Newspaper Page Text
PAGE FOUR
~ ATHENS BANNER - HERALD
B ei et oot et A 00l
;e ’ ESTABLISHED 1832
Puplished Every Evening Except Saturday and Sunday and on Sunday Morning by Athens Publishing
Co. Entered at the Postoffice at Athens, Ga., as second class mail matter.
B B BREASWELL . ..........ciotiiaiiinniuiinnes soiruuiiimsssssinioe EDITOR and PUBLISHER
B. C, LUMPKIN and DAN MAGILL ............cc.cccccoinieeeniennnsannieo.. ASSOCIATE EDITORS
» 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.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed
in this ngewspaper, as well as all AP News dispatches. :
X SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Daily and Sunday by carrier and to Postoffice boxes in the city —
‘ ; B ii e P G ks sk ss e R
el S SRS e e M e B Sl (DU R S e ’
I R ißk AR eeae v s ehe e r e sty R
B R Re e e iR ta esanet ii s rvaviy, Y
i oufusiomseestlopbiste Ret s g e i ePP
5 SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY MAIL
Subscription on R. F. D. 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.
e N ———— el e L L e R
All substriptions are payable in advance. Payments in excess of one month should be paid through our
office sihce we assume no responsibility for paymen ts made to carriers or dealers.
' ; ITATI
PAILY MEyDl'aithATA;lgNo%ered
AWETUCET D unto God a more excellent
sacrifice than Cain, by
X =\ which he obtained wit
ness that he was righteous,
God testifying of his gifts, and by it he being
dead yet speaketh.—Book of Hebrews 11:4.
Have you a favorils Bible verse? Mall te
A. F. Pledger, Holly Heights Chapel.
_-——’—.—_.——»—-—o——-—-——————-——
Negro Voter Has Arrived in
.
South, Southern Editor Says
g BY PETER EDSON
* NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON—"“The negro is the compelling
popular" issue in the South in 1948. . . . It is no
longer good politics to stand up in the South and
proclaixj\ that the negro is all right in his place,
but hissplace is not at the polls. . . Segregation can
be defchded-‘f,»but the denial of civil rights that has
alwaysigon@vith it has become indefensible. . . . .
The negro Q_fl"tdr:has arrived in the South.”
This tis q’o‘}:ifimnyankee that is being quoted.
For a fiorth}tfier to say such things would be not
only presumptuous but also misguided, ignorant
and wrong.
The fnan whg made these statements was Harry
S. Ashmore, new editor of the Little Rock., Gazette,
speaking a few days ago before the Southern Poli
tical Stience Assoclation at Washington and Lee
University, Whglon, Va. Ashmore’s talk got little
or no fovem’ge at the time. Now that the eleetion
is all over and the passion fires have died down,
it may, be safe to dust it off. ‘
TWO ‘HLLION NEGRO VOTERS BY 1952
Somk 700,000 negroes were qualified to vote in
this yéar's elections, Ashmore points out. This is a
600 per gent increase over 1940. At the same rate
of pro!reéaim!- 2,000,000 negroes could be expected
to vote ib" 1052 They will vote not only in the gen
eral elkcfiga; but in the primaries as well,
Witlt this, rise in enfranchisement of the negro,
the mt-%djfi; system that has dominated the
South for %fl“ffi;fiis doomed to pass, says Ash
more. {t w%med on the day the U. 8. Supreme
Court ftrfick' down all previous decisions and
ruled that the primary election is a fundamental
part of the American political system. It is there
fore stibject to the sufirage provisions qf the Con
stitutian, guaranteeing the vote to all, regardless
of cre{d or color.
~ Realisticaily, this should not be taken to mean
that egtra-legal means may not be found in some
states {o discourage negro voters. There were num
erous aftempts at intimidation in the last cam
paian. The egging of Progressive presidential can
didate Hemry Wallace himself was the most noto-
Tions,
Progressive Party leaders charged that the
bst offenses were in Georgia. There were two
x;)ces reported where Progressive Party can
m were “kidnaped” and threatened then
leased. A number of their party workers, iti
clding James L. Barfoot, the Progressive candi
,ME*”for governor, were arrested on the sidewalks
?"Aflanta More incidents of this sort must be
expected in future campaigns.
;;:»But; says editor Ashmore, it is unlikely that the
Der“ ratic Party will ever repudiate its civil
::ighg platform.. It has abandoned for all time the
old dobctrine of states’ rights as traditionally con
ceivej‘by Soutierners. The civil rights platforms
of thg two major parties are now practically iden
tical, ¢
vm:; FOR NEGRO BECAME INEVITABLE
© When the Democratic Convention at Philadel
phia made its 651% to 582% vote in tavor of a
{:.*;tmn civil rights platform, it was merely ex
bt‘ess & the fact that a majority ';_)f the Americans
who Jive outsiae the South consider civil rights
%‘gslrible for the whole of the country, “It is this
pressere of public opinion which has made the
?é{gfraizhisoment of the negro in the Scuth inevi
table)’ he says.
’Wiz‘h that enfranchisement, Ashmore believes
that }he one-party system of the South has been
killed. The South is beund to benefit thereby.
Everf table and chart shewing the standing of the
stated on matters of health, education and cap:tat
reveals how the South has suffered from one
part:f domination. The old system may have main
tained order and stability, but it was “a motion-
Jess ;)ruer of stagnation.”
Ashinore said repeatediy that the establishment
of aitwo-party system in the South is the great
est single reform (hat can be worked in the South.
Qut ‘of it will come gains not only foi the negro
minority but for the white majority.
. THe transition probably cannot ve made smooth
_Jv. Ashmore looks with some gloom on_the rise of
s?:‘.Eierl;:x:m Talmadge in Georgia, Russell Long in
;g?;puigsia;xa and the old worn-out prejudices of
- three generations. There may be chaos for anothe:
;g?geniatiun or two, But the aclitical system must
o be. 4 anged to accommoate the mass oi new voters
now, emerging as a political factor in the South
’ S sttty
’Qidition of numbers running into billions can
Rl in“les-than onse-fifth of a second by the
* "mechanical brain” developed at Harvard in 1946.
Country Awaits With Interest
. ’
tlection’s Effect on Truman
Mr. Truman is now on his own. And
being President by popular choice instead
of by accident is bound to make a great
difference. The country will be waiting
with interest and perhaps some anxiety to
see how his reaction to the vote will affect
his attitude and policies. l
It seems natural that the election re
sults might give Mr. Truman more poise
and confidence and stature. But will he‘
feel vengeful toward those in his party
who abandoned him to what seemed cer
tain defeat, and left him to win his amaz
ing victory almost single-handed? Will
that victory encourage him to strike out
on a bold course, or will the narrowness
of its margin dictate prudence and cau
tion?
Will he attempt to reassemble the Dem
ocratic Party with the same components
that adhered to it in the Roosevelt days,
or will he try to purge the extremists and
scuttle their Wallace and Dixiecrat par
ties? Will he administer the country’s af
fairs with an eye toward re-election?
These questions, while they cannot be
answered now, may have a decisive bear
ing on the conduct of our government and
on world affairs in the next four yzars.
And while the answers must wait on Mr.
Truman’s actions, some of the most im
portant influences which will be brought
to bear can already be seen. 2
One is the survival of the New Deal
tradition. The 1946 congressional elec
tions might have led some to believe that
American opinion was shifting to the
right of center. But on November 2 the
majority vote shifted it right back again.
This was even more apparent in the turn
over of Congress than in the choice of
President.
How far and how quickly will Mr. Tru-|‘
man follow this lead? He may be influ
enced by the knowledge that he owes
nothing to the big-city leaders and many
of the top Southern Democrats for this
victory. Since neither group is rabidly New
Dealish, the President does not need to
hesitate on their account. On the other
hand he apparently does owe something
to pro-New Deal organized labor—not to
the top-level leaders so much as to junior
officials who rang doorbells and got out
the vote that may have turned the tide.
At the same time there have been .indi
cations that Mr. Truman may have clung
to New Deal policies through loyalty or
duty or expediency more than through
conviction. This suspicion is blostered by
his Cabinet appointments.
Another brake on any sweéping domes
tic program may be the. expense. With
stepped-up rearmament and%tfi'e world aid
program, and with peacetime taxes about
as high as any politician wants to see
them, there aren't going to be any bilions
lving around for unessential projects.
If the President does not take the very
fact of his election as a signal for full
speed ahead, then the size of his opposi
tion may persuade him to go slow. The
smallest vote in 12 vears gave him a plu
rality of a little more than 4 percent, as
against Mr. Roosevelt’s majority of 13
percent in 1932, 24 percent in 1936, and
more than 7 percent in 1940 and 1944.
Wendell Willkie, losing in 1940, polled
substantially the same number of votes az
Mr. Truman did this year. o
So the important factor of unity must
be considered in Mr. Truman’s program
for the future. Unity was Governor
Dewey’s theme in this campaign, and Mr.
Truman was inclined to scoff at it. But we
hope and trust that the scoffing was that
of a campaigning politician and that, as
statesman, the President will chart a pro
gressive course in domestic as well as for
eign affairs that the whole country can
support and follow.
The high cost of eggs is not the result of
the hen layving for the dealer; it's the
dealer laying for the public.—Comedian
Garyv Moore.
We (of Israel) are a small country, but
a big people. We must not be satisfied
with just having a country of our own. We
must prove that we sitll possess the force
that once gave the world moral law and
social laws.—Dr. Chaim Weizmann, pres
ident of Israel.
It is folly for us to decieve ourselves
that we are at peace, for in truth we know
there is no peace and naught for whiceh
we fought has come to fruit. — Francis
vankioal Spelloan. . oo d
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
ECHOES FROMMEMORYLAND
TOld Negro “Tap” And,H.:Sermon On “Dry Bones”
: BY T. W. REED
Tap! Tap! Tap!
That was a familiar sound out
on the Boulevard forty-odd years
ago. Sometimes you could hear it
ipast midnight in the early morn
ling hours. It would gradually get
louder and more distinct. I could
hear it as it passed my home on
the Boulevard and grew fainter
and fainter out in the direction of
Newton, the negro settlement
lsome distance away.
The noise was made by a walk
'ing stick in the hands of an old
Negro preacher who was about
‘half-blind and who tapped on the
’sidewalk in order to keep his di
rection. He had been over to the
Negro settlement known as Lun
don Town and was going to his
home in the Newtown settlement.
I .do not remember his real
name, We all called him ‘Tap’ on
‘account of his habit of tapping on
the sidewalk. He didn’t have
much sense, could not talk much
and the little children in that end
of town were all afraid of him,
but he was perfectly harmless. He
followeci but one line of work and
that was just preaching. Just how
he reiached that conclusion I do
not know. Of course he had no
church pulpit to fill and whatever
congregation he could assemble
was made up of those negroes
who looked upon him as a curiosi
ty. I do not remember whether he
affiliated with Methodists or Bap
tists? Probably with neither.
Sometimes I would stop him
and talk to him a while and. try.
to get a line on what he preached
R
y &= By WILLIAM IRISH ]
___?My William Ms'\ned by NEA SERVICE, IN
THE STORY
Time, 1880 Place, New Orleans
..Louis Durand, 37, well-so-do
bachelor, has been corresponding
with Miss Julia Russell, whom he
has never seen. He has proposed
marriage and she has accepted.
According to her picture, Miss
Russell is dark-haired, strong
featured and no longer young.
Durand goes down to the dock tol
meet the boat that is to bring her
from St. Louis. He is dumfounded
when an exuisite young blond
creature introduces herself as Ju
lia. She explains her little deceit
by saying she didn’t want him to
fall for just a pretty face. Durand
is enchanted with her and they’
‘are married. Certain things puz-‘
zle him, however, during their
lfirst ‘days together. Among them!
is the fact Julia has never epen
!cd her trunk. When he gquestions!
;her, she says she lost the key, ]
A * @
X
It was quite by chance that he
happened to go through the street
in which his former lodgings werée.’
And it was equally by chance
that Madame Tellier, his erstwhile
landlady, happened to come out
and stand for a moment in the
entrance just as he was in the act|
of walking by. g e
She greeted him effusively,
with shrieks of delight that could
be heard for doors away in either
direction, flung her arms about
him like a second mother, asked
about his health, his happiness, his
enjoyment of married life.
“Oh, but we miss you, Louis!
Your old rooms are rented again—
to a pair of cold Northerners (I
charge them double)—but it’s not
the same.” She creased her rather
large nose distastefully. Sudden
1y she was all alight again, gave
her fingers a crackling "snap; of
self-reminder. “I just remember
ed! I have a letter waiting for
you. It’s been here several: days
now, and I haven’t seen Tom since
it came, to ask where your new
address is, or 1 would ‘Have for
|warded it, He still'comes around
now and then to work fer e, you
;know. Wait here, I'll bring it out
to you.”
l She patted him three times in
rapid succession on the chest, as
lif cajoling him to stand patiently
as he was for a moment, turned
|and whisked inside.
He had, he only now recalled
rather ruefully, completely over
looked having his mailing address
changed from here, his old quar
ters, to the new house on St. Louis
Street, when he made the move.
Not that it was vitally important;
his busliess mail all continued to
go to the office, as it always did,
and of personal correspondence he
had never had a great deal, only
his courtship letters with Julia,
now brought to a happy termina
tion. He would stop by the post
office, on his way home, and file
the new delivery instructions; if
only for the sake of an occasional
stay missive such as this,
Meanwhile she had come back
with it. “Here! Isn't it good you
just happened to come by this
way?”
He gave the inscription a brief
glance, simply to confirm it, as he
took it from her. “Mr. Louis Du
rand,’ in spidery penmanship; the
three capitals, M, L. and D, stand
ing out in black enlargement, the
minuscule letters too finely traced!
and too diminished to size to make
for legibility. However, it was his
own name, there could be no mis
taking that, so he questioned it no
further; thrust it carelessly into
the side pocked of his coat and
promptly forgot about it.
Their leavetaking was as ex
clamatory an denthusiastic as their
greeting had been. She kissed him
on the forehead in a sort of ma
ternal benediction, waved him
‘steadil yon his way.
~ He accomplished his errand, he
returned to his office, he absorbed
himself once more in the daily
routine of his work. USRS
He discovered the letter a sec-
about. But I never succeeded in
my investigations along that line.
So far as I could determine he had
but one text and that was “Dry
Bones.” 1 could never get him to
admit that he talked on any other
subject. As to what he had to say
about “Dry Bones” I could never
determine. Probably all he had to
say was a repetition of his text,
for he had net enough sense to
preach about anything.
He had plenty of lung power
and on a perfectly quiet night you
could hear his voice over in dis
tant Newtown.” - Frequently he
would start his harangue about
ten o’clock and keep up his racket
far past midnight. It was simply a
blare of noise, perhaps in one of
the unknown tongues that same
down from the Tower of Babel as
recorded in the Old Testament.
There were only two intelligible
words in his vocabulary that any
one could understand — “Dry
Bones.”
Just what “Tap” wished to con
vey to his hearers on that favorite
subject I cannot say. He must
‘have had some in his mind, if, in
fact, he had any mind. but all you
could get out of him was “Dry
Bones.”
All that I can remember about
him was that wierd sound on the
pavement late at night when he
came up the Boulevard on his way
home. ;
Tap! Tap! Tap! on the pavement
and those jumbled sounds that
came across even up to the early
morning hours and the two words
of his text: “Dry Bones.”
ond time only within the last
quarter of an hour before leaving
to go home, and as equally by ac
cident as it had been thrust upon
him in the first place by happen
ing to thrust his hand blindly into |
his pocket for a handkerchief. l
- Reminded of its presence, he
rested himself for a moment by
taking it out, tearing it open, and
leaning back to read it. No sooner
‘had his eyes fallen on the intro
ductory words then he stopped
again, puzzled. ‘
. “My own dearest Julia:”
‘Tt was for her, not himself.
.. He turned to the envelope again,
Jlooked at it more closely than he
’Lh‘ati on the street in presence of
Madame Tellier. He saw then
Y¥hat had misled him. The little
drly following the “Mr.? 'so tiny
salmost to «escape detection, ;was.
‘meant for an “s.”
' He went back to'the paper once
more; turhed this over, glanced at
‘the bottom of its reverse side.
“Your ever-loving and distress
ed Bertha.” -
It was from her sister, in St.
Louis.
“Distressed.” The word seemed
to cast itself up at him, like a
barbed fishhood, catch onto and
strain at his attention. :
" He did not intend to read any
further. It was her letter, after
~11
|dll.
Somehow the opening words
held hi mtrapped, he could not
stop once they had seized his eyes
with their meaning.
My own dearest Julia:
I cannot understand why you
treat me thus. Surely I deserve
better than this of you. It is three
weeks now since you have left
me, and in ali that time not a word
from you. Not so much as the
briefest line, to tell me of your
safe -arrival, whether you met Mr.
Durand, whether the marriage has
taken place or not. Julia, you were
never like this before. What am
I to think? Can you not imagine
the distracted state of mind this
ieave me in—
(To Be Continued)
MOVIE PROGRAMS
FOR THE WEEK
———————————
PALACE—
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — “Vel
vet Touch,” starring Rosaling
Russell, Leo Genn, Sidney Green
street, Claire Trevor. Jimmy Dor
sey & Orch. News.
GEORGIA—
Thurs.-Fri. — “The Last Round
up,” starring Gene Autry, Jean
Heather, Athletic Varieties. Rat
tled Rooster. News.
Sat. — “The Big Punch,” starr
ing Wayne Morris, Lois Maxwell.
Superman — chapter 15.
STRAND—
Fri.-Sat. — “Two Gun Justice”
starring Tim McCoy. Wife to
Spare. Adv. of Frank & Jesse
James—chapter 6.
RITZ—
Fri.-Sat. — “West of Sonora,”
starring Charles %tarrett. Square
head of the Round Table. Adv. of
Rex & Rinty-—chapter 3.
: SNE PERSON
ity 08 o paATELLS ANOTHER
e IRE pyan
o L) P
R,
T
b MoRE S
LEGEE &
| A N ) T
l\A’ Rey "rfi\ ke
";»"/}‘s_’ . *i";fi €52/
y’\v WA A\
74 ASPIRIN AT ITS BEST
l The, name “St. Joseph” is your assur
ance of speed, dependability, purity.
12 tablets 10c, even greater savings on
the 100 tablet bottle for 45¢c. Why pay
more, why ever accept less. Buy—
808 THOMAS SAYS:
IPARKS SEEKS ACTION
FILM AFTER ‘JOLSON’
BY 808 THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 12—(AP)
—Far be it from Larry Parks to
get typed as Al Jolson’s film ego.
He’s seeking an action story as
his next film.
Under his new Columbia con
tract, Larry gets 35 weeks as a
free agent after he finishes ‘“Jol
son Sings Again.” He wants to use
at least part of the time in pro
ducing his own picture, which is
the only way for a star to make
real money in this town.
Despite rising costs, the “Jol
son” sequel will cost less than the
sensational original. There will be
no production numbers. Jolson’s
voice and Parks’ face will have to
put over the songs. \
Gene Kelly turned down a film
treatment of the lives of Mont
gomery and Stone, famed theatri
cal team. MGM would have
brought it for him, but Gene fig
ures he’s too young to play it
now. . ~ . “It won’e be long now”
note: Christmas trees already are
going up on Hollywood Blvd.
Rogers Sensation
Ginger Rogers came back from
her Oregon ranch for retakes of
her Sarah Bernhardt scenes in
“Brakleys of Broadway.” The se
quence was so good that people
thought someane else doubled for
Ginger. So she’ll do some close
ups to prove it's all hers.
“I Marriéd A 'Communist” will
pull no punches.”lt’s about life on
the San Franciseo waterfront and
the Bay City shaild find it inter
esting. Oneé of/the writers on the
RKO film s Asgt - Cohn, former
Oakland Tribune staffer. . . . Life’s
great embarrassment: When John
Carroll introduced Gordon Mac
rae as “Joel 'McCrea” at a San
Francisco benefit. -
Another “road” coming up?
Could be. A couple of writers are
working on ideas for another
Crosby-Hope-Lamour opus. The
question is whether Bing and Bob
can get together on a deal. .. ..
‘Robert Ryan's wife and kids were
in a car crackup which may foul
the Rryans’ plan for a vacation
‘}after Bob winds “The Set Pp.”
| Gallup Tosses
Howard Hughes reportedly
dumped Dr. Gallup’s audience re
search long before the polltaker’s
election fiasco. RKO had been
shelling out an estimated $60,000
yearly to discover popular tastes,
ON THE
AIR - WAVES
The big radio news for the
week-end from WGAU is the on
the-spot play-by-play broadcast
of the Georgia Bulldog-Clemson
Tiger football game. Georgia, the
nations 13th, ranking’team takes
on another Southeastern Confer-,
ence foe in this game broadcast
starting at 2:00 p. m. tomorrow.
Ingrid Bergman, one of Amer
ica’s most gifted stage and screen
actresses, will play the title role
when Director Fletcher Markle
presents a full-hour version of the
younger Alexandre Dumas’ classic
love story “Cap=lle” on WGAU
CBS’ “Ford Theatre” tonight at
9:00 p. m. y
This will be Miss Bergman'’s
oniy netwokr performance during
a New York visit for the premiere
of her new motion picture, “Joan
of Arc,” adapted for the screen
from Maxwell Anderson’s “Joan
of Loraine,” in which she starred
on the Broadway stage last sea
son.
Lucille Ball, one of Hollywood’s
most glamorous actresses and star
of WGAU-CBS’ “My Favorite
Husband,” draws top billing in
“Angel Face,” the second offering
of the Columbia network’s new
dramatic series; the “Philip Mor
ris Playhouse,” tonight at 10:00
p. m.
In “Angel Face,” an_original
story by Ceornell Woolworth, Miss
Ball is cast as a hardened New
York girl who tries to prevent her
brother from eloping with a cho
rine as a way out of his difficul
ties. Following an argument, the
showgirl is found dead. The
brother is arrested for the crime
His sister’s efforts to exonerate
him provide a tensely dramatic.
With Al Capp, the creator of the
comic strip “Lil’l Abner,” as his
guest, bandleader-singer Vaughn
Monroe will fire the ‘official gun
starting Sadie Hawkins day, the
open season for all. unmarried
girls to catch the men of their
hearts, on WGAU-CBSS “Camel
Caravan with Vaughn Monroe”
tomorrow at 7:30 p. m.
That prize fairy tale of all time,
“Cinderella,” in an original radio
dramatization by Nila Mack. is
WGAU-CBS’ “Let’s Pretend” pre
sentation tomorrow at'll:os a. m.
The search for the foot that fit
the glass slipper is acted out in
all its dramatic forces and glory
is Prince Charming’s silicon
scenters trot all over the country
side. f
AND ALL WHO TRAVEL
ANYWHERE TO ANYWHER]E
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
as reported by Gallup. 1
Bud Abbott is the latest to plan
production of films for television,
Meanwhile, Lou Costello is buy
ing into a project to make ice
cube trays that elimiante fuss. . .
Liz Scott says she’ll hunt an apart
ment in the East after “Bitter Vic
tory” and stay there three months
a year. .
Grable For Mail
Betty Grable says half of her
fan mail requests are for pictures
of her kids. . .. No truth to rumor
Cleveland -Indians . are scouting
Jimmy. Stewart because of his
“Stratton Story” role. The lanky
i lad has turned into a good hurler.
Angela Lansbury finally plays
her own age in “Samson and De
lilah” — 24-year-old Semadar.
A SOOTHING DRESSING § FINE FOR: {
DOUBLE Buris |
FILTERED § ™SO
FOR EXTRA QUALITY ¢ he |
-puRITY R Scraiches |
|V Lo d: Lo |SO
RTR T 10c |
PALACE o
1 SHOWING
Wk SRS - Bo
q D ity e o
,' B . ...vwith never an
& & I[DLE moment!
AN '.:':i,-;a:,;_.;m.v‘. e The intimate story of
i3S % : ’ Broadway’s most
= / A exciting actress who
s 5 s, played her most
i _ enlicing love
' :';'2 i e ; scenes —
o Rosalind Russell
: 4 ¢ | A FREDERICK BRISSON PRODUCTION ‘
¥ ;. 5 also xlanme
o Leo Genn - Claire Trevor
k 1 Svdney Greenstreet
FEATURE STARTS: 12:46 - 2:53 - 5:00 - 7:07 - 9:19.
: SATURDAY ONLY !
iTHE SOCK SENSATION OF THE YEARY)
8 6.8
RAY 1! B A Pl T
% IMAC RAE.. gl W R | “;*a
Afim sopet SO SRR B Lcoie 0 5 G
towotes W R ©NTR BT it
zfl\is way 10 BEE SR L O ARGRERERSRT IR
1 gory S e _& e T G R
: s sueendlb\m ':i»v:.;v;_fl__ :M b il egy
nERBR"S» LG il o B / 3 T
> '.J‘_s',:;_g_;.--.‘.’_.- 4 "Hff‘i : ~~, ’w; fay vi&A_’ S/ A T
wpgesf’_‘u;fi- ' RRERR f,’f,_/-,’ ',(““ o ;;‘4;" " / [as
= Cet 5 g, LAY/ S LR bl B
/( : : . fre iA:?88 STN &
Fa ; E ¥ iioy /i 19 K A X
J:E.‘;';if'-' N, 1 S SR n‘ i/ ¥ ;”: § "‘v )::'.
T y) &5 i 3(g S A
8 / s e T HITS /0| NSy
E-::f";‘:;; o . -3 S 0 & .\»\t//v('i ; o &
PO .% s L;_,j D Hirs 1t ’
TS i, S g Gt et e : v
N WAYNE ETLOIS ceapon ?
?\L"’r; 1 8 2 fl S r° s
% MORRIS-MAXWELL- MAG RAC
:& 8 g 8 3 B Gomellon ‘:A_
— LAST TIMES TODAY —
“THE LAST ROUND-UP” starring
FEATURE STARTS: 1:03 - 2:45 - 4:27 - 6:09 - 7:51 - 9:33
- STRAND -
- Fim
McCOY
“"Two Gun
JUSTICE"
~ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1948,
The British gal has ed a range
.gt ages, up to the -old pub
isher in “State e Unbn™
She has done e ind of rolé
except comedy d she started
as a comedienp];' New York
night clubs. j "
CAPSULE REVIEW
“When My Baby Smiles at Me”
(TCF) is a happy reunion of the
“Mother Wore Tights™ stars. Betty
Grable and Dan Dailey shine in
the time-worn = “Burlesque” plot
of .-a show business'touple separa
ted by careers and alcohol. Best
features: Good backstage suff and
fine dances by the stars.
b
Soviet Russia- covers nearly
one-sixth of the 'world’s land
area and has almost one-tenth of
the world’s population.
o b Mise givaiti e cabr, o x“&fi,
ia*fi%:@mawm&gfi@ S
PO IRy L R S
RN Ry e SR
REMER o W Yege
: /f"‘”sfi” SR B vke 9’@
110 U R e g
B g ‘ S
3 '7;'{‘o 2 s e ".‘:;»%?5': "
e S 3 | ey
SRR D P TAKe o
% 0N e SRk
BN FIBR
T I
e © i 3
S’ g
?' AL \”: » 40 0558 AT
W it
SRR :,. 4
R&A 2 P
SR oMI gy B X G
WoTABLETS o
LRI ol
Pt =~ A MUY I
Av””wm o g
NOW SHOWING
. &
~ m,,m-umtfl; -+
Co” EXCITEHENT: |of
,‘;X\ s‘, 4‘:l£ (v\\
‘\;‘\‘ {/ X v
) 9'./1/ I o .i'*r,sm»\\fl : A\v
TT' %\\R“E‘:‘w \\\‘\
SRRy
AL
o e