i home i 1 i r. i j

1
Elsie Robinson, Writer Os 'Listen World/ Dies SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 8 UP). —Elsie Robinson, famed col- umnist whose writings gave hope and encouragement to millions of persons, died at her home here today after being bed-rid- den for 16 years as the result of an accident. She was 73 years old. At the time of her death she was still writing the column "Listen World,” which King Fea- tures Syndicate began distribut- ing in 1924 and which had been running ever since. In private life, Elsie Robinson was the wife of Benton Fremont, San Francisco engineer and grandson of Gen. John C. Fre- mont Began With Oakland Paper Born in Benicia, across the bay from San Francisco, Mrs. Fremont began her newspaper work during the World War I period with a column "Cry on Geraldine's Shoulder” for the Oakland Tribune under the single pen name of Geraldine In 1923, she moved to San Francisco and began writing a . column called "Tell it to Elsie” ¦ under her maiden name for the : old San Francisco Call, then > edited by Fremont Older. She > later conducted another column, . “Young America,” but the one t which brought her fame, and i fortune, was the widely distribut- ed "Listen World.” , Mrs. Fremont was married first | to Goerge Crowell and moved to . Vermont for 10 years, where she also worked as a magazine illu-j | strator. When that marriage failed, she returned to California with her son, George, jr„ who 1 died when he was 21 years old. Worked as Miner 1 At one time, seeking a healthy ' climate for her ailing son, she moved to Hornitos, in Merced county, and worked as a miner, ! using a pick and shovel along with the men. She got her first columnist job with the Tribune, she said, by i literally bombarding editors with ! children’s stories she had written ' and illustrated. Her second husband, whom she i married after coming to San i Francisco, survives. GAO Ruling May Shrink Government Work Week The General Accounting Of-, flee yesterday made public a de- cision that could be the fore- runner of an ultimate 35 or 37 hour work week throughout the entire Federal Government,. Yesterday's decision, affecting 4.000 Government Printing Of- fice employes whose wages are set administratively by the Pub- lic Printer and which are not subject to negotiations, held a shorter work week than 40 hours for this class is legal. Further, the ruling held they can be paid overtime for hours worked above the shortened work week. This follows a decision in July by Attorney General Brownell that the Public Printer can le- gally set a shorter work week than 40 hours for the 2.300 GPO employes in crafts whose wages are set annually in negotiations. Shortly after the Attorney General’s opinion was rendered Public Printer Raymond Blatten- Ruling Requested burger asked the General Ac- counting Office for a clarifying ruling. He wanted to know whether a shorter work weeki could also be applied to the 4,000 GPO employes whose wages are set administratively. Yesterday's ruling by GAO is the result Mr. Blattenburger wanted to know if the shorter work week is agreed upon, would the GAO object to establishing this shorter work week or paying compensa- tion at overtime rates for all hours exceeding the shorter work week for the recognized trades. Further, he inquired if he should establish a shorter work week for all employes who do not fall within the conference procedure of the Kiess Act. but 1 whose wages are fixed by him, ; would the GAO object to the! shorter work week for them or the overtime payments. Assistant Controller General Frank H. Weitzel in yesterday’s; opinion held there is no legal! bar to establishing a work week of less than 40 hours or over- time for the shortened week. But regarding classified em- ployes in the Office of the Superintendent of Documents, Mr. Weitzel ruled it is reasonable to “require an express authori- zation of the Congress” before permitting them a less-than-40- ,hour work week and overtime for the lesser week. Under Legislative Branch The opinion pointed out that it has been recognized that the GPO is under the legislative branch of the Government. But concerning employes of the Office of the Superintendent of Documents, the decision said their rates of pay are set in ac- cordance with the Classification Act of 1949. The decision held Congress did j not intend to pay them their an- nual statutory salary for working less time than the great bulk of i employes occupying positions subject to the Classification Act. Observers said the Buearu of Engraving and Printing and some 800,000 per diem or wage board employes, of whom there are some 30,000 in this area, would be indirectly affected by yester- day's ruling. While the bureau usually follows the GPO in fix- ing salaries for corresponding classes, per diem employes in other branches of the Govern- ment will doubtless make stren- uous efforts to secure a shorter work week as a result of this latest decision. A shorter work week in the GPO cannot be set before next March, when the present con- tracts expire. Jet Crashes, Sets Fire To 1,000 Acres of Timber SAN DIEGO, Calif., Sept. 8 UP). —An Air Force jet plane, from which the pilot parachuted, crashed on Pine Mountain in Northeastern San Diego County, today, starting one of the coun- ty's largest brush and timber fires. The pilot was identified as Capt. Charles M. Sargen of the Yuma, Ariz.. Air Force Base. He was rescued only 100 yards Ahead of the flames by a Coast Guard heljcopter after running more than two miles to escape the fast-spreading fire. He was taken to the Naval hospital here suf- fering from shock and exhaus- tion. It was not learned why he left the plane. Walter J. Puhn, supervisor of tile Cleveland National Forest, said the fire, which has burned more than 1,000 acres of brush Howard Sociologist Wins Lecture Award DETROIT, Sept. 8 UP).— Dr. E. Franklin Frazier. Howard Uni- versity sociologist, was given the Maclver lecture award tonight at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Society Dr. Frazier received the award for his book, “Bourgeoisie Noire’’ (“A Black Middle Class”), an historical analysis of the Negro in the United States. ¦ and timber, was completely out i: of control. , i The plane crashed on the east- i ern slope of 4.000-foot Pine , Mountain. A forest ranger spot- ¦ ted Capt. Sargen’s parachute as ¦ It drifted down on the mountain. Forest rangers said the fire > was three miles long and two : miles wide. > -ii. ———— [fences ALL TYPES Wood ond Chain Link Florida Red Cypress . . . "The Wood Eternal" OARAGES $495 up f.o.b. Free Estimate*—Terms I I Phone OT. 4-6900 I SEABOABD Industries Co. 1109 Jefferson Dovis Hwy.. Arl.. Vo ADVERTISEMENT 3 Times Faster For Gas on Stomach I Certified laboratory tests prove Bell-ana tablets neutralize i timet as much l stomach acidity in one minute as many . leading digestive tablets. Get Bcll-ans today tor the faateit known relief. Jsr y A Washington Landmark \ Wod 'Sled non-sficulativi gfe I I NON-SECTARIAN Near the mam entrance git* overlooking the malestie expanse of Rock Creek Ulj|9 *(’ Cemetery stand* the . *.? |PT,II *yi\ imposing Bradford * JjWR ( Cross, erected in J|l <|l honor ot the donor c > j of the original Rock Creek Cerne'ey tract. *ir ’~~ mm-aunM—- -1 Rock Creek Church Road and Wthiter Street ,N.IT. Direct Transportation: Stienth Street Cars marked [ i, Soldier's Home or Buses marked Rock Creek ,• Ilia Cemetery. OFFICE HOURS: Sunday and Holidays, 9 to 12 _ —i—¦ Blood Bank Collections 'Holding Own' The Red Cross blood collec- tions are “holding their own” because of a previous banner I week although only about half | !of the past week’s goal was met, 1 (the Washington Regional Blood: Center announced today. I Collections totaled only 845! pints, largely from bloodmobile; visits to the Quartermaster Gen-| eral’s Office, Fort Belvoir, andj !the American Security & Trust :C°. The weekly required minimum is 1,750 pints, Red Cross officials said, and there is little reserve: on hand. The Center distributed a total of 1,282 pints of blood in the ¦ District and communities cov- ered by the bloodmobiles in Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. Fortunately, the Cen- jter said, there was no severe! drain by area hospitals on the 1 blood bank. In addition to the regular weekly bloodmobile schedule for {Collections, Red Cross donors jmay give blood at Garfield Hos- ipital from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon- days through Fridays; at Freed- : men’s Hospital from 1 p.m. to 8 .p.m. Mondays thorugh Fridays, ' and from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sun- days; at Walter Reed Hospital from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, and from 7 p.m. I to 9 p.m. Tuesdays, and at the Washington Regional Blood Cen- ter from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. Mon- days, and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m Tuesdays through Fridays. The bloodmobiles are sched- uled to make the following visits this week: Monday - Prince Georges County: Service Club AFB from 9:30 am. to 1 *«:30 pm D C. Chapter: Naval Gun! ;|factory Bldg. No. 197, second floor, from! 11:30 a m. to 4 p.m. I Tuesday—D. C. Chapter: Main Navy Constitution avenue. Room 2641, from 1 9:30 am to 3:30 pm. Arlington Chap-; ter: Chapter House. Arlington. Va.. from l 10 a.m to 4 pm. Wednesday—D c. Chapter: Penta- gon Room 4A-750. from 10 a.m. to: 3:30 p.m. D C. Chapter: Naval Re-! ceiving Station top floor, Recreation' Building, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday—Culpeper Chapter: Baptist; Church. Culpeper. Va.. from 10 a.m. toj 4 pm.. EST Montgomery County. , Woodside Methodist Church. 8814 Geor- gia avenue, from 1 p m. to 7 p.m. Friday Albemarle County: Croiet Woman’s Club. Crozet. Va.. from 10 a.m. i to 4 p.m . EST. DC. Chapter: Hecht Co. Service Bldg . 1401 New York avenue N.E.. from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 3 Hemingway Novels Ready in 'Refrigerator' LE HAVRE, France, Sept. 8 r i/P). —Novelist Ernest Hemingway landed in France for a vacation 1 today. ! Jaunty in slacks and a sport coat. Mr. Hemingway confided he has three unpublished novels ¦ in the “refrigerator,” which is the vault of a New York bank. He said he and his wife intend i to travel like "gypsies” to the Riviera and Italy. licOUiJNsl ; I FUNERAL NOME j ¦ I Telephone RAndolph 6-7117 I r ftp t . Francis J. Collins * 1 3821 14th St. N.W. \ ¦ "3- ¦¦ - i Lawrence G. White Son of Architect Stanford White ST. JAMES, N. Y„ Sept. 8 (/P). . —Lawrence Grant White, 68, | architect son of the famed arch- . itect Stanford White, who was /shot and killed by Harry K.j i I Thaw in 1906, died of a heart | I attack at his home tonight. Mr. White had been a member | of McKim, Mead and White, his! I father’s firm, since 1919. \ Among buildings he designed jare the Newark (N. J.) Pennsyl-i . vania Railroad Station, and the 1 ¦ Hotel National at Havana, Cuba/ !j He served in the Navy in both j i World Wars, and in 1919 was naval aide to President Wilson. He had been president of the ¦ National Academy of Design. The shooting of Stanford [ White was' a sensation. Thaw, , who accused White of "ruining” I Thaw's wife, former showgirl Evelyn Nesbit, was acquitted of i murder, but ordered committed !to a mental institution. He was i later adjudged sane and he died i in 1947. | i R. L. Hartford, 55, Former Stunt Man j Robert L. Hartford, 55, an! employe of Julius Garflnckel & Co. and a former stunt man in motion pictures, died Thursday in Georgetown Hospital follow-: . ing an operation. Mr. Hartford was hospitalized about a month. 1; A native of Brownsville, Pa., > he attended theatrical school in ilNew York City. He worked for : major motion picture studios for ¦ 33 years as a stunt man. A resi- . dent of Washington since 1954, . Mr. Hartford was a salesman ini ! the men's clothing department , of Garfinckel’s. ' He was a member of the Screen Actors Guild. ' Mr. Hartford is survived by ¦ his widow, Luella, and a step- i daughter, Brenda Lou Baucom, of the home address, 18 Ninth street N.E. , Services will be held at 11 a.m. ; tomorrow in Gawler's Chapel, ; 1756 Pennsylvania avenue N.W. Burial will be in Cedar Hill j Cemetery. 1 Boy Runs Into Path Os Car, Is Killed I A 4-year-old boy was fatally ; ¦ injured yesterday when, police' ! said, he dashed from between f parked cars into the path of > another auto. The victim, Darrell Deed, col- ' ored, of 614 Keefer pi. n.w. was pronounced dead at Freed- -1 men’s Hospital at 4 p.m., an ' hour after the accident. I Police said the boy, using a tree limb as a make-believe; i horse, “rode” into the right front wheel of an auto driven ! by Mrs. Thelbert E. Hines, 38. i colored, of 529 Lamont street ¦ N.W. The boy’s head was crushed. The accident occurred a few i yards from Darrell’s home. It marked Washington’s 41st traf- ' fle fatality of the year as against : 42 at the same time last year. [IVES FUNERAL HOME! IN ARLINGTON Ives Funeral facilities consist of a modem, air- |1 conditioned funeral home, our own spacious parking m lot, well trained personnel and years and years of experience. All are available as part of our complete Rt service. jjl Est. 1910 I ARLINGTON'S FIRS7 AND FINER 1 FUNERAL HOME 2847 WILSON BLVD. JACKSON 7-3016 | (On Wilson Btvd., Near Sears) Continuous Service for S 3 Years in Washington and Suburbs Call Columbia 5-7023 . 3s S.H.ifin&s Company IFutteral 2901 -03-05 •07 14th Street N.W. W. R. Frank Hines, Presdient No Branch Establishments Convenient Perking Facilities Adjoining Funeral Home The expense is matter ot your own desire ;! AVOID SHOCK-AVOID DISTRESS INQUIRE ABOUT . .. PRE-NEED INSTALLMENT PLAN Be *n.» mi tourxrlf, plan ahead and avoid .hock and di-lrr--. Subscribe In a unique plan by Chamber, and you will not only have peace of mind but you can >a*e >‘*i on a $395 funeral! You and your family are ull eligible under llte plan. Inve.tigate il today! S3OO Other complete funerols 595 to S2OOO Complete grove opened and closed—S69 p In Cose of Death Call CO. 5 0432 t ONE or TmE uA»OE*T UNOE»TA«E»S in The 1,200 Alabamans Attend Klan Rally, Hear Wizard MONTGOMERY. Ala., Sept. 8 (JP). —Approximately 1,200 per- sons attended a meeting to or- ganize a Ku Klux Klan unit in Montgomery tonight. While three crosses were jburned in a baseball grounds parking lot, the emperial wizard I of the U. S. Klans called for a revival of the pro-segregation or- ganization in this area. Emperial Wizard E. L. Eswards jot Atlanta and approximately 200 hooded and robed Klansmen from Georgia and Alabama at- tended the meeting. The crowd applauded enthu- siastically as Dr E. B. Slay of; Atlanta said “We are facing 1 the most serious crisis . . . since the end of the Civil War. This! is a replica of what happened at that time,” Dr Slay said in dis- cussing the racial situation ini {the South today. "But we won the victory” after Announcement WASHINGTON-LEE NIGHT SCHOOL 1300 North Quincy Street Arlington, Virginia i Registration: September 10th to September 14th. Place: Washington-Lee High School Central Office. Time: 7:00-10:00 P.M. Classes start Monday, September 17th, 1956, 7:00 to 8:30 P.M. and 8:30 to 10:00 P.M. the Civil War, he said. “My friends, the K. K. K. has saved this country and we are going to save it again.” He predicted a K. K. K. mem- bership of 18 to 20 million mem- ¦ bers within 10 years. > Organizers were busy signing up members as he spoke. Refering to recent disorders in Tennessee and Kentucky over admission of Negroes to previously all-white schools, Dr. Slay accused police and National Guardsmen of provoking vio- lence. His comments on the court - ordered integration of some public schools drew shouts of resentment against Negroes. i- CARTER'S FUNERAL HOME Telephone NA. 8-2715 Morris A. Carter A Co. 305 H St. N.W. THE BEAUTIFUL BURIAL ESTATE IN MONTGOMERY COUNTY ! Open to Visitors ‘til Sun- down. Daily and Sunday. 1160 Rockville Pike OLympic 9-8300 Rockville Md hist 3 Milas North ot Betho»do Naval Ho» oital 'Oi Um Visr* Mill Rood ontranco 1 - ( dQnsbnrghs j *A*MlNC'o»sl DC » lANGIfY '*b MARYLAND I Enroll Now in New Classes Bishop Method of Sewing Beginner, Intermediate and Advanced t Night and Day Classes Storting Monday Sept. 24th Lansburgh's Langley Park, Md. Only For Information and Registration ¦ Come to Our Pattern Deportment i First Floor, Longley Park, Md., Store or Coll NA. 8-9800. EXT. 1-330 lear-aidl \ (Copyright’ and Pal. Applied For) £ > TRADEMARK REGISTERED C | Hear Better | < THIS SIMPLE, EASY AND > > INEXPENSIVE METHOD < T m Ounce I«“ ! ENTIRE DEVICE HORN f MEM CANAL f # (As Illustrated) C | If* 4 No Cords! No Tubes! | # * Not Electrical! First Cost Only Cost! ] ? Will Not Wear Out! C 4 ? EAR-AID is a non-powered auditory canal insert C ? offered for sola to persons suffering from deaf- C i ness or hearing loss due to collapse or partial C ? collapse of the ear canal, which is an infrequent C ? cause of deafness. < i ? For Free Information Mail Coupon < > < Let ut lend you Ihii "Free” information without 4 * i the slightest obligation. It could be the most > < ' important thing you do this year. Just fill out t , ? coupon and mail it now. < fiUCHANNAN HEARING CO. ~ j > y I 726 14th St. N.W. \ A j Washington, D. C. j f # | Phono Dl. 7-6S7S I > C j Please send free information on Ear-Aid. I # > I ADDRESS [ y C I CITY STATI ..._ M J y THE SUNDAY STAR, Washington, D. C. 5* SUNDAY. gCPTEMBEK 8. IPAQ Shop Lansburgh's Langley Park, Md., 12:30 Until 9:30 P.M. Monday; Washington Store Open 9:30 Until 6 P.M. ! CJ£” sbur S™) WASHING'Cm DC •* LANGIfY *A«K. MARYLAND Back-to-School SPECIAL! i! * 11 PARKER “21” PEN AND PENCIL SET 7 95 Perfect pair for smooth writing for school, now specially priced in an attractive set! Pen has electro- polished point, easy "2-finger" filling. Medium, fine or extra-fine points. Propel-repel action pencil with reserve lead supply, adjustable eraser! Matched set 'j in blue, red, green, block. “Musts” For Back-to-School JK K. Jr * Box of 24 Personalized Texon Finish, Zip Close > School Pencils Sturdy Ring Binder§ *|2s l’«* t, Pin-striped poncils witli eraser r or three-ring not* . tips. Each hos name stomped P°P« r ' Sturdy binder in scuff- in 6 51 d color. Comes in handy res.stmg Texon finish. Zips > gift box for easy storing. ,h . r " i finger, pastels. Has Lunch Pouch! With Vacuum Bottle > Nylonitc School Bag Metal Lunch Kit i 2 n 2* 9 Long-weonng school-bogs to Holt-pint vacuum bottle, > hold books, pooers, pencils, hondy metol kit in “Robin >! lunch. Zip pencil pocket. Hood." "Jr. Mist" ond plaid Ginger, chorcool or ivory. lithographed designs. h Lansburghs—STATlONEßY- Washington, Street Floor; , Langley Park. Md., First Floor >' Washington, 7th, Bth ond E Sts. N.W. NA. 8-9800 j Longley Pork, Md, New Hampshire Ave. ond University Lone A-23

Upload: others

Post on 26-May-2022

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: i HOME i 1 i R. i j

Elsie Robinson, WriterOs 'Listen World/ Dies

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 8 UP).—Elsie Robinson, famed col-umnist whose writings gave hopeand encouragement to millionsof persons, died at her home

here today after being bed-rid-den for 16 years as the resultof an accident. She was 73 yearsold.

At the time of her death shewas still writing the column"Listen World,” which King Fea-tures Syndicate began distribut-ing in 1924 and which had beenrunning ever since.

In private life, Elsie Robinsonwas the wife of Benton Fremont,San Francisco engineer andgrandson of Gen. John C. Fre-mont

Began With Oakland PaperBorn in Benicia, across the

bay from San Francisco, Mrs.Fremont began her newspaperwork during the World War Iperiod with a column "Cry onGeraldine's Shoulder” for theOakland Tribune under thesingle pen name of Geraldine

In 1923, she moved to SanFrancisco and began writing a

. column called "Tell it to Elsie”¦ under her maiden name for the

: old San Francisco Call, then> edited by Fremont Older. She> later conducted another column,. “Young America,” but the onet which brought her fame, andi fortune, was the widely distribut-

ed "Listen World.”, Mrs. Fremont was married first| to Goerge Crowell and moved to

. Vermont for 10 years, where she’ also worked as a magazine illu-j

| strator. When that marriagefailed, she returned to Californiawith her son, George, jr„ who

1 died when he was 21 years old.Worked as Miner

1 At one time, seeking a healthy' climate for her ailing son, shemoved to Hornitos, in Mercedcounty, and worked as a miner,

! using a pick and shovel along• with the men.

She got her first columnist job• with the Tribune, she said, by

i literally bombarding editors with! children’s stories she had written' and illustrated.

Her second husband, whom shei married after coming to Sani Francisco, survives.

GAO Ruling May ShrinkGovernment Work Week

The General Accounting Of-,flee yesterday made public a de-cision that could be the fore-runner of an ultimate 35 or 37hour work week throughout theentire Federal Government,.

Yesterday's decision, affecting4.000 Government Printing Of-fice employes whose wages areset administratively by the Pub-lic Printer and which are notsubject to negotiations, held ashorter work week than 40 hoursfor this class is legal.

Further, the ruling held theycan be paid overtime for hoursworked above the shortened workweek.

This follows a decision in Julyby Attorney General Brownellthat the Public Printer can le-gally set a shorter work weekthan 40 hours for the 2.300 GPOemployes in crafts whose wagesare set annually in negotiations.

Shortly after the AttorneyGeneral’s opinion was renderedPublic Printer Raymond Blatten-

Ruling Requestedburger asked the General Ac-counting Office for a clarifyingruling. He wanted to knowwhether a shorter work weekicould also be applied to the 4,000GPO employes whose wages areset administratively.

Yesterday's ruling by GAO isthe result

Mr. Blattenburger wanted toknow if the shorter work weekis agreed upon, would the GAOobject to establishing this shorterwork week or paying compensa-tion at overtime rates for allhours exceeding the shorter workweek for the recognized trades.

Further, he inquired if heshould establish a shorter workweek for all employes who donot fall within the conferenceprocedure of the Kiess Act. but 1whose wages are fixed by him, ;would the GAO object to the!

shorter work week for them orthe overtime payments.

Assistant Controller GeneralFrank H. Weitzel in yesterday’s;opinion held there is no legal!bar to establishing a work weekof less than 40 hours or over-time for the shortened week.

But regarding classified em-ployes in the Office of theSuperintendent of Documents,Mr. Weitzel ruled it is reasonableto “require an express authori-zation of the Congress” beforepermitting them a less-than-40-

,hour work week and overtimefor the lesser week.

Under Legislative BranchThe opinion pointed out that

it has been recognized that theGPO is under the legislativebranch of the Government.

But concerning employes ofthe Office of the Superintendentof Documents, the decision saidtheir rates of pay are set in ac-cordance with the ClassificationAct of 1949.

The decision held Congress didjnot intend to pay them their an-nual statutory salary for workingless time than the great bulk of

i employes occupying positionssubject to the Classification Act.

Observers said the Buearu ofEngraving and Printing and some800,000 per diem or wage boardemployes, of whom there aresome 30,000 in this area, wouldbe indirectly affected by yester-day's ruling. While the bureauusually follows the GPO in fix-ing salaries for correspondingclasses, per diem employes inother branches of the Govern-ment will doubtless make stren-uous efforts to secure a shorterwork week as a result of thislatest decision.

A shorter work week in theGPO cannot be set before nextMarch, when the present con-tracts expire.

Jet Crashes, Sets FireTo 1,000 Acres of Timber

SAN DIEGO, Calif., Sept. 8 UP).—An Air Force jet plane, fromwhich the pilot parachuted,crashed on Pine Mountain inNortheastern San Diego County,

today, starting one of the coun-ty's largest brush and timberfires.

The pilot was identified asCapt. Charles M. Sargen of theYuma, Ariz.. Air Force Base. Hewas rescued only 100 yards Aheadof the flames by a Coast Guardheljcopter after running morethan two miles to escape thefast-spreading fire. He was takento the Naval hospital here suf-fering from shock and exhaus-tion. It was not learned why heleft the plane.

Walter J. Puhn, supervisor oftile Cleveland National Forest,

said the fire, which has burnedmore than 1,000 acres of brush

Howard SociologistWins Lecture Award

DETROIT, Sept. 8 UP).—Dr.E. Franklin Frazier. Howard Uni-versity sociologist, was given theMaclver lecture award tonightat the annual meeting of theAmerican Sociological Society

Dr. Frazier received the awardfor his book, “Bourgeoisie Noire’’(“A Black Middle Class”), anhistorical analysis of the Negroin the United States.

¦ and timber, was completely outi: of control., i The plane crashed on the east-i ern slope of 4.000-foot Pine

, Mountain. A forest ranger spot-¦ ted Capt. Sargen’s parachute as¦ It drifted down on the mountain.

Forest rangers said the fire> was three miles long and two

: miles wide.> -ii. ————

[fencesALL TYPES

Wood ond Chain LinkFlorida Red Cypress .

. .

"The Wood Eternal"

OARAGES$495 up f.o.b.

Free Estimate*—Terms

I I Phone OT. 4-6900 ISEABOABD Industries Co.1109 Jefferson Dovis Hwy.. Arl.. Vo

ADVERTISEMENT

3 Times Faster For

Gas on StomachI Certified laboratory tests prove Bell-ana

’ tablets neutralize i timet as muchl stomach acidity in one minute as many

. leading digestive tablets. Get Bcll-anstoday tor the faateit known relief. Jsr

y A Washington Landmark

\Wod 'Slednon-sficulativi gfe

IINON-SECTARIAN

Near the mam entrance git*

overlooking the malestieexpanse of Rock Creek Ulj|9 *(’

Cemetery stand* the .

*.? |PT,II *yi\imposing Bradford * JjWR ’ (

Cross, erected in J|l <|lhonor ot the donor c >

j of the original

Rock Creek Cerne'ey

tract.*ir ’~~mm-aunM—-

-1 Rock Creek Church Road and Wthiter Street ,N.IT.Direct Transportation: Stienth Street Cars marked

[ i, Soldier's Home or Buses marked Rock Creek ,•

Ilia Cemetery.OFFICE HOURS: Sunday and Holidays, 9 to 12

_ —i—¦

Blood BankCollections'Holding Own'

The Red Cross blood collec-tions are “holding their own”because of a previous banner

I week although only about half |!of the past week’s goal was met, 1(the Washington Regional Blood:Center announced today.

I Collections totaled only 845!pints, largely from bloodmobile;visits to the Quartermaster Gen-|eral’s Office, Fort Belvoir, andj

!the American Security & Trust:C°.

The weekly required minimumis 1,750 pints, Red Cross officialssaid, and there is little reserve:on hand.

The Center distributed a totalof 1,282 pints of blood in the

¦ District and communities cov-ered by the bloodmobiles inMaryland, Virginia and WestVirginia. Fortunately, the Cen-jter said, there was no severe!drain by area hospitals on the 1blood bank.

In addition to the regularweekly bloodmobile schedule for

{Collections, Red Cross donorsjmay give blood at Garfield Hos-ipital from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon-days through Fridays; at Freed-:men’s Hospital from 1 p.m. to 8.p.m. Mondays thorugh Fridays,

' and from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sun-days; at Walter Reed Hospitalfrom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondaysthrough Fridays, and from 7 p.m.

I to 9 p.m. Tuesdays, and at theWashington Regional Blood Cen-ter from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. Mon-days, and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.mTuesdays through Fridays.

The bloodmobiles are sched-uled to make the following visitsthis week:

Monday - Prince Georges County:Service Club AFB from 9:30 am. to 1*«:30 pm D C. Chapter: Naval Gun!;|factory Bldg. No. 197, second floor, from!

11:30 a m. to 4 p.m.

I Tuesday—D. C. Chapter: Main NavyConstitution avenue. Room 2641, from

1 9:30 am to 3:30 pm. Arlington Chap-;ter: Chapter House. Arlington. Va.. from l10 a.m to 4 pm.

Wednesday—D c. Chapter: Penta-gon Room 4A-750. from 10 a.m. to:3:30 p.m. D C. Chapter: Naval Re-!ceiving Station top floor, Recreation'Building, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Thursday—Culpeper Chapter: Baptist;Church. Culpeper. Va.. from 10 a.m. toj4 pm.. EST Montgomery County.

, Woodside Methodist Church. 8814 Geor-gia avenue, from 1 p m. to 7 p.m.

Friday Albemarle County: CroietWoman’s Club. Crozet. Va.. from 10 a.m.

i to 4 p.m . EST. DC. Chapter: HechtCo. Service Bldg . 1401 New York avenueN.E.. from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

3 Hemingway NovelsReady in 'Refrigerator'

LE HAVRE, France, Sept. 8r i/P).—Novelist Ernest Hemingway

’ landed in France for a vacation1 today.

! Jaunty in slacks and a sport

coat. Mr. Hemingway confidedhe has three unpublished novels¦ in the “refrigerator,” which is

• the vault of a New York bank.• He said he and his wife intendi to travel like "gypsies” to theRiviera and Italy.

licOUiJNsl; I FUNERAL NOME j

¦ I Telephone RAndolph 6-7117 Ir ftp t. Francis J. Collins *

1 3821 14th St. N.W. \¦ "3- ¦¦ - i

Lawrence G. WhiteSon of ArchitectStanford White

• ST. JAMES, N. Y„ Sept. 8 (/P).. —Lawrence Grant White, 68,| architect son of the famed arch-. itect Stanford White, who was/shot and killed by Harry K.ji I Thaw in 1906, died of a heart |I attack at his home tonight.

Mr. White had been a member |of McKim, Mead and White, his!

• I father’s firm, since 1919.\ Among buildings he designed

• jare the Newark (N. J.) Pennsyl-i. vania Railroad Station, and the 1¦ Hotel National at Havana, Cuba/!j He served in the Navy in both ji World Wars, and in 1919 wasnaval aide to President Wilson.He had been president of the

¦ National Academy of Design.The shooting of Stanford

[ White was' a sensation. Thaw,, who accused White of "ruining”I Thaw's wife, former showgirlEvelyn Nesbit, was acquitted of

i murder, but ordered committed!to a mental institution. He was

i later adjudged sane and he died

i in 1947. |

i R. L. Hartford, 55,Former Stunt Man

j Robert L. Hartford, 55, an!employe of Julius Garflnckel &

Co. and a former stunt man inmotion pictures, died Thursdayin Georgetown Hospital follow-:

. ing an operation. Mr. Hartfordwas hospitalized about a month.

1; A native of Brownsville, Pa.,> he attended theatrical school inilNew York City. He worked for: major motion picture studios for¦ 33 years as a stunt man. A resi-. dent of Washington since 1954,. Mr. Hartford was a salesman ini! the men's clothing department

, of Garfinckel’s.' He was a member of the Screen• Actors Guild.' Mr. Hartford is survived by¦ his widow, Luella, and a step-i daughter, Brenda Lou Baucom,of the home address, 18 Ninthstreet N.E.

, Services will be held at 11 a.m.; tomorrow in Gawler's Chapel,

; 1756 Pennsylvania avenue N.W.Burial will be in Cedar Hill

j Cemetery.

1 Boy Runs Into PathOs Car, Is Killed

I A 4-year-old boy was fatally ;¦ injured yesterday when, police'! said, he dashed from between

f parked cars into the path of> another auto.

• The victim, Darrell Deed, col-' ored, of 614 Keefer pi. n.w.’ was pronounced dead at Freed--1 men’s Hospital at 4 p.m., an

' hour after the accident.I Police said the boy, using a

• tree limb as a make-believe;i horse, “rode” into the right

• front wheel of an auto driven! by Mrs. Thelbert E. Hines, 38.i colored, of 529 Lamont street¦ N.W. The boy’s head was• crushed.

The accident occurred a fewi yards from Darrell’s home. Itmarked Washington’s 41st traf-

' fle fatality of the year as against: 42 at the same time last year.

[IVES FUNERAL HOME!IN ARLINGTON

Ives Funeral facilities consist of a modem, air- |1conditioned funeral home, our own spacious parking mlot, well trained personnel and years and years ofexperience. All are available as part of our complete Rtservice. jjl

Est. 1910 IARLINGTON'S FIRS7 AND FINER 1

FUNERAL HOME

2847 WILSON BLVD. JACKSON 7-3016 |(On Wilson Btvd., Near Sears)

Continuous Service for S 3 Yearsin Washington and SuburbsCall Columbia 5-7023

. 3s S.H.ifin&s CompanyIFutteral

2901 -03-05 •07 14th Street N.W.W. R. Frank Hines, Presdient

No Branch EstablishmentsConvenient Perking Facilities Adjoining Funeral Home

The expense is • matter ot your own desire

;! AVOID SHOCK-AVOID DISTRESS

INQUIREABOUT .

..

PRE-NEED INSTALLMENT PLANBe *n.» mi tourxrlf, plan ahead and avoid .hock anddi-lrr--. Subscribe In a unique plan by Chamber, andyou will not only have peace of mind but you can >a*e>‘*i on a $395 funeral! You and your family are ulleligible under llte plan. Inve.tigate il today!

S3OO• Other complete funerols 595 to S2OOO• Complete grove opened and closed—S69 p

In Cose of Death Call CO. 5 0432

t ONE or TmE uA»OE*T UNOE»TA«E»S in The

1,200 Alabamans AttendKlan Rally, Hear Wizard

MONTGOMERY. Ala., Sept. 8(JP). —Approximately 1,200 per-

sons attended a meeting to or-ganize a Ku Klux Klan unit inMontgomery tonight.

While three crosses werejburned in a baseball groundsparking lot, the emperial wizard

I of the U. S. Klans called for arevival of the pro-segregation or-ganization in this area.

Emperial Wizard E. L. Eswardsjot Atlanta and approximately 200hooded and robed Klansmenfrom Georgia and Alabama at-tended the meeting.

The crowd applauded enthu-siastically as Dr E. B. Slay of;Atlanta said “We are facing 1the most serious crisis .

.. since

the end of the Civil War. This!is a replica of what happened atthat time,” Dr Slay said in dis-cussing the racial situation ini

{the South today."But we won the victory” after

AnnouncementWASHINGTON-LEE

NIGHT SCHOOL1300 North Quincy Street

Arlington, Virginiai Registration: September 10th to

September 14th.Place: Washington-Lee High School

Central Office.Time: 7:00-10:00 P.M.

Classes start Monday,September 17th, 1956,7:00 to 8:30 P.M. and

8:30 to 10:00 P.M.

the Civil War, he said. “Myfriends, the K. K. K. has savedthis country and we are goingto save it again.”

He predicted a K. K. K. mem-bership of 18 to 20 million mem-

¦ bers within 10 years. > Organizerswere busy signing up membersas he spoke.

Refering to recent disordersin Tennessee and Kentuckyover admission of Negroes topreviously all-white schools, Dr.Slay accused police and NationalGuardsmen of provoking vio-lence. His comments on thecourt -ordered integration ofsome public schools drew shoutsof resentment against Negroes.i-

CARTER'SFUNERAL HOME

Telephone NA. 8-2715Morris A. Carter A Co.

305 H St. N.W.

THE BEAUTIFUL BURIAL ESTATEIN MONTGOMERY COUNTY !

Open to Visitors ‘tilSun-down. Daily and Sunday.

1160 Rockville PikeOLympic 9-8300 Rockville Mdhist 3 Milas North ot Betho»do Naval Ho»oital 'Oi Um Visr* Mill Rood ontranco

1 -

( dQnsbnrghs j*A*MlNC'o»sl DC » lANGIfY'*b MARYLAND

I

Enroll Now in New Classes

Bishop Method of SewingBeginner, Intermediate and Advanced

t Night and Day Classes’ Storting Monday Sept. 24th

Lansburgh's Langley Park, Md. Only

For Information and Registration¦ Come to Our Pattern Deportmenti First Floor, Longley Park, Md., Store

or Coll NA. 8-9800. EXT. 1-330

lear-aidl\ (Copyright’ and Pal. Applied For) £> TRADEMARK REGISTERED C

| Hear Better |< THIS SIMPLE, EASY AND >

> INEXPENSIVE METHOD <

T mOunce I«“ !

ENTIRE DEVICE HORN fMEM CANAL f

# (As Illustrated) C

| If*4No Cords! No Tubes! |

#*

Not Electrical! First Cost Only Cost!] ? Will Not Wear Out! C4

? EAR-AID is a non-powered auditory canal insert C? offered for sola to persons suffering from deaf- Ci ness or hearing loss due to collapse or partial C? collapse of the ear canal, which is an infrequent C? cause of deafness. <

i? For Free Information Mail Coupon <

>

< Let ut lend you Ihii "Free” information without 4*

i the slightest obligation. It could be the most >

<'

important thing you do this year. Just fill out t

,? coupon and mail it now.

<‘ fiUCHANNAN HEARING CO.

~

j >y I 726 14th St. N.W. \A j Washington, D. C. j f# | Phono Dl. 7-6S7S I >

C j Please send free information on Ear-Aid. I #

> I ADDRESS [ yC I CITY STATI ..._

M J y

THE SUNDAY STAR, Washington, D. C. 5*SUNDAY. gCPTEMBEK 8. IPAQ

Shop Lansburgh's Langley Park, Md., 12:30 Until9:30 P.M. Monday; Washington Store Open 9:30

Until 6 P.M.

! CJ£” sbur S™)WASHING'Cm DC •* LANGIfY *A«K. MARYLAND

Back-to-School

SPECIAL!

i! * 11

PARKER “21”PEN AND PENCIL SET

7 95

Perfect pair for smooth writing for school, nowspecially priced in an attractive set! Pen has electro-polished point, easy "2-finger" filling. Medium, fineor extra-fine points. Propel-repel action pencil withreserve lead supply, adjustable eraser! Matched set

'j in blue, red, green, block.

“Musts” For Back-to-School

JK K. Jr

* Box of 24 Personalized Texon Finish, Zip Close

> School Pencils Sturdy Ring Binder§

*|2s l’«*t, Pin-striped poncils witli eraser f°r or three-ring not*

. tips. Each hos name stomped P°P« r ' Sturdy binder in scuff-in 6 51 d color. Comes in handy res.stmg Texon finish. Zips

> gift box for easy storing. ,h.

r "i

finger, pastels.

Has Lunch Pouch! With Vacuum Bottle

> Nylonitc School Bag Metal Lunch Kit

i 2n 2*9Long-weonng school-bogs to Holt-pint vacuum bottle,

> hold books, pooers, pencils, hondy metol kit in “Robin>!

lunch. Zip pencil pocket. Hood." "Jr. Mist" ond plaidGinger, chorcool or ivory. lithographed designs.

h Lansburghs—STATlONEßY- Washington, Street Floor;, Langley Park. Md., First Floor

>' Washington, 7th, Bth ond E Sts. N.W. NA. 8-9800j Longley Pork, Md, New Hampshire Ave.

ond University Lone

A-23