New York Amsterdam News — 1963-00-00003

1963 1 pages ✓ Indexed
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SPORTS AND WAR HEROES SHAKE — Fritz Pollard, Foot­ ball Hall of Famer since 1954, gets hearty- handshake from General Douglas Me Arthur (right i during annual $50-plate dinner at Waldorf-Astoria-lh>- tel to raise funds for erection of Hall of Fame building at Rutgers College. Guest’ of hon­ or was Justice Byron "Whiz- zer” White, former All Amer­ ica from Colorado, who receiv­ ed 1962 gold medal for out­ standing achievement. Seated in center is Harvey Harmon, National Executive Secretary to Hall of Fame. U. S. Attor­ ney General Robert Kennedy was arnpng 2,000 guests. The programs will be held* in response to a resolution passed at the Association's 53r<Lannual convention in Atlanta last sumnt-, er calling on NAACP units to commemorate the centenary by dramatizing the Negro’s struggle to realize the full promise of President Lincoln’s Emancipa­ tion Proclamation. HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY • DIPLOMA If you never finished high sehool, or went to school In other lands, you can get a State High School Equival­ ency Diploma, accepted by business, Civil Service. 12 session evening class pre­ pares you. Ask for Folder AY. ’ * EASTERN SCHOOL 721 Broadway, N.Y. 3 AL 4-5029 TOKEN OF AFFECTION — Transit workers present an ear­ ly valentine to Catherine Cul- . liten, chosen by the New York Heart Association as "Miss Heart Fund — 1963.” Gift pre­ sented by Lloyd Peterson is a check for $1,200 representing New York City Transit Author­ ity employees’ voluntary con­ tributions for this year to the New York Heart Fund. Mr. Pe­ He oacame a lieutenant in! j 1954, and rose to the rank of captain in 1957. An active mem­ ber of the Vulcan Society of the New York. Fire Dept., he serv- ed-"Overseas during World War II with the U.S, Army, and made' staff sergeant prior to his dis­ charge. Chief Beekman is married to the former Muriel Gittens, and they have three children; Her- nadette, age 8; Stephen, age 6, and Arthur, one year old. The Beckmans reside at 109-65 198th; St., Hollis. terson is charity committee chairman of the New York City Transit Authority. Miss Ciillit- en, employed at New York Tel­ ephone Company, accepted. check for the Heart Fund at Transit Authority’s Brooklyn office, 370 Jay St. From now until the end of February— "Heart Month” — she will Serve as a volunteer at Heart Fund headquarters, 10 Columbus Cir­ cle. 54th Meeting The centennial will be noted at the 54th annual NAACP meeting here on Jan. 7 when Executive Secretary Roy Wilkins makes his report to the membership. . Theodore Berry of Cincinnati heads a 12-person committee of JSAAEE Marks Emancipation NEW YORK — Branches of members of the NAACP Board the National Association-(pr the Advancement of Colored f^Oopl? throughout the country will spon sor a series of meetings, dinners, pageants and other presentations celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclama­ tion which became effective on Jau. 1, 1863. The celebrations which will be­ gin with the Nevy Year will be continued on appropriate days througnout the year. Other his­ toric dates on which local NAACP units will observe the Emancipation centennial Include Feb. 12, birthday of Abraham Lincoln and the NAACP; May 17, ninth anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s school desegre­ gation ruling; May 30, Memorial Day; July 4, Independence Day;) and Dec. 15, Human Rights Day Directors with mapped the plans for the observance. Serving with Mr. Berry on the committee are Mrs. Daisy E. Lampkin, Pittsburgh; Dr. W. Montague •, Cobb, Washington; Svestley W. Law, Savannah, Ga.; Earl B. Dickerson, Chicago, Joseph P. Kennedy, San Fran­ cisco; Drw James 3. McClendon and Walter Reuther, Detroit; Dr. Nathan K. Christopher, Cleve­ land; Alfred Baker Lewis, Old Greenwich, Conn.; and Dr. Ralph J. Bunche and George K. llun- ton, both of New York City- The celebrations, Mr. Wilkins said, will be used not only for educational purposes but also to stimulate membership* in and contributions to the NAACP. Dudley mtlnucd from Page One) Judley promised to do “all I power” to relieve traffic! 't'.ion, idl’d asserted that would be .stepped up on the ulitation of the East River — 155th SF, viaduct, cost- v>re than $8,000,000 and the lation of $14,000,000 worth leetronic signals to1 speed ow of traffic below 65th St. dglng some action each sec- of the borough, Mr. Dudley lised improvemen’s on play- ids, new schools, hospitals, r and city police and fire ins. New Assistant <- earlier developments Mr. ey swore in William Rose, ier Associated Press news- , as his $15,000-a-year ic information oficfer, and the departure of some of former top aides to the new Department of Highway, omas Carroll, former Cdm- iioner of Borough Works, was tinted as the $25,000 Com­ moner of Highways, while ry Levinson, a civil service neer with the office, was ap- ited as First Deputy Com­ moner, at $20,000, and Mitchell im, lower East Side leaden Deputy Cmmissioner of flpgh Works, was appointed Deputy Commissioner of High zs for Manhattan. 'udley, who is rumored bead- for a State Supreme Court geship if the Legislature, ap- ves of a bill to create new ,500 - a » year Judgeahips.l tinong the specific Items Dud- listed will be Improvements Thomas Jefferson Park, Co-, ial Park, the playgrounds at teker and Hudson Sts., at dngton Ave. and 105th St., 1 East River and Washington rare Park. ["he new combined Ice-skating k and swimming pool for year ind service will be built w ntral Park, south of 10th St.. 1 a new Gouverneur Hospital [1 be started, Dudley pledged, le also pledged action on re- istruction of Bellvue Hospital d on laying foundations or. irlem Hospital, for nine new soots, and for police and fire uses In various areas of Man ttan, plus some $7,000,000 »rth of modernization improve- ents on various piers between th and 79th Sts. -School (Continued From Page One) ledlately send copies of the re- >rt to Governor Nelson Rocke- Uer and President Kennedy. The report said that it was iviously desirable for many >asons for additional medical 'hools to >be located in New ork City but that one of the ity’s most pressing interests as the impact which additional edical school facilities would ave on the level of medical are available to New Yorkers i the hospitals, and particularly i the City hospitals. This would e primarily true in Queen*, and outh Bronx. „ The Mayor4 s committee, form- d In October, 1961, consists of; lerald D. Dorman, M.D., Medi­ al Director, New York Life In- Lurance Company; David M. leynpari. Chairman of the May- if's task Force oft Organization >f Medical Services; Willard C. lappleve, M.D., Member, Board >f Hospitals; Louis ty. Rousselot Vf.D., St. Vincent’s Hosmtal; Charles H. Tenney, City Admmis ;rator; Ray E. TrusseU, M.D., Commissioner o f Hospitals; John R. Everett, former Chan­ cellor of the City University of New York (Chairman). -Dockers -Wagner n .'on tin (Continued From Page One) (Continued From. Page One) 1 - . . , Program >r this week. >wn, a member of the Hous and Redevelopment Board, Deputy Borough President expected to name Earl first yearjand 11 cehts increase around for a replacement for in the second year of a two-City Planning Commission Chair- lman James. Felt, who is re- year package. The remaining demands in the signing the post, and for several package call for 14 cents an hour) her top city aides. He also must for pension benefits, 10 cents for] fil* eleven judicial posts within medical contributions, four weeks ihe next few weeks, vacation after 10 years and four City Hall sources indicated that paid holidays added to the pres- the Mayor had won approval of Queens Democratic leaders to ent eight. The slicing of demands was a name Queens Civil Court Justice concession wrested by Wirtz Sun- Mario J. Cariello, one of his one- day in a long, painful series ofj time Assembly buddies, as the talks with both sides at the Hotel'new Queens Borough President. The five Queens Councilmen Commodore. . will select the new Borough head Wednesday, and Cariello is re­ ported to be the Mayor’s choice to fill the post vacated by the election of John T. Chancey as Queens Surrogate. New Requests The Mayor is also preparing new requests to Governor Rock­ efeller seeking an estimated $100 million dollars in additional state aid from the Legislature, although he has not pressed for off-track betting which other Democrats are seeking. While the Mayor favors it, he reportedly feels there is little likelihood of Its passage this year. Wirtz’ optimism was some­ what tempered by Red Moran who said; v —Refugees that way. 1 don’t.” "I’m glad he (Wirtz) feels Moran credited the Labor Sec­ retary, however, with "parrying the load” of negotiations. Earlier Wagner had won many friends in city civil service ranks as the Board of Estimated voted $31,000,000 in raises for police- been employed in municipal de- men and firemen, amounting to partments in such positions as about $300 a year per man which Gleason earlier had said that Junior Engineer, Social Case will show in the reduction of Worker, Street Club Worker, X- their work week from 42 to 40 Ray Technician and Laboratory hours and two extra paid holi- Aide. (Continued From Page One) jdays. _ , he "personally” hoped that the strike, which already has crip­ pled the newspaper-hit economy of the city and is tolling millions in lost business to the nation, would be brought to a close soon. He said that neither dockers nor shippers could afford a long- drawnout strike whose conse­ quences would be damaging to both. Both sides took a one-day rest from talks during the New Year’s holiday. But strikers manned the docks in the face of near-zero winds. weather and gale-force The Mayor noted that all ap-l The City Council had approved pojntments under waivers of the two weeks ago of the new $1,084 citizenship requirement are sub-!755,351 Capital Budget, ,the first ject to all other Civil Service billion dollar budget in the city’s requirements. The waiver makes'history, without any deletions the Cuban refugees and other including $251,000,000 for new foreign nations eligible for ap-! schools, $173,400,000 for 300 new pointment, if otherwise qualified, subway cars, $62 million for new The Mayor said the granting of! hospitals, and for the new $11 the waiver would strengthen the 000,000 Gouverneur Hospital, al- operabons of several City de-i though seven Councilmen opposed partments now handicapped by a the hospital. shortage of professional and! -------- -------------------- . The strikers, who have agreed technical workers. to. load and unload oil, explosives and other vital cargo, were join­ ed by seamen of the National. Maritime Union in their hands- off policy handling luggage of (Continued From Page One) incoming and outgoing cruise nasengers. -"Rocky" Mental Health Budget The walkout from Searsport, major proposals of his state pro- , lative «^ion. will outline the Commissioner Marrin E. Per- submitted a New York „ Maine to Brownsville, Texas,;Sram in his annual message to (nlty .C®m.mu"l.ty came Dec. 23 when the 80-day the Legislature next Wednesday, Taft-Hartley injunction expired. Ja£. 9 -- ’ T--:-lature next Worfiws/iav Board budget for the fiscal year 1963-64 to Direc-tor-of Budget Wil­ liam F. Shea totaling $34,166,203 which is an Increase of $6,040,032 over last year’s budget. budget for the fiscal ye; Hit by the strike are the cruise! Discussing the goals of his industry textiles and fruit and administration, on which he will food imports from abroad. .conunent on in detail in the an- Also -hit but not felt are the'nual message, the Governor said Newsprint imports whose users ^e would give high priority in in the newspaper industry are;‘lls second administration to.im- now inoperative because of a Pf04''enw"t and extension of higher education expansion of printers’ strike. Anthony* (Tough T»ny) Anas-'traunn^ t®meet ,h® challange tasia, ILA boss of the Brooklyn «f automation, sound economic docks, met early this week with growth and expansion or job op- Jerome Alderman; an attorney PPrtunit.es and emphasis on re- for the McClellan Senate Sub­ committee, which plans to look into charges that the ILA struck to protect featherbedding prac­ tices, a central strike-issue fo­ cusing ip the work-gang load. search and development. In submitting the budget Com­ missioner Perkins said that the basic budget includes $330,965 for 55 new positions. Among the most important of the new posi­ tions are 9 in the agency’s re­ search and planning . division whose work is important to the planning and developmental ac tivities of the agency. Are Relations Between Whites and Blacks Improving in the South? In the new issue of LOOK Magazine, Atlanta’s Ralph McGill, one of America’s most eminent editors, looks ahead into 1963 at the South’s mostexplosive problem. GET LOOK TODAY ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT High School "Drop-Outs Prepare for Special Diploma New York, N. Y. (Special).— Thousands of men and women, 20. 30, even 50 years of age, who dropped out of High School, are now preparing for a special High School Diploma through a home .study course which may be com­ pleted as quickly ea spare time permits. adult population without a High School diploma, the “Drop out” problem is one of the most serious coriTTorfting the country. Men and women are being held back in business and social life because they lack a High School educa­ tion. Recent government reports in­ dicate that a High School grad­ uate earns $75,000 more during his life time than a non-graduate. This could mean that a diploma Is worth $30.00 to $50.00 more in weekly income. This new diploma is called a HIGH SCHOOL EQUIVALENCY DIPLOMA It is accepted In busi­ ness and Civil Service as the equivalent of a regular 4 year High School Diploma. This course which prepares a "Drop out” to pass the State Equivalency Di- An Informative Home 8tudy ploma exams is being offered by High 8chool Book is being offered the National School of * Homejree of charge to serious minded Study. National has been char- persons who need a High School tered by the Board of Regents diptbqia^ Requests should be mailedto the National Sehool of of the University of the State Home Study, Room 1A, 230 Park of New York. With an estimated 46% of our,Avenue South, New York $, N.Y. -N.Y.Times L * Continued From Page One) •e sick leave and a higher for night work. be publishers are offering a 0-a-week package, with no uction of hours in the work *k. (either side reportedly has ■n willing to adjust Its de- nds. Time* Statement he publishers have said that npliance with union be­ nds would mean an additional it to the industry of $38 per in. Jr ad ford also could not be iched for the publishers view, t Orvil E. Dryfoos, publisher The Times, said In a letter the newspaper’s employes it' "the economics of the situs- n are not pleasant, n estimating what settlement the nearly a month old strike uld cost, he said tn his let- ’That Is difficult to deter ne. Certain large fixed costs itiaue whether w» publish or t. Certainly we do not gain iders and most of the adver- Ing that we mis*. is gone for rtr* creased costs for welfare bene­ fits and for pvertime. ; 18,000 Idle More than 18,500 persons have been thrown out of work as a result of the strike. Nine million dollars In wages and benefits have been abstained by these workers over the three-week per­ iod. Another $3,000,000 loss in wages will be tallied at the end of this week. ’ • • Unofficial estimates have put the loss of 5,700,000 daily sales In circulation to the nine dallies at close to >12,000,060, and an additional $33,200,000 In advertis­ ing revenue during the period. The biggest advertising revenue loss was effected during preparation for the holiday season. Charities, department stores, employment agencies, auto deal­ ers, florists, hotels and other tourist-catering industries, con­ certs, theatres and movies, prln cipally, have felt the effects of whijt has become the longest newspaper strike in the city's history. Police Hit Also affected^ the strike was the Police Department whose campaign for safe motoring was ground out by the lack of pub­ licity. have. . .been asked about Cost of’ a oettlement. Per-' ► Royal W. Ryan, executive vice president of the Convention and i it is best to fKptaln this Visitors Bureau, explained the rery direct terms. There are strike’s effect this way: roximady 8,000 employees on newspaper. A dollar a week ease for each employe Is »; and $8 a week for each iloye Is $40,006 a week Hiia amount of $40,000 mul­ ed by 82 weeks is in excess 12 million a year. And this r not include additional ln- “There is little doubt that the strike wiH have a cumulative and deteriorating effect on four city’s visitor business," h<> said "The longer the strike will con imue, the greater the impact it will have on this aspect of our city’s life." Discontinued St While They Last . . . Values To 17.99 REGALSHOES • - . I ; ' . 166 W. 125 St., cor. 7th Ave. 2262 3rd Ave., cor. 123rd St. • - 325 W. 125th St., cor. St. Nicholas Ave. 554. Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn , 40 Regal Start* in Greater New York ” s 3rd Negro fire Chief Former ty. Augustus A. Beck­ man, former Company Comman­ der of Engine Co. 17, 185 Broome St., Manhattan, was sworn in last week as battalion chief, be­ coming the third Negro chief in I the history of the New York J City Fire Department. -4 Chief Beekman was sworn in by Fire Commissioner Edward Thompson during a promotion ceremony held at' the High i School of Fashion Industries, 225 ,.W. 24th St, w The 39-year-old chief, who en­ tered the Fire Department i n 1947 and worked as a fireman in Engine Co. 58 in East Har­ lem, will be in charge of the Fourth Battalion located in low-} er Manhattan. i . Two Others In becoming the third Negro to attain the high rank in the department, Beekman follows re­ tired Chief Wesley Williams and Battalion Chief Dudley Glasse. This Week In Wall Street (By Ph’irp M. Jenkins, Investment Broker, President of Special Markets Inc., 92 Liberty St., New York 6, N. ¥.). — The complete picture of the 1962 business year is rapidly coming into sharp focus, and already “experts” are bpsy writing its history. In Wall Street - the brokerage house barometer of a good year is-the Christmas bonus. This year most houses reduced or eliminated their office workers’ hoped-for cash re­ ward for long hours of demanding work under pressure. The money just wasn’t there to be divided because of the market slump which started in May.. ^ Industry reports are more en­ couraging. Auto companies report a generally good sales year. Local retail stores were adversely affected by the A. Y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat., Jan. 5, 1963 • 3 Hold 2 Suspscts In 6 Slayings Henry Dusablon, 20, and Em- execution of Harry Schnieder.ilieve the two suspects execi anuel J. Sqmperi, 29, are being 50) who lived at 90-36 149th St Morris Neuringer of 3133 Re He was slain in the rear of his beau St., who was killed In held without bail on a halfidozen Artny-Navy store at 152-02 Ja- Bronx liquor store at 163 E 1 murder charges for action by maica Ave. Bronx police also be-,St , Bronx. the Grand Jury. The two, police ---------------------- -------- ------ -I*- said, are suspected qt commit 8“ay' the Bronx and Manhattan. ...............’ Seized by Det. Joseph Gara- han ol the W. 47th St. detectives, in the Belvedere Hotel, 319 W 47th St. Friday, the two suspects, police said, readily admitted the murders and' robberies. Police said the crime spree started on Christmas Eve in Wo­ burn, Mass., when Frank C. Ross, 59, an antique dealer, was robbed and shot in the head as he kneeled in the rear of his shop. New York Slayings J 1 1 1 I 1 rt1 B«MtW m AMERICA'S N'lSELUNG SCOTCH WHISKY'. G DISTIUUIES PRODUCE , A end holidays, though most companies at Mr. Jenkins newspaper strike just before the year- tin Himmelstein, 41. who lived Drive*F orest Hills. ,r, . Himmelstein was shot to death admit that their disappointment, was m not being in the rear of his hquor store able to increase sales to new goals, rather than that at 731 Amsterdam Ave. Ce^r Largo, 56, a clerk in the store they were forced to record losses. was also forced to kneel for his execution. \ . ,o Many large cut-rate (discount) houses ran into trouble' last year as opposed to 1961, Sales re­ mained high but profits shrank duer according to some opinions, to over-expansion, operating with top little capital, over-stocking, too large lay-outs, and too many stores of the same type competing in the same retail market area. Pblice said the pair are. also suspected of murdering Henry Joseph Jassem, of 68-25 Dart-1 mouth St , Forest Hills. He was killed, in the rear of his hard ware store which is located at 689’Ninth Ave., Manhattan. Jamaica police also want the two for questioning about the Credit houses are reported to be cracking down onmany discounters and some are going out of business . •. . On the brighter side — of the ones operating in the New York area, one of the biggest, E. J. Korvette Inc. reported record profits for 1962, as did Vornado Inc. of New Jersey. • Steel Unhappy Steel companies are r§3t unhappy about the year’s business, but they are complaining bitterly about the sale in this country of foreign-produced steel at prices that violate antidumping laws, and with which the American companies cannot compete. In the near future, 48 thousand shareholders of Pan American World Airways and Transworld Airlines will have the opportunity to vote their stock for or against the merging of these two air-transport giants into the largesUairline system in the world. Directors of both companies have already voted their approval. Whether the common stockholder owns one share in either company or a thousand shares, he or she will experience the thrill and the responsibility of sharing in this important decision However, stockholde? approval will not make the merger a fact. President Kennedy and the Aeronautics Board must give their O.K. because of its international implications. Although recent Gov­ ernment rulings would &em to favor public trans­ port mergers, a CAB recommendation last month was against the merging of American and Eastern ; airlines—a fact that injects an appreciable amount of uncertainty into this issue. Direct opposition has already developed from pj|*@ Safety Hughes Balks ..blended vl | SCOTS WHISKY I [*t»V RROIfc StO0k'| | fuifi io* j;*"*- ( *** »»U — •<» . »• ax**1* ^ THIS Qttkltn SCOICR WHISKY THE BUCKINGHAM CORPORATION ROCKEFELLER CENTER • NEW YORK IMPORTERS • BLENDED IS PROOF THE BRONX 149th St. 8 3rd Ave. New and Enlarged RECORD SHOP FRIDAY & SATURDAY 10 A.M. 'TIL 9:30 P.AA.! RECORD RIOT! MYCHAHUS**». SPECIAL! GREATEST HITS aa. LP RAY CHARLES "GREATEST HITS" DINAH WASHINGTON "DINAH '62" MOMS MABUEY "YOUNG MEN-SV OLD MEN-NO" HUNDREDS of GREAT NAMES! • Gloria Lynne • Duka Ellington • S. Vaughan • Jaa Williams • Art Blakey ea. LP • Count Basie • Della Reese • Errol Gardner • Billy Eckstina • Maynard * Furgeson PLUS MANY, MANY MORE! SPECIAL JAZZ SALE! • Jimmy Smith • Shirley Scott • Ramsey Lewis • 3 Sounds • Horace Silver • Art Blakey • Gene Ammons • Ahmad Jamal • Sonny Rollins • Miles Davis PLUS MANY, MANY MORE! MB ea. LP< RECORD SHOP'—- MAIN FLOOR Hicks In Auto Crash WomarvThrown Out Window . j James L. Hicks, executive edi tor of the New York Amsterdam Ndws and Mrs. Wilma Dob'c, a public relations consultant, were hospitalized in Yonkers General Hospital last Friday night when Hicks' car crashed into a concrete bu.tress on the i New York Thruway. Hicks was driving Mrs. Dobii to her Scarsdale home from the Overseas Press Club in Manhat­ tan when the accident occurred Both were treated for lacera­ tions of the face and scalp. No other cars were involved ic the accident. TA Employe Found Dead I ‘Anthony Daniels, 36, of 2033 Madison Ave., charged with hom­ icide, is being Jield without bail for action by the Grand Jury. Da­ niels. taken into custody by Det. John Stahl of the E. 126th St. de­ tectives, is charged with the death of Mrs. Estelle Brooks who lived’at 110 E. 127th St. •Police said Mrs. Brooks was stabbed and apparently thrown out one of the windows of her apartment. The body of Transit Authority employee, John Walton, 42, was found on 204th Street between Ninth Ave., and Harlem River Tuesday morning. Police said Walton, who lived at 345 W. 145th St. with his fam- ly, left for work Monday morn-; ing and told his wife he was later going to a party. Police! said ht never got-there. 4 | His death was listed by police j as natural since he reportedly; i suffered from fainting spells. , - I I I ■ I I I GET INJO CIVIL SERVICE WORK! During the next twelve months, there will be many appoint- I ments to U.S. Civil Service jobs in the nation. I There will be steady employment, good pay and many of | these Job* require little or no experience or specialized education. National Training Service is a privately owned school which tlon on U. S. Civil Service Jobs, mail TODAY, or Phone MA 4-1860. helps many pass these tests each year. To get full informa- I I I I NATIONAL TRAINING SERVICE, INC., Dept. AM-124 Box 500 Greenwich, Connecticut Name Street City Phone No. • Age Zone State - JOHN VELASCO SERVICES HELD John Velasco, a merchant seaman and popular man about town, died suddenly last Wedn­ esday in his residence at 629 W. 115th St. and was buried in Cypress Hill Cemetery Mon­ day after rites at St. Phillip’s Protestant Episcopal Church. Velasco,* 47 years old, had been an entertainer and a so­ cial and former business as­ sociate of John Levy and Dick­ ie Wells, Harlem sportsmen and entrepreneurs, in the op­ eration of the old Ebony Chib in midtown Manhattan^ He is survived by his wife, Olive, of the W, 115th St. ad­ dress. his mother, Alice, and a sister, Victoria. Not carrying enough cash again? some strong elements of labor, from domestic air-' A spec|al dem'ns,ralten line, and from Howard Hughes who is the major TWA stockholder with 78% of its outstanding stock. Juan T. Trippe, president of Pan Am has been signed to reduce fire hazards and to emphasize fire safety in hospitals and nursing homes will jn u,e auditorium of the against any new alignment of shares that would High School of Fashion indus- tries. 225 W. 24 Street, at 2 p.m.. on Thursday. January 3, (Continued on Page 34 > Blumslcin WEST 125th STREET OPEN FRI. & SAT. TO 7 JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE SPECIAL SAVINGS ON BLUMSWM* CUSTOM-MADE CUSTOM MADE DRAW DRAPES CUSTOM-MADE ON FAMOUS to-order BOY NOW IT THESE LOW PBICO- FIY 00 EASY TERMS! Then reach for this Helping Hand. Open < choking account at Chemical New York and you always have your money with you. Our checks are known and used all over tepvn, can’t be lost like email, and cost so little. Why not see the difference in convenience this Helping Hand can make. Come in and open your account this week at any of our 111 offices. Chemical Bank New York Trust Company. * SOFA OR 2 CHAIRS REUPHOLSYEREO.., AS LOW as | WOOTWITOMT! Y.ur f-rnltur. >« m.d. ». ** ggriSKA ”!•“ IrtKSriX.«... V.W .ur him. with full S.tail.1 will vWt y.u M V** "■ ■f *-< MYLENCTM OFT! 11 FT. WIDE... CMFWdV t MSTN.UHT MUTMUST ...MIMAS MewOMtoPay! • ANY IIMOTN YOU WAMTt • INCIWMS ML FAMKI • IWCtUOIS AU HAMWAOII • IMCtWOtS iNttAUATIOm • INCIUOIS HANOINOI AH at NO IXTIACOtTI REUFHOISTERY ____ SLIFCOVERB_______ DRAW DRAKES______ KLASTIC SLIPCOVERS. FOR FREE ESTIMATES ' PHONE 1 TODAY... ' SOFA OR 2 CHAIRS AS LOW AS fiwtitwra in Cintom made la fit year homa. TramanJaus salMti^, , tka mwt iovaly Gbrics ♦. ekoata tram, CUSTOM MADE TO ORDER plastic slipcovers JTwtimvi *S« BLUMSTEIN WEST ,25th STREET (bet. 7th & 8th Av FURNITURE DEPT.-ENTIRE 4th|FlOOR I J Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com