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The Herald-Palladium from Benton Harbor, Michigan • 2

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Benton Harbor, Michigan
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2
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i PAGE TWO THE NEWS-PALLADIUM FRIDAY, JANUARY 5, 1940 mental activities. The early cases the board's history which were At The Theaters appealed to the supreme court Do You Remember? quirementa. ft Tkf Michigan renewed its destructive habits yesterday by carrying out 75 feet of the elevated walk north rvipr and Isolating the The Hews -Palladium COMPRISING THE EVENING NEWS Vol. 59. No.

206 New York Day By Day By C. B. Driscoll 23 Years Ago Completion of the organization of Benton Harbor's new bank, the Berrien County bank of Benton made much of the contention of unfairness, and, incidentally, anti-employer bias. They were found to be without foundation by the court Finally, they have been practically abandoned as an argument and in a very recent case, Ford Motor Co. vs.

N. L. R. Mr. Frederick Wood who took over the case for the Ford Motor Co.

in place of Mr. Colombo, entirely eliminated that contention from the brief and took a new approach to the due process problem. was effected today. Direc Title Kef. C.

8. rateat tors were elected at a meeting of THE DAILY PALLADIUM Vol. 49. No. 80 SBt6 (or trsnsmlvnon through th mails as second clsss matter at the Poct-iflc at Harbor, allchlgaa.

the stockholders of the institution lighthouse from the mainland. Hugs1 floes of ice dashed about by a heavy sea pounded the iron built walk all day until a 75-foot section toppled over between the shore line and 100 feet east of the fog signal. C. S. Grinnell, lighthouse keeper, was ashore when the damage occurred.

Mrs. Earl Foresman and Miss Phyllis Spellman attended a convention of Michigan Bell Telephone company operators in Kalamazoo yesterday, i NEW YORK Thinking out loud: Dave Elman has made a tremendous success out of an idea that was yesterday and today directors elect to Higman Park. The Central Loose Leaf Co. of this city, established years ago by H. C.

Baster and W. E. Koch, formerly associated with the Baker -Vawter company, has been purchased by the latter company as a part of its expansion program. Army food and blankets purchased some time ago by the city council arrived today and will be put on sale tomorrow at the rear of the fire station. Some $2,000 in food and merchandise is included in the shipment which will be sold at cost, in charge of Haryey Osborne.

ed officers. Attorney F. H. Ells worth is president of th institution. Arthur Higman and Charles considered outworn.

"Hobby Lobby on the air has built a fortune for Young were ejected vice-presidents, The Associated Prass I exciuslrei n-tltletf to the dm ot repabUeatiao ot all news dtspatcbea credited to it not other vise credited to this papw and alio the total news published herein. 411 right of republication daily except Sundaj. Benton Harbor. Wch. The argument that the board has degenerated into an inquisition is entirely without merit.

The board has absolutely no power to act until the fmall, bright-eyed, hardworking and James Rose, cashier. John Rob Elman and a inson Is of the board of 3 ew years ago charges are filed in the office of the K- iff? directors. St. Joseph's new city hall, a $35, regional director. Then hearings Dave was he ft 000 'structure built under Mayor are held in accordance with the charges and are definitely limited to those practices outlawed by the hought.

Death of i son had shaken him so that he had no interest in 10 Years Ago Consolidation, of a score of Mich MAO. SLtSCEirTlON KATES Mall tut icnpnoD prices in Micnigaj (ouulde of Berrien, van Bur en and A.le gan counties): Indiana. Olinots, Ohio and Wisconsin daily. News-Palladium only KM per year: 13.00 lor 6 1 SO fm 1 and SO cents for 1 ma Dairy News-PaC-dtum in Berrien, Vn Buren and Allegan counties by mail 4 CO per year; 2.50 for 8 t.25 for SO cents for 1 mo. Wagner Act.

The Board thus has no Dancing Every Sat. and Sun. Sunnyside Inn 3 ML E. on Territorial Ed. Beer Sandwiches Wine power to set itself up as a dictator igan and Wisconsin cherry growers' IS" ship over industry.

It cannot deter co-operatives into one big combina Smdertakenin mine hours of labor, as you state in The "Dead End Kids" are featured with John Garfield and Ann Sheridan in the gripping story "Th ey Made Me A CriminaL" playing Saturday at the Lake. "Legion of Th Lawless" and "Pack Up Your Troubles" end tonight. aesperation, i od-serve, are often successful, be your editorial. You evidently have confused the Wagner Act with the Fair Trades Practices Act when you tion as a part of the merger program launched In December to 83-cure loans of nearly $2,000,000 from the federal farm board fpr organization and marketing purposes, struck Wallace's administration, will be dedicated Wednesday night with formal ceremonies in which the St. Joseph city council and prominent citizens of the sister city will officiate.

Dr. C. A. Mitchell has returned from St. Thomas, Canada, where he accompanied his wife and sons to spend the holidays.

Lawrence Schmuhl has gone to Chicago for the remainder of the Winter. Mr. and Mrs. C. E.

Davis leave soon for St. Petersburg, Fla. 20 Years Ago What is regarded as the first step LIBERTY made that statement. It is true that the employer is limited in his i2ff THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE Politicians and political observers of the Washington scene doubtless iiirVi. interact nnnn thl cause the venturer puts all he has into the Job J.

B. Priestly is the most a snag in Traverse City yesterday. powers to dismiss his employe, but this is not an all-inclusive limita Bringing the powerful story of a man seeking to make an honest way in the world after a term spent in prison. "Invisible Stripes." staring George Raft, Jane Bryan, and William Holden shows today and he is William Holden, the youth who scored such a hit in movie crcles in the title role of "Golden Boy." Holden plays the younger brother of George Raft who wants to turn to crime as a means of securing enough money to marry. How Raft our of the six canning factories whose purchase has been contemplated have refused to negotiate OrociHont'c iMvg tn fionoress this DKISCOLLi week.

They didn't find any subtle unpopular with the Manhattan press Karsen Cleaners Phone St. Joe 1385 3 GARMENTS $1.25 We can fit better and quicker serriee with cor newly instaUed cleaning plant. tion. He is merely deprived of his right to dismiss employes because they have been engaged in union with the co-operatives and are at Saturday at the Liberty. tempting to sign up enough of the ization activities.

If we grant the hints as to what the Presidential oi au vimiui8 "is' mind was thinking about as regards "When We Are Married, got an a third term. But they did find that, awful panning in the Nsw York the message itself on the whole was papers. Partly because it was a bad George Raft plays the title role. keeps him from making the same 1930 crop to prevent the combination premise that employes should have In this, following on the heels cf from meeting the farm board re- mistake he did forms the basis of this gripping picture described by coast critics as one of the most play, I suspect, and pertly because toward extension of the local street car line to Higman park was seen in surprisingly temperate, if not act' his tremendous success In "Each Dawn I Die," Raft is the man who comes back to the girl he loves, determined to lead a straight life, only a request which the local company made last evening to the city coun tremendously moving films to come out of Hollywood this year. cil.

The company asked permission to find the way barred to him because of his stigma: to install a cross-over at Main and 'Pack Up Your Troubles" "Legion of the Lawless" Last Times Today- "Mr. Smith Goes To Washington," with James Stewart as the youth who creates much excitement when Pipestone streets which would make Jane Bryan, the screen's newest it posible to link the main systems he is appointed a U. S. Senator, with the Water street branch. The Author Priestly has been notably high-hat about American journalists Talking about names, to while away long hours of driving, Frank Markey and I decided that nobody by the name of Converse could be anything but dignified, or even a bit aristocratic.

For a retired rural Judge or Justice of the peace, we picked Howard Jonas as the ideal rame Velva Darling was the name of a plump, pink-cheeked California girl who once wrote for the papers under my editorial 'direction. She looked the name the right to organize then it would necessarily follow that employers ought not be permitted to fire them if they do so. Incidentally, what would you term a plant in which the employer had aa absolute right to hire and fire as he pleased if not a dictatorship? The accusation that the board has aligned itself with the C. I. O.

as against the A. F. of L. has no foundation in fact. As a matter of fact, it has actually ruled in favor of the A.

F. of L. more times than it has in favor of the C. I. O.

(see March 1939 Columbia Law Review, p. 341, also statement released by Charles Fahy, general counsel for dramatic star, who has achieved a star ranking through her brilliant work with Bette Davis in "The Old Maid" essays the top feminine role of a girl seeking only happiness with the man she loves. In this case ually conciliatory. With war waging abroad, Mr. Roosevelt said he would very much like to have a united country behind him.

He put it in these words: "National unity is, in a very real and deep sense, the fundamental safeguard of all democracy." And, closing his messags, the President, as if waving the olive branch even a bit more vigorously, added: "I am very hopeful that the closing session of the 76th Congress will consider the needs of the nation and of humanity with calmness, tolerance and cooperative wisdom." The text and the tone of the mes 1 Anra Saturday -DLr-ouoLzDl only starts Sunday at the Liberty. Jean Arthur, Claude Rains, Guy Kibbie, Edward Arnold and others are in the cast. Water street line now runs from the "four corners" to the Union depot. Permission was granted and it is believed the company has intentions of extending the Water street line sease, the demand for protein is John Singer Sargent, famous paint er, had a name that would be diffi- LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE This Column Is Open To Signed Communications Only again in excess of the usual require cult to fail with In our town sage indicate clearly that Mr. Roose velt ardently desires Congress to! there was an attractive gin named hphavp.

itself and not stir ud the no- Darling Crum and at pie so ment. In time of need, protein can also supply the requirement of the body for energy; but this is a wasteful performance. Fats and carbohydrates are the real economic icize. I merely feel that all the litical hornets. To this end his mes-jcials, when I was a boy, I admired facts surrounding the criticism sage concerned itself with only two two sisters Lura and Lora Wilson the board on December 22, 1939.) The startling fact is that in the great preponderance of cases in which the C.

I. O. and the A. F. of L.

seemed to be at odds the board has been able to settle the dispute to the substantial satisfaction of both parties. (See also March, 1939, Columbia Law Review, p. 341.) Your condemnation of the N. L.I Tom Dewey has the faultless fuel materials. should be divulged.

The suggestion of Rep. Ram MS important issues, one, an increase in taxes to support his plan for a The proteins include a large va name for a political candidate. Easy to remember and pronounce, and speck's that Mr. Madden and Mr. larger national defense and, second, 'continuance of Sscretary of State carrying no unpleasant connota riety of amino acids.

When protein food is taken into the stomach, it is acted on by the pepsin II I .1 I II Smith be removed from the board is a very serious one. A good case could be made for the removal of Mr. Smith, but the removal of Mr. Hull's treaty making powers under which he has been negotiating a long R. B.

for standing idly by in the tions. You may have noticed that we've never had a president whose name was hard to pronounce. And it IT'S UP TO VOTERS Editor, The News-Palladium: No permanent relief from the burden of excessive taxation can be expected until the voters take the initiative and abolish the U. S. House of Lords, establish unicameral state legislatures and non-partisan elections.

Expect little help from public officials in this undertaking. Some of the members of the national parliament from the Metropolitan districts will not vote for any legislation which will benefit the American peasants, and the rural members of parliament should not sup is a wonder to me that there hasn't been, within my knowledge, any list of trade pacts with nationj abroad. Whether Congress will remain "calm" and "tolerant" and "co-operative" when it gets down to discuss Madden would, in my opinion, be a very grave mistake. Mr. Madden belongs to the "old school" to whom the name "a gentleman and a scholar" has been applied.

Ask any candidate by the name of Washing ton, since the first one. The name isn't uncommon, and it ought to ing and debating these twoi-hjatters and hydrochloric acid which make up what is called the gastric secretion or gastric 'juice. When the food passes on from the stomach into the intestines, it becomes subjected to the action of other secretions, including trypsin, which comes from the pancreas. These also help to digest the protein material so that it can be taken up by the body fluids and carried to the cells which use it for growth and repair. Most proteins are composed carry one along for some distance.

Is quite problematical. Already the attorney that has ever argued a matter before the board and that will be his reaction. Before assum recent Chrysler flare-up Mr. Editor, Is grossly unfair. The plain truth of the matter is that the board had no Jurisdiction whatsoever in that case.

It has no power to mediate, conciliate or arbitrate labor disputes. The only department having any mediation powers is the department of labor and Mr. Dtwey of that department was on the Job literally day and night. Lest I be accused, Mr. Editor, of being the "defender of the devil" in this instance, let me hasten to add at this time that I am not interested, ipso facto, of defending the RaB.

Or any other administrative tribunal. I am only inter port any Metropolitan interest which ing his present task, Mr. Madden Ken Kllng, cartoonist, who has made one of journalism's outstanding fortunes, once did a comic strip about a character whom he called Windy Riley. Ken made the name was Professor of Law at Pittsburgh federal tax levy, one way or another, has become onerous. Business is being bludgeoned right and left by taxes and to increase the load doesn't invite a pleasing prospect for the immediate future.

As for Secretary Hull's trade pacts Congress has never been overly enthusiastic about willingly opposes the American peasants. Just labor troubles and just federal income taxes sometimes annoy these interests and their henchmep. A Republican member of University and had already gained for himself a pre-eminent position chemically of a number of elements, up out of his head. Yet I remem as an authority in the field of property law. His reports to the Presi including caroon, hydrogen, nitro gen, oxygen and sulfur.

Some also bered, after seeing the strip a few times, that there had lived in our neighborhood in Kansas a hilarious the national House of Commons voted Xor the Frazier-Lemke bill, dent and to the various senate com ihem either, in principle or in mt results. In late months, as the pacts mittees have' been masterpieces, izvt contain phosphorus and small amounts' of other elements. Since voted against the Federal Reserve fellow who was known to all the Act and spoke about the interest on EXTRAS several different protein substances i ested in the cause of truth. The is volving a tremendous amount of research and clarified In an unassailable fashion. Such a keen mind is the public debt, so a farm owning neigiiDors as wmay Kuey.

sucn coincidences are rare. A few may contain the same amounts of sue we have discussed is a vitally years ago the creator of Andv OWL SHOW SAT. crucial one, surcharged with emotions and ill-will. We must analyze yes man may oppose him in the primary. After five years revenge is going to be sweet.

City farmers are behind it. Oh tillers of the soil, what CHAPTER 8 THE PHANTOM CREEPS' PATHE NEWS EVENTS it from a coldly objective, non-par Gump, cartoon character, was sued for damages by a man who claimed to look almost exactly like Andy, It these various elements, we know that the nature of the. protein depends on the way in which the elements are arranged In the molecule. Not all proteins are equally use-! ful in the diet of man. are 22 amino acids or protein sub Too Busy To Work" i- have multiplied, both individual Democratic and Republican members of Congress have corns to view them as of doubtful value.

When Mr. Hull was in Congress he was always an ardent free trader and his now famous trade pacts have simply provided the ways and means for satisfying his ambition for ing a free trade policy for the country. The President devoted a good deal of his message to the world sit tisan position, continually striving for actual facts. It Is from that standpoint that the recent words of terrible crimes are committed in thy name! Remember, farm problems like conservation problems, cannot be solved entirely by city men's was easy for ths cartoonist to prove that he had created the character out of his fantastic imagination. Sun.

Wallace Beery "Thunder Afloat" badly needed on the board today. His actions in relation to the Smith committee are very Illustrative. The committee Issued "shot-gun" subpoenas, seizing the entire files of the N. L. R.

B. without any statement of the limits of the investigations or the issues, which it was seeking to resolve. Such a procedure is highly dubious and could easily have been questioned in the courts. However, Chairman Madden insisted on disregarding the technicalities, feeling that the rec Mr. William Leiserson (see Time, Dec.

22, 1939) seem extremely appropriate: "It seems strange to me that almost every day we should be 9 9 General George Warburton Lewis stances in the human body, it is known that there are 10 absolutely essential in the diet for good growth and health. These 10 amino acids cannot be manufactured in the clubs, although some of the newspapers and radio stations are doing good deeds for the peasants. Remember who gave free space in a and his wife, Zoralda, were good enough to call on us and break reading of attacks on the board and uation, as was prop3r. While he enunciated nothing new, he did make diet. They are called "nutritional bread, recently.

A more interesting couple you won't find in a lone its personnel, but hardly anyone ever thinks of attacking those em newspaper so the fruit growers could stamp on the stamps. It clear that he has little patience with the so-called Isolationists. "I ly essential" or "nutritionally indis-; pensable" amino acids. When any one of these 10 is ab-i ployers who have flouted the law of Congress." JESSE SANDERS. South Haven.

raw ords of the board ought to stand on its merits. ramble about New York. The General is six feet three, weighs 180 pounds, and is put together like an old-fashioned Texas steer, with long legs and arms, loosely jointed. He's not a voune Respectfully yours, ROBERT S. FELDMAN." sent very long from the diet, growth and tissue repair are not satisfac-l AND Saturday The other suggestion advanced by Rep.

Ramspeck, namely that the tory. The 10 amino acids that are: DEFENDS LABOR BOARD Editor, The News-Palladium: On Friday, December 22. 1939. employer have the right to petition the board for a collective bargaining The Family Doctor mm GEORGE RAFT man but he can stand on his head and keep a basketball going with his feet, at less than the drop of a hat. Zoraida is a tiny, dark-eyed beauty, speaking with an engaging Spanish accent, sings Spanish folk songs charmingly, teaches languaees essential have strange chemical names like arginine, hlstldine, ly-' sine and tryptophane.

But no-' body buys them by such names1 in the grocery stores. We do not buy them in pure! chemical form. We buy them as constituents of well-known food materials eggs, milk, cheese, meat or fish. hope we will have fewer American ostriches in our midst," he told Congress and the country at large. "It is not good for the ultimate health of ostriches to bury their in the sand." From that it can be taken that the administration will continue to concern itself with world affairs, confident, as the President said, that impact of war, and all that goes with it, upon other nations has profound repercussions on these shores.

On pressing domestic issues Mr. Roosevelt had little to sayyond recognizing the fact that the effort to get millions of unemployed back to work must gd on and that such social reforms as the New Deahas already undertaken must be con if Tovghar than ia "loch Down I Die" at a downtown school. General Lewis was born in Kan BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association, and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine Proteins are the materials out of which our bodies are built. They constitute the essential elements of the cell.

Eighteen per cent of our bodies consists of protein. Since the proteins of our body are constantly being used up and destroyed, it is necessary for us to supply the body with additional protein material for replacement. When we starve, the protein ma sas, has tought in a score of revolu JANE BRYAN GrMtor than in "The Old Maid" tions and trained many thousands oi soioiers in tropical countries, and a few years ago finished the DANCING tinued and strengthened. Unques job of training an army for the African republic of Liberia. I first election, probably received its greatest impetus from the split within the ranks of labor.

The suggestion is fraught with danger, however, An employer bent on an anti-union course could very easily stop his plant by requesting an election just as soon as he heard that organizational activities were being begun. Obviously, to organize takes a great deal of time and thus no union would be successful in securing? a majority. The State of New York permitted such an act on the part of the employer and its experience demonstrated that it was not in very much demand. From 1937 to February 1, 1939, only seven petitions went to final conclusion and five of those seven were by agreement, of the parties (see March 1939 issu-a of Columbia Law Review, p. 394.) Incidentally, it must also be noted that the board itself has recently modified its regulations to permit an employer to petition the board1 for certification in the case of an Inter-union dispute.

Your suggestion that the board has violated the rules of fair, play were resolved as baseless by a series of decisions from the United States supreme court. Inherent in our concept of due process of law is the necessity for fairness in govern- mm terial of the body is called' upon, and the effects on our tissues are obviously not beneficial. After any long continued fever or wasting dls- WILLIAM HOLDEN Men amazing than in "OoltUn Bey" there appeared an editorial in your newspaper entitled "Abolish the Labor Board." I invariably enjoy reading your editorials since they are an expression of opinion, and curiosity has often compelled me to And out other people's views on important issues of the day. This has been true, regardless of whether I agreed with the views stated. On this occasion I disagreed.

Believing that the labor problem lies at the crux of our economic and social well-being, and feeling that only by an airing of all the facts involved can the people be in a position to determine a proper course of procedure, I should' like an opportunity to critically analyze your editorial. The attack by the National Association of Manufacturers upon the Wagner Act is nothing new. The Association has consistently fought all labor legislation since the day of its creation and'layed a prominent role in the unsuccessful fight against its enactment (see Hearings before senate committee on Education and labor on S. 1958, 74th first 1934.) Since then it has not hazarded a direct attack on the Act but has been content with "an indirect attack upon its procedure. However, since the activities of the Smith Committee began, it has probably felt the time is ripe for a return to the direct attack I do not desire to curtail the right of any group or individual to crit- tipnably the President is hopeful that the current pickup in business and industry will continue and thus relieve pressure on the economic home front.

As for the war outlook, as it intimately concerns the U. S. Mr Roosevelt's message was, to say the least, He merely said that he well knew the overwhelming majority, of the American people "3o not abandon in the slightsst their hope and expectation that the United States will not become involved in military participation in the war.V 1 What eventful turn the met him in Porto Rico in 1924, when he was Chief of the Insular Police a military body. He was then a bachelor. He married the charming Zoraida while conducting a war for her distinguished father; in Nicaragua.

Lewis writes adventure stories for magazines now. I am hoping he will write the true story of his life and adventures as a book. It to outrank most thrillers. Workmen have finished turning the 6ite of the Hippodome into a parking lot. As the old HiD was a i SUNDAY EVENING, JAN.

7 SHADOVLAND BALLROOM SUrer Beach RAY WINTERS And His Orchestra PARK PLAN DANCING FREE ADMISSION war win take, as it affects Ameri SZ anud Perhaps. lives, the so this is a super Be Here Before 9:1 5 p. S3 r- HIIMDUPrV RrtfiADT tTXZI aoesn pre- parK ior cars. There is a cozy little predict- ere lias unquestion- office against the wall' of one of the 1th reasn beh the Presi- tall buildings bordering the lot. A dent's demand, as reflected in his high wire fence encloses the large 01 Thursday, a half- site, like the fence around a corril ft ltf appropria- for branding cattle.

A thin but tions for the country's-miiitnrv oc oL Willi IllSSal MWUnill FLORA R0BS0N Pari Keilj Henry CHwII Let Patrick RAY-TED CAFE 0ft to tabhshment. lIlc enure Directed by LLOYD BACON A WARNER BROS. First Nttfeul Pktvt As I give my car over to an at tendant ior parkme and take ADDED EXTliAS SEE 'The GORILLA' The Riti Screaming Laugh Riot NO. 2 "SONGS and BULLETS" Deluxe Western ALSO Serial and Short Subjects KUHN LIKES PRIVACY Fritz Kuhn wants to be alone. It appears now that the leader of the German-American Volksbund a convicted embezzler, prefers the isolation of Sing Sing to concourse with other prisoners.

PARAMOUNT NEWS EVENTS check for it, I can't help Wondering whether the car will have the luck to be parked over the buried stone figure of an elephant's head and trunk. For somewhere under the pavement rests thafr sewlnhirpr! CALDWELL 2 HITS 2 "Intermezzo" And "Cafe Hostess" buildings are running races with one another, tearing down their properties. i Copyright 1940 by -The McNaught Syndicate, Inc. Color Parade "Modern Methods" MUSICAL "SWING STYLES" 5 Miles Sooth of St Joe on US-12 DINE AND DANCE FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY Without Cover or Minimum 1 Charge SHELDON ALEXANDER and His Orchestra, featuring Jean Alexander, vocalist. Our fjf Dinner Served New I DC At AU Hours Don't Miss Our Tenderlain Steak Sandwich, French Fries, rn Pickle and OUve DUC Phone 501 BffiTC sted from the facHhe Cortoon "FAGIN'S FRESHMEN" tan lilLIvJ- Hippodrome.

I il il The Utmost In Dancing Pleasure FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY Don't Forget "MUSICAL GUESS0" TONITE Bring a Pencil Sal Stocco AND HIS BAND 9 0 9 STARTING SUNDAY Oft Dance, Jan. 6 GLEANERS' HALL SISTEK LAKES MUSIC BY STOREY'S 5-PC. ORCHESTRA Adra. 35e Ladies Free But, despite the acres of parking land made available by razing of Manhattan buildings within the last year, one can't notice any relief to traffic. Well, in another year they'll have space for many thousands more cars.

Tax-harried owners of vert. But. from an accounts, he isn't. He's a leader, and leaders are by their very nature, gregarious souls, happy to mingle with others and convey their Warden Lewis E. Laws of Sing Sing offered to remove Kuhn to a section inhabited by the "common prisoners" but the Bundsman declined without givinit his reason mom COME ALL CHILDREN 1,000 FREE CHOCOLATE MILK DUDS CANDY BARS at the Matinee Tomorrow FMJIKCflPIUVS I -2 -r-t I SEE OUR CnP CIIMHAVe BIZ- (SsyaSnS Patiaco Paw raw Lake Coloma r.Smifh (linos TOMORROWS "'f, ad DOUBLE BILL Perhaps the ego that was manifest In all his conduct will be tiven a better chanoa to nurture while he can regard himself as an "exclusive" convict.

For a man like Kuhn, that is very Important. Like his idolized Fuehrer abroad, thU half-pint edition of I DANCING SATURDAY TToHTashin 2ton tied "It eed Creator o. storkf Today Sat. 2 Feature Show JAMES "Lct Cn' Also Serial and Cat Comie Carton 8 Geo. O'Brien In- "Dude Ranger" Bryan Donlery and Jacqueline Wells "Behind Prison Gates" '1 A iu" DANCE ALL EVENING For 25c Adm.

Fri. Sun. Sat. Adm. Is 30c Beer and Liquors of Course MUSIC BY Emlo Ilaydcn and His Orchestra ADM.

35c DANCING FREE COMING SATURDAY, JANUARY 13 BILL CARLSEN AND HIS ORCHESTRA Ooes Vou ARTHUR STEWART iiitler must feel always that he is on a ppdestaj, away from us com- maner folk. Tha martyrdom that he feels in jail can be borne more successfully in seclusion. COLUMBIA PICTURE.

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