Great American Employes Take Club Show TitleGreat American Plastics Co. employes won top honors with ease at last night’s industrial amateur show presented before 1500 persons at the high school auditorium under the sponsorship of the Rotary club. The ] group was presented a cash award of $100.Second honors and an award of $50 was presented employes of ■ KETTCo. and the third prize of $25 was received by the group representing SSSCo. Awards were presented also to ILCO and Hed-strom-Umon workers.Two score employes of Great American Plastics Co. had no difficulty in winning top honors when they presented with skill and enthusiasm a night club television broadcast which was replete with variety and catchy tunes,Raymond Bennett opened the program presented at “Irwin Nightclub with the usual announcements and then stepped the show into a fast tempo with Patrick Kirby and Miss Geraldine Shockey singing “Hubba, Hubha*” and dancing a re-*strained Jitterbug for oae of thechoruses.Arthur Loveland* with a deep rich basso, followed with “When Depro-fundo Sings liow C and Miss Gina Rosa then sang “Symphony” as a soprano solo. The master of ceremonies, Mr. Bennett, then called upon Miss Theresa Gendron to ^oto him for an exhibition of ballroom dancing and George Smith closed the production with “Let Me Call You Sweetheart1'Peter McCarthy, Edward Bisson -] nette, and WendaU Ingalls composed the orchestra which offered special selections and accompanied the program throughout Waiters who served refreshments from a ‘ bar, in real nightclub fashion, were Louis Marrams and Joseph Newmark. Miss Bernice Cornier was the cigaxet girl.Employes who took part as customers of the dub and joined in chorus numbers were the Misses Helen Christie, Lena DeCarohs, Concetta Valera, Ruth Dwyer, Beatrice Belliveau, Elaine MaeLeon, Yolande Cormier and Giorio Maggi; Philip Griffin, Roy Bourque, Leon Wicker, Arnold Raragren, Jack Keaveny and George Farr, Paul Caron, Harry Patinelii, Gerard Pothier.Telephone company employes also presented a nightclub scene with the Misses Evelyn Gordon, GradeLoudon, Jeanette Couturier, Irene Walsh, Beatrice Healey, and John Hascome, as soloists.Another nightclub scene was presented by SSSCo. -workers. Donald Clark as master of ceremonies, Walter Sendrowaki, Mrs. Clara De-coninck, Miss Lorariae Daupbinais, Henry Morin, as soloists.ILCO added a bit of variety to the program by presenting a pantomime entitled “Just In the Nick of Time,’* with George Sargent, Lucille Goguen, Frances Dunn, Frank Sherwood, Adon Brownell to leading roles and Baron Sa vlier as announcer and reader.Hedstrom Union Co. “Blue Jackets” presented 15-year-old Alec Dymek on the accordion as a feature of a program of orchestral music. Norman Luder was vocalist for the group.Last night's industrial amateur night closes the season’s program of public entertainments sponsored by the Rotary dub for the benefit of its service fund to rehabilitate veterans. Kenneth C. Trask, chairman of the committee, was the announcer.Kalevas Plan Entertainment