THE DAILY TIMES-GAXETTE, Fridey, December 13, 1957 |} L Drive For Jobless . { The Roman Catholic St. Vin. day were finding jobs throu ; Success In Windsor cent de Paul Society began alsociety's bi ie il the SOR. (CP) x unique 18 Sinday o find every Dati, harty Richer, Manager of the WIND -- me available ssex|society's salvage operations, said drive to find Windsor's part-time County. |that though eri are Ast : New Yorkers Routine Disturbed By Strike a insets pl jeswpeebegusng to Se i. i afce THUR W. EVERETT (formerly 35 minutes away. But, While it's been pretty ,|cash for Christmas is working|joh oppportunity cards from the|from householders who want wine BY arn) (AP) -- The sub-|he said there have been some A well, officials said Thursday. [society said nearly 20 persons alter help. way strike de" ayed airliners.| "I've never had a better time| There was the man im-Brooklyn ~ : Fo Brooklynites commuted to Man-| travelling to work and back home|who tried to squeeze aboard a Prin ce Ww altz es 1 hattan by ferry although no ferry|than I've had since the strike be-|train with a tuba. Neither made connects the two boroughs. Andigan. I spend four hours a day it. POSE then there was the tuba player travelling, but I feel more re-| A Times Square subway guard, {RF2 4 who tried to get on a crowded|laxed, I get more fresh air, have|noting a 2 Squa 3 Supway guard, With Housemaid train with his instrument and the plenty of time to read the news-|the door of a train, yelled in com- woman who lost her shoes. papers." passion: Best Quality STOVE OIL Why have airliners taken off late fo r the distant points? Well, the subway strike forced commu- To get downtown, some enter- prising travellers took the Hud- son tubes under the Hudson River from Herald Square -- at 34th Street -- to New Jersey. There "Who wants off I just got on." LONDON (AP)--Prince Phili th a Buckingham P. "Let that woman off, let her|Waltzed with a off!" ac Shouted the woman: e housemaid Thursday night at the annual Christmas party of He [oval household's domestic staff. ® Prompt Delivery i -- A Ata to use their cars to get to ye Rares) : i This congested Long Island -- parkways. Airlines buses from|they boarded a tube train that| On a subway in Queens, a thin| With Verse Bomilor e Lo Manhattan to the airports got|brought them back to downtown|voice cried woefully from some-|his arms, Philip whirled around EY count in ra So Ane | VLoahattan. where in the massed, immovable the floor of the palace supper See ol sengers arrived late So#he| moo Brooklynites, i the floor of the pala prer Ag I a H er eartied catch a train out of Pennsylvania| "Ladies and gentlemen. I hatePed by as the partner of chef Staten Island ferries CArt-v\Station and unable to get there|to bother you but I'm not stand-| Ronald Aubrey. ig Brook ho agenious resi.| bY subway, caught a Long Island|ing in my shoes. Could you please| The dance was the first of aj from Brooklyn. ici 4 who Railroad train from Brooklyn to{look around if they are near series of royal staff parties. dente of tha to Manhaitan by|Jamaica, Queens There they|you?: The Queen wore an evening golds: get, te t a lternate |SWitched to a Manhattan-bound| But the woman was swept off gown of ivory satin embroidered uivay Wty Macs LIRR train that deposited them at the next station and no one|with gold sequins. She arrived plan. in Penn Station with time to knows whether she ever got into|with Philip at 10. p.m. when the TAKE A FERRY spare (her shoes. party was just warming up. They took a ferry from Brook- lyn to Staten Island and then | from Staten Island to Manhattan, | One such voyager Louis Wein. | stein, 42, of Flatbush, travelled | two hours to get to a destination Detroit River | SEIS 2 Closes Down For SES Winter Season WINDSOR (CP)--The world's {busiest inland waterway is clos- {ing up shop for the winter. | | The stream of shipping, whieh i summer makes the Detroit) spot of the super-airport. The in the the busiest iniand water-| arrow points to the arrival | way in the world, has fallen to a i ildi i i ' " " ilding, which has a visitors' rickle as boats head downstream | new arrival building in front of | view of the "new project. The building, whic Itrickle a ii x arly i oid being trapped in the up- which fountains spout spectacu- | building at bottdm, leit, is the | promenade near ly a mile long. oy bd I A Iter. Light buoys and spars are be 50 Years In Life Of The UP jn eri [ |the department of transport be- | |tween the Ambassador Bridge ecalled In Book By Morris gm: tie wi the buoys ashore Ny 26. there Hugh Baillie was 44 when he|as a company selling daily news Washington bureau, as an exam- -= Tile Mr gy Bo 4 became president of the United reports for profit to 369 news-|ple has grown from five men in are Bae hey. Press Associations. Tall square-|papere. I way not uni July 5 gnesoom ofice over a haber: "Ty United States Const Guard| {tary hs, ne wel the nounced on its front page that/dashery in 1907 to a staff of 115{will start hauling in Ngkier boys Hollywood version of a Prussian|the new agency had been formed under direction of Vice - Presi-|at the SOE 0 eves on ang officer. He had the thorough and that its despatches would dent Lycle C. Wilson. {Sauk pil Maile Eo Sean knowledge of operations, the in- Heresiier appes in the Press. \FINE STORY [Fane 8 3 exhaustible energy, the dramatic The same ition carried the ~ iis . 1D. States Co of En- ; ret i " ress' red Deadline Every Minute" is a| The United States (A rps A Showmanship i Dews overage, first By United Press" credit, chievement by a topnotch gineers said Wednesday that, for would be so vital to success in| Author Joe Alex Morris was a newspaperman who knows "his|as long as possible, wotk in perhaps the most frenzied and part of the United Press for 15 way around in the big time continue - the = a difficult 22-year period ever to|years, his last position with the world of jopnalism Jor Lose herstiurg Chagnel Joep ig "he i | 5 s that of .\who belong to the profession ject, P { an 8 press sssicialion, ein Sie or 0 1943. po will be a treasured book jo bs be necessary when the channel perform y i i f read and read, and used fre- freezes. Alex dy "DE OLIN id ork eran ibune, tae quently as a reference; for those| Sault Ste. Marie reported three H / y i loutside. the profession, it should of the four Us. locks closed EVERY MINUTE: THE STORY, The firs UP news dispatches have an equally strong apppeal while the Canadian lock is sched Vi a e-wire < (Doubleday oy a Pid, telegraph system, of by regular because it deals constantly Withfuied to close togay, 2 Sug 18s which tells of 50 years of a great mail, to 369 newspapers. The headlines, and the news behipd | been sent out to pick 3p) ght pews service, the top stories it|leased telegraph lines were ten-/the mews. It is a fine achieve- house keepers on Ii covered, and the history it un-|uous ties linking a few big cities ment for Alex Joe Morris Iperior islands. covered. |of the East and Middle West, ~ i" - As the cover blurb boasts about (and a few cities on the Pacific this book; "This is both a five coast. | ] ress r es star history of the United Press| By the 1950's, the miracle of . . and a dramatically told review of | transmission of news and photo- . the past 50 years." All major | graphs by radio to multiple des- pews events since 1907 are re- tinations had made it possible to a S 1 £ io] called in terms of the immedi-|bring the whole world into oS moment when the particular most instantaneous contact. The i : eit was making the day's vast change in communication] LONDON (Reuters). -- Some alliance = to agree - quicker headline. since the time when Ed L. Keen British newspapers Thursday than roc els--on a common p |covered Great Britain on a cable urge the West to negotiate with!licy for negotiations. The West FOUGHT MONOPLY {budget of 100 words a day was Russia on some of the proposals must be ready for talks with Author Morris mays the UP|demonstrated during the 1956|made by Premier Bulganin in Russia. was founded for the avowed pur- Olympic games at Melbourne, | letters to the Western Big Three gmp aN ON NERVES pose of fighting a wire-service Australia. Sports Editor Leo H.|leaders and Chancellor Konrad The. Maoh ester. Guardian Monoply by = the Associated | Petersen fook a staff of 27 re-|Adenauer of West Germany. ih : aches yr Siar ian Press. He also says it had to in-| porters -- from 11 different coun-| French political commentators, np ora : is the warnin vent and improvise new, and tries -- to Melbourne and set up| powever, treat the Soviet pre. | Russ ans Fenewing | . ariing | often daring methods to beat its|special radio tele-printer cir-|ier's diplomatic offensive as an|fo the Germans and others that {1a | Mier s dip } : to become a base for the new | rival. cuits to San Francisco, Manila, attempt to exploit cracks in the ios i to 1 "DEADLINE EVERY MIN- Tokyo, and London for the dura-|Atiantic alliance. US. ballistic missiles is to in- " A [alla 3 vite the worst devastation in UTE" tells of these methods and tion, As a result, the outcome of London Ti believes th 5 : of the men and women who used sports contests held on the other | The London {mes oe oy A wartime, the nerves of NATO them with frequent enough suc-|side of the world reached news (letters are designe ; 0 Jack, up are again being tested. | cess to establish the UP as one|papers in Chicago, for example, [the Russian thesis that 18| «There is no reason to believe | of the major world news services. |just about as quickly as if the Obsolete and Bee eo. intro. (hat they will be any more frail Here is told how a UP man|games had been staged at De.| Ihe letters, therefore, Intro-|ap those of the Norwegians crept into a Paris hotel room at |troit. |duce no mew element into the; ype Tyrks were during the | night to discover the text of the] These and other expanding forthcoming Paris discussions, inj, q¢ round of notes. f rontroversial Article 10 of The services gradually boosted UP, the sense that nothing can be all-| "amy goandinavians probably Covenant of the League of Na-|personnel to around 6000. The owed fo deflect the' delegates)..." sot have strategic weapons | tions, The pages are studded from their main purpose, which on" ir territory and the Ger- with, names which have become is to make NATO as strong a de- mans. are treading quietly. So household words; Roy Howard, A hi Di fensive partnership as it can be." far only Britain has committed Ra A Sick, Waller, Cootikise, IC itect 1e8 MENTIONS ZONE [herself to the opposite course, . After drawing attention to Bul- though Italy and Turkey, two Yerlrook Jae, IB ll3a In Windsor ganin's idea of a zone in central | countries in vital positions, will Merriman Smith, and dozens {Europe free of nuclear w probably follow." more. | WINDSOR (CP) Ope of Nosty The Times ogdsl, a ' | REFIT VESSEL America's mos stinguished| "Nothing wou 0 more to ART or : MITCHELL TRIAL architects, Professor Er ne sticast doubts on the West's tte ios TRL ARTHUR (CP) The BL Readers, especially older read- Wilby, 89, died here Wednesday.|ity than to give the impression two remaining bulk oil carriers ers acquainted with the topline] Prof. Wilby, originator of theithat it fights shy of an ideaon the Great Lakes, is being fit- news stories of the past 35 years, concrete pier and steel sash tvpe'simply because it is echoed ini ted out as a bulk cargo-carrying will enjoy reading about the triallof industrial construction, was Russia." vessel by the Port Arthur Ship- of Billy' Mitchell, the Ruthlawarded a fellowship in the The Daily Herald (Labor) com- building Company Limited. The Bnyder-Judd Gray murder trial,|Roya' Architectural Institute of ments: "It will be tragic folly if conversion will keep more than Lindberg's flight, the Wall Street/Canada in 1946. At the time only the West dismisses Russia's 300 men employed at the ship- crash of 1929, the assassination|five living persons held the move as propaganda vards well into the summer of Huey Long, the abdication of award "There i$ danger of rival H- Cargo space of the vessel, re- Ki Edward VIII, and Cham- He was at one time associated rocket bases being established innamed Nipigon Bay, will be in S eeling with Hitler in with the late Albert Khan, De: the two halves of Germany." creased to 870,000 cubi ¢ feet 2. The chronicled events iroit industrial architect. Prof.| "The most urgent talks of the from roughly 700,000 cubic feet. it up to the Hungarian re- Wilby supervised the construc. -- -- ee -- tion of Henry Ford's huge High- r a thrill somewhat land Park plant, the Hill Auditor akin sitting in a newsroom at ium at Ann Arbor, Mich, and a dramatic moment in these the Detroit News Building. He pages taught architecture at the Uni- United Press Association versity of Michigan from 1923 to n in the summer of 1907 1929. ® Courteous Service 20: ® Reasonable Price GAL. TELEPHONE RA 5-1109 VIGOR OIL CO. LIMITED 78 BOND ST. W. OSHAWA ea NEW YORK'S SUPER-AIRPORT NOW IN OPERATION Latest of New York's won- | larly in a 220-acre park. The | 11-storey control tower, high ders is the reconstructed In- | $30,000,000 structure is 11 blocks ternational Airport at Idlewild, | long, three stories high, 640 feet | N.Y., where, top, is shown the | deep. 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