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Cites Aid To Services
Talmadge Unmoved By Attacks
¢ B
0f Former Governor Thompson
By The Associated Press
Former Governor M. E. Thompson boasted last night
(Monday) he has the Talmadge administration “scared
arld on__the I‘Ul_l_”‘ an(} tho._JAu.ne 28 m'imary Ain tho 'ba‘g._ .
Gov. Herman Talmadge didn’t
share his opponent’s views, About
the same time Thompson was pre
dicting the governor’s defeat, Tal
madge was telling a radio audi
ence what he plans to do when
elected to a full four-year term.
Thopmson had to compete with
a ball game in Griffin, but drew
a crowd of about 850 people. Ear
lier yesterday he addressed some
500 at McDonough, county seat of
Talmadge's home county of Hen
-Iy, and about 150 at Hampton.
“A few weeks ago you didn’t
think we had a chance,” the ex
fiovunor told his Griffin audience.
'You were averawed and a little
bit afraid of the machine. But the
tide has turned and I predict that
even if the election where held
tomorrow, we’'d lick ’em.”
In his radio address, carried
over a state network, Talmadge
told what his administration has
done and promised to do greater
things if re-elected.
He said he was proud his ad
ministration had licked a ‘“des
perate crisis” in the stite school
system when he took office. He
said he kept schools from closing
down by furnishing $5,000,000 in
extra education grants to coun
ties and $3,600,000 more to teach
s,
Talmadge also promised to fi
nance the Minimum Foundation
Proflm for education, but didn’t
say how the money would be rais
ed. He outlined a road building
g@um totaling 10,000 miles of
al gost roads and trunk high
'? uring the next four years.
@ said he could finance this
by earmarking all gasoline and
CAFE SITTING DOESN'T RATE
PAREE "SPORTS CERTIFICATE"
' PARIS—(NEA)~—~Many Ameri
* gans stlll cherish the idea that the
average Frenchman's favorite
sport is sitting at a sidewalk case,
supping aperitifs while he watches
the world go by.
Those may be the French the
tournists have seen and will see
g:z this summer and fall. Hun
of thousands they don't. see,
m“n, will be flocking to foot
} games, watching the yearly
| #ix-day bike race, leaving work to
i meomg;titou in the bicycling
; de France,” most gruelling
| #ndurance test in the world, or
! h& E‘u‘t in sports themselves.
i G 4. o‘blg’ulevardsl whe;e the
w ~air swimming
“beaches” dot xe quays of the
Seine in the heart of Paris. They’ll
> doing a roaring business all
summer with men and women
who devote their lunch hour, on
! nice days, to swimming.
@* L *
. Last year the government voted
& budget of about $7,000,000 for
the country’s sports program,
which comes under the depart
t of physical training in the
Ministry of Education.
| Among the things such a budget
has made possible is the estab
ishment of 220 “physical re-edu
cation” centers to combat the
harm suffered by children in the
years of undernourishment dur
ang and after the occupation.
. HAVE YOU BEEN COUNTED?
b '
* Whe 1950 Census is nearing completion. If you have not been
counted angwhere else, please fill out this form and mail it to
the U, 8. Census District Office, Municipal Auditorium, Au
gusta, Georgia. :
R M i vh o e
(Last Name) (First Name) Middle Initial)
My address on April 1, 1950 was:
Fouse Number Bnd BIEME o isriassccsicniirsasrenasisinnses
Oity, town, VlLage ..cievecrescsssnisiiie.. Stale .ioiaiiniise
B Sit IO T RBOD s vheisiav o 0 MBS Vi inesssd
Wednesday's Special
Rack of Dresses
All New Summer Crepes
Values to 19.95
Now 10.00
Shorty Pajamas
Batiste and Crepe
Values to 3.95
Now 1.95
slacks and Peddle Pushers
Cabardines and Butcher Linen
Values to 595
Now 3.95
: AN Sales Final Please
The Fashion Shop
A Across From N&N
tag tax levies to road building and
maintenance purposes.
Extends Services
The governor said advances
made during his administration in
expanded state services—schools,
roads, health and welfare—were
the results of “close team work
and harmony.”
“Let us continue this great con
certed movement for the bepefits
of every man, woman and child in
our commonwealth,” ke concluded.
“Let us join hands, let us work
and pray together, let us dedicate
ourselves to the task of building
a greater, a better and a more
prosperous Georgia, and, with the
help of Almighty God, we will
succeed.”
Thompson, entering his fourth
week of vigorous campaigning, ac
cused the administration of trying
to “steal” the governor election by
moving the primary date up from
September to June.
~ But, he added, “the machine is
going to fail in the effort to steal
this election.”
He predicted the June 28 ballot
ing will make Talmadge “one of
the worst defeated candidates in
Georgia’s history.”
Thompson noted that he had
been referred to derisively as “the
school teacher.”
“This school teacher is going to
teach one juvenile delinquent a
lesson he should have learned two
years ago,” he declared.
Continuing a swing through
middle Georgia, the ex-governor
scheduled talks this afternoon at
Jgfikson and tonight at Barnes
ville,
These centers put more than 15~
000 physically deficient young
sters back on the road to health
during the 1948-49 school year.
This year the requirement that
a “sports certificate” be produced
before elementary school gradu
ation has been extended to the
equivalent of American high
school graduates, too. This has
built up sports enthusiasm among
young women, as well as men. In
1949 there were more than 600,000
French girls holding sports cer
tificates, and 100,000 of them took
part in organized competitions.
* * ®
Sports clubs in commercial and
industrial organizations are not
required by law, but since libera
tion more than 1270 such groups
with 110,000 members have been
formed,
Football holds first place in
French sports interest. There are
something like 8600 amateur foot
ball clubs, plus 781 professional
groups, and the football federa
tion counts 425,000 members. Bas
ketball accounts for another 82,-
000.
Biggest handicap to the national
sports program is the lack of suffi
cient instructors,. The . govern
ment’s 1450 coaches and 1720
‘male and female instructors aren’t
enough to go around, and budget
‘restrictions have limited new ap
pointments.
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CAUGHT IN THE ACT—Two Berlin youths posting forbidden Communist propaganda in the west
ern zone of the city are caught in the act by an alert cameraman. As one dashes for cover, the other |
hides his face to prevent identification by police. The posters are part of the deluge of propaganda |
material being distributed in western Berlin to boom the Communist youth rally set for May 28.'
Henry W. Grady As Recalled By
Mrs. Lamar Rutherford Lipscomb
Tomorrow, May 24th, being the
birthday of the iliustrious Henry
W. Grady, The Banner-Herald
presents an interesting and inti
mate glimpse of him as a man, as
recalled by Mrs. Lamar Ruther
ford Lipscomb who, as a small
child, was an intimate of the
Grady family.
The following, from Mrs. Lips
comb’s gifted pen, was written
some years ago, and is to be in
corporated in Mrs. Lipscomb’s
Autobiography With Letters and
Essays which she plans to have
published this year:
Opponents were never jealous of
him—he was so fair and lovable.
The preceding sentence portrays
the key to the success of Henry
Grady, the southerner who, after
the tragic conflict of states, more
than any other man, drew closer
in friendship the demanding North
and the defying South.
Born in Athens, Ga., in 1851, he
had a brief and brilliant life which
ended in 1889. Managing editor of
The Atlanta Constitution and cor
respondent for the New York
Herald, he won national recogni
tion with his fiery speeches and
spectacular editorials under the
title, “The New South.”
As a little boy, he went to Mrs.
Elvira Lee's school and there he
was the classmate of my aunt,
Mildred Lewis Rutherford.
A friendship started between the
two that lasted throughout life. So
as a very young child, it was my
happy lot to be on intimate terms
with the Gradys. Henry, attending
college in Athens, fell in love with
Jule (Julie) King, daughter of a
greatly respected doctor. She was
Grady’s first and only sweet
heart.
I remember Miss Jule so well. I
was very young, but the family
petted me—once gave me a little
book that belonged to their neigh
bor, Miss Mary Harden, the sweet
heart of John Howard Payne, au-
thor of “Home, Sweet Home.”
Payne lived down the street from
the Hardens.
Henry Grady used to scream
with laughter when I would imi
tate Miss Mary. I was 12 years
old when I used to walk with Miss
Mary to Sunday School. Her pet
ticoat was always too chort and
when she wore a black grenadine
gathered skirt over her petticoat
her legs would show—and they
were not shapely.
Once I asked Mr. Grady, “Where
did you find Miss Jule?” He twin
kled his eyes and answered, “I
found her at the head of her class
at school. Yes, I remember there
were two in the class. But Jule
was at the head most of the time.
I forget the other girl, Jule, what
was her name?”
And Miss Jule would retort:
“Henry, you make Lamar believe
what you say. There were more
than two in my class—at least a
few more.”” Then her husband,
who loved a joke, would gayly
chuckle.
. The Gradys were living in At
lanta and the prosperous men used
to drive home to dinner. Dinner
was at 2 o’clock in the middle of
the day. Everybody who was any
body had a driver and a span of
horses.
The Gradys lived near my cou
sins, the Tom Glenns (father of Isa
Glenn, the novelist, and Garrard
Glenn, writer on law subjects).
The Gradys and the Glenns were
intimate friends and sometimes
Cousin Tommie on his way home
would linger at the Gradys. His
wife, Cousin Helen, waiting on the
porch (in those days all southern
homes had a front porch and
lawn) would send for him. An
other neighbor, Judge Newman
(father of Frances Newman, fam
ous author of “Demi Virgin"},
crony of the Gradys and the
Glenns, would call from his porch,
“I just left Tom on Grady's porch
up on a step ladder trying to kiss
Miss Jule’s hand.” At that, digni
fied Cousin Helen would quietly
smile, and say, “Mister Glenn (he
was short and stout) hasn’t got the
figure of a flirt, Judge.”
President Grover Cleveland and
his young bride were invited to
;visit Atlanta. The reception was
held at the Gradys. And I was in
vited to come over from Athens to
Atlanta to be one of the young
girls who were to help them re
ceive. Atlanta dressmakers were
kept busy making suitable gowns
for the grand occasion. The town
was decorated with flags and yards
and yards of bunting. It was a
.gala affair, with the elite as guests.
& had just returned from Europe
and had a lovely robin’s blue dress i
embroidered in silver with silver
slippers to match that I enjoyed
wearing. Once when I was wearing
this costume my escort, a cousin,
Tom Cobb Jackson, noticing that
the slippers had rhinestone buck
les that belonged to our renowned
great - great - grandfather Cobb,
ejaculated: “Lamar, too had it isn’t
the custom for a lady to put her
feet on the table!” At my aston
ished shocked “why?” he laughed:
“It would give you a better chance
to show off those lovely slippers!”
The next night after the recep
tion there was a grand affair at the
Capital City Club. Receiving were
Mayor Livingston Mims and a
group of outstanding Atlanta citi
zens who had sent President
Cleveland an invitation to visit
Georgia. The invitation was en
graved on a sheet of gold.
Well, that night I was right be
hind the President and the crowd
jostled, mashing against his fat
person, and he got mad, red in
the face. Desperately he tried to
elbow his way through the con
gestion, but the crowd couldn’t be
controlled, so the President ex
pressed his feelings in no uncer
tain terms. This displeased the
committee. One of the elegant
social leaders later came up to Mr.
Grady while I was sitting with him
on one of those old red plush sofas
so popular in their day. As Mr.
Grady arose to shake hands, “Hen
ry,” he said, “I'm going to turn
around and I want you to kick me
in the pants. I hope to Heaven
I'll _have better sense than to
send another gold invitation to
l that—" and in deference to a lady
the last word was said too low to
‘ hear.
i New Year’s Day was a great day
in Atlanta. Everyone threw open
his home, receiving from 11 o’clock
in the morning to 11 in the even
ing. I was invited to receive with
,the “Hugh Inmans. They lived
near the Gradys. I borrowed my
’ sister’s wedding dress to wear.
{ It had a gorgeous long train of
white satin trimmed in silver.
Somehow I was late in arriving
and all except Mr. Grady went
over to the Inmans. He waited for
me. He had eaten a big duck din
ner, his favorite dish was duck.
He was a much-sought-after din
ner guest and people used to bait
him to their affairs with “there’ll
be duck.” When we had strolled
up the long brick walk leading to
the Inmans, he stopped at the foot
i of the stone steps and said, “Missy,
I don’t believe I can tote myself
up those steps—l'm so full of duck
—l'm just drunk on duck, honey—
you don’t know what you miss
not liking it.” Then he commenced
to tell funny duck stories. Out of
every subject that came to his
mind he would make an interest
ing story. He would take the sim
plest things and weave them into
a wonderful fabric of thrilling
events. He was always out for a
story. If anything intrigued him,
he would write it down on his cuff.
On one occasion I was at a din=<
ner given to an English Lord, title
! folk were rare in Atlanta and so
ciety was excited about this visi
tor; I can’t remember his name. He
| didn’t look much like my idea of
ia Lord, he was red-headed and
had a measly face and couldn't
ltouch in brilliancy another din
i ner guest, Henry Grady.
There were many wines served
and, of course, as for all grand
dinners, champagne. There was a
discussion of the right tempera
ture for wines. It seems in Eng
land a dilferent temperature was
considered correct from what we
thought over here. Mr. Grady dis=
| cussed the subject as a connois
seur, although he was a teetotaler
and a strong prohibitionist.
Mr. Grady had the meost express
ive eyes, ‘and when he talked to
the honor guest they had funny
little twinkles in them. He had
a way of letting his eyes fall side
{ ways, then looking up they held
| a laugh.
{ The dessert at that dinner was
| the talk of the town. A hand
| some silver basket was filled with
| ice cream frozen in the shape of
| erimson and yellow roses with
?rose leaves. I have never seen
;anything more beautiful. It was
i a triumph in artistic effort. When
the basket was passed, the Lord
exclaimed: “Ah, these beauties—
shall I take a yellow or red rose?”
“Well,” said Mrs. Clarence
Knowles, the hostess, “you were
i born in Killarney—you should take
a Killarney rose, the yellow; the
tothers vy, American Degutions;
' His only, daughter, Gussie (Mys.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHPNS, GEORGIA
Eugene Black), told me that one
day her father came home with an
arm full of gifts and toys like
Santa brings. Her mother met him
at the door, exclaiming: “Henry! ! !
Why do you bring all these things
home at this time of the year—
July 4th?” }
“Well,” he said, “I like Christ
man so much, I hate to wait so
long for it to come again. So I
just thought the Gradys would
have two Christmases!”
The last time I was in the Grady
home was at the celebration of his
16th wedding anniversary. At the
dinner table I sat on his left and
my diary is filled with pages of
his wit. After this affair I went
with my cousin, Mrs. Hugh Hagan,
to spend the winter in Vienna, at
that time a gay capital with a so=
ciety life that, looking back, seems
like a story of fairy tales.
We told the Gradys goodbye in
October. During Christmas week
in that far-away land, we read in
in the New York Herald an ac
count of his death, Apgainst his
physicians’ advice and the pleas
of his wife, he disregarded an ill
ness and went north to give his
famous address at Plymouth Rock.
Pnfiumonia set in with tragic re
sults.
After reading this sad news, I
stood dejectedly looking out of the
windows on the Opera Ring
Strasse, thinking about all Henry
Grady’s wise sayings, thinking of
the advice he had given the son of
the owner of The Atlanta Consti
tution, Clark Howell Senior, at
tending the University: “NEVER
GRUMBLE; NEVER DRINK;
MARRY EARLY.” And as I stood
there, my cousin, whose affection
for Henry Grady was as deep as
mine, touched me on the arm,
“Come, Lamar, let’s go on the bal
cony and watch the sun go down
and the stars come out—just as
he used to tell us in his little poem,
‘lf I live till sundown, I will see
you and the stars again’.”
EXCERPT FROM HENRY
GRADY'S SPEECH ON THE
RACE PROBLEM IN THE SOUTH
Delivered In Boston, Dec. 12, 1889
I My people, your brothers in the
South, brothers in blood, in desti
|ny, in all that is best in our past
and future—are so beset with this
- problem that their very existence
depends on its right solution.
| What, we ask of you? First, pa
ltience: out of this alone can come
perfect work. Second, confidence:
in this alone you can judge fairly.
Third, sympathy: in this you can
help us best. Fourth, loyalty to the
republic, for there is sectionalism
in loyalty as in estrangement. This
hour little needs the loyalty that is
loyal to one section and yet holds
the other in enduring suspicion
and estrangement. Give us the
broad and perfect loyalty that
loves and trusts Georgia alike with
Massachusetts, that knows no
South, no North, no East, no West,
but endears with equal and pa
triotic love of our soil, every State
in the Union.
A mighty duty, sir, and a mighty
inspiration impels every one of us
tonight to lose in patriotic conse
cration whatever estranges, what
ever divides. We, sir, are Ameri
cans, and we fight for human lib
erty. The uplifting force of the
American idea is wunder every
throne of earth. France—Brazil—
these are our victories. To redeem
the earth from king-craft and op
pression—this is our mission. And
we shall not fail.
God has sown in our soil His
seed of millennial harvest and He
will not lay the sickle to the ripen
ing crop until His full and perfect
day has come. Our history, sir,
has been a constant and expanding
miracle from Plymouth Rock and
Jamestown 11l the way—aye, even
from the hour when the voiceless
and trackless ocean, a new world
rose to the sight of the inspired
sailor. As we approach the fourth
centennial of that stupendous day,
when the old world will come to
marvel and to learn, amid our
gathered treasures, let us resolve
to crown the miracles of our past
with the spectacle of a publie
cempact, united, indissoluble in the
bonds of love—loving from the
Lakes to the Gulf—the wounds of
war healed in every heart as on
every hill, serene and resplendent
at the summit of human achieve
ments and earthly glory, blazing
out the path and making clean the
way, up which all the nations of
the earth must come in God's ap
pointed time.
The night before you do your
baking, wrap your shortening in
waxed paper and put it into the
freezing compartment of your re
frigerator. In the morning, you ’ll
find it hard enough to shred on a
metal grater. It will be simnle to
mix it with, flour ang other in
&fl‘k?tflfl!%i‘wn ‘ £ek
Truck Crops
Good: Weather
Slows Planfing
The unseasonably war weather
during the first part of the year
was followed by intermittent cold
snaps .and heavy frosts -intil late
in the spring. Rainfall has been be
low normal and soil moisture is
brady depleted. in most areas.
Widely scattered showers have
been received since May 1, but
a good general rain is needed in
most sections of the State.
This unfavorable weather re
tarded planting of crops, states
Georgia Crop Reporting Service.
Cotton planting has been slow and
considerable replanting has been
necessary.. The soil has been too
dry for transplanting tobacco and
sweet potatoes satisfactorily. The
condition of growth of small
grains, grazing crops, and pasture
has been substantially retarded by
the cold weather and shortage of
soil moisture. Yields of both wheat
and oats will fall short of earlier
prospects. Dry weather and cold
‘nights have retarded commercial
truck crops and home gardens.
~ Freezing temperature and fre
quent frost in March and April
‘have been very destructive to
fruit crops, especially in north
Georgia. Only a fair crop of peach
es is expected south of Macon and
elsewhere in the State the pros
pects are very poor.
A Truck Crops
The general rains during the
first of the month, supplemented
by lighter rains this week have
improved growing conditions of all
truck crops.gßainfall has been
short this spring especially in the
central and southernd areas an
more rain is needed soon to pre
vent substantial falling off in
quality of truck crops reaching
the maturity stage. Harvest of
Ittuce and cabbage is nearing com
pletion. Very light harvest has
started for snap beans, cucumbers,
onions, and Irish potatoes.
Grain sorghum is a good substi
tute for corn and can be planted
through June with a fair chance
of good yields.
Brow sugar i a large jar with
dried prunes is a good combina
tion. The prunes keep the sugar
from turning hard; the sugar
sweetens the prunes.
from Cramp Pains
Scores of happy girls and women are
finding that when they take Cardui each
month they get blessed relief they never
knew before, {rom functional periodic pains.
That's beecause unlike pain-deadening drugs,
pills and tablets, Cardui helps correct pain
ful contractions of the organ musecles and
thus helps Nature resume a more normal
rhythm. In this way it actually aids in
overcoming a frequent cause of painful
eramps, If your pains are due to simple
functional disturbances —don’t wait — ack
for a hottle of Cardui. You'll bless the day
you first tried this tested relief.
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AS SHOWN
: N 8
m St C G STUDESAKER CHAMPI 4
e udebaker hamplon 6-PASSENGER, 2-DOOR
is one of the 4 lowest pri - “DA"S 9
largest sellin ! :
gest selling cars! |
* . . e
Champion vt gas mileage, Bof DELIVERED IN ATHENS ¢
" i
loca xirs 4
A Studebaker Champion, with everdrive (optional at extra State and ! taxes, if any, ¢ .
cost), beat 30 cars of 16 makes in straight-out gas mileage Prices may vary slightly in nearby communities 1
in this year's Mobilgas Grand Canyon Run. Here's how the dve to differences im framsporiction charges ..
Champion and the other largest seiling lowest i
price cars did in that contest: PERMGuAELSI.ON Comparably low prices on other d
. - Studebaker Champion Custom models: i
Studebaker Champion with overdrive | 26.551 4-door sedan, S-pass. Starlight coupe, [
Lowest price car "B” with overdrive | 23.326 business coupe
Lowest price car "C” Prices sublject to change without notice Y
Lowest price car "D" g
287 W. Broad Phones 9175 or 4546
AT THE
MOVIES
PALACE—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. — “Mrs. Mike,”
starring Dick Powell, Evelyn
Keyes. Hypo-Chondri Cat., News.
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — “Wo
mon of Distinction,” starring Ray
Milland, Rosalind Russell. Shoot
the Basket. Jingle Jangle Jungle,
News. ‘
GEORGIA—
- Tues.-Wed. — “On the Town,”
starring Gene Kelly, Frank Sina
tra, Vera-Ellen. College Sports
Paradise. Timid Pup.
Thurs.-Fri. — “Pinky,” starring
Jeanne Crain, Ethel Waters, Ethel
Barrymore. News.
Sat. — “Sahara,” starring Hum
phrey Bogart, Bruce Bennett, Fifth
Column Mouse.
STRAND—
‘Mon.-Tues. — “Prison Warden,”
starring Warner Baxter, Anna Lee.
High & Dizzy. Yankee Doodle Don
key.
Wed. — “The Heiress,” starring
QOlivia De Havilland, Montgomery
Clift. Adv. of Sir Galahad—Chap
ter 10.
Thurs. — %“Johnny . Allegro,”
starring Geo. Rraft, Nina Foch.
Hands Tell the Story.. Dream
Walking.
~ Fri.-Sat. — “Mysterious Desper
‘ado,” starring Tim Holt, Richard
Martin. Mama’s Little Pirate. Ra
‘dar Patrol vs. Spy King — Chap~
ter 7. .
RITZ—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues. — “Pardon My
Sarong,” starring Bud Abbott, Lou
Costellc. Woman of Tomorrow.
Strife with Father.
Wed.-Thurs. —“Dangerous Pro
fession,” starring George Raft,
CLASSIC CITY
POST 185
Atlanta Highway
Tuesday Night, May 23
Starting 8:00 O’Clock.
Music By
Dukes of Rythm
Adm. 1.25 Couple
— Advance Tickets —
Colonial Hotel.
F—FH R R =Rt
om °44% % E
A iy . i
By " Loans up to S2OOO 't_fi(
i} .
e 4 , +:f COMMUNITY ;i
I _nifloan & Investment -
3 7 " CORPORATION i
LS ”M i Rm. 102, Shackleford Bidg. T
Fi % fll 215 COLLEGE AVE, ATHENS, GA. || -
“; M@m o{ Telephone 1371 :{
1] Phone first so your ¢ { i
money can be waiting.” | _ ‘1
e w“t’gi?s
TURSDAY, MAY 29, 1950,
Ella Pat O'Brien. 5, v,
Thmm Not Guilty, | pg
s‘!“rl'-%lt - “Rnnm%e; o e
? Brleg
Starrett, Smiley gmt. Super
‘Wolf. Cody of the Pony Express. .
DRIVEIN
D “IN— .
__Mon.-Tues. — “Knock gn Ay
Door,” starring Humphrey 5. dart
John Derek. Donald’s Qi Dav.
News, : :
Wed.-Thurs. — “Silver River »
starring Errol Flynn, Ann Sher.
‘dan. Sheepish Wolf. News.
Fri, — “Always Together,” siar.
ring Robert Hutton, Joyce Rov.
nolds. Kicking the Crown Arou, .
'lndian Serenade.
| Sat. — “Brimstone,” starring
'Rod Sameron, Walter Bran, ¢
Adrian Booth. Waders of the Doe,
‘Lo the Poor Buffal. :
NEW 1 ]
FREE!
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,Contains illustrated map of
‘entire cilly, showinibus and
subway lines, with photos
and information on where to
go, how to {et there. Your:
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And When You Visit New York- ‘
Why not stay at the King
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