I
Coped
Gets
Permit For
Dam Project
Confirmation has Just been re
ceived from the federal power
commission of a license grant
ed to the California Oregon Pow
er company on July 19 to build
the Toketce falls project on the
north Umpqua river, first unit
of a comprehensive six-project
development of that river and
Its tributaries. Estimated cost of
the plant, including transmission
line to Dixonville near Rose
burg, is $3,200,000, according to
A. S. Cummings, president of the
company. Approximately two
ychrs will be required for its
completion.
The Tokctee project was se
lected as the first phase of the
development of the North Ump
qua river because of its greater
potential capacity, Cummins
said. It is based upon a modi
fication of original application
submitted to the hydro-electric
commission of Oregon and the
federal power commission, and
calls for a 25,000 kilowatt plant
to be operated on a stream flow
basis.
Other projects included in the
Umpqua development program
tipon which preliminary surveys
and engineering studies have
been made, include the Slide
creek project, below Toketee;
Paul O. Landry
this question:
"An elderly friend of
my mother's was recently
injured in an accident at
home. Can I take out a
personal accident policy
on my mother, who is 67
years of age?"
Tha Courthout It Now
On Block Down Th
Street From Out Offic.
For information on any
Insurance problem, consult
THE LANDRY CO.
419 Main St. Ph. 5612
Serving Klamath
20 Years
THERE'S A
Dmijtdn
V-BELT DRIVE
FOR EVERY PURPOSE
No power transmission job is
too bis or too small for Dayton
V-Belts. They ar equally ef
ficient on drives of fractional up
to a thousand horsepower. Be
cause of their greater gripping
power. Daytons are asir on
bearings and require less main
tenance and adjustment.
KLAMATH MACHINE &
LOCOMOTIVE
MILL SUPPLY DEPT.
Spring and Elm Telephone 5141
Shasta Way Summed. . 0 Hot
Leiye S. 6th Leave Leave 8. th Leave Leave Alt. Leave Leave Ore. Leave Leave P. T.
eta aud Ith and 4tb Jt and 4th Ave. and 4th Jc and
Main Madlien Mala Hemcdale Main Anderaoa Main fileba M.'n Lowell
AM 5:40 AM 11:00 AM :50 AM l:IJ AMIil AM":4S AM 1:10 AMlr! AM :! AM :
6:00 B:5 f;fta ' 7:8o ;:.!S 7:10 7:30
': 1:50 :li :0 a:l.l 0:IO . 0:50
: S:.30 0:15 0:30 0:53 0:40 0:30
:m :'5 :10 10:15 I0:!0 10:15
10:00 10:23 10:30 11:15 11:30 11:5 PM 1J:I0 PM ll'JIO
11:00 11:45 ll:.',o PM 12:15 11:40 11:30
PM 12:00 PM 12:21 PM 12:50 1:15 PM 1:30 PM 12:15 PM 1:10 PM 1:20 1:40 2:60
1:25 1:50 2:15 1:35
" :S5 2:30 1:13 2:20 2:45 2:10 3:20 1:40 4:30
am :S 3:30 4:15 3:30 J:',5 1:10 3:30
4:25 4:50 5:15 4:20 4:15 5:10 5:20 1 10 1:30
:5 :10 6:13 0:30 SM :40 6:30
" :' :50 7:15 0:20 :4 1:40 1:30
,:0" 2:25 7:30 1:15 7:30 7:35 7:40 7:30
iM :-"0 :15 :20 S:1S 0:10 0:20 10:40 10:30
:0 :!5 0:30 1 0:15 0:30 0:35 I
10:110 10:25 10:30 11:13 10:20 10:13 11:10 11:30
U'lS ... 1I:M AM:1 11:30 11:33 11:10 11:30
12:00 AM 12:25
Due to condition beyond our control, each aa contraction on Sooth nth. the eifenilea of certain rant, elo., wo
are forced to Inaacnrate a new echedole which we feel tare will he mere eallifaelorv te the public,
net nnlne An rim let (he Sheila War hae will leave lewa ea the hear only, and will tarn around at Madlion and
Snath 6th and return via Sbatla Way. Therefore, tbote people on Sonth lh who have been tiding the honrlr
Shaita Hay baa will ride the Heath lib and Allaiaonl-Sammera Lane baeei.
The South nth hae will leave town at :10 of the hoar and all tripe will continue areand Hope and Hooiedale,
except Sundaya and Holldaye.
The Allaiaonl-Sammera Lane hae will leave r20 after the even hour! and !J0 after the odd bouri throarhout the
aay, and all Irlpa will continue areand Snmmere Lane except SDndaya and Holldaye.
I!"'.FO','OWIN1 "CH"l''- ONLV WILL BE EFFECTIVE ON SUNDAYS AND HOLIDATS, and will Include
Sbaata Hay, South 6tb, and Altamont.-
SUNDAY AND HOLIDAY
Shasta Way and South 6th I South Sixth I Altamont
.... .. Leave Leave Leave Leave
Ith Main MadHoa 8. Ola ltb 1, Main Id.lla'o 1th i. Main Alt. oV Andrrioa
AM 0:00 AM;:i AM 11:10 AM 7:00 AM7:20 AM 7:40'
0:00 8:20 0:10 0:00 0-20 0:40
;-' :0 10:00 10:20 10:10
10:10 :oo 11:20 11:10
v.M.'J:;I ":' PM 12:00 PM 12:20 PM 12:40
PM 12:110 PM 12:20 PM 12:10 :ao IT . 1:40
1:110 l:2 :o 2:IM) j;0 t:IO
JJJ J2 ' 'm 1:20 S:40
. : 4 00 1:20 4:10
' 1:40 :00 6:20 6:40
iM 6:20 6:10 00 :20 0:40
J: 0 :20 . ,-, ,.
':IO 11:00 :20 :
M :I0 0:00 0:20 0:lo
-9:IMI :0 0:10 10:110 10:70 10:10
10:0. ,:20 l.:l. Il;00 . .
11:10 12:00
AM 12:10 AM 12:30
The "unday and liolldar Bhaela Way hue will contlnae around South 01 b and Into town.
The Sunday and Hoi day South llth hue will ro to Idella'e and return, omllllne Hope and llomedale.
The Sunday and Holiday Altamont bul will turn around at Anderaon Ave., and return, omllllne Bummtri Lane
Firemen Bottle
fM mnnviiwM.tmi.i-
1",k Si
if
A raging six-alarm fir that gutttd Hotel Broadway In
Oakland. Calif., was to InUnsa It took 125 ftramen 11 hours to
subdue the bias. Twenty firsmon war injured in th spectacu
lar bias that tent pajama-clad hoUl rasidantt to the ttraat.
The fira caused an estimated $500,000 lost. (NEA Talephoto).
two above Toketee on the North
Umpqua river known as Lemolo
No. 1 and Lemolo No. 2. and
two are situated on Clearwater
river, a tributary of the North
Umpqua. to be known as Clear
water No. 1 and Clearwater
No 2.
At the location of the Toketee j
falls plant, 80 miles by road j
from Roseburg and 25 miles be
low Diamond lake, the North j
Umpqua river flows through a
rugged canyon from 500 to 1000
feet in depth. The fall is more
than 100 feet per mile for a dis
tance of four miles. The diver
sion dam will consist of amain
earth fill section having a crest
length of 350 feet and a maxi
mum height of 45 feet. Connect
ing this ham with the power
house will be 880 feet of wood
stave pipe nine feet, six inches
in diameter, 5600 feet of con
crete lined tunnel of the same
diameter and approximately
1500 feet of steel penstock. A
surge tank will be constructed
near the head of the penstock.
OSC Summer Classes
Climb To New High
CORVALLIS, July 30 UP)
Registration for the second sum
mer school term at Oregon State
college was at 765 last night,
largest ever listed for the term.
The first session, which ended
Friday, had a total enrollment
of 1547.
filttM;.'
NEW CITY BUS SCHEDULE
EFFECTIVE AUG. 1, 1946
Blaze 11 Hours
if . j
1 f . ,
. T f r- i
...
Gl Insurance
Branch Opens
Decentralization of National
Service Life Insurance from New
York to the 13 branch offices of
the Veterans Administration ex
tended to the northwest today as
VA branch No. 11 jn Seattle an
nounced receipt of some 500,000
NSLI records of World War II
veterans living in the four north
west states and Alaska, Patrick
W. Kilby, VA contact representa
tive in this area said.
"All matters pertaining to
NSLI policies of veterans in
Oregon, Idaho, Alaska, Montana
and Washington will now be con
ducted from the northwest
branch office of the VA in Seat
tle," Kilby stated. "Veterans
can now expect present delays
on insurance matters to be
partially or completely eliminat
ed within the next three months.
Veterans in the northwest are
being advised of the insurance
decentralization by rjostcard
notices of the change. The form
er NSLI headquarters in New
York has mailed August notices
of premium payments for the
last time, giving Seattle as the
return address.
The northwest branch of the
VA now becomes the permanent
record office for all NSLI pol
icies. The VA contact office in
Klamath Falls. Kilby said, will
continue however to provide
service to veterans on matters
of reinstatement, conversion and
other queries. Mail inquiries
may also be made to the regional
office in Portland, Ore., Kilby
explained.
Big Money Being
Paid For Colts
LEXINGTON. Ky.. July 30 UP)
' Bidding that staggered the imagi
nation of trie most lavish
thoroughbred horse fancier
! pushed money marks toward un
expected but unmistakable rec
ord levels today as the Keere
land sales operators braced for
the flprnnri dav of their summer
I VAtirlinif mIac
Topped by the $54,000 paid for
each of two gray fillies last
night, the first of four days and
nights of auctions yesterday saw
i 105 thoroughbred youngsters
'sell for $1,115,800, an average
of $10,626 for each colt and
filly.
f In Tit
ejwwwaeoViMi.wi' ' aaw.
(Continued From Tage One)
position to ask favors front them
later.
That is tlf bald truth, and we
might as well Itu'e it.
THIS writer Is even so far gone
as to believe that ALL cam
paign contributions should bo
forbidden and the ban eiuorced
to the full extent of sending
violators to Jail.
The stock argument agaln.il
that theory has been thut it
wjuld FAVOK RICH MEN. Not
necessarily. Intelligent voters
are always suspicious of anyone
who seems to be spending too
much money to get elected to
office.
They SHOULD BE. The man
who spends too much money to
get elected Isn't apt to be the
kind of official we want aud
need.
e o
IF all campaign expenditures
Including those CONTEM
PLATED, as well as those made
had to be reported and pub-
itsnecl wen ahead 01 election ana
if the candidate who spent too
much were AUTOMATICALLY
BARRED FROM OFFICE, the
too-rich candidate would have no
great advantage.
A LL this, of course, is Idealistic
in the extreme. From the
standpoint of professional pol
itics, it is the rankest kind of
heresy. But It might help in
getting SINCERE men into of
fice.
That is one of our great needs.
Whiskerino Grips
Chins and Jowls
(Continued from Page One)
any most barbers around town
say that their shave business is
better now than ever as beard
trim and shaping has once again
become a part of the tonsorial
art.
It seems that a lot of people
are whittling around on their
own trying to decide what looks
best on their faces, then taking
the result to their favorite barber
to get it straightened out.
The haircutters are doing their
level best, too, considering what
they have to work with some
times it's hard to make a van
dyke out of a quarter-inch stub
ble. But if a customer wants to
get his whiskers shaped like
those of Abe Lincoln, U. S. Grant,
Black Bart or any other favorite
character, just take a picture of
the model in to a barber and
he'll see what he can do.
But he's got to have something
tn start on first. If our barbers
could figure out a way to bring
out a lush growth where a sparse
one blossomed before, they
wouldn't be barbers.
They'd be millionaires.
Housing's Tough
At Cleveland
CLEVELAND, July 30 P)
The Cleveland Indians gained
an extra outfielder today be
cause of the housing shortage.
William Stengel, 56, who
says he's a cousin of Casey
Stengel, former Brooklyn
Dodgers' manager, moved a cot
into the center field tent at
League park which during
games houses the Indians' 15
piece swing band.
"That's how it is these days,"
said President Bill Vceck.
Howard Hughes Said
Steadily Improving
LOS ANGELES, July 30 UP)
Steady improvement attends
Howard Hughes, airplane manu
facturer and pilot, who is slow
ly recovering from injuries in
curred in an air crash July 7.
Doctors drained his chest for
the fourth time last night. They
said his temperature and pulse
were about normal.
INJURIES FATAL
PORTLAND, July 30 UP)
Harold M. Hall, 35, died yester
day of automobile accident in
juries suffered Sunday. Nell
Bosso, 42, was killed in the
same crash.
The customary order of dish
washing is glassware, then sil
ver, plates, cups, saucers, serving
dishes,, platters, baking dishes,
pots and pans.
HOTELS
OSBORN HOLLAND
EUGENE ORE. MKDFORD
Thoroughly Modern
Mr. mad tfri. J. E. Earley and Joe
Earley
Proprletoro
IN STOCK AT
Loggers & Contractors
MACHINERY CO.
732 So. 6th
Light Planis
10 KW full Automatic Light Plant
1500 Watt Full Automatic Light Plant
800 and 1500 Watt Manual Start Light Plant
Le Tourneau Equipment
One CK-8 Angledozcr
One R8C Power Control Unit
One R7C Power Control Unit
Youngsters Attempt
f illiiMiitaaaiiitlaaialaai'w aeaaaaeaaaaaaa wroii n
Mary O'Neill, 10. Barbara Soblo. 4, and Vlnconl Aruro, 7.
(left to right) attompt to block workmen constructing street-car
tracks in front of thtlr Chicago homos. Thoy war forced to
mov by th polic after city ofliciali ruled that th traction
company could put in th tin. (NEA Tolophoto).
OPA May Lift
Bakery Curbs
WASHINGTON, July 30 l'l
OPA may decide today whether
to eliminate price controls on
all bread and bakery products,
an official disclosed.
A request of the baking In
dustry for a one-cent a loaf In
crease in bread prices and a 23
per cent boost in biscuit and
cracker prices precipitated the
i&uc. scrid this official who ask
ed anonymity.
Under the new OPA revival
law, prices are not controlled on
wheat from which most bread
is made.
A meeting of top OPA offi
cials, including Geoffrey linker,
deputy administrator for prices,
and possibly Administrator Paul
A. Porter, was set for this after
noon (3:30 p. ni.) to decide
whether any effective controls
on bread and other bakery pro-,
ducts can be maintained.
If the OPA decides to con
tinue the bread price ceilings,
informed officials forecast that
at least part of the baking in
dustry demand will be granted.
This would be justified, they
said, because of the termination
of federal flour subsidies
nd
recent sugar
price increases
which have pushed up bakers'
costs.
In addition to the bread and
biscuit increases tne industry has
asked a 13 to 25 per cent rise
on cookies, doughnuts and simi
lar sweetened products.
Five Portland
Teams In Meet
PORTLAND, July 30 (A')
Five Portland semi-pro baseball
Scams were still in the 11HU
slate championship tournament
today after the Albany Vets, last
up-state team in the play, was
eliminated last night.
Albany bowed to the Ames
grocery, 2 to 0, in the opener of
last night's twin bill, ihe Gil
bert Furniture team, with Hal
Saltzman of the University of
Oregon on the mound, took Its
fourth consecutive victory by
winning from Hinlto Billiards,
2 to 1, in the other game.
The Gilbert team will be Idlo
until Saturday's finals. The
other four Portland teams still
in the play are the Kialto,
Byerly's, Ames and McElroy's.
all of the Portland City league.
Lane County Names
New Health Officer
EUGENE. July 30 ) Dr.
Anthony Triolo, former assist
ant South Dakota state health
officer, will become Lane coun
ty health officer Aug. 1, Judge
Clinton Hurd said today.
The post had been vacant be
cause of inability of the court
to fill it at the $410 monthly
salary budgeted. The Lane
County Health association made
a grant of $580, permitting a
$300 salary.
13 Counties To Show
At Oregon State Fair
SALEM, July 30 W) Thir
teen counties will have agricul
tural exhibits at the Oregon
State fair, which Is only five
weeks away, Fair Manager Leo
Spitzbart said today.
They are Columbia, Polk,
Curry, Linn, Lane, Benton,
Marion, Hood River, Coos, Mal
heur, Clackamas, Tillamook and
Yamhill.
Classified Ads Bring Results.
Sitdown Blockade
Heirens Welches
On Confessions
CHICAGO, July 30 Ml An
eliiuorute plan or William
Heirens to confess (ormully the
Suzanne Degiinn kldnap-kllllng
unci two other slaying collapsed
today when State's Attorney Wil
liam J. Tutihy announced the
youth would say only, "I don't
remember.
The prosecutor had received
the 17-year-old University of
Chicago student at the behest
of the youth's attorneys who an
nounced Saturday he was "will
WW to sign a confession."
Malachy Coghliin. one of
Heirens' five attorneys, said at
that time that "the defense feels
the time has como for Heirens
to make known by confession
to the state's attorney thn facts
of the various crimes charged
against him."
Senate Passes
Pension Funds
WASHINGTON. July 30 P)
The senate approved today on a
voice vote a sliding scale of fed
eral contributions for old aue
i assistance, aid to the blind aud
help for dependents.
Action came on adoption of
an amendment to a hotiso bill
I freezing social securities payroll
taxes at the current one per cent
each on employer and employes.
benator Iaft (H-Ohlo) previous
ly had warned that the home,
might reject the whole bill If
the senate changed the present
system of matching state federal
funds evenly.
Under the proposed new plan,
the federal government would
put up a maximum of $2 to tho
state's one dollar in some cases.
Based on' department of com
merce figures, the state would
contribute In the proportion that
Its citizens' incomes bear to the
national average.
Senator Langcr (R-N.D.) tried
unsuccessfully to lower the min
imum age of those receiving old
age assistance from the present
65 to C2, the age at which mem
bers of congress may retire under
the reorganization bill passed
last week.
Cigarette Price
Raise Announced
NEW YORK, July 30 (!)
An increase of about 3 per
cent in the wholesale price of
Chesterfield and its other
brands of cigarettes, effective
tomorrow, was announced by
Liggett and Myers today.
The increase comes to about
22 cents per thousand cigar
ettes, or about 4 ' cents per
carton.
Meanwhile,, upward price ad
justments affecting cigar brands
selling below two for a quarter
were being placed in effect by
a number of leading cigar
manufacturers, whose opera
tions recently were freed from
price control.
Industry sources said the ad
justment, ranging from 10 to
20 per cent, had been postponed
until the removal of OPA con
trols was assured,
Soviets Drop Charge
Against Embassy Man
NEW YORK, July 30 UP)
Waldo Rucss, U. S. embassy clerk
In Moscow who was confined to
the embassy for two months be
cause of Russian charges of
"hooliganism," arrived from
Paris today en route to Wash
ington for consultation with the
state department.
Last May, Rucss was sum
moned to appear at the Moscow
city prosecutor's office to an
swer charges growing out of
what Trud, Moscow trade union
organ, described as "insolent
hoolllgan acts" towards a Rus
sian actress. Rucss said then the
state department Instructed him
to remain inside the embassy be
cause the question of diplomatic
Immunity was involved.
Russia later dropped the
charges.
Lt. Redin's Ship
Still At Portland
PORTLAND, July 30 (') The
Russian ship Maxim Gorki, on
which Lt. Nlcolal G. Redin and
his family plan to return to Rus
sia, was still tied up here in late
morning although it was expect
ed to sail today, No sailing time
was set.
Rctlln has been here for sev
eral days, coming from Seattle
where he was acquitted on
espionage charges.
Classified Ada Bring Results.
nriAl D NF.WS, Klimelli FelU, Pro. TI MnAT, ialf t. HIS. ra,o t.f
Copt. Homer Cain To Piloi
First Plane From Bay City
riiiiliiln Homer Ctiiu will be at
the controls of the first north
bound MiiinllntT from San Fran
cisco when It land" at tho Kliun-
mil Fulls imiiilrtiiiil all'Diirt on
inauguration of United Air Lines'
service hero Tliumdiiy, Auguat 1.
Captain Cain took flight les
sons from his outer nroiner,
Ciiptnln Guy Ciiln. who also flU's
lor United Air Lines, wnen inn
lutter hail comiili'ti'il Ills flight
training at tho lloeing School of
Aeronuutlcs and stinted to fly
for United. Homer also uttentled
the Boeing schuol to get his air
line pilot's lli-enso inn! began fly
ing for United in 11)311.
On their first aeronautical
csaipmlo the brothers got an Im
pressive lesson In caution and
safety. While Homer looked on,
Guy leaped from a roof of a
barn on their father's luign
ranch at Dos I'aloi, Calif., near
Fresno, using an umbrella for a
parachute. The umbrella turned
wrong altlo out and tluy emerged
from the crash landing with a
broken link It1.
Captain Homer Cain, who has
flown more Until 230,000 inllen
on United Air Lines' routes, Is
bused In San rrniuisro and will
be milking flights in and out of
Klinnulh Fulls.
Ho Is murrled ami has four
children,
Love Of Sugar
Brings Prison
GRANTS PASS. July 30 UV)
William Richard Aldernuin
doubtless wishes now thut he
hud acquired a taslo for black
coffee because his desire for
sugar led to his being seutenrrd
to five yeurs in the stato peni
tentiary ut Sult-m in circuit
court here lust Friday.
Uy misrepresenting himself
and forging a purchase order,
Aldernuin purchased a 1U0
pound sack of the sweet staple
from tho Kampfer grocery say
ing that ho was buying lt fur
the Del Rogue coffee shop.
Store employes became suspi
cious when he called a taxlcnb
to transixirt the sugar, and no
tified the police.
After a hectic pursuit Alder
mon was captured at tho county
fulrgrounds
Idaho Gunner
Cops Trapshoot
SALEM, July 30 (V) Bob
.inn, Lewlston, Idaho, woro the
all-around championship crown
totlitv after tho thrre-diiy grand
Pacific International trapshoot,
in which more than 3U0 men and
women banged away at the clay
pigeons.
Ho scored 329, nosing out
Frank Troeh, Portland veteran
and former national champion,
by a lone point.
Other champions:
Singles. O. E. Fine, I.a Grange,
Calif., 1IIU; second place, F.url
Averlll, Snohomish, Wash., 11)7.
Women's division, Helen
Odell, La Grange, Collf., 18H;
second place, Mrs. Shcvlln Sath
cr, C.'orviillls, 179.
Handicap M. It. Cummings,
Corvallls, OB.
Doubles, Frank Troeh, Port
land. 48.
Junior, Sid Fisher, Pacific
Cltv, Bfl.
Preliminary handicap, Corl
Vlnning, Sacramento, Calif., 07.
Byrnes Backs
Majority Rule
(Continued From Page One)
attempt to have them stand as
heads of Individual delegations.
Soviet Foreign Minister Mnlo
tov was not present In the hall
when Byrnes made his speech,
an answer to French President
Bidault's inaugural address of
yesterday. The Russian delega
tion, which has Insisted upon un
animity of the four principal
powers on recommendations to
the peace conference, was head
ed by the vice-foreign minister,
Andrei Vlshlnsky at the mo
ment. 'Tho United States will stand
by Us agreements In the council
of foreign ministers," Byrnes
said. "But if the conference
should, by a two-thirds vote of
the governments here repre
sented, make a contrary recom
mendation, the United States
will use Its Influence to secure
the adoption of that recommen
dation by the council."
Klamath Youths
Arrested in Reno
(Continued From Page One)
that It was part of loot taken
from the Jones' home.
Whether they are Implicated
In any others of more than a
dozen recent burglaries is not
known for certain but the hoys
will be questioned about them
when they are brought back
hero to Juvenile authorities.
1'hey were In Reno on their way
lo South Dakota.
a m mmmtm
Starts
mi
rr
mis Love
ofOurs
Also "VENGEANCE OF THE DEEP
CAPI'. HOMER CAIN
Bergdoll Faces
Assault Charge
DOWNING TON, Pa., July 3D
fI'l (irover Cleveland Bergdoll,
32, thu notorious tliall dodger
of the first World war, must
face trial on rhaigris ul iimuuiI
ing his 33-yi'ar-iiltl butler and
threatening him with a rifle.
Ilf.i-uflull hither nf Mix ellil.
dren, pleiitlt'tl Innocent to charges
oi ussiittii aim umii-iy. amtie.
aitra-.
"lgn
vulrd assault and buttery an
otilniliitf fireiiriiis tin arrul
im.nt lnt Itluht. fin Wlllvofi
hearing ami was freed after ptwrt
lug $2300 ball.
The butler, Clement Klein,
said llergtloll struck him in an
argument over linck wages.
Klein trstlflt-d that hi employer
minted a rifle at him Rim said:
I'll shoot you down Ilk a
dog."
Baa Oftlre Oeene lile-a.le
RIGHT NOW
PAUIHU GODDED
Lnl lit,! iiusi unt uptiit
! A CROSS-COUNTRY ROMANTIC I
ISCAPADfl
TL: .,:AZrt.L-
i lel MtMetMMMMSJIW 48- SWeT
te
C'eallaaeaa llallr Oeene al 11
ENDS TODAY
- .in!n.,f
Alio "Mystery Kongo"
Starts WEDNESDAY
JlTiiumpkant!
THE SONG OF
ADETTE
Willi
INMW
fA WTILtAM tYnit
l DIARIES 8ICKF 0R0
m wnuni a
IIEI.CW
m$ com
I
; J ieV.e . .
ninini
Th A I til
JiUnd
Ctelor C'rin
lb
BERN
vj 1 1.-1
HIM
II Sh
1 t
Mi
aniin
tut uu m) t
TODAY
t
"08V", If 1
II
0