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The Buffalo News from Buffalo, New York • 12

Publication:
The Buffalo Newsi
Location:
Buffalo, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

12 Labor Domestic News Buffalo Evening Kews Saturday December 6 1941 1 I Oh Johnny She Cried 1 And Kissed Her Present M'KELVEY DENIES TRICO-UNION LINK WITH EARLIER UNIT Even Accidents Have Become Slightly Wacky in These Times Pilot Bounced Out of Plane on Fuselage Cavel Head Hits Salesman Goose Knocks Out Hunter Interscholastic Press Elects Officers One hoy and four girls were elected officers of the Western New York Interscholestic Press Association at its Fall convention today in Hotel Stailet They are left to right front: Robert Schaffer Lafayette High School president: Jean Carver LaSalle High School Niagara Falls first vice president hark row Carol Thomas Griffith Institute Junior High Springville second vice proident Isabelle MarKenzie Niagara Falls High School recording secretary and Betty Stetson Kenmore Junior High School corresponding secretary Miss Wanda Adams of Plain-view Tex drove into a filling station to have her car serviced She maneuvered it onto the hydraulic hoist which an attendant immediately sent skyward Miss Adams went along for the ride She absent-mindedly decided to step out and did No serious injuries At Odon Ind- the farm home of William Hackler caught fire 28 distinct times in one day One after another every part of the house burst into flames First it was an upstairs window sill then a downstairs window then a calendar on the wall a pair of overalls hanging on the door a bedspread a book in a desk drawer a layer of paper between the springs and mattress of a bed The Odon fire department worked hard and often finally sent an to firemen in nearby towns When the blazes eventually subsided Mr Hackler tore down what was left of the house and found himself another not quite so hotsy-totsy One theory was that the Hackler home was in the renter of a strong magnetic field where static electricity prevailed But nobody knows for sure Messenger Catches Baby Western Union Messenger Vito de Giorgio of New York walking home from work one day glanced up to see a tiny baby fall from the narrow ledge of a second-story window 15 feet above 'He dashed over and assumed an alley-opp stance The next thing he kn he had a bright-eyed ta'oy in Ns arms here pU-ae sain Messenger Vito as he delivered the child to its grateful prrems Theidore Booker of Chicago was hauling home a collect on of crackers pinwheels and otuer vzlers in the baik seat of his ear July 3 when a pie-Fourth celebrant tossed a lighted firen acker through Ihe rear window of the Booker rar Mr had his celebration right then and there to the gratification of a large and enthusiastic crowd A New York Central passenger train waitri on a barren stretch of track between Carthage and Philadelphia while passengers and crew walked slowly up and down the tracks peering intently at the ground Then a shout of triump a flurry of congratulation a scramble to get aboard and the train rhugged on its way again John Clark the hrakeman smiled broadly His false teeth were safely bark in his miuth? Brakeman John had sneezed beside an open window Picture Page Draws Readers School Journalists Are Told Kensington High Yearbook Wins Trophy Presented by Buffalo Evening News points School 58 was second with 896 points and School 75 third with 894 points Honorable Mention ARNOLD URGES CURB ON UNFAIR TACTICS OF LABOR LEADERS Bell Engineer Is First Buffa-lonian Cited by NAM for Production Contribution BprraLb CvgMtKg Kwg New Ynrk Bureau NEW YORK Dec Thurman Arnold assistant attorney general in a speech Friday night at the annual dinner of the National Association of Manufacturers concluding event of the A 46th annual Congress of American Industry at the Waldorf-Astoria issued a warning that legal penalties may be imposed on "shortsighted labor leaders" who use "illegitimate" tactics More than 3000 persona heard Mr Arnold and two other speakers Dr Robert Gordon Sprout president of the University of California and Keller president of I he Chrysler Corporation whose company has been a leader in defense lank production and now has the world's largest tank arsenal His Machines in Use In one ear of the defense program Mr Keller said the United States has "reached a production stage that it took German industry under a dictatorship from three to five ears to reach" The National Association of Manufacturers Friday night named Arthur A Schwartz chief research engineer of the Bell Aircraft Corporation of Buffalo as the man who had contributed "most to production methods in the last ear" Sevyn other men also were cited for outstanding contributions to national defense The first Buffalo man 1o receive Ibis recognition Mr Schwartz has designed a rivet-making machine a pantagraph router a spar-cap milling machine and a rolling machine for forming tapered sheets for leading edges of airplane wings All these machines now- are used in Bell production A Double Problem Born in Waukegan III Mr Schwartz also has designed candymaking machines: operated a te-tail-radio business and owned a gasoline -engine manufacturing business Mr Arnold who as head of the Justice Department's antitrust division has instituted suits charging certain labor organizations with antitrust law violations causing a move by I he American Federation of Labor for his removal asserted that the nation's present labor difficulties present "not one problem but "The first" he said "is the necessary insurance that our defense program shall not he tied up by the failure of mediation in labor disputes The second is the indispensable protection which independent businessmen and consumers need against extortion in a time of rising prices This second problem is being forgotten Enforcement Blamed If Prentis Jr president of the Cork Company and A board chairman was frequently by applause a h( (sailed "collective radicals" and the "tyranny of administrative law" which he said have endan-gerei ie freedom of ritizens as guara ed under the Bill of Rights He said that the Wagner Art "as warped by administrative interpretation" curtails the freedom of speech by employers to such an extent that a government official repot ted that an employer who ralli -i a union leader a Communist might be held guilty of coercion even though the statement were true He characterized as "legal the bringing of criminal indictments against individuals To force consent decrees which said brought government control over industry in many rases "beyond the limits defined in any existing Bill of Rights Cited Mr Prentis said that no right has been so restricted by "extra legal methods" as "the right to and riled Mr Arnold's report of exorbitant union initiation fees "It seems to me" said Mr Pren-ti amid applause "that the best way to relrhrate the 150th anniversary of the Bill of Rights just proclaimed by the President would be to observe the Bill of Rights" The same spirit was invoked hy Howard Pew president of the Sun Oil Company who assailed the doctrine that in the present crii "it is patriotic for us to relinquish our economic freedom" He contrasted the failure" of government shipbuilding in the last war with the present emergency record in which "shipbuilders werp called in told what the government wanted and turned loose on the job" The result he said is pro-nut lion "months ahead of Sprrial to the BcrroLO Evruiu Niwt CHICAGO Dec With all the criticism accidents are getting these das you would think they would behave themselves But they keep right on brazenly happening and even go nut of their way to get attention by cutting crazy didoes Sometimes these freak mishaps are tragir Sometimes they're not But add them all up and you have a bumper crop in 1941 to prove that accidents have raught the spirit of the times by going slightly wacky To wit Student Pilot Victor Woodrirk of Benton Harbor Mich figured the jig was up when he was bounced out of his training plane as it hit an air pocket 5m feet above East St Louis III He came down kerplunk on the plane's fuselage near the tail Digging his heels into the fabric and holding on for dear life he rode jockey hut backwards -to the ground as the instructor did a neat bit of flying to land gently Hilt a steeplejack fell ino feet from a steeple atop a church in Ellsworth Wis and landed on a cement walk To the amazement of witnesses Mr Hill got up and started to walk away Fall Is Broken A hospital examination revealed nothing more serious than a sore thumb The fall was broken when Mr Hill struck a projection 10 feet below the perch another 50 feet farther down and a slanting root over a basement stairway The chairman of a meeting of East St Louis retail furniture dealers hanged his gave so vigorously that the head of the gavel flew off and landed whack on the head of Jack Dougherty a furniture salesman The motion before the house was carried So was Mr to the hospital Mrs Paula Teutsch of Chicago thinks aiiiomnhita are dandy for older folks who want a more sedate ride For herself she prefers a motor scooter Mrs who is 63 loved to putt-putt along humming a song But one day the scooter developed too much scoot and slambanged against the rear of an auto One of Mrs wrists was broken and the scooter was scuttled Worst of all police suggested that Mrs cease to be a scooter rooter Shucks! 28 Fires in House on One Day The goose shot down hv Barrett at Maxwell Cal no doubt would have died happier had it known that it plummeted from the sky on Nimrod Barrett's head and knocked him cold Race-Hatred Law Is Upset in Jersey Ban on Such Speeches Called Unconstitutional TRENTON Dec 8 New Jersey's mee-hatred law was held unconstitutional Friday as the State Supreme Court reversed sentences of nine men for making or promoting anti-Jcwish speeches at a German-Ameriean Bund rally The court held the law which made it a misdemeanor to express in a group utterances of "hatred abuse violence or hostility" against any race color or creed violated federal and state constitutional guarantees of free speech The decision is appealable to the Court of Errors St Appeals highest New Jersey court Indictment of the nine grew out of a rally in the Summer of 1949 at the Ger-man-American Bund Auxiliary's former Camp Nordland near Andover The defendants included Wilhelm Kunze national bund leader Fashion Show Marks Opening of Ann Lewis Shop Featuring a siiecial stock of Christ mas gift items the Ann Lewi Shop for women was formally opened today at 432 Main st Sports costumes gowns eoats and lounging costumes were modeled as part of the opening ceremonies One of a sjiecialty-store group the shop will he managed hy Larry Grayson of Charlotte A sales force of 50 was hired Inrally Mr Grayson said The interior is air-conditioned and has fluorescent lighting Garige Housed Elephants NEW YORK Dec 6 Said the health Inspector to Magistrate Peter Horn: "This man is keeping two elephants in his The magistrate told Frank Roper he'd have to take his elephants elsewhere Mr Roper a show-owner said he would try to ship Lady and Honey to Florida 8 BILLION DOLLARS FOR 1) DEFENSES APPROVED BY HOUSE Bill Designed to Double Arms Production Described as Blow for WASHINGTON Dec 8 An S3244041531 appropriation bill described by one member of the House as earning "bafty blows for Mr Hitler" was ready today for Senate action The supplemental defense measure passed the House Friday 309 to It was designed to double armament production and if enacted into law will bring the defense expenditures and contractual authority up to $67990256596 which would be twice the amount of money the United States spent in the World War The measure set up Sl556496246 for lend-lease purposes and the War Department was authorized to transfer an additional $5000000001 worth of supplies on a lend-lease basis if necessary Representative Francis Case Republican of South Dakota said that because Congress had approved the lend-lease program he saw no reason for "pulling our punches" now and that the bill carried the blows for Mr Hitler" Amendment Shouted Down The extra half-billion-dollar authorization was opposed by Representative Joshua li Johns Republican of Wisconsin who told the House the American people should know they would "never get this money back" In addition to S66S7569046 for the War Department and lend-lease purposes the measure included S1129S70000 for the Navy This Includes the cost of more than 2U0U planes some of which may be used on merchant ships being converted into aircraft carriers The measure was approved after the legislators had shouted down ap amendment by Representative Robert Rich Republican of Pennsylvania to strike out the lend-lease title of the bill The five members who voted against the bill were Representatives Fred Crawford Republican of Michigan William Lambert-son Republican of Kansas: James A Shanley Democrat of Connecticut Jessie Sumner Republican of Illinois and Mr Rich The roll call on final passage came after the House defeated by a roll-call vote of 252 to 56 a motion by Mr Lambertson to send the bill back to the Appropriations Committee Woodrum Criticizes Opponents Two Republican members who said they voted against the original Lend-Lease Act opposed Mr effort to restrict that program Friday They were Mr Case and Representative James Mott Republican of Oregon Represscntative Clifton A Wood-rum Democrat of Virginia sharply criticized those who while opposed to war are "unwilling to make an economic to stop the Axis forces "before they get here" you want to avoid he demanded heatedly "Then sustain the hands of those opposing Hitler" Although only $78000000 of the total was earmarked for aid to Russia Gen George Marshall chief of staff said it was his "urgent advice" that if American land forces were not involved in war much of the equipment to be bought with the funds in the pending bill "might well be diverted in order to assist the Russian Army to remain on its Rail Unions Ratify Pact to Avert Strike Nonoperators Will Continue Negotiations CHICAGO Dec 6 The threat of a nation-wide railroad strike scheduled to start tomorrow was dissolved Friday night Representatives of 350000 union operating emploes ratified terms of a compromise settlement worked out through mediation of President Roosevelt's fact finding commission A contract embodying the provision was signed by all parties The settlement announced Tuesday provides wage increases of 9'i cents an hour or 76 rents a day for operating employes who have been receiving upward of $306 a day and had called a strike to enforce demands for a 30 per cent boost Representatives of 900000 union and nonoperating workers said negotiations affecting them probably would continue for several days Those unions did not cal! a strike For nonoperating labor the compromise called for raises of 10 cents an hour or SO cents a day They have been paid an average of 634 cents an hour and had demanded increases of from 30 to 34 cents -Traffic executives of the roads ended a private conference Friday on proposals to seek increased freight rates and passenger fares to compensate for payroll increases estimated at $300000000 a year The fact-finding commission calculated rate and fare increases would approximate 5 per rent if the entire pay boost were passed on to the public Mine Sweeper Launched BRISTOL Dec 6 A 135-foot minesweeper as yet known only as the 18 was launched today from the Herre-shoff Yard from which many famous defenders of the Cup once left the ways THIS AD KC WORTH (MarSs PcnaaBral Waaa aa wa a-laltaa al (feta aS aal) Bat latar Ihaa Daa I life data aaa la caSaait ILA 11(0)10) IE Ar heir RIP ihl Yr Wl (hi Wl LK il Tt Cl HH a Ifc A I IVI 5 It i a I I A BA I a I I Bt' I I I I 1 I I CA I I Cl II I 4 a I Employes Association Is a Distinctly Separate Organization Says Chairman As the NLRB hearing Into unfair labor practices charges against the Trico Products Corporation SIT Washington st adjourned late Friday until Monday morning Cecil McKelvey 118 Lincoln blvd chairman of the Employes Association an Independent union testified that the union was "a distinctly separate organization" and was in no way connected with the earlier Trico Social St Benevolent' Association which the company admitted aiding financially Mr McKelvey on cross-examination by Peter Crotty regional NLRB attorney could not explain a printed statement on the flyleaf of the Employes Association constitution which states that that constitution is "revised" from the constitution of the Benevolent Association He testified that the present constitution was not a revision but an entirely new document In hit capacity ai cost clerk he has advised the company on how to cut costs including those for labor he said Earlier William Paulus vice president and plant manager testified and read the company's labor policy from the factory rules which stated: "This company is committed to an open-shop policy which means that no employe and no one seeking employment shall be required to Join or refrain from joining a labor union" Motions by Dana Hellings counsel for company and Holland Williams counsel for the union to dismiss charges of company domination of the Employes Association were denied by Trial Examiner Will Maslow Another motion by Mr Hellings asking dismissal of charges that Chester Brudek and Anthony Kandra were discharged for labor activities was also denied Strike Believed Inevitable Chances of averting a strike of 2000 employes at the American Magnesium Corporation 1889 Elmwood ave Monday morning were termed "hopeless" today by Hugh Thompson regional director Herman A Clott International representative of the United Mine Workers District 50 was conferring with officials of the Aluminum Company of America parent organization of the magnesium company in Pittsburgh this afternoon and hatever action is taken Monday depends upon the outcome of the talk Mr Thompson said The workers members of Local 1228 will meet in Harugarl Frohsinn Hall at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon "If Mr Clott comes back for the meeting tomorrow there will be a strike" Mr Thompson said "If he remains in Pittsburgh for further talks there probably won't be any" Conciliation Planned If ronferenres here do not result in settlement of the I strike at the Spring Perch Co Ine in Lackawanna hy Dec 17 company and union officials probably will take their grievances to Washington for presentation before a threeman paneL Both union and company accepted invitations to the Washington meeting from Carl Schedler acting director of the Conciliation Service but Harold Dow president of the company said today that he would enter Into further negotiations only if the employes go back to work while the talks go on Joseph MrNichola International representative of the Steel Workers Organizing Committee (S said Friday night that a union meeting would be held lat today to determine whether work would be resumed but at the Lackawanna office today it was said no such meeting was planned Strikers to Return Monday A strike at Weber's Cleaning Sk Dyeing Works 833 Broadway ia "positively settled" and employes ill go bark to work Monday morning Jack Himmel president of Local 123 Cleaning St Dyehouso Workers (A LI announced today He said that the decision reached late Friday after Dr Thomas Norton of the State Mediation Board was called into the case provided for 10 per cent wage increases for 18 persons and for partial reimbursement for time lost during the strike which started Wednesday Gifts for Former Workers Former employes of the Bethlehem Steel Company who were members of Local 1024 Steel Workers Organizing Committee CIO will receive Christmas gifts from She proceeds of a Sport Night to be held in Memorial Hall Lackawanna Dec 13 at 8 ANT MAKE AUTO REPAIRED awS OwkNbf PAY 50e Don (lion's Cboorolot SMS Min ST KEYS a CLOSED HELPS TO COLDS Because Father Joho'sMed-icin is very rich in the i xential vitamins A and D1 which are needed to help re £ist winter colds and coughs due toroids Its whclesom ingredients ar pure nourishing safe for all the family Four generations have proved its rest value CAROLE BRUCE ATLANTA Dee 6 Film actress Carole Bruce got her first Christmas present and a Georgia Tech Junior figured he got as much as he put Into It Johnny Rogers who said he had been a Bruce admirer for some time hid himself in a large box wrapped In Christmas paper and the fancy trimmings Two friends wheeled Johnny backstage while Miss Bruce filled a personal appearance engagement here who are you? asked the startled actress on opening the package "I'm Johnny!" he stammered "Oh Johnny!" said Miss Bruce who squared things with a kiss and an autographed pirture Decision is Speedy 1 ironiimH from Pag 11 The company and the union have until Dec 10 to select their own arbiters The agreement throwa the dispute from the lap of the Conciliation Service which has no power to enforce a decision into the three-man arbitral commission whose decision will be binding Closed Shop Still Issue Thus serious striking difficulty at the Bell plants is avoided unless one of the two parties declines to live up to the agreement The arbitration board will have before it the Bell agreement with its employes which does not expire until Jan 1 1943 and which President Bell and Vice President Ray Whitman maintained up until the last does not permit of reopening except for a discussion of wages The union injected the closed-shop issue in the negotiations here and this may be discussed by the arbiters Subjects which undoubtedly will come before the board will include the starting rate for workers the increase in pay sought by the workers for all others and the troublesome question of union security Pressure Is Applied The latter may include the maintenance-of-membership question the checkoff system and the closed-shop issue The rapidity with which the disputants reached a basis of agreement was viewed as amazing following developments of last Thursday evening when the union threatened to walk out on the proceedings and hope of a strike settlement hung by a slender thread Back again in the conciliation office at 8 Friday morning the company officials and the union representatives were met with a literal demand barked by War Department pressure that some kind of an agreement be reached Under this pressure a working basis had been established by nocn and from that time until 2 o'clock the discussions seemed to center around selection of a third man Perkins Enters Case Scheduled to begin at 3 o'clock the discussions were not resumed until a half-hour later when Messrs Bell and Whitman returned from lunch From that time until the agreement was announced there were great signs of activity in the conciliation offices with members of the panel closeting themselves in one room and the company representatives in another and each of them passing back and forth Finally at about 6 o'clock it was made known that Secretary Perkins had entered the case Representatives of labor were closeted with the secretary for more than an hour Company representatives talked with her for nearly hair an hour Undersecretary of War Robert Tatterson had been called into the case to give practical force to the argument that nothing must stand in the way of the production of Bell Company airplanes LABOR TERMS DEFINED Now that the dispute between the Bell Aircraft Corporation and the United Automobile Workers' luteal 501 (C I Ot has gone into the third phase of discussion it has passed through all three possible conciliation mediation arbitration What's the difference? Here are the definitions as provided by Thomas Finn labor conciliator CONCILIATION Where both parties sit with a conciliator and discuss possible solutions The conciliator has no power to settle anything but can try to reconcile opposing views Where the mediator hears both sides individually carrying from one to the other suggestions towards compromise He also has no power to settle the dispute but can try to argue the sides closer together ARBITRATION Where both parties agree to abide by a decision of an impartial arbiter (agreed on by both! or pancL Both sides present their case and the arbiter or board decides one way or the other A natrhery repons that the fastest growth for fingerling trout up to 6 inrhes is made by brook trout followed by rainbow brown and lake Committee May Call Arms-Company Heads Wants to Know Why Dies For Cartridges Cost $22 Brrruo Fmrixc Nrxi Wahinzlen Burra'j WASHINGTON Dec 6 Officials of the Remington Arms Company may he called before the House Military Affairs Committee it was indicated today to shed any light they can on the get-rich-quirk operations of Leon Sha-nack 81S9noo-a-year defense contract broker extraordinary Specifically the committee will want to know: Why did the company pay S22 each for cartridge dies Shanack bought from a machine-tool manufacturer for $990? Why did the concern fail to purchase dies direct from the manufacturer utilizing the subcontracting service of the Government's Office of Production Management rather than permit Shanack to earn profits ranging from 50 to more than 2) per rent Why did Rene Erkins field purchasing agent for the arms company advise the Hydramatric Machine Corporation of New York City to bid $575 per shell die although it was earning about 23 per cent profit selling articles to the firm for S3? Meanwhile It was revealed through a study of War Department ordnance contracts with Remington that the Government or rather the taxpayers -had made Shanack a relatively rich man in a short span of time The Remington concern the contracts showed received a flat fixed "management fee" from the Gox-ernment for managing federal ordnance plants at Lake City Mo and Denver The fee was over and above all costs of producing the cartridges including Shanack's $189000 In addition the contracts provided that Remington be paid a "fixed fee for of the plants so much for every 1000 cartridges produced This figure ranged from a low of $2 to a high of $11 per 1000 bullets Postman The picture page is its strongest feature in terms of reader interest Clifford Orr secretary for public relations of Hobart College Geneva told ftW school journalists this afternoon at the 24th semi-annual convention of the Western New York Inter-scholastic Press Association in Hotel Statler The association is sponsored by the Buffalo Evening News School journalists devoted the morning session to a business meeting and to sectional sessions considering yearbooks mimeographed publications printed newspapers and photography The following new officers were elected: President Robert Schaffer Lafayette High School: first vice president Jean Carver LaSalle High School Niagara Falls: second vice president Carolyn Thomas Griffith Institute Junior High Springville: recording secretary Isabelle MacKenzie Niagara Falls High School and corresponding secretary Betty Stetson Kenmore Junior High School Journalism of Tomorrow Speaking at this afternoon's luncheon at which awards were presented in high school yearbook competition and in elementary and junior high-school publications competition Mr Orr who as a teacher at East High School w-as one of the founders of the association discussed photography as "the journalism of tomorrow" The most significant change in newspapers in the past decade has been in the field of photography" Mr Orr pointed out "It is significant for us to realize that despite the fart that adding pictures to the papers costs money this development took place during the depression years They never would have taken place during these years had there not been real factors of reader demand back of them" Pictures make the paper more attractive and the stories more readable: in fact picture always increases the chance that a story will be read" Mr Orr said He declared that 84 per rent of the men who read the paper and 90 per rent of the women find something of interest on the picture page which he said draws even more readers than Ihb comic section Kensington High Wins Attaining 970 out of a possible 1000 points Kensington High School won the Buffalo Evening News trophy for the best printed yearbook in Class A The yearbook competition a feature of the convention was marked by an entry list of 66 schools by far the largest enrollment in the association's history Second place In Class A went to Fosdick-Masten Park High School with a score of 915 points and third place to Owego Free Academy of Owego with a rating of 900 points Only five points behind Dunkirk High School and Kenmore Senior High School tied for fourth place with 883 points The News trophy In Class one of two new awards created as the result of a reclassification to equalize competition between larger and smaller schools was won by North Tonawanda High School with 950 points Fredonia High School was second with 873 points and Orchard Park High School and Grover Cleveland High School Buffalo tied for third with 860 points each Offset Press Sninglehouse High School of Shinglehouse Pa won the News trophy in Class with $60 points Lakewood High only five points behind won second place and Forest vi lie Central School and Middleport High School tied for third place with 850 points each The News trophy for the best yearbook made by the offset process was won by Tonawanda High School with 955 points Eden Central School was second with 933 points and Hutchinson Central High School Buffalo third with 820 points Scoring 960 points out of a possible 1000 Clymer Central School won the News trophy for the best mimeographed yearbook Garden-ville High School won second place with 860 points and St Nicholas Academy of Buffalo third with 823 points In the competition for the best elementary and junior high school mimeographed publications School 24 won the News trophy with 915 Special honorable mention awards were given to Kenmore Junior High School and South Junior High School of Niagara Falls for the best elementary and junior high school printed newspapers and to Gaskill" Junior High of Niagara Falls and School 51 of Buffalo for the best elementary and junior high school printed magazines Earl Tierney of North Tonawanda High School presided at the luncheon meeting Five founders of the association were honored: Mr Orr Mrs Gertrude Chittenden of Kenmore Senior High School Mrs Berenice McCarty Oliver of Niagara Falls High School Miss Helen Cornell of Hutchinson Centra! High School and David Peugeot of the Buffalo Evening News The awards were presented by Thomas A Boris of the News The complete ratings in the annual competition follow: High Srfenwl Yaarfeaiiha PRINTED 'CLASS A (irM Vans Trapfe? Kensington Comp 9T0 (irM Blue Rlhfean Kki-tiirk-Maslen Parle 4'hronnir SH Onego Free Aradem Tom Turn Dunkirk Iy Tower fee' Kenmore Kemtoruil a an I on Kies Sn I i A So Lalayettr Crr ryi IaS! Niaz-r- Kail repn RnereMte Skipper K- (Mx Duke I 'enter Pa (Mineral MV Niagara Fails Nlazanan SI" war4e4 IM Klhfcaa DeVenne School Nias Fall- I'Srvrmi kit St Niasara Fall- Sam-ta Maiia s(i Jame-Pe-n Senior Annual 7Vi Saiamanra Senera 715 South Park Dial PRINTED ASS Hi Awarded News Trwpfcjr Noith Tonawanda Norm star SCO Awarded Bine Kifehaaa Fredonia Ililltnpper S71 Oiriiard Park Refleelor NtO (irover Cleveland lletelander Ml Edo Eaatnnidn KVi Bolivar (lusher KVi Medina Mirror too Awarded Red Rlhfean Port Alldn Pa Tier ti 7m Altrt To-eh 7i Terhriral TerhtoRian 770 Ratavia Batavian TMi Barnett Beacon TTS Albion Chevron 7: Otwanda Valley 70S PRINTED Cl ASX Awarded Xrwa repay Shinglenou-e Cleaner Awarded Rlae RMifcea (dkcwreei Caidmal (Vi Forr-tvt'lr Krho h'ei Melulepriit soxe Wil'Mm-v ille Seairhiight Si Pat Mon Tower feju Aaarded Red Rlhbea Alevandv Trolt Vocal aiii u- Fail- Reflector Anrunria'edi Annunriaia Angola Angolaroie Raikei latino U'ainjn BUm tuning (tuna Oak field (feat-lr SI Mai' seminaiv Toirh OFFSET YEARBOOKS rwi 7V 7V 7V 7'i 710 Tor Too 7i Awarded Xew Trapfey Tonawanda Tonawandan KJ Awarded Mae Rlhfean Eden Ember ca Hulrhinaon-Crntral Calendar R)i Awarded Red Ribbim Newark Valley srhtxH Memone 775 Elba Revue 755 AS Seneca Al Pile iXI Akron Akromte tiki A vot Avnran 50 Hiiwdalr Panorama Falconer Corrplor 731 Parker Clarence Saga 70S (Srilfiln In-titute Sprint Ulr Cnffonrll Tin New fane Century wrt Kktan Forum 13 SilMEOCRAPHED YEARBOOKS Awarded New Trapfey Clymer Spotlight Jnai Awarded Mae Kibfeea Cardenvillr Beamn Mi St Xu'luiia Aratlemy Yify K9 Awarded Red Rifehaa St Mary' Lancaler folio Marute 77 Dele an Drl-lli ri Collin- Cenier Outrun tilM MtMKXTSRV A JIMtIR HltH MNIMH MIMEOriRAPIlKD PfRIIf ATIOXS Awarded New Trophy Srlmnl 24 Twenty Four Tiding- Sli Awarded Mwr RIMwa School 5t Flahe K'lti Srhwl 75 Eveel-ior St-lmd li Announcer ST School Ail June Tnpir KU Nr hoi 1 Vs Spnke-man KX Awarded Red Rlhfean Schotd 4 la nonet ti School 7H Uymiur Herald MO Hamburg Jr The Scroll 7 Kenmore Jr Student Bulletin 77s Iumiln Jr Jamrutown Emanriuator 759 Day Schtad for Crippled Children Herald 722 Jt NlllR HltH sTHlMlf PRINTED NEWSPAPER Special Award Kenmore Junior High Srhool Student Vote ms South Junior High School Niagara Falls The Rlaaer 1 70 ELEMENTARY AND JfNIOR HICH MHIMIL PRINTED MAGAZINES Special Award Gaki1 Jr Niagara Falla Dial Annual Sr hod 51 Bui lain The Broadraatrr Law Officers Rename Head WASHINGTON Dec 6 William Chanler corporation counsel for New York City was re-elected president Friday of the National Institute of Municipal Law Officers Just a Little Puzzle for the One glance was enough for Buffalo Postoffice Princeton Postmaster Daniel A Driscoll how-clerks to determine that the above letter was on Its I ever frowns on this type of address during the way to Mrs Nell Hubbell ill Henry Hall (H-awl) Christmas mailing rush now beginning.

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