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The Evening Review from East Liverpool, Ohio • Page 1

Location:
East Liverpool, Ohio
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Page:
1
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WEATHER Showers and turning cooler tonight; Sunday, showers and cooler. Dam 8 Friday 6 p. m. 82, Friday midnight 69, 6 m. 63, today noon 80.

High 84, low 62. EAST LIVERPOOL REVIEW HOME EDITION Complete News Coverage of Wellsville, Midland, Chester and Newell VOL. 75 NO. 161 The AssociaUd Press, United Press, lAtenuitional News, Brush-Moore State Serrlce EAST LIVERPOOL, OHIO, SATLRDAY, MAY 1, 1954 18 PAGES 5 CENTS Roy Moore Dies At His Canton Home Roy D. Moore, president and publisher of the East Liverpool Review and Brush-Moore Newspapers, and nationally prominent in newspaper circles, died today at 7 a.

m. his home on East Drive, Congress Lake, Canton. He was 66. Members of the immediate family were at the bedside as death brought to a close a distinguished career that began 46 years ago. Funeral services will be held Monday at 3 p.

m. in the Congress Lake home, with the Rev. George Parkin.son of the Canton First Presbyterian Church officiating. The body will be taken from the Arnold Funeral Home to the residence Sunday, where, friends may call from 2 to 4 p. m.

and 7 to 9 p. m. Burial will be in North Lawn Cemetery, Canton. Other newspapers under Mr. direction as president of Brush-Moore are The Canton Re- piository.

The Steubenville Herald- Star, The East Liverpool Review, The Salem News, The Marion Star, The Portsmouth Times and The Salisbury (Md.) Times. Mr. Moore had been under treatment for a chronic heart ailment for seven years. Dr. Roy Scott of Cleveland first made a diagnosis of his weakened heart condition at Hanna House of Lakeside Hospital in Cleveland in 1947.

Since that time, he has been un- der the care of Dr. R. T. Warburton of North Canton, who three years ago placed Mr. business and civic activities on a restricted basis.

Visits to his office in the Repository building were curtailed and much of his business was conducted from his home. His condition took a turn for the worse April 15 and he grew stead -1 ily weaker. His first warning of a heart con- i dition came in April, 1936, when 20 Killed, 130 Hurt 111 Greek Quake More Than 25,000 3Iade Homeless As Towns Are Cruinpled City, County Electors Show Little Interest In Primary Tnesday ROY D. MOORE ATHENS, Greece officials reported today the earthquakes which struck central Greece yesterday and crumbled whole towms killed at least 20 persons and injured 130. More than 25,000 were made homeless.

Earlier official reports had the death toll as high as 150. Light tremors continued throughout the day after the violent initial i shock lasting 20 seconds. The Athens Observatory reported 38 disturbances, three of them violent. King Paul and Crowm Prince Constantine cut short an inspection of army units in 'Thrace to By to Volos in the Gulf of Pegasai, where the earthquake destroyed the town hall and split open a section of the quay. From Volos, the king and prince will inspect the worst hit' areas.

'The quake disaster was the i since the shocks that devastated the Greek Ionian islands last August, killing up to l.WO piTsons and destroying the homes of says an attempt may soon I come to shorten the public probe stricken area stretched from the East Coast into ffirioic the Pindus Mountains, where shat- Glides and top mi i ary tered villages could be reached Mundt, chairman of the Senate only over donkey trails, De-True-, Investigations subcommittee dur- tion appeared to center around ing the televised inquiry, said last Granitsa, 135 miles northwest of night the hour may shortly be at Athens, with the towns of Sofad- hand for efforts to narrow the is- hes, Farsala, Karditsa and Domo- sues that have now been pitted be- kos hardest hit. fore the senators in seven days of Thousands of persons slept in under-oath hearings without signs open because they of let-up. had no home to return to and Secretary of the Army Stevens, others because they were afraid who first took the witness stand to go back to the tc-wns they had the opening day, April 22, was still fled. there when the group recessed for 'The government sped supplies the weekend yesterday, although and medicine to the earthquake several others have testified for interludes. Stevens was Shortening Of Ariny Quiz Looms MiimU Savs Issues In Dispute Mav Be Narrowed WASHINGTON LfV-Sen.

Mundt Vote Board Estimates Low Result victims and dispatched troops to briefer he suffered an attack from whichAmerican Newspaper Publish-' again addressed the publishers. repair communication lines. A re- listed for another appearance on- he fully recuperated at his Association in New York last! In partnership with the late Louis holiday which had closed day. A second attack occurred at Louis- 1 Associ 1 Salem and William communication and govern-' as the hearmgs closed yester- CiUe in September. 1936.

week, but his cond.Uon would not offices hindered the relief Ray H. Jenkins, special Moore built and directed the group, measures. committee conyuR Ste- yAlOlll 1 OOl U.S., Russia Go Into Huddle Among his most recent pleasurable functions was his participa- as chairman of the governing newspapers and radio stations! Many telephone and telegraph vens tion, together with Brush-Moore board of the Bureau of Advertising comprising the Brush-Moore were down, delaying ddtails wher associates, in a retirement party.publishers’ group, Mr. iOhin anrt on the extent of tlie disaster. thinking an acknowledgment Maj.

that was Gen. I papecs I hc in Ohio and Mary- on the extent of tlie disaster. April 9 for Henry R. Schaffner, Moore, in April of 1946, had intro- prush died in June of Here was the situation accord- Kirke B. Lawton from comman general business manager of Brush- duced Gen.

Dwight D. Eisenhower, Philadelphia while to available reports; Ft. Monmouth, N. be so i Moore Newspapers and a longtime from his V.C Republican National Con-i Sofadhes. a town of 4,000.

was Mcrarthv friend. in Europe, to the ANPA. He had Sen. McCarthy lelt aooui ii. Mr.

Moore had made arrange- high hopes of attending this ments to attend the annual meet-: banquet, where Mr. Eisenhower, ings of the Associated Press and now President of the United States, vention. For 27 years, first as vice presi- Ft. Monmouth, a radar research Dulles Aiul Molotov Confer Second Time On Eisenhower Plan GENEVA S. Secretary (Turn to Page 3, Column 1) Woman Killed Testifies At HenriuQ For As Tornadoes Rip Southwest 56 Injiirtul.

Damage First In Attaek U.S. In Indo 111 Congress center, was then a Me- hunt for 15.000 May Ballot Throughout C.oiinty And 3.000 Locally Climaxing a campai.gn marked mainly by apathy, about 15,000 of Columbiana ixMential are expected to go to the jh Tuesday to nominate candidates state, i county and ciffices. i About 3.000 of Fast voters are to cast ballots, the Coutdy Election Board estimated at tlie end I'f wa.s called quietest campaign many With just four county offices nt stake in the election, only two contests will be settled by each of tlie two major parties. Republicans have a throe-war race for state representative. Both the Democrats and the Republicans have a two-man contest for a single nomination as county commissioner and tlie Democrats also have a two-way race for county auditor.

County voters also will have a voice in chtxising candidates for virtually all state offices, district congressman, state tor, the term of late Robert Taft, two full term.s and an unexpired term the Ohio Supreme Court, a judge of the vj legislative hurdle for a district court of appeals and state Foreign rrogram requiring all city water county party committeemen customers to install meters at their women. TO REPL.VCE AT GENEVA. U.S. Undersecretary of State Walter Bedell Smith (left) answers some questions asked by reporters at Washington liefore departing for Geneva to tako the place of Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, who plans to return home in accordance with earlier plans. Western nations at Geneva hope the conference will switch from the subject of Korea to ludochina next week.

Council To Act On Mandatory Water Meters Proposed 25-Ceiit Parking Fine Also On Agenda Moinlav ow; expense wiU face Council 3 Senators Declare Direct Intervention WonT Be Approved in 48 B. C. command at Karditsa, population about 28,060, still is. had 75 per cent of its houses toppled. Domokos was 10 A preliminary hearing for Jack Reed of Wellsville, charged with deliberate maiming in the beating of Edwin Vocial of Oak St.

April 1 17 on St. Clair got under KllIlS Into Ihoiisant today before Judge George Over Area L. Brokaw' in Municipal Court. The case delayed for nearly LITTI.E ROCK, Ark. hour while police located two does and vicious winds lashing six prosecution witnesses.

Vocial states in the Southwest and Mid- called. Ztl The victim of the beating testi- the Indochina war, year-old monastery aecs estimated in the hundreds his fiancee a Republican, Sen. Flanders anasios, near of thousands of dollars. of Chester, passed four agreed that the thought of Texas suffered the most damage men on St. Clair Ave.

near the American intervention is un- Rpfreslieil injured in 23 towns and com- Central Shoe Repair shop. in Congress. But he said munitie.s. Other states hit yester-; After they had passed. Vocial the United States and the United AdlllitS Drinking day included Oklahoma, Arkansas, heard whistling and Nations may be take di- Barnes of Ohio View was almost destroyed.

One person was killed and several injured. Farsala, about the same size, had 80 per cent of its houses down, leaving 5,500 persons shelterless. nuestioning Reports on the dead and injured: Eisen- day night. proposed tax were not in. The town is a his- said that McCarthy Lawton, international Council wi consider levies.

toric site, said to be the home of continued in Salineville will act on a 2-miIl Achilles. It also was the battle invpstieation and' "'as the second meeting be- Lhlities, ic a minis i street lighting, Fr.mklm i ground of Pharsalus. where Julius "dh ar tween the two top East-West sys em, a School District will vote on Caesar defeated Pompey the Great that in fact was left Ft. Monmouth ana bellow Creek Sch.xil Dislriet But the secretary said he was ence on ra. Councd cfa i.s a meters for re-sale to its cus opening of the confer- Comers.

enee on Far Eastern questions. Earlier. MrCarthv repri- Tbe meeting todav was held in revolving fund to finance exjienses. per cent de- secrecy. Molotov had m- the graduai program, ex- if Lawton was removeu, was to extend across two years.

gave McCarthy the information fL," to Meters will be purchased from the tntere.st prc as part of his own and money collected from shared by a pair irv of coooerating with the Sen- siipt'r-secret concrtve proiwsaiN ty. install for commis.sioner On the county end of the ticket, will be )f two-way races and a thrce-mari stroyed. Five persons were in- he Twelve persons were injured in policy of cooperating witn me sen- United States March customers required to install one-, WASHINGTON Thirty-four houses col- ate probe, and that he decided to made the United States fund. contest for state representa- ly. 1 live.

These talks between the Amen- About 2.700 customers who have era tic senators said today Con- Volos, and houses were retain Lawton strictly gress is in no mood to approve in- j-eported destroyed in Agia Mar- of his case, volvement of U. S. fighting units Xenadies Louisiana, Missouri and Iowa. Mrs. Dcxit Sowell, 73-year-old David Sohine, a former McCarthy posed an Voiirr'" Howard L.

Ketchum, committee non-salaried consulmnL: atom for Wayne Township trustee and farm- il: to N. Genera. As- a. since Jan. The Uti.i- oner es igation of alleged Commu- sembly last Dec.

8. ties Board said the mam pu 3 There is nothing that would pre- of general metering is to put all Mmocip.d ice Comnuo i'-n and an tiiiploye of the accounting dt p.irt- inquirv group the currently boggod-down discus- reduce the cost of closed session yes- sions on Korea mg and filtration Midland, and Albert K. VVrail of testified he heard whistling and Nations may be forced to take di- Carnes of Ohio View was radar cen- There is nothing that would prc- of general metering is to put all that they yelled about rect action, if the Communists Friday after- have denied the vent Dulles and from go- payments on an equi- threaten overrun intoxication charge fol- mg over other problems, including table basis, cut down waste and iiut-u XV XV. arraigned yesterdaj He 'said he didn't remember sel changed his plea, declaring the nrore.ss. mvoivme a officers freshed memory." the President waits for Con- Four other counsel could get together to nar re- intoxication wflter Bedell Smith, $1.

engagements in Wisconsin that who arriving bxlay to head the The log.i sending L. S. troops to Indochina, today by Judge George L. U. S.

mission (Turn to HEARING, Page 9' were injured. tinued. Eleven separate but small tor- He bniu nc mviu vx.v..v.vi.v^x.x process, involving a nadoes struck in eastern anything from the time he wen of war bv Congress. One twister injured five mem- back and asked the four they bers of a family near Cedar Rapids until he re- when it tossed them about 100 feet gained consciousness into a field. Their farm home was The pottery worker also testi- long, time.

There is no senti- cars 12 stitches were revquircd in ment in the Senate for intervention ij 1 A LI 0 and If He Relief, Farm Aul houses of their roofs. eyelid at the 1 ittsburgh Monroney (D-Oklat said in 1 Two were hurt in Arkansas, Eye and Ear Hospital. He said a separate interview that case 1 7 I I 111 three at Versailles, and one he also suffered on the been made as yet for the VyCHO A in Oklahoma. forehead and his upper front American in Indo- Eleven children were hurt in an teeth w'ere chipped. china and he added: is lit- east Texas twister that struck the Reed pleaded innocent when ar- tie likelihood that Congress would Beiilak schoolhouse, 12 miles south- raigned Monday before Judge give such authority east of Lufkin.

Brokaw, who set his bond at gen. Holland said late Har- Court, of ill-fated that opporing talks on Indochina here at Gejva. tn nar- Dulles has a full weekend si Council also is scheduled to con sider vow some of the in dispute, m- pcomptiy East Asked possibility of to retu Undersecre- for 25 cents-instead of tae usual Bridge. an ordinance that would Mados.ai Town rap a ticketed drivers settle farmer and former manag. The GOP field frr state repre- slation was tabled at the sentative compri 1 nvL'fiit rlarifi- Atty.

Delmar T. (J Hara of Wells- at Geneva after meeting April 19 to await ciariii cO, Trvcorvh Vlllc, thC IHCU mbcnt 3eC i 3 th 1Td Dulles departs cation by Solicitor Josepn cooper tv u' i on his way to Dulles IfTisim? who trviJ first will stop off in Milan, Italy, (Turn to METERS, Page 5) to confer briefly with Prime Mm- ister Mario Scelba on mutual U. Italian problems. CIO NLRB Tcst Although the formal meetings on Stppf The CIO United the weekend, there was the usual Union of District has petitioned Taylorcraft Aviati Corp. at Ai amount of behind-the-scenes diplo- the National Labor 1 a i matic activity.

Board at Pittsburgh for an elec- in the legislature bebire running unsuccessfully for 18th District congressman in 1952, and Russell E. Iden of Homew urth, a of the peace in Knox Township Donai Burcham of Gardendale, Feared Possible Revolution of f-toto. oW toto waTa followed Democrat- and of behind-the-scenes working out its strategy for The company only Thursday rf a swirled past the James of Wellsville. the immediacy of the situa- school building, in which 690 chil- Reed was held for the Grand tion (in Indochina' before con dren were attending classes. The as the hearing ended.

Judge sent to sending our combat troops school damage, but de- Brokaw continued his bond at struction in downtown Grapeland was estimated at $25.000. ic advice to halt relief spending House social doings. Houston. Fort Worth. Dallas.

San y. Antonio-all felt the force of the spring storms that damaged a Negro housing project in west Dallas so cxtensivelv that 18 families had so txitu. iVL strikes plagued In taking his somewhat different bal- Ickes. the self-styled cur position Sen, Flanders said: rill ance the budget. registered strong crit- eussions here.

nffirpTS to be evacuated. A protective wall over the state fair auditorium molished, causing damag atcd at SlOO.ijOO. Home, farm building and line damage was extensive throughout the five-state area. to TORNADOES. Page 3) coun- rt of a small lamp factory, and Ain.on G.

cent of ll OOO workers LRbon, a deouty in the members of is worKing out auckcg.v awx rL Togtonia ooerator cf r. the remainder of the Korean dis- clined to hold a conference with fartnrv and A'n the explanirg 90 per Union. Democratic nomination county cinn'aTi Senate Armed Services Commit- Starcher, 48. dean of the Independent The has asked confer-, eardidaies are er.ces with all basic steel produc- 3 Prohate Judae Louis ers to discuss new contracts. tKc tened to spread to a fourth today, tee.

Dallas was de- United Steel Workers Earlier in the week, the House ui damage estim- midnight at the defeated 214-37 a proposal by Rep. -Tbe Inside 4 Tl 938 -that ctensive xu. crote Mfg. Co of Bellevue, Indochina without prior congres- told him he (Rooseve.t) tfiN LU seeking the LXjrnocratiC The CIO tried three times r.j term; and 5 to orgdr.ize Vtenton County Auditor I. J.

Vomdran, A previous independent union and the Grote sional assent. Union mem.bership numbers ------------------------about 1.200 at the three concerns, DicS iQ-tfi invarion burn fD-Tex'. then House major- college of Arts and Sciences ai leader and now minority floor ifniversity. said today he has of Poland September. 1939 of the ding for a new term on the GOP The 335.000-word vo.ume.

things. Ickes wrote university of North Dakota at 7" that Roosevelt Grand Forks, effective July 1. Three of the four Republican would have starcher is a graduate of -r candidates for sta.t.- senab.r in the Schuster. Excerpts will appear in Bernard M. Baruch out of University.

He has been a The NLRB investigate the ithe May 18 issue of Look maga- Democratic party, if he had member of its faculty for.24 years. claim of membersmp at (Turn Page a. Column 1) zine out next week. financial help pr. Starcher will succeed Presi- Weirton plants and decide if an No 10 Notice all Warehousemen are re- The tMal of strikers would soar to quested to attend our next meet- 2.300 if steel-workers reject five quesieii vrvxx Crattv.

90. who quit the news- term xeus 3rd. Business of impor- cent age offer 2 f.pt oaner at the age of 43 to unsuccessful tance. Election of delegates for our.liam 1 oweU valve manuf medicine, died here Friday. six justices to the convention.

Pres. 86. Ad. lures. i Inside Struggle" maces the Alben W.

Barkley whVirretirtog elecUon should be held. An early Notice Kiseve.t second from post 21 years in thf ballot test would be assured if meeang of imporvar.ce. Monda, -X. -enator after years independent unioj 3rd, Election of delegates to consent. i convention.

ufi Dr. happenings of Roosev who quit the news- term tells of the New Deal jg again seeking. battle to Supreme (Turn to DIARY, Page 3) County..

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About The Evening Review Archive

Pages Available:
381,489
Years Available:
1885-1977