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The Palm Beach Post from West Palm Beach, Florida • Page 43
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The Palm Beach Post from West Palm Beach, Florida • Page 43

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West Palm Beach, Florida
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43
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PALM BEACH POST-TIMES, Sunday, OcL 20, 1957 Pao. 43 Age Of Missiles Spurs Trend To Locate Industry In Florida TALLAHASSEE, Oct. 19 The age of the guided missile and "sputnik" rolled around just about right for Florida to make its big industrial bid. scenic beauty are pulling high payroll industry to the state. Florida is in the midst of an electronics boom which started in 1953.

Radar and communications equipment and inertial-guidance (missile) systems now are homegrown products. The Industrial development was; Up until a few years back tourist-minded Floridians spurned talk of industrial development short two years ago, former Gov Millard Caldwell deplored efforts accelerated noticeably in 1956 and has continued at a high rate this "to make the state another Pitts i burgh." year. The number of new plants But new-type clean industry and major expansions the first six months of this year reached 386. being blended into Honda semi profit' u. tropical landscape is changing all that, and spurring population and Greatest industrial growth came in the big tourist counties along the lower East Coast and in the St.

economic growth. Ironically, the facts that make "Tabuif llt.1l 4 T' TV I I t'lc'Ml SI Petersburg area along the West Coast. Florida one of the nation's top tourist -magnets climate and Gov. LeRoy Collins said that by far the most important factor inj winning the electronics and engin 18.5 Million U. S.

eering industries to Florida is the state's ability attract engineers and skilled labor through its sun Workers Members Obituaries shine and attractiveness as a place to live. Stan Sheets Photo NEW OFFICERS Newly elected officers of the Boynton Beach Boat Club will conduct their first official business meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday it the Boynton Casino. The first meetiag was a potluck supper last week. Left to right: Mrs.

Clara Staples, treasurer; Joe Sheldon, fleet captain; Duncan Hunter, commodore; Stan Pickering, vice commodore, and Jim Warnke, MRS. MINNIE P. EBERLY. Mrs Eberly, 81, of 1230 Lake Ave Of Labor Unions Lake Worth, died Saturday at a local hospital after a long illness She came to Lake Worth first in 1914 from Akron, Ohio, and be WASHINGTON, Oct. 19, (jP) The Labor Dept.

reported today its latest survey shows a total came a permanent resident in 1931. She was a member of the labor union membership of about Averill Photo, Belle Glade FIELD DAY Cattlemen intently look on during phases of Cattlemen's Field Day dealing with production problems at the Everglades Experiment Station near Belle Glade. At the left two experts ire discussing some production problems, using a cow In the demonstntion. Pirtlcipating are, at left, A. C.

Warnick the Dept. of Animal Husbandry, University of Florida, and Dr. Herbert L. Chapman, associate animal nutritionist at the experiment station, All Is Quiet On Little Rock Sacred Heart Catholic Church 18 Mi million. Survivors include a son, Charles The department said the mem Eberly of Miami; a daughter, Mrs.

bership claims of U.S. unions as Pratt and Whitney officials attest to the state's pulling power with hard-to-get skilled technicians. Last year when Pratt and Whitney was casting about for place to locate a jet engine test center it ran parallel blind ads in industrial centers to lure technicians. One of the ads asked for applications for work with an unidentified engine-manufacturing concern. The other invHed applications from such a firm to work in Florida.

The ads with the Florida lure far outdrew the other, and proved to be one of the deciding factors in locating the 40 million dollar plant near West Palm Beach. Ruth Shotts of Lake Worth; three of the beginning of 1957 added up to that figure. It is some grandchildren and four great grandchildren. Rosary services will be conduct Racial Front 500,000 greater than the total in the department's last survey at ed Monday at 7:30 p. m.

at E. Earl Smith and Son Funeral Home. the beginning of 1955. LITTLE ROCK, Oct. 19 More than one million of the 'S The controversy over integra Mass will be said at 9 a.

m. Tues fR, 4 iJ7iQiv; iaawcfei miw- 1 1 II If If 18Vie million members of American unions were outside the tion at Little Rock Central High day at the church. Burial will fol School here simmered at a low low at Pinecrest Cemetery. United States, primarily in Can point today. ada.

The survey showed about Friends may call at the funeral home today from 3 to 6 p. and Gov. Orval Faubus, who op 16,900,000 of the members in un poses the federal government in ions affiliated with the AFL-CIO, Last week, Minneapolis-Honey after 8 p. m. JOHN HENRY YAUN.

Mr. Yaun its protection of nine Negro chil which has been claiming only 15 million members. dren at the school with paratroopers and federalized National well's new 4ft million dollar vibration-proof inertial guidance plant was opened in the St. Petersburg The Labor Dept. said about one 81, of 3510 Lucerne Lake Worth, died Friday evening at bis Guardsmen, was at Fayettevtlle, fourth of the nation's total labor area.

for tha Arkansai-Texai foot home after a long illness. force, and about one-third of em Resembling fashionable apart He came to Lake Worth In 1940 ball game. ployes in non-farm employment ments, these new-type smokeless At Fayetteville, Faunus repeat belong to unions. It said these from Crestview, Fla. He was carpenter.

ratios have remained about the Survivors include his wife, Mrs. same since the end of World and fumeless plants are being fitted into the Florida landscape in such a way as to enhance rather than detract from the natural ed earlier statements that he "expected" a special session of the Arkansas Legislature to deal with the problem. War II. Annie Lee Yaun of Lake Worth; The survey had a number of beauty. Only Faubus can cm such a sidelights.

One was that about four sons, Dewey, Rolan and Ed ward H. Yaun, all of Lake Worth and Porter Yaun of Alaska: i But the biggest, quickest spur to 3,400,000 women are union mem session and he gave no indication when he might do so. industrial development of any area bers. Another was that an esti I tr Ml ffi-vf aw daughter, Mrs. Thelma Henschel of West Palm Beach; 13 grandchil has come about in the perimeter mated 2V4 million white collar Faubus also has said the stat surrounding the Air Force Missile workers professional, clerical might take up a legal fight to Test Center at Patrick Air Force dren and two great-grand-children Funeral services will be conduct and sales employes are union have the troops removed, but there were no development! along Base near Cocoa, where the United ists.

The white collar field is one ed Monday at 4 p. m. at E. Earl States will launch its own satellites the unions have been trying to that line today. Smith and Son Funeral Home.

Bur soon. U. S. District Judge Ronald N. organize most recently.

AIRMAN OF MONTH Airman 3c Isaac C. Davis has been chosen as Airman of the Month for the 1371st mapping- and charting squadron for the month of September. Chosen for bis outstanding performance and initiative in performing duties both as administrative and mail clerk, Airman Davis wis presented with a $25 Savings Bond by Major Robert L. Taylor (left) commander of the 1371st, in recognition of the honor. Airman Davis, who attended Florida State University before going on active duty with the Air Force last October, reported to the 1371st in April.

His home is in Plant City. ial will be in Pinecrest Cemetery. Cape Canaveral, where the long- len unions account for nearly range missiles are launched on ALFRED T. HOOPER. Mr.

Hoop half of the country's total union membership. Six unions have a Davles of Fargo, N. Thursday dismissed without hearing a citizen's suit seeking to have the troops ordered out. their long course across the Atlan er, 69, of 1019 Alabama died tic, is 18 miles north of Patrick on combined membership of members, or one out of three the coast. at a local hospital Saturday morn in after a Ion illness.

This action resulted In a protest In mid-1956 there were 9,500 union members. from Faubus and a demand from. He came here 21 years ago from persons employed at the missile The half dozen largest unions. the plaintiff's attorney for "im test center, of which 5,500 were Famed Imposter Said Hired Pittsburgh, Pa. He is survived by his wife, Mrs.

Lena Hooper: two sisters, Mrs. El in order of size, are the Teamsters, Auto Workers, Steelwork-ers, Machinists, Carpenters and peachment of Davis. The liwyer also said he would appeal the dismissal order. employed by the contractors engaged in constructing and operating the facilities. len Patterson and Mrs.

John Kem- the International Brotherhood of Troops were still on duty in th nitzer. All are of West Palm The civilian contracts represent Electrical Workers. As Teacher In Alaska Town vicinity of the high School today despite the weekend recess. cross-section of the aircraft, a The Labor Dept. figured there Beach.

Also surviving are three brothers, Edward Hooper of De As the fourth week of integra population and electronic industries in the United States. Up until the are about 125,000 collective bargaining contracts in effect, 'covering some 18 million workers. troit, and two others in England. Funeral services will be held at Russians launched "sputnik" the given Lawrence as bis home JUNEAU, Alaska, Oct. 19 UV- civilian contractor personnel including some workers not un town.

One of the nation's most famous tion ended yesterday only seven of the Negroes were attending school along with nearly 2,000 White students. The other two Negroes were 111. A spokesman for the absentees said they hoped to Vogel Funeral Home Tuesday at ion members. There are 17 unions Godgart, who described him lmposters apparently was em of government workers, with a ployed briefly last month as self as 6 feet, 1 inch tall and weighing 250 pounds, arrived at strength there had been programmed to double by 1960. Now it probably will go even higher.

West of there, near Orlando, the Martin Co. is building a multi- combined membership of nearly $6,400 a year school teacher 2 p. m. The Kev. josepn a.

houn, pastor of the Union Congre-Rational Church, will officiate. Burial will be at Hillcrest he hnrk in class MondiV. in Alaska, the department of edu uu.uuu, wnich do not negotiate agreements. Dillingham about a week before his employment began officially CRAFT FROM SPACE Children examine the glint plastic balloon which came to rest in a eedir swamp Frldiy neir Her-mmsville, after soaring more than 16 miles above the earth. The balloon carried two nivy scientists, Lt.

Cmdr. M. L. Lewis and Cmdr. Malcora D.

Ross, across three states in hush-hush spice exploration flight. The flight, called "Strito-Lab High No. 2," wis kept secret until after It's ascension on Friday morning from in open pit Iron mine it Crosby, Minn. Peik height of the flight was 86,000 feet. The gondola and crew were unharmed.

(United Press Trlephoto), cation said today. Clothier James T. Karam, whose name has been brought The survey, made by the de with the opening of school Sept Department officials said an partment's Bureau of Labor Sta million dollar plant geared to the guided missile program which may become the state's largest indus examination of records indicated 2. As he had requested, his territorial teaching certificate was tistics, is to be detailed in a new ALBERT JAMES MILAN. Fu a man they hired as Martin Dan Into the integration dispute, cancelled plans for a television appearance tomorrow and said ha instead would set out his view labor union directory to be pub awaiting him when he arrived iel Godgart, 31, might well be trial plant.

B. F. Fuller, executive dir neral services for Mr. Milan BR. of 4805 Fern Lake Worth lished soon.

The directory is re A spokesman for the depart Ferdinand Waldo Demara, 35, vised every several years. will be conducted Monday at 2 point in an advertisement In Sun- whose career in the last 10 years ector of the Florida Industrial commission which is coordinating ment at Anchorage, with direct supervision over Western Alaska has cast him in such roles as Pahokee-Canal Point Notes p.m. at E. Earl Smith and 5on Funeral Home. A Christian ay's Arkansas Democrat.

Karam, a friend of Faubus, has the drive for new industries, said schools, said Godgart worked on Canadian naval surgeon, college Florida isn't benefitting particular ly three or four days out of the Egyptian Units professor and an assistant war Science reader will officiate. Burial will be at Pinecrest Ceme ly from the industrial shift from den of a Texas prison. total time he was employed. He did very well in the classroom on one section of the country to The Rev. Hoke Shirley of Or tery.

Friends may call today at been accused by Mayor Woodrow Wilson Mann, as the "principal instigator" of riots outside the school before troops were sent here. lando, former pastor of the Pa- those few days, the spokesman Don M. Dafoe, territorial com. missioner of education, said there the' funeral home. Mr.

juuan Sail For Home "It's mostly new. type industry," hokee First Baptist Church, will said. died Thursday. were many similarities between However, Godgart' left Dilling Karam has denied the charge he said, "although there's no question but that the state has bene advisor of the Pahokee Assembly, Order of Rainbow for Girls, presided for tlie first time at a meeting in the Masonic Hall Monday night. The group made plans to sponsor a concessions booth at the PTA Halloween carnival on Lair Field the night of Oct.

31. ham without notice for Anchor THOMAS J. JULIAN. Rosary DAMASCUS, Syria, Oct. 19 (iD- the background of Demara and Godgart, who was employed for fited tremendously from the trend age on Sept.

18 or 19, the spokes Egyptian naval units which Rnd said Faubus' enemies were attempting to hit at the governor through him. services for Mr. Julian, 47, of 1213 N. D. Lake Worth, will about two and a half weeks as a toward dispersion of industry since conduct revival services at the Canal Point Baptist Church, Oct.

20-27. Services will be held on weekday mornings from 7:30 to 8 a.m. The evening revivals, which start at 7:30, will be preceded by brief prayer services in the Sunday man said. Arnold Granville, su brought Egyptian troop reinforce teacher at the territorial elemen be conducted today at 7:30 p.m ments to Syria last Sunday sailed pervisor for the department at Anchorage, met the plane and tary school at Dillingham, a fish. at E.

Earl Smith and Son Funeral for home today. ing town off Bristol Bay in far Home. Mass will be said at 9 The move came on the heels of A program on "Equal Rights Godgart signed letter of resig nation. western Alaska. a.m.

Monday at Sacred Heart reported new mediation efforts for Women in Business "was pre there was so much new territory for industry to move into." Gov. Collins said that in addition to the climate, Florida's favorable tax base has served as a big lure for industry. There are no corporate or personal state income taxes and no state ad valorem tax. The bulk of Florida's taxes are School building at 7:15. The special music will be under the direction of Mrs.

Paul Rardin, assisted His whereabouts since then Catholic Church. Burial will be Bridges Demands Slav Aid Cuts Godgart, who listed his home as Salem Depot, N.H., on his ap by King Saud of Saudi Arabia in sented by Mrs. Elsie Sims, legis were not known to the depart the Turkish-Syria crisis. lation chairman, at a program at Pinecrest Cemetery. Mr.

Jul ian died Friday. plication for employment with the by Martin Bradley of Nashville ment, Dafoe said, although he The troops were sent here in an dinner meeting of the Pahokee Business and Professional Wom department of education, had a song leader, and Mrs. Brad said it was understood from com operation of the joint Egyptian- Pallbearers will be Robert O'Connor. Pat Howley. Wilbur letter of recommendation from a ley.

ments that Godgart planned to go Syrian-Saudi Arabian defense an's Club at the home of Mrs. Betty Dinnis Tuesday night. She on the consumer, and the tourists Little. Thomas Burke, James to Chicago. command.

It was an obvious ges Fred Demara of Box 374, La con ia, N.H. Demara rated Godgart as "su pay the big share of them at the Efforts to locate the ex-teacher Bishop and Charles Blumer. State Sen. Doyle E. Carlton, was assisted by Mrs.

Pat Bos-worth and Miss Jane Pltimer race tracks, night clubs, restau at Anchorage failed. ture by Egypt to back up Syrian and Soviet charges that Turkish troops were massing in a threat of Wauchula, state president of the Baptist Church Brotherhood, will JOHN GARHARD WOLKEN. Fu Information Godgart supplied Sara Ndrris, Pahokee High School perior on such matters as personal and social character, personality, teaching ability and pro neral services for Mr. Wolken to the department coincided close be guest speaker at a dinner meet Senior, was introduced as a stu to Syria security. rants and resorts.

Tax receipts from business and industry represent only 10.9 per cent of the entire state tax levy compared with 23 per cent for the nation as a whole. 65, of 620 58th will be held ly with the known career of De ing of the Baptist Brotherhood of (British and American sources dent representative of the club. fessional attitude: He classed him have estimated the troops num Monday at 9 a.m. at Northwood Funeral Home. The Rev.

Joseph mara, who entered the news in 1951. That year he joined the as "average" only on two points Mn. Luther Jones of Belle bered 1,000 to mentioned in a department ques the Pahokee First Baptist Church Tuesday, Oct. 22, at 7:30 p.m. The wives of members will be guests and a special "ladies night" pro Most of the new-type industries WASHINGTON, Oct.

19 Sen. Bridges (R-NH) demanded today that this government stop all forms of foreign aid to Yugoslavia, because it has formally recognized the Communist government of East Germany. "For many yean my common sense has told me that Tito is a fence straddler, playing both ends against the middle," Bridges, senior Republican on the Senate Appropriations and Armed Services Committees, said in a statement. "I have sought to put an end to foreign aid for the Tito puppet Canadian navy undei the name of At Latakla, Syria's chief Medi Borg, pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church will offi tionnaire health and personal have had to bring in their own Dr.

Joseph A. Cyr, and perform terranean port, Syrians there Glade was guest speaker at the October meeting of the Canal Point Garden Club held Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. appearance. ed several difficult operations in massed by the thousands for a skilled labor.

But some of the industries found skilled workers who ciate. Burial will be at Hillcrest Cemetery. Mr. Wolken died Thurs In reply to the question, "would Korean waters before the hoax farewell to the Egyptian sailors, you be willing to employ the ap had moved to Florida to retire, was discovered. S.

Evans, Cypress Lodge, Port shouting "long live Shukri, long gram will be presented. Hugh Branch of Pahokee has es tablished the new vegetable broker age firm of H. H. Branch, Inc. plicant? Demara replied: "In It was learned that earlier De Mayaca.

The speaker described live Gamal. and brought them in for part-time duty as draftsmen and the like, deed." mara had posed in 1947 as Dr. day. Pallbearers will be Carl Lus cano, John Lyons, Leon Skibyon-ski, Alfred Carlton, Floyd Mc-Daniels and Al Scobille. Shukri Kuwatly is Syria's pres Dafoe said Godgart accepted There has been little of the so- Robert Linton, a Stanford grad.

and demonstrated the planting of annuals. Mrs. O. H. Chastain, president, presided at the business session.

ident. Gamal Abdel Nasser is president of Egypt. employment as a tentorial teacher in a collect telegram from uate who served two months on the faculty of St. Martin's Col with recently completed offices at the Pahokee State Farmer Market. Branch, who has been working in the vegetable produce business In regime," he said.

"Such aid has Damascus newspapers reported called heavy industry in Florida outside of the paper mills in North Florida and the phosphate mining in Central Florida. Lawrence, Aug. 3. De seemed to me a travesty on MRS. REGINA SPITZER.

Funeral lege near Olympia, Wash. In that King Saud advised Kuwatly sound diplomacy and a waste of The Victory Class at the Paho services for Mrs. Spitzer, 92, of mara, when his previous mas. querades were made public, had he has sent a message to Turkish 1955, under the name of Benja min Jones, Demara worked brief Florida's transportation system the Glades since 1936, has as as sociates in the new firm his broth 3600 Okeechobee will be con President Celal Bayar calling for kee First Methodist Church School Is making preparations to move isn't as highly geared as some of ly as assistant warden of the withdrawal of Turkish troop con er, Julian Branch, and A. i.

ducted Monday at 11 a.m. at E. Earl Smith and Son Funeral Home. nelworth, a granddaughter, Texas state prison at Huntsville. Into its newly completed class centrations near the Syrian bor Culberson.

His wife will be in the northern states and power generating costs have been rela the taxpayers money." Bridges referred to Marshal Tito, boss of the Communist re-' gime in Yugoslavia. He said the United States had granted nearly 1 billion dollars of military and Jean Marsh of Mt. Vernon, N.Y.; Karller this year he was arrest room in the educational building. Rabbi Irving B. Cohen of Temple der.

charge of the bookkeeping depart seven great-grandchildren; three Saud has been in Beirut con Named by Mrs. L. J. Fraser, class Israel will officiate. Burial will be tively high due to lack of coal and natural gas.

nieces, Miss Elizabeth Marriott ed at Augusta, Maine, for posing under false pretenses as Martin Daniel Godgart, teacher at North ferring with Lebanon's President ment. Mrs. M. C. Carter and Mrs.

Will- president, on a special committee to select furnishings for the at Woodlawn Cemetery. Mrs. Spit zer died Thursday. of Vienna, Austria, Mrs. William But Fuller said the new-type economic aid to the Tito govern Camille Chaumon about the Middle East crisis.

Haven Island school. classroom are Mrs. Leo Maxwell, Meggers of Elmhurst, and Mrs Eugene Wells of Lake Geneva, liam Baker were received as new members of the lone Patterson industries are of such a type that transportation and power costs aren't the big items of considera-l At that last iob, Demara had Mrs. If. J.

Anderson, Mrs. Robert Communist bloc expressions of earned the respect of many of the support for Syria continued to and three nephews, Roger Marriott of Rockford, 111., Divid C. Hatton, and Mrs. Robert J. Schroder, class teacher.

tion. town residents for his work with mount. A natural gas pipeline now being Marriott of Pacific Palisades, children, and he had oreanized The publisher of the Damascus built will carry natural gas the and Frederick Rogerson of Sea Scout unit. The Happy Helpers eroun of aily Al Alam, now touring Red ment. If this amount had been spent on the U.S.

satellite and missile programs. Bridges said, it "could well have meant an 'also ran' position for Sputnik." "It Is indeed significant, and more than coincidental, that opportunist Tito should make clear his own orbit as a Communist satellite on the heels of the successful launching of the Soviet length of the peninsula to Miami St. Louis, Mo. Circle, Canal Point Baptist at a meeting at the home of Mrs. Ida Butler.

Mrs. W. S. Evans gave the devotionals and presided at the business session during which Mrs. Paul Rardin and Mrs.

C. B. Jones reported on the leadership conference which they attended at Ft. Pierce. China with a Syrian press delegation, reported in a dispatch and this is expected to give even Friends may call at Mizell- CAP Announces stronger impetus to the industrial Simon-Faville Funeral Home to that Mao Tze-tung sad he would children at the Pahokee First Methodist Church have resumed regular weekly meetings for the coming season on Mondays at 2 p.m.

Mrs. W. O. Moss is the new leader for the group. She is being day from 12 noon until 5 p.m be delighted to meet Kuwatly.

drive. In the new Industrial awakening Funeral services will be con Red China has already pledged Training Program ducted at 5 p.m. today at the fu to support Syria against Turkish man-made moon," he said. neral home. The Rev.

Ray Vale assisted by Mrs. Dorsey Pugh and aggression inspired by American DAYTONA BEACH, Oct. 19 Uti Congress has left the decision imperialist conspiracies, without committees of 100 have been formed in several major cities to assist chambers of commerce and utility companies, and the state development commission has expanded its industrial services sec of Forest Hills Presbyterian Church will officiate. Further Mrs. Vance Denton who serves as pianist.

A new communications training saying how. services and burial will take The East German commercial ru program will be. offered in the Florida Wing of the Civil Air about aid to Communist Yugoslavia to the President in the past. He was required to find that it served the national inter place in Milan. Jimmy Schoeppel, who gradu representative in Damascus delivered a note pledging Commu tion.

ated from Marion Institute in Patrol, it was decided here today at a communications conference MRS. LILA PATTERSON. Mrs. June, has enrolled In the Dental nist East Germany's support to ests of this country before continuing such aid. of the CAP.

BPW Survey Set Patterson, Mangonia Park res Syria in event of a Turkish at Brenda Kaye Unwin, new president of the Intermediate Girls Auxiliary at the Pahokee First Baptist Church, presided at a GA meeting at the home of Mrs. Ralph Grimes, who together with Mrs. E. B. Gamble, serves as co-counselor for the group.

Other new officers are Olga Sheffield, vice president; Betty Ray Gillis, secretary; Myra Jones, treasurer; Linda Hand, program chairman; Janet Upthegrove, social chairman, and Yvonne Thompson, community missions chairman. College at Emory University, Atlanta, Ga. tack. Secretary of State Dulles and DAYTONA BEACH, Oct. 19 W- ine program will be instituted each of the 92 squadrons in ident on N.

45th died Saturday at her home. She had been Mr. and Mrs. Roy Vandegrift, The Hungarian foreign minis The Business and Professional other administration spokesmen Florida along with a training pro a resident in this area since 1926, LOUIS HENRY KLINGSICK. Mr.

Klingsick, 84, a pioneer resident of Vero Beach, died Thursday afternoon. Born at Washington, Jan. 12, 1873, he moved to Vero Beach 43 years ago. He was a citrus grower and a member of Grace Lutheran Church, Vero Beach. Surviving are his brother, Oswald W.

Klingsick, St. Louis, three sisters, Miss Amanda Klingsick, Miss Thelma Thorman, and Mrs. William Neiburg, all of Washington, Mo. two nephews, Walter Klingsick and Herbert Klingsick of Vero Beach; three nieces, Miss Esther Klingsick, Miss Lillian Klingsick, and Mrs. J.

B. Tippin, all of Vero Beach. Services will be held at 3:30 p.m. today at Grace Lutheran Church with the Rev. L.

C. Gerbhardt, pastor, officiating. Burial will be at Crestlawn Cemetery. The Cox Funeral Home, Vero Beach, has charge. MRS.

MAUDEHOOVER. Mrs. Hoover, of 6911 S. Flagler died Saturday. She had lived here for three years, and had been a winter resident for many years.

She was a former resident of Milan, Ohio, where she was a member of the Methodist Church and the Milan Garden Club. Survivors include two sisters, Mrs. Raymond Allen of Craw-fordsville, and Mrs. James Aylward of Elmhurst, a grandson, Frank Kelly of Ken- have as a guest her mother, have called the aid to Tito a cal try in Budapest issued a govern Women's Clubs of Florida will coming here from Atlanta, Ga. Mrs.

Welch of South Carolina. gram in electronics for CAP cadets, Col. William Criswell. chief conduct a survey in November to determine the prospects for em Survivors include her husband, Mr. and Mrs.

Vinson Hender culated risk, worthwhile in the light of Yugoslavia's resistance to domination by Moscow. ment statement assuring Syria of Hungarian support and attacking what it called "the American, Turkish and Israeli Jessie C. Patterson, and two sons, communications ofiicer, reported. ployment of women in Florida inis will be line with son have returned to their home in Pahokee from Chambersburg, where they spent the "Let it be frankly admitted This survey was announced here C. and Isaac R.

Patterson, Mangonia Park; three other sons, strengthening the search and res that our oft-quoted policy of 'cal at the opening session of a state cue services CAP does for the Eugene and Jessie L. Patter culated risk has not paid off in board meeting attended by some son, Delray Beach, and Ralph H. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Friend Selma Bowen, who underwent major surgery at Good Samaritan Hospital Monday, had as visitors 210 delegates.

Miss Helen Krauss, aimer Elected this particular instance," Bridges said. Air Force, he explained. Some 150 CAP communications men will end a two dav confer Patterson, Ft. Pierce; also a sis St. Petersburg, a past state pres have as a guest her sister, Mrs.

H. C. White of Savannah, Ga. ST. PETERSBURG, Oct.

19 during the week his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. ident and chairman of the BPW "Know Your America Week" ence here Sunday.

Col. Criswell ter, Mrs. E. B. Lowe, East Point, and nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

R. H. Palmer, of Lake Mr. and Mrs. A.

D. Beverly Worth was elected president of saia interest in tne CAP com Bowen and son, Pat, of Bruns have returned to their home in Pahokee from Mountain City, munications program has Brown wick, another brother, P. L. Committee, urged all Florida clubs to promote the week (Nov. 24-30) actively.

Funeral services will be held at p.m., Monday, in Northwood considerably. There are 600 sta the Florida of Electrical Contractors today. Palmer succeeds James Dandelake of worthy matron of the Pahokee Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, attended the Friendship Night program of the Clewiston OF.S Chapter. She was accompanied by Mrs. Hulda Wilson, Mrs.

Peg where they spent the sum Bowen of Mountain City, and Funeral Home, conducted by the mer. tions in the state network, he said, placing the Florida Wing an aunt, Mrs. A. C. Everett of Macon, Ga.

During their stay Rupert Mock has pledged to the Rev. Luzene Lamerson, pastor of West Gate Baptist Church. Burial will be In Hillcrest Cemetery. Others elected today were J. here they the visited Selma's Phi Kappa Phi Fraternity at third In the nation in size and strength.

gy Mzemore, Mrs. Velma Hall In storing summer carry-alls, remember to put elastic or rubberized items in cool places. When storing such items close to mother, Mrs. F. L.

Bowen, and Florida State University and his Arthur Turner, Tampa, first vice president; Carl W. Olson, Pallbearers will be O. C. Ovre, He said also the wing will seek bill in the next Legislature to brother-in-law gwd sister, Mr. and Mrs.

J. H. Strayer, in Canal Point. Albert Crane, Blaine Williamson, Daytona Beach, second vice sister, Jeanine Mock, is pledged to the Delta Gamma Sorority at the University of Florida. and Mrs.

H. G. Rodgers. Gordon Chase, student of the University of Florida, has pledged to Lamba Chi Alpha Fraternity at the university. C.

P. Webb. Donald C. Paterson president; and James R. Lowry, gether, it is wise to wrap them in paper or some material to keep them from sticking together.

permit radio call letters on license plates. and James F. Lucky. Coral Gables, secretary-treasurer. Gwen Bracewell, new worthy Mrs.

a a 1 Harrington, A.

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