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The Rhinelander Daily News from Rhinelander, Wisconsin • Page 2

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Rhinelander, Wisconsin
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2
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PAGE 2 TOE HHINELANDEH (VV1S.) OAILV NEWS Story of Escape From France Told By Anderson Brown story of how-war came France nnd how ho escaped under Ihc eyes of the Gestapo, to Spain nnd North Africa to fight with the French in Corsica and ultimately to return to the city of his birth was told to the Rhinelander Rotary Club yesterday noon by Anderson G. Brown. Brown is a son of the late Raymond Brown and a grandson of the late Anderson W. Brown, one of Rhinelander's founders. He was born in Rhinelander 24 years ago and 'returned to his mother's native France in his childhood.

His father, a member of the American Army in the first World War. died in 1929 of wounds received in action at St. Mihiel. The boy's visit here is his first since his return to France with his mother. It was an absorbing story the blond, slender young man told, in French-accented English, to the Rotarians yesterday.

It was the story of quiet, peac-sful living in France in the pre-war years; of the approach of the starin clouds of war in the late '30s: of a France so torn by internal dissension that its men could not be provided with the weapons they needed to fight off With the Cofors Activities of Onelda County Men In the Armed forces Is In Prance. Pvt. Ray Bissonnette has arrived in France, according to word received by his wife, who lives in Pino Lake. At Great takes. Richard Johnson is' receiving his initial indoctrination nt the U.

S. Navy station, Great Lakes, 111. He is the son of Mr. and.Mrs. A.

W. Johnson, Waupun. and a nephew of Miss Esther Johnson, West Davenport Street. Promoted. Cpl.

Joseph Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Taylor, Pelican Lake, has been promoted to the rank of sergeant.

He is stationed in the Philippines. Another son, Pfc. Eugene Taylor, who is with the Seventh Army in Germany, has been transferred from the infantry to the medical branch. On Leave Here. SIC.

Tony Shalbrock, U. S. stationed at Newport, is on leave visiting his family at 604 Newell Street. Is in India. Mr.

and Mrs. Louis Wolfroin, 731 Thayer Street, have received word' that their son, Cpl. Allan Wolfrom, is stationed in India with the Sig- the "German 'invader; of the" suave nal Corps, courtesy of the Germans in the initial stages of France's subjugation, a courtesy that gave way to ironhanded Nazi rule and enslavement of French manhood for the production of war material for the wehr- macht; of tortuous escape into Spain and North Africa; of fighting with the French on Corsica; of interminable delays in getting papers straightened out to permit him to return to the land of his birth: of his overwhelming joy in sighting the shores of America, and of his hopes and plans for becoming a member of Uncle Sam's armed forces soon. Eluded Capture. Fear that he would be "next on the list" of the Germans who were shipping the manhood of France to their war plants prompted Brown, he said, to join with a friend in an effort to escape Europe and join Allied foress in North Africa after the 1942 invasion.

Helped along by French underofficials who were ostensibly collaborating with the Germans but secretly Gen. Charles de affiliated Gaulle's with Fr.se French, the men worked their way to a point near the Spanish border. There they were removed from a bus and.ordered held for interrogation by French and German authorities. Eluding the officers, the paii made their way to a rendezvous ana. with a party of 23 refugees, made their way in a 10-hour hike through the snowy Pyrenees into Spain.

Held by Spanish authorities because they refused to surrender papers and money, they were ordered returned to the frontier. An aged official, ac? t'onrithe ourneyi' succumbed to offer of tobacco and money and turned them loose, recalled. Walking by night and sleeping by day, existing for' four days on a couple of turnips pulled from a garden and two bowls of SOUP given them by French sympathizers in Spain, they finally reached Barcelona. There, with the help of the American and British consuls, aided by the fortuitous death'of'a German consul who had been watching for such movements of refugees, they managed to join a large group bound for Portugal. From" Portugal 2,000 men were con- ycyjd, in two ships, by five North Africa.

-Finding that his return to this country would be delayed, Brown joined up with a French battalion an'd participated in the seizure of Corsica. There 600 Frenchmen took over from about 10,000 Germans and many times that many Italians, Brown said, when the Germans decided to make a run for the Italian mainland and the Italians refused to fight. Most of the Germans were killed before embarkation or lost to Allied action at sea, Brown recalled, and the Italians were removed to Allied-occupied Sicily for work in labor gangs. Killed Vazi Gunners, A story in the American Army Stars and Stripes, late in 1943, credited Brown with killing two German machine gunners who were contesting with the French for control of a Corsican village. Returning to North Africa to use a belatedly-issued passport for a trip to America, Brown found that its time limit had expired, so he went to work as a civilian interpreter for the American Army in Algiers.

He remained there until late December, 1944, when his passage to the U. S. was finally arranged. A 20-day sea trip, during which one of the ships in his convoy was torpedoed within a few hundred yards of the boat on which he was a passenger, ended with what Brown described as the beautiful sight of the American shoreline. He expects, Brown said, to become a member of the American in the next couple of months.

British 40 Miles From Mondoloy KANDY, Ceylon, Feb. 13 UP) British Fourteenth Army troops driving down from the north along the Irrawaddy have captured Sin- gue, 40 miles from Mandalay, an Allied communique announced today In north Burma, Chinese First Army troops have cleared the Burma road southward to within 61 miles of the key city of Lashio. Passenger Hurt As Truck Hits Three Lakes Pumps Eugene Shadick, of Antigo, was seriously injured when the Vulcan Last Corporation truck in which he was riding as a passenger rammed into roof-supporting pillars and gasoline pumps at the Kuehl filling station, in Three Lakes, early last evening. Shadick is a patient in St. Mary's Hospital here.

According to the information given to Sheriff Gordon Taggart here by John Stanek, driver of the big semi-trailer, he was driving from Antigo to a northern woods operation of the Vulcan Last firm, taking on the trailer a fly wheel, weighing about six tons, for delivery to the woods crew. He. was ordered, Stanek said, to pick up a man at Elcho and to take him with him on the trip north, He did not know the identity of his passenger, the driver told authorities here, and had not learned it at noon today. Entering Three Lakes on Highway 45, Stanek said, he was about to drive into a back street to avoid the town's business district and was traveling at about 25 miles an hour. said, moved into his "travel tmtexpectedly and he swerved -into the Kuehl filling station to avoid a collision.

The weight of the load he was carrying, Stanek said, made it impossible for him td bring the vehicle to a stop to avoid hitting the pillars which supported a roof sheltering gasoline pumps and the truck sheared the supports and the pumps from the ground. One pump was thrown or slid nearly 165 feet from the station, officials said. An ambulance was called from Three Lakes to take the injured man to the hospital here and Stanek was held by authorities here this morning pending 'investigation of the accident. At the Vulcan Last office in An-, tigo this morning, Shadick was identified as the passenger of the truck but all further information was refused. Even confirmation of Stanek's identity as driver was declined, a member of the office staff saying that "we're not supposed to give out any information about it." Data as to Shadick's age and his reported status as a discharged war veteran was refused.

Girls Needed In Cadet Nurse Corps CHICAGO, Feb. 13 district office of the U. Nurse Corps issued an urgent "appeal today to Wisconsin girls to enroll in the Cadet Nurse Corps to help relieve the national shortage. "There is an immediate need for 56 qualified girls to become members of the U. S.

Cadet Nurse Corps with all-expense scholarships through U. S. Public Health Service in six Wisconsin schools," the office stated. "The schools are located in Janesville, Madison, Milwaukee, Racine and Wausau. Corps members are available to young women between the ages of 18 and 35 who are high school graduates, in good scholastic standing and sound health and who requirements of the Council Votes to Start West Side Condemnation Institution of condemnation proceedings by which the city would seek to acquire land adjoining the West Side School for playground purposes was authorized by the city council last night.

-The council adopted a resolution instructing City Atty. E. A. Rorth to start the condemnation action. It took the step after receiving from the board of education a resolution in which the inadequacy of the present playground area was described.

The city council and the school board would be plaintiffs in the condemnation action. The owner of the land, Mrs. Anna Bibby, has declined to sell, saying that as a widow she needs the area for the growing of a garden and the raising of poultry to earn part of her livelihood. Members of the council expressed reluctance to undertake proceedings which would involve hardship for Mrs. Bibby, but said the offer of $1,000 made for the land was "generous" and that Mrs.

Bibby would have remaining, on the improved lot where her house stands, a large area for garden purposes. The "inconvenience" which would be caused Mrs. Bibby would be outweighed by the public necessity for providing adequate recreational space for West Side children, councilmen declared. The condemnation proceedings will involve court action by which the public need for the area will be determined and the fair value will be Appraisers will be appointed by the court to make the appraisal. Both as to public need and value, Mr.

Korth told the council, Mrs. Bibby will have the rights of appeal to higher courts. council received a petition from North Side residents and the McCord School Parent Teachers' Association for establishment in the 1945-46 winter of a skating rink on the city's North Side. A delegation from the PTA appeared before the council and pointed out that the rinks available in the city are too far from the North Side to be useful to children in that neighborhood. Difficulty in locating a site for the proposed rink was discussed.

Doubt was expressed by City Manager T. M. Wardwell that the baseball field at Hodag Park would be suitable, because of the distance for getting water connections and the impracticability of in the baseball playing area. of the matter ledVto the conclusion that the North' Siders and Mr. Wardwell would examine the possibility of other sites being available.

FEBftUARI? News Paragraphs Ration Guide The S. Cadet By the Associated Press Meats, Fats, Four red stamps Q5 through S5 good through March 31. Stamps T5 through X5 good through April 28. Stamps Y5 and Z5 and A2 through 2 good through June 2. Four stamp 34 good for five pounds through Feb.

28. Stamp 35 valid for five pounds through June. 2. Another stamp scheduled to be validated May 1. Processed Foods Book Four blue stamps X5 through Z5 and A2 and B2 good through March 31.

Stamps C2 through G2 good through April 28, Shoes Book Three airplane stamps 1, 2 and 3 valid indefinitely; OPA says no plans to cancel any. (gasoline 14-A coupons good everywhere for four gallons through March 21. B-5, C-5, B-6 and C-6 coupons good everywhere for five gallons. Fuel Oil Last year's Period Four and Five coupons and this year's Period One through Four coupons good in all areas. Period five coupons good in midwest and south.

All'coupons good throughout current heating season. meet the schools. Lemon Juice Recipe Checks Rheumatic Pain Quickly If you from rheumatic, arthritis Un simple inex- thf me reclj that thousand, are Vow can now un pound, a two-week supply, today it with a quart of add, i lemons. It's eas y. No trouble and pleasant.

You 4 48 only Com Mix at aU 3 table- Pint Mortgage loans Are Made By The First Bonk Property. Favorable resut are need two 68 a da sometimes splen If the pains do ed by drug everywhere CELD-SIQINC MAUM Army approved this new produce for speed in application, durability, at' tractive appearance. Ideal for almost any kind oj building or temporary construction, or for erproofing on the farm. Triple Purpose Combiges siding, sheathing, and insulation all in one, at one application labor cost. GRANULE-SURFACED pn out ASPHALT COATED 90 oil ond i Thank You We wish to thank all those who bought tickets for the Benefit Card Party held Saturday evening in the Crescent Town Hall for Frederick Reader.

These acts of kindness are most sincerely appreciated. FREDERICK READER MRS. J. HELMS Attractive, economical, durable exterior protection for brooder houses, hog houses, tourijt cabins, roadside markets, tool sheds, industrial buildings, etc- Mqcdonqld lumber and Coal and Mrs. Herbert Kelley, Upland Avenue, announce the birth of a son, Michael Richard, Monday, Feb.

12, in St. Mary's Hospital. Mrs. Kelley is the former Evelyn Plouff. continuing fait of snow, starting early this morning blanketed this area anew today.

At noon nearly two inches had fallen and it wns still snowing. Stores, Schools And Offices Will Close VE Day Reaffirmation of plans for Rhinelander observance of VE Day (day of German capitulation) was announced today by the Chamber of Commerce. Two long blasts of factory whistles, followed by a series of intermittent blasts, will signal the German downfall. To mark the day, all stores and schools in the city will close. The procedure will be as indicated in the following question and answer schedule: Q.

When will stores, schools and offices close if the surrender signal comes before noon? A. Stores will close immediately and be closed the rest of the day. Q. What will be the closing arrangement if the signal comes during the afternoon, bu't before evening? A. Establishments will close immediately and will be cldsed for all of the following day, if that day is a regular business day.

Q. What will be the closing arrangement if the signal comes during the night? A. The closing will be for all of the following day, if that day is a regular business day. Q. What will be the closing arrangement if the announcement comes before noon on Sunday, holiday, or the second day of a double holiday.

A. Stores will be open the following business' day. All establishments planning to close are asked to conform to the Chamber schedule, and to keep the instructions above available for ready reference. Clothing Specialist To Meet Dealers i Max Roseman, price specialist the district Prjice Adi ministration, willybe' in Rhinelanp der to meet with clothing tonight. The meeting is scheduled for 7:30 o'clock in the ration board office, East Davenport Street.

All persons dealing in clothing of any type are invited. Dealers are invited' to submit problems for discussion, and questions will bje answered. Mr, Roseman is familiar with the pricing of surplus, goods being rai- leased by government agencies anjd will discuss this matter if dealers indicate interest in it. Corp. Erwin Kunze, Of Enterprise, Killed in France Cpl.

Erwin Kunfce, 25, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Kunze, of Enterprise, previously reported missing in action, was killed in action Jan! 0 in France, the War Department has informed his parents. Cpl. Kunze entered service in March, 1942, received his training at Camp Blanding, Delworth, N.

and Camp Edwards, Mass. He left for overseas service in April, 1943, and saw action in Africa, Italy and France. The Enterprise soldier was born Dec. 2, 1919, in Antigo. He attended Rhinelander High School for two years and before entering service was employed as a clerk in the Montgomery Ward store here.

Surviving besides his parents are two sisters, Irene, of Milwaukee, and Blanche, who attends Antigo High School; a brother, Robert, at home, and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Beul'ow, Route 3, Antigo. Anti-TB Association Plans Activities The planning committee of the Rhinelander Anti-Tubarculosis Association met last evening the Vocational and Adult School to plan a program of activities for 1945. The following proposed plans will be presented to the association lor adoption at its annual meeting: Tuberculin test all Ninth grade students in the public schools; tuberculin test all Twelfth grade students who showed negative reaction to the test in 1944; follow-up all positive reactors in the community with' periodic X-rays; bring the W.A.T.A.

photofluoroscopic trailer unit to Rhinelander this spring and inviting participation from industrial workers, personal service groups, food handlers, hospital employes, school employes, adult Vocational School students and county farm residents. The program of tuberculosis prevention and follow-up is financed- through the local association iiinds that have been raised through the annual Christmas Seal sale. The personnel of the 'planning committee includes Dr. Marvin Wright, Frank Reich, W. F.

Kruschke, Dr. Frances Cline, Dr. Lois Almon, Miss Anne Stager, Miss Lorraine Swensen and Ralph J. Keen, chairman. 'Brake Emphasis Program' Planned 4 MADISON, 1 Feb.

13 The motor vehicle department today Announced plans for a "brake emphasis program" in Wisconsin. Scheduled for April, the program is part of a country-wide effort to focus' public attention on the condition of automobiles and to stress the need for increased care in car operation. Police Chief Joseph Kluchesky Milwaukee, and Enforcement Homer Bell of the state department have been appointed to serve" as chairman and vice chairman for Wisconsin. McCoy Son Is Prisoner is George, MacMullin, camp McCoy tied by the War Department today that his son, Lieut. Robert J.

Mullin, -was prisoner of war in Germany. tieiit. MacMullin, a fighter pilot, was reported missing in action after a raid Dec. 14. Officers Move to Build Co-operation Law enforcement officers of four counties met at A.

J. O'Melia cottage, near Three Lakes, last evening for an exchange of information as to how their work may be-made more effective through co-operative activity. The district attorneys of i 1 a and Oneida counties; sheriffs and uhdersheriffs from Vilas, Oneida, Langlade and Forest counties; police representatives from Antigo Minocqua and Rhinelander; state traffic patrolmen and conservation wardens from the area were in attendance, the group numbering nearly 25. Sheriff Gordon Taggart, of Oneida county, was enthusiastic to- iay in expression of the conviction the meeting would produce cooperative activity that would im- Drove enforcement work in the region. Prompt exchange of information as to wanted men and records of suspected law violators was agreed upon.

Setting up of "road alocks" in all the counties when fugitives are attempting to elude pursuers was considered. The officers agreed to meet from time to time and to consider, at their next session, the feasibility of forming an Throughout the meeting there was recognition of the fact that enforcement work may be much more difficult in the post-war period. Some of the officers 'suggested the time may come when the ounties in the group may wish to establishment of short- wave transmitters for speedier apprehension of criminals. WMC Orders Worker Interviews CHICAGO, Feb. 13 William H.

regional War Manpow- Commission' director, last night requested state WMC directors in Wisconsin, Indiana and Illinois to advise employers that no workers scheduled for release Thursday to a recent WMC order 'be laid.ofr until the employer has made arrangements for interviews with the U. S. Employment Service. The order referred to the release of employes in "unclassified" work whose employer carries 10 or more workers on the payroll. Dentists, Sojfons Named in Charge LANSING, Feb.

13 Circuit Judge Leland W. Carr today fixed Friday for the circuit court examination of three dentists and three former legislators who demanded examination when they surrendered today to a grand jury warrant charging them with a legislative graft conspiracy. Stock and Produce Market Reports "Tbe Builders' Service Station" ae as $5 Per Month Final "New York Stocks! NEW YORK, Feb. 13 A broad buying movement swept the stock market today as rails, motors shells added fractions more than two points and new seven-year peaks were plentiful. I Profit taking was absorbed witli- out much difficulty and, near tHe close, prices were around the Transfers approximated 1,700,000 shares.

i Reasons for the push varied. Principal credit, howevej-, was given the belief, that growing volume of idle investment funds must eventually find refuge Jn securities. Another batch of pleajs- ing dividends and earnings statements was helpful. Although npt particularly surprised by results faf the "Big Three" parley, this evidence of Allied unity propped Wall Street sentiment. Al Qhem Dye Allied Kid 17 Allis Ch Mfg Am Can 89V4 Am Locomotive Am Smelt Am Tel Tel Am Tob Anaconda Cop 33 Armour Co Atch Bendix Aviat Beth Steel Borden Co Borg Warn Calumet Hec Case I 4Q Ches 8t Ohio Chrysler Corp gg Cons Nat Gas 35 Container Corp 29 Corn Prod 02 Curtiss Wright ft Douglas Aircraft Du Pont Gen Elec Gen foods Gen Motors 67Vi Grt Northn Ry Pfd Jnspirat Con Cop Int Harvester Jnt Paper Int' Tel Tel 4 Johns ManviUe Kennecott Cop Kimberly Clark Marshall Field Ward Nash Kelv 18 Natl Steel Central By North Amer Co 22 Northern Pacific 2JH4 Pan Am Airways Pfcelps Dodge Markets at a Glance.

NEW YORK. Stocks: Higher; list in broad advance. Bonds: Steady; late rally in rails. Cotton: Firm; mill and commission house buying. CHICAGO, Wheat: Firm; commission house buying.

Corn: Firm; light offerings. Rye: Firm; light offerings. Hogs: Active; fully steady. Top $14.75. Cattle: Slow; steady.

Top $17.00. Phillips Pet Radio Corp of Am Repub Steel 21 Shell Union Oil 27V 4 Simmons Co Sinclair Oil Socony Vacuum Std Brds 31V 4 Std Oil Ind 37 Std Ojl Swift Co Texas Co Timk Pet Axle United Aircraft Rubber 57 Steel West Un Tel A 46y 4 Woolworth 43y 4 Youngst Sh Final New York Curb. Alum Co Am 40 Ark Nat Gas A 8 Cities Service 21 Cities Svc Pfd Bond Sh ny 4 Hecla Min Chicago Potatoes. CHICAGO, Feb. 13 Potatoes: Arrivals 81, on track 130, total U.

shipments 670; old stock, offerings light, demand good, mar- fretj at ceiling; new stock, none available in today's market; Nebraska Bliss Triumphs, Commercials, 3.39; North Dakota Cobblers, U. S. No, 1, 3.19; Wisconsin Chip, U. S. No- 3.09.

Teacher Salary Narrow Here, Report Mem bees of the Rhlneiander board of for spring cofttfacting teaching personnel, were told by Supt. W. F. Kruschke, last evening that 'the average salary paid, teachers here is about on a £ar with' th'at paid ers in comparable school systems, but that generally, the spread the Salaries of grade: and'high school teachers is considerably greater than it is in Rhinelander. Mr.

Kruschke reviewed a analysis of, teacher salaries, reporting that in Rhinelander the aver- ageds $1,675 for grade teachers and $1,775 for high school teachers. In the other systems included in the survey, he reported, grade schbol teachers generally have a lower average salary and high school-teachers have a higher average salary. While the spread between grade and high school teachers here, on an average basis, is $100 a year, the spread in most communities is several -hundred dollars per year, he reported. of the matter evoked the comment that, under present educational standards, the Rhinelander policy was preferable to that of systems teacher compensation varies widely as between grades and high schools. Educational preparation' for.

grade school work, responsibility and requirements for maintenance of teaching education standards, Mr. Kruschke pointed out, suggest that the spread between grade and high school salary standards be kept nominal. The matter is to be considered by the board's teachers' committee in the preparation of contracts for the next school year. Mr. Kruschke submitted an annual financial report, covering 1944, showing that receipts exceeded budget estimates by $2,817.02 and expenditures were less than budget estimates by $2,221.01.

The situation resulted in an operating balance, at the end of the year, about $11,000 greater than the balance for the first of the year. Other highlights of the board session: Enrollment: There were 33 new enrollments (nine in high schools, 24 in grades) and 32 withdrawals (17 in high schools and 15 in grades) in January. Truancy: Greatly improved attendance reported; most troublesome truancy conditions corrected. Child labor permits: 22 issued. Stamp and bond sales: Figures for other schools indicate that sales here are below average.

Class for beginners in instrumental music: So much interest shown that school has been unable to supply instruments to all Fifth and Sixth graders wishing to. enroll; several violins purchased; decision made to divide applicants to-two. groups, one oft Saturday mornings and the other to have instruction during summer months. Forensic groups: Interest greatly stimulated by competi-' tive activity at Eau Claire and Wisconsin Rapids. Building alteration: Contract for revision of Senior High School heating system, to correct uneven flow of heat to some rooms, accepted.

Affiliation with state School Boards Association: Approved by board. The school board adopted a reso- lution requesting the city council to acquire West Side lantf needed for school playground purposes and transmitted the esolution, to thi city council. The council author teed the attorney to proceed With -condernnatioft proceedings. Girt Fractures Skull on Bathtub MILWAUKEE, Feb. IS Janet Redzinsfci, 17, died of a skull fracture suffered yesterday when she fell in the bathroom, of he? home, striking her head against tub.

She was a member of. February graduating class at side High School. SCHEME! America's Largest Selling 86 a i Stheoley DUtiilert N. Y. C.

FIREPOWER! HELP BUILD IT CARPENTERS ELECTRICIANS PLUMBERS LABORERS Butter. GQ, Feb. 13 VP) Butter: firm; receipts 83 score AA, score 41: 90 80 40V4; cooking 88, 39; centralised car- lots 88, Eggs; Receipts top steady; current receipts weak; U. S. extras U.

S. standards, 35.1; cur- reni receipts, 33.0; dirties, 32.6; checks 32.6. You are urgently needed foy new construction of the Rocket Powder Plant at Badger Oidnance Works Near Baraboo, Wisconsin Union Wage Scale Housing Available Now Working Week Time-and-one-half over eight hours in any one day and for Saturday, and Sunday Mason and Hanger Company ANP PRIME CONTRACTORS WMC RULES APPLY Company-Representative at United States Employment Service Office Bhinelander, Wis. Week ol Feh43 8 A. M.

to P. JM. LAST TIMES TONIGHT SHOWS 9-9 VERA HRUBA RA EUGENE PAUETTE KOMftT UVINOCTON WA11IR CATUTT NOME AND OUCHMTtA HARRT OWENS AND HIS ROTA1 HAWAIIAN! icr spfciAints MCCOWAN AND MACK TWINKU WATO IHt MIMY MIIS1EU OuMt Star HOY R06HB King of Hi. Cowboyi Short Subjects STARTS WEDNESDAY i Matinee 1:30 P. M.

HIT NO. 1 Don't Miss This Picture! WITH SHARYN MOFFETT JILL ESMOND UNA O'CONNOR GEORGE CLEVELAND CHARLES ARNT-CLAIRE CARLETON HIT NO. First rousing hit to tell the story of millions of love-hungry gals! AMERICA'S NO. 1 LOVE PROBLEM! ELYSE KNOX WARJORIE RAMIiAU RICK VAIUN KMT i AIMIGMT News Events Children 1ml jr. Bfc Ue Isal Juici- CWldren Jr.

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About The Rhinelander Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
81,467
Years Available:
1925-1960