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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 13

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

mm ''L. u. CL! l-ifw, Good Morning! THE ARIZONA REPUBLIC Trouble-Filled Afternoon Ends With 'Action' In Avondale Gym THE STATE'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER Friday, January 14, 1955 Page 13 Phoenix Fourth Station By DON DEDERA An era of good feeling prevails at Avondale School, and it all may Soon To Be Seen Channel 3 KTVK Will Carry ABC-TV Network Shows KTVK, Channel 3, will sign on March 1 with ABC-TV network. it was announced yesterday by Ralph A. Watkins, vice president 5 and general manager of the new station, and Alfred R.

Beckman, director of station relations for development of many ABC shows, such as Break the Bank and Stop the Music, has added three new faces to the Phoenix television scene Pa It Barnes, Vic Gort, and Art Eiock. Members of Channel 3's staff, and ABC officials are co-operating on plans for a large formal opening to include some of ABC's big names. Channel is owned by Gov. Ernest McFarland, president; the network. KOOL-TV, Channel 10, has been the local ABC-TV affiliate, but the station announced recently it aa would become CBS-TV's affiliate beginning June 15.

Watkins Dillon Among the network shows to be Watkins: and Henry Lnrsen, secretary. Other stockholders, also Arizonnns, are Edward Cooper, seen on Channel 3 will be Disneyland, Stop the Music, Steel Hour, since it has the dual advantage of the lowest channel number and the highest (100,000 watts) power output. Break the Bank, Lone Ranger, Voice of Firestone, Danny Thomas Show, Ray Bolger Show, now on assignment vvasning-iton, D. as an assistant to Eric Johnston: Leon M. Nnwll; Wright and BassH T.

Wright. Read Maggie Wilson's Tune In, Pago IT. Calvacade of America, Ozzie and Studios are being, erected at N. 27th Street are in a mood to feed a dog poisoner some of his own medicine. Over the past few weeks children have been kept close at home.

Parents fear the tots will pick up some of the strychnine-loaded bait that has brought agonizing death to about 10 pets. "If I find out who's doing it," said a father of six children, "I predict what I might do. I'm boiling." Was it coincidence? Or Wade Stitt, 19-year-old navy radioman, called his mother the other night from San Diego to report that he just had an operation on his nose. He told Mrs. Katherine Stitt of 1740 W.

Devonshire that he was doing fine, but that the operation caused a great deal of bleeding from his right nostril. Two hours later Mrs. Stitt was quietly sewing in her living room and for no apparent reason the right side of her own nose began to bleed. She had a dickens of a time stopping it. And speaking of coincidence, Fred Nichols, 35-year-old mechanic from McFarland, had a few too many, tottered down the stijget into Fred Nichols, 35-year-old Phoenix detective.

Guess what happened? You students who have trouble with English might get a boot out of this report from our copy of the Journal of the American Judicature Society. These words were put into trial record by an Ohio lawyer: "If the train had been ran as it should have been, or if the whistle had been blew as it should have been, both of which they did neither, the cow would not have been injured when she was killed." 3435 N. 16th Street. Dillon, who has assisted in the date back to a trouble-filled afternoon about a month ago. That day a half-hundred students were egging on a fight that had some nasty undercurrents.

The fight pitted Americans of two races. The racial angle was being played up by the jeering circle. Laddie Coor, superintendent, and Loren Conry, principal, felt they couldn't just break it up, and let it go at that. Unsettled arguments have a way of spreading poison. So they marched the boys into the gym.

Laddie lectured the boys on fair play. Then he broke out a stop watch and some overstuffed boxing gloves, and offered to referee "any differences that you might have." The bouts strictly voluntary featured boys matched in size and age, and were limited to six minutes, spread over three rounds. A half dozen fathers looked in and stayed to help in the matchmaking. By suppertime, "all differences were settled." "They couldn't hurt themselves with the gloves they were using," said Laddie. "But morally, every blow was a knockout." Photographer Ralph Camping was shooting a picture for the society page.

"What should we say cheese?" asked one lady. "Heavens, no," said her companion. "Let's say You get the same expression, plus a twinkle in your eye." Parents on and around the 2300 block of Voice of Broadway 'Gigi' To Open Here Tuesday Harriet, Stork Club, Treasury Men in Action, Sammy Kaye Show, Masquerade Party, Super Circus, Stu Erwin Show, and TV Readers' Digest. Some of the shows have not been carried here by Channel 10. In addition, according to Sean Dillon, operations and program manager, the station will also remembered for her performance Mrs.

Louise Flower, ad ASC Paper Work missions secretary at carry local live programming in "Gigi," adapted by Anita Loos from Colette's famous French novel, will open at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Phoenix Little Theater. The three-act comedy, which concerns the rearing of a young, girl by her mother, aunt and grandmother, is under the direction of Betsy Carter. C. J.

Miller, cluding remote pick-ups, sports. in the PLT production of "Born Yesterday," plays the title role. Opposite her is Paul Beardsley, who has had eight years of professional stage, film and television "Gigi," Will play through Saturday at the theater, Central and McDowell. and motion pictures in both black and white and in color. Arizona State College at Tempe, receives another stack of registration material from Galen Cassity, ASC assistant registrar.

She's assembling thousands of class schedules, forms, blanks, and cards in preparation for second semester registration Jan. 25-26. KTVK is believed to be Ari zona's most powerful station, DIGGER TracS-Ia Allowances ttiggjSvcsr mm Mini w. mm mttz mm Rrinor in vnnr nlii WATCH or Wllll II Ml WIM ttt I De amazea WinlllWIIWiiilWH II wniwfcvn tfrrJ i rwi i ii ib i at the extra BIG allowance vou set when voa trade! Linda Christian May Marry Countess Bismarck's Son i I ii. vi t.

i ii i i ill II 1 ULJW -TA I ns nRv nn By DOROTHY KILGALLEN Despite Linda Christian's one-time passionate interest in Rritieh Anfnt- MBioMces Your Old Watch is Your Down Payment liiisiii ELGIN $3975 1 0 JSll 5 3975 $100 HHil A WEEK I mtJjrijr I WJOtiHEa $100 A WEEK LESS TRADE-IN See Our Complete Selection of America's Most Famous Watches! than Gertrude Niesen's "I Wanna Get Married" in "Follow The Girls." Talk of Beverly Hills are those parties Farley Granger and Dancer Jimmy Mitchell are tossing. Once every month Carol Haney flies to Chicago to spend the hours between the Saturday night "Pajama Game" performance and curtain-time Monday evening with Larry Blyden, of the Windy City troupe of "Oh Men! Oh Women!" There'll be no racial discrimination at Arthur Godfrey's Kenilworth Hotel in Miami Beach. It may fascinate Laraine Day to learn that a Cuban singer, planning to make her Gotham debut before very long, bills herself as Cleo Durocher. Elaine Malbin is learning how success snowballs. Her TV offers have tripled since she drew raves with her initial appearance in "Kismet." Now she's so busy she can do only Sunday guest shots.

Baseball men are watching the Stuart, Florida, divorce courts closely, eager to learn the result of the divorce action one-time Brooklyn pitcher Rex Barney has instituted there against his wife. Many chums feel Rex, who once pitched a no-hitter against the Giants, stands a good chance of making a comeback once the marital knot is untied; they credit the husband-and-wife difficulties with being responsible for his mysterious loss of ability. 6-DIAMOND PAIR Edmund Purdom which caused the rift in his marriage and in hers there appears to be a good chance that she Isn't planning on him as her next husband. Countess Bismarck, the ex-Mrs. Harrison Williams, considers her son, Bobby Schlesinger, definitely engaged to the beautiful ex-Mrs.

Ty Power, and referred to Linda at a dinner party the other night as "my son's fiancee." Gerry Mulligan is disbanding his famous pianoless jazz group and plans to spend the next six months searching for a new sound. He'll devote the time to fvriting for and rehearsing various experimental combinations, using the scientific approach to cool music. Democracy at work department: Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt stood in line at the Museum of Art to buy $9.53 worth of greeting cards. ftrenda Frazier's former husband, husky Shipwreck Kelly, has found himself a new brunette slender Gillis McGill of the doe-eye fashion model set. Mme.

Henri Bonnet, so chic she's inevitably thought of in terms of fashion, did some extremely down-to-earth shopping in the New York stores before she returned to France. She bought a stock of kitchen equipment, with emphasis on glass baking dishes. Jane Kean will warble a tune titled "Honeymoon" in her forthcoming show, "Ankles Aweigh." Insiders say it'll be a bigger smash DIAMOND DUETTE $2.00 $0095 LESS M95 LESS $2.50 SI9Q50 LESS TRADE-IN A WEEK 99 TRADE-IN A WEEK TRADE-IN A WEEK Your Money's Worth Expenses Of Having Neiv Baby Deductible Under '54 Tax haw (One of A Series) By SYLVIA PORTER $3.50 $17750 LESS $2.00 $QQ50 LESS JSISijSmK A WEEK III TRADE-IN A WEEK 3 TRADE-IN JrtiSSSU-'-i DUIOVcI Iffllip $3.00 $ICf "SS $4.50 SOIQ00 LESS, WmiBlWfS A WEEK I0U TRADE-IN A WEEK TRADE-IN 1 I 1 71 21 RADIANT DIAMONDS 49 DIAMONDS Wl FINE QUALITY If CHOICE. Jf7 MEN'S OR LADIES $6.50 $O9C00 LESS $7.50 SOICOO LESS i $1.50 A WEEK smoWKK IK $1.00 A WEEK A WEEK WW TRADE-IN A WEEK 019 TRADE-IN 1 $7 1 50 LESS if $15050 LESS lM $750 LESS I lMRADE-IN rTRADE-IN JTRADE-IN Nearly all of us had medical expenses last year and many of us had Lra 1 plies, such as invalid chairs, arches; stork service, such as ambulance to and from hospital; travel expenses essential to getting medical care; medical treatments, such as blood transfusions. medical bills that knocked us flat on our financial backs.

YOUR OLD WATCH IS YOUR DOWN PAYMENT The Diamond Stores of the Southwest QUESTION: My son was hospitalized for an appendectomy last winter. The bill, not covered by insurance, came to $550. We spent another $50 for drugs and medicines. We're in the $6,000 bracket. What's our medical deduction? ANSWER: All your medical expenses above 3 per cent of your adjusted gross income of $6,000 meaning above $180 are deductable.

So you can deduct $370 as your medical expense ($550 minus $180.) You can't include your drug or medicine expenses in your deduction because the cost didn't exceed $60 (or 1 per cent of your adjusted gross income.) QUESTION: I know the medical deduction includes all the expenses of treating an illness from diagnosis to cure. I pay substantial premiums for an accident and health insurance policy. Are these premiums deductible? ANSWER: Yes. And so are the fees you pay for hospitalization and dues to medical care agencies, group clinics, etc. And don't forget such medical deductions as: cost of laboratory tests and examinations; dental services, including X-ray and straightening teeth; eyeglasses, and hearing aids.

Your deductible expenses include all the costs you incurred to prevent or cure an illness during 1954. This year it's more important than ever before that you check down to the penny exactly what you spent for medical, dental, or similar expenses in 1954. Here's why: The 1954 tax law says that if you are under 65, you can deduct medical expenses above 3 per cent of your adjusted gross income which is total income for most wage-earners up to a maximum ceiling of $10,000. For example, a married couple with two or more dependents and with a $5,000 adjusted gross income in 1954 can deduct all medical, dental, and similar expenses above $150 up to the $10,000 limit. However, you may include in your medical expenses the cost of drugs and medicines only to the extent they top 1 per cent of your adjusted gross income.

The $5,000 family, as an illustration, can deduct costs of drugs and medicines only above $50. Below are angles that can mean real tax savings to you. QUESTION: We had a baby last year. What are our possible deductions for expenses? ANSWER: You can deduct for these expenses if you paid these bills during 1954: doctor bills, including use of delivery room, X-ray, dentist bills, registered nurse; laboratory tests; special equipment and sup- 'A JJlJyifUl ulRILWmlM YOUR OLD APPLIANCE IS WORTH MONEY TRADE IT NOW ON A NEW IRON, MIXER OR RADIO 14 EAST WASHINGTON ST. in MESA 142 W.

Main in YUMA 210 Main St..

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