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    am g lad to m eet you,” said Bea Bailey, in the cur­rent show. “I hope I look as good as you do years from now” . . .1 4*And I trust that life treats you Well and makes you as happy as 1 am,” replied Jean Ackerman, who learned how to laugh—afte? wasting her tears for years. Late Watch Table-talk: Count-eess di Frasso is back from Mex­ico. Spent the last day there in the hoosegow for motoring over gov’t shrubbery . . . Paramount won’t let anyone see ::Bell Tolls” before the premiere. Such airs . . . A. E. Gallatin, the modern! art connoisseuer, is doing the bibligraphy of Max Beerbohm... Julian Boyd, head of the Prince-ton Library, is putting Mencken’s letters b e t w e e n covers . . . Charles Lincoln, ex-M. E. at the old World, resigned from the Times the other day. Clashed With Bruce Rae . . . Brooks At­kinson, Times critic, writes chums he was glad to get back to Chungking, after taking naps in a sleeping bag for 30 nights with the army . .. Navy Lt. John Mason Brown, who sat in the best pews at first-nights (as critic), Jpent a night’s leave standing up to see “Doughgirls.” Sightseeing Bus: The place 555 town that tattos your social se­curity number on your chest or arms . . . The real American Indian, long braids, blue trousers, red silk shirt—carrying a cane— on 42nd street near 5th . . . The new dating spot for uniformed lads and their gals—Father Duf­fy’s statue on Broadway near 4th . . . The quotes from Nazi leaders in Radio City’s “This Is the Enemy” exhibit. So fantastic they seem made up, but are real . . . The wolves who loiter around the 5th Avenue Library lions waiting for the lambs . . . The Greenwich Village cafeteria with tables reserved for Village ec­centrics— so that others may en­joy the nightly “show” they put on . . . The lovely trees in Wash­ing Square—which once served as gallows for public hangings. Recommended to Diversion Seekers: Enric Madriguera’s ver­sion of “Adios,” which he ruhm-bauthored . . . Prof. D. Broek- San’s rhythms . . . Pretty Mary oward, songstress at Monte Carlo Beach . . . Claudette Col­bert’s cinemagic in Para’s “No *fime for Love” . . . The Chanti­cleers at La Vie Parisienne . . . Lum Fong’s Confucius Cocktail: , d?feree-quarter ounce brandy, dit­to orange curacao, ditto lemon juice, plus a dash of anisette. Wa-Hooooo! plus a dash of anisette. Wa-Hooo! Memos of a Midnighter: Soph Tucker broke the H’wood Flor­entine Garden record . . . The Follies girls were offered a 25- cents-a-week raise! . . . Sgt. Jack Blaine is in Africa . . . Mary Mul-hern McCarthy, former Follies girl, has shelved 40 pounds since her illness . . . Rose Teed now says she isn’t sure if she’ll wed her feller or some dramatic school . . . Diana Harris, who danced professionally with Ted Trevor, is now brunette . . . Sev­eral socialite mothers of tiny babies, desperate for milk (dur­ing the skip-a-day deliveries), phoned swank night clubs, which obliged . . . Phil Curtis, a mid­get (3 ft. 7) was drafted! . . . Larry Adler’s autobiog (“From Hand to Mouth” ) will be Double-day- Doran’d soon . . . The June 26 issue of the Satevepost will unveil the hatcheck racket. Broadway Smalltalk: Since the news has been confirmed that Chevalier is a Nazi collabora­tionist, why doesn’t that station stop playing his recordings? . . . The Sheraton Roof features this Summer concoction; Iced coffee laced with Creme de Cacao . . . ? * Madeleine Carroll says she make no films for the duration . . .1 Eddie Cantor is making a flicker at RKO. He tried to get Cary Grant to play Jessel in it. Mrs. Grant (Babs Hutton) allegedly thumbsdowned the plan — “not . dignified,” she said . . . What be­comes of chorus girls? Well, Leona Olsen, Puddy Smith and Margie Young (three of the pret­tiest in “Banjo Eyes,” etc.) have quit the stage and dwell in For­est Hills. Margie and Puddy are having bee - a - bee - whys, and Leona’s groom is in uniiform . . . It’s a girl for the Richard Ryans of the Fortune Ryan clan . . . The Tom Fizdales have fizzed . . . A Mexicanning . . . “Early to Bed,” due next week, has 19 backers . . . Old Straw Hats in the Wind Dep’t: “J. Walter Thompson has given up the Jer-gens account to push a rival hand Sounds in the Night: In Reu­ben’s: “Some day that bore will fall into somebody’s deep yawn!” . . . At Lindy’s: “In short, Jessel wrote his book with the shades up” . . . At the Village Bam: “He’s just been cast as the lead in the latest moron joke” . . . At the Havana-Madrid: “If you buy a woman a $1,000 fur coat you’re called a sucker. If you let her buy you a drink—you’re a gig­olo” . . . At Ruban Bleu: “What’s I his double-Crossley?” . . . At Theodore's: “Oh, for the day when we find out how much Tokio can Take-io!” . . . At the 18: “She went into tantrums, rages, creams and upsetera” . . . At the Cub: “If she gains any more weight, she’ll be able to eat I oats.” inmatesxnemseivef a trial and punish the wrestling I instructor. As p u n i s h m e n t , James said, the Japanese ap­pointed the instructor leader of the community planning board. The instructor, who taught judo, a form of wrestling, twice broadcast over the camp public address system, James said, promising each inmate 10,000 yen for loyalty to the emperor. In the broadcasts, the instructor identified himself as an agent of the Japanese imperial govern­ment in the camp, James said, and received applause from the assembled inmates. “He told them Japan was sure to win the war and that everyone who fell in line would be paid 10,000 yen when the war was over,” James testified. I. Uchida, whose arrest on a charge of assaulting another camp resident with a deadly weapon provoked a week of rioting in which Caucasian ad­ministrative officers were held in siege, apparently never was tried, James said. Rioting stopped when Uchida was released at the personal di­rection of Interior Secretary Harold L. Ickes, after the camp administrator, and John Collier, head of the U S. Indian service,! were unable to decide what should be done. Ickes conferred with the war department, James said, and di­rected Uchida’s release. “He was picked up by the FBI after his release from the camp jail and taken to Yuma to face an old extortion charge,” James said. “But he came back to camp the same day I don’t know what happened at Yuma, but after his return, he was turned over to the camp Japanese for trial on the assault charge “I don’t believe he was ever tried.” sponsored by tne Grace community church will be held on the government lawn at] 8:00 o’clock. Dick Chase and Lionel Leon-; ard of Boulder City now are working on the coast. Flag day in Boulder City will be celebrated in the evening by a parade in which local organ­izations will take part. The pa­rade will form at 6:30 p.m. and begin marching at 7 o’clock. Vegas Youth Gets O.T.C. Assignment Corporal Stanley P. Doty of 408 Bonneville street, Las Vegas, will leave shortly for Fort Bel-voir, Virginia, to attend the of­ficer candidate school of the army engineer’s corps. He is at present stationed at Las Vegas army air field with a base head­quarters and air base squadron. Corporal Doty is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Doty of Moapa, Nevada. He attended San Diego State College for two years after graduating from La Jolla, California, high school, when he entered the armed serv­ice last July 16th, he was em­ployed by the Nevada state high­way department. His wife, the former Miss Mabel G. Quinn of Rapid City, South Dekota. resides at present in Denver, Colorado. On January 1, 1943, there were 25 million A ration books for passenger cars in the hands of consumers, 6,400,000 of the B books, and 3,600,000 C books. ary w tier, j officel Apj| the Kingn taininl are trl will a| then the bc| plans in the man tl will b| night. " to be BMI hi Swil To The | the^ at tf on Fit| 7:30 three cutivel Suthel annoul ThiJ fered I instru has b| officel the c<| age, mers.l repor| day registl The nazi “Bauleiter” for the Baltic states has ordered the re­moval of all church bells as a total mobilization measure. Do You Need Money? We Make JEW ELRY LO ANS W arner Diam ond Co. 111 Fremont Ave. Open Eves POSSE CAPTURES LIONS ELIZABETH, N. J., June 12 (UP)—A ossee of 50 policemen and firemen armed with tommy guns and pistols captured four runaway lions from a visiting circust oday and then stood back warily while two other escaped lions were coaxed into cages by their trainer. AUTHORIZED F R IG ID A IR E SERVICE ZX CAbol 310 Ogdon Phono 1234 ? Stc| BONNIE WOOD R E D U C E Take Off Inches THE Stauffer W ay 404 Fremont Phone 2324 / CARDINAL A PISETTA Distributer* ef Cikuore Products I industrial Oils & Grease for all Jobs Diesel OU and Commercial Oil Storage Tanks of AU Sises Plant 810 So. Main Phone 435 S ILL'S It's New! It's Different! FIFTH AND CHARLESTON STS. • Barbecued Meats ? Chicken and Steak Dinners • Fountain Service • Deluxe Hamburgers -:- 1 4 -H ou r Snappy Service! W H ILE UP TOW N M AKE WIM PY’S YOUR __________ EATING HEADQUARTERS___________ International Correspondence Schools SHORT COURSES FOR BMI WORKERS Architectural — Chemical — Civil — Electrical Mechanical — Structural Engineering and 400 Other Subjects 212 So. 2nd St. Palace Theatre Bldg. Open Eves. Phono 1292 SHOOT THE JAPS Ray Guns— Sky Fighters and Air Raiders Slot Machines and Novelty Games PLAYLAND ARCADE AND COCKTAIL LOUNGE First and Carson