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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 14

Location:
Akron, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4 AWull bfdCi'U JUliILi.il i. uidiiiiie Hum uie uecseyiowu uuu. up iu uie lueuien. fire house, the driver didn'tjThe blaze wrs quickly extin-j stop until he had driven his guished. (Takes His Fire i To Fire House ALTOONA.

Pa. Fire- 0u'o Democrats Book JFK For Fund-Raiser MUST EBE1IT? imen in nearby Geeseytown didn't have to go very far to fight this fire. When a tractor -trailer (caught fire about a quarter to the penitentiary Monday a few hours after being sentenced by Common Pleas WE WELCOME YOUR ACCOUNT REGARDLESS OF YOUR CREDIT RECORD From Brarni Jml Wir iir jpr. jhj. President Vili thf COLUMBUS President 12 campaign a gwi is coming to Ohio off.

for the first time since his pi Sai'e has said he will tint campaign to get into the White seL; reelection. House. The time: The night of Jan. Cleveland Vlun 111 Educational TV 6. The place: Either the Buck eye Building on the State Fair ZENITH TRADE-IN HEARING AIDS Judge G.

H. BirrelL Raymond J. Dttle, also a former councilman, preceded the other two to the penitentiary two weeks ago. WARREN (iP) Rodney Davis, 19, of Warren, was charged with second degree murder Monday in the death of his 13-month old daughter whom he admitteed beating with a belt. Police said Davis told them at first that the child fell down stairs but later told of beating her last As Low At 25 GRACY-WOLF OPTICAL CO.

207 Ohio Bldj. 175 S. Main Akron, Ohio grounds or the Veteran's Me-: CLEVELAND Cleve-morial Building here. The Board of Education has casion: A birthday dinner in approved an educational telp-honor of Gov. Di Salle, a Dem- vision schedule using! time ocrat like Mr.

Kennedy. donated by Cleveland's, three White House Press Secre-' television stations. Station eary Pierre Salinger said Mr. WEWS has alio' ted the schools Kennedy accepted the invita-; 10:45 to 11 a. and WJW tion extended by William L.has set aside tentatively 9 to Coleman, Ohio's Democratic; 9:15 a.

m. KYW will announce State Chairman. its schedule later. The schools are to get DI SALLE sat with the, $30,000 worth of receivers. President during the second Programs are to be developed half of the Army-Navy foot-! by personnel from radio sta-baU game in Philadelphia last jtion WBOE, the school sys-Saturday.

Item's station, and by teach- The Democratic Party isers, the Board announced sponsoring the dinner to honor (Monday n'ght. nondiscrimination in conspicuous places. The notices, informing the public that all patrons will be served regardless of race, color, religion, national origin or ancestry, went to restaurants, hotels, motels, taverns, barber and beauty shops and theaters, among others. A new law on the subject became effective Oct. 21.

Failure to post the notice could result in a maximum fine of $500. DAYTON UP) Dayton's City bus strike became three weeks old today with not much optimism expressed for a settlement. A 4 12-hour negotiating session between City Transit Co. and union representatives broke up Monday night with the comment from Federal mediator Irwin Ga-rard: "No visible progress was made and no new meeting has been scheduled;" ELYRIA UP) A Federal mediator will meet again today with both sides in an effort to reach settlement in the 25-day strike at the Bendix-Westinghouse Automotive Air Brake Co. On strike are 1,069 members of United Auto Workers Local 971.

ASHTABULA UP) City Council passed Monday night a 32-page zoning ordinance that provides a master plan larry, the Pants Xing, sayi Make Di Salle's "distinguished serv caliber rifle into the ground to frighten off a group of students harassing him, but two girls said they were cut slightly when a bullet hit a car window. Wife Slayer Sued For $200,000 CINCINNATI UP) Charles R. Mulcahy, sentenced to concurrent one to 20 year terms after pleading guilty to manslaughter in the fatal stabbing of his estranged wife and to cutting to kill another man, Monday was sued for $200,000 damages. The suit was filed in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court by John Waggoner, Lacrosse, who was wounded in the attack on Mrs. Dorothy Mulcahy last June 13.

In the suit, Waggoner contended he received permanent injuries, that surgery was ice to the State." HIM 1 Teacher lined; Fired At (iirls IRONTON Cole-grove, a mathematics teacher at Ironton High School who says he has been harassed Coleman said ticket purchasers would receive membership in the party's 1,000 Club, composed of those making major contributions to the party. Model T1800 PORTABLE TV f- Sl Mill DELIVER! I prr nuuuy by students during the last DI SAULE said today he was five years, was fined $20 and "extremely grateful" the Pres-lcosts Monday on a misde-ident had accepted the invita-'meanor charge of discharging tion. a firearm within the city Democrats were jubilant limits, over the announcement, hop-! He said he fired a small- With Nationally Advertised Brand GIFTS He Will Appreciate LAYAWAYS GIFT CERTIFICATES We Invite for future development of the needed to save his life and that entire citv. The ordinance took two years to prepare. ii Chargette" Accounts WARREN UP) Two former FREE 1 HOUR PARKING at Ruuell Harp Lots City Councilmen who pleaded guilty to bribery charges in connection with a shakedown of contractors on a $4.5 million Fashion Kxperl Speaks Ignore Husband's Advice On Dress! II '1 HTi riTOTT TtrnniviXl sewage treatment project, were in Ohio Penitentiary to he lost wages and incurred hospital bills.

MULCAHY, 46, pleaded i guilty to the charges last month, telling the court he lost "my whole Irish disposition" when he saw Mrs. Mulcahy with another man I after a discussion of reconciliation. i Mrs. Mulcahy, a singer and pianist, had just finished her debut as entertainer at a downtown hotel. Waggoner said he was helping to carry her tape recorder to her car when they were attacked.

I Hot fa Intervenes 2 LOCATIONS 100 E. Market Arlington Plaza FR-6-6178 PR-3-5511 day serving terms of from one to 10 years. Jack Flask and John Janosik were taken SKtg! Open Every evening Till 9 SStgtgtl NEW YORK Take it from fashion expert Amelia Gray, girls. When your husband tells you what to wear, ignore him. Most husbands don't know any more about women's fashions than most housewives know about their husbands' businesses, says Mrs.

Gray. Consequently, she advises, each should do what he or she knows best: A woman should choose her own clothes and decorate the home. A man should make his business decisions (so he can pay the bills). For Ousted Aide YOUNGSTOWN UP) A telephone call from Teamsters Union President James R. Iloffa brought John J.

Angelo a stay of execution from an order evicting him as secretary-treasurer of Local 377. Angelo was handed an immediate suspension by a Local Trial Board Saturday, but Hoffa told the local officers he would go along with An- gelo's request for a stay until all channels of appeal within the union have been exhausted. The trial board found An Mrs. Gray, whose Beverly Hills, shop caters to some of the most elegant women in the film world and California society, was in New York on a buying trip. She made her remarks in an interview with Marilyn Bender of the New York Times.

"Don't ask him how he likes it," Mrs. Gray advises her customers. "Just put it on and let him compliment you." And if he doesn't? He will, said Mrs. Gray sooner or later. Husbands take time to get used to things.

"Looking at fashion or furniture is like looking at a painting," she says. 'The first time, you can't begin to see what the designer is doing. You have to look and look again." Some women approach clothes with a negative thought, Mrs. Gray says, and they transmit that thought to their husbands. "When a woman says her husband hates her to wear black, I know it's her fault.

I'm married, and I know. There are good blacks and bad blacks, and no man can possibly hate them all." gelo guilty on five counts in volving alleged misuse of union funds and violation of the union constitution. Fqual Service otiee acquired rom Our toluiiiliim Bureau COLUMBUS-The Ohio Civil Rights Commission notified places of public accommodation today to post notices of Eastern ETS TO FROM CLEVELAND Old Grand-Dad comes beautifully packagtd for your holiday giving. EFFECTIVE DEC. 15 EASTERN OFFERS TWO JET FLIGHTS DAILY TO MIAMI FROM CLEVELAND'S HOPKINS MUNICIPAL AIRPORT.

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TAMPA 12:15 AM AR. MIAMI 1:27 AM RETURN FLIGHTS IV. MIAMI 4:45 PM AR. CLEVELAND 7:15 PM IV. MIAMI 2:00 AM LV.

TAMPA 3 15 AM AR. CLEVELAND 5 30 AM MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW FOR YOUR WINTER VACATION IN FLORIDA! mm 11 Mm mm Give the gift that says "BEST OF THE SEASON" This year you can give Old Grand-Dad, Kentucky's finest bourbon, in three beautiful holiday giftwraps. Select 100 proof bottled in bond either in its handsome Gift Decanter or regular bottle. Or choose Old Grand-Dad in the familiar bottle of lighter 86 proof. Each comes in its own gift package at no increase in price.

Coll 535-3327or your TRAVEL AGENT EASTERN AIR LINES FIRST IN ON-TIME DEPENDABILITY LIGHTER, MILDER 86 PROOF or 100 PROOF, BOTTLED IN BONO KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKIES THE OLD GRANO-OAD DISTILLERY FRANKFORT, KY. DISTR. IY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS 0(.

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About The Akron Beacon Journal Archive

Pages Available:
3,080,993
Years Available:
1872-2024