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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 13

Location:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

a 1 3 1 orth by Northwent-V tp P(pz Til 1 1 1 6 Stall 1 AT 1HI UGH Of THI ClOCK UNCI 1172 THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER. MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 17, 1959 By BARBARA L. WILSON a case of mistaken Relaxing over a martini in the HEAVENLY RINGS volved in identity. more concerned with having fun than building suspense. And the Alfred Hitchcock's new thriller, "North by Northwest" at the cocktail lounge of a Manhattan hotel, he suddenly is whisked at Down-to-Earlh Prices picture provides a treat for audi I mi- Grant made for him were tame in comparison to those created in the current film.

But with the accustomed Grant agility and finesse he endures everything from a runaway automobile to a Stanley, is one of those no holds away by two henchman to a Long barred films. For better than Island estate where he is accused ences, although it would be even more effective with additional two hours, he lets the Technicolor melodrama ramble across the pruning. of being an American intelligence operative by foreign agent James Mason. When the first attempt VistaVision screen while glee Ernest Lehman's plot, as suggested by Hitchcock, pictures on his life fails, Grant turns crop dusting plane throwing out poison gas and bullets. In between threats, he exchanges torrid dialogue and kissesreminiscent of scenes with amateur sleuth and starts off on fully setting traps for his hero, the likes of which haven't been seen since the days Rudolph Rassendale was trying to eliminate Hairbreadth Harry.

In this one, Hitchcock seems a pursuit to unmask his would-be killers. CAUGHT IN MIDDLE Cary Grant as a neophyte in adventure; boredom has driven his first two wives into the divorce court. As an ulcerless Madison Avenue executive, Grant is in- More than words themselves, they are the embodiment of your hopes, dreams, realizations. And because It is perhaps the most important purchase of your lifetime, your engagement ring from Kind's means the more because with it goes unquestioned prestige without added price. Come in see them all let us tailor a divided-payment plan for you! Other solitaires from $75.00 to $5000 Vi et.

$285.00 tax Incl i Grace Kelly in "To Catch Thief" with a glamorized and! sophisticated Miss Saint, Thej Headlined as the murderer of a United Nations official, uranf tongue-in-cheek film is aided by Mason's dispassionate perform- finds himself the target of both the police and Mason. He takes I iv. Jr I 4 i Mme. Landowska, 80, Centurviance and the dryly amused por- flight aboard the 20th (Limited and meets mysteryjtrayals Jessie Royce Landis woman Eva Mane Saint who s. KIND sons OEMOLOG1ST DIVIDED PAYMENT PLAN SUGGESTION I Pric (Incl.

Pad. Toil Down Paymaxt 75 00 lalatica 210.00 ms. S79.00 atr mo. No Carryiaf Charf II Prlca duel. Pad.

Toil 00 Dawa Poymaat 45.00 Solonea 2S4.40 12 mot. r8 S2I.20 par ma. lacludlag Corrylnq Chorqo Dies; Harpsichordist Dr.C. G.ALGASE DENTIST PLASTIC PLATES CHESTNUT STREET Af Broad PE 5-8370 Open Wed. 'til Closed Saturday LAKEVILLE, Aug.

16 (AP). Madame Wanda Landowska, 80, noted harpsichordist, died Sunday at her Shopping Center MO 4-3150 Opar) Fri. 'til Optn Stturday gives him refuge in her compartment until they reach Chicago. Following a dangerous interval there, Grant carries his chase to Rapid City, S. where the action is climaxed atop Mount Rushmore.

The obstacles posed by Hitch I'PI Telephoto MADE IN ONE DAY home here. She was recognized as a scholar on Bach, Mozart A It M'I HnM i01 MARKET ST. Actress Vera Miles wears her new hairdo, a "feminine crewcut," to party in Rome. She cut it for a movie role. tuoso and settled in Paris.

But and Haydn. LXST CONCERT IN 1954 8il to I Wtliwt I-S10O Ir-ronrtltlnimt cock in the four previous pictures she shifted to the harpsichord. She made her American debut in 1923 with the Philadelphia Or Her last public concert was in New York City in 1954. However, chestra under Leopold Stokowski. she continued to make phono graph recordings, including an album of Haydn sonatas released Her first New York recital was in 1924.

RETURNED TO EUROPE Mme. Landowska returned to earlier this summer. A native of Warsaw, Mme Landowska became a piano vir 's mighty Jet fleet keeps on growing Europe in the 1930s but came back to this country in 1941 as a refugee from the Germans. Other Obituaries On Page 16 Barely 5 feet tall, she wore a type of loose dress on stage. Her husband, Henri Lew, a folklorist, was killed in an auto accident in 1919.

323H Judge Palmer i Dies in Potsville Special to The Inquirer POTTSVILLE, Aug. 16. Cyrus M. Palmer, President Judge of the Schuylkill County Court for the last 19 yean and a judge here for 28 years, died Sunday in Pottsville Hospital. He was 72.

TONIGHT AT 1:30 Mats. Wed. Sat. 2:30 1.M-2.00 On Wttk Only FA YE EMERSON in S. N.

Bihrmin's Cemtdy Hit "BIOGRAPHY" SEATS NOW Box Office Optn 10 A. M. tt 1:30 GR 7-1700 Stats Alt at John tyanamakar, Gimbals I CENTRAL CITY TICKET OFFICE i ynm A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania Law School, he was nnmmmm iiumMnnniihini. xasK elected to the State Legislature in 1915. He served a term as District Attorney of Schuylkill county and two terms in Congress as representative from the 13th district.

Surviving are his wife, the former Erma Marchant, and two daughters, Mrs. George Craig and Mrs. Donald Dolbin. Services will be held at2 P. M.

Wednesday at the residence, 1915 Mahan-tongo Pottsville. Woman Beaten, STARTS TOMORROW A VIRGINIA MICHAEL if MAYO O'SHEA "TUNNEIJF LOVE" it. Wit. 2 JO Sit. JO 4 30 Phani ST I S24B: Plili.il MimB NEXT WEEK if MAICAIIT HUMAN If I "THI HAPPY TIME" 8 Tossed From Car READING, Aug.

16. An elderly woman, brutally beaten and apparently tossed from a passing car, was found unconscious in a field in Douglass township, 10 miles south of here Sunday. State police said the woman, mm who was unidentified, suffered fractures of the skull and jaw. She was admitted to Memorial Hospital, Pottstown, in critical condition. Sti.

TO S-41 ir Hiilt PINAL WEEK JANE MORGAN III 9 Killed, 5 Hurt In 2-Car Crash COLUMBIA, Aug. 16 (AP). Nine persons were killed and five others injured in a two-j car collision on U. S. Route 40 aWMW liianfmrr Sfc, ri mMWl1 with KEN HARVEY HAI 9-9000 ar Wrltt In 12, Hatttnttli.

N. I. ChlH (rn with talk tiekit lirtkutf oatlt far Sit. P. M.

iknr. OPENS Rogers Hammerstsin's A us. 24 "OKLAHOMAl" "wwmnmnwiw Xiwk! 1 VKSteef aniuu 'emvm WmawtJ jmhuvuiimmwhi. wiiuMMiwiiMm WWJ' about eight miles east of here Sunday night. Seven persons were dead when authorities arrived at the scene.

Two others died at Boone County Hospital shortly after their 171111 4 8 Youths Face VWWWWW'VWia' Jet. 202 1 13, Davoa, Pa. -OPENS T0NIQHT 1 WK. ONLY Hammtrttolo't wonderful musical 77. Theft Charges KM.

NIAGARA 4-SO00 Eight teen-agers, believed by police to be members of a single Mhil ordrra write Devon, Pa. CalK ttitltttt ItH wit taek tnka) linhuil ay idilt far P. M. tat 3 OPENS "CALL ME MA0AM" -AUft. 24 Comtonce Sannatt gang, were arrested over the week end and charged with a series of 22 burglaries in the last yvvm'fW'i six weeks in southern New Jersey, Camden authorities disclosed Sunday.

Police said fix other teen-agers may be implicated. The burglaries, which netted ties finite feto itm's croy fHay Ntw Haaa Pa- VOIanlaaf 2-2041 'INAl WliK NOW PIAYINO Vickt Msrrai Its CUMMINGS MATHESON BERGERE "THE LAUTREC PRINT" Vlv.t. Matt. Wad. A lot.

2 P. $2535 in cash and $1785 in merchandise, were at Templin Motors, 1388 Haddon Camden; the Hertz Hardware, N. Main Medford, and a liquor store, Route 38 and Browning Pennsauken. Also looted were 10 service stations, several stores and laundro-mats. Police said none of the money OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! Bior mercnanaise was recovered, i The arrests were made bv De-i Infectives Joseph Hainsworth and Walter Zimolong.

I Arrested were: Henry Brown, New SENSATIONAL RIDES Tl RNPIKK KIDE RO R-A-FI-4NE Tl'NNEL OK I.OVB ASTRA SUPER JET 17, of Federal st. near 27th, Camden; William Brothers, no address; James Mentz, 19, 36th st. near Westfield Camden; James Hansen, 18, of Holman Delair; William Neely, 18, of Rowe st. near 33d, Camden; Charles Keller, 18, of S. Merrimac Camden; Claude Bennett, 17, of Sewell st.

near Morse, Camden, and Al Fine food. Cont. Bnt. vvwu xmm: -ytmy ILyy 1 150) MORAVIAN ST. bert Iezzi, 19, of Fimore st.

near Viola, Camden. tt 15th Wiiait ma Sn PHilli's BiGGLSI Little Nits Spot I I' 0 Pf wa.J.r -T iiifif Tr itt "i -1 rr 'i ttitt h-tti mi irti ir mW iiiri niiirsin-tfrtnTi ii-niiiniWi't nifin nt riiiiiiviiftojirtn Yt wii i rrnn -tt rf-: A -r- mm I Schools Colleges TECHNICAL TRAINING SPRING GARDEN INSTITUTE TECHNICAL m-HIMlLt l-tM AUTOMOTIVE SC HOOL) P. Claaaea Br(la September IS, IMS unci if if Call your travel agent cr TWA LOcust 8-3200 mm ADVERTISING AitCITiSiai. inr.ii., 21 friti iittil. Frit CitalH.

Cut Kl 5-09 HI 1 1 A. IUSIN1SS TRAINING COMPTOMETER SCHOOL lit N. BROAD ST. LO 1-MJ1 Gardens TRANS WORLD AIRLINES Schedules shown are in iocs! tin rsE rior law.v PROorciS OR BtTlER IAHK CARS.

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Pages Available:
3,846,195
Years Available:
1789-2024