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W«other Forecast 


Mostly sunny weather and warm* 
t r today with high 5 8 to 65. 
T h e C u m 
b e r l a n d N e w 
s 
Volley Rood Boy 
Fatally Burned 


(See Back P ag e) 


VOL. 18— NO. 124 
Ifitenuitioiul N « w i S e m » 
A uoriated P r e ii Service — AP Phot o f « 
CUMBERLAND, 
MARYLAND, 
MONDAY, 
MARCH. 5, 
1956 
Eatered ee eecoadi 
cIm » matl matter at Cumberland. M aryla^, 
under the act e( March 3. 117 9 . 
10 PAGES— SIX CENTS 
Israelis And Syrians Clash 


IIP Assails 
“Cavorting” 
lioyd, Dulles 


Conservative Raps 
British, American 
Policy In Mideast 


LONDON. March 4 tiP_ciamor- 
3US criticism of British and Ameri­ 
can p olicies in the Middle East 
sounded in Britain today as a re­ 
sult of the firing of the British 
commander of Jordan’s Arab Le­ 
gion. 
The criticism crossed party lines 
as fears w ere expressed that the 
dang er of war betw een J ew s and 
Arabs had been m ade more acute 
by the rem oval of the steadying 
influence of Lt, Gen. J ohn Bagot 
Glubb from the service of J ordan 
alter more than a quarter century. 


Sir Robert Boothby, an outspok­ 
en C onservative m em ber of Par­ 
liam ent. assailed what he called 
“ ravorting ” 
foreig n 
secretaries, 
tnd declarYid in a newspaper ar-i 
dele that B ritain’s Selwyn Lloyd 
ind U.S. Secretary of State J ohn 
roster D ulles should spend m ore! 
im e at their desks. Dulles is on a 
.our of the Far E ast, and Lloyd is 
v*isiting key M iddle E ast capitals. 
Both are on their w ay to a m eeting , 
)f the Southeast Asia Treaty Or­ 
ganization in Pakistan. 
Joint Policy l.s Urged 
'Tt is a m istake,” Sir Robert 
said, 
‘‘for foreign secretaries to 
spend half of their tim e cavorting 
all over the world. B y so doing 
they 
have 
achieved 
nothing 
but 
loss of prestig e.” 
Sir Robert insisted. “ Britain and 
the United States m ust produce, 
without further delay, a joint pol­ 
icy for the Middle E ast which they; 
failed to achieve in W ashington.” 
He ^referred 
to 
P rim e 
Minister 
visit to President 


Freighter Sinks 
But 60 Rescued 


Death Cheated 
By Navy Ship's 
Timely Arrival 


Sen; Kefauver 
Urges Ike Call 
‘Summit’Talks 


^Dema Aspirant Says 


Meeting Cauld End 


Middle East Crisis 


MANCHESTER. 
N. 
H.. 
March 


SEATTLE, 
March 
4 
iA^—Sixty 
persons rescued in lifeboats after 
the Seattle carg o liner W ashington 


Mail broke up and sank in the 4 (/pi_ _ Sen. Kefauver (D-Tennrd'e^ 
¡frigid North P #cific last night w ere nianded 
today 
that 
President 
jen route to Kodiak. Alaska, today Eisenhower call another “ sum m it 
aboard a N avy transport. 
¡conference” to avoid the dang er 
The Gen. H. B 
Freem an w asiof war in the tense Middle East, 
due to arrive at Kodiak at 
11;(X)I 
Tlie 
D em ocratic 
presidential! 
a.m . PST tomorrow, after its al-¡contender told a press conference 
m ost unbelievable tim ely arrival'new developm ents in the Middle 
East crisis make it imp erative 
that Eisenhower “p ersonally take 
a strong hand and u.se the p restige 
of the p residency” in reaching “ ai 
to Arab-Israeli 


at the sinking scene yesterday. 
The scene of the nightmare ex- 
ip erience was 700 miles northwest 
iof here in virtually the same sp ot 
where the freighter Pennsylvania'p eaceful solution 
broke up in the same fashion, 
un-i difficulties” 
,dcr the same conditions and sank' 
"He should call a conference, 
¡with loss of all 46 men 
aboard and he should do it now. 
before 
I four years ago. 
jit is too late,” Kefauver declared. 
I 
The W ashington Mail carried a Open Meeting Advocated 
g eneral carg o of flour 
and lumber; 
xh e senator 
said participants 
should 
include Arab and 
Israeli 
leaders, and British 
and 
French 


,for Oriental points. 


SOS Sent Out Earlier 


END OF SEARCH - Melvin 
Messimore 
(fop , 
right), 
65, 
Tacoma. Wash., is led by an 
FBI agent into headquarters in 
Los Angeles after a seven- 
month search for a little girl 
missing from her T a c o m a 
home. Messimore was arrested 
by the FBI on the farm of his 
sister, and with him was Mary 
Elizabeth Hall, 
5, 
shown at 
bottom with a nurse. 


, 
representatives “ b e c a u s e both 
Plunging and w allowing in t h e , n a t i o n s 
have 
interests 
20-fooil^Svyells raised by a 30-to-50-i 
” 
knot wind, the W ashington Mail, a: 
K efauver said the talks “ could 
7 ,9 43-ton freig hter belong ing to the 
held in W ashington or Cairo 
Am erican Mail Line, broke in two qj. anyw here e lse ” and could he 
at the No. 3 hold at 4 36 p.m . attended 
by 
“ any other nations 
yesterday, 
m ig ht 
wish 
to 
join 
us 
in 
Apparently Ihere had been som e ‘bringing about a settlem ent andi 
jwarning because the ship's m as-ig peaceful solution.” 
ter, Capt. Dudley A. Durrant of| 
Such 
a 
m eeting 
of 
heads 
of 
¡Seattle, had sent an SOS 12 m in-isfate “ should have been held long 
utes earlier, saying the ship w as ag o, even before the British evac 


Ch e e rfu l In Sp ite Of Bu rn s 


In the hosp ital since January 3 and faced with the p rosp ccf of many more months of skin-grufting 
surgery to rep air damage done by burns over 75 p er cent ot her body, 4-year-old Martha Ann .Miller, 
Knoxville, Tenn., still remains cheerful. She is shown here with her mother, Mrs. Thomas Miller. 
M artha Ann has a large group of backers in her siriiggle back to health—Kawanians and Shriners of 
Knoxville, who are underwriting the heavy costs. The child was burned when her 3-year-old brother 
gave her a cup of gasoline which she thought was wafer and threw into a firep lace to p ut out a fire. 
(.41* Phototax) 


Police Launches 


Seized By Syrians, 


Two Israelis Slain 


JERUSALEM. 
March 4 (iP — 
Shooting between Israeli and Syr­ 
ian forces flared up today in the 
troublous northeast corner of the 
.Sea of Galilee 
.A United Nations 
-p okosman .said two Israeli p olice­ 
men were killed. 
Aeeusing the Syrians of a “ wan­ 
ton" attack, the Israeli Foreign 
Ministry announced the two bodies 
were returned to Israel tonight aft­ 
er the Syrians had handed them 
over to U N. officials. 
Also returned were two Israeli 
|)()licc launches seized by the Syri­ 
ans during the incident, 
j I 
Israel still listed as missing two 
i other 
p olice 
rep orted 
wounded, 
I and cap tured by the Syrians. The 
Syrians said they suffered no cas­ 
ualties. Earlier Israel had threat­ 
ened countermeasures unless the 
(our p olice were returned. 


War Threat Increases 


Eden's recent 
Eisenhower. 
Hugh 
G aitskell, 
leader of the 
Labor party, told a political rally, 


Adenauer Wins 
Test Of Strength 


in distress. 
F'our hours sailing tim e aw ay 
the USS Gen. F'reeman. a N avy 
transport bound for Adak, in the 
Aleutians, and J apan, heard the 


uated the Suez,” Kefauver a sser­ 
ted. 
Break In N. H. Tour 


“ D evelopm ents 
com ing 
from 
what we have done so far have 
call (or help and turned toward,„„, 
.. 
^e 
the freighters Posifon. 
„ad| 
Thirty minutes after the forward^j^^j^.j^ g willingness to do econom-t 
p ortion of the ship broke loose it 


Nixon Will Run 
If Choice Is His, 
Associates Say 


Burglars Remove 


Floodlighted Safe 


CHICAGO. March 4 if)~A Chi­ 
cago disp lay window Icalurcd bur­ 
glars at work la.st night, but ap ­ 
p arently no one saw them. 
| 
Manager 
Hay 
Zabiski 
of 
the 
Workmen Savings and Loan Assn.* 
on the South Side told p olice a 3U0- 


Minimum Of Ike 
Campaign Trips 
Forecast By Hall 


WASHINGTON, March 4 


The latest blood.slied occurred 
as world cap itals exp ressed fear 
the danger of a new Arab-Israeli 
war had been made more acute 
by the removal of British Lt. Gen. 
John Bagot Glubb as commander 
of the Jordan Arab Legion, 
i 
The scone was where 
Israeli 
Torccs. retaliating for what they 
:.said wa.s shooting at fishing boats, 


j attacked 
Syrian 
gunp o.sts 
last 
I Dec. If and killed .56 Syrians. Six 
Israelis 
lost fheir 
lives 
in 
the 
battle. 


An 
Israeli 
army 
sp okesman 
charged Syrian forces this morn- 
ijf} « . » ng cap tured a stranded Israeli 


were 


W.ASHINGTON. March 4 
clnv'"" 
“ ically what we are doing n o w -1 Associates p redicted today that. 
^ 
National 
Chairman 
engaged in in.sp ection 
^ i . a o o r p ariy, loiQ a p ouucai rauy, 
thfW shT ngton 
examp le 
building a dam at.if the final choicji is his. Vice ^rete base in the Iront window 
^aid today he 
h 
e 
- 
« nd dragged it into Syrian 
• 
“The government has com p letely! 
r . 
. 
r i 
- • 
! e ssira bo uf and in a 
have. President Nixun will not S>ve up 
failed to match up to the new situ- I n \ f a t p 
h l a r t i n n dUion 
T 
a 
f 
The window’s tk» o<iUghts 
ation in the Middle East and t h e . i » JlU lC LiC tllU II 
not now have the danger of war J p ublican ticket for any Cabinet ,,, 
1^ 
theft wi 
danger of war there is undoubted- 
STUTTGART 
Germanv 
March 
I 
h 
kI 
government p ost. ________ 
ly becoming more acute.” 
I 4 ^4« _ chancellor KonVad Ade-i 
'The cap tain held the 51 crewmen 
gave^^newsmen his views 
End Of Era At Hand? 
! naucr’s 
Christian 
D e m oc r a t i c and 
nine 
p assengers, 
including g;, ^e began the fourth dav of S f. 
f 
a ^ L , 
u 
T T 
^ 
* 
I 
Emmanuel Shinwell. who served p arty-C D U -today 
turned 
back two Roman Catholic missionaries 
current 
five-day 
automobile 
F Tft f Andnpl- 
firs 
as defense minister in 
he an op p osition election challenge to en route to service in the 0 rien t.,,3^ p 3,g„ 
m New Hamp shire. 
iU L I U V/UII3IUCi 
Attlee Labor governmen . said. 
It its dominant role m the key state aboard the floundering hulk untilt jh e tall Tennesseean is criss- 
‘.f w X s d a r h e ^ ^ ^ 
would not surp rise me to see fur- of Raden-Wuerttemberg. 
shortly after 
8 p .m. 
crossing the stale and asking for relm inaU on 
ther trouble in Saudi .Arabia and 
The .state s voters gave the CDU 
Then 
he 
gave 
the 
"abandon ^yp p ort in New Hamp shire's first-i 
, 
Iraq " 
1% of the 120 scats in the State ship ” order and everyone took to jn-the nation p residential p rimary 
President 
Britons 
who have long p rided Parliament—six more than it held two lifeboats, bobbed about like g vveek from Tuesday. 
them selves on being a stabilizing previously—despite efforts of the 
influence in the Middle East, w ere!C hancellor’s foes to end the “ Ade- 
hard hit by the firing of Glubb. nauer era .” 
Many 
now 
freely 
acknow ledg e 
The election w as the tirst popu- 
that the end of an era has com e. lar 
test 
of 
Adenauer's 
strength 
and are dem anding that a joint since 
his recent setback in the head to help guide the transport 
British-Am erican policy be shaped Ruhr. The result indicated he is Nearby, the after portion of the 
to m eet the situation. An under- still a popular figure in West Ger- ill-fated ship rolled over and sank., 
current 
voice 
here 
is 
that 
the m any 
and 
m ay 
have 
a 
good only a scant few m inutes after the^ 
United States is partly to blam e chance for re-election next year persons aboard had taken to the 


corks and were visible only a 
short' distance because of snow 
flurries. 
M eanwhile, two flying boats had 
arrived 
and 
were circling over- Pontiff Warns 
Of ‘False Peace’ 


declined to say 
then whether he want.s Nixon as 
a running mate. Previously iuscn- 
hower had imp lied at a Jan. 25 
news conference that — to an un­ 
certain extent—it would be up to 
WASHINGTON, March 4 ¡tfi—OÍ-I 
Nixon to determine his own p o- ficials ot striking electrical work- 
litical cour.se. 
ers today called a top -level meet 


when the nation chooses 
Parliament. 


Cabinet Offer Sp eculated 


Without p rofessing to know the^*^'^ ending the 140-day-old West 
V.AllCA.N CITY, March 4 14''—• details of conversations between 
'^'•’Ikouf 
Pop e -Plus 
XII 
warned 
today the President and Nixon subse-! 
comp any negoti 
A fransfAr tn tho i.VAn.-naii ,, oc'Bgain.st 
thc 
“ m ilage 
of 
false Quent to the Wednesdav a n n o u n c e - H » * ' clarification of the 


fered any injury. 


was 
national 
regarded 
19.57. 
Approxim ately 
71 
per cent 
of 
Baden - W’uerttem berg 's 4.675.3.38 
elig ible votes went to the polls, 
despite 
blustery 
March 
weather 
and floods in country areas. 
Unolficial final returns g ave fhe 
. # 
CDU 1.391,728 votes or 
42 6 per | O U f l l O H O U S e W f t e 


lieved any camp aign trqis Presi- territory, along with lour wounded 
dent Eisenhower takes “will be al 
p olice. 


was dis-^ 
, 
. 
' “Sp y” Mission, .Syrians .Say 
Hall .said he (houghl thcie might 
be a flight into a city and hack 
In Damascu.s, an official Syrian 
to Washington again, hut he tore-, statement 
declared 
two 
Israeli 
saw no cross-country train trip , 
boats were damaged, It said the 


I 
Senate Rep iibliian leader Know- Israelis tried to land armed Is­ 
land of California said he p ei.son raeli 
units during darkness for 
ally would urge 
Ei.senhower to “.sp ying" near the village of Mas- 
make a 
lew camp aign 
ap fieai adia 
The 
statement 
said 
two 
ances 
where 
Rep ublican 
candi- Israeli 
boal.s. 
under a covering 
dates may be in trouble 
Know- fire, had tried to advance to the 
land added he wasn’t sugge.sting re.scue of one of the boats that 
"barnstorm ing,” which the Pre.si-, became grounded in the op era- 
dent has ruled out. 
¡iion. and one of the rescue craft 
But 
a 
third 
Rep ublican—Sen, in turn was damaged 
Goldwater (R-Ariz) - p redicted 
jsiaej asked for an immediate 
that Eisenhower would do some, 
ing for tomorrow night to consider, harn.storming 
government 
p ackage p rop o.saljlke “ Camp aigner At Heart’ 
“ He’s a camp aigner at heart," 
» ^>'» ervers 
rushed 
to 
Goldwater 
said 
ol 
Kisenhnwer, 
“ He has been through this before. 
He knows that it lakes it” 
he three Rep ublicans sp oke in 
sep arate televised interviews. 
all said he agreed with Know-i 
nd that it “.should be and must 


Westinghouse 
Peace Formula 


investig ation by the U. N,-spon­ 
sored Syrian-Israeli Mixed A rm i­ 
stice C om m ission. A team of U. N. 
the 


isters to the Holy See from 42 na- 
p resident—or Nixon himself— 
» hard camp aign—I don’t take 
tions gathered to give him birth-should decide Nixon s p resence on 
^ 
t e government s 
! 
^ 
in n s. K ^ ln r a In m n r rn iA / 


Pentagon Calls Go 


day greetings. 
Militant materialism is the term 


anything tor granted” 


for waging an “oil war." 


Steel Rods Fly 
Off Truck, Smash 
House, Kill Two 


PITTSBURGH. 
M arch 4 OP-A 
load of steel rods hurtled from a cent. This comp ared with 36 p eri 
hhemselves in a direction whichi.some change that would e n h a n c e 'T 
big truck through a house near cent which the p arty got in state 
YOUNGSTOWN. Ohio, March 4 
£ ¡„^5 
1^3^ an j cannot lead to his p olitical future. 
rtaArr.i ...Aa..». r. h.nUAH ci.A.r mcnl that he is “ assuming” 
t 
h 
e 
a 
V 
c 
” ” - “n i 
Imp erial today, killing two women elections in 1952 and 52.4 p er cent '.P—The Pentagon in Washington p ea ce” 
federal mediators handed (hcir^^ 
_ 
• 
* _ ^___ ^ 
R Keck, p resident of Sup erior Oil 


Sen. Goldwater 
Acknowledges 
Keck Donation 


“ 
f 
: 
L 
! P« r'.« ns 0, ,l "are no. e„(,rely ■'?» ?, 
. . 
- P - ' (ha. he had rece.ved . c L - 


He rep eated his p rédiction that 
if the Democrats make Eisenhow- 
the ballot would be a liability, the 
... .... 
— vice p residenl would be ottered 
n 
¡, 
p . , 
, 
. a . t 
i 
..........- ..........— ................ 
the Pope u.sually uses when re- a Cabinet or som e other high po.st 
^ 'er’s health an issue, they will lose 
fern ng to com m unism . 
jwhen his present term ends. ()th-i 
'i'he people ju.st don’t like 
He told the diplom ats the forces 
of 
m ilitant 
m aterialism 
“ orient 
. . . 
, 
. . . 
. . 
. 
uui iHiii:« 
ui 
11 
flit' 
niji 
r n i i i t ' i v 
Hall 
also 
repeatc*d 
his 
state 
us. 
paign 
contribution 
from 
Howard 


“ Formulas like ‘national unity’ 
Looking Ahead To I960 
p lan to comp any and union rep re- 
« kam will have the (jf, , was “correct” 
tQ83 
against a housewife who has been 
.................; 
-- - - - 
sentatives yesterday 
Details of Eisenhower Nixon ticket 
••{} 
j^^pck likes the wav 1 
Helen Clark ■ 
A d d e r ’s mam op p onents the recavm g some of The P e n t S 
social p rogress must not be 
while a switch in jobs would the p rop o.sals worked out by a' .H** -said Vice Pres.dcmt Richard vole he has a p erfect right to give 
Helen Clark. 
Adenauers mam op p onents, the receiving some 
tentagon 
the p op e said, “ fo r mih- p rovide Nixon with the kind ot e x- sp ecial p anel .striving to end the *^» xon wa.s “a greal Am encan,” 
„.„„cy to m e,” GoldwatVr .said in 


in the house and injuring 
a third which it won m federal elections may have to p rep are a defense 
seriously. 
The dead are Mrs 


for 
Iho 
' » t m ajerialism the 1,me ol peace ecu .ivc experience he lacks, the l , m „ 
J 
„ 
r strike" in two Ue- 
Ant» 
''all sa.rl Nixon telt .hat g 
"Col- 
m 5s’ Francis Kaelin 
49 
Oak p er cent' in 1952 and 23 p er cent building reach Mrs Jam es G Car- 
* 
‘" " I u 
p resident was rep resented as cades have not been di.stlosed Rut Eisenhower had handled the vice 
p onference” 
dale, suffered from shock.'leg lac-Tn 1953. The Socialists lost two mody in nearby Girard. 
t ’h 
^ 
his p resent p o.sl offers the a government source, clo.se to the 
‘ absolutely 
(;oidwater is on a .select Senate 
erations and p ossible internal in- seats 
in 
the 
Stale 
Parliament, 
Nearly every day for several 
■. 
** 
m'mths-long 
negotiation,'., 
mam- 
^ 
i„,. fommittce 
to 
investigate 
cam 
the 
p eop les 
I 
, 
, 
. 
diop p ing from 38 to 36. 
The p ontiff also exp ressed his p residential nomination m 196« . yet" of settlement 
The truck driver. Anlhonv *Mar-. 
The right-wing fre e Democrats receiver to hear the caller ask for 
' , . 
.« „kA.fo! 
. 
. 
, 
. 
’'•"H inim 
sih. 46. Pittsburgh, escap ed injury. -F D P -g o l .541,300 or 
16 
6 p er a general, a colonel, or some g 
o 
v 
- 
s 
e 
c 
o 
n 
d 
technical 
Eisenhower has made it clear 
The a c c i d e n t occurred 
at cent com pared to 18 p er cent in ernment olliciai. 
revolu ion 
of the p resent age may that the vice p rc.idcntial nominee r 
3 . , 
i _. 
Quinn s (iorners. near the inter- 18.i2 and 12 7 p er cent in 1953. 
The telep hone number at the 'fTip eril the .vp iritual and moral nrtusi he thoroughly accep table to j W e f l l S l l J c l S L r S S n 
section of routes 22-.30 about 12 They also drop p ed two seats, from Carmody home is Liberty .5-6700, 
society. 
him. He has given p lenty of ver- 
bal evidence that .Nixon fills this 
HALSlNGBORfi. Sweden .March 


ma.lor 
contender 
lor 
the 
(tOP tamed they oiler the "best chance 
Al 
hrs 
new.s 
conl.-rcnce 
Iasi 
g ,j„ conlribulions and lobbying 
nresidential nomination m 1960. 
vet" of A,ettlemeni 
week. 
Ei.senhower p raised .Nixon .-fu- t.x-. .. ” ” 


miles west of Pittsburgh 
23 to 21. 
the same as the Pcntagon’.s. 
State p olice said 
.Marsili told The Communist 
p arty 
lost all 
How do the calls get short-cir-: 
them an auto turned in front of four scats it had held. It received cuited to G irard’ Best guess is 
him and he swerved his tractor- 104.518 votes—only 3.2 p er cent that someone has misdialeri the 
trailer to avoid a cra.sh When he and less than the 
five p er cent “foreign 
area code” in dialing 
did, the big vehicle jack-kmted required to win a seat. 
¡long distance direct, 
and the steel rods .smashed into 
tiie house — carrying the three 
women into the back yard. 


Four Persons Killed 
In N.D. Plane Crash 


FARGO. N D., March 4 )4" 


bill. 
4 
Four Swedish jet fighters 
C h U C k l c 
Nevertheless, the feeling exists Flying in close formation crashed 
* 
among some Rep ublicans that be- 
« fog-shrouded hill near here 
’cause the 
43-year-old Nixon has today and exp loded The air force 
become such a controversial p olit- said all four p iiot.s p erished, 
\ 
~~ ical figure he ought to be rep laced 


3 Children Fire Victims 


LOUISVILLE, Ky.. March 4 .F - 
Tlucc small children p erished to 


U.S. Air Force Operations 
Grow, Accident Rate Drops 


'state Sen. (arroll E. Day. .50. of 
someone p ossiblv more ma- #f%| 
# n 
• 
i 
■ • 
¡Grand Forks, N.D., his son and ^ure in vears who is likely to have 
H 
h n r i V 
K 
U 
S S I i i n K 
f i V 
n l l J r i n n 
;two others were killed when their jgwer shafts aimed at him by the 
■ ■ W i i J 
T W l M i l M I I 
To Deceive West Forecast 


W.ASHl.NGTON, .March 4 4*— A 
Within the la.st two months there jtic 


light p lane crashed in a snow.storm op p osition, 
seven miles northwest ol Fargo 
late last night 
n * 
• 
Day. active m .North Dakota p ol- S P H r f n r O r V lK ^ in P 
CN. had flown to Fargo from 


« c k. t..is,.„h,m,.r p ra.srd ,Mx« n, 
c-ummiilM was ap . 
hul h . .sail Ihr .•.HclKin ol Ih.- 
g,,,, g,,,,. 
^ 


r , M 
’" 
f 
h 
« 
' 
» A" 
A S2 ™ ■'All- 
the deci.sion of the p arty conven- 
. u . 
,i. . 
< 
IKin on il.s p rc.Mdcnt,al nomin« .. 
‘ " '’"•■bii ion that ap p aron ly 
came from oil and gas interests. 
Subsequent inquiry develop ed tes­ 
timony that the money came from 
p er.sonal funds of Keck Keck .said 
he had been unaware the money 
had been offered Case 
Asked if he thought he should 
disqualify lim.self from the select 
committee, Goldwater r e p l i e d , 
"No, 1 don't 
I can. if 1 care to. 
name you four or five Democrats 
who received contributions from 
Mr. Keck as well as Rep ublicans. 


He look his defeat like a 
man He blamed if on his wife 
• ( op s n u h t (Ifn e r a l í r í i u r e » t orp > 


day when fire envelop ed their bed. Strategic Air Command bomber is have been eight major a^r crashes Grand Fork.s to attend a basket- 
p y [ i ) 0 


Alter all. it costs money to run » 
RALTLMDRE, .March 4 4^—Col denied anyone help ed him and said camp aign. You don't go out and 
Triius L. Amoss, former World War 
never heard of such a t'u« »t f>ul of your own p ocket.” 
Four others sleep ing in the same making an aerial relueling contact of Air Force p lanes. The latest ball game He was returning home V j i uut i i i uo i c i 
i u n i t 
j j 
jnteihgcnce offi'cr who now 
*'^'’•‘1 after he reached Den 
bedroom escap ed. 
with a flying tanker on an average was the loss of a giant C124 trans-w hen the single 
- engine p lane 
i n \ t i f i \ ’ \iarrh 4 i* 
i k Airheads a nrivatelv financed i n t e r - * 
.u 
. 
T p v ;iC T n i i r i c f F i n r l c 
The dead are Terrv Cecil 3, and of everv four minutes, 
p ort in the sea off Iceland yester* crashed. 
v 
u 
^ 
\ 
7 
'I 
7 1 p nvaieiy 
nicr 
A m oss-the rank is m thc I C X dS l O U r i M r i n U S 
Beinice ami .Mary Frances .Moor- 
.iel'fighler ,x landing or taking day. 
: 
Killed were Day s son King-iey, J ;';” 
"''AC'-vc-said 
hus m- , r , f 
. n : 
d 
man. 4 and 3. 
,off at the rate of one each minute. 
USAF officials say that in sp ite who would have been 16 today; Jiff? 
American 
bis .sources rep ort a 
p hony foimants 
rep ort 
Soviet 
secret |J 2 " v £ j r d l L /id n iU l1 Q 
with one base in the United States of the rap id invcase in op erations r b Arnason. 63. of Grand Forks; ^Hobernast^er p lane which crashed revolution" will be staged in Rus- p olice olficers will direct a “ man- 
. 
. I 
'having an average of one each 42 the rate of accidents is going down, and his son. Harold, about 15. 
the .North Atlantic continued 
5,3 
deceive the West. 
aged 
revolt to "smoke out the 
M LRl RLEbBORO, Ark., .March 
O n in S I C lG P Q Q G S 
seconds. 
¡The Air Force still insists up on 
j today without avail. 
Col. Amoss made thc statement real 
revoiutionaires 
who. 
they, 4 .?y_a Texas tourist found a 154- 


U S. Air P’orce planes—bom bers, secrecy regarding the total 
num- 
. . 1 
e L * 
r * 
j r \ 
B rid g e 
.........................................7 
fig hters, 
transports and others— bcr of hours flown by its planes 
British Ship Fired 
On 
C om ics 
7 
flew last year more than 2 4 tim es and the actual number of 
acci- 
Crossword 
Deaths 
Dr 
Editorial Page .......................5 
Racing .................................... 9 
Sports 
....................................6 
Television 
.............................7 ooerations todav in seeking an- this 
basis show that in 


Seventeen p ersons were aboard in his weekly radio p rogram, “ Un-tC op e. 
will 
join 
the 
counterfeit 1 carat diamond today at the nearby 
the big p lane which burned yester- dergrground,” over radio station mutiny 
and 
thus exp ose 
them- crater of diamonds, the only dia- 
day off Iceland—in the same area WBAL here, in which he gives re-'selves.” 
¡mond mine in .North America, 
the total hours flown by all Amen- dents. 
‘ 
HONG KONG. March 4 fv—Chi- where the same p lane with* the p orts he says his organization has‘ 
At the same time, he said, the 
The estimated value of the stone 
can-owned com m erciaf airlines op - 
Officials will disclo.se only the « « se Nationalist gum on White same crew narrowly escap ed dis-gathered from behind the 
Iron 
“ revolt” might lull the West into is $15,000 
Van Delien 
7 . *. *. 1 5 
eratmg in this country and over- rate of accidents p er 100 000 hours Dog Island fired on the 3,5.59-ton aster a week before. 
Curtain and elsewhere overseas, 
comp lacency 
and 
win 
leit-wing 
.According to the rules of the 
.......... 
5C 3S. 
of f ly in g t im e , for w or ld w id e o p e r - British ship Donnthia when she 
An .Air Force .sp oke.sman said 
In 
.March, 
19,53. 
Aino.s.s 
was Europ ean group .s to the Soviet side mine. .Mrs. .A. L. Parker of Dal- 
Air Force otlicials came up with ations. 
left F'oocbow 
today, the royal navy hop e was .steadily waning that any credited unolficially with master-1 
Amoss did not disclose where his las will be p ermitted to keep all 
this index 
of American airp ower The figures made available on rep orted. 
No casualties or damage 
ol those aboard the p lane would minding the escap e of Polish flier informants were or where they got but 25 p er cent of the ap p raised 
op erations today in seeking an-this basis show that in 1954 the were caused and the Donnthia p ro-be found. Two bits of wreckage Franciszck Jarccki. who flew a 
their information. 
jvalualion 
of the 
diamond. 
Sh« 
Tn-sVat'e** 
.....................*. *' 2 
s^ers to rep orters* questions about rate of major accidents was 20. In ceeded on her course, the an- were the only traces of the air- Soviet-built .MlG-15 jet to a Dani.sh 
No p rc% tion was made of when must p ay the 23 p er cent 
to tb« 
W ant A s " 77*. *7] 8 
9 
accidents. 
119 35 it was 17 . 
jnouncement added. 
tcrait discovered yesterday. 
lisland. However Lt. Jarecki later the revolt will take p lace. 
Imanager 
o l the mmi. 


% 


Weather Forecast 


Mostly sunny weather and warm­ 
er today with high 58 to 65. The Cumberland News srr 


(See Back Page) 


V O L 18— N O . 124 
International News Barview 
Associated Press Service — AP Photofax 
CUMBERLAND, 
MARYLAND, 
MONDAY, MARCH. 5, 
1956 
Biitarad aa sacond class mail matter at Cumberland, Maryland, 
under the act of March 3. 1179 
IO PAGES—SIX CENTS 
Israelis And Syrians Clash 


MP Assails 
“Cavorting” 
Lloyd, Dulles 


Conservative Raps 
British, American 
Policy In Mideast 


LONDON, March 4 
Clamor­ 
ous criticism of British and Ameri­ 
can policies in the Middle East 
Rounded in Britain today as a re­ 
sult of the firing of the British 
commander of Jordan's Arab Le­ 
gion. 
The criticism crossed party lines 
as tears were expressed that the 
danger of war between Jews and 
Arabs had been made more acute 
by the removal of the steadying 
influence of Lt. Gen. John Bagot 
Gluhb from the service of Jordan 
atter more than a quarter century. 


Sir Robert Boothby, an outspok­ 
en Conservative member of Par­ 
liament, assailed what he called 
“cavorting” 
foreign 
secretaries, 
md declared in a newspaper ar­ 
iole that Britain's Selwyn Lloyd 
md U.S. Secretary of State John 
foster Dulles should spend more 
ime at their desks. Dulles is on a 
our of the Far East, and Lloyd is 
visiting key Middle East capitals. 
Both are on their way to a meeting 
>f the Southeast Asia Treaty Or­ 
ganisation in Pakistan. 
Joint Policy Is Urged 
“ It is a mistake.” Sir Robert 
said, “ for foreign secretaries to 
spend half of their time cavorting 
all over the world. By so doing 
they have achieved nothing but 
loss of prestige.” 
Sir Robert insisted. “ Britain and 
the United States must produce, 
without further delay, a joint pol­ 
icy for the Middle East which they 
failed to achieve in Washington.” 
He ^referred 
lo Prime 
Minister 
Eden's recent visit to President 
Eisenhower. 
Hugh Gaitskell. leader of the 
Labor party, told a political rally, 
“ The government has completely 
failed to match up to the new situ­ 
ation in the Middle East and the 
danger of war there is undoubted­ 
ly becoming more acute.” 
En J Of Era At Hand? 


Emmanuel Shinwell. who served 
first as defense minister in the 
Attlee Labor government, said, “ It 
would not surprise me to see fur­ 
ther trouble in Saudi Arabia and 
Iraq ” 
Britons 
who have long prided 
themselves on being a stabilizing 
influence in the Middle East, were 
hard hit by the firing of Glubb. 
Many 
now 
freely 
acknowledge 
that the end of an era has come, 
and are demanding that a joint 
British-American policy be shaped 
to meet the situation 
An under­ 
current voice 
here 
is that the 
United States is partly to blame 
for waging an "oil war.” 


Steel Rods Fly 
Off Truck, Smash 
House, Kill Two 


PITTSBURGH. March 4 i*- A 
load of steel rods hurtled from a 
big truck through a house near 
Imperial today, killing two women 
in the house and injuring a third 
seriously. 
The dead are Mrs Helen Clark. 
5.1. Coraopolis, and 
Mrs. Susan 
Druga, 44. Imperial. 
Mrs. Francis kaelm, 40. Oak­ 
dale. suffered from shock, leg lac­ 
erations and possible internal in­ 
juries. 
The truck driver. Anthony Mar­ 
tin. 46. Pittsburgh, escaped injury. 
The 
a c c i d e n t 
occurred 
at 
Quinns Corners, near the inter­ 
section of routes 22-30 about 
12 
miles west of Pittsburgh 
State police said 
Marsili told 
them an auto turned in front of 
him and he swerved his tractor- 
frailer to avoid a crash. When he 
did 
the big vehicle jackknifed 
and the steel rods smashed into 
the house — carrying the three 
women into the back yard. 


3 Children Fire Victims 


L O U IS V IL L E . Ky . March 4 
lf Tin cc small c hildren perished to­ 
day when fire enveloped their bed 
Four others sleeping in the same 
bedroom escaped 
The dead are Terry Cecil 3. and 
Bernice and Mary Frances Moor­ 
man, 4 and 3. 


On Inside Pages 


Bridge ......................... 7 
Comics 
....................... 7 
Crossword 
.................7 
Deaths 
.................... 2 
Dr Van Dellen ........... 5 
Editorial Page ............. 5 
Racing ......................... D 
Sports ......................6 
Television 
................ 7 
Tri-State ............... 
2 
VA ant A s • • • • »-♦ • 
. 8, & 


Freighter Sinks 'Sen. Kefauver 
But 60 Rescued Urges Ike Call 


Death Cheated 
By Navy Ship's 
Timely Arrival 
‘SummitTalks 


Demo Aspirant Says 


Meeting Could End 


Middle East Crisis 
SEATTLE. 
March 
4 ^ S ix t y 
persons rescued in lifeboats after 
the Seattle cargo liner Washington 
M ANCHESTER, N. H . March] 
Mail broke up and sank in the 4 ,^ _ s Cn. Kefauver <D-Tenn> de-] 
frigid North Pacific last night were manded 
today 
that 
President 
en route to Kodiak. Alaska, today Eisenhower call another “ summit 
aboard a Navy transport. 
(conference” to avoid the danger 
The Gen. H. B 
Freeman was of war in the tense Middle East, 
due to arrive at Kodiak at ll OO TIK* 
Democratic 
presidential 
a rn. PST tiftnorrow. after its a1 contender told a press conference 
most unbelievable timely arrival new developments in the Middle 
at the sinking scene yesterday. 
East 
crisis 
make it imperative 
The scene of the nightmare ex- that Eisenhower “ personally take 
pcrience was 700 miles northwest a strong hand and use the prestige 
of here in virtually the same spot of the presidency” in reaching “ a 
where the freighter Pennsylvania peaceful solution to Arab-Israeh 
broke up in the same fashion, un- difficulties.’' 
der the same conditions and sank 
"He should call a 
conference 
with loss of all 46 men aboard and he should do it now. before 
four years ago. 
*t is too late.” Kefauver declared. 
The Washington Mail carried a Open Meeting Advocated 
general cargo of flour and lumber 
jbe senator 
said 
participants 
for Oriental points. 
should include Arab 
and Israeli 


SOS Sent Out Earlier 


END OF SEARCH — Melvin 
Messimore 
(top, 
right». 
65, 
Tacoma. Wash., is led by an 
F B I agent into headquarters in 
Los Angeles after a seven- 
month search for a little girl 
missing from her T a c o m a 
home. Messimore was arrested 


leaders, and British and French 
. . . 
, 
•representatives “ b e c a u s e both 
Plunging and wallowing in the thosp 
n a t l o n s havP interests 
20-foot shells raised by a 30-to-50- t^erp •* 
knot wind, the Washington Mail, a 
Kefauver said the talks “ could 
7.943-ton freighter belonging to the be hHd m Washington or Cairo 
American Mail Line, broke in two nr anywhere else” and could he 
at the No. 3 hold at 4:38 pm attended by “ any other nations 
yesterday. 
wbo might wish to join us in 
Apparently lhere had been some bringing about a settlement and 
warning because the ship s mas- a peaceful solution.” 
ter, Capt. Dudley A. Our rant of j 
Such 
a 
meeting ol 
heads 
of 
Seattle, had sent an SOS 12 min state “ should have been held long 


J P ’ 
WtimiZkA _ 


Cheerful In Spite Of Burns 


In the hospital since January 3 and faced with the prospect of many more months of skin grafting 
surgery to repair damage done by burns over 75 per cent of her body, 4-year-old Martha Ann Miller, 
Knoxville, Tenn., still remains cheerful. She is shown here with her mother, Mrs. Thomas Miller. 
Martha Ann has a large group of hackers in her struggle back to health—Kawanians and Shriners of 
Knoxville, who are underwriting the heavy costs. The child was burned when her 3-year-old brother 
gave her a cup of gasoline which she thought was water and threw into a fireplace to put out a tire, 


(A l’ Ph«>tofax) 


by the FBI on the farm of his 
utes ear^'er* *ay*nK the ship was ago. even before the British evac- 
sister, and with him was Mary 
Elizabeth Hall. 5. shown at 
bottom with a nurse. 


in distress. 
uated the Suez,” Kefauver asser- 
Four hours sailing time away ted. 
the USS Gen. Freeman, a Navy 
|n n H Tour 


transport bourd for Adak, in the 
. [V v elo p m e n t5 
comm„ 
from 
Aleutians, and Japan, heard the wha( „ 
ha%t 
M far hav. 
call for help and turned toward only made 
matters worse.” 
he 
|the freighters position. 
said. “ If, three years ago, we had 
Thirty minutes after Hie forwaid s^own a willingness to do eeonom- 


Nixon Will Run 
lf Choice Is His, 
Associates Say 


WASHINGTON, March 4 UU - 


Burglars Remove 


Floodlighted Safe 


CHICAGO. March 4 IF1—A Chi­ 
cago display window featured bur­ 
glars at work last night, but ap­ 
parently no one saw them. 
Manager 
R ay 
Zaleski 
of the 
Workmen Savings and Loan Assn 
on the South Side told police a 309- 


Minimum Of Ike 
Campaign Trips 
Forecast By Hall 


WASHINGTON. March 4 Ut - 
Adenauer Wins 
Test Of S t r e n g t h ^ , r ; 
s S i f w 
S ’S s s ^ * s r t ^ r r 
In State Election 


the Washington Mail tossing aim- Aswan—a settlement might have President Nixon will not give up 
noon 
lessly about and in a sinking con- been brought about and we would second place on U hs year s Ht>| 
a ‘ 


dition. 


Take To Two Lifeboat* 


beveil any campaign trips Prcsi- 


window * floodlight* were 0 " * Eisenhower lakes ‘ will be at 
pot new h a v Ult dunker «t war/ publican ticket for any Cabinet s„ u „ „ whfn ,hp ,hf|, 
a minimum/- 
Sipping a cup of black coffer or other high government post. 
, 
Hall 
od he thought thcie might 
STUTTGART. Germany. March ’ 
‘ 
' J , ' " " . ,, 
« M.ncherter hotel lobby, he- 
Th, ,utur(. of Nlxon a l0[1 
A •** — Chancellor Konrad Ade 
The captain held the 51 crewmen jdUVfr gavP newsmen his views gpt jor aua.g bv the Democrats 
nauor s 
Christian 
Democratic and 
nine passengers, 
including „ hp began the fourth day of htis become the chirl subject of 
party—CDL —today 
turned 
hack t*o Roman 
C atholic missionaries hlg 
current 
five day 
automobile 
national political speculation since 
an opposition elf ct ton challenge to 
en route to 
service in the Orient. campalsn tour m New Hampshire 
rrfsjdpn, 
Eisenhower announced 
its dominant role in 
the key state aboard the 
floundering hulk until Thp ta|| Tennesseean is criss- |aM Wednesday he is available for 
of Baden-Wuerttemberg. 
shortly after 
8 p m. 
crossing the state and asking for renomination 
The state s voters gave the CDU 
Then 
he 
gave 
the 
“ abandon support in New Hampshire s first- 
T . 
PrpsiHn„t ,w i,n*a t 
«. » 
% of the 120 seats in the State ship” order and everyone took to in.,he nation presidential primary 
‘ ' J 
1 ” 
v 
v 
Parliament—six more than it held two lifeboats, bobbed about like a week from Tuesday. 
nether 
he wants Nixon 


Pontiff Warns 
Of ‘False Peace’ 


IUE To Consider 
Westinghouse 
-Peace Formula 
a running mate. Previously Eisen 
bower had implied at a Jan. 2 
news conference that — lo an un­ 
certain extent—it would be up to 
WASHINGTON. March 4 
Of- c 
Nixon to determine his own po- finals of striking electrical work- 
1 
litical course, 
ers today called a top level meet- 
a* 
ting for tomorrow night to consider 


he a flight into a city and hac k 
to Washington again, hut he fore­ 
saw no cross-country train trip. 
Senate Republican leader Know- 
land of California said he poi son­ 
ata 
would 'urge 
Eisenhower to 
make a 
tow campaign 
appear­ 
ances 
where 
Republican 
candi­ 
dates may he in trouble, Know- 
land added he wasn’t suggesting 
"barnstorming.” which the Presi­ 
dent has ruled out. 
But 
a 
third 
Republican—Sen 
(R Ariz» — predicted 
Eisenhower would do some 
barnstorming ” 


C linnet Ofter Speculated 
a government package proposal Ike “ Campaigner At Heart’* 


Without professing to know the *or endm 8 
140-day-old West-j 
a campaigner at heart.” 


previously—despite efforts of the corks and were visible only a 
Chancellor s foes to end the “ Ade- short distance because of snow 
nauer era. ” 
j flurries. 
The election was the first popu- 
Meanwhile, two flying boats had 
Jar test ol Adenauer s strength,arrived and were circling over­ 
siz e his recent setback in the head to help guide the transport 
Ruhr. The result indicated he is Nearby, the after portion of the 
still a popular figure in West Ger- ill-fated ship rolled over and sank, 
many 
and 
may 
have 
a 
good only a scant few minutes atter the 
*----- — — ....... - 
^ 
.. 
chance for re-election next year persons aboard had taken to the 
VATICAN CITY, March 4 
details of conversations b e t w 
e e n waIK(M,t 
Coldwater 
said 
of 
Eisenhower 
when the nation chooses a new boats 
Pope -Pius 
X II 
warned 
today the President and 
Nixon aubse- 
union and company n eg otiant bas been through this before 
Parliament. 
a transfer to the Freeman was aRamst 
“ mirage 
of 
false quent to the Wednesday announce- alors 
tor clarification of the He knows that it takes it " 
The Baden-Wuertlemberg voting quickly made roll was called and peate 
which he said for “ militant men!, friends of the vice presi- Sovernment plan 
j The three Republicans spoke in 
was the last state test before the everyone checked. All were ac- materialism” means only a truce dent said they are convinced he 
in tIn ia i£ S « T n .o n of 
‘e,^v,sed interviews 
national election. Adenauer said he countpd for and nnnp 
thp FrppJ 
The pontiff, now IO. spoke sol- wants to stay on the ticket. 
h 
, 
. 
. 
w,thj Knnw; 


regarded it as a barometer for man mPssaged Kodiak, had aul- emnly t0 ambassadors and min- 
There have been reports that if n‘ 
(ljllo„ want to clear un some L 
u V 
f J " . ’I ' ? ' 
1957. 
fprpd anv injury 
inters to the Holy See from 42 na- the Prrsident-or Nixon himself- " * ' ' ' 
* , 
f ' I J l l , ! be a hard t amP*ign-l don t take 
Approximately 71 per cent of 
* 
y’ 
lions gathered to give him birth-.should decide Nixon s presence on q 
a . u 
KOV^,nmonf 8 anything for granted ” 
Baden . Wuerttemberg* 4.675,338 
dav greetings. 
the ballot would he a liability, the 
rP ,omomm 
He repeated his prediction that 
eligible votes went lo the polish 
Militant materialism is the term vice president would he ottered % 
., » 
, 
< 
if the De.mn rats make Eisenhow- 
despite blustery March weather n . 
P 0!** usually uses when re- a Cabinet or some other high post a ’ . 
, 
*^lf! , v!<f 
‘ n 
ers health an issu* 
they will Ion 
and floods rn country area. 
P e n t a g o n 
L O H S G O lorrin" o communism 
-hen h.s present term ends lith- tl«ctric Corp., said vott> 
Unofficial final returns 
(D I 
I 391 728 VOtCt ST —— r — • • 
1 
mandril 
-.mum — .... 
-a..- ... 1 , 1 portions if it 
nit 
not entirely 
cent. This compared with 36 per: 
(themselves in a direction which some change that would enhance (loar (o UR .. 
7| 
Hall 
also 
repealed 
his 
state- 


Federal mediators handed their rn^n* 
I* )s * a im in g 
the 
■ ut.mnk -tnrmu •* , 
plan to c<jtj1 1 fi> and union repre Republicans again will I ,ive Hie 
“ Formulas like 
national unity ( 
- 
sentatives 
yesterdav 
Details of Eisenhower Nixon ticket. 
While a switch in jobs would the proposals worked out by a 
sa,d V*0* Prudent Richard 
a1 panel striving to end the ^ lxon was 
a Ureal American 
lunge 


The people just don’t like 
Pentagon Calls Go„ . 
v . 1 im i iu i ii 0 iii* 
w t i^ p hup j/i f 
m 
l e i xii x i n n 
v y * 
i f n 
n u 
» 
1, 
. 
j 
gave the _ 
^ 1 • 
y 
•# 
He told the diplomats the forces er speculation ha* been that Nix- 
’ 
, ’ K<> 
. .. 
. 
. 
’^a! 
fd campaign, Hall said 
42 6 per TO OnlO H o i / S 6 W 
f i 6 of 
militant 
materialism 
“ orient on himself might want to make 
, 
,, 
.. ,,, 
J 
Nixon ‘’(.rrat American” 


Middle East 
War Danger 
Seen Rising 


Police Launches 


Seized By Syrians, 


Two Israelis Slain 


JER U SA LEM , March 4 ie - 
Shooting between Israeli and Syr- 
ion forces flared up today in the 
troublous northeast corner of the 
Sea of Galilee 
A United Nations 
spokesman said two Israeli police­ 
men were killed. 


Accusing the Syrians of a “ wan­ 
ton'’ attack, the Israeli Foreign 
Ministry announced the two bodies 
were returned to Israel tonight aft­ 
er the Syrian* had handed them 
over to U N . officials. 


Also returned were two Israeli 
police launches seized by the Syri­ 
ans during the incident. 


Israel still listed as missing two 
other 
police 
reported 
wounded, 
and captured by the Syrians. The 
Syrians said they suffered no cas­ 
ualties. Earlier Israel had threat­ 
ened countermeasures unless the 
four police were returned. 


W ar Threat lnerea*e* 


Tile latest bloodshed occurred 
as world capitals expressed fear 
(he danger of a new Arab-lsraeli 
war had been made more acute 
by the removal of British Lt. Gen. 
John Bagot Glubb as commander 
of the Jordan Arab Legion. 
The scone 
was where 
Israeli 
forces, retaliating for what they 
said was shooting at fishing boats, 
attacked 
Syrian 
gunposts 
last 
Dec. Ii and killed 56 Syrians. Six 
Israelis 
lost 
their lives in 
the 
battle. 


An 
Israeli 
army 
spokesman 
chai gee! Syrian forces this morn­ 
ing captured a stranded Israeli 
police boat engaged in inspection 
duties, and dragged it into Syrian 
territory, along with four wounded 
Israeli police. 


“ Spy” Mission, Syrians Say 


In Damascus, an official Syrian 
statement 
declared 
two 
Israeli 
boats were damaged 
It said the 
Israelis tried lo land armed Is­ 
raeli 
units during darkness for 
“ spying" near the village of Mas* 
adia 
The 
statement 
said 
two 
Israeli 
boats, under a coverinf 
lire, had tried to advance to the 
rescue of one of the boats that 
became grounded in the opera­ 
tion. and one of the rescue craft 
in turn was damaged. 
Israel asked for an immediate 
investigation by the U. N.-spon- 
I sored Syrian Israeli Mixed Armi­ 
stice Commission. A team of U. V. 
truce 
observers 
rushed 
to 
the 
scene. 


Sen. Coldwater 
Acknowledges 
Keck Donation 


cent which the party got in state 
YOUNGSTOWN 
ohio. March 4 does nol jead and cannot lead to his political future, 
elections in IK S and 52 4 per cent /V*—The 
Pentagon in Washington peace 
which It won in federal elections may have to prepare a defense 
Looking Ahead To 1%0 


in 1953 
Adenauer 
must nut he 
against a housewife who has been 
•«ot.,41i nrocres 
. 
,Uak 
, l A 
anti social pipits., ...»— 
„ nisr a 
m jijui wuu iu me proposals w o r Keo out ny a 
lauers main °P P ™ *n£; 
M IU 
abused.” the Pope said. “ For mill- provide Nixon with the kind ol ex- special panel .striving to end the ? 
Socialists, won 942.418 votes 01 -8 9 telephone ca Is. 
tant materialism the time of peace ecutive experience he lacks, the longest major strike in two de- 
And Ha,l sa,d NlX0n ,p*1 that 


per cent‘ 
. L 9C0maarri n 
i t ! huilri.nc r e ic h 'Mr* 
lam is " 
Car ,s merely a Ume of tru(f~ a pre‘ 
president was represented as cades have not been disclosed But Eisenhower had handled the vice 
per cent I? !9’>" 
P 
cent 
d * 
L 
T 
1 
carious truce which awaits only feeling his present post offers the a government source, close to the presidential question 
“ absolutely 


the social and economic collapse best opportunity for becoming a months-long 
negotiations, 
main- r,f**E 
* 


, 
-a , 
circ 
..n #h« 
people* 
major 
contender 
for 
the 
GGP tamed they offer the “ best chance 
At 
**'* 
news 
conference 
last 
dropping from 38 to 36. 
year*, Mrs. Carmody picks up the j Thf 
aiso expressed his presidential nomination in 
i960 
yet” of settlement 
s*«*ek. Eisenhcjwer praised Nixon 


in 1953. The Socialists lost two mody in nearby Girard. 
seats 
in 
the 
State 
Parliament. 
Nearly every day for s e v e ra l. 
. 
Dholes 
years. Mrs. Carmody picks up the ' 
' 
p f. 
The right-wing Free Democrats receiver to hear the caller ask for 
P p‘^ 1 
* 
- FD P - g o l MI 300 or 
loo por a general, a colonel, or soircr fiov- or»ncrrn 
I** 
second twhmiol 
tuenho-er h » nude it clear 
cent compared lo ll per cen! in ernmenl Ollie tat 
revolution 
el the prevent age may ,hal the vier po idential nominee C 
J- L 
I . 
r 
u 


1052 and 
127 per cent in 1953 
The telephone number at the ™ 0<,nl ,th'' ‘ >’irl'u»l 8nrt m®r»l must be thoroughly acceptable in D W t 'C IS t l J H S U d S t l 
They also dropped two seats, from Carmody home is Liberty 5-0700 v* 
° ‘ man an 
s0Clf y' 
23 to 21 
tht same as the Pentagon s. 
The Communist party lost all 
How do the calls get short cir- p 
P G r S O f lS K i lle d 


but bf* said the selection of the 
vice president traditionally awaits 
the decision of the party conven­ 
tion on its presidential nominee 


four seats it had held It received culled to Girard’’ Best guest 
104.518 votes—only 3 2 per cent that someone has misdialed the I 
JU IN 
D K n n f r ^ c h 
and less, than the five per cent “ foreign 
area 
code" 
in 
dialing I I I ll.L e . I ICI 111 v l u M I 
required to win a seat. 
jl&ng distance direct. 


U. S. Air Force Operations 
Grow, Accident Rate Drops 
Day active in North Dakota pol- S e d F C ll F O F M i S S I l l g 
WASHINGTON March 4 4*— A 
Within the last two months there jtit-s 
had flown to Fargo from 
" 
. 
Strategic Air Command bomber is have been eight major a r crashes Grand Forks to attend a basket f ilA h p m ^ K f o r f lit lip 
making an aerial refueling contact of Air Force planes 
The latest ball game He was returning home C J I U U C ili a J lv l 
I U U IC 
with a flying tanker on an average was the loss ut a giant C124 trans- vchen the single - engine plane 
ot every tour minutes. 
port in the sea off Iceland yester* crashed 
A jet tighter is landing or taking day. 
j 
Killed were Day's son Kingsley, 
off at the rate of one each minute, 
USAK official* say that in spite uho would have hem 16 today; 
with one base in the United States of the rapid ing-ease in operations r b Arnason 63 of Grand Forks; 
having an average of one each 
42 the rate of accidents is going down and his son. Harold about 15. 
seconds. 
jThe 
Air Force still insists upon 
U S Air Force planes—bombers, secrecy regarding the total num- 
t . 
fighters, transports and others— ber of hours flown by its planes British Ship Fired On 
flew last year more than 21* times 
and the actual number of acci-j 
the total hours flown by all Amen- dents 


him He has given plenty of ver 
bal evidence that Nixon fills this 
HALSINGBORG. Sweden March 
bill 
^ 
Ah—Four Swedish jet fighters T n d a V ^ S C h u c k l e 
Nevertheless, the leeling exists ^y,n8 *n close formation crashed 
* 
among some Republicans that he- on a fog-shrouded hill near here 
He took his defeat like a 
cause the 43-year-old Nixon has 
exploded. The air force 
man He blamed it on his wife. 
become such a controversial polit- Ra,d a^ ^our pilots perished. 
J 
icopvnght central Feature* corp* 
ital figure he ought to be replaced 
State Sen Carroll E Day 50. o! Wltb someone possibly more ma- # 
Grand F orks. N D., his son and jure in years who is likely to have 
two others were killed when theirijewer shafts aimed at him by the 
light plane crashed in a snowstorm opposition 
seven miles northwest ol Fargo 
late last night 


FARGO. N U., March 4 <?* — 
Phony' Russian Revolution 
To Deceive West Forecast 


BALTIM O RE 
March 4 As—Col denied anyone helped him and said 
UUu* L. Amo*!!, former World War Lie had never heard of such a 


ll 
intelligence officer who now scheme until after he reached Den 
mark. 
LONDON. March 4 ZP-V S Air heads a privately financed inter- 
CoJ 
Amo**-the rank is in the 
Force headquarters said a wide- national intelligence agency, today Air Force Reserve—said his in­ 
spread search for an American said bis sources report a “ phony formants 
report 
Soviet 
secret 
Globemaster plane which crashed revolution" will he staged in Rus- police olticers will direct a “ man- 
mto the North Atlantic continued 8ia (0 deceive the West 
aged" revolt to * smoke out the 
today without avail 
j Go) Amos* made the statement real 
revotutionaires 
who. 
they 
Seventeen persons were aboard in his weekly radio program, “ Un-fC ope 
will 
join 
the 
counterfeit 
the big plane which burned yester- dergrground,” over radio station mutiny 
and thus expose 
them- 
day off Iceland—in the samejirea WBAL here, in which he gives re selves 
HONG KONG. March 4 It—Chi- where the same plane with" the ports he says his organization has 
At the same time, he said, the 
can-owned commercial airlines op- Officials will disclose 
only the nese Nationalist 
guns on White same crew narrowly escaped dis- gathered 
from behind the 
Iron “ revolt 
might lull the West into 
erat-ng in this country and over- 
rate of accidents per 100 000 hours Dog Island fired 
on the 3.5.39-ton aster a week before. 
Curtain and elsewhere overseas 
complacency 
and win 
left-wing 
sca^ 
ct flying time for worldwide opcr- British 
ship Donnthia when 
she 
An Air Force spokesman said 
In 
March. 
1953, 
Amos* 
was European groups to the soviet side. 
Air Force officials came up with 
ations. 
left Foochow 
today, the royal navy 
hope was steadily waning that any credited unofficially with master- 
Amess did nut disclose where his 
this index of American airpower 
The figures made available on reported No casualties or damage ot those aboard the plane would minding the escape of Polish flier informants were or where they got 
operations today in seeking an- 
this basis show that in 1954 the were caused and the Dorinthia pro- he found 
Two bits of wreckage Franciszek Jarecki 
who flew a their information 
swers to reporters questions about 
rate of major accidents was 20. In reeded on 
her 
course, the 
an- were the only traces of the air- Soviet-built MIG 15 jet to a Danish 
No predation was made ot when 
accident*. 
11955 it was 17. 
jnouncement added. 
leraft discovered yesterday. 
(island. However Ll. Jarecki later the revolt will take place. 


WASHINGTON, March 4 ^-Sen. 
Coldwater 'R-Ariz* said today a 
report that he had received a cam­ 
paign contribution from Howard 
B Keck president of Superior Oil 
Co , was “ correct ” 
“ If Mr. Keck likes the way I 
vote he has a perfect right to give 
money to m e " Coldwater said in 
a televised interview—ABC'* “ Col­ 
lege Press Conference" 
Coldwater is on a select Senate 
committee 
to 
investigate 
cam­ 
paign contributions and lobbying 
activities. The committee was ap­ 
pointed alter Sen 
Case ' RSD> 
said he had rejected a $2,300 cam­ 
paign contribution that apparently 
came from oil and gas interests. 
Subsequent inquiry developed tes­ 
timony that the money came from 
personal funds of Heck Keck said 
he had been unaware the money 
had been ottered Case 
Asked if he thought he should 
disqualify himself from the select 
committee, Coldwater r e p l i e d , 
“ No, I don't 
I can if I care to. 
name you four or five Democrats 
who received contributions from 
Mr Keck as well as Republicans. 
Atter all. it costs money to run a 
campaign. You don't go out and 
run it out of your own pocket.” 


Texas Tourist Finds 
151-Cardt Diamond 


M URFREESBORO. Ark , March 
4 .P—A Texas tourist found a IS1*- 
carat diamond today at the nearby 
crater of diamonds, the only dis* 
mond mine in North America. 
The estimated value of the stone 
is $15,000 
According to the rules of the 
mine. Mrs. A. L Parker of Dal­ 
las will be permitted to keep all 
but 25 per cent of the appraised 
valuation 
of 
the diamond. 
Sh* 
must pay the 25 per cent lo th* 
manager ot the mine. 


TWO 
THÉ CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD., MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1956 
Phone PA 2-4600 for a WANT AD Taker 


Frostburg RC 
Opens Campaign 
Headquarters 


More Workers 


Are Announced 


FROSTRURG — Local headquar­ 
ters for the 1956 Red Cross drive 
has been designated as the tiunter 
Hotel. The headrluarters witl he* 
open Monday through 
Saturday 
from 1 to 5 p. m. 
i 
Workers scheduled for duty are 
Mrs. Thornton C’ooper and Mrs 
Alice Ryan. Monday, Mrs. F.. Bur­ 
nett Van Fos.sen and Mrs. Charles 
Meehan, Tuesday: 
Mrs. H. Ru­ 
dolph Mendelsohn and Mrs, Arthur 
Roe, Wednesday (ieorge Hale and 
Mrs Waller Kline. Thursday; Mt' 
Kathleen 
Todd 
and 
Mrs. 
John 
Ives, Friday and Saturday. 
Ail solicitors are requested to 
make their returns and pick up ex-, 
tra supplies at the headquarters, i 
Additional workers for Fro.sthurg 
and outlying ai'eas who will partici-. 
pate in the house-to-house solicita­ 
tions in the drive have been an 
nounced by Mrs. H. Rudolph Men­ 
delsohn, local chairman. 
j 
Workers include; .Miss Ruth B 
Kngle. Beall High S(hool; John 
Manley. Hill Street School; Mrs ' 
Howard Duckworth and Mrs. Mel­ 
vin 
Henry, 
Grahamtown; 
Mi.ss 
Jeanne Lowery and Miss Jo Ann 
Lowery, Mt. Pleasant Street; Mrs. 
Raymond 
McFarland 
and 
Mrs 
John Kreitzburg, Spring and Milli-viRs. rh s k B. CAI.LAN 
Streets; Mrs. George Greco and 
Mrs. James Darrow, Waters and 


îarton OES 
-etes Organist 


BARTON—Barton Chapter No 
.37, Order of the Eastern Star, hon­ 
ored 
their 
organist, 
.Mrs. 
Eva 
Cross, with a dinner recently at the 
l O.O F. Hall. 


Frostburg Scouts Hon ored 


Mr« Kenneth Babcock, leader of Troop 1 Girl Scouts, is shown pinning the “ curved bar” the 
highest award in Girl Scouting on Mi.«.s Alicnc Frost while Kay Beeman. who was also presented 
a “ curved bar ’ at thi.s meeting looks on. The pre.sentalions were made at a court of honor 
hold at Fir.st .Methodist Chiirfh. 
Proficiency badge.s were also awarded to other girls of the 
troop 
A candlelight ceremony, symbolizing the Girl Scout promise and laws, was conducted 
by Su.an Duckworth. 
Following the awards, refreshments were served to the girls and their 
parents. The troop is sponsored by the Gleaners Sunday School Class of First Melhodi.st Chun-h. 
DEATHS AND FUNERAL NOTICES 


Mrs. Hose B. Callan, 79, Little 
Q 
M.U 
M 
a 
r e a 
r e t'Orleans, died at 10,30 yesterday 


Alice Smith and .Miss Rosemarie «’»'■''inS 
» " ’P“ “ '' 
Smith. Spring and Hill and Mrs. 
Idabelle Gordon. Park Avenue. 
Workers in other territories not 
previously announced Mrs. Gerald 
Grove, captain: Mr.*. James Ken­ 
ney, High to Sand Spring on Me­ 
chanic; Mrs. Grove, Che.stnut^ fo 
Pine on College Avenue; .Mrs. ('arl 
Fresh. Pine tn High on College 


where she had been a patient since 
la.st Thur.sday. Mrs.Callan was a 
member of St, Patrick’s Catholic 
Church, Little Orleans. 
Born at Little Orleans, she was 
a daughter of the la*e James R. 
and Elizabeth * HeeD Higgins. 
Survivors imlude ner husband. 
Charle.s T. (’allan, and one sihtei. 
Mrs. Anna R. Van, of Cumberland 


GEORGE H. GLOTFELTY 


OAKLAND — George Howard 


Tri-Towns UO Airs Task 
Of Assisting Aged, Needy 


The same 


Garrett County 
Opens Campaign 
For Red Cross 


Kick-Off Dinner 
Set For Tuesday 


OAKLAND—The goal of the an­ 
nual Red Cross drive in Garrett 
K '“ 
In itn a 
FriHaV f>VP- 
nOOfl. 
IHC IfCrUUtT Will DC 31 
, 
evening, the o f f i c e r s W e s t e r n p o r l L i S ^ 
Hampshire County Court House 
year is^S4.000^accor^ 


Christmas Fund 


Deficit Reported 
Romney Recruiting 
Schedule Changed 


ROMNEY — Time of the regular 
weekly visits of the Navy recruiter 


WESTERNPORT - Providing 


A proRram ="<1 vocal selections I 
....... . 


M tUraia'ConnLnd Mr. S' areLe^P“ ' 
" 
? 
‘'p* •>een changed from Fri- 


Penman, 
The ^ap.er presented '^ S d 'a ^ t n f m e e t m r o f the 
Mrs. Cross a gift. 
i 
«»-o. to noon. The recruiter will be at 


of the Chapter held dedication . 
s 
e 
r 
- 
! 
" 
' 
" 
' 
^ 
( 
e 
v 
e 
r 
y 
Wednesday to interview men-iQ Mrs. 
vices for the emblems which were; 
v^yh church provide a car 
..„„en interested in Navy ca- campaign chairman, 
donated by members ot the group.jP»! f»' ‘"»s« 
A” “ “ f A'^vrs and others who wish infor- 
Mrs. Ruby Galtens and Mrs. 
ohurch was supeslcd and a 
enlistments, 
da Stafford were in charge of theivl’ureh census m the Tr -Towns,, 
program 
j P i c d m o n t , Westernport, Luke, 
the^“ 
^ T M r 'L t n i « ^ ^ 
wasTo^iTcd“"“ Kiwuniun Governor 
Michaels in charge. 
The next regular meeting of the 
Rev. Andrew 
Evangelical Unitedfrnv r.re”^ Will Visit Keyser 
............. 


chapter will be March 12 a t 
8 j Church stated he vv-ould pre.sent the 
X E Y S E R —James M . M o ler, gov-'All chairmen and co-chairmen and 
p. m . at the I O.O F . H all, a t which m a t t e r of the next ^ 
D istric t in te r e s te d 
w o r k e rs are urged to 


Mrs. Glotfelty said yesterday 
that workers are being enlisted in 
all parts of the county to help in 
the general solicitation. 
A campaign meeting will be held 
tomorrow* at the William James 
Hotel, with a dinner at 6:30 o’clock. 


the members of 
R e b e c c a 
A rh o d Tn- Towms Ministerial Association 
intornational. will pay 
a n attend, Mrs. Glotfelty said. 


or7d'’ guesu‘’ f w e e t s a R w.n‘be' Wayne Ritchie, chairman ot the 
L" 
held at the conclusion of the meit- FO who presided, announced that ^ .r!':/ _ .,llh a rle s j™ n ,_ 
'f lyfPjaseatat,« Rom 
American 


ing. 
the group is not out of the red 
president of the Charles Town^ Red Cross is scheduled to .speak. 


Glotfelty. 77. of .McHenry, died at 
Garrett County Memorial Hospital 
here yesterday morning. He was 


Avenue; Mrs. Albert Cook, ( hest- 
nut to High on Frost Avenue. North, 
Side: Mrs. Walter Kline. Chestnut, 
^ 


MR.S. ANNA M. DEIHL 


of Oliver W. Deihl. 
3, Bedford Road, died yesterday 
morning 
in 
Memorial 
Hospital, 
where she had been admitted Sat 
urday afternoon. She was the wife the husband of the former Lula 
of Oliver W. Deihl. 
Broadwater. 
Born in 
Lonaconing. she had! Born April 12. 
1879, he was the 
resided in 
this area for the pastlson of the late Thaddeus and Mar- 
lf> years. She was the daughter oflgaret (Fratz) Glotfelty, and lived 
the late Douglas and Margaretjaii his life in .McFfenry. Mr. Glot- 
' Walker) Somerville, 
Telly was a member of the E. U. B. 
Other 
.survivors 
include 
one Church of McHenry, 
daughter, Mrs. Margaret F. Oster, 
other survivors include two sons. 
I'he body will remain at the Haf- Bedford Road; one son. John M.,pjgjf,p 3^,^ Hubert Glotfelty, both 
Deihl, Cumberland: three .«isters.Lj McFfenry; three daughters, Mrs. 
Mrs. M I* D. 
Fiaker, 
Baltimore, pgyjg 
Boldf, of 
Wc.st Middlesex, 


Oakland Citizens 
To Ballot March 12 


OAKLA.ND—A complete slate of 
candidatc.s for the municipal elec­ 
tion to be held in Oakland on 
March 12 has been announced. 
Rus.sell L. Smith, of Oakland, 
proprietor of the Chimney Corner, 
has filed his candidacy for mayor 
of Oakland. 
Three have filed as candidates 
for City Council. They are Harry 
L, 
Stcmple 
and 
R o b e r t 
E. 
Maroney, incumbents, and Clayton 
Winters. Mrs. Beryldine Stanton is 
the only candidate for treasurer, 
and she is seeking re-election. 
Three 
councilmen 
are 
to 
be 
elected. 


although contributions have been 
received to pay the indebtedness 
sustained 
during 
the Christmas 
time. 
Contributions 
received 
include 


Kiwanis Club, past lieutenant gov- Lowell Loomis and Mrs. E. Z. 
ernor of the Fifth W, Va., KiwanisjTowcr will explain the plans of the 
Division and past treasurer of thejcampaign, and distribute materi­ 
als. 
In Grantsville, Miss Viola Broad- 


WSCS To Meet 


LON.\CONING — The Woman’s 
Society of Christain Service will 


Women’s GOP Club 
To Meet Wednesday 


to High on Frost 
at 10 a m at St. ¡Jarv’.vMrs. Rav Grove. Fetersburg. W. 
5ide: Mr.* William 
to Ormond on Pine; Mrs. Herbert 
Loar. Chestnut to High on Ormond, 
South’ Mrs. Adam Baer, Chestnut 
to iiigh on Ormond. North;’ A’r 
s 
^7,;v;' 
Walter Plummer Frost Avenue ex-j* 
„ „„ 
tended; 


Rev. DanieijVa . and Mrs. Charles Miller, Cum 
McGrath, pastor of St. I’atrick’s herland; four brothers. John and 
Catholic Church, 
latti.' Orleans. David of Bridgeport, Ohio; James 
celebrant. Interment w’ll be in St. 


f’a.; .Mrs. i'larence Glass, of Acci­ 
dent :and Mrs. Clarence Cessna, 
of Bedford, I’a. 
The body i.s at the residence. 
Cumberland; and Douglas Somer­ 
ville, 
Severna 
Park, 
and 
four FRANTZ BURIAL 


Mrs. 
I’larl 
Richardson, 
ILhbearers will he .)f‘iTic.s J. Van grandchildren. 
Services 
for 
Mrs. 
Theresa 


Chestnut to Pine on Linden; 
^rvvigg. Edward Larkins, Welling- 
Charles Fchutz, 
Yutzy, and James C. Smith Sr. 
chanic on High; Mrs. Harry Dish-, 


Sr . James ,l. Van ,lr.. Robert 
The body is at the Kight F 
u 
n 
e 
r 
a 
l 
3 ,^ 
Home, where .services will he held) 
^ 
Memorial lio.spital. 
of O n 
m 
vi/lth TiOV : 
, 
A 
1 
A 
1 
^ 
I were conducted yesterday at .3 p 


ong Jr.. Ormand Street extended jo s E P II E. .McKEN/JE 
and Park; Mr.s. Charles Meehan 
and Mrs. William Goebel Tarn 
Tenace and Mrs 
Fran» s Miller 
and Mrs. Deda Wade, Shaft to Na­ 
tional 


Gleaners Class 
Hears Recital 


FROSTBURG — Joseph E 


R, F. Munman. pa.slor of Kairviowi 


Kenzic «8. of Utile Savage Moun Burial Park. 


Methodi.st Church, officiating. 
jf^^nson Jr., pastor of 
Me- termcnt will be in Zion Memorial 
Christian Church, officiated 


tain, died .suddenly at the 
t-c t iio MAS Dl l IN 
Oak Inn near Grantsville late 
TIIOMA.b D LIJN 
urday night. His wife, the formerl Charles Thomas Dulin. 79. a;HARRY L. HA.MILTO.N 
Samantha Warner, preceded him re.sidont of the Cumberland area 
in death 
ifor 60 years, died Saturday noon, 
------- 
He was the son of the late'at the home of Charles* E. BraUi[” 'E_ 
Tuesday at 
is 
Franri.s and Leah Anna (Warner) Sr.. 414 Grand .Avenue, where he 
McKenzie. 
'made his home. 


FROSTBURG-The Women’s Re 
publican Club of Frostburg will 
hold their regular monthly meeting 
Wednesday at 8 p. m. at the Amer­ 
ican Legion Home. Various com 
mitlees will make reports and dis­ 
cussions of future plans will be 
held. 
A musical program will be pre­ 
sented by Donald Zarefoss and ac­ 
companied by Mr.s. John Stewart. 
The committee in charge of the 
program and refreshments is head­ 
ed by Mrs. Pauline Powell, chair 
man and Mr.s. Ursula Dunn and 
Mrs. Regina Morgan, co-chairman. 
Others serving on the committee 
are Misses Emma Simons, Mary 
Smith. Doris Stewart, Margaret 
,, 
1 
. 
II „«-I Stewart and Datha Thomas and 
KtVbh,n-l arry Leslcr Hamil- „esdamcs Elizabeth Sires, Lena 


W. Va. District. 
In making his official visit at 
Sar'from Thc 
wScimport” ^ and this time to the Kcyser Club, water has been named community 
Luke Lions Club; monthly contri-j^'hich he will attend Wednesday chairman for that area. Mrs D. 
butions of $10 from JCvangelical «‘vening. he is coming at a time W. Hershberger will be co-chair- 
United Brethren Church; 
Social^hen the Keyser club is marking man 
Welfare Club $5; Auxiliary Unitiup tw-o special event.s this week. 
No. 52. American Lcgwin of Kclly-lFirst the institution of the new Key 
Mansfield 
Post, 
Piedmont 
andNlub, .sponsored by the local Ki- 
Chestnut Grove Methodist C h u r c h 'wanians 
club 
at 
Keyser 
High 
$6,94 . 
¡School, and second, annual Ham. 
Also the Social Welfare Club had'Racon and Egg Show and Sale, 
p ^ 
3 ^ ^he 
sent out several orders to needy|lhe Future Farmers of A m e r i c a , M e t h o d i s t Church with Mrs. 
families; clothing 
had been pro- which the Keyser club is sponsor-!pj3j.p3pg Duckworth 
president, in 
vided for a family burned out in ing 
Friday 
and 
Saturday 
this 
McCoole and furniture was secured week in the Keyser High School — ----- 
------ 
----— 
-i 
for them. 
gymnasium. 
Fore Sale: Furnace and fireplaca 
He had distributed food given to 
Mr. Moier is an educator, and 
_ J3 
3 ^^ 
UO provided by 
Social Welfare is principal of the Wright D e n n y <,3^ g” 93 3 Frostburg. 
Club and that club also 
gave a School 
in Charles Town. 
’3 ^. g 
family 
a load of coal, 
Ritchie! 


Ritchie 
related some 
of 
the Barton Personals 
problems in dealing with some of, 
Air. and 
Mrs. Wharton Sheally 
and son Brian, of Cleveland, Ohio, 
are visiting Mrs. Shcally’s mother, 
Mrs. Mae Logsdon. 
Mr. and 
Mrs. Curtiss 
Griffith, 
Baltimore, are visiting their homes 
here. 
Mrs. Wiola Griflith is a patient 
FROSTBURG—The Miners Hos- in Memorial Hospital, Cumberland, 
pital Auxiliary met in the home| St. Claire Miller is a patient in 
service 
room 
of 
the 
Potomac Memorial Hospital. Cumberland. 


and interment 
Burial Park. 
was in Hillcrest 


the persons needing aid and how 
some had to be screened. 


Hospital Auxiliary 
Buys Plate Covers 


Edison Company on Monday. 
Mrs. Fred Kyle has received 
Reports from committee were.word 
that 
her 
daughter, 
Mrs. 
heard and it was voted to purchase'-Albert Darcu.s, has injured her 
five dozen stainless steel plate back in a fall down a flight of 
covers for the hospital. The follow- stairs at her home in Youngstown, 
ing members were elected to serve 
on the nominating committee: Mrs. 


MORGAN BROS. 
FARM SUPPLY 


W . M ain Sf. 
Frostburg 


. Phone 1080 
------- 


See the complete line of 
O LIVER SU PER 
TRACTO RS 


55, 66, 77, 88, 


Gasoline or Diesel 


Ohio. 


T. S. Cooper, Mrs. Clarence Rich-For Sale: 
.5.5 x133’ Building lot. 
ardson, Mrs. Joseph Durst, Mrs. Estate Heatrola. Phone P'rosthurg 


He is survived hy two sons, Carl' He had been suffering 
from a 
and Donald 
M< Kenzic. both of lingering illness for 12 year.s. 
RFD 2, Frostburg; one daughter,! 
He was born 
in Keyser April 16, 
FROSTBURG 
Th e Gleaners Mrs. Isabelle Durr, of Rawlings, 
1876 and was a son of the late 
Class of 
First Methodist Church one i lMer, Mrs, Charles Bolden, of Gabriel and Sarah M. iSoulei 
met 
a 
recent evening 
in 
the Mryer.«dale. Pa,; and one brother, 
Dulin, 
lecture hall of the church. 
Mrs ‘Francis .McKenzie, also of Meyers-; 
He had been a house painter by 
THelm 6 Rephann presided at the dale, and one grandchild. 
¡trade. 
bu.sincss meeting. The class voted 
A retired clay miner. Mr. Me ’ 
He leaves no survivors, being 
to present a donation to the Ameri- Kenzie wa.s a mcmhc rof St. Ann’s the last surviving member of his 
can Red Cro.ss and also the Mary-Catholi«- (’hurch at Avilton. the,family. 


home. 61 L Street. 
Snyder, Mildred Spates, Hel- 
He i.s survived hy his widow, Ien Stair. 
Ethel 
Stanton. 
Clara the meeting. 
Mr.s. 
Mildred 
Hamilton; 
t w 0 stark. Polly Stewart. Mern Stew­ 
art, P'anny Stewart, Hazel Swcck- 
er, Arthur Thomas and Elizabeth 


John Ives and Mrs. Upton Loar. 
Miss 
Katherine Close demon­ 
strated the planning and prepara­ 
tion of a meal The meal wa.s won 
by Mrs. George Hale. 
Refresh­ 
ments were served at the close of 


1002, or Apply 47’2 P'lrst Street. 
-Adv. March N-T 5-6-7 


daughters, Mrs. Betty Jean Hixen- 
baugh and Mrs. Virginia Lee Jack­ 
son, both of Keyser; one son, Sgt.jTaylor. 
l.ester P’, Hamilton, Ft. Carson. 
Colorado; his father, Charles Ham- . 
n 
i 
» #1 
lion, 
Fairmont 
three 
nstovs. S t U Q e n t N U f S e S 
Mrs. 
John 
Duke. 
Texarkana,! 
r* 
ii» 
Tex,is; Mrs Helen Taylor, I air 03006(1 At 630101016 
mont, and Mr.s .Mary Jones, Balti- 
more; one brother, Hubert Hamil- 
Teachers Holy Name Society of the church. 
and the l-oyal Order ot Moose, 
P'rosthurg lodge 
Funeral Home, where services will 
be conducted tomorrow at 2 p. m. 
Hev. 
lyouis 
P. 
Chastain 


lapd Singers of Slate 
College. 


Mrs“ " t C ' H 7 r d ^ r M 
Ttio hiKly ,s a. t.e OurM Funeral ^ 
. 
. 
. 
. 
.n,er.?n. 


Prayer.- Hymns used dnrin« « 
h 
e 
. 
! 
™ 
" 
, 
h 
e 
,1 W. Rra.I, 


The body is at the 
S c a r p e l l i California, and three grand- 


rayer.” 
Hym ns used during the,tom orrow at R> a- ni. 
rvice w^re “ W hat A P'nend W e ^ ntholic t hui' h. vuth 
...« i.x lo .r.c •• -na ‘ Blest He the the Gre(m ville. Pa . t 


children. 
A funeral service was conducted 
Markwood 
P'uncral 
Home 
in 


cmelcry. 
C. F. Rratt. .lohn Estes. Leslie 
Brinkman, D. H. Coby, and PJmoj 
Evan.N. 
I 


.MR.S'. ELIZABETH L. GREEN 


Thursday with the Rev. S. A. P'. 
Wagner, pastor of Grace Metho­ 
dist Church, officiating. 
Interment was in Queen’s Point 
Cemetery. 
sc 
Have in Je.«us," and 
Tie That 
Binds.” 
I’ra.ver 
S E H V I C E . S 
offered by Harriet Elias 
Assisting, 
' 
* 
, 
, 
, 
Mrs. Hardestv in the devotions 
R O M NPA—A funeral servu'e for 
were Mrs 
Emily Jeffries, 
Nell Edward Hines, 84. of here, who, , 
A * r C T r T 


H e le n died Thursday at Memorial Hospi-^ 
FSTC lOITIOrrOW 
Don Cossack Chorus 


^K°^PJvi^a^^Nelson^” ^K^^^ 
Plu m - 
tal, Cumberland was held ye.«ter D- Creen, 73 
died Saturday 
mer.’ Ruth Morgan’ and Bertha 
d a y at 2 p m . in E b en ezer 
Metho-,ber home on 
r,n,,i 
dist Church, with the Rev. 
Robert 
Born in 
A\ilton, 
she 
wa. 
Fmzel. 
Special piano music was pre.,C , Lym«"-™« ofdcialinR 
sented by Richard Powell and his 
'""rm ent was in hbcno 
mother, Mrs. Vaneatta Powell 
As 
a duet they played “ The Merry 
t a b i THA FISHER 
Widow Waltz” by Franz Leher, and 


as 
a 
idaughtor of the late Mr. and Mrs ¡ 


FROSTBURG-The Don Cossack 
Choru.s will make its second 


WFSTER.NPORT — Cecelia Ann 
Moomau, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Dyce Moomau. Wood Street, here, 
and Mary Ann Small, daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Small, Bal­ 
timore. 
formerly 
of 
Piedmont, 
were among student nurses capped 
at the Church Home and Hospital. 
Baltimore, recently. 
A reception 
was held in their honor following 
the ceremony. 
Mr. and Mr.s. Moomau, Western­ 
port. Mr. and Mrs. Small and Mrs. 
Thomas White, Baltimore, attend­ 
ed the events. 


Eiierslie Gives 
$96 To Heart Fund 


ELLP’.RSLIPI — Six workers soli­ 
cited $96 38 in the Plllerslie area 
during the Heart Sunday 
fund 
drive. 
In charge were Norma Porter, 
captain. Hazel Ryan, Zuma Bur­ 
kett, Ruby Harrison, Hazel Grif- 
fey and Olive Shroycr. 


PALACE THEATRE 


Froitburg 


M ON 
TUIS. 


''The African Uon " 


oiso 
"5tormy, The 
Thoroughbred" 


LYRIC THEATRE 


MON 
TUIS. 


Mouraan 
O Hara 
Gaorga 
Nadar 
"Lady Godivo" 


Could You Use 
»500 


Come in and let us show 


you on eosy, simple and 


procficol way to get $500 


for a few dollars each week 


FIDELITY BANK 


"Tha Bank with tha Town Clock'* 


Frostburg, Morylond 


Mambar F.D I C. 


- 
If pearance here tomorrow at 8 p. m 
Interment was in Ebenezer Cem-:David Beeman and the widow of 
^ program of entertainment in 
ap Frostburg Briefs 


The Ladies Aid Society of Salem 
the auditorium of Compton Hall, Evangelical and Reformed Church 
Frostburg State Teachers College 'will meet today at 7 30 p. m. 
The appearance here is under 1 Miss Peggy Engle, daughter of 
Gertrude Engle. 31 Grant 
, 47, of 605 
V 
K n ’ 
ix.« Kmth 
auspices of the college convo-j.Mrs. 
ed Saturday 
I J 
committee, and the pro-Street and Miss Anna Jean Twigg. 
daughter of Mrs. Edward Shoemak­ 
er, East .Main Street, have accept­ 
ed positions with the Department 
of .Agriculture, Washington. D. C. 


House for Rent. Apply 59 Hill St.. 


Edward Green. 
Surviving are two .sons. Thomas 
and John Green, both of Lonacon- 
. , 
. 
. 
. . . 
„ 
i 
tng: a daughter, Mr«. Frank Harf- 
Richard played a solo entitled: 
Mi.«s labitha Fisher, 
- 
- ^ 
“ Edelweiss Glide” by Vanderbeck.jWoodlawn Terrace, died oaiuuuiv 
hoth 
Mrs. Ruth Morgan wa.s in charge morning in Sacred Heart HnspUal i ¡,3gponmg. nine grandchildren 
general pub 
of a recreational program includ- nhere .she had been a patient a 
great-grandchildren. 
mg several games and an original week. 
i‘ 
remain at the' 
reading entitled 
“ The 
Time of 
She was a daughter of the late 
V;;neia1 
Home 
where rirrlft« To 


Day.’ 
jhrank 
and 
Maryland 
1 \Salker • 
i onducted todayi 
Spring hats were made and later Fisfier and held membership in 3^ 
^ 
p 
ni. 
hy 
Rev. 
Joseph! PiF'.DMONT—The Marguerite Ar 
modeled in a style review. 
The ht. Paul's Lutheran 
Church and 
pastor of First Methodist'nold Circle will meet at the 
F i r s t 
first prize was won by Mrs. Nell the 
I Jernal 
Hoacon 
-MiHMonary 
Prowe.presbvterian Church at 8 p. m. 
Adv. March N-T 5 
Shryock. Others taking part m the Soc iety of the c hurch. 
Cemeterv. Garrefl County, 
todav.* 
Mr.s. Norman Baughman 
.style show were Mi> 
Emiiy Jef- 
Survavmg «re a si^^ter, 
and Mrs. John Hill will be hostcss- 
fries. Alla Buckalew. Eula Duck- gmia V. l.ashrr. and a niece. Mrs IHAHLK.s \U KEKLINt. 
worth, Helen Lehr, and EDie Con- .Mary B. Small, both of this city. 
| q a KL.\M)—C h a r 1 e s William! Westernport Circle will 
meet 
at 
rad. 
Mrs, Edith Cook was the' 
" -- c.i 
. 
- 
■ ■ 
' 
narrator, and Margaret Aldridge, 
the pianist and Thomas Elias, the 
judge. 
at 2 p. m. by Rev. Dr. Hixon T. 
He was horn here Fobruary 9 
Following the program Thelma Rowcrs„x. 
pastor of St, 
Paul'« 
Christian and Ida '\5hirL Kerling. 
Rephann, Vaneatla I'owcil. Evelyn Church, imermcnt will be in Rc.nc 
He wa« reared at Loch Lynn and 
Hardc.>!v. E l s i e .Morgan 
.Amy Hiil Cemetery. 
was a laborer most 
of 
his life 
Richardson and Edith ( 00 k. ho,«t- 
Pallbearers wall be .hixeph Chris- time. 
esses, presided at the retrcshment topher, 
Rotiert 
David.’-on. 
Ray 
(iraveade 
.serv ices were 
held 
table. 
The next regular monthly mond 
Skidmore. I’atrick 
Mo yesterday at 9 a m. in the Oakland 
andu’emetcry with the Rev. John At- 
'wcll officiating. 


.Mary B. Small, both of this city. 
j qaKL.AND—C h a r 1 e s 
William! Westernport Circle will meet at 
The body will remain at the bil-iKcrling. 71. an Oakland native,l^he home of Mrs. Q J. Baughman, 
cox Funeral Residence where ser-'died at hr. home in Atlanta, Geor-!jt^g Wood Street Westernport to- 
vues 
will 
be 
conducted 
todav;^,a. last Thursday. 
morrow at 7 ,30 p’. m. 
n 
..... 
L . . . 
r>.rv « , 
Iv ,... 
1 1. 
'T< 
f t - 
1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ 
T ^ - i _ _ _ _ _ 
r \ 
^ 


meeting is scheduled on -April 5 at Greevy, 
Gerard McCireevy 
8 p. m. 
¡Cromwell Zembower. 


YOUR 
LAYING HENS 


will do their best on 


The Rocco Program 


Rocco Feeds 


©♦ Wt»r Virginia, Inc. 
M O OREFIELD, W . Vo. 
Phone 85 or 181 


Delco Batteries 
’10.95 •xcKang* 


- RADIATORS ^ 
Removed 
Repaired 
Recored 


DON'S 
Radiator Shop 


208 Machante St. 
Frostburg 


PHONI 7 5 9 -» 


-iremen Mark An n iversary 


FREE P IC K U P and 


D ELIV ER Y SERVICE 


Pivtufcd lei' 
u. 
at the Barton 


Jsnics I.CiC’K i Si-:; 
.»fihn Rooerts. E: 


M l - 
’■tr’!! (fl'.-il ( Of!•■•!•. "r-p (, { *Hf. 
•it ine o.-iC.tersary ccii-orat.o.n. 


'«'f c 
;;jny No.J, thirty-seventh anniversary banquet are 
‘ P« icsud 
WiJbur Johnson, David K 
Kirk and Luther 
m.pany. They arc displaying the Memorial plaque presented 


Clarysvillo Motors 


Thomoi Grocie and E?ereH Worn# 


PH O N E 1100 


Special 
This W eek 


1954 Oldsmobile 


Power brokcs, 
power steering, 
R . H, Hyd., 
w.w. tires, low 
mileage 


_________ ‘23 95. 


Green Chev. Co. 


Phone 200 
Frostburg 


OPEN E V E N IN G S 


NOW! TRADE IN ANY RANGE 


ON A NEW 


FRIGIDARE ELECTRIC RANGE 


GOOD LO O KIN ’ 


LIFETIM E P O R a L A IN FIN ISH 


IN SID E A N D O UT 


C H O IC E OF COLORS 


GOOD CO O KIN ’ 


DEPENDABLE R A D IA N T U B E 


SURFACE U N IT S 


FULLY IN SU L A T E D O VEN S 


H ERE’S A TYPICAL FRIG ID AIRE 


RANGE D ESIG N ED FOR M O DERN LIVING 


The Frigidaire 


Imperial 


★ Fost-Cooking Spced-Hcot 


Surface Unit 


★ Heot-Mindcr Unit 


W on't Let Foods Burn 


★ Deep-Well Cooker Also 


Serves As Deep Fat 


Fryer, Extra Surface 


Unit And Small Oven 


★ 'Kant-Slide' Griddle 


★ Roll-To-You Oven Shelf 


★ Cooks Meals Automatic­ 


ally While You're Awoy 


$1 0 


DOWN 


D ELIV ER S 


Any Model 


H A V E A N E W F R IG ID A IR E R A N G E IN YO U R H O M E FOR AS 


LITTLE AS $1.96 A W EEK — USE O UR O W N EASY-PAY PLAN 


THE POTOMAC EDISON CO. 


FRO STBURG 
CU M BERLAN D 


T W O 
TH£ CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD., MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1956 
Phone PA 2-4600 for a WANT AD Taker 


Frostburg RC 
Opens Campaign 
Headquarters 


More Workers 


Are Announced 


FROSTBl 'RC, - Local headquar 
ters for the 1956 Red Cross drive 
has been designated as the Gunter 
Hotel. The headqmrrTTTr~rvtt1“ b r 
open Monday 
through 
Saturday 
from I to 5 p. rn. 
Workers scheduled for duty are 
Mrs. Thornton Cooper and Mrs 1 
Alice Ryan. Monday; Mrs. E. Bur­ 
nett Van Fos.sen and Mrs. Charles 
Meehan. Tuesday; 
Mrs. H. Ru­ 
dolph Mendelsohn and Mrs. Arthur 
Roe, Wednesday; George Hale and 
Mrs Walter Kline. Thursday; Mrs, 
Kathleen 
Todd 
and 
Mrs. 
John 
Ives, Friday and Saturday. 
All solicitors are requested to 
make their returns and pick up ex­ 
tra supplies at the headquarters. 
Additional workers for Frostburg 
and outlying aiVas who will partici­ 
pate in the house-to-house solicita­ 
tions in the drive have been an-; 
nounced by Mrs. lf. Rudolph Men­ 
delsohn, local chairman. 
Workers include; Miss Ruth B 
Kngle, Beall High School; John 
Manley. Hill Street School; Mrs 
Howard Duckworth and Mrs. Mel­ 
vin 
Henry, 
Grahamtown; 
Miss 
Jeanne Lowery and Miss Jo Ann 
lowery, Mt. Pleasant Street; Mrs. 
Raymond 
McFarland 
and 
Mrs 
John Kreitzburg, Spring and Mill m r s . r o s e B. CALLAN 
Streets: Mrs. George Greco andj 
Mrs. James Harrow. Waters andj 
Welsh 
Streets; 
Miss 


Mrs. 
Frostburg Scouts Honored 


Kenneth Babcock, leader of Troop I Girl Scouts, is shown pinning the ‘'curved bar” the 
highest award in Girl Scouting on Miss Allene Frost while Kay Beeman, who was also presented 
a ‘ curved bar” at this meeting looks on. The presentations were made at a court of honor 
held at First Methodist Church. 
Proficiency badges were also awarded to other girls of the 
troop. 
A candlelight ceremony, symbolizing the Girl Scout promise and laws, was conducted 
by Susan Duckworth. 
Following the awards, refreshments were served to the girls and their 
parents. The troop is sponsored by the Gleaners Sunday School Class of First Methodist Church. 
DEATHS AND FUNERAL NOTICES 


Mrs. Rose B. Callan. 79. Little 


M a r g a r e t Orleans, died at IO;30 yesterday 
Alice" Smith'and Miss Rosemarie morning at Sailred Heart Hospital 


Smith. sSpring and Hill and Mrs. 
Idabelle Gordon, Park Avenue. 
Workers in other territories not 
previously announced Mrs. Gerald 
Grove, captain; Mrs. James Ken­ 
ney. High to Sand Spring on Me­ 
chanic; Mrs. Grove, Chestnut to 
Pine on College Avenue; Mrs. Carl 
Fresh. Pine to High on College 
Avenue: Mr*. Albert Cook, Chest- 
nut to High on FrostyAvrnuo North 
Side: Mrs 
alter Mine. ( hest nut 
A ( nut , 
to High on Frost Avenue, south 


where she had been a patient since 
last Thursday. Mrs.Callan 
member of St. Patrick’s Catholic 
Church. Little Orleans. 
Born at Little Orleans, she was 
a daughter of the la*e James R 
and Elizabeth <Reel> Higgins. 
Survivors include ner husband, 
Charles T. Callan, and one sister, 


MRS. ANNA M. D EIHL 


of Oliver Wr. Delhi. 
3, Bedford Road, died yesterday 
morning 
in 
Memorial 
Hospital, 
where she had been admitted Sat- 
was ajurday afternoon. She was the wife 
of Oliver W. Delhi, 
Born in 
Lonaconing. 


G EO RG E H. G LO TFELTY 


VVlll‘am ( > 
uVrhlTrtICatholic Church, with Rev. Damel|Va . and Mrs. Charles Miller. Cum 
to Ormond on 
me, 
s. 
McGrath, pastor of St. P a ‘rick*s berland; four brothers. John and 


Mrs. Anna R Van. of Cumberland daughter, Mrs. Margaret E. Oster. 
The body will remain at the Haf* Bedford Road; one son, John M. 
(Delhi, Cumberland; three sisters, 
A funeral njass will be held Wed**Mrs. W F D. 
Baker, 
Baltimore; 
Inesday at IT a rn at St. Mary’s Mrs. Ray Grove, Petersburg, W. 


OAKLAND — George 
Howard 
Glotfelty, 77. of McHenry, died at 
Garrett County Memorial Hospital 
here yesterday morning. He was 
the husband of the former Lula 
Broadwater. 


Born April 12. 1879. he was the 
resided in this area for the past son 0f the late Thaddeus and Mar­ 
in years. She was the daughter of garet (Fratzt Glotfelty, and lived 
the late Douglas and Margaret an his life in McHenry. Mr. Glot- 
< Walker) Somerville. 
felty was a member of the E. U. B 
Other 
survivors 
include 
one church of McHenry. 


Other survivors include two sons. 


she hadi 


Catholic Church, 
Little Orleans, 
celebrant Interment will be in St. 
Mary’s Cemetery. 
Pallbearer* will be a.-mcs J. Van 
S r, .lames J. Van Jr., 
Robert 


Loar. Chestnut to High on Ormond. 
South: Mrs. Adam Baer. Chestnut 
to high on Ormond. North;* Mrs. 
Walter Plummer Frost Avenue ex-j 
tended; 
Mrs. 
Far! 
Richardson.! 
Ch.'tmit £ W M on Linden: Mr* 
Fdward ,,arkmv Wflhng- 


rharlcs ' c l, Ii 
® 
h (on Yuliy, and Jamo» C. Smith Sr. 
chanic on High; Mrs. Harry Dish- 
ong Jr.. Ormand Street extended j o s e p h E. MCKENZIE 
and Park; Mrs. Charles Meehani 
„ n n „ T n r n r 
. 
. 
Mr 
and Mrs. William Gucbcl. 
T a r n . > HOST Bt RG ~ Jo cp i I- 
Ten ace ani Mr* 
Erin- * Miller K™ 
‘‘ h«- 
& " * * * Moun- 
and Mrs. Deda Wade. Shaft to Na 


Blaine and Hubert Glotfelty, both 
of McHenry; three daughters, Mr*. 
Davis Boldt, of West Middlesex. 
Pa.; Mrs. Clarence Glass, of Acci 
dent;and Mrs. Clarence Cessna. 
of Bedford. Pa. 
The body ii at the residence. 


tionai 


Gleaners Class 
Hears Recital 


tam, died suddenly at the White 


David of Bridgeport. Ohio; James 
Cumberland; and Douglas Somer­ 
ville. 
Severna 
Park, 
and 
four!FRANTZ Bl RIAL 
grandchildren. 
j crrv;r r , 
tnr 
Theresa 
The body I' OI ihe Hight funeral Fr‘ 
( 
6, o( 3|0 park 
who 


<1'^ Friday rn Memorial Hosp.,.,.. 
jwere conducted yesterday at 3 p 
rn. at the George Funeral Home. 
Rev. Carl Johnson Jr., pastor of 
First Christian Church, officiated 
and interment was in 
Hillcrest 


Barton OES 
Fetes Organist 


BARTON—Barton 
Chapter 
No. 
37. Order of the Eastern Star, hon­ 
ored 
their 
organist. 
Mrs. 
Eva 
Cross, with a dinner recently at the 
LO O F. Hall. 


Tri-Towns UO Airs Task 
Of Assisting Aged, Needy 


Christmas Fund 


Deficit Reported 


A program and vocal selections)^ansTpori ation t0 *lderly J ? ™ " “ J 
H 
the Tri-Towns who would like to 


Romney Recruiting 
Schedule Changed 


Garrett County 
Opens Campaign 
For Red Cross 


Kick-Off Dinner 
Set For Tuesday 


W ESTERNPO RT - Provid in g 
ROM NEY - Time of the regular 


was rendered by Mrs. Helen Kyle, ^ 
" T wuu,ut "7fnrH Week,y Visi,S of thc Navy recruiter 
Mrs. Kila Conn and Mr. Clarence'fttcnd cl]urc^ a" . cantl" 
d here has been changed from Fri- 


Mr" T 
J I T . ? ap,er presente<* discussed°al ^he3 meeting" of .h o * * ,0 
<"»» "> »• »• 
.Mrs. c ross a gin 
United Orean^tmns Friday eve-to noon- Thc recruiter will be at 
- ------ 
The same evening, thc officers 
^ w„ t 
t Librarv 
.the Hampshire County Court House Count>’ thls >ear is 54000 according 


That each church provide' a c a r” " * Wed" e* ^ •» 
" * » “ > Mrs' K firm iU ilSlM iy. count, 


“ 
a ^ s t ^ l 
r « r s M d othws who 
^ 
C" 
~ 


program 
P i e d m o n t , Westernport. Luke,! 
Refreshments were served after J* ranklin. Beryl, Bloomington and | { j \ v ; i n j a n ( l O V P m n r 
the meeting, with Mrs. 
Evelyn Hampshire areas was proposed. 
IM e e O IIIO II V JU Y C IIIU I 


Michaels in charge. 
j 
Rev. Andrew Agnew, pastor of Will Visit Keyser 


OAKLAND—The goal of the an­ 
nual Red Cross drive in Garrett 


Mrs. 
Glotfelty 
said 
yesterday 
that workers are being enlisted in 


all parts of the county to help in 
the general solicitation. 
A campaign meeting will be held 
tomorrow’ at the William James 
Hotel, with a dinner at 6:30 o’clock. 
K E Y S E R —James M Moler, gov- All chairmen and co-chairmen and 


The next regular meeting of the'Evangelical United 
B r e t h r e n 
chapter will be March 12 at 8.Church stated he would present the 
n m at the 10 0 F Hall at which matter of the next meeting of the 
, a. 
^ 
. 
• . 
. . 
, 
j , 
S . members of Rebecca A 
r n o d 
^ 
, M in im a . A b l a t i o n ~ 
“ 


Wayne Ritchie, chairman of the °^ ‘c‘a! vis't to R eyser lh*8 week.j 
Robert Murphy, Eastern Area 
Chapter, MU Savage, will be hon­ 
ored guests. A sweet sale will be 
FO who presided announced that A native of Charles Town, he is representative from the American 
the group is not out of the red past President of tho Charles Town Red Cross is scheduled to speak, 
although contributions have been Kiwanis Club, past lieutenant gov- Lowell Loomis and Mrs. E. Z. 
received to pay the indebtedness ,?rnor of the Fifth W. Va., Kiwanis Tower will explain the plans of Hie 
sustained 
during 
the 
Christmas 'Division and past treasurer of the campaign, and distribute maters 
time. 
lw - Va. District. 
|als. 
Contributions 
received 
include 
In making his official visit at 
In Grantsville, Miss Viola Broad- 
$20 
from 
the 
Westernport 
and fh's 
time 
to the 
Keyser 
Club, water has been named community 


h a KT Avn 
A nnmni*!* 
nf Luke Lions 
monthly contri-!which he will attend Wednesday chairman for that area. 
Mrs. D. 
OAKLAND A temple e slate 
, f 
,---— E.alnvpnino he is coming at a time W. Hershberger will be co-chair- 


held at the conclusion of the medt 
ing. 


Oakland Citizens 
To Ballot March 12 


candidate* for thV^m 
u n i r i n a l 
e l e c - 1bu,i°ns of SIO from Evangelical,gening, he is coming 
" . 
. LL 
n . ? 
n a ile d Brethren Church; 
Social1" '''''' "'n Keyser club 
tion to be held in Oakland on 
March 12 has been announced. 


is marking man. 
Welfare Club $5; Auxiliary Unit;UP two special events this week j 


Russe,. L. Smith, of Oakland I ^ A m e r i c a n 
1 
^ 
! ^ 
(h^ M ilul.on o, Ih e ^ w K e y ^ ^ j . T o M # # f 


proprietor of the Chimney Corner, 
has filed his candidacy for mayor 
of Oakland. 


Mansfield 
Post, 
Piedmont 
and c,ub. sponsored by the local Ki- 
Chestnut Grove Methodist Church!*33'3™ 
club 
at 
Keyser 
High] 
$6.94. 
LONACONING - The Woman s 
. V V 
, . . , , , 
„ 
^ 
' . 
‘ adv-5eC0J ld' anT 
l ^ S o c i e t y o f 'C h rism Service will 
Three have filed as candidates! 
A “ 
Sot'a » « * « * < '"•> hal ,Bhac0" ? nd E « Show a,nd, S<le: ofjmcot at 7 Mi p. rn. today at th. 
for City Council. They are Harry ;cn' . out M,v" al orders to needy'he future harmers of America. First NIclhodist Church w,lh Mrs. 
families; clo thins had been pro- which th. Keyser club U spoiler- U 
Duc.kworth. president, in 
vided for a family burned out in mg 
Friday 
and 
Saturday 
this charce 
McCoole and furniture was secured week in the Keyser High School 
c 
.................. 


R F. Hartman, pastor of Fairview 
Methodist Church, officiating. In­ 
terment will be in Zion Memorial 
Burial Park. 


CHARLES THOMAS DULIN 
Burial Park. 


L. 
Stemple 
and 
R o b e r t 
E. 
Maroney, incumbents, and Clayton 
Winters. .Mrs. Berycine Stanton is 
the only candidate for treasurer, 
and 
she 
is seeking 
re-election. 
Three 
councilmen 
are 
to 
be 
elected. 


Women’s GOP Club 
To Meet Wednesday 


FROSTBURG—The Women’s Re­ 
publican Club of Frostburg will 
hold their regular monthly meeting 
Wednesday at 8 p. rn. at the Amer­ 
ican Legion Horne. Various com­ 
mittees will make reports and dis­ 
cussions of future plans will be 
held. 
A musical program will be pre­ 
sented by Donald Zarefoss and ac­ 
companied by Mrs. John Stewart. 
The committee in charge of thc 
program and refreshments is head­ 
ed by Mr*. Pauline Powell, chair­ 
man and Mrs. Ursula Dunn and 
Mrs. Regina Morgan, co-chairman 


gymnasium. 
Mr. Moler is an educator. 
and 
for them. 
He had distributed food given to 
UO provided by Social 
Welfare 
Club and 
that club also gave a School in Charles Town 
family a 
load of coal, Ritchie 


Ritchie 
related 
some of 
the Barton Personals 
problems in dealing with some of; 
the persons needing aid and how 
Mr. and Mrs. Wharton Sheally 
some had to be screened. 


Fore Sale: Furnace and fireplace 
npin.inui „f it,. 
n „ n„„;W°od — large and small loads. 
L u 
, 
P?-L i. t 
right Denny phone m Qr m Frostburg. 
Adv. Mar. N-T 3-5-6 


Hospital Auxiliary 
Buys Plate Covers 


Others serving on the committee 
Oak Inn near Grantsville late S 
a 
t 
- 
j 
^ 
are ^jisses Emma Simons. Mary 
urdav night. His wife, the former. 
Charles Thomas 
Dulin, 79. 
a HARRY L. HAMILTON 
Smith, Doris Stewart, 
Margaret 
Samantha Warner, preceded him resident of the Cumberland areal 
KPV<jp n 
, 
u amii Stewart and Datha Thomas and 
in death. 
ifor 60 years, died Saturday noon I 
ar^y 
s er 
. 
Mesdames Elizabeth Sires, Lena 
He was the son of the latejat the home of Charles’ E. Bratt;,nn* 
. *uesaay dl nis,Sires. Margaret Sluss. Ruth Small, 
Francis and Leah Anna • W a r n e r 414 Grand Avenue, where hejnome* 61 L h 
!Rutb Snyder, Mildred Spates. Hel- 
McKenzie. 
made his home. 
J 
He is survived by his widow. !cn stair, 
Ethel 
Stanton, 
Clara 
He is survived by two sons. Carl 
He had been suffering from a Mrs. 
Mildred 
Hamilton; 
t w o.stark. Polly Stewart, Mern Stew- 
and 
Donald 
McKenzie, 
both of lingering illness for 12 years. 
daughters. Mrs. Retty Jean Hixen-!artt Fanny Stewart, Hazel Sweck- 
RFD 2. Frostburg; one daughter.' 
He was born in Keyser April 18, haugh and Mrs. Virginia Lee Jack er, Arthur Thomas and Elizabeth 


and son Brian, of Cleveland. Ohio, 
are visiting Mrs. Shcally’s mother. 
Mrs. Mae Logsdon. 
Mr. and Mrs. Curtiss Griffith, 
Baltimore, are visiting their homes 
here. 
Mrs. Wiola Griffith is a patient 
FROSTBURG—The Miners Bos- in Memorial Hospital. Cumberland 
pital Auxiliary met in the home 
St. Claire Miller is a patient in 
service 
room 
of 
the 
Potomac Memorial Hospital, Cumberland. 
Edison Company on Monday. 
i 
Mrs. Fred Kyle has received 
Reports from committee were word 
that 
her 
daughter, 
Mrs. 
heard and it was voted to purchase Albert 
Darcus, has injured her 
five dozen stainless 
steel plate 1531,1 ,n 3 RHI down a flight of 
covers for the hospital. The follow- stairs at her home in Youngstown, 
mg members were elected to s e r v e Ohio. 
on the nominating committee: Mrs. 
— 
T. S. Cooper, Mrs. Clarence Rich- For Sale: 
55 x133* Building lot. 
ardson. Mrs. Joseph Durst, Mrs. Estate Heatrola. Phone Frostburg 
I n L n I 
« 
a 
m 
J 
% t .. _ 
V f 
a. * 
. 


M ORGAN BROS. 
FARM SUPPLY 


W. Main SE 
Frostburg 


. Phone 1080. ---- 


See the complete line of 


O LIVER SUPER 
TRACTO RS 


55, 66, 77, 88, 


Gasoline or Diesel 


FROSTBURG — T h e Gleaners Mrs. Isabelle Durr, of Rawlings;j 1876 and was a son of the la te e n , both of Keyser; one son. Sgt 
Class of First Methodist Church1 om si ti 
M 
I 
Sarah ML (lode i ■ 
■ 
I 
Hamilton, Ut 
Carson 
Taylor. 


met 
a 
recent 
evening 
in 
the Meyersdale. Pa ; and one brother, Dulin 
He had been a house painter by 
trade. 
He leaves no survivors, being 


lecture hall of the church. 
Mrs Francis McKenzie, also of Meyers 
TKe!m4 Rephann presided at the dale, and one grandchild, 
business meeting 
The class voted 
A retired clay miner. Mr. Mc 
to present a donation to the Ameri- Kenzie was a membe rot St. Ann * the last surviving member 
of hts 
can Red Cross and also the Mary- Catholic Church at 
Avilton. the family. 
land 
Singers of State Teachers Holy Name Society of the church. The body 
is at 
the 
College 
and the Loyal Order of M o o se ,I Funeral Home, where serv ices 
will 
Following the business meeting.! Frostburg lodge. 
!be conducted tomorrow at aIp. rn. 
Mrs 
Evelyn Hardesty 
led the 
The body is at the Durst Funeral with 
Rev. Louis 
P. 
Chastain 
devotional part of the program Home here, 
using as her topic “ The Lord s A requiem 
Prayer." Hymns used during the tomorrow at IO a rn. at St. Anns Cemetery. 
fie “ What A Friend We'C**holic Church, with interment in Pallbearers will be 


Colorado; his father. Charles Ham 
. 
r i 
i 
* ai 
Ilion, 
Fairmont 
three 
sisters Ared S tu d en t N llfSCS 
Mrs. 
John 
Duke. 
Texarkana,1 
, 


T « a » ; Mrs. Helen Taylor. Fair- Capped A l B a ltim o re 


mass will be held 
officiating. 
Interment will 


mont. and Mrs Mary Jones. Balti­ 
more: one brother, Hubert Hamil- 
Scarpelli ton 
California, and three grand­ 
children. 
A funeral service was conducted 
in 
Markwood 
Funeral 
H o m e 
Thursday with the Rev. S. A. F. 
Wagner, pastor of Grace Metho­ 
dist Church, officiating. 


be In Rose Hill 


service wen 
Have in Jesus.” and 
Tie That 
Binds.** 
Prayer was 
offered by Harriet Elias 
Assisting 
Mrs. Hardesty in the devotions 


A W. Pratt, 


‘ Blest Be the 1,16 Greenville. Pa , Cemetery. 


41 IN KS SERV IC ES 


RO M N EY—A funeral service for 


C. E. Bratt. John Estes. Leslie 
Brinkman. D. H. 
Evans. 
Goby, and Elmoj 


MRS. ELIZABETH L. G R EEN 


Interment was in Queen’s Point 
Cemetery. 


Don Cossack Chorus 
were Mrs 
Emily Jeffries, 
Nell Edward Hines, 84. of here, who 
r n w iv r 
k , m 
r x 
Helen died Thursday at Memorial Hospi-I^ LON AC OMNG — Mrs. Elizabeth 
I O m O fT O W 
Shrvock. 
Helene 
Morton, 
,------------ 
. .. 
„ 
.. . _ . 
, 
Lehr, Elvira Nelson. Eva Plum tai, Cumberland was held yester JL- Green. 73. idied Saturday 
mer. Ruth 
Morgan and Bertha day at 2 p rn . in Ebenczer Metho ^ 
borne on Douglas Avenue. 
Emxfl. 
jdist Church, with the Rev, Robert 
in 
Avilton, she 
was 
I 
C. Lymburner officiating. 
(daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs 
. 
tomorrow at 8 d rn 
Dav id Beeman and the widow of pearance n*re tomorrow at 8 p m 


FROSTBURG—The Don Cossack 


W ESTERN PO RT-Cecelia 
Ann 
Moomau, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 
Dyce Moomau, Wood Street, here, 
and Mary Ann Small, daughter of 
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Small. Bal­ 
timore. 
formerly 
of 
Piedmont. 
were among student nurses capped 
at the Church Home and Hospital 
Baltimore, recently. 
A reception 
was held in their honor following 
the ceremony. 
Mr. and Mrs. Moomau. Western­ 
port, Mr. and Mrs. Small and Mrs. 
Thomas White, Baltimore, attend­ 
ed the event*. 


John Ives and Mrs. Upton Loar. 
Miss 
Katherine 
Close 
demon­ 
strated the planning and prepara­ 
tion of a meal. The meal was won 
by Mrs. George Hale. 
Refresh­ 
ments were served at the close of 
the meeting. 


Ellerslie Gives 
$96 To Heart Fund 


ELLERSLIE — Six workers soli­ 
cited $96 38 in the Ellerslie area 
during 
the 
Heart 
Sunday 
fund 
drive. 
In charge were Norma Porter, 
captain. Hazel Ryan. Zurna Bur­ 
kett. Ruby Harrison, Hazel Grif- 
fey and Olive Shroyer. 


1002. or Apply 47** First Street. 
—Adv. March N T 5-6-7 


PALACE THEATRE 
Freeburg 
MON Tull 


"The African Lion" 


olio 


"Stormy, The 


Thoroughbred" 


Could You Use 
>500 


Come in and let us show 


you an eosy, simple and 


practical way to get 5500 


for a few dollars coch week 


LYRIC THEATRE 
1 
FIDELITY BANK 


Maureen 


MON 
TUSS. 


O Hora - George 
Lady Godiva" 


N o d e r 
‘The Bank with the Tewn Clack'* 


Frostburg, Maryland 


Member F D I C. 


NOW! TRADE IN ANY RANGE 


ON A NEW 


FRIGIDARE ELECTRIC RANGE 


Special piano music was pre-; 


r m / a i D i iv vt— 'l u r i/un 
r p 
.* 
O 
* 
£ 
Chorus will make its second ap* p f O S t D U T ^ u T IO lS 


•ented by Richard Powell and his 
Interment was in Ebenezer Cern 


mother, Mrs. Vaneatta Powell 
As e,<,r.v* 
a duet they played 
The Merry M|SS TABITHA FISH ER 
Widow Waltz” by Franz Leher. and 


Edward Green 
a Pr°K ram 
entertainment in? 
The Ladies Aid Society of Salem 
Surviving are tun son*. Thoma*''he *'ld',or' ™ » ' C" n'* “ 
Ha"^Evangelical and Befanned Church 
and John Green, Doth el I.onacon lF r™ ,bur,! S,a,f Teachers College will mee today at 7 30 p. rn 
rue a daughter Mr- Frank Hart- 
Th* 
aPPeara"ee here ta under, 
Visa Peggy Engle, 
daughler of 
Richard 
played 
a solo entitled. 
Miss Tabitha Fisher, 47, of 605 
* 
. 
„ * ... 
. 
hroth*i,hf suspires of the college convo- Mrs. Gertrude Engle. 31 
Grant 
“ Edelweiss Glide” 
by Yanderbeck 
Woodlawn Terrace, died 
Saturday 
ie*** an(j peter Beeman both cal,on 
committee, 
and the pro- Street 
and Miss Anna Jean Twigg. 
Mrs. Ruth .Morgan was in charge morning in Sacred Heart Hospital nf Lonaconing nine grandchildren'cram 
opcn to l^c Scnera, Pub- daughter of Mrs. Edward Shoemak­ 
er a recreational program includ where she had been a patient a 
n(^^lxV great grandchildren 
lic* 
tat MVtral gomes »ni aitlarifu u jlw «k. 
. 
I The bode will remain at tho; 
reading turtled 
The Time of 
She wav a daughter of the Je fe K|rhhori) 
r 
„ (Hn, 
where c i r f |B . T . M p B , 
Day. 
iTrunk and Maryland 
b a lk e r, „ e r v K e s will he conducted today! 
Spring hats were made and later I tailer and held membership in a| 2 
p 
m 
hv 
R(-v 
joseph! PIEDM ONT—The M a' -ueritr Ar- Hous<' 
,or K0" 1- APP'y 59 Hl" 
modeled in a style review. 
The St. Paul a Lutheran Church and Youw 
p a s l ( , r 
, l ( rirJt Methodist nold Circle' will meet at thc First Frostburg 


GOOD LOOKIN’ 


LIFETIME PORCELAIN FINISH 


INSIDE AND OUT 


CHOICE OF COLORS 


GOOD CO O KIN ’ 


DEPENDABLE RADIANTUBE 
SURFACE UNITS 


FULLY INSULATED OVENS 


cr. F'ast Main Street, have accept­ 
ed positions with the Department 
of Agriculture. Washington. D. C. 
HERE S A TYPICAL FRJGIDAIRE 


RANGE D ESIG N ED FOR M O DERN LIVING 


Missionary Q,urcb interment will be in Crowe 
Cemetery, Garrett County. 


first prize was won by Mrs. Nell the 
Eternal 
Beacon 
Shryock. Others taking part in the (Society of the church, 
style bhow were Mrs. Emily Jef- 
Surviving are a sister. Mrs. Yir 
fries. Alia BUC kale w. 
Kula Duck- gmia F. Lasher, and a niece. Mrs CHARLES W. KERLIN G 
worth, Helen Lehr, and E lsie Con-Mary B. Small, both of this city. 
I 
OAKLAND—C h a r I es 
William! 
rad. 
Mrs. 
Edith Cook was the 
The body will remain at the Sit- Kcrhng. 71. an Oakland native ! 
narrator, and Margaret Aldridge, cox Funeral Residence where ser- died at his home in Atlanta, Geor 
the pianist and Thomas Elias, the vices 
will 
be 
conducted 
today!gja. last Thursday. 
judge. 
at 2 p. rn. by Rev. Dr. Hixon TV 
He was born here February 9 
Following the program Thelma Bowersox, 
pastor of St. 
Paul’s Christian and Ida <Whirl* Reding 
Rephann, Vaneatta Powell. Evelyn Church, interment will be in Rose 
He was reared at Loch Lynn and 
Hardesty, E l s i e Morgan 
Amy 
Hill Cemetery. 
was 
a laborer 
most of his life 
Richardson and Edith 
Cook, host- 
Pallbearers will be Joseph Chris- time. 
esses, presided at the refreshment topher, 
Robert 
Davidson. 
Ray* 
Graveside 
services 
were 
held 
table. The next regular monthlyjmond 
Skidmore. 
Patrick 
Me-,yesterday at 9 a rn. in the Oakland 
meeting is scheduled on April 5 at Gtreevy. 
Gerard 
McGreevy 
and Cemetery with the Rev. John At- 
8 p. rn. 
{Cromwell Zembower. 
(well officiating. 


Presbyterian Church at 8 p. rn. 
Adv. March N T 5 


today. 
Mrs. Norman Baugbmanj 
and Mrs. John Hill will be hostess­ 
es. 
Westernport Circle will meet at 
the home of Mrs. Q. J. Baughman. 
‘1158 Wood Street. Westernport, to- 
j morrow at 7 30 p. rn. 


YOUR 
LAYING HENS 


will do their best on 


The Rocco Program 


Rocco Feeds 


at Wen Virginia, Inc. 


MOOREFIELD, W. Vo. 


Phone 85 or 181 


r RADIATORS “ 
Removed 
Repaired 
Recored 


DON'S 
Radiator Shop 


201 Mechanic St. 
P rottb u rg 


P H O N E 7S9-» 


Delco Batteries 
*10.95 anchanga 


Firemen Mark Anniversary 


FREE PICKUP and 
DELIVERY SERVICE 


Pictured left to right at the Barton 
James Lamberson. John Roberts, E 
Metz, the Memorial committee of the 
at the anniversary celebration. 


ipany No J , thirty-seventh anniversary banquet are 
ic'* Poland, Wilbur Johnson, David E 
Kirk and Luther 
ompany. They arc displaying the Memorial plaque precented 


Claysville Motors 


Thomoi G ro a t and E»erett W orn# 


PHONE HOO 


Special This W eek 


1954 Oldsmobile 


Power brakes, 


power steering, 


R - H, Hyd., 


w.w. tires, low 


mileage 


*2395. 


Green Chev. Co. 


Phone 200 
Frostburg 


OPEN EVENINGS 


The Frigidaire 


Imperial 


★ Fast-Cooking Spced-Heof 


Surface Unit 


it Heat-Mindcr Unit 


Won t Let Foods Burn 


★ Deep-Well Cooker Also 


Serves As Deep Fat 
Fryer, Extra Surface 
Unit And Small Oven 


it Kont-Slidc' Griddle 


A Roll-To-You Oven Shelf 


★ Cooks Meals Automatic­ 
ally While You’re Away 


$IO 


DOWN 


DELIVERS 


Any Model 


HAVE A NEW FRIGIDAIRE RANGE IN YOUR HOME FOR AS 


LITTLE AS $1.96 A WEEK — USE OUR OWN EASY-PAY PLAN 
THE POTOMAC EDISON CO. 


FRO STBU RG 
CU M BERLAN D 


f 


Phone PA 2-4600 for o WANT AD Taker 
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD., MONDAY, MARCH 5, 
1956 
THREE 


Hennings Will Press Primary Reforms Fight 


WASHINGTON, March 4 
if» —;ing of campaign expenditures andlvestigations growing out of 
controversy over 
natural gas bill. 
lobbying on 
the 
the 
Sen. Hennings <D-Mo) said today contributions as a central feature, 
he IS going to continue to 
fight for but Johnson's bill v/ould not apply 
an elections reform bill 
applying to party primaries in which can**case Probe To Resume 
to primary as well as 
general didat^s for federal office are nom* 
special 
Senate committee 
elections. 
mated, 
continue its hearings tomor- 
*T see no rea.son why I should Primaries Decisive In South 
whether a $2..itXl campaign 


Two Men, Boy Die 
in Baltimore Fire 


BALTIMORE, March 4 i.4^-Fire 
pread from a candle in a first- 
floor apartment and up the stair­ 
well of an old West Baltimore row- 
house Saturda>. trapping two men 
and a 6-year-old boy. 
Charles Garrett. 40, who lived on 
the third floor, and his two visitors 
Clifton Hunter. 48, and son Shan- 
jnon Hunter, were dead on arrival 


Oak Timber Burns 


HAGERSTOWN. March 4 ti' - 
Washington County's largest forest 
fire this year destroyed five acres 
of 
oak 
timber 
yesterday 
near 
Weverton, in the southern part ot 
the county. 


Boy, 9, Hangs Himself 


BETHESDA. Itld.. March 4 t.r- 
A nine-year-old boy, Thomas Mc­ 
Coy. accidentally hanged himselt 
today playing in a rotating clothes 
line. 


Join 
in sponsoring 
the JohnsonI 
Hennings noted that in about 
contribution rejected by Sen. Fran 
bill,’* Hennings tcTd newsmen, re- third of the states, particularly the ^j^ 
iR-SD> was an attempt to 
ferring to a measure introduced traditionally Democratic South, the 
bill 
by Senate Democratic Leader Lyn- primary elections are decisive and 
Another, bigger special commit-j:: provident Hosnital 
All were 
don Johnson of Texas. 
said, “ I intend to continue my tee has been set up by the t’cnatcj^r 
• 


The two measures are sim ilar tisht to make reform legislation 
ij^ake a much broader invcsti- 
in many respects, with full report-iapply to primaries as well as g^n- gation of lobbying and campaign 
!------ 
--- ------ 
eral elections.” 
. . . . . 'contributions and to recommend h a f l f i p k I j f p T p r m 
ihnson said yesterday that 
legislation 
Rut its Re- 
bill now has tbF signatures of 49 
Democratic 
mcm- 
senators, including 32 Democrats 
divided, have yet to 
and 17 Republicans, and he called 
agreement on rules of pro- 
this 
bipartisan 
sponsorship 
“ a ^edure. 
highly encouraging sign.” 
j 
He drew up the measure in con­ 
sultation with Senate Republican 
Leader 
Knowiand 
of 
California 
and others in an offshoot of 


GET A 
GENUINE 
UIITtR 
mnsTFR 


Amtrieo'f Lorg»$ t S»IHng 
TOILET TANK BALL 
Noity running teibn eon wotb ovnr 
1000 gollont of wator a doy, Tht 
amazing potontod W otor Mottor 
to n k b o ll in s ta n tly stops th« 
flow of wotor oftor ooch flushing. 


75 c AT H ARDW ARC STORES 


in- 


Do You Have A 
Drinking Problem? 


The Cumberland Group of 
Alcoholics Anonymous 
Meets Every Tuesday and 
Friday Nights 


For Information W rite 


Box 323 or Phone 


PA 2-1041 or PA 4-2072 


In Baby Kicking Case 


HEREFORD. Tex,. March 4 
—A jury today convicted Harold* 
Roberts of Dumas. Tex., of kick­ 
ing his 17-month-old daughter to 
death in a drunken rage and sen­ 
tenced him to life imprisonment. 
He was condemned to death in 
an earlier tiial but that verdict 
was reversed by the Texas Court 
of Criminal .A.ppcals, 
The state contended the child, 
Lena Marie, died alter Roberts 
kicked her Aug. 21. 19.'»4. 


SEATO Council 
Meets Tuesday 


KARACHI, rakistan, March 4 
—Political 
and 
military 
leaders 
converged from East and West on 
Pakistan's capital today for an 
eight-nation meeting to forge a 
stronger Asian link in cfefenses 
against communism. 
. 
The three-day conference of the 
Southeast .Asia Treaty Organiza­ 
tion Council opens Tuesday. F'or- 
cign ministers and top military 
charge. An absolute proven 
men will be present from the Unit-T^*^''^‘^y- Cinly one trip required. 
ed States, Britain. A u s t r a l i a . ;I^i«aWed_ {arsons 
may 
send 
a 
¡France, New Zealand. Pakistan. Iricnd, 4.5 South .Vlt, Vernon Ave., 


SPECIAL 


r SINGER SEWING 
CENTER 
the on/yTtote/ntoi¥n that 
cany/in? you thisyreat value.., 


SINGER 


ADVi:nriSKMKNT 
Rheumatism-Arthritis 


NEURITIS-SCIATICA 


Relief 
from those torturing pains 


m 
ROEBUCK AND CQ 


MON., TUES., 
& WED. 


Mr. T. R. Howkins, 
Specialist in Child 


Photographer, W ill Take 


BABY'S PICTURE 


A SVixS-lnch Print for 
19e 
GROUP PICTURES ................... 38c 
• No appointment needed to have Mr. Ffawkins, widely 
known expert on Child Photography, take your baby’s picture 
at Sears this week. Just one 19c picture to a family. Children 
may be from 2 months to 10 years. All children must be with 
a parent. Quick .service. 


Additional Pictures at Low Cost 


In Quantities To Suit Your Requirements 


TIME; DAILY, 10 A. M. to 5 P. m 7 


M ON. 10 A.M . to 9 P.M.— SAT. 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. 


(*[1 1 H C 
Baltimore St. 


< t % m / t e t e y 6<iehh' 
3L n K 3 Cumberlond, Md. 


the Philippines and Thailand. 
Adm. Felix B. Stu mp , comman­ 
der in chief of the Pecific area and 
leader of the U.S. military dclcga-: 
tion flew in today. 
U.S. Secretary of State Dulles 
left Malta by air for Karachi and 
British Foreign Secretary Selwyn 
Llnvd is due tomorrow. 
The 
meeting 
is 
expected 
to 
tackle the problem of building a 
permanent defense structure. Un­ 
til now SEATO has been largely a 
paper organization. 


.500 ft. off Route 40, Uniontown, Pa. 
Office hours; Daily 10-6. Sunday 
10-4. Permanently located. 


DRY 
C lIA N ID ond 
IX P IR T IY 
flNISHfcD 


H A R R Y FOOTER & Co. 


CLEANERS - 


Thu Special Coih ond Corry price effective ot oil our »tore» 
Cumberlcittd, LoValc, Fro»tburg, Piedmont and Key»er for o 
limited time only. 
Extra Fast SHIRT Laundry 


Some day »ervice on dre»» »hirt» now avOilable at our 
Cumberland and LoVale Store». 


V j 
S IN r.M c « « 
Smooth-stmhincSiNOr 
^ Home Srwmg 


Sturdy l«.nt«««l 


. Sc. r* b«'ic 
AUL $9 4 50 
m 


•A Treit* Werk nt Twr WNOW *»«. ©n. 
SINGER SEWING CENTER 


6 5 Bolfimorc St. — Cumberland, Md. - 


77 N. Moin St. — Keyser, W . Vo. 


Phone PA 2-3060 


- Phone 20971 


AnVERTlSEM K.N T 


People 60 to 80: 
Tear Out This Ad 


. . and mail it today to find 


out how you can still apply for 


a $1,000 life insurance policy to 


help take care of final expenses 


without burdening your family. 
j 


You handle the entire transaction 


by mail with OLD AMERICAN of 


KANSAS CITY. No obligation. No 


one will call on you! 


Write today, simply giving your 


name, address and age. Mail to 


Old American Ins. Co., 3 West 9th, 


Dept, L319B, Kansas City, Mo, 
9 


OPEN ^TIL . . . 


«[RLE 
OREOf 


C O S M E T I C S 


1 1 2 So. Liberty Si. 


If you 're savin g for a comfortab le fu tu re... 


Wh ere you save does mak e a difference 


As more than 15,000,000 Americans already know, there are 
important advantages to putting your savings in insured 
Savings and Loan Associations . . , 


Fxcclienl returns from your money is one advantage. 


Modern, efficient, forward-looking service is another. 


And, of course, your money is safe because in insured Savings 
and Loan Associations your savings are protected by sound 
management and substantial reserves. They are insured up to 
SIO.OOO by the F S L IC —an agency of the U. S. Govemmcnu 
No wond er Americans are now p utting more o f th eir sav ing s 
account d ollars into insured Sav ing s and Loan Associations 
th an any wh ere else! 


Thiv sign identifies usa? a mcf^Scr of 
The Savings and Loan boun aiinn 
Inc., a nationwide orgnm. 
.if 
insured Saving*^ and Loan Bu 
irg 
and Loan and Homestead A -vi 
tions which sponsors th 
me 
in Life, The Saturday 1 xentng P 
and L. S. News and World Report, 


Open Your Insured Savings Account 


TODAY at the 
First Federal Savings & Loan 


Association 
141 Baltimore Street 


Open today from 9 a. m. until 3 p. m. and from 7 until 9 p. m. 


Yo u r Red Letter Da y is Co min g! 


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If you are a Nation wid e policyholder 


carrying auto Medical Payments 
You are going to receive a 
Wondeuful Letter 


A letter in a flaming red envelope is in 
the mail for you if you are a Nationwide 
policyholder living in Man'Iand or Dc 
ware. Look for it. 


It wall tell you about a new Alternative 
Compensation coverage that you can 
have w'ith your present auto insurance 
policy. L'ndcr tliis new' protection . . . 


If y ou, or any relativ es liung uith y ou, are injured h y an 
in.surcd or ei n 
h y an uninsured d riv er-no matter w'lio’s at fault 


W ell pay die b d l‘' 


If y ou, or any relativ es liiing with y ou. are injured h y a car • ■wh ile walking , 
rid ing a bicy cle, d riv ing someone else’s car, nr 
almost any circumstance 


f 


W ell pay the bilh! 


If y our car-no matter uh /s d rh ing it, 
or w ¡ki s at id uli-’injures any one 


W e’ll pay the bills! 


There are other benefits too, and the letter in 
the mail tells you all about them. W atch for i' 


ATIONWIDE 


M U T U A L I N S U R A N C E C O M P A N Y 


H O M E O F P I C E i 
C O L U M B U S , O H I O 


(formerly Farm Bureau Mutual Automobile Insurance Company) 


Yo u r Red Letter Da y is Co min g! 


THESE 
ARE 
YOUR 
LOCAL 


PHONE NUMBERS 


BARCLAY 
ROBERT C., 60 
Aspmoll St., Frostburg Md........................ 
Frostburg 432 
DAVIS 
CHARLES F 
702 Bokcr St , 
Cumberlond 
PA 4-0806 
DERHAM, ROBERT M , 402 Hammond St, Westernport, Md. 
. . . . Wtsternport 3571 
EDWARD. JAMES H , GrontsviHe, Md 
Grontsviil? '^0 
HAHN, W ILLIAM P., SÌ4 Williams St., Cumberlond, Md .......................... PA 2 0481 


N A TIO N W ID E 
AGENTS 


PHONE NUMBERS 
INSKEEP, KENNETH M., 606 Wosh ngton St., Cumberland ................. PA 2-4314 
MAXEY 
WALTER J., 4SI Wolnut St, Cumberlond, Md 
........................ PA 
4 5812 
McKenzie, c la r e n c e U., 417 Wmmer St, Cumberland. Md 
PA 2-1311 
MACK, J. PROPST, Ooklond, Md 
. 
............. 
.............................. DI 4-2501 
SNYDER, CHRISTOPHER M,, P. 0. Box 5, Cresoptown, Md 
.................... PA 2-7685 


Phone PA 2-4600 for a W ANT AD Taker 
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD., MONDAY, MARCH 5, 
1956 
THREE 


Kennings Will Press Primary Reforms Fight 


WASHINGTON. March 4 
- 
Sen. Hennings <D-Mo> said today 
he is going to continue to fight for 
an elections reform bill applying 
to primary 
as well as general 
elections. 


" I see no reason why I should 
Join 
in 
sponsoring 
the Johnson 
bill.'* Henmngs told newsmen, re­ 
ferring to a measure introduced 
by Senate Democratic Leader Lyn­ 
don Johnson of Texas. 
I The two measures are similar 
ta many respects, with full report- 


HMR 
M R 


A m ir nor'* Largttt Selling 
TOILET TANK BALL 
Noisy running toilers can wait* ov*r 
1000 gotten* of water a day. Th* 
a m a tin g patented W at*r M atter 
t a n k b a ll in sta n tly stop t th * 
flow of water ofter coch Hushing. 
75c AT H AROW A R I STORTS 


ing of campaign expenditures and 
contributions as a central feature, 
but Johnson's bill would not apply 
to party primaries in which can­ 
didates for federal office are nom­ 
inated. 
P rim aries Decisive In South 
Hennings noted that in about a 
third of the states, particularly the 
traditionally Democratic South, the 
primary elections are decisive and 
said. 
“I intend to continue my 
fight to make reform legislation 
apply to primaries as well as gen­ 
eral elections.” 
Johnson said yesterday that his 
bill now has The signatures of 49 
senators, including 32 Democrats 
and 17 Republicans, and he called 
this 
bipartisan 
sponsorship 
"a 
highly encouraging sign." 
He drew up the measure in con­ 
sultation with Senate Republican 
Leader 
Knowland 
of 
California 
and others in an offshoot of in­ 


vestigations 
growing 
out 
of the 
controversy over lobbying on the 
natural gas bill. 


Case Probe To Resum e 
One special Senate committee 
will continue its hearings tomor­ 
row on whether a $2.i00 campaign 
contribution rejected by Sen. Fran­ 
cis Case (R-SD* was an attempt to 
influence his vote on the gas bill 


Two Men, Boy Die 
In Baltimore Fire 


BALTIMORE. March 4 i* -F ir c 
spread from a candle in a first- 
door apartment and up the stair­ 
well of an old West Baltimore row- 
house Saturday, trapping two men 
and a 6-year-old boy. 
Charles Garrett. 40. who lived on 
the third floor, and his two visitors. 
Clifton Hunter. 48, and son Shan­ 
non Hunter, were dead on arrival 
at 
Provident Hospital. 
All were 


Oak Timber Burns 


HAGERSTOWN, March 4 i f - 
Washington County's largest forest 
fire this year destroyed five acres 
of 
oak 
timber 
yesterday 
near 
Weverton. in the southern part ot 
the county. 


Boy, 9, Hangs Himself 


BETHESDA. Md., March 4 < fU 


A nine-year-old boy, Thomas Mc-j 
Coy. accidentally hanged himself 
today playing rn a rotating clothes j 
line. 


Another, bigger special commit 
tee has been set up by the Senate -\Cftroes 
to make a much broader invests 
gation of lobbying and campaign 
contributions and to recommend Q g J ( j g f c j j f g J e r m 
corrective legislation 
But its Re­ 


publican 
and 
Democratic 
mem- In Baby Kicking Case 
hers. equally divided, have yet to 
reach agreement on rules of pro­ 
cedure. 


Do You Have A 
Drinking Problem? 


The Cumberland Group of 
Alcoholics Anonymous 
Meets Every Tuesday and 
Friday Nights 


For Information Write 


Box 323 or Phone 


PA 2-1041 or PA 4-2072 


SEATO Council 
Meets Tuesday 


KARACHI. Pakistan, March 4 i f 
. . . 
—Political 
and 
military 
leaders 
j J ane* 
aA, .r ^°*>€r,s 
hoi' A sttrS 
« 
I iii. A 


HEREFORD. Tex . March 4 if 
—A jury today convicted Harold 
Roberts of Dumas. Tex., of kick­ 
ing his 17-month-old daughter to 
death in a drunken rage and sen­ 
tenced him to life imprisonment. 
He was condemned to death in 
an earlier trial but that verdict 
was reversed by the Texas Court 
of Criminal Appeals. 
The state contended the child, 


kicked her Aug. 21. 19f»4 


ADVERTISEM ENT 


SEARS 


RO EBU CK AND CO 


MON., TUES., 
& WED. 


Mr. T. R. Hawkins, 
Specialist in Child 
Photographer, W ill Toke 
BABY'S PICTURE 


A 3 l ix5-lnch Print f o r 
19c 
GROUP PICTU RES .................... 38c 
• No appointment needed to have Mr. Hawkins, widely 
known expert on Child Photography, take your baby's picture 
at Sears this week. Just one 19c picture to a family. Children 
may be from 2 months to IO years. All children must be with 
a parent. Quick service. 


Additional Pictures at Low Cost 
In Quantities To Suit Your Requirements 


TIM E: DAILY, IO A. M. to 5 P. m 7 


M O N . IO A.M. to 9 P.M.— SAT. IO A.M. to 6 P.M. 


p uouuefa / C T JI H P 1^9 Baltimore St. 


ct ya m money ta ct' 
J Cumberland, Md. 


converged from East and West on 
Pakistan's capital 
today 
for an 
eight-nation 
meeting 
to 
forge a 


stronger 
Asian 
link 
in 
defenses Rheumatism-Arthritis 
against communism. 
The three-day conference of the 
N E U R IT IS-SC IA T IC A 
Southeast Asia Treaty Organiza­ 
tion Council opens Tuesday. For- belief from those torturing pains 
eign 
ministers and top military or no charge. An absolute proven 
men will be present from the Unit- lcmedy. Only one trip required. 
cd States. Britain. A u s t r a l i a . Disabled 
^rson s 
may 
send 
a 
France, New' Zealand. 
Pakistan. tnonci, 
South Mt. Vernon Ave., 
the Philippines and Thailand. 
^ R* °h Route 4o Uniontown, Pa. 
Adm. Felix B. Stamp, common-!'Office hours: 
Daily 10-6. Sunday 
der in chief of the Pantie area and 10 4 
Permanently located 
, 
leader of the U.S. military delega­ 
tion flew in today. 
J 
U.S. Secretary of State Dulles • 
left Malta by air for Karachi and J 
British Foreign Secretary Selwyn • 
Llovd is due tomorrow 
a 
The 
meeting 
is 
expected 
to J 
tackle the problem of building a i 
permanent defense structure. Un- | 
til now SKATO has been largely a i 
paper organization. 


/’SINGER SEWING 
CENTER 
is 
the 
on/y store in torn that 
can give you this yreat value... 


S 
I N 
G 
E 
R 
P 
o 
r t a 
b 
l e 


ridm 


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ALL $ 9 4 50 


r 
n 


EAST 
HMKNT TEWS i 


•A Trerf. Mark <4 TW* MN**** anc O' 
SINGER SEWING CENTER 


65 Baltimore St. — Cumberland, Md. — Phone PA 2-3060 


77 N. M oin St. — Keyser, W. Va. — Phone 20971 


) o u r R ed Letter Dux is (Mining! 


ADVERTISEM ENT 
People 60 to 80: 
Tear Out This Ad 


. . . and mail it today to find 


out how you can still apply for 


a $1,000 life insurance policy to 


help take care of final expenses 


without burdening your family. 


You handle the entire transaction 


by mail with OLD AMERICAN of 


KANSAS CITY. No obligation. No 


one will call on you! 


Write today, simply giving your 


name, address and age. Mail to 


Old American Ins. Co., 3 West 9th. 


Dept. L3I9B, Kansas City, Mo. 


OPEN ' T I L . . . C j 


(IME 
rom fin 


C O S M E T I C S 


112 Se. liberty St. 


If you’re saving for a comfortable future.. 


C T " 
" " 
J L 
Where you save does make a difference 


As mort than 15.000.000 Americans already know, there are 
important advantages to putting your savings in insured 


S a v in g s and Loan Associations . . . 


Excellent returns from your money is one advantage. 


Modern, efficient, forward-looking service is another. 
_ 


And. of course, your money is sale because in insured Savings 
and Loan Associations your savings are protected by sound 
management and substantial reserves. They are insured up to 
SIO,OOO by the FSL IC —an agency of the U. S. Government. 


S o wonder Americans are now pulling mo*e o f their savings 
account dollars into insured Savings and Loan Associations 


than anywhere else! 


This Mg* idvntifk* us tv a member o f 
The Savings and Loan foundation 
Inc , a nationwide organization of 
insured Savings and Loan, Building 
and Loan and Homestead Associa­ 
tions which sponsors this message 
in life . The Saturday Evening Post 
and ll. S. News and World Report. 


Open Your Insured Savings Account 


TODAY at the 


First Federal Savings & Loan 


Association 
141 Baltimore Street 


Open today from 9 a. rn. until 3 p. rn. and from 7 until 9 p. rn. 


If you are a Nationwide policyholder 


carrying auto Medical Payments 
You are going to receive a 
Wonderful Letter 


A letter in a flaming red envelope is in 


the mail for you if you arc a Nationwide 
policyholder living in Maryland or Dela­ 


ware. Look for it. 


It will tell you about a new Alternative 
Compensation coverage that you can 


have with your present auto insurance 


policy. Under this new protection . . . 


l f you, 
or any 
relatiies Ii tin* uith you, are injured by an insured 
e m 


by an uninsured driver- n o matter who’s at fault 


W ell pay the bilk! 


lf you, or any relatiies 
living with you. are injured by a walking, 


riding a bicycle, d riling someone elses ear, or almost any circumstance 


r 


W ell pay the bills! 


/ / your car-no matter u ho’s during it, or w h o 's at fau lt -injures anyone 


W ell pay die bills! 


T h ere are o th e r benefits too, and the letter in 
the mail tells you all about them . W a tc h for i' 


A T IO N W ID E 


M U T U A L I N S U R A N C E C O M P A N Y 


H O M E 
O F F I C E ) 
C O L U M B U S . 
O H I O 


(form erly Firm Bureau M utual Automobile Insurance Com pany) 


w 
># i ' 
¥* ■ * * 
. 
• * * J ■ 
' 
Your R ed Letter Dux 
Comino! 


THESE 
A R E 
YOUR 
LO CAL 
N A T IO N W ID E 
A G EN T S 


P H O N E N U M B E R S 
P H O N E N U M B E R S 


B AR C LA Y , R 0 8 E R T C , 60 Aspinoli St, Frostburg Md 
................... Frostburg 432 
INSKEEP, K E N N E T H M , 606 Wosh ngton St, Cumberland 
. . . . . . . . . . PA 
2-4314 


DAVIS, C H A R L E S F , 702 Boker St, Cumberland 
.. 
PA 
4 0806 
M A X E Y , W A L T ER J., 451 Walnut St. Cumb«rland, M d ......................... PA 4 5812 


D ER H A M . R OBERT M , 402 Hammond S t, Westernport, M d 
Westernport 3571 
MCKENZIE, C L A R E N C E U , 417 Winmer St, Cumberland, M d ............... PA 2 1311 


EDW ARD, J A M E S H , Grantsville, M d 
Grontsvdle 90 
M A C K , J. PROPST, Oakland. 
Md .......................... 
DE 4-2501 


H A H N , W I L L I A M P., S U Williams St., Cumberland, M d ......................... PA 
2 0481 
SNYDER, C H R IST O P H ER M., P. 0. Bo* 5, Cresaptown, M d ................... PA 2 7685 


FOUR 
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD„ MONDAY, MARCH 5, 
1956 
Phone PA 2-4600 for o WANT AD Toker 


Hughes Answers Criticism On Teacher Salary 


Ddegate 
George 
R. 
Hughes, lative record to date 
bears out! A total increase of 
1)00 in 
minority 
leader 
in 
the 
House, my opinion that I have 
been most the State 
Lducation 
has issued a s t a t e m e n t in friendly and sympathetic tow,ards budget, with $2 , 0 0 0 of the in- 
reply to criticism of his stand on public education in general and crease earmarked for higher con- 
school teachers' salaries by John school teacher.s in particular. For inbulions to the teachers 
P . Kcllv, president of the Alle- instance, during the lO.'iS session of ment system, ihe bill under which 
cany County Teachers' 
Associa* the General Assembly 
of 
M a r y - $1,500 (K)0 was appropriated 
for 
tjon. 
* 
;lan d . I co-sponsored and supported S 0 ci a 1 
Security 
for 
Marylancl 
Hughes said he is not surpnscdiHou.se Bill No. .531 which provided teachers during the 
(hat Kellv disagrees with hi.s stand Tor an $8W.0O0 bond i.s.suc for the year and also House Bill 21 which 
on teacher salary increases but purpose 
of 
constructing 
terfain increases pensions of certain re­ 
ís surprised at the tenor of his new .schooliP. and making ( crtain tired teachers 
remark.s. 
(additions, 
improvements and re- 
Hughes said he .sponsored House 
“ When seriou.s matters, such a> pairs to existing .schuols in Alle- Bill 2 which contains items total-1 
the one at hand, develop into a gany County. I also c« .spnn.sored ing $1.300.000 
for 
expan.sion 
of ; 
public controver.sy. Ihe only just and 
.supported 
House 
Bill .500. teachers ^colleges. 
includes 
and valid way to settTF them is to under whuh every public sciiool Sp.MO for a 
^ 
go to the record, and. after all teacher in Allegany County will be I ro.sfburg 
reachets College. 
Ihc 
relevant facts have been thorough- given a $.W) .salary increase over Frostburg school’s budget was alsoj 
Iv aired allow the public to decide a period of three years. In addi- incrca.sed SO.i.OOO. 
He 
also sup- 
which side is right. Therefore. I tion. I supported House Bill 705, ported 
House 
Bill 118 
creating, 
would like to put before the public sponsored 
by 
Mr. 
'Lester 
B ,» t e a c h e r-education scholarships,; 
my legislative record on the que.s- Heed, providing for the payment Hughes declared, 
tifin of public education, including of an annual pcn.sion to certain 
Hughes .said that if Senate Reso- 
school teachers' .salarie.s. 
former public school teacher.s in lution lit, passed during the 19.)« 
“ First, during the 19.55 session Allegany 
County 
who 
are 
not .session of the Senate, which re- 
of the Lcgi.slalure. I was apt>ointed eligible to retire under the present quests the Legislative Council to 
to a Special Committee to m a k e Teachers’ Retirement System law. make a complete study of salary 
a study of our state mental hos- Ra.'-ed on this legislative record, needs of all .stale employes, .shows 
pitals. bn the night of the Shrine I can t help hut conclude that .Mr. an increase in teachers’ salaries is 
Country Club 
meeting at 
which Kelly has a rather short and one- warranted,” " will support legis- 
th'' proposed teachers’ salary in- sided memory.” 
lation to that 
effect. 
^ 
crease was discussed, I was in 
Delegate Hughes also listed the 
He 
concluded 
by 
stating: 
I 
Baltimore attending a meeting of following measures a f f e c t i n g.believe my responsibility to all of 
this 
Mental 
Ho.spifals’ 
Investi- school teacher.s and the education bhe people whom I represent in- 
gating Committee. Therefore, my system which he supported; 
¡eludes the duty to say no when 


Neely Confirms 


Mollohan Support Unusual Crash 
Results In Suit 
CLARKSBURG. W. Va . March 
4 
Sen. Matthew M. Neely 'D- 
VVVa: of Fairmont said today that 
. . . 
i 
j 
t 
u- 
i n ^ 
‘ 
A rather unusual accident which: 
his protege and fellow town,man. 
Rep. 
Robert 
H. 
Mollohan 
M ) - w h e n a Delaware motor- 
WVa s “ will be the next governor ist swerved to avoid hitting a La- 
of VVe.st Virginia.” 
Vale man's car and then ran into a! 
Neely’s statement, read during third vehicle has resulted 
a reception 
at a Clarksburg 


Delaware car abruptly to avoid 
hitting the Bennett machine. 
} 
In doing so, the suit states, the 
clergyman’s car ran into an auto* 
operated by Lewis E. Jones Jr. 
The lawyers for the clergyman 
point 
out 
that 
Jones 
received 
$3.59,93 in a compro.mise settle­ 
ment when he sued Rev. Mr. Cross 
in .New Castle County Court ot 
Common Pleas. Del. 
The .suit claims the damage to 
thei^^® clergyman’s auto is $104.50. 
.Another 
$.500 
suit 
was 
filed 


confirmed the general impre.ssion 
throughout the state 


hack in the 1940s. 


M n iln lia n 
t ta o fr t 
! 
.n O O in e r 
SU U 
W 3S 
lU e U 
h T O hAtfl 
fnrm'dlv 
° 
.Allegany Loun-jgg^yj-jjgy gg g result of a collision 
• impro«mn 
|“ > »’<' intersection of Baltimore 
that Neely I 
Thomas G. Cross, of N e w |and North George streets. Eugene 
was supporting Mollohan. whom hVCastle. Del., owner of the car, and,^ - Whitfield of 12 \Ve.st CoJlep 
first took undf-r his political wing hi.s driver. Paul W. Leach. VVoodsj^^™®- ^'’oslburg, bock^ted the 
Haven School. Claymont, Del . 
against Donald Malamphy 
suing K. E. Bennett of LaVale. 
1° 
Park Street. 
' 
Through the local law firm of! , ^^e declaration contends that on 
November 10, 1955 the auto operat- 


Golden Ray Class 
Plans Lawn Fete 


FRO STBU R G -The Golden Ray 
Sunday 
School 
Class 
of 
Salem 
Evangelical and Reformed Church 
held its regular monthly meeting 
recently at the home of Amelia 
Cross, class secretary. Plai^ were 
made to sponsor a lawn fete at the 
church 
sometime 
in 
the 
early 
summer. 
Tho.se pre.sent w ere G l a d y s 


Ewing, Hazel Hill. Harriet Griffith, 
Thelma Fuller, Letty Close. Suz­ 
anne 
Wehler, 
Llewella 
Carder, 
Nancy Robeson, Louise Llewellyn, 
Lois Jackson. Lavern Yutzy, Myr­ 
tle Swauger, Grace Hawkins and 
Amelia Cross. 
The next meeting will be held at 
the home of Helen Cummings. 


in mv opinion, that is the correct 
, 
. 
... 
. 
. 
U 
r 
nfh-iinrfp fif tiUD pt aod tiCppcrt. it IS contend- 
answer, as 
,h. 


group may hp 
vresibound i a n r j D " '' 
P»«engcr crosswalk at the 
saying 
yes 
some formidable 


ed by Malamphy collided with the 
car of Whitfield that was stopped 


I 
1 
i i 
j 
ft 
'ft/s 
t l i l t l V V I 
l U v 
TV tt, 
l/^/UUVi 
ICIIIv 
C»»N 
. 
pleased thereby. 
^ restaurant ‘«ter^^ction. 


Humans burn more calonc.s and property three miles cast of Clear 
use more energv during their first Spring in Washington County, 
hour of sleep than when ihey rc: 
As a result, the declaration al- 
gyygl^p 
lege.s. Leach had to swerve the 


Idaho'.s first permanent irriga­ 
tion system was a canal four miles 
long, built by Mormon pioneers at 
Franklin. 


absence from the teachers’ meet- 
ing was unavoidable and was not 
due to an attitude—unfriendly to 
education' as .Mr. Kelly ha.s con­ 
cluded. 
“ Next. I believe that my legi.s- 
IWHKiTSPiOl^ 


• Norge Washing Machines 
• Necchi Sewing .Machines 
• Dinette Chrome Sets 
• Studio Couches 


“ Fer Cntk th« C h ta p ttf 
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th« 
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Peoples 


FURN ITURE STORE 


Monday Night Special 


6 to 9 ONLY! 


TOPS In QUALITY I 


lIGHTWEICHT'eiG t ROOMY' 


13^4 
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METAL PICNIC BASKET 


IN COLORFUL TWO-TONE 


TWEED DESIGN! 


Covtr (on be removed and used 
os a Serving Tray! Use It for Pi<- 
nits, Beach, Barbecues . . . also 
mony uses around the home. 


The bosket is fully woshobic . . . 
olways cleon. 


Penn. Avenue P. T. A. 
Minstrel 
Capades of 1956 


Fort Hilt High School 


I 
Auditorium 
Tuesday, March 6 , 8 P. M. 


A dult! 7 5 t — Studer^f» SOe 
T'ckstt 
at 
Von d«g rift'( 
Music 
Shop, 
|Cumb«rland 
Savings 
Bonk, 
Fort 
Hill 
and Pennsylvania Avenue Schools. 
JZ 


A Bemfi dai 
LOAN 
ended my worries! X 


IIFE INSURANCE-NO EXTRA COST ON LOANS $300 OR LESS! 


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loons up to $1000 on Signature, Furnituro or Cor 
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Phone: PA 2-0721 • Ask for the YES IVIANager 


OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT — PHONE FOR EVENING HOURS 
tsoBi mod* »« rsiidtn»» sf «11 ssrrtunding tswni 


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filet mignon $1 -45 


2 
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ROLLS and BU H ER 
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O YSTERS...... 
ON THE HALF SHELL 


SEAFOOD 
THE DOLPHIN BAR 


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RHONE PA 4 -9 B22 


The Friars Guild 


Benefit Spring 


DANCE 
Friday, April 6 


All Ghon Shrine 


Gauntry Club 


Feck 
Mills 
Orchestra 
By reservatian enly— 
Phene PA 2 -2 76 6 


• 
T M. A. .A...Í 
J _ 
HELD OVER 


N O W SH O W IN G ot- 12:17 - 2:41 - 5:06 - 7 :30 - 9:55 


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Leans SSO te $300 00 


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FO UR 
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, 
CUMBERLAND, MD., 
MONDAY, MARCH 
5, 
1956 
Phone PA 2*4600 for o WANT AD Taker 


Hughes Answers Criticism On Teacher Salary 


land. I cosponsored and supported So cial 
Security 
for 
Maryland of West Virginia. 
Neely's statement, read 


Delegate 
George 
R. 
Hughes, 
minority leader 
in 
the 
House, 
has issued a s t a t e m e n t in 
reply to criticism of his stand on 
school teachers’ salaries by John 
D. Kelly, president of the Alle­ 
gany County Teachers’ Associa­ 
tion. 
,---------1-----—. ----- .. 
. 
Hughes said he Is not surprised House Bill No. 531. uhuh provided teachers during the coming fiscal 
that Kelly disagrees with his standjfor an $800,000 bond issue for the year and also House Bill 21 which 
increases but purpose oI 
constructing certain increases pensions of certain re- 
the tenor of his new school* and making c ertain tired teachers. 
jadditions, 
improvements and re- 
Hughes said he sponsored House 
"When serious matters, such as pairs to existing schools in Aile Bill 2 which contains items total- 
the one at hand, develop into a gany County. I also co sponsored mg $1.300 000 
for 
expansion 
of 
public controversy, the only just and 
supported 
House 
B ill 590. teachers colleges, 
and valid way to settle them is fo under which every public 
go to the record, and. after all teacher in Allegany County will be Frostburg Teachers College. The 
relevant facts have been thorough- given a $500 salary increase over Frostburg school’s budget was also, 
• 
1 
* 
, 


Neely Confirms 


Mollohan Support 


CLARKSBURG, W. Va, March 
if,—Sen Matthew M. Neely <D- 


lative record to date bears out' A total increase of $7,800,000 in 
my opinion that I have been most the State Department of Education! 
friendly and sympathetic towards budget, with $2,600,000 of the in-.4 
public education in general 
and crease earmarked for higher con WVa> of Fairmont said today that 
school teachers in particular. Foi tribulions to the teachers' retire his protege and fellow townsman 
instance, during the 1955 session of men! system. I he hill under w hich Rep. 
the General Assembly of M ary SI 500 OOO 
was 
appropriated 
foriWVa 


Unusual Crash 
Results In Suit 


Golden Ray Class 
Ewing. Hazel Hill. Harriet Griffith, 
j Thelma Fuller, Letty Close. Suz­ 
anne 
Wehler, 
LleweUa 
Carder, 
Nancy Robeson. Louise Llewellyn, 
FROSTBURG— The Golden Ray Lois Jackson, Lavern Yutzy, Myr- 


Delaware car abruptly to avoid 
hitting the Bennett machine. 
in doing so. the suit states, the Plans Lawn Fete 
clergyman's car ran into an auto 
operated by Lewis E. Jones Jr. 
The lawyers for the clergyman Sunday School 
Class of Salem tie Swauger. Grace Hawkins and 


Robert 
H. 
Mollohan 


A rather unusual accident which 
p. occurred when a Delaware motor- 


point 
out 
($359.93 in 
that 
Jones 
received Evangelical and Reformed Church Amelia Cross. 
The next meeting will be held at 


will be the next governor ct swerved to avoid hitting a I.a- 


a compromise settle- held its regular monthly meeting 
ment when he sued Rev. Mr. Cross recently at the home of Amelia the home of Helen Cummings. 
in New Castle County Court ot Cross, class secretary. Plat* were 
-------------- 
Common Pleas. Del. 
made to sponsor a lawn fete at the 
Vale man s car and then ran into a 
during third vehicle has resulted 
in 


on teacher salary 
is surprised at 
remarks. 


3 T S S J ^ S S T J S S 
rS 01 f * 
“ A11Cfi3ny C° Un" J Saturday* as "a result of a "collision 
, . 
i 
... t j ( .'(Ult. 
the 
intersection of 
B a ltim o re 


Idaho's first permanent irriga- 
The suit claims the damage to church 
sometime 
in 
the early tion system was a canal four miles 
summer. 
long, built by Mormon pioneers at 
Those present were G l a d y s Franklin. 
thcithe clergyman’s auto is $104.50. 
Another 
$500 
suit 
was 
filed 


This includes 


al a C 
confirmed the general impression 
throughout the state that Neely j 
was supporting Mollohan, whom he Castle. Del., owner of the car, and 
first took under his political wing his driver, Paul VV. Leach, Woods!Avenue’ 


at the intersection of Baltimore 
Rev. Thomas G. Cross, of Newland North George streets. Eugene 
F. 
Whitfield of 12 west College 
Frostburg, docketed the 


back in the 1940s. 
Haven School. Claymont, Del , are ac!,on against Donald Malamphy 


that is the correct 


suing R. K. Bennett of LaVale. 
Through the local law firm of 


d, n_ 
S() od that Bennett, on May 15. whilc!cd by. Malamphy collided with the 
df) going eastward on U. S. 
40. entered the westbound lane as 
he turned to enter a restaurant 
*'! 'n( it)n 
Humans burn more calories and property three miles east of Clear 


„ „'n 
nriviirnp of Gunter and Geppert. it is contend 
j 
i 
f 
- 
j* 
I * * , c o * liaa 
up 
alert chin 
ss 
3^ inc privilege oz, 
Iv aired allow the public to decide a period of three years. In addi- increased $9.> 000 
He 
also sup- 
■ 
41 4 ° --- 
— 
which side is right. Therefore. I tion. I supported House Bill 765, ported 
House 
Bill 118 
creating * 
formidable grout) may 
would like to put before the public sponsored 
by 
Mr. 
(Lester 
B. Lf e a c h e r-education scholarships,™™ed thereby’’ 
my legislative record on the ques- Reed, providing for the payment Hughes declared. 
*> 
Hon of public education, including of an annual pension to certain 
Hughes said that if Senate Reso- 
school teachers' salaries 
former public school teachers in lution 19 passed during the 19561 i^rn'ore eneVgv during them first Spring in Washington County 
"First, during the 1955 session Allegany 
County 
who 
are 
not session of the Senate, which re- 
~ 
*- “ 
J “ '— *; 
of the Legislature. I was appointed eligible to retire under the present quests the Legislative Council to 
to a Special Committee to make Teachers' Retirement System law. make a complete study of salary 
a study of our state mental bos- Based on this legislative record, needs of all state employes, shows 
pitals. On the night of the Shrine I can't help but conclude that Mr. an increase in teachers' salaries is 
Country Club meeting at which Kelly has a rather short and one- warranted,'’ ! will support legis- 
salary in- sided memory. 
Delegate Hughes also listed the 


of 414 Park Street. 
The declaration contends that on 
November IO. 1955 the auto operat 


Route tar °* Whitfield that was stopped 
for the passenger crosswalk at the 


hour of sleep than when they're 
awake 
As a result, the declaration al­ 
leges, Leach had to swerve the 


lation to that effect. 
He 
concluded 
by 
stating 


school teachers and the education the people whom I represent in­ 
cludes the duty to say no when 


th*' proposed teachers’ 
crease was discussed, I was in 
Baltimore attending a meeting of following measures a f f e c t i n g believe my responsibility to all of 
this 
Mental 
Hospitals’ 
Investi­ 
gating Committee. Therefore, my .system w hich he supported 
absence from the teachers’ meet-, 
ing was unavoidable and was not 
due lo an attitude—unfriendly to 
education as Mr. Kelly has con­ 
cluded. 
"Next, I believe that my legis- 


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DIAL PA 4-1400 


Sometime* y o u m ay have a prescriptive, 
filled, and pav 
sav. MV for it. Never 
underestimate a medicine’* power 
because sou pa id so little. Hundreds of 


drugs, though priced low. are extremely 
effective for specific illnesses 


Alwavs remember 
the true value of a 
medicine lie* not in how little or even 
how much vou pav - but in how well it 
does the specific job sour doctor intends. 
Next time your doctor hand* vou a 
prescription, hand it to a Peoples 
pharmacist, for swift, accurate, 
economical service And, of course, 
vour prescription is priced with uniform 
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Drug Store. 


PEOPLES Certified 
PRESCRIPTIONS 


AT ALL PEOPLES SERVICE DRUG STORES 


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YODER 


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PA 4-0610 


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A 


X h e C u m b erlan d ]Xews 


Publl» bfd d aily excep t Sunday, "-9 S M echanic S t , C um berland. 
M arvland, by Tha T im es * A lleganian Com pany. 
A. 
T 
B R IS T . 
J R . 
-M anafin* 
Editor 
M em ber of The Audit Bureau of C irculation 
M em ber of The A ssociated P ress 
Subscription rates by C arrier 
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Monday Morning, March 5, 19 56 


Reform Of Elections 
Could Help America 


Election campaigns are expensive. 
In a way. 


that isn’t a bad thing. 
II costs money to get a 


candidate’s ‘’m essage” across to the voters, but if 


both parties do that well enough the result may be 


an informed electorate. There is abundant experi­ 


ence to show that where little is spent on cam ­ 


paigns and the voters hardly know who’s running, 


the results rarely serve good government. 


But the abuse of campaign contributions is a 


problem that hasn’t been licked. Congress appar­ 


ently will try again to adopt legislation to limit 


abuses. 
Maybe less emphasis this time should be put 
on limiting the amount contributed or spent than 
on how it is used. There should be some ceiling 
on contributions, though not one so unrealistic that 
it is universally evaded. 
Among proposals now under consideration is 
one to raise the ceiling somewhat, but at the same 
time to impose more stringent regulations to assure 
that few cxpenditupes go unreported. Allow about 
as much spending, in short, as is actually done 
now, but make sure that the spotlight of publicity 
falls squarely on it. This seem s like a good trick 
if they can do it. 
Another proposal, which is not new, is to 
permit taxpayers to deduct up to $100 for cam­ 
paign contributions. The idea is to encourage the 
little fellow to put 
up a few dollars, making 
candidates less dependent on the big fellows. 
Another idea would permit radio and tele­ 
vision networks to give free time to major candi­ 
dates “ as a 
public service” without having to 
undergo the heavy expense of making equal time 
people who are saying that 
available to a dozen or more so-called partiesjjiat 
president Eisenhower "is getting 
are just running for the exercise. This would help 
ready to dump Nixon” are even 
reduce a major item in the cost of serious cam- 
more wrong than the people who 
paigning. 
saying that the President is 


The goal of all three proposals is the sá m e­ 
lo make it more difficult for any contributor to 
"buy” any candidate. Success in reaching that goal 
would strengthen the American system. 


The Band' s Showing A Lot Of Courage 


x~ 
<> 
I -, 


Republican Senators Not In Accord 
On Settlement Of Farm Question 


\V.\SHlNGTON—lU'publuan sen- 
ator.s met behind closed doors tne 
other day to settle the farm ques­ 
tion. What happened is suppo.sed 
to be a GOP sen ct. hut this col- 
umn can report (hey left the ques­ 
tion more unsettled than ever. 
In fact, the top Republican on (he 
Senate 
.\gnculture 
Committee, 
Vermont's curly-haired George .\i- 
ken, not only left (he question but 
left the meeting He walked out in 
a huff during an impassioned plea 
for high farm .supports by Minne- 
sola's big Ed Thye. 
Both Aiken and Thye were raised 
on farms, and both still look hap­ 
pier in overalls. On farm legisla­ 
tion. however, they arc just as op­ 
posite as a chicken farmer and a 
fruit farmer — which they both 
are 
Aiken, the fruit farmer, be­ 
lieves devoutly in Secretary of Ag­ 
riculture 
Benson’s 
flexible 
farm 
supports. Thye, a chicken farmer, 
is just as adamant in favor of 
rigid. 9 b per cent parity payments. 
At the closcd-door session. Thye 
warned 
his 
fellow 
llepuhhcans 
that the Benson plan would remain 
an issue with farmers for years to 
come and would be held against 
the GOP. it was at this point that 
Aikcn. scowling darkly, stomped 
out of the room. 
Earlier, another farm .senator, 
North 
Dakota s 
long, 
lean 
Mill 
Young, sounded a warning again.st 
the Benson program. He claimed 
that flexible price .supports, if con­ 
tinued, would have disastrous po­ 
litical repercussions lor Republi­ 
cans in the farm belt 
Ths obser­ 
vation was seconded by South Da­ 
kota’s roly-poly, cigar-pufling Sen. 
Karl Mundt 
Will Ike Veto? 
Young urged his fellow Republi­ 
cans to desert the administration 


Despite Obstacles. Nixon May Get Nod From GOP 


WASHINGTON 
By Joseph and Stewart Alsop 


far too fond of Nixon to tolerate 
any other vice presidential nomi­ 
nee. 
The real Nixon story is a lot 
more complicated than that. It is 
(rue 
that 
the 
President 
has 
a 
warm affection for the Vice Presi­ 
dent. It is also true that the Presi­ 
dent. being a kind man and grate­ 
ful to Nixon for his loyal service, 
would 
much 
prefer 
to make, no 
change in the Republican ticket 
this year. Thu.s 
those 
who 
are 
betting that Dick Nixon will get 
the nod again have by far the best 
of the bargain, as of now. 


Can Be Cold-Blooded 


Rut for all 
his 
kindne.ss 
and 


These Days 


By George E. Sokol: ’ 


The Leninist Dogma 


U is not at all surprising that the Marxist-Leninist 
Dogma should be .so little understood outside the Soviet 
I niversal State. After ail. Roman Catholics and Protes- 
........... ........... 
tants belong to the Christian religion and they hardly 
friends. Dwight D. 
ever understand each other and neither knows much 
j-jsenhower has also shown that he 
about .ludaism from which they both stem. 
Jews and 
cold-blooded about 
Moslems originated from the same Semitic races and 
niembers of his team who cea.« e to 
have religions which are closely 
akin but that has not 
made it possible for them to live in peace. 
might have, 
indeed he 
probably 
The -Marxist-Leninist Dogma, in all its phases, seems 
absurd to the Western mind. The biologic interpretation 
of man. 
the complete omission of God and of 
any 
expression of mysticism, 
the elimination of personal 
liberty and the subordination of the individual to a social 
environment which not only dominates him but molds 
his personality, the avoidance of the profit concept in 
economics and the reinslitution 
of slave labor 
the 
Western mind re’^ists such notions of hie. 


on the one hand that the choice 
of the vice presidential nominee 
would have to wait until the Re­ 
publican convention, and on the 
other hand praised Nixon in the 
highest terms. Those who .speak 
with undoubted authority have now 
paraphrased 
t h e s e 
seemingly 
double-edged presidential remarks 
about as follows: 
"I'd like to have Dick Nixon on 
the ticket with me. but I'm not 
going to commit myself becau.se 
something may happen to change 
my mind.” 


Obstacle Race .Ahead 


F'or Nixon, therefore, the next 
six months are going to be a par­ 
ticularly dangerous obstai le race, 
in which the penally of failure will 
be the 
President 
changing 
his 
mind. 
The 
obstacles 
ahead 
of 


Nixon are only too easy to discern. 
There is his marked unpopular­ 
ity. first of all with the type of 
Republicans who would prefer a 
vice 
presidential 
nominee 
like 
Governor 
Christian 
H e r te r 
of 
Massachusetts. 
There 
is 
second, 
and actually more important, the 
bad showing Nixon has been mak­ 
ing in the political polls. In these 
reporters’ opinion, the results of 
the poll-takcfs are almost mean- 
ingles.s until the actual eve of the 
voting; but politicians .scare very 
easily if the polls seem to show 
that a man is not a winner. It was 
this, in the last analysis, that cost_ 
Robert 
A. Taft 
the 
Republican 
presidential nomination. 
The 
polls 
alone 
can 
perhaps 
cause Nixon to be dropped, if they 
.show, for example, that an Eisen- 
hower-Nixon 
ticket 
is 
markedly 


weaker than an Eisenhower-Hcrtcr 
ticket. The polls may perhaps do 
just this, although no one can tell, 
until the noses are counted, how 
much 
the 
President's 
impaired 
health 
will cause 
the 
voters to 
weigh their choice by their opinion 
o( the \ ice I’rosidcnt. 


But then Dick Nixon, it .should he 
remembered, has very great as- 
.sets on hi.s side, a.s well as very 
considcrahlc 
obstacles 
to 
over­ 
come. When Nixon has got into 
hot water, in the first place, he ha.s 
invariably done so by 
sounding 
too much like a partisan politician; 
but he has sounded like a partisan 
politician 
precisely 
because 
the 
President, who wants to be above 
pq|ilic.s,— has 
rat, h xr 
shrewdly 


By Drew Pearson 


and vote for the Democrat-spon­ 
sored. high-parity farm bill. The 
only thing the Senate could do to 
relieve the farmers this year, he 
pleaded, would be to pass 9 0 }>er 
cent price .su p p o rts. 
In answer to an nhjection that 
this would pile up staggering sur­ 
pluses. Young pointed out that the 
Agriculture Department has acre­ 
age limitations on the basic crops. 
There will he tho same numher 
of acres at tkl per cent. ” he .said, 
"as under flexihle suppoits " 
Iowa's stern Sen. Hourke Hirken- 
looper noted that corn farmers ha­ 
bitually ignore the acreage restric­ 
tions and dump their excess corn 
on the open market He suggested 
that 
the solution wasn't 
flexible 
supports, however, hut more real­ 
istic acreage allotments 
At one point. Sen Charlie Potter 
of 
Michigan asked whether 
the 
President would veto a high .sup­ 
port farm hill Senate GOP Leader 
Bill Knnwland of California sug­ 
gested it wtuild depend on the lan- 
giuige of the hill. 
‘■The I’residenl never makes a 
statement about a hill until he sees 
it,” said Knovvland. 
NOTE —• Instead of adopting a 
(iOP policy on farm legislation, the 
Republicans ended up in more riis- 
agrcemenl 
ihan 
ever. 
All 
they 
seemed to agree upon was that the 
final larm bill would he a patch­ 
work ot amendment.s. 


Adlai And F.sles 
Adlai Stevenson is waging a very 
smart remote-control campaign to 
W’in New Hampshire away from 
Sen. Estes Kcfauver in the coming 
presidential primary 
Stevenson is playing a game of 
heads l-win-tails you lose 
He 
is 
pouring in money and waging a 
vigorous campaign against Kctau- 
ver without appearing to do .so. 
This will enable him to claim no 
contest if Kefauver win.s or take 
credit for a victory without trying, 
if Kefauver leases. 
The Stevenson forces are out- 
spending the Kefauven tes two to 
one — printing sample ballot.s. di.s- 
Iributing campaign literature and 
hiring campaign help. They have 
the hacking of most labor leaders 
and 
Democratic 
regular.s, 
who 
were whipped by Kefauver in the 
19,52 primary and are now out for 
revenge 
Stevenson's undcrcove- campaign 


manager in New Hampshire iron!« 
caliy IS a Kefauver protege. Na­ 
tional Committeeman Henry Sulli­ 
van. Kefauver got him his job m 
19 .i2. hut Sullivan later climbed 
aboard tho Stevenson bandwagon 
and is now running the campaign 
against his former benefactor. 
Stevenson's 
stronge« i 
support 
will come from Mayor« Jo.sephat 
Benoit of Manchester and Edward 
Charpentier of Soiner.svvorth, whose 
city organi/.ation« are diumming 
up vote« for Adlau 
One Stcven.son tactic wa« to run 
three secret Stevenson men as Ke­ 
fauver delegate« in an attempt to 
split the Ketauvcr vote. However, 
Kefauver.« New Hampshire man­ 
ager. Thomas Mi Intyre. managed 
to get the three phonie.« listed on 
the ballot only as ‘ favorable” to 
Kefauver. vvherea.« the loyal dele- 
gates are all 
i d e n t i f i e d as 
"pledged ' to Kctauver. 
I>emoera(ie 
National Chairman 
Paul Butler, who i.« suppo.sed to he 
impartial in Demoeralic primaries, 
also pulled a last one. He .suddenly 
hired Mary Farmer, a lady deputy- 
.sheritt in Manchester, to work for 
the Democratic National Commit­ 
tee in Washington. 
It so happened that Miss Farmer 
was one of Kefauver’s most popu­ 
lar delegates. She was told pri- 
vMely that, m her new Washing­ 
ton job, she would have to with­ 
draw as a Kefauver delegate, Thi.A 
deft maneuver is expected to co.st 
Kefauver hundreds of votes m New 
Hampshire's biggest city. 
NOTE—.Stevenson's biggest han­ 
dicap IS a crack he made in Chi­ 
cago that Nev 
Hampshire wasn't 
important enough for him to enter 
as a candidate. Some .New Hamp­ 
shire voters now say Stevenson 
isn’t important enough for them to 
vote fur 
Washington 'Whirl 
Secretary of .Agriculture Benson 
has made two unexpected converts 
in the South — Sens. .Iim Eastland 
and John Stennis, both Mis.sissippi 
Democrats 
Benson has been 
cnzying up to Eastland for weeks. 
Result; 
Ka.stland 
finally 
bought 
Benson s farm ideas, hook, 
Una 
and low parity 
, 
. More than 
per.suasion wa.s involved, however. 
Ib'n.son made a deal not to cut 
Missi.« sippi s colton-acreage allot-, 
nienf, also agreed to support cot­ 
ton at 87 per cent ot parity ■— just 
a fraction below the iK) per cent 
figure sought hy most Democrats. 


11 op yrigh i, 19 56, The B ell S yn d icete. In c.) 
ft 
Changes In Education 


By Roger W. Babson 


You re Telling Me* 


II w as easier w hen Stabn 
w as the m aster of 
R ussia b ecau se Stalin w as a brutal autocrat, a 20th 
Century reincarnation of (ien gh is Khan. 
Slalin w as 
not even true to the M arxist-Leninist D ogm a, as the 
20th C ongress of the ( om m u n ist P arty 
I S S R 
has 
now declared . 
He built his own 
d ogm a in a book 
called " F oundations of L en in ism ,” and he dem and ed 
an unfailing orthodoxy. He w as uncom p rom isin g with 
those who even slightly d eviated from his d ecisions 
w hich covered 
the 
entire 
gam u t nf human thought 
and 
activity. 
D eviatnrs he 
had 
killed 
or, 
in 
* 
gentler 
m ood, 
he exiled 
them 
to 
the 
tundras 
of 
Siberia, 
He organized for world conquest and held 


his power until he died. 


Opposition to Stalin was constant in Russia and in 
th« world Communist parties. He met the opposition by 
purges in the course of which he de.stroyed his betters, 
the founders of his party. When 1 encountered Slalm at 
the Smolny Institute in Petrograd in 19 17. he was not 
even 
newsworthv 
compared 
with Trotzky, 
Kamenev. 
Zinoviev, Bukharin, etc. 
He killed them all. 
After Stalin s death, the Communist parly had either 
to return to the Marxist-Lenmist Dogma or degenerate 
into a struggle tor power among men ambitious to be 
dictators like Stalm 
In !9.-i2. the latter seemed possible 
in the triumvirate of Beria. Malenkov and Molotov v^hieh 
Stalin had appointed to succeed him. But the cmcrgem e 
of Khrushchev ended the struggle because he reverted 
to the Marxisl-Leninist Dogma and to the dictatorship of 
the party rather than of one man. 
This is called 
"collective leadership." 


It is loo early to grasp all that happened at the 
? 0(h C ongress, 
H ow ever, it would se e m to m e that 
from an historic standpoint, this w as a m om en tou s 
gathering 
and 
that 
It 
is 
likely 
to 
strengthen 
the 
Snviet L n iversal State b ecau se it will bring into line 
dissident 
factions 
inside 
and 
outside 
Russia. 
To 
p ossess power. 
Khrushchev avoided 
the seizure of 
pow er, assu m in g that ditteren res of opinion do not 
really ’ am ount to m uch in the long run. 
W hereas 
.« Uclin 
could 
not 
eftect 
a 
change 
in 
govern m en t 
without committing 
m urder. 
Khrushchev 
does 
not 
even deprive .Malenkov and Molotov of office, thus 
m aking 
them 
increasingly 
dependent 
upon 
him. 
I ndoubtedlv, 
K hrushchev 
p ossesses 
a 
sense 
of 
humor, which could not he said of Stalin. 


The riaiuer m tlie Lniied States hes ¡n fhi.s very 
sense of humor which m aki' 
K't .. h 
icv n’orc nexii'do 
than Stahn wa« 
And :i i' te, 
MoMbilif whu h has unn 
for Khrushchev the great d pP.i -t - v • ‘oiy nf neutraiisin 
wh:rh IS a peril to the I n,ted Sta'es 
Stalin long placed 
with the idea of moving intc tne .Moslem world but 
found no way to do it: Khrush i ev moved in boldly even 
while the summit conference vwi« oeing held at Geneva. 
It IS bevond belief that our officials did nothing about 
that except to .say that the sRuation is prccariou,« and 
ought not to become a campaign issue in 19 56. 
The 
absurdity of the position of our State Department will 
become obvious when Israel too purchases arms from 
Czechoslovakia and f’oland which po.ssess ample means 
to arm any small nation that would like to do any 
fighting anywhere. 
What will John Foster Dulle« ^ .'-a> 
to that" 
Will he say that Soviet Rus.ssa encourage« 
ncutrahsm among our aihrs bccauip they fe.nr u« "' 
Bj 
that logic, why r.nt (•■nc'iir.ige neutrah.'-m among « ome 
n{ Russia s '■alellite- 
Thi 20th Cnngrc'.s it « tnkc« iv,e is a turning poult in 
history and not a good onr 
- 


<C« pyri*ht. I9 5i, K;n| Feiturti 
inc » 


would have fought to the end for 
any crony as close to him as Sec­ 
retary of the 
Air 
F'orce 
Harold 
Talbott was close to Eisenhower. 
From Ei.scnhower, however, Tal­ 
bott got the 
axe in 
very 
short 
order, with no greater consolation 
than a nice note and a military 
review. 
By the same token, the 
President 
did 
not 
conspicuously 
rush to the defense of his first 
secretary of health education and 
welfare, when .Mrs, Hobby was in 
trouble with 
the 
Salk 
vaccine 
program. 
F’or this reason, tho Prr« ident\s 
affection for Ihe Vice 
President 
IS no sure guarantee of Nixon s 
future. The real status of Nixnn 
was implied very clearly at the 
President's historic pres.s confer 
ence, when Eisenhower declared 


By William Ritt 


A 
copy nf 
‘ Frank.stein." bor­ 
rowed from a Nebraska library in 
189 9 , has just been returned. 
That's 
a monstrous long time 


Christian 
Dior's 
latest 
fashion 
for the girls is the ".Arrow Look ” 
Grandpappy Jenkins thinks it may 
be a sure-fire beau catcher. 


,A Detroit psyc^iologist say« most 
anyone can acquire a good mem­ 
ory. 
Now don t you forget that I 


Two hrnther:- teetotalleis. bought 
the only saloon 
in 
an 
F'.nglish 
town, then flosed :f 
If they were 
trying to he funny, it certainly wa.s 
strictly dry humor. 


Three hundred young Swedes on 
their way to be inducted into mili­ 
tary service.s noted on a Stock­ 
holm-bound train Those lads must 
plan to spend their basic training 
in the guardhouse. 


The emu is lound only in Austra­ 
lia. according to a nature artide, 
Guess that writer never tried to 
.solve a crossword puzzle. 


If you want to know what's cook­ 
ing in latest styles in women s mil­ 
linery read this 
A French design­ 
er has come out with a snappy 
feminine chapeau shaped just like 
a chef's hat. 


deputed tho political infighting to 
his vice president. 
.Nixon has (ar 
more ability and judgment than 
his detractors suppose, and unless 
the I’resident asks him to make 
partisan polilici! noises, he is en­ 
tirely capable of striking an alto­ 
gether different note in the next 
six months. 


Nixon Likely Nominee 


In addition, the great majority 
nf 
Republican niganizalions out­ 
side. 
the 
ICa.stern 
states 
quite 
clearly prefer Nixon to any other 
vice 
presiflential 
nominee 
And 
finally and above all, there Is no 
visible 
substilute 
lor 
Nixnn on 
whom the President s personal ad­ 
visors can easily unite Thomas E. 
Dewey would prefer Dewey. Har­ 
old Stassen would prefer Stassen. 
and .so on through Ihe Irsl of hope­ 
fuls, and all the Impefuls' friends 
are similiarly divided. 
F'or Nixon, theretore jxi se'sion 
of tiie vu e firesidciK y is pretty 
(Cltain to prove nine points of the 
law, unless the polls go too dra.sti 
tally against 
him or 
he makes 
some really had bobbles 


' < ’op ngh* 
I'l’S. 
K>w York Herald Tnbunf. Inc > 


Streptococcus Has Jekyll And Hyde Personality 


The streptococcus still is a bad 
actor. 
It goes on a rampage al 
this time of the year and causes a 
variety of respiratory infections as 
well as erysipelas, scarlet fever, 
and rheumatic fever. These micro­ 
organisms 
have a 
dual 
person­ 
ality. like Jekyll and Hyde. 


When benevolent, they may live 
for months or ycar.s in the pharynx 
without causing harm but should 
rc.sistance 
be 
lowered 
they 
are 
transformed into brutes and the 
notorious .strep sore throat en.suc' 
The disease comes on suddenly 
with chills, headache, generalized 
aching, and a scratchy sensation 
in the throat 
Nausea and vomiting may co- 
e xi s t , particularly in children. 
Shortly 
thereafter, 
the 
tempera­ 
ture rises and mav reach 103 to 


By Dr. Theodore R. Van Deflen 


10.5 degrees F. The ensuing symp- 
lom.s are typical of a .« trep infec­ 
tion. 
The throat feels full and it 
hurts the victim to swallow. 
Pain 
radiate- 
into 
the 
ear.« 
()!;(a.sionally givin.g the impression 
that 
these 
organ.« 
are 
involved 
also. 
Tenderness is noted when 
pressure is applied at the angle of 
the jaw. Thi.s is due to inflamma­ 
tion of the neck glands which are 
numerous in this area. 
In the past, strep sore throat 
usually lasted five or six days 
b e f o r e subsiding spontaneously 
( omplication.s 
were 
not 
unusual 
and. in many instances, the dis­ 
ease was prolonged by ear m 
volvcmcnt. pneumonia, .sinu? irou- 


Try And Stop Me 


By Bennett Cei4 


In private life. Jack Benny is one 
nf the most generous souls, but the 
penunou.s v« nrner he portrays on 
the air has b('come so famous he 
c a n t r« tape il. At a nightery in 
New A’ork. for instance he to« cd 
the hat-check gir! a dollar bill She 
to.wsed If right back, beseeching. 
■ Please. Mr 
Benny, let a poor 
working girl preserve at lea.st one 
illu.sion'" 


Ray Henberry was walking down 
the Rue de Rivoli m Paris with a 
friend when a taxi driver sounded 
his squeaky little horn. The friend 
jumped as though a round of t.ic k 
shot just had caught him in me 
.«.I? :« put. 
Noting 
lientoTiy - 
-’u- 
prisf be explained 
\\\ wifp . n 
away wiij; a Fienc i .i itu m.m t.*-- 
vear- ago F.very t me ] hen- < m 
of those horn.« blow I'm afraid he s 
bringing her bacK.” 
(D u 'n b u 'e íl b > K.cg Feaiu re* Sy n iUfiieJ 


ble, or rheum.atic fever The latter 
give 
the 
strep 
sore 
throat 
its 
stigma. 
On 
many 
occasion.s 
1 
have 
warned patient.' with strep throat 
to lake tare of them.seivec and 
in adoilion. not expose others to 
the infection. They may tran.smit 
the organi.'ms to someone who i.s 
su: ceplible to rheumatic fever, the 
disease that damages the heart. 
It i.s remarkable that 
penicillin, 
the 
fir.st 
antibiotic 
;s 
still our 
most effective weapon against this 
group of micro-organisms. 
l!-. early u» e helps decrease the 
f hiinccs 
of 
complitatioms 
The 
remedy 
aLo 
i- 
emplojed 
as 
a 
prophyla-m 
mf-a-ure during ep.> 
deinic 
in 
> . unV 
in« titutions. and 
t- .tar 
.0 taliati-ui; 
'1 he« c out 
br'-siik 
I'rin be terminated abruptly 
if all I'.e inrnalc.s rtMcive .simul- 
tancGu ,> a 
ongle 
njedion or a 
few table*, of penicillin 
TO.MORH'z^ 
Seek the cause of 
rectal iieh nr 


H K .H A ND LOW 
Mr« 
W. writes 
When 1 wake 
up -n thp mornmg my stomach is 
flat 
hut 
by evenmg it 
is qu.te 
hirt: 
What c'iuld - eu'e this swell- 


FM f’LV 
Food and 


OI.D.STERS’ h u . 
y 
D F writes 
Do old people need 
more .sleep than the young and 
middle aged’’ 
REPLY 
The elderly are less active and 
usually need lerw sleep. On the 
other hand they fire more easily 
and go t'i bed eariow 
In addition, 
!;py ca’nap freqi; ntiy nuung the 
d a* . 


A WI MF R PROBI.FM 
L M 
write« 
Whv r:o me« t p‘‘'0* 
pie suffer from frequent unnaUon 


during told weather’’ 
1 have no 
trouble this way in I hr summer 
time but in cold weather I'm al­ 
ways looking for the nearest wash 
room. 


HEPLV 
.Apparently coid ■-Lmiilnte' 
the 
bladder' 
In addition 
more unnc 
1« manufactured dsring the wm 
tertime he< au« e h s water 
!'>« ( 
through perspuaiiun 


VARH OSL U .( Fits 
D. W wrtir 
W 
a e 
res on 
a varico.se vc n rirti ( H i 
c? 


REPLY 
The majority are not, but the 
tew that be< orr.i rhrsnie give the 
lesions their bad i(p'J íit‘On They 
fail to heal because nf.-thing is done 
to eh: 
tne 
/ »r f 
\ e.tv 
.Anofi.er p(/ 
iiol;'. , 
t 
’ I• f < u 
dUK.n ' 
11 
1^ 0' ' I ,1 d t* e u! 
eer st(--'i« !r, t 
-, ,, ! 
( .( 
dato-n 
fiue 
to ii.irdeoi r- 
the 
art» ‘nes 
rather th,.n 'e 
,,*- 'i« e ‘.ein,« . 


TF( HM( IAN S JOB 
H 
.1, 
a rcgi.'-’cred 
nurse rin 
a meta'iehsm test or 
must the dffCtor do i* ' 


REPI,V 
A 
nurse 
mav ir.'M.;»' 
thr*. te*-f 
if she ha- 
been I • „ ♦ ►''e <, 
In 
Imsnifai« 
the ha 
rt-be r be 
U r.Ti nat,' r 
- a e 
cp 
• ^ r ' r 
let hnic.an-- 
' ' ' ( , 
, 
' r pr 
' 
( .an ' off.^ f 
* e- 
„ 
t Í /u.r •, 
a nui'( 
\f< ' no a'» c'- 
r •' 
nmd 
ical a'« ,‘tanl traine' 
to use the 
machine 


LFXKFf.MlA IN ANIMAI S 
T. V. writes; Do animals ever 
develop leukemia'' 


REPl.Y 
Ve‘ 
particuLi.'iy fo.vi. 


To tra» Omit of •piir» -, oue-Oion* p^r- 
t.i.n.ni to (he p'^'enii-'-n o* fCsei'.e w»'! 
be .40?VIPif-a 
rpr« o« A: tips.p* w,;t be 
mshe when tei..in 
■ pe?» en-.fi-.pe i* 
en*- 
Telephone .ngu-r-ej not 
•*- 
(Opted 
Dr 
V» n Dp.‘an « i not r> ake 
d.agnosia ear preccnb* for 
icUividuAi 
dlMS» « » . 


BABSON PARK. Ma.ss. — i now 
see no way to cut cosl.s of operat­ 


ing primary or grammar schools. 
I 
believe, 
however, 
that 
high 
S('hools and colleges will become 
more efficienfly and economically 
operated. The self service super­ 
market will .show the way. 


Do-Il-Vourself .Movement 


.Some 
educational 
cxpert.s 
are 
urging tit ITS and low n.s to spend 
Jess on 
buildings, librarie.s, 
and 
equipment and devote more of the 
total allotment to teachers’ .salar­ 
ies Thi.s may be good polilics, but 
it is not in the students’ interest. 
1 favor building better schools with 
better libraries and equipment, but 
having fewer teachers 
Then pay 
better 
salaries 
to 
these 
fewer 
teacher« . 
'I'he nio.sf vital field for a "Do­ 
lt 5'mirseir’ cainiialgn is that of 
education A parent can buy a .set 
of 
encyclopedias for $HM) which 
contain more intnrmation than is 
(ontained in the heads of all the 
teachers in youi community. More 
over, the training and discipline of 
.self education is even more valua 
hie than all the facts that ran be 
learned Hence 
I forecast that the 
next grcud movement in education 
for those above 13 years of age will 
be teaching students to learn with­ 
out teachers 1 wish that some city 
would put the mfinagers of it.s .self- 
service 
supcrmarket.s 
on 
their 
school hoards. 


The .School Board 


To 
begin 
with, 
you 
probably 
don't know who are on your lo'al 
s( iiool hfjard 
If n<(t, 
end to your 
« upenntendent of « (i ools and ,'c k 
tor a 1: 1 of the meniber , and the 
f)u: me « in which < a< h ¡« engaged 
.¡nd the number of c hildren whu h 
each has in the school« , You may 
be surprised to find how 
poorly 
chosen these men and women are 
for this work. 
In too many citie.s, school froard 
member.« are interested in getting 
income for them.seRes or friends 
as 
fioctors. 
builder« , 
insurance 
agen!', hank officials, .storekeep­ 
er« 
(■'(' 
I hese « (riool c<irnrniltee 
me.'i bf r iialuiallv take the advice 
of fite « uperinfeiideni 
« d schools 
who is an hone« t mar; but is guided 
by the eollegcs wtucii determine 
what shall be taught and how. The 
superintendents and .school princi­ 
pals are too often judged hy the 
number of « uden's they pa.s.s along 
to the colleges 
and promoted 
ac- 


cordingly. They are fine men and 
women; they deserve much better 
pay. but they have very little free­ 
dom. 


Mlial Ik Educatbtn? 


i have ju.st been reading reporti 
of the recent (.'onference on Edu­ 
cation 
held 
in 
Washington. The 
great demand there was for feder­ 
al aid without federal interference. 
Very liitle discussion was devoted 
to vch.Tt should be taught our child- 
ten and how. No time was given to 
rii.scu.s.Hijg 
lowering the cost or 
laising the efficiency of school.» . 
The great need today is to lackl« 
Ihe educational 
problem 
as 
w« 
have T. H. and polio and cancer. 
1 have in mind a family of four 
grown-up brothers all of whom at­ 
tended Ihe same .schools and had 
the same teachers. Yet three of tha 
men are today useful in their com­ 
munities and hold good positions. 
One ol the boy« was a "delin- 
« luenf” and is now a ne’er-do-well 
supported by the first three. Tha 
question the mother asks is: Did 
the .schools have any effect on th« 
( haraeter or "life” of these boys? 


Traveling To The 
.Mcm»o 


'I hc hooks most popular with the 
youth nf today are books on ".space 
Iravel’ ~ that rs. going to other 
planet . It is .« aid that Washington 
IS having more inquine,« about the 
earth ".satellites ’ which arc to h« 
released than about any other .sub­ 
ject 
Why 1.« it that young people 
are so nua h more interested in 
other worlds than in learning about 
their own world and how to live in 
it ' .Something is wrong .somewhere, 
fsducation should teach how to live. 
It should help parents mold char­ 
acter 
're.-irhct« 
should he 
spiritually 
iiiinded m order to he efficient. ,A1- 
I hough they should be paid better 
salaries, yet thi.« salary should not 
he based upon the degrees which 
they have received. Looking bacf-i 
over my .school life 
it wa;« t t « 
teachers with the biggest hearts 
who won my interest and awaken­ 
ed a 
desire for knowledge 
serve e 
To gf'f back to my nui.u ..tppeal: 
One « sure way to inrreaM- the effi- 
cieney and reduc:e Oie (o« ! o f ouf 
.schools and truly help our child­ 
ren 1« to teach children where tn 
find thii'ir own answers to questior.» 
and aw,(ken m them a desire for 
more knowlcdL’e. We need teacher» 
born whh a hwe for children and 
trained as helpful librarians. 


Factographs 


Irnn orr < 
and lime.ston“ ar^ 
the three principal raw materials 
u.sed in making .steel. 


Snake.s. often regarded as slimy 
creatures, arc actually cool and 
dry to the touch. 


Natives of 
the 
Marquesas 
is­ 
lands, i.n the Pacific harpoon wild 
tattle .« ¡nt e i-ey lack 
firearms. 
Dog« aid them in the hunting. 


Abe.ut c-ne ! ith of puhlie 
high 
Sehodl 
«V fenv- 
:n 
the 
I'nited 
State« provide programs for driver 
education. 


By Central Press 


The British House of Commons 
has 6 to members, compared with 
435 members in the V. S. House of 
Representative.« ;. 


The loquat, a fruit thiit looks 
like a plum, belongs to the sama 
family a.s the apple and the pear. 


The United .''States contains about 
the « am« ' number of Chinese and 
JapanC'C- 


In 19.5.1, more hmms were being 
os^eratcd in Florida than m 
19 .50. 
Florida was the only stat« m ths 
Union to do so. 


T h e Cum berland Xew s 


Publi*h<><l daily 
except 
Sunday, ?-• S 
M echanic St , Cum berland, 
M aryland, by Tha 
Times 
* A lb a n ia n 
Company. 
A. 
T 
B R IST , 
JR -, 
M anafin* 
Editor 
M em ber of Tho Audit B ureau of Circulation 
M em ber of The Associated P ress 
Subscription rates by C arrier 
3 he 
per 
week 
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single 
ropy 
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News 
1st. 2nd. 3rd and 4th Postal Zones 
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The C um berland 
News assum es no 
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typographical erro rs in advertisem ents, but will reprint that part 
rf 
an 
advertisem ent 
in 
which 
tha 
typographical erro r occur*. 
Error* m ust be reported at once. 


The Band's Showing A Lot Of Courage 


Monday Morning. March 5, 1956 


Reform Of Elections 
Could Help America 


Election campaigns are expensive. In a way, 


that isn t a bad thing. 
It costs money to get a 


candid ate's ‘ message” across to the voters, but if 


both parties do that well enough the result may be 


an in form ed electorate. T h ere is abundant e x p e r t 


ence to show that where little is spent on ca m ­ 


paigns and th e voters hardly know who's running, 


the results rarely serve good government. 


But the abuse of campaign contributions is a 


problem that hasn t been licked. Congress ap p ar­ 


ently will try again to adopt legislation to limit 


abuses. 


Maybe less emphasis this time should be put 
on limiting the amount contributed or spent than 
on how it is used. There should be some ceiling 
on contributions, though not one so unrealistic that 
it is universally evaded. 


A m ong proposals now u n d e r consideration is 
one to raise the ceiling somewhat, but at the same 
time to impose more stringent regulations to assure 
that few expenditures go unreported. Allow about 
as m uch spending, in short, as is actually done 
now, but make sure that the spotlight of publicity 
falls squarely on it. This seems like a good trick 
if they can do it. 
A n o th er proposal, which is not new, is to 
perm it taxpayers to deduct up to $100 for cam ­ 
paign contributions. The idea is to encourage the 
little fellow to put up a 
few dollars, making 
candid ates less dependent on the big fellows. 
A n o th e r idea would perm it radio and tele­ 
vision networks to give free time to major candi­ 
dates “as a 
public service” without having to 
undergo the heavy expense of making equal time 
available to a dozen or more so-called pa rtie ^ ijia t 
are ju st ru n n in g for the exercise. This would help 
reduc e a m ajor item in the cost of serious c a m ­ 
paigning. 
The goal of all three proposals is the same— 
to m ake it more difficult for any contributor to 
‘ b u y ” any candidate. Success in reaching that goal 
would strengthen the American system. 


These Days 


By George E. Sokoh 


The Leninist Dogma 


Republican Senators Not In Accord 


On Settlement Of Farm Question 


WASHINGTON'—Republican sen­ 
ators met behind closed doors tne 
other day to settle the farm que* 
lion. What happened is supposed 
to be a COP secret, but this col- 
umn can report they left the ques­ 
tion more unsettled than ever. 
In fact, tho top Republican on the 
Senate 
Agriculture 
Committee, 
Vermont's curly-haired George Ai­ 
ken, not only left the question but 
left the meeting. He walked out in 
a huff during an impassioned plea 
for high farm supports by Minne­ 
sota's big Ed Thye. 
Both Aiken and Thye were raised 
on farms, and both still look hap­ 
pier in overalls. On farm legisla­ 
tion. however, they are just as op­ 
posite as a chicken farmer and a 
fruit farmer — which they both 
arc 
Aiken, the fruit farmer, be­ 
lieves devoutly in Secretary of Ag­ 
riculture 
Benson’s 
flexible 
farm 
supports. Thye, a chicken farmer, 
is just as adamant in favor of 
rigid, 90 per cent parity payments. 
At the closcd-door session. Thye 
warned 
his 
fellow 
Republicans 
that the Benson plan would remain 
an issue with farmers for years to 
com e and would he held against 
the COP. It was at this point that 
Aiken, scowling darkly, stomped 
out of the room. 
Earlier, another farm senator, 
North 
Dakotas 
long, 
lean 
Milt 
Young, .sounded a warning against 
the Benson program. He claimed 
that flexible price supports, if con­ 
tinued. would have disastrous po­ 
litical repercussions for Rcpuhli- 
cans in the farm belt 
Tbs obser­ 
vation was seconded by South Da­ 
kota s roly-poly, cigar-pufhng Sen. 
Karl Mundt. 
W ill Ik e Veto? 
Young urged his fellow Republi­ 
cans to desert the administration 


Despite Obstacles, Nixon May Get Nod From GOP 


It is not at all surprising that the Marxist-Lenmist 
I Dogma should be so little tin 
de the Soviet 
Universal State. After all. Roman Catholics and Protes­ 
tants belong to the Christian religion and they hardly 
ever understand each other and neither knows much 
about Judaism from which they both stem. 
Jews and 
Moslems originated from the same Semitic races and 
have religions which are closely akin but that has not 
made it possible for them to live in peace. 
The Marxist-Leninist Dogma, in all its phases, seems 
absurd to the Western mind. The biologic- interpretation 
of man. 
the complete omission of God and of any 
expression of mysticism, the elimination of personal 
liberty and the subordination of the individual to a social 
environment which not only dominates him hut molds 
His personality, the avoidance of the profit concept in 
economics and the reinstitution of slave labor — the 
Western mind relists such notions of life. 


It w a s e a s i e r when Stalin 
w a s the 
m a s t e r of 
R u s s i a b e c a u s e Stalin w as a br u t a l a u t oc r at , a 20th 
C e n t u r y r e i n c a r n a t io n of G e n g h i s Khan. 
Stalin was 
not e v e n tr ue to the M a rx i s t Leninist D o g m a, as the 
20th 
C o n g r e s s of the C o m m u n i s t 
P a r t y USSR 
has 
now 
d e c l a r e d , fie built his own 
d o g m a in a hook 
r a i l e d “ F o u n d a t i o n s of Leninism,*' an d hr d e m a n d e d 
a n unfailing orthodoxy. He was u n c o m p r o m is i n g with 
those who e v e n slightly d e v i a t e d f ro m his decisions 
wh ich c o v e r e d the entire g a m u t of h u m a n thought 
a n d 
activity. De viators 
he 
had 
killed or. 
In 
a 
g e n t l e r 
moo d. 
he 
exiled 
t h e m 
to 
the 
tu n d r a s 
of 
Siberia. 
He o rg a n i re d for world co n q u e s t an d held 
his p o w e r until he died. 


Opposition to Stalin was constant in Russia and in 
tha world Communist parties 
He met the opposition by 
purges in the course of which he destroyed his betters, 
tha founders of his party. When I encountered Stalin at 
the Smolnv Institute in Petrograd in 1917. he was not 
even 
newsworthy 
compared 
with 
Trotzky, 
Kamenev, 
Zinoviev, Bukharin, etc. 
He killed them all. 
After Stalin s death, the Communist party had either 
to return to the Marxist-Leninist Dogma or degenerate 
into a struggle for power among men ambitious to be 
dictators like Stalin 
In 1952. the latter seemed possible 
in the triumvirate of Bena. Malenkov and Molotov which 
Stalin had appointed to succeed him 
But the emergence 
of Khrushchev ended the struggle because he reverted 
to the Marxist-Leninist Dogma and to the dictatorship of 
the party rather than of one man. 
This is callid 
“collective leadership ” 


it is ton e a r l y to g r a s p ait th a t h ap p en ed at the 
fOth Co ng re ss . 
Ho we ve r, it would s e e m lo m e that 
f r o m an historic sta ndpoint, this w as a m om en to u s 
g a t h e r i n g 
and 
that 
it 
is 
likely 
to 
str en g th en 
the 
Soviet U n i v er sa l State b e c a u s e it will bring into line 
di ss id ent 
factions 
inside 
an d 
outside 
Russia. 
To 
posses* po we r. 
K h r us hc h ev avo id ed the seizure of 
p o w er , a s s u m i n g that di ffe re nc es of opinion do not 
real ly a m o u n t to m uc h in the long run. 
W he re as 
Stalin 
could 
not 
eflect 
a 
c h a n g e 
in 
g o v er nm en t 
without 
c o m m i t t i n g 
m u r d e r , 
K h r u s h c h e v 
does 
not 
e v en d ep r i v e Malenkov a n d Molotov of office, thus 
m a k i n g 
t h e m 
incre asi ngl y 
d e p e n d e n t 
upon 
him. 
I n dou ht edl y. 
K h r us hc h ev 
poss es ses 
a 
sense 
of 
h u m o r , which could not he said of Stalin. 


The danger to the United States lies in this very 
sense of humor which makes Khrushchev more flexible 
than Stalin wa* 
And it is this flexibility which has won 
for Khrushchev the great diplomatic victory of neutralism 
which is a peril to the United States. Stalin long played 
with the idea of moving into the Moslem world hut 
found no way to do it 
Khrushcnev moved in boldly even 
while the summit conference was being held at Geneva. 
It is beyond belief that our officials did nothing about 
that except to say that the s.tuation is precarious and 
ought not to become a campaign issue in 1956 
The 
absurdity of the position of our State Department will 
become obvious when Israel too purchases arms from 
Czechoslovakia and Poland which possess ample means 
to arm any small nation that would like to do any- 
fighting anywhere. 
What will John Foster Dulles say 
to that”* 
Will he say that Soviet Russia encourages 
neutralism among our allies because they fear us0 
By 
that logic, why not encourage neutralism among some 
of Russia s satellite* 
The 20th Congress it strikes me is a turning point in 
history and not a good one for u< 


WASHINGTON 
The people who are saying that 
President Eisenhower “is getting 
ready to dump Nixon” are even 
more wrong than the people who 
are saying that the President ts 
far too fond of Nixon to tolerate 
any other vice presidential nomi­ 
nee. 


The real Nixon story is a lot 
more complicated than that. It is 
true 
that 
the 
President 
has 
a 
warm affection for the Vice Presi­ 
dent. It is also true that the Presi­ 
dent, being a kind man and grate­ 
ful to Nixon for his loyal service, 
would 
much 
prefer 
to make no 
change in the Republican ticket 
this year. Thus 
those 
who 
are 
betting that Dick Nixon will get 
the nod again have by far the best 
of the bargain, as of now. 


Can Be Cold Blooded 


By Joseph an d Stewart A lsop 


Rut for ail 
his 
kindness 
and 
loyalty to his friends, Dwight D. 
Eisenhower has also shown that he 
can be pretty cold-blooded about 
members of his team who cease to 
look like assets 
Harry Truman 
might have, 
indeed he 
probably 
would have fought to the end for 
any crony as close to him as Sec­ 
retary of the Air 
Force 
Harold 
Talbott was close to Eisenhower. 
From Eisenhower, however. Tal­ 
bott got the 
axe in 
very 
short 
order, with no greater consolation 
than a nice note and a military 
review 
By the same token, the 
President 
did 
not 
conspicuously 
rush to the defense of his first 
secretary of health education and 
welfare, when Mrs, Hobby was in 
trouble with 
the 
Saik 
vaccine 
program. 
For this reason, the P residents 
affection for the Vice President 
is no sure 
guarantee of 
Nixon s 
future 
The real status of Nixon 
was implied very clearly at th* 
President* historic press confer 
ence. when Eisenhower declared 


on the one hand that the choice 
of the vice presidential nominee 
would have to wait until the Re­ 
publican convention, and on the 
other hand praised Nixon in the 
highest term s. Those who speak 
with undoubted authority have now 
paraphrased 
t h e s e 
seemingly 
double-edged presidential remarks 
about as follows: 
“I’d like to have Dick Nixon on 
the ticket with me. but I'm not 
going to commit myself because 
something m ay happen to change 
my mind.” 


Obstacle Race Ah ead 


F’or Nixon, therefore, the next 
six months are going to be a par­ 
ticularly dangerous obstacle race. 
in which the penalty of failure will 
be the 
President 
changing 
his 
mind. 
The 
obstacles 
ahead 
of 


Nixon are only too easy to discern. 
There is his marked unpopular­ 
ity. first of all with the type of 
Republicans who would prefer a 
vice 
presidential 
nominee 
like 
Governor 
Christian 
H er ter 
of 
Massachusetts. 
There 
is second, 
and actually more important, the 
bad showing Nixon has been mak­ 
ing in the political polls. In these 
reporters’ opinion, the results of 
the poll-ta kefs are almost mean­ 
ingless until the actual eve of the 
voting; but politicians scare very 
easily if the polls seem to show 
that a man is not a winner. It was 
this, in the last analysis, that cost, 
Robert 
A. Taft 
the 
Republican 
presidential nomination 


The 
polls 
alone 
can 
perhaps 
cause Nixon to be dropped, if they 
show, for exam ple, that an Fisen- 
hower-Nixon 
ticket 
it 
markedly 


You re Telling M e1 


By W illiam Rift 


A copy of 
’ Frankstein,’* bor­ 
rowed from a Nebraska library in 
1899. has just been returned. That s 
a monstrous long time 


Christian 
Dior s 
latest 
fashion 
for the girls is the “Arrow Look “ 
Grandpappy Jenkins thinks it m ay 
be a sure fire beau catcher. 


A Detroit psychologist says most 
anyone can acquire a good m em ­ 
ory. 
Now d o n t you forget that! 


Two brothers, teetotallers bought 
the only saloon 
in 
an 
English 
town, then closed it If they were 
trying to he funny, it certainly was 
strictly dry humor. 


Three hundred young Swedes on 
their way to be inducted into mili­ 
tary services rioted on a Stock­ 
holm-bound train Those lads must 
plan to spend their basic training 
in the guardhouse. 


The emu is tound only in Austra­ 
lia, according to a nature article 
Guess that writer never tried to 


solve a crossword puzzle 


lf you want to know what s cook­ 
ing in latest styles in women s m il­ 
linery read this 
A French design­ 
er has come out with a snappy 
feminine chapeau shaped just like 
a chef* hat. 


weaker than an Eisenhower Perter 
ticket. The polls m ay perhaps do 
just this, although no one can tell. 
until the noses are counted, how 
much 
the 
President* 
impaired 
health 
will cause 
the 
voters to 
weigh their choice by their opinion 
of the Vice President. 


But then Dick Nixon, it should be 
remembered, has very great as­ 
sets on bis side. as well as very 
considerable 
obstacles 
to 
over­ 
come 
When Nixon has got into 
hot water, in the first place, he has 
invariably done 
so 
by sounding 
too much like a partisan politician; 
but he has sounded like a partisan 
politician 
precisely 
because 
the 
President, who wants to he above 


deputed the political infighting to 
his vice president. 
Nixon has far 
more ability and judgment than 
his detractor* suppose, and unless 
the President asks him to make 
partisan political noise*, ha is en­ 
tirely capable of striking an alto­ 
gether different note in the next 
six months. 


Nixon Likely Nominer 


In addition, the great majority 
of 
Republican organization* out­ 
side 
the 
Eastern 
states 
quite 
clearly prefer Nixon to any other 
vice 
presidential 
nominee. 
And 
finally and above all, there Is no 
visible 
substitute 
for 
Nixon on 
whom the President’s personal ad­ 
visors can easily unite Thomas K. 
Dewey would prefer Dewey. Har­ 
old Stassen would prefer Stassen, 
and so on through the list of hope­ 
fuls 
and all the hopefuls' friends 
a ie sim ilarly divided. 


For Nixon, therefore, possession 
of the vice presidency is pretty 
tei tarn to prove nine points of the 
law, unless the polls go too drasti­ 
cally against 
him or he makes 
some really bad bobbles. 


• Copings* 
nvx. 
York Herald Trtbuna, Inc > 


By Drew Pearson 


and vote for the Democrat-spon­ 
sored 
high parity farm bill. The 
only thing the Senate could do to 
relieve the farmers this year, he 
pleaded, would he to pass 90 per 
cent price supports. 
In answer to an objection that 
this would pile up staggering sur­ 
pluses. Young pointed out that the 
Agriculture Department has acre­ 
age limitations on the basic __ 
"There will be the same number 
of acres at 90 per cent.’* he said, 
“as under flexible supports.” 
Iowa's stern Sen Bourke Hicken- 
looper noted that corn farmers ha­ 
bitually ignore the acreage restric­ 
tions and dump their excess corn 
on the open market. He suggested 
that 
the solution wasn't flexible 
supports, however, but more real­ 
istic acreage allotments. 
At one point, Sen Charlie Potter 
of 
Michigan 
asked 
whether the 
President would veto a high sup­ 
port farm bill. Senate GOP Leader 
Bill Knowland of California sug­ 
gested it would depend on the lan­ 
guage of the bill. 
“The President never makes a 
statement about a bill until he sees 
it,” said Knowland 
NOTE — Instead of adopting a 
GOP policy on farm legislation, the 
Republicans ended up in more dis­ 
agreem ent 
than 
ever. 
All they 
seem ed to agree upon was that the 
final farm bill would be a patch­ 
work of amendments. 
Adin! And Estes 
Adlai Stevenson is waging a very 
sm art remote-control campaign to 
win New Hampshire away from 
Sen. Estes Kefauver in the coming 
presidential primary. 
Stevenson is playing a game of 
beads-l-w intails you lose 
He 
is 
pouring in money and waging a 
vigorous campaign against Ketau- 
ver without appearing to do so. 
This will enable him to claim no 
contest if Kefauver wins or take 
credit for a victory without trying, 
if Kefauver leases. 
The Stevenson forces are out- 
spending the Kefau v m trs two to 
one — printing sam ple ballots, dis­ 
tributing campaign literature and 
hiring campaign help. They have 
the backing of most labor leaders 
and 
Democratic 
regulars, 
who 
w ere whipped by Kefauver in the 
1952 primary and are now out for 
revenge 
Stevenson'* undercover campaign 


hire ironi­ 
cally is a Kefauver protege. N a­ 
tional Committeeman Henry Sulli­ 
van. Kefauver got him his job in 
1952. 
but Sullivan later climbed 
aboard the Stevenson bandwagon 
and in now running the cam paign 
against his former benefactor. 
Stevenson's 
strongest 
support 
will com e from Mayors Josephat 
Benoit of Manchester and Edward 
Charpentier of Somersworth, whose 
city organizations are drumming 
for Adlai. 
One Stevenson tactic was to run 
three secret Stevenson men as Ke­ 
fauver delegates in an attempt to 
split the Kctauver vote. However, 
Kcfauvor’s New Hampshire m an­ 
ager. Thomas McIntyre, managed 
to get the three phonies listed on 
the ballot only as “favorable” to 
Kefauver. whereas the loyal dele- 
gates are all i d e n t i f i e d as 
“pledged" to Kctauver. 
Democratic National Chairman 
Tatil Butler, who is supposed to be 
impartial in Democratic prim aries, 
also pulled a fast one. He suddenly 
hired Mary Farmer, a lady deputy- 
sheriff in Manchester, to work for 
the Democratic National Commit­ 
tee in Washington. 
If so happened that Miss Farmer 
w as one of Kefauver's most popu­ 
lar delegates. She was told pri­ 
vately that. in her new Washing­ 
ton job, she would have to with­ 
draw as a Kefauver delegate. This 
deft maneuver is expected to cost 
Kefauver hundreds of votes in New 
Hampshire'* biggest city. 
NOTE—Stevenson’* biggest han­ 
dicap is a crack he made in Chi­ 
cago that New Hampshire wasn't 
important enough for him to enter 
as a candidate. Some New Hamp­ 
shire voters now say Stevenson 
isn t important enough for them to 
vote for. 
Washington 'Whirl 
Secretary of Agriculture Reason 
has made two unexpected converts 
in the South — Sens. Jim Eastland 
and John Stennis, both M ississippi 
Democ rats 
. 
Benson has been 
cozying up to Eastland for w eek!. 
R esult. 
Eastland 
finally 
bought 
Benson * farm idea*, 
hook, line 
and low parity 
. . . More than 
persuasion was involved, however. 
Benson made a deal not to cut 
M ississippi * cotton acreage allot*, 
m ent, also agreed to support cot­ 
ton at 87 per cent of parity — just 
a fraction below the 90 per cent 
figure sought by most Democrat*. 


(C opyright. 1938, Th* Hell Syndicate, la c .) 


a 
Changes In Education 


By Roger W . Babion 


Streptococcus Has Jekyll Ami M * 


The streptococcus still is a bcd 
actor. 
It goes on a rampage at 
this time of the year and causes a 
variety of respiratory infections as 
well as erysipelas, scarlet fever, 
and rheumatic fever. These micro­ 
organisms 
have 
a dual 
person­ 
ality, like Jekyll and Hyde. 


When benevolent, they m ay live 
for months or years in the pharynx 
without causing harm but should 
resistance 
be lowered 
they 
are 
transformed into brutes and the 
notorious strep sore throat ensur- 
The disease comes on suddenly 
with chills, headache, generalized 
aching 
and a scratchy sensation 
in the throat 
Nausea and vomiting m ay co- 
e x i s t , particularly in children. 
Shortly 
thereafter, 
the 
tempera 
lure rises and may reach 103 to 


By Dr. Theodore R. Van Darien 


105 degrees F. The ensuing sym p­ 
toms are typical of a strep infec­ 
tion 
The throat feels full and it 
hurts the victim to swallow. 


Rain 
radiates 
into 
the 
ears, 
occasionally giving the im pression 
that these 
organs 
are 
involved 
also. 
Tenderness is noted when 
pressure is applied at the angle of 
the jaw. This is due to inflamma­ 
tion of the neck glands which are 
numerous in this area 


In the past, strep sore throat 
usually lasted five or six days 
b e f o r e subsiding spontaneously. 
Complications 
were 
not unusual 
and, in many instance* 
the di« 
ease was prolonged by ear in­ 
volvement. pneumonia, sinus trou- 
Try And Stop Me! 


By Bennett Cert 


In private life Jack Benny is one 
of the most generous souls, but the 
penurious worrier he portrays on 
the air has become so famous he 
can t escape it. At a mghtery in 
New York, for instance he tos-ed 
the hat-check girl a dollar bill She 
tossed it right back, beseeching. 
Please 
Mr 
Benny, let a poor 
working girl preserve at least one 
illusion'” 


4Cepyn*hU ISM. K.ng Fcatur** Syndic*'*, lac I 


Ray Henberry was walking down 
the Rue de Rivoli in Paris with a 
friend when a taxi driver sounded 
his squeaky little horn. The friend 
jumped as though a round of buck­ 
shot just had caught him in the 
sit-spot. 
Noting 
Henberry s 
sur­ 
prise be explained. “ My wife ran 
away with a French auto man two 
sears ago Every time I hear one 
of those horns blow I'm afraid he s 
bringing her bacK.” 


“ The first lesson 
the gentle art of m 
vises Steve Allen, * 
gin-‘•r•> on. 


o remember in 
!f.ffyvfr.* gp ’ 
rf. 


is to keep your 


U i 
. i ■ 
h 
(Dutnbuttd by K.. r.g future* SyocUretci 


hie. or rheumatic fever The latter 
give 
the 
strep 
sore 
throat 
it* 
stigma 
On 
many 
occasions 
I 
have 
warned patients with strep throat 
to take care of themselves and 
in addition 
not expose others to 
the infection. 
They may transmit 
the organisms to someone who is 
susceptible lo rheumatic fever, the 
disease that dam ages the heart. 
It is remarkable that penicillin, 
the first antibiotic, 
is still our 
most effective weapon against this 
group of micro-organisms. 
Its early use helps decrease the 
chances 
of 
complications. 
The 
remedy also 
is 
employed as 
a 
prophylactic m easure during epi- 
demies in school*, institutions, and 
military installations 
These out 
breaks can be terminated abruptly 
if all the inm ates receive sim ul­ 
taneously a single injection or a 
few tablet* of penicillin 
TOMORROW 
Seek the cause of 
rectal itching 


HIGH AND LOW 
Mrs 
VV. writes: When I wake 
up in the morning my stomach is 
flat but by evening it is quite 
high What could ca use this sw ell­ 
ing 


REPLY 
Food and g 


OLDSTERS' bu. 
. 
D F writes 
Do old people need 
more sleep than the young and 
middle aged’ 
REPLY 
The elderly are less active and 
usually need less sleep. On the 
other hand 
they tire more easily 
and go to bed earlier In addition. 
they catnap frequently dugng the 
day. 


A WINTER PROBLEM 
L. M writes 
Why do most peo­ 
ple sidler (rom frequent urination 


during cold w eather'’ 
I have no 
trouble this way in the summer 
tim e but in cold w eather I m a l­ 
w ays looking for the nearest w ash­ 
room. 


REPLY 
Apparently cold stimulates the 
bladder 
In addition, morp urine 
is manufactured during the win­ 
tertim e because le-s water is lost 
through perspu alien 


VARICOSE ULCERS 
D. W 
w rtif . Why are sores on 
a varicose vein difficult to cure? 


REPLY 
The m ajority are not, hut the 
few that become chronic give the 
lesions their bad reputation. They 
fail to heal because nothing is done 
to eliminate the varicose veins. 
Another possibility is that the con­ 
dition is misdiagnosed and the ul­ 
cer sterns from poor circulation 
due to hardening of Rte arteries 
rath er than to varicose veins. 


TE< HNH I VN N JOB 
H 
J. write 
( an a registered 
nurse do a metabolism test or 
must the doctor do it ’ 


REPLY 
A 
nur*-c 
may 
ma** this test. 
if she ha 
been taug'it how 
In 
hospitals, the ba al metabolic de 
terminations are made by medical 
technicians whereas in the physi­ 
cian's office they can be done by 
a nurse technician or other med­ 
ical assistant trained to use the 
m achine 


LEUKEMIA IN .ANIMALS 
T. V. writes 
Do anim als ever 
develop leukemia'’ 


REPLY 
Yes particularly fowl. 


To the limit of »p*ce, question* per- 
taming to tho prevention of d.veave Will 
be angered 
Perton*! repliei will be 
made when teiurn vtarrperi envelope I* 
enclosed 
Telephone inquire* not *e- 
repted 
Dr V*n Delian w I not max* 
d agnosia bt 
pre arn be 
for 
individual 
diana***. 


BABSON PARK. Mass. — I row 
see no way to cut costs of opeiat­ 
ing primary or gramm ar school*. 


I 
believe, 
however, 
that 
high 
schools and colleges will become 
m ore efficiently and economically 
operated. The self service super­ 
market will show the way. 


!>o-lt-Ynur»Hf 
Movement 


Some 
educational 
experts 
are 
urging cities and town* to spend 
less on buildings, 
libraries, and 
equipment and devote more of the 
total allotment to teachers' salar­ 
ies This may be good politics, but 
it is not in the students' interest. 
I favor building better school* with 
better libraries and equipment, but 
having fewer teachers 
Then pay 
better 
salaries 
to 
these 
fewer 
teachers. 
The most vital field for a “Do- 
It-Yourself” campaign is that of 
education. A parent tan buy a set 
of encyclopedias 
for HOO which 
contain more information than is 
contained in the heads of all the 
teachers in your community More 
over, the training and discipline of 
self-education is c en more valua­ 
ble than all the facts that can be 
learned Hence, I forecast that the 
next great movement in education 
for those above 13 years of age will 
be teaching students to learn with­ 
out teacher*. I wish that some city 
would put the m anagers of its self- 
service 
supermarkets 
on 
their 
school boards. 


The .School Board 


To 
begin 
with, 
you 
probably 
don't know who are on your local 
*chool board 
If not, send to your 
superintendent of schools and a^k 
for a list of the members and the 
business in which each is engaged 
and the number of children which 
eac h has in Hie schools. You may 
be .surprised to find how poorly 
chosen these men and women are 
for this work. 
In too many cities, school board 
member* are interested in getting 
income for them selves or friends 
as 
doctors, 
builders, 
insurance 
agents, bank officials, storekeep­ 
ers, etc. These school committee 
m em bers naturally take the advice 
of the superintendent of schools 
who is an honest man but is guided 
by the colleges which determine 
what shall be taught and how. The 
superintendents and scImioI princi­ 
pals are too often judged by the 
number of students they pass along 
to the colleges, and promoted ac- 


Factographs 


Iron ore coal and limestone are 
the three principal raw materials 
used in making steel. 


Snakes, often regarded as slimy 
creatures, are actually cool and 
dry to the touch. 


Natives of the 
Marquesas 
is­ 
lands, in the Pacific, harpoon wild 
cattle since they lack firearms. 
Dogs aid them in the hunting. 


About one fifth of public high 
school 
systems 
in 
the 
United 
S tates provide program s for driver 
education. 


ro v in g ly . They are fine men and 
women; they deserve much better 
pay, but they have very little free­ 
dom , 


What I* Educ atio n? 


I have just bern reading report* 
of the recent Conference on Edu­ 
cation 
held In Washington. The 
great demand there was for feder­ 
al aid without federal interference. 
Very little discussion was devoted 
to what should be taught our child­ 
ren and how. No time was given to 
discussing 
lowering the cost or 
taism g the efficiency of schools. 
The great need today is to tackle 
the 
educational problem 
as 
we 
have T. B. and polio and cancer. 
I have in mind a fam ily of four 
grown up brothers all of whom at­ 
tended the same schools and had 
the sam e teachers. Yet three of tho 
men are today useful in their com ­ 
m unities and hold good positions. 
One of the boys was a “delin­ 
quent'' and is now a ne'er-do-well 
supported by the first three. The 
question the mother asks I*: Did 
the schools have any effect on the 
character or “life'' of these boys? 


T r a v e l i n g To The Moo* 


The books most popular with the 
youth of today are books on “space 
travel” — that is, going to other 
planets. It is said that Washington 
is having more inquiries about the 
earth “ satellites” which are to be 
released than about any other sub­ 
ject, Why is it that young people 
are so much more interested in 
other worlds than in learning about 
their own world and how to live in 
it? Something is wrong somewhere. 
Education should teach how to live, 
It should help parents mold char­ 
acter. 
T ea ch er should be spiritually 
minded in order to be efficient. Al­ 
though they should be paid better 
salaries, yet this salary should not 
be based upon the degrees which 
they have received. Looking back 
over m y school life, it was tha 
teachers with the biggest heart* 
who won my interest and awaken­ 
ed a desire for knowledge and 
service. 
To get back to my main appeal; 
One sure way to increase the effi­ 
ciency and reduce the cost of our 
schools and truly help our child­ 
ren is to teach children where to 
find their own answers to questions 
and awaken in them a desire for 
more knowledge. We need teachers 
born with a love for children and 
trained as helpful librarians. 


By Central Press 


The British House of Commons 
has 6to members, compared with 
435 members in the U. S. House of 
R epresentatives. 


The loquat, a fruit that looks 
like a plum, belongs to the sam e 
fam ily as the apple and the pear. 


The United States contains about 
the sam e number of Chinese and 
Japanese, 


In 1955. more farms were being 
operated in Florida than in 1950. 
Florida was the only stata in tho 
Union to do so. 


SIX 
THE 
CUMBERLAND 
NEWS, 
CUMBERLAND, 
MD., 
MONDAY, 
MARCH 
5, 
1 956 
Phone PA 2-4600 for a W ANT AD Toker 
Piedmont Draws Berkeley Springs As Region 4 Opponent 


Vikings Face 
Hedgesviile 
At Shepherd 


Mounfaineer High 


Opposes Newburg In 


Opener At Parsons 


Piedm ont High School, winner of 
nine con.cecu tive gam es, inclu ding: 
th ree the p ast weekend 
in the* 
Section 16 event at Keyser, willi 
p iay B erkeley Sp rings High Schools 
Indians of M organ cou nty Friday 
a t 8 o'clock in the semi-final rou nd i 
of the W est Virginia Class ‘‘R"! 
Begion No. 4 tou rnam ent at Shep ­ 
herd College. 
In the other sem i-final gam e at 
7 o'clock. Coach Jesse Rigglcm an s 
Petersbu rg 
High 
School 
Vikings 
will do battle with Hedgesviile High 
School of Berkeley cou nty. 
The cham p ionship gam e is .sche­ 
du led Satu rday at 8 o'clock. Ofti- 
«’lals for the tw'o-day tou rney which 
w-ill be directed hy Gordon Eism on, 
p rincip al of Shep herdstown High 
School, are Sheriff Tiano and Jack 
.Andrews, 
Be.it WVSD In Finals 
Piedm ont 
U8-5) 
won the 16-B 
event on Satu rday night by beat­ 
ing the West Virginia School for 
the D eaf a t Potom ac State College 
hy the score of 75-51 after disp osing 
of F o rt Ashby 66-51 and Ridgclcy 
,54-52 in p relim inary gam es. 
Clay Smith, Dick Niland and E d­ 
die Orndorff had 30, 21 and 20 
p oints for Piedm ont in the cham ­ 
p ionship gam e while C harles Bu - 
em i and Gene Smith sp arked the 
Rnmney qu int with 21 and 12 ta l­ 
lies. 
In the consolation final a t Key­ 
ser. Ridgeloy High’s Blackhaw ks 
heat E lk G arden. 49-51. 
Kenny 
H artm an, Ellsw orth L am bert and 
Mike Zö llner scored 14, 12 and JO 
p oints for Chet P ayne's qu int. Tom 
Rawlings headed Elk G arden with 
19. 


Pennsylvania Beagles 
Score In Derby Trial 


Hubs Lose By Forfeit, 
Mel Henry Gets Into 
Hassle WithArbiter 


Stoltenberg, Risch 


Hounds Head Thirty 


In PCA Qualiiier 


Mayfield Wins 
At Baton Rouge 


Californian Cops 
$2,200 With 277 


Hagei-itown 
High 
School, 
which p lays Frederick High s 
Cariéis in the first Cla'> 
A" 
game of the M.oylanri D islrid 
No. 1 tou rney Friday night at 
Fort Hill High School, lost the 
final gam e of its regu lar sche­ 
du le hc4 Friday at Chambers- 
bu rg ttigh School via the tor- 
feit rou te. 
Cham hershiirg 
was 
leading 
43-37, in the third p eriod with 
1 20 rem aining when one of the 
officials charged 
that 
Coafh 
Mel Henry had u ttered p rofane 
langu age agam.st him. Henry 
said that su ch a charge wa.s 
u ntru e. A p olice officer was 
called tn evict the Hagerstown 
coach hu t the form er refu sed 
to make Henry leave the gym ­ 
nasiu m . When Mel insisted on 
rem aining on the bench with 
his team the gam e was for­ 
feited to C ham bersbu rg by the 
officials. 
The Hu b wou nd u p their reg­ 
u lar sea.son with a 14-6 record. 
Frederick closed its 195.5-.56 
Rchedu le last week with a 16-2 
record, winning its final gam e 
from Annap olis High School, at 
Annap oli.s, ,59-36. 


Soap Box Derby 
Is Discontinued 


« 
Ev ent Is Cancelled 


After Eight Years 


BATON ROI G F. La.. .March 4 
lley Mayfield of Los An- 
an.s were adju dged the winners of gelcs finished with two hirdies to ; 
the Derbv Trial held yesterday by day to clinch a fhree-.stroke vit ; 
the Allegany Beagle Clu b at the tory in the $12..500 Raton Rou ge 
Barton 
Dairy 
Farm . 
.McMu llen Op en Golf Tou rnam ent, 
highway, 
.Mayfield shot a three u nder p ar 
' 
Chap p ie s 
Chance, 
owned 
by 69 tor a 277 total after 72 holes, j 
Charles 
N 
Stoltcntierg. 
Altoona, 
Jim m v D e m a r e t. Kiam esha; 
p aced 
a 
field 
of 
20 entries 
in Lake. N. Y.. tied with Mayfield: 
winning fir.st p late in the 13 inch at the .start of the day's rou nd,- 
tla -s. 
bad a 72. 
: 
' 
Risch's .icff 
owned by W illiam 
D em aret wou nd u p in a fou r-; 
Risch, David.sville, Pa..* won the way tie lor the ru nneru p .sp ot with! 
15 inch evc'nl in which there w'cre a 280, PffA king Dou g F trd . also 
ten entries. 
<d K iam esha Lake. W alter Bu rke 
i 
Galen Ritchey, Roaring Sp ring, mo of 
Franklin. 
.Mich ; 
Freddie 
Pa., and William (Rtebel. Fro.st- Haa.N 
of 
Clarem ont, 
Calif . 
and, 
bu rg, did the ju dging in the 1.1 inch Fred Hawkins of FI Paso. Te.x,.' 
clas.H while Ritchry and l.ou Slitch- all tinished with 2?« ) s to tie De­ 
er, Cu m berland, were the ju dges m aret. Bu rkcmo and Ford finished 
D n 'th e 15 inch clai;s. 
¡with 68’h, H aas with 7! while Haw-] 


j 
I’lace 
hou nds 
in 
both 
classes kins cam e in with 70. 
¡qu alified for the f’cnn Central As- 
The crowd interest centered on 
'sociation cham p ionship s schedu led the battle between D em aret and 
Tor Ap ril 7-8 at 
the T n -C o u n ty : Mayfield. Both were tw o u nder p ar 
■Beagle (Tu b, Carrnlltown. ('am bria throu gh the 1.5th hole, 
cou nty. 
Pa, 
The 
F’enn 
C entral 
Both hogeyed the p ar 4 IHth hole. 
Association is comp osed of eight M ayfield w as short of the green 
!clu bs, inclu ding the Allegany Bea- with his second shot, short again] 
gle Clu b, 
i'^'th a chip shot and two p u tted' 
Y esterday's resu lts; 
11 
IN < H 
( I.V S S 
» a i 
K N T R IF .» » 
^ 
w 
e 
i 
i 
t 
into a trap again Billy M artin and 


2 Daiifne .s, ('. st« v« sp H, RoaringjOn the p ar 4 17th hole for anotheryj j jyi 
Konstanty 


Top 20 Teams 
Rated By INS 


M*;W 
YDRK. 
MARCH 
4 - 
n.N S'—Here are the top 20 col­ 
lege basketball team.s of the 
week as voted in a nationwide 
su rvey by International News 
Service. 
1—San Francisco '24-0; 
2—Ixju isville '23-3> 
3_D ayton <23-3- 
4—North Carolina State <24-3) 
5— Alabama '20-3* 
6—Iowa TB-S' 
7—Sou thern M ethodist <22-2) 
8— Illinois <18-3- 
9—V anderbilt <19-4' 
10—Temp le '21-3* 
Second Ten; 11—North C arol­ 
ina 
' 18-5'; 
12—Kentu cky < 19- 
5» : 1.3—Holy Cross i22-4t; 
14— 
St. 
.Josep h’s *Pa.) '20-4); 
L5— 
P C L A. <19-5': 16—Utah <21- 
5'; 17—St. Francis <.N. Y.) <19- 
2: 
18—Ohm Slate <1.5-5'; 
19— 
Hou ston <19-5'; 20—Iowa State 
<17-4<. 


SS. Peter-Paul 
Posts Seventh 
Straight Win 


Tops St. Patrick's 
By Score Of 44-36 


r A T H O l I C L F A O t K 


W 
L 
SS. P p tp r -P a u l 
7 0 
St. M ich a el’s 
St. 
.M a r y'* 
.1 1 
O a kla n d 
K eyser 
3 2 
W estern p o rt 
St 
P a t r ick’s 
3 4 


T h u rsd a y 
(.a n ir s 


,S.S. F’ eter P a u l a t W e.stern p o rt 
S t, 
.M a ry’* 
a t 
St. 
P a tr ick 
vSt. M ich a el’s a t O a kla n d 


Yankees Sign 
Billy Martin 


Konstanty In Fold, 


Each Get $20,000 


ß G A j2 e iL a U 
SCORES 


SATURDAY GAMES 


,S< H O L .A S T IC 
1« B 
S ectio n a l: 
(A t 
K eys er ) 
P ied m o n t 75, Wes» t 
V a 
D ea f 
.51 
( ( h a m p to n sh ip 
g a m e) 
R id g clcy 
49. 
E lk 
G a rd en 
41 
(C o n so la tio n 
F in a l» 
4 t-B 
S ectio n a l: 
(A t 
W a r d en * » llle) 


B erkeley 
S p rin g s 
85, 
W a rd en sv ille 
41 
(C h a m p io n sh ip 
g a m e) 
C a p o n B rid g e 79. P a w P a w 70 
¡C o n so la tio n 
lin a l) 


C O L L E G IA T E 


D a r tm o u th 
90, 
B ro w n 
79 
(tw o 
o v er tim es) 
Y a le 
8 2, H a r v a r d 
69 
C a ni.sius 64, 
.N ia g a ra 62 
F o r d h a m 78, S eton H a li 76 
P it t 
100, 
P en n 
S ta te 
90 
.St. 
J o h n 's 
(B K n > 
77. t ( N Y ’ 
69 
K en tu cky 101, Tenncs.see 77 
W 
K en tu cky 100. M id d le T en n 
85 
O kla h o m a A . & M . 52- S t. L o u is 49 
B r a d ley 69, N o tr e D a m e 63 
W ich ita 
71. 
T u lsa 
51 
SS. P eter and Pau l qu int k e p t ^ ^ S a “ o t 
two winning streaks going yester- 
(o v ertim e» 
day by chalking u p its 7th 
" 
of the second half cham p ionship O r eg o n 
72. 
W a sh in g to n S ta te 
58 
race of the Catholic You th Leagu e 
J 
* 
. 
n c 
J 
r 
71, W yo m in g 64 
and p osting its 22nd consecu tive M o n ta n a 63. 
C o lo ra d o 
victory over St. P atrick’s over _ 
A ir F o rce A ca d . 7Z. D en v er F ro sh 60 
five-year sp an. 
<N cw M ex ico 
74, U ta h S ta le 63 
The score of yesterday’s gam e, 
Id a h o sta te 6:i. M o n ta n a s ta te 67 
p layed on SS. P eter and Pau l cou rt 
% 
was 44-36. 
I u CL A R4. C a U fo rm a 62 
li'H iit t h p 
m i i i r f p r ' 
T ch rs, 91. T ren to n T ch rs. 80 
M. F a tric ks lea at m e qu arter, 
f.3-6, and also at halftim e, 19-16, 
W oo sler 85. O hio W esleya n 65 
bu t Coach Bob M attingly’s aggre- 
gation forged fo the fore in the p u rd u e 
73. 
In d ia n a 71 
third p eriod at 38-29 and never was 
' 
A llegh eny 68. W a sh, i .lefferso n 57 
h ea d ed . 
| D a yto n 
71. 
C im -in n a ti 
58 
Mike Firlie and Carrol! Wilt with 
Kansas state 7. 
Geneva Ki4. Waynesbu rg 62 


A 
L 
M . 
62 
a B n g h a m 
Y o u n g % . D en v er 86 


, 
. 
. 
. 
S T . P E T E R S B U R G . F l a . M a r ch ! 
. 
, 
. 
cc 
n 
.ijf u ev a lAH, 
v> ctynfM iui K 


¡ t h e 
g r een . 
D em a r et 
w en t 
i n t o 
a 4 i 4 6_T h e N ew Y o r k Y a n k ees co m - ^ 
p o i n t s 
s p a r k ed 
S S . 
i 
joseph.s 
9 i 
D ela w a re 
~ i 


1 t r a p a n d m i s s ed a s ix f o o t p u t t , 
¡ p l ct ed 
t h ei r 
s ig n in g s 
t o d a y 
w h e n ^ * ' 
P a u l 
a t t a ck 
w h i l e 
L a r r y 


' ' 
D em a r et 
w en t 
In t o a t r a p a g a i n R p i v M a r t i n a n d 
J u l i a n S ch o n t er co l l ect - : i^yeom m g 
104, w est C h ester T ch rs ss 


ed ei g h t t a l l i es ea ch . M i ck ey S ca l-iC o ig a t^ e^ m ^ ^ R h o d e 
DUnd^^68^^ 


s p n n g , 
p « 
¡ b o g ey, 
w h i l e 
M a y f i el d 
.sa n k 
a 
2 2 a g r eed 
to 
t er m 's 
t 
ct t a l ed S t . P a t r i c k ’ s w i t h 14 p o i n t s . s,'*^ P eter-s 
‘ j^.’^ 's r s T B o n a v en t u r e 
7 4 'J . R a y H u l l , 
E n o r d o " M o o s e” 
A r - 


P n to in a c P a ik M a r l . G eo rg e P a r ker ,! 
b i r d i c 
t h r ce. 
f n r 
iq e^k 
K a r - h 
b 
J i m 
E v a n s 
a n d 
J i m 
S i t t i g 
O h '« 9« - X a v ier , o . 91 (o v eitim e) n o n e. 
T o m m y 
K el l y 
a n d 
W a l d o n 
» 
lu r 
13.T0. 
r.d cn 
» 
. 
. 
. 
. . 
_ 
. 
, nnnii» « rn. H:1. .«Cl 
6 ranris. Pa. 69 
,,,Skinner. 


3 
P o to m a c 
P a r k 
4 
N esco 
N a r b y, 
( a r i 
A . 
G r o v er , 
A l 
tCKina, I ’ a , 
R eserv e: 
F ro st 
P la ce 
l.a fly, 
J o h n 
R 
A r m s tr o n g , T r ip le 
l.a kcs 
15 
1N'( H 
C L A S S 
(l(t 
F N T R IE S ) 
1 
R i s f U * J eff, W illia m R isch , D a v id « - 
v ille. 
P a 
2. H en ry C o u n ty B la ckey, W illia m G o e 
b el, 
F rn .sfh u rg 
.3 
H i R o ck 
.Sa m . 
D r . 
H . 
r . 
D ieh l, 


F ro s t h u rg 
4. P ea rso n '» 
J e D ee. 
J . 
P ea rso n , 
A l­ 
to o n a , 
Pa 
R eserv e ■ 
H in kles 
R a n g er . 
J a m es 
H in kle, tu m b er la n d . 


Brav es May 


Mayfield hit an ap p roach shot on 
rep orted to 
the p ar 5 18th to within six feetj^gyg received a 
of the p m. He then drop p ed his:^20,000 contract, 
p u tt fnr a hirdie and the $2.200j 
j^lanager 
Ca.s- 
first p lace money. D em aret had a '^ y stengel was 


i n s t r u m en t a l 
in 
p ar 5 on the last hole. 


C u m berland’s Soap Box D erby. 
m id-su m m er affair for the p ast — 
i 
» 
s 
i 
eight years, will be discontinu ed. | f Q 
a © 
M C lC O C K 
Derby sp onsors here have been — 
^ 
• 
• 
Berkeley Top s W arriors 
notified by All-Am erican Soap Box J Q 5 t. L O U I S 
Berkeley Sp rings, 
coached . bV; 
in D etroit that Cu m- 
G erard ‘M erry ' Calhou n, *^u e-timej^p j.jgg^.g franchise has been can- 
M oorefield High athlete, earned 
regional berth by beating Cap on 
Bridge. 
62.53, 
and 
W ardensville 
H igh’s W arriors in th a t order ml 
the Section 14 event at W ardcns- 
ville. The Berkeley qu int owns an, 
overall record of I4TF 


John J . McM u llen, p u blisher of 
the Tim es and A lleganian Com­ 
p any, has received the following 


BRADENTON. FLA.. M arch 4 - 
iIN S)—T rade winds blew in the 
Sp ring training cam p of the Mil- 


Philley Is Last 
Oriole To Sign 


Dav e Reportedly 
Will Get $23,000 


SCOTTSDALE. Ariz.. M arch 4 
—O u tfielder Dave Philley, who hit 
.299 for the B altim ore Orioles last 


Fearer Loop 
Playoffs To 
OpenTonight 


Two Games On Tap 


For Beall Court 


H ayoffs in the F earer Memofia! 
Chu rch 
Basketball 
Leagu e 
of 
¡PYostbu rg will get u nder w'ay to­ 
night at Beall High School. 
Q u arter final contests will be 
staged tonight and tomorrow, sem i­ 
finals on Thu rsday and the cham p ­ 
ionship gam e one week from to­ 
night. 
In tonight’s op ener at 6:45 o’­ 
clock. Coach Tommy Wilson’s St. 
M ichael’s qu int will p lay Coach 
Jack Atkinson’s St. Josep h’s cag- 
ers of Midland. In the second con- 
test, 
H arry 
B aker’s 
Frostbu rg 
M ethodist team will op p ose H arry 
H itchins’ Salem Reform ed p assers 
at 8 o'clock. 
Tu esday night Joe C arter’s Eck- 
hart Methodist five will m eet Jack 
B u rner’s 
Klondyke 
iloorm en 
a t 
6:45 while Gu y M allow's Congre­ 
gational 
aggregation 
will 
tangle 
with Glenn “Sp eed” H anna’s Welsh 
Bap ti.st qu int at 8 o’clock. 
In the Thu rsday semi-finals the 
w inner of .Monday’s first gam e 
will m eet the winner of Tu esday’s 
first gam e and the winner of Mon­ 
day's second contest will do battle 
with the victor m Tu esday’s second 
tilt. 
Officials for the p layoffs will ha 


BILLY MARTIN 


getting both hold­ 
ou ts to sign. He 
called M artin in 
New 
York 
and 
informed 
the 
scrap p y 
infielder 
that he wanted him in cam p and 
satisfied. M artin w as given a $3,000 
hike over last season's salary. 
Stengel also sp oke to K onstanty 
at the training cam p . The veteran 
p itcher had been discontented with 
p reviou s term s and settled for the 
sam e salary as he received in 
1955. 
M artin, who can p lay second and 


X a v ip r, O . 91 (o v eilim e) n o n e 
showing the way with i.l and 1 3 ; ^ " " . *, 
p oints, St. M ichael’s defeated St.; M inneso ta se. M ich isa n 72 
M a in e 86. B ow doin 82 
A ( C 
T o u rn e» 
C h a m p io n sh ip 
« 
N o rth C a ro U n a S ta te 76, W a ke F o rest 64 
S erv ice B a sketb a ll 
2nd A rm y T o u rn ey 
C h a m p io n sh ip 
F t . K n o x 
108, 
F t. 
E ustis 87 
D isl. 25 N A IA P la yo ff« 


F’e te r’s of W esternp ort at F ro st­ 
bu rg yesterday by the score of 
49-.32. 
M ertz w as high scorer for West- 
crnp ort with 10 p oints. 
St, M ichael’s held a 12-p oint lead 


w au kee Braves today as ru m ors sea.son after they obtained him from 


a t 
i n t er m i s s i o n , 28-16. 


L i n eu p s ; 


St. M ich a el * 
K ir h v 
f 
W ed d ie 
{ 
.SittlK 
f 
K iR h l 
g 
E v a n s 
g 
D eia n ev f 
M cK en r ie g 
B a r r v 
g 
T o ta ls 
N o n SCO rin g 
subs: 
St 
M tch a el'-s 
K id - 
w ell, R o b erts, < a ta n ia , W er n er . W estern ­ 
p o rt 
N elso n , 
W ilso n , L a n n o n . 
S co re b y p erio d s: 
S T . 
M I C H A E L ’S 
...................... 17 
2$ 
39 
49 
W E S T F .R N P O R T 
6 
16 
29 
32 
O fficia ls — S h er t ter a n d 
B o llin o 


1 G 
F 
T 
W f s lf rn p o rt 
G 
F 
T 


1 
1 
1 
N ila n d 
f 
6 
2 
2 | 
3 
6 
6 
H er b er t 
i 
1 
2 
41 
5 
3 
13 
D a v i* 
« 
2 
2 
6' 


1 
0 
2 
M a r t i 
K 
3 
4 
10 
4 
7 15 
C R’neUi 
K 
1 
5 
7 
2 
1 
5 
F 'en h a ker f 
6 
1 
1 
I 
0 
2 
Thom p.son g 
0 
2 
2 
I 
1 
3 
T o ta ls 
7 
IB 
32. 
18 
13 49 


F IN A L S 
G eo rg ia T ch rs 112. Stetson 86 
M a son 
D ixon 
P la yo ff* 
f ; f 
t 
’ M U S t. M a r y* 107, L o v o la . 
R a ltn n o re 86 K lo n d yke 


letter from W. J . ".lake” King, 
gp ncral m anager of the All-Ameri-iLoins Uardinal.s. 
^can Soap Box D erby, Inc.: 


p ersisted that first basem an Joe 
Adcock will be p eddled to the St. 
Cleveland, signed a contract 
the 195f5 season today. 
He 


year after retu rning from s e r v i c e P eter -P i. 
g f t 


a first- 


Coach Cliff Towles’ Cap on Bridge 
High cagers won consolation hon- 
* "• 
p ' 
; 
........ n 
mp ntinncd as nnssit» le 
ors at Warden.sv.llo hy w h ip p in g :'^ roqu ircm onis of 
' T ' ’ 
B ravo rs(m g h t to gel 
Paw P aw 's Ihrates Satu rday nighi P« -rhy agroom onl was lo have at 
hv thP crnrp of 79 79 John McCau- 
.50 or m ore qu alified c o n t e s t - s e c o n d Pa.em an. 
by the score ol 79 m. Jonn Mcu .au 
< i a Ineal race each' 
The B raves are not hiding the 
ley banged in 36 p oints and S ir-; 
^ P the basis of p ast c o n -fa t’l 
w ant Red Schoen- 
bau gh collected 20 for the victors. 
R ay L argent p aced Paw Paw with 
J8 m arkers. 
Petersbu rg won the L5-B .section 
a! F riday night by downing Circle- 
ville’s Indians, 6,5-43, atte r .sp illing 


contract. He had requ ested a two- 
year agreem ent. 
Philley took p art in today’s work- 


2 
4 
0 0 
4 
4 
n 
3 
5 n 


18 


8 
0 
0 8 
4 12 
0 0 
0 6 
0 10 
0 0 
8 14 


^*",in Sep tem ber. Konstanty p osted a ^ Irian r 


_ 
was the last Oriole to s i g n . i ^ t T '" ^ ’ 
First basem an .Toe Adcock and ih e 3.5-year-oId 1‘hilley rep ortedly J 
f 
season 
^ 


•■For the p asi fivv yra rs one p f'right h.andor Bu h Bu hl have hefn.v.n| p eceive $2.1,0(10 in a one-.vearii’,, 
rnm rnational L e a g u e d " rL ""™ "' 
- ____ :______ 
„f « K,. c,v..,x n^v m entioned as nossit» le trade bad asicontraet. He had reou ested a two- . 
, 
v/ 
i 
r * i 
i 
<» 
joined the Y anks in the final weeks 
Total* 
of the season, bu t w as ineligible 
tor the World Series. 
st V at r kk ’s 
' 
ou t. 
Meanwhile, rookie Jo e Cristello 
grabbed m ost of the glory in a 
p air of intrasqu ad gam es, getting 
fou r sm g h s m five tu rns, stealing W g H g p H O IT ie R U R S 


S t. 
P a t. 
S ia let ta 
t 
S m ith 
f ’ 
O ’R o u rke 
e 
M a r tin g 
B u z z a rd g 
B ro d e 
T o ta ls 


W . 
V a 
C oll. 
to n fer en r e 
< ha m p io n sh ip 
W . 'Vs. T ech 83. G len v ille 72 
S m o ky 
M o u n ta in T o u rn ey 
C h a m p io n sh ip 
T u scu lu m 55. 
L in co ln 
.M em o ria l 81 
!4o. C o n f 
T o u rn ey 
W est V ir g in ia 
.58. 
R ich m o n d 
.66 
(ch a m p io n sh ip ) 
D ist. 29 N A IA 
P la v o ffs 
T en n . 
S ta te 
72, 
J a ckso n , 
M iss. 
(f in a le) 
W in sto n -S a lem 9 2. M d 
S la te 86 
(co n so la tio n ) 


« 4 


Midland Methodist won the p lay­ 
offs last season. 
H ere’s how the team s finished 
the regu lar season: 


W 
L 
fc) 
1 
F .ckh a rt 
B a p t. 
7 
8 
2 
P res b yteria n 
. 6 
9 
2 
E n g lish 
B a p t .. 4 11 
3 
D . A 
W 
4 n 
5 
S t. P a u ls 
. 
4 11 
5 
M id la n d 
M eth . 3 12 
6 
S I, 
J o h n a 
. . . 3 12 
W elsh 
.................. 
8 7 
Z io n 
...................... 0 15 


S t. 
M ich a el« 
14 
F ro stb u rg M e. 13 
E ckh a r t M e. 
. 13 
C o n g reg a t'n a l 
12 
S a lem 
. . 10 
S I. J o sep h ’« 
. 1(1 


Sunday ’s NBA Sco res 


Boston 128, Philadelp hia 114 
New York 118. Syracu se 111 
.Minneap olis 113, St. Lou is 84 
F'ort Wayne 103, Rochester 88 


w e 
reg ret dK’nst of the C ardinals who cou ld 
^thu f 
a Soap Box Derhv ag reem ent , 6olve their second ha.se pro blem s. 
!will not be offered for the cu rrent! 
M eanwhile. Rookie first basem an 
Fran k T orre who IS being groom ed j home and making 
I'he 
Dertiv for bovs 11 to 15 years 
to su cceed Adcock—it he is traded catches in left 
iield. 


Mays And Thompson 


O fficia ls 
B u z z a rd 
a n d 


8 
16 
38 
13 
19 
29 
R itt er 


two 
circu s 


ville’s Indians. 65A3. after sp . m 
g ^ 
co-‘sp onsored here - w a s beaned today at the B raves’ 
The 
.squ ad 
of 
Coach 
T.u 


53 T 2 
The vminL^sTrn^^^^^^ 
the 
Tim es-News 
and 
Filer cam p _ His p rotecUve helm et p re- H arris won both gam es over C 
1?» ' 
A i t inc-kv« 
Chevrolet. Inc.. with the C u m ber-vented seriou s inju ry. 
*,Harry B recheen's .squ ad. 6-5 
i.s 12 wins and 11 
. 
L ^ 
, 
, 
Association of Com- 
There w as a Big dent in the bei- ^. 2 . Rookie p itchers Kelly Se 
Hedgesviile em erged the victor 
.^e rm bt side of his ..„a 
w i.m .v.cU . 
. o. k 


Nine Win 15 Hams 
In Ridgeley Shoot 


Nine p ersons shared 15 ham s in 


N. B. A. 


R m h esier 9 4, 
M in n ea p o lis 96 
F T 
3 3 Jenkins To Retire 
J 
8 1 
NEW YORK. March 4 .,4"-Hayes 
0 6 Jenkins, Olymp ic and world figu re 
g 3g skating cham p ion, said today he 
is going to retire from rink com ­ 
p etition and stu dy law. 


4 4 
Jenkins, who will be 23 years old 
^ M arch 23, arrived by p lane today 
from Eu rop e, fre.sh from his Olym­ 
p ics and world m eet conqu ests. 


Do Yo u Need An Extra 
Ro o m ? 


When your friends or rela­ 
tiv es ore in town, colt for 
reserv ations at the 
CUMBERLAND 
MOTEL 
1 Mile East of City Limits 
on U. S. Route 40 


EKC« ll« nt Food Nea rby 
PHONE 
PA 2-9885 


. „ " r i e 'T n 
ñ . . . - » ¡,, 
. , , . ^ , „ « 
^ . ^ 0 „.v„p ow ..r. 
tA 
I hi’TP u rro 50 narlicinnnts in irn ip if. 
mu it 
S;*!. n .'^ T h " ? d S o g e , X ' r I t« - d nv o re thg n f,.$ entnes in sulfer.ng fro m a headache. 


eh m m atm g M u sselm an ■ s.^ p p lem e n :™ » t'd 
I"';' 
, 
in the indiai ro und. 4 7 4 .i, in nv er-.dt'dual.firalinns a 
,,.,..,1 H v n d m a t l Alld ForHPS 
time. Hedg esv dle, co ached hy ii,|l » 'o wev er, there v v ere o nly 4 a .actual n y i l U l l l d l l H IIU n i l U C 5 
- ....... 
s r - ' 
” 
To Play At Bedford 
W inners starting with 1948 were* 


! 
PHOENIX, Ariz., M arch 4 .4*' — 
.'.'(’’a " Hu me ru ns by Willie Mays and ,. 
. u la 
. 
j 
. .i, 
“f'-G le n r y Thomp son help ed a loam " 
■ " " '" " " 1 
'’f " " 
^ t't'm a n a g e d by Davey WUliams 


right side of his 
Wisniewski each Cave 
f 
H. A. Howney. Martinsbu rg. and 
rep orted 
he w as ,,p „„e hil in sp litting the mou nd 
( , ^ . 1 intra-squ ad gam e of the 
chores 
in 
the 
second 
six-innine 
________ 
w inners with three ham s each. Dr. 


Fights This Week 


c '? **1 
Bodby G em C u m berland; George cou rt for the D istrict 5 Clas.s C, 
t ( i m 
g h t 
w« iu <« 
Bu n ’ smith 


B’ 
K4 f» « 
ivf McCnole and Roger I'aylor, Wiley 
The winner of this gam e will p lay teiPCBst 
g h s 
Ntag. 
J., 
D istrict 6 winner on M arch 12 
'ro^iGHT _ Gen« roirp r. 
k*ii» 
•4' will op p ose 
, 
. 
, 
, 
J 
, 
. 
1 . 
, 
f *14 
Di*nn.v ,lfi P« r» z, Nrw York, a t Si 


Osbou rn, owns an 18-3 record. 
Thom as Faces Newbu rg 
In the'scm i-tinals of the Region 
, 
lll-B lou rney Fr.day n.ghl at P ar- « '" •" 'd Ru riis. Ke.sser: Ned .lones, 
sons 
High 
School, 
M ou ntaineer 
High School of Thom as U6-4' will ^ 
p lay 
Newbu rg 
High 
Preston cou nty tl8- 
?nd 
Kingwood 
High 
Preston ™ ‘[tW tia-4( w dl op p ose 
,„,,,rtnu ar1ers also 
( oalfon High of Randolp h cou nty 
in the second gam e. 
The finals 
will be staged Satu rday. 
C(sach F d sSupak’s IMou ntaineers 
■won the section 12-B event at Par- 
son.s Satu rday t» y downing Kas.son 
High in the finals, i9-62 
(» eorge L I p ^ |J C A n f p f P r i r p '^ 
Hu ffm an and Davis .slammed in 22 r i c d u v U l l l v l “ l i t l : o 
p oint.s each for the Tu cker cou n- « n y 
T/v-wr*« 
tians while Shaffer and Wilson had All" I OUni0y 
I COm 
16 p oints ap iece for Kas.son. Thom- 
a.s elim inated B ayard in the op en- 
lilCHMOND, \ a . M arch 4 
ing rou nd. 75-61, 
M ake Pairings To day 


gam e. 
Rookie Ryne Du ren, a fastballer, 
hu rled hitless ball tor tou r innings, 
hu t walked five, hit a batter and 
had one wild p itch. 


six-inning ¡,p p jgg 
su nny, 80-degree w eather 


t o d a y. 


T h o m p .s o n 
connected 
off 
J i m 


E rn est K p erjessy, Johnstown, P a., 
'an d E dgar H. McDonald, Heads- 
ville, W. Va., won two ham s each. 


Hyndinan High School will p lay. 
Midland: 
E rnesto 
Mellon. 
Me- Forties High School tonight at 8 
R icardo Mellon, McCoole; 1 o'clock on the Bedford High SchooL 


Hearn wilh one on in the first m-, 
Tho.se w .nnins one each were 
nine to clim ax a three-ru n rally.¡„^^¡^1 llou sew nrth, Betiford Val- 
while Mays, m ajor leagu e lead e r',e y, p a .; P au l Hornick. .Ir„ Johns- 
in 
1ÌI55 
wi h 
.SI 
hom ers, 
cam e 
p a ,. 
p „n ert C arder. Short 
Ibrou ehm the fifth off rookie rig h t-o a p , w . V a.: 
-1. Calvin Collis, 
l-\ n M ,r4 n »■ T3 
ItfwlLw,.^ ....AL_ — 


BRING YOUR 
FILM W O R K 
lo b* d« v*top *d 
RAND’ S 
to 


34 Hour Sorvico 


WE SELL FILM OF AU KINDS 


R A N D ’ 
S 


Cor. Bolbmoro and Contro St«. 


hander Ben Wilbu r with none on. 


Maxwell is Victor 


All - .America headqu arters also' 
Hyndman ha-- won 14 ou t of 24 
has cancelled the agreem ent ot gam es this .season. 
H agerstown. 
j 


Hundley And Floyd 
Vien’s Shuffleboard 
League Standings 


MEXICO CITY. M arch 4 UP - 
Billy Maxwell. Ode.ssa. Tex., p ro, 
today won the M exican National 
Golf Op en with a record 72-hole 


Bu nker Hill, W, Va.. and T. W. 
Hou ser, Johnstow n. Pa. 
Eighteen p articip ated in the p ro­ 
gram . 


Vernon Works Out 


SARASOTA. Fla , M arch 4 i/P - 


w>- 
The con.sistent 
'V irginia's Rod 
brilliance 
o f 
Hu ndlcv and 


i.s 
Shinn.ston 
and 
Fairm ont 
ballots ca.st by 31 news- « « i- ru rp i. u rBrt n 
Side High School. 
p ap er and radio men covering the 
u p 
in 
the 
the 
m axim u m 
voimg. 
Richniond'.s tu u rnanicnt ru nners- 
u p , who lu st to West Virginia 58.56 
in last night s finals, p laced two 
of their aces on the team —\Nalt 
Lysaght and Kd Harrison, each of 
6- 9 
1(1 vvhom 
tinished 
with 
145 p oints. 


7 . R r Rou nding ou t the team is Wash- 


2 - 2 '6 ington and Lee s p rize sop homore 
1 1 
Dorn 
Flora, 
the 
key 
figu re 
in 
« « 3 W&L’.s first-rou nd u p set of 
top - 


h ip 
A ll T im e high 
p ie 
H ea r t 
( iii» « 


n cr of seven gam es m a row. has cm Conterence Basketball 'rou rna- 
qu alified for the ('lass A, Region 3 
nicat 
was 
rew arded 
today with 
tou rney 
which 
gets u nder 
way their u nanimi» u ,s Mde< tion lo the 
Thu r.« >(iay at Fairm ont Stale Col- all tou rnainent team 
lege bu t p airing.s will not be an- 
Hu ndley, the indisp ciiNablc man 
nou nced 
u ntil today. 
One gam e for 
the cham p ion 
Mou nlaineer.s. 
will be p layed T hu rsday, 
one Fri- and Floyd, the two-time Ali-Ameri 
................ 
d ay and the champ ion.ship lilt on ^an who .set a tou rnam ent .scoring (.oidp 'n 
Satu rday. 
O ther team s 
event a t Alorgantown Hi 
higan 
E ast Diu c 
wn-iHMu. 
p ap er 
In the op ening gam e of the Class tou rnam ent. Each 
.A 
Region 4 tou rnam ent at Elkins 
Thu rsday. Grafton <9-12' will p lay 
Weston <.5-16 . 
Elkins High ' ‘29-2 
will tackle (ia^-'away on Friday. 
The chanip ii.inship contest is set for 
Satu rday. 


T I T L ) 
t . 4 S ! l 
M t n « « r 
G t 
I K *s» fin 
G 
H o itm a n 
16 2- 3 n 
W . P o lin * 
2 
D h m s 
7 8 16 22 
1.. 
P n lin g 
3 
Q u a lt r a 
6 1 - 2 i ( 
P ijth m a n 
2 
J 
S m ith 
2 6 
6 
4 
S h a lip r 
7 
M e y t r 
5 4 
7 34 
W ilso n 
7 
B 
S m ith 
2 6 - 1 4 G a 'n r r 
6 
T o ta l* 
32 15 2 1 79 B o t \» r (l 
1 
T o ta l* 
22 I f 26 6; 
S rn r« 
h v p o ri'id s: 
’MorNTAiNEF.R 
14 46 .I? 7'- p olled 114 p oints. 
K A S S O N 
I t 
25 
41 
62 
O fficia l« - r.ignrr » nrt Patmrr 


1 
A M ) R H 
\ N 
t)t> Is lO N 


j T > * m 
W 
1 
T r i 


b ro-stburs 
l/*'K ion 
SK 
14 
8t»b 


( u m b r r la iK l 
K . 
of 
( . 
- .SI 
21 
.7(18 


( a * 
T a ,\ tor s 
............... 4!» 
J3 
h81 


G o o d fello v i.sh ip 
( lu h 
................. 38 
;u 
(28 
f- o jt 
A shbv 
\ I W . 
, ................. 38 
34 
.528 
C lin R crn ia n s 
. . . . . . . . 
’ ( 
■9 
458 
1-rosi b u rg 
f .iR le* 
. . 
_____ 
. . . 26 
46 
161 
.« southern 
B .ir 
................. Î.1 
49 
319 


« ito d 'u m 
Inn 
. 
- 
26 
52 
278 
( i im b eija n '' 
T H iin 'in 
R 
M 
111 


N A T I O N A l , 
r » i \ i 6 i ( » \ 


7 e* n i 
w 
I 
f'« t 


t ’;i>p :r 
H f r f it 
( 
/■ 
- 
7(,1 
( , i r r n V 
t .,i-v ..s'fi 
. 
y : 
26 
7 22 


I- ish er 
A 
R o lcn fs e 
51 
' i 
7 >iX 


H -rnn * 
l. i» er n 
_____ 
?.’ ■ 
2. ' 
694 


W no dn en 
o i the W ..:; d , 
, 3 4 
19 t 


I M isth iirg 
K 
<« ( 
t . 
................. *! . 
'1, 
4R6 
M f 
.S« \ « ze V f W . 
....................... 
41 
49*, 


(.o ld en 
N im L'i'i 
................., 2'i 
4 : 
1(1'! 


( iiin h crl.in d M oose 
.............. 
2:- 
Ml 
V i b 


H i 
Dee 
( hit 
17 
t. : 
2 Ì6 


M iR he« l s( ore of 
74th w eek: 
B ill 
t.flU 


N ich o la s 
A ip n a , 
N ew 
\ n rk 
< if.v . 
T ele­ 
ca st 
hv 
D u M o n t, 
10 p 
m , 
F.S T. 
W E D N E .S O A Y 
J a ck l.a b u a . E a st M ea ­ 
d o w . 
N . 
Y . 
v s. 
.lo h n 
L 
S u lliv a n , 
o f 
^ 
__ 


^ " d 'l ei r r a s i h v ” 
B ( ! ’ ! 
^ 
p 
of 
2 64 ^ A r g en t i n a ’.? 
R o b er t o | M , ck ey 
V er n o n , 
d ela yeci 
en 
r o u t e 


F R I D A Y - i.u d w IK L iK h th u rn , o f B r it is h id e V i ccn z o . d ef en d i n g ch a m p , w a s t o s p r i n g t r a i n i n g b y t h e d ea t h o f 
second with 266. 
jh,« ; father-in-law. rep orted to cam p 
De Vicenzo staged a last-rou nd today for his first workou t in a 
rally, scoring a 65 today to p u ll Boston Red Sox u niform, 
within two strokes, after trailing j 
The ,37-year old Vernon, traded 
Maxwell hv six at the end of the from W ashington last November. 


H o n d u ra n , 
v s. 
L . 
C . 
M o rR a n . 
D a v to n , 
O h io , a t 
M a d iso n S q u a re G a r d en . N 
Y . 
B ro a d ca st a n d teleca st h.v .N B C . 10 p. m , 
1:,ST 
s \ T l ’R D A Y . J o ev 
G ia r d ello . 
P h ila d el 
p h ia . v s 
.la y A n d erso n , P h ila d elp h ia , a t 


third rou nd. .Maxwell s p rize money 
w as $1,200. 


w a s o n l y t h r ee 
p o u n d s o v er w ei g h t 


a t 
1 8 8 p o u n d s . 


SALE I MEN'S 
SPORT SHIRTS 


SPECIAL 
PURCHASE 


$4 95 Quolity 


O N 
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$4 
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(oil deluxe cleaning) 
3 Pant» or C'È A Q 
3 Shirts . .. 
I 
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3 Skirts (plain) 
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Valid AnyMme up to 2:30 
Open Monday Night 
UNTIL 9 P. Me 


GEORGE ST. 
CLEANERS, Inc. 


Cor. George & Union Sts. 
Dial . . . PA 2-5440 


Basketball Standings 


(Miifit *t.in itiii£ i.) 
B t 
T H F 
A S M K tA T F O 
T R f 
( o n lrren re 
.All <,« iTir» 
W 
L P et 
« 
I. P et 
\-W p>.l 
V ir s in i* 
10 
2 
. 8 ' ' 
21 
R .721 
(,♦’<> 
W a shin gton 
16 
2 
S t l . n 
7 
.731 
\ irg in ia 
Tech 
10 
7 
588 
14 11 .366 
R u h m o n d 
.. 
8 
6 
.521 
16 13 .557 
W m 
a nd M a r y 
. . . . 9 
7 
,563 
12 14 ,467 
F u itii,.r; 
7 
7 
.560 
12 16 .429 
l» ,i‘-d * n n 
. . . . 
7 
.4 F 
16 15 .406 
Ws« « h. a nd 
L ee . . . . . 8 
8 
,38.5 
12 16 ,429 
V M l 
3 
11 
.214 
4 19 .174 
T h e 
C ita d el 
0 10 
.006 
2 19 .09.5 
X 
conference 
ch a m p m n . 
S ta n d in g * 
in-: 
tu b , .12 
chid e only R a m e* a g a in st co U eg ia te opposi-, 


C 
G ilb er t. 
G ood 
iion i 


o re- B ill L a u r en t, P u r- 


F 
T 


W TiU e 
f , 
f 
T 
M er n m a n 
5 2 
5 :2 
R.id' 
1 6 2 2 
D 
O d o rff 3 
6 - 1 6 
C u n ha « » 
6 4 
4 4 
.Milln 
2 1-5 
f> 
R () do rtf 1 4 - 4 6 
B ill 
O ’r i i 1 5 - 0 2 
B r o o k* 
1 2 - 5 4 
T o ta ls 
14 13-'2t) 41 
S co re h v p erio d s: 
V A R D F S .S V lL i.fc 
. . . 16 
14 
B E R K K L K Y 
S P R IN G S 
lb 
39 
O flii ia is 
L o ren z 
a n d 
S h elto n 


p icked 
of 
1.55 
p oints 
Name Dixie Teams 
HALF Kill. \ U . Mart h 4 .4'- 
DcPau l and West Virginia have 
been chosen for tlie 
19.56 Dixie 
('lassie 
It was annou nced tonight 
t» y IV erett Case, coach of .North 
Carolina Nfate. 
Those two join Iowa and Utah 


a ? the fou r intersectlonal visitors 
who will op p ose .North C arolina's 
cz 
, * 
. 
r-i 
*■'>2 fnu r in the op ening rou nd ol 
ha.krttw ll lnu i'n„mvM, :ilat(.. 
('arnlina. Du ke, and Wake Forest 
'a re 
tolu exls 
tor 
the 
December 
; Waugh Is Loser 
------------------- 


T h e Pu b lic 


is in vited fo view 


th e co n stru ctio n o f 


Now being built 
on Vocke Road 


Office 702 Hill Top Driv e 


Phone PA 2-2322 


FT M \ ERS. Fla 
March 4 


Fieilnnctni ( , 
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V4 V S D . 
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-.pr G 
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< in-.e 
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Sheet* 
0 0- ; 0 


M en r « 
2 « • (' 
4 
u * u 
j 
L t !ose 
11 0 - i 
2 2 Jim wau gh. p romising 
right hand 
[.crner 1 
6 - 
2 
2 
p itc'hcr oi a tcw vcars ago 
who 
.Sm ith 
4 
8- 8 16 
, 
, 
7 
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V. B'hart 3 
9 - 1 0 r, I’’ trym g a com cbark with 
the' 
Totals 33-19-23 
85 Pittsbu rgh 
P irates, gave u p live: 


2 , 
hits in three innings today as the 
71 85 P irates went 
throu gh their first 
intra-squ ad gam e of the training 
sea.son. 
Wau gh was the losint p itcher as 
the 
Su keiorth.'" 
niafic u p of last 
year .s r ( -•'ila^^—beet 
the 
'Mu r 
tau g!;'-" 4 '! 
(iair Allie. p lay.'ni; :-;(orls'op tor 
the losers 
had .s;> 
chances and 
•niu iied three o f them fo r e rro rs. 
4 


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SIX 
THE 
C U M BERLA N D 
N EW S, 
C UM BERLAN D , 
MD., 
M O ND AY, 
M A R C H 
5, 
1956 
Phone PA 2-4600 for o WANT AD Taker 


SCORES 


G E N E R A L I N S U R A N C E 
AND SURETY BO N D IN G 


Fearer Loop 
Playoffs To 
OpenTonight 


Two Games On Tap 


For Beall Court 


Top 20 Teams 
Rated By INS 


NKW 
YORK. 
MARCH 4- 
<INS'—Here are the top 20 col­ 
lege basketball teams of the 
week as voted in a nationwide 
survey by International News 
Service. 
1—-San Francisco < 24-01 
2—louisville <23-3 > 
3— Dayton <23-3» 
4— North Carolina State <24-31 
5—Alabama (20-3» 
ft—Iowa < 16-5) 
7—Southern Methodist <22-2) 
ft—Illinois <18-3* 
9—Vanderbilt <19-4) 
10-Temple <21-3> 
Second Ten: l l —North Carol­ 
ina '18-5); 
12—Kentucky <19- 
5»; 13—Holy Cross ‘22-4►; 14— 
St .Josephs 'Pa.* <20-4l; 15— 
U C L A . < 19-5'; 1ft—Utah <21- 
5>; 17—St. Francis 'N. Y.) <19- 
2; 18—Ohio State < 15-5); 19— 
Houston <19-51; 20—Iowa State 
(17-4». 


Yankees Sign 
Billy Martin 


Konstanty In Fold, 


Each Get $20,000 


SATURDAY GAMES 
SC HOLASTIC 


16-B 
Sectional: 
(At 
Keyser) 


Piedmont 75, West Va 
Deal SI 
(Championship 
game) 
Ridgeley CS. EIK Garden Cl 
(Consolation 
Final) 


I I H Sectional; (At Wardensville) 
Berkeley Springs SS, Wardensville 41 
(Championship 
game) 
Capon Bridge 79. Paw Paw 7ft 
(Consolation final) 


C O L L E G IA T E 
Dartmouth N . Brown 79 
(two overtime*) 
Yale 82. Harvard 69 
Canisius M , Niagara 62 
Kordham 78. Seton Hail 76 
Pitt 
IOO. Penn State 90 
St 
John's i B k n .) 77, ( CNY 69 
Kentucky 101, Tennessee 77 
W Kentucky IOO. Middle Tenn 8.7 
Oklahoma A 
A M. 52 St 
Louis 49 
Bradley 69, Notre Dame 63 
Wichita 71, Tulsa 51 
Nebraska 64, Oklahoma 6.1 
Nebraska 64, Oklahoma 63 
(overtim e! 
San Francisco 65, Loyola (L A ) 48 
Washington 71, So. California 67 
Oregon 72. Washington State 58 
Stanford 72, San Jose State 70 
Utah 71, Wyoming 64 
Montana 63, Colorado A 
A M . 62 
Brigham Young 96. Denver 86 
Air Force Acad 
7$. Denver Frosh 60 
New Mexico 74. Utah State 63 
idaho State 63. Montana State 67 
Iowa 96. Illinois 72 
Navy 76, Arm y 67 
UCLA 84, California 62 
New Haiti Tchra. ti, Trenton Tchrs. 80 
Princeton 80. Cornell 76 
Wooster 85, Ohio Wesleyan 65 
Penn 60, Columbia 58 
Florida 82, Georgia 69 
Purdue 73. Indiana 71 
lafayette 111, Rutgers 69 
Allegheny 68. Wash. A Jefferson 57 
i Dayton 71, Cincinnati 58 
Missouri 85, Kansas State 7. 
I Geneva 134, Waynesburg 62 
St. Josephs 91 Delaware 77 
Albright 64. F'ranklin A Marshall 60 
Flast Stroudsburg 89, Kutztown 72 
Lycoming 104, West Chester Tchrs 88 
(Colgate 78, Rhode Island 68 
Wisconsin 76, Northwestern 70 
St. Peter'* N. J. 85 St. Bonaventure 74 
Miami. Ohio 96. Xavier, O 91 (overtime) 
Duquesne 83, St. Francis. Pa. 69 
Ohio State 96, Michigan State 84 
Minnesota 86, Michigan 72 
Maine 86. Bowdoin 82 


Af C Teeraey 
Championship 
• 
North Carolina Stat# 76, Wake Forest 64 


service Basketball 


?nd Army Tourney 


Championship 
Ft. Knox 108, FT. Flush* 87 


Dis!. 25 MAIA Playoffs 


FIN A LS 


Georgia Trhr* 112. Stetson 86 


Mason 
Dixon 
Playoff* 
* 
MC St. Mary a 107, Loyola. Baltimore 86 


W. Va 
< oil 
< onlerence 


( bamptonship 
W. Va. Tech 83. Glenville 72 


Smoky Mountain Tourney 


Championship 
Tusculum 55. Lincoln Memorial t i 


So. Conf 
Tourney 
West Virginia 58, Richmond N 
(championship) 


D ill, IS N AIA Plavnff* 


Tenn. State 72, Jackson, Miss. 84 
(finale) 
Winston Salem *2 
Md 
Slate IM 
(consolation) 


Californian Cops 
$2,200 With 277 


Tops St. Patrick's 
By Score Of 44-36 
Playoffs in the Fearer Memorial 
Church 
Basketball 
League 
of 
Frostburg will get under way to­ 
night at Beall High School. 
Quarter final contests will be 
staged tonight and tomorrow, semi­ 
finals on Thursday and the champ­ 
ionship game one week from to­ 
night. 
In tonight's opener at 6:45 o'­ 
clock, Coach Tommy Wilson's St. 
Michael’s quint will play Coach 
Jack Atkinson's St. Joseph’s cag­ 
ers of Midland. In the second con- 
test, 
Harry 
Baker's 
Frostburg 
Methodist team will oppose Harry 
Hitchins' Salem Reformed passers 
at 8 o'clock. 
Tuesday night Joe Carter's Eck­ 
hart Methodist five will meet Jack 
Burner's 
Klondyke 
floormen 
at 
ft 45 while Guy Mallow's Congre­ 
gational 
aggregation will tangle 
with Glenn "Speed'' Hanna's Welsh 
Baptist quint at 8 o’clock. 
In the Thursday semi-finals the 
winner of Monday's first game 
will meet the winner of Tuesday's 
first game and the winner of Mon­ 
day's second contest will do battle 
with the victor in Tuesday's second 
tilt. 
Officials for the playoffs will he 
J, Ray Hull, Enordo "Moose" Ar­ 
mine. Tommy Kelly and Waldon 
Skinner. 
Midland Methodist won the play­ 
offs last season. 
Here's how the teams finished 
the regular season: 
W L 
W k 


St 
Michael a 
14 
I Eckhart Bapt, 7 
8 


F rostburg Me. 13 2 Presbyterian 
, 6 9 


F:ckhart Me 
. 13 2 English Bapt . 4 l l 
( ongregat'nal 
12 
3 D. A W 
4 l l 
Salem 
. . I O 5 St. P a u l* 
4 l l 


St. Joseph'* . IO 5 
Midland Math. 3 12 


Klondyke .. . . 
9 6 St. 
John s 
. . . 3 12 


Welsh 
........... 8 I Zion 
................ 0 Ii 


Hagerstown 
High 
School, 
which plays Frederick Highs 
Cadets in the first Class "A " 
game of the Maryland District 
No. I tourney Friday night at 
Fort Hill High School, lost the 
final game of its regular sche­ 
dule last Friday at Chambers­ 
burg High School via the for­ 
feit route. 
Chambersburg 
was leading 
43*37, in the third period with 
1:20 remaining when one of the 
officials charged 
that Coach 
Mel Henry had uttered profane 
language against him. Henry 
said that such a charge was 
untrue 
A pollee officer was 
called to evict the Hagerstown 
coach hut the former refused 
to make Henry leave the gym­ 
nasium. When Mel insisted on 
remaining on the bench with 
his team the game was for­ 
feited to Chambersburg by the 
officials. 
The Hub wound up their reg­ 
ular season with a 14 ft record. 
Frederick closed its 1955-56 
•chedule last week with a 16-2 
record, winning its final game 
from Annapolis High School, at 
Annapolis, 59-36. 


C A T H O LIC L E A G U E 


SS Peter Pa u l 7 
o si Michael's 
2 4; 
St. 
M ary * 
5 
I Oakland 
I 
4 
Kcy*er 
3 
2 Westernport 
. 0 
6 
St. P a tric k ’* 
3 
4 


Thursday Game* 
SS Peter Paul at Westernport 
St. 
M ary's at St. Patrick 


St M ich aels at Oakland 


SS. Peter and Paul quint kept 
two winning .streaks going yester­ 
day by chalking up its 7th triumph 
of the second half championship 
race of the Catholic Youth League 
and posting its 22nd consecutive 
victory over St. Patrick's over a 
five-year span. 
The score of yesterday's game, 
played on SS. Peter and Paul court 
was 44-36. 
St. Patrick's led at the quarter, 
13-ft. and also at halftime, 19-16, 
but Coach Bob Mattingly’s aggre­ 
gation forged to the fore in the 
third period at 38-29 and never was 
headed. 
Mike Firlie and Carroll Wilt with 
12 and IO points sparked SS. Pe­ 
ter and Paul attack while Larry 
Burns and Julian Schonter collect­ 
ed eight tallies each. Mickey Scal- 
etta led St. Patrick’s with 14 points. 
With Jim Evans and Jim Sittig 
showing the way with 15 and 13 
points. St. Michael’* defeated St. 
Peter s of Westernport at Frost­ 
burg yesterday by the score of 
49-32. 
Mertz was high scorer for West­ 
ernport with IO points, 
i 
St. Michael's held a 12-point lead 
at intermission, 28-18. 
j 
Lineups: 


Ut. Nietos#!'* G E T Westernport 
C F T 
Kirby 
I 
1 1 1 Niland I 
ft 2 
2 
VV,.rim# I 
a 
ft 6 Herbert I 
1 2 4 
Situ* c 
S 3 13 Davis e 
2 
2 
6 
Hight 
* 
1 0 2 M art! g 
3 4 lh 
IF:*ans * 
4 7 15 C g'nelh 
g 1 5 
7 


I Delanev t 
2 
1 5 F'enhaker i n I 
] 


Mc Kenzie * 1 0 2 Thompson g 0 2 2 
B arry 
* 
1 1 3 
Totals 
7 
18 32 
Totals 
18 13 49 
Non scoring 
subs; 
SI 
Michael s 
Kid 


well, Roberts, Catania, Werner. Western 
port 
Nelson, Wilson, Lannon. 
Score bv period*; 
ST 
M IC H A E L ’S 
IT 
28 39 49 
W E S T E R N T O R T 
6 
16 » 32 
O fficials— Storm er and Bolhno 


SS. Feler-H G E T St. fa t. 
G E T 
Burns 
f 
2 
4 
8 Sc aletta 
I 
6 
2 14 
F man 
f 
O O O Smith 
f 
ft 
3 3 
Sc bonier 
# 
4 
6 
8 O'Rourke e 
I 
I 3: 
Firlie 
g 
4 
4 
12 Martin g 
4 
0 8 
Zarger g 
ll 
I) 
(I Buzzard * 
3 
6 8 
Aaron 
1 0 
6 
Brod# 
1 0 
2 
Wilt f 
5 0 
IO 
Total! 
IS 
« 36 
Barbe 
g 
O O O 
Totals 
18 
8 14 


Score bv periods) 
SS 
P E T E R P A U L 
6 
16 18 44 
ST 
P A T R K K S 
13 
19 29 36 
O fficial*— B u lla rd and Ritter 


ST. PET ER SBU R G . Fla . March 
4 i/pi—’The New York Yankees com­ 
pleted their signings today 


Mnrnn in 
New 
York 
and 
I 
informed 
the 
scrappy 
infielder 
that he wanted him in camp and 
satisfied. Martin was given a $3,000 
hike over last season's salary. 
Stengel also spoke to Konstanty 
at the training camp. The veteran 
pitcher had been discontented with 
previous terms and settled for the 
same salary as he received in 
1955. 
Martin, who can play second and 
shortstop, hit .300 in 20 games last 
year after returning from service 
in September. Konstanty posted a 
7-2 record, hut was ineffective dur­ 
ing the second half of the season J 
and was optioned to Richmond of 
the International League. He re- J 
joined the Yanks in the final weeks 
of the season, but was ineligible 
tor the World Series. 


Event Is Cancelled 


After Eight Years 
Braves May 
Trade Adcock 
To St. Louis 


Sunday’s N BA Score* 


Boston 128, Philadelphia 114 
New York 118. Syracuse 111 
Minneapolis 113, St. Louis 84 
Fort Wayne 103. Rochester 88 


Dave Reportedly 
Will Get $23,000 


BRADENTON. FLA., March 4~ 
GNS)—Trade winds blew in the 
Spring training camp of the M il­ 
waukee Braves today as rumors 
persisted that first baseman Joe 
Adcock will he peddled to the St. 
Louis Cardinals. 
First baseman Joe Adcock and 
right hander Bob Buhl have been 
mentioned as possible trade bait as 
the Braves sought to get a first- 
class second baseman. 
The Braves are not hiding the 
fact that they want Red Schoen- 
dienst of the Cardinals w ho could j 
solve their second base problems, j 
Meanwhile, Rookie first baseman 
Frank Torre who is being groomed! 
to succeed Adcoek—if he is traded 
—was beaned today at the Braves’ 
camp. His protective helmet pre­ 
vented serious injury. 
There was a Big dent in the hel­ 
met along the right side of his 
temple. 
Torre reported he was 
suffering from a headache. 


SCOTTSDALE. Ariz . March 4 <* 
—Outfielder Dave Philley, who hit 
299 for th* Baltimore Orioles last 
season after they obtained him from 
(Cleveland, signed a contract for 
■the 1956 season today. 
He was the last Oriole to sign . 
The 35-year-old Philley reportedly 
will receive $23 000 in a one-year 
contract. He had requested a two 
year agreement. 
Philley took part in today's work* 


I o ut. 
I 
) 
Meanwhile, rookie Joe Oristello 
; grabbed most of the glory in a 
pair of intrasquad games, gating 
four singles in five turns, stealing 
I home 
and 
making 
two 
circus 
catc hes in left held. 
The 
squad 
of 
Coach 
Luman 
Harris won both games over Coach 
I Harry Breeheen's squad. 6-5 and 
6 2. Rookie pitchers Kelly Searcy 
1 and Marvin Wisniewski each gave 
' up one hit in splitting the mound 
chores in the second six-inning 
game. 
Rookie Ryne Duren, a fastballer, 
hurled hitless ball for four innings, 
hut walked five, hit a batter and 
had one wild pitch. 


Do You Need An Extra 
Room ? 


When your friends or relo- 
tives ore in town, call for 
reservations ot the 


Rochester 94. Minneapolis 9ft 


Jenkins To Retire 
NEW YORK. March 4 <*-Hayes 
Jenkins, Olympic and world figure 
skating champion, said today he 
is going to retire from rink com­ 
petition and study law. 
Jenkins, who will be 23 years old 
March 23, arrived by plane today 
from Europe, fresh from his Olym- 
pics and world meet conquests. 


CUMBERLAND 
MOTEL 


I Mile East of City Limits 
on U. S. Route 40 


Excellent Food Nearby 
PHONE 
PA 2-9815 
Mays And Thompson 
Wallop Home Runs 
BR IN G YOUR 
FILM WORK 


Ie be developed 
•• RAND'S 


24 Mawr Service 


PHOENIX. Ariz., March 4 .4* - 
Home runs by Willie Mays and 
Henry Thompson helped a team 
managed by Davey Williams de­ 
feat a team piloted by Ray Mueller 
4-0 as the New York Giants played 
their first intra-squad game of the 
spring in sunny, 80-degree weather 
| today. 


I 
Thompson 
connected 
off 
Jim 
Hearn with one on in the first in­ 
ning to climax a three-run rally, 
while Mays, major league leader 
in 
1955 with 
51 
homers, came 
through in the fifth off rookie right­ 
hander Ben Wilbur with non* on. 


Nine persons shared 15 hams in 
the shoot held yesterday at the 
traps of the Ridgeley Rod and Gun 
Club. 
H. A. Downey. Martinsburg, and 
Tony Francis, Westernport, led the 
winners with three hams each. Dr. 
Ernest Eperjessy, Johnstown, Pa., 
and Edgar H. McDonald, Reeds­ 
ville. W. Va., won two hams each 
Those winning one each were 
Meairl Housework, Bedford Val­ 
ley, Pa.; Paul Hornick. Jr., Johns­ 
town, Pa.; Robert Carder, Short 
Gap. W. Va.; J. Calvin Collis, 
Bunker Hill, W. Va , and T. W. 
Houser, Johnstown, Pa. 
Eighteen participated in the pro­ 
gram. 


S P E C I A L ! 
Cleaning & Pressing 


(oil deluxe cleaning) 


3 Pant# or e * Q O 
3 Shirts 
| 
3 Sweaters 
q q 


3 Skirts (plain) 
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2-Hour Cleaning 


Volid Anytime up to 2:30 


Open Monday Night 
UNTIL 9 P. M. 


Hyndman High School will play 
Forties High School tonight at 8 
o'clock on the Bedford High School 
court for the District 5 Class C 
championship. 
The winner of this game will play 
the District 6 winner on March 12. | 
Hyndman has won 14 out of 24 
games this season. 


T O N IG H T 
Walla, e 
' Hud ' 
Smith, 


h*hiwrifiht .Hampton, ss Tons De M arfa. 
ai Boston Garden, in non dll# boul. No 
telecast 
T O N IG H T Gene Poirer. N iagara Fail*. 


vs 
Danny Jo Pere*. New York. at Si 


No Kolas Arena. 
New York (tty . Tele­ 
cast bv DuMont, IO p 
rn , EST . 
W E D N E S D A Y 
Ja ck l.ahu*. East Mea 


dew. N. Y . vs 
John 
L 
Sullivan, ol 


ire la n d 
al Syracuse, N. Y . Broadcast 


and telecast by A BI , IO p 
rn., FIST. 
F R ID A Y —Ludwig Lightburn, ©I British 


Honduras, 
vs 
L 
C. 
Morgan. 
Dayton, 


Ohio, at Madison Square Garden. N 
Y. 


Broadcast and telecast by N BC , IO p rn . 
E S T 
S A T U R D A Y —Jo ey Giardello. Philadel 


phta, vs 
Ja y Anderson. Philadelphia, at 


Paterson. N, J . No telecast. 


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Maxwell Is Victor 


MEXICO CITY. March 4 jp - 
Billy Maxwell, Odessa. Tex., pro, 
today won the Mexican National 
Golf Open with a record 72-hole 
.score of 264 
Argentina's Roberto 
de Vicenzo, defending champ, was 
{second with 266. 
De Vicenzo staged a last-round 
rally, scoring a 65 today to pull 
within two strokes, after trailing 
Maxwell by six at the end of the 
third round. Maxwell’s prize moneyl 
was $1 200. 


Vernon Works Out 


SARASOTA. Fla . March 4 if - 
Mickey Vernon, delayed en route 
to spring training by the death of 
his father-in-law, reported to camp 
today for his first workout in a 
Boston Red Sox uniform. 
The 37-year old Vernon, traded 
from Washington last November, 
was only three pounds overweight 
at 188 pounds. 
______________ 


GEORGE ST. 
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A M i R H UN 


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Basketball Standings 


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Phone PA 2-2322 


W e moke of! types of low- 


cost home loans, tailored 


to your individual require­ 


ments. Stop in soon and 


talk over your home loon 


needs with us. 


\ 
f 
\ 
E 
MOTORISTS* 


' W 
k 
FRIEND, Inc 


173 Baltimore Street 


N O W P A Y IN G 2 % INTEREST O N S A V IN G S ! 
SKATING 


Every Tuesday • Thor* 


Admission 
C f l f 
Skating 
v W l 


Auto Accessories 


Seat Covers 


Motor Oil 


Tires 


at LOW EST PRICES 


M#mp#r F#d#'o! Deposit Insuronc# Corpora* on 
-y/»yyqjr owoff ty y qyyyyqpfqxy 


A T TH E CITY H A L L SQUARE 
ARMORY 


Ph<?ne PA 2-4600 for o WANT AD Taker 


TH I UTTLI WOMAN 


THE CUMBER LAND NEWS. CUMBER LAND, MD., MONDAY. MAR CH 5. Ì956 
SEVEN 


TV Today 


TTi* prefram s llsteg below ere furniobed by the telc?tiloB 
•tationo. The Cumberland Newt is net responsible (or late 
ehanget. Alt times are Eastern S andard. 


W TO P (C BSt, C able *. 
Chanael * 
W M A L (A B C I, Cable !► 
Channel 7 
W E C (N 'B O , Cable 4. 
Channel 4 
W TTG (DuMont). Cable i. Channel 5 


Cable 


K D R A . Pllttburfh, 
T4«sv 4. Harrisonburg, 
M 'J C r, JohnstosTB, 
W E B G , Altoona, 


Cbanne) i 
Channel 
1 


Channel 
• 
Channel tO 


“ E r — thank you — but I enjoy standing.” 


Fourth Binaural Concert Set 


The fourth binaural stereophonic 
Found concert will be presented at 


SS. Peter and Paul Hal! at 8:30 


This group ‘ will play. “ Cornin' 
Through The Kye,” “ I'll Follow 
.My Secret Love,” “ Sophisticated 
„ 
Lady,” “ When You Wish Upon A 
p. m. Wednesday, and will feature: 
> 


presentations by Austria’s leading Wont The Strings of My Heart.” 
concert group, the Wciner K o n z e rt : Over The R ainbow,” “ Oh What A 


thramcln. the Florence May Fosii «'‘f ! “ “ ! 
" .7-""S J 'S '’ 
, 
_ , 
, 
, 
, 
, (ind har Away 
and 'I Got R hy- 
val OVchestra and the Leonard 
.. 
Sorkin String Symphonette. 
j 
concert in the series 
The .Auslnan concert group tvilh^,,, 
presented .March 2t. and 
Tunes. 
jg scheduled for 
''""'‘¡April 4 at 8;30 p. m. 


bring 
“ \iennese 
Folk 
“ Sentimental Viennese,” “ ilappi 
ness.” “ Old Vienna Dance,” “ Vien­ 
na Waltz” and “ From Home.” 
“ T h e 
Sorcerer s 
Apprentice,” 
which is a humorous translation of! 
a Goethe ballad into music by 
Paul Dukas, a native of Paris, will 
be played by the Florence May 
Festival Orchestra, under the ba­ 
ton of Vittorio Gui. 
“ The 
Little 
Symphony. 
Opus 
44,” by Hans Pfitzmcr, will ^harc 
the Festival Orchestra’s presenta­ 
tion of the 
Dukas composition.; 
The Leonard Sorkin String Sym­ 
phonette p r e s e n t a t i o n s will 
he popular music done m lormals, 
with an interspersing of .swing. 


WIFE PRESERVERS 


Cabla 
Cbannel 


C:4r<— 4-Today on Farm 4 
7;«>_2 W ill R oger* J r 9 
4-Today 
4 
Today 
2 
Today 
6 
W ill R ogers Jr . Id 
1.00—2 Capt. Kangoroo 9 
Capt. K'garoo JO 
9 .00—2 Mark F,vans 
9 
4 Little R ascal* 
4 
5 Thoufht. 
K n* 
.t 
Wayne Griffin 
2 
Faith for Today fi 
R ov R oger* 
10 
9 ;iO—4 R omper R oom 
4 
G arry Moor« 
0 
10.05—2 G arry Moore 
9 
4 Dins Dong S ol 4 
5 Kaleidoseope 
'S 
G arry Moore 
2 
Ding Dong S ol fi 
R enal Theatra 10 
in:l.V— 
.Music 
Shorts 
10 
10:30-2-Arthur Godfrey 9 
4 Ernie Kovsc* 
4 
Woman * Angle 2 
Frnie 
Ko\acs 
fi 
F.inte Kovacs 
30 
Ifl l.V 
Arthur Godfrey 2 
1 1 :00— (H o m e 
4 
Home 
6 
Fl.Mtns Inn 
10 
ll:]S - 3 T h is I» Story 
7 
U.30—2 S ln k a It R ich 
9 
2-Studio 7 
7 
.Strike It R ich 
2 
Strike It R ich 
10 
lndu*tr> P iade 3 
13:00—2 V aliant L.adv 
9 
3-Cartoon Concert 7 
4-Ten'»*e* Erni« 4 
3-I^oney Tunea 
5 
News 
2 
Man To Man 
3 
Ten’ssee Frnie 6 
Little Theatre 
10 
1*;1S—2 Love of Life 
9 
K n. 
KaiToon 
2 
I.ove of IJfe 
3 
Ixive of Life 
10 
12:30-2 S ’ch for Tom 'w 9 
3-Clown 
Corner 
7 
4 le a er V 'r Nest 4 
5 Aftern’n Movie .1 
S'ch for Tom ow 2 
S ’ch for Tom w 3 
T ea er Y ’r Neat 6 
New* 
10 
12:45—2-Guiding Light 
9 
Guiding Light 
2 
Guiding lig h t 
3 
Guiding Light 
10 
1:00—2-Jack Pa ar 
9 
3 Toadies Theatre 7 
4 Playhouse 
4 
B ill 
Brant 
2 
Tennessee Ernie 3 
S'ch for Tom’ow fi 
Ja c k Pa ar 
10 
1 :1A— 
l^ ve of Life 
fi 
l;30-2-Love fitory 
9 
K a y ’a Kitchen 
t 
Lgive Story 
3 
Feature Theatre 6 
I/i\e Story 
10 
2:00-2 R oht Q Lewis 
9 
5-Ladie* Be S'ted 5 


( bannel 


Popular Science 2 
Playhouse 3 
3 
R obt Q Lesvi* 10 
2:15—2 Donna Dougla* 9 
\ aliant Lady 
2 
Cnils'.ng 
.Seaa 10 
2:30—2 Hou^e 
Pa rty 
9 
3 tju u Club 
7 
4 Afternoon 
4 
Meet .Neighbor 2 
House Party 
6 
R oller 
Dei by 
10 
?.t.V 
Movie Uu;£ 
6 
3.00— 2 Big 
Pajoti* 
9 
3 T ilm 
I-eslis.il 
7 
4 .'latinee Thetre 4 
Big Pa.votf 
2 
Matinee The tie 3 
Matinee The Ue 6 
Big Pa\off 
10 
3:SA-2 Boh tio sb y 
9 
5 T T'iine T h ie 
5 
Playhouse 330 
2 
Tu be an’nied 10 
4.00-21Tck Temple 
» 
4 Date With Life 4 
5 Brighter I'a v 
5 
Bnghlei 
D.<v 
2 
Bnghtci 
Day 
3 
Dale With Life 
6 
Brighter Day 
10 
4,15—4Mod n R om cea 4 
5-Set l et Sjjpi m 
.5 
Set ret .Sloim 
2 
Secret Sioim 
3 
Mod R omances fi 
Secret Sloim 
10 
4:30— 4 Queen for Day 4 
5-on Y T Account 5 
On A r Account 2 
On A ’r Account 3 
• 
Queen f or Day 6 
On Y ’r Ac ount 10 
9 :00—2-LitUe Margie 
9 
3 Mickey Mouse 
7 
4 Pinky Lee 
4 
5 Lam b hes.sion 
5 
Video 
Adven. 
2 
Pink y Lee 
3 
.Superman 
6 
M il key .Mouse 10 
5:30—2 Foreign Im ent 9 
4 Houdv Doodv 
4 
W ild Hill HifkoK 2 
Hewriy Doody 
3 
Howdy Itoody 
6 
«.00-2 Cisco hid 
9 
3 Clown Corner 
7 
4 b'Tlight The'tre 4 
5 Hoppit> Skip it.v 3 
News, B ill, Buiz 2 
Western Trail* 3 
Sports 
fi 
News R eview 
in 
«18 
News 
fi 
Coke Tima 
10 
«,8 0-2-Spotltght 
9 
3 T ’n i C.ountry 7 
6-Cindy Lou 
S 
News 
2 
I I^ se Lucy 
« 
Topper 
10 
6:45—2 Edwards News 9 
3 News, Weather 7 
4 News, Weather 4 
Pitt Fade, Spti 2 


1 able 
i:dwards News 
3 
7.00-2 SoldTs of F ne 9 
3-Jim Gibbons 
7 
4 Sherlock Holmes 4 
5 (iildersleese 
.A 
Monte 
Cristo 
2 
Film 
Theatre 
3 
Break the Bank « 
Sports 
10 
7:1.V—3.1 
i>alv News 
7 
5 Kitchen 
Magic 
S 
.1 Dab New* 
10 
7.30—2 R obin Hood 
9 
3 Topper 
7 
4 (lordon M acR ae 4 
5 1 Spy 
.V 
Time Out 
2 
Disneyland 
3 
Gordon .MacR ae fi 
1 thel ii Albert 10 
7.4S—4 News ( atacan 4 
i:ddy 
Arnoid 
2 
News Caravan 
6 
1:00—2 Burns A Allen 
9 
3 R eader'a Digest 7 
4 Producers Show 4 
5 i:\emng Movie 5 
Pinducets Show 2 
Prm liuers .Show 6 
R uins k Allen 10 
I . .70—2 Arthur Godfrey 9 
3 V ee of l irest'e 7 
Eddy Arnold 
3 
l.a w i’ce VVfik 
10 
9 .00—2 I Love Lucy 
9 
3 Dot tv .Mack 
7 
1 1,0 V e Lucy 
3 
9 :30—2 Dece'ber Bride 9 
3 Medical Hon'n* 7 
4 R 
Montg ery 
4 
5 R oving 
3 
duherace 
2 
Dece'ber Bride 3 
R . 
Montg'ery 
fi 
Fam ed P l’h »a 10 
10:00—2-,Sfudio One 
9 
3 M c« b'k 
Music 7 
Studio One 
2 
R oving 
3 
.Studio On* 
10 
l«;H(U-3Top Plays 
7 
4 1 le d 3 Lives 4 
T ale* of ( 'filrj( fi 
10:4.1-5 Mad 
.Sq 
Gdn. 5 
Playhouse 
3 
11:00—2 11 P. M R eport 9 
3 News, Weather 7 
4 News 
4 
5 News, Feat’ma .5 
World Tonight 
2 
Big Town 
6 
News 
30 
U .l> ^ 2 Patti Page 
9 
3 Sports, Theatre 7 
4 W’etther, .Sports 4 
Arm or Theatre 2 
Playhonae Ten 10 
U.»0—2 (’hina 
Smith 
9 
4Tontght 
4 
Big Picture 
fi 
Mark fiaber 
10 
1t:48 
News, Sport* 
3 
12:00—2 M r , Mrs North 9 
3 H e*rl of City 
7 
New* 
6 
Film 
Theatre 
10 
12 :30— 
News 
Theatre 2 
1:00—4 Inspiretton 
4 


DAtLY C R O S S W O R D 


CLEANING 
SPECIALS 


. CASH and CAR R Y 
3 Sweaters. 
3 Pants ... 
3 Plain 
Skirts 


SPECIAL EQUIPMENT FOR 
WHITE CLOTHES 


WE ALSO DO 
CUSTOM CLEANING AND 
HAND FINISHING 


SPECIAL— l.HOUR 


CLEANING SER VICE 


Mary’s Cleaners 


157 N. Mechanic St. 
PHONE PA 2-2040 


Enriched bread and whole wheat 
bread make contributions of iron, 
and the R vitamins .such as thia­ 
mine. nnacin and nbollavin. They 
also provide energy. 


^ O A H H uh SKUM* 


h\ 


ACR OSS 
4 Part of 
22 Boat 
1 R iver in 
"to be ‘ 
23 Marine 
New .Mexico 
5. Ttmifl 
h.shes 
5 Portico 
tcolloq > 
24 Very 
9 Pinaceous 
6 Civil wrong 
hot 
tree 
7. To 
rondi* 
10 Monks’ 
he 
ment 
hood.s 
in 
25 Single 
12 Engli-sh 
debt 
unit 
author 
S Southern 
26 Little 
13 Of an area 
river* 
girl 
14 Tree 
9 Steep. 
28 Second­ 
I.*» f=:'xil! 
rugged rock 
ary 
16 Board of 
11 Le.ss quickly 30 Parts 
Ordnance 
15 Turkish title 
of 
(abbr ) 
Ik Nobleman 
window 
i: 
Science of 
19 Metallic 
frame.s 
earth and 
rock 
31 African 
rock.s 
20 R ecord of a 
ante. 
20 Mandate 
ship's 
lope 
21 Operangs 
voyage 
32 F'ashiona 


m s m s a o a 
mam 
^mmm Emaa 
aiaana 
aoi 
as 
mm 
a B Q a H a laaaD 
f Q g i a 
S Q Q 
IHDiaa QSBSf3EI(!] 
DCS 
QB 
3D 
annaS n m m m 
\ 
Bmmm Eiaena 
mmmm laaBis 


s> 


Saturd ey'e Anewer 


3.1 A dish 
of boiled 
meat anri 
V pgetables 


.3 .') S u rc e s s n r 
Audience 
.30 Vfx 
40 Bibliral 
name 


'EAR A JO A H - \NOULP 
hOU CALL AM EFA BEZ 2 L& R 
A M A STER I H -the AR T 
OF ^LED 6ER . DOMAIN ^ 7 
PR IO R SiM C iA tR . 


N E u J 
V o Q t < a T Y ^ 
A l . y 


22 Fleshy fruit 
23. Tally 
26 Sweetening 
27, Terminal 
part of arm 


AiOAH — 
D O ES 


Y d ü R m i i p e n e e d l e 
y o u 


N N H EN 
S U E 
w a n t s 
F jiii 
MONEY 7 
. 
IV A M 
. s r e e c e 
PAl m e r t o n i, pe-NV. 


28 Storage cnb 
29 Affirmative 
vote 
30 Method* 
34 Music 
note 
35 Ha.slen 
36 Fate 
37. Bend to 
the knee« 
39 Sultan’s 
decree 
41 Ga.slropod 
mollusk 
42 R efresh 
43 Blunders 
44 Teases 
(slang) 


DOWN 
1 Web-footed 
birds 
2 A state 
3. Youth 


Z 
Q Z F 
T Z X J 
T 


F L R C P Q R A , 
Q Z F 


M Z L C G X U C R — P Y 


N «re'f the kind of event that always seems to 
take a Uttle more money than you have on hand . . . 
when borrowing seems t>oth a neeessarv and sensible 
solution And tli. t s ju.-it the time to t.:ike yi»ur problems 
to th*‘ leader in tl'.e • -■n.-umfT tinanee fu ld, to ask 
the help of the be t tnuiied staff anywhere. 
Nearly tvo) mi liou nie^ rnd women each year find 
that HFf' rnake.s a praefice of getting the money into 
your hands jUrt a.s qui< kly as ¡kk-: , ihle. If you have a 
steady income and can make regular monthly 
payments, you meet the p-nncipal requirement for 
borrowing at IIFt'. The ’aniple chart below shows 
loan ainuunPs, and 
8 .vielei-tion of 
repayment plan.s. 


Household provides 
life insurance 
protection on all 
loans without extra 
cost to >ou. 
i.au . 
America'f old cnt and (artjest -onsu mer finance company 
^ “ OUSEHOID FINANCE 


X ^^ o y i4 y u U c c ft 


12 South Centre St., S. E. Cor. Boltimore 


2nd Floor — PHONE PA 2*5200 — Cumberland 


to n n s M a d t to Re sid tn ts 
- j/ S e a rh ; To u n s 


Saturday'» 
Cryptoquote; 
D A Y S— HAR DY. 
Distributed by King 


Contract Bridge 


y M R 
Y O 


O Q Z L C 


P R L Z . 


D U LLE ST 
OF 
LULL-HU ED 


Features Syndirair 


I M H UN G PyA N D 
irs STILL AM HOUR 
7D SUPPER TIM E m 


OB 


- 5 ^ GOOD tm M G I J U S r 5 
( WAPP£ N£ D t o MAV'E t h is 
r BCOOM ÍN m/ HAN'DOQ YCXJ 


IS STIUU DUvTieELS N6> I LL NAVE TO 
SPiM TWE TCP TD «v-OvV IT POvVN ' AEG YOU 
ZtcO 


LOOK, WR yS6, THIS 
15 SUP9 0SSD TO IS A 
VÄCATION.MmOifliO 
Shopping ikstsao op 
TÄ&5.N6 along w 
YOU to 6AWK AT 
A1R *»UWES 


/ r 5 A D SA G f^^tT. 
m U.T, $E| YOU AT 
0iNki|g...7:50 ON 
T-HE DOT. 
^ 


{ B ü ñ o í ^ 
T fk q H A P M C flll, 
YOU OLD iRliktOgCN'. 
WHAT AÍS YOU 
DOING 


A MOTEL IN JACKSONVHU,FLORIDA. 
'imm 


1% AIOUT TO FLY AlOARO THE CARR It 
"TIPPECANOE”. WE’RE HIADlNS FOR 
MANEUVERS INTNE MEOlTERRANEAM 
RiSNT now 1% ON MY WAY TO LUNCH 
YdTH A llTOF NEAVEN, A GlAMOIR 
QUEEN WHO HAPPENS TO 8E MY 
FiANCiE. C'MON, YOU GOTTA 
MEET HEI^. > 


MIZ HAR GR OVES- 
IM R UNNIN' PER 
MAYOR AG'INST THAT 
w uthless Riddles 
, BARLOW, AN' -UH" 


YE'LL GIT 
MY VOTE 
PER SHORE, 
SNUFPY- 


PER VIDIN'-^^ 
YE 00 ME 
ONE LEETLE 
FAVOR 


JEST NAME 
IT. MIZ 
HAR GR OVES 


DUR N THAT 
R IDDLES BAR LOM!^ 
NOW I KNOW WHY 
HE DON'T CAMPAIGN 
ON MONDAYS 


' WfTH His MIND ALWAYS UPON f SOON'E^ 0« LATIS? SOME 
BUSINESS*“ BUT sTiicrLy-HC'sl Sm art cookie vmas bound 
TO Pur IN A 0<D FOR HIS 
0ANKBOCX.' AND WITH r* 
AAV FUTURE 66TS CUT 
ALONÓ TV€OOTTfP LINE, 


ÍÍÍ4 


1 
5 


i 


5 
*> 
7 
4 


lO 
It 


i l 


i4 
15 
Ito 


r? 
'i8 


% 


20 


21 
j X 


25 
24 
25 
2te 


27 
w 


d 
d 
Í9 
io 
3 . 
31 


34 


f 


55- 
3fc 


37 
is 
39 
4 0 


*11 


i 


41 


45 


HONESTSANPY 
YOU SAY THAT 
MR . BI6 PAT IS A 
R OOR MAM.'r CANT 
FI66CR THAT, CAUSE 
EVlR YBOPy SAYS 
HE'S 60T LOTS AN' 
LOTS O'MONiV/ 


iU-L»-er. 


D O GS 
ANJST BE 
ON LEASM 
IN 
PAR HC 
I \ 


. 3 


V 
• A l 


•C____ 


C 


D A ILV CKYPTCHH’O TE — Here’s, how to work it; 
A X V I) L B A A X Pv 
is L O N U F K L L O \5 


One letter simply stands for another. In thus example A is used 
for the three 
L's. X for the two Os. ele. Single letters 
apos- 
trophies, the length and formation of the word.s arc 
all hmU. 
Each day the code letters are different. 


A Cryptogram Quotation 


TTUEDE! I PiyE D L O T S C F 
COOFtES AND LEAOvIADE- 
PM DEAtTV fO Q THE 
CMfLDDEN- 


V 
i 


VUVY- 
LOOKS 
GOOD! 


MEQfc GOME MV 
FT?IENDS, BETV4 
-*TUFOF MUST 
BE T H IR T Y 
O F T H E M ' 


PINE, DONNIE-SHtOw) 
THEM INTO T H E 
^ 
U V N G DOOM. 
THIR TY 
OP 'EM?/ 


»-1 


BY GOLLY I'M g e t t in g OUT OF WEQE 
BEPODE rv. s t a m p e d e d TO A PULP! 


SUR E, TWE MOOS GOT augOD* 
STAINS ON rr. we CAME IN 
W ER &BLEED iN G U K E 


lOJD 
Í T S A L 


Dy Josephine Culbertson 


HIM TO MOVE " “ 
THATS 
AND WE tdOVEO; ' 
ÁS TO WWER E WE tSNOW- 
MOW SHOULD I KNOiVP 


THER E* PR ESSUR E ON PP ES" 
SUR E POibrrs w a s STOPPaD 
WIS BLEEDiNG. WIS FEET APE 
e l e v a t e d p o r ^OCK-AND 
t v e s t a r t e d a f ir e 
TO K EEP UIM 
WAR M. 


« o a Pit w I 
;T*a Sf 
' 
ekojif« ttftwji» 


<b< 


NOW TO W iPB WI5 FACE 
an d c le a n ’IM gP* YES, SIR , 
‘‘■''VvOUR DOCTOR ’S WITH 
■ AND YOU’R E OONNA 
BE OKA-V. 


DENNIS THE MENACE 
By Hank Ketchom 
GR IN AND BEAR IT 
By Lichfy 


A Q L L L R IM iST 


AN YO N E who pi'ks up a hand 
in which thr hignrst card is a 
nine-iipol can t be h.amed iur feo). 
mg that he i.i very m 
h o.it 
it <m th a t dial. H-w'vcr, a 
ha' 
been f-marked 
bf ote 
hi 
thing? can happen at ihe ftriagc 
table. For example; 


S'-) ith deal<'f. 
Both sides vulr.£','-ah)i’ 


opening lead of the o’ewce of dia* 


m ond:,; 


It did.n't C7 n occur to South— 
wrm V 
. i l;, nx of it ’’—to put 
I , I.,. Ü a '.'-nti t> n from dummy; 
) 
t 
'■"d < n th'' 
‘' ‘ 0 , and whc-n 
Fa t 
i l a . i ' l th e i: ne and found 
hu 
in pf> 
Ì, 
rt '-I a 1 M' 
ss.i.n of the Iri'k, 
I' ') asvmiahed to 


MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS 
Yoo 
0#t 
.1 
! 
1 
12 
4 


$100 
t 
'!■ > • ' .s 4'> 
2(10 
,)ti ’ 


.too 
1 ’ . 'f. i 
Id 
50t> 
, : , 
i 
- 
"1 
1 
1 
k't.:': ; 


1000 
. . - . f i 
“ 
, ' 
4 


r 
, 
• 
. 
/if / e/ 
, 
- 
* 
/. /.U- ,'iillK- 
r • 
,j • .. 
, U’i 
* 1 i • 
<“ hi -'If t 


Í 


. Í: 
, r 
i f ' 


fi / 


1 


r if".o 
t .> '■< A 
1 ar.. 


llmrc aft cr. How- 
,iwa9 »a:-;y 
,/ 
),ua' his part- 
fcr the ff'turn 
the 


t r 


w a • 


Í 
t 


1 *-a 


West gave cons.derable thoug'- ‘ 
to samifu'.ng at s;x h 
nd , 
hut dec:ded ag8.r.---t it-tnfn h' 
ga-.e even n-orf- tiio-ght to tiv 


o p p ' s m g 
bid'i. r. g, 
a n d 
f na, , 
came out w-rm ih»» rcr.arKau.c 


a <i.o, and so the contraftj 
t.va'f.n on the sp<'t. the do.: 
r.-'> taW ng 
one diamond and j 
. 
clubs 


(^ran* nil that We d wa.s lucky 
^ gi * tre r's lit he Oid. it wn ,.d . 
' :a • n c a,i t,. onen.ng b ad 
- ^ ; 
, -a’ ''■r a, ar I .<■ ’ go at 
T' f-r*' 
v-a f p.ann.ng and 
n vV-'V 
• .f,n. Ii<- fore- 
a* • ' f 
' .1 1 r '• t 
'Ao-re , 
j I - at N ' i ’ h 3 s p a c e . 'u. t 
•. ' r- a grf at many dis- 
larer W* !«t also as. 
■ .d, co rre ctly 
that he wouid 
L bc' ab> to ca^h t vo d amor.d.s. 


J 


■’ , d. 81 
w V d f ■ 
. ard 
f -r 
£ 
r. 
The 
t:;a’ 
t. . i: 
W «S 


). ■ pe t 
r r ir. 


tvdb r.g strongly indicated 
S' .’h had the club kmg; 
\s c>ts low diamond lead 
r -Í 'f en the one reasor.a’. ie 
at he cru’d put h.s fart­ 
er a clv.b return. 


) / 


-J 


^ 
9m. 


“ He 


D uorcuecl i.)' ' K n g l e a ' 
•Wr'l, 
not invisible ink. 
know that much.” 


. . Idling daughter about his rosy prospects! 
hh union is going to demand when their 
contract expires!” 


Phone PA 2-4600 for a WANT AD Taker 
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, 
CUMBERLAND; MD., MONDAY, MARCH 
5, 
1956 
SEVEN 


THI LITTLE WOMAN 


■ 
j 
Th* program* luted below are furnish*# by the telcrtilep 
atattone. The Cumberland New* ii not responsible far late 


■ 
ehange*. All time* are Fatten* Standard. 


W T O P IC B M , Cable *. 
Channel » 
ADRA, PltUbnrgb, 
WM A L (A B O , Cable I*. 
Channel I 
W ST A, Harrisonburg, 
W B C (N B O , Cable «. 
Channel 4 
W JA C , Johnstown, 


W TTO (DnMont). Cable S. Channel 5 
W I KG, Altoona, 


“ F.r — thank you — hut I enjoy standing.” 


Fourth Binaural Concert Set 


The fourth binaural stereophonic 


Bound concert will be presented at 


SS. Peter and Paul Hall at 1:30 
p. rn. Wednesday, and will feature 


presentations by Austria** leading 
concert group, the Weiner Konzert- 


Rhrameln, the Florence May Fest: 


val Orchestra and the Leonard 
Sorkin String Symphonyte. 
The Austrian concert group will 
bring 
‘'Viennese 
Folk 
Tunes.” 
“ Sentimental Viennese,” ‘ Happi­ 
ness.” “ Old Vienna Dance.” ‘‘Vien­ 
na Walt!” and “ From Home.” 
“ T h e 
Sorcerers 
Apprentice,” 
which is a humorous translation of 
a Goethe ballad into music by 
Paul Dukas, a native of Parii, will 
be played by the Florence May 
Festival Orchestra, under the ba­ 
ton of Vittorio Gin. 
“ The 
Little 
Symphony, 
Opus 
44.” by Hans Pfitzmcr. will share 
the Festival Orchestra’s presenta­ 
tion of the 
Dukas composition 
The Leonard Sorkin String Sym* 
phonette p r e s e n t a t i o n s will 
be popular music done in formals 
with an interspersing of swing 


I This group 'will play, “ Cornin’ 
Through The Rye,” “ FU Follow 
|My Secret Love.” “ Sophisticated 
I Lady,” ‘ W hen You W ish Upon A 
Star,” “ Bye Bye Blues,” “ Zing 
Went The Strings of My Heart,’ 
Over The Rainbow',” ‘ Oh What A 
Beautiful 
Morning.” 
“ Long 
Ago 
and Far Away ’ and “ I Got Rhy 
ibm.” 
The fifth concert in the series 
will he presented March 21. and 
the (mal program h scheduled for 
April 4 at 8:30 p. rn. 


WIFE PRESERVERS 


Cab)* 
Channel 


g:4'i— 4 Today on Farm 4 


7 ;«*—2 SA til Rogers J r 9 
4-rod ay 
4 
Today 
I 
Today 
6 
W HI Roger* J r 
IO 
I . Oft— 2 i apt. Kangoroo 9 
C apt. K'garoo IO 
f . OB—2 Mai Ic F.van* 
9 
4 Little Ba*..a1* 
4 
5-Thought. Kit! S 
W/vne Griffin 
3 
Faith for Today * 
Roy Roger* 
IO 
S:JO—-4 Romper Room 
4 
G arry Moor* 
* 
IO.OIE—3 Clarty Moore 
9 
4 Pin s Dong S ol 4 
S-KaleidOM ope 
”S 
G arry Moore 
2 
Ding Pong S ’ol 0 
Renal Theatre IO 
ID: I L — 
Muslr 
Sheila 
IO 
10:30—2-Arthur Godfrey 9 
4 F. rn ie Novae* 
4 
Woman « Angia 2 
F in is 
Novae* 
* 
Hi me Novae* 
IO 
in is 
Arthur Godfrey 2 
ll:UO—4 Horn* 
4 
Homa 
* 
Flv nn s Inn 
IO 
IL IA — l-Thi* I* Storv 
7 
11:30—2 S in k * tt Rich 
9 
3-Studio 7 
7 
Stnka It Rich 
2 
Strike It Rich 
lo 
Industry P'lade I 
12:00—2 Valiant Lady 
9 
3-Cartoon Concert 7 
4 U n ite # Ernte 4 
J I.noney Tunes 
5 
New* 
2 
M an To Man 
3 
Ten’**ee A rot# 0 
Little Theatre 
IO 
12:13-3 LOVO of Life 
9 


K D. 
Hat too* 
2 
I /ive of Life 
3 
Love of Life 
IO 
tS:IO— 2 S ’ch for Tom'** 9 
3-Clown 
Corner 
7 
4 I ea'er Y 'r Ne*t 4 
J Aflern’n Mov e 3 
S'eh for Tom ow 2 
S'ch for Tom w 3 
l ea er Y T Nest i 
New* 
IO 
12:44— 2 Guiding l ight 
9 
Guiding Light 
2 
Guiding Ugh! 
3 
Guiding Light 
lo 
1:00-2 Ja ck L ia r 
9 
3 Ladle* Theatre 7 
4 Playhouse 
4 
P ill 
Rrant 
2 
Tenne**ee Ertue 3 
S'eh for Tom'ow * 
Ja c k Faar 
1« 
I: IL — 
Love of life 
4 
1:10- 3-Love Story 
9 
Hay'# Kitchen 
I 
Love Story 
3 
Feature Theatre A 
Love Story 
lo 
2 00-2 Robe Q Lee ii 
9 
S-Ladiea Be I ted S 


Cable 
€ hannel 


Popular Silence 2 
Playhouse 3 
3 
Rob! 
U Lew if IO 


2:13— 2-Donna Oouglaa 9 
Valiant Lady 
3 
Cruising Seat IO 
S3<L-*2 
Bout# 
Party 
9 
3-Quii Club 
7 
4-Afternoon 
4 
Meet 
Neighbor 2 
House Party 
I 
Roller 
Derby 
IO 
2. IV 
Movie Uuu 
4 


3.00—2-Pig 
Poy Off 
9 
3-1 tim 
Festival 
7 
4 
Matinee I he ire 4 
Big Payoff 
2 
Matinee The ne J 
M.itinee The tie A 
Big Pavoff 
IO 
3:30—2 Bob Crosby 
9 
5 T lune rh ie 
S 
Playhouse 330 
2 
To be an’nced IO 
4:90— 2 Pick 
Temple 
ti 
4 tiate With Life 4 
J Brighter Day 
5 
Brighter I >.* v 
2 
Blighter Dav 
3 
Date With I ie 6 
Brighter Dav 
IO 
4.13—4 Mod n Rom To* 4 
3-Set ret Storm 
5 
Secret Moi rn 
2 
Secret Stoi m 
3 
Mod. Romances A 
Secret Moi in 
IO 
4:30— 4 Queen for Day 4 
S*On Y ’r Account S 
On Y r Account 2 
On Y ’r Account 3 
• 
Queen For Day 
A 
On Y ’r Ac ount IO 
9 
7 
4 
5 
1 
3 
• 
IO 
• 
4 
2 
J 
• 
9 
7 
4 


3:60— 2 Little Mai git 
3 Mickey M oult 
4 Pinky le e 
4 Lam b Session 
Video 
Adven. 
Pinky Lee 
Superman 
Mickey Mouse 


5:30— 2 Foreign Inc tnt 
4-Howdy Deedy 
Wild Bill Hitkok 
Howdy Wood y 
Howdy Poody 
4 90-2 Cisco Kid 
3 Clown Coiner 
4 F ’tlight The’tre 
3 Hoppity Skip tty S 
News, BUI. Buix 2 
Western Trails 3 
Sports 
A 
New* Ravitw 
lit 
9:13 
News 
A 
Coke Tim# 
IO 


I 30-2 Spotlight 
9 
3 T ‘n A Country 7 
3-Glady Lou 
* 
New* 
2 
I Love Lucy 
A 
Topper 
IO 
9:43-2 Edward* New* 9 
3 New*. Weather 7 
4 New* 
Weather 4 
Pitt Pad#, Bpt* 2 


t able 
Channel 
Edward* News 
3 
7 .OO— 2 Soid’r* of F n# 9 
J-Jim Gibbon* 
7 
4 Sherlock Holmes 4 
J Gildersleev# 
3 
Mont# 
Cristo 
2 
Film 
Theatre 
3 
Break the Bank A 
Sports 
I I 
7:13—3.1 
Dele News 
7 
3 Kitchen 
Magic 
J Daly News 
7 .30— 2 Robin Hood 
3 Topper 
4 Gordon Mal Rae 
3 I 
Spy 
Time Out 
Disneyland 
Gordon MacRae A 
Fthet it Albert IO 
7.43~*4 New* (a ia v a n 
4 
Eddy 
Arnold 
News < aiavan 
1:90—2 Burns A Allen 
3 Reader’s Digest 
4 Producers Show 
3 I venins Movie 
Producers Show 
Producer* Show 
Bum s it Allen IO 
1:30—2 Arthur Godfrey 9 
3 V ce of I irest e 7 
Eddy Arnold 
Law r’ce Walk 
9.90— 2 I Levo Lucy 
3 Dotty Mack 
I Love Lucy 
9;SO—2 Dace’ber Bride 
3 Medical Hort'ns 
4 ll 
Montg ery 
3 Holing 
A i beroe# 
Dece’ber Bride 
n . 
Montg’erv 
Famed P l’h'ae IO 
19:00—2 Studio One 
0 
3 Mea b k Music 7 
studio One 
2 
Boxing 
3 
Studio Ona 
in 
IO:*©—3 lop P U vs 
7 
4 1 Led 3 Live* 4 
Is le * of C ’turjt A 
10.43-3 Mad 
Sq 
Gdn. 3 
Plavhouae 
3 
11:90-2 ll P. M Report 9 
3 News, Weather 7 
4-New* 
3 New*. Feat'm s 
World Tonight 
Big Town 
New* 
t i.IV - : Patti Page 
9 
3 Sport*, Theatre 7 
4 Weather, Sport* 4 
Armor Theatre I 
Plavhor.*# Ten lo 
l l . lO -X China 
.Smith 
4-Tonight 
Big Picture 
Mark Saber 
11:43 
New* 
Sport* 
11:00-2 Mr . Mr* North 9 
3 Heart of City 
7 
New* 
Q 
Film 
The*tr* 
IO 
\1 *n _ 
News, Theatre 2 
I OO—4 Inspiration 
4 


DAILY CROSSWORD 


CLEANING 
SPECIALS 


. CASH and CARRY 


3 S w e a t e r s . 


3 P a n t s . . . 


3 P l a i n 


S k i r t s . . . . 


SPECIAL EQUIPM ENT PO* 
W HITE CLOTHES 


W I ALSO DO 
CUSTOM CLEANING AND 


HAND FIN ISH IN G 


SPECIAL-— I -HOUP 


CLEANING SERVICE 


Mary's Cleaners 


157 N. Mechanic St. 


PHONE PA 2-2040 


Enriched bread and whole wheat 
bread make contributions of iron, 
and the B vitamins such as thia­ 
mine, nnacin and riboflavin. They 
also provide energy. 


A CR O B I 
4 Part of 
22 Boat 
I River in 
“ to be * 
2.3 Marine 
New Mexico 
5. Timid 
fishes 
5 Portico 
fcolloq ) 
24 Very 
9 Pinaceous 
6 Civil u rong 
hot 
tree 
7. To 
condi* 
IO Monks’ 
be 
ment 
hood* 
in 
25 Single 
12 English 
debt 
unit 
author 
8 Southern 
26 Little 
13 Of an are* 
river* 
fin 
14 Tree 
fi Steep, 
28 Second* 
15 Rklll 
rugged rock 
ary 
16 Board of 
l l Less Quickly 30 Part* 
Oi (inane# 
15 Turkish till# 
of 
fab b r) 
IS Nobleman 
v indow 
I* Science of 
19 Metallic 
frame* 
earth and 
rock 
31 African 
rocks 
20 Record of a 
ante­ 
20 Mandat# 
sh:pa 
lope 
21. Opening* 
voyage 
32 Fashion# 


am ala m m 
siM ua H a n a 
HOOP! rjnrv t 
8 
a r m il h u r o n 
ut 
a a 
(an 
nuctoMM Tin Li ii 
□HW a a a 
a n c io tir*fflOf:iiej 
u : 
r n 
n o 
o n a a o ataonrj 
a n a m lim p id 
M M M ISMHB 
riia a n misos 


S*< urds) '• Answer 


33 A dikh 
of boiled 
meat and 


\ ^ g e ta b le * 
39 Successor 
3* Audience 
39 Vex 
40 Biblical 
nome 


_ 
T A C A JO A H - WOULD 
TOO CAU. AM EM BEZZLE-^ 
A M A S T E R IH TUE ART 
OF ^LED GER* DOMAIN* 7 
p r io r S in c la ir . 
NEW W oQ X C K Y' A IV 


[ / F A R /NOAH— 
D O ES 


yo u r 'AiIPE NEEOvE VOO 
\M4gN SUE W ANTS Fi!^ 
MONEY ? 
- 
/VA AV S T C E c e 
P A L M E R T O N , 
ti. *->• W A ii ta rn S - **' 
_ 


Cash for fuel, repairs 
and new-born heirs 


% 


"I 
1 i 
A 


Va 
r " 
a 
; 
* 
i 
i 


11 


l f .11 
ii 


t - i 1 
/ y y 
/// % 


Its 
i*> 


11 
ie 
A 


U t 


ai 


" 1 % 
% 


21 
y// 
</< 


i i 


73 
24 
35 


-7 
i 
39 
" 


JO " 
It 
J I 
3 J 


T « 
SS 
% 
% 


Jo 


I f .. 
*5 
5 9 
4C 


4t 


I 


41 


I 


-15 


% 


JU 


% 


H«r«’s the kind of event that alway* perms to 


take a little more money than you have on hand . . . 


when borrowing seems both a net Pbsagy and sensible 


solution And th at’s just the time to take your problems 


to the leader in the consumer finance fit Id, to ask 


th ' help of the be*t trained staff anywhere. 


N early two million nu 0 an<* women each \^ar find 


that H I < 
makes a practice of getting the money into 


your hands just as quickly as possible 
If you liave a 


steady income and can make regular monthly 


payments, you meet the principal requirement for 


borrowing at B F C . The sample chart below shows 


loan amounts, and 


22 Fleshy fruit 
23. Tally 
26 Sweetening 
27. Terminal 
part of arm 
28 Storage crib 
29 Affirmative 
vote 
30 Methods 
34 Music 
note 
35 Hasten 
34 Fate 
• 
37 Bend to 
the knee* 
39 Sultan a 
decree 
41 Gastropod 
mollusk 
42 Refresh 
43 Blunders 
44 Teases 
(slang) 


DOWN 
1 Web-footed 
bird* 
2 A state 
3. Youth 


DAILY CRYPTOQl’OTE — Here’* how to work It: 
A X Y D L B A A X R 
Is L O N U E E L L O W 
One letter simply stands for another. In th.s exam fie A is used 
for Hie three L f X for the two Os etc 
Single letters apos* 
trophies, the length and formation of the words arr all hint*. 
Each day the code letters are different. 


A Cr>ptogram Quotation 


Z 
Q Z F 
T Z X J 
T Y M R 
Y O 
C Z 
C Q R 


F L R C P Q R A , 
Q Z F 
O Q Z L C 
C Z 
C Q R 


M Z L C C X U C R - P Y P R L Z . 


Saturday* 
Cryptoquote: 
D U LLEST 
O F 
JDLLL-HUED 
D a y s — h a r d y . 
D.s'ributed by King Feature* Syndics** 


Contract Bridge 


by Josephine Culbertson 


A Q I E L R TWIST 


•..AU OSU,. U- 
CSQi 


DOGS 


M U S T 0 6 
OM LEA SH 
IM 
PARK. 


J 


al 
W* 
] 


.j V 
/ 
\ 


BV GOLLY I'M GETTINGS OUT OF HE OE 


a wslectiop of 


repayment plans. 


Househcdd provide* 


life in su ran ce 


p ro tectio n on all 


loan* w ith o u t extra 


cost to you. 


Casa 
Y o j 
Oat 
♦ 


M O N TH LY PAYM EN T Pl ANS 


i i 
! 
30 
I 
H 
I 
/ 
po\mtt • poimtt I Astert J Po ••or 


11 no 
$ 6 72 >10.05 ISIS 
i ud 
! > 44 I 204/1 
.% 92 
.too 
30 :4 
55 38 
MIO ^24 62 
f. kiv 
’.si I Cl * 89 3 1 


1000 
48,44 
in, Kl 
58 j 175 4 1 


A N YO N E who pi'ks up a hand 
in which the highest card is a 
nme-apot car. I be blamed for fee). 
mg that he is very rn .ch out of 
it on that d< a! 
However, »•' hay 
been remarked b/foie 
strange 
things can happen at the bridge 
table 
For example: 


South dealer 
Both sides vulnerable. 
A A K J 10 7 6 
V Q IO 4 
4 IO 7 
4*9 5 


I OO nu 
Lau , 


tot (out of tot Iron if 
»• )■ /roe* 
tot un att lot 
Ut Fin*. I 


Ameri< a i oldest and tariff *t ((trimmer finance conipany 
OUSEHOLD FINANCE 


12 South Cantrt St., S. E. Cor. Boltimort 


2nd Floor — PHONE PA 2-5200 — Cumberland 


Loans Mad* to Rtm4$nts oj S'arb; fauns 


The bidding 
South 
West 
N r t h 
Fast 
1 6 
3 ♦ 
3 A 
la i 
4 6 
5 6 
5 6 
I ass 
Pass 
Puss 


West gave considerable thought 
to ag#rific.ng at six d.arnonds, 
bi;t dei fed against it — In* n bf 
g a v e e v e n mere thought to the 
opposing 
bidding, 
and 
finally 
came out wan the re mar Ka' ie 


opening lead of th# siewce of dis* 
mondsl 


It didn't even occur to South— 
who would t/r.nk of it?— to put 
up the uiamond ten from dummy; 
he tossed « r. the a oven, and when 
Fa t played the nine and found 
himself in possession of the trick, 
he wsi almost too astonished to 
make ar y play thereafter. How* 
ewr, after recovering, it was easy 
for Ka.-', to realize that his part* I 
ner wa 
y»armng for the return 
cf a cub, and so the contr a t 
was i > a'<n on the spot. the de- 
fir.'-’ taking ore diamond and 
two flu Lr 


Granting that VV/st was lucky 
to r> * the v suit he did, it would 
tx mf a r to /all his optn.ng lead 
rn* rely senrat.or a. ' and let go at 
th*’ 
There v.as planning and 
logic rn Wes', s selection. Ii*’ fore­ 
saw 11.at v 1 emmy s trumf .* wert 
sc lid, and that North’a spade suit 
u O'.id I reduce a great many dis­ 
cards for declarer. ^ est *>o as­ 
sum ed, correctly, that he would 
not be able to ta*h two d.arnonds. 
The bidding strongly indicated 
that South had the club kmg. 
th is, West a low d.amond 
lead 
was rrad# on th* on# reasonable 
hope that ho could put his part­ 
ner in for a club return. 


t> .tfiliated by K ’ I t es' ../* V- na. » * 
•Welt, lls no* invisible ink. 
He know that much.' 


He » sen us! . . . J filing daughter about hi* rosy prospects! . 
What all his union is going to demand when their 
contract expiresU* 


EIGHT 
THE CUMBER L/.ND NEWS, CUMBER LAND, MD., 
MONDAY, MAR CH 
5, 
1956 
Phone PA 2-4600 for a WANT AD Toker 


1 ..— A n i i o u n e t i n e f i t t 


"STR AND l iq u o r STOR E 
N Centre at Baltimore Sts. 
OUR PR ICES AR E LESS 


2 — 
A u t o m o t i v e 
2 — 
A u t o m o t i v e 


2 — 
A u t o m o t i v e 


nrifty Auto Sales 


.305 S. Centre 
Phone PA 4*2201 
See Bill or Arie for a R eal Deal 


' 
1984 C H E V R O L E T 4 OOOR 
Equipped. 17,000 mHe.i. SUSO 
Phone P A 2 7961 


Í9 4 7T Íl'íc k ~ W ÍT H ~ [;OOD~19 5i MOTOR 
Í9 8. 
Phone F A 4*4fi51 


1953 4 PO O R M O R R IS M IN O R 
A l Condition 
Phone R E fi 9110 


E A C R TFIC Í:—1955 Plymouth Savov, II.two 


mììAf. »149.5 .John A. Nies, Jr ., R outi 
3, Valley R oad. 


EXPER IENCE IS STILL 
THE BEST TEACHER 


32 years of Honesty and 
OWING 
Tavlor " J Ä " PA 2-7979 
SMITHS 


1953 Plymouth 
Cranbrook Clb. Cpe., A4 Condition 
S 


/ 
218 S. Mechanic 
temas 
p a 4- 2 0 0 0 


Fair Dealing 


2 — 
A u t o m o t i v e 


Ahlburn's Chevrolet Co. 


,15 Chev. "21(1" Dix, 4-Dr. V 8, PG . »1975 


.15 Slude. 4 dr. Piesldrnt, AT. R iH . 
.55 Stude. 4 di 
comm. 2Unhe, O IL 
M ercury 
5.1 Stude, .1 pais. < pe Comm. A l. h a m . 
*2 Stude. tiomm. H lop. 
• u 
47 Stude. Landrruiser. 4 dr. O D, R • H 
47 Stude. Champ. 2 dr. O. D. * beatci 


11 Stude 
2 ton thassis *< 
,51 .stude. 
ton pickup 
.52 Stude. »-s ton pickup 
52 Dodge Vx ton coal bed. 


.53 ( bev. Belair 4 Dr. 
.53 Study Land Cruiaer 4 D. 
52 Chev. Bel A ir Hard Top 
:)Z ( hev. S. L. Dix. 4 D. ... 
.51 f hev. S 
L 
nix. 4 D. ... 
10 Buirk Sp 
D!x. SD N T. ... 
50 Í hev. S L, S P. 2 D ........... 
4 D ....................... 


2 — 
A u t o m o t i v o 
1 4 - U n f u r n i s h e d 
A p a r t m e n t s 2 0 — 
F o r S o l e 
M i s c e l l o n e o u i 


CHR YSLER 


»1275: 


»595 
».'595 
1330 


K E L L 
OR 
T R A D E ■— 1949 
Pl.v mouth 
Special 
Deluxe 
4 
door, 
direm onal 
•ignals. 
2.54 
Mechanic. Iro.ithurg 
1094-J 


CLEAN 1953 CHKVR OLKT SEDAN 
LOW M ILEAGE 
BABB MOTOR SALES 
1.52 Wincow St. 
PA 2*4,170 


riang e 
Motors 


The New Home Of 


^ackard & Clipper 


Soles & Service 


Open Mon.-Fri. *til 9 
Sat. 5 


Collins Garage 


Your Studehaker Denier 


75 Henderson Ave. 
PA 4-1.j42 
Used Car Lot 
Bcdiord R d. at Nave’s Crossroads 


O T H E R S 


AHLBUR N’S CHEVR OLET CO. 


PHONE 26 
. HYNDMAN. PA. 


HAR OLD'S 
For The 
Best Deol in Town 


3 R ootna, kitchenette, porch 
private baO». Heat furnished. 
Phone P A 2-7437. 


^ 
56 PLYMOUTH SAVOY 
*¿'4 DR . 6 CYL. 
$69.) 
This beautiful 2-tone ta r of dark green 
and white paint has onl.v been driven M O D ER N 
1.410 miles 
It form erly belonged to an 
executive of the garage. Erjuipment in 
eludes 
push 
button Automatic Trans­ 
mission. aigoal lights, heater, defroster, 
air foam seats. This is your opportunity 
to own a new car. as this one carrie« 
a 
new . ar W arantee and h a i never 
been titled. 


4 R oom«. Modern, 101 Washington SL 
Second Floor. 
AdulU. 
Phone PA 3-0212 


P R IV A T E 
3R CiOM 
A P A R T M E N T , »45 
Stove. 
Frigidaire optional. 
Apply: 
Stegm aier's, 429 .N. Centre. 


O N E used 
Norge refrigerator 165: one 
used 
Bendix 
auiomaiic 
washer 
$40. 
one used square tub Maytag washer 
»40: one rebuilt Prem ier sweeper $30 
Terms 
available. 
Oreen-Hartman 
Ap 
pliances, 
198 
N. 
Centre 
St. 
Phone 
P A 4 0730. 


2 0 — 
F o p S o l e M i s c e l l o n e o u t 


Frosthurg's BUJCK Dealer 


1954 B IT C K 4 DR . R . H., D YN . 
19.54 B IT C K 2 DR . R , H , DYN 
1954 M E R t 'L B Y 4 DR . B ., H 
MM 
19.5.3 Bt IC K R IV ., B , H . D YN . 
1952 B U IC K R IV ., B . H 
1949 M E R C U R Y 2 D R .. R . H , O D. 


S T . CLOUD MOTOR S 


PHONE 441 
FR OSTBUR G, MD. 


_0T NO. 2 


Corner S. Mechanic A Harrison 
PA 4-6464 & 
PA 4-6465 


tone. 


FR EE AT PENN-MAR 


Csr and tru c k appranal. Find out what 
\oii should really get on trade. No obliga 
tion. 


55 Pa ik a rd Cpe. "400" $2.000 off! 
15 Hudson Metropolitan ( pe. HT. 
,55 < hev. 4 di. *d, like new 
55 ( adillac "6 2 " Sdn. Loaded .. 
55 f ord 2 door R iH 
--- 
,55 Biiick hardtop, loaded 
55 hord Cust, V B, 4 Dr Loaded 


»3395 
»119:, 


.53 Plymouth 4-Dr, Sd, .. $1093 
53 Plymouth Sta. Wgn. . $1093 
.3.3 Plymouth Club C pe . $ 995 
49 Chevrolet 2 Dr. . . . . $ 343 
49 Nash 4-Dr.................$ 93 
48 Dodge 'Itedi 4-Dr. .. $ 245 
48 Dodge 4 d r , ..............$ 295 


Sales' McCÜLLOUGH Service! 


CHAIN SAWS 


D IS T R IB U T O R S 
C A R R IE R 
H E A T IN G k CO O LIN G 
K E L V IN A T O R 
W A T E R C O O LER S 
B L R N H A M H E A T IN G E Q U IP M E N T 


A 
T 
P r n 
V 
E N G IN E E R IN G h 
A l r i U U i . N 
S U P P L Y C O M PA N Y 
2 W illiam s St, 
Dial 
PA 2-7269 


apartment, 
Baltim ore 
Pike. 
i'ich S !"U 'p “ '‘;rn d . “S ; , 'S c « g r o v e . K2 N cent™ PA.2-3040 
furnished, garage. Phone P A 2-9743. 


3-4 AND 5 R OOM apartments — Private 
bath — Utilities furnished — l.aundry 
room available — No pets — First and 
second floors — 879 Patterson Avenue 
— P A 4-OfiBO. 


4 R OOM S and Bath with Garage — 
Heat furnished. 3rd Floor. 
419 Washington St 
3 R OOM S and Bath with Garage — 
Heat furnished 413'^ Washington. 
A P P L Y ; TR U.ST D EPA R TM F..N T 
T H E L IB E R T Y T R U S T ( O. 


[Expert R OD & R EE L Service 
Fly Tying Materials 


1/ K r * 'Q 
t a c k l e SHOP 
IN vD D 
243 VA. AVE. 


T H R E E rooms, 2nd floor; private bath, 
utilities furnished. 12 Fourth St. Phone 
PA 4-6523. 


ti'cQ slr,* 
J -so » A 
A X 
m o d e r n 
3-room 
apartment. 
Private 
*15^7 PA 4-3840 Potomac Motors 
bath. 
Adults only. 
no pets, can see 
' 
anytime. 702 M aryland Ave. P A 2-R208 
$1295 
ÎIH9 ', 
SLIhl 
.i5 FTym. R ei. Auto. Trans 
Loaded »1505 


Open Evenings 6:30 to 8:30 


LOT and GAR AGE 


GLEN-R OY OLDSMOBILE 


U S E D C A R LO T 
H FJN D ER SO N A V E 
* F R E D E R IC K ST. 
PA 4 66«5. 
O P E N 
E V E N IN G S 7 TO 9 P. M. EX C . SAT. 


NEW CAR SHOW R OOM 


161-63 Bedford .St. 
PA 4 6790 
Open Mon. Wed 
F rl. Eve. 7 to 9 p. m 


55 Packard 
4-dr, Cust. 2 
R &H. Vltramatic drive 
'55 Packard ‘'400” hardtop, PB, 
PS, R &H. Ultramat 1C drive 
’55 Ford Conv., like new, R , H. 
Fordomatic. WW tires. 
’54 Packard 4-dr. R &H. PB. Ultra- 
matic drive. 
'53 Mercury Sp. Cpe. Mercomatic, 
2 tone paint, R &H, WV' tires. 


56 New R ambler 4 dr........... 
.56 New lliidfcon 4 dr............. 
55 New HiidHon 4 dr. . . . . . . . 
56 Civ. 
.Jeep, 
New 
....... . 
56 .Jeep Pk up 
.53 Stude. ( omm 
Sp. Cpe. 
51 B uh K .Spec. 2-dr............... 
50 Nash 
2 dr. 
............ 
48 Civ. Jeep, 4 W D 
........ 
49 Ford f I. Cpe.................... 
48 Buick R oadmaster ......... 


R EEVES STUDEBAKER 
Wa hava ■ comptet* line of used 
parts for all make cars) 
1954 Plymouth R edan 
1 owner car with 
2.5.WW miles. 
Light Blue. 
Priced 


S t only 
. »1095 
1951 .Studebsker 
Champ 
.Sedan. 
Has 
R adio, Hester and Aufomatic Drive 
Color 
is 
Black. 
Low 
Priced 
at 
only 
................................... 
t 


WestBrnport, Md, 
Phone 5481 


-O' 
No. 


322 S. Centre St. 
Dial PA 4 6466 


Used 825-20 
$35 up 
New 670-15 Tuheless $17.95 (EPT) 


D U N LO P T IR E ii B A T T E R Y S E R V IC F. 
ft W llUsm s St. 
Dial P A 2 3X90 


’54 Mercury 4 dr. 2 lone paint, WW 
tires, l-nwner. 26,000 miles $1595 
'54 Chev. 4 dr. 2 lone paint, WW 
tires, heater & defroster 
$1195 
'51 Chev. 
2-dr. 
dlx., 
Fleetline. 


R 
& 
H ......................................... ? fi9 S 
*51 Olri.s. 4 door, 2 tone, R . 
H. 
Hyd...................................$ .'>95 
’46 Cadillac, R &H. Klraight shift 
Rdn. cpe. Nice ................. $ 395 


1955 
FO R D 
Thunderhird. 
Immaculate. 


8.600 miles. Green. Haid canvas top 
Overdrive, 
power 
acccxaoriex 
Never 
raced. 190 H P. Phone PA 2-5:i61 


CUMBER LAND 


LINCOLN-MER CUR Y 
SAFE BUY 
SED CAR S 


1955 Mercury 2-Door 
1934 Merc. Mont. 4 Dr.. MOM 
1933 Lincoln Conv. Hyd. 
1953 Willys Hard Top 
1953 Stude. 2 Dr.. OD 
1953 Ford Victorian FOM 
1953 Plymouth 4-Door 
1952 Ford Sta. Wag. FOM 
1952 Dodge 4 Door Coronet 
1951 Ford Cust. 4 Dr. FOM 
1950 Chevrolet 4 Door 
1950 Buick 2 Door 
19.50 Mercury 2 Door 
19.50 Olds. "88" 2 Dr . HYD 
1949 Cadillac 4 Dr.. HYD. 


»700 
»800 
»400 
»200 
»175 
»150 
»100 
» 1 00 


W e'r« 
lo w Paym ent SpeciaVstt. 


So Cash seeded. l<Ti Interest. 


Penn-Mar Motor Co. 


Jeep R ales and Service for Allegany Co 
Narrows Park and Corriganvilla 


Dial PA 2 6.140. 


J I P 
in ').' 
»r.55 
» ni', 
% S«r. 
$ aa:, 
»10'!'. 
» 75,5 
, $ 605 
, S 495 
, »1195 
, $ 79:5 
, » 795 
. $ .195 
, ,$ 695 
. » 995 
. » 59,5 


D .YMO 


Cor. S. George and Harrison Sts. 


4 — 
A u t o G l o i t 
GLASS INSTALLED 
(W H IL E YO U W A IT ) 
BEER MAN AUTO PAR TS 
519-521 N. Mechanic 
PA 4-0250 


ie Finest Cars 


in the City at 


.54 (h ev. 4 dr. sdn . leal nice 
54 Buu k Spec. Haiftlop 
.......... 
54 M ercury .Mnnt. hardtop ......... 
54 Chcvrolel 
2-dr. 
. . . . . . . 
' 54 PIvm . 4 Dr. 
Savnv 
DOWN -,-j R un It 4 rir Loaded R eal nice. 
• »6011 5-j p„n tiar 4 dr, ( rcampuff. 
.. $7-59H,3 f bevroirt 2 door sedan . . . . . . 
»500 ^3 piyp, 
Lranhrook 2 dr. 
. . . . . . 
,53 Henry J . OD. like new ............ 
53 Buick 2 door R & H.................... 
,53 Chevs "210" 
.............................. 
5;f Hudson 4 door Je t .................... 
.53 W illyg 4 dr Dlx. 
................. 
52 ( hev. 2 dr., R & H ..................... 
52 Pont. Catalina 
R & H................ 
52 Kaiser 4 dr. OD 
....... 
52 Olds. "9 8" HT. 
A beauty ........$129.- 
,51 Na.sh R am bler 
HT. 
$39 5 
1)1 Merr ury 2 or 4 
di- I»oaded. OD. $ 59fi 
51 ford 2 dr. Fordomatic 
* 995 
51 Buick Sup 
R iv 
4 dr 
$ 6‘i5 
51 Pac kard 4 di 
I llramatii-. Beaut 
$ 69;H 
U p nH p rnon A v P 


51 Dodge 4 di 
R eal nice 
.........$ 395 50/ M e n o e rs o n A Ve. 
51 Plymouth 4 dr , like new .......... »49 5 
.51 F ord 2 dr., rebuilt m o to r............. » 495 
51 Chevrolet 4 d r............................... » 41-' 
51 Pontiac Clb. Cpe........................... » 595 
51 Olds. Sup. "88" 4 dr ....................* 69.5 
51 Kaiser 4 dr., R & H................ 
» 295 
51 .Stude, 4 dr.. V 8............... . 
» 395 
50 Plymouth 4 door 
....................... » 29.5 
50 ('hev. 2 or 4 drs. 
.......... 
» 395 
50 Ford 2 dr. (a Sperlal) ............ »29 5 
50 Fold 2 or 4 drs 
.............. . » 3M5 
49 Pontiac 4 door ....................... . 
» 295 
49 Packard 4 dr, 
........................* 199 
49 Oldsmobila 4 dr............................ 8 195 


R E D 
.SPFXTAL 
D E L K T O L S 
A P P L E 
T R E E S 
$1 25 F. A( H 
SMITH'S GAR DENS 
1120 Shade.« Lane 
P A 4-145« 


2 1 — 
W o n f e d t o 
B u y 


"^w a n t e d ” 
FILL DIR T 
P H O N E P A 4-6881 


SOUNDS UNBELIEVABLE 
SAVE $176 ON 


4 piece luxurious cherry bedroom 
suite. Spacious double dresser and 
mirror, large chest, book-case bed, 
night stand. 
R EG $495 ...................NOW $319 


W AN TF:b AT O N CE -Use Pole Trailer 
or 
flat 
bottom 
with 
air. 
28 or 30 
foot. Phone 465 R omney. 
__________ 


~^Wanted 
Parade Drum 
suitable for student. 
Phone P A 2 4291. 


" t w o COZY 4 R OOM A P A R T M E N T S 
Grand Avenue. R easonabla R ent 
Phone P A 2 7900 


4 R ooms and bath, first floor. 
15 .N. Pro.spect Square, $80. 
Newly decorated 
Phone P A 2T292 after 7 P 
M, 


MO.NTH S rent free to party redecorating 
same. 
Four room apartment, all pri­ 
vate. 
712 N, Centre 


T H IR D FT/)O R 4 R OOM S 
A V A IL A B L E IM M E D IA T E L Y . U T IL IT IE S 
PA 2-5704. 


5 — 
A u t o 
R e p a i r s , S e r v i c e 


NOR TH END GAR AGE 
PA-2-359Ü 


Skille<d Ra<diator Service 
Schade’s Mcch & Valley P A 2-0500 


LOWEST PR ICES 


BES' 
DEALS 


ER E 
ANYW 


.52 LINCOLN 
Conv 
(ont 
Kit 
R H 
Hvd 
L. New, New Top, W. W all* 


FORD 
Victoria 2 Tone 
BH. 
F ’Omatic. W. W all* 
Sharp. 


M V A IC . 


H Top Montercv. 2 Tone, 
R H . S Shift 
Nice. 


fj:') 
BUICK 
Su|ier V 8 4 D i 
2 Tone 
Green. P 
Steeiing 
R H, D.vn. 


5 3 
D o d i T P 
4 Dr R H . Gvro tran* 
One Owner, .New Tire* 


395 


295 


295 


395 


895 


The finest cars a i the 
lowest pricei 


828 N. MECHANIC ST. 


54 PUYM. 
c 
Cpe 2 Tone Green. 
H&D, 1 Owner. 
995 


56 Ford " 8" pk up. new 
t 5(19 off 


3 
N IC E 
rooms, 
modem, 
redecorated, 
blinds, porch, heat; private entrance, 
bath; attic; 117 Pennsylvania Ave. 


P R IV A T E 
4 
room 
modern 
apartment 
Steam 
heat 
& 
hot 
water 
furnished 
Adults only. 406 Beall St. F*A 4 .5661. 


Only at Millensor s uilt 


you find lalues like these 


Millen so n ’s 
317 Virginia Ave. 
PA 2-3930 


C?T>rNT> XT SEL F- S T O R IN G W IN D O W S 
b l U l v A i 
C O M BIN A TIO N DOOR S 
- JA L O U S IE S - P E R M A N E N T A W N IN G S 
APC Metal Pro d u cts 
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 
BO X 43. OLDTOW N R OAD 
PA 4 1234 f.EN N O X C O A U G A S. OH 


■J 


2 3 — 
F l o r i s t s , F l o w e r s , 
P l a n t s 


Funeral 
BOPP'S 


Flowers I L T ï ï e 


2 4 — F u r n a c e s , H e a t i n g , S t o v e s 


R A YM O N D J 
G R A B E N S T E IN 
Contractor Phone PA 4-4397 825 Va 
Av«. 


Sheet Metai — Weldmg ~ fíeattnp 


Plumbing & Heating 
J E W'oodvard 
Phoie Pa 2-6950 


rp f> A t r W A S H E R S E R V IC E , PA 4-2.541 
i 
VV Complete Overhaul Apex. Easy 
Maytag Dexter.Kenmorc.Blackstone.ABC. 
Your wringer dries clothe* HVe 
new W ith ou* expert installation 
o f 
n e w 
rolls 
and 
bearings.____ 


_ _____ 
F U R N A C E S 


Winter Air Conditioning 
Klingler Heating, 1% N O n trc PA 4-683(1 


H O LLA N D " f u r n a c e CO. 
" 
Oil — Coal - Gas Heating Units 
Cleaning. R epairing 
449 N Centr«. 
PA 4-5522 


5 R OOM apartment on the West Side 
Apply 
409 
Greene 
St. 
R eferences 
required. 
PA 2-7235. 


S P E C IA L 10 
D ISC O UN T! 
On All Spouting and -Spouting Fixtures 
Liberty Ha rid ware Co. 


57 N. Liberty St. 
Phone PA 2-7140 


FO U R large rooms, private bath; heal 
water, laundry, porch, garage. No pets 
Phone F iostburg 226 R . 


LaV ale 


McFa r l a n d a u t o s h o p 
Phone Prt-4-1216 
507 PIN E AVE. 


b l a m b l e b o d y s h o p 
Bedford R oad 
Phone PA 4-4199 


7— 
B u s i n e s s O p p o r t u n i t i e s 


Albright Bus Line for Sale 
FJlerslie, Md. 
Dial PA 4-2695 


6 rooms and bath, 
heat and water furnished 
Phone PA 2 7188 


3 r o o m s and bath, private, .second floor. 
443 
R ace 
St. »20. 
C, Glen 
Watson, 
P A 2 404(1. 


PUPPIES corífRsÍAs'.’ELS 


Do you need a new heating plant? 
Call PA 4-2414 for free estimates. 
Sun Heating Co., P 
O 
Bo* 447. 


2 5 — 
B u i l d i n g 
S u p p l i e s 


L O V E L Y P E T S 
Mehle Kennels — PA 2-1691 


Drapery. Dress & Slip Cover Fabrics 
STO P IN TO S E E O U R S P E C IA L S ! 
Some as low as 49c a Yard. 
Kitchen Chairs eovered in Plastic, 
G EO . B R A G G . L a V A L E . MD 
PA 4 4611 
2 Bincks Opp 
LaVale Methodist Church 


S' 


ALUMINUM 


OR M DOOR S 


N O R TH F,ND 
Three rooms- private hath and entrance 
Heat 
furnished. 
Newly 
decorated. 
425 
Chestnut SI. 


HOOVER Sales & Service 
L. Bernstein PA 4-5900, 4-5724 


CAD. 
( l-ie 
De Ville. l/iaried 
Like new. P. Steenng 
895 


56 Cad. Cpe. DeV. Loaded, New 
.56 Cad. ‘62’ Sdn. Loaded, New 
.56 Olds "88" 4 Dr. Hoi. HT. New 
56 Plym. V-8 Belvd. Cdn., R &H, 
.55 Ford ‘8’ Cu.st. Sdn. Locded 
55 Chev. V-8 Sdn. R . H. 
55 Pontiac Sdn. R &H. AU power. 
.54 Merc. Sdn, A Crcampuff 
.54 Ford Cust ‘8’ Sdn. Loaded 
54 Lincoln Capri H T.. All Power. 
53 Chev. R cl. Sdn. R &H P.G., P.S. 
.53 Pont. Ch. Dlx. 2 Dr. Loaded 
53 Cad. ‘62’ Sdn. A real creampufl 
,53 DeSoto 8 Cl. Cpe. PS. Like new 
52 Pontiac sdn. R , H & Hyd. 
.52 Pont. 2 Dr. R . H Hyd. 
52 Buick Sedan R . H. Dyn. 
51 Chev. Sdn. R . H. 
51 Pont. Sdn. R . H. Hyd. 
51 Nash S. Wag. R . H. OD. 
51 Ford Cust. s Dr, R . H. 
50 Hudson Sdn Loaded 
50 Olds ‘88’ Sdn. H. H. Hyd. 
50 Chry.sler Sdn. R &H. like new 
.50 Buit’k Spec. Sdn. R H & AT. 
,50 Pont. Sdn. R . H. Hyd. 
,50 Plym. Sdn. R . *^1. 
49 Plym. Clb. Cpe. R . H. 
49 Chev. Clb. Cpe. R 
H. 
49 Pontiac 2-dr. sdn, R H & Hyd 
49 Lincoln Sdn. R . H. OD. 
49 Nash Sdn. R . H OD. 
49 Chev. Conv R . H. 


53 F ord Aii-T. 
panel 
13 Ford Sdn, D»l. 
........... 
52 f hevrolet I ton truck . . . . . 
51 Dodge "«-T. panel .............. 
51 Chev, V»-T. 
pickup 
........... 
51 Chev. 
I T . 
Panel 
.. 
....... 
50 International 
W alk 
In 
... 
50 Ford Vanetle 
....... 
47 Dodge 1>A-T. Coal bed ... 
41 Dodge t'j T. pkup 
41 Internationa! Xj ton pk. up 
40 F ord ta-T. Pickup 


S 795 
$ 695 
» 895 
» 395 
» 695 
$ 395 
» 2V. 
» 69.5 
$ 343 
S 
95 
» 
95 
» 
95 


Exceptional Opportunity 


W E L L E S T A B L IS H E D 
S E R V IC E B U S IN E S S 


Fu llv F’.quipped — F X 
1() year* 
Y e ar round profit starting 
from 
the first month. 
3’hi* opportunity doe* not demand 
pre'.ious 
expeneni-p 
will 
train. 
Price $14.900. Term* 


C R E S A P T ()W N -- FIntire aecond floor, 
four rooms, bath, private, front porch, 
garage, 
utilities. 
Ideal 
for 
working 
Couple. Phone PA 2-4987. 


N E W 5 rooms, bath, private entrance 
Convenient 
to downtown. 
$60 month 
All utilities furnished 
PA 4 0737. 


S T E A M 
H E A T E D 
A P A R T M E N T 
On Sperry Terrace. R ent R easonable 
Phone PA 2-7195 


I 
Write Box 990 A c n 
l ime.* New* 
$5 Down On Cars Up To $700 R E S T A U R A N T 
F’ullv 
equipped 
Well 
e>.tahlished. ('entra! location. Write Box 
BANK TER MS 
AR OLD'S 


McMullen Hwy at Custard Stand 


9 A. M. to 9 p. M. 


915 A, »- 0 Tinies-New*. 
B ^C o a l For Sale 


Nelson Auto Sales 


B E R L IN R U ; V E IN $6 TON 
G tlA H A N T E E D 
— 
S T O K E R 
G EO R G F: L E Y D IG 
D IA L P A 2 9715 


Dial P A 4 0670 i B E R L IN 
B IG V E IN 75% L U M P »6.50 
A LSO 
S T O K E R . 
P R O M P T 
D E L IV E R Y 
D IA L PA 2 5353, N IG H T PA 2-0676 


R OOM S, bath. 2 garage*, porch, yard 
745 Kelly Blvd. $48 monthly. Apply 306 
Wa.shington. 


$39.95 


PAR AKEETS 
13 Lyons S t 
R ldgcley 
Phone R E 8-9119 


Coron’s Quality Candy 


Butter Creams 
,59c lb. 138 Bedford St. 


.NEW 3 room apartment 
private, heat 
and hot water furnished. Adults only. 
Phone PA 4 4604. 


1 5 — 
F u r n i s h e d 
R o o m s 


SLFiF.PIN G 
room, 
fumi.shed 
.1.30.136 
Virginia Ave. 
Phone P A 4 3445 or PA 
4 0420. 


51 Uhev. "210" 2 Dr. 
Sedan 
.5.3 Pont. 2 Dr. .sdn 
Auto Tran*. 


.30 Potomac St. 
R idgeley 
R E « 9290: Any Amount. Dial PA 2-5163 or P A 2-17.58 


BER LÍN $6 Ton, PA 2-5070 
Pea 
& 
Beaverdale Oll-lTeated 
Pea 
Georges Creek or Berlin CoaL 


18— Houses For Rent 


314 PACA ST. 


BENN l TT’S 


Save 15% On 
Bottled Gas 


P A 2-7900 


Full length piano hinge. 1 1/18 
inch 
thick, 
2 
removable 
glass 
panels and 2 screen panels. Heavy 
gauge aluminum. Price includes at! 
hardware. 
Installations can b« 
easily arranged. 


CHINFISE; 
CH FLSTN UTS-H ardy. 
Bligh 
resistant, 
Produie 
prolific 
crops 
ol 
sweet, deliciou.s nut* and provide shade 
for Wie home grounds. 3wo .! to 4 ft 
Sire Trees-O ffer 
No. 
. 
5 
for $6 U>. 
Po.stpaid. .'5sk for I-'iee ( opv New .56- 
page Planting Guide < atalng in color 
offering 
complete 
assortment 
Fruit 
Tree-s. Nut Trees. Berry Plants. Grape 
Vines, and Landscape Plant Material 
Salespeople 
wanted. 
VVAYNFISR OR O 
N L R SF.R IE .S , W .4YN ESR O R O . VA 


BUCHANAN 
-umber Company 


S P R IN G S T Y L E S 
l.inen Dresses, si/e* 7 13. 12Li 24’.-% » 9 9.5 


549 N. Centre St. 
PArkview 2-0650 


P A 4 .335.5 b e fo re 5 


rucks 
^ick Up 
DINGLE ESSO STATION 


Fayette and Greene Streets 


Georges Creek Coal 7.50 Ton 
Stove, furnace wood 
PA 2-8097 


51 BUICK 
PA 4-0460 ; 2 D. 
n& H 


Open T ill 9 P M. Weekdays 


Saturdays *Till 5 P. M. 


Bonded Select 
USED CAR S 


M-G-K Motor Co. 


ni.\ 
v s 1 
Blue 
\>r.v Clean 
95 


Too Matty To List 
GULICK'S 


Cor. S. Centre S« Williams 


49 Chev. Sdn. R . H. 
49 Plym. Sdn. R . H. 
49 Ford Sdn. R . H. 
48 Olds Conv. II. H Hyd. 
48 VVillys S. Wag. R H. OD. 
43 Nash .Ambass. R H. OD. 
47 Buick Sdn, R & H. Nice. 
4/ Plym. Sdn. R . H. 
47 Nash 2 Dr. Sdn. 
41 Packard Sdn. R H. 
40 Plym. Sdn. R . H. 


h . 


1953 
P llN llA « 
4 door 
sedan, loaded 
17.(HiO 
miles 
A l 
condition 
Phone 
P A 2 4712 
Apply 111 M in g Ase 


221 GLENN ST. 
DIAL PA 2-23(K) 


1946 
PONTIAC 
4 
door, 
radio, 
heater 
New 
t.ies. 
Complelely 
reconditioned 
$135 
PA 4-2066, 


aylor Motor Co. 


218 N. Mechanic St. 
PA 2-7979 


s 


p 
0 


E 


R 


L 
S 


New Cor Trades! 


Somerset big vein coal, pea stoker. 
Any amount 
Phone PA 2 0836 
A. Lepley 


, 
. 
Cotton Blouses and Skirts, d,\ed 
.Six room» 
with bath. Gas furnace, 
new 
mati-h 
paper and paint, porch and 
yard 
»40. Large si/e Skirts from 
S 3 98 
Sleeveless Blouses, sir,r>. ,38 In U S 
2 98 
Dre.sse* and nialching Dusters, 7-15. 
12«-»-24iy 
................................... 
« 2 9.5 
Cotton Skirts ................................... 
* 33»8 
Blouses from ................................. 
$ L9 8 
p-,, l.fi’ e Ftr'.f S n t’l 
Cl'c 
SYKES STYLE SHOP 


tor quality . , . 


LUM BER ond 


BUILD IN G M ATER IALS 


CALL 


The South Cumberlond 
Planing M ill Compony 


„,2 „-'33 Queen St 
PA-2-2600 - 2-2601 


20— Far Sale Miscellaneous 


B IG V E IN 75% L U M P 
»6 50 PR O M P1 D E L IV E R Y 
PHONF: P4 4-OlOfi; PA 4-0217 E V E N IN G S 


Piano Bargain — Used Upright piano in 


good condition........... 
MILLENSON'S 


317 V’irginia Ave. 
PA 2 1930 


Used r v Sets 
B A R G A IN P R IC E S 
Paramount 
101 Va. Ave 
PA 2 2230 


P O W E R E X C A V A T IN G & T R E N C H IN 'a 
Concrete Septic Tanka & Installation» 
Steel Storage Tanks. Stock or Custom 
PILE BROTHERS 
McMullen Hwy._________ P A 2-8484. 2 848» 
HAGER STOWN BLOCKS 


89 5 Md Ave 
Daitv 
11 A 
M. — 9 P. M. , R ^ 9 M. Athey Phoue PA-4-4417 


Phone PA 2-1570 


W A L L P A P E R 
Maxe vour selecUon at 
home 
Expert paperhanglng, low cost, 
PA-2-0224 for samples Hartley Wigfield 


CI.E.AN lumpy coal. Prompt delivery. Vi 
Ion 
deliveries. 
Phone 
M. 
Keister, 
PA 2-2571, formerly FI 
W 
Campbell. 


G U A R A N T E E D 
P R O M P T 
D E L IV E R Y 
B E R L IN B IG V E IN COAL. 
»6 TON 
P H O N E PA 2 2717 


Sweene's Boat Shop 
t e a m 
horse*. 
harne.*se*. 
equipment 
CO 4-2061 
Cow, fresh in April, seven hog* 
Wil 
NF:W & U S E D BO A TS. BO AT K IT S 
Yoders, Bear Hill R oad, Oldtown 


F A R M AND S A W M IL L IN G E Q U IP M E N T 
Complete repair parts and service on 
Alhs Chalmers and Oliver Cletrac 
___________________________ ________________— , Complete diesel service on 
G M and 
Somerset Big Vein, PA 2-7710 
i 
Am erican Bo.sch in.icctors. 
a i l 
KINT»« nir «iTO KER COA' 
1 f “ " 
crawler trsciora, 
A Lt 
K IN D S O F STOKF.R COA-. 
stationarv power units—gas 
& diesel, 


9 — 
l l c c f r i c a l W a r k , 
F i x t u r w ' 
( o c h r a n f a r m e q u i p .m e n t c o . 


4 F’arm all F -20 Tractors on rubber 
$139 
to 
S.519 
H G, R ender 
Ph. 290 Mrversdale. Pa 


Phone 4148 


PO N TI $C 4 dr .Starchief Custom $7475 


“ Inrp M ntnr Sn 
v j I C , 
- J v J «-.Oj 
jf, good condition, priced to sell. 


Orchard & Wms. Sts. 
219 S. Mechanic 
p.\2 4hb4: 
BR UCE MOTOR CO. 
i*.\2-.33.32 r o M M .V 
W VA 
PHONF. 197 


NOTU E 
R educed for qtiuk salr 
19.50 Ford V 8 
2 door, radio, heater 
1947 Poniiai 
ladio. 
healer, good tire* 
Good condition 
Lall 
PA 4 1216 . 507 Pine Ave 


52 Ford V-8, AT. $695 
IDONI AUTO SALES 


248 N. .Mechanic 
Ph P,\ 2 7480 


1950 Buick 4 dr. sedan 
Dyiiaflow, radio .. $395 


THOMPSON BUICK 


PA 2-8400 
Car Lot PA 2-1424 


HAIILEY DAVIDSON 
Moiorcyclr Sales & Service 
411 N 
Meehan 
.lust below Valiev 
BAUPACH’S 


See Us First! 


F E R G U S O N 
ITtAC'*l()R S 
F A R M 
M A C H IN ER Y 
■Ugbt'i Garage Ballo 
Pik» 
PA-4 4178 


1953 FOR D F-600 


1.54" 
W B 
254 cu 
in 
Engine. 
825x20 
10 pi* tire* Turn Signal* Marker Jights 
Heater. 2-Speed rear axle. Like ne# 
D lA l 
PA 2 3456 
ST 
G E O R G E MOTOR CO 


Trip le Lak es Au to Mart 


5ft Ford 2 dr. R H , 22 900 i 
be told from new. all nev 
R t. 220, T r ip le Lakes 


See Us Last' 


But 


t:- Sure To Sec 


Our 


OK'd Used Cars 


rfore You Buy' 


5ft Ford 2 dr. R H , 22 900 mi < 
d's 
be told from new. all 
new 
tiifs 
,,, 
, , 
^ _ 
P \ 
4 4b )i U9.'i.x Í lic v rn lc t 
*2in 
4 D o u r. 


H 
D. T T . N ñ 
3.M 
$184.3 
1949 F o ld > 7'D u m p 9O0x2o 12 po tue.*, 
Chev ro let 
'210' 
4 D o or. 


P 
D . n . N o. 3fi4 


ird 
f ’u-'loni 
4 D o o r 


D. n 
A T \ n 
:it:i 


19.13 C h c v ro ii't B c l.A ir 4 D o or. 


3ank 
inancing 


AT OUR OFFICE 


30-Mo n th 5 % In terest 


ON A LL ’56 M O D ELS 


56 ('ad. Cpe DeVille, Loaded 
56 Plym. Clb Sdn. V S. Push Ao Don 
Button Trans New 


5) P O M T A i 
4 dr 
Start hief 
5.5 ( H E v n o i,F ;r 4 di. b c i a h- 
5) FO R D 2 ri' 
Fairlane 
55 s U H F .B A K F R 2 di 
( omm. 
.54 Ol D.sMOR lLF'. 
Holidav tpe. 
51 BU U K 
siipcr Haidtop 
54 M l.nt l flY 4 dr, MonteiPV 
5( PONT I Al 
4 door 
54 PON I IA( 
(a la lin a ( oupe ... 
.51 Hl K K 2 (Ir. Sperial 
... 
54 l H F:V no i l. T' 2 dr. "210 ’ 
.. 
54 ( HUV R OI I I Bel Air 4 dr. . 
.54 ( h f :v r o i r i 4 di 
- ^in’ 
54 ( tu \ R OI F 1 ‘ 2 ton pickup 
)4 P IA MOI I H Snvov 2 doiir 
,5;t l M llL L A t 
4 dooi 
5.1 F OR D 
V iftoi la 
,.l l ‘( iN I 1 Al 
4 dr 
5.1 I’O N IIM 
( atalma 
(oupe 
5.1 C H i;V R O I.I 1 2 di. Bel Air , 
5) { 10 \ R O l.l I 2 di 
"210 ' . . . 
:<,l NASH .states'iian 4 d r........... 


.5.1 I O R I) 
1 door 
52 P O N IIA t (a la lin a (oupe ... 
52 IH s o l o 
spoit'.man 
.5 ■ PONTTAÍ 
Sedan Deliverv 
12 I HI .\ n o l.i: I 
door 
51 (A D IU L A C (oupe De Ville 


»229; 
» 197(1 
»196:5 
»150 
$22'>' 
»209* 


ELECTR IC WOR K 
Motor R epairing, Wiring and Fixture» 
QUEEN CITY ELECTR IC CO. 


Wettinghonse Apparatus Agent 
1.58-160 Frederick St 


Somerset, Penna. 


ELECTR IC WOR K 
F R E E E S T IM A T E S ON W IR IN G 
Sterling Electric Co., Inc. 
N. CENTR E ST. 
P.V2-4800 
!| \ \ri^ > 
— ............. . — ..I. 
...I...'. 
..I— 
-------- 


«nn* 10—Finoncing, Maney fa Laan 


Table Top Gas R ange »15. 
7 foot lunch counter. $15. 
Phone PA 4 9811, 


V E T S BH Y t l.K S A L E S & S E R V II Fl 
Wholesale and R etail 
t^hone P A 2 1133 
( ham Saws $169 50. Bicycle* »18 up. 
Power Mowers »35 up. 
,1ft « I K E N C IT Y P A V E M E N T 
CumheiTand. .Md 
PA 2-6683 


PUPPIES 
Mrs. Meek 


A n O R A R I.K 
( 0( K E R SPA N IK!..S 
Vale Summit 
Md 


B U R K E T T ’.S W A S H E R S E R V IC E 
101 N. ( edar SI 
Phone P A 
4 2966 


E L E C T R H 
IN I I BATO R 
400 F'.ggs Capacitv. 
D. 1. 
R oller. R oule 4. Box :i53. City 


BEER S2.99 CASE 
(Choice ol 1'' different htanri ) 
8-yr, Old Bourbon $3 99 qt. 


W f 
B R O N Z E 
Bahv 
Shoe.* 
Ail work K lln C 'S Llq U O r StO lG 
7(K) N . M c c h . 


^“P h ^ r i A ^.4617 
pT 
n N Y .B R lT E - (O P P E R - A N D - B R A .S S 
CLEANF'.R . 
For 
Demonstration, 
Call 


Fo r Ch eap er Co n crete 


an d Cin d er Blo ck 
o f Gu aran teed Qu ality 


Call 


The Cumberland CemeuT 


and Supply Company 


R ear 419 N. Centre St. 
P.\ 4-2000 


nGold Bond one 


D 
:.ed 
ester 


M AGH 
CHF’.F 
combination range 
( oal : 
'2.23,57 


$15'!.' 
$111.5 
» ■ 2ii' 
$119' 
* I (195 
$119- 


& 
Ctas. 
Excellent 
FTostburg 170-W 
condition. 
Phone |--- 


TH R IPri PLA N 
I 
„ 'Baldw in 
Electric 
Organ, 
brand 
new 
Finance Corporation of Cumberland 
M IS ( FILLA N F.O l S 
R F .S T A U R A M e 
q 
u 
i 
p 
- 
$1590, Sale Price $99.5 
loe Frederick St. 
Phone PA-4-0344 
ment 
large 6 burner, broiler & 2 oven; 
_ 
„ . 
, 


»''XO-, 
We Loan Money 


$12'» j 
On Watchca, Diamond». Open 'til T 
SI2'(5| 
“ It you need money 
Sam " 


$ 14<t5; Southern .Jeweler* 
131 N 
Meebanle 
5 l(l‘l ., ---------------------- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 
$10451 
» 92 j 
» 91 ! 
$l('9 i ! 
$ <195 
« 89(1 
$ "ri­ 
si 645 


Payment Specials 


LOANS 
ON Y O U R S IG N A r U R E ON LY 
UP ro »1500 


F A M IL Y F IN A N C E C O R PO R A TIO N 
40 North Meehanle Street 
Phone PA-4.3600 


AUTO LOANS 


in 5 minutes 


NalinnaL Loan, 201 S George 


gas stove, 8 toot white porrelain 
re 
Only At 
M'ilen*nn$ Can 
V^u 
F 
-i 
« 
fngeiator display ease, stainle.ss steel: Value Like Ih i.'J 
w ater station & <om pressoi; stainless j 
^ 
^ 
.steel 
reii igerator; white cabinet hasej \1111 PTTsinn 
” 
with porcelain top; three 
.small hard: 
m 
i k. i i j u n ^ 


maple lop took 
tables 
Also one „.y V'lrpiniR 
PA 2*3930 
chrome riivan and two i-haii*. ( hrorne '^^' viisiiim nvc. 
with Duran 
upholslerv, 
suitable 
lor I 
■ 
offire 
or 
waiting room 
Apply John: 
Haler, 228 Baltimore Ave 
'p F iA T H l’M riS 
will 
awaken 
your 
soil 
______________________________ 
TA< O 
W.AVF: trap antenna 
with rotor.gue new life 
to old soil, aid all piants AFAN oi woman wanted to handle Mr- 
and rontrol 
10 element beam 
P h o n e l a w n s , eliminate weeds 
PA 2-2796. Half Pru e , 
i ........... 


$1443 


$109. 


radio, heater 
A 1 
(N e w '556 
Fo ld 
Virtori.' 
Hard 
Top. 
n 
Fordomatic, 
laiiio, 
healei 
wmir ¡rj-o [ 
«a;i tues 
a 
„t, 
19 54B;..« K 
4 
door, 
raflK-, 
heatei, 
lu-.r 
I! 
new 
* ■ '* 
1953 Lincoln 
Capri 
Hard 
Top. 
lo.idrd 
like 
new 
5 
D. R , N(3. .M.i 
1953 Plymouth convertible, a bctfuiv 5>‘i. 1953 ('hfvrolot 210 ('!ub. Cpe. 
1954 Chev. 
BeU ir 
hardtop, AS engmr 
Hvdramatic 
$ U'.i 
I' 
U- U- *’ 0. .>07 
1951 Mercury 2 d r. 
R adio, heater 
ovei 
Chevrolet S’lino 2 Door. 


‘""'derfm er’s gar-age 
R- H. D. No. 339-A 


Ridgeiev w’ V a ________ D^ 
' 1951 I’uu'k Supcr 4 Door, R . 


M o o r e ’ s 
F A - 4 4 i 4 4 l J 
» 
-' i' >;» 
s« 2 
s m 


'1951 
( hrvrnlet .N line 4 Door, 
j 
R , H. I), PG. \o. 
368 
11949 Chevrolet S'line 2 Door. 


$1045 


$ 695 


owing lU-vir 
$ 595 


949 PONTIAC 


Streomlmer Eight 


Deluxe Sedan 


Standarii 


H II I), No. 359 
1948 f'iiovrolei F'm.«l 4 Door. 
R . H. r>. No. 324-A 
1947 Chevrolet F'mst. 4 Door 
H D. No. 3.50 
1M47 ' hevrolet F ’mst. 4 Door 
H 
D No. 197-B 


$ 395 


$ 295 


S 175 


R adio, Heater 
Tran.smission. 


One Day Only 


S265 


$ 175 


YOU ALWAYS SAVE 
MONEY AT 


EilerChevroletJnc. 


56 Ford Fairlane, R H, OD 
56 Ford Cust 2 D. New 
55 Mercuru sd.. R , H. MM 
55 Chev. “' r sd , R . H. PG 
50 Huick Conv. dll & Dyn 
55 Ford Sdn. R &H 
55 Pontiac 4 dr. St. Wag 
55 Cadillac sd.. R . H. PS PB 
54 Plymouth Sd., R & H 
54 Ford Sdn. Cust. K. H. 
53 Olds ‘S.V Hoi Cpe K H Hyd 
53 Ford "8" Sd., R . H. FM 
53 Chevrolet Bel. Sd. 
53 Dodge Hard Top, R &H 
53 Cad. Cpe. DeVille, R H, PS 
53 Buick Super R w. R &H 
53 Buick Spec. Sdn. K. H. 
53 Pontiac Conv., R .H.. Hyd. 
53 Studebaker Sdn R H. OP 
53 Mercury Spt. Cpe. R . H. 
52 Ponttac Sdn., R H, Hud. 
52 Studebaker Sdn.. R H 
52 Butck Sp Sdn St. Sh. 
52 Chev Sdn R H 
52 Henry J., R & H. 
52 Willys Panel 
51 Chev. Belair. R H 
51 Hudson 2 Dr. OD. 
51 Cadillac Sdn. like new 
51 Pontiac Sdn. R H. Hyd. 
51 Ford 4 Door, R & H 
51 Plym. hardtop. R &H 
51 Dodge Sdn., R &H 
Plym Sdn R &H 
51 Fort Custom "8" 2 dr 
51 Stude V 8. 2-dr OD 


1 Bt U K Super 4 door 
* - 0-, 


51 P L V A lo t IH 
Be vcdere 
s 
1,: ' 


M 
F (')M lAt 4 door 
$ (.'I', 


)1 ( HI-'VR ril F T ( liib ( oupe .... 
s ■)9A 
■)() < VDH 1-A' 
1 oupe 
....... .. $1,29 


i ,)() t Hi-.V R IH ET 4 door ................ 
$ 49.-, 
30 ( HF;\ R O LF T 2 door ................ 
S 49.-,, 


.3-. I’O M lA i 
4 door 
.............. 
s 49.-, 


)0 01 riSA ioBH E 4 d r.................. 
$ 1 1', 
lO 01 p s M riB lI.E 2 d r.................... . 
$ 49.5 


,0 n o D t.l 
4 di 
.................. 
» 
p. , 


.0 { IIR 3 -1 1 n 4 door ................ 
$ -)f|- 


sn N A.SH 
4 door 
.................. 
$ 295 
40 ( A D ILI 'A< 
4 
door 
$ 7 4.3 
49 m DSMOHII,!-: * 88 ’ 4 door 
« 49., 


48 ( HEV R O l.K l 2 door 
$ lb.3 


I — For Rent 


2 n d Elo o r Office Sp ace 
Will remodel to suit tenant. 
CURL’S 


op 
Full L'ne of Metal Goods 
for Piasterinn 
SUPER CONCR ETE CO. 


495 11 Henderson Ave, 
Ph. P A 2 -^0 


26— Help Wonted 


P A R T Y to clean up, partly I'ebuild an(l 
repair property In country. Could oceu- 
pv 
rent 
free 
lor 
care. 
W rit« 
Box 
983 .A c 0 Times News, 


H O S P IT A L 
Aitendant.s 
(W hite) 
2ft 
t(* 
4.5 vesis with minimum of 10 year.* of 
si-hool. 
FExperienie 
not 
necessary. 
Permanent positions, Thu is a private 
meniat hospital located 8 mile* norih 
of Baltimore. 
W rite to Personnel (»1- 
firc. 
Shefipard I'ratt Hospital, Towson 
4. M.srvland. 


- 
-................, 
— lb.-10c 
BR 1DF:S: 1 et us photo.stat ymii marriage 
certificate* Can be made in pocket si/e 
.sealed in plastic. Whatever if is, vie 11 
copy It. 
Anv valuable 
paper* 
repro­ 
duced 
n M B E R I.A N D E N G R A V E R S . 
118 South Mechanic St . PA 4 1622 


*3 23 


C A M E R A SH O P 
20 N 
C E N T R E ST 


H O S P IT A L B E D S . W H E E L C H A IR S . 
W .M .Kl U.N. t B i rCHri.S 
PA 2 8484 
Pile 
Bros 
Ht 
.5 
.McMullen 
Highway 


12— Apartments 


All Cars Inside! 


ontiac-Cadillac 


FT R M S H F :d or unfurnished. 646 Wash 
ington 
.St., 
newly 
decorated 
private 
apartment having living-dinmg oombi 
nation, 
bedroom 
bath 
and 
kitchen 
Adults onlv. 


•jrnished Apartments 


E X C E L L E N T M IX E D H A Y 
$25 Ton 
At Happy Hills Farm 
5 Miles West of F'ro.sthurg, R oute 40 
Call .lohn Flafer 
P A 4 .3533 


A U T O M O BILE Insurance to covei State 
Law »29 fift Also Workmen’» Compena» 
tion. F ir« 
Glenn Wataon PA-2-4040 


Liberty Hardware Co. 


57 N 
Liberty St. Phone I ‘A 2-7140 


Ne.* P'o diut* full OI spare time. Op. 
poriunKv to make $Ui a day. No experi- 
cn<e nc< essai V. W rite .Mr M cVey, 109 
Maiket P a i r 
Baltimore 2. Md 
2 7— Femóle Help Wanted 


CR OSSTOWN BAR GAINS 


ST KN G GR AJMH R under 2.3 
Permanent 
1 
Tn-staie Flmployment Agency, licensed. 
P. O 
Box 163, LaVale 
Md 
P A 4 1962 
$39 Trade-in allowance on vour 
mr reMuuant work W nte or apnly 
•y.xi 
11 d u r 111 
oiuJwoMvv- 
. 
, 
person, siupwav i inn. Green R idge, 
old wringer washer on a new 1956 _ FT^^mstone. Md. 
^ 
2 W .A riR K SSK S 


H O M E L IT E CH A IN SAW S 
Salea and Service 
Davi» Garaga, 
Flint.stone. Md Phone GR -8 4282 


Norge convcnlionai washer. 


KLINE FUR NITUR E CO 
40.5-413 Virginia .^ve 
F.\ 2-4H2D 


Applv Hv Burger Hesturant 
6 M i'rs V\e.,t of (um beitand. R out* 40 


W dM -W 


On e Min u te 


FO R 
HOI SF W O R K 
Live in. Give age and refríente, 
H {i\ 989 A < o 
I IMF 6 NF WS 


205 N MECHANIC ST. 


r.4 2-8300 
Open 7 to 9 


Mak e Offer 


3 Buick Spec 2 dr . R H & AT 


‘,'•2 Stude. ( omm. ( !b tpr.. R &H 
: '2 ( hev ’ 
ton 
pickli[> 
; 
( hc\ « !h ( pe 
Heater 


':'U DndR c 4 riooi 
R A H 
‘51 F'md tbnv. R . H. AT 
131 Kaiser 4 
dr R & H. one owner 
I ’ll Mercury 
Cl t'pe 
R 
H one owner 
; )I Poniiar 4 dooi 
R 
& H 
Ì3U Ford Cust 2 dr , R H. 
30 Pont 2 dr.. 
R Ff 
AT, 
id Ply Spec 4 dr 
R H 
49 Chev 
2 
dr , R H 
18 Chev 
4 
dr . R H 
18 F .iid 4 drtc.i 
R & H 
')■' Ford 
ton pk-up L one owner 


B L V D A I’TS 2. 3, 4 R oom Apts. 
Utilitic.* included 
Also Sleeping R ooms 
R eaaonahle. PA 2 8100. 
PA 2 4144 


3 R ooms, «econd floor. 
Adults. 
7 N. W'aveiTy Terrace 


R OOM S, nicely furnished, Fngidaire, 
hot 
air 
heat 
Children 
allowed 
313 
Bedtord St 
Phone PA 2-0138 


LIG H T Hou.sekeeping R oom* AU utiliOea 
furnished 
Sleeping 
rooms U desired 
il9 S Allegany St 


TW O and Three room comfortably furn­ 
ished 
apartments 
Utilities 
Columbia 
St 
section 
PA 
2-7900, 
Evenings 
PA 
4 3874, 


N EW \iN O LEUM S 


All ( olots & Design* 
Beautiful. 


9 X 12 only . 
$5.60 


Bennett Transfer & Storage 
Henderson Ave. at Franklin St. 
Phone P.\ 2-6770 


Washer Parts .... ....................................................................... 
Complete .stock M l DDE! 
accd woman for housekeeper, 
S K F ! L F 3 "s 
.5.36 Pine .Ave. 
P-A 2-5115: 
How.ud Burkett. .(uS N. Mechanic St., 
' 
( ;tv. Phone PA 2-972:! 
Set of F'unk and Wagnall s eneyclopcdia 
Fortv 
Volumes. 
*'>'i 
Phone Frosthuig 422 H 


CIGAR ETTE 
VENDING MACHINE 


iM aceii on eommti$inn barti) 
E N T E R P R IS F A M U S E M EN T CO 
170 N 
Centre St 
Phone PA 2-005( 


THKFtK 
rooms, private entrance, frigi 
daire, .scmi-pnvate bath, laundry p rivi­ 
leges. .Adults. 410 l.oiiiDiana Ave 


N it E L Y 
F urnished 
apartment, 
private 
hath, 
private 
entrance. 
Adults. 
114 
(.recnc .St. 
-Apply 6 to 8 p. in 


CAR PET SALE 
All wool 9 X 12 Wilton & Axminstcr 
rugs. R egularly priced as high as 
S95. 
NOW $49 


Thr-, a y shnppfis Will buy ih ffe la it 


Millen so n 's 
317 Virginia Ave, 
PA 2-3930 


Over 35 Cars to Choose From 
_ 
1 2 
oiuui 
r o. 6-u/ 
Bank Terms & No Down Payment¡^’^'VUnd’ eieMK. fng'dT.' 


51 Buick Sedan. ^ 
Dyn, f u iiilici'la n d .Aloior S a lo s - W 
' - ' l T l 
51 
o _ W aQ R IL 01) 
^t. 
Opp. A&P ,Mkt. 
’ 


Phone PA 4 0790 
Open ’til 9 30T- 


219 N. Mechanic St 
R egister your motor nu.mher Open Evenings 
Ph PA 4-4400 
for Plymouth contest NOW! 


GUR 


51 Olds. "88" 
Sdn. R &H 


5 0 B u t c k S d n . 
R & H 
50 Butck Sup R w R H Dyn 
50 Packard Sdn., R &. 
50 Olds Sdn.. R . H & Hyd. 
50 Ford Sdn. R c*. II 
50 Chevrolet Sdn. R . H. 
49 Olds “ 88". R 
& H. 
19 Butch Sdn., R &H 
49 Chevrolet Conv 
49 Chevrolet Sedan R & H 
48 Cadillac Sdnt. R &H 


AlIDTOWX MOTORS 


( iiev Bel A 


A PA R T.M EN T. newly decorated, private 
hath, automatic heat 
and hot water 
Adults. 
R elciem e 21 Piosped Square^ 


ooms, 
heal 
porrii, 
1011 Vii'G inia .Ave 


all utilities luinished 
.Adults. 
;22 Paca St 
^ 
__ 


TW O room apattment 
fust floor. Frigi- 
ri.)u e. 
pi tv ate 
entrance 
Phone 
p V 2 UU98 
lU 30 
to 
Afterwards 
P A 4 6T79 


HT. P i, R H, 
i 
tinted 
WW 
2-lone 
Oi p 1 ust Oifive 
$895 
PA 4-3230 Ì 


Two 
room.*, 
bath 
porches, lawn 
LaV ale 
Phone P A 2-6.326. 


S P F X IA L - 
sewing machine* adiusted 
in the home $2. Al.*o electrify & buy 
machine!, 
W A K E F IE L D Sale» & Ser­ 
vice 
P A 2 8430. PA 2-4794 
Baby Porakeets For Sole 
439 N Mechanic 
Phone PA-2-7Ü11 


Spinel Piano Bargain 
Kim ball - 
R egu 
lar Pn ce $623 
Sa5e Price 
$419 
O'l.'v 
At 
M liten 
Co« 
rnu 
Find 
A 
Bo'gain Like Thi%’ 


M ILLE N SO N S 
317 V^jginia .Ave. 
PA 2 3910 


NPAIN 


R N 


'ED 


R 


L.AR GE STOCK 


Try- 


2 8— Mole Help Wanted 


Are you 17-18H years oldr^ 
Beloie voli start to work establish 
Draff Detened .Status 
V V m i O N LY S IX MriNTHS 
A( TTVE n i T Y T R A IN IN G 
You can 
do 
this 
by 
enlisting 
In 
the 
Aro v R eserve. 
Visit or CciL USAR Armory 
301 S 
.Meehan <■ St. 
Dial PA 2 4i-' i 


Ca 
MEN WANTED 


:h,.ve 
I New s 


.e 2 men with neat appearanr» 


0 a¡e inierested in the future. Must 
\5tite Box 964 A c/ o Times- 


// PENNSY 


n i 
S3 AN HOUR 


In The Narrows 


DIAL PA 2-7300 


l! 
vnil qiirililv d iiPit saie^. established 
!u'toi'.f-i- 
F’eimanent 
3'ou 
< an 
natce 
ii’i'.-iis' on guatanieed you need to start. 
Mrtii eri w ’h . or or:* 
<,r-e pnone num- 
he. 
and 
adrire.ss. 
Write 
Box 987-.A c » 
1 i '-e- Nf w . 


TI 


SL R G F electric hot water 
i, 
— 
Phone 
........ '■ 
to otfci 


iltl-.F: M EN wanted 
Finest assnrtmer 
(Ii bii.isehoid luintshings .sold on 
I ,fic 1 
f'laii wh.i h ft ascs e.vss 
s a . e s . 
.set Ml 
i,ii iilenstetn, llh \ 
( ( ntre St. 


N O TIC E- P E O P L E O V E R 60 CAN NOW 
B U Y H O SPIT A LIZ A T IO N 
P H O N F 
PA 4 0313, 


14—Unfurnished Apartments 


K O O G V E N T A LU M IN U M A W N IN G S 
Welch Insulation 
Tr«« Estimateal 
r t 
Ashby 2110 
Frostburg 540 


10 
gallon Wilson 
milk coolei 
Bedford Valiev 183 
_ _ 


H O t S r i " T R A l L F R 
1933 
St-)l 
4'1 
foe' 
2-heriroom *. 
w a s h in g maihme 
1\ 
an 


te n n a e . 
fu ll tu b & 
s h o w n 
P 


im m e d ia te 
.sale 
& 
• U . T ' Jn B S 
PA 2-14(14, 
8 4 
P 
' I 
e \ i w„'. 
a itc . 
.3 P M 
_ 
__ 
_ 
______ 
Bock Beer, F&S Throwowoys 
$2.98 per Case 
29 


k 4 
PN 
J 
13 N. Front St 
M 
c 
J 
Q 
u 
G S 
D ia l P.-X 2 2030 


d iS 
I'd 
. 
pi nses fuinistipd 
Mon 
)J w f (K s a 


labhshed sale* route 
■vine in llie .Mese,»- 
c'.ivcrv ti ui k and ex- 
Salai *■ plus eommis- 
cai 
Anri' in peraon 
to 1.(7 I n.nn M , ( urnhei land 
Aid 


High pd.v 
All tiade*. F are paid 
.so 
.Anietua 
Ihe 
Islands, I S 
W ri'e 
Dejt 
R B National, 1020 Bioad, New- 
aiK. N 
J 


u Ers 
nc 


Dodge-Plymouth 
123 S. Liberty PA 2-0200 or 2-0202 m b. cen u * su 


In tern atio Dai Harv es?ter 


Authorized Dealer 
Motor Irueka 
Farm Iraetora & Maehtnery 


& O EriKF.B CO 
Phont PA2'5(>oo 1722 GHLL.NL ST. 
R ed's Used Cars 


1 
G M C Trucks 


! Cose Tractors & Machinery 1 
I 
entrance. 
¡New Holland Farm Equtpment 
C O M P L E T E 
R E P A IR 
S E R V IC E 
FOR Al,l 
M A K E S 
After We ^ell— We Serve' 
' Collins G M.C Truck Co 
Ici n ro o m s and bath 
I ’A 2-8150 HI. 40 LAb'I 


THR F'.E 
u.sed 
overhead 
garage 
doors 
. ' 
, , 7 
I 
complete with hardware 
16 ft. wide. 
iM ODFIR N 5 room apartment 
217 wasn 
Heat 
turmshed 
Private 
12 ft. high with glass, P A 2-4260 week 
days 8 to S. 


au"^ f^ M iV W e have a larga assortment of aUghtly 
vi.crt 
h e a t 
iurn iY eri ' ( e n t r a l l u s e d coal heating & cooking stove*. Bar- 
b'cftmS- a^228 K m o*^^' 
A\eR " Ippi.v «ain price». Apply 130 Federal S L Phone 
Ic' n ILiter, 2.10 B.Utunoie ,Ave 
PA 2-614/ 


491 


Financing — Home Loans 


— 
M c K A I G ' S — 


K i T 
z M 
I e R 
” M 
E M Ö R I A L S 
MONUMENTS and MAR KER S 


-Salesmen Wanted 


DOOR 
to door 
salesmen 
who 
are not 
getting ahead and wani last advance 
ment in the selling f.eid (,ie «t opoor- 
tunif. 
Will! 
one oi 
the 
laigesi cnm- 
panus ol 'Is ksnd Wi de P /> Pnx 982, 
(uniber:,inn 
Md , gmng full particu- 
lais 01 vour-»'.; 


AU the bea t ma rble a nd 
g ra nita 
m 
eluding "Ro ck o f Ag ea ’ 
g ra nita a nd 
"Ba rr* Guild 
Memo ria l« " 
Baltim ore ¡S O R R Y Sal is now a merry 
gal 
She _ 
. 
^ fc George Sts. PA 2-0765-2-3984 
)* , 
.)* 
o .i 
'' « lable alter March 15. Phonel 
used Blue lu stre nig and u p h o !* t e r y | ^ « « f 
i ’H O iN L FA-2-3y22l p a 4 oTOO. 
cleaner, 
R osenbaum a Houseware». 
• 
S E E 
W HAT 
JO U 


.h V !F:«M \\ 
Vt 
$73 .-i .ii arteed a 
v« c 
Box :‘h8 A t o I .ine« \ 


T H E L O N i.F R -.- a ad 
per do 
d t-c- 
' - 
qtlDle long tei ni 
an\ 
want a-j, ei 
{■'St t;ie gicater 


- old, V dh ra r. 
to ila r i 
W iite 


rl I ■ 


I pioi.t. 


ire »lieapre 
tu» g¡*d ff) 
)• I ra'e* to 
lowei your 


! 


EIGHT 
THE 
C U M BERLA N D 
N EW S, 
C U M BERLA N D , 
MD., 
M O N D A Y, 
M ARCH 
5, 
1956 
Phone PA 2-46C0 for a WANT AD Taker 


I — Announcements 


"’ s t r a n d l iq u o r S 
o r e 
N Centre at Baltimore St*. 


OUR PRICES ARE LESS 


2— Automotive 


ISM C H E V R O L E T 4 DOOR 
Equipped. 17,(WO mile**, IH M 
Phone PA 2 796 I 


JIM" B U IC K W IT H C.OOD 1951 MOTOR 
*95. 
Phone PA 4-4651 
___________ 


1933~« DOOR- M O R R IS .MINOR 
A l Condition 
Phone R E 9 9110 


S A C R IF IC E - 1955 Plymouth Savoy, ll WO 
mile* 
$1495 
John A. N it*. Jr ., Route 
J. Valley Road. 
1953 Plymouth 
Cranbrook Clb. Cpe., A l Condition 
S 
i 
/ 
218 S. Mechanic 
Ie in la s 
pa4.26oo 


F E L L 
o r 
TR a d e ” "— 
1949 
Plymouth 
Special 
Deluxe 
4 
door, 
directional 
aignal*. 
254 
Mechanic, 
Frostburg 
I (*94-J. 


2— Automotive 


Thrifty Auto Sales 


305 S. Centre 
Phone PA 4-2201 
See Bill or Arle for a Real Deal 
TOWING 
Taylor 
PA 2-7979 


24-Hr. 
Service 


2— Automotive 
2— Automotive 


CLEAN 1953 CHEVROLET SEDAN 
LOW M ILEAGE 


BABB MOTOR SALES 
152 Wineow St. 
PA 2-4570 


Frostburg’s BUICK Dealer 


1954 R IT C H 4 DR , R ,; H , DVN. 
1954 R IT C H I DR , R , H , DYN 
1954 MERC U R Y 4 DR 
R . H 
MM 
1955 R IT C H R IV , R , H , D YN. 
1952 B U IC K R IV ., R , H 
1949 M E R C U R Y 2 D R.. R . H , O D. 


ST. CLOUD MOTORS 


PHONE 441 
FROSTBURG, MD 


GLEN-ROY OLDSMOBILE 


U S E D CAR LO T 
H E N D E R SO N A V E 
* F R E D E R IC K ST. 
PA 4 66*5 
O PEN 
E V E N IN G S I TO 9 P 
M. EXC . SAT. 
NEW CAR SHOW ROOM 


161-63 Bedford St. 
PA 4 6790 
Open Mon Wed 
Frl. Eve 7 in 9 p. rn 


REEVES STUD EBAKER 
We have a complete line of u»ed 
pens for al) make rara* 
1954 Plymouth Sedan 
I owner car with 
29,000 
mile* 
Light Blue. 
Priced 
at only 
81095 
1911 Studebaker 
Champ 
Sedan. 
Ha* 
Radio, Heater and Automatic Drive 
Color 
la 
Black. 
Low 
Priced 
at 
only 
. . . . . 
.............. 
I 495 
Westernport, Md. 
Phone 5481 


Used 825-20 
$35 up 
New 670-15 Tubeless $17 95 (E P D 


D U N LO P T IR E A B A T T E R Y S E R V IC E 
• W illiam * St. 
Dial PA 2 3190 


2955 
FO R D 
Thunderbird, 
immaculate 
**00 mile*. Green. Maid canvas top 
Overdrive, 
power 
accessor)#* 
\evei 
raced 
190 H P. Phone PA 2 5M3 


SMITH'S 
Triangle 
Motors 


The New Home Of 


Packard Cr Clipper 


Sales 8* Service 


LOT NO. 2 
Corner S. Mechanic h Harrison 
PA 4-5464 & 
TA 4-6465 


’55 Packard 
4-dr. Cust. 2 
tone, 
RAH. I dramatic drive 
’55 Packard “ 400" hardtop, PB, 
PS, RAH. Ultramatic drive 
'55 Ford Conv., like new, R, H, 
Fordomatic. WW tires. 
’54 Packard 4-dr. RAH. PB. Ultra­ 
matic drive. 
'53 Mercury Sp. Cpe. Mercamatic, 
2 tone paint, RAH. VV’ tires. 


LOT No. I 
322 S. Centre St. 
Dial PA 4 6466 


54 Mercury 4-dr. 2 tone paint. WW 
tires, l-owner, 26.000 miles $1595 
'34 Chry. 4 dr. 2 tone paint, WW 
tires, heater A defroster 
$1195 
’51 Chry, 
2-dr. 
dlx., 
Fleetline, 
R A H ..............................I 695 
'51 Olds. 4 door, 2 tone, R, H 
Hyd.................................................$ 595 
'46 Cadillac, RAH. straight shift 
sdn. cpe. Nice ........ 


f>. R A H 
A heater 


EXPERIENCE IS STILL 
THE BEST TEACHER 


32 years of Honesty and 
fair Dealing 


55 Stud*. 4 dr 
President, AT 
HAH. 
55 Stud#. 4 dr Comm. 2-tnne, OD, H 
IS Stude. S BM S. < ne Com MC AT. RAH. *9 M ercury 4 
52 Stude. Cornin, H top. DD, H 
47 Stude. I andrruner, 4 dr. O 
47 Stude. Champ. 2 dr. O, D. 


53 Stude. 2 ton cha**)* A cab 
53 Studs. S ton pickup 
52 Stude. 
ton pickup 
52 Dodge IV! ton coal bed. 
Open Mon.-Fri. ’til 9 
Sat. 5 


Collins Garage 


Y our Studebaker Dealer 
73 Henderson Ave. 
PA 4-1342 


Used Car Lot 
Redford Rd. at Nave’s Crossroads 


Ahlburn's Chevrolet Co. 


55 They. ''210" Dix. 4-Dr. V-8, PG . #1*75 
53 4 hev. B e lalr 4 Dr. 
53 Study Land Cruiser 4 D. 
52 Chev. 
Bel A ir Hard Top 
52 (h e v. S. L. Dix. 4 D. ... 
SI < hev. S 
L. Dix 
4 D. ... 
50 Buick Sp 
Dix. SDNT. ... 
50 Chev. S. L. S P, 2 D. .. ... 
D ...................... 


O T H ER S 


2— Automotive! 


CHRYSLER 


AHLBURN'S CHEVROLET CO. 


PHONE 26 
. HYNDMAN, PA. 


*1275 
I™ 56 PLYM O UTH SAVO Y 
4 DR. 6 CYL. 
ahu.) 
Thi* beautiful 2 tone c ar of dark green 
and white paint ha* only Keen driven 
1.450 mile* It formerly belonged to an 
executive of the garage. Equipment In 
elude* push 
button Automatic Tran* 
mission. signal light*, heater, defroster, 
atr-foam seats. THI* is your opportunity 
to own a new car. a* thi* one carries 
a 
new car W it ante* and ha* never 
been titled. 


* .95 
$.195 
9350 


FREE A T PENN-MAR 


HAROLD'S 


For The 


Best Deal in Town 


53 Packard Cpe. "400” *2 OOO off! . *3395 
55 Hudson Metropolitan 4 pe. HT. . 91195 
55 t hey. 4 di. sd. uke new 
....... $1695 
55 C adillac "62” Sdn. Loaded .... $3795 
55 Ford 2 door R i l l 
91295 
55 Buick hardtop, loaded 
... *1*95 
55 Ford Cust. V I , 4 Dr Loaded 
$1595 
55 Plyrn, Bel. Auto. Tran* Loaded 61595 
54 Uhev. 4-dr. *dn., real nice 
54 Buick Spec. Hardtop 
Car and truck appraisal. Find out **hat; 
, , ......... 
, 
. . 
,, 
. „ 
.Mercury Mont. hardtop . . . . . . 
\ou should really get on trade No obliga r< ( hr%rf)|),t 2 dr 


tl0B 
54 Plym . 4 Dr. 
Savoy 
DOWN I j 3 r ,ji< ic 4 dr, leaded 
Real nice. 
J*®**. S3 Pontiac 4 dr 
Cream puff. 
... 
. .. . . $750|53 Chevrolet 2 door sedan . . . . . . 
*'22 r'3 Plym . Cranbrook 2 dr.............. 
. . . . . *700 
**00 
*400 
*200 
*175 
*150 
*100 
6100 


,34 New Rambler 4 dr......... 
56 New Hudson 4 dr........... 
55 New Hudson 4 dr. . . . . . . 
56 Civ. Jeep, 
New ....... 
56 Jeep Pk up 
53 Slude, Comm 
Sp. Cpe 
51 Buick Spec. 2 dr............. 
50 Nash 
2 dr. 
........... 
46 Civ. Jeep, 4 W D ......... 
49 F’ord Cl, Cpe 
......... 
46 Buick Headmaster ........ 


We're Low Paym ent Specialists. 


No Cash Needed. \ % interest. 


Penn-Mar Motor Co. 


Jeep Sale* and Service for Allegany Co 
Narrow* Park and Corriganville 


Dial PA 2 6340. 


The Finest Cars 


in the City at 


LOWEST PRICES 


CUMBERLAND 


LINCOLN-MERCURY 
SAFE BUY 
USED CARS 


1955 Mercury 2-Door 
1954 Mere. Mont. 4 Dr., MOM 
1953 Lincoln Conv. Hyd. 
1953 Willy* Hard Top 
1953 Stude. 2 Dr., OD 
1953 Ford Victorian FOM 
1953 Plymouth 4-Door 
1952 Ford Sta. Wag. FOM 
1952 Dodge 4 Door Coronet 
1951 Ford Cust. 4 Dr. FOM 
1950 Chevrolet 4 Door 
1950 Buick 2 Door 
1950 Mercury 2 Door 
19.50 Olds. "88 ' 2 Dr 
HYD 
1949 Cadillac 4 Dr,. HYD. 


The Finest car* ai the 
lowest price* 


828 N MECHANIC ST. 


BEST 
DEALS 
ANYWHERE 


1395 
52 LINCOLN 
Conv 
font 
Kit 
RH 
Hvd 
L. New New Top W. W alls 
53 FORD 
Victoria J Tone 
RH, 
F ’Omatic. W. W all* Sharp. 
MERC. 
OO 
lf Top Monterey 2 Tone. 
R H , A Shift 
N iff 
BUICK 
53 
Super V I 4 Dr 
2 Ton# 
Green, P. Steeling RH . Dyn. 
53 Hod pp 
4 Dr 
RH . Gvrn iran* 
One Owner, New Tire* 
54 PLYM. 
C Cpe 2 Ton# Green, 
HAD. I Owner. 
52 CAD. 
( pe 
fie Ville, leaded 
Like new. P. Steering 
54 BUICK 
PA 4-0460 2 O' 
DI* 
V « I 
Bin# 
RAH 
Very Clean 
Open Till 9 P. M. Weekdays 


1295 


1295 


1395 


895 


995 


1495 


Saturdays Till 5 P. M. 


Bonded Select 
USED CARS 
M-G-K Motor Co. 


221 GLENN ST. 
DIAL PA 2*2300 
Hare Motor Sales! 


Too Many To List 
GUUCK'S 


Cor. S. Centre & W illiam s 


56 Cad. Cpe. DeV. Loaded, New 
$ 395 56 Cad. *62’ Sdn. Loaded. New 
56 Olds "88" 4 Dr. Hoi. HT. New 
56 Plym. V-8 Beild. Cdn., RAH, 
55 Ford *8’ Cust. Sdn. Lo*dcd 
55 Chev. V-8 Sdn. R. H. 
55 Pontiac Sdn. R&H. All power. 
54 Mere. Sdn. A Crcampuff 
54 Ford Gust ‘8’ Sdn. Loaded 
54 Lincoln Capri H T.f All Power. 
53 Chev. Bel. Sdn. Ruff P G., P.S. 
53 Pont. Ch. Dix. 2 Dr. Loaded 
53 Cad. *62’ Sdn. A real creampuff 
53 Desoto 8 Cl. Cpe. P.S. Like new 
52 Pontiac sdn. R, H A Hvd. 
52 Pont. 2 Dr. R. H Hyd. 
52 Buick Sedan R IL Dyn 
SI Chev. Sdn. R. H. 
51 Font. Sdn R. H. Hyd. 
51 Nash S. Wag. R. JI OD. 
51 Ford Cust. 2 Dr. R. H. 
50 Hudson Sdn Loaded 
50 Olds ‘88‘ Sdn. R. H. Hyd. 
50 Chrysler Sdn RAH. like new 
50 Buick Spec. Sdn. R H I * AT. 
50 Font. Sdn. R. H. Hyd. 
So Plym. Sdn. R. H. 
49 Plym. Clb. Cpe. R. H 
49 Chev. Clb. Cpe. R 
H 
49 Pontiac 2-dr. sdn R H & Hyd 
49 Lincoln Sdn R H OD. 
w-v- 49 Nash Sdn. R. H OD. 
i (j A ) 49 Chev. Conv R. H. 
(49 Chev. Sdn. R. H. 
49 Plym. Sdn R. 4. 
49 Ford Sdn. R. H. 
48 Olds Conv. It. H Hyd 
48 Willy* S. Wag R H. OD. 
43 Nash Ambass. R H OD. 
47 Buick Sdn. R & H. Nice. 
ii Plym. Sdn. R. H. 
47 Nash 2 Dr. Sdn. r>. h 
41 Packard Sdn R IL 
40 Plym. Sdn. R. H. 


33 Henry J , OD. like new ....... 
53 Buick 2 door R A H ............... 
33 Cheve "210” 
........................ 
53 Hudson 4 door Je t ....................... I 795 


*1195 
* 1393 
*1595 
* 99 3 
6 693 
* 995 
*10951 
* 7951 
* 695 
* t I 
* 1195 
I 79.5 


53 Plymouth 4 Dr. Sd. .. $1095 
53 Plymouth Sta. Wgn. . $1095 
53 Plymouth Club C pe . $ 995 
49 Chevrolet 2 Dr.......... $ 345 
49 Nash 4 Dr................. $ 95 
48 Dodge ‘Red) 4-Dr. .. $ 245 
48 Dodge 4 d r,.............. $ 295 


PA 4-3840 Potomac Motors 


Open Evenings 6:30 to 8:30 


LOT and G ARAG E 
PLYMOUTH 


Cor. S. George and Harrison St*. 


14-Unfurnished Apartments 


3 Room*, kitchenette, porch 
private bath. 
Heat furnished. 
Phone PA 2 7437. 


4 Rooms. Modern, IO] Washington S t 
Second Floor. 
Adults. 
Phone PA 2-0212 


P R IV A T E 
3 ROOM 
A PA R T M EN T . 
*45 
.Stove. 
F'ngidaire optional 
Apply: 
Stegm aier’*, 429 N. Centre. 


M O D E R N 
apartment, 
Baltimore 
Pike, 
2’* 
miles, 
2 bedrooms, living room. 
kitchen, 
ample 
ground, 
hath 
Heat 
furnished, garage. Phone P A 2-9743. 


3-4 AND 5 ROOM apartments — Private 
bath — Utilities furnished — laun d ry 
room available — No pets — First and 
second floor* — 679 Patterson Avenue 
— PA 4 OMO. 


20— For Sole Miscellaneous 


O N E used Norge refrigerator *65; one 
used 
Bendix 
automatic 
washer 
*40; 
one used square tub Maytag washer 
*40; one rebuilt Piem ier sweeper *30 
Terms 
available. 
Green Hartman 
Ap 
pliances, 
196 
N. 
Centre 
St. 
Phone 
PA 4 0730. 


Sales! McC u l l o u g h Service! 
CHAIN SAWS 
Cosgrove, 252 N Centre PA-2-3040 


20— For Sole Miscellaneous 


AIRCON 


4 ROOM S and Bath with Garage - 
Heat furnished. 3rd Floor. 
419 Washington St 
3 ROOMS and Bath with Garage - 
Heat furnished 4134 Washington 
A P P L Y 
T R U S T D E P A R T M E N T 
T H E 
L IB E R T Y T R U ST CO. 


Expert ROD & REEL Service 
Fly Tying Materials 


TACKLE SHOP 
243 VA. AVE. 
KING'S 


53 W illy* 4 dr Dix 
........................ * 595 
52 Chev. J dr . RAH 
..................... *695 
52 Pont. Catalina 
KA H .................... * 995 
52 Kaiser 4 dr OD 
............ I 595 
52 Old*. "9 r- HT. A beauty ......... *1295 
SI Nash Ram bler HT. 
* 395 
51 M ercury 2 or 4 dr Loaded. OD. * 596 


4— Auto Gloss 
GLASS INSTALLED 
• W H IL E YOU W A IT ) 
BEERM AN AUTO PARTS 
519-521 N. Mechanic 
PA 4-0250 


* 595 
* rn 
* 6951 


5— Auto Repairs, Service 
51 Ford 2 dr. Fordomatic ........... 
SI Buick Sup 
R iv 
4 dr 
51 Pac kard 4 dr Ultramatic. Beaut 
SI Dodge 4 dr. Real nice 
......... 
51 Plym outh 4 dr., like new ......... 
51 F ord 2 dr., rebuilt m o to r........... 
St Chevrolet 4 dr 
.............. 
51 Pontiac Clb. Cpe................... 
51 Olds. Sup. "66 ' 4 dr.................... * 695 


NORTH END GARAGE 
I w; 507 Henderson Ave 
PA-2 3590 
* 495 
S 495! 
Skilled Radiator Service 
* 
Schade’s Mech & Valley PA 2-0500 


31 Kaiser 4 dr., RAH. 
51 .stud#. 4 dr., V *......... . 
50 Plymouth 4 door ....... 
50 Chev 
2 or 4 dis. 
30 Ford 2 dr. (a Special) 
50 F otd 2 or 4 dr*. ....... 
19 Pontiac 4 door 
........... 
49 Packard 4 dr................. 
49 Oldsmobile 4 dr............ 


I 295 
6 395 
I I * 
I 393 
* 295 
I 303 
* 295 
* 195 
S 195 


M cFa r l a n d a u t o s h o p 
Phone Prt-4-121, 
50? PIN E AVF 


36 Ford "8 ” pk up, new . . .. . 
33 Ford 
4 T . 
panel 
. . . . . . . . . 
3.1 Ford Sdn. Del. 
......... 
32 C hevrolet I ton truck . . . . . 
It Dodge V T . panel .......... 
31 Chev. 
V5-T. 
pickup . . . . . . . 
31 Chee. 
I T. 
Panel 
....... 
50 International 
Walk 
In 
... 
50 F old Venetia 
47 Dodge 14 I. Coal bed ... 
41 Dodge 
T. pkup 
41 International 4 ton pk. up 
40 Ford tj-T. Pickup 


I SOO off 
..., 6 795 
. . . . 6 693 
. . . . I 895 
. . . . • 39*. 
. . . . * 695 
. . . . * 395 
. . . . I 295 
. . . . * 695 
.. . . I 343, 
. . . . * 
9.51 
... 
* 
95 


BLA M BLE BODY SHOP 
Bedford Road 
Phone PA 4-4199 


7— Business Opportunities 


Albright Bus Line for Sole 
KH cr she, Md. 
Dial PA 4 2695 


Exceptional Opportunity 


W E L L E S T A B L IS H E D 
.S ER V IC E B U S IN E S S 
Fu lly E quipped —- Est. IO year* 
Y ear round 
profit 
atarting 
from 
the first month. 
This opportunity does not demand 
previous 
experience 
will 
train. 
Price *14.900. Terms 
W rite Box 990 A c o Time* New* 
* 
95 
$5 Down On Cars Up To $700 r e s t a u r a n t 
e u iiv 
equipped 
well 
established. Central location. W rite Box 
93,5 A. «■ o Times-New*. 


SOUNDS U N BELIEV A BLE 


SAVE $176 ON 


4 piece luxurious cherry bedroom 


T H R E E rooms, 2 nd floor; private bath. su,te- Spacious double dresser and 
utilities furnished. 12 Fourth st. Phone mirror, large chest, book-case bed. 
jp a 4 6523. 
[night stand. 
M O D ERN 
3-room 
apartment. 
Private ‘ 
bath. 
Adults only. No pet*. Can see R E G $495 
....................... 
N U W 
5319 
anytime. 702 Maryland Ave. PA 2 R206 


TW O CO ZY 4 ROOM A P A R T M E N T S 
Grand Avenue. Reasonable Rent 
Phone PA 2 7900 


4 Rooms and bath, first floor. 
15 N. Pro *ped Square, *80. 
Newly decorated 
Phone P A 2 7292 after 7 P 
M. 


Only at M illerton'* u til 
you find values like these 
Millenson’s 
317 Virginia Ave. 
PA 2-3930 


D IS T R IB U T O R S 


C A R R IE R 
H E A T IN G A COOLING 
KFT.VTN ATOR 
W A T E R C O O LER S 
B U R N H A M H E A T IN G E Q U IP M E N T 


E N G IN E E R IN G A 
S U P P L Y C O M PA N Y 
2 William s St. 
Dial 
PA 2 7269 


s p f c j a y 
- 


R E I) 
D E L IC IO U S 
A P P L E 
T R E E S 
*1 25 FACH 
SM ITH 'S GARDENS 
1120 Shades Lane 
PA 4-1450 


21— Wonted to Buy 


W A N T ED 
FILL DIRT 
PH O N E PA 4-6881 


W A N T ED AT ON CE 
Use Pole Trailer 
or 
flat 
bottom 
with 
air. 
28 or 30 
foot. Phone 465 Romney. 


Wanted 
Parade Drum 
suitable for student. 
Phone PA 2 4291. 


23— Florists, Flowers, Plonts 
cuneral 
BOPP'S 


p lO W P r S 
Phone 


24-Furnaces, Heating, Stoves 


C 
T A 
P \T S E L F ST O R IN G W INDOW S 
O I U / U - U 
COMBINATIO.1 
C O M BIN A T IO N DOORS 
, 
. 
- JA L O U S IE S - P E R M A N E N T 
AW N INGS 
M O N T H S rent free to party redecorating! 
* 
A t 
a 
I 
n 
I 
a 
same. 
Four room apartment, ail pri- 
/ \ I L 
u Y lG tc U 
I l ’O G U C t S 


yM,e 
712 N 
( entrf 
[BO X 43. OLDTOW N ROAD 
T H IR D FT/HTR 4 ROOMS 


RA YM O N D J 
G R A B E N S T E IN 
Contractor Phone PA 4-4397 825 Va Ave. 
Sheet Metal — Welding 
Heating 
Plumbing & Heating 
J E Woodvard 
Phoie Po 2-6950 


A V A IL A B L E IM M E D IA T E L Y . U T IL IT IE S 
PA 2 5704. 


3 
N IC E 
rooms, 
modem, 
redecorated, 
blinds, porch, heat; private entrance, 
bath; attic; 117 Pennsylvania Ave. 


P R IV A T E 
4 room 
modern 
apartment. 
Steam 
beat 
It 
hot water furnished 
Adults 
only. 466 Brail St PA 4 5661 


5 ROOM apartment on the West Side 
Appiy 
409 
Greene St. 
References 
required 
PA 2-7235, 


FO U R large rooms, private hath; heat, 
water, laundry, porch, garage. No pets 
Phone Frostburg 226-R. 


L a V 8Ie — 6 rooms and bath, 
heat and water furnished 
* 
Phone PA I 7188 


3 ROOM S and bath, private, second floor, 
443 
Race 
St. 
*20. 
C. Glen 
Watson, 
P A 2 4040. 


T X i - W W A S H E R S E R V IC E . PA 4 2541 
i CV VV Complete Overhaul 
Apex, Easy 
Maytag Dexter.Kenmore.Biackstone.ABC. 
Your wringer dries clothes like 
new with our eiperf installation 
o f 
n e w 
rolls 
and 
hearings. 


PA 4-1234|t,EN N O x COAL. CAS. O II 
FU R N A C E S 
Winter Air Conditioning 
Kbngler Heating, 196 N Centre PA 4-6839 


S P E C IA L IO % D ISCO UN T! 
On AH Spouting and Spouting Fixtures 


Liberty Hardware Co. 


57 N. Liberty St. 
Phone PA 2 7140 


H O LLA N D F U R N A C E CO 
OU — Coal — Ga* Heating Vntti 
Cleaning. Repairing 
449 N 
Centre. 
PA 4-5522 


Do you need a new heating plant! 
Call PA 4-2414 for free estimates. 
Sun Heating Co., P 
O 
Bo* 447. 


PUPPIES 
R E G IS T E R E D 
CO< K E R S P A N IE L S 


L O V E L Y P E T S 
Mehle Kennels — PA 2 1691 


Drapery, Dress A Slip Cover Fabrics 
STO P IN TO S E E O U R S P E C IA L S ! 
Some as low as 49c a Va id. 
Kitchen Chairs covered in Plastic. 
G EO 
BR A G G , La VA L E , MD 
TA 4 4611 
l l Blocks Opp 
LaVal# Methodist Church 


25— Building Supplies 


ALUMINUM 


STORM DOORS 


NO RTH EN D 
Three room* 
private hath and entrance 
Heat 
furnished. 
Newly 
decorated. 
425 
Chestnut St 


C R E S A P T O W N — Flntire second floor, 
four ,-ooms. hath, private, front porch, 
garage, 
utilities. 
Ideal 
for 
working 
Couple. Phone PA 2 4987. 


N E W 5 rooms, hath, private entrance 
Convenient 
to downtown. 
*60 
month 
All utilities furnished 
P l 4 i»737 


ST EA M 
H E A T E D "A P A R T M E N T 
On Sperry Terrace Rent Reasonable 
Phone PA 2 7195 


BA N K TERMS 
HAROLD'S 


McMullen Hwy at Custard Stand 


9 A. M. to 9 P. M. 


8— Cool For Sole 


B E R L IN R IG V E IN 66 TON 
G U A R A N T E E D 
— 
ST O K E R 
G E O R G E L E Y D IG 
D IA L P A 2 9715 


8 ROOM S 
bath. 2 garages, porch, yard. 
745 Kelly Blvd *48 monthly. Apply 306 
Washington 


N EW 
3 room apartment 
private, heat 
and hot water furnished. Adults only. 
Phone PA 4 4604. 


$39.95 


1/18 
HOOVER Sales & Service 
L, „ , 
., 
, 
r n 
* 
na a cc inn 
1 n7 ‘iA' * 1)11 
piano hinge. 
I 
L. Bernstein PA 4-5900, 4-5724 inch 
thick, 2 
removable 
glass 
panels and 2 screen panels. Heavy 
gauge aluminum. Price includes all 
hardware. 
Installations can bo 
easily arranged. 


PARAKEETS S X C ’. 
13 Lyon* St. 
Ridgeley 
Phone R E $-9119 
Coron’s Quality Candy 
Butter Cream* 
59c lh 
138 Bedford St 


Save 15% On 
Bottled Gas 
BEN N ETTS 
PA 2-7900 


IS — Furnished Rooms 


S L E E P IN G 
room, 
furnished 
330-336; 
Virginia Av*. 
Phone PA 4 3445 or PA 
4 0420. 


Nelson Auto Sales 


Diet P A 4 0670 B E R U N 
B IG 
V E IN 
75'N. L U M P *6 50 | 8 
H o U S C i F o r R e n t 
A LSO S T O K E R 
P R O M P T D E L IV E R Y 
D IA L PA 2 5353, N IG H T PA 2 0676 


33 Chev, "210” 2 Dr 
Sedan 
5.1 Porn 
2 Dr. Sdn Auto Trans 
30 Potomac St. 
Ridgeley 


BERLIN $6 Ton, PA 2-5070 
Pea A 
Beaverdale Oil-Treated 
Pea 


Georges Creek or Berlin Cool 


C H IN E S E C H EST NUTS - H ardy, Blight 
resistant. 
Produce 
prolific 
crops 
of 
sweet, delicious nuts and provide shade 
for tTie home ground*. Two 3 to 4 ft 
Sire Tree* -Ofler 
No. 
.3 A —for *6 45. 
Postpaid 
Ask for Free cops New 56 
page Planting Guide < ataiog in color 
offering 
complete 
assortment 
Em it 
Trees, Nut Trees, Rerrv Plants Grape 
Vines, and Landscape Plant Material 
Salespeople 
wanted 
W A Y N E S B O R O 
N U R S E R IE S , W A Y N ESB O R O . VA 


314 PACA ST. 


Six rooms with hath. Gas furnace, new 


paper and paint, porch and yard 
*40 Large size skirt* from 
PA 4-3355 before 5 


BUCHANAN 
Lumber Company 


549 NL Centre St. 
PArkview 2-0650 


tor quality . . . 
LUMBER ond 
BUILDING MATERIALS 


Pick Up Trucks 


D IN G LE ESSO STATION 
Fayette and Greene Streets 


Rf- 89230 Anv jvmount [>i*i p a 2 3161 or TA 2 17.8 2 0 — For S o l e M i s c e l l a n e o u s 


Georges Creek Coal 7.50 Ton pi ann Bargain 


S to v e , fu rn a c e w o o d 
P A 2-8097 good condition 


1953 
PO N TIAC 
4 door 
sedan, 
loaded 
17 .(MMI 
mile* 
A l 
condition 
Phone 
P A 2 4732 
Apply 111 Idling Ave 


1946 
PONTIAC 
4 
door, 
radio, 
heater 
New 
tire* 
Completely 
^conditioned 
*135 
PA 4 2066 


Two 
Wheeled 
Assemble., 
•'railer. 
In good condition, priced to sell. 
Orchard & Wins. SU. 
PA 2 4664! 
BRUCE MOTOR CO. 
219 S Mechanic 
PA 2 3332 R o m n e y 
w 
v a 
p h o n e r n 


N O T IC E 
Reduced for quick sale 
1950 f ord V I 
2 door, radio, beater 
1947 Ponte. 
heater good tire* Good condition call 
Motorcycle Sales <t- Service 
TA 4 1216, 597 Tine Ave 
HARLEY DAVIDSON 


52 Ford V-8, AT. $695 


IDONI AUTO SALES 


248 N. Mechanic 
Th PA 2 7480( 


J950 Buick**4 dr. sedan 
Dyne flow, radio .. $.?95( 
THOMPSON BUICK 
PA 2 8400 
Car Lot PA 2-1424 


F E R G U S O N 
I KACTOKk 
F A R M 
M A C H IN E R Y 
Eight b Garage Batto 
Pike 
PA-4-4179 


R A IT A C H 'SJV mSiSm 
Ju st below Valley 


Taylor Motor Co. 


218 NL Mechanic St. 
PA 2-7979 


s 
p 


0 
E 
R 


A’ctiJ Car Trades! 


PO N T IA C 4 dr Starchief Custom *7475 


Used Upright piano in 
*69 


Somerset big vein coal, pea stoker. 
Any am ount 
Phone PA 3 0636 
A 
Lepley. 


MILLENSONS 


317 Virginia Ave. 
PA 2 3930 


S P R IN G S T Y L E S 
Linen Dresses, sizes 7-t5. 
* 9 95 
Cotton Blouses and Skirts, dyed 
to match 
*12 95 


! M S PO W E R E X C A V A T IN G 
[Sleeveless Blouses, sue* .38 to 44 * 2 98 
Dresses and matching Duster*, 7-13. 
121Y-241Y 
.................................. *22 95 
[Cotton Skirt* ...................... 
* 3 98 
Blouses from ................ .................. * 198 
He hare First N a tl 
Charge 
SYKES STYLE SHOP 


105 Md 
Ave 
Daily ll A 
M. — 9 P. M 


The South Cumbtrlond 
Planing Mill Compony 
33 Queen St. 
PA-2-2600 - 2-2601 


• T T R E N C H IN a 
Concrete Septic Tank* A Installation* 
Steel Storage Tank*. Block or Custom 
PILE BROTHERS 
MrMullen Hwy 
PA 2-8484, 2 848* 
HAGERSTOWN BLOCKS- 
Ray M. Athey Phone PA-4-4417 


Used TV Sets 
B A R G A IN P R IC E ! 
Param ount 
101 Va 
Ave 
PA 3 2230 


. Prom pt delivery 
W S w e e n e S B o o t S h o p 
r o zAMM 
Phone 
M 
Keister, 
CO 47061 
iv E 
W 
Campbell 
NFIW A U S E D BOATS. BOAT M T S 


BIG V E IN 75% L U M P 
86 50 P R I IM P I D E L IV E R Y 
P R O N E P S 4-0106; PA 4-0717 E V E N IN G S 


C l-RAN lumpy coal, 
ton 
deliveries 
PA 2 2571, formerly 


G U A R A N T E E D 
P R O M P T 
D E L IV E R Y F A R M AND S A W M IL LIN G E Q U IP M E N T 
B E R L IN B IG V E IN COAL. 
66 TON 
I 
Complete repair part* and service on 
PHONF: PA 2 2717 
Alii* Chalmers and Oliver t letrae 
—----------- 
—-------— . 
: 
Complete diesel service on GM and 
Somerset Big Vein, PA 2-77 IO 
Am erican Bosch injector* 
A U 
KIN D S O F S T O K E R COAL 
. f ul1 ,in* ol ***** an'1, cr* * l*'[ 
—.I 
-------------------- 
stahonarv power unit* 
gas L diesel. 
9— Electrical Work, Fixture! 
coep r a n f a r m e q u i p m e n t ca 
* 
‘ »*■ 
Somerset. Penna 


Phone PA 2 1570 


Phone 4.146 
ELECTRIC WORK 
Motor Repairing, W iring and Fixture* 
QUEEN CITY ELECTRIC CO. 
Westinghouse Apparatus Agent 


Table Top Gas Range *13. 
7 foot lunch counter, >1). 
Phone PA 4 9811. 


"V E T S B IC Y C L E S A LE S A S E R V I* F. 
Wholesale and Retail 


Bank Financing 


AT OUR OFFICE 


30-Month 5ro Interest 


ON A LL '56 M O D ELS 


See 


r 
D C 


1953 FORD F-600 
154” 
W B 
254 
eu 
in 
Engine 
825x2f 
IO ply tires Turn Signal* Marker light* 
Heater, 2 Speed rear axle Like ne# 
D IA ! 
PA 2 3456 
G E O R G E MOTOR CO 


Us First 


e Us Last' 


But 


*r 
- q ae 


r r 
Triple Lakes Auto Mart 


lure I o 


Our 


OK'd Used Cars 


Before You Buy1 
Vt F ord 2 dr. BH , 22 000 mi < an hardly 
be told from new, ail new tues 
$495 
PA 4 465111955 Chevrolet '21(1' 4 Door. 
_________ 
I? D. T.T. No 351 
$184 
.949 Ford FT Dump. *>0x20 12 ply tire., m 4 f h 
, 
. 
j 
radio, healer A l 


RL 220 Triple Lakes 


35 PON rise 
4 dr 
stanhief 
53 < H E V R O L E T 4 d r Bel Air 
5.3 F O RD 2 dr 
F airier# 
95 S it D E B A K E R 2 di 
(nm m , 
54 O L D S M O B IL E 
Holiday I pe. 
54 B l Ii K 
Super Hardtop 
34 MERC I RY’ 4 dr. Monterey . 
54 PO N T IA C 4 door 
54 PONTIAC 
Catalina Coupe ... 
34 BUIC K 2 dr. Special 
54 C H E V R O L E T 2 dr 
"216* ... 
54 C HEV ROI E T Bel Air 4 dr. , 
34 C H E V R O L E T 4 dr. •‘210’' 
34 C H E V RO I E T ' j ton pickup 
54 PLY M O I I II Sa i oy 2 door 
53 t A D IL L A C 
4 door 
... 
33 FO R D 
Victoria 
53 PON ITA! 
4 dc 
53 PO N T IA C 
Catalina 
Coup* 
. 
S3 C H EV R O LF: J 2 d i. Bel Air . 
53 C H E V R O L E T 2 dr 
"210* ... 
5J NASH statesman 4 dr. 
33 FO R D 4 door 
.. . . 
52 PO N T IA C Catalina Coupe ... 
32 DF!SOTO 
Sportsman 
... 
I ? PO N T IA C Sedan Delivery . . . 
52 < H E V R O L E T 2 door 
SI C A D IL LA C Coupe De Ville . 


*2295 


*196:' 


156-160 F rederick St 
Phone P A 2 1133 
*169 SO, Bicycle* *18 up 


F ! F C T R lf * 
W O R K 
.Power Mower* *35 up 
C C C L . I TY IC . 
VV U M P S 
,n W| , f \ . H Y 
P A V E M E N T S 


W A LLP A PFiR 
Max* vour selection at 
home 
Expert paperhanging, low cost, 
PA 2 0224 for samplea Hartley Wigfield 


T E A M 
horses, 
harnesses, 
equipment 
Cow, fresh in April, seven hogs 
W il­ 
liam Yodels, Bear Hill Road. Oldtown 


4 Fan n all f 20 Trai tm» on rusher 
*139 
to 
*539 
H G 
Render 
Ph 290 Meyersdale, T* 


ADOR 3 R EE 
j 
CCM K E R S P A N IE L S 
Vale Summit. Md 


For Cheaper Concrete 
and Cinder Block 
of Guaranteed Quality 


Call 


P U P P I E S 
Mrs 
Meek 


It 


B U R K E T T 'S W A S H E R S E R V IC E 
101 N 
c edar St 
Phone PA 4 2(>66 


ELEC T R IC 
IM T BATOR 
400 Egg* CapaciO 
D L Roller, Route 4. Box 353. Cit 
BEER s- DD CASE 
(Cholee of I* different br«ndM 


F R E E E S I (M A T E S ON W IR IN G 
J";;. 
Sterling Electric Co., Inc. 


do?- IOO N . C E N T R E S T . 
PA-2-4300 
* I ■ 
*179 
*15® 


p a 2 h6* i 
8 - y r. O l d B o u r b o n $ 3 9 9 q t . 


H IC ’ 
J! 29: 


Cumberland 
Md 


w e 
b r o n z e 
Baby 
shoe* 
Ail work K lin e s L iq u o r S to re 
700 N . M e c h , 
guaranteed 
A 
R 
Samp»on, 815 Calven, 
----— ---- 
Phone PA 2 4617. 
PF'.NNY B R IT E 
C O P P E R 
AND 
BR A SS 
I 
C LEA N KR. 
For 
Demonstration, 
ta ll 
IO—Financing, Money to loan T o . .' 
r * 
Frostburg 170-W 


The Cumberland Ceme- 


and Supply Company 


R e a r 419 N . C e n tre St. 
P A 4-2000 


condition. 


Gold Bond and 
Red Top Plaster 
Full L ne of Metal Goods 
tor Plastering 
SUPER CONCRETE CO. 


4(5 ll 
H#nder*on Ave 
Ph. PA 2 4360 
26^— Help Wanted 


T H R IFT 
PLAN 
rtnanee Corporation of Cumberland 
IM Frederick St 
M ist E L L A N EG U S R ES T A U R A N T equip 
Baldwin 
Electric 
Organ, 
brand 


Phone PA 4-0344 
Regular price *1500, 


*1095 
*1195 


56 Cad. Cpe Deville, Loaded 
56 Plyrn. Clb Sdn V 8. Push So Down Payment Spec 
Button Trans Hew 
56 Chev Bel Spt Cp Loaded » 
" K sup*r 4 dnor 


*1295 
*1493 
*1095 
*1043 
* 925 
* 995 
*|09f 
t 995 
« aon 
* 745 
*1645 


We Loan Money 


On Watches. Diamonds Open "til 7 
" It *o» need money «#* Sam " 
Southern Jeweler* 
131 N 
Mechanic 


LO AN S 
ON YO UR SIG N A l l K I O N LY 
I t lo ti N 
IA M U Y F IN A N C E CO RPO RATIO N 
40 North Mechanic Street 
Phone PA 4 3600 


Bale Price *3 


Can 
You F 


AUTO LOANS 
in 5 minutes 
National Loan. 201 S Georye 


(New i 
19M 
Fold 
Victoria 
H o d 
Top 
Fordomatic, 
radio, 
heater, 
whit* 
wall lire* 
ISO# ©ii 
1954 Buick 
4 
door, 
radio, 
heatei, 
Ilk* 
new 
*159' 
1953 Lincoln 
Capri 
Hard 
lo p , 
loaded 
like 
new 
JU 1'* 
1953 Plymouth convertible, a beauty *l»9. 
1954 Chev, 
Be lair 
hardtop, 
\ I 
engine 
Hydramatic 
*129! 
1951 Mercury 2 dr . Radio, beater, ovei 
drive 
*54! 
D E R E M E R S G A R Af.) 
B dgeiey. W Va, 
Dial RFI I 9ll( 
Moore’s 
Towing 


1949 PONTIAC 


Streomlmer Eight 


Deluxe Sedan 


H. D. R. No, 304 
$1445 
1953 I ord Custom 4 Door. 
H. D. FL AT 
No 
343 
$1095 
1953 Chevrolet Bol Air 4 Door, 
A. D. R. No. 335 
$1145 
1953 Chevrolet 210 Club. Cpe. 
R H. D. No. 307 
$104 
1952 Chevrolet S'line 2 Door. 
R. ll. D. No. 339-A 
$ 695 
1951 Buick Super 4 Door. R. 
PA-4-644U 
H l) AT No- 
$ 745 
1951 Chevrolet S'line 4 Door. 
R. ll. D. PG, No. 
368 
$ 595 
1949 Chevrolet S'line 2 Door. 
FL FL D. No. 359 
$ 395 
1948 Chevrolet F'mst 4 Door. 
R. H. D. No. 324-A 
1947 Chevrolet F'mst, 4 Door 
H. D. No. 330 ...... 
1947 Chevrolet F'mst 4 Door 
H D. No. 197-B 


24 Hour 
Service 


Radio. Heater 
Transmission. 
Standard 


One Day Only 


$265 


$ 295 


56 Ford Fairlane, RH. OD 
56 Ford Cust 2 I) New 
55 Mercury sd., R. H MM 
55 Chev. D r sd.. R. II. PG 
50 Buick Conv. RH & Dyn 
55 Ford Sdn. R&H 
55 Pontiac 4 dr. St. Wag 
55 Cadillac sd., R. H PS PB 
54 Plymouth Sd., R & ll 
54 Ford Sdn. Cust. R. IL 
53 Olds ‘SR’ Hoi Ope R ll Hyd 
53 Ford “ 8” Sd., R. H. EM 
53 Chevrolet Bel. Sd. 
53 Dodge Hard Top. R&H 
53 Cad. Cpe. Deville, RH. PS 
53 Buick Super Rw. R&H 
53 Buick Spec. Sdn R. H. 
53 Pontiac Conv., R H,, Hyd. 
53 Studebaker Sdn RH OD 
53 Mercury Spt. Cpe. R. H. 
52 Pontiac Sdn , RH, Hyd. 
52 Studebaker Sdn., Rf! 
52 Buick Sp Sdn St. Sh. 
52 Chev. Sdn RH 
52 Henry J., R & II. 
j 52 Willys Panel 
51 Chev. Belair. R ll 
51 Hudson 2 Dr. OD. 
51 Cadillac Sdn. like new 
51 Pontiac Sdn. RH. Hyd. 
51 Ford 4 Door. R & H 
51 Plym, hardtop, R&H 
51 Dodge Sdn., R&H 
5* Plym Sdn R&H 
51 Fon Custom "8U 2 dr 
51 Stude V 8. 2-dr OD 


* 795 
I P L Y M O U T H 
Belvedere 
.. 
* 675 
SI PO N T IA C 4 door 
. . . . . . * CD' 
51 C H E V R O L E T C lub Coup* ......... * 593 
Sd < A D IL I.A l 
Coupe 
*1295 
VO CH EV R O I E T 4 door ...... 
* 495 
.50 C H E V R O L E T 2 
door 
.............. * 49 
SO PONTIAC 
4 door 
.................. * 4*5 
YO OI D SM O R II I 
4 dr.............. 
» 495 
M O L D S M O B IL E 
2 dr.................... * 4*5 
I t D O D G E 4 dr 
.................. 
* I* - 
50 c HRYS1 I R 4 door .................. 
* 395 
so N ASH 
4 door 
............. 
* 2'* > 
49 I A DI KLAC 
4 
door 
S 743 
4* O L D S M O B IL E 
*8 ' 4 door 
* 49 
48 ( HEY R O L E T 2 
door 
* 165 


.4/1 Cars Inside! 


Pontiac-Cadillac 


205 N M ECH A N IC ST, 


r.i 2-8300 
Open 7 to 9 


I — For Rent 
2nd Floor Office Space 
Will remodel to suit tenant. 
CURL’S 
C A M E R A SHOP 
SO N 
C E N T R E ST 


H o sp hr A L B FD S. 
W HK E LCM A IR sT ” 
W A L K E R S 
4 R U TCH EN 
PA 2 8484 
Pile 
Bio* 
RI 
5. 
M rM ullen 
Highway 


men! 
large 6 burner, broiler it 2 oven 
ga* Move 
8 toot white porrelam re 
Only At Af-lfem 
tnget ator display rase. Mamies* steel! Value Like Th iii 
water station A compreaaor; ttainie**; 
•tee! 
refrigerator; white cabinet 
ba*# 
\1 i I l o n v i A n 
with 
porcelain top; thiee small hard; 
a’ l l l l t 
I1 5 U I1 . 
maple 
top look 
table* 
Also 
one 
,.- i. 
A vo 
< brome divan and two chan*, ( brome 
' " g u ild A v e . 
with Dutan 
upholstery, 
suitable 
tor I 
office or 
waiting room 
Apply John, 
Hater, 228 Baltimore Ave 
P E A T H UM US 
will 
awaken 


TA< O 
W A V E trap antenna 
with rotor gun new life to old ami, an 
and control 
10 element beam 
Phone 
PA 2 2796. Half Pru e 


ne» PA RTY’ to clean 
up. partly ie bu lid 
and 
I 
repair property In country. Could oceu 
j 
p' 
rent 
free for 
care. 
W rit* 
Bo* 
9 983-A c ' O Time* New*. 


PA 2-3930 


your 
mu 
ail plant 


B R ID E S 
I.et u* photostat your marriage 
certiorate* Can be made in po< aet »ize| 
waled in plastic 
Whatever it is, we ll 
cop* 
it. 
Anv 
valuable 
paper* 
repro 
dured 
C l A IR ER ! AND 
E N G R A V E R S , 
Ilk South Mechanic At., PA 4 1622 


and lawn*, eliminate wee 


lb.—10c 
50 lb 
*2 


E X C E L L ! NT M IX E D H A Y 
•25 Ton 
At Happv Hills Farm 
3 Mile* W’e*t of F'ro**hurg, Route 40 
Call John Hater 
PA 4 5533 


A U T O M O BILE Insurance to cove, Stat# 
Law *29 66 Also Workmen * Compen** 
lion, F ir* 
Glenn Watson PA-J-4040 


H O S P IT A L 
Attendant* 
(W hite) 
20 
it* 
45 .veal* with minimum of IO year* of 
school 
F'xpertenc* 
not 
necessary. 
Permanent positions. This I* a private 
mental hospital located 8 mile* noFtn 
of Baltimore. 
Write to Personnel Of­ 
fice 
Sheppard Pratt Hospital, Towson 
4, Maryland. 


MAN or woman wanted to handle Mc- 
I 
Ne** Products full or spare time. Op­ 
portunity to make 540 a day. No expert 
erne necessary. Write M r MeVey, ICA 
Market Place, Baltimore 2. Md. 
27— Female Help Wanted 


I S I F:\OGR A T H ER under 25 
Perm anent 
Tn-siate Employment Agency, licensed, 
P. O. Box 163, LaVale. Md P A 4-1962- 
$30 Trade-in allowance on your cire ut r e s e n t work w ntTTTT^ 
in pet con. Shipway • Inn, Green Ridge, 
old wringer washer on a new 19oF> 
Fiiatnone, mu 


2 W A IT R E S S E S 
Apply Hv Burger ReMurant 
6 M ile, West of Cumbeitand. Rom# 4b 


Liberty Hardware Co 


57 N 
Liberty St 
Phone PA 2-7140 


CROSSTOWN BARGAIN S 


12— Apartments 


F U R N IS H E D or unfurnished. 646 Wash 
ington 
bt., 
newly 
decorated 
private 
apartment having living dining combe 
nation, 
bedtoom 
bath 
and 
kitchen 
Adult* only. 


trnishcd Apartments 


B L V D A PT S 2" 374 Room” Apt* 
Utilities included 
Also Sleeping Room* 
Reasonable. PA 2 8100, PA 2 4144 


3 Room*, second floor. 
Adult* 
7 N 
W averly Terrace 


Make Offer 


I 175 


I B r ck Spec 2 di , R ll A A l 
>2 stude 
(o m it. Lib cpe , RAH 
51 ( hey. ' j ton pickup 
5? ( hcv. 
('lh. ( po 
Heater 
52 Dodge 4 dom 
R A If 
5! Ford 
Conv 
R, IL AT 
SI Kaiser 4 dr, R A H on# owner 
YI Mercury Cl I pc 
R 
ll on* owner 
SI Porn lac 4 door 
R A H 
St) Ford Cust 2 dr . R H. 
YU Porn J dr.. R H 
AT. 
-ti P v Spec 4 dr R H, 
49 Chev 2 dr , R H 
48 Chev 
4 dr , R ll 
18 F ord 4 door 
R A H 
YU Fold 
ton pk-up Ii one owner. 


3 ROOMS, nicely furnished. 
Fngidaire, 
hot 
air 
heat 
Children 
allowed 
i l l 
Bedford St 
Phone PA 2 0136 


R O M E I.IT E CHAIN SAW S 
Sales and Service 
Davis Garage, 
rtintatone Md Phone G R 8 4287 


N E W LIN O LEUM S ~ 


AU Colors A Design* 
Beautiful 


9 x 12 only 
$5 60 


Bennett Transfer & Storage 


Henderson A\e. at Franklin St. 
Thone PA 2-6770 


Norge conventional washer. 


KLIN E FURN ITU RE CO 
405-413 Virginia Ave 
PA 2-482C 


O n e M i n u t e 
Washer Part* J 
Complete Stock M ID D L E 


W OM AN 
FO R 
H O U SEW O RK 
Live in. give age and refetente. 
BO X 969 A CO T IM E S N EW S, 


I S K E L L E Y ’* 
536 Pin* Ave. 
PA 2 5115} 


Set of F unk and Wagnali s encyclopedia 
F'orty 
Volume* 
*50 
Phone Frostburg 4i2 R 


CIGARETTE 
VENDING MA "H IN E 
(Pieced on commation ho rill 


E N T E R P R IS E A M U SEM EN T CO 
170 N 
Centre St 
Phone PA 2 005' 


$ 175 


YOU A LW A Y S SAVE 


M O N EY AT 


;Ei ler Chevrolet, I ne. 


219 N 
Mechanic St 
Register your motor number Open E\emngi> 
Ph PA 4-4400 
for Plymouth contest NOW! 


Over 35 Cars to Choose From 


, 
C , 
n o 
rs 
|B a n k T e r m s * N ° D o w n P a y m e n t ^ ’^ 
^ 
^ 
^ 
f 
r 
i 
Z 
" sSm ftZ RH “od 
urn bel'land Motor Sales 


51 Olds. “ 88” Sdn. R&H 
I14 v' ineow St- 
OPP A&p 


50 Buick Sdn. R&H. 
.Phone TA 4 0790 
Open ’til 9:30 
50 Buick Sup Riv R H Dyn. 
_________________________ 


GURLEY'S, Inc 


Dodge - Plymouth 


50 Packard Sdn , R&. 
SO Olds Sdn.. R ll & Hyd. 
50 Ford Sdn. R a, K 
50 Chevrolet Sdn. R. H 
49 Olds “88”. R & ll. 
19 Butch Sdn., R&H 
49 Chevrolet Conv 
49 Chevrolet Sedan R & ll 
48 Cadillac Sdnt. R&H 


MIDTOWN MOTORS I 


52 f hev Bel Air HT. PG . RH, 
c Q O C 
Tinted gias, 
WW 
2 Tone 
i o O 
[Opp. Post Office 
PA 4-3230 


LIG H T Housekeeping Room* AU unlit)#* 
furnished 
Sleeping 
room* U desired 
119 R Allegany Bt 


TW O and Three room comfortably furn 
Ohed 
apartment* 
Utilities 
Columbia 
St 
section 
PA 
2 7900 
Evening* PA 
4 3674 
___ 


T H R E E rooms, private entrance, frig) 
dane, aemi-private bath, laundry privi­ 
lege, 
Adult* 
410 Louisiana Ave 


M i I I Y 
Furnished 
apartment, 
private 
bath, 
private 
entrant# 
Adult* 
114 
Greene St. 
Apply 6 to 8 p. in 


A P A R T M E N T , newly decorated, private 
hath, automatic heat 
and hot 
water 
Adult* 
Reference, t i Prospect Square 


rooms, 
heat, 
ga-- 
ann 
electric, 
irig d aire . 
porch, 
laundry facilities 
IOU Virginia Ave 


3 Nice loom*, all ut littles tut niched 
Adult* 
322 Pai a St 


TW O room apartment, first floor 
Frig! 
daire. 
p ila t e 
entrance 
Phone 
PA 2-0096 
P A 4 6779 
IO 30 
to 
Afterward* 


Two 
rooms, 
bath 
porch#*, lawn 
I^ V a ie 
Phone P A 26326. 


CARPET SALE 
All wool 9 x 12 Wilton A Axminster 
rugs. Regularly priced as high as 
$95. 
NOW $49 


T 'im ty chopper! will buy there fa it 
Millerton s 
317 Virginia Ave 
PA 2-3930 


S P E C IA L — 
Sewing machine* adulated 
in the home *2 
Alto electrify A buy 
machine* 
W A K E F IE L D Sale* A her 
vice 
PA 2 6430. PA 2 4794 


UNPAINTED 
FURNITURE 


LARGE STOCK 


Try: 


cd woman for housekeeper. 
Howard Burkett. .UMI N. Mechanic St , 
( it> 
Phone PA 2 9723 
28— Mole Help Wanted 


Are you l7-l8Vi years old* 
Belar# you start to work establish 
Draft Deferied Statu* . . 
WI T H O N LY S IX MONTHS 
A C T IV E D UTY T R A IN IN G 
You can 
do 
thi* 
bv 
enlisting 
in 
the 
Army Reverve. 
Visit or Cell: USAR Armory 
301 S 
.Mechanic St. 
Dial PA 2-4404 


M EN W A N TED 
Can 


New* 


2 men with neat appearance 
are in'ereMed in the future 
Mu** 
car 
Write Box 964 A c/o Time*- 


// 


Baby Parakeets For Sale 
439 N Mechanic 
Phone PA-2-7011 


Spinet Piano Bargain 
Kim ball — Regu 
lar Price *62» Sale Pru e 
*419 


Only 
At 
M u ifn in n’t Can 
Yoe 
Find 
A 
Bor gam Like T h it’ 
M il LENSO N S 
317 Y og ini* Ave. 
PA 2 3940 


N O T IC E 
P E O P L E O V ER 60 CAN NOW 
B U Y H O SPIT A LIZA T IO N 
P H O N E PA 4 0313 


PENNSY 


In The Narrows 


DIAL PA 2-7300 


SI R O E elect ne hot water heater 
«*nri 
Phone i " *"< 
to 


$3 AN HOUR 
ll you quality duet! 
sale,, established 
customer* 
Permanent 
You <-n 
name 
tommission guaranteed you need to start, 
'la r i cd » th car or 
Gr-e phone num- 
hr i 
„cr| 
^rtfircss 
VS rite 
Bo* 98?.A e n 
lime*-New* 


T U R ! ! 
M EN wanted 
! inert assortment* 
ut household furnishing* sold on e**'# 
budge! plan which make* ex** 
»ai#«. 
See M r Lichtenstein. 176 N 4 entre St. 


Ilion 
Wilton 
milk cooler 
30 ga 
Bedford \ allrv 185 


HOI S ! " T R A IL E R 
1955 
star. 40 Run 
2 bedroom*, washing machine 
TV 
an 
tennae 
full tub A showei 
Priced for 
immediate 
vale 
A 
occupant' 
Phone 
PA 2 1404 , 6 4 
P. M 
P A 4 6671 atter 
,5 P M 


a wi 
offer a man 
dale. Pa 
area. I 
prn«*e* furnished 
iuon 52 Weeki a 
ta 


G M C Trucks 


Case Tractors & Machinery 


14-Unfurnished Apartments 


KO OL-VENT A LU M IN U M A W N IN G S 
Welch Insulation 
Free Estimates! 
Ft 
Ashby 2110 
Frostburg 340 


M O D ER N 5 
! 
ington bt. 
■ entrance. 


room 
Heat 


T H R E E 
used 
overhead 
garage 
tim rim tnt W H wash- 
complete with hardware 
16 ft 
furnished. 
Private 


International Harvester 


Authorized Dealer 
Motor I rucks 
Farm tractor* A Machinery 


I HF LIGHT A D EJ K E B CG 
12j S 
L ib e r t y 
P A 2-OiUO Of 2-U/U^ i i i g. Genus AL 
Phone PA 2S600l72«f C r R L L .N L S T . 
Red's Used Cars 


l % ! a £ 
aJ 
Z 
" " D K " * I «>»"- »p*rlm en. 
U t , 
C O M P E R T ! 
R E P A IR 
SE R Y IC E 
, 
Bu,„ 
in 
Kitchen 
units, 
all 
floor* We have 
coveted, 
heat 
furnished 
location al 228 Ba'fim ore 


doors 
wide. 
12 ft. high with gias*. PA 2-4260 week 
day* 6 to 5 


E G B A U 
M A K ES 
After W> Sell— We Serve! 


Coffins G M C Truck Co 


I A K E N O TIC E 
larg* assortment of slightly 
t m 
i n i used coal heating A cooking stovea 
Bar 
Ave . Apply gain price* Apply ITO Federal AL Phone 
.lo; n H«fei, 230 Baltim oie Ave 


FO U R ROOMS and hath. 491 Haltir 


PA 2 6147 


ie S O R R Y Sal is now a merry gal 
She 


Bock Beer, F&5 Throwaways 
$2.98 per Case 


JO R S 


7 Union St 


High pay" 


tarnished sale* rout# 
• vins in the Meyers* 
* :vorv t un and ex 
Salary plus commis- 
•cat 
Apply in per*on 
Lumberland. Yid 


All trades 
Fare paid 
So 
America 
Th* Islands, US 
W rit* 
Dept 
ISH National, 1U20 Broad, New­ 
ark. N. J 


2V— Salesmen Wanted 


I I 
p v 
13 N . Front St [DOOR 
to door 
va let non who are not 
Mc Dados Dial pa 
-2030 


Financing — Home Loans 
— M cK A IG 'S — 


K IT Z M ILLER M EM O RIALS" 
MONUMENTS and M ARKERS 
AD the best marble end granite rn 
eluding "Rock of A ge*' 
gr*nite end 
‘Barre Guild 
Me mortals" 


getting ahead and want lait advance­ 
ment in the selling field 
Gieat oppor­ 
tunity with one of 
the 
large vt 
com­ 
panies of its kind Write P Cl Box 982, 
( umberL:od 
Md . giving full particu­ 
lars oi yourself. 


SA! ES YI AN 
IO • 56 vear 
$75 guaranteed a wee* 
Box 986 A c o Times-New* 


I T H E L O N G E R your ad rtm< 
per dav it become* 
We 
quote long term 


i ’ \ 2-81 if) K l 
Ari F A N I 
D U M M . 
p a -i w 
i 
A ' f 
l i a b l e gitei M arch IS. Phone, 
used 
Blue lustre rug and uphoHteryi 
a oiou U I . 40 L A b I 
I n (J;N L F A i-5922f 
t,A t 6709 
» <.ieilner. 
Rosenbaum * Housewares. 
• 
upholstery frederick A Georg* St*. PA 2-076A—2-JSRMj 
any want advert 
" S I * 
W HAT TOV 
B U Y ' 
cost the g ieater your profit 


old. with car. 
to start 
Writ# 


th# cheaper 
be gild to 
lei rate, to 
lower jour 


Phone PA 2-4600 for a WANT AD Toker 
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD., 
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 
1956 
NINE 


29 — Soles men Wonted 


Salesman Wan ted 
S8 .000 to $1 0,000 


Here 
i top 
mb for a salesman 
who wants greater earnings, oppor­ 
tunity 
for 
the 
future 
and 
greater 
stability 
If 
you 
have 
real 
sales 
ability and can prove jt with actual 
records, and are interested in a new 
position offering you more satisfac­ 
tion and prestige, here is >our oppor­ 
tunity to become associated with a 
leading manufacturer, international in 
Us growth and leadership with large 
direct sales to plants and shops. Pro ­ 
duct^ are broadly promoted and na 
tionally 
advertised 
I .sed 
by 
thou­ 
sands of the nations leading indus­ 
tries. 
E.yclusive 
territory. 
Drawing 


I account and high coinmi.ssions, Re- 
puired: At least 3 sears sales esperi- 
ence, aged 26 4.3. car. good eye .sight, 
mechanu at 
aptitude 
nr 
fam iliarity 
with metals and machiners 
Only ap­ 
ply if you have sales experience. 


P H O N E Mr. J I. H alves. Fort Cum- 
berla 
Hotel. Monday thru Wednes­ 
day, f 
rth 5, 6, 7 for appointment. 


47 — Real Es fote for Sol# 


The H A R O LD R . F L E T C H E R Co. 
Mortgage Banker»-Real Estate-lnsurance 
FH A 
Bedford. P *. Phono 104« 
V A 
Today ’s Sermonette 


(Continued from Page 10) 


th a t lo o k e d so stro n g an d im p res- 
10 A C R E good garden ground. .I room 
house, 
2 
room 
cottage. 
Phone PA 
■ 
« 
. . 
t 
i. 
.i. 
j 
4-3502. 
Joseph 
E a rl 
Strong. 
Creek 
^^d b een b u ilt up on th e san d. 
Road, off Williams, 


4 ROom concrete block, large lot, good 
water. Easy terms. Bowman s Addition. 


8 Room frame, arranged for 3 apart­ 
ments, hot woter heat, double concrete 
block garage. 
Shriver Ave. 


J . S HUTTON. Realtor 
Listings Wanted; 
Ridgeley, W. V*. 


Parsons High Sc hool Holds 
County Firemen 
Annual Popularity Elec tionHggf* Reports 


On Convention 


At The Tracks 


It w e n t d o w n b e fo re 
the s u rg in g 
P A R S O N S — T h e a n n u a l 
p o p u la r- jD a n ie l. an d C a ro le O r r . R e s t d a n c 


tlood o f u n c o n tro lle d d e s ire . T h e re 
co n test o f P a rs o n s H ig h S ch o o l e r bo.v: firs t. B o h S t u r m s ; se co n d . 


w a . a m o ra 
co 
*and P a r s o n s Ju n io r H ig h w a s h e ld i^ ’*^^ 
d a n c e r g i il ; 
firs t. 
T h e ho u se m a y fa ll b e c a u s e of. 
;Jo a n S h o e m a k e r; se co n d . J u d y O rr. 
la c k of 
fa ith . 
D u rin g th e s 
e 
c 
o 
n 
d 
f 
o 
l 
l 
o 
w 
i 
n 
g 
w in n e rs ; 
Ju n io r H ig h — M o st hand- 


W o rld W a r D r. L e s lie W e a th e rh e a d 
b een n a m e d a c c o rd in g to a n sop-jc jjo y; firs t. B ill E v i c k ; se co n d , 


re c e iv e d a le tte r fro m a b ro k e n - u n rio iititP irie n t m a d e b y E a r l C o r- jD g v id 
H o v a ttc r . 
P r e t t ie s t 
g ir l: 


h e a rte d w o m a n . “ M v h u sb a n d h a s c o ra n p rin c ip a l o ft he sch o o l. 


Mex ic an Double 
Pay s $7,725 


Today's Selections 


iJo a n 
B la c k , 
firs t; 
se co n d , 
J e a n ¿irnong topic.s d iscu sse d v e .s te rd iv i 
- 
Dial R E «-8700.5 cc n k ille d in th e w a r . M y b o y w a s 
P a r s o n s 
H ig h 
S ch o o l 
—• 
M o st \ e y to r. 
Mo.st 
p o p u la r 
b o y ; 
firs t,|;)t 
th e 
m o n th ly 
m e e tin g 
of 
tiie 
« 
r o m i sjar. ‘ Perfevt ‘ 


T 
io o k in g ~t h 
r I o n a s h i p t h a t h a s b e e n t o r p e d o e d , fisni^som e b o y ; firs t, D o n N e s to r; p e n n is 
S c h o n o v e r; 
se co n d , 
B ill'e x e c u t iv e c o m m itte e 
o f 
A Ucoanv-***’*^ 
s M r 
A v u o n , D o n r , .shm ia s u i 


to your te ie p h o L jW h y do y o u go on ta lk in g a b 
o 
u 
t B 
o 
b 
b 
y S c h o o n o v e r and Jo e [«A ick. 
M o st 
p o p u la r 
g iri 
fir.s t.;G a rre tt V o lu n te e r F ir e m e n 's "\sso - 'b « - 'L 'x a n d e r ot S a n D ieg o . C a lif . 
" 
STO P right now and start 
the for sale ads 
GO 
and call the advertiser of the Heiii y o u !th e *lo ve o f G o d ^ T h e re Cannot b6 B e v a . 
P r e t t ie s t 
g irl 
arc 
interested 
jn 
Sava 
time, 
aave 
money, save trouble. 


I By The A.s.soriated Pres.s * 


f A lR t.K O * ,v n s 


1 
Piet .s .Son. Dutch (ial, Syrian G irl 
. \ G l’.^ 
C X L I F N T E 
M e x ic o 
2 
w h i/ \ r u 
hook up. Hardhack 


M a rc h 
4 
.? - H o ld e r.s 'o f ‘tw o 
$2, 


tick e ts w on $7.72.i 60 e a c h on d aily-! 
> 
1 ouiteen 
tirand. 
f ighting 
Wise. 
F’haelaler 
. 
............ 
' 
lUue Sall.v, Weekl.v. Danger Cue 
an d th e re g io n a l fire school w e re 
tra c k to d a y 
t, 
i.o\eiv 
i.aun. 
lommv s je i. Tiger 
It 
w a s 
the 
largCNt 
d ailv- d o u b le 
. 
. 
hamrm-gen 
DiahiO 
Susan 


R e p o rts 
on 
the 
a n n u a l 
c o u n ty ^ 
, 


co n v e n tio n , 
th e c a r n iv a l sc h e d u le 
C a lie n te ho rse 


3’ — Situations Wanted 


M O D EL Day Nur.sery open 8 to 5 daily 
Children 2-6 
I ransportation available 
Reasonable. Phone PA 2-4816. 


6 ROO.M b ruk house 
(Fn tral Ave 
P riic reduceo for quick sale. 
Phone 
_ P A 2 3823 
NEW STROUt~CATALOG~ 
Just Out: .Mailed F R E E ' Chock full of 
bargain.^ — 
,3.046 propertie.s de.scribed, 
34 States, Coast-to-C'oast 
Farm s. Homes, 
Businesse.«. 
W 0 R 1 .D S 
I.AR G E.ST; 
.56 
Years 
.Service 
STRO UT 
R E A L T Y , 
. 
. 
1427 A J 
Land 
TUlc 
Bids 
Philadelphia = 
y c t rilS f3 ltn h clu 
10. Pa. 


a G od 


su ffcn 


w o u ld let it h a p p e n , a n d yo u k eep 


on p ra tin g ab o ut a G o d w h o lo ves. 


W e c a n ’t b e a r it .” H e r life h a d f a ll­ 


en in . S h e fo rg ot th a t th e M a n w h o 


to ld us to b u ild o u r hou.se up on the 


ro c k su ffe re d m o re th a n a n y o f us. 


t 
, 
, 
, 
- 
J'c m e n 's A sso 
firs t, 
.Ju d y Jo a n B la c k ; seco n d 
J o R ig h tm ir e . ciijtio n . 
T h e m e e tin g w a s held at 
S12.724, 
T r a c k 
o tiic ia ls 
that is s till a w o rld 's re co rd 
7od. W h y do o u r m e n h a v e t o jB a r r ; se co n d , C a ro l S te w a r t. M o st B e s t dres.sed b o y . firs t. B i ll E v ic k . M t . 
S a v a g e V o lu n te e r C o m p a n y 's 


icr__like th is “? N o h u m a n fa th e r p o p u la r b o y : 
firs t. 
B ill 
R o s c n a u ; a n d 
D e nnis 
fk 'h o o n o v c r: 
se co n d ..f ir e h.dt 
_________ 
se co n d , F r a n k M u lle n a x . M o st p o p ­ 


u la r g ir l: 
firs t, W ille tt i L a m b e r t ; 


se co n d . C a r o l S te w a rt. B e s t dress- 


D ic k K y w e l l a n d L a n n y L a m b e r t , 


dres5 
B e s t d re s se d g ir l; J o R ig h tm ir e , 


fir s t ; 
seco n d 
F 'ra n c c s 
K e e . 
M r 


ed b o y ; firs t, J i m m y K . L a m b e r t ; Ju n io r Hi- firs t, P a u l P e n n in g to n ; 


se co n d , W illia m H o lle r. 
jseco n d . B ill E v i c k . M is s Ju n io r H i: 


Be.st 
d re s s e d 
g ir l: 
firs t. 
C a ro l F ir s t . 
Jo a n 
B la c k ; 
se co n d . 
J o 


iS t c w a r t ; 
se co n d . 
K a y 
C u rra n c e . R ig h tm ir e . 


sa id ' ' J ' ' ‘■*"'^1 
e v K K 
1 
Lüíti Flushing. 
B irtandmade.. 
Dcat- 
I 
. 
. 
1 
tino» Date 
I he w in n in g b ets to d a y w e re 
on 
2 i.a i. ih, 
(.n t t it . ra i. \ fii 
Keegan 
ame 
Wmnic, 
Rich«ood 
S t e p , 


the c o u n ty co n v e n tio n Ju n e 7. a n d 
E n riq u e z , in the fo u rth ra c e . ' ; 
and B lu e o n ia , rid d e n b y C a rlo s de xewv 
l.uie of {.old, Changeaway, Bitter 


W c s te rn p o rt 
w ill be the site of ^'»«W 'vater, rid d e n b y Jo c k e y Mel- 
3 
la 
. 
{.-.,.3-. 1.'.,..,.,...,, 
— 
Ih.-ini r t apri- 


3 2 — 
In s tr u c tio n t 


FIV F: 
room 
frame 
semibungalow 
on 
landscaped lot. Ideal for small family. 
A Stieel 
LaVale 
( all PA 2-0395. 


48— 
R o o fin g , S p o u tin g 


P A 2-6.398. 


B E A U T Y I S B I G B U S I N E S S ! 


U N L I M I T E D O P P O R T U N I T I E S 


N E W C L A S S S T A R T I N G 


T R I- S T A T E B E A U T Y A C A D E M Y 
114 VA. A V E . CU.MB E R L .AND PA 4 2180 
j q 


Bitlinger-Burkett. 


New Roofing, Gutters. Conductors 
Meta: Work, all types. Roof Painting 
25 yis Exp. A L E X J S C H U T E PA 2-6505 


R O O FIN G 
SPO U T IN G 
S ID IN G 
rhree years to pay 
Guaranteed work. 
Andrew Witt. Phone CO-4-3667 
-Up h o lsterin g 


fire m e n tro m that c o m m u n ity r e ­ 
p o rte d 
p ro g re s s 
in 
p la n n in g 
th e 
in th e filth ra c e 


e v e n t. 
C ro m w e ll Z e m b o w e r 
asso-' 
B o ld w a t e r 
an d 
B lu e o n ia 
p aid 


A 'ia tio n 
tre a s u re r, 
re m in d e d 
a 
l 
l 
^ 
s tra ig h t $2 w in 


^co m p an ies th a t due.s m u st be p a id '^ ‘^^^''‘^ 


I’ lii 
h 


Testis s a id he th a t h e a re th an d 
^ 
^ ‘ 
B o .s e n a u ;' 
M o st 
co u rte o u s 
b o y ; 
firs t. 
B illio n o r b e fo re M a y 1. o r th e d e lin - 


d c ^ M h e f e w o rd s ^ 
not rfc o n d . 
F r a n k 
M is s P . , E v . c k ; 
se co n d . 
P a u l 
P e n n in g to n .................................... 
q u cn ts w ill not h a v e a v o ic e at th e 


eno u gh 
to 
h o ar, 
w e 
n eed 
to 
be 
f^ s l 
W ille tt, l.a n ib e r t: s e c - a n d R o h e rl C o s s , Mo.sl co u rte o u s 


d o e rs 
an d th is is m o re th a n 
K n o tts, g irl; firs t, J o R ig h t m ir e a n d A m y 
C h a rle s 
C ra w ford, 
ch ; 


em o ti'on al 
e x p e rie n c e , 
, v o m a n | 't " i! 
N’f * ' “ '' 3 ' » ' ‘ I'r n iv a l c le a r a n c e c 
s a id to .lesu S o n e d a y . - B le s s e d 
i * e « nd._^ A m a n d a ^ U m 
b c r t j ^ i a th le ic M ; . t ir s i. .lu n m y Old- re p o rte d Ih a l c a in iv a ls h a v e 
R g f p 


co n v e n tio n 


C h a rle s 
C ra w ford, 
e h a ir m a n ot 


o m m itte e 
.second, 
.-\manda 


t^ h rw o m b U ia t b ore" Uiee^'m ^ 
Be.st a th le te b o y a k e r ; .second D ic k L a n t/ , B e s t ath- .scheduled b y L a V a le J u l v 9 to 14. 


b re a s ts th a t th o u d id s t s u c k ” B u t j 'f , ', - 
R '’s e n a u ; seco n d K r a n k lc te 
j . r l ; 
lir s t. 
.lo a n 
B la c k , 
M - c - - ......... 
................................................ 
Jesus turned and said. "Yea rath-J “ 
L. 


Swaps And Nashua 
Will Not Meet In 


c r. b le sse d a r e th e y th a t h e a r t b e ' g ' ' ' ' * , 
•’ y a h l e b oy 
f.rs i, B ill IC v.id .: .secoiid, 
I 
„ „ a 
a ” 
jS te m p le . 
iP a u l P e n n in g to n 
M o st d e p e n d a b le 
w o rd of G o d an d keep it 


W illia m Ja m e s sa id . ‘ N o m a tte r 


how fu ll a r e s e r v o ir of m a x im s one 


Flving Hi>, Shrt'wd. ( j Cp 
7 
R o itp in ’i. ImiuR.v. Gel Bii*y 
R 
{.*1 
Proof. TufI Chir, (.ootl Sivter 
9 
.lovie {.obei, F 
S 
Knight, Bob F 
R i ^T B f I . Time fo r Fun 


rri- T o w n s . 
M a y 
20 
to 
26: 
antt 


F 1 ic n d s v ille . M a y 28 to Ju n e 2 w ith 


a p a ra d e sc h e d u le d th e re at 7:30 


l E D T ' on .Ju ne 1 
A ll c o m p a n ie s 


M o s t 
d e p e n d a b le 
b o y : 
D e n n y .g ir l; firs t, A m y Ferg u .sn n an d Jo a n ai'o in v ite d to the p a ra d e 


C o rh in fw h o d ie d F e b . 21. fro m in- B la c k : 
seco n d, J o R ig h t m ir e an d ; 
D e lb e rt V a le n tin e , p re.sulent. a n d ;^ ’^*'^ H a n d iv a p M a rc h 17, 
h , x r , i s , o h n 


su s ta in e d 
w h e n 
he 
w a s .lan e t B a r r . R e st d a n c e r b o v f ir s t .iC e o r g c C o m p , 
v ic e pre.sident, 
re 
l''o c k spoke.sm an 
H o ra c e w a d e , 
. 
.. 


(.1 I I S | K f AM P A R K 


1 Hlg 
'Im k , 
VVorntrd 
Dvor, 
D fip 
Rivor 
2 
OiiHlpr, Dr/ot, Quarlor Master 
.3 
SU nlfv (' . tilg a l'v . Elixir 
1 Fioinan 
Haltle. 
Oh 
Johnny, 
Spict 
Rminrt 
.5 
( hitner. Rate Mtixn , Rotxy T 
6 Boh 
Austin. -Vriiniral John, Jo yrin 
M lA .M l. F'la . M a rc h 
4 i.r»— G u ll 
je i • 
w «r 


s tre a m P a r k 
o flic in ls an n o u n e e d j ' T , u-h 
Rud, .Scot.sman. 
Bond. Markets 
to d ay 
that 
Sw ap.s 
w ill 
not 
m e e t|(!a '” »' 


N a s h u a in the $ino,OOn G u ltsfre n m - 
U s No Fxr, Indian l.and. Yoeman 
H F s l 
B l.r , Boh .Austin 


ju rie s 


34—-Los t and Found 


r U R S E . 
while 
getting 
into 
car 
front 
of 40.5 Prince Cicorge St, 
Finder call 
PA 2 7437, Reward 


3 5 — 
M i s c e l l a n e o u s 
- SHOVELS - DOZERS 
Mobile Cranes. Back Hoes, High Ufts, 
Compressers. 
Paving 
Breakers, 
Drills,! Geo 


m a y possc.ss. a n d no m a tte r how 
^ larlie r 
in 
th e H e rb e rt 
L a m b e r t ; 
se co n d . 
D e n n is P o U e d 
th e y 
had a tte n d e d 
a n n u a l 
FJl.sw o rtli.j 
^ 


Tops. Drapery & siip^ Covei* Fa b ricll^ ^ ’® ^ 
s e n tim c n ts m a y b c. iffh a y i- se co n d . J i m m y K , L a m b e rt.,S c h o o n o v e r. 
R e s t 
d a n c e r 
g ir l; 


G EO . BR A G G . La V A L E . MD 
PA 4-46 1 1 onc 
h a s 
Rot 
ta k e n 
a d v a n ta g e 
o f yfost 
d e p e n d a b le g irl 
firs t. L e la fir.vC .Sarah M u lle n a x ; se co n d , J o 
UPHOLSTERING 
Joho Troxelt, 222 Oavidsoo St 
PA-4-2094 


UPHOLSTERING 
Furniture 
Automobii« 
AUTO C O N V E R T IB L E TO PS 
T R K 'K SE A T S 
T A R P A U L IN S 
H A STIN G S A LU M IN U M A W N IN G S 
S. W arner, 1323 Va. Ave. P A 4 0774 


e v e r y c o n c re te o p p o rtu n ity to a c t. n a j j j j x ; 
se co n d , 
F J d a 
M a e 
M e- R ig h t m ir e . 
o n e 's 
c h a r a c t e r 
m a y 
r e m a in 
e n ­ 


t ir e ly 
u n a ffe c te d 
fo r 
th e 
b e tte r 
p 
9 
/ 
^ 
1 


W h e n a re s o lv e o r a fin e flo w o ! JjJ P e te f S ChUrCh 
fe e lin g 
is 
a llo w e d 
to 
e v a p o r a te 


w ith o u t b e a rin g p r a c tic a l fru it, it \ Y | | | 
n 
3 
V G u U G S t 


is 
w o rs e 
th a n 
a 
c h a n c e 
lo.st: 
it 
Tractor-Traiiers, Low Red Trailers. Pole 
¿.’urjutuj-g 
U p h o ls te rin g , 
R e p a ir » j w o rk s 
SO 
as p o s itiv e ly 
to 
h ^ Jd e r P | * 0 g £ [ ^ 0 | * \ y 0 ( j f | 0 ^ ( J g y 


C a n v a s 
& 
A lu m in u m 
A w n in g s 
fu tu re 
rc.solution 
an d 
e m o tio n s .” 
' 
Irailer.s, Ti-uck* of all kinds. Fill ground, 
top soil A road material. 
We have more than 200 Pieces of 
Equipment to s e n t pour 
needs/ 
B A U G H M A N C O N T R A C T IN G C O , 
Rt. 40. West. 
Dial PA 2-458H 


POSSELT O v e r* « Y e ï r s " ? a?>! 
id e a 
b e c o m cs 
c h a r a c t e r 
o n ly 
131 Frederick St 
Phone PA-2-4715 


Celanes e Inc ome 
Nearly Triples 


N F ;W Y O R K , .M a rch 4 iif — Cela- 


nc.se C o rp . 
o f A m e r ic a to d a y re- 


Hxailsville. 
Dutch King 
PUfoon 
Gptitinal. Tuinexa, M.trt (#»1 
b a n q u e ts 
at 
l.a V a le 
an d 
B irto n 
a g a in s t' 
i 
moo..c 
Eve. 
Heroic 
vn-iue. si«k* 


c o m p a n ie s an d also an in s ta lla tio n ^ ^ - '*"« 
T 
’ 
of o f f iie r s at B a ltim o r e Ih k e Com - * '" 7' ‘JR a in sI N a sh u a , 


p a n y T h e v also re p o rte d a tte n d in g 
’''***‘* 
^ 
w ill 
tly 
the fu n e ra l o f R o b e rt A 
W h ite h n ir ¡T e r r a n g . 
w in n e r 
of 
the 
$ 1 0 0 .iM) 0 


w h o w a s p resid e n t of th e C o rrig a n 


v ille C o m p a n y a m i a m e m b e r « i 
L u .k , i.oudn«« 
the 
e x e c u tiv e 
c o m m itte e 
of 


as.sociation 
Y e s t c r d a v 's 
m e e tin g 


.'dong 
w ith 
L ik e 
M a g ic , 
A in d e .j 


L o v e rs 
.\id. 
B a r e ly 
N oth in g 
a n d ’ 


Rernle\ 
De.ii Sundy. .AgnnsmaB 
5 Wti.ilre Pitt 
Sighted. r«xt Spin 
6 
Kntitiv .lack. Ertiernxe. Kixstne 
7 
Wise Roxe. M a n h Deb, QuexHb^ 
8 
Wavcte, txailv Trxlfir, .New York 
9 
Lui k> 
Loudoun, 
Titrry 
Not. 
Nick 
Bloom 
B l S t 111. I 


o p t'n rd w ith 
a 
m o m e n t 
of 
silen t 


in 
m e m o rv 
of 
W hiteh-i'»' 
‘'' J ” 
other 
FJ k '.woilh 


C O LLIN S C O N STR i r r iO N CO. 
Phone REdwood 8-8911 


CUSTOM M A D E F U R N tT U R E 
Rpcorering and Spring Repair. 
C E. Brode 
555 Greene 
P A 21890 


co m p an ie s to 


of 
d e c e a se d 


Remndrling. R cpainng, New Homes B u ilt^ ^ | 
V o C U U m C l e a n C r t 
WELL DRILLING 
VACUUM CLEANER 
Parts & Sennce 
PA.2-5070 
1302 VA AVF 


S3 y « exp 
Moden» •teei equlpmeni 
Pump Installation* Galvanued Casing 
¥ V C A R P E N I E R WE1.1 D R IL L IN G Co 
P O 
Box 352. ( umb 
Ph 
R E 8 9300 


(Sr:Fi TC 
TANKS 
C IJJA N E D 
Modem ' 
equ'pment 
Bi State 
Di*po*at 
Servire | 
. 
Write ot Phone l.ona( oninR HO 3-^1 O l S p i a y 
U l a S S i t i e d 
Block Laying & Cemtnt Work 


F H G N E PA-‘2-2690 
J 


^ 


3 8— 
M o v i n g , 
S f o r i n g 
\ 
I 
f 


. 
. 
. 
, 
T O N A C O N IN G — T h e R e v . D on-pQ,-(pfj 
3 
^ et 
in c o m e 
fo r 
19n5 o fT '* * " 
^ 


w h e n It IS p ra c tic e d . A n d th e re - 'a ld F . E th c r to n . of th e C h a p e l ot $ 1 5 .,303,268. c o m p a re d to $6.59 0.268 
«« "• 
^W ariP s-..H 
w a rd in g w o rd s of G o d a re 
'M rell the A sce n sio n an d P r in c e of P e a c e .im 
1 9 5 4 
\ a le n tin e ask ed a ll (• ''• "• '...... 


done tho u good 
an d 
fa ith fu l 
ser- R o c k d a le , w ill be g u e st p re a c h e r,j 
x h e 
19.55 e a rn in g s p e r s h a re of 


v a n r , 
'M a r c h 7 
a t 8 p. m . a t th e L e n te n ;c o m m o n s to ck w e re $ I 81. In 
1 
9 
5 
4 
> 
; 
" 
* 
* 
' 
• 
»'*«' Fair GrOUnds Entries 
W h e n 
w is h in g , 
an d 
fe e lin g an d s e r v ic c 
a t 
S t. 
P e t e r 's 
E p is c o p a l th e y w e re 3 2 ce n ts 
■♦'ecretary, .so th e y c a n be in c lu d e d 
w i w w u m » 


th in k in g , an d lo n g in g a r e tra n s la t- c h u rc h . 
. 
j 
f h c c o m p a n y re p o rte d n et s a le s 
M e m o ria l s e r v ic e c e re m o n y 


ed in to a c tin g , th e n th e y a re t^rans- 
F a t h e r E th c r to n w ill p re a c h o r.|h ad in c re a s e d fro m $147.606.3,50 in 


la te d in to c h a r a c te r . C h ris t h a s a th e S a c r e m c n t .•! H o ly M a t r im o n y j , 9 5 4 n, $ 1 7 7 , ^ 2 , 0 2 6 in 1935. S a le s of 
. , 


w o rd fo r e v e r y situ a tio n an d if 1 T h e re w ill be A d u lt 
t o n f ir m a f io n :t e .,(i| „ 
j^ e h ig h e st s in c e 19 5’ 
h e a r it an d do it m y house w ill be c la s s on 'lu e s d a > , .M arch 6. at 7:30:,, 


at th e c o u n ty e o n ve n tin n 


V a le n tin e 
a lso 
re m in d t'd 
re p re 


ot 
the 
23 .c o m p a n ie s 


p. n i.; A d v is o ry B o a rd 


th e h o m e o f M rs . R o la n d 


e o n firm a tio n ' 


JO H N 
A P P E I 
T R A N S F E R LOCAL. 
l.UNG D L S IA N fE .MOVING A G EN T 
C R E V V A N 
l i n e s 
PH O N E 
PA 
4 1623 


M EADLK.'» 
IH A N S l E R , 
LOCAL 
LON{< 
D IS IA N C I. 
AG ENT 
NORTH 
A M E R U AN VA N _L1NES_________________ _ 


A (U N r ~L \ V I i.(iVVr.R 
IR A N .Srr' CO 
lO C A L . LONG D IS IA N C E MO VING 
M .A V L llN TR ANSI-MR C A L I 
P A 4 2770 


L ' \ ’ N ^ tr'T T ^ 
Iransfer and 
1 
Stoiage Co 
Lo cal — Lo n g Distan ce 
PHONE PA 2-6 770 


____ _ 
I SniM and S*rvit* 
PH PA* 4 39 00'* 
Mathonir Sf 


G'^opes Transfer & Storage ; 


L o c a l. L o n g D is ta n c e . 
P A 2-2188 


^ • R O M P I pick up and dt>livnr.y snrvk-e 
• 
including Sunda.vs and holidays. Closed 
pane! truck. Dial I’A 2 3 3 76 . _____ 


3 9 — 
P a i n t i n g , 
P o p e r h o n g i n g 


' 
VV^m X p . A P E ^ R EM O V IN G 
FAST 
e f f i c i e n t S E R V IC E 
R. J 
K iiN Z A l 
2 6897 


b u ilt uponTThd ro ck 


O n e w in te r nig ht in a tin y cot- 


Jd a g e in a S c o ttis h g len a fin e o ld ,a t 8 30 p 
m . 


I S c o ts m a n la y d y in g . It wa.s a w ild | Y o u n g 
P e o p le 's 


s to rm y 
nig ht 
O n ly 
hi 


I e r ” sa id the d a u g h te r.” w o u ld y o iF e sO 
p. 
m . 
Ju n io r 
C o n firm a tio n 


j lik e m e to re a d th e B ib le to y e ’’ ” c b s s w ill 
m e e t T h u rs d a y , M a r c h 


i “ 
N a . na. la .'s ie ,” said th e old sa in t, g at 4 
p m . 


P A - 2 * 2 7 d O * hi.s e y e s fu ll of th e lig h t s tre a m in g 
T h e 
R t . R e v . 
N o b le C 
P o w e ll. 


6, at 7:3 a :,,„,| the , 
3 ,^ „ ( r d a n c a L ih e n iit - a ls 
i” ' 
" 
, 
„ 


m rc tiM g 
.-,1 
3 , 
3 „ 
|,i I, 
G 
'■ , * " ' ’ "'''"'■ 1 
,7,',M i n t ’. "■ 
d C. S la u p ,.p!>nr!Pil 
w n tifig to th e e x e c u tiv e c o m m itte e whi/ a b ,i 


u r s t P o s t 2 4.5 rr.s 
IT R s r 
SI 80«. (Talmlng. .3, 6 ( 
I Dulth Gal 
Hit. vMi* it OÍ ,sion# 
104 
Pirt'x Son 
llh (.«plain RuNtrr 
U.l 
% TTgci >. D«»t 109 l.iUlo Joannip 
l»9 
•»Hbdtna Dark 
109 Absiainci 
114 
109 D»i,x\ ( Titlri 
109 


Gulfstream Park Entries 


WHITACRE’S 


C D M H C R LA N b 
M A V IA O 


re p o rte d . 


C e la n e s e now m a rk e ts m o re th a n 
a t 
th e 
next 
m e e tin g 
to 
be 


I A p r il 8 at 
F'lin tsto n e , 


h eld M'OVO 
Hobfit 


, , , , 1 
» V Hook I p 
O th e rw is e , 
irv 


115 
no 
11.5 
X 
M ix* 
j 
P i «■ill« I 
lor 
in 


(la u g h te rjc la s .s w ill be W e d n e s d a y . M a r c h '• 'a n t^ h T d ra u llc 
l u b r i c a t i n c c h a n g e s c a n n o t be con.sid ered ' » 'm L.«rtv 


• an d he w e re in th e house. “ F 'a th - ia t 4 30 p. in .; c h o ir re h e a rs a l 3 J\ ,p c c ia ltie s 
* 
** 
c o u n ty c o n v e n tio n , 
he 


Clarenc e Ky le Heads 


— 
■»lalready 
fro m 
th e o th e r la n d . 
" I p D . B is h o p , w ill be at S t 
p | a f | f 
I n r ; * I 


th a tch e d 
m e 
hoose 
b e fo re 
th e c h u rc h on M a r c h 20 to r.'n ih ti.s trr ■ I d l l l U U d i U L U U d I 


sto rm b e g a n .” 
¡th e S a c r a m e n t of C o n f'r n a t io n tO; 


T h e s to rm w ill a s s a il us so o n e r tho se w h o a r e in the p - f'- .n ! co n • 


0 | o r la te r. W e m u st w o rk w 'hile it is firm a tio n c 1.t s í.c s . 


id a y . 
H e th a t re c e iv e s th e w o rd s ; 


tra n s la te s 
th e m 
in to 
a c tio n - . 
, 
^ 
W R O U G H T fR O N -]nd 
d eed s 
b u ild s his 
ho u se upon j y j f l n O n e y U e t S 


A 
I I 
I H | B ^ 
^ ' t h e ro c k an d the floods do not des-l 


K 
I ! ■ I R 
l y P 9 
fro v 
if. 
W is e 
b u ild e rs 
a re 
m en 


. 
i,«ni«i\ 
Ixlünrt 
*’0 “ b X 
Suhjerlive 


11« 
Noble Tyi»t 
112 
e IlHKlhHi'k 
11» h(.»«mbler 
no 
enu > , 
a 
Nrx* anrt Kelk'hei 
h 
( ;«pH«no ent!\ 
f l H lR I) SL9 00, d annine, 2. maidens. ! Elixii 


[Warner’s 
1323 VA 
A V I. 
PA 4-0774 


(C o n tn m e d fr o m Pa g e 
1 0 ) 


s e rv e d . 


C o m p , w h o h a s b een in s tru c tin g 


a 
ba.sic 
tire 
cour.se 
in 
G a r r e t t 
f 


C o u n ty, 
to ld 
the e x e c u tiv e g ro u p f ’ : - ' 
H i V i ' . r m r H e r ' 
th at 
18 
m e n 
had 
co m p le te d 
fh c layio n ex i 
u s ruvoim ix 
m i** 


co u rs(. an .i g ra d u a te d . 
S ix te e n a r e 
H i 


tro m O a k la n d an d tw o Iru in D e e r ' K.«ibt(n Ann ii.i 
mixu-i lotav 
L I K E — C la re n c e K y le h a s b een D a rk . 
r«tii rofk* 
1 1« »ad ar 
( tipper 


e k 'c te d p re.sid ent o f L o c a l N o . 135,| 
Z e m b o w e r w a s ap p o in te d to tie- ' 1 (¡1 r t h 
$2 .n(Ki. 


U n ite d P la n t G u a r d W o rk e r s , of th e te rm in e w h a t dale.s a r e a v a ila b le ^ 
U . 
1 *.1... ...I. n« 
f «1» 
\i> 
. 
!'■ 
' I 
■ 
X 
t haelatei' 
112 I'txirtinis Wi*e 
L u k e 
p lan t 
o f 
the 
W e s t 
\ irg in ia fo r 
a 
re g io n a l 
tire 
sc hool 
h e re . xvv«r .sp, iria i v 
1 1 2 Fotiuppn c.ianrt i i 7 i 
114 
Hig Rpxult 
It 
114 
I 11 TH 
51 9(W 


IF 1RS I 
POSI" 150PK.S 
EIR .M 
$3.20«. 
cl . 4 V 4 up, 8 {. 
Iloirtc Hoy 
11« 
\ Pulxator 
113 
Swivi*! 
115 
Big Mtsrk 
117 
Bid Nu» 
110 
X Dancing 
Boy 
US 
Ncilhcr (ihoxt 
11.V 
Influenre 
115 
X .Ml 
Sterling 
11« 
xxVVarmed Over 108 
Eui'h 
Foot 
115 
Hlaiu hard 
U S ­ 
li nxor 
11.1 
XX Ro\ al St 
U I 
X Tifep B is fr 
11« 
PowderxitioK# 
11.1 
SECOND- »3.00«. cl . 4 \ A up. 1V6 m 
I»«-nnv 
111 
X ( an Nertion 
108 
■lohnxon 
1' 
111 
Mix ( entury 
113 
Juntbo Lie* 
ii:t 
X l'acaro 
108 
Deziir 
1«H 
Sailor l.ad 
119 
VV«'trd Mu*ic 
IK) 
Direct Tint 
i n 
Q iiailrr M aiter 
11« 
Sonfar 
111 
M uter Dover 
t«8 
( onxawritchia 
108 
X Ruifter 
I I I 
Phi 
113 
i 
IH IR D $3.200. cl .. 4 ( 4 Up. Dl m 
M.-« nil ion 
115 
h F auioyal 
118 
\ .lohn B P 
117 
Hoke V 
m 
« ( algAry /- 
115 
b Medico 
122 
I otiliei 
115 
x-.shami ock 
110 
X Slit nie V ( ’ 
106 
a Duffin 
115 
8ir Out 
11.1 
Beau Black 
114 
X Idle Platter 
11» 
Gutdcri Bomb 
115 
! Elixir 
111 
Portage Bov 
115 
a Cramer C iIr P 
Farm entry 


a n d V a le n tin e a sk e d th a t lire m e n 


O th e r o iiic c r s n a n u 'd a r e H e n ry be on the lookout to r a n a b an d o n e d 
T a y lo r , 
v ic e 
A rn o ld b u ild in g w h ich c a n he used to r a f.' 
l ’i<itneni«(lp 


PAPERHANGING 
South End Wallpaper Shop, 331 Va. Ave 
40— Pers onals 


e x p e r t s C LA IM a comfortable mat 
tress is the key t.i a good night ■ rest 
Ijet us put the "com fort" bark In that 
lumpy, bumpy mattrc.** of yours. Mat 
tressea of all size.* made to order Cum 
berland Mattres* F'artory Ph PA 2-1105 
4 1— Profes s ional Serv ic es 


Stran d TV 


D R E S S M A K IN G - Alterations—Talioring 
U1 Baltim ore St. 
Phone PA-4 5759 
B E R T H A A V IS S E A R L E S 


E Y E G L A S S R E i^ lR IN G . Broken Lenses 
Replaced — Prescriptions Filled. 
Thoa. C. Hubba, 59 Pershing St. 
43— Piono Tuning 


Piano Tuning and Repairing 
Laurence Griffith 
PA-2-1633 


R O B E R T ~w 'l4 0 R E L A .N D 7^ S P 'i.~T u ^ ! 
R epair! 
School, 
Church, 
and 
Home 
Pianos. PA-4-1084. U.xrd pianos. ________ 


4 6 — 
R o d i o , T - V 
S e r v i c e 
CUMBERi>«ND 
ELECTRIC CO. 
TV aenrlcea on all makes—Guaranteed 
Nlte-Simday acrrice available. PA-2 61911 


We repair aU eeu ■ 
from A {A dm iral) to 
Z (Zenith). 29-A 8. Centre S t PA-2-722C, 
After 6 phone PA 21914. 


G U A K A N T E E D R A D IO S E R V IC E 
Specializing In 
home and auto radic^- 
D O lJtN ’S 
11 N 
George St. 
PA 4 555C 


H A V E your TV 
repaired at home 
by 
technician of 26 yra. clectromo cxpen 
eoce. Reasonable prices. 
PA 4-1718. 
Alleg an y Amu semen t TV 
Fociory auihorued ttrviot 
O tnuint factorp parts 
Service daily 9 a m 
to 11 p m 
Sunday 1 p m to 11 p m 
PA 2 47^i 
47— Real Estote Por Sale 


M A Y BU R Y -PO LA N D R E A L T Y AGLNC’Y 
R4 A L E S I ATI 
B R G K r RS 
PH O N E PIED M O N T 6ull 


' 
^COUNTRY L E V E L LOTS 
100 * .,'M' 
1350 
^ 
O P IE 
ANNAN. PA 2 7733 


or (xithtiii* 
tii: «bl€ 
RC‘ tie 
!e nca> 
White 
.!.«:e 567 R 


I ROOM BRU.'K, 
1> 
hai^^ 
hut w atii 
iK-at, 
(,ara;;p 
' ’.cl. ;■■ ■'it 
(.oikI 
(onrtitii)»! 
, I’cnr. 
•.¡v-if ■ \ve 
tju..>00. 
J 
-ng M 
, I 
, 
P 
4 


BLX ROO.M modi-rn bi vrnoer 
hom<- 
(ixragc 
New, . 
cnnxt; ic.: d. 
H; liop 
D rue, For m-oertion- D:ci P^ • .''25 


I?7 
\( R l. 
'.'I hoi.-i- 
1 brtrn, 
elerfr''- 
sot ie l .ibo- 
( .dl evening; 
P \ 4 . ¡87. ( umbrrlar.d. Md 


I ROOM S, bnh. e leilric r-Oj-c 
o i heat 
er 
4 
ac i-X 
irounii 
I’l > e 
5 4 lOii 
,j 
mile 
f-f>m 
I ’ 
A .hb’. 
on 
Route 
46 
Flnyrt 
P. 
Gi.icc, 
K .Jto r. 
Phom 
R F 8 9...i2, 


B R IC K D ip!c\ 4 4 < 
O' bl 
2.5 X l.: i ii.vr On R<- ■: •'tn-t 
^ ^ .a 'h . (■:■'■•:«-f. 2 por h-X f 
rodiij-. 
h.itb 
lal > 
M' 1 
I 


lik (' 
that 
T h e ir c h a r a c t e r 
is 
th e, 
T h e re p o rt w a s th a t th e 
A n d re lir e 
d em o n .slratio n . 
H e .said 
a n y v s„i-x R,-qu(xi u « 


112 
h Reinhold Hanrtleman entry 
1151 
l o t H ill 
13,50«. at . 3 {. I m 70 y 
115'Spire Round 
122 
l opek* 
118 
115 Peeler 
116 
Rufux The Red 1!« 
11« (lb 
.lobnnv 
119 
Homan Batle 
122 
118 Rnrkpoil 
1 L5 
114 
M l 111 
43.:)««. (1 . 4 v I up. « I. 
1«7 Hiiick ( nvote 
11.5 
Hetnv T 
‘n*' I'ln Meur 
104 
x Rare Muaic 
Hioken VVtng 
1«9 
( harter 
' 
• (ialite ( hen« e 
112 
MXT H 
*:i,5«0, « I . 3 v. fi'y f 
Ji'iA rtm iia l John 
118 
Nizami Blue 
, 
« ' Df.«ii Suie 
i l l 
B laik Froxt 
maiden», ilainiing. 2 
„ 


1L5 Wedding Ring 


claiming. 
Ladv 
4 
A 
118 
1«8 
113 


11.5 
M ix* Irene 
112 


H.iii 
lovI in 


fa b ric o f th e C ity of G o ti, an d I h r i r n , a „ . K „ v ( . „ s .tth n is t r ic t c ro u ,. a n d . r " “ ' ' ' , 
J « T . i r . v ; 
W tl- por.son k iio w in K „ 1 an o ld b u .ld in « 
stre n g th 
is 
not 
fo r 
th e m s e lv e s t u . 
/ v ,...iiu ., e .a is i.t.n .t 
I f.lk c n s , tru s te e , 
H a r r y B a il- \thn h t .in lie h n rn ed slinuld c n n ta c l n . 


alo n e . 
It 


iMixx Boo Boo !«7 


Railroads Qualify 
For Tax Write-Offs 


W A S H IN G T O N . M a r c h 4 ,T— T h e 


v o lu n te e r 
the 
n e a re s t 


p a n y 


Ij'lt e r .s o f thank.' 
an d a c k n o w l 


is n a rt 
of th e g lo rv o f 
C o g g in s-0 M a lle y 3 rd 
D is tr ic t 
« p rg p a n t.a t- a rm s 
an d 
C lifto n a n y o flic e r of th e as.sociat 
IS p a n 
ot 
m e g io r y or o rg a n iz a tio n 
w e re 
in v o lv e d . 
B o fli jj^^yj 


faction.s 
h a v e 
b een 
u n frie n d ly 
to 


B a lt im o r e 's .M ayo r T ho m a.s D 'A le.s-' 


andrò*, a s ta u n c h .su p p orter of for- I p g i n i l P f i ç f T 
a H n l f i 
m c r S e n 
M illa r d E . T y d in g s fo r 
I ^ 3 1 I U I l U l U 


“ ’ L " o Z a " n ' ™ d . - A s o f thts t t n t e ,Aoiiiv ers ary Party 


I h a v e not c o m m itte d m y.se li per- 


, s o n a lly 
B a lt im o r e an d O h io R a ilr o a d an d 


,th e 
W e s te rn 
M a r y la n d 
R a ilw a y , 


'q u a lifie d to d a y fo r ta x a.s.s isfa n c e 'j^ y "^ . 


b v w r itin g o ff co sts to d e p re c ia tio n .i , 


ngci ( .11» 
Blm siiinc 
X 
L ie r r.m ilv 
ir(’ 
( (Jill- I ’ciHibna 


ion o r 


118 Pat Foiav 
11« 
P itn tf V .f 
UR ! Alite A yic* 
115 CtiKk'« 
Image 
1(1,' 
Blue Sally 
11', .Mella Wav 


118 
118 
u;i 
118 ; 
II.’. 


112 


11« 
i n 
11,5 
IflH 
Ufi 
113 
Ufi 
i n 


SIX T H 
41000, allowiimex 
1 
8 f 
rnm nii * .let 
114 
K . 
Hainlxm 
Lui'tiix Beebe 
112 
x 
I igei Piav 
e d g e n ie n t w e re re a d fro m U S S e n 
a u iian a 
i«7 
Loveiv ¡.«mt 


a to rs 
J (,le n n 
B e a ll an d J o l m ' s i v î 'v m 
iV ' jm i, 
*u«vx«me*. 
M a r s h a ll 
B u tle r 
fo r 
the 
as.soeia* i 
'» 


tio n .s teleg iam -s .supporting f 
a 
v 
o 
r 
- 
U'i 


* 
LaII 
M m 
116 A<«'Uvttv 
IxHai 
116 W ill 
R«- Dona 
G,«U|P O 'H earU 
101 H hxI v Heixalrt 
X Rub Aiixim 
ll.i ( hrixtx'» VVixh 
,S1 V k N Ilt 
IIO.OU» «(bled. 1 
> up 61 
lei'x W .ir Date 
1«7 .Squared .Away 
12« 
Hilaiinitx 
i n I 
Appeal 
117 
( ounl> ( Ure. 
II.' ( taigwood 
115 
)(i(, Rot k 
Pilot 
106 Dm 
De 1 er 
118 
] J 5 ILingiivei 
113 
ll'l 
1 K .IIIH 
14,00«. al. 4 \ A up. 1 1/lfi m 
.«(teadm 
111 X Harold L 
l«fi 
3, I wo 1 ixled 
111 (Gilf Siieam 
109 
ti lav .lax 
I I I a ( entenaire 
109 
no Wise Tod 
116 Salmon Peter 
111 
a Re ping Right 118 bs xman* Bond 
1«« h Fleet 
Bird 
109 
109 * Marked Game 112 


w h ile th e W e s te rn M a r y la n d pnr- 
M e K e ld in 
a fte r nar- 


c h a s e s to ta lin g $3.316,1)00 w ill a n f)jj.y ^ .|y (je ie a tin g M a h o n e y fo r 
the 


Honor 
110 VVheme 
110 
a W eil enti V 
Sw Td* 108 
b ( .iliimet f arm enli v 
112 
M N T H »3,00. « ! . 4 y 
k up. 
; a II * No 
I xe 
113 Ladd 
'pitloctirv 
11.1 a Ml Duly 
up. 
iiixh s« » 
119 Winning Fleet 
Les Rtindi 
122 x Yoeman 
1L5 
Scandia 
119 Mikeahv 
119 
X Rig Mi.*ler 
114 Leidown 
118 
inrttan 
l.and 
116 
119 
a Hclman Mage.» entty 
j 
X 5 
X* 7 Ibs 
AAC 
up. 


104 


I ‘k m 


111 
119 
118 
117 
113 
113 


be at an R.> p e r cen t ra te . 


Dis play Clas s ified 


Sermon Topic Of Ike's 


,Mt 
S a v a g e F ir e C o m p a n y la d ie s 
* 
a u x ilia r y . 


1-V IS IT LOANS 


Phone — Ihen tome »n lor 
caih. Up to $1000 on signa 
lure, lo/niture, or r « . 


R e M ^ tk l fIN A N C C C O „ 
led rr iitfRTT lausT co. 
e»-.berloed • Fh Pa 7-077) 


nomination. 


M a h o n e y 's h e a d (}u a rte rs h a s an 
nounccd whai ii call.', his first ma- Minister Coincidence 
jor organized political Mipiiorl; 


tro m a B a lt im o r e c it y d is tric t. T h e 
W A S H I M T I D N . 
.M arch 
4 


7th 
W a r d 
F ir s t B o h e m ia n 
Dem*.- P re s id e n t 
E is e n h o w e r ’s 
m in is te r 


c r a t ic C lu b , " a n im p o rta n t u n it of 
n o th in g 
but 
coinci- 


the 
2nd 
D is tric t 
o rg a n iz a tio n ." 
■ issued a .statement favoring 
in 
H ig h 
D eci- 


Mf 
Ailm n 
Hifh Hiifiex 
z 
2, X 
M 


pet 
Dune 
X (>ioup Three 
111 
* 
Tea 
Hiaruit 
110 
Charles Town Entries 


Finland Is Is olated 
By General Strik e 
Sunshine Park Entries 


M RST 
' 4 m 


M R S T PO ST 1 P E 8 
41,200, claiming, 4 A up, ihoul 


S12 AÍ R l 
d<iir- 
fsiin v 
jnachim-i . 
J.n 
. ; 
l»,;i 
tfiw.-.rd* 
vTe\er tl;- 
( run n 
I ’)'mt 
,M 


ll.M,; 
( 
herit. nov. 
«■.‘mtileie! » 
(eiio i. 
,D 
5 


n« e 
b.. 


itiert 
Lot 
r.ot I 
floor 
h 
2ft: 
W„t( 1 
cl „ . 
cno 
P \ 


l.aV 
b, 


Get 


MAXIMUM 


PERFORMAN CE 


with "SA FEG U A R D " 


DUALS & HEADERS 


FIBRE GLOSS MUFFLER 


— Doubit* IaHouM Copoc'ty 


— Modarn Erh o u i) S/*Um 


— Tramav doii* 
Inc fao» * m 


Hortspower and etonom-/ 


Instoll Them Today! 


Qt low o i — $109 5 


iCrft 2 p* 


pit 


r R lM lM Lot 
n 
m gd- 
. d 
e* 
b.:r. R 
rO(-f.S r.n ft! 
r'.-fili rn k.tfhen 
-.rund fk» , 
*«itb bal.h Anri ■•iif.fix 
Ncn 
,hiio.-,. 
chur.-•he^ 
P ;nif-:.sion .lur!« 
..•t 
P i f f 
<n «00 
p. 
PA 4 0818 ..Itei 6 p 
111 
lot ..ppfiml merit 


r n u O M h t . - c 
b-’b 
fu.r.af-' hc-t 
rir«e.' 
watci lurtU-r (..Kid 
«nntt-uun 
. I d 
ts *,ound. - .m ’ > 
ho.-'.e 
bu.n 
ciutbuildmgx. 
fruit 
tr.-eb 
Priced 
lor 
quit '- 
»«ale 
[yic 
d 
2 n, if . .-■.tuUi >■ 
M.verxdale 
Route 
2ti 
Inquire 
M.- 
Jnhn Suder 
Houle 
Box 1 •. ,Me>eri, 
daU. 


M iin F R N 
htme 
8 
hat^ 
b.-^e 
mem, 
'.ni air 
furnact ■u’U ¡n cabt.iti... 
■’ink and tile k 
i 
i 
> 
>. n i n 
.on nf-r. 
h.xti'i. e'p tru'. nsteiTi nnd web 
Five acres land 
L) L i’t tree 
w 
»e’l part 
ai' nr land 
I >a‘-d i - 
m:ie oil JZ'"*- n\crinok;nE K c nr 
C. E 
Kcsecker, Phone .vicCoc.c SVl,. 


Chrome Lic ens e 
Plate Frames 


’ 2 .9 5 
With Plortic Cov er 


To Fit New Md 
Tog* 


CUT OUT — M A IL 
YOU N AME IT! 


. . . I would lik e to 
hav e a good us ed 
Elec tric 
Sewing 
Mac hine for: 


¡h o n e y on S a tu rd a y . 


S 
Two Paper Mill 


Employes Retire 


[ $ 


[ 


I W O ULD 
Like To Poy 


Portobic 
or Console 


k" Nome 
.................. 


'' Address 
........... 


Location .................... 


Moil fo: Singer Sewing 


Mochine Company 


65 Baltimore St. 


Cumberland, Md. 


CUT OUT — M A IL 


'A lt e r n a t iv e s 


Fion.x ” 


A nd last S u n d a y : 


"D c c L s io n 
and 
D is c ip le .sh ip .” 


T h e 
P re s id e n t 
h e a rd 
th e 
R e v . 


• D r. 
FM vvard 
L . 
R . 
K ls o n r ie liv c r V a lle d 
out 
by 


l U K F — Jo ^ e P re n d e s 
b l e a c h s e r m o n . ^ at N a tio n a l P r e s b y - iT r a d e 
F n io iis 


p la n t k iln o p o ra lo r a m p lo jV d u tth In ria n 
I'h u r .h . 
In 
h e lu n n n 
he f r h o K e k k o n c i 


M R r PO ST 2PFS 


- F’ln lan d '.' 
firs t 
g e n e ra l 
.xirike 


s in c e 1917 i.xolalcd Ih e n .iiin n fro m 


th e re.'-t o f the w o rld tonig ht 
A ll 


p la n e an d tra in ti.-ilfic wa.s h a lte d 


a;- 
w e ll a: 
h ip i.iiig fro m S w e d e n 


A h a lf m illio n w orker.s, the b ulk 


of 
F in la n d 's 
la b o r 
.‘'U p p ly , 
w a '. 


he 
F ( d c fid io n 
of 


i t 
a : 
P rc x id c n t 


f u lp 'a n d 
Pai>.-r 
f n m p a n y 
. s i m c ; - '“ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ^ ' « " " ' i " ’ ™ - 


l)e ( e m b e r 1, 1923 w a: 
r*x e n t!y r»- ' 


'"■-(t, ivaiter c Mtiler 1, 2 and .2 'ndia-Soviet Accord 


b e a te r 
h e lp e r 
ha.'’ 
re tire d . 
H r 
t a I J I T T A 
In d ia 
M a n h 4 
T 


s e n io n ty goes h a ck to M a y 20 
1943 
jp j,., 
j | ^ u y 
(MK> tr.ns o! .-teel 


p rod u ct 


vzage in ir e a s e . Thf- a v f r a g e w a e e 


in 
F in la n d 
if- 
2tk) 
F in n m a r k 
an 


h d u r ' Wi r e n t , . 


Dis play Clas s ified 


Property Is Sold 


',\ o r!h and 


I 
cuitom mijda 
| 
: 
VEN ETIA N BLINDS 
J 
I 
CLEANED ood 
REPAIRED 
1 
. 
DRAPERiEV end DRAPERt 
RODS 
^ 
I 
o rn a m e n t a l iro n R A IIIN G S 
| 
FIBRE GtASS p a n e l s - ALL SIZES 
3 
I 
a w n in g s ■ ALL TYPES 
i 


' 
JO H N I. SH A R P & CO 
^ 
I 
401 N zzirhofiic St. 
PA 2 7620 ^ 


fro m 
H u 
l a 
thi- y e a r ,: 
D i.n a id 
P 
V, 


a= ((jrd.n- 
to 
arra n g e m e n t- , m a d e 
W h it n a t li 
u. '.t 
oio 
pi-'i 


hr-(> 
v e .t e r d u y b y 
In d ia s 
iro n 
-’ m 
H o in m o n d 
Xddit.Hn 
of 


-I' 
1 ' in tio lie ’ , r . R 
% a tc 'c tn . an d ( rtipoiT 
t o ' ( f< ] 
^ 
W ijk t - 


.1 ' 
,.t d rle g a tio n 
F o r m a l a g re e A n n .ib ( Ilf I 
W -• 
. 
i -idi 


m r-i' -.xJl 
be sig n e d in N e w D e lh i .« rjppd f jp d 
f*. !>•( 


la te r. 


A nna 


[K'l t ’ 


W e t 
..pri 


No Vote For Women 


a (|«ed file d !<., 


of .lo'-epb [ 
ii 


g a n y Coun'> t 


ltd 1" Ih ' O'I 
e 


. 
( k t 1 
of A lie 


' 
O’lrt 


Completes Training 


i n C 
A 
l 
W IND O W 
IIIChL 
p r o du c t s 
CO. 
Venetian Blind Laundry 


— VEN ETIA N BLIN D S— 


Fraa Ettimata* 
630 Columbio Ava Phona PA'2-2D3I 


f-n 
• i 


i- -inf 


H I F.N 
V I*--' 
■ 'I 
M a 
h 4 
,f 


r. ( 
.'.‘ • i . s - . f F * (c in i'in 
‘ Fie rn 
P n v d>- 
.in ’n 
" 
\ 


n« n on! 
re b , ed t '* l y to g ra n t M r . 
an d 
Mi - 
• 


vo tin g r ‘g ''t 
t’- 
.v'im en 
l.M one. ha; a- 
.f;l-'tf'd I6< e o n t'.f o( 


Onlv 
47 pf 
cent ol ' ' e a ll- m a le 'a d v a n e o d h.« 
'• tra.-nn 
h-ooke 


c i i 't o r . ‘*e 
v '.tfij 
in 
the 
referen- A r m y 
.Me<i ■ ;•! 
( fn '- 
F’oi t 
S .im 


(lu m 
'■ 
pr--)i)c"Cfi 
a n ie n d m e n t 
to H o ir.to n 
Mc-xa*- 
!!»' 
w ill 
tic 
a - 


t 'f ' He. n co ir.titu tio n wàt. r c jc i ted. M g n i'd 
to 
A i'r.:. 
Mi^dn <d 
. S ( i« i ( c 


62 9 ; 1 to -52 9 29 , 
i 


F in s 'i 
c 
(1 V 4 op, 5>-, f 
I 
All Set 
1Î ; 
Bidandmadc 
i n 
' anrtk ( ' ox* 
i n 
De-.lino'x fiate 
1)8 
* I afl\ F Mshlng 
H« 
(ientle I’oxe 
118 
Ml 
Snoop 
118 
V Ml 
Dofle 
i n 
' k Mur bane 
! 1 1 
Î to Ba 'it*0 
116 
S E IO N D 
$«(Hi . <1 . 4 « 4 up 
5>> f 
i 
X F.kti a Five 
Dl 
-.cl! Kcei'.in 
111 
D.'f f Siiitinici. 
UR 
H, .) n i x 
108 
- (.n l'ic . P.,' 
(, .icih 
118 
» (.lent 1 lavoi 
10« 
- H i'h V 
» Don u ; 
Bill .lobh 
1 H 
(lian icx 8n' 
i n 
'IH IR D 
4! (K)0 
X¡: 
X< |r 
1 . 
fif 
Swniflx Mairt 
in 
V f lor- Blood 
i n 
X • Alt' \ighi 
III 
X (.!„ 
V C I P 
108 
Mr Tab 
118 
V R p i .'.ooij Step 
108 
fib M'ghtv 
I 18 
x t.aiic Winrtic 
im 
Aliolitifiu 
11 
( tiai.i c ( a|ie> 
118 
LOI M I H 
$««« 
( 1 . 4 V 4 up. 6 f 
f title (tor 
1 n 
X S.,1, .losx 
1 1 ( 
Bad 
Sew 
! 0 '( 
X ( aioi i.t Muon 
|« I 9 
I.. 
M,.h 
I 19 
.11..... r, Ilo.v 
1 14 
•I>. ■ 
oil' d 
I 12 
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O p ti Moidey Evtrmgv 
Us# Your First Notioio! CHerge Account 


AUTO 
PARTS 


PA 4-0750 
BEERMAN 


519 N 
Mtc honic J us ) Abov a V o llty 


FAST CASH LOANS 


— Y ÎÏ 
t h i p a ym e n ts! 


320 TO 31500 


Salvador Elects Lemus 


\ \ N \ I \ A D f d l 
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THRIFT PLAN FINANCE CORPORATION 


O f CUMBERLAND 


10An 5 OZl» »300 JVADf UNDfR MAPYIAMO »(CHrtmAl BHAF<a ACT. 


18 N. Liberty Sr. 
Dtoi PA 4-0344 


" 
R A I T I M O K F 
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— .Mr. 
a n d M rs . 


te a m 
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un H u M 
w ill 
b e „in 
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ticket-i P a in c k .M cC onnell. 
R o c k v ille . Lon- 


T h e In te rn a tio n a l A;-:^. of M a ch in - w a 
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th e ir 
h o m e 


¡:-^.t;. vo ted o v e rw h e lm in g ly to d a y to 
fic g a la d o '.i g ra n d .-lam '.sa- 
the 
B o x scat.s. no m o re than lo u r to a fte r sp end in g the w in te r m o n th s 


a c c e p t 
a tw o - je a r c o n tra c t agree- rxccond of the g a m e for ( ’uf t i n e l l o a cu .slo m e i. 
a r c $2 7j and 
lo w e r 
viM tin g w ith S S g i an d M rs , Lcon- 


n ie n t 
w ith 
I o(khf'f*d 
.X ircra ft te a m S a m 
M e le 
hit 
one 
in 
ttie 
rer-eivcd o ca t.— al.-.o lim ii-.d to fo ur a rd U o > n iiz an d .soji.'. at Fenn.sau- 


('.'ii'p . 
e n d in g 
a 
s tn k e 
th re a t 
0 ! iu u iih in n in g to tic 
toe v ore at 
$2 
F p p e r 
r c 'c r v e d 
s c a t' 
a re ken 
N 
J 
an d w ith relative.^ an d 


2 2 'ftO 'ao'-kcrs a g a m s t th re e t a h - 7-7 
an d 
both 
teaiiv^ 
tiic n 
."■cijred $ 1'4) an d g e n e r .J a d m n - .o n .-rat- ft tend- 
m 
Lo n g 
Is la n d 
a n d 
th e 


io rn ia p la n ts . 
itw o ru n s m the i.ith . 
¡$ 123 B o th a r c in u n lim ite d supply .iB io n x , X . Y . 


Plane Strike Averted 


i 
B U R B A N K . C a lif 
a rc h 4 .ft— 


Phone PA 2*4600 for a W A N T AD Taker 
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD., 
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 
1956 
NINE 


29— Salesm en W an ted 


S a le s m a n W a n t e d 


$ 8 , 0 0 0 to $ 1 0 , 0 0 0 


Here I* » fop job for a salesman 
who wants creator earnings, oppor­ 
tunity for the future and greater 
stability. 
If you have real sales 
ability and can prove it with actual 
records, and are interested in a new 
position offering vou more satisfac­ 
tion and prestige, here is jour oppor­ 
tunity to become associated with a 
leading manufacturer, international in 
its growth and leadership with large 
direct sales to plants and shops. Pro­ 
duct^ are broadly promoted and na­ 
tionally advertised 
I Ned bv thou 
Bands of the nations leading indus­ 
tries. Exclusive territory. Drawing 
account and high commissions. Re 
quired- A? least 3 sears sales experi­ 
ence. aged 26-45, car. good eye sight, 
mechanical aptitude or familiarity 
with metals and machinery only ap­ 
ply ii you have sales experience. 


PHONE Mr. J L Harvey, Fort Cum­ 
berland Hotel. Monday thru Wednes­ 
day, March 5, 6, 7 for appointment. 


47*—Real Estate For Sale 


I he" H A ROLD RTI'LETCHER~Co! 
Mortgage Bankers-Real Estate-Insurance 
EHA 
Bedford, Pa. Phono 104* 
V'A 
IC ACRE good garden ground™ 5~ oom 
house. 
2 room cottage 
Phone PA 
4 3502. Joseph Earl Strong. 
Creek 
Road, off Williams 


4 Room concrete block, large lot. good 
water. Easy terms Bowman s Addition. 


8 Room frame, arranged for 2 apart­ 
ments, hot woter heat, double concrete 
block garage Shriver Ave. 


J. S HUTTON. Realtor 
Listings Wanted.' 
Ridgeley, W Va. 


Parsons High School Holds County Firemen 
Annual Popularity Election Hear Reports 


On Convention 


Today’s Sermonette 


(Continued from Page IO) 
that looked so strong and impres­ 
sive had been built upon the sand 
It went down before the surging 
PARSONS—The annual popular-jDaniel. and Carole Orr. Rest dane 
Hood of uncontrolled desire. There ^ 
con(est 0f parsons High School er b°>’: first- Boh Sturms; second. 
was a moral collapse. 
I 
, 
. 
. .. Dick Hill Best dancer cirl* first 
. . . . 
.and Parsons Junior High was held;, 
. 
. 
urfni.tr gin. 
The house may fall because of> 
. 
Joan Shoemaker; second. Judy Orr 
lack of faith. During the second; recently and the following winners 
Reports on the annual county 


A t The Tracks 


Mexican Double 
|Today's Selections 
Pays $7,725 


Parsons Junior High—Most hand ( 
World War Dr. Leslie WeatherheadIh*v« been named according to an some boy: first. Bill Evick; second, convention, the carnival schedule 
received a letter from a broken-announcement made hy Earl Cor jDavid 
Hovattcr. 
Prettiest 
g irl:land the regional fire school were racc tlack today 


Bv Th* Associated Press) 
F 41 RI.RO', NUA 
I Piet s Son, Dutch Gal. Syrian Girl 
AGUA 
CALIENTE 
Mexico 
2 Whiz A Bit, Hook up. Hardback 
March I W-Hohkrs of two 
X . j *,°"*B - * * » " Ann' 
tickets won $7,725.60 each on daily- 
* fourteen 
Grand, 
f ighting 
Wia*. 
double bets at the Caliente horse r *aPR1,J#r sSally. Weekly. Danger Cue 
lively Latin, Tommy * Jet. Tiger 
hearted woman. “ My husband has 
Dial r e »t?oo.Pren killed in the war. My boy was 
coran principal oft he school. 
'.loan Black, first; second, Jean among topics discussed vex!erH-ivI 
M was l^e largest daily-double p,*>' 
, . 
, 
. 
Parsons High School — Most Nestor. Most popular boy: first, at the monthly meeting of the |iayof* here since July 4, 1954. when 
r rd vat Mar. ‘ perfect vn*ten Diablo 
handsome boy: first. Don Nestor; Dennis 
Schonover: 
second, 
Bill executive committee of \lle-any* tbl'holder of one ticket, Mrs. Ottil- 
9 v,‘ Action. Don*. Sheila suaan 
Hl.sf Bf I . Lovely l.aurl 
STDP'rieht now .'nd'.t.iTinftkin. «h^ ^ s !on a sh‘P that has been torpedoed. 
the for sale adv 
go to your telephonejWhy do you go on talking about,second, Jo b h y Schoonover and Joe Evick 
Most popular girl: 
first. Garrett Volunteer Firemen's Asso l,la Alexander of San Diego. Calif . 
Rightmire. ciation. The meeting was held at won $12-724- Tlatk officials said si .nm hm 
pakk 


3 1 — Situations W anted 
MODEL Day Nursery open 8 to 5 daily 
Children 2 6 
I ranaportation available 
Reasonable. Phone PA 2 4811. 


and rail the advertiser of the item you foe love of God? There cannot bo Beva. Prettiest girl 
first. Judy .loan Black; second Jo 
money, aav**trouble. *'* Un><>* **'* a God. Why do our men have tojBarr; second, Carol Stewart. Most Best dressed boy; first. Bill Evick Mt. Savage Volunteer Company's ,hat *s 
a w°rld s record 
i,,m / naie*!ushm* 
suffetJike this0 No human father popular boy: first. Bill RosenauL^nd Dennis Schoonover: 
second.)fire hall. 
‘ 
| The winning bets today were on 'T t.amn, Grittte. Pal. sen Keegan 
second. Frank Mullenax. Most pop- Dick Kujwell and Lanny Lambert. 
ares! 


6 ROOM bink house ,-213 (Antral Ave 
Pine reduceo for quick aal*. Phone 
PA 2 3823 
NEW STROUT CATALOG 
Just Out: Mailed FREE! Chock full of 
bargains - 
3,046 properties described, 
31 States. ( oast to-< oast Farms. Homes, 
Businesses 
WORLDS LARGEST' 56 
Years 
Service 
STROUT 
REAI.TY 


would let it happen, and you keep 
on prating about a God who loves 
We can't bear it.” Her life had fall­ 
en in. She forgot that the Man who 
told us to build our house upon the second, William Holler 
rock suffered more than anv of us.1 
Best dressed girl: first, Carol pirst, 
Joan 
Black; 
iw jsj U M W 
a 
* 
’ n S Z S * . .Od yet Hi* bitt. held. 
Stewart: 
second. Hay durance RIRI,inure. 


.Jesus said he that hcareth and 


ular girl: first. Willets Lambert;! 
B0St dressed girl; Jo Rightmire, 
second. Carol Stewart. Best dress fjrst; 
second Frances Hee. 
Mr 
cd boy: first, Jimmy K. Lambert;[Junior Hi: first, Paul Pennington: 
second. Bill Evick. Miss Junior Hi: 
second. 
Jo 


Westernport will be the site of Coldwater, ridden by Jockey Mel 
2 (.ame 
Winnie. 
Richwood 
step, 
fredo Enriquez, in the fourth race. 
Fun. carotin. Moon. Bad 
and Rlueoma. ridden by Carlos de New* 
Mollo. in the fifth race. 
U 5 Lut* of Go,d- ct»«ng*.w.y, 
Coldwater 
and 
Blueonia 
paid' 


the county convention June 7. and 
firemen from that community re­ 
ported progress in planning the 
> 
veU Zembower asso*, 
««*»>" 
treasurer, 
ren, Muted 
aud MO ai un Mra.gM »2 
J J , “ a 
S S , 


PUI 
Flying Biy, Shrewd. Gee 


32— Instruction! 


IO. Pa 
FIVE 
room frame semibungalow on 
landscaped lot. Ideal for small family. 
A .Street La Vale (all PA 2 0395. 


48— Roofing, Spouting 


ROOFING. SIDINGTpitStfiS:^ Moulin*. 
fciCHOOlJS. OLDEST * LARGEST. Free 
catalogue. 
Asa Whetsell, Represent* 
(ive. 
P. O. Box 2226, Cumberland 
PA 2.6398 


BEA U TY IS BIG BUSINESS! 
U N LIM ITED OPPORTUNITIES 
NEW CLASS STARTING 


T R I STATE BEAUTY ACADEMY 
114 VA AVE. CUMBERLAND PA 4 2180 Aft 


General repairs. Call Cumb. PA 4 3494, 
Hyndman 
72 RS. F r e t 
estimates 
Rittinger Burkett. 


Mr. P. H. S.: first. Bill Rosenau; 
companies that dues must be paid 
Most courteous boy: first, Bill on or before May I. or the delin 


tickets. 


doeth these words of mine. It is not "cc™ d , Prank MulJenax.^ Miss P. j Evick: 
second. 
Paul 
Pennington qucnts will not have a voice at the 
' ~ 
" 
invention. 
Charles Crawford, chairman of 


New Roofing. Gutters, Conductors 
Meta! Work, all types Roof Painting 
25 yrs Esp ALEX J SCHUTE PA 2 6505 


doers, and this is more than an 
emotional q^pcrienee, 
A woman 
said to Jesus one day. ''Blessed is 
the womb that bore thee, and the 
breasts that thou didst suck ” But 
Jesus turned and said, “ Yea rath- 


Swaps And Nashua 
enough to hear 
we need to bo fI s-: flfSt 
Lambert; sec* and Robert Cross. Most courteous convention. 
'end. Judy Barr and Sylvia Knotts girl 
first. Jo Rightmire and Amy 
Charles Crawford, chairman ol U / j|| |Vln * M z u if In 
Most courteous girl 
Judy Barr. Ferguson, 
second 
Jean 
Nestor the carnival clearance committee 
** I I I l l O I If lv C t II I 


ROOF ING 
SPOUTING 
SIDING 
rhree year* to pay Guaranteed work 
Andrew Witt, Phone CO 4-3667 


Upholstering 


34— Lost and Found 


PURSE, while getting into car front 
of 405 Prince George St. Finder call 
PA 2 7437, Reward 


35— Miscellaneous 


- S H O V E L S - D O Z E R S 
Mobil# Clan**, Back Hoe*, High Lifts, 


Amanda 
Lambert Best athlete boy: first. Jimmy Old- reported that carnivals have been C ..lf . f r i i 
l> ,, « 
and Lela Haddix. Best athlete boy aker; second Dick Lantz. Best nth- scheduled by LaVale July 9 to 14 
U U I l M r r d m l\ d (.t 
first, Bill Rosenau; second FrankJefe girl: first, .loan Black, sec Tri-Towns, 
May 
20 to 
2t>: 
and 
Mullenax, Best athlete girl: first. ond. Maycel Haddix. Most depend-Friendsville. May 28 to June 2 with 
MIAMI, Fla . Man h 4 (fu-Gulf 
stream Park officials announced 
meet 
ulfstream 


I how 
full a reservoir of maxims one jurjes 
sustained 
when 
he 
was Janet Barr. Best dancer boy: first. George Comp, vice president, re 
rrack spokesman Horace Wade 
inay possess, 
and no 
matter how; sjrucjt 
By a train earlier in the Herbert Lambert 
second. Dennis ported they had attended annual said SwaP® ,0WRCI/ 
Ellsworth. 
L To^^Drxpery* t slip1 Vo^er* Fabric*‘^ood onc 5 sent‘mcnts ma> he, 
day); second. Jimmy K Lambert Schoonover. 
Best 
dancer 
girl. 
GEO. BRAGG. uvALE. md pa 4-46H one has not taken advantage of Most dcpendab|e girl 
first, Lela first, Sarah Mullenax; second. Jo 
U P H O L S T E R IN G 
(every concrete opportunity to act. 
John TToxcii. 222 Davidson st PA-4 2omEone's character may remain en 
--------------------- yuraitur< " tinely unaffected for the better 


Haddix; 
second. Elda Mae Mc* I Rightmire. 


UPHOLSTERING 
feeling is allowed to evaporate . 
. 
_ 
without bearing practical fruit, it \ Y ||| H d V P U liC S l 
Comprc'sers. Paving Breaker*. Dnlls Gen S Warner, 1323 Va. Ave. PA 4 0774 
worsp than a chance lost; it 


Automobila 
AUTO CONVERTIBLE TOPS 
TRICK SEATS 
TARPAULINS 
HASTINGS ALUMINUM AWNINGS 


When a resolve or a fine flow of St. Peter’s Church 


Traetor-Ti arter*. Low Bed Trailer*. Pole 
Frailer*. Truck* of all kind*. FiU ground, 
top soil & road material. 
We hate more than 206 Piecer at 
Equipment to terre your needs) 
BAUGHMAN CONTRACTING CO. 
Dial PA 2-4588 


Furniture Upholstering, Repair* works so as positively to hinder 
W C u n C S u d V 
Canvas & Aluminum Awnings (future resolution and emotions") 


Celanese Income 
Nearly Triples 


8 Joyce (.ot>er. I 
S 
Knight, Bob F 
B t ST B E T : Time For Fun 


t,t L U I R f AM r ARK 


1 
Rig 
Mark. 
Warmed 
Over, 
Deep 
Rivet 
2 
Ruffler, Derm. Quarter Master 
3 
stanley t , t ilg a ry, Elixir 
4 
Roman 
Battle, 
ob 
Johnny, 
Spica 
Round 
5 ( haner. Rare Music. Beivy T 
6 
Boh Austin. Admiral John. Joyrtn 


7 
filial iou*, 
traigwood. 
Jet a 
War 
Dale 
8 
Fleet Bud. Scotsmans Bond. Marked 
Game 
a 
tea No Ute. Indian Land, Yoeman 
Bl si HF I 
Bob Au vim 


( H ARI.KS lo w > 


1 
HyatOvtH*. Dutch King 
Platoon 
2 optional. Turtles#. Mad Gal 
3 
Moose 
F ie . 
Heroic 
Virtue, S'akt- 
banquets al LaVale and Barton ll‘" niU'lv drc'ded today 
against 
companies and als,, an install. 
«>••»* lho b "™ f ,,re 10 cnt,r « * T a , , * , , d... s.nd,. A,...m.a 
of officers at Baltimore Pike Com Ia(e aKa,n;', Nashua. 
s Quatre Pat sighted. Fast spin 


P«ny They alan reported « 
i £ 
S 
T * * MHl ^ T ! ! ' * ' 1 1 
5 Z T ' Z ' J Z ' Z i ' Z Z . 
the funeral of Robert \ Whitehair 
wifimi 
ol 
inc 
|ioo,ooo| 
$ w^vrte. fcartv Tr*fnt# 
York 
who was president of the Corrigan-added Santa An,ta I)crby yrs,rr' w!? J r hy Uurtoun, T-rry 
Ville Company and a member of df y ' lo ,h,ru tra(.k M«nday *vrnmg,| B| ^ ^ 
Ut||, L#II-WM. 
the executive conunittea Of 
the a 
^ With 
Like 
Iago. 
Ainde 


Loudoun, Tarry Not. Nick 


N EW YORK, March 4 ifT-Ccla 
nc.se Corp. of America today re. l)la>ci 
P O S S E L T § % "n 
a's An idca tx*™ ** Character only! 
LONACONING - The Rev. Don-por^ a net income for 1955 0f 
accidently electrocuted a 


association 
Yesterday’* meeting ^0VPr* ^ ,d* Barply Nothing anti 
opened with a moment of silent ^ ^mo ^ed- 
in memory of Whitehair 
SwaPs 
anf* 


Rt. 40. West. __ ________ 


COLLINS CONSTRUCTION CO. 
Phone REdwood 8 8911 
Remodeling, Rn - ■ ng. New Home* Binit 
V a c u u m C le a n e rs 
W ELL D RILLING 
S3 era exp 
Modem steel equipment 
Pump iretaliation* Galvan-ted Lasing 
9 V CARPENTER WEI.! DRILLING Co 
P O Bo* 352 ( umb PH RE 8 9300 
iFIPtTC 
TANKS 
C U S P E D - Modern 
equ'pment 
Bi Stat# Disposal dervtc# 
Write or Phone lonat oning HD 3 
4401 
B ooh I 
I W ork , 


PHLNL PA-2-269C 
J 
ii 


38— Moving, Storing 
J 
i 


Phone pa 2 4713 when it is practiced. And the re-ald F. Etherton, of the Chapel of $15.303,268. compared to $6,590 268 toup*e 
a^°* 
s'"FURNITURE 
’warding words of God are 
W ell the Ascension and Prince of Peace. ,n j 9-4 
I 
Valentino asked all 
ISI Frederick St 


c u st o m ' MADE 
Recovering and Spring Repair 
C E Brod* 
555 Greene 
PA 2 1890 


companies to 
submit 
the 
names 
of 
deceased 


other 
Ellsw orth 
horses w ill come to Florida by rail, I 
arriving 
sometime 
next 
wi 
W ade said. 


G u l f s t r e a m P a r k E n t r i e s 


" VACUUM CLEANER 
Parti & Sennce 
PA-2-5070 
130? VA AVF 


done thou good and faithful ser- Rockdale, will be guest preacher.! 
The 1955 (.arnjngS pcr share of 


v a n r 
March 7 at 8 p. rn. at the Lenten common stock were SI 81. In J 954 m rm bcrs of the past year to the 
G r o u n d s E n t r i e s 
When wishing, and feeling and service at St. 
Peter s 
Episcopal ^e> were 32 cents 
j secretary, so they can be included 


thinking, and longing are translat-jchurch. 
* 
The com pany reported net sales "! !bc Mcm orial servk e ceremony 
i iR sr post 2 43 pes 
. j 
i t 
m 1 
ha, 
, 
at the county convention 
1 
f i r s t ii boo, claiming. 3. a r 
ed into acting, then they are trans- 
Father Etherton will preach on 


lated into character. Christ has a the Sacram ent **t Holy M atrim ony iq-.4 ... ti77 sn9 A9« in iq'aX Katns 


word for every situation and if I There w ill be Adult Confirmation textiles were the highest since 1951 


had increased from $147,606.55)0 in “ V T ‘ <HiD,y ronvcn,'°n 
(im| 
>H#.rt (M SIOIM» im 
valentine also reminded repro ei*u* s. n 
us < apism Ru*in 
id 
Dust IO# Little Joannle 
IO# 
sen tat Ives 
ol 


Display Classified 


Hic 23 .companies 
in lyrrian Girl 


JOHN A PPEI 
TRANSFER LOCAL. 
LONG DIS I ANC F MOVING AGENT 
C R E W AN 
LINES PHONE PA 4 1523 
ME A DL HS 
FRAN.SI ER. LOCAL 
LONG DIS I ANCI. AGEN! NORTH 
AMERICAN VAN LINES 
PH PA 41900 
A 
I 
IRA.N.Sir 
CO 
LOCAL. LONO DES! ANCB MOVING 
M .AVL'IIN TRANSI RH CAU PA 4 2770 


W 
H I T A C R E ' S 
CeWHCALANt) MAVIAO 


hear it and do it my house will befclass on Tuesday, March 6, at 7 30 and the «,a|r 0f Celanese chemicals present thal Pr°P °s<*d changes 
built upon~The rock 
|p rn. Adviso-y Board meeting at ‘ 
. 
... - . m . i,Th th*, f 
b-vdavrT 
niusf 
submitted 
in . " rA 
One winter night in a tiny cot- the home of Mrs. Roland C. Staup reported* 
writing to the executive committee who a a / 


'ijta a r in a Sen..,sh glen a I,ne o ld .,, * 30 p rn 
Celanese now m arket, more than t ‘ l l " , Z ^ - Z T J 1 ' l l * M 
'1 “ 
" S J R 
J Scotsman lay dying 
It wa# a wild 
\oung 
Peop les 
confirmation ,() chem icals 
mrludme firr 
i 
p 
Hint.stone. Otherwise, sue us 
jjslornny n.ght 
Only his daoghler d a s , w l„ be 'Vedne-day M arch I an| hydraulic nuldi, and l 
u 
b 
r 
i 
c 
a 
t 
i 
n 
g 
‘ ° " 5i df r5d t S S . ' t S * , 
* and he were in the house. 
Path- at 4 30 p, in.; choir rehearsal at specialties 
county convention, he ob „ x 
suWeriiv* 


1 er " said the daughter." would you h 30 
p 
rn. 
Ju n io r 
Confirmation 


IU# AhMainei 
H)9 Daisy ( tilter 


Ila * Miss J 
115 Pi edict 


IU 
lo# 


IU 


J like me to read the Bible to y e 0 


1 
Na. na. lassie,” said the old saint. 


I ranger and 
Stoma# Co 
B E N N E T T 
Local — Long Distance 


P H O N E P A 2-6770 


G ra p e s T ra n sfe r & S to ra g e 


Local. Long Distance. 
PA 2-2188 
• 


ROMPl pick up and delivery service 
Including Sundays and holiday*. Closed 
panel truck. Dial PA 2 3376 
_______ _ 
i9 — Pointing, Poperhonging 


W ALLPAPER REMOVING 
FAM 
EFFICIEN T SERVICE 
R J KUNZA! 
_____ 
FA 2 6897 


PA PER H A N G IN G * T ALV'.niV“ 
South End Wallpaper Shop. 331 Va. Av# 
40— Personals 


EXPERTS CLAIM- # "comlortabia mat 
treat la th# key ta a good night a rest 
Let us put th# “ comfort" bark ta that 
lumpy, bumpy mattress of yours. .Rat 
tressea of all aire* mad# to order Cum 
berland Mattress Fartorv Ph PA 2 1105 
41— Professional Service! 


DRESSMAKING - Alterations I alluring 
111 Baltimore St 
Phono PA-45758 
BERTHA AVIS SEARLES 
EYEGLASS REPAIRING, Broken Lenses 
Replaced — Prescription* Filled. 
Tho* C. Hubba. 59 Pershing St. 


43— Piono Tuning 


Piano Tuning and Repairing 
Laurence Griffith 
PA-2-1633 


ROBERT W "MORELAND. ASIM , Tunes. 
R ep sr* 
School. Church, and 
Home 
Piano* PA-4-1084 Lived pianos 


46— Radio, T-V Service 


C UM BERLAN D 
" 
ELECTRIC CO. 
TV asrvlcas on all make*—Guaranteed 
Nit# Sunday terne* available PA 26191 
Wa repair ail eau 
from A (Admiral) to 
Z (Zenith). 29 A S. Centra SC PA 2 722? 
After 6 phone PA 2 1914._______________ 
‘ 
GUARANTEED RAIMO SER VICE 
Specializing In home and auto tadio— 
DOI-AN'S 
ll N George St 
PA-4-5550 


HAVE your 
IV repaired at nom# by 
technician of 36 yr#, eiactronia ex pan 
ance. Reasonable price*. PA 4-1718 
Allegany Amusement TV M 
facrory authorised tervio# 
Oenurns /actors pard 
Service daily 9 a m to U p m 
Sunday lp m to ll p m 
PA 2 4783 


47— Real Estate for Sale 


elm will meet ThurjJay, March 


I S ' n S S J r ? ? P A - 2 - 2 7 9 0 ; h .V ryrs full of the light streaming " The4 R t.^ R ev. Noble C 
Howell C l f l T e i l C e K y l e H C f l d S 


- 
- - - - 
aire ,i (iv froni tho other land 
" I p D 
Bu hop. w ill be at St P e ,C Ii D l a n f r . ii n i - r j I A r a l 
r l a 11T Y 
^ A F F T Y thatched 
me 
hooxe 
before 
the church on M arch 20 to r , 'mi,lister >10111 U U O I U L U t d l 
B E A U T I - b A r t T T s(orm hogan ” 
the Sacram ent of 
O n f'rn a tio n to 


The storm will assail u# sooner tho«e who are in the p't^rnt con 
. . . 
, 
, 
. . ; 
. 
f 
, 
UB. ih r t h.mn no vKu.im* 
or later W e must work while it i# firmation claires 
f 
? .P 
. 
v . . . al 
/embower wax appointtni to de 
mu h th 12 noo. claiming 


served. 


tit) Nnhl* Ti*tat 
lit a llardha, k 
ll# h (limbier 
HO 
a Nev* and Kellrher entry, 
h Ca pit a no entry 


jdav. He that receives the word#, 
_____________________________md trai 
em 
into a c t l e ii L j 
, 
r 
. 
W R O U G H T IR O N 
house upon IV jd llO n fy Vl^tS 


D 
M L I I I A 
l f * 
the rock and the floods do not de# 
B C JR L I L 
I R 
I P 9 
troy 
it 
Wise 
builders 
are 
men 
(C o n tin u e d fro m P a g e IO ) 


that 
Warner's 


troy 
1323 VA 
AV! like 
PA 4-0774 


rT (pi *1 aa* ar * 1, 
* ihiiihih, •, iiiain 
a 
basic 
fire 
course 
in 
G arrett 
* 


County 
told the executive group £ 
£ 
£ £ » {j{ \ Z T n e ^ 
that 
18 men had completed the I a>lorc**t 
ill I iii aiolis Mn* 
csurM 1 and sraduated. S ix lw n a rr 
J)} 
I rom Oiiklcinci md two from Deer 1 iCRtHrMi Ann tis Muter Foiav 
Clarence Kyle has been Park. 
i1 *,,,ur F»,rh» 
no Radar ( tipper 
" * ' 
— U 8 v 
4 a 


(F IR S T 
PO ST D O PES 
F IR S T 
93,206, 
cl 
4 v I up, 8 I. 
Home Boy 
no 
x Pulsator 
ID 
Swivel 
ID 
Rig Mark 
l l? 
Hid No# 
no 
x Dancing 
Roy 
ID 
Mother Oho*! 
115 
Influence 
ID 
x Sit 
sterling 
no 
xxWarmed O vtr 
in# 
E a rly Foot 
115 
Blanchard 
ID 
IrriM ir 
ID 
xx Royal SI 
lit 
x Deep R u e r 
tin 
Pnvxder»mok# 
ID 
SF (O M ) 
D OOP cl . 4 v * up. m 
rn 
!>enny 
ID 
x ( an Nedion 
IDR 
Johnxnn T 
113 
Mix ( entury 
ID 
Jum bo lie * 
ID 
x Tararn 
too 
Ile tor 
IO* 
Sailor laid 
119 
Weird Mu*!# 
ID 
Direct Tint 
i n 
Quarter Matter 
ll# 
Santa r 
u s 
M uter Dover 
108 
( nota<* alc hi# 
108 
x Ruffler 
111 
Phi 
111 
T H IR D 93.200. cl 
( i 4 up. D I rn. 
Mal rn mn 
ID 
b I auio\ a1 
ID 
x John R f» 
117 
Hcikev 
114 
A ( *1#Ary se­ 
ID 
b Medico 
122 
ntinel 
ID 
k-Shamroi It 
116 
\ Stanley C 
HH. 
a D u ff in 
r n 
Air Out 
ID 
Beau Black 
I U 
» Idle Plaiter 
ll# 
(iuid.fi Bomb 
ID 
F.ltxtr 
ID 
Portage Boy 
ID 
a Cramer C A P Farm entry 
h Retnhold Handyman entry 
Mil H ill 93.5(H). al . .1 >. I m TO y 
l l ' spire Hound 
122 Topeka 
It! 
t i' Peeler 
II# Mufti* Th# Rad ll# 
KO oh Johnny 
ii# Roman Baile 
122 
lit Rockport 
US 
I IM H It 506, cl , 4 v I up. 4 I. 
Blayk toyota 
115 Hedy T 
ll# 
En Fleur 
164 x Rara Mum 
1#8 
Broken Wing 
to# Charter 
IU 
(•aine t ham# 
112 


na 
us! 


i i i 
107 
up, 


117 


Strand TV 


United Plant Guard Workers, of the (ermine what dates are available 1 1 14 m 
I ill a 
n |n n 4 
_ f 
if;- —. 
j £ 
i 
. 
. 
* 
. 
* FliR#lRt#f 
U t Fi|H tin f W lM 
I.ukr pl,int of the West 
\ irginia for 8 regional firf school here %w«r seneiary im rourtfti Gland I it i sixiii ii vni ri 
I y, 
4^ f 
Papor (emf* 
pud 
dentine .eked that firemen **',r 
" J M“ Re*u" 
Admuai John ’ n* 
Mr*....... 
Other officers named are Henry> ' on the liMikout for an abandoned 
f ifth *'m o t.'‘maiden*, claiming. 3 
Sur* 
|JJ 
Taylor, 
vice 
president; 
Arnold building which tan be used for a f,' 
u 
>>< un 
iii w.-.iding Rim 
Their character is the| 
The report was that the (iood-l^.00^ ' *****[***treasurer; Andre tire demonstration. 
He said any v's'.T" R^ue.i na a im Z Z 
Roo rn ;,a¥;‘. r Klm 
,.L rv . i . 
' 
j Shaw, 
recording secretary; 
W ii person knowing of an old building " ,,klv 
111 f,*, m»i«v 
**“ 
i 
, ____, ___ 
, , _____ n _ i 
, _ ,_____ 
. 
. 
. 
. 
( hoam 
ll* 
P i in< r V 
J 
it Dangei 
fabric of the City of God. and their man.Kovens 5th District group and 
^ 
J " >v 
w 
M 
™ 
V " 
11,11 in 
strength 
is 
not 
for 
them selves,^ coggms-OMalley 3rd District 
^ 
n. 
armL . ‘.L V m ?* 
-iv ,»fh.rr nf ti* 
!’ 
1 
alone. It is part of the glory of organization were involved. D~‘u 
ant a-arms and Clifton any obiter of the association o 


Railroads Qualify 
for Tax Write-Offs 


Boal. guide. 
Both! 
factions have been unfriendly to 
Baltimore's Mayor Thomas D'Ales- 
# 
andro*. a staunch supporter ct for ^ | Q 
p P o s t T o H o ld 


volunteer fire 


Anniversary Party 


mer Son 
Millard E. Tiding* for 
the nomination. 
Goodman said. "As of this time 
I have not committed myself per-! 
, sonallv 
towards 
any 
senatorial 
, , 
.. 
. 
^ 
•. ni m 
Baltimore and Ohm Ratlroad * 
n 
d 
prl mary candidate." 
•P*M N#- “ • 
w1** ,,ljn 


(u # 
Ilk * Alice Ayre* 
Bim nome 
111 Crack** 
Image 
x Fiver F.mtly 197 Blue sally 
com- Ivtrutina 
JJS stella Wav 


’ 
S IX T H 
81 006, allow an ce*. I 
8 I 


, 
Letters 
of thank 
and acknow! 
I K 
[ W T ; 
Iedgement were read from t'S Sen- nnijnna 
107 liv e ly i.«uri 
I af ors J 
< rlenn 
n ~ n 
— J 
m 


the nearest 
pa ny. 


iii 
na 
us 
IO* 
us 
iii 
m 
in 


Beall and John 
.366, 
alluwani e*. 


WASHINGTON. March 4 F-T h e 
PIEDM ONT 


• — 
MUfiii) 
R EVF: NTH 
I Marshall Butler for the a s.sona* * 1 IS 
lion s telegrams suooortinB fnvor- !™ %Ay Wl rtor !li »»«•■ N-tre%. 
telegrams supporting favor 
Kelly-Mansfield ablt‘ acllon 
the CAO Parkway • lure 
112 


hold its annual birthday party hn- 


Ktng o Se cud* 111 Tens* Hull 
Vtmroi|rn 
ill b vl.adv Se 
lorn panics which previously re Fr®**y Mr 
no Mi Bub w 
the 
Western 
Maryland 
Railway 1 
hile, 
Tydings 
has 
an- , 
, D 
. .. 
. " 
cen cd fire hose 
t'lvii 
- ,;| s'om rn" v 
qualified today for tax assistance Inounced that J. Newton Brewer day at 8 p m at the Leg,on home I 
’ 
from Civil Defense 
h w.u.,* j, 
*„„* 


ll* A rrlivllv 
116 Will Be Dona 
(lam* D'Hearla 161 Hasty Kew*rd 
. Boh Austin 
111 L h r t.lv '. Wish 
S E V E N T H 
tio.ouo added 
3 
y tip ll 
let'* War Data IO? Squared Away 
120 
llile i iou* 
1(3 I 
Appeal 
County tiara 
112 ( reignnod 
ll# 
IOO Bim k Pilot 
lo« Oui De I er 
111 
ID Hangover 
I i ) 
III 
F IGHTH *4,06(1. al. 4 v * up I 1/1* rn 
I ape ador 
111 s Harold L 
IO# 
3, 
I wo F ivied 
111 Gull Stream 
IO# 
ja Jay Ja i 
IU a ( entenair# 
IO# 
HO Wise tod 
ll* Salmon Peter 
I I I 
ll* 
us .man* Bond IO# h Fleet 
Bird 
IO# 


111 


bv writing off costs to depreciation. j j r ^ Montgomery County invest-' 
The Office rf Defense Mobilize-1men( banker, will head his finance tional 
alternate 
committeeman, «‘PPlyii*t af the < (runty Garage 


4 
& 
up 


lion «»d tho.rapid writeoff iv to commitlee. The H-year-old Roek.|wl“ „ ^ . f ‘“ * ^ 1 
apply to several purchases totaling iv|j,e residc,nt w 
Movies of the 1955 Sugar Bowl 


about 19 million dollars, all at 85Isuccessful campaign_____________ 
per cent for the Baltimore A Ohio.LQr 
governorship in 1954. Byrd 


as •t.'tue in the un-jc| 
- 
an(j 
|j,e ,9^ Army Navy 
paign of H C, Byrd! 
___ 
/ 


while the Western Maryland pur 
chases totaling $3 316.000 will also 
be at an 85 per cent rate 


game will he shown. Refreshments 
will be served. 


Display Classified 


I - V IS IT L O A N S 


Phone — the# coma in for 
c*sh Up to $1000 on Sign* 
tuff, furniture, or tw. 


fw A tjutcu 
F in A N C I C O . 


lad rf notate r*u*» co 
(•mb»it»i>( • *•> aa l orn 


! lost to Gov. McKeldin after nar­ 
rowly defeating Mahoney for the 
nomination. 
J 
Mahoney's headquarters has an 


[nounced what it calls his first ma- M in is t e r C o in c id e n c e 
jjor 
organized 
political 
support) 


from a Baltimore city district. The 


S e r m o n T o p ic O f Ik e 's 


WASHINGTON, March 4 ie 


between 8 a. rn. 
Monday through 
announced. 
Refreshments we 


Mf.. Savage Fire 
auxiliary. 


and 4 p. rn 


rt ii rn 
Royal 
Star 
ne 
Pe rfe«t 
M itier 
ID 
Star ICrater 
115 
Jo h n’* 
Baby 
U h 
x Diablo 
IU 
Atom Bamb 
I U 
R a y # 
Surprise 
no 
Valor L #*» 
n o 
Quick 
Son 
ID 
N IN T H 
ll #66, 
r tainting. 
4 
4 
up, 
J I I* 
rn 
Wind tor Knot 
IIT 
x 
Ixlipel 
164 
xShetl a 
fuaan 
in# 
Done 
166 
Crack ice 
ID 
x (iinup Three 
111 


Mr Ael ion 
IU 
x 
Tea 
Biscuit 
n o 
High 
Hop*. 
1)6 


7th Ward First Bohemian Demo-,P rf*,d*nf 
Eisenhower’* 
minister, 


cratic Club, "an important unit of sav,t 11 
* as n °,tlinK 
comd* 


Finland Is Isolated 
- By General Strike 


I 
2. X 
5; xx 
7 lh* 
AAC. 


S u n s h in e P o r k E n t r ie s 


H ELSINKI, Finland. March 4 </fi ah sh" 


issued a statement favoring Ma- mon * a 


F IR S T PO ST IP F # 
*960, cl 
4 v A up. I t * f 
til Bidandmaa# 


( rn** 
111 
f)#*tjfio « D*t# 
the 
2nd 
District 
organization," jdence ,bat ,be lnpic 
t0^ay * *er j - Finland’s 
first 
general 
strike r *"a 
ainee 1917 isolated the nation from'^ 
I* TZfiZZ 


Decl- the rest of the world tonight. All'** Hurh»n# 


M A Y B U R Y PO LA N D R E A L T Y A G EN C Y 
HU AL FAT A T F B R O K E R S 
PH O N E PIED M O N T 6011 


CGI 'N T R V - L E V E L ” LOTS 
160 a 50(* 
056 
O P IE 
ANNAN, PA 2 7733 


|12 At RI 
cia r> 
I * 
* lh ®r w ithout 
machinery. 
IJS 
avie* 
tilUbl* 
Route 
160 
towarri* 
M#\#rivdal* 
n#*r 
Whit# 
Oak Church, 
rh ine M-v#rvdal# 
567 H 


I ROOM B R R K. I * 
bath-, hot w rtt#i 
heat. 
tiaras#, 
v Aid. 
poi the* 
(.nod 
condition. 203 Prnnw lvam a Ave 110,500 
Irving Millen.son 
PA 4 559C 


SIX ROOM modern brick v#n#*r horn*. 
Garage 
Newdy 
eon-Uucted 
Hilltop 
Drive 
For in«r>*#tifin 
Dial 
PA 2 2322 


It 
houv* and barn, 
elertric, *on;* timber 
( all evenings, 
P A 4-2317, Cumberland, Md 
I 
cr 
4 
acres 
ground 
Price M.'iOO. 
3 
md*- (rom 
Ft 
Ashby on Route 
*6 
Floyd 
P. 
Grace. 
realtor. 
Phone 
R E 8 9533. 
_ 
______________ 


BHK h 
■ ; .............. 
umbu Street. Lot 
25 x 135 rear On Bond Street 3 Rooms, 
• 


bath, fireplace. 2 porches first floor 
*-room». bath, Urge rear porch 2nd 
floor 
Conelet* basement 
Hot 
water 
heat, new ladiator* 
New metal roof 
complete!v 
renovated interior and ex 
tenor 
$7^00. PA 2 4260 weekdav* 8 to 
5 


? 
I .aVaie. with full b u t- 
(Dent, ga* fired hot water heat, 2 porch 
e*. back yard, shade tree* 
garage 
4 
room* on first floor with powder room, 
modem kitchen 
3 room* second floor 
with bath 
and closen 
Near schools 
churches 
Possession Jane 
1st 
Price 
913,500 
Phone PA 4 Oil* after 6 pm 
for appointment 


r 
se, bath, furnace he. 
matic 
water 
heater. 
Good condition 
3 acres ground, summer house, barn. 
outbuildings, 
fruit 
trees 
Priced 
for 
quick *a!e 
Located 2 Bn de* south of 
Meyersdale, 
Route 219. 
Inquire 
Mrs 
John buder. Rout* 3, Box 136, M eyers­ 
dale. 
_____ _ 


M O D ERN home 
8 room* 
bath, base 
menu hot air furnace, built-in cabinets, 
link and tile kitchen 
Screen pot che*, 
bath, el* trie, cistern and well waler 
F 'v * acres land, 70 fruit trees 
Will 
s#d part or all of land 
Located had 
rn de off 22° overlooking Rosser 
C E 
Kesecker, Phone McCoole 8541. 


Get 


MAXIMUM 


PERFORMANCE 


with "SA FEG U A RD " 


DUALS & HEADERS 


PIERE 
GLOSS 
MUFFLE* 


— Doubles E«hou*t Coparty 


— Modern f*hou*t $r»l*m 


— Trameadous Intrans# in 
Horsepower ond economy 


Install Them Today! 


as law os —- $10 95 


Chrome Licente 
Plate Frames 


With glottic Cover 
S f t Q C 


To Fit Now Md 
Togs , . , 


Rear View Mirrors 


1 .6 9 


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Fenders es law os 


Sun Visors 


Fit Most Cart 


A t law et . 
6 .9 5 


Odon Mondoy Evening* 
Ut# Your Fin! Norton#) Chorg* Account 


BEERMAN T L T * 


519 N 
Mochomc Just Above V o lle y 


CUT O LT — M A IL 


YOU NAME IT! 


... I would like to 
have a good used 
Electric 
Sewing 
Machine for: 


j 
[S 
] I W O ULD 
Like To Pay 
■* 


] Portable 


or Console 


h Nome ........................ 
* 


* Address ...................... 


Location 


Mail to: Singer Sewing 


Machine Company 


65 Baltimore St. 


Cumberland, Md. 


C UT OLT 
M A IL 


honey on Saturday. 


T w o P a p e r M ill 


E m p lo y e s R e tir e 


piano and train traffic was halted 
•*K(ONr> ***«' cl 
ii 
. 
. 
. 
* F.xlia F ive 
DI 
as well as shipping from Sweden Dave summer. 
A half million workers, the bulk * <ir,u'r * r>j| 


0{ 
L'ih I.m J*- 
i„ i.. _ 
_____ i. 
I« (.*•'•» Flavor 
Finland s labor supply, 
wa# h ji Jubh 


wage intreasr 
in Finland is 200 Finnmarks 
hour *86 cent 


Property Is Sold 


ti OOO »P W|. t n,s J y, 
lit Vie tor v Rinod 
lit I (illy Vim# 
118 
v Ri( h«v(,r>(J Step 
Oh Mighty 
ll* 
.G am e Winnie 
r , 
.Abolition 
I J J < hance ( *pei 
The average wage 
rot rth imm ct. 4 v a up. a r 
an 


"Alternatives 
in 
High 
lions " 
And last Sunday; 
"Decuion 
and 
Discipleship.” 


The President heard the Rev 
Dr 
Edward L. 
R Elson deliverj(-a||pd out by the Federation of 
t h i r d 
L I K E - Jose Prendes, bleach ^ 
,frrnoni at 
Fresby-iTrade Unions just a* President 
n !^ 
plant kiln operator employed 
withjU?nant ' hur' h 
In 
h#>tw,^ n 
he 1 rho Kekkonen 
took office 
Friday Mr r»h 
the Luke plant of West Virginia1 madp 
° * n rriomen,ou*' decision The unions demanded 
a 6 per cent 
Pulp and Paper Company since I” 10 se(k a second term. 
December I, 1923 was recently re i 
tirfd 
, 
India-Soviet Accord 
Also W,liter C Miller. I. 2. and 3 
beater helper 
has retired. 
His! CALCUTTA. India, March 4 f - 
seniority goo bat k to May 20 1943 jndja Wij| huy 50 000 tons of steel 
~ products from Russia this year, 
Display Classified 
iaccording to 
; here yesterday 
by India’s iron -' in Hammonds Addition of West 
| steel controller, C. R Natesan. and crnport to* C ecil A. Wilkes 
J a Soviet delegation Forma! agree Annabelle f: H ilk* - -----1 
$ ment will be signed in New Delhi 
* later. 


ut 
f 
Do Be Tee 
< ■ 
I up 
N#!l H # # (.a 
ll 


II* 
« Hemen* 
HI 


t il 
Gareth 
ll 
IMI 
» fftch View Don ll 
118 
( Ii.rn e* Are 
ll 
Af 


f ltd# Doc 
• R ill New. 
Jo 
Mull 
«Davit'* SojtnR 
Tlrtie For Fun 
Bright Blo*wim 
F IF T H 
tv*) 


up. 
ll# | Son Jo *. 
I"# 
* ( arqlin* Sfonii 
Ii# 
.Broken How 
112 K'fl 
Brown 
114 
Dupo 
114 
( I 
4 v 
I 
up 
* 
f 
Grey Granite 114 Ch at) se ast » 
Donald P Whitworth and Anna!xL.v!'!w‘,h 
,## m mk T’igbi 
arrangements madej.oe Whitworth haie nold p r o p e r t y w ” 
aa 
.Trenton San J 
Big Dance 
Vienna Dance 
tor tom rnone 


VEN ETIA N BLINDS 


CLEANED ond 
FE P A IR !D 
DRAPE Bits and D IA P E R 
PODS 
ORNAMENT* 
HON PA 11 INGS 
$ 
FIBRE GLASS PANELS • ALL SIZES 
’ 
AW NINGS • ALL TYPES 
| 
JOHN I SHARP & CO 
401 N M.fhomc St. 
PA 2 7620 


and 


i n n , 
window 
HILAL 
p r o d u c t s 
c o . 


Venetian Blind Laundry 


— VEN ETIA N BLINDS— 
Fro# l»bmot#» 


620 Columbia Avo Phono PA-2-2021 


No Vote For Women 


BURN, Switzerland, March 4 e 
—The voters of the canton of Bern 
Completes Training 


Private John C 
Vance 


of Gold 
IO# 
.R itter Fill 
167 
She'. A Btl d 
HK 
S IX T H 
91206 
al 
I i 
4 up. 
IO# J ii.t Barb* 
IO# 
. F M n t Dr 
164 xAvtettf 


according to 
a deed filed for record in the office 
of Joseph F.. 
Boden, clerk of Aile- * Shrewd 
gany County Circuit Court. 
ai#** * N ,M 
.G et H im 
I eochie 
Brr.tun 
F IG H TH 
I or tight 
son of Tuff ( hic 
—men only—refused today to grant Mr. and Mrs, Ora \«ime, Flint- JJ.'J 
11 
voting rights to women. 
'stone, has completed fhe course of Ga) err*/ 
Only 47 pcr cent of the all-male advanced ha'-ic framing at Brrioke 
aNp '!"v %9tm 


eieitorate voted in fhe referen-!Army Medical Center, Foil Sam n»nr,r 
Rob F- 
. I.' 
S 
Knight 
Thor Ie * 
* Mann. Roberf*on entry 
x 5 
xx 7 lb*. AAC 


« f 


8 f 
IM 
ll! 
ii; 
ii; 


durn. A proposed amendment to Houston 
Texa# 
He will be as 
the Bern constitution was rejected, signed to Ai my Medical Service 
62.971 to 52 929. 
I 


Salvador Elects Lemus 
Regdlddo Belts Bdl! 


164 
l l WA 
*1 . 4 v 4 
117 
tlm urgu v 
ISP 
Bad Pat 
lf# 
Br.(term 
118 ( nth Requ 
91,666 *| 
I A 4 v. I m 
70 v 
111 
long I .ake 
161 
"NI 
Slur ( he#)) 
tm 
161 
*l^ n A < h*rn e 
im 
108 
Goon Si.tei 
IC 
118 
■I . l r A up 
I 1/16 rn 
116 
I I aivr You 
IU 
111 
. I o n * Go ber 
16 
111 
Set ret I rn pal •# 
ll 
113 
x a Tar Unit 
l l 
168 


FAST CASH LOANS 


— y o u ch oose the p a y m e n t s ! 


5 2 0 T O 5 1 5 0 0 


Bdltimore Ticket 
TUCSON, Arb , March 4 
* 


’‘V 
V 
' 
1 SdleSet Mardi 10 
^ rcc Corner# 
including one with 
the bases loaded, and drove in 
eight runs in a six-inning Cleve- 
BA LU MORK 
March 4 
f — 
Tickets for the Baltimore Orioles 


m o n t h s 
AMOUNTS 


SSO 
n o o 
9200 
S JOO 
tsoo 
$1,000 
l l 200 


12 
5 07 
lo o s 
20 0# 
JO 13 
46 0# 
#0 17 
IO* 69 


l l 
3 64 
7.27 
14 S4 
21 l l 
S I 74 
62 42 
74 91 


24 
.... 
. . . . 
........ 
..... 
14 to 
48 7# 
sa t i 


THRIFT PLA N FIN A N C E C O R PO R A T IO N 
OF CUMlEILAND 


IO ans O eft DOO ma ex uno<8 MAinANb mkx/itwaz Akan Cl AO. 


18 N. Liberty St. 
Dial PA 4-0344 


Mar 
ivador 
elected 
Col. Jose 
Maria 
I Lemus their president today. The 
[only opposition candidates with­ 
drew last week, charging the clee* 
I Don 
would 
be 
a 
"scandalous 
ifraud ” 


Plane Strike Averted 


1 
BURBANK, Calif., March 4 <*— 
The International As-.n. of Mac him was hit with a teammate on base 
Monday, March 12 


day 
Hi 


i Whence 
109 
x Marked Gam# 
112 
a Wert entry 
bCalum et F'arm entry 
NIN TH 
*1.66, 
cl ,, 4 v 4 
up. Uh 
rn 
a Ila No U M 
ID 
Ladd 
119 
Pitlochry 
ID 
a Mr 
Duty 
ID 
i lr!ab Re* 
It# 
Winning Fleet 
ll* 
| Lea Rand) 
122 
a Yoeman 
117 
j Scandia 
ID 
Mike ah v 
t i l 
1 x Rig Mister 
IU 
letdown 
111 
Indian I .and 
IU 
a Ha Im aa 51 age* entiy 
x S 
xx 7 Iba 
AAC 


C h a r l e t T o w n E n t r i e i 


F IR S T PO ST I PFA 
| 
F IR S T 81.200, claim ing, 4 4 up. ghoul 
I*, rn 
j Hob* 
Ace 
111 
■ 
Ace Flight 
IM 
Id rrub 
114 
Hi Ruddy 
I U 
J Dutch 
King 
l it 
War 
in t 
I 11gel To! 
111 
M ickey's Jack 
IU 
, Platoon 
111 
Se# Location 
ID 
iHuajf Ambia 
I i i 
Hyattsville 
I U 
Flesh Gal 
IU 
Appetite 
IO# 
ll 
SECO N D 
*1,606, 
claim ing, 
4 4 
up, 
I about 4!x f. 
I « 
Annette 
167 
x Spherical 
IOT 
I Bul tie 
Fatigue 
ID 
Optional 
I U 
; I urn#** 
ID 
Zany 
112 
I Gilded Right 
111 
Abidjan 
I U 
Fligihle 
165 
M irar 
111 
, Mad 4,al 
ID 
( od a i 
104 
. xhmv 
Fem 
IU 
Herndnd 
UA 
T H IR D t i .666, claiming. 4 4 up, about 
, 4U f 
Va 
111 
1 High ( balked# 
IOO 
Sun Brandy 
Montana Pride 
12# 
Heroic Virtu* 
120 
' Wild 
Wing 
IU 
Ona Light 
ll* 
1 Bob F.d 
117 
Sweeping J# 
U t 
1 STooxe 
F ye 
126 
Peaty 
111 
I Te< Ord Trip 
111 
( hilly F im* 
ID 
I itakvpumt 
117 
Silver Glow 
IM 
l o t RTH 
11.200. 
claim .ng, 
4 
4 
up. 
I about 7 f 
• Hor * Joy 
IO# 
Rernlev 
U S 
I Ty ma 
ID 
Our Ventui# 
IU 
I Hem 's Queen 
IU# 
Suinmei 
Duck 
ID 
I Dear Sandy 
ID 
FUgle Speed 
ID 
(.mug! Hie 
ne 
Beau John 
IU 
Big Tattoo 
i i i 
x Lavelv Miaa 
164 
I Aganaman 
11# 
Sir Stake 
120 
. 
T IF 111 
11.506 , claim ing, 3. about 
• t. 
I F.leioal Boy 
115 
Laxly s 
LIO 
I bighted 
HO 
x Piping Ta# 
116 
I Ko! a ne. a 
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n e 
.olden (ap e 
ID 
F a.t Spin 
no 
Belt’* ( lur hy 
ID 
Turbine 
N 
126 
Quatre Pat 
no 
Royal 
Incline 
1)0 
Butterbur 
ID 
T horny 
120 
-SIX I ll 
l l ,506, 
allrmaniea. I 
4 
Up. 
about 6 I 
Ex tra Blend 
DQ 
Headdren* 
169 
. Singing Queen 
ll# 
x Haatevtile J r 
IM 
1 Mouxevt.y 
126 
Mia# D r af I 
I OI 
. Knotty Jack 
DQ 
F diatom* 
ID 
J. I c* I r #* pci i &c 
120 
F ly ie 
H 
126 
I ffflttfwf 
115 
Neddie* Jon** 
111 »i * r * si t * t w 
i mg 
SF7VF NTH 
11,200. 
i a.iii,rig. 4 4 
up. 
, J in in, 
1 Gv. * ne'h 
117 
Appleton 
US 
% 
Kente.xa 
a Mi** 
Elliott 
IOT 
Gold Fabric 
IM 
( ha lo'a 
ID 
Wise Ro*# 
IO# 
Que.abe 
ID 
M u I nj* 
lo* 
P m ALO. k 
ID 
M arch Deb 
i l l 
w tim Bo.ton 
ID 
Knock 
(tut 
to# 
Welsh Fo n e 
168 
F.Il.HT lf 
ll.260. ti aiming, 4 4 up, 
De 
iff* 
Moon Slate 
ID 
F arly 
J i aine 
ID 
, V trgima Duke 
120 
Habunoga 
IO* 
; Royal Admiral 
Ro.i. ha/ina* 
ID 
Rantain Bm 
IU <’ W ittam Tell 
115 
I New York 
Porn h 
LIO 
,Btumi**u>n 
i 15 
W avale 
IC# 
J Slave* 
Dating King 
113 
I 
M M U 
l l 2<j0, elalming 4 4 up. about 
ll* , rn 
| L a d ' 
Vino 
lu c k ' laiudouo 
ID 
I Pe dei r 
i u 
Ga ii* rn Beau 
IU 
i Nipping 
IM 
First Rank 
111 
vRo,! 5 our Dan 
IO# 
Bec a Pride 
114 
scotch Bush 
IU 
Counter P io i 
I U 
Geneva 
111 
T arry Not 
ll# 
Nick Boom 
111 
Dark W arrior 
IU 
grand slam came in the sixth 
Washington Senators will go 
sale March IO af Memorial Stadi 
* ' f,s A' ( 
flame with two outs and the score um, 
tied at 9 9 It gave a team man- 
The tu-ket oflice will be open Return Home 


aged by Coach Tony Cuccinclio a from 9 am till 6 pm. The down 
13 9 victory over Coach Red Kn #a town ticket 
office at the Southern 
LONACONING — Mr. 
and Mrs. 
team Bach of his other home run- 
Hotel will 
begin selling tickets 
Patrick McConnell. Rockville. Lon­ 
aconing, returned to their home 
ists voted overwhelmingly today to Regalado's grand slam was the 
Box seats, 
no more than four to;alter spending 
the winter months 
accept 
a two-year contract agree- second of the game for Cuccinello’s a customer, are $2 75 aud lower visiting with S Sgt. and Mrs. Leon- 
ment 
with 
Lockheed 
Aircraft team. Sam Mele hit one in the reserved seats—also limited to four ard Woynicz and sons, at Pennsau- 
Corp , 
ending a strike threat of fourth inning to tic the score at —$2 
Upper reserved seats are;ken N J 
22.500 workers against three Call-7-7 and both teams then scored $150 and general admission seats friends 
in 
and with relatives and 
Long Island and the 
forma plants. 
itwo runs in the fifth. 
j$1.25. Both are in unlimited supply ..Bronx, N. Y. 


TEN 
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD., 
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 
Ì956 
Phone PA 2-46U0 for a WANT AD Taker 


5-Year-Old Boy 
Fatally Burned 
By Gasoline 


Valley Road Tot 
Lives Seven Hours 


A five-year-old Valley Road boy 
was fatally burned yesterday af­ 
ternoon when his clothing caught 
fire as he or his brother poured 
gaseline on a small open fire. 
Admitted to Memorial Hospital 
about 3 p m was Gary Gentry, 
son of Mrs. Mary M Gentry, fol- 
lowipg the mishap in which a rela­ 
tive was burned about the hands 
attempting to put the hlaze out. 
Hospital attaches said last night 
the youngster had second and third 
decree burns over more than 9tt 
per cent of his body. He died at 
9 4' p. m. 
He was brought lo the hospital 
hy Flugene ,\ppnld. who tore the 
burning clothing from the hoy's 
b' dy and beat out the flames with 
his hare hands 
ReNcuer Treated 
Appold was treated for severe 
burns of (he right hand at the hos­ 
pital and was discharged 
Appold 
said 
last 
night young 
Gary was playing with his brother 
Robert “ Butch" Gentry. 
8. and 
some other children and that they 
apparently built a small fire in the 
yard of the Gentry home 
Somehow Garv and Robert got 


Mahoney Gets 
Tawes’ Support 
In Senate Race 


Four Hurt 
In Series 
Of Accidents 


Tydings Claims 
New Backing 


BALTI.MORE. March 4 of-State 


Youthful Driver 
Hurt As Stolen 
Car Hits Tree 


Herman P. Miller 
Has Head Injury 


An 18-year-old Kcyser youth was 


Present And Past Potentates Confer 


.lohn Rrenneman. the new potentate of All Ghan Shrine, is shown 
surrounded by past potentates at the annual potentate s dinner, 
danre and reception which was held Saturday night at the Shrine 


Countrv Club. Pictured, left to right, are Edmund S. Burke. A. 
Wayne Reed. Rrenneman. Roy A. Leiter. Hagerstown, and Roger 
Brad Wolfe. Frederick. 


bold of a two-gallon gasoline can 


Congratulatory Letter Campaign Helps TwoMen Found 
Local Industrial Promotion Efforts 
Asphyxiated 
In Automobile 


One of the seemingly in.signifi in 
the 
old 
Celanese 
Staunton, Va. 
cant projectK of the Indu.strial F’ro- 


plant 


Some of the letters have brought 


Exhaust Clogs As 
Car Mires In Mud 


in cerely wish you continued prog- 
re.ss. 
, 
„ 
. 
V. .... 
‘Cumberland, 
too, 
is 
making 
which still had some gasoline in if motion Department ol the ( umber-^^^^^ 
memories to the recipient.;progress—the type of progress you 
While 
playing 
Gary 
apparently land Chamber of Commerce which 
instance, L. O. Neff. director;will be interested in. New indu.st- 
spilled some of the gasoline on his 
in the long run prove of im-iof indu.strial relation.s of American nos are moving m to take advan- 
clothing. 
measurable value is a congratula-i Motors Corporation, recalled in his tage of a highly productive sur- 
Later. Appold said, one of the 
. 
, 
, 
¡letter of last April that as a young plus labor force and vast supply 
boys poured the gasoline from the 
^ 
tampai 
man. 40 years ago, he worked in of natural resources. 
River bot- 
can onto the fire. It suddenly b!az-| Albert H. Hargreaves, director 
the Western Mary- tom Hood free sites provide for; 
ed up and caught the younger the Indu-sfnal Promotion H‘“Part-|iynfj 
Kailway ('ompany. 
L 
brother’s clothing afire a.s he was 
explained it this way. A .Jacobson, 
an 
executive 
of the 
standing beside Robert. 
mo,-nhi.r nf his staff .scans the Wall Chrysler Corporation, recalled that of water daily. Being as tar "-’Csvpriendsville 
in 
Garrett 
CountyA ‘*’‘f)J^Sfating. 
Countian, who 
served 24 years in the Senate be- 
of the boy and the other children, me coiumn conccinmK ...r 
beautitul. fas-;three railroads ana exceiieni irucs- 
jvai.mu .ic .j. 
4«. ot („rp losmg to Republican John 
and rushed from the Gentry house tion of executives in ma.K)r indus ,.,nating and with an ahoundance ing facilities provide easy actessjTerra Alta, W'. Va.. and LeRoy..Marshall Butler in 1950. said: “ re- 
where he was visiting to find the (nes across the country. 
;of resources. 
He also noted that to midweslern and eastern mark- \\ hite Uphold. 20. of near FTiends- Ports reaching me from every sec- 


F’our men were injured in a 
.series of automobile accidents over 
the weekend in the Cumberland 
area. 
Five other persons involved 
in the mishap e.scaped injury, au­ 
thorities said, 
Charles Leroy Carter, 21. of Old- 


day endorsed the candidacy 
„ f Hospital about 10 30 p. m Satu - „„rnmg when the reportedly sto l. 
'George P. Mahoney for the Demo- rtov '*‘H> o severe y accrated left en car he was driving crashed int, 1 
icratic nomination to the U. s. 
a possible fractured leg , a „ee in Kcyser as police chased 
'senate 
i Trooper J. F, Slakem who m-him. 
! 
Only' yesterday, the prominent vestigated 
the 
mishap 
for 
the, 
Herman Paul Miller was report. 
Eastern Shore Democrat denied ai-'^^oTand State Police said Carter 
‘-still unconsciou.s and in very 
i report he was a wheel-horse in a driving alone on Route 51.about critical condition" with a fractured 
!newly-formed coalition of Balti-ja mile east of North Branch, lost skull at Potomac Valley Hospital 
more City 
and 
Eastern 
Shore control of the car and left the side jast night. 
partyites who would support Ma-” f JFi® road, struck an embank-i ttc was admitted 
shortly after 
honey. 
ment, rolled over and hit a tree. 
i a. m. after being pulled from the 
The 
Baltimore 
Evening 
Sun.'Marine Injured 
¡wrecked auto by Cpl. Evan Moody 
which 
published the report, said! 
Ellis Geiger, a 19-ycar-oId Ma- of the Key.ser detachment of th» 
!one of the coalition’s 
first actions 
rine stationed at Quantico. Va., west Virginia State Police, 
might be Tawes’ endorsement of was admitted to Sacred Heart Hos- 
Speeding Car 
Mahoney. 
jpital about II 30 p. m. Saturday, ^pj 
j^joody said last night he 
The comptroller, who is regard- for treatment of his right shoulderig^^ Trooper Richard Long were 
ed as an almost certain candidate which was injured when his car 
Route 46 toward 
for governor in 19.58, said flatly 
he skidded on Murley’.s Branch Road 
Ashby when they passed a 
vjasn t entering any coalition. He, The marine, whose mother livesj^gj, traveling at a high rate 
of 
said he didn't know where the re-¡at Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was rc*|speed toward Keyser. 
port came from. 
iportcd 
in 
“ fair" condition 
la.stj jj.,p officer said he swung his 
However, he apparently left the night at the hospital. Tfc. John 
ground on the highway and 
door open for the endorsement by Browning investigated. 
¡began pursuit of the car. which 
declining to comment on how he. 
Attaches at Miners Hospital abimmediately picked up speed and 
' 
'prostburg said one of two Midland¡jjjggppggred over a small hill into 
youths admitted there with in-|the city limits of Keyser. 
juries buffered in a mishap at_ 
About 2 000 yards beyond tha 
Woodland about 9 a. m. Saturday pg,„j^ where the cars pa.ssed, the 
was released from the institution 
troopers found Miller pinned 
yesterday. 
jin the automobile, which had run 


felt toward Mahoney's candidacy. 
Cites Publir Opinion 
In his statement of endorsement, 
Tawes said his surveys of public 
sentiment in Maryland have con­ 
vinced him that “ the people want 
George P. Mahoney as the Demo­ 
crat standard-bearer. . . ." 
The Tawes’ endorsement was an- 


Wiiliam Walker. 19. was relea.s-,^p g 
embankment, smashed 
ed after being held overnight for’jj.jjg g |j.pg g„^ overturned on Arm­ 
strong Street after rounding a 
sharp curve. 
observation. 
He suffered lacera- 
nounced by Mahoney headquarters tions and bruises. His companion, 
here. 
¡George B. Keller, 22. sustained rib;” ^^^^ 
I 
Ex-Sen. Millard E. Tydings. Ma-|fractures and chest injuries when; ^ 
continued their 
t 
A A A ^.'honey’s chief competition lor the his car .swerved off a county road 
„t ¿up prgci, 
a,s. 
. 
f 
^nomination, fired a salvo today struck an embankment and turned 
j,gy t^pp„ 
a minimum of grading and accesslcarbon monoxide ga.s on a lonely from his political camp. He said;nver. His condition last night 
g^pjpj, from a 
to an average of 80,(KK).(K)0 gallons,road 
between 
Sang 
Run 
and,Mahoney's “ claimed strength" is,‘ good.’’ State Police Tfc. Charles^ 
. " 
, . ■ 
Kevscr shortly be- 
member of his staff .scans the Wall Chrysler Corporation, recalled that of water daily. Being as far west^ p j . j p j ^ y j . y j j j p 
(iarrett 
C o u n t y 
BraU Out Flames 
, 
, 
. 
■ 
rhprWinoi’n his earlier days with Chry.sler as Búllalo, New York, and 
cat,,rHav afternoon 
H a r t or d 
Appold said he heard the cries * 
\ 
. 
h® covered much of this territory 135 miles 
from 
Baltimore, out 
- * 
- 
• 
,, 
c u, 
f the bov and the other children, the column concerning the promo-|^^y 
P 
Pp beautitul, fas-;three railroads and excellent truck- 
Ralford Henry vanSickle, 


DeWitt investigated. 


toCs clothes a ma.ss of flames. 
i 
jpp^p p,-„motcd executives Marion f’owers. vice-president of;ets. 
He tore the clothing away from p^pppj 
Pi^^pjpypP Py a pgpppj . the 
Kelly-Springfield Tire Com-j 
“ Quite 
Ihe lad’s body and beat out 
^p^pp f^p obvious reasons pany, is one of his friends, 
flames with his hands, he said. 
Iwould not be interested in Cum ; 
About on third of the answers 
Then wrapping the boy in « 
rooeive congiatulatory let Hargreaves 
has 
received came to none. We know our area won t 
heavy blanket. Appold pul him in 
jf,om the State of New York. An-Tit every company best, but we be- 


frankly. Mr. Smith, as 
Maryland’s second largest city, we 
aspire to industrial growth second 


hii car and nushed the yDimgslerj 
induslnal frnmolion 


10 Ihc ho.spilal 
. ,„!|,,.parlm<.nt was established in lalo f)h">, 
lllinoi.s. 
Members nf the famil.v Iasi niehl 
„ „ „ .„ le ., ahoiil MK ^'Eaii 
unable to explain where fhe| 
congi aliiialnry let- Here's how most nl the congratu- 


used car lot in Keyser shortly 
fore the mishap occurred. 
The corporal said Miller 
ap. 
Two Escape Injury 
Two residents of Keyser were! 
recognized 
the 
polica 
unhurt when their car went o 
u 
t 
, 
p 
p 
of control on Route ,50 near the «^¡creasing his speed in an attempt 
Jay Inn and overturned Saturday 
^jpp^ 
control of the car and 


ville were found on a narrow back 
road by a neighbor who investi­ 
gated when she heard an automo­ 
bile motor running. 


tion 
ol 
Maryland 
indicate 
un- afternoon 
,mistakeably that the c l a i m e d j 
vVest 
Virginia 
State 
Trooperj 
The car 


integrating 
and 
is 
approaching 


other 10 per cent each came from lieve your company can make 
road into a ditch as the men; 
The car apparently had slid 
county after county, espe- 
Pennsylvania and use nl our induslnal district a 
n 
d 
, 
:cially „njbe^ 


were 


They 
explained 
they 
were 
not 
the child 
fire in fte yard until the accident, ^ 
Ar*piiT*n*n 
The Gentrvs live on Valley Road: 
F’robably half of the 4oo have 
in Bowman’s Addition just a short asked (or .some additional mforma- 
rii.stance from the Bowman’s .Addi-Hon about Ihe industrial prospect.s 


living 
Smith, on you to 


the area s advantages. 
:'wFïh«,k-h;ipir.ltty ..d 
• «n-W.e » i ™ 
ling are synnnymotis and inviW: 
visit 
commun, y. We,!; 
; you better and; 
sin-¡have you get to know us. 


from those who 


smashed into the tree, 
was demolished. 
City Officer Junior Maine« as­ 
sisted the .state police at the scene 


hrnthers nblained the gasoline canj-; -- 
'from lalory letters read. 


They 
explained 
they 
were 
oot 
„ AKmtf aao ni ihrsp husv^ 
“ ( nngratulatinns. ¡vu 
xtn jruu m. v.o.u x,u. 
----- . 
aware the children had built the, 
• 
. 
.• * vour appoinment a.s announced in would like to know you better and 
, 
tn cinon 
t *u 
r-» 
L 
au 
J ..-4,1 fK- 
executives have taken the 
t im e y^^r app 
^_____ ^ 
vr... cpi m know u.s.“ 
They apparently decided to sleep many of these Democratic party 
‘.Now that Í am a candidate 


tion Fire Hall. 


Five Farmers 
Adopt Soil 
Saving Plans 


Toll Gate 
Poll Officials 
Will Receive 


I 
■ 
■ • 


in the Cumberland area. The othei 
I 
■ 
I 
200 came from industries in 27 | | a ^ | u £ | A £ ] 
Americ an state.«;, the District of Co-. ■ ■ ■ V ■ 
luinbia. Chnada and Fngland. 
■ 
P 
I 
j, 
Several of the companies suhse- | | ^ 
m 
U C S G w 
» 
quently became actively inlerestc'd 
^ 
in the Cumberland area and de , 
sp„gtnr Charles M See said a 
¡.spite the fact that no specific new |j,)^oo ite,„ for the purchase of the 
industries can actually be altnbut- 
House i.s included 
ed to the letter writing prograin 
Capital Improvements 
Hargreaves believes that the pro- 
j.,., 
General Assembly. 
gram is highly successful from a 
„ i. a.a 
'" " " " " ‘■’ I uuier surv,vu..N ...uiuur w,.v:v -x.. 
aUempt 
puhlir relations standpoint. 
Lc 
rl'cnU V f'a Lcerted effort ^ 
^ primary elec- ters, Mrs. 
devastating primary in the coming 


. , 
. 
g , 
g • J 
17 1915. VanSickle w as 
Additional groups nf chief judges^ 
j 


6 iH anci machine judges who 


strength ot my principal opponent ¡(-barle.s Oliver said Elmo M. Phil- 
in the counties rapidly is dis- jjp^ 
45 pasted bond for his ap­ 
pearance in court on 
charge. His companion 
liam Hollingsworth. 60. 
Three teen-agers escaped injury;' 
when their car flipped five or six 
mile south of 
clock Satur­ 
day night, 
Cpl. Evan Moody of the Keyser 
. 
1 
, 1 
detachment of the West Virginia ] 
m the car until daylight, and letl leaders voluntarily are giving me 
^gj^ 
¿river Rob- 
the engine running. 
itheir assurances that they are tor? 
Bennett, 19. of Cresap- 
A .Mrs. Thomas, who lives near me, that they will vote foi me 
given a hearing this,' 
,the road, became alarmed 
a n d and will work for my nomination, i,^^^rning 
before Justice of 
the 
¡looked into the car at about noon, Tydings Heartened 
I peace C. J. Phillip.s in Ridgeley on; 
'Saturday. Doctor L. I. Raumgart-| 
Tydings said he was heartened g motor vehicle charge. Clarence| 
Another forest fire danger season 
ner. Garrett County medical exam- especially by what he failed “ the 
gr,^ pa„i Rjer, both 17. of hgs arrived.’ 
jiner, estimated that the pair had alliance which is being toimed in pumbcrland, were with Bennett in 
District 
F'orcster 
William 
F’ 
died between 5 and 5:30 a.m. of many ot the counties between the 
pg^ 
^Johnson issued a reminder that^ 
carbon monoxide gas. 
I young members of the Democratic^ 
Moody said Ihe boys told him the controlled burning season ex- 
Born in Fricndsville September 
older party gioups 
ygi^ts went out as they were tends 
through 
the 
months 
of 
the son o f,*"j’^” ®” 
®andic1acy. . . . 
(pgveling toward Romney. The car March. April and May. 


^ 
the accident after being alerted 
was " 
b 
- 
g 
^ 
g 
^ 
g 
officer* 


Were chasing the auto. 


Forester Says 
Fire Danger 
Season Is Here 


at the polling places in 


i*'f 
DouiK and Louetta 'Keileyi Van-; 
Tawes. in his pro-Mahoney state-,,pp 
p^g^ 
g„ pmhankment 
The potential danger wa« empha- 
will serve g,p,^,p p, ppp , jp^pg j^jta. 
ment, said: 
Fiir many months 
1 
turned over several times be- sized last week when about eight 
.Mleganyi other survivors' include three 
fore stopping on its side. 
acres on Haystack Mountain with- 
*i4* cnpi2V in an aiirmpi in avOKi ai 
*u.^ 
xioc Knmr»#*! m a 


........ 
result of 
F'ive more 
ers have become 
moperators 
Martin ... 
, 
, 
local office of the Soil 
C o n s e r v a - din?'»rates the point. 
tion Service, reported (0 the Board 
He wrote in part: 
..x 
, 
nf ,h. Allegxny So.l 
• / „“ Z ; ' ’;;;,',:': 
alo„g ,n the General ,A.«em. 
bly. 


AlleKany county farm-l 
A reply letter Irnm Glenn Knser, 
Cnunl” 
l7iillo r s "V ''™ 
va^'TnH'^ M w ' 
;e become soil conservatioii vice president and K®n®ral man- • 
acquire the proper- Jh® County Board of Election Sup-|^.;^,De..«.,,.' 
nnrr hmth- “ 
itortt 
m- the part 
month, aeer nf the lorrance 
P »"* 
^ 
mon.j 
M. Gordon, aide in then 
the Rome (able C»(P“ fdtion, _ 
|ervi.sors’ headquarters in the Courtj.-^.ppp,t VanSickle. Accident 


of Supervisors 
Conservation District. 
. 
,u 
1 
The new cooperalorr are Krank Iha' Vou 
r ’line'" job in 
Sonalor See said that as soon a.- 


umcnf of the old National Fioad. 
¡House basement at 7 .30 o'clock 
Delegate Harry W. 
^^each night through Friday of this 
Garrett County, he said, helped the 


I raii.se alone in the General .Assem- 
Operation of the new voting ma 


However, two weeks ago 
, 
.. became apparent that a primary 
O UDm lJiGU 
Sickle. Mt Rainier, and one broth- 
,^p avoided, 
W n rh 
“ In recent weeks, I have been 
jCnOOl W O tK 


H um bertson. 
210-acre 
farm 
on Jzations are 
Warrior Mountain. .Insnph 1„ Mar promolinK yoiir 
Rp. dustry has its obligations 


chines which will be used on a 


in the city limits was burned in a 
brush fire Jiat was believed to 
have been set. 
State regulations permit burning 
of brush and debris only between 


He was a member ot v.r a nes_^^p 
p u b l i c 
.sentiment: A * Ctf^^aOtOWn 
iMarch^ Apiil L L t v e^^^^ 
villetWVa.- MethodisMhurch of throughout the State as to w h o ;A f LrC Sap T O W n 
Oakland Camp 11. Woodmen of Hie 1 should be the Democratic nominee' 
, 
i 
r 
• tnpker' 
thp rppnlaHnns annlv onlv to 
World, and of Terra Alta Post 154. | f„r United States Senate in the 1956 
Preliminary plans 
" 
» 
_ I 
tin 
fmiri 
i 
i 
. 
and shower rooms at the Cre.sap- burning witnin 2(>u teei 01 wooaiana 
America 
* 8 ^ 
¿„Vine World‘^^-r^ election. 
School have been submitted or inflammable material that could 
years in the Army during worm, 
g^^ convinced by this survey 


tin. 70 acres along Knob Road 
gina M. McCullv. 7.3 acres at Union community 
Grove: Leander Whorton, 12.5 acres needs a community s 
Oldlow. and 
R^^Simpxon. 


” 
n " , ' ’ n. Slider, chpiimxn "f 
(-„„unis-Mon or th. I>pai'l. i 


Harlow 


In the Hoard of Public Works acquires jpyntv-wide basis for the fir.st time u gn n He was employed bv the that the oeonle want George P^ 
Superintendent of Schools Ralph ignite and carry fire to woodland 


me piopeily. he will M « « - ' '^«1 
. . . n 'u k e l. vnn iurnace^’ o. of 
T m e D e m o i^ S f a n L «' 


but it most certainly Hie actual operation of the 
^O judges 
'Marion,'Pa. 
lard-bearer . . . 


u p d e i- M a n d - mark hejjir^ 
e. 
^he body »,11 he at the home ol - Since a Democralic victory in 


l L ” 
« i L 
h e added that some'relurn March 29 lor the-fmal in ''i‘ 
'» 
d i e aaonev 
such as Ihe Slate sliuclional session; 
.Services »oil he held to iw rro » ^ ^ 
a ,,,,,,,,,., 
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 
. ....... 
Kleelion 
District 
9 
Bal l 
o 
n 
- 
: 
* 
' 
L 
f 
, 
‘howPr.i and lockers lor Ihe cirls construe! 
iChurch. F riend.sville, with Rev. S (¿p Uemoc-ratic Party otter a well- 
thnso for the bovs vide aroi 


attend the Board meeting nf the 
Maryland Yssocnation of Soil ^ 
servation Districts at the Lord Hal 


1 
Metz, 
chief 
judge. 
Kirk and F’elecit P iD. 
candidate, 
relatively 


local architect. 
towns. 
Minter will next send them to 
Unless there is a natural fire- 
the State Department of Education break at least 10 tcct wide sur- 
for approval or revi;-xion. 
rounding the area to be burned it 
The architect's plans 
call for is neeeshary to plow or otherwi.se 
a lirelme at least 10 feet 
on one floor and tho.se for the boys vide around the area to be burned. 
, 
. 
- on the lower floor. Adjacent to It also is required that sutficient 
Benin youthful g„^ 
Hemorrstrated ^g^j^ 
..(^ower and lockcr room will help he provided with tools to 
in the ghility to campaign vigorously and 
g recreation room where ping prevent the fire from e.scaping 


in 


P i t e r s ment of Forests and Parks, may Thomas 
H 
Curlice he interested in making use of the Chn.stina M, .................... • 
„ , 
has been 
Toll Gate House. Moses, machine judges, all Repub- 
o"u’‘V o ’‘M^rrh president ot (leneial Mi.torsi orpo- 
The Allegany Countv Delegation licans. Richard W, Howell, ehiet 
Baltimore March 
^ 
who .successfully pushed a House re.so- |udge_; Althea Lashoaugh and Al-,^Yphnld was horn March 13. 1935. po^ 


near Fnendsville. He was the son, 
“ George P. Mahoney embodies * 
Cresaptown improvrmrn! Is the last spark is out. 
of Dayton and Mearl 'Savage' fp*,the.se essentia! qualities to merit „„p 
t^p 13 projects listed in thei 


timore Hotel 
23 
, 
iast vear gained national rerogni- Uition in 19,55 calling for the state Rpd Schramm, machine ludges. ail 
The supervisors received word 
g^^ i^^gjg,g,g 
prop. 
£}pp»jon District 1!, 
from the Allegany County Board 
control 
of 
Montgomery erty. 
Fro.sthurg — 
of Commissioners tha» the hoard 


»111 pay Ihf $H2 required for the 


'Uriison Lemmert, 
chief judge; Cla*'a Fà. Walbert. ma- 


Sawers officiating, assisted by qualified 
Gerald Daniels and 
Wilhelm. Burial will be in me ability to campaign vigorously and ¿p g recreation room where ping prevent the fire from e.scaping 
It 
to enlist widespread popular^ sup- pp„g 
shuffleboard might be also is necessary to have at least 
played. 
one watchman on the ground until 


Soil 
Conservation 
District 
which have been installed at five 
points along the county line 
are on I . S 40, two on I . S 
220 
and one on Md 51. 
Gordon also mformed the super- 
^ 
vi.sors at their meeting Friday that 
a pond survey had been t onducted 
on the farm of Ronald 
Lohr at 
Twiggtown 
He 
also 
said 
that 
Frank Humbertson has borrowed 
the mechanical “ bush hog" to cut 
up apple prunings on his orchard 
Kenneth .M. Slone, soil scientist 
connected with the loi’a! Soil Con­ 
servation Service office, reported 
that he had surveyed about 1.200 
acres in the Haystack Mountain 
area. 


Lions To Meet 
actively interested in this area 
.p 
after receiving a letter trom Har- 
greaves wa.s a New England metal herland 
companV. 
which jneviously had Wednesday at 12 15 p 
given no thought to a new location Community Room ol the 


hold. 
nomination as the senatorial can-,sgoo 000 county supplemental build-' 


chinf juilshs. holh Republicans, 
' 
i 
f 
p 
I 
r 
S 
h 
o 
. 
" ’5 " ’« 
authorized by the 
Francis D Chambers chief iiidee T 30 P 
at Blooming Rose Mcthn people. 
General Assembly in .Annapolis 


The »cekly meetmR of Ihe Gum- clarence .1. Po»ers. machine judg'.""*' 
Tawes wasn't the only person last year. 
Lions rluh will be held as, both Democrals. 
,church cemetery^ 
:mentioned in the f.venins Sun s 
The hodv rs at the home of an ‘-eoahtion 
story to issue a quick 
Births 


12 15 p. m. in the 
e.s, both Demoerat.s. 
Election District 12-.32, Fro.stburgi 
—Ralph Patter.son and Pearl xShaf 
VMl'A 
plant. .Although Cumberland C.uest speaker will be (morge 5oa. 
judges; Angela Hanna, 
selected, the lirm did manager of the Baltimore office 
locate a branch plant at nearby of Dun and Bradstreet. whose topic 
Winchester, \a 
A salety razor will he “ Credit—.Man s r.onfirience 
company was similarly interested in Man 
His talk will be high- 
in this area and eventually .settled lighted hy a motion picture. 


aunt. Mrs Flossie VanSickle. 


Mary C. Davis, machine judges, all, 
J m 
o h i l e U n i t 
Republicans; 
Kathleen Spearman! 
and Agnes Ix. Kelly, chief judge.s. Visits Here Today 


jrienial. 
¡(ioodman Denies Link 
! Slate Sen, Philip H, 
'D-Balto 5th', another 


Mr. and .Mrs. Thomas Ridgley, 
Hyattsville. announce the birth of 
Named To Dean's List 
son there Kehruary 
20, 
The 
I 
Miss Norma D, Grimo,«. 313 f oot- PO'crnal grandmother is Mrs. Ida 
Goodman or Placo, has boon namod lo Iho Ri'lS'fy- Otmbcrland. and the ma- 
roportod Gottv.sburg Collogo Doan s Honor '« "« I grandparonts^are _Mr 
and 


Legislative Council Flas 
Good '56 Batting Average 


Blood 
todav. 
donors are needed herCj 


Header in the alleged movement, List for scholastic e.xcellcnte dur- 
jal.so denied any link with it. 
u Coj/tinued on Page 9, Col. 4a(56 school year. 
Mary A. ibsgrove. Mazie Vunger-, 
man and Mary .lackson. machinci 
judge.s, all Democrals 
The fiillowing haio boon folifiod """Ji“ 
n,^p,er. Amer id T * 
a-k M 
F a O 
ropoit for insDuction^Tuosday 
Rpc Cross. 1.« making an ap-1 / OdCLV S OCTfTlOttCttC 
peal for volunteer blood donors, e- 
pecially 
those who 
have never 
10(1»% * srinjanpifp U » H-sphI nf « *prmnn prcMrhpd kpkteirtsy Hi Ciarf 


to 


A«i'Ociation, 


Deaths 


J ~ . ‘j 
krifuro 
tn v is it th c 
Mpthndf.^t « hiitTh b- thf pflsfor 
R pa 
Vdam F:, ‘ «tim 
Ttic «prmnn diipkis 
donated hlood bctore. to \1. l 
nnrni 
p repared 
through 
the 
cooperation 
of 
the 
Cum berland 
Ministerial 
hloodmohile 
unit 
today 
at 
the 
F'.aglcs Home on North .Mechanic 
Street. 
On this 


night and again on .April 2 
Election District 13-1 and 2, Mt 
.Savage—Raymond Neder and Nel 
he Hotchkisx. chief judges, How- 
ANN APDLIS 
Man h 4 T—The It is made up of 10 members irom aid Herring, 
Fhnma Izzeft 
and 
Logi.Gatno Goiim il. a group oi oal 
h h™''' 
f’/," » A. 
Ruri h. ma. hine judges. 
, 
, 
, 
, 
hlv, who travel about the state. g|i Republicans; Paln< k A, F an- 
ed to study legis.atsve dueslions 
hxa! problems and „on and Edward H, Carter, ehtef 
between sessions ol the Marvland 
p|-opos(‘d changes in the laws. judges: F'rancis J. Mulligan. Leona 
Callan, Mrs. 
Rose, 79, 
UlH® 
(ieneral .Assembly. sci»ied belter it 
works 
in conjunction 
with Reggan 
and Ana.stasia MeGann. 
Orleans. 
than average in enac Imenl of Us oHu'r .stale agcm ies. such as 
the rriauhine 
judges, 
all Demoerat.s: 
Deihl, Mrs. Anna M-. 57. Bedford piopoyais by the 19.56 session 
Port .Study i (fmmission that 
was Election Distrul 13-3. Barrelville— 
Road. 
D! 
6.3 hiils introdiuod by the named to consider the problem, (.eorgia M Chambers, chief judge: 
Dulin, Charles T.. 79, 414 Grand 
„ the tii>t day ol the ses 
Mure important pieces ot legisla- na/el 
Wilhelm, 
machine 
judge. 
YYes!ernport, 
^ 
,be building of a hou 
Avenue. 
«.mn 
uere crtai led and 2.3 al- tu»n initiated bv the council this hi,tw narM.Kiionne 
Ih.txoc vc Pmo. blood are requested nom 
k.,.i.4.„« « i.t« v,,,.. 
Fisher. Miss Tabitha, 4 
Moodlaw n Terrace. 
by (iovernor .Me Kcldin 
E.stabli.shmen! of 
Gloifelt.v, George 
H., 77, Me- 
propo-a!.- thi.s vear ranged to promote economic and industrial 
R„y Rmips ^btef judge; Jessie 
Henry, 
^ 
from such suggestions as exempt- development, which was enacted j 
g„^ >^(g,-y i\ Turner ma 
Green, Mrs. Elizabeth L.. 73. 
member.s ot ihe clergy, reh- 
Setting uj). ot controls over oil 
judges, all Republicans: An 
Lonacontng. 
i-mus 
institutions 
and 
students, and gas wells, also enacted gg t . McCleary, chief ,|udge, M 


.Mrs. Charles Cox, RD 1, Ridgeley. 


ing !h» firM semester ol Ihe 1955-,, M''- 
‘'" '’N R- 
'Jr., former residents, announce the 
hirth nf a son Saturday at Good 
Samaritan H o s p ita l, Zanesville, 
Ohio. 
.Memorial Hospital 
I 
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart E. Bur» 
caw. RD 6, city, a daughter yes* 
; terday. 
I 
Mr. and .Mrs. Francis A. Sebold 
ijr.. 
Green Spring, 
W. Va., a 
hut he 'if good cheer 1 have over- daughter yesterday, 
i.tme the world. " 
■ 
Mi- and Mrs. Gilbert Minnigh, 
F lustration comes not because of 214 Mary Street a son yesterday, 
problems but from wrong attitudes 
Mr. and .Mrs. Grover Broadwa* 
taken towards the problems. The ter. RD 5. city a son yesterday. 
ia< t that the public has purcha.sed 
-Mr. and .Mrs 
Charles A. 
L. 
and read million.s of 
"How To" Butler. Cresaptown, a daughter 


^ .Hion, 39 wtM-e enadcii and 2.3 al- (ton initiated by the council this both Republicans. James W. Ring- 
ready have been signed ¡nto law year were 
jor. 
chief judge. Democrat. Flee- 
fri-lowns aiea. 
by Governor .McKcldin 
F;.stabli.shment of a department 
District 14-1 and 2. this citv—■ 


Hamilton, Harry L., 5«, Kejser, 
|y,.y ¿y,y ,„bich didn't pass , 
-jy g,ve the Maryland Tohaeco |gyp 
Crippen * and 
Ada 
Cnnlev 
44. \ a. 
to creatum of a State port authority .Authority power to curb 
unfair To„g machine judges, all Demo- 
MrKen/ir, .Joseph F-., 68 , 
Little vkith broad powers tn expand and 
practices on the Southern Mary- ii-gtj;_ 
Savage .Mt. 
promote the Port of 
Baltimore land tobacco markets, enacted 
^ 
Merling, Charles 44., 71, Atlanta, 
-vi'hieh did pa.v« alter 48 amend^ 
To prohibit wire tapping unless. 


Wise And Foolish 
regular monthly visit « ¡i i 
here. 15» pints are needed lo meet O U im erS 
the quota. The collection center 
By 
RF \ . ADAM E. GRIM 
will he open from noon until 6 Pm 
-i' .I 
Tomorrow, the bloodmobile will-Matt, i .24 ../ 


be at Ihe Victory Ij^ion Post ^ 
7 
h 
“» pa'raWe ^H* is ■conipanng iiook» in the la,«t deeade is indifa- Salurday. 


■ 
r d l ' - i i U ; . : : : 
e r ;:if .> n .n ,a „ . fa., a son Saturday. 


wise builder would not think ot lems. I hat foundation can be found 
huilding a house unless the Uninda- in Jesus Christ, 
tion was built upon a rock, but said 
He, a foolish man is one who takes beoause 
. 
. 
, 
» . 
1 
*u« * 
An\ 
lu n m a r in nni 
Dale F', Schaidt, 
simply builds a house upon the anchored upon v.on w.u^t^t nuui.x> 


Mr. and Mrs. H. Clinton Cook, 


Poultrymen Charter 
Bus For Meeting 


Alegany County poultrymen w i l l •’^and, 
ZTed 
b u s 7omOTrow^^Tinrning_ to hnuse_he muM^ Ime 
Tr^wnrld^tur helfts Ra^i^gs, a son Saturday, 


Saturday. 
.Mr. and Mrs. James L. Ziler, 


Ga. 
which 
(Obiluaries on Page 2i 


Flagman Injures Back 
Homer Johnson. 38, of RF'D 
Locufd Grove, was admitted 


Mr. and Mr.s. Bernard 0, Finzel, 
F'rostbuig. a .son Saturday. 
.lesus saw peop-le going to pieces -Mr. and Mrs. William F. RoK I 
they huilf iheir 
h o u s e s nette, Uiley Ford. 
\ 4 . \a , a son 


no thought of the foundation 
but upon the sand. Any life that is not 
^ 
house upon 
the anchored upon God will eventually ^ -M»- 
fall If the storms of life are to hc ” 
man builds is 
the withstood let us pray. “ That so 
to house he must 1. , ........, — 
attend The annual'"»,nl'cr'poilltry usod to «ay in her «on« in sivinq ‘ "“ S''' 'l' 
„ " “ d " X « 
mcetinBs bnins held in conjunctionius advice, 
•Th»_w»y you •". »'i 
b» fouwl'. " 
Ridkeiey, 
W. Va. . 
* daughter 


Moral calamity is sometimes the^‘‘‘ 
it was. sign that the house has fallen' 
„ good foundation in. Some time ago a man of my 
M e e t 


eleven honor^business students who 27 reservations for the bus which was necessary. Life 
h i: The weekly meeting of the Cum* 


be lems 
heartaches, and 
s o r r o w -. church, and his job. 
He went to 
berland Rotary Club will be held 
not 
little flock it is jour another part o-the country tn start tomorrow at 12 15 p. m. in the 


The bus will F'ather's good pleasure tn give you a^am 


Elected To Fraternity 
With the cíntenniaí celebration aCyour bed that is the way you must 
f 
in it. 


ments were placed on it s 
authorized 
by 
a 
court. 
' 
Another council propo.sal was to passed in another bill. 
i ...... 
i incrca.se 
the 
racing 
season 
at 
To clear up obsolete sections of 
Miss Sarah Newton of Cumber- the University of .Maryland. 
jiJe 
i 
k j 
♦ i f 
¡Maryland's hor.se track;- to bring the »State’s 9 3-year-old constitution, land and Miss JoAnn Riggleman 
County .Agent Joseph 
M. Stegerj Jesus looked 
at me a. 
in rnore revenue. This, which also which passed and will be voted on of Petersburg. W, Va,. are two of said last night that he already has Fie 
knew 
that a 
was proposed hy McKeidin. wa.s in the next election. 
_ 
c hanged bef-nre passage to increase 
To establish a tax court to hear will be inducted into the Beta Nu can haul as many as 37 passengers, a glorious experienc e 
Sacred Heart 
Hospital Salurdav juuher the number of rating days appeals on property assessments. 
Chapter of Pi Omega Pi. national .Additional 
reservations 
will 
night for treatment of back injuries 
The counc .1 also introduced *18 which failed in the 
Senate, honorary business education fra-accepted today at 
Sieger's office 
"Fear 
sustained when he fell in the ca- measures aimed at tightening up 
To 
abolish the pre,sent 
State tcrnity, at Madison College. Harris- in the Court House, 
boo'^e of a tram in 
the we.sibound insurance l.nvs All but a tew of Roads Commission and replace it onburg. Va. 
vard He was 
reported in ' fair" these 
pasNod 
with 
a 
director 
Thic 
measure 
The induction will take 
place Mechanic Street at 6 a- m. tomor-jplatfer 
- 
n» Pnn^ Q Col 3 Someone You Know 
condition at the hospital last night , The council was created in I939.,didn t get out of committee. 
,March 21 at the coUege. 
¡row. 
iJesus.” ye shall have tribulations..; ConUnued on Page 9, Col. J.i.Someone Aou Know. 


His wife learned through a Communitv Room of the YMCA. 


ioa” 
!™;;''the'Term,naron''North ihV'kmjd"™ "'b ,„ not on'a «liver '« '" '• y y ,', 
P ''"'"'™ “ i" " T * ! , " ' * 
leave irom me itrnmidi 
^ 
world “ 
said a double life. 
The house nf life tion picture. “ An Introduction ta 


1 3 7 2 1 2 8 3 


TEN 
the. Cu m b e r l a n d 
n e w s, Cu m b e r l a n d , 
m d ., 
m o n d a y , 
m a r c h 5, 
1956 
Phone PA 2-46UQ for o WANT AD Taker 


5-Year-0ld Boy 
Fatally Burned 
By Gasoline 


Valley Road Tot 
Lives Seven Hours 


A five-year-old Valley Road boy 
wa* fatally burned yesterday af­ 
ternoon when his clothing caught 
fire as be or his brother poured 
gasoline on a small open fire. 
Admitted to Memorial Hospital 
about .Ip rn was Gary Gentry. 
son of Mrs. Mary M. Gentry, fol­ 
lowing the mishap in which a rela­ 
tive was burned about the hands 
attempting to put the blaze out. 
Hospital attaches said last night 
the youngster had second and third 
degree burns over more than 90 
per cent of his body. He died at 
9 45 p. rn. 
He was brought to the hospital 
by Eugene Appold. who tore the 
burning clothing from the boy's 
body and beat out the flames with 
h's bare hands, 
Rescuer Treated 
Appold was treated for severe 
burns of the right hand at the hos­ 
pital and was discharged 
Appold 
said 
last 
night young 
Gary was playing with his brother 
Robert ‘ Butch" Gentry. 
8. and 
some other children and that they 
apparently built a small fire in the 
yard of the Gentry home 


Mahoney Gets 
Tawes’ Support 
In Senate Race 


Tydings Claims 
New Backing 


Four Hurt 
In Series 
Of Accidents 


BALTIMORE. March 4 
—State 


Youthful Driver 
Hurt As Stolen 
Car Hits Tree 
Four men were injured in a 
series of automobile accidents over 
the weekend in the Cumberland 
area. 
Five other persons involved 
in the mishap escaped injury, au­ 
thorities said. 
..... 
_....... 
Charles Leroy Carter. 21, of Old* 
I Comptroller Millard J. Tawes 
to- lown>, wa* admitted to Memorial critically injured early yesterday 
day endorsed the candidacy 
of Hospital about IO 30 p. rn. Satur- morning when the reportedly stol^ 
I George P. Mahoney for the Demo- 
day with a severely lacerated left pn car be was driving crashed int*# 
cratic nomination to the U. 
s. cheek and a possible fractured leg. a tree in Keyser as police chased 
Senate. 
I 
Trooper J. F. Stakem who in- fom. 


Herman P. Miller 
Has Head Injury 


An 18-year-old Keyser youth was 


Only yesterday, the prominent 
Eastern Shore Democrat denied a 
report he was a wheel-horse in a 
newly-formed coalition of Balti- 


vestigated 
the 
mishap 
for 
the 
Herman Paul Miller was report­ 
ed “ still unconscious and in verv 
Maryland State Police said Carter 
driving 
alone on Route SI,about critical condition” with a fractured 
a mile east of North Branch, lost skuU at Potomac Valley Hospital 
more City and Eastern 
Shore 
control of the car and left the side jast nij?ht. 
partyites who would support 
Ma- of the 
road, struck an embank- 
He was admitted shortly after 
honey. 
invent, rolled over and hit a tree. 
The 
Baltimore 
Evening 
Sun Marine Injured 
which published the report, said; 
Ellis Geiger, a 18-year-old Ma- 


I a. rn. after being pulled from the 
wrecked auto by Cpl. Evan Moody 
of the Keyser detachment of the 


Present And Past Potentates Confer 


John Rrenneman. the new potentate of All Ghan Shrine, is shown 
surrounded by past potentates at the annual potentate's dinner. 
dance and reception which was held Saturday night at the Shrine 


Country Club. Pictured. left to right, are Edmund S. Burke. A. 
Wayne Reed Rrenneman, Roy A. Leiter, Hagerstown, and Roger 
Brad Wolfe, Frederick. 


one of the coalition's first actions rine stationed at Quantico. Va., West Virginia State Police. 
might be Tawes' endorsement of was admitted to Sacred Heart Hos- g 
. sprrdjn« ( ar 


M*h“ ney- 
, „ 
. 
. 
M '* 1 abm" " 'N P' !"• st tul* H Cpl.' Moody said last night h« 
rho comptroller, who is regard- for treatment of his right shoulder.an(| T 
r Rlchard L 
wer, 
ed as an almost certain candidate which was injured when his car 
Rn,,)e 
ac *nu,ar a 
tor governor rn 1958. sa.d flatly he studded on Motleys Branch Bond 
Ashht when they pa sed a 
wasn't entering any coalition. Ile 
The marine, whose mother lives 11 
® 
" 
/ 
h 
t 
e 
h 
rate of 


n 
Where ,he 
t 
i ? 
speed Uwarif Keyser ^ 


Somehow Gary and Robert got 
. 
. . 
, . a . , _ 
hold of a two-gallon gasoline can <ant Pr0'fc“ o( ,hf' Industrial Pro- 


Congratulatory Letter Campaign Helps TWO Men Found 
Local Industrial Promotion Efforts 
Asphyxiated 


In Automobile 


ported 
in 
•■fair” condition 
last 
The o(f|c(,r Mjd h(, awunB w, 


One of the seemingly insignia 
plant 
in cerely wish you continued prog­ 
ress. 
“ Cumberland, 
too. 
is 
making 
progress—the type of progress you 


in 
the 
old 
Celanese 
Staunton. Va. 
. 
, 
.. . 
r 
, 
Some of the letters have brought 
which Still had some gasoline in it motion Department of the 
umber- ^ 
^ mpmonw fQ fhp recjpjpnt 
bde 
playing 
Gary 
apparently land Chamber of Commerce which Kor mstanoe, L. O. Neff, director,will be interested in. New indust- 
apilled some of the gasoline on his may in the long run prove of im 0f industrial relations of American nos are moving in to take advan- 
elothing. 
measurable value is a congratula Motors Corporation, recalled in his tage of a highly productive sur- 
Later. Appold said one or the 
camoaien 
letter of last April that as a young plus labor force and vast supply 
boys poured the gasoline from the lor> 
campaign. 
^ 4,, year}l ag0< he worked in of nalura| resources. 
River bot- 
can onto the fire. It suddenly blaz -J 
r 
argreaves. irec or 0 uumberland fwr jbp Western Mary- tom flood free sites provide for 
ed up and caught the younger the Industrial Promotion Depart jancj 
Railway Company. 
C. L a minimum of grading and access 
brothers clothing afire as he was mPnji explained it this way. A Jacobson, 
an 
executive 
of the to an average of 80,000 000 gallons 
s'anding beside Robert. 
j member of his staff scans the Wall Chrysler Corporation, recalled that of water daily. Being as far west 
Beat* Out Flames 


port came from. 


T £'ghl *' ,hP h0spi,al J T,C- John F |cru.S«r ground on the h.ghway and 
door open for the endorsement by Browning investigated. 
b 
n nursuit 0f the car 
which 
declining to comment on how he 
Attaches at Miners Hospital at . L a t e l y picked up speed and 
Frostburg said one of two Midland^ 
^ over a sma„ hlll int0 
youths admitted there with 
in- thp cjty ,imits of Keyser< 
juries Suffered in a mishap at 
About 2 000 yards ‘ beyond the 
Woodland about 9 a. rn. Saturday point where the cars passed, the 
sentiment in Maryland have con was released from the institution sta(p troopers found Miller pinned 
vinced him that -The people want'yesterday. 
|in the automobile, which had run 


felt toward Mahoney's candidacy. 
Cites Public Opinion 
In his statement of endorsement, 
Tawes said his surveys of public 


Exhaust Clogs As 
Car Mires In Mud 


Two men were found 


I George P. Mahoney as the Demo­ 
crat standard-bearer. . . .” 
The Tawes’ endorsement was an­ 
nounced by Mahoney headquarters 
here 


William Walker. 19. was ideas-(jp a sma|j embankment, smashed 
rd after being held overnight for jn^0 
jfpp and overturned on Arm- 
after rounding a 


ArnoldMid ha' heard th- e n d * ™ * * J®® "® ' «®l> day chalking'" " " 
day* with Cl,ry«l*r a* Buffalo, New York. and only 
Saturd, v a(tPnl00n 
Appom said ne nearn me cries 
bp covered much of this territory 135 miles 
from 
Baltimore 
our a * sa*urna\ 


observation. 
He suffered lacera-|strong street 
Jinns and bruises. His companion.|sbarp curve 
George R. Keller, 22, sustained rib . 
Ex-Sen. Millard E. Tydings. Ma-ifractures and chest injuries when 
?\ nornntimiod thoie 
dead of honeys chief competition tor the his car swerved off a county road 
V1o^dy and 
r L L L L L ^ 
, 
. 
. 
. 
nomination, fired a salvo today struck an embankment and turned inves >£a lon 0 
‘ * 
carbon monoxide gas on a lonely from his political camp. He s a lv e r . His condition last night was $ovored 
car Mdler had hpen 
road 
between 
Sang 
Run 
and Mahoney’s “ claimed strength” is "good ” State Police Tfc. Charles ” nvjinS 
.be™ stolen^ ,!^m * 
Friendsville 
in 
Garrett 
County disintegrating. 
h 
Dewitt investigated 


of th* hov and lh* oth*r ch,ldr*n. lh* column concerning lh* prom®-;^’ 
“ “ " J * 
w i l l RalfordVnry VanSickle. lo. of ^ L s ' n T " * - " ’e-S<'na,t b" l Two maiden!* of Kc.vaor were 
and rushed from the Gentry hou*e tion of executives in major mdus-' cinating and with an abundance ing facilities provide easy access Terra Alta. W. Va., and LeRoy Marshall Butler in 1950. said: “ re- 
where he was visiting to find the |rip^ across the country. 
of resources. He also noted that to midwestern and eastern mark white Lphold 20 of near Friends ports reaching me from every sec* 
“ 
. 
. . . 
{)on 
Maryland 
indicate 
un­ 


used car lot in Keyser shortly be­ 
fore the mishap occurred. 
The corporal said 
Miller ap- 


lo Republican John unhurt „ hpn ,hP,r car' wcnt"ou>ar''",ly. / ' l;0''n!!edJ 


The H a r f o r d Countian, who j w.„ 
Injury 


tot s clothes a mass of flame*. 
j Ajj 
|bpsp pr„ m0|Pd executives Marion Powers, vice president of els. 
a. 
1 fL f I j f,0,hmJ *way 
except those employed by a corpor the 
Kelly-Springf:eld Tire Com- 
fhe lad 'b o d y and bea 
nu 
he 
whjch f(tr option* reasons pany. is one of his friends, 
flames with his hands, ne said. 
W0uld not be interested in Cum 
About on third of the answer* 


'Ville were found on a narrow back 


of control on Route 50 near the Blue, 
_ 
. 
. . 
Jay Inn and overturned Saturday, 
^ 
|oM comro, of 


„ 
„w% 
... 
-... — __ _______aspire to industrial growth second 
Then wrappmg the boy in a ^ r|and receive congi atulatory let Hargreaves 
ha* 
received came to none. We know our area won t 


"Quit* frankly. Mr. Smith, a*:” " ' 
stakcably that th* c I a , rn . d “ '^ V i r g i n i a 
Stale 
Trooper 
Maryland * tocond largrat city. we road by a neighbor who invest.-jstrp„ gth 0| my prjBclpi, o p p o n e n t oliver said Hmn M Phil-1" " 


heavy blanket. Appold put him in 
hi* car and rushed the youngster 
to the hospital 


ters. 
{from the State of New York. An fit every company best, but we be 


gated when she heard an automo- in the counties 
rapidly 
bile motor running. 
integrating 
and is 


The car apparently had slid off c°!!apse' 
* ---• — 
a ditch as the men 


approachingi*'PS’ ^ 
'T * f " . 
I h M e 
approaching po.rancc in court on a mMor 
a||(,r hp 
a|trt),d 
.charge 
His companion was WU- 
, 
. 
., 
r°.T 
.e.r ™ u_my; *sp*; ham Hollingsworth. *0. 
w L* chasing .hi auto 
Three teen-agers escaped injury 
* 


cruiser as he passed it and, in- 
an attempt 
the car and 
smashed into the tree. 
Th* car 
demolished. 
Citv Officer Junior Haines as­ 


hine e the Industrial Promotion other IO per cent each came from hove your company can make good fhp roa(J m(o 
Mcmhncr«Pnf"ihc family la.! night W a rtm .n t wa* **iahh*h*d in late Ohio. 
Illinois, Pennsylvania and use ol our industrial district and 
,n |ufn 
armmd Thf ^ 
B a . cially on thc Eastern Shore. I have 
Memoers or int ramify las mgn 
.. 
--------- -L- * u 
, 
/ 
. 
lhp area s advantages. 
‘mired in the mud above the rear* 
hearing . . . from those who 
were 
finn a 01 mr rmiinj 
iii*:"' 
a*,. 
unable to explain where thc 1952 Hargreaves estimates, about Milligan 


bro,her, Obtained .be gasoline can ^ 
J Z 
T 
* 
? 


aware “ * c m I 
sh W 
W 
t” jh» ®«lce. About son ol these busy 
"Congratulation.. Mr Smith on'you In visit our 


“ We think hospitality and Rood 
exhaust nine was had glven lhcir endorsemMt 
living are synonymous and invite _' 
; 
___ , \ ____ _ 
,_____ where before it was known I woulc 
community. We par" ally " lo« ,'d’ ,orcm« ,um<-s be a candidate 


fire in the rard until the accident executives ha\e 
occurred 
110 aniw*r these letter*. 
The Gentry* live on Valley Road 
Probably half of the 4oo have 
in Bowman’s Addition inst a short asked for some additional informa- 
distanre from the Bowman s Addr tion about the industrial prospects 
| O I I 
tion Fire Hall 


taken the time y °ur appoinment as announced in would like to know you better and into the vehicle 
“ Now that I am a candidate . 
the Wall Street Journal. 
We sin-,have you get to know us.” 


Five Farmers 
Adopt Soil 
Plans 


Included 
In Budget 


in the Cumberland area. The other 
200 came from industries in 27 
American states, the District of Co­ 
lumbia, Canada and England. 
Several of the companies subse­ 
quently bet ame actively interested 
in the Cumberland area and de j 
Scnator Charlp, M gpp Ra,d a 
spite the fact that no specific new $,0 m ((em f((f the purchasp of thJ 
industries can actually be attribut- njd 
( -afp House is included; 
Additional groups of chief judges 
ed to the letter-writing program. 
Jhp (’apitai improvements Bill'anr) rnachin«> judeea who will siervr 
Hargreaves believes that th. pre, 
„ „ 
,h(> Gpnpral AsspmWv 
|ana m,cmn' Jua‘!e‘ 
gram is highly successful from a r 


Poll Officials 
Will Receive 


I 
■ 
■ * 


jwhen their car flipped five or six 
times on Route 28 a mile south of 
Ridgeley about IO o’clock Satur­ 
day night. 
Cpl. Evan Moody of the Keyser 
detachment of the West Virginia 
State Police, said the driver. Rob­ 
ert Harold Bennett, 19. of Cresap­ 
town, will be given a hearing this 
morning 
before Justice of 
the 
Peace C. J. Phillips in Ridgeley on 
a motor vehicle charge Clarence 


Forester Says 
Fire Danger 
Season Is Here 


They apparently decided to sleep many 0f these Democratic party 
[in the car until daylight, and left leaders voluntarily are giving me 
the engine running. 
(their assurances that they are for 
I 
A Mrs. Thomas, who lives near me. that they will vote for me 
(the road, became alarmed and an(l will work for my nomination.” 
looked into the car af about noon Tydings Heartened 
Saturday. Doctor E. I. Baumgart- 
Tydings said h* was heartened a 
vpmclp cnargP , , arPnce| 
AnolhPr fnr(,sl flre danger season 
aer. Garrett . aunty rued,eat fxanv especially by whaI he called "the nj7rr am| Pau, Ri„ hofh „ of h « W 
r t ^ 
mer. estimaied that the pair had alliance which is heme bu rned in ( umhPrland „ 
rp wl,h Bennett 
^istHct 
Koroster 
William 
H J 
died between 5 and 5 30 a rn. of many of the counties between the 
t , Y ,SUICI 
rorcsier 
william 
r i 
I carbon monoxide gas. 
iyoung members o, the Democratic 
kajd th( b(1, , ............“ 
r 
S 
^ 
r 
^ 
n 
« 


were tends 
through 
the 
months 
of 
The car March, April and May. 
embankment 
The potential danger wa* empha- 
times be- sized last week when about eight 


Martin M. Gordon, aide in 
local office of the Soil Conserva- illustrates the point. 


S a v i n g I m i n 
*r»m I* .highly .needful Iro^ . 
■ 
"* 
A,l*, ?*yi 0,h" 
vor* include three sis- 
tore stoppmg on its’ side.’ 
acres on Haystack Mm,main with- 
in the city limits was burned in a 
brush fire that was believed to 
ha\e been set. 
State regulations permit burning 
of brush and debris only between 
4 p. rn. and midnight EST during 
____________________ 
'March. April and May except when 
of Supervisor* of the Allegany Soil 
appreciate your \n- 
iOakland ( 'amp ll, Woodmen of the. should'^ be the'^Democrauc no miner i 
' 
firound is covered with snow. 
Conservation District. 
tere*t* in our operations and feel 
a " 
• 
j 
. in- ma World, and of Terra Alta Post IMI lf^ United St at es Se nate in th e t956 
Preliminary plans forNiew locker 
The regulations apply only to 
The new cooperator* are Frank that you and other similar organ- bly. 
J 
F 
of 
n 
ng ma Ampncan Ugion Hp served four I general 
election* Pd,e ^ 
an(l shower rooms at the 
Cresap- burning within 200 feet of v^oodland 
Humbertson. 
210-acre 
farm 
on ira tion* are doing a fine job in 
® 
‘’t* - <*>saJ‘ 
a as 00 
s< ” nfs 'Ahl<n Wl! 
he used en a vvars ,n the Army during World 
..j am convincpd 
bv *bl, llirv.pV town 
School have been submitted 
or inflammable material that could 
Warrior Mountain. Joseph I.. Mar promoting your communities. 
In 
IP 
nai 0 
' 1( 
,,t s c^u 
•’jcounty-wide basis for the first time vYar I! He was employed bv the .bat *bp nponip 
__«»* r> t0 Superintendent of School* Ralph ignite and carry fire to woodland 
tm. TO nee** .long Knob Rod. R* duMry h « it. 
bl,gut,on- lo . h* P'o„*,t>^ he^ will i p 
l M 
M 
bp p 
,a|nK| 
, 
Co o( Poml 
^ m o cr^ ltan d R 
W®h»t*r by S. Ru** Minier, ouivide ,he limit* of incorporated 
gma M McCully 7J -ere* a, Vim community hut ti mo*, 
cert.inly th* « t » . 
”“ • la d Rr0„ p of >boul „ Jud8„ 
Marion. Pa 
lard bearer 
'oral architect. 
tow„*. 
Grove l.*and*r Whorl,in. I2S aer** need* » communitya understand 
- _ 
_ 
, 
j 
h(,d|lIkd 
„ Mr( 
Thp body will he at the home of 
.-Sm(.p a 1)pmnrrallP v,Pl„ rv in 
Minter will next send them to 
I 'ideas their I- a natural lire- 
IO feet wide *ur- 


puhlic relations standpoint. 
I 
h‘n<J ua* included, he said. (;ounty at tbp May 7 pnmarv flee- ters. Mrs. Iva Elliott, Terra Alta; ^np,g*y in an a,!emP’ 
aw,lfl 


En c more Allegany County f.rnv-l 
A .reply letter (rom (U n .i Koger. « 
"Lunty""Vni'Xitor*'Ti " " " 
report for in*,ruction to Mr. Naomi C .* t^ , Morgantown, 


e o o p e ^ L r r Hie' P7«T momh ager ol the Torrance Cal,I , plant hove the .late acquire the proper- th* (bunty Board of Electron Sup !s,ckl/ 
Mt“ Ra,n,^ and onp brnth ^hecam* appar, id that a primary 


then, th* Rom* Cab,* Corpora,,on 
" " 7 
1 ^ 
h" " 


lion Servica, reported to the Board 
He wrote, in part: 
, J Ga^rtt 
M td ^ e l^ 'th l! " ch n‘* hl ,hrou‘ h Fndty 
lhls v,ll,1 
I* ' Methodist Church, of Z Z s h Z t the State as'To'"who 
. 
-i**-- im ,»*. rionarai Aaaarre*. w**k. 
Oakland (am p ll. Woodmen of lhe)Sboujd ^ lbp Hemocratic nomineej 
Operation of the new voting ma i^ or^ ' and of Terra Alta Post ^54,jfor dinted States Senate in the 1956 


Plans Submitted 
For School Work 
At Cresaptown 


near Oldtown and F R Simpson mg of its problems" 
jgany County Historical Society. 
I acneauieo l0 report tonight ana 
19 li re* on Ralfimnre Pike 
I 
Some of the best known men in 
It is possible, he added that some return March 29 for the’final in h« 
Ernest R 
Slider 
chairman of American industry have sent re state agency, such as the State structional session. 
the Board of Supervisors, plans to Pl,e* to Hargreaves atter having Roads Commission or the Depart-j 
Election 
District 9, 
Barton— 
attend the Board meeting of the r#cf've^ congratulatory l e t t e r s meni of Forests and Parks, may Thomas 
I. 
Metz, 
chief 
judge. 
Maryland Association of Soil Con- TyP,cal 
are Harlow H 
Curtice be interested in making use of the Christina M. Kirk and Felecit P. 
servatmn Districts at the Lord Ral * ho *,m,‘ ear*-v 
19,113 has hrrn 10,1 
Mo*#*, machine judges, all Repub- 
u ' r 
i""L .’n 
m the Ck Vt" “I 
,,, rTlu,lslia'r] each shower and lotker room will help be provided with tools to 
Baltimore March Prudent °f Genera! Motor* Corpn 
The Allegany I ounty Delegation beans. Richard W. Howell, chiel J L \ n p p * 
! I? c™ ipai2n vtaorously and bp a recreatlon room wh<*rr pinc prevent thp flre from e.scapinf. It 
ration, and Louis E. Wolfson, who successfully pushed a House reso judge; Althea Lashoaugh and Al-,churth. . ^ 
vt^rrh ii 19^5 
f ” 
wldesPreafi popular, sup pong or shuff|eboard might be also is necessary to have at least 
ord last year gamed national recogni- lotion in 1955 calling for the state fred Schramm, machine judges, ail' 
Poo,f1 was ho,n Marrn 
" port 


parents after .3 pm 
today November 
is 
important 
to 
. 
jServic*s wilt h* M d tomorrow ut Sta„ and nallon , 5ld( (rom 
. for .pprov.l or rrrii-ion. 
rounding lh* aren to be burned it 


'2 pm al Blooming Ro.* Method!.! c(,„sldpr» „ons. it „ es«*-nt.al thai J 
he *rchl'« ' * P|ans ,ca" f"r ls ""'".sa iy to plow or othorwis* 
Church. Fri*nd»vill*. with Re*. S thp |)Pmncra„ c Parlv 
a 
shower 
and locker* for the girl* construct a brei,ne at ‘east IO lee, 
D. Sawer, officiating. a**<sted by quallf,pd 
<andldatp 
rpl, t,vp,y on one floor and those for the boys wide around the area to be burned. 
Rev 
Gerald Daniel* and Berlin youlh(ul , nd Mllh d, m0Mtr, 
on the lower floor. Adjacent to It als.. ,* required that .nil,cent 


timore Hotel in 
23. 
The suoervisors received worn -- 
-..... — --- -....... *.............. - --..... - 
^ 
...ovi.mw lutigt.*, an; 
i i- 
tho von' 
« . . . 
, 
. 
pia'cu. 
one waicnman on me 
from the Allegany County Board t,nn ,n h,s unsuccessful efforts to to purchase and maintain the prop- Democrats 
Election District ll. nfar V-r L a u.-rl iL k L 'r I n *u 
° rg* 
, Mah?ney embodief' 
This Cresaptown improvement is the last spark is out. 
a r- 
I_______ ak.., .k,- 
nssume control 
of 
Montgomery erty. 
.Frostburg — Harrison Lemmon of Dayton anet Mean Savage 
p these essential qualities to merit -n- 
, 
a nrftlpr»s i1Ktod in th# 


played. 
one watchman on the ground until 


are on l ?. S 
and one on Md 


Frostburg _ Hanson Lemmert. 
"- J""* 
n«i quauues in merit onp of the 13 projects listed in the! 
chief judge; Clapa K. Walbert. ma h,‘‘d- 
. .. _ 
a* nomination as toe senatorial can *800 ((Od county supplemental build ' 
_ 
- 
One of the firms which became 
chine judges, both Republicans J 
Services wd be he,d ! uesdav at dldatp 
of 
«the 
party 
o( 
the ing prngram authonzed bv the D a p f U 
C 


<1 at r,ve ........- 
m ,h“ area Lions To Meet 
(Francs D. Chambers, chief judge.!3 » p m. at Blooming Ro*# M e .h o - .p e o p ie 
” 
G e n e r a l 
A s s e m b ly in 
A n n a p o lis P l * I I I ® 


line Two a,tn rtcenme a letter from Har- 
The weekly meeting of the (urn- Clarence J. Powers, machine judg-dist Church, with interment in tne 
Tawes wasn't the only person |aS( xear 
t a on I 
S v»0 greaves was a New England metal berland Lions Club will be held es 
Democrats. 
ichurch cemetery. 
mentioned in the Evening Sun s ' 
! 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bidgley. 
’ W° 
" 
company, 
which previously had Wednesday at 12 IS p. rn. in the j 
j.’|w.t|on District 12-32 Frostburg 
an (“coalition ' story to issue a quick 


of Commissioners tha* the hoard 
will pay the $142 required for the 
ri,d- 
Soil 
Conservation 
District 
signs 
ne 
which have been in*,.lied .I live ar" ' ' ly '"f^res.^d 


pn,n'« along the county bne_ Two grpaNps 
^ \ pw England metal berland Lions Club will be held 
Democrats 


51. 
in the 
_ 
. 
, 
. 
, .. 
given no thought to a new local ion Community Room of the YMCA 
p .,. d-*#— 
. 
f 
Gordon also informed the super- ? 
* 
. 
^ 
y ,,., —Ralph Patterson and Pearl Shaf 
' 
for a plant 
Although ( umberland (luest speaker will be (.corge \oa. . 
, 
. . . 
. 
.. 
visors at their meeting Friday that 
^ 
fh, „ im HlH 
nf .hr Ralt.more office \er' th,ff lud8ev 
Xn^*la Hanna 
a pond survey had been conducted 


aunt. Mrs Flossie VanSickle 


Winchester 


selected 
the firm did manager of the Baltimore office 
’ 
. . * 
- 
- 
. 
- 
, 
. * 
, 
a branch plant at nearby of Dun and Bradstreet. whose topic 
‘1V |S nidt 11' 
J '* *1' 
“ 
B l O O O VTI O u i 16 U n i t 
.ie, 
* ..lim 
ic/.,r Will ne 
n . d il- Man * ...nlideme R'PuW'can, 
Ka hleen Spearman 
„ 
, 
hi* t-ik win be high and As" " '• Kelly chiel judge, v / |S | f S H e r e T o d a y 
*__________ 
iMary A lo*grove. Mazie Yuneer- 


on the farm of Ronald 
I.ohr at 
Twiggtoun. 
He 
also 
said 
that cornpanv was simiia,|y interested in Man.” 
Frank Humbertson 
as 
,>rrn" p 
m this area and eventually settled lighted by a motion picture 
the mechanical ’ bush hog 
to cut 
up apple prunings on his orchard 
Kenneth M. Stone, soil scientist 
connected with the local Soil Con­ 
servation Service office, reported 
that he had surveyed about I 200 
acres in the Haystack Mountain 
area 


Legislative Council Has 
Good '56 Batting Average 


Rlood donors are needed bere 


j Mary A Cosgrove. Mazie Yunger-J 
man and Mary Jackson, machine. 
'judge- all Democrats 
I B jP jM 
I The following hate been notified j 
Countv chaplPr. Arnee 
to report for instruction Tuesday . 
« 
, f. maL nt, an an 
night and again on April 2 
,K'a" ,R,d Frof ' “ 
pP , 
, 
Election Divine, 13 I and 2. MI hral ?r ^ 
unlMr ^ 
d" " ° " P “ r| 
Savage—Raymond Seder and Nel 
y i.. ° k' . '! " 
. 
tbp 
donated blood before, to visit the 
the 


Intentioned in the _ 
Hyattsville, announce the birth of 
(denial. 
Named To Dean's List 
a son there February 20. 
The 
{Goodman Denies Link 
Miss Norma D. Grimes. 313 Foot- paternal grandmother is Mrs. Ida 
[ State Sen. Philip H 
Goodman er Place, has been named to the Bagley, ( umberland. and the ma- 
•D-Balto 5th>, 
another reported Gettysburg College Deans Honor ,ornal grandparents are Mr. and 
deader in the alleged movement, List for scholastic excellence dur- Mrs ( harles (ox. RD I, Ridgeley. 
I also denied any link with it. 
mg the first semester of the 1955- 
ylr* anfl ' l rs- 
T1. Hotchkiss 
!Jr.. tonner residents, announce the 
Today’s Sermonette 


unit 
today 
at 
Deaths 


.lie Hotchkiss, chief judges 
How- 
, 
ANNAPOLIS. March 4 tT-The It is made up of IO members from aid Herring. 
Emma 
Izzett and , 
, 
„ 
v 
», 0uanir 
Legislative Council, a group treat- 4*a*h house of Die General Assent- Dora A. Burch, machine judges. 
cs 
nmP on 
° r 1 
ed to study legislative Questions b,y* " ho travel about lbe *tatP 8,1 Republicans; Patrick A. Fan- Strpe, au 
vicit 
listening to Wk a1 problems and non and Edward H ( artpr rhipf 
regular monthly 
\..i _ 
.. i 
between sessions of the Maryland proposed changes in the laws. 
;judges- Francis J Mulligan I eona lie,e' 
Pints a,e nce(led to nie«*t 
UIU* Gener.l Assembly. «uied belter 
I, works in conjunction with Rfacan and Anastasia 
Mctiann. 'h' «uola 
Th* collection «n t*r 
than average in enactment of its other Mate agencies, such as the machine 
iudcex 
ill 
n#»mnrrai* will b e open from noon until fi p m 
« 
Dei hi, Mrs. Anna M., St. Bedford proposals by the 1956 session 
Port Study Commission that was Election District 13-3 Barrelville 
Tomorrow, the bloodmobile will - lab < -J., 
Of 63 bills introduced 


Callan. 


Orlean*. 
Mrs. 
Rfwe. 79. 


Road. 


\(Continued on Paqe 9, Col. 4 j,56 school year. 
... 
{birth of a son Saturday at Good 
Samaritan Hospi t al . Zanesville, 
Ohio. 
Memorial Hospital 
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart E. Bur* 
caw. RD 6. city. a daughter yes­ 
terday. 
Mr. and Mrs, Francis A. Sebold 
Mr.. 
Green Spring. 
W. 
Va., 
a 
'but be of good cheer I have over- daughter yesterday, 
come the world.” 
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Minnigh, 
Frustration comes not because of 214 Mary Street, a son yesterday. 
problem-* but from wrong attitudes 
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Broadway 
taken towards the problems The ter, RD 5, city a son yesterday, 
fact that the public has purchased 
Mr. and Mrs 
Charles A. L. 
Jesus usually taught by parables.'and read millions of "How To 
Butler, Cresaptown, 
a daughter 


Today'* wrnjnnttfe to » it (Mi of a wrmmi prrachad *8*tfrd*v at fir arr 
Mi»thorti*i (hurt-h h\ tho p*»'fn, R oy 
Adam F 
Grim 
Tho oorrrnn diktats 
ato Oom* proparod through the cooperat.on of the Cumberland 
Min.Menal 
Aooociation 


Wise And Foolish 


By RFV. ADAM E. GRIM 


by the named to consider the problem. Georcia M fhamhars rhi»>f inHoo be at the Victory Legion Post home 
Jesus usually taught ny . 
. . . 
Dull*, t h.rte* T., I*. IU Grind ,,mBcll m tbP ,irs, da). 
tbp 5P. 
MorP imporlam plPl-P, „| | „ j s|» ||a7 wllhebu 
m ihine 
m il, '» Westernport, where ISO pint* cl In this parabla He is comnarinx books to th* last decade i* indica- -Saiurday 
aion. J* were enacted and 23 al- non initiated by th* council this 
Republic an* -lames W 'Dine- h10011 ar' cequi-sited (rom donors in the^ buddins ol a house to thai^ ®f|ble_®fi l f .saa'.'„. 
ready have been signed into law year were 
by Governor McKeldin 
Establishment 
of 
ler chief judge, Democrat. Flee- 
Tn-lowns ai ca 
a department tl0n District 14-1 and 2, this citv 


Avenue. 
Fisher, 
Mu* 
Tabitha, 
Mondlawn Terrace. 
Glotfelty, 
George 
H., 


Hr" rv 
, 
from such suggestions as exempt- development, which was enacted 


U ^ c 't L t , 
I"* T U X ? , * 
d0r8r dr01,1' 
^ " ns 
01 lC0" ,r° ' >J ' W od chine'juds'eT.'a'lTRepubl^a^; 
iionaroning. 
gl0UR 
institutions 
and 
students and gas wells, also enacted 
Hamilton. Harry L., .>*, Keyser, from jury duty {whlch didn t pass'. 
To give the 


Mf* 
Its proposals this year ranged to promote economic and industrial j]""Roy Kimes' chLf judge JeLie 


Ii White and Mary A Turner, ma- Poullrymen Charter 
Bus For Meeting 


Mr. and Mrs. H. Clinton Cook, 
building a lite. Now Jesus said a!f"undation in meeting lite s prob- Hyndman. Pa . a son Saturday. 


W. Va. 
to creation of a State port authority Authority power to curb unfair 


.. 
na T. McCleary, chief judge. M 
. lary land lohacco janf 
frippen 
and 
Ada Conlev 


Ga 


wise builder would not think of terns. That foundation can be found 
Mr. md Mrs. Bernard 0. Finzel, 
building a house unless the fpunda- in Jesus Christ 
F rostbuig. a son Saturday. 
lion was built upon a rock, but said 
Jesus saw people going to pieces 
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Rob J 
He, a foolish man is one who takes because they 
built their houses 
" lI*y ford* W- Va * a Ron 
no thought of the foundation but upon the sand. Any life that is not Sa uraay. 
dimply builds a house upon th# anchored upon God will eventually 
* 1 
an 
,a 
Schaidt. 
Alesan* County poultrymen w.ll sand. 
, 
fall lf the *fonp* of life .re to be 
' * d,u*ht« 
travel to Collece Park bv char- 
The house a man builds is thc withstood let us pray. 
That so 
• ' 
, 
_ . 
tered bus tomorrow morning to house he must live in. My mother among the sundry and manifolrl R a w h a 
a sonSaturSy ’ 
attend the annual winter poultry used to say to her sons in giving changes of the world our hearts, 
^ ^ 
william W Barr 
meetings being held in conjunction us advice, “ The way you make may surely there be fixed where Rjdge, 
w 
Va 
daughter 
with the centennial celebration at your bed that is the way you must true joys are to be found. 
Friday 
* 
’ 
the University of Maryland. 
(lie in it.” 
j 
Moral calamity is sometimes the, 
_____ 
County Agent Joseph M. Steger 
Jesus looked at life as it was. sign that the house has fallen 
in more revenue 
I hi- which also which passed and will be voted 
on of Petersburg. VV Va 
. are two of 
said last night that he already bas He knew that a good foundation in. Some time ago a man of my ac- RofQj-jQpjj J o M e e t 
was proposed 
by McKeldin, 
was in the next election. 
eleven honor business students who 27 reservations for the bus which was necessary. Life is not simply quaintance suddenly, and without 
_ 
, u 
u 
, 
*° changed before passage 
to increase To establish a tax court to hear 
will be inducted into the Beta Nu can haul as many as 37 passengers a glorious experience without prob- obvious reason left his home, his 
jh e weekly meeting of the Cum* 
L f 
Hospital baturda) further the number of racing days 
appeals on property assessments Chapter of Pi Omega Pi, national Additional 
reservations 
will 
be lems. heartaches, 
and 
sorrows church, and his job. 
He went to Arland Rotary Club will be held 
night tor treatment of hack injuries 
The council also introduced 18 which failed in the 
Senate. honorary business 
education fra accepted today at Steger * office “ Fear 
not little flock it is your another part O'the country to start tomorrow at 12 15 p. rn. in tho 
sustained when ne (cli in the ca 
measures aimed af tightening up 
To 
abolish the 
present 
State termty, at Madison College. Harris- in the Court House. The bus will Father s good pleasure to give you again His wife learned through a Community Room of the YMCA. 
boose r a train in the westbound 
insurance laws All but a few ol Roads Commission 
and replace it onburg Va 
leave from the terminal on North the kingdom ” but not on a silver letter that he 
had been living The program will consist of a mo- 
ysrd 
He wa< reported in 
fair 
thr o passed 
with 
a 
director 
Thi< 
measure 
The induction will take place Mechanic Street at 6 a. rn. tomor-platter. 
“ In 
this 
world" 
said a double life. 
The house of life ,lon p,ctUre, “ An Introduction to 
con .itjon at tr.e hospital last nig- 
j The council was created in 1939 ,didn t get out of committee. 
j March 21 at the college. 
jrow. 
jjesus,” ye shall have tribulations, ^Continued on Page 9, Col. ^Someone You Know." 


McKenzie, Joseph F.. At, Little Wltb broad powers to expand and practices on the Southern Mary- 
0mO 
. 
promote the Port of Baltimore land tobacco markets, enacted 
1 
Merlin*. Charles 
71, Atlanta. which did pass after 48 amend 
To prohibit wire tapping unless; 
ments wore placed on it 
authorized 
by 
a 
court, 
which E le c te d To F r a te rn ity 
Another council proposal was to passed in another bill. 
j 
• 
increase 
the 
racing 
season 
at 
To clear up obsolete sections of 
Miss Sarah Newton of Cumber- 
Maryland s horse tracks to bring the State’s 93-year-old constitution, land and Miss JoAnn Riggleman 


(Obituaries on Page 2) 


Flagman Injures Back 


Homer Johnson 38, of RFI) 
Locust Grove, was admitted 


13721283