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Page 2 TUPPER LAKE FREE PRESS Thursday, September 23,1937 Mi. Patrick J. Hickey motored to Canton yesterday to attend a meeting of the New York State Assaciation of Local A.genU, an insurance conference. Mr. Harvey Van Vranken Sr. to reported quite ill with the flu at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Clifford Prespare, at 272 Mc- Laughlin avenue. Mi. ami Mrs. George Bushey spent the past week In Ramouskl, ] Gray, returned to her home in in the Uaspe sector, Canada. I-Fort Plain, N. Y., Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. William H. White ' Dr. J. Abbott Thissell left Sat- ani! son Billy are enjoying a urday for _ Beverly, Mass., where Syracuw. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Penman of New York City were guests of Mr. and lira. Henry Fitzaimonds during the past week. Mif. Agda Roaenlund and her two sons, Clifford and Norman, and Miss Mary Walker, all of Flushing, L. I., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hastings. Mrs. Alice Gray, who has been visiting her daughter, Miss Lillian week's motoring trip through New York and Pennsylvania- Mi, and Mrs. George Bishop be will spend a month. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Miller of Utica visited old friends here Sun- left Friday to spend two weeks In day and Monday. Pittsfield. Vt. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Tesslef In . and Mrs. John Hamelln of , spent the pant weekend in Utica -• - — \ j! . Miss Beatrice, Woods, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Woods, left Sunday for Albany where Helena, N. Y., were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fletcher. Mrs. Floyd Keeler Sr., Robert' she will attend the'Vildred Elley Keeler, Mr. Ovila Beauchamp and son Wilfred were called to Rome ! i ecently by the serious illness of , the Infant son of Mr. and Mr«. T Floyd Keeler Jr. Mrs. B Seigel returned home Friday after spending two weeka ir Albany with her daughter, Mrs. H I... Bookstein «*.nd family. Herbert Oarrow, son of Mr. and Mr:). Adelard Carrow of Faust, i ecently enrolled in the Grand Central School of Arts at New York. He was a June graduate at Holy (Ihost Academy. Medd'ie Allan! recently returned to Albany where he is In his f'.r.al your at Albany School of Secretarial School. Among Tupper Lake students who left during the week for col- lege were Misses Ruth Williams and Beatrice Propp, Syracuse University; John Maid, to the University, of Buffalo, and Miss Mary Uttlefield to Terre Haute, Ind, where she will enter St. Mary's in the Woods School. Mr. and Mrs. Nell Spencer have returned from Sacketts Harbor where they spent a week with Mr. Spencer's parents at the Lake Side Country Club. Mr. Edwin J. Morey of New I-<ondon, Conn., owner of radio Station WNLC, is spending the Mr. and Mrs. Edward Whitman of Massena were week-end guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray- mond C. Whitman, here. I*h:>:iiiiicy He was ai-companied* •week at <he home of Mr. and Mrs. on hi.i return by Mr and Mrs. ' Charles Farmer. Williiirn Hock who haii r>een quests at his home at 12 Railroad street. Mr. Allan) is employed by Mr. Perk, mi Alhany pharmacist, and plans to continue In his service during the current school year. Re\ ,-in.l Mrs R K. Sheffield , left Monday morning for Bridge- I port, ('(inn . where they will spend ! I ho week with Mr. and Mrs. Robert I I Allison Mrs Allison was ; formerly Miss Elizabeth Sheffield Rev Sheffield will conduct services n.i usual at Grace M. K. Church Sunday. Louis Simmons and Edmund Berrlgan spent the week-end In I wlih to announce that I wHI be a candidate for TOWN'SUPT. OF HIGHWAYS nmrr- than 20 >ears' ox|N-rieni'o In road con- ttmrtlon work; know how to handle men, imd *»xperl«\nced In all details of road and itlde- uiilk <-<>n«itruction. Now em- ploml iis . foreman hy Hrimar Const m<-tinn Co., on Kanuuw- TupjMT road Job. solicit ><>ur support at the TOWN (\i<rs Monday. Sept. 27th Town Hall K |>. in. lo 9:»O p. m. OZIE LALONDE 269 Park St., Tupper Lake 'Miss America'—Blond or Brunet A study in beauty contrasts is this picture of two \Miss Americas\— blond, blue-eyed Bette Cooper, right, this year's winner of the na- tion's annual beauty pageant at Atlantic City, and brunet, dark-eyed Rose Coyle, \Miss America, 1936,\ shown placing a glittering crown on Bette's head. \SAN QUENTIN,\ DRAMATIC STORY OF FAMED CALIFORNIA PRISON, AT THE \STATE\ TODAY, FRIDAY PAT O'BRIEN, BARTON MmcLANE, HUMPHREY BOOART, ANN SHERIDAN HAVE POWERFUL ROLES IN PENITENTIARY THKILUER American Beaver, White-Tailed Deer Shipped to Debt-Paying Finland by N.Y.S. Cons. Dept. as Good-Will Gesture Albany, Sept. 22. — feveral | superintendent of the Bureau of hence it's possible that|Game, to combat winter starva- tion conditions in the state\s Ad- irondack and Catskill deer herds. If the ocean air develops hefty appetitlea and the food supply runs low, Dr. Klemola asaerted, he may cable ahead to take on an additional supply v at any of the ship's ports: LAndon, Gothen- SOFTBALL TEAM DINNER GUESTS WALTER KIKLEVICH ENTER- IAIN'S 23 AT DINNER FOR GRILL TEAM TUESDAY — PLANS TO BACK TEAM AOAIN NEXT SKASON Fifteen members of the Klkle- vich Grill •oftball team and their wives or girl friends were guests of their sponsor, Walter Klkle- vich, at a dinner Tuesday night at his Faust establishment. Cueita were Manager and Mrs. Herbert S. Dean, Captain Walter ' Cebo, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Car- row' Hank Zlnger, Herb Dean Jr., Mr and Mm. Loren Burke, Mr. and Mrs. I^loncl Dewyea, Mr. and Mrs. Dirk LaOrave, Mr; and Mrs. Oscar GsJT. Harry Cole, Gordon Soucy. Rene LeBlanc, Mr. and , Mrs Floyd Burke, Mr. and Mrs. I-ouls W. Klemme and Walte# Kiklovich Jr., team mascot. The proup was \treated\ to an excellent dinner half a spring broiler and all the trimmings— prepared by Chef Sam Grifoni. Floyd Carrow presided as toa.»t- mas'.or. i Manager Dean and his players, all of whom spoke briefly, Were I warm in their praise of the sup- i port given them by their sponsor. j who plan* to back the team again I next season. The Orill team wound up the summer schedule in About as powerful,a melodrama as the screens have reflected in a conaiderable period is \San Quen- tin,\ the First National production laid in and about the famous Cali.'ornia. penitentiary, which is showing today .and tomorrow at the 8trand Theatre. Strong stuff! You couldn't ex- pect anything less in a story dealing with a couple of thousand prisoners, their officers-guards, their warden—plus their hatreds, jealousies and internal strifes. And strong men to play it 1,Pat O'Brien as Captain of the Yard. Barton Macljine as the man whose job he taXes and who hates him for it. Humphrey Bogart as a., desperate prisoner; Jo=eph Saw- command of the prison yaid in the hope he can, with square dealing, maintain discipline, which has slackened through the old-school methods of MacLane, who has been demoted. Just before taking the job, Pat goes to a night club and meets Ann, a braes-singer. She doesn't know what he does. She's bitter about prisons because her brother, Red—who is Humphrey Bogart- has just been sentenced to San Quentin. So Pat doesn't reveal his Job. Ann visits her brother. She is seen passing money to him and is summoned before the Captain. The Captain has been good to Red, really trying to straighten yer as another; Joseph King as him out. He puts Red on a road the warden. Breaks for freedom? Certainly! Yet at the «ame time there runs throughout the stern tale a nice note of romance, with the lovely, red-haired Ann Sheridan its life splratlon. Pat O'Brien is keen flrst as an ex-Army captain appointed to gang. Red and some others make a successful break. What happens then leads up to the powerful climax of \San Quentin.\ O'Brien, Bogart, MacLane and Miss Sheridan, the principals, are outstandingly good in their char- acterizations. WARING'S PENNSYLVANIANS, DICK POWELL HEADLINERS IN \VARSITY SHOW,\ COMING TO STATE SUNDAY TED HEALY, WALTER CATLETT, ROY ATWEIX SUPPLY COMEDY IN COLLEGIATE FTLMtTSICAL ! Firilami n hunters and trappers will be lulling American beaver ami white-tailed deer, species which, do not exist there now, simply because Now York State's Conservation Department has been bitten by the bug of good will for Finland, the only nation to maintain its war debt pay- ments. Also, because the Finnish Kovernment apparently still in- sists on reciprocity, New York's sportsmen some day may be gun- ning for tne big black grouse, Finland's major game bird. Starting a 6,000 mile journey today from New York city aboard t>, Scantic liner will be eight beavers and four white-tailed deer. * gift of the New York State Conservation Department to Finland, thrdugh arrangements by Conservation Commissioner Llth- gow Osborne in behalf of the Empire states sportsmen. From this seed stock Finland- hopes that Nature will propagate a new source of food, fur and sport for her own 88,000 sportsmen. Accompanying the shipment is Dr. V. M. Klemola, chief game inspector of the Finnish govern- ment who has been studying game conditions and management In America since June. The reciprocal shipment of black grouse, in addition to a few capercailzie, another Finnish game bird, will be sent New York soon. Dr. Klemola asserted. That the black grouse, also called black cock or black game, will be wel- comed is apparent since careful study by Conservation Depart- ment experts has Indicated that its habits and natural environ- ment are such as to hold out considerable hope that it will be adaptable to New York ' state conditions. Rather than liberate such valua- ble foundation stock, Commission- er Osborne explained, they will be placed on New York's Experi- mental (lame Farm In an attempt to propagate a sufficient number to permit experimental distribu- tion. The eight . beaver were care- fully selected for color, fur, size, and tractlbility from fifty breth- ren, from* a surplus on one of tho New York game refuges. With the deer, they underwent a special training period for the trip. A. truckload of quaking aspen branches will accompany the beavers as fodder while the white- tails will feed on the state's Mr concentrated deer cake, develop- ed, according to Gardiner Bump, ' - . i 1 Sunm't Stamp Club To Meet Tomorrow burg, Copenhagen 'or Gdynia (on tho Polish Corrider) before reach- ing the home port of ' Helinsko. F'rom there the beaver will be transported 500 miles overland to a Lapland experimental sanctuary in North Finland. The deer will bo freed on a larg-e Island in the Finnish Gulf. Finland, with a total area ap- proximately equal to New York etato's, has become conservation conscious, Dr. Klemola explained, and sportsmen through the nation anxiously await his return with New York's good will offering. TUPPfRLRKE.N.Y. \Varsity Show,\ Warner Bros, nlmusiral extraordinary will show in Tupper Ijike Sunday and Mon- day at the Strand Theatre. Star- ring the ever-popular Dick Powell and Introducing In grand manner 'o motion picture audiences, Fred Waring and his nationally famous orclffstra. the Pennsylvanians, \Varsity Show\ marks a new high in musical and comedy entertain- ment. Included in the stellar cast he- the Tupper Lake Softball League I s , f , cs Dick poweU am , Frc( , Wa . well up toward the teams competed. top. Seven Subscribe to the \Free Press.\ Bubbles. Walter Davis and Roy Attention, Car Owners FOR ONE DAY ONLY Friday SEPT. 24 ring are such leading figures as Ted Healy. Lee Dlxon, Priscilla I-ane. Rosemary Lane, Buck and Catlett, Johnny Atwell. Busby Berkeley, known for his Imagina- tive, ami lavish protection num- bers in past Warner_ Bros, musi- 1 cals. outdoes himself' in \Varsity Show\ with a smashing finale that . climaxes more than an hour of I supreme fun and amusement. The plot of the picture deals THE TYDOL-VEEDOL SERVICE «.\» I.aki- St. STATION Wilfred I)enno, I'rop. - WILL FEATUIK — Phone 45-J Motor-Tun e-Ups B\ tho Tide \Vivt<»r Ansmintod Automotive Service Engineer;!, In i\:ir Msiiiufiwtiirrrs' Specification*, I'sing the Most Modern Aulontotivr Testing and Tuning Kqiil|>mpnt. (Dick Powell), a Broadway pro- ducer temporarily on his uppers, to stage the annual Quandrangle Club show at Winfield College. Daly, himself a Wlnfiekl alumnus, Is Induced to return to the college to rescue the varsity show from the hands of Professor Sylvester Biddle (Walter Catlett), faculty advisor, who is all for art and nothing for modernity in school presentations. Da+y overcomes many obstacles set before a successful production by Professor Biddle, jams mem- bers of the cast through special scholastic examinations and then figures in a student strike brought on when Biddle ousts him from the campus. The undergraduates take matters into their own hands. The show must go on. It does. Playing side by side in- \Var- sity Show\ are Dick Powell, vet- eran of many Warner Bros, musi- cal productions, and Fred Waring The Sunmount Stamp club has called its first meeting for to- morrow night. Of particular in- terest will be the showing by Sani Goldstein, WBb president, of hto recently acquired British corona- tion stamps. This issue la com- plete and in blocks of four. Other interesting displays will be made by Verner J, Pennstrom, club secretary, who has been making p. specialized collection of first day of issue covers and naval cachets. A !;neclal invitation has been sent to all collectors In the vicinity of the facility to attend the open- Ing meeting and take part i^ the club's exchange department. NRS Found Jobs for 141 in Franklin Co. The National Re-employment Service in Franklin County filled 141 jobs duHng the month of , August, according to a statement by Ed Socha, NRS manager at j Saranac Lake. Of these Mobs 67 I were in private ipdustry, 74 in I governmental service and public building and construction. with the efforts of Chuck Daly and his Pennsylvanians. of Chuck Howard Cleaves, Renowned Camera Hunter Will Show Authentic Wild Life Movies At High School Auditorium Sept. 30 THE TIDE WATER TRUCK Will H* 1 In Towr^Onlj One Day—Friday. Knrh Car Ucqiilres One sni'l a Hull Hours, So We Cm Handle Only Seven. Trurk Is K<|iii|i|ied to < 'h.-Tk Your Car from Knd to End—Test Wir- iUK, lirukc;, Moior, lAKItYTHINfl! • This U Yotir Oppor- tunity to (id Vour Cur in I'crffM't Running Order, and Now Is thr Timr, lt«'fore Cold Weather Set,s ill. Iletter I'erform- mirr, iireiiti-r K<-ononiv und Increased Safety Knsuro<U Tests WUVllegln iit 9 a, in. Krldny. PHONrV!.-. I NOW AND MAKK VOVlt AITOINTMKNT \Wilderness Thrills.\ wVt'h How- ard Cleaves and his movies ^n charge of the thrilling', comes Mre next Ttiursday, Sept. 30th, at 3 p. m . in the auditorium of the new hit;h school. Intimate and sometimes unexpected \closeups\ of everything from bears to chipmunks, humminghirds to her- ons, make up what audiences have described as the host and truest wild Yito, pictures being shown in this country. , Howard Cleaves is one of the country's crack camera hunters. Irately he captured a Certificate of Merit at the International Kx- hihitlnn of Nature Photography in T,omlon. His photographs help il- lustrate the recent book \Bird Flight,\ hy Gordon Aymar. His enmera shots have appeared in \Saturday F.venlng Post,\ \Na- tional Geographic,\ \House and i Garden,\ \Nature and others. Iing \American Roy\ enrried a feature article last April about him and MM work. Constantly working on new plnn« ;«vl ideas for ontching un- awares tin- denizens of the great outdoors, one gets th« impression Unit Cleaves never sleeps. And wfld-llfe photographers seldom do - at night. Many of his very best sequences are taken by flash- light and lig:ht bombs, involving hours and hours of patient wait- ing \uritt! the right second comes. Several - years ago Howard Cleaves was chosen from the whole United States to be the official photographer for Pennsylvania's Governor Pinchot in his trip to tho South Sea Islands, and lie came back with thousands of feet of beautiful film of that region. More recently he has been work- ing on wild life of the Atlantic Coast and . Appalachian region from I^tirailor to Florida. No description of his work can tell the story, however; his mo- tion pictures only can rarry his aurijffre.s with him to tho remote anil sometimes surprisingly near places 'where the thrills are wait- for all with eyes to see FOOD SAI.K SATf'RDAV A benefit food sale., sponsored hy Tupper I,ake Grange 1 r >(M, will bo helil at Urown Urothers store, | Park street, Saturday afternoon, | October 2, from 2 to n o'clock. V ' ' Frederick Rule on Purdue School Band Frederick Rule, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rule of Faust, has been selected as a member of the crack, Purdue University band at Lafayette, Indiana, according to word received by his parents. He l» enrolled as a freshman, and plans to major in mechanloal engineering a t Purdue. He said in, his letter that the band has start- ed rehearsals in preparation for the football season. There In no Oreater Pleasure Than to Have GOOD-LOOKING SHOES AND GOOD-FEELING FEET! Correct Shoe Flit Ing Infants, Children, Men and Women GINSBERG'S Tupper Lake Phone 222 THURSDAY - FRIDAY, SEPT. 23 - 24 ADDED: MUSICAL, \CARNIVAL IN PARIS- — PETE SMITH'S \WANTED A MASTER\ — WORLD NEW8 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 ADDED: SPORT REEL — CARTOON — WOi 8CREENO AT 9 P. M. NEWS SUNDAY - MONDAY, SEPT. 26 - 27 FUNNY AS A FROSH'SFUWER PENNSYLVANIANS WiU. TtO HtALY- WALTER CATUTT PWSCIIU UNE • ROSEMARY LANE JOHNMY DAVIS • BUCK W BUBBLES Dir.d.J k, WILLIAM KCICHLEV A Wim. Rrx. Krf— i ADDED: MKKRIK MELODY, \SWEKT SIOUX\ WORM) NEWS Tuesday - Wednesday, Sept. 28 - 29 i — BK; FEATITUES — 2 NO. 2 HIGH PRESSURE ROMANCE! S BUNGALOW NAN GREY KENT TAYLOR ' A NEW UNIVEBSAL PICTURE L 0 R R E Think Fast, ADDKl); V\OKI>n NEWS Bnnk Night Wednesday Between 8:00 and 10:80 P. M. Attend Any lVrformaneo Tuesday or the Wednesday Miitinee. and hy nljrnlnfr an Attendance, Card, You Need not he Present ut thn' drawing to Win. • '•• .