LizzieMaine
Bartender
- Messages
- 33,840
- Location
- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Reports from Italian radio monitored by the Columbia Broadcasting System today declared that the fighting on the Karelian Peninsula of Finland has ended. There is no official confirmation of this report from Finnish or Russian sources.
Meanwhile, a Finnish emissary arrived in Berlin today for a conference with German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop in which he is expected to request support in negotiating a peace with Russia. Former Finnish President Per Evind Svinhufvud was accompanied by Swedish Minister to Berlin Arvid Richert, and is expected to argue the case that Nazi support for Finland in the peace talks is the only way to prevent the Allied Powers from intervening in the situation. The official Nazi position has been that Britain and France are using the Finnish situation as an excuse to bring Scandinavia into the current war.
German planes raided the British coast last night in an assault that sank or damaged a total of eleven merchant ships. The reports from the German news agency DNB stated that all aircraft returned safely to their bases after the raid.
Two young Brooklyn society women, including a niece of Borough President John Cashmore, are under protection of the Federal Bureau of Investigation following a series of kidnapping threats that have their roots in a series of bizarre telephone calls dating back nearly a year and a half. Twenty-year-old Miss Miriam Lashley, whose mother is President Cashmore's sister, and twenty-year-old Miss Melvina Schulz, daughter of a wealthy real estate broker, began receiving the calls in October 1938. At first, the caller, believed to be an adult male with a gruff, possibly disguised voice, repeated the phrase "Bow wow wow!" and then tapped out what seemed to be a Morse Code message by striking the telephone mouthpiece with a metal implement. The caller also breathed heavily during these calls. The calls later became more specific, threatening the girls with abduction unless money was paid. The calls ceased briefly in the spring of 1939 before resuming more regularly, and recently have been received at a rate of two or three per day. The girls have no known enemies, and the theory that the caller might be a rejected suitor seeking revenge has been discounted by investigators.
Five men accused of aiding a now-deceased arch-swindler in taking over one of the nation's largest drug manufacturing concerns are on trial in Manhattan Federal Court. Assistant US Attorney Irving R. Kaufman is prosecuting the case against John O. Jenkins of Jamacia, Leonard Jenkins of Richmond Hill, Horace B. Merwin, president of the Bridgeport Trust Company, Rowley W. Phillips, the chairman of a major firm of investment bankers in Waterbury, Connecticut, and John H. McGloon of Fairfield, Connecticut, the chief controller of the drug firm of McKesson and Robbins. The five men are charged with aiding the late Philip Musica, who operated under the name of F. Donald Coster, in his takeover of McKesson in a swindle that, until it crashed in 1938, cost company stockholders more than $21,000,000. Musica formerly operated the Adelphi Pharmacal Company in Brooklyn, a bootleg concern dealing mostly in illegal liquor. At the height of his success in 1936, he was asked to run for the Republican presidential nomination. Two years later, with his scheme in ruins, Musica shot himself in the head.
The defense rested its case this morning in the murder trial of Ernest Walter Kehler for the slaying of German consular secretary Dr. Walter Engelberg. After denying a series of defense motions, Judge Peter J. Brancato recessed the trial until Monday morning, when both sides will make their summations to the jury. Defense Attorney Leo Healy called no witnesses and offered no evidence in concluding his case.
An impeccably-dressed young woman who leaped to her death from a hotel window in Detroit after scrawling "Exit Smiling" on the wall of her room in lipstick has been linked to the president of the Columbia Broadcasting System. The woman, who had registered at the hotel under the name of "J. Stoddard," has been identified by Detroit police as 28-year-old Geraldine Kenyon of Pontiac, Michigan. Letters found in the room addressed to CBS president William S. Paley and signed "Johanna" professed her love for the broadcasting executive, and thanked him for past kindnesses. From his New York office, Paley issued a statement today acknowledging that he knew the woman and had tried to help her after she claimed to have tuberculosis, but that he was unable to grant her request for a job as a radio entertainer because she had no experience that would justify putting her on the air.
A plot to kidnap 17-year-old movie star Judy Garland collapsed in Hollywood today, leaving one of the plotters, a 19-year-old youth from Buffalo, New York, in jail. The boy, identified as Robert Wilson, lost his nerve and called the police to warn that "Judy Garland will be kidnapped tonight." Police traced the call and arrested Wilson a block away from a Santa Monica hotel. A search for his co-conspirator is underway.
("Damn Hipster," 1940 style.)
Brooklyn College, which has so far resisted college-movie hijinks, will go in for hazing freshmen following a series of new regulations passed by the Student Council. Effective immediately, first year students will be required to wear beanie caps at all times on campus, and to address all upperclassmen as "Sir" or "Ma'am," "Mister" or "Miss." Freshmen will also be required to enter the library thru the side doors "to preserve the dignity of the institution," and to sing the school song and recite the school motto on demand. A student court to address violations of these rules has also been established.
The men of the Central Congregational Church had hearts all aflutter as they modeled the latest in feminine fashions before an audience of more than 400 persons in the church parish house last night. The glamorous gentlemen displayed elegant gowns, sportswear, and negligees in a pageant jointly sponsored by all departments of the church. (What, no pictures?)
(You really *can* get anything at Sears.)
Broadway columnist Hy Gardner says bandleader Ben Bernie, now appearing at the Hotel Taft, needs to stop eating so much or he'll start looking like the hotel's namesake. (And Walter Winchell says to Mr. Gardner, "Scram, small fry. I'm working this side of the street.")
Robert Francis went to see the Three Stooges in person at the Flatbush, where they're heading the vaudeville bill this week, and says if you like this type of slap-face-eye-poke comedy, don't miss this show. The Stooges were in fine form, dominating every other act on the bill and at one point stopping the show with their antics.
Now showing at the RKO Albee, a pretty impressive double feature -- Shirley Temple in "The Blue Bird" paired with Raymond Massey in "Abe Lincoln in Illinois." 25 cent matinee shows till 5 pm, kids always 15 cents!
The Dodger outfield for the opening game of the Grapefruit League season against the Reds in Tampa will be Joe Vosmik in left, Ernie Koy in center, and Roy Cullenbine in right. Meanwhile, as the team headed out in cars for the 27 mile drive to the Reds' camp, there was still no sign of Dolph Camilli, and Larry MacPhail is still fuming mad at the big first baseman. "He thinks he can blackjack the club because we wouldn't dare open the season without him," growls the Red Headed One. "But he might just as well know now he can't get away with it!"
Bad Eddie Shore, the man who brought the Americans back to life in their quest for a Stanley Cup Playoff berth, is looking increasingly corpse-like himself. Shore may beg off tonight's game against the Bruins on the grounds of exhaustion after playing three games in three nights.
John Gambling celebrated his 15th anniversary on the air today, with his Musical Clock morning-exercise program one of New York's most enduring daily features. Gambling is on the air daily from 7:15 to 8 am, never having varied his formula of calisthenics, live music by Vincent Sorey's orchestra and a canary-bird chorus, and pleasant ad-libbed chatter.
George, you've tried to take every rich relative that's ever turned up, and what has it ever gotten you? And stop bumping your big potato nose up against his, it's unsanitary.
What'll it take, Leona? A subpoena?
"Father Coughlin? Who's he?"
Meanwhile, a Finnish emissary arrived in Berlin today for a conference with German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop in which he is expected to request support in negotiating a peace with Russia. Former Finnish President Per Evind Svinhufvud was accompanied by Swedish Minister to Berlin Arvid Richert, and is expected to argue the case that Nazi support for Finland in the peace talks is the only way to prevent the Allied Powers from intervening in the situation. The official Nazi position has been that Britain and France are using the Finnish situation as an excuse to bring Scandinavia into the current war.
German planes raided the British coast last night in an assault that sank or damaged a total of eleven merchant ships. The reports from the German news agency DNB stated that all aircraft returned safely to their bases after the raid.
Two young Brooklyn society women, including a niece of Borough President John Cashmore, are under protection of the Federal Bureau of Investigation following a series of kidnapping threats that have their roots in a series of bizarre telephone calls dating back nearly a year and a half. Twenty-year-old Miss Miriam Lashley, whose mother is President Cashmore's sister, and twenty-year-old Miss Melvina Schulz, daughter of a wealthy real estate broker, began receiving the calls in October 1938. At first, the caller, believed to be an adult male with a gruff, possibly disguised voice, repeated the phrase "Bow wow wow!" and then tapped out what seemed to be a Morse Code message by striking the telephone mouthpiece with a metal implement. The caller also breathed heavily during these calls. The calls later became more specific, threatening the girls with abduction unless money was paid. The calls ceased briefly in the spring of 1939 before resuming more regularly, and recently have been received at a rate of two or three per day. The girls have no known enemies, and the theory that the caller might be a rejected suitor seeking revenge has been discounted by investigators.
Five men accused of aiding a now-deceased arch-swindler in taking over one of the nation's largest drug manufacturing concerns are on trial in Manhattan Federal Court. Assistant US Attorney Irving R. Kaufman is prosecuting the case against John O. Jenkins of Jamacia, Leonard Jenkins of Richmond Hill, Horace B. Merwin, president of the Bridgeport Trust Company, Rowley W. Phillips, the chairman of a major firm of investment bankers in Waterbury, Connecticut, and John H. McGloon of Fairfield, Connecticut, the chief controller of the drug firm of McKesson and Robbins. The five men are charged with aiding the late Philip Musica, who operated under the name of F. Donald Coster, in his takeover of McKesson in a swindle that, until it crashed in 1938, cost company stockholders more than $21,000,000. Musica formerly operated the Adelphi Pharmacal Company in Brooklyn, a bootleg concern dealing mostly in illegal liquor. At the height of his success in 1936, he was asked to run for the Republican presidential nomination. Two years later, with his scheme in ruins, Musica shot himself in the head.
The defense rested its case this morning in the murder trial of Ernest Walter Kehler for the slaying of German consular secretary Dr. Walter Engelberg. After denying a series of defense motions, Judge Peter J. Brancato recessed the trial until Monday morning, when both sides will make their summations to the jury. Defense Attorney Leo Healy called no witnesses and offered no evidence in concluding his case.
An impeccably-dressed young woman who leaped to her death from a hotel window in Detroit after scrawling "Exit Smiling" on the wall of her room in lipstick has been linked to the president of the Columbia Broadcasting System. The woman, who had registered at the hotel under the name of "J. Stoddard," has been identified by Detroit police as 28-year-old Geraldine Kenyon of Pontiac, Michigan. Letters found in the room addressed to CBS president William S. Paley and signed "Johanna" professed her love for the broadcasting executive, and thanked him for past kindnesses. From his New York office, Paley issued a statement today acknowledging that he knew the woman and had tried to help her after she claimed to have tuberculosis, but that he was unable to grant her request for a job as a radio entertainer because she had no experience that would justify putting her on the air.
A plot to kidnap 17-year-old movie star Judy Garland collapsed in Hollywood today, leaving one of the plotters, a 19-year-old youth from Buffalo, New York, in jail. The boy, identified as Robert Wilson, lost his nerve and called the police to warn that "Judy Garland will be kidnapped tonight." Police traced the call and arrested Wilson a block away from a Santa Monica hotel. A search for his co-conspirator is underway.
("Damn Hipster," 1940 style.)
Brooklyn College, which has so far resisted college-movie hijinks, will go in for hazing freshmen following a series of new regulations passed by the Student Council. Effective immediately, first year students will be required to wear beanie caps at all times on campus, and to address all upperclassmen as "Sir" or "Ma'am," "Mister" or "Miss." Freshmen will also be required to enter the library thru the side doors "to preserve the dignity of the institution," and to sing the school song and recite the school motto on demand. A student court to address violations of these rules has also been established.
The men of the Central Congregational Church had hearts all aflutter as they modeled the latest in feminine fashions before an audience of more than 400 persons in the church parish house last night. The glamorous gentlemen displayed elegant gowns, sportswear, and negligees in a pageant jointly sponsored by all departments of the church. (What, no pictures?)
(You really *can* get anything at Sears.)
Broadway columnist Hy Gardner says bandleader Ben Bernie, now appearing at the Hotel Taft, needs to stop eating so much or he'll start looking like the hotel's namesake. (And Walter Winchell says to Mr. Gardner, "Scram, small fry. I'm working this side of the street.")
Robert Francis went to see the Three Stooges in person at the Flatbush, where they're heading the vaudeville bill this week, and says if you like this type of slap-face-eye-poke comedy, don't miss this show. The Stooges were in fine form, dominating every other act on the bill and at one point stopping the show with their antics.
Now showing at the RKO Albee, a pretty impressive double feature -- Shirley Temple in "The Blue Bird" paired with Raymond Massey in "Abe Lincoln in Illinois." 25 cent matinee shows till 5 pm, kids always 15 cents!
The Dodger outfield for the opening game of the Grapefruit League season against the Reds in Tampa will be Joe Vosmik in left, Ernie Koy in center, and Roy Cullenbine in right. Meanwhile, as the team headed out in cars for the 27 mile drive to the Reds' camp, there was still no sign of Dolph Camilli, and Larry MacPhail is still fuming mad at the big first baseman. "He thinks he can blackjack the club because we wouldn't dare open the season without him," growls the Red Headed One. "But he might just as well know now he can't get away with it!"
Bad Eddie Shore, the man who brought the Americans back to life in their quest for a Stanley Cup Playoff berth, is looking increasingly corpse-like himself. Shore may beg off tonight's game against the Bruins on the grounds of exhaustion after playing three games in three nights.
John Gambling celebrated his 15th anniversary on the air today, with his Musical Clock morning-exercise program one of New York's most enduring daily features. Gambling is on the air daily from 7:15 to 8 am, never having varied his formula of calisthenics, live music by Vincent Sorey's orchestra and a canary-bird chorus, and pleasant ad-libbed chatter.