CEMBER 10, 1958 WEDNESDAY, D Ser In v Demoted ed Shakeup LONDON ( Ivan A. Serov I I—LMoseow followed up the transfer of Gen irom his job as t lesterday at dis a fresh blast y e OK'd s Lines Rate Ri For 9 B HARRISBUR (FP) Nine bus lines providing t ansportation be tween several m: 'or Pennsylvania cities yesterday were authorized by the Public Utility Com Mission to raise their fares by five to nine per cent. The increases are effec tive Dec. 15. The PUC granted the increases after the companies agreed to drop their requests for a boost in fares 50 cents and undOr. In the new schedule, fares be tween 55 cents and $1 will be in creased by 5 cents while fares over $1 will be raised an average of about 6 per cent. Some of the bus lines affected and their operating areas are: Greyhound, throughout th e state; Edwards Motor Transit Co., Williamsport, through the north east. Civil Rights Group Asks Negro Voting Evidence MONTGOMERY, Ala. (A') The Civil Rights Commission, with assent from Southern members started legal action yesterday to compel defiant public officials to produce evi dence about Negro voter reg istration in Alabama. A spokesman for Atty. Gen. Wil liam P. Rogers said in.-Washing ton the matter will be • handled through Hartwell Davis, the U.S. district attorney at Montgomery. The U.S. District Court in Ala bama will be asked to issue the order. The spokesman noted that if the court order is issued and is not obeyed, a contempt situation will be presented. Six vote registrars, protesting what they called an invasion of their rights as judicial officers, declined to talk about the func tions of their office when called as witnesses at the outset of the hearing Monday. Five of them re fused even to testify under oath. Alabama Atty. Gen. John Pat erson, who directed the massive Big car bills cramping your social life? ' GO RAMBLER = Feat S 9 and Save °I . 6 . ' "AA , . kr , • Now for '1 per gallon, to - $214 on turn and • individu he Soviet's top policeman with graced former leaders it calls the antiparty group. The opinion was widespread that he was being kicked down stairs. One argument in support of this was the fact that, as "top cop," he could go nn higher in his chosen *field. But this opin ion was not unanimous. A dispatch' from Moscow said various observers in the Soviet capital believed the former chief of state security is perhaps head ed for an-even more important job, though there was nothing in the announcement to pinpoint it. The announcement said Serov was being relieved "in connection with his transfer to other duties." Contrary to normal procedure, it did not name his successor. One theory of the latest Krem lin shuffle was that Serov may have run into the peril that dogs all Soviet' police chiefs when they become too strong for their masters' peace of mind. Serov's job gave him minis terial rank and control of a pow erful arm of the Soviet state. He has always been regarded as "Khrushchev's boy." resistance, accepted the commis sion challenge. "If they are going to attempt to try our public officials," he said, "they ought to do it in a court of law, and we will take advantage of every means we have available to represent our judicial officers and protect them from invasions by the federal government and legislative and executive branch es of the government." State Plans AU Out Fight On Juvenile Delinquency HARRISBURG (1P)--A $27 mil lion program to combat juvenile delinquency in Pennsylvania was outlined by Welfare Secretary Harry Shapiro yesterday. "If adopted by the 1959 Legis lature, this program would mean state assumption of leadership for the first time to coordinate a pro gram on •juvenile delinquency," Shapiro declared. The program would be aimed at prevention and treatment of juv enile delinquency. "The problem of juvenile de- I linquency can no longer be treat ed as a local problem," Shapiro (contended. :$11.*:,-.% , /, • n more miles cost, too—up Is. Easiest to :onalized Comfort: seats. Go Rambler! UR NEARBY RAMBLER DEALER THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE, PENNSYLVANIA Navy Plane Crash Lands, Killing Six NORFOLK, Va. (t-1 3 )—A Navy tanker plane attempting an emergency landing smashed two houses yesterday. Its four-man crew and two babies in - one of the homes per ished in the wash of flames from the fuel filled tanker. Two other persons suffered burns and shock. One of these is Mrs. Joseph E. Tondora, mother of the two ba bies. Also burned was Charles She poard Jr., driver of a potato-laden trailer-truck struck by the plane as it bounced across the 8900 block of Granby street, in a resi dential' area. No one was at home in the other residence. . A spokesman said preliminary investigation indicated the pilot tried to , reach a swamp a short distance behind the two houses. Crewmen killed were identified by the Navy as Lt. Cmdr. George Wilson, 38, the pilot. Norfolk; Ens. Fred M. Clancy 111, 20, copilot, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Clan cy Jr., Kissimmee, Fla.; Airman Patrick F. Toomey, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Toomey, Durham, N.O , and Aviation Me chanic 3.0 John E. Delaney, 20, son of Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Delaney, Chelsea, Mass. Industry's Spending Shows Slow Rise WASHINGTON (EP)—lndustry's spending on new plants and equip nent has hit bottom and turned upward. But this important busi ness barometer is rising more slowly than other major indi cators. Plans for business expansion and modernization' outlays, on the basis of reports by corporations, call for a spending rate of about 30 billion dollars annually this quarter and 30% billion dollars in the first quarter of 1959. The figures were announced yesterday by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commerce Department on The basis of reports from corporations. Industry's outlay for factories, machinery and equipment is re garded by economists as an es pecially significant factor in gen erating jobs, production and build ing activity. Walker's Talk Published Parts of the address President Eric A. Walker delivered at the dedication of the Engineering Cen ter and Research Park of Na tional-U.S. Radiator Corp. at Johnstown in October are being carried in the current _issue of "Product Engineering." ' New 100 Inch wheelbase RAMBLER AMERICAN $1835 • .- Suggested delivered pm it Kenosha, Wiscomm, for 2.slong sedan at left. State • and local taxes, It any, automatic trios. 2 mention and optional equipment, extra 61.1111111111MAXIIM N~( IM=l Goldfine Is Indicted On Contempt Charge WASHINGTON (/P) —Ber nard Goldfine, the big-dealing friend of Sherman Adams, was indicted yesterday on a charge of contempt of Congress. Goldfine, who protested he was being smeared when the charge first was raised in the House, had no immediate public reaction. He is to be arraigned in U.S. District Court here next Friday morning. The 'lB-count indictment was based on Goldfine's refusal to an swer questions put to him last July in a sensation-filled House investigation. This inquiry turned up, among other things, evidcn-e that he paid $3,096.56 in hotel bills and did other favors for Adams. Adams, then serving President - Eisenhower as his No. 1 aide, and Goldfine, were friends of long standing. Adams acknowledged putting in some queries to federal agencies with which Goldfine was having ge.....c.c.....z.t.,....e. w w w Your Holiday in Fashion w w .... w Fe m A fashionable gift for Mother, Aunt, or Roommate this holiday season. t04i . , , , k', - ,9 -1, ( 1 1 , t il 1 i. ., , \-I 2 . - • , sHalfslips in nylon and da , , 1 :,' 'from with lace trim are priced -4 2.95 to 4.95 . Both the P - I r j p full and the halfslips are de .?j I m signed by Las. Blu-Swan and /) rst:.& Sel-Mor. bi. 4 4. a Full-length slips of nylon, dacron, or a mixture of cotton, dacron and nylon trimmed in exquisite lace, are priced from 3.95 to 6.95. 124 E. Main ota)lll4ol2a4o92lo43ooo44l4oladMlnlart7ll2ool42ooo4llool2MiafaaDMllkat: t+++:4++++++++44÷4.44+++444-x.4.4.-:444+++++•:-:-:- The Prophet Kahlil Gibran Aunt Tuddy... Van Gogh The Best of Everything Rona Jaffe Alexandre Dumas' Dictionary of Cuisine The World of Christopher Robin the lives and times of arehya mehitabel Slightly Out of Order Eloise a 2 Christmastime Kay Thompson.;,. A complete selection of Skira art books are available The Pennsylvania Book 129 W. Beaver Ave. State College i... Daily 9 to 9 Sat. 9 to 5:30 ) Are÷444.44444-1444444.:7+14+4,44-1.+4444+444444+++44444+ difficulties, but he denied apply ing pressure. The House voted 369.8 on Aug. 13 to ask for Judicial prosecu tion. Under the indictment now voted by the grand jury, Goldfme could be fined $lOOO and sent to prison for as " much as a year if con victed. Town Crier Astounds New York Bystanders NEW YORK (W) A leather lunged town crier sounded his call above the din of Tunes Square yesterday—and his bellow startled even the blase natives. Bill Cruttenden, carrying a 300-year-old staff of office, swing ing a 200-year-old bell, raised his 52-year-old voice authoritatively above the noisy traffic. His vocal prowess, he confided to amazed bystanders, comes from always wetting the whistle. before work, with a beaker of beer, LINGERIE Jeremy Gury.... Frank Elgar Ralph E. Shikes RAGE THREE .+. ' .t Milne . 3.50 Shop
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers