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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1934)
PAGE FOUR ATHENS BANNER-HERALD flbll; hed Every Evening Exgept B‘tum{ and Sunds “fl: o Su:z.y Morm‘ng bs‘ Athens Pu llsh!ng' Co, Y Pt e———— A s e 3‘6'- Braswell ..., Publisher and General Mlnl!fl et g ala it T T Bryzn C, Lumpkin ~........:v...+ .Managing Edito) A —————————ee ettt e e e . National Auvortlollnqq R?uunutlvu H,_ Eddy Company, ew York,K Park. Lexington uilding; Chicago, Wrigley Bullding; Boston Old South lding; J, B, Reough Rhodes-Haverty Building, At- Kois Ga : Members Of the Assoclated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or vt vitnerwise credited In the pa}')er, &l=o to all local news &u’bllnhed therein, All rights of republication of special patches also reserved. | QIFpRIChes Also MeserVe: —@(—————e Full Leased Wire of the Associated Press with the Lead. ing Features and Comics of the N. E. A, ! | With Its Benefits 7 BY BRUCE CATTON ‘ . People who enjoy living in &4 democracy might as well .moake up their minds to the fact that democ racy's shortcomings have to be accepted right along with its benefit. During the last few days we have been getting a demogracy's worst drawbacks—knock-down and first-hand and rather frightening picture of one of drag-out industrial warfare. | Naturally, this has caused a great many of us to demand that tome way be found to make impossible a repitition of the kind of things that has been hap- | peiing in San Francisco. “ Thdt's a perfectly understandable view-point. Buti we mead to recognize the fact that this sort of thing, costly and destructive as it is, i~ nevertheless onei of the thinz: we bargain for when we pint out fa.ith‘ to- the democratic processes. | s Look abroad for examples, and you get an under standing of this. _Russia has no strikes for instance. It hag mo s{rjka& because there is not, strictiy speaking, any one for the workers to strike against except them- | seives. Technically, at least, they own the: country, | loek, stock and barrel. They can’'t have a dispute with the management because they are the manage \That's one way to make strikes impossible—to li quidate the employing class. Italy is another land in Which strikes are un known. The Italian worker can't strike because, if he does, he strikes against a government which will have no hesitation in bringing Its iron hand down on his neck. He Is no longer a free citizen; he iz & cog in a machine, and in that capacity he takes. what iv haded him—and likes it. .So that's another way to prevent strikes—to li quiddte the labor movement. ' ~ Under, & democracy, neither of these solutions is poss le. There must remain, then, an amountof freedom within which either the employer or the Wm'ket can, if he feels ju:tified, precipitate indus trial war; and there is no way of making this im m:‘t:&ley‘except by s#liding off in the direction of either Fascism or Communism—which, of course, mqpaq:;;bandontnz democracy. Ai!*jg‘t which doesn’'t make it any easier to endure &}Zfif: condone the kind of thing San Francisco has W‘ experience. But it doeg help us to see the kind of deep water we get into when we talk about king strikes impossible. ;y ~have a democracy and we mean to keep it— mé«w strikeless millenium will just have to wait unmfiu@ whole industrial field ig pervaded by the _»;gp_d,wth_e public spirit and the sense of respon y which are, ultimately, democracy’s greatest 1% ,\muscle men of the underworld have things gmt much their own way because they are so tg\gtfi that people fear to oppose them, Once in a whilg, however, some two-fisted citizen comes along {o demonstrate that the underworld plug-ugly is pretty much a hollow shell. dtiwas so with a Chicagoan recenty. A West %‘jmmed Richard Johnson one night surprised our” young hoodlums robbing the store which is %36;‘, his apartment. Being a war veteran, John ~ son }ip’t afraid of a fight, so he waded in, rounded 4p the four single-handed, and turned them over - to the police. .~ Next day a my:terious stranger warned him not ~ lo testify against them in court or he would be . taken for a ride. Johnson laughed at him. A cou . blg of nights later three men jumped on him near ~ his home, to put the threat into execution. Johnson gfi, stapted his fistt swinging—and pretty soon ' these . three were in police cells, along with the other four. © _ These feursome city gangiters evidently aren't g{ qmu‘g tough after all—if one lone citizen, equipped gH” th courage and a good physique, can handle . sgven of them. R, = — | - It begins to look &s If the Communist regime in . Russia is feeling more confident of its popularity . with the masies than it has felt at any time siuce . the revolution. . This; at least, is the construction that might he _ placed on the recent order whereby the dreaded b ‘._,,U';.,notorioug secret police force, has been reor d shorn of come of its vast powers. ! - .Un I just now, the OGPU was not only a police . force, but also a judicial body. It could arrest you, ~ #nd it could also try and sentence you. Now it hus 4, lost thgat power. It can :till make arrests, of course m .all cases it produces must be tried in the ~ regulap Soviet courts, like any other lawsuits. wßhe elaws of the OGPU would hardly have been P d unless the Russian authorities felt that the . danger of an uprising was steadily diminishing. -~ HOLLYWOOD GOSSIP s —_— B . .% .. BY DAN.THOMAS - . NEA Service Staff Correspondent WW’OOD-—Judnh Allen is going to get mar .~ _That may not startle the world in general, but it - e inly is going to be surprizing news to Holly . Wwoed. " _Since getting her divorce from Gus Sonnenburg, ~ the “rassling feller,” ast year, Judith has been ~ utterly and completey free. She has been seen in the ~ eempany- of 10 many different men that even Holly %mt‘:()ssips couldn’t link her name witk that of ~ any particular man. fiqg&ver, she confided to me the other day, be . tween lunch courses that despite the fact her first . jnarriage was a failure, :he wants to hear wedding bells again. " . “L will get married again in about two years,” the | actress said. -"I cant say just now who the man BNI be. In fact, I haven't narrowed the field down i one yet. But I will because I think that even - Hellywood married life is far preferable to that #of a_ single person.” oy ey i . Now that she is between pictures. Elizabeth Allen g. s getting busy. Each day finds her doing 18 - N of golf, playing tennis for about twe hours, . and riding for an equal length of time. A T ji;‘ While shooting a scene for “Hide Out,” Bob J Montgomery annoyed the prop man considerably by | Bating the cherries out of a bowl as fast as the %f refill it. Then came a rain scene in " whieh Bob had to be doused with a bucket of water :%; yscak him thoroughly. ‘lt was the prop man’s turn . foteven the score. He uced ice water. :&‘i‘fi' jbout 5 percent of the people of Ohio hold ap r;r wately 75 percent of the state’s productive he streets of Cottage Grove, Oregon, are paved | gold; this gold consists of tailings from the Bo! @ mine. e CONDITIONS REMAIN STEADY “In spite of the adverse extraneous in fluences”, says Dun and Bradstreet, con | ditions remain in a surprising degree of | steadiness. Such is the report of this well known commercial agency which covers the entire nation with its hundreds of rep resentatives who seek for reliable informa tion on which Dun and Bradstreet base 'their predictions, - | The report as issued by this concern for last week is most encouraging and shows that the nation is coming back, commerci- | ally, financially and industrially. It is ob-| vious that the tipe is near at hand when | normaley will be restored and the country | will once again settle down on a firm ands substantial basis. ‘ f Speaking of conditions, at the close of |business last week, Dun and Bradstreet, |said : | “The most encouraging reports on dis ‘tribution were received from New England, )south Atlantic, middle western, and north western states. “In the southwest one hundred days of ‘drought have brought a distinet lull in ‘most branches of commercial activity. | ~ ‘““While retail sales the past week fell somewhat below expectations, volume was bolstered by successful clearance promo-i tions, particularly in light weight wearing | apparel, textiles and housewares, with the total rising 8 to 10 per cent above the com-l parative figures of 1933, “Despite the uncertainties regarding the{ final outcome of the fall crops, because ofi the rapid spread of the drought areas, and | of the epidemic of strikes that spreadl across the country this week, the leading wholesale markets reported activity at the | highest pitch reached thus far this year.” | . . It is true that the nation has been greatly disturbed over labor troubles, strikes and | riots, but with all such demoralizing oc-| currences, business conditions have not de- | viated from the line of march back to nor maley. In both retail and wholesale lines, | the increase in volume of business hasi shown a marked degree of improvement. | In fact, industries of all kinds have shown] an increasing number of orders which has aided materially in keeping sales to a peak above any that has been enjoyed since 1929. There is much to feel encouraged | over and the anticipation of a continnance of such conditions is not only gratifying! but stimulating for a brighter and more| profitable season for this fall. z WORKING THE STREETS BY BEGGARS In practically every city in the country, the street beggar has become a source of much annoyance to pedestrians, Many of these people, of course, are deserving, but in many instanceg they are undeserving and imposing on a kind hearted public. In New York, ‘“working the streets” has igrown to be a profitable profession to many. These people take advantage of the public and use the guise of charity for profiteering. The nusiance has grown to such proportions in New York, the muni eipal and welfare officials have adopted a plan to prevent street begging. A card is ‘given to all mendicants with the names of all relief agencies listed. These agen cies are to issue relief and the public is called upon not to make contributions to any of the solicitors for charity. It has been found that street begging is objectionable to the people for the reason that they have no way of determining the deserving and the undeserving. “Quite recently, in Atlanta, we have lfound the street beggar in large numbers. I'l'here does not seem to be any restrictions on these neople, and many of them are very ingistant for aid. We are not informed as to the official system used in that city, but it occursto us that the plan used in New York would be an improvement over pres- I entconditions. - While there is some strect begging in lAft,hens, vet it has not grown serious. How lever. the average citizen who is approach ed for aid from the street beggar would be greatly relieved if the card system was employed here and the guarantee that neo nle sent to the relief agencies would be helped. .In these unusual times, naturaliv there i iTémany veople dependent upon the wel fare agencies, These neople are human be ings and shovnld be shown every consider ation before being refused by officials or penresentatives of charitable organizations. ft is easy to refuse aid, but it is nothing ishort of criminal to do so without making '?‘Nt}z'orough investigation before sayving | 0. | Tt is alleged that the number of depend jants in this city is comparatively small to [that a veor ago. but there are some here |who are deserving and in all sveh cases [there shotld he no delaying or bickering on the nart of those charged with the re gponsibilitv of relieving the needyv and de serving citizenship. ISLAND’S ECONOMIC RESTORATION The people of Puerto Rico are friendly inclined to the people of the United States, especially to the present administration. At the close of the Spanish-American war, these people were inclined to cooperate and work in everyway possible to secure a closer relation with this country. Condi tions have been stagnant in that country the same as everywhere else. and now they are seeking to revive and restore economic conditions. The government is showing substantial interest in the welfare of the Puerto Rico people. Since the visit of President Roose velt, representatives from the United States Agricultural, Interior and Treasury departments, and the federal relief agen cies have undertaken a program for the island’s economic restoration. With that interest being shown by this government, it is quite evident that the people of the island wili be helped and placed in a posi tion where they will not only become self supporting, but will be enabled to become independent and regain that which has been lost by them from an economic point of view, St : - DIDITEVER - OCCURTOYOU - - g v —— . A Little of Everything, . Not Much of Anything ls By HUGH ROWE A it 5 i i e L R e —— ! Editor Jack Hilton, of the | Banks County Journal, is a % philcscpher as well as an edi | tor of state-wide reputation : for his bright and virile style | of writing. Speaking of liars | and the opinions held by many 'l of their own superb qualifica tions, Editor Hilton says: - "Some people say the Journal lies, some say the GCeorgian lies, [sumo say the Constitution . lies, and some have the gall to say the Banks County Journal lies, and if these same people would take stock and examine themselves they would discover they are also liars. Some of the greatest liars we have ever known did not know it and would fight you for calling them liars. We can look over our own faults so easy, but we demand perfection from the other fellow.” In politics, the Banks County editor is a strong supporter of Governor Eugene Talmadge. In an editorial paragraph, he says: “Visitors here sing the same old song they sang two years ago. A big majority say ther are for Tal madge and he will easily be eleet ed. The song of the minority 'is generally like this: ‘I am no Tal madge man, but he will be elect ea’’ ‘ Editor Jim Williams, of the Greensboro Herald - Journal and dean of the Georgia Press Assiciation, deserves a great deal of credit for the success of Route 15 meeting at Wat son’s Springs. s . He is a pioneer in highway pav ing in this state anq was one of the first to commence the agita tion of Route 15. How well he hds succeeded in creating an interest in this route was demonstrated last week when nearly (fifteen hundred people, from 41l sections along the proposed route, met at Watson's Springs for the purpose of making sure the paving of this highway one of the early projects to be taken up by the highway board. It is absolutely certain that the members of the highway board will allocate a portion of the federal appropriation which will be made to Georgia within the next few weeks. Route 15 from Watkinsville to Watson’s Springs has more curves in it than any highway | in Georgia. A resurvey will be | = made ‘of this road before its paving by the state. Numbers of accidents have oc curred on this route during the { past few weeks, some serious and I.sume fatal, all of which should be |an argument in favor of its early !cnmpl_gtion. If work and interest |oounts for anything, the highway iboard will be convinced of the lscr‘iousness of the advocates of j this route. There are only a few | miles of Route 15 paved bhetween 'Rahun ‘and Johnson counties, yet it is one of the most important {:md shortest roadways leading in ito Florida. At Athens, this route | hooks up with the Bankhead high | way from the east and with the | highway from the west ~which | naturally has a tendency to at | tract all that travel through this i(‘it.\'. l The naming of the highway | from Augusta via Athens to | Atlanta will be considered by | a committee to be appointed ’ by Chairman Nelson at an ' early date. . ¢ Tt is generally accepted that the 'highway will be named in honor |of Willlam H. Crawford. The lmeford Memorial AsSociation, at Crawford, Georgia, has récom lmended the name of the Ogle lthorpe county citizen “who was | one of the- outstanding men in | public life during the early days lof this state. It is fitting and | proper that this highway be named (for William H. Crawford in view | of the fact that it traverses his [ former county. Another noted ;vitizen. Charles J. Haden, of. At | lanta, has memorialized the mem jory of Crawford by. erecting a | monument in the town of Craw ford, also purchasing the burial |lot of this great statesman and { provided furds so: ils upkeep ir | the future. i The Athens members of the | committee will advocate the name of William H. Crawford | for the highway. While a num ‘ ber of names have been sug i gested, it is the concensus of I cpinion thta the committee l will agree upon William H. | Crawford. | 'This route is one of historical limere.\t in that it was the old | stage coach route from Charleston, iSa\'annah and other points in | that section of e country in the ioar)_\' days. There are many points i(’.f historical interest along this route that should be identified i with markers bearing inscriptions |of full detzils in order that visi | tors to this state might be inform led as to the true history of these i places of note. 'Reports Conflicting on . . . Who “Lured” Dillinger | s i | CHICAGO — (# — Police and | federal agents issued conflicting {smtemenw toeday on whether John Dillinger, the public arch !emmy. was Jured to his death by {a woman in a red dress. \ Meanwhile, a vigorous drive to | extergninate all the hoodlum { henchmen of Dillinger was set in !motiun by the federal government ' Any man who sets foot on the shores of the tiny Pacific islénd of Forasiboa runs the rick of being Jeaten by women cannibals. The i island is inhabited oniy by women. THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA 5 . " 2 ,I“Lmle Women,” With | Katharine Hepburn, Re i turns to Strand ‘ | The plot of “Here Comes Ihf‘i Qroom,” the Paramount fiim Icomvdy, coming Wednesday to the' Palace theater, i built on the hil arious situation of a bewildered yvoung man in love with one giri‘ who spends a honeymoon with an ]oLhor. i ’ Jack Haley, Broadway stagel comedy-star, recently featured !wilh Jack Oskie in “sitting Pret~‘ ty,” has the leading role, with Mary Boland, Neil Hamilton, Pat rieia Ellis, Isabel Jewell, Sidney, Toler and Larry Gray in featured | roles. The screen play was writ ten by Leonard Prasking and Ca sey Robinson from the original play by Richard Flourney. Edward ‘lSedwick, directed. . The story, crammed with amus-’ Ing situations, begins with an ar-[ gument between Jack Haley and Isabel Jewell, his sweetheart. Shel is leaving him. flat because he is such a failure at his chosen pro fession, burglary. She cites her brother and father who are such successes that they now repose in the city jail. Determined to “show” her, Haley sets out to hold up a poker game But some rea] robbers hold up Haley while he’'s holding up the game and get away with every thing including Haley’s pants. Chased by the “cops” Haley takes refuge in a Pullman com partment of a young bride whose husband has just deserted her be cause her father lost his money. Not to be outdone, she forces Ha ley to accompany her home as the new bridegroom, who is a famous masked radio tenor. > ' Arriving home, Haley Jearns! that Mary Boland, the girls aum’ is a “nut” over radio and espec-t ially over the masked tenor, a.nd,! from then on, complications pile up swiftly. | DRAMATIC “LITTLE WOMEN SHOWS AT STRAND WEDNESDAY RKO-Radio Pictures’ dramatiza tion of “Little Women” Louisa M. Aleott’s powerful and idealistie screen without dramatic license and with brilliant, sensitive per formances on the part of every members of the large cast. It i¢ a true = representation of beautiful ideals and the best in American family life. Katharine Hepburn, starred as Jo, is magnificent. Her perform ances shades anything she has ever done, not excluding her late hit, “Morning Glory.” Joan Bennett, Frances Dee and and Jean Parker as Amy, Meg and Beth respectively, the other “Little Women,” leave nothing to be de sired by those who have made the Alcott characters their ideals. Many movie-goers are no doubt familiar with the story, the tale an American family, revealing the development and ennohlement of four sisters. All the characters are introduc ed. Marmee, the mother of the “Lit tle Women” portrayed by Spring Byington, who leads her daugh ters through the formative, dan gerous years of girlhood. Much credit should go to KRO- Radio executives for their courage in essaying the task of pleasing 20,000,900 Alcott fans and millions of others; to Kenneth Macgowan, associate producer. who enthusias tically accepted the responsibility of gupervision; George Cukor, the director, whose sensitive direction is just as the author herself might have wished it: Hobe Erwin and Van Nest Polglase, who designed the settings; Henry Gerrard for his photography, and finally Sa rah Y. Mason and Vietor Heerman the writers who succeeded in adap ting the words or the original au thor into accurate and powerful drama. 2 i ‘Woman Is Expelled * From Chur:hj Files g 2 Suit for Damages SAVANNAH, Ga. —(AP)—Mrs. F. H. Sills of Metter, expelied from a Primitive Baptist church because she married a divorced man, wants s£lo,ooo damage. Mrs. Sills has filed suit in Candler county superior court naming Eider J. Walter Hen dricks, pastor of several primitive Baptist churches including one here and another at Metter; E. J. Bird, a deacon and J. S. Bradden, | clerk of the church, as defendants.! Mrs. Sells claims her reputation as damaged SIO,OOO by being dis- ! missed from the church underi suech circumstances. The church of which Hendrioksl is pastor has strong convictions!' against divorce. Sills, a pastor ini the lower Black Creek Primitive! Baptist church and a member of‘ that church, did not come under{ the jurisdiction of Hendricks' | church, but Mrs. Sills was a mem her of Hendricks' chureh and the action was taken against her. Sills is a forrer Savannah tl’:l\'-‘ enng salesman. He left the Prim- | itive church and joined the Miss-] ionary Baptists, studied in the Louisville Seminary and preachedl in that church for sometime. The first Mrs. Sills, who lives here,| here, diyorced him. After that Sills returned to the Primitive! Baptist denomination and remar ried into that denomination. | CURFEW SHALL NOT RING BUTLER. Pa—(#)—Not even the town clock is going to disturb the slumber of Butler residents, the eounty commissioners have de cided. They enacted a law, for bodding striking of the clock bes« tween 10 p. m, and 8 a. m. In New York Paul ;l‘ahrrison ; NEW YORK.—You can nay $500,- ;mm for a year’s lease on a pent [house on Park Avenue, Then | again, you might rent one for $5 ’u week. A lot of people do. , Shortly before roof-dwellings be- Icame socially desirable, and there- Il‘ore costly, a number of swank apartment buildings were erected along the world’'s richest street. 'When the question of servants’ 'quaners came up, manageéments ' solved it—rather neatly, they 'thougm—by building rows of little ’cottages on the roofs. .~ That was in the days when apartment tenants could afford to ' keep full-time servants and rent ‘rooms for them to live in. But ‘the depression changed all that. Cooks and maids, and now and ‘then a man to do a little butler ing, were hired by the day or the hour, And the roof-top cotages stood vacant. People began to look at them covetously and finally a young so ciety bachelor whose income now is a mora pitance, decided to move in. He enlisted the help of a friend who is a tenant of the huge apartment at 277 Park Avenue. The friend rents one of tne cot tages for S2O a month, and is'paid by the socialite, who is listed as a valet. By now there’s an amazing as sortment of ‘servants” occupying penthouses. Impoverished social! registerites, actors\ and actresses, bond and automhobile salesmen— all kinds of people who want to put up a front with a smart ad dress and telephone number. Of course the cottages are small, and are not luxuriantly furresned. But the greatest disadvantage s that the occcupants, home-bound. have] to wait around opn the sidewalk until nobody is looking, and then dodge ilnto the employees’ en trance. * & . Seen at Noon A place to see celebrities at noon time is Susan Palmer’s restaurant, just off Fifth Avenue at Rotkefel ler Center. Some of them, I sus pect, go there for the thrill of watching the doors, operated by electric eyes, swing open mysteri ously as they approach. Eddie Cantor does, I know, because he always goes in and out two or three times. James Montgomery Flagg dines there often. So do Chamberlain Brown, Amelia Earhart Putnam, Ircne Rich and her daughter Frances, Courtney Riley Cooper, Roy Chapman Andrews and some times Earl Carroll. Rudy Vallee always orders Irish stew; he also brings his Irish terrier, which sits stoically on the floor beside Rudy and doesn’'t seem to ebject to a handout. Octavus Roy Cohen has steamed clame., Douglas Fairbanks brings hig mother there, when they're in town. John D. Rocksafeller, jr,, has a chef in his office, and a house nearby, but he goes to Miss Pal mers ,when he wants sea food. Customers all look alike to the electric 2ye at the door, and to the waiters inside. The other day Rockefeller found himeself in line behind his secretary. who was shown to a tahle first. Both of them grinned about it, but the sec retary looked a little red around the ears. s % Generous Giver Probably you didn't hea, about the death of Billy LaHiff. He was just a man who ran a restaurant, and there are quite a few restau rants hereabouts. But he and his Tavern have been part and parcel of Broadway for a long time, and Broadway people will not soon for get him and his encouragements and shy little philanraroptes. Ambitious chorus girls would beg him for introductions to stage and movie directers. Mae Clark and Larbara Stanwyck got their first legitimate roles that way . . . He staked thousands of performers to free meals. *“Aw, forget it,” he’d mutter. *“We're all friends’ . . . LaHiff liked to assign definite tables to regular customsrs and the waiters can show you where some of the biggest deals in the enter tainment world have becn made by sich men as Warner Brothers, Harry and Jack Cohn, Jesse Lasky and the rest. Over in one corner is the table where Moss Hart wrote most of “As Thousands Cheer” . .. And going back further, there are the favorite places of Fred Stone. Will Rogers, George M, Cohan and John Barrymore . . . LaHiff, by the way, was an uncle of Nancy Carroll. L 2 CHERE COMES THE NAVY™ Since becoming an independent state in 1831, Belgium has had but four kings. The Arctic . regions of Greenland have bumblebees. (ST 19C B R R S S P (0 S R s ffliifl.':\s3f~'EE’::?:fffi?:i:?::i:;?i:-24:1.3:'~:1:{:5:;:';:;:_c;:;:\;::1::;1:1;'(1."-.;':{'5:;1;‘,;};;;:,;~:-:<:~;»:-,:E;fz;;;:;:%:;':o'-:;'-:-;-4';'f-;;;;:;;_:};.;:;;f;;:'W‘r;;?i_z;;,:-;;;g;;;:-y;;.;:,:ig;;;:{;.;t;:;;f; ¥ %/‘ a 7, R R e R S R READ . N SPRI” A e e R SR TP o M came Juily SomEmße G SRS SR :;:;:1.-:;::.;:;.-:;;;:-.;:---4.--:;5;5::»:~:~:A',-_;:;:;;-:':}-. IO RIS R ‘;';:-»‘:,'v:;yp.'n':f.-:'.'v._,:.'-,-,-:-;«:;:;:\:;.;,_zg_: ‘u;% P 2 % 5 B & e AR . , Y R 2 O T B B aoe% B OS fi SR g & S g 2 7 ~.kf,-:f-’fi,\:.".“. % S e U & S = o Ry Sy IPe &5 55 ;,{: PR e S R RRS R e R s R SRR / at Life k" swept in, B of desire! as tarmne in America’s favorite romance " "Little Women' g? by LOUISA MAY ALCOTT E- wflL JOAN BENNETT PAUL LUKAS FRANCES DEF JEAN PARKER EDNA MAY OLIVER : Douglass Montgomery Henry Stephenson Directed by GEORGE CUKOR® Kenneth_Macgowan, . assogiate_producer, | PLAYING TODAY—“PILCRIMAGE” | PALACE "Mty | _HE WAS THE BRIDE'S BIGGEST MISTAKE! o g A& S AR (| s 7 | I\A._J//f' /// INC N 7 el f//\ B \5 b %} i fi.&{,fiw;_, i R Y The bride took £ e e -} him for better | ' Lo "‘g 4 «,( ga‘a or worse...and | e 35 B 0 N (Zl] got the worst of | JSES e ,' : / 2’;‘ * (i 1 it. A mixed- 1 L % :omod";':: m:: 555;3 ); g%" ] rimonial errors. | ‘:# =) SV | | Z‘3 g - SRR ; ’ "sE;izf:irii e R pal () X 9 800 e coments : i b et ; . leisure in which to repent L . Es N%l , " An old girl with ““, Adolph Zukor 2y 3 young ideas !i/ LB 8 T g \ ) %‘x :; e X THE GROOM f} “‘;‘ 4 Poramount Picture with ;., A\ JACK HALEY o ) \MARY BOLAND y L S A W& \ PATRICIA ELLIS Pttt g Bt R S s SHOWING TODAY—“THE KEY” l TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1934, | Mizar, the middle star 1 o handle of the Big Dipper, hag 4 !tin_v companion star, | e s l Cairo is the largest city |y As. riea. i