Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Dunkirk Evening Observer from Dunkirk, New York • Page 7

Location:
Dunkirk, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DUNKIRK (NT.) EVENING OBSERVER, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20,1945 PAGE SEVEN guff Correspondent 20-Kallr- discovery, sTfistr (Between Two of Bandage and This (tots) eftlered corncd mltk is movietown. beta hearing this ever to look up the couple of Warner warned us: thing. up end Md date with talk," Charley- "maybe we write you letter." can Wa Plenty. ene of those nigged Hollywood I'm crazy." Eleanor the milk shake "but I'm hairdos clothes and put fa Kt But you don't feol any' ysuttstf that way. ivcrybddy tells me But I believe that counts.

'jjlpad lifted its eyebrows at weeks ago when in fdr completed the to the re-make of Bondage." She posed pictures, then add to and finally had to be sent home. "I Just couldn't stand it," she said. ''I was half undressed, people were pulling at my stockings and 1 couldn't go on with it. I blew up and cried. They said I was crazy then, too, but 1 know 1 would go nuts lot quicker if I held my emotions in." Eleanor lives in a small house near the studio with a housekeeper and girl friend irom Cleveland who Is studying singing.

Cleveland is her home town, where her father is a high school mathematics teacher. She started acting in school plays there when was five. Starred at "Double" By the time she was in high school she definitely was movie itruck, entering motion picture star double contests at Cleveland food shows. She dyed her hair red rne year and came in second as a double for Eleanor Whitney. Next year she placed second again as Eleanor Powell's''double.

After graduation, she borrowed 84000 from her parents and studied dramatics at the Rice Playhouse at Martha's Vineyard and then at the Pasadena Community Playhouse. A Warner talent scout saw her in the audience there, got a screen test and stock contract. For two years she played minor riles until Warner Bros, discovered siie could really act. Finding a stock girl who could act was such shock to the big bosses that Eleanor immediately was given leading roles. Japan's over-all position is unfavorable.

I don't believe Japanese people realize that, but 1 am confident the Japanese High Command is deeply concerned. They must be. --M. Gen. Albert C.

Wedemeyer, American Commander in China. --Save your waste fals. Maybe of will be made Into expletive that up Hitler. BON LENTEN SERVICES WEDNESDAY 12:00 to 12:30 by Dunkirk Minitterlal Anooition fOCT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Fourth Street at THE PUBLIC IS INVITED TIXUOJAVE OX Clmufag, Crtm -foe (Ukr-drjr, thin, ikto. too! fitlp MlM ikia look tint, soft.

rhtk CltmiiHg Cnum-told. uetm irpt dcuucr, lot notaul and roungjJtio. light, mellinj, leaves skin looking tod imotth. mSURE Ybvr Jewelry These treasured possessions create charm you may forever lose, unless they are covered by our MMONAl JIWIMV VLOATII Ctnsult us for particulars THE W. W.

Heppett COMPANY Iral ZiUU A Zniaranee DUNKIRK, N. Y. Phone 2446 TIM TKAVELBBf, Muttttt CITY and VICINITY --Metal bed lamps, Ehlers. --Sea Shell by Chen-yu, 75c it Sideys. --Wanted: Girl's pre-war bicycle.

Box 34. Observer. --Baby auto seats, S2.75,Service EasS 4th street. --For rent: rooms and bath. 208 S.

Beaver. --Circle cleaners, 4-day service. Phorae 4115. 750 Park Ave. --Wanted, used kitchen sinks.

Service East 4th street. --Pencil pointed fountain pens Miller Office Supply. --For sale: Reed buggy, like new cheap. 431 Columbus St. --For sale: Light work horse.

138 Steuben Street, near Gardner, Fredonia. --Clothes lines, scrub mops and dust mops in stock. Service East 4th street. --Wanted--first class carpenters. Apply N.

L. Smith Lumber 802 Main St. --Farm Scenes in place mats. Red Barn, Sunset. Duck pond stc.

S3.00 for four at --For sale. Tappan gas range in Rood condition. Elbert Blodgett, West Main Fredonia. --We can supply printed matter bearing Union Label. Dunkirk Printing Company.

--Wanted, bookkeeper, permanent position, good salary. Inquire Box 27, Observer. --Place, mats save wear and time New farm scenes. $3.00 tor set ol lour at Sideys. --Shield covered Bibles and Prayer Books.

Miller Office Supply. --Lost: Small brown key case. Finder please return to Box 32, Observer. Reward. --Come- in and see our tablp of greatly reduced articles.

Many big bargains. McClenatbans. --Round and oval willow clothes Baskets shopping baskets. Service East 4th street. --Plaid blouses in all cotton by 'Joan Kenley" $3.98 at Sideys.

Neat little plaid, short sleeves. --Protect' your garments from moths by having them dry cleaned the Swiss Method at Vatone's. --We stock a complete line of jyrex oven and top of stove ware. Service East 4th street. --Chambry blouses in blue and jrown by "Joan Kenley." $3.88, Short sleeves, round neck.

Sideys. --Just arrived--500 windows for immediate delivery. Smith Lumber 802 Main St. --Parts and service for household appliances. Dunkirk Appliance Service.

35 E. 3rd. 2011 ---For 7 room tipartment, garage, garden, fruit. 131 Center, Fredonia. Phone 539J.

--Now in stock: Men's Rockford athletic socks; white only; -sizes 10 to 12; 4Pc pair. The Safe Store. --Gray is the favorite color for your spring coat, also in young spring colors. $29.00 and $32.90 Sideys. --See our samples of engraved wedding invitations, and announcements.

The' Observer, Phone 2328. --Wanted, girl or young woman tor restaurant work. Apply after 4 p. 24 W. Park Diner.

--Wanted--Late model used car from private owner, ask for Mrs. Favorite 2224. Afternoons and evenings. --For sale: Tw6 buildings, Dunkirk, suitable for warehouses. Lot 180x90, centrally located.

Box 300, Cassadaga. --Murphy's oil soap, Solventol and Dica Doo and Soilax pslnt cleaners in stock. Service East 4th --Watch for the opening of Rickey's Fashion Shop, 303 Main St. Exclusive lines of luits, dresses, accessories. --Wlllard Batteries Sales and Service, wholesale and retail.

Bremer Battery Service. 20 Second St. Phone 3340. --Tor your bed room windows --a new waterproof fabric in a bamboo pattern for $1.19 a yd. ot Stdeys.

38 inches wide. --Car Repairs, all make's of cars. Moderate charges. Fast service. Batteries, all makes.

Ford Garage. Ralph B. Jones. --Sewing Machine service. Any make adjusted, (repaired or rebuilt by Singer trained servicemen.

Work guaranteed. Ph. 468 '--Wanted girls for clerical work. Steady employment with good wage. Apply Personnel Department, Cease's Commissary.

--For Sale: heater; rockers; table; chairsr miscellaneous furnishings. 157 E. Main, Fredonia. --Why waste good fuel heating the out doors? Insulate your house with Kimsul insulation and enjoy all the good from the fuel you burn. Service East.4th St.

--Have you tried Spred? It's the new soy-bean, water thinned paint. It's washable and covers all kinds of walls in just one coat Smith Lumber 802 Main. --New records in "Ac- cent-tchu-ate the Positive" (Kay Kyser; "Evelina," Karl; "Twilight Time," Les Brown; "It Had to Be Artie Shaw; Bunny Berigan's Memorial 'Album. Service East 4th St. Booby-Trap Pvt.

William H. Edwards, above, of Hayti, with the 4th Infantry Division, went on night patrol in the Huertgen Forest, and a land mine blew his loot off. He lay in silence all the next day. That night the Germans him. They methodically wired an explosive charge to him, left him as a living booby-trap.

Edwards managed to remain conscious and warn Yanks who came to his aid. He's pictured in McCloskey General hospital, Temple, Tex. COUNTYCuWlRY PANEL Mayvtlle, Feb. 20--A panel ot 48 trial jurors for' the March term of Chautauqua county court has been drawn. Their names follow: Lloyd' Adams, Jamestown.

Garfield, Ames, Axle E. Anderson, Jamestown. Nels O. Jamestown. Grace Arnold, Cassadaga.

Fred Barnes, Fredonia. Gerald Bennink, Clymer. Ellen Carlson, Sinclairville. Ernest Comsiock', Dewittville. Mildred K.

Corkery, Jamestown. Cleanor Crplle, W. Dailey, Jamestown. 'Homer Donaldson, M. J.

Drake, Clymer. Lawrence Emory, Clymer, R.D. 2. Esther C. Erickson, Jamestown.

Fickle, Westfield. James Funicello, deny. Lucy Godden, 81 W. Fifth Dunkirk. Bern Gostomski, South Dayton.

Coral Groters, Clymer. Mary.Kidder, Sherman. Pearl I. Kimball, Jamestown. Richard A.

Kling, Jamestown. Clara Lynch, Chautauqua. Hattie Mackey, Silver Creek. Maud Manhart, Ashville, Rt. 2.

George McEwen, Fredonia. Hazel Miller, Fredonia. Raymond Naeser, Westfield. Fred Newhouse, Clymer R. D.

2. Qzella JTuttall, Findley Lake. Preston G. Parks, Fredonia. Carl O.

Person, Jamestown. George. Plank, Fredonia. Leon L. Redspinner, Jamestown.

Florence Rexford, Ashville. Bert Roberts. Sherman, D. Elgie Russell, Sherman. John Sinski, 137 Fourth street, Dunkirk.

Evelyn Smith, Clymer, R.D. George Smith. Jamestown. Henry Stroebcl, Mayville, R.F. D.

Herman A. Strong, Jamestown Gust Torsell, Frewsburg. Amos VanErden, Clymer. R.D. 2.

Hendrick Werner, Jamestown. Gerald Williams, Kennedy, R.D. 2. NON-COLLECTION FINES WILL BE IMPOSED ON JAMESTOWN GARBAGE Jamestown, Feb. 20--A decision to impose penalties on Nelson Son, Jamestown garbage and tin can collection contractors, was reached by the council here Monday night.

The contract provides for a 50 cent fine for each case of non-collection. Councilman William McCool moved that the fine provision be invoked, saying complaints still continue to come in, despite a meeting with Clarence Nelson several 'weeks ago. Councilman Robert Helgren. said cans have not been collected lor several months in some areas of the. city OF MIDNIGHT CURFEW The midnight curfew hour for amusement places proclaimed by War Mobilizer James F.

Byrnes effective as of Feb. 26 will be enforced strictly in Dunkirk, Police Chief John J. Warren announced today. Under Byrnes order theaters, clubs and other places of amusement must close their doors at midnight so as to conserve coal and other fuels.) Patrons are to be out and the doors locked 'at midnight, the order states. The edict will have little effect in Dunkirk since establishments licensed to dispense alcoholic beverages are regularly permitted to remain open only until 1 a.

m. week-days. Theaters which have been running midnight, shows Saturday will have to discontinue the Dunkirk patrolmen will receive instructions to make close inspections of establishments aflect- ed by the, order and to arrest persons found violating it, the chief asserted. Broadway BY JACK GAVER New York (UP)--Somewhere in New York is a girl, probably a bobby-socker, with a yen for movie actor Sonny Tufts, who unwittingly helped write for what may well be a hit song in a few weeks or months. The story goes like this: In.

1937. Mills Music, published in German the creation of a German songwriter named J. Pfeil. It was a swingy, beer garden tune," a walzer, to be sure, and not long ago it came to light again. With English lyrics, something might happen, Mills deci'ded, and lyric writer Mitchell Parish was called in.

Now, the original German lyric was something a fraulein beseeching a blond sailor to sail to, her' but that had absolutely nothing to do with Parish dropping into the Paramount theater to relax for a couple of hours with the Bing Crosby picture "Here Come the Waves." In the movie is that blond hunk of man, Tufts, playing a sailor, and after a few feet of Urn one of the girls stand it any longer. "Oh, mother, I want that blond sailor!" she yelled. Everyone laughed but Parish, who muttered a thank-you to his Unknown helper and left quickly to write the song while the mood was on him. "The Blond Sailor" is the name o'f the song and it's on the presses now. The first line is "Mother, I'm in love with a dashing blond sailor." The funny thing is that the next picture in which Tufts appears, "Bring on the Girls," also has him playing a sailor.

A couple of publicity tieups would seem to be in order--all because a girl screamed her pruference at the Paramount. That long-anticipated Theater Guild production of the musical version of Molnar's play "Liliom" goes into rehearsal today. It is called "Carousal" (only one and be sure that next to the last letter doesn't turn an and has music by Richard Rodgers and lyrics and book by Oscar Hammerstelri, the duo. If it turns; out to be a hit, it will make some young unknowns famous overnight just as "Oklahoma!" did. Playing the Liliom role: in this Americanized version will be John Reitt, who has been the hero in the touring company of "Oklahoma 1" for months, and the leading woman will be Jan Clayton, a west coast girl, who is 'described as a starlet.

Neither has appeared on Broadway. WOR-Mutual has come up with what sounds like a good radio program idea' to start this Wednesday evening at 9:30 EWT. "Brownstone Theater" is the name of it and the fare will consist of half-hour condensations of famous dramas- of 30 years and more ago. The first offering, for example, will be Charles Klein's "The Lion and the Mouse," which was a. sensation back in.

"The Climax," "If I Were King" and "Mrs. Dane's Defense" are 'some of the others to be used. Clayton Hamilton, author and former drama critic, will serve as commentator. He'll have first-hsnd knowledge of what he's talking about. One oC those statisticians who excavate vital information submits as the day's dose oC irony that a few years ago in Canada one Alan Young was the sound- man on a radio series featuring comedian Jack Carson.

Two ol the largest radio polls recently returned Carson as the second most popular new comic. He lost out in both polls Young. The first institution of higher learning 1 in the world to admit women was Oberlin college, at Oberlin, Ohio. --Read the OBSERVER reju-i tarly. Wise People Deposit Their Money in the Dunkirk Trust Company A STRONQ FRIENDLY BANK Dunkirk Trust Company Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Nazi in Mufti The lad on back of the motorcycle in the photo above Is a German soldier He donned the nobby civilian outfit to escape Yanks making the anal cleanup in Kleve, but they-nabbed, him and be'si on his way to prison camo.

Silver Creek Mr. and Mrs. J. B. McGoldrlck have received a cablegram, from their son, William, an.

internee in Switzerland, that he expects to be released in the near future and will see them icon. "Save your gasoline coupons," he suggests in his letter. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph are eagerly awaiting, word from their son who'has been a German prisoner since the African campaign.

A "camp in which they believe he was held, has been recaptured by the Russians. John Livecchi of. Buffalo has been visiting his grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph.

Livtcchi. He leaves for home today. The sentence, "Pack my box with five dozen liquor Jubs," contains all the Ittteri of the alphabet. "Glamorize" Your Kitchen With This New Range This range is a perfect baker and will add plenty of glamour to your kitchen. While their sale is subject to government regulations, the qualification! are liberal, and you may be eligible to buy one.

THE SMARTNESS That Housewives Rave About! 89 .50 TERMS $1.25 Per Week. NO EXTRA COST for INSTALLATION NOTE THE FEATURES: 1. KOLL OUT BROILER 2. AUTOMATIC BURNERS 3. FULLY INSULATED OVEN 4.

AMPLE COOKING SPACE 5. STORAGE COMPARTMENTS 6. E-Z CLEAN OVEN LININGS 7. CLEAN OUT TRAY 8. MODERN FLOW CONSTRUCTION GEO.H.GRAFCO.

I.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Dunkirk Evening Observer Archive

Pages Available:
178,577
Years Available:
1882-1950