Loading...
Page 10 This is Florida's Big Story (PBP) 9-22-57)-.�'A�� — ... �-A ���.►ice era:v!�lwa.�,arw*T:.,}�IF��.T•^;h^�R.�fp.�',2k %�+a�ev uyr.�le.:e.,. 10-1100M ELEMENTARY 8CI100L—A two -wing, 16 -room Me- mentary school, to be built on village of North Palm Beach land dnnaled to the Palm Beach County Board of Education by North Palm Reach Properties, Inc., Is pictured above. The ten -aero tract has an assessed value of $96,000. The school, which will PALM BEACH POST -TIMES, Sun.. Sept. 22, 1957 Pmp 27-g M �v.nnAlV�-,I 1 •, '^-^^'-,ww%`..wll� l'.. e e,l �' 1 `^tom �•�r• �, r e ` ► w�'. t' take care of students In the entire arra surrounding it, will be built at ■ cost of $294,000. Four rooms will be in each of the two stories in each wing. The building at the right will house ad• ministrative offices and a combination cafeteria-auditortum, Lk } Black•$ ed Pea Group] Pheasant And Bantam Seeks New Members The Old World Really Needs Produce `Phantam' SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT—Before the sewage from North treatment plant, one of the finest of Its kind In the nation. No TAYLOR, Tex (UP) — Lovers' NEW TROY, Mich, (UP) — Palm Reach Village is ever discharged it goes through a com- septic Lanka are permitted within the Village, and each lateral of the black-eyed pea, a snuthernA Among the many birds on Charles plete sewer treatment process in the million dollar plant pictured sewer line is already installed as tar as the lot tine of each dish considered by some a dell-' ` Good Royal .Matchmaker above. All homesites In the Village are serviced by the sewage homesite, racy, can relax. Tirhy's farm is a "phantom," a -- -- -- --- -- Elmore R. Torn, Acting press crossbreed of a golden pheasant LONDON (UP)—What Europe His brother, 23 -year-old Prince and a bantam chicken. �. dent of the National Black•Eyedineeds is a good royal match -I Albert and England's 22 -year-old Far East Spurs New Oriental Dome Decor Man Sees Sister Pea Association, Inc., said he has The "phonism" is easy to raise. Abandoned fans to unincor orate maker. Duke of Kent share that unmar- P P but since it is a hybrid 1t will not the association and convert it Into The court cupid would have one rigid state. After 44 Years a society, (major problem on his hands— Even adding Norway's Crown lay eggs and reproduce, salol By VIVIAN BROWN Instead, Torn has again opened1flnding eligibles for the princess- Prince Olav, a 54 -year-old wid- Tichy, a master cabinetmaker who IM Newsteatures Writer the rolls to new members on the es, who outnumber the eligible ower who might he expected to raises fowl as a hobby. When in doubt as to how to DALLAS, Tex. (UP)— An R2- basis of what he calls a bargainPrinc•es. marry again, that makes only furnish a room or add accessories s ~'' Ile said his next attempt at to It on a small budget, consider �,_ _ ' " year-old Dallas man has finally in an era of inflation — one cent, A century ago, King Leopold oflfour eligible males in the ranks " ° , found his sister after 44 years. o[ reigning royalty. And there are crossbreeding will involve a golden the Oriental motif. It offers man k �. .. for lifetime membership. Belgium gained a reputation as Y A �• s. John Baston and his family came Long on members and short on Europe's royal malchmnker for no fewer than 11 princesses of Pheasant and a chicken of normal possibilities to secure quiet ele ".w pr size. to Dallas by covered wagon when money, Torn abandoned plans to the tray he paired off many a�reigning royal families yet to be Bance in decorating without strain- ._ Baston was 20, from Somerset, Ky, dissolve the association's corporate prince and princess, including Paired off. "That probably will work out all ing the exchequer. , �'� , "It was a long walk," the agile, status when he learned such anjseveral of Queen Victoria's chll- This Predominance of princess -,right, but there again I doubt If Far Eastern motifs have re _ quick -thinking man remarked.lact would call for the consent oil es, however, is only one of the the hybrid will Jay eggs," he said* dren. mained pretty much the same l "But I had a shotgun and I hunted,an estimated 1,000 members in 42 In that era of royal romance Problems that w o u 1 d face a said. through the ages in America — all along the way. There wasn't a'states. Leopold even had a special cor- would-be royal matchmaker. paradoxically, since manufacturers „ a bridge across any river along the The assnelation's primary pur- ner of his palace garden lighted For one thing, royal state visits without Any current serious suitor have jazzed up just about every " `1 way, except for the Arkansas. We softly for lovers among the cou- are fewer than in the days of old. mentioned, royal or commoner. other period and style, including crossed the rest of them on ferries Hepplewhite And Chippendale which custom to and encourage a spendThe only solid rumor of a royal have been treated i s aghetwlike or forded them in our wagons." eating of back -eyed peas on New y palace. ally keep well within their nation- romance in Europe this year was es P' It took 51 days to make the metal embellishments and reclassi- ;, * journey in those days. After acou- Year's Day pushed by Torn, the P1Buth those invited so of l.eo their al circles and seldomgottogether.. between a Princess and a common- - courting days In his P 9rc, } s » : Im j Y - royal matchmaking are long Secondly, matches nowadays arc ler. Sweden's 23 -year-old Princess fled "modern." For some reason ple of years part of the family COLD CASH Margaretha was reported deeply in the trend setters have hesitated to moved on to what was then called gone, and even today's occupant often only half•royal, with a mem- tamper with Oriental design, and Oklahoma Territory. SAGINAW, Mich. 0M — The of Leopold's own throne — King her of this royal family or that'iove with Landon advertising man recently have discovered that lah father and a friend started Michigan Rural Letter Carriers Badouin of Belgium—is a bathe- marrying a high-born commoner. Rubin Douglas -Home, But Mar - up My fat there; called it Blair, Assn. says one of its pet gripes lor. For instance, there has been rue garetha'a family said "wait." Americans can take their furniture „ concerns farmers who put pennies At 27, bespectacled Badouln mor after rumor that Europe's Britain's Princess Alexandria, straight. The result has been that Baston said. designers have been given freer Boston was a cowboy Around in rural mail boxes to pay for leads the very short list of high- most publicized princess, Marga- Zl, also )s on the eligible list, as is Ma - reign to pour out their creative stamps. The carriers say that dur- ranking royalty in Europe who ret of Britain, had her eye on aiher widowed mother, Princess Ma - Dallas for years and in 1897 de- ing the winter they nearly freeze ere of marrying age—if 21 is con- husband from outside the royal rina, the Duchess of Kent, whose talents instead of being hamstrung livered the Star Route mail three their fingers scooping In coins froz- sidered that age. Badoufn is the lineage. name has been liked with that by the manufacturersdays a week on horseback. For en to metal bottoms of the boxes. only bachelor reigning monarch. But Margaret turned 27 Aug, 21, of Norway's Olay. Oriental design takes to bed- reasons of health his doctor ad - rooms these days. There are ac- ORIENTAL BEDROOM, Contemporary and Oriental furnishings vised him to move to a drier ell- cessories such as Japanese Shoji combine for a charming effect. The decorative screen behind mate. screens and nests of end tables the bed gives the room a spacious appearance. "How about Oklahoma?" Baston that double as handsome snack by other Oriental styles. Korean involves using a wall screen or asked. The doctor told him he tables, good looking at any price. "had never heard of water more "It's i f chests were brought back to wallpaper in a simple Oriental It S so wonderful for the childrenwd Grass cloth is used on the walls America by many service men, and motif as a charming background than a foot deep up there, even • • • and Chinese lamps are charming during a flood " so Baston headed as they have been for decades, those are handsome in the t over- for bed. It may stretch clear for the Sooner state. f can home when they do not over- across the wall behind the bed for I'm only minutes away trom my work at whether the bases are old ginger During that time his father re - jars or priceless Ming vases. serer other furnishings. They a scheme le effect.. p, serve attractively as a focal paint A scheme of that sort offers All Ynarried and_ia .1910 his half-�j,ter These Eastern furnishings usual- Gertrude was born. He saw h be used Ina bedroom where other decorator. It can cover up a in A room, such as a foyer, or may sorts of possibilities to the home Pratt ,� �� Iv are compatible with almost for the last time in 1913 when she an hItn'ey. every style and period when used was three years old. % so. a•. W)AD as accessories. Korean furnishings furnishings do not challenge their cracked wall, give a room the Baston moved to North Dakota dominance. pearance of being much largerer are a little more difficult to ince where he began 31 years of farm - American contemporary a n d than it is and substitute for other grate Into contemporary rooms, as Ing, ranching and business. Oriental styles harmonize well. wall art. The effect will be lovely a. these are likely to be massive One interesting bedrotreatment no matter what the reason is for "I tried to locate her during all rW without the delicate beauty offered om those years, but I just couldn't pin .n ` ^g'' allalal­that gives a lush effect to a room using it. s • } % ' . i, v her down," he said. ' x Casual Livin Seen NOT YOU, HER as I retired in ]94R. Sold r11. Corn Ear Worm Has out just like you sell a shotgun. Tou h On Tailors TOLEDO, Ohio (M— A judge lock, stock and barrel, and headed �+ cleared Raymond Kopaniasz of in- Weakness For Yellow back to Texas." PEORIA, Ill (UP) — The "Cas- sulting a policeman in a bar after He again settled in Dallas. On x M ualness" of modern Il ing may hearingthis explanation: RIVERSIDE, Calif. (UP) — The run many a tailor out of business, a visit to his native Kentucky', Bas - "My wife was talkin on the corn ear worm, one o[ the most .. retired tailor Richard B. Bradley g serious agricultural pests, may ton barely missed seeing his sis- phone, trying to get me to c•ome� observed today. home for supper. I asked her Iflsoon be controlled because of its ter. She had left town before he Bradley, widely known as theshe was trying to bribe me, and weakness for the color yellow. arrived. He kept looking and final- ' inal- »�•• tailor who loved to talk because This pest to sweet and field corn ly in August he located her through of his popularity as a public speak- just then a saw the bartender likes all bright colors, but of nine the town his father had started, +- ,66 the n cigars. 'h handing c some a s. 1 e , g P g r'o I colored cloths tested it Blair Okla. er, quit his 55 -year career here cop thought I was talkingabout variously c o ed „ was most aerial to the yellow. I had been 1n town a couple o[ Aug. 1, shortly after his 78th birth- him."P day. Knowing this weakness, research- minutes when I met a nephew who ars may be able to develop a trap told me that Gertrude was in Tur- Women are largely responsible p P key, "`_ ... .. ��,.;..- ..�._s,---•-.. , „"'-r t or a bait for killing the corn ear Tex. I dropped everything ... -. for the "casualness," Bradley said. GOOD RISKS,.- -•< �"" a lea worm or at least for luring it awn and started looking for her."" sr k They no longer Insist on males HARTFORD. Conn. IRI —World Y# : - Rp�1,g i ot► being properly attired In public. War II and Korean veterans buy- from its prey. Finally they met, for the second and men have progressed beyond ing homes under the GI bill have At present hand -applied DDT Hine in their lives, in Blair. Ger- , 1 controls the pest, but it is too ex- trude had become Mrs. Gertrude , the stage of shedding coats and scored A near perfect credit ret- ' Every - neckties even in the mast fashion• nrd, says the Hartford Veterans Pensive to be used extensively. Crawford o[ Somerset, Ky. Every->, body's happy and Boston said he'll x able places, he explained. Administration. With 72,921 GI � "It's no longer unusual to see homes In Connecticut guaranteed Almost half of the 21700,000 tour- keep her visiting with him in Dal, men dining out In Bermuda shorts by the VA, only y car. 189 have become Ists who traveled to Spain last las as long as she'll stay. ang sports sm d eye -shocking onvernent lnss' ". year arrived b . • _ - _ = - _-- viatrix Runs. • WEHAVE FURNISHED many of the fine homes i IN NORTH PALM BEACH and vicinity .. . • WE INVITE YOUR VISIT to our store for the furnishings y o u will need for your new home! Riviera • "Quality Furniture At Moderate Prices" 1532 BROADWAY — RIVIERA BEACH -- VI 4-4345 OPEN TUESDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS 'TIL 9 P,M, CLOSED SATURDAY NOON Nursery School DALLAS, Tex. (UP) — The change from a flight instructor to the operator of a nursery school is a big one, but Mrs. Virginia Holmes finds the combined nursery and dancing school just as exciting. Mrs. Holmes, who once taught Army pilots at the San Marcos, ,Tex., base how to cope with in- strument flying, concocted a new ;career for herself while flying :over Dallas one day. She had taught dancing at Long Beach, Calif., after studying hill eral arts at UCLA, and was think- 'ling hink- ]ing of starting a dancing school In Dallas. ,The 29 -year-old slender brunette. her two children and husband had just moved to a new housing de- ,velopment In South Dallas. How- ever, commercial enterprises had not quite caught up with the in- creased population. Mrs. Holmes took to the air to I o just how many houses lay be +ren her new home and the clos 1 dancing school, near the center, of town. She noticed scores of homes, and also saw that her own neighborhood hada woodsy, spa- cious atmosphere. One idea led to another and he - fore long she found herself on the business end of a new combined nursery -dancing school in a 10. acre wooded plot. The nursery school angle got into the act for the convenience of her five-year-old daughter, Caro lyn, the youngest child. It has blossomed into a schnol staffed by four teachers and housed In a rambling farmhouse. She calls It the Singing Hills Pre School and Dance Studio, Mrs, Holmes had been teaching flying and selling airplanes. "This school is my main object- ive now," she said. "But I'll never) gel far away from flying." Husband Jack, a former Navy jet pilot, shares her enthusiasm fnr aria] endeavors. He still flier as a hobby, but his regular job is an administrative engineer for an I aircraft company, Mr. 7161ino lmtung for worlr just a sisal pimvm t drive from horse The ")lase of North Palm Beach, from oar acandpr>bnt, is tFk ideal omnya City. With a family to raise, we were particularly anxious that the children be giarm the advantages of good schools, cafe strocAs aril erxnmuniity environment. As for myself, I waa;W to be stogie lo my woeh, I had my fill of 6y distance consmogibrig, The v&W d North Palos $each has more than mPA the &bore regwireumts Of particular interest is the new village ball, the t'twwkm water and sewage plants. "Tile wide, safe, landscaped oxceia and sidewalks that are not only here, but paid for. Police, fire and sanitation departments are in Rill operation. The new school to be built this fall incorporates the most advanced ideas in design and construction. Strict zoning regufatioas attwpo perpetual Protection of our investment. If you're piarm g ort my* to Florida, ym T be way ahead if yin decile to lige in the vXVc of (Borth Palm Ben& you get M 0 R E for your Money in the villages 01 ORTH ALM EACH U.B. HIGHWAY #1 • NORTH PALM 9EACH9 FLORIDA • PHONE Victor 4-3411