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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 5

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

if Red Feather Drive Seeks The Arizona Republic 1 8CXDAY. ManabMniaiaaMBaa" ii wniH'iiP. J. A Sept. 1, 1951 Greightoh Gets School Subsidy Half Of 1952 Total Budget Less than half of the cost of Phoenix's $1 million Red Feather Patrons of Creighton School dis budgets of the various agencies.

The budget figures were submitted after many hours of work by the board of directors and finance committees. trict Saturday approved accept ASC Extension Classes Enroll Monday Night ance of a federal subsidy to build budget must come from public contribution, William R. Young, president of the fund, said Saturday and he has figures to prove it. The solicitation will be conducted during the third week in Rmmniidf4 1951 19.12 Vrr more school accommodations by a vote of 870 to 14. BuU-t Crant Crat 30.U0 27.000 90 Boys' Clubs Camo Firp Girls The amount of the grant the Catholic Soc.

Serv. 16.224 October. Desert Mission 301340 Crittenton Home 31385 Candidates for extension classes by Arizona State College at Tempe Of the total budgets for all 22 Red Feather agencies 47 per 15.000 92 18.000 18 39.16 60 S.500 73 S0.00O SO 9.704 99 2.989 5 16.551 72 12.230 63 friendly House 7.S0O Girl Scouts 24.9TtO Golden Gate Setfnt 9.S4 Goodwill Industries 57.7BO Jane Wayland Ho'e 22.351 Jewish Soc Service 19.6U0 cent is to be raised as the fuad's professors may enroll at 7 p.m. Monday at the Arizona Academy, share. 1323 N.

14th St. Legal Aid (financed by Maricooa Bar The remaining 53 per cent Is Association and Community Council" Day Nurseries 26.519 ,000 26 xi sunicient students sign up, the. following classes will begin at raised through fees for services, membership dues, endowments. government will make the district is not known, but it was represented to be between $250,000 and $480,000. Because defense Industries, such as AiResearch, Motorola and similar factories have aided greatly to the population of the Creighton School district it was designated a federal impact area, which" made it eligible for the money grant.

Approval of the voters was required, although no bond issue was involved in the deal, according to W. T. Machan, superintendent, i the Academy Monday night: Genetics and eugenics. Dr. Her direct contributions, and the sale of reconditioned merchandise, he said.

54.195 22.474 27.719 230. 7P0 78. 601 7.950 7.200 3.392 31.174 Salvation Army Social Service Cen. Visiting Nurse Y. M.

C. A Y. W. CA. rnmmunw Council Urban League Social Serv.

Ex'ec Defense Fund 46 20.749 92 20.969 76 36.650 16 327tO 41 7.550 95 4.290 60 1.292 3S 31,174 100 bert L. Stahnke, room econom Budgets of the combined agen cies will total $961,487, while the fund's share is $450,983. One hundred and fifty Phoeni Sub-total S40S.4S3 45 Administration and Central Service 29.500 29.500 Campaign Expense 13.000 13.000 cians, from all walks of life, spent almost 900 man-hours reviewing Grand total S450.9S3 47 mm Hfmmssmm FLOOR SAMPLE Yrkiiiirr Anrl Olrl Raymond Martinez and his J.UUI1" mil Uiu grandmothert Mrs. Ernestina Martinez, 1620 S. First try one of the many Mexican dishes available at the concession booths at University Park where Mexican Independence Day celebrations are being held.

Ypu can have your pick of tacos, bean burros, enchiladas, chili, and many other foods. (Republic Staff Photo) ic policy in war and peace, room curriculum determination and construction. Dr. Roy Rice, room principles of criminology. Dr.

Kenneth Stewart, room current English usage, Dr. Louis Myers, room educational psychology. Dr. Rexford Boiling, room and constitutional government. Dr.

Ross Rice, academy dining hall. Also scheduled Monday will be three sections in figure painting in Arts 329 on the Tempe campus. Tuesday's courses at the Academy will be: Art education for elementary teachers, Miss Gwen Burgess, dining hall; improving instruction in bookkeeping and accounting, Dick Mount, room play education, Mrs. Nell Byers, room 1 secondary school curriculum development, Dr. Guy D.

McGrath, room Shakespeare: The comedies, Miss Dona Boyle Burke, room college algebra, room and educational measurements, Dr. George Young, room 8. Other classes will Include a seminar in American art, taught by Miss Paula Kloster in the ASC li CHROME KITCHEN SETS I I V1 mi SSL The Last Touch Rosita Aguilar, dancing a from Phoenix, makes one last adjustment Saturday night to the hairr do of Eva Pagan of Mesa before leading a group of eight dancers onto the huge circular stage set up at University Park for the celebration of Mexico's Independence Day. In the foreground, Beatrice Meza, 9, of 331 N. 16th St.

looks in awe at the costume of Eva's brother, Daniel. (Republic Staff Photo)" Investigation Is Ordered In 5rSSSS Your iP )3V s--3 Choice Values To 129.50 ROUNDUP A demonstration of public speak Woman's Death ing procedures will be presented at a meeting of the Phoenix JToast master's Clubs at 7:30 p.m. Thurs An investigation and autopsy was 645 day in the YMCA. brary, room 6, Tempe. A basic course in guidance will be taught in school.

White Washed Stables Man Wakens Upside Down, Cold, And With Pain In Ankle BALTIMORE, Sept. 15 (AP) -1 through the window. Members of the four Phoenix ordered Saturday night by Coroner Al Flood into circumstances surrounding the death of a 33-year-old mother of four clubs and any visitors from clubs WEST INDIAN SCHOOL ROAD in Mesa, Prescott, Flagstaff, Yuma, Furniture Company Ajo, and Tucson are invited, ac When Roy Rodgers woke up Sat coraing to Jesse Mcuiain oi Phoenix, District 3 governor. Rodgers refused hospital treatment for his bruised right ankle but accepted a double shot of whisky. urday the world was upside down, he was chilly and there was a pain v4 Leaving this week for Chicago in his right ankle.

to attend the annual convention of the American Bankers Associa He was dangling by one foot tion are Hugh C. Gruwell, pres from a second story window in his Sixty Blocks Under Water In Texas City WESLACO, Texas, Sept. 15 (AP) Floodwaters from an 11 inch cloudburst, captured behind clogged drainage ditches, spread out over 60 city blocks here. Dead is Mrs. Arnell Hooks, of 2215 S.

7th Ave. doctor pronounced her dead on arrival at Memorial Hospital at 8:30 p.m. Saturday. It firstwas believed Mrs. Hooks, a former tubercular patient, had died of lung hemorrhages.

However. Sheriff's Deputies Frank Mitchell and Martin Pintz learned that the woman had a large bruise on the back of the head and had been bleeding from an ear as well as the mouth. ident of the First National Bank underwear. of Arizona, and W. K.

Humbert, "I had a he told police later. "Two men were after a vice-president. They will be ac companied by their wives. me. I didn't know what happened until the window dropped on my right ankle and it started to hurt." Uof A Students RODGERS, who is 33, hung from Coroner Flood, who was notified the window more than half an by telephone of the woman's Using four rowboats, Weslaco hour, his back against the rear wall of the building.

death, directed an autopsy to determine the cause. Robert Gloverand Earl Hare. About 75 neighbors in their both of whom lived at the same night clothes gathered in the alley under the window. Someone finally called the police. address as Mrs.

Hooks, told officers volunteer firemen and national guardsmen evacuated marooned families to community welfare centers and to the St. Joan of Arc Catholic school. No deaths or Injuries were reported but widespread suffering was certain among low-income families whose flimsy homes were worst hit. they had been talking to her a few moments before her collapse. Patrolman Charles E.

Moran Woman's Target TUCSON, Sept. 15 (AP) Sheriff's deputies were seeking a woman with a small revolver and an itchy finger Saturday night. John Allen and Joe Kuhn, University of Arizona students, said they drove to the Wetmore swimming pool but returned to their car when they found the pool closed. As they started to drive away a woman in a late model car opened the door and fired two shots at the students. One bullet went through the rear window of Allen's car and.

the other was deflected off the trunk. roused the landlord, still asleep in front room on the first floor. Patrolman James E. Santmyer THE 11 -INCH deluge began lhey said she went into the house from the front yard they had been conversing. She reappeared at the door, they said, and then collapsed with blood streaming from her mouth and nose They explained the soiled condi leaped over a garden gate and began climbing a grape vine toward about 9:30 p.m.

(CST) Friday Rodgers. night and continued without letup until about 10 a.m. Saturday. MORAN AND William Altigere, Weslaco has no creek to carry off the water, and drainage 'ditches, long dry because of the historic the landlord, broke the lock on a door to the Rodgers apartment and Moran pulled him back in tion of her clothing as the result of half-carrying and half-dragging her through' the yard towards a summer drouth, were clogged with water faucet. underbrush.

Flood troubles also hit at Kings Obituaries Ambulance driver Gene Olds, who answered the call, said he felt a faint pulse beat when he ville and Driscoll, farther up the coast but within the area which has been pummeled by large amounts of rain in the last two placed her in the ambulance. Victor M. Lewellen, Arizona Resident Since 1904, Dies days. Tranquitas Creek, which winds through North Kingsville, broke Meet To Draw 150 Delegates Victor M. Lewellen, 59, former and Sons.

The Rev. William D. us DanKS Saturday ana cut a swath a quarter mile wide, inun dating business buildings and Bostrom and Rebekah Lodge No. 1 will officiate. Burial will be in Greenwood Memorial homes alike.

Red Cross units evac More than 150 delegates are ex uated 100 persons by mid-morning and their operations were con tinuing. AT DRISCOLL, flood waters re- railroad engineer, died in the Santa Fe Railroad General Hospital, Los Angeles, Friday. The body will be brought to Grimshaw's Mortuary, where funeral arrangements will be announced later. A resident of Arizona since 1904, Mr. Lewellen moved from Prescott to Phoenix four years ago when his work on the railroad made this city a more convenient place to live.

He resided at 1232 reded Saturday but were momentarily expected to rise again' with i I if VALUE! arrival of a new crest on San Diego Creek. Driscoll is down-river from Alice where 15 inches of rain caused an estimated $1,500,000 damage Friday. Driscoll Constable W. M. Williamson said the heavy rains which hit Alice Thursday Augustine Tellez Jr.

Funeral services for Corp. Augustine Tellez 24, killed in Korea March 23, will be held in St. Anthony Catholic Church at 9 a.m., Tuesday, with burial in Greenwood Memorial Park, where the American Legion will have charge of the rites. Corporal Tellez enlisted in the 11th Airborne Division in 1948 following three years in the navy. He was wounded in Korea in March and returned to duty one week before he was killed.

He is survived- by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Augustine Tellez, N. Laurel. He was a native of pected at the sixth annual Arizona Aviation Conference in Phoenix Tuesday through Thursday.

Opening event, a western bar-beoue, will be Tuesday evening at Bud Brown's Barn on E. Northern Ave. Conference business sessions will be at the Hotel Adams. Among those who will speak during the conference are Ralph S. Damon, president of Trans-World Airlines, J.

M. Wuerth, project supervisor for North American Aviation, Lt. Gen. Ennis Whitehead, USAF, and George Haddaway, editor of Flight Magazine. Governor Pyle and Mayor Udall have been invited to welcome the Martinstown, Mo.

Mr. Lewellen is survived by two should bring the flood crest to Driscoll by nightfall Saturday? sons, Jonn ana nomas Lewenen of Phoenix; three daughters, Mrs. Harry Stoffer, San Francisco; Miss Gladys Lewell and Mrs. Jessie Driskill, of Phoenix; four sisters and a brother, living in Missouri. delegates.

James A. Smith, cham Mabel E. Middleton Funeral services for Mrs. Mabel E. Middleton.

55. who died Thurs Laveen; three brothers. Angel, Alex and Joseph Tellez; and five sisters, Mrs. Andrea Ramirez, Mrs. Julia Felix, Mrs.

Dora Lopez, Mrs. Adelana Towe and Miss Estelle Tellez, all of Laveen and Phoenix. Corporal Tellez was born in Duncan and attended Laveen schools. ber of commerce president, Barry Goldwater, long-time pilot and city council member, and William B. Stout, aircraft designer, will serve as moderators and toast- day at her home, 1234 N.

35th will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Memory Chapel of A. L. Moore masters. National Jaycees Like 'Free Power' SALT LAKE CITY, Sept.

15 (AP) "Capitalist" may become an obsolete description of the U.S. type of government if a National Junior Chamber of Commerce trend in thinking becomes universal. William A. Gossett of Carlsbad, N. president of the national Jaycees, told a conference of Utah Jaycees that "the word 'capitalist has been so abused in propaganda flowing from the cpld war gripping most of the world that the real connotation has become distorted, As a substitute word and cure for this wrongful meaning Jaycees in all parts of the country are toying with the idea of using the words 'free Clarence G.

Smith Funeral services for Clarence G. Smith, 1247 E. Missouri, who died Friday, will be at 3 pjn. Monday in Memory Chapel, A. L.

Moore and Sons. The Rev. S. O. Redacre, First Church of Christ, will officiate.

Burial will be in Greenwood Memorial Park. TEN MIXING SPEEDS ARM PORTABLE MIXiriG HEAD leot Grinder 2 Beaters Juicer Bowl Juice Diverting Spcct Uecmer 2 Glass Mixing Bowk 00 DOWN WEEK Adjustable Stand Turntable npek "ftp 1 l-V 'Jl Fire Near Powder Plant Is Halted KLAMATH FALLS, Sept. 15 CAP) Fire in the industrial district of this southern Oregon city ate to the doorstep of the Hercules Powder Co. mystery plant Saturday, but firemen stopped it there. It took hours to bring the blaze under control, saving the million-dollar plant and some All yes EVE3Y PSSCE indectorf of tfee OKI LOW PWa Now yovrs wUf be the kitefcen deiexe ffie pride of fbo neiyor hoodt.

Yom get ffoe DOSMSYE3 ovtt that mixes, fuices, boots, triads DOES SO MUCH to lighten yoor dally tasks end make year kitchen truly modern and whafs more, yoa get the handsome stvrdy table and can-ntsters as Don't wait for greater mira- Augustus F. Williams Augustus Forney Williams, 76, an Arizonan 23 years, died Saturday night in his home at 323 E. Willetta. He resided in Clifton and Globe before moving to Phoenix 33 ago. At the time of his death he worked for the Arizona State Highway blueprint department.

From 1933 to 1942 he worked ih the state land office. Survivors are his wife. Elizabeth, of Phoenix; four daughters, Mrs. Joe Shimels of Phoenix, Mrs. Frank Sheppard of Globe, Mrs.

Earl Redwine of Arlington, and Mrs. M. D. Joyce of Texas; four sons, Peter, Frank, and E. all of Phoenix, and Maj.

Augustus of Dayton Ohio; a brother, Frank, of Ajo; a sister, Mrs. E. H. Marshall, of Eugene, 13 grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. Rolf if anywhere, ffs on 4 smooth-rolling CASTiMSI rigid, lasting construction I All stool I rMW mmkml W.Bll HIIJIH, jl I DecoranVe Tree eft Cb9T 4 Most ossefitiBf sTuf des! Let yowr eredjbryethbrefoo nearby gasoline storage tanks from damage.

Destroyed in the fire were abandoned buildings of the Ewauna and Big Lakes box companies. A half-mile long ice dock owned by the Southern Pacific Railroad also suffered some damage. The amount of damage was not estimated at once. i mail" orders filled "i A I itasKins eweier iu z. tenim PHOEXIX, ARIZO.VA rr AUM mmm I A44reM.

rmw pBd mr the DORMETEK "Mrml- Maker" mnd I asTre pay l.M weekly Meetings Today Aerie 2007, Fraternal Order of Eagles, will hold initiation ceremonies at 4 p.m. at 425 N. Central. Eagles Lodge No. 2407 will initiate 46 new members at 4 p.m.

at 425 N. Central. Radioactivity Takes Life Of Scientist NEW YORK. Sept. 15 (AP) X-rays and radio-active materials with which she worked for more tfian.

two decades have claimed the life of Dr. Gladys L. Carr, 70, pioneer radiologist. She was organizer of the radiology department at Meadowbrook Hospital, Hempstead, N. Y.

I Cheek EnekMe4 Pen C.O.D. I Add to My Aeemrat I I Blsh to Opes mn Aeemt I Befeww i Tnn- TTirrta Edith Rugenstein, 1719 E. Rancho, JXlUlllg an entrant in the Miss Arizona Avia tion contest, demonstrates a photographer's idea of the western way to fly an airplane. The contest is part of the Arizona Aviation Conference in Phoenix Tuesday-through Thursday. 1 02 North Central Avenue Georgia calls itself the Peach State and Delaware has the peach blossom for its state flowex..

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