Walkerton Independent, Volume 86, Number 26, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 28 June 1962 — Page 2

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— WALKERTON INDEPENDENT — June 2«, 1962

“Lover Come Back" Is Top Comedy At Rialto There’s no doubt about it For a champagne topper to "Pillow Talk,” every movie goer must taste Universal's madcap melange <f mei ry-making aid romai.re, "Lo er Come Back.’ which opens Thursday at he Rialto as the casons first new c medy sinas i. Combining the talents of the san • trio teamed in th. earliei fdn R< ck Hudson, D ris Day and Tony Rendall the new vehicle races along at in even more laugh-provoking tempo Any linger! ig doubts about the < medic gem is of the triumvij ite cf stars are f never put at i >, with the blockbuster assault on he public's funnybone made in every hila nous frame of the < invent prodi ction. An eye-po; ping double-barrel-ed sui prise a waits h. ppy viewers of the cellul :d frolic one in th- high-jollage secret ingredient put into a c< neocted item de^.nbed as ’ VII-'. and anothe; in the fade-out footage where social custom i uns a mp-and-tuck lace with the st oik. The picture may in fact make “VIP a new word in the i atio.nal idiom. A highly vulrerble target Cotham’s M idison Avenue and us quixotic mixture of foibles and fanfare provides a tailormade themat c background for Ilie antics of the players. Rock appears as Jerry Webster, whose pr we s as an advertising mastermind matches his outstanding gift ' as a lady killer renowned over all the happy hunting grounds if Manhattan. The tempt ng bait plat ed in his ffast-paced s ride to eminence in all his diverse pursuits is captivating Miss Day. his arch rival, ready to m. ke almost any sa< - rdieo to wi >st awa\ his choice Tri-A\ ay Drive In I M. lessor th Os Bly mo ilh On I . S. ‘!1 Your riendly Family The; ter. Yours To Enjoy, Our I” asure To "serve \ou. Children » nder 12 Always Free F ee Kiddie Playground Teri ger> Get ’I our Broul )f Attendance | Cards; Al The Box Office Are. Thur. Fri. .lune 27-28-29 'l uo Thi illei -In Color Fit 4 Ktm I*D mouth Jo rncyToThe S< ve. th Planet Jobu Auar Greta lh\ »in Go is Os The Black Whitilo Don Mtgowan Sih m i I’anuhtnini ( .n t >on Pop Im Pop - it u d dune :> J <lne Night Only B< wery Boy J; mhoree ( rashing' Las Vegas cie iing Trouble Hot Shots Car mn Operation Sawdust > i i. Mon. .1 uly J-2 iFmblv I catuir The Second Time Around la < ohu W ilh I Jd»ie IGinold* Steve Forrest Twist All Night June Wilkin-on Louis Puma ...

accounts. And the ever-entertaining catalyst in this magic brew is Tony Randall, a scatter-brained neurotic who is front man, but certainly not the guiding light, for the agency at which Rock parks his Madison Avanue-style fedora. Through an in< rabble .twist of events it is the delectable Miss Day wh > finds hersef? pursuing R ck. a circumstance played to the hilt, by the Don Juan she mistakenly believes to be a naive bumpkin unversed in the ways and wiles of the more pneumaUc sex. How adroitly Rock plays his nefarious hand may be learned from his feat in arranging matbers so that, to protect him from the machinations of various designing persons, Miss Day persuades hun. much against his wishes, of course, to spend the night at her own little apartment. For diversionary interest the film also offers a spectacular eyeful of titian -tressed Edie Adams, stain as Rebel Davs, a high-step-ping chorine whose kicks are unerrmgly aimed at deadcenter bullseye. One of the screen’s foremost comedians. Jack Oakie. adds further appeal to the cast, portraying a bourbon-imbibing southern pa’rrt and floor wax king. Jack Kruschen, remembered for his Os-car-nominee performance in "The Apartment,” adds to his muming laurels with his role as a research . scientist who undertakes to invent a new product to match an advertising campaign. Kudos are in order f r all who had a hand in this merry caper, which is in color. The screenplay is the work of Stanley Shapiro and Paul Henning. Direction was brilliantly handled by Delbert Mann, an Oscar winner for "Maity.” PATTERN’ Map out your plans for the present it will be a determining tfa.Ur in what y ur future will be. FISH STORY Anglers find that there ire two peril ds when fishing is good before they get there and after they leave. ECONOMIZE What this country seems to need most today are sound and practical theories on b w to live within one's income. The fellow who is thoroughly satisfied with himself is about as worthless as they come. REES Thur*. Fri. & Sat. Escape From Zahrain In ( 'inemascope & Color \ ul Brv nner Sa! Mineo Luk Ward i The Years Most Exciting Adventure, Exploding Out Os The j Zahrain. Powder Keg Os The Middle East! \l>o Color ( ailuon Sun. Mon. Tues. & Wed. Follow That Dream In Cinemascope & Color Elvis Presley Arthur O'Connell Anne Helm The Funniest Picture Os His Career. It’s Good For The Whole Famih ! Mondai Thru Saturday 7 A 9 P. M. Sundat Continuous 2 P. M.

SERVICE NOTES

PARRIS ISLAND, SC. pvt Stanley Kaminski, USMC, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Kaminski, of 606 Jackson St., Walkerton, completed recruit training June 12, at the Marine Corps Recruit Dep.t, Parris Island, S, C. The training includes military formation drills, bayonet training, physical conditioning, ceremonies and other military subjects. Three weeks are spent on the rifle range where recruits fire the M-14 rifle and are instrueted in the use of ether basic infantry weapons. । The training prrp arPH marines for further instruction in a service school or with a unit of the Fleet Marine Force. MEDITERRANEAN - Thaddeus J. Stark, seaman apprentice, USN, son of Glenn E Stark of 1311 Ohio St., Walkerton, is serving aboard the ammunition ship USS Wrangell, operating in the Mediterranean with the Sixth Fleet. The Wrangell is scheduled to return to the United States in August. During her Mediterranean cruise, the ship has visited I TZ^VI Pi Thur, thru Mon. June 28 thru July 2 Rock Hudson Doris Day Tony Randall '■ ■* * 1* * i ,n [aslmtn COLOR tCII ADAMS JACK OAKIE

111 ri M??v?r^ < WHH Jills-'^-S? 1 \ . pKjj£L 'nHH MsV'^ ’ t ~no HHM NO ! VAMHCY iMMqS |FI VACANCY * ■■■V 7 T^f ^^"s3 wl ^.. .ETr//,/M ^3 ' v ~,11 ‘ ' l ,MW " ll W ^ ■ «*; ■> gffijJH*-'' J Be ahead/CALL ahead A simple, easy, thrifty Telephone Call assures that you’ll ■" warmly received. UNITED Telephone Co. 4 3UBSIDIA RY OF UNITED UTILITIES, INCORPORATE*

Naples and LaSpezia, Italy, the island of Malta and Ismer, Turkey. CIaARK, AB, PhiUiplne Islands David T. Anglemyer, cf Walkerton, has been promoted to air]ni|n first class in the United States Air Force. The son of Guy V. Anglemyer, 603 Van Buren, Walkerton, he entered the sendee in February, 1958. The airman is assigned to the 19615 t Communi cations group here aa a cojumunications center specialist. His wife is the former Jo Ann Ernst cf 2095 Hyacinth Drive. St. Paul, Minn FORT KNOX. Ky. - Army iPvt Douglas W. Buissie, son of ' Mr. and Mis. Howard Bussie, 307 Maple St., Walkerton, recently completed the eight-weeks parts supply course at The Armor Center, Fort Knox, Ky. Bussie received instruction in the identification receipt, storage and issue of parts used in the Anny. Ho entered the Army last January and completed basic train-

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ing at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. ' The 18-year old soldier attended Walkerton High School. U. S. FORCES, Gem.any — Army PFC Robert W. Boocher, son of Mrs. Vera Shireman, Route 1, North Liberty, recently participated with other personnel from the 31st Medical Group iq Exercise Surge-On, a week-lon# medical field training maneuver in Germany. The exercise was designed to test tlie capabilities of Seventh U.S. Army medical units to provide full medical support for combat units under all conditions of limited and nuclear warfare. The training emphasized the care, treatment and evacuation, by road, rail and air, of simulated casualties from a combat zone A utility worker in the group's 7th Evacuation Hospital in Darmstadt, Boocher entux'd the Army in April 1960 and aas stationed at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., before arriving overs, s in September 1960. The 20-year-old cldier attended Edwardsburg High School.