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..:.-:• ::.: ,, :.::::::::::.•:::.:::::. :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::':::::::.'.;.{.:.:.- .. . ..: . Prospect Park ':}1%:}:.• •[-..•, .. - '.:':ii•iii•!iiiii::•!:i{{{•:/:•i!{i ii!i{.-,'•::i}i!•!•i!•ii?...}.{!}i!{•ip?:{i?.•::{{iii.-'-.-•.:..'•ii•.•ki!i•i:?:{ii•:.{'-..P' .... "i•?:{{{{{{•i{..:,:..•i' ..,. ?:':.: .ß ::•.i.::•:•..-'.: .: ..'. i-!-i:i:!:•:i.:.•e:i.-.-':i:•::.,::::: i-•:!:i:!:•:i:{i!::.p, • ..i:::i-: ...... '-. S]nga½ i" 'ii:iiii!!!!} . "?' ' :'iiiiiiii•i•' ...,,:Siiii=S:i.- ...... ::=.':i..-.:::.'!.'iiii!!i!!i!•!iii::: ' .-..-!!'!i!ii!!.'-... " .:.:.:.:..:.:.:.:.. : ..e- ,. , .,:-:-•-:-:-:.:...... ::.:::•"•::.::R,..-:-:.:-:-:-:-x.:.:-•L•'. ;'.:::::.::.::-'-'. "'. ß :.•%::::::i::i:11{{ififii::}::, '- .5 :.%•::i::•ii•!•i?:iiiiiii•i:ii•!::{{!!i•!i•i!{i!:.ii•i::ii•i•i::i•!•:.i}:}}i..•:•:I.-:'/.•-"::•:!i!!i?:i{ii:iiP' ...... ::.-'.'.'f!ii'{•11!::}:...... ': ..... ' Tetowa •'e•.{ ...... "'..-,".•..•,•'-?:{!}::ii{{i"::?ii::}!::::... •..•.{.:.'• ...... ,...:...... •...... '" ß "'.•?-:':-'...... '-.:.,';• ,'" '""...... e::.... Wayne ,:#•;..•,..•..:.:...... --...... ':' '"•'•!11! :...... •:.":::"-'-...... ':.•_..... '" •.,,,- ..,•:•'•,•.•!...... -::.-.::::::.-.'•..•:•,...... : ,•.:.. •.:•;,..'" "'"•-:",•-'.:"-' .... e•.a.x .... '• ' • •sf Paterson

MARCH 6, 1960

VOL. XXXII, No. 10 WHITE a.d $-HAUGER, I-.(:.

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Living Room - Bed Room • :. Dining Room ......

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SEAFOOD •:•.• THE SHAPE OF THINGS -- Hugh Downs gives daughter ASPECIALTY ß•. Deirdrea previewof "The Shapeof Things,"a "World Wide 60" BROILED LOBSTER • -- DAILY program. to be colorcast by the NBC-TV Network Saturday, FROGS' I,EGS - •)i.'T SiiEI.L March 12. With Downs as host and narrator, the show will TROUT - HALIBUT - SAbMON - SHRIMI'S - SCAi.!,OI'R - provide a light-hearted, layman's view of architecture and what OYSTERS - CI.AM - COD FIR!! - S[VOItD FISH - DAILY DINNEH• it means in everyday life. It was filmed in various parts of the 168 BELMONTAVE. [Cot. Burbank}.HALEDON - - - •mberf 5-98•5 U.S., Europe and the Middle East. ß., ,. ._...... :.:.

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LEADING LADY -- Julie Harris stars as a circus ballerina in d'Turn.theKey Deftly,"Alfred Bester'soriginal mystery to be Letthe manfrom Equitable brincj you peace of mind producedand directed"by GeorgeSchaefer for NBC-TV Net- ..= work'8"Sunday ShowcaSe 'colorcast of March6. The dramais set behind the scenes of a traveling circus. i PageTwo Citizen of fhe Monfh THE

Published Weekly by

THE CHRONICLE COMI'Ad•IY

170-172 Butler Street Paterson, N.J.

LAmbert 5-2741

VINCENT S. PARRII. J.•, Publisher VINCENT N. PARRII_J_•, Managing Editor

Entered as SecondClass matter August 24, 1926, at the Post Office at PatWrson, N.J., under the act of March 3, 1879.

MARCH 6, 1960 -- VOL. XXXII, No. 10

Single Copy 10 Cents ..•'•i:•. 22 $4.00 • Year by Msil

CONTENTS SADD,LE BROOK- Floris Wissekerke, Sr., (left) is awarded the New York - New Jersey Detective Crime Clinic's Award of "Citizen of the Month" by Township Committeeman Rich- ard Kelly at the Casa Mana in Teaneck.Wissekerke is credit- FEATURES ed with saving the five members of the Drehle family from a fire last December which destroyed their home. North Jersey League Ready For BusinessIn 1960 __ 5 The Exciting Stow of Glass ...... 6 P.TA Celebrates Focus ...... 9

Crossword •e ...... 10

Television Highlights ...... 12 The Window Box, by Louis Arthur Ctmningham A Complete Short Story 14 American History 15

DEPARTMENTS

Social World

Editorials ......

Editor Speaks Complete __11-12-13

COVER PICTU 'E-

While many were loudly proclaiming the fact that with the ...•dventof March winter was over, and while the stores set up FAIR LAWN John A. Forrest, principal of Roosevelt spring displays, Old Man Winter decided to teach these School, Fair Lawn, cuts the P-TA's 25th anniversary cake. Forrest and past principals of the school were honored at the birds a thing ov two., and came knocking at our doors. anniversary meeting this. week for the role they played in ne result? Unless you've •been in another world these past the history of the school and its P-TA. Left to right- Forrest, Mrs. Julian Bornstein, anal Archie A itchison, president of the ßew days, you know darn well what happened, Board of Education.

Page B.ooks In Review Joelson Receives Club's Support E. R. Braithwaite forgot about his black skin during six warhme years as an R..A.F. fighter pilot. As one of the heroes of Britain, he was' encouraged and welcomed by grateful civilians. Demobil- ized, the co]or bar was brought

ß ß violently home to him when he ... attempted to find the engineering job for; which he was qualified. In "To Sir, With Love", publish- ed by Prentice-Hall, Braithwaite tells how he became a teacher-- the one profession so short-hand- ed it was willing' to overlook the color of his skin and fought and overcame prejudice under some of the most difficult condi- tions anyone ever had to face. The British Guiana-born Negro found himself in a London slum school world of foul-talking, re- bellious teen-agers. The students had sent their last instructor on the run; they set out to break the new teacher with a campaign of open hostility and prejudice. YOUNG DEMOCRA•TS Deputy Attorney General Charles S. Joelson (fifth from left), Braithwaite tells how he even- is congratulated by Adolph Badagliacca after gaining the unanimous endorsement of the Passaic County Young Democratic Club during a recent meeting at the Alexander Hamil- tually won the affection and re- ton Hotel. Left to right: John Lloyd, Drew Kowalski, Joseph Dragonetti, Michael Casale, spect of the denizens of this Joelson, Comsr. Badagliacca, club president; City Prosecutor William J. Rosenberg, blackboard jungle, and how he Comsr. JosephPiastrelli, Alderman William J. Flynn and Anna Mae Cancro. entered into their personal lives to teach them tolerance of race. At first his classroom was a daily battleground. (The school Democrats Hold Victory Celebrafio:n allowed no punishment of a stu- dent.) The inexperienced, untrain- eel Braithwaite, whose vision of teaching was to "neat, well-man- nered, obedient children," was shocked and nauseated by the Cockney toughs' dirty talk and obscene behavior. "They seem to have no sense of decency," he writes. The girls, strutting about in tight, greasy sweaters and skirts, necked openly in the hallways with equally dirty and carelessly dressed boys. When they weren't creating havoc, they sat sullenly at their desks, refusing to learn, hurling' jibes at the teacher about his color. He was determined to make a success of his job, and began to fight back. He had to knock down a class leader who forced a fight with him. When one of the h,ard- ened girl committed an outrage- ous obscene act in the classroom, he tongue-lashed her. The classroomwas going to be a civilized place he announced. They were to address him either as "Mr. Braithwaite" or "Sir". The girls would call the boys by their surnames. The boys would address the girls as "Miss" NORTH HALEDON--Ralph D. Cava, fourth from left, whose election to the borough coun- cil marked the first time Democrats sit equal in numbers with Republicans on the council, It was slow going and tense at is congratulated by North Haledon Democratic leaders at a victory dinner in Cedar Cliff first, but gradually Braithwaite Restaurant. Left to right: Councilman Donald S. Hayford, Tax Assessor Louis Pisacane, and .the class learned mutual re- Councilman Garry Zysling, Cava, John Cochrane, borough Democratic leader; Samuel A. Wiener, former leader and dinner master of ceremonies; Stephen Littler, president of spect. Democratic Club and William Shambura, chairman.

Page Four The CHI{O••. SPORTS

KeepingSemi. Pro BaseballAlive:

NorthJerse VLeague Readv For BusinessIn 1960

LOUIS INFALD League President Semi-pro baseball, thrown for re- will gather to determine the personnel peated losses in many sectors of the on the North Jersey roster for the ap- country, is kept alive in this area thanks proachingseason. Winter's breath still to the North Jersey League which is in is felt on our shoulders, but members business after all these years. No less of the committee will prepare for the baseballgame in the city'shistory-was than 25 years, in fact. warm months as they go over the ques- provided as the all-star teams of. the That's how long this hardy circuit has tion of which teams will be selected fo•_' North Jerseyand Essex'Leagues. t:an - survived,dating .backto the time When vacant spots on the 1950 roster. gledat EastsidePark. The game, spear-•. it was in business as the Suburban The teams which are back from last headedby Park CommissionerCharleS' League and eventually being fused 'into year, are set for the new season,of. Trombetta who furnished the impetus its present North Jersey pattern, the course. The Midland Park Rangers for the event,attracted over'3100'0' peo, oldest semi-pro circuit in the state. This championsbent on a successfuldefense pie to Eastside Park and' when rain is a loop which has reason for pride, of the league title this year, head the forced a replay of the game after it was producing many outstanding players parade of returning clubsin questof an- washed out in the early' innings, an even

through its long tenure and sending other determined campaign. So are the largerturnout viewed . . 'the actionwhen up many players to the major leagues. Paterson Phillies, Shebets, Edwins, Gar- it was presented at.a later date. Include among these, such perform- field Benigns, and Granatell Indians. In This year, the •me leagues 'will pit ers as Danny O'Connell, Larry Doby, addition, two teams will be added and their best in another' all-star game.with Tom Acker, and carl Sawatski. More these will be chosen from t•he appli- theloeaie shifted tø"Ess ex County.. Hall- recently, it has provided considerable cants already indicating their desire to mark of the circuits:-an upsurge. in"in- minor league talent .and some of these move into the North Jersey ranks. terest•vith the presenceof the•-ung performers will find their way to the The North Haledon club which won playersand bright prospectS-•'!/•'t•all upper brackets eventually. But aside the Passaic County League title last wonder that North Jersey has_..•uch from this consideration, there is reason year, is anxious to move up into the reasonto view 1960 with optimism:':Sev- 'for the league to point with pride at one stronger ccircuit this-time. So are the eral outstanding prospects were-note d significant product-- it provides en- Wallington Hillsides, the Jordans, and on the rosters last year and more a .re tertainment for baseban fans in the sec- teams from Oradell, Lyndhurst, and the expected to shine. this time. :tion all summer long. Pompton area. These teams will provide The season will get under way,•-the Lou Infald, Counsel to Mayor Wil- the two squads to be chosen for com- secondweek of May and the schedule liam P. Dillistin of Paterson and a long- pletion of the North Jersey circuit list will wind up shortlyafter LabOrDay. i{-.timesports enthusiast, is Presidentof for 1960. By the time the end of the It is no small item that the last two 'the North Jersey League, a post he has campaign arrives, it is certain that the years saw playoffs required to settle the ' filled through the rocky years and one players, teams, and fans will see a lot championship. In 1958, the Paterson •-which he has handled with skill and of action swirling over the area's dia- Generals and Garfield Benigns wound sound finesse. Lou was a former athlete up in a tie for first place and the playoff •L'himself,performing in baseball and soc- The League.will play twilight ball, in finally crowned the Generals as cham- cer ranks with distinction. In recent sea- the main, but there will be some Sun- pions. In 1959, the Garfield Beni-gns sons, he has provided adroit administra- day games as well. In Paterson, most of were in there for a slice again, being tion of North Jersey's diamond activ- the competition will be concentrated on knotted with the Midland Park Rangers •ities. Eastside Park and Totowa Oval. There and Edwins for the top spot. In . the i'•:•-i•Next Monday evening, the organiza- will be some night action, too, but the windup., the Rangers won it to pick UP i'•on meetingfor the 1960campaign is exact plans have not taken shape on ß•" the marble•. • ' -•'•fSCheduledat the City.Hall. At that time, that portion of the season planning. Now,it's a brandnew year 'land-a

•//}•';he.. screening committee of the league Last year, the first night semi-pro brand new race.

.

Page Five Cotton-soft or diamond-hard, heavy as east iron or lighter than cork, per- fectly transparent or virtually opaque-- any of these diverse traits can be built into a 75,000 years old "wonder mater- iar' known as glass. Housewife, store- keeper, salesman, farmer- whatever and such -- protected the secret formu- your occupation, you may see and use la by which Venetian glassware was as many as 450 different types of glass made. Craftsmen were prisoners, kept on an average day. But scientists know apart from their fellow citizens and over 20,000 types. spied on by police lest they blab the se- cret. If they tried to leave town, as- Glass today can be a sheet of pa- tion -- glass to conduct electricity or sassins followed- to make sure that per, a hammer handle, a hairthin insulate against it. Today kitchen uten' the artist and his art would not reach thread, a curtain, curtain wall, or sils of glass, tomorrow homes that cook a rival city. gleaming door panel. Glass yesterday with glass and have windows which au- was a vase, a lens, a window pane -- Eventually, of course, the secret tomatically control light and heat trans- but also a weapon of war, a rich man's spread across Europe. Beautiful vases mission by the nature of their chemical toy, a state secret guarded by the death and goblets multiplied, but there wasn't composition.Whole cities may one day penalty for suspected betrayers! much progress in other directions. "Mir- be enclosed in glass "skies" which can Just what is this amazing stuff we call ror, mirror on the wall" was only a filter the weather. glass? Its main ingredients are sand, fairy tale till the 12th and 13th cen- Some fine day you may hop into your soda ash and limestone, though almost tury. But if .milady couldn't see her car -- which will also have more glass all the basic elements of the earth are shiny nose, neither could milord- the than today's model -- and find glass required by one or another of the glass- first optical lenses, produced around built right into the highway'. Phosphor- making formulae now in use. In fact, if 1285, were useful mainly as showpieces escent glass could be used as a wear-re- the earth's entire crust were properly in the jeweled lorgnettes of the rich. sisrant road material, softly but dis- crushed and mixed, heated hot enough The first plate glass windows, appear- tinctly outlining the highway at night and cooled fast enough, the resulting ing about the same'time, were similarly and elastic enough to prevent disinte- •ubstancewould be glass. unrevealing, and also_reserved for the The first known glass was nature's wealthy. Only in the last 150 years has grationby frost.It may eventake the place of that other glasslandmark, the product•' a volcanicglass CalledOb: glass left the ornamental luxury cate- traffic light. sidean.It wasfound by a'club:•ting ex- gory and become a clear necessity. While .envisioning this sparkling plorer and fashionedinto a much more "People who live in glass houses," world of tomorrow, scientists also have /•ffic'i•n••weaPOn -- arrowheads-- some once a purely mythical group, may soon 7•000 'years'"ago. A somewhatdifferent a clear picture of the spaceage. It will include the entire population as win- feature satellite stations, spaceships, 'glassweapon WaS employed 'by Egyp• dows become walls in an ever-increas• tion :[•1ies"who enhancedtheir beauty ß rockets and other aeronautical appara- ing number of office buildings, schools tus constructedin large part from new- with glass beads, 'and With aromatic oils and private homes. j. Jt0red"in glass jars--'50 centuriesago. er and tougher types of glass. "l•6i•econventional weapon s --';knives Inside the gleaming glass-enclosed Already, missileheadsare beingmade.•(•... buildings no.w rising all over the na- from an incredibly hardy substance? tion, the ancient wonder material is per, which consists .of glass converted into '• forming a dazzling variety of functions. a ceramic•by heat bo.mbardment. Glass fiber for curtains and draperies That arrow-whittlingcaveman would that can be wiped clean with a cloth- surelyhae cracked up if he couldhave. • glass barriers that block atomic radia-

been told what his discovery Would lead. to. But the rest of us, thoughwe migh• be a bit glassy-eyedfrom this visionof progress,can't doubt that it Will come to pass.It's asclear as crystal • oop•!i!:-!.

sorry'-- crystalglass. ,•.

•_•. ' -.•' '-'- The CHI•ONICI::i...... Page Six ::•• ,':: . -- . .• SOCIAL -..

.-.

By PAT PA•I•g

The annual card party and fashion show of the Junior Auxiliary of St. Joseph"shospital will be held on Wednesday, May 11 in the Grand Ballroom of the Alexander Hamilton Hotel. Tickets may be obtained from Mrs. Thomas McNearney or Mrs. William Scu]ly or any member of the auxiliary. Plans for a costume ball to be held in October were formulated at "'"'i , a recent meeting of the Opti-Mrs. Club at the home of the club presi-

dent, Mrs. Joseph Leogrande.. A social affair will be 'held on March •. • •'" :'::i:i:!:i:i.": 19 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Messineo in Wyckoff. •..ß • ••-.,======,-'•' ' ...... :;::.:..-:•i•• Adult classesfor the preparation of Confirmation at St. Michael's ... IL C. Church are being held on Mondays starting at 8 p.m. in the Rec- ..-•, tory Hall at 70 Cross Street. :i . • ,.•,,• •,;,. .. . .

The combinedsocieties of St. Paul R. C. Church will hold a St. ß Patrick's Day dinner on March 13 in the school auditorium. CYO girls ß ß . '•, '' . will serve the dinner which will start at 5:30 p.m. Corned beef and •.'• ? .: - cabbage will be prepared by the Holy Name Society members. Vin- cent S. Parrillo is ticket chairman. "' '•. JOll]q MONTALBETTI MRS. ALBERT BREEN The second annual spaghetti supper under the sponsorship of the The marriage ceremony of Miss Miss Lorene Swezy, daughter Junior Women's Club of Paterson has been set for March 19 at the Esther Rodgers, daughter of Mr. of Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Swezy, Women's Club on Broadway'. Proceeds will be donated for' the New and Mrs. Malachy Rodgers of 666 of 981 East 22nd Street, became Jersey State Home for Girls. Mrs. Joseph .Haik is ticket chairman. Belmont Avenue, North Haledon, the bride of Albert Breen, son of to John Montalbetti, son of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. William K. Breen George Hankinson, assistant superintendent of schools in Fair and Mrs. Domenic Montalbetti, of of 1043 East 22nd Street, in Peo-

Lawnß will .be feted at a testimonial dinner on March 10 at the Casino 124 Richmond Avenue. Following ple's Park Reformed Church. A de Charlz. Hankinson is completing 17 years of service, has accepted a honeymoon, the newlyweds will reception was held at the Madi- a similar position in Joliet, Ollinois, and' will .begin .his new duties on reside at:'540 West Br(J•'dway. son Park Singing: Society.

The combined societies of St. Bonaventure's R. C. Church will sponsor their annual corn, beef and cabbage dinner on Sunday, March 20, in the Parish Hall. Angelo Gambatese is chairman. Reservations "must be made before March 15.

ABOUT PEOPLE YOU KNOW-- Among area residents who returned recently from winter vaca- tions are Mr. and Mrs. John Feeney and family of 79 Boulevard, Glen Rock, home from a motor trip to Mexico. Mr. and Mrs. J. Re of Saddle R•ver, have returned from an air trip and sea .cruise to Hawaii. Twinswere born to Mr. andMrs. Ma•½h •'.. Schwartz of Massachu- setts, in St. Joseph'sHospital. The boy was named Martin Guy and the girl, Ursula Gabriele. Mrs. Schwartz is the former Miss Mary To.omey,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tooracy of 9.9.1Marion St. .. Mr. Schwartz is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Schwartz of Kearney Street, and is a student at •orthwestern University in Boston. The babies :' join a brother and wil! remain here for the next six weeks.

;?ß Lynn Prince,son of Mr. and Mrs. Linford Prince,454 SouthP]ea-

_. sant Avenue, Ridgewood,was given a farewell party. He enlisted in 'the MarineCorps, and will receivehis basictraining in ParisIsland, it: South 'Carolina.

LAmbert 5-9623 CRESCIONE FULOIL PHOTO STUDIO CO. cione xedos, Inc. Weddings--- Portraits POTLUCKY PAIR-- Marti Barris, who plays .Peppi Mint on' HeatingSystems "The Howdy Doody Show" Saturday morning colorcastsover Installed Full line ol Tuxedoz/or Hire th• NBC-TV Network, joins Leo the Leprechaun'(played by. guestBill McCutcheon)in admiringhis pot of gold.Leo Will ß : !• AR4-8050 l•!•ion, N.J. •2 Market •t. l••n N. bring a touch of Ireland to Doodyviilefor its advanceSt. Pat,. ., mT • m rick's Day observanceduring the colorcast of March 1.2..'.

Page Seven EDITORIALS THn n Fn[T

.,.\' J . ß

. THE SHRINKING DOLLAR

...... iThe Chamber of Commerce of the United States reports ! ' ßß that the American dollar is worth lesstoday than at any time _... ß- :. ,.., .. in•_hist0ry.... . '-•-' I • '"' •" '-' During the current century alone, now just •tarted on its sixtieth. year, the purchasing power of that dollar has dropped -, ,.,- , from 100 cents to 29 cents -- a loss of almost three-quarters. ruitlul Fruit And-the value of savings,pensions and insurancehas dropped f accordingly -- as great numbers of people who must live in whole Or in part on fixed incomes have learned the hard way. ß- We Can't changewhat has happenedin the past. But we can learn from it, and make an honest effort to keep the d01- lar's worth from sliding still further down the hill. For in- stance, the Chamber calls upon Congress, in the current ses- ß StandUp And Sleep] sion, to keep the highway program on a pay-as-you-go basis; THE INDIANELEPHANT LAId to oppose inflationary increases in the minimum wage; to re- SLEEPSTANDING UP BE- move artificial restrictions on the interest rate of government CAUSE OF A MUS•:•ULAR MECH- ANISM IN HI5 LEeS T1-LA•TLOCKS bonds;to avoid wasteful defensespending; and to,eliminate AND PERMITS HIM TO REMAIN unnecessary spending for public works, depressed areas, com- UPRleHT FOR•Y• AT munity facilities, veterans' benefits, and airport construction. A TIME / This call is based on the inescapable fact that the greatest sin- gle force back of inflation is drunken-sailor federal spending. NOW HEAR THIS I. The Chamber also seeksto reducemonopolistic labor power, ALLSERIES EU.S. SAVINGS BONDS •Ave EXTENSION PRIVILEGES OFTEN YEARS AFTER MATURI• DATE- WITH INTEREST AccRU•Ne ! which is another important source of inflationary pressure. •ET ON THEPAYROLL •AVIN•S PLANWHERE YOU WORK OR Naturally enough, there will be wide differences of opin- RESULARLYAT•UR BANK ! :ion over the details of such a program. But, those aside, some- th•ng drastic must be done, and done soon, if the dollar's . worth does not become 15 cents, 10 cents, 5 cents and, ulti- mately, zero. The Editor Speaks

It. seems to me that too many 'peoplepay entirely too much atten- tion ta ,what happensafter their demise.Almost daily you hear of wills that are pagesand pageslong and make a number of almost un- A DEFINITION OF SEAPOWER fuTfillableprovisions. Thus long litigation ensues, and by the time the testator's estate is. distributed,. the only people who really benefit Wl•atis seapower? are fhe lawyers. "-if-You think that can be answered by saying "A powerful It reminds me just .a little of a law recently passed in Victoria, Navy," think again. B.C., which providesthat hunters may no longer hunt ducks.with Here for instance,is what AdmiralArleigh A. Burke, cannons. An old, old Canadian 'law made it legal to use "gun, can- Chief of Naval Operations, has to say' "Seapower is not just non, pistol, rifle, revolver or fo-wlingpiece." But that is no longer al- lowed. Hereafter, only shotguns may be used. men-of-war. It includes cargo ships, passenger liners, tankers I don't think it makes much difference to a duck whether he I• and the many other craft and auxiliaries that make up the killed with a shotgun or with a cannon,pistol, rifle, revolver or lowl- Merchant Marine. Our experiences in World War I and II ing piece. A dead duck is a dead duck. demonstrated beyond question our dependence upon our mer- By the same token, I don't see where it should make so much chant arm, our 'Fourth Arm of Defense', and we must strive difference to a human' being how his money is disposd of after he always to keep our merchant fleet virile and strong." dead and buried, as long as his family is provided for. If the wrong people get it in the first place, another set of "wrong people" will Military leadersalso point out that the developmentof get it away from them. And the same set of lawyers will serve both ._ new and terrible weapons of war have in no way diminished for a reasonable fee. the importance of the Merchant Marine. If anything, they Everybody should make a will, of course. That is no less reason- have increased it -- for nuclear war might wreak such de- able than that everybody,should have a life insurancepolicy on him• self or be covered by automobile insurance. ! think if ! were a st•i•ction on other formsof transportthat merchantships wealthy man -- and not being one, I would do.it anyway -- I would, ' wouldbe the only meansof movingthe vast quantitieJof sup- leave everything unconditionally to my wife. plies on which survival of the westernworld woulddepend. A lot of menthink that their wivesdon't know how to handl•I '.Wayback in 1936Congress formally declared/that it was money. Well, if they didn't I bet you that a whole lot ot• rich-men wouldn't have.•.nearly so much to leave their wives, if those sam•, the policyof the UnitedStates to fosterthe developmentand wives hadn't known pretty darn well how to handle money. enco.uragethe maintenanceof a first-classU. S.-flagMerchant Justma•ke a survey some time on how many men started wit•.! •' Marl.he. Time has proven, beyond doubt, the wisdom of that out a nickel and never .saveda cent until they got married• For eveB action, foolishvirgin" you are apt to find a hundredwise ones. • PageEig-ht Two Scouts Receive Eagle Award

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F_•ST-WEST Much has been heard of the Soviet Union's ef- forts and plans to increase elec- tric power output. This is a high- ly important matter- for elec- tricity, to say the completely ob- vious, is vital to any nation's in- dustrial and military strength.

Representatives of the electric ß power industry of the United $ . . States made two visits, in 1958 and 1959, to Russia to inspect its facilities. They were cordially re- ceived and saw what they went to see. Their report is now available, and it is a significant one. No attempt is made to down- grade Russia's ability or deter- mination to expand the nation's power system. The report as- FAIE LAWN--Two membersof Fair Lawn ScoutTroop 240 receivethe Eagle Award,the sumes that the goals set for the highestaward offered a scout,at a troopcourt of honor.Left to right' Mrs. HenryBor- Seven-Year Plan ending in 1965 stelmann,Henry Borstelmann,Manfred Borstelmann, Ralph Baker, Jack Baker, Mrs. Jack will be reached. Even so, at that Baker,and Walter Taylor,scoutmaster o! Troop240, who presented the awards. time U.S. power capability will exceed Russia's by an even larger margin than at present. To put it in figures, our 1959 power capability exceeded Rus- sia's by about 124 million kil• watts. In 1965, if both countries JayceesAward BowlingCitations carry out their announced plans, the excess will be !1.33 million ki- lowatts or more. The report states categorically that "there is not the slightest reason to believe that Russia will pass the United States in power supply at any time in the foreseeable future/' In power, as in other funda- mental fields, private enterprise is outdoing government enter- prise by a huge margin.

FARM PEOBI,•M- For Ameri- cans wondering why' the U.S. soil-bank program has not been more successful in holding down the staggering farm surpluses, U., S. Comptroller General Joseph Campbell had an answer. Of all the 23 million acres that have gone into the soil bank, nearly one-quarter (or 5.4 million acres) of the "idle" land had not been producing crops anyway. Campbell said owners of fallow acreage have been paid $50 mil- lion a year for five year. Thus the government, now moving to halt the abuses, spent a total of $270 WAYNE• Therewas an abundanceof trophiesthis week as the Jayceesawarded citations million to reduce crops that never at its bowlingcontest for Wayneyoungsters. Left to right are JaniceWood, Kathy Simp- existed. son,Joseph Guidetti, former Wayne teacher, representing the Junior Chamber; Ken Staudt, GaryHolden, Bob Wrobel and Lance Comfort. Kathy Simpson and Gary Holden will repre- sent Wayne in the coming state junior bowling contests. Page.,ßNtnt-. ACROSS •---Shortand pointed l--wel•h onion 9--Are obstacleto •nraptured 10--Tale J -Lifelea 11--Pen-name o! 34•Pleshof swine 1•= StrikesCharles head•mb on 15 Count•vanin of Penns•l- 13--Emblem 18•rien• l•tnder •SWSF •O 21--Malaysignadapted for vessel,swift 17--MentalImago . travelin either 18--Arevnrltblo S direction •ho•s up slain Word 2•trin•ed•--UnitOf instrument •et rid of 28--Wideawake ••at of NewYort P•[• 30--Persiankingdom s• reformatory 31--Danish-American -Icelandiccolletlop s•iaJ worker•dled -Wide-mouthedof literature po• • Page 1S •,•axon 1914t •lrellng 9 -Remove from active 33--Wanting in harmon] •rvice 3•Com•tRive e•ent 33-•nd that •ts 35-Egyptianbull tilled•Spanisht 36-• avart for 3•--•ne of foret• sacred 30--Part of eye 38-Call •est 41•ne unit In stairc• il--Va•rlzed wa•r 4S--Blackhaw 12 Concei• -- 6•--•gal claim o• 47--Tardiest BREAKFAST 'AUTOCRAT' -- Sir Cedric Hardwicke, (center) 43--•ur-ttstlng crosby 40--Expressagr•ment •-Yetrp In offlc •B•k of neck M--Reproveharsh!• as the poet and author, Oliver Wendell Holmes St., known as • 8the attitude 69•Hea• bread : 53--Unit of French the "autocrat of the breakfast table"; Ann HardinG' (left),. as 18 •prin back •Dunce t currency 18•mtl) river duck •l•oil in• bah •-Unit of forceIn his wife, Amelia, and Anne Francis, as Fanny Dixwell, fiancee •--Ha• physics of his jurist son, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., have starring 52--MoreylelUln •WN ....• •-Run tws• to be S7-Brother-in-lt• Ot • l•teeple mtrri• roles in the full-hour "Our American HeritaGe" Colorcast..of Nation J 2--• st sony 58-Znvl orate "Autocrat and Son" on the N BC-TV Network Sunday, March 20,- SOStew-pan ," •ro•an fi• 57--Rain in very •e •--AnW• • •rican •m•a•t drama Christopher Plummet stars as young Holmes in the drama J4 •rv•moldin r•m •Bfins out in• M A •lum carbonate based on the famed jurist's early years. o•n 59--Pro•Ftion (Latin • •n •• •a• 81--Exchangevremium t - usa, • run v--Wharf •-Close

THOSE WERE THE DAYS' By ART BEEMAN

AND M,E, •1 ' N/X'I'UI•E / ß ' THOSE NA.'rA•!E,SN"r.,-r ' ß •EEE ..THE ß ..MOON .. .--AND ,,"/OU - ':."' TEE AY$- ß

2 7741N•COSTS

Page Ten* S--RollerDerby l:30 9•Nightmare 9--Foreign Festival 4•--ReligiousProg. I I•Divorce Court I I--Mama 7--Movie 13--Open End 13•College DanceParty 9--Movie 10:30 9:30 I I--Bowling 2--What's My Line 2--Have 'GunWfil Travel 2':00 4---Movie %VCBS-TVm2 •% A-T• --4 %VN E%%'-TV•5 4•Journey to Understand.2--Our Miss Brooks 7--21 B.eacon Sfree? • -TV--7 WOI•TV•9 WPiXmll I 'l--W. resfling 4•Cinema '60 9--Movie I I :GO WNTA---13 10:00 2:30 These TV Morning and Afternoon'Programs Are Repe•ted 2-- 2--New York Forum 2-•-Sun. News Special 7--Marry A Millionaire 5--Mydery Is My Business 4--News Monday Through Friday from 7:00 a•m. to 5:30 p.m. 10:30 i I--Ho:lywood S.•owcase 5•Starlight Theatre 6:00 ß .4•The Price Is Right 7--Day In Court 2--Eyewitnessf• History 13--Reading Out Loud /--Movie 4•Confinental Classroom 7--Romance of-Life 2:30 4--•.Man From letarpel 3:00 I I--Weekly News Review 6:30 9--Herb Sheldon 7--Jubilee USA 11:15 2--House Party 2--Sports Spectacular I. 1':30 2--Sunrise Semester 4•-Loretta Young Show 9--Bowling S•Movie 2--Movie 2--Decem be:- Bride I I--Movie 7:00 7--Gale Storm Show 7--Open Hearing I I•AII Star Moyle 4--Concentration 12:20 2--News 9--Love Story . 13--Play of the Week 9•-.Mfilion Dollarß , Movie 4•Today 5--Romper Room I I--Basic Russian I1:00 I I--Inner Sanctum 4--Midnight Movie 7--1 Married Joan , 7:30 2--News r3--Play of the Week 1:30 I I--Wor':d of Numbers 3:00 7•artoons 4--Sat. Night News 3:30 2--Late, Late Show 13--Day Watc• 2--Millionaire S--Movie - 8:00 7--Champio.nshipBridge 12:00 &--YoungDr? Malona 7--Movie 2--News 2--Love o• Life 5--So This Is 11:15 4--WRCA-TV Presents MO' "' 5•D;ng Dong School 4--Truth or Consequences 7--Beat The Clock 2--Movie 7--Paul Winchell 7--Little Rascals- 7--Restless Gun 9--Sire n-goStories 4--Movie Four MARCH 7 1.3--Richard Willis Show I I---Ca ptured 9--Movie Time I I--Movie 4:30 7--The Night Show 5:30 8:!5 I I--Foreign Language ' 3:30 I 1:30 2--Face The Nation 2•Capfain Kangaroo 12:30 2--The Verdict Is Yours 9--Playboy's Penthouse 4--ChampionshipGolf 2--Early Show 8:30 2--Search For Tomorrow S--Big Beat 4---From These Roots . 12:30. A:M. 7--Broken Arrow S•Sa'ndyBecker 4--It Could Be You S--Doorway to Destiny 4--MMnighfMovie '9--Mil. lion Dot'lastMovle 7--Rin Tin Tin 7--Time 'fOr Fun $•Cartoons 7--Who Do You TruSt 13--Newsbea,• Roundup I I--Whistler 9--Moyie 13--PhysicalCulture 7--Love That Bob 9--Movie 1:15 I I--Three Stooges 9•00 12:45 13--Da,¾Watch 2•Late. Late Show 2•C0nquest' 6:00 2--PeoPlesChoice 2•The Guiding Light 4:00 S--Sherlock Holmes 4-•-Hi' Mom I:00 7--Funday Fu•nies 5-.Carfoons 7--Beu'i.ah - 2--News 2--BrighterDay 4•Comedy Playhouse I I•Ca-t. Grief 7--Lifile Rascals• 13•Day Watch &--Dr. Joyce lrother• MARCH 6 I'3--Movle I I--Popeye 9:30 •Carfoons S--Douglas Fairbanks 7--Amer;can Bandstand 7:00 5:30 13•Record Wagon 2--My Little Margie 7--About Faces 4:15 4--Modern Farmer 2•College Bowl S--Topper I I•--Fun At One 4--Time: Present 6:30 ß 2--The Secret Storm 8:00 7--Personal Theatre 13--Day Watch S--Mr. District Afforn'ey &-News, Gabe.'Pressmae 4:30 2--Susie '10:00 1:05 7?--The Lone Ranger .S--SandyBecker 2--Red Rowe 2--Burns and Allen 2--The Edge of Night &--Library Lions I I--Fast Gun s 7--Newsreels 7---Cartoons ,4•DoughRe Me 1:30 4--Adventure Time 6:00 I I---Superman 8:30 5;--Moyle 2--As The World Ture• S-•4r.ß Dlst.rie•fAttorney 2--Smal'l World 13•Curfaln Time 7--Memory Lane 4--Dial 4 I I--AbboE' & Costello 2--My-Liffle Margie 4--Mee• The Press 4--Let's Ta•k About God I:l--Mathemafics S--Movie 5:00 S--Sun, Playhouse 6:45 10:30 7--Ray Milland 2--Life of Riley 5--Cartoons 7---Men of Annaperis 4•Huntle¾, Brinkley 2•On the Go 9--Drama 4•M'ovie 9•Weekend Movie 7•John Dalv S•Overseas Adventure 4---Play Your Hunch 2:0• 2--Peoples Choice I I--Casey Jones 7:00 I i:00 9--Wild Biff Hickok 2--FOr Better or Worse 4•Library Lions 6:•e 2--News I I--Boz• TI• Clown S--Woederama 2_--1Love. Lucy .4•), ueenFor A Day i 4--Sh-of,•un Stede -. 2--Twentieth Century 13--Topic 4•Saber of-LondOn S•Charlle Chan 9--Zacherly 5:30 9:3! 7--The Vikings. 7--Resc-ue 8 12:30 2--The Eady Show 2--Way To Go SATURDAYß 6:0e I I--Brave Stallion 9--Terryteen Circus 2--American . Musical The, 4--SuedaY Special I I--News MARCH 5 7--West Point 13--Newsbeat 7:00 4--Detecfive's .Diary 13--Foresight 7:00 13--N. ewsbeaf 7--Restless Gun 9-•Champ. Bowling 7:1S 2--The Big Picture I I.•Jeff's Collie 2--Lasge 1':00 2•l. am.p U-wio'lvi.y Feet 2--News 4•Modern Farmer 4•Overland Trail ; 13--Record Wagon 7--The School Story 7:30 2--Saturday News 7--Colt 45 I I--News . 13--New Horizons 2--Sunrlse Semester 4--Mystery for Saturday I I--Whi.rlybirds 7:30 $•Movi'e 4•New• and-Weather 10:30 2--Kate Smith Show 8'.-OO 6:30 13:--Belwe'on The Lines 7--High SchoolBasketball 2--Look Up a'nd Live 4--Riverboat 2--Capt. Kangaroo 4---Cameo Theatre 7:30 I I•Guv Lombardo 7--Focus . 5--Man Hunt '4•And¾'sGang S•Ce.rfooas 2--Dennis The Menace 1:30 9--Zachedy S--Metro. Probe 7•Chey.enne S--Ding Donq School 7--Harbor Command 13--Sfevio and his Friends 7--Cartoon Festival 2--Young Worlds 7--Maverick 9•Movie I I--Sergeant Preston I1:0• 9--Million Dollar Movie 9--Moyle I I--Bold Journey 8:3q 6:45 2--FYI 4•Children's Theatre I I--Bowling's Best 2•News and Weather I I--Victory A+ Sea 13--Highway Petrol 4--Searchllght .B:00 •--Carfoons 13--Day Watch 7d• 13--Sherwood Fores.• 2:00 7--Faith For Toda• 2--The Texan 13--Command Perform. 2--BOld Venture 8:00 I I--Chrisfophers 5--Dial 999 9:00 2--Hockey Ca.me 2--Ed Sul.l•van Show 4--Pro Basketball S•Judge 13--Movie I I--Intern; Defective " ß. 2--Capfain Jet 7--U. S. Border Petrol 4--SundayShowcase' I I--Movle I 1:3• 13--Mike Wallace Interv. 5--Just For Fun S--Treasur• 2:30 9--Terryteen Circus 2•Camera Three 8:30 ,", 1.3--Day Watch I I--STeve Donevan I I--Wrest!inq S--Action Playhouse &-Watch Mr. Wizard 13•Citlzen Soldler ß2--Father Knows Best ß • ' 9:30 2:45 13•Bis.•op S•een 7--Thls Is the Answer • I 0:00 7:30 8:30 4-- 7--Newsreel Album I I--Bowling 2--Treasure Island $•1 Led Three Lives S--Divorce Hearing •,:•i!• 2•HeCk!e & Jackie 3:00 12:00 4•Bona.nza 7•Lawman 7--Bourbon St. Beat • 4•Howdy Doody Show 7--Baseball 2--Televislon Workshop 10:30 5•Waferfronf 13--America.n Legend I I--Kingdom o• •he Sea 9--MiUion Do-Ilar Movie 7---Dick Clark• 4--Brlefing Session 9:00 13--Play of the Week - 2--MTqhty Mouse I I--Movle 9--Pro Football 7--John Hopkins Fi!e 2--GE Theatre 9:00 •:' &--Ruffand Roddy 4:00 9•Oral Roberf• •: I1:00 I I--Beefs and Saddle 4---The Chevy Show 2•Dann¾ Thomas 5--Eas-:' Side K;ds I I--Capitol Headlines 5L-Medic 4--Peter Gunn ..... 2--Lone Ranger 13--Playhouse 13 12:30 7--Mystery Matinee 8:00 7•Rebel S--Theatre Five • 4---Fury I I--Movle 4•You':-h Forum !--.::5--Bicj Adventure ,•--Blg Beat 9--Bowling 9--Science Fiction Theatre 13•Day Watch 7--Bishoo Pike -:-' 7•Great Glidersleeve 7•High Reed I I--Mee, • McGraw I I--Silen•, ß Service 4:15 9--The Evangel Hour ß 9•Continen.t.•l Cookery I I•Amos & And¾ 13.-t-A!e•In Wonderland 9:30 2--L,aureland H•rdy I I--Mark Saber 13--Day Watch 8:30 9:30 2--Playhouse 90 11:30 4:30 2--Wanted Dead or Alive 13--Coy. MaYnor 2--Alfred Hitchcock 4•Dram'a 2--1 Love Lucy 2--Eye on New York 4•Man and the Challenge I:0e 5--Foreign Legion 7--Adventure in Paradise .•::':. 4--C;rcus Boy 9--Milllee Dollar Movie 7--Leave It To Beaver 2--Young People'sConc. 7•Alaskans 9--Strange Storles .::•:• 7--Anlmaland 5:00 9--Aggie 4•Open Mind I I•City Detective I I--Thi• Man Dawson (•i•. i2:00 2--TheUfo o• Riley I1--1 S•arch For Adv. S--Movie 13--Small C•aims Court I 0.00 '::i•:•2--Sky King 4--Star Theatre 9:00 7•Co11. News Conf. 10:00 4•Steve Allen Show %•?:'•'5--T'reasure 5--Charlie Chan Movie 2--Mr. Lucky 9--Christian Science 2•Jack Benny Program S--Walter Winchell 4•-True Story 7•AII ßSTar Gol• 4--The Deputy I I--Continental Mina. 4•Loretta Young 9--Martin Kane _./•.7•SouPySales I I--Movie 7--Lawrence Walk Show 13--Movie 5---H¾ Gardener I I--Special Agent 7 •::• •-e CHRONICI• •age EleYen 10:30 10:00 9:30 S--Big Story 2•erry Moore Show 2--I've Got'A Secret 7--OriglnalAmateur Hour 4--Id Squad 9--Favorite Story 9---MailionDo/ler Movie 7--Alcoa Presents I I•eliforniens ' I i'•Cocle 3 I I•ivorce Court 10:80 13--MiEe Wallace 10:30 2•Reolt at Hadley I'1:0• 4•Miko Hammer 4•--This Is Your Life Saturday 2raThe Late Newe 7--Keep Talking 7--Bedng 7:30 p.m.--2•Show of the Mo•th m "Treasure Island", with Hugh 4--J. M. McCeffrey 9--Movie 9•ong 'JohnNebel Griffith and Boris Karloff in Robert Louis Stevenson's mas- 'S--MOVie I I•ampy's Corner I I--Decoy 7.--Newi 13--Mike Wallace terpiece about a young boy's exciting adventures in search/or ! I---News Report I I:00 10:30 4•Wichita Town pirate gold. 13•Dance Parl• 2--The Late News 9--Movie 9:30 p.m. ! -3(mrney to Understaading • a full hour color filmed I I: I S 4•d. M. McCeffrey I I--Panic 2•The .Lateß..Show S--Movie report on President Eisenhower's entire tour o! South America. 4•Jack PeerShow 7--News 13---Mike Wallace , 10:30 p.m.--2•Eyewitness to History -- "The President in Argentina, ?•TheNight Show I I--NewsReport Ii:00 Chile, and Uruguay", covering the President's visits to Buenos I •Sporfs andWeather 13--DanceParty 2--The Late New• Aires, Santiago de Chile and Montevideo, and includes his 11:20 II:IS 4•doh n M'C•Ce(•rey visit to a gaucho ranch. I I-•AII StarMovie 2--TheLate Show S--Movie 4•Ja.ck 'Pear Show 7--News 15:15 p.m.--2--.The I•te Show m "Louisiana 'Purchase", starring Bob Hope, Zorina and Victor Moore. To delay exposure, an innocent 9__Mysfeey12:00Movie 7--Thei i__Movie'Night Show I IraNews 13•uality.Theatre 12:00 13roDeace Party dupe for a mythical group of politicians filibusters for .days, 12:4S II:IS and tries to compromise the investigating senator's reputation. 9--Mystery Movie 2--Late Show (1941) 2'TheLate, Late Show 13•.uality.Theatre 4•Jack Pair Show 1:00 12:4S 7--The Night Show 11:15 p.m.--4 Movie 4 -- "Street With No Name", with Mark Ste- •. ConsultDr. Brothers 2--Late,Late Show I I•ovle vens, Richard Widmark and Lloyd Nolan. An FBI agent is.:as- ,I :oo 1'2:00 signed to Skid Row to uncover the identity of a mob that has TUESDAY 4•Consu'.tDr.Grothers 9--Mystery Movie

. been..terrorizing the city with murders and robberies. (1948) I:1õ 13--Qua.!ify 'Theatre MARCH8 I:00 11:30 p.m.--9--Playboy's PerUse -- Playboy editor welcomes the WEDNESDAY 2:•Lafe, Late Show outstanding Jonah Jones, his trumpet and his quartet, vocalist S:30 4•onsulf Dr. Brothers 2--The Early Show Jeri Southern, harmonica virtuoso Larry Adler, comedian Don S--Bi.qBeat MARCH 9 Adams, and Pantominists Tony and Eddy. 7--Rockyand his Friends 5:30 THURSDAY Sunday 9--Movie 2--TheEarly Show 6:30 p.m.--2--Twentieth Canary- "Japan's Changing Face--_.Part I I--ThreeStooges S•BigBeat 6:0G MARCH 10 I' The New Look". Part I exploreswhy the youth of Japan, S--Felixand Frends 7--My FriendFlicka who 15 years ago woulcT have died gloriously for the E.rnporer, 7--LiffleRascals 9--Movle I I--Three Stooges S:30 now look upon him as-a symbol of the past, and live only •or I I--Popeye 2--Movie the moment. 3--Record Wagon S--Big Beet 6:30 6:00 7--Rocky and His Friends 7:30 p.m.--7--M•verick "The Misfortune Teller", Bret Maverick, 4--News S•Oartoons 9--Movie arrested for killing the local' mayor, tangles with an angry moo S•SendyBecker 7--LittleRascals i I--Three Stooges ready to lynch him. 7--Newsreel I i--Popeye 6:00 I I •C•)uickDraw McGraw !3--Record Wagon S--Felix and Friends 8-00 p.m.--2--Ed Sullivaa Show- Guests include singers Anna 13•urfa'in Time 7--LiHle Rascals Maria Olberghetti and Eartha Kitt, comedian Bob Lewis, folk 6:30 6:4S 4---News I I •opeye singer Leon Bibb, dance team Augie and Marg'o, and the Happy 13--Record Wagon Jesters, comedy singers. 4•News 5•C.artoons 6:30 7-:--News 7--Newsreels 4•News 8:00 p.m.-- •. Sund•y Showcase m "Turn The Key Deftly",-with 7:00 ! I--Brave Stall'ion •arfoons Julie Harris in a mystery telling of a young architect who 2--World News 13•CurtelnTime 7---Newsreels 4•Phil Silvers 6:4S' takes his dead father's place as magician with a traveling cir- I.I--HucklehorryHound cus and the eerie circumstances he faces• S'Scotlendß :Yard 4•News 13•Curtain Time 7---UnionPacific ß7--*NOWs &:4S 10:30 p.m. • -Movie 4 -- "" starring •Terrytown Circus 7:00 4•News Wendell Corey and . An exciting romance I I--Kevin'Kennedy 2--World News 7--News of the Tropical Seas, taken from a book by Joseph ConracL i'3•He.wsbeet 4•DeethValley Days 7.-O0 7:15 S•Tombstone Tarratify 2--News 11-15 p.rn.•2•The • Shov? -- "Now, Voyager," with Bette Davis, •News 7--U...S. BorderPetrol 4--Lockup Paul Henreid and Claude Rains. A young lady 1alls in love with I I•Jøhn Tillman' ! i'--News S--Shor'rff of Cockise a 1allow passenger when she goes on a luxury cruiser to recu- 7:3e 13'Newsbeat 7---TugboatAnnie ßperate. (1942) 2--Greed Jury 7:15. 9•artoons 4•-.La'remie' 2--N•ws I I--Kevin Kennedy. •zona• through S•Bedge 714 9--TerrySoonCircus 13--Newsbeet 7•Bro•co I I•John TillmacNews 7:30 and R0:30 p.m. --9--Million Dollar Movie -- "The Naked City", 9--Movie 7:30 7:1S with Barry Fitzgerald, Howard Duff. Against the authentic I I--Fljgh;• 2--Be Our Guest 2--News background of more than a hundred New York City land- I •3r'•H.ighway Petrel 4---WagOnTrain I l--News marks, two detectives try to solve the murder of a young girl. I:0• S--AfricanPatrol 7:30 One of the best crime ever made. (1948) 2•ennls O'KeefeShow 7--MusicFor Spring Nile 2--To Tell The ,Truth •Sherlock Holmes 9--Movle 4•Law of Plainsman •Ion6ay II--Public Defender !l--Air Power S--VVhite Hunter 13--Mike Wallace Inferv. 13--•Highway Patrol 7•ale Storm 9:30 p.m.•2•P!•yhouse 90 • "Tomorrow", with and 8:30 8:00 9--Movle Kim Stanley. The story, adapted from William Faulkner's no- 2---Dobie Gillis s--FOllowThat Man I I--You Are' There vel, is about' a southerner's devotion to the ideal of love and 4•Starfime 7--Charley. Weaver 13--Highway Patrol his deep loyalty to a woman and a small boy. S--•; .• Assignment I IraThe Honeymooners

11:15p.m. 2•The I•to Showß m "Mystery Sea Raider". Rescued from 7--Life of Wyatt Eerp 13--Mke Wallace InSerr. 2--Betty Hutton I I--Whlrlpool 8:30 4•Baf Masterson a sinking ship by a fellow passenger, a girl enlists her fiance's 13--Playof theWeek 2--Men Into Space S•Byl;ne freighter to help her benefactor. (1940) 9:00 4•The Price Is Right 7--Donna Reed S•Award Theatre I I--Meet McGraw Tuesday 2--Tightrope 7--OZZie & Harriet S•Wresfling 13•Mke Wallace Interv. $:30 p.m.--• Staxtime--- "The' Swingin' Years", a musical program I !--. Beat 8:30 7--Rifleman with l•onald Reagan as host. Guests include: Jo Stafford, Red 9•Arf Theatre of the Air 13--Play of the Week 2• 9:00 Ingle, Vaughn Monroe, Eddy Howard, Woody Herman, Charlie'- I I•The Fabulous Fraud 4--Johnny Staccato 2--The Millionaire S--Doug FairbanksTheatre Barnet, Louis Jordan, Freddie Martin and Jack Fina. 9:30 4---Perry Como ßShow 7--Real McCovs 11:15 p.m.--2---.The I•te Show- "Love Thy Neighbor", with Jack' 2--Red Skilton Show S--Wrestling I I--Navy Log 4•Arthur •urray 7--Hawallan Eye 13--Play of the Week Benny, Fred Allan and Mary Martin. When two •euding come- 7--Phi!ipMarlowe 9--Harnes•Racing 9:00 dians run into each other on a New York pier, •ur flies. (1940)

1 I--Dangerous Assignment I I--Trackdown 2--Zinc Grey . Page Twelve •l•e -CHKONIC 4•Bachelor Father I I--Three Stooges II--Public Defender S--Prof. Wrestling 6:00 13--Play of the Week 7--Pat Boone 5•Carfoons 9•neak Preview 7--Little Rascals 9:00 I I--Thi; Man Dawson I I--Popeye S--Theatre5 9:30 13--RecordWagon 7--77Sunset Strip 2---Markham 9--Movle 4•Ernie Ford 6:30 I I--Man From the Wed 7--The Untouchables 4--News 9:30 I I--Love Story S--Cartoons 4•Masquerade Party 10:00 7--Newsreels I I--The Bachelors 2--The Revlon Revue I I---Sky King 10:00 4•Groucho Marx 13--C;urtain Time 2--Twilight Zone 11--26 Men 4•Cavalcade of Sports 10:30 6:45 S--Not For Hire 4•Lawless Years 4--News 7--Detectives 7--Ernie Kovacs 7---News I I--Hiram Holliday 9•Movle I I--Shotgun Slade t:00 10:30 13--Mike Wallace 2--World News 2--Person to Person I I:00 4•The Four Just Men S--Official Detective 2--The Late News 5--1 Led ThreeLives 7--B'ack Saddle 4•J. M. McCaffre¾ 7--U. S. Marshal 9--Movie 5--Five Star Movie 9--TerrytoonCircus I I--Soldiersof Fortune 7--News I I--Kevin Kennedy 13--Mike Wallace I I--News 13--Newsbeat i 0:45 ! 3--Dance Party 4--Jackpo-,• Bowling 11:!5 7:15 I I:00 2--The' Late Show 2--News 2--TheNews 4--Jack Pear 4--John M. McCaffre¾ 7--The Night Show I I--News 5--Movie I I--Moyle. 7--News ! 2:00 7:30 I I--News Boris Karloff stars as Capt. Billy Bonesand young Richard 9--Mystery Ivlovie 2--Rawhide 13--DanceParty O'Sullivan plays Jim !lawkin in the Du Pont "Show of the 13--•uallty Theatre 4--PeopleAre Funny I 1:1S ionth" adaptatioztof Robert Louis Stevensoffs"Treasure [sial:d," 12:45 5--CannonBall 2--TheLate Show Saturday, March 5, on the CBS Television Ne!wo•k. A!.•o in he 2--Late, Late Show 7--WaitDisney 4•Jack Paar starring cast of the 90-minute adventure story are lugh Gri 'th I:00 9--Moyle 7--TheNight Show ,• ax Adrian, Michael Gough and Barry blorsz. 4•Consuit Dr. Brothers I I--Mr. Adams and Eve , 13--HighwayPatrol I l--Sports11:20 8:00 I I--All Star Movie 4•Trou biashoofers 1'2:00 S--NightCourt 9--1dysferyMovie 204 MA.; ,. ... 5 PATERSON MARCH II IlkSan FranciscoBeat 13--•uality Theatre Tipson Touring 13--Mke Wallace Interv. 12:30 It•LD OVEE 5:30 8:30 S--Five Star Finale If you are a woman with a family 2--Hotel De Paree I:00 --and thereforewith normally strong .... 2--The EarlyShow protective instincts--you'll quickly S--Big Beat 4•Telephone Hour 4•Consu!t Dr. Brothers et the point of this note on seat C. S. FORESTER'S '•, 7--Rin Tin Tin S-- I:15 elts from the National Safety MOST AMAZING 9--Movie' 7--Man From Blackhawk 2--The Late, Late Show Council ß TALE OF TRUE ..... 1. Seat belts cut your chances of ADVENTURE! '::'":: getting hurt in an automobile acci- ß . dent in half.

.:-i•.:.'?.:.: q•) $ •d . .' NOTIII\G BUT TIlE TRU II By Arnold ß .

ß .-.. P•a, CT•½,kCL.¾AL.L. .... ' MINKS - :'•: ß •' -.:•i'•.•'" •'•"• ß::'-.:<•"-.. -. .:-. :• ':- , '"' '' • ' " • •OW• INCObO•- ß . -- :•, ß ...... ;.:.-.•,

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*' -•' --:''.i.- -*x• ..... ' ' ' .' ' •' !• •• 5NkDE5•INKOF NA•ALFUR -: i. "' •.. ',";; .- , : ß .....:.-•,.:.. . ':'.: .. •... . ß ß ' -.-:- , j• • . ß . 2. The danger in an accident is five .. • :s . ß times greater if you're hurled from the car than if you remain inside-- .

..... and seat belts help keep you there. • ß

8. Safety experts extimate 5,000 ß . ... lives could be saved annually if ß.. :o..•. . .. seat belts were universally used in The Nation:d S:•fety Council, The ß-:..-•::• 'F..:: .-....:• ":'-::...... ':•-- : :''... - American M•.dical A.•n., and the U.S. Public !Ioalth S•.rvice stress L-::::':,.•'?•::• ß ' thes points in their attempt to popu- larize use of seat belts. KENNETH,E DANAWYNER Seat belts, the organizations say, •'•""LEW1SG!LBERT-'•..rED UHDH NORTH •'e: •INEMASCOP 1• 1. A tangible action for safety and a constant reminder to be careful. 2. An aid to comfort and reduc- .. tion of fatigue. ß Toda• JET . 8. A help in keepingpre-school-age childrenin their places,especially in PILOT has abou• event of a quick stop. I00 cOr•eol•to opcea•½ Said one safety expert: "The five "rHE I a•l 24 ine•eu•e• pairs of seat belts in my car can cut .•y family's chancesof being hurt w•/• /• •c/• // a collisionin half. For my money• ON••'O• igi•dica• I•L• • •• it's smart to use seat beltst" _

. .

Page Thirteen work, naturally. I'll do better illustrating away from the city. If you want a divorce' 'q t Martin, you may have one. I'll leave you the name of a lawyer you can get in touch with."' "But yourdon't you want a divorce?" She shook her head. "Not now. Sometime maybe. I'll let you know." He hadn't tried to hold her. This thing had been building up too long. Maybe they would be better apart, he and Glynis. She was made for the quiet places•a country cottage, a village life, a garden. His eyes, unseeing, had .been gazing over the roofs and towers of the city; now they returned to the window box and the drab unsightliness of it, the ugly chaos filled him with disgust. "Like a dump," he muttered. "Littered with tin cans, rubbish, filth •" He turned away from it angrily, wanting to run from it, from all it stood for, craving for some high hill where a man could breathe-- He had his chance. Paul Rayner, a partner in the advertising firm where Martin worked had a salmon-fishing camp on the Upsal- quitch. He was going north in a few days and asked Martin to go along--."Get the carbon out of your lungs, boy, the sludge out of your motor. You'll really live up." Martin jumped at the chance. He simply had to get out of the apartment,stay out of it for a month. "Should have it fumigated," he mottered. "But anyway I'll tell old Kiley to chuck that darned flower box into the dump whet it belongs--" He had three weeks of it--three weeks to look closely at 'himself, to think honestly and see what his life was and just where it was heading. As soon as he got back to New York, he called Glynis from his office. Odd how his heart beat quickened as he waited to hear her voice, what a lift it gave him when finally she answered. She was liv- ing in Westchester with a cousin. "Hello, Martin." Her tone was guarded. "How are you?" "Fine--just great, Glynis--and you?" "I'm fine. How is the apartment. And and what made you call me up?" "The window box," he said. "The damned window box. I wanted to tell you that I had it chucked in the dump[ Hated the damned thing--hated all it stood for--" "Oh•oh, I see." He could hardly hear her. Then, suddenly, he knew she had hung up. He tried to get her again but there was no answer. The senseless burr of the bell at the other end mocked him. Well, if that was the way she wanted it• he Jndow Box It was late that night when he g'ot back to his apartment. Kind of good to get back after a month away from it. But he had By LOUIS ARTHUR CUNNINGHAM the color that went with the wheat gold hair, hoped for so much. Up there. in the, dark the deep grey eyes, the color that made a green of the New Brunswick woods he had .Martin Frayno, looking at the window temptation of 'her mouth, like some strange dreamed of what it would be like when he box, thought ho• symbolic it was of the life orchid which no man could resist touching, returned, when he and Glynis were together he had led since Glynis had left him-cigar- yet whose very touch meant madness. again. But Glynis wasn't having any. She ette stubs tinged with lipstick of a do7en Ivory-tipped stubs stained with magenta. didn't even want to talk to him• lurid hues, champagne corks, cigar butts, He could see Avis, white shoulders bare, in He, saw the flowers even before he turned cellophane wrappers off cigarette packets-- a silver gown, the silver bracelets on her on the light--saw their ghostly, ethereal He turned from it in disgust, feeling the wrists, the long, supple line of her body, the loveliness in the strange radiance of the city deep depression and sense of foreboding that eyes that held his with ancient promise-- and he ran to the window box, falling over had come to him in countless hangoxers, Yes, there was Avis. There still was Avis. chairs, hassocks, a table, to stand above tasting the dry and acid aftermath of too Yet it hadn't been so much on account of them, his eyes misty with gladness, with much liquor, too many cigarettes, knowing Avis Caulfield that he and Glynis had separ- wonder. She must have been coming here in the noxious smell of stale perfume-- ated after only ten months of marriage. Not his absenceto tend 'the things she lovedand "That window box-must tell the janitor Avis so much as the values, the things, the hoped that he, would love•to clean the trash to clean it out. It's a mess." life that Avis stood for•glittering, always fromround them • to cultivateand water' Ills own life, too. had been a bit of glittering and blinding bright, always in them. this past five months without Glynis. At first motion, always at a fast and unremitting The window box was full--blue and white :.. it hadn't been so bad--a party every night, pace. andyellow crocus; jouquils, hyacinths, snow- ":'• the companionship of kindred spirits-the "I can't live like this, Martin." Glynis was dropsythe exquisite,, lovely things that God, kind of people Glynis could never get to like small-boned, dark, olive-skinned, with large sends to grace the spring. All these she had •the bright, brittle hard-surfaced crowd to black eyes that glowed at times--times such planted without ever telling 'him, all these whom stuffiness was the only deadly sin, as this when she spoke from the deed heart had been sleeping in beauty under the taint- dullness the one thing to be most dreaded. of her. "It's no good. We're just travevling in ed trash that accumulated above them. And there was Avis. circles, and when you're traveling in circles "Thank God!',' 'he murmured. "Old Kiley He could pick out from among the un- it really doesn't matter whether you're doing must have forgotten it. And Glynis--she countable cigarette stubs, the ones that Avis fifty or 'five hundredsyou aren't going any- thoughtI had chuckedout all this Caulfield had dropped in the long box as the where, anyway. So I'm stepping off the mer- thatI hatedthe quiet, lovely things it stoo(??".•. two of them sat in the cushioned window ry-go-round." for--" seat or leaned on the wide stone sill looking "Where will you go? What will you do?" He dashed from the apartment. He took.•.•.•,.•,• down at the ant-sized life creeping slowly "Some place where it's quiet, where people taxi to the suburb where Olynis lived. I-I•; in the steel and concrete canyon below them. aren't always trying to telescope things, to carried in his arms a huge bouquet of spring' What deep_ magenta eelor--that was Avis• make package deals of everything. I'll do my flowers-- ., .. Page Fourteen The",', SHerwood 2-7738 Crossword Puzzle-Answer Residence FAir Lawn 6-0666

JAMES S. SCULLION

-rid SON LEWIS & CLARK spring the party, in six canoes THE PACIFIC and two keelboats,'set out toward Home for Funerals For 18 months the exploring the mysterious West. So little •x•dition l•d by •efiwether known was that wild country that 267-269 Park Avenue •wis •nd •llliam 'Clark h• the expedition had been told to be on the lookout for mastodons at Madison pushed •g•y acro• the known Northwest. •e group had and mammoths. Paterson,New Jersey star•d out from l• •amp ne• Late in May they got their first St. •u• in the spring of 1•. sight of the Rockies, majestic, Now. on Nov•r 7, 1• , they snow-capped ranges whose .peaks saw on the horizon the blue Hne seemed to mingle with the cloud• marking the Pacific Ocean. After a long, xough journey Captain wrote in across the Great Divide they Banquet & Wedding Facilities his diary how delighted they all reached the Snake River. and were to be at the great Pacific thence by boat once more down Ocean which they had •en so' to the Columbia. and finally to long anxious to see. and to hear the sea. the roaring of the wa•es:' And Their Journey had been a well they might be delighted. The rugged one. They had starved at most important exploration ex- times and suffered great hard- pedition in American histo• had ships. and even had eaten dogs reached its goal. among the Nez Pefco tribe But After the •uisiana Purch•e they had accomplished their mis- from France. President Thomas sion. had met and made friends Jefferson decided to send an ex- with many Indian tribes. and had ploring party through the tre- gazed on grand scenes o! moun- mendous territory which few tain. plain and forest never before white men had ever seen. In 1•3 seen by white men. ! Congress appropriated $2,5• [or At the mouth o! the Columbia the expedition. Jefferson appoint- the Lewis and Clark party built • his private secreta•. Meri- a crude shelter called For! Clat- wether Lew;s. who was al• a sop and spent the winter there. veteran of the irontier wars. to In March. 18)6 they began the be the leader. •wis, in turn, long journey home. Crossing the MANZELLA'S picked William Clark, younger Rockies again the explorers split "Here'sThat D• !n A Pinch! brother o[ the Revolutionary War up into two groups to make a W• Te!lin• You Abbut--" PINK ELEPHANT hero, George Rogers Clarg, to more extensive examination of head the expedition •ith him. the country. One party went Italian-American Cuisine •wls was 30. and Clark 34 years down the Yellowstone and the old at the time. other down the Missouri and at Lobster A On May 14, 18• the explorers the. Junction of the two rivers the LAm• 310: SpeeUdty set out by flat•ats up the swol- two groups united Late in Sep- len waters of the Mi•ouri. •e tember they reached St. Loui• 486 PASSAIC AVENUE •roup included 26 •ldie•. two again after having been gone for French voyageurs. Clark's Negro 28 months. from May 14. 1804 to GRegory 3-9479 LODI, N.J. servant, York. and l•t. but not September 23. 1806 An epic ex- least. the patient. loyal Indian ploration was ended. girl. SacaJawea. known as the The information Lewis and , rl Is, Linoleum, "Bird Woman." She was the wife Clark brought back was the first of one of the Frenchmen, •d she official report on our country's B•I. & Bedding •as to prove o[ great help to the vast territory between the Miss- 'FNETIAN BLIND ex•dition in getting along with issippi and the Pacific The way the Indians. was now opened for the greatest 'ORMI 0 ' FuneralService and [[ ARer struggling up •e Missou- development in American history. ri until late October, they camped "The Winning of the West" FuneralHome [[ for the winter at some In,an vil- 96 MAIN STREET lages near the present si• of 'ATER •N, . . marck, North Dakota. The next

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