The Syracuse Journal, Volume 26, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 March 1934 — Page 4
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.•' ■ - : LOOK- A NEW LOW PRICE on the 1934 Maytag Washer for a short time only. See A. O. Winans, Phone 1160, Syracuse, Ind. 40-ts POPULAR VARlETlES—Bloodtested chicks. We specialize in custom hatching. Hoosier State Hatchery, Box 67, Millersburg, Ind., Phone 105. 40-stp OFFICE SUPPLIES— Typewrite, ribbons, for all makes of machines, carbon paper, typewriter paper, card board, blotting, tags, etc., for sale at .he Journal Office. tl. LEGAL FORMS—WiIIs, 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. PLANT TREES AND REDUCE TAXES, SAYS STATE Trees to plant several thousand acres of unproductive Indiana farm land may be had from the state nurseries at a minimum cost. The limitation of acreage for crops tinder the government plan will leave idle tracts on many farms, and it is these acres which the slate hopes will be planted in trees. Land owners having tracts of three or more acres on which they plant trees and secure classification ,by the state Division of Forestry as forestry lands, are required to pay taxes on an assessment of only $1 per acre on such lands. To secure classification as forest lands the owner must agree to plant the tract of three or more acres in trees, must prohibit grazing in that tract at all times and must take precautions against tire. He may secuffc\trees for planting from the state through the Division of Forestrfc at a Coat which merely represenut\the cost of production. Having the land classified as forest land does not interfere with the sale or transfer oL the land. The average cost of planting varies from $lO to sl2 an acre, that cost including the trees and plantings. The state nurseries have available at the present time large quantities of four-year White pine, American Red pine and Norway Spruce, two year Osage orange seedlings and oneyear black locust seedlings and stratified black Walnut nuts. Full Information regarding re-classifica-tion and prices may be secured from the Division of Forestry, Department of Conservation, Indianapolis. NOTICE TO HEIRS, CREDITORS, ETC. In the Matter of the Estate of John Swenson, deceased. In the Kosciusko Circuit 4 Court, February Term, 1934. Cause No. I *>• i. , Notice is' Hereby Given, That John W. Swenson as administrator of the estate of John Swenson, deceased, has presented and tiled his account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will Come up for examination and action of said Circuit Court on the 10th day of March, 1934, at which time all heirs, Creditors, or legatees of said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said account ami >h i.kt not be approved. Dated at Warsaw, Indiana, this 15ht day of February, 1934. ROYCE R. HILDENBRAND, Clerk Kosciusko Circuit Court. W. H. Wigton, Atty. 44-2 t
The State Bank of Syracuse •••••••• Capital and Surplus $50,000 “OUR BANK” Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent
MEAT SPECIALS— i ► STEAK, ,1b ~.. l«c SAUSAGE, per lb .... 12c PORK CHOPS, per lb 18c PORK SHOULDER,, per lb _ 15c PORK ROAST, per lb .. 15c BEEF ROAST, lb .-. 10c RIB BOIL, lb., -- 6c SLICED BACON, 5 lb carton 50c HAMBURG, 3 lbs. for ...... ... 25c HOME MADE BALOGNA, lb 8c Will Have A Saddle of Veal From Swift’s Get Your Choice Cuts Early. FRESH OYSTERS PHONE 76 :0: WE DELIVER KLINK BROTHERS BUY YOUR MEAT FROM A MEAT MARKET
I IX 01, R ('HVRt'IIKN ■ _ ‘ ’ I METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH A. J. Armstrong, Minister. Chester Langston, Supt. Church School, 9:45 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00. Evening Worship, 7:00 p. m. Mid-week service, Wednesday j evening at 7:15. t CHURCH OF GOD • Rev. Marion Shroyer, pastor. C. J. Kitson, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00 a. m. Christian Endeavor, 6:00 p. m. Evening worship 7:00. CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN Evangelist J. Edwin Jarboe. pastor Guy Symensma, S. S. Supt. Sunday School 10 a. m. Prer.ching at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. Aid Society, each Thursday. Last Sunday was the first Sunday we have gone below the 200 mark for several months. Let every one boost to go over the top next Sun- | dayNo evening service next Sunday on account of the Union services in the U. B. church a 7 p. m. GRACE LUTHERAN < HI R< II Rev. John A .Pettit. Pastor. Vernon Beckman, Supt. Sundav school. 9:45 a. nt. 1 Morning worship, 10:45 a. m. Mid-week Lenten services, Wednesday evening at 7:30. You are cordially invited to come ■ and worship with us. ZION CHAPEL i Emerson M. Frederick, Pastor. Sherman Deaton, Supt. I Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Evening Worship, 7:00 p. m. Indian Village. , Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning worship, 10:30 a. m. EVANGELICAL CHURCH Rev. Samuel Pritchard, Pastor. C. E. Beck, Assn’t Supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:45 a. m. 1 No evening service, because of Union service at U. B. Church. 1 Scout Meeting Monday, 7:00 p. m. Choir practice, Thursday night at 7 o’clock. LAKESIDE U. B. CHURCH Rev. E. C. Keidenoach, Pastor. h Syracuse. 9:45 a. m. Sunday School. • I Evening worship, 7:00. Prayer Service, Thursday 7:30 p.m. J The speaker next Sunday evening will be Mr. A. E. York of Indiana--1 pols. This will be a Union service, I and each church co-operating is requested to furnish a special music number. ■ j Concord. , Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Morning worship, 11:00 a. m. j Indian Village. 1 Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. - MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED. Announcement is being made of i the marriage of Miss Hjjlen Gibson [ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank t Gibson and Theron Clemens of Go’s shen. The ceremony was performed lin Goshen Sunday. 1 UNDERGOES OPERATION ! r Mrs. Xenia Pritchard, mother of Rev. Samuel Pritchard of the Evan- » gelical church became ill suddenly I last Thursday and was taken to the I Elkh. rt hospital Sunday where she H underwent an abdominal operation.
Multigraph Deal Swung by McNutt Angers Printers State Typothetae Strikes Back; Rap I Governor; Questionable Bookkeeping Used io Show Profits. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind.— Protest from printers and publishers over Indiana were piling up on the desk of Governor Paul V: McNutt this week con demning the new State Multi-: graphing Department which the gov-! ernor chose to install, to put the state ; in competition with private concerns i for printing contracts* A bulletin “A New Menace Con- ! fronts the Printing Industry >• of Indiana," issued by the Indiana State Typohtetae and mailed to 800 Hoosier printers and publishers charges: 1. That the purchase and operatiion of the Governor’s printing equipment was effected in a complete air of mystery and that “it was impossible for a public citizen to find out just what this multigraph plant j consisted of because of the fact that, little information was given to the j public and inspection of the plant was denied.” 2. That state laws were violated w hen the McNutt administration purchased the equipment from an Indian. polis concern whose Sales manaager was put on the state payroll at a alary of 8200 a month; that a relative of one of hte Governor’s secrete ies as an agent for an out-state paper company is selling the state printing plant paper. 3. That the state is doing questionable bookkeeping in an effort to show a profit on the printing it is doing; while in two instances investigated the government actually lost $l,lOO by doing its own work. 4. That the state in an effort to show a profit is violating the NRA by working its men as much as 80 hours a week at no additional pay, while private printers are limited to 40-hour weeks and must pay time and-a-third and time-and-a-half for i overtime. 5. That the state plans to install an even more complete printing plant in the reformatory at Pendleton and use prison labor to compete with Indiana printers for state contracts. | Even with questionable bookkeep- : ing in an effort to show profits to the state, two cases investigated by the Typothetae show htat the taxpayers were the losers on printing done by the Governor’s new depart-, 1 ment. ’ i Forms for the Gross Income Tax Department were mulitgraphed in December and the charge made to the Gross Income Tax Division amounted to $2,4v3.60, hte bulletin asserts. We must say that the state printer who would have printed these forms would have charged the state sl,506.20, representing a tangible saving of $897.40. In o her words, the Gross Income Tax Division paid ap- ; proximately 60 per cent more for multigraphing than they would have paid if the work had been done by a! printer. This does not take into consideratiqa. the interior product so noticeable when these forms were distributed to the public. During the month of January, | 1934, the Government’s Unemployment Relief Committee purchased! printing from the state house multigraphing department in the amount of $1,610.17. This multigraphed pro-1 duct was paid for with government I money appropriated by the Federal I Government for relief work. We find upon analyzing this particular charge that the committee paid to the state i $259.56 over and above that which j would have been paid if the regular contract printing price had pre-1 vailed. There are numerous instances of' similar character. The printers association claims! that the work done by the Governor’s department is inferior. j | The product of multigraph equipment can in no sense equal that type of printing which is produced on standard printing and offset equipment, it is stated. The general appearance of the product which is produced in this department is in the last analysis a very poor imitation of tetter press and offset printing. The various departments are rej quired to utilize this product regardless. When this is done it places a ‘ premium on an inferior imitation product which would not in the least be countenanced by any of the state departments or institutions if the > same inferior product came from the presses of a legitimate printer. x *• ASSESSORS STARTING. Work of assessing was commenced this morning, Thursday, March 1. This is the last year assessing will be . done by township assessors, except in W’ayne township. Assessing in the 16 other townships devolves upon the | township trustees according to an act of the last legislature. The assessor for Turkey Creek township is Walter Kohr, assisted by Will Kindig. CHASERS Mary Pickford fled from a man and woman who had been trailing her for two days, but, the chances are they were only two determined autograph hunters. ■ QUIET TITLE SUIT IS FILED Blanche McClintic has filed a quiet title suit in circuit court against Alda Pensinger.
THE SYRACUSE JOUKHAL
Seal Looks Like Fish, i but of Animal Family • The seal Is a member of that queer , finally of creatures which look like fish, but which are nevertheless anl- : mate, says a writer In the Montreal Herald. Like the whale, the seal breathes air, but ft has the advantage over the whale in that it can come, on land. The seal lives entirely on fish, and ■>ay eat as much as a hundred pounds | of them in a day. He can swim won- , f derfully welt, just as well as a fish i can, and throughout the late summer, | i autumn and winter, he roams the sev- ( i en seas, and during all that time he j ■ may never leave the water once. But j In the spring he returns to the place j : where he was born, which may be a | thousand miles away, and there he ■ meets millions of other seals. In the ! ; summer the baby sente are born, and as soon as they can swim—that takes about six weeks—off they go again. These seal nurseries are in out-of-the-way places where men seldom come, and on suitable beaches the rocks are often worn smooth by the millions which visit them every year. The scene on these iieaches Is soni derfttl, for you can hardly see the j j ground for the huge number of ani- ■ : mate. The noise, too. can he heard i for miles away, for all the males fight ■ for the best places and roar all the i timei J ,\ Spider Builds Swinging Cradle for Young Ones ■ A spider rejoicing in the name of ■ olios cocnobita. found in Madagascar, has a unique nest for its young tn the I form of a swinging cradle. The spider spins several threads, forming them Into a stout cable, and carefully suspends it from the branch of a ts«e from which the cradle is to swlhg. The cradle itself is an empty shell, sometimes a snail shell, hut often h , one-chambered shell ending in a point or spiral opposite the opening. The Spider then travels hack and forth frbm the branch to the cradle, which I Is still lying on the groupd. until she. decides that the r»»j>e is strong enough. ! When the cable Is tfffrk enough the little maker mounts to the top of It. where It is fastened tn the branch, and rolls it up with her feet until the era- j die swings some two Inches clear of j the ground. Since t-be spider silk Is moist when first spun, and contracts as it dries, she knows it will become shorter. And here. In their shell cradles. the baby spiders rock back and forth in the breeze, safe fmm harm until they are ready to start out in life for themselves. ■ ■; i Engraving on Copper Engraving Is generally done 'bn a thin, flat copper plate, w(th a small pointed tool known as burin, or graver, which makes a V-shaped cut. The engraver works by pushing the burin, holding it almost flat against the plate. The very nature of the process makes the line more method- f leal, less sketchy than an etched line. The process came Into use early In the Fifteenth century, and was prac- < ticed most in Germany. Italy and the Netherlands.. Martin Schongauer was the first big name. After him came , Albrecht Durer, head of the prolific i Sixteenth century German sch»»ol. ‘ Among the early Italians were Man- 1 i tegna. Marc Antonin and Campagnola. > | The English and French engravers [ ■ offer the best opportunities flor them. i Among the more prominent English- ■ j men were William Sharp and Robert • Stiange. The Frenchmen, who en- ■ I gaged in perpetuating on copper plate j the work of Watteau. Chardin and i Lancret, were Cochin, Audran. Tar i dieu, Gravelot and Moreau. “Tekla” Pearls Man Made Tekla pearls are made from a spe i , cles of Hungarian fish that Is found I In Lake Balaton, which contains radium tn Its waters and quantities of j gold fish. A kind of whiting and | sheat supply the scales used for the ; manufacture of “Tekla pearls." There i are two laboratories on the lakeshore i at Siofok and Fonyod. where microscopic crystals are extracted by a | treatment with ammonia from the ' scales scraped off the fish. The prod- | net Is the raw material of the “BalaI ton pearl essence." Glass beads re- | ceive a coating of this essence, which ; lends them that warm, glossy shine that makes It so difficult to the eye ; to distinguish “Tekla" from genuine ( pearls. The coating, however, is not ; done tn Hungary, but mostly tn the ■ pearl laboratories of France. Spain i end Japan. It Is the essence which i Is exported from Hungary, or the j scales themselves, salted down In | barrels. Antimony Widely Used Antimony, of the Don-rasting and non-tarnlshlng metals, plays an important part In industry. Perhaps its most Important use. at any rate the use which dally affects more people than any other, is its use ip type metaL It has a low melting point, melting at 800 degrees. It find* its way Into medical use in the tartrate form, tartar amtic being widely used Id medicine. Antimony oxide and antimony sulphide mixed are used to color glass and porcelain yellow, while In a form ’ known aa butter of antimony, antimony chloride, it Is mixed with olive oil to give a brown color to gun barrels. Antimony Is usually found in the sulphide form, particularly in France, where large quantities are smelted. Antimony is also produced In Borneo, California. Nevada. Mexico, and New Brunswick. —Washington star. ; A certain young girl cried piteously after her young man had proposed. , j “Why are you crying dear?" asked the young man, solicitously. “Have I offended you?” “No, dear," answered the girl, ! “that’s not it. I am crying for pure joy. Mother always said I was such an idiot that not oven a donkey would propose to me, and now one has."—Farmer’s Guide.
il 1 | SCHOOL NOTES | i i Mrs. Merton Meredith, Second , grade teacher has been suffering , with a boil on her chin. ‘ . •• * i A number of illnesses were report- 1 ed with twelve absent from the First i Grade Monday. Three from the 'Second, Four from the Third. It is ' i thought that a number of these absences are due to the recent vaccination, but Jean Method and Richard ’ Ketring have the whooping cough. Two pupils transferred from Beh|ton to the Second grade here this week, Deloris and Eugene Si-pen. • • » School will be dismissed at noon Friday because of the County Basketball tournament at Warsaw. Practise for the Junior Class Pl.ij •under the direction of Miss Henwood jhas begun. The play chosen is “I j Will, I Won’t”, and will be given ! March 16. I• ♦ • i The Third and Fourth Basket ball i teams won from Ligonier last WedJnesd y evening. They plajed Goshen | here last night. i The Syracuse Eighth Grade te m | won from Milford in a b sketbali lgame played Tuesday after school. FRONT STREET Be ore the i on hoise came into ust all the meich ndise carted bd horse and wagon from Fori Wayne or the St. Joseph river. So we had many peddlers, mostly Irish or j Jewish, selling goods from house to house, on foot or horse back, anc ’( Jacob Straus of Ligonier made his start by carrying a pack of goods on his back. Then he carried a load on his horse. After a while he was able ! to hitch his horse to a wagon. . The writer has a picture of Jacob Strres selling merchandise with a horse in 1861. The merchandise ther carried was Irish table linen, th ead handkerchieves, dress pa terrs, calco, muslin, pins and needles. In August, 1853 or 81 years ago, a ! peddler was selling gcods three miles northwest of Syracuse, along the old Huntington road. One morning the peddler's horse was found dead with a bullet through his head, sad died and bridled, ready to go. The horse lay on the west side of the road on a ridge between two cat swamps just this side of Macane' brothers’ barn. i The peddler was never seen in that locality again. Not far away in the yard was an open w'ell, walled with About this tinte the wall .in the well fell in, and it was , thought the peddler had been muri dered for his money and goods and then thrown into the old well which fell in and covered him. (After the killing of the horse people traveling by on the. old Hunting- • ton road at night said they could see floating lights and spooks in different I shapes and forms. In after years, George W. Adams lived in this pld spooky house. One dark night Mr. Adams was coming down the Huntington road and all at once a bright light came into view toward him l about 20 rods away. The closer it ■ came the brighter and larger it grew Within 100 feet of Mr. Adams he stopped with the hair on his head standing up. Finally the light caine up to him and the spook was one of the neighbois come to spend the evening with him. The neighbor was carrying one of those old, tin, tallow candle lanterns, perfoiated with holes to let out the light. He had the lantern door open, ' holding it in front of him to make > better light. The writer was at the Macane ( farm last summer. They showed me the place where the old well was located. There is a sharp depression in the ground. They fill it up, but it is not long until the depression is back again. The writer’s father saw this horse lying on the ground, dead in August 1853, and pointed out to him the location. WHO WILL WIN AND LOSE Washington, March I—Senator Warren B. Austin, of Vermont, has tabulated those who will win and lose by the new dollar devaluation. Here they are: “The losers, all of them creditors: All lenders of dollars, such as holders of bonds, notes, mortgages, preferred stocks; sellers of credit of property such as goods, commodities, houses, gold; holders of life insurance policies; thrifty conservative savers; receivers of wages, salaries, rents, interest, taxes, freight charges, fixed fees and similar items. “The gainers, all of them debtors: All borrowers of dollars such as issuers of bonds, notes, mortgages, preferred stocks and fixed income securities; owners and buyers on : credit of property such as goods, ; commodities, houses and gold; holders of foreign currencies; holders of industrial stocks and other equities; speculators for a rise in prices, par•ticularly those borrowing to do so; ’those heavily in debt and luxurious spenders; payers of wages, salaries rents, taxes, interest, freight chargees, fixed fees and similar items.” CONSTIPATION 6 YEARS, TROUBLE NOW GONE i John J. Davis had chronic constipation for six years. By using Adlerika he soon got rid of it, and feels like a new person. Adlerika is quick acting—safe. At Leading Drag gists. —adv.
.’—NAME THIS COLUMN—? (Details on Front Page.) : Wrens choose green houses in which to build their nests. If your wren house has not been occupied and it is any color but green, paint it and see if the wrens do not live' there next season; For tall hollyhocks, hoe threeinch trench about plant. Add 2 handfuls of dry Nitrate of Soda—then i fill with water. After water has seeped away fill trench with dry soil. Nitrate of Soda is also good for Sweet Feas. Gladiolus plant deep. Work handful of bone meal into soil below each bulb. Blossoms exceptionally good—oulbs better than usual. What to do With Spare Time? Cultivate, plant, care for and harvest a beautiful garden. Just a small me that you v. ill/tiTue "for yourself. TIME LIMIT < r ’oniinueii Jrom One) positors to confer with the bank diectors, and the committee was to .eport to the ‘depositors what progress had been made Tuesday. Those appointed on the committee were William Bushong, Roy Darr, Arthur Blahchard, Floyd Strieby, Drniel Klink, Claus Bobeck, and Chat les Purdem. Purdem was made chairman of the committee. At this meeting the general opinion i expressed was that two things were i necessary to save the bank, that the I -toekholdeis pay their assessment! immediately, and the deposit*srs sgn 1 he agreement to waiver 75 per cent >f their deposits. The committee »vas to confer w ith the directors about getting some cc.ion out of the stock-: holders. „ ESTATE TRANSFERS The Journal is fui nished with the ollowinu trausfeis <>f real estate t>y Houton C. Fiazer, abstractor, W r saw, Ind. Prairie Township to John D. Harman, 1 acre section 27, Prairie township, sl. Alice A. Schuder to Dora Schuder 2 lots in block 8, Becknell’s addition Milford,. SI. John Angel to Thomas C. and Lydia I. Crouch, 1 acre section 10, Tippecanoe township, SI. Ralph Moore to Wm. W. and Elnora Feldman, -38 acres section 4, Jefferson township, SI. Charles H. Weade o Harold K. nd Freedonia Eachelder, 206 acres, sections 16 and 17, Ti|>pecume township, SI. Warsaw Building Loan Savings Association to Martha M. Warner, 4xß rod tract in section 15, Tippecanoe township, $650. 0 SUICIDE HOPES KIN BREAKS NECK WITH AUTO HE LEAVES The following clipping from a newspaper out west was sent to A. W. Emerson: “Arthur B. Franklin, who committed suicide in his garage from the fleets of carbon monoxide gas left a note reading: 'I may be crazy, but I would like to know who wouldn’t be? The only thing I have left is my auto and that is registered in my daughter-in-law’s name. I hope she breaks her neck the first time she rides in it'.” . — Q Howard Maggart of Albion spent Sunday with relatives in Syracuse. — *-o TRY’ A JOURNAL WANT AD
| BABY CHICKS You are cordially invited to come in and see our Modern Hatchery. Book your orders no\? for March-April deliveries. Get your chicks now for early layers next fall, when the egg price is at its best. We Carry a Complete Line of Poultry Supplies at Very Reasonable Prices. ; x CROMWELL HATCHERY I Lawrence Schlecht, Mgr. Roy Jorg, Prop, i
All Mash Chick Ration With Cod Liver Oil. 17.5% Protein — 3.5% Fat —6% Fiber INGREDIENTS—Ground Yellow Corn, Wheat Bran, Wheat Middlings, Meat Scraps, Dried Buttermilk, Alfalfa Meal. Bone , Meal, Salt and Cod Liver Oil.. CHESTNUT HARD COAL Red Clover Sweet Clover Alfalfa Timothy Bluegrass Red Top Lawn Seed SEE US FOR YOUR N£EDS Stiefel Grain Co. PHONE 886
THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1934’
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED The Past Chiefs club, which was organized nine years ago at the home of Mrs. Ed Unrue celebrated its anniversary at. a party at her home Tuesday. A pot luck dinner was served. There were 18 club members and 4 guests present. SHOULD FORM AN ARMY OF THEM FIRST Cuba has one hting to be thankful for. It does not provide pensions for its ex-presidfents. Phone Box 177 Watch and Clocx Repairing A. J, THIBODEAUX First House South of U. B. Church Lake Sit., Syracuse, Ind, 3-24-34 DWIGHT MOCK —for — Vulcanizing and Acetylene Weldins rtaiu>» ! band lleiutirirsr Siottih Side Lake Wawasee Authorized Crosley Radio Dealer • Near Waco. BOAT LIVERY Phone stt4 Syracittw GEO. L. XANDERS a i iorSly-ai law Settlement ot Estates , ■( ' Opinions on lilks I I’liotH- ~ Syracuse, ln«* Fiw (*thei Insurant c Newr gw pretz OPTOMETRIST GOSHEN. INDIANA. i
I GRYS TA L Ligonier r i i’• M . Thurs. Mar. 1— "TILLiE AND GUS” A grand comedy with W. C. Fiel.s, Alhon Skipworth arid Baby Leßov. 10r—ADM SSICN—ISc _4—j _— i_ Fril-Sat. -3— KING FOR A NIGHT” I Chester Morris and Helen Twelvetiees in a gripping picture of glamorous night club life. Also ■ a Musical Revue and a Cartoon. Sun. -Tues. Mar. 4-6— i L ‘ DANCING LADY” Joan C.awford, Clark Gable and Franchat Tone in a great;sansa ion I musical romance. A drama th t tingles with excitement, a wealth of scenic and musical glory, hundreds of gorgeous singling, , dancing beauties. A l| glittering p geant of rioit- gj ous color with glamor Joan § dancing s n ight in o your 3 heart. ' It is Hellywood’s 3 ci owning contribution to a f. me and gfory. ISc—ADMISSION—3Oc g Weds-Thurs, Mar 7-B—■ a Bargain Nights. “THE SEARCH , ■ FOR BEAUTY” g A fast moving comedy of feminine beauty and stalwart $ youth, starring Buster Crab- g| be and Ida Lupino, with S| 30 International Beauty con- S test winners. ' V JOc-ADMISSION—ISc ■* COMIN(Y-“Miss Fam’s?Ba- j by is Stolen” “Last Round Up*’ “Fugitive Lovers” J “Bolero” “Carolines” “Mr. i Skit ch” “Going Hollywood. ”
