The Syracuse Journal, Volume 26, Number 39, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 January 1934 — Page 4

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pthtAds

WANTED -Will buy or exchange wood for a small building, about 6xß (V T. R. Coy, R. R. 1. 40-ltp LOOK A NEW LOW PRICE on the 1934 Maytag Washer for a short time only. See A. O. WinanS, Phone l&O, Syracuse, Ind. 40-ts POPULAR VARIETIES- Bloodteated chicks. We specialize in custom hatching. Hoosier State Hatchery, Box 67, Millersburg, Ind., Phone Jou. 40-stp OFFICE SUPPLIES— Typewrite ribbons, for all makes of machines, carbon paper, typewriter paper, earn i t'aid. blotting, tags, etc., for sale at he Journal Office. ts. LEGAL FORMS -Wills, Mechanic’s Liens, Mortgages, Assignment of Mortgages. Options, Bill of Sale, Quit Claim Deed, Notice to Quit Tenancy etc, for sale at the Journal Office. FOR RENT Cotti ge, 5 rooms and < bath, with boat house a/id garage, on Huntington St. Apply Chas. Bowersox for key, or see L. E. Stfhloltei back, Ligonier. 40-ts WANTED. TO TRADE 2 J 6 rooms each, furnace, full base-’ ment, electricity, gas, sewer, paved all clear, garage; in zoo, Mich., for two bouses in Syra-' ruse, diflereijce pay like rent, deal with owner, safe commission, write to Julia De Shoovere, 1117 N. West St., Kalamazoo, Mich. 40-lt i Notice to Out-Of-Town Voters in Pret int ts One. Two and Three. * | The registration officers of precincts one and three will be at the basement of the library Saturday, Jan. ‘27, from 12 o’clock noon until 9 p. m. to register voters who live out in the country and any others in these precincts that wish to register at this time. \ oters in precinct two h -may regisle i at almost any time any day or evening at the office of the Syracuse Journal and at the honie of Miss Janice Rapp ■ 4 INFLUENZA, ... k a. i, . call J)r Wane; He wi>l help you. Calls made day and night. Dr. Warntr, Goshen. —sdv. i NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS Stale of Indiana, KomhicKo (iiunt), m: , In the Koacioako Circuit Court, Decen ibet Trim, 1933. I Nancj E N<-<-vs Howard M. Noe t No. 19638 Now tomes the/Plaintiff, by Warreii. T C> iwell. /her attorney, and files <• herein, together with an affidavit of Li competent person that said defendant ./Howara M. N c. ! the State of Indiana, that said action is for diund that said non-resident is a necessary party thereto'. N»! ice is therefore hereby given said defendant, last named, that unless he be and appear on the 43rd <i.»y -f the next term of the Kosciuskol Circuit Court, being the 26th day of; March, 1934. to be holders on the 4th) M <nday <>f March. A. D., 1934. at) the Court House in Warsaw, in said* County and State, and answer or I demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in his absence. WITNESS WHEREOF. 1 herouiiti. set my hand and affix the’ seal of said Court, al the office of the l <e> k theiei'f, in the City of Warsaw Indiana, this 19h day us January, A. D., 1934 ROYCE R HILDENBRAND, 40-31 Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court

i The State Bank of r Syracuse ■ Capital and Surplus $50,000 ••OUR. BANK" Safety Deposit Boxea For Rent I ' ' MEAT SPECIALS---STEAK, pound -15 c SAUSAGE, lb— : 10c PORK CHOPS, 15c lb.; 2 lbs for . ..25c PORK SHOULDER, 15c lb; 2 lbs for 25c PORK ROAST, lb UR: BEEF ROAST, lb. 18c RIB BOIL, 1b.,... .. 6c Chunk Bacon, lb 10c Picnics, 6 to 8 lbs, per lb. 10c HOME MADE BALOGNA, lb 8c Hamberger, 3 lbs. - - • • 25c 1 \ ■ FRESH OYSTERS PHONE 76 sO: WE DELIVER KLINK BROTHERS

1 IX 01*1 4’HIRCHEN | • ! METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A. J. Armstrong, Minister. Dr. O. C. Stoelting, Supt. Church School, 9:45 a. m. y Morning Worship, 11:00. Evening Worship, 7:00 p. m. Mid-week service, Wednesday evening at 7:15. LAKESIDE U. B. CHURCH I . i Rev. E. C. Keidenbach. Pastor. y Syracuse. I 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. I Morning worship, 10:45 a. m. Prayer Service, Thursday 7:30 p.m. Concord. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Morning worship; 11:00 a. m. Special Revival meetings will begin on Thursday evening, Jan. 25. Indian Village. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. ° GRACE LUTHERAN GHURCH Rev. John A .Pettit, Pastor. i Vernon Beckman. Supt. Sunday school. 9:45 a. tn. No preaching services Sunday. Luther League. 6:00 p. m. Choir practice Thursday night at 18 o clock at the parsonage. You are cordially invited to come and worship with us. I ZION CHAPEL. Emerson M. Frederick, Pastor, bherman Deaton, Supt. ! Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. I Morning worship, 10:45 a. m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday ? p.m Indian Village. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning worship. 10:30 a, m. Evening worship, 7:00 p. mJ , Beginning with this date a revival. Saturday, Feb. 3, at 7:00 p. m. the second quartet ly conference will convene. CHURCH OF GOD Rev. Marion Shroyer, pastor C. J. Kitson, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 10:00 a. tnChristian Endeavor, 11:00 a. m. Prayer meeting Thursday, 7:30 p.m A Revival meeting will commence February 4. CHURCH Ob THE BRETHREN Evangelist J. Edwin Jarboe, pnslot Guy Symensma, S. S. Supt. Sunday School 10 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. • Aid Society, each Thursday. Attendance last Sunday - 225 ■ Goal for next Sunday - 229 Special music and singing at the evening service followed by an ‘Evangelical Sermon. EVANGELICAL CHURCH Rev. Samuel Pritchard, Pastor. C. E. Beck, Assn’t Supt. % Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:45 a. m. i E.L.C.E. 6 p.m. Ralph Disher, Jr., leader. Evening Worship, 7:00 p. m. Special music. Men’s quartet. Junior Ladies Aid Tuesday. Choir practice, Thursday night at 7 o'clock. ’, o ■ The world series this year was far from a financial success and one of our exchanges thinks it was because there were no fan dancers at the games. Maybe so, but there were a lot of dancing fans. .

3 ARRETED. (Continued from Page One) the stqps to the door of the, courtI house, with Prosecutor Rowdabaugh Sheriff Person and McKrill standing at the door, Deputy Joe Rovenstine standing in the center of the stairway read the description of the property 'for sale, McKrill bid $6,600 in be; 1 half of the Federal Land Bank, and ! ; it- was sold to him, three minutes bej fore four o’clock at which time the j sale would have officially ended. ] Three quarters of the crowd of almost 1,000, which had gathered by Gthat time, cheered, and about onequarter boO-ed. The three who were arrested were taken to the jail in Goshen, so not to be present in case the Kosciusko I county pail w«s raided, and the I charge placed against them was interfering with an officer in perfotmnce of duty. It has been rumored since this charge is to be changed to j kidnaping, holding George Bowser against his will, or perhaps inciting a crowd to riot. i Ti. la claims to h .ve been born in ’ this country, of Finnish extraction, claims to own a farm in Minnesota. Monday night a mee.ing was held in North Webster, in an attempt to I raise money for bonds for the three in jail, but this the leaders were unable to do. ; The demands of this group, the United Farmers’ League, is for the cancellation of farmers’ debts, leaving those who gave them credit and trusted these people "holding the bag.” The following is the list of their demands printed and sent to anyone interested: 1. Immediate relief for all needy farmers in order to live and to continue production. 2. C; ncella ion of secuted debts, mortgages, back rents, delinquent taxes, and seed and feed loans of impoverished small and ‘ middle farmers* 3. A stop t<> all foreclosures and evictions of impoverished farmers and farm families. 4. An increase in the farmers’ purchasing power. 5. That ruined and impoverished shall be exempt from taxation; and that all toiling farmers shall have* substan ial tax reductions. * 6. That cash and crop rents of the toiling farmers shall be substantially reduced. After being taken to the Goshen jail, from the scene of the riot in Warsaw, Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. Tiala and Jesse Hann were taken to the prison in Michigan City, to prevent any outbreak in an attempt to gain their release. Monday evening, it is reported, a ■ meeting was-held in North Webster i where an attempt was made to raise money to furnish bonds for these three prisoners. A committee of farmers has retained Allen Widainan of Warsaw as attorney, to represent the prisoners. According to a Warsaw paper, John Boon, secretary apd treasurer of the farm loan association, said that the Federal Land Bank of Louisville, Ky. will withdraw the mking of loans in Kosciusko county, if such demonstrations as that at the Gearhart sale continue. There are now about 300 farmers in this county who have filed application for loans with this company. Mortgages have been taken over by the Federal Land Bank from the Syracuse bank so that money would be on hand in the b.ank here to pay to depositors. . The leaders at the have urged exemption of poor farmers 3 from payment of taxes, yet their meetings have so far Been held in tax supported buildings. CHURCH of god to PRESENT MISSION PLAYS j The Mission Circle of the Church of God will give two plays Wednes- : day evening, Jan. 31, at 7:30 p. m.»! entitled “Living Waters,” and “Aunt Elizabeth’s Missionary Tea”. Those taking part are: Martharose Hibschman, Billy Darr, Genevieve Kitson, Lydia Darr, Olive Deardorff, Sarah | McPherson, Lena Kitson, Dora ; Bushong, Laura Bo<wld, Hazel W’ard, ; J Virgil Hibschman, Grace Parsons, I Aura Druckamiller,- Hazel Miller, | Alma Eyer, Clem Gordy, Bess Rapp, I | Esther Brown and Emily Gordy. | Special songs will be sung by Laura j Bachman, Pauline Hibschman, Mar-1 I garet Smith, Lucy Bachman and, MrsJ Catherine Rapp-Stoner. Safe Pleasant Way To Lose Fat How would you like to lose 15 i pounds of fat in a month and at the | same time increase your energy and t improve your health? How would you like to lose your double chin and your too prominent abdomen and at the same time make your akin so clean and clear that it will compel! admiration? Get on the scales today and see how much you weigh—then get an 85 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts which will last you four weeks. Take one half teaspoonful in a glass of hot water every morning and when you have finished the contents of this first bottle weigh yourself again. After that you’ll want to walk around and say to your friends—“ One S 5 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts is worth one hundred dollars of any fat person’s money,” Leading druggists America over sell Kruschen Salts—You can always get it at Thornburg Drug Co. —adv

THE SYRACUSE JOUkmAL

FARMERS TO OBTAIN FEDERAL LOAN MUST AGREE NOT ’ TO INCREASE PRODUCTION t Special to Journal— WASHINGTON, Jan. 25—The , agreement between the Farm Credit , Administration and the Agricultural , Adjustment Administration will not bar any farmer, who has adequate [ security and is otherwise eligible to . borrow, from obtaining loans for , financing agricultural production from production credit associations or from private credit agencies discounting with the Federal intermediate credit banks, according to a statement issued by the Farm Credit Administration. The only effect of the agreement is that the farmer who h.sfot signed a production con- ' trol agreement will be required to furnish, in addition to other necessary loan paper?-, s tisfactory evidence that he pL ns no increase in production of b sic agricultural com- ’ modrties'in a manner .detrimental to the of the production control programs. ’Farmers who have signed control agreements will need no further proof of their cooperation in order to bonow. A list of all who have signed production control agreements will be ( ina e available to the Farm Credit Administration. Each production credit associa ion will have in its possession the list of farmers 4:0- , operating with the Agricuitpr. 1 Ad- , justment Administr tion in the terri.o.y it serves, end, therefore, will , know which faimers have signed , agreements. This, e; ch f rmer who has not signed sui h an agreement will be required to obtain a statement from the county council to be set up in e ch county by the A. A. A. with authority to issue certificates respecting ctop production by fanners who are not on the list of cooperators. The production credit associations will accept such certificates as s tisfactory evidence that the to whom they are issued are not increasing their production in a manner detrimental to the success of the program. This co-operative agreement between the Farm Credit Administration and the Agricultur. 1 Adjustment Administration apj.! es to all shortterm credit agencies over which the Farm Credit Administration has control. Thus it applies not only to the, newly organized production credit associations of which there are now more than 450 and of which 50 to 75 are being organized each week, but to private lending agencies and corporations which discount farmers notes with the Federal intermediate credit banks, such as livestock loan companies, igricultural credit corporations and banks. “The close cooperation between the Agricultural Adjustment, Administration and the Farm Credit Administration does net contemplate an undue hardship on those who have not joined production control associations,” stated Wm. I. Myers, Governor of the Farm Credit Administration. “It does look forward, however to a coordination of the efforts of these two agencies of the Federal government in bringing about production control and the cooperation of the agencies which affect this control. Thus it applies only to shortterm credit which might quickly efi feet any changes in agricultural production. Long-term farm loans such as are made by the land banks and the land b?nk commissioner are chiefly for refinancing farm indebtedness and consequently ate not affected by this joint arrangement with the Agricultural Adjustment Administration. No applicant for a loan from a land bank or front the land bank commis*?sioner will have to obtain the con- ! sent of the county council in order i to get his loan. ” I —<r LAKE NEWS. IGontinued from page One) home of Mr. anti Mrs. Ira Landaw. Mrs. Harrier Juday and R. C. j Johns of spent the evening there. Charles Dalke of Indianapolis was a lake visitor, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Martin planned to leave this morning, to spend two weeks in Clearwater, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Martin were i Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and j Mrs. C. R. George in Mariom. Mrs. Harry Fishack and Mrs. Grace Olds spent Saturday with Mrs. i E.. L. Martin. WHO PLAYS A VIOLIN Mr. Vanderwater is suffering from I absent-mindedness. He said several years ago, when ■' there was prosperity, he refused SSOO for an old Steiner violin which he ' owned. In recent months he loaned iit to someone in this vicinity. Now he can’t remember to whom he loaned it, but is sure the party who has it will remember to whom it belongs. 0 : WIN SUGAR. Winners of sugar in the weekly drawing of names, Saturday evening were: Sherman Coy, David Barker, Leonard'Barnhart, Vern Brown, Alma Eyer, W. M. Cory, Mrs. Hurtig, Ocal Craft, Mrs. McSweeney, A. L. Miller, J. E. Kern, F. R. i Brown, Iva,Coy, Aaron Ketering, J. P. Hughes, Dick Mench, Mrs. O. L. Cleveland, John L. Sloan and Geo. W. Wandel. (

MAIN STREET WHUTLINGS The riot of farmers in Warsaw pushed the bank topic aside for a j few days. Buy only for a few days. The minds of the people just naturally gravitated back to the problem in which their money is concerned, in spite of riots, politics and disorders. A steam boiler or a peanut wagon will blow up, if a hot enough fire is put under it and there is no outlet for the confined steam to escape. So public meetings of the United Farmers League may be the necessary outlet for that steam boiler. j Realizing th t the favorite indoor sport is to jump with both feet on public utilities, the editor with tome trepidation wfches to call attention .to the fact that some of our readers have their data tuisted in reg; rd to street lighting in the town of Syracuse It does not cost the town of Syracuse for street lighting .as was stated in a letter to the editor, printed last week. The item of $4,000 which was referred to, is an appropi i lion coverirg the expense of sheet lighth g, he. t and water. Hydrant service for the town costs SI,BOO, which comes out of this appropii ition. Last year, s reet lighting cost the town $2,264, due to a reduction in rates which was the result of conference between the town board and officials of the N. 1.. P. S. Co. , last May. i_ n . HAS OLD VIOLIN At present in the possession of Lloyd Disher there is a violin which he claims is an old, valuable Stradi- ! varius. He is negotiating for its sale ' now, and plans to go to Chicago during the coming The violin was formerly in the possession of Sherman Folk, who several years ago ran a second hand shop in Chicago. Disher said that several ye; rs ago when Mr. Folk | was suffering a fractured skull, representatives from Henry Ford had come to Syracuse, offering as much as SB,OOO for the violin. Mr. Folk was unable to consider business at that time and h s not taken the matter up since. Antonious Stradivarius was an Italian violin maker who lived between the years of 1644 and 1737. It is said that Rumanoff, whose orchestra broadcasts each Sunday night on the i radio, paid $12,000 for his Stradivarious. SURPRISED ON BIRTHDAY V- J • - ■ Mrs. 0/ C. Stoelting planned a surprise prrty in honor of her husband’s birthday, and invited six friends to dinner Friday evening. The party included Mrs. Stoelting as well as her husband, as the guests got together, planned an extension t® the party, and instead of a party jof six, Mrs. Stoelting opened the door s to see 14 guests arriving. They I were equipped with b skets of food, i etc., so her w’orries w>ere short lived. | Bridge was played following the birthday dinner. j ■ KILLED IN ACCIDENT Mr. and Mrs. Louis Heerman re- > ceived word, Sunday morning, that their Granite City, 111., formerly a resident of Syracuse, had been killed in an automobile accident. He was taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Dodge in South Bend, where funeral services for him were held yesterday. Relatives from Syracuse attended. ... BETCHA HE’D ‘ FOLLOW COPY IF IT GOES OUT WINDOW”! The perfect correspondent has been found! i It happened recently in the Toledo Blade office. M. J. Foreman, state editor, in his instructions to new Correspondents, tells them to send in their string for payment at the end of the month , c A new correspondent in a nearby village replied with a letter itemizing the two stories he had sent which the Blade had carried and then—obeying instructions to the letter—he inclosed two pieces of string—one 12 inches long, the measure of the longer story, and the other five inches long, for the shorter!—Exchange. —O ’ Balloonists talk from eleven miles in ■ the air, according to a current newspaper headline. Nothing unusual about that in a congressional debate.

These Prices In Effect Until ‘Further Notice Sana tone cleamatg 75c Standard cleaning 59c Economy cleaning 39c SYRACUSE DRY CLEANER M. E. RAPP

i SCHOOL NOTES 11 I 1 • As Mr. and MH. Glenn Stookey ■ have moved to Syracuse to make I their home With Mrs. Clara Stookey, | their daughter, Patsy Lou entered! the First Grade, Tuesday morning. Sarah Jane Hinderer has missed school this past week for the first * time this year, because of a bad cold. Richard Johnson is another pupil of the Second Grade, absent because of illness. • • • Louise Stiffler and Marilyn Holloway were absent from the Third Grade th* first of this week. i» • • Fourth Grade’s . attendance l was! 1 perfect, Monday, , but bad colds hrdj kept Wendell Beck and Philip Brower out of school last week. • t • Ruth Rarig, John Hann, Nelson Hinderer and David LeCount missed from the Fifth Grade, duiing the past week. The teacher, Mrs. Hess, returned to school,. Friday, recovering from her illness. Mrs. Lucy Miles taught in her place two s dys last week. t • » • Lois Dillen and Curds LeCount have returned to the Sixth Gra e ai-! ter being absent because of illness, j The Seventh Gn de held a cl; ss meeting and elected officers. MLs Olive Disher is president; Stephen Snavely, vice president; Lym. n Stucky, secretary-tieasurer, tndj Miss Irene Shock, class sponsor. School is to be dismissed at noon, Friday, as tournament . play commences in Warsaw in the afternoon with Syracuse in the first game, at 2 p. m. • • • I Mr. Slabaugh s. ys he wishes when people lose things at basketball games they’d be ?more thuoghtful about ’ it. He has several gloves and mittens' resting in his office, with the mates' of these probably yet in the poshes-' sion of the owners. One glove or mitten is of no use to him, he said. There is also a scarf. Anyone may ; have these by identifying them. Report cards will be issued next Wednesday at the conclusion of thej work of the first month of the second semester of school. ■ • • * . I Sydney Yazel, Fifth Grade, became ill at school yesterday,? and so that she would not have to ride home in the school hack, Frederick Clayton carried her to the doctor’s office, after school, and the doctor took her home. She is said to have been suffering from indigestion. AFFIDAVIT MADE OUT Following an alleged fist fight between Arnold and Rudolph Beckman,, i Sunday, Vernon Beckman went to Warsaw, Monday, and made out an affidavit chrging his brother Arnold with Xssualt and battery on Rudolph. ■ The charge was made in Justice I Frank Lens’s court, and the constable from Warsaw came to Syracuse, Tuesday, but could not find Arnold. He was to have a hearing in court this morning. O — ■ ; CLUB TO MEET. The Junior Ladies of the Round Table, division No. 1, will meet at the htime of Miss Rowena Kline, Thursday evening,, February T. |

COAL COKE CHESTNUT- (Hard Coal) RED ASH — (Genuine Black Gold) BLUE GRASS— (Blocky Ky. Coal) PEACOCK— (A Pomeroy Coal) YELLOW PINE I—(Range 1 — (Range Coal) POCAHONTAS COAL NUT COKE EGG COKE SEE US FOR YOUR NEEDS Stiefel Grain Co. PHONE 886 DELINQUENT TAX SALE SYRACUSE PAVING Monday, February sth, 1934 A list of lots returned delinquent for the year 1933 and previous years in the Town of Syracuse. Ella Traster, Pt. out lot 4, Me. andL, 98.8 ft. front~ge, __’__s22l.oß Jesse Coy, lots 7 and 8, Syracuse Water Power Co., add 96.76 Byron H. Doll, lots l, 2 and 3 in block 3, K. & K. add 77.45 May H. Beach, E. half lot 4, Kindig add . 1(M). 39 May H. Beach, N. 32 ft. E. half lot 3 Kindig add. 12.12 John Dillon, N. half lot 14, O. P 42.06 Joe Rapp, lot 5, S. and W. second 2.07 George L. Xanders, S. 60 ft. lot 9 S. and W. second<141.54 Hattie Kindig, South half lot 33 O. P. 34 66 SOUTH MAIN STREET SEWER. Byron H. Doll, lots 1, 2 and 3, in block 3 K. and K. add 8.83 Jesse Coy, lots 7 and 8, Syracuse Water Power Co., add 14.40 JOHN HARLEY Treas. for Town of Syracuse. Notice is hereby given that so much of said lots as may be necessary to discharge the tax, interest and cost which may be due, thereon at the time of the sale, will be sold at public sale, subject to the unpaid portion of such assessment not then delinquent, at the door of the Town hall, Town of Syracuse, on the first Monday in February, the same being the sth day of February, 1934. \ M . . JOHN HARLEY, Jan. 20-Feb. 1 Treas. for Town of Syracuse

THURSDAY, JAN. 25, 1934

INTER-CHURCH B. B. LEAGUE Standing of Teams. GW GL PCT Evangelical 7 0 1000 Lutheran 4 3 571 Methodist 4 ' 3 571 Brethren 2 4 333 Ch. of God 0 5 — United Brethren 0 1 Games played Tuesday, Jan. 23. 7:oo—Ch. of God vs Lutheran* 8:00— Brethren vs Evangelical* 9:OO—U. B. vs Methodist* • —-Indicates te?m won. FRY A JOURNAL WANT AD Phone xjw Box, 177 Wati h and ■Cloca Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX [ First House &outh of U. B. Church Lake St., Syracuse, Ind. ? 3-24-34 - -1 OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN, INCMANA. GEO. L. XANDERS A riOKNLY-AT-LAW Seiiieinenl of Estates Opinions on litles I'lkxh- 7 >») racuse. Inc* Fire .mil Other Insurance DWIGHT MOCK —for — Vulcanizing and Acetylene Weldine i»■ t !»»••• ine ami Itepnlrlra Snutjh Side Lake Wawa.ee Authorized Crosley Radio Dealer j Near Wnco. BOAT LIVERY !*’ ■ - . ~A I CRYSTAL i 1 Ligonier 2 i} “ r Thurs. Jan. 25— ? Bargain Nights I ("SHOULD LADIES BEHAVE?” Starring Alice Brady, Lionel Barrymore ard Conway Tear’e. A sm rt corned •. 10c—ADM SSICN- 15c Sat.-Mon. Jan. 27-29— ■ “BOMBSHELL” Je: n H rl w, rs.’h° blonde b nibs. ell <f Hollywood. J the h t cha i ! ol of the screen. She’s rlways in a J jam. and how the news papers eat it up. The laugh se sa ion of the s’, as n. Also N Extra Fine Short Subjects. ;Veds.-Thursd. Jan. 31 Feb-1 | “THUNDERING HEARD . Bargain Nights. Zne G ey’s great s story, g and what a- picture! The g th ill of Americ ’s maling, 8 will make all America thrill. 4 A tion, suspense, s ectacle, s rring R Stott and ; Judith Allen. J JOc—ADMISSION—ISc y COMING— | Sat.- Men., Feb. 3-5— ONLY YESTERDAY” W’e endorse this picture as one of the year’s greatest i sc; een triumphs. Words cannot do it justice, starring John Boles and Margaret Sulla van. A new screen s ar