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M O LICENSES OF 33 REVOKED
IN LOCAL AREA 49 other drivers suffer suspen
sion of permits, state bureau report reveals
Brocton; Joe A. Cannon, Niagara Falls.
Failure to report accident: Murray Smith, 390 Clinton Street.
Unauthorized possession of operator's license: Theodore Hollings-worth, 127 Madison Street; Carter Sims, 535 Clinton Street.
Suspensions Reckless driving: Nathan Mesne-
koff, 681 GeTfesee Street; Leo Le-wandowski, Depew; Robert W. Simpson, Lakewood; Wayne John Dennis, Jamestown: Frank Mauro. Niagara Falls; Edward C. Edwards, 251 Summit Avenue; Fred C. Held. 445 Greene Street; Roy Davis, 594 North Division Street; Ida Mae Witt.
ONrttr-rxpreM Alton, Bureau Gowanda; John C. Devine. 234 Albany, Dec 24—There were 33 Olympic Avenue; Paul F. Olah, 144
# revocations and 49 suspensions of Dewey Street; Joseph Finnegan, automobile registrations and driving Tonawanda; John W. Piwowarczyk, licenses in the Buffalo district dur- ; North Tonawanda: Wilson S. Clem-ing the two weeks ended December \ e m 3 6 cushing Place; George A. 12th. according to announcement f Yttorag. 267 Bissell Avenue; Michael today by Charles A. Harnett, state j j . nourrnpv 225 Chpnanen Street:
BUFFALO COURIER-EXPRESS,
Marian Martin Pattern •
commissioner of motor vehicles In the entire state during the same period there were 838 revocations and suspensions.
The cases in Western New York follow, addresses indicating Buffalo:
Revocations Driving car while intoxicated: Al
bert H. Brown, Silver Springs; Stansiil Parker. Akron; Walter E. Fisher. Angola; Robert Strand, Jamestown; Harry Gee, Lackawanna; Roy W.akefield. Kennedy; Ephraim "T Wilson, Jamestown; Walter Meredyk. Cheektowaga; George Skye, Tonawanda Reservation, Basom; Avery Moshier, Jr., Scio; Earl J. Jones. 115 Henrietta s o n s. Shoemaker, 277 Bird Avenue;
J.. Courtney, 225 Chenango Street; Arthur Warner Burwell, Wilson.
Improper use of license plates: Harold Jacobs, 934 Sycamore Street.
Licenses irregularly issued: Clive Hill, 85 South Elmwood Avenue; Edward Z. Wawrzyniak, Depew: Raymond Ellis. Fillmore; Daniel Freed, Alfred; Lawrence Sgroi, Niagara Falls; Henry G. Wildenkron, 10 Abbottsford Place,
Failure to renew cancelled insurance policy: Harold G. Maud, 435 Military Road; Paul J. Skummer, Blasdeil. ,
Felony: Anthony Trnka, 318 Fourteenth Street; Charles Harten-stein, 16 Kaufman Street; Kenneth Peterson, 149 Burton Street; Jud
Avenue; Joseph Garland. N?wfane; Joseph Kruzel, North Tonawanda; Reuben Nordstrom, Oakfield;- Albert Henry Brandel,. 60 Hillery Avenue; Otu) F Krause.- Mayville; Herman i sunset Street.
Abraham Hoffman, 179 Levering Avenue.
Illegal use of junior operator's license rules: Edward Luszcz, 46
Graff, North Tonawanda; Leroy F. Clark, Batavia.
Reckless driving: Michael Courtney, 103 Tennesee Street; Ben John-eon. 17 Vary Street; Emmett E. Kennedy Appleton; Wm. A. Shauntz, Niagara Falls; Edward J. Green,
Grand larceny: Charles M Smith. 62 Fillmore Avenue; Herbert M. Brown, 47 West Chippewa Street; Emil Lang, 425 Genese* Street.
Petit larceny: Stanley Glinskt, 749 Sycamore Street,
Failure to notify commissioner in writing of change of residence: Jo-Jamestown.
Leaving scene of accident without ' ̂ „ f ; J f r ^ f t ' i . I f f ^ r • S reporting Clemens Steiner. North > Failure to satisfy Lor-Tonawanda; Herbert F. Steward, Bwain; John R. Lutgen, Fred on ia.
False statement on application: Joseph Maworski, 409 Sweet Avenue; Thomas Lyons, 31 Walnut Street.
Violation of junior operator's license rules: Clarence R. Locey,
Season^ Greetings F1ATCBINO
IE I MORSE Kiicsftfct Swing Star if Stags,
Rtrfit Vtfita ft Orefctrt EM< CACERES
Ttylsr ft All«n MeGtrnlcklKidd
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS 9 m» P M. $1.50
raine Bittier, Lockport; Louis Fle.nv ming, 24 Amsterdam Avenue; John Drewelow, 109 Ash Street.
Failure to file certificate of weight: Karl Obert, 832 Seneca St reel; Clayton A. Orton, 198 French Street.
Using a car in commission of a !£rime: Sam Sicurella, Farnhanv
•ff False statement on application: I Vincent Giarno 109 Hudsorr Street; George Dejac, 25 Tennessee' Street; Benjamin Factor, 61 Brunswick Boulevard; Raymond Henderson, 595 Clinton Street.
Eye and road tests required: Eugene Saunders, Portville.
FULL PRODUCnOfT SEEN Ford plant here awaits arrival
of necessary parts tf sufficient parts arrive here
from Detroit by Monday full pro-, duction in the Fuhrmann Drive
I plant of the Ford Motor Company | [will be resumed, officials said yes-. terday.
The strike in the Kelsey-Hayes [ plant at Detroit held up production j
; of passenger cars, because brake' j drums did not come here in suf fi-1 ' cient quantity. About 1,600 men! ! were laid off because of the short-1 1 age of material. '
A .
PATTERN 9121 Looking for a rroek that's full of
gay flattery, easy to make, and "Just right" for every occasion? Then of course yott'll choose the beloved shirtwaister—classic in line, but up-to-the-minute on all those smart details that fashion-wise women love! What's most important, Pattern 9121 can be made at home, by You, in the fabric you're fondest of —and in your favorite color. It won't take you an> time at all, either —for this pattern Is so simple to follow, that the most inexperienced at sewing will find it easy! You'll adore the free-action back (seen on only the most expensive frocks), long or short sleeves, and youthful Eton collar. Ideal in a cotton tweed or sheer wool. Complete Diagrammed Marian martin Sew Chart included.
Pattern 9121 may be ordered only in sizes 14, 16. 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 2%. yards 54 inch fabric and %• yard 2 inch ribbon. /
Send fifteen cents in coins or stamps <coins preferred) for each Marian Martin pattern. Be sure to write plainly your siae, name, address, and style number.
Spring ahead' Order our new Marion Martin pattern book, with its many helpful hints for a gay, new-seasOn wardrobe! You'll find after-
3 SMART GIRLS TOPS PROGRAM
AT LAFAYETTE
Thes:er Review
Deanna Dur bin; ether luminary, makes debut in talk
er; G-Man film added Deanna Durbln, the new radio
personality, makes her screen debut in Three Smart Girls, opening today at the Lafayette. The featured players are Binnle Barnes, Alice Brady, Ray Milland, Charles Winninger, John King and Mischa Auer.
Three Smart Girls tells the story of three daughters of a rich New Yorker w^o upsets their father's May-December romance with a gold
»digging blonde. The title roles' are played by Miss Durbin, Nan Grey and Barbara Read.
As the father, Charles Winninger essays a new type of role, Miss Barnes plays the part of the gold-digger and Miss Brady is cast as the blonde's scheming mother. Mischa Auer is seen as an impoverished nobleman whom the three youngsters hire to lure the adventuress away from their giddy parent.
Ray Milland and John King provide romantic interest as sweethearts of the two elder of the three girls. The remainder of the cast includes Ernest Cossart, Hobart Gav-anaugh, Lucille Watson and Nella Walker
You Can't Get Away With It heads the surrounding bill. This three-reel picture shows the inside working of the G-Men, headed by J. Edgar Hoover himself.
Other Christmas offerings are on the program.
DONALD DUCK STARRED Popular Disney character fea
tured in morning show Donald Duck, the popular new
Walt Disney character, will be featured in a special Christmas party at the Great Lakes. Saturday morning at 9 o'clock. A two-toour ptcf-gram of all-Donald Duck subjects will be presented at this show-Ten or more films will toe unreeled for audiences who fancy this novel little comedy character. To accommodate early arrivals the doors of the theater will be opened at 8.30 o'clock.
Among the subjects to be shown are: Orphans' Benefit, Mickey's Service Station, The Band Concert, The Fire Brigade, On Ice, Mickey's Polo Team, Orphans' Picnic, Mickey's Grand Opera, Judgment Day and Alpine Climbers?-' Technicolor, as well as black and white subjects will be shown.
Shea's Century Adolph Zukor presents The Jungle
Princess, talking picture romantic melodrama produced by E. Lloyd Sheldon, directed by William Thiele, adapted fitum Max Marcin's story by Cyril Hume, Gerald Geraghty and Gouvernew Morris, with Dorothy Lamour, Ray Milland, Akin Tamir-off, Lynns Overman, Molly Lamont, Mala, Hugh Buckler, Sally Martin and Roberta Law. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer promts General Spanky, a Hal Roach talking picture comedy directed by Fred Newmeyer and Gordon Douglas, story and adaptation by Richard Flournoy, Hal Yate. and JohnGuedel, with Spanky McFarland, Phillips Holmes, Irving Pichel, Ralph Morgan, Rosina Lawrence, Billie Thomas, Carl Switzer, Robert Middlemass, James Burtis, Louise Beavers and Willie Best.
dusk "glamour" frocks, flattering all-occasion styles for every age and type—from tot to stouter figure. Easy-to-sew fashions for junior and 'teen-age, too! Don't miss the "pin money" pages, bridal fashions, fabric or accessory tips! Book fifteen cents. Pattern fifteen cents. Twenty-five cents for both when ordered together. ' . _ • - •
Send your order to Pattern Department, Courier-Express, Buffalo, N. Y. Due to Customs we are unable to fill Canadian orders.
Parents who want to find diversion for t&eir youngsters after the excitement? of receiving Christmas presents *»nes can do a lot worse than take them to the Century, where some grand entertainment by the Our Gang awaits them in General Spanky, plus some rip-snorting melodram* in The Jungle Princess. The latter is a bit bloodthirsty in spots but, on the whole, harmless and the sort of stuff 'teen-age children usually enjoy.
Jungle Urincess, saving most of its thrills for the final footage when a horde of apes comes to the rescue of a party of distressed white folks in the lialay jungle, is only a mediocre Itory but serves to introduce a (pamorous personality in Dorothy Lumour, also of the radio, who plays the title role. Miss Lamour exhibits plenty of physical charm and personality that indicates she has a future in films. She and Ray Ifilland click with splendjd performances under difficulties Lynne 0#rman ' s dry humorv a chimpanzee's comical antics and Uie clever work of a big tiger helps hold attention when the action of the story drags. Akim Tamiroff, Mala, Molly Lamont. Hugh Buckler and Sally Martin also do well.
Milland, deserted by his native boys, is found injured by Dorothy, a female Tarzan who has grown up with an Obedient tiger. She falls in love with Milland, which causes embarrassment no end because he's already engaged, and nurses him back to health. When he returns to his white friends, she follows. The natives, convinced she is a witch, seize her Ond eventually are going to kill thjf whole party, when the apes show up.
General Spanky is a grand* picture for the children, with Spanky, "Alfalfa" Switzer, "Buckwheat" Thomas and the rest of the Gang as members if the kind of army vkkis want to join and grown-ups remelm-ber fondly. A Civil War story, it is handled in good taste, giving offense to neither side. -
Spanky and Buckwheat, befriended by Phillips Holmes, a Confederate captain, organize an army to protect the wifmen and other noncom-batants. *Ifie Northern forces occupy the ration but Holmes, wounded, is traOped "within the Union lines. He is captured by Irving Pichel, wh# conducts a rump court-martial and sentences him to be shot as a any. Spanky and Alfalfa, seeking a "higher authority," go to
HOUSEHOLD o4RTS Estate Valued at $8,700 Letters of administration of the
estate of Arthur W. Meaner, found shot to death after a double murder and suicide Saturday night to his East Aurora home, were issued by Surrogate Louis B. Hart to the victim's son, Albert R. Meaner, 1J7 Commercial Street, yesterday. A value of $8,700 was placed on ttoe estate.
• Know the
PATTERN 575 thrill of creating
Beauty, as you crochet this handsome cloth of string, for tea or dinner table. You've never-seen a simpler, more easily "memorized "key' square than this, either. It ^measures 4Vi inches and when repeated and joined, makes many a smart household accessory^ Place mats require but a few squares—centerpiece, too —and before you know it you have a complete luncheon set, or mats for vanity or buffet. In pattern 5755
you will find detailed Instructions for ; making the'square shown and joining it to make various articles; illustrations of it and of all stitches used; color suggestions; material requirements.
To obtain this pattern send ten cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) to Household Arts Dept., Courier-Express, Buffalo, N. Y. Due to Customs we are unable to fill Canadian orders. Be sure to write plainly your name, address and pattern number.
AT FAMOUS*
McVAN'S NITE CLUB
NIAGARA sad HERTEL A M o d e m Version of * Famous
Old Burlesque i THE <>N-C/\\72
Introduced By
DORIS "B«n«-B*nf" CRAVELLE Dynamic Mistress of Ceremonies
Singing Torek Songs
the Union general (Ralph Morgan) jwho proves himself a regular fellow, permitting Holmes to rejoin his sweetheart, Rosina Lawrence.
Moviegoers who have heard Alfalfa Switzerfs previous vocal efforts will not want to miss his rendition of Just Before the Battle, Mother.
J. H. Q;
Your ^aby and Mine
By MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED
movie! The girl who has thrilled millions on EDDIE CANTOR'S Radio Hour, becomes overnight the most startling find in motion pictures. Hear the lovely voice of
DEANNA DURBIN in
The emphasis upon the necessity for parents to "co-operate" in child-training methods has given rise to the confused belief that in order to be successful parents must think exactly alike upon all subjects. We know such a situation to be absurd and impossible. Parents are individuals and naturally their ideas and attitudes differ.-
The father in a family may be tremendously in favor of the hair brush r s s a method of correction. The mother may be as violently opposed to it. The child will not be harmed, necessarily, if when father is immediately concerned in his discipline, he vses the method of which he approves and in which he has faith, not unless mother rushes to gather him in her arms and coo, "Mean old Daddy to hurt my baby so."
Neither will the child be immune to the mother's gentler disciplinary methods provided the father does not say gruffly, "You're too easy— give him a good spanking."
In the world the child is fated to be acted upon by innumerable antagonistic-forces, for the world is made upj of individuals who hold vastly different beliefs and espouse different programs and attitudes. The home is the child's world and in a limited sense gives him his first taste of these varying influences.
Let him but know that his parents disagree and he is torn between his lyoalty to one or the other. But let them imbue him Iwith a respect for both of them and despite their different treatment he accepts it, without antagonism or resentment, as just the difference between Daddy and Mother.
Co-operation there must be; T»ut it can be the co-operation of two persons holding divergent viewpoints, each of whom is fair enough to respect the other's. ! Our leaflet on "Obedience and
Discipline" is suggested as reading matter for botfi parents and it may be had for a self-addressed and three-cent stamped envelope sent to Myrtle Meyer Eldred care of the Your Baby and Mine department of | this newspaper.
of Other Entertainers to Wish You a Merry X m t i end Happy N e w Year.
Make Your New Year's Reservations Now—
Call DE. SSS7 Tonight
3 Shows Nitely, 9, 12, 2 :30 . N E V E R A COVER C H A R G E J
H
with brief comments by
DR, HARRY EMERSON F0SDICK
STATION W K B W BUFFAL0
MARINE TRUST COMPANY OF BUFFALO
and the Marine Midland Banks serving 29 New York Statecommi
i
\ .
A New UNIVERSAL Picture with B INNI BARNES
ALICE BRADY • RAY MILLAND [CHARLES WINNINGER • MISCHA AUER
Nan Grey • Barbara Read Directed by Henry Koster
Associate Producer, Joseph Pasternak CHARIN R. ROOMS, Exocutivo Producer
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TO-DAY! NEW L A F A Y E T T E t S J
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EXTRA
"YOU CAN'T GET AWAY WITH IT"
t this Yuletide Reason we pauses to extendi to all our customers and friends our sincere best wishes for a
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Untitled Document
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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069
www.fultonhistory.com