Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 39, Number 66, Decatur, Adams County, 18 March 1941 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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DCHS SENIORS ~ WIN TOURNEY Score 38*24 Victory Over Juniors; Frosh Drub Sophomores, IH-35 Th* senior* wow th* annual In tram nr*' net tourney at Dmatnr (Mtholir high school last night hy dropping the Junior* In the final Utt. 19-li Holing*r with IS palm* and flman with 11. pa<«l the seniors to their Win. while Terveer led the lasing junior* with 13 merger*. In the <o»*olatlon tilt the freshmen walloped the sophomore* by a 49-M count. Ha<kman with 1* point* and Bri’-de with II were out■landing tor the winner*, with Klepper and Imurent ea<h adding II marker* to the loser*’ total. Senior. FG FT TP ( Iman f t » II Miller f 111 Hackman. c ll* Hol lager g . * 1 IS Rterly. g 111 Hmith. f . a a a Spangler, t ......... 0 0 0 Weber, r 0 a # Total* if 1,1 m Junior* WJ FT TP Keller ' Wil Kuhn)*, t . non Terveer, t 4 S 13 ( J. Holthouse. g . I ! 1 B Holthou*e. g I 0 I lie. Jean*, f » 2 2
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THIAt t * J I
♦ J _ J ♦ — Lett Time Tonight — "ARIZONA” Joan Arthur. Wm. Holden. Warren William, huge east ALSO—Sheets ’OclOc Ine. Tan * WED. & THCRS. * OCR BIG DAYS!” First Show Wed. at 8:10 Continuous Thurs. from 1:10 BE SURE TO ATTEND! YOU WONT HAVE A GHOST OF A CHANCE! As the gurgeou qott to ton! ■Mrv swy a.. u St * > ■ BLlpMrjn»j| 1 S I J Virginia BRUCE kA John BARRYMORE J Jobs HOWARD i a K Qarbe RUGGLES i & teuHOMOLIA owt-vgjkm mQ nwi— w Frl. A Sat. — "Lucky Partnoro” Ginger Rogers. Ronald Colman. aw #a "■ 1 "M • Coming Sunday — Mickey Rooney. • Andy Hardy s Private Secretary” OMMBBMMHi I
111 Total* . 7 l» 24 Feshmen Ft; FT TP I Mngerk h. f 3 0 4 Markman f .4114 Welker r 4 1 » Rnede. g 4 4 It Wolpert. g . Sag Col< h In. g . 1 a 1 Total* Il 7 W Sophomore* FG FT TP Imnreat. f 4 • It Faurote. f 10 4 CoUhia. c 11 7 Klepper g g 0 11 tohmlts g . • • • | Total* 17 I 31 Referee. Klelnlght. t'mplre. Real HIGH GAMES IN BOWLING MEET Only One Os Early I-eid-er* In Money At National Tourney Mt. Paul. Minn. Mar 1* A* the 4l»t annual American howl Ing rongre** swung into It* *llth day long aession today, tabulation of results showed only one of the original pare setter* on the Hat of , leader*. After the moat sensational weekend In A R.C. history. eight more change* were recorded yesterday on the lists of the 12 leader* tn each of the four divisions of the tournament. i only the f'edar Inn of Milwaukee. with a wore of 1.778 made on the opening day. Hill wa* on the hoard da ninth place. The Gru back Funeral Home team of Drtroll ied With aarore of 1.819, Yeeterday'* competition wa*' highlighted by the fourth total of Too or Tetter hi the single* event when Edward Ro< k. a Hammond . Ind., aleel worker chalked up an even Too with game Korea of 24*. 212 and 220 giving him fourth place honor* New name* appeared In second and third place* on the board'* IIM of doubles leader* They were Jame* Lynch and Howard Vautherot, Detroit. 1.388- and Anton Jerbek and Walter Stand. Waukeg- . an. 111. 1 347. The standings Team event : Grubach Funeral Home Detroit 2,*». to-hlltl Brown Bottle*. Milwaukee. 2. IM; Deerfield Bowling Academy DeerSeM, HL. 1833, Acme Furnace Pitting Company. Chicago fi.NIS. and Armatrong'* Jeweler*. Hammond. Ind.. ISM Doubly* Hlila Kallas and Frank Caravella. Milwaukee- 1.289. James Lynch and Howard Vautherot. De trolt. 1.218; Anton Jersbek and Walter Stand. Waukegan. 11l- L--147. Russell Henry and Charles Woods. Detroit. 1.245. and Gerald Enright and Ed Boyle- Chicago. 1,21S Singles Hili* Kalb* Milwaukee. 717; George Tlshock. Milwaukee. 70S: James Berado. Chicago 791; Edward Bock. Hammond Ind. 70S, and William Taylor. Chicago <l9. All events. George Tishock Milwaukee. 1.941; James Berado Chi- • ago. 1.903; Hill* Kalla*. Milwaukee. ISH. William Taylor. Chicago. LH24. and James Lynch. Detroit. ISIS. ~ ■ During the World war. American plane* shot down 249 enemy craft for every V. S. loss.
| CORT ♦ — —- ■ • " R — Last Time Tonight — -LUCK* OCVILI" , Richard Arlan. Andy Bovine A “KttPING COMRANYFrank Morgan. Ann Rutherford Only tOeZOc * WED? & THURS. * DWARFING ALL OTHER SCREEN SPECTACLES—AMaovninud ya aA. ndert wwtwwM W" Wvl’Wwi w In Magic TCCHNICOLORI “THE THIEF OF BAGDAD” With tabu. Conrod Veldt, Juno Deprei. thouMndo more. •Cl—The adventure of Um Maglo Carpet! Mt—The monpt rout Spider King, ton timer. human UH! SlC—Moroer that fly; a at ft liatft .1 mailt Mania* r” VWr’tn »no¥r gprile. Two Year. to Rrodueo — the Wonder Rlcturo of All Time I Coming Sunday'*—'"-BLACKOUT" A “RIDS KCLLY RIOC."
FOUR TEAMS IN PRO TOURNEY ■ Four Crack Quintets In Semi-FinalN Os Pro Tournament Chicago. Mar. 11. - 'UFI — Four i crack basket boll quintets, repre- ,, sent ma four different state*. move , Into the aeml final* tonight of the ’ ' world professional basketball tour- , | nament at the International smphl theater The New Ynrh Renaissance 1939 , I tltllet. meet* the Detroit Eagle* I and the Toledo White Huts meet I the tHhknsh. Wls. All-Star*, last year'* champs, the Harlem Globe Trotter*, were eliminated Sunday i night. Chuck Chuckowlt* of the White I Hut* highlighted laat night's competition when he rang up ?2 point*, a tournament record- and led hl* team to a 43-33 victory over the ! Chicago Bruin*. Jim Rae. former all-conference star at Michigan unii verslty. wa* lost to the Hut* when ! be sprained an ankle in the second i quarter The Ren* moved Into the semi- • firal* by defeating the Kenosha. I Wla. Royals 43 to IS. They held their opponent* to three point* during th* entire second half The All-Stars’ 1* to II victory over the Philadelphia Hebrews wa* the closest battle of the evening It wa* ntp-awd-tack until the second half when the tt*hki»h quintet managed to forge ahead, mainly though the effort* of Leroy Edward*. cet-ter- who scored 12 point* — —♦ 1 — * Today’s Sport Parade * Sy Haney Meisner* I 0 - - o Miami. Mar I* <U-» Give Waller Hagen two hour* of your time and I'll guarantee that hell convince you that the modern golfer*, with their sensational More* In the I middle sial lea and thereabouts, j aren't one bit better than Were the I champion* of 'ie day* when he was In hi* prime The Haig started making hl* 1 point to me as the Clipper rose I from Biscayne Hay and moved out. over the sea toward Nassau, and: be had me on hi* side two hour* later when the big ship settled down on the pastel waler* of the harbor of the lovely little island playground. Hagen, whose eleven British and American title* give him the authority to speak as sn authority on golf, doesn't believe, as most critic* I do. that the fantastic scores of the Snead* the Hogan*, the Nelsons, the Little* and the like la largely due to the Improvement in golfing equipment He admits that steel shafted ctui»s a livelier hall, aadj | the sand wedge have helped in tbs almost complete destruction of I par. but considers such thing* of secondary importance "The big reason for the low score* of today,” Hagen said a* | Bimini dropped behind u*. "He* In the different objective that golfer* of today have when they step on th* tee. In my day Vardon and hla accuracy was our pattern We ' wanted to hit the ball atralght. and were content to get down in par. because par baa always been good enough to win. Then, just as In baseball, flneeae wa* supplanted hy alugging and the t>oy« wen' In for the spectacular. If you have enough guy* trying to be spectacular — that I* trying to make the longest carries and hitting gvery shot right for the flag —two or three or four of them are bound to make it come off. and get sensational score* * "Moon al! the golfer* knew they had to do this nr run th* risk* of having the gamblers pull down the money and the title* Mo they all started playing like desperadoes, and this kept up unill lhat sort of play became the comnumplace thing In my time, a man only played that sort of golf when he was behind and the hole* started running.out. And a lot of us could bring off a string of birdies when forced to So you see. If Mr goal had been <7 aay from the start instead of 72. we undoubtedly could have done just what the boy* are doing today.” • Hagen I* of the firm belle? that a champion la bom with the gift of being a champion, and that no
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DEMTI’R DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATI R. INDIANA.
1 SPRING SPRIVING STARTS . And you'll find this packet nf three . omprehen*lve b.aAlet* par- j ’ Ihularly useful at thi* *ea*.m of lh«- >*■• The title* are I HOME HEDAHIM 1 HOI'MEWfFEM MAN! AL 3 INTERIOR DEt’oRATINtI The Information these laxihleta coat sin *lmple repair* of all • kinds snuind ihe home meihtid* of *• <ing >:niia> don- ■ ihe howaa In the most efficient and *atl*fsctory manner, and suggestions on ■elec lon snd u*e of flmtftar*. furnishings, floor covering* and drapI edee will he particularly helpful for “*prlng epriM ing up ' Mend tSe <Mbpon below for your packet v ’ fLIP COI FON HERE F. M KIRBY. Dept fill. Daily Democrat’s Barvlee Bureau. tOtl Thirteenth St. Washington. 0 C. I enclose here Wil h twenty five rent* In coin, money afd* , f «he«-k. or *tamp* to <over return pci*tage and other coata for my •Nprihg Hprurlng" packet of three hook lei* NAME I RTRRET and No CITY MT ATE I reed the Decatur Dally Democrat. Decatur. Ind
matter what age be lived In. would have won hl* cup* and title* Ju*l the name ■There la a great difference between being a great hitter of a golf hall and a champion hitter of ; a golf ball The wood* have been full of great rwinger* and hittar* since they played with feather hall* In dear old tootland. but the only hitter* that matter ar* the one* you'll find In the record book under the roll of champions I mean the fellow* with the will io win. and the heart to hack up the will "How many of the hoy* who are •hooting course* In nothing flat •hoot the same kind of golf wit >u a national title la there fo* then to aim at? Von mean to tell me that Boh Jone* wouldn't have been a champion if he had been born ten year* later* Or that Vardon or a dosen other* you can name wouldn t have been the same." "What about yourself. Haig 7“ I asked. No false modesty In the Hslg ’’l would have won my share. 1 ■ think. I'll tell you this When I’m 70 they can roll me out to the final tee of the national open and tell me anythin* hotter than an eight will win It for me. and you can het I'll win R. I'll come closer to getting a birdie than a liuaaard ” Then the ship came down and the Haig wa* off down the dock to meet the Duke and Ducheu. walk , Ing a* be always ha* -> like a ■ champion Independent IHayerM Feted At Berne Event Berne. Mar 1* Oswln Sprung | er. custodian of the Berne auditorium. wa* host to aliout »fi men and lioy* at a dinner held al th* audl torinm The guest* were member* lof the l ight Independent teams which have been playing at the auditorium this winter, tbel ■ man-1 ■gers, aponaors. soorers. official*, newspaper men and director* of the • auditorium. Cheater Michaud, mao-1 - sger of the towns FtS.-JlitUrr learn which won the league title, served as toastmaster. Talk* were made I by Mr Michaud. O. N Hrni'h. Roy | Girod. L. L. Yager Edward Llechty and Mr Sprunger Honor Monroe Netten At School Celebration; 1,1 ’ Rome. Mar ll— The member* of the Monroe high school basket ball team and their coach. Herman Neiienschwander. were guest* of the Munro* high school at a dinner' •erred at the school About M people attended the event The basketball players and others spoke briefly and a program was given. Monroe doe* not lose a *iagie I first team player this year and ha* bright prospect* for neit year ♦ I hiring 1939. the «. B. absorbed 1 a total of 14.8 percent of all of I Japan's esport*
Crop Inivance Asrares Power J Cl *•’*.• tt!»*r* tTftmfc AAR rAAraoaata a * •>***!» •e— t• * 1,000 Io laMrad Ts • • ’ **••’* *• prodootloa * . ‘ ***?» OMHr of mM-M ■<?•- ?•' •‘•/ V; iaft eoWAftmak ee—a« —- An el * Ae ® • ® * vVWY*Ww*O* g *”d*g * • g * g # *g • g gs I *g 11.901 .. *, *. .{ttlaotod eerot •, f * .• • ioemo< - -IM.MOf > ♦p • Kttlaotod letorod V*.‘ • , l ( Xy. ** JI ** tfM»«»ioa-5.i«2,0?1t»— I ~>iMpii ■ • .* ’ e X h. y* v*q t > * ll* *’J l *!* el J J*. *W ar*
COLD WAVE AND K-OWTtNCtm FHOM PAOR OWR) sad central Teas* and there was ra n on the north Pa« ific coast Berviee tnadooust* fit. Paul. Minn. Mar It fIJ-» Gov Harold E Mtaesen aald today he had notified secretary -if enmmerce Jes»e Jone* that the great •oM of life In Minnesota and North Dakota during th* weekend storm was "contributed to by Inadequate weather bureau service” tn the area. The weather bureau In the east can forecast within 4k hours when * hurricane will hit Flnrtda." fits*•ea said There must be aome way to have warned those people In Minnesota and North Dakota.” In Minneapolis M R llovde. D. N meterMoglst. *ald It was "logical'' that a regional foceca*t Ing office should be established In Minneapolis, but be defended the accuracy of the bureaus predic flaw. He said that in the forecast Maturday before the storm a cold wave and strong north winds were predicted snd farmer* were warned to shelter their livestock V. R citlaaas are rpend ng more money for newspaper *ul> < rlptlon* now than even In the lush days of 1929. according to the Census Annul newspaper receipt* tram »atv scrlptloas amount to over 1304.600 <*oo Th I* was an annual Increase of fIVOkS itoe in tea year*. Wealthy Woman Slair Mra. Rath Rawtiaa Rs* bead Uttered by a wise bottia, th* body of Mr*. Ruth Rawliaa, playgtrl wife of a wealthy Canadtaa mining man, waa found to a ditch nvar Galnsviße, Ha . after a drink-: mg bout with two tail driver*.' ■ Arrested, am* driver blamed the I . other for the actual slaying. I
GREAT BRITAIN roNTIMUBD rvtOM PAriß OMR I Isrh nf nsglvailcuial lights, etc i Nor doe* it Im lad* d*m«g*d «hlp* 1 laid up for repair a sahetsniial I total In ll*elf. It la believed do* to freqaent German air attacks which Injured hut do not sink merchant The British frankly state lhat losses have not reached the peak , espected as weather conditions for submarine operation* Improve A hint of what may be In stare was given In • dispatch from Washington which reported receipt of information Indicating thai a long range German submarine may be enroute to start operation* <df the American coaat. I'allk* the world war there has been little or no authenticated ac tlvlty by 1' boats off the American coast However. It wa* though' that the Steadily increasing «tresm of American aid la Britain might have tempted Germany to aeeh 'o aink ships carrying that aid close | to the <ource Nhlp* In American water* are not convoyed a* they are on the routes from Hallfaa to Britain However, the t*. M navy since start of th* war ha* maintained an elaborate and far-reaching neutrality patrol aeveral hundred mile* off the American < oust In order to observe any belligerent activity In th* I’. M. neutrality tone German embassy source* declln ed comment on th* »übmarine report but Informed German sources scouted the suggestion that any Natl submarine would he ord-red Into the t! M neutrality son* The attent of aid which the I'nlled dhate* Is preparing to give to Britain waa indicated by a lam don speech of W Averell Harriman. special representative <M President Roosevelt, who said that the t'nited Mtale* Is ready to make McriDcs* In its diet. If necessary, in order lhat Britain may got the food *he needs to carry on the war U. M ambassador John G Wlnsnt In hla initial address In Britain underlined the American shoulder-to-oboulder po*6ion with Britain In I a epee h denouncing Nas Ism and pledging American cooperation with free peoples In setting np a ! free world The Balkan situation appeared ' lo be close to a showdown Istanbul believed that Germany will be forced to move against I Greece shorily If she I* to win ’.he race with Britain for the military Initiative In the Balkan* Germany and Britain continued to pour troop* Into Bulgaria snd Greece, respectively. British readers for the first lime reed In their newspaper* dispatches from ear- .' irepoadents la the middle east telling of huge convoy* which carried British material and troop* from Aleisndri* to Firaeu*. port of I Athens. Turkey believed that Germany i still was hoping to obtain from - Jugoslavia the use of the Important south Jugoalav pastes for an attack *on Greece. But from Belgrade I came word that the Jugoslav* still j appear to be stalling off the Nasis snd declining <o adhere lo the axis Jugoslavia seemed to be undergoing * resurgence of patriotic spirit, possibly Induced lo some degree by Britain’s strong measure* In Greece and actlva Turkish diplomatic effort* Jugoslav defense measures vere on the increase and ware aald to be still Incomplete Both Athens and London con Hnusd to report failure of an Italian offensive la Albania last week. Athena placed Italian looses al -lO.UtMi effective* and said the li»lI lans ware rushing reinforcement* . Into Albania. London, mor* cm•arvativa and probably more sccur 1 ately slashed the Greek figure i.n , Italian loose* but said that the . Greek* took 3.606 prisoner*. Lon- ; don spectfied *everal Italian dlrl sioni which were eat up badly In the fighting on a 26-mile front around Tegelirl. 1 " a During the World war, the U. 8 produced 11.740 airpiaae* ROY S. JOHNSON AUCTIONEER OcCßtir?, tlMl Rhone Offleo 104 Reeldense 100 Marek 19—0. C. Ewell, farm equipment. Preble, Ind. Marell 30 — Barg Uptgraf: A Wheeler. 8 mile* weet of Geneva. Mar 24 LaCrosse Co. Guernsey ■ale. West Salem. Wla. March 18 — Carol Troutner. 1 aalte west of Ohio City. Mar. 0-Ruaaail L Hall. 821 W. Market «traet, Bluffton, led. J. p. fUnmann ancU<Mi«r Apr. 9- Virginia Blate AberdeenAngtU cattle sale, CUwatoa, Va.
TTBDAY. March ii | J
To saw on ovoiy pack of s mo u t ■ A A Won't labfl you a "miser B , ;J Men welLtodo smoke Manrelj B >Of And prefer the tag of-wiser •- Him Tht Cigar9tt9 of irtsuaNO HCttHfaj. sw'usMiX * 1; p,.
BRITISH RAID tCONTIMVBD FBOIB PAOB OM»k> German plane* fHwnbwl ports on ihe east coaet of Mcotlaad German plane* yesterday *hot down four barrage balloon* over Dover, the communique added During armed reconnaissance over the North R*a according to the •-ommunlq"* German plane* sank a merchant ship of shout 4 ••• tons off Newcastle. One submarine, the high com mand said, reported *lnklng five armed merchantmen totaling 39.3W6 ton* from convoy* The communique made no mention of the alleged torpedoing by German torpedo plane* of two British hattle*htp* west of Crete. ** reported by the German news agency yeeterday. But today's Italian high command communique • <HMaltied the assertion - - — NaziM ArreMt Two More U. S. Newsmen Berlin. Mar 18- <UR> -Gecmall military authorltle* have arrested Jay Allen, an American correspondent for the North American Newspaper Alliance, and another American newspaper man. unidentified, who tried to cross the demarcation Hue between occupied sad uaoccapied France without a permit, accordlag to DNR. th* officials new* agency. DNR said the two men bad traveled to Paris from unoccupied France without permlsslim several day* ago Th* I’nlled Atate* • barge d'affaire* at Parte Maynard | B Berne* apparently wanted to' Intervene at first, hat later deetd-
BROADWAY NIGHTS E By AXEL STORM I <=-—1? „ BUtrtOl.a k* FMtunu SroCimt. tor :.. = K
NEW YORK—There are three schools of thought regardins George Bernard Shaw among the critics of New York's then tra. One holds that he's a pUte with whiskers: one that he's an aged and extremely obstreper ous enfant terrible: one that he's a great dramatist whose least-considered work to world shaking in portent On the basts of the revival of bis The Doctor's Dilemma” we incline to Uw first clßßStficßtlon, making him out a pixie, whiskers and all—but a tin de siede pixie in the literal sense. He was a pixie at the turn of the century. In thio play he's a rather longwuxMl Bneicntc Isboiisg <fidloos variations on an outmoded them#. Against the background of disagreement among doctors. Mr. Shaw poses a moral question. The man who was knighted for his disco Tories in serology falls tn love with the wife of a tubercular artist The artist to a genius, but as a man. a verttable stinker. Having but one more bed tn his clinic, the aero legist turns the artist over to g wßcicy BXfWiiYwntßr, cures bd old friend, b ptnnUctß general of tuberculosis, loses the woman ho tries to get by having ths doctor friend's ignorance kill off the husband. Pretty old hat. of course But at the turn of the century, when it wasn't general knowledge | that many a dignified medico s austere gray thatch eowed a medical vacuum, it was hot stuff. Science has ehanged since then and so have doctors. That dates the play badly and puts Mr. Shaw at a dtaadvan»But even in the early audiences must have become rather tired of the talk, talk, talk with which Shaw spun his ptay from curtain to curtain, tt's bright enough talk, we grant you. but the humor to heavy, much too heavy for the sharp-tongued Shaw, and the action alow indeed. It would have been an art of charity an the part of Mtos Katharine Cornell not to have revived The Doctor's Dilemma". What the play leaked, the cart supplied. With Mtos Cornea wore Raymond Massey, Clarence Derwent. Whitford Km* Ralph Forbes, Cecil Humphreys, Cetin Keith-Jahn-om and Bramwell neither. A east like this could have recited the alphabet tor three acts and ■Mde as much dramatie meat
ed to take no .1 when he iea-n.-.) j, x violated r-vu. t - lA( , ■ Special ludut Take. I Cbm* In HTW' lai I |-I». j.., ,r the Jay lirru.’ • 1-ase of th- F - • — s«sln«t M i: •lay The .11,- s the compsr.y .-i , tnent for |»’l . ( .. the defmidan- , 1911 After haarin* Jenkinvl»ement Fcii | ... John I. In-Vo,- . repreaentmi th. . j I ** tendaut. r<-,|» • . • •inducted in th. -. K the court room- , was in prngrr«* - , ' Itself The ' half a day — ' I®* Repair Damage f At Court Court ho.i-. . ieady to >u»rje<' , in-on:tic when building to fn.ij ;>• . .. She comrtt - oa the Door Plaster and Irr:. k » . ~ '•d all over th.- Co - . ed. however ■ or constant caused the pl*.’. ,■ celling had been 'time Repairitw »>- , started by Mike Re • Trade In a Good I * >
at It We doubt thst The D» B tor's Dilemma' will remain tong B at the Shubert Theatre ■ Another opt-mng this vset B! was "They Walk Alon'. a»» B <ier mystery by M -x Catta it B the John Golden Theatre. rta B Miss Eha Lanchertt: and M s B Carol Goodner in the iexdinf B roles There's sotr- 1- -g atxM B British playwrights tnat raato !g them give their al! to a nrur-rt B mystery. Baying d *'-ora» B on the moor, mama-a. laughte B women who sneak in the orp= K lofts of churches to piay hymu ME in the middle erf th<- night But ■> in its way “They Walk Akxv does pretty well it you expect B to bo trered. A servant girl (Mins Landes ■ ter) reports for work at tr.e Tv S lent farm near Lincoln. Err B« land, just as th* fam.ly is Bn Ing for a harvest ball. Shea B» taken in forthwith, but hai the K unhappy faculty of being dri>« Bp daffy by organ music. wantinf IK to ptay It in the middle of the ■ night. Another of her failmp B, to men. Men. of course, have 1 falling for her Sh- Kiwlu off ■ throe of the local ladx before Mias Goodner. as 8.-ss Stas K forth, allows the seed of dou« S which she herself had p'snted B In her own bosom, to blossan, n Bnd manages to kill the impressionsbk- young son befov B they catch up with her B] throttles 'em. A little Uss. w*« ■ she's alone with a man a sudden access of maniacal stneniP M makes this dubious feat fris’ib* ■ There are screams and light m nfhg flashes, the sound of M the baytag of dog*, mad g.«k» » and uncontrollable t*" !* 11 " “They Walk Atone", and Mr- ■ Catto gives you your moneyi ■ worth. The ptay scared the B out of a hefty lady in th* M behind us, and there was mW ® a gasp in the audience i-o® K time to time. ..... K Again, the cart was bet» r K than the ptay. With Mis* La g Chester and Mias Goodner »*« ■ OUve Deering, who did a ■ job as the young.sister; ■ fftanforth as the unimaginative husband of Miss Goodner, a « P. Kaye was the k!nd-h**rt« g f£her; Martin Manbus a* th* g young tad who finally g and Erfcrd Gage as Mim Lx* ■ taTs rather dull H thrillers go They Walk Atone W to a fair job, extremely •« acted. It's not the best ***■ tn the theatro. but rt» « » better than playing souuire. ® | gtaa« to toe movies. |
