The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 10, 1956, Page 2, Image 2

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    .4$cc I) Statesman, Salem, Ore.,' Juts., July 10, 1956
tlrlesome
Signals
Changed by City
(Story also ea Page Oae)
i - Improved traffic signals for the three-strert intersection at Silver
I'nn Road, Highland Avenue and Highway 99 E in North Salem were
.wdered Monday night by Salem City Council.
- Timing of the traffic light there has caused numerous driver
tfnmplaints. city officials reported, because the city could not originally
J!ora to pay tor a runy-suiomaiic
lolis
Papei
;r Hits
Stassen Talk
I MINNEAPOLIS m The Min
flenpoli Star Mid in an editorial
Monday it "will Rot. be intimidat
ed or deterred' by "name-calling
er unwarranted attacks on the tn
trgrity and honeity of our staff
by either party."
'The editorial in the itate'i
ttrgest daily newspaper was in
" answer to remarks made at
tress conference last Friday by
Barold E. Stassen, Presidential
adviser on disarmament.
; Stassen said Democratic-Farnv
er-Labor political leaders "have
iiany apologists infiltrated in the
newsroom and city desk of the
Minneapolis Star."
An editorial, in Monday's Star
sead, in part:
(''Harold E. Stassen V attack on
the Minneapolis Star is evidence
(hat the press ts going to be a
whipping boy for the politicians
again during the 1956 election
campaign. .
"Former President Truman and
ether Democratic leaders often
complain that they aren't given
a fair deal by the . 'one-party
press. Now the former, Republi
can governor of this state joins
the anvial chorus from the other
side of the political aisle. We're
confused. How can we be guilty
of both accusations? -
Stassen objects td the way
In which headlines are written,
positioning of the newa and edit
ing of stories in the atar. Pre
sumably he wants the headlines,
positioning and editing to reflect
his own Republican views. But
as an independent newspaper, the
Star tries to cover political news
In a fair, Impartial and objective
way which seldom satisfies the
extreme partisans in either par
ty." .
Site editorial added that II Stas
tek has any evidence of an asso
ciation between "invading labor
racketeers and FL leaders, he
should make It public aw) the
Star would publish It
- ' t
Religions Cult
Leader Freed
DETROIT Wl James F.
(Prophet) Jones, Negro teliglous
entt leader, was found Innocent
by recorder's court jury Mon
day of a charge of gross indecen
cy. The prophet, wearing a purple
silk suit and fawn gloves, said,
"God Is good. God Is justice."
Liter, outside the building, he
led a crowd of bis followers in
singing the national anthem.
.Jones had been charged with
moral misconduct oa a complaint
by the police vice bureau. He re
cently sold his mansion to a rival
cult leader and announced he will
seek to establish his Church of
the Universal Triumph of God,
Inc., in another city.
Roseburg Yonlh
Umpqua Victim
ROSEBURG W Eugene Leroy
Engle, 17, Roseburg, drowned
Monday while swimming in the
South Umpqua River south of
Roseburg.
A companion, John Mclntyre,
also of Roseburg, told authorities
he and Engle were swimming in
the river when the youth suddenly
disappeared from sight.
Firemen dragged for the body
and recovered it about one hour
later. The youth waa pronounced
dead by Douglas County Coroner
L..JU Powers.
Dividend Announced
On Phillips Oil Stock
UARTLESVILLE, Okla. (1 An
initial dividend, on recently-split
shares was announced Monday by
directors of the Phillips Petroleum
Co.
The dividend was made possible
by raising the quarterly dividend
to 42,. cents per share. This
meant an increase of approxi
mately 13 per cent.
The new payment brings to
irtockhlders;,rate of 11.70 per
share compared with the equiva
lent previous rate of tl.So;
The dividend is payable Sept.
1 to stockholders of record Aug. 3.
Wrecker Giarped
With Death of ChiM
NEW YORK tl - Workers en
gaged In tearing down a building
tossed a cast Iron radiator out of
fourth-floor window Monday,
killing a child playing In a yard
below.
Police said Ralph Torris, S.
snd Charles Cross, S5 .admitted
throwing the radiator. They wrre
booked on homicide charges. The
victim was Julia Quinones, I.
ilinneaf
RENT A TOOL
Do r) Vnurwlf H'e Cfteepae
OPEN SUNDAYS
lekm't Oldest loot mat
HOWSER IROS.
1180 Uvrk 1 Ith l.
Traffic
Ordered
signal operation.
The . aldermen took action last
night at City Hall to split with
the state Highway Department
the 12,600 cost of the new installa
tion.
Paring Referred
Several other traffic matters
were before the Council. Referred
to the Planning Commission was
a Salem Chamber of Commerce
recommendation that Hines Street
be paved from Mission Street west
to relieve some of the traffic load
at the Mission and 12th Streets
intersection.
No-parking areas were added on
Ferry and on Trade near Com
mercial, and list Street in East
Salrm was made a through street
between D and Market Streets.
Final passage was voted or a law
prohibiting drivers from crossing
streets from alley to alley and
allowing turn from an alley with
direction of traffic on one-way
streets or right turn only on other
streets.
Aaaeiatlea Gains '
Additional legislative steps were
taken on two annexation proposals
from an area along East Park
Avenue and another area - near
Silverton Road and Lansing Ave
nue. Nobody appeared at a public
bearing on the former, which will
come to vqte In, the area Aug. 13.
Proceedings have been initiated on
the latter area, with hearing to be
called later.
Salem Housing Authority went
out of existence formally when
Chairman W. J, Braun and Secre
tary timer Amundsen presented its
fund balance of $20,047 and final
papers to the Council". The author
ity cleared its Southeast Salem
property recently and voted to dis
solve after 10 years of postwar ad'
ministration of low-cost rental hous
ing in temporary buildings.
Procedure Cleared
Walter Wood questioned city pro
cedure on Market Street paving
auring a public hearing, and was
Informed that the Council is plan
ning to assess part of the cost- of.
the work against property owners
east of 21st Street because they
had never before been assessed for
their paving. .
mat a section of the street Is a
former county road in an area an
nexed to Salem several years ago
ana it is now part of the Market
Street improvement to be carried
out by a bond Issue that Salem
voters approved in May.
In the city's general program of
street pavings this summer the
asphaltic concrete contract will be
divided between Walling Sand and
Gravel, low bidder on all items.
and Warren Northwest, next-low,
the Council ordered.
Opeaiag New Plant
Walling ia opening a new asohalt
plant in August. That firm waa
granted contract for 14,883 tons
after the aldermen estimated that
much of the paving work could be
done before the Sept. 30 contract
deadline. Warren Northwest gets
the contract for remaining 7,040
tons.
The Council turned dowa request
for a billboard at 1351 S. 12th and
approved a billboard change at 890
N. Liberty St. Sewer plans for
Lowen Street on Kingwood heights
were approved and plans were
ordered started for a water mam
in the same general area.
Street Improvement resolutions
were adopted for South 22nd from
Ferry to Trade, South Church from
McGilchrist to Judson and East
Avenue from 13th to 14th. A new
street paving added to the city's
list at the request of property own
ers who will pay the costs is on
20th Street from Lee to Shelton.
Section Hand
Admits Killing
OWOSSO, Mich, (ft - Ledren
DeWitt, 42, of Durand, pleaded
guilty to second degree murder
Monday in the fatal beating of his
4-month-oId son,
Circuit Judge Michael Carland
remanded him to the Shiawassee
County jail to await sentencing on
July 23.
DeWitt, a railroad section
hand, had admitted killing his in
fant son March 31 "because he
cried."
Gates Opea :45 Shaw at Dusk
... ENDS TONIGHT ...
"KISMET - AND - "LADY GODIVA"
.STARTS TOMORROW "
"" . in 'i ! ''1 i I
EXCITING
' -TCMNICOLOa f
Maaa :m 4'Me V
I VI
r.'lia.41
7)
FliD MsmMURRAY
DOROTHY MALONI
WALTER MENNAN
'' . i . ...... ; , i- i i , . . . . .... . . ,.,, "t",;v, I,
X
X - . ,
r ' X
HOLLYWOOD Hrlea Rah (left)
learning Meaday that their mother, ea whose behalf they came here seeking Is wla money ea a tele
vision abaw, had died at their heme aear Perterville, Calif. The girls tnld police they were trying
la raise money te enable their mother to go U a r sorer clinic when word came that she died. Mrs.
Rail, wife ef a Ft. Old soldier, holds her month-old daughter. Breads Joyce. (AP Wlrephoio.)
Greater Hope for Premature Babies
Promised by New Female Sex Hormone
By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE
AP Science Reporter
NEW YORK l A new fe
male sex hormone promises to
ssve thousands of babies who are
born prematurely, a drug firm
said Monday,
It can- work In either of two
Production
Of New Cars
Below 1955
DEROIT ) The nation's new
car retailers sold 1.548,710 units
during the first five months of
1950, official registration figures
disclosed here. The total compares
with 3.840,433 registrations in the
same 1955 period. The figures are
published in the current issue of
Automotive News.
Factory output for the first five
months of the year came to about
2,782.000. Of this total about 12fl,-
000 cars were for export. Thus the
auto makers geared production
more closely than ever to the re
tail market.
(Unofficial figures indicate June
output came to 428.364; retail sales
are estimated to have been well
above 600,000.)
Of this year's five months' reg
istration total General Motors' big
Chevrolet Division accounted for
(58,560 and Ford Division for 545,
037 cars. Buick was third with 248,-
134 and Plymouth fourth with 214,
294. In the same period last year
Ford Division had a small margin
over Chevrolet, 600,013 registrations
to 593.411. Buick had 311,805 and
Plymouth 280,239.
Surgery Slated
On United Twins
SAN DIEGO. Calif. W - Sur
gery to aeparate tne ttutcnins
Siamese Twins has been set for
July 1. the doctor who delivered
them said Monday.
A chief surgeon and s plastic
aurgeon will perform me opera
tion at Grossmont Hospital in
suburban La Mesa.
The twins, born to Mrs. Floyd
Hutchlns, 33, July 2, are joined
by a atip of tissue, an inch in
diameter and lMi inches long, ai
the base of their apines.
The Hutchlns. who have two
other sons, formerly lived in
Goree, Texas.
CO-HIT
V
a-
Attempt to Save Mother Fails
, . f a- , "Sa4' iLmjJ
II, and her sister, Joyce Schreyer,
ways to saye babies who are born
too soon from premature labor.
It sometimes stops the premature
labor contractions, thus giving
the infant more time to develop
in the womb.
Or it can make the premature
birth easier so the babies are not
fatally injured before being born.
The hormone is Relaxin, a
natural sex hormone playing a vi
ta role In the birth process.
Monday WarneTChtlcott Labora
tories of- New York announced
success in making supplies avail
able for the first time, under the
name Releasin, to help reduce loss
of life from premature labor.
In normal pregnancy, Relaxin
stretches pelvic ligaments and
softens tissues of the womb and
birth canal at the time of deliv
ery. It also makes labor contrac
tions less severe. Lack of Relax
in is believed responsible for pre
mature labor and still-births..
In many cases of premature la
bor, there are strong contractions
but the birth canal is not ready
and the babjris Injured fatally.
In some cases when the nor
Mnone halted the labor, the normal
aenvery uner on was quit anu
neary painless, said ur. oeorgemn of the dam and hydroelectric
H. Mangun, director of research plant.
of the laboratories.
In clinical trials, Relaxin was
credited with saving seven out of
10 babies who otherwise probably
would have been stillborn.
The hormone drug is still
scarce, and expensive. Costs of
treating one case in a hospital
are estimated at from $150 to
$175.
Some 200,000 babies are still
born each year from premature
labor. At present there will be
enough Relaxin to treit only some
18,000 women annually, but this
could mean saving 12,000 to 14,-
000 infants, pr. Mangun said.
The hormone is obtained from
the 'ovaries of pregnant sows, in
volving elaborate work to sepa
rate out purified Relaxin. From
500 sows, only enough is obtained
to treat S to S women. More ef
ficient sources of supply are be
ing sought.
The hormone appears most ef
fective when given to women
threatened with premature labor
mm
PHONE
4-4711
50c
Open 1:45
20c
NOW PLAYING
SPECIAL fIRST RUN ENGAGEMENT
jThe Picture of the Year
Color and CINEMASCOPE
MO INCREASE IN PRICES!
Guvs
Dolls
II, seek solace from the Bible after
in the 29th to 32nd weeks of preg
nancy. In time, when supplies increase,
it might be used to induce de
livery at desired times, and pos
sibly make birth easier. No harm
ful effects have been noted in all
trials to date.
Priest Rapids
Dam Contract
Now Official
NEW YORK UB The contract
for the Priest Rapids Dam on the
Columbia River was signed here
officially Monday after a check
for $16,907,027.78 was presented
by underwriters to the Public Util
ity District of Grant County,
Wash.
The project is the third largest
hydroelectric project in the na
tion's history. Frederick W. Arlt,
president of the public utility dis
trict, accepted the check. Arlt
an d Commissioner -William
Schemp of the PUD then signed
and awarded a 191,878,625 con-
tract to Merritt-Chapman Scott
t0rp. of New York, for construc-
Trl :. . .i,.... ..i.k.
jished a field office at Ephrata.
Wash., and is prepared to start
work immediately on the four
year project.
A dozen public and private util
ities in Washington, Oregon, Ida
ho and Montana have signed 50
year contracts with the Grant
County PUD for purchase of 63'4
per cent of the power developed
by the Priest Rapids development
which will eventually be 1,200,000
kilowatts. The remainder will be
retained by the district.
ISLE GETS VOTE
TOKYO li - Th 200 adults
on Ao Ga Shima, an island 200
miles south of Tokyo, got to vote
for the first time in Japan's elec
tions Sunday. The island adminis
tratively is part of Tokyo, where
only 49 per cent of those eligible
voted. Intrigued by its new right
to vote, Ao Gs Shima had an 80
per cent turnout.
mum
HELD OVER!
QnwssaScoPEs
CWWtWU-a
CO-HIT
JOStM
GOTTEN
ftHONOA
LEMINQ
WSMDSLk
COREY
.11 'Mi Tf
' World; It
Jl LAMcTsnR .CURTIS.
i
LBsteJnnnfiniisWj
a. ss. "
Hoaxf3S
Kidnaper Search
WESTBURY. N. Y. W - The
search for kidnaped Peter Wein
berger bogged down Monday in
a welter of hoax calls from heart
less meddlers. Police turned this
way and that, without a clue.
I No trace of the five-weeks-old
boy has been found since he was
seized from the patio of his home
!here in mldafternoon of July 4.
Theatre Time
Table
FI.IINORI
"TRAPEZE": 7:00, 10 M
THE KILLER IS LOOSE"! 1:11
CAPITOL
Continuous from 1 p.m.
"SAFARI": 1:00. 4:07, 1:14. 1 Jt
THE SECRET OF TREASURE
MOUNTAIN": 1:17. IM, 1:11
NORTH SALEM DRIVE IM
(Gates open MS Show t Dusk)
"KISMET.'' Howard Kiel. Ann
Blvth
"LADY OODIVA." Msureen
O'Hara
HOLLY WOO O
"GUYS
AND DOLLS": 7:00,
10:11
Riders Hunt
Missing Tot
For 5th Day
WIDTSOE, Utah t -"We came
up just as blank as the other
days," a search leader said Mon
day on the fifth day of a hunt
for 2-year-old Vilate Young of
Monteview, Idaho. She wandered
away from a Fourth of July fam
ily picnic and hasn't been seen
since.
But Garfield County Sheriff De
ward Woodard said riding clubs
around the state will try to get
up to 500 riders onto the search
in this desolate and rugged area,
about 193 miles south of Salt Lake
City, by Tuesday or Wednesday.
The sheriff said be is still work
ing on the possibility the girl was
kidnaped.
Young Vilate, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Kerry Young, wandered
away from a picnic at the Newell
Steed ranch, about 7 miles north.
of here. Her teddy bear was found
a short distance away. Blood
hounds followed her scent, but
lost it on a country road.
Woodard said about M persons
searched the sagebrush, hills and
canyons Monday. Two private air
planes also helped. The blood
hounds, flown in from Nevada,
were flown back. An Air Force
helicopter from Nellis Air Force
Base, Nev which flew in from
the airplane crash area of Grand
Canyon Sunday, also returned to
its base. '
Empty Boat Hikes
Drowning Fears
PORTLAND Finding of a
drifting 19-oot cabin cruiser near
Sauvie Island extended search
Monday for its owner, John .
Heide, 34-year-old Portlander.
Heide's wife said he took the
boat from its mworage here Sat
urday night. When found Sunday,
one of the boat's gas tanks was
empty but the ignition key was
turned on. Deputy sheriffs said he
may have fallen overboard and
drowned. Mrs. Heide said her hus
band suffered from s back ai
ment that would have prevented
him from swimming.
PARK METERS LOOTED
Two kitchen facility coin meters
were broken and an estimated $.1
stolen during the night st Helmick
Park, south of Monmouth on High
way WW, park attendants reported
to state police Monday.
Enjoy An Evening
of
l Concert
In the Parle -
Tuesday Eve., 7:30 p.m.
In Beautiful Willson Park
(Just west of the Capitol Bldg )
featuring
ED SYRIN6
at the
SPINET MODEL
Hammond
Organ
Courtesy of
PI A NO COMPANY
THE VAltlY'l flNIST IANO SIOM
1210 Slate St.
Muddle
Nor has there, been a scrap of
hard evidence that the child Is
still alive.
Arrested MoMay
Two men were arrested In New
York early Monday. Police said
they admitted hoax telephone
calls that sent the baby'a mother,
Mrs. Beatrice Weinberger, into,
the night in a lonely, perilous,
fruitless search for her son.
Her vigil was a waste of time.
Even as she waited, police said,
jher two tormentors were phoning
i her home . anew at least three
more times from taverns and
drug stores. They poured more
'anguish into the heart of Mrs.
Weinberger's husband, Morris,
with their misleading information.
Rashes te Appointment
"They said they, weren't inter-!
ested in the money." New York
deputy police inspector "Raymond
V, Martin said. "They just wanted
to see the cops run around.
The fake phone call had assured
Mrs. Weinberger she could pick
up her baby in a Roman Catholic
! Church in Jackson Heights after
ch had nairi th ransom in th
BUJUII11I1K ntfuusiuc BdklUU Ul
j : -: : i' 1.: J.. , :
Queens.
Mrs. Weinberger ran Srom her
home her at :30 p. m. Sunday,
into a humid night. She drove the
15 miles to the Woodside rendez
vous. Face Prises Terms
-Meanwhile, the added phone
calls had proved the undoing of
the two hoaxers, both in their
20's. Through an operator, the
telephone calls were traced and
New York City police 'sewed the
men.
The pair, 2 24-year-old unem
ployed Queens resident, Gordon
T. Rowell, and a 26-year-old part
time Queens bartender, .Robert
F. Giebler, were booked on
charges of giving false informa
tion and attempted extortion. Both
married, they faced up to 10 years
in prison if convicted.
Taken From Carriage
The calls were the latest of
scores of crank calls that have
added to the frantic desperation
of the Weinbergers.
Peter, 37 days old Monday, was
taken from his carriage on the
patio of the family s comfortable
ranch home here July 4. Mrs.
Weinberger had left him alone for
a few minutes while she got him
a fresh diaper.
Border Clash
Fatal to Three
JERUSALEM IB Three per
sons were reported killed Monday
in new violence en the Israel
Jordan border.
Tension gripped the Israeli sec
tor of Jerusalem after recurring
reports that Jordan was massing
troops serosa the frontier.
An Israeli army spokesman said
two Israeli travelers were killed
when their car was ambushed in
the Arava valley between the
southern end of the Dead Sea and
the Ein Hussub settlement,, near
the Jordan border.
In Amman, a Jordan army
spokesman said a civilian was
killed in an exchange of gunfire
between Israeli and Jordan forces
in the Jerusalem area.
DAMASCUS. Syria OB Rrig.
Twafik Nizameddin. Syria's new
chief of staff, said Monday the
army is "alert to check any Is
raeli aggression on Jordan."
Presidential palace sources said
Pres. Shukrj Kuwatly telephoned
King Hussein of Jordan that "Syr
ia stands beside Jordan in the
face of any Israeli aggression."
P IN BALL OWNERS TESTIFY
PORTLAND t Pinball ma
chine, owners Monday appeared
before a Multnomah County, giand
Jury which is investigating
charges of vice and corruption in
Portland.
Bring tht
WhoU
Family I
The first IS mln.
will, be broadcast
ver Radio Sta
tion
KSLM
The rest of the
evening will be
your requested
numbers.
Ask sbeut
Stone's "Easy
Ownership
Plan." Yon eaa
easily have a
Ha mm and la
your home!
w a
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Br CLAY
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nod words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodiac bi rth siga
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Virginia Negro
JSk,Aua
i"l4-30-7-4.
y70 73.77
for Dcseresation Headline
RICHMOND, Va. ( Negro! time limit for completion of de
attorneys pressed a federal court segregation set by the National
here Monday for a definite time Assn. for the Advancement of Col
limit "no later than September ored People in itself took off soms
1957" for completion of deseg-!of the pressure. The NAACP law
regation in public schools of vers in their briefs had indicated
Prince Edward County, Va. They they would seek completion of
asked for a "reasonable start" desegregation by the opening of
toward desegregation by this fall, schools this fall.
They said In effect that no ef- Close Schools First
fectual move had been made by ) white citizens of Prince Ed
the county to comply with the,ward County, who constitute SO
Supreme Court's May 30. 195S,rppr cent the population, have
decision ordering the county to; vowed they will close the public
desegregate "with all deliberate 'schools rather than integrate
speed." them.
1 Judges Required Although NAACP attorneys also
Rut arguments never got around ; asked for a "reasonable start"
to the merits of the time limit: toward desegregation by Septem
Monday. The three-judge court re- ber this year and for interim pro
cessed probably for a couple of ; gress reports thereafter, the court
weeks to consider whether one j delay might mean that the court
judge may now take over the ! ty's schools would open on a scg.
"case. , regated basis.
Federal law requires three! - NAACP lawyers argued -Mon-judges
where a question of the! day for continuance of the three
constitutionality of state law is ! judge court, They said they be
concerned. Thus three judges lieve the Supreme Court meant
tried the Prince Edward case or-j for a three-judge court to hear
iginally since it involved the con- "all of the implementation pro
stitutionality of Virginia's segre-1 ceedings" when it remanded the
gation law. lease to the district court.
But it is argued now that the But Prince Edward attorneys
Supreme Court already has nulli- wgued for a single judge. And
fied the Virginia law and all that 1 JiutiKp barter himself, who or
remains in the case is a question J d!7ed ,h,s question settled first of
of the enforcement of civil riehts. appeared to favor a single
rs- a. .n....!..
Chief Judge John J. Parker of
the U. S. 4th circuit court of ap
peals announced that if the deci
sion is for a three-judge' court.
the case will be called up again
before Sept. 1.
Rut if it Is to h a tinclA-inrlce
court, Richmond District Judge
Sterling Hutcheson will sit and
he will announce when the case
is to be called up again.
At any rate, Monday s develop
ments took some of the pressure
off Prince Edward County. The
Dm n k en You tlis
Wreck 16 Trucks
In Dealer's Lot
ATLANTA -Four boys rang
ing in age from 11 to 1 got drunk
and wrecked 16 new trucks in a
dealer's parking lot Monday.
Detectives R. C. Tcndley and
I. M. Helton said the four broke
into several parked autos looking
for liquor. They found some and
got drunk, the officers said, and
then proceeded to test their skill
at driving by visiting the park
ing lot.
The detectives said several of
the trucks were wreckedin head
on collisions between youth
ful drivers.
Starts Wednesday
r
FLYING SAUCERS ATTACK!
71
-t1ilrnnaaWllW
, HUGH MARLCWE JOAN TAYLOR
IrfM. nr t noeoi we mine
tlDWUII Tetlwa ! CrWl
Ihmm tnui, IMS uiisua
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Woodburn Drive-In
Sunday Monday Tuesday
"SUSAN Slt-PT HERE"
Dick Powell '
PIub
"GREEN FIRE"
Stewart Granger
Open 7:15 . Starts at Dusk
DALLAS MOTOR-VU
Gates open 7:15 show at dusk
Giant 100 fL screen
Ends Tonight
"HELl AND HIGH WATER"
"DADDY LONG UGS"
Starts Tomorrow
Richard Detaining,
lxri Nelson in
"THE DAY THE WORLD ENDED"
Superscope
Second Feature
Kent Tivlnr In
"PHANTOM FROM 10,000 LEAGUES
Ends Tonirt)
, "Safari"
"Secret Treasure"
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