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I* or *»25 SOCIETY Call Before Noon r7ch, Club, Lodge and Other# Items of Interest to The Times-News' Women Readers tcAGEMENT OF WIDE BaL INTEREST ■ • ent of Miss Rose I . ighter of Judge W'. i Schenck, to Ed ry ' \uhan. of Raleigh, was P. a partv last evening r Sihcnck entertained J usidence on North Kjjnt i'l- The party was f of Mrs. Schenck's ] P Richard H. Mason of ■ ho is their house truest. ; J nt of the eofa)(e< t-t i-at 'he close of the1 P... : 10 guests who I ■V i for bridge. .. - • eider daughter of 1 Justi of the Supreme I Mrs. Schenck, aitend I f HendenoR* I (graduated from] ■nhooL Mr. Vaughn1 I' Nr. and Mrs. C. C. ■j^hn i Jackson and attended m «h ■ •• State college. The C^iinir •' take place .\overn Ker !-• | rhr*am uneement was made at 1 nt hour, when dain 1 and white were E-.-u' bearing small cards dec ■nted with hand painted bridges) t: bridegrooms inscribed with ' the bridal couple fcj their wedding date. Lovely fc».-k;er:u'nt> of colorful flowers pled the r»» ms in which 10 tables t ed for bridge games. j I Attn prizes were present- 1 L. aftei tht feaBMS, Mrs. Mason L e ...• onor gift. I" Ihe for** iti: clipping from the febfeigh News ! Observer is of I . ... nterest throughout I:' pecially here \vhere Ihe bri • was born and spent her early gir . >i. She was one K: th» ular members of I set and belongs I*. ly which is prominent | he south. MISS SHIP MAN HONORED twice yesterday ' Mrs. M. R. Sams was hostess ye.n»-rday at her home in Green ville, S. < . at *» charming lunch eon complimenting her niece, Miss Garnette Shipman. whose wedding to .Mr. Murray Bonham Jones, of Fayettevdle. will be a social event of next Saturday. The table was exquisitely ap pointed. A iarjje tulle bow, with a shower of silver wedding bells and >atin rihb<<ns. fell from the chandelier above the unique cen terpiece, which was formed of a miniature lattice-work wedding aitar against a background of everure«-n<. Miniature candelabra flanked either side. On the tiny platl'orm stood the miniature bride and bridegroom. Leading1 from the three white steps, the 'alilt was marked with satin rib fcon- and miniature floor baskets of white flowers. Throughout the dining room the bridal motif of green and white wa> observed as well as in the {luncheon. A lovely corsage mark ed the place for the bride-elect, who was also the recipient of a host^s gift. A verse enclosed told where grifts in the kitchen show er. presented by the guests, were hidden. The guest list at this delightful affair from Hemlersnnville includ ed Misses Garnette Shipman, Tine -Shipman, Mary Salley, Winona 1-iwbank. Tommy Shepherd. Anne Weeks. Mesdames J. K. Shipman, K. Jl. Staton, K. McKay Arledge, J. D. Whitmire, F. W. Streetman, W. H.. Groce and G. C. Richard son. Those from Greenville pres ent were Mesdames E. Langdon Hanna, Wilton Connor. Misses Annie Addison, Sara McSwain and Lulu i^itimer. In the afternoon Miss Elizabeth Shipman, who teaches in Central, S. ('.. entertained there beautiful ly at the home of Mrs. G. Max Ptrry at fouf tables of bridge honoring her sister. Miss Garnette biupmati. About 25 other guests f*me in for tea. Kegal-looking Jji'len dahlias were used through out, the home. • The bride-elect was presented i *.it.i afi exquisite corsage when 1 shi- arrived and later a trousseau j bv her sister, and a piece of W tlat silver by Mrs. Perry. Miss •*>sie .Morgan held hijjh score, tad Mr<. I.. M. (iaines the low. A' ereen and white motif was ; Jfrie/1 out .in the salad course, Shipman's place being mark ** with a miniature bride and at the table an<l a tulle '** «»n h< r chair. Guests going rn here to this lovely party j *"f. be-idev the honor guest, f- J- K. Shipman. Mrs. R. H. -^n<> Shipman and lommy Shepherd. J*1** CI UB HAS Feting , |',|iS '-••ona Lanf was hostess "■'•••v-nint; at a charming meet S f Hook club, the home M^tically arramred with i"rfu! fail flowers. When the ltrT at which followed j.*" ••*< hance. wore counted >■' tn.r»hy f-.r hieh- seore was Katherine Good S^n- ;'"'i that for low to Miss * ■* ^ salad course was >*« u' th'* "n'-v special truest be Mrs. !)'.vit»ht Bennett. SUATy°ME" ' American U-jfion Auxiliary S r i"!' (>n Monday evening at . ■ ' kkk at the U'fcion clubhouse. CJ! that there will be a w **t*ftdance to greet the new Mr* FrankYarbor J- ^ '"•■mhershin drive is Qn * . i><-rs are asked to take feT0" EKi *^fk-ertd F'aw»gan is spending ' ~~ ■ in Atlanta, Ga., feoRock CoLfl •IT TA«TC3 MO COOP" MRS. C. R. McMANAWAY, Editor with Miss Ella Payne, who is | spending the winter with Mr. and Mrs. Benny Goodlett, the latter her sister, and taking a course at Emory university. Miss Flanagan motored there with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George M. Flanagan, and Mr. and Mrs. George M. Flan agan, Jr. They attended the Geor gia Tech-No^re Dame football game. personal" PARAGRAPHS ' Miss Roberta Wolfe left today for her home in Albemarle after spending the religious holidays with Miss Elizabeth Lewis. Mr. and Mrs. Victor A. Sapp, of Greensboro, are week - end quests of Mr. and Mrs. Otis E. Stepp. Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Winter, of Hickory, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Patla during the hol idays. Miss Elizabeth Lewis leaves to morrow to spend a few days in Asheville with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Patla, following which she will spend the week-end of October 15 with her cousin. Miss Sylvia Patla, at W. C. of U. N. C., Greensboro. Czechs Quit Area Poles To Occupy j FRYDEK, Czechoslovakia, Oct. 8. (UP)—Czech troops and refu gees today streamed out, of Frys tat district, which must be surren dered to Poland in three days. They took along guns, house hold goods and animals, but aban doned their homes and lands that on Monday go under a new flag. Weed Marketing Tax Law Upheld MACON. Ga., Oct. 8. (UP) — A three-judge federal court today ruled that the tobacco marketing act is constitutional and that mar keting in excess of quotas may be validly penalized. FRIDAY Maximum temperature—74 de crees. Minimum—45 decrees. Mean—59.5 degrees. Day's range—2i> degrees. Normal mean temperature for October—56.4 degrees. OCTOPUS FIGHTS BACK SANTA CRUZ, Cal. (UP).— Sammy Pennington, while fishing with a headline from a barge, caught a 50-pound octopus which at once engaged the boat in bat tle. It seized the gunwales in its tentacles with such a grip that they had to be cut off. • STORIES IN STAMPS ■ Taylor's Colic Won FMlmore Presidency CIX TEEN months after "Old l Rough and Ready" Zachary Taylor took the presidential oath im 1849, he died of bilious colic, so ambitious Millard Fillmore suc ceeded him in the highest office in the land. A Buffalo, N. Y., lawyer, a con gressman and a Whig, Taylor had sought the presidential nomina tion of his party in 1844, but it went instead to Henry Clay. The ume year he ran for governor ot New .York and lost that contest also. He became comptroller of New York state in 1847, and the following year was nominated for the vice presidency by the Whigs on the ticket with Taylor. Hardly had he succeeded Tay lor when Congress passed the fa mous compromise measures ol 1850 and the fugitive slave law. Fillmore supported these and thereby alienated many of the extreme northern members of his party. The other chief event ol his administration was the estab lishment of diplomatic relations with Japan. . Id 1852 Fillmore was a promi nent presidential candidate beXore the national convention of the Whigs, and in 1856 he was again a candidate for the high office on the ticket of the Know-Nothing or American party, but he carried only one state, Maryland. He died at Buffalo, March 8, 1874, at the age of 74. He is shown here on a stamp of the new U.*S. regular se ries, enlarged. • (Cwrisbt. 1IH, HKX iMvl^lii) NEW OUTDOOR TERM OF SCHOOL POPULAR (Continued from page one) did not jaret around to it until this year. She said every indication pointed to a successful session here and to the permanency of the arrangement. She is especially pleased with the setting and ac commodations of Camp Carlyle, she said, and the warm welcome received here. More than fifty pupils and fac ulty members are at Camp Carlyle while others are carrying on school work at Miami. The visit to the mountains is optional, and Miss Harris said she expected more and more pupils to come each autumn and spring. The ar rangement, she pointed out. per mits the holding of classes out of doors the year round, with re sultant benefits to health of pu nils. The children range in age from kindergarten through high school years and most of them are mem bers of rich and social register families. Students are registered from Long Island, N. Y.; Fin castle, Va.; Roanoke. Va.; Cov ington, W. Va.; New York City; DuQuoin, 111.: Iowa City, Iowa; Baltimore, Md.; Battle Creek, Mich.; McClellensville, S. C.; Pat terson, N. J.; Youngstown, Ohio; Pittsburgh, Pa.: Philadelphia, Pa.; Harrisonburg, Va.; New Smyrna, Fla.; Coconut Grove. Fla.; Coral Gables, Fla.; Miami Beach, Fla.; Miami, Fla.. and Charlotte. Members of the faculty include Mrs. Otto Greeley and Miss Eliza beth Long-well, of Dresden, N. Y., who is teaching science and relat ed subjects. Miss Longwell studied at Teachers' college of Columbia university, Cornell university, and Stetson university. Miss Luc'le J. Kntorf. of Amboy, 111., is teaching voice and choral music. S^e is from the American University of Music, Chicago, 111., and New York university. M iss Carlotta Dawson, who lives at Laurel plantation, McClellens ville, S. C., is the trained nurse. She studied at New York infirm ary. Miss Nancy Prindle, of Wash ington, Conn., a graduate of Fan ny A. Smith school, Bridgeport, Conn., has charge of the kinder garten end is instructing in swim ming, riding and golf. Mrs. Marion Dean Holcombe, of New York city, a graduate of Brown university, is teaching French and English. Miss Lucy Mable Tibbetts, educated at Bos ton university and the University of New Hampshire, teaches Latin and languages. Mrs. Iris Crannis, educated at the University of North Carolina, is librarian. She lives for six months of the year near Asheville and six months in Miami. Other faculty members include Norman White, owner of the Vik ing camp for boys at Orleans Cape Cod, Mass., and Mrs. Nor man White, director of the May t flower Adult camp at Orleans, Cape Cod. Mr. and Mrs. White are associated with Miss Harris' Florida school in the winter in cruising, sailing, swimming, and riding activities. < Classes and study periods at the mountain unit ar£ held, during the mornjn" hour*. ^Afternfcons ar,e given over to outdoor sports and for trips to places of intfrest ih Western North Carolina. Stu dents are taken about in the school aero car, a large deluxe trailer. J i ' ' • I A.F.L COUNCIL WILL TALK REVOLT THREAT (Continued from nsge one) when he boldly called on the Fed eration's convention to demand new peace moves with the C.I.O. There was no assurance ' that the council whose decisions gov ern 5,000,000 workmen "would set I tie the issue todav. A responsible Federation official promised, how ever, that before adjournment next week the convention would erive a clear...and unmistakable an swer to Tobin and to President Roosevelt who made a personal plea for an armistice. • A .clear-cut expression of a de sire to restore harmony in labor's ranks and o fa willingness to co onerate in conferences toward that end. is virtually certain to be placed before the convention for approval. Likewise, the council is expected to emphasize more stronely the position it took in its annual report that John L. Lewis, head of the C.I.O.*, must accept fuU responsibility far breaking off peace conferences Inst Octo ber and thus prolopfrinjr the strife. President Roosevelt's sueeresrion that no door be closed in the Fed eration to block access to peace, will be observed, it was saaid. Yet there were few in Federation hieh nlaces todav who believed that the council or the convention would eo to the extreme of invit ing- outside mediation of the dis pute as sujreested by Tobin. The teamsters' hend called on the convention to instruct the council to name a committee to meet with the C.I.O. and to leave points on which the rroum could not apree to "some nnselfish. un prejudiced .body or board to de cide. . FF AG SIGNAL FOR WORK FRESNO. Gat:. (UP)—A num ber of fruit packing- houses have adopted a blue flag as an unoffi cial time keeper to inform every one whether or not the plant was running. When the flaW is up, there is work, but when down, no work. - \' WORLD SERIES Chicago OOOOlOOl New York x' , 000 022 0 Bryant, Russell, French and Hart aett; Pearson and Dickey.. Five Local Girls ! In Campus Clubs At Fassifern 15 More Voices Added to Glee Club and Re hearsals Begun Five Hendersonville pirls, stu dents at Fassifern School, were selected as ne> members of cam pus clubs at the recent tryouts. Miss Helen O'Neal, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George E. O'Neal, won membership in both the Dra matic and Glee clubs, Miss Mar tha Meteer. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Meteer, Dramatic club; Miss Claire Cox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Cox, Dramatic club; Miss Lillian Overton, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Overton, Glee club; Miss Louise Lazarus, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Lazarus, Glee club. Ten new members were chosen at the Dramat:c club tryouts, in cluding Misses Cecelia Ann Davis of Irvin, Ky„ Rosamund Graves of Winter Haven, Fla., Augusta Ilayle and Anne Stamper of Cleve land, Tenn., Anne Pcttigrew of Cape Haitien, Haiti, Mildred Ro thenberg of Atlanta, Ga.. and Helene Wilson of Miami, Fla., in addition to the three students from Hendersonville. Formal in itiation of these new members, in cluding thev presentation by them of an original one-act play, will be held next Wednesday after noon. Announcement 01 tryouis ny members of the Dramatic club for parts in the three-act play was made by Miss Dorothea Stadel mann, head of the dramatic de partment at Fassifern. The play, "The Witch's Doll" by Helen A. Monsell, will go into production immediately, as soon as the cast is selected, and is scheduled for presentation in the late fall. Miss Eleanor Etheridge, head of the music department at Fassi fern, announced that fifteen new members were chosen from the thirty-odd students who tried out for membership in the Glee club. These include, in addition to those already named, Misses Elizabeth Littlegreen of Lookout Mountain, Tenn., Edwina Davis of lrvin, Ky., Augusta Hoyle and Anne Stamper ; of Cleveland. Tenn., Betty Ann Pearce- and Lois Braznell of Mi ami, Fla., Do Kithcart of St. Pe tersburg. Fla., Clara Coe Sherrod of High Point, Mary Estes of Gay, Ga., Dorothy Cook of Ceballos, I Cuba. Betsy Fleming of Bristol, > Tenn., and Irene Schumate of ! Charlotte. Election of officers will be held next week, and practice ! has already begun on the program | of Christmas carols to be present' | ed just before the Christmas holi j days. ANTI-SPY BILL TO BE UP IN CONGRESS i (Continued from page one) % legislative program, going ever ! further than foreign propaganda and spying phases, soon after con , gress convenes in January. , "The president has taken cog i nizance of this grave situation in . a splendid move," he said. "Out ! committee will cooperate with him to the fullest. We hope the administration will sit down witii us. and work out the Legislative i angle, immediately.'* Dies said the new legislation .should include: • ; ! 1—.-A central federal agency tc 1 take charge of all foreign prop j.iiganda and spying activities, r '?2—Drastic strengthening oi j immigration and deportation laws [ .3—Abolition of foreign-con LtK>U«d political groups in the United States. "I have information, which 1 hope to bring out later in com i^mittee hearings, that Soviet Rus f sia alone has 10,000 spies anc agents in this country," Dies said p,4There are more than .'j00 Nazi '.Italian Fascist an$l Coiumunisi [groups controlled from Europe (.operating in this country. ; ."These groups, which are nol ' subject to accounting, are collect ting millions of dollars in the Unit i ed States. This raises the questior •whether any" groups shoufc f-fce allowed to legally exist. At .least, they should be required tc •furnish semi-annual reports dis [ closing their menibership and con tributions." J.» Army and navy officials like wi§e indicated satisfaction with President Roosevelt's plans. Somt i feel, however, that increased ap propriations to expand militarj intelligence services, which, the} said, are not adequate, might bt r-a better solution than creation ol a special agency. FOUR MINOR FIGURES REMAINING IN U. S. I NEW YORK, Oct. 8. (UP) — All but four minor figures of ar : alleged espionage ring of at least •i 18 are in Germany, safe from t prosecution, while a federal grand : jury inquires into the assistance j given some of the 18 to flee this ■ country by persons and organiza tiohs in the- United States, j • The indictments voted last May, Unprecedented in peace time, ; were with the consent of the state 1 and justice departments, accord* j mg to U. S. Attorney Lamai Hardy, prosecutor of the case, I Who said, "The directing heads, ol j this ring reside in Germany and ! are connected with the govern ment of that country." I Hardy returned recently from ] an European trip on which he in (quired further into phases of spy f Activity but would say only that \ he had talked with British and | French officiah. ' The German government has j denied that any of. its military of ! fieers were connected with the es ' pionage. The officers named in j the indictment, which djd not spe | cify that they had engaged in es I pionage within the jurisdiction of the United States, were kieut. "TOO HOT TO HANDLE" Clark Gable and Myrna Lov in "Too Hot to Handle," at the Carolina tonight. JAP COLUMNS PUSH FORWARD 3 American Women Caught in War Zone Believed Missionaries ! SHANGHAI, Oct. 8. (IJP) — Japanese mechanized columns drove southward along the Peip ing-Hankow railway towards Chi na's provisional capital in Han kow today behind a fleet of big I bombing planes blasting Chinese defenses in the mountains which , cross the railway from east to west between Sintien and Kwang shui stations. Prince Naruhiko Js'igashi Kuni, commanding the Japanese armies in the triangle formed by the Peiping-Hankow railway and the Yangtse river with Hankow as its apex, radioed military headquar ters in Nanking that his right flank was firmly astride the "Ping j Han" line and that he was in po i sition to launch smashing attacks ; on an estimated 200,000 Chinese troops based on Macheng, Hwan j gan, Sungfow and other positions , southward to the Yangtse river. Higashi Kuni said he had a "firm foothold" on the Peiping Hankow (or Ping-Han) line for a distance several miles north and . south of Liutienchen near Sin | yane station. Several occidentals including three American and three British 1 women were caught in the war , zone at the Kikungshan summer | resort, 10 miles southeast of Liu i tienchen. The Americans are Mrs. j Anna Martinson, Miss H. L. Han ! sen, and Miss M. Anderson — be i lieved to be missionaries. I The Japanese reported no moves south of the Yangtse where their | ' columns striking towards the' i Hankow-Canton railway south of j | Hankow apparently were inactive, j j The U.S. consulate in Hankow I . was informed that Japanese aerial, bombs hit a building of the Meth- > odist' missio nut Xanchang, big Chinese military base southeast of Hankow, on October 5 and i damaged it. There were no cas- j ' ualties, however. i I HUNGARIAN-CZECH f NEGOTIATIONS WILL START SUNDAY BUDAPEST, Oct. 8. (UP)—! Hungary and Czechoslovakia will i open negotiations Sunday, in the ' i frontier town of Koniaion on the Danube, in an effort to obtain a 11 peaceful settlement of Hungary's demands for further dismember ment of the Czech republic, it was: announced last night. The agreement on the confer ence, which will begin in Konia-1 rom at 7 p. m. (1 p. ni. Ji1ST) Sun-j . day, was.confirmed by Czechoslo vak officials at Geneva. One of the first topics to be' taken up according to Czech of-! ficials, will be a Hungarian de-! rnand that the Hungarian army be "permitted to make a "token"! occupation of two border towns and communes along the frontier j before a final agreement has been reached. Hungary will send a commis- i i sion of experts headed by Foreign I Minister Kolman Kanva to Koma i ron which is 80 miles north of Budapest and straddles the fron-l tier, part in Czechoslovakia and part in Hungary. |. It was understood that Josef Tiso, premier of the new auton omous Slovak government estab lished 4 within the framework" of the central Czech government, would be the chief Czech negoti ator and that most of his assist ants would be Slovaks. Commander Uno von Bonin, chief ! of the naval intelligence service of the war ministry's counter es pionage service, and Lieut. Com manded Hermann Menzel, an as j sociate of von Bonin. Those awaiting trial here are Gustave Rumrich, former U. S. : army sergeant and deserter who posed as under secretary of state j in order to obtain blank pass ports; Johanna Hofmanr*. former hairdresser on the German Liner : Europa, who allegedly served as (messenger for the ring; Erich , Glaser, former U. S. army private j attached to the air corps at Mitch el field; and Otto Hermann Foss, ! mechanic of the Seversky Aircraft corporation at Farmingdale where j some army planes are manufac tured. The king of Iraq has forsaken ( the mount of his ancestors, the ! elephant, for short distances and uses a motorcycle. I Bulldogs Defeat P. C. 12 to 0 In Contest Friday CHARLESTON, S. C.. Oct. 8. (UP)—A spirited Citadel Rulldog eleven last night defeated Presby terian College, 12 to 0, before a crowd of 4,000 persons. The first half was scoreless as both teams battled with end runs and line bucks. The Citadel took to the air in the third period and Graham Ho wards passed his team to within nlunging distance of the goal. Dan Stuhbs bucked the line for the first touchdown. In the last quarter Edwards passed to Jake Burrows, end, for the final score. June Moore, Presbyterian back, pared his teammates in their fu tile attempts to cross the Rulldog goal. Football Results By UNITED PRESS At Athens, Ga.—Georgia .18; Furman 7. At Norfolk, Va.—William-Mary (Norfolk) 22; Hampden-Sydney Frosh 7, At Davidson — Davidson 33; Rrskine 0. At Atlanta, Ga.—Oglethorpe 1SJ; Wofford 6. At Philadelphia—Texas Chris tian University 28; Temple fi. At Deland. Via.—.Stetson 28; Statesboro Teachers 0. At New Britain. Conn.—Lowell Textile 24; New Britain Teachers 0. At Washington, D, C.—George Washington 20; Butler 0. At Marietta, O.—Marietta 28; Otterbein 0. At Albion, Mich.—Albion fi; Alma <5. At Kalamazoo, Mich.—Kalama zoo 14: Olivet 0, At Orhndo, Fin.—Rollins 54; Dong]** Teachers 0. At High Point—High Point 6; Guilford 0 fnlaved last night in stead of today.) •• At ChicnVo—M^rouotte 7; Sou. Methodist University 0. Al Cleveland—John Carroll 2.r); Baldwin-Wallace 6. ' > GERMANY ROOSTiNf, INFLUENCE BY LOAN (Tontinned from na«r<> nnp\ Black sea along Chancellor Ado'f Hitler's "drive to the east" now that Czechoslovakia has been dealt with successfully. Th^» surrender of Czechoslo vakia's Sudeten'and to Hitler opened the wav for Gorman eco nomic penetration nnd broke down the barricades of French political and economic domination in cen tra' Europe. Germany believes that commer cial domination in southeastern Furope, eastward alontr the Dan ube, mav prove to be life itself in event of another war hecauee it would o^set the danger of a Brit ish or Freneh- naval blockade. Funk's visit to Ankara was sig nificant because Great Britain, last January, attempted to obtain a strong commercial footing: in Tirkev. Diplomats said that German predominance jn Turkey, mipht have far-reachifie nolrtical effects on the eastern Mediterranean and speculated that the Turkish gov ernment's apparent shift toward the Nazi orbit might be due to Britain's handling of the Arab Jew question in Palestine which has aroused the anger of a large part of the Moslem world. Before coming here Funk halt ed in Belgrade to set tho stan-e for a pending commercial treaty between Yugoslavia and Germany. NEW CRISIS SEEN: POLES DEFY LONDON (Continued from page one) shin pact. Britain asked immediate with drawal of 30.000 or 40,000 Ital ians. Mussolini, determined that the insurgents must win a full vic tory, wants to withdraw only 10, 000 now. Both British and Italian diplo mats were optimistic that an early compromise would be reached, probably within three weeks, and it was indicated that the stiffen ing of the British attitude regard ing- the withdrawals was du^ to dissension in the British cabinet over Prime Minister Neville Cham herla:n's "peace with honor" at Munich last week. Two or three ministers have beop on tho ver(?e of following First LorH of the Admiralty Al fred Duff Cooper in resiprninir and the firmer stand aerainst Mussolini was rumored to have been a move j to quell the cabinet differences. "IN OLD CHICAGO'S" STARS Surging with the fpirit that made the nation great, Darryl F. Zanuck's 20th Century-Fox masterpiece, "In Old Chicago," pre sent* TYRONE POWER, ALICE FAYE and DON AMECHE (left to right) in the leading role* of a human drama, to be »een at the State Monday and Tuesday. MUSICAL COMEDY AT STATE SUNDAY A "different" type of musical comedy conies to the State theatre I Sunday in the picture, "Joy of Living," Starring Irene Dunne and Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. The part Miss Dunne plays is that of a musical comedy star who has enjoyed a success, while Fair banks plays the likable role of a rather forthright playboy, vho has given up his rich relatives to become a sort of sea vagabend. His philosophy is to obtain happi ness by doing what you want to do. Miss Dunne, in spite of her , larjje income, finds herself con tinually in debt, thanks to her j selfish laniily. However, she per ! sists in believing that her family > loves her and is not living selfish ly off of her. Fairbanks endeav I ors to convince her that she should let her relatives shift for themselves and have a good time. About this revolves a series of ; unusual events. NEGOTIATIONS GIVE CZECHS ARMS PLANT ! (Continued from pnj_r<' one) .that Germany be permitted to i control the export of all Skoda { arms and munitions. ' For years, since the World war. Skoda has been the arms purvey or to France's eastern allies. The I.ittJe Kntente and Balkan Kn i tente countries'—Koumania. Yugo slavia, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, Turkey ami (Jrecce have been • served by Skoda instead of the Schneider plant at Creusot. Skoda also has furnished arms to China, J .Jac an; Sweden, I'ussia, Poland j and most of the Keltic slater. I'>nder the "Austro - Hungarian empire, Skoda was the Austrian munitions indnstrv employing 30. I 000 workers who built the famous •1*0 millimeter field howitzers which hammered Verdun and Maubeuge in the World war. • SUNDAY ONLY# Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Irene Dunne in "JOY OF LIVING" 20c STATE 20c Adventure's Call!... It is .answered by the Kinp and Qui'i'ii of the screen ... in a story as full of action and ro mance as "Tost Pilot" . . m >re thrillinir than any of their other hits together! . . . 'cm mL CAB/riOX Too /for // HANDLE . . . ■«*<(/! f WALTER PIDGEON u WALTER ,CONNOLLY fe LEO CAWRILLO LATE SHOW TONIGHT SUNDAY and MONDAY r "IT'S THE O'LEARYS , AGAINST THE WORLD!" A strange tribe, but a errand tribe . . . the O'Learyti . . . fiyrhtinn: toe-to-toe one minute, side-by-side the next! Daring adventures in a city where fortunes were won overnight and lost in the greatest disaster known to man . . . the Chicago Fire! The mightiest spectacle-thrill any picture ever gave you... Yet you'll remember ' it most for its tender, heart kindling storyl with TYRONE AUCK DON POWER • FAYE • AMECHE ALICE ANDY BHIAN BRADY • DEVINE • DONLEVY The Great American Motion Picture Your last chance to tee it in Hendcrsonrille! • MONDAY—TUESDAY •