1
TWO JAMESTOWN (N.Y.) POST-JOURNAL—Friday Erening. January 4, 1957 Report Critical Of Andrea Doria Safety Features Investigators Give Findings to Group Of Congressmen WASHINGTON UP, — Specialists who investigated the Andrea Doria sinking for a House com- mittee say the, Italian luxury liner met "by a very narrow margin" certain tnternauonal safety stand- ards. In Genoa, owners of the multi- million-dollar vessel disputed this and other findings of a panel which conducted the investigation for the House Merchant Marine Committee. The probe was the outgrowth of the lots of the Doria off the At- lantic coast July 25 after a col- lision with the Stockholm, a Swed- ish vessel. The Stockholm was badly damaged, but did not go down. Some 50 persons died. • The investigators, while avoid- ing p'acing blame for the incident, said yesterday there were "ser- ious questions" as to whether the Doria and the Stockholm "were being operated in accordance with the precepts of good seamanship and the provisions of the inter- national convention for safety of Ufe at sea." They said "it is clear from this accident that the operation of the standards of the 1948 international convention did not meet their ob- jectives." Accordingly, the spe- cialists recommended that the! ALBANY, (JP\ — U.S. Weather CAMBRIDGE, Mass. tff) — Prof.(major role in modern American United States propose steps to- Bureau temperatures to 7:30 A.M. Pitirim Sorokin of Harvard Uni-political life. One of the alarm Canadian Rail ike Threat NEW CONGRESS OPENS—The Rev. Bernard Braskamp, at rostrum, de- livers the invocation in the House of Representatives to open the 85th Congress yesterday. Clerks and other officials face camera. Members of the House have backs to camera. —AP Wirephoto i Todays Weather Trend to Sexual Anarchy Said Threatening America Across "he U.S. ward adoption of "more effective standards for construction and op- eration." The. report was critical of the way the Doria was fitted with watertight compartments aimed at confining flooding to, damaged portions of the ship. It said the Doria barely met international standards in'this respect. The in- vestigators also said the informa- tion they had indicated that the vessel was not properly ballasted, causing her to list badly after the crash. * Replying to these crfcicisms, the Doria's owners said the liner met fully international require- ments on watertight subdivision of hulls. They said further the Doria was built in line with standards set bv the British Lloyds Register of Shipping, the American Bureau of Shipping and the Italian Reg- ister of Shipping. On the question of ballasting, the owners said. "The best proof of the positive stability of the ship is seen in the fact that despite the tremendous blow she received, the ship was, able to remain afloat for 11 hours'. . ." BOMBS Continued from Page 1 MARKET REPORTS Oil Stocks Lead General Advance Lake Shore Mines Molybdenum Pacific Petro Pancoastal Petro j South Penn Standard Oil Kentucky iTe. " 4*4 24 18'i 10H 39^4 54 84 IS 1 11/16 No Government Intervention Is Likely Immediately MONTREAL LB — The coast-to- coast strike on the Canadian Pa- cific Railway cut a little deeper I prices. today into the country's prosper-j The market was higher from ous economy. But no government j the start in active trading. There intervention appeared likely be-1 was a slight paring of prices, then fore Parliament reconvenes Tues- quotations moved even higher than *y_? . (before NEW YORK <£»— The stock mar- i Wright Hargraves ket increased, its initial gains as ————————— oils continued as pacemakers ear- CHICAGO GRAIN ly this afternoon. Quotations Furnished by Goodbody Leading issues were ahead from j * Co., Jamestown, N.Y. fractions to around 2 points. Turn- • * open 1 P.M. over was brisk. \ WHEAT: Oils stepped ahead further, fol- ^• rch lowing up their rise of yesterday jjiy on news of an increase in crude | CORN: oil prices. The rise in consumer J ^|y Ch 23-a5c; 10-ifc. sacks, S*-38c; UHb. sacks 43-48c Salsify Doz. bunches, ll.TS-2.U0. Squash—Market steady. Hotoegrown Late varieties, bu.. $2.00-2.50: best 4U ! Delicious and Hubbard, $2.75-3.00. o?a*, Turnips Market steady. Home- is?* grown "White, 4 bu.. 81.00-L50; car- ini*:tons of 1 doz. 1 lb. film. $2.00-2.25: gg£ Canadian Yellow. 50 lb. sacks $1.25- 54 i 135 - 8 installment debt also spurred July OATS: March May' July 2.407* 2.41 2.374 2.37% 2.284 2.28% 1.36% 1.36H 1.394 1.39% 1.41% 1.42 .78% .76 .70 SHERMAN LIVESTOCK Sherman Livestock Auction — Jan. 2, as reported to State Dept. of Agr. and markets: Cattle — 141. Demand active. Market stronger for dairy type slaughter cows and bulls. Utility and Commercial cows'$11.00-12.75; Cutters $10.00-10.73; heavy Canners $9.00-9.50; light Canners $8.50 down; Good dairy type slaughter heifers $14.00-16.00; Commercial .78 j $12.00-13.50; s Cutters $9.50-11.00; .76 Good sausage bulls $16.00-16.75; 70 ^ | Commercial $15.00-15.50; Cutters | $11.00-11.50; Canners $10.50 down. Calves — 280. Market stronger. LOCAL STOCKS Prime Minister Louis St. L a u - 1 ^ 0 ^ also were heavily traded ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ nt told newsmen he had nothing «„ th* American Stork Fxrhanop Jan. 4. 1957 l P.M.. _ !»-00-3o.00 Commercial $28.0(W2.- rent told newsmen he had nothing j on the American Stock Exchange, to announce after prolonged Cab-; w hich was higher in active turn- met sessions yesterday of the| over cripplingwalkout. Corporate bonds were higher in g» hl The strike in its first two days quiet trading. U. S. Government has idled 73.0M railroad and other ^nds eased in slow dealings. workers and threatens cutbacks and hardships to many points served by CPR's 17,000 miles of track, nearly half of Canada's railway mileage. First Strike Since I960 St. Laurent indicated that the NEW YORK STOCKS Art Metal Const. Bank of Jamestown llstrom Metalll pire State Oil Marlin Rockwell Plomb Tool Wooster Rubber Bid 34 16 16 8 18 14% 10 BANK-TRUST STOCKS Ask 00; Culls $26.00 down; bobs over 100 lbs. $15.00-20.50; 80-100 lbs. $12.00-18.75; 60-80 lbs. $10.00-14.75; under 60 lbs. $12.00 down. Hogs—5. Few Good and Choice 170-220 lb. hogs $17.75; Medium and light sows $14.00. Dairy Replacements—74. Market stronger. Demand active. Springer cows $73.00n228.00; fresh $131.00- 37 9 19% 16 11 Ol. UIU1CI11 UlUlcaiGU Uiai UICI , Kanter* Trust Cabinet at artrther meeting M o n - ^ " c o ^ ^ e m b e J s T f ^ N Y ftoTil & ! Chase Manhattan day may recommend parliamen- change and Amer. stock Exchange | f^^onS 0 cit^aTiik Guarantv Trust Co. Quotations Furnished by Goodbody & Co., Jamestown. N.Y. Jan. 4, 1957 l p.M '216.00; milkers $60.00-159.00; first Bid A^ked tary action to end Canada's first rail strike" since 1950. Any request- ed legislation likely will not ,be known until the traditional Speech From the Throne Tuesday outlines Admiral Alco Products Allied Chem. & Dye American Airlines the government's plan for the law- JSeriSn gKiator makers. Some government economists say Canada's powerful economy may not be seriously affected for a week. They estimate that the Open 1P.M. r"f'" Tr,«t i:<*. v?«. j I " in*. Tr "st American Smelting American Tel & Tel American Tobacco "'B" Anaconda Co. Armco Steel Armour Albany Binghamton Boston Buffalo Chicago Cleveland Des Moines Detroit Galveston Jamestown Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis Montreal New Orleans New York Philadelphia Pittsburgh Rochester Seattle St. Louis Syracuse Washington 23 23 25 30 35 36 43 «*) 71 ?7 51 68 69 35 21 70 36 36 33 29 42 49 29 36 14 19 20 28 26 28 18 28 64 •u 31 49 66 13 n 30 30 26 28 36 33 7 31 24-Hour 12-Hour i versity, an authority of human |ing results, he said, is that "sex High Low (behavior, says Americans are bribery and blackmail" are now [drifting toward sex anarchy. {as "prevalent as monetary cor- "Americans," he said, "are vie- ruption." , tims of a sex mania as malig-| "Sexually infamous persons or j rise to 10 million dollars, nant as cancer and as socially their proteges." Sorokin said, Such a loss over a p menacing as communism." *' are appointed to ambassador- on the ships or other high office and work stoppage now is cutting n a - l ^ ^ 1 ^ efi *,f_ F - tional production by a little more Avco Corp. than a million dollars daily, or Bendix Aviation about 1 per cent. They estimate I jH£5 lehem Steei the daily loss after a week may | Burroughs 0 Prof. Sorokin's views subject are contained in a book titled "The American Sex Revo- profligates sometimes become the popular mayors of metropolises, lution." due in the book stores 0 r members of the Cabinet or next Monday. -leaders of a political party. | "We arc .completely•surrounded | ..^ y. officials i^y t h e m i n g tlde of s g X which th is * a t ^ ion of fl [Is flooding every compartment of lllt _ B -^u u pt# , WK f xllal an 5 h< our culture, every section of our social life," Prof. Sorokin wrote. "We live in a video environment lates. both heterosexual and ho- mosexual." | Canada Dry a loss over a prolonged Canadian Pacific Carborundum period would have a serious im pact on national production, ex- pected to reach a record 31 billion dollars this year. CPR estimates the strike is cost- ing it $1,300,000 daily in lost rev- enue and the strikers and other idled railway workers five million dollars weekly in wages. The ftrike started Wednesday afternoon when about 3.000 mem- The Harvard professor charges v ^ of me Brotherhood of Loco- Democrats Hold First Advisory Group Meeting saturated with exhibitionistic or i that cocktail parties play a n | mo tive Firemen and Enginemen teasingly semidraped nudity," he- lm P°rtant role in the stimula- q u i t t o protest a proposed gradual said. "Sex appeal has become a uon of sex drives and in the pro- elimination of firemen helpers on must in commercial advertising | vokuig of many premarital and diesel yard arK j freight trains. Other union workers refused to cross the brotherhood's picket lines, and by today some 67,000 other CPR workers were unem- ployed. Layoffs in other industries served by the railroad climbed to torical age." [nearly 3.000. with more in pros- Sorokin. who is head of Har-lpect if the strike continues, vard research center in creative our civilization has become extramarital liaisons so preoccupied with sex that it "Our morals," he said, "have now oozes from all pores of Amer- changed so notably that contin- ican life." ence, chastity and faithfulness are Prof. Sorokin said the nation's increasingly viewed as oddities, as "sex obsession" is reflected in the the ossified survival of a prehis- mounting divorce rate, the up- surge in sex crimes, "the empha- sis of sex in radio and TV pro- grams, stage plays and movies, I altruism, also said: popular songs, pictures, reading) "This sex revolution is as im- matter and advertising." portant as the most dramatic po- He also wrote that sex plays a'litical or economical upheaval." 5 Days Forecast As Warmer, But Four in Plane Die As Novice Pilot Crashes into House unoccupied house on a quiet res- idential street. All four aboard the WASHINGTON tin - The Demo- ~ ^ - has been killed by the Bombers |C ratic Advisory Committee set up GOP devices. to advance a partv program be- ^ w Lussen said also that police had tween elections holds its first ses- Continued from Page 1 obtained handwriting samples of s j on today with a slim attendance that a strike against the govern-; every employe of Commonwealth in prospect. [ment "cannot be tolerated" but| r ... ^Edison Co. in Westchester. The; However, three of the party's then tailed for repeal of the Con- A n O W V WfiGKeild "Bomber" is believed to harbor'top figures - former President jdon-Wadlin law prohibiting strikes / w v , x w " g aome grudge against the uttity Harry S. Truman. Adlai E. Ste- D y public employes. ALBANY (B—The extended jplane were killed Tirm and may have been its em- venson and Mrs. Franklin D.' The Republican leaders noted weather forecasts for New York 3>loye at one time. . Roosevelt — are to be on hand, j that New York City had protested r Lussen said each employe filled Stevenson yesterday aimed alf or years that it had been "short- cut a "Civil Defense" form. *A shaft at his party's congressional changed" by the state on financial aiandwriting comparison with .et- leaders who largely are boycot- a j d 3ers supposedly written by the-ting the advisory group. But mey sai< j Harriman was ^'Bomber" failed to produce any He said "To be an effective op- "highly gratified" last year when 13T» 18 97 *i 24 41 4 17 3 t 56<?g 1738* 74 H 72 ; \i 64.% 16 26^ 45'» 6>4, 62U 195's 57 39U 137* 33*a 44»« 67-\ 69 s , 27 »* 17* 18s 8 39 s ; 45U calf heifers $87.00-161.00; bred $103.00 down; open $77.00 down; young service bulls $142.00 down. Sheep and Lambs—Salable re- ceipts too few to establish a mar- ket. IMV/CCTkirklT CTAr't/C - Prices quoted are doDars per I IN V t J I Mtri I > I U V - r \ 3 | c w t except for shoats, small pigs [7§; Quotations Furnished^by Swan-Rowley and dairy replacements which are sold by the head. 13 3 M 18 97T4 24 41% Manufacturers Trust 63 s ; 66'i 49"i 52% 46% <£*k «S 70*4 »5 89M 33 5 i BU 437i ' 46% Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Chrysler Motors Cinn. Gas & Elec. Columbia Gas & Elec. Commercial Solvents Commonwealth Edison Consolidated Edison Consolidated Nat'l Gas 41 Curtlss-Wright 45'a Dome Mines 13 DuPont deNemours 190V4 Eastman Kodak 89Vi Erie R. R. 20 Ford Motor Co. 55% General Electric 59% General Foods 43 s * General Motors 43'i Glmbel Bros. 25'i Goodyear Rubber 8084. Graham Paige 1 5 4 Great Northern 4*% Greyhound 13 Homestake Mining 35*4 International Harvester 38 1 International Nickel lio Jones & Laugh]in 60^ Kennecott Copper 12S Lorillard Co. 16N, Loews Inc. 20% Mack Trucks, Inc. 29 Marine Midland Corp. 19'', Mtdwest OH 34H Montgomery-Ward 38 s * National Biscuit 35** National Cash Register 50^ Nat. Dairv Prod. Corp. 37*.- Natl. Distillers National Fuel Gas New York Central No. American Aviation Northern Pacific 175% 74 72V2 M% 16 26 ; »g 45'g 6% 62 » H 195% 57 39% 14V4 33 3 g 44% 67% 69% 27 % 171* Co.. Inc. Members of NAT'L ASSN. SECURITIES DEALERS. INC. Jan. 4. 1957—10 A.M. Bid Affiliated Fund Boston Fund Bullock Fund Canadian Fund Com'wl. Inv. Dividend Shares E. & H. Bal. Fund E. & H. Stock Fund Fidelity Fund Fundamental Inv. Incorporated Inv. Mass. Inv. Trust Mass. Inv. Growth Stk. io.fiS National Inv. 9.86 Tele. Elect. Fund 11.76 12.99 5.81 16.42 13.03 19.73 9.09 2.72 21.71 20.71 14.56 16.53 9.90 11.62 Ask 6.28 17.75 14.29 NEW YORK EGGS NEW YORK. Jan .3 (A — (US DA)—"Wholesale egg prices were 21.351 weak today. R e c e i p t s 20,700. 9.88 (Wholesale selling prices based a.99 39nM 45" 40% 45 13 191% 90 22.14 16.74 18.12 10.70 12.56 11.51 10.66 12.82 BUFFALO EGGS, PRODUCE BUFFALO. Jan. 3—(Dept. of Agr. ^igjand Mkts.l—Eggs_SuppIy moderate. 55% demand moderate, market about 59 1 ? I steady. (Prices indicated are lor sales 43'i "in case lots. Add 3c for cartons.) Un *23 2 i ! on exchange and other volume sales.) Spot quotations follow: Nearby: Whites: Top quality (48- 50 lbs 1 W 2 $5; top quality (4548 lbs) ZZ-W*; mediums SO-SO^: smalls 29-30[ Browns: Top quality (48-50 lbs) 3 33-34; top quality (45-48 lbs) 32^- 33; mediums 32-33; smalls 30-3L Butter—weak. Receipts 915,000. Wholesale prices on bulk cartons (fresh): Creamery, 93 score (AA) 61-61% centsp 92 score (A) 60*4-61: naVket^aboutlW score (Bl 60-60%; 89 score (C) 59%-60. Cheese—Steady. Receipts 279,000. '•T* Icandled Nearby: Larsre and Extra , 25^1 Large White 40-47: Medium Whitej Prices unchanged. 80% 132-39; over 27 oz. 48-50; Large Brown 1 5 4 |39-45c; Medium Brown 31-38e; over 45 \T oz. 46-48c; Pullets 29-33c; Eggs 15 candled to meet NYS Grade A, 5-7c 36 J i ! above uncandled prices. Published daily- except Sunday by 38^1 Poultry 1 Dressed)—Nearby: Market'the Jamestown Newspaper Corpora- 109t, « steady (Eviscerated) Leghorn Fcwijtion. 311 Washington Street. Jame*- THE POST-JOURNAL PHOENIX. Ariz. UP - A novice Ohio on Co pilot spun out of the overcast yes- plnnsyuania R R terday ai* crashed into the only Pepsi Cola State, prepared by the U.S. Weather Bureau, for the period from 7:30 P.M. today, to 7:30 P.M. Wednesday: Western New York—Stormy weather is indicated, with tem- Phillips Pete. Corp. Pullman Co. Pure Oil Corp. Radio Corn, Raymond C. Roberts, a 38-year- .SSKoebS old oil exploration engineer at Cos-jservei. inc. ta Meja, Calif., had rented the j Sinclair 011 plane at an airport near his I home. With him were his busi- ness partner Urbin N. Hartman, 52, of Anaheim. Calif., and their Southern Natural Gas Significant results, Lussen said. ^ position, the Democratic party tne HeaJd Commission recommen-| Peratures averaging a few de- wives, Mrs. Leona Roberts, normal Moderating and Mrs. Anna Hartman, 51. - Three teen-aged Staten Island must have a broader base thaniNations on school aid allocated! grees above noi Jiigh school girU were taken into the Democrats in Congress." \^evv York the same proportion it' witn a general snow over the Southern Pacific Standard Brands Stand. 'Oil of Calif. Stand. Oil of Indiana 40, Stand. Oil of N.J. Stand. Oil of Ohio Sterling Drug The Gvil Aeronautics Adminis- studebSker-Packard Custody after they allegedly) Truman, arriving in Washington ^ad" been" geTun^Ar^'^ey Taid ; weeke ^- P artial clearing and | tration said Roberts got his pilot's! fe^asTorp t- !the Buttenwieser committee! colder Monday, followed by an-, license Dec. 24 and had flown Texas Gulf Cphoned false bomb reports to their last night, declined comment. 3sew York: City schools. * Nine of the 11 senators and rep- named by Harriman and Mayor 9^ general snow Tuesday and Z Zulma Sanuago, 16, of Castle ton resentatives named to the adviso- i Robert p Wagner of New York! "ednesday, then turning colder. romers pleaded not guilty to ajry committee by Democratic Na-| City t0 ^ ^ate-city fiscal re- ^hajVofma^acaJly^en^,^^!™!! Paul A. Butler lat [ onshi ^ ski ^ a s ^o the New Dorp High School. She have indicated thev will not serve, i f h j i d HK ^ * avas held In $500 bail for a healing a national committee aide said" ^.j, f wnich of course 3\ext Tuesday. - Two 15-year-old girls were ac- HARRIMAN crused of making telephone warn-j • • ^ • v i x i i T i m 1 angs Wednesday to the Curtis High ex- i plod's the fraudulent, shopworn Tammany complaint that the state 'government had short-changed fhool, St. George. Yesterday me anors. H?rrim™ will a u ^ g V t i S j v ^ City ' " " * * *"* M ** ?W?iin , n b WaS fOUnd °" Uie th ^ ^ d r Wad lf to . of ^ nses -; During the 12 years of Former ?n P.4h Amhnv N T John f etroacUvel y as we » as ? n *e fu- Gov ^ E. Dewey's Repub- In Perth Amboy, N.J., John ture. so as to avoid giving viola-:{T, ort ;j m ; Bich , al 4 fln H»^!»vivh Matis. a 42-year-old laborer, was tors a "criminal record." ^ " c™i S vA% M rl*K fined $1.000-with an alternative of| Other points in the program ex-j none > sald : *™ Y ° v * £2 S IS a year in jail—on his conviction as press such general objectives as average or * ' ^ f f r ^™ ™ ? " a hoaxer who twice on New Year's protection and enlargement of the ?* e . aid , to + loc ?) ^Y crnme f ?Ji Eve made calls in which he said j forest preserve, expansion of pub-' Harriman s two budgets aUotted the Packer Hotel in the community lie campsite facilities, more road- A1 Pe f ccnt> Uie uu ^ le auers contained a bomb. 'side picnic areas, and improve- added. ^. "I'm getting sick and tired of ment of the Conservation Depart- Spoils' Polities cnarged this sort of thing." Magistrate Lou- ment's efficiency. Heck and Mahoney said that the TAX More than one inch of melted snow is expected. Eastern New York—The weath- er during the next 5 days will be much more moderate than the cold weather of the past several days. Temperatures will average 3 to 6 degrees above normal. Moderate temperatures over the weekend becoming warmer about Tuesday or Wednesday. Precipitation will likely be in the form of snbw in northern sections, and a mixture of rain and snow in the south. It is ex- Lpense pected to occur over the week- end and again about Tuesday. Rainfall and melted snowfall will average V 2 to one inch. ^ Temperature normals—normal only 24 hours on his own. Continued from Page 1 He will suggest that the Federal government: 1. Cut taxes on small business, incorporated and unincorporated, in order to provide more capital for expansion and to meet compe- tition from big business. 2. Allow commuters to deduct the coat of traveling to and from work as a legitimate business ex- Sulphur Tlmken Roller Bearing Union Carbide Union Pacific United Aircraft Corp. United Corp. U. S. Rubber U. S. Stee! Warner Bros. Pictures Western Union Tel. Westlnghouse Air Brake 28*4 'Westinghouse Elec. 57K Woolworth <A% Youngstown S & T 122% 27% 19U 35 K 3R% 40 y ? 4 -*< T i r>M 19 53 64 ?5 58 29 R3i; ?"» 45 37', 49 "4 5PSi •57 54 7«* 61U 30«i ICO 114U 31 89U 6'i 48 s 4 71 7 * 2S»-i 20 60% 128 16% 20-i 30 1 ; 197* 35 39 35*4 50 .T7H 27 *i 19 r.5 1 - 38% 40% 44% 19% 29-35c: Colored Fowi 34-39c: Broilers town, N.Y. Entered at the Postotfic* and Fryers. 31-37c; Roasters 44-48c; at Jamestow*. N.Y^ as Second Qass AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE Quotations Furnished by Goodbody & Co.. Jamestown. N.Y. Jan. 4, 1957 3. Provide fSpeclal deduction forj Atlas P i yvv00 d parents who are paying for college education of their children. He iwill say that, if the Federal government acts in the college- daytime high temperatures at (expense matter, the state should Auto. Voting Machine Barium Steel Coastal Car Canadian Marc. Consolidated Mining Creole Petro is F. Sellyei observed in Perth: Other membe'rs of the Skiing.state safety division had become, mis ti f f te TmoleZ'''the^Federal taxre Cuba AtI Su «" Amhnv Munirmai Cmirt in imnos- rnmmittp^ ar P - ["infested with 'spoils' politics" un- v . w Vwt „ ' :„ t u A ^L... , complement ine *eaerai lax re- Dumont Lab. Amboy Municipal Court in impos- Committee are: ("infested with 'spoils' politics un ing sentence on Matis. Matis was! George Earle, assistant profes- der Director Michael H. Prender- told he could pay the fine in $20! sor at the State College of Forestry gast, who is State Democratic weekly installments, beginning to- at Syracuse University; Ronald i Chairman. day, or go to jail for a year. ! McKenzie of Lake Placid, coach of | The GOP leaders contended that "I did it to acare the hell out of [the 1952 Olympic Skiing and Ski-,all of Harriman's efforts were everybody,'* Matis was quotfd as ; Jumping Tean^; Roland Palmedo j aimed at his reelection J n 1958. New York range in the upper i]j e f 20s and lower 30s. Overnight lows range from 8 to 17. Riesel Will Visit saying. Police said he had been of New York City, head of a Ski-I This explains, the Republican j London Eye Specialist drinking. Resort Development Company; headers maintained, "why he has LONDON (J> —Labor columnist Hartford, Conn., police took 21 Harry W. Voege of New York,|assembled on his personal staff... Vj ct o r Riesel who was blinded teenagers into custody and said president of the State Winter j five full-time specialists to concen-k y an & ^ attack in New York they admitted making at leas* 12 Sports Council; and Vincent Schae-trate on a propaganda blitz—at t h e h ^ year ^ visiting London for bomb hoax telephone calls in the fer of Schenectady, a meteorolo- taxpayers' expense—to reelect Mr. seve ral days an1 plans to see an last two days. Six of the teenagers gist. __^^_^_^^^ - _____ were girls. , Wl . - . Police Chief Michael Godfrey J o n e s Named Erie said 18 of the students, all at the •» . _ _ u Ai PI;. . same school, admitted making r O D e r INeWS tdltOr three calls to the school forcing it ERIE, Pa. <JP*— W. Benton Jones, men, Heck and Mahoney said to close for the day. a veteran newsman with the Eriei The GOP leaders assailed Har- Godfrey said the teenagers then-Dispatch, today was named newsjriman for absences from Albany branched out and called bomb editor of the Erie Morning News j during the so-called bill-signing pe- scarea to three other schools, two w hfch starts publication next Mon- riod—the 30 days after the leg- hotels, a radio station, a typewrit- day. islative session ends. er company and Trinity College. The New? was established bv "In 1955. Mr. Harriman spent 17 Youngsters with police records ^ e Er ie Times Publishing Co.. of the 30 days away from Albany were sent to the juvenile detention publisher of the Erie Times, which and in 1956 he spent 20 of the 30 plans Harriman. e ye specialist. This buildup of the publicity staff | Riesel said after his arrival yes- costs $64,000 annually besides theitgrdav that the London specialist more than $200,000 paid to depart- "can"help me, but he can't give ment and agency public relations : me back mv sight." He also planned to talk with British trade union leaders. legislature while abusing and try- ing to discredit the Republican home. The others were reteised J J ^ c h M e d ^ ^ ^ members of the Leg- in custody of thir parents, pend- wiU ^ editorially independent of Florida vacations ^both years," lsldlure ' ing their appearance in juvenile the j ^ ^ Heck and Mahoney said 150 Policemen Hunt Missing Sisters CHICAGO m— Police intensified! their search today for two missing! teen-age sisters who failed to re-; turn home last Friday night after leaving to attend a movie. Mort than 150 policemen were, directh/ involved in the hunt for; the girls, Barbara Grimes, 15, and her sitter Patricia. 14. Capt John McCarthy said po-i lioe have investigated scores of report! that the girls had been seen in various places in the city and suburbs. However, he said, police concentrated their work on He intends to continue claiming;the city's South Side in the belief credit for progressive, responsible j that the girls are staying close achievements of the Republican to home. Dvnamics Corp. Electric Bond & Share Flying Tiger Glen A! den Coal Imperial Oil Ltd. Tntemational Petroleum 49% Kaiser Indus. 14% 9% 16% 11% 1% 3% 28% 91% 19% 4% 26% 9% 11 59''. Ducks 45-47C Poultry (Live)—Supply liberal, mar- ket weak for fowl others about steady. The following quo- tations reflect current prices paid tot live poultry delivered Buffalo; Broilen and Fryers. 2-4 lb. 19-21c; Roast- ers 5'i lbs. and up. 20-22c: Fowl, leghorn type, ll-12c; heavy type; un- der 6 lbs. 13-15c; Roosters (cocks) 8-9c; Ducks 23-25c. Apples—Market steady. NYS Cort- land. No. 1 2%" up. bu. S2.75-3.25; cartons of 12 3 lb. film bags. S3.00- 3.35; R. I. Greening. No. 1. 2U" U p, bu.. $3.50-4.00; Comb No. 1 and Util- io B ity. $2.50-3.25; Mcintosh. No. 1. and toai Utility 2 1-4" up. bu. $2.50-3.00: No. G4i? 1, 2^' up. $3.25-3.75: fancy. $4.25- 461- 4.50; 2 1-4" minimum, cartons" of 12 3414 3 lb. bags. $3.00-4.00: Northern Spy. 58*4 No - I. 2 % " UP- bu.. $3.75-4.25- Red 2o Delicious, No. 1. 2 1 a" up, bu.. $4.00-1 ?*: U.50; tray pack, 72s-150s, $4.50-5.25; IW, 2*4" minimum, bu.. $2.50-3.00; car-* 55% : tons of 12 No. 3 lb. film bags, $4.50- \ .•"^-,5.00; 2" up. S3.50-4.00: 2*i". double 45% I red. bu.. $5.00-5.50: Golden. $-1.50-5.50: 37*/, 2%" up. $3.00-3.50. 49% Pears—Market firm. Homegrown! P°% Bosc No. 1, 2 1-4" up. bu. $4.00-5.00. 60 Beeta— Market steady. Homeero^" 1 *7 topped, bu. $1.50-1.75; % bu.. 2" 54»i SL00-1.25. Cartons of l doz. 1% lb. 7% cello packages. $1.75-2.00. 61% Cabbage—Market weak. Homegrown 30% ' Danish. 50 lb. baskets or crates. 50-1 100 sr5c; few. best 80c-$1.00; Red 75c-$1.00. j 114% Ariz. Cabbage, 50 lb. crates 2.00-2.25. 30* Carrots Market steady. Home- 89% grown, topped, bu., $1.50-1.75; core- 6% less $2.00-2.25 carton. 2 doz. 1 lb.! ifilm pkgs.. $1.85-2.00. A3'*! Celery Market weaker. Home- ~* grown. Golden, doz. bunches. $1.75- 20% 2.30. ~f I Mushrooms _. Market steadv. N.Y.S. ?Ti» 3 lb. baskets $1.35-1.50; pints 21-23c: #,'* Pa pints 25c. Cauliflower — Market firmer. L.L. crates of 12 heads. $2.50-2.75.. Onions Market weak. N.Y.S. Drv Yellow. No. 1. 50-1 b. sacks, merit-j urn $1.10-1.25; Jumbo $3.35-1.50; 10-lb. sacks 30-35c; 3-lb. sacks ll-12c; Span-| lsh. bu.. $1.50-2.00; Leeks. doz. bunches. $2.50-2.*T5 Parsnips—Homegrown 8 qt baskets, j $1.00-1.25: % bu. $1.50-2.00; cartons: of 6 1-1 b. film packages. $1.00-1.25. Potatoes Market weak. N.Y.S. mail matter. Subscription Bates Delivered fey carrier: 36 cent* per week. Delivered by mail to RFD boxhoid- ers In Chautauqua, Warren and Cat- taraugus Counties: $8 per year. By mail to all other points in New York and Pennsylvania: $12.00 per year. By mall to all other states In United States: $18 It per year. Missed Copies It you fall to receive your copy call The Post-Journal before 7 P.M., except on Saturday. On Saturdays *all before 5 P.M, Dial 7-111. DANCING Every Saturday Night ot 10 P.M. to the made of MAX DAVIS TRIO plus V by Lou "Swede" «*• beoirttfitl 121 9% COLONY ROOM i^'lRed No. 1, 50 lb. sacks, unwashed 11 ?"!SI.25-1.50; White, 50-lb. sacks, $1.00- 4% 1.25; washed. $1.30-1.60; 5 lb. sacks. 28*% 92^ 19% 4% 6 27% 9% 10% 59% 49 1 HOTEL JAMESTOWN NEVER A COVER CHARGI Goodbody & Co. Bank of Jamestown lido,. Member N.Y. Stock fxchona* Martin-Rockwell and other Local Stocks Bought Sold Quoted Phone 41-114 & J, Myers. Mgr. court OOXGRESSWOMAX FALLS suffered by Rep. Katharine St. Jones worked on newspapers in> "The Harriman reelection pat- Wheeling, W. Va. ( Columbus andjtem is obvious," they concluded. Cincinnati before joining the Erie WASHINGTON <*-A head injury,£." ""I?"„^M I „ I M ? H ! K .«.,«• K V R»o K»th»rir«» St ' Dispatch-Herald in 1933. He has been associated with the Dispatch George (R-NY.) y^terday appar- ^ ^ ently is not serious. Mrs. St. editor and manaeina Pditr»r George fell down while walking , , » t e ^^r^ managing editor from her office to the House C h a m - \^ A )j££* to t £ f m e r Lr^ SS ber for the opening session of the ^ a ^Sc wSrvtaor to 85th Congress. The fall occurred | ^ l ^ w ^ C JSE V t t ° r GENERAL INSURANCE Hotel Stratford Arms VY. UTICA ST NEAR dAIN Buffalo, N.Y. Single $3.50 Double $6.30 •HON! 4-1 Ot •f TOP BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY Pro-Teet-U, maawfacturer of t»e orifinal JaloHsio Window, Is be. tInniof m tioamion program la Wastora New York. OppartoaJty fat live wire operator with shop and modest capital tor wholesale aad retoJI distribution. Local pormontnt factory assistance tor aU phases of opotation, A new aad highly profitable Weld. Are yaa iHMfosioa 1 Call or write: MR. I0WAR0 RICHARDS Pro-Ttct-U Jalousie Corp. till WaMaa Aveaao. •offofo 25, Now York RE. 7020 Curr.nt Di». Avoitablc In iniMftd Saving} Altec's. fACH ACCOUNT imuno TO $10,000 B. C. MORTON • CO. end MvfvoJ l*wim*a* rwm' 0WICK F I M COAST TO CMS] B. C. Morton & Go. N.Y. Ave. PtoM 17<2tlf A00«f SS - - cur _STA« PH Bk ^^ ^^^ ^fl Br^ ^9 ^S Our Regular Dividend * ^ ^ ^f ^^ y Has lean Declared ^ ^T L / AT THE d%| /_0/L PER A ^ ^J RATE OF dt72 /O ANNUM \ ^ W For the Semi-Annnal Period lading Dec. 31, 1tSe ^ ^W Dividends Credited and Compounded ^^ I f June 30th and December 31st \ J Pins These Extra Days of Grace: AH Deposits Made by the 10th of lack aad Every Month Earn Dividends from the 1st of That Month. l*m< W^\ K* •fiNSURED 1 ifA •'«• Bl % JAMESTOWN 11 SAVINGS and L O A N b . ASSOCIATION I • OS IAST SICONO STIIIf \^k±\ 4«tff »!«» SIMI.I HI.* ICMO.t mi 'iwtoam it TUB tt mm' | TOMORROW Last Day for CHRISTMAS GIFT EXCHANGES I AT In Accordance With The Retail Merchant's Division Jamestown Area Chamber of Commerce. in? 9 Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

In The End All You Really Have Is Memories 23/Jamestown...CPR estimates the strike is cost ing it $1,300,000 daily in lost rev enue and the strikers and other idled railway workers

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Page 1: In The End All You Really Have Is Memories 23/Jamestown...CPR estimates the strike is cost ing it $1,300,000 daily in lost rev enue and the strikers and other idled railway workers

TWO JAMESTOWN (N.Y.) POST-JOURNAL—Friday Erening. January 4, 1957

Report Critical Of Andrea Doria Safety Features

Investigators Give Findings to Group Of Congressmen

WASHINGTON UP, — Specialists who investigated the Andrea Doria sinking for a House com­mittee say the, Italian luxury liner met "by a very narrow margin" certain tnternauonal safety stand­ards.

In Genoa, owners of the multi­million-dollar vessel disputed this and other findings of a panel which conducted the investigation for the House Merchant Marine Committee.

The probe was the outgrowth of the lots of the Doria off the At­lantic coast July 25 after a col­lision with the Stockholm, a Swed­ish vessel. The Stockholm was badly damaged, but did not go down. Some 50 persons died. • The investigators, while avoid­ing p'acing blame for the incident, said yesterday there were "ser­ious questions" as to whether the Doria and the Stockholm "were being operated in accordance with the precepts of good seamanship and the provisions of the inter­national convention for safety of Ufe at sea."

They said "it is clear from this accident that the operation of the standards of the 1948 international convention did not meet their ob­jectives." Accordingly, the spe­cialists recommended that the! ALBANY, (JP\ — U.S. Weather CAMBRIDGE, Mass. tff) — Prof.(major role in modern American United States propose steps to- Bureau temperatures to 7:30 A.M. Pitirim Sorokin of Harvard Uni-political life. One of the alarm

Canadian Rail ike Threat

NEW CONGRESS OPENS—The Rev. Bernard Braskamp, at rostrum, de­livers the invocation in the House of Representatives to open the 85th Congress yesterday. Clerks and other officials face camera. Members of the House have backs to camera. —AP Wirephoto

i

Todays Weather Trend to Sexual Anarchy Said Threatening America Across "he U.S.

ward adoption of "more effective standards for construction and op­eration."

The. report was critical of the way the Doria was fitted with watertight compartments aimed at confining flooding to, damaged portions of the ship. It said the Doria barely met international standards in ' this respect. The in­vestigators also said the informa­tion they had indicated that the vessel was not properly ballasted, causing her to list badly after the crash. *

Replying to these crfcicisms, the Doria's owners said the liner met fully international require­ments on watertight subdivision of hulls. They said further the Doria was built in line with standards set bv the British Lloyds Register of Shipping, the American Bureau of Shipping and the Italian Reg­ister of Shipping.

On the question of ballasting, the owners said. "The best proof of the positive stability of the ship is seen in the fact that despite the tremendous blow she received, the ship was, able to remain afloat for 11 hours'. . ."

BOMBS Continued from P a g e 1

MARKET REPORTS

Oil Stocks Lead General Advance

Lake Shore Mines Molybdenum Pacific Petro Pancoastal Petro

j South Penn Standard Oil Kentucky

iTe. "

4*4 24 18 ' i 10H 39^4 54

8 4 I S 1 11/16

No Government Intervention Is Likely Immediately

MONTREAL LB — The coast-to-coast strike on the Canadian Pa­cific Railway cut a little deeper I prices. today into the country's prosper-j The market was higher from ous economy. But no government j the start in active trading. There intervention appeared likely be-1 was a slight paring of prices, then fore Parliament reconvenes Tues- quotations moved even higher than *y_? . (before

NEW YORK <£»— The stock mar- i Wright Hargraves ket increased, its initial gains as — — — — — — — — — oils continued as pacemakers ear- C H I C A G O G R A I N l y t h i s a f t e r n o o n . Quotations Furnished by Goodbody

Leading issues were ahead from j * Co., Jamestown, N.Y. fractions to around 2 points. Turn- • * open 1 P.M. over was brisk. \ WHEAT:

Oils stepped ahead further, fol- ^ • r c h

lowing up their rise of yesterday j j iy on news of an increase in crude | CORN: oil prices. The rise in consumer J ^ |y C h

23-a5c; 10-ifc. sacks, S*-38c; U H b . sacks 43-48c

Sals i fy — Doz. bunches, ll.TS-2.U0. Squash—Market s teady . Hotoegrown

Late variet ies , bu.. $2.00-2.50: best 4 U ! Del ic ious and Hubbard, $2.75-3.00.

o?a*, Turnips — Market s teady. Home-i s?* g r o w n "White, 4 bu. . 81.00-L50; car-i n i * : t o n s of 1 doz. 1 lb . f i lm. $2.00-2.25: g g £ Canadian Yel low. 50 lb. sacks $1.25-

54 i 1 3 5 -8

installment debt also spurred Ju ly OATS:

March May' July

2.407* 2.41 2 . 3 7 4 2.37% 2 . 2 8 4 2.28%

1.36% 1.36H 1 . 3 9 4 1.39% 1.41% 1.42

.78%

.76 .70

SHERMAN LIVESTOCK Sherman Livestock Auction —

Jan. 2, as reported to State Dept. of Agr. and markets:

Cattle — 141. Demand active. Market stronger for dairy type slaughter cows and bulls. Utility and Commercial cows'$11.00-12.75; Cutters $10.00-10.73; heavy Canners $9.00-9.50; light Canners $8.50 down; Good dairy type slaughter heifers $14.00-16.00; Commercial

.78 j $12.00-13.50;s Cutters $9.50-11.00;

.76 Good sausage bulls $16.00-16.75; •7 0^ | Commercial $15.00-15.50; Cutters

| $11.00-11.50; Canners $10.50 down. Calves — 280. Market stronger. LOCAL STOCKS

Prime Minister Louis St. L a u - 1 ^ 0 ^ also were heavily traded ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ nt told newsmen he had nothing «„ th* American Stork Fxrhanop Jan. 4. 1957 l P .M. . _ !»-00-3o.00 Commercial $28.0(W2.-rent told newsmen he had nothing j o n the American Stock Exchange,

to announce after prolonged Cab-;which was higher in active turn-met sessions yesterday of t h e | o v e r

cripplingwalkout. Corporate bonds were higher in g » h l

The strike in its first two days q u i e t trading. U. S. Government has idled 73.0M railroad and other ^ n d s eased in slow dealings. workers and threatens cutbacks and hardships to many points served by CPR's 17,000 miles of track, nearly half of Canada's railway mileage.

First Strike Since I960 St. Laurent indicated that the

NEW YORK STOCKS

Art Metal Const. Bank of Jamestown

l ls trom Metalll pire State Oil

Marlin Rockwell P lomb Tool Wooster Rubber

B id 34 16 16

8 18 14% 10

BANK-TRUST STOCKS

Ask 00; Culls $26.00 down; bobs over 100 lbs. $15.00-20.50; 80-100 lbs. $12.00-18.75; 60-80 lbs. $10.00-14.75; under 60 lbs. $12.00 down.

Hogs—5. Few Good and Choice 170-220 lb. hogs $17.75; Medium and light sows $14.00.

Dairy Replacements—74. Market stronger. Demand active. Springer cows $73.00n228.00; fresh $131.00-

37

9 19% 16 11

Ol. UIU1CI11 UlUlcaiGU Uiai UICI , Kanter* Trust C a b i n e t a t ar tr ther m e e t i n g M o n - ^ " c o ^ ^ e m b e J s T f ^ N Y f t o T i l & ! Chase Manhattan day may recommend parliamen- change and Amer. stock Exchange | f ^ ^ o n S 0 cit^aTiik

Guarantv Trust Co.

Quotations Furnished by Goodbody & Co., Jamestown. N.Y.

Jan. 4, 1957 l p.M '216.00; milkers $60.00-159.00; first Bid A^ked

tary action to end Canada's first rail strike" since 1950. Any request­ed legislation likely will not ,be known until the traditional Speech From the Throne Tuesday outlines

Admiral Alco Products All ied Chem. & D y e American Airlines

the government's plan for the law- JSeriSn gKiator makers.

Some government economists say Canada's powerful economy may not be seriously affected for a week. They estimate that the

Open 1 P . M . r " f ' " T r , « t i:<*. • v?«. j I " in*. T r " s t

American Smel t ing American Tel & Tel American Tobacco "'B" Anaconda Co. Armco Steel Armour

Albany Binghamton Boston Buffalo Chicago Cleveland Des Moines Detroit Galveston Jamestown Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis Montreal New Orleans New York Philadelphia Pittsburgh Rochester Seattle St. Louis Syracuse Washington

23 23 25 30 35 36 43 «*) 71 ?7 51 68 69 35 21 70 36 36 33 29 42 49 29 36

14 19 20 28 26 28 18 28 64 •u 31 49 66 13

n 30 30 26 28 36 33 7

31

24-Hour 12-Hour i versity, an authority of human |ing results, he said, is that "sex High Low (behavior, says Americans are bribery and blackmail" are now

[drifting toward sex anarchy. {as "prevalent as monetary cor-"Americans," he said, "are vie- ruption." ,

tims of a sex mania as malig-| "Sexually infamous persons or j rise to 10 million dollars, nant as cancer and as socially their proteges." Sorokin said, Such a loss over a p menacing as communism." * ' a r e appointed to ambassador-

on the ships or other high office and

work stoppage now is cutting n a - l ^ ^ 1 ^efi*,f_ F-tional production by a little more Avco Corp. than a million dollars daily, or Bendix Aviation about 1 per cent. They estimate I jH£5 l e h e m S t e e i

the dai ly loss after a week m a y | Burroughs0

Prof. Sorokin's views subject a r e contained in a book titled "The Amer ican Sex Revo-

profligates somet imes become the popular mayors of metropolises,

lution." due in the book stores 0 r m e m b e r s of the Cabinet or next Monday. - leaders of a political pa r ty .

| "We a r c .comple te ly•sur rounded | . . ^ y . o f f i c i a l s

i^y t h e m i n g t l d e o f s g X which t h i s * a t ^ i o n o f fl

[Is flooding every compar tmen t of l l l t_B - ^ u up t # ,W Kfx l l a l a n 5 h< our culture, every section of our social l ife," Prof. Sorokin wrote .

"We live in a video environment

la tes . both heterosexual and ho­m o s e x u a l . "

| Canada Dry a loss over a prolonged Canadian Pacific

Carborundum period would have a serious im pact on national production, ex­pected to reach a record 31 billion dollars this year.

CPR estimates the strike is cost­ing it $1,300,000 daily in lost rev­enue and the strikers and other idled railway workers five million dollars weekly in wages.

The ftrike started Wednesday afternoon when about 3.000 mem-

The Harvard professor charges v ^ o f m e Brotherhood of Loco-

Democrats Hold First Advisory Group Meeting

saturated with exhibitionistic or i that cocktail parties play a n | m o t i v e Firemen and Enginemen teasingly semidraped nudity," he- l mP°rtant role in the stimula- q u i t t o p ro tes t a proposed gradua l said. "Sex appeal h a s become a u o n o f s e x dr ives and in the pro- elimination of f i remen helpers on mus t in commerc ia l advert is ing | vokuig of m a n y p remar i t a l and d i e s e l y a r d a rKj freight trains.

Other union workers refused to cross the brotherhood's picket lines, and by today some 67,000 other CPR workers were unem­ployed. Layoffs in other industries served by the railroad climbed to

torical age." [nearly 3.000. with more in pros-Sorokin. who is head of Har-lpect if the strike continues,

vard research center in creative

our civilization has become extramarital liaisons so preoccupied with sex that it "Our morals," he said, "have now oozes from all pores of Amer- changed so notably that contin-ican life." ence, chastity and faithfulness are

Prof. Sorokin said the nation's increasingly viewed as oddities, as "sex obsession" is reflected in the the ossified survival of a prehis-mounting divorce rate, the up­surge in sex crimes, "the empha­sis of sex in radio and TV pro­grams, stage plays and movies, I altruism, also said: popular songs, pictures, reading) "This sex revolution is as im-matter and advertising." portant as the most dramatic po-

He also wrote that sex plays a'litical or economical upheaval."

5 Days Forecast As Warmer, But

Four in Plane Die As Novice Pilot Crashes into House

unoccupied house on a quiet res­idential street. All four aboard the

WASHINGTON tin - The Demo- ~ ^ -has been killed by the Bombers |Cratic Advisory Committee set up G O P devices. to advance a partv program be- ^ w

Lussen said also that police had tween elections holds its first ses- Continued from Page 1 obtained handwriting samples of s j o n today with a slim attendance that a strike against the govern-; every employe of Commonwealth in prospect. [ment "cannot be tolerated" b u t | r . . .

^Edison Co. in Westchester. The; However, three of the party's then tailed for repeal of the Con- A n O W V W f i G K e i l d "Bomber" is believed to harbor'top figures - former President jdon-Wadlin law prohibiting strikes / w v , x w " g

aome grudge against the uttity Harry S. Truman. Adlai E. Ste- Dy public employes. ALBANY (B—The extended jplane were killed Tirm and may have been its em- venson and M r s . Franklin D.' The Republican leaders noted weather forecasts for New York 3>loye at one time. . Roosevelt — are to be on hand, j that New York City had protested r Lussen said each employe filled Stevenson yesterday aimed alfor years that it had been "short­c u t a "Civil Defense" form. *A shaft at his party's congressional changed" by the state on financial aiandwriting comparison with .et- leaders who largely are boycot- a j d 3ers supposedly written by the-ting the advisory group. B u t m e y sa i<j Harriman was ^'Bomber" failed to produce any He said "To be an effective op- "highly gratified" last year when

13T» 18 97 *i 24 41 4 17 3 t 56<?g

1738* 74 H 72;\i 64.% 16 2 6 ^ 45'»

6>4, 62U

195's 57 3 9 U 137* 33*a 44»« 6 7 - \ 6 9 s , 27 »* 1 7 * 18s 8 39 s ; 4 5 U

calf heifers $87.00-161.00; bred $103.00 down; open $77.00 down; young service bulls $142.00 down.

Sheep and Lambs—Salable re­ceipts too few to establish a mar­ket.

I M V / C C T k i r k l T C T A r ' t / C - Prices quoted are doDars per I IN V t J I Mtri I > I U V - r \ 3 | c w t except for shoats, small pigs

[7§; Quotations Furnished^by Swan-Rowley and dairy replacements which are sold by the head.

133M 18 97T4 24 41%

Manufacturers Trust

6 3 s ; 66 ' i 49"i 52% 46% <£*k «S 70*4 »5 89M 33 5 i B U 437i ' 46%

Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Chrysler Motors Cinn. Gas & Elec. Columbia Gas & Elec. Commercial Solvents Commonwealth Edison Consolidated Edison Consolidated Nat' l Gas 41 Curtlss-Wright 45'a Dome Mines 13 DuPont deNemours 190V4 Eastman Kodak 89Vi Erie R. R. 20 Ford Motor Co. 55% General Electric 59% General Foods 43 s * General Motors 43' i Glmbel Bros. 2 5 ' i Goodyear Rubber 8084. Graham Paige 154 Great Northern 4*% Greyhound 13 Homestake Mining 35*4 International Harvester 381"» International Nickel l i o Jones & Laugh]in 6 0 ^ Kennecott Copper 12S Lorillard Co. 16N, Loews Inc. 20% Mack Trucks, Inc. 29 Marine Midland Corp. 19'', Mtdwest OH 34H Montgomery-Ward 38 s * Nat ional Biscuit 35** National Cash Register 5 0 ^ Nat . Dairv Prod. Corp. 37*.-Natl . Dist i l lers National Fuel Gas N e w York Central No . American Aviation Northern Pacif ic

175% 74 72V2 M% 16 26;»g 45'g

6% 62 »H

195% 57 39% 14V4 33 3g 44% 67% 69% 27 % 171*

Co.. Inc. Members of

N A T ' L ASSN. SECURITIES DEALERS. INC.

Jan. 4. 1957—10 A.M. Bid

Affiliated Fund Boston Fund Bullock Fund Canadian Fund Com'wl. Inv. Dividend Shares E. & H. Bal. Fund E. & H. Stock Fund Fide l i ty Fund Fundamental Inv. Incorporated Inv. Mass. Inv. Trust Mass. Inv. Growth Stk. io.fiS National Inv. 9.86 Tele. Elect. Fund 11.76

12.99

5.81 16.42 13.03 19.73 9.09 2.72

21.71 20.71 14.56 16.53

9.90 11.62

Ask 6.28

17.75 14.29

NEW YORK EGGS NEW YORK. J a n .3 (A — (US

DA)—"Wholesale egg pr ices w e r e 21.351 weak today. R e c e i p t s 20,700. 9.88 (Wholesale selling pr ices b a s e d a.99

39nM 4 5 " 40% 45 13

191% 90

22.14 16.74 18.12 10.70 12.56 11.51 10.66 12.82

BUFFALO EGGS, PRODUCE

B U F F A L O . Jan. 3—(Dept . of Agr. ^ i g j a n d M k t s . l — E g g s _ S u p p I y moderate . 55% demand moderate , m a r k e t about 591? I steady. (Pr ices indicated are lor sales 4 3 ' i "in case lots . Add 3c for cartons. ) Un

*23 2 i ! o n exchange and other volume sales.) Spot quotations follow: Nearby: Whites: Top quality (48-50 lbs 1 W2$5; top quality (4548 lbs) ZZ-W*; mediums SO-SO^: smalls 29-30[

Browns: Top quality (48-50 lbs) 3 33-34; top quality (45-48 lbs) 32^-

33; mediums 32-33; smalls 30-3L Butter—weak. Receipts 915,000. Wholesale prices on bulk cartons

(fresh): Creamery, 93 score (AA) 61-61% centsp 92 score (A) 60*4-61:

naVket^about lW score (Bl 60-60%; 89 score (C) 59%-60.

Cheese—Steady. Receipts 279,000. ' •T* Icandled Nearby: Larsre and Extra , 2 5 ^ 1 Large White 40-47: Medium Whi te j P r i c e s u n c h a n g e d . 80% 132-39; over 27 oz. 48-50; Large Brown

154 |39-45c; Medium Brown 31-38e; over 45 \T oz. 46-48c; Pul le ts 29-33c; E g g s 15 candled to meet N Y S Grade A, 5-7c 36 J i ! above uncandled prices. Publ ished daily- except S u n d a y by 3 8 ^ 1 Poultry 1 Dres sed)—Nearby: Marke t ' the J a m e s t o w n Newspaper Corpora-

1 0 9 t , « s teady (Eviscerated) Leghorn F c w i j t i o n . 311 Washington Street . Jame*-

THE POST-JOURNAL

PHOENIX. Ariz. UP - A novice Ohio on Co pilot spun out of the overcast yes- plnnsyuania R R terday a i * crashed into the only Pepsi Cola

State, prepared by the U.S. Weather Bureau, for the period from 7:30 P.M. today, to 7:30 P.M. Wednesday:

Western New York—Stormy weather is indicated, with tem-

Phi l l ips Pete . Corp. Pul lman Co. Pure Oil Corp. Radio Corn,

Raymond C. Roberts, a 38-year- . S S K o e b S old oil exploration engineer at Cos-jservei. inc. ta Meja, Calif., had rented the j Sinclair 011 plane at an airport n e a r his I home. With him were his busi­ness partner Urbin N. Hartman, 52, of Anaheim. Calif., and their

Southern Natural Gas

Signif icant resul ts , Lussen said. ^ position, the Democra t i c par ty t n e H e a J d Commission r e c o m m e n - | Pe ra tu res averag ing a few de- wives, Mrs . Leona Rober ts , n o r m a l Moderat ing and Mrs . Anna H a r t m a n , 51. - T h r e e teen-aged Staten Is land mus t have a b roader base thaniNat ions on school aid al located! g rees above noi

J i igh school girU were t aken into the Democra t s in Congress . " \^evv York the s a m e proportion i t ' w i t n a general snow over the

Southern Pacific Standard Brands Stand. 'Oil of Calif. Stand. Oil of Indiana

40, Stand. Oil of N .J . Stand. Oil of Ohio Sterl ing Drug

The Gvil Aeronautics Adminis- studebSker-Packard C u s t o d y after they allegedly) Truman, arriving in Washington ^ad" been" g e T u n ^ A r ^ ' ^ e y Ta id ; w e e k e ^ - P a r t i a l clearing and | tration said Roberts got his pilot's! fe^asTorp

t- !the Buttenwieser c o m m i t t e e ! colder Monday, followed by an-, license Dec. 24 and had flown Texas Gulf Cphoned false bomb reports to their last night, declined comment. 3sew York: City schools. * Nine of the 11 senators and rep- named b y Harriman and Mayor 9 ^ general snow Tuesday and Z Zulma Sanuago, 16, of Castle ton resentatives named to the adviso- i Robert p Wagner of New York! "ednesday, then turning colder. r o m e r s pleaded not guilty to ajry committee by Democratic Na - | C i t y t 0 ^ ^ate-city fiscal re-^ h a j V o f m a ^ a c a J l y ^ e n ^ , ^ ^ ! ™ ! ! Paul A. Butler l a t [ o n s h i ^ s k i ^ a s ^ o the New Dorp High School. She have indicated thev will not serve, i f h j i d

HK^ * avas held In $500 bail for a hea l ing a national commit tee aide s a i d " ^ . j , f w n i c h o f c o u r s e 3\ext Tuesday. - Two 15-year-old girls were ac- H A R R I M A N crused of making telephone warn-j • • ^ • v i x i i T i m 1 angs Wednesday to the Curtis High

ex-i plod's the fraudulent, shopworn Tammany complaint that the state 'government had short-changed

fhool, St. George. Yesterday m e anors . H?rrim™ will a u ^ g V t i S j v ^ C i t y ' " " * * *"* M**

? W ? i i n , n b W a S f O U n d °" U i e t h ^ ^ d r W a d l f t o . o f ^ n s e s - ; During the 12 years of Former ?n P . 4 h Amhnv N T John f e t r o a c U v e l y a s w e » a s ?n * e f u - G o v ^ E. Dewey's Repub-In Perth Amboy, N.J., John ture. so as to avoid giving viola-:{T,ort ; j m ; B i c h , a l 4 f l n H » ^ ! » v i v h

Matis. a 42-year-old laborer, was tors a "criminal record." ^ " c™i S vA%Mrl*K fined $1.000-with an alternative of| Other points in the program ex-jn o n e> s a l d : *™ Y°v* £ 2 S IS a year in jail—on his conviction as press such general objectives as average or * ' ^ f f r ^ ™ ™ ? " a hoaxer who twice on New Year's protection and enlargement of the ?*e. a i d , to

+ l o c ? ) ^ Y c r n m e

f ? J i Eve m a d e calls in which he said j forest p reserve , expansion of pub- ' H a r r i m a n s two budgets aUotted the P a c k e r Hotel in the communi ty lie camps i t e facilities, more road- A1-° Pe f c c n t > U i e u u ^ l eauers contained a bomb. 'side picnic areas, and improve- added. ^ .

"I 'm getting sick and tired of ment of the Conservation Depart- Spoils' Polities cnarged this sort of thing." Magistrate Lou- ment's efficiency. Heck and Mahoney said that the

TAX More than one inch of melted snow is expected.

Eastern New York—The weath­er during the next 5 days will be much more moderate than the cold weather of the past several days. Temperatures will average 3 to 6 degrees above normal. Moderate temperatures over the weekend becoming w a r m e r about Tuesday or Wednesday. Precipitation will likely be in the form of snbw in northern sections, and a mixture of rain and snow in the south. It is ex- Lpense pected to occur over the week­end and again about Tuesday. Rainfall and melted snowfall will average V2 to one inch. ^

Temperature normals—normal

only 24 hours on his own.

Continued from Page 1 He will suggest that the Federal

government: 1. Cut taxes on smal l business,

incorporated and unincorporated, in o rder to provide more capital for expansion and to m e e t compe­tition from big business.

2. Allow commuters to deduct the coat of traveling to and from work as a legitimate business ex-

Sulphur T lmken Roller Bearing Union Carbide Union Pacif ic United Aircraft Corp. United Corp. U. S. Rubber U. S. Stee! Warner Bros. Pictures Western Union Tel. West lnghouse Air Brake 28*4

'West inghouse Elec. 57K Woolworth <A% Youngstown S & T 122%

27% 19U 35 K 3R% 40 y?

4 -*<Ti

r>M 19 53 64

?5 58 29

R3i;

?"» 45 37 ' , 49 "4

5PSi •57 54

7«* 61U 30«i

ICO 114U 31 89U

6 ' i 48s4 7 1 7 * 2S»-i 20

60% 128

16% 20- i 3 0 1 ; 197* 35 39 35*4 50 .T7H 27 *i 19 r.51 -38% 40% 44% 19%

29-35c: Colored Fowi 34-39c: Broilers town, N.Y. Entered at t h e Postot f ic* and Fryers . 31-37c; Roasters 44-48c; at J a m e s t o w * . N.Y^ as Second Q a s s

AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE

Quotations Furnished by Goodbody & Co.. Jamestown. N.Y.

Jan. 4, 1957

3. Provide fSpeclal deduction fo r j A t l a s Piyvv00d parents who are paying for college education of their children.

He iwill say that, if the Federal government acts in the college-

daytime high temperatures at (expense matter, the state should

Auto. Vot ing Machine Barium Steel Coastal Car Canadian Marc. Consolidated Mining Creole Petro

is F . Sellyei observed in P e r t h : Other membe'rs of the Ski ing .s ta te safety division had become , m i s t i f f te T m o l e Z ' ' ' t h e ^ F e d e r a l t a x r e C u b a A t I S u«" Amhnv Muni rmai Cmirt in imnos- r n m m i t t p ^ a r P - ["infested with 'spoils ' poli t ics" un- v . w V w t „ ' :„ tuA ^ L . . . , complement ine *eaerai lax re- D u m o n t Lab. Amboy Municipal Court in impos- Committee are: ("infested with 'spoils' politics un ing sentence on Matis. Matis was! George Earle, assistant profes- der Director Michael H. Prender-told he could pay the fine in $20! sor at the State College of Forestry gast, who is State Democratic weekly installments, beginning to- at Syracuse University; Ronald i Chairman. day, or go to jail for a year. ! McKenzie of Lake Placid, coach of | The GOP leaders contended that

" I did it to acare the hell out of [the 1952 Olympic Skiing and Ski-,all of Harriman's efforts were everybody,'* Matis was quotfd a s ; J u m p i n g Tean^; Roland P a l m e d o j a imed at his reelection J n 1958.

New York r a n g e in the u p p e r i]jef 20s and lower 30s. Overnight lows r ange from 8 to 17.

Riesel Will Visit saying. Police said he had been of New York City, head of a Ski-I This explains, the Republican j L o n d o n E y e S p e c i a l i s t drinking. Resort Development Company; headers maintained, "why he has LONDON (J> —Labor columnist

Hartford, Conn., police took 21 Harry W. Voege of New York,|assembled on his personal staff... Vj c to r Riesel who was blinded teenagers into custody and said president of the State Winter j five full-time specialists to concen-ky a n &^ a t t ack in New York they admi t t ed making a t leas* 12 Sports Council; and Vincent S c h a e - t r a t e on a propaganda blitz—at t h e h ^ y e a r ^ visiting London for bomb hoax telephone calls in the fer of Schenectady, a meteorolo- taxpayers' expense—to reelect Mr. s e v e r a l days an1 plans to see an last two days. Six of the teenagers gist. _ _ ^ ^ _ ^ _ ^ ^ ^ - _ _ _ _ _ were girls. , W l . - .

Police Chief Michael Godfrey J o n e s N a m e d E r i e said 18 of the students, all at the •» . _ _ u A i P I ; . . same school, admitted making r O D e r INeWS t d l t O r three calls to the school forcing it ERIE, Pa. <JP*— W. Benton Jones, men, Heck and Mahoney said to close for the day. a veteran newsman with the Eriei The GOP leaders assailed Har-

Godfrey said the teenagers then-Dispatch, today was named newsjriman for absences from Albany branched out and called bomb editor of the Erie Morning News j during the so-called bill-signing pe-scarea to three other schools, two whfch starts publication next Mon- riod—the 30 days after the leg-hotels, a radio station, a typewrit- day. islative session ends. er company and Trinity College. The New? was established bv "In 1955. Mr. Harriman spent 17

Youngsters with police records ^e E r i e Times Publishing Co.. of the 30 days away from Albany were sent to the juvenile detention publisher of the Erie Times, which and in 1956 he spent 20 of the 30

plans Harriman. e ye specialist.

This buildup of the publicity staff | Riesel said after his arrival yes-costs $64,000 annually besides theitgrdav that the London specialist more than $200,000 paid to depart- "can"help me, but he can't give ment and agency public relations : m e back mv sight." He also

planned to talk with British trade union leaders.

legislature while abusing and try­ing to discredit the Republican

home. The others were reteised J J ^ c h M e d ^ ^ ^ members of the Leg-in custody of thir parents, pend- w i U ^ editorially independent of Florida vacations ^both years," l s l d l u r e ' ing their appearance in juvenile t h e j ^ ^ Heck and Mahoney said

150 Policemen Hunt Missing Sisters

CHICAGO m— Police intensified! their search today for two missing! teen-age sisters who failed to re-; turn home last Friday night after leaving to attend a movie.

Mort than 150 policemen were, directh/ involved in the hunt for; the girls, Barbara Grimes, 15, and her sitter Patricia. 14.

Capt John McCarthy said po-i lioe have investigated scores of report! that the girls had been seen in various places in the city and suburbs. However, he said, police concentrated their work on

He intends to continue claiming;the city's South Side in the belief credit for progressive, responsible j that the girls are staying close achievements of the Republican to home.

Dvnamics Corp. Electric Bond & Share F l y i n g Tiger Glen A! den Coal Imperial Oil Ltd. Tntemational Petroleum 49% Kaiser Indus. 14%

9% 16% 1 1 %

1 % 3 %

28% 91% 19%

4% •

26% 9%

11 59''.

Ducks 45-47C Poultry (Live)—Supply liberal, mar­

ket weak for fowl others about s teady. T h e f o l l o w i n g quo­tations reflect current prices paid tot live poultry delivered Buffa lo; B r o i l e n and Fryers . 2-4 lb. 19-21c; Roast­ers 5 ' i lbs. and up. 20-22c: Fowl , leghorn type , l l - 1 2 c ; heavy t y p e ; un­der 6 lbs. 13-15c; Roosters (cocks) 8-9c; Ducks 23-25c.

Apples—Market s teady. N Y S Cort­land. N o . 1 2%" up. bu. S2.75-3.25; cartons of 12 3 lb. f i lm bags. S3.00-3.35; R. I. Greening. No. 1. 2 U " U p , bu. . $3.50-4.00; Comb No . 1 and Util-

i o B ity. $2.50-3.25; Mcintosh. N o . 1. and toai Ut i l i ty 2 1-4" up. bu. $2.50-3.00: N o . G4i? 1, 2 ^ ' up. $3.25-3.75: fancy. $4.25-461- 4.50; 2 1-4" minimum, cartons" of 12 3414 3 lb. bags. $3.00-4.00: Northern Spy. 58*4 N o - I. 2%" UP- bu. . $3.75-4.25- Red 2o Delicious, No. 1. 2 1 a" up, bu.. $4.00-1

?*: U .50; tray pack, 72s-150s, $4.50-5.25; I W , 2*4" min imum, bu. . $2.50-3.00; car-* 55% : tons of 12 No . 3 lb. film bags, $4.50- \ . •"^-,5.00; 2" up. S3.50-4.00: 2*i". double 45% I red. bu.. $5.00-5.50: Golden. $-1.50-5.50: 37*/, 2%" up. $3.00-3.50. 49% Pears—Market firm. Homegrown! P°% Bosc No . 1, 2 1-4" up. bu. $4.00-5.00. 60 B e e t a — Market steady. Homeero^"1

*7 topped, bu. $1.50-1.75; % bu. . 2" 54»i SL00-1.25. Cartons of l doz. 1% lb.

7% cel lo packages. $1.75-2.00. 61% Cabbage—Market weak. Homegrown 30% ' Danish. 50 lb. baskets or crates. 50-1

100 sr5c; few. best 80c-$1.00; Red 75c-$1.00. j 114% Ariz. Cabbage, 50 lb. crates 2.00-2.25.

3 0 * Carrots — Market steady. Home-89% grown, topped, bu., $1.50-1.75; core-

6% less $2.00-2.25 carton. 2 doz. 1 l b . ! *» if i lm pkgs . . $1.85-2.00. A3'*! Celery — Market weaker . Home-~ * grown. Golden, doz. bunches. $1.75-20% 2.30. ~ f I Mushrooms _ . Market s teadv. N.Y.S . ?Ti» 3 lb. baskets $1.35-1.50; pints 21-23c: # , ' * Pa pints 25c.

Caulif lower — Market firmer. L . L . crates of 12 heads. $2.50-2.75..

Onions — Market weak. N .Y.S . Drv Yellow. N o . 1. 50-1 b. sacks, merit-j urn $1.10-1.25; Jumbo $3.35-1.50; 10-lb. sacks 30-35c; 3-lb. sacks l l - 1 2 c ; S p a n - | lsh. bu. . $1.50-2.00; Leeks . doz. bunches. $2.50-2.*T5

Parsnips—Homegrown 8 qt baskets, j $1.00-1.25: % bu. $1.50-2.00; car tons : of 6 1-1 b. f i lm packages. $1.00-1.25.

Potatoes — Market weak. N .Y.S .

mail matter . Subscription Bates

Del ivered fey carr ier: 36 cent* per week.

Delivered by mail to R F D boxhoid-ers In Chautauqua, Warren and Cat­taraugus Count ies : $8 per year .

B y mai l t o a l l o ther points in N e w York and Pennsy lvan ia : $12.00 per year.

B y mall to al l o ther s tates In United S ta te s : $18 It per year.

Missed Copies It you fall to receive your copy

call T h e Post-Journal before 7 P.M., except on Saturday. On Saturdays *all before 5 P.M, Dial 7-111.

DANCING Every Saturday

Night ot 10 P.M.

to the made of

MAX DAVIS TRIO plus V by Lou

"Swede" «*• beoirttfitl

121

9%

COLONY ROOM

i ^ ' l R e d No. 1, 50 lb. sacks, unwashed 11 ?"!SI.25-1.50; White , 50-lb. sacks, $1.00-

4% 1.25; washed . $1.30-1.60; 5 lb. sacks.

28*% 9 2 ^ 19%

4% 6

27% 9%

10% 59% 491 •

HOTEL JAMESTOWN

NEVER A COVER CHARGI

Goodbody & Co. Bank of Jamestown lido,.

Member N.Y. Stock fxchona*

Martin-Rockwell and other

Local Stocks Bought Sold

Quoted Phone 41-114 & J , Myers. Mgr.

court

OOXGRESSWOMAX FALLS

suffered by Rep. Katharine St.

Jones worked on newspapers in> "The Harriman reelection pat-Wheeling, W. Va.( Columbus andjtem is obvious," they concluded. Cincinnati before joining the Erie

WASHINGTON <*-A head injury,£." ""I?"„^M I„ I M ? H ! K . « . , « • KV R»o K»th»rir«» S t ' Dispatch-Herald in 1933. He has

been associated with the Dispatch George (R-NY.) y^terday appar- ^ ^ e n t l y i s n o t s e r i o u s . M r s . S t . e d i t o r a n d m a n a e i n a Pditr»r George fell down while walking , , » t e ^ ^ r ^ managing editor from her office to the House C h a m - \ ^ A ) j £ £ * to t £ f m e r Lr^ S S ber for the opening session of the ^ a ™ ^ S c wSrv tao r to 85th Congress. The fall occurred | ^ l ^ w ^ C J S E V t t ° r

GENERAL INSURANCE

Hotel Stratford Arms VY. UTICA ST NEAR d A I N

Buffalo, N.Y. Single $3.50 Double $6.30

•HON! 4-1 Ot •f

TOP BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

Pro-Teet-U, maawfacturer of t»e orifinal JaloHsio Window, Is be. tInniof m tioamion program la Wastora New York. OppartoaJty fat live wire operator with shop and modest capital tor wholesale aad retoJI distribution. Local pormontnt factory assistance tor aU phases of opotation, A new aad highly profitable Weld. Are yaa iHMfosioa 1 Call or write: MR. I0WAR0 RICHARDS

Pro-Ttct-U Jalousie Corp. t i l l WaMaa Aveaao. •offofo 25, Now York RE. 7020

Curr.nt Di». Avoitablc In iniMftd Saving} Altec's.

fACH ACCOUNT

imuno TO $10,000 B. C. MORTON • CO.

end MvfvoJ l*wim*a* rwm' 0WICK F I M COAST TO CMS]

B. C. Morton & Go. • N.Y.

Ave. PtoM 17<2tlf

A00«f SS - -

c u r _ S T A «

PH Bk ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^fl Br^ ^ 9 ^S Our Regular Dividend * ^ ^ ^f

^ ^ y Has lean Declared ^ ^T L / AT THE d%| / _ 0 / L PER A ^

^ J RATE OF d t 7 2 / O ANNUM \ ^ W For the Semi-Annnal Period lading Dec. 31, 1tSe ^

^ W Dividends Credited and Compounded ^ ^ I f June 30th and December 31st \ J

Pins These Extra Days of Grace: AH Deposits Made by the 10th of lack aad Every Month Earn Dividends from the 1st of That Month.

l*m< W^\ K*

• f i N S U R E D 1 ifA • '«• Bl

% JAMESTOWN 1 1

SAVINGS and LOAN b

.

ASSOCIATION I • OS I A S T S I C O N O S T I I I f \^k±\ 4«tf f » ! « » . » S I M I . I H I . * ICMO.t mi

' i w t o a m it TUB tt mm' |

TOMORROW Last Day

for

CHRISTMAS GIFT EXCHANGES I

AT

In Accordance With The Retail Merchant's

Division

Jamestown Area Chamber of Commerce.

in?

9 Untitled Document

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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

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