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Alabama Journal from Montgomery, Alabama • 9
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Alabama Journal from Montgomery, Alabama • 9

Publication:
Alabama Journali
Location:
Montgomery, Alabama
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Businessman Ruled Bankrupt Crosby's Son Is Arrested MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA Friday, September 12, 195S Alabama Journal 9-A DIAL AM 5-9222 For All Types was returning from the beach with tion and had to be restrained from attacking them. The car he was driving was registered to his stepmother Kathy Crosby, police said. two friends. No one was injured. SANTA MONICA.

Calif. (AP)- McClain said the husky young ster shouted abuse at newspaper photographers at the police sta Bing Crosby's Son Lindsay, 20, By U.S. Courf A well known Montgomery was booked on suspicion of drunk driving last night after his car Secretarial Service MILDRED W. GORDON GORDONS Secretarial Service IN THE MOORE BLDO. smashed into a parked car.

Officer James McClain, who arrested him, said young Crosby businessman, with total debts flunked a sobriety test. amounting to about $624,635 was Crosby, clad in a bathing suit, declared bankrupt today by U. District Judge Frank M. John .1 -Xl" i A r- i LJ- A son Jr. The bankrupt man, W.

H. Haig- ler 4019 Hickory owns the Haigler Construction Co. The company, begun in 1941, is in the business of renting construction equipment. According to the bankruptcy petition filed on Haigler, he has liabilities of $44,362 in Income tax to the government, $128,222 to creditors holding securities and and $75,937 to creditors whose RECEIVES 'SPIRIT OF HONOR' claims are unsecured. Haigler's total assets, including accounts receivable, total $429,745.

Of this sum. the accounts receivable from Haigler's 25 outstanding debtors amounts to $392,741. while his machines, fixtures and tools come to $35,505. SHEPPARD AFB. Texas A.3.C.

Eugene A. Stybe Is being congratulated as he receives the American Spirit of Honor Medal during a review held by the 3750th Technical Training Group d'Sheppard AFB. Making the presentation is Col. Roy C. Heflebower, commander of the 3750th Technical Training Group.

Airman Stybe is the husband of Mrs. Valerie J. Stybe, 216 Carey Montgomery. She is the former Miss Valerie Bradford. A $7,500 mortgage is held on Haigler's home by Myron C.

Frosh Play Set SQUADRON OFFICER SCHOOL: i New Maxwell Class At Huntingdon The newest arrivals at Hunting U. S. Fidelity and Guaranty Co. of Montgomery holds a mortgage on a lot owned by Haigler at Bahama Beach, Panama City, Fla. Birmingham Slag Co.

holds a $33,000 mortgage on farm lands owned by Haigler In Montgomery County. The Construction Equipment Co. don College will show off their Ito Hit Nearly 800 talents to the upperclassmen tonight at 7:30 when the Class of i i has a seating capacity of 1,000 1962 presents an original show in the auditorium. entitled "Freshmen Frolic in Ten of Birmingham holds a personal property mortgage worth $66,722 on equipment. Students to the 14-week course Acts." of professional education will be The performance will be given! v.With an enrollment that may Ixeach as high as 773 students, i Squadron Officer School class 58-C gets under way at Maxwell Air i Force Base next week.

t2 The school, a division of the Air University's Air Command land -Staff College, is currently There are 45 creditors, whose welcomed Monday by Ma. Gen Richard A. Carmichael, comman in the Huntingdon chapel under the sponsorship of the Hunting claims are unsecured in the amount of $75,937, according to dant, Air Command and Staff Col lege. the listing. The course enrollment includes Undergoing an expansion program Mvhich will result in a quota of County Bookmobile officers from four allied nations.

Norway, Pakistan and Saudi Ara bia are each represented by two Visits Announced students, while one is from Viet Nam. U. S. Air Force officers The Montgomery County Book eligible for the course must be mobile will make the follwing U.000 students per class by 1960. Jh quota has previously been r00' students per class.

bue to the expansion. SOS has tmovcd into building 1403. which ACE MISSION: first lieutenants or captains. trips the week of Sept. 15-19: Monday: Madison Park School, don Town Students Court.

David Davis, of Montgomery, will act as master of ceremonies. From there on it will be entirely a freshman show. Singers on the program will be Billye Maye Atkinson, of Marianna, Patsy Cade, of Eufaula; Sarah Mantel, of East Brewton, and Martha Jo Knowles, of Columbus, Ga. Spencer Bennett, of Fort Walton Beach, will da a magic act. Robert May, of Fort Lauderdale, will present a humorous monologue.

Piano numbers will be by Eudora Rodgers, of Montgomery, and Jane McGowin, of Andalusia. Sandra Peek, of Columbus, will present a solo dance 9:20 Chisholm School, 10 Here's the bedroom suite of' a.m.; Memorial Heights Cemetery, 3:30 p.m. Wednesday: Mrs. Lloyd Taylor's lawn, 8:30 a.m.; Catoma School. 8:40 a.m.: Stones, Mrs.

B. B. IliPaq Embarks for N.Y. iTp Report on Mideast Howard's lawn, 12:50 p.m.; West View Gardens, Donahoo's Grocery, 1:30 p.m.; Lee Farms, Mrs. N.

L. Finley's lawn, 2:10 p.m.; BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) from the Mideast, while at the same time insuring non-interfer- and Sally Lewis, of Montgomery, United Nations Secretary General ence by foreign states in the do- will appear in a song and dance your dreams t. beautifully styled and master-crafted from solid, hard-rock maple. Rich Salem finish, hand-rubbed to a glowing luster. It's a buy-of-a-lifetimeU come in today! 7-PIECE BEDROOM GROUP mestic affairs of Lebanon and, routine.

'Dag Hammarskjold met with President Camille Chamoun here Jioday and then flew to New York Jordan. These were the two aims set Du Pont Company forth in an Arab-sponsored resolution passed by a special session of the General Assembly in August. Pays $6,200,000 In Alabama Tto report to the General Assembly Ion his Mideast peace mission. Hammarskjold has conferred JLwSS government leaders in Cairo. ArTnan, Baghdad, Jerusalem and Beirut in two rounds of talks since pale last month.

32e met with Chamoun for more Hlm half an hour at the presi- There was little hope here that Hammarskjold had achieved any Grovewood Estates, Mrs. G. R. Davis' lawn, 2:30 p.m.; Tren-holm School. 2:40 p.m.; Hunter, 3 p.m.; Old Selma Road Grocery, 3:30 p.m.

Thursday: Little Ro a a School, 9:50 a.m.; Phillips School, 10:15 a.m.; Naftel, Mrs. Palu-dan's lawn, 10:45 a.m.; Norman Community, Mrs. C. S. Smith's lawn, 11 a.m.; Mrs.

Will Boyd's lawn, 11:15 a.m.; Mrs. Sam Taylor's lawn, Luverne Highway. 11:40 a.m.; LaPine Methodist Church, 12 Noon; McCants School, 12:30 p.m.; Grady, Athey's Store, 12:55 p.m.; Milligan's Cross Roads, 1:40 p.m.; E. P. Athey's Cross Road's.

1:55 p.m.; Zion Hill School, 2:15 p.m.; Sprague, McLaney's Store, 2:40 p.m.; Bob Mary's Restaurant, 3 p.m.; South Court Street-Fleming Road Intersection, 3:30 p.m. Friday: Chappell Gray School, great success. It was expected that U.S. withdrawal would come about in the near future with or Direct buying power of more than $6,200,000 in payrolls and SPECIAL purchases was generated in Ala 'dwtial palace today. There was without his aid.

bama by the Du Pont Company, But Jordan, where British troops Fred N. Hendon, manager of were called in to bolster the gov cement of what they dis-I cnssed. but it appeared likely they (took up Hammarskjolds at the close of his peace SEPTEMBER VALUE GROUP CONSISTS OF: the company's Birmingham ernment, was not out of the Works, reported today. woods. It was believed here that Ham Purchases of materials and services by Du Pont from nearly All 7 Pieces Only $10.00 Delivers Balance $3.00 Week Chest Available $49.95 Extra marskjold got nowhere in gaining 250 Alabama businesses amounted He hoped to discover in talks rviih top Arab leaders how the i'V2i.

could best facilitate depar- assurances of non-interference in Cairo that were satisfactory in We also have available a 7-Pc. Group of Same Style and Quality Consisting of Dresser, and Poster Bed with Same Bedding $139.95. tare of Anglo-American sj Amman. Large Double Dresser Bookcase Bed Innerspring Mattress Matching Box Springs 2 Fluffy Pillows Bedspread to $4,500,000 of which $1,760,000 represents purchases in the city of Birmingham. Payrolls for the company's employes at the plant, 8:30 a.m.; U.

S. Jones school. 8:50 a.m.: Margaret Beard School. 9:10 a.m.; Turnipseed's iDemo Strength Surge Indicated by Maine 9:30 a.m.; Downing, Mrs. Luther Push's lawn.

9:45 a.m.; Battle two sales offices, and three ware-houses totaled another $1,760,000. Major purchases in Alabama for the Birmingham Works and other Du Pont plants throughout the United States included steel, chemicals, textiles, paper bags, coal, and electricity. The Birmingham Works has School. 10:15 a.m.; Pine Level School. 10:20 a.m.; Daniel McNear 1 ZJJl 4.

1 OPEN FRIDAY West Virginia. School, 12:30 p.m.; Pine Level, Paul's Store, 12:50 p.m.; Shaver's Store, 1:10 p.m.; Mrs. A. E. CHANGE IN MARGIN By LYLE C.

THLSON WASHINGTON (UPI) By rule based on last Monday's There are 233 Democrats, 198 UNTIL 9 P.M. Blanton's lawn, 1:30 p.m.; Dub Republicans and four vacancies in been operated by Du Pont for 32 years, and it manufactures dynamite and "Nitramon" blast lin, Neugent's Store, 1:45 p.m. the present House. A 21-distnct would reduce the Republicans to swe oi iviame election, uie uem-loeratic Party should gain at least '21 seats in the House of Repre- ing agent for mining, construction, 177 seats and increase Demo quarry, and otner industries in Bedard, Savitt Vie in Canada cratic seats to 254, excluding the members returned from the current vacancies. Ir'sontatives in next November's y.

polling. i' The Democrats (rained one seat I' Mondav in Maine's 1st District That would not be a low point TORONTO (AP) Canadian representation in the men's singles of the third annual International I7-which has been represented by Republican Rep. Robert Hale eight states. "As part of a continuous modernization program, we have recently installed a new process for making nitroglycerin, a key ingredient in dynamite," Hendon said. "This new process provides a tremendous advance in the safety of our operations." for Republicans.

Democrats held 322 seats, Republicans 102 after the 1934 congressional elections in Invitation tennis tournament rests today with Bob Bedard. He has 1 since 1943. Hale was defeated by! Democrat James C. Oliver by which the GOP first felt the impact of FDR's New Deal coali no easy job. The 27-year-old three-time Cana 4', nearly 8.000 votes of approximate ly 106,000 cast.

tion. The remaining seats were dian champion meets Dick Savitt held by leftwing splinter parties, 4 Of all the Rprtuhlican seats in of East Orange, N. semi Worse was awaiting the Repub retired now but still one of the strongest amateur players in the licans, however. They were able Montgomerian Wins M.A. From Michigan ANN ARBOR, Mich.

Rachel 4- the present House, Hale's was' 11 won two years ago by the least njargin. His bulge over Oliver in j' 1056, as determined by a House i committee, was 111 votes. Maine's world. in 1936 to elect only 88 U.S. representatives.

That was the year in Bedard-Savitt match and which FDR won the electoral one between top-seeded Mai An votes of 46 states against Alf. Reid Avery, 3271 Gilmer, Montgomery, was graduated from the 1st, therefore, was notable after Landon, of Kansas. University of Michigan summer derson of Australia and veteran Budge Patty of Los Angeles and Paris will complete the field for f- 1956 among what politicians call marginal districts. ON EDGE OF SEATS school here. She received a mas ter of arts degree.

Saturday's semifinals. t'- A marginal district is one in 11 which the winner -obtains 55 per I Are Fined In Pleas Court City to Padlock Beach cent or less than the total vote. Thirty-eight Republicans, includ ing Hale, from 21 states hold such 0 marginal seats in the present House. Fifty-one Democrats from Common Pleas Judge Alex Becauseof Race Mixing ST. PETERSBURG.

Fla. (AP) land were assigned dressing rooms 22C states won marginal district Marks this morning fined seven persons and bound one over to the elections two years ago. 8-ih sinus so ieb sum wm grand jury. Bound over was Michael Cor City Manager Ross E. Windom is by attendants, then swam for 20 preparing to put a permanent pad- minutes and left.

There were be-lock on popular Spa Beach, closed tween 200 and 250 white persons mier. He ist charged with abscond It is among the marginal seats of the opposition that each party IZ always expects to make its prin-cipal gains, if any. Shifts in the balance of the political substruc-? ture are felt first and most fore-iHy in these see-saw districts. ing and disposing of a camera he on the beach, yesterday because four Negroes rented last week from Mel's Photo Shop. Bond was set at $1,000.

swam there. I He will ask the city council next week to authorize facilities for an According to testimony, Corm Group Consists of: Simmons Sofa Bed Simmons Lounge Chair 2 Modern Step Tables Modern Cocktail Table 2 Table Lamps Metal Smoker Group Complete Only $10.00 Down Delivers Balance $3.00 Weekly Makes your room a living room by day and a bedroom at night. Enjoy SIMMONS quality features. T- The difference between Hale's ier rented the camera from the photo shop last Friday and was Windom has said "the city of St. Petersburg does not want to take the responsibility of trying to establish an integrated pool with the risk of possible violence between the races." He said the city and state road departments have established a other beach for the exclusive use of white persons.

The beach he has in mind is north of the Spa. In margin of 111 votes in 1956 and Oliver's bulge of nearly 8,000 last supposed to return on Saturday, He allegedly disposed of it in this way, he said, the city can 4fonday suggests that a move-wTment is under way in the basic "political substructure of the Troy and was picked up a little avoid a 1957 U.S. Supreme Court later in Florida. ruling giving Negroes the right to use Spa Beach and its adjoining United States. Fined were, William Richard States in which Republican rep- son, $100.

reckless driving; James pool. resentatives hold marginal seats Gray, $25, no driver license; He said Spa Beach would remain 31' vVaiUfr -ttWKM-- MONTGOMERY IFcnirIh)CBS- CSV John Copeland, $50, reckless driv closed indefinitely. He indicated Qje widely scattered excluding, of geurse, the South. In addition to ing; Elva Deitz, $50, reckless the pool also would be closed if Open Friday Nile Until 9 P.M. 0U3 CREDIT TERMS PLEASE EVERYONE ZUlaine, they are Arizona, Califor- driving: Arthur Reid, $25, no beach for Negroes north of the city and "it was hoped the Negroes would accept it and forget about the Spa.

But I am now convinced the Negro is going to force integration of the Spa if it remains open." He said he was aware of the possibility the Negroes might also try to use the facilities at the proposed new beach in order to gain a Supreme Court ruling on their rights there. 1 Negroes tried to use it. Both were closed last June because Negroes, "WyiiiniOT FURNITURE CO. Colorado, Connecticut, are, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kan- swam in them. They were re opened only last week.

driver's licenes, and Homer Henly, $50. driving while revoked. Thomas A. Powell, was fined $100 and given three months in county jail on a charge of petit ImJtas, Maryland, Massachusetts, tJtchigan. Missouri, Nebraska, Jersey.

New York, Oregon, The presence of the four Negro youths at the beach yesterday caused no trouble. They asked for irgnnsylvania, Washington and; larceny,.

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