Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 51, Number 131, Decatur, Adams County, 4 June 1953 — Page 12
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This aerial view of Mount Everest, taken 20 years ago by a British expedition, marked man’s first sight of Himalayan peak’s summit. E. P. HILLARY (shown) is the 34-year-oid New Zealander who reached the summit of 29,000-foot Mount Everest, highest known peak in the world, with guide Bhotia Tensing. Map Ibcates Mount Everest, on the Nepal-Tibet border. Hillary is with a British expedition led by CoL John Hunt. Hillary’s feat is man’s first conquest of the fabled peak. (International Soundphoto)
Junior Deputy RUTLAND. Vt., UP — Sheriff Geno Framoni has a potential deputy in hiS 16-year-old daughter, Joanne. When she spotted an escaping prisoner being pursued by a policeman, Joanne joined in the chase and collared the fugitive. British education free and _ compulsory between the ages 6t i 5 and 15 for boys and girls.
See new 1953 -4 philco refbiceiuTOß ■' ■ . ; v .... so Automatic It Thinks for Itself! ★ Just Plug II In! No Dials No Bother 'I ' No Defrosting ;■ ’> F ' ■'; — STQP IN AND SEE THE MANY FEATURES IN THIS ALL NEW PHILCO REFRIGERATOR PHILCO 1138 “Automatic” * Huge Freezer * Dairy Bar Sharp Freezes at With Cheese \ 20 Degrees Below Zero || Keeper. ? • Butter Keeper * Beverage Chiller S. second St. Bf M I HEATING Across From M JQh 11 K 3 APPLIANCES Qratt House " PLUMBING
Vermont Farm Toll BURLINbTON., Vt.. UP—There is “a funefal every two weeks at some farrii home in Vermont due to an accident,” according to Harry Pontipus. director of safety for the Farm Jlureau Insurance Companies, whp urged Vermonters “to put some effort” into acquiring safety. Trade in ja. good Town—Decatur
More Movies For TV Than Theaters Hollywood Bustles With TV Output HOLLYWOOD. UP — More television films are being made in Hollywood today than theater movies. and the man who pioneered the TV-on-flilm business says the town "once thought I was mad.? The }]al Roach studio was the first movie factory to go in for home screen movies back in 1947. when only 113.000 TV sets flickered in Los Angeles and only a handful of cities in the U. S. boasted TV ' . ; I Today Hollywood bustles with 23 television movies in production, but only 21 theater movies. A year ago 33 theater movies were before the cameras; two years ago, 44. “We had to try to convince television people of the possibility of using film,’’ explained Hal Roach Jr. “They were mostly ex-radio people and they din’t know niuch about pictures. We didn't know much qbout radio. It took some doing for us all to get together. “Then you heard the argument on any New York street corner that TV never would be on film and the TV industry never would come to the West Coast. They couldn’t understand our argument that filmed! shows could be used over and over. We just sold 100 old ‘Racket Squad’ films for a million dollars.” Roach and his father, pioneer movie-maker Roach sr., sank their future in TV production. This year the Roach studio alone t will turn out more film, by the foot, than MOM and 20th Century-Fox put together. « The old studio in Culver City used to make Harold Lloyd, Our Gang and Laurel and Hardy movies. Today the sound stages are busy with television’s "My Little Margie,” with Gale Storm and Charles Farrel; “Life of Riley” with Bill Bendix, and "Racket Squad’’ with Reed Hadley. You can also seq Laraine Day. Brian Aherne, Peter Lind Hayes and Mary Healy on the lot acting in test films for TV series. Other small studios have clambered on the television bandwagon. General 'Service, Motion Picture Center., Goldwyn, RKO-Pathe, Eagle-Lion and Republic studios rent space to TV movie companies making films with such bigname stars as David Niven, Charles Boyer and Dick Powell. A rumor persist the Warner lot may cater to TV rentals, too/ "The big studios haven’t gone
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in for YV yet because they own theaters, indirectly, and* they have to protect those theater Beat*,’’ Roach Jr., said. “We don't own theaters.’’ "Corpse" Caught YAZOO CITY, Miss., UP—Chief of Police E. W. Russell found L. C. Copeland a Negro wanted for pilfering gasoline from parked automowtes, hiding out as a. “corpse” in a coffin at a local funeral home.
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A NEWBORN baby girl, found ip an incinerator in the Red Hook housing project in Brooklyn, N. Y., by a porter as he was about to light a fire, is examined in a Brooklyn hospital. Doctor is Johannen Vironeen and nurse is Gertrude Hom. (International)
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Accommodating DETROIT, IIP -k Four youths, whose loot-laden tar stalled half a block from the house they had ransacked, hailed a police patrol car and asked for. a push. Patrolmen Lucian Piekarz and Mello Korsman obligingly shoved them right into the precinct police, station. . : i ; — IBus Stop HARTFORD, Conn., UP — MaxKroopneck slammed on the brakes of his bus when a car pulled out in front of him. He leaped out of the bus. chased the car. got in and stopped it. Then he got back on his bus and drove away. The car was a runaway. No More Dancing ' ~ LOUISVILLE, Miss., UP — An inch of rain fell, roofs of 76 homes and the local high school were damaged and plate glass windows were broken tn six downtown business establishments here an hour after members of the Order of the Arrow Scouts staged a rain dance around a campfire at nearby Camp Palila recently. H 1 APPOINTMENT Oil ! • ADIIIMSTHATOjI No. 48NU Notlee Im hereby riven, the undersigned han been appointed Administrator of the estate^of Elsie K. Harmon late of Adams County. • eased. The estate is probably soisdlvent. WILLIAM E. BELL Administrator LEWIS LUTZ SMITH Attorney 5-20 1953 | 5/21-28 6/4 APPOINTMENT OF !■ ADMINISTRATOR No. 4KM Notice Is hereby given, that the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate (if Len Harmon late of Adams County, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. WILLIAM E. BELL, Administrator. May 20, 1953. ’ # LEWIS LUTZ SMITH, Attorney. 5/21-28 6/4.
Industrial Hospital Being Built By GE Modern Hospital In Schenectady, N. Y. ’ SCHENECTADY, N. Y„ — A million dollar industrial hospital, one of the most modern in American industry, is being erected here by the General Electric company to minister to the needs of its 41,000 employees in Schenectady and to battle against industrial hazards. i The new hospital will seirve a three-fold purpose: to give Emergency treatment for ill or injured employees, to expedite pre-place-ment and other types of examinations, and to provide an industrial hygiene laboratory to study Working environments and protect from industrial hazards. The new hospital will be a twostory brick-faced reenforced concrete structural frame building with a* penthouse to accommodate equipment for air conditioning and other services. It will have a gross floor area totaling 33,6&0 square feet, with 18,200 square feet on the main floor, |12,4100 square feet on the second floor and 3,000 square feet in the penthouse. 1 It is estimated that it will take until the middle) off 954 to construct and equip the new hospital. An industrial hygiene laboratory will be provided to conduct a continuous investigation of working conditions, solvents, acids, dusts, air-borne contaminants, humidity, noise, illumination and conditions involved in welding and other pro’cesses. The first floor of the T-Shaped building will have dispensary areas
physical therapy and medicaManalyses rooms, separate areas tor handling of skin and other infer--tiops, ear, nosC and throat Ail 1 ments, operating rooms equipped for emergencies, medical and surgical storage room. X-ray analyses rooms, doctors’ rooms, nurse's Station, power facilities and mechanical service rooms. Men and wxjmen will be treaied in separate sections of the hospital. The second floor will have a complete pre-placement service area where thorough physical examinations will be given prospective employees. Two of the latest X-ray units will installed in that area to aid in examinations. The machines also will be available ’ for other X-ray diagnostic services. i < The Second floor also will house the modern industrial hygiene laboratory. : i In addition, a clinical laboratory for bacterial and body fluid tests, a section for cardiogram studies, library, conference roomj offices for the supervising doctor, nurses’ lockei and rest rooms, and a central record room will be provided. Two ambulances will be housed in a garage jbuilt into the first floor, with access directly to the hospital facilities. ; I: An automatically operated emergency lighting system will be provided. Sea-Going House EaLL RIVER, Mass., UP — Standing here is a house that made a 100-mile sea voyage before the Civil War. Mrs. Grace Chadwick’s grandfather bought the house on Nantucket Island in 1861 for $2lB, dismantled it, and moved it by boat to its present site on the mainland here at a cost of |l,500.
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MM■■i ! Mansfield ■ MOTOR SALES USED CAR BUYS - THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL 1947 BUICK 2-Door, R. & H. $595.00 52 Nymouth Club Coupe, heater, Seat covers. 51 Plymouth Sedan. A nice used car. 51 Plymouth Tudor, radio, heater. Seat Covers. 50 Plymouth Sedan. Radio, heater. Nice car. 50 DeSoto j Sedan. A really nice used car. 49 Chrysler Sedan. Radio, heater. k 1 . 48 Chrysler w Sedan. Radio, heater. 47 Plymouth Sedan. Radio, heater. New Paint. 47 Dodge Sedan. Radio, heater. f 46 Plymouth Sedan. Radio, heater. 48 Dodge Coupe. Radio ■ and Heater. Perfect Condition. 42 Plymouth , Club Coupe. Radio and Heater. s Clean and Runs Good. > LOW Down i PAYMENT 30 MONTHS TO PAY I t Dick Mansfield ■■ MOTOR SALES 222 North 3rd St.
