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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 1

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

"'WW 3 fc I ca "i 1 Re. U.S. PatO. 8 1958. Globe Newspaper Co.

1 fu (oi Lru XL i 1 vy ril' I 5 4 f( VA rft fores aaa Uy A f)l 1 I i BOSTON DAILY GLOBE FRIDAY, DEC. 5, 1958 CLXXIV NO. 158 44 PAGES-FIVE CENTS IN TONIGHT'S GLOBE fa 1 CLEARING Colder Tonight Fair, Cold Saturday (Full report on Page 22.) Bridge ....42 Classified 34-37 Comics ....42 Crane 3 Problem ...42 Hadio-TV ..43 Society ....27 Sports MTA 1A Star Gazer .43 Theaters Deaths 33 Editorial ...24 Financial ..32 Twistagram 10 Women's 26, 27 Ordered to a I Thousands at Rites for School Dead Someone Stepped on Toe Grace Flips Lid Style In Royal mmmmm: WM'mrrn A J'Jft 'dub x'd JJ Li '-'J UlitrJ H.H -VV, i pri ta -C -j? 1 1 iCHEtRl Mother Plea To Globe Santa 'Son Loves World By BERNICE KEANE Boys will be they will also be men. These thoughts prompted a member of the Big Brother organization to corroborate the letter of a desperate mother. Edward, a 7-year-old, does not have a father around to act as his second in the daily battles of life but he does have a man in his corner.

Edward's champion wrote the following letter to tell why Globe Santa should add Edward to his list: Dear Santa: I am Edward's Big Brother, designated to that position by the Big Brother Organization e-f Boston. I take Edward out one afternoon a week as is our policy. But due to the fact that I have a family of my own and the responsibility of such, I can't do what I would like for Edward, GLOBE SANTA Page Thirty-eight Boy, 12, Held In Attempt to Fre School A 12-year-old East Boston boy, who police say, attempted to set fire to the Hugh Roe O'Donnell grammar school. Trenton East Boston, was arrested today. Police were called when Francis Crowley, custodian, found a door and casing on the Lexington East Boston, side of the Girls' room, scorched and a can of lighter fluid nearby.

BOY HELD Page Thirty-three For the BEST GUIDE to WINTER VACATION PLEASURES See The Boston Globe WINTER VACATION PREVIEW In the Sunday Globe MM I-'- 'w I V' fBoston Globe-UFI Telephotol BEFORE GRACE GOT HUFFY A short time after this photo was made she suddenly rushed from ballroom floor in New York. 7-Yr. Period Involves His Textile Pills Newton industrialist Bernard Goldfine was ordered today to produce certain books and records for Federal tax investiga tors by noon Monday, or face a possible jail sentence. Federal Judge Charles E. Wyzanski Jr.

told counsel for the textile and real estate millionaire and Goldfine's secretary, Mildred Paperman, that the records must be produced under penalty of "civil and criminal contempt of court. In another proceeding to day, a minority stockholders' suit against Goldnnes real estate firms, he was given an extension until 5 p.m. Tuesday to file a notarized list of certified 'and cashiers' checks purchased since 1947. His counsel in this case, Atty. Samuel Sears and Laurence R.

Cohen, said the checks total $191,000, of which 000 in certified checks was mainly for property taxes in Boston and Revere, and 000 was in cashiers' checks, including a $1000 donation to the Massachusetts Jefferson Day dinner. The tax case came up ear lier. Today's rulinr involved Federal back taxes over a seven-year period, allegedly owed by Goldfine's textile firms, which have some 2000 employees in New England. Judge Wyzanski ordered Lebanon Mills, of Lebanon, N.H., to produce all books and records from 1952 to 1957, and Lebandale Mills, also of Leb anon, to furnish all books and records for 1956 and 1957. George Mabbett Sons of Plymouth, was or dered to produce them for 1955, 1956 and 1957, the judge commenting that no returns had been filed by that firm "that could have been audited." GOLDFINE Page Eighteen Woman, 3 Men Set for Atlantic Balloon Flight SANTA CRUZE De TENE-RIFEj Canary Islands, Dec.

5 (AP) Four intrepid Britons, one of them a woman, hope to set off from the Canary Islands tomorrow night on a perilous flight across the Atlantic in a balloon. The four hope to gather information on weather conditions and wind currents during a 3000-mile attempt to reach Barbados, in the British West Indies. ATLANTIC Page Twenty-one rose would also gain three (to and from Boston). Train service would be abolished at 52 stations in alL Seventeen of these would be on the three branch lines for which discontinuance is asked. These are between: 1.

Marblehead and Swamp-scott. 2. Wakefield Junction and Dan vers. 3. Hudson and Boston.

The Woburn and Reading stations would also be moved a fraction of a mile from their present locations. A railroad official a i NEW YORK, Dec. 5 (AP) Princess Grace of Monaco gave high society a surprise sample ol royal displeasure last night with abrupt flight om the dance floor. Caught in a milling crush of spectators, guards and photographers at a ball in her honor, the former movie star made her sudden exit with lips set, chin high, and trailing a slightly bewildered escort, her husband, Prince Rainier III of Monaco. A spokesman at the royal box explained moments later v.

i ii 8 si 1 $5 If I li i 5. ft 9 in i i 1 In that the princess had found the throng just too much when someone stepped upon her white satin slipper. The royal wrath subsided swiftly, however, and the girl from Philadelphia remained for the midnight "Beauty and the Beasts" tableaux, and presided at the drawing of grand prizes for lucky ticket holders. But although she smiled, she danced no more. GRACE FLIPS Page Six leaders of the building trades group numbering some 30,000 won the inclusion of an amendment by which their jurisdiction in plant renova- tions and expansions would be fully recognized and re-, spected by the merged organi- zation.

The building trades group had insisted that the demarcation line between their work and that be done by former C.I.O. employees had not been clearly defined. Judge Deady of the Greater Boston Building Trades Council told the assemblage," at the Hotel Somerset, "unity is what we want it's the we're concerned with." He said that the building trades group had been contin- dally repudiated on the na- tional level, and that "if this repudiation is to be the hallmark of new organization, then let me say to hell with your STATE A. FX. Page Thirty-thret NEW LICENSE PI I KEEP CLEN UftlttC I AS n-jirt Hi LICENSE PLAtt fRAWSS Vi-.

Wi4 -A tf Building Trades Object A.F.L. Set for Merger After Stormy Session FILL NEWSPAPER. FRONT (AP Wirephoto) PAGE Gansett Results DAILY DOUBLE Nvy Pledge and Little HathT paid M.8I. FIRST $2200, claiming S-year-olds. 6 furlongs.

Navy PtedKe- (V Spinalet 8.00 3 20 J.4n Eddie (Davernl 4.60 3.2n Charm Song (Fisherl. 3 20 Time, 1.14 2-5. Maid of Gold. Wind'n Wave, One Rou. Jean Batou, Farmer's Daughter.

Grecian Gold. Lot O'Fight. Noble Sis. Jeannie O. also ran.

UANSETT Page Forty 900 Commuters Affeited B. M. Seeks to Drop 78 Trains, 27 Stops PHOTOS CHICAGO, Dec. 5 (AP)- The flames which killed 87 children and three nuns in Chicago's worst school fire, a bishop said in a funeral sermon today, also kindled unsurpassed charity. Twenty-seven of the young victims were buried after a mass funeral held in a neighborhood armory.

Most Rev. Raymond P. Hil-linger, auxiliary bishop of Chicago, told some 6000 persons at the service: "It would be folly to minimize the fire of last Monday. It was ghastly. It was hideous.

ONE CALL SELLS ALL Call today and solve your classified advertising selling problems The AVenue for results is AVenus 2-1500 OF 70 FIRE VICTIMS But God will good from the draw untold purgatory of this week. "The three sisters and the children died so that the char ity of Christ may continue in our lives always," he said. "These little ones have done much to put Christ back into Christmas. "We have seen charity unsurpassed in the heroic deeds of those who helped the sufferers." Before a temporary altar in Northwest Armory where the funeral was held lay the caskets of 27 victims in a double row. vv.

By MICHAEL BEATRICE Delegates to the Massachusetts Federation of Labor convention cleared the way today for their scheduled merger tomorrow with the state C.I.O. Council, but only after a stormy battle waged by members of the building trades workers. The merger constitution finally was approved after that about 6 percent of the railroad's 35,000 present daily commuters or about 900 would be "affected" by the moves. Most of these are "suburban riders." In its petition, the noted that its losses for the first 10 months of 1958 totaled $3.4 million. The official estimated potential savings of about from the changes.

The road said that technically, it was, adding" 64 trains as a partial offset to the 78 being dropped. B. M. CUTS Page Seven BOSTON GLOBE DIRECTORY The group rite for 27 of the 87 youngsters who perished in the fire at Our Lady of the Angels School Monday was as rare as it was impressive. No simila- funeral has taken place in this city in recent decades, at least.

CHICAGO FIRE Page Twenty-one Eddie EscoYts Liz to Dinner As Debbie Files EEVERLY HILLS, Dec. 5 (UPD Singer Eddie Fisher escorted raven haired actress Elizabeth Taylor to Mike Romanoff's swank restaurant for a champagne and caviar dinner last night only hours after Debbie Reynolds filed for divorce. It was the first public date the singer has had with Miss Taylor since his public dates with her in New York last September which led to the breakup of his marriage. FISHER Page Six k'UKIf 'IV't'llijMf OTl' "44 The Boston Maine Railroad today sought permission to abandon service on three branch passenger lines, and abandon 29 other little-used stations. The railroad said 900 commuters would be affected, The railroad's 30-page petition with the Department of Public Utilities, the longest it has ever filed, asked to abolish 78 trains, and 27 "stops" made by some trains.

But in a reshuffling of service, a few stations, such as Reading, would actually gain (three more to Boston). Mel- SKI THIS WEEKEND i CRANM3RE and WILDCAT For 'reservations telephone EASTERN SLOPE INN Has your family visited The Globe? Bring your family for a four of America's most modern newspaper plant daily from 9 A.M-4:I5 P.M. Groups should call for a reservation. S-8000 DOWNTOWN OFFISE Us The Globe's Downtown Office at 319 Washington St. for your Globe business For a Treat! Take HER to the KING PHILIP THit Siiurdiy Nil JESSE SMITH A HIS ORCHESTRA EV 4-31 11, WRENTHAr.

MftSS. BOSTON Shopping Hub of New England The Globe All-Scholastic Football Team will be announced In Ths Sunday Globt SporH Section V- iri.jii Mfflft fa. 4.

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Pages Available:
4,496,022
Years Available:
1872-2024