corpus christi theatres
TRANSCRIPT
To Open DoorsAt 6:15 Today
City's EighthMovie House ToSeat 400Persons
.The Beach Theatre, eighth andnewest jn Corpus Chmti, will-open- its doors to the public at5:15 o'clock today, with "Alleg-heny Uprising," starring JohnWayne and ; Claire Trevor, theopening attraction.
Wit. ha seating capacity of 400,the new theatre is designed to fillthe need of an adequate motionpicture house in the North Beachamusement center. The Beach islocated on Water Street, at itsElm Street intersection, almostdirectly in front of the N o r t hReach Bath House.Latest Equipment
A wide range sound system andthe latest projection equipmenthave been-installed at the theatre.A washed-air cooling system willadd to the comfort of patrons at-tending the theatre.
The building itself is of Mex-ican style architecture, with hol-low tile and plaster construction.Front of the building is decoratedwith gaily-colored Mexican tile.Its walls and ceilings are of Celo-tex construciion. The theatre hasonly one floor.
Ample parking space for theheaviest attendance possible at thetheatre will be offered by parkinglois which ndjoin it.
The Beach will offer the bestsecond run f i lms available at pop- - . -lilar prices. - I t s attraction for ! with . knocked-riown airplanes,Sunday and Monday, will be ! could enter Hudson strait "with
Hudson Bay Is an OpenOn United States, Canadian Writer Declares
THE CORPUS CIIPJSTI TIMES, FRTT>AY. iMAY I'J, 1350• . . i
'Forgotten Sea'Ideal for HostileBases
By'THE AP FEATURE SERVICE
."North America can be attackedtomorrow. Canada'can. be smashedinto helplessness at one1 blow. TheUnited .States could : hardly bequickly vanquished, but her boast-ed security is- nothing but emptyconfidence that could be ex-ploded wiih terrifying conse-quences, and this may happen withthe next rising of the sun."
This Jeremiad is preached byH. Dydson Carter, a Winnipeg con-sulting engineer and author, in;'Sea of Destiny," just published(by Greenberg).
The sea he speaks, of is HudsonBay, which he calls America'sback door, wide open and invitingany enemy.
Carter's book is based upon per-sonal observation and study, buthe says experts have agreed onmany of his conclusions.Defended by a Pistol
'.'Hudson Bay," he says, "is thesea and the coast our admiralsforgot on paper. Hudson Bay isthe perfect attack base from whichraiders can ,• paralyze the nervecenters of all Eastern and Mid-Continental America.
"East, West and South, we aresecure, provided our one-oceannavy is not divided by a doubleattack. But the northern sea, wiiha coastline ibat is as long as At-lantic or Pacific shores, is de-fended by nn ice-breaker and apoliceman's revolver."
Carter says hostile craft , loaded
BOMBING TIMEBASED ON 250 MPH
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
''Rancho Grande," with GeneAutry and Smiley Burnctte. OnTuesday and Wednesday of nextweek the theatre will of fer.''Northwest Passage," with Spen-cer Tracy and Robert Young.Richard Dix and Chester Morrisin "The Marines Fly .High" wi l lbe the fea ture attraction nextThursday.Program Changes
Changes of program wsil be of-fered at Tiie Betich even' Sunday,Tuesday, Thursday and Friday.
Prices at t h e . n e w theatre \viilbe JO cents for ch i ldren , a I a l ltimes; 20 cents for adults at Satur-day matinees and 25 cents stnight and. nn Sundays and holi-days. Matinees will be held on
no opposition whatever"; close th'estrait and establish bases for as-sembly of the planes.
At what home base would_ theenemy ou t f i t such sn expeditionin time of, war? By what routewould the ships reach Hudsonstrai t , evading the Allied patrolin the ocean approaches?
"Such questions," contends Car-ter, "are those of a naive navalcollege cadet, of one unacquaintedwith the history of the World Warand with subsequent world polit-ical developments.Submarines Can Go There
"How was the German navyable to maintain secret submarinerefueling and restocking bases inevery ocean during the entire four
of the first struggle, nnd
Modern bombers based on iludson Bay could range over thisarea. Author If. D. Carter says the waters are open the yeararound. Hudson Bay is the world's second largest, sea (larg-est: Mediterranean). ItIsles or Scandinavia.
lies no farther north than the British
Saturdays and Sundays only, the j ]on& ;,ficl- German warships had
is it possible for Hitler's underseafleet to repeat that history now'.'
"Two elementary truths are suf-ficient: The oceans of the worldare very large: international fas-cism has powerful friends in themost unexpected places."
Carter's book was written beforeGermany invaded Denmark andNorway. It is made more thought-provoking by the fact that Green-land, a Danish colony, is withineasy striking distance of NorthAmerica.
President Roo?cvelt, C a r t e rpoints out, promised to defendCanada with all of the resourcesat his command, should the Do-minion ever be threatened.
"But the truth is that the UnitedStates could no more rush to thedefense of Canada than to thedefense of her own Pacif ic const.
planes and not a single shore bat-tery."Carter's Conclusions
As to steps that should be takento lessen, the menace of America'sfourth coastline, Carter suggests:
1. Seal Hudson strait with minesduring the winter months.
2. Erect coastal fortifications attwo or three strategic points fac-ing the entrance channels.
3. Assign a squadron of suitablyarmed ships to permanent patroland anti-submarine duty in theapproaches to Hudson strait.
4. Establish extensive air ps-
ontinueTg HoldPlace at Narvik
Allied Lines,vHowever, Are.Drawing Tighter
By THE AP FEATURE SERVICETEMPLE,':. Texas—Wind,, sun,
rain : "arid the things of the.'earthare mingling in a huge "test tube"near here, working out an experi-ment that holds important irnpii-
For !t is'ih the North Elm Creekwatershed that the U. S. Soil Con-servation Service has located thelargest, of. its 170 demonstration
formed outhas
167 farms:
grim force of. Germans,with airplanes as its only meansof -supply, wag reported in dis-patches from the northern Swedishborder :last night to be hanging . . . . ,.. . . .to . its positions about Narvik projects. The biggest contiguouswhile British, French and Nor- i block of:conservation-treated landwegians drew their encircling lines I m the'.country, 32,000 acres,tighter. . been
German warplanes patrol therugged mountainsides all but afew hours of the day bombing andstrafing Allied patrols and gunpositions and attacking Alliedships. .
.The .planes have succeeded inalighting on . o n e glacier-'ikemountain top near Narvik, accord-ing to one report, and in landing !parachute . troop reinforcementsnortheast of the port for an at-tack on the Allies' rear.
The Allied attack is now beingfurthered by the . increasing ef-fectiveness of two groups.
French Alpine chasseurs, work-ing against terrific handicaps, areworming their way into advanta-geous .'positions up steep mountain-sides, hauling their guns afterthem and . t rying to take coverwhen the German planes r:omeover. Their job is to gain pointsfrom which they can shell outthe German machine-gun nests.
Norwegian mountain volunteers,all expert on skiis, move in themanner of Finnish skit units tobreak up German patrols andharry their outposts.
In this Arctic war scene, amidstrecurring, snow storms, the Ger-mans' chances of holding on arediminishing, experienced observerssay.
. To the north of the snow-cov-ered mountain, penetrated by tun-nels through which Swedish oretrains once rolled down hill toNarvik port, the Germans are saidto be well .encircled.
South of the railway, the Alpin-ists and Norwegians are still en-deavoring to link gaps in their
Four _farmers with" 5i,GOp '': acres 'are: co-
' ' -operating' in the' experiment -the results .are'suff.icient't6 ; jriakethe. !SoiI Conservation' Service.point ' with pride. .,:-/;:;.'.:",Plow.ed Up the '• Grass •_'; '-.j'-:-'~-:'.^' : .'
'Beginning in 1836," when" Texasbecame a republic, thousands . offarmers flocked to the 9,000,000,-acre. Texas .Blacklands- to raisecotton. They rooted. but the riativegrasses and plowed V1 t h e t . '
Chase H;.'. Vt.'; who went to1855 'to: 1859.V;.
'•"• ..The' book -. contains iteins:-;.qt:£xr S^S j' ^ . - -as ' - - fo l lQwS:" - : 'V l ' ' - ' ' bV8pmo; . ; ' : t :.
'$4.25;., stoyep.ipe,: '• i5c;'$2; wood saw, 22c; straw
lines.Patrols, usually small, engage
theatre's doors opening nt 6:15jj,Pt.n scoured from tho seas? Hnw i if that coast had no f leet , no I from the northern patrols.o'clock' on other day? of the wee!;.
Opening of Tile Reach increasesihe number of theatre? oporrin Corpus Christ! by CorChris t ! Theaties, Inc.. to eight.Other*nre theTower, Grande. Melba and Alines. ]
F. J, Mavi ty will be hnusc man-ager at the new theatre. LeonFelder will be the projectionist
tro'.s throughout the coastal and ! in frequently savage encounters,inland regions.
5, Set up a chain of air basessouth of the uninhabited 'north-land and fr inging the settled re-gions of Canada, where largefleets of the fastest attack ?hipscan be held in readiness for alarm
mAn airview .of Texas Black-
lands under the Soil Conserva-tion Service's plan. White lineis one of the curve cultivationlines. It has been emphasized toshow at a glance how the linescontinue for miles, across manyfarms.
s i . _ ,
I Streamlining of Red Army and Sovietl. ; . . _, ^
s:j Defense Does Not Mean mat RussiaI Wants Warr Correspondent Declares
isnd Hn?.elf i! inas cashier.
Turner serve ;
San Antonio ManTo Seek To OustBexar Delegation
SAN' AN'TONMO, May 10. '--I'—The Democratic convention ;itWaco Mny 28 wi l l bo atkcd to barthe door" to the Bexar Countydelegation upon the recommenda-t ion of Fred Rueko.r. S;m Antoniomanlier of the state Democraticexecut ive committee and . cnnd i -d;itt,. for the U. S. Sennlc. Ruckor.said yesterday he would f i le the'protest personally.
The committee member said hewould contend that party prece-dent was not fa l lowed in the so-lection of the Bexar County dek1-Ra t ion ;md th i i t force was resortedlo in the proceedings at the mu-nicipal audi tor ium Tuesday night .
Huckcr snid it had always beenthe practice of the DemocraticParty lh.it the county chairmann.'ime the Credent in IK Committeefor the convent ion and that whenCounty Chairman W i l l A. Mor-rlss, Jr., a t tempted to follow 'hispractice at the Bcxar County con-vent ion he was stopped by force.
STH1KK EN«SLONDON. May 10. (/I1)—-A s t r ike
of 500 trolley and bus condtictorsand drivers, which began Wednes-day in n dispute' over new sum-mer .schedules, ended last night.
Congratulationsto the new
ACH THEATREPalnthiff Din-orating:
by
Louis T. DudleyDial 2-2217
Action of Nation Has All Been To WardOff Attack by Any Enemy, Deuel Says,And Stalin Will Not Be Caught Unprepared
iiy NOKMAN DKUELWASHINGTON, May }0 UJ.Rt—Russian Dictator Josef Stalin is
s l r r a m l i n i n R the Red Army and Soviet defense for any eventualityon the basis c?l" lessons learned from the European and Russo-Finnishwars nnd with an eye to the future .
This does not mean that Stal in wants war. War for the SovietUnion would jeopardize what it has been trying to build up for( 20
ars. Bui to be unprepared for j : ' ~~it would invi te disaster. | lhis s t j l l- c laimed Russian territory
The pat tern of the Soviet plan j by lorce. Except strategically itis gradually becoming clear. i is not worth much.
Continued stress on mechaniza-tion of agriculture, wnich dependsmuch on Juel from the Baku oill ia lds , indicates that adequateplans for their defense have beenjmido. Bombing ol these wellswould a f f e c t not only Iho oil buttlie bread supply.
The Al l ied f lee t in the Mediter-ranean and the position of Turkeymust be canslantly watched.
Reports from Belgrade of pos-sible Soviet-All led co-operation to j
I Canning Indus t ryi Renews AttackOn Wage-Hour Law
i WASHINGTON. May 10. i'ff>—i The canning industry renewed its
attack yesterday on a wage-houradministration rule granting ex-emption for agricultural processingonly to canning plants operatingin small towns and drawing Der-
The Senator Gets a Haircut-And He Spi!!s the Beans
washed away whole sheets of top-soil, the i cotton ' yield ;declined.Then, in 1933, a conservation proj- _ect was started in the.Elm Creek jdistrict, where 75 per cent of the 'land was in cotton..Now, the soil conservation re-
ports: .. • ' • ' " ; . . . . ' . • - . . - • •L.The acreage devoted to cotton
has been reduced to 38 per centof. 'the : cultivated land. ; ; , :
2. Eroded land has bee'n° placedunder a protective grass cover.
3. There has been an increase of15 per cent in livestock—cattle andsheep—because now there is feedand forage. : . • .
: 4. Almost 6,000 eroded, acres,formerly in clean-tilled crops orjying idle, have been " convertedto pasture. .. ," : - ; : . ' ;•. . . ."/'•'•'-''.-'.
5. Over 3,000. acres Of •permanentgrass rnea'dowj or .meadow bufferstrips protect 4,000 actes of culti-vated 'land. , v : . ; ; . - ; - . . •''.'.'. '.••}They Follow 'Round' Farming i
And, most. important, . '.'.round"farming has displaced "square"farming, in which furrows ""corre-spond to boundary lines-no matterhow the land sloped. Today, on32,000 acres, the rows wind aroundthe slope on the contour or level, jregardless of boundary lines. Be- :tween the intervals of; open-row;crops -lie strips of fibrous-rootedplants such as small grain, sor-ghums, or sudan grass. Thus, run-off water from, the clean-tilledrows is filtered of any soil It rhsybe carrying.
The pastures are; contour-fur-rowed and contour-ridged to holdback the water. While boundarymarkings are retained, the furrowsand strips move from field to fieldas required by good conservationpractice.
The Soil Conservation Serviceat Fort Worth reports that farm-ers outside the Elm Creek area,having seen the success of tneproject, are now petitioning for theformation of a district covering750.000 acres. It says that, withmodifications, the pattern estab-lished at Elm Creek is applicableto the whole cotton South.
SIGHT "RECOVERED;STYLES AMAZE V -
.' RANKAKEE,; vllh ^,years: of total' blindness lailcd; to-:make Mrs. Schuyler D. Bursph'-ofthis city forget fashforis and styles. :Her first words upon walking .down a city street after ..an. pper^-.ation restored her sight y/ere, "Mygoodness,.but skirts are short thisyear." . - . : . ' . . . :'-.".' . . - . ' - . , : . ; . . v '
. - . '. . and ' • : ' . . - --
CORPUS CHRiSTITHEATRES, inc.«
We are proud of ourpart.as Ejectricai Con-tractor on the beauti-ful new
N E L S O NELECTRIC CO.
317 Schatzel Phone 2-2544
The Russian mil i tary guaranteeto Outer Mongolia warned offJapan. The minor war of Chant;-k u f c n g and the Mongolian-Mnn-chukoan bordor f igh t ing enforcedthe warn ing by tests of strength.These incidonis served tn clear theKaFl for the coming crisis in theWest.
When KuropiMn tension reachedthe b ro i ik i i iK point , ideologicalconsidoralion.s wore thrown over-board for a non-aggrc.ssion paciwith Germany. That, whatever |else it did, avoided immediateSoviet par t ic ipat ion in the war.Occupation of part of Poland like-wise can be regarded as a protec-tive measure.
Sta l in wants to ward off at-tack by any enemy. It is Com-munist teaching that all the capi-talist world is the enemy of the.Soviet. In the course of his dealwi th Germany and by power poli-tics he gained Ba l t i c bases againstattack by any single power orcombination.
He went to war wiih Finlandlo •supplement this- on the oppo-site side of the Gulf of Finlandby gaining u base at Hango, strat-egic Islands, and the strongly strat-egic Karelian Isthmus near toLeningrad.
It would be reasonable to sup-pose that if Rumania becomesinvolved in Ihe war, Stalin mightoccupy Bessarabia to protect Odes-so nnd the Crimea. Soviet, lead-ers have stated, however, thatthey will not attempt to regain
WASHINGTON — Capital bar-bershop:
Barber: Good afternoon. Sena-tor. Looks like spring's here.
Senator: May be. Leave it long.Got to go back home and makea speech next week. Don't wantthe folks to think I'm trying tobe another political glamour b^oy.
Representative ( f r o m n e x tchair): Heh, heh. Howya, Senator.What you got against glamour
. , , , ,. . . ^v.n.. Not a thine, not a thing,ishable commodities from farms | Bul one jn thc l imelight in eachwi th in a 10-mile radius. I party is enough.
A wage-hour hearing called to I Barber: You mean
else who
McNutt andDewey?
Sen.: Know anyonecould wear that shoe?
Barber: Well, 1 guess'. . . .Rep.: Say, what a race for the
ladies that would be—McNutt vs.wages and ovar- i Dewey. Any chance of such a
CONGRATULATIONS
keep Yugoslavia uninvolvcd maynot be without foundat ion . Warin the Balkans would be danger-ous for Russia.
Stal in can - a f f o r d to. take norisks or error in the game.the So-v i e t Union must play along with'other nations, and previous er-rors must bo corrected to makethe Red Army thc hard-hit t ingmachine . it is designed to .be.
It is extremely di f f icu l t tostreamline an army under the So-viet system. Mistakes can be cor-1
reeled when they become appar-ent. ' -• . . ;
One of these which showed tipin the Finnish, war was the ineff i - 'ciency of the system under which:political commissars had equal andin practice superior authority withmilitary commanders. . ' :
It was a relic-of the revolulion,used then to make sure of theloyalty of former C/arisl officersnnd men an rito direct them andRed recruits along the desired po-lit ical path.
reconsider regulations def ining anexempted area of production:heard witnesses assert that the10-mile limitation was too narrowto provide most canning operationswit han area of production exemptfrom minimumtime pay.
Herbert E. Gray, Sr.n Jose,Calif . , tes t i fying for the CannersLeague of California, said therewere canneries in the state whichdrew thei r tonnage as much as 450miles from southern Oregon ".ndhence were non-exempt under thearea of production exemption rule.
Complicated GadgetTakes Care ofReturned Books
CAMBRIDGE, M a s s . (U.P.J—When Harvard University's \Vide-ner Library is closed, -studentsmake use of a "Rube Goldberg in-vention" to return their books.
. The complicated gadget is de-scribed by students in the "Gold-berg" manner: "Student slidesbook (A) through slot (B) downslide (C), to tray (D). Whenenough books are on the tray aphotoelectric beam (E) is inter-cepted, causing jack (F) which;supports tray to sink to floor;Dropping of the tray sets off alarmclock (CO, which rings and callswatchman (H), who comes andcollects Hie books."
TO
BRUCE COLLINS andCORPUS CHRISTI THEATRES, Inc.
Upon the Opening of the
We are very proud to have been chosen as contractorand builder of this beautiful now theatre.
i
Pioneer Construction Co.619 S. STAPLES ST. PHONE 4681
OBJECTORS FAUiULANCS, Eng. (U.P—Since the
war began 4,000 conscientious ob-jectors have avoided mil i ta ry ser-vice on condition (hey lake up ag-r icul tural or A.H.P. work. But noone seems to know whether theinstructions have ever been car-vied out.
th ing happening, Senator? Howabout a little round-up on the wayyou see things now. What hap-pened to that so-called Roosevelt-Farley split? How about Taftdodging Dewey in Maryland?How about . . .
Sen.: Whoa! One thing at atime, Congressman. There's al-ways a chance o£ anything hap-pening in politics. You know thatMcNutt's still in thc running. I f fhe.comes out of that Indiana busi- ,ness wi th his boots shined and nomud on his britches, he'll be some-body to figure with. The boys whoare really practical about thisthing, th ink a McNutt-Farleyticket would be thc biggest vote-getter the Democrats could put
-in Hie field—that is, if, of course,FDR steps down.
Re)).: But would Farley take , . .Sen.: Not only would, but will.
I don't care what Jim says, I'll.bet a hat that's not in the ringhe's playing for second place.
.Why, way back there months ago,• when he made1: a junket to thewest coast and talked to old po-l i t ica l cronies along the line, they:told him. I know that. And he'stoo smart not to know they know
Investigation ofSlaying at DalKartGoes to Grand Jury
DALHART, May 10. (.'Vj—Thegrand jury today will investigatethe knife slaying of a tall farmhand, known as Slim, in a calehere Wednesday night.
Papers on t.he man's person borethe name of Richard H. Jones,Jr., 26.
Two men are held in the slaying.•Ef fo r t s to locate relatives of
the slain man in Peoria, 111.. Wich-ita Falls and Arp, Texas, were be-ing made by officers.
what the Chief does.' That's thereason you can take that Roose-velt-Farley split with a couple ofpinches of salt. Why, if FDRkeeps his hand .on the helm as jfirmly as it is there now, Jim }would be walking the politicalplank with his eyes open if hebroke with the Chief. Don'tthink he doesn't know that, too.
Rep.: But where would Farleyfit in"with Hull?
Sen.: Maybe he wouldn't but Ithink that's Jim's favorite f i t . . .thc combination he'd like best. Inthat Boston speech thc other day,didn't Jim get him a foreign pol-icy and a good strong one . . . butdid it clash with Hull's It didnot. And by the by, the wind is jblowing Hullward again. Haven't ;you noticed it?
Rep: Yeah, I have. But howabout Dewey and Taft and Mary-land?
Sen.: Well, the Maryland dodgecould have hurt Taft , but I don'tthink it did. People take too lit-the interest in primaries, orDewey's men didn't get their pub-licity rolling or something, Idunno. As for Dewey, he's ridinghigh. That's plain. But the wholehistory of primaries since the lawwas passed is tha t horses that runahead in, the primaries generallyget winded before the homestretch. Those practical politi-cians again say the best Republi-can vote-getter would be a Van-denberg-Dewey ticket and evenpoliticians who aren't practicalwill admit that would be a hardone to beat.
Rep..' But hasn't Vandenbergbeen hurt by .. . . .
Sen.: Hurt, yes. But great guns,man, the convention's s t i l l weeksand weeks oft". The only thingyou can be sure about now is thatRoosevelt is in the saddle. Neverheard of anybody ever 'having hisparty so completely in controlthis far ahead of convention-time.Anything he wants at that con-vention, he can have. But I'lllet you in on a l i t t le something:
ROOFING & SHEETMEIAl WORKON THE NEW MODERN
R.J.SECHRISTCO.1415 Mussett Phone 6359
O f f i c e Phone 2-2991 Res. Phone 2-2333
Registered Architect
FOR THE
421 Medical-Professional Bldg.
TONIGHT IN PERSONwhat they're talking about. What ' He's NOT going to run again. (ToJim's counting .on is staying in•politics and in 'front line'of theDemocratic party . . . no matter
the Barber) Ye gods, man,you put t ing on my hair?trying to ruin my career.'"
whatYou
SANDWICH? AVc willserve it to your car!
A Good ShowThen
GOOD FOODAttend the Opening of
BEACH THEATRETHEN VISIT
Corpus Christi's Most Modern Drive-InEnd of Water Street
CongratulationsCORPUS CHRISTI THEATRES, Inc.
On the Opening ofYour Fine New Suburban Theatre
THE
We Wish You Well
MOVING PICTURE
O P E R A T O R SL O C A L 604Corpus Christi
FROM KGKO, FORT WORTH
T O D A Y6:15 P.M.
Newest SuburbanTheatre
I'AOfc t(i*B,
NOW THROUGHSATURDAY
Sales Engineer Here NextUp' People To Learn Their
THK CORPUS CHIUSTl TIMES, FKIOAY, -'JANUARY 3. 1011
'Imt s
NOW THROUGHSATURDAY
NOW THRU TOMORROWNOW THRU TOMORROW
IT WASHIS LIFE OR
HIS BROTHER'S... in the dark-est days of the
nation!
Joy:
! " W I N N E R S of The! WEST" Serial e n d
Comedy
NOW THRU TO-MORRO«'
Pin? :"THE GF-EEN
HORN ET"Seria
N E \V S
LAST TIMES TODAY
PlusA PLUMBING v/E WILL GOCcmccy snd Se r i a l "Drums cl
Fu Ma nchu.'7
Optimist Club ToSponsor CourseNext Week
Me:i and Avomcn enrolled in the!''Buying Habits" course which |Harvey Stover.*, national salesengineer, presents Monday. Tues-day and Wednesday at Civic Cen- jter under sponsorship of the Up- jtown Optimist-C :!ub will be lucky jor unlucky, as the case may be, |if Stowers selects them for a~"siz.-jing up" of buying habits. i
Stowers hss "sized uprl him- jnreds of persons, selected from jthe thousands \vho have enrolled jin his sales training course. He Igives a candid analysis of the jbuying habit? of individuals from j
; a personal inteiview ar.d study o f ;j ieaturec and profile. iI Th.rec yeai's ago the sales engi- j| r.ces "sized up'' every movie star j1 or. the RKO lot in Hollywood, i
Calif. An.iong the group were!: such stars as Ginger Kogers, Fred'. Ast.-iire, Gene Raymond, Preston ;; Foster. Ann Sothern. Clark Guble, |. Cnrole Lombard, Spencer Tracy \i Ann Shiricy ;he late Robert \Vooi-j• sey. Barbsrn Sian\v^~ck, Rosalind!: Russpli, Carv Grant. Wai-ace- :.Beery. Fred Stone, Biliie Burke;; and oihe.rs. i
\Vill Select Volunteers 'I During i!-e- "Buysiig Habits" ;••ales training: course next Mon- ]
nay. Tuesday and Wednesday!.n ights ai Civic Center Stowers;; \viil select from volunteers sev~:; eral person? to "size up." as he ' .i calls his analysis.
Stov/ers "sizes up" a person like ;
] this: "Buying Habits o i 'Ann Soih- jI em. RKO siar. Shape of face— ') Trianguiar, square: Interested in '; ideals and romance of merehan- i; nise. Wajits facts - and proof, j; Beauty and qual i ty buyer. Inter- ij ested in strength, durability end i! lasting quali t ies of product "; "Color — BJonde.
K R I SToday's Program(Listings Subject to Change)
l :3i)—K| }.;i-ho < lc -3:00—.Murliol KojVorls—i-cmolo
•;!r,S—Al' No\ys Fla'sJics •I •(!!>—Kidc Siroin ViRi io l t c s—Jibe^ • i r > — - V f i o r n o i ' i i Melodies—stiullo4 : ; jH ^oii'^s ur Yijnr t Jo i i r t—sluiUo4" : iS—\V«iync Van l>>'ne—"'.'CS : I IH—Kini : Ar lh i i r , Jr.—iiljor,-]-.—irouc \Viok.•!•—n!icS:;io Tli i> f t o r y "f '-uJ -Hni'loii—nbo
:-|-iO—Til,' . . \ l r j l f ivt [\f:J«'|-ls?:i;i—Ti-:iiisi-l-ili.--il M. ' lodU-s—sli i i l io
"S::!."i—Yoiu- l i u p p y 1 ' in lu l i iy—nVju;i;(-iO—N'tiu-scasl—stiwtlo•;i :If>—1'opninr Mc'.ottio-'—stmlio:)::iii->-.)lniitiio Jmues i)r<:li.~nlic:
l i i ; .T( i—l ! nl tn : i io<l Hoi-izons—ubu11 iiio_W;ir News —»!iu11 :(r;—.Mitflx-15 Ayrop—nl>c11:31.1—Hohliy Hyrncs—it l>t -
Weekly Meat RationPrice Is ReducedIn Great Bri ta in
LONDON, Jan. 3. (.Tt—Theminis t ry yesterday ordered reduc-tion in the weekly meat ration ef-fective January G from the equiva-lent of 4-1 cents to 36 cents in U. S.money.
From that date pork and some •• l'nrl>'other meats wiU be included in therationed list, which will ailed i-up- . . .plies issued by canteens, caterers | ! l n '>l-niul residential establishments.
The miuistry warned thatnitrht not be avail-
SMatures Orchestra
Wife; of Dead/Man Wears PartyDress to Service
COLUMBUS..Ohio, Jan.'3. 0The orchestra swung into "HappyDr.ys Are -Here Again" nnd thefuneral of Dodo Fisk, mastershowman, sot underway. •
1C old Dode was peeping frombehind the Veil }\c must havechuckled in satisfaction. His iasperformance was staged by theboss' of the 25-car circus onceknown'as Fisk's Great CombinedShows.
He 'died Tuesday at the age o8 1 . " . ' . : . ' . .
The services began sharply »'2:15 p. m. (as Dode's Shows al-ways., did). The Rev. Wil l iam(Doc) WaddeYl of .SpringfieldOhio, au ex-showman, admonishcd nearly 300 attending the funerato heed the red ami white placardhanging above the coff in with itslone sunflower. It read:
'•No crying or whispering.Laugh! Talk! Walk around andhave a good tiiiic."
The show foli^snd friends triedbvavcly to obliRe^Liode, but therewere a few tears. xJrs. Fisk fol-lowed his request IhaSehe wear a
sllhough it^jyvas very
The Milkman
Manufactured meat products are \not affected.
'There just ain't "no jus-ticc^-to coin a plu'hsc. Wedrank our quarl of Grish-am's Grade A everyday ,just like we-told you to do. tWe slept with the windowsopen, but were as carefulas could be to avoid drafts.We wore our rubbers onrainy days. We stayed outof crowds. But what hap-pens? Well, just as we'regetting all fixed to :usher1040 out in f i t t i ng style andgive 1941-a rousing wel-come, Old Man Flu sneaksup from behind and slugsyour unsuspecting Milkman.
What, we ask you. havewe done to deserve/ alH his?Whv have we been .visitedwith the fevered brow, theaching limbs and the tur-gid taste? Won't somebodyplease, oh, please take thatbowl of soup and thosepoached eggs away? Andbring us instead tha t treatt o the r a s p i n g throa t ,G r i s It a m ' s Vani l la - IceCream. What a heck of avt-nr 1?M1 turned out to be!
SIZING UP ANN-—Harvey Stowers, national saies en-gineer, tells people hov.' tc become better salespeople and"sizes up" their buying habits. Stcwers, who opens athree-night sales training course Monday at Civic Center"sizes up" Actress Ann Sothern's buying habits on RKOfilm lot. Volunteers will be selected next week for '-'siz-ing up" analysts by the engineer.
Highlight j dined to act fas t , sometimes im- ; over-friendliness of salesperson.i buyer. >vot interested in details. | puisively. Musi be sold fast. '• \Vimts to keep interview on for-i Interested in new ideas, new im- j "Wide-open eyr-5. Trusting.; inal, ' iVictual ba^is with sslesper-•' provenience. Enthuses quickly, j Everyone is r ight until proven' i-on.: Loses enthusiasm just as quickly, j wrong. • -Full mouth. Turned up at cor-
Up^ toaay. do\v:i tomorrow. Moody, j "Straight. Uinieci-iip iux~e. Not n.ers. jc»t inc l ined to keep things"Long upper lip—Skeptical of ' . argumen.tive. but inc-hi' .ed to p u t - ' to self. 1? sympathetic- and kind.
; praise. She \vould bs very ?kep- ; ter with trivial t h in s? . Very sympathetic.tical of the salesperson vho tried; "V.'ide bended. L:i-:r-= to bo.-<. '•Protn.iriins eyes. Has language
i to sell her by using flattery or j Likes to have her \v?.y. Has the power and the ai i i l i iv to expressi P!~a!fe- j a b i l i t y to domina te n s i t u a t i o n , herself \Vi l l express" aui turie to-> "Receding forehead. Thinks fast I Would be inclined to dotr.iinuci and has the ab i l i ty to make u p : the salesperson.' her mind very quickly. • "Fine textur! "Slightly-
STEEPLEJACK, 65SALISBURY, ?.Id. (U.RV—llarry ' j
Hagcn. 65-ycnr-oM steeplejack, iholds hopes of (.•elebrr.tiiig his |80th birthday by.working iilop a j70(i-fi>ol to\vor—but he wil l not ivide in an airplane. Hagcn, wlio iVias worked on !-.isii structures forthe past 35 years, explained "itmight make me dir.zy.''
SOUTHERN NATIONAL L I F E INSURANCE CO.
The Only "Old Line . Lccal Reserve CompanyDomiciled In Corpus Chrisll ~- Jones Building
receding chin.lured sk'.n. f e a t u r e s '
In- i and hair. Resents ' r- ivj i i iari ly or :
v.'ard product such as any nega- ;l ives or her 'Ikes or di^hkcs.1'
GET FUEE LUNCHESMONTGOMERY. Ala. (U.?3—Up-j
vvnrds of 45.000 needy, under-1nourished children in Ahibr i inn 'schools wrc receiving free lunches'!
y through the statexvide school I:ch program sponsored by the i
Surplus Commodity Cor- 1
LAST TIMES TODAYp—^—~Ls*~-L*^^L^ua2/,;s.'/*.'/j;
MERCHANTS'DELIVERY SERVICE
BONDED AND INSURED
Dial 2-3363FAST MOTORCYCLE
DELIVERY
T E A T R O MELBAHOY
E N P E R S O N ALOS POPULARES ESTRELLAS
DEL CINE MEXICANO"ARTURO DE CORDOBA"
Y
LUZ MARIA NUNEZ
Y
"ALVARITO"EL UNICO 1NTERPRETE DE LAMUSICA DE AUGUSTIN LARA
PRECIOS POPULARES!
Radio ProgramFRIDAY, J A N U A R Y 3
WATCH R E P A I R SMost modern ar.d c o m p l e t e
wstch repair shop in the city.Parts on hand " fo r more thnn2.COO American and Swisj watches.Aft work Qu.iratiteed
D I A M O N D f o r ' D I A M O N D S•»24 Starr St.
NLson Bide. Dial 7611
CARNEIRO, CHUMNEY & CO.CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
Members American Institute of AccountanUSAN' ANTONIO BROWNSVILLE CORPUS CHR1STI
as l is ted due
A::r.i ;r Jr. rpl.—::l.;--bli;c-
N'lw.s hf i ix lc^s l inR per iod—-nbc-whaa5:6" — K.ju-.v. •'•. H iH—oi>«- \v : i l= j j -ha>ic
I'. - . - • • . • M:-;.- i.'n-.--i:l>i--wjv:-i.:i.-t •
v. '. >',Hci l i l a H'-.ppcr on Movie.1?—c'ns-wnbc
MX.L-JC LlrcheMru—nbc-wji
.Suit! Nc\v>- — c
CASH & CARRYFor Cleaning and PressingMen's Suits .Ladies' PlainDresses andSoilsSien's Hats.(Add JOc each for our usual
efficient delivery service)
PERFECTOCleaners & Hatters
Frnd W. .Marshall. Owner118 Mesquitc Phone 6619
BEST
IN THE WORLD
PORT ARANSASALL CONVKMENCES
TAKt CAUSEWAY AT ARANSAS PASS
L : ! "• 1 '.i :•' — i i i-c- v,-.-:i fr L - t l ! i « - W | 7 . - t « I X M e
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i - . . - i ::•-:: M:;:-i.: (')••• :.•• ;: ,1 — riln. '-v.-jv;i .'• I,: j - . .v A r . - l y , S K i : - — l . : i - v v . T l i - - - i ' H s t j
; C '" — A ! ' - o Tu- i i ip l ' j ro i i — v. r - i i f - n h cj J > : > . . - . v . i - , • - . ' vf H- l !—i- J K - . . I . ; - . -
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THE SCREEN'S MIGHTIEST PEACETIME SKY'DRAM A!T^^-VV'-'lj -'""''' '•"''"l1' .l)li-1-" :•""""-;-".i'S-C" !
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ROBERT TAYLORwith Walter Pidgeon
' 7:r">--Lu!.-!!:<- M:m:;' .--, •••- jn. —nj v . . - i f
I 1 - - ' . - L-;i'.-.^,.,r ,. !
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Tr-.IV;
PREVIEW SATURDAY NIGHT « D ,« u " % - D I V \n :i5 p M 1 Rufn Hussey • Paul KelTHEN STARTS SUNDAY
ie M iiM^-— rilj
Mcj.j.lv- nl\V.i r t i ' - \vs
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AMER!CA'S^!ONEE!I HERO
Msisif.1 Or.—-mlj!:-w;:ii
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• O inc.-. Mn.sfr . Or .—mi.s-<") i ji 10:!.", —f. S : i i - r c> i i i iK«T. T;il!c~iil-,.~--.vc:i r ;] r.';ir:< in;: M' l . sn- fH 'cU' -> . i : a—nt, '";-\v^i n.-un:c Orr- l i ; ,Vcv,-« t i l ! 1—ohs-chn ln i
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V. ' iKi i l 'oml 'H Tra i l , MU-J.—inl, . t -rh: i i 'n j11:00—X(r\vs : Dr fn>: f i to i2—iOji:-ch
WARNER BROS. PRESENT ,
Olivia de HAVSLLAND
PREVIEW SATURDAY NIGHT11:15 P.M.
Then Sunday Through Wednesday
Let us make your photo-graph TODAY! At t r ac t ive lyframed . . . your picturewilt occupy a pln.cn of honorforever.
Wish You Well
\Vc Lend Cameras Frr.e
There Is One For You
Porlr . i l ture• Cameras• Supplies• Finishing• Commercial
Pholoor.iphy
1015 Chaparral Dia l 702J
ooc MCGREGOR TODAY"\vhlch means
Snap a Picture Today!
POSITIVELY THE BIGGEST- BEST SHOWEVER in CORPUS CHRISTI
• THE 3 KINGS"Something New ntu! D i f fe ren t . "
« DEL KNIGHT"Novelty Hand BaMnclng".
« RUBY HARMOR
• SMOKY JOE, M. C."With the Educa t ed Fee l ... , N o v e l t y Dnnr.es'1 .
• NORMA ROSE"Novelty Acrob.it*."
• DAVID MARTINEZ AND HIS BAND. . . OTHER SENSATIONAL ACTS . . .
For Reservations Dial 2-1 163 or 6817
SHORT
SUBJECTS
2 MINUTES ... TO SOLVE A MYSTERY'
B PKTKKS and KEMINGTONB SHOTGUN' ,snr:r.L.s
a
D
Nick CArlor on the «pot...iin the laleil and most thrill-ing of All hif sdvonturot!
/^.-. And it'i so rom*nlicl
... or die!
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D ' B_ Any Gaujre, Any Sl/c Shut „B . g
K Tor I f i i i id i i f ; Law Tnfontu- BD l ion I)l;il 43-IO H
I NAU'S Ig f i l l IMcsri l l i lc Tlicnic t H I ! ) g!
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CARTER
"M WALTER t FLOnlNCF-
PIDGEON * RICEJOSEPH JOHN
SCHILDKRAUT • CARROLLDONALD MEEK • NAT PENDLETON
by f rmie t l cU St«pli.ml
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UYD E F E N S E
/ / " - S A V I N G Sd, S T A M P S
Final Edition
Rom,Slightly Colder
VOLUME 5J2—SO. 1C! CORPUS CHItlSTI, TEXAS, TUESDAY, 1'EBJIUARY 10, 1942 IOUETEEX PAGES TODAY
Japanese Swarming Onto Singapore IslandFormer FrenchLiner CapsizesAt Hudson Pier
Firemen ExtinguishAnother Blaze onLafayetteNEW YORK. Feb. 10 (UP)
The $tiO,000,000 liner Nov-niaudie. which was to havesailed proudly again as theUSS Lafayette. lay on herside in the Hudson River to-day while investigation wentforward to fix blame for theblaze that laid her low.
The fire—liy all accountsfrom a worker's acetylenetorch—raged for four hoursyesterday aboard the 83,000-tonNbrmandie, which had been un-dergoing conversion from i d isluxury to war service. Thousandsof ion» of water were poured intothe vessel and that, in extinguish-ing the fire, left her so topheavyon the incoming tide that. 12 hoursafter that, blaze started, she rolledtjontiy away from the dork unt i lher port side rested on the sillybottom.
Immediately f i re .blazed again' f rom- , the seared interior of herxuper-.-arucUm?,. but- it was ex-tinguished in -iO minutes ;ind theweary hundreds of nav; i l and mu-nicipal f ire-fighter?, w h o h a dbatt led to save her since yester-day ju'kTiioon. lef t her to theengineers v--hu must sylve the'-<™.;i:!(>n!;ii .problem of r i g h t i n g
The bic sh ip was fo rmer ly theiVormaridie. pride of the Frenchmerchant mar ine and the Uirnustand faMes t p:\"scnCf.?i' s h i p a f l o a t ,N u w the USS Lafayette, t h c•. 'Brio's lar f io t r.av;il a u x i l i a r y ,n h i 1 v.'as a .NIC! t-'iK'iM at dawn re-M.-.iU'd hvv « c i ipp le t i hulk . Onethird f i C her .-••..'piT-itniL-lure andhriduf v.-rre under water and hrrthree Lu- in t , •• t;ici\;-, ( i i H i her iv:a>tsa few ("eel i ibnvc the water on thei ' - i ' - chnkcd p ier .
No Sabotage. Admira l SaysThvie was sdiVie s;o-id news to
a l l a y the disaster of the accidentall i r e \vh:i'h raged in her decks torfou r hours uncontrol led yesterdayafternoon and resulted f i n a l l y inher turning uver on her side. Oneof her former French of f i ce r s toldthe Uni ted Pros tha i undoubted lyshe could be rijilneri an;i repairer!--;uul w i t h a speed t h a t would:-tirpnso the l ayman .
The newspaper I'M rf-ealed ina copyrighted story t fday that i tii.'.d investigated p r <; c ;-. u V i o ;i s:i.U;:in.st sabotage on the Now V u i k( 'neks six weeks ago and had dis-covered t h a t sabotage agamst any•-.!m> in the harbor, includint; theL;\; L'.ycUe. would lie "a cinch."If reporter, Edmund Scott, got aj i > i » as a stevedore aboard hotby payniff a 'nigh i n i t i a t k n fee'» the lons,shc:remen's union, , wiuiin.' questions asked, and reportedt h a i ho could have even .set ex-ploMves aboard h o r. .so non-existent were even ordinary pre-caut ions .
Rear Admira l Adolphus An-drews, commandant of the ThirdNaval District , .said, however, thatthere was no possibility of thefire having been set by saboteurs.
Interior of Hull SealedNava l censorship prohibited a
deta i led account of the damage,but it was permissible to say thatthe f i re damaged was entirely con-fined to the three upper decks,t h a t the interior of her h u l l hadbeen sealed by water- t ight doorsand bulkheads and that she re-mained dry even while ' partlyunder water. She remained struc-turally intact , both above and be-low the main deck.
The French off icer , who be-cause of hi.s .status in this countryis that of a deportable al ien .sea-man, said that the disaster wouldhave been i n f i n i t e l y w o r . s e ifwater had gotten below her maindeck and to the great electricengines, the mammoth generators,the many banks of boilers. Hesaid that it would have takenmonths to repair water damage tohighly intricate machinery, butthat righting her, Xvhile a d i f f icul tengineering problem, could be ac-complished in a fraction of thattime.
Admiral Andrews, left the sceneat 3:30 fl. m., after losing a dra-matic battle to keep her ftfl.OOO-(on bulk upright. Tons of waterhad been poured into her super-structure. It froze into g r e a tmasses of ice on her upper decksand bulkheads, making her gro-tesquely top-heavy.
Chinese Leader Confers WithIndian Viceroy at New Delhi
Talks May Result in New Allied StrategyFor Defense of India
NEW DELHI, India, Feb. 10. (U.PJ—Gen. Chiang Kai-Shek ofChina and the Marquess of Linlithgow, Viceroy of India, representingone-third of the people of the world, conferred today on UnitedNations' strategy with special reference to India and Burma.
(The London News Chronicle heard the Tokyo radio broadcasta report that strong Chinese forces had been massed in SouthernChina, presumably for an attack on the Japanese, rear in Thailand i
French Indo-China.)
Registrants ToAnswer 11 SimplelQueries Monday^
Men Registered inPrevious R-DaysNeed Not Bother}leu who register
i Monday at the USOnext jClub j
With Chiang were his brilliantwife , the former Sooag May Ling,Weiiesley graduate, and 15 staffofficers who are to confer withthe chiefs of the British. India andother commands on Allied strat-egy and tactics oxer the entireSouthwest Pacific area.
The importance of the talks wasincreased by the fact that SirArchibald Clarke Kerr, who is onhis way to Moscow to serve asBritish ambassador to Russia afterhaving served with signal successas ambassador to China, accom-panied Chiang.
The Chinese leader, whose brave
at times almost without arms and Builclins, Shoreline Botile-
11ii ,
never on equal terms, for more ! vard and LagUiia Street, forthnn four and one-half years, and j possible military servicehave now arrived on the Burma , r P1'nrp *i13T1front to aid the British, intends 1 ansA\ei » 0 t _ m o r e tnaa — ,to tour India during his stay and j Simple questions, accordingtalk to Mohandas Ganghi, Jawa- j to registration blanks now inharlal Nehru and other Indiannationalist leaders, as well aswith chiefs of the government.
It was intimated authoritativelythat Chiang's talks were expectedto result in new Allied strategy
?r the defense of India.Chiang arrived in India several
days ago but his presence wastroops have fought the Japanese.! kept secret at his own request.-
Lord Beaverbrook To JReel Says HospitalRepresent Britain in i Exempt From Tax byPooling of Supplies I Doing Chanty Work
Envoy's New PostCorresponds toThat of Nelson
Answers ChargeThat institutionIs Run for Profit
?>lemoriai
Draft Board No. 3 office.But the procedure will not
be so easy for registrars.F. B. Orr. chairman of
Draft Board No. 3, will bein charge of registration of menborn on or after February 17.3897, and on or before .December31, 1921. Men who registered onprevious R-Dnys do not registerMonday. Registrars will be schoolteachers arid volunteersnames are already in the hands
j I. M. Singer, who is handling asI signment of registrars for the day. iI Schools will be dismissed Monday!
so that teachers may serve. jI Simple Questions . j| Questions men will be asked arej as follows:- ' • -j 1 Full name of the registrant,i including middle name, if any.i 2. Place of residence.: '3. Mailing address, if other than; residence:
4. Telephone number:5. Age in .years and date of
birth:6. Place of bir th:7. Name and address of a per-
son who would always be inform-ed of the registrant's address:
8. Employer's name and
LONDON. Feb. iO, i.-Pi—Lord i The Fred RobertsBeaverbrook, Bri ta in 's newly-ap-1 Hospital is a public institution,pointed minister of production.! owned by a board of trustees andw i l l represent Br i t a in in various! leased .since 1928 to retire its in-pooling . arrangements with the j debledness. David T. Peel. sec-United States, an o f f i c i a l spokes- | retary-trcasurer of the board stat-man announced today. j ed today.
The new post, lo which Lord j The hospital has always doner \-M-brook w;,y sh i f t ed from i charity work through the years dros.-:the Ministry of Supply, he said. i«">n|l the trustees f?lt it was not i 9. Place of -employment orcorresponds to that held by Don-, properly subject to taxation, he | jn,>s.;_alci M. N'elson, head of the United '• asserted. . j Those questions arc on the faceStates V.'ar Profkic'iion Board, and ' Peels statements were in re-I of f)1c p.llein it he wil l exercise general su- : sponse to assertions of Dr. Clyde j carflspervisioa over supply departments '.O. Watson, police c 1 fire com-and s h i f s b u i l d i r . c a n d " "concert' missioner, made at a meeting ofand co-ordinate all their actions." i the City Council last night.
AH labor questions, it was a r id - i Dr. Watson declared the hos-ed, will be settled between the • P>uii should be subject to taxa-minister of labor and ; newly- i ' ion because it was being operatedcreated minister of production. , £<"'r profi t . Tie specifically cie-
To the question whether Beav- 'dared the hospital xvas not cio-erbrook would spend more of his ' mg any char i ty work. Or. Watson
is a practicing physician.
Get Test TonightPALESTINE, Te;. Feb.
10. (U.R) — Anderson Countyt o n i g h t tests its "junglegrapevine" air raid warningsystem.
-Sometime between 7 and .12p. m. farmers will beat onrusty plowshares, worn-outbrake drums, and old bells—in essence, the "jungle grape-vine"—and the lights of thecounty will -o oil for 30minutes.
The "jungle grapevine" wasarranged by Arnold Brough-ton. who appointed dozens offarmer-wardens to spread theword throughout the county,which boasts few telephones.
The e x a c t h o u r of theblackout is a secret City . .si-dents here will turn off theirlights when an old fireballand a '"wildcat" r a i l r o a dwhistle are sounded.
From these s i g n a l s thefarmer-wardens closest to thecity will take their cues andbeat on their improvisedalarms. In lesa than five min-utes, Brougbton believes, thecacophony will bring aboutcomplete darkness throughoutthe area.
t ClV-U^'Jl t
™*°5 Theatre OperatorsI m p as- '
And Movie Men ComeFor R&R Convention
Inspect NewCentre Showhouse,Opening Today
StatesNaval Force atWellington, N, 1.
ReinforcementsSent to SeveralAreas
Theatre operator.- f rom all partsof Texas. Oklahoma and Arkansas
i and representative's ot" the na-1 tioa's leading in o t i o n picturej producers were in Corpus Christ!
green registration
t ime in Bri tain now, he repliedthat no such assurance could begiven.
"From the very nature of hisdu t ies , 1 ' he added, "he will haveto go to and fro ami the ministerof supply can take his place dur-ing his absence."
\Vhon Prime Minis te r Churchill.-.elected Lord Beaverbrook fur thebfuatl duties of the 1 new ministry, ilie reassured Sir AndOunc.in. a former supply minis^
Char i t> Work ExemptionUnder state law. a hospital or-
gcmb.eii for benevolent purposesand operat ing for the care of jh.ir-ity pat ients as well as for thosea b l e , to pay, is exempt from .tax-ation.
Of the f ive hospitals operatingw i t h i n the c i ty l im i t s of Corpus
I Christi , only one is recognized asa benevolent ins t i tu t ion under thisd e f n i t i o n . This is the Spohn Hos-
pec-pieOn the bad-: arc two addi t ional
Cji iest ions which registrars mustdepend on registrants to answer.They nre approximate height andwcipht of registrant.KcRistrar Start-; Work
.Af t e r ' t hose details ore attendedto, the registrar then must deter-mine whether the regis t rant iswhite , negro, Oriental, Ind ian orF i l ip ino ; whether the regis t rant ' s
Of Beaverbrook's selection forthe. production • iortfol.it>, it was
lained that the entry of iheUni ted States in to the war with its I
The Frednot locatedthe l i m i t s
! consequent far-reachiri;., measuresfor pooling of resources
I years ago.in
Roberts Hospital waswi th in the city u n t i lwere extended two
It was taxed for $337d S447.80 last, vear but
cessitated a chantset-up and that
: inthe
the BritishCunadiart-
ne-jh ; ) S paid nci thc r assessment.......st nionth at the annua l meet-
ing of the board of trustees, aborn publisher not only has close -, communicat ion was received fromcontacts with America! produc- 1 t!le city ca.ning at tent ion to thetion chiefs but also "the confi- an-ears nn(j asking that the bill be
! . . _ _ - _ _ j _ _ _ _ i - . ' i i ' f - i 'T^i . . ,^ : , ] . ,_-* ' c*
ad- j today' for the opening ci the newi Centre Theatre and beginning of
b U i " l t h c annua l convent ion of K&R-Unitcd, Inc., theatre circuit .
Heading the delegation of showwere" Harolcl R. Rnbb,
president, and Ed Rowley, vice-president of f i&R-Uni led , I n e ,both of Dallas. Bruce L. C<-'>H'.ns,vice-president of Corpus Christ!Theatres, Inc.. is host to the visit-ing theatre ir.en.
The convention opened y t 10o'clock th is iTormiis: with inspec-tion of t!-e new Centre Theatre,which w;-.s lo open its dcors to
eyes are blue, pray, hazel, brown I the genera! pub l i c a i ' l o'cl">rkor black, ( two spaces are i n c l u d e d j Frank 'Morgan in "The Vanishingfor- colors of eyes u n n a m e d ) : ' Vi rg in ian" is t'.-e opening at'.rac-whetlv.T the registrant's h a i r is lion at Hie ne\v movie house, cle-!)!onrle. red, brown, black, gray or j scribed as one of the most mod'the ir\an is bald, (one spare is i n - l o r n in. the Southwest,ch'ded fa,- color-nf hn i r i i n n a r n - : ' A boot rieie was on schedule fo reci); and whether the registrant's !• C:3() o'clock tli 's af ternoon. At 7
' o'clock t o n i g h t the delegates wi l l(Sec REGISTRATION*. PaRe 2)
'Smuoness' of U. S.May Lead to Defeat,Educator Declares
BUFFALO, N. Y, Feb.
a t - o e k t r i i lbano.uet 0:1
par ty -nndthe Plaza
dence and good will '1 of President.Roosevelt.
Bodies of ThreeTexas Heroes AreMoved to Austin
paid. The trustees replied by as-serting they felt the hospital wasexempt. inasmuch as it was per-
' forming charity work, and always| had.
I Other Hospitals Paying:
I a t t endI mayor'I Deck.i General :-e>sions of the con-
vont ion w i l l open at 9 o'clock to-I morrow nioiv.in:; on ti'e P!a;-aj Deck. Hii i i l i .shts of tomorrow's! .vessions w i l l i nc lude ;\ luncheon on
10 i.-'T'—- j the Pla/a Deck and a cocktailThe Rev. Edmund A. Walsh, vice- j p;-rty and ditmt.r at ti-e Dragonpresident of Georgetown Unive r - i Gn'. j at 7'30 o'clock. The riele-sity, believes the United States is j gates w i l l to'.ir the Naval Airnearer defeat today than at any (S t a t i on Thursday afternoon,other time in history.
"I don't believe that 20 per centof our people realize we are atwar." the educator said last n ightat a Knights of Columbus meet-ing. "They will not. apparently,u n t i l the first casualties are made
I
Former ReleasedUnder $^.On Murder
Other hospitals paying taxes to j known and the first bombs s tar tthe city include the Medical-Professional, which pays a com-bined tax for its off ice building
fx t ih l i sh inn the l a n d h(»Pit;l1 amounting to S4.-fwor%«£-! 552.80; «* Corpus Christ! Osteo-
j AUSTIN, Feb. 10. (U.W-Re-I main:: of three brother heroesI who took part in
Republic of Texas were reinter-, Hospital,'1202 Third Street,roq ncre today, in the .state ceme-i J. 'tor'y.
A monument that was erectedto their memory at Galvesim,;>i'ier ;\ previous ve-intcrmer.t,w i l l be brought to the state ceme-tery and placed at the graves ofthe three—William Tl. Jack.Spencer Jack and Patrick C.Jack.
Jack County, Texas, is namedfor them.
Wil l i am H. .Tack was a veteranof the Baltic of San Jacinto.Spencer Jack fought at Velaseo,and Patrick C. Jack was impris-oned with William B. Travis atAnahiiac in 1832 when Mexicoattempted to nip the Texas up-rising.' All survived the revolu-tion and died in a yellow feverepidemic.
VVHtTESEORO.10.WiVr;
$3Sft.40, and the Gorrell Hospital,519 Park Street, $180.20.
Peel explained today that thetrustees leased the Fred Robertsinstitution to Mrs. Ed Sizer, Jr.,in 1928 to retire its indebtedness.Mrs. Si/.cr was given a contract toact as hospital administrator for10 years. Since 1938, he said, hercontract has been renewed an-1finally. '
tn the meantime. Peel said, theindebtedness has been amortized
HOSPITAL. Paye 2)
to fall."Declaring that "smugness and !
complacency might lead to cie-; vesterday onfeat.'' Father Walsh added "it is i ]n t|-e i-.lt;inot defeatism lo talk ot defeat;it is prudence."
"We have never suffered defeatin a war since we won our inde-pendence in 1776, "out we arenearer to it now than at any timein our entire history," he said. "Ifyou have any grievances againstEngland, don't let hate of hercon-
Texas. Feb.
tribute to the victory of America'smightiest and sworn enemy."
Pi-^-Golden Kemp, n farmer,^leased under $2.500 bond
charge of murderin the f a t a s t a b b i i i ^ of ClaudeRich, r>5, land owner and directorof the Wiiitosboro Co-operativeGin.
Bond V.-MS set at habeas' corpusprocee'. l in^s before Judge R C.Slaslc.
Deputy She r i f f Forrest Watson.s:> id ihe si;. b i i i n r r Saturday follow-
BOSTOX, Feb. 10 (£>)—The,arrival at Wellington, Xew'.
| Zealand, of the vanguard of a ;United State? naval force was Ireported today to the Chris- ititan Science Monitor by its ;correspondent, - J o s e p h G. jHarsch, who described also!the landing of American re- 1inforcements at "way sta-tions along the route" from iPearl Harbor. !
In a copyrighted s t o r y. jHarscli told of his landing at j
. Wellington from a destroyer, •j described as the first unit of Ad-j mira l ' Herbert F; Leary's Amer-| icsri forces.. He said the landfall j| was reached even before the ij public announcement of Admiral jLeary's appointment to command]
\ all Allied f o r c e s in the Anzac iarea. ' j
Tiie Monitor's correspondent!said he traveled part of the way |from Pearl Harbor with the jforces that attacked the Japanesemanda te Gilbert and Marshall]Islands. Then he changed, to an-!other unit by breeches buoy in |mid-Pacific. " ' j
^Thereafter, he said, he "spent jmany days among the tropic!is lands where ship.? well-known to ]the luxury trade poured American 'reinforcements into way stations'1along the 4,000-mile route fromHawai i to New Zealand. A f t e r ,describing the waving of hats a n d !flags a* the destroyer came into iWell ington harbor at 23 knots,!Harsch added; \
"BeV:.ind the color of this little ii act in a great drama lay a symbol j
of an important American victory. <The bat t le of the supply line from !
America 's factories to the Far jPac i f ic bat t lef ront . has been won. |
j Japan has suffered its f i rs t seri- ;ous reverse. An American ad - i!i;u-;U commands the terminus o f ' .the supply route. The Way s ta t ions ;have been secured, Bluejackets :are here. And the way is open •for reinforcements and the vital jweapons of war." i
Raids Made onAliens in Five IiCalifornia Towns 1
SALINAS. Calif., Feb. 10. i«'i_-jIn simultaneous raids on Japa ->nesc colonies in f ive Monterey jCounty towns today, 126 law en- !force-merit agents began arresting!suspicious aliens and seizing con- |traband. <
Under d i r e c t i o n of Nat J.:Pieper, FBI agent in charge o l ' jthe San Francisco office, the of- ificers descended at B a .m. on IJapanese in Salinas, \Vatsonville. jMonterey, Pacific Grove andCarmel. ;
Pieper's force of 54 FBI agents ;was augmented by 72 state h i g h - 1
way patrolmen, sheriff's officers ;and police.
The agent gave no indication of •how many arrests he expected to;be made. He said raiders were :
looking principally for c o n t r a - jband—firearms, radios, cameras 'arid oilier equipment forbidden to :enemy aliens. i
Forced To MakeNew Withdrawal
London Soys Nipponese May Already HaveInfiltrated into Singapore City Itself;Radio Station Blanked Out Suddenly
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSOverwhelming masses of Japanese troops swarmed
onto Singapore Island today, forcing British imperial de-fenders to execute a new withdrawal in what appeared to bethe dying hours of the struggle for Britain's last greatstronghold in the Far Pacific.
Informed quarters in London said it was possible th«Japanese had infiltrated into Singapore City Itself and at-
; [tacked the radio station
Twenty-nine Lives thrrL statiou s u d d e n l yj blanked out this morning.| Dispatches from the be-leaguered city said that thedin of battle intensified afterdawn and that a. great black pall
-nine LivesLost as JapaneseSink U. i Transport
of smoke hung over the scene"ofj rnnn<; i ^S^^S- Japanese planes - fleww^,3 Io,_v over Singapore's outskirts,
Sihaiv ' 8r'cl residents heard the whine o£, , /-\ j i ! machine-gun bullets. -Heavy Udds - ] , ArtiUery: rumbled heavily from
I the west, : while the pre-dawnWASHINGTON, Feb. 10 (U.R)—j skies were red with the glow of.
The War Department announced i bu™in|. o[1 tanlis-» j ., . „ . • f An. Exchange Telegraph dis-today that a small Array trans- j patch frtim Singapore today saidport has been torpedoed and sunk | the British had begun to apply aby a Japanese submarine in Ha- j scorched earth .program with "thewaiian waters with the loss of 20lives.
The loss of the small transporti was announced in an Army com-
munique. The ship v.'as the Royal
up of all .oil tanks andthe firing of all rubber, pineapple'and other factories in the north-west area of the island.
_ Tokyo's dispatches broadcast bythe Italian radio said Japanese
„ „,. , assault forces had driven within1T ranK- five miles of the downtown heart
In the same communique, Gen.! of Singapore City.Douglas MacArthur's Philippine' British headquarters acknowl-troops were reported engaged in f _ *=" &\,,-r, ?;• nlj f'^rV-1 H*, I a. nu i-VV r, Monday; that i\ghi-sav.igc operaaOMs against the Jjp-| ing ranged only 10 miles away
ed ail argument over landThe men owned adjoin-
i mj; farms near vVhitesboro.
Australia To CallUp More Men forDuty in Milit ia
C A X B K R R A , Australia, Feb.I'.-!1.--!.-'' Aus t ra l i an war c.-sbihas iiiv.ded to call up addi t ional
:uil time duty in the mili- :
; , ; ( , ' Minister John Curt in iof! today. !
t in ,
WeatherCwpiis Cfiristi arwj vitfnity: Faifl thi«
aftvrnooiv antf toniKht. sl'i«htiy eoM'cr
'Kold Autumn inYour Hand' WinsNotional Book Award
NEW YORK, Feb. 10. The
l.,-,\vff,t fenvprnrwre (his24 hwn's,
story Of a day-wage farmer inthe "Texas black bottoms, as toldby George Sessions Perry in "HoldAvitimrn ir> Your ri-aritt," won th«n^tronal bowfc award of the Am«r-ican KrtokseTters -A-ssocMtroTt to-day.
The book, Iwifcd as lh« •vd'i's-
*.'•«• *.». iYr., s\vnset covery'v of I^t, \va-s adjudged
nrost \vorth\vhil«'.book of\Vhveh, i-Yi' the booftselHers*
yea-r
Vr or.rT:T. ».
it
Landmarks at StateFair Park in DallasDestroyed by Fire
DALLAS, Feb. 10. «J.R>—Fire to-day destroyed the two-hlock-longautomobile building and its con-nected foods building, landmarksto thousands of Texans at FairPark.
Five alarms called all avail-able equipment to fight the blazebut firemen could do nothing butsave nearby structures.
Roy Rupard, secretary of theState Fair Association-, said dam-age tind'oubtedly would b« m thehimdred:s oi' thousands of dollars-.
Basfc«lball &nti roller skatingriri'fc crowd's h-a'd used the btiiMP-
mght.'Th«' only cia-'swai'ty, so- far a's is
was *w 'firernwry. He \va;sfey arnofce1 afudf ta'fren to
Young King of Egypt Will Create Pressing Problem ifHe Attempts To Break His Alliance With Great Britain
By T>EWITT MACKENZIEWide WorM Analyst
Hitlerian political machinationsin the Mediterranean iheaire areraising troublesome issues for theAllies as the Nazi chief makes os-tensible preparations fur a fresho/fensive to try to wrest control ofthis strategic area from the Brit-ish—a move1 calculated to be eo-ordin;>ted \vith the Japanese drive
thj liimost concern, since there isinvolved the security not only ofthe Mediterranean but of the At-lan t i c . Obviously the UnitedStates is vitally concerned, quiteapart from the obl igat ions-of ouralltaiu-e.
This development comes on theheels <,)' what is said to be Axi.s-i: spired anti-British rioting inSpanish Morocco. There isn't
tenay.,-ievelop-
in the Orient,pore in a grave position
TlY« latest of severalmcnfe vs Vw British ch,;;::e thatfood and gasoline have been v<?ach-ing A-xis troops in Libya thnuighneighboring Tunisia. Thi>- :> P;ir-'tielrfefly setrous in that, n' ; i ' l l<;>-it mt-ans a.dwcMwd' weakf-i'....^ on
Singa- much ie,.son to doubt the origin' of this j rouble, for the Hitler-Mus-solini brotherhood has worked un-linngly to win the support of theAral population in the Mediter-ranean '/.one. This would be agrea: a'set in the eomin-s trial *>fstrength for control of this sea,which !-as made England poliw-
of th« Vrchy govemir.ent man of Kurope." - • - - • - • . . . . . .G«trn«tt pressure fov
gives rise "• '''that ft fftvsnges 'German ---e
fewtes as SMAny swefi1 if*t«»t fev t-ve V
Coirrciwent with this, arrd ofeven- givaret impoviaiwe. youiftfKing Firouk of Egypt has given
es. j 9 fresh- <^enroratration of what thwhy ! Ivvnvfon pr*ss interprets as aY>' afttv-OT r British' aftittflcfe. ti Faroi* fe t*-
deed t ryin thealliance iva press;r;fis one P''terranea;:must < • • !''*-
Acti:: ' ' i!\vast m : t : i :Br i ta in . .,.Suez C ' ; : v > .tern Me.-.;king cho.<-there eattwi l l s!rv,iand t ' lKH ::ing for .">
f f the Hlish ;i ii'.'f\vouici b,for E n ^ i ; ;tlVe fOl!:'.!'Work! VVabe a trib;
u to kick over the truces jcf of Egypt's cast-iron |;ii Bri tain, he wil l raise i
;; problem, for if there i; v in the whole Modi- ::,-ca that the British ;
; , . • i! is Egypt. '.:>!' niurse, Egypt is a
(•••y and naval base l o r .• ;:•..« domination of ihe |• 1 ;-,nd the whole Kas- jt e r ranean . Should the '• e '-o challenge England.;i ic .-•<> doubt that London !
;y evack down on him ;• - , \ t i i e r king wi l l be look- 'iob. i
, i i i s i i dni hare to e.-cwb- •' tectorate over Egypt i t :
iv.--:.v-y repeating itself, |,,.i ronk over control of j:-y eai'ly in the First jr wiven Egypt ceasod to ;;tsry stare of the Tin--!:re. This proteetorage •
ancse.Our troop.-, the communique
said, shot down seven more Jap-anese planes dur ing the past 24hours, bringing the total confirm-ed a.s destroyed in the Philippinessince the.outset of the war to lfc'3.
The torpedoing of the 224-tontransport frank occurred January28 in the "Hawaiian area.'1 Thecommunique said that 33 surviv-ors reached an undisclosed port.The ship w:;s used as a small in-ter-island freighter .
The communique said that Mac-A r t h u r in a message to the depart-ment emphasised the "grim de-terminat ion oi" his American-Fili-pino troops."
It said t ha t f ive veteran Jap-aneSf. divisions have been identi-fied as opposing MacArthur 's lit-tle band on Balan Peninsula.
It continued with a statementthat there are many other sup-por t ing troops for the Japanese,which are being bolstered by freshlandings in the Lingayen Gulfareas'. The American troops thusare lacing increasingly heavy odds.
Last Passenger CarsRoll Off AssemblyLines in Detroit
DETROIT, Feb. 10 (,(••— Thewar's absorption of the aulomo- 'bi le industry became v i r t u a l l yeoi-.iplete today as 'he ia^t pas-senger vehicle ivlled off thv> tewroma in ing ear assembly lines.
The last passenger units to beassembled were Ford cars, butthat, wis merely a circumstance;Ford, wi th a heavy program ofArmy-ordered passenger vehicles,was behind in the war-curtaile-iproduction quota arid w;j$ permit-ted to continue in production un-t i l today to par t ia l ly catch up.
The Ford assembly lines, in fact ,have been turning out just, aboutas r.uiny .Army cars as civilianuni ts .
Just when, the manufac tu re ofpassenger cars for civi l ian use mayagain lie undertaken i* proble-matical. The erstwhile car manu-facturers turned armorers are cer-tain only tha t when such produc-tion is possible they wi l l turnagain to the 1942 model.
r*<t* 2v
City of CharlestonIs Placed Out ofBounds for Sailors
CHARLESTON. S. C.. Feb. 10.iU.R)--Admiral Will iam H. Allen,commandant of the CharlestonNavy Yard, today placed the en-tire city of Charleston out ofbounds for sailors because of al-leged vice conditions.
The out of bounds order wil lbe effective for at least one week,ant-i -affects ail' Navy men sta-tioned here and on \vsrships en-tering the port.
Admiral Allen's action was crm-ci/ed by Mayor Henry Lockweod,vvho charged that vice conciitronsin- thi-s city of 80.000 were dire inpr.rt "to the admiral's negiiafericerather than feck oi effort on in* zcity's part;.'v
Surrender DemandedA Berlin broadcast said the
Japanese commander, Lt.-Gen.Tomoyuki Yamashita, sent amessage this morning to the Brit-ish epmmander-in-chief, Lt.-Gen.A. E, Pcrcival, demanding thesurrender of Singapore.
Bloody fighting still continued,however, with the hard-pressedAustralian, British and IndianImperials exacting a terrific tollon the invaders.
Domet, off ic ia l Japanese newsagency, iaid in front-line dis-patches that Japanese .engineershad repaired the ,'5,000-t'oot'johoreStrait cuusewny, which the Brit-ish had breached, and that Jap-anese troops. and supplies werepouring over the span.Bis* Issues At Stake
There was no disguising themagnitude of the disaster Singa-pore's fa i l would inf l ic t on theUnited Nations. It would:
1. Gravely endanger all Alliedbases between the Suez Canal,Egypt, and Pearl Harbor, Hono-lulu. •
2. Free Japan's powerful Ma-layan armies for attacks on Java,Burma and even Australia.
0. Deal a blow to the UnitedNations' manpower in the South-west F'HCHH', unless the more than6'i.i.OiiO Bri t ish troops now lockedin ba t t le on Singapore Islandcoulei be evacuated—an almostimpossible feat.
4. Give Japan a free passage tothe Indian Ocean and the Bay ofBengal.
Even as Singapore's fatefulhour approached, the Japanese in-vasion hordes were already strik-ing new blows in the Dutch In-dies; and toward Australia.Japanese Land N'ear Macassar
A bul le t in from N. E. I- head-quarters said Japanese troops,launching their sixth attack on akey point in the Indies, had land-ed in the v i c in i ty of Macassar,erne! per: on Die southwest coastof Celebes Island, 500 milesnortheast <>!' the big Dutch navalbase at Soerabaja. Java.
1. ho thrust was seen as another
(See WAR, Page 2)
Peace CampaignBeing LaunchedBy Industrialists
LONDON, Feb. 10. ,-.#— An in-ternacionai car te l oi >'rei5ch iiiiriGeriniin industriaii.si.s v.as reli-ably rep,>;-ied t.ori.iy !o ;-,ave s'art-c- -i organi/mo; ,i iiev, campaignlor a negotiaicd peace betweenGermany ;-,r,d the United .Nationson ousiacss grounds.
These international industrial-ists, a qualified source saidr ar-gued that Japanese conquests intiie Pac i f i c wi t ; ; acquisition al-ready of Territories rich in r,«t-urai resources .'Hid raw mate-rialhave put Japan in a portion toseize and don-rnatc v.orld niar-kets i-1 tr.e we^c-i-p, powers pvf-si.sr iii f i g h t i n g t:ie war to an end.
The indLiStriallst's \V(--re repi'Tt--ed pomtinn a campassnf par'uC-uiarly toward the UnitM Startswi th emphasis cm th« risn^rs (#
wcess r<v raw r.iAtt-riai f<*ch«.vn Kvbw supply.
PAGE 6-nTHE rom»rs HIKISTI TIMKS. TUESDAY. V K B U V A H Y 10. i»i '»
CENTRET H E A T R E
»%>f^*/mutT O D A Y AT 1 P. M.
K R I SToday's Program(Listings Subject to Change)
HEART-THROBS,UU6HS,THRIUSOf AN AMERICANMASTERPIECE!Here is * picture attuned tothe heart-beat o£ .a nation, o i &n Americas' master-piece to place alongside"Ah Wilderness." So true,
» human, » crowded; withlove, laughter and tears - . .'•
it's memorable heart-warm-inc screen eniertsinnieiit ±
I23:35:•1••!45
KATHRYNGRAYSON(Astir Soidr'i .
frfratf Secretary;
Th« World Wai
M5—l.a Voz Del Puerto:-!5— International News Service:00—Musical Brevities:15—Club Matinee—bnc:S5— AP News Bulletins—bnc•.00—SOUKS By Souia—bnert&cr-Cily-Cotmty Health. TalkISO—Flying Patrol—bncHj—Tol Pic Program:00—U. S. Marine Recruiting
,i:)J—Secret City—bncS:3C— KellocB's Texas Rancors5:45—Jax News Dixest5:5vV-Potmlar MIJMCB:t\T— Pleasure Time—nbc6:15—Ir.teriiauQnal Xews ServiceB:3i>—Perkins Brothers-Harmony Hallfi:45— Grand Prize Headlines—-tcm7:00—Johnny Presents—nbc1:3f—Meet Your Navy—bncS:00—News Parade8:l;V-rvno\v Vnur NavyS:30—Fibber McGee and Molly—nbc9:00—Symphony Orchestra—bnc9:SC—Ked Skelton and Company—nbc
iO:CO—Internatiunal News Service1C: 55—Tel Pie Program• o.sr—Francis Craig's Serenade—nbci! : 00—War N*ws—nbcU:o;>—R<>v Shield's Music—nbc•tl-5;—AP News Bulletins-—nbcI.:u'0—Sign Off.
Wednesday's TroeramA. M,G:00—Mi>nuii£ Var:e;if*6.4S-—Intecnaiioiiat News Service7:00—Furonean Js'ews Rounduu—:ibcT:iS—Gardner Nursery Co.—etT:20—Need a Boos*?.7n5—Texaco Star ReporterS:Cil—Breakfast Club—nbe9:00-^Wh'ai'.< Doing Around Corpus
• .Chrifti ' - ' - . ' ' • ' : . .S'.l>—Today's News—nbc9;:s0—Tel Pie .Program -«;i;i-u.£tr£nR Time—ntsc
18:Pi>—Ask ElessiorNash—nbc10:!r>—LivijiK -Uterature—nbcIO:3i>-^.Music and IriionnstionIG.nS—Kei;p Fit For Deiense-n:yc— Ji.ews and- Vie\vs—rnhs11:15—.JUuernatioual News Service11 SO—Headlines . From. Hollywood—Isc5K-"-—Console Patterns V ,
, U*:-^—Magnolia 'News Briefs12:"S—Tbe Chuck "WaKoa GanB—U'c12:30—Front Page Farrell—nibsKi.~45— Glaciiola " Newscast '3.GO—The Ait,in Living:1:15— La Vb?., Del Puerto . -2;43r^Ih;'erndiiohal News' ServiceS:OCr—Musical Brentfes , • • •" •" "" ib Matinee-inbc
: News,-'Bulletins:—libc
•(•••••(•irBw f\mtf»if * **Ai Vp^Y;
. It went into 18 editions. America took |pj| it close to its Heart Now every lovable |''fccHaracter isaHje_iiv_aswdl
SpringByiDouglass NewlandNatalie Thonipson
Mark DanielsaFpKBORZAGE
productionDirected b; :
.FRANK BORZAGSPioduced by EDWIN KNOP?
:r<»3 ?!jy br UK TOKTUKE • _ Bwii tt» Bo=i i>T'H«b<gc* Taso»r'WilH«g»
I 6:! • 15
hristian Science.-30-^-Flyms : Patroli-inbc
5— 'Teiv.Pic ;Prbgram ."•QC— Veterans, of . Foreign WarsilS^-SecreV Citj'-^nbc:30— Keliass's "-Texas . Rausers:45-— lax News- Digestaft-T-Fopular Music. .'.'.-:OOTr?jeasure ' Time— nbc:l:v— iTUerria'Jorialv. -News Service:30— Library ot • Congress Talk-r-nbc«?— Grand Priie Hea-dliners— :qn: 00— The -:Qviz ..Kids— nbc:30— Uncle Vt'siter's Dos House— nb:00 — Nty.-s : Parade
. .9:00-^Lione-l Hampton's Music With
.-"• "Bihc'.Crosbv-9-30— Tel Pic Proeram?:45— Excursions -in Science— et
If.-.or; — International. New? Service!0:15 — Three Rorr.eos— nbc'tft-.y — Authors Playhouse — nbc!l. 00— War News— nbc.-1 1 :05 — Freddie Zbemer's Music— r.be
.H.-SO-rBcastey;. Smith's Music— nbc• I :">",— AP 7Jevs Btslleimf— nbc'2 TO-rSieh :O£s •;'•
Radio ProgramTi:i;M).VV. F K I U S U A U Y IUlAlUM.iuoiis in orovKim as listed du»
ivUuol.v to changes tjy networks)4S5~KM-oi-ts & Belly Vocal— nbc-r«l
The Tom Mix Seriiu nhc-blne-east\V Van Dyne SOUKS nbc-blue-vvcstScatterBOOd Baines, Serial Skit— rbsCatitain Midn'Kh.i Scri.il 'inus-cnst
5-00— LVnver btrnu: Ordiesl.— noc-i'coDinning Sisters Sonis -nbe-blvie-eustStiirie.-- of Adventure— nbc-bluc-wcslTwo News OioadeastinK Periods— ebfPrayer: News: Dance Music Or.— mbs
:;;15 ___ jjt-nver Sttintis: News — nbe-reJhhnirb.* Dance tiand nbc-blue-easl"Secret City." Serial— nbc-ijlue-w-stDorothy Kilsnllcn ov\ Btoadway— cus
5:30— Patti Chapin SinKing- nbc-rcd"he I.""1 and Abner Serial- • »bc-flue
To Be Amu'Hinccd (15 inin . l— cbs'
The Milkman
.5. 45 -The Three Sims Trio— nbr-redLowell 1'honias , TalK— nbs-bUiC-b^s.Tom Mix in Repeat- -nbc-blue-westiVai and World. News of Today - cbsCaptain Midnight Reoeat -nibs-west
6:<1Q— t'. Waring's Time— nbe-red-eastEasy Aces. Drama Serial— nbe-blneAnto$ ami Andy Sketch -cbs-basicFulton Lewis. J t . and Commenl— nibs
6:Hi — \vai NevVs fro^ Etirope.«nbc-redMr. Keen. Dramatic Serial— nbc-blu*Lannv Koss ai«l His Soniis-- cbs-basicHere's That Moiium Proffrain—mbs
5::>0— G. Burns. Gracie Allen -nDe-redVincent IiOiicz & Orclies. — nbc-blueSecond Husbunfl. Helen Menken— cbsArthur H:Ue'* Ne\v» Comment — mk*
-6:45— Jack 'Stevens Sports— rnbs-hasic7:0fr- Johnny Presents Orctt. --"be— -odXaviyr Ciiitnt Rhumba Revvie— b'ueAre Y'OU a lUissina Heir? : Draraa - ^bs\Vliafs M.y Name. Quis Show— nbc
7;30—Horace Heidt. and - Qur-> nnc-n;d••Mcci the Navi-. Variety Snow— ouieBob Buriis; "Variety- -.Proerani— cbs -.-Ned Jordan, The Secret. Asent nnos
7:55- 'EJmet Dn*is-and Comme.nt—cbsB:00— Battle. of Sexes & Qui?.— nSc-rad:The . Famous Jury Trials— nbp-l'lucWe. the.. People. Cnest Programs— cbsGabrU-V :H.enueT Comraent— mbs-bR<vc
S:15 — Mews of London: Musical— nibs8SD- Fibber McGee. &.: Molly ~r.bc-r«aThe NBC.;Sytnphpuy .Concert— blue ..'•Weekly. Repons tb the'*' Nation— etasScctlisht ;-3a'nds:. Featiire — v-nibs*
9:00^ Bob. :Hone : and Variety— nba-rsdGSenn. Milti-r an;l '; HJs Orchestra— cbs•Rflyrttniid Graiii SwinB::'Spea'ks -robs
Svl^-I'ublic: AiTaira Gii est Talks- cbs -Dance"- Music . I'or 113 rriins.— mbs
S.-SO^-Hed Skelton and .Co.— abe-r?d" . 'Commentary:.. -. TeiH Ste«e— nb.t-bliie-
Wherever You:.Ar,c. Gweh Davis-;~cbsTed Straettit and Orchestra— mbs :.
-:s':4S--iiate- War Mew's Broadcast— CDS.-Granrt Raiiids Schubert ; Club— tnbs
10;TO— News ./for 15 K-iins. ^nbc-red-east^P^cd .:Warlr.e*^ receat— nbc-rcd -\ycst;Dance;;& '-News V-(2 lirs.l— TJbc-blus-'cb»
:Nfe\ys :nnd ' pshcc Zilu*ic to 2^mbs' Variety &- News— nbc-red :
ALSO:—"UNUSUAL OCCUPATION" AND COLOR CARTOON
CONGRATULATIONS
FO^PEFENSE
BUYUNITEDSTATES
SAVINGS"
ASSOCIATE
THEATRES
IN"
CORPUS CHRISTI
Flashes of LifeBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AmbitionHUNTIIvGTON. \V. Vs.— Two
, brothers, one is. the other 1,3.made earnest application to jointhe Army ''a.s water boys."
Their reason; They wanted toaid live, brothers already in thearmed forces.
j Recruiting Sergt. J. _ J . Francisi told iheni ge?it!y but f i r tn ly they'd1 have to wait a white.
Land Locked AdmiralFORT RILEY, . Kan.—Admiral j
Dewey's in the Army now. }He's Admiral Dew'ey Cone, 24- . I
year-old selectee from J.itk.^'in- j,'iik'. F!a.. who i s . t a k i n g a course
in coir imunicat ions school. 1
Se<*rrt \o More iALTADF.VA, Caiir .—Red forces
are in vogi.ie for Aitadenn's tele-phone fo.^hip.s.
Dc'puiy Shor i f f E. H- M;ias ;<r-re-'.tcri a couple f>i 'teen ageyoungsters who i'<'!d hooktxi ear-ph'encs «nto n. tele-phone line.They had found (.'Cinvorsatinns ?ointerest ing they became splendidi.-to nets.
The boys- \ \ere lectured andturned over io their parouis.
Next Case i •LOS A N G K L K S — P a u l i n e Evans j m
G i J i l l c n !~;av her divorce.She I,,!,;.; t!\c ji;de.e her hus- : . •
band. Ki:;c.-;o A. Gui l l en , .snured j •so Kiu t i . - i i f1 h;id to close the b e d - j §:-f»'i;;i windav.'s to keep the neigh- ioors f ro :n complaining. ;
,; .Pattern '. 401ft: is layailabie.:' .' inmisses' and 'vvomeu's sizes 12, H.16, 18. 20,; 30, 32, 34, :3Sv-38 . and40..'-Size 16,-; entire /• senserable,tdkes -4. yards 39: inch 'fabric "anda.{ yard contrast. • •'•-•••;•"• '.'
: Send FIFTEEN CENTS . (plusONE CENT: to cover cost of-.mail-in?), lor .this Anne Adams pat-tern."Write Dlalnly SIZE.' NAME.ADDRESS and, STYLE NUMBER,. -Let. the colorful new Anne Ad-ams Spring Pattern "Book helpyou plan a sev.'-and-save pro-gram, with its easily made,promptly, available patterns foreVery age. PLUS—several . pat-terns for defense sewing. Order,your copv NOW: 'PATTERNBOOK TEN CENTS.. Send your order to Corpus
Christ! Tirhe=, Pattern Depart-ment; 243 West 17th St., New York,N'. Y. '
W A N T E DClean Cotton
Rags
ApplyAt Pressroom
If you're one of thosewho've succumbed to thelure of the bicycle and gonein for two-wheeled locomo-tion for the duration, you'veprobably already found outthat you're not as young asyou used to be. Lookingback upon the scents ofyour childhood you remem-bered bicycling as nothingbut fun. But now it turnsout to be rather similar tohard work. A couple oftimes around the block andyou're huff ing and puffingand wo n d e v i n g if youweren't a l i t t le hasty in in-vesting in this shiny-new •inlsrument of torture.
Well, there's nothing forit, but to gel yourself incondition. And that meansyou'd better, getVin touch'with your Grisham'S: rbule-
.,nuuv- at once: Beg: him ;10leave you an extra/: quart ofGrisham's :;.Graaec;A^ Pas-teurized' Milk eyery morn-ing- That's: the stuff; toBuild up::the; old stamina:!;
\Vc invite you id- ha;v^ your-'watch tested .with ihc iiew sci-entific "\VATCII /MASTER?'Ari repairing ;with p r i a t e aproof 'accuracy;":::- -.^. - •:-'.;;--:%-?:;,
DIAMONP for PIAMON DS' 4 2 4 ; .Starr Street :
HAVEBREAKFAST
AT
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CALLER-TIMES
. 3 3 ' F I N E - B R E W S .BLENDED INTO
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ALTON L SEARS
INCOME TAXSPECIALIST
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1025-6 J O N E S SLOG. D I A L 2-7663
NAITS :6U Mesquite Phone -J319 •
a Look, Brother :
DALLAS—"Where in the \ v o r l d his our Pacific ttcci?" finried n ! |war- tnindcd straphanger on a | .
; r-i ' t>\vdcvl bus. j 'Ray Lokey. N;tvy chief petty | (
oliicer. had an answer. jlie hnndcd the man an enlist- j '
j mcni application blank and sug- j |jgestod: "Join the Navy and findj
i ! iNow It Can Be Told j
\VEBSTER CITY, Iowa.—When 1 1the United States troops landedin iVr-rthern Ireland, Scrgt. HenryB. Mahoncy's teeth arrived withthem, but not the sergeant.
lU:i'noney told friends here l^at• when he had his teeth pulled, the| Army medical corps, thinking he
\voufd go ai'.Ti^ with o'ther Iowayoutns. sent !.is ne\v set of teethto Northern Ireland.
Sergeant Mahoney. however,stayed in the United States.
Xcver MindDUBUQUE, Iowa. —It was a
ciicerful Dubuquc County farmeri who walked out of his tire ra-tioning bosrd otfico with an or- I
tier to purchase obsolete t i r e s ;for his ancient, ear, but U.e next |morning he returned and surrcn- idered his certificate. |
"What's wrong?1' asked the jclerk- • I
"I wrecked the car last night,"he responded.
Ground Guns ThwartRaid on Holy Land
JERUSALEM, Feb. If). W—TheHoly Land's first air raid alarmin months sounded Monday at iHaifa but approaching enemy!planes turned tail when gorund :batteries went into action. !
The bombless ilcrt was in forceat the port city for 30 minutes. '
Lawn MowersSharpened
25cPer Blade . . . G r o u n d
Like NewWe have Just bought »n ex-pensive lawn mower sharp-e n i n g machine that gr indsmowers on center accur.itcly-R igh t or left h a n d reel kn ivesmay b« sharpened wi thou tdrawing temper. Ai)l makes ofmowers sharpened l ike new foronly 25c oer blade.<25c Extra ir Mower Is Cal l -
ed For and Delivered.)New Lawnmowers $7.95 up.
• • • • • § • • • • •
I
BEST
DRAGONGRILL
PRESENTS
WilsonHumber
AND HIS HUMBERHARMONYTONE
ORCHESTRA
FISHINGIN THE WORLD
• PORT ARANSAS •ALL CONVENIENCES
TAKE CAUSEWAY AT ARANSAS PASS.
DRIVE-IN THEATRES• TEXAS • BOULEVARD
. HIGHWAY NO. 9 i • LKXISCTON BLVD.
• TONIGHT •! MAIS1E TAtKies THE FIGHT CAME
Sh« Biits Her M«n Tr«p '...and gives as goo<J
YOUTHtnd
BEAUTY I
BARBARABARRIE
BOB DAVISCOVER CHARGE:
WKf.K NIGHTS 45«SATUKOAT NIGHT 75e
Tax Inclv«l«4
KO»ADIOPiclur*
.;•), JAKES ELLISON - WIDMO COUSNIGEL IDUCE • M A R G A R E T HAMILTON
KATHARIKE ALEXAKQEI
• PLUS •
MARCH OF TIME
"OUR AMERICA ATWAR"
A Dandy
GARDEN
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Split "D"
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Reid The (alto-Times Classified Ads for the Best Results
Announcing Another _DOUGLASS EAT- A-BITE
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MOTOR TRIP FIRST
\ Rita Hayworth To Go'Ahead With Divorce
By BOB THOMAS , -j «HOLLYWOOD <*> _ Rila Hav- dance
worth says she will take a month's'motor'tour of the Southwest andthen drive to Reno for her d vorcefrom Prince Aly Khari.
The 'flame-haired actress fin
filmingi
ter all>
Dieterle is now in Israel fbackground shots.
"I wish I could have potion inthe plane with him," said travel,mart Rita.
Her plans after "Salome"?"That's too far away to think
about," she replied. She said she;loves ISurope and plans to returnthere as soon as possible, but notto Aly.
out u-iih <=K- »-e»L-e o f ' After four years awav fromout w i t h six «eeks of J H o 11 y w oo d, Rita seems little!Mils, she said. 'That changed. She is still shy and reti I
completely exhausted. Af - jcen t in conversation. It almosthaven't danced for four|makes y°i> forget her abil i ty to!
- -»«.**. v.u <iwness T in*Ishes work for her picture today
"When I started shooting, I had
— * -»~* fiv.ii.nc luuav.She has purchased a station wagonand will drive to Southwest resorts' »• * ••"•"with her secretary, Margaret !SL7een frie|u- I knew I would. ButPotter. B after 10 days, I got settled down.Ko RcconcllmHori * beSan l° UKe work'ing, * again." '
""lhXSi!Srhert
lnlellVieW'- M'iS3 The PiCtUre Sl°PPCd Sh00li»S totLfl S< OTPIHarf f Drill.. i, n » » ... - _ t. ! . < * - - . .' * f c , • " fbeen posing
years. In fact, I haven't done anv-jg e t involve^ '" so many headlines, jthing for four years.Had Screen Fright Youfh Concert-
Board Praises
that sh(to Europe toAly. She toldin touch,the
i - ' - "<«-ie ias een posng orPanning a return photographs to advert.se and ex-
C°n Vlth Pri"Ce P the iclure "Ail i -h i , r r n -cv, S n0t •»•»«! dad-" She is even posing in a bath-
P
lou,lous_«f t, . proving rincesseS
, ,ended.
Reno
in her fabu- are not above cheesecake.I "Now I'm ready for a rest,"
thoi ,1 .,." c"slod.v otjshe said. "I'll rest on the motortheir daughter. She offer- trip I 'm taking. I love to drive-
™™^ 0 . "the,- terms of.jl've done it 5» every confnent:wui not be;Once I drove all the way from
K'x weeks inj Algiers to Tunisiafor Use divorce. | "I (]on't know whe,.e r], Ro on
Appreciation for "most re-
, Glenbl-°°k, this trip. We'll stop wherever weexplf'ncd- "J -cslab- feel like it, for I do want to get
.......«. .m« u, ,or A ao want 10 gelsome sun. We'll probably spend £ra™,' als° was exPre3sefiso r
.some time in Tucson and Phoenix,Ariz."
— r-'t'-."-". i umdu-Iished residence there when I re-turned to th'is country. The divorcecould be a matter o'f hours, but Imay stay around Reno for a few I Wans Another Picture^ * Hhe Nevada very nmch." -| After the divorce, Rita returnsWhen I saw her last night, the ' lo Columbia studio, where she will
actress remarked, that she was;start another picture, "Salome andweary rrom the movie-making rou- i the Seven Veils." Starting date is
ne' I May 15, and director William
"Concerts for Youth" programwhich met last night at the YWCAto evaluate the concert given herefor 425 teenagers March 4.
The board decided not lo plan onnext year's concert until it met
. with the board of the Corpus Christ iSymphony, which presented theconcert. Appreciation to two ad-,ditionat underwriters of this year'sconcert. Mrs. Dorothy Hawn Blak-eney and Willard Perkins, whosenames were omitted from the pro
the
HELD
OVER
R I t ZWINNER OF THREEACADEMY AWARDS
ttorring
** LEIGH • ™«** BRANDOIt ADULT ENTERTAINMENT
CENTRE LASTDAY
Ray
MILLANDHelena CarterHugh Marlowe;;Forrest Tuclcer
CBANDE LASTDAY
WESTWARD"WOMEN
PORT TONIGHTONLY
PALACE WED. &THURS.
TIRONE POWER
'JESSEJAMESover madei
AMUSU TODAYTHURS.
tRKBTlSTARR
"GREAT MANHUNT"
TONIC.HTONLY
'My Favorite Spy"with BOB HOPE
TONKI»TONLY
i: DOMINGO-; CARLOS LOPEZ,SOLES M O C T E Z U M A ,
Harlem TONIGHTONLY
Uncfc Tom's CabinALL STAR CAST
Engineers To SeeMicrowave Exhibit
A demonstration of microwaveradio relay will be presenter! at ameeting of the Corpus Chrisli Sec-tion of the American Institute o{Eleclricaf Engineers at 7 p.m. to-morrow at McVay's Cafeteria.
I^awson R. Lancrs. division in-formation supervisor for SouthwestTexas of Southwestern Bell Tele-phone Company's public relationsdepartment in San Antonio, willdemonstrated actual transmissionof microwave radio relay signalsby means of ft very small radiotransmitter, which sends a radiobeam to a receiver some 10 feetaway.
A section of the Corpiis-Chrisll-San Antonio coaxial cable will beexhibited and explained, R, M.Eichner, program .chairman forthe engineers, said. !
9
Few Lone-Wolf Sponsors CanAfford High Price TV Shows
By VVAYNB OLIVKU | modest: budget advci User, and atNEW YORK U&T-sriie tmdilioiin) | lhe satV|e t ime wi l l enable TV to
singue sponsorship of network nm-1 In1
akc,cilon=h ^ mefit ils hi.ah costs,>"., . ., , , , Which are headed evmi highergrams that prevai ed in rad o s ,. ., . v ^ '"*>>"->.
. , , . , . - Madden points out that NBC"scrumbling ,n television because o(j,av i8h ..Sh^w of shows" has «Khigh costs of producing and airing! sponsors sharing the cost of nearlyshows. * j $170,000 a week or S6,600.000 for a
Television still has a number ofi'3?*weclk
h setlf"- Three sponsors
,..„, .. , . . . \ i share the cost of $100,00 n week orshows that have only a single spon.|Wi40o.OOO for „ 44-wcVk «oa«o,, o.sot- week after week, but there's] ,.A1, stftr Revue." Fotir ..haro «i«a growing proportion with sponsors (cost of four million dollars for p.that either share commercials or'scaso" °J U'e Isate Smith night-
• time show.
NO. 1 DREAM GIRL—Com-bat corresppndents of t h eFirst Marine Air Wing in Ko-rea, whose stories are oftencensored but whose dreamscannot be scrutinized, havevoted actress Mary Castle(above) their "No. 1 DreamGirl." CAP Wirephoto)
Dance Tonight at —
DANCELAND(formerly Ilnlifllntnrt riuli)
1-MII.K SOUTH OF Atl,\N8AS PASSMusic hy BILL BARR
AND THE SONS OF TEXAS
NOW SHOWINGwoold do anything tor Anna.,.
SECOND BIG HIT.ThcBar.zlin.fBIG TOWN Musical
CORPUS CHRIST! TIMES, Wednesday, Mar. 26, 1952 5-B
alternate in presenting them.35 Million a Year
A big network TV show costs upto $100.000 a week or five milliona year, and there's only H limitednumber of companies with advortising budgets bip enough to under
Other K\iim[>lrsThfiro are nitmcroua other ex-
amples of ftllernatc or slnuo<isponsorship, such as Arlhnr God-frey's , Wednesday night show onCRS, "Kulda, Fi'au and Ollie,"n ~-."r,....-. w»f, v . i iMLif^n lu i t i iuui -*. v-.* 'o, [xunin, l'l all flllu Ll l t ie
write such an expenditure for a "The Goldhergs," Robert Mont-Sln^lc i tem- gomcry T h e a t e r , " "Television
The networks arc offering thealternate sponsorship or sharedsponsorship plan ns an Answer. Alending exponent is Edward Mad-den, sales and operations vice'pres-ident of the National BroadcastingCompany. He contends this planputs TV within reach of tho
Playhouse" and "Ono Man's fam-ily" on NBC, and "Space Patrol"on ABC.
think wn'ro going lo more!multiple sponsorship shows." saysMadden. "Conceivably, television'could po according to the maga-zine concept."
Delicatessen
IMPORTED SARDINES -> from
r<iri>m rhrt.ll'n Only r.»pli»lv<'ly Knjhcr food Slor
1411 Third St. (Across from Spohn Hospital) Th. 3-0152
Future Success
to the
TWIN PALMS DRIVE-IN
most modern of drive-in movie theatres.
Only one of its k ind in Corpus Chrisli.
Best wishes on your formal opening and
future success.
Congratulations
to the
New Ultra-Modern
TWIN PALMS DRIVE-INon their
Formal Opening
compliments
PARR & WILLIAMSV
tt'e furnished all lightweight
building blocks.
3822 Agnos Dial 2-3993
compliments
GULF MATERIALS CO.3702 Agnea Dial 3-9259
L/IST TIMES
TWO BIG HITS!OPERATION
PACIFIC
TONIGHT & THI7RS»/IV
BIG DOUBLE FEATURETROUBLE WAS
J HIS BUSINESS!
PLUS
A WARNER »RO*. PICTURt
Best Wishes
to the
TWIN PALMS DRIVE-IN
on (he formal opening of Ihc i r new ul-
t ra-modern drive-in t t i c f i l rc . Only one of
its land in Corpus Chnsli.
compliments
'CLASCO'CONSUMERS
LUMBER and SUPPLY CO.
5 1 1 5 Highway 9 Dial 2-1779
SOMETHING NEW IN CORPUS CHRISTIFOR DRIVE-IN PATRONS'. . .
A TWIN-SCREEN DRIVE-IN"
^ P * ms •' » »*^
OPEM/VG mlliOF OUR
/>/?/!JHflUHl
>*.
tt
Col* blm
.,."..«•"•
TWIN PALMSVz Mile West of Schepps Palms Ball Park
ON ROBSTOWN HIGHWAY
GRAND OPENINGDOUBLE FEATURE
STARTS 7 P. M.
You can see one or both fea-tures and two color cartoonsat Corpus Christi's newestDrive-In Theatre. You arc ne-ver foo far away from thescroen-one feature is shownon each screen and the fea-tures are switched at the endof every show.
OPEN TODAY WEpNESDAY, MARCH 26th
> /$&?V
AmusementsMELLERDRAMMER ANTICS
Audience GivesActors a Show
0V CUE. IX CHARACTER-Mrs. Hank Altenburg. por-traying a French maid, getsready to go onstage, evokingwoll whistles and catcallsfrom the audience with herflouncing walk and affectedaccent.
._ .'GRANDMA, WHAT BIG EYES." — Olios providebetween-acts and after-the-show entertainment lormelodrama patrons, and an attempt is made to keepthe acts on the same plane as the show. Above arethe 'Seabreezes,' a local barbershop quartet, who ap-peared on the show recently, sporting fancy vests,bicycle mustaches and a member with a disconcert-ing false eye.
By BILL KAZOU yoa think attendjnt » Link
Theatre Corpus Chnsti melo-drama is fun. jot* the acton andbackstage crew. To bear someol thej- nightly experiences »x>uJ<lmake a script in itself.
The current '•mellerdrammer.""Love Rides the Rails." w beingpresented every Friday and Sat-urday at Exposition Hall Patioby LTCC. and actors and creware fast compiiinc a group ofclassic boom or audience anticsto add to the collection from thetwo previous LTCC melodramas.A*dfa«K« Helf* Oat
Audience participation i< vitalto the success ol an evemn-'spresentation, and melodrama ac-tors always look forward to aperformance, well knowing thatwhile stylized to a point, the au-dience will combine to make ita performance unlike any other.
Tbe unrehearsed incidents m*ybe elaborately planned affairs byrelatives or members of a castmember or spontaneous audjencereaction, both ol which win dis-rupt play action for a minute Ortwo.
weeks ago a woman jen-«o much compass too for
the hero tied to the tracks thatshe climbed onstage and beganuntying him.
Another mtrntan at last >-ear'smelodrama was dcmg her hut tohelp the prostrale hero. She be-*sn by reaching onsUje, DK-k-rsup bis sun and handing it to him.The hero finally raised up andpolitely told her to sJt down,^hereupon she aimed the toyPJSM at him and shot out all ofthe cap*.
Last year's players rememberthe classic incident of two youngmen who lost their way whilelooking for the concrssxxi stand.StfMZ no other may to jet to it.they calmly walked across the*tage mhile a scene was goingon.
Villains Jeel ! e sunn;onstaje because some patrons donot limit their reactions to hissesand catcalls. They throw objects»t the hapless actors. A wominthrew her shoes during a per-foRnince two years ago and nev-er «» them main. Frugal actorsadded the footwear to LTCC'swardrobe.
Backstage, misplaced or mis-functkaning props cause anxiousbut humorous moments. A taperecorder burned out a tube ata crucial moment last week andwhile adjustments were beins;made, cast members and the di-rector. Lt. Comdr. John Kees ofNAS. provided sound effects, in-cluding train whistles, much to,
Jap Council Quiet;15 Out of 16 in Jail
AKIYAMA. Jinan. An;. 10. jv-» were prrttjr quiet around
APPRAISING FCtK-'I woo-rWr ho*- they like it?' thinkjLil>.n WUlrtt. playing • wid-««-cd motlrf-r in the nwlo.drama, ax she looks at th«audnw* through * peepholein the back of a i*t.
the audjence * amusement.Heckler* e?t some welJ-de-
*erved squrlches Irotn quick-wit-ted cast member*. Last year, aCroup of youth § krpt throwingpopcorn *t the *hady woman'*low neckline un t i l the actress ad-dressed them: "You boys didn'tplay much basketball in schooldid you 7"
NOT IN THE SCRIPT-Melodrama actors are in danger of planned hecklingby relatives or iriends. Mrs. Paul Hitter, playing a saloon keeper above wasmomentarily taken aback and then highly amused when her husband (left) pop-
Assistance to JordanBAGHDAD, Aug. 10 (AP)—Iraq
has decided to offer Jordan theeqTux-alent of $3.500.000 to $4.-200.000 in financial aid in negotia-tions soon, an authoritative sourcereports.
A« CONDITIONING — Stifffcayfront brcczcj kc«p heroineJamie Gordon busy hntHi«gdown her skirts, and more im-portant straightening her prac-tkaUy hidden stocking seams.
e To Gaze at the Future?Try These TV Possibilities
MANPOWER BEHIND STEAM ENGINE — ThereJ? never a dull moment bnek*tnf'r« n- nrtrrs and crr-wkeep action moving, retrieving lost items or rightingmufunctioning props. Above, R. A. Layman (left)and James P. Geiss get ready to 'roar" down thetracks with the engine prop they are holding.
fcsr w i SHIS FOX
SUCCfJS OF THS
VIKING
TWIN THEATRE
FOR YOUR HEALTH
I00°i pure Distilled Wafer
Polar Water (o.Montr Perkins. Mgr.
1MI $. Stofc* TUZ-f ill
By ARTH1H 1. SXTDER«. Nrw Vwk
ailCAGO. Aus. 10-The realtelevision spectaculars take placein the research laboratories.
Much of this wizardy is beinjdone under the secret mantle ofthe military, bat the home folkhaven't been forgotten.
II you consider color TV al-ready here, then the next bit itemis wall television.
Tbe tiny transistors are replac-ing vacuum tubes and miniaturiz-ing bulky parts so that the TVscTPfn win hang like a painting.Screens will go to life size.
The picture tube wil! be com-pressed into a thin, flat layer ofelectroluminescent material, aspecial phosphor that glows afterbrim; excited with an alternatingelectric current field.
Tfwrr'* rvrry rrmsan tr» bolirv-eit will b<» in three-dimension.
•the movie screen. «ys Fred Pach-o!ke. chief television engineer forthe Warwick Manufacturing Corp.This probably coufd be achievednow with special viewing glasses,but the industry would like to elim-inate any such crutch.
J»ck Davis, vice president tocharge of consumer productj atMotorola, Inc., jays the trendtoward miniaturization will meantruly portable TV sets operating
• on a rechargeable battery.Herbert Sachs, research «ngi.
neer at Armour Research Founda-tion, foresees dosed circuit tele-vision hookups for operators offar-Dung business enterprises. Justas taxicab companies are assignedradio bands.
Related to this win be telephoneTV over which the housewife canv* the merchandise she is order-mg and a home television cirruifthat wil] rnahle brr to see who'*
[Wife at Camp, MalerTends Nine Children
A. August ID, w^—Post«jf ' —•—. vufsjtttjf 11 DC sajo•orfcer Real Leduc. 71, is having I *<E«* «»• * worth a mlflioo» novel vacation. While hl« wife' ,*"*"' **«•*»• reporter, "andE*«. 33. f, off ,„, . !L . I m - » !!V •"« with nine
at the front door.An innovation by RCA DM! will
enthuse the movif camera fan isthe adaption of magnetic tape re-cording to voice and picture.
With a small portable TV cam-era, a hobbyist can take his ownpictures ia color, then view the re-sult* by running the magneticsound tape through an adapter af-fixed to his standard TV set
He'll also be able to record his| favorite television program forI later viewing and purchase pre-I recorded opens and plays for his| TV library.j How about global television? It's•* matter of money rather thanlack of know-how, says Ed Brown.
!the assistant vice president andI chief engineer at Zcntth.' Several feasible ways have lyrnsuggested tu betm tt* signalacro« \hf water* but all arc <x
' arnsive.
THE NEW VIKING TWIN THEATREH a real eonfnbutKy, fo th« progr«« of Corput Chrittl — CON-
GRATUITOUS TO MR. JOHN BLOCKER CM THE GRANDOPENING OF THIS MODERN DRIVE IN AMUSEMENT CIN1 ER
^
CORPUS CHRISTI LINEN SERVICE
362S So. Fort TE5-6216
BEST WISHESTO
MR. JOHN BLOCKER
For rt* success e* your new theatre. We ere sur« Itxrt itwiJ) be 8 joy to everyone who visit* it, especially the children—the ploylond is brond new cr-d he-, everything thot you*Child ctXi!d ever d-eem of to play on. The next time you go too movie, be sure you mcke it rK«
MATHIEU ELECTRICCOMPANY
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTINGCOMMERCIAL — INDUSTRIAL
HAV-A-TAMPAAND
TAMPA NUGGETTCIGARS
For tK« best in ynoking pl u,,. WSen you try Ont of Tr
YOU witl know imr*dictely thor you hov« found o reol tmofcendelight.
CONGRATULATIONSTO
VIKING TWIN THEATRE
ELI WITT CIGAR CO.OF TEXAS
423 S. Abmefe TU4-7702| ms w.
Best Wishes to the
Viking Twin TheatreWe ore proud to hove hod oport in the construction of
this modern drrve-in
FENCESCHAIN LINK. REDWOOD
Wholesale fir Retail
COMMERCIAL—RESIDENTIAL—JNDUSTRIAL
CewioUtety Erected By
TRAINTD CREWSSi f>9wn Poyr«e»i»—36 M/m»K% To Pay
COMFLFTt REMOOCUSG SERVICE
2149FCARSC DIAI
OU.2577
ViOage Couocil chambers thUPtou<* "w*1S * "* "
te « **
' "*"* *
reserve army training as a lance jcorporal in the Canadian WAC,'R*«J Jj minding their nine chtJ-]
and enjoying It, b* said I
Congratulationsto
John Blacker...on the opening of
THE VIKING TWIN
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
Best Wishes from
Valley Film ServiceSon Antonio
FOR
L U M B E RPHONE TE5-7373
FHA TITLE LOANS—REMODEL—REPAIR—ADDITIONS. A DEPENDABLE
SERVICE FOR NEW HOMESPaints Builders HardwareRoofing Plywood
Sash DoorsMillwork
CITY WIDE DELIVERY• • •BEST WISHES
TO
Viking Twin Theatre
BIGGESTNEWESTFINEST
MOST GRANDE
DRIVE-INTHEATREIN TOWN
VIKING TWIN""THE
HAS THE LARGESTATTRACTION PANEL
IN THE AREABUILT BY WALTON
FOR DEPENDABILITY
NEON ADVERTISINGPAINTED SIGNS
* TRUCK LETTERINGBULLETINS
MOULDED PLASTICCAST LETTERS
fN tlONZt Ot ALUMINUM
WHATCVEH YOU NEED FOR YOUR
CUSTOMERS TO READ, YOU DO
•ETTER IY CALLING
Walton Neon4634 BALDWIN
(Durable Ma PeAmusements 25th Year in Soap Operas
AUGUST 11, 1957 PAGE 4B «r rwreiA LOWKYNEW YORK, Aur 10 t*- Ma
Perter* will c*lebnt» a birtMay
of her 23th year on radio.Durable M« sine* Aut ]t ISM.
hat been fitmonttrating nv*r andovrr ncain the value* of the Gold-en R'j> and "fr\j«tinf people untilthe tnwt it v.olaie<i "
Twenty f:ve year* m any y* li» lonj tme fn brvMdcatftnjr, iti* an eon, particularly in *hf eve*M t<vU\ <, teievni.-w performers»V> beg n ro »orry »hou» ramer*-b-;m arvl ovr-e\p<^«ijre af ter theirf ; r« ; 13-»eek options «r* pickedup.Kot twit Aw*
Thry rcgird wi th envt^-ji »weh,->rx> VTRim* Payne, the artreM»rv> «tar»e<1 pluyir.? M* while »he» " ' ' i l i i r.nrmiMtj co!iej<- iiu.d'rr.
In fh« :n'rr, .~n;n;j Tj%rter-<ytv
tvrv il"? »iv« not mUvyJ «*her aIMV rh«v-k of r,ne of the 6207brrvidras>«. although nhr hat »a.i«om« rl,-*e tra ;n ro".nectinm andonre hoboed to the mlrrophon*on erutrhe* a few hours anrrbreaking an ankle.
Throujh the yean. Ma Perkinshasn't rh*Tv»e<l much She has al-*ayj heen a "umpJe" woman.
on common «en«* nhort on
»ho np^rvard ^nrf «o!\-(»« jn«t about atlif the jiroM-nn of the people «>fher to»n. Ruvh\ule Center In hernme Ma Ka» mremied with m<xtof th^ trodhle^ you can name—••nc^pt thow banned by the bmad.r.nt:ng cntif. like baby adoption.alcoholism. CIMC intr igi je . dishoiv-
moral standar4i. advise E*-Jher to do'
TVre have been a number of•r:tir« and a oonsid*rabi« casttornovrr thm«<h th* yeart. butaU concerned with th* ih>«w havebe*n very careful to preserveMa'« deepest secrets.
For instance, nobody— not evenVirginia Pa>i>»— really knows howold Via is. Nobody knows whereRuWivJle Orter is. except thatM« had to hop a plane f.>r a tripto New York once to find out » hat»»* bother jig her da'jgater. She
M3s$ P»y» appears be-fore an auiience in her radiocharacter, they cover her blood*hair » ; fh a zrav »Tg, trot otjtwme reej-nrrmed g.Urjr* andturn her into a deliberately fturyprototype o( a UtUe oid lady.
"Everybody has a different kJeaof .\!a—»h»t *he looks like andwhat she srarxls for—and it is alltw.lt u> m term* of earn listener'sexperience." said MISS Pa>'«e.
' I think that's one of the rea-sons the show h*s survived forso long. That's thc one jjrat thinsthat radw can do—let the listenermake his own Weatific»tk».M
KINGSVILLE
_KING'• TV ».:• rr i K«t*"M < " • ) - A- *>-y C
!>•''» F»v>"uTC« PJ.J 1
Cj- .«• %•-»-»— RANCHO—
' »• — VUrt Lv-n.
—BRAHMA—T^nr* WJft W»
Bui Abbjxt - EouTor Tl»*T
J«C O»nd>r - Ur»latTim Ho**yCart-wi — X*»i
VIKGIMA (MA) PAYTHB. . . a familiar po«e far her
took a train t« ft ti> Hollyw-v>d to soiv* a knotty sjtuatjonfor her T»vel;st son-in-"l»w.
A* the »r.m '.<•,-. A ry f»!l<. ^)ie i.thaving a 'u'-sle ».;h the rijvorceproblem: What can Ma. »ith her
WEEK-END SPECIAL'
CHICKEN BASKET '.".';£SEAFOOD BASKET S£SOVEY'S DRIVE INN
•-3114 S. K>RT
TUJ-U21
BARNYARD RARRVMORES — Animal artists arehaving their bicqrst season on Broadway in manyyears. Outside the St. James Theatre, Jackie Michaelsand Fred Meyer of Animal Talent Scouts escortprominent members of the 'Li'l Abner' cast to thestage door. Jackie has a pi^ and two bassc-tt houndsin tow, while Fred clutches one of the six peese inthe show and tries to coax the donkev.
(AP Newsfeaturcs Photo)
CASTMG'S DIFFICULT
More Plays UsingStars From Barnyard
Ry wn.MAM r.lnVF.RNEW YOPK. A-;;, in .»t_Vn'i
rree« ^ In* of in ' frPst ir 'C char-a^er*; in <Knw hi!«ine.<«—m*ny ofth»m four-frwitrrt. furry and frisky.
Tb^ri* i^ Wimpy, a jrritle ^'o^-r>*t; Sn i f fy , the Cum Trrner uholives iox. hazels SD-^ cvn: V:c-
u>es your kn«e as a tab!* farmssft«mor>r» tea. and a muln-fcrnted.starring array of chicles andchimps, penjuins and pigs. lionsa.id llamas. ilcunk> and sharks.
This talent mmarrrne. a jjrnw.r~p trr^d i« i b ' j TV<W sjrleJinein the field of cntPrtsinrnrnt.
During the past season, for ex-ample, ei^ht Broadway show* fra-turod a weird assortment ol ani-mal life.G«»t. Horw, Alligator
Am^r™ rrcr-nt prr(nrmer< havrrxfr> SiVi. a srxit in "Trahouvo? tho Au^i^f M'lon " CharHe. the
of "Inhrnt the Wind,"' h'Vvp in " f l ^ p f i v M'ir.t
prr-
pubhc d
sur*nr«
!i<«5 "
Mi
v^l^ un to J1V> a week forformrr in a rr^iil-ir 5h"'.v.
Current ly the mast pnp'j.ir rr-formrr in tNe antmil talrnt ponlit Victoria, the kansnroo. » j th .100calls f<ir hrr services *ithm a
ujh V'icton* i« ^pntle.and aloof when on
y. an ir-dernnity irvy for 1300.000 alwaysher on Tour.
As a result of the growing at-tention animals are getting in5how world, an organization wa«
launched—half in jost—? American Guild of Ani-
mHi ArtistvIt recehrd th* good wishes of
the/ V. ,S. Department of Agricul-ture and a number of the talentmenageries ligned up to b«ld
; meetings, »wap informalion andestablish union standards.
I'nso'.wd yrf. howrxrr, i» thematter of artistic handover after
lVr«nifketT Pig
"l.i 1 \hnrr ' ' !vcfl;:<" stie c°' '01'• ~ \ r"-\r,~ *.-^~"',^rT «>),-. ., ^
^ ^^^* I^rriri;-!^ «;\ ^pc^e. a P'2- rWc «-n I - " K '/^a d o n k e y and some Bassett tn l iving'*:^ otherJvVlnH- **apparently didn't krvi
Vnt i l a f«w year? azo rinding pI2."apt animals for staw, televijjort.movi's and arriprt^irc was left | — T » ^ »mostly to chance. Now it is an i
nim^\ sheshe »as a
with rulfs. standard fees and v.proud rim-» that ^n>- Vmd r»f ani-ma! can b* provided for *p*nfic
"It's not jutt a mi ftrr nf sup-
tor r.f frte larce.^ casting poo!.An;m.il Talent Scouts.
"\\V.v \»e do is f i t the animal tc
ir.s.s* on rtvid:ns the scr:pt first."
ar^^nd G rr.am p-nviile poriorm-jns «p*v.a!!i*«. There is on<> in
cro«;c.;r!rj<-x of }fff rarely ra!)ed-
O-i ine nrrjv iri rr-^ntlv MrsTTF^P-e arra'.^H ,'ir ^ r^rf-rm-
Drive-In Th>SUNDAY-MONDAY
.AUN JUNE
IADD * ALLYSON
STORY-
<»HtJ«R1f BLAN.r SPLUS
TV tirr.e
\Mes.(« S»CS /*XS^%
RANDOLPH SCO'/tidingShotgun
WAYNI MORRIS-JOAN WEIDON
\r~? of $V)CARTOON
^ss f t$T VRT at D
BIG DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM!
RICMARO KOANPAOKT
*«rWm
«-. ELVISPRESLEY
LOVEIV1E
TENDER
5333 AYERS <Two llock. OH U*!«9ton) Dial UL3-1091
SUN.MON.TUES. rAH TIIC Iflltmr* I IlAR'5ESlr
>.. FOR THE KIDDIES I DRIVE-INTHEATRE
M •v*vi«a7 ni m fr e Sottlh
MICKEY MOUSE CANDY WITH 130 AcresFREE TOY IN EVERY BOX! *«&// I^w^cresCharacter Cutout on Box, Too!
Children under 12 Admitted Free
Evtqr ChM Attturmj WDI Itctrtt
BOX OFWAIT DISNEY
SpeakerAccommodations
For Over
2000 CARS500 SEAT PATIO
$100 In Merchandise I 2 ScreensGiven by Bruner's Dept Stores | TAKE YOUR CHOICE
LARGEST INCorpus Christ!
Hert'i Furf For The Wholt Fomily—
POLAROID LAND CAMERAMAKES fr DIViLOPS PICTURES IN «0 SECONDS
eg nfer At Box Office — NIotKinq to Bu-/ — Needn't B*Prej«ft To Wir»
• D.«l Ccirtntl EUctric • Ctock
P»cture Area I 20 x 50 Ft.1 Stories HigH
TWSTARTS TONIGHT
I FIRST RUN PICTURESOn Sunday—Box Office Open 6:30 • Cartoons Start at 7:30
noman is strongenough toescape it... *no woman isbeautiful enoughto outwitit!
THE
iO
MARSHALL WILLARD IOAN
THOMPSON PARKER VOHS
SHE WAS
LOVE'S SEVEN WONDERSOF THE WORLD!
r RHONDA RICAROOFLEMING 4
*tlie
Queen ofBabylon
COLORCARTOONS
MOST COMPLETE MODERN FREE
PLAYGROUND IN CORPUS CHRISTI
CANDY CANE CITYi)«ctn« M*rry.t*-r*«i>4Ilcctnc Ferm WheelHckfc, H*r«*. S«.»,$ &
J«tk fr J.
ATTENDANT ON DUTY—Completely Fenced
Complete Modern Snack Bar
REGISTER FREE:
THE SOUTH'S LARGEST DRIVI-IN THEATRE
BOULEVARD^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
i 2100 LEXINGTON ILVO PHONE TES-6211| CORPUS FRIENDLEST DRIVE IN: 5-Big Shock Sensations-5
AWESOME!-oi(/ tkta ia«f I
a*
MONSTERS!
PLUS PLUS
2—COLOR CARTOONS—2
DRIVE IN••••••• • •• •• •••• iBBBBBlBlHi HBI BlB^
HIWAY 9 AT BALDWIN PHONE TU4-819I
MOVED OVER TO CORPUSBY POPULAR DEMAND
Shocking Beyond Description!Soma Of Its Scenet Are So Powerful—
Many actually faint ot each showing! Ifjou_can't take it -— don't come alont.
l-^-i
-VIVIDTftdf-bitCliai
ALSOLOOK Moffiiw <fr"4 'd« f»r ttefl-mrt
Formal OpeningTonight, VikingTwin Drive-In
formal openint of the VikingTwin Drive la Theatre. 5301Ayen, hu been Kt tor tonight;wi* the box office opeaj« at'«:» p.m. ,
Corpus ChristiTheatre Prog am
OSAGE DUVE LN— Now"An Affair in Reno" with
John LoadttfOt Crauroads" wjth
Peggy Castle
Tveaday•Tiger Shark'The Oklahoma Kid"
Starts WedMMfay"Gonfight at the OK Corral"
with Hurt LancasterGULF DRIVE IN-Xow
-Joe Butterfly" withAudie Murphy
"Each Dawn I Die"with James Cagney
The Qoiet Gun"with Forrest Tucker
••Smiley" with RalphRichardson
Starts Ttanda?Tarzan and the Lost Salari"
with Gordon ScottI TodiY
"Somethinjc of Value"with Rock Hudson
Start* Ttanday"The Pride and the Passion"
with Caty GrantCENTRE—Held Over
"Loving You" withElvis Presley
Start* Wed*e*day"The Curs* of Frankenstein"•X the Unknown"
TOWER—X*w"The Ten Commandments"
with Charlton HestonAYEBS-x*w
"Gunfight *t the OK Corral"with Burt Lancaster
Start* Wedoeaday"Fire Down Below**
with Rita HayworthAMUSU—Now
'Tension at Tabzle Rock"with Richard Egan
•They Rode West"with Donna Reed
T«e*day—Wedaecday"Heaven Knows Mr. Allison**
with Robert Mitchum"Night Fan"
with Aldo RayFHday—Satarday
"Yaqui Drums""Reprisal"
The program wffl feature tworun pictures, "Qoeca of
Babylon" and "Lure of theSwamp." with the addition of 10cartoons. Ed Fanner, managersaid.
Featuring the opening of (heSouth's largest drive in theatre•111 be a drawing for prizes. Tick-«s win be distributed at the boxoffice for prizes which win iadodea large size Polaroid camera, sixblankets, including one dual con-trol electric blanket, and ethermerchandise and toys.T*y* tor Clrildretj
At the box office each child winreceive a Walt Disney box whichwfll include candy and a toy.
Viking Twin Drive In Theatrecovers 30 acres and is equippedwith speakers for more than 2.000cars. In addition, patios facingboth screens have a seating ca-pacity for 500 persons.
John Blacker, builder and ownerof the new theatre, has installed
Corpus Christ! Caller-Tim**, Sun., Aug. 11,1M7 SB
PARTIAL VIEW OF MODERN FREE PLAYGROUND AT VIKING TWIN DRIVE IN. play on swing*, colorful car nival attractions is supervised
Mexico's Quake-HitMovies Being Repaired
MEXICO CITY. Aug. 10 CAP)—City officials are making a secondround of inspection to determinehow many of 21 movie housesclosed since the July 28 earth-quake are in condition to reopennext week. On the first roundthey recommended repairs.
Vo More Chauffeursr'or German Commies
BERLIN, Aug. 10 fAP)—EastGermany's Red party chief Wal-ter Ulbricht is cracking down onchauffeuring for government of-ficials. "As a matter of princi->le." he told a party meeting.'officials under age 50 should do
their own driving."
the largest screens m CorpusChristi. They are 120 by 50 feet,equal in height to a seven-storybuilding. >
Everything in the theatre fromthe speakers to the two Simple*XL projectors are the latest i n jtheatre equipment. Blocker said.
In the center of the 30 acres isthe one-story building whichhouses the projection booth, thelargest in Corpus Christi; a snackbar which will accommodatebetween 300 and 400 people, andthe theatre office.Interval UgMteg
The drive in is enclosed by aence lighted at intervals to per-
mit those coming in or leavingwhile the picture is on the screeno drive without turning on carlights to interfere with other>atrons.The Candy Cane City, a free
modern playground for youngstersis an additional attraction for thesmall fry. It is the largest andmost complete of any theatre play-ground in the South. A fence en-:loses the playground and it is
supervision at allp
Pito Reaffirms Snub)f Eastern Germany
BONN. Aug. 10. (AP)—WestGermany and Yugoslavia havesigned a new trade agreementthat solidifies, in efffect. Yugo-slavia's non-recognition of Red-ruled East Germany. The Titoregime is the only Communistgovernment that does not recog-nize East Germany. West GermanChancellor Adenauer has ruledthat Born win recognize no na-tion—Russia excepted—that hasdiplomatic relations with EastGermany.
under aduittimes.
A veritab> carnival awaits the>oungsters who would rather play 1than watch the show. In additionto swings and slides there aresuch attractions as an electricallyoperated merry-go-round and Fer-ris wheel. Jack and Jill climb-ers, the elephant slide, hobbyhorse swings. Miracle Whirls andthe Skyway Dome ride. Safetybelts are provided for the swings Jto prevent possible accidents..Blocker said. P;cnic tables arealso on the playground lor useduring snack time. !
Added to the colorful array onthe playground are 40 cutout ani-mal characters which line the,fence.
TARLIT> o B i v c - 1 N •IOI*IO«m BW144 I
~.VO CB EATER MX1*AM>
AS TMFT OOJOArlcnr D*hl
KILLS BUT^CANNOT BE
_ _wnbaaotyaifwwerl
•IG 3 HOUR PROGRAM — CONTINUOUS SHOWINGDOORS OKN 9 AJA.
CENTRE STARTS WEDNESDAY
I 3-Big Adventure Hits-3I
! FIERY __
UCT.ONCJT POWER • HAYWARD
„ HALLS OFMONTEZUMARICHARD W1MURKI
n GRANGER-era KELLYDOUGLAS • & [RICSON
2-TOP HITS-2
TOP CO-HIT!MEN GAVE HER EVERYTHING...
BUT A GOOD NAME!
ANNE BAXTER ,ROCK HUDSON
IN ,s6 f^'- •*'•"S 1V: >^^
nuiuiiniiiiiinuiiHuiiiiiumuniuiiiuiiiiiinuuiintnHiniimiuniiiirf
TWO SHOWINGS DAILY — AT 2 P. M. «W 7:45 P. M.ADULTS $1.25 — CHILDREN «0«
SEATS NOT RESERVED
NOW! TOWERPhone TO 3-5473
D»«n
MELBAPhone TO 3-1931
STARTS TODAY
DOOM OftN 12:45 f. M.iH 1:40 P. M. — A4.fr* 50c - CfcMf*. 20«
*" \A11BOOT* ounrrjuu Jm!
PORTPhone TU 1-3651
STARTS TODAY
DOORSO^fN 12.45 f. M.
.***"••• T* ' :4° '• ** A4«lrt 40« - CtdMrtn 20c
IRASEMA en
V/or« A Yellow Ribbon" with John Woyn«
OSAGEPhone UL 3-1777
Drive In Theatre4841 SOUTH STAPLES
Double Program-Starts TonightFIRST CORPUS CHRIST! SHOWING
'RENOJOHN LUND
DQtIS SIRSUTONJOHN MOItl
* MATW*AMA MCMS1WW KKX MKIT
McNALLY'CASTlE-YAUGHNAND TWO CARTOONS
GULFPhone UL 3*1854
Drive In Theatre4044 SOUTH PORT
DOUBLE PROGRAM-Starts Tonight-- ——" ^HHH_ . - —- . B^ ^H_ ^BV# ~. ~—t^ _ ^* _
AND TWO CARTOONS
RITZ Matteaa T1U 1:40 fJM.
50e — CK4Wr«ii25«
STARTS TODAYStow* « 1-341-5:15-7:25-9:32
ROCK HUDSON^DANA WYHTlRi starr rams
C E N T R EPhone TO 7-7361
1 :40 P. M. —
HELD OVER
SWwt 1. 1:OJ.5:OZ-7:01-»;04
S0« - CtMUr*. 25«
j CVCRVTHINO YOU COULD WISH FORIN A MUSICAL eNTKflTAINMKNTI
^MUOMI canor•UT M H nwt KM* HUT•w » ui «• u*ir it BO-
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H UL KANTn • SoMfbf Vr •XMXT tUtU mi HC KXVTO
AYERSPhone TO 4-1733
M. —
STARTS TODAY
l-l:tO-S:20-7:JO.f:40
40c -
BURTLANCASTEirKIRK DOUGLAS
KtAHErfOf
'THE«* tie (Lame
fe£ PASSION'TECHWCOIOR*
TWOOC*t t nt • IQMiAW«« . *• m » *M {MOIMA M tOMW AMMT
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COMING SOON!Starts Thursday
15
AMUSUPhone TU 1-7111
M •»!•>! Ti»t :4O 9. M.AArfr* Ilk—CMMrM 20c
'Tcmiofi A> Tobk RockRicherd Ejcn
Doro»*-yAND
THEY RODE WEST
RANDEPhone TO 1-9691
M«ttf»M Tail :40 P. M,OwWrt*
THE
AND
c.i;tr,l *9«-
R O B B E R ' S ROOST
Paufcla ProgramTa^ay Onry
"Tha KiHrn"Burt Loncastcr
"Slotpiwa. C*y"Richard Cent*
Republican SaysHe Heard ReaganTell of Birch Bid
DANCE — Tony Joe and the Mojos, whose recent record'Someday' is considered a hit by local disc jockeys, will join a long _ list ofartists at the KEYS Radio back-to-school dance spectacular Friday night atExposition Hall. Pictured are (left to right) Joe Dodd, Robert McGuffie, TonyWhite (seated) and George Lopez. Other artists scheduled to appear DeludeTommy Roe, the Ron-Dells, Travis Phillips, the Kings and the Six Pence.Tickets are on sale at Woolco, G.M.C., Galvan Music Store and KEYS studios.
LOS ANGELES. UP)-The pres-ident of the California Republi-can Assembly has confirmedJiat he heard actor Ronald Rea-an say the John Birch Socie-y's national public relations di-ector offered to help Reagan'sampaign for governor.Cyril Stevenson Jr. said yes-
irday:"I regret the information had
o become public."Mrs. Jane Alexander of Sanarlos, a director-at-large of the
assembly, said last week sheleard Reagan claim that John
Rousselot had offered to supportor attack Reagan, whichevervould be most helpful to his:ampaign.
MRS. A L E X A N D E R saidReagan claimed the offer wasmade to Stewart Spencer, headof a political management firmhandling Reagan's anticipatedcandidacy for the GOP nomina-
'Inmanship/ 'Outmanship'Also Practiced in Hollywood ander) not to
hing about it.
By BOB THOMASHOLLYWOOD. UP!
ado about Ins and Outs.Recently an article in thei ODeninos
New York Times magazine! ^ ° 'created a stir by naming the 100
j Night clubs: The Daisy is theMuch|new In discotheque, the Cocoa-
jnut Grove is In for important
to Tennessee Williams and in-cluding a parcel of Kennedys,who now mean most to NewYork society. Also mentionedwere a few Out-people, includingMayor Wagner, Dorothy Kilgal-len and Jackie Gleason.
NOWHERE IS Inmanshippracticed more devoutly than inHollywood. I am not going toname who is In and who is Outbecause I must go on workinghere.
But I can report on the habits,customs and institutions thatare In and Out in Hollywood to-day
Hotels: The
Restaurants: The Bistro isthe most In of the new spots,
s of the old. LaLarue and a few small Italianplaces are In.
Movies: Previews at the West-wood Village are In. Big pre-mieres are Out, except for Incharities like Cedars of LebanonHospital.
Sports: Tennis is definitely In.golf is Out. Croquet is In — iyou are invited to play at SamGoldwyn's.
Living areas: Beverly Hills asIn as you can get, Bel-Air fol-lows Malibu is In once more.The San Fernando Valley is farOut
Spactator sports:"Hotels: The Beverly 1 His i s j h '„ d js so In that Cary
forever In. ami the Beverly \ \ i l - i r_. n t f!nes it. Dnris Dav hasshire is suddenly In afteroverhaul.
i Grant does itmade the Lakers basketballteam In. The Angels, alas, areOut.
Award affairs: The Writers
Guild dinner is the most In o:the year. Attending the Acadsmy Awards is Out; watchingit on television at a party isIn.
Parties: Discotheque dancinjin backyard tents is In. Barbecues are far, far Out.
Resorts: Palm Springs ithoroughly, continuously In, eve:more so in the summer. LaVegas "is Out, except when FranSinatra is there. (Wherever Sinatra is, is In.)
DOGS: POODLES are still Inthough not as In as Yorkshirterriers. Collies — with all durespect to Lassie — are out.
Cars: Vintage (but not newRolls Royees are In, as well aimported Italian sports canMotorcycles are coming In.
I realize that this list may bWatching upsetting to local figures wh
thought they were In and no\discover they are indeed OutBut if it's of any consolation tthem, I will add the gratuitouinformation that movie columnists are also Out.
2 Cubans From MusicShow Flee to Florida
his band "PO' Boys"
Thurs. Sept. 2nd
ShannonHall 8 'Til U P.M.
Rtscrvotiont coll WY7-9933
MIAMI, Fla. W — A director;and a thorographer of a Cuban,musical show performing inParis defected and flew intoMiami yesterday from Paris.
Orlando Lima Aguirre, thedirector, and Armando Suezwere attached to a Fidel Castrocultural mission .sponsoring s120-mcmber vaudeville! entitledMusic Hall of Cuba.
They complained that morethan 10 Cuban security agentskept the entertainers under sur-veillance during the tour.
"You simply cannot performunder police vigilance on round-the-clock shifts," Lima Aguir-re said.
Havana r a d i o broadcasts
Tryouts Are TodayTryouts are scheduled today
[from 7:30 to 9 p.m. for pros-ipective Corpus Christi Chorale\ members at the Del Mar ChorusJRoom. Ronald Shirley, director,! announced. Arrangements forj auditioning at some other timeiwil l be handled by the Del MarI Music School office.
have announced that the Cubavariety show opened at the Lyric Theater in Paris Aug. 19 foa thrce-wcek-engagCment.
The radio, heard in Miamsaid the show would be presented later in East GermanyPoland, the Soviet Union anCzechoslovakia.
Last Friday, Cuba's ambassador to London, Dr. Luis Rcardo Aisonso, quit his post iprotest of Castro dictatorshipand went into hiding.
Another government official.Gilberto Alemani, former headof the Cuban trade mission toJapan, announced in Miami Fri-day that he, too, had quit andwas asking for political asylumin the United States.
d to be something in the na-ure of a hatchet."It is true that Rousselot andhave been friendly from the
ime he was a congressman.Rousselot has made no secret ofhe fact that as a Republican
and a former congressman hewill support and is going tocampaign for Republican can-didates where he can do somegood."
ion.She said Reagan made the
disclosure at a private meeting»f Republicans in a San Fran
Cisco hotel room.Stevenson, on two-week ac-
tive duty with the Marine Corps.t Camp Pendleton, Calif., toldi newsman:"I asked the lady (Mrs. Alex-
say or do any-
"My theory was that this wassor.Kthing within the family—the Republican Party — so tospeak."
REAGAN, at a Republicanmeeting at San Diego, said yes-terday of Mrs. Alexander'sstatement:
"I haven't much to commenon that. I can't go rushing intoprint to answer every irresponsible woman who starts swinging a hatchet in my direction
"There was no question buthat particular story was intend-
Lerner's WifeNamed in SuitBy Law Firm
NEW YORK. H1) - Roy MConn's law firm filed suit yes-terday against the wife oBroadway lyricist Alan JayLerner for $19,832 in legal fee:it said it had earned in a tor-rid four-day separation trial.
Supreme Court Justice JohnL. Flynn signed an order to tieup any New York assets ownedby Mrs. Micheline Lerner, nowliving at Lake Tahoe, Nev.
Cohn said in court papers thatMrs. Lerner had agreed to paythe firm $15,000 when Lernerpaid two $50,000 notes whichwere part of the separationagreement. He said she has al-ready received nearly ?200,OQOin notes.
He also is seeking the repay-ment of a $1,120 personal loanto Mrs. Lerner "cFuring theperiod when her husband refused her any support."
Cohn's firm declined to comment on the possibility thaMrs. Lerner would seek a divorce while living in Nevada.
MUSEUM PIECE
Sole of Coach ThatCarried Churchill Hit
LOS ANGELES, ffl - The|funeral coach in which Sir Wins-:ton Churchill's body was car-ried to its final resting placehas been bought: by a Califor-nia city that wanted a memorialof the late British prime min-ister.
City of Industry, an industrialsuburb, recently "purchased for$980 the railroad coach whichcarried the statesman's bodyfrom London's Waterloo stationto Hanborough, near P,ladon. onthe last stage of the funeralprocession. The coach is intend-ed for use as a museum piece.
But Richard Marsh, member!nf Parliament, and chairman ofBritain's state-owned railroadsystem, recently protested thesale. "It's a ridiculous price,"said Marsh. "No effort seems tohave been made to keep ithere."
Darius Johnson. City of Indus-y councilman who negotiated
the purchase, was not sym-pathetic yesterday with Marsh'sobjection.
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HOOTENANNYIS TONIGHT
The summer season's finalfree hootenanny .will be at 8p.m. today, with performersand spectators expected tojoin in the songfest on thePeoples Street T-Head.
Performers include J. D.Price and the Boys, HelenSouthern, Benny Baker, PhilBerry, Don Bodine, FrankHall, Euel Price, David Jac-obs, Mike Merchant, Tra-cy Smith, Dick Hower, JohnSommers, Richard (Cash)Cashman, Pat Glenn, M. C.Walker, Pam Winn, the PozoSingers, the Friday NightSingers and others;
The program is the last ina 14-week series co-sponsoredby the Corpus Christ! FolkMusic Society and City Parkand Recreation Department.
Larry Ray will be masterof ceremonies.
CORPUS CHRISTI TIMES, TUM., Aug. 31, 1965 Tjj
British FactoryStrike Continues
COVENTRY, England. IB -Factory employes today continued an unofficial strike insupport of a girl fellow worker:ired for spending too much timein the powder room.
Reginald Clark, a strike or-ganizer, said, "the manage-ment has been bullying our peo-ple for too Icng."
The management of a coven-try felt factory claimed 19-year-old Carole Lloyd, a machinist,stayed 20 minutes in the ladiesroom one day last week. Shewas fired, and 45 other workerswalked out in a strike which isnot backed by their union.
"We have found out that thegirl was ill at the time she wento the ladies room," said Clark
For management, WilliamBrown said:
"It's nonsense to say the girwas ill. If anyone is ill at ourfactory we send them home andpay them."
iunk it "JUIIB. u, Johnson. "Wethought It should not be de-strayed, and got in touch with
9-Pound Son BornTo Barbara Eden
HOLLYWOOD. Oil — Actres:Barbara Eden, wife of actoMichael Ansara, gave birth Sunday night to a 9-pound son inGo'od Samaritan Hospital. Thechild, Matthew Michael, is theirfirst.
Miss Eden, seen previously iithe movie "The Seven Faces oDr. Lao" and the syndicatetelevision series, "How To Marry a Millionaire," stars in th
role of a new NBC-TV ser
a hillside parcel as a park wherethe coach can be displayed.Other Churchilliana, possiblymanuscripts, will be exhibitedtherein, he said.
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the railroad and arranged to starting next month.buy it."
Johnson said the current pro-test issues from those who"didn't give it a second thoughtuntil they heard it was goingout of the country."
"A number of us here in theCity of Industry admired Mr.Churchill and thought we wouldlike to have the coach here as aChurchill museum, After all, hismother was an American."
Johnson said he is a friend ofDr. Horace King, deputy speak-er of the British House of Com-mons. He was designated as thecity's negotiator for the maroonand gold coach.
Johnson said his city will buy
"PECADO"In Color with Jorge Mistral,
Teresa Velasquez, Mortha ElenaScrvontcs, Jorge Mondragon
"CARMEN LA DE RONDA"
In Color with Sarita Monticl,
Joroc Mistral, German Cobos
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Reality Lack Seen)In Religious FilmCOLUMBUS, Ohio. ID—Many
f the nation's leaders in' thereduction of religious films'ere told yesterday that religionas grown "as remote from theealities of life as abstractaintings."Philip Strapp, a widely-known
ilm animator, artist and com-oser, told the National Coun-il of Churches' Internationaludiovisual Conference thatope for a way out of the "artis-c degeneration" lies in a newnderstanding among scientists,rtists and men of religion."I sense a growing trend to-ard intercommunication which
/ould lead us back to the righttrack," the New Yorker said.
The conference, which runsthrough Saturday, has drawn50me 100 film- specialists andsponsors, audio - visual expert;and Christian educators fromhroughout the United S t a t e
and Canada. It carries theheme, "Film Making and theChurch's Task of Communica'tion."
Stapp warned that "it ismpeless for religious groups tocommission m e s s a g e filmsvhen their religion has be:ome abstract and no longer ap-ilicable to the deepest and most
immediate realities of life."A church actively involved in
the struggle for human rightstends a far better chance of
fruitful collaboration withpublic,' he said as •*» exam-ple, than a church that "is con-tent to stand by and utter emj>-ty platitudes."
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JANE FONDA-LEE MARVIN
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WASHINGTON. UP) - Negotiators trying to avert a nation-wide steel strike were describedtoday as having "reached thestage of hard and tough bar-gaining.
This characterization of themarathon sessions came fromBill D. Moyers, White H o u s epress secretary, who said:
"They are having straight-for-ward confrontations on twomain issues.— that is, wagesand pensions."
The management and laborrepresentatives were meeting,sometimes jointly and some-times separately, in the execu-tive office building next doorto the White House.
Moyers was asked about prog-ress in the talks.
"I have no indication of whatprogress is being made," hesaid.
IN RESPONSE to anotherquestion, Moyers said PresidentJ o h n s o n , who successfullysought an eight-day postpone-
IN THE
NEWSMayor Mclver Furman will
address a Rotary Club luncheonat noon tmorrow in the DriscollHole]. "The Time is Ripe'' willbe the topic of his speech.
The 30 Plus Club will meetfrom 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. to-morrow at Lindalc Recrea-tion Canter for dancing andrefreshments. Tony's Bandwill play on the patio. Adonation of 50 cents a per-son will be asked. Visitorsare welcome.
Overall winners of South Tex-as Bridge Association team offour play last night were James
ment of the threatened steelstrike to permit continued negotiations, had had no personacontact with the negotiators.
Moyers said Johnson was get-ting frequent reports, however,from Secretary of Labor W. Wil-lard Wirtz and Secretary ofCommerce John T. Connor whoare sifting in on the talks.
Wirtz and Connor met separ-ately during the morning withthe industry and labor negotiat-ing teams.
Originally, a strike that wouldhave idled 450,000 workers andshut down 80 per cent of the in-dustry had been called for 12:01a.m. t o d a y by the AFL-CIOUnited Steelworkers. The post-ponement secured by Johnsonput the deadline off to Sept. 9.
THE UNION is demandingwage and fringe benefits in-creases amounting to aboutcents an hour over three years.The industry's last offer was40.6 cents.
Unverified reports that the10 major steel companies hadoffered to raise the ante for asettlement were denied by ahigh administration source.
However, another reliablesource said the industry wasready to boost its offer slightlyat the time the talks were movedhere from Pittsburgh Monday.The union reportedly also wasprepared to make concessions,dropping its demand to 48.9cents.
The union reportedly was cit-ng new Commerce Departmentigures in arguing that WhiteHouse wage guidelines of 3.2 percent should be b o o s t e d toat least 3.4 per cent.
But a White House source in-dicated the union would getnowhere with the argument.
"It's not at all that simple,"he source said in conceding'
that new government figuresshowed a higher gross nationalproduct in recent years thanpreviously reported.
The source said the guidelinesmight be revised upward next
Vaughan, Dick Andrus, Byron]year, but not now.Economidy. Dr. L. M. Draper Johnson has strongly hintedand Mrs. Jim Lcmbka. The as-jhe will stick l° Ms insistencesociatinn meets every Tuesdayat 7:45 p.m. in the Town Club,701 N. Water. Next Tuesday'ssession will be the monthly mas-ter point game.
Escondido FundsAre Approved byBureau of BudgetCaller-Times Washington Burean
WASHINGTON. - The Bu-breau of the Budget has ap-proved a $630,000 authorizationfor Iho Escondido WatershedProtection and Flood Preven-tion Project at Kencdy. Texas.Hep, John Young of CorpusChristi announced today.
The plan calls for construc-tion of two dams and two milesof concrete-lined channel onNicholas Creek, a tributary ofKscondido Creek in K a r n e sCounty.
The' plan now goes to theHouse Agriculture Committee,which has 60 days to act uponthc> authorization.
that the industry grant a set-tlement in the 3.2 per centrange without a steel price hike.
A 3.2 per cent increase wouldamount to a three-year packageof 42 cents on top of steelwprk-ers' present wage and fringebenefits of $4.40 per hour.
^Bfc ' *
%W^/> «•»' jar
ALL-ELECTRIC JlOME OPENS — Chester C. Wine (right), vice president incharge of advertising, sales'and area development for Central Power andLight Co., presents a Gold Medallion Award to Bruce Collins Sr. of CorpusChristi Theatres Inc., who owns the new Woodlawn Theatre. This is the first all-electric theater served by CPL. The theater was visited by about 5,000 personsyesterday at its open house. Regular showings began today.
RAIN SOAKS 1,000
Manry Gets a Hero'sWelcome in Cleveland
CLEVELAND, (fl Robert
Election School SetFriday for Judges
An election school for judgesand their assistants in Tuesday'sconstitutional amendment elec-tion will be held at 7 p.m. Fri-day in the central jury room a t jthe county courthouse.
Use of the voting machine willbe demonstrated, and electionsupplies will be distributed. Elec-tion supplies may also be pickedup Friday at the probate office'of the county clerk in the court-house.
Manry, who sailed alone crossthe Atlantic in a 1%-foot boat,was given a hero's welcome inthe rain when he returned heretoday.
"Gee, I guess I brought someof the Atlantic weather to Cleve-and with me," the 47-year-oldskipper of the red-sailed Tinker-belle told about 1,000 rain-drenched people who greetedijm at Cleveland Hopkins In-ernational Airport.
He thanked them for comingto the airport to welcome him.
Gov. James A. Rhodes, whoextended greetings on behalf ofOhio to Manry, told the crowd.'If this man can spend 78 days
on the Atlantic alone, we cansi and a few minutes in therain to greet him."
WITH THE governor on thelist of welcome-home speakerswere Thomas Vail, publisherand editor of the Plain Dealer.vhere Manry is a copyreader,
and Curtis Lee Smith, presidentof the Chamber of Commercewho represented Mayor RalphS. Locher.
After his greeting at plane-side following his arrivel fromNew York, Manry went into theterminal where he was greetedby another 500 persons. Amongthe crowd were many childrenwaving small U.S. flags.
The program for "RobertManry Day" in Cleveland in-cluded a parade and a civicluncheon.
Sharing the limelight with themustachioed Manry will be hisboat, the sturdy, 37-year-oldTinkerbelle, air-freighted intoCleveland last night. It will betowed in the parade by the leadcar, which will carry Manry andhis family.
DURING THE luncheon theTinkerbelle will be on display inthe Sheraton - Cleveland Hotelballroom. On the last three daysof this week it will be exhibit-
BUCCANEER$1.00 A CAR LOAD SI.00 A CARTOON
"PECADO" ) "CARMEN LA OE RONDA"
In Color wiifrT Jorge Miiirol,Tcrc-,o Vclcsquc:. Martha Elcno
Sffrvantcv Jorgo Mondrogon
In Color with terifa Montitl,
Jorjc Miltral, German Ccbos
ed in the lobby of Cleveland'snew convention center.
Manry sailed alone from Fal-mouth, Mass., to Falmouth, Eng-land, arriving Aug. 17 after 78days at sea.
Tomorrow Manry will fly tothe Ohio State Fair at Columbusin the governor's plane, return-ing late in the day to attend areception given by the actingBritish consul here, RedmondC. Carroll.
CORPUS CHRISTI TIMES, Wed., Sept, 1, 1965 9-C I
Process Server PenetratesBeatles'Cow Palace Guard
SAN FRANCISCO.'W - Aprocess server penetrated the se-curity forces guarding theties at their Cow Palace con-certs and handed themsummonses in a $500,000, breachof contract suit, a San Fran-cisco attorney reported today.
Lawyer Harold Silen said thedamage action summonses werehanded to three of the Britishsinging group's four membersyesterday as they stepped fromtheir limousine at the Cow Pal-ace.
Silen said negotiations are un-der way with attorneys for theBeatles for possible settlementof the action brought by TomDonahue and Bob Mitchell, SanFrancisco disc jockeys.
Donahue and Mitchell claimthey had an oral agreement con-firmed by letters of intent topromote and handle the Beatles'Cow Palace appearance.
They charge they weredropped as the San Franciscopromoters April 6 as a resultof persuasion by Paul Catalana,
San Jose, Calif., night club op-erator, and Norman Weiss, arepresentative of 'the GeneralArtists Corp. of America, thesingers' American agents.
Silen said the damage actionfiled Aug. 23 in Santa C l a r aCounty Superior Court at SanJose names the four Beatles,General Artists ' Corp., Weissand Catalana.
Catalana acted as local im-
presario for yesterday'snee and evening performancesfor which 31,000 tickets wer«sold to net a claimed $122,000 foethe Beatles.
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LOVE 7:20-10:45AFFAIR 9:20
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LEXINGTON TONITE 7 P.M.ADMISSION 90c
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JAMES GARNER
THE ART OFLOVE"
SHIRLEY JONESGIG YOUNG
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fhe most fantastic journey that ever challenged imagination
SHOWSl:00-2:JS-«:1S-5:55-7:JS-»:tS
NEW THEATER—The Deux Cine, a twin indoor theater, will open tomorrow at4900 S. Staples with showings of 'Gone With the Wind' and 'The Gra'duate.' Operrated by-Corpus Christi Theaters, Inc., the theater contains one house seating700 persons and another with a capacity of 500. Formal ceremonies will begin at7 p.m. followed by the first showings.
TV Musical Followed VogBy CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK, ffl — "Where theGirls -Are^' NEC's special "lastnight, was an excellent exampleoithe current vogue'in TV vari:ety. It consisted oi some inter-esting music, uninhibited cam-era work, and lots of color andsight gags.
Much of the time the musicalnumbers were-accompanied bycamera work that" made themlook like those soft drink com-mercials "aimed at the fun-lovingteens. And, most of the tune, thecomedy looked like bits andpieces'-leff over from Mondaynight's "Rowan.? and Martin'sLaugh-in." As a matter-of fact,
CIIDCSUKrALL COLOR-OPEN 6:40
JULIE ANDREWS"HAWAII"
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Dick Martin turned out for onegag.
Noel Harrison. wno~~'~iias*pleasant-way with a song, wasthe show's host. He was particu-larly attractive in the-number"Gentle on My Mind." Don Adams was around in his secreiagent role, which is getting tobe a bit tedious. And there was
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Cher who, as everybo3y knows,is Sonny's wife. She had a cou-ple of songs as did BarbaraMcNair," and two groups, theByrds and The Association.-
. ' " ' • ' • ; -
Solomon' Musical
NEW;mon,V. • bpen&d; i'
; Solo-vnight ; \at:
"Broadway's Hellinger iheater," alavish, jangling and witless rau-
' - - ' ' ' ' : : ';Jiye producers,; Uvo sets Of
writer/^composers 'raiid ;'a. pant-iri£^cast ;c£;6Q: headed by. DickShawn Jafe involved;; They havebrough|;:; forth about three1 nHn-ute of gehume,:cntert^ument^;;'llifev balance-- of;• the-:eitrav'ar
ganza:is labp'j|d,'cheap, ;sh6ddy,humorless, heavy-handed, yiil-gar, frantic and downright silly.
At that, it is somewhat betterthan-the original version fromIsrael,' called "King Solomonand the Cobbler" which gaspedthrough a.run at Montreal's:Expo 67. -.That latter title about sui
all-you need know about theplot; The wisest of ancient rul-ers swaps roles briefly with, aJerusalem shnook to find outwhat people'really think.
"You say xny crown alone pro-tects me from*mockery?" saysShawn, preparing _to switchfrom raiment to" tatters. "That'sblasphemy and furthermore I
dbh't'giye.a'danui."'•; <r ,...That's a' fair sample of thedialogue level provided by^ AnneCrpswell'and Dan.Almagpr. Asfor,the:lyrics:-.suppliedvby Mrs.Crpsweli,.consider the tripletrhyme 'of "lucky me, wine that'sfree, Galilee.!';-; • • . : ; V S; .
'••. The. score .seems recurrentlyon the-yferge of slidiiig into "Ex-odus,": which is no surprise forcomposer Ernest Gold pennedthat priz» .film tune.- ;This -timehe hasn't come up with;a-single
coherent, tune.Several : other songs were
CORPUS CHRISIl TIMES, Wed.,:April;24;,1968, ;. 5-8 .•£•
pennetl-by David Finkle and Bill':^live :'rbster^ibte'^thfr originalplay ",wa£'dohe'i by Sammy' Gro-nemann,; aided In-; what's pro-grammed as .^American adapta-tion":\by' -ZyJlKoh'tiz, , one of; theV:' •
momma, and Salome Jens, who•— surprise, surprise — turns outto be the^.Qtteen of Sheba at thefinal curtafe \-.\-~; , - , :••'*;'^-
The dance routines,}al;mish-mash of, frenzy, were packaged
. .The "iiigoqa^inqhjents turn .up
when Karen -Morrow, Shawn'scobbler/wife;-; gets'?a. chancei! tosing: Ydti J qhly.;: ', w jsh she h' adsomething to. really, warble. .,; :: - Oth'ers}f 1 i 1 1 i n. g strenuouslyabout 'Under" Michael Benthall'spedestrian direction include Car-men Mathews, ; 'woefully. , mis-placed as S .6 1 om o. n 's' bossy
BAND INSTRUMENTTRADE-IN TIME*
Nowyou.tcn o*rn o top ichoot grade bond in*strumentand get.up to"S75 extra.trod<>ini onyour old one.. .offer good until Mby 1.
"0RN \HOP1634 S. STAPLES TU4.9365
r>> ^rX-±BFK»w^ . '
f Second! on Meof, too!Includes Western Style
. Beam, Cole Slaw, PotatoW Mad, Bread, Drink and
Cherry Cobbler.
Every Wednesday & Saturday
Orily$1.00<—^J - iEat ALL the BEEF RIBS,you can eat....
wdtfWVKfa--m HAK-»-a
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PIT BAR-B-Q BEEFRIBS TO CO.. :..LB. 65C'
PHONE UL3-7113-1T'S READY at 4129 S, ALAMEDA
GATE OPENS 6:6200 BIK SO. PADRE ISLAND 991-0520
PREMIERESTOMORROW NITE 8 P.M.
™?x
CLARK GABLEYMEN LEIGHLESLIE HOWARDOLMAdeHAVILLAiND
Winner <A *of Tea M -*;
Academy JL *.\\vards JB,*
AStLZNlCKINTEHNfflOmiPICTURE•
deux cine
4700 BIK SOI STAPLES 854-4848; BOX OFFICE OPENS DAILY 12PM
MAIL ORDERS TO P.O. 657 CC"AIL SEATS RESERVED
, ' lOPERfORMANCES.V/EEKLY,,EVENING8PMFRI*SAT ,;.,....:EVENIN08PMSUNTHROTHUR .. 1
IMATINEES2PMSATASUN. ':'MATINEE2PMWED..... 1
, . SORRY,NO PASSES
ACADEMY AWARD,WINNERIhwtdirbim
4910 LEOPARD DIAL 883-374.1
THE MIRISCH CORPORATION Precis-:' •
SIDNEY POmER ROD STEIGER«THENORMANlEWISOfimTERMlRISCHPRODUCTION • ,,
COLOR bj Deluxe *-«,-., UNIHO sRiis'S
2ND BIG HIT *
JOHN WAYNE • RICHARD WIDMARK • LAURENCE HARVEY
LIVES AGAIN!
MATINEETHURS.ADULTS
1.25
EVENING-OPEN 7-PM-rSHOW 8PM
ADULTS 1.75 CHILD 1.00vSTUDENTS &
GOIDENAGE1.25
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MILLIE!TECHNICOLOR*
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
by 'Donald, McKayle/ An elabo-rate-array of 'setUngs7that':seemto|; get; heavier;, as, the,, affairwears on were crpated - "- '-en:
I'm sorrjrifor^Tiii Solbmoii:' ^
BUCCANEER00 PER CARLOAD0*
* * * *'•.*.* *'•*.*• •* * * *,*> * * *;*•* * * ****;** *":* PREMIERES THURSDAY 8PM +\+c ADVANCE TICKETS NOW ON SALE FOR *-* PREMIERE PERFORMANCE ONLY, *'
i ACADEMY AWARD I'• WINNER£ JOSEPH E LEVINS
* MIKE NICHOLS:;* LAWRENCE TURMAN,
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THE: GRADUATE: flNNE BANCROFT., DUST IN HOFFMAN • KATHARINE ROSS*CALDERWILLINGHAM,«BUCKHENRY PAULSIMONtra^GARFUNKEL OT&ENCETURMAN :
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•s
Hitsmr- t —' * ",^> \ ™ .•• *^ ' - •• •
ByRENATAADLER to television I. Intertommercial,,w' Yor* rim* New, servic. periods, each tenrunatedTv an
n a parochial school, and yet|CORPUS CHRIST! TIMES, Jhurs^ April 25, 1968 1V-Ghe film can't resist all sorts of|
SNEW YORK. — "Yours, Mine'nd Ours," which opened here
is a leering,, racer-leruflj) ^ ft *»-^*«*t>», »***w*i embarrassing, protracted.e comedy-neaay divided in-
jjenoos, eacn terminated bv anabysmal, inevitable joke -quiteanti-sex and pro compulsive pro-
' It stars Lucille Ball, as a wid-owed mother of 8 in San Fran-
% GATE OPENS 6:30 PM6200 BLKSO. PADRE ISLAND 991-0520
DEATH.PSYCHEDELICCOLOR
raSFONDA.SUSAN
STRASBERG
MATINEE?PW '. -°SHOW 8PM """sORRYNOPASSESADSHOW ENGAGEMENT
«"V Julie Andrews >,«.tuMaryTylerMoore
isco; Henry Fonda; as the'wid-owed father of 10;'Van Johnsonas a bachelor friend of the fami-y, and 18 not altogether, sac-charine children. When MissJail is free to cut loose withfoice and facial expression from:he demands of the script — in alirting or a drunk scene/ forxample — she is very funny;
and when Fonda has pins in hismouth — hemming the skirt oflis 5-year-old's dress—he bringshe cairn of his presense to the.nfinite incompetence that keepsbuffeting the entire movie. VanJohnson also does his best. Butnothing can keep this old-fash-ioned comedy all right.
LEATHER OHTHE OUTSIDE
ALL WOMANOH THE
IHSIDE!M,usn maatnaa. ncnnn munt
... . ' PATHECOLOROSS HAGEN-DEE DUFFY-sliARwrKiNziE-soNNYWEST wssa:-"; ' ' • ' - 1 . - . . PLUS CO-FEATURE
AN OUTRAGEOUS KIDNAPPING...ind item is gripped by FEAR!
',".;-;,i •;•' "".'i;1''"^'3"^ " • • • . ^ " ^ » N 'JFpr one thing, "although'It-is] y no indication in the^ihn that• *•''"" ':•'.»':. •»'•'! .r'« »J*«*J'A* *'i-ii.*.'«.>i;': itiL- f Viftjoniinfmr le'w/if «f naonaonly an inflated "Cheaper^byUie
Dpzen,'"'Superlmppsed orVa.spo-keV"Souhd of Music" andTvari-ations on> scene from ''DivorceAmerican Style," it keeps peek-ing out from behind its fingersInto modern times — drawn tothe serious realities' of the pre-sent in a schizoid,4 pretentious,and hyprocrical way. Fonda,who is by profession a Navyofficer, goes on a merry littleoff-California cruise, for exam-ple, on, of all things, the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier "En-terprise, and his 18-year-old sonis drafted; yet there is absolute-
the/country is riot at peace.°iThere are serious little ser-
mons — pro virginity, ^anti-longhair — and a scene with a nun
4910 tEOPARD 6JAL 883-3741
ACADEMY AWARDWINNER -
THtMIRISCH CORPORATION to** -
SIDNEYPOmER ROD STEIGER:,nTHE NORMAN JEWISON WALTER MIR15CH PRODUCTION • ;
sleazy dirty lines, and coy bed-room /scenes and smiley, hesi-tant conversations about puber-ty, which '"would (one hopes)
? PLUMBINGStopped Up
AA Sani-Rooter !;
alienate just that audience thatmight enjoy a^good, old-fash-ioned,comedy about the-logisti-
IQOOllK PORT OPEN iilS
'^r KITTY DEHOYOl' DACIA '
GONZALE;
cal problems of raising 18 chlldren in a middle-class,,modemAmerican family. , ' '«'
BUCCANEER• SI.00 PER CARLOAD
TONY AGU11AR,ROSAdeCASmiAv
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JOHN WAYNE • RICHARD WIDMARK • LAURENCE HARVEY
ALL !M COLOROPEN6:45-STARTS7:15
IMJCUiiiifBIST ACTOR
w OF THE YEAR!
JACKlEAMi
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IN COLOR-ADULTSADM: K PERSON
FEATURES1:1.03(15 .5:247:30
9:30 ' "
FEATURE1:103:004:50 6:40
8:30
HELDOVER!3RD WEEK
"flMEOFTHE BEST SCIENCE-($
FICTION FANTASIES EVER.Really extraordinary. It lias the primi-
tivef ore* of 'King Kong7. The audience isrushed ialorig'with tlie hero, who keepsgoing as fast as possible to avoid being
castrated or Jobbtomized. You'd bettergo see it quick!y...it has theingenious kind of plotting that
people love to talk about.A very entertainingmovie,-]
f:"••'•.. *T/i«N»wVoffnr
DOORSOPEN. "7WA
DIAL884^2333FORSHOW
'TIME
: GATES;".OPEN:
:6i30:-". j _ .. •
WHINNER 5 ACADEMYAWARDS nINCLUDING
BEiS 'PICTURE -BEST ACTOR
WINNER 2 ACADEMYAWARDS
COLUMBU PICIflRES prtsenli aStapley Kramer "*
THE MIRiSCH CORPORATION pr is •
SIDNEY POmER RODSIHBER^-THE NORMAN JEWISON-WAITER MIRISCH PI DUCTION ;;.,t*IM W* * MP/imf flS ' ' v'llM li ft" Hnp'li Llr /--r—'111 ISIIL IlLlftB **«w )Wl SP* RRiS i IT" /> V ;IirrafoHT /• v,COLOR biOeLniB ««-*.uNmD«?nsTS [l
PLUS CO-FEATURE
"THE HUSSIAHS ARE COMINGTHE flUSSIAHS ARE COMING
vSpencef /• Sidney-TRACY ; • ! P01TIER :
• Katharine;; ;HERBURN ;guess who's
comingto dinner
•ndhlrwJucinj
Katharine Houghton
ACADEMY AWARD WINNERJOSEPH E LEV1NEPRESENJS-
MIKE NJCHOLSLAWRENCE TURMANPRODUCTION
THEGRADUATE
• STARRING
ANNE BANCROFT DUSTIN HOFFMAN • KATHARINE ROSSSCREENPLAY BY , „' SONGS BY
GALDER WILLINGHAM » BUCK HENRY PAUL SIMONPERFORMED BY • ' ' PRODUCED BY
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ALL SEATS 1.75.
iiimnm'nmiinnnnriiiilllllllllHIIIIIIIllltltltniin%WWWWVVVVVVVVifU^^^
^^
Winner .; of Tea..'AcademyAwards
IN70 mm.WiDESCREEN-STEREOPHONIC SOUND-MBTROCOLOR
RESERVED SEAT TICKETS NOW AT BOX-OFFICE OR BY MAIL_.™,
4700. BLK .I SOUTH •STAPIK;854-4843!
PREMIERS Tp-NPllli |!ORiii!!iiiifliminfiniiimiiiiiiniraii(iniW !;!.|. JOX-OFFICiE OPENS DMIXUPM, ' |
PA'RKtNGS S MAIL ORDERS TO P.O. BOX 657 CORPUS CHRIST! 1~s~v^ | ; ALL SEATS RESERVED , 1=
a 10 PERFORMANCES WEEKLY I
eux cineS EVENING 8PM FRIDAY & SATURDAY ........... 2.50 1| EVENING 8 PM SUNDAY thru THURSDAY „ 2.25= MATINEE 2 PMSATURDAT & SUNDAY .......... 2.00 I1 MATINEE2PMWEDNESDAY .......'. 1.50 |§ SORRY, NO PASSES
Corpus Christ! Caller-Times. Frl.. Jan. 1, 1971
Coastal Bend PreviewWhat's Happening in the Metropolitan Area This Weekend
| scum, 1919 N. Water; Munds'Special Events ; Hal), TOO S. Broadway, is featur-j Pieces"
CHARLIE PRIDE SHOW AM) inS ^torco'crs by Viva Caiahanj VIKING EAST _ ..pation"DANCE - Charlie Pride, coun-^-gh January. , _
toy and western anger, will be; g ^ , M
at Memorial Cohseum for a: * ishow and dance from 8:30 p.m.: fiOLF-The .Men's Club! THUNDERBIRD - "Beyondlto 1 a.m. Saturday. The show i.s.nwiltill.v Golf Center tournament-the Valley of the Dolls," "Thesponsored by KROB radio and u i l ' get under way at noon Sat-iOnly Game in Town" and The|general admission tickets priced. urcia.v- a;Ki entries will be ac-jFabuIous Kid From Chicago."at S3 are available at r!a\vson's:
cePtKl m^ 4 P-m. Friday. The
NATIONAL II — "Five Easy club at 1 p.m. Saturday followedby natural history at 2 p.m. anda treasure hunt at 3 p.m. Hours
And Always There'sMusic Land, Westwood Shopping; ^Te °f Play '•'•ill be four-manCenter, La/y 2 Saddle Shojvtram lota! scores with handi-Padre-Staples Mall and Howdy 's C'A^- Entry f(-e is §4 for mem- CORPUS CHRISTI MUSEUM]
; to ..< * to „,„ to, AjsKBtSS! S. SB' \FW \T\irS DANCE - The ' m e m b e r s andjinclude movies at 4 p.m. Satur-
.Gemmi and Aborigine Boys;^^™Clul« arc spooring a dance at . sund Entrjes dose gt
Memorial ul.seum on _l - r iday , a n d ,he fee is $2 {or membeR.trorr , 8 p.m. to 2 a m . with mu-and $4 for _ Entdes wi|,
sic by the Rondels of Larcdo.be accepted until noon Sunday!.and Sunny and The Sunlincrsjat Live Oak Country Club for!from San Antonio. Tickets may'1*16 monthly Scotch foursome.be purchased at Prescott Filar-'"'1110'1 w.'iu ^eg'n at 1 P-m- The
fflacy, Richard's Record S. a^Sand Luis Casarez Furniture. The1 plus gi'eens fee.first 500 tickets will sell for $2:; '
DRIVE - INNSCORPUS CHRISII-ROB5TOWN
ORDER OF2 CHALUPAS
55', ORDER OF
3 CHALUPAS
80<
are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday;Special group holiday tours maythrough Saturday and 2 to 5p.m. Sunday.
ART MUSEUM OF SOUTHTEXAS — The Art Museum willbe closed until Jan. 4.
CENTENNIAL HOUSE - One
he arranged by calling Mrs.Robert E. Haegelin. Admissionis 50 cents for adults and 25cents for students.
OLD TEXAS MUSEUM - OldjTexas Museum, 819 Ayers, has a jcollection of items from the Old'
of the oldest houses in Corpus West and is open from 9 a.m. toChristi, dating from the 1850s, is j 6 p.m. Monday through Satur-Centennial House, 411 N. Broad-way, which has been restoredand refurnished with antiques, cents for children.
day and 1 to 5:30 p.m. Sunday.Admission is $1 for adults and 50
. o t h e r , ,,„
Theater andArt Movies
jEdmburg, King plays at Flour! Bluff and Pharr-San Juan-Alamo|is at Ray. Saturday's 7:30 p.m.j games include Pharr-San Juan-iAlamo at Ray, Agua Dulce at
MOVIE—"Water Birds-Parts!Calallen, and San Diego at Cor-I and II" will he shown at. 4iPus Christi Academy.p.m. Saturday and Sunday a t jCorpus Christi Museum, 1919 N ! ,rWater. iVlovirs
CEMRE-"Rio Lobo"
UITZ - "There's a Girl in: .My Soup"
CINE I - "There Was a
CINE II — "Scrooge"«-rv,p
Can I B™ the
EXHIBITIONS-Recenl paint-;ings by Gunnar Anderson a n d jGeoffrey Lewis are being shown Iat the Foster Gallery-, 3815 S.Alameda, through Jan. 20;paintings by Dorothy Carey arejcrookcd Man"being featured for January atPhysicians & Surgeons Hospital,4626 Weber: Memorial MedicalCenter, 2609 Hospital, has a dis-ian (jplay of works by Bonnie Rope;^?during January; intaglois andisculpture by David Bumbeckj W 0 01) L AWN - "Gettingprofessor of printmaking, draw-i Straight"ing and design at Middleburyl x .T ,n VA r , ..Tnr:i] T .College in Vermont, will beUXAMO'vu J ~ lord! Tora;
shown through Jan. 10 at DosiPatos Gallery, 915 S. Tancahua:iJamin Gordon's work is being!featured through January a t -Deu:< Cine, 4701 S. Staples;" var-jious types of work by 11 of Tex-jas1 foremost artists are beingshown at Do.s Cruccs Gallery,;Gfl2 Furnian, through Jan. 4; a Ione-man show by Louis F. Ga.q-nicre is being presented at theAstor Restaurant, 5533 Leopard;Dick Turner is artist of themonth at Corpus Christi Mu-
GRAND OPENING
QUEEN^.isp.m. <tn?Sun. 1:00 'til?
"
1016 LEOPARD882-0511
THE HOTTEST"MOVIES IN TOWN(CALL FOR MOVIE TITLES)
_jrOOMim B£OVER 18
PLENTY [ OFF ~~ "FREE CAc OF REG. CAd
PARKING I DU PRICE 3U iIN REAR [ WITH COUPON I.
STUDIO III cMiKNOW SHOWING-
BIG DOUBLE PROGRAM
iIII
SUPER RED HOT
SPECIALS
Big Screen EntertainmentLadies and Couples Welcome
Super Midnight Show Sat.
FILMED IN REVEALING EASTMAN COLOR
TEXAS CINNE ARTS805 N. CHAPARRAL 882-O664
THEATRE I
THE HOTGUNS"
THEATRE 2
"BUTLER'SPASSION"
PIZZAS10- 12- 14 - 16 INCH
In Town"
ANGELO'S
Complete New Features Starts Every Wed.
SHOW TIMESMONDAY THRU WEDNESDAY 1O A.M. TO 12 P.M.
NEW YEARS SPECIALFRIDAY 2 P.M. TO 2 A.M,SATURDAY.... 10 A.M, TO 2 A.M.SUNDAY 1 P.M. TO 12 P.M.
FOR MEN ONLYYOU MUST BE OVER 18ALL SHOWS RATED X
the old year draws toa close, and a fresh. New Year
begins, let us wish you the happyfulfillment of all your hopes and dreams.
3741 S. Staples(at Weber)
Rockporf, Texas...
in the joyous remembrance ofthe nativity, we wish you everything good.
May our warm "feelings and greetings to yoube shared by all, that peace will prevail over the earth.
the staff andFamily of JOE LUCIANO
HAPPYNEW YEARS
ITALIAN RESTAURANT1618 South Staples « TU4-1832
ClosedNEW YEARS
DAY
^ ^ •••• ^ •••••••••••••••• • nM
New YearFrom
The Bine Bonnet RestaurantOpen \ew Year's Day
r. j ;, ie Detection »f tteliciouslu PreparedFoods" Orders Prepared to Take Out. ep°rc°
#82-6.972Open 24 Hours a
52.> So. Staples
Every Day
Sliding trips aboard the ves-sel Whooping Crane tour thesanctuaries of the whoopingaane and other wild life ono 4 hour cruise across Aran-SQS Bay past Bludworlh Is. tothe remote areas frequentedby the whooping c r a n e s .Sightings guaranteed.
And then en joy thefine food in ihe 5eoGun Restaurant....
All this for only$6.50 per person
teiai only line utorlnine mil« .norih of Sctk-poil on Hwy 35
TORCH 1RESTAURANT
ICLOSED NEW YEARS DAY ^
HolidaywhenYouDine Out
VILLAITALIANO
WISHES YOU
A HAPPY NEW WAR
JIM & ROBBIE STOWELLYOUR HOSTS
10714 S. Ttitt hhnd Dr. At Iht Ciliwoy TO PoJrf It.
Harry Porter, Mgr.
4425 S. Alameda 855-0352!
"run—TEXAS RESTAURANT ASSOCIATION
t4TfNCOUMS FUN
Moaooeooeeoq
MAMACITA'SWISHES EVERYONEHAPPY NEW YEARclosed New Year's Da/
4664 Kosforyt 813-3811
YEAR Eating
25 COUPON IThis coupon and 25C will •admit one to any of the —three theatres for the Caller- •Times Saturday morning •shows I
ADMISSION WITHOUT COUPON 50' |
THE
CAllER-lilYlES
SATURDAYMORNING
AT THESE
THEATRES
NATIONAL TWIN
TONYCUHTIS
AYERS30OO AYE85 884-7233
WOODLAWN• • ' 3700 LEOPARD ;.'/-.
:;.;^8M;:97fJI^v..
ia,au, COLOR-'A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
i ROBERT B. FJAONITZ PROOUCT1QM
THESE THREE NEWFEATURES STARTTHIS SATURDAY
MORNING.
Only 25' With Coupon!Admission to the theatre will be25c plus a 25c coupon clippedfrom the paper, or 50c withoutthe coupon! Parents are welcometo attend with their chil-dren. ..however, no adult (pastJunior High age) will be admittedunless accompanied by a child.
Doors open af 9:30 a.m.
Shows start 10:00 a.m..Each show lasts approximately
1 hr. 45 min.
COUPONThis coupon and 25C willadmit one to any of thethree theatres for the Caller-Times Saturday morningshows
AOMISSION WITHOUT COUPON 50*
w
III
Paul McCartney FilesSuit To Split Beatles
By ANTHONY LEWIS® New York Tlm«i Ntwt SsrviwLONDON - The Beatles,
collective folk heroes of the1960s, Thursday formally brokeapart.
Paul McCartney brought suitin the high court here to end thepartnership. He named as defen-dants the other members of thepop group: John L e n n o n,George Harrison and RingoStarr.
The writ claimed that theirrelationship as "The Beatles andCompany" should "be dis-solved." 11 asked for an ac-counting of assets and income,still thought to be running to $17million or so a year.
For many months there hasbeen talk of a final Beatle bust-up. The four have long sincegiven up personal appearancestogether.
Record Released
They did release a record"Let It Be," last May, and aimovie of the same name fol-lowed. But they have increasing-ly operated as individuals.
The legal conflict that beganThursday makes it unlikely thatthe Beatles will again performas an entity.
When the B e a t l e s firstemerged from Liverpool toworld fame, in 1963, they had
tongish hair and funny reunion the pop world, Ray Connolly."" "" " 'Hesaid then: "The Beatles'have
left the Beatles—but no onewants to say the party's over.
(John's in love with Yoko, andhe's no longer in love with thean interview in the magazineother three of us."
haircuts. Their faces and theirmanner had a winning innoc-ence that enhanced their freshmusical style.
Now all four have beards, andall have married. They have lostthe teen-age look—they are be-tween 28 and 30. They have beeninvolved in political protest,mysticism and business. • . j
Lennon Leaves
Lennon and McCartney wrotethe songs for the Beatles, butLennon has gone off on his ownroad in recent years with hisJapanese wife, Yoko Ono.
Early in 1970, McCartney wasinterviewed by a London expert!
Rolling Stone that McCartneywas to blame. He accused Paulof trying to "take over" afterthe death of their manager,Brian Epstein, in 1967.
Driving Force
Epstein was widely consideredthe genius who made the Beatlephenomenon possible, in termsof both publicity and finance. Athis death many predicted abreakup, and they turned out tobe right.
Last March, M c C a r t n e ybrought out a record album ofhis own, a symptom of changein the relationship. The others
Lennon, for his part, said in also have tried to stake them-
Corpus Christ! Caller-Times. Frl. -Tan. 1. 1071 9C,
selves out as independent per-sonalities.collaboration, Beatles records
In the seven years of theirare estimated to have sold more
made three movies—"HardDay's Night," "Help" and "LetIt De."
The four formed a company!called Apple to handle their af
TOWER THEATRE1647 S. AlAMiDA at SIX POINTS-Ph. 888-5418
than 250 million copies. They I fairs, but it had difficulties.
PETROLEUM CLUB PRESENTS MULTI-TALENTED
JIMMY WALLIS
Fifteen FinishFlight TrainingAt Chase Field
Fifteen officers received theirwings in ceremonies recently atChase Field in Beeville to cli-max their advanced flight train-ing.
They include Lts. (j.g.) Thom-as B. Ballou Jr., G. CurdtsGoodman, Hal W. pike, RobertE. Riera Jr., Robert B. Hitter;
G. Gary Maxwell, Robert L.Moeller Jr., Car! G. Newman,Jerry C. Price, Gordon T. Smi-ley, Robert A. Tolhurst Jr., AceL. Tubbs Jr.;
Rodney W, Freed, John K.Scott and Marine 1st Lt. Tom E.Leininger.
Traffic Accident CutBANGKOK W - Traffic acci-
dents last year were less thanhalf the 1969 total police report-ed.
Where areyour children?At home of course, becauseyou're serving crusty friedshrimp right off the boot.Shrimp 'n' Fries, 85', at
tOU TKAS-855-62714223 S. ALAMEDA-853-6261
(oao^ (fom Town A Country^
""FOR SWINGING ADULTS:;"NUMEROUNO"
O'pqrf 7 NighH riH .2 .A.M.
• Featuring IfiC, .: "Super Suiil'' 01
B. B. REYNOLDSGARY BECK
4116 S, Staple* 854-21*1Across from Porkdole
SPECIALfor your Cocktail Hour
from New York
Jim Dolanat ths Piano3-8 PM Dally
Part of theGOOD LIFE!
Motorola
Quasar
WU82123" (mess, diag.) Quasar IIColor TV. Early American stylecabinet crafted {torn bitchveneers and select hardwoodsolidi in brushed glaze maplefinish
Two Ttar RegisteredGuarantee OR Pictur«sTul»
and AR Purls
MARCOELECTRONICS
1628 MORGAN 883-0772
NEW YEAR'S DANCE9:30 Till
DOWN BEAT CLUB15O2'/i Ramirez-Corpus Christ!
RETURN By POPULAR DEMANDfrom Galveston, Texas
The SOUL MAKERSMake Reservations Early!
(AND FRIEND!)GALA
NEW YEAR'S EVECELEBRATION
BOYS CLUBAFFiUATE
DOS TREMENDAS PELICULAS TOD OS LOS DIAS <ADUITOS $1.50 NINOS 50
Doors Open 6: p.m. Weekdays. Sat., Sun., Holidays 12:45
JUIJSSA -. LA RiBELIONdeLASHIJAS
GULF THEATRE4044 SO. PORT
BUFFET FRIDAY NIGHT . . . . • • 'BALLROOM DANCING LESSONS (grotis) MONDAYS 6:30-7:30
$2.00 Per Car
__ _ _ _ — _ ,,_
g Ruiz Turneries & Tortilla Iyv ™
g Facfory-422 UTH ST.fj WISHES EVERYONE Ag HAPPY NEW YEARfi CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY
Phone 882-0848
I deux cine' I& UMITtD ARTISTS tHIATBC
TODAY'S FEATURES1:00 3:30 6:00 8:30
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mail...
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Ph. 854245!
Maura Monti •'
A COLORI
DRIVE IN 3O33 S. PORTTHEATRE 882-2395
$2.00 Per CorKGIHtTORNE M.». HLVlf.EZISEU YE6A JOHN URUDIIIE
IWINPALMSX 3 WILD UNITSALL FOR ADULTS
OPEN 6:30 START 7:00
This time... •*
presents
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KiwJfOlIO i— —— R4NWIW Color by 0
the Valley of the Dolls
CharleyPride
Memorial ColiseumJanuary 2, 1971
8:10 to 1:00
s Tickets *Available jrt the;
Following Location!
' . - • • • • « • ' . > . ^"^^V-svli:'••<: • • • • ' • ' , ,A^..5;.-v.'',%i-jVti .
• Clawson Music Land5* ' ' 'is4'' "' ' '• I £ i ' * l ' "* j ' -
• Padre Staples Mall• Laiy-2 Saddle Shop• Curiosity Shop-Robsltiwn
PLUS 2ND UNIT
BA.KER *ar scmThE SWEET
bodvofdEboRAh
PLUS 3RD UNIT
COLORME
DEADTWIN PALMS II
HI-WAT 44 884-12123 FEATURES2.00 PER CAR
ACTIONADVENTURE "WARKILL"
PLUS
THE DEADLIEST MAN ALIVE. ..TAKES ON A WHOLE ARMY!
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A UMITtD ARTISTS THEATRE
TODAY'S FEATURES AT1:003:005:007:009:00
ALBERT FtNNJEy"SCROOGE"
A NEW MUSICAL
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i THE FIRST OF THESHOCK ROCK!
This time...ttwy'v.
Beyond
ofiheDolls* *Ru« Meyer Production ALSO
* HAPPY NEW tl« *
3WtHOPI ONE OFYOUR KESOiUTiONSWill BE TO IFF US
EKTEETAm YOU REGUURlIII CAI HEATERS
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TODAY'S FEATURES AT1.-30 3-:25 5:15 7:109:00
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Gfef with the cats who know where it's at... for fun, music and adventure!
WALT DISNEY production-
EASTWOOD
TWO MULES FOB SISTER SARAA UNIVERSAL PICTURE: oi n«Haaa
BIGJOHN WAYNE
•AND-iff
ffilM3512 "TP PHONE
vS.STAPLES | 854-1987
Now For The 1st Time At Popular Prices!
The incredible attack on Pearl Harboras told from both the U.S. & Japanese Sides! I
PWWION* Color by DElHXt*
2:00, 5:00, 8:00 Thru Sun.
Adults 2.00, Children (thru 11) 75'NO PASSES PLEASE
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JOSfPHCOnfNas'HenryLSIimsor!-t.6.1WRSHAllas"llCo!.Bratlon*
' JASON ROBARDSaslcml Short"
TECHNICOLOR®
A PURR-rECTLYWONDERFUL NEW
CARTOON FEATURE
WALT DISNEY—.
TECHNICOLOR THE CM?
This is not a sequei-¥ there has ne«r been anything like it
ALSO
*» GEORGE SIMS.FREOKOHlMAflMU:i,;Th& Omly Gam® let Ibwra
NATIONAL CtNfRALS
NATIONAL TWIN3512 •
,.S.STAPIES1 PHONE
854-1987 "If you see nothing else this year, youmust see "Five Easy Pieces."
TRIPLE AWARD WINNER... Richard Schickel, LIFENEW YORK FILM CRITICS ^~
• BEST PICTURE OF 19/0! /Official Selection• BEST DIRECTOR (BOB RAFELSON) f F
• BEST SUP. ACTRESS (KAREN BLACK) & ,ilm Festival «1970 ^AF
COLUMBIA PICTURES Pr»s»ntt a BfiS Production
JACK NICHOLSON
F1VK EUSS PIECES5:15, 7i15•M ft!5
KAREN BLACK
! II lM|iirMCOLOW
FEATURES AT-liOO 3:20 5:45 8:10
"ElllOTT GOULD IS PERFECTION IN HISEMBODIMENT OF THEANTI-HERO!"-^,,,, <»,ST.MWYO..M««,M -,
ELLIOTT CANDICEGOULD -BERGEfyU
GETT/ .Sj$*!GHI
Thank YouFor YourPatronage.
\\ May You and Your FamilyHave a wonderful New Year.Remember that Movies are stillthe best when seen on theGiant Theatre Screen so relaxand join us.
TODAY'S FEATURES AT1:003:005:05 7:109:15
GATES OPEN 6:15SHOW STARTS AT 7:00
(JWHIMC. KARLSCtm / MALIHvN
GATES. OPEN 6:15SHOW STARTS AT 7=00
STANLEY KRAMERpresents
"IT'S A MAD
SPENCER TRACY MICKEY MONEY
MAD, MAD,MAD WORLD
GIVE'EM HELL,
JOHN!
JOHNA Howard Hawks Production
"RIO LOBOTODAY'S FEATURES
1:00 3:00 5-S07.-.QO 9:00
M'mm fcfmm Good!
PETER SELLERSGOLDIE HAWN
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