Blackwell Family Lucy Stone Subj. File: Lucy Stone (Financial Papers)Report on "Lucy Stone", May 9th production for the benefit of the Boston University Women's Council Totals deposited 0 $655 Bills paid out of cash $34.25 Total receipts $689.95 Expenses Theatre deposit 100. postage advance 35. additional postage stamps 10.85 65 postal cards .65 printing bills 24.40 paper and envelopes 2.10 rubber stamp 1.65 messenger for stamp .50 messenger for publicity .50 taxi, chinese girls 1.50 flowers and ribbon 5.45 press luncheon 1.45 Federal Theatre, check 226.60 Federal Theatre final payment 10. Stantial telephone bill 8.46 429.11 Profits $260.84 Sales of tickets, including additional gifts of $130.85, part of which was used to buy tickets for students $689.95 Box office receipts were $33.65 Guest tickets to Mr. Davis and escort Miss Blackwell Miss Blackwell 18 representative of the press Report on "Lucy Stone", May 9th production for the benefit of the Boston University Women's Council Totals deposited $689.95 Bills paid from cash receipts 34.25 Total receipts $700.85 Expenses: Rubber stamps 1.10 Ruber stamps 1.65 Theatre deposit 100. Advance for postage 35. Additional postage 10.85 65 postal cards .65 Printing bills 24.40 Paper and envelopes 2.10 Messenger for rubber stamp .50 Messenger for publicity .50 Taxi, Chinese girls, (publicity acct.) 1.50 Flowers and ribbon 5.45 Press luncheon at 146 Com 1.45 Federal Theatre, final payment 236.60 Stantial telephone bill 8.46 430.21 Profits $271.74 Totals from sale of tickets $559.10 from "additional contributions 141.75 * $700.85 *Part of this sum used for purchase of tickets and given to students. Box office receipts were $33.65 Guest tickets to Mr. Davis of Class of 1881, and escort Miss Blackwell 18 representatives of pressExcerpt from the report of Maud Wood Park, as Secretary of the College Equal Suffrage League, annual report for 1905-06. It is hardly necessary to say that with us as with most other organizations, the great need is a larger and more active membership. Will not each person present take this to heart, and try to help during the coming year either by service or by inducing some of the many men and women who are interested in our cause but have not time or strength for work to give at least the support of their membership in the Association? As this is our annual report, perhaps the Secretary may be permitted to point out a change which seems to her to have come about gradually in the work of committees and somewhat, too, in the subjects discussed at general meetings. In the first two or three years, we gave a large part of our time to the consideration of private agencies for public good and our work [?][?] was planned in accordance with their methods, as a glance through the first biennial report will show. Little by little, however, we have come to be chiefly interested in the people's work for the people, that is, in the possibilities of government, not merely in its negative function of relief and control, but as a positive uplifting force in the community. In this field, there are as yet few students compared with the number who have devoted themselves to the workings of private agencies and our efforts seem, therefore to have special value when we try to point out, as we hope to do through out study class, our committees, and our meetings, the tremendous civilizing power which is as truly inherent in the city, state or nation, as is the police power or the power to regulate the tariff. In other words, we, as an Association, are growing to realize what women as a class must learn, what men members are not yet wholly aware of, that government, which is an expression of the organized interests of us all is a profound influence in the life of each one of us. Maud Wood Park Secretary Mrs. Stautial For the consideration of one dollar ($1.00) and other valuable presents, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, We, Ada L. Comstock of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Edna Stantial of Melrose, Massachusetts, representing a majority of the Board of Trustees, holders of the copyright in the book LUCY STONE, PIONEER OF WOMAN'S RIGHTS by Alice Stone Blackwell, do hereby convey and relinquish all dramatization rights in the book and title above mentioned to Maud Wood Park of Portland, Maine. This conveyance of authorisation and rights is on an exclusive basis and we do hereby authorize said Maud Wood Park to negotiate the sale and stage production of her dramatization. Dated December 17, 19391010 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass. ASSIGNMENT OF COPYRIGHT Know all Men by these Presents, that I, Alice Stone Blackwell, of ........, State of........, in consideration of one dollar and other valuable considerations to......paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, have sold, assigned, transferred, and set over, and by these presents do sell, assign, transfer, and set over unto ............................................. of............................, ......................executors, administrators, and assigns, to..................... own proper use and benefit, the copyright heretofore taken out by..................for the work entitled........................... ......................................, by........................................................., of which ..............proprietor............., with all.....................literary property, right, title, and interest in and to said work, and all the profit, benefit, and advantage, that shall or may arise from printing, publishing, and vending the same, and to have and enjoy the same during the full end and term for which the said copyright has been issued, or any renewal or extension thereafter, hereby authorizing said.....................................to apply for and receive the renewal and extension of said copyright. In witness whereof,............have hereunto set............hand and seal, this...................................day of........................19............ In presence of .......................... ............................SUBSCRIPTIONS OF INDIVIDUALS: $20,000--Anonymous. $5971--Mrs. Frederick S. Moseley. $5940--Anonymous. $5184--Mrs. George P. Gardner, Sr. $3084--Robert W. Milne Trust Fund. $3000--Mr. and Mrs. John F. Moors; Mr. and Mrs. Samuel H. Wolcott. $2750--Anonymous $2500--Anonymous (5); Mrs. George H. Davenport; Mr. and Mrs. M. Lester Madden. $2025--Mrs. John S. Curtis. $2000--"Mr. and Mrs. H. F. S." $1650--Anonymous. $1600--Dr. and Mrs. John W. Bartol. $1300--Anonymous (2). $1280--John L. Saltonstall. $1000--Anonymous; Mrs. Thomas S. Bradlee; Mr. Mrs. William Tudor Gardiner; Walter K. Shaw, Jr.; Mrs. Henry Wheeler. $935--Mrs. Arthur T. Cabot. $900--Miss Emily B. Shepard. $800--Stephen P. Cabot; Mrs. Jessie D. Hallowell; Frank R. Shepard. $750--Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Holmes; Mr. and Mrs. Cyril H. Jones; J. Preston Rice. $700--Mr. and Mrs. Roland Gray. $660--Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Clark. $625--Mrs. Edward H. James. $600--Mrs. George H. Lyman; Bradley W. Palmer. $560--Miss Bertha H. Vaughan. $535--Dr. and Mrs. William Jason Mixter. $525--Mrs. Charles L. Slattery. $510--Miss Eugenia B. Frothingham. $500--Henry W. Bliss; Mr. and Mrs. Louis Curtis; Lee M., Elsie T. and Sophie M. Friedman, additional (total to date $2100). $500--Mrs. Walter G. Garritt, Mr and Mrs. Justin William Griess, Mr. and Mrs. Edmund F. Leland, Mrs. Thomas Motley, Dr. and Mrs. Philip Phillips, Mrs. Alexander Steinert, Mrs. Samuel D. Warren. $425--Mrs. Benjamin W. Estabrook, Jacob N. Segal. $400--Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Courtney, Norman E. Dupee, Mr. and Mrs. William L. W. Field, Miss Ruth M. Gordon, Richard M. Grandin, Prof. Lionel S. Marks, Miss Frances McElwain, Mrs. Samuel J. Newman, Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Stone, Miss Lucy C. Sturgis, Mr. and Mrs. Sherman R. Thayer, Mrs. Arthur H. Wood. $360--Mr. and Mrs. Augustine B. Conant, Mrs. Edward L. Kent. $350--Miss Elizabeth O. Adams, Mrs. Alfred D. Foster, Augustin H. Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Sawtell, Mrs. William B. Snow, Jr., Mrs. Charles L. Swan, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. John [?] Wylde. $325--Stedman Buttick, Sidney Stevens. $320--Mrs. Elton G. Cushman. $310--Mrs. Dudley B. Fay. $300--Elton G. Cushman, Mr. and Mrs. R. Ammi Cutter, Herbert W. Kendall, Mr. and Mrs. H. de Forest Lockwood, Mrs. John C. Phillips, Charles Sumner Pierce, Mrs. T. H. Shepard, Dr. and Mrs. James R. Torbert, Dr. and Mrs. Charles J. White, Miss Elizabeth A. Williams. $285--Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Morse. $282--Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Bigelow. $275--Mr. and Mrs. J. Lothrop Motley. $255--Miss Emily H. Hayward. $250--Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. Bissell; R. Perry Collins; Frederic J. Crosby; Everett L. Cuneo; Robert W. Dana; Mrs. Edwin M. Dodd; Orville W. Forte; Arthur M. Goodridge; Dr. and Mrs. G. Philip Grabfield; Robert P. Hackett; Albert S. Howe; Miss Lillian Mitchell; Mrs. Robert L. O'Brien; Mr. and Mrs. Morris Rosenthal additional (total to date $1850); Mr. and Mrs. Volney G. Rowbotham; Mrs. Walter K. Shaw, Jr.; Miss Rosanna D. Thorndike; George M. Thurmand; Mr. and Mrs. Richardson White. $245--Miss Mary Hubbard. $225--Leonard B. Buchanan; Mr. and Mrs. Elroy W. Houghton; Mr. and Mrs. Alva Morrison. $220--Mrs. George B. Dewson; Mr. and Mrs. James J. Minot, Jr.; Jesse Stam. $215--Mrs. John Richardson; Mr. and Mrs. George S. Terry. $200--Oscar S. Bauer; Thomas N. Codman; Mr. and Mrs. William H. Eckert; Dr. Albert G. Engelbach; Henry A. Ginsburg; Malcolm Green. $200--Mrs. Theodore C. Haffenreffer; Miss Katherine A. Homans; Charles B. Hoytl; Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Koshland; Prof. and Mrs. Edward C. Moore; Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Osgood; Alexander V. Phillips; Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Soule; Seth Sprague Benevolent Fund; Mrs. John F. Sherman; Ralph E. Snider; Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Spinoza; Mrs. Frederic M. Stone; Mrs. Robert L. Studley; Mrs. Warren M. Wright; Mr. and Mrs. Edgar N. Wrightington. $175--Kenneth S. Domett; Edward C. Wheeler, Jr.; Moses Williams. $162--Judge John Duff. $160--Miss Isabella L. Whittier. $155--Miss Hilda W. Williams. $150--Mrs. Walter B. Binnian; Miss Mary C. Buchan; Miss Susan T. Cushing; Mr. and Mrs. F. Winchester Den[?]o; Miss Alice Falvey; Helen D. Hood; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Marriner; Mrs. Jerome Preston; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Thacher, Jr.; Miss E. Annie Upham; Mrs. George S. Wright. $135--Mr. and Mrs. Abram W. Fish; Mr. and Mrs. Milton E. Lord. $130--Mr. and Mrs. Dudley M. Baker; Mrs. John O. DeWolfe; Mrs. Mary M. Sampson. $125--James J. Axelrod; Mr. and Mrs. Abram Berkowitz, additional (total to date $425); Mr. and Mrs. Henry P. Briggs; Mrs. Annie Fox and Charles J. Fox; Richard P. Hallowell; Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Peabody. $125 -- Mrs. Edmund H. Talbot, Miss Elizabeth R. Weld, Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Yarchin. $120--Miss Madeleine Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. John F. Perkins. $115--Adolph Giesberg. $110--Israel Cooper. $100--Carl K. Bacon, L. Herbert Ballou, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice J. Barron, Benjamin F. Bernstein, Jack B. Billings, Abraham A. Bloom, Judge Wilfred Bolster, George W. Brown, Theodore E. Brown, President and Mrs. Leonard Carmichael, Charles A. Clarke, Abraham Cohen, John P. COtton, Dr. and Mrs. Morris Courtiss, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Foster, Abram B. Fox, Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Gammons, Sidney Goldfine, Mr. and Mrs. John Gordon, Mrs. Martha Fuller Halsey, Marcus Harris, the Revv. and Mrs. Oliver J. Hart, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Harte, Howard W. Hodgdon, Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Keith, Mrs. Charles A. King, John A. Knowles, I. I. Kotzen and Ely Hurvitt, Mrs. Harry Liebman (additional, total to date $850), Mr. and Mrs. William L. Locke, Miss Agnes J. MacNevin, Walter M. Marston, Leo Michelson, Prof. and Mrs. James Buell Munn, Hugh Munro, Robert B. Nathanson, Mrs. Grace N. North, Thomas H. Norton, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Oldham, Orville N. Purdy, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Burt W. Rankin, Mr. and Mrs. John B. Reid, Simon Rosen, Mr. and Mrs. William Rosenberg, Harold R. Sawyer, Mrs. Ida S. Shir, Abraham and Hyman Shocket, Dr. Samuel Sidell, Dr. William H. Smith, James Solomont, Mr. and Mrs. Max Steran, Miss Mary A. Tappan, Dr. W. Stewart Whittemore, Edward F. Willcutt, Joseph N. Willcut, Mrs. Mary R. Winn, Mr. and Mrs. George Zakon.No. 10 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS COPYRIGHT OFFICE WASHINGTON, D.C. ASSIGNMENT OR TRANSFER OF COPYRIGHT Under the copyright statute approved March 4, 1909, effective on July 1, 1909, copyright secured either under the new act or previous copyright acts of the United States "may be assigned, granted, or mortgaged by an instrument in writing signed by the proprietor of the copyright, or may be bequeathed by will." No special blank form for assignment is issued by the Copyright Office. RECORDING ASSIGNMENTS Every assignment of copyright should be recorded in the Copyright Office within three calendar months after is execution in the United States or within six calendar months after its execution without the limits of the United States, "in default of which it shall be void as against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee for a valuable consideration, without notice, whose assignment has been duly recorded." The original instrument of assignment should be sent to the Copyright Office to be placed of record. It is desirable that a valuable document of this kind be forwarded by registered mail. Upon receipt of the document until recorded it is kept in a fireproof safe. After having been recorded, a certificate of record under seal of the Copyright Office is attached and it is then returned by mail. If the sender desires to have it returned by registered mail, 15 cents postage for the post office registry fee should be sent in addition to the recording fees as stated below. The transferring of the copyright of a work duly registered does not require reregistration. NOTICE IN ASSIGNEE'S NAME When an assignment of the copyright in a specified book or other work has been recorded the assignee may substitute his name for that of the assignor in the statutory notice of copyright prescribed by the act. In order that this transfer of proprietorship may properly appear upon the index of the Copyright Office a fee of 10 cents (prescribed by law) for each title of a book or other article transferred is required for indexing, and this fee should be remitted in addition to the fee prescribed for recording the instrument as explained below. FOREIGN ASSIGNMENTS Every assignment of copyright executed in a foreign country must be acknowledged by the assignor before a consular officer or secretary of legation of the United States authorized by law to administer oaths or perform notarial acts. The certificate of such acknowledgment under the hand and official seal of such consular officer or secretary of legation is prima facie evidence of the execution of the instrument. FEES The following schedule of fees is fixed by the statute, as amended May 23, 1928, in effect July 1, 1928: 1. For recording and certifying any instrument of writing for the assignment of copyright, or any license to make use of copyright material, or for any copy of such assignment or license duly certified, $2 for each Copyright Office record-book page (approximately legal cap size) or additional fraction of a page over one-half page. 2. For comparing any copy of an assignment with the record of such document in the Copyright Office and certifying the same under seal, $2. [over]3. For recording the transfer of the proprietorship of copyrighted articles, ten cents for each title of a book or other article, in addition to the fee prescribed for recording the instrument of assignment. It is not safe to send currency, stamps, or coin through the mail. Checks may not be accepted for payment of copyright fees. Remittances should be made by money order or bank draft, payable to the Register of Copyrights. Wm Brown COPYRIGHT LAW, SECTIONS 41-46 SEC. 41. That the copyright is distinct from the property in the material object copyrighted, and the sale or conveyance, by gift or otherwise, of the material object shall not of itself constitute a transfer of the copyright, nor shall the assignment of the copyright constitute a transfer of the title to the material object; but nothing in this act shall be deemed to forbid, prevent, or restrict the transfer of any copy of a copyrighted work the possession of which has been lawfully obtained. SEC. 42. That copyright secured under this or previous acts of the United States may be assigned, granted, or mortgaged, by an instrument in writing signed by the proprietor of the copyright, or may be bequeathed by will. SEC. 43. That every assignment of copyright executed in a foreign country shall be acknowledged by the assigner before a consular officer or secretary of legation of the United States is authorized by law to administer oaths or perform notarial acts. The certificate of such acknowledgment under the hand and official seal of such consular officer or secretary of legation shall be prima facie evidence of the execution of the instrument. SEC. 44. That every assignment of copyright shall be recorded in the copyright office within three calendar months after its execution in the United States or within six calendar months after its execution without the limits of the United States, in default of which it shall be void as against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee for a valuable consideration, without notice, whose assignment has been duly recorded. SEC. 45. That the register of copyrights shall, upon payment of the prescribed fee, record such assignment, and shall return it to the sender with a certificate of record attached under seal of the copyright office, and upon the payment of the fee prescribed by this act he shall furnish to any person requesting the same of certified copy thereof under the said seal. SEC. 46. That when an assignment of the copyright in a specified book or other work has been recorded the assignee may substitute his name for that of the assignor in the statutory notice of copyright prescribed by this act. EXPLANATORY CIRCULAR 10 Assignment of Copyright (July, 1934--1,000) U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1934 Walter H. Baker Company Boston Massachusetts January 1938 No. 2137 [*file*] LUCY STONE Portland, Maine $10.00 Less Our Commission..................5.00 $5.00 $1.50 for Portland League copy $1.50 " School Copy - $1.50 " Portland Players PLEASE DETACH AND RETAIN THIS PORTION FOR YOUR RECORDS FEDERAL THEATRE PROJECT OF MASSACHUSETTS Jon B. Mack - State Director Hotel Westminster, Boston, Mass. Elizabeth Pira - Secretary 1411 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. Bert Sabourin - Ass't State Director Copley Square Hotel Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. Frances Casey - Secretary 13 Jones Street, Everett, Mass. PROMOTION DEPT. Eugene C. Keenan 26 Lexington Ave., Hyde Park, Mass. James Mc Ginn 13[?] Wigglesworth St., Somerville, Mass. BOOKING DEPT. Thomas F. Greer 38 St. Margaret St., Dorchester, Mass. Gertrude Goodman 48 Thomas Park, South Boston, Mass. Mary Saxe 4 Cross Street, Waltham, Mass. Ann Solomon 215 Harvard Ave., Allston, Mass. Salvatore Moccia 38 Poplar Street, Boston, Mass. Louis Gass 87 Lawrence Ave., Roxbury, Mass. ORCHESTRA CONDUCTORS Charles Frank 307 Atlantic Ave., Atlantic, Mass. Chester Mason 19 South Mountain Ave., Melrose, Mass."LUCY STONE" CAST AND DIRECTORS Mr. Ben Russack, Supervisor Play Writing Dept., National Service Bureau, 1697 Broadway, New York City. Eliot Duvey, Director 361 Harvard Street, Cambridge, Mass. Paul F. Sheehan, Ass't Director 93 Thorndike Street, Brookline, Mass. Elsa Tashko 311 Huntington Ave., Boston, Mass. Harry E. Lowell 103 Hemenway Street, Boston, Mass. Ann Baker 455 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. Lillian Merchal 24 Blagdon Street, Boston, Mass. Bertram Parry 314 Essex Street, Salem, Mass. Jack Granfield 345 Harvard Street, Cambridge, Mass. Edward Dillon 135 Magazine Street, Cambridge, Mass. Charles McFarland 407 Broadway, Cambridge, Mass. Muriel Woodward 5 Caspian Way, Dorchester, Mass. Florence Walsh 21 Chauncey St., Cambridge, Mass. William Warren 455 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. Anita Webb 126 Oxford St., Cambridge, Mass. Cordelia MacDonald 171 Hancock St., Cambridge, Mass. Winifred Douglas 460 Columbia Road, Dorchester, Mass. John Lyons 523 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. Basil Burwell 12 Hemenway, St. Boston, Mass. Glen Wilson 1086 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. Bert Kelsey 16a Blossom Court, Boston, Mass. Fern Foster 80 Garfield St., Cambridge, Mass. Roger MacDonald 47 Liberty Street, Everett, Mass. Elizabeth Gerrish 2 Prescott St., Cambridge, Mass. Fritz Eisenmann 114 Empire St., Lynn, Mass. STAGE SETTINGS, COSTUMES - LIGHTING ETC. John Buey 49 Dunfey St., Lowell, Mass. Thomas DeRushia 69 Ellsworth St., Brockton, Mass. Herbert Fish Acton Road - Box 98 Chelmsford, Mass. Catherine Pearson 655 Broadway Revere, Mass. Paul Cadorette 19 Sibley St., Cambridge, Mass.THEATRE ATTACHES' Mr. Michael Meaney 36 Warrenton St., Boston, Mass. Kenneth Fleming 42 Kirtland St., Cambridge, Mass. William Nixon 9 Eliot Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass. USHERS Ruth Soper - Head Usher 7 Columbus Square, Salem, Mass. Margaret O'Malley 667 East 7th St., South Boston, Mass. Celia Romaine 35 Worcester Square, Boston, Mass. Mary Reardon 6 Burnham Place, South Boston, Mass. Mary Cantangelo 116 Broadway, South Boston, Mass. PHOTOGRAPHER Horace Barton 50 Bow Street, Medford, Mass. PUBLICITY John Luce 53 St. Stephen St., Boston, Mass. Thomas G. Stephen 36 Church Street, Boston, Mass. Anne Sullivan 172 Lexington Ave., Cambridge, Mass. Lucy Munden 2 Mills Street, Charlestown, Mass. FEDERAL THEATRE OF MASS., 67 QUINCY ST., ROXBURY, MASS., TEL. HIG. 6310 A Division of the Works Progress Administration Block Ticket Sale ---- Matinee Performances ---- Copley Theatre, Boston Seating Capacity 1032 Net Proceeds $411.00 (exclusive of Tax) Price Scale $0.55 to .25 --------------------------------------------------------------- HOUSE PLAN AND LOCATION 580 Orchestra Seats....$0.55 32 Box Seats........ .55 420 Balcony Seats A-S....$0.25 PLAN A - Students' Clubs, Organizations, etc., desiring to sponsor a theatre party securing blocks of seats not less than twenty five. (These tickets cannot be resold at a price above the restamped value, under regulations as specified by the Internal Revenue Department pertaining to tax on amusement tickets). Seats in the 55 (cents) section (No Tax Required) for 35 (cents) " " " 25 (cents) " " " " 15 (cents) PLAN B - These seats may be sold at regular box office prices. Seats in 55 (cents) section for 35 (cents) Government Tax 5 (cents) Total $.40 Net Profit 15 (cents) " " 25 (cents) " " 15 (cents) (No Tax Required) " $.15 " " 10 (cents) Please detach and return to: 67 Quincy St., Roxbury, Mass. - ATT: Promotion Dept. Name of Organization Street and City Committee Chairman Number of Seats Box, Orchestra & Bal. Price Scale Date Wanted Total Seats Total Cost State plainly plan desired: ________ _________ A BFEDERAL THEATRE OF MASS., 67 QUINCY ST., ROXBURY, MASS., TEL. 6310 A Division of the Works Progress Administration Block Ticket Sale -- Evening Performance -- Copley Theatre, Boston Seating Capacity 1032 Net Proceeds $628.99 (exclusive of Tax) Price Scale $0.85 to .25 ------------------------------------------- HOUSE PLAN AND LOCATION 580 Orchestra Seats ... $0.85 32 Box Seats ...... $.85 211 Balcony Seats A to H ...... $.55 209 " " J " S .......$.25 ----------------------------------------- PLAN A - Students' Clubs, Organizations, etc., desiring to sponsor a theatre party securing blocks of seats not less than twenty-five. (These tickets cannot be resold at a price above the rest amped value, under regulations as specified by the Internal Revenue Department pertaining to tax on amusement tickets). Seats in the 85 ¢ section 45 [?] Government Tax 5¢ Total 50 ¢ " " " 55 ¢ " (No Tax Required) for 35¢ " " " 25 ¢ " " " " " 15 ¢ ----------------------------------------------------- PLAN B- Number of seats in blocks not less than twenty-five (25) to be sold at regular box office prices. Seats in .85 section .50 Government Tax .08 Total .58 Net Profit $.27 " " .55 " .35 " " .05 " .40. " " $.15 " " .25 " .15 (No Tax Required) " .15 " " $.10 ------------------------------------------------------------------- Please detach and return to: 67 Quincy St., Roxbury Mass. - ATT: Promotion Dept. Name of Organization Street and City Committee Chairman Number of Seats Box, Orchestra & Bal. Price Sale Date Wanted Total Seats Total Cost State plainly plan desired: A BD R A M A T I C BP P U B L I C A T I O N S ESTABLISHED THEODORE JOHNSON 1845 WALTER H PRESIDENT INCORPORATED BAKER CARL G.A. JOHNSON 1921 COMPANY TREASURER 178 Fremont Street. Boston, Mass. SOLD TO MRS. [AMY B] [*GUY W*] STANTIAL 80070 1/15/38 COLLEGE CLUB ORDER NO [40 COMMONWEALTH AVE] [*20 Sewall St.*] [BOSTON MASS.] [*Melrose Mass.*] SHIPPED BY PP TERMS: NET CASH ALL ACCOUNTS PAYABLE ON THE 15th FOR BILLS OF THE PRECEDING MONTH QUANTITY DESCRIPTION LIST DISCOUNT AMOUNT TOTAL 75 LUCY STONE .75 1/3 37.50 ON CONSIGNMENT BOOKS PLAYS ENTERTAINMENTS CATALOGUE SENT ON REQUEST