The Goldthwaite Eagle (Goldthwaite, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, October 13, 1944 Page: 3 of 16
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THE GOLDTHWAITg EAGLE— FRIDAY, OCTOBER It, 1044
pedal Friday, 13th
■JINX SHOW
RROR PICTURE and CARTOON
to tike jnm SHOW After the Game
OARS Of FHR - THRILLS - CHILLS
FOR ALL
FRIDAY RIGHT, OCTOBER 13,11 P. I.
Admission-
40c Adults *' r
20c Kids
25c Football Teams and Pep Squad Members
(Tax included in all prices)
MELBA THEATRE
GOinffllMIE, TEXAS
Florida was flnt vtaited oa
"Pascua Florida'’ or Balter Sun*
day
--o-
The largest Roman Catholic
shrine In the United States 1#
located at Aurleavllle In New
York 8tate. It was erected la,
memory of the first North'
American Saints, a group of Jee-
utl missionaries who were exe-
cuted by the Mohawk Indians aS
this place.
Although Thomas Jefferson la
generally credited with the flraS
architectural plan for a collegw
In America, when he bulH the
university of Charlottesville
Va., the plan of Union College gft
Schenectady, N. Y, is actuaitr
six years older. It was deslgnsd
by a Frenchman, Joseph Jae-
tjues Ramee.
-o-
The region within the present
limits of the State of Idaho wae
Included In the Louisiana, Pur-
chase of 1803. Idaho was lnclud-.
ed first In Orebon and subse-
quently In Wasnlngton. It wae
made a Territory In 1883 and
admitted to statehood In 1800.
L
California, signifying “hot
furnace,” Is derived from the
Spanish. *•
ELBA
HEATRE
----• -* - ~ —-r- ---—_I_.trf-f-
GOLDTHWAITE, TEXAS
Thursday, Friday, Saturday Matinee
‘MY BEST GAL’
JANE WITHERS — JIMMY LYDON
. —AND—
‘OUTLAW ROUNDUP’
PHE TEXAS RANGERS — DAVE O’BRIEN, JIM
NEWILL, GUY WILKERSON
— ALSO —
Chapter Twelve—‘THE DESERT MM’
Ihncial FriSay 13Hi JIHX SHOff-11 P.S.
HORROR PICTIIE
ADM.
20c Kids; 25c Teams and Pep Squads;
40c Adults
Saturday Right Only - 7:15 TO 11:30 P.M.
‘THE IMPOSTOR’
JEAN GABIN — ALLYN JOSLYN _
Saturday Prevue -- Sunday -Monday
Matinee nd Right
‘PASSAGE TO MARSEILLE’
JjUMPHREY BOGART—yiCHELE_jlORGAN^
Tuesday and Wedaesday
ALI BABA ARB THE FORTY THIEVES’
(In Technicolor)
MARIA MONTEZ — JON HALL
; if-
“ALI BABA ANB TBE
FORTY THIEVES” AT
MELBA TUES.-WED.
“All Baba" and the Forty
Thieves," Producer Paul Mal-
vern’s Universal Technicolor
feature at the Melba Theatre
next Tuesday and Wednesday,
which co-stara Marla Montez,
Jon Hall and Turhad Bey, Is a
melange of “fiction, fantasy and
fact,” In the words of Edmund
L. Hartmann, who wrote the
original screen play.
“It Is fiction In that we have
taken liberties with the char-
acter of All Baba, and written a
new tale about him—one de-
signed purely as entertainment,”
explained Hartmann.
“It Is fantasy in Its treatment
of ’Open Sesame’ and the 40
casks, Which, you remember,
were used to conceal the thieves.
They are the onty“Indian ets <jr
■props’ that we have borrowed
from the Arabian Nights tale—
and we’ve taken poetic license,
If I may call it that, with them.
“It Is fact in that our story
is bAsed on historical accuracy.
I was a student of the Khans
and Mongols long before Pro-
ducer Malvern sent me to write
his story. I borrowed my villain
from, history.
“Hulagu. Khan and the Mon-
gols in ‘All Baba and the Forty
Thieves’ Isn't lust a character of
the screen. He actually existed.
He was the grandson of Oenhis
Khan, prototype to today’s mili-
tary dictators and tyrants.
“I discovered that. In 1258,
Hugalu led his Mongols In an
Invasion of Bay dad, and that Is
the hlstorlca' incident I used in
'All Baba’.”
t _ —- ■ >•
“THE IMPOSTOR"
One look at Jean Oabin Is suf-
ficient proof that he 1$ back In
the element he likes and under-
stands best, the type of realistic
role which made him France's
Number One actor and the out-
standing dramatic star of the
continent.
As the title player In "The
Impostor,” which Oabin's friend.
Jtflien Duvivler, produced and
directed for Universal, Oabin
wean a soiled French Amy uni-
form and a beard which Is well
over R week old. An oversees
cap sits «n the back of his head,
•nd his prematurely grey hair
hangs down In front.
“The Impostor” comes to the
Melba Theatre Saturday night.
Oabln's character la a bitter
and disillusioned victim of so-
ciety. Then he Joins De OauUe,
and Is regenerated through the
Intense fighting spirit of the
Free French. Through the pa-
triotism and devotion of a group
of soldiers he becomes a natural
leader.
Hi
“17 " allies this week—and
he hasn’t seen his own g.^odson!
i-r—.-iseJ
“MY BEST OAL"
It could only happen In Hol-
lywood ... on the “back-tot” of
the Republic studios. In the San
Fernando Valley, where they
were filming Jane Wlther’s star-
ring picture. "My Best Oal,” now
mlg at the Melba
' rpotncHT the Doctor was hoping to finish
I early, so he could take a two-hour traiu
p and natch a look at hie new 4-day-oid
ideoa. But no—the phone caught him
.in. So now be’aoff to deliver Mr*. Johnson!”
Doctor* have always been 'round-the-clock
i. But since Pearl Harbor, with half of our
Iciana in the armed force*, each civilian
ar ia more in demand than ever. He i* oa
:«day to an average of 1700 people.
>ur doctor’s minutes may be lifesaving
t .... too precious to waate. Help him save
ti. - f >r people who need him urgently, for
f in an emergency, by remembering
tl .-.s four helpful thing* when yew am iDi
Piioise him first. Ted him ss clearly at you
ran wlut's wrong. Let him decade whether he
ebould came to see yon, or yon aboaU go to him.
Go To UM whenever you are able. Howae vMts
taka lots of your doctor'a time—time when
•omeoeae dee may really naed him urgently.
Keep toot aptointmxnt promptly, don’t
[«>*tpooe it; make it at hie convenience, ao that
he can plan hie crowded hours better.
•Vi. k
Follow TOOR DOCToa’D SDVSCl Da the lettrr-
ao that youf trouble doean’t drag on, get com
plicated, or need extra attention fro’- ’
SAVE YOU* DOCTOR? TINF
BRING YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS TO
HUDSON BROS.,
Druggists
“WHAT YOU WANT — WHEN YOU WANT IT”.
cal section of New York City’s
famous Greenwich Village dis-
trict.
Tb the naked eye the set looks
lncongrcous—a busy Njw York
City street, automobiles In evi-
dence, street urchins dancing
on the sidewalks for pennies,
pedestrians passing to and from
... a restaurant ... a dwelling
house, a music shop amidst the
rolling hills on the sooth and
the Sierra Madre nuran tains to
the north, tery much In evl-
•1ST BIRTHDAY
Mrs. Mary Womack wishes to
thank all her friends for being
so nice and thoughtful of lfer
on her Met birthday.
---o-—_____
Mr. and Mrs. Bari D. McCord
of Dallas are here spending this
week with her stater, Mrs. Set-
tle Uhrbach.
Sunday afternoon guests In
the home of Mrs. Hettle Uhr-
bach were Hr, and Mr*. Sam
Taylor of Ban Baba and Mr. and
Mrs. Oram Burk of
. ......«*■■■ 0 ■ 1
Dwight Nlckota and wife via*
itpd their mothers and otheg
relatives over the last week-end.
Mrs Myrtle Stewart and Mrs.
Wayne Maasey spent the week-
end In Temple with their stater.
MTS. Henry Cryer. and family.
' Mrs Walter Martin of Bt«
8pring spent a few days recent-
ly with her stateT, Mrs. Oeorgg
Bohannon, and family.
Mr. and Mra. Leonard Suttcs
of Brown wood vtaited his pan-
rata. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Sutton,
Sunday.
;.y f * |
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Wilson, Ernest E. The Goldthwaite Eagle (Goldthwaite, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, October 13, 1944, newspaper, October 13, 1944; Goldthwaite, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1091093/m1/3/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Jennie Trent Dew Library.