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Beckley Post-Herald The Raleigh Register from Beckley, West Virginia • Page 2

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Beckley, West Virginia
Issue Date:
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2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

and Register, Beckley, W. Sunday Morning, June 30, 19G3 Deaths. K. B. (ilkwiy Funeral services Jor K.

R. Calloway, 79, of 103 Virginia will be conducted at 4 p. m. today in with the Dr. Kenneth L.

Swank in charge. Burial will follow in Wildwood Cemetery. He died at his home at 9:30 p.m Friday after suffering heart attack. Born March 51, 1884, at Glen Daniel, he was a son of the late Charlet and Henrietta Calloway. He retired a year and a half after serving 27 years as bookkeeper for the Beckley Lumber and Supply Co.

Calloway was also a former cashier at the Bank of Raleigh and was employed about 20 years with the Calloway Lumber in Huntington. He was a member of the First Baptist Church of Beckley, the White Stick Lodge No. 37 and the Knights of Pythias. Survivors include hk wife, Mrs. Hattie Ellison Calloway; a son, James, Huntington; a daughter, Mrs.

L. C. (Eunice) Hall, Oak Hill; a brother, Quince, Huntington; 17 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. The body will remain at the funeral home. Final rites for Quince Williams, 86, Willis will be conducted at 2 p.

m. Monday in the Tyree Funeral Home Chapel in Mount Hope with the Rev. Roy Tyree in charge. Burial will be in the family cemetery at Willis Branch. Williams died at 3:30 a.

m. Saturday at his home following a stroke. A retired farmer, be was a member of tbe Methodist Church at Cirtsville. Born at Willis Branch, June 20. 1877, he was a son of the late Floyd and Emily Lafferty Williams.

Surviving are two brothers, Sherman, Long Branch, and Willie of Wdllis Branch, and a sister, Mrs. Lillian Maynor, Mount Hope Route 1.. Tbe body will remain at the funeral home where friends may caH arfter 4 p. m. today.

(RNS) Vince R. McKinney Final rites for Vince Bay McKinney, two-year-old SOT of Darrell and, Lola Bishop McKinney, Basin, will be conducted at noon today in tbe New Spcuce Grove Qwrch with the Rev. Paul Lusk in charge. Burial will be in the John Shrewsbury Cemetery at Be- The child died at 9 p.m. Friday in a Mullens bospitaft, five hours after admittance.

The cause of death has not been determined. He was born In Mullens March f7, 1961. He is also survived by a sister, Dariene, at borne; the paternal grandparents, Mr. end iMrs. Aaron McKinney, and the maternal grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Harrison Bisop allot Basin. The body was taken the Sam Fogtesong Funeral Home in made his tone with a daughter, Mn. Paul (Clarice) Lilly, 1307 Summers Hinton, for the past several years. Also surviving are another son, Lester of Cool Ridge; three other daughters, Mrs.

Howard (Opal) Vert, Nimitz; Mrs. Charles (Eli- Kochy, Cleveland, Ohio, and Mrs. Geter (Hazel) Lilly, Jumping Branch; a sister, Mrsr CHa Adkins, Beaver; 30 grandchildren, 41 great-grandchildren, and 1 great-great-grandchild. His wife, Mrs. Nota Lilly Harvey, preceded him in death in May 1950.

The body is at the Ronald Meadows Funeral Parlors in Hinton pending completion of funeral arrangements. (RNS) Mrs. Ollie D. McClung Final rites for Mrs. Ollie D.

McClung, '66, Clayton, Del, formerly of Crawley, will be conducted at 2 p. m. Monday in the Crawley Baptist Church, with the Rev. Ernest Barley and the Rev. R.

C. Mustoe in charge. Burial will be in the Burns Cemetery at Kieffer. Mrs. McClung died Friday in Clayton after a long illness.

She was a lifelong resident of Crawley, a member of the.Craw- ley Baptist Church, and had been living with a daughter in Clayton since the.death of her husband in 1961. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Helen Woodall, Clayton, Mrs. Katherine Lively, Colmar Manor, and Mrs. Dorothy Legg, Cottage City, two sisters, Mrs.

Mamie Robinson, East Rainette, and Miss Catherine Burns, Clayton; two brothers, Russell, Kieffer, and Emmett, Wprthington, Ohio and four grandchildren. The body will be taken from the Nickell Funeral Home in East Rainelle to the church one hour before the service. (RNS) 'Freedom (all' Funeral services for iMrs. Agnes Dorsey, 64, Gkn Whke, will be conducted at 1 Monday in the Ritchie and Johnson Funeral Parlor Chapel with the Rev. Eugene Wiley Jn charge.

Burial wfll in Greenwood Memorial Park. She died in the home of a niece, Mrs. Pauline Yancey of Glen White at 6 a.m. Friday following a tang illness. The body win remain at the funeral home.

George W. Brooks George Walter Brooks, 76, of 216 Elm Beckley, died Saturday in a Beckley hospital. He had suffered for several years from a heart condition. Brooks was born June 2 1887, in Covington, Va. Mrs.

ROM M. (line Funeral arrangements are incomplete for.Mrs. Rosa M. Cline, 77, PinevilJe, who died at 3:20 p.m. Saturday in a Welch hospital.

Born at Jan. 6, she was a daughter of the late John C. and Lettie McCoy. Surviving are her husband, G. C.

Cline and a son, Tony, Pineville; a brother, Jim McCoy, McAlpin and a sister, Mrs. Emma Justice, Delbarton. The body is at the Evans Funeral Home in Oceana. RNS) George F. Hash Funeral services for George F.

Mash, 67, Princeton, will be conducted at 2:30 p.m. today in the Kee Street Methodist Church with the Rev. William Trowbridge and the Rev. Paul Bohn in charge. Burial will be in Roselawn Memorial Gardens.

Mash-died Friday in a Beckley hospital. The body will remain at Memorial Funeral Directory and will be placed in the church one hour prior to services. Pallbearers will be Howard Durr, Otey Lytton, Alex Johnston, Raymond Fizer, Carl Young, Fred Cooke, and M. H. Jewell.

(RNS) Clarence E. Propps Final rites for Clarence Ester Propps, 68, Lookout, will be conducted at 2 p.m. Monday in the Lookout Methodist Church with the Rev. William Scacrist and the Rev. Wesley Pennington in charge.

Burial will be in the Jannette Cemetery at Lookout. Propps died Friday evening at his home. Death was attributed to a heart condition. A retired miner, he was a veteran of World War I. Born Feb.

11, 1896, at Bdmond, he was a son of the late Samuel and Annie Martin Propps. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mable Propps; three daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Syner, Lookout; Mrs. Jacqueline Landis, Ohio, and Mrsi Bernice Johnson, Ansted; two sons, Lawrence, GETTYSBURG, Pa.

AP) A dramatic call for freedom for the Negro was sounded Saturday on this Civil War battlefield where 100 years ago Monday great, groping armies from North and South locked in a crucial struggle. The scene was the Eternal Light Peace Memorial, where a gold temporary al- been erected so that a military field Mass could be celebrated under auspices of Notre Dame University. The speaker was the Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, president of Notre Dame, who said in a sermon that the Civil War was fought for the Negroes' liberty but that this remains unfinished business.

Calling on all Americans to become great emancipators like Abraham Lincoln, educator- Lookout, and Eugene, Columbus, Ohio; a sister, Mrs. Ben Wilson, Lookout; two brothers, Frank, Church, 10 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. The body will be taken from the Wallace and Wallace Funeral Home in East Rainelle to the residence at 4 p.m. today and will be placed in the church one hour before the service. (RNS) and Henrietta Ailstock Brooks.

Brooks was a retired house painter and paper hanger. He was a veteran of World War I and a member of the Beckley Presbyterian Church. He is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Vivian Legg of Charleston, and two sisters, Mrs. Vina Harless, Covington, and Mrs.

Mullens to the residence Saturday I Harry Suchuder, Richmond, Va. evening. (RNS) The body will remain at the Calfee Funeral Home pending funeral Fimeral services for Samuel Burdette.Clark, 75, of MacArur, will be conducted at 2:30 pjn. today in the Calfee Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Otis Clyburn in charge.

Burial will follow in Sunset Memorial Park. He died at. 5:30 Friday in a local hospital following a long illness. The body will remain at the Oalfee-Funeral Home. priest said, "Moral issues must be recognized and acknowledged in individual hearts and consciences.

The appalling death of freedom for millions of Negro Americans today, in voting, in employment, in housing, in education, in public accommodations, and in the administration of justice, is not something automatic. "It is a positive act; it is free- dome denied from one Americar to another American, and every white American decides to act morally towards every Negro American, there is no end to the unfinished business." The Mass was the unofficial beginning of a great commemoration of the Battle of Gettysburg which marked the high tide anc ebbing of the Confederacy. The ceremonies, including a drama tized version of Pickett's charge without any firing of shots, will last through July 3, the day Con federate Gen. Robert E. Lee gave up his Northern invasion attempt About 250,000 persons are ex pected to visit this hallowed ground during the centennial Observance.

This historic town is aglow with bunting, flags anc store window displays recalling tbe Civil War. Some 4,000 persons attended the Mass, was held in the open in temperatures in the high 90s. Nineteen persons suffered heat prostration and had to be removed. Among those attending were former i and Mrs. Dwight D.

Eisenhower. The general was called to the platform after the Mass to receive a plaque which' read: "With special gratitude from a lady we lovinglv call Notre Dame." President Kennedy, who is in Europe, sent a special representative, John S. Gleason veterans administrator. Gleason also received a plaque. Feared Progress Woald Put Him Out Of Business But- Mercer Blacksmith Now Has More Than lie Can Handle STRAT DOUTHAT BLUEFIELD (A) W.

P. iamilton can remember when the conning of the automobile threatened his livelihood. "But today," "the blacksmith business better'than it was half a century ago." Unlike the smith of poetry who plied-his trade under the village chestnut tree, Hamilton until recently traveled more than 20,000 niles a year from his Bluefield wme to shoe horses in Tennessee, Virginia, Kentucky and West Virginia. "Business was kinda' slow in the 30s and 40s but for the past 12 years there has been such a demand for blacksmiths that I have lad more work than I could handle," he says. Hamilton, a slightly stooped but powerful man of 67, attributes'the heavy demand to lack of competi- He doesn't know of another blacksmith within 100 miles; 'Another reason is that people have more horses today than they used to.

When I got into this trade 47 years ago, everybody had work horses, -Now saddle horses are popular and the. people want their animals shod right." Following' his father's footsteps, he began working at the trade in 1916 after taking a correspondence course. He estimates he has shod well over 10,000 horses. "Sure, I have been kicked plenty of times but never so bad I couldn't finish a job; I have a-special bit which will tame even the wildest horse," he said. Until 1961 he and his wife hauled their portable blacksmith wagon, with its own furnace and anvil, all over this of the country.

"I slowed down a lot after that, The doctors told me I lave burned out the nerves 'in my feet." Hamilton spends most of his time now in a backyard shop conducting a thriving mail order business. "Horse owners send me drawings of the animal's foot and I make the shoes to fit the diagrams. I ship shoes all over this part of the country, mainly because nobody else knows how to fit them." weighs each shoe on a scale and fits it just like a human's shoe. The height of the heel and length of the toe determine the fitting. Hamilton said 18 area fairs and horse shows contacted him this spring to ask him to handle their horses.

"I usually get from $12 up for each shoeing. There's room in the trade today because mosl so-called blacksmiths can't even shoe a horse. They're just' iron workers." His small shop is filled with wagon wheels and other relics of a past era. nis methods haven't changed much since 1916. About" the only concession to change is an electric bl)wer which was installed to replace an old- fashioned h.and crank: blower." 'can make more than of shoes ranging in weight from 10 pounds tQ four ounces.

Hamilton also is a farrier. "A farrier," he explained, "can make special shoes and correct any fault in a horse's foot. By shoeing a horse a certain way, I can make it do a specific gait. "Why, I can just look at a horse's head and tell you is wrong with i If I could only do that with my feet." Sgf. Lilly Urges Driving (are On July 4 Weekend Beckley State and -City Police Departments are urging alea motorists to have a "safe and dane" July 4 holiday.

SGT. D. Lilly, Beckley State Police Detachment, points out excessive speed is a major factor in most highway accidents and especially when fatalities occur. Heavy traffic, he said is not necessarily responsible for traffic accidents, and, he explained, on -rural highways, one-vehicle type accidents are one of the most common holiday highway killers. THE SERGEANT emphasizes extreme caution in after-dark riviiig, and traveling on ar highways.

Also, he stresses nsafe passing and attempting to Mid the right-of-way as major iccident traps for the vacation iriver. Officers of both police departments declared all available of- icers will be patroling the city and county highways on the'look- ut for drinking drivers. Rracas At Carnival res Two; $800 Damages Estimated Alaskan Miss Janice B. Cook Final rites for Miss Janice Buckhannan Cook, 19, Keyrock, will be conducted at 11 a. m.

Monday in the Bockcastle Baptist Church at Rockview with the Rev. Ihmr-; Stevens in charge. Burial Hillcrest Memorial Gar- Matheny. Cook died Friday afternoon iti an Oak Hill hospital after a shoit illness. Among her survivors is her paternal grandmother, Mrs.

Tom Cook, Keyrock. The body will be taken from the Evans Funeral Home to the residence at 2 p. m. today. Oliver C.

Harvey Oliver C. Harvey, Hinton, died at 3:15 pm Saturday in the home of a son, Champ Harvey, Strcster, with whom he had been Tisiting for the past two weeks. Born Dec. 13, 1874, in Streeter, he was a son of the late Mr. and Mrs.

John W. Harvey. He had lived aH of his life in Summers County and was a carpenter and farmer as long as his health permitted. He was a member of the primitive Baptist Church. arrangements.

Ezra F. Dodson Funeral services for Ezra Franklin Dodson, 60, Kingston, will be conducted at 2 p. m. Monday in the Kingston Community Church with me Rev. Arnold Kinley in charge.

Burial will be in High Lawn Memorial Park in Oak Hfll. Dodson died at 10:30 p.m. Friday en route to a local hospital. Death was attributed to a heart attack. A retired miner, he was a member of Moose Lodge No.

1664, Oak Hfll, and UMWA Local No. 6112, Kingston. He was born in Sparta, 25, 1903. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Ethel Lucille Dodson, Kingston; a son, Earl Franklin Dodson, Kingston; a daughter, Mrs.

Emma Grace Gillham, Kingston; three brothers, Joe, Kingston, "William, Lynchburg, and Hal Maford; a sister, Mrs. Thelma Johnson, Eunice and a grandchDd. The body will be taken from the Tyree Funeral Home in Oak Hill to the residence at 4 p. m. today and will be placed in the church one hour before the service.

(RNS) Funeral arrangements are incomplete for James Roy Bragg, 37, Sandstone, who died at 3 a.m. Saturday in the home of Jeff Taylor, Sandstone, with whom he lived. Death was attributed to a heart attack. He was employed as a truck driver and was a son of Kenny and Bessie "Wills Bragg, Sandstone. Also.

surviving are three brothers, Russell and Basil, both of Akron, Ohio, and Mehrin, Joliet, four sisters, Mrs. Madeline Burdett, Princeton; Mrs. Olean Williams, Palmyra, Mrs. Minnie Lee Willie, Akron, and Mrs. Harry (Geneva) Davis, Marie.

The body is at the E. M. Meadows Funeral Home in Hinton (RNS) (Continued From Page One) cause of the rugged terrain. However, Mike said, "I can't say West Virginia compares with Alaska at ail-but I like it." Juneau, capital of Alaska, has a population of about 10,000 and is situated in the southeastern panhandle of the state. The city is backed by towering Mt.

Juneau-a sheer mountain 3,500 feet tall rising from a fjord of the Pacific Ocean. While in West Virginia, Mike and his 99 comrades will study radio astronomy at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory near here. The Observatory is home of the famous 300-foot in diameter reflector that catches radio impulses from, outer space. "I didn't know much abonf know West Virginia, but much I had abou heard (Continued From Page One) admit that she had been dickering with newspapers for her story. "Do you realize that the more well-known personalities and the more sensational you make your story, the greater value it would have?" he asked.

"Yes sir," she replied. "Every person in this case is under contract to some paper and I don't I am news- not be. several BEFORE you THINK for What It Means The knight-and-shield emblem we display Is i a it signifies that we have met al! the qualifications necessary for membership in the Order of the Golden Rule. All who call arc assured of "Service Measured not by GOLD but by the GOLDEN RULE." sae why I should" under contract to papers." She said Miss Keeler received I $64,000 from one newspaper for 1 her story. But she insisted everything stve had testified to was true.

The prosecution has charged that Ward procured girls and shared in the profits of prostitution. At the end of her testimony today the court gave Miss Rice- Davits permission to leave the country until Ward's trial comes up but raised her bond to $1,400. She has said she wants to return to the Spanish island of Majorca to get married. Rose Funeral Chapel AMOS E. QUESENBEW, KCKLEY, WEST VIRGINIA 450 See 'Honey' On Barbour Nile Approximately 450 people saw Saturday night's performance of 'Honey in the Rock" according to play spokesman.

Thirty eight states and the Dis- rict of Columbia were represented; plus faraway Cairo, Egypt. The couple from Egypt were RAIN fell' early "in the evening, but by 7:30 p.m. it had stopped and the play was presented under starry night sky. Saturday jiight was Barbour County night at "Honey," and a resume of the history, of Barbour County was presented. Berkley County will be similarly lonored at Tuesday night's per formance when the Honorable 3ray Silver judge of the Ber Country Circuit Court, will be the guest of honor.

ALL the counties of West Vir ginia will be so honored in turn of the 300-footer," Mike said. Gnad Joins Greany In May, Mike's science instruc tor at June-ait Douglas i School told him he had received an. application from the Centennial commission. With the help the science teacher, his parents and Sen. Ernest Gruening, Mike filed the application and became one of the two delegates to the camp from Alaska.

The second boy is Allen Gnad of Anchorage. Never having been any farther east than Detroit, Mike was excited about his trip here. "I was kind of surprised and thrilled, but soon I became aware of the great honor and what I could learn," he said. He deserved the trip too. He ranks about fifth in his high school.

During the first years, he has maintained a 3.8 average of a possible 4.0. Being science-minded, medicine seems to fascinate him most and he hopes to study to be a surgeon al either the University of Washington or the University of Oregon. About the stay at the Observatory here, he said, "I think IT receive a greater understanding of a major field of science, nol usually touched upon in high school." Being from Alaska, Mike quite popular with rest of the boys, but they were pretty disappointed when he told them, "I've I never seen an 'Honey in the Rock." Play officials said that Satur day's attendance was the larges since opening night. Persons desiring tickets for to night's performance can obtain them at 'the box office. Barron on all Cfllifi brand paint Buy one get GALLONS ONLY INTIIMft OPEN ALL DAY WED.

MR MOM. FREE 'look for the YeFbw Store" Mary Carter DISCOUNT Paint Store 735 S. lanowha St, Pi. 252-2762 From One) Jayne Mansfield as grand mar shal. A historical pageant, "Panhan die Panorama," was presente Saturday night to round out th Centennial celebration.

The festivities will conclude a spiritual note Sunday eyenin with a Union Church service. In his talk, Barron said "one the major objectives" of the Wes Virginia Centennial celebration is to bring all areas of the state int closer contact with each other "to put an end to sectionalism. "Our Centennial gives us splendid opportunity to do that, 5 governor said. "Program such as the one we are witness ing here this week are prpducin maximum results in attaining tha objective." Barrooi also praised the Berkeley Springs Time Capsule as "a especially worthwhile Centennia program." The air-tight capsule containin both historical material and pe sonal messages on microfilm wi be buried in the ground at Be fceley Springs State Park in a ce emony OcL 12. ACCIDENT AT SOAK CREEK State Police at the Beckley De tachment Headquarters said the had received a call Saturda right from a woman that ther had been a wreck at Soak Cree involving a truck, but at pres time they had no other detai on this reported incident.

Need Not Be Expensive! let Ug Help You Select Your Family Monument or SEARS MONUMENT CO. AMIGO (RNS) Two men were jured and damage'estimated at JOO resulted from a fracas at.the arnival grounds at Amigo Fri- ay afternoon. Injured were Luther Caudill, 43, Hazzard, a show operator or 'the All-American- Carnival, vhich is playing this week at the 10 New Laws In Effect Monday CHARLESTON (UPI) New West Virgina's 3 per' cent consumer sales ax and other levies are among" ome 30 legislative acts which wiU ecome effective Monday, the tart of West Virginia's new fiscal year. The laws passed by the 1963 legislature early this year includ- one raising the salaries of the overnor and the five judges of State Supreme Court. The pay oost won't apply to Gov.

W. W. Jarron but will apply to the cur- ent jurists. Also going into effect Monday ill be $3.6 million worth of salary increases, including a 10 a month hike for teachers with degree, $20 for teachers with achelor's degrees and $30 for hose with master degrees. The 1963-64 appropriations i assed by the 1963 Legislature to- aied $153 million, slightly higher lan the spending recommended the State Board of Public Vorks.

Also going into effect Monday vill be laws: --Establishing a joint ixaminer-coroner system in Virginia. --Creating a reclamation boarc if review and dilniating authority etween that board and the Mines )epartment and Natural Re ources Department. --Outlining new mine safety regulations. --Establishing a program for al coholics under the State Depart ment of Mental Health. --Raising the salaries of State Policemen.

Amigo ball park, Reed, 39, Amigo. CAUDILL was Jeckley hospital for a cut on his eft hand which required 14 stitch- s. Reed was treated at the Wy- ning General Hospital in Mul- ens for bruises to the head and chest and a cut to his head which required 10 stitches. Arrested and fined $10 and costs hearing for was Dallas Bishop, Doe Valley, Va. The same charge was lodged against Parris raham, Allen Junction, but was in a magistrate's ighting in public dropped.

Caudill and Sherman treated at a said he returned from business trip to Mullens Friday find a group of men throwing at his trailer by lis wife and three children. He said as he. rushed toward the railer, one of the men who was outside the metal fence which encircles the park, reached through a hole and cut him with a ong knife. THE ROCKS broke a large window and damaged two aluminum panels in CaudilTs trailer, caus- ng an estimated $400 in damages and caused $400 damage to a trailer adjacent to his which elongs to his brother-in-law, R. Miller, Tampa, Fla.

Two other men were arrested and charged with intoxication, but Caudill said none of the four vas the one who cut him. $2,000 Damages 1 Ini Accidents Two unrelated traffic accidents occurred at Stanaford Saturday afternoon within a 20-minute period and a quarter-mile of each other. Robert Lee Lewis, 24, Beckley, charged by State Police with failure to have his vehicle under control after he rammed a 1962 model car owned by Paul Lee Man, Beckley, into a 1957 model car driven by Ella H. Taylor, 54, Piney View, at 3:40 p.m. DAMAGES -were estimated at $500.

At 4 p.m., Warren 0. Rogers, 37, Oak was driving to the left charged with of the center of the highway after he rounded a curve and his 1951 model truck slid into a 1957 model car driven by Bobby J. Ward, 26, Backus Mountain, resulting in an estimated $1,500 damage to the two vehicles. No injuries were reported in either accident. Kennedy Harper Rood Ph, 253-64N President Visits Grave Of Sister EDENSOR, England (UPI) -President Kennedy took time ou Tom his official duties Saturday and visited the grave of his elder! sister Kathleen, who is buried in the village churchyard at Edensor on the Chatsworth estate of the Duke of Devonshire.

As Lady Hartington, she was killed May 3, 1948, when a chartered plane in which she was flying crashed into the mountains near Privus, France. Her husband, the iMarquis of Hartington, was killed in action in France in 1W4. He was the eldest son and heir of the 10th Duke of Devonshire. The last minute change in the President's plans was announced when he had already left Ireland en route to a weekend meeting with Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. The presidential plane landed at Waddington Royal Air Force Station and Kennedy took off immediately by helicopter for Edensor, some 40 miles away.

It was strictly a private affair and he wanted no advance notice. The few White House correspondents traveling on the plane with him and in an accompanying press aircraft were not taken along to Edensor. Accident Victim In VA Hospital Hubert C. "Wheeler of Fayetteville was admitted to the Beckley Veterans Administration Hospital about 10 p.m. Saturday after being in an automobiic accident involving two cars ntar Ansted.

Wheeler was described by spokesman at the hospital as being in "satisfactory However the extent of his injuries had not been xJetermined at press time. It was reported that a woman passenger in the other car had also been injured, and had been taken by ambulance to a hospital in Oak Hfll or Montgomery, but no information about her had been obtained late Saturday night, TRSPASSER RELEASD Calvin Grimmett, Beckley, was released from Raleigh County Jail at 12:05 a.m. Saturday after serving a sentence on a trespassing conviction. Science (amp (Continued From Page One) Charles N. Cochran, assistant professor of mathematics and astronomy at West Virginia University.

Cochran and Joseph M. Hutchinson, also of WVU, will direct a staff of 10 counselors, all graduate students. The program will include arcb eological explorations, surveys and excavations by a team of experts headed by the Rev. Clifford M. Lewis, assistant to the president of Wheeling College and president of the West Virginia Archeological Society.

To insure the continued health of the boys, the State Health Department provided fully-equipped mobile health unit headed by Dr. Emma Jane Free man, a resident nurse. Eight radio telescopes of varying sizes are operated at the observatory. One gf them, 300 feet in diameter, is the largest movable re lector in the world. In addition -telescopes, the observing facil ties include the receivers and as sociated equipment for their use The observatory is operated bj Associated Universities a ion-profit corporation, under con ract to the National i Foundation.

Trieste (Continued From any of the underwater photo graphs taken. The hole was said to be "quite near" the spot where compressed (Continued From Page Ont) to welcome Kennedy. The two men had a 20 minute tea and then went immediately into the prime minister's study and talked nuclear test bah strategy for an hour and a half. Talk With Advisors They also continued the dis- ussion during dinner when such dvisers as Secretary of Sta te tean Rusk, Hailsham, Foreign cretary Lord Home, U. S.

Am- assador David K. E. Bruce, ritish Ambassador to Washing- on Sir David Onnsby-Gore and ir Harold ndersecretary of state at the oreign office. Kennedy flew to England after hree joyous days of "homecom- ng" in Ireland, where he was a oast of the sons of St. Patrick ho cried at his departure: Come ye back to Erin." After an unscheduled visit he graveside in North England his sister Kathleen, killed in French plane crash in 1943, lennedy continued to Gatwick irfield to be greeted by Macmillan.

Then'the two statesmen made the final lap here by heli- opter as evening' was falling ver the Ashdown Forest Sunday after attending Mass in earby Forest How's Roman Catholic Church of Our Lady of he Forest Kennedy will take off or Milan, Italy, and will continue Rome Monday for talks with he new government and an audience with Pope Paul VT. Welcomes Kennedy Macmillan welcomed Kennedy at Gabwick "for another of the many series of informal talks and meetings that you have had vim me over the last few years "The fact that we have "these informal meetings, to review the situation, to discuss things together, shows the deep agreement of the sense and the strength of the friendship and al- lance of two countries." The President arrived under me most stringent security precautions ever seen at this alternate airfield for London, 28 miles to the north. Groups of pound air a 3,000 tank, "bottle" similar to those used on nuclear submarines, was photo graphed earlier this month. Navy Lt. George W.

Martin who acted as pilot of the 58-foo bathyscaph Saturday, said he anc his fellow crewmen, Lt. Cmdr Eugene J. of Orchard Park, N.Y., and civilian scientis Kenneth MacKenzie of San Diego were not able to take tim to examine the hole because Tn este's power was running low. Capt. Frank A.

Andrews, wh heads the search, said TriesU was following the trail of debris including scraps of paper and yellow rubber slipper, which ha previously been photographed i. the area, when the crater wa, discovered, Andrews said Trieste would div again Sunday to get a closer loo at the crater if possible whil surface ships attempt to take more precise magnetometer read ing in the area. The magnetomet er tells of the presence of larg metallic objects at great depths Truck Looted Beckley State Police are invest! gating the breaking and entering of a Hcwell Tobacco Co. truck a Mabscptt some time Friday nigh in which 300-400 cartons of cigar ets and a quantity of cigars were stolen. The vehicle was parked front of the home of George employe of the company, accorc ing to officers, who added, entrj to the truck was gained by break ing a lock off of a side door.

"ban the bomb" demonstrators assembled around -he airfield to protest the Polaris submarine bases in Scot- and. But Kennedy did not see them at least on the The arrival was one ground, of the most private and sedate of Kennedy European tour a the only one not involving an elaborate motorcade through the streets of a principal city Macmillan referred to this in his welcome speech when he said: ''I am sure I speak for the whole British people, although we have not the opportunity of giving you the outward welcome, to line the streets and cheer you, things we should like to do, yet in our hearts watching this cere- mony'on television all going out to say to you good Raymond lewis Named Coal Policy Director WASHINGTON (UPI) Ray mond O. Lewis, Charleston recently elected a vice president of the United Mine Workers union, was one of two men elected directors of the National Coal Policy Conference Inc. The other named to the board of directors was M. B.

Phipps, Cleveland, president of the Nickel Plate Railroad. Lewis, who also will serve as member of the conference executive committee, succeeded the late Thomas Kennedy, who until his death last year was UMW president Phipps succeeded P. S. Hales, who recently retired as president of Nickel Plate..

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About Beckley Post-Herald The Raleigh Register Archive

Pages Available:
52,176
Years Available:
1953-1977