The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, January 07, 1942, Page 4, Image 4

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    I
PAGE FOUR
THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
January T, 1941
flit Queuing $erafo
TAVK JK.VKIN8
MALCOLM IFUJV
- Mttor
. UuuitD Editor
fvblltbtd ?! tfUraooa icvpt Bund? by The Hiratd Publtihtng Ooraptay H sUpltnad
nBllALD PUHLIMUNO COMPANY, FublUhm
loUrtd u Mood ! matter at tht pmto.ric of Klimitta Fall. Or on August SO,
1006 undar act of oongresi, Mtrcti i, IV9.
lmbtr of Th Attoclitad Prua
Th ABtoeUtwl PrtM U ticlunwlj MUMed to th us of republication of all
dlipatchca errdltd to It or oni othrrwiM emitted in thu paptr. and also th local
aa publUhwl Uierrln. All flgbu of republteatlan of special dispatch ara also rMtrrod.
News rtv
i Duin M at t rtkl TT
MKMIIKU AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION
Brprearpttd Nationally by
WaatHolltday I'o., Inc.
Hal Prndtoo, Naw York, Drtrolt, Saaltla, Chicago. Portland, loa Anvalea, St Irota,
Vaoeouvar, B. C. Coplea of Tha Nera and Herald, togrthar with oomplcta Informatics
about tha Klamath Falla market, may ba obtained for tha aaktnf at any of thaaa offlma.
Dallvared by Carrier la CIIJ
Out Month 1
ThrM UooUia MIS
Ooa Tear .
ThrM Mutttha
til Month!
Ont year
HAIL BATE3 PAYABL1 IN ADVANCI
Bj Mall
Klamath. Lala, Modoa and Slaklroa CounUea
-HIS
.J
.0O
Disappointment, But No "Crabbing"
NEEDLESS to say, there is keen disappointment here
in the announcement that South Sixth street develop,
ment must be postponed indefinitely. After years of ef
fort this needed program was brought up to the point
of action, and then came deferment. But the cause of
deferment is the war, and the most active supporter of
the highway program in this community will not ques
tion the necessity of sacrificing even such vitally needed
projects as South Sixth street if the sacrifice is a con
tribution to the war effort. So there will be disappoint
ment, but no crabbing, in the situation here.
The highway commission made a showing of good
faith, in connection with South Sixth street, in deciding
to go ahead with right-of-way purchase for the develop
ment This will clear the way for action when the emer
gency will permit construction work. It is a further indi
cation that at last the commission, after a long period of
indecision, has made up its mind on a plan for solving
the troublesome traffic problem on South Sixth street.
The immediate acquisition of right-of-way is impor
tant because there always exists the possibility that a
change might be made in the status of South Sixth street
in its relation to defense construction! If anything of that
. kind should happen, it would be most gratifying to have
the way cleared for immediate action.
Klamath is not alone, of course, in its disappointment
over the necessity of holding up important road work.
The big Front street project in Portland and many others
will -be "frozen" in their present status until after the
emergency. We are convinced, however, that not in the
entire state is there a more deserving project than South
Sixth, nor one that has been forced to wait for so long
after the need for development arose. It should get the
"go ahead" signal the moment general conditions will
permit.
Cigarette Tax
A STATE tax of two cents a package on cigarettes (5
cents on packages retailing at more than 20 cents)
will become effective on Thursday of this week. This tax
was passed by the legislature at its last session, and is
expected to raise about $1,800,000, of which $300,000 or
thereabouts will go to vocational education, and the re
mainder toward old age assistance payments.
After passage of the tax law,' petitions were circulated
and sufficient signatures obtained to invoke the refer
endum which would have, delayed effectiveness of the.
tax until a vote of the people could be taken. After
long delay, the attorney general ruled the referen
dum invalid on grounds expense accounts did not com
ply with the .state law. A test will probably be held in
the courts, but in the meantime the state tax commission
must start levying the tax.
It is unfortunate that an additional state tax burden
should be imposed upon the people of Oregon at this time,
when they are heavily burdened with increasing taxes
for national defense. Most people are willing to pay
through the nose for prosecuting the war, but they right-
iuny ieei mat they should be spared other burdens wher
ever possible. They already are paying heavily in cigar
ette ana tooacco taxes.
It is also too bad that the state cigarette tax situation
is coniusea tnrough a Jong delay in ruling on the refer
endum. The question should have been settled in the
courts Deiore tnis.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 7 Sev
eral notable successes have
been scored by the US navy In
submarine warfare in both the
Pacific and Atlantic lately, but
the navy has not been letting the
news out. Accounts may not be
available for weeks.
The theory behind censorship
even of its own achievements is
that axis vessels, far from home.
do not communicate with head
quarters sometimes for weeks
Their sending radio is kept dead
to conceal their whereabouts.
Consequently, Berlin and Tokyo
cannot oe sure, perhaps for
month or two of what it has
alloat, if our navy keeDs auiet
booui wnai nas been sunk.
This constant talk about st.
lin flying to Washington first
came out of Budapest (a nazl ru
mor factory) via Stockholm
(where most of our axis grease
in me news is handled them
days.) Up to last Monday night,
at least, no one had invited Sta
lin to fly here and Stalin had in.
dicated to no one that he wanted
to. The idea.never occurred tn
anyone except the axis greasers,
desirous to mark his absence
from the Roosevelt-Churchill
meetings.
STALIN OUT-TALKED THEM
Lord Beaverbrook has just
filed a report with his govern
ment on Stalin's religious views,
which is supposed to be highly
amusing, ne smiles are not at
Stalin's expense. The sufferers
are Beaverbrook and Averill
Harriman, FDR's emissary, who
sounded out the red leader in
Moscow at a time when the relig
ious aspects of the communist
revolution in Russia vere con
sidered very pertinent in Lon
don and Washington, in connec
tion with lend-leasing.
Neither Beaverbrook nor Har
riman were suited to the task, it
will appear when the reDort seta
out. ineir acquaintance with the
Bible was casual, whereas Stalin
naa spent two years in a Russian
orthodox theological seminary
when he was young.
The report readily admits he
oui-iaiKea them.
SIDE GLANCES
com. iw y w mvrct. twe t m ma u a. pat, prr, .y
Tolling
The Editor
Lttr printed hsra mutt not M mora
than 900 word in I tut l h, mtial bt wrtliwi
Mgibly on ONI II Dl ot lh papa only,
and mini tot ttgUHJ. Ooniilbulion tolluw
int thHt rtiltt, art warmly waltwmt.
Dish-Drying's A Picnic Willi These
"Zeke's about the unhappicst man in the county he
made a New Year's resolution not to Ret into any more
arguments and it drives him crazy to sec us sitting around
this stove'"
HUNDREDS
OF
WAR EVACUEES
Your Federal
Income Tax
ARRIVE
.5.
SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 7 fUP)
Hundreds of evacuees from the
YOUR FEDERAL INCOME TAX
No. 2
INCOME TAX DON'TS
DON'T
ON PROPHECY
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (To
tho Editor) May 1 uvull myself
of your column "Telling the
Editor" to say b few things
concerning "War ami Revolu
tion" us I noted an article
thercl.i recently purporting to
show that Hitler is the anti
christ spoken of in Revelation
13. This reminds mo of the
fact that during the lust war
thoro were certain ones who
had the Kulsor all figured out
to fulfill that prediction. Then
there lire others who tell us
that the Tope of the Komun
Cutholic church is the anti
Christ, and I have heard of
others who say that Mussolini
is the anti-Christ, but let us
not allow ourselves to bo guid
ed by our dislikes or hatreds in
saying who mo untiuirlsl or
second beast Is. Let us bo care.
fut and search the scriptures to
see if these, things are so.
In tho first place I would liko
to know how, In the Inst in
stance, the one who figured
Hitler out as the unlit'linst (jot
the authority from the 13lule
to use the English alphabet in
his calculations, when the Old
Testaments was written original
ly in Hebrew, and the New
Testament In Greek and Ara
maic. Also by what authority
did ho assign certain numerical
values to different letters, and
then tell us that these "facts"
arc based on tho 13th chapter
of Revelation. Such distortions
of the scripture are confusing
and misleading, and many folk
as a result turn their noses uu
of
v re? I
Quick
Stilrlicry
Mvra
Towrla
Droll
PATTERN 7165
Whether they're at tho circus
or on your kitchen linens, ele
phants nro always favorites (and
some say good luck, too.) Make
a set for tho bride-to-be she
can nevor have too mtnyl Pat
tern 716S contains a transfer pat
tern of 7 motifs averaging 41 by
10 Inches; Illustrations of
stitches: materials needed; color
schemes.
To obtain this pattern send 10
cents In coin to Tho Herald and
News, Household Arts Drpl ,
Kllimnth Fulls Do not nend this
picture, but keep It mid tho num
ber for reference Ho aiire to
wrap coin securely, as a lonsa
coin often slips out of the en
velope Requests for pntlrrns
should read. Send pattern
No to
lOllowed by your iiunio and address
Hems ot
Thought
at tht VUrWlIn urniiniillnK
nrrnnrp vmtr Incnmn t 1
f - I" kvaail. Willi (.ilk t
tax return until you carefully j .., v ' '
read and understand the instruc- . 'I1Uor m'Khl possibly be fit
tions accompanying the forms. 'ed .i,,tou ,ne luco of ,hu
Make out a work sheet and check I bcastuw.h? con"-'!,1 "l ' o
it with the instmrtlnn. hfnr. ! sea- but ho wou'd have to de-
filling in the forms
DON'T delay in making out
NOBODY LIKES HIM
Mother Perkins, the labor sec.
retary, has been botherine her.
self somewhat in the interest of
rruiiam a. uavis for the chair
manship of the new war labor
Doard, but no one else has. Mr.
Davis, chairman of the disinte
grating defense mediation board,
has some friends there who say
the unanimous distaste for him
among the CIO, AFL, chamber
of commerce and National Assoc
iation of Manufacturers makes
him an ideal candidate for the
post.
About forty other names were
in the lists placed a week ago on
Mr. Roosevelt's desk. Near the
top were James Landis, dean of
the Harvard law school anrf
woyd damson of the University
oi w isconsin.
Purpose of Censorship
A MERICAN people, who don't like censorship, such as
uece&saniy imposed under certain emergency con
ditions, can sret satisfaction out of tVi fnrt if ft,.
ctions are established in this country for the purpose
of KEEPING INFORMATION FROM THE ENEMY, not
iium me American people.
Today, for instance, we have a comparison that makes
the point Italian newspapers carefully refrained from
using: the Impressive figures which were quoted by Presi
dent Roosevelt in outlining the scope of America's forth
coming war effort. This censorship was imposed, not to
Keep information from the Italians' "enemy", who already
know the figures, but to keep it from the Italian people.
mJEO, he kvnd uf censorsniP w do not want in this
country. There has been very little evidence of it so far,
and we hope we see none of it in the future. When it is
necessary, Americans in general must go uninformed about
matt -because general dissemination of the in- j
lormation mieht hpln tha t u-i. i I
,i i rt a- vjvwhwii, xjki, LI1L Uli me
will glaPdTyPacce0pt it news-,ovin Americans
OBITUARIES
BONNIE RAE LUGO
Bonnie Rae Lugo, daughter of
Mr. and Lrs. Carlos Lugo of
Sprague River, Ore.. naxxeH
away at tho Klamath Agency
on Tuesday, January 8. Little
Bonnie was born at the Agency
eight months and 24 riav on
Besides her parents she is sur
vived Dy five brothers, Stephen
Carlos Jr., Alfred, Leonard and
Vernon Lee, and a sister Yvonne,
all of Sprague River, Ore; grand
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Lugo of Stronghold, Calif, and
Mrg. Lottie Patterson of Sprague
River; also four aunts and an
uncle. The remains rest in
Ward's Klamath Funeral Home,
825 High street, where friends
may call. Funeral service will
take place from the chapel of
wards Klamath Funeral Home
on Thursday, January 8 at IB
a. m. Rev. B. V. Bradshaw of
Beatty officiating. Commmit
ment service and interment in
the Chief Schonchln
Friends are respectfully invited
to attend.
EDWARD H. JOHNSON JR.
Edward Henry Johnson Jr., a
lifelong resident of the Klamath
reservation, passed away at the
Klamath Agency on Tuesday,
January 6. Deceased was a na
tive of the Klamath reservation
and was aged 48 years when
called. He is survived by his
wife, Arabella; two sons, Lloyd
and Joseph; a daughter, Marce
line, all of Chlloquin, Ore.; also
two grandchildren, three nieces,
and a nephew. The remains rest
in Ward's Klamath Funeral
Home, 929 High treet. when.
friends may call. Notice of the
funeral arrangements will be an
nounced later. i
COOPERATION
ho one couia ask lor more
cooperation than this congress is
giving Mr. Roosevelt. Little op
position can be heard publicly,
and the only corridor criticism
comes mainly from administra
tion leaders, grumbling lightly
aooui ine way the war is going,
Senate Foreign Relations Chair.
man Tom Connally, for example.
went uuwn to see wavy secre
tary Knox to find out "where the
fleet is." All he could tell his
colleagues on his return was that
a is supposed to be out hunting
Japs.
But illustrative of the general
congressional tone is the case nf
the iconoclastic Senator Wheel
er, ine one thing he feared
most for this country vu ih
delegation of dictatorial powers
to FDR. Now he is championing
an administration bill allowing
Mr. Roosevelt alone to juggle the
hours of the nation into daylight
savings ior one or two hour
Asked about it, Wheeler said:
weii, tnere is no other wav."
In all, the new session mark
no change from the old. It has
the same leaders, same problems.
A foreshadow of possible criti
cism against the conduct of the
war has risen, but not very high
yet.
ICKES' WINGS CLIPPED
The political gas and oil ad
ministrator, Mr. Ickes, Buffered
wing - clipping asain in Mr.
Roosevelt's order setting up the
office of defense transportation
under Joe Eastman. That office
will now decide about new pipe
lines and the Nelson priority div
ision (SPAB) will decide about
materials for pipelines.
Mr. Ickes and his merry men
have an elegant rationing plan
for gas and fuel oil all ready.
out may not get a chance to use
it. The Henderson auto and tire
bans will certainly curtail the
use of cars and gas consumption
increasingly, without other ac
tion. Too bad for Ickes. He
tried so hard.
Pacific war zone, including the 'your income tax return. Tax
problems deserve careful study,
and the early assembling of your
data expedites this.
DON'T, if your gross income is
$3000 or less and is wholly from
salary, wages, or other compen
sation for personal services, divi
dends, interest, rent, annuities,
or royalties, file your return on
Form 1040 without carefully con
sidering the option to file the
simplified Form 1040A, since the
filing of your return on cither
form in such case constitutes an
election which prevents you
from filing an amended return
on the other form.
DON'T overlook the fact that
for the majority of taxpayers the
tax for 1941 will be two or three
times as much as for 1940 and
that it is important for you to
save out of your weekly or
monthly earnings, or otherwise
provide, a sufficient amount to
crew of a torpedoed Norwegian
freighter and families of service
men, arrived yesterday after an
"uneventful" voyage from Hawaii.
The freighter's crew, includ
ing one American, told of their
dramatic rescue at sea by a U.
S. warship and the civilian pas
sengers added new stories of the
December 7 horror at Pearl Har
bor and Honolulu. There were
no casualties or wounded in the
group that arrived today.
Without Warning
It was the third band of war
evacuees to reach safe harbor at
San Francisco since outbreak of
the war. One group arrived
Christmas day, another on De
cember 31.
Lauren Locke, 21, former San
Jose State college student, who
was a member of the Norwegian
freighter's crew, described how
a submarine torpedoed his ship , Pa 'our a" when it becomes
without warning in the Pacific
during a dark night a week after
the war started.
'I was sound asleeD at the
time the ship was hit by a tor
pedo. I was bunking in a cabin
amidship near the galley. The
torpedo hit starboard, near No.
3 hold. It threw me out of my
bunk and pushed the ship
around.
"It was pitch black about 4
a. m. We didn't see the submar
ine that hit us. It didn't surface.
At any rate, there was no fire
from its deck gun."
Capt. Einar Andersen. skioDer
of the sinking freighter ordered
four lifeboats lowered and the
ship abandoned. Young Locke
said he got aboard a boat with
the captain and four other men.
Among those who abandoned
ship were the freighter's five
passengers, including one woman.
We drifted for several hours.
The lifeboats stayed close to
gether. An American warship
hove into sight and picked us
up. There were no heroics.!'
Locke, the son ot Mr. and Mrs.
J. R. Locke, Campbell, Cal, said
ne joined the Norwegian crew
in San Francisco for his first
trip to sea. He planned to re
turn to school.
Among the evacuees were
Jane Burke, 19, Fort Knox, Ky
and her mother. They had been
wintering at Waikiki beach when
the Japanese attacked. Now they
are en route to Arlington, Va.,
to visit Miss Burke's grand
father, George Newlove, a re
tired army major.
We thought it was maneuv
ers," said Miss Burke, speaking
of the Japanese aerial invasion.
A friend from Pearl Harbor
phoned me and said the Jans
were attacking. I didn't believe
it.
I said to her "Ha. ha. that's
pretty good. An attack, me eye.'
went back to sleep."
due. For the calendar vear 1941
the tax is payable on or before
March 16, 1942, or it may be
paid in four equal installments
on or before March 16, June 15,
September 15, and December 15,
iai, respectively. If any install
ment is not paid when due, the
whole amount of the tax unpaid
is required to be paid upon no
tice and demand from the col
lector.
DON'T omit any explanation
or information that is essential
to a complete audit of your re
turn. An ounce of care may save
you a pound of unnecessary ex
pense, and time and annoyance
both to you and to your government.
Courthouse Records
TUESDAY
Justice Court
Betty Emma Raines, no oper
ators license. Fined $5.50.
Robert C. Collins Jr., obtain
ing money and property by false
pretenses. Bond set for S500
cash or 1000 property. Com
mitted.
George M. Belton, no clear
ance light. Fined $10.
Trial set for following liquor
violators:
Donald Buck, unlawful sale of
liquor, John Kandra, unlawful
sale of liquor, Chet young, un
lawful sale of liauor. Orvilln
Sutton, unlawful sale of liquor,
John Kandra, unlawful sale of
liquor.
cldedly change his views und
actions concerning the Jews.
We know that Hitler is n Jew
hater and as such could not
work in complete accord with
a religious leader who will bo
the one whom Jewry will ac
cept as their Messiah. This
will be the antl-Christ. Again
the antl-Christ must be a Jew
for that people would accept
no one but a Jew as such. I
am not an antl-scmlte when I
say this for every one knows
that Judiasm has never accept
ed Jesus Christ as their Mes
siah, but are still looking for
the Messiah to come.
Neither could tho Pope bo the
anti-Christ for wc read in John
f.il, "He is antl-Christ, that
denieth the Father and the
Son." This the Pope has never
done nor has the church which
he heads ever done so. They
stand truer in this respect than
some of the protestant preachers
and churches.
Sincerely yours.
Dr. C. B. Cassell.
IDEALS
Our Ideals aro our better
selves. A. Hronson Alcott.
All good that ever was writ
ten, taught, or wrought comes
from God and human faith In the
right. Mury Baker Eddy.
ideality Is only the avant cour
ier of the mind, and where that,
in a healthy and normal slulo
goes, I hold it to be a prophecy
that realization can follow.
Horace Munn.
A man will not bo the better j
because he hud a well-born
(uihcr, if ho himself la nought. I
But truq high-birth is in the j
mind, it was never In the flesh.
King Alfred.
What you believe must Influ- j
ence what you arc. What you :
ure determines what you do, and I
what you do determines your
value here and hereafter. Jane
i Tudor. i
Ttinr 1- .n,l.in.. !... I '
men rich and strong but thnt
which they carry inside of them.
Wealth is of the heart, not of the
hand John Milton.
To
our,
ntoii
and
Looking Backward
By The Associated Press
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
CHURCHES
"God" was tho sulijeit of tho
Lesson-Sermon In nil Churches
of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday,
January 4.
Tho Golden Text was,
tho only wise God our ii.i
bo glory and nuije.ily, lr,
and power, both now
ever" (Judo 1:25).
Among the cltittums which
comprised the Lesson Sermon
wns tho following from tho
liiblc: "1 am the Lord thy God,
which havo brought thee out
of tho land of Egypt, out of tho
house of bonduge. Thou shult
have no other gods before ine '
(Ex. 20:2,3).
The Lesson-Sermon lo In
cluded tho following currrlutlwt
passages from the Christian
Science textbook, '-.Science and
Health with Key to tho Scrip
tures" by Mary linker Eddy:
"Question, - What Is God? An
swer. - God Is Inrorporrul, di
vine, supreme, infinite Mind,
Spirit, Soul, Principle, Life,
Truth, Liive. Question. . Aro
these terms synonymous? An
swer. They are. They refer to
one absolute God. Question.
Is there more thuu one God or
Principle? Answe. . There is
not. Principle and Its Idea is
one, and this one is God. om
nipotent, omniscient, unci omni
present Doing, und His reflec
tion Is man and the universe''
(p.465).
Mt. Laki
Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Jackson arc
receiving congratulations on the
birth of a son, born Friday, Janu
ary 2, at the Hillside hosDltai.
The little lad ha. been named 3
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hill, Miss!
tthel Dixon and Miss Dorothy
Dixon enjoyed skiing at Crater
Lake last Wednesday.
Word has been received that
Corporal Don West was pro-;
moted to sergeant on his return ;
to Fort Knox last week after a
10-day furlough spent here with
relatives and friends.
Mrs. Corrlo Is on the sick list.
Ethel and Dorothy Dixon left
Sunday by motor for Eugene to
resume their studies at the uni
versity. Other students leaving
thia weekend for Corvallis are
Jean Thompson, Darwin Grlse,
Clyde Dehlingcr, Cecil Whltmorc
and Earl Reynolds Jr.
One Year Ago London suf
fers heavily in daylight air
raid.
Two Years Ago Bitter
weather In Finland stalls Rus
sian offensives on all fronts.
Twcnty-Flve Years Ago
British capture two posts near
Bcaumont-Hamcl on western
front. Teutonic allies continue
advances In Rumania despite
strong Russian and Rumanian
Parents make kids get up on
week dny mornings and the kids
get even orr Sunday.
GOLF HUNT
CHICAGO, Jun. 7 iTi Golf
ers will get In a lot of hunting
this summer, predicts Ed Dud
ley, president of the Profession
al Golfers association. And it
all will be for lost golf bnlls.
Dudley, en route from Phila
delphia to the Pacific const,
said a survey among ninnufnc
turers led him to mnko a con
servative estimato thut the I94J
supply of golf bnlls would be
25 per cent of thoso available
last year.
Read the Classified pnge
DIAL 41)1
OIAL till
I
LAbl llMtS TODAY
Lloyd Nolan Mary Both Hughes
'BLUE WHITE AND PERFECT"
Lupe Volo Leo Corillo
"HONOLULU LU"
We must, build
built before. The AFL will In
sist on a renouncing of the strike.
-President William Green nt
tho AFL.
BABE RECOVERINO
NEW YORK. Jan. 7 It
Friends of Babe Ruth reported
ioaay tne former home run
king was "doing fine" at the
private hospital where he was
taken Saturday. In addition to
nervous condition, Ruth Is
suffering from a cold.
It takes two to make a bar
gainmother falls for it and dad
pays the bill.
CUE OVERTIME
CHICAGO. Jan. 7 (Pi Bil.
Hards' new rule, permitting use
of either cue ball at the start
of an inning, even has Cham
pion Willie Hoppe working
overtime.
He has been trying It out in
practice sessions for the 1942
three cushion title tournament
Friday and concluded today
that it not only will speed up
play, but it will "reduce the
safety play to a minimum and
force many changes in strate
gy." i
li
DIAL I1U
TODAY and
WEDNESDAY
Ben Lyon
Claudette Colbert
in
"I COVER THE
WATERFRONT"
COMIDY
UNUSUAL OOOUPATIONI
I SOS tlNCHLIV
fca--'a" i"ai'ai'aaijirJlJXl
DIAL 111!
NOW
SiTHIART! J
DIETRICH M
rla UMart . OHilla Parliar
"SWEETHEART
nc Tur wavy"
-STARTING THURSDAY
ANOTHER SMASH TWO
FEATURE PROGRAM!
IT'S GENIAL GENE'S BEST BANG-UP SCREEN
HRIILI I
I
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GENE Wf fc-v2JtL
AUTRYV NriB
wUi 1MILIY BURNITT1 J ,n -T) '-f&'Si J
TECHNICOLOR CARTOON . XL fVuf? ?t
LATEST WAR NEWS
Comedy Thrill Hit No. 2
CAROLE LANDIS CESAR ROMERO
"GENTLEMAN AT HEART"
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