Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 10

Location:
Detroit, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I THE DETROIT FREE PRESS -SUN DAY, MARCH 17, 1940 PART ONE Obtains Election Writ Demands a Place on Consumers Ballot A bill of complaint against the NLRB; Frank H. Bowen, Seventh District regional director; the Consumers Power at Jackson, and the Utility Workers Organization Committee (C.I.O.) was filed in Federal Court Saturday by Edward N. Barnard. He acted in behalf of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers and its Local No. 876 An order to show cause why an NLRB election at the Consumers Power Co.

should not be held up until after a hearing on the suit was signed by Federal Judge Edward J. Moinet, returnable March 21. One Union on Ballot Barnard protested because for an election ordered by the NLRB for March 25 at Consumers the only union on the ballot is the U.W.0.C. An election was held at the power company in February, 1938, when employees were given the choice of the U.W.0.C., the I.B.E.W. or neither union.

The U.W.0.C. defeated the I.B.E.W. by about 100 votes, but neither union received a majority. NLRB Ordered Runoff The NLRB, in accordance with its usual procedure, ordered a runoff election between the U.W.0.C. and "no I.B.E.W.

protested, and the United States Court of Appeals at Cincinnati upheld the A.F.L. union's contention that its name should appear on the ballot. The United States, Supreme Court, however, held it had no jurisdiction over NLRB procedure, and the Labor Board accordingly reinstated its order for a runoff election between the U.W.0.C. and "no union." State Mediator Arranges Delay in Strike at Niles LANSING, March 16 'Arthur A. Raab, chairman of the State Labor Mediation Board, said Saturday that his agency had obtained a union agreement to withhold a threatened strike at the plant of the Kawneer Manufacturing in Niles pending accelerated action by the National Labor Relations Board.

Driver Is Injured Resisting Arrest Fractured fingers, A possible skull fracture and lacerations were the price paid Saturday by Martin Brenner, years old, of 6163 Sixteenth, when he resisted arrest after his automobile hit three others. Police said Brenner had been drinking. The crash occurred at 4:15 a.m. at Fourteenth and Stanley. Patrolman Abraham Matlen tried to drive Brenner and his car to the station.

Brenner fought Matlen's efforts to detain him. Matlen, who used his nightstick on Brenner, was exonerated by witnesses. Brenner is held at, Receiving Hospital on a technical charge of trying to leave the scene of an accident. Patrolman Named as Aide to Eaman Patrolman Vincent Mann, of Central Station, was appointed Saturday by Police Commissioner Frank D. Eaman to take over the receptionist and chauffeur duties of Sergt.

Thomas Gilby and Lieut. Miles Furlong, respectively. Sergt. Gilby had been receptionist in the Commissioner's office under various commissioners for about 10 years with some interruptions. Lieut.

Furlong had been chauffeur for ex-Commissioner Heinrich A. Pickert. Sergt. Gilby was transferred to the Vice Squad and Lieut. Furlong to Central Station.

Supt. Louis L. Berg also announced that the six-man auto theft detail would be reduced to two men, and special favors to downtown merchants would be curtailed. Student Gets Life Term in Murder of Policeman CLEVELAND, March 16 (A. -A jury today convicted John L.

McCormick, twenty one yearold Pittsburgh collegian, of murder but recommended mercy, making life imprisonment mandatory. McCormick, son of well-to-do Pittsburgh parents, shot and killed Theodore Nichols, a special policeman, while holding Western Union's main office here Jan. 8- one month after he dropped lout of the University of Pittsburgh. The Week's Recordings By J. D.

Callaghan Easter comes on apace this year and finds Victor ready with an album of Easter hymns as sung by the Victor Chapel Choir, consisting of 21 voices accompanied organ and directed by Emil Cote. Among hymns included on the three ten-inch records are "Crown Him with Many "Ye Sons and Daughters the Hail the Power of Jesus' "I Love to Tell the "Christ the Lord Is Risen Today, and "The Day of Resurrection." The first of the albums of art music sponsored by the Michigan Committee for Music Appreciation, went on sale Saturday at the committee headquarters at 339 State. It was the Schubert Unfinished Symphony in a magnificent recording. As an introduction to great music, the choice is particularly fortunate, for the flowing melodies work are universally Old Musicals Revived Columbia makes it possible for those who saw, heard and loved the great cycle Rodgers and Hart musical productions to relive the experience in an album containing the hit numbers from "Connecticut "Present "'The Girl "Babes in "Boys from "Spring Is "On Your Toes," and "Love Me Tonight." The orchestra is under the personal direction of Richard Rodgers. Four ten-inchers make up the album.

Lyrics and music come as near the perfect combination as anything since Gilbert and Sullivan. Another of those voices known to all cinema fans is reproduced this week in the Victor album "Jeanette MacDonald in Song." Outstanding among the offerings AT GRINNELL'S VICTOR RECORDINGS LAWRENCE TIBBETT "Otello" (Verdi) TIBBETT. MARTINELLI, JEPSON and other Metropolitan stars with chorus and orchestra. VICTOR ALBUM M-620, $12.00 "Stars of the Metropolitan" (VOLUME 2) "Simone. and Boheme" excerpts sung by TIBBETT and JEPSON VICTOR ALBUM M-633, $10.00 Scores of other Tibbett Recordings in the vast Victor library at Grinnell's! RECORD CHARGE ACCOUNTS GLADLY ARRANGED GRINNELL BROS.

Downtown Store and Branches PHONE ORDERS (CHerry 3600) 4 Rebecca By Daphne du Maurier SYNOPSIS It was while was employed as secretary-companion to a middle-aged. rich recently American lost woman. his wife. that met Rebecca, Maxim de Winter, owner when. of Manderley.

as I though knew he had and was surprised calmly. discussing the weather, be asked me to marry him. After a short honeynioon we drove to Manderley. I was frightened of the servants. especially Mrs.

Danvers, the housekeeper. She seemed bitterly to resent me. and WAS constantly referring to my predecessor. Rebecca. When Maxim's sister.

Beatrice, her husband and Frank Crawley. Maxim's agent, came to lunch. in an attempt to make conversation. I inquired if the currents were too strong for bathing in the bay. There was an awkward pause too late, remembered that Rebecca Lad drowned when her sailboat overturned out there.

dress Urged ball. by the townspeople. Maxim decided to give the traditional Manderles fancy Mrs. Danvers, suddenly friendly, advised me to copy a picture hanging in the gallery for my costume. When he saw me.

on the night of the ball. Maxim turned deadly bale, and ordered me to take off my dress. Then his sister. Beatrice, told me Rebecca had worn that costume at. the last Manderley ball.

Maxim did not speak to me all evening and in the morning he was gone, Beside myself with grief. I called Frank Crawler and told him the whole story. learned there was a ship gone ashore in the bay and Maxim. who had apparently only been for an early walk, had taken an injured seaman to the doctor. The harbormaster arrived.

looking for the Maxim A diver from the ship. he said. had discovered Rebecca's sunken boat. cabin tightly closed and body on the floor. Rebecca.

then. must not have sailed alone, for Maxim had identified her body when it washed ashore. There would have to be an investigation, the barbormaster eaid. CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX AXIM window. was His standing back by the was turned to me.

I waited door. Still he did not turn round. I took my hands out of pockets and went and stood preside him. I reached out for his hand and laid it against my cheek. He did not say anything.

He went on standing there. "I'm so sorry," I whispered, "so terribly, terrible He did not answer. His hand was icy cold. I kissed the back of it, and then the fingers, one by one. "I don't want you to bear this alone," I said.

"I want to share it with you. I've grown up, Maxim, in 24 hours. I'll never be a child again." He put his arm round me and pulled me to him very close. My reserve was broken, and my shyness too. I stood there with my face against his shoulder.

"You've forgiven me, haven't I said. He to me at last. "Forgiven spoke, he said. "What have I got to forgive you for?" "Last night," "you thought I did it on purpose." "Ah, that," he said, "I'd forgotten. was angry with you, wasn't "Yes," I said.

He did not say any more. He went on holding me close to his shoulder. "Maxim," I said, "can't we start all over again? Can't we today and face things I don't want you love me, I won't ask impossible things. I'll be your friend and your companion, a sort of boy. don't ever want more than that." He took my face between his hands and looked at me.

For the first time I saw how thin his face was, how lined and drawn. And there were great shadows beneath his eyes. "How much do you love me?" he said. I could not answer. I could only back at him, at his dark tortured eyes, and his pale drawn face.

"It's too late, my darling, too late," he said. lot "We've our little chance happiness." "No, Maxim. No," I said. "Yes." he said. "It's all over now.

The thing has happened." "What thing?" I said. "The thing I've always foreseen. The thing I've dreamt about, day after day, night after night. We're not meant for happiness, you and He sat down on the window seat, and I knelt in front of him, my hands on his shoulders. "What are you trying to tell me?" I said.

put his hands over mine and looked into my face. "Rebecca has he said. I stared at him, my heart beating strangely, my hands suddenly cold beneath his hands. shadow between us all the time." he said. "Her damned shadow keeping us from one another.

How could I hold you like this, my darling, my little love, with the fear always in my heart that this would happen?" died," Maxim said. "I remember that slow. treacherous smile. She knew this would happen even then. She knew she would win in the end." "It means she was not alone." I said.

"It means there was somebody sailing with Rebecca at the time. And you have to find out who it was. That's it, isn't it, Maxim "No," he said. "No, you don't understand." "I want to share this with you, darling," I said. "I want to help you." "There was no one with Rebecca, she was alone," he said.

I knelt there watching his face, watching his eyes. "It's Rebecca's body lying there on the cabin floor," he said. "No," I said. "No." "The woman buried in the crypt is not Rebecca," he said. "It's the body of some unknown woman, unclaimed, belonging nowhere.

There never was an accident. Rebecca was not drowned at all. I killed her. I shot Rebecca in the cottage in the cove. I carried the body to the cabin, and took boat out that night and sunk it there, where they found it today.

It's Rebecca who's lying dead there on the cabin floor. Will you look into my eyes and tell me that you love me now "I she REMEMBER looked at me her before eyes she As It was very quiet in the library. The only sound was that of Jasper licking his foot. He must have caught a thorn in his pads, for he kept biting and sucking at the skin. Then I heard the watch on Maxim's wrist ticking close to my ear.

The little normal sounds of every day. And for no reason the stupid proverb of my school-days ran through my mind. "Time and tide wait for no man." The words repeated themselves over and over again. When people suffer A great shock, like death, or the loss of 8 limb, I believe they don't feel it just at first. If your hand is taken from you you don't know, for a few minutes, that your hand is gone.

You go on feeling the fingers. I knelt there by Maxim's side, my body against his body, my hands upon his shoulders, and I was aware of no feeling at all, no pain and no fear, there was no horror in my heart. I thought how I must take the thorn out of Jasper's foot and I wondered if Robert would come in and clear the tea things. SEEMED strange to me that should think of these things, Jasper's foot, Maxim's watch, Robert and the tea things. I was shocked at my lack of emotion and this queer cold absence of distress.

Little by little the feeling will come back to me, I said to myself, little by little I shall understand. What he has told me and all that has happened will tumble into place like pieces of a jig-saw puzzle. They will fit themselves into a pattern. At the moment I am nothing, I have no heart, and no mind, and no senses, I am just a wooden thing in Maxim's arms. Then he began to kiss me.

He had not kissed me like this before. I put my hands behind his head and shut my eyes. "I love you so much," he whispered. "So much." This is what I have wanted him to say every day and every night, I thought, and now he is saying it at last. This is what I imagined in Monte Carlo, in Italy, in Manderley.

He is saying it now. I opened my eyes and looked at a little patch of cutrain above his head. He went on kissing me, hungry, desperate, murmuring my name. on looking at the patch of curtain, and saw where the sun had faded it, making it lighter than the piece above. How calm I am, I thought.

How cool. Here I am looking at the piece of curtain, and Maxim is kissing me. For the first time he is telling me he loves me. Then he stopped suddenly, he pushed me from him, and got up from the window seat. "You see, I was right," he said.

"It's too late. You don't love me now. Why should you?" He went and stood over the mantelpiece. "We'll forget that," he said, "it won't happen again." Realization flooded me and my heart jumped in quick and sudden panic. "It's not too I said swiftly, getting up from the floor and going to him, putting my arms about him; "you're not to say that, you don't understand.

I love you more than anything in the world. But when you kissed me just now I felt stunned and shaken, I could not feel anything. I could not grasp anything. I was just as though I had no more feeling left in me at all." "You don't love me," he said, "that's why you did not feel anything. I know.

I understand. It's come too late for you, hasn it "No," I said. What the Radio Offers Today Sunday, March 17, 1940 (Programs are printed as issued by the stations listed and are subject to change without notice) SUNDAY'S OUTSTANDING FEATURES Noon--Major Bowes' Amateurs. Cavalcade of Hits WXYZ P. M.

-March of Health Show of the Week P. in Action WJR 7:00 P. Jack Benny, Mary stone; WWJ Great Plays "L'Aigion WXYZ Lenten Music CKLW P. M. -Round Table A 7:30 P.

Guild Play "The P. M. -New York Philharmonic, Awful Truth" with Carole Barbirolli Conducting; Lombard, Robert Young, Roslyn, Tureck, Bellison, Pianist, Clari- Ralph Bellamy WW.J WJR net WJR-WCAR Vancouver Symphony P. -Our Foreign Policy WXYZ 8:00 P. -Orson Welles, Jackie Cooper WXYZ "Huckleberry P.

of Happiness; Wal- Charlie McCarthy, Edgar ter Huston in "Johnny Bergen; Music; WWJ Appleseed" WCAR Message of Israel P. Lobby WIR 9:00 P. Evening Hour; SymSwedish Glee Club WWJ phony Orchestra, OrMusical Steelmakers mandy Conducting, LawP. 3ernie, Lew Lehr; rence Tibbetts, WJR Music WIR Manhattan Merry-Go-Round. WWJ Metropolitan 9:30 P.

of Familiar WWJ P. Theater; Ida Lupino, 10:00 P. Hillman, European Louis Hayward WJR News WXYZ Catholic Hour WWJ 11:00 You Want WXYZ Fifth Row Center 11:15 For You CKLW P. P. Ranch with Gene 11:30 A.

-Music, Drama, Autry WJR News Stations Key to Symbols Commentator -Interslew -Religions -Drama -Juvenile -Talk Educational -Music Variety -Political WEXL Rev. 0 Van Loon WCAR Orchestra Adventures CKLW Pianist 12:30 WIR 0. of WWJ On Your Job-1 CKLW Canadian News WEXL Rev Stacewica Serenade CKLW March of Health-T WEXL Lutheran Church WAR Newscast WIR Mother' Album-M WW. Moderns Music WXYZ Poetry Pilgrimage-T CKLW Old Country Mail-T WJBK Polish Hour.1 WEXL Rev Jesse Kline- 1:15 WIR Musical WXYZ My Garden CKLW Radio Warblers WMBC Newscast 1:30 WJR Grand Hotel- Garden News WXYZ Reiser's Orch. CKLW Lutheran Hour- WMBC Ukrainian Hour- WEXL Bethel Tabernacle 1:45 WWJ Muste 2 p.

m. to 6 p. m. Democracy-L WW Smoke Dreams WXYZ Great Plave.D String Quartet WIBK Hungarian WEXL First Nazarene 2:30 WJR Elliott's Orch. WW Round Table.T CKI.W Back to Bible-R BC Accordion-M WEXL Rev Marion- WCAR Lest We Forget-T 2:45 WMBC Catholic Hone-R WCAR Treasure Chest-M 3:00 WJR New Fork Philharmonic Want Divorce-D WXYZ Violinist CKI.W Elder WORK Echoes of Erin- WMBC Symphony Hall-M WEXL Hazel Park Tab -B WCAR N.

Y. Philharmonic Foreien Policy 8:30 -WWJ We the WXYZ Tapestry Musical CFL.W WIRK Organ Music 8:49 Val Clare WORK Eva Victor WEXL German Mission :00 WW. WAR Timers-1 Coughlin-T Old Wave WIR 750 920 JWXYZ 1240 ICKLI 1030 "This ought to have happened four months he said. "I should have known. Women are not like men." "I want you to kiss me I said, "please, Maxim." "No," he said, "it's no use now." "We can't love each other I said.

"We've got to be together always, with no secrets, no shadows. Please, darling, please. "There's no time," he said. "We may only have a few hours, a few days. How can we be together now that this happened? I've told you they've found the boat.

They've found Rebecca." STARED at him stupidly, not understanding. "What will they I do?" I said. They'll identify her body," he said, 'there's everything to tell them, there in the cabin. The clothes she haa, the shoes, the rings on her fingers. They'll identify her body; and then they will remember the other one, the buried up there, in the woman crypt." "What are you going to do?" I whispered.

"I don't know," he said. "I don't know." The feeling was coming back to me, little by little, as I knew it would. My hands were cold no longer. They were clammy, warm. I felt a wave of color come into my face, my throat.

cheeks were burning hot. I thought of Captain Searle, the diver, the Lloyd's agent, all those men on stranded ship leaning against the side, staring down into the water. I thought of the shopkeepers in Kerrith, of errand boys whistling in the street, of the vicar walking out of church, of Lady Crowan cutting roses in her garden, of the woman in the pinkdress and her little boy on the cliffs. Soon they would know. In al few hours.

By breakfast time tomorrow. "They've found Mrs. de Winter'3 boat, and they say there is a body in the A body in the cabin. Rebecca was lying there on the cabin floor. She was not in the crypt at all.

Some other woman was lying in the crypt. Maxim had killed Rebecca. Rebecca had not been drowned at all. Maxim had killed her. He had shot her in the cottage in the woods.

He had carried her body to the boat, and sunk the boat there in the bay. That gray, silent cottage, with the rain pattering on the roof. The jig-saw pieces came tumbling thick and fast upon me. Disjointed pictures flashed one by one through my bewildered mind. Maxim sitting in the car beside me in the south of France.

"Something herpened, nearly a year ago that whole life. I had to begin living all over again Maxim's silence, Maxim's moods. The way he never talked about Rebecca. The way he never mentioned her name. Maxim's dislike of the cove, of the stone cottage.

"If you had my memories, you would not go there either." THE WAY he climbed the path through the woods not looking behind him. Maxim pacing up and down the library after Rebecca died. Up and down. Up and down. "I came away in rather a hurry," he said to Mrs.

Van Hopper, a line, thin as gossamer, between his brows. "They say he can't get over his wife's death." The fancy dress dance last night, and I coming down to the head of the stairs, in Rebecca's dress. "I killed Rebecca," Maxim had said. shot Rebecca in the cottage in the woods." And the diver had found her lying there, on the cabin floor. "What are we going to do?" I said.

"What are we going to say?" Maxim did not answer. He stood there by the mantel-piece, his eyes wide and staring, looking in front of him, not seeing thing. "Does anyone know?" I said, "anyone at all?" He shook his head. "No," he said. "No one but you and me?" I asked.

"No one but you and me," he said. "Frank," I said suddenly, "are you sure Frank does not know?" "How could he?" said Maxim, "there was nobody there but myself. It WaS dark He stopped. He sat down on a chair, he put his hand up to his forehead. I went and knelt beside him.

He sat very still a moment. I took his hands away from his face and looked into his eyes. "I love I whispered, "I love you. Will you believe me now?" He kissed my face and my hands. "I thought I should go mad," he said, "sitting here, day after day, waiting for something to happen.

Sitting down at the desk there, answering those terrible letters of sympathy. The notices in the papers, the interviewers, all the little aftermath of death. Eating and drinking, trying to be normal, trying to be sane. Frith, the servants, Mrs. Danvers.

Mrs. Danvers, who I had not the courage turn away, because with her ton knowledge of Rebecca she might have suspected, she might have guessed Frank, always by my side, discreet, sympathetic. Why don't you get 1 he used to say, 'I can manage here. You ought to get And Giles, and Bee, poor dear tactless Bee. 'You're looking frightfully ill, can't you go and see a doc" tor To Be Continued Copyright, 1938, Daphne du Maurier Browning.

Released by McClure Syndicate, Inc, Published by Doubleday, Doran and OBITUARY WAYNE Mrs. Elizabeth Whise, 82 years old, died Thursday at the of her daughter, Mrs. Elizabethe L. Showers, of 34636 Brush. Born in Germany, she had lived in Wayne all of her married life.

Prayer services were held at 8:30 a. m. Saturday in the Uht Funeral Home, Wayne. Services were at 9 a. m.

in St. Mary's Catholic Church, and burial in St. Mary's Cemetery, Wayne. At her grave were the children of three families, besides her own, whom she had mothered in a lifetime. Faced with the necessity for earning a living when her husband died suddenly, leaving her with two small sons and a daughter, Mrs.

Whise successively brought up the children of the Phillips, Curtis, and Gabriel Henderson families. In addition, she maintained a home for her own children and paid for the home in which they lived after 25 years of toil. She was Mr. Henderson's housekeeper for 22 years until 1935. Replacing in a quiet, efficient way the mother lost to the Henderson children in childbirth, Mrs.

Whise raised the bereft infant, and the other Henderson children, then: to and 4 years old, respectively, maturity. When this task was done, she retired. Besides the daughter at whose home she died, Mrs. Whise leaves one son, Frank Whise, of Limona, and two grandchildren, Mrs. Bernadette Page, Detroit, and Kenneth Whise, of Alexandria, Adam Dodt.

Born in Germany 72 years ago, Mr. Dodt died Saturday in Receiving Hospital. He lived in Detroit 64 years. His home was at 12257 Wilshire. He is survived by his wife Bertha; his daughters, Mrs.

Carl Ruschman, Gilbert Delaney and Mrs. Howard Puckner, and his sons, Alfred Elmer C. and Norman. Services at 2 p. m.

Tuesday in the residence, conducted by the Rev. Walter O. Hauck. Burial in White Chapel. Christopher Thomas Cowhy.

Born in Riley, 79 years ago, Mr. Cowhy died Saturday in his home at Emmett, Mich. He was a retired farmer. He is survived by his wife Catherine and his daughters, Mrs. John Maher and Mrs.

Marian Dancey, of Detroit. Prayers at 9:30 Monday in the residence. Services, at 10 a. m. in Our Lady Carmel Church.

Burial in Kenockee Cem- etery. Mrs. Rose Muraine. Born in De- troit 34 years ago, Mrs. Muraine died Friday in the Charles Goodwin Jennings Hospital.

Her home was at 398 E. Grand Blvd. She was the widow of Patrick E. Muraine and is survived by her son, Patrick Edmund; her sisters, Elizabeth and Doris, and her brother, Joseph Schamberg. g.

Prayers at 8:30 a. m. Tuesday in the residence. Services at 9 a. m.

in St. Charles Church. Burial in Mt. Elliott. Mrs.

Lizzie Squire. Services at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday in the parlors of J. Sutton Son, 4147 Trumbull, conducted by the Rev.

L. D. Ballingall. Burial in Oakview. Born in London, 78, years ago, Mrs.

Squire died Friday in her home at 642 Prentis. She was the widow of Homer Squire, and is survived by her son Frank and her daughter, Mrs. Lina Butler, of Pontiac. Mrs. Elizabeth Allan Roger.

Services at 2 p. m. Monday in the chapel then William R. Hamilton Cass Alexandrine, conducted by the Rev. Platte T.

Amstutz. Burial in Woodmere. Mrs. Roger was born in England 73 years ago and died Friday in her home at 700 W. Euclid.

She is survived by her daughters, Mrs. Death Notices ROGER- March 15, 1940. at her restdence, 700 W. Euelid. Elizabeth Allan, mother of Mra.

Glencora Harmon, Jane. Betty, Albert. Robert and Allan Roger, sister of Mrs. Allen Rogers, of Chicago: Arthur A. and Alfred E.

Allan. Funeral at Chapel of the Wm. R. ilton Casa Ave. at Alexandrine, Monday, at 2 o'clock.

TONIGHT CAROLE LOMBARD ROBERT YOUNG RALPH BELLAMY ROGER PRYOR OSCAR BRADLEY M. C. ORCH. AT 7:30 WJR GULF SCREEN GULF GUILD THEATER Glencora Harmon, Jane and her and Betty, sons, Albert, Robert Allan. and Mrs.

Imogene Maud Services at 2:30 p. Annett, m. in the residence, 2440 conducted by Burial the Rev. B. W.

Pul. Atkinson, Mrs. linger. Annett was in Grand Lawn. and died born in London, She lived in Friday Detroit in her home.

39 She was a member of Ionic years, ter She No. is 422, survived Order of Eastern ChapStar. Alex her by her husband sons, Earl Harold, and her brother, George and Beaton. rand. WINDSOR -Raymond L.

Bert. in Windsor 43. Mr. Bertrand died years of a heart attack in his home ago, Saturday 933 Moy. He leaves his at Mrs.

and Elizabeth Bertrand; a brother mother, Lyle Weinberg, four of sisters, Wyandotte; Mrs. George Mrs. Gourlay Howell, of Toronto; Mrs. Alexander and Mrs. Lennon, Stewart of Nakima, Services Tuck, of Windsor.

at 3:30 p. m. Tuesday in the Morris Funeral Home, 1624 E. Wyandotte, conBurial ducted in by the Rev. H.

M. Paulin, Windsor Grove. WINDSOR- Mrs. Mary Va. Hughes.

Born in Norwich, 46 years ago, Mrs. Hughes died Friday in Hotel Dieu following an extended illness. Her home was at 1523 Dougal. She had lived in St. Thomas before moving to Windsor.

She was active in Clare's so Catholic Church and St. was one of the founders of the Child Welfare Association of St. Thome as. She is survived by her hus band, Harold three sons, Joha Lee and Roland Hughes, and a sister, Miss Leila Lee, of St. Thomas.

Services at 8:30 a. m. Monday in St. Thomas. Bioff Sentence Appealed in Illinois Supreme Court SPRINGFIELD, March 16-4 (A.P.) -William Bioff, west coast motion picture labor leader, ape pealed to the Illinois Supreme Court today from the Appellate Court affirmation of his eighteenyear-old jail sentence for pander ing.

The appeal was filed by Bioffi attorney, State Senator A. L. Mar ovitz, of Chicago, a day after Chief Justice John Prystalski, the Cook County criminal court refused to grant the thirty-nine. year-old labor leader a write habeas corpus and directed that he serve his six-month jail ence imposed by the Chicago Municipal Court Feb. 23, 1922.

U. of M. Students Injured in Head-On Auto Collision is the Bach-Gounod "Ave Maria," although Miss MacDonald also is opera "Faust." album should effective in two, arias from the be welcome to the MacDonald faithful. Piston Ballet Recorded Victor also gives voice to one of the gayest of works from the hands of an American composer. It is the album containing the ballet music written by Walter Piston for "The Incredible It's modern music, but without the strained efforts of many contemporary works, and it is humorous and entirely tuneful.

The Boston "Pops" under Arthur Fiedler plays it. Once again, Leonard B. Smith, Detroit's brilliant cornetist, records two works on the Victor list. Appearing, Franko on opposite Goldman's sides "My are Heaven of Love" and "Sounds from the Hudson," by Herbert L. Clark.

Should be valuable, especially for trumpet and cornet students. Four Popular Leaders Crowding the, top of the list in the popular field are four recordings which are being snapped up by swing and sweet fans this week. They are Eddie Duchin's Columbia recording of "In an Old Dutch Glenn Miller's Bluebird Serenade" and "When You Wish upon a Star," and "Starlit Hour," by Victor's Tommy Dorsey or Decca's Bob Crosby. There something particularly appealing in the relaxed version of "I Didn't Know What Time It Was," played as piano solo by Clarence Profit, Columbia's spectacular young artist. Profit's feeling for smart ideas and primitive rhythm is brought out to fine advantage on the reverse side in "Body and Soul." Ammor Records headline their version of "The Singing Hills" this week, with "I'd Believe You," both by Claude Hopkins and his orchestra.

The vocals in each instance are effective, the first Orlando Roberson and the other Herman by Autry. Worth a Hearing In addition, a hearing is recommended the following: Take-offs from the masters: "On the Isle of May," a new version of the Tschaikowsky inspired piece, by Kay Kyser (Columbia); "Beethoven "Fur Elise," and Al Donahue vedased (Vocalion). Old favorites revived: "Danny Glenn Miller (Bluebird); "Nola," Vincent Lopez (Bluebird); "Diga Diga Do," Adrian Rollini (Vocalion); "Bugle Call Rag" and "Dardanella," Bobby Hackett (Vocalion). Fast, hot and danceable: "Sweet Potato Piper" and "Captain Custard," Lawrence Welk (Vocalion); "Oriental Shuffle" and "Are You in the Mood Quintet of the Hot Club of France (Victor Jazz Masterpiece) with the amazing Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelly; "Wham," Jack Teagarden (Varsity). East Windsor Expansion to Cost Ford $1,175,000 A new $500,000 electric generator, brought from England under naval convoy, is being installed at the Ford Motor Co.

plant in East Windsor as a part of an expansion program. The program calls for expenditures of approximately $1,175,000, bell, president Canadian according to Wallace, R. Campcompany. Laboratory equipment will include a X-ray machine. Three University of Michigan students and a Taylor Township resident were injured shortly be fore 5 p.

m. Saturday in a head-on automobiles crash, on Middlebelt. Ecorse, beBamlet Kent, 25 years old, of 73 Elmhurst, Highland Park, was in Eloise Hospital in a critical condition. Don Mayfield, 24, of 511 Stevens, Flint, and Davis Doles 22, of 9090 De Witt, driver of the car occupied by the students, were treated and released. Arthur Chesbough, 33 of 27705 Thurnick, Taylor Township, driver of the other car, was rendered conscious, but physicians said his condition was not serious.

12:00 12:45 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:15 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 6:00 6:30 7 a. m. to 10 a. m. 7:00 Roseville Com.7:15 E.

Detroit Com. Gospel Moode WIBK St. Clair Shores-T WEXL Rev. K. Ieke-R Master Singers WIBK Musical Cabin Folk- WW7 News and Music WXYZ Devotiona WW Music CKLW Organ Moods W.IBK Elder WMBC March Melodies WEXL Rumanian Baptist WEAR Organ Cloister Belle-M 8:30 WJR The Funnies WWJ Gene Glen-M WXYZ Tone Pictures CKLW Rantist Ukrainian Music WMBC Music WEXL Quartet-R 9:00 of Four Showmen-M WXYZ Coast to CoastCKL.W San Salute- WIBK Serbian Hour.V WMBC Fiving Clouds WEXL Pentecostal-R WCAR ve Relicion in News Wings Over Jordan WW7 Sunday Drivere CKLW News Ace WMBC Organ WEXL Rev Weinzierl-B WCAR Musical 9:45 CKLW Salvation Army WMBC U.

of 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. 10:00 WIR Don Artiste-M Pulpit WXYZ Calvary Church CKLW Dr.

R. de Haan-R WUBK Jewish Hour WMBC Treasure Seeker-R WEXL. Bible Society Musical Newscast Anne Campbell-T WMBO Central Methodist WEXL Rev C. Youne 10:45 March of Games-J WW.J Ross Trio-M CKLW Pontiac Baptist WIBK Temple 11:00 News Musle ww. st.

Pant WXYZ News Songs WEXL Congregational WCAR Better Things Jim Parsone- Res John Zoller Temple Baptist CKI.W Anelican Chureb WEXI Finnish Church WCAR Worship 45-WIBK Music and News 12:00 Maior Bowes WXYZ Children's Theater CKLW Musical WJBK. Children's Hour WMBC Jewish RHEUMATISM DISORDERS Tune in CKLW SUNDAY AFTERNOON AT 12:55 For More Information Write or Phone WAYNE SHORT WAVE CO. 556 BOOK BLDG. CH 1414 bu WXYZ CKLW Nobody's Children-D Italian Hour 4:15 Cameos- WEXL Grace Baptist :30 WWJ World Is Yours-T WXYZ Lutheran Hour-R CKLW Lutheran Charities-T MBC Accordiana-M WCAR WEXL Pursuit Radio of Revival Matinee Melodies WEXL Christian Alliance 5:00 Hobhe WW7 Swedish Glee Club WXYZ Concert CKL.W Steelmakers-M WIBK Rosary Hour -R WMBC Italian Hour- WCAR Auditions- 5:15 WWJ Bob Becker-T WXYZ News Front WEXL Science Reading Ben Crossroads-R WXYZ Met CKI.W The Shadow-D WEXL Immanual Gospel WCAR Elks' Hour- 6 p. m.

to 10 p. m. Silver -D WWJ Catholic Hour-R WXYZ Barron's Orch. CK1. Fifth Row Center- WIBR Polish Quiz-1 WMBC News and Music WEXL Anglo israel-R Melody WWJ Salon Strings WXYZ Cavalcade Hits CRI.

Show of Week WJBK German Hour: WMBC Polish, Hour- WEXL L. Dean WCAR Music Newscast. WEXL Rev. B. DeMille-R 7:00 WJR Speaker WW.

Jack WXYZ News from CKLW Lenten Music, Father Conchlio-T WEXL Evangel Hour Rev. Jackson- -WJR Screen Guild-D WW7 Bandwacon WXYZ District Attorner- CKLW Vancouver Sym. WM Rev John Zotler WEXL John 0 Moir-C 7:45 CELW World Today-T 8:00 WIR Orson Welles. Detroit Stations WORK 1500 Kca 200 Meters WMBO 1420 Res 211 Meters WEXL 1310 Res Meters WCAR 1100 Kcs WW7 Charley McCarthy-V WXYZ Message of Israel-T CKLW Dr. M.

R. de Haan-B St. Stephen's- WEXL Rev Weinzierl- One Man's ily-D WXYZ Jay Franklin-0 WJBK Greek Hour- V. To be announced CKLW World Today-T Evening Hour WXYZ Walter Winchell-0 WORK Finnish Muste WMBC Rev. Robinson-R Parker Family- WJBK Ukrainian Church WEXL The Gospel -R Familiar Muse WXYZ Irene Rich -D WIBK Ave Maria-R WMBC Polish Hour Sports WMBC Dance Orch WEXL Old Time Kellelon 10 p.

m. to 2 a. m. Ellery Queen WWJ Hour of WXYZ W. CKLW Goodwill-T WIBK Amateur Contest WMB0 Poetry and Mnsio Barnett's Orch.

WUBK Dance Orch. WMBC Lest We Forget-D Cave- WWJ Russell Barnes WXYZ Cheerio-T WMBC Clark' Orch WEXL McLean-R Music WIBK Moon Paul WW. Newscast WXYZ Music Yon Want CKLW Club Reporter-0 WUBK Potpourri- WMBC Sports 11:15 WJR News and Muste WWJ Dance Orch. CKLW Music for You WMBC Dance Orch. 11:30 WJR Busse'8 Orch.

WXYZ Arnheim' Orch. WIBK Rev Metcalf-R WMBC Dance Time 11:45 Pablo Orch. WIBK Melodies WBC Dance Orch. 12:00 WJR Letter from Home-C Barrie's Orch. CKLW Canadian News WIBK News and Nicht Owl WMBC Dance Orch.

WEAL Moonlight Broadcast Orch CKLW Avers' Orch. Garber's Orch. WXYZ Grier's Orch. CKLW Larry Gentile- WMBC Swing Club WJR Krupa's Orch. CKLW Dawn Patrol.

Molinas' Orch. THE BIBLE COMES TO LIFE! Tune in the "LIGHT of the WORLD" MONDAY, MARCH 181h BEGINNING 2:00 P.M.- STATION WWI SPONSORED BY THE BETTY CROCKER Real Constipation Relief AFTER 35! Your own common sense will tell you that after 35 your intes- for tinal muscles are apt to be weaker. What you may need muscles. regularity is Thousands something of to grateful help people strengthen who had literally "tried these sluggish everything" constipation have with at last SERUTAN. Mild in action- -does not gripe! found blessed relief from functional MUST HELP YOU BACK! OR SERUTAN YOUR ELIMINATION MONEY TO READ IT BACKWARDS Lengths of Res 400 Meters Kes 325.9 Meters Res 242 Meters Kca 201.1 Meters.

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

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Detroit Free Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Detroit Free Press Archive

Pages Available:
3,662,340
Years Available:
1837-2024