THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER Published every Thursday at Mc- £eni*y, 111., by Charles F. Renich. £. H. MOSHER Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter at the poatoffice at McHenry* 111., under; tine act of May ^r~1879. FOR SALE Change In Subscription , Price of the . McHejiry Plainde|iler ^ « Now $2.50 per Year in Advance \ le Topics, 7 cents , On Sale at J^eirs Stands, Drug Stores and • Plaindealor Office , FOR SALE--400 laying pullets. Call 619-R-2 or McHenry 37. T. Thonneson, McHenry, 111. . \ 3® FOR SALE--Norge oil heater in perfect condition. Cheap. O. E. Olsen. Tel. 686-J-l. „ *3&: FOR SALE--Hunting dog. Write A. Fores, Box 528, McHenry, III. •39 FOR SALE--Single unit deep freze food compartment; ... Call McHenry 395. 39 MAT:b!iAl€blTOR!Al_ : M iJ I \sr ASSOCIATION , Cse Vehicles. . - V-:'tt %t»icar division of 15,000 mei 'uses abotit 2,000 motor-driven vehi- 2<l(leS. • FOR SALE -- North Dakota Red River Triumph early seed' and eating potatoes. Dave Segel. Tel. 92-J. *39-4 . ' i FOR SALe£--8 room house in the •• block across the, street from grade and high schools in City of MfcHenry. P. J. Cleary, W. McHenry', 111. *37-3 i •, i u 7save Paraffin-.;."; i . Restrictions irt the general Commercial use of waxed pajser is expected to save coating material at an annual rafe of 13,000 tons of petroleum or paraffjli wax. . • •. Infra-Red Cookinf Experimenters believe there's a "future in cooking with lamps radiat- Vlhg infra-red rays. These are now Used on tank-production lines to dry fresh paint in three minutes. Fruits and vegetables will be dehydrated also, which adds up to less vitamin loss and faster cookin®. FOR SALE--Year-'round comfort and economy with fire-proof Johns-Man* yi lie Rock Wool Home Insulation 'Blownin" -walls and ceilings. Call LEO J. "STILLING, McHenry 18. > 36tf. WANT WANTED tO BUY--poultry of all kinds. Wm. Staines, W^tMcHenry. [Tel. McHenry 622-R-2. *39-2 •WANTED--Custom hatching, firing .your eggs now. Hatching chickens; ducks and turkey eggs. Prices unchanged. Lehmann Hatcheries, Highway 14, 3 miles southeast of Woodstock. /* 39-4 WANTED TO BUY--Used baby's crib in gbod condition; also would like baby carriage. Telephone Pistakee 650-M-2. *39 New Salad Pep Shake the last of the french dressing with mayonnaise or salad dressing for new salad pep. Catsup bottle goes bottoms up for the last drop. Save outside lettuce leaves, parsley, celery tops for salads.. Try diying celery leaves for soup flavor. Keep Every Ounce Keep every ounce of drippings . from beef, pork, lamb, poultry, suet, bacon, sausage, ham, etc. Strain all drippings into their containers. Cover and keep in refrigerator. Render out extra suet, ham or bacon "rinds, and fat from fowl. Save even the hits of table fat that cOng to clean wrappings. Clean Up After Crop . Some gardeners feel that the beat Way to clear the garden is to wait Until late fall when all the crops are harvested. Actually, if left this way the job seldom gets done. A better plan is to follow each crop harvest with a cleanup, onions one week, aweet corn the next, tomatoes, cabbage and so on, as harvests stretch Over several months. Shipyard Turnover There are more than 675.000 work- * ers in the maritime shipyards. In the first quarter of 1943 there was an average of 11.2 per eent turnover each month, of which 2 per cent represents men inducted into the armed aiervices. On the West coast, where approximately half of our shipping fcl built, one-seventh of the working fcrce during every month are new- Comers, needing to be trained or Broken in to new conditions. . - Sicily Operation! In operations in Sicily we lost 13 per cent of all the 155 mm. howitzers .. Dire landed, 46 per cent of all mm. ' funs, 36 per <^snt of the motor "c^T nages for our 75 mm. guns, 22 per . .Cent of the carriages for our 105 • 8am. howitzers, and 54 per cent of v the carriages for our 37 mm. guns. .We also lost 7 per .cent of our light tanks; 8 per cent of our medium tanks. We lost nearly 13 per cent 61 mm. guns, Citrus Belt Circling the earth, the citrus belt 'north of the Tropics includes, in addition to the United States, Mexico 7'and the Caribbean countries, Portugal, Spain, Algeria, Tunisia, Italy, Greece, Syria, Palestine, Egypt, India, China, Japan and the Philippines. South of the Tropics important producing countries are Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, Argentina, _LJ5outb Africa, Australia and New : Zealand. WANTED TO BUY--Have buyer for! medium priced dwelling on Fox River nqpr McHenry. Earl R. Walsh, Tel. McHenry 43. ...fp. HELP WANTED ; WANTED --> Newsboys to deliver papers. Good pay. Inquire Albert j-Krause News Agency. Tel. 379. 39 I i-HELP WANTED--Men or women.! McHenry Tent and Awning Co. 39 i WANTED--Draft exempt man for war work. Apply Miller Products. Phone 195. 39-tf WANTED--Cook and housekeeper on I farm near Libertyville. Salary $100 iper month. In reply state age, vex- I perience and references. Address j Box "N," care of Plaindealer. *39 WANTED--Working dairy farmer anjl wife. No children.- Wife as housekeeper and work. Salary $200.; Modern living quarters and food fur- * nished. Must give best of references. Farm located near Libertyville, 111. State experience and age. i Address Box "H," care Plaindealer. 1*39 )• •; ; WANTED--Girl for soda fountain and general store work; steady. Bolger's Drug Store, McHenry. 35tf WAITED--Painter's helper. Hunter Boat Company. 13-tf WANTED--Maintenance man. Hunter Boat ComDanv. 50-tf ANIMALS WANTED CITIZENS OF GREGORY, S. DAKOTA, BELIEVE 'IT'S TIME TO CHANGE' Farmers Remember Triple A Benefits but Fed Too ; Much Centralized Control Is Unhealthy. By BARROW LYONS (EDITOR'S NOTE--This is one of a series of articles written'for this paper by Barrotv Lyons. staff correspondent of Western Newspaper Union. He has just completed an extended trip through the nation and in these reports gives his first-hand impressions of what rural America is thinking as ice enter the third year of war and the first weeks of a presidential election year. Any opinions expressed are the writer's and j not necessarily those of this newspaper.) : GREGORY, S. D.--This is a young town--even as western j towns go. It was planted by the government in the heart of the prairie--the country of the Rosebud Sioux Indians--39 years ago when the land was opened to homesteaders. With the exception of the lean years of grasshoppers and'drouth, when dust storms obscured the sun, Gregory has thrived. It has a population of 1,400, and is the chief trading center of Gregory county. Usually, the Republicans haye^- carried the county by a slight majoirity. In 1924", year of the^Cooljdge landslide, the GOP got 54 per cent of the votes. Again last year the Republican percentage was the same. But in the first New Deal election Roosevelt left the Republicans only 26 per cent of the vote, and in 1936 42 per cent. But in 1040 the Voters veered to the other side, and 53 per cent of the votes were tallied under the Republican emblem. Even though the people of Gregory disj^ce many things about the New Deal, they do not forget the years when the Triple A saved them through seed loans, helped them to hold their produce for better prices and brought new ways of farming that made the prairie soil more profitable. Most of them think today that the time has come for a change. This is true eveif of some of the most staunch defenders of the New Deal, who fee^ that the administration is becoming too entrenched in power, too set in its ways, too far away from the people. Gregory is on the edge of the cattle country, but there is extensive growing of wheat, corn, barley and forage along with cattle, hog and sheep raising. Here Is to be found the conflict of social and political trends that underlie the whole fabric of American politics today -- the clash between the conservatives and the liberals--the traditional _ and the new--those seeking safety and those set for adventure. Dramatically illustrating this conflict are the views of two men living on farms that are close together, both of whom took up homesteads 39 years ago when the land was opened, both of whom have had their ups and downs, but are today more prosperous than ever before. One is E. C. Biggins, wheat farmer, who came here from the cattle country along the Missouri Breaks. He knew the Indians, ranched and The DEBUNKER By John Harvey Furbay, Ph.D. • v if % HE GULF STREAM DOES NOT /ARM SOUTHERN U S DEAD ANIMALS WILL WIN THE! WAR -- Five dollars is the least we| pay for dead horses and cows in good; condition. Wheeling Rendering Co. Phone Wheeling No. 3. Reverse the charges. No help needed to load. 14-tf MISCELLANEOUS OPEN HOUSE--Saturday, Feb. 19. See the NEW FORI) j TRACTOR AND FERGUSON ' IMPLEMENTS. SWANSON-STAEBLER MOTORS, ^ 248 Throop Street,V Woodstock. Phone 851. Authorized FORD arid ' | FORD-FERGUSON SERVICE j AND SALES. We have repair i parts for 1 FORD CARS, TRACTORS and IMPLEMENTS. ^ *39 HAVE YOU HEARD about the new reduced Auto Liability s(nd Property Damage rates? They will surprise you. Ask us for insurance rates. The Kent Co., McHenry. Phone 8. s . 27-tf GARBAGE COLLECTING -- Let us dispose of your garbage each week, <ir oftener if desired. Reasonable r rates. Regular year round route, formerly George Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone 365. r - . tf E. C. Biggins Wm. Sinkular Two farmers--two views. ran cattle, broke wild horses and played poker. Of him a friend remarked: "He's the kind of man who's always been independent aod aoesn't want be told. He doesn't like the New Deal. He is 67 years old, and farms 400 acresv The other is William Sinkular, who raises cattle, sheep and hogs, an<j most of the grain which he feeds them. In the*last few years he has netted between $12,000 and $15,000 a year from his 1,920 acres. He was the first around Gregory to join the Non-Partisan league, one of the first to speak up for the Roosevelt administration. "I saw this land come up from nothing. People thought they were making money. A man took a homestead, borrowed money on it and made improvements. They drove the price of land up to where one could mortgage a farm for $lQ,000 to $12,000. FARGO REGORY FftL^ i 1. NEB. COL! OMAHA Circulate Money 0# > In , ft' iilK f/ V- mi/* Scientists have overthrown th% popular idea that the Gulf Stream is in any way responsible fbr the warm climate of the Southern and Eastern part of the United States, or even the Gulf of Mexico. It is definitely the1 reason for the warmed climate1 of the British Isles, and makes Norway and Sweden habitable near the polar region. The Gulf Stream be- • gins in the Antarctic region, travels up the east coast of South America, gathering heat, arid heads for* the Arctic seas, where it is finally lost. It is a streajn about 6,000 miles long, discharging a thousand times more water than the Mississippi riv- «r« scientists say. • : l*4«er Syndicate.--WlfU T--tutma. For every dollar agriculture get*, the rest ol the United States, geta 17. Women Painters Wartime needs have resulted to the employment of 105 women (members of local unions) as paint' ers, decorators or paperhangers, while 958 were employed as shijj painters in shipyards^ US JulX 15, 1943. . , Rural Credit Took Land by Foreclosure "Then the deflation came. Steer# we thought were worth $50 to $60 dropped to $12 to $14. Rural Credit took land in foreclosure--resold rich farms for $1,500--not a little but a lot of it. When the boom was on we were offered $200 an acre for our land. We saw its value go down to where ye couldn't get ^10 an acre "Today we are again in a boom period, but a man who has reason knows he's not really making money. There's nothing that promises you security. The administration has promised good prices for two years, but they can't keep such promises. "Now I like a Democrat, but I can't stand a New Dealer. They're trying to do all the things that were never thought of before. They're trying tp shove this farming back to the birth of Christ. When they begin telling you how much wheat to raise and what to do--wasn't that what they did in Egyptian times? "I growed up right beside the Sioux Indians. They'd come in on butchering day aTid pick up scraps, but they'd never work. The New Dealers, most of them^around here, are just like that. The administration tried to rehabilitate them, but they tyon't rehabilitate, most of them." Educational Program Helped Country Now let "Bill" Sinkuldr state his case: "The New Deal--not the whole setup-- gave the farmer an educational program that's been a life saver for this country. In 1934 this country was a desert. It had been ruined by dust storms and drouth. In 1934 I received $1,800 for seed, and it saved my farm. "But I don't think all the subsidies they are paying out now are necessary. All that money that's being paid out now to farmers who are prospering must be paid in by somebody. 1 don't think the subsidies are an attempt to buy votes; but the farmers themselves should know that taxation won't do them any good. |'Many farmers would take anything they could get hold of, and yet the§§ gan>e men are the greatest enemies of the New Deal--the men who have profited rnpst from it," H. E. McKee, vice president and director of the Northwest Security National bank, and manager of the Gregory Branch, strongly supports this anti-inflation point of view. He 1 9 4 . 4 W A R F U N D i This year, with service flags in windows of nearly every home. Red Cross will J®®*n •• nmeh more to Americans. As depicted in this reproduction of a 1944 Red Cross War Fund poster, many windows also will display the symbol of. participation in the cause of Mercy and Humanity--the Red Cross. Red Cross Asks $200,000,000 To Cover Wartime Needs WASHINGTON, D. C. -- Confronted ! "with responsibilities of unprecedented proportions, as the war enters its ; most crucial stage, and with a stagger- | ing task ahead in the post-war period. > the American Red Cross opens its 1944 War Fund appeal March 1, confident that the American people will respond to the limit of their ability. President Roosevelt, president of the American Red Cross, Norman H. Davis, chairman and active head of the vast , organization, and Leon Fraser, national War Fund chairman, Join inurging the people of this country to help Red Cross reach its national objective of $200,000,000 because of the vital part it must play within the next twelve months. • Chairman Davis, in opening the campaign will stress the fact that with the decisive stage of the war at hand, the Red Cross must assume a greater burden than ever before, and at the sam.e time must provide aid to. servicemen being returned in everincreasing numbers. Red Cross operations over the entire world during 1943 have dwarfed its , activities during the first two years of war. j An even greater burden will be placed on Red Cross services in 1944. j Thousands of American men and | women are now in Red Cross service ! with U. S. troops at home bases and ; overseas. Field directors, hospital, ; club and recreation workers are with i American armed forces in virtually i every command, Mr. Davis asserted. I Both in Europe and in the Far Bast, i Red Cross workers havjg either gone ! with invasion forces into new combat ! areas, or have followed within a very limited time. On the home tfont, the Red Cross has broadened its service tremendously. Field directors are serving in every sizable military establishment and camp throughout the country, and recreation and social service workers are located in Army and Naval hospitals. One of the most important and necessary war-time Red Cross functions has been the collection of human blood for plasma. Thirty-five blood donor stations are now operating. The dramatic story of the Red Cross Blood Donor Service. thrSugh which thousands of soldiers and sailors have been saved from death, began in Feb-. ru"»~y, 1941, when the Surgeons General of the Army and Navy asked the Red Cross to procure 15,000 pints of blood. Last year* more than'3,700,000 pints of blood were collected for the Army and Navy. This year the goal is mpre than 5,000,000 pints. With major battles of the war yet to come, the Army has asked the Red Cross to supply many millions of surgical dressings. American men wounded in battle will depend acutely on the vast Red Cross surgical dressing production program. Numerous other Red Cross home operations, such as Prisoners-of War packaging centers, where more than a million parcels for war prisoners are prepared each month for shipment overseas, are supported by citizenparticipation In the Red Cross War Fund. So extensive ts Red Cross service during this war that every American civilian can contribute something to at least one of its functions. To continue this gigantic work, all Americans must assume their share of the respon- •sibility bf carrying on this far-reaching service., The $200,000,000 quota will enable Red Cross to alleviate suffering and pain at home and abroad, and to carry on its vast military welfare service. , ersonm has seen the deposits in his branch daughter, Joan, and Mrs. May Zimmer , .. , . mount from $751,000 at the end of of Palatine visited in the Henry J. ^ ba^ wil1 now make their home 1941 to $1,830,000 today, and in the Schaffer home on Sunday. same period has seen loans decline from $694,000 to $430,000. Farmerspeculators are buying up the land today at prices that are tooJiigh, he declares. . "In the last year," he spid, "the As Gregory, South Dakota, Views It Pay Increases The" aVerajge pay envelope of the worker in industry in 1910 was $11 53 per week. By the end of 1942 it had risen to $42.49. This was an increase of approximately 250 per cent in the average weekly pay envelope during this generation. .. Listen to farmer E.C. Biggins: "Today many farmers around tiere are spreading themselves toe far--buying toe many steers, •sheep, hogs at prices that are ~tto« high. One friend of mine •during the last boom kept gathering land at $135 an acre. He was counting his chips before he cashed in. if "Now when they started the Nonwith her parents, the Peter Schaejers. •. Mr and Mrs. C. J. Reihansperger Miss Eileen Kilday of Chicago Tieited hls mother, Mrs. John Reihansspent the weekend in the home of her who is crltictlly ill at her parents, the John Kildays. home in Wegt Chlcago> on Sunday. W. K. Kimball of Gurnee attended | Floyd E covalt attended the Lumthe funeral of his brother, Grover bermen's cbnvention in Chicago last Regional" AgrloultuVal Cre5it~corikv !Kimball> on Friday of last week. |week. He was accompanied to the ration has been lending money to Miss Kathleen Henn of Rosary j city by his wife, who participated in anyone who would take care of more college, River Forest, 111., spent the; the ladies portion of the program, livestock to increase the meat sup^ ; weekend at her home here. ply. In 1940 there were 1,632,000! Mrs. Frances Holley of Harvard head of cattle in the counjty. To- attended the funeral service for her day there are more than three mil- j cousin, Grover Kimball, on Friday. lion head. It is the same with sheep Mrs. James Sayler returned Sunday and hogs; and it is about the same in from a few weeks vacation spent with her daughter, Mrs. Frank Altman, in Pontiac, Mich. Miss Lois Wike, who is enroute from Miami, Fla., to Des Moines, la . called in the Nick B. Freund home on Monday. Miss Wike has been visiting Mrs. Merle Blowers in Fox Lake. who also called in the Freund homv Monday. Mrs. Peter M. Justen returned last week from a trip to visit her son, Sgt. Daniel Justen, in California. Mrs. Carl Courier of Woodsock visited her mother, Mrs. Nellie Bacon other Western states. "What we are doing is laying up an enormous surplus on the farms. If they let this go on for another two or three years it will wreck farming. We'll have the same condition that occurred after the last war." Colony McHenry, Illinois FRIDAY-SATURDAY Brtte Davis Miriam Hopkins "Old Acquaintance" Plus. Musical-World News Cari'jon--"Rabbit Trouble" Use Semi-Dry Bread ' Semi-dry bread is just the ticket for-cubes to make crispy toppings on scalloped dishes, for bread puddings, or croutons for soup. Use whole -slices for french toast, or top with gravy and a bit of meat and fry for a sandwich. if • Early Landing Barges Early forerunner of modern marine landing barges were the boats of the mosquito fleet used by the Leathernecks in Florida against hot* tile Seminole Indians (1835). Military Communication The mechanized units of every Partisan league, this friend was one of the first to fall into that; and he swallowed all their radical ideas. He ; on Sunday. boomed up that outfit, and stuck-J MIMS. Carl J. Freund spent Sunday with them .for several years. Well, I and Monday visiting her sister, Mrs. when he saw all the things -that j Joseph Schmitt, in St. Anthony's hosweren't right with those boys thejpital. Chicago. tears ran down his cheeks. It was j Mrs. ^wRobei^ Beckenbaugh and dissatisfaction with the Non-Partisan daughter, Anita Jean, 'of Crystal league that made the people around Lake spent several days last week here fall into tire Democratic basket, visiting relatives here. . - Mrs. William Althoff spent a few days this week visiting • her "sister. Mrs. Joseph Schmitt, in a Chicago hospital. ; Mrs. Catherine Boger returned Sunday after spending a week in the Harold Frett and Timothy . McCleary homes in Chicaero. ! MrB Increases Yield Treatment of seed wheat to prevent decay of the kernels after planting and to control the stinking smut disease may increase the yield of grain as much as 25 per cent. Rigid Flared Pails metal pails -with flared feommand on the ground, in the air," : sides, or wooden picking contain^ and on the seas are equipped with ers similar shape are preferred inter-communicating radio sets, *° canvas bags for harvesting tentuned to preoraioo^oontrolled quencies. der varieties of .apples suoh as Mcintosh, Cortland, «nd Delicious. Harold Frett of Chicago spent Bohday in McHenry. f Mrs., Elmo Darnell of Crystal Lake has recevel word that her husbanc is confined to an army hospital in Amarillo, Tfxas, where he is suffering from rheumatic fever, Th«. SUNDAY-MONDAY FEB. 20-21 Charles Boyer Barbara Stanwyck Flesh and Fantasy . I*lus Cartoon and News TUESDAY (One Day) "Hi Ya Sailor" Also Comedies WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY John Wayne Martha Scott "In Old Oklahoma" which consisted of a Inatlnee performance of "Oklahoma," followed tf a dinner at the Sherman hotel. Mr. and Mrs. William Justen vlslli-" ed relatives in Wilmette on Tuesday. Mrs. Justen remained for a few dayfe Mr. and Mrs. Lewis McDonald at Woodstock visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Linus frewman, on Frida|T afternoon. 2 .««»_ Save Crumbs r a plepe of butter paper trVejp a knife to slice your precious pouni square or pat. Result is no broken corners or bits, clinging to the knife. Store butter in its own tight-covered' private dish to keep it sweet anf &eah down to the last point's worth. tndnstry Expands Peru's domestic leather industi# has expanded until it not only meet! the needs of Peru'« shoe factories but also produces substantial quant*. ' ties of leather gloves, handbags, pi ture frames, hand luggage and covers. --- ; ' '/T Vitamin C .Source ' /Although the vitamin C content <£ - tomato juice is only about half tha| ' of orange juice, it is an iiViportanl • and almost necessary source of vita£f >'-\ min C for many people, especially/;;, farm families whose access to fresS" !* fruit is very limit enduring the W«K ,ler months. ^ A Fortune ht Fish Portuguese fishermen went t» Newfoundland Banks for codfish, though home waters teemed with tunnies and sardines, the "makings* of sizable industries in themselves. Exports of sardines totaled abooft six million dollars annually. (reabfast Bowl It's smart to shake tag-ends of ready-to-serve cereals together for a breakfast bowl. Good sprinkled over, casseroles or used in meat loaves* too. Roll pre-cooked potatoes in but* ter and crushed flakes and bake ih the oven. Locker Plants Recent government surveys reveal 4,600 locker plants located in 4f states, handling about a half-billion pounds of meat, poultry, fruit andl vegetables a year. Most of the plants are concentrated in the Middle West and Pacific Northwest, with; Iowa, at 550, and Washington, at 375, topping the list. Of the millioa families served about three-quarters are farmers. BEG PARDON III last week's issue of the Plaindealer the heading over the cuts of'- Servicemen Lewis Brefeld and Lloyl OefFling were interchanged. Oveir Lewis Brefelds picture should have been the heading "Recent Bridegroom" and over Lloyd Oeffling'S picture should have been the heading "At Camp Grant." Darnells were former McHenry real dents. ' J Mr. and Mrs. John Phannenstill vis- j ited Henry Freund in St. Therese hospital last Sunday. Miss Christine Adams is spending? Mrs. Evelyn Albright and daughthis week visiting in ,the home of ter have returned from Vernon, Tex., Mr. and and Mrs. James Watterton where they have been living with in Chicago. their husband and father, Raymond Mr. and Mrs. Leo Zimmer and' Albright. The latter has been transferred to Oklahoma and Mrs. Albright Ftw Dittotas Causa Poultry Men Such Umsm When you notice wet be*ki or whe«iing, get bu*y quickly with elmr of ' se convenient, tested tre»tmenlfc For coldi and breathing troubles. Helpa prevent ipread; relieves symptoms. Work* (ton A_ theJntide against such disorders. U»ed alone, or ia severe cases, W with VAl'O-SPIUY. SPRAY WITH VAPO-SPRAY Overheads of the birds. RapiJiii * icttoo, high in antiscptic and Jkj •iAV lalantvalue. Get VA'?0-SPRAY5J >r Leemulaiaa NOW, and tie pr»> mtp pared. ' Bolger's Drug Store Green Street McHenry MILLER WOODSTOCK, ILL. FRI.-SAT., FEB. 18-19 2 BIG HITS 2 "ALASKA HIGHWAY" Richard Arlen Jean Parker "COLT COMRADES" with Wm. Boyd as (HOPALONG) CASSIDY SUN.-MON.. FEB. 20-21 . LADY TAKES A CHANCE" 'Ttr~;.. with 773;": Jean Arthur John Wayne Charles Wiiuiingeir Tl ESDAY ONLY. FEB. 22 Brought Back by Popular Demand TO THE SHORES OF TRIPOLI' In Technicolor WEI\. Till RS.. FRI.. SAT., FEB. 23-24-25-26 2 HITS OF THE SEASON "TOP MAN" with •, Donald O'Conwwr, . Plus "FIRED WIFE" NOTE -- EVERY WEDNESDAY MATINEE--2 SHOWS i-- No. 1 at 12 Noon; No. 2 at 2 p. m. ¥U:&