The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 21, 1954, Page 2, Image 2

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    2 (Sac 1) Statesman, Salenu Oro- TfeursU Jan. 21. 19S4
Man Caught
Breaking Into
Market on 99
Riissel Pratt Also Honored at First Citizen Bannuet
IFive Persons
1 -
U.JV; Delegate Visits
f :
Die jinj Wreck
In California I
, ' i ' ' .? L- 1 ,5 ,li ... -
' ..:- . '. i f M1
rfv.fj . -
w
Mrs. Oswald B. Lord (left) United Nations delegate is shown dis
cussing UN work with Charles A. Sprague, publisher of The States
man and former UN delegate, in Salem Wednesday night Mrs.
' Lord attended a dinner meeting at the Senator Hotel prior to her
UN report talk at Waller Hall on the Willamette University cam
pus. (Statesman photo.)
U. S. Can Afford to Pay U. N.
Peace Price, Mrs.
!
! By CONltAD PRANGE
1 1 , SUff Writer, The Statesman j
The United Nations is helping to build world peace at a price
America and the rest of the World
1rc rutuoM n T-nrrf cairl in ?alpm
i Mr Ird. who enthusiasticallv
lems of the eighth session of be UN general assembly, termed the
world organization "the conscience of mankind." j . i
jorettes to;
Vie Friday atj
Elks Contest !
I
c,tm viir. Tndo. will nrowni :
ltll5th annual Drum Maiorette i
fetort to "Se pblte FridaJ Vt '
WiCe!Uf.
aJ,t:", Pu" j
anonum. I
I , , . . , -
Competing for prizes will be 1Q.,
girls from Oregon high schools,
including those m Salem, Sweet ;
Home, Independence, Beaverton, j
Cops: Bay, .M o 1 a 1 1 a, Portland, :
Kccdsport, McMinnville, Mill;
City,! jetierson, rsewDcrg, orai-
lisJ
An ii
innovation this year wilj be
sCore cards available to those: at
tending so they can ''make, their
own! rating on performances.
Among the contest judges wilj be
Charles Steele. Cottage Grove, a !
former national drum major eon
test winner and baton teachef" at
ihe national band camp of Gun
nison, Colo. j
Salem High's band will provide
the music for the twirlers. For
the lodge Tom Hill and Vernon
Wiscarson are co-chairmen for
the event i
! i !
- i
Xavier Cugat,
Wife Rqbbed,
Kidnaped j
HOLLYWOOD U) - A "shabby i "ol -caucasian"
kidnaped Xavler Cugat I venant theory that any
v,;. .Sf a t te;H guarantee of human rights is dif-
the Pan Pacific Auditorium Wed-
nesday night and robbed them of
jewels which the bandleader jval
ued at $20,000. j
Police, said Cugat and the Icur
vaceous singer, still visibly shaken
by their experience, gave this ac
count a few minutes later: j
They left the auditorium after
the first show at the auto show,
for which Cugat's band is playing.
At the stage door, where Cugat's
expensive white convertible was
waiting, a man rose up inside the
car i and displayed a gun.
He forced them into Cugat's car
and ordered them to drive away.
Near Third Street and Fairfax
Avenue, a few blocks ' awayj the
gunman ordered the car halted in
a shadowy spot. There he took
Miss Lane's jewels. Cugat's wrist
watch, ring and $150. j
Then he left the car and dis
appeared. Congress
WASHINGTON Ufi The f Sen
ate! voted 51-33 Wednesday jiight
fori joint U.S.-Canadian construc
tion of the St. Lawrence Seaway,
to provide a route for ocean-going
liners to Great Lakes ports, t
Other congressional highlights :
Air Academy The House com
pleted consideration, and arranged
forja final rote Thursday, oh es
tablishment of a West Point of
the air to train Air Force officers.
Taxes The House Ways and
Means Committee voted to extend
tax exemption to most, sick bene
fits paid directly by employers as
well as those financed under in
surance contracts. But it decided
income tax should be collected on
such municipal revenue bonds as
those which some southern cities
now issue to buy or build factor
ies as an inducement to new in
dustries. " I
" ' '
Cotton House and Senati con-
ferees reached agreement,! still
Lord Says
i
can afford to pay, UN delegate
WpHnPsriav nitrhL
outlined the progress and prob-
negaraiess oi.ine lanacies " j
ing circulated in the United States ;
about the ineffectiveness of the j
United Nations, Mrs. Lord pegged j
the UN as vitally necessary iniTI 11 T !
I safeguarding world peace.
She outlined the vast scope of
work done by! the UN. She ex-
plained committee workings. She!
told how UN organizations have
helped on a global scale in the ;
cause of health, economics, dis-!
"se. child welfare and technical
assistance, esoeciallv in food oro-
duction in backward nations. j
tt u.M ckAA,;ntf
ijcuu iiiau uiivvuu
ianv Deonle sav all the UN
does is-taik" she said. It is bet.
ter to talk than to shoot And UN
taiking has settled manv problems I
whicn otherwise might never have j
been ironed out peaceablv."
She explained how technical ex- j
perts of some nations help out!,arcu u"
with know-how and equipment
other nations." The UN, she ex-
plained, doef n't do all the work,
but "setarlip pilot plants which;
enable nations to help others by-
neiping memseives
Despite rumors to the contrary,
Mrs. Lord assured her audience
which packed Willamette Univer
sity's Waller Hall, the UN re
spects and guarantee the sover
eignty of its member nations, is
not a nest of spies, is not control
led by Russia and only costs each
American citizen about 62 cents a
year to support.
Named to U.N. Post
Mrs. Lord, irj the UN since 1947,
was chairman of the International
Children's Emergency Fund, when
she was named to the Human
Rights Commission last year.
"Kirs. Lord explained last night
that although! the United States
supported wholeheartedly the de
claration on human rights, it has
a 4 i il. r
! ficult to enforce.
Appearing pn the West Coast
by courtesy of the World Affairs
Council of Ihe Foreign Policy As
sociation Mrs Lord's appearance
in Salem was sponsored by a
group of interested citizens in
Corvallis, Eugene and Salem, and
a group of local service, women's
and labor groups.
Prior to her talk Mrs. Lord met
with these who formed prelimin
ary plans to organize a Willamette
Valley World Affairs CounciL Af
ter her speech the visitor was en
tertained by a group of local and
state Republican leaders. She will
appear in Portland today.
The use of coffee in Abyssinia j
is recordea irom tne loin cen
tury at which time its use was
said to be very old, but coffee
was not used extensively in Eu
rope until the 17th Century.
Highlights
subject to approval in both houses,
on a 1954 cotton acreage of 21,
379.000 acres. The 1954 cotton crop
is the first in several years to be
subject to production controls.
Racket Probe The House Gov
ernment Operations Committee,
authorizing a probe of alleged la
bor racketeering, picked Rep. Ben
der (R-Ohio) instead of Chairman
Hoffman (R-Mich) to direct it
NLRB The Senate Labor Com
mittee put off action until Friday
en the nomination of Albert C.
Beeson. California industrialist, to
be a member of the National La
bor Relations Board. Some Dem
ocratic members ' called him "a
company man.
DAV The; Disabled American
Veterans, smarting under a New
York legislative committee's criti
cism of its fund raising, sought
and , got v a House Veterans Com
mittee hearing to insist it does not
operate a "chanty racket.
A 32-year-old Canadian soldier
who said he "just wanted to get
warm" j was -' caught - red-handed
breaking into Dickson's Market,
4280 S.- Pacific Highway, about
4:30 Wednesday morning.
Jean Paul Beaudom, alias Jean
Marie Gauthier, Regina,' Saskat
chewan, was arraigned in Mar
ion County District Court later
yesterday on a charge of burg
lary not. in a dwelling.
The case was continued to Jan.
21 and he was jailed in lieu of
$2,500 bail.
Neale Chaney owner of the
market who lives in an apart
ment above the store,, said his
three-year-old daughter. Colleen,
was responsible for alerting the
family.
Colleen woke ; up and called
for ! her mother. ' Just then Mrs.
Chaney heard glass breaking in a
door downstairs and called her
husband. .
"If I hadn't been so sleepy I
probably wouldn't have been so
brave," said Chaney, who yelled
to the; intruder to come into the
center! of the store where he
could be seen.
The! soldier obeyed, explaining
he just "wanted to keep warm."
Meanwhile, Mrs. Chaney called
state police.
Chaney said Beaudoin put up
no resistance. He was arrested by
state police officers Floyd Mor
rill and Norman Johnson.
Police said Beaudoin later ad
mitted he was after cash. He told
officers he hitchhiked to Salem
from Los Angeles, arriving at
12th Street Junction shortly be
fore the break-in at the store.
Police said he admitted serv
ing time at McNeil Island for il
legal entry into this country and
was released last May. He also
told officers he again illegally
entered the U. S. in December
h.j ' i
the western states sinc
A " H 1
A i r I s n At 11 n I r nc?
il.ll 11J1C1 lTlalVCo
illPilV I ,.111 Mill O"
i , 7
!
BUFFALO, N.Y. - m A twin-
engmea American Airlines Con-
made a belly landing in a field
ednesday just after taking off
from Buffalo Airport, and the 21
passengers and three crew menv
bers walked away from the wreck,
An American Airlines official
-
a few of the passengers were
sudncu up uui nune was injureu
seriously..
The ; flight captain, Charles HQ
born of Buffalo, reportedly was
cut by glass from the windshield.
n airi'ne sa
ine airline said one engine
Britain Not
Invited to Join
A-PoolTalk
LONDON Wl Britain has not
been invited to join the American-Russian
talks on the Eisenhow
er; atomic pool plan slated to take
place during the big four foreign
ministers conference in Berlin, the
Foreign Office said Wednesday.
A spokesman said no arrange
ment has been made for Foreign
Secretary Anthony Eden to take
part in the "procedural" talks
scheduled between U.S. Secretary
of State Dulles and Soviet Foreign
Minister V. M. Molotov.
These talks are aimed at set
ting up full dress negotiations on
President Eisenhower's proposal
to organize a pool of fissionable
materials for peaceful atomic pro
jects.' Britain, which ranks herself with
Russia and the United States as
a leading atomic power, has been
kept informed by the State De
partment of the progress of the
Washington talks, however.
Portland State
PORTLAND Ul - Portland State
College Wednesday reported that
student enrollment for the winter
term was 21 per cent higher than
the same term last year,
The total is 1,605. of which 1,206
are men. For night classes of the
extension service, 2,721 are en
rolled, an increase of 100 from last
year.
Dancer's Husband
Sues' for Divorce
ILOS ANGELES in Dancer
actress Leslie Caron, 20, was sued
for divorce Wednesday by George
A. Hormel II. 25, scion of the meat
packing family.
His complaint said that since
their marriage in Las Vegas, Nev.,
Sept. 23. 1951, she has treated him
witn extreme cruelty and nas in
dicted grievous mental suffering
upon him. It gave no details. ,
LEON'S
2 for 1
Shoe Sale
Now in
Progress
Bay the first pair at regu
lar price get the second
pair FREE!
N
Enrollment Up
l- d-H v- --.r?' v
Last year's Chamber of Commerce
presented a certificate of recognition and a scrapbook of the
year's! Chamber events daring the First Citizen Banquet Wednes
day evening at the Marion Hotel Conclusion of; the two-hour
program was announcement to the more than 250 present of the
selection of Carl William Hogg as 1953's First Citizen. Shown at
the head table during the presentation to Pratt by William H.
Eisenhower
Gets Gift on
i
WASHINGTON lm A beaming
President Eisenhpwer got a sur
prise gift from his cabinet a
handsome , -crystal cup depicting
highlights of his (career as he
began his second 'ear in the White
House Wednesday. !
The 63-year-old j chief executive
described by an aide as "thriving
on the 'challenge' of perhaps the
toughest job in the world, received
the gift while cabinet members.
Republican! Party officials, lead
ers of the : Citizens for Eisenhow
er Coromittee and White House
asistants looked ;on.
Mrs. jEisenhower also was pres
ent for jthei ceremony marking the
first anniversary 'of her husband's
inauguration.
The rleguiar routine of the Presi
dent's busjf day Was broken only
by thatj brief ceremony and a pri
vate luncheon wim a group oi oia
Army,
iNaiy and! Air Force bud
dies at
Fort McISair, overlooking
the Potomac Rivier.
Hirii
ins
i i !
115 lo Close
EUGENE W
The Siuslaw
Co. will close a
Forest j Products"
.sawmill employing 115 persons at
Maplet6n.50 miles west . of here.
Jan. 2$ because iof "poor market
conditions?' Frank McPherson,
manager, announced Wednesday.
But jhef said the company will
re-openj a smaller mill and some
of the 115 will be employed there.
The firm's plywood plant will
continue operation.
North America
Weather Map
Jll
11
FAIRBANKS, Alaska (Jl North
America's weather map is strange
ly upside; down.
It's warmer in Alaska s arctic
sector! than it is in a large part
of the! northern states.
It was a mild 20 above zero
Wednesday morning at Point Bar
row, the i tip of Alaska closest to
the North Pole. It was 7 above
here in Fairbanks, below the Arc
tic Circle in Alaska's center.
The Weather Bureau here at
tributes the situation to a change
in the course of frigid arctic
storms, whiclj periodically sweep
out, of i Siberia. Normally they pass
southward over Alaska. But this
time a mass of "warm" air over
the tej-ritory is forcing the move
ments! from behind the "icy cur
tain" to : detour north of Alaska
Canada.
Above zero temperatures are
communities that often have had
readings! of 40 to 70 below zero at
this thne of year.
Red Spy Editor
Faces Death
'I
SEOUL tffl South Korean ed
itor Chung Kook Gun, 38, convict
ed as a Communist spy, will be
executed publicly Saturday, the
Defense Ministry announced Wed
nesday. 5
Chung,5 former editor of the
newspaper, Yun-Hap Shinmoon,
was sentenced to death last month
by al military court.
A large crowd of Koreans, in
cluding his family, is expected to
see the execution by an Army ru
ing squad.
YOUR KODAK
Camera & Equipment
Headquarters
Artz Photography
325 Court St. PL MTU
THE PIKE
Butter Caramel
1 ICE CREAM -ll
38 S. liberty
Anniversary
TTncirlfk Tlrvti
.... ' ( -
president, Rnssel IE. Pratt, was
Carl Ho
Service to
City Related
; " j
(Story also on page one)
; Obviously honored, surprised
and humbled by the announce
ment that he is i Salem's 1953
First Citizen, Carl IWilliam Hogg
clung tightly to his newly ac
quired plaque and ;thanked those
present for the j privilege be
stowed upon him. j
Last year's "citizen," William
L. Phillips Sr., preceded open
ing of an envelope which dis
closed who th.? 1953 selection
was. by explaining some of the
qualifications and j standards for
this honor.
Briefly, these j. qualifications
are: One who is oyer 35 years of
age; a Salem resident for at
least the past year; one who
performs volunteer and outstand
ing community service; one who
possesses a high degree of spirit
of cooperation in community en
terprises and one who is recog
nizably a leader by inspiration
and an example in community
affairs.
In a breakdown of the First
Citizen's accomnlishments in the
community, which were conclud
ed by the announcement of who
this year's selection was, a num
ber of Hogj's achievements were
cited. ' Among them were mem
bership in the Elk's Lodge, the
Izaak -Walton League, The Eagles
Lodge, Veterans; of , Foreign
Wars, American Legion, Salem
Chamber "f Commerce, Salem
Memorial Hospital Board. S-'
Industrial Development Council
(chairman) and ;the Lutheran
Church.
In State Position
Hogg was noted, for his service
as chairman of the Board of Gov
ernors of the Associated Employ
ers of Oregon for 1937-38 and
for his selection by former Gov,
Charles A. Sprague to serve on
the State Unemployment Com
pensation Council representing
employers of the state in 1938
39. Hogg is a past board member
and president of the Salem Re
tail Trade Board and in 1942 he
was elected vice-president of the
Salem Chamber ! of Commerce
and the following year was
elected president; in which lat
ter office he served for three
successive years. I
He has served several terms
on the Salem Community Chest
board of directors and in 1946
was campaign director. He was
elected to the office of president
of the Chest for the year 1947,
In Chest Drive
In 1950 he .again responded
to a need and served as co-campaign
chairman of; the Community
Chest Daring the year 1947 he
served as treasurer of the Wil
lamette Valley project commit
tee, president of the Salem Long-
Range Planning Commission and
president of the; Highway u99"
association as well as first vice
president of the Pacific North
west Travel Association. The
same year he was elected Repub
lican delegate of the First Con
gressional District
In 1949 he was appointed by
former Gov. Douglas McKay (now
Secretary of the Interior) to the
chairmanship of the Oregon
Liquor Control Commission. In
1951 he served as a delegate to
the Republican National Conven
tion and participated in the nom
ination of President Dwight D.
Eisenhower. In 1952 he was ap
pointed chairman of the Indus
trial Development Council, which
office he now holds.
Came to Salem in 1935
A native of Oregon, raised and
Old Shoes' Lo6lc I,
Like New After
. A' Trip to
Jim's Shoe Serviee
175 N. High i Salem
T - noni a-crta
Robert Taylor - Ann Blyth
Stewart Granger
Betta St John
"ALL THE BROTHERS
WERE VALIANT:' I
' Short Subject
"Lanrentlan Sports Holiday
' and : - . . -1
. "Winter Paradise
Hammond, president of the Chamber and master, of ceremonies,
are, left to right, Mrs. Pratt; William L. Phillips Sr. and Mrs.
Phillips; Mrs. Paul L. Patterson and Gov. Patterson;: Pratt and
Hammond (standing); Mrs. Hammond, Mrs. 'Alfred Loucks and
Mayor Loucks. and Mrs. John Caudle and the Rev. Candle, pastor
of St. Marks Lutheran Church. (Statesman Photo). i
1 v !
A Kiss for His First Jady
(
IS
- : n
Salem's 1953 First Citizen Carl William Hogg, Salem businessman,
had a kiss for his first lady, Winifred, Wednesday night shortly
after announcement was made of his selection. Hogg became Sa
lem's fourth First Citizen since the inception of the idea in 1950.
(Statesman photo.) l I j
schooled in Oregon City, he first
came to Salem in 1935 establish
ing business of Hogg Brothers
Appliance and Furniture f Store.
He and his brothers were- assoc
iated in business since 1913. He
married Sept 7, 1927, and he and
his wife, Winifred, curreptly re-
side at 2185 S. High St :
An atmosphere of melodic calm
was, achieved and intermingled
with suspense during the ban
quet portion of the evening Wed
nesday by the Willamette Univer
sity String Trio, composed of
Lisbeth Shields, piano; Sally Bol
linger, violin, and Margaret Hu
son, cello. Melvin Geist dean
of the school of music at Willam
ette, sang a regularly scheduled
song, "The Vagabond, dedicated
to the (then unannounced) First
Citizen. He substituted jas well
as guest singer for his student,
Clorinda Topping, who was re
ported ill. Dean Geist's?; second
number, "Silent Worship," was
dedicated to the (then unan
nounced) First Citizen's ? wife.
Patterson Speech H
In his address, entitled "The
Light to Live By," Gov. !Paul L.
Patterson commended trie first
citizen award as another; means
of " . . . making America and
our community a better place in
which to live." j;
Gov. Patterson, whose speech
preceded the announcement of
who Salem's "First" was,; told the
group that "(when he j is an
nounced) ... you will juio w he
has been in your midst; and by
so being has made your commun
ity a better place to be.';
Master of ceremonies,; William
H. Hammond, president; ; of , the
Chamber oi commerce, preceded
introduction of Phillips (by pre
senting to the assemblage three
previous First Citizens.; Intro
duced were Charles A. Sprague
(1950, and Salem's first First
Citizen); TL L. Elfstrbm, Sr.
(1951), and Phillips (1952). An
nouncement of the secret com
mittee chosen to select 1953's
First Citizen was not made.
SEE THE FABULOUS
PFAFF
'Sowing Machino
i
i
it
MYRONS
153 S. Liborty Ph. ji-5773
NOW SHOWING OPEN 6:45
2 TOP HITS IN COLOR! '
TAKE THE II
HIGH GROUND
Richard Widmark
Karl Maiden j i
' Technicolor Co-Hit --A
UON IS INI
THE STREETS?!
James Cagney, Barbara Hale
if - J- '-
r
Daniel Ray
Ruled Insane
PORTLAND (A Daniel Ray,
45, 'who is accused of killing his
39-year-old brother last September,
was found insane Wednesday and
committed to the state hospital at
Salem. I
Circuit Judge Alfred P. Dobson
ordered the commitment after; he
received a report from three psy
chiatrists.
Ray had been charged with first
degree murder following the shoot
ing of his brother, Dr. George L.
Ray; Dr. Ray's wife, Harriet,! 39,
and their stepmother, Mrs. Mattie
L. Ray, 65. George Ray was
killed: the women recovered.
' Judge Dobson said Daniel Ray
would be brought back to face trial
if the state hospital superintendent
ever decides he has regained
sanity. ' ?
Java Volcano
Still Rumbliii
JAKARTA, Indonesia Ml Cen
tral Java's Merapi Volcano con
tinued to rumble ominously and to
throw out hot ash clouds Wednes
day, i I
Dr. De Neve Vollcanologic Ser
vice chief, reported this after an
on-the-spot I investigation ' of the
mountain's! activities following
Monday's eruption which took a
toll of 37 dead and 79 injured. (
IEARN TO DANCE
All typos of dancing taught
80c Z,
Studio Opon
10 A.M. to 10 P.M.
i .
Jon -Mar
Dance Studios
474 Ferry Street Phone 44942
ALLTKZ SPLENDOIU.THZ
IXDIO; Calif. W Five persons i
were killed and a 4 months old girl
was critically injured : Wednesday
in a two-car headon collision 46
miles east of here on Highways
60-70. i
Killed iin the accident, the sec
ond on .this highway in less than
three months that has claimed!
five lives, were; - :
Norton R. Baldwin. 32, and hisi
wife, Mildred Gray Morrell Bald
win, 32. .'and her two sons. Norman
Randolph Morrell; 14, and Alonzo
P. MorTell, 5, all of Abilene, Tex.
Doctors! at Coachella Valley Hos
pital said the couple's baby girt,
Mary Ellen Baldwin, suffered in
ternal injuries.: The family was
enroutejto California to make its
home.
Also killed was Clarence William
Stockman. 46, of Merced, the driv
er and isole occupant of the other
car. j 1
The Highway Patrol reported
that the crash occurred at the
approach to an elevated bridge
over a dry wash, where approach
ing traffic is obscured.
French Retake
Indochina Port
HANOI, Indochina OB French
Union forces reoccupied the Me
kong River port of Thakhek Wed-
nesday without firing a shot and
sealed a big part of the gash the
Communist-led j Vietminh had cut :
across i the narrow waist of Laos. I
The Strike by tanks and infantry, j
gunboats and Marine commandos
served ; to lessen a Red threat to '
Thiland, across the Mekong, and
open the way for resumption of
river and road; traffic between the
north and south of Laos, one of
three associated states of Indo-:
china. ; j '
French Army headquarters here ;
said the task force met no opposi
tion in regaining control of Thak
hek, a provincial capital abandon
ed at Christmas in the face of a
drive by a j Vietminh division
across! Indochina from the South
China seacoast to the Mekong.
The; rebels apparently had fled
northward or eastward into the
jungles, possibly toward Vinh, one
of their old biases in neighboring
Viet Nam 160 miles south of Hanoi.
Polio Strikes
Twice at
Same Name
i i
CANBY, Ore. tfl Dr. Val
Chronovsky studied the case of 11-month-old
Freddy Rice, called in
a Portland specialist, then reported
that Freddy has polio.
And just seven years ago, Dr.
Chronovsky said Wednesday, he
had done the; same thing: Diag
nosed the illness of another Freddy
Rice as polioj
The older boy now is a senior
and leading athlete in Canby High
School. He and the 11-month-old
boy, the new polio victim, are not
related. j
THURSDAY LUNCH
i AT NORTH'S
In Capitol Shopping Center
SWISS STEAK
i Whipped Potatoes
; And Natural Gravy
Cole Slaw
Hot Biscuit and BuUer
65c
Fast Serviee . . Delicious Food
Try; Salem's Best Place to Eat
SALEII HEALTH
FOOD STORE
475
I Center St
Now
Under New
Management
Thursday, Jan. 21st wi win hare
Miss Jan Stinnette, Representative
of the Battle Creek Dietetic Co.,
to help you j with your problems.
At this time we will offer onr
IZ.M BELVEX to ya for Je, a
savin ( of $1.12.
rtrOWE S-S40T
50c Till 5:00
s
Alan Ladd
James Mason
! In
"folairy trw
Also
Walter Brennan
"Ban)oOaMrKaN"
Eveninr Adnlta
! Matinee Adults tee ,
Children Anytime 50c
DRAMA
THE HZART OP
IUf5MMM
rtUMO WHEftB IT MA Pet ID WI
tOUW DC ROChCMONT ASSOCIATES!
I iWrrr.rrtft, 1
I i
3J
1
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I
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