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Marysville Journal-Tribune from Marysville, Ohio • Page 1

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Marysville, Ohio
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I 4 lit j. Ohio in i -h International News Illustrated Vol. 1, No. 126 (Combining the Union County Journal and the Marysvffle Evening Tribun7) it i for good of MorysvilU and Union County, we're lor It Thirty FFA Youths Making Camping Tour Thirty F. P.

A. members from Magnetic Springs and Ostrander schools are on a 17-day camping tour which will take them as far ment. torn Is also being used to help the prearranged camping spot, and transport some of the camping gear, luggage, and cooking equip- south as Mexico City. The boys making the trip are II1C II IfJ The boys will travel 2,000 miles! from the 0-12 grades at the two on the trip southward, and will schools. Each boy contributes his JS share of the whlchwcre estimated before the trip began.

cover about the same distance re turning north by another route. Wilbur H. Frantom, vocational agriculture teacher for the Mag-1 OVOK lwu netic and Ostrander high schools, such as canned goods. will begin the preparation of the meals under the supervision of Mr. George.

The group plans to average about 300-32S miles per day on their Journey. On the trip south they will visit Louisville, Memphis, Little Rock, --o untie nui-jt, In addition each supplied $2 worth Austin, Texas; and San Antonio of some staple food commodity Texas, in addition and Harry George, former superintendent of the Magnetic school, accompany the group, which left Thursday. Members are making the trip in a bus belonging to the Ostrander F. F. A.

A car and small one- wheel trailer owned by Mr. Fran- During the trip, each of the boys will take his turn cooking, clean- Ing up, find performing the other duties connected with camping out. Mr. George will travel in the automobile with the boys who are on the cooking detail each day. They will go ahead of the bus to other cities.

They will cross Into Mexico at Larado. Three days will be spent in Mexico City, with stops at several other Mexican towns and cities. Part of the journey will be made On the Pan American highway. The return trip will include vis- (Contlnued on page THE ONLY ONES IN KAESONG only w.tt.rn-world reporters in KtMong on Communist tide arc thown chatting with reporters during truce talk meeting. At left in Wilfred Bucbett, Australia-born Pelping correspondent for the leftlit Paris Coir.

At right is Alan Winning, ton. Peiping correspondent for London Daily Worker. (International Radiophoto) Contestants For Fair Were Selected Friday Eight Union county 4-H girls tions eliminations presented in the were chosen at the local Demon- home economics department of stration Day to represent this i the Marysville junior high build- conuty in the demonstration com- Ing Friday were: petition at the state fair. Winners in the girls' demonstra- Girl Wrestler Injury Victim EAST LIVERPOOL, July 28 Jeannette Wolfe, 18-year-old Columbus girl booked with a gi.iup of wrestlers by Al Haft, Individual dairy demonstration, Janet Laird, Gingham Gals. Dairy team demonstration, Marcia Green and Marilyn Amrine, I Gingham Gals.

i Individual general nutrition demonstration, Mary Alice How- urd, Merry Mixers. General nutrition team demonstration, aBrbara Anderson and Sara Thompson, Liberty Cooks. Individual home furnishings demonstration, Norma McGinnis, dii-d in Osteopathic hospital to-1 York Seamstresses, duy from injuries suffered in a Individual clothing demonstra- tug match at East Liverpool. The young girj was injured Fri- duy night in a match with three other women at the East Liver- i 4 club office, was pool Shrine Club benefit show, eliminations. It is believed that the Wolfe girl suffered a concussion, sibly in a previous match lost to TouriBt In Crash Contest Blanks Must Be Nailed By Midnight Time Grows Short For Entries In Popularity Event Entries for the Marysville Appreciation Days popularity contest must be made today.

Any entries made by mail must be postmarked by midnight tonight. Union county girls between the ages of 16 and 21 are. eligible. They can make entries at Weiss Bros, department store; Miller's furniture store; Davison's jewelry store or by mailing in information or using coupon from yesterday's Journal-Tribune to Todd Hoopes, secretary of the Marysville chamber of commerce. The popularity queen will be the entrant receiving the most votes during the period- of August 1 to August 18, which will be observed ehre as Marysville Appreciation Days.

During this period tickets to be turned in for votes will be given out by merch ants on the basis of purchases. J1ARYSVILLE, OHIO. SATURDAY. JULY 28. 1951 BIG DOPE RING IS BROKEN UP BY TWO RAIDS WEATHER ftir, lowctt 18 lo 74 tonight.

Saturday warm, potttblr teat- Claim $10,000,000 Per Year Business By the Syndicate Br DAVID K. BOYN1CK International News Service NEW YORK, July in- ternatlonal ring doing a minimum $10,000,000 1 a year business in dope smuggling and counterfeit- Ing In operations assertedly bossed by Charles "Lucky Luciano" smashed today with the arrest of eight men and a woman. Assistant United States Attorney Eugene F. Roth said the ring smuggled into the United States France and Italy 50 pounds )f pure heroin a month as the argest group of illicit ever uncovered. Roth said the ring members be- onged to the underworld society he Mafia and added that ten additional men are being hunted and are expected to be in custody by nightfall.

He put the ring's dope business alone at more than $3,000,000 a Seized with the nine, he'said, was $100,000 in bogus $10 and $20 Jills and added that this group vas the same had been flooding the country in recent months with "hundreds of thousands of dollars worth" of "exceptionally fine Imitations." The crack down was the result of two years' work by federal agencies which had planted one of their own men in the ring which Roth said was bossed from Italy by exiled vice king Luciano. By Carrier 20c a Wwk On Parallel Line SUBSIDING FLOOD LEAVES AfTERMATH OF HAVOC Ohio Rates Top For Scientists MARIETTA, July 28 The Journal of Higher Education announced today that Ohio tops the nation with its production of professional scientists. Harry F. Lewis, author of the article, placed six Ohio colleges on his list of the 39 top-ranking colleges in the United States. Oberlin College was placed first among the Ohio colleges for the output of professional scientists and was listed as second in the nation for its production of 10.4 percent of its men graduates earning i doctor's degrees in science.

Other Ohio collges with their national rank are Antioch 7.5, seventh, Hiram was tenth with 6.7, Wooster 15th with 6.0, Marietta 18th with 4.7 and Mt. Union 23rd with 4.1. 'of' 500 ThU flood w.t.r, viic Seven of those arrested were! arraigned early today before U. S. commissioner Edward W.

McDonald and held in a total of $450,000 bail for hearings Aug. 10. Ajifhdny Marello, 55, and Sul-. vatore Shillitani were held in' $100,000 each, charged with the! sale and possession of both counterfeit money and narcotics. Five, charged with conspiracy and violation of the federal narcotics laws, were held in $50,000 each.

They were identified as Salvatore Mezzasalma, Jean Laget, 57, John Speranda, 50, Carmello Sansone, 37, and Ralph Cianchetti. The other two, Ida Dumidi Bal- locco, former owner of a French restaurant In Manhattan, and Paul Paoleschi, said by Roth to be a nephew of Italy's notorious Mafia chief Don Pasquale, will be arraigned later today. The first arrests came last night New Controls Bill iSgSJgLi rt At Fort Hayes Uets benate Vote hotel. in the ring contacted Marello and Shillitani and told them he had a buyer who would pay $24,000 in sound cur- (Contmued on page S) Tre-Koreon Plus Added Cost' Formula That Will Be Followed; House Will Take Action Monday By CHARLES B. SEIB International News Service Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July compromise price con- i i I COLUMBUS, July 23 An i army dragnet is out today for 19- year-Old Pvt.

Fred A. Lewis, an robber and killer who escaped late yesterday frorn Ft. Hayes guards at Columbus in his i second break for freedom, i Lewis first escaped July 17 from i the Ft. Jackson S. stockade, where he was imprisoned for rob' bery, killing a guard in the process.

He was picked up Sunday in i i-ii was 6d up unc a troi Dill, permitting 'roll-forwards" as well as roll-; Davton and brought to Coium- in i i bus yesterday, where -he brokp i whil he was being registered in backs in non-agricultural products and services, is thf fore the. house today for final action. The senate Friday night adopted by voice vote the 0 B1U U1U conference report on the measure, which sets a "pre- fire for fear of in i urin othei Korean plus added cost" formula. The house is ex- pected to approve the bill and send it to President Truman Monday. not tion, Pat Warner, Claibome Sew- So.

I Miss Eva Kinsey, of the state! for the! Strikers Reject Federal Program CLEVELAND, July 28 bers of local 1050 of the ClO-Un- ited Auto Workers have voted unanimously to continue their strike at the Aluminum Co. of America Klla Waldeck. LANCASTER, July plant in Cleveland. Police and Columbiana County Mary Ellen Thomas, 30, of Pasa- I Approximately 1,200 unionists Sheriff Howard J. Clark ordered dena, was killed und her i attended the meeting at the CIO an autopsy.

husband seriously injured yester- I na 'l last night, according to Pat Pulice huve unable to lo- duy when their station wagon O'Malley, UAM regional director, cate the other members of the crashed through a guard rail and I The strikers rejected a covern- liffjtk-tlifiifrfii-tir .1 wrestling party. fence six miles norlh of Lancaster, rnent proposal to arbitrate Young People Making River Trip by Raft Not Discouraged by Swamping and Damage MOUNDSVILLE, W. July late Thursday while being pushed by Oct. 1, despite the delay. 28 The sociological experiment 1 by a tug in the Ohio River near Brown, a forestry student, said Moundsville businessman prom- £5 in human relations conducted by i Moundsville.

four unmarried young people on, A Moundsvilk- garageman will lo Dimd me cubm th, river raft "Lethargm" beintf, use to right the ajso be provided when a delayed today in Moundsville and aft and then Miss ed whether he to wnte inobably wont be resumed until, Geraldine Garcia. of Boston home to hls folks fo next Tuesday. Don Brown, 24, of Detroit, and rown rc nlied' Mary Ellin McCrady, the 24 Milton Burden 30 of New lied- Well don know wh year-old University of Michigan ford. Mass will have to rebuild th 5end me an graduate student and organizer b-by-8-foot cabin which Brown i dor approve too mucn of the experiment, admitted that sa 'd "is a inesj. i VI ur Death Penalty Nine Swimmers 9 Are In Channel Conferees argeed unanimously on the bill lo replace lhe presenl I controls extension which expires at midnight Tuesday.

Ohio Division Home DEADLOCK OVER BUFFER ZONE IN TRUCE TALKS Report Both Sides Firm In On.Important Point By HOWARD HANDLEMAN International News Service UN TRUCE CAMP NEAR KAE- SONG, July 28 Allied and Red negotiators collided squarely today over the issue of where to draw an armistice line across Korea, and both sides refused to budge from their opposing positions. In a tense debate nt Kaesong, the Communists insisted on establishing a buffer zone alont an area understood to straddle Jhe controversial 33th parallel, would mean long withdrawals by Allied troops. The United Nations delegation replied with equal insistence on another demilitarized belt reportedly approximating the present battlefront, most of which lies inside Red North Korea. Saturday's lengthy 12th meeting of the Kaesong conference ended with the positions of both sides on the vital cease-fire line issue "not changed," the UN Supreme Command announced. "Little Progreis" A communique reported only "little progress" made in hours and 27 minutes of verbal conflict waged in "an atmosphere of cool military formality." The 13th session of the parley was set for 11 o'clock Sunday morning p.

ES.T> when a showdown in the crucial controversy may come. A spokesman at the UN Truce Camp below Kaesong said the conferees failed to reach a single area of agreement Saturday. Air Force Brig. Gen. William F.

Nuckols, briefing newsmen, reported: "Very little, if any, progress was made and the divergent points remain practically unchanged." He revealed that the principal Communist emissary delivered an emphatic statement rejecting a detailed UN plan for the demilitarized zone and urging the Communist proposal instead. In Deadlock The chief Allied delegate made two statements replying to the Red arguments which he rejected while reiterating the UN stand. Nuckols could givu the corres- CAP GRIS-NEX, July 28 NineN swimmers from three count ries were battling a choppy sen today in the first mass English CAMP McCOY, July me Its terms provide that no prices Onio National com- pondents no idea of what might nn i i i I Piling their two-week training happen in Sunday's meeting. He CANTON, July 6 slint at Cam McCoy. are provided no indication as to who in the electric was the sen- exce P' when thls neces-1 returning home today with a com- would speaking at the 13th lenre handed down Inst night to sarv for retailers to maintain their' mtndation from Gen.

Mark Clark, session, saying that both delesa- Hussell Muskus, 30, convicted "historical margin of profit" i chief of army field forces. "Just about talked them- of the necktie murder of George; Base period agricultural' Part of the 37th Divi- selves ut restating Jhc-ir po- LeMasters last December In a fi CUtUrd sion of the ONG started the trip tlons Saturda Canton hotel. commodities and services, which home yesterday and the remaind- The spokesman refused to guess InClUdeS mOSt fnrwi 1 I Channel attempt of 1951. One of the swimmers, After deliberating for an hour jund 45 minutes, the jury reached Ned verdict, withholding mercy to Barnie, a 54-year-old Scotsman, I make the death sentence manda- was attempting it the hard way tor y. It was one of the quickest against the tide from'England to verdicts in the history of France.

Bamie, who started to- Stark county's courts. day's trip from Deal, just north of It was charged that Muskus und Dover, successfully negotiated the 124-year-old Sandra Lee Kingsley route from France to England last tried to work the "badger" game vear on LeMasters after she took the The other eight six Egyptians lo her hotel room. and tow Britons plunged into the icy waters off cap Gris-Nez some six hours before Barnie. A tenth aspirant, Swedish bank clerk Lars Warle, who had a 14- hour headstart on everyone, abandoned his attempt less than a mile from the English coast. Muskus barged into the room, it was and feigned anger at finding lus "wife" with another man.

He strangled LeMasters when the slightly-built New Philadelphia, man refused to meet his demand for money, the (prosecution charged. Farm Products Prices Drop Fifth Month Monday. ss Kiiigsli-y will go on trial WASHINGTON, July 28 The For Agriculture Department states the I average price of all farm products dropped for the fifth consecutive month between June 15 to July JGincy Chauffer Named in Will includes most food items except meats, fruits and vegetables, is set between Jan. 1 and June 24, 1950. Added to such prices can be higher costs of materials, labor, factories, selling, advertising, paper work and administration.

"Unreasonable and excessive" costs can be rejected by OPS. leave by train today. Gen. Clark said he was prussed with the battle experience and leadership" in the division. On the two-day inspection trip, Gen.

Clark was accompanied by Major General Leo M. Krobcr of Columbus, commanding general of the 37th and Brig. Gen. Ken- The bill provides that no ceiling! neth Cooper, division artillery price on any commander Gen. Kreber said 93.3 ptr cent of all the officers enlisted men the division participated in the training.

material or commodity may be lower than the price prevailing just before the order is issued, in- between Jan. 25 24, iy51, whichever is lower. The ban on livestock slaughter quotas was kept in the bill, since it would have been challenged on.NoXt iOT Unit parliamentary grounds in the! Continued on page Bus Employes Remain Idle DAYTON, July 28 service supplied by tJ Great Lakes Greyhound system to the western iif Ohio remained tied up today by strike over drivers' as- Bus Field Problem house. Oi Battery Some J5 AFL drivers und 50 H.inigemen struck yesterday, claiming their seniority rights had not been observed in the assignment of regular runs. Sixty of drivers and all Kmdlav Lima sdney of the experiment, admitted that righting their overturned craft i experiment.

We lost our money The group is trying to find out when old "Lethargia" went over. has become more of a job than she what happens when four mdivid- But neither he nor his compari- und her companions figured on. uals are thrown together and have ions intend tu halt the experiment Two motorboau ure to tow the to se the same persons daily. They were in a pretty good mood "Lethargia a quarter of mik- They began the experiment and looking forward to the car- lo an open area fur repairs loday. July ly in New Kensington, pcnlry wurk which they to Hie iiu-ljy-12 fool raft overturned I and lo reach New Orleans begin Imorrow.

15. Officials reported the nation's farmers received uUout 2.3 percent less for their products than a month earlier, but about 11.8 percent more than in mid-July 1950, shortly after the Korean outbreak. The decline resulted from lower prices for a majority of farm products with the most important decreases cotton, meat animals, oil-bearing crops, peaches and oranges. Conference Chairman Maybank I Members of Battery 323d D) S. and Sen.

Capehart Field Artillerv, which'has' head- at Toledo, rin.nay Lima said they will introduce quarters here will KU on a field Piqua. Tip City Lebanon new amendment to permit live- problem at Camp Knox, the Spiingf.el'd Ui 'jana Belle slock quolas. first three days of next week and t.mlaine. Ddaw.ue, London, Colwill fire the lUSmm huwister. ac- umbu.s and CViinrvilli- l.t.

Cer- Both senators said open hear- CINCINNATI, July 28 A i banking commiUee to "get aV'the' ld Nlni1 Vfj -1 1 1 f.i 1 J. prevent or niL-reuse black mdrket iv. U' HJ fev I "I tiJ-year-old Cincinnati Chauffer ru O11 whether auotas tend tu was virtually overwhelmed when he was told yesterday Out a woman for whom he had worked 31 years had -villed him a quarter of a million dollars. The Chauffer. Norman Ucaihs, learned that his employed, the late The battery, a unit of Die i)3i ij Infantry Division of reserves durinj; the past week had a full schedule of a bubic artillci In IJrtnut.

Great Lakes 1'resl- li'iit Hubrit UiuiJ, said: "This is the clanidfat stiikc- I He addi (I the company jli hi- diivei-s H-. 'Aid Flood Relief AKRON, July 28 UIJVI'13 ll.l instiuctioiL The unit will return I lo.s-;es on August 5. any The v.lul nu LllCldle. Mrs. Louisa ishmer, 8ti-ycar-uld Summit county Red Cross chjpler Inventory Vacation widow of George Slimer, a live- has sent a check for SliO.UOO to.

COLL'WBUS, Two Promotions WASH INC TON. Jiih- stock dealer. bequeathed $250,000 in stock, a new car and U-rs for i'v' a river cruiser. Hi and flood dis- Plant, at Columbus iiunu iiij- rum, ai Louimbus IH. on comment was: ''We'd by the Summit count; Hcd ol tin- force will "mw- much rather have her alive.

vv Kleet and Wal ih.

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About Marysville Journal-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
330,391
Years Available:
1898-2017