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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 42

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
42
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

yO-P, MIAMI DAILY NEWS, Thursday, Jan. 6, 1955 SENATOR'S WIFE HITS NEUBERGER'S TALK 'DIDN'T BOO SAYS WEE OF GOP SENATOR Oiri ifi'cilECS mos, 7 A '2? 5 it 'A arie Associated Pree Washington, Jan. 6 The wife of a Republican senator walked out last night on a speech by Oregon's new Democratic Sen. Richard L. Neuberger assailing "character assassination" in political campaigning.

Mrs. George W. Malone, wife of the senior senator from Nevada, booed and then left the crowded Presidential Room of the Statler Hotel while Neuberger was speaking. Named No Nsmts Neuberger, sworn in yesterday as a senator, shared the speaker's platform with Vice President Nixon and New Jersey's new Republican Sen. Clifford P.

Case at the annual congressional dinner of the Women's National Presr Club. Neuberger said a "distinguished GREATER MIAMI "A Daniel A. McDougal, Florida Oil Pioneer SUSIE ENTERS NURSING SERVICE San Diego, Jan. 6 Susie, a mongrel dog drafted into nursing service at the San Diego zoo, is going to be a mightly confused mother when two of her litter grow a little older. The reason for this is that the puppies, in Dorothea Corbett'a hands, are 6-day old wolves.

Their mother is a maned wolf shipped here with the father in 1951 from South America. Susie was summoned when the mother, like many wild animals in captivity, refused to nurse the puppies. AP VVirephoto. Cadet Is Found Hanged After Broken Romance iotf A TtuinJ Sye glssise. red frames In leethet caes Mrs.

O. A. Smith 814-208 parakeet, light blue. Says "Eddie" A Chrvstwe." Reward Vtc Msv nixia A Andora, Cables. Pa.

MO l-83. Boxer brown fern, name "Pixie" oo tag. Rewsrd. Contact A. Borne stein at 7-40S7 ylc.

Liberty city-Black A White female Part del. matian. "Bnookie" reward. 84-7U COCK-A-T1EL BIRD. VIC.

SW 8 Ave. A St. Reward. 8-8721 Ring, Ladles, pearl A diamond In tduon Center reward, 78-9989. Sunburst antlqus pin.

Small cultural pearls A diamond In center. Bentl. mental value. Rsward. MO 1-7981.

FOUND: MALES. Boxer, Bull Tor-' rier, white A black Cocker, FEMALES. Dachshund, Cocker, Boxer. Various mixed breeds. HUMANE SOCIETY Ph.

T-221T. Railroad tickets. Miami to New York. Reward. UN 8-7300, PARAKEET, TURQUOISE! Says Hello Baby, Merry Xmae 3-8031 Tie clip, gold, sentimental value.

Reward Ed Waka, 2-9165. Parakeet chartreuse, blue A gray Vic, E. 13 St. Hial. B8-8U1S Foam Rubber Pad For Bermuda Bed, From ear top on N.

Miami Ave. Mon. night Reward ph. 7-9929 Earring, gold, dangling fig shape. Consisting of 1 diamond, 1 sap.

Ehlre, Vic. Sunset Dr. B. Mia. Iberal Reward Ph.

MO 1-W83V CINNAMON RINGTAIL MONKEY REWARD Ph. 86-891H Child's blue parakeet "grouper" Miami Springs. Reward. 88-2261. Wallet-man's dark brown.

Vie, Flagler A Miami Ave. Return Important papers. Reward 1727 NW 75 St. POMERANIAN blond female. VI.

clnlty 174 St. A Bisc. Blvd. Ans. "Pixie" I1O0 REWARD.

Ph. 89-0848 White toy collie, brown face A ears. Vic. 183 8t. N.

Mia. Bch. ens. to "Chimes' Reward. Ph.

Any Info, to Southard Vet Cllnlo 818-3538 WHITE A Blk. Terrier "Pecky." Reward. 1030 NW 120 St. Cat, Male. Large Grav A White, Altered.

Name "TUFFY" Itewara Mrs. Ferguson UN 8-4013 Wallet, containing papers A mon ey in Greyhound Bus Station Jan. 3. REWARD. Ph.

85-8174 Instructions KOREAN VETS! Airlines Need Toe Central Schools. Ph. 2-8Q4H I Piano teacher experienced Children A adults. Ph. 4-9623 1 REAL ESTATE EXAMS SALESMEN 110.

Brokers 120. pitied Homestudy course, fines. lions, answers, arithmetic Wh fall and wait months tor nsw EST. 1946 exam. E- W18 8820 SW 20 St.

Ph. 4-3H4 30 Music, Poncing, Volte) PIANO lessons, your home II 50. All grades. Any age. Call 3-1815.

vioun teacner. xour noma or mine. Reas. EMPLOYMENT 34 Help Wonted 'emole NURSEMAIDS. Live In Or OuL 1135 up.

HOUSEKEEPERS. 835 up! -i SALES G1RI.S, salary and com. mission. FOUNTAIN WAITRESSES DAY WORKERS. 88 Up AA SOUTHERN EMPLOYMENT SERVN-E CHARGE- BU '0B- N0 i.

Cashier 3-11. Exp. drugstore. 1001 Flagler St. EXPERIENCED WOOL SPOTTER French Beniol Cleaners 99 SW St.

General office work, bookkeeping reauired, some typing desirable but not necesBarv, Must be able i to "flye. S-day wk. fas NW 36 SL or Phone 3-3292 Drive tea. 1055 NW 79 St. Ph.

84-3888 OPERATORS WANTED en dreases A coats. Full rarment i Tonl Lynn of Miami. 84 NW St. i SORTER, checker A marker la French Benzol Cleaners 99 SW 6t Legal Secretary ferrsll Aftornevi B50 Building pn, S3-84BS WAITRESS. Pasquales.

857 Flsheri man St. Opa-Locka MU 8-9260. KXPERIENCED FOLDERS For" Flat Work Ironer. French Bonsol Cleaners. 99 SW St.

LAUNDRY Markers A Listers. Exp. Deluxe Laundry. 341 NW SS NISH LOCAL REFERENCES API fLY IN PERSON, CREDIT DEPT. MIAMI DAILY NEWS.

Waitresses A general kitchen work. Ave MB 11001,1 1610 Un Salesladies f3) for Hollywood's leading apparel shop. Experienced only. None others need apply. Pa-fnen'e 1910 Hollywood Blvd.

HU. lywood Ph. 2-7398 SEAMSTRESS Helper. North Beach Cleaners. 7134 Abbott Ave.

MANICURIST. Miami Shoree Bar ber Shop, lfll NE 79 St. BINDERY GIRU Experience: Please apply in person. Gulf, etresm Press Inc. 3800 NW 89 St.

Work 25-30 hours $50-7B wk. Handling STERLING, fine BAV. ARIAN CHINA. Leads plsntlul. No can.

WlU train. Commission. Ph. 82-0513 9 to 13 a.m. or write box 8581, Miami.

Cashier Checker MUST be experienced la Buner market. Full or part time. Food No. 1, on the Circle, Miami Girl, general office work. Annie In person, 38110 SW 8 'til 9 i AMBITIOUS HOUSEWIFE Who needs to esrn 150 178 wkly jAnltnE, STERLING, fine BA, VARlAIf china.

No eanr. Car essential. Ph. 82-0513 to 13 AM or write bog 2581. Miami.

Waitresses, Experienced for sesson7 DANCERS TaHL eut1fulof i A PM t-ts beweei 'ny rl' Between 2I A 30. Apply after 3 PM. Beach Theater, Mmmi Beach. Mature white or colored woman to sail Chaiis gsrments. 479 PRE-PACKGIRLg the Circle.

Miami Sorinri. eryy OPERATORS EXPER SPrlRTq? WEAR BECTTON PIECE WOP SINGLE NFrril.B A ALL SI CIAL MACHINE PAIMLA.NO FASHIONS. 400 NW BT. -x The Classified Advertising Dept. of TH1! MIAMI DAILY NTWg Fas an opening for a copv girt eraonaTi Good health, stamina, a gnuiti Age preference is-21.

r. Gmduate. hour, 6-4 dsy ween, with Wednesday afternoons of? Many employe benefits Including! Insurance pi, pH Pleasant working conditions ana opportunity for sdvanc.ment Call 82-S53S, Mia. Walker Jit T. Weekdays between 3-4.

Waitress, exper. living ylc. perrlne Sieady work Experienced Shell A Plier work? ere for noveltv tewnrv, home, workers aW Art' wa A BELIEVE ITI waitress et live Miami Beach nightclub Apple 'i. "'r 10 night et Paper Dell. 7m snd Wa.hinrToV ftROrTPPuAFH iOH Good Work Only.

Call 8-74(ii IAKE GOOD MONEY FTC ch var round Job TTLLW CAB to lis i i ttlxphoni BoucrroRj 3T YPTw tw vr ED wwwT.r CLASMFiED ADVlRTISLNti ABYT! AVTWunw MtARY FLL'S COMMISSION PrVNrrT 40 hour wrr PAID VArATlivJ OTHER BENEFITS TFT EPHnyfj SJ FXT, 84) APTFTT.N10NS BETnLi.ii 3 A 4 ONIT 1- Waitress. Apply at NW I'rire JIMMY 8 PEKTAURAWT We i'ress experienced. 8 to 13 Ok. Harpor Inn t.O 78 St. ff r-er.

no eook 8 dva. fiV s'cimn Cnier Cirl enr-eriem-f literC eooetta. Steady ey wrk CHikS fver. 0 P.O. A 8.

Dixie way. PiM.c 4 STKMig BFCR fcTAB I a. l)0 KMPEP.e Oeo'l titfice ete. Im r.e to Soou. TOPS 13 I BT.

8J Our eej One week On FoT7Vn r.r fiatwo-k Frene faeaiat Ceane.s Is) SW 1 St. if assassination" then "we will have contributed something to American life which will endure in all the years ahead." Assailing "guilty association," the iiew senator said Senate Republican Leader Knowland of California avoided such tactics and was completely fair in Oregon speeches he made against Neuberger last fall. Avoids Disputes Nixon stuck to pleasantries and avoided political controversy in his own brief welcoming address. Case said in another brief talk that the test the voters will apply to both Democrats and Re-publicans in 1956 will be the degree of support they give to President Eisenhower's program. "I hope and predict the Democratic party under its experienced leadership will do well in the next two years," Case said.

"I know our party will do well." Langan Riles In Washington Funeral services for Dr. Paul Conway Langan, 62, retired lieu tenant-colonel, U. S. Army Med ical Corps, and a former Miami an, who died in Washington Tuesday, will be held there tomorrow, with burial in Arlington National Cemetery. Dr.

Langan. who lived at 4150 Poinciana Coconut Grove, came to Miami in 1949, but had spent much of his time during the past several years in Wash ington. He was native of Oswego, N. Y. He was a retired member of the Radiologic Society of North America, former member of the staff of the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, a member of Lind-ley De Game- Post, American Legion, Coconut Grove, and the Houghton Fortnightly Club of Mi ami.

Besides his wife, Mrs. Lizzie Smith Langan, lie leaves two daughters, Mrs. Philip Green, of Baltimore, and Mrs. George Zov- now, of Cleveland, and three grandchildren. The family requests flowers be omitted.

MOTHER DIES Family Hit By Tragedy 2nd Time Tragedy today" had struck a Miami family for the second time in a few months. Mrs. Shirley G. Fortgang, 47, of 1646 SW 14th died today. Her daughter, Mrs.

Bernard (Zelda) Olin, 26, died Aug. 28 at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, where she had gone for a heart operation. Surviving Mrs. Fortgang are her husband, William, a retired New York schoolteacher; a daughter, Joan, a teacher in the Hialeah Elementary School; a granddaughter, Robin Olin, and a brother, Samuel Guberman, all of Miami. Services will be held at 11 a.m.

tomorrow at the Flagler Funeral Home Chapel. Burial will be in Mt. Sinai Cemetery. Mrs. Fortgang, who formerly operated a photographic shop in New York City, came here six years ago.

She was a member of the Foresters organization of B'nai B'rith. Texas Drivers Slow Down At Sight Of Cops Houston, Jan. 6 The Gulf Freeway, also called the Houston-Galveston Expressway, is being turned Into one of the area's safest thoroughfares instead of the most deadly as formerly. Houston Traffic Lt H. Ellisor said it was all because of eight motorcycle officers conspicuously posted atop freeway overpasses during rush hours.

That's all the cops do just sit there looking ready for speeders. "We're not out there to give tickets, one said, "we Just want to be seen. This Baby Sitter Gets No Reward Rochester. N. H.

Ufh-Even governor can pull a boner. Gov. Hugh Gregg, presiding at a recent toll road bearing, gave the floor to Mrs. Noreen Winkley, Holding her infant in her arms the woman asked if she could talk from her seat. Richard F.

Cooper, former GOP state chairman, came to the rescue, offered to hold the baby, "He will probably grow up to be a good Republican now," quipped Grepg. Mrs. Winkley's retort: "She will grow up to be a good Democrat like her mother." Newspaper Hikes Price In Toledo Toledo. Ohio, Jin. (UP) Publishers of the Toledo Times, morning daily here, announced today that the price of each edi tion will increase from five to seven cents, effective Monday." There was no indication that the Times' sister publication, the sfternoon Blade, planned a similar increase.

member' of the Republican party engaged in below-the-belt tactics in the 1954 campaign. He named no names. Some Democrats have accused Nixon of such tactics. The vice president listed Neuberger as, a "left-wing" candidate at Pocatcllo, Idaho, last Oct. 25.

Nixon did not join In a burst of applause which greeted Neuber-ger's first reference to "character assassination." lie did Join in the handclapping at the end of Neu-berger's talk, however. By that time Mrs. Malone known to friends as "Katie" had left the room, declaring in audible tones: "I've had all I can take." Outside, she had a verbal tiff with Mrs. Perle Mesta, the party giver often called the official hostess of the Truman administration. Onlookers said Mrs.

Mesta, formerly minister to Luxembourg, DEATHS day, came to Miami from Rochester 14 years ago. She leaves a daughter, Mr. Loretta DeWitt, of Miami; two brothers and a sister. Joseph P. Saulnier Services for Joseph P.

Saul- nier, 42, of 375 E. 17th Hia-leah, will be held in the Van Ors- del Hialeah Miami Springs Chapel at 9:30 a.m. tomorfow. with burial in City Cemetery. Mr, Saulnier, who came to Mi ami from Middleton, three years ago, died Tuesday.

He leaves his wife. Mrs. Mane Saulnier. Hugh M. Shevnan Services for Hugh Mortimer Shevnan, 60, of 1498 NE 176th North Miami Beach, will be held in the Niceley Chapel at 11 a.m.

tomorrow, with burial in Southern Memorial Park. Mr. Shevnan, a native of Ken- tucy, had been a resident of the Miami area 20 years. He leaves a son, Jack E. Shev nan.

of North Miami Beach. Mrs. C. 6.McCurdy Services for Mrs. Claudia 0.

McCurdy, 64, of 410 SW 69th Coral Way Center at 11 a.m tomorrow. Mrs. McCurdy, who came to Miami from Wilmington, N.C., 10 years ago, died yesterday. She leaves three daughters, Mrs. H.

W. Andrews of Miami; Mrs. Woodrow Smith, of Sarasota, and Mrs. John Robireck of Wilmington; a son, R. B.

McCurdy, of Wilmington; three sisters, two brothers and 12 grandchildren. Mrs. Ela Berliner Rosary services for Mrs. Eva Louise Berliner, 50, of 2413 NW 14th will be held in the Ger-hardt Chapel at 8 p.m. tomorrow, with services in the same place at 10 a.m.

Saturday. Mrs. Berliner, who died yesterday, came to Miami from Savannah, 33 years ago. Besides her husband, Henry Roy Berliner, she leaves a son, John; a sister, Mrs. Marie Fletcher; her father, John C.

McMahon, and two brothers, Louis and Joyn McMahon, all of Miami. Walter E. Wright Walter E. Wright. 64.

until re cently owner of Wright'a Tralier Court in Homestead, died yester day in Veterans Hospital. Coral Gables. He lived In Homestead five years, coming from Detroit, Mich. He is survived by three brothers, including Harry, of Homestead, and a sister. Services will be held at 10:30 a.m.

Saturday in Branam Funer al Home with interment in Palm Cemetery, Naranja. Hyman Green Hyman Green, about 80, a tailor, of 760 Euclid Miami Beach, died yesterday. He moved here three years ago from New York City. He is survived by three sons. The body will be aent today to New York by Beach Memorial Chapel for services and burial.

Edward E. Liberatore Edward E. Liberatore, 54, a steamfitter who had lived here about three years, died yester day following a heart attack while working on the new city sewage disposal plant at Vir ginia Key. He came here from Boston. The only local survivor is his wife.

Rosalind. He lived at 67 Collins Miami Beach. Services will be held at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Beach Memori al Chapel with interment in ML Sinai Cemetery. Mrs.

Eveline Fryar Services for Mrs. Eveline J. Fryar, 79, of 135 Calabria Coral Gables, were scheduled to be held in the Philbrick Miami Chapel at 4 p.m. today, with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery Mrs. Fryar, a former resident of Jacksonville, came to Miami 30 years ago.

She leaves a son, Elmer and a daughter, Frances E. Fryar, both of Miami. Mrs. Mamie Williams Services for Mrs. Mamie Wil-llams, 78.

of 1784 NW 112th will be held in riant City, with the Reed-Gautier Funeral Home in charge of Miami arrarge-menU. Mrs. Williams, who died yes terday, came to Miami from Plant City 15 years ago. Besides her husband, Brady Williams, she leaves two sont, lieu, Jk Ailiaiiu, JlJl of Cleveland, Ohio; three dauin- Mrs. Elizabeth Beckum, of chided Mrs.

Malone for walking out on a speech by one of her husband's colleagues. Mrs. Malone reportedly contended Neuberger's speech wasn't worth hearing. Then, said the witnesses, the women exchanged some personal references. Mrs.

Malone had been seated at a table near the center of the big ballroom with her husband, a member of the GOP Senate group most friendly to Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis). Malone remained at the table. 70 Senators Prawn Some 70 senators and several hundred other persons, including a number of Eisenhower administration officials, attended the dinner. Neuberger, the final speaker, said thai, both Democrats and Repubiiruis agree to campaign "on issues and not on character La DANIEL A.

McDOUGAL Plant City; Mrs. Mell Barco, of Texas, and Mrs. Martha Kelly, of Miami; 25 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. DEATHS ELSEWHERE Houston Ufi Dr. Julius H.

Johnson, 97, who retired from practice 57 years ago because of bad health, and the oldest living alumnus of Vanderbilt University. London Francis Laldler, 87, theatrical producer known as Britain's "King of Pantomime." Knoxville, John L. Humbard, 62, internationally-known Knoxville engineer. As an engineer for the U. S.

Bureau of Public Roads, he supervised construction of the highway from Gatlinburg to newfound Gap atop the Smoky Mountains. Cleveland Wl Mrs. Grace Gaylord Rtbtck, a former stage and radio star. She was the originator and manager of the Gay-lord Trio, one of the early musi cal groups on radio. Limpsfield, England W) Ed ward R.

Pea so, 97, the man in whose home British intellectuals founded the historic Fabian Society. He was the sole survivor of the original fabians who got together 71 years ago to organize their society of evolutionary socialism, which believed in the inevitability of gradualness." San Francisco WV-Russ New- land, 54, Associated Press sports writer who had made the West Coast his beat for 30 years. He joined the Associated Press in 1923 in Spokane and came to San Francisco in 1924. Columbia, S. C.

Dr. Leonard Theodora Biktr, 88, four times president of the University of South Carolina. For al most two score years he was known to university students as Dean" Baker. Kansa Citv Wl Victor J. Miller.

66. former mavnr of St. Louis. He had suffered a series of strokes and had been in a coma for the past six months. A Republican, Miller served as mayor of the city from 1925 to FLORIDA DEATHS DeLand -W- Mrs.

J. W. Per kins, 80, widow of prominent real estate developer in this area who also had been circuit judge and member of State Road Board, died Wednesday. Lakeland Uft Charles Ed ward Bass, 54, captain on the Atlantic Coast Line Railway po lice force who bved in Tampa but worked out of Lakeland, died Tuesday night in a hospital www Key West (3 A. L.

Shtpard, 56, died Wednesday after long ill ness. West Palm Beach Irving Joseph Miller, 78, who came from Dayton, Ohio, in 1953, died at borne Wednesday after short illness. Chipley UP Leonard (Uncle Bud) Finch, who at 111 was be lieved to be oldest Florida resi dent, died at home Tuesday. His birthdate was Aug. 14, 1843, and be spent his entire life within a few miles of where he was born.

'GOOD COUNTRY' U.S. Left $1,171 By Old Soldier Calte trt BuL'alo, N. Jan. The will of James J. Dougherty, 85- year-old Spanish American War veteran who died last October, was probated yesterday, leaving bis $1,171 estate to the federal gov ernment Dougherty's lawyer, Frederick D.

Stevens, said the old soldier came into his office some turn ago and said: "This is a good country to live, in and my government has treated me well. I want to leave every tiurg I have to the United Washington, Jan. 6 (UP) Mrs. George W. Malone, wife of the Republican senator from Nevada, took a walk last night during speech by Sen.

Richard Neuberger, Oregon's new Democratic sen- ator but denies she booed the senator. One report said Mrs. Malone stood up, booed Neuberger, and walked out after getting into an argument with Mrs. Perle Mesta. "That's not so," Mrs.

Ma-lone said today. "I did not boo. I would not be so discourteous. When I walked out, I was going to the dressing room. "If I was discourteous to Mr.

Neuberger, it was purely unintentional. My leaving was misunderstood." LEGAl NOTICES The tnnual meetlni at th member! of Cltltem Federal Ran nee A Loan Association of Hialeah will be held on Thunder January 20. at 2 p.m. at III otficel las Hialeah Dr. Hialeah, Fla.

W. 1. Callahan Sec'y-Treae. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Aa of Jan. 3, 1955 Thomai Cal-caeano, am no lonKer connected with the firm known ai TAT Olaii located at 17h gw St.

Miami, I hereby declare that I am no loneer responsible for any debts that may be Incurred on or after Jan, 3, 195S. NOTICB OF INTENTION TO RBO. ISTER IN COMPLIANCE WITH HOU8B BILL NO. U7S CHAPTER 80983 LAWS OF FLORIDA 1941. Bisi-ayne Guard A Patrol Service.

Coral Way. Miami 44 owner. C. V. Heaton, Lummia Karate, 168 Madiera, C.

Gables. Partnership: Harry Mc-GreKor, Peter Muller. Today's last Mlnutm Offers wen received toe late to classify and wlU appear In tomorrow's u. tine la regular classifications. Beautiful new 3 bedrm.

Ranch house. Patios, heaters. Nice yard, S125Q to May 1. 89-4418 ANNOUNCEMENTS I Otiorh A 'antral Notices JOSEPH ADAM HALLECK Rosary p.m., Friday, Combs Chapel. -Requiem Mass 9:30 a.m., Saturday.

Corpul Cbrlstl Catholio Church. 4 florists EXOTIC GARDENS. INC Four Large stores To Servo You Consult Your Phono Directory! South'! Leading Florist 10 Personals ABY SITTER S2.MI DAY, 8. W. Sec.

Dependable. Mature 3-t76 Wlll share modern home with couple or lady. 6Q mo. 2-93. Younf man to share Gables apt.

with same. References Si 2. 9,1 Catalonia. Apt. 11 after 8.30 PM.

TETECTIVK. Private, FREE Consultation Ph. Friendly, 84-112S REWARD LIBERAL reward lor any know, edge. Information or recovery of 1 year grey miniature French poo. die, female, has poodle cut.

Lost when thrown from car In crash Dec. 23 at Calloway and Tamiami Trail In wnlch persons vera killed. Owner still In hospital, condition still serious, return of poodle will enhance her chances of recov-' ory. Please submit any information to Box N463 News, Young mfined man to share rm. house with same.

Ret. ex-changsd. 111. 758 MW 13 SL- Aft. Nurse desires to share her apt.

with lady. S30 mo. Ph. 83-9837 be-tween 4 PM dally. Will share comfortable modern home with 1 or 3 responsible peo pie.

NE) Section. Ph. 89-4080. Free rent plus Sit wk. In ex- change for homework.

Ph. 88-8374. Tutoring, your home or mine 1st to 8th grades. Also typing 78-0101. Free: Hair cut.

Shampoo styled Dally 9-3, Open eves. La France Beauty School 153 NE 10 St. 9-3418 Widow share MB bedrm. home cpl. or ladies, S4O0.

AM S-3793. WAKE UP SERVICE Will Call You Anytime. T8-TW4. N-O-W I I I 100 BALES LETTERS. 2.5 Includes sketches, drawings, eta.

Only 75c for ea. addi 100 copies Eingle facsimile duplicate, 60o Photo stencils for MIMEO, S3. 00 Made direct from your own copy. Reproduced "WHILE YOU WAIT" Downtown Letter Servtre, Rm. 41S Professional Bldg.

218 NS 3nd Ave. DRESSMAKING ALTERATIONS 26 YRS. KXP. M-1S46 MRS. BUSH.

PHONE MAIL SERVICE FOR Buinei8 Men st Wnmen, Strictly CONFIDENTIAL. 78-7S94, MARRIAGKS PERFORMED ANY-TIME 701 NW 20 Ave. Ph. 9-0187. MAP.RIAOF.8 PERFORMED ANYTIME: 6948 NB 4 Ct, 78-89QS.

If you can sew, let me draft aa Individual basic pattern for Vai. Eliminate t-rtinus fittings. T-SMO. :5 mo. Coral Way apt share, working girls.

4-5iM MOtMtiU Need refined business woman to baby-sit eves, to exchange for pri-vate room Ph. 8-9951. NEED SPACE II 00 month Smrs Warehouse Ce. Ph. S-t3uS, 251 SW 1st Court.

Facial Plastic surgery. Also ense, ears, scare. Ph. 4-4 P.M. 139 BE 3rd SL Deederer II Pay Nuriorlot, Chile Care" BABY sitting.

Good ref. Prefer beach (own carl II hr. T8-4I7T. BEST CHILD CARE. Room frmt Ph.

4-0104 Win baby sit. Dsvs Only. 82.50, SW section. PH. DILI Mll'8.

Rm. for mother A chiM. with child cere. 18 wk. PH.

Child care A room for mother lit wk. TV A Prlv, 273 NW 37 St. Reliable baliy sitter, ret. Hare car, lie hr. Ph.

8.V7193. My Luckv starlet Infants Pre-school. Jjf KWI St Ph. W-2421. 24 HR.

CHILD CARE LgS. TWFrt room for mother H5 wk. -474. Child care 85c hr. 82 or waly, rm for mother I.S wk.

a-8r-M3. Specialised Child care for those needing nurses services Iure'i Horns Lie, 8 -ft, up. MO 1-1127. Trenrel Oppertaaltlee WHY patISe'' ft DmVEKS CAR Anywoere ISA No Faseenrert Lioemsed. RomM.

to ale of ia A-l DRJVEAWAY SFRVIE" 118 NE 1 St. Miami Ph. SHARE Rldi-S CPA. Auto Travel ttureau 7 'V Fiagier, Ph. fMH i DCN'T SEND YOUR CAR) Until von tevet'rte our pais NATIONAL DKIVWAY -Biscayao Blvd.

S4-ni4. Want d-ivr to deliver rir FROli New Yn'k to M'e Til, T-44T, II lost ova y-Rr PH, .8 PreserlptKie red Case, 'y Deny News. Reward. Pa, 8i-8t42 or yq P-at, Blue ts'V-ee I I NW Ph. M.

Reward, Psrakeet, Chartreuse. Nam '('tvp-ry Feward. Ph. -3. torn terrier, ack A rah'es tag lu; rewerd SrTpHFrT tO I lll.OV'.

Jl-TA-JBT-, 4 Brown h' Wee-iBJ new le. sir eectioet. Pfooe S-1-. JM: 4io.d heart Btace.et (Ml as-4A4. Serving Greater Miami Sines 1836 39JI.L 2nd Ave.

Pa. M'OlJ Funeral services for Daniel Archibald McDougal, 89, lawyer and pioneer in the search for oil in loncia, will be neid in ine Coral Gables Methodist Church at 4 p.m. tomorrow, when a memorial talk will be made by his daughter, Mrs. Ivar Axelson. The body will lie in state at the Philbrick Coral Gables Chapel from 7 to 10 p.m.

today. Mr. McDougal, a native of Wayland Springs, died yesterday. He was educated at Vanderbilt University and spent the early years of his life practicing law in Purdy, Selmer and Savannah, Tenn. Cimt Hero In 20s He came to Miami in the early 1920s, and was president of the Chevelier owner of a tract west of Miami, on the edge of which the Forty Mile Bend oil wells recently were discovered.

Using $150,000 of his own money, he built the "Loop Road" sponsored by the Chevelier off the Tamiami Trail. He also was one of the large land' owners who organized the lease block on which the first deep test oil well in Florida was drilled by the Humble Oil and Refining Co. Monroe County west of Miami in 1939. As a young man Mr. McDou gal left Tennessee and went to the Indian Territory, There he engaged in business and politics.

He served in the Oklahoma State Legislature, where he led the fight for a program of construe live measures, including home stead exemption. Because of his frequent election by other law yers to serve as a special judge in cases where the presiding judge had been disqualified, he became known as "the Judge." Independent Optritor While still practicing law he became an independent oil oper ator, pioneering first in Oklahoma's Glenn Pool. Then, for many years he bought oil lands and leases, or drilled for oil in Oklahoma, Texas and Louisiana. Following his theory that oil surrounds the Gulf of Mexico, Mr. McDougal came to Florida and was active in the purchase and financing of the Chevelier tract.

During the Roosevelt administration he spent eight years in Washington as special assistant to the legal adviser to Secretary of State Cordell HuU. His brochure on the practical applica tion of the "Good Neighbor Pol- icy of the United States toward Latin American countries was used as a text by the Department of State in its dealings with South America. Mr. McDougal was a member of the Masonic Order and the Coral Gables Methodist Church. He leaves his wife, three daughters, Mrs.

Axelson, Mrs. Jennie M. MacKay and Miss Violet McDougal, all of Coral Gables; three grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Isaac Selrz Services for Isaac Scltz, 90, of 3536 SW 1st will be held in Cincinnati, with the Gordon Funeral Home in charge of Miami arrangements. Mr.

Seltz, who died last night, was a retired merchant. He came to Miami from Cincinnati four years ago. He leaves a son. Julius, of Louisville; three daughters, Mrs. Anne Frey, of Miami, and Mrs.

Rose Shifres and Miss Ida Seltz, of Cincinnati; a sister, Mrs. Nathan Efforn, of Cincinnati; four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Joseph A. Halleck Rosary services for Joseph Adam Halleck, 104, of 901 NW 46th will be held in the Combs Chapel at 8 p.m. tomorrow, with requiem mass in Corpus Christi Catholic Church at 9:30 a.m.

Saturday. Burial will be in Southern Memorial Park. Mr. Halleck, a retired railroad section man, came to Miami from Detroit 15 years ago. He died yesterday.

He was a member of the Corpus tnnsu tnurcn. He leaves three sons, Edward J. and Theodore T. Halleck, of Miami, and John, of Detroit; two daughters, Mrs. W.

J. Wells and Mrs. Katherine Fitzpatrick, both of Miami; 22 grandchildren, 20 great-grandchildren and 18 ereat- great-grandchildren. Mrs. C.

Haskins Services for Mrs. Catharine Haskins, 78, of 9038 SW 21th St, will be held in Rochester, N.Y., with the Miami Riverside Fu- rside Fu of MiV i arrangements. sweetheart during Christmas holidays at home in Marietta. He was the son of a prominent Marietta wholesale grocer. Found Near Cove The body was found by A.

E. Green and J. Gudgcr one-half mile from an escarpment which drops into a wilderness known as Lost Cove. Young Veach was last seen at p. m.

when he purchased a rope at a hardware store and left for a hike in the wooded area near the academy, a preparatory school for the University of the South He was found hanging to the tilted trunk of a dead tree by the same rope after state highway patrolmen with bloodhounds and a large number of volunteers joined the search for the cadet. Coroner Floyd Anderton of Franklin, reported that all the searchers who saw the body before it was moved were con vinced it was a suicide case and for this reason no inquest would be held. Croetry Extcutive The cadet was the only child of Mr. and Mrs. G.

A. Veach of Marietta. The father operates a wholesale grocery firm, is a civic and community leader and wields influence in local politics. Academy authorities cesenbed young Veach as a "good stu dent." He returned from the holi day, leaving his luggage in a mend room, but never checked in before beginning the fatal hike, friends said. There was almost immediate concern for his fate, friends said, because he had become despondent over the romance.

When the search got under way the University Forestry Department provided a radio equipped jeep. A number of fellow cadets joined the search. Rainy Wealher Invades East Aaseeteied Prese Chicago, Jan. 6 The wet weather which has dampened most of the mid-continent this week moved into wide areas in the eastern third of the country today. Rain fell in a wide belt from the Texas coast northeastward to the lower Great Lakes, the Ohio valley and the Appalachians.

Freezing rain, sleet or snow oelted sections of New York state and noruiern Pennsylvania. only other precipitation was in the interior areas of the Far West. Skies were cloud or nartlv ciouoy omer sections of tne country. Mild weather continued In tho South and as far north as the lower Ohio Valley and central Appalachians. Brownsville, was the warmest spot with 68.

Temperatures were above normal in most areas east of the Mississippi River but colder weather headed into the Midwest and Great Lakes region. Low mark early today was 11 below zero at Glasgow, Mont 'NOT FUNNY' TV Comedy Producer Divorced AssscMeo Fmi Santa Monica, Jan. 6 John B. Guedel. 42.

produces such funny TV programs as Groucho Marxs You Bet Your Life and Art Linkletter's People Are Funny. but at home His wife Beth divorced him yesterday because she said she found him anything but humorous. She said be told her he wanted to live apart from her and their two children and added that he often left their home with out saying when or if he was coming back, Her lawyers said that under a property settlement she will get a Tailed Prese Sewance, Jan. I An 18-year-old cadet, missing since Monday and despondent over a broken romance, was found hanged to tree by a huge search party. Two of ttie 75 searchers yesterday found the fully uniformed body of James M.

Veach, of 815 Church Street, Marietta, dangling from a rope in a wilderness near here. Friends of the Sewanee Military Academy underclassman said he had fallen out with his BRINGING BABY New 'Dad' Ready To Fly Home Aaeoefcsied Prese Athens, Greece, Jan. 6 Lt. Norman K. (Moose) Donahoe plans to leave for Naples Saturday on the first leg of his trip home with his 17-month-old adopted Greek daughter if red tape doesn't hold him up.

"I hope to get through Friday noon." said the Texas-born, 27- year-old Navy fighter pilot, as he impatiently waited for an official Foreign Ministry translation of all documents needed for the found litis, Ronl Marie. Donahoe said the flurry of last minute paper work has kept him from seeing the child for two days. She is remaining at the foundling home until the eve of their de parture by U. S. Air Force plane, Donahoe hopes to catch a U.

Navy flight from Naples to the United Mates. Donahoe and his wife Helen, 27. who is of Greek descent, are childless. He is stationed at Cabaniss Naval Auxiliary Air Station at Corpus Christi, Tex. They were un- able to find a child for adoption i.i Texas and decided to try Greece after learning there were hundreds available thrre.

Mrs. Donahoe is waiting for her husband's return at her sister's home in Brooklyn. PHONY COIN Vision Of Riches Vanishes Associated Prase Corpus Christi, Jan. 6 B. F.

Rimmer read in the Corpus Christi Caller of an expert coin colector visiting here with a 1913 liberty head nickel valued at more than $10,000. Rimmer quickly called the news paper. Tvt one too!" he claimed. Expert J. V.

McDermott of South Milwaukee, convinced Rimmer the nickel was a phony. The date on many 1910 and 1912 liberty heads have been illegally altered to appear as 1913 coins. Only five 1913 liberty head nickels were made and the where abouts of each is known. Asia Economic Union Mapped Aeeeelated Prese Manila, Jan. I Vice President Carlos P.

Garcia said last rifht the Philippines would urge Manila Fact nations to establish an Asian economic cooperation union to promote regional trade. "It would also strengthen the resistance of member nation against Communist aggression." sata oarcu, xno aiso is secretary. He said the plan would include a currency system, sim-lar to the European faymenls Union, which: would clear trade barriers arising from currency differences. 4 minimum of $710 a week, plusineral Home ia charge support for the children. The JGuedels were married in 1936.

I Mrs. Haskins, who died Tues-jters,.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1904-1988