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Tucson Daily Citizen from Tucson, Arizona • Page 11

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 4, 1959 A I I PAGE I I LEARN TO OUTWIT YOUR WEIGHT! IF YOU'RE WORRIED ABOUT I HEALTH YOU WONT WANT TO MISS A SINGLE PART OF "DIET FOR TEEN-AGERS" IT'S CONDENSED FROM THE ONLY WEIGHT CONTROL BOOK EVER WRITTEN ESPECIALLY FOR YOU. Read it Today in the Woman's View TUCSON DAILY CITIZEN WORLDWIDE NEWS FRONT Compiled From The Dally Citizen's Wire ALLIES PLEASED News Of Visits Greeted Brightly By United Press International The announcement of an exchange of visits between President Eisenhower and Soviet Premier Khrushchev was received with generally favorable and hopeful comment from Washington to Red China. There was some sharp criticism in the United States, however. NATIONAL A RECORD Mississin- pians were expected to turn out today for the Democratic primary to choose a governor and other state andJocal officials. Four men seek the governorship.

They are Dist. Atty. Charles Sullivan of Ciaiksuaie, Li. Gov. Arroii Gartin of Laurel, Atty.

Ross Baranett of Jackson and Robert Mason, a Magee welder. THEY STRUCK OIL in the Los Angeles Civic Center. A jackhammer operator, digging in the excavation for the new hall of records building, yesterday hit a seam of heavy viscosity oil 4 feet down in shale strata, but it was a small pocket of asphaltic oil insufficient to justify commercial production and workmen plugged the "discovery" with the concrete footing of steel column ot the building. LIGHTNING KILLED two Girl Scouts today at a camp near Akron, Ohio. Dead were Sally Parker, 14, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and Media, Pa.

June Gamble, 13, EZRA TAFT BENSON, secretary of agriculture, observed his 60th birthday today working at his desk in Washington. He arranged to take time out at noon for cutting a birthday cake supplied by office aides. FOREIGN VICE PRESIDENT Richard M. Nixon talked much about peace while visiting Russia, but sidestepped queries when the United States intends to shut down its imiiiary bases abroad, according to Izvestia. The- Red organ said whenever Nixon called for peace during his tour tne audience invariably asked, "What about the bases?" but Nixon avoided answering but then in his TV-radio broadcast Saturday night he tried to justify their existence.

HOLLAND'S OVERSEAS Ministry announced today that 45 Papuans in West New Guinea were killed in a clash with islanders under Dutch administration and that the dead were all from unexplored parts of New Guinea and were trying to reach areas of the islands under Dutch' administration when the clash occurred. Thirty-four islanders have been arrested. FOUR SYRIANS were killed by a Turkish mine laid in Syrian border territory near the village of Tlel Elsham, Damascus newspapers reported today. The United Arab Republic told Turkey yesterday Turkish-laid mines have been discovered repeatedly i i Syrian territory and complained this violated the good neighbor treaty between the two countries. RUSSIA'S SPUTNIK III com-! pleted its lap around the I earth at 8 t.m., it was announced today at Moscow.

The 2 -ton cone-shaped satellite was launched May 15, 1958. STATE Sunday at Tryon, N.C., after a long illness. His father was founder of Sanrual Bingham's Stores, manufacturers of printers' rollers. Bingham was a director of the company until it was sold several chairman of the Tucson Water Resources Committee, yesterday at Phoenix was named to the board of directors cf the Central Arizona Project Assn. The Tucson rancher and banker, served on a special groundwater study committee appointed in 1950 by then Gov.

Howard Pyle. WES TOWNSEND resigned last night after four years as Glendale Union High School District superintendent, saying in a letter to the schoo! board his "peace of mind, health and family" would be better off. He told reporters later the district is "growing too fast with a limited amount of money," thereby "creating a lot of problems. Enrollment burgeoned from 1,900 students to 6,000 while Townsend held the office. He was a member of the State Board of Education until January and has been In education 25 years.

SHERIFF'S DEPUTIES yesterday recovered the body of John Paul Zurick, 45, Phoenix, who drowned Sunday in Lake Pleas-' ant, north of Phoenix, when his boat capsized in rough water. SAM -T. HEAD, Prescott at- torney, resigned yesterday as a rs ago He was at member of the State Board of Health, saying in a letter to Gov. Paul Fannin, the "pressure of personal business" the cago. SAMUEL SCHWARTZ, 52, New York City, president of the Gray- resignation.

Head, chairman of Cn the board, was midway through at Chicago apparently of a heart the third year of a five-year term, attack. DEATHS I TOHJV SHENK, 84, associate JEAN BENOIT-LEVY, 71, a 1 i of the a i i a Supreme thor and documentary film direc-, tor and producer in France and the United States, died yesterday at Paris after a long illness. He made more than 400 documentary and educational films and also since 1924, died yesterday at Palo Alto. He suffered a heart attack Saturday. MRS.

LUCY M. COCHRAN, 80, Texas Couple Awarded $12,000 LOS ANGELES--UPI--A Cleburne, couple won a judgment yesterday of more than $12,000 for the of their son and for injuries to themselves in a'; traffic accident in Pinat County. Federal Judge at x.iiiswu iiw juditnwm; in U. S. Court award jgoei to Mr.

and Mrs. Herman Allen, who had sought mort than $127,000. The accident occurred In 19S7, when the Allen car involved in a collision with an Army truck near Stanfield. directed several feature films! He Erie, the mother of World was born at Paris. War I Phil Cochran, died Sunday a a brief illness.

She SAMUEL A. BINGHAM, 77, re- was named the National Red Cross tired Chicago industrialist, died Mother of the Year in 1944. 5 10 REAL COOL ACRES MOO Ft. Etevatton 5 Acres 250 Down and per month It Acres $485 Down-- per month. 7Vi miles west of Show Low on State Rte.

1H--I from Fool Hollow Lake. See us at our summer office, 2 beyond Blakely Service Station in Show Low. Open 7 days week! FOOL HOLLOW RANCHES Sales by Southwest Properties MOO N. Central. Phoenlx-CRMai Developed by Ziegman Land Investment Co.

Readers rate Sokolsky tops The Western Allies were gen- eraJly pleased with the announcement, with skepticism somewhat mitigated by the prospect of an Eisenhower visit to President Charles de Gaulle before the Khrushchev exchange. British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan was enthusiastic; West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, less optimistic, a i hoped the trip would show Khrush- chev "the strength of the United States" and its determination to maintain peace. Red China's official Hsin Hua agency said it was hoped the visits would "contribute to better mutual understanding between the Injury Suit Asks $48,323 From Inn A Tucson schoolteacher filed a $48,323 personal injury suit yesterday against the Tucson Inn and Us restaurant, the Bagdad. The suit alleges the two corporations were negligent in causing Miss Mary F. Page, 731 N.

5th to suffer severe injuries Mar. 8, .1958, when she tripped and fell near the entrance to the Bagdad's Garden Room. Injuries enumerated in the suit Include fractures of the pelvis and pubic bone, a dislocated collar-' bone and multiple bruises. The Superior Court complaint says Miss Page incured medical bills of $1,106 and lost $1,777 of rQme expressea apprenension mai her annual $7,100 schoolteacher thg a American public a a a i i nf thp fall. i n- i xt two countries and further the cause of peace." In the Netherlands, the Amsterdam Telegraff sounded a note of warning, saying the American tradition of free speech may lead to "anti-Communist demonstrations" and "it is difficult to predict how the Russian leader will react to these." The New York Times, expressing qualified approval of the Khrushchev visit here, echoed that warning.

"As an official visitor and guest of the President he is entitled to and must receive not only adequate protection but also all the usual courtesies. And however bitterly resident members of the captive nations may feel toward him there must be no repetition of the disorderly incidents that marred the visit of Mr. (Soviet Vice Premier Anastas) Mikoyan." Detroit's Mayor Louis C. Miriani who snubbed Soviet Deputy Premier Frol Kozlov during his June visit here said it would be "inappropriate and presumptuous" of him to comment now on Khrushchev's visit. The man in the street in Moscow indicated a general feeling that "nothing but good can result" and revealed considerable warmth toward Eisenhower "for his wartime leadership and apparent devotion to peace," as one student put it.

"'it's high time the heavyweights together another Russian A sampling of U. S. man-in-the- street opinion turned up comment both hostile and hopeful and some expressed apprehension that income as a result of the fall. It also says she was unable to perform household tasks for nine months, causing another S540 in expenses for domestic help. may negate the value of the visit by insulting or throwing things at the Russian.

All-in-one 268-F 199.50 ALL-IN-ONE STEREO HI-FI PHONO NOW AT A NEW LOW PRICE Compare all its quality features you'll agree that this is truly an outstanding instrument at this low price! 6 Magnavox speakers, two separate sound systems in one beautiful cabinet, precision changer, automatic shut-off, stereo pickup the list could go on! Price shown is for Mahogany Chert)', Danish and American walnut slightly higher. Use your Levy "Option" charge account Strain Marks Steel Strike Negotiations NEW negotia- tors met today in a strained al- rnosphere brought on by an ex- change of bitter statements yes- terday over failure to end the Industry shutdown. Almost complete silence prevailed as bargaining teams for the Steelworkers Union and the basic steel industry took their places around the conference table once more. It was the third joint session of the "negotiators since the union's strike halted almost 90 per cent of the nation's steel production three weeks ago. The second such meeting, held yesterday, failed to break their prolonged deadlock.

Chinese Refvigees Stranded In Laos Some 8,000 Chinese refugees from Red China are now stranded in Laos, the secretary-general the Free China Relief Assn. reported today. Fang Chih, who recently visited the refugees, said they were tribesmen from mountainous regions of Yunnan Province. He said they fled In rebellion against Ihe Communists' commune system. He reported the refugees are living in sheds or tents in the mountain's and are in dire need of food, housing, clothes, medicines, farm and seeds.

FLORSHEIM SHOES FIN entire summer stock 14 to $24,95 si Jew days to save on men's famous 'lorsheim Odds and ends, broken sizes. Better come in right awayl EDUCTION and ends--tremendous savings $fi Levy's Men's Shoes, Strcef floor 10.95 to Levy's, Scoit Penninjjton Sts. Phone MA 4-0411 Open Fridays until nint import china sale! 'Rosalinda" "Tea Rose" "Chintz" special savings on these 4-pc. services 1.99 Here's your opportunity to have the fine quality imported china youVe always wanted and at such an outstanding low price! Your choice of any of the three above, patterns for just 1.99 per place setting! Choose from "Rosalinda," "Tea Rose," or "Chintz" start your own services for 4, 6, 8 or even 12! 4-pc: setting inclules dinner plate, cup and saucer, and utility plate. Shop early for yours.

Salad plates in patterns We Open stock pieces on hand in above patterns reduced "Francine" "Athena" "Autumn Gold" better 4-piece china services reduced! 2.99 Special sale of these fine quality true imported china patterns enables you to start a complete service at considerable savings! Make your selection from "Francine," "Athena," or "Autumn Gold" all arc beautiful and sure to enhance the beauty of any table setting! 4 piece place setting consists of dinner plate, cup and saucer, and utility plate. Buy several place settings at these special savings! Salad platei in patterns Open stock pieces on hand in above patterns reduced save on stemware "Blanka" reg. 1.50 ea. reg. 1.50 ea.

"Greta" reg. 1.25 ea. save to 51 each on above patterns Fine quality, crystal clear Swedish Stemware now reduced from 25c to 5k- each for savings to yon! Goblets, sherbets or champagnes, wines, and cocktails in your choice of the above patterns all just 99c each' "Greta," i a gracefully twisted stem and gently cupped bowl, was regularly 1.25 i its attractive ball stem and generous size clear bowl, was regularly 1.50 with a bell shaped flare bowl and shaped stem was regularly 1.50 each! Shop early for best selection you'll want to stock up now! China and Glassware, Lower Level.

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Pages Available:
391,799
Years Available:
1941-1977