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The Evening Sun from Hanover, Pennsylvania • Page 1

Publication:
The Evening Suni
Location:
Hanover, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WEATHER Ocasional rain tonight a Thursday. nd 1 THE EVENING SUN VOL. 90. CIRCULATION OVER 22,000 JAYCEES SPONSOR NO March Of Dimes CampaigiT Here Will Continue Throughout Frank R. Houpt Chairman The March of Dimes Campaien for 1952 in Hanover and vicinity is again being sponsi'red by the Hanover Junior Chamber of Commerce.

The drive openert yesterday and will be directed by a twelve-man committee headed by Dr. Fiank R. Houpt. The campaign will end Jan. 31.

Over 5,000 of the community Will receive through the mail the familiar dime coin collectors. Members of the Boy Scout troops of Hanover are co-operating by distributing to business places the iron lung containers for display in prominent places. Jaycee members have distributed these collection containers to the hotels, clubs and cafe? in the area. Various, social functions have been planned in connection with this campiiign, with the proceeds to go to the fund. These will be announced later by tlie committee in charge of the drive or the organizations spon.soring them.

Any assistance the public can give the committee to make this year's drive a success will be greatly appreciated, the Jaycees said. Jaycee members serving with Dr. Houpt are Kenneth Leister, Phillip Swartzbaugh. William Murphy, Raymond Leppo, Manuel Feder, William Krumrine. Dr.

Reginald Gobel, Chester Hoke, Jack Kottemyer, Harry He.sson and John Shultz. BOY BORN HERE FIRST 1052 BABY IN COI NIV Son Of Mr. Mrs. Howard C. Mummcrt At erai Hospital Ai iv.55 A.

Fifty-five minutes nfter the start of 1952 a cry bror-e the silenr-e in the third-floor hall at the Han- General ho.spital. said the nurse in charge, to our New Year Hospital attaches later learned that it also was the first baby born in York county this The earliest New Year arrival was a seven-pound, three-and-one- half-ounce boy, born to Mr. and Howard C. Muminert. 40 Carlisle street.

The Mummert child was delivered four minutes ahead of a elevpn-and-one-half-ounce girl born to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Rexroth, 205 West Gay street. Red Lion, at the York hospital.

Three other New Year's Day births were recorded the Hanover hospital. They were listed on the maternity ward charts as follow.i: Son at 3.35 a. m. to Mr. and Mrs.

Donations Oa Way To Korean Orphans (Continued On Page Four) WESTBROOK PEGLER Agent Of Sociaiist Conspi ra cy WISE AGAIN ELECTED BY PARkVlLLE FIREMEN Presidrnt Of Company Chosen For His Sixth Officers Meeting Roger H. Wise was renamed president of the Parkville Fire Company for his sixth term at the annual reorganization meeting last night at the engine houne. Other officers elected are: Clyde Garrett, vice John Becker. Russell Masemore. financial secretary Frock, as- i si.stant secretary: C.

Ros.s Kellen- i berger, treasurer; Clarence WenU, chaplain, and Ru.ssell Kerr, tms- tee. I Operating personnel elected are; Lerov Bankert. chief; Robert Howe, assistant chief; Osc-ir ho.se director; Donald Swope, as- 52 RECEIVES WE' WARM WELCOM Temperature Rises To 53 On First Day Of New Year- 1951 Credited With Excess Of Coolness And Rain Weather accompanying the birth of 1952 was just as the Weather Man said it would and warm. After the heavy mantle of fog lifted yesterday mornuig, the temperature started to rise, reaching 53 degrws by mid-afternoon. Late last night the rain the Weather Man promised arrived in this area.

Precipitation continued steadily throughout the night Shortly after 7 o'clock this morning rain falling but showeis were back about noon. U. N. NEGOTIATORS URGE ALL PRISONERS BE FREED Allied Truce Delegation Also Suggests Relea.sing Of All Displaced Persons In Korea With Guarantee No One Will Be Sent Home Against His Find Proposal Would Start On Man-For-Man Basis JAN. 2.

truce today proposed releasing all prisoners of war and displaced persons in with the guarantee no one would be sent home against his ill. The Reds found the Allied proposal politically unpalatable. The plan starts out on a man-for-man basis and winds up as sn all-for-all exchange, said Lt, Col. Howard S. Levie, spokesman for the United Nations command.

The Conmniiusts took one look at the p' 0 and then said. In effect, "It reiwrted Rear Adm. R. Libby, Allied negotiator. Libby expres.sed iiope North Korean Maj.

Gen. Sang Cho. Rod Tonight, said the Weather negotiator, would change his mind after he studies the complex plan the mercury should dip to between understands it. 35 and 40 degrees. Cessation of rain, The proposal is intended to provide a compromisf hptween the U.

he said, can be expected early to- man-for-man exchange of pri.soners proposal and the Reds' all-for-all morrow morning will follow demand, and at the same time provide for repatriation of all civilians who want to go home. The negotiators the prisoner question meet again at 11 a. m. cloudy and colder conditions The past year was a little coolei and wetter than normal, accord- Thursday. So will a second subconunittee on supervising a Korean truce ing to a review of the weather statistics for the iwelve-month period.

which hung up again on whether the Red.s may rebuild their air fields during an armistice. U. command communique said the key to its new Is Severe icy blasts last month help- the principle of voluntary repatriation for all POWS and Amvets and Boy Scouts load contributions of clothing and other supplies at the home, Broadway, for shipment to Harrisburg and thence to the Happy Mountain orphanage Pusan. Korea. The donations were collected by members of the post und the ix)sfs auxiliary unit.

Loft to right are Ervin Meckley, Walter Toot, Richard Baublitz. Paul Krug, Ginter, George B. Holland, Pete Krug, Roy Hartlaub, Grover C. Gouker, David K. Malcolm and Allen Hartlaub.

Lee said the plan contained things we politically cannot agree He did not amplify. Under the plan anyone who did not want to be repatriated would not be sent back against his will. The International Red Crosii would act a.s supervising agent. Levip the exchanue of prisoners would stari on a man-for-man (Contin led On Page Foui) ENI ERTAINS ROTARY i WITH STORE HISrORYi OBITUARIES I OF COl.UMBDS PLAN MINSIREL SHOW 28 BODIES FOUND IN PLANE WRECKAGE MRS. PAUL 1 ROBINSON Mrs.

Martha Robinson, 53, Jeronir 1). Presents w'llp of Paul L. Robin.son, 10 Kil- Kcvipw or patrick avenue, die this morning 1 ods Of 42 Years at 10:55 o'clock ii the Hanover 1 General hospital, where she was a Members of the Rotary Club at patient since Dec. She was a Tiip Hanover Council. Knight.s the Monday night dinner meeting of the lafi- Emorv and gf Columbus, will the third Of Third Entertainment Will (io To St.

pph's Seliooi I und PAHIS The Communist daily paper, Humanity, is running a discussion of Irving Brown, a professional New York unioneer of the Dave Dtibinsky gang, who ia almost totally unknown to the people of the United States, but has the gall lo meddle in the political affairs of France and ether European nations in the role of "amba.ssador pretending to represent An.erican labor. J. Dallin. a propagandi.st for this crowd, recently described Brown as a former but withdrew this statement and said he never was a Communist nor a Communist It have been added, however, that Brown never has ha.1 any credentials from American labor and is strictly an independent, irresponsible conspirator fomenting more trouble in the internal politics of na.ions already troubled by He an agent of a dome.stic American conspiracy to substitute for the form of governmej.t establiihed by the Constitution. Elear.or Rof'sevelt, mother member of this socialist 'onspiracy.

recently made a to Americans For Democratic Actio.i. Her host was the Pari? chapter and her was What the United States hopes to See Result Frnm the Pre.sent U. vl.ich batch of glich fairly represents this preposterous old faker's command of the English language. One of her fellow sjjeakers at this konklave was Channing Tobias, colored, another faker who has been connected with more Communist fronts than all but a few of the time-worn in- defatigables, including a substantial record of anti-Catholic outfits. Three other members of the American delegation to the United Nations also spoke.

They were Benjamin V. Cohen, or Beany the Cone, as he was known in the days of iiis association wiih Tommy tlie Cork the White House in tne first New- Deal; Anna Lord and Isador Lubin. Here a left-wing litical group of American politicians holding a meeting on French None of them' evor had anv shadow of a mandate fron. the people ol the United to speak for in the solemn gibberish whicii co'ts the taxpayers billions in expenses and commitmenus were ap- poin'cd by a corrupt swori to uphold the Constitution but, by mental reservation, com- mittpd to the dissolution of our republic And they have exerted thetn- selves not as representative Amer- but as political agents of a socialist which the American people know almost nothing about. Wien yoi call Tobias an old faker.

tie old faker p'lll a mournful routh and lo-ok martyred for his Dijthical long in the inteitsts of the Negroes of the United States. will then implv that you are a Negro baiter sistant hose director; delegale to at the Hotel Richard Mc.Allister Amanda Fee.ser Utz. Surviving be- annual minstrel show the bene- the York County Asso- were eiiLertained with a program are lour Qf 3 jo.spph’s fund ciation, Oscar Lemmon and Donaid prepared and presented by Rotar- Broadwa Clinton Thursdav and Friday, Jan. 24 Reindollar, alternate. Claude Wil- ian Jerome D.

Groenebaum, in Charles street; 3 Meade 25, starting at 8 15 m. The dasin was named janitor. which he reviewed avenue, and John York. A school au- i ed mud; in bringing about the ov- I erall temperature departure and drenching June rains accounted for the excessive wetne.ss. The coldest weather ol 1951 was experienced in DecemLv-r before arrival- when official lows of one to nine above zer were registered.

Some frigid recordings in nearby rural areas as 1 (W eleven below zero, June and November were the heaviest contributors to the vear's --------total rainfall of 41 95 uk hes. June PHOENIX. ARIZ JAN. 2, Airmen and cowboys struggled up had the greatest They the icy face of a Central Arizona mountain today to reach the bodies of 28 killed in the crash of an air force C-47 tiansi)ort plane. Mounted on horses, thr advance party of an evacuation team followed a faint trail leading lo the place where the big plane slammed Into Arnier Mountain.

65 miles nortlieast ol and burned. GuKiinK the group was Arnold fifty-year-old cattle ranch wtio went to the crash and found all of the plane passengers, including nineteen Wrst Point cadets, dead. Eight air force officers and set up a base camp about four miles from the wreckage last night. A 35-man evacuation t.eam left William.s air force iia.se for Armer Mourtain this morning When the men set out shortly after daybreak, they figured the temp- fContinued On P.ige Four) LKlHi l.lSn-,1) R)k SKSSION True Hills ontinut-d Ca.ses I'o Suhmitted Vork Beginning Th case load for the January, In charge of the election were methods of 1910, at time of the niembei 01 St. Matthe Lutheran ditorium.

Baltimore street, with 'quarter court of York Armer Mountain was five degree.s below Maurice Sheaffer, judge, and Ralph Noble and Donald Swv)pe, tellers. opening of Greenebai.ms in cen- church, she belonged the ty.jp direction of county, which will begin at 10 Hk' plane hit about 1,50 feet below the and at the foot of ter Square by his fatiier, the late Aid Society and the Sunday school Rather. The min- next Monday morning, is bluff OKPHA.NS COI KT IN During the year just clasfd the sum of $9.244,873.29 was distributed to creditors, legatees, next of kin. David Greenebaum. In contrast, he outlined pre.sent day procedures and pre.sented a skit, a.ssisted by Mack Edwards, featuring the radio program Lose Your proving 'o his members that they, like other citiz- heirs and others by adjudications ens of the community, always know the answers the radio questions.

Guests attending were A. G. Ealy, Littlestown Rotary; Elmer E. Rouser. Charlotte, N.

and Harold E. Trone. Maynard L. Weikert, H. Vernon Ferster.

John D. Bare and Mack Edwards, Hanover. handed down by Harvey A. Gross in the York (junty orphans court. This by no means repre.sents the total of money distributed by ment of decedents' estates.

In the fifteen and one half ince establishment of the orphans court in York through a legislative enabling ac: after a population increase. JudHe Gross in his adjudications has distributed S77.460.432.75 after audits of accounts of executois and guardians. or Licenses class taught by Miss Mary Zinn. Her pa.stor, the Rev. Dr.

Harry Hursh Beidleman. will officiate at funeral Saturday at 3 p. m. at the Frederick fune, al home, Frederick street. Burial will be in Ml.

Olivet cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Friday evening. strel cast bepii fed: Gen-ge compaiatively light John.son reported three to four inciies of snow covered the ground Miller. Henry Snyder. Marklp, Sixteen ca.ses are continued from the scattered wr-'CKage nnd bodit; Jo.scph Ernst, Marlvn Weaver, Rob- previous courts and new indk-t- MARRIAGES LOHR-RECK Mi.ss Janet Lucile Reck, daughter of Mrs.

xMary K. Reck. 587 Baltimore street, and Sgt. Floyd G. Lohr, son of Mr.

and Mrs, H. Lohr, MRS. CLARK ZEiGLER Mrs. Flo Seitz Zeigier. 6 daughter of Mrs.

Elsie Seitz, Hanover, and wife of Cla.K Zeigler, died at her home in acob- us at 12:22 ye.sterday afer an illness of two years. She had bedfast for the past four I resident of Jacobus for four ars, Zeigler was formerly of Ni.rth 1 York. She was a member of St. Lutheran church. York, and belonged to the of the Liberty Fire Company.

Noith York, and tne Jacob L. DeveiS ert Weaver, John Smrh and William P. Brenner interlocutor. The committees named for tlie show are; Advertising, Janu 5 Baker, chairman, and Charles 1. Brenner, William Doll, ir Groit, Millard Klunk, RobcM't Klunk, Thomas L.eahy, Walter McKinnev and Robert Gotwalt; Tickets: Charles H.

Humes, chairman, and Edward Hagerman, Donaid Hoke, Francis Smith, C. Kale and Bernard H. Klunk: Stage and Piops; mighty rough country." said Johnson, who has spent mo.st of life in that area, "The horses will lo be led over some parts of Wreckage of the plane that vanished in a storm Sunday was sighted yesterday afternoon bv aerial wife. Edna, saw the shatterc'd of the C-47 through called for trial. Some are pxix-cted and informed her husband, Johnson rode immediately up the mountain to give aid to any sursivois, but found only the bodies of the 27 one woman ment.s were returned last week as true bills What on Friday, in whal become known the cleanup' court, (lerhaps will ailed the number who mav Ix to enter pleas of guilty.

Forty-two ca.se- are on the list tor sentence or other disposition on Friday. In the.se cases delendant.s have entereo pleas of guiltv or have been found guilty bv In the cases of the nuilty pleas ALLIES BLAST ST RAIL ROUTES KOREA, JAN. 2 Allied warplanes Communist Ernest Ha.ssler, chairman, and Wil- voidicts sentences North Korea today as a frigid haze enveloped ground flght- Couple applying for marriage 11- 24 Fulton street, were married in a chapter, American War Mother- cen.ses at York included Robert M. James. York, and Patricia Ann Good, Frederick street, W'lllian! E.

Miller and Lois Anne Herman, Hanover D. 2. double ring ceremonv Sunday at 4 p. m. in St.

Lutheran church. York street. The pastor, the Rev. Paul Levi Foulk. officiated ijefore an altar decorated w'ith ever- York.

During 1912 1913. attended the Lutheran House in Baltimore. Survivors include her husband and mother, two Lawrence S. Zeig- liam Livelsberger. E.

Kunk, Henry Little, Burnell Eliz, Richard Brenner, Jacob Rilev, X. Brenner, Rodger Hertz. Raymond Hertz, John A Smitii, Vincent Topper and Henrv Talent: Edward MatMugl.i chairman. Richard Miller, Louis Eck and Francis Wierrnan. All member.s of the as' tnd committee will meet Suniav 8 in the auditorium.

were postponed and ottieis havi been ed by motions for new trials. Most sucii have been and (Jther.s have been lefu.sed by court decrees. JudxrK To View Liglits IN AND ABOUT TOWN The Hanover Elks chorus will resume its rehearsals for the new year this evening at 7:30 at the Elks home. The Hanover City Council. Beta Sigma Phi sorority, meet tomorrow at 8 p.

m. at the home of Miss Je.esie Webber. 406 North Franklin street. The Junior Cham'oer of Commerce will meet tomorrow at 8 p. m.

in the Ciiamber of Commerce office. The Kiwanis Club will meet at the Hotel Richard McAllister tomorrow at 6 p. m. Newly-elected officers be installed. A meeting of Hanover chapter 927, Women of the Moose, will held tomorrow night at 8 the Moo.se home Broadway.

The ex- I ecutive board will meet at 7 Harold H. Bair unit 14 American Legion Auxiliary, will meet tomor- row at 7:45 p. m. in rhe Legion home. Car.i.sle street.

The clubrcx)ms of Little Flower Circle 473 greens and yellow pompons. re- ler, and John K. ception was held after me ceremony Zeigler, York R. D. a grandson i at the Goodwill Fire hall.

Grange- and a sisier, Mrs, J. Walter Mci ville. Given in marriage by her Cullough, Hanover. Funeral services grandfather, Henry C. Miller, the will be held at 2 p.

ni. Friday at i bride wore a two-piece aress of rose the Hartenstein funeral chapel. New faille with navy acce.ssories and a Freedom. Barial will be ir. the New Freedom cemetery.

F'liends may call at the funeral home tomorrow evening. corsage of yellow ro.sebuds. Her sister. Mrs. Donald R.

Smith, York, was the matron of honor, wearing a two-piece dress of navy taffeta, navy acce.ssories and pink ro.se- bud corsage. Sgt. Ray J. Wherley, Hanover R. D.

4. was best man. Mrs. S. Donald Michaci the organist, played the traditional wetiding MRS.

JACOB W. WILDASIN Mrs. Emma Virginia Wildasin, wife of Jacob W. 210 West Walnut street, died last night at 10 o'clock in the Hanover General iieat Bonus Deadline Two of three Hanover area veterans who boat the Monday deadline for lihng applications for the s'ate World War II ve'ierans bonus npver had a previous opiwrtunity 1.0 fill out the form because of continuous duty over.sea.'^ Both just returned from foreign militarv' posts. In addition to the three ap- plicatioas officials received eight inqunies about the bonus.

It 's doubtful th'-it any extension of the application deadline will be ai)proved. mg. now almo.st at a Except for patrol contacts, the ground front was in one of its deepest lulls of the So-called twilight war. U. N.

iKjops on the eastern front throw buck a light probe bv twelve Reds ill the Satae Valiev. A U. Eighth Army communique there was no siunificant activity on the central or western fronts. But in the air. United Nations fighter-bombers flew 210 sorties by Judges for the Chnstma.s residen- jjnd cut, jail tracks at 49 )K)ints.

Pilots said a number of railroad tial lighting contest will tour tlie were damaticd. community this evening to select Fifth An said Communi.st ground fire shot down two N. the winners of the event, held un- planes today, an F-84 Thunderjet and an F-80 Shofjtmg Star. There was der the sponsorship of the Hanover no announcement as to the fate of the pilots. Jaycees and the Retail Merchant'fc Sabre jets of the Fourth and 51st Fighter-Interccptor Wings pa As.sociation, The group compo.sed Mig Alley Northwest Korea but weather bad and no Red aircraft of Robert Jones, Bradford were sighted.

Free, George Kemble, and Mi.ss During the night an e.stimated 1,800 enemy supply vehicles were Mary L. Menge.s, will leave the brought under attack. Pilots heavy traffic observed in the ChamlKn- of Commerce office. York eastern sectoi street, at 6 '45 p. Okinawa-based H-29 Superforts u.sed radar sighting in dropping fifty tons of 500-pound bombs on the Samdong rail yards.

New Holes Appear In Street Communist ground hre shot down three Allied planes Tuesday. Only Further sinking of Clearview the air forc.e announced. Two of the planet road on the site of the sewer line Mustangs and one a Cor.sair more than two years ago by the H. J. Williams Company, SAVS IldiVUN VtAV L'P BV FEB.

York, has occurred in llie past --------few days. Borough workmen on WASHINCiTON, JAN. 2, A congressman cuoted music. A graduate of Eichelberger where she was a patient fiiiardsnien Continued On Pase Fourj'Continued On Page Christmas And New Accidents Fatal To 1,399 Monday and yesterdav placed alxiut 7'riiman today he hope- 10 make known before Feb. 6 two and a half tons of jn whether lie wiil run again.

several holes a few hundred feet Rep. Hayes of Ohio told reporter alter White House call that he east of Carlisle street. Flares were iiad out to Mr. Truman that 6 is the last day for filing ol Six of CoiinJany E. 104th placed by Monday candidate' tor from Ohio to tlie Democratic national convention.

Armoii'd Cavalry, National Guard, night and again last niaht lo warn He said 'Iruman told him he "hoped he would be able to work out been promoted, eifective yes- to avoid the caved-in thmg.s he would know what he is going to do before Feb. 6 terdav Tiiey are L. Bair, KlK MS James A. Neiderer, Paul Sliaffer and irnell Wen promoted from orj)oral to and Richard E. Sterner and Edward .1, I Born Mr and Mr.s.

Klunk. from private lirst cia.s.s to shultz, 508 Carlisle street, at th corporal. iBv The A.ssoclated Pressi period over New wa.s in traf- Hanovpr General hospital today, a A total of 1,399 persons lost their Motor mi.shaps cau.sed 535 fatali- during the long Christmas weekend as the toll reached an all-time high for a fo ir-day Christ- lives in the United States in vio- Daughters of Isabella, lent accidents during the New- wili be open tomorrow begin- Year's and Christmas holidays, ning at 8 A meeting of The Year holiday mas holiday, the committee foi Janua toll was 610. compared to the record The toll on the highways, as the will be held. 739 total for the four-day Christ- nation celebrated New Year's, Members of the execut.ve mas holiday.

mointed as traffic deaths for 1951 Ti'affic accidents during the two appeared for the fourth highest big holiday we xends caused over mark ia It would 900 deaths, including 374 over the be the toll since the record New Year's holiday. The National total of 39.969 in 1941. The r950 toll r.e Safety Council had estimated 350 ballet persons would be killed in motor mishaps during the four-day holi- dav. Nearly 200 persons perished in Returns From Guam Sgt. Donald Myers, of Mrs.

Hilda 443 Eagle avenue, arrived ir Hanover Sundav after spending the past two years in Guam. After a thirty-day furlough he will report to Sewart air force ba.se, Nashv.lle, Tenn. of Harold Bair post 14, American Legion, will meet, at 8 o'clock this evening. The regular post se.ssion will be he.d tomorrow at 8 p. m.

The Y. C. A. tcsi weekly lap aiid dancing classes, which halted during the holidays, Baliyxim ing sessions will start Ja morrow HOSPITAL PATIENTS Vino or Borii.i;!) liquor sale bill sought HARRISBURG JAN 2, A Republican Senataor today asked Gov, John Fine lo veto a bill permitting fm sale of bottled liquor by taprooms alter state stores close. Sen Albert R.

Pechan vrote the chief executive, this (the bill' becomes law we will many more highway deaths due to exce.ssive drinking the late drinker who stays until the bar is closed wants that 'one more "Tliere is no need for this Pechan added. Proponents claim Pvt. John tiie pas.sage of tiie bill was necessary it would afford those who Airixjrne Division, Caiiip Breckin- after state stores close an to buy liquor for home consumption If the ix-rson can manage to buy his clothes, food, he can find a way lo buy his The bill would allow taprooms to sell a maximum of one quart of bottled liquor oer person. PERSONAL AND SOCIAL On Page from Moth Worrv plus "Fumol Adv 4 p. m.

for advanced sti dents and wa 35.000. This New Year's traffic deaths compared with 304 during the three-day holiday last year. The As.sociated Press, for com- Curtis Miiier, New Oxford R. D. 1 was convejed in the ambulance from hLs home 0 the Kanover General hospital Ifist night.

Harvey' A. ipp Sprenkle nue. iidge, has returned after spending ten days with hi. parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Walter F. 221 Third street. Mr. and Mrs. Loren DeMer.s left by motor todav for Monterev, where they a 11 reside.

Mrs. De.Mers is the former Mi.ss Martha J. Kintzing, daughter of Mr and G. H. Kintzing.

309 Baer ave- SroCK MARKEl PURSUES UNEVENLY UP IREND NEW YORK. JAN. 2. stock market followed an unevenly upward trend today in its first halting steps into the new yf-ar. Activity was at a low ebb.

and most price changes were less than a dollar a share. Reaching higher ground were U. S. Steel Bethlehem Steel. Southern avenue, was removed "roni his home sgt.

James H. Topper, who had fires, including 69 fro.m 6 m. paiison purposes, made a sufvey of morning b. ambulance to the been spending the holidays at the pacific, Chesapeake ic Ohio, Union Pacific. Paramount Pictures (up Friday at 4 p.

m. ior 'oeginners Piiday to last midnight accidental deaths in a four-day Hanover Genera, hosoital. i home of his parents. Mr. and Mrs.

more than a point at one time', Loew s. Twentieth Century-Pox. Kerne- group. Tap and ciasses will The weekend survey also showed weekend period June 2- n- Curtis C. Topper, 49 Mam street, cott Copper, Chrysler, Zenith Radio, Radio Corp.

(wiping out an esrly I M67 persons killed in 5, 1950. lHE McSherrystown has returned decline), Sinclair Oil, American Cyanamid Westinghouse Electric aniy Continr.ed Page Foun mishaps compared to 143 over The non-holiday death to- STORE. Adv station at Selma, Ala. International Telephone. Christmas holiday.

tal was 4.55 compared with 571 for Backward were Northern Pacific, Fe, General Motors, Mont- biggest reducMon in gomery Ward. Ut)ion Carbide. duPont, American Smeltmf. Air- Aav dental deaths during tiie 102-hour 1 (Continued On 0 1 Jeweler, 16 Baltimore St. a.

Adv MAY-PERYL SHOP, Hauover. Adv craft I Manvillt..

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