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The Charleston Daily Mail from Charleston, West Virginia • Page 20

Location:
Charleston, West Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Human Rights Rev. Aaferssw field, presiscai 'Jse IvAACP. I Stanley aad a L. Leaeswiie, will sen as a Steering committee to cojrdiaaie lobbying action sa favor the bill. IN WASHINGTON tie was ap pointed IaJt year as superintended m.

ibf sale's largest mental hospital. He bekl the pusi once before, from lo 1851. i Smith, as assistant attorney ill's Passage Drastic Farm Plan UnlikelyP Directors Gov. Barron reached into stal Aim Of Group general wooer Barron since Gov. Barron reached into stale beett A onblk hearin.

slated i i Trail's Trode Isovejumeut ranks lo find UQ ifry at 3 p.ai: by altMliflS Ifle lirA. He lL. i rfiu at mm hv a Senate UK iXUHH re 1KUJL mkMk! reached its peak in 1831. In ihat 1 uwii ui uiv iiic ana aence lor engimi ineads tor departments of: Vw Democrats and Republicans I960 campaign. ink itv nf MiM Mental Hrchh And Public As care 01 BiU No.

36, dealing was0113 tnP Names Mental Health, this advice toaay tor the Ken mi wxr uhiwiumx passes last year. I r.edy administration: build on existing farm programs. The legislators saw little; chance in Congress for any drastic proposals. The advice comes beCore the now administration gets down to drafting the far in proposals i President Kennedy will submit to Congress within the next two 1 weeks. A ihi'ec member task force committee on "ttie key elements of the agricultural situation" handed the new administration fann program recommendations' yesterday.

They came closer, in some respects, to meeting prom ises of the Republicans rather I By CHARLES R. LEWIS Associated Press Writer A bill to cut the state's resident' hunting license fee back to the $2 of two years ago was introduced! in the Senate today by Sen. Carl! E. Gainer, Nicholas. The proposal by Gainer, chair man of the Senate's Forestry and Conservation Committee, alsoi would reduce the $5 cost lor a combination hunting and fishingl Joe Gilmore, jcker, chairman of the House Committee on Game and Fish, that he and his group plan to look into last year's hike in ucense lees.

The 1959 legislature boosted the' hunting and fishing licenses irem $2 each to and the combination hunting and fishing permit fee from S3 to $5. Those boosts were followed by sharp drops in sales. Gainer's bill would leave the resident fishing license at $3. Conservation Director Warden M. NEW ROADS, La.

tft A deadly green chlorine from a derailed railway tank car ter rorized the farm and lumber community of Labarre, six miles west of here. Most of the 1,000 or so persons' who fled from about 75 homes, two schools and several businesses! didn't know at first yesterday what! Had seized them. An 11 month old boy died, fivei other persons were left in a criti cal condition, about iOO werei treated at hospitals and clinics. scores of farm animals were killed by the poison gas. Attendants at St, Joseph's Hos pital here said many came in suf fering more from sheer panic than from burned throats, lungs and eyes.

Eighteen cars of a Kansas City Southern freight piled up on the Louisiana and Arkansas tracks! along state highway 1. i Senators paid little attention I Wor Id LOUrt Action so crtuens represent called Ambassador Llewellyn cpnt i I a year directorship i a doien organizations in Thompson home from Moscow: D.u Department new in a new to ftnd ways of legal adviser says President improving b. S. Soviet relations. Ieader WinteA Mt that com i Kennedy will press for repeal of Kennedy, Thompson and Sec retary7 of State Dean Rusk are expected to discuss the possibility of a spring meeting between Kennedy and Soviet Premier N'iktta S.

Khrushchev as well as, a wide range of other subjects, including the outlook for disarmament negotiations and the state of relations between the Soviet Union and Red China. Probe Funds Voted The Senate has voted $2,471, Lane has said that such factors, as unemployment and the state ipopulation loss also have contrib uted to lower license sales. Gainer joined with Sen. Hansi McCourt, Webster, in intro duction today of a resolution di recting the purchase of an ll mile! long logging railroad and i(s roll ing slock in Pocahontas County as a tourist attraction. A similar resolution went intol license in effect since Dec.

31,1 the House under the sponsorship of 1959, to $4 jDels. J. C. Cruikshank, Clay been determined that the rail road and rolling stock including two 1880 model steam shay engines, "can be purchased acted upon immediately. BABY DIES, 100 MADE ILL Wreck Spreads Deadly Chlorine ed in a light wind in huge green ish fog banks.

Jerry Cagle, laundry truck driv er returning from nearby Mor Iganza to New Roads, thought the train was on fire. He went back I to investigate. Apparently he was the mst person stricken. Cagle drove on to the 25 bed hospital; here, gasping and vomiting. mittee budgets have increased each year.

Hunting License Back To $2 notea mac sne ine iranscenus The bill was introduced in Tljomas C. Edgar. Pocha It noted that She line transcends wake of an announcement by Iporteil to be the largest suchl Legislative committees havi checked into the feasibility ofj purchasing the line owned by the Mower Lumber Co. and formerly! used in its logging operation at Cass. Conservation Director Warden M.

Lane also has made! a study of the matter. Today's resolution said it hasl The resolution would direct the conservation director to negotiate for the purchase, it being the! Legislature expressed 1 that the railroad be devesopea as tourist attraction and recre ational facility," There was no reference tot money, but the resolution also ask the director to do any other thing necessary to the use of said railroad for the of incorporating the same into the! state park system area east of the Rockies; and that "the scenic beauty of this mountain area is unsurpassed in! West Virginia. Sen. Lyle Smith Cabell. introduced today a bill lo set up a five member WesL Virginia Historic Commission with powers.

among other things, to purchase! new and replace old historical! road markers. The members would be named: by the governor for four year and would include one who also is a member of the West: Virginia Historical Society. JVEW CODE, BILL jill sponsored by Sen, Clarence E. Martin Berkeley, would establish a five member West Virginia Code Com mission to codify and revise West Virginia statutes. It would include a Supreme Court judge named by that court; umcers ana volunteers rcanzca rotiroc Ihat chlorine gas was involved; would provide, for the iand began warning residents iseek high ground to; escape the! jfumes.

They raced between clouds of; chlorine to about 75 homes, to: Labarre Elementary School! where 400 children had just lopened classes, and to Morganza1 High school, where another 3001 children were in class. The family hardest hit was that; jof James Harris whose son. James 111, was the first victim. Harris lived in a small shack a few hundred yards from the! The chlorine filled car rs ti wreckage on a side road. Harris, 'open.

The green liquid spilled intoihis wife and two other children; ditches, turned to vapor and drift collapsed from the gas. H32ii BILLS INTRODUCED H3r.o Palmcr to ua Serines CounSv. win ihrcr mcmb named by covcrr.cr for H33n Iaicau and Wjlls insurance commls: S311S Gainer chance ho cf nrimary election ballets lo be from nof more than 1 1 20 la than 1 1 5 the number of re; jrnber of rcptslred in a 1 ss.o». rr and 'i "ir.r" rr, vtrea by dcFcctlve vad: 5 S3" 74 sz the attorney general, and three mmebers of the West Virginia! State Bar named by the governor. speaker Julius w.

inngleton Monongalia, and Minority Leader George H. Seibert Ohio, sponsored a House bill to increase pensions under the judges' retirement system from 50 to 75 per cent, of the highest I annual salary of the office from first time, annuities for widows of judges. Senate President Howard w. WHOSE? Dunbar Amused By Poll I How much credence is givi ia Dunbar political poll in which! jihe pollster refuses to identify! himself? A poll published in a Dunbar: i weekly newspaper two weeks ago residents both amused andi puzzled. Several persons listed as candi dates in the poll have denied! inc'jpolitical ambitions.

Others have! 'expressed amusement. Apparent no one is taking it seriously. "n3; The poll is sponsored by an or which C3lis itself Asso News Media. P. 0.

Box Charleston 23. W. Va. ibori The poll's results, published last week, listed three enndiaates for mayor from each parly. ncmrjcr3is listed were Mayor! Lawrence B.irkcr.

Bili Sp3niol and! Dalo Long. On the Republican list 1.1° were Councilman Howard Cole 9 mr.n, Paul and J. C. Kes sell. Spaniol per cent ma in the popularity Mayor Barker came in second; with a showing of ol per ce Dale Long, the only person who! cr admits he is a got oniy: rcr per Spanioi said he rioes not know'.

'ho polling organ; 7a'ion. Hr any involve Z'j. the ANM into the' open and identifies itself, ir no one will ever know a nyi f' more abotit jL a U. S. veto over jurisdiction of the World Court.

Dirksen said results of many i "We have to have a lot more investigations "fill up tons of votes than we had last year," hearings which are sold for replied Chairman J. W. Ful wastepaper." bright, of the Senate I Foreign Relations Committee. Legislation On Blind 1 The exchange yesterday came Sen. Eugene J.

McCarthy, as the foreign relations corn Minn proposed legislation to mittee, without opposition, ap dav which he said would en I the nomination of Abram courage blind persons to try to Chayes, Harvard law profes becomc self supporting. sot. as legal adviser to the State His bill would prohibit resi 1 Department. IN WAKE OF PLANNED PROBE OF '59 HIKE Senate Measure Would Cut Carson, Fayette, and Minority Leader John E. Carrigan, Marshall, sponsored a resolution proposing a constitutional amend the Mental Health UWeilingS terested in the passage of the succeeding Dr.

R. P. bill held a luncheon session to, who resigned. DUin. rUUf IMIICU discuss wavs of ensuring the bill's He picked W.

Bernard Smith of i moxtrpai. (API Fmir passage. Logan, an assistant attorney gen were reportwJ early; were expected to attend eral for the past four years, tojtodav in a fire that swept afternoon's hearing at the! succeed Thomas Egbert of mj hoUses st. capitol. street.

Primary weapon of the proposed i also announced yester af aU. est Human Rights Com day the appointments of James A. .1. u.m„„;„„ t.n.:„. the debris of the bnck: subpoena witnesses to testify at William P.

C. Perry of Chariest buildi.ngs relwrted find' both private and public hearings.1 i luul lu iiii who. raut J. ivauimaii iu as two new members of the i three man State Racing Commission. They succeed Malcolm J.

Lowe of Parkersburg. and L. McCamic of Wellsburg. ment to permit sheriffs uuuti (his guidance and direction, themselves. A similar resolution Two persons were rescued by; introduced the bill and a similar, firemen using ladders.

Oik was' measure was introduced in the snatched from the roof and UieiRouse of Delegates by Charles' other, a paralytic woman, was Peters Jr. iD Kanawha Hagerxnan who heaaed the Men About 15 persons occupied 0f lhose tal Health DeDartment since last ot tnose at endin May. In his letter of resignation, he praised Zeller and expressed confidence the department would carried down from the second; Petm alt(fnded yesterday's; Medical Costs Rise CHICAGO In the past Tj ike King Cheops wore linen, not grey flannel. He never heard of Madison Avenue. Yet when he desired to make known his name to all posterity, he turned to advertising.

And came up with a "billboard" which has lasted 5,000 years. No, advertising is not a passing fancy of our times. It is, and always has been, part of the human scene a basic form of communications among people. As such, it is as old as the first cave man's offer to barter his "better brand" of spear, as young as the "help wanted" cry of a newborn babe. In our abundant society advertising needs no aeienss.

maintain interest in the bill since there are no economic in terests behind it with axes to. years the average family spend 1 Among those scheduled to testify ing in the Umtea Stales for all for the bill are Miles Stanley was introduced earlier the director of the Michigan McntalUypes of medical care has in 1 president of the Labor, House. Heaith Department, director of 'creased by 42 per cent. Federation, AFL CTO, and the all good ads, the Pyramid makes a point Interest Compounded SEMI ANNUALLY DOLLAR SAVINGS AND LOAN CO OPEN FtlDAT EVENINGS 5:30 TO I fM 0 St. SOUTH CHARLESTON On occasion, however, when an individual practice may be questioned, the over all purpose of advertising should be remembered: Advertising is nothing more or less than the means by which information and ideas about goods and services are exchanged swiftly, dramatically effectively.

It is the very human art of stirring dreams. And the very prac tical science of helping to make them come true. To this end advertising builds pyramids, too. But in a land of plenty, not a desert KUDIvjc ri AUKNCY, NEW YORK, N.Y. a THE CHARLESTON GAZETTE jDAILT XML cs semlcf..

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About The Charleston Daily Mail Archive

Pages Available:
114,805
Years Available:
1914-1977