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The Tennessean from Nashville, Tennessee • Page 23

Publication:
The Tennesseani
Location:
Nashville, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
23
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

was a a.m. Cook. a 66, At tomorrow 88- 10:45. I City minimum 13 19 79 37 85 81 81 19 62 78 87 86 79 86 86 10 50 18 43 50 33 58 60 63 67 58 27 59 87 67 43 65 52 36 Sn. St.

Los Seattle Tampa Little Toronto Phoenix Savannah Portland Richmond Pittsburgh Louisville Louis Francisco City 65 89 for 86 80 59 81 51 87 80 8.3 68 66 84 73 13 61 53 60 75 oh Lecond potion I Rights In the of the rishe to in Stock Probe Opens A week from today ton, the government first public hearing in tive 1962 probe of stock markets an to cover every aspect of stocks. In recent months, once hot stock issues market--in which there has been appalling manipulation--has turned to cool and downright cold. The reform movement is in high gear. Whatever is developing in regulations self-imposed Wall Street's leaders, and will de- by velop in new government laws and rules, will enhance the protection of buyers and owners of securities. You're the beneficiary.

SYLVIA Week From Today By PORTER involved in manipulating prices curities, business and which is sure to lead to new. tougher laws governing Wall Street. It's a cinch that. out of this initial hearing wlil ilL come shockin disclosures of unethical if not illegal actions by, salesmen in the SOcurities business, elations distinctly inadequate standamong nest the For the SecurCommission has the public part probe by askquestions about the training, supervipractices of perthe securities busibearing down parsalesmen of mutuall stock to market anyone qualifications inferior, meager, superlax, selling practhe borderline in Washingwill open its its exhausthe nation's investigation of the se- Cary has pinthe mutual the "employor inexperienced "may solicit from operate from pri-list, remote from their that "the offices" of big firms resulted responsibility" the of supervision and regu- fireworks. Even: at there is legislation the SEC to compelling salesmen to the public standards of con- first public the SEC inhas led to a Wall Street.

the SEC'S deep into members of the exchanges, ranging is New York Exsmall regional has been at already tightening of conmembers of the exactivities. has mailed tough financial firms new stock issues corporations selling public, to public handling corporations, to brokers, etc. steps are being the training and securities salesmen, high-pressure and advisory public relathey're under may be a target screening their sure they're not 84, TAPE RECORDERS Porter ards of conduct public has trusted. ities Exchange chosen to kick off of the government's ing searching "qualifications, sion selling sons engaged in ness" and it's ticularly on funds. It's hardly, a familiar that in some areas, of salesmen vision has training has been, tices have been of legality.

SEC chairman pointed in field, has criticized of part-time salesmen" who door to door and vate residences supervisors." HE HAS emphasized spread of branch York City in a "diffusion of and "increased training and lation of salesmen." There will be this early date, probability of new which would permit write rules of stocks and bonds to meet specified duct and operation. But while the ing is a week away, vestigation already reform wave on For months now, perts have been the activities of leading stock from the giant change down to the exchanges. There perceptible trols over the changes and their THE AGENCY questionnaires to distributing "hot" last year, to stocks to the relations organizations publicity for these over-the-counter In every area, taken to upgrade supervision of tighten curbs on advertising of stocks services. Financial tions firms, aware the spotlight and for new laws, are employes to make Parts, Accessories and Expert Service EDDIE'S RADIO SERVICE 265 Hermitage Ave. AL 4-0643 Orders Executed In MAGNAVOX MILES LAB MAX FACTOR Mid-South Securities COMPANY American Trust Bldg.

AL 6-5661 VU Professor Awarded Grant An associate professor of English at Vanderbilt University among four Tennesseans was last night to receive named Fellowships for advanced Guggenheim study in their fields. bilt worTHs Henry fellowship Hoy for of research in the dramatic works of Thomas Dekker. Other Tennesseans sharing awards totaling nearly $1.5 million are scientists at the Oak Ridge National Laboratories. They are: Dr. Jerry S.

Olson, a geobotanist. who the development and maintenance of ecological systems. Dr. Noah R. Johnson a nuclear chemist.

who will study nuclear spectroscopy bearing on nuclear theory. Dr. Waldo E. Cohn, a will use his grant for studies biochemin nucleic acid biochemistry. The awards were announced the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

Amounts of the individual grants were not disclosed. Pickets at Churches Protest Integration NEW ORLEANS (P)-Sign-carrying segregation pickets paraded in front of two Roman Catholic churches yesterday morning, protesting the desegregation of Catholic schools next fall. The pickets marched in front of St. Stephens Church and later marched in front of St. Patrick's, where Msgr.

Henry Bezou, superintendent of archdiocesan schools, is the pastor. Catholics coming out of mass at both churches watched the picklets and policemen interviewed the sign carriers, taking their names and information listed on the signs. There were no incidents. The pickets have been marching since Archbishop Joseph Francis Rummel issued the school is gation order and excommunicated three segregationists for publicly defying that order. The pickets also protested the excommunication of Mrs.

B. J. Gaillot political leader Leander Perez and executive director Jackson Ricau of the South Louisiana Citizens Council. Wilburn E. Gibbons Funeral arrangements are pending for Wilburn Edmond Gibbons.

84, of Zephyr Hills, who died Saturday night in a Zephyr Hills nursing home. The body will arrive at PettusOwen and Wood Funeral Home here tomorrow afternoon. Gibbons was a native of Overton County. He was in the grocery business at Smyrna, until he moved to Florida about 15 vears ago. He was a Methodist.

Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Chloe Peek Gibbons, and a sister. Mrs. Jim Cady, Nashville. Mrs.

Christina Hoke Services for Mrs. Christina Schultz Hoke, 87, 2510 Sharondale Drive, will be tomorrow afternoon in Hannibal, Mo. Smith Home in Hannibal is in charge of arrangements. Mrs. Hoke died Saturday in a Nashville nursing home.

A native of Marion County, Mrs. Hoke lived in St. Louis 25 years before coming to Nashville two years ago. She was a member of Centenary Methodist Church in St. Louis.

Survivors include two sons, Marion Hoke, Nashville, and Charles Hoke, Armstrong, Mo, SPECIAL ELECTION NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an election will be opened and SECOND WARD, SECOND COUNCILMANIC DISTRICT. held in the and 4) City of Nashville, Davidson County, Tennessee, (Precincts 3 on: MAY 3, 1962 the qualified voters of the SECOND WARD. at which election COUNCILMANIC DISTRICT (Precincts 3 and 4) shall SECOND COUNCILMAN from said Councilmanic District to elect a CITY fill the unexpired term of CHAS. E. RILEY, whose resignation created the vacancy to be filled in said election.

7:00 A.M. and will close at 7:00 P.M. The polls will be opened at of persons appointed to hold said election and on said date. Names the voting places are as follows: SECOND WARD Third Precinct-621 8th South Officer: Walter Eddings Operators: John Gilbert Clerks: Annie Mai Davis, Mrs. Alberta Page Jackson, Mrs.

Marjorie Ellarson Registrars: Mrs. Alberta Magistrate: Jack McCandless City Office 2nd Lindsley Fourth Precinct Officer: Doremus Fount Moss, W. M. Powell Operators: Mrs. James Steele, Mrs.

Mary Worley Clerks: Maddox, Mrs. Irene Allen, Alice Blackman Registrars: Mrs. Mary Magistrate: Jack McCandless The above Officials will please take notice that the NOTICE: Tennessee provides a penalty for the failure or Official Code of refusal in the capacity designated unless excused by proper to serve affidavit by the Election Commission. All election officials will report to their respective voting places at 6:30 A.M. on said date.

DAVIDSON COUNTY ELECTION COMMISSION Thos. W. Jarrell, Secretary Dispute Follows Hoffa 'Speech' By JACK HURST Members of Nashville Teamsters Local 327 heard a tape recording yesterday of a speech made by International President James R. Hoffa but there were differing accounts of what happened at the union meeting. Certain Teamster sources said about 75 members walked out of the meeting rather than hear the speech.

About 150 stayed and heard it, but there was a chorus of boos at the end, the sources said. Harold Dies, recording secretary of the local, said this was not true. never heard a boo during the whole thing, he declared. "Now, there was a bunch of guys sitting off in a corner talking when they should have been listening, but you have some of those in any meeting. He said he saw only "four or five" persons leave during the playing of the recording.

The recorded speech was blast against Atty. Gen. Robert ported by some, sources to be F. Kennedy's attempts to revise the laws on court evidence gained by wiretapping. Dies said the speech was not an attack on the attorney general.

was a recording of a speech Hoffa made at the meeting of Tennessee Joint Council 87 at Chattanooga (earlier this month)," Dies said. DIES SAID the speech was "in relation to DRIVE (DemocraticRepublic a n-Independent-VoterEducation)." The program is a political force in the international union. It was begun last year by Hoffa. During yesterday's union meeting, a city police was dispatched to stop a fight reported to have flared in MeAdoo Hall at the Labor Temple. police dispatcher said the fight--if one actually broke out at all--was over by the time the officers arrived at the Labor Temple.

Teamster sources reported that a rules dispute developed during the meeting, with President Ewing King hashing it out with Luther Watson, former business agent of the local. Watson, reached by last night, said: "The rank and file members will rise up in due process and eliminate the evils that are now in power in our local-if due process is permitted." King, president of the local, said there was no disturbance other than "on matters that were purely the business of the local." He refused further comment. The sources charged that King and Dies were running the meetings without adhering to the rules set forth in the by-laws of the union. INFORMED OF this, Dies said. "There was no violation of the constitution or the by-laws of Local 327.

Most of the disturbance was caused by the fact that we have a 4 p.m. curfew on our meetand we were running a little late." Mrs. B. M. Wilson FRANKLIN, B.

M. Wilson, 88, of Route 4, Bowling Green, died yesterday at her home. Services will be at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at Booker Funeral Home here. Burial will ere in Greenlawn Cemetery, Wilson, here.

the former Fletcher Harris, was a native of Allen County. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. J. B. Downey, Bowling Green; a son, R.

J. Wilson, Trenton, three grandchildren, three great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren. Just in Case -AP Wirephoto AP MY QUE, South Viet Nam-Leon B. Talley, of Tacoma, keeps his carbine ready as his U.S. Army helicopter approaches the rendezvous area of Ap My Que for cleanup operations against Communist-led Viet Cong forces in the Mekong River delta battle zone.

The U.S. helicopters carried South Viet Nam soldiers to flush out the Viet Cong. Cambodia, Viet Nam On Brink of Rupture SAIGON, South Viet Nam (P)- Cambodia and South Viet Nam appeared on the brink of diplo-1 matic rupture yesterday AS Cambodia officially disclaimed all responsibility for a raid on a Vietnamese border village in which 54 were killed. Viet Nam has charged Cambodia with responsibility for the April 20 raid, claiming it was "premeditated" and led by Cambodian government guards. The village, Vinh Lac, is less than a mile from the Cambodia border, 120 west of Saigon.

In note to Vietnamese aumiles, thorities, Cambodia, called the Vietnamese slander. REFERRING TO a Vietnamese charge that the raid had been carried out by 200 Cambodians led by military units, the note said: "To obtain 200 persons in Chea Phdey (the Cambodian village nearest the site of the incident) it would have been necessary to mobilize-besides the local provincial guards and a active population--the men, the women, the children the monks of the (Buddhist) temple." The royal Cambodian government demanded the Saigon government "make up morally for the damage suffered by the entire Cambodian nation following this false and cruel accusation." The semi-official French lan- Your Horoscope By FRANCES DRAKE Look in the section in which your birthday comes and find what your outlook is, according to the stars. MONDAY MARCH 21 TO APRIL 20 (Aries)Trying is not always succeeding, but it is setting up a habit that attracts success leads and motivations. Be propelled by bright thoughts. smile at noyances.

Activity increases. APRIL 21 TO MAY 21 (Taurus) A few items to double-check. Legitimate business and extras in for a boost, but you must be receptive to editing. cautioning. You quickly observe advantages but may overlook a pitfall.

MAY 22 TO JUNE 21 (Gemini) Anything that adds to wholesome knowledge and justifiable advancement bears investigating. A for aims such as improving intellectual stature and noting others' good points. JUNE 22 TO JULY 23 (Cancer) Tighten up loose ends. Subjugate fears, resentment, they try to grow In too many corners. The courage of the few is always lasting: conflicting clamor of the many is soon lost to history, JULY 24 TO AUG.

23 (Leo) Some advantages not what their outer dressing implies. Material upon which you build your day will affect your tomorTOWS, SO take care, and more time 11 need be, to do well with best tools, AUG, 24 TO SEPT. 23 (Virgo) Planetary aspects urge thoughtful disbursement of talents and an equalizing of endeavors to elicit returns desired. Bible ACROSS 1 Cain's brother 5 Jacob's fifth son 8 Father of Abel 12 Toward the sheltered side 13 Past 14 Surrealistic art 15 Ananias 16 Insect ct egg 17 Raw minerals 18 Italian gulf 20 Attire 21 Singing Peggy 22 Observe 23 Live 26 Sunday School groups 30 Minus 31 Escaped 32 Exist :33 Bad (prefix) 34 Happy 35 Dirt 36 Guided 38 Takes out 39 Cat talk 40 Sun 41 Relict 44 Abed 48 Mine entrance 49 Milk producer 50 Italian city 51 Part in a play 52 Shoshonean Indian 53 the ocean 54 Building additions 55 Cushion 56 Chickens DOWN 1 Seasoning 2 Pseudonym of Charles Lamb 3 Drop of eye moisture 4 Angels 5 "Inferno" author ACLU Urges Haywood Probe NEW YORK UP)--The American Civil Liberties Union said yesterday it has asked Atty. Gen.

Robert F. Kennedy to investigate what it claimed were reported multiple arrests and beatings of Eric Weinberger in 1 Tennessee. Weinberger of Norwich, has for the past several months worked with families in tent communities in Haywood and Fayette counties, Tennessee, where the ACLU said he has tried to them become economically self. sustaining by teaching them to manufacture women leather handbags. The letter to Kennedy said the tent communities were set up by Negro sharecroppers who were driven from their homes in 1960 by tenant farmers "as a reprisal for their having registered or attempted to register to vote." IT CONTINUED: "According to the information supplied us, Mr.

Weinberger was first arrested on March 2, 1962. with one Jeffrey Gordon and held for three dayy without arraignment or notification of charges. "Although we have made no independent investigation, we are informed that he was beaten severely by law enforcement officers while in jail, and following this incident was arrested for violating the traffic law, for disorderly duct and for resisting arrest, with. in a period of 10 days. "Each time Mr.

Weinberger was arrested he was apparently thrown in jail and beaten again." At Norwich, a spokesman for the Committee for Non-Violent Action said Weinberger now is in Crossville, on a nine-week "march for peace" sponsored by the pacifist group. The 15 marchers started from Nashville Easter Sunday and hope to be in Washington, June 22. Both Negroes and whites' are par. ticipating in the march. Weinberger, 30, came from New York city and was a printer by trade before he joined the pacifist committee as a fulltime volunteer.

Masonic Leader To Speak Here Samuel E. Stephenson of Bristol. grand master of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Tennessee, will deliver all address here at 7:30 p.m. today. The occasion is a district meeting Seventh at then Grand Broadway, Lodge to building.

tended by officers and members of the 41 Masonic lodges in the Nashville district. S. E. Meyer, district chairman, will preside at the meeting. The district is composed of in Davidson, Cheatham, Robertson, Rutherford, Sumner, Williamson counties.

Police Hunt Motive In 3 Fire Deaths SEATTLE (P) Police questioned and released a young woman friend of James Vincent Miller yesterday as they continued an investigation of a fire in which three of Miller's children burned to death. Miller, 38, admitted in a signed statement Friday that he set the fire in his rented home earlier that day. Police Capt. James V. Fineran said the blonde woman, in her late 20s, told detectives she associated with Miller after he arrived in Seattle from St.

Joseph, last September. His wife and five children joined him in February. Fineran said detectives were convinced the woman, whom he did not identify, knew nothing about the fire. He said they would continue questioning Miller today in an effort to determine a motive. Miller was being held without charge.

Heart Attack Fatal To T. C. Heffernan THE NASHVILLE TENNESSEAN, Monday Morning, April 30, 1962 23 Dies at Home T. C. Heffernan Sr.

Pharmacist Thomas C. Heffernan 58, of 2610 Barton owner of Heffernan's Apothecary 2700 Belmont died at 8:05 a.m. vesat his home after a heart attack, Funeral arrangements were incomplete yesterday. The body is at Martin's, 209 Louise Ave. Heffernan was born in Nashville.

He was educated at St. Joseph's, Tarbox, and Hume-Fogg schools and Louisville College of Pharmacy. In 1941 he married Glenda Sarah Hudson of Fayetteville, who survives. Heffernan had been a pharmacist since he was 19. He was a communicant of Christ the King Catholic Church.

Other survivors include Thomas C. Heffernan "Nash: ville, A daughter, Mrs. David Khoury, Cookeville, a sister, Mrs. Margaret Zollner, Flint, and several nieces and nephews, State Road Toll 10 for Weekend Three persons died in bile mishaps in Tennessee yesterday, giving the state 10 accidential deaths for the weekend. One wreck occurred on private property and does not count in official state highway patrol figures.

A Mississippi couple died when their car collided with a transport truck at a South Chattanooga derpass. The victims were Willie E. Beavers, 64, and his wife, May, 62. The driver of the truck, Joe Skipper of Cochran, wa's charged with manslaughter, police said. Lim Manners 18, of the Carlisle Community in Stewart County, was killed when his car failed to make a curve on a private lane near his home and hit a tree.

State Trooper Jack Charlton said Manners was dead when he arrived on the scene. Seven persons died as the sult of highway. crashes Saturday, two in one accident inside the Dayton city limits. H. I.

PINKSTON, 80, of Shelby. ville, died early yesterday of juries suffered in a wreck Saturday afternoon on about seven miles north of Shelbyville. Killed at Dayton were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Austin, Butler, Ohio.

Joe Humphreys, 21, of Memphis was fatally injured Saturday night when his station wagon collided intersection. an ambulance at a Memphis with A Trimble, woman, Mrs. Pinkney B. Cole. 61, was killed Saturday when the pickup truck in which she was riding was struck by an Illinois Central freight train at a crossing near Trimble.

A truck-car collision near Knoxville Saturday claimed the life of Mrs. Grace Melissa Johnson, 54, of Knoxville. Joe Lewis Graham, 10, Oakland, vas fatally injured in a collision of A truck rural Shelby County road.ar on a The Daily Record guage Cambodian newspaper "La Depeche" said: "If South Viet Nam decides to; break relations with our country, it is free to do so and to take full responsibility for the decision." THE VIETNAMESE National Assembly already has passed a resolution condemning Cambodia and calling on the Vietnamese government to "revise its policy toward Cambodia." South Viet Nam, a republic under the strong rule of President Nho Dinh Diem, is anti-Communist. Cambodia, a small neutralist monarchy, is ruled by Prince Norodom Sihanouk, who maintains ties on both sides of the Iron Curtain. Rivalry between the two states has been traditional for centuries.

and border incidents are frequent. However, the latest incident is by far the most serious in recent years. Cambodia broke relations with another of its pro-Western neighbors, Thailand, last year. There are no prospects the breach between Thailand and Cambodia will be healed. Couple Greeted After 1-Way Trip NEW YORK (P) -A young Negro couple arrived here yesterday, fatigued by a 36-hour bus ride from the Southern hometown they said they forsook "just to be American citizens." Shelby Williams, a 24-year-old longshoreman, and his 20-year-old wife were the second family in week to be sent here on a way bus fare basis by a New Orleans segregationist group.

The young couple appeared nervous and ill at ease as they stepped from the bus into a horde of shouting greeters and newsmen. WILLIAMS SAID he had been out of work for six months. Their clothing appeared to be in threadbare condition. They, carried with them their possessions in a battered suitcase. Mrs.

Williams hugged a cloth bundle to her bosom as called out questions, Asked why they had come to New York, Williams almost audibly replied, "Mostly for work a job and just to be American citizens." His wife shyly nodded agreement. The White Citizens Council of Greater New Orleans described their sponsored one-way trips as a paid exodus of dissatisfied NegrO citizens. Minutes after the Williams' arrival a Negro couple offered them a room in their Harlem apartment rent free until Williams can gain employment. A REPRESENTATIVE of the City, Welfare the Department was on to greet Williams couple and discuss with them the possibility of financial and other sistance they might be eligible for. Asked his feelings about the Citizens Council which paid his fare to the city, Williams said: don't hold nothing against them.

They weren't trying to help nobody, just to prove something to themselves. If had the money would have come here anyway to look for work." Mrs. William T. Cook 59 of Mrs. William Glenrose wife of Nashville painter, died of cancer 4:20 p.m.

yesterday at her home. Mass will be at 10 at St. Mary's Catholic Church, 328 Fifth The Rev. Thomas F. Cashin will officiate.

Burial will be in Woodlawn Memorial Park. The body is at Buena Vista Funeral Home The former Gladys Lowella Hill, married Cook 1 in 1928. Mrs. Cook a communicant Catholic Church. of St.

Edwards She is survived also by a daughter, Mrs. Ann Toombs of Nashville; three sons. Alfred H. Norris, William E. Cook and Van Mack Cook, all Nashville: brother, A.

B. Hill of Nashville: and eight children. NEW NEIGHBORS James E. Steelman. 3007 Stafford Drive, from Jackson, salesman for Swift Co.

Feed Mill. Karl Bottomlee, 215 Wallace Road. from Milwaukee. manager Republic Gear Co. Dr.

Albert Bejas, 1903 Adelicia, from Cuba. dentist at General Hospital, Edward F. Schroeder, McDonald Drive, from Valdosta. captain Sewart Air Force Base. DIVORCE SUITS Dorothy Ray vs.

Paul Edward Hanes. Henrietta May vs. Donald Lee Harris. Mary Francis Frey vs. John Andrew Jordon.

Recia Carrah vs. Lucius Calloway. Eudora Eddie vs. Kenneth Owen worth. Janie Irene vs.

Lloyd Edward Wilson. Betty Fay vs. W. L. Nuss.

Marie Knight vs. Earl Luther Davidson, Joyce Nixon vs. Bobby Ray Smith. Mattie Sue vs. Arthur Joseph Smith.

Geraldine Moss vs. Bobby Nelson Moore. Tommie Jean vs. Roy Edmond Rogers. Bettye Jane vs.

William Randall TomSr. Shirley Mal Nixon vs. Rex Maurice Mayes. Florine Grace Hudson vs. Robert liam Clark.

Ernestine vs. Daniel David, Young. Reba Elease Fleming Jesse Miller. Barbara Jean VS, George Edward Herring. Virginia Whitehead vs.

Chester Venable, Edna Louise vs. James Carlton Sanders. Vivian Thompson VS. Ray Clifford Leist. James Vs.

Lora Myrtle Wilson. Enoch J. Jr. vs. Viola Christine Peek Harris.

Ruby Lee VA. Michael Z. Provenzano. Mariorie Ann Mash V8. James Bruce.

Edith Rader vs. Louis Frank. Jean McCantess Gilbert Roberto kisson. Cynthia Jo Ann Newland vs. Harvil Vincent McCrary.

Mattie Lou Greenwood vs. Joe Thomas Cooksey, Mary Louise Holt Jutus Joseph Potthotter, Vadith R. vs. Thomas Earl Billings. Tommie Carroll VS.

Howard Osborne, Blanche Van Hooser vs. Ulous Hennex Brown. Mary Lou vs. Clarence Reces. Joyce Brindley vs.

William O. Jeannie Kay vs. Billy Nolan Sleaman. Gerda vs. Clarence Brewer.

Margaret Louise Crownover vs. Melvin Virdell Hemby. Beatrice Louise John Wilkerson Jr. Peggy Ann vs. Bobby Ross Chameliss.

Edna Faye vs. Lloyd Eugene Cantrell. MARRIAGE LICENSES Roy Allen Holt to Judith Ann Riggs. Larry Carmack Suell to Mary Anne William Hahn Brown to Elizabeth Ann A Drizzly Outlook widespread band of sippi Valley eastward There may be some parts of the Southern casional rain while Rockies. It will be Southern Plains.

rain and showers is expected from the Missisto the Appalachians and the Carolinas. thunderstorms in the Gulf states and eastern Plains. Northern California will have ocshowers are expected in the Northern cooler in the Central Mississippi Valley and 60 Data From U.S. WEATHER BUREAU 50 80 70 80 MILD Rain COLD Snow FORECAST For Daytime Monday Figures Show High Temperatures Expected Northern -AP Wirephoto map New England will have some rain and drizzle. A Nashville Temperatures 2 62 2 p.m.

72 4 a.m. 61 4 p.m. 78 6 a.m. 61 6 p.m. 79 00 a.m.

64 8 p.m. 73 10 a.m. 67 10 p.m. 71 Noon 72 Midnight Yesterday's high 80 at 4:58 p.m. Low 60 at 3:30 a.m.

Mean: 70. Normal 64. Sunset today at 6:33 p.m. Sun. rise tomorrow at 4:55 a.m.

Humidity at midnight, Highest 89 in 1942. Lowest 37 in 1908 Highest last year 77 PRECIPITATION For 24 hours ending at midnight, .09. Total this month 6.91; excess 3.25. Total this year 28.384 excess BAROMETER at midnight, 29.24, steady. WINDS TODAY -Southerly 15 to 25 m.p.h.

VISIBILITY-Today-Good. Brew. Walter Martin Young to Dorothy Paden. Warren Craig Faulkner to Margaret Dean Holland. Chandler Oscar Beard to Martha Jeanette Corbin.

Richard Vannette Kennedy Jr. to lian Shelton Pillettiert. Bridges. Jackie Davis Odum to Betty Jane Bell. Donald Adelbert Jones to Joyce Ellis Elroy McCrary to Helen Claire Saling.

Robert George Cloud to Linda Kelly, Searcy Lee Baker Naomi Speed. Charles Edward Vaushn to Mary ginia Lewis. Leodia Marshall Davis to Norma June Wilson. Woodrow Estes to Stella nette Siegrist. Robert Lytle Warren to Dorothy Ethridge.

James Lee Cox to Vada Julien Barrett. Winfield Scott Trundle Jr. to Diana Shanklin. Clarence Fletcher Southall to Mas Florence Holman. Charles Lyndon Johnson to Barbara Ann Dunn.

Clyde U. Barker to Frieds Anne Lall. Glenn Houston Peden to Elizabeth Rose Carr. B. Myron Woodard Barker Jr.

to Nancy Carole Evans. Charles Everett Wallace to Marcella Browne. James Kenneth Helton to Della Florence Hilton. Alexander Young to Mattie Sue Hill. Leonard Ellis Fouche to Annette Elizabeth Kyle.

Lillard Wayne Craighead to Janice Lanell Douglas. Edward Hillard Liner to Elizabeth Owens McAdoo. Truman Dean Martin to Wands Joyce Jackson. Buford Allen Harper to Willie Evelyn Bain. Sterling Monroe Lewis Jr.

to Sandra Faye Dobbs. Thomas Eugene Randall to Wilma Darlene Nixon. William Eugene Terrell to Patricia Ann Smith. Henry Lawrence Frazier Jr. to Betty Frances Sparks.

William Anderson Beasley to Susie Mas Bowles. Terrell Wayne Couser to Edith Gerda Dudda. Richard Henry Brown to Mildred Louise Keeble. Robert Lee Rainey to Ora Mai White. Gary Max Chapman to Judith Nelsop Herod.

William Hardiman Nalls to Myrtle Carden Williams. Charles George Kuffrey to Carole Pauline Angel. James Estes Harolson to Ruby Woodson Pittenger. Brent Maurice Sanders to Norma Faye Traughber. Charles Edward Hailey to Clacy Bernice Henderson.

David 'Lee Gamble to Margie Marie Wharton. Wayne Garland Coleman to Mildred Pauline Johnson. James Martin Jacquit Jr. to Alma Rhea Walton. Hundley Ray Moore to Mary Frances White pliment another.

it grows strong roots. generates cooperation. SEPT. 24 TO OCT. 23 (Libra) If sane precautions and astute control of energies are your reins, your team will mount up goals.

leap over obstacles, pass (at least hold down) competition. Respect your budget. OCT. 24 TO NOV. 22 (Scorpio) Easy sailing may not be order of this day, but happy disposition and willingness to try again and again will win you staunch support, cement real friendships.

You should find this easy. NOV. 23 TO DEC. 21 (Sagittarius) Wait A bit, then review once more whether to apply that drastic tactic Often time assuages and we see through clearer eyes. But 1f the quick task is yours, grasp it.

DEC. 90 TO JAN. 20 (Capricorn) So many noble things have been plished by this Sign's members we hasten to advise that now, this week. your opportunities are legion for a grand repeat performance. Up to you! JAN.

21 TO FEB. 19 (Aquarius) Do not permit pressure of time or others' anxiety to hurry you into over moves or conclusions before your keen insight allows it is permissible. Protect your budget. FEB. 20 TO MARCH 20 (Pisces) Planet Neptune advances your hidden talents.

suggests you dust off A 11 old, once rejected idea, this period may be ripe for it. Accuracy, good timing, painstaking must exist. Answer to Previous Puzzle Class TEHRAN PERSUA OLEASE NODDED 6 Exchange SAP ESSES premium 7 Negative word ACTA SITS ORSA 8 Worships PEARL SMEAR 9 Venture SLUME 10 Fruit drinks SER REDS 11 Church service NATIONS 19 Born BOG EST 20 Deceased EVADER 22 Snow vehicle REPUNE EVINCE 23 24 Defeat Charity GREETS REDATE 25 Capri, 34 Enlarged 42 Sacred image for instance 35 Samson's 43 Kind of pickle 26 Attired barber 44 Roster 27 Biblical man 37 Shows strong 45 Flower of Tarsus feeling 46 Biblical garden 28 Gaelic 38 Speck 47 Portuguese 29 Places 40 Stitched navigator 31 Soared 41 Merchandise 49 Chalice 12 13 16 20 22 124 25 27 28 31 35 36 37 38 40 143 45 46 49 50 52 53 55 56 Ellington To Speak At Boy Scout Dinner MEMPHIS (P)-Gov. Buford Ellington will speak at a 6:30 p.m. dinner meeting of Region 5 of the Boy Scouts today.

About 500 scouting leaders from 32 councils in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee are expected for the two-day meeting. Newspaper Printing Corporation AGENT THE NASHVILLE TENNESSEAN Morning-Sunday NASHVILLE BANNER Evening INFORMATION AND TRANSIENT CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Rates Below Apply All Classifled Advertising originating within 100-mile radius of city of Nasnville: Daily classified ads are cublished first THE NASHVILLE TENNESSEAN and In will be published again on the same day THE NASHVILLE BANNS 1 Dav Sunday 65c Line 1 Dav Daily 65c Line 4 Davs 39c Line 7 Davs 33c Line Publication in the Sunday NASHVILLE TENNESSEAN AN counted as one day, Daily Rates Quoted Include insertion both THE NASHVILLE TENNESSEAN Morning and THE NASHVILLE BANNER, Nation's Temperatures WASHINGTON (AM) Weather Bureau report of maximum temperature for 12 hours. temperature 18 hours ending m. EST. Albany, NY.

69 Kansas 86 50 Alpena 43 Key West Amarillo Knoxville 81 59 Asheville 19 Rock 87 54 Atlanta 59 Angeles 68 Atlantic Baltimore Memphis 84 64 Birmingham 63 Meridian 64 Bismarck 64 45 Miami Beach Boise Milwaukee 45 Boston Paul 42 Buffalo 56 Mobile 83 68 81 Burlington 45 34 Montgomery 84 Cp. Hatteras 76 Montreal 40 Charleston 79 New Orleans 86 Charlotte New York 80 65 Chattanooga Norfolk Chicago 49 41 Philadelphia 84 64 50 Cincinnati Cleveland 74 61 Columbus Dallas 68 Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth Fresno Houston 84 Indianapolis 76 61 Washington 85 Jacksonville 89 Wiltinston 19 Minimum Charge, 3 Lines Count Five Averase 15-letter) words to the Line The above rates apply to consecutive nsertions only reserved cladsify and Index classified ads according to rules governclassified pages The Banner add The Tennessean also eserve to revise or reject at advertising which Is teemed either sublect matter or aseology Box Number address requires words. Notice typographical errors must be diven time for correction before the Insertion Office Hours Monday through Fridav. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.: Saturdav.

8 a.m. to 12 noon: Sunday, p.m. to 7 p.m. Kelly Lish FLOWERS Green Hills Village AM 9-5611.

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