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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 7

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MINNEAPOLIS MORNING TRIBUNE July 3, 1956 7 NEWS of the WORLD Compromise Reached on School Aid Bill i WASHINGTON (UP) Boyf 13, 'With Urge to Kill Admits Slaying Girl Cousin, 1 4 AROUND NATION loth iwt and Top-speed relief for the atom bomb blast of Aug. 6, 1945. Mrs. Rai Morihiro, who lived about 4,500 feet from the center of the ex graaia-tating antt or attracted by REX A priest sour stomach, jras, House Republican and Democratic school leaders agreed Monday to put a compromise knife with a four-inch blade, was found under the youth's -iu muigestion SPRINGFIELD, knife slaying of Carol Drennon, 14, was admitted ANT I AIT. AnH ntr traps.

Carry bait to plosion, died of a blood Only 10 a (off WHOSE SNAKE? i ered a six-f boa ictor slithering around a pond at St. Mary of nait. Whol colony do-itroyod. Quick octin. Ants soon disappear.

I THI TUMMY struck his cousin in the back with the knife. "She screamed and fell, got up, ran and fell again and he followed her, striking her with1 the knife, the officer said. "He said when he stood up after looking at her body, he then knelt down beside her and prayed." John Pat is the son of John Drennon, who with the father of the slain girl are partners in a heavy construction equipment company. for uii gi druf. rmr.

o4 i4 1 HEIRESS KILLED Rachel V2 -billion-dollar price tag on the proposed school construction program. Representatives Kelley Pa.) and Samuel K. McConnell Pa.) told a reporter they home. Thirty stab wounds were on the body of the girl when she was found dead last Friday in the patio of her home. A police officer said John Pat told them he had no Girls Wanted! Monday, police said, by her cousin who "just had a sudden urge to kill." The boy, John Pat Drennon, 13, made an oral statement in the presence of two police of ItorM.

yttur Mwwl tt0ly ttr4 II .00 'w 4 ttupt f9mi. RIX HSMRCN Talida 7. Oki Parsons, 71, millionaire race horse owner, was found bludg To leatn PBX Switchboard for Telephone Receptionist work. I it 3 yflsanwTl naa agreed informally on a Shfjrt C.filirte )tfv nr Fveninir eoned to death in her 40-room manor house near Newmarket race course. A suspect was arrested in nearby Cambridge, England.

proposal calling for an annual SWITCHBOARD SCHOOL grudge against the girl. He ficers and an attorney for his family. The murder weapon, a steak the Angels church in Chicago. Authori ties locked it up in the Lincoln Park zoo and started a search for the owner. SCHOOL Sen.

Ives federal appropriation of 300 million dollars for five years. SLnh Ads Are Youi Best Buy. said the boy related he first Boa N. introduced a bill to create an academy to train nurses for the armed forces. CRIME CUT Putting on SALUTE THE FOURTH SAFELY-TAKE SHELL'S DRIVING QUIZ NO.

10 more foot patrolmen cut major crime 16.5 per cent in New York City, said Police Commissioner Stephen Kennedy. AMBUSH 'EM Striking at Georgia's rising highway toll, Gov. Man-in Griffin told the state patrol to abandon its no-concealment policy and catch speeders. "I don't care how many persimmon bushes you hide behind," he said. PERMITS NEEDED? Congress asked the coast guard to study advisability of requiring federal "drivers licenses for motorboat operators.

SABER STUCK A saber was welded into the hand of Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest's statue at Memphis, after pranksters stole two others. A PILL'S A PILL Pre-sur-gical worries were cut equally by blank pills and reserpine, a tranquillizing drug, in a test by three Northwestern university doctors at Chicago. SNAKE HUNT Girl scouts holding their international roundup at Milford, turned out in force after a report of snakes on the camp ground. Afraid? None, thev v-r-v 1 Ty x-Vi 1 i Vy AvS'e 4 1 wanted snake skins for hat bands.

NEW MEDAL Pushed by proposals to honor Dr. Jonas for his polio vaccine, the house passed a bill to establish a new medal for distinguished civilian achievement. FOREIGN ROCKETS PLANNED Japan's science council will launch 40 three-stage rockets into the upper atmosphere as its contribution to the international geophysical year. SUB FOR BEN-Great Tom, I. 2.

Your eyes tend to fix on one spot. It's an efTort to thock conditions on all sides out of the corners of your eyes. Maybe your eyes water or burn. 1. You have to brake suddenly because you're rioter to the car ahoad than you thought.

Something has happened to your ability to judge speud and distance. St Paul's ca- vthedral bell, will substitute for -a Bir Ben as t. British A time signal I while workmen A rfPair World f.f i jj War II bomb! damage on the parliament; Big Ben building clock V-i 1 -r' -A tower in London. BALD FACTS Women shed tears, men shed hair when they are upset. Dr.

S. J. Van Pelt reported in the British Journal of Scientific Hypnotism. ATOM DEATH Hiroshima, Japan, reported its eighth fatality of this year attributed to 'v. 4 i A1 til f' -a" A j- UI learned this is no secret but a fact of life!" "T'Wvi vytA 'v-1 4.

Your legs and arms feel stiff. There's a crick in your neck. Aches and pains make you a less attentive driver. 3. You may got the type of headache that sometimes accompanies over-tired eyes.

And often vou'U find yourself sauintine and strainine to see clearly. Roads. Long, straight super-highways to whisk you miles ahead. Quiet, winding lanes that tempt you to ramble off your course for an hour. All kinds of roads in the greatest transportation system man has ever built.

And it's all yours to enjoy. Want to go where you've never been? Turn the ignition key and step on the accelerator gently. Gently, because safe trips are happiest. Don't drive too fast. Don't drive too far in one stretch.

Shell urges you to take time to enjoy your trip. And come home safely. HOW TO BEAT DRIVING FATIGUE ON YOUR VACATION STOP DRIVING! All these symptoms ttll you that your ability to drive safely has been seriously reduced by weariness. If you absolutely must drive on a bit farther, here are some tips for meeting the situations shown above. 1.

Stay well behind other cars to avoid coming up on them faster than your tired senses notice. 2. Occasionally make a point of looking away from the road for a second, then looking back. Don't stare down the white line. 3.

F'ull ofif the road and rest your eyes for at least a few minutes. 4. Pull off the road and pet out of the car. Walk around, breathe in the fresh air. And don't drive much farther! You ran avoid road-weariness by planning your trip wisely.

Don't make daily stretches too long. Stop early while accommodations are still easy to find. Don't drive long stretches after eating heavy meals. says Catherine Russo who now uses ZONITE lo douche 1 SAFIl So often women wonder about douching for feminine hygiene. Eventually, they discover as did Mrs.

Russo, how important the proper method of douching with a fountain syringe is, tiding an effective yet safe solution-like ZONITE. IFFICTIVI! No other type liquid antiseptic-germicide for the douche of all those tested is so powerfully effective yet so safe to body tissues as zonite. HtALTHFUll zonite completely deodorizes, promptly washes aay perms and odor-causing waste substances. A nurse once advised Mrs. Russo that if any abnormal condition exists, she should see her doctor, who would probably recommend that she continue to use zonite.

DAINTY! You, too, can have the "peace of mind" that zomtb gives you after monthly periods and other times. Use zonite as directed, as often as needed, without risk of injury. Costs pennies per douche. us mi FREE BOOKLET These safe driving quizzes are available in booklet form at your Shell dealer' service station. Prepare yourself and your sons and daughters of driving age for a pleasant and safe summer in your automobile.

Sop in today for your copy. Sign of a better future for you C1955 SHELL Oil CO. Prepared in cooperation with the Automotive Safety Foundation. -v i CONSUUANTS: Or. Hrbrl J.

Stock. Oircor, erd Dr. Uon lod, leworrfi Director, Cntr lor Sctth EdtKolien, Nr Yerfc yo HottkMpinrJ lot( y.t 4.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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