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2 4 BUFFALO COURIER-EXPRESS, Wednesday, Mar. % 1960
Fisher Remain*
Melody Changes Hands
Melody Fair changed ownership yesterday. At a private tale, the popular North Tonawanda music tent was pure b a s e d for an a u d i t -closed sum by its new o p e r a t o r s , 200 Productions Inc.
T h e transaction for Melody Fair, a general partnership, was a u t h o r ized by P r e s i d e n t 1. Thomas Finn and Producer Lewis founders of Melody Fair
Fisher, who will remain with Melody Fair as prodncer, was also elected president of 200 Productions Inc.
Kenneth Gill, former production manager of Melody Fair, was promoted to general manager.
Other officers of 200 Produc-
L. T. Fisher T. Fisher,
tions Inc. are David M. Holtz-mann and Benjamin H. Segal, vice presidents; Gurney M. Kranz. treasurer: Frank M. Abba te, secretary, and Robert Hall, assistant secretary.
200 Productions Inc. will carry on the operation of Melody Fair, adhering to the same policy and season of 12 to 16 weeks of Broadway musicals at popular prices. Opening date for Melody Fair's 1960 season Is June 7. Melody Fair, as a summer
theater producing Broadway musicals "in the round," was constructed and opened in the summer of 1956. Located in Wurlitzer Park on Niagara Falls Blvd. in North Tonawanda, Melody Fair has been cited by many civic groups as a great factor In the return of live theater to Western New York.
Its patrons come from a radius of 100 miles, numbering well over 100,000 a season.
Varied Bills Offered By Film Houses
Comedies rule among the new * movies booked this week for
downtown theaters. Three programs are holding over, two for third weeks. The shows:
Paramount—"Masters of the Congo Jungle," documentary travelog, and "The Cruel Tower," melodrama, with John Ericson, Mari Blanchard and Charles McGraw, will open Friday.
Center — "Who Wis That Lady?" farce based on the Norman Krasna olay, with Dean Martin, Tony Curtis, Janet Leigh and James Whitmore, will open Saturday.
Shea's Teck—"Take a Giant Step," drama, with Johnny Nash. Ruby Dee and Estelle Hemsley, will continue for a second week.
Basil's Lafayette — Opening Friday are 'Sapphire," mystery-melodrama, with .\i-Tel Patrick and Yvonne Mitchell, and "Chain of Evidence," drama, with Bill Elliott and Jimmy Lydon.
Century-"Once More. With Feeling," comedy-drama, co-starring Yul Brynner and Kay Kendall, with Gregory Ratoff, will open Friday.
Shea's B u f f a 1 o—"On the Beach." drama of nuclear war's aftermath, with Gregory Peck. Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire and Anthony Perkins, is continuing for a third week.
Cinema—"Toby Tyler," about a boy with a circus, with Kevin Corcoran. Bob Sweeney and Gene Sheldon, is holding over foe a third week.
Amherst—"Operation Petticoat." comedy, with Gary Grant, Tony Curtis. Joanne O'Brien and Dina Merrill, continues for a third week
Granada—' Porgy and Bess," musical drama, with Sidney Poitier. Dorothy Dindridge. Pearl Bailey and Sammy Davis Jr., today will open its 16th week.
Palace—"Step Lively," burlesque revue opening Friday, headlines the exotic, Sharon Storm, with Lorraine Lee. Minette C h i f f o n , Lorraine Sterling. Dick R:?hards, Bimbo Davis and Paul West.
Test Your Horse Sense
Score one point for a correct solution of each of the first five problems. The last problem counts five points.
Answers on Comic Page. 1. Humpty Dumpty's mother
made w h i c h characteristic sound?
Moo Oink Ba-a Cluck 2. St. Patrick should make
one think of which type of fuel? Anthracite Peat
Bituminous Coal Oil 3. Which one of these jewels
is manufactured by living crea tures? Ruby Diamond Pearl Sapphire
4. The sum of the degrees in the three angles of a triangle alwavs total
90 180 270 360 5. The speed of ocean ships is
usually figured in Furlongs Knots
Miles Kilometers 6. In the left hand column be
low you will find five types of sound which have become popularly linked with certain calendar events, as indicated in the right hand column. Try to match each sound with its appropriate holiday. You are entitled to one point for each correct judgment. (a) Chop choo ( D ) Bang bang <c> Gototi'c (d) Cheep cheep (• ) Jingle
(v ) Easter (w) Thanksgiving (x ) Christmas (y) Fourth of July ( I ) Washington's
Birthday
Seats Ready For Showing Of 'Ben-Hur'
Shea's Teck will open Its "Ben-Hur" box-office tomorrow morning at 10 Thereafter, It will be open daily from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and on Sundays from noon to 9.
The most expensive film ever produced, "Ben-Hur" will have ten performances a week after its Western New York premiere at the Teck on Tuesday evening, March 15 at 8.
Performances will be sched-Behind i u l e d *or 5 a c n evening at 8, ex
Closed Shutters." screen feature, co-«tars Eleonora Rossi-Drago and Massimo Girotti.
Patents
cept on Sundays when starting time will be at 7:30. Matinees will be presented on Wednesdays, Saturdays, Sundays and holidays at 2.
During its engagement at Shea's Teck, "Ben-Hur" will not
The Weather
Courier.MTprm* Washington Bureau W A S H I N G T O N , March 1-Buffalo-area , , . . ^
inventors received me following patents oe s n o w n i n a n y o t h e r t h e a t e r !t!i* •TF' i iJI w ,*-L8n?T , c2f-V'\ *£!.•of* i n Western New York. f l d a l Gazette of the U.S. Patent Office.)
General an<* Mechanical Raymond A. Diebet Cheektcwaqa, and
Freder ic * R. Weymouth Jr., Buffalo, assignors to Trlco Products Corp., Buffalo; windshield cleaning system.
Harvard B Kolm Jr . Buffalo, assignor fe> Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co., Minneapolis. Minn. ; Hydraulic control apoaratus.
John Puhrmann, West Seneca, and > John B. Stauss E l m a ; lift c*r t .
Francis S. Faust Buffalo, assignor to hours ending at 7 p.m. Min imum lem-R. G Wright C o , Inc.. Buffalo; closure perature is to' "_ for pre-mix ;nntainer 7 p.m. Weather is a* 7 p.m. All record-
John R. Prybyls*. , Buffalo, and Cle- ings are in Eastern Standard T ime. ment J. Turansky, Tonawanda. assignors i Temp to the United States of America as rep- Cities Weather Max . Mln resented by the Secretary of the Air B U F F A L O Clear 21 to Force; shut-oft valve Albany . . . c lear
Ear l C. Hawks. Buffalo; imoalmg means Ancr-orage, Alaska Cloudy en a clamp for holding packing mater ia l j Boston . . Clear
U.S. Department of Commerce, Buffalo, N Y . , March I , 1940
Max imu m temperature is highest for 12 ours endii
Wright ro . Inc Buffalo, "closure perature is fewest for IS hours ending at
to be cut . Chemical
Everett H Pryde, Kenmore. assignor to S . I. du Pont de Nemours & Co.. Wilmington, De l . ; preparation of sodium borohydride
Alfred A. D'Addieco. Grand island, and Stephen E. Stephanou. Santa Ana, Calif assignors to DuPont, production monopersulfuric acid
Clear . . . . Pt. Cl'dy
Sncw Cloudy
. . . . Clear . . Clear
Jacksonville Clear
Chicago . . . Cleveland Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth
Chen Mir ,ing Chin, Snyder, a w g n c tc General MUM. Inc., Minneapolis. M iw . manufacture of regenerated cellulose sponge mater ial .
Electrical Charles M . Phillips and Francis X
Dinino. Buffalo; keyhole illuminator. Joseph G. Hoffmann, Buffalo, assignor
to the United States of America as represented by the Secretary of the Navy; signal translating system.
Trade Mark Aoplications Graphic Controls Corp . Buffalo, " G - C "
design, for recording charts.
PROMOTES)—The promotion of Joseph J. Sobey to assistant manager of Robert Hall Clothes salesroom at 3623 Delaware Ave., Kenmore, was announced yesterday.
Los Angeles '• | Louisville
I Miami
YOUR CHILD
I 1 for*
< _ _ f tablet*. I a a d adu
C J*yn* *
IOUTOf3DOt$t Fidgeting, loea oi sleep and a tormenting itch are often tell-tale signs of Pin-Worms . . . ugly para-ntM that medical experts say in-feat on* out of carry thru persons examined. Entire families may be victims and not know it.
To get rid of Pin-Worm*, these
Kmoat not only be killed, but in the large intestine where
they live and multiply. That's exactly what Jay lie's P- W tablets do . . . aad here's now they do it:
/tret—a scientific coating earth* tablet* into the bowel* be-they dissolve. Then—Jar ne'e era, medically-approved intent go** right to work—kill* Worm* quickly and easily.
Don't take chance* with this dangerous, highly contagious condition. Get atiuufM Jayne's P-W
. small, eaay-to-take tpeeial sues for children
adulta. Perfected by Dr. D. Son, specialists in worm for 100 year*.
i i 1 1 J j j j
Minneapolis New Orleans New Vjck . . . . Philadelphia Pittsburgh Phoenix . . . . Portland, Me . . . . . Portland, Ore. . . . Raleigh Rochester St. Louis San Francisco Sault Ste. Mar ie Seattle . . . . . — Syracuse Tampa i Washington
Clear Clear
Pt. Cl'dy .. Clear
. . Cloudy . . . Clear . . . Clear
Clear . . Cloudy . . Clear . . Cloudy . . . Clear . . . Clear . . Cloudy . . . Clear
Snow Pt. Cl'dy
. . . Clear Cloudy
Clear
24 30 30 IS 24 It 25 28 IS 61 A3 31 78 14 50 32 34 25 65 30 43 38 20 24 52 25 41 23 81 35
9 5 17 10 12 7 2 12 -6 48 51 10 71 -2 46 22 22 9 53 11 22 26 9 11 471 0 29 10 57 22
LOCAL OBSERVATIONS 7 a.m.—Temperature 12; humidity 15%;
precip., t race; wind velocity 10. 7 p.m.—Temperature 20; humidity 68%;
precip.. 0; wind velocity 7. March 2, 1960—Sunrise, 6:50 a . m . ; sun
set, 6:05 p.m. Possible sunshlne-11 hours 15 minutes. Moon sets at 11:37 a . m . ; rises at 2:45
p.m. T E M P E R A T U R E S AT B U F F A L O
9 a .m. 18 10 a .m. 20 11 a .m. 21 12 noon 22 1 p.m. 22 2 p.m. 23 3 p.m. 23 4 p.m. 23
Max imu m 23; minimum 10; mean temperature for the 24 hours 17; normal for the day 28.
1 a.m. 16 2 a.m. 12 3 a.m. 10 4 a.m. "0 5 a.m. 11 6 a.m. 12 7 a.m. 12 8 am. 15
5 p.m. 23 6 p.m. 22 7 p.m. 20 8 p.m. 18 9 p.m. 17 10 p.m. 15 11 p.m. 13 12 mid. 10
WEATHER SYNOPSIS ^High pressure and cold, dry
air will build over Western New York today and slowly drift eastward. A complex low covers the far southwestern states and there is a good chance that a sizeable storm will develop from this later in the week.
' *
Now Many Wear
FALSE TEETH With Little Worry
Eat, talk, laugh or sneeze without fear of Insecure false teeth dropping, slipping or wobbling. FASTEETH holds plates firmer and more comfortably. This pleasant powder has no gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling. Doesn't cause nausea. It's alkaline (non-acid). Checks "plate odor" (denture breath). Get PASTKETH at drug counters everywhere. —ADV
a*
iiedda Hopper
Alan Lacld, Son
Eye Brazil For
Movie Locale
HOLLYWOOD, March 1 — Alan Ladd told me he and son David are planning a picture in Brazil with Hail Bart-lett titled "The Captain of the Sands" in which Alan would play a priest. They've never done one there and he'd like to see the country. He'll find it fascinating and probably come back owning a lot of property.
Richard Widmark liked the s t o r y "Destruction Test" about a man who was given a terrible assignment during the war. Everyone thinks he's a traitor and even after the war's end he couldn't be cleared. But Widmark won't go to England to make it, so 20th Century-Fox is paging Vic Mature.
FLYNN'S BIOG NOT IN — Jack Warner tells me he hasn't the slightest interest in buying Errol Flynn's book "My Wicked, Wicked Ways." Said he, "I once foolishly bought one about a former star and that was a mistake."
Oliver Messel, talented artist who designed sets for "Romeo and Juliet," for the stage play "Roshmon" as well as costumes, also sets and costumes for Hank Fonda's newest play, will be related by marriage to the royal family since he's the uncle of Anthony Armstrong - Jones, fiance of Princess Margaret.
Messel's sister married Ronald Armstrong-Jones, later divorced him and became Countess of Rosse. Oliver also painted a lovely portrait of Mrs. Josh Logan.
GLOBE AWARDS — Foreign Press Golden Globe Award party promises to be one of the best. Representatives are coming from South America. Germany, France and Italy. MGM gets four awards: for "Ben-Hur"; Director William Wyler; Andrew Marton, director of chariot race; George Hamilton, for international newcomer.
Millie Perkins presents a Globe to George Stevens. In Europe they take thir event more seriously than our Academy Awards.
Kevin McClory Is In the Bahamas skin diving with the Gary Coopers. If Kevin ever does that undersea picture he's talked so much about I'll bet Coop will be in it.
SABU'S NO BOY — When Sabu, the elephant boy, arrived in London recently, he grinned and said, "I'm a little old to play a jungle boy; I'm now 36, married and have two
children. "I saw him first in London riding a huge elephant in behalf of the picture "The Elephant Boy." He became an idol of the British.
Irene, designing D o r i s Day's gowns for "Midnight Lace," flew to Chicago to Marshall Field's international show where she'll represent American designers, and Hubert De Givenchy has been chosen for European couturies It's a gala evening for sym-hony orchestra. Aldo Ray still telephones Johanna Bennett, daughter of an English General, and says he'll marry her even though her father says no.
A MAD PAD, LIKE—I'd never mingled with beatniks until I helped Bill Wellman celebrate his birthday. His family, pals, and associates turned themselves into comic horrors. I dressed to the teeth and was a square. Practically all the girls wore leotards and skin tight sweaters to the knees, and eyelashes an inch long.
Men/ were bearded, mus-tachea, unshaven. Bob Cum-mings was a clown; his wife topped her costume with an orange wig. Mrs. Ronald Reagan blacked out two front teeth ami wore a tousled blonde .wig. Hoagy Oar-michael's son who beats the drums like a pro dressed as a woman.
Andy Devine came in from Balboa. He tells me Edwin Lester will stage "Show Boat" this summer. "Naturally, you'll play Captain Andy," I said. "I hope so. Oscar Ham-merstein told me I'm one of two best Andy's he's seen."
Curtain Time... Opening hours for shows in
Buffalo and vicinity today, as supplied by theater managers, are:
Shea's Buffalo — "On the Beach," drama, 11:10 9:35 p.m
a m i 1:45,' 4:20, 7 and
Paramount—"Guns of the Timber land," outdoor drama, 12:40, 3:50, 7 and 10:05 p.m. "The Boy and the Laughing Dog," drama. 11:05 a .m. , 2:10, 5:20 and 8:30 p.m.
Center—"The Bramble Bush," romantic drama, 11:40 a .m. , 2:20, 4:55, 7:35 and 10:05 p.m.
Shea's T e c l t - " T a k e a Giant Step," drama, 1:45, 3:45, 5:45, 7:45 and 9:45 p.m.
Basil's Lafayette—"The Purple Gang," cr ime melodrama, 11 a.m. , 1:50, 4:40, 7:35 and 10:25 p.m. "Speed Crazy," melodrama, 12:30, 3:20, 6:10 and 9:05 p.m.
Century—"Suddenly, Last Summer," drama, 11 a .m. . 1:10, 3:20, 5:30, 7:45 and 10 p.m.
Cinema—"Toby Tyler ," comedy drama, 1:25, 3:30, 5:30, 7:35 and 9:40 p.m.
Amherst—"Operation Petticoat," comedy, 7:20 and 9:35 p.m.
Granada—"Pe/gy and Bess," musical drama, 2:30 and 8:30 p.m.
Palace—"Harem Nights," burlesque rtvve, 12:40, 3:35, 7 and 10:05 p m. "Gir ls of the Night," screen drama, 10:55 a.m. , 1:55, 5:10 and 8:15 p.m.
• BUFFALO'S F INEST THEATRE? *
* STARTS F R I D A Y ! *
C O L U M B I A P I C T U R E S presents s S T A N L E Y O O N E N production.
YNNER KAYKfNDALL
e-»QR00WRAT0rT<
ELIZABETH ,i TAYLOR
by HARRY KURNfTZ based»Utopia?.
Pndtess asd Diwttd ly STANLEY DONEN LAST 2 DAYS!
S U D D E N L Y , LAST S U M M E R it MONTGOMERY OLIFT
CONVENIENT P A R K I N G IN M
* FAMOUS BUFFALO NITE CLUB *
At Your Request Pr.jer.ra EXOTIC
J U S T A D R E A M
I SHOWS N I T E L T
Tne Out of This World Girl Amazing
JfMMIE SMITH I 'Taps en tne Zycaphont
Lovely . . . D O R O T H Y L a B R U N
itintillating Songstress And Your Favorite MC
TONY ODDI
CHICKEN DINNER
1:45.11:30**"' » " " $ | 5 0 2)30 A.M. ' S V M •somplete
iTOWH CASINO! ;681 MAIN', Opp. Greyhound Bis Term.'
* Now Playing * The Wonderful
HIGH-L IGHTS! Musical Comedy Satirist*
'if PLUS AN ALL STAR SHOW
• 3—Shows Nightly—3 • Reservations-CL. 7388, CL 7349
W e Are SOLD OUT
Saturday, March S
Te The FORD MOTOR CO.
Coming Our April 'Shower of Stars' In Person
CONNIE FRANCIS April 15th
* BOBBY DARIN • PAUL ANKA * • THE AMES BROS. •
M0N. NITE IS LADIES' NITE
Come In Free!I SPEND WHAT YOU LIKE I !
NEIGHBORHOOD THEATERS & DRIVE-INS A U R O R A , East A u r o r a - H E L D O V E R
T I L L SAT. Gary Grant, Tony Curtis, "Operation Petticoat," (Technicolor) 7:18, 9:36.
R I V E R S I D E , 124 Tonawanda-R i ta Hay-worth as " G l i d e " witti Glenn Ford.
Also "The Big Heat ," starring Glenn Ford, Gloria Grahame. Starting at 7:30 p.m.
R I V I E R A , a Webster St., North Tonawanda—Glenn Ford, Debbie Reynolds
In " T h e Gazebo," In Cinemascope plus Olivia De Havil land, Dirk Bogarde In " L i b e l . "
A E R O D R I V E - I N , Union between WaMen and Genesee, R E . 3 9 3 9 - F R E E ELEC
T R I C H E A T E R S . W A R I Two thrilling hits, "Armored Attack," Anne Baxter, Dana Andrews, Farley Granger, Walter Brennan. "Betrayed," Clark Gable, Lana Turner, Victor Mature, Louis Calhern In Technicolor.
THE NEIGHBORS By George Clark DOORS OPEN 10 45 A. M
"You meet lots of people who manage to save money Mr. Thomas. Qt> any of them tell you how they do it?"
College to Offer Saroyaii Play
KENSINGTON ?-1 ->; ELM WOOD HAYWORTH, IANC.6SA»r i
Casting Hall, tlie dramatic I organization of thf State University College of Education, 1300 Elmwood Avt., will pre-1
sent William Sapoyan's "My Heart's in the Highlands," Friday, Saturday and Sunday eve-, nings at 8:30 in the College • Union's music roon}. Miss Mina' Goossen directs. I
The play concerns a boy and his poet-father, great but doing badly financially. Into their lives comes an old man with a bugle and a "heart in the highlands." His songs bring joy to all.
In the cast are Charles F. Campbell, Frank Matthews, Victor R. Shanchuk Jr.
r*ithi
The Story That Tore The Vast Timber Country Apart!
WQD « • .
•flkvwl M l AlOX, SMjGt 11
G U N S OP THE
( TiMBERIUND Mear r raakle Aestos *lm§i "Tht Faithful
Kind" "Get Whiu Whikifcerts Golly C M "
- V X U M W
Heart-•1 WALTER BRENNAN * SIDNEY POITIER
Wo^min^'l BRANDON de WILDE • PHIL HARRIS
T h e BOY a n d t h e LAUGHING DOG
The Entertainment Experience Of A Lifetime
BOX-OFFICE _ MEmOGOLDWYN MAYER
WILLIAM WYLERS OPENS TOMORROW!
r a s s i N T A T i o N or
frfll NOVEL T H A T W A S HAILED DENOUNCE!
- A N D 5 MILLION PEOPLE READ I T I
The Bramble^ Busfi J
RICHAUD BURTON-BARBARA RUSH
F r o m "the best seller that makes Peytonf Place read l ike a book _
of nursery r h y m e s ! " — W i n c h e l l •%,
i ! . . i ^ \ PLUS EXTRA fEATUEtTTE / S • ' i i t i j i w « w f \
f IOOUS' , * * .
^ ICOLOR
35 .« t r"'ISRAEL LfOM USIS
V ; ^ ~ N . * - n a r r a t e d b^ EDWARD G. ROBINSON. • * X , TKS . ' .COVO. ^ y j
i
A STORY OF THE T IME OF THE CHRIST
• • • • ¥ • • • • OTDER RESERVED SEATS NOW P . T . X T
MAIL ORDERS FILLED
Western New York Premiere Engagement
STARTS TUES., Mar. 15 at 8 P.M. •SCHEDULE OF RESERVED SEAT PRICES and PERFORMANCES:
• E V E N I N G S AT 8:00 P. M .
Sun. thru Thors., $ 2 . 5 0 , $1 .75
Fri. , Sot. & H o l „ $ 2 . 7 5 , $ 2 . 0 0
' S u n d a y Evening, 7 :30 P. M .
MATINEES AT 2 :00 P M .
Wednesdays, $ 1 . 7 5 , $ ! 25
Set., Sun. & Hoi . . $ 2 . 2 5 , $1 .75
* Al l Prices Include Tax
SHEA'S TECK Theatsr 760 M A I N ST., BUFfAlO N Y . - M O h a w k e l l I
For information on •hectre parties
call MOhowk 6111
1. • • • • • • • • • • i
ES
1 1 1 I -J 71 1 aj
m.mm%zm* \
375313 ^ IN D O W N T O W N BUFFALO j
NOW • • •
LAST 9 DAYS
WMY/2SHOW
aTBRIOPMONIC SOUND
_ Outiibuted bj 20» comjmfflt
limM ORSON WELLESiWILLIAM WARFIELO" V HEINZ SIELMANN- HENRY BRANDT
Starts FRIDAY at PARAMOUNT!
DOIMT MISS THE KiSSlN./
And the hugging,
and the
hilarity and
the whole
riotous,
romantic
romp
• Tony Curtis Dean Martin Jane t Leigh \
? in Columbia Pictures' "Who Was That Lady?" •
*...»t...i i starts SATURDAY at CENTER!
EVENING AT 8:30
I h
- w SAMUEL w
ftteKMS Produced m TODD-AO'- TECHNICOLOR'
HI-FI STEREO SOUND MATINEE TODAY - SEATS $1 50
SPECIAL PUBLIC SCHOOL AND HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS 90* COLLEGE STUDENTS $1.00
• TAKKINS
BARRY SULLIVAN! CO t r i K K ' N t
ROBERT BLAKE
2nd FEATURE 1 THE J E T - H O T A G E !
J H i f i ' j S A B B O T T RD R I D G C B A I L E Y a t G E N E S E E
'BATTLE OF THE CORAL SEA" Cliff Rober'jort-Gia Sealo
" v r s T E R D A Y ' S E N E M Y " Stanley Baker-Guy Rolf*
T O N A W A N D A T i l Life i f a great showman
"The Jolson Story" & "Jolson Sings Again" With Lorry "arkt-Evelyn Keyes and Barbara Hale
f
S H E R I D A N D R I V E - I N near Grand Island Bridge, R l . 5 3 0 1 - F R E E ELEC
T R I C H E A T E R S . Three action Hits, "Story on Paoe One," Rita Hayworth, Anthony Franciosa. "The Road Racers," Sally Fraser, Alan Dlnehart Jr . "Daddy-O." Dick Cantlno. Sandra Giles. O n * complete show.
1
THE CHASE INN The Greatest t i t t le C lub in Wtttorn N. Y.
3 5 S. T R A N S I T ST . , L O C K P O R T , N . Y . if Proudly Presents *
The JOHNNY ROCKETTE SEXTETTE "The Biggest Little Band In The Land"
Personal Mgt. Ray 6. Kneeland; 75>2 W. Chippewa St., Buffalo, N. T. * Fwrturinc; if
• A L L F O R M E R N A M E B A N D S T A R S •
STARTING THURSDAY, MARCH 3rd Music f o r y o u r Dancing & Littin'mg Plmaturm
EVERY THURS., FRI., SAT. & SUN. at 9:30
I Your Host* Pet* A Dolly |
CARY TONY GRANT-CURTIS - W E R f f l O N -
PETTICOAT' In Eastman C O L O R
Complete Show at
7:15, 9:25
2nd W e e k !
DOORS OPEN 12:30 PM TODAY !
MS ma » |i
TOBY TYLER -"* kvrc«vs
CIRCUS T t K ^ i 6 x p R 7 S 5 S 5 y
AT 1:25, 3:30, 5:30. 7 3 5 . 9 * 0
Palace Burlesk M A I N A T N I A G A R A
A New Stage and Screen Ai roction — NOW PLAYING —
O N SCREEN FIRST SHOWING
UNDERWORLD MELODRAMA
PLUS ON STAGE IN PERSON
SABRA S A M A R R
A TURKISH SiX KITTEN
W I T H A BIQ OAST O F • U R t E S K S T A R S
* WE'RE H A V I N G F U N * * • At the One and* Only
H A V A N A CASINO G O O D f l l A ELM - CI 9010
Where We Bring You tne Bett In Enur-U lament
Presenting f »orrc
EARLENE Tal l . Terrld * Terrif.c
P'trs BUCKY CONRAD A Truly Oreet MC
KNEE MATHEWS • SHERR1 RAYMOMD Tip Top T»pit*r Lowly Dancing Do
3 — SHO W S M I T E L V — S Dane* te Nick DsStefano't Orchestra
ENTERTAINMENT & MUSIC FOR ALL OCCASIONS
RAY S. KNEELAND 75 . W CHIPPEWA
PHONE DATS, W A . 9671 -NITES SUNDAYS HOLIDAYS WA 1178
Untitled Document
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