Newspaper Page Text
Wi pNEGPAY, JULY 30, 1952,
& - “..:;Nw\"' 4 = 7y =Y . . -
L re—Aligs Basil Willing
Rl &\ ¢ By Helen McCloy
o \\\‘\' \ N " Copynight 1951 by Helen McCloy Dresser, printed through permunon of the publisher,
r e WL 00 Random Mouse, Inc. Distributed by NEA Seevice, Ine,
g STORY: Jack Duggan, a
o vate deslive is murdered and
L Katherine Shaw, aged and
L 4, dies under mysterious cir
¢ mstances following a dinner at
¢t » home of D Zimmer, who is a
" .hiatrist smd who held the
P epings o study his patients.
{ +or toe poct Stephen Lawrence
i; noisoned, but saved by Basil
y ting whe wes drawn into the
o~ because Duggan used Basil's
pome to geln sdmittance to Zim
mor's. A clne left behind by Miss
g aw indicates she had hired Dug
.y who hod paid S3O for some
i"'ng de‘(ribfi‘;l N 49104“’8.
XXVIII
TuF street was a thoroughfare,
o the city diagonally from
. west to southeast. Like other
¢~ in the neighborhood, it was
h. dingy, litered, Basil Will
.+ oot oul of his car and stood
hoting up at the sheer, bleak
walls
115 turped to look at the houses
1 his side of the street—small,
uat, squalid houses, some brick,
me brownsione, many with
by little shops on the ground
o, A tailor's. a plumber’s a
eyhbler’s. & pawnshop —struggling
w~iahborhood — businesses that
ould last @ few months and then
. wav to others as fugitive. At
o corner, a sign identified the
voroughfare as “Warwick Street.”
nasil welked toward the middle of
ia block until he came to'number
he cobbler’, shop was on one
. and an electrical repair shop
{he other, The door of the
v itself was a faded brown,
ced and scaling. Basil looked
. at the four floors above. Dusty
I . come broken. No curtains
\ades. No light. The door was
i There was a row of letter
‘os, Through dim glass, he saw
\eg serawled on scraps of pa=-
nor in slots below the boxes. He
li" 2 match and held the flame up
ty the name under box 4-C. In
ihat slet there was no name at all,
A hinge creaked as Basil en
tered the cobbler’s shop next door
_a cramped, windowless closet,
reeking with leather and garlic.
A feeble electric light dangled
from a wire over the cobbler’s
hench. An old man looked up from
tho shoe he was resoling with
dull, incurious eyes. “Shine?”
“No, thanks. I want to ask you
yout the house next door.” Basil
sat down on a greasy chair pro
vided for customers with only one
pair of shoes who waited in stock
ing feet while those shoes were
heeled and soled.
“Don’t know nothing;” The cob
bler dropped his eyelids. His ham
mer began to tap again.
* * B
SILENTLY Basil laid a $5 bill
n the counter. The eobbler look
ed at #t without any change of
“Miracle Drug”
Fains of Arthritis, Rheumatism,
weurids, Lumbago, Bursitis*_ .
fofief Can Start In Minutes
Thore's no internal doging with SURIN,
Nothing te swallow and wait anxiously
I religf. You simply apply SURIN
richt at the point of pain and blessed
relief starts as penetration beneath the
sin gets under way. Of course there's
& reason for this wonder-working new
e ernal fast pain relief medicine.
!""s methacholine, & recent chemical
born of research in & great laboratory.
It acts speedily to aid penetration of
SURIN’s pain-quelling ingredients,
Mathacholine also causes deeper, longer
lasting pain relief and increased speed
up of local blood supply.
[osted on chronic rheumatics in large uni.
versity hospital it brought fast relief to 7365
pailents and in home-for-the-aged 77&- To
tally different from old-feshioned ru and
liniments, modern SUKIN brings faster re
bef, longer without burning or blistering;
without unplegsant odor or grease. Simply
suooth on EURIN st the point of pain and
fecl pain ease in minutes. loney-blag at your
drug store if SURIN doesn’t relieve muscle
pain fester and better then anything you've
e sed. A generous jar costs $1.26. *SURIN
Wrota cure for any of these conditions.
¥closson & Robbins, Inc., Bridgeport 9, Conn,
DRUG CO.
MORE FOR YOUR MONEY
(fl* e m New, improved Silver Dust/
Y" - T T e T ‘ ~
& et AR o S - S - 2
CRMNOR Y
|=3 orth 25° or WOI= =
W Giver Dust © |
\ \) 5 e
B S e
ol L Look what you get!
VR /et Safety with Silver Dusti New im
siaen & § B e o /proved wonder-bubble suds get clothes
‘ R » cleaner, whiter, brighter. Speed dish
v(O (g washing! Contain no harsh chemicals
au to irritate hands or fade colors.
@“ 3 : st Extra Value with Silver Dust! A big
! ; Cannon Dish Towel in every Giant
LOON! eietss P 2‘ Size. Worth 25¢ or more. To&quality.
- &«4«;{ { ‘ Lint-free! Absorbent! Neatly hemmed!
. Rl © 6 N\ o
Fag> ©
W MORE FOR YOUR MONEY | °
< #han any other waghing producs:
expression, but the tapping of his
hammer ceased.
“Is the house empty?”
“Yes.”
“Why?"
“Board of Health. They say it’s
rotting away. Going to fail down.
So everybody has to move out.
Poor people. No other place to go.
Most of them had to move in with
cousins or friends. Why couldn’t
those busybodies have left them
alone? A few nails here and there
and the house would be all right.
Poor people don’t expect a palace.”
“How long has the house been
vacant?”
+ “Six months ago they all moved
out.”
“Who owns the building?”
“Jimmy Bush. He runs the
pawnshop down at the corner.
Why don’t you ask him?” -
“I'd rather ask you.” Basil took
a fihotograi)h from his inner
pocket and laid it on the counter
beside the $5 bill.
The cobbler saw a still face
with staring eyes and dropped jaw
—a crude flashlight picture, un
pos&d, untouched. “You're a cop?”
“ O-”
“That guy’s dead.”
“This happens to be a police
photograph, but I'm not a police
man. What are you afraid of?”
“Trouble. I don’t like a crook,
but I don't like a cop, either, I
look the other way when either
one is around.”
“All I want is information.”
Basil laid another $5 bill on the
counter, but now he kept his hand
on both biils.
The cobbler looked at the
money. “Go to court? Testify?”
“Perhaps.”
“No.” He shook his head. “Af
terwards some of the guy’s pals
would rough me up.”
“This man was not a gangster.”
“All crooks run in gangs.” The
sour wisdom of city streets was in
his eyes. .
“This man was not a crook. If
the police question you, it will be
worse.”
“They’re in on this already?”
“Yes. But if you talk to me I'll
see they let you alone.”
* * *
A FINGER veined with dirt-en
crusted lines touched Duggan’s
picture. “That little guy. He lived
next door for a while or so after
the building was empty. But I
haven't seen him around since the
beginning of April.”
Basil lifted his hand from the
two $5 bills. They vanished in
stantly.
Qutside, in the street, he pushed
open the scabrous brown door
again and paused to listen. No
sound. He crossed the vestibule
and stood at the foot of a stair.
The wooden treads were worn hol
low at the center, splintered at
the edge, and there was a musty,
unaired smell in the place. Shad
ows clustered thickly above and
below the faint light filtered
through & grimy window pane on
the first landing. Neglect, dark
ness, filth he was prepared for,
but somehow the silence was un
nerving.
He bhegan to mount the stairs.
The balustrade was shaky under
Basil Willing’s hand, gritty to his
touch. He had to step over one
tread that had rotted away al
together, leaving only a ragged
opening into the darkness below
the stairs.
On the second floor, he paused
again. The silence seemed to close
about him as if he were sinking
into still water.
(To Be Continued)
-
Soft Drinks Get
.
Price Increase
ATLANTA, July 30. — (AP) —
The way was cleared today for
about 5,000 small eating places in
the South to charge six cents for
soft drinks for on-premises con
sumption.
It came through an Office of
Price Stabilization order permit
ting them tc pass on a recent in
crease from 80 to 96 cents per case
of 24 bottles in wholesale prices.
OPS District Director James F.
Hollingsworth explained that some
eating establishments already have
soft drink ceilings of 6 cents or
even higher. These are not affect
ed by the new orders.
Other se'lers of soft drinks al
ready had received relief under a
general OPS amendment.
AP SRR 1 SR EES IR g
RIS b S e W ’l"’f\,fi-v R ;
- Eees O eEaaLG ¢ ;
.i’:{’;-{\'-é‘-::e-;\ FIR R : R RR R o
SRR ey SR R . . TP eSR R W : ;o
EROREE Be T ‘@&;\“‘«\‘g S
o \gg,au‘ S %c@( o IR R G B
RS R GG osca e 1 R S ad
REC IR RGN Q‘& e 8 ““g%%&‘ - . S S
o SR o SE R
e R RN ST :ft‘ g oy ,\ &i AR 3
&*, R 3 Wk SO 8 s
BN S S P R R RESEEREE NS
L g JUC S e
R ) SIS R S : - e R
RERR R L 3 __ Ly y 9h R b R
B TR G Sy T R s
8 L YER TR R L R
8 § o LR Sy Ty 5
e : s § &»“ R BN 5
e B & fop : & O Sy 3
£ & ;#)‘ 8.8 SR S _*‘ L % S R
£ R L 4 8 TR fi! E };: :;:5;:..5’... i .
N £ R R HRR VR G o
el e e BB ot e ‘
A£ S SRR e . A f'. . R e o
j:"v‘?:‘*”;, TWy B 0 R 3 L SRR ¢ T .
AT RGN T bWk e - 3 ‘l%‘ o N
b W Y ¥R e R b
LA RRN Sy R e B
voE R Poen & B EEE ¥ A R & i
o R LN Y L
Lol RTS Fe% e e&= BB R N e
e ‘ -“* LR AR N R
LR E SR R S B ;
B R o 8 3 7 . s * e b
dow T 7 o ,
i G Y & S B oake
S 5 % G e * e
g T o g TR &
G R R T AR Ro N BN R
.)2:( .. i ’f‘ el Y'y B }-r‘,‘\" R *z; R .f'" S \\K}:
o . R R R e MR SRR
PSRN N‘W 3 PR R SRR ¥ e 9 g sy
SRS TR fifi» y;& Rel
eß2ol *\ SN 8 SR ».*3."3 ek \\43‘ fi%
T S b ‘\\Cq\t-"‘&‘\\ o ;4 SRR O R o %é%
R \\\%i;‘g%g?%l =R T T . *\*\: PeX
SRR e N 3R L 0 SRR RPI BRSO Y R L SN
e L R Sl e
DIR g 13.:_.\*"%;:‘% SR PR s§ %
el B SRR TT TS Bv N e B R
NeoRO R 3 ¥ S 2 ”<§.§‘sk *'{C\ LR AR e
RRS NG fadl TR R R N
iR A S p 32 SoRMTR | L R e N PRt o
;*':@“"u' B \;"&.\.fi\»’ SR T | e \\%’, S iR S
Ml eTew TRO R Rl
Ty SR S _.\..,::.’,\‘:._}_‘:"l:'{ B RN % ».--:‘\ '%\"t SN
‘B'\‘ ied R <\<-"";~:. R R S »: & 0 B ’@\‘%z 5
R TR R - o R . X R R
s S OSO LSRR s e %‘8 & so e
Phßiirem fiap . B N 53 e S PUTTRE e
AR TR R T DR AR R TSP A
N L T e TT R R R
A RN R B R R
CIVIL AIR PATROL CADETS shown left to right are
Wendell Malcom, Edward Patterson and Harris Malcom.
These young men of the Athens area are living lives of
Air Force men at Warner Robins Air Force Base.
Athens Area Youths Atfend CAP
Encampmeni At Wamer Robins Base
Three local youths, participants
in the Civil Air Patrol Cadet pro
gram, will return to their homes
Sunday following a two-week
period in which they have lived
the lives of airmen. The cadets are
Wendell Malcom, and his brother
Harris Malcom, and Edward Pat
terson.
The encampment which they have
attended was held at Warner
Robins Air Force Base at Warner
Robins, Georgia. Designed to give
Civil Air Patrol cadets a taste of
military aviaé)ion and to indoc
trinate them to Air Force Life, the
UN's Social Welfare Head Chalks
Up Amazing Success In Hard Task
By ADELAIDE KERR
AP Newsfeatures Writer
Julia Henderson, only -woman
head of a United Nationg division,
has chalked up a record of success
in one of the toughest jobs in the
world organization.
As director of the Division of
Social Welfare, she heads a staff
of 80 people, of 30 different na
tionalities, who do the footwork
and paper-work for projects des
igned to raise the standards of liv
ing for millions. This is part of
U. N’s major assignment to fur
ther world conditions conducive to
peace. Most of the work is done
in under - developed countries
where food is scarce, housing is
inadequate, millions are ill or
physicially handicapped and
thousands of children are or
phaned.
After delegations okay projects
aimed at helping countries im
prove such conditions, the Divi
sion, often working with the
Technical Assistance Adminis
tration, assigns personnel and
plans the best procedure.
" Miss Henderson’s job requires
patience, good judgment and
diplomatic leadership of many
varied personalities, countries
and fields of work.
This friendly, smiling, gray
eyed woman of 36, a native of
Illinois, is an old hand in the
United Nations. She came to it in
its heginning days, after earning
her Ph.D. at the Univefsity of
Minnesota, studying at the Har
vard Graduate School of Public
Administration and working sev
eral years at the U. S. Social Se
curity Board. Before she took her
present job about 18 months ago,
'she was chief of the Public
Division of U. N.’s Bureau of
Finance.
Today her work is one series of
crises after another. But people
who work with her say she moves
through them with even calm and
an even voice. Come evening,
Julia Henderson goes home to
Great Neck, a Long Island sub
urb, where she and another
woman worker in U. N. built a
house some time ago. A house
keeper runs it for them, but Miss
Henderson cares for the garden.
She gets other relaxation from
tennis and goif.
Next morning she is fresh to
pick up the complicated threads
of her work again. Through her
office pass experts in housing,
health services, sanitation, child
welfare and rehabilitation,
shuttling back and forth on inter
national assignments, as well as
statisticians, sociologists, social
workers and a corps of office
workers.
The experts are on their way
to counsel governments on how
to start some project. For in
stance, one team helped Egypt
start a social security system,
another aided Burma in developing
a national welfare program.
Students are selected from
underdeveloped countries and
dispatched to study modern meth
ods of agriculture, sanitation,
etc.,, in highway industiialized
countries.
Specialists and office workers!
AUGUSTA LADY LOSES 10 LBS.
#NO DIETING — USED ANARO
-
“I have been taking Anaro Con-|
centrate for reducing for a short|
while now and already I have lost 10
Ibs. Thanks to this safe inex;;enaive
home recipe I eat anything I want
and still lose weight, It is no trouble
at all to take Anaro. I certainly do
recommend Anaro to anyone want
ing to lose weight. Both my sister
and brother are now taking Anaro.”
So twflgs Margaret Farmer of Au
a, Ga. $
fl*: amazing how quickly you can
lose pounds of buflcy fat right m{
your own home. Make this recipe
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
encampment serves Georgia and
Tennessee,
Training that cannot be provid
ed at CAP units is highlighted in
the two-week’s activities and
cadets emerge from their stint of
“Air Force Life” with a better
understanding of the needs and
requirements of military aviation.
Wendell and Harris Malsom are
the sons of Mr. and Mrs. D. H.
Malcom and Edward Patterson is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Pat
terson, The Malcom boys live at
Watkinsville and Cadet Patterson
lives with his family near Athens.
are making widespread factual
studies of many social problems
to give both experts and countries
an accurate foundation for their
‘work. One study covered solu
tions which various countries
found for children deprived of
‘normal home life., Another de
'scribed measures for rehabili
tating the handicapped and blind.
A third described modern methods
of improving mud house con
struction by adding asphalt and
cement—a practical help to coun
tries where the dwellings of mil
lions of families consist of one
room without private cooking and
toilet facilities. @Many more
studies were made and others
are in progress.
Both men and women who work
with Miss Henderson in directing
the work of the division give her
a big hand. Says one:
“She has created an atmosphere
in which everybody can do his
best. She dosen’t use authorita
tive direction. What she’s got is
leadership.”
!Ch' Bid
U.s.Aid G
.. Al uroup
TAIPEH, Formosa, July 30.—
(AP) — Chiang Kai-shek today
bade farewell to 25 American sol
dilers who came here in May, 1951,
with the firct U. S. Military As
sistance Advisory Gorup to Nat
ionalist China.
The soldiers are leaving soon
for the United States on rotation.
The 15-mrinute farewell ceremony
was held ir Chiang’s office.
The MAAG chief, Major General
William C. Chase, introduced the
men individually to Chiang, who
' thanked them in a speech and told
}them “wherever you may go, may
we still march side by side in our
unrelenting fight against Commu~-
nism.” g
Those who received the general
issimo’s perscvnal goodbye includ
ed Sfe. Richard E. Werener, Co
lumbus, Ga; M-Sgt. Patrick A.
Fridell, Atlanta; M-Sgt. Eugene
W. Henders»n, Mobile, Ala.; M-
Sgt. Edward H. Nilner, Stillmore,
Ga.; Sgt. Charles L. Parsons,
Sheffield, Aia.
OLDSTER KILLS RATTLER
MONROVIA, Calif.—(AP)—F.
M. Wolford, 74, had never scen a
rattlesnake and decided recently
it was about time he took a look
at one.
After much seairching, Wolford
located a 5Y.-foot specimen about
to enjoy a mid-day meal of rabbit.
The snake hunter shot his prey
and mounted the skin, nine rattles
and all.
More than 45,000,000,000 quarts
of milk are produced annually in
the United States.
!Yourself. It’s no trouble and costs
little, Ask Kxoqur druggist for 4 ounces
of liquid ARO EGONCENTRATE.
Pour this into pint bottle and add
unsweetened grapefruit juice to fill
bottle. Then take two tablespoonfuls
twice a day.lt’s that simple. If reduci=
ble eounds and inches of excess fat
don't seem to disappear almost like
ma&c with the first bottle, return it
to the manufacturer for your money
back. Note how bloat dlsa;;?ears—how
much better you feel. Now is the
' time to redute Ask your druggist
for ANARO.
AT THE MOCVIES
STRAND-—
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 McDowall,
Preston Foster. Shape Ahoy. Qut
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
Wed.-Thurs—"Sensations,” with
Cab Calloways’ orchestra and
Woody Hermans' orchestra. A
foat story of action and music.
dded: MGM color cartoon “Gal
lopin’ Gals.”
Fri-Sat.—“Jesse James,” with
Tyrone Power, Randolph Scott,
Nancy Kelly, Henry Fonda, and
Slim Summerville, in technicolor.
Late Chow Sat—“ Red Badge of
Courage,” with Audie Murphy.
"GLORY ALLEY,” WITH RALPH MEEKER,
LESLIE CARSON, PACKS DRAMATIC PUNCH
With New Orleans’ colorful
night life, its underworld and its
prizefight sector as an electric
background, “Glory Alley,” now
on the Palace screen, unfolds a
dynamic and punch-filled story of
a prizefighter who turns yellow
on the eve of his championship
bout, subsequently becomes a
hero in the Korean fighting and
then slips downhill again when he
tries to make a meal ticket out of
his Congressional Medal of Honor.
The artfully-spun dramatic
threads which reveal the tragic
background which made Socks
Barbarrosa what he is, the bitter
antagonism between the fighter
and the blind father of the girl
ke loves, and his final display of
courage in the story’s stirring cli
max, make for a drama which is
movingly powerful and whose
characters are as real as the aver
age man on the averge street,
Hollywood'’s talented newcomer,
Ralph Meeker, plays the role of
Socks, and makes him a figure
whom audiences won't easily for
get, both in the early sequences
of the story in which Socks ap
pears as a fighter with color,
cockiness and class, and in the
later scenes in which he becomes
a cynical and hard-drinking bum.
It is one of the years finest film
portrayals.
Leslie Caron, who became an
overnight star following her ap
pearance opposite Gene Kelly in
“An American In Paris,” has a
touching role as the New Orleans
A lF | d
DR, S g Usl S RSN TSR (. WL LTt
N kh. k RN % n.‘-'."»_:g‘.‘:'_-;-::;'._.;,:‘_““‘ :
ow, make this most glamorous of all cakes . oy
’ s wr. G
with everyday ease and convenience s, %
Fapgrs odaf |
i e E
S B i R o
s SRR el S S T B R U N W, §
o ASY »W‘o“%m*‘ o e T SRR N s B %’, ]
B e GTR I I o S e B 2 o, 3 B o Roy
P o e e e e RRI e SRR F TN |
R G L s ke W R T N SR o, LA PR G S
L e eR R T oe B ey T
e 3 g RSk /wé/’é»w‘ gDM ST :%"’*’n'w DR, o £BP & 5 S
Y R RN TK e “,@ iA A s i Pl N g
bilee NS gBT B LNet go S S S j/ gt M) Y li-s g,
WL e T A ‘?%-gh&y,) y‘g;;“%* L 2 _ {f?p//’%‘ g R
R, o e o i P S ~‘Zj’.‘**‘%"‘:« o g G e CAKE SIRACEE
g B e S "‘% Wt o A fi«‘””& T PP 7|77 W X'*'
¢ o i v A e y s g TT R Ao "‘e“.{y’y‘b‘, el A 5
T &‘@ ' N T R SRR TR e o
W T R N e B s e
R L ; 3 3 TB ) e
£ ‘ p ’°‘°§, ' S B e G RSI T
Bl g Mt B , gk ¢
MO IE el A complete mix.
GST B S e £ ’S@@ AU g i i .
ol SO Yo m B e € T No eggs to buy. Water is all you add.
Uigdhig o i WTy e TS T e A k y
? ha R g{. b“,"&‘y’ :y;% ; P 5 : ;::5%::‘ A ’./, 4 e nycfle can maxe lto
e CEECRET R { g T B R
G RPN S L R SRR G R . . . .
% & ‘ et T o a 1 e Complete— All ingredients, including eggs,
P !w“ B T eL o, ave in the package. No eggs to separate.
& 5;»',; %&‘ e ‘w 5 & ; ey 4 ".,: S, No yolks left over.
ra ewfi o " gN b Water is all you 2dd.
>aa G MEETEERE .TR efk R. o "&, sot a 3
i'" ¥ : ot ,'e:. - / ! o .‘i 9-); % L ’.,3{ i Easy to mahe —No complicated recipe to
N£X&R*PR MDY . ~ . .
P ) &Q{ : % g ffi T oshas 49% follow. Easy directions on the package.
§ o SR Sk g Wy e s ey
fON R s A S“ B oo }gfify Costs 25% less than the average fine home-
Bl o o oeet S vk S 44 recipe angel food cake.
P o ekt . .o TE o Won't you try this new and really sensa-
A o o R i e, . A . ’ .
&w%& % R i tional Pillsbury Angel Food Cake Mix?
& 2 TR o You'll triumph with angel food at its
L ‘ glorious best.
o 8
— NOW AT YOUR GROCER'S
PALACE—
Wed. - Thurs. = Fri, — “Glory
Alley,” starring Ralph Meeker,
Leslie Caron (sweetheart of “An
American in Paris”). Oily Hare—
Bugs Bunny. News.
Sat. — “Jumping Jacks" star
ring Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis.
RITZ—
Wed.-Thurs. — “The Enforcer,”
starring Humphrey Bogart, Ted
De Corsia. Wicket Wacket-—car
toon.
Fri.-Sat.—“Fighting Westerner,”
starring Randolph Scott, Ann
Sheridan. Baby Bottleneck-—Blue
Ribbon. Don Daredevil Rides
Again—chapter 11,
DRIVE-IN—
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 Ideas,”
starring Glenn Ford, Ruth Roman.
Woodpecker in Rough — Woody
‘Woodpecker,
Sat.—‘“Sugarfoot,” starring Ran
dolph Scott, Adele Jergens.
Sleepytime Tom-—Tom and Jerry.
Reducing—Pete Smith.
hot-spot entertainer who tries des
perately to bring out the sterling
qgualities in the man she loves. It
is a part in which Miss Caron not
only once again reveals her bril
liant dancing talent but also
proves herself an arresting drama
tic actress.
There are a large number of
excellent supporting portrayals in
“Glory Alley,” among them that
of Gilbert Roland as the under
standing promoter who never loses
faith in Socks; Kurt Kasznar as
the blind “Judge,” who comes to
learn to “see” even without ben
efit of eyesight; and Louis Arm
strong, the famous exponent of
Dixieland jazz, who combines his
celebrated trumpet-playing and
singing with a moving perform
ance as Shad, Sccks devoted train
er.
Because much of the action of
“Glory Alley” takes place in the
honky-tonk dives of New Orleans’
French quarter, Director Raoul
Walsh and Producer Nicholas Nay
fack have been able to insert a
number of musical sequences in
which the dancing Miss Caron,
Louis Armstrong and Jack Tea
garden and his band shine. Heard
WANTED
USED TRUCKS
LIBERAL TRADES
EASY TERMS
J. SWANTON IVY, Inec.
DODGE TRUCK DEALER
in these sequences are “glory Al
ley,” “St. Lquis Blyes,” ‘“That's
What the Man Said,” “South Ram=
part Street Parade” and “Jolie
Jacqueline.”
The novelty of a story in which
prizefight thrills, musical inter
ludes and a gripping dramatic nar
rative are of ermout equal interest
makes “Glory Alley” a distinctive
departure from the usual screen
fare.
FEMALE ROYALTY
MAY RETURN
ANAKARA, Turkey.— (AP) —
Female members of Turkey’s for
mer imperial family, the Otto
mans, in exiie since the revolution
after World War I, may now re
turn to Turkey, regain Turkish
nationality and make their homes
if they wish.
Turkey's Grand National As-
| Mrs. Filbert says: .
N faay
_
& % o '
, Ay~ {
¢ \ GRAND ON PARTY SALADS!
GIVES SIMPLE GREENS A
: A FLAVOR BOOST, TOO!
} ‘%:‘ . Y " :
iy b g ""v."é‘.'-"‘ 0% ,”..\,: \\\‘\\t .- ) 20
\{‘\(’&f §:fi \,‘* \B, ™,
ST HTIY Rt
iy KOG G B S 555;:;:‘5::“ s
k \& 3 R ‘ G g F ", b »;.4 ; }tw\-,
RN S ‘,_3 & ¥ % ?;:. \-\?: :f""
S R 6% # v\ 3 PR .:;‘;:.y ».'.;_l_:.. - g
L fae E
" T4e” Spoon out homemade flavor
Bt S .
%s on your salad tonight
R
R e .e S BT
: It's my own recipe and I make it just sSgad ™%,
“""M Vo way you would,” says Mrs. Filbert. Sl L
resident o 3 : R
With extra eggs, pure oil and vinegar o S
whipped into my ews boiled dressing. Then paprika, SRS
mustard and my secret spice-blend for spicy-mild flavor] WS
Folks say my new salad dressing makes salads and sand- gkr“‘; Wi
wiches fairly burst with flavor!” R Gty o
Save money, too! Save the mason-type jar for home Pabidea
canning. Save coupons on jar for premiums! Get Mrs. e 5
Filbert's mew Salad Dressing today. P
MRS, FIIBERng\SAIAD DRESSING
MURRAY BROS., Inc., 307 Hale St., Augusta, Ga.
PAGE FIVE
sembly recently passed a measure
without debate to re-admit: women
members of the imperial family
with thelr husbands and children.
Still barred from Turkey are
male members of the family with
direct claim to the thwrone of the
sultans.
The average passenger car in
the United States travels 9800
miles a year, the average truck
nearly 11,000 miles.
SKIN Black and White
" Ointment contains
BROKEN one of the best
infection clearing
OUT“ “fim lu;own to
- relieve itch of
with sene, lclem:.
Tetter. 25¢c, 60c,
ACNE White Soap, too.