The Syracuse Journal, Volume 26, Number 35, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 21 December 1933 — Page 4
Page Four
Want Ads
.N ITU RE ■ makes the Ideal (. ’ 11. ;; s Gif J. Beckman’s. 30-ts <ll YI Sj We have it, the New k qUi, Washer. Literal allowance .n j r l.i mat bin#, terms to suit. A Winans. Syracuse, Ind. 1 e, 150. . 31-ts FOR SALE Sweet Spanish Onions ,>',c a cr.te. Crate of yellow onion sireeninps f ee with each crate of Si a. -h sold. Ea. l Miller/ Phone R, R.,2, Sjricuse, Ind. 30-tf| Oil ICE SUPPLIED Typewtue .... . ■! ail makes of machines, c. i o«>u j>Hj ej, typewriter paper, euro ■'* ■i.iu, nlvtliifu, lags. etc., for sale at i.i ! ts. I.' ' . F- ..... V\ il s, Met hank's i.ivn's. ' Moi Assignment of Mortgages, <. > j.. • :•. f.Bill of Sale, Quit Claim Deed, Notice to Quit Tenancy g , : b< le al the Journal Office. STARK NURSERY STOCK Stark j '. ■ ■ •:ee -for the! e of ne. Any or&er over-,55. 00 j a ;ite t:ee will i.e given, orders over Via. free freight. H. L. Lung,l 35-21 ! APPLES 1 OR SALE I ithuii, Baldwin and R. 1. ’ .G'teemuga, $1.25 and SLOQ. Grimes i Golden, 9u cents and sll Stephen- -- Beeman. 28-ts i 0.. - - ! N1 R\ Ol SNESS I When nervous and in a run down' . i i . . in Wai ei. He wul i t , , - . .n. Goshen. ad* i 1 o\\ 1 RS FOR CHRISTMAS ! Totted j lants and cut flowers make . < Prices rea&n able. Order early. Phone 277, Mil-! . > Beei. 34-2 t ' I -.- ■ 0 - f LAKE NEWS. {K.on.ii»ut'd i rum Tage One) >p< nt Sunday at their vattge. • | Mrs. S. U. Hooper, Mrs. E. L. Martin and Mrs . A. W. Emerson; were G itors, Et iday. ■ . ;1; Earl Mei xenberger spent ■ < ■ week-.with Mr. . W arsaw.. ; till Mils IO KILL SELF Chest< ... > oke, who - has . he< i ‘ c■ foi some time at* v. ■'i -v- ,I i .day, aftere Lykol. The d r was called and after treatinei.l sh’e- le. oveied.- I I M ALOY ROBBED 1 As I NIGHI Three - h came to -the filling station of which Eugene Ma-. I A i.v - .. . ‘ . ... Itu-i night ns of gas and two.p.aits .-f oil; then holding their Is' in their p kets aS though fort oil Maloy to ivpt-u the safe. k the conitely . 115.' Later te . < seted three negroes ?>; OI Zi . .wi. -e said to anThv des . plion of those who. .I ey refused -to talk. | I ' o >. Gi\ I X JI IX.MI X I > of. t.eiold Hatfield of V.. . ~-h v- Fhe Hoosier Trucking - ? heard hy Judge Van-m-.yvi. i>; ciiiui'- curt, Monday miirning .ai d Hatfield received -$30.judgment. 1
>l’ ; ■ ; The State Bank of Syracuse •••• • • • • • Capital and Surplus $50,000 ! “OUR BANK” i t S«frtv Deposit Boxe* For Rent 1...MEAT SPECIALS*" STEAK, pound ....- 15c SAUSAGE, lb T .... 10c PORK CHOPS, 15c lb.; 2 lbs for .... 25c PORK SHOULDER, 15c lb; 2 lbs for 25c PORK ROAST, lb 12jc BEEF ROAST, lb 10c RIB BOIL, lb., 6c HOME MADE BALOGNA, lb 8c HAMBERGER, lb 10c fresh oysters PHONE 76 :0: WE DELIVER KLINK BROTHERS
IX nt K I’lll RI'HES I f, I METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A. J. Armstrong, Minister. Dr. O. C. Stoelting, Supt. Church School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00. Evening Worship, 7:00 p. m. Mid-week service, Wednesday evening at 7:15. CHURCH OF THE 1 BRETHREN Ev- ngelisi J. Edwin Jai hoe, past.«»» Guy Symensma, S. S. Supt. I Sunday School 10 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Aid Society, each Thursday. All who have a part in the Christmas program, meet at the church Thursday evening, 7:30. Piogr m will be given Sunday evening. Rev. Jarboe will give the sermon Sunday morning. CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Marion, Shroyer, pastor. C. J. Kilson, S. S Supt. i Sunday School, 10:00 a. in.. Morning worship, 11:00 a. ni. ( hiisti n Endeavor, 6:00 p. m. I Evening worship, 7:00 p. m. ; The Christmas play The True 'Meaning of Ch.istmis” will be given Thursday (tonight) evening at I ZION C.HAPEL ,J . Emeison M. Frederick, Pastor. j Sherman Deaton, Supt. ’ Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Chiis m-s program and pieaching at 10:30. Indian Village. Sunday School, 9:30 a. im. Evangelistic Services 7:00' each everting. ' ■ , Merry Christm.s to You. LAKESIDE U. B. (.HURCH 1 * Rev. E. C. Keidenoach, Pastor. Syracuse. i 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. 10:45 a. •m. — Christmas program, (a) Exercises by Uhildien. ‘ (b) Ottering for Otterbeim home tAiniord. Sunday School, 16:00 a. m. 2:00 p. m. Christmas sermon by the pastor. Indian Village. ’ Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. I.— ■ . GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Revi John A .Pettit, Pastor. • Vernor Beckman, Supt. Sunday school. 9:45 a. tn. Annual election of officers Sunday. A Christmas program will be presented by the S. S. department of the church at the morning service. . Luther League, 6:00 p. in. The Christmas service will be Beld in the church at midnight, Christinas Eve. Candlelight Service, with the celebration of Holy Communion. There will be special Christmas music by the choir. YouVare cordially invited to come. \ Midweek Fellowship Supper and Evening service, Wednesday al 6 p. m. . EVANGELICAL CHURCH Rev. Samuel Pritchard, Pastor. C. E. Beck, Assn’t Supt. i Sunday School, 9;30 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:45 a. m. The Junior Department of the S. S. will give i program, during the morning worship hour. This program will be"directed by Miss Ruth Blanchard and Mrs. Melvin Dillen. I" Evening- service, 7 o’clock. The Pageant-drama "Let There Be Light” will be presented at this time
HAWTHORNE (Continued from Page One) the state was not finished, as he had to be at work in Angola. He said his name was Samuel Brooks and that he owned a laundry in Angola. That he was captain of. the guard • there, and had known Hawthorn for j about five years, and had always known him to be truthful. When questioned by the prosecutor, Mr, Brooks said that Hawthorne had become a member of the guard, June 30, lf>32 and had said he was 18 at that time. The prosecutor’wanted to know if Mr. Brooks would still consider Hawthorne truthful if he learned in the testimony that he was not 18 at the time he entered the guard. joe Rapp Testified. * \\ hen Joe Rapp was called to testify he said he had been called to the Ruple grocery the morning of Oct. 16 by order of the sheriff to get the Pontiac coach, 1928 or 29 mo.<el, bluish-green in color and bring It to Syracuse to his garage. He stated at that time, &s had Mr. Mo\ re stated, the cloth was tied around the rear license plate concealing the center numbers. Both had te.trfied the cloth was tied, not 1 id across the piate. ~..pp - a.eiDhe tound a 32 bullet lodged in the window of the car, and a eviuently from Moore’s gun in the rear of. the Ponti..c. i.e stated he found a hammer and wrecking bar not used in conneevioa wuh auto iepairs, m the car. Charles ryenit row, town marshal, was called to the stand and identified the 32 bullet he had removed from ,he car by order of the sherin. Roscoe Howard Testified. Roscoe Howard testified that he had accompanied ixapp to bring in Die Pontiac, and that the clo.h h..d been tied around the hcenie plate, not laid upon it. • G nen .urs. iu. D. Ruple was Called to testify, she said the sound Ol shooting h-d awake:.eu her that morning. That by the time she had leached the uoor she saw Mr. ftloore but that Hawthorne had gone. Thai the rag was tied around the license plate and that she had arrived immediately after the shooting and depanuie of Hawthorne so that no one" else would have had time to tie the rag on the license. nloert Archer; who lives the farm across the from the Ruple store said he was in the wood shed and heard the shooting, that he could see Moore, but could only hear the other gun, could not see the man ' who was snooting. He said when Mr. Moore called to him he got his own gun and came out to the Pontiac, out by that time Hawthorne was gone. Again on Stand. Mrs. Galloway wae again called to the stand~and said the defendant arrived at her store about an hour after she had seen the car there and warned Moore, and appeared to have oeen running. He asked to use the phone and telephvned the sheriff she said, bhe said he eviuently spuxe to somepne else (as it later proved the sheriff was not lheie) and told that person “he was the boy in ihe shootin’g he supposed they’d been called about and that he was going to stay at Galloway’s sLore, he was afraid to go back to' Ruple’s. She saiu he stayed there till the sheriff came and arrested him. Mrs. Galloway said she had never seen Hawthorne before that morning. .When the sheriff was called to testily lie said he had been called to the lake that morning by Mrs. Ruple and found at Rupie’s store, seven or eight people standing near the Pontiac and the two men in the car whom he had arrested on the complaint of Freeman Moore. Moore had told him how Hawthorn had run away, and Mrs. Ruple told the sheriff that Mrs. Galloway had just called her to say that he was at that store. Said He Had Not Shot. The sheriff said Haw-thorne told him he had come from Fort .Wayne and wanted some groceries for breakfast. That he was going to Angola, and did not have a guq. Hawthorne insisted he had done no shooting, the sheriff said. The sheriff answered when asked that he had seen the cloth tied around the license plate, when the prosecutor insisted with hi| question, the sheriff stated that when they had questioned Hawthorne in the jail that he had said the cloth hud been used for toilet paper in the woods and laid across the license plate, that Hawthorne had said it was not tied around the plate. The members of the jury were taken down to the street to view the Pontiac which had been driven to Warsaw and parked near the court- ; house by Joe Rapp, and then as it was almost 5 o’clock, court was disi missed until Tuesday morning. They saw the marks where the bullets from Hawthorne’s and Moore’s guns had lodged. Another Charge Dismissed Tuesday morning it was brought one that the judge dismissed the Charge of robbery against Hawthorne Monday afternoon, on motion of the counsel for the defense, who claimed no evidence showed that Hawthorne had attempted to rob the Galloway and Ruple groceries. The judge instructed the jury so that this charge was dropped. There was but one charge remaining: that Hawthorne was charged with assault with attempt to kill Freeman Moore. William Lamphorn, arrested the morning Hawthorne was taken, was called to the stand. He testified that
THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL
their car was parked in front of the Ruple grocery, waiting for the owners to get up and open the store. That Moore arrived, parked his car behind theirs, tried the door of the store," walked to their car, said there seemed to be no one up, then ran back to his car shouting bandits and began shooting. sHe said the starter of their car wouldn’t work so he got out in front to crank it and Hawthorne got out after he did. Moore fired again, Lamphorn claimed, and so Hawthorne shot at him, about three times. W hen questioned by the prosecutor, Lamphorn s id they were going hunting near Angola and wanted the revolver for target practise. He said they had no permit to carry a gun, and he said the one they had was a .38. Objections Filed. The prosecutor asked if they were not out to rob, and the defense objected to this question. Tie objection was overruled. The defense objected to almost all the questions the prosecutor asked, f. r -v.rious reasons, and sometimes the ob ections were sustained and sometimes overruled. v hen questioned if he had not told in a confession at the jail, to lhe sheriff, prosecutor and other ofticeis that they h d left Fort Wayne the night before about 10:30, with intent to rob the Galloway and Ruple stores, the defense objected, but Lampi orh answered No, he had made no such confession. He also denied that he had confessed to Jawing with others when they robbed Moore, Oct: 5, at the point df a gun. ~ He denied confessing that Hawthorne reecgnized MooLe when he stopped the car, and denied saying that Hawhlorjie had covered Moore with a gun and ordered him to get out: denied that he had confessed that Hawthorne stepped from the car, tired at Moore first and then the shooting became general. Continues to Deny. He stated no one had tied a cloth on. the license plate, it had just slipped over the pl te. Lamphorn stated he did not see Hawthorne point a gun at Moore, that he stepped out to crank the car, Hawthorne heard the shot from Moore’s gun and got out to shoot. He said Laughlin was in the back seat. Thoriias, attorney for the defense, asked L. mphorn if on Monday evening this week he h d not been promised things by the sheriff knd prosecutor if he testified against Haw rthorne. L imphorne said, yes. The prosecutor asked him if he had not been offered the chance for but a six months sentence at the penal farm to tell on Hawthorne, “just to tell the truth" and you refused? Lamphorn answered, yes, 1.. Laughlin Testifies. When William Laughlin testified he said after Moore left the Ruple door and said he guessed they were not up he looked at their car then yelled l “bandits,” ran back to his own car and began shooting. His story was like Lamphorn’s about trying to start the car and Haw thorne shooting af'er Moore had shot twice. , He denied they had robbed Moore at the Turkey Creek Golf course on : Oct. 5; denied that they recognized Moore when he stepped up to their car. Hawthorne Tells Story. When Hawthorne took the stand he said that at 4:30 that morning they had left their homes in Fort Wayne to go on a hunting trip near Angola. That they h d decided to drive to the cottage of his grandfather, A. R. Downing, on Wawasee, for breakfast. That' they had gone to the stores to buy meat and bread. He said he had traded at Galloway’s all summer, and had been in J Ruple’s store four times. He said , when Moore came to their car after leaving Ruple’s door he looked at them, shouted bandits, ran behind his own car, laid on the ground and started shooting. Lamphorn tried to crank the car, and he •-decided “he’d better get out to scare that fellow away;” that Moore had shot twice before he shot. Said Did Not Aim at Moore. That when he shot he aimed at gasoline pumfis and his own car, but that Moore had shot at him all of the time. That not at any time had he intended to hit Moore. He said he’d been in the National guard at Angola this summer, had I markmanship grades and if he had j wanted to could have killed Moore. He said his gun that morning was I either a 32 or 38, he didn’t know • which. He told the same story which the sheriff said he told as to why the ■ clot was lying on the license plate, denying it was tied there. He admitted he had said he was 18 when admitted to the Guards June 30, 1932, but was not 18 until February this year. He had been married duly 3 this year. He said he’d be«i arrested for reckless driving once at Fremont but the case was dismissed. Denied 7 Knowing Moore. Hawthorne claimed he had never seen Freeman Moore before Oct. 16 when Moore approached their car at Ruple’s store. When questioned by the prosecutor if he had not held up the Turkey Creek Golf club house and Moore Oct. 5, Hawthorne said no, he’d been in Fort Wayne with his grandmother, who was sick. He denied saying in jail on Oct. 17: “I don’t
know where I was Oct. 5, besides I’m too smart to commit myself now” When questioned by the prosecutor how he could go hunting in Angola Oct. 16 without any gun but a .32, he said they planned to borrow guns from his uncle, who lives near Angola. Hawthorne admitted they had’but 7 gallons of g&s in their car at Ruple’s store, and 40 cents in his .pocket when arrested and the other two youths had nothing; that they had driven at least 60 miles out of their way coming from Fort Wayne to Angola via Wawasee. The prosecutor asked H .wthorne if he had ever been arrested and ch. rged with housebreaking. He said No. Hawthorne answered the pros* ecutor’s question “If the sheriff of Steuben county says I was, he’s wrong.” Hawthorne denied leveling h’s gun at Moore standing near the car and ordering him aw y. He denied robbing Moore on Oct. 5. William Liugl.lin called back to the stand denied ever being convicted of selling liquor, saying the fine was yet unpaid, he said he had been fined but not convicted. Mother and Wife Testify. Mis: Hi'Wthoit e, mother of the youth on trial said he son had never been a. rested before except for reckess driving, his wife said that also and that he had been at home the night of Oct. 15, leaving at 4:30 the morning of the 16th. The, prosecutor asked the sheriff on the stand if he rec lied Lamphorn’s confession, raying they had lett Fort Wi yne the night of the 15th. about 10:30, that they had come to take the property of Galloway and Ruple and th t L mphorn had said Have thorne h dFcoVered Moore with his gun and-ordered him to move on. The sheriff recalled this. The state and defense rested their case before noon Tuesday. In the afternoon came the arguments to the jury. About 8 p. m. the jury returned its verdict of guilty of assault with attempt to commit manslaughter, carrying with it a sentence of from one to 10 years. Members of'-the jury were: Joe Godsch Ik-, Syracuse; E. A. Stan-, ton, Winona Lake: Harry Beatty, Warsaw; John Bidelman, Claypool; Guy Pinkerton, Milford; Art Griswold; Silver Lake; Milo Strombeck, North Webster; John Postma, Milford; Elmer Lowman,' Burket; Milton Berger, Nappanee; J. E. Scott, Sidney; T. F. Stackhouse, Leesburg. <» OFFICERS ELECTED The following persons were elected as officers in the Evangelical S. S. for the year 1934: ~ Superintendent C. E. Beck. Assistant Supt.—P ,W. Soltau. 2nd Assistant—Mrs. X. W. Pritch: ard 3rd Assistant —N. G., Skidgel. Secreti.ry-Tjes. — i A. H. Blanchard, 7 Assistant Secy-Treas. —Jas. Stucky. BUYS DREDGE. Yesterday in Justice Jesse Shock’s court, Lloyd Disher bought Frank Yoder’s dredge at constable’s sale.
Tlie Wedding March Murder by MONTf BARRETT A new serial that will appear in these columns All New York society is in the church for the wedding of Doris Carmody, heiress, to Jim Franklin, candidate for governor. The wedding march peals out, the bridesmaids start down the aisle, and then begin to falter, to mark time ; —die bridegroom has not appeared—an usher slips out of the vestry room, whispers to the waiting clergyman, and the wedding is called off because of an “accident.” On the floor of the minister’s study the best man has found Jim Franklin stabbed through the heart. Eight persons had made their way to the minister’s study before the wedding to catch the bridegroom where he couldn’t evade them. Eight persons had reason to wish Jim Franklin out bi the picture. Which one turned the vestry room into a scene of violence and death while the organ rolled? Peter Cardigan, well-known writer of mystery stories and amateur detective, is among the assembled guests. You will remember him from Murder Off Stage. He is drawn immediately into the investigation. Because of his past accomplishments, the police turn to him for assistance. At peril to his life, he helps them pursue, with cumulative suspense, the supposed guilt of the eight suspects. The reader is caught by the opening chapter and held at high tension through the brisk logical sifting of evidence to the desperate, skilfully conceived climax. • You will find it a great story
READ THE OPENING CHAPTER IN THIS ISSUE
BIG BAD WOLF (Continued from page One) the gun—and there weren’t any. Mr. Menzenberger stopped to speak to Mr. Gunderlock, who sat in a parked car near the office, awaiting the Wolfs return. A telephone call to Warsaw to the sheriff obtained the information that unless the Wolf was drunk enough to be jailed, there was not sufficient evidence of past wrong-do-ing to hold him that night unless the editor. considered him dangerous, but the editor did not think so. A crow'd had gathered in the office by that time, and enjoyed hearing the Wolfs story of the fight and how his car became damaged. He said his name was Glenn Mabry, and he w; s a respectable business man from Argos with a wife and two children, whom he had left in Argos. And that when he drove up near the Gunderlock cott ge that evening Wednesday 1 st week, five men from Warsaw jumped on the running bo rd of his car and in fighting them he had put his fist through the windshield of his car and had broken it. \\ hen asked how he knew the men were from Wai saw, he refused to answer. He s id later in the evening when he and Mrs. Higgins had gone to what is known as? "the little red b.nrn,” the first house beyond the garage of the South Shore Inn on road 13, rented by a Virginia Janies of Wai saw , he had had to fight two men. W hen questioned he insisted he had no gun on him and had pulled no gun. When questioned if he h d shot out of the window, Maber said, “No M .d.ni, I did not have a gun. I just sat through the window.” Then he wanted to know why the license number of his c r hi d been printed, and was informed because no ownership card could be found in the car. When the qusetioning was at an end Mr. Mabry w 7 as escorted to Mr. Gunderlock’s car and both were informed that the lake was going to be cleaned up, that for months now there had been stories of undesirable places on the lake, and that it was understood young people Os the community were callers at these places. When Mr. Liggett, s ate road cop came into the Journal office, Saturday, he stated that the Hudson which had been pulled out of the ditch was being held at the garage with a police ticket on, it. Mabry said he had been given . permission to o drive With but one license plate. Liggett said Saturday that the plate had been issued to a woman owning a Graham Paige, car. In last week’s story of the fracus the paper stated that two women were beat up in the Higgins cottage. That statement was incorrect. The tight started somewhere in this vicinity, must have lasted most of the night, ended up at the Little Red Barn, with women fighting, merj lighting and Big B .d Men thieatening each other with pop guns. According to State Road Cop Liggett, Mabry’s father came for the Hudson, proving the car belonged to him instead of his son and that the license plates had been issued for the son’s wife’s car.
Phone MX4 Box 177 Watch and Ckk'M Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX First House South of U. B. Church Lake St., Syracuse, Ind. 3-24-34 X ZOFTCIANX , / optometrist GOSHEN. INDIANA. Xmas Specials SILK DRESSES, $3.95 SILK HOSE, 39c, 59c and _____ 89c DOUBLE BLANKETS, 74x8«, -51.69 Also All Kinds of Toys and Gifts. GIBSON’S NOVELTY STORE IN CONNOLLY’S BUILDING
- HUB...®-. —' • - 11 q j Gram V «1 IB qfeeUnqs wifi" 11 ii MERRY CHRISTMAS Stiefel Grain Co. Everett DunnT Coal Feed ; 4 j l ‘ .
THURSDAY, DEC. 21, 1933
SEN. ROBINSON (Continued from page One) were not going to let him be a citi* • zen again now he would have to I wait, until he could afford it. Those in the Journal office webe of the opinion duplicate papers ■ should be issued by Washington for those destroyed, and. no such steps as “becoming a citizen again” be necessary. , Roscoe Howard suggested writing to our Senator, U. S. Senator Arthur Robinson, to ask him what should be done about Evanoff’s case. This was done, and yesterday a telegram was received at the Journal office from Senator Robinson in Indianapolis. He states: “Letter addressed to me in Washington just received by me here, (in Indianapolis). Am taking Up the matter of John Evanoff immediately snd shall advise you as soon as I have a report from Washington. Arthur Robinson.” A second telegram, received last evening from Senator Robinson stateed: • . “Have received following telegram from naturalization bureau in Washington, in re John Evanhoff applies* tion for new certificate. Should have been sent through field office in Chicago for approval. Sent radiogram to* Chicago to expedite this anatter. Wire from Chicago naturalization office jtfst received, reading as follows, Quote: Application John Evanoff of Syracuse, Ind., being sent to commissioner of immigration and naturalization, Washington, today. Were awaiting letter from Evanoff’s daughter as to whether certificate of citizenship had been destroyed. Letter not received, end quote. Expect final action in short time and will advise you. Arthur R. Robinson.” Pei haps our *S- nta Claus” Senator Robinson will make it passible *that Evanoff learns he “can become ,an American citizen aga»n" as a j Christmas present for him. ' ! GEO. L. XANDERS A i tOKNLV-AT-LAVX Settlement of Estates \ Opinions on I'itlca Phone 7 S) ra< use, ln«' Fire and Insurance DWIGHT MOCK o . — ‘for — . Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding HnffeFs ' hanrinr anti South Side f.nke Wawasee Authorized Crosley Radio Dealer Near Waco. • BOAT LIVERY Pl ...... ,
U,— IC R y‘sT AL. Ligonier • Thun., Dec. 21— . “SHANGHI MADNESS” St fring Spencer Tracy and Fay Wray. Laughs and thrills. 10c—ADMISSION -15 c Fri.-Sat. Dec. 22-23— MAN OF THE FOREST” A Zane Grey story th t has everything. Romance, thrills h rd-r ding, hard-fighting. H Also “Our Gang” Comedy. Sun.-Mon., Dec. 24-25— Special Christmas Program ■ MAURICE CHEVALIER ■ IN H THE WAY TO LOVE” M The streets of Paris with H Maurice as the guide. Forget M your conscience and let him guide you through this siriging, laughing, dancing love St adventure. Also extra fine H short subjects. H Christmas Matinee at 2:50 M ■ 15c—ADMISSION—30c g Weds.-Thors. Dec. 27-28— I ‘ SITTING PRETTY” B It’s got everything. Laughs, I sex appeal, dancing, music, g HI girls. Starring Jack Oakie, E ® Jack Halev and Ginger ■ M Kogers. Its Paramount’s I ■ musical comdey. Riot. P'rk I S ' the Body, You’re “Sitting S I Pretty.” A ■ 10c—ADMISSION—25c Sat.-Mon. Dec 30-Jan. 1— r > ’THE PRIZEFIGHTER k AND THE LADY” | Starring Mrx Baer, colorful S jS champion of the ring. The I grandest entertainment of- g sered in years. 'H COMING— ’ MARIE DRESSLER a in •CHRISTOPHER BEAN” ■ Her Sweetheart. hbkhrmmmf
