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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)

-I- 1 Ret U. 8. Pat Off Copyright. 1953 by Glob NwiMDr Co. BOSTON DAILY GLOBE "WEDNESDAY," JULY 20, 1933 1 VOL.

CLXVIIT NO. 20 40 PAGES FIVE CENTS rwn eJ fciimJ win hi bJ 1 i 7 ok ftl JU rnMAi fol As IN TONIGHTS GLOBE FAIR Tonight; Hot Thursday (Full reports en back page.) roblem Legislature liven More Time to Study Solons in Waltham Watch Co. Sold segregation Sale of 5 Tokens for 90c Resumed Friday's scheduled public hearing on the M. T. A proposal to increase fares was today postponed 48 days to Sept.

15 by the State Public Utilities Commission. Chairs Overturned as-Bailey, Powell Clash on School Issue i 'i -r' I yj I- vf W'f 'M i Vx TL i -v. i.v JLr rv 1 REP, CLEVELAND BAILEY WASHINGTON, July 20 (AP) Fists flew in a. name-calling At the same time the M.T.A. trustees announced the limitation of two tokens to a customer had been lifted.

Patrons may now buy live, tokens for 90 cents. The two per rider token restriction caused' long delays at station'change booths. P. U. Chairman David M.

Brackman said the postponement was voted to permit the State Legislature to consider pending legislation. Greater Boston members of the Legislature had sought a delay in a public hearing or granting the request for a jump in fares. The M.T.A. seeks to eliminate the 18-cent tokens, replacing it with a flat 20-cent fare on rapid transit and uppine the 13-cent local surface lines to 15 cents. Senator -Philip G.

Bowker, Brookline, chairman of the Legislative committee on Metropolitan Affairs, said committee will meet Monday in executive" session to determine if it will recommend enactment of two bills. They include a proposed reorganization of the M. T. A. board of trustees, banning present trustees on the grounds that they are not residents of the M.

T. A. area, and one, giving the M. T. A.

advisory board power of(veto over a proposed fare increase. Senator Bowker's committee has until Tuesday evening to file a report, i State Auditor Thomas J. Buckley declined to appear before the committee give details of an audit report on the M. T. and said he" doesn't think it will be ready for distribution until after the Bowker committee reports.

session of the House Education committee today at which members defeated, 17-10, a move to deny Federal school funds to states and local districts practicing racial segre: gation. 1, r' Members said tempers al- ready made edgy by the segre-' gation wrangle exploded in fisticuffs between Representative (Glohe Photo bv Joe 8nci STUDENTS WHO JUMPED INTO RIVER after seeing car go off Sorrow Drive. Left to right, Hervey Seley, Phil Blatzman, Seth Silverstein and Louis Villa. Although the driver was hurled from car before the vehicle hit the river, spectators thought there may have been other occupants. River, Man 1 1 Faces Team Dad Coaches -Tonight Sox George Susce Puts His Father on the Spot Burgess 30 Comics .30 Crane 8 Cross-Word fi Culbertson 8 Deaths 28 Editorial 22 Financial 34 Radio.TV..3(h 31 Serial Story Society :.19 Sports 24-27 Star Gazer ..35 Theatres .28, 20 Twistagram 8 Women's 18, 19 Fist Fight REP.

CLAYTON POWELL Powell, Negro pastor of New York city, and Representative Bailey, of West Virginia. According to accounts of the closed-door session, corroborated by. several committee sources, Bailey charged Powell with peeking to destroy Federal School aid legislation by insisting on an anti-segregation amendment. SCHOOLS Page Tuselte Incidentally, this marks the first time Ole' George will see his son in action in a major league game. Only the varying fates, of baseball prevented father and son from working together on the same major league ball club.

SUSCE Page ruenty-six RED SOX TODAY At Kansas City, 10 p.m. Radio, WHDH. IJ 1 one. I telephone. Row fi i 4- i A a Bellanca Aircraft Maker, Obtains Control LOS ANGELES, July 20 Bellanca Aircraft Corporation announced today that it has acquired controlling interest in Waltham -Watch Company.

Bellanca's president, Sydney L. Albert said his firm would sell Waltham's watch inventory to another United States watch manufacturer. (Officials of the Waltham Watch Co. said this afternoon that negotiations for the Aircraft Corp. to acquire a working control of Waltham are in progress, but have not been completed yet.

(Judge Jacob Kaplan, a director i. and spokesman for representatives of the company, said "no acquisition has yet occurred. Bellanca is not now in a position to dispose of the watch inventory of the Waltham' Watch Albert, who became president after his company, L. Albert merged with Bellanca last February, said Waltham was keeping its other divisions and was seeking additional business for these facilties. In addition to watches, Waltham produces speedometers and has department for manufacture of precision parts on special order.

WALTHAM Page Twelve Delay Looms Hn Signing Pact for Hub Garage It appeared today that the signing of a contract with Motor Park Inc. to construct a garage under Boston Common would be delayed indefinitely. William Stanley Parker, former chairman of the City Planning Board and Attyv Henry L. Shattuck, representing the Boston Common Society and other organizations asked for a 10-day postponement in order to give them an opportunity to study the specifications. They also insisted on a public hearing before any contract for the $11,000,000 project is signed.

The Park Commission went into executive session briefly and then adjourned until .2 p. m. Corporation Counsel William Baxter said that attorney James D. St Clair, counsel for the Motor Park, and engineers and architects for. the project would be present.

It was disclosed that the names of officers of Motor Park Inc. had not been turned over to the Park Commission and the State Department of Corporation and Taxation. GARAGE Page Twelve Rockingham Results DAILY DOUBLE War Mascot and Mental Imaie said $585.60. FIRST RACE S2200, claiming, 3- year-olds, 1 mile. Mascot.

108. Uwsiry .63.80 35 40 18.40 Head Mono, 11S, Walda. 13.80 8.20 scarlet snoes, W4. liinu Time. 1:39.

Telegramma. Burnt Tnroai. Baby Soot. Fair Cleo. Could Surprise.

Lariv Redbird. Exposed, Mr. Bum, Abeshus ran. ROCKINGHAM Pose Twenty-nix 2 Soldiers Seek Road to Peace Ike Takes a Hand to Placate Reds Big Four Hit Dead End on Two Issues GENEVA. Switzerland, July 20-(UP) President Eisenhower and the Soviet delegates to the Big Four summit conference agreed today that they have reached a dead end on the issues of German reunification and European security.

That decision was reached after the Soviets at today' brief summit session put forward a European security proposal that was unacceptable to the West. Yesterday's conference session results indicated East and West were unable to get together on German reunification. But in spite of these disappointments. President Eisenhower told his Russian oppo site numbers today that he believes the Soviets want peace as sincerely as the West wants Both sides, he said, must find a bridge to peace. BIG FOIR, Page Two Meet Alone arms, joint technicians in Hitler's defeat, sent the politicians away they ate and talked alone except for one interpreter each.

The Russian Marshal, attending the Big Four talks here as. Soviet Defense Minister, drove up to Eisenhower's villa smiling from the back seat of a big Rus-1 sion Zis limousine. He wore a light "gray uni- form. The lunch meeting lasted I about 2'3 hours. When it was Over, Zhukov was whisked away from the "Little White i House" in a large, closed Soviet car while a battery of long-j distance cameras recorded tha scene from the villa gates.

Three minutes later, Eisenhower drove out in his own car. He was on his way to in-spect an American atomic reactor set up outside the Palace of Nations as an exhibition during the "Atoms for Peace' conference here next month. 7.HIKOV Page Two BOSTON'S OLDEST AND LARGEST FEDERAL SAYINGS ASSOCIATION 9 oivtftf0 50 mankiin srettr 115 SUMMER STREET Car Dives in A 33-year-old Hyde Park man was flipped to safety as his car hurtled 50 feet, through the air into the Charles fiver early today. Witnesses said the sedan went off Storrow Drive like a jet rocket and submerged beneath wate-s near the Harvard Bridge in a matter of seconds. While hundreds of spectators lined Harvard Bridge at 1:30 a.

to watch divers search for his body, the fortunate driver was found dazed a short dis tance away by M. D. C. patrolman Edward Doherty. Thousands Sack 2 Perle Mesta Rioting Indo SAIGON.

South Viet. Nam, July 20 (AP) Thousands of anti Communist students sacked Saigon's No. 1 hotel today but Mrs. Perle, Mesta out-talked them when they took axes to her door. 1 The students were demonstrating against, the Indian-Polish Canadian Armistice Commission.

As some of the rioters started breaking into her second-floor, air-condi tioned suite in the Hotel Ma jestic, the former United States Minister to Luxembourg threw open the door and shouted: "No We are your friends! We are Americans!" i One of the student leaders who understood English formed a cordon in front of Mrs. Mes- ta's apartment and kept back the mob, who laid waste to the five-story, government-owned building. The rioting followed what bad been scheduled as-a peaceful demonstration by 30,000 students, refugees and government workers in front of the he Flipped Out When the vehicle went off the road, it turned upside down. It is believed Biggins iel head first lt0 sate when the door cnannoH Anon open. The car was traveling out of Boston toward Kenmore sq.

when it careened off Storrow Drive, snapped into the air as it hit a curbing and somersaulted over a grass strip into the water. Two Somerville brother. Harold, 33, and Martin Avedisian, 34, of 57 Marshall In a car directly behind the accident vehicle, stripped down and dived Into the water to rescue the driver they believed trapped underwater. RIVER Page Five Billionaire, $6, Dies 29 Years Before Time LISBON, Portugal, July 20 (UP) Billionaire oil man Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian, one of the world's richest men who vowed he would live to be 106, died today in the Hotel Aviz'at the age of 86. Gulbenkian had been bed-! ridden since December, 1953, with dropsy and complications in a small yellow-shuttered room in the hotel overlooking a tropical garden.

Only a few months ago. he hired a jet-passenger plane for a trip to Paris. 'Even the' rich mysteryman's closest friends had not beep, aware he was near death, so great was his love for solitude. Gulbenkian's son and heir, Nubar Gulbenkian, was visiting in London when his father died. BILLIONAIRE Page Five Outboard Explodes, Sinks, Youth Saved i 20 An unidentified youth was rescued from drowning today when his out board motor boat exploded and tank about 300 yards off shore i near the Pleasant Park Yacht Club this afternoon.

The youth1-was rescued by Henry past commodore of the yacht club, and Dave John- son. a member, who set out in their boat and pulled the victim in. The youth took off immerii- ately after being brought to shore. John J. "Biggins Jr.

of '1211 Faraday- st. Hyde Park, was rrofltorl ai Maarrmsetu Hon- I era! Hospital for a slight head shrk He was released. M.D.C. Sgt Lawrence W. Sullivan quoted Biggins as saying fell from the car as it went sailing through the air into the river.

"I can't tell you exactly what happened," Biggins told the sergeant. "All I know is that one minute my car went off the highway, and the next minute I was lying on the embankment. Evidently, the door came open and I fell out." Hotels Out-Talks China Youths CAUGHT IN SAIGON RIOT- Perle Mesta. city hall to denounce the Armistice Commission, the Geneva armistice signed a year ago, and Communism. RIOT Page Five LFL ONES MOM-TDMMVSMOTHEI? WILL 6E TAIK1NS TO SOU 6OON-F0R i i 1.

WHO'LL OLD GEORGE ROOT FOR? George Susce (right), Kansas City coach, won't be able to root aloud, that is for young George, (left) who pitches for Red Sox tonight against the A's. By JACK BARRY Is blood thicker thah water? "7 The oft-used proverb gets a major test' tonight in Kansas City when George Susce Red Sox rookie pitcher, makes his first appearance against the Kansas Ike, Zhukov GENEVA, July 20 (Reuters) Two soldiers Dwight Eisenhower of the United States and George Zhukov of Russia sat down for a man-to-man talk over lunch here today. The two old comrades-in- Hub Polio Cases Seen Falling Off by State Expert Dr. Roy Feemster, director of the State Division of Communicable diseases, said today the number of new polio cases in Boston appears to be diminishing. Although 27 new cases were reported to the state in the last 24 hours, he said, only II of them were from-Boston.

Past history indicates that Boston suffers most in July and August, he added, while the remainder of the state reaches its peaic in August and September. Of the cases most recently reported, three were in Brook-line, two in Brockton, two in Marshfielo. and one each in Bedford, Dedham, Fall River. Hampden, Lynn, Milford, Need-ham. Springfield and Weymouth.

So far this month there have been 151 cases reported as compared with 17 for the same period of last vear, POLIO Page Twelve IS TRADING HfGHI OXLf Ul WITH TMSIOI LEYEl IIDE Tm Cii Oi) tin Kr I hi Tn Tm Tim nut mm wmmim City Athletics. How come? -Well, George Susce father of the Red Sox pitching tyro, whose lifelong ambition was to see his son become a big leaguer, is coach of the Athletics. For- business reasons alone he should be rooting against his talented offspring. But it would take a mind-' reader to come close to figuring the feelings of George Senior. JULY SOON TO BE OVER Take advantage of the markdowri sales.

Read the Store Advertisements in the Globe every day. Going away on vacation? Arrange to have the Globe regularly. Home from vacation? Order your Globe for the Fall and Winter months. To buy, sell, hire or rent anything, use the Want and Classified columns of the TRUCK DRIVERS LOCAL 25 MEMBERS ELIGIBLE TOn VMENT Of FOURTH STRIKE DONATIONS WILL BE PAID ON THURSDAY, JULY 21, ONLY AT JOHN J. WILLIAMS HALL Shawmut Avt.

and Brookline St. fellows Tti H.Tlnr Ledtrr Namburi frem tno THL'BSDAT. JLLT El. Tlmje H.vinr Lrdter Nnmbert frm 4(HI fHXI THVRSDAT, IT SI. BMw.fs 1:00 m.

and ltft m. EACH MFMBER Ml'SI SHOW HIS IDF. VTIHCATION CHB A VD PECIIPT SHOWING PAVMFVT OP DVf.9 THlf JI'NE. tSS MEMBEBS WHO IID NOT BECCIVE fA VMENT LAST WEF.K MEMBEBS WBO HAVE HETt B.VEO TO WORK, Wrt-L IT TAIO THERE IS A TITTR TATMEKT THE EOLI-OWINO WEEK. m.T mvh he r.fin to collect.

ErtB'ARO f. JENKINS. rrillft Globe, Daily and Sunday. Classified advertisements may be ordered at the ified adver red at the Globe office or by THE YACHTSMAN HOTEL On tfef ra at an nit. KrthUk.nr panorama Vlnrrartf Fr ratti.

rvtaxAltnn, mtmmrhm vim Wn ft llr tan rlvat OnvRMnf-c rrh we)tia, Ftu 4UL Call Richmond 21300.

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Pages Available:
4,495,678
Years Available:
1872-2024