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The Journal Herald from Dayton, Ohio • 6

Location:
Dayton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAYTON JOURNAL, THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1941'. 6 MOVES HOURGLASS THEATERS $30 Stolen Nick Vardalidea, of 213 South Ludlow street, reported to polic Wednesday theft of $30 from a hiding place in his cafe. Accent on Drama in Coming Attractions Downtown. Ray Milland, Robert Taylor and John Garfield Featured HYING HEROES! Ellen Drew Takes a Beating For Her Best Work in Films It's All in Fun for Sake of New Comedy "Our Wife" By FREDERICK C. OTHMAX HOLLYWOOD, June 11.

(UP) Miss Ellen Drew suffered for her art today as no other actress ever suffered. Other actresses have been spanked, of course, but no other actress has been spanked under direction of John M. Stahl, the stickler for VJ i At it if8 Si A. 3 I production beginning Saturday. John Garfield and Ida Lupino, supported by Thomas Mitchell and Eddie Albert, are the featured players in this drama with a waterfront background.

"In the Navy," with Abbott and Costello, Dick Powell, the Andrews sisters and Claire Dodd, moves over to the Strand Friday for a second week. Clive Brook in "Convoy" and Bill Boyd in another Hopalong Cassidy picture "Pirates on Horseback," are on the Thursday bill at the State. "Rookies on Parade" with Bob Crosby and Ruth Terry, plus "South of Panama" with Roger Pryor, follow on Sunday, Reputed to be one of the best aviation films yet produced in Hollywood, "I Want Wings" opens Friday at Keith's. In the leads are Ray Milland and William Holden, together with Veronica Lake, the new glamour sensation. Constance Moore, Wayne Morris and Brian Donlevy are in the supporting cast, Robert Taylor has the title role in "Billy, the Kid," which opens Friday at Loew's.

This picture is based on the adventures of the boy bandit of the west. Seen also in the picture are Brian Donlevy, Ian Hunter, Maiy Howard and Gene Lockhart. "Out of the Fog" is the Victory the Air." at 11, 12:43, 2:33, 4:27, 6:19, 8:11 and 10:03. NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSES DALE Bins Crosby In "Road to Zanzibar." Slarjorie Weaver in "Murder Anionj Friends." FAR HILLS Charley Grapewin in "Tobacco Road." Hugh Herbert in "Slightly Tempted." FEDERATION Alice Faye in "That Night in Rio." Roscoe Kams in "Petticoat Politics." PARK Warner Baxter in "Adam Had Four Sons." Roscoe Karns in "Petticoat PEOPLE'S Alice Faye in "That Night in Kio." Roscoe Karns in "Petticoat Politics." SALEM Alice Faye hi "That Night in Rio." John Howard In "Murder Among Friends." SIGMA Warner Baxter in "Adam Had Four Marvin Stephens in "Ride, Kelly, Ride." ST. PAUL Betty Davis in "The Great Lie." Three Stooges in "From Nurse to Worse." WAYNE Deanna Durbin in "Nice Girl." Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.

in "Angels Over Broadway." h' CITY NEWS BRIEFS eral oil and puffed with smoke from burning resin, and she'd been wandering around Columbia studio's stage two in her bare feet and, after an hour and a half of steady spanking, she was a weary-looking actress. Director Stahl noticed this. In Forty-sixth Day "Ellen." he said, "you'd better sit down while we line up for the next take." "If you don't mind," said she, "I believe I'd rather stand." In its forty-sixth day of shooting was the new movie comedy, "Our Wife," featuring the Misses Drew and Hussey, and the Messrs. Douglas, John Hubbard and Charles Co-burn. This was a picture the white-haired Stahl had been preparing for the last year and a half and for its climax had Douglas' house burned.

That accounted for the water and the smoke. TH piloH ond 1MV -1 v. WAYNE A A RAY Poromounl Picture Uorrlng UM-WiLllAM HOLDEIl NOW! 2 NEW FEATURES! No. 1 Sea Thriller! "CONVOY" No. 2 New Hopalong Hit "PIRATES ON HORSEBACK" JAMES rnrnnr WDHEffe PAT MARGARET LINDSAY FRANK McHUGH Allf- OMHTIOM 'TIIK GREAT Bett TnvU, Oorttf Brent.

Mnrv AMor "FKOM KMC TO WOKSfc" Th Thre stmKf Cliff Kdwarcl Mnnlral Nfwt MA 1282 Mvanm BRIAN DONLEVY. with Constance Moore Veronica Cake Harry Davenport. Directed by Extra Added Enjoyment! Robert Benchley in "The Forgotten Man" ii'ii ist and organist, will assist on the program. Anti-war rallies Monday night at Carthage fairgrounds, Cincinnati, and Tuesday night at the Darke county fairgrounds, Greenville, will be addressed by United States Senator Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota.

The meetings will be sponsored by the Metropolitan Cincinnati chapter, America First committee, and the Darke county chapter, America First committee, respectively. William II. Kigler, student at Hanna Divinity school, Springfield, and recently appointed member of the Lutheran Inner Mission staff for the summer, will accompany the Inner Mission Boys' club to summer camp and will help in institutional work of the mission, Certificates will be awarded to the second class in the Rotary Club Technical Institute at 6:30 p. m. Friday at the YMCA, Fern J.

Blose, chairman of the Rotary's vocational service committee, announced Wednesday. A dinner will be held during the ceremonies. Dr. Fred Douglas Patterson, third president of Tuskegee institute, Institute, will be speaker at the commencement of Wilber-force university Thursday. Dedication of the new Frances Ross Memorial library at Oak-wood's Edwin Smith school was held Wednesday morning.

The regular Dayton board of education meeting has been postponed from Thursday to Tuesday, June 17, at which time several bids for repairs and equipment will be ready for award, it was announced Wednesday. The Lemuel S. Penn estate Is appraised at $3,8,518.50, with in real estate, in papers filed Wednesday in probate court. The Susan Olive estate is appraised at $5,875. DAYTON TODAY MOUMNG Dayton Bicycle club annual outing for children of the Montgomery county and St Joseph's Orphans homes.

Dayton Boys' Music club, pic nic, 'Hills and Dales. Dayton Association of Claim Agents, outing, Walnut Grove Country club. Young Men's Republican club, outing, Camp Marquette. NOON AND AFTERNOON Rotary club, noon, Biltmore. Dr.

Reid Fordyce on "Plastics." Forty-niners, noon, Biltmore, Triangle club, noon, Young Women's league. John Nutt on training memory. Lions club, noon, Van Cleve. Cosmopolitan club, 1:30 p. YWCA.

NIGHT Eighth Ward Democratic dinner, Green Mill. Acacia chapter, Eastern Star, reception, dinner, inspection, Masonic temple. Modern Woodmen of America, 8 p. 134 South Jefferson. Entertainment.

Despite If great size, Great Salt Lake has a maximum depth of only 40 feet. Svrvicp oiPft KEITH'S Abbott and Costello In -In tho Navy," at 11:10, 12:55 2:43, 4:30, 6:15, 8:03, and 9:50. LOEWS William Powell and Myrna Loy in "Love Crazy," at 11, 1:10, 3:20, 5:30. 7:40 and 9:52. STATE "Convoy," at 11, 1:45, 4:25, 7:05 and 9:50.

"Pirates on Horseback," at 12:35, 3:15, 6 and 8:40. STRAND Tyrone Power and Linda Darnell in "Blood and Sand," at 11:16, 1:15, 4:14, 6:43 and 9:13. VICTORY James Cagney and Pat O'Brien in "Devil Dogs of fountain on Hollywood boulevard and Paramount studios had signed her as a stock girl. We remember doing a yarn about her then. She was a Cinderella girl in so far as we were concerned and a nervous one to boot.

It wasn't until later that we discovered why. It seems she was married and had a baby, and the studio had instructed her to keep mum about it. Her boss said the public was interested in beautiful young Cinderellas all right, but not in young matrons who were worrying about feeding formulae. The boss may or may not have been right. Miss Drew in any event has spent the intervening years learning the fine points of picture acting and there is on doubt that she rapidly is becoming an important movie star.

The husband she wasn't allowed to mention she divorced a couple of years ago. She's engaged now to Sy Bartlett, the scenario writer, and expects to marry him some time this summer. And that's the beauty of being a full-fledged picture actress. She can say what she pleases about herself and never have to worry about keeping secrets for the boss. MOVING OVER TOMORROW 2nd BIG RIOTOUS WEEK! igu fir Tiio i-Asr day i "BLOOD AND SAND" pisp i STARTS lUiiiUIiliUti! '5c Plus Tax Till 5 P.

M. 25c KIDDIES 10c ANY TIME LAI IH The rade V' Ti If detail. Result was that Miss Drew, wearing little except a thin bathrobe, was spanked and spanked hard by Melvin Douglas and Ruth Hussey in nine rehearsals. Then the cameras started and she was spanked during four takes and by that time she had tears in her eye3 and she wasn't acting. She'd been Othman sprayed first with water and min- FredH.Rike Re-elected Trustee Otterbein College to Aid Draftees Fred H.

Rike has been re-elected trustee at large for Otterbein college, Westerville. J. H. Weaver of Hilliards, was appointed as a trustee to succeed Jacob S. Gruver of Middletown.

Edward Gearhart, Bucyrus, and Vance E. Cribbs of Middletown, are new members of the executive committee. The board of trustees gave final approval to plans which call for a new $30,000 heating plant which will be constructed during the summer. Otterbein will refund tuition to any student who is drafted during the next school term, according to the report by the president; J. Ruskin Howe, issued and approved by the board of trustees.

The report also stated that any faculty member who was called to the armed forces would be assured of his position at the conclusion of the national emergency. President Howe also announced the appointment of two new faculty members. Francis A. Babione, M.A., of Indianapolis, has been appointed as an assistant instructor in economics and business administration, and Paul Arnold, M.A., of Oberlin, has been appointed as acting director of the department of fine arts for the coming year, during the leave of absence of Miss Elsbeth Walther, to complete her Ph.D. degree in fine arts.

Further changes in the faculty personnel were disclosed by the report. Dean Jon E. Wenrick, at his own request, will become the head of the philosophy and psychology departments of the school. Dr. Kenneth Bunce, head of the history department, will serve as academic dean in Dr.

Wenrick's place. Ranald Wolfe was appointed as director of guidance. Crouch Takes Over Loew's Theater Orville W. Crouch Wednesday assumed the duties as manager of Loew's theater. He succeeds Sam Gilman.

Crouch had been manager of the Loew's house in Canton for the last 14 months and prior to that worked in Atlanta, in connection with the filming of "Gone With the Wind." Gilman returned to his former post as manager of the Harris-burg, theater. Dayton Vocalist To Appear Here Roberta Louise, popular Dayton singer, will appear Saturday night as vocalist at Lakeside park with Raymond Scott and his band. Daytonians will recall her a3 Roberta Sease when she sang with Michael Hauer's orchestra. Uhrig avenue, and Arnold Saska, 3200 Salem avenue, to March field, California, Pvt. Gene A.

Holl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Holl, 773 Heck avenue, has been promoted to private first class at headquarters company, 1524th Service unit, reception center, Fort Hayes, Columbus. NOW PLAYING F. State officers of the Ohio Phar- meutical association addressed retail druggists of southwestern Ohio Wednesday night at the Economy Drug company plant, Riverview avenue.

Professional questions and the national association convention in Cleveland in October were discussed. County Chairman Al Horstman, State Senator Arch M. Barrett, Representative Howard Butz and others spoke at a meeting of the Eleventh Ward Democratic Women's club Wednesday night at party headquarters. Dayton chapter of the Associated Stenotypists of America had a social session Wednesday night at the Van Cleve hotel following discussion of professional problems. Members of the Dayton Distric Osteopathic society and the women's auxiliary held the final meeting of the season Wednesday night with a supper at the camp of Dr.

Warren Custis on the Johnston road. There are 2,203 persons on WTA in Montgomery county, supporting 5,870 persons, County Relief Statistician Harold Tredtin reported Wednesday. Tredtin said the county relief bureau carried 449 relief cases in May, as against 669 in April. Ceremonies al tending the laying of the first brick in the 110-unit addition to De Soto Bass court were held Wednesday afternoon. The speakers Included Mayor Charles J.

Brennan, Rev. Charles T. Isom, Mrs. Perry Strong and William M. Gillespie.

L. G. Battelle, Rev. N. C.

Bang-ham, Judge Lester L. Cecil, Rev. Charles T. Isom, Mrs. Foy C.

Payne and T. J. Prugh have been elected trustees of the Sunday School Council of Religious Education. The board will organize next week. The annual financial campaign has yielded so far Negro war veterans met Wednesday night at Fifth and Mound streets to form a post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

Contributions toward the support of refugee children in Britain have been made by two Dayton and two Miami valley residents, it was announced Wednesday. They are Miss Ida M. Koontz, 23 Davies building; Miss C. Nicodcmus, 1701 Brown street: Mrs. John Twacht-man, Miamisburg, and Miss Eleanor Griffith, Western college, Oxford.

Mrs. G. M. Christ will direct the Cantatae Puellae (Singing Girls) of Santa Clara church of Christ when they sing Friday at 7:45 p. m.

In the church at Santa Clara and Richmond avenues. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Allen, violin- Help Kidneys If Back Aches Do you fl older than vou are or suffei from Getting Up Nights, Backache.

Nervousness, Leg Pains, Dirainess, Swollen Ankles, Khcumatle Pains, BurnlnK. scanty or fris-qufnt passage? If ao, remember trmt "your Kidneys are vital to your health and that these symptoms may be dne to non-orpantc and non-BVstemic Kidney and Bladder troublesIn such eases CYSTEX a physician'! prescription) usually gives prompt and Joyous relief by helping the Kldnevs flush out poisonous excess acids and wastes. You have everything to gain and nothing to lose in trying Cjmtex. An iron-clad guarantee rapped arotmd each package assure a refund of your money on return ol empty package nnleas luHy satljsnYd. Don't take ehances on any Kidney medicine that la not guaranteed, uon I delay.

Get 4'yntrx jf (Sliw-texl from Tour tfCTOV druggist today. Only la. yZlvVfJA The guarantee eirtti lint mhh protect you. AMERICA'S TALLEST HOTEL MDMSOIJ CHICAGO LEONARD HICKS Managing Dtrulnr at HOTEL was, Ky? a rti It also accounted for Miss Drew in her nightgown and robe and make possible Douglas' discovery tnat she was a fraud. "You fraud, you," said he, grab bing her, turning her over his knee and beginning to whack her.

"Stop it," cried Miss Hussey, run ning up. "A gentleman does not strike a lady but I can." She also began to spank Miss Drew and ouch. It hurt to watch. Miss Drew, unfortunately, could not wear any geography books where they'd do the most good. A movie actress has got to have smooth-looking hips, even when she's being spanked, and padding is out.

Ellen's Best Ficture This part looks like the best one yet for Ellen Drew, whom we first met four years ago. At that time she'd just been discovered serving as a waitress at Brown's soda FRANKIE'S -ORESTPARlC DANCE TONIGHT WALKUP'S ORGH. Picnic Grove Free LUCKY PARTY Starfs at 9:00 ft 1 COCKTAIL CORNER ALWAYS A GOOD TLME ED NOLL, Mgr. FIFTH AND WILKINSON HOTEL HOLDEN FIFTH, AT WILLIAMS Midnight Ramble Friday, 50c 'TAN TOWN TOPICS' Celebrated Sepia Stars Artists and Models Chorus Lester Fonntleroy's Orchestra Regular pfrformanoea Friday Nlicht Sat. Mat.

and Night. Popular Prim. COMfOgtAatT COOt AH TimTT Bob Hnpe, Dorothy I.amour Blnf Cronnjr In "Road to Zanzibar" Mnrjorl Weaver In "Murder Among Friends" iiti i'looi Moina LAKESIDE PLAYHOUSE TONIGHT at 8 PENNY NIGHT NO ADMISSION TOMORROW NIGHT AT THE BALLROOM EVERETT HOAGLAND and HIS BAND PRICE 50c CONGA and RI1UMBA TAUGHT FREE, II 11:30 SATURDAY NIGHT Raymond SCOTT And His New Band Featuring CLYDE BURKE AND DAYTON'S FAVORITE ROBERTA FRIDAY NIGHT, June 20 BENNY GOODMAN IPALACEI i TATLO EL 4421 1 Starting IN THE COOL LAST DAY: Abbott TECHNICOLOR MAN wwmi Tomorrow AIR CONDITIONED Costello 'm "IN THE NAVY." Ml J. i 18 MASTERPIECE DONLEVY Loir Timet Totfoyf WILLIAM POWELL MYRNA LOY in "LOVE CRAZY" i biggest thrill in 194Vs picture pa ja M4, and the greatest outdoor Technicolor Jv'1 production since "Northwest Passage. jPi, nnyn AS lOTiiTn'T1 Three Daytonians Ordered To Report at Army Base 1 with EJ IAN HUNTER MARY HOWARD GENE LOCKHART L0N CHANEY, Jr.

Screen Play by Gene Fowler Directed by DAVID MILLER Produced by IRVING ASHER A Mefro-GoWwyn-Mayer Pcfwrt Three Daytonians, Cnpt. William L. Boyd, 16 Locust street; First Lieut. Leslie V. Shaw, 123 Rebecca street, and First Lieut.

John J. Wolf, 1022 Colwlck drive, have been ordered to report to the new army air base at Ft. Wayne, June 30. First Lieut. Stanley C.

Birkhold, Conover, has applied for transfer from infantry reserve to the air corps reserve, and has been ordered to active duty at Maxwell field, Ala. Erccl Fay Eycster, 32 avenue, has been appointed a flying cadet and is beginning training this week at the Spartan School of Aeronautics, Muskogee, Oklahoma. Three Daytonians stationed at Fort Monmouth, N. since their induction at Ft. Thomas, Ky March 27, have been transferred to signal corps units, They are: Bob Maltby, 1246 Riverview avenue, former member of The Dayton Herald editorial staff, to McDill field, and Fred Marker, 741 Y'jj -'A lis.

fzn czLfa tntj rSJ COOL 4,1 ca tsi saa jstjzx COMFORT ABLE L. ,1 KjJ L-J Ki.l LANTZ'S Coming Mondav, June IGlh LAN I McINTIRE Bnd his Aloha Islanders 222 S. MAIN ST..

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Pages Available:
695,853
Years Available:
1940-1986