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The Paducah Sun from Paducah, Kentucky • 8

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The Paducah Suni
Location:
Paducah, Kentucky
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Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SUNDAY, APRIL 11. 96l THI fADUCAH SUN DIMOCRAT FACt IIGHT A On The Cumberland Storage Facilities Drop Flood Height By 5.4 Feet t. 4 I i -It series of storms during the period April 9-13. The total rainfall averaged about 3V inches over the VI spillway crest level by about the middle of May; This flood represents the third occasion in 1962 that flood stage at Nashville would have been exceeded under natural The total damages prevented at Nashville In this year by operation of the Cumberland River system of reservoirs is estimated at Jul $3,800,000. Additional benefits that would have been realized by a completed J.

Percy Priest Reservoir totals 8770,000. 1 John L. Myers Named Head Of Concord PTA if. EASTER SEAL DONATION-M. 0.

DeJarnctt, treasurer of the Easter Seal Campaign, was presented a check for $2,000 by Mrs. Jack Keller, president of the Charity League, and Mrs. Lloyd Emery, treasurer of the Charity League Friday. The major portion of the $2,000 will go to help support the Crippled Children's Clinic here. The Charity League every other year gives the Crippled Children's Clinic the proceeds from the Follies and the other year contributes the $2,000 check.

Stalir Will Help Inspect Mississippi River Work Rowland Case Is Dropped The Kentucky Court of Appeals has reversed the decision of a McCracken Circuit Court Jury which last October found Mitchell Rowland guilty of obtaining property under fulse pretenses and sentenced him to a year In the penitentiary, Following the ruling ot the Court of Appeals, Commonwealth's Attorney James Moore has moved that the indictment against Rowland be dismissed. After his conviction on October 17, Rowland had filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled by Judge Warren Eaton. He then filed an appeal with the Court of Appeals. Russia, China Competing In India NEW DELHI, India (AP) Communist party of India opens a meeting here today that could decide whether Indian Communists look to Moscow or Peiping for leadership. A struggle for supremacy is expected between two factions.

One is the relatively moderate group, aligned with Moscow, that appears content for the time being to work through India's parliamentary system. A pro-Chinese group is inclined toward the tougher approach of fighting Prime Minister Nehru's government with strikes and even violence. The party struggle will begin in an Executive Committee meeting and move Monday into a six-day meeting of the party's National Council. The result could be compromise. Main business on the agenda is selection of a general secretary to succeed Ajoy Ghosh, a middle-of-the-road leader who died in January.

Choice of his successor was delayed by the parliamentary elections in February and by intense maneuvering within the party since then. In the February elections, the faction of the party improved its position in its Calcutta stronghold. The group aligned with Moscow lost heavily in the Bombay area, its home territory, and its leader, S. A. Dange, failed to win re-election to Parliament.

Dange was the first important Indian Communist leader to accuse the Chinese of aggression when India's border dispute with her northern neighbor flared into the open in 1959. Calcutta Communists have been inclined to make excuses for the Chinese-earning for themselves scathing criticism from Nehru, Generally, however, Nehru has not assailed the Indian Communist party. During the election campaign Nehru directed most of his fire at right-wing parties and said Lttle about the Communists. The Communists openly supported some candidates of Neh ru Congress party, most notably DefenseMinister V. K.

Krishna Menon. The party advocates sup port for Nehru proclaimed goal of socialism. Most observers expect a com promise. There have been reports the power of the general secre tary's office will be in the future be shared with a chairman. This would give, the two factions a check on each other and bring to the fore a middle-of-the-road group.

Guido Gains (Continued From Page One) atively unknown politically, as the new army secretary with a free hand to name his own army com mander in chief. This meant Poggi was through, as well as Gen. Marino Bartolome Carrera, army secretary, who re signed Friday night The showdown came quickly aft er Rauch, solidly based with more than 12,000 soldiers and 150 Sherman tanks at his command at Campo de Mayo, (ordered an ar mored column to advance on Bue nos Poggi, depending on the 1st, 2nd and 3rd Motorized Infantry regi ments, deployed defenders in trenches in Palermo suburb in the path of the armored column. His forces wheeled out light ar tillery and antiaircraft pieces be hind a barricade of buses and cars around the dominating War Ministry building facing the Plaza de Mayo and pink-walled Govern ment House in the heart of the city. Rauch tanks and armored per sonnel carriers stormed on into the suburbs, despite the risks of warfare, and 604men seized con trol of the national radio station.

But just as it seemed that some thing would break out, cars filled with generals began arriving atl Guido's gates to seek a peaceful solution. What apparently turned the ta bles on Poggi was this: In the minutes before he went to Guido's residence the huge army garrisons at Santa Fe and at Rosario, Argentina's second largest city, came down on the side of the in surgents. Elements of the air force also were reported to have declared themselves for Rauch. The navy throughout kept hands off, declaring the crisis an army affair. Spokesmen for Frondizi's In transigent Radicals, who from the First have opposed outlawing the Peronists by decree, also pro claimed their support for Rauch.

The Cumberland River flood of last week, which reached a crest stage of 62 feet at Eddyville, would have been 5.4 feet higher without the storage dams built by the Corps of Engineers, U.S. Army, according to Nashville District Engineer Colonel Vincent P. Carlson. Carlson said preliminary esti mates Indicate that flood dam ages in Metropolitan Nashville alone were reduced from a probable of $1,200,000 to $106,000 by the existing reservoir system. Additional benefits not immediately estimable were realized at other points along the Cumberland, Ohio and Mississippi rivers.

The district engineer said that if J. Percy Priest Reservoir had been in operation, the flood crest would have been reduced to 38.3 feet, 1.7 feet below flood stage, at Nashville, thereby eliminating practically all flood damages there. The flood was caused by a Curb Sought On School Activities FRANKFORT (AP) For the first time, state education officials are considering accreditation as a weapon against extracurricular interferences with the classroom. The method is simple too much non-essential outside activity would lower a school's rating. "The time has come to provide leadership in this matter," Supt.

of Public Instruction Wendell Butler said. "A good way to correct abuses is to tie them in with ac creditation." Both the state Board of Edu cation and the Commission on Public Education have expressed concern recently, with the extra curricular activity problem. The state board public worry has focused on fund-raising oper ations. The commission has been talking mainly of athletics on school nights. The two organiza tions may get together next month to discuss remedial steps.

Meantime, the state board has scheduled a special session May 2 on accreditation of some 500 high schools and 900 elementary schools with at least eight teachers. Rating changes will be based largely on current conference be tween the Department of Educa tion and the Kentucky Association of Colleges, Elementary and Secondary Students. Butler said a law to abolish all interferences with school studies is not feasible "the tradition is too strong, the sources too numer ous." He favors a voluntary solution worked out by the communities, the schools and the state. "Many schools are overdoing extracurricular activities," But ler said. "Yet some schools are not doing enough." The issue is not always clear- cut, he said.

For example, on Career Day every year high school students are interviewed by prospective employers. i "This definitely interferes with the classroom," Butler said. "But we must ask ourselves if its value offsets the loss of school time." Much the same holds true, he said, for Senior Day, 4-H Day, FFA Day, Homemakers Day, senior trips, the Kentucky Youth Assembly and a number of other activities not directly connected with schools. At present, accreditation depends on factors ranging from teacher experience to adequacy of libraries. Butler said his staff may check schedules and classes personally to weigh the extracurricular as pect He said a proposal that has not yet come before the state school board also could provide a partial answer.

It is a plan for an intense self-evaluation by each school district, beginning next falL The object is to discover a path to quality education. In accreditation the coveted rating for a high school is "com prehensivewhich means It of fers good courses in both the academic and vocational areas A "standard" school's curricu lum is not as broad, although often just as good. A "provisional" school has a number of weaknesses. An "emergency" school is tol erated in the expectation it will remedy severe deficiencies as quickly as possible, usually through consolidation or new construction. Elementary schools are rated either standard or provisional All one-room schools are classified automatically as emergency.

Kennedy Opens World's Fair SEATTLE. Wash. (AP) "Let the fair begin!" announced Presi dent Kennedy in Palm Beach, and the Seattle World's Fair swung open to the public Satur day amid cheers and cannonad ing. Excited crowds hailed the beginning of the Century 21 Exposi tion unaware that an Air Force jet fighter plane had crashed into a neighborhood just north of Seattle after-flying over the open ing ceremonies. Twelve thousand early arrivals crowded into Memorial Stadium to watch the opening festivities and hear President Kennedy in a telephoned message hail the opening of the first World's Fair in Cumberland River Basin, with the heaviest concentration in the vicinity of Nashville.

The rainfall at the U.S. Weather Bureau station at Berry Field totaled 4.64 inches. At the onset of the storm, both Wolf Creek Reservoir (Lake Cum berland) and Dale Hollow 'Reser voir still contained some of the flood waters stored during the very large flood which occurred early in March. The additional water stored in Wolf Creek caused the lake to rise 13 feet, reaching a height of 24 feet above the spillway crest This is the highest level attained since completion of the project in 1951. Dale Hol low had a 6 foot rise, and Center Hill rose 18 feet, causing the water to reach a height of 16 feet on the floodgates.

Spillway releases have been made from Wolf Creek and Center Hill since April 13. It is expected that Cen ter Hill will recede below spillway crest level by April 24. With normal weather, Dale Hollow and Wolf Creek will be lowered to Tractor Mishap ICills Farm Hand (From Saturday Mornlna Edition) CLINTON, April 22 (Spe cial) Felix Philip Purevick, 40, was killed instantly at 8:30 a.m. today when a tractor he was driv ing turned over, pinning him be neath it. The accident occurred on the Thomas Webb farm in the Moscow community where Purevick had been working for about a year.

He was a parolee from the Kentucky State Penitentiary at Eddyville. Mr. Webb was driving a trac tor in the same field. He said Purevick drove the tractor into a ditch, causing it to upset The body was taken to East Gary, for burial services Purevick is survived by his mother and two brothers in East Gary. Mrs.

Shaw's Funeral Set Monday 5 MAYFTELD, April 21- Funeral services for Mrs. Char-Iene Shaw, 43, who died Friday at 11 a.m. at Baptist Memorial Hos pital in Memphis, will be held Monday at 3 p.m. at the Byrn Funeral Home with the Rev. John Huffman officiating.

Burial will be in the Mayfield Memory Gardens. Honorary pallbearers will be the directors of the Liberty Savings Bank of Mayfield and deacons of the First Baptist Church, Active pallbearers will be nephews. Mrs. Shaw's husband, Howard Shaw, is president of the Liberty Savings Bank of Mayfield. Everything (Continued From Page One) special high military court the same court that sentenced Jou- haud to death interrupted his Easter vacation to start work.

De Gaulle will meet with the Superior Council of Magistrates Tuesday to review the Jouhaud case in a clemency hearing. No matter what the magistrates rec ommend, the final decision will be up to De Gaulle. Letters and newspaper editori als have been urging a commu tation of sentence for Jouhaud, a native Algerian who said he could not stand idly by while his home land was being torn from France. Many sentimental factors have been brought into play for Jouhaud that probably cannot be made to work for Salan. At Sante Prison, Salan told police: "I saw too many people for sil ly reasons.

People that I didn't know. That Is probably now I was captured. But it was probable now, or later. What difference does it make? Everything was collapsing around us." Salan told police he had planned a complete reorganization of the secret army in Metropolitan France and that one of the proj ects was to kidnap Marshal Al- phonse Juin and take him to Ire land. He said that in Ireland Marshal Juin would have been put at the head of a movement for a free French Algeria.

Marshal Juin, a. native of Al geria, had, expressed sympathy for Salan and the secret army but carefully remained alodf from their activities. He was kept in bouse arrest for a few days In Paris for sending a letter of en couragement to Salan. Terrorism continued to reign In Algiers and secret army forces early Saturday fired on a mili tary jeep, killing two of its occu pants and wounding a third. A short time later a police bus was fired on and two policemen were injured.

The secret army has at tacked police and army patrols only infrequently in recent weeks, and there were speculation Sa-lan'i capture had caused a shift In tactics. Six Moslems were killed and several were wounded Saturday morning in two separate machine-gun attacks in the suburb Mai-son Carre, JOHN L. MYERS of the Concord organization, she has served as a committee chair man for the McCracken county PTA Council. MemWi nf the school faculty were honored at a "Teacher Ap preciation Dinner" last week by the PTA and room mowers. Tnn Smith, county superin tendent, congratulated the teach ers on their service to tneir community and school.

Mrs. Gibson Dies At 35 Mrs. Clystie Allene Gibson, 35, wife of Dell Gibson of Boaz Rt 2. Melber community, died at 6:30 p.m. Friday at Lourdes Hos pital soon after giving birth to a daughter.

Born in McCracken County, Mrs. Gibson was a former employe of International Shoe having worked there for the past 11 years. Mrs. Gibson was a member of Melber Baptist Church. Besides her husband and in fant, daughter, Linda, she is survived by a son, Carl Hickerson of Chicago: another daughter, Miss Magdalene Hickerson of Paducah; two brothers, Alben W.

Byerley of Albuquerque, N. and Jack Byerley of Casper, and three sisters, Mrs. Melvin Seay and Mrs. Lennie Rule, both of Paducah, and Mrs. Jean Brewer of New Castle, Neb.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Roth Funeral Chapel with the Rev. Robert Moore officiating. Burial will be in Alcock Cemetery at Melber. Pallbearers will be Wallace Hunt William Hunt, Willie Hunt James Gine, R.

C. Byerley and Glenn Puckett Friends may call at Roth's. 'Vicious Trick' (Continued From Page One) nounced the sponsorship of the trip. Lewis called it "a very vicious trick on the part of the White Citizens Council, designed to embarrass the North, but we will help them (the family)." Philip Sokol, New York City welfare commissioner, called it "a very cruel thing to do." He said the family would not be eligible for relief if it came here simply for that purpose but that if Boyd makes a sincere effort to find work and is unable to do so he may qualify for relief later. Raymond Houston, New York State commissioner of welfare, said in Albany, "It's a cruel thing to send people with no resources or planning.

Eventually we may have to send them back to New Orleans." Sen. Jacob said the family would be welcome and "will be received and dealt with in a way typical of New York." Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said, "The Boyd family is being used as a pawn. It's a naked pretense to maintain-segregation. It's cheap, unconscionable." Boyd said $155-a-month welfare aid the family was receiving in New Orleans was cut off last Dec. tO 4 L.

1 1 attending him for pneumonia pronounced him fit for work. "Since then I have been scraping, getting some aid from neighbors and we are tired of suffering," Boyd said. He said he approached the Citizens Council after learning that it would aid Negroes desiring to move North. Two or three other families, he said, have accepted similar offers. "I am not sorry to leave the South," Boyd said.

"There is nothing there for me." His wife said it was her Idea to come North to give my children a chance." Harry Willis, 84, Dies In Paducah BENTON. Aorfl 5t Ham, Willis, 84, formerly -of Marshall County, died today at l-xs at his residence at 634 Terrell St in Paducah. Survivors Include hi. Mrs. Lula Willis at PnrWnh.

ml daughter, Mrs. Mae Spencer of. ueirou; mur sons, Lonnie Willis of MomenCe, 111.. Boyd Willis of fciruu, rjtue wmis of Indianapolis and Charlea Will I a p. ducah; 22 grandchildren and 7 greai-granacniidren.

Funeral servkw tn v.m Monday at 1 p.m. at Fllbeck and Cann Funeral Home In Benton' with Rev. Tommtn and the Rev. John Klosg officla- ung. JBuriai will be In the Briens-burg Cemetery.

Friends may. call! at the FH- Decs, ana umn Funeral Mm. 1 4 4. I 4 vited to attend the hearing to discuss matters of interest During the course of the trip, district engineers from Memphis Vicksburg, and New Orleans will discuss with the commissioners the construction program planned for fiscal year 1963, which begins on July 1. This will be the 264th session of the 83-year-old congressionally created Mississippi River Com Elvis Snow Of Sedalia Dies At 69 SEDALIA.

April 21-Elvis E. Snow, 69, died at 7:15 p. m. Friday at his home at Sedalia. A veteran of World War 1, Mr, Snow was a member of Sedalia Baptist Church.

He is survived by his widow. Mrs. Lillian Snow; three sons, Delbert Snow of Mayfield Star Dalton Snow of Hickory Rt. 1 and vernon hnow ot Wilmington. four brothers, Paul, Dewey and Hobart Snow of Graves Coun ty and Ovie Snow of Pontiac, five grandchildren and a great-grandchild.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Monday at Rozzell Chapel with the Rev. Charles Blair and the Rev. R.

B. Cope officiating Burial will be in Rozzell Chapel Cemetery. Friends may call Roberts Funeral Home In Mayfield until noon Monday at which time the body will be taken to the church. Company Buys (Continued From Page One) which is now owned by the city. The Planning and Zoning Com mission met in special session to act on the city request for re-subdivision of the former depot and the joint request of Marquette and West Kentucky for rezoning of the site area so it can be used for heavy industry.

Both requests were approved unanimously. The commission must conduct a public hearing on the rezoning application, how ever, before it can be finally apn proved. The hearing is set for 1:30 p.m. May 2 in the City Commission chamber. The east half of the proposed plant site, the side facing the river, already is zoned M-3 for heavy industry.

The half facing Meyers St now is zoned B-4, for general business. The planning commission gave tentative approval to rezone the entire tract under option by Marquette M-3, for heavy industrial use. Only the Marquette tract is affected by the proposed rezoning. God Of $800 Set For Cancer Drive In Hickman CLINTON. Kyi.

April 21-(Spe- cial) A goal of $800 has been set for-the cancer fund drive now underway in Hickman County according to Clyde Rogers, campaign chairman. "The administrative cost of the American Cancer Society is only two and 88 one hundredths per cent the lowest of all such endeavors, and this assures those who give that their money is not being wasted on needless person nel and paper work." "I doubt if there is a lamuy Hickman County that has not been touched by cancer, either directly, or he con tinued. "Many cancer patients can be cured if the disease is diagnosed in time. To light cancer, see your doctor for a check-up and give to your cancer fund," he John L. Myers has been elected president of the Concord Elementary School Parent-Teacher Association.

Other new officers include James P. Brooks vice president; Mrs. T. H. Tabor, secretary, and Mrs.

Roy Gramse, treasurer. Mrs. Perry N. Smith, an active member of the organization for nine years, was presented a life membership certificate by the group last week. Other than being past secretary Judge Fires (Continued From Page One) be, an outstanding effort to improve their public property.

"In the last 10 years we have been improving the property around the 120-year-old courthouse and have it up to what we, in Livingston feel, is in good shape. "With very limited funds, and seeking to spend taxpayers' money as if it were our own, we built a two-room county judge's office ad joining the old building on the south. "We built a ladies lounge and rest room on the back of the old building. Later, we built three new offices on the back of the old courthouse. They serve the county sheriff and school superintendent Fireproof Vault The county then converted an old grand jury room into a fireproof vault for the Circuit Court clerk and generally improved the whole office.

"On the north side of the old building we built a four-office ad dition which serves the tax assessor. County Court clerk and provides a large new vault for the valuable and historic records of the Livingston and preceding counties. "On the second floor of the ad ditlon, we have new grand jury and petit jury rooms. In the old Circuit Court room we have placed a new gas heating system and air-conditioning system and replaced the ceiling of the room, itself. "The furnishings of the courtroom also have been redone.

"Other new courthouse facilities' include a restroom attached to the back and a room to store voting machines when the sched ule calls for their purchase. "Recently, the people of Liv ingston County have financed and let the contract for a badly-needed rest home for our old people who need it "We also put $11,000 into the1 modern health center which was made possible by the Hill-Burton Act "1 am not trying to take credit for these improvements. We have had, down through the years, dedicated county officials who did their part and served the county well. Unwisely, Hastily "I merely want to point out that the grand jury acted un wisely and hastily in its critical report and thereby deprived the people of Livingston and its dedi cated officials, past and present of well-deserved credit "I believe the people of Livingston should have been officially commended instead of criti cized. They have done much on their own to solve the problems that face any county with limited revenue.

"Livingston is one little county which out of debt And I can remember when the official in debtedness ran to $250,000 or $300,000. "All of this Improvement and debt retirement wasn't done by spending money lavishly. "I wish to touch on one more matter which might seem small. This was the grand jury's criti cism of my office being a gather ing place or a so-called "hang out" for the citizens. Official 40 Years 'As you know I have been a county official much of "the time since I was sworn in as deputy sheriff in August of 1922.

"In serving as a county official all this time, I believe I have gained more knowledge of our people's needs than a juror who might have served two days in five years. '1 have tried all of my life to treat everybody equally, regardless of creed or color, no matter how they were dressed or who they were. I have taken time to sit down with them and discuss their problems each time they came to my office. "As long as these people keep me in office and choose to use my office as a gathering place, I welcome one and aH." I Engineer Division, Lower Mississippi Valley, made the announce ment. The Inspection will be made aboard the Corps of Engineers motor vessel Mississippi, prior to the start of the annual high- water Inspection by the Missis-slppi River Commission.

Secretary Stahr is expected to make the trip to view projects from St. Louis to Hickman, his hometown. Gen. Wilson will make inspections from St. Louis to Memphis, Tenn.

Flood control and navigation improvement work under the Mississippi River Commission's project for the Mississippi River and tributaries will be inspected from Cairo, 111., to the Gulf of Mexico. This semi-annual inspec tion, which includes holding hear ings aboard the boat at points along the route, will begin with a public hearing at Cairo at 8:30 a.m. on Monday. May 7. Other hearings will be held at Memphis, 9:30 a.m..

May Vicks burg, 3 p.m. May and New Orleans, 9 a.m.. May 11. after which an inspection will be made to the Gulf of Mexico be fore ending the trip at New Or leans on May 12. The public is in- Statc Meeting (Continued From Page One) tion committee, will make her re port.

Thursday activities will begin with a 7 a.m. council breakfast and workshop at the Cabana Club, followed by a general meeting at Broadway Methodist from 8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m. At this meeting a panel discus sion on New Dimensions in inculcation Through Legislation" will be presented by Mitchell Davis, superintendent of Barren County Board of Education, as moderator, and Dr. J.

Marvin Dodson, KEA executive secretary, Dr. Ralph Osborne, McCfacken County state representative Julian Carroll, and Don Bale, director of division of instruction for the State Depart ment of Education. Mrs. Jenkins will speak on the policies and procedures of PTA at the Thursday afternoon session, to be held from 2 to 3:30 at Broadway Methodist Local unit presidents will be recognized at this session. The convention will close with a banquet at 6 p.m.

Thursday at the Civic Center. Salom Rizk of Toledo, Ohio, author of the autobiography "Syrian Yankee" and originator of The Voice of Man Radio International, will speak on "America Is More Than A Country." The Mothersingers Chorus will sing at the banquet Mrs. Marvin Padgett is director of the local group which will participate in the chorus. Final business of the convention will be the installation of officers by Mrs. Jenkins.

The state officers to be elected during the convention are a vice president of health and welfare and a recording sec retary. Goods Stolen From Fish Market Here Burglars stole some' candy, cigars, chewing gum and fish Friday night from 6th St Fish Market at 1008 S. 6th St The building was entered by breaking a lower panel out of the rear door and unlocking the door trom the inside. Two unidentified white youths stopped officers Marion Hosick and Tommy Robinson in the vi cinity of the building and said they cad chased a Negro from the place BDout 9:43 p.m.. but he cot away from them in the and Railroad yards.

George W. McDaniel of the Belt- line Trailer Court. 701 S. 23th reported the guy wires of his tele vision antenna were cut by three (white youths about 11 o'clock Friday night and lt fell causing consaeraDie carnage. Secretary of the Army, Elvis J.

Stahr and the S. Army chief of engineers, Lt. Gen. Walter K. Wilson are expected to make an Inspection of Corps of Engineers work along the Missis- sipps River below St.

Louis, on May 6-8, it was announced to day. Maj. Gen. T. A.

Lane, Vicks- burg. president of the Mis sissippi River Commission and division engineer, U. S. Army Livingston Youths Hold 4H Rally SMITHLAND, April 21-Sandra Hope and Marty McDon ald each won a $25 Savings Bond here today in their respective public speaking divisions at the Livingston County Junior 4-H Rally. Approximately 100 4-H menv bers, leaders, parents and judges attended the rally which was held at the Smithland Grade School.

Miss Hope won her Savings Bond by copping first place in the girl's junior public speaking division contest as did young McDonald in the boy's division. Winners in various division demonstrations and awarded $5.50 each as well as a cham pionship award were: Boys, Gen eral, Marvin Wilson; Electric, Bruce Dickerson and Team, John C. Baird and Rudy Young: Girls, Breadmaking. Ruth Paris: Sew ing, Donna Hardin; Electric, Carol Smith: Dairy Foods, Sun derland and General. Sandra Thompson.

Blue ribbon winners In demon strations and public speaking di visions were Carol Smith, Ruth Paris, Sandra Thomason, Beverly Quertermous, Agnes Hunter, Edna Sunderland, Linda Dukes, Judy Stinnett, Nancy Chandler, Linda Foster, Marlene Morris, Donna Hardin, Anna Rose Thompson, Bruce Dickerson, Orien Wilson, Charles Oliver, Lynn Ray Hill, Cleatis Hook, Mitchell Threlkeld, Mickey Lasher. John C. Baird, Rudy Young, Shirley Chittenden, Patricia Threlkeld, Lucille Per-rin, Karen Head, Nancy Chand ler, Sandra Hope, Wanda Chad-wick, Judy Davis, Paula Hamby, Wanda Nickels, Judith Ann Croft, Cynthia Stringer, Louis Chitten den, James Eric La Jtue and Marty McDonald. Blue ribbons won for the best exhibits were presented to Onen Wilson, Cleatis Hook; Mickey Lasher, Mitchell Threlkeld, Delor-es Anglin, Carol Smith, Paula Hamby, Kathy Pendergrast, Ruth Paris, Linda Dukes, Louis Chittenden, John Baird, Rudy Young and Lynn lull Boy Fined (Continued From Page One) Princeton: James Edgar Parry 16, of Cobb, and Harlowe Bonistec 17. of Glasgow.

They were placed in custody of McCracken juvenile authorities. In a separate action Saturday morning, English suspended for 15 days the beer license of Agatha Pickett, operator of the Flamingo Club at 432 S. 7th St, for violating the Sunday closing law. She failed to show up for a scheduled hearing on the charge so the penalty was fixed in her absence. The bearing had been set for 10 a.m.

Saturday. English said he visited the Fla mingo Club on Sunday, April 8, and found the door between the restaurant and tavern sections of the club unlocked and there were no locks on the beer cooler as required by law in a situation of this kind. The suspension becomes effective April 28. The woman can continue operating only by paying a fine of $150 $10 for each day of cer license suspension, America in 22 years..

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