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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 34

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
34
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OAKLAND TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1942 Tehachapi Has New System Prison for Women In Mountains Has Proven Successful of a metropolitan receptionist. ALL BUSINESS-LIKE By GLADWIN HILL TEHACHAPI, April (P). -You drive into a green Valley, amid the snow Tehachapi Mountains, where big herds of sheep graze on the rocky hillsides, and nestled in the foothills you come upon what looks like a sumptuous private estate. There are a dozen trim Tudor buildings, grouped on a level expanse of green lawns, with young shade trees, neat walks and luxuriant flower beds, the whole enclosed by a 10-foot wire fence. Inside the gate the first! figure you see, hosing a flower bed, is boots, a young woman in short rubber blue slacks, a yellow sweater and pink-flowered sunbonnet, must- looking like a figure out of a gay cal comedy.

In the main building, a trim, wellspoken girl at a switchboard takes your name and relays the message with the cordiality and efficiency You walk on out into the Women move with business-like pace among the buildings, or the lawn, smoking cigarets, talking, laughing. are personable, intelligent, amiable, The fortyish woman blue slacks and white shirt, with bandanna around her blond about the State University tension course she is taking poultry raising. long, The dark, girl in bobbed red sweater, with hair, about the trouble. she is ting getting piano arrangements some You'd never song knew that the current hits. woman hosing the flower bed the had girl dealt at narcotics.

That switchboard the women around the buildhad shot her lover. That Ings were re prisoners. That institution WAS women, California's a place De for the detention penal for, thieves, prostitutes, murderesses. Perhaps is that there are no thieves, the reason it does so murderesses at Teseem hachapi. prostitutes, You can comb the official files in vain for record of any.

TREATED DIFFERENTLY women who have There are who stolen, have who murdered. But Tehachapi have been prostitutes, is run on the principle that because they have law, that does not put them happened to transgress some apart; they are still fundamentally human beings; and you In a race stand a better chance of track getting by them back on the right treating them accentuating like regular their differ- people than by ences. No inmate crime or her sentence, and at Tehachapi is tagged with her they are not identified as a group by a standardized uniform. to TeWhen a woman comes choice of hachapi, of cloth prints, from which she given her have two week-day cosselection and a Sunday dress in the can tumes any They live in four dormitory style she wants. buildings, very much like a dining girls' school, each with its own They room and recreation room.

locked at sleep in small rooms to room, night- one or two girls a windows. allowed to decorate their with pleasant casement they like, and of They are curtains, ruffled dressing rooms AS desks improved out of their make ensembles that tables and look like professional decorating packing cases jobs. WORK FROM 8 TO 4 They have work breakfast from 8 to 4 with at 7:15 every an morning hour and and a half out for lunch. Their main projects are a sizeable poultry, dairy and where truck farm make and their a sewing shop, also American they flags for State agencies. In the evening they clothes and have first aid classes card and parties Red Cross groups, dormitory and weekly dances.

There anywhere are now from a year to life 172 inmates servwith good behavior can be Ing (which under State law, to as litreduced, in tie age as from seven 17 to one woman 79, years). They range who could get out but has no taking place to go, and spends her time care of Tehachapi a is not unique, radical large family of cats. or merely experimental. There are several other women's prisons run on similar principles, which seem to have proved themselves definitely superior to the ancient tem of treating inmates like pariahs and trying to scare them into compliance with a standard of conduct instead of familiarizing them with Its advantages. Tehachapi, although controversies have raged in the past about its administration, seems to be working out satisfactorily.

ARMY PLANS RITES FOR SHELL VICTIMS NAPA. April services with military honors will be held for the six soldiers killed Friday in the premature explosion of a trench mortar shell during a training maneuver near La Mesa, San Diego County, The services will be held in the home communities of the deceased. The Army announced that the bodies of two of the victims, Sgt. Chauncey H. Orr and Pvt.

Wayne A. Haeck1, both of Napa, would be sent here today. The body of Corp. Lloyd K. Johnson will be taken to Vallejo.

Arrangements for the Haeckl rites are pending the definite word from the Army, according to the Treadway Funeral Chapel. Sixteen other members of four gun crews were wounded in the accident. To Show Picture WARN SPRINGS, April -A free motion picture show will be given at the Warm Springs Grammar School tomorrow at 12:30 o'clock as a part of the public schools' week program. Principal L. B.

Maffey has invited friends the school to attend. PLAN HOSPITALITY BENEFIT Mrs. Marie Wallman, Oakland, singer, chats with (left to right) Sailors Gerald Gill, Eli Crosk, Bob Crowden and Dale Friend (seated), preparatory to the concert she will give Monday evening to raise funds for the Oakland Hospitality House. Her recital will start at 8:30 p.m. Monday at the Oakland Hotel.

Mrs. Wallman is chairman of the Hospitality House entertainment committee. Tribune photo. Women Will Be Trained for Positions in U.S. Air Industry COLUMBIA, April -(P) A one-year college course to train young women for positions in the commercial air industry will be offered next Fall by Stephens College with the sponsorship of 11 major airlines.

President James M. Wood said today it was the first such course to be included in American college curricula. Students will be instructed in Rotary Closes District Meet California and Nevada Delegates Complete First Joint Session Rotarians of Northern California and Nevada returned to their home towns today enthusiastic over the success of the first joint district conference of districts 104 and 105 held in this area. Final reports of conference committees submitted at the closing session yesterday at the City Club showed that 1708 Rotarians registered at the conference. Featured on the closing program was an address by Nat J.

L. Pieper, special agent in charge of the San Francisco office of the F.B.I. Another speaker yesterday was J. Carthell Robbins, director of Rotary International, in his second appearance before the conference. District Governor Roy N.

Dreiman, of District 104, presented awards to several clubs in this area. The attendance award went to the Garberville Club, and won the award for best increase in attendance. The award for outstanding community service went to the Santa Rosa Club, and Eureka won the prize for best attendance at the convention. In District 105, Governor Paul Claiborne presented the award for best attendance to Corning Club, and the community service award to the Reno Club, for its promotion of a local safety council, which produced a no accident record in its community. Newly elected Governors Frank J.

Brannan, of District 104, and Rilea W. Doe, of 105, were inducted into office yesterday, and the convention closed with a memorial service. Aged Man Buried ANTIOCH, April services were held in Livermore today for Manuel Garcia, 70, of Byron, who died at Antioch Hospital Monday night after a brief illness. He is survived by his widow and five children, residing at Livermore. HERE IS EXPLANATION OF U.S.

ORDER FOR PRICE CEILING ON WHAT WE EAT, WEAR, USE WASHINGTON, April (P) 1 The Government has put price ceilings, effective May 18, on Just about everything Americans eat, wear and use. Following is an official explanation of the order, presented in question and answer form: Q-Why was the general maximum price regulation issued? A- The regulation is a war measure issued to stop further increases in the cost of living and in other prices. Q-Why have prices, been rising? -Fighting requires and turns thousands of plants from huge expenditures for a armaments producing civilian goods to producing war goods. This results in increased wage payments but smaller production of civilian goods. Thus, demand is rising while supply is declining.

The result is higher prices. RANGE OF CONTROL What prices are covered by the regulation? A--Nearly all prices charged by wholesalers, manufacturers, and producers of raw materials. The only important cost-ofexclusions are certain food producthat are the ceiling prices? A--In general, the highest charged during March, 1942, by each individual seller. -When does the ceiling become effective? A-(1) For goods sold retail, the ceilings apply on May 18, 1942. (2) For services at retail, that is, rendered the ultimate consumer, the ceiling applies on July 1, 1942.

(3)-For sales by manufacturers, producers and wholesalers, and services rendered to an industrial consumer, the ceiling applies on May 11, 1942. PRICES MAY VARY Will the ceiling prices be the same at every store for the same article? A -No. In general, the ceiling is the highest at which each store sold an article during March. The maximum price will vary from store to store just as prices varied from store to store during March. Q- Can prices lower the ceiling be, charged? A--Yes, they can go as low as the seller wishes.

But they cannot go one cent above the ceiling. Remember, that the purpose of this action is to stop the rise in prices. Q- What action has been taken regarding rents? A- has designated 323 groups of communities as "defense-rental areas" and has taken the first steps to check the rise in housing rents in these areas. LISTS TO BE PUBLIC Q-How will the housewife know what the maximum prices are? A- The regulation lists about 100 of the most important groups of items in the average family's cost of living. The maximum prices of these items must be displayed by any retailer selling them after May 18.

What about prices of goods that are not on the cost-of-living list? A- -Until July 1, the housewife should ask the storekeeper for his maximum prices. After July 1, the retailer must have a prepared statement of the highest prices for all commodities or services, which he delivered or supplied during March. This may be examined by anyone on request. Q-What Should the housewife do if she believes that she is required to pay more than a storekeeper's maximum? A- She should ask the store- Making the Rounds El Cerrito's perennial success story of night life, the Kona Club, is going to town with a floor show headed by the 4 Aces, clever colored musical quartet. Flora Drake does a nice bit of vocalizing and Mary Landa continues to be nature's gift to the Hula.

Six Rayburn nitties see that the show is well rounded out in the right places. Joe Delano's bright, spot out in Hayward is featuring Betty Daniels, a honey, of a dancer. Joe has been doing a good job of picking talent for his customers, and manages to draw and please -a crowd that grows each week. Delano's puts on a show every night except Mondays. Oakland is proving a fertile field for the smaller, more intimate clubs, like Lou Wallace's 2101.

Perhaps the neighborly, easy going sort of atmosphere, plus really good entertainment, is what these hectic times call for in the way of relaxation. Remember the Saddle Rock, Tim Dorgan's, Hanrahan's landmarks of the old pre- prohibition days. If so, you should George James, bartender of the Half-Moon Cafe. He worked 'em all and a lot more besides. Forty-two years behind the polished plank- there's a record.

One of country's top acts turns to the New Shanghai Terrace Bowl, the Fong Wan All-Chinese Acrobatic Group. They bring a new routine to head a typical Terrace Bowl show. And that means as good as there Louis Cafe offers new show, the livliest and gayest pair of old headlining Pa and Mat O'Hagan, folks in show business. Gay 90 songs and Gay 90 nonsense, done with amazing pep and an appealing humor. A BIT OF DIS-A AND DATA "Mac" Harris, leading the Claremont Hotel orchestra, winds up the middle of next month to enter the Army, Howard Becker, original leader, is already in the service Moll Ryer, songstress at Billy Knox' Theater Club, composes most of the songs she sings.

Some 30 compositions already carry her name on the title page Reg Henno of the El Patio just recently married Joan French, one of the BILLY KNOX Greets You! CENTURY CLUB 125 East 12th Street It's A Great THEATRE CLUB 31st Ave. East 14th St. Featuring Johnny David 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. The Latest Sound Movies FREE With "Kip" prettiest of the all pretty Rayburn Dancers.

He works days on this side of the Bridge and she dances nights on the other side. Looks like "Never the twain shall meet" stuff Craby Joe's Big Barn got its name on account of they used to sell fresh cooked crabs there, way back when. Joe Balagno has built it into one. of the truly' unique places entertainment on the Coast Budd MacDonald, baton wielder at the Lake Merritt, sang professionally at the age of 5, in the Theater, Salt Lake City Last week's Skull and Keys shindig at Dugan's in Emeryville was a standing room only affair. The U.C.

Honor Society apparently turned out en mass and what a show the boys put on for themselves and a. collection of famous alumni. Frank Ciraolo would like to sign the troup up as is. When a Berkeley stayup needs a bit of relaxation, the handiest spot is Ed Hogarty's Berkeley Square on University Avenue. eX big circular fireplace and lots of room.

Cocktails in comfort. Cork Oak Trees Thrive in State LOS ANGELES; April County Farm Adviser C. V. Castle reports that 15 farmers have planted 1900 cork trees and predicts that thousands more will be planted next year. Prof.

Woodbridge Metcalf, University of California extension forester, advised Castle that cork produced from cork oak bark in Southern California compares favorably with the best cork imported from Portugal and Spain before the war. LOUIS CAFE 466 12th Street New Floor Show featuring THE O'HAGANS (Pa and Ma) The Old Folks Go to Town in Song and Dance Dorothy Lang Dance Stylist and Comedienne Mandy Lou Singing Mistress of Ceremonies ROSS LOVE AND HIS ORCHESTRA 2 ORCHESTRAS Dancing 2 p.m. to 2 a.m. Lake Merritt Hotel A GUIDE to a Wonderful Evening with Budd MacDonald and His 11-Piece Orchestra with Lovely Linda Stewart, Vocalist Friday and Saturday Nights Friday Nights Saturday Nights $1.10 per couple $1.60 per couple LAKE MERRITT HOTEL Make Your Table Reservations Early Phone TE-2300 Wallace's 2101 Club FLOOR SHOW Featuring Nightly Radio Song Star. BELLA The "Carmen Miranda" of Stage and Radio.

CLIFF At the Hammond Organ. DELL PERRY Piano Artist. MAXINE Singer 2101 Hopkins St. Dimond A KNOCKOUT! DELANO'S NEW FLOOR SHOW! BETTY DANIELS Exotic Novelty Dancer TOM BUCKLEY Original Imitator LENNY RAPOSE And His Orchestra A Triple Starred Show NOW DELANO'S Next City Hall, Hayward SINGER Pretty Linda Stewart is the vocalist with Budd MacDonald's orchestra at the Lake Merritt Hotel. Eliel Named to Maritime Board Appointment of Paul Eliel, head of the school of business at Stanford University, to the post of chairman of the Pacific Coast Maritime Industry Board, was announced today by Admiral Emory Land, war shipping administrator.

He succeeds Wayne L. Morse, who resigned last week to devote his full attention to duties on the War Labor Board. Eliel had been vice-chairman of the Maritime Industry Board since its creation March 11. Function of the board is to handle all problems of labor relations arising from longshore operations. COMEDY, Rusty Colman and Lane Dennis present comedy skits and dances at Dugan's, in Emeryville.

'Relieved' Navy Man Put on Inactive List Lieut. Comdr. Maurice Aroff, Naval Reserve officer recently removed without explanation from the District Office of Procurement in San Francisco, has been placed on the inactive list and returned to his home in Los Angeles by order of the 12th Naval District. Captain R. A.

White, Arloff's superior, was relieved of his duties after Arloff, and Tuesday was placed on the retired list and ordered to his home in Los Angeles. Today AT NEIGHBORHOOD YOUR general aviation, commercial air transportation and basic airline procedure. The training is designed to send young women into responsible positions immediately upon completion of study. Sponsoring airlines include American, Braniff, Chicago and Southern, Continental, Inland, Mid Continent, Pan American, Pennsylvania Central, Trans-Continental Western and United. ceilings.

SOME EXCEPTIONS 1 keeper to explain the price to If she still believes that she is required to more a than his legal maximum, Pale should communicate the facto, to OPA's nearest War, Price Rationing Board or its nearest local office. FOR COMPARISON Q- How can the shopper 'obtain a record showing what she paid so that she can make positive comparison with March prices? A--Every store, when requested by a customer, must give a sales slip or receipt, showing the date, the name and address of the store, the item sold, and the price received. Q-Why is a whole month used for the pricing period? A This is to produce as fair a maximum as possible. If prices were frozen at the level in effect during a shorter period or on only one day, the ceilings might be distorted and might be abnormally low for a store which had had bargain sales or "dollar throughout the base period. What articles 'are covered by price ceilings? A--Practically every article used in the life and work of America.

Included are the basic articles that make up the cost of living--clothing, yard goods, fuel, furniture, most foods, hardware, appliances, tobacco, drugs, and toiletries. At the manufacturers' level the regulations cover virtually. all products and commodities that are not already under price 2-But there are some exceptions? -Yes, some exceptions are necessary. For example, the emergency price control act of 1942, which confers the authority to control prices on OPA, does not permit the price administrator to set ceilings over the farm products that are selling below parity. The act also exempts newspapers, magazines, theater admissions, and railroad, and bus rates.

Because of administrative difficulties. the regulation exempts fresh fish, fresh fruits and vegetables, rare stamps and coins, and objects of art. Raw farm commodities, such as wheat, are exempt from ceilings, but these same products when prepared for the consumer, as in the form oflbread, 'are under price ceilings. Q-Are these ceilings on sales of food or beverages by lunch rooms, restaurants and hotels? A- No, these also are exempt. The possibilities of cutting the quality cooked, its preparation and service and also the amount and quality of beverages served are so numerous that the administration and enforcement of ceilings on sales of this nature, would thought be that extremely if restaurants' difficult.

costs are largely stabilized, there will be little or no excuse to raise prices. Furthermore, the terrific competition in this field will tend to hold prices down. Q- What about services? Is there a limit on charges by laundries, tailors, dry cleaners, auto repair shops, radio repair men, storage es- 'A-Yes, price ceilings are being placed over these retail services performed in connection with a commodity. But purely personal services, such as beauty parlors and barber shops, are exempted by the act. -Is real estate covered? A--No, sales of land and buildings are exempt from price control.

Q-Why do retail ceilings go into effect on different dates? Why don't maximum prices take effect at once? A--By coming under maximum prices one week after wholesalers and manufacturers, retail stores will have a greater opportunity to buy supplies at March wholesale prices before. returning to March' retail prices. 'Any -deliveries to retailers after May 11, of course, must be at prices no higher than the supplier's maximum price- even if the calls for a higher price. In the case of retail services, the effective date is delayed until July 1. This will give OPA time to set up machinery for the administration of maximum prices in this field.

HARDSHIPS EXCEPTIONS Q-Is there any provision for aiding a seller where special circumstances impose grave hardships? A--Yes. If a seller finds his maximum prices are abnormally low compared with prevailing maximum prices for the same article or serviges, he may petition OPA for individual relief. The procedure for making this will be' set forth in a regulation to be issued shortly by the administrator. If a seller's maximum prices for a commodity are in line with those of other retailers, but the retailers as a group can make little or no profit or may have to sell at a loss, the seller should immediately write the Retail Trade and Services Division, OPA, Washington, D.C., and set forth the facts. Q-How could such relief be provided? A--Relief would take the form of "roll-back" of prices at the wholesale and manufacturing level by OPA order.

LICENSING PROVISION Q-What are the provisions about store licenses? A--Every retail and wholesale establishment automatically is licensed to sell under the general maximum price regulation at the date the ceiling applies to it, and every new store automatically receives a license. What is the purpose of the license? A--The license gives OPA a basis for action against. stores which refuse to conform to regulations. What action may be taken? A-OPA may ask a court to suspend, for as long as 12 hours, the license of a store which, after receipt of a warning notice, violates OPA's regulations. Without a license the store cannot operate.

Are there other penalties for A--Yes. Convictions for certain violations may bring a fine up to $5000 and imprisonment up to one shops, radio repair men, storage es- $5000 and imprisonment tablishments and the like? year, or both. DUGAN'S Steak Dinners CONTINUOUS STAGE SHOW- DANCING CATER TO SPECIAL PARTIM NO COVER CHARGE PIEDMONT 4470 MOLLIS PARK EMERYVILLE GOLDEN STATE CAPITOL Foothill -JOHNNY Blvd. A EAGER Seminary ROBERT TAYLOR LANA TURNER BODY DISAPPEARS with Jeffrey Lynn College at Shafter CHIMES JOAN FONTAINE in Her ACADEMY AWARD WE Winning Film "SUSPICION" with CARY GRANT Jeffrey Lynn in LAW OF THE TROPICS DIMOND Fruitvale JOAN Ave. FONTAINE Hopkins in HER A ACADEMY AWARD WINNING Film "SUSPICION" with CARY GRANT Jimmy Durante-You're in the Army Now Foothill Blvd.

Fairfax FAIRFAX WOMAN THE Katharine HEPBURN Spencer TRACY will be shown once only at 8:50 o'clock Robert also Preston, "PACIFIC starts at BLACKOUT" 7:00 and with 10:45 14th St. 37th Ave. FRUITVALE ERROL FLYNN DIED WITH THEIR BOOTS ON Barbara Stanwyck-YOU BELONG TO ME San Pablo Stanford DAY GATEWAY THE Claudette COLBERT and John PAYNE 'BLUES IN THE NIGHT'-Priscilla Lane "Wall Street Activities' by George T. Hughes, in The Tribune FOOTHILL 73rd AVE. EASTMONT Phone MacMURRAY Ray Milland in "MEN WITH WINGS" "IF HAD A -Gary Cooper GRAND LAKE DISTRICT GRAND LAKE Doors TW inoaks open 2300 Katharine HEPBURN-Spencer TRACY "WOMAN OF THE YEAR" at 7 :10:20 Also Robt.

Preston-Martha 'Driscoll in BLACKOUT'-at 9-Come Early PIEDMONT EVERY SEAT P-I-E-D-M-O-N-T A LOGE 4186 Piedmont Phone PIedmont 2727 0 A Robert Taylor and Lana Turner "Blonde From Rice SAN PABLO 35th ST. San Pablo Ave. nr. 35th EL REY 'WE WHO ARE YOUNG' LANA TURNER JOHN SKELTON "PAPER BULLETS" with Jack LaRue SAN PABLO 27th ST. RIALTO Telephone PETER HI gate LORRE 9800 "ISLAND OF DOOMED MEN" Ralph Byrd in DRUMS OF THE DESERT ALBANY Solano at San Pablo ALBANY IN THE NIGHT DESIGN for SCANDAL Russell PRISCILLA RICHARD WHORF NORTH OAKLAND TOWER Telegraph Ave.

TW at inoaks Claremont WHERE ONLY BIG PICTURES PLAY Claire Trevor- Wm. Holden in "TEXAS" Charlie McCARTHY Edgar BERGEN Fibber McGee and Molly Gildersleeve "LOOK WHO'S LAUGHING" ALAMEDA NEPTUNE LAW OF Central THE at TROPICS Webster Jeffrey LYNN and Constance BENNETT also "Ellery Queen de the Murder Ring" ALAMEDA TO BE LA OR kehurst NOT TO 2-4433 BE CAROLE LOMBARD and JACK BENNY BROOKLYN ORCHID Marjorie Woodworth LADIES' POTTERY NIGHT" MATINEE DAILY AT 1:30 P.M. BERKELEY OAKS Solano "BAHAMA at The PASSAGE" Alameda Madeleine CARROLL-Stirling HAYDEN YOU BELONG TO ME-Barbara Stanwyck BERKELEY Shattuck-Haste. CLIPPER WILLIAM GARGAN IRENE HERVEY TREAT 'EM ROUGH with Eddie Albert CALIFORNIA Open Continuous 12:45 Daily p.m. Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland "THEY DIED WITH THEIR BOOTS ON" also Dennis 0'Keefe-Jane Wyman in WEEK-END FOR THREE: Late News "Strange As It Seems" by John Hix in The Tribune Daily JACKIE COOPER SUSANNA FOSTER ThErE TO DINE SEA FOOD OAKLAND SEA FOOD GROTTO Fisherman's Wharf.

Foot of Franklin Phone TW inoaks 2244 SEAFOOD LUNCHES DINNERS AT PRICES POPULAR The Finest Crab Louie and Clam Chowder and All Kinds of Sea Food Cocktails Plenty of Free Parking Space, Fresh New Orleans, Eastern and Olympia Oysters RICHMOND GRAND 23rd Richmond's at Rheem RI-5800 "CONFIRM OR DENY" with Don Ameche Claudette Colbert in 'S LARK' LADIES! BLUE RIBBON OVENWARE! OPEN ALL NIGHT! STATE Continuous 6 pm 'til 5 am "BALL OF FIRE" Gary COOPER Barbara STANWYCK LAMOUR THEATERS GL-8200 PARKWAY UNHOLY Blvd. PARTNERS E. 19th Edward G. ROBINSON Laraine DAY "RIGHT TO THE Joyce East 14th. 89th Ave.

GRANADA IN TECHNICOLOR! "BAHAMA PASSAGE" Madeleine CARROLL-Stirling HAYDEN STEEL AGAINST THE SKY-Lloyd Nolan PALACE 23rd Ave. and THE East DAY" 15th Claudette COLBERT and John PAYNE "BLUES IN THE NIGHT'-Priscilla Lane RIVOLI San Pablo IN near TECHNICOLOR! University "BAHAMA PASSAGE" Madeleine CARROLL-Stirling HAYDEN 'NIGHT OF JANUARY 16-Robert Preston ROBERT LORIN TAYLOR -JOHNNY Adeline LANA at EAGER TURNER Alcatraz a LADY SCARFACE with Dennis 0'Keefe DEL MAR E. 14th SAN Euclid-TR-2556 LEANDRO THEY DIED WITH THEIR BOOTS ON Errol Flynn-Olivia de Havvilland, at 8:55 also "YOU BELONG TO ME" with Barbara Stanwyck-Henry Fonda, HAYWARD GENE 577 TIERNEY Castro Victor Mature in 'SHANGHAI GESTURE' I CASTLE IN THE DESERT-Sidney Toler EL CERRITO CERRITO Jan San Pablo, at Fairmount Daw "SOMETHING TO SING ABOUT" PRESTON FOSTER in "LAST MILE" ORINDA ORINDA Orinda-Moraga Tunnel Highway Junction at "JOHNNY EAGER" with Robert Taylor Gracie Allen in "MR. MRS. NORTH" LARGE FREE PARKING AREA EAST 12th ST.

DISTRICT RITZ East 12th "WHEN Street at LADIES 7th Avenue MEET JOAN CRAWFORD ROBERT TAYLOR also SCATTERGOOD Meets BROADWAY Free Ladies! BLUE RIBBON OVENWARE FOOTHILL 35th AVE. FOOTHILL Phone "SAN FR ultvale QUENTIN" 4100 Humphrey BOGART and Pat O'BRIEN 'STAR MAKER' with BING CROSBY MODE OVENWARE FREE TONIGHT! HOPKINS 35th AVE. HOPKINS 'Phone HUMPHREY FRuitvale BOGART 10121 "ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT Jeffrey Lynn in LAW OF THE TROPICS FREE! QUEEN MARY DINNERWARE! HOPKINS 38th AVE. LAUREL Phone JAMES GL encourt STEWART 8200 Nelson EDDY Jeanette MacDONALD R-0-S-E M-A-R-1-E" Plus Wallace Beery The Splinter Fleet "THUNDER AFLOAT" DISTRICT SENATOR TW inoaks 2300 2 Big Screen Hits THEY DIED WITH THEIR BOOTS ON Errol FLYNN Olivia de HAVILLAND "YOU BELONG TO ME" Henry Fonda Barbara Stanwyck; plus LATEST NEWS THEATERS VOGUE Phone CUSTER'S LA 7th kehurst REGIMENT 2-7337 THEY DIED WITH THEIR BOOTS ON Errol FLYNN Olivia de HAVILLAND CLUB KONA The Eastbay's Smartest Night Club Spring Revue Featuring THE 4 ACES Hilarious Melody Quad FLORA DRAKE Song Stylist MARY LANDA Palms" THE RAYBURN GIRLS De-lightful De-Lovely's from Hollywood MUSIC by JOHNNY STRANGIO and His FOUR KONIANS Dinner De Luxe $1.75 Specializing in Banquets and Wedding Parties 303 San Pablo Avenue Phone For LAndscape Reservations: 5-6971 on EL CERRITO DON and ANN 2820 Mountain Blvd. I warned you.

From now on you come up at your own risk. Because I'm cured and can talk again. -DON. CORN FED STEAKS Full pound- bring your own scales DISJOINTED CHICKEN We You got can 'em this the far reapert, Liquor old enough to walk alone. Too good to have toOn the way to Joaquin Miller Park He Pulls No Punches Read Art Cohn in The Tribune THEATERS 4-Star CAMPUS, My Son, Bancroft-Tel.

My Son Madeleine Carroll Brian Aherne; also "Dancing Turner-Artie Shaw UNITED ARTISTS Cont. TW-2300 Daily HELD OVER! Positively Ends Today! Bette Davis-The Man Who Came to Dinner also "Secret Agent of Foster Tomorrow: Lady Has Torpedo Boat U.C. FOX LANA ROBERT TURNER TAYLOR in "JOHNNY EAGER" with Edw. Arnold: Merle Oberon in Pathe News! Scoop! LIEUT. O'HARE, new air Hero; Calif.

Bear-Wash. Crew Race: Sports Starts in the and Remember the Day with Claudette Colbert THEATERS FOX Continuous Telephone from Richmond 12:00 noon 58. Bette Davis Sheridan-Monte Woolley "THE MAN WHO' CAME TO DINNER" Plus Lynn BARI-Preston FOSTER in "SECRET AGENT OF JAPAN" National Whirligig in The Tribune Covers Washington.

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