Weather Forecast
Fair and continued cool today
with high in sos.
The Cumberland News
Auto Accidents
Claim 2 Lives
1 See Bark Page)
VOL. la— NO. 283
A m m U U * P reM S arita* - AP P tr a M u
intern*lion*I N ew s a c rita *
CUMBERLAND,
MARYLAND,
MONDAY,
SEPTEMBER
IO,
1956
entered M •em nd e l*** mat) matter at C u p herlann, MarvlaiKl.
umtar UM art of M a rrh S. IIT *
IO PAGES— SIX CEN TS
Suez Crisis Grave—Menzies
Showdown Due AdlaiCharges
In School Crisis “Misconduct”
In GOP Ranks
Guardsmen Ready
To Maintain Order Los Alamos Lab
Works On Atomic
Powered Rocket
LOS ALAMOS. N. J., Sept. 9 Ut
—The Los Alamos atomic labora
tory disclosed today It has been
STURGIS, Ky . Sept. 9 t#*—Ap
proximately fido Kentucky Nation
al! Guardsmen stood ready today
to prevent further demonstrations
against seven Negro youths at
Sturgis High School.
Adj. Gen. J. J, B.
Williams.
..
.
,
.
termed the .ituehot. -tense
and “ otkm* on » '™ 'e po»ered rock-
Monday may be the turning
*or ^ie *ast year-
punt ,n a series of protest actions*
Laboratory officials would not
v ich began last Tuesday.
reveal the status of their research
Four tanks were posted around which if successful
would go a
* > school. At least 35 state police long way in opening the bridge to
officers were expected to be on space, and w h i c h
could power
hand to help
But while the situation at Stur
gis was called “bad enough” by
some officials, trouble also was ex-
peeled at
the
nearby
Webster
County community of Clay.
At that village last Friday two
grade school negro children were
turned away from the school. For
the next two days the citizens of
Clay refused to let any pictures
be taken. They told newsmen they
were armed and would resist any
attempt to bring integration to
their school.
While guardsmen and troopers
patrolled Sturgis over the week
end, two FBI agents w ert investi
gating reports of intimidation and
“possible civil rights violations1’
in Sturgis.
The troubles at Sturgis began
Aug. 31 when nine Negroes en
rolled at the school. Residents said
there was no trouble. The Negroes
staved only a half day.
,
But on the following Tuesday, a
group of segregationists turned
the Negroes away.
They stayed home Wednesday
and by that night the National
Guardsmen were sent in by order
of Gov. A. B. Chandler.
Resentment rose steadily. Most
of the people of Sturgis now are
blaming their troubles on “poli
tics," and on thstnearly IOO news
men here to cover the story.
Clinton N ear N orm al
CLINTON. Tenn . Sept. 9 I#u-
The National
Guard
today
re
missiles of unlimited range.
Existence of the N Division at
this laboratory where the atomic
bomb
was
developed
was dis
closed in a brie! press release an
nouncing the employment of an
e n g i n e e r . W illiam F. Carlson,
Bristol. Conn.
The release identified the N Di
vision as ‘ concerned*with the re
search and development of nu
clear rocket propulsion.” This was
the first public word of existence
of the project, heretotore under a
tight secrecy lid.
Desegregation
‘Agitators’ Draw
Clement’s Fire
Declares Scandals
Are Not Confined To
State Governments
PALISADES PARK. N. J . Sept.
9
Adlai Stevenson said today
that a contagion of misconduct
(and corruption ’’has marked the
I Eisenhower administration "
I
The
Democratic
presidential
nominee thus attempted to throw
back at the COP one of the chief
weapons
the
Republicans
used
against the Democrats in the 1952
campaign
The Republican cry that year
was against ’’communism, corrup
tion and Korea "
Stevenson addressed a rally of
several
thousand
supporters
in
this colorful
amusement resort
across the Hudson River from
New York City.
Stevenson pointed to scandals
under Republican administrations
in New Jersey and Illinois and
charges by Gov. George Leader of
a Republican scandal in Pennsyl
vania and declared:
“I wish this contagion of Re
publican misconduct and corrup-
lion—that used to be charged to
the Democrats—were confined to
state governments.
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS.
W. Va., Sept. 9 (Ah—Gov. Frank
Clement of Tennessee said today
he's chiefly concerned over "keep
ing outside agitators from stirring
the people up" on the school inte
gration problem.
"I'm not going to tolerate out
side agitators, period.” Clement
said. as he arrived to preside over
a meeting of Southern governors.
Clement had to send in troops
at Clinton, T enn, when an at
tempt to integrate public schools
Talbott Resignation Recalled
the
turned all law enforcement duties there brought on mob violence.
to local authorities and cut its de
tachment here to 50 handpicked
men.
A guard spokesman said “ We
are keeping men in Clinton only
rn the unlikely event that civil au
thorities should lose control of the
situation."
Tennessee Gov. Frank Clement
ordered 600 guardsmen into this
east Tennessee city a week ago
today after integration of the high
school touched off mob violence.
Eight Europeans
Slain In Algeria
ALGIERS. Algeria, Sept. 9 (gu.
Nationalist rebels erupted at three
points in western Algeria today,
bringing death to 12 persons, in
eluding eight Europeans.
Almost a score of others were
Injured in violence which led to an
air-supported attack by
French
troops against a rebel band in the
region of M o s t a g a n e , on the
coast between Algiers and Oran.
For more than half an hour late
last night, the rebels cut the coast
al
highway between Oran and
Mostaganem
with machine gun
fire concentrated on civilian auto
mobiles. Reports to headquarters
said six Europeans, including one
woman, were killed.
Two European children, a 9 .
year-old girl and her 5-year-old
brother, escaped into nearby sand
dunes when their parents’ car
came to a halt. The children were
found uninjured early this morn-
mg, still hiding in the dunes.
Their parents had been killed
but the children apparently had
escaped in the confusion of the
attack. They were turned over to
the custody of an aunt.
French troops counterattacked
and drove the rebels into the sur
rounding mountains
Jet Starts Big Fire
SAN DIEGO. Calif., Sept. 9 (JI—
Fire raged on out of control today
on Pine Mountain, where it was
started yesterday by a crashing
Air Force jet plane.
The pilot, rescued by a Coast
Guard helicopter, was recovering
in naval hospital.
On Inside Pages
Bridge ................................ 7
Com ics
...........................7
Crossword ..........................7
Cryptoquote ...................j 7
Deaths .......................
9
Dr. Van D ellen
3
Editorial Page ................. 3
Hollywood .................
6
Racing ....................................5
Secrets of C h a rm
9
Sports
............................... 4 ,5
Television ................7
T ris ta te
....................2
Want Ads ....................8,9
for
Asked lf he saw any need
federal forces, Clement said;
“ We don't need any interfer
ence from the federal government
—and I don't mean the courts—I
mean, from executive to execu
tive. The people of Tennessee are
capable of handling their prob
lems."
Clement said that by “ outside
agitators" he meant those who
tried to stir up trouble on either
side
of
the
school
integration
question. The only reason he used | t0 c°ver Political campaigns and
“ It is not. It has marked
Eisenhower administration."
In declaring there had been mis
conduct in the Eisenhower admin
istration, Stevenson referred to
the resignation of Harold Talbott
as secretary of the Air Force.
Stevenson commented on “ the
spectacular frauds committed by
former Gov. < Harold G.) Hoff
man’’ of New Jersey, “ Republican
perfidy in Illinois,’’ and Democrat
ic charges of alleged swindling by
Republican members of the Penn
sylvania Turnpike Commission.
The record of Democratic Gov.
Robert Meyner. of New Jersey,
Stevenson said, “ stands in sharp
contrast to the wrongdoing that
went on under the Republicans be
fore he came to office.
“ You know better than I the
sorry record that was climaxed
by the revelations of the spectacu
lar frauds committed by former
Gov. Hoffman," he said.
Embezzled $300,006
Hoffman, who died in 1954, left
a posthumous letter to his daugh
ter admitting embezzling 1300,000
Nasser Says
He Will Fight
“Domination”
Egypt's President
Shows No Retreat
From Canal Seizure
LONDON, Sept. 9
President
Nasser of Egypt said tonight ans
attempt
to
impose
"collective
domination" on the Sues Canal
would signal “ incalculable strile ”
He made the statement in a note Broadway
to the five-nation Men/irs com- the most
mission.
The text of the noir was re
leased here along with other con
ference documents by the Aus
tralian government
Prime Minister Hubert G. Men
zies of Australia was chairman of
the commission sent by the Urn
don Suez conference to Cairo to
present views of the confrrenc
on future control of the canal
The talks
Ic
d without agree
ment after a final 25-minute aes
sion with Nasser tonight.
Rupert Hughes,
Famed Author,
Historian, Dies
LOS ANGELES
Sept
9 lh —
Rupert Hughes, 84
distinguished
author historian and an unt ie of
miltimilBettaire Howard Hughes,
died at his home here today
Hughe
had suffered a stroke
three years ago and had been in
poor health the last year and a
halt
Death
was
attributed
to
heart failure brought on by fhe
infirmities of old age1
He oil i'll called himself a liter
ary Jack of all trades -and it was
an apt description
Beside*-, thousands of words of
fiction. Hughe s was noted aa a top
music critic, a poet, a successful
playwright and one of
Commission,
Nasser End
Futile Talks
Meeting's Failure
Shifts Spotlight
To London Parley
mod
prolific of Hollywood
screen w i dei s
He also was a distinguished sol
dier. rising from captain and m a
jor
in
the
Mexican and
First
NA arid
War
to a
colonel
who
helped found the California
tiona) Guaid.
Na
N asser R eaffirm s Policy
Full House
Mrs. Anna M. Lacy, Evansville, Ind., has a full house up her
sleeve a* she arrives in California to compete for Mrs. U. S. Navy
1956. She is shown with her husband, Chief Hospitalman Henry E.
Lacy, and their seven children, ranging in age from two months
to IO years. Mr*. Lacy's family is largest of any of fhe 30 finalists
from far-flung naval districts.
.
. reaffirmed that his pol
icy was to maintain free passage I
through the can. withou* diserim*
Nit OSIA. Cyprus, Sept. 9 (AP—
motion. He said the 18-nafion plan
British issued today a revised
to put the canal under internal ion- j
a1 control was intended to take
Typhoon
Down On
Bears
the
waterway
“out
of Egypt's*
hands" and added
“ It would be difficult to imagine
anything more provocative to the
people of Egypt than this "
The published note disclosed he
said “ it would he not the end of
trouble but the beginning of trou
ble."
Japan
Thousands Homeless On Okinawa
to turn in any of the rebels
The new list, as previous ones,
is headed by George Grivas, 59.
former Greek army colonel who
is the reputed chieftain of Greek
.
, . ,
.
-.Cypriot rebels fighting to over-
ll.
th* j o m n m r n l OI llm m
n il„
l v
( AIRO. Sept. 9 UP—Australian
Prime Minister Robert G Menzies
said tonight the Suez Canal crisis
"is the most serious problem the
woiId has belute if
Menzies treads the five-nation
commission which has been con
ferring with Egyptian President
Carnal Abdel Nasser for a w»*ek,
seeking a solution of the dispute.
He said the commission .4 talks
with Nasser ended tonight with an
exchange of documents "fully cov
ering" the arguments of the is
nations which favor international
izing the canal and those of Nas
ser in opposing internationaliza
tion
“The situation is very grave "
Menzies told newsmen as the talks
ended.
Texts of conference documents
released in I Lindon by Men/irs’
government revealed Nasser had
declared any attempt to impose
“ collective
domination”
on
the
canal would bring "incalculable
strife.” Nasser reaffirmed his Ped
ley is to maintain free passage
through the canal for ships of all
nations without discrimination but
free transportation to any place j that the canal must remain entire*
in the world for Cypriots willing l y Egyptian.
•’ British list 35
“Most Wanted”
Cyprus Rebels
list of 3.1 "most wanted" men of
KOKA, fhe Greek Cypriot under
ground. They put prizes of up lo
$26 OOO on ttieir heads and offered
Egypt
alite"
is fully entitled
the canal.
to na!loii-
Crtsis “ Artificially Created'*
“ Whatever tilt system of oper
ating of the canal is going to be,"
on
prus with Greece The British of-
ter a reward oi $2R OOO for Grivas'
capture
IM.OOO Each For IS
The roster included 16 other
KOKA leaders on whose heads the
he said,
"it will depend on the i British put a price ot SU oho each
TOKYO, Monday,
Sept. IO wh-Typhoon Emma smashed its way f
a »d willing cooperation -md 18 lesser lieutenants lur whom
toward the teeming
coasts of western Japan and South Korea early
today leaving a multimillion dollar toll of havoc and thousands of
natives homeless on the U. S. fortress island of Okinawa.
Violent rain and gusts up to 70 miles an hour battered Korea’s
♦ south coast and Kyushu, Jap an s
southern island, as the monster
460-mile wide storm charged from
Okinawa into the 150-mile wide
strait between Japan and Korea.
At 9 pm . Sunday the storm 's
center,
spouting
winds
of
115
rn p h., was located 155 miles west
of Kagoshima. Japan s southern
most large city.
troops, he said, was to preserve
law and order.
And he emphasized what he had
said previously,
that the troops
were neither to
keep the Negro
youngsters in or out of the schools,
but merely to see to it that order
was restored.
Clement also dropped a political jleader* now
,s saving
a U-year
observation. He
said that
Adlai Ja,! term for lak,n*
*ta,e ”umy.
Stevenson, who lost Tennessee t o |Hod8« pleaded guilty during his
Dwight D. Eisenhower four years ln a *'
pay off a blackmailer.
Said Stevenson:
“ The late disclosures of Repub
lican perfidy in Illinois have hu
miliated every Illinoisan—Demo
crats and Republicans alike."
Orville E. Hodge, tyrmei Illinois
state auditor and state Republican
ago, will carry the state easily in
November.
Clement went
even
further:
“ I don’t think the Democrats
will lose a state in the South this
time."
But
the
Southerners
weren’t
unanimous on this point. Among
the early arrivals, for instance,
was Gov. Allan Shivers of Texas
who in 1952 supported Eisenhower
and whose slogan this year again
is:
“I’m for Eisenhower.”
Storm O ff Carolina
MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 9 un - A
tropical circulation intensified to
storm proportions today and is
moving northeast off the Carolina
coast with no danger to the main
land.
•
The Miami Weather Bureau said
in a 6:15 p.m. advisory that Carls Chapman, of Eureka, had their
was adopt 400 miles southeast of 123rd birthday anniversaries Sept.
Cape Hatteras, N. C., at 5:30 p.m. 5th.
S. C. Blonde Launches Her
Reign As Miss America
an that this “routine" will be re
versed.
"It s go to bed early and get
up early" for Miss America, said
Stevenson then referred to Penn
sylvania Gov. George Leader’s re
cent calling for
a grand jury
probe into a potential 20-million
dollars in Pennsylvania Turnpike
contracts
and
investigation
of
turnpike
commission
operations
while it was under Republican
control.
Two Men Born
Same Day Killed
In Auto Collision
EUREKA. Calif., Sept. 9 (#u-
Donald Brazil! and Donald Chap
man, born the same day 23 years
ago, died at the same time early
today when they met in a head-on
automobile collision on U. S. 101
south of Eureka.
Brazill. of Ferndale, Calif., and
N.C. Governor
Hails Approval
Of School Plan
RALEIGH. N. C , Sept. 9 Ut
— Gov. Luther Hodges declared
t o d a y he was
"tremendously
pleased and Impressed" with the
overwhelming margin of approval
North Carolinians yesterday gave
to a state constitutional amend
ment aimed at preserving school
segregation.
Nearly 600,000 persons voted,
approving the plan by about 44-
1, The plan was strongly endorsed
by the governor. He called it a
moderate approach to the U. S.
Supreme
Court’s
desegregation
decrees and said It would preserve
public school segregation and yet
comply with the high court s rul
ing.
With I 880 precincts of 2,047 re-
of the people of Egypt, among
whom and through whose country
the canal runs. , . .
"It is obvious that such iadis-
pensihie
cooperation
cannot
be
re wards up to IM OOO arr offered.
A list published last February
named only 19 KOKA "hard core"
men. including Grivas.
Among those on the $14 WK) list
108 MPH Winds
Five hours later the storm 's
center,
with winds slightly re
duced to 108 miles an hour, was
78 miles southwest of Izuhara on
Tsushima Island, midway between
Japan and Korea. The Weather
Bureau said Emma was moving
northeastward
at
27
miles
an
hour.
Military authorities closed down
all but the most essential U. S.
activities on Kyushu, and ordered
all Americans to stay indoors.
From 15 to 24 inches of rain belted
the island.
Japan Air Lines canceled its in
ter-island flights. The U. S. Air
Force evacuated most of its planes
had if the people will consider the
Marin* Drakos, 24, reported to
operating body as hostile and as ,>e Grivas’ righthand man and No.
against their sovereignty,
their ^ ,n ,*1*' EOKA command,
rights and their dignity.”
I
3S mfn ,ir* generally be
Nasser s note accused Britain, ,
u
*°
^
^ard c®r* °l
France and the Suez Canal Co. of E(,KA
Most or all of them are
creating difficulties despite which
Egypt had kept the canal going.
“The crisis and the so-called
‘grave situation’ are . . . artifici
ally created" by these three, he
charged.
Little Kidnap
Victim Buried
thought to be hiding out in the
rugged mountains along (he north
coast and in central Cyprus.
Bishop Issues Statem ent
Meanwhile, Bishop Yennadios of
Salamis said in a statement print
ed in the Greek language news
paper Elefthena:
"The presence in Cyprus of for
eign troops for serving aims alien
to the desires of the Cypriot peo
ple is condemned by them. We
consider that this adion by the
British proves that Britain is not
seriously concerned in finding a
solution to satisfy the tftsirte of
the Cypriot people for self-deter*
WESTBURY, N. Y , Sept 9 ifu-
Little
Peter
Weinberger
was
buried today, two months and five{mination, and so the gap between
the British government and the
Cypriot people becomes wider."
The bishop is acting head of the
ethnarchy office in the absence of
Bishop Anthimos of Kitium, who
is under house arrest af his home
days after he was kidnaped from
the rear patio of his
parents’
home.
The service was quiet and pri
vate, with none of the publicity
that has dogged the family since
the month-old infant was taken '
Camaca because of alleged con-
p o r t e d . 453,052 voted for th e! 00 K>rushu to the Tok>° area o r !last J 'dy 4 P rier was found dead nections with EOKA. The ethnar
amendment and J 10.906 against.
The double barrelled Pearsall
amendment does not change the
state’s constitutional provision for
maintaining public schools.
However, it modifies the consti
tution so as to:
1. Permit a local school unit,
upon a petition of 15 per cent of
its voters, to vote whether to close
its
schools.
The
governor has
called this a safety-valve device
which he hoped would be used
only in “intolerable" situations.
2. Permit the payment of public
Seoul. Korea.
Entire communities were evacu
ated in the face of tidal waves traveled parkway, six miles from
along the coasts of Kyushu and Westbury.
Angelo John LaMarca, 31-year-
old cabbie, of Plainview, has been
indicted for kidnaping and mur-
the offshore Goto Islands.
Six Drown In Philippines
der. both punishable by death.
Delayed by the requirements of
police agencies, the burial today
Em m a s southern fringe brought
floods in the Philippines, took six
lives by drownings, injured scores |
jatcn/led'onlv' by 'mem bers of
of others and caused property and thf, immediate family
crop damage of nearly 24 million
The only word of it was con
dolers, mostly on Luzon Island.
j tamed in a brief announcement
Both the U. S. Army and Air afterwards by Rabbi Samuel Lan
Force
reported
several
million I ger, of the Westbury Hebrew con*
funds, both state and local, to dollars worth of damage to their gregation.
who
conducted
the
parents who want to send their buildings alonp on Okinawa. The service with the aid of
Rabbi
children to private schools be- ^ rmy est,mated $250 non dam age Jac ob Rudin. oi Temple Beth El.
to new, unsold post exchange mer- 1 Great Neck, N. Y.
cause they object to sending them
to integrated public schools.
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Sept. 9
(iP—Marian
McKnight
of
South
Carolina,
a
gracious
teen-ager
with a sense of humor, launched
her year-long reign today as Miss Miss Slaughter, who described the
new queen as a girl who “knows
her own mind.”
America 1957.
And she told newsmen:
“ I’ve already found out I can’t
do what I like."
|title over 49 other contestants and
With little more than two hours .was crowned before an applaud-
Aug. 24 in woods near the Plain- ckT office is the inner cabinet of
view, N. Y., exit ramp of a w«*ll- j trie Greek Orthodox Church.
Rep. Arends Nam ed
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 <AP-Rep.
Arends tR-UD today was named
I a cochairman of the Republican
National Committee’s farm divi
sion for the fall campaign to serve
with Colorado Gov. Dan Thornton.
Today's Chuckle
Some people have made an
art of being slow to pick up
the check. You’ve got to hand
it to them.
(copyright General Feature* « i»rp I
chandise and extensive losses to
port facilities.
The Army newspaper Stars and
Stripes said 36 vicious security pa
trol dogs which broke loose at the
height of the storm had been
rounded up by military police.
Secretary Sees Ike
Landslide Victor
LINCROFT. N J . Sept. 9 (IU
Bernard M. Shanley, secretary to ^
President Eisenhower, warned to- |l i « l l l *vc *vfa n c P r o f a r
day against overconfidence among lYllrl IlCSO lCl IlS l l t l C !
President would eEfSFJZ Kefauver To Nixon
try “ in the greatest landslide in
history."
MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 9 (IF-The
Shanley. of Bernardsville, told Minneapolis
Tribunes Minnesota
Aiken Declares Stevenson
Using 'Big Lie Technique'
the Monmouth County Federation
Marian won the Miss America of Republican Women that be'ief
of a “shoo-in" victory would be
courting the same disaster as in
sleep, M a r i a n went smilingly
through a hectic two-hour grind
with photographers and reporters
at a postbreakfast news confer
ence.
“ I like to go to bed late and to
sleep late," the 19-year-old blonde
beauty queen from Manning, S.C.,
confided. But Lenora Slaughter,
d i r e c t o r of the Miss America
pageant, promptly informed Marl
ing crowd of 22,000 in Convention
Hall and a nationwide television
audience last night.
Her t a l e n t specialty, a drawl
ing, hip-swinging takeoff on ac
tress Marilyn Monroe, helped her
win the title and a $50,000 jack
pot that includes a $5,000 scholar
ship, a wardrobe and fees for the
personal
appearances
she
will
make during her reign.
1948 when Harry Truman upset
Thomas Dewey.
As
the
President s
secretary
Shanley said he had been with
him “ more than any other person
except his family. I can assure
you that he is better today than
he has .ever been to my knowledge.
“He has more vigor, more drive
and real ability to do this job than
any man living."
poll today reported a preference said the
for Sen. Estes Kefauver over Vice nominee
President Richard Nixon, should
either of the vice presidential can
didates
become president
some
time in the next four years.
Of 1,000 voting age residents
questioned by poll interviewers,
the Tribune said 60 per cent fa
vored Kefauver, the Democratic
nominee, and 34 per cent picked
Nixon, the Republican candidate.
Six per cent were undecided and
less than one per cent said “ Nei
ther one."
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9 U*-Sen.
Aiken
IR-Vt) said today
Adlai
Stevenson “has resorted to the big
lie technique"
in talking about
Republican attitudes toward small
farmers.
Aiken, ranking Republican on
the Senate Agriculture Committee
gives these
'small)
farmers a
chance to earn extra income and
stay on their farm s."
The senator’s statement dealt
with a Stevenson speech yester
day before the Ohio Democratic
convention in Columbus.
Aiken said Stevenson is follow-
Democratic presidential ing a "policy of misrepresentation
says the
Republicans
have forsaken the small farm ers."
Aiken added:
“The issues are so clearcut rn
this instance Mr. Stevenson has
resorted to the big lie technique
to cloud them. He ought to recall
the words of a great Republican,
Abe Lincoln, ‘You can’t fool all of
the people all of the time.’ ”
Aiken, in a statement released
by the Republican National Com
mittee. said “ President Eisenhow-
er’s rural development program
on farm issues
which he said "is
caving in around him."
The senator contended Steven
son “finally
has
admitted
that
Democrat farm policies created
surpluses that are difficult to get
rid of." And he added:
“ He obviously is so devoid of
ideas on what to do about sur
pluses that he has been d< mded
into believing low income tamilies
can eat it all—-regardless of the
fact that many commodities, like
cotton, are not edible.”
"Mo*! Sirloin Problem**
“ We came here." Menzies said,
“lo discuss thr most serious prob
lem the world has before it.
“We wanted to discuss it »•
quietly and fully as possible.
“We thought this could hest be
done without daily statements by
the ‘champions of both sides ‘ ”
For that reason, he explained,
no
daily
announcements
w ert
made of the progress of the talks,
Menzies announced the “compre-
ttawnve
conference
documents"
were
being
released
in Cairo.
Washington and london. He said
they included a summary of all
the
arguments
his
commission
presented to Nasser, and a sum
mary of the viewpoint which Nas
ser expressed to the committee.
“ We came here.” Menzies said
“to present certain propositions,
explain them, advance arguments
m favor of (hem, and to illustrate
their meaning.
“ We have done that.
“ We have been given all tha
time to do this that we required.
There has been no delay on either
aide.”
Spotlight On London
Failure of the talks in Cairo
turned the spotlight on a meeting
in London tomorrow of British and
French leaders to decide their
next step in attempting to counter
Nasser’s
nationalizing the vital
103-mile waterway.
There was talk that B r i t i s h
Prime Minister Eden would try
to put the Suez problem before
the United Nations.
But French Premier Guy Mol-
let. in a speech at Piers in Nor
mandy gave no sign that France
was ready to agree to an appeal
to the U.N,
Moilet and F r e n c h Foreign
Minister Christian Pincau will he
in London tomorrow to confer with
Eden and Foreign Sec retary Sci-
wyn Lloyd.
Memorial Rites
Attended By Ike
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa., Sept.
9 h — President
Eisenhower
re
ceived communion today at pri
vate Episcopal services dedicating
a new Pennsylvania State Univer
sity chapel to the memory of his
late sister-in-law.
The
new
all-faith
chapel
is
named for Helen Eakm Eisenhow
er, who was the wile of the Presi
dent's youngest brother, Dr. Mil
ton S. Eisenhower. She died July
IO. 1954
Eisenhower
flew
here
from
Washington in a small two-engine
plane for the services for the fam
ily and a few friends.
A public dedication ceremony
will be held next Sunday.
Eisenhower returned to the cap
ital by air immediately after the
solemn memorial observance.
He was accompanied both ways
by Lt, Col. Walter Tkach, assist
ant White House physician, and
press secretary Jam es C. Hager*
ty. The President’s wile did not
make the trip.
The President was met at the
university airstrip by Milton Ei
senhower, who is retiring Oct. I
as president of Penn State to be
come president of Johns Hopkins
University at Baltimore.
A crowd of about 200 students
and faculty members stood in the
warm sun at the chapel when the
President s limousine drove up.
He got a round of applause then
and another on leaving the chapel.
TWO
THE C UM BERLAN D
N EW S.
CUM BERLAN D ,
MD.,
M O N D AY,
SEPTEM BER
IO,
1956
Guy To Operate [ £
£
»
«
Walk Lights
In Frostburg
Need Changes
Enrollment Increases
PAW PAW
W. V a- Paw Paw
High School's opening day enroll
ment thin year was 143. an in*;
crease of IS from last year's 128.1
according to Thomas Small, pnn ;
cipal.
There is a possibility of the
enrollment becoming eyen larger
father, Samuel Neat and family.
|thcm from Garretl coun(y and thc Street.
. Westernport
Filtration Plant
Town Officials
Fill $3,000 Post
***** *A*.I M%ia/W >>■ awswMNUd;
ll
I
nfi ' .MW1 r OHRI IHI, alii! JTIIJb. I IIUII1*$^ j
**• nii«|WWVU, TW. %«f.. lit*
W ESTERNPORT — Barnard L. from vacations, ,The enrollment j ^ney were
*n P ^
inner Warmck and daughter. Robin, all! fort Magistrate Frank W. Pritt.
ay, 412 Spruce Street has been include* IS senior*. 18 junior*
,*|')!/np ^ K*C<In^.,|1y n MaX r s
*df H>allsv,lle«
»n(1 Mr**
Tr0°P c r John K. Coleman, of the
FROSTB1 RG -In order to have
the new walk lights in operation at
Barton
Personals
I
Misses Phyllis and Carolyn Neat,*
Washington, D. C., visited their
Deer Park Men
Face Rape Count
Frostburg Ten Pin
League Opens Tuesday
- m e P A 2-44SP *
o
j w
r r j N
D
T o ^
Mr* fassail Falls
Troop WiM Meet
Mrs. lassw rdii>,
, f.R0STBURG _ Troop No.
Fractures Her Hip
sponsored by the First Methodist
FROSTBURG - The
Frostburg
_ _ Mrs
E U M - Church will resume fall
Ten Pin League will open
its fall WESTERNPORT
Tuesday at 7:30 p m. In therec*
season Tuesday,
at the Recreation
beth Cassell 88. who has
•
reallon room of the educational
OAKLAND—Three men
two of Bow,mg
Alley*
on
tasl
Main w i t h her
s o n and daughter in law|buj,dmg
according to Arthur T.
Mr
and Mrs. William Pattison Bond. chairman of the troop com-
Miss Eleanor Mowbray returned other from Terra Alta, were or-
to Washington, D. C „ after visit- dercd held for action of the Octo-
mg her parents. Mr. and Mrs. ber term grand jury in Preston
Benjamin Mowbray.
[county, West Virginia, on charges
as some pupils were believed to ,hf
Tr^ffiiT
^ rs- Anna Moore, Miss Joyce of rape following a preliminary
have bren delayed in returning
.
7
. A.
Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Thorne hearing at Kingwood. W
\a.. be-
Guy, 412 Spruce ____
named the operator of Western* sophomores. 33 freshmen, 28 eighth
1 ” ,u ' ' 1 * !'* !!"
".“ ‘u "A r anH ^ wen
Broadwater
Lonaconing,
ports now
filtration
plant
now graders and 31 seventh graders.
1
*
n* m
a‘ .
.
* " % n d Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Warnick,
being constructed on Westernport
Returning
leathers
are
Miss ' f,,n
in tract ion was
t iLaurel Run.
Hill by the George Construction Mary Urgent. Mrs. William Gofla- A T *
V"
Terr i veil bv the
M,ss Caro! M<?tz returned to the
Company rf CumbarUod
id . .
Ralpl,
Kddy
M r,
J S
j f
- *
p* " " * f t ^
Th. appointm.nl wa. mad,
Marten states that all of th.
Sr. of her. Irani
a special rn.ot.ns o( Mayor Okoyjpnnc.pal
S t .
arr Mrs
^
^
>riju, tfd nmv and
should make these intersections
The league this yea:
is com-'FranWin
for 21 years, fractured mittee
prised of four teams:
the Lions
whcn shc fpl, from a chair «
Clu.1). the Republican Club, the
f
m Memorial Hos-
Cantos Club and th. D. A. V. Club SH' '» * P» J "
wh(re sh. un- F
Th. firs, match is ,ch.dul.d
Shr „ also the f
7:3u p. rn
,,
, r-
. r Pattison Lon-
Teentow n A dults
molh.r of Em .it C. Pattison. Lon-
aconing.
much safer for pedestrians.
All of the parking meters on
Main Street between Water and the
alley above the Palace Theatre will
be changed over to half hour met
ers within the next few days. The
E. Michael and Town Commission-;Guy Sharp, who replaces Baxter
era Friday evening. He will assume Holt, and Sid Roach, who succeeds
hi* duties on October I at an Robert Wolford,
annual salary of $3 OOO There were
position but they were not revealed Bloodmobile Will
Si,I? F J S F i r Z S : Visit Westernport
that their names would be kept
confidential
I
WESTERNPORT - The Johns-
Guy. who is a son of Mr
and 'own bloodmobile unit will be at
Mr*. Joseph P. Guy, operates a ^
home of Victory Post
135.
grocery store on Wood Street HeiAmeric*n Legion. Tuesday from
is a graduate of Bruce High School noon 1° 6 P- m-
A World War ll veteran, he was
Members of
Beta Sigma
Phi
graduated from the U. S. Navy sorority
are
contacting
former
Boilermaker * School and from the donors and trying to secure new
International Correspondent School,onfS
_
of Scranton Pa. in plumbing and
I ho«e between the ages of 18 n A rill% . A „ w | i A A i*
steam fitting
i»nrt 59 inclusive weighing at least K 6 SU IT 1 6 S iV lC C tin g S
While a pipe fitter’* helper at 110 pounds and in normally good
the Celane.se Plant he had some health may contribute blood Any
FROSTBURG—Mountain Chapter
experience in the filter plant there, one who does not have an appoint*
The Mayor and Commissioners mfr,t m*y walb *n
are sending Guy to the University
As * result of the bloodmobile s
of Maryland, for a
.-tamui'i
jvipii or. oi
nerr ii urn
Chicago, IU , where she was em- f
.
'pong man. ( harles
ployed for the summer.
Mr.
and
Mr*.
Arthur
Columbus. Ohio, and Mr. and Mr*.
William Spriggs and son. Steven,
Arlington. Va , visited Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Houdersheldt.
Preston county state police detach
mcnt, identified the trio as Oscai «w
n j
,
Pale Uphold
33. of Deer Park IO m Bet I OMgnT
Robert Dean Canan, Deer Park,;
and Donald Ellsworth Everly, 22.
FROSTBURG — Howard Duck-
,
. r .
.« un 3 Bedford
Terra Alta
worth, prudent of the board rf
Joseph O re u e JL KU »•
adult advisor* of Teentown. has P«
who was ^ ro ilW to » « " “
announced that the annual meet-r'ol Hospital .amra,
, ,
ing of adult members of the organ
ization will be held at the Fire
men's Hall today at 7:30 p. rn.
All persons with children who
attend Teentown are welcome to
Isiah Whetsell, 21. of Bluemont.
j Va., was held a* a material wit*
onn’ ness and released on S500 bond.
Everly
and
Uphole
were
re
leased on $2,000 bond and Canan
was attempting to raise bond.
The officer said the alleged at-
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Clark andjtacks were on Bertha Ellen Miller
changing of the time on the few daughter. Karen, Baltimore, visit-(Kelly, 33. of Terra Alta, and occur
meters between Water and Broad
way several week* ago has so im
proved the situation, according to
Commissioner Marten*, that it was
thought advisable to make this fur
ther change.
Frostburg OES
ed Mr. and Mrs. Archie Clark of red the night of August 22 on Rag
Tavern
road
near
Terra
Alta.
Boy Hor! In Blast
In Good Condition
Hill nwytioi
,
injuries to his right and left
suffered when a ‘ stick
de wa a
pounding
suddenly
exploded
is
reported in good condition.
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Greise
Smith Canan and Uphole were appre
hended later in Oakland. Whetsell
and Everly were arrested in Terra
attend this annual meeting and informed
hospital a ac ’
may offer suggestions and com son
mu*f
havp tomf
c u‘
ments for the improvement of the stick of dynamite
group, A new adult advisory board
will be elected at this meeting to
bere.
Mr.
and
Mrs
Russel
visited
Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence
Stephen at Bittinger.
Ralph .lenkms, Grantsville, is Alta,
visiting relatives here.
Paul Metz, Chicago. 4IU., visited ..
his parents. Mr. and Mr*. Sam Harper Opens New
Moore returned horn, C t" W «
h i" 9 S h o p
after spending two weeks with Mr.! FROSTBURG — A new business recreation room with Miss Rosella
and Mrs. Floyd Clark and Mr. and Hogan operations last week when Youngerman. president, presiding
No. ll, Order of Eastern Star™ will: Mrs. James Artman and fam ily1'0™ 8 Harper opened a car wash-
-------------------
-----
resume
its fait schedule Wednes
at Murrysville Pa.
mK 8bop at a recently completed
|.’or
sale:
Commodore
Wood
dav at 8 p. rn
in
the Masonic Tem- ^ rs- Daisy Hyde and Miss Sally, ^oni-retc block building at 85 Beall clarinet,
like
new.
girl*
shoe-
• I J- _ rn L
« f>
I • •
• I
Awl
I ,
skates, size 8, Phone Frostburg
Adv. N-T-Sept. IO
serve for the coming year.
Society Meets Today
FROSTBURG—The
Ladies
Aid
Society of Salem Evangelical and
Reformed church. Broadway, will
meet today at 7:45 p. rn. in the
«i
.naiyianu, lur
a course on vis,t ,0 Allegany County
every'ple with Mrs Mary Settle, worthy Hyde of here, Mr. and Mrs. John Strr, f
----
operating a filter plant .September Pfrson within the jurisdiction of matron, and Thomas B
Powell,1 Rhodes and daughter, Arlington
a8
hi* shop with oj.m.
1 ^ 4 inclusive conducted bv the *he county chapter of the Red worthy patron,
presiding at the Va . returned from Detroit, Mich., the latest equipment for washing ----
_______ r n __
State Health Department of Mary- Cross is eligible to secure blood
land and the Chesapeake Division and blood derivatives when needed.
of
the
American
Water
Work* The entire cost of collecting blood
Association.
is borne by the Red Cross from
funds donated in the annual cam
paign each March.
Return Homa
Mr. md Mr., a j Maswt aud Ellerslie Briefs
Mrs. Carne Janson of Baltimore
have returned home after visiting
The Mt. Savage Band Parents
with Mis* Ethel Pierce, McCullohand Booster s Club will meet this
Slreet-
evening, at 7 SO o’clock in the Mt.
----------- 1
" Savage School.
business session
where they
visited Mrs. Rhodes greasing, and lubricating cars, and
A social hour WHI ha held aller (“ r *
Mr »"1 M r. John pl«ns to open a snack bar and rec
Rhodes will
spend a week here nation center for teenagers in the
with Mr*. Daisy Hyde before re- other side of the building,
turning to Arlington.
Leon Kirk returned home from
Potomac Valley Hospital, Keyser,
IO ¥1*1?
where he was a pa'ient.
W ESTERNPO RT—The Tit Col-
ML * ^ . Mu‘ J
aCk
" “ I™- lector will be at the Westernport
the
business
meeting
Refresh
ment* will be served by a commit
tee headed by Mr*. Helen Harvey.
Frostburg Receives
Bicycle License Fags
AOVftmtMlNT
CARBUERTOR SAVES
GAS BY “JCT-ING”
Car
Awner*
who
are
wasting
The budget
for
the coming year will he set and
ed to Washington. D. C.. after
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Wellington
Conn and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Griffin Jr.,
Baltimore, visited their families
here.
attend
The ladies auxiliary of the Vol
money and not felling proper ga* 'un,wr Firemen will sell vegetable
mileage due to «?er-rirh mixture* 0UP> Wednesday, at noon in the
will be
pleated lo learn of a ^Irf Hall.
____________________
H im ormij inventor who ba* de
veloped a very clever unit that
cave*
lanoline
by
“ Jet mg
and
Varu-maUng." It I* automatic awd
operate* on the *uperrharge prin
ciple. Easily installed In a few
minutes,
Fits
cars.
trucks
and
tractor*. The manufacturers, the
FROSTBURG—The metal license
tags for bicycles have been re
ceived by the Police Department,
according to Police CommUsioner
other important business will be Franklin Martens and will be is*
transacted
All members and in sue(i lo those children who have
patrons
. r ,
urScd
lh bhd th ,,rh ,C K I. checked and per.|(ind
wk)
A|
p
mils issued, but have not yet been1
. ..
raiatil.p, L rV
issued their metal license plates.^* V,SlUng rc,a,,ves here-
They may be obtained by apply
ing at the police station on wed- N e w P e n s A r r iv e
nesday. September 12. between 5 A . . . .
and 7 p m
A t W e s t e r n p o r t
Bicycles
no, previously checked w ESTERNPORT - The West-
may he brousht rn for inspection *tjfrnport p.,.,
o(llce has reccaed
its ball point pens and they have
been placed in use Thomas V.
City Building Thursday from I to!
5 p. rn. ‘DST) to receive state and
county taxes.
The sense of smell is the first
. . .
..of the five senses developed among
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyu Gatten* *nd|humaDg
children are vacationing in Canada.
Mr. and Mr*. Richard Metis
NEW FA LL PA T TER N S
SK ID M O R E'S
W A L L P A P E R Ii P A IN T
41 East Main St .
Frostburg
the same hours on Wednesday, ac
. 'cording to Martens.
r n
Varu-mattc Carburetor Co., 7*17-
IT M . Atole, Wauwatosa, W ts„ ore
•tiering o Vorwmoile to any owe
who wilt Install It on his m r and
help Introduce It to other*. They
will gladly tend full free particu
lar* lf you wrtfe them or send your
name and andrena on a poet card
today.
(FIERLE
noRFiiRn
C O S M E T I C S
IU to. Liberty It.
March In Parade
McGuire, postmaster, states.
They are the same type of pen
that the government has put in
Darrell Zeller, post offices throughout the country.
FROSTBURG
dtrtctor of the Arion Band, and;
hi* brother Dr. William B, Zeller .
.
n
•
of Bedford. P a . left Friday for L o n a c o n in g P e r s o n a ls
Baltimore, where they wilt marchi
..
. . . .
...
.
.
with Hie All Ghan Shrine Band , Mr/ nf / ' r
Ahlbert Hf dlcy 1’ " d
d I and
anend
(he
Mid
Allan,,cl;!f m' ' “ adl' y hav' .r,turned “
Shriners
Coneen!,on
hclns
held J " eland' ° h‘0' afU;r
‘^ nl
the week-end visiting at the Hadley
homo on Church Street here.
i
there. They were accompanied by
Mrs. William Zeller.
PROCLAMATION
WHEREAS* the maintenance of peace and. a* an alternative,
personal and national *urviva! in the event of enemy attack are
of paramount interest to the citizen* of Allegany County. Mary land,
and
WHEREAS, the existence of a strong and efficient civil defense
is recognized a* a means of attaining thew# goal* and
WHEREAS, the strength of the Nation s civil defense depends
upon the state of individual and community disaster preparedness
throughout the Nation and
W HEREAS President Eisenhower has celled upon the Nation
to observe the week of September 9-tS as Cml Defense Week es a
means of developing an awardnens of the need for general par
ticipation in civil defense.
NOW. THEREFO RE. I William H. Lemmert, President of th*
County Commissioner*, of Allegany County do hereby proclaim the
aforementioned week ae Civil Defense Week in Allegany County
and urge the residents of Allegany County to participate in the
observance of this week
IN WITNESS W HEREOF I have hereunto set
my hand and caused the Seal of Allegany County
to be affixed this 7th day of September, 1958
ADVffTISIMINT
Rheumatism-flrthritis
N E U R IT IS — SC IA T IC A
Mr. and Mrs. Linden Stallenberg*
er and son, Graham, returned to
their home in Akron. Ohio. after
[visiting at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert B. Morton. Robbins
Street.
Relief from those torturing pains
*'fr; an^ ‘^ r*_ ( *arence Barton
or no charge, An absolute proven'and
•>' Robl>;ns Street ac-
remedy. Only one trip required c,oml’,t 11
Stallenbergeri on
Disabled
persons
may
send
a 1„h.<''r r,turn ,np 10
*' Akron'
Special This Week!
1950 O LD S
Super ‘88*
4-Dr. Sedan
*
4
9
5
Green Chee. Ce.
Phone 200
Frostburg
•
O PEN EV EN IN G S
ANNUAL PUBLIC
MEETING
for
ADULT M EM B E R S
TEENTOWN
Third Floor of
Firemen’s Hall
Mon., Sept. 10th
7:30 P. M.
To Elect Adult
Advisory Board
^RADIATORS
REMOVED
REPAIRED
RECORED
DONS
Radiator Shop
20* MICHANIC ST.
F*OST*U*0
PHONE 759-R
PALACE THEATRE
Air-Conditioned
Mon., Tue*., Wed., Thur*.
G
r
e g
o
r
y
P
e
c
k
P j c h a r p , L * o
B
a s e h a R t G
e k n
J
o
h n H
u s t o t j
■ *f ama, an, mire
7 V U ° B y D
i c
k
m
»TWCMNICOL0*
• « « »
.eeOMiea
. J I T jOHR HUSTON
—
scot
R E V I V A L
Central Assembly
Cor. Johnson and
Foyefte ST*.
Sept. 11-16
7:45 Nightly
Evangelist
Richard Beavers
Frem Ctewietee, FteriJw
A young man with an up to date
message from God. Evangelist
Braver* will play and sing with
his guitar, accordion and elec
tric base.
All Welcome!
Frank J. FraHe, Patter
S P E C I A L !
Bm u UIbI 119.95 Storage Chut-TV Bench with
•ach ne* Eurtfci Supe Roto-Mitlc Model 910.
friend, 45 South Mt. Vernon Ave.,
500 ft. off Route 40. Uniontown.
Pa. Office Hours: Daily 10-6. Sun
day 10-4. Permanently located.
Ohio.
Sherman Hyde is a surgical pa
tient in Memorial Hospital. Cum
berland
Mrs Marjorie Clark is a patient
in Miners Hospital, Frostburg.
Now on Disploy . , .
Tho Now
Gulbranson
Pianos
Tbs Rian* et Quality
end Superiority
PEOPLES
FU R N ITU R E STORE
tllNHARTS
The
K e<oq rn ted
Leading House
Furnishers in Western Maryland.'
IT lA lT IM O R I ST
LOOK FOR YOUR LETTER
FROM
Coming W ednesday
.....rf em a;
* regularly for only U
s your one thance for a
parlo get
py
co get
A * copy.
.rff a year to get
^ttorry for only IO* a copy.
It V your one chance for a year to get
L IF E regularly for only lOf a copy.
Its your one chance for a year to get
L IF E regularly for only lOf a copy.
I t’s your one chance for a year to get
L IF E regularly for only lOf a copy.
It ’* your one chance for a year to get
L IF E regularly for only lOf a copy.
It's your one chance for a year to get
L IF E regularly for only IO* a copy.
It ’s your one chance for a year to get
L IF E regularly for only IO* a copy.
It'* your one chance for a year to ge
L IF E regularly for only IO* a c
It ’* your one chance for a year ti ^
| J iv. Mguiaxly tot only IO* a cony-
- I FE r e g u l ^ H F ^ y f *
It's vouj^Tchan, B B 4 ‘‘alto C»*l
LIFEeegularly to M m iO t/copy.
Its ymir on
, i y ^ ]*3 Ly*1"M to get
L IF ■ reguUn^n^PonB fwAi copy.
It ’s A u r one chan«^ h m M m r to get
Liyfceguiiyjjy
copy
l l ‘^ V ^ ra d l^ « tn c (^ lM y # r to K*'1
LIFg \w u laim Jor onlyTJ# a copy.
It’s your
to get
L IF E r e g A J W y n l y 10r a copy
It s your oildb Lffe for a year to
L IF E r e g A - ly n l°nly IO* a c
It’syoujjpiechai
L IF E Jgularly for
It’s yder one c
regularly f^only IO* a
i for a year
for only IO* a
•one chance for a year t'
Regularly for only IO* a
four one chance for a year to ge"
; reg}Warty (or only LO* a cony.
• copy.
, year to get
*»y IO* a copy.
jt for a year to get
for only IO* a copy.
V o n r chance for a year to get
E regularly for only IO* a copy.
.c's your one chance for a year to get
L IF E regularly for only IO* a copy.
I t’s your one chan Wfk^gimmL^0
L IF E re g u lM ^ ^ n T y T W
It’s your oi^Rm c
I J F E j ^ T r l y for
It’s
cha
L IK 7 \ * A ^ < ¥ o1
It’s y o u rP t" n<-» f
L IF E
Its y o u rfV ■in'
I J FE rt»gVarly for on
It 'sjmiMwbRi vnce for a yea ii o get
n%g u ly|yg ^ p ly IO* w ’opy
1% v§i^mjJrhane^or
tyfV
ce fo
o r o # IO* a
r o iU cffl^ O - a Whir to
IF S regularly for
It’s your one chance
L IF E regularly for
It's your one cha
People 60 to 80
Apply For Old Lino Legal
Reserve Life Insurance
If you ere under SO. ^ou can
still apply for a ll OOO life in
surance policy to help take care
of
final expenses
without
bur
dening your family.
You
can
handle
the
entire
transaction
by
mail
with
OLD
AMERICAN of
KANSAS
CITY.1
No obligation of any kind. No
one will call on you!
Write today for free informa
tion.
Simply
mail
postcard
or
letter ^giving age) to Old Amer
ican Ins. Co , 3 W. 9th, Dept |
L919B. Kansas City. Mo.
POWER MOWER
REPAIRS
Complete Line of
Genuine Port*
FACTORY AUTHORIZED
SERVICE
Claysville Motors
Them** Oracle end Iverett Went#
PH O N E HOO
TO INTRO DU CE THE SENSATIONAL
H e ld
R
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B a w l
1956 E
SUPER
YOUR
LAYING HENS
will do thoir best on
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11
Os reported at once
Monday Morning. September IO, 1956
Groper Approach
Is Still Debated
Hou to treat the 60 OOO drug addicts in the
* nited States—as criminals or as physical and
r " *] invalids-—is being talked about in the wake
r
roc<?nt changes
in
federal
narcotic
control
f< dilation. When Congress revised the law a few
Months ago. it adhered to the punitive approach
problem which has been followed in this
country for m ore than 40 years.
However, its
action was preceded by expressions of opposition
in committee hearings from advocates of greater
reliant e on the medical approach. M eanwhile, the
American Medical Association and the American
Bar Association have undertaken a joint study to
S'1* more light on the question.
The m ovem ent to control traffic in narcotics
*as riven strong im petus by the International
Opium Convention in 1912. To carry out obligations
a timed by the United States under that agree*
men* Congress in 1914 passed the Harrison Act,
which set up a policing system designed to confine
iise of narcotics to medical purposes. Importation
o: opium or its derivatives for other than medical
purposes had been banned in 1909, and the ban
was tightened in 1912 by the Narcotic Drugs Import
and Export Act.
Irater legislation has strengthened or supple*
mented these two basic regulatory statutes. Prison
trims tor violation of the narcotic laws were made
mandatory in 1951 for all except first offenders.
T h e Narcotic Control Act of 1956 made prison
sentences mandatory for even first offenders and
prescribed longer term s and heavier fines. The
death penalty or life imprisonment was authorized
for celling or giving heroin to minors.
Siiffening of controls failed to prevent a rise
in ’he rate of addiction when illicit supplies became
more plentiful after World War II. Some persons
contend that the evil never can be wiped out by
punitive measures.
Vigorous efforts to prevent
smuggling only raise prices of drugs to heights
which make the traffic highly lucrative. And drug
addicts not otherwise impelled to crime, become
thieves or prostitutes to obtain the $15 or $50 or
even $100 a day needed to satisfy their craving.
Worst of all. they may turn to peddling and initiate
os her*, into the habit to get a steady source of funds
for their own supplies.
To knock the props from unflor the illicit
traffic, the New York Academ y of Medicine and
other medical groups have proposed that public
(times be established across the country to admin
ister narcotics to addicts at nominal cost and under
carefully controlled conditions. All efforts would
*9 made to induce addicts to undergo withdrawal
treatment and rehabilitation while receiving only
enough drugs to prevent severe discom fort. It is
recognized that a hard-core group probably would
have to be given minimal doses indefinitely.
These Days
I I *0 t
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In l l ,
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U.S.
p r o s p e r it y
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* 1
^
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^
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JUIIdlUI MldllS u t i t h , u u u ,v u u c o p i e s
Of Speech At Taxpayers Expense
rn
- ■
*
■ * 1 'tjv v
■
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•
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-
mmtssmrn
(Editor’*
now#
Prow
V’oarMM
I*
(oui tnt Ow Mxiai* Boat.
During hi*
ah**n< t h i* to iu m n t* b r in * w ritte n
toy hi* hinior partoai. Jar* And*#-
•Oft I
WASHINGTON - Sen Tom Mar*
tin IR., Iow a' has broken all rec
ords for abusing tho free mailing
privilege. He bas lust mailed mil
a Staggering 4.000 000 copies ol a
political speech at the taxpayers'
expense.
This is the biggest load ol free
mail ever dumped on the public bv
a single senator, making Martin
the new undisputed franking king.
This dubious title previously was
held by Congressm an Ralph Gwinn
<R., N Y i, vs ho periodically floods
his district with political
litora-
tine. In fact
Ins printed speeches
have become a m ajor source of
paper for lighting tires in Bronx
ville, N. V.
Yet Gwinn
in his most am biti
ous cam paigns to advertise his own
speeches, never mailed oui any
thing like 4 000.000 copies
M artin’s record mailing is going
to farm ers in
IS slates
It s a
farm speech, called “ Fifty Facts
for F a rm e rs ” which presum ably
is meant to influence the (arm
vole
henatnr’s “ Valet**
HIGHLIGHTS
AND
S ID E
LIGHTS — The State D epartm ent
heard recently that Sen
Bourke
Hickenlooper <R„ Iowa*, then tour
ing the F ar F ast, wanted govern
ment funds for a valet
Hicken
looper is not the type who needs
a valet to help him dress, so this
column investigated
The taxpay
ers will he relieved to know it was
all
a
typographical
error.
The
Reporter Believes Presidential Race Will Be Close
By Geergt E. .Sokoltky
The Supreme Court
It has happened before and it is happening now that
the Supreme Court of the United States is a controversial
factor in a presidential election
Nobody can vote for a
fustic* of the Supreme Court.
He is appointed by the
President, is confirmed by the Senate and holds office or
life units* impeached for misconduct or retires for old
aee
Once appointed, for w hatever re a s o n .* Supreme
Court justice sits no m atter how often the adm inistration
c h V
-lur.ne Ii.. Ufe-t.mc
T h.
chief * * « .
1 ..I W arren, former governor of California, nad never
before had any iud,cal experience. H i. a p p a lm e n t w e.
,bvim ,4,
political
While
thai
in
no way
reflect,
unfavorably upon hi. capabilities, he ^ . become ,
subject for controversy since he was elevated lo
bench.
The principal criticism of the ( nurt and the cause
„f us being an issue in this election is the old
American quarrel over states* rights.
Historically.
thf issue is a simp!** oho. The United States is not
a nation that grew out of the soil; it was formed. It
formed bv the IS colonies thai rebelled against
( real Britain in 1776 by enunciating the Declaration
al Independence.
They attempted to govern them-
-Ives under the Articles A Confederation which were
loose
that
practically
speaking
no
national
g o v ern m en t could function.
Under the influence of
, hf Federalist party led by Alexander Hamilton, the
Constitution was written and adopted and this has
been our law since.
While the
Constitution
does
establish
a
central
cm eminent with specific authority, it protects states
,
i.is bv the 10th Amendment which declares:
* "The powers not granted to the United States by the
C o n stitu tio n , nor prohibited by it to the states, are
rrserved to the states respectively or to the people
The War Between the States settled the question of
*hr ncht of a sovereign state to secede from the United
K . J ,f it so chooses.
Although the War Between the
v ’irs did strengthen the federal government, it did not
abolish states’ rights and no amendment was ever adopted
I initio* the 10th Amendment or abolishing it.
Recent
Supreme
Court
decisions
have
been
recorded as tending to deprive the states of rights
which they are entitled by the t onstituiion.
The
southern states, for instance, claim that they were
Hoking great progress in the solution of the Negro
nuestion, but that a Supreme Court decision aroused
such passions in the South that it set hack racial
•
elations in the South several decades. This decision
I definitely an anti-states’ rights decision.
Out of 13 decisions dealing with Communist cases,
the supreme ( our! decided six in such a manner that
the Communist cause has gained a new lease of life.
lf the Supreme Court pursues abstract justice as an
end in itself, it is beyond and above criticism; in that
, hsc. however, the Court must recognize that it Is
not a third legislative chamber and that the Consti
tution does not provide for such a body.
On the other hand,
no
government agency can
altogether flout public opinion.
The current Supreme
Court has run counter to public opinion and thereby has
become a political issue in the country. If the Court is
highly respected, as it was when Edward D. White or
W illiam Howard Taft or Charles Evans Hughes wait enief
justice it could pursue a course which caused men to
pausf in their attitudes.
E arl W arren has not yet won
such confidence or respect.
(Copyright, 1956, King Feature* Syndicate, Inc.)
WASHINGTON
As of today, after a personal pol
ling experience in the Northwest
and careful study of all the other
relatively hard evidence available,
this reporter is ready to go out on
a limb with the statem ent that the
election looks like a horse race.
This is only going out on a limb,
to be sure, because of the num er
ous pre-convention forecasts of a
record-breaking landslide tor Pres
ident Eisenhower. Shortly before
the conventions were held, for in
stance. Dr. George Gallup public*
ed a poll showing Eisenhower lead
ing Adali Stevenson by the stagger
ing m argain of 61 to 37. And these
rem arkable figures were then ac
cepted as perfectly reasonable by
a great m ajority of trained observ
ers. including, I must add. my-
self.
,
Dr. Gallup was recently asked
whether he thought the Eisenhow
er lead was still anything like
that indicated by hts preconvention
poll He replied rather em phatical
ly in the negative. There was al
ways, he said, a strong tendency
to close ranks alter the party nom
inees had been chosen.
May Encourage Over-Optimism
This theory of Dr. Gallup s ac
cording to m y information, will be
sustained by a sharply narrowed
Eisenhower lead in his first post-
convention poll.
But although it
is greatly daring to say so,
I
would say that even Dr. Gallup *
figures on
Eisenhower's current
lead will still be likely to encour
age Republican over optimism.
The first and least of my reasons
for this conclusion is the sharp
ness of the switch from Eisen
hower to Stevenson that I myself
found
in
Portland
and
Seattle,
where I worked with Lou H arris,
an experienced professional in the
polling business
I did not think,
and H arris did not think, that our
sample was by any means large
enough to perm it confident citation
of voting percentages. As already
reported, we were only confident
that a rather m assive Eisenhower-
to-Stevenson
switch
had
taken
place.
By Joseph Alsop
But in fact our sam ple in both
cities was enorm ously larger than
the Portland-Seattle
samples
in
cluded in the latest Gallup poll,
which is based on only 2.000 in
terviews for the whole country.
In fact our sam ple will still be
somewhat laig er than the Port
land-Seattle
sam ples
to
be
in
cluded in the special Gallup elec
tion polls ol the future, which will
be
based
on
10,000
interviews
across the country.
And
this
local
Northwestern
sam ple of ours showed the Eisen
hower 1952 lead of 55 to 45 for.
Stevenson transform ed into an ap
proxim ate Stevenson 1956 lead of
SS to 45 for Eisenhower.
Four
years ago. Eisenhow er's m ajority
in Portland and Seattle was alm ost
precisely identical with his nation
wide majority
Thus the change
in the Northwest m ight well be
regarded
as
extrem ely ominous
for the Republicans—except that I
do not take th* exalt percentages
seriously, although they are based
on local sam ples so much larger
than Dr. Gallup’s.
Genuine Phenomenon
On the other hand there is im
portant confirmation that the trans
fer of votes from Eisenhower to
Stevenson is a very gehuine and
very significant, phenomenon, which
is not limited to the Northwest. The
Wall Street Journal, for exam ple,
ordered its 12 strategically located
branch offices across the country
to undertake a poll of Eisenhower-
Nixon versus Stevenson-Kefauver
just as soon as the Democratic
nominees had been selected This
was a poll taken by a large num
ber of expert reporters, under or
ders to get a representative cross
section of opinion in a representa
tive cross section of American cit
ies
Baering Down On Th* News
By Arthur “Bug*" Bour
The afterm ath of the dessicated
conventions is a call for more cer
tified m ortar of the realm .
When you’re building for the fu
ture you’ve got to put up the wall
paper before you tear down the
scaffolding. It costs money to oil
the gears of public demand. There
has never been a penny ale on the
millenium.
The odds are a rattle in a lin
eup against a king’s ransom. It
isn t so long ago that a reform
candidate
was
financed
by
a
raffle.
Any citizen who puts his money
where his mouth is expects nego
tiable favors. Moola activates tho
m are. The jockeys don’t go along
just for the ride.
The cam paign m anagers do the
super-m arketing and are supposed
to screen the groceries. But when
the
coins are bouncing
on
the
drum you have to take the batter
with the sweat.
Harding, Wilson and G rant were
gem s in a gypsy setting. They
w ere surrounded by experts who
could throw dice over a transom
and call ’em in the next room.
In
politics the dem and
never
overlaps the supply.
The hooks
balance as evenly as a 32-tooth
bite.
The national com m ittees raise
the scratch and demand an en
dorsem ent in sky-writing. I ts a
wise candidate who knows his own
fodder.
(Distributed by INS)
The
Journal s
reporters
found
that just about nine per cent of
those who had voted in 1952 were
now changing their votes in one
direction or the other. They found
further
that
for
every
person
changing from Stevens!* in 1952 to
Eisenhower in 19 >6. there w ere no
less tfian four persons changing the
oilier way,
from Eisenhower to
Stevenson, lf you work these Jo u r
nal findings with the actual voting
figures for 19»2, you discover that
an
Eisenhower m aiority
is still
forecast—but a nationwide m ajor
ity of only 7.000 votes this time as
against more than 6 odd.OOO four
years ago.
Finally, there is the third piece
in the pattern—the recent Minne
sota poll that gave Eisenhower 47
per cent against 46 per cent for
Stevenson, with the rest of the vot
ers undecided. Eisenhower e arn ed
Minesota four years ago by 54 to
46 Hence the Minnesota poll sug
gests that the race this tim e is
much closer than it was in 1952.
And once again the Minnesota poll
is based on a m assively larger
voting sam ple than the Minnesota
sam ple that is incorporated in Dr.
•G allup s nationwide percentages.
Analysis May Re Altered
I repeat, all the cited percentages
seem rather meaningless to me.
Polling is only a specialized and
dram atically
exciting
branch
of
politically reporting As an old city-
room lag I deeply distrust th'* pre
tentious silent 11 ic apparatus that
has been built up on polling s sim
ple reportorial base.
At this mom ent I should still bet.
like most other people, on a victory
for President Eisenhower. I would
not wish to bet, because the re
turns so far suggest that the cam
paign itself m ay play a very great
role in the final result of the elec
tion. If I were forced lo bet I
should try th get some money on
the race being pretty close
But
perhaps this analysis will be alter
ed by the Wisconsin returns that
will next be published in this space.
(Copt 1 i((i(
ISS*.
N fw
York
Herald Tribune, Inc >
Never Give Up: Optimism Key To Rehabilitation
Optimism is the key to rehabili
tation. It paid a lifetime of divi
dends to a Detroit mother and her
child. The youngster in question
was born without arm s and with
club feet, a congenital dislocation
of both hips, and m arked curvature
of the spine.
The physician put the hips back
in place. The feet were placed in
a cast for a year but this proved
unsuccessful. At age three, braces
were applied but the foot deforma-
ties were so severe, the plan was
discontinued.
Meanwhile, the tot
showed considerable ingenuity and
learned to feed herself, comb her
hair, and write with her toes and
By Dr. Theodora R. Van Delton
to push herself around the floor ef
fectively.
Dr. Joseph L. Flem ing, of the
Henry
Ford
Hospital,
says
(he
little g irls mom never gave up.
When the youngster was 4ty, her
m other took her to a clinic in a
cart and wanted to know if any
thing could be done to help the
child learn to walk.
The surgeons
hesitated
because
the youngster
had made an excellent adjustm ent
to her handicaps and if the op
eration on the lower extrem ities
Try And Stop Me!
By Bennett Carf
Driving E ast across the contin
ent. TV w riter Hal Ranter passed
a roadside barbecue that adver
tised
“genuine
w ham bergers."
Ranter stopped to find out what a
w ham berger was.
“ Darned if I
know." adm itted their originator,
“but. brother, how they sell!’’
Another sign thai intrigued Ran
ter was one planted in the middle
of the vast, trackless Nevada des
ert northeast of Las Vegas. “ Re
m em ber,” it warned. "Positively
no swimming allowed within 300
feet of the highway.”
A newly m arried society belle
insisted upo6 cooking at least one
dinner for her husband It was a
strangedooking
concoction
*he
served up, but he was dead game
about it.
‘‘It’s wonderful d ear,” he fibbed
gallantly, “but you better write
down exactly what you put rn it.
The doctor probably will want to
know."
C o p y is t , 1956, by Bennett, C«H —— Dutnbuted by King Features Syndicate
failed, total incapacity might re
sult.
But the mother rem ained opti
m istic and insisted on surgery. She
said. “ I cah always feed her but
I can ’t always lift and carry her.”
The surgeons were convinced and
started on the long trek toward
rehabilitation
Operations and casts were fol
lowed by months of intensive ther
apy and a strenuous home exercise
program .
The first sign of pro
gress cam e when the youngster
was able to walk with help al
though she lost her balance if she
tried to stand alone.
She was fitted with a special
back brace to which a broomstick
w as attached via a swivel joint.
With the aid of her parents and
this third leg, she learned gradu
ally to stand and walk alone The
child was taught to use her head
and neck to replace the normal
balancing /unction given by the
arm s. This part of her rehabilita
tion took IO months.
The next phase centered about
developing the muscles of the legs,
knees, and spine which are needed
to rise from a
sitting
position.
Prostheses were obtained for the
upper
extrem ities
and
in
the
following year she becam e skill
ful in the use of her artificial
arm s and hands. With their help
she was able to eat. wash her
face, clean her teeth, and type.
She attends school and a cam p
for handicapped children. The little
m iss is now' eight years old and
although she will require continu
ed care, her physicians and occu
pational
therapists
consider
ber
potentially employable.
GRANDMA HATES ( AXS
M. L. T. writes; I am ll years
old and am writing you concerning
my grandm a. I have a little cat
but grandm a hates it. When I kiss
it she has a fit
She has been a
registered nurse for 40 yeari
Is
grandm a right ■*
REPLY
Your grandm a and I come (rom
the sam e school of thought
We
have esthetic reasons for not kiss
ing anim als even though the habit
may never cause disease, includ
ing cat scratch fever.
IT CHASES YOU
D. R. writes: I retired because
of hardening of the arteries and
planked on living in South Africa
B u t' my
sister who
lives
there
writes that she has it too. Do you
think I would be making a good
move?
•
REPLY
Arteriosclerosis is hard
to es
cape
as
our
arteries
begin
to
harden the moment we are born.
It makes no difference where we
live.
YOU’LL KNOW
T. G. w rites; How can you tell
if you have chiggers?
REPLY
The pests cause itching, redness,
and congestion. They become im
bedded most frequently over the
lower parts of the legs, usually as
a result of walking through grass
and weeds. Send a stam ped, self
addressed envelope for our leaflet
on chiggers.
To Ui* limit of «voc*. question* pet
taming to tho prevention of disease will
ho answered
Personal replies will bo
made when return stamped envelope la
enclosed
Telephone
Inquiries
not
ac
cepted
Dr
Van Delian m il not make
diagnoaia
or
pre ac rib*
tor
individual
dbaeaao*.
By Jack Anderton
money was requested not fog a
v.ilet, but for Francis Valeo
He
happen- to br the Senate foreign
relations aide who handled the fi
nances for Hickenlooper a trip
Flare Boothe Luce, our lady am
bassador to Italy, will resign be
fore the November elections She ll
fry to wheedle a cabinet post out
of Provident Ftsenbower (if b e s
elm led*
Millionaire John Hay
Whitney has turned down the sob
of am ha-s.idor to Britain He offer
ed to accept the post for one year.
but President Eisenhower refused
to appoint hun on those term -
The
President
has
instructed
Secretary of State Dulles to he
ready to fly to London for another
em ergency conference on the Sue/
Canal
Ike is sn alarm ed at the
continued danger of war that he
wants
Dulles personally to deal
with this crisis ,
The Kremlin
seems to think President Eivcnhow
cr is a cinch to m n the Novem
ber elections
Party chiel
Nikiti
Khrushchev has told half a dozen
diplom ats that Ike is sure to win.
Khrushchev adds
slyly
that
he
hopes Ike will pick a new secretary
of stale
Reading
Note
President
Eisenhower
likes
to
read westerns for relaxation
but
the reading habits of senators and
congressm en
are
a
belier
kept
secret,
Some light can now he shed, how
ever on their literary tastes One
hook at the Library of Congress
ha* a two month waiting IM
To
meet th# demand, the library ha-
in-* ! ted a pink slip in the fly Ie,*f,
. It reads: “ The long waiting list
of senators aqd mem bers foi this
hook requires that, in fairness to
them , it he treated as a IO day
hook, i e , it is to he returned IO
days from this date
so that
it
may he delivered to the next sen
atm
or mem ber on the waiting
list ”
Name
of
the
hook
“ Death
Walk- on ( at Keel’’ by D. B Ol
sen
()iinte« Cable
Unrepentant
Perom*ta.», discip
les of m illed dictator Heron
have
learned up with the Communists to
win control of the powerful Argen
tine labor movement
Iii a confidential cable from Bue
nos A nes. the American em bassy
reports
“There are at least a half
dozen labor groups struggling for
control. They range from left to
right in political stripe, hut the
Communist left
is at work with
Perom sta fragm ents in a joint ef
fort to get control
The Commies
and the Peronistas have formed an
out I it
called
Movimiento pro la
Democratizacion
del
Movimiento
cihrero, and ar*' boring from w ith
in Little firm intelligence is avail
able on this combined operation,
but *if exists "
The cable declares that “a lot of
Argentine wet kern- not the m ajor
ity -b id plenty of them
remain
loyal to Heron
The engineers and
firem en’s union
the bank clerks.
th** printing trade s people all h a w
been happily dePeroni/ed. But the
brewery workers, for example arc
still strongly pro Heron
The rest
are in vague positions of
pro or
anti-Peron "
St ill th** cable concludes
“Giv
en half a chance the government
.md the labor unions will work out
a way of living together, but the
lob is a long tough one **
Democrats .Her Red
HI ADI INES AND FOOTNOTES
*— Congressman
Francis
Walter
»D , Pa
chairm an of the House
Un American
Activities
Commit
tee, will blast the Defense Depart
ment for moving F ar Eastern Mil
itias H eadquarters from Japan to
Hawaii
Hi* will accuse the Fis*
enhower adm inistration of putting
ct anomy ahead of se« linty in or
dering the move
W alter will charge that the Com
munist lead Longshorem en’s Union
not only dominates the dock* hut
“controls” the Hawaiian economy.
However
(he
Army plans to
man the docks with GD in ca-r of
emergency
O bservers
al' o
claim the workers are loyal Amen
can s
would not follow then Red
leaders in a showdown
Th* Democrats sensitive about
COP charges reflecting on their
lev ally, hope to turn the Red is
sue
against
the
Republicans
in
the
fall
campaign
They
have
dug up documents ploying that
the Communists originally
infil
trated the country under the Hoov
er administration
A special House com m ittee, in
vestigating Communist
activities,
reported on December 16. 1936;
“ We have allowed a lot of Russian
Communists to come in, despite
the d art we have no diplomatic re
lations with the Soviet government.
Some of them have been here as
long as eight years “
Andrew
lrshaf
a Trenton. N, J., editor,
testified on December
19
19.10
“There have been a number of
Hungarian Communists settling in
Trenton
These fellows bore
from within
They
belong to
churches, the lodges and gener
ally participate in the activities
of the community ”
The Demo
crats will use such quotes to hack
up their charges
thai
the
Red
problem developed under the Re
publicans
«( nought lava, rh# aril Syti«nr«ta, loc i
Bonds, Interest Rates
By Roger Babson
BABSON PARK
M ass-R e c e n t
ly
m onetary
authorities
have
tightened
their
controls
again,
bringing about a fur 1 her decline
in
bond
prices.
I forecast
that
these authorities—so long as bus
iness rem ains good—-will maintain
a firm rein on credit. The trend
for bond prices has been down for
20 months
That is the prim ary
reason why I have advised and
still advise th# av n age investor
to buy only short m aturity bonds.
Will Again Re Popular
Investor interest in bonds has
increased
somewhat
in
recent
weeks as uncertainties have crept
into the outlook tor common Mock
prices
and
as
yields
fro.*,
the
most popular common stocks have
become quite low- These stocks
could
be particularly
vulnerable
in any imjxirtant m arket correc
tion
I predict thai investor inter
est in bonds will grow.
As I view the monetary and bus
iness situation this fall, I foresee
a continued weak bond m arket.
The m onetary authorities will have
lo contend with possible upward
price pressure arising out of the
steel wage settlement
but nothing
radical will be done until alter the
elections in November. Certainly
nothing will be done before then
to harm business
Government Ronds
Do not count on long-term gov
ernm ent bonds showing any sus
tained strength. After the election*
the money m anagers m ay have to
fight higher prices by again slight
ly tightening credit term s and rais
ing money rates. I assume that
hankers—who ar# mostly Repub
licans—do
not
object
to higher
money rates.
I would caution the average in
vestor
against
buying
long-term
government bonds with any thought
of
profits.
As
with .other
bond
group*', I urge investors to con
fine the
m ajor portion of their
purchases
to
interm ediate
and
short-term
government
issues.
Only for death-tax purposes should
one build a backlog of those long
term Treasury issues which are al
ways worth par for payment of
estate
taxes
This
means
one
should not pay more than par for
them
Remem ber, however, that
the interest received from govern
ment bonds is subject to federal
income taxes.
Inaurancr ( nmpanies
The difference in yields between
high grade corporate and govern
ment bonds in a given m aturity
is now relatively sm all. However,
I question whether even insurance
companies, should buy so heavily
into the corporate field as into
governments. Unlike the individ
ual investor who m aintains a bal
anced fund of bonds and stocks, in
surance
companies,
particularly
lite companies, must spread m a
turities
and include
some long
term bond>
including AAA utili
ties and rails. Colleges, hospitals,
and funds not subject to taxation
can well ((insider good corporate
bonds However. I think such buy
ers should put more of their bond
funds into utilities and industrials
than into rails.
Rnndk For Ordinary Investors
The average investor to whom
yield is im portant would be justi
fied in putting a small part of his
bond funds into medium-grade util
ity and industrial issues. On long
term issues of such bonds, he can
now obtain a vield of about 375
per cent on rails, 3 59 per cent on
industrials, and 3 62 per cent on
utilities But at these yields, I pre
fer
nontaxable
bonds,
such
as
municipals and high-grade revenue
issues for thp.se who are in the
high tax brackets and who do not
worry about m arketability.
I would recommend that pur
chases of medium grade corpora
tion bonds be confined to first-m or
tgage issues. Medium-grade bonds
are influenced in price movement
by what happens in the stock m ar
ket. In no case should the aver
age investor place any of his funds
ml ended as a nest egg for later
purchase of stocks in other than
short-term high-grade issues, even
though he may have to make some
sacrifice of yield.
Convertible Ronds
Ordinarily. I like to recommend
convertible bonds to my reader*;
but in view of uncertainties in the
stock
m arket
it
us questionable
whether very many purchases in
this field should be made now.
Again I recommend to individuals
—good
short-term
tax-exempt
bonds.
You re Telling Me!
By William Rift
It s dangerous to health to leap
out of bed mornings, says a British
medico.
And, job-wise, it s dan
gerous if you don’t!
R rusch’s elbow bending has hi*
pals wondering which
now his
favorite party — the cocktail or
the Communist.
Nikita is charged with insulting
top-rank foreign guests at a garden
party he hosted. No middle ground
for Nik—he either toasts ’em or
roasts
em.
F X F .
postcards
a
question:
Does one have to
be
a sheer
genius to be a successful ladies’
lingerie salesm an-1
This year’s crop of 17-year lo
custs is rapidly dwindling as the
pesky critters dig in for their long
nap.
T h eres
cm
underground
movem ent we re all in favor of.
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD-
MON DAV, SEPTEMBER
IO,
195<5
Phone
PA 2-4600 for o W ANT AD Toker
Milwaukee Beats Chicago Twice, Boosts Lead To Full Game
Braves Break Pe^
Roce Ken Rosewall Upsets Hoad 'Re? 'e? s V°$e tory Staley
P
_
. At A Glance „
, „ . x...
In 13 Innings rm .s |nHian
National League
I R , Th* Im m U M I P re * * I
w
l ret.
r.B Left
Milwaukee
To Win National Net Title
Brooklyn
Cincinnati
83
82
no
54
55
57
ROR
591
584
Milwaukee »17»—At home <3>.
Chicago 3. away <14>. Brooklyn 2,
Cincinnati I. New York 2. Phila
delphia 4. Pittsburgh 2, St. trouts 3
Brooklyn
< 17)—At
home
<I3N
Milwaukee 2. Cincinnati 2. Chicago
2 Philadelphia 2. Pittsburgh 3. St.
Louis 2. away <4>, Pittsburgh 4.
Tri-State
Cops Title
Holly's Three-Run
Triple Wins, 5 To 2
Cops 4-Set Match;
Shirley Fry Scores
Over Althea Gibson
Losing Streak
Before 35309
Haneymen Post 7-4,
5-3 Wins; To Play
Brooklyn Tuesday
CHICAGO. Sept. 9 Uh-The Mil
Waukee Braves boosted their Na
tional League lead to a full game;
today by whipping the Chicago
Cubs. 7-4 and 5-3. before a crowd I
_
^
^
.
...
of 3' :t09—largest of the *eas<»n a'
MlUaukrc. j
st
Louis 4
away Shop in
tho third and dec ldinKiram e out
W|M. v t
Wrigley Field
. 12». Brooklyn 2, Chicago 2. New game of their aerie* yester lay^a terriperatures lo watch
Hoad try
The double triumph .snapped a
y ork
2
Philadelphia
4,
Pitts Stitcher Field
Cincinnati
< 17»—At
home
4
FO REST H ILLS. N. Y , Sept. IO
ilh— Racket rifleman Ken Rosewall
blasted the “ grand slam” hopes of
fellow Australian Lew Hoad and a
.,16-year dream came true for Ak-
The Tri state ( leaner*, pennan ron.g shirley Fry today in the
winners, also captured the jplayo |finals of the diamond jubilee Na-
title in
the Men s
Rec Softball tjonai TPnnis championships
ijiJLe ag u e
by
beating Lvt e s
»ftnj
^ unninR g crowd 0f jj ooo wbo
in
56-degree,
topcoat
To Cords, 6-5
Triple By Cooper,
Katt'i Hit Decide
ST. LOUIS. Sept. 9
A pinch
triple b£ Walker Cooper and Ray
Katt’s bases-lnaded single in the
five-game losing streak and put hur,.b 2
the Braves a full game ahead of
the Brooklyn Dodgers who beat
tho New York Giants, 6-1, in a sin
gle game.
Milwaukee spotted the Cubs four
runs in the opener and then rattled
off 12 hits to pull the game out ot j
the fire. Threatened by darkness
in the nightcap the Braves broke
a 1*1 tie with a three-run rally in
the seventh, scoring all their runSj
after two were out..
Play Brooks Tuesday
Had the Braves dropped the sec
ond game, they would have had to
open a two-game series at Brook
lyn Tuesday tied for first place
with the Dodgers.
Milwaukee opened the second »
game scoring with a run in the
fourth on singles by Ed Mathews
and Joe Adcock, a stolen base and
Billy Bruton s infield out
Chicago tied it in the fifth when
Drysdale Hurls
Dodgers To 6-1
Win Over Giants
Yields Only 3 Hits;
Furillo Has 4 RBIs
,
duplicate Don Budge's great
fr i i urn es in the thirtMn ice the I J0Uir-,0UPnament sweep of 1936. the J lyn. which defeated the New York the
doubleheader
and
between
Beats Indians
4th Time, 6-2
Chicago Loses, 4-1,
To Score In Opener
C LEVELA N D . Sept
9 UPL- The
13th inning enabled tne St. Louis j Cleveland Indians and the Chicago
Cardinals to come from behind to- White Sox split a doubleheader to
day to hand the pennant hopes of day to remain in a second-place
the
Cincinnati
Redlegs
a
third tie. The Indians won the opener
straight staggering blow, 6-5.
4-1
on
Herb Score's five-hittcr.
The defeat dropped the Redlegs and Gerry Staley beat the Indians
three games behind the league - for the fourth time this season in
leading
Milwaukee
Braves
who the second game. 6-2
swept a doubleheader over Chi- j
The second-game victory gave
eago. The Rhinelanders, in losing the White Sox a 15-7 record against
the series three straight to St j the Indians this season
Louis, also lost ground to Brook-!
A crowd of 28.457 turned out (or
Wilkinson And Dawson
Chalk Up Pen-Mar Wins
•
—
Grantsville Beats
Zihlman, 5-2; OG's
Trim Bombers, 3-0
p
down his heavily favored boyhood:
Cincinnati, winner of IO straight land pitcher Bob Feller, celebrate
f n(
r
c*1um an<* Davi* Cup teammate'extra-inning
ball
games,
forged mg his 20th year with the club.
little, black-haired Rosewall cut Giants.
game ceremonies honoring Cleve-
ter was safe on an error, loading wjfh a,most fault, „ 8 accuracy for
the bases. Wayne Holly knocked ini(he m{,ng tlt)p ^
fi3 63
three runs with a triple and scored
on a had throw to the plate. The Fails To Make Sweep
Cleaners’ other run tame ©a a
run
homer by Fred Meeks in the fifth
Ned Toev made his record 20-5
for the season yielding only three
bits, all singles to James Hamil
ton. Buddy Meade and Hank Page
Roberts “ Boots
Harper was the»finajs 0f ^ e first two of these, and
toter, giving up five bits. a triple jnepded only thp
s
tll|e as a
and single by Holly. Meeks
c,r' , ticket to a HOO OOO professional
BRO O KLYN, Sept. 9 lh—'Young'011'* bl**!, a two bagger by Payton contract. But his crunching power
Don Drysdale turned in his best an(1 Ndter[*
mound effort of the .easort and
•*“ * * >“ 2 w" n ,,b' l i r s ' amf
ll 6. while Tri Stat* won the sec
Hoad, a handsome blond young
ster of 21 with a strange tempera
ment and shots that go like can
non halls, had won the Australian.
Wimbledon and French ehampion-
nhip.s, He beat Rosewall in the
rare
Carl Furillo drove in four runs
KW *-
with a home run and single as the
STAt B
Brooklyn
Dodgers
defeated
the |ly ru ts
I n n anti T w ig *
H R
rn mil I I i I
KW
«»|
C
l
J
2
R
H arper and Bro w n
M er k l (T ri Statal.
New York Giants 6-1 today in their
Pete Whisenant tripled and came
meetibg of the season to stay
home on Danny O Connell * relay on thp heels of the front-running
error to the plate
j Milwaukee Braves.
Chuck Tanner, batting for Andy!
Drysdale,
who
has
not
yet
Pafko, started the seventh with a reached hi* 21st birthday, shackled
single to left and moved to second the Giants with three hits as the
on
a
sacrifice.
Del
Rice
was® Dodgers came from behind a 1-0
walked and Frank Torre, hatting deficit
with
three
runs
in
the
for starter Gene Conley, jwipped I fourth, two more in the filth off
out. Felix M a n t i l l a , however. = loser Max Surkont. and another in
broke the tie with a run-storing the eighth oft Steve Ridzik, third
single to right. Singles by O ’Con- * \>w York hurler.
*
nell
and
Hank
Aaron brought1
The rookie righthander walked
home two more runs.
I one and struck out three as he
Milwaukee added its final run in j evened his season record at 5-5.
the ninth on Del Crandall s 14th oddly enough, four of his victories
homer
W ere achieved against the Giants.
„ „ __
Conley limned the Cubs to thief |)ryada|P addfd in,ult to injury by I Hunter'* *seventh-Inning'triple with
hits in the tix innings he worked w |)at.ging h|B Unt major league tw0
matw
at)oard
anapp, d
.
i‘U
ig r„K ctT.wr h° m# run ln. lhf f,fth’ .. . . .
J scoreless pitching duel between
Bill Hunter’s
Two-Run Triple
Wins for Yanks
Ford Fans Eleven,
Beats Stobbt, 2-1
N EW YO RK. Sept. 9 i*-Bi11y
was the toy of Rosewall'*
all-around court wizardry.
Earlier. Miss Fry, an intense.
29 vear old Ohio girl making her
16th bid in the tournament, added
the U S. women's title to her Wim
bledon triumph by vanquishing jit
tery, off-form Althea Gibson of
New York. 6-3, 6 4.
It was the third triumph of the
year in
four meetings
for
the base and outhit the Redlegs 19 to
steady Miss Fry over the lanky
ahead atter two were out on a
The White Sox opened the night-
walk to Rocky Bridges and Roy cap with three runs oft southpaw
McMillan’s clutch triple.
Hank Aguirre, two of them on
McMillan tried to score when the Larry Doby's 18th homer
Errors
relay from the outfield went astray by Mal Naragon and Chico Car-
but was out at'the plate
rasquel made two of the runs un-
Down 5-4 with one out in the 13th earned,
and facing ace reliefer llershell
Al Smith clouted his 14th homer
Freeman, the Cards rallied to w in. j as the Indians' leadoff batter in
Wally
Moon
singled.
Ancient the last of the first. Two innings
Walker Cooper batted for Bobby I later Minnie Minoso hit his 16th
DclGrcco and tripled to center to homer for the White Sox
score the tying run. The Reds de-
Vie Wertz hit his 27th homer for
cided to walk the next two batters the Indians in the fourth, equal-
to load them up and look for the j ling his all-time high
He hit 27
double play but it never came, for homers for the Detroit Tigers in
Katt
singled
to
center
scoring 1950 and again in 1951.
pmch-runner Bobby Morgan.
J
One of Chicago's hits off Score
Freeman absorbed his filth dc- in the first game was a homer by
feat against 13 victories. He had Walt Dropo. Score, who got his
given up only one bunt single in 16th victory against nine defeats,
tour frames until the Cardinals got fanned nine to increase his league-
to him for the deciding two.
leading total to 220
The Cardinals left 19 men on
< H K SOO
New York girl. who hoped to be
come the first Negro to win a ma
jor U.S. net title.
Miss
Gibson's
usually
itrong
built around a stinging service and
a sharp net attack, folded com
pletely under the pressure of Miss
Fry * backboard consistency and in Brl1 r<
the teeth of a tilting, cross-court R,'h,n*°n 11
wind which
shots.
played havoc
with
Made Debut At 14
Whitey
Ford
Chuck St ©bbs
Washington’s
gave the Yankees a 2-1 victory
against eight louts. Cub starteri
was a home run that ruined !\>w
York *
Jim Brosnan. knocked out in the non-, , hutouf hld „ ramp in |hr
seventh, .suffered hi* eigh h loss in fjr|| ,nnjng and was hit by'Willie
!*The Brave* overcame a four-run
No 80 for ,hp r,iant cpnl<,r over the Senators today
Ihe braves overcame a tour-run fiHdfr M
, onf nf thp twoi
lead to win the opener.
| nthpr hjt, a
*ngk m ,hf fourth
Spahn knwhrd Out
jh e only other hit allowed
by
The
Cubs
blasted
Milwaukee (l)ry#dlllf was a bunt >mgi« by
starter Warren Spahn Rom the n
, Spfncer in thp f|lth
mound in the second inning after srw roan
scoring four runs on three home
* • •
runs and a double
Reliefers Ray
IS i i
Crone and Krnie Johnson blanked
rf
i i i #
the last-place Cubs the rest of the ^ w tTw ,b * • J«
and
Pafko lf
Thorn ann lf
Knit un rf
Crandall t
Spahn p
C ro w p
aTorr*
J uh n
p
f ond} lh
Noah lh
Bahar 2h
Banka aa
Inla lf
M o m rf
ab h a a
4 1 1 1
4 1 1 1
4 0 13
3 0 14
4 I S 0
4 4 2 0
Talala
W hit n nt cf 4 14 0
Landrith e
4 14 6
Kataar p
Va lain ti p
hKing
H a.k ar p
10 16
i e e e
i e e e
6 0 0 0
34 t m
way.
whti# is
Johnson was credited with the ^*,nVr.
«
, ,
j
ti
victory, giving him a 4 3 record, surkon* p
and reliefer Vito Valentmetti suf-
*
feted hts fourth loss against six H ,d „k p
victories.
r iB S T fa W IK
M il M X I B P P
I H K VOO
ab b a a
Mantilla «a
3 12 6
O I on cli 7b 4 I 3 I
Aaron rf
5 4 11
Mathew a 3b 3 I 0 I
AdctM-k th
3 117 6
4 1 6 0
0 0 1 0
3 13 0
4 0 0 1
6 0 0 1
1 0 6 1
H O O
I o o a
Talala
33 13*7 16
Talala
a - Doubled for Crone til 5th
ta Cited out for V atentmetti la 7th
Milo aube*
M I 031 •OO-*
4 hica(>
IM OO# 000—4
It
Mantilla. (>’( unneU.
Aaron 3,
Mat-j
bewa, B i utun, Torre, Hook, lm n . M o n a .'
t.andrtth,
K
Vnrt*
H B I
Hoak.
trim
l.andnth 2. Aaron 2. OT onnell
Adcock. [
Jobnaon.
Mathew a.
Pafko
S B
M orjn 2.'
Torre.
Brufon
H R Hoak
I n in.
l.aa «
brith.
SS
lnbna»n
i>P
( randalt.
M an
tilla and O t onnell. A a too and
Adcoc k j
le ft
Milwaukee
7,
(b lc a io
4
B B I
Kaiaei
I, ( tone
I. Valentmetti I. Mo
lt a1 aer
2, (ton e
I, Valenunetti 2.
HO- I
Spahn
4
in
I
]*3, Crone
I
In
3 2-3, j
John m w 4 In I, Kaiser
7
in a 1-3. V alen
tinrtu 3 in I 3-1. Hackei
I it 2 R KR - j
Spahn 4-4, Crooe ft-0
Barnet
4-4
V alen-
UnefU 3-2. John-on 0-6. Hacker 6-0
W I’
ValonUnetU
PR - Landrith.
W
Johnvm
f|>31.
Ir—Valenttfiettt
<0-41.
I
eonian
Landes
Jorkouaki. Uelmore T- 2 I L
i S ri- und (t a m e *
Milwaukee
ihmi
io u 301— 5 to I
Chit BXU
OOO OIA 002— 3
9 0
Conley, Phillips <7>. Sleatcr <9
and Rice. Crandall *7); Brosnan,
Lawn <7>. Hacker
9i and I,an
dnth; Chiti <9>. W—Conley. L —
Brosnan.
3 0 no
1 0 4 0
1113
10 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 1
7* I *4 lf
BROOM.*' \
ab h a a
f.tlliam 2b
3 1 1 3
Beroe a*
3 0 11
Snider rf
3 I I 0
Bubineon 3b 3 0 0 4
A morn* lf
3 0 10
B u, iHo
rf
3 2 2 6
Hndfea
lh
4 I 14 2
Walker
r
4 0 3 1
IK>adat* p
S i l t
Talala
*7 I r 14
a
Walked for Cornel in 6th
N e* Varh
IOO
OO#
OOO
I
Hi neb lr a
«f*0
3fO
0 li- 4
B
Maya
Gilham ,
Snider.
Rnbtnaitn,
Automa.
6 urtlki
l>ryadaie
B —CHIBwrn.
H BI
M ay*. Furtlkt 4
l»r>*dale.
Snider,
I .’B GllHam
HR
Maya.
Furillo.
I>rya-
! dale. S B
Maya
S
Reeae. A K I A S F —
I Snider. D P
W alker and Ree»e
Rotnnaun,
; I, Ilham and Mortises
I .eft
New Vnrk 3,
B i noblyn 3. HH
Nurkont 3, Grime* J. Hid-
, ilk 1. Dry mlaIe I SO Sui hunt I. Gom el
s I, Drysdale J
H O Surkont 4 in 4 own#
I oui in .Alb*. Grime* I hi 3. Rid/ik I in I,
R KH
SurkiMt 3-3. (lOmet 0-0. Rid nk 1-1.
I Drvadnle l l. W
Drysdale <V5>, I.
sur
kont
(2-2>.
I ’
Aertiry.
Facetn,
Gnmet,
I lascrli T —I 02. A
23 1 70.
Parker’s Beagle
Is Crowned Champ
in Hub City Show
The Yankee victory reduced the
magic number to nine. Any com
bination of Yankee victories and
defeats by Cleveland and Chicago
adding up to that number will
clinch the flag for the Yankees.
Ford struck out ll and permit
ted six hits as he gained his 17th
victory.
Stobbs
was
a
luckless
loser, allowing only four hits in
eight innings.
Both Yankee runs in the eighth
wert unearned. After two out. GU
McDougald singled and took sec
ond when Eddie Yost booted a
grounder by Elston Howard. Hunt
er followed with a drive over Kart
Olson's head that the center field
er did not play very well. By the
time Olson had overtaken the ball,
both runners had scored and Hunt
er was perched on third.
Miss Fry, who now lives in St.
Petersburg. Fla., began playing
and | tennis ai the age of nine and
played in the first of her 16 na
tionals at 14. back in the days of
Helen Jacobs and Alice Marble.
Today Miss Fry was queen of
all she surveyed in women's ten
nis. winner of Wimbledon, the U.
S. and National Clay Court titles
in
a slam comparable to that
which escaped Hoad.
Bucs And Phils
Split Twin Bill
Skinner's Homer
Wins Opener, 4-1
P H ILA D ELP H IA . Sept. 9 up -
The Philadelphia Phillies and the
Pittsburgh Pirates split two 10-
,
inning contests today. The Pirates
Th* Senators got their run in won tbp fjrjd ^.j when Boh Skin
the eighth.
Infielder
Tony
Roig npr s pmch-hit, three run homer
tripled and came home on I lint broke up a tijsht pitching duel be
thorn iney * sacrifice tty. \ost and tween the Pirates’ Ronnie Kline
Ed FitzGerald followed with sin- and the Phils’ Rob
ll in the four-hour contest. Both AP*ri,l°
starters. Murry Dickson and Hat
^.f
Jeffcoat. pitched out of trouble; Min** u
while they lasted
Herman Wehmeier picked up his psiiiip* rf
loth win against nine lost.
( IN riN N VTI
ST
L O U I
■ b h d
0 2 3 3
6 0 3 6
6 16 6
6 6 26 I
3 1 1 6
4 I 2 I
6 6 0 6
2 0 2 0
T u n p la 2b
Hatfield 3b
I nonm an p
| Kinder p
ab k a a , #
R U * ame 2b 7 3 7 1
^etaU
Dark aa
Mutual lb
Moon rf
RrpuUki lf
7 3 13
7 4 0 2
5 12 0
3 13 0
F IR S T (.A M K
C L F V F L A N D
ab h * a '
ah h * a
4 6 I 6
Pope cf
4 I 0 0
3 6 12
Ruaby cf
0 0 I 0
2 1 1 0
Avila 2h
I I 3 I
4 0 3 6
Wood ting
ll
4 0 I 0
4 13 6
W ert* lh
4 I 7 I
4 2 9 !
Cola vita
rf
3 I I 6
4 6 2 6
Rosen 3b
4 6 I I
2 13 1
C ar aquel
it 3 6 0 2
3 6 0 0
Hagan c
3 I IO I
0 0 6 6
Score p
2 I
I 2
10 0 0
IO I 74 IO
Talala
10*77 ll
6 0 0 0
4 2 3 4
4 16 6
d D 'IG r’ro cf 6 6 6 6
scooper
116 6
hM ortan
Boyer 3b
L ek'n rf -lf
Sm itb e
eNelson .
Katt c
Dickson p
issuer
Wehmeier p
i e e e
3 13 1
4 2 11
10 6 6
16 11
Talala
33 lf 39 13
Klua’aki lh
Com rf
Burge** c
a Flood
Bailey c
Jabkm ski 3b 3 6 6 2
Gram * lb
0 6 0 0
bThurman
16 0 6
Bnd«ea 3b
16 2 1
M cM illan aa 3 2 2 6
Jeffcoat p
4 2 0 3
< Black
6 0 0 0
Freeman p
1 6 0 2
Talala
36 11*37 23
a- One out when winning run »cored
a - B a n for Burge** In 6th
Ik - F ouled
out for G ram m aa In tth.
e— Ran for Jeffcoat in »ih.
d - Ran for Repulski In 9th
a—Struck oui for Smith in 9th.
I —Flied out for Dtekkon in 9th.
g -Tripled for DeH.reco in 13th.
h
Ran for Cooper in 13th.
(Tar Ina aff
616
3oa
tm im
1—3
SI, Lama
hoi
le i
ao« moo
t—6
R
Poet 2, Burgee*. Bridge*. M cM illan,
Rlaaingame
2.
Muwal,
Moon.
Morgan,
Uirkaon.
F
Linkm an.
Jeffcoat.
Dark.
R H I
Po*!, M cM illan 2. Jeffcoat 2. Boyer,
Rlaaingame.
Mumal. Dark
Cooper. Katt.
SB
Mu rial. Rlaaingame. Boyer
Burgeta,
Riibmaon
.IB
Dickson. Cooper. M cM illan
HR
Poet. SB- Temple
S
Boyer, DelGre-
co. D P —Jeffcoat. M cM illan and Kluazrw-
•kl
Left -Cincinnati 9. St
Louia 19. B B —
Jeffcoat 2. Freem an 3. Dickson 2. Weh
meier I. SO—Jeffcoat 2. Freem an I. Dick-
ton
3. Wehmeier 3
H O - Jeffcoat 15 ta
I, Freem an 4 In J
Dickson g in 9. Weh
meier 3 in 4.
R F R -Jeffcoat 4*4. Fre e
man |-2. Dickson 4-3, Wehmeier 1-1. WA-
Wehmeier f I M )
L- Freem an (13-5>. l l —
Gere. Reggeaa, Crawford. BallanfanL T —
4 06. A
15,706
Eviction Rescinded
a -Flied out for Kinder in 9th.
C hirata
IHM IIM IKM—I
Cletrland
6*1 IMO f i t —4
R
Dropo.
Avile, Colavite, Carraeouel.
Hogan.
K.
V-ore.
Hogan.
Hatfield, Apa-
rtcte. RH I
Dropo. A vile. Cola vt to. Score.
W erti. HR
I>ropo. ( olavito
SB
Avila I
* —Foe,
Doby.
Score
D P —I arraaqurl,
Avile
and
W ert*.
Fo*.
Aparicto
and
ipg
Zihlman,
which copped th*
Aeries opener by the score of 4-1.
Jack Brodie, who gave way to
Ronnie Rice in the third inning.
was the loser
Grantsville scored three run s^ l
n
Wilkinson
and
Bobby the first inning on Fred Colaw.«
Daimon kept S s v i l i S unit Mf »,,lk singled by Toby Colaw aob
sLvam
in
iIk-
,or tht Wfng*rd a" '1 a
i f !
’y
nbavnff tide in the Pen-Mar Base- Wengerd
Zihlman scored its t o
bin League when they pitched the rims in the third and the Mugger,
Sluggers
and
Old
Germans
to tallied once in the fifth and erne
victories over Zihlman and Barrel- ,n the 8th
Ville yesterday in games at Grants-
Dunn collected two of Zihlman s
V ille ^ n d M C S a v a g e
..even M U . a n a
Wilkinson turned bark Zihlman William
Junie
Per^y
by the score of 5-2 while Dawson Grantsville s attack with a double
shut
out
Barrelville s
pennant- and two singles while
Wengcid
winning club to the tune of 3-0 'rn hit saiely twice.
a contest in which only five hits
Zihlman s two runs in the third
were recorded
came on sin
8eJ ybs
The results of yesterday s games came on singles by Shuck ana Har*
tied up both series at one win tor ns and Dunn s double,
each team
The “ rubber” game
Wilkinson struck out ten and is-
ot each series is set for next Sun- sued onjy one base on balls. Brodie
da> at 2:30 p
rn. at Grantsville yielded three hits, walked two and
and ML Savage The sites tor the fanned two. Rice was nicked for
finals of the playoff semi-finals ()ve safeties, whiffed four and ga\«
were determined after yesterday s up four free tickets,
games by the toss of a coin.
I
jn the game at Mt. Savage, Daw.
I son yielded only three hits-smg.
Donnie Win Seventh
||f$ by Jjm McGregor and Ed Par.
Wilkinson, who ported a 6-0 re- sons in the first and Ronnie Cace
cord during the regular season, in the sixth. He struck out eight
made it seven straight by master- and gave up three
comps.” Bar.
relville failed to advance a runner
past second base. Mt. Savage nick.
cd Jim McGregor, losing pitcher
for its two hits—singles by Geor„s
Shafter in the fifth and Vince King
in the 8th. Ronnie Sisk pitched to
A two batters in the eighth inning
first-inning homer by Charlie Max- after
replacing
McGregor,
who
well and two three-run innings struck out five and walked eight.
gave the Detroit Tigers a 7-3 vic
tory over the Kansas City Ath- OG'* Have Big Inning
Iftics today and a sweep of their,
^
ow
Gtrman,
, cortd
• T M
i S S m
m
- .2 bu. cl, -b - n m m tbe - 8^
in „ ,^
throf Kansas City
pitch*!.
I ^ b y Dcfl>nbauab. plnck-h n m«
Harvey
Kucnn led the
attack for Carter, was hit by a pitched
with three. Maxwell's home run ball and moved to second on Win.
was his 25th of the season and his field s sacrifice. Cangan was
n-
seventh in Kansas
City this year, jtentionaliy passed but was forced
The winning pitcher was Virgil by Johnson. Cassidy drew a pa
Trucks, who started and went six ,With Kline at bat. Cage attempted
innings. His record is now 8-5. The'to pick Deffenhaugh off third but
loser was Wally Burnette <3-8
heaved the ball into left field and
who was driven from the mound Bobby raced home. Kline walked
in the seventh.
and then Vince King singled over
detroit
BV SAA* c u t
and third runs
Sisk
I took over for Barrelville and walk
ed Shaffer, Dawson struck out.
Detroit Defeats
Kansas City, 7-3
KANSAS CITY. Sept 9 4>
gles but Hunter grabbed Pete Run
nel* liner to retire the side.
Kid Chocolate
former feather
weight star, now is athletic advis
or to the Cuban government.
A 13 inch Beagle owned by
George C. Parker, of Potomac
Park, finished its champion
ship yesterday by winning in
the Mason and Dixon Kennel
Club Show at Hagerstown.
Champion C. S. Dancer cop
ped first in his class, winners
dog. best of dinners, best of
variety for breed and won in
the hound group.
The
three year-old
Parker
hound has scored wins at ele
ven shows. To win a champion.
ship a hound must snore is
points. C. S. Dancer had, 14
points prior to yesterday and
added three more at Hagers
town.
VA ASH IN G TON
.SFH V O R K
BUD APEST, Hungary. Sept 9 UP
—In a new step toward reconcilia
tion with Tito's Yugoslavia, the
Hungarian government announced
today that people who were evict-
,
Miller. The pd jrom their homes on the Hun-
Phils won the loosely-played sec
ond, 6 5. on a single, stolen base
? I! I 2
Drop" Left
Chicago 9 Cleveland 7, B B
Donovan 3. Kinder I, Score S. SO- Dono
van 4, Score #. HO—Donovan 6 In 7 l l.
Kinder 6 in 2-3. B E R —Donovan 4-2. Kin
der 6-6. Score l l. W —Score (16-91
L —
Donovan
<16-g)
ti- Honochlck,
Napp,
L'mont. Be rrj
T —3 36
(Second Game)
Chicago
301 IOO 001-8 8 0
Cleveland
IOO IOO OOO—I 7 i
Staley and
Moss.
Lollar
C6>;
Aguirre, Garcia <4», Mossi <8» and
Naragon. L~Aguirre.
Softball Tourney
To Open Today
The fifth Western Maryland
Softball Tournament will get
under way today at Penn Ave
nue Field.
Six of the 14 teams entered
will play opening round con
tests on opening day.
At 6 p. m , the Cumberland
Old Germans will play Kelly
Retail. Ritter’s Social Club will
oppose Wonder Bar at 7:30 and
Johnson's Grocery will battle
Melody Manor at 9 o’clock.
Other games are scheduled
for Tuesday and Wednesday.
iKuenn »•
! Sm all rf
Running p
Maxwell M
Kabne rf
I Boone 3b
Torgeaon ll
Bolling 3b
[Wil*on e
Truck* p
a Tuttle cf
It costs $2,385 to enter a horse in
ab k * a
•it ii • a
Vos! 3b
3 3 0 4
Bauer rf
4 1 1 6
Fitz Id r
4 17 0
Carey 3b
3 0 6 2
Runnel* lh
4 1 1 1
Mantle rf
4 0 6 6
Sievera lf
4 0 0 0
Berra e
3 1126
lem on rf
1 6 2 6
Skowrun lh
4 16 1
G raven rf
3 6 2 6
Collin* 1b
6 6 16
Olton rf
2 6 16
M el) f Id 2b 2 I t 3
fle w s 2b
6 0 6 6
Howard lf
3 6 7 6
Rot* 2b-a*
4 1 3 1
Hunter a*
3 I 2 3
V afiliv’ao a*
2 6 16
Ford p
3 0 0 0
a billet) « 2b
I 6 I Q
[Stobbs p
2 6 2 J
,
bCout Inay
0 0 6 ti
Cbakalea p
6 6 6 1
Total*
M C 74 I
Total*
1 3**7 9
a
Struck out for Valdtvlelxn In
Uh
t> Hit aacrtftce fly
lor stobbs tu nth.
W athingtna
WM
WM
410— 1
New V»rk
WM
*06
36x—7
ll
Knig.
Mi Dougald
Howard.
E — Fill-
gerald. Tout. B e n a
H B I—Courtney,
ter 2
2H
Hmg
TM
Hoi*, Hunler.
error and sacrifice fly.
The second-game victory went
to righthander Robin Roberts, the
last of four Phillie pitchers. The
Pirates also used four, with Char
lie Naranjo taking the loss. The
victory was Roberts' 17th of the
season,
bringing the Phils’ ace
closer to a p o s s i b l e seventh
straight 26 game season.
Mary
Blaylock
brought
home
stole second and continued on to
third when catcher Hank Lodes
threw the ball too low. Elm er Valo
j then lofted a fly into center and
ga nan-Yugoslav border d u r i n g the
Garden
State
Stakes.
Last
Tito’s expulsion from the Cornin-! year * winner
took
down 1157,-
form may now return
918 50.
ICI
i
i n
nm *
'n
nm*, n
u
,
R l o v l n r b v.rniA H
Rot*, a- MrDounaid, Carey. s9-Courtney. niavioCK SCO!en.
LOANS
DF TO $1500
Caw
tau
M«Mk!y
• *<• »#
ea,*>*«>i|
Calk
24
7 Ow
Moo*!*
lacs -a
gavot eft*
$100 OO
200 OO
300 OO
$ * 73
1144
30 16
S SOI OO
740 32
1032 OO
$2S OO
3* OO
SOOO
Payment* abave thaw tan, «| |*S« ,< ttpatd mn ached*!*
Cha***i mn leant abave S300 •>* mmPm under 6** Indutbrai
finance taw
Phone PArkview 4-3600
for your money today!
FAMILY
F I N A N C E
C O R P O R A T I O N
40 North Mechanic Street
*
Telephone: PArkview 4-3600
D P
Show'rem, Hunler And Sh o w n *
M f
Dougald
end
Skowron
Left—Washington
b
New York 6. B B — Stobh* I. Chahdle' I,
fold J
SCL Ntobb* 5, Fold ll. HD—
Stubbs 4 in 7, Chnkale* I in I.
R-ER--
Stobha 2-6. Chahale* 0-6. Ford !-t. W —
Ford
(17-5*.
L —Stc'bb*
(13-1 I L
I
-Sum-
mcr». R u t, I label I*. Mc Kinley. T —2:11.
A
I7.SU
Amateur Golf
Meet To Open
L A K E FO REST, III. Sept 9 UP-
Conlidente was bubbling all over nnM 1JIG N
the lush Knollwood course today
ah b * *
a’s 200 goiters fired their final
<• n J j a e
practice shots before the start of thomas 3b
d u o
the 56th National Amateur Golf
Championship tomorrow.
ironies c
* 2 3 0
Ken Venturi, the Calitornia kid.fJrcat*.
3 6 2 5
who almost set the Masters T o u r - J 0 ib j j y ®
nainent topsyturvy
last spring, ^skinner
l i c e
and his associate in a San Fran
cisco automobile business, defend
ing champion Harvie Ward
are
the names most trequently men-
ttoned by those who try to pick
the winners They both have been
playing well.
,
_______
J
O
F
MOTORISTS'
FRIEND, Inc.
173 Boltimort Street
tor
AUTO ACCESSORIES
SEAT COVERS
MOTOR OIL
TIRES
et LOWEST PRICES
Skinner came to bat for Kline in
the 10th inning of the lirst game |
with Hank Folios, who had singled.
on second, and Bill Mazeroski on
first through a walk. The homer
was his fourth of the season.
Through nine innings. Kline, who
was credited with his 13th victory
against 16 defeats, and Miller, who
now has a 3-6 record, each gave
up six hits. The defense hacked
up the tight pitching jobs with five
double plays, three by the Pirates.
M R> T G A M !
P H II A D E L P H I A
ab h a a
Ashburn cl
4 12 0
Hemu* 2b
3 14 7
Blaylock lb
4 0 14 1
Lopata e
3 0 3 0
Enrnt U
J one* 3b
Vain rf
Hamner *»
R Miller p
b B m h o lti
Face p
0 0 10
Total!
34 6 30 19
TalaU
a— Homered for Kline in loth
b-Grounded out tor R Miller in loth
Pittsburgh
OOI
OOO
coo
1—4
Philadelphia
OOO
OOO
106 6— 1
R
Colies
Mazeroakl 2. Skinner, Jone* j
E
None
R B I
KUne.
Jon**,
Skinner
J. i
2R-Clem ente.
Ma/ervaki 2. Ftutee
3B—
Walls. H R —Jone*. Skinner S B — Ennis S—
Groat.
S F —Face,
D P
Mazeroski.
Groat
and Long;
Groat. Mazeroski and
Long. I
Kbne. M aieroaki and Long. Jones. Hemus ;
and Blaylock; H ainnni. Hemus and B la y
lock.
Left -Pittsburgh 4.
Philadelphia ii.
B B
Kline 4. R
M iller 2,
SO -R Miller J.
KUne 2, Face I
H O -K lm e 4 in 9. Face 0
in I
R E R —Kline l l
M iller 4-4
VVP-
R Miller.
W - K iln #
U3-I6L
L - R M iller
13-6). l l — DonateUi. Gorm an.' PinelU. Dix
on. T —2:11.
Second Game
Pittsburgh
020 030 OOO 0—5 IO 3 \
Philadelphia
IOO 210 IOO 1-6 14 2 J
Friend, Kline <6', Face <8», Na- ^
ranjo
<10)
and Shepard, Foiles k
(5); Haddix. Negra
<5), Meyer N
<6), Roberts <7) and Lopata. W — ^
Roberts. L - Naranjo
^
Home run — Philadelphia. Lo- ^
pata
KANSAS (IT T
ah ti * a
ah h rn a
5 3 2 3
Power lb
* 1 7 6
3 6 2 0
Skit** lf
4 1 1 6
1 1 0 6
ls>pex 3b
4 13 2
3 12 1
Simpers rf
4 2 16
4 14 6
Smith c
4 2 * 1
4 1 1 1
Pilarcik cf
3 3 4 6
9 5 2 6 6
DeM'atn aa
1 1 1 4
4 0 3 3
bThnmpson
16 0 0
3 6 1 I
Ba vc* aa
6 6 0 6
2 16 1
Boyer 2b
3 14 1
3 2 6 0
cRohtnann
16 6 6
Finigan 2b
6 0 6 6
Burnette p
16 0 2
Crim un p
6 6 0 0
Kretlow p
6 6 6 6
dZrrnial
6 6 6 6
r it 77 i
Talala
I i 12 27 I*
B A R R E L V IL L E
"Ort <*«
666-« 3
t
MT
S A V A G E
606 006
OJx—3 2 J
Jim M cGregor. R
S it* ( I ) and Cag*.
'Dawson and Iran ian .
L P —J . M cG reior.
ZIH LM A N
662 666
bfkV- 2 ’ I
.GRANTSVILLE
3#0 016 61x-S » I
Brodie. Rice
*3) »nd Bktdm ore
WJ-
kinaon and Keister.
L P - Brodie
________________________
Totals
a—Singled for Truck* In 7fh
lh—F bed out for
DeMaeotrt ta 6th.
r- Flied out for Boyer In 6th,
d- Walked for Kreflow in tth
Detroit
166 666 363—7
Kansas
City
666 761 666—3
R — Kuenn. Bunning. Maxwell
3. KaUne.
Tuttle. Simpson
Smith
2.
E- Boyer.
Crimtan. B B !
Maxwell 2. Torgeson, Ka-
fine 2. Boone. Smith. Pilarcik. Boyer 2B—
Pilarn k . Smith. Tuttle. Baline 3B—Torge
son.
HR
Maxwell
S
Small
Maxwell.
D P -Maxwell and Bolfing, Kuenn. Bolbng
and Torgeson 2, Burnette. DeMaestrt and
Power. Lopez and Boyer. Left—Detroit ll.
Kansas City 9
B B —Truck* 3. Bunning I,
Burnett* 5, Kretlow I. SO Trucks I, Bun
mng 2. Burnett* 2, Crimtan I. Kretlow 1.
HO—Truck*
9
in
6,
Bunning
3
in
3.
Burnette I in 6 2-3. Crimian 3 in I 1*3.
Kretlow
I in I R E R - Truck* 3-3. Bur-,
nette 6-2. Crimtan 3-3.
P B —Smith.
W — |j
Truck*
<6-S>.
L — Burnette
(3-IL
U — I
Runge, Rommel, Stevens. Tabaret)), T —
2 52. A l.490,
Gatherman’s
Busi
ness School Eludent
wishes
rid* from
Westernport to Cum
berland daily.
Phone PA 44)966
y „
ID GERMAN
NATIONAL LEA G U E
Yesterday’* Result*
Milwaukee 7-5, Chicago 4-3
Brooklyn 8, New York I
St.
Louis 6. Cincinnati 5
(13
innings;
Pittsburgh 4 5, Philadelphia 1-6
<both IO innings)
Standing Of The Team*
Won Lost Pet. G B.
Milwaukee
83
54
.606
aaww>
Brooklyn
. . 82
55
.599
I
Cincinnati ...
80
57
.584
3
St
Louis
68
68
.500
IC I
Philadelphia
63
72
.467
19
Pittsburgh
60
78
.435
23
New York
56
80
.412
28',
Chicago
..... 54
82
.397
28 *
Today’* Schedule
33 6 36 l l
Ifs amazing when you
remember I had no political
future until I started getting my J
clothes STA-NU dry cleaned by
^
^
wsrxiTarawwM
8
No games scheduled.
a m e r ic a n l e a g u e
Yesterday's Result*
New York 2. Washington I
Cleveland 4-2. Chicago 1-6
Boston
3,
Baltimore
2
(13
innings)
Detroit 7. Kansas City 3
Standing Of The Team*
W on Lott PH . G.B.
ah i naru {<>/
New York ..
88
49
642 _
Cleveland ... , 76
59
.563
ll
Chicago ...... . 76
59
.563
ll
Boston
...
. 75
6!
.548
12'i
Detroit........ . 69
67
.507
18N
Baltimore ... . 59
77
.434
28N
Washington
57
79
.419
30N
Kansas City
43
92
.319
44
D I A L : P A 4-1400
V
jr jr j0
j0
jr w
r <
0
j0
jr jr jr jr j»
Goth !
GET IT
Today'» Schedule
No games scheduled.
FOOTBALL SCORES
(Saturday Game)
Keyser High 19. Charles Town
0 U E EN *C 'T y S P E .V i
G "c O
A
■ H a ' - ' t m
* I '
Phone PA 2-4600 for a W ANT AD Taker
i n t
L.UMDC KL/\iNU
Arch Rival, Sought And Toy Knightess Arrive At Fairgo
Torreyson String Includes
Black Jewel And Newberry
70 Horses Already
Stabled; Littleton
To Have Crew 175
Happy Chandler
Given Booing At
Pro Grid Game
Arch Rival, champion juvenile
of the Maryland minor track cir-!
curt
last year;
Sought, a good
LOUISVILLE. Ky.. Sept. 9 ■ fi
e rc e * year • old
filly,
and
ToyiGov
B
Chandler today was
Knightess. a 4-year-old filly that greeted with a roar of booing
finished in the money 13 times in w^cn
made a halftime appear-
23 outings and won $12,315 in 1955 ance before 21.876 spectators at
were among the topnotch thor- the exhibition National Football
oughbreds arriving yesterday at League game between f’hiladel-
Fairgo for the 12-day session of Ph|a and Baltimore
the Cumberland Fair Association
The booing began when Chan-
which gets under way Wednesday d,er appeared on the field and
at 2 p. rn . EDT.
n e w actually stopped. Chandler
spoke briefly and at one point
Approximately
seventy
horses
arc now in the barns at the local
half mile track and the “big rush"
will be on today and tomorrow as
horsemen
van
their
strings
to
said:
“If you showed as much enthu
siasm as you have mouth you
would
have pro football every
Cumberland from Timonium which SuJ?da-v
.
u
The Democratic governor has
closes on Tuesday.
Arch Rival heads the
stable of been at odds with leaders of the
..Sh, (rained by L. E. T a r p o n ^
2
^
,
*
L°UiSVUIe
tiC'Cflce a f vvcie• ’
.
«/
who has had much success at past
meets here
Arch Rival, a 3-year
COULD SCORE AT NICE PRH E—One of the horses to waich
during the Cumberland Fair Association s racing meet which opens
Wednesday is Zybie, a 7 year-old gelding, trained by Thomas R.
Decker. Zybie won twice and placed twice at the Charles Town
He has been critical of his Dem-
old. won eight race. in It
torro*r GoV' 1
Walston Stars
As Eagles Top
Colts, 19-14
Kicks Four Goals,
Snares Key Pass
(B y Th# A ssociated Pre**)
W heeling Entries
? e ir ,T J ",X
‘,r.t S S S X i i *
™
*
T
h
e
R
a
c
e
T
r a
c
k
s
spring he won*two races and last ^ ' ^ ' 1'0"
whrrp ,oday * Today's Selections
Wednesday celebrated his return
1
s
■
to the races with a decision over
War Phar at Timonium.
Other
classy runners in the Torreyson
string include Black Jewel, recent
victor at Timonium and Newberry
which scored at Hagerstown.
Sought, winner of four races at
Charles Town and Hagerstown, is
among
the
four
thoroughbreds
being conditioned by J. M. Webb.
of Roanoke. Va., who trains for
the Dun-So-La Stable. Toy Knight
ess formerly raced on the major
ovals and was handled by Davern
Emery, now trainer for the Caro
lyn K Stable. Her record in 1955
was 4-5-4 and Trainer Webb re
ports she is in excellent condition
for the races here. Zany, a 5-year-
old mare owned by Mrs. Helen
Duncan, wife of L. N. Duncan,
general manager of the Queen
ATLANTIC C ITT
1
Dunum, Alpine Rn**. Habitant#
2
P o m posity,
B eauty
M iss,
Town
J
I H ope. Y oui* Shin*, Soh it ii a
4
A lter
K eo,
P ap a to n y . Hi and F a ir
J— D ark T ru ll. B rady A, V ertex
A R ippon, M itt E q u ity , T e tra Sun
7
Don t
l-ook
Now < rann. Sea Vnv*«#
Bro * „ T itre**
t
Why Not
Mi**
C astle, Top B ra** U tile
B arb
BEST BKT—Alter I*®
I ProudHwt
spring meeting, l^ast year Zybie finished in the money IO times
in 22 outings, including eight seconds
Zybie ut pictured with a
stagehand and Trainer Decker on the right.
Dodgers To Tour jVdn Roby, Jackson
Hawaii And Japan Annex Title Hight
Matches In Tourney
Shufflers Open
Race Thursday
Sid Roach Named
Cage, Baseball
Coat h At Paw Paw
Three N ew Teams
A m ong 20 Listed
Sid Roach, former Romney High
and Shepherd College athlete, ha*
been named basketball and base
ball coach at
Paw
Paw
High
School, succeeding Robert Wolford,
The
20 team
Allegany County *ho recently resigned
Shuinfhoard U u u r will nP,n Us
A, Ro,
b, , arppd |cl|p, ,
or Thursday n,«ht
ll WM (oolM |
b.,<kl.,b„||
h.,srhi)||
aniMuncrd
yrstrrday
by
Disk „nd lratk (nd „ sbophrrd r „,lr„
Oirtstophfr,
rf frrsibuis. »«■«• ihf
(,„tball. b«»k«h.B
la2L
and baseball
There are three new teams in
sid was a member of the J lagers.
the
circuit
this
year.
namely,Uown pmrchikf Packets and Char*
Cumberland Eagles, Peck s Cafe,jps Town Legion basketball teams.
* ,
*nd
Cumberland u, «!<,,> was a memhei of the Rom*
\ r \V Stadium Inn Frostburg i-'m-y Rockets independent baseball
among the missing for the first team in the old Inter-Sfate League.
time si nee the league was formed, |,M*t year he played
baseball at
eight yeai s
ago
Oilier
195.1 Tai Earl Benning Ga
teams that
have withdrawn aret
His parents are Mr
and Mrs.
the Cumberland Rodmen and Mi
Savage V. T
VS
Here are matches .scheduled for
Thursday at 8 .IO o'clock;
NATIONAL DIVISION -Cumber
land Moose at Cumber lane! Eagles,
Mann's Tavern at Hi Dee Club.
Purple Heart Club at Frostburg K
of C . Green s Chevrolet at Fisher
A Robinette and Woodmen of the
World at Golden Nugget, Frost
burg.
Paul Roach. Springfield VV Va.
Si VTI RDA VS NI I. si ORES
Chicago Beats 21 Pittsburgh Id
Washington 17. Green Hay IO
New York 21. Nan Francisco ll
AMERICAN DIVISION
Cate at Southern Bar Clingerman *
at
Ca*
Taylor'*.
Fort
Ashby
V F. VV at Cumberland K of C.a
Frostburg Eagles at Gondfellow.
ship (Tub and Cumberland V E W’.
Peck’s af Frostburg American legion
BROOKLYN. Sept. 9 UP -P re s i
dent Walter F. O'Malley of the
Brooklyn Dodgers announced few *
Chiton Van ftohy defeated Max
day he had completed negotiations Bastian. 9 and 7. and Orville VV
KIRST *1 ooo. c. I Y A up, tv* fur
Roxton Baby
IIT E te rn a l D an g er 117
BelieveiwUI
120 On M y O '*n
ll®
sp eed
I* V ital
120 x B rtlyn G
H i
Quteli Hypo c h a itra
117 R ocket M aria
117
jw ^iioka
!» C ai* Lady
I S 'for
w«rM champions to tour I Jackson won over George Garbo.
Gun Maker
i2o
Hawaii. Japan and United States ! up on the 19th hole in first round
se( o.ND si.oeo. c. SY a up. I i i* military bases at Okinawa tm
1*0 mediately
117
in
J im '* Tow *
Cm CuJo
F a tte r Runty
I o u n t R ay b ern
130
J
T H IR D
11.000. C
l * I V . I M I M
■E LM O N T CARIS
Swill l.vnn
IO? J e t C o m m an d er I ii
I
Pilot J e t, M ission H oed, Arctan l.a ik s y rr s p u r
I i i O lym pic R u n n er HS
lift
117
117
120
S h re w * , S m ileatone. K xpedition
IxH oval Souxentr 102 C lodhopper
C rucial. B reaker* A head, H rbei G irl windy Bill
n o
r i m G lance. P a u l* * T ex. Bill < anc
FO U R TH
$ 1 8 0 0 , C I V *
stip e n d , A m b tm fo rU . G len A lden
U j
Soor*
D ream .
Equable*!,
G la n d e s ,r H ow ard
120
A **em hl*fe
na
up. I l l*
G rephen
7 —M arxillah, Mia# Blue Ja y
t
Islan d er, M uezzin. Kite an d D rum
BF ST BKT*—M arullah
LOUISVILLE, K y, Sept. 9 tfu.
Bobby Walston kicked four field
goal* and caught a key pass toddy |
to lead the Philadelphia Eagles Be|m 0nt Park Entries
over the Baltimore Colt*. 19-14.
chalking up the Eagle* first win
.B onnie liter
D efilade ‘ A conite
IVA, IIVI OI
I I
I
Ut
inc
(
"
City Brewing Company, and Colo-|,n
Football League exhi*
ny Page, a 6-year-old gelding, also Aition play
•re being conditioned by Webb.
Among yesterday’s arrivals at
the
local
track
were
several
vanloads of thoroughbreds' from
Wheeling Downs and Randall Park
in Ohio. in addition to those that
were sent here from Timonium
and Charles Town.
Walston racked up a 6-0 lead
with 37 and 14 yard field goals in
the first quarter. He added an
other in the third from the IO and
in the closing minutes kicked the
final points from the 14
The Colts drove 80 yards in 12
plays to the Eagles IO and guar*
Hagerstown winners slated
to
Gw fge Shaw found Lenny
race here are Just Fair, R h y w ic k .° ° re m ,he e”d zone for their
Record Trip. Jacodancer. Bristol firust P en rt tmichdown. Bert Recd
Joe, Big Tattoo. Swick, Sought,
Newberry, Nutzie Moran, Lorenzo.
Perturbed, Argumentative, Mind’*
ichar added the point to make it
7-6.
Moore took a punt on his own 39
and raced 40 yards to the Eagles
n -
lav- Bari
iiiAckn
1
AJan Ameche and L. G. Dupre
Dr. .ake. Red Flush Juesbu, Zac- rammed the iinc {o three wherc
rn Seepier and Waging Along
AmKhe
,
„v„ Rpchichar-,
Timonium
w in tra
liattd
for conw U ow ,
pm th. Colt.,
stalls at I-airgo include Just !• air.! j4.j3 at
^a|f
ut
KIRST
*3.SOO, <
J * up
HA M
M u tto n R oad
IHI
B attalion
a w o rry M anana IU*
Jin* J im
Bi* Wood#
120
xN oble Sir
Cub
Scout
ll*
A rdan
L a rk
ll* :
Pilot J e t
113
S ealed Book
ll*
SECO ND
*3300. I
TY
I up. H a M
A gba A libhal
ll*
Shrew ie
ll* :
R unform un
F IF T H
l i no*. C.
I E lu m *
ll*
I Count L ifh t
HS
jH o n eio n e
113
I G ilded R ight
ll*
I SIXTH
*1,000. C
. . . l o u r D ay
ll*
" ‘ s ilv e r
Billy
ti*
1,0 Wan Shy
H I
kBull tread er
HS
SEV EN TH
*1,000, C
l i t
E tth a r V
120 C ourt H ov
117 H appy P lay tim e
S Y A up, 6>-t fu r
Hi Ruddy
B rookshire
G ray lin g
matches played in the champion-
after the 1956 World jship flight of the fall golf tourna-
Scries.
moot at the Cumberland (Country
The trip will be sponsored by.Club
Yomiuri Shimbun. one of the lead-
Results of matches played in the
mg Japanese newspaper*.
The Dodger party will leave
New York Oct. IO and depart from
San Francisco Oct. ll. The team
first flight were as follows;
Benny LaNcve defeated William
Claus, I and I; Jerome Ellennon
defeated Dr. A
G. Shandhoff. 4
3. Morion Pe.skin. Jr.. won
will play three game* in the Ha-land 3. Morton Peskin. Jr.,
||*i waiian Islands. 20 in Japan and over George Schwar/enhach. 8 and
' two at Okinawa The Dodgers will 7
John Wilson won bv default
I V. « ‘t fu r.
M u*iard Seed
H onker
Good h e a rt
3 Y a up .
Tim ely B ull
It*
a-Senti h
R oyal
US
Sm ile atone
ll* a Refi igeriqua
Man Man
ll* Arnold
E xpedition
ll* F ine D ick
Hiwiked
i ount Bro*#
Walk And T alk JI* r o r e v t r A gnat
^G in g e r B row n l U
l p ^ P a n ? r
11 a
IU
120
120
II*
IU
f o rt B ara
Sir
G am b ia
D eem
won
it*! return to the United States Nov. jfiom Dr. Frank Leger; Dr.
Us 17.
|T. Cawley won by default
It marked the third straight in-'Ken Farrell
vltation to a metropolitan team.
The New York Giants toured Ja
pan in 1953 and the New York
•'a! Yankees were visitor* there
1955.
Frank
from
117
120
tao
120
117
117
fo rtu n e *
Fool
ll* ^ in fligh t
C asual F rien d
ll*
Trtu*
ll* M agic W and
A lakxar
ll* R ealtor
» t aho* hon
113 W arrior# S tand ll*
a
B artell S lea irr E n try
T H IR D
S3,*00, H all 3 Y A up. IM M
M adal
M an
ISA
B reaker# A head 1*3
R atty
My c ro ft
130
T h reat
1*3 C orn H unker
xxx-Sgi
V inca
133 C rucial
Independanc#
13* kkH ebet G irl
FOURTH—*3.700. C 3 Y A up.
S tum pia
1 » W iaem ar
E IG H T H -*1.000, C. IV
A1
Sir Sag
A up. I I I*
. . . E l'a M arxhall
• ‘l l l>nve B etty
* Ibi
AAC
IIT
117
120
ll*
xR ack F ire
T rue To V a
D addy C
D ark P rtd a
112
III
117
114
Nats’ Plews, lemon
Hurt In Collision
r»
B reak er* A head U (
,
e» rom Remark rn Atlantic City Entries
JO
xM i
I nited
It*
I
Posting
a net 712-69. Clifton
Van Roby won the straight handi
cap tourney held a* the club over
in | the
weekend
Twenty
members
participated
Those with flags on the par
three holes were
No. I—Clifton
Van Roby. Nos 6 and 13—Orville
VV Jackson. No. IP—Morton Pes
kin. Jr. No. 12—Earl Guard
IS—Morton peskin, Sr.
No.
P a u la a T ea
Will
Be
Do m
Lady
Atom
Bill C ane
F in d G lance
The Eagles tried a series of line
HypofrUl. Gary B. Blue Crown,
MinO-s Eye Spr.ns Grove. Jim '. p| , yll
opp„ th, spcond bjU bul
Pal, Swrar Off. High V ision. Black found hit], opening in the Colt
Jewell. Arch Rival. Alibu. Quaker hnt Tb, Colt5 look ov„ but (jve
Meeting. Grand Chiel and A Bit plays ,at„
the
ta g le s- Chuclt
^ ast-
Bednarik intercepted a pass and
George Pell s Spherical, winner returned it to the Colt 16.
of
the
1955
Manley
Memorial;[
The Eagles couldn't get past the
Deena Fair. Little Gig, Master De- Colt four and Walston was called
gree and Farm Mils are among the up0n to drop his third field goal
thoroughbreds being brought here and give the Eagles a 16-14 edge
by George Pell of Washington.
j
The two teams kept the ball
Robert C. Littleton, of Hagers- pretty much in the center of the
town, who will serve as pari mu-1 field for the next few minutes until
tuel manager at Fairgo for the the Eagles' Don Schaefer took a
third year, was a visitor here yes- hand off and passed to Walston
terday. He returned to Timonium for 49 yards to the Colt 31. setting
last night. Bob stated that he has the stage for the final field goal.
a
picked crew of 175" to work the Baltimore
......... 7
7 •
0—14
local meet because of the fact that Philadelphia
....... 6
7 3
3— ll
Delaware Park is not running at
Baltimore scoring—Touchdowns;
the present time as it was when Moore '35, pass-run from Shaw)
Cumberland
was
operating
last Ameche <3 plunge). Conversions
June. In fact. Littleton revealed Rechichar 2.
that quite a few in his crew have
Philadelphia scoring — Touch-
not been here for four or five years downs; Shaelfer I, plunge. Field
as they were working at other EoaL Walston 37, 16. IO, 14. Coa
tracks during the Cumberland ses-1 versions: Walston,
sion. The work of setting up the
tote equipment here is scheduled •*
ta i*
to start today.
BOSOX W i l l
O
v e r
Hundreds
of
persons
visited
■
■
| # | 4 L
Fango yesterday to give the thor- V ^ llO I O S lf*
I A lf*
oughbreds the “once over’ and it
BALTIMORE, Sept. 9 if— Billy
really was the busiest day since Goodman banged out a run-produe-
Cumberland Fair Association offi- mg single in the 12th inning today
a a ls began preparing
lor its ini- to decorate a
five-hit pitching
12b
110
UA
ll*
______
ll*
ahead » je t se t
i m
F IF T H
**.000. all
iG len
A lden
Am btnsonx
O rrta rc k
12*
a G unner B«v
111
t D aw n
H e a t
111
a- W hitney E n try
SIXTH
*4.300. all
a-N oort I n a i f
IOO
IU
r n 1
f i r s t
13 IOO t
VY, * fat
131 xxM ightv S m a rt IO*
Mi** K atU ton
lu r T ow er HUI
ll*
H ab itan t*
113 x k M arrh Co-Ed KW
xD taplav Son*
N ative Son
116 * •* ' sh « ‘
*H
M ar
C trcu* P a ra d a
13<> Du*uin
It*
M adeira
P a tu x e n t
113 Stew ard
ll*
x*T l*ht P la y e r 107 a * L<.m 0 n
Y arn
123 xC ourageou* A re IO# C e n te rlin e
ll*
N ight Bel!
ll# Alpine Ro*#
111
Adducted
H 3
SECOND *3,200 C, AY A up, 7 fur
TY A up. I 1 /1 * M B eauty M.*a
Si11ban
12# B att!# M ount
Jonn
G ordon
117 T urf Bull
Stioend
122 EU aka
W liat.toldyou
ll*
G ove.no
M anihtki
lo* * * * * * Run
Q u arry Slave
lu r L ittle Joneay
THIRD >3J
NKW YORK, Sept 9 * — Two
Washington Senator
hall players r .
,
,
. . .
.
were sent to Lenox
Hill Hospital fljZhlS I MIS W06K
today after a collision in the sec-
®
ond in n in g o f th eir g a m e w ith th e
t o n ig h t
juan u iu iiiv a n . m
e ««
V n rlr V i n t o n . .
lan d . v«
Willi# T ro y , of W ashington. D
, , ,
N ew Y o rk T a n n i n s .
J, _ at st
N lrhola*
A ren*. New Y ork
in
Second baseman Herb Plews and jT#iee#*t by DuMont at i* p m . i m
,ut right fielder Jim Iarmon collided
caught a short fly by
Yankee first baseman Bill Skow-
3 Y A
up
b l .r e n a n L ur# 116
.M a n # F an cy
IOT
G rand U .a p h e n ll* C agey M °>,
Cl a caic
M usic
IO#
Noor* D ream
*,» H ope
y anti ne B usher 113 K in*’* B ounty
E quableu
122 S tran g e Union
a P ata ca D an cer IO#
_
P rince**
K it#
U ljX x B u stle Ma
Silent
One
b-Ro*e O a g
U3
B lack M ain
113
xE aca Ij i **
IO*
a —Bell P hippa E n try
b Com pa na S table Z a u d erer E n try
SEV EN TH
The
A ata rita, *15,000 add
«d. atake*. 2 Y. 6 lu r
(W idner Coui*e»
M aruilah
119 Mi** Blue J a y
a Lucky M istake lib F a ir View
K apichan
111 D efilade
A tanesian
122 J e t'# I h a rm
a-T ourbillonta
ll*
a —S lephens-C hrv*ler E n try
EIG H TH
*3.700 C , * V A up. I M
R etam e rn
111 South F lo rid a
ll*
G aelic C hiel
113 D udley D arb u ry 113
G ay R ea p er
110 xM utti
2nd
106
Islan d er
117 xR oartn gBull
M u em n
117 Fife And D rum
113
x-S xx-7 xxxT* lb*. AAC.
lls
Rom posit v
IM
114
xxQutck 'lo an
III
ll*
Live Ticket
III
IM
Andv Johnson
IM
11*
Faurh# (event
IMI
167
Sweet Verm outh I Mi
ll*
x« Mi** Drop It
104
114
H ’n
G
R
106!
OO. < . M. 2 Y, # fur.
tis
a Quiz Mar
IIN
us
Look Forw ard
IIS1
113
Bien Gold
113
u s
Buford * Gal
113
u s
Soh* ti a
115
in*
Fortunate
US
a US
I ’Audacious
115
US
Your Shine
US
ron
Plews sustained
_
,____ ,
m en
Basil!
a head injurj
TU ESD AY
L a rry
B o ard m an ,
M arl
boro, Conn , va
J im m y C a rte r, a t Bo*
to n G ard en
*
W EDN ESD AY
Jo h n n y S axton defend*
w elterw eight ch am p io n sh ip ag a mat C a r
m en
B atin o ,
fo rm e r
ch am p io n ,
in
It
at fty racu ae. N
Y
B road
swelling on the right tide of
ED T
I HIDAY
R alph (T ig a rt Jo n es. Yonk
e ra, N
Y . v t
Wilt (.reav e * of ( anad *
and
P ittab u rg h .
at
W ashington
D
<
B ro ad cast
and (tia ra * !
by NRC a t
I*
p. ma. KOT.______________________
1*0
120
120
Timonium Entries
I J lb*, AAC.
F IR S T
*1.000. M
2 Y, » fur
C lontoo
U S High P itch
Barmie
US B aufra
N ickel P u m p
ll* Pouty
E a r lech*
Jo y
115 Mi** P atien ce
T e trad
ll* G ee l.in
M r J N
ll* P h a ra ru le
SECO ND —*1,000
C. S Y A up. 7
Long L iver
111 O ccupied
Zone
Busy B room
111 x S p h eriral
R ecor T rip
117 Irism a rk
I n onhunter
120 la u r e l
Brook
B alm y Mixa
117 Saf« D eposit
Fir#! Jo Al
117 Sun B randy
T H IR D
11.000, I , 3 Y A up. 7 lu r
Lynbrook
a
AAM Stahl* Treplow Stable Flirty
E O I RTH
*3,30(1. C , 3 Y. 6 fur
119 R estra in ed
ll* HI And F a ir
I
1 1 2 ! F leet Lax*
IU P ik ad o n
I
11* i P ap a Tony
114 A lter Ego
I
122 M ist E rlen
I i i
F IF T H
13 *00
all , J Y. * fur.
B radv A
120
D ark T re at
D eadly A ctor
ll# O ur Jo y
V ertex
120 Jo lly
R h y m er
Ju m p in g R rook 120
SIXTH
If .ooo. all , J Y. « fur.
ins M iss Equity
ll*
R ippon
N o rm andy 2nd
ll*
flite
T e tra Sun
ll*
.M itt Jaro m m o
Va va Con Dioa ll*
SEV EN TH
13.400. C . S Y . I 1/Y * M
(turf I.
C rau n
M I
D on’t Look No** Mf
S ara K ale
112
xTwfnlght
ll*
K ing* R ut*
ll!
JJT x x C ap a rtito r
HO
J J-Sm ooth S tride
113
R edhot T rouble US
r f ;I D delovelv
ll*
JJJ
EIG H TH
*3.300. C . 4 Y A u p . I 1 /1 *
i igj M
fur I Br#** Ring
ll*
x H rrn ’s P rtftce IO*
. .^1 John R P
ll*
Top R rass
ll*
L 'W h v Not
111
\M i*» Caslle
IM
JU xxClever Def*
106 xxG randpa * Sue IO*
IM
- ............----------------V- '--------- - - I - -------- J
117
117
with Footer sfHTBB
\ o * *
x B ea u 'a M agie
H edy’a B est
I cive* E te rn a l
il.v n m a r
Sea V oyage
H o rk etain
111
US
US
Dry Cleaning Care
There'* a Footer Store Near You
Harry F O O T E R a c.
CLEANERS
Cumberland, LoVole, Frostburg, Keyser & Piedmont
or Phone PA 2-6400 for Pick-up ond Delivery
L
JUST IM TIME FOR SCHOOL
STUDENT
LAMP
$£49
INCLUDING
FEDERAL TAX
BEAUTIFUL
BRASS FINISH
GOLD SUNBURST
DESIGN PARCHMENT
SHADE
SCIENTIFICALLY DESIGNED
FOR STUDY, READING. SEWING, FTC.
C O M #L fT l W IT H R fF lfC T O t M U J
See fhf*e »ftricDee tamp* ln»Wy
T W > p
Irniw** hf*h end
provide proper U ^ l wuitout •yepLraifUnc d art h ^Ax
qeeeU y.
IHE POTOMAC EDISON CO.
Ual 12-day session and the latest
racing meet here in 13 years.
Here are some more stables that
have been granted stalls for the
meeting here:
J
P. SIMPSON, Berryville. Va.
Roll
E qual. Hasty Word. Mmd a Eye. Swick,
Lady
Virginia
Scotch
Knight.
Cool. was set W ith a walk, a W ild pitch
chore by young Dave Sisler and
Ike Delock as the Boston Red Sox
edged the Baltimore Orioles 3-2.
Goodman got his single off Bill*'
O’Dell, who relieved starter Con
nie Johnson after the scoring stage
Royal Walk
Humble Boy
Night Mu*ic
P o w cti
f ttdfcw
Jack Tyne
114
117
IM
U7
120
IM
t M ittir Degree 112
Reeky K.
EUGENE TOMPKINS, Haltimoie
Dr
Jake. Indian Harp. Ala Pigeon. Ventilate,
H arhiei, ll Trovatore
HOBER I
W HEELER.
Baltim ore—
Kievx Teddy. Ila**.' Chance. Larkchoid.
Lively Jeep, Dutch King. Ca»alaine. Ball’*
Lam ent, bethorn ( axe
IR E D
G R EEN E.
Davidsville.
P a -
Inagain, Place Pigalle- Scone. M ary God-
fie>
Jim * Pal. Extra Blend. Star Wor
ship. Donoux. Abbextale
WILLIE
J.
JOHNSON,
B altiin o ie-
Regal Pax*. Driven o u t, Light Bonnet,
Mr. Thutnbe, Royal Glove*.
JOSEPH
MCCAFFREY.
Lutherville,
M d.-S un Brady, Busy Amble.
W. S. MOXLEY, Elliott City- Bellator,
Ostracize, Busy Phil. Mister
Dan, Mr.
M orzberger, Knott Jack.
HarpUt
LYNCH
Pong*
Up.
Gay
and Delock’s bunt
The 9 079 fans had until then
witnessed a mound duel in which
Johnson gave up only seven hits.
Delock,
who took over in the
eighth after Sisler had twirled
three-hit ball for seven innings,
emerged
with
his
12th victory
against six losses. He gave up only
two scratch safeties.
Johnson was tagged with his
10th loss against seven victories,
BOSTON
BALTIMORE
ab k a a
Goodman 2b 5 I I I
Pierxall cf
Lepcio 3b
White e
WILLIAM
I ,in * ,.i
. *»»»
*.-j Kjau,, M
S I
3 3
Com m ander, Renounc*
T.W’liam* lf 3 0 I 0
JOHN S. ADAMS. U iarle* Town
W . Varnon )b
«2 IO
I
V a.-H ig h Traffic. Apslav. Black Mollie. Jensen rf
El vie
ll,, Steel
Town.
Sure
To S ta y .1
Jeeps!!#**, Swear OH.
L
J
BOYCE
B udal
Wreath
Still
Hoping
My Lucille. Big Tattoo, Border
r
Lord. Thorn Bunh
aGernert
DAVID BUTLER. Towson. Md
v#ry IfcConaolo
Special. Blue Tune, Indictm ent. Alibu.
!Sja,er „
R
t .
CALDWELL.
Tlm onium -C all cStephen*
The King. Jeraey Impulae, New Gino
nelock p
O. DeCRESt ENT, B altim ore-Irtam ark,
ToUli
43*3*14
Tatal*
M ai
Val DeOro. M axtam
_
d
Singled for Wha# in *th
b—Ran for Gernert in *lh
3 14 0
3 12 1
3 0 3 3
2 0*1
1 0 4 0
1 I 0 0
0 0 0 0
2 0 0 3
110 0
I 0 0 I
43 ( 3* 14
ab k a a
Gardner 2b
3 0 4 2
Boyd lb
3 113 0
Kell 3b
3 0 15
Ntrman lf
3 0 3 0
Francona rf 3 2 3 0
Trtando* e
3 1 * 1
Pyburn cf
1 0 2 0
dFrazier
1 0 0 0
Miranda t i
3 0 2 7
Johnton p
4 10 1
O’Dell p
0 0 0 0
Kikuyu
l i t
Berniey
ll*
Peggy Prim
ll*
Gatewood’* Gal U t
FOURTH—*1,000
C. S Y A up, 7 fur
Dandalo
117 Mi** Eileen
IM
Navy Brat
ll* Bill’* Beat
Red Elu*h
123 Fir Proof
Tea*#
ll* Lacroxae
106
Spike * Pride
112 Sharon Colleen
106
B rebannockjim
IM Ju*t F atr
F IF TH
*1.000, C, 3 Y A up, I 1/1* M
Rig Tattoo
Prodigal Son
Penson
Triple Crown
Pnm alee
Miss Swing
117 Sun Blk*
117 Sun Tony
117 Wee Dip
117 Pooch
119
Mr
Harp
ll*
Fam ily Mao
117
122
117
117
117
117
SIXTH
*1.200. C. J Y, 7 fur.
Howdovoudo
112 Fvr*t
Mix* Tie
ll* Star Clo**
Ladv Incline
111 Dunam
La Villa!#
120 lan e To n o
Janet Lynn
120 Mr** Thell
xF'arm Mi**
115 April Haze
SEVENTH—*1.500. (', 3 Y A up,
One Tear
111 Jitter*
Run
115 Royal Elf
L.vneelee
IO# Pensive Song
Moon Da ah
HO High Low
Joe Cream
113
EIG H TH -*1.100. C. 3-Y A up. I I /I S
M
Let Out
117 tiypay Boy
Joyce'* Joy
117 Smiling Harp
Buckie Boor*#
117 Bit O R atter
Thorn a t Edw ard 117 Sunoloc
Katie King
ll* M artam
Foster* Cuahla
ll* Cabo Blanco
112
IM
120
120
112
112
S fur
113
113
112
IU
122
IM
119
117
117
114
LOOK FOR
YOUR LETTER
FROM
Pro Exhibition Football
Philadelphia Eagles 19. Balti
more Colts 14
I* * 3* I*
J
K
KOCKLER, H a g ertto w n -Wing
ing Along. Record T rip, Gary B. Hadit,
Bachelor Al, High Viaion
LF
HUYETT, C harlet Town
G.. Charlie Ford
ROBERT R
HILTON-S cep ter, Cabo
Blanco.
Perturbed,
Pound
F’oolixh,
Woody * Image. Em prlae
C
HADAWAY,
Chestertown.
Md —
M ary’* Birthday. Worby. Jo E. I^ewia.
Sm uggler’* Gold.
JOHN MORRIS—Cherie* Town Golden
Dodie.
Chan.
Sham rock
Green.
King-
poise.
Man
Shy,
Another
K its,
Belie
Star. Dizzy Mi**. Ida K , Vadis!
HwRRY DORSEY. H agerstow n-C herry
Punch. Bristol Joe
D
M
BURGESS, J r —Hypolrlll, Quak
ar Meeting.
( —Singled for Sider In 9th
d—Popped out for Pyburn In 12th
A nnette: Bolton
906 IOO 010 001—3
Baltimore
'
OOO *00 OOO 000-2
R- -Klau*. Daley. Stophon*, Boyd, Fron-
cona. E —Boyd 2. HBI—Jensen. Triando*
2. Vernon Goodman
2B — Francona. i
Klau*. 3B— Jensen. SB—Klau*. S—Miran
da. Goodman. Delock. DP—Kell. Miranda
and Gardner. Left—Boston 16, Baltimore
5. BB—Johnson *. Sisler 2, Delock I. S O - |
Johnson 5. Sisler 8. Delock *, O'Dell t. !
HO—Sitter 3 in 7. Delock 2 in 5, Johnson
7 in ll. (none oui In l?th>, O'Dell I in
I, R ER Johnson 3-2, O’Dell 0-0. Sidler
2-2. De lock 0-0. W P~Johnson
W—Delock
(12-6). L—Johnson (7-10). U Soar. Papa-
J re Ha, Hurley, Chylak. T—3 06. A—9,07*.
j
SKATING
Tues. • Thuri. • Sal.
San. Evenings
7:45 ’Iii 10:45
ARMORY
Coming W ednesday Jy
4 for a
j t only
hance fora
#^*aHy for on
re* your one chai
LIFE regularly foi
It’s your one chao
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for a year to get
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s one chance for a year to get
as. regularly for only IO* a copy.
*t*s your one chance for a year to get
LIFE regularly for only IO* a copy.
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LIFF; regularly for only IO* a copy.
It’s your one chance for a year to get
LIEU regularly for .only IO* a copy.
LIFE regularly f<
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LIFE regularly for o n l^ l* a copy.
It’s your one chance for a year to get
LIFE regularly for only IO* a copy
It’s your one chance for a year to get
LIFF regularly for only MI a copy.
your coe efcanrMor a yaar to art
TR regularly for only IO* a copy
«your one chance for a yearto get
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. your one cha
rE regu
i your em'
FE regul
a your onec
IKE r ‘
g*
opy.
sr*
a ropy
ear tog*!
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year to get
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for a year to get
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toget
atopy
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atopy
to get
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toget
_ atopy.
hance for a year to get
y for only IO** copy,
hance for a year to get
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hance for a year to get
y for only IO* a copy,
hance for a year to gel
y for only IO* a copy:
hance for a year to get
oat?
a coo*.
Where you cen take care of ev
ery financial need et one stop!
Open Tonight-7 to
af 1 iimln>rlantl. M a r y la n d
T H F
C U M B F P t A M D
N F W ^
C U M ® ***!.A N D
M D .
M O KT
AY ,
! r n ^ r “ ? rn
I ?
1n !5
Phone pA ? 4600 for o V / A h T _ AD To|_W_
Kecpir.: Up W!'.!i Holly weVU
by Louella Parsons
jc balers, selected France* Dor
spy as an entirely new and balletic
type; Florence Hay for her acro
batic number and our California
boy Richard Dwyer as outstanding
Snapshots of Hollywood collected
friarridge Licenses
poxing snip sunk
at random
As soon as Monty Clift finishes
“ Raintree County” on September
HOLLYWOOD. Sept. 9—< INS»—jmust be clear of this before sign-
"Adamson Of Africa,” the new mg for the Gregory movie.
picture Peter Viertel has sold to
u . .
Warwick Pictures with a Columbia!
Marion and D. A. Doran 'pro- u. he goes into a hospital tor
release is more like John Huston duct ion head of Paramount' left further surgery, bliubeth Taylor,
than Adamson. Peter wrote “ White Friday night for a hurried three who took a week off from
Rain
Hunter, Black Heart,” which was weeks' trip to Europe The Dorans .tree” to vacation in New York,
a very thinly disguised story of Mop over in New York long enough has been ordered back to Ken
John
Huston
filming
"African to **e “ My Fair Lady.” tinfor- tacky
by her studio.
Queen”
in
which
he
directed tunately. Julie Andrews
ii sick;
Him Novak, who has been seeing
Katharine Hepburn and Humphrey again and out of the cast.
Prank Sinatra almost every nig tit,
Bogart
j
In London they'll look af "The was at the Oyster House with -the;
While John’s friends were fun-j^halk Garden ; in Pans they will reliable Mack Knni
ous at some of the aspersions casljdisctttM Audrey Hepburn i plans
Shelley Winters is a flu v ic ti rn, I
at him
Huston
himself, took it tai th her. and in Rome D A will also Cobina Wright, who is bedded
all in stride and laughed uproari talk to Sophia Loren, who is due with intestinal flu
Cobina has to
ously at the book
"Adamson In at Paramount in April
get well in time tor her birthday;
Attila" is really Huston in Africa
D
A- 18 one
the hardest party September 20.
Aitri, by the way, John who has working gents I know, and one of
Estelle Taylor met with Rowland;
been in Mexico is off to Tobaco. the most conscientious.
I had to Harbor and Danny Winkler at the
West
Indies
where he ll make drag all of this out of him because Plymouth house to discuss the life
"Heaven Knows Mr. Allysnn.”
be never wants his name in the story of Jack Dempsey,
Barber
paper.
Jwrote the hook. "Somebody Up
7heir are plans—big ones afoot
'There Likes Me ”
— for
"On
My
Honor.”
Paul
The ice follies, better than in
Mrs, Blanche L.yon, mother of
Gregory s
first
R K O
picture any previous year in the costumes publicist
Bill
Lyon,
underwent
starling in January
So Donna and beautiful staging, had a most surgery
at
Cedar* of
Lebanon
Reed is justifiably proud that she representative turn out of star* at Hospital Friday and came through
ha* been offered the top actress the premiere.
George Gobel and'with flying colors,
role
in
the
MacKinlay
Kantorihis missus had a rousing cheer,!
The Jack Wrathers ' B o n i t a
novel, originally titled "God Ane Boh Hope. Dolores
and the four Granville>. who were Molie s hosts
My Country."
I children, Greer Garson and Cesar; at Disneyland, Van and Frances
Most of the filming will he on Romero, Greg Rautzer. and his Heflin, the Vince Flaherty * Car
location in Iowa," Donna tells me, I lovely Dana. Gloria and Jimmy men Consume, the Bill Perlbergv
"Mgyhe in my home town. Den !.Stewart, the Ronald
Regans and and John Morse were a few of
rn soft.”
the Jerry Lewise*
kept the pho Millie's pal* who dropped by to
Tlpra'c only
one hitch Donna‘tographers
busy.
say hail and farewell
has to make “ Wherever You Are”
My niece. Louella Rehfield, and
That * all today.
See you lo
in Europe late this year and she)her husband, Jerry, both champion morrow__________________________
Bernard Francis Winner, Lona
coning. and Dorothy Marie Mc
Dade, 309 Franklin Street.
Nicola Francasso and Rosalee
Teresa Serponc, both Luke
Charles Clement Lindner, 1010
Bedford Street, and Julia Celeste
Giovinali, Ridgeley,
Allen Carl Bennett. RFD 3, and
Marilyn
Joan
Miller,
RFD
J,j
Bedford. Pa.
Marvin Lorraine Marti, RFD I,
Hyndman, Pa., and Delores Jean
Clites. Ellerslie.
Aubrey Eugene Cobb. RFD I.
Gay, W
Va., and Wilma Hariett
Riggs. Romney. W. Va.
William
Charles
R o w e ,
1933
Dinecn D r i v e ,
Baltimore, and
Anna
Pearl
Malloy.
32
Bealls
Lane. Frostburg
Wayne
Leo Dawson.
Western-!
port, and Shirley Jean Fa 2enbaker,
Luke
Paul Wright Miller, and Carroll
Louise Davis, both of Valley Road, j
Dallas
Waldo
Hite.
Oldtown
Road, and Carolyn Maxine Bald
win. 323 Memorial Avenue
Clarence Hubert Evans, Keyser,
and
Catherine
Mahley
Bennett,
Piedmont
Cecil Westly Broadwater. Finzel,
and Mary Elizabeth House, Mid
land
HULL, England. Sept. 9 <1*—'The
2,891-ton Swedish freighter Lona,
its cargo of coal mine props burn
ing furiously, was sunk deliberate
ly today, close beside the King
George docks here
Firemen cut holes in red hot
plates to let in the sea, and poured
in water from the dock The vessel
went down on even keel, and fire-
I men hoped tney had prevented its
swinging
out
into
the
channel
where its hulk might have trapped
other vessels in the harbor
11
Iln j OOO.
bef** C»*fe
ion jxJtW
<«X.-we
Imp kb*
irW i mr*. I Ii
H
i
■
Plus News & Cartoon
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i f
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rot FINEST
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Wednesday
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nmnrr for * yes r to get
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- a!
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xfy for onlj
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farly for <
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for onlj
t on* fiance for a’
only 10#^
n i r r+ 4
a ye
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UMM OU NIU • OAK ROBERTSON
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•och
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To Thursday of This Week
■a
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^r
RIOC W IT H ‘E M I
A
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It a th* twat
durn w«t urn
yon nm ma md at)
B O H N E R S
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|Y appointment
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INI INSURANCE—NO (ITRA COST ON LOANS DOO OR tm
* Th# fj&uftctaf Min givM prompt ca»h lo#nt— l#t#
you pay laf#r . . . with hu great Co»h-New Poy-tof#r
H«*»l Lif# tn»iir#nc#, no #*tra co*t, on loam $300 or
loaf Phona for I-trip loan, mk'Tite or coma in todayf
WM ap ta SI OOO a# Stqnotuf*. Farmtur* ar Cor
I
I
------------------ AN EXTRA TREAT'
THE STORY OF THE ONLY MAN TO KNOW THE Hlll-RIVER S SECRETS!
“ THE AMAZON TRADER” .n c o u ti
A T T R A C T I O N ! •
V
WANNER 0NO4
-o
n i t e r KELIV-muStttt
—
WWIN l.lOt—
-
Rim* MN AMI Ut WM*, imm mm rn tm »t MMU i« ta a fe w i.n i# ia » r.»g*iRh ll-Ut
T S e w fitio t
M
Forum* u»sc FINANCE CO.
fOIMlfU MtSONAl fIN*NCI CO I
Im .. MOO a«w» I#m amt. ••dr '*• MuHoM
(ta* Act
ed C kFRetiMDetdkeefd
1TBANCE SO. CENTRE ST.
(Take elevator to 2nd FI.)
CUMBERLANI
2nd P L , Room* 202-204 • L IB E R T Y T R U ST C O M PA N Y BLD G .
Rhone i PA 2-0721 • Ask for the Y E S MANager
OPEN EVENINGS RY APPOINTMENT — PHONE FOR EVfNtNG HOO*!
twat ma#, I* wu4w h af aM h iih **# *# ta m
se# Us foe oo Improvement Loon
• Arid a m n
.
Ant*#) The auh- or
enlarge the whole h o u v Our helpful
loan w ill take care of the cnetK Ho
d o vn paym ent nam m arv Take years
*» repay Bong rn Your ptam and yow
contractor's eatmvMe. today*
AIR
CONDITIONED
LAST 2
DAYS
TOMORROW NITE
AT 8:25 P. M.
SNEAK
PRE-VUE
Sa* ‘ Mom With Goldan Arm” Flu*
Iran# Naw Hollywood Hit — Itod
Tomorrow* Timo».N,w8 For mara
Na toil*.
w ednesday
2 Dsys Only
FIRST TIME ON WIDE SCREEN
ja m a is
BETTY HUTTON
HOWARD KEEL
.MM-a-NMAfTtlPICCfTsciiKicoron
First Federal
Savings & Loan Assn.
141 Baltimore Street
¥
56 - the y e a r to F I X
4
2
T E ’*C1TiNQ V.''— '
I R I11 v4 f I
"TOR’ Of
i
AV £ RIC a ; s YOST.
d(:orjte: -.ero!
AUDIE
v
MURPHY 1A
ACTION-FILLED
FEATURES!
Ta Hall and Back 100-1130
Fort Yuma — IO OO
w
# / IM
M
/ lf f
K M M -
I f ^ C
K itm
U
K
t o p T M M
A L I!
m s
f o r t ;
.^TECHNICOLOR
a
t o m c R U if
AUDIE MURPHY
...
V I
starring
I I MNE PUI MTTCttiTKMAI PV-IPC
PtTl* GI,AA£S * J0AN V0HS
A WIVtJOAL INItWUIIURAl TCiUR*.
J0MN HUDSON - JOAN TAYLOR
<0 * 2 Ot>
$ 1t ^ \ 'ti.
T o m
o ^
S u p p o rt N A T I O N A L
CIVIL DEFENSE WEEK
SEPTEMBER 915.1956
Volutetr Workers Wanted
Fill out and send In coupon
from this paper today.
J^ono PA 2-4600 for o WANT AD Tok-*
TV
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, MD., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER
IO,
1956
SEVEN
T A J A l l
prof n m * llctfi * ,!« » , r# r,r*f.b*ft by ti*
I U O d f
Ti, ( umbf r!»nd N e ,, „
r e s e a l s , ,
J
f0T UU 'bang**. All tim** a rt Daylight Sating l i m *
WM t i
t *k,# *’
< hansel »
WTTO in J ' f ,b l * *•
I banafl 4
TTO (DiMealI. Call# I, C b.nn.l ft
| i/Y -l* .
d a n ie l
•»-4 Today oo r a m 4
’ " ~ 2 Will Rogers Jr •
♦•Today
4
Today
Today
g
t im . ' Vl11 Ro**r* Jr. id
"'W -Jf apt, Kangaroo t
, — . Lapt- K’S*roo IO
» "0-1 Mark Evans
9
♦-LMI# Ha sr a la
4
♦ 'bought. K in
J
Monte Town
2
Eaith for Today «
, - „ *•> Rogers
IO
^'♦■Romper Room
4
G,ry Moor*1
«
t OS— j carry Moor*
9
A Ding Dong S ol 4
♦ Kaleidoscope
|
Gary Moore
J
Ding Dong S ol ft
Movletim#
lo
I* ftft- 2 Arthur Godfrey 9
♦ Bandstand
Woman s Angia
Romp*! Room
ie J — a thur Godfrey
Ii 1x1—4 Home
Home
Ii to—I sin k , tt Rich
Strike ll Rich
Sutk# u Rich
l.V— industry P'de
It 00—2 Valiant Lady
♦ Tic Tar Dough
♦ Pete'a Place
News
Msn To Man
Tic Tar Dough
Short Show
IS— Lovo of Lift
K D. Kartooo
L«vo of Ufo
I • '« of Ij|e
4
2
A
2
4
4
9
2
ie
3
9
4
»
1
3
A
IO
•
2
I
___________ IO
It IS-2 S’ch for Tom’, 9
3-Clown Corner
7
♦ ( mild Be You
♦
ft Altern’* Movie ft
S oh for Tm’row 3
Reb for Tm’rowr 3
Cauld Be You A
News
IO
U 4*—I Guiding Light 9
Guiding
Light
2
Guiding
Ugbt
3
Guiding
Light IO
I OS—3 Star Theatre
9
I The Ruff leg
I
♦ Playhouse
4
B U Brant
I
Elim I beat re
I
•'rh for Tom w 4
N ew
10
I IO - Love af Ufa
f
Stand * ('mint IO
I M—J Aa Borid Tumi 9
I Rs<ket Squad
7
K aya Kitchen
3
A* World Turn* 3
Tea tine Theatre A
As TV’Id Tome IO
I AK-3 Donne Douglas •
3 ladles Thestro 7
Coble
I bennel
ft L ie* Be Seated 5
Studio Two
2
Do< Tv
Theatre 3
Johnny 1 arson IO
? I V—2 Johnny carton 9
2lift—-2 House Party
9
4-Ten’ae*
Krnte
4
Meet Neighbor 3
Ten'see Ernie
3
Ten’see Ernie
0
Charles Flynn
IO
I Od—2 Big Payoff
9
3-hUm Festival
7
4 Matinee Theatre 4
Bi* Payoff
2
Matinee Theatres
Matinee Theatie ♦
Bi* Pavoff
10
31 JO—2 Bob I rosby
9
ft T Time Theatre S
Bob Crosby
I
To Be Affied IO
Valiant lardy
2
9
4
ft
2
3
4
10
ft
3
IO
KUKA, rittihorgh,
WsVA. H arriseabarg,
TV IAG. Jebnstew e,
WF BG, 4 Hook a.
tab la
3 News
3:1ft-
• .**■-2-Pick Temple
4 Queen for Day
ft Yes’day’a New a
Queen for Day
Brighter Day
Queen for Day
Brighter Day
4.1ft—J Secret Storm
•Secret Storm
Secret Storm
4 3tt-5 All Star Theatre 3
Edge of Night 3
Edge of Night IO
4.1ft—4 M’d ’n Romance* 4
Secret Storm
3
M’n Romance* A
ft.Od—2 Little Margie
9
3 SI 1 ekev Aim se
7
4 C omedy Time
4
• Lamb* Se seton
S
Nickelodeon
2
Comedy Tim#
3
< ilia Kid
A
Mickey .Moas* IO
I fttt—2 Amo* & Andy
9
4 JA illy
4
Rill Htikoh
3
West Trails
3
S diers of F’ne A
• Od- 2 « ISI o Kid
*
3 t Iowa f orner
7
4 F Right The'fro 4
ft Floppily ftkip ny ft
News. Bill. Bun 3
•porta
I
China Smith
IO
I l l
New*
I
I Sd-2 Spotlight
9
3 T’n A « nu wry 7
ft Cindy Urn
S
News
I
FTlm Theatre
a
Ch il# Farrell
I
Penna
Today IO
• lid—2 Edward* New* 9
4 New*. Weather 4
Put Pade. Spit. I
Edwards News 3
Edwards New* IO
7 Od—2 S’ers of
E'ne *
( basnet I
< flannel ft
Channel 4
Channel ll
( hanne 1
Sports
7
4 Death Valley
4
5 Gilders!***#
ft
Monte Aristo
3
Film Playhouse 3
Eddy Arnold
A
( undid Camera IO
7: IS—3 J
Daly News
7
7;3tt— 2 Robin Hood
9
.1 Bold Journey
7
4 FT ankle Carle
4
ft I Spy
s
Greatest Sports 2
Disneyland
3
Frankie Carle
A
Boid Journey
IO
7 44—4 New* faiavan 4
Eddy Arnold
2
News C anvas
A
«.9*-2 Burns 4 Allen »
3-Squeegee
7
4 Ernie Kovacs
4
ft Evening Movie 5
I Led 3 Live* 2
Ernie Kovacs
a
Burn* A Allen IO
• Id—2 Arthur Godfrey 9
3 Voice of Caton* T
Voice of F stone 2
Film Theatre
I
Arthur Godfrey IO
F AB—2 Charlie F arrell 9
3 Film F air
7
4-To Be An'red 4
Goldberg*
2
th a i lie Farrell 3
Medic
A
lone Wolf
ii
9 .fttt—2 Vie Damon*
9
4 Robert Mo cry 4
3 Boeing
ft
s c h for A’ture 2
Vie Damon*
3
Robert M ery
4
Vie Damon*
IO
10
Oft—2 studio One
9
studio One
3
Boeing
]
Studio One
lo
It aft—ft Ruggles
7
l f rootier Dr.
4
Jim Bowie
A
!A
4ft—ft Hall of F ame
ft
11
2-News
9
3 New s. Weather 7
4 News
4
5 Warren’ New* ft
News
2
P pl# Are F"’nny 3
New*; Theatre A
New*
30
I t llft-2 Late Shew
9
J sots, \ , 1, Show 7
ft Festurama
I
4 Weather. Apts, 4
Theatre
2
l ate Show
IO
ll :ld~4 Tonight
4
Playhouse
3
it -ad—
Newr*j theatre a
News; A porta
I
I lift—ft Meditations
9
______ 4 Inspiration
4
Doily Crossword Punk
TOPS In QUALITY
£
A »
k
m
1
r
n
r n c e r i j
i f t P
e a
. 1
M
J
SHOULD a catastrophe
occur, and you ara without
HOSPITALIZATION
INSURANCE . . .
•C l
INDUSTRIAL
LOAN SOC I ET Yf Inc.
tee quick service teen,
le e n t ICO se $100 00
Doom 901, liberty Trust I de.
IVied Fleer, Telephone FA ft-jTOO
A C R O S S
I Physician.
V Scottish mimical
Instrument*.
SS Beethoven * Srd
By rn phony.
I t Medicated
liquid for
rubbing:
17 W here Oatuho*
tide*
l l One wav to
order dinner.
I I Adherent n f:
Suffix.
Sh Stitched.
2 2 Fair and — —
JI President Of
Franco.
IS Holland i m
w a ll
27 Observed
2* Boy 8 oout
irroup,
30 Traps or
luggage.
31 V ies a hand
ah u u la
JI Barrel.
n Musical threat.
S t Golf item .
39 TV signal
finder
• 3 Most agile
4 f> Garden tool.
4Ct Bluefin.
48 Unhappy.
4 9 S a n d a r s e tro th
B l Dimension
63 Jumped.
R7 Let
It sta n d
13
In tertstlo n a l
R9 Grassplot
agreements.
Jewish month
14
Suffix
meaning
( 2
‘T h e monkey
"on# who."
chased the
21
Peruke.
— ...-
24
Harness
(4
Section of ft
together.
table top.
28
DumboY wing*.
Ck Be In debt.
29
Held la
87
W alk.
31
Tears.
89 Capita! on Oil
33
Place.
Danube.
SS W ildebeests.
TI
Yugoslav
ST Spoken.
coastal district. 3 9
Exclamation.
T2 Closely related. 40 Viking.
73
No cheerers.
41
Hostess' after*
they.
noon furniture
TI Cerfafn eon*
42
Indign.
tract#
44
Inkling.
DOWN
47
Rhododendron
I
Portray
relatives.
3 Campaigner on 60
Begin again.
the data.
62
Lamb kin.
I
Recover con*
64
Handsome mat*
sriousnftts: 3
6b
Enemy of Lh*
W (ii.
Cheyenne.
4 Ov«rtura.
66 Tire facts
b So. Amer.
68
Pertaining to ft
sw eet
po! at OSO.
tlsaue.
I
Dem olished:
80
Tart of
Tar.
IT S'N A
T Bed rover.
63
Lump*.
8
A ffect with
63
Better than
pain.
never.
9 Chew.
«S Cabinet for
IO Measure*. LO
papers.
printing
<3 Shooting
l l
Turkish Inn.
match
Fr
13 Buffa**
TO High note.
W
A
N
T
E
D
^
W
O
M
E N
* AGE 11 f« J ! -M A R R IE D cr S:*»Gl t
~ T
E A R N to J ? 7
/ ^
AND
V O R E
lf foe v W -
«wed en ' N
W E E K I Y
Posifiees
w ee
opuw
NOW
mom—
NtACTICAl NURSES.
You ere wrqewfly seed-
sd to AH food payrmq
po tit 1 od* m pr iv ate homes, bet-
pet of s. doc Fort* odic es. v an tttetittd sT ^fclO ^ctrw * * *
Thfts sp wee tim e t reiM**wq d o es n o t ta fe rfe re
w ith
y owe
o te sc we
ju t
or
b^yu yeh ot^J
dsi Fir \
k4 e Fe, e
m OOO— p re fe rre d !
Mo he 9* school
Get NhR drt*fc
NOW!
tee Ne. 377 AX, The News Times,
Cumberland, Md.
■VA)
DAILY C B Y FTO Q IO TE — H tre ’f how to work Mf
A X Y n L B A A X R
I* L O N G F E L L O W
One letter simply stands for another. In thti exomple A ii used
for the three LY X for the two OY. etc. Single letter!, spoa*
trophies the length and formation of the word« are ail hint*
Bach day the code letter* sr# different.
A Crypto! rmm QuoUtton
T E K I G N H A l
D Z K
A K Q K Z
N A P N I •
V Z K K G ,
D A I M K Z I
1 H U K G N U K 1
D Z K - *
M N S P K .
Saturday's Cryptoquote: HOW' CAN THAT BE FAL$E,
WHICH EVERY TONGUE OF EVERY MORTAL MAN AF*
FIRMS FOR TRUE?—DAVIS.
Distributed by King Feature# Syndic*!#
Coren O n Bridge
A N SW E R S TO R R ID G E QI 17.
1—NorthSouth vulnerable and
Q. 7—Neither vulnerable and aa
South you hold:
Q: I - , u r ^ v W,.„ v u .„ c ifl#,c# ,.u |
Thp biddmK hi(s prn(,W(jfd.
as South you hold.
a Q.I J I 9 Ai J AAI 0 3 AA I A I
A K I V 9 6 S J 2 4 K Q J 9 S + 7 B rit
North Fast
South
The bidding has proceeded:
!»*••••
»*•••
'"••rump
r
vee lh
P ass
Will
I club
Barth
I »p*4a
E O I
P a t*
What do you bid;
What do you hid now?
r e - C d O M O * * STUDENTS
A —Pass Despite your IS points there
is no aition that you can take with
safety Th* distribution is all against
-
_
you for offensive purpose* and your brit
• —Two spades
PP0**
*
«bant e of a profit lies in th# hope that
who could venture a vulnerable o verall, l(hf> oppovitloIt Wi„ ^ ,uned info carrying
you have a hand of distinct merit and ()R {he bld{)lB»
should offer pattnei
an opportunity to.
contract for game. Bidding two
of nor
_____ .
Un,,th vein hold*
I of sour red suit* is not calculated to gel
W- •
SOUW >OU nolil.
you to gam*, f" if
rebids ap ed -
* K I 0 8 5 4 V A I 0 8 S 4 # 2 A A 2
you will hardly be
in possum to act
. ■ .
.
___
again Your trumps
ore adequate to sup | I he bidding lids pioceedC d.
port a vutnerabl# overcall.
Neutb
| I spade
Q. 2—.\either vulnerable and as ^ hearts
South you hold;
A 9 7 V 8 A K J 9 7 M 3 A 1 0 9 8
Partner opens with one heart.
What l* your response?
Borrow with confidence
where grandad did
HFC has provided caah loans since the days of the
handle-bar mustache and the aurrey-with-the-fringe-
on-top. Yes. since 1878 millions of people have de
pended on HFC for money help.
This dependable service ii now streamlined to
meet today's demands. Loans are made in one day,
on terms you select. But the friendly, helpful spirit
is just as it was in Grandad’s day. And that is why
today more mod
em Americans bor
row from H FC than
any other company
in it« field.
B ou w hold provide*
life iniurance
protection on all
hone w ith ou t
extra coit to you
Cask
Too
Gel
♦
$190
200
JOO
500
1000
MONT
U
Permit
HIT PA
JO
bssmt i
YMENT
II
Po tm h
HANS
ft
Par rn 11
$24.62
48.44
$ 6.72
13.44
20.16
.28.88
56.81
$10.06
20.09
30.14
46.09
90.58
$18.46
36.92
55.38
8G.34
175.43
Verm tnt* aim# include tttls ti the lot* if
lfpttd en Khfdult. Chorees on loons abote
SSM me made under tie I ndustnoi Finance
O U S E H O L D F I N A N C E
VZ South Contr# St., S. L Cor. Bolti mort
2nd Floor—PHONE: PArkviow 2-5200
Loans Made to Residents ef Nearby Towns
W m l
North
P»v* 9 4Umnn4t
P s i* 2 ne t rn rn *
What do you bid now?
A — Pas*
Partner’# nonjump
bul ut
two no trump is not forcing and tho we
have a disinclination to stop short on
constructive
bidding,
we
cannet lose
A.—Pass
To
respond in any fashion *,ght of th# fact that
w# have a hand
with this hand
miftht lead to serious which contain* only ti
high card points
complications
If you acknowledge .'inn and baa some of th#
earmarka of a
tad plight by passing, you may find lf misfit,
expedient to enter th* auction on the
next round
(Copyright 1944: Th* (hicago Tribune)
Q 3—-As South you hold:
4 K 7 Ii 5 3 R ID # 1 2 A k I I M
The bidding has proceeded:
North
Fast
N«u"»
H <*»t
I spade
I hearts 4 spades
Pa**
ft spade*
Pass
7
What do you bid now?
A.—Six sprfd**. The bid above game
in this sequence is conventionally regard
ed as an inquiry a* to partner’s holding
in th* adverse aud.
lf lesponder can
promise thai he will lose no moi# than
one trick in that suit. he should accept
the invitation Observe that if your heart
and diamond holding* were reversed your
proper call would be a pass
4—As South you hold:
AA I VRJ 7 2 2 $ A J I A A I Q I
Partner opens with one spade.
What is your response’
A.—Two hearts
With one point more
this hsnd would be * mandatory jump
shift (which call* for 19 points). Sine*I
you hive no special support tn partner’s
suit nor a good suit of your own we
recommend an unaccelerated pace Thete,
will
he time enough to display youi
charms.
Q. 5—Both sides have a 40 part
score and as South you hold.
AA Q 6 2 VA 1 0 5 3 4 K J 7 A 9 4
The bidding has proceeded:
South
West North
F'.svt
I spade
Pass 7 spades .(diamonds
■f
What do you bid now?
A I o a h N
u m s k u l l
n u rn QLD WA 6
)
J
QLD YA6
N ufD S A
pi<t £«?
,
0 ) c A R MOAK — WHAT
WIND OF TOBACCO
S M O K E D IN g A & P 'P F S ? r
T. J. KAUPP
M
a s c o u t a h , i l l - .
A —Double.
You have at
least four
tricks to contribute to the detente with
a fair chance for the fifth, If partner’s
raise includes high caids, the penalty
should he substantial. If partner’* assets
ar#
principally
distributional,
he
will
carry on to three spades to complete the
game.
Q.
8—Both vulnerable and as
South you hold.
A A Q I 0 8 6 V A K 9 f i 2 4 M A 2
The bidding has proceeded:
South
West North
East
I spade
Pax* P m
Double
o
What do you bid now?
A.—Pass
Since partner ha* acknow
ledged holding a worthless hand, a bld
of two heart* would be an unsound risk
The chances of a game are much too
remote to justify courting
a sizeable j
penalty.
i / B A f Z M O A B —
IF
A T R E E s u a s i o n
OP ti? AT ED OM AN EVER-
6 9 * EU, WOULD WE SEW „
IT UP WITH PINE NEEDLES .
< 3 o * £ E S S
8 u u u
C H A f t u Q T r e , NO CAR.
tbCn NuevktfuiL uoT.ou t , jualu
Pta.tMwa sr s»| f» ,i.. ■».• ^.....
The
only
city
in
the
United
States that receives its water sup
ply from a city-owned glacier is
Boulder, Colo.
A n s w e r T o P r e v i o u * P u z z l e .
p jhTTTl
* 0 ' T
“ He surfed it!”
. Maybe we should be glad Junior is going through this phase,
Dow • • . before he gets old enough to drive the carl • * •"
Phone PA 2-4600 for o W A N T AD Taker
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND,
MD.,
MONDAY,
SEPTEMBER
IO,
I — Announcements
U K E a letter from home every day
through
the
year
To
your
eon
or
daughter tit the
Armed Service*. or
your hey or girl a way at achoo!
Send the C umber land New*. The Eve
iring or Sunday Time*
Call: Ctrcula
lion Dept
TA 3 Coot'
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
AUTO
INSURANCE
SIX
MONTHS
Basic Coverage
$ 1 4 9 4
See or call:
THE
Carroll Agency
ALLEGANY INN
PA 2-2737
2— Automotive
2— Automotive
GO A N Y W H E R E
JEEP TRUCKS
IM I Jeep Pickup,
4 W D, Earned
transmission
MS
par mo
1«« Jeep Pickup
4 W D.
I speed
transmission
M9 per mo
1957 Jeep Pickup, New. 4-WD, I speed
transmission
MS
par mo jj£ P ly m .
V-8 Skin.
R .
H .
P o w e r
1M7 Jeep Sutton Wagon 4 W IE 8
I
push button tra n s
speed transmission
M2 per ma I
’
v
1142 Army Jtep . 4 WD. aa la
1275
Payments cost leas lf you use Penn Mar's
P ER SO N A LIZ ED P A Y M E N T PLA N
Taylor Motor Co.
56 Golden Hawk HT Sports Car.
Power Brakes. Power Steering,
Electric Windows, Hydrolytic.
56 Chry*. St Regis HT. Powered.
Only Bt per year interest buv* a IIM
Jeep or Car.
Don’t
shop for
money
atop hers
Jtrr- M V D S O H BA LKS k SBR V IC B
PENN-MAR MOTOR CO.
Narrows Park
PA 1-6341
HAROLD'S
For The
Best Deol In Town
2— Autom otive
56 Plym. V-8 Station Wagon New
56 Chev. 2 Door Sedan. R. H.
56 Olds "88” Holiday. NEW
55 Pontiac Catalina, R. H. Hyd.
55 Buick Sup. Sd., R. H. Dyn.
55 Chev. V-8 Sdn. RAH
55 Olds Super "88” hdtop, loaded
S3 Buick Sup Riviera H. T.
53 Dodge V-8 Cor. R H. Gyro.
53 Ford *8' Sdn. R. H.
53 Chev. 2 Dr. Sdn. Very Clean
52 Pont. 2-Dr. R. H. Hyd.
5k (’hev. Sdn. Rid!, PG
5! Chry* Wind. Sdn. Like New
51 Pont Sdn R. H. Hyd.
51 Mere. 2 Dr. R H. Like New
50 Pont. Sdn. R. H. Hyd.
49 Chry*. Sdn. R. H.
49 Lincoln Sdn. R H. OD.
48 Buick Sdn. R. H Dyn.
2— Automotive
51 Chev. Pl. Dix. 2-Dr. Attractive
Grey. Excellent Condition.
BABB MOTOR SAI ES
152 Wineow St.
PA 2-4570
REEVES STUDEBAKER
New 56 Stude. V-8 4 ton pickup
Big discount on this truck.
56 Stude President Classic sedan.
Demonstrator.
Loaded
with
everything. Selling at a big, re
duced price and with a new
car guarantee!
Wa ha v«
rn rom P iru Un* of used
parta (or all maka carat
IMS FO RD 2 lMTOR SED AN
In (.nod Condition
Dial PA 2 1230 before l p m
"
FER G U SO N "TRACTO RS
F A R M MAC HIN E R Y
.
.
Right'* Garage, rialto. Pika PA 4 4174 '♦ Bu,r,t
I'**'1*®
Pick Up Trucks
DINGLE ESSO STATION
Fayette and Greene Streets
Tractor Tiro
24 Ford Fairton* 4 Or
Fordomatir
Power Sleeting,
loaded
122911
IWS Che* colet Pf. S.OOO
mite*
$2191
SA ford Curt
4 re , **«nrh Wag 12.193
MI Ford Cu*tom
4 dr.,
leaded
*!*9 ,
SS ford ( u*tnm
A beauty
1129.1
■5 fold R an ih Wage" like new
•l7,sL . «
l.
ct
ss < hev 4 dr i. loaded PG
*i«9i|218 N . Mechanic St.
St Buick Spec
4 dr
Min , loaded 11,191
• IWS
S4 t hev, t onfvfltr, AT.
.
S3 Punk Sup 4 dr dyn. loaded
S3 Chrysler 4 door
............
S3 Plymouth
Cranhrook
....... .
Cars on Lot at 210
and in garage 217 A 2IU
PA 2-7979
I Pontiac 2 Br , Hyd............ .........
S3 Ford 2 Dr , leaded. . . . . . . . . .
53 ('hee
2 dr
Relair
....
...
S3 i mdge V I 4 Dr Sdn
Beauty
11 Navh Rambler HT Cont
53 Ford Ranch Wagon
.. .. . .
15 ( hrysler
HT
.........
12 Packard A cream puff .......
12 Stude baker 4 Dr
...........
S A L E S
S E R V IC E
P I M PIN G AND R E PA IR IN G
r S v n J X A M
n ^ B A n K R Y r
52
Hun. Ilk . ne- .......
* W IL L IA M S S I _____________PA 2 JIM M
4 dnnr
V e n t . . C o e J l A
l M
T P n
I SI ( ad!UM "KB" 4 dr. like new
lour I ar Ails I nu Hi stude id r
.......
( T A Q Q C I - Y e a r G u o r o n t e e
o m .kMH^
? V
e
'.'.[VMV.
^
no cosh N M d a d j" J2 r a s £ S * r ? “ :::;::
Raked Enamel Finish
5, Dodae 4 door
......................
Pay aa little a* $4 month
M p ,,* ,,.* . loaded .....................
Auto Ola*.- Body
R g M li*
si ford 3 door
...................
JA C K 'S
. ioDr w ii.
S S S : JST*
H I * Mechame
Dial PA 4 0421 „ N iih flash ier H T
................
International Harvester i! ""2 a4d!,r *roa#.
Authorized
I feater
Motor
Trucks
N**h S dr..................................
Farm Trotters A Machinery
-M Packard 4 dr.................. ..........
THI: LIG H T A D U K E R CO
M Pontiac 2 dr
.........................
I l l * < entie St
Phone PA 2 moo SO Nash Ambassador 4 dr.............
— — SO Ford V I 2 or 4 dr*
. . . . . . . .
CMC Trucks
Case Tractors A Machinery
New Holland
Farm Equipment
C O M P L E T E R E P A IR K ER V IC K
FO R ALI, M AKES
After We Sell—We Serve!
Collins G M C. Truck Co.
11795
11391
I M
I M i
I 995
I *95
I M I
• MS
I 991
t 99,
I 691
I 191
I 391
I 791
t 491
• 1291
I 29.1
I 79SI
I 191
» 391
I 491
I 291
t ( «
I 491
I 191
I 491
I 391
S *91
I 191
I 191
I 141
• 193
I 39S
t 391
I 3*5
1950 Ford $275
IDONI AUTO SALES
248 N. Mechanic
PH PA 2-7480
Collins Garage
LOW PRICE SPECIALS
48 Stude. Champ, 4-dr. OD . f 95
50 Stude. Champ. 2-dr. OD . S295
50 Stude. Champ 4-dr. OD
$295
51 Stud*. Commd. 4 dr. AT. $295
49 Packard 4-dr. OD ....... $195
Collins Garage
home of the Fabulous
hew Studebaker
Westernport, Md.
Phone 5481
SO I hey relet t or 4 dr*. .......
in Buick J Dr....................................... » BBS
Vt Nath 2 dr
................................... * WS
49 Lincoln 4 door ........
... * 291
49 lord Its. Wagon.............................I BBS
TRUCKS
SS Ford l i t T
S3 I ord 4* T V *
13 Chev
pickup th ton
BT. 40 EAST PHONE PA 2 3»22 I I Chet relet Van ..........
sa Ford Panel
Atake, New Tire* 914*1
s n
I 4*5
75 Henderson Ave.
Weekdoy$ 'til 9
PA 4 1542
Sot. 6
S3 Chevrolet ‘’ll# " I dr.
El Mercury Mont
4 dr.
Dammer'* Garage. Ridgeley, R E I I I J I
55 Mercury 2 Dr.
Master, d e f. overdrive. hack up lights.
twin side mirror*. S tone fin. I.ika new
s r G EO R G E MOTOR CO
PA 2 3451
"’"iii* M ERt C R Y Phaeton, new Trade
Term*
Shafter a Aute Sales. Corri
ganville.
56 CHEV. 2 DR. SEDAN
RAH
A Healthful
Green and Cream.
30 Months to Pay
TAYLOR’S “ N MKrHAN,c
111 N
PA
17971
SI (hey. Truck walk in . . . . . . . . . . .
St Ford 4« T. pkup. ............
50 Dodge p ic k u p ......................... .
51 Chevrolet Sedan De Ii very .......
SO Chev. a* t o n ............................. ..
49 Auto-Car Tractor (Coal I I I , OOO)
49 Ford 2 ton dump .....................
44 Federal 2 ton ............................
49 Ford
Panel
...................
47 Ford I toa Utility
............
47 Ford
IH ilO
...................
41 Dodge la T. Pickup ...................
I 795
I 4*1 -
I 491
I
*
I 2*5
I 491
t I
I S9S
I M I
I 391
I 171
I
I 34J
I IM
Bonded Select
USED CARS
M-G-K Motor Co.
221 GLENN ST.
DIAL PA 2 2300
Hare Motor Sales
56 Cad. Deville 4 Dr. Loaded
55 Pont. Catalina Cpe Loaded
55 Chev. 2 Dr. Like New.
54 Cad. 4 Dr. Full Powered
54 Olds Sup, "88” 4 Dr, Power
54 Chev. Bel Air 4 Dr.
53 Buick V-8 4 Dr.
53 Buick Spl. 4 Dr
53 Chev, Bel Air Cpe.
53 Ford 2 Dr. R. H OD.
53 Ford Ob. Cpe Equipped
52 Chev. 4 Dr. Powerglide
52 Chev. Ob Cpe Powerglide
52 Nash Rambler Hardtop
52 Dodge Coronet 4 Dr.
51 Buick Spl. 4 Dr.
51 Olds Sup. *88’ 2 Dr.
51 Pont. 2 Dr. Fully Equipped
51 Chev. Conv. Loaded
51 Chev. Ob Cpe. Powerglide
51 Chev. 4 Dr. Loaded
50 Chev. Bel Air Cpe Sharp
50 Buick Riviera Cpe. leaded
50 Ford V-8 2 Dr. Clean
Many Others to Choose From
TRUCKS
54 Chev, W ton pickup
53 Dodge '3 ton pickup
S3 Willy* Pkup. 4 wheel drive
47 Ford I ion. 4 speed trans.
47 Chev. H ton pickup
Wms. at Orchard
PA 2-4664
I— Automotive
Be Thrifty—Buy Thrifty
51 Buick 4 dr. Special. 2 tone
green, R. H, tinted glass
52 Buick Hardtop. R, H, Dyn.
SI Ford 4 dr. Cust. 8. t-owner
50 Ford 4 dr. Heater. A bargain
at any price
49 Chev. 2 dr. Sty. dlx. H D.
49 Nash 2 dr
R. H. Cruising
gear. Economy on wheels.
Thrifty Auto Sales
305 S. Centre PA 2-1771. PA 4-2201
4— Auto Gloss
“ GLASS INSTALLED
(W H IL E YOU W A IT !
BEERMAN AUTO PARTS
519-521 N. Mechanic
PA 4-0250
5— Auto Repairs, Service
NORTH END G A RA G E*
507 Henderson Ave.
PA 2-3590
Skilled Radiator Service
Schade's Mech. & Val. PA 2-0500
McFa r l a n d a u t o s h o p
Phone PA 4-1216
507 Pine Ave.
/
B u s in e s s O p p o r t u n i t i e s
1956
f
14—Unfurnished Aoortments
20
For Sole Miscellaneous 20— For Sole Miscellany©*!
TH H E E
rooms,
private
bath
and en
trance, porch. Phot* PA 2 1570 or I A
2 2*23
T H R E E
and four room
private apart
menu
First and second Door. Adult*
only, 217 Columbia Si.
T r i RST floor, eeilrely private. 3 room*,
bath, closets, (fila r, furnace, large
porch. 2t 19 Carroll St.
___
A V A IL A B L E September lith -4 Sunny
Room*.
Bath,
porch.
private
en
trance
Automatic beat. Cresaptown
P A 2 2*50
U SED MACHI N E R I
FO R SA LE
Model 64 IHC Combine with motor
John Deere Forage harveater w/motoi
John
Deere
Baler
Dellinger ado filler
Allis
Chalmer*
Combine
WD Allis Chalmers tractor*
Used Rakes and Mowers
Used HD5 Allis Chalmers crawler*
Used BG Cletrae with winch
D « Caterpillar
75 h
P
CM Diesel Power Unit
IOO H
P GM Diesel Power Unit
Erick Sawmill
M O D ERN 3 rooms, private bath Adult* complete repair Partt * " 4 " f o m e n t
Settled couple
pre
AUt,
Chalmer, and Oft tut■ « • * * * *
mn:
anytime.
702}
COCHRAN FA RM E Q U IP M E N T CO
Phone 435*
only
No
pets
ferred
Can
Maryland Ave. PA 2 820#
" t h r e e room*, second Door ( omplete-
ly private. Heal, hot water furnished
Apfig i 1'*) Williams SC_________ __ _ _ _
".MODERN
4
room
apartment
Hot
water heat, garage
Adults, 344 La-
Vale
PA 2 3232
3
ROOM S, private bath, private en
trance. first floor
Apply 2nd floor,
317 Race St.
* ________
Somerset, Pa
' V E N E T IA N B L IN D S
Venetian
Blind Laundry
Aluminum
Awnings.
Slot rn
,V’or' , A
I I vt I A I WINDOW PROD UCTS CO.
I U L A L B2t» columbia Ave Pa2-2028
r»ryi AROID Land Camera brand
W U » » «"••» W W * *
buyer
Souther*
Jew elers
131
N .
Mechanic s t .
___________
_______
burner.
22
target
and
iron
sight
GAS
conversion
r-tf Ie
with
scope
PA 4-IM*.
Amana
Upright.
tu ft- / I Ii
—
New
1170 cheaper than Hor* Pr>®*- J * * ® *
PA 2-1*20 or write 3*1 -A c-o Tiroee-
News.
“ "WARM Morning Hea.roi.
condition
Reasonably priced. Apply
112 S. Johnson Si _
_______ _
“ c o c k K R P U P P IE S and 2 lovely red
and
white
female*. 7
weeks.
One
black
male 3'T months
Ancone in-
te a te d rn taking mature dogs on
• farm out’* basis contact Mehle Ken
nels C resaptown PA 2 IW L
15— Furnished Room*
_O N E
S L E E P IN G
Room,
twin
beds
suitable
for
2
gentlemen.
230
Glenn St
"G E N T L E M E N
- comfortable sleeping
rooms, dav or week. Private home,
separate bath*
Reasonable, centi al,
parking
PA 2-6*60
_ _ _ _ _ _
f urnished bedroom
In
quiet
neighborhood
PA 2 7WI.
*94 PK W Demonstrator economy ear
SPORTS CAR MOTOR S A L E
McMullen Hwy PA 4 0520 or PA 2 2VW
~~49'CHEVH/2 T PKUP
Low mileage. 1-Owner
Nelson Auto Soles
38 Potomac. Ridgeley RF 8*9290
Many Other* to Choose From
$5 Down On Cars Up To $700
BANK TERMS
HAROLD'S
McMullen Hwy at Custara Stand
9 a rn. to 9 p. rn.
Dial PA 4-0670
Frostburgs BUICK Dealer
1*54 BUICK
4
DR
R
H D
I EU BU IC K 2 DR
H
H
DYN.
1913 RUK K
4 DR
R
H. Dya.
1*52 S T U D E B A K E R H
R.
1*47 CHEV. C O U PE R
M
ST. CLOUD MOTORS
T H O N E 441
F R O S T B U R G . M D
Safety Tested Used Cars
Priced To Sell Fast
While They Lost!
1955 Pont. Starchief 4 Dr.
1955 Dodge Lancer Hardtop
1955 Olds 88 Holiday Cpe.
1954 Chev. 210 4 dr.
1953 Olds 98 loliday Cpe.
1953 Plymouth Cran. 4 dr.
1953 D o d g e Diplomat H’top.
1952 Chev. Styl. Del. 2 dr.
1952 Olds Sup 88 4 dr.
1951 Olds 98 4 dr.
1951 Olds 98 Holiday Cpe.
1950 Chev. Styl. Del. 2 dr.
Glen-Roy Olds Co.
Henderson Ave. at Frederick
Phone PA 4-6685
CUI PT V
1*>^
Rj,d“ »
Heater
O U I L . I
A good dean car]
Padfield Sunoco M2 Greene PA 2 2972!
Triple Lakes Auto Mart
THE BEST FOR LESS
40 Cars and Truck* to choose from
Ut
VO
T iipi* Lake*
PA 4 4611
51 Dodge 2 Dr. Sedan
Radio. Straight Shift
2-Tone. Good $345
THOMPSON BUICK
CUMBERLAND
LINCOLN-MERCURY
SAFE BUY
USED CARS
SALE
54 Mercury 2-dr. with OD
54 Pontiac Conv., hyd.
53 Mercury Mont. Htp. OD
53 Mercury Mont. 4-dr.
MOM
52 Olds Holiday Htp , hyd
52 Ford Victoria FOM
52 Ford 4-dr., FOM
52 Plymouth 4-dr. ..$595
51 Mercury Conv. ..$545
51 Chevrolet 2-dr. ..$495
51 Studebaker .........$395
50 Ford 2-dr.............. $395
49 Buick 4-dr.............$295
49 Mercury 4-dr, ...$295
48 Pontiac 2-dr
$195
Payments from $5 to $25 Mo.
828 N MECHANIC ST.
PA 4-0460
Open 'Till 9 P. M. Weekdays
Saturdays Till 5 P. M.
CHRYSLER
52 Pontiac Chieftain DeLuxe
This
I
evlmder
convertible
la
al
gleaming
black
and
has
a
perfect]
hydraulically operated top
Equipment]
include* dual range hvdramatie. custom
leather interior, radio,
heater, extra
bumper guard*, under coat, turn ait
nal*. backup lighta. courtesy light* and
good whitewall urea. A perfect, trouble
Ire* ear for only
$895
54 Chev. 4-dr
$1195
54 Chry*. 4-dr. ...$1695
53 Chev. 4-dr. . . . . $ 895
52 Plym. 2-dr
$ 595
50 Packard 4-dr. ..$ 495
49 Buick 4-dr
$ 345
49 DeSoto 4-dr. . . . $ 345
48 Chrys. 4-dr. .. $ 245
48 Nosh 4-dr
$ 150
PA 4-3840 Potomac Motors
Open Evenings 6 30 to 8 30
LOT end GARAGE
PLYMOUTH
Cor. S. George and Harrison St*.
Demonstration day
IS
Every Day
NEW and USED CARS
55 Ford
•
V-8, 4 d r, Automatic
55 Chevrolet
4 dr.. Standard shift
54 Plym. Station Wagon
2 dr, 2 seater, light blue
54 Ford
Club coupe, overdrive
53 Mercury
Station Wagon, 2 dr., 3 sealer
SUNOCO STATIONS
FOR LEASE
HIGH PROFIT POTENTIAL
HIGH GALLONAGE
LOW RENTAL
Minimum Investment
Paid Training Program
Four men needed to
start training program
For Interview
Coll MR. DOHERTY
PA 2-2400
M o n f r n
2 Bay” Service
Station
for
Rent
( ail
I h#
Texan
Co .
Dial
PA 2 MUH) or rA 2 *127.
BROOKS HOTEL
.
t i 47 w e e k
t e l e v i s i o n in i.oRRV ,317 v ir g in ia A ve.
" r o w a VA ILA BLK flN B FRKBSTO N B
USED BARGAINS
One combination coal, wood and
gas range all white table top.
Very nice $49.50
One 6 piece kitchen outfit in solid
oak. table. 4 chairs and matching
cabinet. *75
One gas range, ported condition
$39 30
Only at Millerton's can you
find values like this!
MILLENSON’S
PA 2-3930
K IT Z M ILL E R M E M O R IA LS
MONUMENTS and MARKERS
All the beat marbla mxl ira nit#
including 'Rock of Agen' granlU
and
Barr# Guild Memorial*"
Frederick a George St#
PA L07W 2 39*4
S K S W HAT VOO BO T__________
Sleeping Room
200 Columbia St.
18— Houses For Rent
M O D ER N S Room houve. garage four
mile* out Baltimore Pike, 940 monthly
Phone P A 2 14*1. _____
V r o o m
f a r m
h o i s e
On Winchester Road.
Phone PA 2-4091
SHORT G A P - Route 2*. Large buat
ne** location
now
uaed
at
tavern
I wo 3 room apartments. R. R. Pylea.
R f. I 9403
8— Cool For Solo
Somerset Big Vein Po 2-7710
A L L KIN D S O F S T O K E R T O A L
52 Pontioc
Station Wagon, 4 dr., 2 seater
C LEA N LU M PY CO AL
Prompt Delivery
E
W Campbell. Phone PA 4 5*0*
"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
BIG
V E IN
GOAL.
MSO
TON
PH O N E PA 2 2717. ___
"B E R L IN
G U A R A N T E E D
Bt*
Vein
coal. M SO ton. Load Iota. Phono PA
2-9715. (George Leydig
“ BERLIN COAL, PA-2-5070
Pea 4 Beaverdale OU-Tfeated Tea
T O M K * S E T < (JA L A P E A S I O K ER*
PH O N E PA 2 0*94
A L E P L E Y
Guaranteed Coal $6
Slab Wood F.Z Gredit.
PA L P M
Want Good Coal?
Coll: KEISTER PA 2-2571
B E R L IN COAL. H Ton or any amount
*6 10 Ton
J C. Smith. Dial PA 4 4429
T H R E E ROOM HOUSE
HATH
A f P l Y 622 F R E D E R IC K S T ^
’ F IV E ROOM HOUSE
Furnished
or
Unfurnished
Located in Bowling Green. PA 4 0012
I ROOM house, ga*, electricity, water
yard
*10 month. Mary Borh, *‘B '
St . I.aVale, Md.
A L O V E L Y 9 room dwelling which would
coit
at lea*! 921,000 lo build today,
bordering
on
South Cumberland, tor
rent to a well recommended family for
*60 Suitable for a fam ily with patent*
living In
Writ# Box 32* A « / • Time*
New*
200 Decatur St.
t bedroom dwelling
940 month.
Phone PA J 6230.
19— Wonted to Rent
E M P L O Y E D woman want* small un
furnished apartment Strictly private
Quiet. Phone PA 2 3195 evenings only
"A R L Chem I at and wite want to rent
3
room
furnished
apartment
with
private
bath.
Reasonably
dote
to
down
town.
Call
room
916
Fort
Cumberland Hotel
FR E E Z IN G
AND CANNINO
P-E-A-C-H-E-S
Daily except Sunday et our:
Irons Mountain Orchard
5 Mi. from Cumberland on
Williams Road. Dial PA 2-0114
Consolidoted Orchard Co.
Sales McCu l l o u g h Service
CHAIN SAWS
Cosgrove, 252 N. Centre Pa 2-3040
H O M E U T B CHAIN SAW S
Sale* and Service
Davi* Garage
Flintatone. Md
Phone G R 142*2
"g P E U lA L ^ H a le peache*. *1 50 bushel
Bong container*. Bv bushel or truck
load.
Stafford*
Wayside
Market.
Route 51, 2 mile* east of ( umber
land on Otdtown Road at Golden a
Grove.
20— For Sale Miscellaneous
HI-FI
Recorded
Tapea-Suppliea
Used
Tape Becordera-reatonable
Tape
Re
cor de re Fo r Rent. Davta Motion Picture
Service. IM N. Caster SC Phone PA I
3050
PARAKEETS
BIG V E IN COAL
STO VE AND f l R N A l E WOOD
P A 2 *097
T
u m p y T h g " v e i n
p e a " s t o k e r "
R
K IR C H N E R
D IA L PA 4-010* —N IG HT PA 4 0217
9— Elcctricol Work, Fixtures
51 Packord
4 dr.. Automatic. 2 tone
Bank Financing
AT OUR OFFICE
30-Month
r.r>
u JO Interest
Smith's Triangle
Motors
Your Packard Dealer
322 S. Centre St.
PA 4-6466
Mon. — Sat. — 8 9 P. M _
M SI
PLY M O U T H Crenhreok
4
deer
sedan
Hv-drive tranamisaion
23.000
artual mile*
Reason for selling -
won
new
Buick.
Phone
PA 4-3*l*
alter S P M
ELECTRIC WORK
Motor Repairing. Wiring and Fixtures
QUEEN CITY ELECTRIC CO.
W ftin y h o u ' 0 Apparatut
Agent
ll* 160 Frederick St.
Phone PA 2 1133
92 AO and up
Also supplies
13 Lyon* St Ridgeley Phone R E » 9119
NEW ORIENTAL RUGS
Miscellaneous Household Items
NEW and USED
Bennett Transfer & Storage
W arehouse—Franklin St. Pa2-6770
Save 15% On
Bottled Gas
BENNETT S
PA 2 •900
BEAT THESE
(For Price or Car)
Make Offer
53 Chev. A Dr
H.
53 Chev
*M
del
PA 2-8400 Car Lot PA i i0 4 “ S J V * , h ".^ a L "
St Ply. d b
cpe
R
* ,
53 Plymouth Clb. Sdn.
Cronbrook
Real Nice!
STEINLA'S
218 S. Mechanic
McIntyre Chev. Inc.
Sales and Service
219 N. .Mechanic
PA 4-4400
51 f ord 2 dr
R. H
Fem
II Buick sp 4 dr
R . H , Dyn.
11 Chev
Dix. 4 dr
H
IO Pontiac
2 Dr. R, H
10 Frailer 4 dr, R., H., OO
P A 4-2600 (9 Dodge Cor
4 dr , H
12 Chev
Vi Ton
Pickup
H.
11 Ford V* r.. Pkup., H
51 f ord “ I " A* Io n Pickup R
H.
50 Chev. Del. 4 Dr. R. H.
Over 40 rara to rfiooa* from
A QUALITY CAR
47 PONTIAC
Chieftain ' 8 " dlx. 4 dr.
Includes Hydramatic. radio and
heater. Beautitul metallic green
finish.
"You’ll like it!”
NO DOWN PAYMENT
Only $395
Woody Gurley's
Dodge • Plymouth
123 S. Liberty
PA 2-0200 or 2-0202
AAA Meadqtartert J ot Tri-Statt Area
Bank terms and no dowD payment
Cumberland Motor Sales
14 Wineow St.
Opp. A A P Super Mkt
Phone PA 4 0790
Open TU 9 J0
52 CMC TRACTOR
5-apeed trans. 2-speed axle
2* foot flat
trailer with air
10 20 12 ply tire* w /
75% rubber. Ready for work,
PRESS AUTO MART
Route 28
Dial RE 8-9616
48 Pontiac
$125 49 Plym.
$245
48 Chev.
$100 50 Chev.
$245
49 Nash
$ 99 50 Ford V-8 $245
AND M A N Y O T H ER S
56 THOMAS
PA 2-1401
ON A LL 'SS M O D E LS
Cadillac Sdn. ful. equipped
56 Pant. Star Chief Cust. Cat.
56 Ford FL Sd., loaded
55 Plymouth V-8 sedan
55 Desoto V-8 hardtop
55 Stude V-8 Pickup
54 Buick Sup. HT, loaded
54 Pout 4 dr St Wg, R JI, Hyd
53 Chrys. Conv., R. H Nice
53 Chev. 210, RH, PG
53 Chev. Sla. Wg. 4-dr 3 seats
53 Olds 88 Sdn. R. A ll.
53 Buick Sup. Riv. R. H. Dyn.
51 Buick Sup. HT, RH, Dyn.
51 Buick Conv. RAH
51 Nash hardtop Rambler
SI Plym. Sdn. RAH.
51 Buick Sedan, RH and Dyn.
51 Ford Sd., R H. Sharp
50 Mere. Clb. Cpe., RH
50 Ford sdn. RAH, OD
50 Dodge 4k ton truck
50 Stude. sd., R A H.
SC Pont. Conv., RH., Hyd.
49 Dodge Sd, RH
49 Buick Sd., RH, Dyn.
49 Chevrolet sedan, R, H.
49 De Soto sedan R. A H.
49 Ford Conv., RH
48 Ruick Sd, R, H
48 Dodge Sdn. R A H .
48 Chev. sedan R. H. Sharp
46 Chev. Sd, like new
46 Dodge panel truck
41 Olds Clb. Cp. RH, Hyd.
41 Cadillac Conv., R. H.
41 Chev. Sedan. Nice.
Red's Used Cars
722 GREENE ST.
PA 2-8150
’52 Font
Padfield Sunoco
Dual range Hyd
R , H, I own Sharp
842 Greene
PA 2 2972
Moore Motor Sales
53 Pont 4 dr
RAH
13 Buick Sup 4 Dr.
52 Ply S Wag RH
52 f ord EM 2 D RH
SI Plym
4 Dr
H.
l l tbev I Dr
RH
SI Ford 2 Dr R. H.
51 Olds Bt 2 D RH
52 f old Conv.
50 Mere
4-dr
H
50 Chry# 4 Dr RH
49 W illy* H T Pkp.
49 Plym . 4 A 2 Dr*
4* Chev. Mi T. Pkp
54 FORD
990
V 4
4 dr. 2 tone— Sharp
53 CHEV.
880
4 dr 2 tone Eqpt DK
53 W ILLYS
500
2 dr
6 ^yl
V. ( lean
52 CHEV.
,
440
2 dr
S tone
New mtr.
51 FORD
440
V I
4-dr. RAH. Nit*
50 CHEV.
350
DU
2-dr. RAH Clean
ELECTRIC WORK
F R E E E S T IM A T E S ON W IR IN G
Sterling Electric Co., Inc.
IOO N. CENTRE ST.
PA 2-4800
lO-Finoncing, Money Loons
AUTO LOANS
in 5 Minutes
National Loan, 201 S. George
T H R lrT ~ p l a n
Finance Corporation o* Cumberland
18 N Liberty St.
Phone PA 4 0344
W A L L P A P E R - Make your selection at
home
Expert paperhanging, low coat
PA 2-0224 tor sample#. Hartley Wigtield
HARDY7 C H R Y SA N T H EM U M S - t u r f *
blooming
atte
plant*
Beautiful
new
type* and color*
5 tor HOO; 12—92:
20—83.
Tharp Seed
Store.
PA 2-6147.
Baby Parakeets For Sale
439 N. Mechanic Phone PA 2-7011
LOANS
ON YO U R S IG N A T U R E O N LY
U P TO HSWI
F A M IL Y U S A N C E CO RPO RATIO N
40 North Mechanic Street
Phone PA 4 3600
Finance Plumbing A Heating
— McKAIG'S—
LOANS in a HURRY!
ON A R T IC L E S O F V A L U E
— Also Unredeemed Value#—
C l M B K R L A N D U lA N CO.
42 N M M HANIG ST.
l l — For Rent
H O SPIT A L B ED S. W H E E L C H A IR S ,
W A L K E R S .
C R U T C H ES
PA
2 8484
Pit* Bro*
R I
5
McMullen Hwy.
60 MORE BUYS
GUUCKS
Cor. S. Centre L W lUiams
2d CAR SPECIALS
Priced and ready to roll
49 Packard
49 Mercury
48 Pontiac
48 Mercury Conv.
47 Chevrolet
46 Chevrolet 2 dr.
46 Chevrolet 4 dr
41 Chevrolet
41 Plymouth
S m i t h ' s T r i o n
Motors
Your Packard Dealer
322 S. Centre St.
PA 4-6466
Mon. — Sat. — 8 9 P. M.
3.000 square feet, suitable for whole
sale
or
other
business
Within
one
block of Baltimore St. Phons PA 2-5760
or PA 2-3723
T R A IL E R " SP AC E S
Throe""rn i lea from
Cumberland on Baltimore Pike.
TV,
washers, driers.
P A 2 7168
STORM
Self-Storing
Windows
I
Combination Doors
—Jalousies— Permanent
Awnings
APC Metal Products
BD X 43. OLDTOW N ROAD P A 4 1234
MIRRORS
Door M irrors, Mantel
Mirror*. Glass
Furniture
’lop*.
Mirror*
reailvered
Free pickup and delivery.
ART GLASS COMPANY
C R E S A P P A R K ________
PA 2 4421
Vet s Bicycle & Mower Supply
"Everything
for
the
bicycle
and Lawn Mower"
Queen City Pavement
At Union St
Phone PA 2 86*3
"H O S PIT A L IZ A T IO N !” Life. Accident k
Health.
Representing Traveler* In*
Merle Cornelia*. Ridgeley. R E * 9290.
"U S E D Bldg
MaterialTDoors. window*,
flooring*
framing
aheeting.
chicken
batteries. UYimO'd Salvage. PA 4-06*3
PEAT MOSS
Peat Mo** is indispensable for mulch
ing lawn*, all kind-, of plants and rose
bushes
Keep* weed* down, give* a
cest, clean appearance.
Liberty Hardware Co.
5/ N. Liberty St.
Phone PA 2-7140
H o l 'd PLA N S
Whether sou get them
from a magazine or have an archi
tect. we’ll reproduce them
Everyone
needs
copies
of
valuable
paper*
Photostat or Blueprint. Cumberland
Engraver*. I l l S Mech. St. P A 2-1622
'St o r m s
nsd_
"P o y Khtte you gore"
M A R Y LA N D H O M E R IP P L Y
29 %
Centre St
PA 4 6436
BEER $2.99 CASE
(Choice of IO different brands)
Night Owl Blend S3 23 5th
Kline s Liquor Store 7U0 N. Mech.
WALLPAPER
Cochran Paint*—Sander* Rented
Neier knowingly un Arr told
QI ( M I N M
R IC E
19 Laing Ave _ _
_
. . . .
_
..
Open 7 day* week
* a. rn. to 12 p. rn
2 5 — —B u i l d i n g
S u p p l i e s
— SHOP IN COMFORT
— AIR CONDITIONED
— FREE, EASY PARKING
ONE STOP SERVICE
Porn*— Lumber— Hardware
Try "PENNEY"
In The Narrows
Dial PA-2-7300
21— Wonted ta Buy
SC R A P IRON. hrs**, copper, batterie*,
radiator*,
etc
Cumberland
Metal,
near Wiley Ford Bridge. PA 2-3619.
SCRAP IRON
(JI cher Price* Nun In Sffertt
Heavy — Sheet — (ast
W H O L E S A LE AND R E T A IL
SCRAP METAL
HIGHER PRICES
Copper.
Bra**,
Batterie*.
Aluminum
Brock Scrap & Salvage Co
(rid Tm Plat# Sit#
Between Kmg A Offut
PA *
£1 Timothy hay
and straw wanted.
W rite Box .3*2 A c o Time* New#___
23— Florist, Flowers, Plant*
Funeral
BOPPS
T I
19 N. Liberty St
r IO W 0 T Phone PA 2-4330
24— Furnaces, Heat, Stove*
Plumbing & Heating
J. F-. Woodyard Phone PA 2-6954
"L E N N O X - Coal, Ga*. Oil E U R NAC E l
Cleaning A Repairing
Bungler Heating 196 N. Centro Pa 4-68M
Do you* need a~new hearing p la n t?"
( all PA 4-2414 for free estimates.
Sun Heating Co.. P. O. Box 447
H O LLAN D FU R N A C E CO
Off — Coal — G at Heating U nit I
Sam-vac cleaning service, repairs
449 N. Centro St.
Phone P A 4 512;
R
H. L A P P A SONS
P L U M B IN G A H E A T W O
PH O N E P A 4-6650
P U P P IE S - Adorable Cocker Spaniel*
Mrs.
Harold
Meek.
Vale Summit, 2
miles South of Clary Club.
AUTO Insurance to cover State Law
932.22. Also Workmen’s Compensation.
Eire. Glenn Watson PA 2-4040.
U S E D electric refrigerator, 820. used
gas
refrigerator, 940:
used
Bencite
washer. 940;
used gas range, 925,
rebuilt Hoover vacuum cleaner with
attachments.
950;
new
Kelvinatoi
air conditioner. 9* ton, was 9339 95
now 9229 95; window fan*, 30% off
Term* available Green Hartman Ap
pliance*.
198 ti. Centre
St.
Phone
P A 4 0730.
S P E C I A L S - !
8i 89 C A S H M E R E
F L A N N E L 79e
81 49 C O RD URO Y 91c
Kitchen Chair* Covered In Plastic
G EO . BR A G G , L a V A LE . Md
Pa 4 4611
2 Block* Opp. La Vale Meth. Church
TOMATOES
You Pick Them
75c bushel
Bring Contomer
Fred Bierman. Mexico Farms
PA 2-6654
EXCLUSIVES
Headquarters lor
Fishing & Archery Supplies
TACKLE SHOP
K l IN O J
243 VA. AVE.
Weddings— Announcement*,
Invitations,
Napkin*, etc., Wide variety
Federal
Printing, 257 Columbia St. Pa 2-3424
Cocktail and Formal
Wool Sheath*
Black or brown
Coat*
for
school
Junior Drevav Coat*
Women’*
Coats
to
sue
54
i A—
/ A p a r t m e n t s
O N E
4 ROOMS U N F U R N IS H E D
O N E 2 ROOMS F U R N IS H E D
PA 4 3874
13— Furnished Apartments
First floor
Two
room*
Lavatory
and
shower
Porch.
Adults
S I
I mon
st
"t w o r o o m s " w it h P R IV A T E "B A T H
LA U N D R Y AND P A R K IN G
229 UNION ST.
T H R E E ROOMS
C E N T R A L
A D ULTS
7 N
W A V E R L Y T E R R A C E
2 L A R G E room*, private bath.
Nicely
fumiKhed,
quiet.
Relerence
Adults.
Harrison St
Phone PA 2-6761.
J ROOM I ut ni?. bed apartment, fngidaire.
hot
air
heat,
children
allowed,
323
Bedford St. PA 2 0138.
BLVD . A PTS 2. 3. 4 Room Apt*
Utilities
mil.
Also
Sleeping
Room*.
Reasonable. PA 2 8100. PA 2-4144
T H R E E
ROOM
furnished
apartment
Adult* only.
North Cumberland
Dial
PA 2-2699
Two comfortable rooms.
Porch,
phone,
laundry.
All utilities furnished
400 Decatur St.
239 N Mechanic St.
PA 4-6440
SPOERL'S
PONTI AC-CAD1LLAC
845 N Mechanic St
PA 2 2414 or PA 2 8300
Customer Parking
Open 'til 9
1947
DESOTO
Custom
Sedan,
Good
condition.
(HS.
Phone
Homestead
3-7221.
51 Font. 6 cyl. 4 dr. $295
Radio, Heater. Hydramatic
Charles Gurley Garage
129 N Mechanic St.
* Dial PA 2 4846
AHLBURN’S"CHEVROLET CO.
13 Mercury Monterey Hard Top
51 Desoto Custom 4-d Sdn.
SI Desoto Custom Conv
51 Chev
Styleline Dix Cd. Sdn
51 Ford Custom 4-d. Sdn.
50 Buick Special Cd
Sdn.
T R U C K S
55 Chev. H Ten Dix
Pick Up
31 Chev *♦ Ton Pick Up
Ahlburn's Chevrolet Co.
PHONE 26
HYNDMAN, PA.
1951 FORD 4-DR '6' $395
1949 OLDS 4-DR '76'$195
1948 CHEV. 2-DR. .
$175
116 P A t A s r.
P A 4-6717
3
ROOMS, private
bath, private en
trance, automatic neat k hot water
Phone PA 2-1570 or PA 2 2823
B E A U T IF U L L Y
furnished
3
room
apartment. 2nd floor, strictly private,
central. Phone PA 2 Hut. oi P l 2-699.1
1 4 - U n f u r n i s h e d A p a r t m e n t s
M O D ERN
3
Room
Apartment
with
private bath and porch. Second floor
Convenient to g)a»» plant. 507 Green
way Ave.
’ .MODERN T i
ROOMS
Bath.
porch.
Strictly private. Automatic heat fur
nished. Apply 14 Fourth St
KO OL-VENT A LU M IN U M AW N INGS
Welch Insulation. Free Estimate*!
Ft.
Ashby 2110
Frostburg
546
Latest Exclusive Fall Frocks
LaBONITA D*KSS 54 Greene
L u u u i x i i n
SHOF
p a 2-1440
Low Prices! Snouting, Spout
mg Fixtures, Roof Paints!
Liberty Hardware Co.
57 N. Liberty St.
Phone PA 2-7140
USED TAPE RECORDERS
Phonograph^
H i'P i
Equipment
Enterprise Amusement Co.
170 N
C E N T R E ST
D IA L PA 2-0050
S P E C IA L Sewing machines adjusted in
the
home
92.
Electrify
and
Buy
W A K E F IE L D Sale*
PA 2 8430, I 47*4
T
P, Y I J Experienced, fast Washer
A .
VV
repair*. A L L M A K E S
24 HO UR S E R V IC E
PA 4-2541
B U R K E T T 'S W A S H ER S E R V IC E
133 Race St
Phone PA 4 2064
F-4 AND 5 ROOM apartment* - Private
bath - Utilities furnished - Laundry
room available - No pet* - First and
second floor* - 879
’atterson Av.nue
PA 4 OMO
\\ ii si in A PA R T M I
I k 4 room*
with
bath,
new,
very
best
Apply
after 3 p. rn.. 105 Washington St.
2 L A R G E ROOMS and semi private bath
on first Root, 637 Md. Ave 920. Harry
B.
Simpson,
Dial
PA
2-5760 or
PA
2 3723
lo u r Room
Apartment With Bath
On Washington St.
_
PA 2-7195
3 ROOMS. P R IV A T E BATH
Private Entrance. Porches, yard.
925 Morth
*16 Paca St.
Wolfs Warehouse
BARGAINS
Still usable merchandise
at give-away prices
Refrigerators $35
Washers $20
Gas Ranges $15
Breakfast Sets $10
Apply at rear of
German Brewery Bottling
Plant off Market St. Bridge
*52 lo rd Tractor like new ........
S989
*52 Ford Tractor 6 cyl....................... S989
AC Roto Baler new rubber .......... *319
IH jt45 Pickup Baler PTO
.......... 9989
22 in. Erick Thresher
8419
H. G. Bender—Ph. 206—Meyersdale, Pa.
U S E D Mobile Homes—35* Spartanette,
35’ Marlette, both like now: Trailer
Village Sales, LaVale. PA 4-2754.
Used TV Set*
BA R G A IN P R IC E S
Paramount
101 Va. Ave.
PA 2-2230
C O M P L E T E U N l T U S E b C A M ER A S
Still k Movie!
XII Guaranteed
Price* Reduced. Just in time for
vuirftier
Snapshots
C A M ER A SHOP
20 N. C E N T R E ST.
Sum
CURL’S
A LU M IN U M H O U SE T R A IL E R
Excellent Condition, 91665
Phone PA 2 2943
122 95
822 95
824 91
$39 95
939 VS
SYKES STYLE SHOP
•05 Md. Ave.
Daily l l a. m.-t p. m
Phone PA 2 1570
120 BASS
Accordion,
excellent
«ond7
Don 825; New Minolta 16 M M minia
lure camera. Phone PA 2-7192, 6 30
p
rn.-7:30 p. m.
Z E N IT H
radio.
Kenmore
sewing
machine.
Marmot
fur
Mole
I rom
bedroom for rent. PA 4 3902.
Kenmore Deluxe Automatic
Sewing Machine
Console Model. Slightly Scratched
sAVL0n,y...............$ 6 0 .0 0
SEARS
R O EB U C K k ( O.
PArkview 2 5100
1955 -
30 inch Westinghouse electric
range.
1950 7 co
ft
Westinghouse
electric refrigerator. Both in excel
lent condition Must sell, leaving city
Phone PA 2 6506 after 6 P M
Reversible Window FanT~
Reg. $54.95 Now $38.50
FURNITURE MARI
20 N. Mech. St.
Dial PA 2-3141
’S P E C IA L S ’*—3 John Deere Jt?4 F o r
age
Harvester* w/row and pickup
attachments; I John Deere «64 H arv
ester; I New Holland rbOO Harvester
I
John
Deere
z.M) Forage
Blower
w
40 ft. pipe
also New .John Deere
Z 8 I-oi age Harvester* and Blower*
See
us
before
ve*j
buy
R
n
Speicher,
Phone
433 J .
Meyersdale
Pa
Electric Sewing Machine
PA 2-3060
EASY
S K E IL E Y 'S
Washer Part*
Complete Stock
536 Pine Ave
PA 2 51)5
CROSSTOWN BARGAINS
Beautiful, new, modern stele
FLOOR LAMPS
KLINE FURNITURE CO.
405-413 Virginia Ave.
PA 2-4820
IF YO U R linoleum is old! you’ll lie
sold on Glaxo, Beautifies and makes
ii last
Rosenbaum's.
Gold Bond and
Red Top Plaster
Full Line of Metal Goods
for Plastering
SUPER CONCRETE CO.
405 11
Mendel son Ave.
Ph
PA 2 428
for quality . . .
LUMBER and
BUILDING MATERIALS
C A LL
The South Cumberland
Planing Mill Company
33 Queen St.
PA 2-2600 2-260
HAGERSTOWN BLOCKS
& MARTINSBURG BRICK
Ray M. At hey Dial Pa 4-44V
JOH NS- M ANV ILLE
Gas Flue Pipe
Asbestos Cement
Safe . . . and it s permanent
The Cumberland Cement
and Supply Company
Rear 419 N. Centre
PA 4-200
ARE YOU CONSIDERING
BUYING A
PRE-FAB
HOME
lf so, see us first.
The Buchanan PLAN is
designed to bring you the
greatest value at mini
mum cost.
Use
Nationally
known
Brands backed by a local
lumber yard.
BUCHANAN
LUMBER CO
549 N. CENTRE ST.
PHONE PA 2-0650
26— Help Wanted
l l FT. emus CRAFT
runaboutTv^
engine
Excellent condition. May be
*een Saturday, Sunday or Monday,
Storey’* Boat Landing, Deep (reek
Lake or Phone PA 2-4390
W IN K L E R low prepuce oil* conversion
unit, with all control* and tank Like
new. Dial PA 4 4169
i i Val* in
Employment, Box lr.
CO rn n arr Isl •X.P*!^ *‘lnce<, *«•»> Ot women
tng etc
Industrial, domestic nun
Get S&H Green Stamps for
STO S? PURUCKER’S
158 N Centre
p A 2.78r<
[ a p r
Export, German, /r-'-\ r\ r\
Boh. Iron City. S s / O O
Ft. Pitt.
Case *'*— ' s
McDades
27— Female Help Wanted
B AN I ED Woman for house work at*
part time child care. Live out. $31
5 d*y week. Reference*. PA 4 2596.
G IR L wanted to help with 2 childre
and housework in McKeesport, P f
P A r m ' . T ' Good "»««*
Phoa
3 between 6:30-7:30 p. M.
°d k L !«r re*tau^*nt "o S ~ W rite or ai
i W j S E £ . . n r - *“ • G~
eve i tin J aLJ
? y not do aomethm
t.on c5u*npdApl? 7ii ; f w
Kor ,nlorm,
• rn.
—- ■ -
or 5-6 p m. ouly bet wee* 9-9 7
PILE BROTHERS
Phone PA 2-4600 for o WANT AD Taker
NINE
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS.
CUMBERLAND.
MD., MONDAY.
SEPTEMBER
IO.
P 5 6
27— Female Help Wanted
38— Moving, Storing
JO H N AP P E L T R A N S F E R " LO C A L.'
LONG D ISTA N CE MOVING A G EN T
G R E W AN
L IN E S
TA
4 1*2'
S I— Vacuum Cleaners
Display C la w Med
B E A C L U B S E C R E T A R Y
Get *25, *50. I IM in famous product*
free'
Help your trieruis get National
Brand* they want for onlv l l a week
They get valuable free gift*, too
and
YO C get gift after gift
E R F E : Send
today for detail* and F R E E New 274-
page catalog P O P C L A R C L U B PLA N .
Dept. J644. Lynbrook, N. Y .
W A IT R E SS - and ear* fir!
Apply My
burger Restaurant. « mile* B e n of
Cumberland on Route 40.
BEAUTY-SAFETY
VACUUM CLEANER
Parts & Service
PA-25070
1302 VA. AVE
Display Classified
39—Pointing, Paperhanging
PAIN TIN G—EX T ER IO R —INTERIOR
Insurance. Experienced Workmen Call
I. L W ILBERT , PA J *5»S
EVERGREENS
A
\
For Foil
Planting
$375 OO PER MONTH
Salary, plua generous bonus arrangement
for aggre**ive, ambitious woman 25 50,
desiring
an
interesting
and
profitable
I U e*
management career as oui
Dis
I^Prct
Maifkger
in
Cumberland
am t
Direct selling recruiting experience de
airable but not
necessary
a* we
give
complete
training
Unusual
ground
floor" opportunity wtth Cart Cosmetic*.
a new and fast growing company develop
Ing a nationwide organization
Mileage
nliowance for u*e of car doing limited
area driving. No evening or partv work
For interview' write or wire L. D. Ken
iredv, Gen. Sates M g r, 37 W. Aith St ,
New York, N. Y .
40— Personals
STORM DOORS
W INDOWS It
JALOUSIES
a Frow fttimotlif
J. E. Sharp & Co.
McMullen Highway
tm 7-7*20
A
.
M
K
u
f
i l Gua' onl eed
' R h 4 8 l o w e s t Brito*
C v £
Hifhosr Quality
SPECIAL OFFER
GOtDIN VICARY PRIVIT
I V B
Beautiful pant* -IVj ft.
* w
SMITH S GARDENS
UTO Shade* Iona
PA 4 U t*
L IK E a letter from home everv da\
through
fhe
year
To your
non
or
daughter in the
Armed Services, or
your Poy or girt away at school
. .
Send the ( umberland New*
The Eve
nlng or Sunday
rime*. Call: t'trcula
«ion Dept PA 2 4600
E X P E R T S C LA IM a comfortable mat
tree* la the key ta a good Bight a rent
let ae pat th# “ comfort* bark la that
lumpy, bumpy rn Hues* of yours. Mat I
trtsse* of all tire* made to order. Cam
bartend Mattress Parlor? Ph PA t-110*
43— Piano Tuning
Piano Tuning & Repairing I
Laurence Griffith PA 2-1633,
R O B E R T
W
M O RELA N D .
ASPT,
Tune*, R ep aid br hoot, Church, Home:
Piano*
PA 4 1084
Used Piano*
28— Male Help Wanted
I
VENETIAN BLINDS
B
I
Madc-lo Measure
j
I
Cleaned. Repaired
1
AW NINGS
m
I
Fibrtglat or Aluminum
g
IRON RAILINGS
■
|
DRAPERIES and
■
DRAPERY RODS
■
F R E E
E S T IM A T E S
*
, JOHN E. SHARP I CO. B
McMullen Hwy.
PA *-7«l ■
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■
■ « ■
S A L E S M E N AND C A N V A SSER S
• Full or part time!
Get ob the Band Wagon
Easy lo sell
merchandise sold on budget pun, good
f
ay. Transportation furnished
See Mr
.ichtenstam, 17* N
(entre St
(.lo x e s
h e ro in e a
m ost fe m in in e
» e re **o n r lf tm o n ih e d on (bd
h a n d * w ith (he le a r n t at stra ig h t a* (hose of y o u r hone.
46— Radio, TV Service
Secrets Of Charm
by John Robert Powers
Conditioning
- Room Coolers
- Residential
-Commercial
- Industrial
-Ventilation
Distributed by
AIRCON
Engineering & Supply Co.
2 Williams St.
PA 2 7269
Call your Carrier dealer
JOURNEYMEN
ELECTRICIANS
Do I Wear Gloves?
Whether the bride weal* gloves*
or not is really a mailer of choice j
lf the wedding is a very small one,
I the bride wears no gloves at Ail
J Or. if she chooses a long sleeved
(gown, she doesn t wear gloves.
Gloves with certain period bridal
gowns complete a picture, and the
bride usually prefers to wear them.
If short gloves are worn, the bride
merely pulls the gloves off at the
altar.
But if she wears elbow
I length or longer evening gloves,
| the under seam of the wedding
finger of the glove is ripped for
I about two inches.
This permits
It ha ring lo he slipped on her
linger. The bride then only pullsj
'the tip off to have the ring put on
White suede or glace gloves are
usually selected by the bride. They
should be smoothed on the hand
'with the seams as straight as those
‘of your hose.
To he sure the hands are lovely,
since they are such an important
part of your beauty, give them
special care before the wedding
At least once a week. give your
| hands a massage with face cream
ibefore retiring. You can use warm
oil 'baby oil or sweet oil*. Begin
at the fingertips and stroke the oil
j or cream down o\er the back of |
ithe hands and past the wrists, lf
(your cuticles need softening, soak
them in a little oil with a piece of
j cotton.
To give your hands a1
^really wonderful treatment, leave1
the oil on all night and wear a
pair of roomy white cotton gloves
jto bed. This will prevent the oil
from rubbing off
MOW
M M M
S H O U B
TOU
W K (G R *
A new, lightning calculator (hat tails
you how to commot your e s s individual
• ideal weight
Write to Secrets mf ( harm
in rare of (hi* newspaper, enclosing Ilk
• in comr and a aelf addressed
stamped
antelope
Ask
(or ‘ How M oth Should
Yon Weigh’ "
,
• Copyright 195*. John F
Dill* Co I
Tomorrow — On the job, fir*!
thing.
Hyndman Boosters
Plan Rummage Sale
EXPERIENCED
IN
INDUS-
TRIAL
CONSTRUCTION
THIS WORK
IS
IN
THE
VICIN ITY
Of
W ILM IN G
TON, DELAWARE.
47— Real Estate For Sale
HYNDMAN.
Pa. — The
Band
Boosters Club of Hyndman will
hold a rummage sale in the Cook
Rutldmg
on
Washington
Street
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs
day.
Items to he contributed to the
sale may he brought to tho build
mg today.
Delivery will i*e pro
vided for those who caU
Mi*
Victor Atwell at 7-R
Another project of interest ta a
hake sale which will he held in
Buck Bruner a grocery on Satur
day. October *
Baked goods will
include pies
cakes, bread, rolls,
cookies, gingerbread and home
made candy. The sale will begin
at Id a. rn.
It is requested that
baked goods be at the store by IO
a. rn. or before noon af the latest
A homemade Icecream sale also
is in the club's tentative future
plans.
Wa
have
cash
buyers
tor
modern
homes. Guaranteed Result* or no coat
to you
Your inqutrle* welcomed. M. D.
Reinhart Again y ~ P A J S U L
Heal Estate Broker, Auctions
Floyd P. Grace — RF. 8 9532
RATE $3,525
PER HOUR
G O LD EN K F Y HOM F. 700 Hilltop Drive
3 Bedroom*. Corner lot.
Forced hot
air heat
PA 2 2122
REAL ESTATE SERVICE
Buy! —
Sell' —
Finance!
Cumbd a Real Fatale Market Place
The HARO LD R F L E T C H E R CO
SS N
L IB E R T Y ST
D IA L PA 4 M I*
~ S F V E N - Room “ brick”
IWW
N
Centre
Automatic heat
Excellent condition
Ter v
reasonably
priced.
Dial
PA
2 1*3*
‘ B E A U T IF U L
Stoat ' Rah. her
Tiled
rooms
Built 1954
Modern in over?
way
IS Memorial A * ? . Eat. Fine
neighborhood lo t (4*110
I ROOM
Brick
I
hath*,
automatic
beal
Double garage
fin e condition
212 Schley St
Priced right. See it:
M IL L E N SON, Real Fatale P A 4 S59P
CALL MR. FLYNN
Wilmington, Del.
OLYMPIA 2-0124
MEDEK
Transfer
Finest
lo?ipm «nt
Experienced Man
Sellable I
CONSTRUCTION
•
A
M
TO ♦
P
M
FO R
A P
PO IN T M EN T IN T E R V IE W S IN T R E
LO R D D E LA W A R R H O T EL. S U IT E
C l
ON DU PO N T P A R K W A Y . I
M IL K
SOUTH
O F
W ILM IN G TO N
P L E N T Y O F P A R K IN G S P A C E OR
T A K E BU S X 17.
lf Casts
NO MORE
W A N T E D - Painting to he done bv con
tract both
ut Cumberland and
en
Happy Hills Farm . S mile* west of
F roatburg
Contact John Hater. 130
Baltimore Ave
I
A L U M E N
F u ir o r ~ p ir r tim# to 'rep'
resent leading Catholic
rn nattily
in
Cumberland and vicinity. Guaranteed
year around repeat arder*
Call PA
4-37S3 between I and 7:30 p. rn
* 7 A L E S M E S - S a ta r v Ted rn m lesion, bon
us
Transportation
furniehed
Ho*
pltallsation.
retirement
paid
aera
tion
Apply Norman Taylor. Ringer
Sewing Slachine Co. Call PA 290*0
tor appointment.
POTOMAC Park—new 4 or • room
modern
bouse,
Ready
lo
move
Large lot. Phone PA 4-1414
IM M E D IA T E Posaeaaion—4 bedroom*.
living room >Sa27. kttrhen 19x 14. hath
Automatic
hot
water heater,
com
pleteiy insulated
AU wood paneling
Interior
Double
garage,
workshop
overhead
De acres. 29 minutes (rem
Cumberland
Phone Fort Ashby S43I
“ Tm h- SA I.K »1J,0<» oT Heart M l month I
Two
bedroom
atone
unfurmraherl
borne. Braddock Road
Garage. Pull
Basement. Dial PA 4 0974
I
Modern 6 room home. large lot.
IO
mite* out Route 2*
Price reduced,
lot fox IOO School S i. (a v a le
( Omer [a t —Patterson Ave. and B itch *
St
90x300
Two 4 room houses Wiley Ford Terme
J. *
HUTTON. Realtor
Ridgeley.
W
Va.
R F
• *7M
M A Y iU R V IO L A N D R E A L T Y
R E A L FS T ATK
B R O K E R S
P H O N E PIED M O N T (OII
T xoU B L F
H O U SE . n i x
rooms,
hath-,
furnace, each side North End Phone
P A 3 3574
A ft OOM HOUSE. NR E ~ Y ARD
514 DUB y St
Apply between 4 and * p m ______
LOCAL AMO LONO OISTANCI
Phone PA 4-3900
203 INDEPENDENCE ST.
No Job Too Big
Or Too
Small!
Sermonelte
Coll ToJtryl
The South Cumberland
Planing Mill Company
33 Queen St.
PA 2 3600. 2-tW l
YOUN G
M EN
Nationwide Inspector and Reporting Co
hat salaried openings ta the Cumber
land area tor mature appearing young
men
age*
33 39
who
enjoy
outside
pubUc contact-work la lnaurance and
personnel
selection
work.
No
aale»,
.
collection*,
or
adfuanng
No
exper
lence necessary. Mutt be a high school
graduate, have
a ear and be able to
tvpe
Good
atoning
aalary
with
In
crease within t month*. Car expenses
paid
Call
Mr
Srharf at PA
4 (* n
or call in person
room f i t Liberty
Trust Bldg
MAN hetween- M io 'w T lh - **11 mg exper
lence. W ill train. Salary, plua commis
sion. hospitalization, Phone PA 2*430
— "
SA LESM A N
Exceptional
opportunity
for
good
Salesman ta go th busine** far sell
with
my
help
I
furnish atnck
and
finance your account#. Car essential
but no cash investment required
Ref
erences. Reply; Box 375 A e /o Time*
New*.
___________
31 — Situation* W an te d
“ A M BIT IO U S
lady
desire*
posiioo
general office work or receptions
Call PA 2 512*. *12 morning*_______
PO U R ROOMS. bath, glassed In bark
porch, screened front porch. Garage
Phone Ft. Ashby 4271,
S IX ROOM Brick House
Modern coo
veaieaces. Extra lot 70g E. Oidtowa
Road, ( um belland. Md. PA 4 399?
JO H NSON
H E IG HTS
S EC T IO N —4-
ROOM
BUN G ALO W
W IT H
BATH
E l K N A P E . 9* 900 O P IE ANNAN, 35
K R E D E R ! K
• A 4 0200_________
7 ROOM bouse part bath, attic, amoke
house
met lot
Bowmans Addition
Term* Price 93.770. Phone PA 2 3429
Hall Asks Americans
To Mark “Ike Day”
0 CONCRETE
0 POWER
# STEIL
SEPTIC T A N K S
E X C A V A T IN G
STO RAGE T A N K S
b ee tle WoHoWeoe
T R E N C H IN G
W<‘ •» C*e*#m-Mwde
McMillin! Hwy.
More Information Call:
PA 2-84*4 or 2-8485
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9
rn —
GOF National Chairman Leonard
Hall today called on Americans to
celebrate Out. 13—the day before
P r e s i d e n t Eisenhower's 66th
birthday—as ' Ike Day."
Hall suggested "a warm birth
day tribute to a man who has de
voted his life to public service
both as soldier and statesmen,"
Hall said actress Irene Dunne
and Charles H. Percy, president
of Bell and Howell, will serve as
cochairmen to direct planning of
celebrations throughout the na
tion.
H A R D IN G A V E. lot. SO x IO*. Water,
sewage, ga*, electric. *230
Term*
H
R eiser. Mt. Savage. I O 4-4571.
* ROOM » R A M E H O USE
A P P L Y
J.
M
SCHAID T
O ID T O W N . MD
32— Instructions
P IA N O
P U P IL S .
Beginner*
or
ad
v Snead. Registration now! Hildegardc
Click.
1*0 N.
Smallwood
St.
Dial
PA 2 202?.
" l e a r n b e a u t y c u l t u r e
Investigate this field
Fall Classes Open Sept. IO
Tri-State Beauty Academy
l l * VA. A VE. Cumberland PA 4 21*0
34— Lost and Found
^ LOST
~Male” part Beagle dog. S ub
day. August 2Kth, Willow brook f hri*
tv Golden Lane section Moatlv white,
brown ear*, amal! brown spot center
o f , head.
large
brown
apot*
each
side of middle.
Reward
PA 4 0217.
Roy Kirchner. Golden I .ane
M O D E R N
brick
3
bedroom
home
F.xtra large living room and kitchen
Fireplace,
ceramic
bath,
garage
North End
PA 2*12*
B R IC K
bungalow
in
fine
revtdennal
section, two bedroom*, dining room,
living
room,
kitchen,
sun
parlor.
bath
Double
garage,
admitting
lot
SO X *0 PA 2 1340 or P A 2-01*0
“H O U SE "in Bayard - *
Va
• Room*,
bath, insulated
Writ#: Mr*
(.e o n *
A
Bombax. 709 N. High St., Martina
burg. W
Va
_____
M A R K E T building- and two 'apartment*
on
Fast
Main
St .
Frostburg,
Md
New
hot water heating plant, new
roof Everything private. Owner must
■ell due to other commitment* Bring
ing
good
immediate
income
Will
pay
for
itself
Owner
will
help
(inane* U needed Everything to gain,
nothing to lose here. For appointment,
call Frostburg 345 before 5 P M
After S P M
call Frostburg 1199
7 ROOM S
bath
modern kit. )ien
sew
mg toom. hardwood floors, hot
air
heat,
insulated.
Rusco
Storm
Win
dows, door*, convenient to downtown.
at bool*, park. Clava Factorv
Im men
iate possession. Phone PA 2-37(1 .
and other Fall expenses!
See m above rn Thrift PU n
emunnal need*. One dttfj, par*
law n to ow*fit your children
annal loon a tm ce Mf abray*
for acfcont. G et «rtra money
yourn mt T h rift W rtfa. tJym a
far hom e refM BiB, Am! end athar
or come rn . _ «, to d a y s -.■ jjms
©
LOANS OVER $300 MADI UNDID THI
MD
INDUSTRIAL f IN ANCI LAW.
T H R IF T PLAN LO ANS
THRIFT RIAN FINANCE COR PORA! KHA
OF CUMBERLAND
18 N. Liberty St.
Wreck On C. And O
ST. ALBANS, W. V a, Sept. 9
'INS*—An eastbound CV and O.
freight
sideswiped a coal
train
near St. Alban* today, derailing 47
cars and dumping thousands of
Ions of coal. No one was hurt.
35— Miscellaneous
S E P T IC TA N K S
C LE A N E D .
Modem
equip't.
Bi Jxiat#
Diapooal
Service
Writ# or Phone Lonaconing HO 3 4401
NOTICE TO PROPERTY
OWNERS
Notice la hereby given that at a meet
ing of the Mayor and City Council ot
Cumberland, Maryland to he held in the
Council
Chamber, ( tty
Hall
ai
IO on
'• < lo* k A
M , EH N I
Monday S e t’em
her 24.
195*. Hillman, ex qtll be
intro
ducrd providing for the iinproxing of the
(allowing streets from their inicrae. turn*
with Frederick Street to their intersex
Hon* with Bedford Street
E IC H N E R
A V E N U E
paving, curbing.
guttering or otherwise improving
FO R ST EH A V E N U E —paving, curbing.
guttering or otherwise improving
AU per«on« to be affected by said pro
reeding* atrail be given an opportunity
to be heard tor or against the passage
of said ordinance*
M AYO R AND C ITY C O U N C IL
O F ( U M B E R L A N D
Wallace C Uttery
City Clerk
Adv. Sept. N-T-16 ll
_____________
LOOK at these!
R O O FIN G ,
SPO UTIN G
SID IN G
Three year* to pay
Guaranteed work
Andrew Witt. Phone CO 4-3667 •
TRADES - TERMS - NOTHING DOWN
ROOF ING.
SID IN G .
Fainting.
Spout
ing General repair* Call Or mb. PA
4 3494, ILndm an 137 R 5. Free e«ti
mate*. Balinger Burkett.
" " SID IN G A RO O FIN G . A L L 1 5 P E R
W in o Alum. Storm Door* A Windows
Onlv let Grade Material*, no second*
Lowest Price* Nothing Down 4 yr*.
C'mb'd Home Improvement PA 4-0004
H A R R Y YO UN G . RT 3. B E D F O R D RD
~ R O O FIN G T ISID IN G . C A R P E N T R Y
BLO C K L A Y IN G A C E M E N T W O RK
Garlitz Home Improvement P A « 0255
RO O F Repair* * New Roof*. Shingle.
Slate Built Up. Hot Asphalt Coating*
E . VV. Abell, PA S-7R1L______________
'H U M E S Home Improvement Co
gene
ral contracting In roofing. J-M and
Inselbrie aiding. No down payment
Phone PA 2-1*94, PA 4 3595, 337 Day
nixon HL, Cumberland, Md
New Rooting, Painting, Gutter*
Metal Work, all type*. Estimate* free!
3-5 yr*. Exp. Alex J
Schul* PA 2 6505
R O O FIN G ,
lU B a *
All
makes
Roof
painting, repair* 36 mo*, to pay. Milo
Brewer, Bittinger, Md. Ph. CH 5-2*01.
‘
P A IN T IN G
RO O FIN G
RO O F R E P A IR S
F R E E E S T IM A T E S
PH O N E PA 2 554*___________
FORD V-8 SEDAN
Robin, heater, seat caver*.
An exceptrenally clean car
Display Classified
PONTIAC CATALINA
W ith all th# thing* yaur heart
desire* in an autam ebil*
. . ,
50 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR
Sadia, heater, defroster, automatic
trantm tuion,
clean,
guaranteed
SPECIALS - worth the money
W KST I*’, RN PORT—Some 453 pup
ils were enrolled at the Hammond
Street School for the beginning of
the 1956-57 term. Miss Nellie Dow
ling. principal states. The number
is about the same as last year.
The fourth grade has two new
teachers, Miss Judy Ann Johnson
of Cresaptown and Miss Gail Dunn
of Lonaconing. They succeed Mrs.
Raymond
Beckner,
Westernport.
and Mrs. Bonny Wilson Graney of
Barton, who resigned.
r i - V i s i t l o a n s
Phone - then com* ** to*
cash Up lo ti OOO on sign*
tot*, fucnrlute, IX t x .
FIN A N C I CO.
lad Ft. I M M " t9 «*t CO.
Cumberland • PA. FA 3-OF3I
52 DODGE 4-DOOR SEDAN
Radio, heater, defretter, tubal#**
w hitew all tire*, tinted fla t* . . . .
I Continued from Page IO)
Rohland,
Bethesda;
Samuel
J.
Cohen,
Hagerstown;
J o h n
W.
Fincham.
Riverdale;
R o b e r t
Sharp. Easton; S. Denmead Kolb
Salisbury;
William
Miller,
An
napolis; Carroll L. Crawford. West
minster; James Reinhart, Cum
berland, and Robert V. McCurdy,
Baltimore.
The local committee is headed
by Reinhart and includes John F
Workmeister. Fdgar Kendall and
J. Henry Hoizshu.
MOTORCYCLE
S i HARLEY DAVIDSON
light weight
Motorcycle. N ew
. . . .
MECHANIC S SPECIAL
'SO HUDSON SIDAN
Radio, heater
I
overdrive
................
I
RAUPACH'S
The
aircraft
industry
in
th*
United States is served by mort
than
60000
subcontractors
and
suppliers.
Richard Men* -r Johnson of Ken
tucky, in 1836 became the only
Vice President of the United States
elected by the Senate.
443 N. Mechanic
Jutt Below
Valley St.
TEN
THE CUMBERLAND NEWS, CUMBERLAND, M D,
Driver Killed
Instantly When
Car Hits Bridge
John G. Merrbach
Diet At Gilmore
A
44 year-old
local
man
was
killed
instantly
early
yesterdayi
morning
when
the car he
wasj
operating rammed into a concrete
bridge at Gilmore on State Route
36 near Lonaconing.
The victim was John Godfrey
Merrbach of 510 Woodside Avenue.
who operated a shoe repair shop
at Lonaconing
* Dr. H. V'. Deming, deputy county
medical examiner who said death
was instantaneous, reported that
M rrbach died of a fractured skull J
He also suffered a crushed left!
chest, fractured left leg and arm ,
Traveling Stone
Police, who reported that the!
accident occurred about I 20 a rn i
yesterday,
said
Merrbach
wa*
traveling north alone on Route .46
apparently at a high rate of speed
Girl, 4, Killed
By Automobile
Civil Defense
Week Opening
In City Today
Information Center
On Baltimore St.
. Pherw PA 2-4600 f«r ° WANT AD Tok*f
Senate GOP Leader
W ill Speak Here
Knowland To Visit
City October 3
Fife
U.
S
Senator
William
. Know land of California, minority
Cumberland and Allegany County leader of the Senate, w ill aPP?ar |
join the nation today in marking in Cumberlacd at a pome
the opening of Civil Defense Week
ner meeting Wednesday, October
3. in behalf of Maryland Republic
sponsored by the Washington Coun-
Republican
Committee,
Cott-j
Bowling Green Fire Hall Rises
Bricklayers art shown adding to th* height of the new fire hall
of the Bowling Green Volunteer Fire Company along McMullen
Highway in that suburban community.
Fire Chief Calvin Ayer*
said last night the firemen hope to have the 130.000 building under
roof by the end of the month, although much work still will remain.
Much of th* labor has been done by the volunteer firemen them-
Volunteer Firemen Oppose
Bypass Of Route 40 Area
The Allegany-Garrett Counties Volunteer Firemen’s
when she was struck by an auto Association yesterday afternoon added its aupport to th e
Th# child s mother is believed growing campaign to reverse th e action which resulted I
ta
elimination of that portion of I S. R out, 40 be-
State Polite said the child was tween Hancock and Washington, l>a*» from the Federal
♦ Interstate Highway System
solve*.
Ayer* figures between 20 and 25 men have donated their
lime and effort since work was started in the early spring. Th#
new fire hall was made necessary when the State Roads Commis
sion purchased the old hall because it is on the right of way
planned for one portion of the divided IL S. Rout* 220 through
Bowling Green. Some materials have been salvaged from the hall.
Cumberland
City
Police
were
asked last night to locate Mr*
Lolita Jones
whose four year old
daughter, Sherri Lee Jones, was
killed in Boynton, Pa,, yesterday
struck about l p m
yesterday as
ah* darted from behind a parked
oar into the path of a ear driven
by Gale l^roy
Hiiiega*. 33.
of
Salisbury, Pa.
The child • father. John Jones,
of Boynton, was with her at the
tim* of th* accident which occur
red on a township road near the
elementary school.
He lost control of th* car and
rammed into tho west side of the
concrete bridge.
Th* vehicle wax
demolished.
Investigating
officer*
w e r e
Trooper First Class Harry S. Bos
ley and Trooper J. F. Stakem of
the State Police.
A native of Frostburg. Mr. Merr-
hach wa* born October 4. 1911. and
was a son of Mr*. Mary Merrbach
of Gilmore, and the late Emory
W. Merrbach.
Funeral Tomorrow
Surviving,
besides
his
widow.
Mrs. Bessie fc. 'Porter! Merrbach.
are three daughters. Mr*
Angus
McDonald, Charles Town. W. Va ;
Mrs.
Le* Breeden,
Ransom, W.
Va.;
Mtss Jacqueline
Merrbach,
Morgantown, VV
Va.; a brother,
Eugene
P,
Merrbach,
Gilmore
and three grandchildren.
Mr. Merrbach was a member of
St. Mark *
Evangelical and Re
formed Church
The body is at the Right Funeral
Home, where a service will
he
held tomorrow at 3 30 p. rn. with
Rev. Carl H. Clapp, pastor of St.
Mark's Church, officiating
Interment
will he in
Hillcrest
Burial Park.
Six Persons
Slopped Here
In Stolen Car
TO SPEAK TODAY—M r* Wen
dell
Allen of
Baltimore
will
give
two
gardening
lectures
today at SS. Peter and Paul
parish hall, under sponsorship
of the Garden Club of Cumber
land. Mr*. Allen wdl apeak at
2 p.
rn. on ’ Spring
Flower
Bulbs,” and at 8 30 p. rn. on
“ Home Land* aping and Main
tenance
of
Home
Grounds **
Both lectures ar# open to the
public.
Knights Plan
Installation
Friday Night
A formal installation of officers
At the meeting in the Friends
ville Fire Hall, the association in
structed Cromwell C. Zembower,
association
secretary,
to
write
IL S. Senators J. Glenn Beall and
John
Marshall
Butler,
Rep,
De
Witt S
Hyde and Robert O Ben
nel!. chairman of the State Roads
Commission, expressing their op
position.
Most of the rest of the Septem
ber
meeting
was
devoted
to
discussion of plans for Fir* Pre
vent ion W eek October 7-13.
Alvin
Rankin of
Frostburg,
committee
chairman, issued posters, in-pec
turn
blanks , and
lapel
pins
to
representatives of the various fire
companies.
Each
company
was
urged
to
conduct
demonstrations
and
in
spections
in
its
community
to
emphasize the need for fire pre
vention measures
Soil Supervisors
Meet This Week
In Ocean City
William G. Barger, director of can cancj,dates for public office
Civil Defense for the county, said and the National GOP ticket. Rep
last night that an information cen- Dewitt S. Hyde announc cd herr
■tor will I * located near St. Paul «
Mnt
Ca„ (or„,an.
Lutheran Church. Baltimore Street. Vite President Richard M
Nixon,
for the convenience of residents m jj gp^gk in Hagerstown Friday,
who would like to learn more about September 28. at a political rally
the CD program.
Today
the
information
center G
.
m
.
wilt bf Off!, from noon until »
K^ wland ,, , 48-ycar,
old California native
He has been
assistant publisher of the Oakland
Tribune
since
1933
and
served
three years in the IL S. Army
Walter
Byer.
assistant
chief dunng' world War IL
He was
warden of Cumberland. Raymond appointed to the IL S. Senate in
Whitehair,
medical
service,
and l945 and baR bcid the seat ever
T Sgt Joseph Hodge, new regional smce
having won his first six
liaison representative of the Ground year term ,n
Observer Corps in this area will
Details of Senator Knowland s
he in charge of the booth and will appearance
in
Cumberland
are
he assisted by other volunteers.
Ibfmg
made
by
the
Allegany
Volunteers in Civil Defense work County Republican Committee.
in
Cumberland
and
immediate Hvdf campaign* Here
areas are being sought. Those who
p rn., and from noon until 5 p. rn
the rest of the week.
Volunteer* Needed
SEN. WILLIAM F. KNOWLAND
Demos To Open
Headquarters
In Md. Today
BALTIMORE Sept. 9
- The
Maryland
Democratic
P a rty *
answer question! ob various phases [rom
^ (|v, . countv
SlIlh Con. c a m p a l team, hearted by State
a CP work and wUI have various £res,ionai Dl„ m ., p!an, t0 kpom1 sen. John Orason Turnbull, will
most of this week
in Allegany! open
headquarters
here
tomor-
pamphlets available.
Also on display will be medical. County
following
a
program of
communications
and
radiological mfor^ ai campaigning
row.
T. Barton Harrington, State par-
A d e le tio n from Allegany and ? T pm“ ' Ba/ « " 1 ™ " '" *°“! !ba'
The
Montgomery
County man
ln m w H
Garrett; counties plan* to attend
. e* enm*
ab<Hlt. 5
5iock will interrupt his stay here briefly tv chairman, yesterday announced
the fall meeting of the Soil Con
servation District Supervisors and
Helpers scheduled next week in
Ocean City.
The meeting, according to M ar
tin Gordon, soil conservation aide
of this county, is being held in!.
until 9 o'cloc k the Civil Defense tomorrow by flying to White Sui- the
Baltimore County
senator *
a appointment as campaign chair-
Rescue Truck will he on display iphur
springs, * W.
Va.,
for
at North Centre Street just off luncheon engagement of particu
Baltimore Street.
Will Explain Equipment
Jesse Baker and Frank Schill-
| tar significance to those who have
been campaigning for a cleaner
Potomac River, i
man.
He said Turnbull will run the
Maryland campaign “on behalf of
conjunction with
Maryland L a n d ‘s
^ a,s'sl<,<t b* mcmtxrra Hyde plans to meet wiih Governor
of the men and women * rescue Theodore B
McKeldm of Mary-
squad
in explaining the various land. Governor Thomas R. Stanley
At White Sulphur Springs. Rep the national ticket and will co
ordinate
the
activities
of
that
Week, which opened yesterday and
end* September 15
; Chicago Expert
Will Address
Realtors Here
ter* at the Plimhimmon Hotel.
Program Scheduled
campaign with those of the sen*.
torial candidate, George P. Ma
honey, and the seven congression
al candidates.”
___________________
Other members of the team ara
I Cicil Defense represents, iccord-]tttt^ionen of the District of Co* Wilbur
R.
Duiin
of
Annapolis,
The Ocean Cit? marting for the Par,s of ,he re#iCue ^ .p m e n t.
(of Virginia
Governor William C
FREI) B. HI EBENTIIAL
supervisors and helpers convene*
most
important
basic in- Mar,and of 'Jw t Virginia
(.over-
on September 13 w ith headqyar stinct of every human being is nor George M. Leader of Pennsyl-
jsurvival and this is precisely what vama an(i one of the three com
Following the three-day meet a mg to Barger, who said it is a
program
sponsored
by
the
Soil dynamic concept of survival which
lumbia.
former State senator,
who will
Governor McKeldin has arranged serve as campaign secretary and
Conservation Society will he held*** becoming a practical, everyday JI11*
a! *ke request of Rep Comptroller R. Walter Graham of
on September 15 and 16.
A* part way of life.
of the Land Week celebration the*I
Should the catastrophe of nu-
Hyde for a discussion of plans for Baltimore,
the treasurer. Lawr-
the
expansion
of
the
compact ence Fenneman. former war man-
h m m haste™ SI,ere S M M a , : .
I
,
Civil * hlcb ^
* »
« * » * « * |
c. mfflil l iom r far M i n f c * .
tour
by
bus
will
be
taken
of Defense provider the only organ
Worcester County.
Thi* will be on September 13. adding:
Fred
B
Huebenthal,
Chicago
realtor lawyer and real estate con
ta.
-
-ii i . sultan!, will be the headline speak
Th,, year the program will be
fof ^
f|f|h semi annual State
tt nKttd,tutted .((ort mvulnng th,
Contemner to
Allegany-Garrett
Volunteer
Fire-j
m en* Association, the Allegany-
Garrett
Counties
Fire
Insurance
Underwriters' Association and the
Cumberland l i re Department.
rpa| fgjatp buxines* on thtjthe Netherlands and the systems
Zembower
is chairman of the
^
______ |_x J;1..__u_____________
' J
A good reminder is "Alert Today
fie
held
bv
the Maryland
Real
Those making the trip to Ocean
City will have an opportunity t o j . . . Alive Tomorrow.”
hear a talk by H. J. Van Kretsch-
mar, agricultural attache with the
Netherlands
Embassy,
who
will
the District of Columbia together; will head the campaign adv isory
committee.
Headquarters will be opened in
the Emerson Hotel.
meant nf inrvivai
*h<» .aid 10
Interstate Commission on
means of <,urv,va1' he
[th# Potomac River Basin.
Authority Needed
The
commissioner*
now
have
Estate
Association
here October speak
on
“Our Fight
With
the
Sea.”
Huebenthal has been engaged in;
He will describe agriculture in
12
speakers’
bureau
for
Fire
Pre
vention Week,
His group already
is accepting speaking engagements
throughout the month of October
for fire prevention programs for
service clubs and school groups.
President George Comp of Deer
Park officiated at yesterday'* ses
sion.
The next meeting will lie
held October 7 at Ellerslie
Eight
een of the 31 companies attended
West Side of Chicago for 30 years, | of
diking and drainage used
in
specializing in the fields of broker | maintenance of agriculture in that
age, management, financing and country,
appraising.
In
recent
have been in constant demand a*jthe opening day of the three-day
a speaker and lecturer on real
estate topics.
What * Ahead*
.Soil Rank Meeting
years,
his
services!
Kretschmar will give his talk on
Two Ballpoint Pens
Local Post Office
Two of the
12
new
ballpoint
of C hief Justice Taney
General pens which were installed Thurs-
Asseinbly, Fourth l>egree. Knights
of
Columbus,
will
be
held
on
Friday at 8 30 p. rn. at th# home
of Cumberland Council 586, K of C
Installing officer will
Im* M n
4 v
persons,
^eluding
a
IO- p
Nagel, Master of the Fourth
month old baby. were stopped near Degree. District of M arland . The
here yesterday afternoon in a car officers who will be installed in-
which reportedly had been stolen elude
m
na* v i. n ii
a tu
Joseph Webb, faithful navigator;
Maryland State Police said they
th -,-
,
« vt
James Condon, faithful
captain;
were on their war to Cahfornia
.
«
.
h.,i »k»,r A*m
Aul ti;
,
James Quinn, faithful pilot: Iran -
but t t .tr |r|p to th. Wet, w « c u r-1.„ w , m
,
\
Walter
Meade.
cis Werner
.
, .
,
.. .
- - . . I .
..oade.
faithful
purser.
were apprehended a one Wil- .
,,
, lU< ,
i
•,ohn
Kh diet.
faithful
scribe
Norman Eearnow, faithful inside pens.
sentinel.
ers
low brook Road.
Police got their first lead when
a service station operator about
four miles east of here on Route
40 reported that he was suspicious
of the car and passengers
speak on
Estate ”
Huebenthal has eerved as presi-
_
-
I _
dent of th* West Side Real Estate
Are Removed From Hoard
th<> Chicago Real Estate
Board and the Illinois Association.
He is a member of the American
Society of Real Estate Consultants
and serves as an instructor in the
Real Estate Institute in Chicago.
The Columbus Day session will
open
at
2
p.
rn.
in
th*
Fort
Cumberland Hotel.
Mayor Roy W. Eves will apeak
meet.
Gordon said a soil bank
meeting
is scheduled on Friday
night.
Expected to attend the meeting
At
jh#
meeting
here,
he will J from Allegany County are Floyd
~ atr
“ What • Ahead for Real “ ----------*
A,J----------------
Two Persons
Wounded In
Rifle Mishaps
«ni« «..»k-ve.A.. t
i
ut
Turnbull* selection wa* decided
?
y
P
'
""
consultation Wllh Na.
L
I
r
:
Ur
CT
e, n «>onal Comro,tt«.n,an Mtchaol J.
m * pollution of the Potomac Finer Birmmgham NaljoMl Comm lttw.
Authority is lacking for them to
regulate and control pollution on
the river. Hyde said.
woman Mildred Otenasek. Mayor
Thomas D Alesandro of Baltimore,
Comptroller
J.
Millard
Tawes,
epi
, .
~
,
c ompirouer
J.
Millard
I awes, *
♦k
o
n(ers,i,,e
Commission on Mahoney and other party leaders,
the Potomac River Basin was au-
-
. „
thonzed by resolution on Congress' J urnbul'
7 * * ^ * s a p,J';
which gave the four .Mates and Slbl<' ‘'andtda.e for the senators
the District of Columbia power toi o - ^ ' h T “ [ 'L u '* T u “
‘
enter into a compact, which was B,rmln<'ham' a ,tU« * Baltimore
Two
persons were
injured
shooting
accidents
yesterday
widely
separated
areas
of
county.
A 26 year-old Midland man was
jn done in 1940
Rep. Hyde said the compact lim
ited the authority of the commis
sioners more than was required
under the Congressional resolution.
in
the
reported in satisfactory condition
Me commissioners reg
day at the local Post Olfice were
removed over the weekend.
The pen* were chained to the
writing stands to prevent possible
!hf f,
bld aomeone ,ucc1tt^
in at the opening session and greet
the delegates. Up to 300 Maryland
realtors
and
their
wive*
are
expected to attend.
Committee Listed
°
*
* j I
I v1II ill TdU'IdL IU! jr LullUlUvil f .
Buser of the Oldtown section, and |ast night m Miners Hospital where; u,lator-v and control power*.
taking them, chains included.
The pens are labeled. “ Property
of U. S
Government.” and any
one found with one in his posses
sion is sub lect to a $500 fine
Thomas B Cumiskey Jr.. assis
tant postmaster, said last Right program
Charles S. Harvey of Shaft, Soil
Conservation District supervisors;
Joseph M. Steger, Allegany County
farm agent, Stuart Delbrook, con
servation aide, and Gordon.
Planning
to
go
from
nearby
Garrett County are District Super
visors
Foster Yost of
Accident,
and Dorsey Guard of FriendvilJe.
William Nace, working conserva
tionist at Oakland, and Cecil Right,
conservation aide.
Births
he was admitted earlier in the
evening with a gunshot wound ac
cidentally inflicted by a four-year-
old boy.
Sgt. William F. Baker, criminal
investigator
for
the
Maryland
countian, was named Mahoney *
campaign manager.
Dr. Rasmussen
To Open lecture
Series Tuesday
Governor* To Confer
Similar powers are now held by!
the eight-state Ohio River Valley
Commission and the Interstate San
itation Commission involving New
MO. Y.OI.U Y o r k ' New Jerse-V and Connecticut I
State Police gave this account of
_“ i<i' ,Th* Poilution Cofl ! Dr fa rl C Rasmussen, profess-
the shooting;
P,° r
P
, y
. 8St S* SS,on ° r ?f svstCTnatic theology at Luth-
T h , vtcntn. .fun,or L e, Y a .« , a
T^
,0* fcal Sfm'"ary' GfN
Baltimore
and
Ohio
brakeman,
went target shooting yesterday af
ternoon with George Sagle Hughes
Sr., of Frostburg, his four-year-old
son. George Jr., and another friend.
The three
I Pyles Jr. announce the birth of a
The committee in charge of the son on
Saturday
at
St.
M ary’s
tysburg. Pa., will open a series
The meeting is being arranged of lectures here tomorrow night
at White Sulphur Springs because on
“A
Comparison of Lutheran
Governors McKeldin. Marland and a«d Roman Catholic Doctrines ”
Stanley will be attending the South !
The lecture series, sponsored by
em Governors Conference there, the Friendly Young Adults Sunday
men
were using
a ,Governor Leader also has promix Church School Class of st l u k e *
Mr.
and
M r,.
Eliot
Thom«,n
J ” ^
.
L
! ? 1°.,f " t " d ‘h' Tuesday luncheo". j Kv„„Solu nl Lu,h,r,n Church wrt!
that a method of detection has headed by Georg* W. Robertson,
been worked out in the hope of Bethesda.
for
the
conference
is Hospital.
Knoxville.
Term.
The
mother is the former Miss Mary
preventing the theft of any more
Patrick Hopkins, faithful outside
sentinel and J. Donald
Murray,
faithful
admiral.
The
Old
De
Kauffman 'Fair'
David Kauffman of LaVale, a
Other
member*
are
Adolph
(Continued on Page 9J
Josephine
McKinny, daughter of
clay pigeons on an abandoned strip
mining area near Klondike.
After the pigeons had been shot
Columbia commissioners.
Woodrow W. Gurley, local auto-
up. the men began to shoot the mobile dealer and amateur pilot,
smaller pieces with a .22 calibre
Shriners Lose
or tnt* car ann passengers
—
«■«•■»••><
*
»«-j
..........
..............—- —
........ - mfg
One of th* passengers attempted fender 8 r)av dmner d*me com- special assistant Maryland attorney C a
- . T A C tit if
to sell th* service station operator
me<,( tomorrow at 8 30 general is reported in "fair " con-,■
a # ! * *
Keep Horns
operator
the hub caps and fender skirts off P
the 1955 Pontiac convertible
Th* driver of lh* car was re
ported to reside in Connecticut,
while two of lh* passengers were
from Massachusetts and a man.
woman and baby were tram Phila
delphia.
Police said that five of th* pass-
eagers had
been puked up as
hitchhikers by the driver. They
_
__
were held for ques!inning while Keeping Faith With God
place that is worthy of entry.”
ed authorities of Con-
But you and I do not have to go
rn
at the local council home dition at Sinai Hospital in Ralti-
Afterwards the degree exempli more,
where
underwent
surgery
fu atwin committee will convene,
[about IO day* ago.
Today’s Sermonette
Today** yrrmoiM>tt* I* a digrftt of tho wrm nti proached yesterday at Fir«t
Pre«.h»i*nan Church by the pantor, Rev
Maurice D. Kobertvon. The »er«non
are
heme
prepared
through
the
cooperation
of
(he
Cum berland
M in ikin lal A a ><>c ta con
cold There is no business taking
Dewitt. Mo. The father is a son of
Mrs. Charles A. Rice, 318 Bedford
Street, city.
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Winfield,
Brunswick, announce the birth of a
daughter Thursday at
Frederick
Memorial Hospital. The mother is
the
former
Norma
June
Bucy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ira C.
Bucy. 898 Ridgedale Avenue, and
One of
the
two
Cumberland !jl? / a!5erJ -* ,a 801" of
^
Shriners whose
fezzes were
stolen
lt;,ip^d
Williams Road,
early Saturday morning when sevJ M ^monal Hospital
oral young men jumped them on
ant* ^ rs*
G. Hutt.
North Charles Street in Baltimore RD 5* c,ty* » *° n Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. McKinny, Jr*Re*
When they finished practicing.
Hughes laid the gun on the ground.
police notified
said last night upon his return to
this city that he believes the cul
prits were trying to steal their
musical instruments.
Arthur H. Apery said he and J.
nett lout. Massachusetts and Penn
Bv Rev. Maurice I). K»beriM.n j batk , eVera| thousand years for I Wallace Close were walking easu-
s> i r ia
i
^rea'
^ uaker *sainl
,ohn an illustration. How about the end- allv
along North Charles Street
I he travelers sold the hub caps Woolman, kept a journal or diary jeas meetings held in our commun- a few feet ahead of their window
shopping wives when suddenly they
were assaulted. Close was knocked
ani; fender skirts to a resident all his life, which has become a |ihes today’"A re not many of them
'!Ves1"car ‘ Umt" ,.la'Kl
bul cl" " K devotional and m*j national ,lk<. ,he onfs r,oted by John Wool-
OMOUlwu, V1W1. wtia
Lindbcrg Cook rn vest iga ted r(M,{HI|
(,n a ,np
'brough
North man- jj0w much comes from the to the sidewalk but managed to
LaVale Firemen
Plan Fund Drive
general
membership
meeting
at
the
LaVale
Fire
Hall
evening.
The drive wiij run from Sep
(ember 17 through September 30.
Principal action tomorrow night,
according to Cromwell C. Zem-
arolium visiling various I riend s ,,ndjesS meetings? In relation to!hold onto his baritone horn after
Societies, Woolman was distressed (bo number of hours people put in his fez had been snatched. Apsey iTerday
to note a frequently recurring no-
sucb gatherings, certainly the said his fez also was taken, but
tation m the minute* of their meet-i results are terribly meager. What he managed to hold onto his d a rl
ings, It read;
No business require atK)ut the meetings of the United net.
mg entry.* Though Woolman,
Nation* or the Congress’ Is there
Quaker, was *a master at holding! business important enough to de
mand entry in the world's min
utes'* Certainly not often enough!
Or look at the activities of our
Mr. and Mrs James D. Taylor,
218 Columbia Street, a son Satur
day.
Sarrrd Heart Hospital
Mr. and Mrs. James Coyle, 827
Elwood Street, a daughter yester
day.
Mr. and Mrs. John Kasecamp,
218 Columbia Street, a daughter
yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. Abran Chisholm,
RD I, Mt. Savage, a daughter yes-
Deaths
ing. the four-year-old boy apparent
ly got curious and picked up the
firearm
It
discharged
and
the
slug hit Yates in the right hip.
Charles Ernest Brinning. 17, of
766 Northern Avenue. Hagerstown.
was shot in the bottom of the right
foot with a .22 caliber rifle on the
West Side of Town Hill Mountain;
yesterday afternoon.
State Police Trooper First Class;
Harry S. Bosley said Brinnmg had Bedford Stveet
been
helping
his
father,
Harry
three Distnct <*;<>P«n a‘ 7:30 p. m. at the church.
Lectures
win
he
given
at
the
same time on the second Tuesday
of each month through February.
Dr. Rasmussen, g r a d u a t e of
Gettysburg College, took his post-
graduate work at Columbia Uni
versity and at the University of
Pennsylvania.
He is the author of "What About
Scandinavia
and has translated
several theological works from the
Swedish. He has held pastorates at
Messiah Lutheran Church in Get-
t.vshurg.
and
at
Luther
Place
Church in Washington.
Dr. Rasmussen is a past pres!-
will fly Rep. Hyde to the West
Virginia
resort
and return
him
promptly tomorrow afternoon.
The Congressman from Bethesda
While the three men were talk- arrived
in C umberland Saturday
night. Yesterday morning he at
tended the worship service at St.
Luke s Lutheran Church.
Bush, Leroy, 55 Bloomington.
Davis, Mr*. Norma R-, former dent of
the
East
Pennsylvania
resident of Kitzmiller.
Synod
of
the
United
Lutheran
Haler, Calvin Otto. SI, of 363 Church the Maryland Synod and
Harriman, Lawrence J. (Mike),
Brinning* build a hunting lodge ! 71, of 434 Chestnut Street.
The younger Brinning was lying
on the ground when he was hit by burg.
a bullet fired by Press Martin, 45.
who was helping to build the lodge.
Martin fired from about 25 yards
behind and to the left of the boy.
Bosley said the shot apparently
Hill, Dwight, 54, native of Frost-
the
Washington
Federation
of
Churches.
A teacher at the seminary since
1940. Dr. Rasmussen represented
Johnston. Mrs. Abby*, formerly Amen^a^al th ^ T h ^ V1
m
Of this city
Amel lea at the Third World Con-
I . . .
.
■
. Science on Faith and Order in
Logsdon, Mr*. Sarah J., 73. of j9S2
323 Greene Street.
Moore, Harry L. Sr., 70, form-
ricocheted
from
rock.
Brinnmg * r,v of Westernport.
was admitted to Washington Coun-
Schroder, Jacob C., 72, of
ty
Hospital
at
Hagerstown
for Oldtown Road.
surgery.
Martin V as not held.
|
(Obituaries on Page 9)
,
.
..
, .
. Quaker, was *a master at holding
Final plans for the annual fund hls tpmper and h)S tonj?Uj>
(h ‘
Fire Cnmnanv'will h jle
j U**
infuriated and angered him and he
Fire-Company^ wall be made at a * ro|p in hw diary* ..|n God-s name
Tuesday * ^ Uas ,bcre not so,ne ^usmess>; generation and ask if there are
jthat
required entry
and
strongithings worthy of being recorded in,
action
With the horrible sin o tijb<., m .„rd book of the ages. Too
slavery and its cruelties all around I often we are engaged in the pur
ulent. and the sin of war impend- 8Ujt* of sound and fury, signifying
. J
0
w could they say. ’No buw- very jdtje
Qur jjves are sp€nt
bower, will be assignment of 23 ness lbat re(lu'red e,)try? .
i noisily and restlessly, but so little
While in Baltimore attending the
Shrine Mid-Atlantic States Regional
Convention, members of the All
Chan Shrine band were honored,
by Bouilli Temple at a party Fri-
Maryland State Forest Department
Marking Its Fiftieth Anniversary
Topic of tomorrow ni"ht’
Hire is
The Church.** Other sub-
315 ^ *s- and Ike dates on wtuci,
y
will be dicussed: October 9. "The
Word
of
God' ;
November
13,
Justification";
December
ll.
Purgatory and the Future Life” ;
January
15,
‘‘Marriage and
Di
vorce ; February 12. "The Virgin ^
Mary.
day night. The bandsmen. includ-iyear 0f S(ate forestry.
Maryland is celebrating its 50thiserved
as a
model
for various!
It reminds one of the message of eternal value comes from all our
| in the Book of Revelation, of the activity. The projects to which we
Assisting Zembower are T.
Lloyd; Angel of the Lord to the Church dedicate
our
first
loyalties
and
Smith. James
Loar and Robert al Laodicaea.
In effect, the angel energies are so secondary, so triv-
zone captains to cover the area
served by the volunteer firemen
Gruen.
Leaflets
explaining
the
objectives of the free-will cam
paign will
be distributed to a1!
hornet iii the area*
said to the church, "You are not
saying anything or doing anything
You are in that gray twilight of
inaction. You are neither hot or
ial
Moments and hour* are scat
tered abroad as though they were
worthless as confetti.
Even our
(Continued on Page 9J
ing Apsey and Close, marched to
the
Boumi
Temple
on
Charles Street.
They left the party with their
wives about 1:30 a. rn. Saturday
and were walking casually toward
their hotel rooms when suddenly
they were “ jumped.” Two of their
assailants were captured and the
stolen fezzes were recovered. Jack
McClure. 23, and Charles W. Cross,
20, were fined $50 each in magis
trate s court in Baltimore Satur
day*
,
I other states.
Fifty years ago. with only one
Since 1906. when the legislature,
___„ „ „
North created the State Board of Forest employe,
an
annual
budget
of
ry. the Old Line State has been $3,500,
and
with
approximately
in, the vanguard, helping to write
the nation's forestry history.
In an article appearing in the
program
of
the
Forestry
Field
Day slated tomorrow in Frederick
County,
it
is
pointed
out
that
1,200 acres of state forest,
but
with no equipment of any kind, no
fire protection and no statistical
data, the predecessor of the pres
ent
Department of Forests and
Parks was started.
Maryland was the third state in
Today it has 165 classified em
ployes, some 121.000 acres of state
forests in eight locations scattered
over the state, including those in
never needed basic changes, has!Allegany and Garrett counties.
the Union to hire a technically
trained forester.
Its
forestry
code,
which
has
Boy Hurt In Mower
There are now U.327 acres of Mishap Returns Home
state parks and recreation areas !
The Department owns land and
Slx >ear-<»ld Alan D. Paxton re-
property including bu.ldtngs and s?r™ , iLV 'm gST/rom Mcmonal
equipment valued at a total ot ---------
• '
,rom
Mcnlor'al
$9,207,516.
The annual budget for
1956 was $1,026,375.
Throughout its 50 years of his
tory, the forestry department has
been directed
by
only two ad
ministrators. Fred W. Besley, the
first state forester,
who served
from 1906 until he retired in I9*i2.
and his successor Joseph F. Ray-
lor, the present director.
Hospital, where he had been
a
patient tor a week after a power
lawnmower
ran
over
his
foot
XI,! . I*5 v,s,ting ^ *rand*
father at Flintstone.
* k ^ f nj S fa,ber' Estoii Paxton, said
h iL f.? Wasl T
ratinS the mower
miself. and that previously pub-
U M
reports
that
hi,
grand.
■ u n ! :..W‘ S runmng the machini
I were in error.