Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Evening Independent from Massillon, Ohio • Page 12

Location:
Massillon, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MONDAY, MARCH 29, THE EVENING INDEPENDENT, MASSttLON, OHIO Senator Sees -POLITICS- lOhio River's Young Makes jLocks Pictured Appeal For Near Collapse A A Aliirt Rigid Props By JACK BELL WASHINGTON, (AP) AKRON (AP) Ohio river locks and dams, started 40 years ago, have deteriorated so badly they imperil the industrial growth of the area, the army's chief engineer says. Maj. Gen. Samuel D. Strugis, sev- col Sen.

Young (R-ND) predicted speaking at a weekend con- loday that "there won't be a vention of the Ohio Society of Pro- single Republican or Demo- fessional Engineers, warned 1 4 -fvnm eral locks on the rwer Ca crat elected to congiess fiom jlapse day; and such a ihe midwest next November i lapse halt river traffic for who stands for flexible farmj as rauc as a year. price supports." Young, "a member of the senate! "MODERNIZATION of the Ohio agriculture committee, said in dn river waterway is an undertaking interview if Republicans want of the highest priority, yanking in sell a farm program to the voters, urgency with construction of the they had better get behind his! St. Lawrence seaway itself," he de- proposal to retain rigid price sup-jelared. ports on major Held crops at 90 He added both the seaway and per cent of parity. the Ohio river "are linked not so imuch physically as by their inter- PRESIDENT EISENHOWER hasjlockin indispensability to the eco- pdvocated flexible supports rang-jnomic life and growth of this re- ing from 75 to 90 per cent butjgion and of the nation." Young said he is convinced that since World War II, i more than the farmers themselves don't want 2,500 factories have gone up in the such a program.

valley, which is becoming a major If what he believes is true, the center of atomic development, the North Dakota senator said, he general stated. would have to take issue with mid- western Republican leaders who came to the conclusion at a meeting in Omaha, that "if we can get out the farm vote will the congressional elections." "The congressional elections are going to be settled on the basis of individual districts, so far as the house members are concerned, and on a state basis for senators," Young said. "Each man is going to have to stand on his record and'there may be no national trend." However, Young's views apparently are not shared by some of his midwestern colleagues. Sen. Ferguson of Michigan, chairman of the GOP policy committee, said in a CBS radio broad-, cast yesterday that his mail indicates Michigan farmers favor the administration plan 2-1.

SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE Benson said yesterday he thinks the program he arid the president advocate is gaining approval of farmers generally and of congress. In response to a question on an NBC television program, he said congress passes a bill to continue the present high rigid supports, he thinks Eisenhower would veto it "in the interest of the farmer and of the country." Benson also denied that he plans any revision in his directive lowering price supports on dairy products from 90 to 75 per cent of parity effective Thursday. Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis) had said Friday that "some people" in the agriculture department assured him A 20-year project proposed by the army would replace the river's 46 locks and dams with 21, he said, and the first three projects should be "New Cumberland -near Pittsburgh. Markland near Cincinnati and Greenup near the Ashland- Huntington area.

"Along with these, we want; "to build Hildebrand dam on the Mp- nongahela, one of the busiest rivers in the world, where the navigation works are in about the same precarious condition as those on the main stream of the Ohio. "And; although it does not have quite as high priority, we also want to get to work on the Allegheny dam on the'headwaters of the Allegheny river." they expected change. some last-minute (Continued from Page One) Smith called them off temporarily when he received a call.from Dr. Clunk -Saturday morning, stating that he would return to Massillon early this week. AS A RESULT of the postponement, the possibility of holding spring practice became quite 'remote.

Football gear readied for the workouts in case the board decided -'after its interviews to hire a local coach. Schools are permitted a month of, spring practice but it must be completed by April 24. Practice would have tn start today in order to get in the four weeks of training. Among other coaches who may be called for interviews when they are resumed by the board of education are I Bill Kidd, New Philadelphia high school coach, and Bud Bucher of i Lisbon. Adlai Faces X-Rays Today DURHAM, N.

C. hospital specialists planned X-ray examinations today for ailing Adlai Stevenson, the 1952 Democratic presidental candidate. Stevenson was admitted to the Teenagers (Continued from Page One) off the streets at late hours. The juvenile officer reprimanded the parents of four youths Saturday afternoon in what he earlier called a case of "clear-cut parental delinquency." They were the parents of the boys who were taken to the detention home earlier Saturday. THE FOUR WERE detained after displaying "arrogance and con-! hospital last night for treatment tempt" for police officers who ap- of a kidney ailment.

Dr. R. M. prehended them, Kreiger related. McMillan of Southern Pines, who 5 'Dangerous' Convicts Overpower ST.

PAUL, (AP) Roadblocks were set. up in Minnesota and neafby Wisconsin today as highway patrolmen and sheriff's officers sought five prisoners who fled the Ramsey county jail here after overpowering two jailers. Late yesterday police received a report that the car taken by the escapees had been seen a few miles north of here. -However, search failed to locate it. Officers said the five men were considered dangerous.

One of them, Murl Russell Jarvis, 29, Richmond, was to stand trial shortly on a charge of robbing, the First National bank of Cannon Falls, of $101. He also was accused of a Bondurant, Iowa, bank robbery and a holdup of a grocery store in Hasting, Minn. ARLAND GERBERDING, 32, Madelia, was convicted last week on first-degree robbery charg-. es in i St. Paul bar holdup.

His partner, Donald Matthews, 30, St. Paul, was to be tried this week for the', same holdup. The other escapees were Bruce M. Brown, 26, Minneapolis, charged with using the mails to Terrance R. Farrell, 20, Dauphin, Canada, accused of some 40 service station holdups in the Twin Cities.

Patrick Kelly, 42, "inside jailer," said the break occurred.yesterday morning after Gerberdinf threatened him with a razor blade fastened to of wood. -Kelly said he Was then' knocked to the floor. The other Shuck, 53, entered the'cell area and the improvised weapon was turned on him. Shuck's keys were taken, the'jailers were-locked in the cell area and the five prisoners dashed away. The escape was not discovered until a matron the floor above heard the jailers' shouts 15 minutes later.

(Continued from Page One) At 11:45 a. m. his aide, Maj. Ismail Farid, said Naguib had recovered and breakfast. had eaten a light Kreiger became incensed later Saturday morning, eight hours after the boys were picked up, not one parent had called either his office or police to find out why the boys had not returned home.

At the afternoon conference the parents were instructed to see accompanied him to the.hospital, said his patient was "very, comfortable" last night and "we feel certain that he is going to be all right." Dr. McMillan recommended that Stevenson enter the hospital for a checkup and further treatment when the kidney ailment that first 'the second successive day, swarms of well-organized demonstrators roamed Ciirn streets to the presidential palace, shouting for continuation of the military regime than a return to parliamentary government. Similar demonstrations were, re ported from Alexandria. Business.activity gradually came standstill.in Cairo as a transport which, started Saturday spread, to almost all other fields of work. younger officers of the nil ing Revolutionary Council appeared to gaining a new lease on power an aide to Naguib told reporters last night Na'guib and th council had.

"agreed in principle that the council" would remain in office "to comply, with the-will the people." NAGUIB FOUR days ago ha forced the council to agree to elec tion this 'summer of a constitueri assembly and the disbanding of the council. Young officer supporter of the revolution a regim promptly threatened a new revol against what they asserted would be a return of corrupt politician they had forced out of power with Farouk. Despite the reported agreement the long meetings of Naguib, hi chief opponent, Lt. Col. Gajnal Ab del Nasser, the vice premier, arid the other members of the counci and-cabinet continued today almos without pause as they disputed jus how far they would reverse the re turn to parliamentary governmeri promised last week.

An.informant indicated the coun cil was thinking now in terms o. an elected constituent assembly to meet July 24 but with the Revolu tionary Council continuing in of Criticism Of Italy Denied By Mrs. Luce ROME. S. Ambassador Clare Boothe Luce has fired back a flat denial to a magazine report that she criticized Italy's government in a speech to Washington newsmen.

After publication of the report, 35 far leftist senators demanded that she be ousted from the. country. Her statement, terming the account of the purported speech, a 'fabrication pure and simple," was issued coiricidentally with a report from Washington that she had urgently requested President Eisenhower to send Vice President Nixon on a brief goodwill tour of Italy to combat Communist propaganda. MRS. LUCE, ia Paris to confer with U.

S. anj NA'TO officials, declined to comment on this report. It said she had recommended the Nixon trip when she visited Washington in January but that Eisenhower had riot decided whether he" 'could spare Nixon from his duties in: Washington. The independent weekly "L'Eu- ropeo" had claimed last week that Mrs. Luce in a speech to a group of correspondents" in Washington Jan.

5 told them she had urged Italian leaders to crack down harder on communism. The article also quoted her as saying she had warned. ex-Premier Aleide de Gasperi that further Italian delays in ratifying the European army (EDC) treaty would result in a "big cut in the figures of American aid." Mrs. Luce in her statement, dictated by telephone from Fontainebleau, said her ramarks to the Washington newsmen were "simply friendly conversation over a dinner table" and "naturally, the talk turned on Italy." "But some of the topics cited in this misleading article did not come up at all in the Conversation; and those that did were discusssed from a point of view entirely different from that suggested by the article" she declared. that their sons attended school I troubled him two years ago began fice.

But Naguib and the counci classes regularly, Kreiger said. In addition to skipping classes, the four had.been in trouble on other occasions for violating the curfew and for careless driving, the juvenile officer said. to cause pain yesterday. Stevenson was vacationing with Mr. and Mrs.

Ernest L. Ives, his brother-in-law and sister, at their Southern Pines farm. He is scheduled to deliver a major address in At least two of the boys will i Charlotte Friday, lose their driving rights temporarily as a result of the case, Kreig- reported. Plans Banquet ANOTHER WEKEND case involving teen-agers resultedi REENVILLE-Onc of Ameri- in two boys and then- ca being ordered to appear at Kreig- er's office Wednesday at 1 p. m.

Police said a merchant policeman nabbed the pair, 14 and 15 years old, after they were spotted Sunday night tampering with a lock on a display case at the Meek-Scgner apparel shop, 40 Lincoln E. Kreiger and Patroman James Reed said the boys admitted trying to open the dispay case in order to steal shoes. The hoys were released to their parents pending the hearing Wednesday. LENTEN SERVICE The Rev. Clyde A.

Miller will base his Lenten message on "The Doubt of Man," Wednesday evening at 7:30 at the midweek service. This is the fifth in a series of sermons on the theme, "As God Man." The Junior choir will sing. Doing any painting at your house? Protect windowpanes, when painting a room, by coating each pane with a thick soap-and-water paste. When you've finished painting, the paint splatters will wash ofi easily with the soan. ditional opening day circus fans and press' dinner, will highlight festivities launching Ohio's home- based circus, Mills Bros, three ring circus, at its winter quarters community here Saturday, April 17.

And, to further this year's tour- opening gayety, there will be special birthday trimmings since 1954 marks the circus' 15th anniversary. Upwards of 500 circus fans from throughout the nation, along with civic and state officials, press and radio representatives, and members of clubs and civic organizations which will be sponsoring showings of the circus during the spring and summer, will attend the banquet. It will be held in the Greenville high school gymnasium following the initial matinee performance under the big top at the Darke county fairgrounds. Greenville Mayor Marion Perry and John Boyle of Cleveland, national'president of the Circus Fans Association of America, will be among featured speakers. The honey bee dies after it stings a person because it losses its stinser in the flesh.

5till had. to agree, this source said on whether the now-banned political parties would be allowed to revive, details of the assembly election arid the relationship that would he instituted between the council and the assembly. 2 Escape Injury In Plane CARROLLTON (AP) Two Reynoldsburg men escaped injury yesterday when their light private airplane crashed in a farm field thre miles northeast of nearby Magnolia. The state highway patrol said John Hazy, 26, pilot of the plane and William Eckman, 29, his pas senger, -were forced down on the farm of Carl R. Scherer of RD 1 Waynesburg, The men were on a crosscountry flight when they ran into heavy windstorms which swept the state.

The'patrol said a dislodged battery became entangled in a rudder cable, causing Hazy to lose control. HOTEL FIRE KILLS KANSAS CITY (AP) A fire swept through the top two floors of a small hotel near downtown Kansas City yesterday killing three persons. Five firemen were injured; DRESS DESIGNER DIES NEW Kiam prominent west coast dresir designer, died here yesterday at the Ritz Tower hotel, a hotel spokesman siid. No; other details were Nine Jordan Attack JERUSALEM, Jordan Section (AP) A Jordan spokesman charged today that Israel had organized attack at midnight on a Jordan village two miles west of Bethlehem. First reports said nine Arab troops were killed, and 16 wounded.

The spokesman, Maj. Mohammed Izhaq, senior Jordan military delegate to the U. N. Mixed Armistice Commission, said the Israelis also demolished some, houses then withdrew to Israel after an hour. Izhaq attack was made on the village of Nahalin the section of Palestine occupied by- Jordan since the 1948 war with Israel.

Three Brothers Held In Thefts COLUMBUS. Three brothers, one of them hospitalized with bullet wounds, were held for investigation today-after two -business places near Chillicoth.e were ransacked of money and liquor. Held under police guard in University hospital is Smith Thacker, 22, of Columbus. Booked for investigation of burglary were the two other brothers, Cecil, 32, of Columbus, and Robert, 19, of Wheelersburg, W. Va.

Ross county sheriff's deputies Marty Eblin and John Corcoran said the Gold Key, a tavern, and the Hi Buddy Inn, both on U. S. 23 about six miles south of Chilli cothe, were ransacked about 3 a. m. today.

Since a whale has no vocal organs it cannot make a sound from its throat. Laborers In Five-County Area Strike MANSFIELD (AP) Picket lines were being set. up by construction workers in a five- county area. The strike has stopped production on a' five million dollar warehouse at Wilkins air force base in Shelby and six schools in Richland and Ashland counties. Local 1216 of the International Hodcarriers and Common Laborers of America AFL, called the strike after rejecting a new contract offer by' the Northcentral Ohio association.

Some 200 workers are involved. COUNTIES AFFECTED are Richland, Morrow, Ashland, Knox and Crawford. Work was suspended also on sewage disposal plants at Shelby and Galion, on department stores and an apartment building in Mansfield, and jobs at Timken Roller. Bearing at Bucyrus, Westinghouse Mansfield, and the North Electric Co. at Galion.

The union asks a 17-cent an hour increase to S2.07 an hour and a 10-cent hourly bonus for certain specialized work. Union. Business Agent C. E. Garner said an hour is the prevailing wage in surrounding Ohio counties.

'Gray Market' In Placing Of Babies Probed HAMILTON. Jackson Bosch said today he is.in vestigating. a possible "gray market" in the' placing of babies in Butler county. Warren county director, gave Bosch complaints involving six separate cases. "SOME MOTHERS haven't been too careful in the placement of babies," Bosch said.

"Some times the parentage is the mothers place their" children with some married couple. Perhaps the couple pays the mother. Or the mother pays nothing for the child's living and feeding Then in two or three years, after the foster parents become fond of the child, the mother demands -her son or daughter." If evidence of law violation is uncovered, the grand jury will be asked to act later in the week, the prosecutor said. "So far as I know there has been no selling of 1 he said. "There's no 'black market' but there may be a 'gray' one-" State law provides all child-place ments for and girls under 2 years old must he supervised by welfare officials.

(Continued from Page One) Thomas Logan said $14 was taken from a stand in the living room, $1.25 from a cupboard and $6 from Haynes' wallet which he. left in his work clothes in the basement. Patrolmen Hohneck and Logan said entrance to the Chicago gro eery was gained through an un- locked'window. Hassan Hamit, the proprietor, said the following was Eight boxes of frozen chicken 100 pounds of ham hocks, 6( pounds sausage, 41 pounds oJ smoked meat, 60 pounds of spiced lunchmeat, 80 pounds of salt pork four boxes of cigars, 42 cans oj Cruit and vegetables, five dozen eggs, a leg of veal, 30 pounds of beef sirloin, two pork shoulders 20 pounds of bacon, 10 pounds ol cheese and a 10-pound carton oJ meat sauce. -Hamit established the loss at the officers said.

TWO CASES of theft of auto parts -were reported to police Sunday. Paul Mauger of 1205 Plymouth ave NE told Patrolman Krier that a fender skirt was taken car while it was parked in Postal pi SE. A spare tire was taken from the trunk of his auto sometime ngiht, 'Charles Stillwagner of 612 Cliff st NW reported. He said the car was parked in front of his residence. Man, apes and monkeys are believed-to be the only mammals who see color.

'30 Seconds Of HelV When Train Hits Burning Trestle STEILACOOM, (AP) In what the engineer called "30 seconds of hell," eight units of a 73-car Union Pacific railroad freight train plunged through a burning trestle into Puget -sound here yesterday. The only casualty was L. R. Pearson, a brakeman who suffered minor burns about the eyes as he braved flames to save three carloads of bellowing dattle. Union Pacific officials placed damage to tile trestle and to the cars at more than $300,000.

ENGINEER William Boyce said he was highballing along the waterside track toward Seattle, some 45 miles to the north, when he rounded a curve and saw flames billow- ng from the trestle. He applied the air but the heavily laden train couldn't be stopped before the three Diesel units and 19 cars ploughed through the flames. The next eight cars dropped through to the water at the trestle gave away. Four cars burned. The destroyed cars carried wax, tires, refrigerators and shoes.

The. cause of the fire was, not determined. Post Office Pay Raise Big Issue InCongress By NORMAN WALKER WASHINGTON, (AP) Congress, in its role as the nation's largest employer, seldom has had a-bigger fight on its hands than the present scrap over postal worker pay. Postmaster Gen. Arthur Summerfield is proposing a job reclassification plan estimated to cost 80 million dollars a year.

The present annual payroll runs more than two billion dollars. A number of postal worker unions, highly critical of Summerfield's proposals, are plugging for a straight $800 annual'raise for all the 500,000 postal employes, some of whom work part time, field says this would cost 350 The outcome is important. For whatever congress does for the postal employes it probably will do'for more than a million-other federal empoyes, also seeking a wage hike. Summer- BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS are employers that labor unions are trying to get a sizeable raise for government employes as wedge for pay boosts in industry. Summerfield is.

opposed to any general postal pay raise. He says most postal except supervisors, are well paid compared with similar jobs in industry. He says more attractive salaries for supervisors and postmasters are needed to attract high-type men. merfield's reclassnication plan, framed for him by a Chicago consulting firm, George Fry Associates, is designed to eliminate "inequities" without reducing any present employes' pay. 'Summerfield says would mean some kind of raise for.

four out. of five employes. Clerks and carriers, he says, would get an average a year. The postal worker unions are bitter about Summerfield's whole idea. In the first place, they, claim it was whipped up in three months by a fiehi staff of only eight say this made it impossible to do a real analysis t)f so big a business.

THE UNIONS SAY some workers would get as little as $10 a year raise under Summerfield's plan, with the big raises, some running several thousand dollars, going to postmasters. Using different figures from Summerfield's, the unions contend postal workers are lagging behind the-cost of living and, moreover, have demonstrated increased efficiency by handling constantly increasing amounts These some of Summerfield's arguments why the postal system needs a thorough job overhauling: There is no way now to pay a person acconling his duties. Stenographers, window clerks, accountants; draftsmen, purchasing agents are classified as clerks. All are now paid the same yet one is more skilled than another. Stenographers now employed would take no pay cut, but new ones would be hired at a lower rate.

Custodial employes would be hired at less. But the purchasing agent would get.a considerable pay increase no.w.'with opportunity for advancement. "WE BELIEVE the correction of result, in better work performance and greater efficiency," Summerfield told the house post office committee. "An inequitable salary, structure leads to frustration." labor groups say they are not opposed to reclassifyjng jobs but want a general first and a chance to help draft any plan for changing job titles and pay rates. The unions say Summerfield's plan would down-grade future em- ployes because in many cases workers would be hired at lower rates than now.

A major contention of the em- ploye organzations is that Summerfield's plan would make the postmaster'general an "almost absolute dictator." The unions he could continually change job titles and pay of workers. The report of, the consulting engineers to Summerfield also recommended changing the law to allow qualified supervisory personnel to be brought in' from outside the postal service. IT HAS BEEN traditional to fill supervisory jobs from the ranks of postal workers. The unions say the Summerfield plan would lay the postal service wide open to political patronage. "Postal employes have been forced to accept the system of political appointment of postmasters," said E.

C. Hallbeck, legislative representative of the AFL's National Federation of Post Office Clerks. "We know every grocery clerk or butcher with a political drag would come in at the top. It would simply be a political deal." Congress will have the last word in the big argument. 6 Tricycles For Polio Victim, 5 PROVIDENCE, R.

I. many persons helped Andy Charette, 5-year-old polio victim, when his tricycle was smashed by youthful vandals that he was able to help other polio victims. picture showing Andy and the smashed tricycle, which he needed to exercise his polio-ravaged muscles, was transmitted across, the country by Associated Press Wire- ahoto recently. He received his sixth tricycle yesterday. -All of them were gifts torn strangers, giving the to other twllo victimi.

Far (Continued -rom Page One) found admiration for the brave and resourceful fight.being waged by'troops from France, Viet Nam, and other parts of the French Union" in the battle now- raging for the key fortress Dien Bien Phu. -The president asked his message be conveyed to. the garrison commander, Col. Christian De Cas-, tries, whom he had already singled out for praise at his news conference Wednesday. THE PRESIDENT'S gesture underlined a defense department announcement it is sending 25 more B26 bombers.and other supplies to the defenders of Indochina.

A house foreign affairs subcommittee on Saturday declared that any Allied attempt to seek a truce in Indochina would mean "appeasement equivalent to an Indbchinese Munich." It called for accelerated U. S. military aid to the French and Indochinese and for continuing the conflict under the'United Nations as an international one a policy the.French have opposed. It said a grant of "complete independence" to the Indochinese was necessary to rally them. The congressional group also advocated maintaining opposition to recognition of Red China.

Dulles is expected to say tonight that the United States will react vigorously at places arid by means not disclosed against any direct intervention by Red Chinese troops in Indochina. (Continued-'from Page One) at Akron-Canton, reported Sunday's mean was 47, seven degrees above normal. The high was 56 at 2 pi m. Temperatures were on the downgrade throughout the central and eastern states today, the Associated Press reported. spectacular of the temperature drops was recorded in southwestern Kansas where the mercury plummeted 15 degrees in 15 minutes when the cold air arrived.

The plunge was from IS to 61. Snow was heaviest in Montana, hut falls up to eight inches also were reported in Iowa and there was drifting in some A thick screen of wind-driven flakes hit Chicago early today, making driving hazardous and forming a sticky blanket underfoot. The weight of spider webs is so light that one pound of-the finest French Claim 1,000 Rebels I Die In Clash By LARRY ALLEN HANOI, Indochina (AP) French Union forces broke out of their besieged fortress of Dien Bien Phu late yesterday and the high command said they killed 1,000 men of the Communist-led Viej- minh in a counterattack outside the fortress' fringes. French army headquarters announced French tanks, artillery arid infantry, under the fortress commander, Col. Christian de killed all Vietminh entrenched in two villages about two miles from the western line of the dusty plain's defenses.

IT WAS THE first major French counterattack since the Vietmiiih. launched their great mass assault on the key northwest Indochina outpost March 13. During three days of wave-on- wave infantry charges, the wither-; ing French fire killed an estimated 3,000 and wounded another The Vietminh pulled back to regroup, presumably for more mass assaults. Since then they have kept up artillery bombardments front the hills surrounding the plain, while French artillery and aircraft harassed the rebels in reply. The command said in the attack yesterday -heir own forces had only "light losses" of about 20 killed, and had killed "every Vietminh soldier" found in the lages of Ban Ong Pet and Ban Ban.

They claimed they had smashed a long string of Vietminh antiaircraft batteries which for two weeks, had been firing on the red cross- marked hospital planes with which the surrounded had tried to bring their wounded of Dien Bien Phu. (Continued from Page One) ing arose because the ship hid just come through the Suez Canal, where Egyptian-British tension Is high. The blue and white troop carrier was homeward bound from Kure, Japan, to Southhampton, England. She had stopped at Hong Kong, Singapore, Colombo, Aden and Port Said. Aboard were about 250 crewmen and- 1,268 passengers soldiers, sailors and airmen, with 277 women and children dependents.

Seventeen hospitalized soldiers -were. among those saved without mishap. A British aircraft carrier aada, two: destroyers sailed toward- 'Algiers ioday to bring the survivors home to England. CAPT. WILSON said that-moments after the blast on the Empire Windrush, flames spread out of control, and choking, acrid smoke billowed through the ship.

It was then, he said, that he passed the order for all hands to abandon ship. Four Dutch freighter Mentor, the British cargo vessel Socotra, the Italian tanker Taigete and the Norwegian freighter Hem quickly on the spot. Within two hours they had webs could reach around the world, picked up all the survivors. Start your collection with 3-PIECE PLACE SETTINGS OWLE Yon can set a table for FOUR for as little as and in solid, solid silver that will never need replacing. These three pieces are ample for today's informal service: knife, fork and teaspoon.

Three-piece settings from $15.55. Pieces may be added easily: salad- forks from $5.10, butter spreaders from $3.95,. soup spoons from $5.15. Our Payment Plan makes it easier still. JOIN OUR CLUB PLAN 137 LINCOLN WAY E..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Evening Independent Archive

Pages Available:
216,307
Years Available:
1930-1976