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Albuquerque Journal from Albuquerque, New Mexico • Page 2

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Albuquerque, New Mexico
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ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL August 5, 1933 Page Two 1 Five Motorists Are Fined Total of $625 Fiva motorists were fined a Safeway Inc. Bosses Plea Philadelphia Laws Relaxed File Applications Station Sites On Sandia Crest ft t. i Little Girl Gets Head Stuck in Pool Exit LOUISVILLE. Ky. (TV-Little Jeanette Sarbo, age 5, tried to enter a swimming pool through the exit.

Six men and one irate mother later, Jeanette'! head was freed from the bars of a locked turnstile. The girl's mother, Mrs. A. W. Sarbo, saidj Jeanette wasn't allowed to go near the pool because she's too young.

Stagg to Manage AEC Office Here Walter W. Stagg, manager of the Amarillo branch office of the Atomic Energy Commission's Santa Fe Operations Office, has been named manager of the South Albuquerque branch office, the AEC announced Thursday. He replaces Norman H. Mac-Kay, who has been reassigned as technical assistant to the director of the ACF Industries contract division here. Succeeding Stagg as head of the AEC Amarillo office is Dar-vin D.

Davis, formerly assistant chief of the operations branch, Kansas- City field office. A native of New Jersey, Stagg formerly served in the atomio energy program of the Manhattan Engineer District from 1943- it The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co- and the Associated Telephone An-iwering Co. have filed applications for repeater station sites on Sandia Crest, the U. S. Forest Service said Thursday.

Another application has been filed by the Alvarado Television owners of KOAT-TV, for a control tower site on the crest, It was announced. An Answering Co. spokesman eaid that the repeater station would provide for greater distance between transmitting stations and automobiles, trucks or buses. "We only have around 30 miles coverage now" he said "and if our application is hon ored, we will increase from 90 to 150 miles, depending on mnsnhpric rnnrfitinne The Mountain States public information office had no comment other than their application might be withdrawn and the whole project dropped. Walter Stiles, general manager of KOAT-TV, said his sta WOILD-BE SUICIDE: Lawrence Yudin, 45, father of four children, about to be caught in a net after a suicidal leap from an eighth floor apartment window ledge at Newark, N.

J. He suffered a broken back In the fall, but is expected to live. Police said he left a note saying "My family doesn't want me anvmore." Army Corps of Engineers Provides 3 1 ,000 Sandbags tion is hoping to build an 85-night sponsored by the Southern loot television tower on the, Union Gas Co. crest if the Forest Service and! The dinner was held In honor Federal Communications so(0f a number of Southern Union anction- "A tower on the crest. officials, who are making a tour will greatly increase our cover-! of the company's installations in total of $625 in police court Thursday on traffic charges.

Fined $200 on a drunken driving charge was Charles L. Bell, 44, of 1418 Marble NW, who appealed. Fined $100 each on reckless driving charges were Carrel K. Hale. 36.

of 4823 Cherokee NE; Richardo J. Laredo, 24, of 912 Alta Monte NW, and Jose Chavez. 22. of 618 Ethlvn SE. Sera- fin Chavez.

43. of 820 Third SW, was fined $125 on charges of reckless driving and failure to report an accident. Russia Seeking Farm Machinery Study in America ROSTOV-ON-DON, U. S. S.

R. Soviet Union wants to send a delegation to the United States to study the manufacture of farm machinery, one of the top Soviet experts in that line said here. Evgency Doutsov, chief engineer at the Rostov farm machinery plant, told the touring delegation of American farm representatives he was one of the 10 persons the Soviet Union wants to send to the United States. Rostov is one of the big farm machinery centers in Russia. Doutsov said the Russians already had approached the American embassy in Moscow to sound out the Washington attitude and probably would apply formally for visas late this month.

(An official at the American embassy in Moscow said he did not know of any formal approach by the Russians, but it was quite possible some high official had made an inquiry on an informal besis.) During the 1930's Russia sent many delegations to visit American industrial plants. The Russians apparently hope to revive these visits. Los Padillas Youths Charged With Burglary Two Los Padillas youths were charged with burglary at Isleta Pueblo late Thursday after they reportedly broke into the El Pueblo Store earlier. The pair, 16 and 17, were lodged in county jail after a federal complaint was signed by U.S. Commissioner Owen J.

Mowrey. The youths reportedly broke into the store and carried off a cash register early Thursday. Isleta Indian police recovered the cash register and captured the youths about 3 a.m. Thurs day. I nnocence FORT WORTH, Tex.

Innocent pleas were entered for two officials of Safeway Stares, under indictment for alleged antitrust law violations in a brief arraignment here before Federal Judge Dooley. The pleas, for Llngan A. Warren of Oakland, president and a director of the chain, and Earl Cliff, Dallas division man ager, were announced by Atty. Elton Marshall of Kansas City, Mo. A federal grand jury here returned a three-count Indictment against the two officials and the firm last month alleging violation of anti-monopoly laws by selling below cost Other attorneys representing the grocery chain were George C.

Kemble of Fort Worth and Robert L. Clark and Ramsey Clark, both of Dallas. The government was represented by U. S. Atty.

Floore and Miss Margaret H. Brass of the Department of Justice in Washington, D. C. On request of the defense, Judge Dooley granted an extension until Sept 19 for filing of motions in the case. The court also released the defendants without bond.

1 First Legal Executions Scheduled in Guatemala GUATEMALA (JP) The first legal executions in Guatemala since President Carlos Castillo Armas took over the govern ment are scheduled to be held this morning. Former Policeman Margarito Team and Francisco Pineda, a one-time police captain, are due to die before a firing squad for torturing three anti-Communists in Antigua about a year ago. The president refused a final appeal for mercy. Castillo Armas became head of the government following last years successful revolution against the Communist-supported government of President Jacobo Arbenz Guzman. Air Force Colonel Joseph Hreha Dies SEATTLE tf Col.

Joseph A. Hreha, deputy chief of staff and comptroller at Fourth Air Force headquarters, Hamilton Air Force Base, died here. He was 44. He was here to attend an Air, Force management course at the Sand Point naval air station. His widow, Helen, and a daughter, Jo Al, 12, survive.

Son of )t. York Is Ordained Elder LOUISVILLE, Ky. The son of the famed World War I hero, Sgt. Alvin York, has been ordained an elder in the Church of the Nazarene. Ordination of the Rev.

George Edward York, 32, ended a two day Kentucky district assembly of the denomination. A graduate of Trevecca Nazarene College, Nashville, Rev. York recently received his license to preach. He has been pastor of a Glasgow, church for six weeks. Illness prevented the minister's father, who holds the medal of honor, from attending the service.

"But he is mighty pleased," the younger York said. Rev. York said he would like to be an army chaplain. Injured Child Is Flown Here A 14-month-old child, Gordon Neal Crane, was seriously injured in a car accident in Aztec late Thursday and flown to Presbyterian Hospital here where his condition was reported "poor." The child's mother, Mrs. E.

N. Crane, said she went to a store in Aztec and put the child in the house. She said he apparently got out and ran across a neighbor's drive where he was struck by the car. He was first taken to a Farm-ington hospital where a spokesman said the boy suffered several skull fractures and lacerations. UN Asked to Collect Data on Atomic Tests UNITED NATIONS, N.

Y. The United States has asked the! United Nations to collect data about nuclear test radiation to' prove it does not affect human! health and safety if the tests are' conducted properly. Henry Cabot Lodge chief U. S. delegate, asked that thej question be made part of the' work nrnrram nf tha mfVi won.

I fc wn. Avitt gtir eral assembly opening here Sept. 20. be added. At least a dozen antennas have already been installed on: the popular crest, including1 television, Sheriff's office.

Air! Force and Trans World Airlines towers. until 1947, and later at Los Alamos as an engineer. MacKay is a former chemist with the Dupont Co. He joined the AEC in 1953 as chief of tha technical contracts branch at Los Alamos. He was assigned to the Albuquerque post in June 1954.

Little Cannons Make Big Bang NEW YORK (INS) Being shot out of a cannon is one way to get a bang out of life, But Harold H. Herd of South Pasadena, is getting it in another surefire way and is profiting in the process. He took the cannon and put its bang into business. When the bushy-bearded engineer and metallurgist saw an ancient cast iron field piece in a West Coast museum five years ago, he decided then and there to make a miniature of it and did. He's has been designing, building, shooting and selling what he calls "the world's smallest real cannon" ever since, according to Steelways, magazine of American Iron and Steel Institute.

Cannon-maker Herd builds his cannon in several different scales, from one-half-inch-to-the-foot to one-inch. The "little big shots" really go bang like real cannons and have amazed many artillerymen with their accuracy one-inch bulls-eyes at 200 yardJ. RACCOON VISITS HARRISBURG, Pa. (J) -Fred Marshall heard a scratching in his living room early one morning. When he got out of bed he found a big, snarling raccoon.

It escaped through a hole in a screen door which had been made for the cat. New York Pianists PHILADELPHIA W) City Solicitor Abraham L. Freed-man announced completion of two-year project involvinc codification of the city's ordinances from 1854 to the present Obsolete ordinances which would be eliminated now prohibit: Throwing bustles on the public highway. Smokinc cigars In public parks. Girls under IS from selling flowers, matches and newspapers in public.

Trolley cars speeding over 12 miles an hour. Geese in the streets. Southern Union i ihrinpY AfiPTInPfl lllCflUCU By 350 Guests More than 350 Albuquerque business and professional leaders attended a buffet dinner at the Alvarado Hotel Thursday C. H. Zachry, president of Southern Union, told areporter during the dinner that he was impressed with the growth of Albuquerque.

He said that he had estimated, in a 1952 speech, that based on gas connections the population of Albuquerque, least the metropolitan area, 150,000. ''Everybody laughed at that," Zachry said, "but now, also based on meter installations, I can make an estimate of at least 200,000." Other executives of the com- i president, Santa Fe: Ross Byron, Turner, McConkey, Dallas, treasurer; Willis Lea, Dallas, general counsel; Thorn- ion Hardie, El Paso, director, and Scott Hughes, Dallas, vice president Want Control 'l li f'11 lUllllMZ firm I 3 KANSAS CITY (2) A group of Texas investors will pay; nearly $2 million today to gain! stock control of Flour Mills of1 America, the seventh largest milling firm in the the Kansas City Star said. I A spokesman for the group. J. M.

Ferguson Fort told the Star the purchase is! its rooi. The three teen-age occupants stepped out with only minor injuries. In Recent Flash Floods The Army Corps of Engineers delivered 31,000 sandbags to city and county crews when the western slopes of the Sandia Mountains sent recent flash floods cascading into the Albuquerque area lowlands. This didn't happen by chance. The Corps of Engineers through years of flood fighting opera-1 tions has organized an efficientjstockpiles sandbags by the thou-working organization which canjsands in order to supplement the be put into "high gear" at a efforts of local agencies and gov-moment's notice.

lernment groups during flood As soon as a devastating, emergencies," Colonel Barnes downpour begins to send ugly.j531- swift, destructive waters down "When local officials and arroyos on the east mesa headed 'groups have depleted supplies, for the lowlands, "Operation1 or when their resources obvious-Sandbag" is on. ly will be inadequate to cope 4 -i vi with the situation, sandbags and Available If Needed equipment may be furnished to Col. Lynn C. Barnes, district these local agencies." engineer, issues a mobilization Col(mel BarneJ gdded hQW. order activating the districts that dQ Mt fa flood fighting crews and imme- ma wer to de.

diately advises city, county andu these vid. state officials that men, equip- ual property owners ment and sandbars are available. Gives Impressive Private Program une or Aiouquerques mostJirn Reid executive vice presi. discriminating audiences igave its DalIas; ColCi a vice piano skills of Zalic Jacobs, Newi director; H. V.

Mc featured artist at a private musi cale in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lionel C. Rosenbaum. The guest artist, who completed a successful concert tour of Israel last season and ap peared as soloist with the Kol Yisroel Orcheitra in Jerusalem, presented a well chosea se- quence of ea.y-to-listen-to selec tions by Bach, Brahms, Chopin, Debussv.

Shostakovich and Debussy, Shostakovich and Gershwin. His greatest opportunity to exhibit his skills, however, came early in the program with his performance of Mozart's quartet with three Albuquerque musicians: Mrs. Ruth Mary Crowell, violinist; Mrs. Naomi Goodman, violist, and John Randall, cellist. The program opened with if needed.

Simultaneously with the issuance of the mobilization order engineers are deployed through out the area of anticipated flooding, These engineers report flood conditions to J. T. Martin in the hydrology department where a composite picture of the entire flood is kept current. Oddly, the director of flood operations for the Corps to the city and county in 1 i Tt groups oi epanisn ana Auwnjsimj an eent and there selections by a two-piano team; wiU nQ change in executive Ui vi 4 Directed to City Individual requests, he said, should be directed to the city, county or state officials directing the flood fight. The Army En- gineers will assist as much as possible in the distribution of sandbags but this is coordinated with city and county officials, he said.

Pointing out that the Corps of Engineers delivered 31,000 sand- the recent flash floods, Colonel Barns added: "We can't interrupt this major distribution of sandbags to critical areas in order to comply with a request for '10 6andbags at my back The Corps of Engineers telephone lines should be kept free for official requests and other important messages, he pointed out Vacation Bible School Mated to Upen Monday Vacation Bible School at Sandia Church of the Nazarene, Claremont and Louisiana NE, begins this Monday and lasts through Aug. 8. The school is open to children aged four through fourteen. Persons desiring transportation should call Rev. Kenneth L.

Jenkins. 5-1117. Sat. ONLY! L3 La REG. $5.98 VAL.

CENTRAL AVE. named Fish Stan Fish. Martin heads up the hydrologists in action. Transportation is directed by R. J.

Simms. Supply operations are directed by Fred B. Key. J. L.

Redmond serve as reports chief, and O. C. Porter as radio technician. Miss A. M.

Woelk is chief of the message center. R. M. Richey serves as office assistant and Locke L. Mouton heads up the public in- formation service.

i efforts of the Army Engineers are rl. t. Murray, chief of the engineering division, and J. A. Loughridge, chief of the construction division.

As the floods zrow' worse flood operations director Stan, Fish is bombarded "for more sandbags here" "additional, sandbags there." And out go more eandbags. "The Albuquerque District maae up oi jars. Aosenoaum personnel 0 pollcies of the co-sponsor of the program, udWnichhasheadquarteri here and Mrs. Patrel.Buck. at KansM Cltv The audience was composed and Great Bend, Kan.

of approximately 100 invited! Other investors include Charles guests. Despite its modern set- A. Sammons, Dallas; Kay Kim-ting, the entire program was Phillips Norris and W. P. reminiscent of an eighteenth Bomar, all of Fort Worth, and century drawing room, where a.

L. Liebscher of New Braur.s-chamber music had its birth. fel, Tex. Jacobs, now ending a three- 1 week visit to Albuquerque his END OF THE LINE first despite the fact that his first teacher, Miss Julia Bu-j MINNEAPOLIS (JP)-A car chanan, is a native New Mex-j roared around a corner at the lean especially impressed his edge of downtown Minneapolis, audience with the apparent ease; hi curb, hurtled end over with which he approached even Send and then skidded 200 feet on mm mm ipt f-J jTlk fi 11 liitt or vHow gold for 1 1.00 W.t!y $50 iTourTto WeaTwitifj jllll NO DOWN PAYMENT PSik 3 Convtnient Terms. No Carrying Chars liMWiA JSWnMEfl Fit rrm MEN'S 8.

oz. BLUE DENIM VI FULLY SANFORIZED FAMOUS Manufacturer the most difficult passages and; the almost religious fervor with which he 'mastered each assignment. Lawmakers Often Fail To Care for Themselves COLUMBUS, Ohio (P) Our ration's lawmakers are so busy taking care of the country they often fail to take care of them- selves, says Dr. R. W.

Gifford, assistant attending physician to Congress. He terms life in Congress a "process of natural selection with voters retiring lawmakers who become senile or lose their agility and drive. He says con-: gressmen have hard, tough jobs, physically and mentally. I "Our biggest problem is to get them to take care of he says. He cites long, tiring sessions of Congress as conducive1 to heart ailments.

Overweight is a major problem; there are too' many banquets they eat on the run, and their habits are irregu- lar." And, he adds, congressmen generally are reluctant to admit they are under medical care. He; says many of them won't even admit they're on a diet Dr. Gifford spoke during visit here. I Superstitious Crow WINNSBORO, La. (JPj Hub' Dear believes crows are superstitious.

This, says Dear, makes them a cinch to keep out of watermelon. patches. Just drive' stakes at intervals through the patch and stretch string from' stake to stake. "Thinking the string is some1 kind of trap, he will not light in the patch where the string is placed," said Dear. "The crow is a smart bird but he is also very superstitious." Dear discovered this version of the traditional scarecrow in 1917 and I W.Jdln, I of dignity Jr qyilf.d pattern.

1 I "ctionl Brilli.nt kV with 10 fi.ry VotOv. I diamond gutrd- I dumondi trd br.lli.nt Vi IVJ'i by 7 toni it In 1 Urg. I 4 JfrJyKA VXUVTT prong mounting I ng, I ripo UM MllVS SMlhf 14 white ytl If if bd.d gold, I WM whit. iJ 5oo M95 Ii arAA WAY ZIPPER FRONT ACTION BACK FOR COMFORT SIZES 34 lo 44 R. Eitra 515 W.

Long Lengths PAy checks cashed free is.A it linrft.

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About Albuquerque Journal Archive

Pages Available:
2,171,079
Years Available:
1882-2024