The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, August 21, 1936, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5

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[society news T?Upfcom 100 ,i Mr. and Mrs. Richard* Host* Mr. Mr8, ?* R1<Jbards entertained Tuesday evening at their hom6 a Fair street. Members of thatr eveM contract club ware invited for bridge ?'?d dinner, High'scores wore u??d? by Mrs, J. B. Zemp and John Vllleplgue. . , ' Boys Enjoy Camp Ralph Stevenson was host Monday *ben be Invited a group of boya to* gp?Bd the day and night party at the gtevensoo cabin below Camden. Harold McNinch chaperoned and attending, the party were, beside the host: JMPCB Sheora, Charlie Mnfiialtlll, Benton Sheorn.-CnH Ingram, Co I/In gheorn and Bill Sowell. . Entertains For Visitor Miss Iyouiee McLeod entertained on Friday afternoon in honor of her bouse guest, Miss Mary Watson. The party was given at the MbLeod home on I^aureus Court and bridge was played at three tables. First and second high score prizes ware won by Miss Nancy Watts and Miss Helen Tindal. Calling after cards were Miss Dorothy Creed and Jane Caston. ~ / Gave Dinner Party Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shannon gave a dinner party Friday evening at their home on Cheanut street. A crystal bowl of roses centered the dining table where covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Shannon, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Vllleplgue, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Whltaker, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Zemp. Contract was played after dinner and prizes were awarded Mrs. Zemp and J. M. Vllleplgue. Miss Redfaarn entertains. Miss Elsie Redfearn entertained on Tuesday evening at her home on north Broad street In honor of Miss Mary Zemp, who celebrated her sixteenth birthday on that day. Punch and cakes were served during the evening and dancing was enjoyed till a late hour. The honor guest was presented a gift from the dozen guests present at the party. Honors House Quest Miss Lucy Carland, of Asheville, who is the house guest of Miss Margaret Osborne, was honor guest at the party that Miss Ellen Little gave Saturday afternoon at her home on Lyttleton street. Players were invited for four tables of contract and prizes were awarded Miss Carolyn Chntey and Miss Susan Team for high score and consolation. Miss Carland was presented a gift. In .Honor of Visitor Mrs. Mortimer Muller gave a pretty party Tuesday afternoon for Mrs. Sam Wellborn, who is visiting her mother, Mrs. Virginia Clarke. Two tables of guests were invited for bridge and high and second high score prizes were awarded Mrs. Charlie H. Zemp and Mrs. Brevard Boykin. The hostess presented' a gift to the honor guest. Mrs. Donald Morrison and her house guests, Mrs. William Dallas and Mrs. John C&lder called after cards when an ice course was served. Miss VanLandingham Entertains Miss Liyjy Carland was honored on Tuesday afternoon when Miss Jean VanUuidingham entertained at four tables of bridge. The midsummer flowers used in the party rooms and the ice course served after the bridge games carried a color, note of pink &ud green. There was a gift for the honor guest and Miss Ellen Little won the high score priSe. Miss Phyllis Karesh received a prize for the low score. ' ~.r*: Visitor Complimented Mrs Sam Wellborn,' of New Orleans> was given a pretty party^ Thursday morning when Mrs. W. R. Zemp invited eight guests tor ihnek^ And bridge. Mrs. Wellborn vros presented a guests* prize and Mr* Lee Maya won the Prize for top score. Misa Olive Nettles cut the oonpolation.. Mrs. John Nettles assisted Mrs. Zeipp. In *nring luncheon to the h#Agr guest Miss Elizabeth Clerk, Mrs. Wil, Nettles, Jr., Miss Olive Netties, ?ra. Lee Mays, Miss Mary Goodale, Mrs. Charlie Zemp and Mrs. Sidney T. Zemp. Mr. and Mrs. Kirkman Finlay, 'Catherine McCarrel) are receiving congratulations of their friends "Pen the arrival of a son.^Kirkman lnlay. Jr? August It, at the Columbi* hospital. The little boy Is ths ?*adson of the Rt. Rev. Kirkman ^lay, D. d., bishop of the Episcopal ocese of Upper South Carolina, and Finlay.?Monday's State. " Mrs. ?Uy win b? pleasantly remembered o?re as Miss Bee McCarrel. she hav***** * poular teacher In the city choolt. . i * ** TUiting tkt h'mirr ?"kTl? ?* W. ? -CV ' . : ? f. HE.-' personal Mention j ?iv?0,nMw,^"on*vu"'??'? : *ss -I V,B^ ?, P, W'mbw'y. ot Allend.le, j vlHlted friends here I*,, woek flume ?: J lto?rW* h" returned 'run, ? amy at MyrUe Mrs. J, K. Ross leaves today for Washington to spend sometime. 1 Wds R d tt|otiards I. visiting ht. uncle, R h. Hayes In Washington. are lu^Ar^6 4nd chl,dr?" re in Arden N. c? visiting relatives. ' fumit Henry Savage and ludn, n*c it>*I,dlng lomet,m? ^ Sa8am Wellborn, of New Orleans, i. Clarke"1 ** *** h?m6 ?f Mri V W MUs Dorothy VauLandingbam fa birn ?f1Mla# Mary Maddox Oreensboro this week, Mrs. Thouias Waters has as her fuest this week Miss Dorolyn MoSeley of Lancaster. Phnls A' N"""'1"' lmB gone to Philadelphia to visit her sister. Mrs. T. Hall, .Mr- and Mrs. D. A. Boykin spent the past week end with the former's brother in Wadley, Qa. ,..Mi"b; J- B ZemP iett yesterday for Washington, D. C., to visit her daughter, Mrs. Fischer, Black. Mrs. E, N. McDowell is on a visit to her sister, Miss Emma Villepigue in Washington, D. C. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Whttaker have returned from a visit to Mrs. Whitaker's sifater in Asheville, N. C. Mrs. Solomon Minis, of Charleston, is here on a visit to her parents, Mr and Mrs. C. E. Watts. Sonny Robinson, of Saratoga Springs, N. Y., is the guest of Newton Boykin and McKee Boykin. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Brown I and children, of Ooldsboro, N. C., have moved to bamden to make their home Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Goodale left Tuesday for Saranac Lake, N. Y., where they will spend several weeks' Miss Myrtle Williams has returned from Jacksonville, Fla., where she was the guest of Mr. and Mrti. J, h. Humphries. I Miss Lucy Carland returned Thursday to her home in Asheville, N. C., after a visit to Miss Margaret Osborne. Mr. and Mrs. A. Sam Karesh have gone to New York where Mr. Karesh I will purchase fall and winter stock for the Fashion Shop. Mrs. F. D. Rogers and son, of Bennettsville, have returned home after a visit here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Haile. Mrs. Palmer DuBose has gone to Alexandria, Va., where she will spend several weeks as the guest of Mrs. W. S. Burnet. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. ? Waters and children have returned frojn a stay in the mountains of western .North Carolina. Mrs, Stephen Lewis Clyburn and children of Hartsville, are guests this week of the former's sister, Mrs. Julian' Oraham. Mr. and Mrs. John Richardson, of New York, returned home Sunday after a visit to the former's mother and grandparents. R?y.B. Caston was in High Point, N. C., last Sunday where he conducted services in the First Baptist church of that city. Last Sunday Mr. and Mrs. S. A. McCasklll had as their guests Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Belleau, Mrs. Bruce Bobo and son Francis Bobo, of Union. ' Mrs. Ralph Brown, who has been spending sometime with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred B5. Kennedy has returned to her home In Barnwell. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Munn, of Rock Hill, Lawson Munn, of Wlnnsboro and Mrs. B. J. Truesdale, of Boykin, have retup^d from a stay at Myrtle Beach. - Miss Eunice Keel, of Allendale; Miss Julia McRae, of Denmark; and Charlie Moore, of Columbia, were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Kennedy at Bettyheck Plantation. Mrs. H. L. Rtchey, Miss Barnb Lynn Hi obey and Herbert Rickey, left: Tuesday for Nashville, Tenn., * to y attend the graduating exercises qt Mfti 0arah Lyiyi.* fthe will receiv^MfM. A. degree frpm Peabody. Rev. and MA. A. D. McArn. Misses Margaret Pewell and Lai Blakeney have gode to Norfolk, whtft-e they will take the boat to Boston and from that city will motor through the New England states and into Canada. Mrs. W. 0. Major and son, William Major, Jr., of Florence, have moved to Camden to make their home here with W. O; Major, Who has been a Resident ofCartden for the past three years. They are residing on Highland {avenue. Camden dtlsens am glad to welcome them here. Recent guests aiUe home of Mr. and Mrs. A*tcOh?kll| have been: R.1* OtnU RikBjlii, Texas; Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Oault, of Dallas; Mr. nadiM^ ^?tyn JMin. K, c.. , MRS. MARION SOMERVILLE MARRIED TO FILM ACTOR Wlluiingtou, i^CXug. 18?Mr. and Mm, William duPont, Jr., announced yesterday the marriage of duPont'* sister, Mrs. Marlon duPont. Somervllle to George Randolph Scott. The' wedding occurred March 23, In Camden, S. C. Scott la a moving picture actor. Mrs. Somervllle la the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. WUlara duPont, of Wilmington. She spends moat of her time at her Mont poller, Va., residence, where she maintains extensive stables. SUa and her first husband, Thomas H. Somervllle, were divorced at Reno In October, 1986. Scott is a native of Orange, Va., near Montpeller. . The Charlotte Observer says that news of the wedding last March of Randy Scott to Mrs. Marion duPont Somervllle came as a complete surprise to friends here of the movie actor. Scott's mother, Mrs. G, G. Scott, was out of the city last night, friends of the family said, adding they were sure even she did not know of the wedding of her son to the nationallyknown sportswoman. Mrs. Randy Scott has Just returned to her Virginia home from the West, where she mot Randy in New Mexloo during the time when he was free from his motion picture work. The wedding culminated a friendship that be^&n when Scott was attending Woodberry Forest preparatory school at Orange, Va., where he had lived until he was 12 years old, when his family moved to Charlotte. Returning to Orange to attend Woodberry, Randy met Mrs. Somervllle, who was living at nearby Montpeller at her estate, the home originally of President JameB Madison. Mrs. Somervllle also maintains homes in Florida and at Camden, S. C., where her horses have won frequently in the spring season steeplechases, notably the Carolina Cup classic. Attended Clemson 8hort Course The following members of the Midway Home Demonstration Club enJoyed a very delightful short course held at Clemson College August 3 to 5: Mrs. Fleta West, Mrs. Alex West,, Mrs. Mattie Branham, Mrs. Nettle Young, Mrs. Herbert Horton, Mrs. Broadus Horton, Miss Ruby Horton, Mrs. Bessie Rodgers, Mrs. Eth?i An. derson, Mrs. Carrie Hyatt and Mrs. E. D. Dabney. H ( The trip was made in a school bus driven by Archie Anderson with W. B. Stevenson, agricultural teacher of Midway high school in charge and eight of his agricultural boys. The route carried us through numerous cities and towns. One noticed the new bridge being built at Great Fall. From there we went on thru Chester, Spartanburg and Greenville. We were in sight of the Blue Ridge mountains. Several of the ladies had never seen a mountain range before, which was of great Interest to them. It was very interesting to notice the difference In the towns and the.smallneap of the crops. We arrived at our destination about 2 o'clock, pretty tired and not so good looking, but were well cared for by Miss Margaret Fewell, the county home agent and were ushered Immediately Into the mess hall by Mr. Clayton where lunch was awaiting us which was thoroughly on jeyod * after the long tide. There were so many places of interest we hardly knew what to notice first. The first day Mr. Lewis explained the program for the three days. We assembled once a day and greatly enjoyed the different talks made. Vespers was held each evening at 7:80. Swimming, hlk-; lng, visiting the dairy barn, poultry plant. Old Stone Church, Calhoun's mansion, textile and engineering buildings, library, pictures and museum were all enjoyed. To our sorrow after lunch Wednesday afternoon we bid adieu to Clemeon. Anderson woe the first city on onr return route. At Greenwood*we stopped and enjoyed ice cream. Right on and on we enjoyed the vtewH of various plaoee. Finally we came ' to Columbia where we visited the Curb Market which was exceedingly interesting to the farm women. From there we came home after a very very pleasant trip. We were delighted to have with us Mrs. Kate Tldwell from the Gates Hill club and Mrs. Lilly Belle from the Malvern Hill clnb. Each lady has a broader view of Clemson and we feel sure that each one will send her son there. Tie toort QQurge ^wus wonderful jpfe instructive. Bach minute was thorough. Jy enjoyed. Mrs. C. C. Smith returned Monday to her borne In Panama City, Fla., after a visit to her eister, Mrs. D. M. McCasklll. Her daughter, Mrs. K. F. Bagley, accompanied her hoese tor a ..f. n nut . ^ -X. -r-pr? . .i *1,-* - - * , . v.. -*S. n t < - . - V- \ . 4.^ - ? ? Newell Wlmberty and baby left laet week to tote Mr. Wlmberty to Salisbury. N. C, after en extended vtait to tke termer's mother, Mrs. D, Nurses Were Riding In Branson's Auto Two Baptist hospital student] nurses, Miss Jacquelyn Walker and Miss Ann Cartee, yesterday Issued a statement Identifying themselves as the passengers in the car with W. E. Branson last Sunday night when he was fatally Injured one mile uortn of BlanSy on United States Koute No. 1. They saw In The State that Camden authorities wished to know who nasi In the ear with Mr. Branson and were I glad to cooperate. The trigedy was termed In- the! statement as a "pure accident." Mr. I Branson was attempting to pass an-| other car when he crashed with a car I coming In the opposite direction, they I said. The other car was said to have I been driven by Thomas B. Berry, ofl Hartsv(lie. After the crash the Brun-T son car also struck a car driven by a negro preacher from Spartanburg. I The girls did not render first aid 181 Mr. Branson because a number of men rushed up and took tha Injured I man to the hospital. Miss Cartee was I knocked unconscious in the crash and was rushed to Columbia by a passing motorist. ' X Miss Cartee, the statement said, had I been invited In tbe afternoon to go I riding with Mr. Branson and had ask-l ed Miss Walker to accompany them. I They were returning to Columbia I from Camden when the accident oc-| curred at 9:10 p. m.?Sunday's State. I (From Saturday's Columbia Record) I Miss J&cquolyn Walker and Miss I Ann Carter, hurses at the Baptist I hospital, today Identified themselves I aa being with W. E. Branson, of Co-1 lumbla, Sunday night in which he was fatally injured In, an automobile acci*| dent one mile north of Blaney. Offl-J cers had been trying to learn the lden-1 tlty of the people known to have been I in Branson's car. Tbe inquest has] been delayed because testimony froni-K these people was wanted. The nuraeg made the statement to-1 day to a reporter for the Columbia Re-1 cord upon the suggestion of the Rev. I W. M. Whitesldes, superintendent ofl the hospital, who had urged them "tol make a clean sweep, , because they I owed it to Brunson's memory." Citing the automobile wreck as a I "pure accident," the nurses said that I Brunson was attempting to pass an I automobile when his car collided with I another coming from the opposite dl-l rectlon. He vu traveling about 551 miles an hour, tbey said. The car traveling In front of Brun-| son's, also enroute to Columbia, was J said to belong to a preacher and the I automobile traveling in the opposite | direction was B&id to have been driv-| en by Thomas R. Berry, of Hartsvllle. I Branson's automobile sideswiped Berry's and was thrown against the! minister's car, turning over, Miss -Walker said, i Brunson. who wa? aaid by Miss Carter to have been merely a friend I of her's for some time, was hurrying I to Columbia so the nurses would not be late for church services at 8 p. m., I she said, ' I Miss Carter had been invited to go I for a ride with him, earlier in the I day, and had invited Miss Walker to I accompany them. f The nurses did not render asais-l tance to Brunson following the crash,! because Miss Walker said some men I rushed upon the scene and told herl that they would take care of him. ' 4 She said further that Miss CarterI had been knocked unconscious In the] accident, and both she and Miss Car-| ter were taken to Columbia imme-1 dlately by a passing motorist Mlsal Walker was uninjured. Miss Carter was still in bed today! at the Baptist hospital here suffering! ffom bruises. The accident not only turned over! Branson's car, but was also said to I have turned the automobile around In I a direction toward Camden. The preacher's car was said to have I been traveling slow, but the nurses! were unable to tiril^B^rry'i speed. I Brunson applied the ' automobile's I brakes shortly before the crash, the! nurses said. Superintendent Whiteside said that! he had discovered the nurses to have! been In the accident when a check-up I showed them absent from church ser-1 vicei, and when Miss Carter was ad-1 mitted to the hospital for treatment.! ' Ho said that the nurseehadhveul reprimanded. Mr. and Mrs. WAR. Hough, Miss Mary Emma Hough, Mrs. J. A. Belli and daughters, Misses Emily Kath-1 p-n flit Wednesday I for Plattsburg, N. Y., to vlstt Mr. and | Mrs. Hough's daughter, Mrs. Harry! BrOmley. The party will also visit! Montreal, Canada, and New York City I before returning home. ? | John and' Mack Rust, brothers ofl Memphis, Tenn., have pat their "per- J tested*^ mechanical cotton picker on! exhibition, and say they wlU give field demonstrations with the jpaohine next! ! mnmk. They ggy that they have shtp-1 MIGHT OF NA2I8 PARAOE8 8PORT8 8TADIUM FOR VI8ITOR8 . Olympic Stadium, Merlin, Aug. 13.? In the pit of the relch's great sport a stadium where the finest youth of 62 nations have been battling for athletic supremacy under the Olytaptc code of good sportsmanship, Chancellor Adolf Hitler tonight staged an* elaborate demonstration of Nasi Germany's armed might. It was the first time in the history of the Olympics that a military review waa made part of the fames. Twenty-five hundred helmeted men of the army, navy and air forces? most of them about the same age as the Olympic athletes?goose-stepped onto the field amidst deafening "hells." Eighty thousand arms swung up In the Nasi salute as the crack troopB marched past the tribune where Hitler, surrounded by high officers of the third reich'si fighting forces, stood at rigid attention with right arm outstretched. The cheers that swept down on the marching column made thoBe given any athlete seem like murmurs by comparison. Any doubts as to the significance of these helmeted men were dispelled when the Nazi war flag, w!(h the Iron cross above the swastika, was hoisted over the scoreboard to the acompanlment of cheers that all but drowned out the blare of grouped bands. Few of the 20,Q00vlsltors from all parts of the world had ever seen the Nazi war flag before although every Inch of Berlin had been draped with the swastika during the games. Every move of this great military spectacle was dramatically staged from the very moment that the band leader, in dark green uniform, took his place on the flag-decked stand In the center of the playing field. Regimental bands marched in first behind their regimental colors, dipping from a large silver and gold standard. 8potllghts on the brim of the stadium were reflected dazzlngly from the men's steel helmets. Although primarily a military band concert, this panorama of armed strength could not have been more Impressive If tanks of cannon had rumbled over the rampB Into the stadium, or the large black bombers, which have been flying over Berlin In recent weeks, had swooped In fighting formation* over the 100,000 spectators. The massed bands marched onto the field through the arch at the west end of the stadium, directly beneath the Olympio flame. There were 100 fltes and 100 druMs, played by soldiers and.sailors. They were followed by a battalion of horns and bugles. In perfect formation, the bands marched to the center of the field and formed around the leader. In the center of the formation there were a dozen kettle drums, played by helmeted musicians with sabers strapped to ihelr sides. The crowd's enthusiasm reached Us peak when *the stadium lights were slowly dimmed, leaving the field In complete darkness. ^One thousand torches flared up from around the Olympic flame. With the naked eye it was Impossible to see the men carrying them, but with binoculars' one could make out the forms of 1,000 goose-stepping soldiers, marching all with the percislon ,of Germany's famed World war armies. Their torches were the only light in the vast concrete bowl a* they ringed the athletic field, standing stiffly at attention. A moment later, 200 more torches, borne by white-Jacketed sailors and led by an officer on a black charger, appeared. The sailors marched around the field to a spot directly In front of the review stand, where they dramatically took a salute from der fuehrer. When the cheering died down, the bgnd began. Its concert, ending with the German war hymn, played while those in the stands stood with bared heads saluting the Illuminated war flag over the scoreboard. At the command, "Achtnng," announced over the microphone system, the soldiers with the torches turned to face Hitler and sang the war hymn. WELL-TlftlJtglUD PORgrr REDUCES FIRE HAZARDS Well-timbered forests usually are safer from lire than woodlands which have been trimmed out, say foresters of the United States Forest Service. Timberl&nd well stocked with growlng trees resists wind and gun which dry out vegetation and leave it ready for a blaze. ?A virgin northern hardwood-hemlock forest is one of the safest forests, although by no mi pans fireproof, foresters warn. During the summer months for five years foresters of the Lake States Forestry Experiment station in Michigan found the temperature of soil In the virgin forest about 1 to tt degrees lower than of the Mil ta the cntorer forest. The, found the wind was nearly Always three ^0pMI . * - - fl IH I II . . vrs:. r.,. \ yT- ir Teachers Say That Fox Trot Favorite New York. Auk. 14.?The word of the Dauclug Master* of America, In convention assembled, Is that the fox>< \ trot will continue the ballroom favorite this fall, although the tempo j may be slower.. The word Is spoken despite the fact .that the atmosphere of the convention was rhythmioal with the "swing music" accompanying a new "swing step" which promises to be popular. The taugo 1b growing in popularity, but is not yet a rival of the fox-ttot, while the "rhumba" is uot really the rhumba but a Cuban dance called the ' son,'' they say. Pressed for an explanation, the un<i women designated as the convention's ballroom teachers state the "rhumba" is to be found only In low places in Cuba and that nice people don't dance it. * Modern ballroom dancing, Hays Oscar IJuryea, one of the teachers, was ushered In by the pre-war one-step, Itself un evolution from the turkey trot. The one-step proved too tiring, consisting of all 'running steps.' Now there are two' Bteps to the measure in the walking movements, with some walking, some two-stepping. Duryoa says it was Irene and Vernon Castle who refused ballroom dancing. He admits popular songs may have some effect on dancing, but thinks "nice people" continue to dance in a refined way no matter how hot the music is. He frowns on such offbeat steps as the "Lindy hop." Tom Riley, another of the teachers, sees the Lindy hop becoming smooth, with "swing music." People, he says, now waits when the band plays a waltz, but used to two-step to it. "The man should go forward and turn on the first beat to make'It a real waits," he says, v A. J. Weber," another member of the teachers' group, was outspoken against the "'convention step," in which two dancers merely walk side by side as though they were in a country lane instead of the ballroom. Duryea notes that histories of dancing mention a "dancing craze" proceeding all wars. "It's not a craze now," he said, "but we seem to be getting there/ The waltz remains a favorite, and has never gone out of fashion, the dancing teachers agreed. * PROGRAM OF UNION MEETING TO BE HELD WITH BETHANY The following is the program to be carried out at the Union meeting to be held with Bethany Baptist church, at Westville, belnning at 10:80 o'clock on August 29. Rev. J. D. Qulledge is the moderator: ! . Song, "Jesus Shall Reign"; devotional by Rev. Connie Dabney; welcome by T. C. Fletcher; response by J* Jordan. Special music. Talk, "The Right ^Use of Time," by Rev, B. 8. Broym; "talk, "The Right Use of Talents," by Mrs. George A. Creed; Inspirational address by Rev. J. B. Mclver. Adjourn for lunch. Afternoon session with song and prayer Bervlce. Talk, "The Right Use of Money," by Mrs. W. F. Byrd; Talk, "Enlisting Others," by Rev. A; B. Fuller; inspirational address by Rev, R. Caston. Mlscellanoug business an# * adjourn. Haiglar Theatre Ceraer Bread and Kutledge SU. friday, august ii Final Showing the Sensational CLARKE GABLB and JEANNETTE Mac DONALD a "san francisco*' | A mighty drama of San Franoisco's bravest days. SATURDAY, AUGUST 32. New Aetlon Thrills Await You! GEORGE O'BRIEN In "border patrolman" Romance! Suspense!! Action!! Also comedies and cartoons and Buck Jones Serial. . ' rr r r i j - r i , , , , RANDOLPH 8COTT in .. SSBSfM!f$AV J? Dwwrt, Temple^S. ^ou'lTe^"?^ RA*T> Barry more, Ida Lupino, Reginald ; the asking* Special morning show 10:10 . Matinee 8:15 : Night 7:30 and 9:15 ^ v - ??? ? i , i r r i*- ii , i . ^VV^SDAY ujg FRIDAY Hi '% 4k- > - - "sh -