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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 51

Publication:
Tampa Bay Timesi
Location:
St. Petersburg, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
51
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ST. PETERSBURG TIMES, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1940 SEVEN YOUR RADIO TODAY wh.a-wsun" WDAE I jWTSP Scenic Argentina Boasts Four of World's Wonders 900 fOOO 1100 i i i I I I I I I News 8:00 WFLA WDAE 8:00 WTSP WDAE WFLA 10:00 WTSP 11:00 WSUN 12:00 WTSP 1:00 WTSP 2:00 WTSP 2:30 WDAE 8:00 WTSP 4:00 WTSP 5:00 WTSP 6:00 WTSP 7:00 WTSP WDAE 8:55 WDAE 9:00 WTSP WFLA 10 00 WTSP 11:00 WTSP WDAE 12:00 WSUN 12:57 WSUN 7 P.M. to Sign-Off 7:00 WTSP News WDAE News WSUN Jack Benny 7:05 WTSP Jimmy Dorsey 7:30 WDAE Screen Guild Theater WTSP Trinity Lutheran Church WSUN Fitch Bandwagon 8:00 WSUN Charlie McCarthy WDAE Terrace Orchestra 8:30 WTSP Pop Concert WDAE Crime Doctor WSUN One Man's Family 8:55 WDAE Elmer Davis 9:00 WTSP News WDAE Revival Hour WFLA Walter Wlnchell 9:05 WTSP Artie Shaw 9:15 WFLA Parker Family 9:30 WFLA Familiar Music WTSP Gospel Tabernacle" 10:00 WTSP News WDAE Hit Review WFLA Hour of Charm 10:05 WTSP Moon Dial 10:15 WDAE National Defense 10:30 WDAE Columbia Workshop WFI.A Organist 11:00 WTSP News WDAE Headlines and Bylines WSUN News 11:05 WTSP Dance Till Midnight WSUN' Mai Hallett 11:15 WDAE Lee Brown 11:30 wPnrv Buose WSUN The Messiah 12:00 WTSP Sign-Off WDAE Sign-Off WSUN News 12:05 WSUN Abe Lyman 12:30 WSUN Jimmy Dorsey 12:57 WSUN News 1:00 WSUN Sign-Off SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15 (Changes In programs as listed due to last minute network corrections.) 1 (1ft CtinHo.r rinnrn nhn.w.af Kaflio Ulty concert Cont'd nbc-wjz Church of the Air Sermon cbs-wabc March of Health, Drama mbs-chain 1:15 Singing Canaries mbs-midwest1 1:30 On your Job Prog. nbc-weaf RECORD Some Jazz Classics Here's a genuine bargain in jazz classics. An all-star outfit from the famous Duke Ellington orchestra, now recording for Victor, has just recorded "My Sunday Gal" and "Without A Song" for Bluebird.

Rex Stewart, ace cornetist from the Duke's band, is featured, along with Harry Carn-ery on alto and baritone, the Duke himself at the piano, Jimmy Blanton, bass; Ben Webster, tenor; Lawrence Brown, trombone, and Sonny Greer, drums. "My Sunday Gal" is an Ellington original, done in Sunday afternoon stroll tempo with the incomparable Ellington rhythm. You've had occasion already to hear Alvino Rey and orchestra as accompaniment behind the King Sisters. Now the outfit steps out as the headline attraction, and delivers a tremendous version of "St, Louis Blues," backed by "Row, Row, Row Your Boat." Aided and abetted by the Sisters on both numbers, Alvino and the boys display an astonishing virtuosity and full band power. You'll hear this number plenty on the coin machines.

It's a Bluebird. "Panama Hattie" From the pot of gold of "Panama Hattie," Bea Wain has borrowed "Let's Be Buddies" and "Make It Another Old Fachioned, Please." She interprets the first in her popular vocadance style but varies the temnos nn the re verse from slow to medium while the supporting orchestra fills in with fine rhythm and solid swing that packs a wallop. Good news! Duke Ellington has recorded "Chloe," one of the great lazz classics of Deen Smith origin, with all the rich, weird cnoras ana inspired solo work that set the Duke's band in a classification all its own The coupling number, "Across the iracK Jtuues, makes news because it's a medium slow hlnea setting for Barney Bigard's clarinet, Cootie William's trumpet, and Lawrence Brown's trombone. Its on the Victor swinir rlassir list. Hacienda Hotel Opens for Season The Hacienda hotel, located at New Port Richev.

has nneneH fnr the winter season. It is under the management of Gray and Robert Holmes. Gray Holmes manages the Mt. Ranch hotel, Helen, in the summer. Make Christmas i ai The Argentine republic is much in the eyes of the world today, and with reason, for its 1,078,278 square miles of fertile soil contain only a little over 12,000,000 inhabitants.

As a matter of fact the lack of population is even more pronounced than the above figure would indicate because the city of Buenos Aires, wnlch ex tends over 72 square miles, has 2,300,000 people. Thus, a country one-third as large as the United States or Can ada and nearly 10 times the area of Great Britain and Ireland, has only one and one-third inhabit ant to every square miles of territory; compared with 490 for the British Isles or 40 for the U. S. A. Argentina can boast four of the "biggest" things in the world: the widest river Rio de la Plata; the longest street, without change of name Calle Rivadavia; the greatest extension of level plains; and the most lengthy piece of straight Nazis Save War Blinded BERLIN (Correspondence of the Associated Press) Dr.

Hein-rich Goering, brother of the chief of Germany's air warriors, Reichsmarshal Hermann Wil-helm Goering, is serving the armed forces in his role as an eye specialist. Dr. Goering, as head or tne ophthalmology department at the University of Frankfurt and director of the Wiesbaden Optical sanatorium, has taken an active part in treatment of eye wound.s. When soldiers get tiny steel splinters in their eyes from shell explosions, they are rushed to Goering's clinic, where he uses a huge magnet to draw out the fragments to a spot in the eyeball where they can be removed with a minimum of danger to the sight. Dr.

Goering stated in an interview with the German news service Dienst Aus Deutschland that the eyesight of many a. battle-blinded man could be restored through transplanting of a clear healthy part of cornea taken from Riding Clothes Needed On Indies Cruise How to choose a wardrobe for a West Indies cruise is an old story by now, but if you sail on the "Kungsholm" which drops anchor in the palm fringed harbor of Cape Haitien on the Island of Haiti you will need a riding costume to fully enjoy the unique experience of scrambling up the steep mountain trails to the crest of Le Ferriere where stands that fabled castle built by Christophe, the hero of Black Majesty. Isabel McCord who has just returned from a voyage to the West Indies, tell us all about it. Of course you will plan to visit the Citadel of Henri Christophe, that eighth wonder of the world, perched on mountain top 3,000 feet above the sea, says she. You first drive as far as the ruins of the Palace of San Souci at Milot, where the Black Emperor once held court, and there you change to horses and mount one of the sure-footed ponies which carry you up the break-neck mountain trails to the famous stronghold high above the tropical forests.

It is hot in the lower valleys but is always cool on the breeze-swept mountain top where you will eat your picnic lunch and explore one of the most remarkable structures ever built by man. In packing for your trip it is well to include suitable clothes for this day on horseback in the hills. A pair of heavy shoes or boots, riding breeches or slacks and a lightweight shirt will be comfortable topped by either a sun helmet or a wide brimmed woven straw hat plus sun glasses to keep off the glare. This is simple advice that anyone may follow and, provided with such a costume, you will strike a prettier note than many who have packed only for ordinary days ashore in a typical West Indies city. In this island French is the native tongue.

If your French is rusty, take along a little pocket dictionary. You'll find conversing with your hosts in their own language most pleasurable as you jog slowly up and down the face of the mountain. Youll surely join the black boys who accompany you in singing with them "Bon soir, bon soir, Messieurs Mesdames." Different This Year TRAVEL HOLIDAYS All Expense NEW YEAR CRUISE LEAVES DEC. 29 RETURNS JAN. 4 Long Suffering Customers Get Break When Uncle Sam Takes Hand in Film Making Give your family and yourself, as an inspired gift, this fascinating and inexpensive trip.

titm jpjjujjy ON THE That ageless Carmichael mel ody, "Stardust," has just been given a new recording by two of the top bands of the land. Tommy Dorsey's Victor record of this tune stood in the best-selling bracket for several years; and it would seem unfair for the record company to withdraw the old disk without having Dorsey make a new one, in its place. This is exactly what the Victor company has done. It is good to see Dorsey make his new version in slow, vocal style, featuring his famed singers, Frank Sinatra and the Pied Pipers, as well as his own silky trombone. A beautiful arrangement of "Suwannee River" is the platter mate of this fine record.

Also on Victor is an outstanding rendition of "Stardust," by Artie Shaw. His band plays it in medium slow drag with Shaw's own intricate and dazzling clarinet wizardry. Turn the platter over, and listen to Shaw swinging rendition of "Temptation," of popular vintage. Dont ask us to tell you which version of "Stardust" is the best of the two. Pay your money and take your choice.

They're both good! WAYNE KING POPULAR It Is only rarely that you run across a record fan who doesn't like Wayne King. His smooth, mellow handling of the sweeter side of music has long kept him in the front of the popular bandleaders of the country. We note that he has added a 'cello to his string section in order to do justice to his latest waltz pairing, the "Evening Star," from Wagner's "Tannhauser," and Franz Schubert's immortal "Serenade." Here are two charming and famil iar airs, tenderly and beautifully handled by the Waltz King. Deep South Melodies The cradle of genuine jaz music, the Deep South, has been receiving more and more attention lately. And this attention is certainly deserved.

When you listen to the captivating, spontaneous rhythm of Mugesy Span-ier and his Ragtime band, for instance, you have only one thought in mind; to hear more of it. And that is why we wonder at the small number of records that Spanier has made for Bluebird. However, we are pleased to see that a talented blues singer with an outlandish name. Hud3ie Leadbelly, is going to town on Bluebird with a steadily increasing number of the unwritten sons of the south. They range from work sons of the cotton nicker to the ballads, blues and hollers of the men In stripes on the chain gnn.

They are songs of the soil, full of the haopiness and roiserv of the un named million who till the fields, nlant the cotton, and are soon buried and milcklv forgotten Wp recommend hs "Fapv Ririer Pnd "Sail On, Little Girl, Sa'l On." In thiq connection. Washboard Ram and his Wahbonrd band on have dished ont "Good T.uck B'ues" and "I'm Goin? to St. Louis" both tasv examples of the music that is denned for the "race trade" of the deeo south, and is ouickly snatched un hv he ennnoii5enr in classical for reason which are easily understood when the music is heard. New Kemp Records Janet Blair warbles "So You're the One," and "WalkhY By the River," with Hal Kemp's outstanding band on Victor. In bright bounce tempos, the Kemp saxes and triple-tongued trumpets are set in excellent arrangements.

Both melodies display the Kemp individuality to perfection. We mentioned Wayne King only a few paragraphs ago, but it's time to call your attention to him again, nonetheless. For King has recorded his well-known theme, "The Waltz You Saved for Me" with "Song Of The Islands" in a new version with the advantage of up-to-the-minute recording technique. For years, King's older version stood in the steady-sell-in lists of Victor. Tribute is paid to the Paris that was, in a new tune, "The Last Time I Saw Paris." written by Oscar Hammerstein II and Jerome Kern.

The melancholy flavor of the lyrics is preserved by Leo Reisman' orchestra on Victor, featuring Phil Duey's rich baritone voice. It's a nostalgic commentary on what life was in Paris before the iron heels of the Nazis crushed out the charm and gaiety that made this beautiful city what it was: "The City of Light." Now Faster Flying via the New, Luxurious Lockheed lodestars JACKSONVILLE 1 HR. 54 MIN. $11.00 $19.80 Round Trip PLANE LEAVES 7:25 AM 1:54 PM 9:00 PM MIAMI 1 HR. 8 MIN.

$11.00 $19.80 Round Trip PLANE AM 6:29 PM LEAVES PM Tickets: Municipal Airport Phone 7768 WEBB'S $00 600 700 800 I i i 1 1 I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 i 1 I I 1 1 I 610 Bt'N'DAT, DEC. IS 7 A.M. to 12 Noon Petite Munlcala uegion Band News Roundup Wt'LA Weather and Keum 8.UO-WTSP Music ror Sunday WDAB New WX-A News from Europ 8:05 WDAE Mattinata WJj'LA Newii 8:15 WDAE BuUalo Baptist Church la uigan KecltaJ 8:30 WTSP Reading the "unnlef WKLA Gens and Glenn 9:00 WTSf Newt WDAE European Nws WFLA News Veteran's Corner 8:15 WDAE Bible Sunday WFLA Chimes 8:20 WFLA Four Showmen 8:30 WDAE Wings Over Jordan WFLA Sunday Drivers 10:00 WTSP News WDAE Church of the Air WFLA Radio Pulpit 10:05 WTSP Orchestra 10:30 WTSP Organ Reveries WDAE Vouth Orchestra WFLA Chills and Thrills 10i40 WTSP Christian Science V' Church 10 WFLA WPA Program 11:00 WDAE Church Service WSUN News 11:05 WSUN Mountain Meditation 11:30 WSUN Music and American Youth 12 Noon to 7 P.M. 13:00 WTSP News WDAE Major Bowes WSUN Emma Oter 12:05 WTSP Modern Moods 12:30 WDAE Salt Lake Tabftrnacle WSUN Wings Over America 1:00 WTSP News WDAE Church of the Air WSUN Sunday Down South 1:05 WTSP Melodies 1:20 WTSP Guy Lombardo WDAE March of Games WSUN On Your Job 1:35 WTSP Richard Himber 2:00 WTSP News WSUN String Symphony WDAE Gems of Melody 2:05 WTSP Children's Program 2:15 WDAE To be announced 2:30 WTSP Clyde Barrie Singers WDAE News WSUN Chicago Round Table 2:35 WDAE Sweet Rhythm 2:45 WTSP Wayne King 8:00 WTSP News WDAE Philharmonic Orcheftra WFLA 116th Field Artillery Orchestra 8:05 WTSP Tampa Gospel Taber- 8 -15 WFLA H. Knltenhorn 3:30 WFLA Poetic Memories 3:35 WTSP Interlude 3:45 WTSP Wilson Amps WFLA Bob Becker 4:00 WTSP News WFLA National Vespers 415 WTSP Light Classics WFLA Paereant of Art WDAE Musical Program 4:45 WTSP The Thompson Four 5:00 WTSP News WDAE Design for Happiness WFLA Battlegrounds of 1940 5:05 WTSP Bible Institute 5:15 WFI.A Songs 6:30 WTSP Fun Begins at 40 WDAE Christmas Seal Speaker WFLA The Patriarch 5:35 WDAE Musical Brevities 6:45 WTSP Rones WFLA Tribune Air Cadets WDAE U.

S. Army 6:00 WTSP News WDAE Silver Theater WFLA Catholic Hour 6:05 WTSP Rwingtime, 6:30 WTSP Sports Resume WDAE Gene Autry WSUN Sunday Serenade 6:35 WTSP Interlude 6:45 WTSP Songs WSUN Malor Robinson AN EXCELLENT GIFT FOR MUSIC LOVERS Hear These Two Record Albums on the VICTOR RECORD CONCERT WTSP 4:00 to 4:50 P. M. NOTE NEW TIME TSCHAIKOW SKY: Nut Cracker Suite, played by the London Philharmonic Orch. Three records with album.

price $2.50 DEBUSSY! Petite Suite, Paris Conservatory Orrh. Two Red Seal record with $2.00 "The world's greatest artists are en Victor and Bluebird Records" tm sr. no Your Musical Station 8:00 A. M. Music for Sunday 8:30 A.

M. Reading the Funnies 10:05 A. M. Marck Weber and His Orch. 10:40 A.

M. Christian Science Monitor 12:30 P. M. Victor Salon Orchestra 1:20 P. M.

Guy Lombardo 2:05 P. M. Children's Program 3:45 P. M. Wilson Ames 3:30 P.

M. Fun Begins at 40 13 70 ON YOUR DIAL 1200 1300 W0 1500 1220 1370 Josef Marals and His Song nbc-wjx March of Games Qulzeis cb-wabs Sunday Lutheran Hour mbs-east 2:00 NBC String Symph nbc-weaf iea waione Pilgrimage nbc-wji To be announced (30 cbs-wabc Chicago Concert Orchestra mbs-ch. 2:15 Foreign Policy Talks nbc-wji Chicago Kuundtable nc-weai The Tapestry Musicians nbc-wji iNews: sweet Rhythm cbs-waoc Nobody's Children, Drama mbs-ch. Washington Calling nbc-weaf The great Plays series nnc-wjz N. Y.

Philharmonic Orch. cbs-wabc National Defense. Prorram mbc-ch. Kaltenborn Comment nbc-weaf Music Feature Prog. nbc-wear Younr Pennle'n Church mbs-chaln Becker's Dog Talk nbc-weaf 4:00 Yvette and tier Bongs noc-weai Sunday Vespers by Radio nbc-wji Peter Quill the Wizard mbs-chain 4:15 Tony Wons Scrapb'k nbc-weaf Th Paveant of Art nbc-weaf Vocalists Concert Orch.

nbc-wjzl The Kos'eiani'TZ uoihwtt raew Shadow Drama mbs-New England iih.i.n'. Vlnni- Deneut mba-West 5:00 Auditions for Opera nbc-weaf Yodeier; Dance noc-wji Woman's Symphony Orch. cbs-wabc The Music Steelmakers mbs-chain 5:30 Dreams Coming True nbc-weaf Behind the Microphones nbc-wjz Col. Lemuel's Stoopnagle cbs-wabc Dh.rinw rtrtma mha-WOr-Chaln 8:00 The Catholic Service nbc-weaf News: Brief Piano renoa noc-wj Conrad Nagel Theater cbs-wabc Double or Nothing, Quiz mbs-wor 8:05 New Friends of Music nbc-wjz 6:30 Ted Weems i Quiz nbc-weaf Gene Autry and Melodies cbs-wabc Show of the Week Orch. mbs-wor 7:00 Jack Benny and Mary nbc-weaf D.

Pearson, B. Allen nbc-wjz-east Pining Sisters, Song nbc-blue-west European War Broadcast cbs-wabc Russell Bennett Notebook mbs-wor 7 Europe War Broadcast nbc-wjz 7:30 Bandwagon Orchest. nbc-weaf Speak Up America's Quiz nbc-wjz The Screen Guild Theater cbs-wabc Pn'nourri of Week-end cbs-mldwest War News from Berlin mbs-chain Williams mbs-network McCarthy nbc-weaf Star Spangled Theater nbc-wjz Helen Hayes Dramas cbs-wabc-east Columbia Concert Orches. chs-west American Forum, Talks 8:30 One Man's Family nbc-wear Sherlock Holmes. Dramatic rtbe-w The "Crime Doctor" cbs-wabc-baslc 8:45 Dorothy Thompson mbs-wor 8:55 Elmer Davis.

News cbs-wabc 9 :00 The Merry-Go-Round nbc-weal Walter Winchell's Column nbc-wjz The Sunday Evening Hour cbs-wabc Old Fashioned Revival mbs-chain 9:15 The Parker Family nbc-wjz 9:30 Album Familiar Mus. nbc-weal Irene Rich's 15-min. Play nbc-wjz pin stern nn Snorts nbc-wjz 10:00 Phil Spitalny's Girls nbc-weaf Good Will Hour via ttaoio tidc-wji Bob Hawk's Quiz Propram cbs-wabc News: Dance Music Hour mbs-wor 10 :30 Courboin, Organ nbc-weaf-east M. Shredmk orcnes. nDC-rea-wem CBS Workshop Piny cbs-wabc-west Helen Hayes in repeat CDs-wesi on News Broadcast nbc-weaf-wjz news rsroaucasi uut-wi--j News Broadcastlne Time rbs-wa tic Orch.

Tunes lor Dancing mns-cnain A. Mitchell (Answer Man) mbs-west 11:15 Dance Orch. News all chains If a theater owner wants to buy any of these things with his eyes open, it's okay with the judge, but from now on, he won't have to. Up until this week it had been the practice of many stu dios to say to an exhibitor: "You can't have our feature pictures, unless you buy our other product, too." The "other product" frequently turned out to be some of the worst ever put to celluloid, made at a next-to-noth-ing cost, and designed primarily to wring extra profits from the exhibitors. You customers suffered.

You remember. Furthermore, if any picture because of its plot is offensive in your part of the country on moral, religious, or racial grounds, you wont have to sit through it. The theater owner can refuse to buy it. Numerous other clauses, of no particular interest to you customers, are designed to protect exhibitor and oroducer alike in their business relationshin which traditionally have hppn on the verge of the cut-throat. Then, on next Sept.

1, comes the most important part of all. On that date, theater operators the nation over will have the right to quit buying bad pictures. They'll know the bad ones, too, because the distributors will be forced to hold previews of every picture for the benefit of the men who buy them. Heretofore the buvers bought sight unseen. And you have paid your money to watch such atrocities as "Green Hell" and "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" and a few more we could mention.

After next September the theater owners won't have to buy a full year's pictures from one company blindly and at one whack. First they'll look at the pictures of a movie producing outfit, and then they'll buy five of them. If all five aren't up to snuff, the exhibitor can tell the producer to throw the rest of his pictures in the lake, and do business with somebody else. All the major studios already are reorganizing, trying their dead levelest to be set by September with good pictures and good pictures only. It's a matter of life and death.

Paramount Studios consequently have quit making pictures altogether and have gotten rid of all their producers, directors, and stars. Twentieth Century-Fox has taken in a couple of extra producers to help Darryl F. Zanuck with the load, presumably on their theory that no one man can produce 50 hit pictures a year by himself. for a 91 THIRD ST. SOUTH railway track, 20S miles from Saforcada to Mackenna on the Pacific Railway line.

The republic extends from north to south over 2,980 miles or 34 degrees of latitude. Between the extreme north, above the Tropic of Capricorn, to the farthest south, Tierra del Fuego, where snow falls every month of the year, may be found almost every conceivable climate and vegetation indigenous to the various zones. Argentina, far from being, as is popularly imagined, one vast treeless plain, contains within its borders some of the grandest scenery in the world. The Falls of Iguazu are more magnificent than any; the southern lake district, which covers 1,000 square miles of territory contiguous to the Andes mountains, is unsurpassed for scenic grandeur, whilst the tropical beauty of the northern cities can only be equalled in other equatorial countries. a person who has just died.

(This method of transplanting small bits of borrowed cornea, setting them like windows in an opaque, blinded eye, is one of the newest operations to save sight. The war is giving it a test on a large scale.) DEER HERD TOO THRIFTY COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (U.R) A few deer make a nice tourist attraction for the Broadmoor hotel but when the herd gets so large it destroys the shrubbery and evergreens, it's time for something to be done. The state game and fish department has ordered a survey. Villa D'Este HOTEL Biscayne Blvd.

at 8th St. MIAMI, Florida Special Rates for the Orange Festival From $2.50 Single From $4.00 Double All rooms with bath 1 4 tnoiriE, Famous A Phone 4524 TROWC TOURS CHRISTMAS TOUR or NEW YEAR'S TOUR TO FOREIGN! GAY! ROMANTIC! Seven Day CHRISTMAS OR NEW YEAR'S H-AA'-A-N-A Sail from St. Petersburg Dec. 22nd or Dec. 29th Christmas Tour Sails Dec.

22nd New Year Tour Sails Dec. 29th. Take the Children During Vacation. Children Under Twelve Years Half Rate. ALL EXPENSE SEVEN-DAY TOUR Including First-Class Transportation Hotel Accommodation with Bath All Meals Transfers GRAY LINE SIGHTSEEING with English Speaking Guides.

FOR DETADLS APPLY Make Reservations Early. Your Money Will Be Refunded in Full, if You Must Cancel. THE PRICE INCLUDES 1ft Transportation on S. S. Cnba outnide berth and mraU on hnnrd ships rjy room with bath and mrali at a brttrr Cuban hotel I private car ffl transfer to and from ahlp In St.

Peter dim rn and Havana) in lit- a seeing trips with American-speaking guides and interpreters as tJ) follows: "Ju CITY TRIP TROPICAL OARDKNS CICAR FACTORY Vi CAPITOL BILIDINO SHOPPING COAST TO COAST A MORRO CASTLK FORTRESS CABANAS (iAY HAVANA, MITK TRIP JAI ALAI PRAOO HY NKiHT SPKCIAL 4ft CHRISTMAS AND NEW YF.AR'S KLKHRATIONS Vk ASK FOR SPECIAL FOLDER GIVING ALL DETAILS GENERAL TRAVEL AGENCY. Webb's Drug Store AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL SERVICE 208 CENTRAL AVENUE PHONE 8671 OR IN MIAMI 330 EAST FLAGLER ST. PHONE 33-178 By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN HOLLYWOOD. (U.PJ All the reams which have been printed in movie trade magazines and in the newspapers, back by the want ads, about the motion picture consent decree seem to add up to the fact that Uncle Sam is intent on giving movie customers a better run for their money.

Fact is, you're already getting part of it. Maybe you've noticed. Part of the decree, as signed by Federal Judge Henry W. God-dard in New York, rules that the movie makers cannot force theater owners to show long winded advertisements for forthcoming pictures. Many a theater already has eliminiated them or cut them drastically.

Judge Goddard also put into effect an anti-stinkeroo clause, whereby the picture makers can't foist off any more ninth rate westerns, dead news reels, punk serials, non-understandable foreign features, or travelogues about the beauties of Bali. HEAR RUTLAND'S PROGRAM $25 CASH PRIZES 8:30 P. M. EVFRY WED. OVER WTSP Listen to GUY LOMBARDO AND HIS ROYAL CANADIANS ON WTSP 1370 YOU'LL ENJOY HEARING THE "SWEETEST MUSIC THIS SIDE OF HEAVEN" Today 1:20 to 1:35 Sponsored by "KANISS JEWELRY CO." 9 nihco yOr WA I i mm i JdWlL to HAVANA ftaiU Service.

4 b- i 'flu A POLflTlflL Iv OTHER SPECIAL TOURS BY AIR BV STEAMER aft 1 CHRISTMAS CRUISE LEAVES DEC. BETt'RXS DEC. 28 25 4th ST. N. POST AT SPECIAL PRICES FROM ST.

PETERSBURG MIAMI KEY WEST ASK FUR A FOLDER SPECIAL HOLIDAY TOURS BRINGS YOU SENSATIONAL NEW INVENTIONS PHONF. niiiiAAii 123 OPPOSITE OIKICR 37 Fourth St. So. PHONE 4332 fl OPPOSITE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE A sm JUUri UHfitbUH SERVICE ON ALL HAKES OF RADIOS r-lk.

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