Thursday, November 25, 2021

11/22/1951

 

EAST FAREWELL NEWS


Thursday, November 22, 1951   Vol. C337


LOCAL NEWS


FULL HUNTERS MOON AND WARM EVENINGS MAKE MAIN STREET A BIG HIT


East Farewell – The full Hunters moon and surprisingly warm evenings has made Main Street the place to walk. Couples, families and even many youths have taken advantage of the mild fall weather to stroll down Main Street after sunset. Several restaurants have also taken advantage of the warm nights to set up tables along the sidewalks and stay open later than usual to offer dining and drinks. “This is just a wonderful time,” said Mrs. Mallard, local boarding house owner, “It is very unusual to have the evenings to be this warm this late in the season but we love it. I think we will be paying for it later in the month but for now we are going to enjoy it.”

            The warm weather is a bit of an “Indian Summer” that has settled in for the past few days. Most of the weather forecasters are saying the true fall weather will be returning by the end of the week. For the mean time, though, many people have found great pleasure in strolling down Main Street and up Lake Shore Drive. Some have even launched out onto Lake Charles in canoes to take a romantic paddle across the lake. Most of the people with motorboats have refrained from running them after dark so the canoes have pretty free reign.

            “I hope the town will make this type of event a more permanent occurrence,” said Leon Doyle, local restaurateur, “It would be great if we had a dedicated evening that everyone could come out and stroll down Main Street. I think it would have to be before this time but maybe late September or mid-October would be great. I had a full sidewalk for three nights now and that was great. Just great.”

Main Street at night - 1951


SPORTS


COUGARS WIN BY A WHISKER


East Farewell – The Cougars took on their arch rivals, the Slate Mountain Miners, on Saturday and the evenly matched teams played a very good game. Both teams played error free with both offenses and defenses executing extremely well. The game came down to a last minute extra point block by Cougars defensive end Shamus McKean that sealed the win for the Cougars.

            The Cougars started the game with a well-executed drive that fell short at the Miners 35. Coach Burcowitz thought they just too far away for a Cox field goal attempt so they gave the ball to Cox for a punt. While Charlie did not try any punts before the season, he has learned, practiced and really became a fairly good punter. Apparently, he has not mastered a lot of control and still relies on pure power. He knocked the ball into the end zone for a touchback. The Miners first procession ended at the Cougars 40.

The game started to look like a battle between the 30s but in the second quarter Cougars QB, Billy O’Conner, was able to find his favorite wide receiver, Phil Flynn darting down the sideline and laid a perfect 25 yard pass right in his arms and he was able to go in for the first score. The Miners came right back and with thirty seconds left in the half the Miners were able to send their best halfback, Ned Furman, right up the center for a trying score.

The second half was similar to the first, each time moving a little then punting and the other team moving back across mid-field but not much further. With one minute left in the third quarter, Cougar running back, Joey Fox, got a screen pass from O’Conner on the right side and danced by two would be tacklers and broke out for a 30 yard TD. The Cougars took their 14-7 lead all the way down to the last five minutes of the game. It looked good for the Cougars as they were holding the Miners time and time again but with one minute left, third and five, the Miners QB, Bert Davis, dropped back and took a big gamble. He threw a long bomb to his streaking wide receiver, Anthony DeMaio, who made a fingertip catch in stride and having out run his defender ran in for the score. There were only ten seconds on the clock as the Miners lined up for a two point conversion. They were able to convert and it looked like they won the game but before the ball was hiked one of the Miner guards moved and the play was called back with a five yard penalty, the first of the game. The Miners lined up to kick an extra point and tie the game. That is when McKean came blasting in from the right side, untouched and hurled himself in front of the kicker and smothered the ball. The Cougars were able to win by a whisker, 14-13.

The Cougars take one last road trip next week to Corning to face the Devils. The Devils have fallen on some difficult times since they defeated the Cougars earlier in the season, 21-14. The Devils have been stung with injuries to key personnel, namely their league leading quarterback, Ken Murphy, and receiver, Mitch Tupper. The Devils have dropped their last two and the Cougars are hoping for a little revenge for their hard fought loss earlier. The game begins at 1:30 on Saturday at Corning High School field.

 


 NATIONAL NEWS


TRUMAN FIRES AG CAUDIE – TRUMAN CHARGES REPUBLICANS WITH TRYING TO BUY THE ELECTION – WARREN JOINS RACE – NIXON RANKS CANDIDATES -  FAKE DRAFT CARDS IN CHICAGO – GLEASON SIGNS WITH CBS


President Truman fires Assistant Attorney General T.Lamar Caudie saying he had “engaged in outside activities” not in keeping with his duties as the Government’s No. 1 prosecutor of tax frauds. 

President Truman charges that the Republicans will try to buy the Presidency next year in a campaign of “lies and smears.” He predicted that “special interests” would spend more money in “trying to defeat the Democratic Party next year than has ever before been spent in any election in the history of the republic.”

Gov. Earl Warren becomes the second avowed candidate for the 1952 Republican Presidential nomination. He joins senator Taft of Ohio as a declared Republican candidate.

Senator Richard Nixon says that if Gov. Warren (of California) wins the Republican Presidential nomination “He should win handily over Truman or any other Democratic nominee presently considered.” “I would say Sen. Taft and Gen. Eisenhower are the front runners, with Gov. Warren the strongest dark horse.” 

In the Chicago area – the unsavory racket of juveniles is becoming widespread – the sale of forged draft cards to high school boys to enable them to purchase liquor and cigarettes. The cards are going as high as $15. Said one teen, “I don’t know where the pupils get them, but I have seen the cards and they look pretty authentic. They are purchased mostly by kids in the better residential districts who have the money and who want to go to nice places. The kids in poor neighborhoods, where the tavern owners aren’t so fussy, don’t need them. Some of the boys also use the draft cards to pick up older girls.”

Jackie Gleason signs with CBS-TV for three years for a reported $300,000 per year. Gleason had been in talks with NBC-TV. Needless to say, he’ll be leaving as emcee of Dumont's “Cavalcade of Stars.”


Many, many thanks to www.mrpopculture.com for contributing to this section of the East Farewell News.


 



Thursday, November 18, 2021

11/15/1951

 

EAST FAREWELL NEWS


Thursday, November 15, 1951   Vol. C335


LOCAL NEWS


ARMISITCE DAY CELEBRATED IN EAST FAREWELL


East Farewell – Armistice Day was celebrated on Thursday in town with a memorial service at the Lake Shore Drive War Memorial. The service was attended by many honored veterans from World War I, WW2 and the Korean War. Tommy Flynn, the town’s oldest surviving vet (from WWI) was the guest of honor and other honorees were presented with keys to the town which will entitle them to free dining in restaurants and free services offered across town. Most of the honorees will only partake in the free food. The service was tailored for the afternoon setting so the high school band could be present and play some military music. An honor guard from the High School ROTC Squad fired a rifle salute to the vets and in honor of those who had paid the ultimate price. Also, there was a sole bugler on the hill beyond the memorial who played taps in memorial to the fallen. The bugler was sophomore, Warren Daly.

            After the ceremony there was a small luncheon for the honorees and their families. The food and drink was supplied by the local restaurant, Duffy’s. Everyone was invited to attend there were tables and chairs set up around the Lakefront Plaza and lights were strung around the Plaza and the evening was filled with great food and popular music supplied by local bandleader, Gus Templeton and his slimmed down orchestra which was basically a quintet with Les playing the piano.

            Lately Armistice Day has been called Veterans Day but either way is the special day we all take to remember our heroes, local or national, living and passed, and thank them for their service.


1951 Armistice Day celebration on Lakefront Plaza


SPORTS


COUGARS GROUND HAWKS


East Farewell – The Cougars got back on the winning track on Saturday with a 21-10 win over the struggling Southport Hawks. The Cougars took charge early and held control throughout the game. In the fourth quarter with the game well in hand Coach Burcowitz put in the second team that resulted in the Hawks getting their final field goal. “The second team really showed they knew how to play,” Burcowitz said after the game, “They played tough and stopped that determined Hawks team and forced them to kick a field goal. They almost blocked that, too.”

            The game started with the Cougars receiving the kickoff and the very speedy Joey Fox returning the kickoff all the back to the Hawks 48. Billy O’Conner started off on the ground giving the ball Shamus O’Donnell who ran for a quick 8 yards. The Cougars stayed on the ground and moved the ball all the way down to the Hawks six. O’Conner then went to air dropping flair out pass to Phil Flynn who scooted in for the score on the Cougars first procession. Charlie Cox added the extra point. The Hawks tried valiantly but they had a difficult time moving the ball in past the Cougars 30. Their defense did rise up and seemed to grow stronger as the game went on. The Cougars were able to score once more before the end of the half on a beautiful end run by Joey Fox. The half ended with the Cougars ahead 14-0. The third quarter had the Cougars in almost complete control of the ball holding onto it for 8 of the 12 minutes in the quarter. Even though they dominated the clock control the Cougars were only able to score once in the quarter and surprisingly the Hawks were able to score when Hawks defensive back, Chuck Bellows, grabbed an errand O’Conner pass all the way back at the Cougars twenty four and Bellows with an open field, ran back his interception for a score.

            The fourth quarter started with the score 14-7 but the Cougars came right back after the interception-score with a long, hard hitting drive of their own and scored on their first procession of the fourth quarter. They again seemed to have control and eat up the clock. The stiff Hawks defense would not give in though and they kept the Cougars off scoreboard. The clock wound down to three minutes and Coach Burcowitz put in the second team. The Hawks did move the ball but not as much as they would have liked and as time ran down they set up for a 15 yard field goal with 30 seconds left on the clock. “I talked to Coach Randell (Hawks coach) after the game and he said he went for the field goal because he wanted his boys to get some points for all the work they put in on that last drive. I’m OK with that,” said Coach Burcowitz after the game.

            The Cougars stay at home next week when they meet their arch-rival, the Slate Mountain Miners, for the second time this season. The Cougars won the first meeting 14-7 but the Miners have improved greatly through out the season so this should be a very good game. The game begins at 1:30 on Saturday at Regional High School field. 


 NATIONAL NEWS


REDS ACTING LIKE BARBARIANS – RIDGEWAY TO INVESTIGATE SLAUGHTER OF OUR BOYS – CONGRESSMEN WANT TO NUKE KOREA – COMMIES FILL AIRWAVES WITH ACCUSATIONS – WEST UNVEILS PEACE PLAN – KAISER-FRAZER DEBUT NEW CAR – BANCROFT GET FIRST MOVIE CONTRACT – POP MUSIC THIS WEEK


The U.S. 8th Army charged the Reds in acts of “barbarism unique even in the Communist world,’ have killed about 5500 Americans and 290 other prisoners of war. The charges say that Chinese forces in Korea committed most of the Communist atrocity killings of the U.N. prisoners of war since the entry of Red China into the conflict late last year.

Supreme-allied commander Gen Matthew Ridgway orders a full investigation of the story of Communist slaughter of allied war prisoners released this week by an 8th army legal officer.

Angry Congressmen demand that the United States drop the atomic bomb on Communist troops in Korea and break off truce negotiations with the barbaric Reds in retaliation for newly disclosed enemy atrocities.

Communist broadcasts fill the air with bitter new charges of allied atrocities in Korea, casting a pall over the recessed truce talks at Panmunjom. Some of the accusations included killing or starving to death some 17,000 North Korean and Chinese prisoners of war and shipping out 1,000 Red Korean and Vietnam prisoners for use as guinea pigs in atomic tests.

The western powers unveil full details of their new peace plan, calling for an eventual disarmament parley of all nations, including Communist China.

Kaiser-Frazer Corp. announced that it will make a new low-priced automobile named the Allstate to be sold only by Sears, Roebuck & Co. The Allstate will look much like the company’s Henry J, with “distinguishing appearance characteristics,” it is learned.

 


Anne Bancroft (20) of New York gets her first motion picture contract. She’s been appearing in New York TV productions for the past 18 months. Her 20th-Century Fox contract says she’ll receive $20,000 for her first year in pictures.

 

Pop music this week:

SIN - Eddy Howard

BECAUSE OF YOU - Tony Bennett

COLD, COLD HEART - Tony Bennett

I GET IDEAS - Tony Martin

DOWN YONDER - Del Wood

AND SO TO SLEEP AGAIN - Patti Page

THE WORLD IS WAITING FOR THE SUNRISE - Les Paul & Mary

Ford

UNDECIDED - Ames Brothers

TURN BACK THE HANDS OF TIME - Eddie Fisher

DOMINO - Tony Martin

THE LOVELIEST NIGHT OF THE YEAR - Mario Lanza

WHISPERING - Les Paul

BLUE VELVET - Tony Bennett

IT’S ALL IN THE GAME - Tommy Edwards 


Many, many thanks to www.mrpopculture.com for contributing to this section of the East Farewell News.


 


Thursday, November 11, 2021

11/8/1951

 EAST FAREWELL NEWS


Thursday, November 8, 1951   Vol. C334


LOCAL NEWS


IRON WORKS WORKERS GET NEW CONTRACT


East Farewell – The Iron Works and the IWU (Iron Workers Union) signed a new four year contract that increased wages and extended medical benefits to all members. The company gained more flexibility in work schedules and job descriptions. The negotiations were short, cordial and mutually beneficial. “The current business atmosphere is very good for both labor and management. Both sides to want to take advantage of this very lucrative environment and make everyone, on both sides, benefit,” said Iron Works manager, Ike Rustman.

            The Iron Works has been in East Farewell since the town was founded in the early part of the century.   The Mighty Keystone Railroad first set up the Iron Works to supply rails for its westward expansion.  In 1913 the Iron Works was sold by the Mighty Keystone Railroad to a local business group headed by Francis O’Sullivan.  The business was spun off from the main railroad under pressure from anti-monopoly forces in the government and O’Sullivan’s group received very favorable terms in the sale.  Along with the factory and trained, IWU union labor force, O’Sullivan received an almost continuous order for rails from the railroad.  The business thrived and expanded through the following decades. The local work force grew and the Iron Works took a prominent position in town affairs and sponsored many events and youth teams. Both management and the work force all lived in town and their children all attended the same school. This has led to positive relationship between labor and management. The four year contract is another sign of the positive relationship that has been built between labor and management. Most previous contracts have been for only two or three years. It also shows that the company anticipates continued growth and profits.

East Farewell Iron Works with workers reporting to work


SPORTS


HEARTBREAKER IN RIVERVIEW


Riverview – The Cougars lost a heartbreaker on Saturday in Riverview to the Riverview Wildcats, 21-20. The Cougars were coming off a strong win last week against Sun City and they were hoping g to extend that momentum against the Wildcats. Both the Cougars and the Wildcats are sitting in the middle of the league in standing and they are similar teams in many ways. The most obvious is that they are both very young teams. The Cougars have only one senior on the team while the Wildcats field two. The Wildcats have more sophomores through, 5-3. What both teams do not lack is enthusiasm and that was on display Saturday.

            The Wildcats won the toss and surprisingly deferred, perhaps because they felt their strength was in their defense. The Cougars were able to move the ball but they were not able to score in the first quarter. The Wildcats were able to push the ball on their second possession and score on a quick out pass to their lead receiver, Jimmy Fletcher. In the second quarter, the Cougars found their footing and were able to work the ball down to the Wildcats 17. Billy O’Conner dropped back to pass on first down but then handed off to fullback, “Moose” Boyle, who rumbled through a hole in the center of the line and ran all the way in for a touchdown. “That was his longest run of the season, I think he was winded afterwards but he was happy,” said Coach Burcowitz after the game.

            The second half had much more action with the Wildcats scoring two more times, a run by Donny Salter and another catch by Fletcher. The Cougars fought back and in the fourth quarter scored their third touchdown with beautiful end run by Joey Fox. The Cougars lined up for the extra point but they attempted a two point conversion because there was only one minute left on the clock. They were going for the win. They lined up, the ball was hiked, O’Conner dropped back and was looking for Flynn in the end zone but he was double teamed and O’Conner dumped the ball off to Shamus O’Donnell who valiantly tried to slip across the goal line but he was met by two defenders, Billy Arnold and Taylor Reynolds at the one and stood up and tackled. The Wildcats ran the clock out and the Cougars left the field dejected with a 20-21 loss on their record.

            “That was a tough one,” said Coach Burcowitz, “We really though we could get that two-pointer but they defended very well and you have to give them credit for that. Our boys played a very good game; we just came up a little short today. Next week.”

            Next week the Cougars play the Southport Hawks. The Cougars are back home and the game begins at 1:30PM on the Regional High Field. The Hawks are having a difficult season since their senior quarterback; Lamar Donaldson was injured in their first game. They have had to field a sophomore, Bert Farley, to run the team.  


 NATIONAL NEWS


IKE FLIES HOME – CIRCUS TRAIN CRASHES – AUTRY SUES REPUBLIC – SINATRA GARDNER MARRY – DAVIS ELOPES – CAMPANELLA NL MVP – AT THE MOVIES 


General Eisenhower flies home from his Paris headquarters of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization at the suggestion of President Truman to report on the European situation. It’s his first journey home since January. Since then, Republican leaders have insisted he declare himself soon on whether he will run for the Republican nomination for President.

A circus truck overturns on a treacherous mountain road in Arkansas. A vicious leopard, a dangerous polar bear, two black bears and four monkeys got away. Hunters found a second leopard crouching in underbrush and shot it to death a few hours after the crash.

Cowboy actor Gene Autry sues to halt the sale of 64 of his old pictures for commercial television. The suit against Republic Pictures Inc and Hollywood Television Service Inc alleges that the films, made between 1934 and 1947, have been offered for sale by the Hollywood Television service (which is really a subsidiary of Republic Pictures). Autry asserts that the films were made solely for theater showing and claims the exclusive right to use or permit the use of his name in commercial advertising.

Frank Sinatra and Ava Gardner get their marriage license in Philadelphia. Sinatra was described as “highly nervous,” Miss Gardner “very calm.” Sinatra gave his age as 34 - occupation-entertainer. Miss Gardner said she is 28, an actress.

Marion Davies, the former actress and long-time confidante of the late William Randolph Hearst, eloped with Capt. Horace Brown Jr., a merchant marine skipper.

 Brooklyn Dodger catcher Roy Campanella is voted most valuable National League Player for 1951 by the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. In addition to Campanella, seven players drew first-place votes: Musial Irvin, Maglie Roe, Jackie Robinson, Bobby Thomson and Murry Dickson. Campanella is the second Negro to receive the honor. The first went to his teammate, Jackie Robinson in 1949.

At the movies -

Close To My Heart - Ray Milland, Gene Tierney

Detective Story - Kirk Douglas, Eleanor Parker, William Bendix

The Mob - Broderick Crawford

Hotel Sahara - Yvonne De Carlo, Peter Ustinov, David Tomlinson

The Big Night - John Barrymore Jr., Preston Foster, Joan Loring

Let’s Make It Legal - Claudette Colbert, Macdonald Carey, Zachary Scott, Barbara Bates, Robert Wagner, Marilyn Monroe, Frank Cady

The Magic Face - Luther Adler, Patricia Knight

The Whistle At Eaton Falls - Lloyd Bridges, Dorothy Gish

Across The Wide Missouri - Clark Gable, Ricardo Montalbán

People Will Talk - Cary Grant, Jeanne Crain

His Kind Of Woman - Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell

The Blue Veil - Jane Wyman, Charles Laughton, Joan Blondell, Richard Carlson, Agnes Moorhead, Natalie Wood 


Many, many thanks to www.mrpopculture.com for contributing to this section of the East Farewell News.


 



Thursday, November 4, 2021

11/1/1951

EAST FAREWELL NEWS


Thursday, November 1, 1951   Vol. C333


LOCAL NEWS


HALLOWEEN SCARE IN THE GRAVEYARD


East Farewell – The town graveyard was the center of attention last week as Halloween approached. Many of the town’s prominent citizens are buried there as well as some early settlers from around the area. While East Farewell’s history only goes back to the beginning of the century, some of the first people to move here are buried in the town cemetery. One of those is a character from the early days of East Farewell. Edward Drury came to America around the 1870s according to his own telling, and roamed around post-Civil War America for several years. He found a job with the Mighty Keystone railroad when it was still a small, local line. The MKR was just starting to experience it’s incredible growth at the time and it is told that Drury, without any real surveying expertise was able to talk his way into a position of assistant surveyor and went to work with the Lendel  brothers, Sid and Lou, and helped lay out the new cross-state route for the MKR. All along the route the MKR built towns and they ran through established towns but they were few and far between. Still, it seems Mr. Drury became very adept at going into a town and finding an available, or unavailable, young woman and romance her much to the young woman’s boyfriend, father or husband’s lividity. Luckily for Drury he was never in any town long enough to feel their wrath. Mr. Drury did not live in East Farewell proper; it was more where he ended up. There have been rumors that Mr. Drury met his demise at the hands of an irate fiancé on the shores of Lake Charles. He was buried in the town graveyard. Over the years a bit of a legend has developed around Mr. Drury. It evolved into a ghost story that was passed down and shared, mostly by the seniors in the high school imparting them to the younger students. Part of the legend is that Mr. Drury’s ghost rises from his grave on October 28th, the day he was murdered, and he goes looking for the woman who was his last conquest and her fiancé who did him in.

            Last Sunday was October 28th and keeping with the legend and in the spirit of the season a group of high schoolers gathered in the graveyard to await Mr. Drury’s return. Usually this is an anti-climactic event with the youths sitting around his grave with candles and flashlights telling scary stories and eventually scattering when a nocturnal animal disrupted the scene. But last Sunday a strange thing happened. As the clock struck 11:15, the purported time of Mr. Drury’s untimely death, a large cloud appeared to float over the graveyard and move towards Lake Charles. Needless to say, the crowd was frantic. They all ran towards the graveyard exit screaming at the top of their lungs. All the commotion alerted the police who were coincidentally parked right around the corner and they were able to corral the gang and calm everyone down. 

            “After the investigation we determined that the “spirit” was really just an unusually well timed lake fog that had drifted into the graveyard. It is interesting that the cloud drifted in at the exact time the ghost was supposed to rise but I prefer to write that off as an amazing coincidence than an actual apparition,” said Office Ward when asked afterwards at the station house.

            An amazing coincidence indeed.

East Farewell Cemetery


SPORTS


COUGARS HOMECOMING BIG WIN


East Farewell – The Cougars held their Homecoming game on Saturday when they hosted the Sun City Eagles. There were fun pre-game festivities and a wonderful halftime show and the Cougars were able to satisfy the adoring hometown crowd with a convincing 28-14 win. The Cougars seemed charged up from the start of the game. Perhaps all the hoopla at the beginning helped. The Cougars won the toss and elected to receive. Joey Fox received the kickoff and dashed right through the middle and made it all the way to the Eagles forty-eight. Billy O’Conner came right out and started throwing. He hit Phil Flynn on the first pass for twelve yards. He screened a pass out to Fox who gained another eight yards. On the third play he handed off to Shamus O’Donnell who shot through the line a got another first down. The Eagles were back on their heels and the Cougars were moving easily. It only took five more plays for the Cougar’s “Moose” Boyle to ram through the middle on a second and goal to rumble into the end zone for the first score. The Eagles responded with a drive in the second quarter that tied the score but the Cougars came right back before the half with a last minute play to Flynn that gave the Cougars a 14-7 lead at the half.

            The Eagles were able to score again in the third with a long drive that took up most of third quarter but the Cougars came right back to make it 21- 14 at the beginning of the fourth. The Cougars game sealing score came from a 35 yard sweep by Joey Fox, shaking off two tackles and racing into the end zone for the score. The Cougars celebrated their homecoming with a 28-14 win.

            Next week the Cougars travel to Riverview to battle the Wildcats. Both teams are in the middle of the league standings so this game could be very important for the final standings. The game begins on Riverview High’s field at 1:00PM.

 


 NATIONAL NEWS


TRUMAN WELCOMES QUEEN – CHURCHILL SEND TROOPS TO SUEZ – ALLIES & COMMIES IN BIG DOGFIGHT – SINATRA DIVORCED – PICKFORD ACTS AGAIN – POP MUSIC THIS WEEK


In Washington, President Truman welcomed Princess Elizabeth to the United States. 550,000 cheered the Princess and Prince Phillip. Said President Truman - “Margaret tells me that whenever anyone becomes acquainted with you they immediately fall in love with you.”

The Princess told the President and millions more watching and listening on radio and television that Britain and Canada will “work with all our strength for freedom and for peace.”

Britain Prime Minister Winston Churchill ordered another infantry division to the Middle East as Egyptian extremists boasted they are “adequately armed” for an underground war to oust the British from Suez and the Sudan.

Korean War - Allied jets and 113 Communist MIG’s clashed today in the three actions over Northwest Korea. The 5th Air Force said one Red jet was shot down and two were damaged in the sudden renewal of air combat. All Allied planes returned to their bases.

Mrs. Frank Sinatra was granted a divorce from her singer/husband. Mrs. Sinatra, under questioning of her counsel, related that on numerous occasions, her husband stayed out very late or did not come home at all. On numerous occasions when he invited guests to the house, he would go into another room of our house and ignore his company. Ask if he had asked for a divorce, Mrs. Sinatra said he had done so a number of times.

Mary Pickford will resume her acting career after a 19-year hiatus. She is signed by Stanley Kramer for a film titled “The Library.”

Pop music this week:

Because Of You - Tony Bennett

Sin - Eddy Howard

Cold Cold Heart - Tony Bennett

I Get Ideas - Tony Martin

And So To Sleep Again - Patti Page

It’s No Sin - Savannah Churchill

Turn Back The Hands of Time – Eddie Fisher

Hey, Good Lookin’ - Frankie Laine-Joe Stafford

Calla Calla - Vic Damone

Down Yonder - Freddy Martin

Blue Velvet - Tony Bennett

 


Many, many thanks to www.mrpopculture.com for contributing to this section of the East Farewell News.