Housing Project site sold, Ross Brothers Buy Land from MacArthur, firm to build 3,500 homes (Miami Herald) 7-10-55Sunday, Jody 10, 1955 Complete State News Report Section B
Ca11 ed MWst Stringent
State Blue Laws
Propi ►k � � � � equest
.For Clarification
Appeals
Courts
Council Backs
Amendment
4 9TALLAHASSEE —(Rf— Thee'
TALLAH*6SEE--(1P►— An official of the Florida State Florida Judicial Council Satur-
Retailers Assolcflation called on the attorney general Saturday day urged the people to ap-
to clarify 19551aws which appear on their face to give Florida prove the District Appellate
''the most stringent Sunday blue laws in the nation." court amendment in the 1956
-- Dallas L. Hostetler, execu- general election as a means of
tive director of the associa- achieving speedy, economic
Marine, 39 tion. Orlando, said that ttice.
o
amending old laws relating to Jus
' operating business establish* The council, which drafted the
nlents on Sundav, the legisla- basic plan for the proposal ap-
Kill^d III lure appeared to 'have ,lime Proved by the 1955 legislature,
C inated certain previous said the amendment would result
exceptions and exemptions, in a considerable speedup of lit-
igation and reduce court costs
These exceptions and ex. sharply,
Cay, Crash
emptions included tourist at- These are the principal bene -
tractions, drug stores, restau- fits to be obtained by the public,
rants, hotels. parking lots and the council said. In addition it
outlying grocery stores. will help reduce the heavy work-
JACKSONWILSE —(LP)— A load on the Florida Supreme
Marine captain , was killed and "The present law raises court.
four persons injured, three crit- many questions among the
ically, in a twotcar wreck on a merchants of our state," Hos- The Florida bar was asked
rain -slick highwadv near the Jack- tetler said. to spearhead the move to obtain
sonville Naval Asir Station Satur• He asked for a general, approval of the amendment in
day, over-all summary of what the 1956s J. Lance Lazonby, Gaines -
County road tpatrolman A. L. law requires, and to outline ville, newly elected president
Rowland said thr dead man was what a merchant shopkeeper of ' the bar, said the matter
Marine Capt. Walter J. Zience, had to do or not to do to abide woul71 be presented to the
39 -year-old father of two chil- by the law. board of governors at its next
dren, w•ho was alone in his 1955 "Does not this law require meeting.
model sedan at the time of the all shops, markets, souvenir
The lesislature rejected an -
accident. stands and all other retail and other phase of the council's rec-
Criticall In red were Mrs. wholesale establishments to omnnendations calling for n e w
y be closed on Sunday?" he ask -
Elizabeth Bor aux and her ed methods of electing judges in an
two sons. 1lficikael, 3. and Ray. One amended section of the effort to remove thein from pol-
4. 'Mrs, Bordealux' husband, Joe itical influence.
seph, driver of the other car, Sunday Blue laws states: Several council members said,
also was injured but apprent• 6&Whoever follows any pure however, this feature would be
ly was in better condition than suit, business or trade on Sun• difficult to sell to the people at
the rest of his family, day. either by manual labor this time, and was more contro-
or with animal or mechanical versial than the appellate court
Rowland said Zience's car ape power, unless the same be Proposal.
parently crossed, the path of the Rork of necessity, shall he The proposed amendment calls
Bordeaux vehicle on a straight, punished by a fine not exceed• for creating three district courts
level stretch o£ road on Roose- Ing $50." of appeal to consist of three
velt blvd., just youth of the main judges each. Except In major
entrance to tble naval station. This amendment specifical• cases, the appellate courts would
Both Bordeaux and Zience were lv exempts printing and sale hear appeals from trial courts,
6tationed here. of Sunday newspapers, and and thereby relieve the Supreme
Rowland said there were no operation of motion picture court of much of the mass of
skid marks on -the wet highway. shows, litigation which now has to come
and it had not yet been deter• Another amended section to Tallahassee.
mined what caLased the captain's reads:
car to veer; acro1% the toad. "Whoever keeps open store Justice Elwyu Thomas of the
The Bordea= family was be- or disposes of any ware, mere Supreme court, who is council
Ing treated at the air station's cilandise, goods or chattels on chairman• said this plan would
base hospital. Sunday, or sells or barters the allow the appellate court to
same, shall be punished by a hear appeals in cities wherethe cases originate and there -
fine not exceeding $50. In case by eliminate the necessity of
Hendrickson of emergeney or necessity. the lawyers' coming to Tal-
however, merchants, shop' lahassee. and of the records
Former Road keepers and others may dis• having to be brought up.
pose of the comforts and neem
essaries of life to customers Perry Nichols, Miami attornev,
Man, Dies without keeping open doors," said that in a recent trip here
on an appeal ca e, he observed
FORT LAUDIERDALE — Fu•]�l�s Picks T� 14 :Miami attorneys in the court
neral services will be held at 1J (,J for hearings on cases originating
in Miami.
11 a.m. Monday at the Fannin Nichols said that if the ap-
funeral home chapel for Earl Extra Fare pellate courts operated, the hear.
Hendrickson, 64-y e a r•old re' ings could have been held in
tired State Road Departfnent HIGH SPRINGS eagle .Five Miami.
engineer wha flied Saturday minutes out of High Springs a "In such cases the lawyers
horning at has home at 1540 on a Lake Citv to probably had to charge their
Second ave. passenger clients 5100 expenses for the trip
Born at Welbb City. Missouri, Tampa bus gave birth to a to Tallahassee and that would
Hendrickson came to Florida baby girl Friday. have saved the litigants $1.100,
37 years ago, in 1917. He was The mother, Mrs. Iona he said.
Thomas said that because of
self-employed at the time and Buckles, 35, of Statesville, Ga., crowded dockets, the Supreme
conducted a survey for a high- was traveling to Tampa with court now was setting cases for
,way and canal, from Lake Okee• oral arguments next February.
chobee to Palm Beach. a 4 -year-old son to attend the g y
wedding of a relative"
In 1918 he moved to Fort A few miles outside High Lumber Course
Lauderdale. He worked with she was obvious)
the Brow•ard Drainage District Springs y inTO Be Offered
until 1933, when he was hired pain and another passenger,
as a project engineer for the Mrs, J. D. Hancock of Ocala,
State Road Department. went to her aid, helped deliver GAIXESVILLE — One of the
the baby and turned it over to South's growing industries—hard
He held this job for 10 Dr. P. D. Weeks when the bus wood lumbering — will have a
years, during which State rd. arrived here. special course offered its kiln
84 was constructed from Fort The baby', about t h r e e drying operators here Aug. 22
Lauderdale to South Bay, In months premature, was listed 27.
1944 he retired from the Stage in fair condition at a Gaines- The University of Floridz
Road Department because of ville hospital, where it was in school of forestry and the genera.
failing health. an incubator, extension division of Florida w•il
Surviving are his mother, conduct the course. Co-operating
Mrs. Belle Bailey of Fort Lau- Citrus Volume in the week's work will be the
derdale; two sons, John P. of Southeastern Forest Experiment
Fort Lauderdale and Leon G. For the Week Station at Asheville, N. C., ane
of Indiana: one daughter, Mrs. the Forest Products Laborator%
Marvin W. Craine, of Iselin, 4 of Madison, Wis.
N. J.; and seven grandchildren. WINTER HAVEN — 011 — Last
Burial will be in Evergreen week's citrus shipments:
cemetery. Grapefruit 71,755; oranges 117: Summer Band
673; tangerines 80; total 189,508, LaBELLE — Bandleader Hor
Previous week: Grapefruit 106,• aid Supank said the LaBelle ban(
Comic Dictionary 534; oranges 183,405; tangerinea prograrn would continue through
GOLF 40; total 289,979. out the summer- vacation Witt
A game that was once a rich Season total: Grapefruit 16,926; beginners classes on :Monday
man's sport but now has mile 460; oranges 22,299,946; tanger-. Wednesday, and Fridav at 2 p.m.
lions of poor players. ines 3,362,575. at the Band Shell. Twirlers wil
be taught at 4 p.nn., on Monda`
1i ON to i and Thursday, while the senior
s. band will meet Monday, Tues
.7 f day, and Thursday at 7 p.m.
40
A V
—Herald Photo by Mel Kenyon
THE RED MEN ARE IN DUTCH
. Jfmmy Henry, left, and Tom Buster, medicine man
0
CLOSING
THE DEAL FOR TRANSFER OF
970
acres of
Lake Park
property is� Charles A.
Cunningham
(seated
0000
CLOSING
THE DEAL FOR TRANSFER OF
970
acres of
Lake Park
property is� Charles A.
Cunningham
(seated
right), who
signs the contract for
John D.
MacArthur
of
Chicago who recently purchased
most of
the
town of
Lake
Park
and
adjacent
lands.
Standing
are
Herbert
Missing
Man, 82,
Rescued
Court Ruling Eyed
Ross (left), and John Schwencke, both of North Palm
Beach, Inc., purchasers of the property and seated left,
is George English, Fort Lauderdale attorney who repre-
sented MacArthur in the sale.
Midnight Oaths
For Governors:
DAYTONA BEACH — (UP) — TALLAHASSEE —(UP) —The state Supreme court's
An 82 -year-old employe of the ruling in the Volusia county judgeship contest might pave
Volusia county health depart- the way for future governors of Florida to take the oath
ment, missing since Thursday, of office at midnight instead of noon,
was found Friday night with his The court ruled Friday that
automobile stuck in the mud at • an outgoing governor has full
the end of a lonely road.
Charles E. Luther was suffer-
Orartge Jutce power to make appointments
ing only from hunger and ex•I and perform other official du-
haustion. A few figs he had in . ties until the new governor ac -
the car apparently kept him alive, Firm Seeks tually takes the oath.
until he was located by J. D. j
Whitnev, a farmer -who happened' Traditionally, Florida gov
to see the car near Port Orange. To Use Sugar erpors are sworn in at high
Whitney paid he recognized noon of their first day in of-
Tice, even though their terns
Inther from pictures in news• LAKELAND — (tai — Golden actually begins "on the first
papers. Luther was taken to Gift, Inc., a concern attempting Tuesday after the first Mon-
Halifax Hospital where he was ••
pronounced in good condition. to get permission to use cane day in January which appar•
l g ently could be anytime from
sugar to sweeten orange juice,
He said he had taken the is schedule to be heard Wednes- midnight on.
Wrong road and ended up in the day in Polk county circuit court The court made the ruling in
mud. He decided to wait in the on its suit against the Florida a contest between appointees of
car until someone found him.
Citrus Commission. / former Acting Gov. Charley
Poultry Sales Robert C. Evans, general man- Johns and Gov. LeRoy Collins
ager of the commission, said Sat- for the county judgeship vacat-
Hit $33 Million urday that he was informed that ed at middight, Jan. 3 with the
Golden Gift had been granted a resignation of Robert Wingfield
JACKSONVILLESales hearing before Judge D. O. Rog- to become a Circuit judge.
of Florida•produced eggs, chick- ers, who ordered a temporary The court, in a four to two
ens, broilers and turkeys brought injunction two months ago re- decision, held Collins didn't of -
533,174,000 last year, the state straining the commission from ficially become chief exzcutive
'Chamber of Commerce said Sat
urday.I enforcing its regulations on until he was formally sworn
Eggs accounted for $19,759,600 chilled orange juice. in at noon on Jan. 4.
and the three types of poultry) Golden Gift has been attempt- The constitution provides
for the remainder. Farm use is ing to have commission regula- "the governor shall hold his
also included in these values. tions relaxed to permit it to use
About half the poultry meat cane sugar in orange juice dur office for four years from the
volume consumed in Florida isiing off-season months. time of his installation." In the
raised in the state while some- sam6 section, it sans "the term
what less than half the eggs are r of office of the governor shall
Florida grown, -the chamber said. Airline Cht*eI begin on the first Tcesdav aft-
wwwoer the first Mondav in January
Education Group On Strike, Too afterhis election."
Elects Bailey One attorney foresaw the
CHICAGO--tll'I— John Lester
Buford, 57 -year-old Mount Ver-
non, I11.9 superintendent of
schools was elected president of
the National Education Associa-
tion Friday.
He succeeds Waurine Walker
of Austin, Tex., who returns to
her post as director of teacher
relations and certification at the
Texas education agency.
New directors named included:
A. L. Whitten, Marianna, Ark.:
and Thomas D. Bailey, Tallahas-
see, Fla., state school superinten-
dent.
The flying president of a
non-scheduled Miami airline
has gone on strike in sym-
pathy with other striking pi-
lots.
Paul Satterfield, president of
the Aero Finance Corp., gl•ound-
ed his plane in Wildw•ood,
N, J., Friday after a flight
from Europe. He refused to
fly until a wage dispute is
settled.
Jack Chrisite, president of
the Air Carriers Pilots Asso-
ciation (AFL), said that while
Satterfield is president of the
corporation, other officers have
refused arbitration.
Medichte Matt Ulal) j)ed ite Shevolff's wig-wam
possibility of an interpretation
that an outgoing governor, in
the 1:: hours between the offi-
cial end of his term and the
noon oath•taking by his sue-
cessor, might be able to ape
point "little cabinet" officials
to serve under the new goy
ernor.
Others, however, didn't see
any possibility of this since
statutes provide the terms of
officials like the road board,
beverage director and motor
vehicle commissioner shall run
concurrent with the term of
the governor.
T I T T S1 rRun
-te Law *bal
Way
Palefac
Afotil ,
By TONY PATRUS
Herald staff Writer
FORT LAUDERDALE
When a man marries in the
Seminole Indian nation, he
takes the family name of the
woman he weds. His name
becomes helms, and his children
become her children.
That has been the way of
Osceola and the White man's
attempt to change it by the
arrest of Jimmie Henry, a trib-
al medicine -man and T o m
Buster, for refusing to surren-
der custody of five motherless
Seminole children to the father
is wrong, deputies were told
here Saturday.
"The matriarchy is at stake,"
Billie Doctor, another tribal
medicine-inan and chieftain of
the Glades Indians told Brow-
ard county law officers who
jailed Henry and Buster here
early Saturday morning.
Doctor and three other
leaders of a group of Tamiami
Trail Indians came here to try
to get the two captured In-
dians out of jail,
The two men were released
after posting $250 bond each.
They will be arraigned in court
of crimes in two weeks.
Center of the issue are five
Seminole children w h o s e
mother, Mrs. Joe Billie, died in
January.
The father, Joe Billie, Fort
Lauderdale parking lot attend-
ant, wanted to and did keep
the children — contrary to the
tribal law.
Late in June, however, he
was forced to leave them with
his wife's relatives in the Ev-
erglades after being persuaded
to take them to an Indian
medicine man.
He was permitted to bring
out a sixth child, a baby
named Marie, by convincing
the Indians that she needed
care,
Billie enlisted the White
man's law and started the
court fight by swearing out
warrants for the arrest of Hen-
ry and Buster for alleged-
ly contributing to the depend-
ency of the children.
"They cannot go to school
and church out in the Glades
as they could if I were to keep
them with nue in Dania," Bil-
lie claims.
Billie has a frame house on
the Dania reservation, a steady
job at the parking lot and
makes extra money by appear-
ing as an alligator wrestler
at tourist roadside exhibition
spots.
Doctor and the three other
Trail Indians came to the jail
to argue with officers for the
preservation of ancient tribal
ways,
Deputies Roy Longbottom
and Ed Fletcher went into the
swamplands surrounding Ev,
erglades City during the early
morning hours to search for
and arrest Henry and Buster.
He told the'group Saturday
afternoon that there was noth-
ing he could do but continue
to hold the two men and wait
for the courts to decide what
was justice In the mattes',
Doctor, speaking slowly, with
carefully chosen words, said,
"The matriarchy of the Indians
is at stake,
"The way- we live, how our
children are taken care of all
can be wrecked if our men
can be arrested for doing what
our ways say we must do."
Doctor told the two captive -
wen who are being held under
$250 bond each to be patient
and that efforts are being made
to free thein without charge,
"This is no charge," Doctor
insisted to Longbottom. "No
one is contributing to the de
pendency of the children.
"They are safe and well
cared for with their grand,
mother and living in the
Glades.
"There are many motherless
children taken over by the rel-
atives of other mothers who
have died and left children to
be cared for. These have been
taken care of also and without
interference.
"Why should these children
be any different?"
Chief
Ho res Back
At Johns
Ross Buys
Land From
Al'Arthur
Firm to Build
3,500 Homes
Sale of one-third of the Palm
Beach county land holdings of
wealthy insurance executive
John D. MacArthur for $2,870;
000 was disclosed Saturday.
Ross Construction Co. buyer of
the property, immediately an,
pounced that it will build a
3,500•home community on the
land. J
Before the sale MacArthur held
3,000 acres—including the boom -
time town of Lake Park — all
purchased for $6,000,000 just two
months ago. The Ross purchase
takes in 970' acres of that land.
The wealthy Chicagoan, who
Is president of Bankers' Life
and Casualty Co., also owns
the 01,600 -acre Carol City house
Ing development northwest of
Miami.
His announced intention when
he acquired both projects in ]lav
w•as simply to put in utilities and
streets and re -sell the land in
smaller parcels to home builders.
The Ross sale is the first to be
made in either of the two proj•
• ects,
TALLAHASSEE —111'+— Road
board chairman Wilbour Jone:
said Saturday Sen, Charley Johns,
Starke, was "playing politics"
when he charged on the senate
floor Friday road department pay-
rolls had soared during tjne Col-
lins administration,
And he said Johns was "unfair"
when he made comparisons of de-
partment payrolls during the
first six months of this year
against the same period last year
awhile Johns was acting governor.
"It is regrettable that he
would seek to involve the de-
partment in a political speech
without giving the full facts,"
he said,
Johns said figures he got from
the comptroller's office showed
the department had spent $199.822
more in payrolls during January
this year than in January last
year. He said increases in other
months through June of this year
ranged from 5115.000 to $182,000.
Johns said the Collins adminis-
tration had created a "lot of use-
less jobs" in the road department.
Jones said he hadn't seen John's
figures but that he had "played
politics" by failing to analyze
them.
The Collins road chairman
said there was little road build•
Ing during the early part of
last year and payrolls conse-
quently were down. Toward the
latter part of the year the
Johns road board got a sub•
stantial road building program
under way and payrolls' in-
creased correspondingly.
Jones said when he took over
as chairman, the road department
had 4,780 employes About 150 of
these were discharged, he said,
because they were "unessential."
Payrolls now have built back
up to about 4,700. He said these
included 81 temporary employes
such as engineering students put
on during the summer months.
Jones said that since he had
become chairman some s a l a r y
raises had been given engineers
and other technical employes to
keep them from going to other
jobs.
"Sen. Johns himself had 'rec-
ommended such raises while he
was acting gorernor," Jones
said.
And Jones said that when he
took over he found cases where
employes of the road department
were hired or given raises on
direct recommendation of Johns.
"There is not a single instance
of anyone being hired or given
a raise on the recommendation of
our present governor," he said,
WSBB "'W fwyrwa /,.air
1230 Ke
SUNDAY JULY 10•
MORNING
8:00 World News 9:45 Woria News
8:15 Sunday Sch'1 10:00 Am. S i nade
8:30 Bible Quiz 11 400 Church Sery
9:00 Church Bul'
9:30 Stage 7
AFTERNOON
L2:00 Noon News 3:30 cavo oI Music
12:15 Fr'd'm Story 4:00 Wor d News
12:30 Thru List (31 4:15 Guest Star
1:00 Com Chapel 4:30 Rem When
1:30 Meth Men's Hr 5:00 Top Pops
2:00 Mu' of Mas 5:30 HitskEno's
3:00 Pr'dly We Hall
EVENING
6'00 World News 9:00 Morgan Man
gals 'rhiv, Is Hour 9:30 Frogskin Fro
7:00 Paris Star T'm 10:00 World News
7:30 World News 10:15 St'lilrht Set'
7:45 Concert Hall 11:00 Final Editor
8:30 Allan Jones
WINK -TY w;,1,11. 11
SUNDAY JULY 10
4:00 'rest Pattern 7:30 Pvt, Secret'ry
4:30 This is Life 8:00 Your Music
5:00 Faith Todav 8:30 Ford Theatre
5:30 The Search 9:00 Pepsi Plavh'se
6:00 Christophers 9:30 Break Bank
6:30 Facts Forum 10:00 Fam Thea
7:00 World News 11:00 Sign Off
7:15 Big Playback
Ross Construction Co., head-
ed by brothers Richard E. and
Herbert A. Ross, has already
formed a new corporation
known as :North Palm Beach,
Inc., to handle their new de-
velopment,
Their 970 acres takes in the
area from the northern limits of
Lake Palk to the Intracoastal
waterway at Juno Beach and
from the edge of Lake Worth to
Prosperity Farm rd. It fronts 3
mileson U. S. 1 and 2 miles on
Lake Worth.
Preliminary plans call for a
community of many canals with
a large number of waterfront
lots. These canals will be tied in
with the Intracoastal waterway
on the north and the Earman
river on the south.
First of the homes to be built
will be under way this fall. A
shopping center. school sites
and parks are also in the plan.
Ross Construction Co., is also
building water and sewage dis-
posal plants for MacArthur. The
Ross plants will serve their own
holdings as well as MacArthur':,
Officers of North Palin Beach,
Inc., in addition to the Ross
Brothers, are John A. Schwencke
and Jay H. White.
Study Grant
PRINCETON, N. J, -- (A
Four graduate students have re•
ceived corporate grants for their
studies in Princeton University's
unique plastics engineering pro-
gram, it -was announced Sature
day.
Among them was Ernest T. Os -
kin of St. Petersburg, Fla., whose
fellowship was granted by Phil-
lips Petroleum Co.
Deaths Elsewhere
PAOLA GALLICO. 87. symphony come
Poser and father of novelist Paul
Gallico, at New York.
MANUEL CALDERON, 9o. veteran Dub-
licher of "El Cronista," leading ?ion-
duran anti•government daily, and self-
made dean of that nation's vreas,
at Tegucf alpa.
DR. WEND LL M. LATIMER, contribut-
ing atomicand chemical warfare
chemist and Manhattan District's war-
time plutonium director, at Oakland,
Cal.
PAUL Be WHITE. 51 ffaiioneer radio news
editor, CBS public
it director, and
1945's *'Peabody Avt•ard" news cover-
age winner, at San Diego. Cal.
EDWARD R. ARMSTRONG, 78, "sea-
drotne"s.Inventor, Ian oceanic float-
ing airport,) and E. I. du Pont de
Nemours & Co.'s former mechanical
research chief, at Philadelpphia.
SIR FRANK PLANTT, i Britain's
World War II cotton controller and
hu
Me Lancashire Cotton Corp. chief,
anchester.
VFT"UM As RITSCHER, JR., 85, editor
and publisher of Bloomfield's "Citizen"
which merged 1n 1915 with "Bloom-
field Independent Preas," at Bloom-
field, N.J.
GUSTAVE MAGNEL, 58, Beltian Pre-
stressed concrete specialist and 1950 s
Frank P. Brown medal winner in en-
gineerint, at New York.
THE REV. WILLIAM B. COR.NRLIA. 70,
New Rochelle's Iona College founder
and past president of Nova Scotia's
St. Mary's College in Halifax, at King-
ston. N.Y.
ARGIN A, BOGGUS, 58, Georgia stste
legislator, at Htr¢erald. Ga.
ADOLFO DE LA HUERTA, 72, Mexico's
1920 provisionsi president and former
treasury secretaryy, at Mexico City
FRANK B. STEARNS, 76, automotive
pioneer and Stearns Motor Co. cream
tor. at Cleveland.
HAROLD COOPER BURR, former New
York Post and Brooklyn Eatle sports
writer, at New York.
ANDREW DONNELLY. 62, Composer of
"Babiv Your Mother Like She Babied
You.' and other sonts, at New York.
ERIK J. LINDHARDT, 66, National By
Products. Inc., president, knifhted by
Danish Mug Chrislian for his finan-
cial assistance shortly after World
War II. at Des Moines. Ia.
MRS. RICHARD DURYEA, 80, movie
actor Dan Duryea•s mother, at White
Plains. N.Y.
ROBERT W. BLACK. 63. Standard Oil
o. of New Jersey's chief engineer,
at Linden. N.J.
FRANK H. JOSKEYo past national corn-
mander of the 29th (Blue and Grayi
-Division Association. and Woodrow
w'ilson's European bcdyguard member
at East Orange. N.J.
WILLIAM STICKNEY ABBOTT, 68. for-
mer New York Times copy eidtor and
veteran newspaper man. at Paris.
DR, H. G, ADAMSOM 89. internationally
known dermatologist, at Buckingham-
shire, England.
CHARLES E. PHILLIM 72. builder of
the 20 -story Phillips Hotel. at Kansas
Citz Mo.
DR. w'ILLIAM J. STICKEL, 52, National
Chiropodist Association execut!ve 6ec-
retary since 1941. at ChicagQo.
MRS, MARY BAER SCHWEIZER. 35.
daughter of Francis S. Baer, senior
vice president of New York's Banker
Trust Co., at San Francisco.
WMBR-TY .Iseidl
SUNDAY JULY 10
MORN IN G
10:15 Test Patterr 111:00 Presbyterian
10:30 Christ^p%FTERNOON
12:00 Star8Lowcase 3:30 Face Nation
ild B
19:30 W'1 Ho
k 4:00 Capt Gallant
1:00 ome Fair 4:30 Lot's Take Tr1D
1:30 Million 3 Mov' 5:00 Lucy Show
3:00 This is l VLNIN•3G Yo u are Th re
6:00 Ford Theatre 9:30 What's M'L'A
6:30 Pvt. 8'etary 10:00 News Sped
7:00 Toast of T'n 10:15 Ames Broa.
8:00 GE Theatre10:30 Pub. Defender
8:30 Stage 7 1 1:00 Big Picture
9:00 ADD't V Adv. 11:30 Sian Off