DETROIT SWISH CHRONICLE and Tit

"'low/ 4brteen

d d14:iif

S

With Sally Fields

"St. Louis Blues" and "Spiritual
Jive"; Johnson and Mitek, breath.
taking hand balancers; Count Le-
Roy, sepia skating star; Phil Ma-
raquln, comedy novelty act, with
his unicycle, magic tricks and
dancing; handsome baritone Don
Harmon; Lillian Janics, songs-
tress, and many others .. The Au-

•

LAIL

•

rora Roche-Carlyle Dance Group
offers beautiful - production num-
bers, with "Hindu in Swing" top-
ping the list; the Jumpin' Jivers
remain for laughs, and Frankie
Rapp is the zany master of cere-
monies. Ben Young and his or-
chestra provide music for the
shows and dancing. Opening Mon.

Friday, July 19, 1946

Legal Chronicle

day, July 22, will be Arthur Lee
Simpkins, great tenor, who ap-
pears for the first time in De-
troit.
•
The Cinema Theatre announces
that it will present for one week
starting Wednesday, July 17th,
the Detroit Premiere of a new
musical comedy from Russia,
"Hello Moscow," starring a cast
of young people new to the Rus-
sian stage and screen but talent-
ed far beyond their tender years.

Directed by Serge YutkevItch,
with an infectious musical score
by Anatole Lemin, "Hollow Mos-
cow" is designed to exhibit these
talents which took all Russia by
storm—in the fields of folk sing-
ing, dancing, musical performers,
acrobats and humor. The film was
produced in Moscow and Magni-
togorsky by Mosfilm and stars
Anya Stavinskaya, Nikolai Leo-
nov, Oleg Bobrov, Vassill Selez-
nev, Pirogov and Ivan Lubeznow.
There are complete dialogue titles

In English.

•
And once again let me remind
you that the spots listed on these
pages are well known for their
excellent service in food, drinks,
entertainment or what will you.
Believe me, I have had so many
splendid reports from the recent
convention visitors that Detroit's
high ,pots as listed in these pag eq
arc incomparable.
•
And now 'tis adieu.—Sally.

E

Michigan
olidated
as Company

DETROIT FREE PRESS
JUNE 22, 1946

I.

has Utility
Ignores Ad
by Panhandle

kf

An advertisement pointing out
- that Detroiters pay a higher price
for natural gas than residents of
comparable cities brought "no
comment" from a spokesman for
the Michigan Consoldated Gas Co.
The advertisement, by the Pan-
handle Eastern Pipeline Co., pur-
ported to show that Detroiters pay
a markup, of more than 400 per
e cent to Michigan Consolidated.
The two utilities are awaiting a
hearing before the Federal Power
Commission in Washington over
the right to bring gas into Detroit
from Texas fields.
• * *
ACCORDING TO the advertise-
▪ ment, Michigan Consolidated
0 gas for only 38 cents, and buys
sells
• for $2.
e
"We have absolutely nothing to
11 say to the claims of Panhandle
Id Eastern," the spekPmnan said.
"We have no comment. If we
wanted to get into a dehate with
Panhandle, we'd buy the space and
reply by advertisl lg. We have
absolutely no intention of doing
that."

•

Woitied About 10110.6
vas, GAS
1A00%, AT

cities because it must pay more foe the natural gas
Consolidated pays only -
Panhandle Eastern?
its sister
while the gas cora
Michigan
from
its ... to the contrary: t at wholesale, Cleveland pay from
00
cubic
feet
and
No
hIPTIER THAN ANY NUMBER Of WORDS, the drawing
for 1,8 Pittbrgh,
38 cents
illp above tells a story
that
should
interest
every
Detroit
the
panics
serving
use gas for cooking and
water heating
morel between the 38 cents which Michigan Con-
established
by
fate
wholesale and the.,$2.00 it
collects
from
5 to 9 cents
average
"service
householder who
so-clled "domestic"
The difference
The
and most of
cubic
feet
of
gas
ted
paysaat
and
pays the
Toledo, . Consolidated's
Cleveland
"service
Michigan
Consolidated Gas Company.
solid
Detroiters is c lied a "service tu charge
that foe 1,800
gas
mark.ap of
see monthly by most families for
Michigan
a
charge" on 1,S00 feet of
DittfOlt
is $1.62 . i .
Mr. and Mrs.
Pittsburgh is 77 cents. 130
the average
cooking
and water amount
heating used
• .• they pay Michigan Consolidated
charge" on this amount of gas
. $2.00,
. while Clevelataders pay $1.34;'foledoans, S1.25; and
trts.
more than 400!
on i dtran
Does gicillgao C000li-
lye majority of Pittsburgbets, only $1.08.
Pa lan dsis
cents more than
.
l gee;
66 to 92
ports naturoh
Are vitteletal• rates householders
t* biome?
Sous w i
the
're
'rem
„gates" o
slated have to charge
Is

161I

to the
etroit, where It
sold at wholesale to
ut uity
total gas .
n
trlbutIo
I s

g

r.

f

t

t

4'

t

AS USUAL

DETROIT'S GAS USERS
GET NO EXPLANATIOIt.

WHY?

ford

CITT

S.A5iAt

■ 40

...„.,

.'•s .•
d 1 ";
,..p. 4

•

11$ V I 0 1 5

1; 1 - •- ;

•

'
A
..,...'71
!-.:...",...
'',-.
r - - .. •,, ...!,:c::
*.*•":"‘S
' -***" "

