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The Hutchinson News from Hutchinson, Kansas • Page 8

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Hutchinson, Kansas
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PAGE EIGHT THE HUTCHINSON. KANSAS, NEW S. SATURDAY. AUGUST 19, 1939 Negligence In Drowning Coronor's Jury Ruins In Death of Boy Dressed in the Spout uniform of which ho was sn proud, Ralph Shaw, 13-ycar-old son of Clark Shaw, who drowned in the municipal pool Thursday afternoon, will be buried today in Memorial park cenvtcry. Hutchinson Scouts will attend in a bodv the service al 4 o'clock this afternoon at the First Presbyterian church, and fellow members of troop 1 of which Shaw was senior patrol leader will be his pallbearers.

A coroner's jury late yesterday found that Ralph Shaw died by drowning. I'rgr Covering Of Drain the jury," their verdict Tend, "feel that through the negligence of a person or persons unknown (hat a drain pipe in the Hutchinson municipal pool was uncovered, thus causing a dangerous condition. It is our opinion that this condition should be corrected immediately and also that any other death trap in said pool be Park Commissioner Dave Baxter said today the pool probably will be reopened Monday. In the meantime a protective grating will be placed before the drain pipe. Some other changes are contemplated, including the moving and anchoring of the life guard's chair.

May Not Finish Season Grief-stricken, E. A. (Chop) Cairns, high school athletic director who has managed the pool this summer, announced after the verdict yesterday that ho did not believe he would finish the season at the park. Cairns and Commissioner David Baxter were grilled at the inquest by A. Lewis Oswald, attorney and Shaw's scoutmaster, in what seemed to be nn attempt to pin upon the city the responsibility for the uncovered trap in which the youth met his death and for opening the drain valves while swimmers were in the pool.

Open Past Nine Years Evidence, however, indicated the trap has not been covered for the past nine years, including the period during which Oswald was mayor. Asked about that after the inquest, Oswald said: "What has happened does not matter. It is the future about which wo are In Oswald's summation of the case to the coroner's jury, he said: "I have no deeper regard for anyone than Chop Cairns. My purpose here is to make such a record that during the next ten years at least we need not be concerned about another such tragedy occuring." He mentioned no other names, Oswald Chief Inqulsitlonrjr Oswald entered the case as a friend of the Shaw family and took most of the burden of questioning from County Attorney Arthur Symns and Dr. H.

Stewart, coroner. During his quizzing by Oswald, Cairns testified that earlier in the afternoon, before the trag edy, he had opened the shear gate in the pipe to drain some water from the pool as hot water was being added, but he was certain that there were no swimmers near the outlet at the time. There was a normal flow of water, he said. Under persistent questioning by the volunteer attorney, Cairns said that a boy would have "no chance" should he be in the drain pipe when the valve was opened. Cairns said that later in the afternoon he was told a boy was missing.

Mistake to Open Valve "I dashed over and jerked the valve open. That's the mistake 1 might of made. It was a gamble to save the boys' life by bringing him through the pipe. Not until later did I find out yiat would have been impossible because there was a log lodged in the pipe and he couldn't have gotten through." Under cross-questioning, Cairns repealed he did not know the log was in the pipe. Cairns added that this lime when he pulled the valve open there was not a normal flow of water.

The log lodged in the pipe was one of the floating buoys used in the pool. He said he did not know if the log had been in tlie pipe months or years. Ferguson Reynolds, who recovered the body, was questioned by Symns as to whether the boy bad badly bruised. The fireman said he got a very poor view of the body. Dr.

G. R. Walker, city physician, said death was caused by drowning and there were no indications of foul play. No Fractures Dr. Stewart said x-rays revealed no fractures but that Shaw had two severe bruises and a cut over the right eye which might have been caused by the boy's struggles or by pulling him out, James Wesley, who was swimming with Show, said they were playing follow the leader and weaving around the slats under the diving board.

"It took quite a lot of breath," he said. "Ralph watched me do it and said 'Wait here until get 1 supposed lie swam off somewhere trying to ditch me. asked some of the boys and about that time Chop came over and asked me if a boy were missing. He said the drains were not working. "I searched for Ralph and identified his clothes and then Chop called the fire department." Fell Suction Questioned about the drain, Wesley told the jury that "Ralph mentioned quite a lot of suction from the pipe.

I went down and put by hand in and it was sucked in. I went down later and it was calm, guess it was and we went down and started playing. "Afterwards, I put my feet in Braves Maze of Danger On The Air Waves A member of the navy crew at work on salvage of the sunken submarine, Squnlus, is shown after he plunged into chill waters of the Atlantic off the New Hampshire coast. He holds a knife in his right hand ready to sever cords binding air hoses together during the second lifting operation. He was one of the crewmen who risked their lives continuously.

Saturday fiavftl'f Hotfl Lincoln orchestra. I NBC. At Work." CBS. I "County starring Collins. CBS.

Annual Coney Inland Midsummer Song festival, mus rhonia led by Fred Warlnc NBC. "Music, Maestro, Please." LOB Anpplrs. CBS. Hollywood Today." Bachelor male trio: Debutantea, ctrl's trio; fclvira Rlos. soprano.

NBC. "AviiInn Time." with lied Skelton. comrdlan; Edna PtlllweU; Avalon chorus; Janette, vocalist; Bob StrnnK orchestra; Curt Mftsscy, baritone. NBC. Hit Parade." with Lanny vP.osn.

tenor: Raymond Scott quintet; Mark Wnrnow'p, orchestra; Kay Ijorralne; SongflmJlhs male quartet. CHS. Pop," Parka Johnson and Wally Butterv-tirth with Graham McNnmee. NBC. Oboler's plays, "Efficiency Island." starring Betty Catne.

NBC. NiKht Serenade," Mary Eastman, soprano; Bill Perry, ten or. CBS. Caravan," Benny Goodman orchestra with, Louise Tobln, vocalist. WOW.

Gordon's Westchester Country club orchestra. NBC. Heidi's Hotel orchestra. NBC. Barry Wood orchestra.

CB8. Jenny orchestra. CBS. Sunday "From the Orpan Loft," Julius Mattfeld. CBS.

Back the Clock," Altec Remsen, contralto; Bailey Axton, tenor; two-piano tea.ni. NBC. for Strings." CBS. Drivers," novelty program with Fields and Hall; Frances Adair, contralto. NBC.

of the Air," Rev. Armin George Wens. Ph. president II llnols Synod of. United Lutheran church, CBS.

McKlnley, baritone. NBC, Over Jordan." CBS. and Rhythm," news stories by Todd Hunter; Carl orchestra; novachord played by Davo Bacal. CBS. Martinez, guitarist.

NBC. Bowes' Capitol family, Dalton brothers, Nicholas Cosenttno. opera tenor: Charles Masnante, ac cordionlsi; Sam Herman, xylo- j-hnnlpt: and Waldo Mayor's orchestra, CBS. Walter Logan's Muslcale. NBC.

Lake City tabernacle choir. CBS. for Moderns," featuring Nathan Snader's orchestra with Bonnie Stewart and Roger Williams, soloists. NBC. Symphonette featuring concert orchestra under direction of Edward A.

Rice. NBC. in Action." U. Dept. of Interior, office of education.

CBS. South." Clyde Barrte, Deep River boys. CBS. and Rhythm," Chicago. CBS.

2 Broadcasting symphony orchestra. Howard Barlow conducting. CBS. You Think You Know Music?" with Frank Macaluso, Judpa David Ross. CBS, 1 'Syncopation Piece." CBS.

Country Journal, Minnesota Ptate fair. Program. CBS. Ninety Revue." CBS. Club." Jack Lascoulln, master of ceremomes; Art Bryan- Emory Parnell, Beth Wilson and Leon orchestra.

NBC. to Hollywood," summer theatre; "Career," with Alice Eden nnd John Archer. CBS. People's Platform." Lyraon Bryson presiding. CBS.

Aldrlch Family," starring Ezra Stone, comedy sketch. NEC. Bandwagon," with Garry Morflt. NBC. Froman and Jan Pecrce; Erno Rapce orchestra.

CBS. of Ellery Queen." CBS. and Sanborn program. Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy Don Anieche, master of ceremonies Nolson Eddy, baritone; Dorothy Lamour; Robert Armbruster, musical director. WOW.

Summer Hour," featuring Jamea Melton, Francis While, Don Voorhees' orchestra. CBS. Merry-Go-Round, Btar- ring Rachel Car ley. blues Finger; Pierre Le Krecun. tenor; "Men About Town," Don Donnte's orchestra.

NBC. Album of Familiar Mti- sic," Frank Munn, tenor; Jean Dickenson, soprano; Elizabeth Lennox, contralto; Buckingham choir Arden and Arden, piano duo; Bert rand Hirsch. violinist; the Haen echen concert orchestra. NBC, Symphony." National Symphony orchestra; Gay Fraser Harrison. NBC.

Adventures," Frank Graham. CB3. Basle orchestra. CBS, King orchestra. CBS.

Miller's Glen Island Casino orchestra. NBC. Young orchestra. CBS. Corruption No.

1 Racket G-Men Are Out to Bust the Big Fix Washington G-men find their allies are drawing a bead on the daddy of all the rackets! They're after the crime behind crime. They've got their eyes on the Big Fix. Without this worst racket few illegal short cuts to wealth could survive. Crime would disappear as an organized force. The criminal would revert to his old furtive, hunted, way of life, unprotected by crooks in high places.

The light of truth would return to that wise old saw, "Crime does not pay." The first objective in a nationwide drive is one Louis (Lepke) Buchalter, a bulbous-nosed New ifork parasite who has been charged with selling protection to legitimate business for the point of a gun and at the end of the arc of a bomb. Between them, Thomas E. Dewey, New York's racket-buster, and J. Edgar Hoover's Federal Bureau of Investigation have put a price of $30,000 on Lepke's scalp. Some folks have the idea that potential Republican presidential candidate Dewey and Democratic Attorney General Frank Murphy, Mr.

Hoover's boss in Washington, are rivals for custody of Buchalter. It's true, the capture and conviction of Buchalter would be a political asset. The principals deny any such rivalry, and insist they are cooperating with each other. But, rivalry or not, the public benefits in the chase for a criminal. Of that there can be no doubt.

The FBI admits that Buchalter is wanted in the worst way. Dewey says he's the most dangerous industrial racketeer in the nation. He's Bait In A Trap But that's only part of the story. As a matter of fact, Lepke is not deux ex machina in the national underworld. Right now he's just so much bait big, fat, juicy lump of bait in a trap set clear across the country Jaws of the master trap stand agape in many cities, perhaps among them Cleveland Chicago, New Orleans, Boston, Miami, Philadelphia, San Francisco.

A New- York federal grand jury has set itself up as a clearing house for crime, armed with a hand-truck load of the encyclopedia of the underworld, sent up from Washington, Anybody in the underworld anywhere in the country who has ever 'They Are Ready For It' K.U.Puots Rank Second Only Purdue Ahead of Kansas In Instruction Gen. John J. Pershmg (left) is shown as he was greeted by his son, Francis Warren Pershing on his return to New York from FTance. Asked about French military preparedness, the 79-year- old A. E.

F. commander said: "They are ready for it." election fixers were sentenced in federal court. The Summary Now look what's happened since: Tom Pendergast is a number in Leavenworth, convicted of income talc evasion, the quickest way to get him. His lieutenant, R. Emmet O'Malley, accused of bribery in a huge insurance rate fraud, is in Leavenworth with "the boss." E.

Mont Reily, Pendergast's Republican crony is under indictment for forging city payrolls. H. F. McElroy, Pendergast's city manager, is under indictment for embezzlement of public funds. Angolo Donnici, Pendergast ward heeler, the "mayor of ninth street," has been convicted with 58 others of running a a-year narcotic ring, supplying the whole southwest.

Charles Carollo has been indicted as tlie czar of a $20,000,000 gambling syndicate. At least that's what Judge Allen C. Southern said the gamblers took from Kansas citizens and their guests every year. Kansas City showed the G-men Better Mail Service Here Letterji to Northwest Kansas Speeded Up and their allies what can be done done business with Buchalter is a when they get at the Big Fix. It the pipe to see if I could feel him." Oswald asked if during the afternoon he hart watched Caims manipulating the drains.

"I heard Chop was taking the water off the bottom and putting warm on top," Wesley replied. Chief Ben L. Jones and Detective Wiley Sloan testified as to elaborate measurements and photographic evidence taken by police Thursday night to provide the jury with exact details. Drain Always Open Charles Carpenter, park superintendent now and under previous administrations, told the jury that he had been al the park "off and on for nine years" and "never seen a grate" over the trap. Carpenter was park foreman during the Oswald administration.

Several other friends of Shaw also were called to the stand. The jury deliberated more than half an hour before bringing in a verdict. Packing Workers In Rebuff to CIO Newport, Minn. of the Cudahy Packing Co. at Newport voted 460 to 228 today against having the United Packing House Workers local industrial union, CIO affiliate, handle wage and hour negotiations "with their employers.

The election was conducted by the National Labor Relations Board, and was another step in the two year controversy between the CIO unit and the Packing House Workers Union, independent plant organization. Frank Also, district director of the CIO, said the election would be appealed immediately to the NLRB. Brazen Hussy Stands Naked in Doorway CITIES OVU 50,000 ro K.OOOTO 50,000 10,000 TO mm mm CRIME IN CITIES I OFFENSE PER 1,000 INHABITANTS. A letter mailed airmail in Hutchinson tonight could be placed beside a breakfast plate in Los Angeles tomorrow morning, but until a few days ago, a letter mailed from Hutchinson to Wa- keeney, or Sharon Springs on Monday wouldn't arrive at its destination until Wednesday. The "break-down" in the mail dispatches for northwest Kansas was a source of worry to Hutchinson postal employes, especially since Wichita letters and those of other localities made better connections for that locality.

Now however, mail addressed to points in northwest Kansas, 75 to 250 miles distant will arrive not soon as an airmail letter addressed to Los Angeles, 1,500 miles away. The new western Kansas service became possible with the establishment of a new bus line between McPherson and Salina which makes connections with an early morning Union Pacific train out of Salina, and improves service by IB to 24 hours, according to Bert Tuttle, dispatch clerk and Ralph Russell, postmaster. FBI figures show crime Is greatest in population centers. It's a heart-rending story. Once she wore the best of furs, was admired by all the girls and created a flutter even in masculine breasts.

She worked day and night and she had no bad habits. She didn't even smoke. Then something happened. She was stripped of her finery, tossed in a truck and hauled to Les Harrison's municipal trash heap on the banks of the Arkansas river. How and why she became the Lady of the Dump is a mystery Harrison won't unfold.

She just stands in the doorway, silent, enigmatic, naked and seemingly unashamed. (Stuff marked man. Anybody who gviesi him aid or comfort along the underground railroad of crime is in! danger. For the FBI is waiting to, spring the trap, not on Buchalter! alone but the men who are IN on big-time crime anywhere. They want crooked lawyers, politicians, bail bondsmen anybody who lives an outwardly respectable life, but who protects crime.

Ask J. Edgar Hoover about it, as I did the other day. and he'll tell you, only he'll use the dictionary word for the Big Fix, "corruption." "The maladies which lawlessness inoculates into the social order will rot the foundations of our nation," said the head G-man. "The worst of these is corruplon. Corruption begets corruption.

Without it, organized crime could not exist." The Kansas City Massacre Kansas City was one opening wedge for the nation-wide drive. It took a long time to drive that years, the G-men knew something was rotten in Kansas Back in 1933 three big-time hoodlums tried to rescue Bank Robber Frank Nash from several officers of the law, and smeared the annals of crime with the notorious Kansas City massacre. Four ofdecrs and Nash were murdered right in front of the Union Station. But local crime is no concern of the FBI, unless some federal law is violated. So J.

Edgar Hoover and his G-men bided their time. On the morning of December 14 1936, Federal Judge Albeit L. Reeves handed them golden op portunity on a silver platter. "Find out who tampered with the votes of citizens in the last national election," was the gist of his order to the federal grand jury and the G-men. Hoover was primed and waiting.

He moved in truckload of scientific microscopes, and the the men who knew how to use it. Tom Pendergast's henchmen must have laughed. Imagine trying to jail anybody with a lot of fancy gadgets! But those gadgets did their work. They found fraudulent ballots. They found the latent finger prints of Pendergast henchmen on those ballots.

They threw the fingerprints on a screen in federal court. Witnesses began to talk. At last the Big Fix was on the way out, Late last year the last of 25ti sharpened their taste for a bigger and better shot at the underworld And they're starting off with Lepke for bait. Pyramid Crime. Larger Reformatory Crews to Fair Grounds Additional crews of reformatory men are to be dispatched to the state fair next week to prepare the grounds for the big exposition, Supt.

A. J. Murray said today, The present detail will be augmented by shifts which will be increased as fair time grows nearer. Use News Herald Columns for Results. of Kansas student pilots had the best spring training record of any college group of fliers west of the the second best record in the United to a report just received from the civil aeronautics college pilot training program by Prof, Earl D.

Hay. head of the mechanical 'engineering department at the university. Although the 20 Kansas fliers were the last to get started In the initial program because the training program inspector visited the other 12 schools ahead of Kansas, the Jayhawk pilots were next to Purdue university in finishing the course. Purdue, which started first, graduated all 50 of its students, and a few days later the 20 Kansas pilots completed their work without a failure. Then came Alabama with 30 students finishing, and Pomona junior college in California with 14 out of 15 fliers graduating.

Strung out in the line were San Jose, Michigan university, North Texas gies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and North Carolina State. Several schools had not completed their program by the end of July. Kansas, one of the 13 schools selected last year out of 300 applicants for the pilot training work, received special commen dation at a June meeting in Wash, ington for finishing Its work so efficiently despite a late start. Professor Hay said. At the same meeting Professor Hay was made a member of a committee to make plans for determining personnel of the pilot groups.

On the basis of last year's record, the University of Kansas has' asked for a larger quota of pilots for this year. Last year the university's score of pilots flew a total of 788 hours without accident. This year an allotment of 100 is sought, although it will probably' not be granted. Professor Hay said, because of the million dollars sought form congress by the Civil Aeronautics Authority four million was granted. This means a reduction of about one fourth, and Kansas probably will be awarded between 70 and 80 as its pilot quota.

Oklahoma Arbuckle Mountains. Supervising the outing are Emerson Gilbert, scoutmaster, and Leonard Stauffer, assistant scoutmaster Margaret Powell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. A.

Powell, Sylvia, will enter nurse 's training at St. Elizabeth's hospital next week. Miss Powell is a graduate of Sylvia high school and has attended Santa Ana college, Santa Ana, Calif. BEING ABLE to read the fashion magazines when they're not busy with customers only helps upset saleswomen at the Greenwald store according to Mrs. R.

G. Twombley. "We read all about these fall fashions for going away to school and the clothes are so pretty," she mourns, "but they aren't the kind we can wear to work in the store. They're too sporty." AL WINGERT, 510 West wlU enroll in the federal government airplane construction school which opens in Wichita late in September he said today. After attending classes six weeks, Wlngert will be given a job in the plant established in connection with the school.

Wingert hopes eventually to go to Akron, to work with his uncle, Clarence Bond, an airplane designer, Odds and Ends Of Days News Of Small Saving In City Insurance Bill Finance Commissioner Ernest Murphy reports the insurance program on city real property has been revised to save about $125 a year in premiums. Propertv has been revalued from $313,000 to $281,000, with the coverage remaining at 80 per! cent of the actual value. The premiums will be $1,025 annually. Changes have been approved by the insurance board. A policy also has been written providing for fire, theft and com prehensive insurance on some of the city's 53 insured vehicles and public liability insurance on others of them.

The premium cost is $535.57. Still unsettled is whether the city should pay liability insurance on privately owned cars used by employes in city business. These employes get a $30 a month car allowance. Denied Beer Permit Upon the recommendation of Police Chief Ben L. Jones, the city commission has refused to issue a beer permit to Isabel San ders, 220 West E.

Classified Heads Knights ROBERT ALLAN, RFD 2, and James Sperling, Stafford, will leave Monday on a "pledge" tour of southern Kansas. Members of Phi Alpha Delta fraternity at Washburn college, Topeka, they will Interview boys planning to be at Washburn this fall. They will return to their homes Friday Ray A. Nelson, formerly of Hutchinson, and William Carson, Stafford, have leased the Coleman filling station at Sylvia, 'Canned Music' War To District Court Columbus, Kas. Columbus "canned music" war was headed for Cherokee county district court today.

Leo Armstrong announced an immediate appeal after his client, J. D. Averill, was fined $10 in police court for violation of the new city ordinance forbidding the playing of "music boxes" in public places after 9:30 p. m. The police court hearing was crowded yesterday, largely with youngsters who have vigorously protested the ordinance.

While basing his court case on a contention that Mrs. Averill and not Ed Averill was proprietor of the place where the music was player, Armstrong has been a leader in circulation of petitions against the ordinance which he charges would "put Columbus to bed at 9:30 every night." I MAY SUE" warns Mrs. Thomas Carter, who broke into the "Ten years ago column" Aug. 5, when the announcement was made of her marriage to Clyde Phelps. Mrs.

Carter is real certain the man she married ten years ago on that date is the same who is her husband today and that his name is Thomas Carter. The error undoubtedly resulted from a mix-up in two married chronicled that days and somewhere along the line consolidated so that one groom and one bride was omitted and the wrong bride given the wrong groom. One Dead, Six Hurt In Auto Accident Wellington Smith, 19, Emporia Negro, was killed and six other enrollees of the CCC camp here were injured by the plunge of an automobile over an embankment on U. S. highway 160 near here last night.

None of those injured was in a critical condition. PREFERRING writer's cramp to a boasted budget, Mayor Willis Kelly and City Clerk T. C. Smith have turned down a proposal they purchase a machine which would automatically sign city checks for them Dorothy Crawford, Midland theatre cashier, appeared embarrassed yesterday when her ticket machine broke down. Be' cause of some defect, the device would eject, the wrong number of tickets.

When Miss Crawford punched a key for six, two card boards bobbed up. "I guess I'll have to tear them off the roll," she said. Insurance protection in accidents like this. Will S. Thompson.

Adv. STRAND LAST DAY F. Bennett "TRADE HINDS" B. Whitney "CAMPUS CONFESSIONS" STARTS SUNDAY "HONOLULU" "RIDE A CROOKED MILE" Better Drainage For East Part Sought Declaring the northeast section of Hutchinson drains into their yards after heavy rains to create an unsanitary condition, 26 householders living in the vicinity of Fourth and Grandview have petitioned the city commission to change the drainage. Charles Morgan, 417 Fontron, told the board the water has stood on some lots until it has turned green and that householders are boiling their drinking water for fear of typhoid fever.

City commissioners see no permanent solution to the problem except constructon of a storm sewer with the expense assessed against a beneft district. M. F. SHEDDAN, 1714 North Poplar, admits he was a bit overzealous in ridding his backyard of weeds upon his return this week from a vacation in Tennessee with Mrs. Sheddan and daughter, Joyce Ann.

Inspecting her flower beds after her husband's purge, Mrs. Sheddan discovered he had hacked away her choicest posies. BOY SCOUTS of Troop 14, sponsored by Mitchell church, are spending the week camping in the Cash income from the sale of American farm products in the first five months of 1939 amounted to $2,466,000,000. a decline of 4 per ment from the same period in 1938. Wanted: Place to work for board and room by girl attending college.

Phone 132. Adv. N-15-lf ELLIOTT GAUD FUNERAL HOME White Ambulance Service 1219 N. Main Phone 827 Francis P. Matthews (above) of Omaha.

was elected supreme knight by the Knights of Columbus at (heir convention in Seattle, Wash. 4-GARMENTS-SI All garments insured against fire and Theft. PARIS CLEANERS Howard W. 5th Phone 22tt OLD Enough 1,0 VE! BUT NOT Old enouih to MARRY WITHOUT Parental ConMtit DANCE TO-NITE LEO BATES ORCHESTRA at THE COOL CANTEEN DANCE GARDEN Adm. 25th Gents 25c and Ladies 10c Main MIDLAND TONIGHT "CHARLIE CHAN IN RENO" Slitm-n at NOAH BEERY, JR.

in "BADLANDS" Khuwn at ENDS TONIGHT Roy Rogers "FRONTIER PONY EXPRESS" Richard Arlen Mary Astor in "NO TIME TO MARRY" And Chapt. "ScouU To The Rescue" IRIS ENDS TONIGHT Bob Baker in 3 "BLACK BANDIT" 5 FISTS" Chapt. 5 "FIGHTING DEVIL DOGS" BOYS! GIRLS! Bring Your MIDLAND SI! LAST TIMES 'INDIANAPOLIS SPEEDWAY' Pat Sheridan OWL SHOW TONIGHT AT 11:00 "SWEEPSTAKES WINNER" with Marie Wilson Starts Sunday Theitoryof the world's greatest newspaper, man becomes Hollywood's best motion picture for 19391 STANLEY and LIVINGSTONE SPENCER TRACY NANCY KELLY RICHARD GREENE WAITH CHARIES CCMURN BfC HARDWICKE HENRY HUU HENRY TRAVERS.

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About The Hutchinson News Archive

Pages Available:
193,108
Years Available:
1872-1973