearer, actress, $300,000; Frank Capra, movie director, $294,166; Warner Baxter, actor, $279,807; Edward C. Stone, U. S. manager, Employers’ Liability Assurance Corp., a British firm $277,184. The next five were Ne M. Schenck, $275,673; Clark Gable, $272,000; Greta Garbo, $270,000; Fred Astaire, $266,837, and Darryl F. Zawnuck, $265,000. All are in the movie business. : Music skyrocketed two men above the $75,000 mark. Jascha Heifetz received $100,000 for working in one picture for Samuel Goldwyn, Inec., and Leopold Stokowski Drew $80,000 from Walt Disney productions for work on animated cartoons. Disney himself got 4$104,411 for his movie cartoon work. Three newspaper cartoonists also were in the upper brackets.

COURT HOUSE BEGINS VAGATION SCHEDULE

Virtually half the Court House started summer vacation today with the closing of seven courts. : The Circuit and Probate Courts and the five Superior Courts stood recessed until the day after Labor Day. One Superior Court, that of Judge Russell J. Ryan, was to be placed on a temporarily adjourned basis during the summer months to permit it to handle any emergency proceedings. The courts that will remain open are Criminal Court, the two Municipal Civil Courts and Juvenile Court. These four courts, however, will operate on a special schedule under which employees will be given regular two and three-week Vaeations.

2 WHO FLED SCHOOL NABBED IN MISSOURI

Two youths who escaped from the Boy's School at Plainfield, Ind., Saturday were captured by the Missouri State Patrol in Warrentown, Mo., yesterday. State Police here said the youths walked away from the playgrounds, stole a car in Plainfield, and drove to Brazil. There, they took the license plates from another machine, stole a second car, and went to Missouri. Authorities said the pair apparently did not know where they were going and had not intended to go to Missouri.

Butler to Award Diplomas To Aeronautics Graduates

(Nish) Dienhart, airport superintendent. - The following members of the

graduating class have passed all examinations in the course: Paul Elliott, John Nicks, Russell Rauch, James Thomas, David Yarian, Ted Stewart, Shirley Atkins, James Bashore,. Lewis Knudsen, Claude Stropes, Joe Woddell, Frederick Rpetter, David Martin, Neal Maxwell, Theodore Shadinger, Robert Smith, Madge | Rutherford, Robert Sink, Herman | \Leeth and Harry Hadd.

COT TTHIYIT:

15¢c to 6

Bing Crosby “IF 1 "HAD MY _ John n Wayne * “DARK COMMAND”

Sook ALAMO

15¢ * 6 "First Indianapolis Showings Three A aT ED

Powell, To fo -30 1 IVER" Red Rider”—Lal

At Sapphire Room

Jack Chapman and his orchestra will move in to replace Paul Sabin and his band at the Hotel Washington’s Sapphire Room tonight. The Chapman orchest comes here from a five months’ engagement at the LaSalle Hotel in Chicago. The dance team of Lischeron and Adams also will be _featvred. \ >

They Asked For Crickets

But Mary Astor and Other Film Folk Can't Take It.

HOLLYWOOD, July 1 (U. P.).— Perhaps it was for want of seagulls, but at any rate actress Mary Astor and a group of other movie players couldn’t cope with crickets as the Mormon pioneers did. Miss Astor, John Carradine, Dean Jagger and 40 others returned to Hollywood from the Nevada desert and admitted the crickets were too much. “They got the best of us,” said the actress. The city of Elko, Nev. had informed producers that a. bountiful supply of crickets existed there, so two chartered planes carried ‘a troupe of actors and actresses .o Elko to make scenes of the picture “Brigham Young.” Crickets were plentiful, they discovered. The insects invaded the movie camp, spattered camera lens and hopped ‘into the sound equipment. In pioneer days, seagulls ate the crickets, but the 20th Century Mormons; a la Hollywood, had no gulls. They packed up and returned to the film capital. Members of the troupe said the crickets ate their food and that Miss Astor fainted the last day on location, |

JOE E. BROWN'S SON BETROTHED

HOLLYWOOD, July 1 (Uy P.)— The betrothal of comedian oe E Brown's son, Joe L., was announced in Hollywood fashion—with a standin taking Joe’s place. Young Joe Brown will be married to Virginia Lee Newport, his campus sweetheart at the University of California at Los Angeles where he was a football player two years ago. But the prospective bridegroom was away in Texas managing a baseball team when the engagement was announced, so the diamond ring was placed upon Miss Newport's finger by his brother, Don Brown. The wedding will be held in September and they will live in Pittsburgh.

FORMER ACTRESS SEEKS DAUGHTERS

HOLLYWOOD, July 1 (U. P.)— Eleanor Boardman, former motion picture actress, said she was making plans today to seek recovery of her two girls, Antonia, 11, and Belina, 10, her daughters by King Vidor, the director. The girls met their mother at Union Station when she arrived from New York and Biarritz, France. Mr. Vidor was granted custody of the children two months ago. He charged that Miss Boardman was not fitted to care for them.

ROOSEVELT AND LOWE RECRUITS

HOLLYWOOD, July 1 (U. P). —The two newest recruits in an allmovie battalion of the U. S. Marine Reserve are James Roosevelt, son of the President, and Edmund Lowe, the actor. Mr. Roosevelt is a producer. They already hold captains’ ratings in the volunteer Marine Reserve and have asked to join the screen studio artillery battalion being raised by Maj. W. 8. Van Dyke, a director.

WHEN DOES IT START?

“Four Sons,” with Dgn Am he Ee enie Leontovich, Algn Curtis, at 1 :50, 5 40, 7:30 and §10:20. Florente Rice,

in Jognt Traylor. at 12:85, 3:45, 6:35 and

4:40, 7:20 and

with Princess

Jubilee Polliog, 3:49, 6:38 and

Chiyo, on stage at 127. g

¥

HOLLYWOOD Producers May Put the Cash Customers Under Microscope to See What They Like

By PAUL HARRISON

HOLLYWOOD, July 1.—AFTER ALL THESE YEARS of blundering and waste, bankruptcy and borrowing, wailing and confusion, the flicker business is getting around to the point—or at least to the adop- . tion of an attitude—where it may take the trouble to find out what the buying public wants in pictures. You'd think that with all sorts of commercial and political surveys

having been made for years, with the soundly conducted ones forecasting opinion and buying habits. to maybe one-tenth of 1 per cent of accuracy, that the movie makers might have spent the cost of one of their flop epics in analyzing ‘the moods and preferences of you and me. But they didn’t. . There are producers who consult astrologers and there are producers who are sensitive to the whims of their wives, secretaries, or Japanese gardeners. ‘However, the first producer to ask a question of the average people who push the money through the wicket is Sam Goldwyn, who is still thought of around here as an “old school” executive with a semi-psychic sense of showman-s ship. Mr. Goldwyn has been conducting a single-handed crusade against double features, and he talked George Gallup, the big questionnaire and poll man, into doing a free survey on the subject. (Incidentally, another survey organization recently completed a poll indicating that 66.9 per cent of American women are opposed to double bills.)

tJ ” 2 i SUCH inquiries are at best institutional, and the answers will not be much help to Mr. Goldwyn in figuring what sort of stories to film and which players to hire. A more significant move has been made by George Schaefer, head of RKO, who has hired Dr. Gallup’s exclusive services in the motion picture field. Gallup, in turn, has organized the Audience Research Institute which is merely a hired staff, like his American Institute of Public Opinion), to take care o fthe curiosities of Mr. Schaefer. Okay. Now let’s assume that we are Mr. Schaefer and are worrying about a future production. Shall we try to hire Cary Grant, for a lot of dough, or is there some less expensive leading man whom the majority of customers would like to see in a top role? Is the substance of the story attractive to the public in its

By FRANK FAN

J OVERS, come back to |

us! We movie fans have been singing that to M-G-M. Everybody in town wanted Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy together again! LJ * And here they are— singing their hearts out at Loew’s in “New Moon.” *® %

When Jeanette Sings “Lover, Conie Back To Me”—I felt like running down the asile to her! I knew Eddy would come back!

“New Moon” is a grand entertainment! Its songs and romance; its beauty and heart-tug have the boys and girls holding hands at Loew’s. * * * Take your other-half to _8ee “New Moon”; Jeanette and Nelson will do the

rest! * % ®

To the first 50 requesting, I will give (gratis) a : lovely, real photograph of the singing stars together.

LOEW’S

a great short ubject program)

ETS TLS

Pl

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EAST SIDE

(ol CTREIN]

Jack Ay et 1 “BUCK BENNY RIDES AGAIN” Chas. Ruggles “Opened by Mistake”

present mood? Shall we delete or build up the war angle? Which of these six titles . , . is the catchiest? Shall we raise the budget $50,000 for a big-name director, or do the patrons give a whoop who makes picture? Well, we'll call up Dr. Gallup, who'll send his emissaries scurrying from house to house, and we'll find out. ” ” 8 YOU THINK we won't? Well, consider this unpublicized accomplishment: In 1937, when Dr. Gallup first -began angling for .some Hollywood business, he undertook a free forecast on “Vogues of 1938.” With a copy of the script, a cast sheet, and some productioncost. estimates, he made a survey. From the answers, he predicted that the picture, would flop. It did. He also prophesied with disturbing accuracy the box-office totals in some of the big cities. Dr. Gallup has no monopoly on methods of gathering and the Sclentifie braéketing and correlation of information. Any major studio could have its own organigation. The movie industry, with an annual total production expenditure of about $1,450,000,000 a year, could sound out the interests and tastes and theater-going habits of America on a really big scale. The phantom czar, Will Hays, might have launched some such | constructive ‘research years ago. | So far as this interested observer can determine, however, he does ‘little more than sign a quarterly report—a hindsight compendium of dead statistics.

SERIES TO BE SCREENED “Nobody’s Children,” popular radio series dramatizing juvenile. problems, will be brought to the screen in the near future, Columbia Studios has announced.

ELMER TO GO ON TOUR As soon as Joe E. Brown finishes “So You Won't Talk” he will go East for a tour of the summer

Cooper Past Jinx 1X Year

Jackie: Is Given $800, 000

Paramount Contrast.

HOLLYWOOD, July 1 (0. P.)i= Jackie Cooper, with an $800,000 contract in his pocket, today was safely past the “jinx years” that tripped up Jackie Coogan and many other one-time child movie stars. = " Jackie Coogan dropped out when @

Shirley Temple, as a young woman

But young Cooper kept on works ing during his growing up years and today, at the age of 17, his for= tune is assured by a new contract with Paramount Pictures which pays him more than three-quarters of a million dollars for appearing in not more than four pictures an= nually during the next seven years.

MRS. TED HEALY TO. MARRY AGAIN

HOLLYWOOD, July 1 (U. P.).—= Elizabeth Nash). 24-year-old widow of Ted Healy, movie comedian, and Dean Tyler Robinson, 28, have filed notice of intention to wed. Ib will be Mr. Robinson’s first mare riage, and the second for Miss Nash. They said the marriage would take place “sometime soon,” but did not disclose their plans. 3

LIKE FATHER

Roscoe Karns’ son, Roscoe Jr, will be screen-teésted when he come -

Max Reinhardt workshop. 8 Mi. No. of on Road

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' SIT IN YOUR CAR...SEE AND HEAR THE MOWIES

DRIVE-IN CINCH

Adults 80c o Children 10¢

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theaters, playing “Elmer, the Great.”

gossip: it tells how pretty girls t-e-a-s-e-d men into marriage!

PRIDE uw

Strand St. Clair Ritz Uptown Irving Hamilton Esquire

Granada

‘Rivoli Emerson Vogue Sheridan / Cinema Talbot Tuxedo Belmont Zaring

Established Price . ......... ‘ies Plus U. S. National Defense Tax

COOL!

EMERSON E. y+ 20¢c to 6

Tyrone Power “JOHNNY APOLLO” Madeleine Carroll “MY SON, MY SON”

‘Lucky Cisco Kid,” yith Cesar Roe mero, Mary Beth Hughes, at 11:40, 2:29, 5:18, 8:07 and 0.38.

Chas. M. Olson's

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wasn. COOL!

Wash.

adeleine Carroll “MY SON, MY SON” » Meérle Oberon “OVER THE MOON

Cool PARKER p23 5.1%

key Rooney “YOUNG TOM EDISON” mie Laraine Day ONE WAS BEAUTIFUL”

« 4 LAST DAYS! . International 7

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Princess CHIYO

In Her Daring Dance

YY THE SCREEN

Lee “" ‘Adv. of ; em

HELD 0

733 N. Noble

The Mecca op Bett Chaney Jr.

“QF MICE AND MEN" 0 Bing Crosby “ROAD TO YiNGAPORE"

pr \s Teer] | Ann Sheridan “UIT ALL CAME TRUE” Deanna Durbin “IT'S A DATE”

(IRVINE “rcs le™ 200

: “IT'S LOVE I'M AFTER” Botte DANE HOUR TO LIVE"

NORTH SIDE

Ork. Bing Crosby Gloria Jean

WAY”

Merle Oberon + VER THE MOON”

COOL! “REBECCA” mea

Fountain Square

in Technicolor

PREJUDICE

(M-G-M hit starring GREER GARSON & LAURENCE OLIVIER) Coming Soon!

ADULT ADMISSION PRICE CHANGES

EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY In the Following Neighborhood Theaters

30°

Incl. Tax

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30¢

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TOTAL

These Prices Cover Evenings (After 6 P. M.) and Sundays and Holidays i No Tax on 15¢c or 10c Admissions—Children 10c Always

+ «YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

TH SULLA

OLSON THEATERS ~

ESTE

Joan Blondell—Lana Turner

2 Girls on Broadway’

d Greene—

“I WAS AN ADVENTURES”

“GREEN HORNET” Once at 6 Seta M. Thur. Mat. “IRENE” & ‘20 MU LE TEAM”

Ww ST.CLRIRTE,

Fi. Wayne & St. Clair

“ITS A DATE”

Ginger Rogers

Deanna Durbin

“PRIMROSE PATH”

Zh 1 le x

Loretta Young—Ray

“DOCTOR TAKES A WIFE”

Turner—Joan Blondell

“Two Girls On Broadway” Taio gclt 2

pessus 41T'S A DATE” “DARK COMMAND” Joi

Trevor

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110 S. MERIDIAN “PRIMROSE PATH” i) EGA YOURE WRONG”

T ALBOTT : ott at 22nd

Deanna Durbin “ITS A DATES

Francis Ann Sheridan “IT ALL c TRUE” Westinghouse Air- Air ditioned

NORTH SIDE le Stratford VD exe otiees”

nid aan riam- opkins 4 “MA, ss S MAKING EYES AT ME” Sist i THE REX ii tines

ckey Rooney +YOUNG ior 3 » “TOO MANY HU EDISON"

CINEMA $%.* COOL

Matinee Da ote from 1:30

Ann Sheridan “IT ALL CAME NEW DAISY = SPEEDW/ AY Speedway City mE" AGA SOUTH, SIDE Shirley Tn BE Co BIRD” "Ho ° I HAD MY WA

“DR. KILDARE'S STRANGE CASES MY SON. Shirley. Torn Toes BIRD” “HOUSE’ ACROSS THE B BAY” ask Penny Chas. er “OPENED HAD “TWO 2h ON B 7 WAY ETI Chomerans | FOUNTAIN SO Sweat 1 | LS ON BBOADWAL:

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¥ WEST SIDE 2902 W. Ti 55 The State mb Weaver Bros. “IN OLD MISSOURI” evine eames snd Wash. BELMONT by Westinghouse Air-Conditioned = Claire Trevor “D Doors Open at S45 Show Starts 1106 Errol Fl;

they had to cut his bobbed hair,

actress; is a studio question mark. .°

pletes his drama course at the 2)