1 Ohio Wants To Hire Highway Engineers Fired By Chandler Sun-Democrat, February 9 1956 -20 )Chandler Promises Agency To Unify Children's Program FRANKFORT, Feb. 8 (P)r Governor A. B. Chandler promised delegation of women today the state would set up an agency to coordinate Kentucky's program for delinquent and dependent children. He said the agency would be division of the Economic Security Department.
But later, Economic Security Commissioner V. E. Barnes told some of the delegation the division would not include the Youth Authority, the reception center at Lyndon near Louisville and Kentucky Village near Lexington. He explained they would remain in the Welfare Department. Chandler promised the women pending House bill, to write into law his recent transfer of the Children's Bureau from the Welfare to the Economic Security Department, would be amended to conform with a chart outlining the plan for the coordination.
Barnes later said in reply to the Ten Area Teachers To Be Honored LEXINGTON, Feb. 8 Ten Western teachers who have had years in the Kentucky. schoolroom and are still actively engaged in the profession will be among the guests of honor at the University of Kentucky's Founders Day observance Wednesday, February 22. Five of these are from McCracken County, the only county in this end of the state to have more than one teacher honored. The McCracken teachers are Mrs.
Mamie Egester, Miss Henrietta Goodwin, Mrs. Georgia Lee, Miss Annie Lester and Miss Mabel Mitchell, all of Paducah. The other West Kentuckians to be honored are: Ballard, Mrs. Maude Hook of Kevil; Caldwell, Mrs. Mamie Curry of Princeton; Christian, Mrs.
Idella Irvin of Hopkinsville; Fulton, Sister Mary Bernadette of Hickman; Graves, Miss Hattie Veal of Mayfield. Altogether, more than 100 Kentucky teachers who have taught at least 45 years and are still teaching will be honored. The university will entertain the veteran educators during the day and will recognize them at the formal program to be held at 8:15 p. m. in Memorial Coliseum.
Two UK graduates who have won wide recognition for their work in the field of educationJames W. Carnahan of Chicago and Nancy Duke Lewis of Providence, R. been named to receive Founders Day plaques at the program. Like other programs commemorating the founding of the university, this year's event will consist of musical numbers and dramatic narrative built around the Founders Day theme, "Education: the Concern of the In addition to the public school teachers to be honored at the observance, several college, university, parochial, and private school educators will be recognized during the evening. GE Plans Plant To Test Jets CINCINNATI, Feb.
8 (P) -The General Electric Co. today Announced plans to build a 20-million-dollar facility for the testing of jet engines three times as powerful as any now in production. The company announcement said the supersonic test facility, the most advanced of its type in the world, will be able to simulate conditions a large jet engine would encounter flying at 2,300 miles an hour- and half times the speed of sound--at 60,000 feet. J. S.
Parker, general manager of G.E.'s aircraft gas turbine division, said the facility also will be able to simulate the conditions an airplane engine encounters in A dive or steep climb. Few existing or planned laboratories have this capability. "As a result of the supersonic speeds of advanced aircraft, more powerful jet engines in the near future will be required to operate safely with air entering the engine at temperatures as high as 900 degress fahrenheit," said. "These high air temperatures and high speeds create many mechanical and metallurgical problems jet engine designers. This new facility will enable us to solve problems and SO deliver advanced engines on shortened time schedules." E.
W. Leech Funeral Today PRINCETON, Feb. 8 (Special) -Funeral services for Elbert Washington Leech, 78, will be held at 2:30 p. m. Thursday at Morgan Funeral Home with the Rev.
O. T. Nichols and the Rev. Norman O'Neal officiating. Mr.
Leech, Caldwell County resident, Tuesday night. He is survived by two brothers, R. D. and John Leech, and two sisters, Mrs. Ada Stallins and Mrs.
G. W. Holt, all of Princeton. Philip Crosby Is Charged With Drunk Driving TACOMA, Feb. 8 (AP)Philip Crosby, 21-year-old soldier son of actor Bing Crosby, was booked today on a charge of driving under the influence of liquor at the time of a traffic accident last night in which a pedestrian was injured.
Young Crosby posted $250 bail and was released from the Pierce County jail. the Hennings Abandons 'Bribe' Probe To Avoid 'Unseemly Tug Of War' COLUMBUS, Ohio, Feb. 8 (P)- Some Kentucky highway engineers may' end up building roads for Ohio. That possibility was disclosed Wednesday Dey Ohio's highway director, Samuel O. Linzell, who has heard reports that the Kentucky State Highway Department is being shaken up.
Kentucky changed governors and highway directors at the beginning of the year. Governor A. B. (Happy) Chandler succeeded Law- rence W. Wetherby, There have been reports that many Kentucky highway engineers would be released due to the change in administration, Linzell said.
Ohio wants at least 100 more engineers, both young graduates and experienced men, the director said. That is because the department's work load will increase this summer, due to a large construction program and an increased highway planning program. Asked about the situation in Kentucky, Linzell said: "The situation in Kentucky is confused. Some are out and some don't know if they are out. We just know there is a shakeur going on there." Linzell said some Kentucky engineers may have been fired other than political reasons, and we're going to take a man sight unseen from Kentucky." He said Ohio is interested in recruiting "the better ones" for Ohio road work.
University Of Alabama Says Mob Tried To Kill Autherine Lucy TUSCALOOSA, Feb. 8 (P) -A University of Alabama official formally reported today that a riotous mob was "trying to A Negro co-ed when she was surrounded while meeting classes there Monday. Jeff Bennett, assistant President O. C. Carmichael, said he made the report to" Governor James E.
Folsom, who is ex chairman of the university board of trustees. Folsom was not in his office to receive the report, and Bennett conferred at Montgomery with legal adviser Frank Long, executive secretary H. Finney: and press secretary Ralph Hammond. Bennett said no decisions were reached because such matters are left to the governor and school president. were screaming 'Let's kill her, and were trying to open the car doors." said Bennett.
The school official narrowly escaped serious injury when a large stone shattered the rear window of the car he was driving after Autherine Lucy and dean of women Sarah Healy had left it. "In my opinion those who were there to kill her weren't students," although students were in the crowd, said Bennett. He wouldn't try to identify the outsiders. Miss Lucy, the Negro co-ed, was barred from the campus for safety reasons by the board trustees following eight hours of uncondisturbances. She threatened the board with legal action unless she is readmitted by tomorrow morning, but the board has announced no change in its stand.
Miss Lucy's attorney was to be in Federal Court at Birmingham tomorrow on another case involving a Negro barred from enrollment, and she was not expected to try to enter classes. President Eisenhower said at a press conference in Washington that the Justice Department already is investigating the incident as it does in all cases where federal civil rights statutes may be involved. He added, however, that the U. S. Supreme Court has turned back to the Federal District Courts the enforcement of its anti-segregation decisions.
The National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People has asked federal criminal proceedings against "any and all persons acting in any manner" to prevent Miss Lucy from attending classes. The university trustees said Miss Jury Deadlocked In Case Of Jewelry Theft The trial of Billy Joe Davis, charged with stealing a tray of diamond rings from a showcast in store, identified Davis as the boy who came into the store with another colored boy last September Rudolph's Jewelry Store here, 29 and asked Rudolph to ended in a deadlock jury late companion a ring in the yesterday. Rudolph said Davis The jury reported at 3:30 p. m.
in the store twice before it was unable to agree. asked him to put one Davis, 21-year-old colored boy, in the safe for him to denied on the witness stand that later. he was ever in the jewelry store or knew anything about the theft. Paul Rudolph, owner of the Progress In Mideast Talks Is Reported WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 U.S., British and French leaders tonight reported "very satisfactory" progress in their first meeting to seek a foolproof way to prevent war in the Middle East.
Ambassadors of Britain and France met for two hours at the State Department with Deputy Undersecretary Robert Afterward, British Ambassador Sir Riger Makins told newsmen the three had had a preliminary exchange of views and the session WAS "very satisfactory." French Ambassador Maurice Couve De Murville agreed with him. No date was set for another meeting, but a State Department announcement said "further consultations will take place." Meanwhile, the House heard a string of speeches friendly to Isthe rael. floor. Some 20 congressmen took Only Reps. Byrd (D-WVa) and Winstead (D- Miss) rose to oppose demands that the United States sell arms to Israel to "offset" shipments to Egypt from the Communists.
Rep. Edna F. Kelly, (D-NY) Foreign Affairs Subcommittee chairman who also traveled through the Middle East last year, called for an immediate peace meeting among the Arab nations and Israel, plus arms and economic aid for nations willing to attend such a conference. There was no indication how long it would take the U. BritIsh and French representatives to settle on an approach Arab- problems growing out of the dispute.
House Approves (Continued From Page One) Conrad, Cornett, Davidson, Davis, Day, Farmer, Speaker Fitzpatrick, Flanery, Freeman, Greene, Grigsby, Gullette, Hahn, Hawkins, Hill, Hilton, Hinkle, Holsclaw, Clyde S. Howard, Isler, Johnson, Kubale, Lowman, Martin, McCallum, Melton, Miller, Moore, Morgan, Mullins, Newsom, Nunn, Parrish, Pollitte, Rateliffe, Ray, John B. Reed, Vernon Reed, Howard V. Reid, Reynolds, Searcy, Stith, Thomas, Thompson, Tinsley, Walsh, Wathen, Weintraub, A. W.
Wells, Lynn B. Wells, Williamson, Mrs. Wilson. Republicans (11)-Blankenship, Dunsil, Grundy, Heskamp, Heyburn, Jennings, Lambert, McKinney, Qualls, Rayburn, Wirsch. AGAINST: Democrats (5)-Hadden, Mackey, Murphy, Robert Reid Young.
Republicans (8)-Carter, Griffin, Hislope, Durham W. Howard, McPadden, Peace, Saylor, Sloan. Not recorded as voting: Democrats-Beshear, Billington, Blue, Breckenridge, Bush, Cottengim, Everett, Harris, Highland, Nunnelley, Ockerman, Tanner, Republicans--Bates, Buchanan, Embry, Gay. group's questions the chart was In error where it showed the Youth Authority would be under the proposed new division of children's services in his department. The commissioner added his department would have nothing to do with children committed by the to Kentucky Village "as criminals." The women, from various sections of the state, said they represented no organization.
They came to protest against what they called "separation of services for dependent and delinquent children." The chart was prepared by Joseph Leary, Frankfort attorney, Chandler's campaign co-chairman and adviser. Eisenhower (Continued From Page One) United States. I don't believe that it is really appropriate for me to go around asking someone to do such-and-such a thing because that implies, I suppose, tHat I think I can, put him there." No Barnstorming As an on the proper sphere of presidential activity, Eisenhower said that one of his ideas is "that he doesn't go out: storming for himself under any conditions." "And even had I stood for the presidency again, and never experienced this heart attack," he added, "I would never have gone out barnstorming myself, as I felt it was my duty to do in 1952, having accepted that nomination." Some newsmen, grasping for hints and significance in Eisenhower's remarks, thought the President might have been indicating he had made up his mind against a reelection bid-on the basis of the phrase: "Even had I stood for the presidency again." The news conference also got around to such additional topics as: CIVIL RIGHTS- -The President said that "all of us deplore" the riots at the University Alabama over the enrollment of a Negro girl. He said the Justice Department already is looking into the case but he hoped "we could avoid any interference" as long as the state will do its best to straighten the situation out. BULGANIN-As long as he and Soviet Premier Bulganin "keep up a correspondence that is not bitter in tone," the chief executive said, there is "always some faint hope that something may grow out of it." POSTAL RATES- -Eisenhower said that "I always hope that good sense will prevail" when it comes to balancing the Post Office Department's budget.
He said it seemed to him "almost that selfrespect demands a raise in postal rates." But he didn't say whether he thought a Congress, which has refused to up rates before, would do so this session. MANSURE -The chief executive said he has been receiving reports on activities of Edmund F. Mansure in connection with a U. S. government nickel plant in Cuba -activities which have been under fire in Congress.
He said any violation of law would go automatically to the Justice Department but "as far as I know, there has been nothing actionable turned up about Mr. Mansure." Mansure turned in his resignation Monday as head of the General Services Administration. Elsenhower said the resignation was for personal reasons that "had nothing to do with this NATURAL GAS- With respect to legislation passed by Congress to end direct federal regulation of natural gas producers, Eisenhower didn't say whether he would sign or veto the bill. He said he is studying it from the standpoint of preserving the rights of the states while protecting the consumer. Herbert Foster Funeral Today CAVE-IN-ROCK, Feb.
8 (Special) -Herbert Foster, 22- year-old ex died Tuesday at his mother's home here. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 2 p. m. at the CaveIn-Rock Baptist Church with the Rev. John Henshaw officiating.
Burial will be in the Cave Hill Cemetery. Young Foster died from a kidney infection. He is survived by his widow. Shella Jean Foster; his father and mother. two sisters and eight brothers.
The body is at his mother's home here. Linn Bus Hearing Set For March 5 FRANKFORT, Feb. 8- The State Department of Motor Transportation today announced a bearing will be held at the Hopkinsville Courthouse March 5 upon application of J. F. Linn, Bardwell, for lifting of restrictions on his present certificate which forbids picking up and discharging passengers in Bardwell on the ground that there are no other bus facilities through Bardwell to the Atomic Energy 'Commission and Tennessee Valley Authority plants in McCracken County.
Linn's operation--an industrial certificate limited to of employes of the two plants. Balloon Protests (Continued From Page One) from flying over Soviet territory. The U. S. government offered a note to tell the Russians about the balloon program's safety features.
It sought to enlist Soviet cooperation, asking the Russians to return any scientific instruments the balloons might have parachuted to Soviet soil. Though Secretary of State Dulles said yesterday the United States feels it has the right to send balloons anywhere around the world so long as they fly at safe heights, that point was not brought out in the American reply. WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (P) Chairman Hennings (D-Mo) of the Senate Elections subcommittee abandoned his efforts to make an immediate investigation of the $2,500 campaign contribution offered to Sen. Case (R-SD).
He said he wanted to avoid "an unseemly tug of war" with a special 'four-man committee the Senate appointed yesterday for the express purpose of looking into the offer. The money was tenedered to Case during the fight over the natural gas bill. He refused to accept it. $2,500 Offered While Hennings yielded the right of way to the special committee, he told a news conference the Elections subcommittee still intended to make a broader inquiry into any campaign contributions, or promises of contributions, made to influence the vote of senators either side of the natural gas issue. River Will Start Falling Here Saturday The river will crest here Friday and start falling the next day, the United States Weather Bureau at Cairo said Wednesday morning.
The Paducah stage at 7 a.m. was 39.8 feet, rise of .8 of a foot in 24 hours. The stream will inch upward to stages of 40.4 feet today and 40.5 feet Friday. The Friday stage will be the crest of the present mild rampage, according to the Weather Bureau. The Cumberland, a minor threat in the Eddyville-Kuttawa area for the last week, continued to fall slowly, The Cumberland crested (55.4 feet) earlier in the week.
Little damage was reported, although lowlands were inundated. CINCINNATI, 8 (P) Rain clouds hovering over the southern part of the state apparently held the answer tonight as to whether the Ohio River will reach or pass the 52-foot flood stage here. The U.S. Weather Bureau forecast some rain in the Ohio Valley but wouldn't predict how much there would be. Officials said it would take an inch or inch and half of rain up river to send the river to flood stage here.
As of late today, the river Was stationary here at 43 feet but forecasters said it would begin to rise again tomorrow and reach 44 feet by Friday morning. Rigid Farm Props (Continued From Page One) finish its work on the farm bill tomorrow. Its Saturday votes were not final. In 1954 the Eisenhower adminis- tration won congressional approval of a flexible system of price supports, gearing the level of a crop's support to demand for the commodity. During and after 'World War II a system of high rigid supports was in effect on basic commodities.
A number of Democrats have demanded a' return to the fixed support system, contending that the flexible system has brought hardship to farmers through falling prices and dwindling income. Republicans supporting Secretary of Agriculture Benson have taken the stand that the accumulation of huge government surpluses under the high support system has been an important factor in depressing prices. "Both sides agree on the principle of a soil bank. Under it farmers would curtail their planting and be rewarded by payments in cash, or in commodities drawn from the surpluses. The idea would be to cut down the supply and surplus until there was a demand that would keep agriculture on a stable plane.
Eisenhower wrote that Aiken had posed a question of great importance, and added that he was glad to comment on it. "As long as we on accumulating surpluses, thereby depressing agricultural markets more and more, it will be impossible for our farming people to share fairly in the nation's growing prosperity," Eisenhower said. "In order to have a free, prosperous agriculture, we must deal effectively with the problem of surpluses. It is principally for this purpose that we have proposed the soil bank." Mrs. Verna Linzy Funeral Today DYCUSBURG, Feb.
8-Mrs. Verna Ella Linzy, 71, of near Dycusburg, died at Marion Hospital Wednesday morning. Funeral services 'will be held at 2 p. m. Thursday at Carlisle Springs Baptist Church with the Rev.
L. J. Knoth officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery Survivors include the husband, Nathan Linzy; four daughters, Mrs. James Bright, Detroit; Mrs.
Harry Brasher, Fredonia; Mrs. Bill King, Lebanon, and Mrs. Randell Boyd, Marion; a son, Warner Linzy, Gary, a brother, Claude Dockery, Dycusburg; two step-sons, Ray and Lee Linzy, Marion; 18 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren. Former Graves Woman Accident Victim MAYFIELD, Feb. 8 (Speciai) -Mrs.
Ida Bell Nance, 66, former Graves County resident, was killed last Saturday in an auto accident at her home in Live Oak, Fla. Funeral and burial services will be held Friday at Bowling Green, Ky. Mrs. Nance was born at Sedalia and lived in Graves County for a number of years. She was teacher at Western State College in Live Oak.
The $2,500 was offered to Case by John M. Neff, a Lexington, lawyer who insisted there were no strings attached to It. Case said the offer caused him to change his mind and vote against the gas bill, a controversial piece of legislation designed to exempt natural gas producers from utility-type regulation by the Federal Power Commission. The Senate debated the bill for three weeks and then passed on a 53-38 vote Monday night. Hennings also announced late today that he was resigning from the Elections subcommittee "very shortly." His senatorial term expires at the end of the year, a and it is customary for senators to leave the subcommittee when they are engaged in a re-election campaign.
He indicated Sen. Gore (Tenn) would succeed him as chairman. To Probe Contributions Hennings said the subcommittee won't touch the Case matter "dur- ing the time the select (or special) committee is studying it." In a statement passed out at the news conference, Hennings announced "a broad inquiry into campaign contributions and other expenditures to influence the outcome of elections and legislation in But in talking to reporters later, he said the probe would be limited to contributions which might have affected the voting on the gas bill. Hennings did not mention any specific contributions to be investigated other than the one disclosed by Case. He told the newsmen he would not be sitting with the subcommittee by the time the investigation began.
There were indications from chairman Green (D-RI) of the powerful Senate Rules Committee earlier in the day that probe of the offer to Case had been sidetracked. Lucy was barred "until further notice" for her safety and that of other students and the faculty. It appeared likely that if the action is challenged the board would contend it acted under its police powers and not on the grounds of race. Overbey (Continued From Page One) davit the center is "nothing more than a juvenile jail with cells." Welfare Commissioner Charles Allphin said in an affidavit he had requested Edward Lee Jr. to resign as superintendent at Kentucky Village after examining records.
He said "the findings indicated there was inefficiency in the operation of the institution." Says Smear Threatened Allphin's affidavit continued: "Mr. Kenneth Foresman, director of Kentucky Children's Bureau, called me by telephone and threatened to smear me and my family on the front page of every newspaper in Kentucky if I followed through with the idea of Mr. Lee's resignation and further said he would do the same smear for Gov. Chandler and the governor's administration." Foresman told a reporter, who asked by telephone about the charge: "That's absurd and baseless, without foundation in fact. People that know me know that I am not that kind of an individual, that I have never resorted to threats." He added thot the charge was "manufactured." Robert B.
ammond, Ashland, was appointed temporarily to succeed Lee. D. B. Waller, former field superintendent in the child placing division, said in an affidavit "I am quite certain that most of the well-wishers of this society (the Kentucky Children's Home Society) would not wish to have delinquent children mixed in with those children who, through no fault of their own, are its wards." The society was organized to find homes for dependent children in Kentucky. Ashar Tullis, executive director of the Boys Club of Louisville, said, in an affidavit he visited the home recently and found "that approximately 40 boys were locked out of their rooms in a small corridor with absolutely nothing to do, and--certainly--no program being conducted for them although recreation rooms were available Rufus Kearns, instructional worker at the home, said that since he came to the home about seven years ago the boys there had become "rough." He said "they committed crimes, were hard to get to work, talked bad, and one boy threatened to stick a knife in my back." Mayfield United Fund Is $16,300 Short Of Goal MAYFIELD, Feb.
8 (Special) -The United Fund Appeal Drive in Mayfield is over $16,300 short of its goal, according to an announcement by chairman Albert Wilson, A total of $19,421 in cash and pledges is on hand today with the campaign goal set at $35,800. The drive ends March 1. Burley Co-Op Urges Fight Against Fag Price Bill LEXINGTON, Feb. 8 (P)- The Burley Tobacco Growers Cooperative Assn. today urged farmers to fight a bill, approved by the State Senate, to put a minimum retail price on cigarettes.
The co-op also sent telegrams opposing the bill to members of the House, which has not voted on the measure. Association Vice President John M. Berry said, "Cigarettes sell for $1.90 a carton at some stores. This bill requires that they be sold tor not less than $2.25 The measure singles out cigarettes. It discriminates against our own product." "We have plenty of proof that people stop smoking when cigarettes cost more," added W.
L. Staton, co-op executive secretary. Mayfield Student Gets Scholarship MURRAY, Feb. 8-Mayfield senior Jane Taylor has been awarded a $100 scholarship by the First District Parent-Teachers Association when a designated recipient did not fulfill requirements. Mrs.
Taylor was selected in the fall. The scholarship available for her when a became recipient returned the grant when she did not teach in Kentucky her first year after graduation. Kentucky teaching is a condition of the award. The new recipient is a member of Kappa Delta Pi. education honorary, the Association for Childhood Education, and Alpha Sigma Alpha sorority.
She has held a teaching position in the city schools of her home town, Mayfield. MARKETS Grain CHICAGO, Feb. 8 (P)- High Low Close Wheat Mar. May Jly. Sep.
Dec. Corn Mar. May Jly. Sep. Dec.
Oats Mar. May Jly. Sep. Dec. Rye Mar.
May Jly. Sep. Soybeans Mar. May Jly. Sep.
Nov. Lard Mar. May Jly. Sep. 11.95 11.80 11.85 12.32 12.17 12.25 12.65 12.55 12.60 13.00 12.95 12.95 2.14⅝ 2.13% 2.14% 2.09¾ 2.08¼ 2.09⅝ 1.97⅛ 1.96% 1.96⅞ 1.99⅛ 1.98½ 1.98⅞ 2.03¼ 2.02¾ 2.03⅛ 1.30¼ 1.29½ 1.29⅝ 1.34⅛ 1.331 1:33 1.37% 1.37¼ 1.37¼ 1.37⅜ 1.36% 1.36⅞ 1.34½ 1.33¾ 1.33¾ .63 63 63 .64 .67 1.22½ 1.21 1.22% 1.21⅝ 1.20¼ 1.21¼ 1.18¾ 1.17¼ 1.18½ 1.19½ 1.18½ 1.19½ 2.50¾ 2.49½ 2.49½ 2.54 2.52¾ 2.53 2.54¾ 2.53¾ 2.54¼ 2.41¾ 2.40¼ 2.41¼ 2.37¼ 2.35½ 2.37 Poultry CHICAGO, Feb.
8 -USDALive poultry weaker on hens, steady on balance: receipts in coops 506 (Tuesday 580 coops, 907 fob paying prices unchanged to 1 lower; heavy hens 23-27; light hens broilers or fryers 23-24; old roosters 14.5- 15.5; caponettes under lb. 24- 25, over lb. 28-30. CINCINNATI, Feb. 8 (P) -Eggs, fob Cincinnati (cases included), Hospital Notes Admitted to Western Baptist: Miss Phyllis D.
Shoe, 1618 Park Fred Kaler, Symsonia; Phillip Wayne Hunter, 403 Oaks Road; Mrs. Alice Bradley Allen, Bandana; Mrs. Johnnie Bell Shankee, 2701 Ohio; E. B. Hughes, Hickory; Mrs.
Arvil Clifton Peck, Elmwood Court: Joe Marshall Rogers, Paducah Rt. Mrs. Teana L. Bone, Bardwell; Miss Dorothy Marie Hunter, Cunningham; Mrs. Mayme Jones, 1404 Mayfield Road; David Willett, Metropolis, Don Willett, Metropolis, Dan Willett, Metropolis, James Thompson, Paducah Rt.
Frank Beckenbaugh, 3000 Washington. Dismissed from Western Baptist: Mrs. Donald McKee' and infant, 2907 Jackson; Mrs. Mary Lou Smith, Paducah Rt. John Cathey, 2713 Clay; Phillip King, 1226 S.
6th; Mrs. Margaret Steinbeck, 923 Jefferson; Mrs. Irene Ramsey, Elmwood Court: Mrs. Mary Miller, Wickliffe; C. F.
Sullinger, 1200 Salem: James Edward Griffing, 2300 Madison; Mrs. June Musgove, 2911 Cornell: Miss Della Lane Smith, 228 S. 17th; Mrs. Viola Kelly, Golconda, Mrs. Mary Turner, La Center; Mrs.
Judy Borden, Elmwood Court: Mrs. Louise Moorman, Metropolis, Frankie Scott Crain, Metropolis, Mrs. Mayme Jones, 1404 Old Mayfield Road. Admitted to Riverside: Mrs. Rex McDowell, 2901 Jefferson; Mrs.
Jim Brunston, Wickliffe: Floyd Lynn, Metropolis, Mrs. Blanche Gough, La Center; G. W. Yates, Marion; Miss Alma Robinson, Paducah; Gregory Washam, Calvert City; Mrs. John Bechtold, Paducah Rt.
Mrs. Harry Short, Karnak, Ill. Dismissed from Riverside: Mrs. Jesse Brayboy and infant, Goodman Drive: Mrs. Lawrence Stanton and infant, Metropolis, Edwin Wurth, 3016 Georgia; Mrs.
Lloyd aBntel, Metropolis, Mrs. Rodney Butler, 631 N. 4th: Melvin Hobbs, Paducah Rt. E. P.
Johnson, '417 Tennessee; Coy Jones, 1110 Madison; Mrs. Coy Jones, 1110 Madison; Mrs. Ann McGuire, Symsonia; Mrs. T. A.
McKenzie, River Oaks; Billy Ross, Olivet Church Road; Mrs. James Ryan, 633 Shelby; Clarence Winthurst, Metropolis, Miss June Townsend, 1143 Jefferson; Miss Margaret Vessels, Paducah Rt. 3. Admitted to Illinois Central: Marvin Aston, 1902 Harrison; F. C.
Callender, Durant, G. M. Allen, 1134 Caldwell; Jerry Langston, 1105 Nelson; J. W. Churchwell, 2105 Clark; May Hampton, 1210 Ohio.
Dismissed from Illinois Central. Kenneth Allen, 2027 Park E. Green, 142 Concord; J. Trainor, 914 Broadway; Quentin Powell, Metropolis, D. H.
Hoffner, Dongola, Ill. consumer grades, U. S. A large white 43-45; brown and mixed 43- 45; A medium white 41-43; brown and mixed 41-43; wholesale prices, extras, minimum 60 per cent A quality, large white 40-41; large brown 40-41; medium white 38-39; brown 38-39; current receipts (cases exchanged) 34-36; net prices paid for eggs, delivered candled and graded, including U. S.
grades (cases exchanged), A large white 36-39; brown 36-39: A medium white 34-37; A medium brown 34- 37: checks 28-30; large 34-37. Poultry, prices at farms, Cincinnati area, No. 1 quality fryers, lb. 20-21: hens, over 5 lb. 23- 25; 5 lb.
and under 18-19; light type 15-17; old roosters 9-12. Butter, wholesale 66. Potatoes 3.25-5.00. Livestock show his safe. had been and had ring away pick up While Rudolph and the other colored boy were in the back of the store, Davis slid back the door of the display, case and reached around inside, said Rudolph.
Hearing the noise, Rudolph shouted, and the boy ran out the door. Rudolph called the police and within 15 Patrolman Louis Sumner arrested Davis on Harrison St. between 3rd and 4th. The rings, 12 of them, were never recovered. Brought back to the store, he was dentified by Rudolph.
Two bystanders said he was dressed exactly like a colored boy they saw running from the store, although they hadn't seen his face. Davis was the only defense, witness. His defense was denial of the charge. The jury got the case about 1 11 a. m.
It had not reached a verdict at noon, when 1 court was recessed for lunch. In the only other case heard in the morning se sion, Thomas Helmantoler pleaded guilty to two charges of cold checking. On recommendation of Commonwealth's Attorney Roy Vance he was sentenced to 15 days in Jail on each charge. New Baptist Church Formed In Princeton PRINCETON, Feb. 8 (Special) new church, to be known as Southside Baptist Church, has been organized here with 82 members.
The church grew out of Nichols St. Mission organized two years ago by the Second Baptist Church and later taken over by the First Baptist. Rev. H. G.
M. Hatler, pastor of the First Baptist Church. has been conducting services at the mission. Baptist The pastor of another Princeton church has resigned to accept the pastorate of Victory Baptist Church in Providence. He is the Rev.
Irvine L. Parrett, for two years pastor of the Northside Baptist Church here. He will move to Providence the first of March. His final sermon here will be Sunday night, Feb. 26.
Gardner (Continued From Page One) Gardner said he didn't think the report would be made public because of its highly classified nature. It was disclosed today by Sen. McClellan (D-Ark) that his Senate Investigations subcommittee staff has questioned Gardner about a "possible conflict of interest case." But McClellan said this had no relationship, as far as. he knew, to the research chief's resignation "There 18 no conflict of Gardner himself said, and the subcommittee's inquiry "in no way affected my decision to resign." A reporter asked him whether he was connected with Dan Kimball, former secretary of navy and now an official of Aerojet which holds government contracts. "I used to work for him," Gardner said, adding that he had no connection with Kimball now.
I NATIONAL STOCKYARDS, Feb. 8 (P) -Hogs mixed 180-230 lb. 12.50-13.25; mostly 12.75 up; several hundred head mostly No. 1 and 2 around 195-225 lb. 13.50; 230-270 lb.
11.50-13.00; some mostly 1 and 2 around 230 to 13.25: 270-340 lb. mostly No. 3 grade 11.00-75: 140-170 lb. 11.00- 12.50; 110-140 lb. 10.00-11.25; sows 400 lb.
down 0.50-11.00; heavier sows 9.50-10.25; few 10.50; boars over 250 lb. 6.50-7.50; lighter weights to 8.50. Cattle calves 600; scattering good and choice steers 15.50- 17.75; load utility grade 12.25-75: load fleshy two-way 1,000 lb. steers 16.75 to feeders; load good around 950 lb. 15.75; sizeable sprinkling good and choice heifers and mixed yearlings 16.00-18.50; short load choice mixed 19.00; utility anl commercial cows mainly 11.00- 12.50; individuals up to 13.00; canners and cutters 8.00-10.50; utility and commercial bulls 12.50-14.50; good and choice vealers 23.00- 29.00; lower grades mainly 14.00- 33.00 very sparingly.
22.00; prime par individuals up to Sheep 800; few sales choice to prime wooled lambs strong at 19.50-20.00 with good and choice 19.00. Plane Crew Is Rescued From Jungle CARACAS, Venezuela, Feb. 8 (AP) -Rescue came speedily today for the crew of a long-range U. S. Navy patrol bomber downed in a jungle clearing of Venezuela while heading for rescue operations of their own in the Antarctic.
All eignt aboard were reported well. Maj. Haddon Johnson, U. S. Air Force mission officer, said three men already have been removed by helicopter to Pedernales, near the Boca De La Sierpe (serpent's mouth), and thence to port of Spain, Trinidad, and the others will be flown out tomorrow.
Johnson said the plane, a Neptune P2V. WAS badly damaged by the crash landing in a clearing on the Orinoco River delta 25 miles northeast of Boca De Uracoa and that only the crew's cabin seemed intact. A U.S. Air Force helicopter from the Ramey base near San Juan, Puerto Rico, was assigned to the rescue mission. An Air Force Globemaster commanded by Col.
H. G. Thorne commander of the base at Palm Beach, winged to Puerto Rico to pick up the helicopter and fly it to Trinidad. Johnson praised the cooperation of the Venezuelan air force, which waived all restrictions on the movement of planes and helped in the search for the Neptune. First reports from the scene said the Neptune did not appear seriously damaged.
R. L. Butler Rites Thursday MAYFIELD, Feb. 8 (Special) -Robert L. Butler, 68-yearold Water Valley resident, died Tuesday at 7:30 p.
m. at his home. Funeral services will be held Friday at 2 p. m. the Water Valley Methodist Church with the Rev.
Ed Taylor officiating. Burial will be in the Bethlehem Cemetery in Pilot Oak. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Nina Butler; six stepdaughters, Mrs. George H.
Adams and Mrs. R. B. Wade, both of Water Valley, Mrs. Raymond Lawrence and Mrs.
Noel Goodman, both of St. Louis, 5, Mrs. Roy Hart, East St. Louis, and Mrs. Marion Williams of Detroit: one step-son, James Franklin Hart, Detroit; four sisters, Mrs.
Sod Holland. Melber, Mrs. Jim Gargus, Wingo, Ira Puckett, Detroit, and Mrs. Carl Maxwell, St. Louis; one brother, Jesse Butler, Water Valley..