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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 15

Publication:
Tampa Bay Timesi
Location:
St. Petersburg, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

AT CONVENTION MONDAY C-C To Explore Space Prosperity "Florida: A-Okay, to Prosperity" is the topic to be explored by an estimated 500 members of the Florida State Chamber of Commerce at their 45th annual' convention, beginning Monday in St. Petersburg. More than 24 business, industry government officials from Florida, Washington and New York will take part in the discussions, centering around the various challenges facing the state in the wake of an accelerated space exploration project headquartered at Cape Canaveral. KEYNOTE speaker at Monday morning's session will be G. T.

Willey, vice president and general manager of Martin Orlando Division. Climax of the convention will be a talk by Gov. Farris Bryant at a banquet Tuesday night. Bankers, lawyers, manufacturers state and national legislators and their wives will begin registering at the Soreno Hotel today. Registration will continat 8 a.m.

Monday. Convention chairman W. J. Clapp, president of the Florida Power St. Petersburg, will open the convention at 9 a.m.

Monday in the hotel ballroom. Herman W. Goldner and Mayor, Shouppe, president of the Greater St. Petersburg Chamber of Commerce, will welcome the group. Response to the welcoming address will be given by W.

S. Rosasco III, director at large of the state chamber. ALSO DURING Monday's morning session, a memorial tribute will be made to four state chamber directors who died during the past year. They were W. E.

Ellis, chairman of the Commercial Bank and Trust Ocala; George B. Howell, president of the Marine Bank and Trust Tampa; Robert Kloeppel, Jacksonville, president-director of Kloeppel Hotels, and James J. Love, Quincy banker and tobacco farmer and a member of the State Board of Control. Monday's luncheon will honor state chamber executives and the Florida Junior Chamber of Commerce. Presiding will be Charles G.

Hays, West Palm Beach, president of Florida Chamber of Commerce Executives. Luncheon speaker will be Arnold Frutkin, director of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) office of international programs in- Washington. His topic will be "Florida's Place in NASA's program." After lunch, members may choose a boat cruise on the Miss Florida III or participation in a golf tournament at Sunset Golf OBITUARIES ARNOLD, MITCHELL 66, 6th Ave. S.E., Ruskin, Thursday (Nov. 16, 1961).

Born in Valdosta, Ga. Moved to Ruskin five years ago from there. Retired heavy equipment operator. Veteran of World War I. Survived by two daughters, Mrs.

Leroy Grimes, Sarasota and Mrs. James A. Grimes, Kemblesville, a brother, Jerry, Dade City; thirteen grandchildren and on el great grandchild. Funeral Services Monday at 2 p.m. from Chapel of Lewers and Shannon Funeral Home, Ruskin.

PACKARD, MRS. 80, 516 14th Ave. Friday (Nov. 17, 1961). Born in Pittsburgh, Pa.

Here from Bridgewater, Mass. 37 years ago. Member of the Protestant Church. Survived daughter, Mrs. Mildred Speel, St.

Petersburg: two sons, James, Sarasota and John, Clinton, nine grandchildren including Robert Speel of St. Petersburg. John S. Rhodes, East Chapel. I SPENCER, GEORGE 87,1 resident of Bay Pines Domiciliary, Friday (Nov.

17, 1961). Born in Hartford, Conn. Here from Key West three years ago. Veteran of the Spanish American War and Commander of the USVW. Key West.

Survived by a niece, Mrs. Constance Babcock, Sarasota: a nephew, Alfred Lytle, Chelmsford, and a son-in-law, Ellis Archer, Key West and a grandson. and burial in Key West. WilhelmThurston Funeral Home. WILLIAMS, FRANK, 74, Sunny Acres Trailer Park, Bradenton, died Friday (Nov.

17, 1961). Born in Kansas. A winter resident of Bradenton for past 10 years from Marysville, Kan. Retired farmer. Member of the Sons of the American Revolution, and Oketo Lodge 25 Oketo, Kan.

Survivors include his wife, Frances a daughter, Mrs. Marjorie Cornelius, Berkeley, a sister, Mrs. Ida A. Schmidler, Topeka, and grandchildren. Burial in Marysville.

Funeral Home Shannon. Diabetes Test Shows 36 In 1,510 Positive BRADENTON A total of 1,510 persons were checked for sugar during Diabetes Detection Week in Manatee County and 36 showed positive tests, according to Mrs. Jack Van Der Beek. chairman of the Manatee County Lay Society. Van Der Beek said Society will continue to check, tests free of charge during the year, and that "dreypak" envelopes are available at all drug stores in the county for this purpose.

Next meeting of the local Diabetes Society will be Dec. 11 at the County Building Auditorium, 212 Ave. Bradenton. Dr. Marvin Silver, local internist, will speak on 1 "The Importance of Keeping Diabetes Well 11 ConI trolled." Data From U.S.

WEATHER BUREAU LOW 50. 29.59 40 40 HIGH 60 30.30 50 HIGH 30.37 COLD and Country Club, for an afternoon of recreation. SPEAKERS TUESDAY will include Herbert F. Underwood, Jacksonville, president of the Florida Retail Federation; John W. Black, Washington, special assistant to the U.S.

secretary of commerce; Thomas F. Fleming Boca Raton, chairman of the state chamber's education committee; Meril A. May, New York, vice president of Dun and Bradstreet, Dr. Irving E. Muskat, Miami, chairman of the Inter-American Center Authority; W.

J. Bowen, St. Petersburg, president of The Houston and John R. Phillips, Tallahassee, chairman of the State Road Department. Also on Tuesday's program will be a panel discussion with Wenof the Florida Development Comdell.

Jarrard, chairman-director mission; Otho B. Bruce, director of the commission's Industrial Division, and Roger D. Stake, director of the commission's Tourist Division, as panelists. Ivy League Club To Hear Dr. Baughman SARASOTA Dr.

George 1 F. Baughman, president of New Col-: lege, will be guest speaker at Tuesday's Ivy League Club dinner at the Holiday Inn, club President Ansel Frankel has announced. The committee appointed to handle arrangements for the annual dinner include Alan D. Catterall, Dartmouth '21; William D. Bickham, Princeton '13; Ken L.

Emerson, Dartmouth '24, and Russell W. Hallock, Harvard '14. The 7:30 p.m. dinner will be preceded by a social hour. Florida college presidents have been invited to attend, also wives of Ivy League Club members and guests.

H. H. Howry, chairman of the greeters' committee, chose as hosts and greeters the Rev. Charles, H. Terriberry, Ricker, Brown Cornell '15; '13; Dr.

Paul W. Beaven, Columbia '20, and Clarence B. Bull, Harvard '32. Your Horoscope Page 8-E St. Petersburg Anna Maria Bradenton Clearwater Corey Causeway Cortez Dunedin St.

Joseph Sound Egmont Key Gandy Bridge, Hillsborough Gulfport Indian Rocks Johns Pass Pass-a-Grille Pinellas Point Safety Harbor 12:518 Sarasota Mullet Key Channel Skyway, Tarpon Springs, Anclote River Welch Withlacoochee Causeway River Sun Rises Sun Sets Moon Rises Moon Sets HIGH 60 LOW 29.88 STATION 30.30 70 Rain LOW Snow 29.77 70 COLD WARM FORECAST 80 For Daytime Sunday Figures Show High Temperatures Expected Pre. Pre. Temperatures Portland, Me. Sarasota 76 58 Richmond Savannah St. Louis Seattle .04 Alpena St.

San Antonio Petersburg Tampa Toronto 28 Albany, N.Y. 55 Amarillo San Diego Washington Asheville San Francisco Wilmington Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Birmingham Boise PENSACOLA Bismarck A TALLAHASSEE Boston Bradenton PANAMA Buffalo .02 CITY GAINESVILLE Burlington Cape Hatteras CROSS CITY DAYTONA BEACH Charleston, S.C. Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Zone Forecasts ORLANDO Clearwater Columbus Clear to partly cloudy and cool. High 62 to 68. LAKELAND Cleveland VERO BEACH Dallas Denver ..36 B-C: Fair and cooler.

High 65 ST. Des Moines to 70. Northeasterly winds 5 to Detroit Duluth 15 m.p.h. Fresno Fair and cooler. High 68 WEST Houston .04 Indianapolis to 74.

Northwest to north winds FORT Kansas Jacksonville .01 5 to 15 City m.p.h. Key West E-F-G: Fair and a little cooler. Knoxville High middle 70s. Northwest to Little Rock .03 MIA MI Los Angeles north winds 5 to 15 m.p.h. Louisville H-1: Fair.

High near 80. VariMemphis .02 Meridian able winds becoming north to Miami Milwaukee Beach northeast 8 to 15 m.p.h. Mpis, St. Paul Fair. High near 80.

Variable 004 Mobile winds becoming north to northMontgomery Montreal east 10 to 18 m.p.h. Nashville Fair. High near 80. Mostly New Orleans New York northeasterly winds 5 to 12 m.p.h. Norfolk Phoenix Pittsburgh 34 Philadelphia Tides For Sunday, Nov.

19 High Low High Low High Precipitation Table Precipitation 1961 January 2.23 February 3.01 March 2.10 April 2.91 May 3.41 June 3.20 July 8.61 August 10.81 September 5.82 October .29 November .14 December Totals 42.53 CITY HALL REPORT Andrews To Do A Lot Of Looking Before The Leap By CHARLES PATRICK Of The Times Staff The new face in City Hall is open and friendly, calm, confident, eager. But behind it is a man feeling his way. The old faces in City, Hall expect it will not take Lynn H. Andrews very long to find it. They want him to.

And that strange new spirit of cooperation stirring down the long corridors of City Hall even into the lofty chambers of City Council-may be the beginning of a try at teamwork. If it turns out to be true, it will be unprecedented. St. Petersburg is new to Andrews, but it should not be strange. He's faced the problems St.

Petersburg faces before and his record indicates he whipped them. One week out of San Antonio and three is spending most of his looking and listendays on his new job as city, manager, Andrews ing. Nobody expected him to do more at the beginning. Once he gets his bearings, though, there should be some action. But no big changes PATRICK immediately.

FRIDAY, THE MANAGER toured the building, ting employes (they liked him) and surprising some of those he had briefly encountered before by recalling their names. First, A General Cleanup FIRST ORDER: A general cleanup, new, neat look. Ragged maps off walls, plaster patching and painting. And the word "private" immediately chipped off all City Hall doors. "Nothing here is private anyway," said Andrews.

"This is a public NEXT JOB: A review of the floor plan for all city offices for better allocation of space and placement of those offices most used by the public on the ground floor. During the next two weeks, Andrews will be visiting all department "to see where they are and how they operate." And by Dec. 1-when dependable consultant Baynard E. Cook goes back into retirement -Andrews will be in business. That's also the day Danny Davidson, his administrative coordinator, and Bill Simpson, city budget director, arrive here for duty.

(They worked under Andrews in San Antonio.) Is It Neck, Fanny Or Shoulder? What kind of city manager, what kind of leader will Lynn Andrews be for St. Petersburg? Will he be a neck leader, a fanny leader or a shoulder leader? Those classifications of city manager types are outlined in a current national magazine for municipal officials. The neck leader makes recommendations on everything before the city council during public meetings, often delving into policy without prior discussion with the council. He settles controversial citizen groups prior to council meetings, makes Problems, appointments without consulting councilmen, gives them a good jolt now and then by letting them read major municipal developments in the paper and saws off all limbs after councilmen climb on. The fanny leader operates the city strictly by ear.

He acts only when told to act, does advance planning and seldom anticipates problems. His attitude: "Let council do all the thinking. If they want something done, they'll tell me." Seven thinkers and one doer can build a big backlog of things undone. The third type leads with his shoulder. He leads through the council.

He develops the management team through department heads and the council and he leads through direction. He pushes occasionally but seldom pulls, realizing that he has to stimulate action and desire in the city personnel and in the council. He builds a team on the philosophy of working with people and through the city council. Ross Windom had a thick neck, but a strong one; George Armes drew criticism for sitting, when he should have been standing and stepping. A clue to Andrews' classification may be in the authorship of the magazine article.

He's Steve Matthews, executive director of the Texas Municipal League--the man Andrews worked under and succeeded as city manager in San Antonio. Nortney Cox: Where To In '62? Next idea for Councilman Nortney P. Cox, the man who's created more color on council than anyone in recent years: Possible candidacy next November either for the Pinellas County Commission (he's in A. L. Anderson's district) or the Florida Legislature.

Cox says he hasn't made up his mind to run (his council term will not end until 1964), but is "giving i it some thought." If he decides to try, Cox (a Democrat), says he "probably" would run as an independent elected, would resign his seat on City Council. If it turns out to be the legislature, Cox says he'd like to push a bill to make all county elections non partisan a man could run on his personal record and not be helped or hurt by his party It's Vote Trading Time Councilmen were trading votes like crazy last Thursday on appointments to city boards. Mayor Herman Goldner, fresh from his "leadership" fight with other members Wednesday, "went along" with all appointments after council accepted the nomination of his law partner Tom Carney to the St. Petersburg Housing Authority. And Vice Mayor Eli Jenkins handed future appointment IOUs to a couple of other councilmen after they supported his nomination of Hans Lischka Jr.

to the housing board. Councilmen, generally, are following a line of "new faces, new figures" on all city boards--with the accent on youth and Mild Is Fine, But Drat It, Still No Rain ADVERTISEMENT FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS for the McCUTCHEON-TINMAN Florist PATRICK Yesterday's Temperatures St. Petersburg 76 57 Sarasota 76 58 Bradenton 76 50 Clearwater 74 56 3163 CENTRAL AVE. PHONE 7-3661 VIOLA LINDBLOOM Acacia Shop 2332-9th St. So.

All hours Phone 5-7774 SERVICE MEMBER, THE ORDER GOLDEN Announcements Daniel, Charles O. Mattox, John Spencer, George E. for information phone WILHELM 0 THURSTON Funeral Home, Inc. PETERSBURG Phone 7-8181 (St. Petersburg Times, Sunday, CARTER Oscar Leo Carter, 72, 126 16th Ave.

died Thursday, Nov. 16. 1961. He was a retired carpenter. Born in Lebanon, N.H., he came here three years ago from Hanover, N.Y, Mr.

Carter attended St. Mary's Catholic Church. Requiem Mass in St. Mary's Catholic Church, Tuesday, 8:30 a.m. Interment in Memorial Park Cemetery.

C. James Matthews in charge of Bolita (Continued from Page 1-B) St. Petersburg were Negroes, while the nine arrested in Tampa were white. Lopez, the alleged "banker," was arrested about 11 a.m. at his Tampa home, where vice squad agents seized account books and an adding machine.

Lopez was charged with conducting a lottery, aiding and assisting in the conduct of a lottery, possession of lottery paraphernalia, and possession of bolita. Also arrested in Tampa and charged with aiding and assisting the conduct of a lottery were Ralph Farmer, 33, Raymond Ramos, 22, Celestino Martinez, 42, Harry Mendez, 38, Angel Noda, 40, Alfredo Paso, 61, and Ralph and Alice Hernandez, both 37. DIRECT information will be filed in the case of all nine by the state attorney for Hillsborough County. Also seized in the Tampa raids were a 1951 station wagon and a 1952 sedan, which police said d. were used in the bolita operations.

The St. Petersburg vice squad spokesman summed up the significance of the arrests this way: "This cripples the bolita operation in both St. Petersburg and Tampa, and deals a staggering blow to bolita operations on the west coast of Florida." He estimated the organization grossed between $15,000 and 000 weekly. This would amount to upwards of $1,000,000 a year. The 10 week investigation which led to yesterday's arrests started in St.

Petersburg and led to Tampa, when it became a combined operation of both police departments. November 19, 1961 OBITUARIES 13-B Funeral Notices CURLEY Ward F. Curley, age husband of Leona J. Curley, passed away Thursday, November 16, in a local hospital. Resided at 6260 66th Avenue North, coming here nine years ago from Detroit, Michigan.

Also survived by son, Raymond Karns, St. Petersburg: one granddaughter, Friends may call at Rhodes West Chapel, 900 Forty-ninth Street North, where services will be conducted by the Reverend H. Paul McCormack, Monday afternoon. November 20 at 2:00 o'clock. Interment in Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery.

FERRY Thomas Pittman Ferry, 71, 780 56th St. died Friday. He was a retired advertising counselor for the Herald News, Passaic, N.J. Born in New York City, he came here five years ago from Clifton, N.J. Mr.

Ferry was a member of the Covenant Presbyterian Church. Funeral services will be held Monday, at 4:30 p.m., in the C. James Matthews Chapel, 2025-9th St. with the Reverend T. Raymond Allston officiating.

Interment later. Friends who wish may make contributions to the new building fund of the Covenant Presbyterian Church. GLASER Catherine 80, of 5769 Dartmouth Ave. died Thursday, November 16 in a local hospital. She was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey and moved here five years ago from New York City, She attended St.

Jude's Catholic Church. She is survived by a niece, Mrs. Alathea M. McGurn of St. Petersburg.

Friends may call this afternoon from 2 to 4 and this evening from 7 to 9 at the C. E. Prevatt Memorial Chapel, 801-59th St. N. Recitation of the Rosary will be this evening at 7:30 p.m.

Funeral Mass will be offered Monday at 8 a.m. in St. Jude's Catholic Church with Father Timothy J. Allman, celebrant. Interment in Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery, HARING Henry Abner, age 64, of 3027-6th St.

died Saturday. He moved here ten years ago from Pennsburg, Pa. He was carpenter by trade. Survived by his wife, Cora P. Haring.

Funeral services will be held Monday 3 p.m, at the Layton Williams Gulfport Memorial, 5601 Gilfport Blvd. So. Loyal Order of Moose officiating. Friends may call Sunday after 2 p.m. Interment later.

MERRITT John age 54, 4075 Park Pinellas Park, died Friday in a local hospital. Mr. Merritt was born in Mamaroneck, N.Y. He moved here two years ago from Lake Hopatcong, N.J. He was a retired hospital engineer and a member of the N.A.P.E.

New York No. 1. Surviving are his wife, E. Catherine, one son, John S. St.

Paul, one brother Kenneth Cos Cob, a sister Mrs. J. Wallace Clapp of Port Chester, N.Y. Funeral services will be Monday, Nov. 20th, at 2 p.m.

from the F. H. Osgood Chapel with the Rev. A. Waldo Farabee officiating.

Interment will be in Memorial Park. MORAN James 78, died Saturday at his residence, 10298-117th Terrace Largo. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Seminole Beach Memorial FUneral Home, 5100 Seminole Road with the Rev. John Gatewood, Jr. officiating.

Interment will follow in Memorial Park. The family will receive friends this afternoon and evening at the funerai home. OBENAUF Albert Myron Obenauf, 79, of 313 First Street North, husband of Mrs. Mabelle Herbster Obenauf, passed away Friday in a local hospital. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock at Fred H.

Kenfield Funeral Home, Central at 64th, the Reverend Henry V. Kahienberg, Pastor of Trinity Lutheran Church officiating. Entombment in Memorial Park. Art Center To Present Student Award Show LONGBOAT KEY The boat Key Art Center will present the Student Panel Award Show with an opening tea today from 2 to 5 p.m. Artists exhibiting are Holland Dorsey, Isabel White, Mabel Lutz, Lester Armstrong and Josiah P.

Huntton. Mrs. Dorsey has studied painting with several teachers in Indianapolis, including Helen Woods, and Stella Coler, and at the Art Colony in Brown County, with V. J. Cariani a Fred Rigley.

In Sarasota she continued her work with Helen Sawyer, in Bradenton with Eugene White and at present, is studying on Longboat Key with Marilyn Bendell, Her paintings have been accepted for exhibits in the Art League of Manatee County Gallery, the Sarasota Art Association Gallery and her painting titled "Bounty of Summer" won first award at the Longboat Key Art Center this past season. ISABEL WHITE, a native of Indiana, is a graduate of the Studio School of Advertising Art in Cincinnati and has studied at the Chicago Art Institute. Since coming to Florida she has studlied with Eugene White, as well as being a protege of Marilyn Bendell's for seven years. awards have come from Forti Wayne, Van Wert, Ohio; and Longboat Key Center. She has exhibited at Art League of Manatee County, Fort Wayne Art Van Wert the Hoosier Salon in Indiana and the Longboat Key Art Center.

Mabel Lutz did some art study in Indiana before coming to Florida and while here has studlied with Eugene White, Marilyn Bendell and recently with Robert McFarland. LESTER E. ARMSTRONG of Bradenton is a retired mechanical engineer. He has studied at the Manatee County Art League under Eugene White and Nike Parton, and at the Longboat Key Art Center with Marilyn Bendell. Josiah P.

Huntoon had his training at the Longboat Key Art Center under Charles McCurry. He started painting in 1959 and won first award in the 1960 Student Show and won second award in the 1961 Student Show. The Art Center tea chairman, Mrs. Howard Barber, said the hostesses today will be Mrs. Emily Nash Smith chairman; Mrs.

Eva Bauer, Mrs. Charles D. Lutz, Mrs. George Donnell, Mrs. Genevieve Van Atta, and Mrs.

Warren Seelye. Single and com. panion crypts sonably priced. No carrying charges for time payments. Liberal discounts purchase.

for cash 8000 No representative 131st St. No. Nonsectarian will call except Phone or write for descriptive folder. at your request. THE GARDEN SANCTUARY MAUSOLEUM PARK 300 3rd Ave.

St. Petersburg, Florida Phone: 7-8431 OSBORN Rosary service for Dr. Alexander W. Osborn, 87, of 646 4th Ave. who passed away Friday, will be held at 7:30 p.m.

today at The Palms Memorial. Funeral mass at St. Mary's Catholic Church at 8:30 a.m. Monday with the R1. Rev.

P. J. Donohoe, Celebrant, Interment in Memorial Park where the Spanish American War erans, General Leonard Wood Camp. will conduct graveside service. A five of Cannelton, Dr.

Osborn came from Chicago 21 years ago. He was a member of the Roman Catholic Church. Chaplain of General Leonard Wood Camp, Spanish American War Veterans; past commander in chief of the Naval and Military Order of the Spanish American War Veterans, and past commander VFW Post 976 at Chicago; member L. M. Tate Post 39 VFW and American Legion Post 14, St.

Petersburg. Survived by 2 daughters. Mrs. Vera Ackerson and Mrs. Jean Beasley, both of St.

Petersburg; 2 grandchildren, 5 great grandchildren, and 2 great great grandchildren. PAYZANT Funeral service for Charles Payzant, 87, of 2230 53rd Street Gulfport, who passed away Friday, will be held at 2 p.m Monday at The Palms Memorial with the Reverend Denver C. Pickins officiating. Inter. ment will be later.

A native of Boston, Mr. Payzant came here from Lynnfield, Mass. 9 years ago. He was a retired salesman, with the Adams Co. ot Boston for 45 years.

and member and former deacon of the Lynnfield Congregational Church, Survived by his wife, Ida 2 daughters, Mrs. Evans W. Lewis, Gulfport, and Mrs. Walter E. Wilkinson of Lynnfield, 2 sons, George T.

and Francis both of Lynnfield, 10 children and 10 great grandchildren; 2 brothers. Samuel of El Monte, and Phillip W. of Falmouth, Nova Scotia. POTTER Florence B. Potter, age 87, passed away Wednesday, November 15 in a local nursing home.

She resided at 833-3rd Street North, coming here thirty-five years ago from Oneida, New York. There are no known close survivors. Friends may call at Rhodes East Chapel, 635 Fourth Street North, where services will be conducted by the Reverend James S. Dickson, day morning, November 20 at 11:00 o'clock. Interment will follow in Royal Palm Cemetery.

SCHULTZ George F. Schultz of 3930 50th Ave. No. died Thursday, ber 16th at the age of 70 years. Mr.

Schultz who was born in Chicago, moved to St. Petersburg in November, 1951. He was a retired accountant ing been employed by the Linde sion of Union Carbide Corporation for 35 years prior to his retirement. He was a member of Prospect Lodge No. 957 A.F.&A.M.

of Chicago, a member of Prospect Low Twelve Club, a life member of The Art Institute of cago, and a member of Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. burg. Surviving are his wife, Gertrude Gilley Schultz; a daughter, Mrs. Almira Freebus of Chicago: a son, George F. Schultz Jr.

of Brookfield, a sister, Mrs. Lillian Corny of Chicago; two grandsons and two granddaughters. Friends may call at Rhodes East Chapel, 635 4th St. where services will be held Sunday afternoon, ber 19th at 2:00 o'clock with the Reverend Martin W. Rupprecht officiating, Interment will be later in Royal Palm Cemetery.

SPENCER Stanley age 75, of 6501 Hobson St. N.E., passed away at the residence Wednesday, Nov. 15th. He was native of Philadelphia, living here nine years from Texas. He was a retired chief purser of the Merchant Marines.

He is survived by one daughter Mrs. Jane Worstall, of Doylestown, Pa, one brother, Alex of Drexel Hill, Pa. also surviving two children. Funeral services will be Monday, at 11 a.m. from the F.

H. OsgoodChapel, with the Rev. Booker C. Short officiating. Interment will be at a later date.

SUTHERLAND Mrs. Louisa F. Sutherland, 80, of 2947-40th Ave. died Wednesday, Nov. 15, 1961.

Born in don, England, moved here 8 years ago from Jacksonville, Fla. She was member of the Presbyterian Church, and OES, Jacksonville. She is survived by her husband, Colin, and a sister, Mrs. Rosina, Deadman, Canada. neral services will be held Monday, 10 a.m., in the Anderson McQueen Chapel, 2201-9th St.

with the Reverend Martin W. Rupprecht official- ing. IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of Mrs. Anna Thurner, who passed away Nov. 16, 1956.

Martin Thurner, husband; Ted Thurner, son, Elsa Atkinson, daughter, ADVERTISEMENT hear better with new This girl is letting you in on a secret her "Sonotone hearing aid. It's Sonotone's smallest, lightest ever weighs only of an ounce. It's a wisp of a hearing aid worn entirely at the ear. Women hide it with curl, men just tuck it in place. If you have trouble understanding others, make a hearing date with OF ST.

PETERSBURG DANA S. GREENLAW MANAGER 203 FIFTH ST. NORTH PHONE 7-5971 It was back to normal for the Suncoast yesterday, after Friday's welcome dribble of rain, and the final score of the Mirror Lake rain gauge stood at zero. The cool, dry air that had moved into Florida Friday brought St. Petersburg's night temperatures into the low 50s, rising to a high of 76 at 1 p.m.

Little change in temperature was looked for today, the fall weather is expected to continue mild through Tuesday. Mild conditions prevailed across the southern states, with temperatures in the 60s in the arid Southwest, Southern Texas, the Gulf Coast and much of Georgia. At the southern end of Florida, they neared the 80 degree mark. Cold air continued to cover the mid section of the nation yesterday, but precipitation was confined mainly to the center, the northeast and northwest corners. Over the center of the country, a band of light snow spread.

Hospital Surgical Insurance For People 85 Years or Under Pays Regardless of Other Insurance MEN WOMEN 18-54 18-45 Incl. $175 month MEN WOMEN 66-85 66-85 $4,00 Incl. month MEN 55-65 $230 CHILDREN UNDER WOMEN 46-55 Incl. month 18 YEARS OLD month NO DUES OR ASSESSMENTS Call HE 6-9265 or mail coupon if you live out of town FLORIDA HEALTH AGENCY, INC. WORLD 4305 74th Ave.

Pinellas Park, Fla. PLEASE SEND ME FREE INFORMATION about this low cost plan. WIDE Name Age COVERAGE Address City Zone State 1960 Aver. Record 1.48 2.44 10.39 $48 4.72 2.94 10.93 4.75 3.18 11.33 6.16 2.86 9.09 1.26 2.23 10.64 4.25 6.13 16.88 45 16.46 8.94 18.97 8.46 9.16 21.65 8.45 8.52 18.60 4.11 3.49 14.12 52 .02 1.78 6.85 1.15 2.06 6.67 30 61.45.

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