riATTSMOUTH SEMI - WEEKLY JOURNAL PAGE FIVE THURSDAY, JULY 14, 1938. Work to Begin on Little TVA Early in Fall South Carolina Project Probably Will Cost $37,C00.CO0 To Em ploy 18.000 Men. COLUMBIA, S. C. (UP) Last h ".al obstacles have been removed for inauguration of a "Little TVA' project in the lowlands of South Carolina. It is the Santee-Cooper hydro c 'citric and navigation project, to cost an estimated $37,000,000. Ac tual work is not expected to begin r.r.til early fall, but already prelim inary steps have beer- taken, accord ing to the South Carolina Public Ser-- authority, administrative body :"' the development. Since the state legislature ap proved the undertaking in 1924. private utilities have attacked it from every angle. Lower courts over ruled them, however, and recently t . U. S. supreme court ended the lengthy legal battle with a decision favorable to the project. Obtaining data from a private en gineering firm that first planned the ptvject 12 years ago will be the first step in actual work. A site of 2.000 ceres in Berkeley. Calhoun, Claren don and Orangeburg counties will be purchased as a preliminary move. To Employ 1S.0C0 Men Approximately l.vi'UO men will be J'.;' to work on the pi eject, clearing reservoirs ".0 miles long and build irg two dams to divert the swift, muddy Sanue river down a sharp de cline into the Cooper river near I in lis. r.i keiev county. There a power plant with an output of 450. Oph.OmO kilowatt hours annually, is la be constructed. The project also -calls for a 175 mile navigation channel bet wean Charleston and Columbia, and pro duction and distribution of sufficient electrical current to serve a field ex it n ding from Raleigh, X. C. to Ath ens, Ga., and eastward to the At la ntic. In addition to the electrical out put, the project is expected to ef fect an vnnual saving of S 1.500.000 in freight ift"s. Of'icials estimate the project will r-claim lfiu.OOo acres of farm lands and permit cutting of 500.000 board feet of timber while providing a pay roll of SS5.000 weekly for the three years necessary to complete the un ci ei "taking. The plan is to take the Santee's v. ;.ter across a watershed divide by mean? of a reservoir and dam. and r';i::p it into the smaller Cooper river, thus creating electric power i: :;d locks t; provide transportation. Two lakes will be created, one a STAR U THE ?IELD! His kren scent makes him a star performer on the fir Id. Kern ed?es make Star Single-edfre ISLades star performers on your lace: Famous since 1880. THE AWFUL PRICE YOU PAY FOR BEING NERVOUS Quivering nerves can make you old end haptrard looking, cranky ar.d hard to live witn can keep you awake niphts nd rob you of good health, good times and jobs. tVhat you may need is a particularly jrood woman's tonie and could you ast for anything whose benefits are better proved than famous LydiE E. Pinkham's Vepptabie Compound? Let it whole pome herbs and roots help Nature build up more physical resistance and thus help calm your shrieking nsrves. jrive more cnerjry and make Lie worth livir.ir afrain. More than a tniliion women have re ported benefit why not lot P:nkham's ( r rt r u d br!r VOX.", t, to ao ''srii i:ir th-u" tryirig irr.-s liit it ha eti Fratul women iir the pas 3 Eracra tions? IT MUST EE GOOD: covering 59.000 acres and the other 78,000 acres. While no villages will be sub merged as was the case in building the Gilbertsville dam project in the Tennessee valley, many historic old plantations wili be wiped out by wa ters of the two huge lakes. The 151,000 acres involved in the project do not include any railroads or hard-aurfaced highways. Only 1,000 acres are listed as high grade upland and SO. 000 acres are in swampland. Dr. F. H. H. Calhoun, consulting geologist of Clemson College, report ed to the authority that within 50 miles of the project are many re sources catiable of development which are not now used commer cially. Many Natural Resources These natural resources Include marl deposits, phosphate rock, timber for paper and hardwood, granite. Kaolin, sand and other products. Vegetables for canning, cotton for textiles and tobacco are crops most commonly grown in the area. The project will follow a course that was charted 150 years ago when rich planters bulit a canal to con nect the two rivers and act as a trade artery between Charleston, then a famous seaport, and upstate South Carolina. This canal. 22 miles long, was dug with slave labor and cost $00,000 a mile. It required eight years to com plete. P.oats used the canal for many yearr. until seasonal failure of the water supply and the growing use of railroads made it no longer profit able. Today only traces of the once busy canal remain, and many of the historic- old plantations along its banks have long since been abandoned. EISCARDS ETIQUETTE RULE OAKLAND. Cal. (UP Emily Post's edict that it is the bride's parents who must give and pay for ihe wedding supper, was overruled here by Justice of the Peace Harry W. Pulcifer. despite the fact that the etiquette book itself was pro duced in court lor correct reading on the dictates of polite society. Last August the daughter of a prominent couple here was married to the scion of another equally prom inent couple. in the evening, a wedding supper was served by a catering company, at which nine bottles of sherry, one-half barrel of beer, two cases of soft drinks, SO chicken dinners and l."0 assorted sandwiches figured. The hotel company serving the supper presented a bill for $1S0.0S. The mother of the groom paid $40 on the bill, but declined to pay the rest, saying it was the duty of the Mride's parents to give the supper, and quoting Emily Post as her au thority. The parents of the bride refused to pay the balance on the wedding supper nil I and the case came before Justice Pulcifer. He declined to ac cept the authority of Emily Post and ruled that ps the mother of the groom had assumed part payment of he bill, she was responsible for the rest. He suggested, however, that as a compromise the two families might get together on the matter, but the court at least couldn't stand for split wedding bells. GIRL'S SHE? MODELS TRACE HISTORY OF MERCHANTMEN SAN FRANCISCO (UP) Frances jPcntony is believed to be one of the few girls of the world whose hobby is model ship designing and build ing. She is completing an entire cycle of the world's merchantmen from galleons and caravels of the lath cen tury to clipper ships, the round boats of the Nile and the flat-bottomed boats of the Amazon. Her design of an Oriental sampan has won her an invitation to exhibit at the Tokyo ex position of 1940. BE SURE TO GET AN AMERICA'S STANDARD TIME! Get trustworthy time in smart LigenoU natch. Yankee is the smallest and thinnest pocket natch at fl.50. Chrome-plat et, clear numerals, unbreak able er-ysLaL , ffrn . : - , i T -.S'ZT,' ' - . . a UTAH MAY RAISE MORMON SHAFT SALT LAKE CITY (UP) Future visitors to Utah will view a $250, 000 monument on the spot where Brijrham Young-, Mormon Church founder, first looked over the fertile Salt Lake valley, according to present plans of the L. D. S. church and Utah state officials. A committee appointed bv Gov. Henry Blood is drafting- plans for the monument to be known as the "This-is-the-place" memorial because because of the words uttered by Young when he first saw the present site of Salt Lake City. The group is headed bv Heber J. Grant, president of the Latter Day Saints (Mormon) church, with Bishop D. G. Hunt of the Salt Lake City Catholic diocese as first vice chairman. Seek Legislative Fund John Giles, executive secretary, s id that the committee will ask the next session of the Utah le?:sk.ure, which meets in January, for 250,000 to be-! gin work on the project. Two sculptors are now working on preliminary sketches for the memor ial Mahonri M. Young, a sculptor for the New York World's Fair com mission and direct descendant of the church founder, and Avard Fairbanks, 1 head of the University of Michigan ! department of sculpture and a mem J ber of a pioneer Utah family. Giles explained that both Young ! arid Fairbanks will submit prelimin : ary drawings of the monument some time this summer. 1 he commiti.ee will select one of the designs and engage the successful sculptor per marently to complete the design. A site for the memorial has been ! i selected in Emigration canyon on the ! outskirts of Salt Lake City, justj above the United States Army Fort j Douglas. I Place Already Marked J A smaller memorial has been in ; place on the site for a few years, I j but plans call fcr this to be sub- j stituted by the larger structure. j j According to church legend. Young j was ill and Tying in a horse-drawn I surrey as his followers crossed the j Wasatch mountains on their way to j the "promised land" that the church i founder had seen in a vision. As the parfy reached the knoll in I Emigration canyon. Young ordered that the wagon train stop, lie drew himself up to the edge of the surrey I and peered over into the valley be j low. ! "It is enough," he told his followers. ! "This is the place. Drive on into the j valley ar.d here we will build ourj homes.' YOUNG MIDGET WILL UN DERGO GROWING TEST FAN FRANCISCO (UP) Science here is attempting to develop a po tential midget into a man of nearly I normal size and the first results have been encouraging. The case is that of John Irman. an 11 -year-old boy who is no larger than a child of 4. The point to be decided during the present stage of observation is wheth er his failure to develop is due to malnutrition or to functional disturb ances of the endocrine glands, which are held responsible for the develop ment of both midgets and giants. The case was called to the atten tion of specialists of the hospital of the University of California in a rather indirect manner. Several weeks ago. residents of Alameda where the boy lives, com plained to the health authorities that the little child apparently was not ! getting enough to eat. Investigation was made, but from the mother's re cital of the failure of her little boy to grow, the specialists were inclined, to believe that the trouble lav rather j with his endocrine glands than with nutrition. The boy has been removed to the county hospital and if adequate ob-1 s?rvation proves the correctness of the diagnosis, an eftoit will be made by hormone and glandular treatment t: make him develop into a normal sized boy and man. & According to local specialists, if the treatment is undertaken, it will be one of the first and most inter esting in medical annals since the im portance of the endocrine glands and their hormones has been discovered. Subscribe for the Journal. Plain or Aenfchol-iced EAGLE ! ITEMS William Tinker, Jr., of Omaha, is visiting home folks. Agnes Ketelhut spent Friday evening of last week in Elmwood. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Mick of Lin coln visited relatives in Eagle last Sunday. The Search Light Extension club met last Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Mary Lanning. Mrs. Anna Kleitsch came the first of the week from Omaha and will visit at the Guy Jones home. Patty Piersol of Lincoln spent the first of this weke with her cousins, Faye and Delores Scattergood. Mrs. O. S. Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Judkins of Lincoln visit ed Mrs. Emma Judkins last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Wall, of i West Point, visited relatives both in . IT....!,, rx n A PnlnUTQ fllirina 1 h im-rn-.l.- I end. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Oberle of Lin- , coin spent Friday evening and Sat- tirclay with Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Oberle. Miss Lois Jean Lytle spent the week end with home folks. She re turned to Lincoln on Monday, where she is employed. Ted McCartney, who resides in Alvo. began work for the Farmers Union Oil company of Eagle, the first of this week. Charles Seeley of Weeping Water. who formerly owned and edited the! Eagle Beacon was in town on Mon day of this week. Nick Peterson has been near Benedict, Nebraska, for more than a week, where he is helping to run a threshing machine. Mrs. Joe Rudolph entertained the Methodist Aid in the parlors of the Methodist church on Wednesday af ternoon of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wachter and sor from near Walton were Sunday i guests of Mr. Wachter's mother, ! Mrs. Mary Wachter. j Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Trutnble spent i Sunday at Haveloe k w ith their daughter. Mrs. Charles Dobeck and ! Mr. Dobeck and family. j Miss Catherine Nichols, of Lin-! coin, spent the first part of this week J with her sister. Mrs. Donald Spring er and Rev. Springer. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Thomson of j near Palmyra ; ron's parents. visited Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Thorn Harry j Caddy and family on Sunday. I Atl-C V TI AT:i- M-'jc linctucc tn the ladies of the Trinity Lutheran Aid on Thursday afternoon of last week. They met at the church. I Mr. end Mrs. Crnest Underwood drove to Nebraska City on Monday of this week. Mr. Underwood look ed alter some matters ol business while there. Richard Weyers. little son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Weyers. ot Wabash, was taken to the Bryan Memorial hospital Monday. His tonsils and adenoids were removed. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Wall enter tained at dinner last Sunday, having Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Wall of West Point and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Thomson and Gary of Palmyra as guests. Word conies from Alliance that William Hudson is not feeling at alljunion ,.(lfustd ,0 take thc (.ut. North well. His condition has grown worse since he and Mrs. Hudson arrived home from their visit the fore part of June. Mrs. S. W. Moore left for Arkan sas on Friday of last week, where she will join Mr. Moore and visit his parents. They plan to come to Eagle in about two weeks. Due to the illness of Mrs. Moore's mother. Mrs. Gerhard, she will not return to California with Mr. Moore on Aug ust 1st. i Former Eagle Resident Dies A number of people from this com munity attended the funeral of Mrs. Mamie Christopherson Waugh Sun day afternoon. She passed away at the home of ber father. William Chrisioophersoon in Lincoln at thc age of 27 years. She was born near Eagle and lived here until after finishing high school, when she moved to Lincoln .'h her parents. Besides her father, she is survived by her husband and two sons. She was buried in the Eagle ceme tery. THE SMOOTH COMFORT OP MENNEN LATHER SHAVE MAKES ANY MAN SING! Try it and you'll ting too! for extra coolness Cis !'?rli , oure Dig iop will be Back Bad Season for Ringling Bros, and Barnum & Bailey No Deterernt to 1939 Opening. NEW YORK (UP) It has '"en a tough year on the nation's i, 100, 000.000 circus industry, but "the circus will come back it always does." That reassurance conies from Roger Littlei'ord of billboard's circus de- partment. a man who knows his tau- oarK and canvas. "Ringling Brothers and Barnum ac wne lomeu lor toe season. he said, "but it's certain to be back next year. Circuses have gone through bad times before, but the circus has always survived. In 1 9 2 1! there were hardly any shows on the road. Next year there may be scores." But when Ringling Brothers, the "greatest show on earth." announced at Scranton. Pa., that it would cut j short the regular 3 0-week season j and move back to winter quarters. the entertainment world was shock ;ed. It was the first incident of its j kind, involving a major "railroad jshow," in the CO years since the cir cus had become an established insti- tution in America. AfTppts; 1 fim Ppr;rirs Millions of circus fans, not all of them chi'dron. were deprived of one of their favorite amusements, and 1.C00 roustabouts and performers ; ha d t hei r income ( urtaiied. Tears! we re shed. ; Two other shows Downey Brot fi lers and the Tim McCoy Wild West I show had closed during the season, but 17 sti'l are operating despite ; generally bad circus conditions. 1 Of the 17. four are "railroad snows (. oie Brothers in iSlassacnu- setss. Robbins Brothers in Lastern . Canada and New England. Al G. j Barnes and Sells-Floto in the r.orth- West illlft H.-!Tf cen back-Wallace in west- cm Canada. Thirteen are smaller, motorized companies. Rinding Brothers started the sea- j sc-n vrndor ne w manageme nt with ! what was said to be its greatest com ;binatiou of perfomiers. roustabouts land animals in history. Newly j "streamlined" it started out with (expectations c.f a great season. I John Ringling North and his brother, Henry, had with the aid of j an aunt. Mrs. Charles Ringling, ae-j cirired control of the circus, in IV- cember. 19.17. In so doing, the sons of a Ringling Ncrtk. the late John Ringiing's only sister, had brought the show back into the family which had carried it 'o its greatest heights. Labor Trouble at Opening Labor trouble developed at the opening in Madison Square Garden, however, and flared , again in Scran ton after the circus had run into a streak of bad show weather. John (-jvil ian Conservation Corps program Ringling North asked everyone. from!jn state parks and because of the executives to roustabeuits. to take a 2 per cent cut in wages. The roust abouts and performers union, the Am- erican Federation of Actors, had ob jtained raises a year ago which lift icd the roustabout pay to $00 a month with food and transportation. The jSaid the closing did not mean the 'structural load.- of buildings, bridges 'end of Ringling Brothers. He saidjnnd other structures reeiuire com . (.ircuP had a $1T.0. 000 stake in its treasury with which it would start again next year. The Ringling Brothers once were seven. Before the turn of the cen turv ihev started on a small scale at Earaboo, Wis., and built their circus j until, upon its consolidation with Barnum in 1918. it was indeed "the j greatest show on earth." the tag ! which the late Dexter FHlo'vcs made i synonymous w :ih Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey everywhere. CCC IMPROVES INDIAN HIGHWAY OF NORTHWEST HANCOCK. Mich. (UP, The!"!1 bphind iK CViiUo'i U n hA; L'Anse trail. on:e one of the prin-i"Ild drafl U aFho,c for lhe final .... ... . , .. e i "coup de grace. cinal Indian highways of V. iscon- 1 " sin and Michigan, soon will be trav- fled again, not by Indiajis. but !)' i 'OMS5C0OCCCO&05O&XOCO&r, the youth of 19CS who will camp on its 10 camping grounds. -8 TVv CCf" l ill imnrm-n A A lilt i.lil iiiJl'l u t c :iu m. j velop the trail which took the In dians from Lac Yieux Desert, a large lake along what is now the Miehigan Wisronsin line, to the hunting and fishing grounds near L:ike Superior. Portions of the trail have been I obliterated due to erosion and dense ; growth of underbrush The CCC boys will clear the trail and establish 10 j camp grounds along thc CO mile route. Streams are to be restocked v.itu 1 O fish and water will be tested drinking. a tetter and newsier Journal is cup constant aim. You can hela by phoning news items to No. 6. CITY 'BLACKOUT' DATES TO 1880'S BUFFALO, N. Y. ( UP t Shut- ting off a crty apply tc ef- i feet a '"blackout a practice now j coming into vogue for armv air-raid j drills, was a nightly occurrence here lJl li 1 'V. i vll. uii j'lautj i.t", t.vivi uin , to Pobert , Emblidge, veteran sup erintendent of operations for the Buf falo Niagara Corporator.. This was revealed by Emblidge when he retired at the age of (18 after 51 years' service with the Ni agara and antecedent companies. When he first took un the wo rk in 1H7, Emblidge said, "balckouts" I were part of the dai!v routine because i the tir.y generator furnishing power for the citv was shut down nightly I between 11 P. M. and 7 A. M. What's I. I f .1; flJ. Lie l ai tut v a y. w i . ff f c-t.m-dav until Mond ;v to j give the employes time off. i "For this reason," he raid, "it was ! a source of regret to the maintenance j men when St. Paul's Cathedral de j cided to inrtall elect ri-jit". It meant ' the power plant would have to run : on Sundays." ! Reminiscing fu:ther, E nib! nig'? said 1 that the Buffalo Light and Power ; Co. was the first in the country to i generate alternating current fur com i mercial use. ! In the earlv Iay-. Emblidge reciil- cd, electrical equipment manufactur ers v:2vc bitterly opposed to elect ro- ! cation as means of capital punish- i I ment. I "Around 1?? cr lbU several con- iccrns banded together to try and pre- vent the electrocution of a muruercr, he said. "Thev thought that people j would associate electricity with vio- lent death and did everything tney j could to stop it." SOIL SHIMMIES IN TEST DEVICE WASHINGTON (UP) "Sally Hand" is again playing before ca nacitv audiences in the basement oT v- nu.rtmf.!it build- ! I Jir .MM 111 A 11 1 1' I v 10g. The government's "Sally Rand," ! however, isn't the fan-flipping dancer :C.f World's Fair fame, but a shimmy jing mechanism for sitting dirt. The j device was dubbed "Sally Rand" be ! cause of its eccentrically rotating motion. j The mechanism is equipment in i one of the interior department's -0 i laboratories engaged in studying soil in relation to structural engineer ling. This study of ul mechanics" jis expected to save millions of dollars during future construction of public and private dams. Tn the nast. engineers have had , t( rey ()U pUesswork in determining " ,.v, Q -rrt-.in tmp nf soil would i settle under a massive dam or office j building. The government, however. ! is doing its best to reduce, "soil me- jchanies" to an exact science. ; "Much of the practical work in i the laboratory recently." said one of jficial. "has dealt with the design for Ulnms constructed as part of the success of its work in this connection, the laboratory has been visited by chief engineers rf almost every fed eral agency, and is attracting favor able attention from consultants and educators in the United States. "Other work has been the testing of soil from borings v. here heavy plete knowledge of the capacity of foundations so that the loads may be properly placed and the founda tions strengthened if necessary. TWO BOYS CLUB SHAEK AND DRAG IT ASHORE ALAMEDA. Tal. (UPi Tall stories about the wonders and sport of shark fishing were deflated a trifle by the experiences of Jack Wadsworth and Bill M:Glinn. two 10-year-old grammar school boys. When they spied a 5-foot shark swimming near the edge of a lagoon thev got a counle of dubs, sneaked MORE New 1938 Models Men's Wash Pants Just Received PLENTY OF HOT WEATHER AHEAD OF US We credit you with the full "trade in value" of your old pants. I 8 1 X Q 8 K i K WESCOTT'S Where Oualitv Count: i O C Where Quality Counts N West Expects Tourist Horde of 10 Million i Vacationers to Mountain States Arc Likely to bpend. du,uixj.uuu; Wyoming Optimistic. 1 DENVER. Colo. (UP) The west's ! million-dollar tourist industry built jup around jagged peaks, cool valleys, i trout-fishing' streams and mile afte r !mile of scei.ic- oddities ma) attract i 10.000.000 American vacationists to six Rocky mountain states this suni ! luer. I The estimate was made by a na-iti'in-jl travel bureau as the entire 1 sc:-nic paradise from the Canadian i border south to the Indian pueblos 'of New Mexico prepared for the 19ob j t on l ist rush . I Through cash registers v ill pour at least .?".(. 000. ecu before Sept. 1 ! as the great American sightseer and ibis family pay for their food, lodg- ing and fun as they stare at t he- I western scenery. i "This business of si.uv:ng olf our natural re-sources has bece-mc a gi gantic industry." said Charles B. Stafford, employed by the state of I Wyoming to advertise the c ow co'.in- try's last frontier. "I expect summer travelers to leave at bast $14,000. !00o in rnv stale this year." j "The tourists get their money'; v:rih," added Joe H. Thompson, i travel bureau director. "The y get a .million dollars woith of fun for every j thousand dollars they spend sicht- seeing." j T The- travel bureau made its esti- Imate of 10.000.00o visitors after a I survey of early travel, advance reser vations and a study of business con ditions. The figure:; indicated more- ! persons v. ould cross V.'venning, horn" i i of famed Ye-!owsto:r Park, than any cither r.; iiutain side except New j Mexico, which has an all-year tour I ist seas--;. I The bureau estimated that 1,77-.- i jOO't persons would enter Wyoming. and added that perhaps 700.000 of jthem would rush at once to Yellow stone Park to see the bears and ge-y- i sers. j Estimates for other slates in the j scenery - for - sale region included: Colorado. 1 .n0 9.fi 00 : Utah. 1 . T 4 1 . ( 0 ; 'Montana, l.r.00.000; Idaho. l,C0o. jOOO: New Mexico. 2.000.oc0. i From all si states came reports ithat early tourist travel was a to 12 jp.tr cent higher than it was at tin" isame time last summer. ! The rapid increase in the num j ber of automobile trailerites was e-x-! pec-ted to swell the tide of persons 'seeking two weeks of relief from the I sweltering east and middle west. I Wyoming which has a population J of 2f.0,000 and entertained five times as many tourists last year, reported j'boom times" at all trailer camps. Colorado scenic centers were crowd led with house-trailers despite the bv iness recession, and every road 'leading to the other states was jain- med. Meanwhile, willing to invest a por Mini of their profit to "keep 'em com ing." the six states speeded bigh way building programs designed to !net the Rockies with high-speed reads. j Colorado's highway department led Hie rest with an outlay of $m.io0. 00( to complete three arterial routes aerors the two-mile-high Cemt ine ntal Divi'e. Crews of road builders with i almost a-- mue-h to spend were at I work in the other live states. I Said the engineers and chamber ! of cfimmerce heads: "The better the : roads th farther they drive anil the longer they slay." I FRIDAY A WD SATURDAY not mi: ii. ti mi: Jane Withers in 'Rascals !'!"! Hiii-pi'-M Hit of tin- S-axii. A!m I ;i:nk a i tiii in i 'Springtime in the Rockies ! A 1 ';in l rev Hctfon West' in. anl an. j .Ml..-!- i ::ril:iiS - aptcr l'4jlniim Ilrtil I !!; r-riiil. Matiiicf Sji i in-. la , 2 :::. ! Adu!ts. ,25c Children . . .10c SUNDAY - MONDAY TH O II S OM. 'I ruir l'Btr. lict l-'njf, Hon m--li-li- llrm'.- nw 'h hi Tlionsnmln in Old Chicago1 1 1 t"; s tl.m all'. Tii.- ftnt'-si sp.-( -Im tc ever PtouI t l tlit- scrci-n. Now I i jj i n tr in c!ti-s io all r. ." k 1 1 1 r'ui.v No riii.-c in aomissiori. l'l;n l it' MMAV MATl.Vrr. AT i:: Matinee, 10-2&c NiGhts, 10-30c TUESDAY OPiLY llic llurcnin l)n; slinvrnii linker mi' .'nt I'mirnmn in 52nd Street Maliii'.-f at ::i0 Nigl.-t Shows. T aret 'j All Shows, 10 and 15c WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY inn iili: KEATl iiu ( tiro! I.fiulnrd aiitl 1". Mnrh iu 'Notliing Sacred' J It rau)tj Mnurb T"in in 'Pcnrod and His Twin Brother'