PAGE TWO :::;;is thiod lit is m Daring iStunts put on With - Noted Fliers at Helm Of tip-top Ships - - MIAMI. Wi., Jan. 8 ( AP) Airplanes darting .across a south era, sky today launched Miami' third en-American air meet on it i-day-aerles of raees and, stunting by- famous- ctrlUan and service fli ' era. , ' Dignitaries of the United States and foreign countries Tiewed the . spectacle as fleet-winged planea swooped about pylona of the IS tnlla reee course- or Boomed and rolfed mboat the T,50 spectators. A group of six marine corps pursuit planes, from 1 Quantico, Va., thrilled spectators with their rapid darting over the field in series or formation; maneonvers with snap and slow barrel rolls, loops and direst ; A novelty of tbejrogram was the hesitant hops ana Jumps ox a . law -winged Doodlebug elan pi loted y K. S. McDonnell, Jr., Chi cagos - The craft darted or slowed alaaost-to a stop at will and land? d almost vertJcaiiy to display its ease of handling-. John Livingston. Aurora, Ills,, flying a Monocoupe -net bp the Alghest speed -or the aiternooo tor cabin planes with-his negotiation of the IS mil course from a standing start is six minutes, 21:40 seconds, an are rage speed of 141.it miles an hoar. , Barton Stevenson. Kaasas City. In a Monocoupe. flew loS.ES - miles an hour to win the 15-mlle race for 175 cubic inch dtsplace ; ment. planes. ' Lowell R. Baylee, Springfield. Mass.. put his plane with motor halted, fire feet 1 'inches from a mark -on -the -field "to win the dead stick landing contest. Harold E. Newman, Geneseo. TIL, Von the bomb dropping-contest, "placing his bomb Tl feet from the -mark. T. I Leak. Miami, burst a free : balloon In SO second, after it was released -to- win the event. The" tree, for all race -for planes of 509 to 1.-000 cubic Inches dis placement,' went i to Art Davis, East -Lansing, Mich., flying his Waco at 142.191 miles an. hour. His time for 80 mile race was 12:39.54. The race was from a standing : start. 5E TIED UP ON DROUGHT AID Bill ; (Continued from page 1) : to conference unless the republi can and democratic forces agree .that the food provision apply to both urban and rural districts. - He introduced a resolution to ... day to appropriate 130.000.900 to i be turned over "to the American Xted Cross to feed the unemployed throughout the country.' Similarly a measure to appro i trlste $16,000,000 was introduced by 'Representative ' Fish,' republi n can. New York, who also submit ted a resolution to hare the farm m board turn wheat in its possession i over to the Red Cross, v, , Objecting tor the third time to a move br Chairman Wood of the bouse appropriations committee to . send the drought measure to conference, LaOuardia aald It would be "impossible to explain . .to the American people why food : .should . bo distributed to certain sections of the country, . utterly ' .disregarding the needs in other sections, particularly in the -cities.". V ; V'r '- ; Wood said he wls opposed to I .the food provision for any section of the country as a matter of prin l clpl He added the England, jArk.. food disturbance was stag- ,d "for' the, purpose of creating ; consternation ant confusion an I trouble all over the country and declared the 'Arkansas governor .bad repudiated tbewhole thing. I . j At that point Representat e Parka, democrat, Arkansas, lea p ! : "edto his feet and shouted that the :. people participating in the Arkan : ' aaa incident "never beard of a ' radical. ; organization In - their I lives . ' Parks- read a telegram from Governor Partfell of Arkansas and v more than a sco- of others from - prominent Arkansas people urging j relief and telling of pitiful condi- ' tlons In the drought areas. I ' "I hasten to correct anjf impres- '( ' si on that Arkansas does not need assistance, regardless of what the eastern papers mar say. Par ti ell's telegram read. "Am strong . for the Caraway amendment and hope, that It will pass by big ma ) .;. Jortty.- . ; M IES SO D ES aEVIITOH - '- Salem- -friends of Branson Miles,; 20. son of the late Don Miles, .Salem attorney who died last spring, learned ha was acci dentally killed In a tall down an elevator shaft at a home hotel tn Ban ttrandsco, word received here-yesterday. j Young- Miles absence ot two days from his place of employ ment ted January to notification of 'the police and investigation, which resulted in his -body being discovered is the elevator pit ot the hotel. lis was night clerk and had been working there since early last spring. i Since word of hia death, sent under date ot January f, was to the effect the body had been found that morning. It Is suppos ed death actually occurred last Friday night or early Saturday . morning. Nothing was said re garding rnneral arrangements. It Is believed the remains will be -.buried la California. Besides his mother he is suri . vlved i by his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Miles, formerly ot Salem but now living In Portland, where Mr. Miles is seriously m at a hospital. Mrs. Miles went to Portland to be near her husband. . t, -. - -; one UlibUUil biAliaiiiia, Mifw. urcKuiu xmmy .ax.-. aij . 5H INTERNATIONAL VESIC IS SUCCESS AT imiVERnTC celatienebJp between week, bold December 1-7. ' Foram dtscrmaion gmnps were held tn all Uvug organlxatlens, foreign atndenU ireiw gwests ef sIm fellow Amer team etodenta at a baaqnet, a talk on tnternatloaaJlsas was dollvered by Dr. Q. B.i Heble et Seed eeUege. and by Dr. Soy Akwgt, jmsnlanat Japan auUtor. On tbe, directorate la charge -of the affair were, from left te ilgfatr Charles QlUeapAe, Eugeaei sfbanle Ilelzer, Portland; Calvin Bryan, Graata Pass, general rJiaJrxnaa; Mlcaael Ilaimorrtch, Eugene; Merlin BhUs, EsygesM EUxabetia "Scrogrs, Portland Kasnett fltxrerald. Pertbsnd; Lonlse Webber. PorUaad ; Jasocn Landye, Portland; Alexia Lyle,-HTamnft' Falls Edna.' Spenker, Portland; lAvbna tucks. Portland; Alice Badetzke, Portland; ZsabeDe CroweH, Portland! George Boot, Portland; Jean Cox. Portland; and Her. Walter tSeycra, Cngene. ' ; . - j '",! m ' : r . : - " -- ' . , x POPE HITS OUT AT (Contlnoed from pS D rimony -exercised in such a way that the act is deliberately frus trated in its natural power." he said, "is an offense against the law -of Cod; and V nature, and those who lodalse In- each are branded -with the guilt, of a grave sin. i : ' ' Companionate" marriage came- in "for an equally vigorous denunciation. : Marriages of such a nature, are often defended as a neces sity of "modern" culture, he de clared. He -gave as the church's dictum that -they did not par take of such culture but were "simply hateful : abominations which beyond all Question sim ply reduce our truly cultured natures to (he barbarous stand ards of . savage people". The modern wife, the pope declared, must not carry the doctrine of .obedience to her hus band to the point of sacrificing her wifely dignity This is not." he said, "true emancipation of woman. It is rather the debasing of the wom anly character and the dignity motherhood. ; i. . Saints and Bibke Called To Substantiate Pope's View Divorce he utterly condemned and; he called on the pronounce ments of the salhts and the Bi ble! itself to show that once en tered into . conjugal fidelity and anion must ; persist until death separates -the partners. "The laws" of marriage are of God." he affirmed. "These laws cannot be subject to any human decrees or to any contrary pact, even of the 'spouses themselves," the ' encyclical enjoined. The pontiff urged the educa tion of youth if or marriage but condemned too; much '"physiolog ical" education ' The encyclical took on the na ture of a sociological doctrine in its reference. to the duty of the state to assist married couples in straitening" circumstances. "Their necessities must be re lieved as far as possible," the pope said. - State Mast Help to Provide Family With Funds Then, adopting the principles of Pope Lea XHTs "rerum no va rum" encyclical as his own, he laid down -the doctrine that "in the state such social and eco nomic methods should be set up as will enable every head of family to earn as much as, ac cording to his station in life, .is necessary 'for himself, his wife and for rearing his children". Persons contemplating matri mony., he said, should of course strive to dispose of, or at least diminish, the material obstacles In their way, "but. "provision must be made also, in the case of those- who are not self-supporting, for i joint aid by public or private guilds". LIXDSKY -SATS POPE AGAINST GREAT LAW NEW YORK. Jan. 8 (AP) Former Judge Ben Lindsey of Denver in a statement tonight occasioned by the pope's encycli cal on marriage -aald the protest of the pontiff was powerless to WXOBXX0HTS rtOK THB TA- i rax. xvoroiooax. ox 4 , uaasuoB 4 By U AMiU4 Ptm ! SUata ''ChMt wedlock . i . is th raaelf! aaS foaaSatioa ef doti McUty ae tkror ef alt haataa iatreor." i a ramUr -"Tka faadly U ar. aaeraS 'tfcaa taa stata, aaA mum ara - aat far the aorta, km far kaavm sad atana ly." '.,)..-.(... . . , JMvacaa "Taa ; aaaraaiaat af atarriac aarriaa-wita it "a par pataai aa aialabla boa waick caaa4 ba diaaatvei by elvil law." BUtb Oaatral OontraMpiiaa la aay Sana ia "aai affaaaa afaiait taa Uv 4 t4 aad a star." Owpaata a.ta-aa "napaiiaiaa tat aumaaae axa r'aatfal aaaaiiaattaaa . , , valeh rasaaa ear Waiy aaitara4 aalans U iaa tarfcar'waa . ataadards et , Baraga faaplM." 'f i ..; 7 StartUtaMaa ... "atarltraWa aava aa dtraaa awar ar Ota aadiaa af their aaaiaM. Taaralara, ka aa artaM kaa takaa plaoa. taay aaa vat diraetly aara ar taaipat ttt taa iaurritr at taa body. Itktr lor raaaaaa at oala sr aay atW rat Ma.' , Abartfloa Ja aay atraauaaaa to ,ajralae tka praaaaU af &d aad of aatara. Waaa "If tka ataa U tka kaad, tka wanaa ta tka kaart, aad aa ha aaeapia tka akiaf plaaa la allar. r aka . . . claia tats karMif tka akiaf alaaa tm lora." Tka Sata. "Biick social aad eaoaaaia aaaaaaraa at mat ka aat aa aa will eaakla erary kead at a faatily ta aara aa aiaek aa, accord. Ins ta kit stettoa ta Ufa, la aeaa aary far klataalf. kla wUi ad tor raarta aia akUdraa." FilTES . - I" t American and foreign students was affect shifting codes ot morals. "His i Holiness, the Pope," said the exponent of companionate marriage, "has a right to be con cerned about oar changing mor als. In j some respects he can no more slop -the change than the course of the comets by protest ing sgajnsr it." - MBS. SMIDI id ( Continued from page 1) proviso; that: it contain a clause that the appointed person should be a member of the political faith of the one who had been electedJ . t The meeting was harmon ious one. the -best of feeling be ing evidenced among the mem bers. No further meetings will be held unless it be tor consid eration! of legislation affecting this connty. ! . ! While the meeting was called as a secret meeting, word of j its being held became circulated Thursday. Members were retl- cent about discussing their tion but the' above report is garded ! as dependable. ac- re- Qualifications of all men Carefully Checked Over The delegation went very carefully over the whole list; of persons. ' who had been men tioned. discussing their qualifi cations and endeavoring to eome to general ; agreement without discord;. The house members (de ferred (to Senator Brown in 'the matter ot the recommendation for his! colleague. Mrs.!W. Carlton Smith who is widely known in Salem and the valley has long been active in Salem affairs, civic and social. JONES mi IB jl' It- I WASHINGTON. Jan. 8. (AP) Congress passed the Stobbs bill to modify the Jones "6 and 10" dry law today and that waa about the sum total of agreement cap! tol l hill. The j 216.000,000 loan for man food waa virtually in on hu- the same position in the honse that it occupied yesterday. The senate spent most of its time arguing over the proposed reconsideration of Commissioners Smith, Garsaud and Draper of the power commis sion. I - . . Concerned with the snail-like progress of legislation in the sen ate, the assistant republican lead er. McNary of Oregon, lniormea his colleagues he was prepared to ask for night sessions three dafs week beginning. Monday. Muses Shoals is out of confer ence but its troubles are not j yet over, tt may pass the house! but even then it faces the possibility ot a presidential-veto. j: - Congress, feeling it Has enough trouble on its hands, has made an effort to delay submission Of the much discussed prohibition report of the !law enforcement commis sion. The attempt- failed. The commission is understood to be ready to tell the president the re sult of i Its dry law studies and ho Is expected to transmit the report to congress. Daughter Gives moon ten save Mothers Life PALO ALTO. CaL, Jan. f APi-J-A rirl recoverine- from In fantile paralysis today gave a pint blood to save the ufo of an expectant mother suffering from the same disease. ! The girl is Miss Patty Baker. It. Stanford university co-ed, who has been la the Palo Alto hospi tal fori the past three months. The expectant mother is Mrs. A. Tueker who was discovered today to be suffering from the disease. ' Doctors recommended an i anti toxin Injection, and Miss Baker's offer of a pint of blood vat ac cepted.! Dr. Harold Beave wh made the transfusion, pointed out the girl's blood was an toxin as her blood t had built up to resist Infantile lysis. - - . x i , - Jf ; anti- bee a para- BRtCAD, BUTTER CHEAP KANSAS CITY. Jan. t. -AP) Bread eaters are apreadiag It thick in Kansas City, i Butter, at If to 35 cents pound,! retail, is the cheapest in 10 rears. Ills mm son f brought about at the-Unlversltr Mickey Mouse NOTES By ZOLLIB VOLCHOK ! : M.M.C. i "The Spell Of The Circus, is an all talking serial and it Is the name ot our new serial. We hare had every kind, ot a serial but never a circus on and we have also had many mysteries In our serials bat - never - one that has sa many as this. It has the thrills-of n real circus combined with mystery and romance. M.M.C. He is only eight years old but he had enough sense : to know how to bandage a boy's arm when it was broken, and that is what he did when his playmate tell down and broke his arm. So on the Honor Roll tor eight year old Burson Ireland. Even though his name sounds it he's not Irish. M.M.C. Why not hand In v yell and have it yelled at the club meet ings. Honorable mention goes to Alice Ann Wlrts for handing one in. i- : ' M.M.O. She's good there's no doubt ing that. I'm talking about our star from Barbara Barnes School of Dance. Little Pauline Zoe Chambers. M.M.C. The Keds last week were won by Dolores Parker. M.M.C. Our new serial, stars Such act tors and actresses as Francis X. Bushman and Alberta Vaughn. M.M.C. With "The Spell of the Cir cus" comes Fanchon and Mar co's "Society Circus", Road to Paradise' and a "Silly Symph ony" cartoon. M.M.C. Everybody at tha big circus Saturday. WOMAN FLIERS Bf (Continued from paga 1) the Lady Rolph. The materials re quested are used in patching plane fabrie. Five of Anuy'a Beet Were ia Question Stark - The Qnestlon Mark, the army's contribution to endurance flying, set the first refueling mark here Just two years ago. It was aloft a little more than ISO hoars. The Question Mark carried a crew" of five ot the army's best fliers and was powered by three motors. Under a sodden eky the Lady Roiph was refueled at twUlght for the lith time since Its takeoff at 2:30 p. m., Sunday. With its tanks full the plane was prepared to fly through n dreary night. , . The return ot the plane to Its base eased the tensity evident last night while it circled the Imper ial valley airport 150 miles away. Ia case et trouble the girls can coast the plane to a landing at the municipal airport with a new women's record clinched. They exceeded the old 4 z-hour mark on Tuesday, but had they been forced down elsewhere the flight would hare come to naught Poor flying weather present more than half the time since the takeoff, has had its effect on the fliers' spirits. Apparently they have given ap all hope ot chal lenging the. mens 4 5-hour reo- ord, but are determined to reach the absolute limit of their plane's 17 -horsepower motor. Peru President Held Looter of States Cofiers LIMA, Pern, Jan, I ( AP) Augusta B. Legnla. deposed president of Pern, and his three sons most psy Into the treasury zf ,000,000 soles (approximately 17,121.000) as reimbursement for alleged improper transactions during the 11 years of the . Legs la regime... i The national aanctloas court today an noun end sentence on the former president and his three sons, Augusto. Juav and Jose, following a three-months Investi gation, . - :4 : M " Two ot the Judges in an addi tional opinion estimated that the Legnlas ! owed tha i country 50.000.000 soles or about fl5, 250.000. Hi - 10B HOURS UP 1 A R OREGON lj e Oregon ourmr IntecMatlnnnl GOOD FOOD TO BE FOB urn WASHINGTON. Jan. t (AP) A food eulde calculated to fur nish the maximum ot health and energy from a minimum expendi ture was made public today by the bureau of home economics. : The plan was prepared at the request of the president's em ployment committee to help fam ilies with low incomes and was outlined particularly with a view to prevention of mal-nutritloa. Dr. Lillian M. Gilbreath. chair man of the woman's division of the committee, emphasized "eur food standards most not; be low ered or adults will suffer arid the children may be handicapped for life." M The recommendation include: For every meal, milk for chil dren, bread for 'aU. ! For every day, cereals In por ridges or puddings, potatoes, to matoes or oranges for children; a green or yellow vegetable: a fruit or additional vegetable. For two to four time a week, tomatoes for all: dried beans and peas or peanuts ; eggs, especially for children, lean meat, fish or poultry or cheese. Where freeh milk costs more than 10 to 12 cents a quart, the committee suggested unsweeten ed canned milk or dry skimmed milk be ' substituted for, the great part of the milk-allowance. The housewife was, cautioned to adapt her menu to local prices. In regard to meat it waa pointed out there are many inexpensive cuts. - I s !i S E CORVALLIS. Ore., Jan. 8 (AP) Gang rule and bootleg ging activities, as revealed' In testimony In the William Hen derson murder trial here this week, are Intolerable, declared Circuit Judge J. F. Sklpwortk here today. He ordered a special grand; Jury drawn to investigate the situation. f j Judge Skipworth delivered a sharp rebuke to peace officers and attorneys immediately fol lowing the v announcement Hen derson had been convicted of manslaughter for the shooting of E. B. Mills here last Novem ber. He said he was am axed such conditions were allowed to devel op here in the very shadows of a great educational institution. Judge Skipworth ' ordered the grand Jury drawn Immediately. The investigation wilt begin next Wednesday; - . i t Several et the state's witness es in Henderson's trial admitted knowledge ot liquor "deals,' hl Jacklng operations and gambling. lficOrVtura . - j. j .- t. - 1 - :. It win scam the Laughs oat ef yoa at x ; Thin Sunday , j KPWORTH US PROD IT COllUS : ii-j f ' 2 ! . a ' UIIEEtEO HITS AT PRESIOEOT Refusal to Return iloralna- tlonsipf Power men is Held Pro-Utility WASHINGTON. Jan, (AP): --Taking i notice or, reports. Pre-, sldent -Hoorer would reject a re- 4 nest front the-senate to return. the nominations or three oe tne new power commissioners, Sena tor wheeler, democrat Montana. asserted in tne senate ipaay such a refusal would Justify the charge "great newer interests are, running his administration.? ! Administration senators, i de fending each a possible course 1t the senate passes the motion pending, declared the senate bad no authority to take such action and the president would -not have the right to comply with it. i Wneeier denounced the com-J missioners j tor dismissing solici tor Oharlea. A. Russell and Chief Accountant WilMam X. Wag. His speech came during all day I debate on the motion ot Senator Walsh, democrat; Montana, to re consider 'the I nominations of Chairman Smith and Commission era Draper and i Garsaud: . j . Wheeler! charged -they were dismissed because "the - great power Interests wanted them to be.' because of successful efforts to cat down the- valuations ask ed by the power companies. As debate swept on, leaders virtually gave up hope of a vote before Monday, i Senator j Braton, democrat. New Mexico, Joined the forces seeking to recall the nominations. Senator Kerrls, republican; Ne braska, who already announced Ms position asserted "if Theodore Roosevelt had been in the White House, tbe three commissioners would hare been fired" immedi ately for dismissing Russell and King. I : I "! Wheeler aald he did not be lieve) the president would "stand behind the technicality" by re fusing to return the nominations. "If the president stands be hind' thst technicality the charge wiu be maae. ana justltledly in my opinion, that the great power interests not only contributed to his campaign but are running his administration.! "Russell and King could hare got. along on the commission pro vided they had been subservient to the great power interests." Relief Seekers Don't Like Way Of Gov. Olson ST. PAUU Jan4 s- (AP) Ex pressing dissatisfaction with the reoly of Gov 'Fiord n. nunn tn a series of "demands" made yes- from a .group! of unemployment WARNER BROS. He Was Her Thief,1 outcast, sneering at the law, coolly plan dering the society that ostracized her yet when tht more terrifying menace of! riral gang threatened her lore, fighting with the heart of a tigress and unswerving loyalty for HER MAN. Sewi this " strange drama of tore and loyalty amobg crooks in a drama that wrings the heart. v7a4niMEn DEIOO. Last Time Today avaaajtn el staai iL - - A lively story that explains tbe ood and bad in youth's new coda of morals, It wi3 teach parentt about their childrenand boys and (iris about thomselwea- l&GalLj By OLfVE tU DOAK THE HOLLYWOOD Today Richard Dix in e "Shooting Straight." . ( - .: - r, .WAIIXEirS'ELSIXORE i Today - Sue Carroll in "Dancing sweeties". . . - WAiRKimtS CAPITOL ! Today"OuUide the Law. TITK GnAItD f : Tadar I ' Georse Durvea and aily Starr in "Pardon My Gun,;,.,.,,. ...;l..:.,;;';.v.-,,.l, THE CALL BOARD ! S You will enjoy "Dancing Sweetie's" now at -the Warner's l8inore, it yea see It as I saw It; Thursday afternoon. It is the, story ot ; two modern -youths of the -great: middle class, each of them misunderstood at home, where their money, if they make any, is mere acceptable than their presence, who meet in a public dance contest and fall la lore. A furnished flat. Is being offered to any couple who will get married as -part of the festi vities la the dance hall the night of the -contest. Circumstances work so ! that there two young things. .Sue Carrol and Grant Withers, am the ones to be mar ried. . f; r- . - Some trouble follows and all In all the whole thing Is quite hu man and-n&t too tar outside the keen of actuality, la addition to that it is well acted and not badly photographed. demonstrators today . left a con ference with the chief executive. They threatened that "unless our program of relief is, approved the unemployed workers will take matters into their own hands.' .The program demanded by the demonstrators yesterday in cluded immediate appropriation of .S2S.60O.O0O for relief ot un employment. Cor. Olson In i con ference with the delegation to day termed the demands "unreas onable." - I .i Uniform Code on Driver's License j Strongly Urged I i ' aaaaaaaaaaaaaV ' J NEW YORK, Jan. 8 (AP) The executive committee of the national conference on street and highway,; safety decided today to urge the' legislatures of 44 states this winter to adopt a uniform code of automobile traffic regula tions and uniform drivers' license laws. -f. )-' - ".-.'! ... William E. Metxger of Detroit, chairman of the committee, said most accidents were due to unfa mlliarityjof drivers with the traf fic laws of the various states.) He said only 12 states hare drivers' license laws, v'm . , .-,'1. L SATURDAY. nAitnis twixs 'Who's Who' ; 5 aad yV BIJITT , DIAlfO SIARlTJf ; j Varxlng Oa Toes' ; -, ,TABOXl a GBKKCTB ! A fpo Hew Ugly Tow Is i t Man 8UNIUHT I1IL1TJTXE3 Versatile Novelty Artists ON TUG -' : yv tn STATE OUDGET BELEASEO HERF :' I j-.-; $8,000,000 for 2 Years sum To be 'Sought In Vote , ; Of Legislators , , (Continued from pas 1) Items are 2.ll for a! tubercu lar ward and shed at the Oregon state hospital In Salem. 152.600 for bulldlug and furnishing a dor mitory at the- atat home for the feeble minded in Salem. $20,10 tor additions to the nupreme court library, and $60,000 to aid in the. construction ot a training school building at the Eastern Oregon Normal school at LaGrande.- The latter appropriation is contingent upon the LaGrande school district providing ISO, 000 for the same purpose. The capital outlays s im proved by the governor aggregates approximately $812,720. Capital outlays " recommended tor the years 1020 and 1030 ag gregated $412,148. Comparing the Tarious reaulrer meats for the years 1021 and 1932 with the amounts provided for the previous blennlum, it was found that the increases occur chiefly at the state custodial In stitutions. Requirements at the state tuberculosis institutions at Salem and The Dalles for the bl ennlum 1131 and 1032 total $110,612, as compared with $355 tit tor the previous blennlum. At the eastern Oregon state hos pital the Increase for Improve ments totals approximately $248, 605. At the state penitentiary the Increase, exclusive of the defici ency of $245,000 authorised for the purchase ot flax straw and $53,000 tor the construction ot a ceU block, totals $71,734. 66G Is a doctor's Prescription fot) COLDS and HEADACHES It Is the most speedy remedy ' knows. I . 666 also In Tablets Home of btlt Talkies Today and Baturday Special , Mickey Mouse Matinee Sat. lfpO P. M. " j ; I Tike ! Old " ' plx Agala RICHARD I-ts-j World iioves Him. Radio Pictures Blighty . Dramatie Sensation 1 Also Our Gang Comedy, Fables Comedy, News aad cr1 Vfli-SS LIB. SUNDAY ' DJLri V. IRENE SYLVIA - ' Darllag DebatantoS ROSSI MAItia GAIITIIII 'Acrebatio Daasease' v-OODIKGS HAIiP PINTS SCREEN 1 a P0LLYW01M a i aaak aa a giaaasiase 00m&& a air? . t V V t. s i !