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Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 9

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

JUNE 7, 1956 THE ARIZONA DAILY STAR SECTION A PAGE NINE Traffic Box Score The following two part accident roundup shows 1) the number of accidents, injured and dead from Jan. 1 to midnight, June 5, and 2) the number of accidents that occurred in the 24-hour period ending at midnight, June 6. Accidents Injured Dead Pima County 693 399 13 City 1417 349 Total 2110 748 18 Yesterday's Accidents: Accidents Injured Dead Pima County City Total 12 Church Sanctuary Is Being Erected Completion of a new sanctuary building for St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, 205 E. 16th is set for this year, the pastor, the Rev.

Lewis Sasse, said yesterday. The foundations and part of the wails are already built. The building is expected to cost about $12,000. It will be 75 by 33 feet in dimensions, and will seat 125 people. The present church will be used as a parish hall when the sanctuary is finished.

Foundations for the building were put down about two years ago. Plans have been drawn by Anne Rysdale, Tucson architect. The new church will afford more room for the congregation, which has been filling the present building to capacity. Furnishings Missing Mrs. Ethel Steger, of 210 Stern yesterday reported to sheriff's deputies that household furnishings valued at $167 had been taken from a rental home at 2561 N.

Flanwill Blvd. I Allies In Booting Mediators UN Says Commission Must Leave Korea By -JIM CARY PANMUNJOM, Korea, Thursday, June 7 P- -The U.N. Allies Wednesday announced they are determined to proceed with the removal of the four-power truce inspection teams from South Korea. Maj. Gen, Robert G.

Gard, sennior allied delegate to the joint U.N. Command-Communist Military Commission, said the U.N. Command has "no alternative" but to carry out its week-old order that the teams ior allied delegate to the joint of the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission must withdraw from three South Korean ports back to the neutral zone. announced the decision a after the Reds and Allies at a meeting of the armistice commission, deadlocked on a compromise proposed by the -neutral commission of Swedes, Swiss, Czechs and Poles. The U.N, Command agreed to a portion of the proposal providing for "temporary withdrawal" of all neutral truce teams from Korea and Communist North Korea.

But it reboth, South, fused to accept two Communistbacked conditions that: 1. There be no change in functions and authority of the Neutral Commission, and 2. The Commission has the right to send inspection teams into either South or North Korea to inquire into any "well-founded" charges, of side. armistice violation by The U.N. Command so far has made no move to enforce its order against the truce teams, although it announced last Thursday the withdrawal would begin in about a week.

The Allies charged the Com. munists had been carrying out a troop and air buildup in North by the armis-with the connivance of the Red Czech and Polish truce delegations. The Swiss and Swedish governments have proposed disbanding the neutral commission. The senior Communist delegate, Maj. Gen.

Chung Keuk Rok, told the armistice commission session the Allied move is a "serious threat and menace to peace in Asia." He added: "The illegal acts of your side have heightened the vigilance not only of our side but of peoples throughout the world. Our side will keep a close watch on every step of your side. I warn that should your side wreck the armistice agreement, your side would have to bear the entire responsibility for all the consequences." He gave no indication of what these consequences might both Communist and Allied representatives have stated unofficially they do not expect serious trouble. Gard has said he sees no threat to the armistice. Firefighters Elect Barnes President Burton N.

Barnes, of 1539 E. Silver was elected president last night of Tucson Local No. 479 of the International Association of Firefighters. A fireman with the City of Tucson for nearly 10 years, he is a driver for Engine Co. No.

6 at E. 5th street and Swan road. Barnes succeeds Al Montoya as president. Other officials elected at the association's regular meeting at the central fire station were: Alfonso Machado, vice president; Ruben Gabusi, guide; J. W.

Archbold, guardian; Wallace W. May, a three year term as trustee. W. Lynn Bierbaum was reelected secretary-treasurer and Harold Houlf was re-lected to another three year term on the grievance committee. Approximately 30 members were present for the meeting.

The association represents only fully paid, professional firemen. Course Completed By Manager Dixon Kenneth G. Dixon, Tucson sales manager for American Airlines, returned to his office yesterday after attending a business leadership course at Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. The company sponsors the course for its management and supervisory personnel. Dixon attended the school for three weeks.

There were 23 American Airlines staff men in the class, including the manager from London, England. The course is conducted by the New York State School of Industrial and Labor Relations, and included studies in management, supervision and human relations. 3 Gunmen Make Big Diamond Haul NEW YORK, June 6 P- Three uniformed gunmen wearing dark goggles waylaid two employes of a gem brokerage firm Wednesday and robbed them of $211,000 lin diamonds. The victims were Albert C. Schmitt, 32, of East Fayson Lakes, N.

and Eugene Epsky, 27, of New York. The two brokerage men had left a lower Manhattan appraiser's shop to make diamond deliveries when the gunmen accosted them. The pair were forced into cellar off Sixth Avenue in Greenwich Village and bound hand and foot. Hollywood Beds Thompson Style Youth $16, Twin $24, King $45 Bunk, Trundle and Settees 343 E. 9 Thompsonbed 2-3432 HARD TO FIT FEET Extra Long Extra Wide Extra Narrow Men's--Women's--Children's The DAVART SHOE Co.

210 East Congress St. A Nice Trick If You Can Do It At the tender age of five weeks, Mike, a kitten owned by Mrs. Esther Larson, has acquired degree of self-sufficiency that has made him the envy of all the kittens in his neighborhood: He learned the trick about a week ago, Mrs. Larson said. (AP Wirephoto) 700 Couples Invited To Anniversary Pastor Plans Reunion Of Persons He Married PRESCOTT, June 6 (P- bells will ring out here June 24 to call back many of the 700 couples whom Dr.

Charies Franklin Parker has married in the First Congregational Church. The Rev. Dr. Parker is taking the occasion of his own 25th wedding anniversary to hold a reunion of as many of the couples As can gather at the church where he has been pastor since 1934. Invitations are going out to all of the couples whom Dr.

Parker has been able to trace. He hopes several hundred persons, includIng children, will show up. "The couples are scattered all of the way from New York to Hawaii but we have been able locate a great many of them," he said. "This isn't a unique idea," Dr. Parker said.

"Other churches have reunions of couples who were married in the church. But it is unusual in that. all of the couples we are inviting were married by the same minister." Dr. and Mrs. Parker will renew their own marriage vows a ceremony in which the other couples will be asked to.

join. "This ceremony will be an opportunity for the couples to come back to the church where they were married and gain an emotional pickup," Dr. Parker said. "I think love needs to be nudged along now and then. "Renewal of marriage vows should be a means of stabilizing the family in these times of prevalent marital breakups." Dr.

Parker plans to make the reunion an annual affair. Dr. Parker said he got the idea for the gathering from the fact that sO many couples he has married return in later years. "They come back and knock on the door and say, 'Well, you're still Then they want to see the church." Woman Injured Auto Wreck Mrs. Thelma Olson, 44, of 3215 N.

Walnut was admitted to St. Mary's Hospital last night after the car in which she was riding collided with another vehicle at Pima and Swan road. She suffered possible pelvis and ankle fractures when a car driven by Mrs. Thelma Thomas, of 400 Eucalyptus, pulled into the intersection in front of the car driven by her husband, Arthure E. Olson.

Mrs. Thomas was cited by sheriff's deputies on charges of failure to yield the right of way. FIRST MORTGAGE LOANS Life Insurance Money on owner occupied homes, duplexes and mercantile build. ings; 10, 20 years. Quick Service Refinancing E.

L. GRADY Ph. 2-3241 628 N. 4th Ave. Two Youths Steal Plane; Neither Knew How To Fly WELLS, June 6 (P--A cut forehead led.

to the apprehension of two boys Wednesday after police said they had stolen an airplane which neither of them knew how to fly. They crash-landed the plane near U.S. Highway 40 about 10 miles east of the Wells Airport and caught a ride back to town with a passing motorist. a After the Elko County Sheriff's Department, the Nevada Highway Patrol, the FBI and Wells Constable E. M.

Powers had spent half a day trying to find who took the airplane, the father of one of the boys returned home and asked his 16- year-old son how he got a cut on the head. After learning the story, the father flagged down Deputy Sheriff Clarence Yancey and turned the boys over to him. The other boy was 14 years old. Officers returned them to custody of their parents pending investigation. The plane was a Navion, four belonging place to low wing Supp Motors monoplane, of Wells.

It was parked unattended at the Wells airport, an emergency landing strip two miles northeast of Wells. Officers quoted the boys as saying they decided to take the plane up and practice shooting some landings. Police said the smaller had not been in a plane since he was 5 years old. The 16-year-old had taken several plane rides but he didn't know how to fly. The plane landed on its wheels in the sagebrush about a quarter of a mile south of the highway.

The landing gear collapsed and the craft spun around and skidded backwards a short distance. The only injury was the cut forehead received by the older boy when he banged his head against the windshield. Rotarian Emory J. Hyde Dies Following Illness Emory J. Hyde, prominent Rotarian and Tucson resident since 1938, died at his home at 3015 E.

Helen St. late yesterday evening following a long illness. Mr. Hyde was a graduate of the University of Michigan and was at one time head coach at Texas Christian University. He was active in local civic and service organizations.

At the time of his death he was chairman of the Rotary club's scholarship committee which chose students to be sponsored for international scholarships. He was also active in the Arthritis and Rheumatism Foundation and had been a member of the executive committee of the local chapter. In 1953 he and his wife, Emma, donated a diathermy machine to the Southwest chapter, a used in the treatment of medically indigent arthritis patients. He came to Tucson from Ann Arbor, in 1938. While Ann Arbor he was president of the YMCA board and served as chairman of the Ann Arbor Community Fund.

He was president of the University of Michigan Alumni Assn. for four years and was associated with the Retail Credit Co. for 35 years. Funeral services are being arranged by the Arizona Mortuary. Agency Begins Apprentice Functions PHOENIX, June 6 IP-The new Arizona Apprenticeship Council will open a two-day meeting here tomorrow.

The session will the first for the 13-member management group, appointed April 27 by Gov. Ernest W. McFarland. Council members will be ad. vised during the meeting of their duties in supervising apprenticeship training in the state, Awards for meritorious service will be presented to J.

T. Weir, former state apprenticeship director, and A. E. Williams, a member of the old apprenticeship council. Weir has been succeeded by Adolph F.

Schindler of Tucson and Williams has left the council to qualify for appointment to the State Building and Planning Com- mission. The 11 finalists in the statewide apprenticeship contest recently conducted by the council will be honored tomorrow night. Council Chairman W. E. Naumann of Tucson will present certificates of completion carpenters who have ended their apprenticeship.

Tropical Virginia Tropical Virginia PORTSMOUTH, June 6 (P- C. M. Kennedy has moved the tropics into his backyard. In a small greenhouse grows bananas, pineapple, mango and avocado plus orchids and bougainvillea. It started when a friend brought the Kennedys a small orange tree from Florida.

Kennedy's hobby branched out with the tree. The beaver is the largest North American rodent and one of the most valuable furbearers. HOMART GLASS- LINED SEARS WATER HEATER ROEBUCK AND CO SALE, SAVE to 3195 Enjoy hot water that is 'drinking glass clean'. Seventeen ago, inside of steel tanks a glass lining that years Sears began selling heaters with glass lining never chips, cracks or rusts. You can't break it even with a hammer! Buy the finest, most durable glass-lined water heater test.

made Buy Homart at Sears! Best by NO MART 17-year Homart Custom Model with glass-lined Tank Regular $99 Check These SAVE 28.95 Homart 127.95 Features $5 DOWN, years America's Equip your home with the very finest now, save! frame' This pre-rated. costs for covers labor replace- veers Sears Easy Terms unconditional guarantee Homart gas water heater has striking new 'picture with America's first 5 years! styling. Big 30-gallon glass-lined tank is insulated ance finest full 2-in. thick layer of Fiberglas. Expanded scale on Pure and appearance heater in Thermo-Slide control is easy to read and with performadjust.

Honeywell Recovery rate of 42-gallons per hour at 60 concealed controls. pedestal base piedegree rise. Backed by 10-year written Therme-Slide 45-Gallon Size 65-Gallon Size temperature Reguler 149.95 $139 Regulat 189.95 $169 adjust. Regular 79.95 Standard Gas Model with Minneapolis safety Honeywell Deuble slot shut-eff. controls Costs less than many ordinary galvanized water heaters! 20-gal.

glass-lined $66 saves barns evenly, tank is Fiberglas insulated. Internal 30-Gallen, Regular $5. DOWN, heat provides THERMO. 40-Gallen, Requier 109.95 $99 Sears Easy Terms vents water faster heating 119.95 Deluxe Gas Model heaters with harmful center ever-recovery found 7. 1 Formerly Advanced design glass-lined 30-gallon thickness Fibergies Insulation is tank with new improved thermostat, $88 Will not found other doable other features.

Guaranteed 10 'settle'. heaters. $5 DOWN, 40-Gallon Size, Formerly 137.95 $109 Seers Easy Terms 44.95 Electric 6-Gal. Glass-lined Heater ......39.88 54.95 Electric 15-Gal. Glass-lined Heater ......49.88 BUY NOW on Expert Installation Can De Arranged or Yes Can Sears Easy Payment "De It Yourself" Plan SAVE NOW! Ideal For Small Kitchens 42-In.

Harmony House STEEL SINK CABINETS cabinet Pressed for sink is kitchen made of space? Compact Reg. 91.95 heavy steel for dependable wear. Treated to resist rust throughout. White Right or left drainboard. Has our baked enamel finish.

Ample storage. 7888 "best" porcelain enamel sink top. DOWN EMORY J. HYDE Former Senator Bingham Dies WASHINGTON, June 6 (A Hiram Bingham, former Republican senator from Connecticut chairman of the Truman administration's loyalty review board, died Wednesday at the age of 80 after a long illness. The death of the onetime political figure who also was a scholar, explorer, author, aviator and businessman, was attributed to a respiratory ailment.

He died at Doctors Hospital, where he had been a patient for six weeks. Bingham served in the Senate for nine years during the administrations of Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover. Before that, he had been governor and lieutenant governor of Connecticut. Deal Directly with Your Butcher PACKING HOUSE MARKET 4351 EAST BROADWAY Next to the Seat Cover King PHONE 6-9974 We Specialize in Meats Only FOR CHARCOAL BROILING STEAKS -The Best Well -Top Sirloins T-Bones Club Fillet Mignon, -Cut to Order. ROAST CHUCK STEAKS Cr.

CHUCK Beef Sirloin TEAKS OVEN Ground ROUND BONELESS BUY YOUR MEAT HERE AT WHOLESALE PRICE AND WE WILL FOR PROCESS YOUR IT FREEZER READY FREE Open Fridays 'til 7:00 P.M. 66 IN. SINKS Here's lot of sink money. for Roomy the Reg. 134.95 double-basin and of storage space.

Easy to clean chromed fittings. drainboard. Lots Sparkling 11488 $5 vitreous enamel DOWN top. Good 66-in steel. SAVE 20.07 Eliminate Those Hot, Dry Stuffy Rooms With A HOMART EVAPORATIVE COOLER 4 4500 CFM Size Regularly 139.95 12838 SAVE 15.07 DOWNDRAFT MODEL Don't suffer in hot dry climates Homart evaporative type coolers give off plenty of cool comfort.

Durable, attractive blue-gray hammertone finish. Ask about Sears low cost of installation. 5500 CFM Size, Reg. 159.95 144.88 Others as Low as 39.95 ALL ROADS Open 9:30 5:30 Fridays 'til 9 LEAD TO 81 N. 6th Ave.

Tucson ME SEARS Phone 3-4751.

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