Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR-A
e %} N S -~
i ATHENS BANNER - HERALD
bkt ;4 - g i s e i
: : ESTABLISHED 1832
fflm Every Evening Except Saturday and Sunday and on Sunday Morning by Athens Publishing
Co. red at the Postoffice at Athens, Ga., as second class mail matter,
Bst et e gge i e e
B.‘L‘- B v s b mne v shdn oo dpeciattie Funsahacendne e irivien EDITOR and PUBLISHER
B. C. LUMPKIN and DAN MAGILL . .......covocr coinnaiinireiiniiininn ASSOCIATE EDITORS
B ittt bt e : : ol Sl Bl o ikt
: NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES
Ward-Griffith Company, Inc., New York, 247 Park Avenue; Boston, Statler Office Building; Atlanta
23 Marietta St.; Los Angeles, 1031 South Broadway; Chicago, Wrigley Building; Detroit, General Motors'
Building; Salt Lake City, Hotel Nehouse; San Fran cisco, 681 Market St. '
i MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed
in this newspaper, as well as all AP News dispatches.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES T
Daily and Sunday by carrier and to Postoffice boxes in the city —— X
B eAR Vi iae bar s haep bRS b s 25
B B MOMERS .. ... %ks.cectenntaioinaiiiaiane se eil b 3.15 |
D B . RS s s 5 R S kes v Cep Rty Kenar e v waria s T egs so S |
O WRGMERE . Dii sl A hamr v e st rhsesiieesvendyaaqys 12.00
SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL: i e ‘
Subscription on R. F. . Routes and in Towns within 50 miles of Athens, eight dollars per year. Sub
scriptions beyond 50 miles from Athens must be paid at City rate.
All subscriptions are payable in advance. Payments in excess of one month should be paid through our
office since we assume no responsibility for paymen ts made to carriers or dealers,
- DAILY MEDITATIONS
For if any be a hearer of
TORRLCANAY, the word, and not a doer, he
is like unto a man behold
-2= A ing his natural face in a
557 i glass. For he beholdeth
himself, and goeth his way and straightway
forgetteth what manner of man he was.
James 1:23-24.
B | e
" “Have you a favoriie Bible verse? Mall to
A. F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel,
Of All the Political Prophets
DA's Louis Bean Looks Best
BY PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON—Of all the political prophets,
Department of Agriculture Economist Louis H. Bean
now looks the best. He missed on the result in the
presidential race, like everybody else. But in his
book, “How to Predict Elections,” published last
summer, he wrote on page 166: “That the Repub
lican victory of 1946 could be short-lived is sug
gested by my analysis of the course a political tide
couid take in the decade beginning with 1948. All
these indicators prior to the Democratic troubles of
early 1948 nominating conventions could be taken
as pointing to victory for the Democratic candidate
in 1948, with a popular vote of 54 to 55 per cent—
in a two-party contest. Such a vote could return
the: Democrats to power in the lower House, giving
them about 55 per cent of the seats.” As it turned
out, the Democrats got about 52 per cent of the
two-party vote, 60 per cent of the House. Bean un
derestimated.
As reported in this column a week before the
election, Louis Bean also predicted: “The President
may succeed o the extent of winning a Democratic
Senate and—as a long shot—a Democratic House
of Representatives. . . . Historically, more Demo
cratic congressmen have been elected in presi
dential election years than in midterm elections.
The' difference is usually 25 to 30 congressmen.”
The way it turned out, the Democrats elected 78
more congressmen in 1948 than-in' 1946.
LABOR PARTY IDEA LOOKS DIFFERENT NOW
Sweeping Democratic = election victory may
change entirely United Auto Workers' plan to
latinch a new political party. In March the UAW
executive board adopted a resolution making its
official political objective “the formation after the
1948 elections of a genuine progressive political
party.” UAW President Walter Reuther restated
thig objective in his column in the “United Auto
Wogker" before the election. Now, however, it is
stated at UAW offices in Washington that Reuther
has been misunderstood. All he wanted was a poli
tit;afi realignment to put all conservatives in one
party, all liberals in another. Reuther has always
run his union “on a very.fluid policy,” it is now
explained. The facts of life at any given moment
always have to be considered, and this political
question will take a lot of study. The UAW board
meets in Detroit this week and the question will
probably be taken up then. Delegates will be in-_
st}‘{icted on what position to take at the coming
CIO national convention. The UAW convention
‘\é,]j be held next spring, at which time a new reso
h§t{on may be passed. A lot depends on how the
Auto Workers consider the Democratic Party is
k?fl]g up to Truman's campaign promises.
FCC CHIEF BURLESQUES FCC :
fil!ederal Communications Chairman Wayne Coy
handed back to the Radio Executives Club of New
York some of the broadcasters’ own hot language
in a recent talk. At the same time, Coy poked fun
ai }he radio industry®s complaints about FCC red
tape. “I have been trying for a long time to get a
péémit to come up here and speak,” Coy began.
“i“hey toid me I had to file my application and
qualifications in triplicate. I was also instructed
to furnish a detailed analysis of my program plans.
I immediately challenged this jurisdiction over my
pregram plans. 1 said it was unconstitutional, I
‘téléphoned my senator and my congressman to put
‘on'the heat. Well 1 waited what seemed an eternity
till my application got to the top of the processing
Ifit At that point I was thrown into a competitive
lfiaiaring. I was ruled against because I wasn’t a
local speaker. But after the oral argument I won
qp} by promising to live in New York.
~-“':“I[ anything I have just said is a reasonable
facsimile of anything any of you have written in a
brief filed before the FCC,” said Coy, “just consider
it due to the laws of chance.”
fOne of the fanciest offices in the Pentagon is
'still kept in the name of the late Gen. John J.
A!?ershing. AEF commander in World War 1. A full
= en‘oxxel and a lieutenant-colonel are assigned to
the office. The general’s favorite chair is kept be
hind the desk and the desk is arranged with paper
& gr&d pen just as though “Black Jack” was expected
: ‘walk in any minute and do business. It will take
_@bout two years to settle Pershing’s estate and’all
bt business affairs. He still gets many letters from
men who served under him and don’t know that
! is dead.
~ The new “mechanical brain” calculating ma
?;e developed at Harvard in 1946 enables one
General Bradley Offers Wise
Prescription for OQur Welfare
After reading General Omar Bradley’s
speech to the Chicago Economiec Club we
are convinced that General Eisenhower
has a wholly worthy successor as chief of
staff. General Bradley’s military hril
liance is unquestioned. But his speech was
marked by the same clear-sighted wisdom,
compassionate wish for peace, and under
standing of the civilian’s viewpoint which
have made General Eisenhower the ad
mired and trusted public figure that he is
General Bradley acknowledged that
military expenditures were high and that
thecy competed with needs of social pro
gress. He said that is the people and Con
gresg, not the military, who must make
the final decision on military budgets and
rearmament. At the same time he ex
pressed the sound view that one division
tor the prevention of war is worth a dozen
divisions for fighting a war. .
General Bradley noted that ‘“‘there is
happily a vast difference between the pos
sibiity and probability of war.” But he
warned that bctween them may lie a “‘twi
light of lension” in which there is danger
ot complacency if the cold war should
become a “war of boredom.”
it was ¢ncouraging to us to see that the
general had bluntiy labeled as “fools”
those persons who talk of winning a war
in a few days with new weapons, or who
say “if war is to come, let it come now.”
And it was more encouraging to hear
from a man, who has a commanding voice
in military policy, a statement of what he
thinks that policy should be.
We need, said General Bradley, a sta
ble, long-range military policy no less
than we need a stable, long-range forcign
policy. It should be a policy that does not
“respond to criges after they have erupt
ed” and does not shift “every time a pa
per is rustled east of the Klbe.”
¥oreign policy today is badly hampered
by interim uncertainty. Military policy is
still hampered by disagreement among
military leaders of our armed serviees,
which seem to be *‘unified” more in name
than in fact. Both situations give cause
for some concern. So it is all the more re
assuring to hear this clear and sane state
ment from the chief of staff, and to fee!
that it is being urged upon our makers of
top policy. : SRR
The makers of top policy include Con
gress, of course, as well as the executive
depratment. And it seems likely that Con
gress will have the same confidence in him
that it had in his distinguished predeces
sors, Generals Eisenhower and Marshall.
If the present chief of staff will talk as
convineingly to Congress — and through
Congress to the people—as he did to the
Economic Club of Chicago, he will prob
ably find strong backing for his wise pre
seription for the nation’s continued wel
farve.
. .
Mechanized Utopia
Because zippers offer quick relief from
the onerous job of fastening buttons,
snaps, buckles and such, their manufac
ture has grown into a $100,000,000-2-
vear industry. And because they also wili
get out of order at the most embarrassing
and frustrating times, we now have a zip
per repair tool which, its maker says, “is
adjustable to 100 percent of all zipper
problems.” We find all this encouraging.
For the gadgets that make our lives sim
pler (and at the same time more complex)
also make jobs.
If this keeps up thes American citizen
may reach the point where he carries
more equipment than a telephone line
man. But that's probably a smal! price to
pay for banishing the specter of techno
logical unemployment.
Families need safety valve people. At
least one member of the family . .. should
be good at relieving others of their trou
bles.—Dr. E. L. Woodward, field con
sultant, National Committee for Mental
Health.
Some people who have been eating
crow since the election might be wise to
save part of it. We understand the nation
is facing a turkey shortage this Thanks
giving.
The hour has conie when we should kick
out of schools and colleges everyone who
s _not _believg in the Constitution, and
does mot-pledge-allegiance. To-the.flag.—
Senator John W. Bricker (R) of Ohio,
THE BANNER-IIERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Rome Plant
Files Suit
Against TWAU
ROME, Ga., Nov. 11 —(AP)—
The Celanese Corporation has
practices against the striking text
ile workers union of America,
charging coercion and restraint of
its employes by the union’s mass
picketing of the Rome plant,
The charges were presented to
the National Labor Relations
Board in Atlanta late yesterday
and named three TWUA agents
as principals in the action. They
were National Executive Vice
President George Baldanzi, In
ternational Representative Joe D.
Pedigo and Truman Henderson, a
textile workers organizer.
The charges against the TWUA,
its Celanese Local 689 and the
three agents specified:
“On the sth day of November,
’1948, and prior and subsequent to
'said date, did coerce and restrain
‘employes of Celanese Corporation
of America by mass picketing
in large groups at ana near the en
trance to said plant, in refusing
to allow automobile trucks to enter
said plant and in refusing to allow
the Southern Railway System to
replace or remove cars into or
from said plant.
By such conduct employes
were intimidated restrained and
coerced from going to their work
contrary to the desires of such
employes. Such illegal action was
engaged in during the strike of
some of the workers at said plant,
which is still continuing.
In the foregoing, in addition,
various of said employes have
been assaulted and beaten by res
pondents and others in conspir
acy with them, have been sub
jected to threats and violence, all
intended by respondents to coerce
and restrain said employes in the '
exercise of their rights under sec- !
tion 7 of the act of congress,
known as the National Labor Re
lations Act.” ‘
Picketing of the plant contin-i
ued today, although no violence
was reported. Some 22 members’
of the TWUA are under bond on |
multiple counts of assault and bat- |
tery and assault to murder fol- !
lowing alleged incidents of vio- |
lence on Monday and Tuesday. b
Federal District Judge Robert
Y 1 Byaeall haoe ‘gat Nov: 16 as the
date for hearing on a motion to!
remana legal proceedings against
the union to Floyd Superior
Court. Union Attorneys last week
petitioned for removal of legal
actions to the Federal court, |
Political Announcement
I hereby announce my candi
dacy for re-election as Council
man from the Fiist Ward in the
City Democratic Primary of No
vember 17th, and will appreciate
the support and influence of all
persons in my behalf.
H. L. “Bob” SEAQRAVAES%_
I hereby announce my candi
dacy for City Council from the
First Ward in the City Demo
cratic Primary to be held on No=-
vember 17, and I respectfully
solicit the vote and influence of
every citizen of the First Ward.
Respectfully,
ERNEST O. AARON
I hereby announce my candi
dacy for City Councilman from
the Fourth Ward in the City
Democratic Primary to be held
November the 17th, Your vofe
and support will be appreciated.
| R. M. SAYE.
FOR CIVIL SERVICE
COMMISSION
I hereby announce my candida
cy for the Civil Service Commis
sion in the Athens City primary
to be held November 17 in accord
ance with the rules and regula
tion set by the Democratic Party.
Your support and influence 1n
my behalf will be appreciated.
DICK WANSLEY
FOR COUNCILMAN
I hereby announce my candi=
iacy for Jouncilman from the
Fourth Ward subject to the rules
and regulations governing the
Democratic Primary to be held
Wednesday, November 17th. I
will appreciate your support and
influence.
| R. W. PHILLIPS.
FOR CIVIL SERVICE
COMMISSIONER
I am a candidate from the
Third Ward for re-election as a
member of the Civil Service
Commission, to be voted on by
the City at large on November
17, subject to the action of the
Democratic Executive Cummit-]
tee. Your vote will be appre
ciated.
W. FRANK BETTS.
I hereby announce -my candi~
dacy for City Council from the
Fifth Ward in the City Demo-i
cratic Primary to be held Nov-1
ember 17, and I respectfully ask‘
the vote and support of every
citizen of my Ward who desires
to see continued the progress and
development of not only the
Fifth Ward but the entire city.
Respectfully,
M. L. GILBERT, JR.
FOR COUNCILMAN
1 herebv announce my candi
dacy for Councilman from the
Fifth Ward subject to rules and
regulations of the Democratic
Executive Committee, in the
‘election to be held Wednesday,
November !7th. Your vote and
support will be appreciated. ¢
b DICK THOMPSON.
T FOR COUNCILMAN
- [ hereby announte my candi
dacy for Councilmen from the
Fifth Ward in the election to be
held Wednesday, November 17th,
subject te the rules and regula
tions of the Demeccratic Commit
tee. Your vote and influence will
be appreciated, .. .
o e
RADEC) CEEITK
WGAU-CBS
THURSDAY EVENING
6:oo—Eric Severeid and News
(CBS).
6:ls—Georgia Association of
Education.
6:3o—American Education
Week. ’
6:4s—Lowell Thomas and News
(CBS).
7:oo—Beulah (CBS).
7:ls—Jack Smith Show (CBS).
7:3o—Club 15 (CBS).
7:45--Edward R. Murrow
(CBS).
8:00—F. B. I. in Peace and War
(CBS).
B:3o—Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost
Persons (CBS).
9:oo—Suspense (CBS).
9:3o—Crime Photographer
(CBS).
10:00—Hallmark Playhuuse
(CBS).
10:30--Danece Orcheswa (CBS).
11:00—Georgia News.
11:05—Dancing in the Dark,
12:00—News.
12:05—Sign Off.
FRIDAY MORNING
6:SS—AP News.
7:00—Good Morning Circle,
7:3o—World News Briefs.
_7:3s—Good Morning Circle.
7:ss—Georgia News.
8:00—CBS World News Round
up (CBS).
B:ls—Western Serenade.
B:3o—Music Shop Parade.
9:OO—CBS News of America
(CBS).
9:ls—Glad Tidings Program.
9:3o—Salute to Music.
9:45—01d Corral.
10:00—Rich’s Radio School. |
10:15—Mid-Morning News. ‘
10:30—Arthur Godfrey (CBS).
11:30—Ring the Bell.
11:45—Rosemary (CBS).
12:00—Wendy Warren and News
(CBS).
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
12:15—Hillbilly Matinee,
12:45—Farm Flashes.
1:00—Big Sister (CBS).’
I:ls—Ma Perkins (CBS).
I:3o—Young Dr. Malone (CBS).
I:4s—The Guiding Light (CBS).
2:oo—Feaminine Footnotes.
ON THE
AIR - WAVES
Ann Blythe and Edmund O'Bri
en, two of Hollywood’s fastest ris
ing young stars, will be presented
on “Suspense” tonight at 9:00 p.
m. The swiftly-paced WGAU
CBS thriller is called “Muddy
FTrack.”
O’Brien is heard in the role of
a reckless horse-player who loses
his roll and finally takes a job
working as a bookie for a notori
ous gangster. Miss Blythe is the
girl whose apartment he uses
during the day, while she is at
work, for taking telephone bets.
When he finds a body in the
girl’s apartment, the rookie
bookie decides he’s been marked
for ‘“fall guy” on a murder rap,,
and he tries desperately to escape
as the police spread a dragnet
around the city.
From here on, suspense builds
steadily as O’Brien finds himself
fleeing not only from the police
but also from his gangster boss.
There’s a love story, too, adding
poignancy to the climax, which
has a surprise twist as startling as
anything heard all season on this
unique series.
Casey assumes the post of a
man of great wealth in the hope
of snaring a dangerous shake
down artist in the drama, “The
Mystery Man,” on WGAU-CBS’
“Crime Photographer” tonight at
9:30 p. m. In a variation on a hare
and hounds chase, Casey follows
the trail of suspiciously new
greenbacks from the Blue Note
Case to a dead man’s hotel room.
Betty Garde and Charita Bauer,
both of stage, screen and radio
fame, head a great cast in “The
Big-Time Baby” story of a high
school lass who gets mixed up
with a ring of car thieves, in
WGAU-CBS’ “F. B. 1. In Peace
And War” tonight at 8:00 p. m.
The girl goes from bad to worse
until federal police intervene.
When a fashion model is chot
during a showing at one of New
York’s hotels, “Mr. Keen, Tracer
of Lost Persons” is called in to in
at 10:30 p. m.
Railroad Schedules
SEABOARD AIRLINF RY,
Arrival and Departure of Trains
Athens, Georgia
Leave for Elberton, Hamlet and
New York and East—
-12:35 p. m.—Air Conditioned.
8:43 p. m.~—Ailr Conditioned.
Leave tor Elberton, Hamlet and
East—
-12:10 a. m.—(Local).
Leave for Atlanta, South and
West—
-8:00 a. m.—Air Conditioned.
~ 4:05 a. m.—(Local).
| 3:15 p. m.—a Air Conditioned.
| CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
| RAILROAD
Arrive Athens (Daily) 12:33 p.m.
Leaves Athens (Daily) 4:15 pm.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY NYSTEM
~ From Lula and Commerce
| Arrive 9:00 a. m.
| East and West
. Leave Athens 9:00 a. m
| GECORGIA BATL.ROAN
| Mixed Trains
Train 51 arrives Athens 8:00 a.m.
Train 52 leaves Athens 8:10 =.m
Déodorant Cream, Regutar SI.OO
*
2:ls—Perry Mason (CPSj.
2:3o—This Is Nora Drake -
(CBS).
2:4s—Romance of Evelyn
Winters (CBS).
3:00—1340 Platter Party.
3:2s—News.
3:30—1340 Platier Party.
4:oo—Hint Hunt (CBS).
4:2S—CBS News.
4:30-~The Get Acquainted Hour.
s:oo—Huddle Sports Interview.
s:ls—Sleepy Joe.
5:30 —Sports Parade,
s:4s—Herb Shriner Time,
FRIDAY ' 3
6:s9—Sign On. * %2
7:OO—UP News.
7:os—Sports. .
7:lo—Market Summary.
7:ls—The Blessed Hope.
7:4S—WRFC’s Trading Post.
8:00—UP News.
B:ls—Musical Clock, :
B:SS—UP News. .
9:oo—Morning Devotional.
9:ls—Musical Devotional. -
9:3o—Show Tune Time.
9:4s—The Feminine Agenda.
10:00—WRFC Telephone Party.
10:30—UP News. | '
10:35—-—Novel{?Tune Time.
10:45—Bing Crosby. !
11:00—Chuck Wagon.
11:45—Leon and Red.
12:00—Hillbilly Review.
12:15—UP News.
12:30—Checkq}aorad Jamboree,
12:45—Farm News and Market
Summary.
I:OG—UPr?Ws.
I:os—That Man With the Band.
I:3o—Luncheon Serenade.
2:OO—UP News.
2:os—Vocal Varieties.
2:3o—Music You Like.
2:4s—Time Was.
3:oo—Hep Cat Corner.
3:3o—Closing Market
Quotations.
3:3s—Rhetts’ Record Room.
4:OO—UP News.
4:os—Rhett’s Record Room.
4:45—8i11y Christian At the
Organ.
s:oo—Tomorrow’s Headlines.
s:ls—Sports Round-Up.
s:3o—Sign Off.
U. S. Civilians
Claim Beating
By CID Agents
FRANKFURT, Germany, Nov.
11— (AP)—Two Americans have
charged that U. S. Army police
agents beat them during an in
terrogation last summer.
James M. Mobley of Whigham,
Ga., and A. J. Newhard of Amar
illo, Texas, said two agents of the
criminal investigation division
(CID) pummelled them in the
face and stomach during a probe
of alleged irregularities in the
Frankfurt Post Exchange System.
They testified before a two-man
Army board investigating charges
of “third degree methods” in the
handling of American Nationals.
Neither Mobley nor Newhart has
been charged with any offense to
date, but are restricted to Frank
furt. They are post exchange em
ployes.
Mobley told the board that he
was seized by CID agents July 31,
and questioned for three days,
during which he 'signed two
l statements.
He said that, shirtless and bare
foot, two agents took him into a
“very cold, musty smelling” cel
lar of a house on the second day
of the interrogation. .
He quoted one of the agents as
saying:
“You are now going to account
for every penny found in your
home and I don’t want to hear
the word ‘gambling’ in it. When
we get through with you, you will
be glad to say anything.”
He charged that the agents
struck him “every time I said no
or did not give them the answer
they wanted.
A catfish found in the Nile
River normally swims and floats
unside down.
COOKED
Fillings And lcings Just
Like You Make Them In
Your Own Kitchen. That’s
What You Get In Benson'’s
4 Layer Home Made Cake.
Try Burnt Caramel, Cho
colate Fudge, Lemon
Cheese, Pineapple. Your
Gro. Has Them Or Will
Get Them For You.
MIGHTY GOODBREAD.
We Are Buying The Finest
Materials Can Buy. Tak
ing Lots Of Pains In Put
ting Them Together. Ben
son’s Breads Are Bigger
And Better Than Ever.
BENSON'’S
MISNOMER? Bt
Spring tides ocecur at all sea
sons. They are the excessively high
and low tides coming at the times
of the new and the full moons.
Accerding to American Iron
and Steel Instlitute estimates, the
automotive industry received a
fourth of total sheet and strip
steel shipped in the first seven
months of 1946.
Sl e,
é geg T Dy %
AT
Broi ing_Easier
| 'You can get away @ |
& with ANYTHING... i
7 if you've gotthe %
. VELVET TOUCH!”
: / ; " v
i ‘_,:s:".‘s(.\‘ y 3 o : ;
»fi@« ¥ R
& o P e L
A 8. ' ©
. \o(k ’ {,\ ‘ Sy / .
' Waich out s T e
¥ when Rosalind sy s i& i
¥ tangles with o 5 TTR
¢ aguy she can't wE . o 4
L quite handle. . , ge B TEEL
L it's a perfect e, \ S z::::Ei_l';:_:_
[ blend of Laughter BB B 8 ° .. 0¥
j ondsuspenset R T g, W
R l®% d R ll ._;«::f.::if:i;sr::z.
I‘. k' A“FREDERICK BRISSON PRODUCTION also storring :“
¢ LeoGenn - Claire Trevor g
i Sydney Greenstreet
Screenploy by f with LEON AMES + FRANK McHUGH
LEO ROSTEN i/ ALTER KINGSFORD + DAN TOBIN )' Pod
I . Released l" e N ,onkof"g""“;fi? méfl@nflh
y RKQ Radio Pictures AR s T NCTURE
FEATURE STARTS: 12:46 - 2:53 - 5:00 ~ %307 - 9:19.
TODAY — FRIDAY 3
| RIDE WITH GENE _ , (' ,
= ik o SRy
5 eßt . GESEEIR
.ON HiS MOST i é
5 TR, PR PR
% . PR %M s Yo IO Vo,
!x Cl" " G 3 .-;_'__‘7‘ ", b ‘ v?; wm,,: :3 \2‘;:: % ; \
: ADVENTURE! FRN O T e
o 2 Sy e L "-:" A .\“ :fi’k \ o s
.
R ;
~ : ‘ y: & ;“x‘ %;w ', § '_.. ;
4£ o 242 g6oW 7
R W SRR 8 % o < i
B WGy £ T o e @ somea N i
- COLUMBIA PICTURES presents ~ * SUSEERRL™S &%l = .
P RN Sl e
b B BT R
g-’ NRE g ':’f"\‘ ;. :",‘9 e o
e TR e ¢ (R
and his famous horse, YS e
/ CHAMPION i
. THE ggmfl TP -
7 /b T
o T :
§ . PR TR
é M EATHER - RALPH MORGAN - CARDL THURSTOK -AR TANELS 08 _gg;; |
e THE TENES BANGERS Pl T
£ 4‘l‘“’% it
g Screenplay by sack Townley and Earls Spalt ;!- :_’»V' ”'%e*‘" ? '&'{-.V ‘.v‘ ‘3
[ Ovectd by JOHN ENGLISH - produed by ARMAND SCHAEFER IRO
£ A Gene Autry Productica 5 “’*v S SE;IT k.
FEATURE STARTS: 1:03 - 2:45 - 4:27 - 6:09 - 7:51 - 9:33
- STRAND -
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
Fge
I'im
McCOY
IN
“Two Gun
JUSTICE"’
- LAST DAY —
“LADY FROM SHANGHAL"
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1948,
AND ALL WHO TRAVEL
ANYWHERE TO ANYWHERE
Before going hunting, camp.
ing or on any trip . .. protect
yourself against, hazards of
travel and all activity ac.
cidents with our $5,000 to
$25,000 policy. Covers 3 days
to 6 months. Pays for in.
juries and full benefits if
killed, Costs ‘as little as
sl.lO.
CAREFREE TRIP INSURANCE
Issued Immediately by
HOWARD T. ABNEY
301 Southern Mutual Bldg,
Phones 71 — 2249-W
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
) &
~ po,,mwmaf PR
S/ EYCITEMENT: U]
\\\ ’kj*é WA
»\ ’/ . A A
.'} A ’-" h Y
'\_ FA DGI S
S NaNA
ST
S X 1R
A 77 17 1/ |
1l ot
~ LAST DAY —
“LADPY FROM CHEYENNE”