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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 3
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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 3

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Bismarck, North Dakota
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ississiDDi Dems p. 1 Th, BISMARCK TRIBUNE MfwUy, Aufutt 11, Wl 15-Man Chinese Delegation, NUBS of the NEWS Mike and Al to Do Repeat in Congress Russians Cooking Up Misery Wind, Rain Bogs Air, Ground War wants help. It seems a safe gnesi leaders at times. An example of this was the Initial administration request for government controls prior to World War II. WARY OF congressional approval, the administration proposed a piece-meal approach to rent, price, wage and other government ceilings.

Monroney and Gore were certain this could not curb inflation. They backed an overall controls plan urged by Bernard Baruch, based World War I experiences. "We got only a few more than votes that time," Monroney recalled. But the next session Congress enacted the full program of controls that operated throughout the war. MONRONEY also had Gore's help in pushing through a reluctant congress the 1946 act that streamlined )nd reorganized law-making machinery for the fir.

time in about 70 years. And Gore had Monroney's help when he upset proposals of Secretary of Agriculture Brannan to push through Congress a "trial run" on the controversial Bran-nan farm plan. The administration with backing they went there to cook up misery for someone. The party was headed by Chou En-lai. Chinese Premier, and in-i eluded military', economic and diplomatic leaders.

China, not being militarily self-sufficient, needs Iius-Isian help if it wishes to pretend to real power. The specific reason for the visit I may leak out, piece by piece. Or it may not be revealed until the i Communists, Chinese or Russian. begin some new adventure, such las as tried in Korea, i WHILE THE Chinese, need Russian help, the Russians need the Chinese. Particularly if they want (to expand communism in Asia and at the same time keep the United States busy on two fronts: Europe land Asia.

i Yet, if the Russians attempted to aid the Chinese militarily on a big scale, they'd be in a position somewhat similar to that of the United States: They'd be siphon-! ing off supplies, as we da for our I European allies The Russians can't afford to an-I ger the Chinese, If the latter broke 'with Russia and made peace wilh West, Moscow's world position I would be badly shaken. I Such a break seems unlikely The Chincc have their eyes on i the rest of Asia. So long as Russia jis a threat in the West, the strength of the West is split in So is its ability lo stop the Chinese. YET THE RUSSIANS must have misgivings about the Chinese for future unless they can find some way to reduce China to a puppet as they have done with Poland, Czechoslovakia and the jollier satellites. I With a population of about i million the Chinese now nutmtm-jber the Russians by about 130 mil I lion.

Hut China Is backward economically, militarily, and industrially. i It will be years before China I can produce for war on the same I scale as Russia. Until then China i is not a full rival or threat to Russian survival. LEGION STAFF IN TOWN NEW YORK tf The American Legion's headquarters staff is in town to prepare for the organization's 31th annual convention starting next Sunday. TODAY and TUESDAY 2:30 7:00 and 9:00 P.

M. By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON Ifl A 15-man Chinese government delegation has arrived in Moscow for talks with the Russians and undoubtedly 'Eternal Life' Killer Confined NEW YORK Peakes, the "eternal life" physicist who killed a pretty blonde secretary on the Columbia University campus, Monday was ordered confined as a lunatic. General Sessions Judge Edward J. McCullen committed him to Matteawan State Hospital. Psychiatrists had found Peakes so mentally deranged that he could not understand the murder charge against him, nor that he had done wrong.

On last July 14, Peakes walked into the offices of the American Physical Society, on the Columbia campus, and shot to death 18 year-old Eileen Fahey a girl he had never seen before. He said he was ungry with Hie society for not recognizing his theories on electronics and for prolonging life. He said he killed the girl to attract public attention. Beach Officials Seek Three on Check Charges BEACH trP Three persuasive strangers two men and a woman said by sheriff's officers here to have talked two local farmers into cashing checks totaling $00 Saturday were sought Monday. The sheriff's office asserted the Checks were worthless, and broadcast a request for the trio's detention.

The three, in an old faded green sedan, headed south. After cashing the checks, the jl.i'iiff's u'fiLf h.inl, tliu lilt ii anil the woman bought a shotgun, fishing equipment and some clothing here, and later were reported to have tried to sell the nrerchandise in Amidon, N. D. It was no sale, however, with the man they had accosted, who became suspicious. The three were on their way again, however, before authorities were notified.

BISMARCK -UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL presents In 3-Way Battle For Supremacy JACKSON, Miss. Mississippi's divergent Democrats, in a three-way split for Gov. Adlai Stevenson, Dwight Eisenhower tnd a possible third party group, battle Monday for supremacy in the State Democratic Convention. The convention opened at 10 a.m.,! CST, to decide its political role in the 1952 presidential campaign. Mississippi, with 96 per cent of its voters on the state Democratic party rolls, has groups supporting Stevenson and Eisenhower and a faction that prefers a third party Southerner to either major party candidate.

The Stevenson forces, headed by Gov. Hugh White and Mississippi's congressional delegation, won a fight in the Resolutions Committee Sunday night. A RESOLUTION offered by Stevenson backers was adopted by an 11-5 vote after Eisenhower members brought about the omission of a clause endorsing the Illinois governor. The resolution, as revised, called simnlv fnr trip plui'tnrs nf the Democratic Convention to be pledged to Stevenson and Sen. John Sparkman of Alabama without a state party endorsement.

The resolution was subject to revision, rejection or adoption Monday. A resolution of the pro Eisenhower forces was defeated by an 11-5 margin. It sought to put the Stevenson-Sparkman ticket on the ballot with the statement that the Mississippi Democraic party did not recommend them to the voters of the state. THE ORIGINAL Stevenson resolution offered by Slate Rep. Ed White contained an endorsement clause that read, "Therefore, believing the best interests of Mississippi requires it, this convention irrevocably pledges its electors to vote for Gov.

Adlai Stevenson of Illinois for President and fnr Spn. John J. Sparkman of Alabama for vice president." Former Lt. Gov. Sam Lumpkin, head of the Mississippi Democrats-for Eisenhower movement and chairman of the Resolutions Committee, warned the committeemen, "If you go on to the floor of the convention tomorrow and railroad that Stevenson endorsement through, you'll split the Democratic party of this state so that it will never get back together again." (Continued from page 1) whether he can "clean up the mess in Washington" if he is elected President.

The Illinois governor implied that he would use "ruthless objectivity" in cleaning house, in a letter to editor Tom Humphrey of the Oregon Journal, Portland, Ore. His letter appeared to accept as fact that there is a "mess" in the nation's capital. A Presbyterian minister who is a personal friend of Stevenson, declared from his pulpit in Springfield Sunday that Sen. Dirksen told a "blatant lie" when Dirksen said recently that Stevenson was "the worst governor we've had since the turn of the century" in Illinois. IN HIS SERMON, Rev.

Richard Paul Graebel Identified the speaker of the "lie" only as a United States senator who is also "an Elder of the Presbyterian Church." But he told reporters later he meant Dirksen. Stevenson was in church to hear the sermon. Graebel called Dirksen "one of the most irresponsible men in the Senate and his own party." Dirksen could not be reached for comment. Yankton Man Killed By Milwaukee Train YANKTON W-Robert Cook, 24, Yankton, was killed instantly when his body was run over by an East-bound Milwaukee Railroad freight tram, about one mile east and a mile and a half south of Utica, shortly after 10 o'clock Sunday night. Deputy Sheriff Bob Warren of Yankton County said that Cook evidently was lying on the tracks or had fallen before the freight train passed over his body, which was found between the tracks some 25 feet northwest of the SEOUL, Korea (AP) Typhoon winds and rains Monday bogged fighting and grounded war-planes in the Korean War.

Counter-attacking Chinese, supported by a mortar-artillery barrage, won a hill outpost on the East-Central Front Sunday. It was the third time the hill, east of the Ptikhan River, had changed hands in four days of bitter hand-to-hand fighting. The Chinese first captured the hill last Thursday. U. N.

troops won it back early Sunday but before noon the Reds rushed the position again. The U. S. Eighth Army said 13 Reds were killed before U. N.

troops fell back. There was no report of any new effort on the part of the Chinese to retake Bunker Hill on the Western Front from the U. S. Marines. The Leathernecks broke up seven desperate Red charges after winning the ridge last Tuesday.

NEGOTIATORS TO END WEEK-LONG RECESS MUNSAN, Korea United Nations and Communist truce delegates meet Tuesday at Panmun-jom, ending a week-long recess that produced no visible hint of progress. The delegates are scheduled to meet at 11 a. m. Tuesday (8 p. m.

Monday, CST) in the faded conference tent. They probably will pick up right where they left off last week, arguing fruitlessly over prisoner of war exchange, the only issue blocking i an armistice for Korea. I Weekend Traffic i (Continued from page 1) Edmunds, N. air in a Carring- ton hospital. George Aljets, Foster sheriff, (said Schlotman's car collided with the other vehicle driven by Schafer as the latter pulled off a sideroad 'onto Highway 7.

Both cars over turned in a ditch. Schafer was reported to have compound fractures of the right thigh and lacerations, while Lut-man had severe head injuries. Arthur Lee, Westhope, N. a blacksmith and construction company employe, died in a Bottineau hospital Saturday of injuries suffered in a one-car accident near Westhope. Lee was on his way to work Thursday morning when a tie rod on the car he was driving dropped, causing the vehicle to upset.

Westhope is about 45 air miles northeast of Minot. Montgomery Services To Be Held Tuesday Funeral services for Robert J. Montgomery, 58, 1031 Tenth will be held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in the chapel of the Boelter Funeral Home here. The Rev.

Francis V. Tannehill will officiate and burial will be made in the family lot at Tappen. Mr. Montgomery, district conscr vationist of the Soil Conservation Service, died in a local hospital at 2:45 p.m. Friday, following hospitalization of about two hours.

The body is lying in state at the Boelter Funeral Home. Pallbearers will be Clifford Wahl, Lloyd Joos and James Long, all of Bismarck; Elmer Worthington and Joe Brand, both of Mandan, and Lester D'Krey, McClusky. The Bismarck Masonic Lodge will be in charge of graveside services at Tappen. The family requests that no flowers be sent. Memorial contributions will be accepted instead.

Fifth Member of One Family Gels Polio TAYLOR, WIS. The fifth child of the Helge Hjorneziak family to be stricken with polio was in a hospital isolation ward Monday. Danny Hjorneziak, 4, became ill Saturday. He is the youngest of eight children. The first of the family to contract the disease was Beatrice, 20.

She became ill Tuesday and died Wednesday. Ardella, 12, and Gerald, 14, were hospitalized Thursday. While Beatrice's funeral was taking place Friday, Helge, 16, was stricken. The Continental Congress adopted the Stars and Stripes as the flag of the United States on June 14, 1777. WASHINGTON Iff Mike and AI, legislative team that made recent history in the House, hope to a repeat performance in the during the years ahead.

ifce is Scn- A- s- Mike Mon' of Oklahoma. Now 50, he is lender and youthful-appearing. He the veteran Sen. Elmer Thomas in an Oklahoma primary two years ago after Thomas had served 23 years. 1 is Rep- Albert Arnold Gore of Tonne'siee.

44- wn0 accomplished rne of Die political upsets this year, lie belted Sen. Kenneth D. Mc-Kellar in a Democratic primary. 'IcKellar, 83, tops the Senate with js vears of continuous service. BOTH MON RON EY and- Gore rave up influential places as House members, where seniority and ability had won them key place on committees, to try for the Senate.

Both have been described as moderate liberals or progressive Democrats and years of teamwork the House produced a warm personal friendship. Both have supported most of the international policies of the "New peal'' and "Fair Deal" but they jlso have been a thorn in the side of the administration and House IAST TIMES TONIGHT Ding Crosby in im i II 1L K.aing n.gn TUES. WED. THURS. CCXUM8U nCTUt) pfM Dottglas FAIRBANKS, Jr.

Stynts JOHNS Jack HAWKINS TteGtfAT Ifonwrty Wj SIri IfftfD ORRAfl DRIVE-IN THEATRE 8:15 ond 10:15 P. M. Adults 50c Children Under 12 Free idHVaHiaffla-rtBaill ia aflh 4HkJBMkA Wheel Alignment md Wheel Balancing GEORGE W. PAUL Capiiol Servicenfer Cofntf 7th and Main Phona 90 MATINEE 2 P.M 9 TODAY and Thru -mm ARMOUR'S CRESCENT Siiiinner Swnsdown Instant or Devils CAKE MIX i namer tv 7. 1 I EXTRA FANCY I Stewing on 60 of lo in of by of a to REIDS HAVE GUESTS Mrs.

Peter Reid and son, Russell, 811 Twelfth had as their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Woodelton, Brooklyn, N. Y. They were en route to their home after touring Yellow-' stone and Glacier National Parks.

Accompanying them were Mrs. Woodelton's niece and nephew, Judy Sanders, Maplewood, N. and Charles Sanders, Ridgewood.l N. J. I WAGNERS VISIT HERE 1 Mr.

and Mrs. William N. 922 Summit have as their! guests Mrs. Barnes' parents. Dr.

and Mrs. H. N. Wagner, Henry-1 etta, Okla. The Wagners have been i here for the past two weeks and will leave for their home this week.

HERE FRCM KANSAS Miss Ann Whitehead, Wichita, has been spending the sum- mer with her brother-in-law and i sister, Mr. and Mrs. Don Sarbar, 1104 Avenue E. She will leave for her home this week. During heri stay here.

Miss Whitehead and the Sarhars toured the Black Hills of South Dakota, the Badlands and other points of interest. ARRESTED Robert Kraft, Linton, was ar-I rested here Saturday night on a charge of drunk and disorderly conduct. His arrest followed an al tercation in a local tavern. He was released on $25 bond to appear in court Monday. CAR PROWLED Jerald Richold, 811 Aevnue reported his car had been prowled and that binoculars, a flashlight and some rifle shells had been taken.

JAMESTOWN HIT Jamestown police reported Sunday that, at least 25 cars were prowled there Saturday night, in what was apparently an organized looting. BRUNSDALES VISIT MAY VILLE Gov. and Mrs. Norman Bruns-dale, 320 Avenue and daughters, Helen and Margaret of Minneapolis, visited friends in Mayville this weekend. Helen returned to Bismarck with her parents for" a short vacation.

TO ATTEND MEETING E. J. Booth, Bismarck city engineer, plans to attend the annual Public Works Congress and Equipment Show at Los Angeles Aug. 24-27. He is director of the organization for North Dakota.

RETURN HOME Mr. and Mrs. John W. Patton, Billings, who have been guests at the C. L.

Young home, 220 W. Avenue are returning to Billings Monday. MINOT GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. Whitney O.

Rcf-vcm, Minot, and their son, Ben, were weekend houseguests of Mr. Refvem's parents. Mr. and Mrs. B.

O. Refvem, 200 W. Avenue A. EGF Girl Fund Up fo $8,265 EAST GRAND FORKS, Minn. I Latest donation to the Mary Patricia Enright fund have boosted the total to $8,265, according to A.

G. Rand, fund treasurer. Mary I'atiiiia Is the 11 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Enright of rural East Grand Fork She has been unconscious in i Grand Forks hospital since March 4 when she was hurt in a highway mishap while walking home from school.

The fund drive was started to help her father defray medical and hospital costs. Board Of Trade May Hike Business Time CHICAGO Itf-Members of the Board of Trade were voting Monday on a proposal to give directors power to extend the trading hours 30 minutes on Mondays through 1 Fridays. The proposal provides that the board will close at 12:45 p. m. central standard time instead of.

12:15 p. m. as now. Carl Bostrom, president, said directors had decided to put 'the new trading hours in effect Mon-1 day, Aug. 25, if members vote in' favor of the proposal.

Dakota Commissions i Protest Grain Rates THa VnrfK PiiMif Commission and the South Dakota Utilities Commission joined Monday in protesting what they alleged to be a discriminatory differential on carload grain shipping on the Milwaukee Koad main line. The two state commissions, along with the Main Line Grain Rate composed of elevator men and other grain shippers in northwestern South Dakota and southwestern North Dakota, filed a com-. plaint with the Interstate Commerce Commission. Democrats Select Finance Committee North Dakota Democrats chose their finance committee fur the November election campaign at a meeting of the county chairmen and the party's state committee here Monday morning. Harry Bnen.

Park River, Mrs. Etta Fenclon, Bismarck, and Jess; Nygaard, Jamestown, will conduct! a dine to collect funds for bati pr'y of'icials termed an "active" 1 campaign. The mei'tins a called by Ab-ner Larson, Mandan, sta'e Demo-, civic chair-nan. TO ADDRESS SCHOOL MEN I'lKRKE Earl J. VcOrath, S.

(-nnimissioner of education, will auarc-s the pre-school COSferer.ee of srhrml admimstra'ors wniih me-! 22 lamank Hllal Iu(htr, Mr. and Mn. Aufuit Gtorla, Tappen, is p.m., Au. 17. St.

Aleilaf Hoipllal Daughter, Mr. and Mr. Jama Tnah. SM Fifteenth 4:14 Aui. 16 uauxMer.

Mr. and Mra. Albert AlcrKal. I Braddock. 11-34 p.m., Aug.

16. Daughter, Mr. and Mra. ueorge Martut. Temvik.

15 a.m.. Aug. 17. Daughter, Mr. and Mra.

Arthur Reln-hardt. Zap, 7:24 p.m., Aug. 17. Mandan D.ar.neaa HofBttal Daughter. Mr.

and Mra. Kranlt Jochlm, Flasher, 11:44 a.m., Aug. 16. Daughter. Mr.

and Mra. Leonard Shalaky, Hull. 8:07 p.m., Aug. 16 Daughter, Mr. and Mra.

Frank Haider, St. Anthony, 11:02 p.m., Aug. 16. Son, Mr. and Mra.

George Tachlder, Solen. 7:10 a.m., Aug. 17. DEATHS Mra. Tekla Kruih, 16.

WUton, In a local hoaptta! at 10 p.m. Saturday. Halt Funeral Home. D. W.

Jarkion, 82. 305 Collins Ave, Mandan, in a Mandan hoaptta! at 4:35 a.m. Sunday. Kennclty Funeral Parlora at Mandan. FIRE CALL At 7:10 p.m.

Sunday, to Brown'a service station, Fourth St. and Thayer Ave. Empty five-gallon gasoline can exploded, no damage. RI AL ESTATE TRANSFER! I T. Clem Casey to George W.

Jennings. I Casey'a third addition, lots 4-6, block 15 and lots 4 6, block 17. T. Clem Casey to Wayne Jennlnga, I Casey's third addition, lota 2 3. block 17.

Orin Thompson to H. A. Brocopp, Gov-I en i Pierce addition, part o( lots 10-12, 11 I i 53. onomy Homes Co. to J.

W. Euren, lns re-plat, lot 17, block 4. Economy Homes Co. to Kenneth W. Howlette, Calkins re-plat, lot 2, block 6.

Albert Hoffman to John Krey, Flannery and Wetherby addition, lots 23-24. block 35. George S. Register to Raymond W. Kelm.

Flannery and Wetherby addition, lota 15-16, block 9. Margaret Seyfert to Albert Sprenger, Flannery and Wetherby addition, lots 31-32, block 47. Donald S. Cummlng to Charles De Boer, Flannery and Wetherby addition, lot 23 and lot 24, block 5. Raymond W.

Riese to M. C. Morrison. Sturgis addition, part of lot 4 and lot 5, block 2. Robert J.

Strobe! to Frank A. Morrelle. Park Hill second addition, lot 2. block 5. Economy Homes Co.

to Arthur Anderson, Calkins re-plat, lot 24, block 4. Economy Homes to George L. Schoeneck-er. Calkins replat, lot 19. block 14.

Economy Homes to Rodney Peteraon, Calkins re-plat lot 16. block 4. Carlo Martlnuccl to Herbert W. Rauer, Fisher's addition, lots 12-13, block II. Trombonist Has New Angle CHAUTAUQUA, N.

Y. ufi An angular trombone is Davis Shu-mans answer to the black looks he gets in a crowded theater pit. Shuman, a teacher at Juilliard Music School in New York City, played his sidewise trombone in a concert here Sunday. The slide moves off at an angle to the right, instead of straight back and forth. Shuman says the hookbilled horn, his own design, will also be handy for youngsters, who have to stretch for the low positions on a standard instrument.

Believes He (Continued from page 1) paign manager, also announced that the general will make a farm policy speech at the National Plowing Contest at Kasson, Sept. 6. On Sept. 9 there will be another major addiess by the general in i Indianapolis. HE WILL TRAVEL by air in fill- 1 ing all of those engagements.

Along about Sept. 15 he probably will set out by train on a whistle-stop swing i around the country. On Wednesday he will fly to Boise, Idaho, for a campaign conference with the Republican governors of 10 Western states. From I the State Capitol steps after that meeting he will make what aides have labeled his first frankly polit ical speech since winning the nom-1 ination. From Boise he will fly to Kansas City, for a conference Thursday with GOP leaders and other supporters from seven Midwestern states.

Friday and Saturday will be spent in Denver. Sunday the general will travel by plane to New-York, where the next day he will address the American Legion's na-ional convention. Eisenhower has said that speech will be non-political. Eldridge Farmer Dies In Aulomobile Fire ELDRIDGE -Charles C. Fair-j field, Eldridge farmer, died in a fire early Sunday morning as he; was seated in his car, according to Dr.

Robert Woodward, Stutsman County coroner. Fairfield died from asphyxia, according to the coroner's report. The body was badly burned. The blazing car was noticed by a Northern Pacific freight crew shortly after 3 a.m. on an Eld-j ridge street.

The crew attempted to put out the fire but the flames had gained too much headway. The Jamestown fire department was then called. Fairfield was unmarried. He leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

John R. Fairfield, his brothers and sisters, Edna Fairfield, William, 1 Leonard, and Darrell. ail of Eld-' ridge and Rueben of Minneapolis. Funeral services will be held in Jamestown at 2 m. in St.

John's Lutheran Church. N. D. Stale Business Federaiion To Meet GRAND FORKS A meeting of the North Dakota State Business i Federation has been called for Sept, 5 at noon in the Gardner Ho- tel of Fargo, it was announced Monday by Arthur Tweet of Grand Forks, president. i The eating will consider re-j pons of committees on the work-1 compensation law, the un-1 employment insurance law, the North Dakota state sales tax.

and, the state highway system. Invi'ations will be :er.fr4 to all chambers of commerce, tradej associations, and civic and com- i mTcia's of the sts'e. POLIO COUNT BOOSTED Siul I'ALLS Tao more polio a and one were reported here Saturday. The addition bisled to the mm.ber of polio patents rested at Surnx falls Vicpitsk thi yesr. I DONALD OIOIOLiopinrson ALICE KEllf PAIMM IEE WILLIAM REYNOLDS SHOWING AT MANDAN JAMES STEWART in "BEND OF THE RIVER" the House Agriculture Committee had signaled a green light for passage.

But Gore formed a coalition of Democrats and -Republicans that swamped this move. Only hurdle now facing Gore is the final election and Tennessee voters elect the Democratic nominee senator with regularity. "He is one of the most able men I've ever known in either House or Congress," Monroney said of Gore. "He is clear-thinking and courageous and able to express himself." BORN ON a hill farm in Tennessee, Gore was a country school teacher even befoie he go( his college degree. Advancing to county school superintendent, he studied law at night at the Nashville YMCA become a lawyer in 1930.

Gore decided to enter politics because of his great admiration for Cordell Hull, former secretary of state, who served as a senator and House member from Tennessee. He won election to Congress rrom Hull's old district in 1S39 and the House soon became a friend another freshman lawmaker, Monroney. MONRONEY'S PATH to Congress was different. He had been a football player, honor student, reporter, political writer and then a successful young businessman before jumping into politics. Christened Aimer Stillwell.

Monroney had been nicknamed "Mike" his father. After entering politics he had his name changed legally to A. S. Mike Monroney. Monroney won the $10,000 Collier's Magazine Award in 1946 as the most useful House member, largely for his work on congressional reorganization.

He donated the prize to the Episcopal diocese Oklahoma. Gore also has numerous accomplishments. He is rated as an excellent hillbilly fiddler. He used hillbilly band in his first election campaign and frequently had entertained with other congressmen at the informal adjournment sessions. The flying lemurs of Malaysia can glide 200 feet from one tree another.

WEDNESDAY! EXTRA! a. toon 'Flatfoot Flfdgling' Musical and World Newt Sausage Food FLAVORITE tun tmranbK If "aajf 1 au CAPITOL Sensational Story of the Thrill-Busters JANE NIGH 'DOnPfV COLOR BY JOHN ARCHER KUUCU CINECOLOR TUESDAY DO YOU NEED MONEY? i i Vi OtoKK v. DOROTHY HART LAST TIMES TODAY ADULTS 39c CHILDREN 12c WEDNESDAY BLASTING WIDE OPEN I THE "THE PAY-UP- OR ELSE" RACKET! i 0 HJ Saturday Aug. 23 i A A 4, 1 Chickens 45( MsmmrM -2? FIG BARS -49 Thursday Friday Aug, 21 Aug. 22 lt Chance.

Redeem your Green Csh Register Receipt for Beautiful FREE DUCHESS $75.00 worth of Cash Register Receipts, must be redeemed before August 23rd. i 621 BROADWAY JJilWf'rYk tilZN ('J DAILY DELIVERIES 'A i i A 1 i.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1873-2024