The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 11, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 July 1934 — Page 4
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Want Ads
FOR RENT—Roomi at 1621 Prairie Ave. for the Fair at Chicago. 4-Btp ' FOR RENT—Everett Darr property on So. Main St. Syracuse. Inquire of Jesse Darr. 11-ltp FOR'SALE—Trailer with new bed and good tires. See Earl Treadway, (On Chas. Stettler farm) R. R. 2. | 11-lt LOST—A pocketbook containing sum of money. Sunday evening, between Syracuse and Goshen. Reward Phone Syracuse 261. 11-ltp FOR RENT—Furnished house on So. Huntington street, 4 blocks south of Main street. Write, Mrs. Lewis Fear, R. R. 2, Syracuse, Ind. 11-ltp LOST—A Brook’s umbrella tent on north or west side of Lake. Notify Perry Broud, New Paris, Ind. Paone 73. Reward. 11-ltp FOR SALE—Hotpoint Automatic Electric Range, 3 burners, in excellent condition. Reasonable. Communicate with Mrs. Noble Miller. Milford, Ind. 11-lt THISWEEK (Continued from First Page) long, but several years, if the government continues its present asinine course of inflating with bonds, doubling its debt by payment'of interest. If nudist foolishness last long enough, and foolish nudists have money enough, Mr'. Maurice Allard, who has made himself president of the “Nature's Recreative association," intends to take a hundred and sixty nudists to lovely Vanna Vanna island in the South seas. It will cost each nudist SI,OOO to go there, and, for the sake of peace, they must all be married and take their wives. At a recent sale of old coins, somebody paid SIOO for a “brass dollar,” of the tune of Franklin, that dollar having stamped on it the words, “Mind your business." If that dollar could make this country take that advice, it would be cheap at $100,000,000. Failing to mind our business has cost the United States many tens of billions, and will cost more in the future. 0 ■ NOBCE I will not be responsible for bills contracted by anyone but myself. Mrs. Margaret McClellan CHICKEN SUPPER Saturday night from 6 to 7, CST, creamed chicken and hot biscuits at the Lutheran Church, 25 cis. CARR FUNERAL HOME Phone 75 — Syracuse, Ind, COLQNTC IRRIGATIONS ,Will overcome the need of dangerous laxatives and cathartics. Dr. Warner, Goshen. —adv. m; A “flag tourney was played on the South Shore Golf course yesterday. AIL players who went out that day listed their handicaps plus par of the course. When these many strokes were used, the flag with which each had been presented was placed where the player’s ball lay. Mrs. Frank Mills of Indianapolis won among the women and Mrs. Karl Freese was second; T. Hopewell of South Bend was first; Porter Pace of Ft. Wayne second and Dr. Caylor third among the men. o "The Land of the Free" has a lot of restrictions these days—in fact unionism and prohibition it a lot. D I The Vanity Beauty Shop i | Expert Finger Waving Shampooing J Marcelling and Manicuring | * / Done at Reasonable Prices I PHONE SYRACUSE, $7 Miss Daisy Stover
Meats of Quality Swift’s Products Beef * Lamb and Cold Meats KLINK’S MARKET
i J I • I IN OUR CHURCHES . __ ■ j ZION CHAPEL. Emerson M. Frederick, Pastor. Sherman Deaton, Supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. | Indian Village. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning worship, 10:30 a. ra. CHURCH Oh THE BRETHREN i Central Standard Tijpie Evangelist J. Edwin Jarboe, pastor ! Guy Symensma, S. S. Supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Preaching Service, 10:30 a. m. Evening Service, 7:30 p. m. Aid Society, each Thursday. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Daylight Savings Time. A. J. Armstrong, Mitristei. Chester Langston, Supt. „ Church School, 9:45 a. m. Morning \voiship, 11:00. Evening Se: vice: 8:00 Mid-week service, ° Wednesday evening at 8:00. ‘ - 4J—EPISCOPAL CHURCH Lake Wawinee. Services are to commence this coming Sunday morning, ti.e first. Sunday in July, at 10:30 CST. CHURCH OF Lil TLE FLOWER Lake Wawasee. Services are being hell at 9 and 10 a. m. CST. 1 \ LNGELK Al <HI RCH Central Standard Time. Rev. Samuel Pritchard, Paster. C. E. Beck, S. S. Supt. > Sunday School, 9:45 a. in. Morning Worship, 10:15 a. ra. Rev. Francis W. Pritchard will preach on ' God’s Galilean.” U«>-operuti%e evemr.g service in this church with Kev. E. C. Reidenbach preaching. 7:00 p. m. GRACE LU I HERA > CHI itC.H Central ‘Standard Time Rev. John A .Pettit. Pastor. Vernon Becka:..si, Supt. Sunday Schor 1, a. m. Morning worship, 10:45 a. ni. Chief J oy - ous Christians.” CHURCH OF GOD Central Standard Time. Rev. Marion Shroyer, pastor. ■ Clee Hibschman, S'. S. Supt. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. Morning Worship, 11:00 a. m. I Christian Endeavor, 6:30 p. m. I Evening service 7:30 p. m. Prayer hour Thursday 7:30 p. in. O_ —.■' LAKESIDE U. B. CHURCH Central Standard Time. Rev. E. C. Keidenbach. Pastor. Syracuse. | Sunday School. 9:45 a. m. 7:00 P. M. - Union Service at the Evangelical Church. Ptayer Service. Thursday 7:30 p.m. Indian Village. Sunday School, 9:30 a. m. Morning Worship, 10:30 a. m. The Indian Village Church will observe its annu. 1 Home Coming on Sunday, July Sth. Concord. Sunday School, 10:00 a. m. - FIRE AT TIPPECANOE LAKE Fire of unknown . .rigin burned the. dance hull of Crooke & Crooke, on Tippecanoe Lake, the Ervin Hotel and the cottage of Mrs. J. Warren of Fort to the hotel Saturday morning about 2:30. | Und .unted, Mr. Crooke had workmen and material on the ground al daylight, building a plu.tform for the dancing advertised f. : th 4 qyening. It was'ready for the dancers when they arrived too. Tents were put up to take case of the employes and the band. | I The Wawaiee Marine Supply Co. ‘is providing Motor-boat transputta- | lion to Waco from any point on the | lake for 25 cents per round trip. ; Many cottagers are taking advantage |of this service , - CARD OF 1 tiA.Aii.tK The kindness shown during the illness and the -< pa’.hy extended at Vtime of death of Mrs. Winans was greatly appreciated. A.TO. Winans and Relatives.. Antique fugs are valuable but antique clothes are not.
DILLINGER (Continued from page One) asked their 'names be withheld, wanting to rent a cottage for six men. They were told there was nothing for rent. Later that day Dr. Kruse of Fort ' Wayne, in the Oneal cottage on the Vawter Park road, was scratching his head trying to figure out why anyone would steal a certificate of title out of his car and not take the license plates, and the machine. 1 Killed, 4 Injured. In typical Dillinger style, five robbers had swiftly entered the Merchants National Bank at South Bend Saturday, gathered together $28,439 and returned to their auto. The holdup was marked from start to finish by gunfire. The chatter of ; submachine gunfire directed at the ‘ bank ceiling announced the holdup. Outside two lookouts stood off offi- ! cers and citizens, killing Policeman i Howard Wagner and wounding four j other persons. Officers were convinced that Dillinger and his chief > lieutenants, John Hamilton and Geo. (Bab;, F.tce) Nelson, took part in ' the holdup. By Saturday afternoon the raiders had been traced as far as Goodland, a here a tan sedan, bullet pocked and blood stained, was found abandoned. Two boys who saw the car stop there said the occupants trans- : (erred to another car. tw’O of them apparently wuonded. i On Sunday, after investigation by ' county and state officers. Sheriff Harley D. Person said it was not cerj tain that the man who forced Dr. Leslie Laird of North Webster to ; treat the bullet wound of one of the : number and then slugged him over the head, were connected with the South Bend bank robbery, Saturday. It was at first thought these men must he the same, as one of the thieves ”believed to be Dillinger and his gang, who robbed the bank in So.' Bend had been wounded when ‘ they-fled in an automobile. About 2:30 Sunday morning, two men came to the home of Dr. Laird in North Webster, stating that there had been an automobile accident and ' one of their party, at his office, had I been cut by glass. Dr. Laird accompanied the two men to his office. When he reached there, one of the men who had been with him all the time, showed him a j bullet wound in his arm which rej quired medical attention. It was a hole through which a .38 caliber b.il’et has passed. Dr. Laird took care of this, and ! then administered anti-tetanus serum jto prevent t&bod poisoning. When j the two men demanded cocaine, he : told them he had none, and one ; slugged him over the head, striking- : . behind and Dr. Laird told the officers he couldn’t remember any,thing else. When he came to, perhaps half an hour later, he was lying in his blood- | stained office with a three inch cut |on his forehead, which required six ’ stitches to close, and a bump on | the back of his head. The office had i been ransacked and bandages taken, j i he telephone w ires had been cut. The doctor was able to cross the 1 street to the restaurant and they telephoned the sheriff and Dr. Fred Clark here in Syracuse, who went to North Webster to treat Dr. Lairdls injuries. Various reports reached Syracuse Sunday, that the doctor had been kidnapped, that he had been slugand many were the automobiljes which visited North Webster, Sunday, for occupants to gaze curiously at the doctor’s home, where the officers were gathered. 0 FIRE CAUSED BY | GASOLINE STOVE Flames in Joel Wilt’s Cottage Sunday Afternoon Quickly Ex- « tinguished. Fire caused bj- 6 gasoline stove in the Joel Wilt cottage on Syracuse Lake caused the fire alarm to be turned in, early Sunday evening, and the report the fire was extingI uished, before the fire department | arrived at the cottage. According to Wilt, Marjse Dillen and his daughter Betty had gone swimming that afternoon, in the lake in front of the house, and Edwina Juday said she had started to cook “hot dogs’* for sandwiches when they came out of the lake, w hen the flames from the stove shot to the ceiling, smoking it and the walls. She called Wilt\. and with Bill Brown, who is camping near there, he threw the stove outdoors, but not before the kitchen linoleum had been burned near where the stove bad Mood. Wilt’s arm was singed in carrying out the stove, but no other injury waa reported. Water from the hose was immediately applied to the the flames and they were extingnishTbe lues ig covered by insurance. We wish to thank neighbors and friends for the kindness shown during the illness and at the tims of the death of Mrs. Landefeld. George F. Landefeld, Mrs. Margaret Sanderson, Mm. 8. Trip! stt, Mrs. Molly Lamb.
THE SYRACUSE MMHUUI
NOTICE TO ROAD CONTRACTORS Notice is hereby given that sealed proposals for the construction of certain highways described as follows, will be received by the Chairman of the State Highway Commission at his office in the State House Annex, Indianapolis, until 10>W A.! M. Central Standard Time, on' -'the 17th day of July, 1934, when all proposals will be publicly opened and read. On the following “State Contract" each bidder shall file his “Wage Stipulation” with each proposal in accordance with an act of the State of Indiana, entitled “An Act Concerning the Compensation of Laborers, Etc.," approved August 17, 1932. This form of Wage Stipulation is bound with the proposal. KOSCIUSKO COUNTY—Contract R-928—6.81 miles on State Road 14. From end of concrete pavement north of Akron to Silver Lake. On the above, bids are invited on BITUMINOUS MULCH, as shown on the plans and described in the specifications, supplements, and special provisions pertaining thereto. Proposals must- be made upon standard forms of the State Commission. Proposal blanks specifications may be obtained free, and plans upon the payment of a nominal charge. No refund will be made for plans returned. Plans may be examined at the office of the State Highway Commission, State House Annex, Indianapolis. ALL CHECKS FOR PLANS SHOULD BE MADE PAYABLE TO—“CHAIRMAN. STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION OF INDIANA.” Immediately prior to this letting, each bidder shall submit an EXPERIENCE RECORD and FINANCIAL STATEMENT, prepared on the State Highway Commission standard form, which will be furnished free upon request. Experience Records md Financial Statements previously filed with the Commission will not be acceptable for this letting. Each bidder, with his proposal, shall file a corporate surety bond, payable to the State of Indiana, in the sum of one and one-half (1H) times the amount of his proposal, and such bond shall be only in the form prescribed by law, and shall be executed on the form bound in the proposal. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids or to award on any combination of bids that is most advantageous to the State of Indiana. / STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION OF INDIANA James D. Adams. Chairman.
Sheriff’s Sale By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number 19,627 where in The Prudential Insurance Company of America is plaintiff and Burt E. Westcott, Eva E. Westcott, John Baker, D. Franklin Vanator, Ada Venator, Frank M. Baker and Alto Baker are defendants, requiring me to make the sum of money in said decree provided, and in manner and form as therein provided, with interest and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on Saturday, the 14th day of July, 1934 between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate situated in Kosciusko County, Indiana: The North seventy six and sixty six hundredths (76.66) acres of the Northwest Quarter (*>«) of Section three (3), Township thirty one (31) North, of Range seven (7) East, of the Second Principal Meridian, containing seventy six and sixty six hundredths (76.66) acres, more ~6r leas. If such rents and profits will not >ell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, with interest and costs, 1 will at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. HARLEY D. PERSON Sheriff Kosciusko Co. Bowser & Bowser,' Attys for Plain. Warsaw, Ind., June 18, 1934. 9-3 t Sheriff’s Sale By virtue of a certified coi »y of a decree directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number 19,663 wherein Warsaw Building Loan and Savings Association is plaintiff and Joseph H. Hansman, Anna Hangman Indiana State Bank and Trust Company and Victor D. Mock, Receiver of Indiana State Bank and Trust Company, defendants, requiring me to make the sum of money in said decree provided, and in manner and form as therein provided, with interest and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on Saturday* the 14th day of July* 1934 between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate situated in Kosciusko County, Indiana: 7 ~ x Lot Number 4 in Beechwood' Park, in the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 31, Township 33, North, Range 6 East. If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient ram to satisfy said decree, with interest and costs, < I will at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. HARLEY D. PERSON Sheriff of Kosciusko Co. J. Edward Headley, Atty for Plain. Warsaw, Ind., June 18th, 1934 9-3 t
CHINCH BUGS (Continued from page One) ficult peat to fight. The fact that it is a sucking insect and cannot be killed by applying poisons to the plants on which it feeds, adds to the difficulty of. control." according to the-bulletin. -.r - The bulletin also states that .(each female bug lays an average of 150 eggs over a. period' of three or four weeks, that it takes 7 to 45 days for 'th eggs to hatch, that the chinch bug sheds its skin five times during its growth. During these five stages , the bug is wingless. The sixth or adult stage the bug develops wings and is about one-sixth of an inch long with conspicuous markings on ; its back. The bulletin also explains that | there are three distinct migrations iof the bug during the year. They ‘ feed on plants belonging to the grass I family, which includes small grain, l/fSKh, broom corn, sorghum, millet, ' amrthe wild or uncultivated grasses. ('-''According to the bulletin, legumes, small clover, alfalfa, soy-beans, i vetch, cowpeas, sweet clover j peai nuts, stalk peas and velvet beans . are immune from chinch bug injury. I But, Arthur Keefer and Ralph jVail stated on Tuesday that they ' were cutting their fields of big Eng- : lish clover as these were alive with ' the bugs which were killing the clover. The chinch bug attaches itself to what it wishes to eat and sucks out the sap, gradually killing the plants. The methods of control listed in the bulletin are: winter burning of the bugs, hibernating shelter in fence rows and uncut wild grass; by growing crops upon which the bug does not feed, by the use of barriers and creosote, and by making a dusty furrow. The dusty furrow is made by plowing a dead furrow, throwing the dirt both ways, and then dragging a log or trough of planks back and forth in this furrow until the sides have been worn down to a fine dust. Much rain is given as one of the surest way of controlling the pest by the bulletin. Spraying and dusting along the first rows of corn which are infested,
Sheriff’s Sale By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number 19,672 wherein Thomas J. Prickett is plaintiff and Orville Silveus, Verla L. Silveus, Donald Vanderveer, Receiver, Orville E. Smith, whose Christian name in unknown to plaintiff, known as Smith Motor Co., is ’ defendants requiring me to make the sum of money in said decree provided, and in manner and form as therein provided, with interest and costs, I will expose .at public sale to the highest bidder, on Saturday* the 14th day of July, 1934 between the hours of 10 o’clock a. ' m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate situated in Kosciusko County, Indiana: Lot Number seven (7), Block Number five (5) in Becknell’s Addition to the town of Milford Junction, Kosciusko County, State of Indiana. ! If such rents and profits will not sell for a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, with interest and costs, I will at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. HARLEY D. PERSON. Sheriff of Kosciusko Co. Howard R. Inebnit, Atty for Plain. Warsaw, Ind., June 18tn, 1934 9-3 t Sheriff’s Sale By virtue of a certified copy of a decree to me directed from the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Kosciusko County, Indiana, in Cause Number 19,682 wherein The Prudential Insurance Company of America is plaintiff and Alfred Tom, Peoples State Bank, of Leesburg, Indiana, Victor D. Mock, Receiver of Indiana State Bank and Trust Company and Howard Mock are defendants requiring me to make the sum ed, and in manner and form as therein provided, with interest and costs, I will expose at public sale to the highest bidder, on Saturday* the 14th day of July* 1934 between the hours of 10 o’clock a. m. and 4 o’clock p. m. of said day, at the door of the Court House of Kosciusko County, Indiana, the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described real estate situated in Kosciusko County, Indiana: The West half (H) of the Southeast Quarter (M) of Section twentysix (26), Township thirty four (34) North, of Range six (6) East, Os the Second Principal Meridian,' containing eighty (80) acres, more or leas. If such rents and profits will not a sufficient sum to satisfy said decree, with interest and costs, I wfll at the same time and place expose to public sale the fee simple of said real estate, or so much thereof as may be sufficient to discharge said decree. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws. HARLEY D. PERSON Sheriff of Kosciusko Co. Bowser A Bowser, Attys for Plain. Warsaw, Ind., June 18th, 1934 9-3 t
are also recommended, but are expensive. A 2 per cent nicotine dust is recommended, and a solation of certain grades of laundry soap, as a spray. The soap must be used with caution as it might injure the corn. Chinch bugs first became so plentiful as to be harmful in .the south ern part of this county, *but since Saturday, Turkey Creek and Van Buren townships have been “crawling” with them. 0 THRESH ON FOURTH The first threshing of wheat to be reported in this vicinity this year, was at the home of Mrs. Marie LeCount, yesterday. Many residents say they can never remember wheat being threshed as early as- the Fourth of July before. Threshing was to be done at the Albert Hibner farm today. 1 It was later reported that Jim Traster threshed wheat at Floyd Felkner’s near Milford, Tuesday. No big yields have as yet been reported. MOCK’S BOAT LIVERY —for— TIRE REPAIRING VULCANIZING ACETYLENE WELDING Lawn Mowers Sharpened and Repaired South Side Lake Wawasee NEAR WACO Phone 504 - — Syracuse Phone 889 Box 17! Watch and Clock Repairing A. J. THIBODEAUX 3 First House South of U. B. Church Lake St.« Syracuse. Ind. GEO. L. XANDERS ATTORN E Y-AT-LAW' Settlement of Estates Opinions on Titles FIRE and OTHER Insurance.' Phone 7 Ind. OPTOMETRIST OOSHEN. INDIANA.
COAL - COKE See Us for Your Needs Stiefel Grain Co. PHONE 886 i ■ ..I Coal I Feed . —. _ E The State Bank of Syracuse CHARTER NO. 345 CHARLES PURDUM, President o Report of Condition of the State Bank of Syracuse, of « Syracuse, Ind., in the State of Indiana, at the close of business on June 30, 1934. BANKING ASSETS Loans and Discounts, $ 59,669.08 Overdrafts - .70 • U. S. Government Bonds and Securities 8,450.00 Bonds and Securities Guaranteed by the U. S. Government■, 19,000,00 Other Bonds and Securities 1,080.00 ! Banking House, $6,000, Furniture and ♦ Fixtures, $1,000.00 7,000.00 Other Real Estate Owned 1.00 Cash on Hand and Balances with other Banks 92,950.08 Exchanges and Cash Items 2,280.29 Total Banking Assets 190,431.15 BANKING LIABILITIES . Demand Deposits—lndividuals69,373.26 Time Deposits, including Time \ Cert, of Deposits 26*,930.14 -Savings or Thrift Deposits 1,622.87 U. S. Government and Postal Savings Deposits 7,248.25 Deposits of the State and Political X I 1 Subdivisions 37,85*99 Total Deposits 143,029.51 Bills Payable None. Rediscounts; None. - Total Banking Liabilities 143,029.51 CAPITAL ACCOUNT Capital Stocks3s,ooo.oo ' , Pref. Capital Debentures None Total Capital _-_ 35,000.00 Surplus 12;240.91 Undivided Profits—Net 160.73 Total Capital Account 47,401.64 Total *Banking Liabilities and Capital Account 190,431.15 Included in Loans and Discounts are Loans \ to Affiliated Companies None. Included in Other Bonds and Securities are 4 Shares to Affiliated Companies None. Incl’d in Deposit are Fist Lieu Trust Fund- 25,339.99 i Included in Total Deposits are Deposits Secured by Loans and or Investments None. LOANS AND INVESTMENTS TO SECURE LIABILITIES U. S. Bonds and Securities, (pledged to I - secure Postal Saving Deposits), 7,450.00 Other Bonds and Securities None. i Loans and Discounts • (excluding redis- v counts) None. 6 Total Pledged (excluding redis.) 7,460.00 /r STATE OF INDIANA ) V<lCOUNTY OF KOSCIUSKO ) SS: I, Noble C. Blocker, Cashier of the State Bank of «Syracuse, of Syracuse, Indiana, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my* knowledge and belief. NOBLE C. BLOCKER i Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this sth day of ; i July, 1934. - ; ROSCOE C. HOWARD L (Seal) Justice of Peace "i r
THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934
ROY J. SCHLEETER —GENERAL INSURANCEFIRE - LIFE - AUTOMOBILB ACCIDENT - and - HEALTH PHONE 876 — SYRACUSE 6-1-34 Syracuse Ice Cream —FRONT STREETON SYRACUSE LAKE ALL FLAVORS Bricks and Sherbet to Order " Phone 19 Josie Snavely, Prop. Garrett Latham, DJ)JS. Office' Hours 9 to 12 and 1:38 to 6 Evenings by Appointment Phone 77J or 77R CRYSTAL Ligonier S Thurs. July 5— Mid-Week Special. “BOTTOMS UP” K Starring John Boles, Pat Patterson, a new star, and M Spencer Tracy. For those -fi w h° to laugh and siiig when tears get in their eyes. M A real love stpry with music I and laughter.' ? 15c—ADMISSION—25c Fri.-Sat. July 6-7— "HONOR ON THE RANGE” Ken Mavnard delivers action galore in this fast step.7 S ping western story. Sun.-Tues. July 8-10— “THE THIN MAN” j William Powell and Myrna I Loy in Dashiell Hammett’s I greatest mystery novel. It I comes to life, breathless, M with excitement packed I H with laughs and tense mo- I ments. Every thrilling scene I M is crammed with fun and | frolic. A production:—We think " ■ you’ll describe it as “the t H best picture of the season.” | 2 Nights Only—July 8-9 / COMING- ——— | ' Sun.-Tues. July 15-17— HOLLYWOOD PARTY” The screen stars invite you. " to this musical cocktail. NOTICE— The Crystal Theatre will be closed on Wednesdays and Thursdays during July and August.
