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Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, the Evening News du lieu suivant : Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania • 18

Lieu:
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
Date de parution:
Page:
18
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Telephone Tonr Want ass to 2-2121 TIMES-LEADER, THE EVENING NEWS, WILKES-BARRE, PA WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 11, 1942 IS On Capitol Screen Friday PRODUCTION With Winchell SSbSsS 17 0 i.rc than 101,500 KUled so. tha illllDDSWAl IB1AP cost Miii 3 Ann 1 The Battle of, Production REQUIRES That You BE CAREFUL at Work! DOH'T TAKE aTo the II I -esti- has vv7 ii dut! tfl abled u. a. i-- -12-Month Period Errol Flynn, cast as James J. Corbett, accepts the heavyweight championship belt from Ward Bond, playing the role of John L.

Sullivan, in a dramatic moment from the Warner picture, "Gentleman Jim." The picture starts Friday at the Capitol Theatre. March jlX Urtf i their orted today that TirnriS' 5. In 1941 nu r. aiwi from man oermanenii7 others. aDi?" cam from CHAIICES! SSaiaBaaaMSaasaasaaaaBasaBSsaaaaBaaamSi jnSUnEJOURSELF lOlV AGAII1ST ALL ACCIDENTS! nior.

ttr lose teneineu .,1. 11 iV. vw to new tecldenti In; ytg In eM)t. ana TtA Rooseveu ae Naturaiu. f0 Uhn work.

Industrial fogged I of Tha lncreaso Mh my crease. Ths and iuneru ViUed toother tlnu.4. war. I death am el mu Four Policyholders in Wyoming Valley Met Accidental Death WHILE AT WORK, From February 7th To April 13, 1942. I I Per Year .50 BE PROTECTED AGAINST ACCIDENTS at WORK 7 oat HOME or during TRAVEL The New York Scene Faees About Town: The Stu Er-wins (June Collyer) and their images promenading along Central Park soutn in weir oauuam Mr.

and Mrs. Maxim Litvinov of Moscow, dining on roast duck at land's. Hepburn in the 1-2-3 looking rahlly glamorous Hildegarde, the Eyeful Tower, exiting from the Mona Elissa Landi and her intoxicating smile at Comm. of Licenses Moss (he goes Margie Harfs publicity) at Madison and Greta Garbo, circling the Reservoir alone Vice President Henry Wallace subwaying, because cabs were scarce in the big rain Sherwood of the White House staff, relaxing at the Ruban Bleu under Maxine Sullivan's magic. shy lad at the Stork wondering if he could request "Cheer, Cheer for Notre Dame." Don Miller, one of the 4 Adolphe Menjou relating how most Washington xecs welcomed him "but the Los Angeles 1 A LITTLE THEATHE 1 PEODUCTIOJI i PIAYUTO 1 TONITE "Hsari Of A City" Act Flay liy leiley Storm Bireoted By WALTEE YOUNO WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11th Curtain 8:30 P.

M. Reserved Seats On Sale At Box Office Irem Temple Auditorium 55c 85c JUO Tax Included Servicemen Admitted Free Cents Celebrate Armistice Day With Us! AMERICAN SAW AND BTJTHLBSI "SIN TOWN" with Fatrio Xaowles-Brod Crawford Connie Bennett KINGSTON TOOT BALL THBlLLS "Spirit of Stanford" with IranMe Albert Matt WiUis Margrurite Chapman FARSOIMS SEATS 380 "GIRL TROUBLE" with Son Ameche Joan Bennett Added BATTLB OF MIDWAY STERLING "POWDER TOWN" with Tic McLaglen June Havoc Edmund O'Brien LUZEI1NE "MAYOR OF 44th ST." with OEOBQE MUBPBT and AHHB SH2BLEY LIBERTY m. A DOUBLE LAUGH BIOT "JOAN OF OZARK" with Joe X. Brown tidy Canova It ART Today SHAWNEE Thursday They Blak Their Uvea to Test Onr Weapons of War PAT O'BRIEN "FLIGHT LIEUTENANT" GLENN FORD EVELYN KEYES ENN Ends Tonite "GLASS Top Ranking Acts From The Poland's Premier Dancers "Tha Rcssiliancs" In their own spectacular creations of their native dance featuring the "Polka" and "Mazurka." 7 iVOO rl AJJLL L.2 VwU P3355. ii 1 i II I I I i i i i I OF RESINS IS SPipiJP Scientists Pierce German Secret for Continuous Flow of Strategically-Important Pine Gums Olustee, Nov.

A revolutionary process for drastically increasing production of extremely war-important "naval stores" is no longer a German feecret but is working for Uncle Sam, thanks to the success of U. S. Forest Service scientists here in cracking the riddle. "Naval stores" is the commercial terms for tar, pitch, turpentine and other products from resinous pine trees. Their war uses are many.

Rosin is used in the waterproofing of tent fabrics, in making bulletproof glass for bomber-plane noses, as a substitute for fats in soap, as a skin disease preventative, as a binder in shrapnel, as bedding for shipment of live shells, as a substitute for arsenates, as insulation in ship construction and in smokescreens used by the Navy, to list just a few. The Army uses turpentine byproduct to top-dress concrete roads. Another by-product is" a source of synthetic rubber and turpentine itself goes into the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, paints and varnishes, besides having scores of other everyday uses. Set Production Eecord Another index to the importance of naval stores is this: by a mighty effort throughout the 100-mile-wide coastal belt of slash and long leaf pine country stretching from the Mississippi well into South Carolina, 1941's production of 285,000 units will be packed up to an estimated 325,000 units this year. Yet Secretary of Agricultural Claude Wickard has asked that, despite the increasing labor shortage, 340,000 units be produced in 1943.

That's a lot of naval stores, for a unit is one 50-gallon barrel of turpentine and 3 1-3 barrels of rosin at 500 pounds to the barrel. But it looks as if Secretary Wick-ard's prayer may be answered as a result of the U. S. Forest Service's new process for stimulating the flow of resinous gums by as much as 55 per cent above normal, Naval stores are obtained by distilling the trees' natural eum. which flows from the wounds or "streaks" into containers.

In the still the pine gum vapor condenses into water and turpentine. The turpentine floats on top of the water and is drained off. The gum residue in the still Is rosin, which is strained through two layers of wire and one of cotton batting laid on firie wire. While molten it is ladeled into barrels, where it solidifies. Credit for this country's progress in the field of chemical stimulation largely goes to Michiean-born T.

A. Liefeld quiet-spoken Forest Service siivicuitunst. News of the German discovery reached this country in 1937, and he has worked in this field almost exclusively since then. He has spent 10 of his 11 years in the service in the Olustee Experimental Forest. Last year Liefeld and his asso ciates R.

A. Chapman, A. G. Snow, and R. P.

True found that a 40 per cent sulphuric acid solution applied to fresh "streaks" chipped in the "faces" of gum-producing slash pine stimulated the gum flow by 55 per cent. A half a thimbleful of this solution, sprayed or brushed on, turns the trick. But the 40 per cent solution did next to nothing in stimulating the gum flow from long leaf pine. was only this year, after expert-menting with 75 or 80 chemicals that the in forest green" achieved success with this species, finding that a 60 per cent sulphuric acid solution worked like magic. They also found that a 25 per cent solution of sodium hydroxide (lye or caustic, soda) stimulated long leaf even more ana actea ravorably on slash.

Seek Single Stimulant Their new problem is a labor-saving one. Since slash and long leaf are intermingled throughout the turpentine country, it would save many hours of precious labor if one solution could be used to stimulate both. Liefeld thinks now that the Forestry Service will recommend the use of a 25 per cent sodium hydroxide solution for weekly chipping, and a 40 per cent sulphuric acid treatment for use with bi-weekly chipping. For oddly enough, an analysis of records has shown that the 40 per cent sulphuric acid solution first used successfully on weekly-chipped slash works well on bi-weekly chipped long leaf. The solution really does the business the second week after application.

In the area surrounding Olustee, 19 large operators this year cooperated with the Forest Service in using 40 per cent sulphuric acid solution on slash pine. With two exceptions, the increase in gum was marked. One operator had a 60 per cent increase in the first half of the current season. Tree expert Liefeld and his associates now beli PVP that wriK full cooperation of naval stores operators, chemical stimulation of long leaf and slash pines will practically double the present production with normal labor, or maintain a better-tnan-average production with one-half the labor now available. Religious School Elects Directors Directors of thp hri IbMa t.

meeting of Ohav Zedek Religious School were: Max Rosenn, Edward G. Berk. Mrtrric rtrfmnnrM Horowitz, Nathan Klein, Dr. Harry i.yuns, Mrs. Meyer Felsher, Mrs.

Herman Sternlieb, Myer Mittelman. Mrs. Isadora trnn. Iskowitz, Mrs. Joseph Sandler, Ar-nun Robinson, Leo Bergsmann, Max Lenovitz.

Ex-ofTicio members: Isaac Engel, Mrs. Alfred M. Friedman; honorary, Rabbi I. M. Davidson.

Chile is financing exploration work In an effort to find a local source of petroleum to alleviate snonage, the Department of Com merce reports. ni nr rnrr i- LULU 3 LAU3C I SORE THROAT nnnnn ir in is Country Club bars Fong bowing to George Ching Nathan. Sallies In Our Alley: Sue Kyan, the clown, sums up tne dilemma in Hollywood over the $25,000 limit. "Conversation will be a lost art out there when movie people have to swd Dragging about their salaries: Willie Shore and a pal were idling it. T.

.1 ill ironi oi uie nuii-iceiiie wucn iwu gals in pigtails strolled "Hmmm," hmmmm'd Willie, "prob' ly on their way to court" Memos of a Midniehter: The Shu berts, and not Vinton Freedley, will do The Ziegfeld "Follies aeam. John Murray Anaerson pro duction, Bob Alton staging. the Macomba (Hollywood) bunaay night, Publisher Wm. Wilkerson sat near three of his Gracie Allen finds it tough panning her kin (in her radio scripts) since five are in the armed forces Jones, the model, has a dog named Misty (also a model) which makes more money than she The Jose Fernandez (Kathleen Burke, the former "Panther are having Re- Evie Roberts says everything is honky-dooly and that the rumors are stale and It was Ham Fish's 13th campaign an unlucky one for many people. Joe E.

Lewis whose new songs at the Copa are his best yet says he will enlist after his Chez Paree date in Chcago. He's been reclassified In 3 A. New York Novelette: This is how the wife of a local mag exec got a Ifull-length ermine coat her hus-jband didn't want to go He gifted her with a jacket-size, in-! Recently, she persuaded him to throw a party at a midtown place and to include among the guests a- pal who had just been Presented with an ermine full When the owner of it got ud to dance the wife Dressed a lighted cigarette against it (on the iback of the chair) and burned a hole through Of course, there was a scene when the owner dis covered the damage threatening a lawsuit, etc. husband settled matters by buying it the wife had it reDaired and now everyone is Including the people he's fouled. Broadway Smalltalk: They now hear that Ed Flynn's diplomatic post will be New Zealand Mike Jacobs, who was cured of backing shows (when he lost a bundle on a Bea Lillie flop), may angel one for M.

Todd Mel Allen, the sportsman, is in 1A Up to Oct. 1st, according to a survey, Drey Pearson's predictions were 81 p. c. correct Miami Beach's Lord Tarleton is now in the Army, too The Harry Rogues of "Count Me In" (Ruth Merman, a chorine) are three at Manhattan General Hosp Tom Brown and Lynn Merrick, who were planning to blend last week, have cancelled The Whole Thing Z.OOZ! LOOK! LOOK! Surprise Package Bight TONIGHT Lew Boy Boiler Palace ARMORY 10 PRIZES Skating Thursday Bit lut Two Dayt PAT O'BRIEN JANE WYATT I friday mew -'jr pxory ox Corbett I GEHTLEHiin 1 nr? ERROL FLYNN ALEXIS SMITH Added Dover Boys Cartoon KEY" Brian Donlevy-Alan Laud Nations Leading Theatres JOliFI FEEfiEY Singing Your Favorite Hit Tunes of Today and Yesterday The Four STYLISTS Radio and Recording Stars An Instrumental Ensemble That Will Play Your Bequest Tunes "1 A. mm mm 1 V-S 4 With the increased tempd of war and production the danger of accidents also increase.

All forms of work and travel become more hazardous. One fall even in your home can lay you up for weeks one accident in your car may prove fatal. Insurance at a time like this so easy to get now will be a great help to you and your family later. ALL WORLD IS STUDIO FOR ARMY RADIO Pickups From Combat Areas Used in Unique Weekly Broadcast Pro grams New York, Nov. 10 Six hardy goslav guerrilla flghters members of the famed "Chetniks" will take part in "The Army Hour," the War De partment's unique Sunday afternoon military radio program early next montn.

That they will not broadcast from a secret mountain hideaway In their native land is due more to the fact of their presence this country than to the difficulty such an overseas hook-up might present to the Army Hour engineers. For arranging just such cuincuit ana dangerous trans missions is the unprecedented job Deing done Dy these tecnmcians. Building Yugoslav Squadron The Chetniks are busy in Arizona organizing the first Yugoslav Squadron to fight with' American forces overseas. They are all veterans of the guerrilla warfare that has run the Italians in Yugoslavia ragged and has been such a thorn in the side of the vaunted German army of occupa tion. Two or them escaped to this country from Nazi prison camps.

A feature of their broadcast will be participation by their exiled ruler, young King Feter, who will speak from abroad. The Army Hour has become a world-wide show from the war fronts to the home front, having for its "studios" the war's combat sectors and American training centers. Many of the pickups are military secrets until they are actually on the air. Bringing in voices from odd corners of the world, sometimes from enemy-held territory, often requires the utmost ingenuity of radio technicians. It takes over 50 engineers, announcers and production men throughout the world to put the show on the air, as there are usually from 6 to 10 hookup noints involved No advance announcement can be made of the overseas points involved, to prevent the bombing of those places and jamming by Axis stations while they're on the air.

British Station Jammed Them Once it was arranged to have a Russian general speak from an airport near Moscow. The preliminary tests were fine. The afternoon of the broadcast there was a great deal of interference from an unknown station, making reception almost im possible. The interf erence was finally traced to a friendly British station, which didn't know it was interrupting the important pick-up. On one of the programs a pick-up was scheduled from an airport near Newfoundland.

When the engineers arrived there they found a single telephone line running out of the place and this was on the ground for a distance of three miles. Hasty technical adjustments were made and the program was short-waved part of the distance from the pick-up point to St John's, Newfoundland. It was then re-transmitted to Mon treal, from where it was sent over landlines to New York. The "Army Hour" has had the only broadcast during the war Xrom Curacao in the Netherlands West Indies. An RCA engineer happened to hear an unknown short wave station operating at that point.

He advised the War Department, which contacted the "ham" operator and 10 days later had a program on the air from Curacao. Heard in U. S. The "Day Before" Engineers in United Nations countries have been very co-operative in setting up these broadcasts. When General Wavell spoke from New Delhi, India, a few weeks ago, he was heard in America on Sunday afternoon at 4 p.

although he was speaking at 1 a. m. Monday in India. General Chiang Kai-Shek spoke from Chungking at 8 a. m.

Monday morning when he was heard here Sunday afternoon. General Emmons faced the "Army Hour" mike in Honolulu on Sunday morning at 10 a. m. for the afternoon broadcast. The Army's history-making program was developed by the radio section of the War Department, headed by Lieut.

Col. E. M. Kirby. The direction of the program is in the hands of Wylis Cooper, well-known radio script writer; Lathrop Mack, of the NBC special events department, and Jack Joy, orchestra leader and coordinator of the show in Washington.

A 90mile stretch of the Chile-Ar gentina rail link being constructed will require 30 bridges, 20 tunnels ana 15 trestles or viaducts, the Department of Commerce reports. Brenda -Will You Step Out With He Tonight? 1 know I've been an awful sronch not tak Ins you any place lately. But after atandingg all day at toy new job, my feet darn near killed me with callouaea and burning. Now I've reformed or rather my feat have thanks to the Ice-Mint yon advised. Never tried anything that seemed to draw the pain and fire right out bo fait and the way it helps soften callouaea ia nobody's buaineaal Been able to set some extra overtime money ao what do yon aay, let'a so dancing tonight.

You can step on my Ice, Hint feet all you want. ter Pidgeon, never in the money, enjoyed three big hits in a row: Blossoms in the Dust," "How Green, etc." and "Mrs. Miniver." He could demand $150,000 a film but not since The Big Freeze The Henry Fords, III, are imaging Burnu Aqua-netta, despite all the controversy about her, will have the last laugh. Universal will star her Broadway hears that Willie Bioff, the labor racketeer, is in charge of a road building group in Arizona Of all things! The paw nails on the mink hat of Mrs. Quentin Reynolds (Virginia Peine) are rouged! The Big Time: Harry Bruno's book, "Wings Over America," especially the chapter on Lindbergh Boy Grew Older" Fred Waring's excellent short-short on the Anthem The scor of the forthcoming music-drama, "Stove Pipe Hat" particularly beautiful being "Mother's Prayer." It's the life of Lincoln Hemingway's "Men at War" he-man stuff That thrilling picture about and with Capt.

Wheless at the Music Hall The Gordon-Warren score of "Springtime in the Rockies" The lovely likeness of Hotty Lamarr nthe front of Pic Chicken a la Brazilian at the Copacabana. East Side, West Side: The eye-filling Chrysler window (of machinery) at 42nd and Lexington The empty corner store at 47th and 7th signifying the passing of Slop-ny Joe's The doorman of a big Broadway night club. You'd never suspect from his smile he once owned one as big The dignified, silver-haired delivery "boy" in that midtown food market. He wears pince-nez specs and looks like a bank prez The 'florist at 52nd and Lexington, who specializes In 4-leaf clovers. For your laDel The chestnut vendor at 57th and Madison, whose cart sign reads: "My product is the nuts!" Sign in a ghetto delicatessen: "A Ginz-burg Pickle Gives You More for a Nickel" The tiny luncheonette on downtown 5th which has a neat name: "Snacks, Fifth Avenue." Times Sq.

Ticker: The gendarmes are looking for a foursome (a man and three gals) who are pulling the old badger racket on married sinners. They "work" the midtown bars The FBI has picked ud an army man, accused of forgery, with night soots being his targets Cantu, the magician at Leon Eddie's, got $125 per. Following the naragraoh in the colvum recently, his bookings piled up for 6 months at $500 per in most Ruth Waterbury is now editor of the newest fan mag Movieland" Paul Stewart, of the Chicago Sun, has joined the Army Capt. Herschel Williams, who co'auth'd "Janie," and Linda Watkins of that show are merger-bound Ed-wina Seaver, of the Balanchine Ballet, is being studied by the talent-discoverers There are 55 Hollywood "names," of which 24 are on the list. The others are "Bs" George M.

Cohan's funeral attracted almost 10,000 admirers He rarelv went to a funeral, including pal Sam H. Harris'. Said funerals depressed him. Broadway Wiseguy: $25,000 a year will still buy a lotta ham. La.t Timet Today tie Till P.

K. Kay Kvser and His Band In "My Favorite Spy" 7oe Won't Shut Hia Trap Till A Whole Spy 'Ring It In It THE a YcuisgMan JOEE. rs Kl 1UU MvfMrKt CHAPMAHWifflain WRtGHTj COHERFORD In Observance of ARMISTICE BAY Box Office Opens At 11:30 A. M. Jnhn Viiviia Carmen Miranda -if aarry James and Hia Orrh.

FKISAT DAVIS In "Now, Voyager" with Paul Eenreid A S3 I YOU CM GET THIS INSURANCE AS LOW AS $11 cLL Our Washington National all coverage policy pro vides indemnities for practically every form of, accident while at work, at play, in the home, outdoors and when traveling. This all-protection policy covers you for an investment of only a FEW CENTS A WEEK. TOMORROW, FRIDAY, SATURDAY jl i ir-usssssi TIMES LEADER THE EVENING NEWS you do not receive your policy within 4 days after paying for it, kindly notify the Wilkes-Barre office of Times-Leader Evening News. A representative will call at once to examine your receipt and correct any errors. EDISON AND LOUISE Matchless Moments of Merriment and Music INFORMATION COUPON HUGH JONES, Resident Agent, Washington National Insurance Co.

Times-Leader Evening News Wilkes-Barre. Pa, fieaae rurnlsh me with Information on the 8pedai Coverage Accident Policy available to subscribers ot the Times-Leader Evening- News by the Washington National Insurance Co. 1 am now 1 want to become A subscriber to Times-Leader Evening News. FULL NAM! STREET ADDRESS CITY STATE DON'T DELAY! Send In Coupon Get Low Cost Protection A Dynamic Entertainer I SAr.ir.lY WHITE The Dancing Comedian Star f) et Screen and Stage Vertlon of "Show Boat".

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À propos de la collection Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, the Evening News

Pages disponibles:
553 876
Années disponibles:
1884-1972