et glia eae <n _ ~T See by ce | THE PAPERS MONTCLAIR, N.J. (AP)--Her heetah is being cheated, says a woman who rides about town in her Jiaguar sports car with a six- foot jungle cat beside her. Miss Marcel Hight said 'that pressure from the town commis- sion is forcing her to sell her pet cheetah, Blitz. The commission passed an ordinance recently, ban- ning "non-domestic" animals from Montclair. . Miss Hight claims that the leop- ard-like animal is domesticated. She keeps it tethered outdoors across the street from her home. At night tthe cheetah sleeps in a garage. -- Blitz has been accused of claw- ing a dog, Miss Hight-said the dog had attacked Blitz first. WISBECH, Eng. (CP) -- Colin Hales, a Methodist lay preacher, gave an address to a church in this Cambridgeshire town on the text: 'What Lack I?" After the service he found that his motor- cycle had been stolen. KEMMERER, Wyo. (AP) -- Vic Rizzi dubbed his golf shot, but still came up with a "mole in one." On the eighth hole at the Kem- merer golf course, Rizzi dribbled a ball off the tee. It bounced along | a few feet, struck 1a mole on the head and killed it. ORANGE, France (AP) -- Andre Guerrero discovered playing Ro- *meo is no fun when Juliet has a ~ shotgun. Police reported Guerrero, 29, decided to climb up to Lucienne Anastasio's window to-patch up a quarrel, but she hit him on the head with a shotgun as he reached the top of the ladder, then fired a load of buckshot into his shoulder as he fled. Doctors plucked the buckshot out of Romeo's shoulder; police arrested Juliet. High Wycombe, England (AP)-- A bus driver has been cleared of a charge that he boozed in a tav- ern one hot summer night while}. fhis passengers muttered thirstily outside. It happened along the winding road that leads from Ley, Hill to -_ High Wycombe, in Buckinham- shire. : : ' There is a bus stop at the Queen's Head tavern, and when the bus trundled to a halt there the driver quickly beat it for the building. Inside the bus, the passengers - waited and muttered. It was the custom. for the bus to make only the briefest stop. "He's gone for a drink," some- one said. The story spread. Some people even got angry, for it is an unpar- donable sin for a driver to drink while on duty. -- The driver came back soon and the bus moved off 'again --.but someone complained to the bus company, . The next day the driver was visited by a stern inspector and grilled about what happened in the Queen's Head. - The driver told him--frankly. Friday, the bus company an-" nounced the driver's story had been accepted. He was a solid chap, had been with the company for 20 |. years. And, what's more, he didn't drink. "He did go into the building," a bus company official admitted, "but it was for a legitimate rea- son." And the driver's name? He was non-alcoholic, but still anonymous. ; "Sorry," said the official, his face coloring, "he'd rather we did not tell his name. It's so embarras- sing... ." KEMPSEY, England (CP) -- Francis Rea, celebrating his 100th birthday in this Worcestshire com- munity, gave this remedy for old age: "TI started smoking at the age of eight and I haven't stopped since." _ 'TORONTO (CP) -- George Ko- meak is a 29-year-old Eskimo from '| Fort Chimo on Ungava Bay, where his people hunt+the polar bear. But the closest he ever came to one 'alive was during a visit to the Tor- onto zoo. . George was on a sight-seeing tour. His copper-tanned face broke into a 'smile when he saw the three polar bears lolling half in, half out, of the cool waiter of their pool on a hot afternoon. "T have never been so close to a bear alive," he admitted. Once he was 300 feet from a bear "when I shot him, but never this close." At the zoo he saw the brown bear, the grizzly and the Kodiak bear from Alaska for the first time. Lions, tigers, camels, even skunks, were strangers to him, although the recognized some of them from pictures he had seen. But the timber wolf was no stranger. It reminded him of one of his husky dogs. Eager Visitor George absorbed all the infor- mation he could, because when Thursday, July 16,1959 he returns home he will describe the visit in detail to his family, friends and neighbors. He has five children. He never went to school, but at 13 persuaded a white man to teach him to speak English in return for lessons in the Eskimo tongue. He observed: "You learn wonderful things when you travel from home." Last year he went to Greenland as-an interpreter, The Haileyburian Page 9 There he met the Greenland Eskimos and learned how they lived. "They have houses and jobs and schools just as you do," he said. In Greenland you can get books and papers written in Eskimo, bub we have nothing but prayer-books in syllabics." George also saw a deep-sea VeS= sel in Toronto harbor and "visited a Toronto fire hall. . electricity. ONE a fitful night's sleep in a hot, muggy bedroom? air-conditioner is the secret of cool, blissful slumber... the reason you wake refreshed and smiling? - An electric air-conditioner will blend with any type of decor . . . costs only a few cents a week to operate. You get more out of life when you get the most out of WHICH ONE ARE YOU IN THE MORNING? Is that you on the left... still tired and worn out after Or is that you on the right... a man who sleeps in air- conditioned comfort... who knows that an electric room water. sti by One Alon, To freshen a refrigerator which has not been used for some time, wash out with baking soda in warm SSE owls Aa i Si lacs ral aaah saat <7