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Washington C.H. Record-Herald from Washington Court House, Ohio • Page 2

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Washington Court House, Ohio
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2 Record-Herald Thursday, Oct. 29, 7910 Washington C. Ohio Deaths, Funerals fwalter O. Paul Walter 0. Paul, 73, of 316 I Gregg died at 7:45 a.m.

'Thursday in his residence. He was dismissed from Memorial Hospital Wednesday and had been in failing health two years. Born in Ross County, he had lived in Fayette County for the past 42 years. He was a retired custodian of Wilson School, a a World War I veteran and a 5 member of the Church of Christ I in Christian Union. His wife, Jessie Wilson Paul, I survives, along with a son, I Arthur, of Cincinnati, a former of Washington C.

four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. 5 Also surviving are two sisters, 5 Mrs. Goldie Coder, 1314 Pearl and Mrs. Josephine Swift, of Muncie, Ind. Services will be held at 1:30 ip.m.

Monday in the Church of I Christ in Christian Union with Rev. Charles Williams officiating. Friends may call at the Funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday, anytime Sunday and Monday until time for the service. I Mrs.

Eva Alice Morris Mrs. Eva Alice Morris, 75, la native of Fayette County died 'Wednesday evening in Columbus hospital where she had lived for many years. She was the widow of Marion Francis Morris, who died in 1928. She is survived by four Ward, of Washington C. Theodore, of Lancaster, Frederick, of Harrisburg, and Russell, of Mount Sterling; daughter, Mrs.

Mae Barley, of Bloomdale; nine grandchildren; and 13 great grandchildren. Private services will be held at 2:30 p.m. Saturday in the Gerstner Kinzer Funeral Home with the Rev. Ray Russell, pastor of the First Christian Church, officiating. Burial will be in Milledgeville Plymouth Cemetery.

Friends may call at funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday. Omar Lemming I WILLIAMSPORT Omar Lemming, 87, of Williamsport, died at 9:30 a.m. Thursday in Hospital, Circleville, where he had been a patient days. I Born in Adams County, he spent most of his life here.

He was a retired employe of Pennsylvania Railroad and a member of the Modern of America Lodge. I He is survived by his wife, 'Delia Hickle Lemming; two Harmon and Harold Lem ming, both of Columbus; two daughters, Mrs. Wilba Parker and Mrs. Wilmina iCramer, also of Columbus; IO 24 great grandchildren and one great great grandson. Services will be held at 2 p.m.

in the Williamsport Methodist Church, with Rev. Edward Linville, Burial will be in Lawn Cemetery under 'the direction of the Kirkpatrick Home, New Holland. may call at the home after 7 p. na I GEORGE W. HOOKS for George W.

Hooks, 78, jof 929 Lakeview were held at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Barrett Funeral Home, with the sRev. Charles Williams officiating. Mr. Hooks, a retired and a veteran of World War died Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart sang two hymns; taps were by Connie Palmer and Chinn, and the flag was folded by Walter Wilson and C. E. Wright.

Pallbearers for the burial in Washington Cemetery were Russell Baker, Walter Wilson, Harold McLean, donald Hurless, Isaac Stewart and Wiley Arnett, all fellow tnembers of the Veterans of foreign Wars. Miss Mabel E. Church Miss Mabel Easter Church, 66, died at 1:50 p.m. Wednesday in the Williamson Nursing Home where she had been a patient many years. She was a native and lifelong -resident U.S.

Rejects Red Demands At Paris Talks Armco Hurts, Too Bethlehem Steel Profits Show Drop See Showdown The Weather Stock Prices Between Judge Washington C. H. PARIS (AP) The United States today flatly rejected the I By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 01 North Cong de- Coyt A. Stookey, Observer Minimum yesterday 53 Minimum last night 53 Maximum 63 Pre. (24 hrs.

end. 7 a.m.) Minimum 8 a.m. today 53 Maximum this date last yr. 55 Minimum this date last yr. 29 Pre.

this date last yr. Are Down MARKETS Her closest surviving relative is a brother, Wayne E. Church, mand for the removal of the top three men in the Saigon government. But it said the Commu- of Gallipolis. Five brothers and other basic demand at the two sisters preceded her in Paris peace unconditional withdrawal of all American troops by next June death.

Graveside services will be held at IO a.m. Saturday in Sedalia Cemetery, with the Rev. Ray Russell, pastor of the First Christian Church, officiating. Friends may call at the Gerstner Kinzer Funeral Home from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.

Area Deaths SPRINGFIELD Services for Ruth Estelle Morris, of Springfield, were held at IO a.m. Thursday in the Richards Memorial Home, Springfield, with burial in Bloomingburg Cemetery. She was born in Fayette County, Jan. 20, lb93. Survivors include a brother, Arthur Morris of Circleville.

GROVE CITY Services for Henry George, 70, Rt. 2, Mount Sterling, who died Wednesday in Doctors Hospital, Columbus, will be held at ll a.m. Friday at the Schoedinger-Norris Chapel, Grove City with burial in Concord Cemetery. Mr. George, a retired Baltimore Ohio railroad employe, is survived by his wife Elizabeth negotiable.

may not like the Ambassador David K. E. Bruce told the Communists at the 90th weekly session of the talks, I wish to leave you in no doubt that these are serious responses designed to lead I to real discussion of the issues I involved ir a are ready to negotiate an agreed timetable for complete I withdrawals as part of an overall Bruce said, but a timetable, for U.S. troop Withdrawals cannot be established in isolation. Our proposal offers a reasonable basis for negotiating our differences on this also ask whether we will agree to your demand that changes be made in the he said.

should be no mistake about our answer to this question. As the President said on Oct. 7, this is a patently unreasonable demand and is totally Bruce also said South Vietnam offered to discuss with you unconditionally all aspects of a political settlement This is something the North Bethlehem Steel the second largest steel producer, reports profits were off 60 per cent in the third quarter and nearly 40 per cent in the first nine months of this year compared with 1969. The earnings were disclosed Wednesday amid controversy over report by the mayor of Lackawanna, N.Y., that Bethlehem planned to furlough between 6,000 and 7,000 of the 17,000 workers at its mill in Lackawanna. A company spokesman in Bethlehem, said reports from union sources that 10,000 workers would be furloughed at the Lackawanna mill were but declined to comment on Whether a lesser number would be laid off.

Armco Steel which ranks in the top five steel producers, said that if the General Motors strike continued through two more weeks it could cause major layoffs at its mills. A spokesman for Armco, a Middletown, Ohio, firm, said two of its plaints were major suppliers to GM. He did not specify which plants and the numbers of men that would be affected by a layoff. And Congress WASHINGTON (AP) Congress and the courts appear headed for a showdown over a federal landmark decision that an official House report is a of radical campus speakers and cannot be; 48 29 The Weather Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS High Low Pr. Albany, fog 54 25 Albuquerque, clear 56 26 Atlanta, rain 62 55 Bismarck, rain 40 34 .14 Mlchael- of and Viet Cong have Sterllng- refused to do.

Earlier in the meeting, South Vietnamese Ambassador Pham Dang Lam rejected both the two Red Press Hammers Af Generals basic Communist demands as preconditions for serious talks. He said the North Vietnamese-Viet Cong insistence on acceptance of these two points was proof that main concern is a total victory MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet not a negotiated peace." press ground out more propa-1 ganda today about the American plane with two U.S. Army I generals aboard that crossed! Tuition Cost Rise Noted By Panel the Soviet-Turkish border eight days ago. The Communist party newspaper Pravda said the incident was the result of American intelligence activities that have been going on around the Soviet borders for and proved that Washington increasingly inclined to try its luck on the slippery and dangerous path of the cold The generals, along with their American pilot and a Turkish liaison officer, are being held in a government guest house in Lc- runakan, near the Turkish- Armenian border. Two American consuls who visited them Monday returned to Moscow Wednesday night after Soviet authorities refused them a second visit immediately.

The article in Pravda was written by the authoritative commentator Yuri Hukov, wtoo is believed to have closer contacts with the Kremlin leaders than any other Soviet journalist. Hukov wrote that President Nixon has appealed for an era of peaceful competition, but basic trend in all, or almost all, statements of U.S. leaders in the last two months are in complete contradition to this Students Get Real Crack At Building LOS ANGELES A year ago John Konwiser was stumped. A home building executive, he wanted to interest high school students in going into the construction trades. He drawing blanks.

tried going into schools and giving he says. the boys Then it occurred to bim: Give them a taste of real construction pay. Konwiser arranged to provide a dilapidated old house for the boys to renovate and have journeymen from the home building trades instruct and supervise the work. The idea was the basis for a pilot project last February through June. It was so successful that Konwiser and fellow executives now are working to spread it nationwide.

Two dozen boys at Jefferson High, in a Negro working class district just north of Watts worked eight hours each Saturday, transforming a 70-year-old house into a neighborhood show- WASHINGTON (AP) State universities and colleges offer the best dollar bargain for the college-bound student but even here the cost of a college education has risen 30 per cent in the past five years. And it is going I to continue to rise. These were among conclusions of a joint report of the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, representing 275 schools, and the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant I Colleges, representing 113 of the biggest state schools. The report indicated it is getting tougher and much more expensive to enroll as a nonresident student in the tax-supported institutions. The median cost at a big state was I university for a resident student ran $1,376 this year for tuition, board and room.

For an out-of- state student it was $2,019. At the normally smaller regional universities and state colleges, resident students got by for a median $1,215 while the non-resident had to come up with $1,689. Actually the rise in most student charges was not as dramatic this year as in the past, the two associations said, but they found little encouragement in this. reasons behind the boosts paint a much gloomier the joint report added low-tuition principle, which has enabled more and more young people to obtain a college education, has been guarded by these institutions since their the report said. financial realities of the seventies, however, are making this tenet more of a publicly printed.

The House Internal Security Committee which issued the report promptly announced Wednesday it will appeal the decision in line with Chairman Richard H. vow to challenge the power to issue such an order against Congress. U.S. Dist. Court Judge Gerhard A.

Gesell ruled the report has no proper legislative purpose and was solely for sake of exposure or Gesell prohibited official public printing or distribution on grounds the report violates the free-speech rights of the 65 campus speakers it identifies as members of radical, militant, extremist or Communist-oriented organizations. He declined to block distribution of the report by individual congressmen. are undoubtedly individuals who would destroy our institutions and form of Gesell wrote. any of them are listed in this report, our Constitution nevertheless preserves their rigtr; to speak even though their acts may be American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Lawrence Speiser, who won the order, said it is the first time in history a court has blocked official publication by Congress of a report. But Chairman Ichord, a Missouri Democrat had released the report co newsman and announced he will challenge court authority to restrict Con Boston, clear 54 37 Buffalo, cloudy 58 42 Charlotte, rain 64 54 Chicago, clear 63 37 .35 Cincinnati, rain 66 56 .07 Cleveland, cloudy 61 48 Denver, cloudy 56 32 Des Moines, clear 55 32 Detroit, rain 60 53 .04 Fairbanks, Fort Worth, clear 65 39 Helena, clear 50 17 Honolulu, Indianapolis, rain 62 48 .67 Jacksonville, cloudy 76 65 Juneau, Kansas City, cloudy 59 39 Los Angeles, cloudy 85 56 Louisville, cloudy 64 52 ,52 Memphis, fog 67 45 .13 Miami, cloudy 80 70 .03 Milwaukee, clear OO 31 .50 clear 50 34 New Orleans, rain 74 59 05 New York, cloudy 55 40 Okla.

City, clear 80 35 Omaha, cloudy 47, 27 Philadelphia, cloudy 55 39 Phoenix, clear 76 45 Pittsburgh, cloudy 54 34 Ptlnd, clear 57 31 Ptlnd, clear 61 30 Rapid City, enow 38 29 .02 Richmond, cloudy 58 52 St. Louis, clear 56 34 .21 Salt Lk. City, clear 47 25 San Diego, clear 76 52 San clear 69 56 Seattle, fog 58 Tampa, clear 85 Washington, cloudy 58 50 Winnipeg, LBJ Plowr To Stay Out Of Politics WASHINGTON (AP) Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson soys her husband bas no Intention of injecting himself into national politics and be and bridled into anything demanding a schedule.

is concerned for a few control over its own re-' personal friends he believes ports. I but the extent of his inter- NEW YORK (AP) Afer wavering uncertainty in early trading, stock market prices dipped lower this afternoon in moderate trading. At noon the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was off 2.54 at 753.42. Declines on the New York advances by a heavy margin; earlier, advances were ahead. Stock Exchange outnumbered advances by a heavy margin; earlier, advances were ahead.

Analysts said investors were reacting to the recent report that the leading economic indicators showed a decline last month. At noon. The Associated Press 60 stock average was off 0.4 at 257.1 Declines ran through rails, metals, aircrafts, mail order-retail, and rubber issues. Steels, motors, utilities, chemicals, and airlines were mixed. Oils and electronics were up.

Local Quotations grain B. Co-op Quotations Wheat Ear corn Shelled corn Oats Soybeans .72 2.85 Livestock Market Markets close 3 P.m. PRODUCERS STOCKYARDS Hoes 200 to 225 lbs. 16.25. and 15 more ti delivered before ll.

Sows 13.75. SELECTED BUYING STATION No 2 hogs 190 to 210 lbs. 15.75. KO. 4 nogs 0ccordin? jp merit.

Sows 13.50 Cincinnati Stock Prices The report concludes the campus speaking circuit is a significant money source tho promoters of disorderly and revolutionary activity among and the speakers a platform to radicalize students. Mainly About People Probate Clerk In Pike County Given Sentence WAVERLY, Ohio (AP)-Judith Bucy, 29, of Waverly, former clerk of the Pike County Probate Court, entered a plea of guilty Wednesday to a charge of embezzling $4,086 over a period Of two and a half years. Under provisions of the law she was fined twice that amount and will be placed on probation for two years if an investigation by a probation officer is satisfactory. Common Pleas Judge C. W.

Smith assigned from Vinton bounty to hear the case, ordered Half of the fine to be paid immediately and ordered that it Be used to make restitution for the loss. The remainder of the lfne is to be paid at the rate of a month, according to the sentence. Mrs. attorney told the Birt she was guilty of negligee, bookkeeping and id judgment in many Re-Elect James Ross As Grange Master AKRON, Ohio (AP) James Ross of Muskingum County was installed here Wednesday as State Master of the Ohio State Grange during the 98th annual meeting. He began his second two-year term as leader of the nearly 80,000 Grange members in Ohio.

Otis B. Core, former Washington C. H. attorney and former Fayette County probate judge, has been appointed as a general referee in the Probate Court of Franklin County. He now resides at 2955 Neil Ave.

Columbus. place. This fall four such projects dream than a reality are under way, two rn Los Angeles and one each in Santa Ana and Oakland. Others are planned for next year in Long Beach and Sacramento, and in Chicago and Austin, Tex Since World War some 300,000 illicit housing units have sprung up in Rome without city authorization or zoning. GM Shows Quarterly Loss; First Time In 25 Years DETROIT (AP) General Motors hit by a strike and sharply declining sales, has posted its first quarterly loss in 24 years.

GM reported Wednesday a $77 million loss for the July-September period of this year, compared with a profit of $230 million for the same three-month span of 1969. The last previous loss reported by GM was S3G.1 million in the first quarter of 1 when the corpontion wis shut down- more than months by a United Auto Workers strike. That strike began in 1915 and ran 119 days to March 19. 1S46. Tile current UAW strike in support of new contract demands now is in its 45th day, but it did not erupt until 15 days before the end of the third quarter, and shipments from factory lots continued to approximately Oct.

I. months to $744 million, compared with $1.2 billion for the January-September span of 1969. Reporting earlier this month, Fofd Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. showed third-quarter profits of $73.9 million and $1.1 million, respectively.

profits for the first nine months totaled $365 million, down from $402 million, Chrysler had a loss of $20.2 million, having failed to overcome a first-quarter loss of $29.4 ium in the two subsequent quartzes. Chairman James M. Rache and Preside it Edward N. Cole of GM said in a joint statement that tie beginning of the UAW strike 'luted to the poor sales showing. decline in they said, due to the vehicle product! in lost in the United States and Canada because of the strike called by the United Automobile Workers and a long- Third-quarter GM sales were er shutdown ii the U.S.

and $3.5 billion, against $5 billion in a spokesman said shutdowns the same three montes the pre-; because cl the extensive change Anti-War Rally Conditions Met By March Group COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-Ali legal requirements for planned anti-war rally here appear to have been met. Organizers are expecting upwards of 10,000 persons for the two and a half hour rally, featuring a series of anti-war speakers on the West Statehouse steps. State officials have approved the use of electronic sound equipment and the city has made available a march permit if the sponsors, Cleveland Area Peace Action Council (CAPAC) request one. Accepting the permit would require CAPAC to hire ten policemen to escort the parade the three miles from the Ohio State University campus to the Statehouse. Bruce Allen, son of Mr.

and Mrs. William Allen 177 Carolyn has been elected to the music student advisory committee at Ohio Northern University, Ada. est in the current election Mrs. Johnson said in an interview. If asked his main occupation nowadays, Mrs.

Johnson said, the ex-president is likely to reply: am trying to keep my grass green and keep my cattle that her 783-page book, White House is now published, the former first lady said; the head of my docket now is learning to play Johnson needs a steady parti ner for the sport which he took up again this summer at Lady Bird Johnson Municipal Park near Fredericksburg Tex. IL? own boo): is progressing wtii said. But she doesn't expect it to be out until sometime next year because the publishers would give mine a play for a number of Subdivisions Get Money From Liquor Fayette County political subdivisions shared $15,641.03 in the annual distribution of liquor license money from the state. Total distributions to the 1,283 Ohio subdivisions qualified for the receipts were $9,437,324, according to the report by Roger Cloud, auditor of state. Washington C.

H. received Bloomingburg, Jeffersonville, Milledgeville, $199; Marion Township, $597; Paint Township, A Samurai is a member of pe military caste in Japan. queriers $15.7 billion, comr ared a spokesman said shutdowns with $17.7 billion. for model changeovers lasted I The Prtbiloff Islands are in GM loss dropped its tarn- approximately a week longer me Bering Sea. iings for this first nine this year jthan last.

vieus year, and for the three I in certain regular size models. and Union Township, $4,079.50. Liquor licenses are not issued in the other political subdivisions. Coffee (Continued From Page I) ca tegories: (I) prettiest, t) ugliest, (3) funniest, (4) most original and (5) best group The winners will receive prizes The parade will be led by a police cruiser and followed by a fire truck In the line of march will be scores of kiddies, making like everything from dainty princesses and fairies to hoboes, witches and goblins It also will include the high school homecoming queens in convertibles tossing out candy, two or three floats and WJHS and WSHS bands Jaycees in clown getups will march along to help keep the parade moving THE OFFICIAL name of this county seat has been a matter of some confusion for many years, and now the Ohio attorney office has added to it. Officially the municipality is the City of Washington.

However, due to a confusion with other municipalities in the state with the same name, the Post Office Department added the words Court House to the designation. The requests for funds on the city street improvement programs have been sent to the Ohio Department of Highways under the official name of the City of Washington. The department began confusing the requests from here with those of other cities in the state by the same name, so it asked the attorney office for clarification. The reply from the office is that the Fayette County seat is City of Washington at Washington Court House. Defendant Put On Probation NEW YORK (AP) ll a.m Allegheny Cp Allied Chemical Alcoa American Airlines ABrands American Can American El Power American Home Prod.

American Smelting American Tel. Tel. Anchor Hock. Armco Steel Ashland Oil Atlantic Richfield Babcock WUcox Bendix Av. Bethlehem Steel Boeing Chesapeake Sc Ohio Chrysler Corp.

Cities Service Columbia Gas Con. N. Gas Cont. Can Cooper In. CPC Intl.

Crwn Zell Curtiss Wright Detroit Steel Corp Dow Chm. Dress Ind. Eaton Ya. Firestone Ford Motor General Dynamics General Electric General Foods General Mills General Motors pen. Tel.

El. Goodrich Goodyear Intl. Bus. Machines International Harv. Johns-Manville Kaiser Alum.

Kresge SS Kroger Co. LOFord LykeYng Marathon Oil Marcor Inc. Mead Corp. Mobil Oil National Cash Reg. National Distillery Newberry Norf W.

Ohio Edison Penn Central Penney J.C. Pa Pfizer Phillips Petroleum PPG Ind. Procter Gamble Pullman Inc. RCA Reich. Chem.

Republic Steel Sa Fe Ind. Scott Paper Sears Roebuck Shell Oil Singer Co. Sou Pac. Sperry Rand Standard Brands Standard Oil Cpl. Standard Oil Ind.

Standard Oil NJ Standard Oil Ohio Sterling Drugs StudeWorth Texaco Timken RoU. Bear. Un. Carbide Unit. Aire.

US Steel Westinghouse Elec. Weyerhaeuser Co. Whirlpool Corp. Woolworth Xerox Sales 3,000,000 A man convicted of breaking and entering Ferno-Washington Building, S. Fayette in the night season was placed on five years probation Wednesday by Common Pleas Court Judge Evelyn W.

Coffman. PO 1 IC 6 btQtlOll The man was Ronald Melvin, 28, of 605 Campbell St. He had been indicted by the April term Fayette County grand jury. The 18 ft 53 ii 19 40 399 25 04 Va 26V, 25V, 21 263, 57 24V, 45V, 31 Va 27 31 29V4 108 64 Va 28 Va 49 Va 19 V4 31 Ii 69 4 251, 25 Va 30 Va 15 14 21 21 28 Va 283i 39 23 av, 69 64 30 Ii 2334 4234 4734 6934 73 Va 51 33 32 Va CINCINNATI (AP) USDA --Cattle 700; calves 50; limited supply of slaughter steers and heifers; about steady; cows steady to weak; bulls scarce; few sales weak to 25 lower; in feeder cattle auction all classes weak to instances 50 lower. Slaughter steers: few low- choice 900-950 lb 2-3 29.00; good lb 26.50-28 50; heifers few choice 800-900 lb 2-3 28.0, good 600-900 lb 25.00-27.00.

Cows and bulls: utility and commercial cows 18.00 20.00; cutter 17.00-19.50; canner 15 0017.00; commercial and good bulls over 900 lb 23.00 28.GV; calves: not enough vealers for cattle: few high-choice and prime 375-500 lb steer calves 33 25 33.35; choice 500-750 lb couple prime 315 lb heifer calves 30.25; choice 400650 lh 25.25-28.00; good to low- choice 450-600 lb 23.00-25.00. Hogs 900; barrows and gilts generally 1.00 lower; slow; 1-3 190-230 lb 16.50*16.85 2-3 230-250 lb 15.75-16.60; 250-260 lb 15.2516.10; few 3-4 near 300 lb 13.0G- 13.25; sows 1.00 lower; 1-3 300450 lb 12.50-13.50 2-3 450-60 lb 12.25-12.5. Sheep 50; not enough for test. Columbus COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hogs (65 central and western Ohio markets reporting to the Ohio Dept, of Agri.) butcher hogs mostly .50 to 1.00 lower, sews mostly 25 lower, estimated receipts 6,800. No.

2 average good butchers 200-230 lbs 15.50-18.50, graded No. I meat types 200230 lbs 15.75-16.75. Sows under 350 lbs 12.50-14.00, over 350 lbs 10.00 12.00. ungraded butcher hogs 160-190 lbs 14.25-15.25; 220240 lbs 15.25-15.75; 240-260 lbs 14.50-15.00: 260-280 lbs 14.00-14.50: 28-300 lbs 13.00-14.00; over 3 lbs 12.0-13.00. Cattle (from Columbus Producers Livestock Co operative steady.

Slaughter steers and yearlings: choice 28.2530.80; good 25.50-28.25; standard 22.50-25.50; utility 21.50 23.50. Butcher stock: choice heifers 24.75-28.90; good 23.25 25.25; standard 22.50-23.75; utility 15.5022.00. Commercial bulls 26.50 down; utility 21.60 down. Cows: Standard and Commercial 18.5021.25; utility 16.00-18.75; canners 13.75-16.25. Veal calves steady; choice and prime veals 36.00-42.00; choice and good 32.00-36.00; standard and good 21.00-30.00; utility IO.

down. Sheep and lambs steady: strictyl choice 26.0-27.00; good and choice 24.00-25.00; commercial and good 20.00-24.00; utility 13.00 down; slaughter sheep 7.50 down. Grain Market COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio Dept, of Agri. cash grain prices: No 2 red wheat I lower 1.55-1.63, mostly 1.60 1.62; No 2 yellow corn 4-6 lower 1.191.30, mostly 1.19-1.21; No 2 oats 69-80, mostly 69-73; soybeans 12 higher 2.8»2.93, mostly 2.852.90. Hit By Bomb MILWAUKEE Wise.

(APA young man wearing a parka breaking and entering occured jacket with the hood pulled up My 9, according to complaint. outside the back Melvin entered a plea of guilty door of a suburban Whitefish to the charge and waived police station late Wednes- right to a jury trial.day night, police said today. Grand Jury Indicts Frazier For 5 California Slayings SANTA CRU, Calif. (AP) I last Friday as he slept in the Leary Plans U.S. 'Visit7 CAIRO (AP) Dr.

Timothy Leary, fugitive from a California prison, said today he will enter the United States in disguise within the next few days to attend a Black Panther meeting in New Haven Conn. Leary spoke to newsmen shortly before bearding an Air Algerie plane for Algeria after being refused entrance into Egypt. He was expelled from Lebanon earlier this week. will be in the United States by the third of he said. I will enter the United States disguised to attend a big demonstration in New Haven in support of Bobby Seale and Ericka Huggins.

Seale, national chairman of the Black Panther party, and Mrs. Huggins are being held without bond awaiting trial in New Haven in the slaying of Alex Rackley, another Panther. Seale is charged with murder and Mrs. Huggins is charged with kidnaping resulting rn death and with aiding and abetting in murder. BANKING INSTITUTIONS will be closed at 1:30 p.m.

Friday for funeral services of former city manager Clarence A Christman Jr. The outside service windows will reopen at 2:30 p.m., and the regular facilities will open at 4 p.m. The Santa Cruz County grand jury -has indicted John Linley Frazier on a charge of murdering five people in a luxurious mansion less than a half mile from the dilapidated cowshed where he lived. The indictment was returned Wednesday night after Dist. Atty.

Peter Chang Jr. questioned 22 witnesses for three hours behind closed doors. Frazier, 24, is accused of shooting the victims in the head Oct. 19 and dumping their bodies into the swimming pool at Dr. Victor $250,000 hilltop home overlooking the Pacific.

Within minutes of receiving the indictment, Judge Charles F. Franich of Santa Cruz County Superior Court clamped down on publicity surrounding the case. i He issued a four-page order prohibiting statements to news media about evidence, motives or speculation on the slayings. Judge Franich said the news blackout, applied to attorneys, investigators and witnesses, was necessary to insure a fair trial. Frazier, a high school dropout and former auto mechanic who became separated from his wife monroe ago, was arrested shed in a rugged ravine strewn with wrecked automobiles and other litter.

Victims of the mass slaying were Mr. Ohta, 45-year-old eye surgeon, his wife, Virginia, 43, sons Derrick, 12, and Taggart, ll, and his secretary, Dorothy Cadwallader, 38. Frazier and his wife, Dorothy, were hand earlier Wednesday his scheduled arraignment on murder charges in Municipal Court. The arraignment was postponed pending the outcome of grand july action. The defendant smiled several times at his wife, who sat quietly in the rear of the courtroom, and as the sess'on ended said, all right, Overheated Stove Brings Fire Alarm An overheated fuel oil stove in a tenant house on the Walter Rogers farm, Ohio 38 just south of Interstate 71, roused the Bloomingburg Fire Department at 3:45 a.m.

Thursday, but there was no fire or damage when the equipment arrived. Mrs. Georgia Reed and her son, the occupants, called for firemen when they awakened to find the house filled with smoke. Mrs. Reed reported the fire through the Fayette County Department.

Mary Baker Eddy was the founder of Christian Science. The capital of Belgium is Brussels. CARD OF THANKS I wish to take this opportunity to thank my friends, neighbors and relatives for the prayers, cards, gifts and flowers I received during my stay at Fayette Memorial Hospital. Special thanks to Dr. Hancock, Dr.

Woodmansee, Dr. Roszmann and to the nurses of the 400 wing. RONALD POPE.

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About Washington C.H. Record-Herald Archive

Pages Available:
107,570
Years Available:
1937-1977