1 . - '• • » I f f ) l . . | KIKR K\PR^SS . O " ^ Saada j , M i rcmlwr 7. 1*»4T
Silence Never Goldwyn; He'll Talk Anv Time
Seems to Be Building Battle With a Censor
Continued from Page Fourteen
motion picture matter. It has to do with the very basic principles of American life."
This is not the first time by a long shot that Sam has stuck his neck out. Wrong or right in his opinions, he was never lacking in vehemence—or. fo»' that matter, sincerity—in expressing them. Heil Tackle Anything
Sam will tackle anything or anybody with whom he disagrees. Not even the industry is spared. Last year he aroused the wrath of certain movie moguls when he publicly accused Hollywood of a "fat cat complacency" in seeking out new ideas and new materials. He battled in print with James. Thurber over the handling of the latter s story, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. It was no secret that he and William Wyler vere virtually at each other*:; throats before The Best Years of Our Lives finished shooting.
Another pet antipathy for Goldwyn is the idea of double features, against which he's fought for years. He has lambasted the industry for turning out so many gangster films. Right now he's ready to go on the warpath against exhibitors, who he insists must share the loss, fa loss there be. of profits due to the British film tax.
He is mortally afraid tha t major studios will react to the situation by bringing back the era of quickies. This, he maintains, would mean the kiss of death to pictures from the standpoint of both producers and exhibitors.
Sam. tor all his battles, has the respect of the ei.tirt industry. All of us love pictures, but he goes further. He lives and breathes them. And when he says that he will not have the Goldwyn name attached to any film that he has not spent the utmost in time, money, and care to bring it to perfection we believe him. It is such men as he who is your hon» and our hope for the continued lue and vigor of the screen.
Copyright- 194?, 6y tH« CfctC*#a fXaVM
Cop Joins Shooting Of Bullets for Film
Hollywood, Dec. 6 >JP> It was 2 a. m. m a dark alley in Mexico City.
For the benefit of cameras filming Mystery in Mexico, William Lundigan fired a stream of blanks a t the fleeing "criminal," Walter Reed. Heroine Jacqueline White •tood by and screamed.
Reed reached the end of the alley then raced back again, witn bullets ricocheting from walls on either side.
A Mexican policeman had heard the shots and screams and decided to join the party.
_ . — • - I . . — —
Horse Sense Answers I. Bob White iQuam 1 C.<:ifornta
• HolKwoodi. 3. Paul He*ere. * (;«>rgia 5 Hampshire and Orpington iHarn or hacon and e«a-> * <ai Ba'aam—Talk ln« a«s i i i ID I Naaman— l-*per ix> H I Ciirteon—Hebrew general I n . id» Abra-h s i n - f l i v o hi« wtf# «v>. iei Ahah—
REDUCE N O W
is the time to get rid of EVERY FATTY BULGE
FREE Figure
ANALYSIS
Henri Temlanka
The Paganini Quartet, which will give the second concert in the Buffalo Chamber of Music Society series tomorrow evening, in Klein-
h a n s M u s i c Hall, was formed in 1946 under the sponsorship of Mrs. William Andrews Clark, d i s t i nguished m u s i c patron, who heard the
k ~%¥* cellist, R o b e r t ^ t ^ | | p p - Ma as play on M ^ ^ / | ^ his arrival from
• L F B e 1 g I U m. and n f \ expressed a de-
N L \ sire to make W»^»^^^» «* p o s s i b l e the
founding of a g r e a t quartet.
Both Temianka. the first violin, and Maas had been looking for each other with that idea in mind. Mrs. Clark's support was the final key to their ambition. Courte and Rosseels were invited to round out the quartet, on their arrival from Belgium, the four men went to California to devote their efforts to rehearsals.
Their debut performances in a series of four concerts at the University of California were played to an overflow crowd, and public and critics alike hailed their advent as a tremendous addition to the American musical scene.
At their concert here the Paganini Quartet will play the three quartets of Beethoven comprising Opus 59, the set dedicated to Prince Rasoumovsky. Single tickets may be had at the door and series tickets are available until after this concert.
Opera Star Here Tuesday Mona Paulee, mezzo-soprano of
the Metropolitan Opera, will appear in the fourth concert of Mrs. Zorah D. Berry ' j series, at Klein-nan's Music Hall, next Tuesday evening Miss Paulee has achieved front rank among aitists, and her vocal, personal, and musical charms have won her great popularity. In a venture new in the concert world, she is making her p esent tour of 50 cities, entirely by privste plane, with her husband. Dean Holt, as pilot.
The program: !
She Kmrm Told Her Lov« . . . Haydn Ytant. rh» pot sereno. from Semi-
ramide Gluck B-r ata Rwpl«M t na wire poee '*. f rom The Bar
bar nf SeU"e Rossini
n Mav Night «D.e Mainacht* Brahms
I .Mil,: •«! l&\e iV ergeblK-lies >*arrl(-heni Brahms
The Inn i Has Winhaus i . Schubert The Er lKing iDer Erlkonigi
Schubert III
Aria' Pleurez, mes yeaux. from Te
Robert Schulz
C i d Massenet
SWIM In Our POOL LEON'S
STATLER cau LENDERIZIN6 MA. ALON • 1773
I MOTH STATLER 9 « « « M * Str»«t •» Nia«*ra Square
ft * tkrv St«tW H»t»l Ufckv
INTERMISSION" IV
Hay Nieht Palmgren The Sea . . . . Palmgren
Mr Holt V
LTnrmse Fevrier Chanson N'orveaienne . . . Fourdraln Nicolette Ravel Avant aue tu ne t e n allies Faure
VI The Night Has a Thousand Eyes
Richard Hagemtn Modern Youth . . . . l ru in Heilner When You Walk Thru Woods
. . . . Elinor Remid-r Warren \"o v ' o re Tw>"M» > » * r n Spiritual! Pinckney and Bunt This Dav Is Mine Harriet Ware
m Twilight Music Hour
The Twilight Music Hour will be presented in the Buffalo Museum of Science this afternoon at 4 o'clock, by Victoria Pawelski, soprano; Marilyn Piccard, flautist, and Marilyn Donahue and Joy Detenbeok, accompan ;st*.
The public is invited to hear this program: % o del mio doke ardor Glue* Vussretse . Wolf Do no! 80, mv love Hageman Were n v sonjr with wings provided
Hahn Mt*s Pawelski and Mrs Donahue
Soma for Flure in B minor Bach Andante: Allegro moderato T»argo e dolce Presto: Allegro rnoderato
Mr» Ptrtard and Miss Detenbeck t"n "el dl Yedremo Puccini \t t t e We'l • Hageiran
The T. rt '° French Clock Kountz t,et mv song fill w o t heart Charles
Miss Pawelski -»-'1 Mrs. Dona'me Trumpeter Pops Soloist
Lester Remsen, former first trumpet soloist of the U. S. Marine Band, now in first chair in the Buffalo Philharmonic, will be introduced as soloist a t next Friday's Pops concert, with Rudolph Doblin conducting. I t will be given in Kleinhans Music Hall, beginning at 8.30 p. m.
Remsen, a native of Akron, will play the Harry James arrangement of Ciribiribin as the featme of his three selections. He was soloist with the Marine Bard. after four years* study at Eastman School of Music, to whk h he won a scholarship in a national contest for high school musicians.
Doblin, assistant conductor of the Philharmonic, has chosen a varied program, including a special arrangement of numbers from the Irving Berlin Broadway musical hit, Annie Get Your Gun. Dancing in the Mary Seaton room will
WITH £pAc6)'f§tee/€/tp ($at€h
Come in today an4 see the many new designs we have this year. We'l) be glad to he!p you select cne that will be suitable for use with one of your favorite snapshots. Deckle-edge cards available at no extra cost—and, for only a few extra cents, you can have your cards hand colored and edge tinted.
2 5 for $2 .25 and up Your Neighborhood langtry Doalor
CeA&/ced PHOTO F I N I S H I N G
;<^K
Make a TROPHY PRINT ALBUM OF YOUR ACTIVITIES A*«.I*»U lw 434 110 III , t U •(«• Jwmfc* Site, 33m*, IM 137, om4 rofloR •rownio
follow the concert, with music oy Max Millers orchestra.
The program: Overture to Merry Wives of Windsor
Nicolai Raller Music from Mignon Thomas Slavonic Rhapsody
Latttar Remsen, t rumpet Polovtzian Dames Borodin
Intermission Polonaise from Boris Godounoff
Moussorjcsky Inflammatus from Slahat Mater . Rossini Ciribiribin . Arr. by Harry James
Lester Remsen. trumpet Rhumba from Svmphony N"o. 2. McDonald Music of the Spheres Strauss Selections from Annie Get Your Gun
Berlin fe"-
Amherst Benefit Concert Today The Amherst Symphony Orches
tra. Joseph Wincenc conducting, will give a benefit concert this
afternoon at 4 o'clock, in Amh e r s t Central a u d i t o r i u m , 4301 Main St., S n y d e r . It is s p o n sored by Amherst C e n tral PTA for its s c h o l a r s h i p fund.
Robert Schulz, Buffalo pianist, w h o w i l l b e s o l o i s t , will play, for the first time in Western N e w
York, Ted Mossman's New York Concerto for Piano and Orchestra. Igor Prince is concertmaster of the orchestra, which has 100 members, and is s tart ing its second season with a program of four concerts, under the sponsorship of Snyder Rotary Club.
Included in today's program Is the Intermezzo from Cavalleria Rusticana, by Mascagni. in memory of Isabelle Workman Evans, who was the first concertmaster of the orchestra, as well as music editor of The Courier-Express.
The program: Toccata . . . . FresrohaUU-Kindler Symnhonv No. 4 in A Major Op 00
Italian Mendelssohn Allegro Vivace Amlante Con Moto f'on Moto Moderato Saltareillo *
Intermezzo, from Cavalleria Rusticana • Mascagni
Prelude to Act III, Lohenyrln . Wagner INTERMISSION
Three Dances from The Bartered Bride Smetana
Polka Kuriant Dance of the Comedian*
New York Concerto, for Piano and Orchestra Ted Mo.-sman
High Tension Strolling tip 3M Street Liberation
Robert Sch»»l», pianist
Glee Club in Concert The Erie County Glee Club.
American Legion Auxiliary, will give a concert tonight at 8.30 o'clock, in Troop I Clubrooms, Franklin St.. featuring the 12-year-old pianist, Sebastian Fasa-nello. Michael C. Slominski directs the singers, with Mrs. Charles F. Thompson as accompanist.
The program: The Heavens Are Telling . . . Beethoven A Wish Chopin Boat Song . . . . F. Paolo Tosti
Glee Club Introduction and Fugato .('uthbert Harris Salfeggletto Ph. Km. Bach Sicilians Vivaldi-Bach Variations on a Theme: Three Rllnrt
Mice . . John Thompson Sebastian Fasaneilo
Alleluia . Mozart A Song of Peace .. Jean Sibelius The Lass with the Delicate Air
. . Michael Arne Glee Club
Memories of Childhood . . . O c t a v i o Pinto 1. March, Little Soldier 1. Sleeping Time 3. Run' Run!
Hungarian Etude MacDowell Sebastian Fasaneilo
Mv Heart at Thv Sweet Voice • . C. Saim-Saens
Serenade Franz Schubert Vienna. Mv City of Dreams
Dr. R. Sieczynskl Gle« Club
S o c i e t y in 17 th C o n c e r t
With Rivka Mandelkern, violinist, and Eva Rautenberg, pianist, as guest soloists, the Buffalo Jewish Choral Society will present its 17th anniversary concert next Wednesday evening in the Mary Seaton Room, Kleinhans Music Hall. Morris R. Poummit is director and Samuel Luskin director emeritus, with Rita Axelrod at the piano.
The program: Fein E-hkocheich (Psalm 137* Oerovirh Min Hameitzar (Psalm l isi D"raye\vskf Samuel Greenfield. R;»"hr>i Tick. Leva
Crouse and Chorus Ach Yah Cha>>>bi ia Boleroi . arr. Luskin
Choral Society Sicllienne and Rlgandon . . .Kreisler N'igun Bloch Zephyr . . . . . . H u b a y
Rivka Mandelkern Naaleh L'Artsenu Binder Old Jerusalem (Psalm 134> .Chajes-Luskin Estelle Gudovitz. Melville Ehrlich and
Chorus Palestinian Worker's Song arr Luskin Let Mv People Go arr. Scott Pearl SUllman. Jack Lenzner and Chorus Hallelujah Amen (from Judas Macca
beus! . . Handel Choral Society
March from I,o\ e of Three Oranges Prok'ifieff He : rpf
Vrhron Auer PotHjo C a p " n i i i - M
Saint Saenv j Rivka M»r»delkera
Reh Davldl Zilhert« Di Riimslerhe f.a«h Polke . . . V Heifeti ganuhka Sons . arr. Chaies Cantor Gtidovirz. Nathan Ba^--. Marv Koniknff. Melville Khrlich. Irving Chasen,
Estelle Gudovitz and Chorus Mooz Isoor ...\Vohl-Rosenhlatt-Lu«kln Cantor Gudoviiz. Mona Paul. Norma Ler-
ner and Chorus
Wednesday Morning Musicale The Wednesday Morning Mu-
sicale will meet December 10th in the home of Mrs. Charles Fenney. Assisting 'he hostess will be Mrs. Sanford Ulrich, Mrs. Marian Pat-erson and Mrs. Nathaniel Norton. The program will be given by Anna Kowalska Bley, pianist; Hazel Maurer Jerome, recorder, and Geraldine Avers iririch. contralto.
Eva Rautenberg will be accompanist for Mrs. Jerome and Mrs. Ulrich.
Children's Chorus Concerts The Children's C o m m u n i t y
Chorus of the Tonawandas, directed by Lillian Sandbloom Wilder, with Mary Jedele as accompanist, will present its third annual Christmas concert this afternoon at 3 o'clock, in Tonawanda High School. Next Sunday, it will be presented by the First Church of Christ, in North Tonawanda High School, and the following Sunday evening at 8 o'clock will give a Yuietide program in the Statler 's Chinese Room.
The crimson-robed chorus, num bering 105 voices, will have as soloists Rae Cole, Gerald Savitz, Richard Perry, Carolyn Holrod, Shirley Tamburlin, Billy and Micnele Doyle, Gail and Carol Payne and Noel Peters. Miss Jedele will play Chabrier Espana Rhapsodie. with orchestral parts on the organ by Mrs. Wilder.
Under the direction of Silas L Boyd. Asbury-Delaware Methodist Church choir tonight, beginning at 7.30 o'clock, will present the H. Alexander Matthews cantata. The Story of Christmas. Solists will be Helen Hutchinson, j ane Smith,
n a r r y Kichman
Riehmaii to Star At Town Casino
The Ink Spots will conclude their appearance tonight at the Town Casino, with shows a t 7.30,
10.30 and 1.30, and Harry Rich-man will s tar t tomorrow, headlining an all-star Broadway R e v u e b u i l t a r o u n d t h e Wally Wanger dancing girls. Lenny Page will c o n t i n u e * as master-of - ceremonies.
"Our new policy of booking name stars for one week only,
start ing with the appearance of the famous Ink Spots, proved an instantaneous success," said Harry Altman. Casino show producer, and Harry Wallens, co-owner of the Main St. theater-restaurant. "The Ink Spots close tonight and tomorrow v.-v are pleased to announce that I y Richman will be here to top u-ie of the season's most entertaining floor shows.
"Richman is in the same category as Ted Lewis, Arthur Lee Simpkins, Lena Horne and other stars who have scored hits in our club," Altman added. "Stars of this type will be brought to Buffalo regularly for one week appearances.
"On December 15th. we are bringing to Buffalo Ray Eberle and his 16-piece orchestra featuring as singing solist. Marion Hutton of the famous Hutton sisters. During the prewar days. Eberle was the mainstay of Glenn Miller's band and his voice was heard on many of Miller's most popular recordings. After his discharge from the Army, Ray resumed solo work and finally decided to form his own band."
Virginia Ford
Painting Result of Stroll Teck Presents rFab»lous Te™" Pr0^s
T-. T • i T jTo Be Rival Producer
Drama Laid In Primitive Area
I BUCOLIC LANDSCAPE
By Milton Avery One Summer Milton Avery, American contemporary artist, fol
lowed cows over the Vermont landscape studying their wonderful color possibilities. Bucolic Landscape, oil on canvas, one of the features ot the Contemporary Art collection<g>
Hazel Mcintosh. Mrs. Eve Crawford, Mrs. Allene Brisbane. Walter Cline, Owen Harlan and Herbert Rainer. Max E. Hodges will be at the organ, with Jean Miller playing the harp accompaniment,
fe"-There will be a Junior Chro
matic program and tea next Saturday afternoon at 2.30 o'clock in the home of Mrs. Herbert C. Bar-too. 50 Ashland Ave. Those to perform are Suanne Carlson, Miriam Hayman. Alice Buckholtz and Elizabeth Ann Lester, pianists; Edwina Buszka. Lucille DeGoris, Beatrice Z,ik and Pearl Barger, singers, and Louise Moscato, violinist. The group also will sing Christmas carols.
The Fredonia Oratorio Choir will present the Christmas portion of Handel's Messiah this evening at 8.15 o'clock in Fredonia Methodist Church. Soloists will be Vincent Mattina, baritone; Gertrude Risley, contralto; Marjorie C. Redder, Mary \ o u Fillier and Natalie Graham, sopranos, and Milford Fargo, tenor. The choir of 80 voices is directed by Adelaide J, Johnson with Evelyn M. Henderson a t the organ.
The Catholic Choirmasters' Guild will meet next Thursday evenin * at 8 o'clock a t Stella Niagara Normal School, 745 Washington St. One feature of the meeting will be th j singing of suitable music for the Lenten and Easter seasons. There also will be a display of liturgical music publications,
i r -S^ndy Anselmo. 508 Plymouth
Ave, student at the New England Conservatory of Music, will sing in an advanced student recital next Thursday evening in Jordan Hall, Boston, doing two Haydn arias.
Glenn Ford will play opposite Rita Hayworth in Carmen. They were together in Gilda. Luther Adler, Ron Randell and Victor Jory also are assigned.
/hlcl
at the Albright Art Gallery, is a happy result of the meditative walks through the New England pastures. Done in 1945, it exhibits the extraordinary color methods for which t h t art ist is noted.
Avery wa i born in Altmar, N. Y.. in 1893, die son of Russell and Esther Avery. When Milton was 12 years old they moved to Hartford, Conn., where, at the age of 20, he began to paint under Charles Noel Flagg at the Connecticut League of Ar t Students. After absorbing a few routine lessons, Avery worked alone, and, surprisingly enough, he evolved into an American Setiool of Paris representative without so much as seeing one School of Paris painting. Of course hts work was scorned and denounced in his own home town at first. Two Awards In 1929
In 1926 he married Sally Michel, a commercial artist, and moved to New York. T*ro years later he had his first one-man show at the Op-
Show af McVan's In Fourth Week
Highlighted by the costumed production dance, Feudm' and Fussin'—which carries out the
motif of that popular hillbilly song in visual form. McVan's current f l o o r show enters its fourth and final week tomorrow evening.
The original i n t e rpretation features Lorraine and Thel-ma of the Mc-Vanettes a n d brings all other members of the cast on stage to b u i l d the finaje. These include comedian Dick Havil-land, C h u c k Brown, guitar-
banjo specialist; Myra Jean, acrobatic dancer; Tony Oddi. singing and dancing personality, and John Girt, romantic baritone and emcee.
The Hcrtel-N'iagara club, staging three complete floor shows rarh n;,?ht I t 9 o'clock, midnight and 2 .'JO a.lni.. will present its special Christ mas production start ing December 15th. with a new group of specialty acts opening at the same time.
Geraldine Brooks will be starred in The Story of Seabiscuit, with Barry Fitzgerald likely for the role of the Irish trainer Miss Brooks recently was seen in Possessed.
portunity Gallery, and in 1929 he won two prizes: a first at the Connecticut Academy of Firy» Arts and the Frank F. Logan third at the Art Institute of Chicago. It was not easy sledding for Avery, but two things sustained him; the courage of his own convictions and the help and faith of his wife. 'He has had many one-man shows, is represented in the Phillips Memorial Gallery, the Newark Museum, the Barnes Foundation and in the private collections of Walter Chrysler, Jr., Louis Kaufmann, Alfred Newman and others. His subject matter ranges from a comprehensive study of his daughter. March; the crowded beaches of Manhattan, simple activities in friends' homes, the burlesque and circus clowns to the Vermont scene.
Avery's first figures were long thin people, reminiscent of Picasso's Blue Period starvelings. He has grown since then to an American version of Matisse plus Thurber. The color seems to me to be much more daring and brave than the studied sophistication of Matisse's deliberate patterns. The yellow cow is r e c u m b e n t on orange-yellow-green pasture land meditating upon a pink sky that tilts beck gently into the distance giving an excellent effect of perspective with no effort at all. The beautiful clover so conveniently near at hand is growing there as surely as our cow is going to turn her head and quietly devour it.
Avery's magic with color has very comforting results. But it has taken a lot of study and thought, out of which have grown quickly painted canvases.
The apparent ease and un-ambiguity of line suggest the quiet humor and skill of James Thurber.
The 1 ma and Lorraine
PUBLIC LIBRARY NEW BOOKS at
Hebrew Meloriv hntrotluctlon and
The Sea ami the States: a Maritime History of the American People, by S. W. Brvant.
B.?hold Williamsburg, by Samuel Cham berlaln.
Postscript to Yesterday: America: The Last Fifty Years, by Lloyd Morris.
The Balkan States; An Introduction to Their History, by G. E. Mylonas.
Europe Without Baedeker. Sketches Among the Ruins of Italy. Greece, & England, By Edmund Wilson. SOCIAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCES Your Career in Banking, by Dorcas
Campbell. Constitutions, Electoral Laws. Treaties
of States in the Near and Middle East, by H. M. Davis.
The Cornell Plantations, a History, b\ Ft S Hosmer
The Keyneslan Revolut ion, bv I.. It k «• n
T I ' M ' J Imperial Communism, by It H Markhacn
Language •'•' 'd \ rea Studies in trie Armed Service Their t u t o r * Significance, by it .1 Matthew.
Making the American Mind: Six ial and Moral Ideas in the Mci.affev Readers, by R D Mo-ier
Public School Administration, by J. B Sears.
SCIENCE AND USEFUL ARTS Alterations of Men's Clothing, by David
Carlin. Wings In the Wilderness, by A. D.
Cruiikshank. Model Motor Manual. A New Handbook
on Model Engines by 1-ouls Garaml and Howard McKntee.
Introduction to Mathematical Statistics, b * P. G Hoel.
They Tamed the Sky: the Triumph of American Aviation, by D J. lngells.
Rock-etry. .ie> -. and Rockets: the Science of the Reaction Motor and Its Practical Application for Aircraft and Space Travel, In; r p Lent
Newspaper Advertising, by J, V Lund The Ci>ok is in the Parlor, bv M G
McCarthy Mathematics for Radio Engineers, ny
Leonard Mautner. The Servicing of Television Receiver*,
by Phi lea Corporation Training High-School Youth lor Em
plovmen*. by C. E RakfXraw Electromagnetiam, bv J. C. Slater ano
N. H Frank. Pressure Vessels for Industry; Con
struction, D>s| Practices, by
Sunspots In
Inspection, and Safety M. Spring tlon. by H. T. Stetson. ERATL'RE
The S ta i rwaJ of Surprise, by William Rose Benet.
Late City Edition, by Joseph G. Herz-berg and Memtjers of the New York Herald Tribune Stiff.
Extempore Speaking: a Handbook for the Student, the Coach, and the Judge, bv D. L. Holley.
The Careless Clock: Poems About Children in the Family, by Mark Van Doren.
One H u n d r J i Years Ago: American Writing of is-jf, edited by J. P. Wood.
FICTION |ce, by Hannah Lies. I k , by Scott O'D.-'i edict, liv Lionel sjhap'ro p lumes, bv Vit i . i Bird
The Dark D H.H nf the 1 'I •!•• Sealed YOUUR Misj
Stew art Line of Dcd
RE1 Weapons of
Uai ni Electric Con The Petrol J
leuni Englneefl Plastics Mol
E. II. Snyder. CHILDREN S
Title to Hani The Glass SIJ
bert Farjeon. More Tales
and Illustrate! The Story
Victorian Cind< Storvtitne F;
T. A Scott. MI!
Colors. U I-Louis CheakH
Their Searc in the Orient,
A Treasury Puzzles, by Young
The Rape nf MaeDougall
MacQougal] Kingdom oft
Chronicle of M\ Highest Moun ti.'ipants and '
lure, by Peter Viertel. 1ENCE BOOKS
I'orld War 11. by (J M Its, by Itagnar Holm.
Data Book, by I'etro ktbllshing Com pan>.
fDesign, by C, C. Sachs A
4 N D YOUNG P E O P L E S BOOKS ess, by AdPle De Leeuw
per, by Eleanor and Her
rom Gr imm, Translated Wanda Gag
Harriet Beecher Stowe: •ella. by P. W Jackstjn pontes . . . Selected by
fcLLANEOUS rticv can Do lor You. bj
| j r Gnd \\ a -* ol Worship F. M Kuril
W Game-, Qu://es anO •Ills Kia-er and Edith
Belle, by (!«• ry Hahn Pinochle, by Mickey
r ' .enture: Everest. A I'S W a u l t on the Earth's in Narrated by the Par |xt by J R I llman.
What is a Man. i\v R i( Wick.,
Dana Andrews. Anne Baxter. Walter Brennan and Walter Huston appear in memorable roles in Swamp Water, at Sheas Teck for a return showing. Also presented is Warner Baxter in The Prisoner of Shark Island, drama, with Gloria Stuart. Harry Care\ and Claude Gillingwater. Teck News is added.
Swamp Water unfolds the story of a boy who matched courage and cunnin: against a swamp-crazed madman, ruthless ruler of a 700-mile empire, in a fight for justice and girl.
Background is Georgia's Oke-fenokee Swamp. Brennan appears as Tom Keefer. fugitive from justice. Andrews is Ben Ragan, seeking Keefer. Miss Baxter is seen as Reefer's ward, and Huston as Ben's stern father.
Hollywood. L> 6 ' .? Republic atudio recently conducted a newspaper contest to promote the premiere of the picture, The F a b - , ulous Texan.
Readers were asked to send in their votes for the most fabulous Texan living today.
The winner was not the star of the movie, but a rival picture producer—wh , also happens to maka airplanes—Howard Hughes.
Patricia White will be leading woman for Charles Starret t in Blazing Across the Pecos.
RUCS and Upholstered Furniture
C L E A N E D f strmotei Givn Without Obligation
HOME Rug Cleaners
1245 McKINLEY WO. 6700 Formerly at 13 Carroll St.
For Mothe Christmas
many
METAL PRODUCTS, INC.
White Steel KITCHENS WIDELY ACCLAIMED
FOR THEIR QUALITY AND BEAUTY AT THE RECENT BETTER HOMES EXPOSITION
TERMS Up to 3 Year*
•
PHONE
EL. 2315
White Steel Cabinets are jthe product of America's largest manufacturer of custom-built metal cabinets and stainless steel sinks. Each unit is individually made for the installation for which it was ordered, by skilled metal cabinetmakers.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON INDIVIDUAL CABINETS
JAMES M. HAWKINS Corp. 448 FRANKLIN, Between ALLEN and VIRGINIA
1%J I fZ M VpT % 1%T Only Location in Buffalo 1 « «-*• H/t"L/lll 528 BRISBANE BUILDING
One of AMERICA'S LARGEST FURRtERS
trvn
N. L. Kaplan's Great Buying P o w e r Makes Poss ib le These Phenomena l Fur Values and S a v i n g s ! Attend T o m o r r o w !
Stunningly Beautiful, New
FUR COATS Regularly Priced $375 to $395!
s 295 • Black Persian Lamb
• Sable Blended Muskrat
• Sheared Beaver Dyed Raccoon
• Mink Blended Muskrat
• Russian Squirrel
• Silverblue Dyed Muskrat
• Leopard Cat
Sec These Special Fur Values! WERI
Mouton Dyed Lamb $125 Beaver Dyed Coney Black Persian Paw Mouton Dyed Lamb Grey Chinese Kidskin Sable Blended Muskrat . . , China Mink , Black Persian Lamb Grey Persian Lamb Alaska Seal Sheared Canadian Beaver Black Persian Lamb Natural Wild Mink .
Prices Include Fed.
WERE $125 129 185 155 265 275 525 495 550 625 875 600 2950
NOW $ 95 100 135 115 T95
385 345 395 450 650 445 2250
Buy Her Beautiful Furs For Christmas From N. L. Kaplan's! Choose From The Largest Displays In Western New York. Small Deposit Reserves Choice)
•
Thousands of Other Fur Goals $95 to *;1500
OPEN EVERY EVENING
NUZAN 8RASSIERE CO.. INC.. Dipt, A. NEW YORK 18, N 1..^'•..IIII i:V *li!3Batr«
IS. L. KAPLAN ONLY ONE LOCATION IN BUFFALO
5 2 8 BRISBANE BLDG. 403 MAIN STREET OVER KLEINHANS
.rtZjfcte©*-*
Untitled Document
file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AM
Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069
www.fultonhistory.com