Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette, 26 Jan 1954, p. 14

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

14 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, January 26, 1954 RADIO LOG WGR 550 © CKEY 580 © CBL 740 @ CJBC 860 © CHML 900 ws WBEN 930° © CFRB 1010 © CKLB 1240 © WKBW information 0p radio programs is supplled prints CHUM 1050 © CKOC 1150 1520 © CHVC 1600 oy the individual stations. The as and and does Times TUESDAY 6 Pl _EKLB-News; Sports WGR-News CBL.- 4 P.M. EVENING -One WGR-News CJBC-Fergus CFRB-Eddie WGR-People in Sports CKEY-N WBEN Les Paul and Mary ows; 630 P.M. CKLB-Dennis WBEN-Mike Mearian WGR-Music By 64 P.M CJBC-Byng's Choice WBEN-' Star Extra WGR-News 1.00 P.M. CKLB-News in a Minute, Follow the Band, WBEN:Barrie 00 CKLB-News: Do CKEY-News; Joe od. CJBC-Byng's Choice WGR-Family Skeleton CBL-News Roundup CKEY-News: Ballroom CFRB-Kate Aitken WBEN-The Nations Business 1.15 P.M. CKLB-Real Estate Review hlights CBL-Barney Potts CFRB-What Do You Think WGR-Beulah 1.30 P.M. CKLB-Great Musie CBL-Four Gentlemens CFRB-Record Shop CJBC-Choral Time CKEY-John B. Kennedy: WBEN-World News WGR-Choraliers CKEY-Voice 9.30 CKLB-Lives CFRB-Plant CBL-Twenty WBEN-Rocky 10.00 CKLB-News; Not Pay CFRB-Organ CBL-News Diamonds CRB) News: WGR-Louella WEDNESDAY MORNING 5.30 A.M. CKLB-News: WBEN-Farm Reporter 5.45 A.M. CFRB--Morning Melodies WGR-Chore Time: This Believe 6.00 A.M. VKLB-News; Koffee Korner CKEY--News:; Musical Clock CFRB-Breakfast on the Farm WGR-News; Chore Time; Farm WBEN-News; Music 6.30 A.M. CKLB-News; Koffee Korner CFRB-News; Top O' The WGR-Musical Clock; News 7.00 A.M. CKLB-News; Koffee Korner CBL-News; Concert -Toast and Jamboree CKEY-News; Music CFRB-News; Top o° the Morning: Livestock Review WGR-Musieal Clock; News WBEN-News: Musical Clock 7.5 AM. CELB-News; Koffee Korner CBL-News; Concert Mel te ody CKEY-News; Music CFRB-News; Top ¢ Morning CKEY-News; CFRB-News: Morning WGR-Musical WBEN-News CKLB-News; Korner CFRB. News -News: | Morfing: 2.00 CEKLB-News; CJBC-News: Club CKEY-News: s WGR-Musical JEN-News 12.00 NOON @KLB-Community News; Midday Melodies CBL-BBC News CKEY-News: Pick the Hits; Star Time CFRB-At The Plano Fifty A D CBL-Aunt Lucy CKLB-Kitty CFRB-Farm & News CJBC-What's New WGR-Aunt Jenny WBEN-Old Saddlebags 12.30 P.M. Home Mal WGR-P: CKLB-News; Sports CBL-Farm Broadcast; Ma! WGR-Helen Trent WGR-Nora CKEY-Richard Scott CJBC-Mai CFRB-News; Women WBEN-Luncheon Club 2.45 P.M 12. WM. CKLB-Vocal Spotlite WGR-Our 1 CELE-News; Stop the eco) WGHK-Road of Life CBL-News and Weather CJBC-Maitland Manor CKEY-News; Tops in Pops CFRB-Perry Mason WBEN-Luncheon Club L153 P.M. WGR-Ma Perkins CFRB-Widder Brown "BL-Happy Gang 130 P.M. Gal Sunday 00 P.M. CFRB-Daily CBL-Life Can Beautiful -Concert CKEY-News; WGR-Hilitop Beautiful 3. CBL-Pepper Malone WGR-Dr. Malone WBEN-Sally Work 1.45 P.M. CFRB-Helen Trent CBL-Musical Kitchen CBL-Right to WBEN- Right 4.00 CKLB-News: 8.00 P.M. GELB Muse 'BL-Public Eye Fisher Show tra Mickey Lester CFRB-Rosemary Clooney 5.50 P.M. CIBC £3 InpRony. rchestra WGR-M: and CFRB-Fvn Parade CBL-Mr. Lime CJBC-CBC-Concert Hall CKEY-Art Hall WGR-My Friend Irma CJBC-The Eustace ess WBEN-Fibber Magee CBL-News Sports CJBC-News; Sports CEKEY-iuus WBEN-Musical Clock 8.30 A.M. CBL-News; Music jor CFRB-News; Winning Word: Ki CBL-Trans-Canada tinee 'erry Mason WBEN-Pauline Fredrick CFRB-Ma Perkins Dr and WBEN-It Pays To Be Married 3.00 P.M. CKLB-News; Showcase Derby WBEN-Life Can Be 15 P.M. WGR-House Party WBEN-Road of Life CBL-Ma Perkins 3.30 P.M. WBEN-Pepper Young 3.45 P.M. WGR-Helen Neville Tim: CFRB-Hobby Show. Musie in Our Time Family CBL-Leiceste: Square are Funny Shore CKLB-Airlane Trio CFRB-Music by Nantovan; The Passing Years WGR-Trio 1.00 P.M. CKLB-Sports Finals; Sports; Day Mystery Mrs. North | WGR-News; Craig ML Let George Back Talk; Show CBL-Chico Valley lo Cubanos WBEN-News, Sports, Diane of St. John . P.M. of Harry 11.30 P.M. CKEY1Sports; Les Lye Show CBL-Here Comes The Band CJBC-Prelude to Dreaming CFRB-News; Sports: erry Go Round WGR-Glacy's Basement 12.00 MIDNIGHT CKLB-News Starlight Souvenirs -News CKEY-News: House Party CFRB-News; Sports; Merry Go WBEN-News; Midnight Column WGR-News; Glacy's Basement CBL-News Questions Fortune P.M. Crime Does Musie Margaret Parsops 10.15 AM. 'BL-Kindergarten C.\BC-Hope for the Ladies CFRB-Ann Adam 10.30 A.M. CBL-Ruth Harding Jane Weston WBEN-Bob Hope CJBC-Worth Knowing; Just Around the Corner €" iB-Who Am 1 10.45 A.M. CBL-The Song Shop JFRB-What's On Wally's Mind; Worth Knowing WBEN-Break The Bank 11.00. A.M. CKLB-News; Music CBL-Road of Life CJBC-Coffee With Bruce; Pops CKEY-News; Baliroom CFRB-News; Harriet's House WBEN-Strike It Rich 1.15 A.M. Sports Sports Top 0' the Clock: News Koffee M Past Top o' the Singer AM, Devotions Breakfast Jay and CFRB-Second Mrs. Burton CBL-Backstage Wife 11.30 A.M. CKEY-Stars Sing; Nancy Clock Teg CBL-Kate Aitken CJBC-Cote Glee Club CFRB-Kate Aitken WGR-Make Up Your Mind WBEN-Phrase that Pays 10.45 A.M, CKLB-Second Spring Times; Clair's Kitchen CFRB-Strike up the Band: News WBEN-Second Chance WGR-Rosemary NOON WGR-News; Keaton CFRB-News: Hollywood Reporter CBL-Play It Safe CJBC-Styles in Song CKEY-News; Club 580 WBEN-Backstage Wife 4.15 P.M. CKLB-Showcase CFRB-Aunt WBEN:-Stella Dallas 4.30 P.M. CFRB-Top Tunes WBEN-Widder Brown CJBC-Of All Things CBL-Encores 4.45 P.M. WBEN-Woman in My ' House CBL-Music 5.00 P.M. CKLB-News; Supper Club CBL-Your Program CKEY-News; Party CFRB-News; C. Wallace WGR-News; Keaton; Barometer WBEN-Plain Bill 5.15 P.M. CFRB-Three Suns WBEN-Front Page Farrell 5.30 P.M. CKLB-Comunity News; Supper Club CJBC-News: Elwood over CBL-Jubilee Road ake Manor Be Pag 0° Gpld House WBEN Lorenzo Jones 5.45 P.M. CFRB Personalities; WBEN-Jack Berch Art Van Damme, Ethel Smith WGR-Curt Massey CBL-Bashful Boxcar M Young News Happiness to Happiness P.M. Show Case Malan Opposition Survives First Post-Election Crisis i PRETORIA (Reuters) -- South Africa's United party, chief op- position to Prime Minister Daniel Malan's Nationalist government, has successfully come through the first phase of a post-election in- ternal dispute. A crisis was passed here when the Transvaal congress of the party, some 600 to 700 delegates from all parts of this key prov- . ince; unanimously approved the recent expulsion from the party of four "rebel" Transvaal mem- bers of Parliament who had openly criticized the party leadership. Earlier the Cape province con- gress of the United party backed, by a large wajority, the expulsion »f another "rebel," the fifth mem- Her of a right-wing group accused ° trying to appease the Malan !ationalists in their efforts to sep- '2 mixed-blood voters--the so- ailed cape coloreds--from whites | for $261,800. At present, it oper- | ister, now 101, prepares sermons ates 66 highway first aid posts [and travels 75 miles from his home S |and has two special ambulances on | twice each month to deliver them. has been boiling 'up | highway si the electoral rolls. MALAN SPARKED CRISIS The crisis ever since the April Bis) eneral é€lec- | other worl re-elected | ambulances plus two-way radios. prime minister, openly invited members of the Opposition to vote with the government to end a long- standing constitutional controversy over the mixed-blood vote. Out of 3 series of extended caucus meetings, the five chi dissidents became known het they declined to join in a vote of confidence in the party leader, Jacobus Strauss, successor to the late Gen. Jan Smuts, wartime prime minister. isons and {pathetic res- ignations from the party caucus followed, Party dismissals came ater. ' PLAN SERVICE EXTENSI TORONTO (CP) -- The iri council of the St. John Ambulance Brigade said Thursday that, in the WGR-News; CKEY-News; Ballroom EN-News WGR-News: 6.00 P.M. Muro! CKLB-News; Sports; CFRB-Denny Vaughan CBL-News; CFRB-Path of Duty Headlines 615 P.M. Club Melodies ade CKLB-Supper CBL-Mayfair CFRB-Supper Seren: WGR-Sports: Heartbeats CKLB-Boston ~ WEDNESDAY EVENING Edward R. w WBEN-One Man's Family CKEY-Dick Hi es 8.00 P.M. CKLB-Musie CBL-La Trdviata Show; Army CFRB-Wild Bill Hickock Show PB.' WGR-FBI ip Peare and War WBEN-Walk a Mile 8.30 P.M. CBL-La Traviata aym WGR-Orchestra CFRB-Music by Mantovani 10.45 P.M. CKLB-Airlanes Trio CERE Musie: Passing Blackie ears WGR-( WGR-Galen Drake WBEN-Mike Mearia® 6.45 P.M. CELB-News; Smiley Burnette (ele Highlights CFRB-Kate Aitken CKEY-News; Ballroom CBL-News Roundup WGR-Family Skeleton WBEN-Trio 7.15 P.M. CBL-introduction CFRB-What Do You Think CKLB-Murphy's Melody WGR-Beulah WBEN-Rosemary Clooney 7.30 P.M. CBL-La Traviata CKLB-Great Musie CJBC-Choral Musie CKEY-Lorne Greene Show WGR-Les Paul and Mary Ford; Julius La Rosa CFRB-Take A Chance CKEY-News: WBEN-Grou: 10.00 CEKLB-News: Korner CBL-News CFRB-Rogers Gazette WGR-Rogers G Venture CBL-La Traviata CJJBC-Music CFRB-Mr. and WGR-Crime Photographer cho Marx 915 P.M. CJBC-Music Hall CKEY-Cavalcade of Music 'The Big CJBC-Let's Make Musie WGR-Crime Classics CJBC-Cal Jackson CKEY-Parade of Bands azette WBEN-Fibber Magee ne P.M, CELB-News; Sports Finals; Starlight Souvenirs CBL-Music by Mozart CJBC-News CFRB-News; Sports CKEY-News: Les Lye Show WGR-News WBEN-News 11.15 P.M. CJBC-UN Today CFRB-Merry-Go-Round BL-Music of Mozart WGR-Sports Interlude WBEN-Sports; Diane V2 P.M CKEY-Sports; Les Lye CJBC-Prelude to Dreaming CFRB-News; WGR-GlacySs 12.00 P.M. JKLB-News; Starlight Souvenirs CBL-News OR Nom Merry Go ews: Round CKEY-House Party; News WGR-News; Glacy's Basement WBEN-Midnight Column; Hall Mrs. North Back Talk: P.M. Kim's Trio of The of the TELEVISION PROGRAMS OBLY, Ohannel 9 TUESDAY 2:30--Matinee 3:30--Garry Moore 3:45--Music 5:00--Planet Tolex 5:15--How About That 5:30--Cowboy Corner 6:30--Uncle Chichimus 6:45--News 7:00--Tabloid 7:30--Dinah Shore 7: The 8:00--Tabloid 9:00--G.M. Theatre 10:20--Theatre Party CBLT Toronto ~-- Channel § WEDNESDAY 2:30--Matinee Theatre 5:00--Let"s Make Musi 5:30--Children's Theatre 6:30--Uncle Chichimus 6:45--News 7:00--Tabloid 7:30--Jazz With Jackson 8:00--Life with Father 8:30--Fighting Words 9:00--What's My Line 9:30--Art Gallery 10:00--Ford Theatre 10:30--Nightcap 11:00--Music Lall 11:30--Regal Theatre WBEN Channel TUESDAY EVENING 6:00--Sagebrush Tran 6:30--News 6:45--Sports Spotlight 7:0 0--Play of the Week 7:30--This Week in Sports Caravan 11:00--News: Weather: Sports 11:20--Film 11:30--Life with Elizabeth 12:00--Place the Face WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.--Today: Dave Garroway 9:00--~Girl Talk 9:30--Learn and Live 1:00--Matinee Playhouse 1:45---Johnny's Show 3:00--Big Payoff 3:30--Kate Smith 4:00--Welcome Traveller 4:30--On Your Account 5:00--Fun to Learn 5:15--Children's Theatre $:30--Howdy Doody WEDNESDAY EVENING p.m.--Sagebrush Trail 30---News with Ed Dinsmore :45--Sports Spotlight an 00--Superm: 7:30--Outdoor Camers 7:45--News Caravan 8:00--Arthur Godfrey 9:00--Television Theatre 10:00--Boxing 11:00--News; Sports; Weather 11:20--Film 11:35--The Web WHAM Channel § TUESDAY EVENING 6:00--Western Theatre 6:30--News; Almanac 6:45--Speaking of Sports 7:00--Cinderella Weekend 7:30--Dinah Shore 7:45--News Caravan 8:00--Bob H 9:00--Fireside Theatre 6 6 6 7 9:30--Circle Theatre 10:00--Judge For Yourself 10:30--Crown Theatre 11:00--News; Almanac 11:15--Dollar a Second WEDNESDAY 7:00--Today 8:25--News 8:30--Today 8:55--Thought for the Day 9:00--Take It Easy 9:30--Home Cooking 10:00--Ding Dong School 10:30--Brekfast in Hollywood 11:00THawkins Falls 11:15--Three Steps to Heaven 11:30--Ask Washington 12 noon--Bride and Groom 12:15--Movie Qu': 12:30--Midday Midway 1:00--Art Gallery 1:15--Movie Theatre 2:30--Ladies' Fair 3:00--Kate Smith 4:00--Welcome Travellers 4:30--On Your Account 5:00-NBC Feature 5:15--Pinky Lee 5:30--Howdy Doody WEDNESDAY EVENING 6:00--Western Roundup 6:30--News; Almanac 6:45--Speaking of Sports 7:00--University of Rochester 7:30--Fisher-Ameche Show -- 7:45--Camel News Caravas 8:00--1 married Jaon 8:30--My Little Margie 9:00--Kraft TV Theatre 10:00--This Is Your Life 10:30--Favorite Story 10:45--Sports Spot ACROSS 1. An intrigue 6. Moccasin. like shoe 9. A red, Juicy berry 19. God of love (Gr.) $2. National god (Tahiti) 38. Cry of pain 34. Wire. 8. Humblest 6. Wooden 7. Melody vo 8. Finish 9. Craggy hilt € strength. ened fabric 35. Named It "i g i ii i 32. Mimicked 33. Height (abbr.) 34. Departing 36. Over (poet.) 38. Rested on the knees 42. Seaport (Algeria) 44. Geranium (sym.) 45. Epoch 46. Bird of the hawk family 47. One of the British kings 49. Moisture -50. Borneo aborigines DOWN ¢ Center Centenarian Opens Store NASHVILLE, Tenn. (CP) -- In- stead of sitting back in a rocking chair when he reached 100, Rev. . W. D. Mayes went into the grocery business. hope of extending its hway ser- vice, it will launch a drive Feb. 9 patrol and 11 more on . It says it needs more from 4 a.m. until 9 p.m. each week day without even a part-time clerk The English - born Negro min- He keeps his grocery store open to assist him. He hand-sets type and prints "The Lighthouse," which he pub- lishes twice a month, along with church bulletins and other mat- erial. Mayes is pastor of the Mt. Tabor Colored Cumberland Presbyterian church near Huntington. The church is about 75 miles from Roellen. A neighbor drives him there twice each month. When he slipped on an i A street two years ago he suffered hip and skull injuries that laid him up for five months. He refused to go to a hospital and insisted that he be By PRESTON GROVER BERLIN (AP)--So different are the personalities of the four for- eign ministers who begin today to discuss the world's crucial issues that dramatic clashes seem in- evitable. The two oldest and toughest, American John Foster Dulles and Russian Vyacheslav Molotov, rep- resent the biggest powers. The others, Anthony Eden of Britain and Georges Bidault of France, are both in their 50s. Here is how they look on the conference's opening day. Molotov: 4 There probably is no harder and colder personality in the U.S.S.R. than Molotov. He comes to the con- ference nearing his 64th birthday March 9. Unlike the other three, who have developed a warmth and acceptance of ane another, Molo- tov hasn't a friendly contact in the Western camp. : At the 1947 Big Four conference in London, his cynicism finally drove the then state secretary George Marshall to give him one of the fiercest tongue lashings in modern negotiations. Marshall then broke off the conference. Molotov unmoved |KEEPS PARTY LINE Molotov, well grounded in Com- munist theory, never loses sight of the long view of Communist policy. Dulles: The secretary of state, who may celebrate his 6th birthday at the conference table Feb. 25, has been on the fringes or in the middle of U.S. foreign affairs for a score of years. A Republican, he was at the elbow of the various Democratic secretaries of - state and worked put on his hat and left, outwardly {- out the peace treaty with Japan. Clashes Inevitable At Big 4 Session His recent statement that the United States would have to make an 'agonizing reappraisal" of is licy in Europe if France fails pe ratify the European Army pact stirred up a ruckus in France. It was part of the Dulles pattern of plain speaking. He wants see Russia back within its own frontiers and especially out of central Europe. He wants the U.S. position to be fortified by strong moral rightness. Eden: The foreign secretary is looked upon as formidable at the confer- ence table, firm and forthright. What he may lack in give and take, Eden makes up in a rich background of international experi- ence, dating back to the League of Nations. TO AVOID COLLAPSE ' He wants to avoid an abrupt col lapse of the negotiations. He fa- vors removing the barrier between East and West by working aut agreements on small things if larger scale operations are im- possible. In that he may run counter to Dulles who has indicated he favors a stiff policy with the Russians, Bidault: Favoring ratification of the Eur- opean Army pact, Bidault comes to the conference table bolstered only by a thin and uncertain ma- jority in Parliament and with no great assurance that he will be foreign minister more than a month after the conference ends. He may join Eden in softening. the impact of Russia and U.S. ideas at the conference. He is learned in history, once was a history professor in Paris, and worked his way to the leader- ship of the 'resistance' in France during the German occupation. EUROPEAN PROBLEM By ALAN HARVEY Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP) -- Two Europes meet at the crossroads Monday to try to solve the apparently un- solvable: What's going to happen to Germany? With the opening of the four- power conference in Berlin, diplo- mats have another chance to do something about the country whose name throbs in the sick brain of Europe. The issue is whether Germany is to be reunited on Western terms, which Russa won't accept, or on Russian terms, equally unaccept- able to the West. Meanwhile, the country lies partitioned into a free federal republic of 48,000,000 per- sons and a Russian-controlled "'de- mocracy" of some 18,000,000, BATTLE OF EUROPES Behind this is the broader battle of the two Europes--western Eur- ope torn by old tensions, reduced by war to a narrow flank of free- dom on the borders of the Iron Curtain, and eastern Europe firmly if [octiessly, under Russian con- trol. Recalling the bitter lessons of their feebleness in the Second World War, the countries of free Europe have been trying ever since then to strengthen themselves by political, economic and military moves toward unity, but the plans are shaky and the Berlin confer- ence may have a decisive effect. Thus, the hard-shelled brooding enigma that is Germany remains the key to a many-faceted prob- Germany Key To Solution: lem. Reliable reports tell of poverty and gloom in the Eastern zone. A young West German who re- cently cycled through the Russian- controlled areas - wrote in The Times that people in the smaller places there could hardly believe there were stores where bicycles, watches, radios and cameras could be bought. "These obscure villages," the West German wrote, "are bitter indictments of the regime in east- ern Germany." DIFFERENT STORY ' Western Germany is another story. With a frenzy for work the tough, thrifty citizens of the fed- eral republic are breeding a new industrial juggernaut out of the rubble of defeat. "Those babies really know how to work," the military men say. "If Canadians think we can keep up with them on a five-day weel and what have you, we've got an- other think coming." In the trade drive, some Ger- man industrialists speak of Canada as ultimately becoming their No. 1 target. With all the stories about West Germany's 'fantastic' comeback, few writers try to predict where these energies will lead. One view is that up to now the Germans have been concentrating on earning enough to keep themselves alive and get re-established, and that olitical align- the question of their ment is still uncertain. 9.00 p.m. CBLT Channel 9 AND CBC-TV NETWORK A New Play for Television # The by Rodney Coneybeare . Starring SUZANNE FINLAY DOUGLAS MASTERS RUTH SPRINGFORD oLD TINE \ RED BA carried into his church on a cot to continue preaching during con- valescence. DANCE . Featuring "CANADA'S KING OF THE FIDDLE" KING GANAM AND HIS SONS OF THE WEST WESTERN MODERN STARS OF CBLT TELEVISION HOLIDAY RANCH ® RADIO ® RCA RECORDS [ ) 4 Q Wednesday dan. 27 - 9 p.m. ONE NIGHT ONLY 4 4 [ 4 s [| L Adm 1.00 FINED $7 FOR ASSAULT SIMCOE (CP)--Patrick Hurley and Harry J. Kealy, both of Tor- onto, were fined $75 Monday on a charge of assaulting a dance hall manger. They were also ordered to pay two doctor bills amounting to .50 or serve 30 days in jail. Witnesses said the two started a fight in a Delhi dance hall Dec. 19 in which manager Cyril Paulett Fufered a broken nose, bruises and cuts. CHARGED WITH BREAKIN ST. CATHARINES (CP)--Police early Sunday arrested Melvin Mac- Donald, 18, of nearby Merritton, in the office of Valley Motors in Mer- ritton. Officers, who charged him with breaking and entering and attempted theft, said they found him crouched in front of a safe, trying to light an acetylene torch. GOOD FOOD Commercial Hotel NO ADVANCE IN ADMISSION PRICES Thiffer! . introducing BAF ELOT- ME FANNER ALSO The 3 Stooges THEATRE GUIDE Marks -- "Distant Drums, 12.45, 3.50, 6.55, 10.05, '"'San Francisco Story," 2.25, 5.30, 8.45. Last com- plete show, 8.45 p.m. Biltmore -- "Sangaree'" (Techni- color), 1.00, 4.00, 7.00. and 10.00 p.m, "The Desert Rats" 2.35, 5.35 and 8.45 p.m. Last complete show at 8.45 p.m. Plaza -- "I the Jury", 1:30, 3:28, 5:26, 7:24, 9:22, Last complete show 9:06 p.m. -- "Rancho Notorious" -- , 6:20, 9:25. "Beware My Lovely" 1:55, 5:00, 8:05. Last complete show 8 p.m. i 3 - Brock -- *'Millionaire For Christy", . "The Frame". Evening shows at 7 p.m. Last complete show 8:20. in CPLOR BY CHNICOLOR wn FRANCIS L. SULLIVAN - CHARLES KORVIN TOM DRAKE JOHN SUTTON MiIRELS OF hie Wksi'd RAK ADULT ENTERTAINMENT | ROBERT RYAN &5 "Rancho Notorious" Today aot 3:15, 6:20, 9:25 "Beware My Lovely" 1:55 - 5:00 - 8:05 STRANGEST HIDEOUT! MARLENE DIETRICH ARTHUR KENNEDY MEL FERRER NoTORIOUSY arly TECHWICOLOR Fiox eine 1.51244 RY Co 27 TeCANICOL OR. TECHNIGELOR. OPER When Frisco was a brawling, sprawling hill-city of sin! SAN, 3 -

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy