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Arizona Republic du lieu suivant : Phoenix, Arizona • Page 6

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Lieu:
Phoenix, Arizona
Date de parution:
Page:
6
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

of of of of of of of REPUBLIC 22. The Arizona Republic, Phoenix, March 6, 1959 CITY Pros, Cons Of Lettuce Control Given Agriculture committees of the Arizona legislature last night heard contradictory testimony on a bill to limit lettuce when the market dips. Lettuce growers and shippers overflowed the house chamber of the capitol to testify before senate and house committees on the bill. The bill also would provide for control of size and quality of lettuce. of the measure from the Salt River Valley, the Yuma area, and Cochise County claimed Arizona farmers are deep in dept and face economic ruin without such a law.

They said the majority of lettuce growers favor it. OPPONENTS of the bill said a similar law in California forced lettuce quality down, cost shippers customers, gouged consumers, and drove some growers into unregulated Arizona while making temporary profits for others. They said increased lettuce acreage in this state suggests that there is still good money to be made without controls. The testimony was taken under advisement by the committees. The bill under study would work like this: AUTONOMOUS lettuce board would be appointed by the for one-year terms.

The governor members from Yuma County, board would consist of three three from Cochise County, and nine from Maricona County the rest of the state. To activate the board, a grower referendum would be held. The referendum, to carry, would require an affirmative vote by 65 per cent of the affected growers and the growers of 65 per cent of the preceding year's lettuce acreage. Then the board could limit shipments and contro! the grades and head sizes shipped. Decker Rites Are Today MESA (Special)-Funeral serv.

ices for Zechariah Nathaniel Decker, 76, will be at 4 p.m. today in the 11th Ward Chapel, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints with Bishop Junius D. Bowers officiating. Burial will be in Taylor, tomortow. Mr.

Decker died in a Phoenix hospital yesterday afternoon. He was born in Parowan, Utah, and was a retired farmer. He had lived most of his life in Snowflake until coming to Mesa in 1935. The family home is at 252 S. LaSueur.

He is survived by three sons, Edwin Snowflake; Joseph Ogden, Utah; John McCook, three daughters. Mrs. Eunice Heward, Woodruff; Mrs. Ruth Abbott, Mesa; Mrs. Iva Hartman, of Long Beach, two ers and one sister, all of SnowBake.

Friends may call at the Relief Society room of the chapel from 2 to 4 p.m. today. Chicago-Rome Flight Made NEW YORK (UPI)-Pilot Max Conrad became the first man to fly a light, single-engine plane non-stop from Chicago to Rome early today when his craft touched down at the Italian airport. A Conrad spokesman here said word had been received that Conrad landed at 1:46 a.m. (EST), to complete a flight.

DENTURES ONE DAY SERVICE Any Repairs While You Wait GAS EXTRACTIONS DENTAL PLATE REPAIR Service by Mail, Cash or C. O. Collect for Prices! Write Call Dr. E. B.

Pease? DR. JOE M. REAVLEY First Street and E. Washington Fox Theater Bide. AL.

4-3943 (Open Sum.) AL 3-3691 The Republic's Teenage Quiz By BOB PISER The Question: Should the existing child labor laws be changed to permit teenagers to get jobs? The Question Site: Central High School, GAYLE editor school changed. Many position to Students prone job would quit KITCHEL, 17, senior, assistant paper. The laws should be times students are in a obtain a good job but can't. to quit school just to get a regardless. RICK ZIVNEY, 15, sophomore football player.

Lots of kids could use a job to get money they need 1 for expenses through the year. If a fellow's capable, he should be allowed at least a part-time job. After school is all right, as long as it doesn't interfere with his studies. DONALD SPENCER, 15, sophomore, Spanish Club. Kids under 16 should be permitted to work if they really want to.

It's healthy for a teenager to have a job a couple of hours a day. It not only gives him something to keep him busy, but it helps him mature, too. JANE TRENT, 16, sophomore, majorette. It depends on the family situation. If the money is needed at home, a teenager should be allowed to work.

He shouldn't be permitted to quit school, though, or work late at night. SUSAN FLETCHER, 16, junior, cheerleader. A lot of kids could help their families by working. There would be a problem in enforcing this but the students who do work should not be permitted to fall down in their studies. And they shouldn't work late at night either.

TED THAYER, 16, sophomore, football No one should be permitted to work full time. Take the problem of those teenagers who just don't do well in academic subjects. Not even they should be permitand get a basically technical training. ted to work. They should stay in school Lower Fee Contracts Being Drawn A new architectural contract which would pay architects less the customary 6 per cent of construction costs is being readied by Phoenix high schools.

A. W. Mitchell, district business manager, said yesterday that the new contract is now in the hands of the attorney general and Frank Haze Burch, Phoenix attorney and school board member. Mitchell said he hopes the contract form will be submitted to the board of education within month. INSTEAD of paying architects a flat 6 per cent of construction costs for design and supervision, the contract provides for a sliding scale of fees.

The fees would vary, depending upon the nature and amount of work. Maximum payment would be 6 per cent. Mitchell said he does not think the 2 per cent customarily paid for architectural supervision can be cut. But the remaining 4 per cent could be reduced to or 3 per cent in some cases. A 1 per cent savings on $3 million high school would be $30,000.

"We know that there are reputable a architects who feel they are entitled to a fee of less than 6 per cent," Mitchell said. HE HE that (district SAID. again doubts, American use the Infour-page stitute of Architects contract, which has been used in past conI struction. "It might be good for building a house, but not for schools," he said. "We hope to achieve a more explicit statement between the architect and the owner," he said.

The new contract reportedly is more than 20 pages in length and is much more restrictive and in favor of the organization paying the bills. BORGNINE TO WED MILAN, Italy (UPI) Actor Ernest Borgnine and actress Kati Jurado will be married near Modena or in' Rome next month, it was announced here Wednesday night. Packed House Warmly Applauds Richard Tucker's Performance By ANSON B. CUTTS Richard Tucker, leading dramatic tenor of New York's Metropolitan Opera, sang before a packed house at Arizona State University last night. The concert would have been an un: ranged to have Memorial alloyed delight, had, someone arUnion's venilation system or airconditioning functioning.

As it was, the suffocated, while witnessing the progressive discomfiture of the artist. Small wonder he only offered one brief encore at the end! The program itself was meaty and varied. Starting off with "'Ye People, Rend Your Hearts" from Elijah, the first section included "If With All Your Hearts" and "Sound Alarm" from Handel's "Judas Maccabaeus," which were notable for the excellence of the diction, the ease with which the Today In Phoenix Sombrero Playhouse: Katherine Cornell stars in "Dear Liar," 8:40 p.m. Exhibit: Arizona Scholastic Art Awards, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Phoenix College.

Display: "Arizona ma," photographic masterpieces by Tad Nichols, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Heard Museum. Concert: Phoenix Union High School Orchestra, 2:45 p.m., school auditorium. Square Dances: Call AL 8-7313, ext. 501; or AM 6-4166.

Phoenix Optimist Club: Noon, Hotel Westward Ho. Valley of the Sun Kiwanis: Noon, Hotel Westward Ho. Phoenix Rotary Club: Noon, Hotel Westward Ho. For All Your Variety Store Needs Think First Of TO $100 STORES 5 LOCATIONS in the PHOENIX AREA 5020 W. Indian School Rd, 5536 E.

Thomas Rd. Marysale 56th Thomas 3943 E. Camelback 6025 North 35th Ave. 40th Camelback 35th Bethany Home Rd. 1139 East Main MESA buy GIRL SCOUT Any GIRL SCOUT GIRL SORT SIRL SCOUT GETTING READY Preparing booth at Park kins, and Ginny Jekel.

All Girl Scouts in Maricopa Central in preparation for annual Girl Scout Council will participate in sale, mostly by de cooky sale starting tomorrow are three members door canvassing. Funds raised wil be used for of Troop 9. From left are Jo Damiani, Judy Haus- camping and troop projects. (Republic Photo) Obituaries Last Rites For Lillie Tingley, Arizonan 19 Years, Tomorrow Funeral services for Mrs. Lillie; Tingley, 64, of 2945 E.

Cheery Lynn, will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at Paradise Chapel and Funeral Home, 3934 E. Indian School. The Rev. Luther Allen will officiate.

Burial will be in Greenwood Memorial Park. Mrs. Tingley, who died Tuesday in Phoenix General Hospital, had lived in Arizona for the past 19 years. She was born in Childress, Tex. She was member of the Eastside Baptist Church.

Mrs. Tingley is survived by her husband, Marvin four sons, Wayne and Arnold Leatherman, both of Farmersville, Arvel L. Leatherman, Rialto, and Melvin R. Leatherman, Burbank, her mother, Mrs. Leila Lloyd, Floydada, two brothers, William Lloyd, Little Rock, and I.

J. Lloyd, Petersburg, a sister, Mrs. Bonnie Moore, Wichita, and 14 grandchildren. Robert M. Hume Funeral services will be at 11:30 a.m.

today at St. Paul's Episcopal M. Hume, 44, of 3212 E. Virginia. Church, 2801 N.

31st for Robert The Rev. Walter H. Dugan will officiate. Cremation will follow in Greenwood Memorial Park. Mr.

Hume, a salesman for machinery firm, had lived in Phoenix for the past year. He had spent number of years in mining activities in Alaska and South America. He was a native of dianola, Neb. He is survived by his wife, Hilda, a daughter, Susan, of Phoenix; two sons, Paul, of Phoenix, and Robert of Portland, his mother, Mrs. Susan Colling, Boulder, and two brothers, Donald, of Denver, and Ralph, of Boulder, Colo.

Herbert B. Brubaker Funeral services for Herbert B. will Chapel Brubaker, be at of 10 68, A. a.m. of L.

341 today W. Moore in Vista Me Memory Sons a Mortuary, 333 W. Adams. The Rev. Leonard L.

Patterson will officiate. Burial will be in Greenwood Memorial Park. Mr. Brubaker was born in Oswego, Kan. He came to nix last December from Tulsa, Okla.

He formerly operated brake equipment shop. Mr. Brubaker is survived by his wife, Alma; daughter, Mrs. G. C.

(Laura Lou) Plotke, Phoenix; a sister, Mrs. F. E. Kepple, Fort Worth, brother, T. H.

grandchildren. Jennie Mesquita Mrs. Jennie Mesquita, 33, of 1104 W. Sherman, died yesterday in a Phoenix hospital. Mrs.

Mesquita was born in Litchfield Park. She is survived by her husband, Arturo; her mother, Mrs. Micaela Rivera, Avondale; four daughters, Irenia Lopez, and Gloria, Cruz, and Margaret Mesquita, all of Phoenix; two sons, Arturo Jr. and Robert, both of Phoenix; a brother, Gilberto Rivera, Avondale: and five sisters, Mrs. Gloria Aguilar, Mrs.

Lola Pena, and Angelita Rivera, all of Phoenix, and Mrs. Mary Mendez, Cashion, and Lucy Rivera, Avondale. Rosary will be recited at the home at 8 p.m. today. Requiem mass will be at 9 a.m.

tomorrow Isles A Boon, Mesans Told MESA (Special)-Traffic islands on Main Street would step up the present 18 and 19-mph speed through downtown Mesa to about 25 mph, Arizona Highway Department safety engineer Lawrence E. Thompson told the Mesa Chamber of Commerce highway mittee yesterday. In addition, traffic islands would create much safer highway, he said. Both the city council and the chamber of commerce have taken stand against construction of islands in conjunction with the installation of traffic signals at Drive and Hobson Street intersections. Thompson explained it was the highway department's plan to have divided highway from Phoenix to Apache Junction.

He said construction of islands for one block each way from the two intersections would not reduce business values. With islands, need to protect pedestrians would be only crossing traffic lanes as they may wait on the islands for signal change. The present 18 and 19 mph speed is necessary to allow a sufficiently long cycle to permit podestrians to cross the full width of the wide street. in Our Lady of Fatima Church, 17th Avenue and Papago. Burial will be in St.

Francis Cemetery, Nina L. Ruder Funeral services for Mrs. Nina L. Ruder, 36, who died Wednesday at her home, 2316 N. 24th will be held in St.

Louis, Camelback Chapel and Funeral Home announced yesterday. Mrs. Ruder came to Phoenix two years ago from Illinois. She is survived by her husband, Leo; daughter, Mrs. Judy cock, Chicago; her mother, Peoria, a sister, Mrs.

Barbara Switala, Belleville, and two brothers, George J. Martin, East St. Louis, and Edward L. Martin, Peoria," Ill. Aileen B.Baird Funeral services for Mrs.

Alleen B. Baird, 62, of 9830 N. Terrace will be at 10 a.m. Monday at Paradise Chapel and Fu neral Home, 3934 E. Indian School.

The Rev. Douglas Gaston will officiate. Burial be in Memory Lawn Cemetery, Mrs. Baird came to Phoenix 10 years ago from Mount Vernon, Ohio. She was born in Berlin Township, Ohio.

She died Wednssday at Good Samaritan Hospital. Surviving are her husband, Harry three sons, Albert L. Carpenter, Phoenix; Merle S. Carpenter, Mount Vernon, Ohio; and Cecil Carpenter, Indianapolis, and a daughter, Mrs. Helen Ruth Jolly, San Diego, Calif.

Mildren E. Larson Funeral services for Mrs. Mildred E. Larson, 43, of 1807 N. 31st will be at 2:30 p.m.

Sunday at the Arizona Funeral Home, 376 N. Third Ave. The Rev. John F. Howerton will officiate.

Burial will be in Greenwood Memorial Park. Mrs. Larson, a Phoenix resident nine years, died Wednesday at St. Joseph's Hospital. She was born in Anita, Iowa.

Surviving are her husband, Stanley Larson; two daughters, Sharon and Lorraine, of Phoenix; her mother, Mrs. M. M. Storer, Colman, S.D.; two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Olson, Phoenix, and Mrs.

Grace Miller, Albuquerque, N.M.; and a brother, Hobert A. Storer, Colman. Friends may call at the funeral home after noon tomorrow. open daily 9-9, sat, 9-6 only at Sunny the Vegas collection an imaginative concept in provincial furniture. Perfectly adapted to western living the integration of design, craftsmanship, quality and functionalism is perfection! Your choice of coffee or step and table (as shown) for this one low price.

Both tables boast heavy plate gless tops on the smart lazy susan wagon wheel. Choose from six finishes. 4795 BUDGET TERMS WE GIVE SECURITY STAMPS Decorating Service At No Cost To You. FURNITURE 500 E. Dunlap, Sunnyslope sunny Phone WI 3-6481 Trueblood Quits Board At Glendale GLENDALE (Special)-Dr.

R. K. Trueblood, a member of Glendale Union High School District board for the last 13 years, has resigned. He leaves an almost four year unexpired term. Pressure of other activity was given as the reason for his resig.

nation. In his letter to John Herriott, board clerk, Trueblood, said he had enjoyed his services with the board "but it is now time for me to quit." Replacement for Trueblood will come from the Washington area of the school district. Trueblood's resignation was ac cepted by the board along with that of Robert C. Scott, Glendale High School principal. Faculty members in the district also resigning are Mrs.

Florence Trueblood, of Glendale High, wife of Dr. Trueblood; Mrs. Marjorey Allen, and Miss Marjorie Yetman, both of Washington High School. The new principal for Glendale High will be Vic Lowman, ently the assistant principal and business manager. (fioratura was negotiated, ringing high notes.

number HOWEVER, of the second group that it was in the first the singer hit his stride with sensitive and polished ed rendition of the aria, "Una Furtiva Lagrima" from Donizetti's "Elisir in which the middle voice showed to excellent advantage in the legato passages, embellished with a superb high note in falsetto. This was followed by Veracini's lyrical, gay, and light-hearted "A by Torelli's lodious and consoling "Tu Lo Sai;" and by the speedy tarantella-like musical conversation between singer and piano climaxed by a stunning top note forte in "Che Fiero Costume" from Legrenzi's unfamiliar "Etiocle Polinice." Then came the apex of the first half of the program, the famous tenor aria, "Oh Tu Che In from Verdi's, opera "Fortza Del which revealed the beautiful tonal modulations of which the singer is capable in the course of highly dramatic utterance, or contemplative phrases without accompaniment. At this point Tucker showed his sense of humor by announcing that his first encore would be "Matinat" by Leoncavallo, alias "Your Breaking My Heart" by Vic Damone, which was sung with a spirit of abandon and joie de vivre not in evidence earlier in the evening. FOLLOWING intermission, Accompanist Jospe offered two solos Ravel's "Jeau d'Eau" with its cascading runs and diverse tone color: and the complicated, loping rhythms and chromatic cadenzas up and down the scale in "Rondo Brillante" by Von Weber. To repeated applause he obliged with "Prelude" by Gershwin.

Tucker's next section brought the tenor back in even better voice than before. This was evident in two French 'songs, "Le Manoir de Rosamonde" by Duparc, and "Tes Yeux" by Rabey, which the singer interpreted with evident relish and imbued with fine lyric tones. THESE WERE separated from two typically lilting and impassioned Italian songs in the bel canto tradition, from "Sorrento." by breath takingly beautiful rendition of the climactic Lucevan Le from the third act of Puccini's "La Tosca." In this the Tooth Stains TOBACCO COFFEE kep is recommended by dentists to remove stains from teeth. Stain-free teeth look bright, feel wonderful. Kep Drve 49 794 singer showed commendable restraint throughout, superb phrasing and control, and the most heart-rending high notes of the evening.

Each of the four English songs which followed brought out a dif. ferent facet of Tucker's artistry, Carpenter's "When I Bring You Colored Toys" being simple, touching, and childlike; Weaver's "The Abbot of hilariously humorous, farcical, and rollick. ing: Dungan's "White Jade," dramatic mood piece, full of oriental color; and Worthy's "Mid. summer," picture of carefree lassitude and laughter. "Awake, by Clara Haden served as the final encore, Phoenix Child Dies On Train DUARTE, Calif.

(UPI)-A 3- year-old Phoenix girl died last night of leukemia aboard a train, 3 miles from the City of Hope, the Duarte hospital to which she was being returned for treatment. The victim was Lori Marie Alexander. Her mother, Mrs. Jack Alexander, was with her. The girl's body was removed from the Southern Pacific train to be re turned to Phoenix.

3 Nabbed In Robbery Three armed robbery suspects were captured by city police last night after a $73 holdup at Circle 1001 N. 16th St. Officers Vernon Wingfield and Clayton 1 Milwee stopped sedan carrying the three men a few blocks from the store. The suspects are Don W. Casey, 27, White Hotel; Eugene Murcum, 35, of 442 S.

21st and Robert Eugene Johnson, 22, of 2342 W. Pima, Officers said Casey and Marcum entered the store and pulled a gun on clerk James Blythe, 1143 E. Culver. They said Johnson waited outside in the car. ASTHMA? Breatheasy Complete Set Regularly $1250 NOW $750 Limited- -Time Offer Breatheasy AT YOUR DRUG STORE.

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