■ PALIS AD 8
Jar— -rac*
Bounded 1906 by the lata Charles Thomas
Logan. Jr. Incorporated 1925.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
by tba Pallsadlen. Inc. Charles Thomas
began, President; Walter Stein, Vice
President; Cbarlee W. B. Lane, Secretary
end Treasurer. „ ,
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lilt. _
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f ADDRESS
The Palisadian
, Editorial Office
Office No. 2, Grant-Lee Theatre Building,
Palisade Junction. Palisade, N. J.
Phone 1443 CM fluids
Publication Office
847' Gorge Road, Grantwood, N. J.
Phone 2002 Cllffslde
CHARLES T. LOGAN, Editor; CHARLES
w b t,ANE. Manager and Associate Editor;
THOMAS deV. FREDERICKS. Assistant
Manager.
REPQRTORIAL STAFF—Mrs. George
Donaldson, Grantwood; Mrs. H. A. Matttce,
Coytesvllle. C. Abbott, Fort Lee: Mrs. C.
Johnson, Englewood Clifts. Special Corres
pondents. J. Hall. Grantwood; J. R. Wilson.
Fort Lee; Mrs. George F. Hall. Grantwood,
Frank Merritt, Grantwood.
ADVERTISING— Mrs. Mary W. Torrey.
Hudson Trust Company Building. Union
City, N. J., Thomaa deVaux brederlcks. Pal
isade. _____
MEMBER
New Jersey Press Association
OFFICIAL PAPER
Borough of Cllffslde Park
... Borough of Fort Lee
VOL. XX
JULY IS, 1927
No. 23
AFTER THE SHOUTING AND THE
TUMULT
When he left the municipal opera
last night Colonel Lindbergh stepped
out of "the fierce, white light that
beats upon a throne” into the quiet of
private citizenship. This is not to im
ply that fame,- having showered him
with passionate and exultant atten
tions, has now cast him aside. Fickle
jade though she be, Fame has a cer
tain quality of constancy. She may
flirt outrageously with the half-gods
and pamper them with tinsel and
brummagem for a brief, strutting
hour; but when one of the real gods
comes, as come they do at glorious in
tervals, Fame knows that there is a
suitor with the authentic credentials
of imperishable achievement who has
wooed and won. '
v ' Charles Lindbergh’s boyhod is end
ed. There is no way back to the sim
plicity, routine tasks, struggles, dis
appointments, merrymaking of
youth's bland irresponsibility. His
tory, poetry, heroism and the ever
lasting burden of noblesse oblige—
such is the estate to which he has
tame \ twith., Minerva-like * .wonder.
Whatever his inclination he is oblig
ed henceforth to play a great man's
jpart. . ’• ' ,
That he will be equal to his high
heritage is the judgment of all who
have been privileged to come into close
’contact with him. That, too, is the
popular impression. For he appar
ently has that indispensable gift of
common sense. Throughout this whole
Olympian triumph he has been able to
think and talk in terms of reality and
shining possibility.
It is no sudden drop from the
clpUds, then, to quote Lindbergh’s re
marks as to what must be done to
realize the future of aviation, which
hks become a universal faith. He has
dwelt on the necessity of airports. He
has talked about our St. Louis-Chica
go air mail service. The flight be
tween the two cities is a matter of
two hours, and almost as much time
is consumed m transporting tne man
from the cities to their landing fields.
That won’t do. Airports must be tak
en out of the suburbs and made in
tegral assets of the cities. It is an
engineering problem, he confesses. So
it is. But spurring on the technical
.experts to a solution must be public
sentiment, civic pride, the indomitable
will of great cities to do what belief
in progress says must be done.
What of St. Louis? What special
bequest may be ours from this "per
feet lyrics” with our winged young St.
Louisan has written in the stars? Lis
ten to his Odyssey: Fourteen hours
and five minutes from San Diego to
- St. Louis. Seven hours and 16 min
utes from St. Louis to New York.
That means that you are going to be
able to get in a plane in St. Louis in
the evening and step out of it at any
point in the United States the next
morning. It takes 85 hours to cross
the United States by train. Yet in
the whole flight from San Diego to
8t. Louis; from St. Louis to New
York; from New York to Paris; from
Paris to Brussels; from Brussels to
London; from Washington to New
York and from New York back to St.
Louis, the “Spirit of St. Louis” has
been in the air 79 hours and 20 min
utes, or less by almost six hours than
a transcontinental train journey.
There is an epic in the simplest
prose which drives home the fact that
St. Louis is naturally situated to be
the center of aviation in the United
States. < ,
St. Louis and Lindbergh! Joined
together in immortal accomplishment,
js there anything in the illimitable
dominion of the air which they may
not confidently undertake after "the
shouting and the tumult dies?”—St.
Louis Post-Dispatch.
WORK FOR THE REFORMERS
Now that the primary nominating
system is safe, for one year at least,
both the political parties in New Jer
sey might well devote some of their
time and energy to the revision of the
Corrupt Practices Act.
This law will be found in the gen
eral compilation of the election laws
for 1927, issued by the Secretary of
State, beginning at the bottom of page
202. With its supplements it occupies
space in nearly seventy pages of the
book.
Governor Wilson ordered a revision
of the Corrupt Practices act in 1911,
but his committee, unlike the volun
teer experts who drew the Geran law
and recast the direct primary laws,
made a botch of the job.
They were either unfamiliar with
their task or they did not want to put
teeth into the statute.
Since 1911, one body of lawmakers
after another has modified or mutilat
ed the original enactment, as the mar
ginal notes and the supplements show,
until much of what little virility there
was in it has been destroyed.
Too much money has always been
expended in our American primaries
and elections. It is conceded that the
official reports of these expenditures
are largely fraudulent and mislead
ing. Some citizens will sell their votes
and some politicians can be found to
buy them.
But no large sums of money can,
in these days, be raised for political
purposes without leaving their reflec
tion on the records of the banks.
Heretofore . the authors of corrupt
practices acts have been afraid or un
willing to go drastically into this
phase of the, problem.
"Expenditure of money in politics
I cannot be kept secret,” said chairman
Stokes on June 28. He is right, but
the trouble is that we have no real
corrupt practices act in New Jersey
jto punish the offenders.—Hackensack
Record.
Putting a few of the brazen devils
behind the bars who go into elections
with wads of ten dollar bills to buy
votes might do some good. The pre
sent law has no teeth in it.
Liberty it worth whatever country
it worth. It ii by liberty that a man
hat a country; it ie by liberty that
be hae right*.'—Henry biles.
MINISTER EXCUSES ADULTRY
The New York World ;of last Sun
day published in.full.tyie appeal made
before the San Francisco assembly. (of
the Episcopal church held recently,
and it has not added anything to the
| reputation of the rector who delivered
it. It is an appeal to ,the church to
broaden its views on the marriage!
question, and is an open revplt against
the chastity of women and men—an
advocacy of trial marriage, and an
actual espousal of sex freedom un
heard of before as the faith of a man
chosen to espouse the Christian relig
ion. He is Reverend Henry H. Lewis,
rector of St. Andrew’s Protestant Ep
iscopal church, of Ann Arbor, Michi
gan. This recalitrant gentleman of
the cloth has violated all of the trad
itions of the church, invalidated every
principle of. decency in human con
duct, and comes out in favor of sex
relationship without wedlock, excuses
it, and says it is both legal and whole
some because it is human and there
fore natural.
The fact that Bishop Manning re
buked Reverend Lewis with vehement
emphasis may undo some of the mis
chief done by this Michigan reformer
and Correct (<he whole doctrines he has
unleashed. But there is an element
that would like nothing better than
to feel justified in marriage without
wedlock. Reverend Lewis actually
says that it is all right to have illicit
love because “science” now makes it
“safe for women.” The dissemina
tion of such unholy filth is an abase
ment of every teaching of the Bible
and God. If it is “Youth’s Moral
Standard,” the sooner Youth blots it
all out, the better will be the world
throughout all Christendom. There is
no language strong enough to con
demn such debasing theory of life and
it is quite unlike anything ever before
propagated in the history of the
Christian religion. Youth movement
followers, however, will get a lot of
license for their faith from this Mich
igan rector who would prostitute chas
tity and put the disgrace of licen
sclousness before the world as its high
est virtue. There is one check against
the social freedom of this new crusade
against truth and decency, and that
is the church as it is.
Liberty ie never cheap. It it made
difficult, because freedom i* its ac
complishment and perfectness of
man.—Emerson.
NEW JERSEY CANDIDATES THICK
From all accounts there are to be
more candidates for the next govern
orship and for United States senator
than were ever before the voters. It
is going to be a contest never equall
ed, from all accounts. Bergen county
alone will have at least two candi
dates for United States Senator. Wlio
will be the lucky man? It is high time
somd of the. big plums were falling
>ur way.
ENGLAND FEARS A TUNNEL,
APPARENTLY
France and England have long
talked of tunneling the English Chan
nel. Now, just when the best plans
have been formulated for a tunnel,
giving France and England the exact
same terms of reducing the liabilities
of danger from a tunnel, England
balks and says she will have none of
it.
For years the question of building
a railway tunnel from England to
France has been mooted. There have
been many periods when the two coun
tries have not been on very good
terms, so the tunnel idea has always
been blocked. Something has always
come about to stop the very best ideas
on the subject. Today France is in
favor of the scheme, for the safety
points have been covered to her lik
ing. Now England stops it all, and
says she won’t play.
The cost of the tunnel would be
about $80,000,000, a small sum, con
sidering the size of the enterprise. It
would be 39 kilometers long, and 50
meters below the bottom of the sea at
the deepest point. This would mean
the tunnel would be 25 miles long and
200 feet deep. It could accommodate
25,000,000 passengers and 8,000,000
tons of freight annually, with electric
traction.
Answering England’s fears, France
tells her that the exits at both ends
would be under the range of all the
guns of Dover. Not only that, but all
the power stations would be in Eng
land. All French trains would be op
erated by this power. The English
could easily shut oif the current, in
time of war, and also All the tunnel
with asphyxiating gas.
Not only that, but the tunnel could
be filled with water from top to bot
tom for a space of one and a half
miles without destroying the struc
ture. In other words, France could
safeguard herself from England and
vice versa. The military danger would
be nil. Nevertheless, England objects.
Thus we see the greatest nation of the
world, in power, perhaps, living a life
of absolute, abject, almost trembling
fear.
There it no state of society under
heaven, and there can be none, where
perfect liberty exists, without; u>
obedience to law to glad and so entire
that the restraints of the law are an
felt—Timothy Titcomb. 1
Liberty ,an«| liberty alone, gives me
all for w&cJw»xittenc«. is greatly vel-.
uablei mind, speech, education, law,
security, social station, and social
claims; kindred,, home, country.—
[Henry Giles. ^
Eternal vigilance is the price #f
[liberty.—Ascribed Thomas Jeffer
IH ..
Arthur W. Tams
In the (jeath of Arthur W. Tams
one of the] earliest, as well as one of
the most prominent, of its citizens has
been taken from Palisade. Already
widely known in New York city, and
in fact in a great part of the country
through his music library, he came to
Palisade to make his home about 1906
and soon became an active influence
in the civic and social life of the rap
idly growing suburb upon the cliffs.
His home, in which he always took
the greatest pride, was made one of
the most attractive in the village, with
its spacious grounds and arbors, and
with the love of its owner and Mrs.
Tams for association with their neigh
bors, soon became one of the centers
of hospitality.
Mr. lams always entered wnoie
heartedly into civic affairs and was at
all times among the foremost in work
ing for the betterment and preserva
tion of the town as a residential com
munity. In this respect he was a tire
less worker and joined cheerfully in
any movement to this end. In the
various stages of the town’s develop
ment from the abolition of the divid
ing line that had placed it in two bor
oughs to the completion of its im
provements he was one of the lead
ing factors.
He was always deeply interested in
Palisade’s social and musical develop
ment, an interest that led him early
in the town’s history, to give his ser
vices to the village’s pioneer fire com
pany in training and conducting it in
its first benefit performance. This
deep interest in the community also
led him later to organize a choral so
ciety of the town talent and produce
both “Pinafore,” and “The Mikado,”
which he staged and conducted, work
ing with tireless energy.
He was equally energetic in work
ing in many other directions and civic
labors.
Social by nature, he enjoyed always
seeing others about him enjoying
themselves and, in spite of the great
infirmity of ever-increasing loss of
hearing, he was always cheerful and
hearty in his greeting. . His greatest
recreation was motoring and he sel
dom went out on a ride without taking
some of his neighbors with him.
A busy life, a life of achievement,
i life devoted to his home town and its
affairs and Palisade misses him and
mourns his passing.
—David Arthur Carson.
OFF THE KATIN WON WTOtJOC* WILSON
For the Pellsadien—
Repeats Itself
Mr. Russel Crouse, in the Post,
claims to have discovered in history,
the origin of a popular American ex
pression.
"On the evening of the 26th the
march against the city was begun by
Clinton—and Howe.”
A Tree
(Apologies to Miss Hawling) •
Among the beautiful things on earth,
A tree is mighty neat,
With green boughs spread to the
morning sun,
Or in sillouette, when the day is
done,
Against the nostilucent sky,
It’s pretty hard to beat.
Good, If True
A stranger wandered into the Po
lice station last evening and asked for
a piece of toast. He said he was a
poached egg and wanted to sit down.
The sergeant gave officer Jake
Scheurer a meaning look.
"It can’t be possible that the gen
tleman is potted,” he said.
"What is your name, my friend?”
“Poached egg” mumbled the strang
er.
. “No nonsense now,” ordered the
Sergeant.
“Where did you come from?”
A bewildered smile came over the
face of the stranger and he answered
sweetly. - • ’ .
“Poached egg,” he said. v
*?Hey,” said the- Sergeant, "Snap
out of it.”
"Egg,” murmured the stranger.
• "Jake” asked the Sergeant, wearily,
"Ain’t a policeman’s life awful? Now,
what do you suppose is eating this
poor almond?’’
"Sarge,” said Jak6, “I think this
is a case of hallucinations or else he’s
just plain coocoo. Let’s call a doctor
before he starts to hatch.”
"Hello Doctor,” phoned the Ser
geant to Doctor Crandall a moment
later. “We have an egg over here—
What? NO. I mean a nut. Sure.
Quick!” '
In a few minutes the Doctor ar
rived1 and examined the stranger
carefully. . , q •;
•••‘'Don’t worry - boys,” • he said,
“He’ll be all right in a day or two, but
for the present, you’d better lock him
up-erhe may get an idea he's a crumb
and choke, awnrfwdy.”
..-^VJjat is,1 it,'* masked Jake, "Is he
plartpred or is* he balmy?”
* «just a little tig zag in the belfry
f^pm trying to keep his' balance on
these Main street sidewalks.”
' “"Oh,” said Jake.
Discrimination
The average *wealth of the United
States is, per capita $39.86. We could
account for the 86 cents up to the
time we bought our lunch but now we
stand $39.00 short of our share.
Somebody please remit.
Rash And Aisky
A German woman is planning to fly
Across the Atlantic. Her name is
Rasche and we consider her all of that
if not actually reckless. /
New Style Lullaby
Hush-a-by, baby, pretty one sleep,
Daddy's gone golfing to- win the club
sweep,
If he plays nicely—I hope he will,
Mother will show him her dressmak
er’s bill.
Hush-a-by, baby, safe in your cot,
Daddy’s come home and his temper is
hot,
Cuddle down closer, baby of mine,
Daddy went round in a hundred and
nine.
—Boston Transcript.
Conscientious Witness
The old-time practice of kissing the
bride received a jolt at a Rowan
county wedding when an awkward
looking guest was asked if he had
kissed the bride, and replied; “Not
lately.” -
Rest In Peace
They picked up the pieces,
With a dustpan and rake,
Because he used his horn,
When he should have Used his
brake.
Not Much Difference
The National Geographic Society
has issued a bulletin describing the
smhllest republic in the world—Tannu
tuva. The bulletin says, “Deer milk,
deer meat and tender roots are the
principal foods of the Uriankhai, and
for clothing they wear deer skins.”
It really isn’t so different—our milk
and meat and clothing are dear
enough, heaven knows.
Trucks Save Sheep
The value of motor trucks in savins
sheep from starving by transporting
them from drought nreas to green pas
tures was demonstrated during the
recent dry period In Australia, the de
partment of commerce at Melbourne
announced recently. More than 10.00C
sheep were moved 220 miles by trucks
POETRY
Lovers Of Poetry Are Invited To
Submit Original Or Clipped
Poems For Publication In This
Column. Please Give Name
Of Author And Source.
For th« P»li«adian—
Mistress Rain
Mistress Rain has slender fingers,
And a misty, silver dress,
With a lilac fragrance round it,
• And a hidden loveliness.
Mistress Rain is tall and shining,
And her eyes are pools of light;
And her hair is faintly golden—
Faintly gleaming, faintly bright.
And her voice is silver music,
Very low, and sweet, and clear—
Calling all the Springtime flowers
At the threshold of the year.
—Mary Saunders Hawling,
. Ridgefield Park, N. J.
My Lily
All summer skies of haunting blue,
All verdant springs of old, '
All flashing suns have gone to make
My lily gold.
—VV. S. B. Dana,
Cliffside Park.
Summer Night
Darkness—and a sweet cool breeze
That rustles softly through the trees,
And quiet *tars in a quiet sky,
A pale moon rising late and high
Are things that make a summer night
As lovely as the warm sunlight.
Now robins are silent and larks are
still;
An owl hoots from a distant hill;
The drowsy drone of the insect band,
The riplets swishing on the white,
white sand,
Are things that make a summer night
As lovely as the warm sunlight.
—D. L. Baxendale,
Palisades Park, N. J.
An Arab Love Song
The hunched camels of the night
Trouble the bright
And silver waters of .the moon.
The maiden of the morn will soon,
Through heaven stray and sing,
Star gathering.
Mil]
Now while the dark about our loves is
strewn, r'A
Light of my dar£,.bfood my heart,
O <;ome! ->*■»}> *,~i »<»*# !
And night will catch hefl^bfeath
and be dumb; • so n j.
Leave thy father, leave thy mother
And thy brother; .
Leave the black tents of ihym>tr?bei
apart! 1 " •«*•'■> * 11
Am I not thy father "and thy brother,
And thy mot he if? '
And thou—What needst with thy
tribes black tents, *
Who hast the red pavillion of my
heart!
—Francis Thompson
Unrest
Sprihg moonlight raises havoc in my
blood,
I, who dm deeply rooted as a tree,
And from each gurgling footprint in
the mud
Crawl germs of wanderlust to mock
at me.
Spring breezes blow from out the
wanton south,
Soft as the breath of a new-bedded
bride;
A thousand miles away, the river’s
mouth
Lifts hungry lips to kiss the May
moon’s tide.
These cursed birds that sound so
sweet to you,
Keep chirping at me, “Man, if you
were free,
We’ll tell you what’s the first thing
you would do—
( You’d take the long, long road that
leads to sea!’’
Old Masters
Oh! Where do fairies hide their heads
When snow lies on the hills,
When frost has spoiled their mossy
beds,
And crystallized their rills? .
Perhaps, in small blue diving bells
They plunge beneath the waves,
Inhabiting the wreathed shells
That lie in coral caves.
Perhaps in red Vesuvius
Carousals they maintain;
And cheer their little spirits thus,
Till green leaves come again.
—Thomas Haynes Bayly; Oh,
Where Do Fairies Hide Their Heads?
Days of my age,
Ye will shortly be past;
Pains of my age,
Yet awhile can ye last;
Joys of my age, ,
In true wisdom delight;
Eyes of my age,
Be religion your light;
rhoughts of my age,
Dread ye not the cold sod;
Hopes of my age,
Be ye fixed on your God. -'
—St. George Tucker: “Days of My
iTouth”
Grantwood Man Injured By
Automobile In Fairview
Henry J. Joescher, 65 years old, of
265 Knox avenue, Grantwood, is in
the Engiewood hospital suffering with
internal injuries that resulted from
an accident on Fairview avenue, Fair
view, on Friday afternoon of last
week.
Mr. Joescher was crossing the
street and was struck by an open door
on an auto driverf by Thomas New
ton, of Ridgefield- Park. Newton was
held under bail on the charge of as
sault and battery by auto.
Mr. Arthur Abrams, Jr., of Law
ton avenue, and Mr. Jeff Yoost, mo
tored to Providence, R. I., recently.
Auto Injures Girl <
Olive Miller, six years old, of 464
Columbia avenue, Grantwood, was.
painfully injured when struck by an
auto driven by Victor Edelman, of
Union City, on Anderson avenue, re
cently. The driver claims that the
child darted into the street directly in
front of the machine.
Mrs. Schmidt, of Warren avenue,
Fort Lee, has been ordered to keep
her bull dog tied up for fifteen days.
The canine bit Mr. Jesse Fry, of Rah
way, on Monday last as the gentleman
was strolling along the street. He
reported the matter to the local police
and they sent him to Dr. Charles Litt
win, of Palisade, to have the wound
cauterized.
For Your Amusement
200th King Of Kings Presen
tation At Gaiety Theatre
With Monday July 25, Cecil B. De
Mille’s production at the Gaiety thea
tre, “King of Kings” will celebrate its
200th consecutive presentation, where
it has been the mecca of crowds since
mid- spring. The picture is now se
curely established in the good-will of
all theatre-lovers and the special in
terest of those who admire this might
iest of stories. Cinematically it has
added to the fame of If. -B. Warner,
Ernest Torrence, the Schildkrauts,
Jacqueline Logan, Victor Varconi,
Sam De Grasse, Theodore Kosloff,
George Siegmann, William Boyd and
the many other principals, bringing
them stardom or other advancement
just as was the case of players in
“The Birth of a Nation” and the play
ers in “The Big Parade.” .One of the
most remarkable recent tributes of
“The King of Kings” has been paid by
Governor Alvan T. Fuller of Massa
chusettes. “It is unlike any other
photoplay I know,” he said after see
ing it at the Tremont theatre, Boston,
“because of the reverent and drama
tic manner of picturizing the last
years of the life of the Master. Such
a picture is something of which the
theatre should be proud.” Already a
New England company has been rout
ed to follow the Boston engagement,
playing suflh dentres as Providence,
Springfield, ( Hertford and Portland
betwixt Labor .day and the holidays.
In Philadelphia another unit with its
own orchestra and effects will begin
an engagement at the Aldine theatre
there on October 3. The engagement
ft thi <&aiety here is indefinite with
he presentations continuing twice
daily.
;=
New Thriller Planned For
Park By Nicholas Schenck
Many years ago, Nicholas Schenck,
the pioneer in the creation of amuse
ment park thrillers, built the “Scenic”
at Schenck Brothers Palisades Amuse
ment Park, directly across the Hud
son from West 125th street.
It operated motorized cars by means
of a third rail, swooped over the big
dip and continued on its ways over
a mile of track at breakneck speed.
It was the .super thrill of the day and
was copied countrywide by other
amusement park builders.
< Last season it was “The Skyrock
et,” built to be the exact replica of
the swoom of an aeroplane dipping
toward the earth from a hundred foot
elevation. A “zoom” that was. breath
taking in its descent, a super-thriller
that was acclaimed the country, over'
as “the last word in amusement de
vices.”
The inception, construction and op
eration of amusement devices design
ed by Mr. Nicholas Schenck to ap
pease the human craving for thrills
had become such an enterprise and
important industry and because of
his knowledge of crowd psychology
and engineering and inventive, skill
that once again he felt called upon to
present to the patrons of Palisades
Amusement Park yet another >“super
thrill.”
It is a new coaster railway, a grav
ity ride, which drops its trains down
a dip of 132 feet and at the bottom
they are traveling at -the rate--of -70
miles an hour and it is going to be
called “The Cyclone,” ready for it<s
first dip spmetimp in thq v^ry near
future of this present season.
\ b
GRANT-LEE
til V,\
THEATRE
Dedicated to the proper presen
tation of Photoplays
PALISADE JUNCTION, N. J.
PHONE 1511 CLIFFSIDE
E. Thornton Kelly, Managing Director ’ 1
Member of Motion Picture Theatre Owners of New Jersey
, SATURDAY and SUNDAY, July 16 and 17
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
Marie Prevost, Charles Ray in “Getting Gertie’s Garter”
Tom Mix in “THE BRONCHO TWISTER”
MONDAY and TUESDAY, July 18 and 19
Karl Dane and George K. Arthur in “ROOKIES’
Mabel Normand Comedy—“Nickel Hopper”
WEDNESDAY, July 20
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
All Star Cast in “EXCLUSIVE RIGHTS”
Priscilla Dean, Robt. Frazer in '“The Speeding Venus”
THURSDAY and FRIDAY, July 21 and 22
Corinne Griffith in “THE LADY IN ERMINE”
OUR GANG COMEDY—“Ten Years Old”
Matinee: Mon. to F>i., 3:20 p. m. Sat. 2:30 p. m. Evenings: Continuous from
7 p. m. Sundays Continuous from 2 p. m.
4
COMING
“THE GREAT GATSBY”
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PALISADES AMUSEMENT PARK
Salt Water Surf Bathing
8 A. M. to 11 P. M. DAILY
N. T. G. and his ‘Radio Pals*
will present another ‘Intimate Revue’
Friday evening, July 22
Ballroom at 10 P. M.
State Tango Championship
Third elimination contest Wed. night, July 20 in the
Ballroom
The Park’s Own Broadcasting Station WPAP
is open to the public each evening
except Saturday and Sundays