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The Morning News from Wilmington, Delaware • Page 15

Publication:
The Morning Newsi
Location:
Wilmington, Delaware
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WILMINGTON MORNING NEWS, WILMINGTON. DELAWARE. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 11. 1944 FIFTEEN i Pavelic, Croatian Quisling, NO ALLIED TROOPS mm HOUSEUN The Timid Soul Arrested by Rebels, Report Head of German Puppet State in Northwest Yugoslavia, Said to Have Been Handed committee said, for State and local public works, the Federal Government to match local funds with outright grants.

No completely Federally-financed program should be undertaken because the local governments are in good financial shape, it was said. Moreover, the committee added: "Large Government spending in itself is not a satisfactory stimulus to sustained production. The WPA at its peak employed not more than 4,000,000 people, only at subsistence wages. The stability of our national credit may be threatened If (such) deficit spending is increased by substantial amount." MADGE.1.' Over to Marshal Tito's Partisans By WADE WERNER a Associated Press Correspondent LONDON, Sept. 10 The United Nation radio at Algiers said tonight that Ante Pavelic, Quisling dictator of Croatia.

German puppet state in northwestern Yugoslavia, had been arrested by revolutionaries and handed over to Marshal Tito' Partisans. There was no confirmation. A Free Yugoslav radio broadcast aid Titos Partisans had captured Zajecar, only about Ave miles from the Bulgarian frontier, in their drive Season's Concert Features Listed Miss Patricia Travers will be the first artist of the concert season of the Wilmington Community Concert Association, appearing on Wednesday night. Oct. 11, The young violinist also will appear with the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra later in the season.

Membership cards for the 1944-45 season will be mailed in a few days. On Tuesday, Nov. 14, the piano team, Morley and Gearhart, will appear; Tuesday, Jan. 9. the soloist will be Mr.

Leonard Warren of the Metropolitan Opera Company who will present a program of baritone songs. The season will close on Thursday, March 22. with the appearance of the Pittsburgh 8ym--phony Orchestra under the baton of Mr. Fritz Reiner who is well known to Wilmington musicians. The concerts will be held in -the Playhouse as usual and the entire membership quota was subscribed last spring before the season had closed.

to unit up with tne Ren Army sweep-- Irn? through capitulated Romania and Bulgaria. They were fighting at Theatre Guide ACE "Pin Up Girl," 1:12, 3:17, 5:22, 7:27, 8 33. ARCADIA "Double Indemnity." 12:00, 2:04, 3:59. 5:56, 8:00, 10:03. CREST "Standing Room Only," 7:36, 841.

EDGE MOOR "Sensations of 1945," 7:30, 9:30. GRAND "Delinquent Daughters." and "Becky Sharp." Open at noon. LOEWS ALDIN'E "The Seventh Cross," 11:05, 1:14, 3:23, 7:41, 9:53. NATIONAL "Miracle of Morgans' Creek." Open at 11:00. PARK "Home in Indiana." Open I at 6:30.

PIKE "Union Pacific." Open at 6:45. QUEEN "Secret 12:05. 2:03, 4:01. 559. 7:57.

9:55. i RIALTO "Sweet and Low Down," i 12, 2. 4. 6, 8, 10. RITZ "Bucket fOf Blood" and' 'Leave It to the Irish." Open at 6:45.

SAVOY "Johnny Apollo." Open at 11:45. STRAND "Pin Dp Girl." Open i at 6:00. WARNER "Janle," 12:00, 1:59, i 3:58, 5:57, 7:56, 9:59. SCHOOL SUPPLIES MOVED i Supplies and equipment salvaged from the tire at the old No. 8 school.

Seventh and Spruce Streets, have been moved to the old school build- ing at Eighth and Adams for safekeeping. The No. 8 school was used as a workshop, and contained lumber, other building material, paints and supplies. The fire de- stroyed the second floor of the structure. i Let freedom ring on Uncle Sam's cash register! Buy U.

S. War Bonds and Stamps! EARLE THEATRE New Castle. Del. Phana t5U TODAY Mary Lee Roy Rogers "SONG OF NEVADA" Casualties Continued From First Page them the German government had said that Sergeant Hinkson was dead. While in Wilmington on a furlough last February, Sergeant Hinkson had planned to marry Miss Ann D.

Clayton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Clayton, 827 Morrow Street, but the couple decided to wait until he returned before announcing the engagement. He was sent overseas in June. A native of this city, he was graduated from Wilmington High School in 1S41 and was a clerk in the Purchasing Department of the DuPont Company when called to the service in March, 1943.

He played in the high school band and was an active member of West Presbyterian Church and various church organizations. A memorial service was held in his honor in the church yesterday morning. Wrote Just Before Flight Word of Lieutenant Jackson's being missing was received by his wife, the former Miss Marie T. Gilson, daughter of Mrs. John F.

Gilson of West Haven, that he was lost on Aug. 29. She had received a letter from him dated the evening of Aug. 28, in which he wrote that he was very tired after 15 missions and would go the next day to the Isle of Capri for a short rest, but that he had a mission to fly that night first. It Is believed that this was the mission on whch he was lost.

The officer is the only son of Mr. and Mrs. Herman A. Jackson of 1025 Adams Street. Married In January He was married in January of this year, just after completing his pilot training at Turner Field, and went overseas in June.

Lieutenant Jackson is a graduate of Wilmington High School and Goldey College, and worked in the DuPont Company main office before he entered the service in May, 1942. Private Sanders was a member of the "Suicide Raiders" of the Second point only 50 miles south of Zag- reb, where Pavelic has ruled as lead- er of a puppet regime said to have slaughtered hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Jews and Partisan sym- pathizers since its' installation in 1941. Even if Pavelic has not been cap-1 tured his days apparently are numbered because Tito's troops, aided by i the approaching Red Army In the east and systematic Allied "aerial destruction of Nazi communications radiating from Zagreb and through-t out the Balkans, has effectively blocked the escape routes of per- haps 330,000 Axis troops in the lower i Balkans. In capitulated Bulgaria the Red Army was cleaning up scattered 4 German remnants and moving to-i ward a quick liquidation of the pocketed enemy troops in neighbor- ing Greece and Yugoslavia. I Pressure on Hungary The Russian government also stepped up its diplomatic-military i effort to get Hungary out of the war.

Soviet troops were striking toward Hungary from the east and southeast as the Moscow radio again "4 called on Hungarians to overthrow 4 the Nazis and Join the Allies. An imminent juncture in force between Tito's men and the Red army Is likely, if it has not already occurred. Russian troops in western Romania reached the Yugoslav frontier at Turnu-Severin last week, a point only 50 miles north of Zajecar, captured by the partisans. A Berlin broadcast also said Soviet parachute troops had landed but had been wiped out south of Turnu-' Severin, which could be in Yugoslav 'territory. The Greek government in exile In Cairo, headed by Premier George Papandreou, transferred its tem-f- porary seat to Naples today in ex- pec ta tion of an early entry into 4 Athens.

Firmer Toward Turkey 1 A firmer Soviet attitude toward Turkey was visible in Moscow now that the Red Army is practically on the frontier of that nation whose persistent neutrality has long Irked 5 the Russians. Bulgaria's request for an armistice in the now ended four-day-old i war with Russia, and her declara-j, tion of war against Germany, has I eliminated the last major German influence in the Balkans, but Mos-1 cow points out there still are Ger- mans in Turkey. Gen. Feodor I. Tolbukhin, Third i Ukraine Army commander whose i troops have overrun Bulgaria, has put it up to the new pro-Allied' Bul- gar government under Premier Kimon Georgiev to disarm German 5 troops In that country.

If help is needed, the Red army is ready to divert forces to any threat-! ened sector. It is estimated that Bulgaria has 20 divisions which it can hurl into the fight to make Hitler's Balkan disaster complete. A Berlin broadcast recorded by Federal Communica-i tions Commission said a new Bulgarian "national govern- ment" had been formed in opposition to Georgiev's regime in Sofia. The announcement was followed by a. Berlin radio ap-I peal asking the Bulgars to dis- regard Sofia's declaration of war on Germany and fight Anglo-Americans." (Peter Grabovsky, Bulgarian minister of the interior under former Premier Bogdan Pbilov.

and founder-leader of the Bul- garlan Fascit Youth organiza-. tion, arrived In Istanbul today aboard a special plane as a roundup of former pro-Ger-n man leaders continued in the IN YUGOSLAV FIGHT Military Authorities in Rome Confirm Tito's Broadcast; Say Commandos Withdrew LONDON, 6ept. 10 (P) Allied military authorities in Rome tonight confirmed a broadcast statement from Marshal Tito's headquarters that no AUied land forces were operating in Yugoslav territory. Commando units belonging to land forces based in Allied Adriatic territory raided Yugoslavia and then withdrew, it was explained. "There are no Allied land forces on Yugoslav territory," the statement said.

"The struggle is being conducted only the National Liberation Army of Yugoslavia with the cooperation of the Allied air forces." "There are no commandos on the Yugoslav mainland, neither have the Allies asked for them to be landed," the declaration added. It made no mention of Russian troops who have been reported inside Yugoslavia. Last Thursday Allied headquarters in Rome announced a general offensive had started in Yugoslavia with Allied "land forces of the Adriatic" participating. The Yugoslav broadcast said the statement was issued to correct radio reports. On the battle fronts Tito's Partisans reported their units had entered Zajecar, 30 miles west of the Danube and had captured Knjaze-vac, 25 miles to the southwest.

Zajecar is only about five miles from the Bulgarian border and about 30 miles from Romania. The communique said fierce street fighting was in progress in Zajecar and that fighting also was going on In the Pozega Yardiste and Bajina Basta sectors. In Bosnia the war bulletin said that the Partisans had captured Prijedor, 70 miles southeast of Zagreb, and Ljubija Mine and were approaching Bosanswki Novi, 50 miles south of Zagreb. Other Partisans operating in Crotia captured Dabar, 20 miles inland from the coast, and Sloconska Pozega. Russia Continued From First Page garian Transylvania, was captured in the Rusisan drive from Bucovina on a front that had been quiet since last spring.

Rusii-Moldovita, 10 miles northwest of Varna at the end of a spur railway In the mountains, also was seized, as well as Brosteni, 21 miles south of Varna and only 12 miles from Transylvania. Two hundred prisoners were captured in a 24-hour battle for Varna, the midnight bulletin said. A Budapest communique, broadcast by Berlin, told of "superior Russian and Romanian formations" attacking the Hungarians and Germans along the entire front. Malinovsky Promoted Gen. Rodion Y.

Malinovsky, Second Ukraine Front commander, was directing these widespread operations aimed at crushing Hungary or producing that last big Axis satellite nation's capitulation. For his already brilliant work in Romania. Malinovsky has been made a marshal of the Soviet Union, Mos-sow radio early today announced. All this fighting was along the Carpathian ranges on the east, but lar to the west other Soviet troops had crossed the Mures River in a strike toward Cluj, Transylvanian capital, after moving through the mountains from the Danube Basin. A Moscow dispatch said these Russian vanguards were less than 100 miles from pre-war Hungary.

On Saturday they had taken Teius, only 37 miles south of Cluj. The Soviet communique was one of the shortest of the summer campaign. It did not mention the Yugoslav front nor Bulgaria, where Soviet military operations against the Bulgars ceased Saturday after a four-day war. Move West of Burgas With a Russian blackout on news from Bulgaria, the Berlin D. N.

B. Agency said the Russians had moved on southward on a broad front without meeting any resistance, and had crossed the east Balkan Mountains, west of the captured Black Sea port of Burgas, in their drive to the Mediterranean. Burgas, captured Saturday, is only 30 miles from the Turkish frontier and 80 miles from the Greek border. D. N.

B. said the Russians "obviously intend to uife all of Bulgaria as 1 Skate for Health's Sake! at the 1 Delaware Roller Rink aa 2 DuPont Blvd. below Farnhurst Open Six Nite a Week Closed Tuesday Nites Only. Special Rates to Parties Phone 93-2566 E. Schramm, Mgr.

No Intoxicating Liquors Permitted. POST-WAR PLANS Economic Group Olfers Six-Point Program; Suggests Tax Cuts, Farm Assistance WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 (P) A post-war program of lower taxes on business, so as to encourage private enterprise, and on Individuals in low and middle income brackets was recommended today by the House economic planning committee. Its tax recommendation was one of six suggestions in a report to be delivered to the House tomorrow on how the United States may be kept prosperous in the peace years. The other were: Other Suggestions Listed Tight credit controls to prevent a sharp spiral of inflation when the nation spends an estimated in savings piled up in the war years, A streamlined government "to reduce overlapping jurisdiction, duplication of effort and inconsistencies in policy." Increased foreign trade.

Early removal of wartime controls on agriculture and encouragement of family-owned farms. Maintenance of an armed force of upwards of 3,000,000 men until the occupation task abroad is considered ended. The committee, headed by Representative Colmer (D-Miss) also suggested the states Increase their unemployment compensation scales and period of payment, and that mariners be placed under the program. Calls for Sharp Tax Cut Emphasizing "incentives for venture capital and business growth," the committee called for sharp overall reductions in taxes, particularly a softening of the burden on lower and middle income groups, and for abolition of "double taxation" of corporation earnings. he Federal budget probably will run about 20 billion dollars annually for a while, it said, and that wiil mean each family has a yearly tax burden including State levies of $900.

Obviously, the committee opined, unless productive capacity is maintained at a much higher level than in any peacetime year in the past, the burden of necessary taxation "may prove intolerable." Backs Public Works Plans should be "hastened." the THEATRE CLAYMONT a H. O. 1714 TODAT Barbara Stanwyck Jel MeCraa Robert PreatoB Brian Oonleyy In "U.NIOV PACIFIC Important Featnre Starti 1:1 FEATURE BETTY GRABLE MARTHA JOE E. RAYE BROWN "PIN UP GIRL" Milea North of Wil. Ga.

Frlnta Bird. TODAY and TOMORROW Eleanor Powell Dennis O'Keefe "SENSATIONS OF 1945" Kill or Be Killed Newa Flaahback Healthfully Air Conditioned TODAT and TOMORROW ir BUT U. S. WAR BONDS nho NEW MARCH Hounded! Hunted! Hated! Suddenly this girl brings low mto Itis Hft -M IV CTH) feel I aX I NATIONAL Tay Daara opea at it at. Daily Tomorrow "MIRACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK" an assembly area" in their Balkan conquest.

A free Yugoslav broadcast said Marshal Tito's Partisans had captured Zajecar, only five miles from the Bulgarian western frontier with Yugoslavia, and 30 miles from the Romanian border. Zajecar, -is 50 miles below Turnu-Severin. The Germans also reported continued battles along the Narew River northeast of Warsaw, but said Soviet attacks were repulsed. In southern Poland, the Russians also attacked with "several rifle divisions and tank formations" near Sanok and Krosno in the northern Carpathian foothills, but Berlin said these thrusts also failed. On Saturday, the Germans had said these assaults were aimed at Krakow, last big bastion guarding the invasion road into Germany's industrial Silesia, but the Russians in this area also were in position to strike into eastern Czechoslovakia in a pincers movement on Hungary.

FORMER LEIPZIG MAYOR TO DIE FOR HITLER PLOT LONDON. Monday, Sept. 11 (JPy Dr. Karl Goerdeler, former mayor of Leipzig, who had been accused of plotting against Adolf Hitler, has been sentenced to death, the Berlin radio announced today. Also sentenced at the same time, said the broadcast, were: Paul Le-Jeune-Jung.

identified as a former deputy; Wilhelm Leuchner. former Hessian minister of the interior; Josef Wirmer. a lawyer; Ulrich von Hassell, identified as a former member of the diplomatic corps; Troot Stolz, former secretary in the foreign ministry, and Count Helidorf, former chief of the Berlin police. PENICILLIN SAVES LIFE OF U.S. FLIER IN ROMANIA BUCHAREST, Romania, Sept.

9 (Delayed) W) Penicillin has been administered for the first time in Romania flown in from Italy to save the life of an American flyer ill of septicemia, it was announced today. The patient, who has been in a small village hospital since Aug. 10, is sergt. Peter Tlerney, Rochester, N. Y.

He was reported missine in action after a Liberator in which i he was radio operator and gunnerl went down at Ploesti. Tierney now is out of dancer and on his way to complete recovery. 0PA REVEALS FORMING 1 OF SECRET POLICE UNIT! WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 (JP, The Office of Price Administration disclosed today that it has set up a special division, similar to the Secret Service, to cope with ration Ready for Location Music Pins Arcades etc acrtnc Jfecaaatr Service CALL 7092 ACE AMUSEMENT SALES AND SERVICE stamp counterfeiters and distributors. Creation of the new branch was made known in connection with a report on the arrest in New York City last week of four alleged counterfeiters and the seizure of a press and equipment ready to print almost 5,000,000 illegal gasoline coupons.

These coupons. OPA said, would have been good for almost 25,000,000 gallons, of gasoline and worth $3,500,000 on the black market. Special agents attached to the new branch have been authorized to make arrests, a power not granted any other OPA investigators. Weather Conditions Delaware Mostly cloudy with moderate temperature, some chance of rain today, cloudy with intermittent fain, moderate temperature tomorrow. LOCAL TEMPERATIRES 8:30 a.

59 5:30 p. 79 1:30 p. 78 Midnight 62 Maximlm (5:30 p. 79 Minimum (4:30 a- 52 LENGTH OF TODAY Sun rises, 6:37 a. sets, 7:16 p.

m. HIGH TIDES TODAY A. M. P. M.

Lewes 4:58 5:25 Kitts Hummock 5:23 5:50 Bombay Hook 6:18 6:45 Port Penn 6:43 7:15 Mouth of Christian. 7:40 8:12 Wilmington 7:45 8:17 General weather conditions at 7:30 p. m. (Eastern war time last night, reported by the United States Weathpr Bureau at Philadelphia: Temperature Last 24 Hours Low Hie Aliunde City, N. J.

57 72 Boston, Mass 5 61 BufTalo. N. V. 49 30 Charleston. S.

6 p4 Chicago, 111 57 85 Cleveland. 0 52 i Denver, 5,1 Detroit. Mich. 54 Duluth, Minn 54 ti" Harrisbilrg, Pa 4a 80 Louisville, Ky 52 8A Miamia, Fla 74 8 New Orleans. La.

72 80 New York. N. 60 76 Philadelphia Pa 53 79 Pittsburgh. Pa 52 do Portland. Me 4S 74 St.

Louis, Mo 85 San Antonio, Tex ..62 91 Washington. D. 57 73 SEPT. 22-23 MATINEE SATURDAY Broadway'a Hit A Cvmedy-Drana NOW MAIL ORDERS ONLY Pricts: Orch. 3.00, Hal.

flnt rawi next rowa l.M, last 5 rm 1.30. Gal. lanreaerred) 90c. Sat. Mat.

Orch. 1.80, Bal. 1.30. Gal. nnreerrcd) Me.

All prieea include tax. FOR MAIL ORDERS PLEASE ENCLOSE CHECK WITH SELF-ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE FOR RETl'RN OF TICKETS. Box Office aale peoi Wedneidaj, Sept. With. McftKATH KOHINS Scientifically Air Conditioned Lfam llLv- WARNERS' NATIONAL JOY SHOW.

every Jejct PBlDS-ibtet HUIT EAwi JOUI km HAM Robert KNCHIiY to HALE tna4 by MKHAB, CUtTIZ mini LAST DAY xtw xvm w- Starrs TOMORROW The Greatest Gangster Thriller That Ever Exploded From the Screen! SAMUEL GOLDWYN PRESENTS EaflD Starring HUMPHREY BOG ART SYLVIA SIDNEY JOELMcCREA DEAD END KIDS Based an the Play jr Sidney Kintal ey jitjinimiimHi LAST DAY DOUBLE INDEMNITY" FRED MtcMURRAT BARBARA STANWYCK EDWARD C. ROBINSON STARTS TOMORROW 2nd Hit "HER ENLISTED MAN" Barbara Stanwyck Robt. Tonnr Red Skelton Esther William NOW PLAYING IN COLOR "Becky Sharp" with MIRIAM HOPKINS AND "Delinquent Daughters" IIMIIHIIIMIIillMlllllllliUIIIH Calif re Man: Banker'! 8a NOW A MOBSTER 'JOHNNY APOLLO' TYRONE DOROTHY POWER LAM OUR EDWARD 1.L0TD CHABLfT ARVQtn NOI.AV GlAFrwitf fi ari i ml I. LAST DAY Marine Division and had been through nine major- Pacific campaigns from Guadalcanal to Guam. He was wounded on Bougainville but returned to action.

Sergeant a 1 1 ey, the husband of Mrs. Marilda West Wheatley and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wheatley, holds ri Gr the Air Medal with three Oak Leaf Clusters for sustained combat bombing missions over Germany. He was employed at the Dravo Corporation when inducted into the Army early last year.

Wounded in France Private Bowden, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Bowden, was in the infantry fighting in France. He was employed by the Reading Railroad Company before entering the Army early in 1942. Private Gross, the son of Mrs.

A. M. Gross, was a member of the parachute infantry in France. He was employed by the E. L.

Jones Company before going into the Army and was a former student at Wilmington High School. Private Brank, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Brank 4s In a hospital in England after being wounded in the arm. A former shipfitter at the Pusey and Jones Corporation, he was inducted in the Army in February, 1942.

2 ILS. LEADERS URGE END OF INTOLERANCE NEW YORK. Sept. 10 (jP) Assistant Secretary of State Adolf A. Berle, Jr, appealed today to all religious faiths in America to help preserve and perfect racial and religious tolerance in this country.

Addressing an inter-faith conference at Randall's Island here this afternoon, Berle said by fulfilling the historic American pledge for such tolerance and friendship "we earn the right to call ourselves Americans." SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 10 (JPi America could lose the peace if it fails to "eradicate every vestige of racial and religious prejudice and hatred," U. S. Supreme Court Jus tice Frank Murphy said tonight. Murphy, beginning the Far Western campaign of his Committee Against Persecution of the Jews, said in an address prepared for delivery at a nass meeting in the civic auditorium that Nazi ideologies of race persecution have had some influence on American thinking.

i i PARK OPEN 6.30 P. WALTER 4 JEANNE BRENNAN CRAIN ion McCALLISTER HOME IN NO I At! A numii a Starts TOMORROW CHARLES INGRID BOYER BERGMAN "GASLIGHT" Healthfully Air Conditioned (mi EVE. TWO SHOWS MARYLAND AVI. AT BOXWOOD ROAO Fred Paillette Mac Murray Coddard SPEED THE DAT OF VICTORY MKT. NR.

3RD OPEN NOON OF TIME U'a STARTS THURSDAY I Cms -A mncju Lit 1 1 fA-i i'j CIiOSHIUG SKI 017 Climaxing A Good Season With Our Most Sensational Show capital of the Balkan kingdom. (Another plane was reported to have taken the Fascit leader Nikola Tsankoff and D. Kxap-chev, editor of the Fascist newspaper, Zora, from Sofia to Berlin.) Romanian armistice talks In Moscow are in the very last stages, a Moscow dispatch said. WOMAN, 101 ATTENDS COLLEGE ANNIVERSARY HACKETTSTOWN, N. Sept.

10 JP) Centenary Junior College celebrated its 75th anniversary today with a rededication service attended by 101-year-old Miss Hamilton of AUamuchy," who was present at the laying of the cornerstone in 1869. President Hurst R. Anderson conducted the ceremonies. GIBSON, ARTIST, ILL NEW YORK, Sept. 10 UP The condition of Charles Dana Gibson, creator of the "Gibson Girl," who suffered a heart attack at his Maine summer home last week and was brought here by plane yesterday, was reported satisfactory today at Doctor's Hospital.

PILOT MISSING FX CRASH PHILADELPHIA. Sept. 10 JP) The Fourth Naval District reported a Navy plane crashed into the sea one mile east of Brigantine Beach, N. today. The pilot is missing, the Navy said.

His name was withheld temporarily. PRINTZ ROLLER RINK Got. rrints Blvd. Holly Oak, DeL OPEX IVIBT XIGHT rtoM a it p. jt.

except TUESDAY and THURSDAY Matin Skat 8ntr. trtna 1 It i am. Special Ba ta Parts VM ata rttHi tka aiak ky lal train, trial Ptau Statlaa. fttliaf art at Holly Oa. aita ay ho.

faltlat rf at Dal. Aw. a putia Piaa. a-e tit4 tmtwrmmtum mtt S-S343. atr.

eailla Vaart. aeaartatar. IN PERSON The Maniac of Mayhem ANGEL DAI LY Passenger Transportation WILMINGTON PHILADELPHIA City of Washington Lv. Wilmington 9:00 A. 7:00 P.

M. Lv. Philadelphia 2:00 P. 9:43 P. M.

1 wilfc fit of foiciftaff iif iiv ti S1GNE HASS0 HUME CRONYN JESSICA TANDY AGNES M00REHEAD- HERBERT RU0LEY mmmm SWEDISH ANGEL The French Angel Is A Sissy Compared To The Swedish Angel NO ADVANCE IN PRICES Adm. 85c Res. Ringside 4-5443-4-7113 Bon a 4 Week Sunday Trip Days H4iy Adults 70c 90e Children 40c 45c Hi Ciairu, ttutalafi ar FlutiMlnra Allwa FEUX BRESSART Margaret "CANTERVILLE CHOST" lit aaw UVar 4th Street Wharf Starring O'Brien -ar Robert Young Charles LATJGHTOV A Laogh Riot Ti.

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Years Available:
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