Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1945 — Page 16

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iq 3 Hinted Ready to Carve Eastern Reich for Poland |

" LONDON, Feb. 5 (U. P).—A claim _ by the Polish provisional govern- |

ment ‘to a broad: slice of eastern _ Germany enlivened speculation over

fhe allied Big Three meeting today. |

. President Boleslaw Berut of the

provisional government told visite ‘ing foreign correspondents at war- |

paw that ‘nis governmeht antended | to extend its authority over Sovietliberated territory as far west as . the Oder and Neisse rivers.

Such action would lop off virtually with the Polish question and the] | Espanola,”

all of German Pomerania and Si-

Jesia, the latter one of the most im- many among their major problems. eker, chairman.

portant coal-producing and indus-| trial areas in the reich. It also would include a major portion of Berlin's home province of pe

The Oder river runs into the | J Paltic at Stettin and to the south flows within 30 miles of Berlin. The

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Neisse empties into’ the Oder at a point 55 miles southeast of Berlin land has its headwaters in Czecho- | | slovakia just north of Prague. Bres- | Iai is 90 miles east of the Neisse. Berut said representatives of the Polish government already were establishing civil administration in

HIGH TO STAGE

Five Vaudeville Acts This Week-End.

liberated areas of German Silesia. The report came as neutral sources speculated that President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill | land Premier Stalin were in the | {midst of their second conference,

post-war dismemberment of Ger-|

London sources said some definite ward “of the ,Big Three meeting could be expected this week.

At Stalingrad?

An Istanbul dispatch said it was | ‘rumored in Balkan diplomatic | circles” that the meeting was being |

| Some ‘sources believed the con- |

|ferees were considering proposals | [to give the European advisory comfission broad new powers for coh- | {trolling -Germany sand possibly. making it the nucleus for a- new

{international consultative commis-

sion of the big powers. They were believed to be weighing the advisability of giving the | commission active policy-making powers for the administration of | Germany in the post-surrender | period. The commission has been | hamstrung because its powers have had_no more than the strength of recommendations. - ’

Wife of Soldier.

In Service Here |

{ WHILE SGT.” ROBERT L. | BUFFALOE was being decorated | | with a silver star for gallantry in action, ‘his wife, . Mrs. Virginia - | | Buffaloe has made her own contribution to the war effort: She is a chauffeur at the army air forces depot at the Indiana fairgro un d, where she has | the . “pleasant but absorbing task of driving officers on official business.” a former resident here Mrs. Buffaloe wrote his wife that he went “wherever there was trouble.” He penetrated enemy . territory under heavy fire to obtain accurate firing data for American gun positions and was decorated specifically for his activities against the Germans from Nov. 18 to Dec. 5.° At present, Sgt. Buffaloe is somewhere in Belgium, while | Mrs. Buffaloe lives at 2901 E. Michigan st.

INITIATION OF FIVE SCHEDULED BY LODGE

| Ramona Grove, 63, Supreme | | Forest Woodmen circle, will have] | initiation of five candidates at 8 p. m. today in Castle hall, 230 E. Ohio st. The Addie Braly guards drill team {will assist new officers in the cere- | monies. ,Mrs. Rose Green, Mrs. {Ermal Austin, Mrs. Evelyn Joyce |and Mrs. Margaret Deckert also will {help in the rituals. Mrs. Green will preside and Mrs | May Beaver, national attendant and | state manager, will give a resume. of {the meeting held with the national president talley. Mrs. Austin, who {is leaving to assume her duties as {new state manager of Wisconsin land Minnesota, will be honored { guest.

3 FORMER HARRISON OFFICERS PROMOTED

Three former Ft. Harrison officers | | pave been appointed brigadier generals. They are LeGrande A. Diller, on ithe staff of Gen. Douglas MacArthur; Einar B. Gjelsteen and George w, Read Jr. {was in command of company D.| {11th infantry; Gen. .Gjelsteen, an| |officer in the 3d field artillery, and |

|Gen, Read, an aid to his ad who was in command of the Fifth|

corps area with headquarters at | Pt. Harrison at that time.

| LODGE UNIT TO MEET Itasca council No. 337, Degree of {| Pocahontds, will meet at 8 p. m, Feb. 13, in Castle hall, 230 E. Ohio st.

Gen, Diller formerly |

Shortridge high school's annual Junior vaudeville, presented by the 1946 class, will be offered Friday

VARIETY SHOW, !

Shortridge Juniors to Offer,

Cho r Joins In Symphony

Beethoven and Carpenter's 'Song ‘of Faith' on Bill.

By JEAN KERCHEVAL

The Indianapolis symphony orichestra and the Indianapolis symphonic choir joined forces for the first time this year for the

and Saturday ih Caleb Mills hall. % Five acts will be featured in the | production. A Spanish act, “Jota is sponsored by Miss Louise Reiter with Dorothy Schon-| “Syncopated Scots,” coached by Debbie McDougal and! Dotti Friedland, chairman, is spon-

|sored by Mrs. Charlotte Ryker and | was presented.

Miss Barbara Turner, John Rawlings, Robert Green aM Virginia Black will be in the ‘My| Mummy Dene Ptolemy” act, spon-| | sored by “Miss Mona Jane wilson. | Robert C. Black and Mrs. Gertrude Eckert, are sponsors for Glenn] | Speckman’s “Musical Revue,” and| Mrs. Margaret Farmer for Jeanne Trulock's number, “A Hat Land of Fantasy.’ | Stagehands Named

Working behind the scenes will

|seventh pair of subscription con[certs at the -Murat Saturday night land yesterday afternoon. Chief place on the program was

POLIS TIMES

«MONDAY, FEB. 5, 195

At the Circle

Shep Fields (above) and his orchestt#i* are featured on the Circle stage this week.

HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 5 (U, P.)— The motion picture “Going My Way,” whose star, Bing Crosby, pulled the highest box office re"turns of any actor in 1944—today {won the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ nominations. for seven coveted ‘bscar” awards. For his performance in the .picture, Barry Fitzgerald became the first actor in academy history to be nominated for awards for both the best performance by an actor and the best performance by.a support ing actor. Fitzgerald and Crosby, who also

(taken by - Beethoven's Symphony INo. 9 in D. Minor. John Alden {Carpenter's ‘Song of Faith” also|

Unique for Finale

Soloists for the choral movement of Beethoven's last symphonic {work were Jean Carlton, soprano; Mary Van Kirk, contralto; Harold Haugh, tenor, and John De Surra,| baritone. The combination of choir and orchestra is always _ an | pressive- sight ‘and tHey performed © both compositions very satis- | factorily.

The Ninth symphony, unique for(Mr. and Mrs. Archer, and Billie,

'Kiss and Tell’

im- | Popular comedy,

Comedy Bill " Opens Here

Week's Run at English's.

“Kiss and Tell,” F. Hugh Herbert's | begins a six-day |

ngagement at English's tonight.

Starring in the show will be Kath- | final balloting Feb, 10 to select the erine Warren and Jack Davis as| | winners, to be announced March 15.

Starts for

was nominated for the “Oscar” for best actor, played the roles of two Catholic priests in “Going My| Way.” | The picture also was nominated | as best movie of the year, the best written screen play and the best original motion - picture story. Its director, MeCarey, was nominated for achievement in directing and the tune “Swinging on a Star” was nom=inated best original song.

{the film industry will participate in

‘Going My Way' Wins Nominations For-Seven 'Oscdr’ Movie Awards

Approximately 9000 members of

be Don Goelzer, chairman; Willlam |, = a) finale and its eight sep-|Lou Watt, their teen-age daughter RE JECTEE HIKES 18 MI.|

Hall, Gerry Rappaport, George Stone, Ralph Klages, Tom Rafferty, | {hart, Tom MacConnell, Robert {Bon Hueber, Eddie Hill, James Lodwick and Richard Sutton, all on the stage crew. Other workers are: Light crew, DonrAufderheide;-chairman; Richard Phillabaum, Jay Meador, James] Demlow, John Zimmerman, Guy | Taylor and Joe Epstein; construc-| tion crew, James Reid, chairman; | Robert Chevalier, Paul Sweany, John Finot and Don Hippensteel. Make-up committee, Marie Bart|ling, chairman; | Tavel, Gloria Dotty, Judy Slattery, | | Mary Manolios, {Joan Gutzwiller, Virginia Rock, Pat |

1

Mary Underhill, rity of character.”

| Mary Nunamaker, Betty Fogel, Ann]

Martha Rafnel, | spoken by August J. Sieloff.

arate themes, was written to Schil-| ler's “Ode to Joy” and in spite of] | ways a popular work. Its message |

He sadness of a world at war. Song Is Inspiring

| Corliss, all members of the troupe 0 R | which played more than 80 weeks in| TQ) WAR JOB IN SNOW | Thurman Anderson, William Eck-| infrequent performance, is al-| Chicago. Miss Watt was a junior at North-| |Adams, Earl Trimpe, James Jay,| s “fiendship and joy, accentuates Western university a year ago and|P.) — Everett Cooper, | was active in the school's plays. turned down by army examiners be- | When she went to New York to try| |cause of bad legs, today was. cited |her luck in professional work, she by Chairman J. A. Krug of the war

ELLWOOD CITY, Pa., Feb. 5 (U. who was

But if Beethoven's Ninth sym- | was chosen as the leading candidate | production hoard ‘for service be-

phony advocates lofty ideals, |less so does Carpenter's Faith.” Written in commemoration of the 200th anniversary George Washington's birth, based on the ‘priceless inheritance | t that - has come down to us from |

no|of more than 100 girls to play the| yond the call of normal duty” “Song of | Corliss role. This is Mr. Davis’-second year in of the role of the father although he|qay at his war plant job. it is|joined the Chicago company less| Cooper, a painter employed at the

han a year ago.

Also in the cast will be Caddell

be= | cause he walked 18 miles over snow=|drifted roads Tather than miss a

#5 TYE

Constance oa, a Taylor The psychological chiller “Gas- | Bl ng Cr

light” also was nominated as best! picture of the year, and its stars, | Ingrid, ‘Bergman, Charles Boyer and | Angela Lansbury, were named as best -actress, best actor and best supporting actress, respectively,

Swedish Miss - Bergman was | nudged out of the award last year by newcomer Jennifer Jones, who was mentioned this year as a can-| didate for supporting honors for her role in “Since You Went

MARILYN FURS Away,” nominated as one of he i

best pictures of the year, 29 E. Ohio St.

===MARTENS CONCERTS, INC. ENGLISH THEATRE, SUNDAY, FEB. 11, 3 P, M.

ROBERT CASADESUS

Outstanding ‘Pianist : Prices—-$3.60-$3.00-52.40-$1.20, Tax Incl. MARTENS CONCERTS, INC. — GLADYS ALWES MUSIC SHOPPE ROOM 201 38 MONUMENT CIRCLE FR. 8761

First Indianapolis Showin Allan Fans val aily Vernon : “SHERIFF OF § NDOWN" Billy ‘Gilbert, “Orasy Knights” HManbunt_of Mystery Island’’—News

INDIANAPOLIS Exclusive Furriers

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[Ellwood City plant of the National|

| Tube Corp, a U. 8. Steel Corp,

| George Washington's selfless integ- | | Burroughs as Dexter, Corliss's boy| subsidiary, walked from his home

The Washing-| | friend; Alice John, ‘Billy Saunders, | at Slippefy Rock to the plant dur-

ton recitative, consisting of excerpts | Arlene Ainsley, Gene Lyons, Ruth ing a heavy snowstorm, negotiating

{from Washington's - writings,

were Conley George Baehr, Donald Mc- { Clelland, Eva Paspsil. Gerald Sor- | hours. Few musical works have expressed nell, ‘Kirk Brown and William J.

(Harrison, “Marilyn. Janson, Donna | quite so well as this the dignity of | McCarthy.

| Sue McKee, Lora Mae Linton, Isabel] | Coshow, Joanne Eberg, Joan Spitz-|

Inagel, Clair Jackson, Ruth Markey, |

| Suzy Shepherd, Mary Dien Pierre, | Beverly Davidson, Alberta Meyer, | { Dorothy Feckman, Norma Hussy,| | Phyllis Padrick and Jean Cox. | Miss Jeanne Snodgrass, daughter |of Mrs. Ella M. Snodgrass, 1041 S. State ave, is vaudeville chairman.

LOCAL LIVING GOST CLIMBS .5 PER GENT

Times Special

NEW. YORK, Feb. 5—According to the National Industrial Conference board, living costs of Indianapolis wage earners and lower{salaried clerical workers rose .5 per |cent from November to December of the past year. Food prices rose 1.1 per cent. Sundries and household fiirnishings showed an increase of 0.2 per cent, and clothing rose 0.1 per cent. Hous ne fuel, . and light remained the

ame. | Living. costs, compared with De|cember 1943, were 2.7 higher. The board’s index of the cost of living in Indianapolis, based on the January, 1839, figure of 100, was 127.5 in December, As compared with 126.9 in November and 124.1 in De- | cember of 1943.

Lost Teeth Cause Bath in Ice Water

PITTSBURGH, Feb..5 (U. P.). —With John L. Fischer it’s the whole tooth and nothing but the tooth. Fischer, who weighs 213 pounds, was crossing a downtown bridge when he became ill. As he leaned over the railing, his false teeth fell ‘into the icy Allegheny river. Thinking the ice was strong ?| enough to bear his weight, Fischer ventured on the icy surface and was- soon floundering in; the Allegheny. He was rescued and taken to a hospital for treatment for exposure but his teeth remained in the river.

SEEK EMMY HASSLER

The home service department of| the Indianapolis Red Cross has a | message for ‘Mrs. from Karl Hanburger, Struthutten,| uber Neunkirchen Kr. Siegen, and| seeking her wheteabouts. A letter sent to Mrs. Hassler at R. R. 15, | Box 687, has been returned.

if

J Info Warm

Times Foreign Service WITH U. 8. FORCES, EAST OF ST. VITH (Delayed) —Trust a boy from Gary, Ind. to make ingenious uses of steel to provide himself a snug shelter against the | snow and cold of the Ardennes. In this case the steel was an abandoned hill of knocked-out German self-propelled guns and the Gary man, 26-year-old 8. Sgt. Harold Flood, of ‘the armored infantry. ‘ What attracted a visitor's attention to Floods domicile was the unfamiliar sight of a tin ¢himney sticking up through the top of a vehicle which looked a good deal like a Tiger tank. The

'SOLTIS and FRAY

v» Hoosier Converts Nazi Guns.

Home at Front

chimney was belching smoke.

Flood and a half-dozen companions were warming themselves around a small coal stove. They were all halftrack drivers, assigned to the cold, punishing and dangerous job of shuttling rations and ammunition up to the troops engaged in our attack. They were using the self-pro-pelled gun-housing as a shelter between trips and they slept in it in relays at night. It's a mystery, to everybody where so many G. I. s get their stoves. ‘You find them in frontmost foxholes as soon as a front grows stationary. This is a fluid front at the moment, however, and the lads doing the actual attacking lack such refinements. It seems that good fortiine as well as good management attended Flood. Copyright, an

The Chicago Daily News,

Emmy Hassler |

1043 by The Indianapolis | Tine

| America. The expression of the ideals upon which this government was founded cannot he repeated

. Matinees ‘will be held Wednesday | and Saturday in addition to the six| evening performances.

| the 18 miles in five and one-half

( CIRCLE -Stagz -)

wt RETISORL

{too often in these times and Cary | penter’s text and music do it very | well.

. Zoo Noises Lull Veteran fo Sleep CHICAGO, Feb. 5 (U. P.).—Pfc. Floyd Robertson had been both.ered with insomnia since his return from the South Pacific, so he went over to Brookfield zoo the other night 40 get a little sleep. ’ When the superintendent was making the rounds of the parrot house, he came upon a soldier stretched out on a bench fast asleep. J Later, Robertson, en route to his home in Akron, O., on a 30-day leave after service in New Guinea, admitted it was the first good night's sleep he'd had since he came back to the states. ' “1 miss the chatter of parrots and _cockatoos,” he told the startled zoo keeper, “1 guess I've got so used. to the jungle noises that I'm finding it hard to go to sleep without them.”

LOS ANGELES TO PLAY ANGEL TO GREEK CITY,

LOS ANGELES, Feb. 5 (U. P.).—| The little Greek city of Argos, devastated by Nazi invaders, was notified today that the munificent county of Los Angeles would not renege on its promise to rebuild the city after the war. The promise was made in 1842 in a burst of pre-election generosity, when county supervisors resolved to. finance rebuilding of the Greek city after its liberation. They received formal notice last month that Argos was liberated and anxious to rebuild. All they lacked was the money. Today, the supervisors wired Greek Ambassador Cimon P. Diamontopoulos that a fund-raising campaign would be staged to defray | cost of rebuilding

‘FREEZE ACCENTUATES

Times Amusement

Clock

OPENING TODAY

ENGLISH'S

“Kiss and Tell” ~with Billie Lou Watt, Katharine Warren and Jack Davis, at 8.30

CURRENT FEATURES . CIRCLE f

stage, Shep Fields ang 2 orchestra, at 12:55, 3: 1, : and 9:3

“Her Lucky Night,” with the Andrews sisters, at 11:15, 2:15, 5:15, 8 and 10:35.

INDIANA

“The Keys of the Kingdosh,” with Gregory Peck, Thomas Mitchell and Vincent Price, at 11:20, 1:55, 4:30, 7:05 and 9:45

LYRIC

“To Have and Have Not,” with Humphrey Bogart and Hoagy Carmichae. at. 11. 1:12, 3.24, 5:36, 7:48

and 10. LOEW'S .

“Meet Me in St. [puis,” with Judy Garland and Margaret O'Brien, at 11:50, 2:18, 4:46, 7:14 and 9:45.

Shef FIELDS

‘Popular Maestro & Nis Now Rhythms’

Fwy WO OD

‘Radie’s Top Singing Master of Coromenies’

%zy KELLY 4

‘Radio & Hollywood's Favorite Comedienne’

/ MEREDITH BLAKE © GENE MARTIN ® TOMMY LUCAS © THE FONTAIN

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IN TECHNICOLOR

CRISIS IN NEW YORK

ALBANY, Feb. 5 (U. P.).—Sleet | land rain freezing on the ground | {glazed most of New York state to- | |day, momentarily checking an of - fensive against winter's grip on railroads and highways. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey and | Mayor Fiorello la. Guardia of New York City broadcast warnings of | “oritical” developments in . the state's coal, food and livestock feed emergency. Dewey said, however, the transportation crisis “should soon be over.”

CHARGES MIS-STEAK |

~NEW. YORK, Feb. 5 (U. P).—| Daniel Tierney, 37, was held in| $500 bond today for hearing | Wednesday on a charge of dis- | orderly conduct. His wife complained he hit her with a five-| pound steak, bruising her lip. She sald she waited in line three. hours to buy what hit her.

If Your Child Is Coughing,

Saple heal raw, tender, ine

|

ENGLISH

2 Years in New York and Chicago

TONIGHT THRU SAT, 8:30 MATINEES WED. & SAT, 2130

Gay Hit F. HUGH HERBERT KATHARINE | JACK o BILLIE LOU WARREN DAVIS WATT ond @ Goy Breedway a

WED. MAT,

EVES. 60c, $1.20, $1.80, $2.40, $3.00

SAT. MAT. 60¢c, $1.20, $1.80, $2.40, Includes Tax

60c, $1.20, $1.80

Screenplay by Don Hartman, Sis wi rein Finan

Sucliana |

rims i

Starts Wednesday

(XI 10 RPS. 0 DUA RE

__._ TONITE—Adults, 5:45 "Til 6—80¢ Wallace Beery—Binnle Barnes

“Barbary Coast Gent” Jon “San Diego | Love You”

5:45 Ann —Sothern—John-—Hodiak

\“MAISIE_GOES T0 RENO” |

Cary Grant—E. Barrymore

“None But the Lonely Heart”

TONITE—Adults,

Gene Tierney ™ “LAURA” “Atlantic “City”

Gene Tierney “LAURA” ie. PLUS oe “Music in Manhattan”

“TOGETHER AGAI

Plus

“Forty Thieves”

Talbott at 22a

TALBOTT Frederio March

“I MARRIED A WITCH Gene Tierney “SUNDOWN"

CARL NIESSE SUGGESTS TODAY

V

"OLLEGF at 63rd FREE PARKING Monty Wooley—June Haver “IRISH EYES ARE SMILING” Lana Turner “DRAMATIC BCHOOL”

" rts sent

19th F 4 Stratford. Ed acy il E"

“N FOR LOY

0 TIME Ann Miller "EVER

SINCE VENUS" reanitavmalf

COME EARLY - OPEN 6:15 Greer’ Garson—Walter Pidgeon

“MRS. PARKINGTON"

Simone Simon--James Ellison

‘Johnny Doesn't Live Here’

Cartoon—Late News

Neighborhood Theater Directory | EAST SIDE ae NORTH SIDE ; REX Northwestern p43 b lo! L. Turner A: I Roy Rogers “San Nygrando Valley” rn r— Plus T Tretnestny @ 25€ 5:50 Goddard MacMurray Susan Hayworth “FOREST RANGERS” Paul LADD MORGAN HENKEID “JOAN OF PARIS” E. Wash. af New Jersey Huge Cast of Stars “FOLLOW THE BOY 4630 1 EMERSON “0. Greer Garson—Walter Pidgeon ichard Arlen—Ellen Drew “THAT'S MY BABY” SHERIDAN E. Wash. Richard Dix “AMERICAN EMPIRE" PLUS! A “CARTOON REVUE” 40 Revival Minutes of Fun ————

sist & i “Marriage Is Private Affair” : RI SE. 10th » « PARK FREE Paulette Fred Alan Michele HE ——— PARAMOUNT Martha O’'Discoll “WEEK-END PASS” “MRS. PARKINGTON" 6116 Joel MoCrea “GREAT MOMENT” With Donald Duck, Goofy, Hollywood 1802 Boosevgih

IP e, Pork Pi | Bugs Bunny, Popey ’ Ruth Terry “THREE LITTLE SISTERS" Open CH.

SE Richard Dix “AMERICAN EMPIRE" PARKER "0 yr E. 10th 6:45 Sidney: Toler “BLACK MAGIC” Bela Lugosi “RE

TURN OF APE MAN" TACOMA

S442 E. Wash. St Doors Open 5:45 P. M.

MA-7088 Shows at 6 and 9 Claudette Colbert—Jennifer Jones Robt. Walker—Jos, Cotten “SINCE You WENT AWAY" - 30th & Illinois

33 ; NG Te ESQUIR TA-7400

Wm, Powell—Hedy L. £5500 E. WAS iMG Jas. Craig “HEAVENLY BODY" Paulette

Diana Barrymore—Robt. Cummin Goddard * Milland —

Kay Francis “BETWEEN US “LADY HAS PLANS"

Rosalind * Fred WEST SIDE Russell MacMurray STATE ©%W. eity Hatton

“fAKE A LETTER, DARLING’ “MIRAC pC Schcken 38 Betty Grable

MORGAN'S CREEK" MECCA , N. Noble John Harvey

2th and Centra) Irene Dunne-Chas. Boyer “TOGETHER’ AGAIN: ohn Carradine—Larry Parks LACK PARACH KE"

ENGLISH 3 0

and h flamed bronchial mucous meme branes. Tell your a bottle of Creom ding that

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31.90. SAT. MAT. Oreh., $8.00 $1.90, Please enclose.

+... SATURDAY MATINEE GILBERT MILLER

LE OF i RB 8. Kids “MILLION DOLLAR Kip» “PIN-UP GIRL" Erie Portman “UNCENSORED”

OLD TRAIL"™ 7, Wah a | TUXEDO “* Lia" Doors Open 5:45 P. M.,

Pat O'Brien “SECRET COMMAN " _ Constance Moore “ATLANTIC TTY" Shows at 6 and § Claudette Colbert—Jennifer Jones

Belmont a Wash, obt. Walker—Jos, Cotlen

BELMON ant 4 Wa R “SINCE YOU WENT AWAY"

“MAISIE GOES 0 RENO" DREAM ‘gu

Wallace Beery, “BARBARY COAST GENT" | TONIGHT AND TOMORROW yy “ARSENIC AND OLD LACE

DAISY B40 Ww. Michigan ‘Judy “Louisiana Hayride”

Cary -Grant—Ethel BR te ° CPOPEYE CARTOON ¢ FOX NEWS *

SPE EEDWAY a ey

“MUSIC IN MANHATTAN" “IN THE MEANTIME, DARLING”

SOUTH SIDE

"HARRIET"

"by FLORINCE RYERSON and COUN CLEMENTS

RNING: SEND ORDERS EARLY Orch, $3.60; Bale. $3.00, $2.40, AREY au i Bale. §2.40, $1.80; :

Nina Foch “CRY of the WEREWOLF" Ed

“NONE BUT THE LONELY HEART” NORTH SIDE | capper ox ; Dally pn Jmeche-Dady ra Lulubelie & Scotty NATE ATER DANCE ret eet

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Ernie P I hate it.”

BILLS IN LE

Members Work on Filled W

By } Both house day plunged and passage ( line rush to tion yesterde measures to More than tions were in the assembly

an all;time r

The senate the house a b the retiremen feachers from

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The senate sent to the h limit firemen week, includir while sleeping Bills signed enacted into 1 ONE: Rat boarding chil from 75 cents TWO: Res county tax ad view welfare THREE: | $3000 annuall mer governors The house 1 governor a Si

(Continued 0)

AF. OF WORK

Taft and |

New

By N Scripps-H MIAMI, Fek pions of labo the American today in its ce May work-or-The A. P. o assembled he: meeting, chose service measu likely to suc Senator Rober Manpower Cc McNutt as the

Green urging house-approve

{Continued on

TIME

Amusements . Business ..... Comics ...... Crossword... Editorials .:.. Peter Edson. .

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