Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
“(('5 "’%(Q‘g" ~A~ SR e=g . . i
i -{f‘)‘""’*‘i-rAiIO;S Basil Willing
i <69 ,(”'(,’\.‘ By Helen McCloy
i, NG 19 esß, g o i,
AL % WS 00 Rondom Mouse, Inc. Distributed by NEA Service, Inc,
THE BTORY: Jack Duggan, a
private detective, is murdered
after he posed as psychiatrist
Basil Willing at a dinner at the
home of Dr. Zimmer, also a psy
chiatrist. The same night Kath
e 'ne Shaw, aged and blind, dies
under mysterious circumstances.
Zimmer resumes his gatherings, at
waich he had been studying some
¢’ his patients, and Stephen Law
rcnce, a poet, is poisoned, but is
revived by Basil, Neither Law
rence nor his daughter Perdita are
2b% or willing to tell exactly what
oceurred and maintain it was an
asccident. But Charlotte Dean
I'Miss Shaw's secretary makes a
roport on the party to Basil. The
guests, she said, were “a little
dictrait.”
* » <
XXVII
CHARLOTTE DEAN went’ on,
“Mr. Yorke wasn't in the least
uneasy. He didn’t stammer, even
hesitate or anything like that. But
he did seem a littlo—weary all
evening and rather silent. As for
Dr. Zimmer. ..."” Charlotte smiled.
“Has that man ever been ill at
ease in his life? He’s always the
parfect host, genial and ccnsider
ate, as ready to listen as to talk,
but never at a loss for a word
when there is an awkward pause.
And so vastly civil, as they said in
the 18th centry! He wears his
courtesy like armor and it makes
him quite impentreable to ordin
ary mortals like myself. But I do
like him. And Mr. Shaw was very
attentive to me.”
“You've forgotten Mrs. Mann,”
said Gisela.
“She was just as wusual. Not
very profound in her conversation,
perhaps, but always amiable and
smiling.” Charlottee’s own smile
was rueful. “I know this is not
the sort of thing you wanted to
hear, Dr. Willing, but as nothing
else happened all I can report are |
these gossipy little details that
can’t have much interest for you.
I won’t say I'm sorry. It would
have been dreadful if that idea of
yours about Miss Shaw had turned
out tosbe the ‘ruth. I'm glad if
I've helped you to prove it wasn’t
sO.”
Ba:g’a face was grave as he an
swered her. “My dear Miss Shaw,
nofl'li:x has been proved yet. I've
warned you of possible danger.
Let me repeat that warning.”
o> fl eyes clouded. “And
I thourt it was all 0ver....”
“Have xou thought any more
about this”” From his desk Basil
RITZ -
Doors
LAST TIMES T(I)iT;;’,HT
Features: 1:07, 2:48, 4:29,
6:19."2_:‘.51. 9:32.
: EK\Y 4
_—~ A p :
JOUNTAX
mRROLFLYNN l
PATRIGE WYWORE os @
Also — Mporiscope — Cartoon
ATHENS
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
LAST TIMES TODAY
.
!‘_J“ L
B GORDON ¢
DAY-MARAE
Plus — Noveltoon — News
C¢-0-0-L—Air Conditioned—C-0-0-L
S’I_‘AR:%S ' ; Doors Open 12:45
TOMORROW PAIAcG | Features—l:oo, 2:42, 4:24 6:00
- - 7:48, 9:30
&
LN o e,
a 3 4Ay 2
L fig&'
the sweetheart of _/ 2y *
*AN AMERICAN - & )
N PARIS”. .. &, "‘ B -is the flaming torch
o : of New Orleans now !
s M-G.M" \ _\-13\;5; . 'ff* B :-.',.‘. B
'{ \ -« smna‘ms %
B a N
5% et
O B R .. 6. W e AR R
oo KURT KASTHAR - mg! ROLAKD - Jomm e
mmw M 57 * soom o scose pu o ART COMN
‘ v (U i cesay =
{ mfi &y “Only Hare” “Latest News”
I —LAST SHOWING TONIGHT
Jennifer Jone
“W” H'ART” Starrln(;z “;):vidol":rrar
took the scrap of paper they had
found in Miss Shaw's copy of
Keats,
“I haven’t had time, really.”
Charlottee fumbled at her jabot
and detached a long, slim, Italian
lorgnette. Daintily she peered
throught the lenses at the grubby
scrap of paper. “All those letters
and figures—4Clo4WS-——the com
bination of a safe?”
~ “It looks more like a receipt for
something that costs $30,” said
\Gisela. “Something indicated by
| 4CIO4WS. Don’t department stores
use code numbers to indicate the
}type and size of clothing or other
merchandise”
- “This isn’t a department store
tag or sales slip,” answered Basil.
“There’s no printing. Just a hand- |
written scrawl.”
. “Then I really have no idea
what it is.” The lorgnette snapped
shut and dropped to dangle from
its black ribbon. “I'm sorry to be
of so little help to you!”
“Oh, but you have been a great
deal of help,” returned Basil.
“More, perhaps, than you have
any idea. And let me remind you
of your prominse not to mention
this slip of paper to anyone. It
would be dangerous.”
* e &
AS soon as Charlotte had gone,
Gisela turned to him in arnaze
ment. “You didn’t tell her about
Stephen Lawrence!”
“It would have altered her im
pression of the whole evening and
distorted every observation she
made,” he explaned.
“It’s strange she hasn’t heard
about it already from someone
else.”
“You think so? Lawrence isn’t
going to talk about something that
might be construed as his attempt
at suicide or his daughter’'s at
tempt at mercy-killing. Neither is
she. ¥ shall not report it to any
one as anything but accident, for
I have no evidence that it was
anything else. Probably no one
who was at that dinner last Fri
day has the slightest suspicion of
what happened to Lawrence after
ward—except the person responsi
ble for it.”
Gisela looked at him in con
sternation. “So they’re all going
to dine togethre again Friday
night! Can’t you do something?”
Basil did not appear to be listen
ing. He was looking at the grubby
scrap of paper with its scrawl of
letters and figures—4Clo4WS. . ..
That evening after dinner he
went to the bookshelves where he
kept the old books he had in
herited from his grandparents and
took down a slim volurne in mot
tled boards with spine and corners
of leather—the sort of binding
used in the 19th century when a
magazine or pamphlet was bound
at the owner’s expense.
He was so absorbed that Gisela
finally looked over his shoulder to
see what it was. “Dickens! Of all
things! Mrs. Lirriper’s Legacy.” I
never heard of it.”
“It’s an interesting story—or
rather an interesting collection of
stories — told by Mrs. Lirriper’s
lodgers. One of them is curiously
modern, with the atmosphere that
preceeded the French Revolution
doubling for the unrest of our own
time. Yet my grandmother brought
this on a railway station platform
in 1870.”
* * *
GISELA saw him reading the
book several times in the next
few days, but it was not until
Friday afternoon that he put it
down with a new look in his eyes
—a look of decision and excite
ment. ’
“You’ve got an idea!” she ex
claimed.
“Several ideas.”
“Tell me!”
“I think I know why Duggan
was killed and how.”
“Did you get it from something
Perdita omitted?”
“No. From something she added.
Unnecessarily. There isn’t time to
{ talk now. I've only a couple of
! hours before these people meet
i again at Dr. Zimmer’s. Do we
. have a street map of Manhattan?”
t (To Bet Continued)
I YWCA PUMP BROKEN
Due to delay in repairing the
pump for the pool at the YWCA
gym, there will be no swimming
this afternoon or tonight, but of
lficials said late today that the
| pump will definitely be repaired
'in time for swimming Tuesday
iafternoon or night.
l Sound waves travel about 1,100
feet per second.
B e T | =
gt w 0 ‘ T Y - S i . l": .1
'R | iupl | (T o o wo |
“i@e 2% ! v ’ ; Lo, B i i
L P e T 8 h Y. VW sl v la e i, i f
7 e % A y & S z it e R % _E
b 5 o g & % b 5 i s ] L R e vBB 1 g s
‘- P &mgST PO e ’Jgf iy %fi '
B VP L WA o 4’@4 Gl J\ vl g
Pl BTN ey vWV L “ By et Vgt
f%)” “o‘4‘ 'y T RS e’; e PT TR W Ll A
LR 7 ey Son A i % LY b% 1i
‘,; 2 flwfv o »;;_""‘ ;*: ",y'r ib\ g B %i, :i ks »}j i
iR TR R || O el . Mgy
&,"L:; O o T ; o . % ; o
o 58 e S gy 8 : . R i
RRRR. / L o .
gr’ TRoph iy e is B / AN Wi 7 . & e
bsRAL4RN e 2 3 . R K
/,., g .:; gt . P’k (i g ’:)3"'" J . ) S o 3
' ; TR R ) ; i 5 A
b 4 R e i / il A
e Z 4 . ' f % A LS, ~“ e e
i it ‘. 4 G 3 J o A 3 ; ; o, . 9 b P
L T W ; il o ; ~ il
%";% i e % i »fifl a 5 s & 52 mffi W.m . J
NO STEEL, NO SHELLS—SheII-making machinery stands idle in the country’s biggest _aftillery
shell factory as lack of steel from struck plants sent 2200 workers off the job in St. Louis’ Chev=
rolet Shell Plant.
: % z S
SRR R 2 B %"??:é G B %5
B s i % e e Fa
o . : ’ -
e i s TR B e
T | .
e PR R B gl B o
e . i s e / e, T v
,f? . . o e N
o A S S T
S ...
P M&&Wfi,fi i R e R e 1:3‘2%%,;3~,’f" s
READY FOR REDS—White-helmeted police of Osaka, Japan, .
grouch behind the aluminum shields with which they have equipped”
themselves in anticipation of Communist riots. -
Kandy Bar Kid Is High On Gl List
0f Brave Men Fighting In Korea
The following story by James
A Michener, author of “Tales of
the South Pacific” and “Return to
Paradise,” was released Monday
by the U. S. Navy. Michener is in
Korea as a correspondent for Holi
day magazine.
By JAMES A. MICHENER
With U. S. First Marine Divi~
sion in Korea — (AP) — Every
once in a while you meet a man
whose extraodinary bravery stuns |
you. But high on anybody’s list
would have to be an amazing
Marine called the Kandy Bar Kid.
Twenty - three - year- old Lyle
Lewis of Tacoma, Wash., is phen
omenal, even for the Marines. He
apparently has no nerves, no fear,
and little need of sleep. More than
40 times in the last two months
he has penetrated Communist lines
to a depth of more than two miles,
has scouted their positions for pe
riods of up to 40 consecutive hours,
and has wandered back to his own
lines to report on what the enemy
was up to.
He has been ambushed by the
Chinese five times, has engaged
them in pointblack night battles
eight or nine times, has lived
through several artillery barrages
of enormous concentration, has
been wounded once and went back
behind enemy lines three days
‘after the shrapnel was removed
}from his leg.
| Cowboy G. L
Lewis looks the part. Six-feet
two slouch — hipped, blue — eyed,
he is quite thin and looks like a
fast shooting cowboy in a B-movie.
He has a shaggy crop of red hair
that looks as if mice nested in it
and an incredible moustache that
wanders all over his face like a
lost forest.
He has developed such great
skill in pentrating enemy mine
fields, cutting barbed wire, prob
ing entrenched positions and ly
ing low among enemy elements
that he has revolutionized Marine
procedures in his sector.
I saw him the other night as he
started & probe which would take
him more than two miles into the
heart of what his commanding of
ficer termed ‘‘unusually heavily
fortified positions.” Lewis was
dressed in dirty fatigues, helmet
and armor-proof vest: His face
was smeared with black paint and
he carried hand grenades and a
submachine gun. He was a lethal
character, headed for one of the
toughest jobs a man could get.
He would penetrate enemy mine
fields, climb to the top of a Com
munist-held hill well inside enemy
lines and personally blow up a
troublesome machine-gun bunker.
One Man Army
He grinned through his camau
flage and said, “I feel better about
this job since the rain started.
You can move quieter.” He set out
SAVE
50%
PLASTIC OR FIBRE
SEAT COVERS
Permanently And Neatly Installed By An Expert
At No Additional Cost.
Quanity Limited — Price Low :
GET YOURS NOW! :
J. SWANTON IVY, Inec.
THE BANNER-HERALD. ATHENS, GEORGIA
through an Asiatic cloudburst and
within 10 yards the paint was
streaming down his face, his ank
les were slogging in mud, and he
disappeared into the darkness. His
buddies call him the one-man
army.
Therefore his nicknime, the
Kandy Bar Kid, comes as a sur
prise. This deadly fighter has a
special trick he uses when it is
absolutely vital that he get up-to
date information. He leaves his
own lines at dusk, goes deep in
side the enemy positions, finds
some natural camouflage and hugs
the earth as day breaks. There he
lies, in the blazing sun, all through
the daylight hours watching
enemy dispositions.
As the second night begins he
usually moves forward in an at
tempt to take a prisoner or wreck
some installation. Thirty-six hours
later he straggles back to his own
line. On such trips he takes with
him one cup of water and three
candy bars.
A friend says, “Give Lewis three
candy bars and a sub-machine gun
and he’ll invade hell.” His com
mander, Lt. Col. Gerald Russell
of Georgiaville, R. 1., reports, “The
only limit to Lewis’ courage is
my order that he can’t go more
than three miles inland. He’s in
credible.”
; Soft Spoken
Lewis is no dead-end killer. He
comes from a good family, is mar
ried and has two kids. He speaks
softly but enjoys a good bust with
the boys.
Five nights out of six he pene
trates enemy territory. When he
comes back at 4 o’clock in the
morning dawn, he stands his nor
mal watch along the line, he sleeps
for about six hours and in the af
ternoon takes his place in the or
dinary routine of digging trenches
and doing heavy work around his
company. He puts in an 18-hour
day, 10 of them under the most ex
treme danger. In civilian life he
held a union card.
In the 57 days Lewis has been
doing this work he has never had
a hot meal, has had one bath.
I saw him this morning when he
returned from his mission against
lthe machine-gun bunker. He was
dripping sweat, covered with mud,
his face an ugly smear. His mous
l tache looked as if he had borrowed
it from a wounded walrus. “Got
the bunker,” he said briefly and
slogged off to bed.
* HARLEM *
Sun. - Mon, - Tues.
'* “ENFORCER” *
Child's Devofi
By DAVID TAYLOR MARKE
AP Newsfeatures Writer
Parents and teachers are becom
ing more and more concerned
about radio, TV, comics and the
movies viewed and read by their
children.
According to Professor Paul
Witty, Director of the Psycho- Ed
ucational Clinic of Northwestern
University, and Dr. Harry Bricker
of Emory University’'s Atlanta
Area Teacher Education Service,
these forms of entertainment have
come to be increasingly important
to our children in recent years.
Sometimes it seems to adults that
youngsters’ leisure time is filled
with little else.
The authors of a little pamphlet,
“Your Child and Radio, TV, Com-~
ics and Movies,” published by
Science Research Associates, Inc.
of 57 W. Grand Ave., Chicago, 111.,
they point out that millions of
children know ecomic characters
better than they know our secret
ary of state or England’s prime
minister.
Over 90 per cent of children
between 8 and 13 years of age
regularly read comic strips and
comic books. Every Saturday, and
often three or four times a week,
10 million children’s eyes are
glued to movie screens.
In addition, the average child
in some communities spends two
or more hours each day listening
to the radio. Reading, studying,
and other activities are often car
ried on with radio programs as
gackground. It is known, too that
5- and 6-year-olds are among the
heaviest televiewers; they aften
watch TV four or five hours a day.
Many children, ages 7 to 17,
spend an average of three hours
a day in front of television sets.
Some watch video 27 hours a week
—almost as much time. as they
spend on their lessons.
“What do all these facts mean?”
the authors ask. “They mean that
today’s children live not merely
in an age of atomic energy, but
also in an age of mass communica
tion .... Today-directly or indi
rectly—these forms of entertain
ment inescapably touch every
child, and no amount of parental
care can prevent this.”
These media, the authors say,
are not in themselves harmful.
Rather, it’s the way they are often
used and the things they bring to
the eyes and the ears of children
that cause the trouble. :
Parents are concerend, for ex
ample, with the horror and viol
ence which run through so much
of the material. They want to
know if the constant repetition of
trite situations will stunt the
creativeness of children ex
posed to them. Will children
acept the standards and val
ues stressed by these enter
tainments as their own even if
these are opposed to those values
stressed by most parents and
teachers? Will the child who is a
passive listener learn to participate
in constructive activities? Won’t
grades go down? What can parents
do to help them choose a balanced
diet of fun and recreation?
First of all, say the authors,
moderation is essential. Only you
and your child can decide how
much time he should have for lis
tening to the radio or watching TV,
or reading comics. Only you can
decide how much excitement he
can stand without ill effects. You
may have to ration or even ban
some programs. If you do have to
skip some programs, you’ll need
to provide some good substitutes.
The important thing is to plan
with your child a well-balanced
program.
Schedule home work before or
after he settles down to his favor
ite programs. Some children can
work to a background of radio,
but this isn’t true of every child.
- As for movies, children under
8 should go very seldom, say the
authors. When they do go, parents
should know from reviews or from
some reliable person who has
seen the movie, that is a whole
some experience for.a small child.
And it is a good idea, they say, for
movie going not to became a
habits.
Since TV, radio and the comics
are here to stay, say the authors,
teachers can play a part, too, in
helping children make better use
of these media. By learning some
thing about their pupils’ habits
they can also discover ways to
use these as tools for helping chil
dren learn.
EXTRA FINGERS AND X
TOES REMOVED
CORDORA,. Spain — (AP) —
Gines Ceaballero Zurita,- 18, will
walk better after an operation.
He had nine toes on each foot and
six fingers on each hand. The
operation was. to relieve him of
the surplus. The young chair
maker never has been able to
wear shoes.
After Jail Break l
HOLYORK, COLO. July 20—
(AP)—Fourteen persons, five of
them children, were imprisoned
for hours in a farmhouse on the
eastern Colorado sandhills by two |
gun-brandishing youths during al
sh(])rt-lived Sunday flight from
jail. l
The pair, identified by state |
highway patrolman Darold Hart-E
sook as as Glenn Maynard, 19, of |
Amhert, Colo., and Ronald Ravey |
17, of Indianapolis, apparently be- I
lieved they had killed Sheriff |
Harry Clements when they broke |
jail yesterday.
Talked of ‘Killing”
One of their hostages said they
talked of the “killing” -and warned
that there was certain to be a gun
battle at the farmhouse.
Actually, Clements suffered on
ly cuts and abrasions from a beat
ing and was resting at his home in
“good” condition when the youths
‘were captured about dusk at a
highway barricade. They surren
dered meekly.
After the sheriff was beaten
yesterday morning, the two mana
ced him to a third prisoner in the
jail and fled in the sheriff’s radio
equipped car. They seized wea- |
pons as they left. ‘
About 9 a. m., farmer Frank |
Myers related, they suddenly ap- |
peared at his farmhouse three
miles from Wray, Colo., waving
their weapons. |
Other Threats
They threatened Myers, 58, his
wife Ella, their son Mynard and
their daughter, Mrs. Harry |
Strauch of Denver, and her two
children.
By chance, the Myers family
had planned a reunion at the
farmhouse. Myers said that all
‘persons who arrived up to late af
‘ternoon were admitted while the
intruders stood by with drawn |
weapons. ‘
The men, he said, were tied to
chairs, but the women were al
lowed to move around and even
were directed to prepare lunch.
The children were confined to the
house but were not bothered.
Finally, Myers said, the pair |
became nervous about the num
ber of persons being held and
feared someone would start a
search so they fled. The headed
back northward and their trail
was picked up almost immediate
ly. Waiting officers ran them into |
the roadblock. ;
POSTAL CLERKS MAY SMOKE'
" NEW YORK— (AP)—Postoffice
iclerks in Manhattan now are per
‘mitted to smoke at their desks,
play the radio and send out for
coffee on the long night shifts.
Clerks now may smoke except
when dealing directly with the |
public (selling stamps) or when*
working around open mail sacks. |
Playing the radio is restricted to
hours when the postoffice is closed
'to the public and coffee calls are
permitted only in regular time- |
off periods. ‘|
Similar policies have been ini
effect for years at other general |
postoffices in the city. It was|
found that outright prohibiton of
smoking resulted in the time—
consuming practices of smoking in |
washrooms or elsewiere. ‘
Some 19 metals, in very small
quantities, are contained in the
various grades of beef. Called 1
trace elements because they are |
found in traces, these essentials
‘ run from aluminum and boron to |
tin and zinc. |
Open
m 12:45
LAST TIMES TODAY
fe‘-,..:}«"}a;yiu 2o . A
| "‘ETJEERS £ "TILTHE SUR SHIRES
| S3EEE NELLIE
STARTS TOMORROW
For One Week
N Spectacular Color by
\TECHN!COLOF
S RAFAEL SABATINI'S
STARRING A A »
STEWART - ELEANOR #% ;
g : o vfi* 44
i JANET MEL e
LR #
| with ovz
| HENRYWiLcoxoN-Niva Foc
| -EWIS STONE- RICHARD ANDERSO!
T e IR T T VL. P Sy
: Doors
HINHEY omen
£ DRt o) A e2l
TODAY AND TOMORROW
A PICTURE WITH A HEART AS
B 2 s TODAY'S GOLDEN WEST!
T
¥ RODDY - PRESTO_N : R!;;\w
h McDOWALL + FOSTER « JOHNSON
;IR ReIBAT LB UL 100 e ey
AT THE MOVIES
STRAND-—
Sun. Mon.-Tues.—"“Wait Till the
Sun Shines Nellie,” starring Jean
Peters, Hugh Marlowe. Bug Pa
rade, News.
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. — Scara
mouche,” starring Stewart Gran
ger, Janet Leigh. Ghost of the
Town. Met News.
GEORGIA—
Tues.-Wed.—“My Friend Flic
ka,” starring Roddy MecDowall,
Preston Foster. Shape Ahoy. Out
board Shenanigans.
Thurs.-Fri. — “Skirts Ahoy,”
starring Esther Williams, Barry
Sullivan. Hush My Mouse. Fox
News.
Sat.—‘“Jungle Jim In Forbidden
Land,” starring Johnny Weissmul
ler, Angela Greene. Hawaiian
Sports. Neighbor Next Door.
..HARLEM (Colored)—
(Free Parking
Sun.-Mon.-Tues, — “Enforcer,”
starring Humphrey Bogart. The
stor yof a man who matched him
self against a natlonwide network
of killers-for-hire. More show:
Chapter 11, “Perils of the Darkest
Jungle. Disney Color Cartoon,
Plutos Heart,” and Latest world
news.
Wed.-Thurs.—“Sensations,” with
Cab Calloways’ orchestra and
Woody Hermans' orchestra. A
great story of action and music.
Added: MGM color cartoon “Gal
lopin’ Gals.”
Fri.-Sat.—‘“Jesse James,” with
Tyrone Power, Randolph Scott,
Nancy Kelly, Henry Fonda, and
Slim Summerville, in technicolor.
CYNVISAT RS eTR
Wed i
ednesday Morning
N C
B-A-R-G-A-I-N-S
SPECIAL PRICES - SPECIAL
SAVINGS FORYOU—
/@ | Men's Sport
e Y iey
PR NG R 5 B W N . . (.
*'x;z\ Lo Ny SHIRTS
v %L}an flf; A very limited quality
% f\’ in WHITE only. Full
5 R (7 : cut stock up mow and
| SKIP-DENT ; 7 | :
B \. 4 save. Sizes. 5-M-L.
e R sEa s T
MEN'’S
ITS
SUMMER SUITS
I 4.88
Qur Entire Stock Reduced to Ge!
M
MEN’S
Q
SPORT COATS
Our entire stock of summer coats repriced 0 #
new low off—
-7.88
“d
b o LITTLE BOYS
BRI 4R Denim Shorts
E?gg«’”??e\ c p' "
e
W% % . . Shorts, soeasy o <l'€
G N
GO %W P
gzz”w‘g for, sp cool so We?
i et :
, i Sizes 2-10 you save
B-cement Floor ~ plenty on these
TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1942
PALACE-—
Sun.-Mon.-Tues.—“Wild Heg, "
starring Jennifer Jones, Dsj,
Farar. Mysterious Cowboy—c;,.
toon. News.
Wed. - Thurs, - Fri, — “G 14
Alley,” starring Ralph Meelc
Leslie Caron (sweetheart of
American in Paris”), Oily Harc. .
Bugs Bunny. News,
Sat. — “Jumping Jacks,” s, .
ring Dean Martin, Jerry L wis
RITZ—
Mon.-Tues.—“Rocky Mountaiy, »
starrini Errol Flynn, Patrice W .
more. Let's Go Marlin Fishing
Sport. Snow Time for Comedy_
Blue Ribbon. .
Wed.-Thurs, — “The Enforce;
starring Humphrey Bogart, ¢
De Corsia. Wicket Wacket—;,.
toon.
Fri.-Sat.—“Fighting Westerne, -
starring Randolph Scott, Ay
Sheridan. Baby Bottleneck— 1)
Ribbon. Don Daredevil Rijc.
Again—chapter 11,
DRIVE-IN—
Mon.-Tues, — “Tea for T.."
starring Doris Day, Gordon Nac-
Rae. City Kitty—Noveltoon. New«
Wed.-Thurs.—“The West Point
Story,” starring James Cagney,
Virginia Mayo, Doris Day, Gordon
Macßae. Snow Time for Comedy
—cartoon. News.
Fri.—“ Young Man With Tdeas*
starring Glenn Ford, Ruth Roman
Woodpecker in Rough— Woody
Woodpecker.
Sat.—“Sugarfoot,” starrinz Ran
dolph Scott, Adele Jergens
Sleepytime Tom—Tom and Jerry,
Reducing—Pete Smith.