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Show 111! Li 1 &"- a ....J Bomhrrs 'Spi'ak'i The American airmen finally delivered de-livered a message which Tokyo understands. un-derstands. Not from an inkwell, but from a bomb rack. The American filers reminded Japan Ja-pan Ui;:t the open city of Manila was nut a closed urave bjt an i pen wound. London, Warsaw, Shanghai and Nankirs are avenged because the bur'iir." sea of Pearl Harbor is still burning in American hearts. Japan is entitled to receive what she gave. Japn gave no warning at Hawaii and she gave no mercy at Bat.ian. These are cruel words, but these are cruel times The blazing cities of the Axis nations are the only lighthouses to civilization. The way to bring peace to our cities is to bring war to theirs. The foundation founda-tion for international justice must be dug with 2. 000-pound bombs. This is the lesson they have asked for and we must drive it home with bayonets: Where our planes can fly. our armies will march. And where our armies can march, their dictators dic-tators will kneel. Who are the legislators hold-In;; hold-In;; up passage of the bill that wuuld raise the pay of soldiers and sailors? . . . Da, Ha Dep't: The Jap t an now join the other naps who thought the oceans could protect them. 7 us .. .Veil' York: The oM-faidiioned private houses on West 52nd Street between 5th and Cth Avenues where the veteran New Yorkers pull down the blinds every eventide to shut out "Swing Street" . . The J. P. Morgan mansion covering an entire block of Mudison Avenue real estate. Boasting Boast-ing one of the most sordid facades this side of a "Dead End" movie . . The emergency case internes nt Dcllevue Hospital, who read detective de-tective stories between life-and-death assignments . . . Times Square the "glamorous street" where the corners are occupied by a drug store, a brauhaus, a cigar shop and a hot dog stand. The pure-while Squibb Kldg. on Fifth Avenue, a well-manicured finger-tip pointing at a star . . . The Kiverside Drive jitterwhacky set that dance on the grass to the rhythm from nearby Claremont Inn . . . The hundreds of heads that pop out of as many windows in the Wall Street sector whenever two cars bump noisily . . . The noonday noon-day hoss players making their wagerswilling wag-erswilling to put more across a nag's nose than on their wives' backs . . . The wailing of the zoo tenants in the dead of night a nuisance nui-sance to the midtown (near the park) dwellers . . . E. Cantor's $2.98 hat. The Hoy Apartments In mid-Harlem. Birthplace of the Fiat-Foot Floogie (with the F-F) . . . Alf Lunt, the star, washing dishes at the Stage Door Canteen . . . The Woolworth edifice, which no longer has a 5-and-Dimery on the site . . . Hotel America, where most of the circus performers tepee . . . The famed showman supping with two midgets several of whom helped him keep the wolf from the door with their talent . . . The two live penguins, that serve as ass't head-waiters head-waiters at the Penguin on E. 51 St. . . . New Street, one of the oldest Tark Avenue's sore spot at 50th Street, where the swanky sector suddenly sud-denly goes Brooklyn with a large garage, a pet shop, a butcher store and a cigar store . . . Mrs. Katzen-berg, Katzen-berg, the affable first-nighter, who rarely misses a premifcre. They'd hold the curtain if she were tardy . . . George S. Kaufman, one of the town's wittiest, who wears a melancholy look , . . The big bows on Moss Hart's neckties.. , . Lucy Monroe, the Star-Spangled Soprano-table, Soprano-table, who is also ready to sing the Chinese National Anthem or the Jewish Jew-ish anthem, Katikvah . . . Popular Danny Kay's giggle. Scrambled Egs: Vox poppers have to be good to get their letters printed. Too many professionals pro-fessionals are crashing the dailies, discussing the country's welfare. The smaUies reporting the first rob-In rob-In dlcjn't have a look-in . . . The public has overruled the reviewers on "The Moon Is Down." It is buying buy-ing it big . . . Wonder how harsh and tin-panny your voice has to be before you can get a job as a commentator com-mentator in the newsreels. Some of the femmes could saw their way out of a jail with those pipes . . . It's a snide trick to quote part of a guy's remarks to make him look silly, take it from one who's done it. Sounds In the Night: At Bill Bcr-tolotti's: Bcr-tolotti's: "He's on the road to successjust suc-cessjust another of Broadway's clicking heels" ... At Roseland: "Broadway is where celebrities meet each other but never half way" . . . In the Century Room: "Can you keep a secret -because I can't!" ... At the Bowman Room: "Did you read what our bombers did to Vokoha-ha-ha-ha!" ... At Spivy's: "Some times he gets a little irksome irk-some with a japital J" . . . In the Hickory House: "Original? The crook walks around with a bit of carbon paper In each earl" |