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NAPLES DAILY NEWS

Wad., Sept. 5, 1973

A-PDF Merger DEMO : Purchase from www.A-PDF.com to remove the watermark 7-75, U.S. 41

Completion Promised
Sweeney said he felt there was no problem for having the path built. He said funds are available for bike paths in other parts of the county and he saw no reason why one could not be constructed in Bonita Springs.

Nuckolls Optimistic On Area Roads


People In Thejtow?
BONITA SPRINGS - An optimistic State Rep. Hugh Paul Nuckolls (R) said last night motorists should be driving on a 1-75 extension through Collier and Lee counties in two years. Speaking before the Bonita Springs Improvement Group, Nuckolls touched on road problems, taxes and the current Big Cypress Swamp controversy. Nuckolls added that U.S. 41 four-laning is no longer a problem in Lee and northern Collier counties and that project should be completed within a few years at both ends of the county. A contract has already been let for the northern segment in Lee County, he pointed out. Touching on the recent legislation which allowed for donation of $40,000 by the state toward federal purchase of Big Cypress Swamp, but which also incorporated stringent controls on development in most of the area, Nuckolls said: "Basically, I think it is a good bill and does what is needed . . . with the exception of about four lines in the control clause and I intend to introduce an amendment during I he next legislative session lo change that clause." Nuckolls added that he hopes lo bring two specific bills before the next legislature. One, he said, would be a tax relief bill for Florida citizens and the other would increase the present $5,000 homestead exemption to $10,000 for everyone. Lee County Commissioner James Sweeney also spoke to the improvement group, touching on tax assessments and bicycle paths. He said teenagers have asked for a bicycle path to be consiructed from U.S. 41 west on Beach Rd. lo the public beach on the Gulf of Mexico. He said he will present the measure to the commission for approval today.

PRINCE PHILIP

JOHN MITCHELL But the prince, an accomplished coachman and horse fancier, was politely, but firmly, escorted to the rear seat of the "chetvyorka" as a passenger. The coach circled the track twice with a visibly irritated and unsmiling prince at the Tuesday celebration. When Philip was later offered a ride in a "troika," he walked off briskly. He commented, "No, thanks. We've been around twice. That's quite enough."

Mitchell Turns 60
NEW YORK (AP) - Former Ally. Gen. John N. Mitchell marks his 6flth birthday today, but a spokesman would not say how Mitchell intends to celebrate. Next week he goes on trial in U. S. District Court here on charges of conspiracy, obstruction of justice and perjury. The charges against Mitchell stem from a secret 5200,000 cash contribution from Robert L. Vesco to President Nixon's reelection campaign. Vesco is a New Jersey financier.

Eco-Buffs Sidetrack Power Plant Project


JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) Long-sought federal approval to begin building a factory that will make floating nuclear power plants has been given, only to be stayed almost immediately by a federal judge. Part of the proposed factory site is a Florida tidal estuary and ecologists have been trying to keep the factory rom being built there. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers issued a dredge-and-fill permit Tuesday, a move that U.S. District Judge June L. Green of Washington D.C. then suspended at least until Sept. 14. The judge set that dale for a hearing on an injunction request from the Florida Audubon Society. The permit would let the Jacksonville Port Authority fill in the 525-acre tidal estuary known as Back River. It makes up about one-fourth of Blount Island in the St. Johns River at Jacksonville. The authority has agreed to sell 1,000 acres on the island to O f f s h o r e Power Systems (OPS), a company formed by Westinghouse and Tenneco corporations to build floating nuclear power plants. Its first two plants have been ordered for delivery in 1979 and 1980. They are to be anchored inside a breakwater to be built about three miles off Atlantic City, N.J. and furnish electrical power to a wide coastal area. OPS has also agreed to compensate for any damage to Blount Island, which they say will be minor anyway, by buying 1,050 acres of tidal land elsewhere and giving it to the U.S. Interior Department. Audubon officials claim in their request that Army Engineers didn't file a complete environmental impact statement and did not hold a required public hearing. Col. Emmelt C. Lee Jr., district engineer for Florida, denied the society's claims. "We are issuing the permit with full confidence that the Corps and the Jacksonville Port Authority have complied with all requirements," Lee said before the blocking order was issued. He said three hearings were held one by the Jacksonville City Council, one by the Florida Pollution Control Board and one by the Florida Cabinet more than a year ago as steps toward successful approval by city and stale officials. He said the Audubon Society took part in the hearings and that a fourth hearing was not in the public interest because "all substantive comment has been made available to the public."

Wig Ban Stays


TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - A federal judge has refused to order a U. S. Marine Corps Reserve unit to lift its ban on wigs. Two long-haired reservists filed suit last month against the Marines' antiwig regulation, claiming it violated their constitutional rights. In handing down his decision Tuesday, U. S. Dlst. Judge W. Terrell Hodges cited past decisions by the U. S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, which has upheld haircut regulations in the U. S. Air Force and individual military schools. The suit was filed by Alan Fout, 23, of St. Petersburg, and Steve Whitls, 24, of Tampa. Terrell's refusal of the injunction did not affect their request for a trial on the issue. They claimed they were subject to call to active duty because superiors gave them unexcused absences when they wore shorthair wigs to drills. In his Tuesday order Hodges maintained that "getting a haircut was a simple expedient" in resolving the friction of haircut rules in Tampa's 4th U. S. M a r i n e Amphibious Tractor Battalion.

Chess Rematch?
PARIS (AP) Chess champion Bobby Fischer may play Boris Spassky in a rematch in Paris next year. Stanley Rader. Fischer's attorney, is here sounding out the chances. He spoke of a million dollar purse for the winner, and from $150,000 to $200.000 for the loser. Fischer defeated Spassky in Iceland last year and plans a European tour early next year.

A Princely Scowl
KUSPENSKOYE, U.S.S.R. (AP) - Prince Philip of England look such a fancy to a four-horse coach at a show held in his honor that he wanted to drive the team.

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Playboy Sued
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actress Cyblll Shepherd has sued Playboy magazine for $9 million. She claims it wrongfully published two semi nude photographs from "The Last Picture Show," in which she starred. The actress, 23, said she only reluctantly had agreed to the scenes in the popular movie in which she stripped before jumping into a swimming pool. The Memphis actress, popular in television commercials and a frequent cover girl, said use of the photos without her consent in Playboy invaded her privacy and was a misappropriation of her property rights.

The Queen's Week


THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) - The socialist premier of the Netherlands today launched a week-long silver jubilee for Queen Juliana, Europe's longest reigning monarch. Premier Joop Den Yul in a nationwide broadcast said the 64-year-old q'ueen's direct contact with the Dutch people and concern for their problems showed that "it is still possible for royalty to f u n c t i o n in our country." Today was a national holiday, and the queen, her husband Prince Bernhard and their four married daughters were to visit a Dutch town picked by lottery. On Thursday, the royal family will tour The Hague and meet the country's mayors, members of Parliament and the diplomatic corps.

AP Wlrcphoto

AILING MISS Terry Mecuwscn, current Miss America, grimaces at a news conference In Atlantic City telling newsmen (hat she Is feeling "a HUle better" following a bout with pneumonia. Doctors refused to allow her participation In the Miss America Pageant parade on the boardwalk but she expects to keep her scheduled appearances at the pageant, pednlng medical advice.

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Page 4

Panama City News-Herald, Sunday, Nov. 15, 1953 WDLP590 On lour Radio Dial

THOUGHTS
I was not in safety, neither bad I rest, neither was I quiet; yet trouble came.Job 3:26.

'YIPE!"

The Capital Treadmill:

Pana

erald

By FRANK KENNEI . culated to sustain the British Army Xews-Herald Washington in Belgium for 40 days. With this vast depot in German hands, the Correspondent Imminent, discoveries in the retreat on Dunkirk was the only branch of scientific research, way out for the British. When Conknown as "powder metalurgy", gress gets back to town, I want to whose details are too complex for know, for one, from the big shots Member Audit Member of tte this reporter to comprehend, .give over at the Pentagon, just how the Bureau Circulations Associated Press strong promise of new uses for the deployment of our troops in Europe BY ALLEN MORRIS metal titanium and its- oxides which now differs from the fix the British Associated Press la entitled excluslTely to the us* for ^publication 01 ail HTS orinted In this newspaper currently are being produced on a found themselves in when their TALLAHASSEE A "now-orcommercial basis near Jacksonville rear base was cut to pieces. never" feeling seems to prevail SUBSCRIPTION BATES by the dePont and National Lead Presumably a lot of plain Ameriin the camps of practically all the Canter Companies. Herald News Herald men who expect to run if a Democans would like to know the same News, Herald News and Sunday and Sunday Da- Only Da. Only cratic primary for Governor is held This information, more or less thing. Their curiosity is apt to be bad Sen day $20.80 518.20 $15.60 $13.00 531.20 classified, is traceable to compe- satisfied, too, when Congress gets 1040 8.10 7-20 6.50 next spring. 15.80 tent engineering and scientific back to Washington. The CommitTaking them in alphabetical or5.20 4.55 3-flO 3.25 7.80 Mosth* sources. It is being disclosed guard- tees to which Congressmen Sikes 1.75 1-S2 1-SO 1-10 der, friends of State Senator L-eRoy a.ei itoath .40 -SS 30 edly that titanium, with one of the and Lantaff reported, the House Collins of Tallahassee believe his Copy. DaHc. Sunday News-HeraldlOc highest melting points of all metals, Appropriations and Government political fortunes are at high tide M*n. must be fused with some other Operations Committees, respectiveand that they well could begin to Payable is. metal to produce an alloy which ly, doubtless will delve into the News-Herald ebb if he steps aside this time in News and Herald will be essential to the manufacture multiplicity of the Congressmen's d Sunday Sunday and Sundaj Sun. Only favor of John McCarty, brother of fcb.20 the late Governor Dan McCarty. ^25.00 *15.60 12.00 of some of the super - jet war- charges of waste, extravagance aos 650 300 (Collins privately took himself out 13*0 planes now on the drafting boards | and inefficiency, of which the bus7.00 S. 1.75 of the race several weeks ago, then of the Air Force and of the several jiness about American bases, un1.75 2.20 1.89 Moat!) reopened the decision. 1 industries allied to their develop- i protected by American armed Keprwented la me general advertising Held by Join H. Perry Associate*. :28 Those who insist that Collins' ment and construction. "Titanium troops surely will rate a substantial East sett Street.. New York. N Y Branch ollices In principal cities. best opportunity could come next unquestionably is the metal of the portion of their attention. Ocia-uas eipressea Dy writers oJ syndicated articles published In tie New- spring point out that the memory future," said one able engineer who HARD-BOILED BUDGET BURare L2e:x own t^d do not necessarily represent oplnloni entertained by of his 1953 sweep of legislative honis known to be working, on the Florida ors - the Cracker Politics Award fringe at least, of the hard corps of EAU Members of thewho are congressional delegation scientists who almost daily are de- slated to meet with the Chief of uoctj 5k.09crit>ers wio lail to receive their News-Herald should telephone SD 5-858i as the most valuable legislator and De:nre S a m 03 Sundays. The complaint service office Is closed alter this hoi>. the St. Petersburg Times Award veloping near miraculous metal al- Army Engineers, Major General as the best Senator -still is fresh loys and plastics. A hint of the Samuel B. Sturgis and his aides, in the public mind. They note also power and force of the jet war- | at St. Petersburg over the weekend, that his services to the public planes yet to come may be found in i concerning the further development schools, both before and since his the circumstance that these skillful of the The meaical scientists tell us that since 1933 there has successful fight for the Minimum scientists now' are working on a ! control Central - South Florida flood be been a truly alarming increase in deaths from lung cancer. Foundation Program in 1947, would formula for material to build new locking project, perchance may the the stable door after begin to be forgotten if stayed out runways which have a higher melt- horse is stolen. The disease is killing four times as many men and twice as of the Legislature a session under ing point than concreteso intense rr.ar.y \vomen as it did 20 years ago. present circumstances and then ran will be the heat on the runways The Army Engineers, it has been known here for weeks, .readily They are trying to track down the villians responsible for Governor in 1956. at the takeoff of the new jets. of State Comptroller would recommend larger approprifor this, and believe they have found at least some of them. C.Backers argue with equal fervor The Florida titanium deposits ations for the undertaking "if they M. Gay now, being worked in the congresAT recent scientific gatherings in this country, some of the that Gay's chances next year would under orders from sional districts of Congressmen were not already and from the Budnewlv learned facts and some of the shrewder guesses have be better than at any time in the the White House Bennett and Herlong by the Na- get Bureau to pare their estimates past and better than if he decided been brought into sharp focus. tional Lead Company, north, of the on waterways funds to the bone. to wait until 1956. Many persons T/ie Washington Merry-Go-Round Right now. city air pollution and smoking are high on urged Gay to run in 1952 and he is St. Johns River, and by the duPont (! The 1953 - 54 budget is well on the Company near Camp Blanding, and way to competion now at least I ho ius :cct list. Indeed, the case against pollution seems well receiving the same suggestion from a smaller working near Melbourne, its basic numerous sources now. It's; doubton ihe way to being proved. do not represent, according to the lated by outlines have been formuful, however, if all Gay's potential and during Studies abroad disclosed that the air over English cities support would be patient for a third | best geologists, the whole potential [the six or the Bureau, intervening seven weeks ' titanium deposits in Florida Ex- ! before Congress reconvenes there contained a cancer-producing chemical formed by the in- time if his decision on 1954 should plorations are continuing and new i will be little opportunity for anycomplete combustion of coal. It was found to be present in be negative. promising deposits confidently are with two more greatest amounts in winter months, when fuel consumption of Moreover, to run, Gay hasyears how the Republican National Com- Foundation doesn't permit any po- expected to be found. The greatest ;body to alter these basic outlines By DREW PEARSON his term conWASHINGTON Farmers are mittee tried to pressure New Jer- litical activity." producing area of titanium in this 'to any appreciable degree. is hiehesi. siderably more prestige than he in for more anguish when they sey's popular ex-Congressman Clif- In desperation, the Republican hemisphere is in Canada at Bay i There is some presumptive eviOne investigation actually showed that the number of might have as retiring Comptroll- study carefully Secretary of Agri- ford Case into campaigning for National Committee went over jdence at hand, too, that the EisenSt. Paul on the er. What he says and does now lung cancer deaths in English towns increased in proportion news on its own merits, where is culture Benson's new farm acre- the GOP ticket in the recent New Case's .head to Paul Hoffman, a where AmericanSt. Lawrence River, Ihower Administration is approachmining companies it stanch Republican, one of the pil- are underwriting the venture. The , ing the whole question of ffood conto the number of chimneys per acre.. Another indicated might not be if he were merely age controls. They are more rigid Jersey elections. than anything ever dreamed of by Case, the most popular Republi- lars of the Ford Foundation. But [Canadian titanium oxide ore as- trol from a direction which runs heavy incidence of the disease near a coke-producing plant, another candidate for Governor. the Democrats. Hoffman shook his head. can vote-getter New ti- contrary to the policies of-the preAssuming Acting Governor Charless frequent appearance as distance from the plant in- ley E. Johns is declared eligible What Benson has decreed is that originally hopedinto be Jersey, had "Cliff Case is an honorable' says about 35 per cent pure ore vious Democratic Administration, the Repubtanium, whereas the Florida creased. to run, he, too, would have many if farmers violate their acreage lican candidate for governor. How- man," he declared. "If he feels it assays as high as 58 per cent, jit seems to be the desire of the White House to place The amount of pollution over modern industrial cities advantages next year which would agreements on one crop, they lose ever, he was stymied by the GOP would be unethical for him to cam- according to the engineers. Cana- jisponsibility on states, greater regroups of be diminished by 1956. Under pres- price supports on all other crops. Old Guard in favor of wealthy, paign for Troast, that's all there is dian reduction methods are cheapis astonishing. The New York City health department re- ent conditions, Johns would have This means that if a farmer conservative Paul Troast. Case, to it. There's nothing I feel I can er, however, so the cost of com- states, and their divers political ports that every month 176 tons of solid matter fall on each the advantage of an argument that plants more corn acreage than al- meanwhile, resigned from Con- do about the matter." jmercial production runs about even subdivisions for the construction of square mile of he city. Half a ton of that is tarry material has worked successfully in the past lowed, he automatically loses his gress and took an important post Case remained aloof throughout when all factors are taken into flood control projects. This policy already is in the open clearly in - the theory that a man who gets crop supports on basic crops. with the Ford Foundation. the campaign. The Republicans account. The mining processes are the matter of developing hydrowhich contains the menacing chemicals. In the past, a farmer who grew part of a term for any office by entirely different, too the Florida Shortly his Exhaust fumes from gasoline and diesel engines are accident deserves a full term and more than his allotment of one campaign,after Troast launched be- lost. method, as explained for the lay electric power: the Eisenhower AdRepublican bigwigs Bead Polish Heroes ministration repeatedly has assertcrop was still eligible for price came uneasy. The Democrats were also blamed, especially when they are inefficient and when a chance to prove what he can do. European newsmen recently mind fay the engineers, resembles a supports on other crops. they are running in heavily congested city traffic. The guilty As Acting Governor, Johns also Benson order, however, Under the showing i n c r e a s i n g strength. missed the story of a dramatic, giant cream separator in reverse. ed that local interests and private a penalty The scientists and the engineers tilities should be permitted, chemicals in this instance are certain hydrocarbons. One would -be in position to make head- will be imposed against all of the Troast appeared to be slipping. So crew of a Polish jet bomber. lines headlines which would be will not name the day when titan- j wherever possible, to develop such s e v e r a l leading Republicans The bomber struck out across ium will come into its own as the j power plants, thus relieving the scientist said that when painted on the skin of mice they pro- certain to publicize his campaign violating farmer's basic crops. Prediction: Look out for more phoned Case, asked him to lend the Baltic Sea for the Danish is- metal of the future there are, a [Federal Government of the cost of for election to the office. duce cancers in 50 per cent of the animals. a hand in the campaign. land of Bornholm. with a squad- lot of bugs yet to be removed iso doing. It now is being hinted, In Johns' case, it is too early Benson blasts on Capitol Hill. The scientists are much more sceptical about the role to tell yet what the' final public "I'm sorry," he replied. "Can't ron of Communist MIGs after it in present excessive costs of'produc- I according to insiders, that his pol, New Jersey Defeat of smoking in lung cancer deaths. At least .five independent r.eaction will be to the feud that .Inside story can now be told oi do it. My contract with the Ford hot pursuit. Just as the Poles were tion, the best metal or metals to icy of local responsibility and selfa few miles from Bornholm and complete the titanium alloy, and help will be extended to the flood studies shows a strong association between cigaret smoking broke into the open the other day freedom, "the pursuing MIGs shot other like obstacles stand in heir control .program with a view of between him and some key apand this type of cancer, especially among chain-smokers who pointees of the late Governor Mcthem down in flames. Incidentally, way. They do not 'doubt, however, scaling down federal contributions have had the habit 35 years or more.. But the link is far Carty. However, it may be sigit was an IL28 light jet bomber. that the ultimate solution will be and shifting more of the cost of such improvements to the sections which we have never been able to found. from conclusive, and researchers have not yet discovered nificant that Johns apparently had By WALTER LIPPMANN and localities which would benefit no difficulty in obtaining equally inspect at close range. what specific substance in tobacco might be the source of prominent men to replace the oustby their construction. Another group of Polish fighter SIKES JOLTS CONGRESS Provisional Germany trouble. Many people who do not smoke still get lung cancer. ed members of the Turnpike Aupilots were piloting a mass escape Recent revelations by Congress- If this policy does show up in the In any event, the role of air pollution is sufficiently -veil thority and the Racing CommisBONN. constitutional order at home, the in several MIGs but were caught men Sikes and Lantaff that the waterways budget to be presented sion. Some critics of Johns had anJanuary, it established so that city officials, sanitary engineers and other ticipated that removal of the Mc- Now that the doors have been social democrats differ from Ad- before they could get in the air. American combat divisions facing to Congress nextfewer federal will dolclosed to German unification and enauer on tactics and specific As a result, the Russians now the Iron Curtain are dependent for take the form of authorities ought to move in on the problem without delay. Carty appointees would prove so withdrawal of the foreign armies, measures rather than on purposes won't let a Polish pilot take off their sustained fire power upon jlars for flood ontrol, not more of Said one scientist in New York recently: "We are creat- unpopular that Johns would have the relations between Bonn and the and principles. They are a consti- with more than fifteen minutes' rearward bases in France and them. In such event the Florida to be content supply of gasoline. ing a marked cancer hazard in the air over our big cities by placements. with second-flight re- other Western governments will tutional opposition. Italy, undefended by American delegation can pat itself on the if its certainly become very close. But . There is no evidence now of imJunkets and Elections armed troops and threatened po- backBudget memberstocan persuade dumping all manner of fumes and gases into the atmosphere." It may or may not prove forfcu- the relation can never be a simple the Bureau stick to the portant popular discontent with th by Communist underHandsome Republican Governor To impose the necessary controls upon the countless nate for John McCarty that his 1 one. For although the Federal Re- regime. The Communists are neg- John Lodge of Connecticut, brother tentially military units of brigade same formula of proportionate ground operations which produce city air pollution may not be easy. friends have insisted on pushing public is already a great European ligible and the neo-Nazis, who of U. N. Ambassador Cabot Lodge, strength, have shocked many of spending, federal, state and loca, man to power, the partition, the dismemlaid out when Congress But the price of failure, told in shocking medical statistics, him forward as the logical his late i faerment, and the continuing occu- would be the leaders of German gat Secretary Dulles to pat him on their colleagues on Capitol Hill. which was the Florida project sevcarry out the program of disaffection, are for the time be- the baCk the other day in order to Some of these Congressmen, approved is pretty obvious to all. brother. This has had the effect pation put it in an abnormal posi- ing fairly quiescent and without a get him off the hook with home- without regard to party affiliations, is the court of last resort; should of gaining a great deal of support tion. Even though the maintenance large mass following. state voters . . . Lodge has been seemed to have whipped up more the Budget Bureau insist on cutof his almost certain candidacy of things as they are is for the Those who have reason to know criticized for flitting around the alarm than the two Florida Con- backs of federal money, Senators time being the policy of all con- agree that the internal situation is country too much instead of stay- gressmen who made their disclos- Holland and Smathers and Connext spring. At the same time, it has had the ! cerned, it is impossible to imagine not likely to change as long as the ing home and working as gover- ures following their recent return gressmen Rogers. Herlong and LanBREAKFAST TABLE BATTLE effect of diminishing his not incon- that the partition of Germany can i industrial boom continues. While nor . . . His latest junket was as from a European 'tour of inspec- taff may be able to repeat their accomplishment of last year perst lorever. ^he boom lasts, the mass of the siderable stature in his own right. last forever. WALL STREET JOURNALIt is certainly true, as our Where many friends of the Mc- For this reason the current re- [ peopie a re preoccupied with re- head of the American delegations tion. A few of them drew on the suading Congress to grant more to attend inauguration ceremonies early history of World War H for money for the flood control item Mr. McWethy entusiastically reports from Battle Creek, that Carty family had argued prior to lations between West Germany storixig their private lives, which in Panama and Costa Rica, where a plausible comparison. Here is one than the Budget Bureau originally death that John and Western Europe, and the vari- were shattered by Nazism and the Connecticut governor did a observation: the cereal sellers are super-salesmen. We are ready to sur- the Governor's very strong candi- ous projects and arrangements, the war. would make a good job, but nevertheless his ab- "If Russia moved to overrun recommended. render the point without argument. date in 1960 or 1964, he now may are in their way essence provisionsence wasn't appreciated back Western Europe, The -lower shell of our pantry is stacked with half-full be forced to run now or chance i al and tentative. They cannot be It is, I believe, fair to say that home ... To quiet the criticism. nist undergroundand the Commumilitary units i taken for granted as if they were the post war Germany that the cardboard cartons. They contain bits of corn flakes, wheat the risk of political oblivion. Lodge arranged to have Dulles tell e Brailey Odham of course, has tthe permanent structure of Eu-. West admires and trusts is still his news conference that Lodge's rose to destroy the supplies at our rec uire flakes, rice flakes, snapping nixies, crackling cornies, and alreadv qualified as a candidate.. ! rPe- The>" rearward bases, it would be the Q How much do state sales l constant lilce a fairly thin cnist over a flu. popping puffiesmostly in the large economy size. His followers can be expected to i vigilance, effort, persistent toler- i& mass The i eaders and policy trip to Panama and Costa Rica makings of another Dunkirk for taxes now cost each citizen? was really not a free junket but the American troops at the front. ance and A An average of S20 to S35 a understanding, and much jmakers inside and outsicle the gov- an important government mission As a reward for having bought and stored all this we work even harder for victory this , Just remember World War H. Hit- year, according to a nation-wide what is minority of have a houseful of atomic rings, secret codes, triple bubble spring than in 1952. They certainly ingenuity to make out ofthat will ernment. are an elite Nazism and . . . The Statement didn't seem to ler's tank columns blitzed through tax survey. proisional something men who witbstood are aware m do much good, however, for shortgum, 3-D comics, voodoo paper, cut-out spacemen, a real American that while many mende- be good and durable. yet survived it. They now have the ly thereafter the voters in Connec- the French armies at Sedan in May politics have been Q What is the correct title treasure man that contains the secret of buried pirate gold, feated for a given office once and authority and the prestige of gov- ticut's two most important cities. 1940 and captured Amiens, where A casual to for the Chief been successful in a tiny-tots cardboard TV console, X-ray binoculars, not to try few have ever a subsequent |i Germany canAmerican visitor ac- ernment. But they . do not have Hartford and New Haven, threw were concentrated all the supplies, prems Court? Justice of the Suarms, ammunition, food, medical survived two mention a whole litter of the likenesses of the lone star space consecutive setbacks for the same Q u n e a false only too easily The them unconditionaily a prostrate out their Republican administra- supplies, and all the other impedi- A Chief Justice of the United complacency. They have revived tions. menta of warfare for the British States. ranger and Hopping-Along Video. post. German material recovery since country and they have made powHeadlines and Footnotes the war is brilliant. The results, erful friends abroad for what was army in Belgium supplies calTucked away in the phone book, stuck behind the coffee This does not mean that all the as seen reSoviet Premier canister or tacked on the shopping list board we also have a men listed above will be candi- mains of against the hideous pro- an outlawed country. But it would pulled a Deputy when he Mikoyan ery told TV star Ed Sullivan that Q What part did the Victoria the bombing, are a boner boasted Bridge play in Canadian history? wealth of valuable coupons that enable us to buy more of all dates. It does mean that all of digy of organization and of tech- be superficial to I suppose, and no that Russian workers can now af- a prominent anti-Communist or- A Its completion across the serious German have spoken to them are under heavy pressure nological genius and of hard unthis, and so become eligible for more delightful loot, at a from key does suppose, that they have ac- ford to drink champagne. Unfor- ganization has actually been infil- St. Lawrence in 1860 made it posto do so and , remitting work. the tunately for Mikoyan, Pravda trated by the Communists. sible for a railroad to enter the discount price. Breakfast cereal is about the only thing we that all are being told their chances ipeopie as the fol-The mood of en- j ign visitor e Senator Morse's Neighbor United States from Canada. habitual following which the army came out at the same time with know of that we can get for ourselves wholesale. will never be any better. counters it is very cheerful and an admission that cattle and milk When Senator Wayne Morse of One of the few major possible friendly. The ardor and sincerity enjoyed for some two centuries. And we have only one plaint about the whole matter. Q Can fish hear? Down under the curst of what production had fallen below the Oregon studied at the University contenders who can afford to wait is Will some of the busy brains of Battle Creek figure out is Representative Robert L. Floyd | of Adenauer's foreign policygov- one might call the European and 1913 level under the Czar. This of Wisconsin, one of his classmates A Yes. beyond all question, and his democratic elite, there are still the has led Europeans to paraphrase was Owen Scott, now executive 3. way to make an eight year old eat? of Miami. While Floyd still may , ernrnent is one of most oherQ Does Canada have aiiy COB efficientx in the Western ^ - ^ wC *,. cadres of the _ Officer Corps of Marie Antoinette's "Let them eat editor of the U. S. News and World old decide to run. most of his friends ent ana cake" to "Let them drink cham- Report. Today they are neighbors trol over the Great Lakes? N&z] pany virtually aU the believe he will be as strong in DELINQUENCY STUDIES _. , , . men from trartv-five to fifty years pagne" . . . Lothair Teetor, who is in Washington. Aside from that. A Canada shares transporta1956 as he is now, and perhaps The new parliament contains no , Q{ aee who .^ nQW becorne the assistant secretary in charge of they don't have too much in com- tion and fishing rights with the stronger. y or irreconcilable^-1 ]ead ^ rs Qf GermanV; started or Commerce Department domestic mon at least where politics is United States on four of the Great PENSACOLA NEWSThe problem of juvenile delin- Passage of a S300.000 bond issue affairs got a letter from a New concerned. Senator Morse bolted Lakes Superior, Huron, Erie and quency is receiving more and more attention on all levels last Tuesday for a hospital in ro ad York woman which read: "I se< the Republican party to support Ontario. . : his . and out of these studies and discussions should come some Bfker county brought Senr.tor Edregime. J.hose from twenty-five by the newspapers that you' have Adlai Stevenson, while Scott, who win G. Fraser of Macclcnny to the l Out_ of the Legislature for a time. | . __^ concrete measures for control and correction. Q Who became king of Engvicarious end of a long personal Frascr decided^he best could push j to thirty-f-.ve years of age were been put in charge of domestic af- works for conservative columnist 'the hospital campaign forward by educated and indoctrinated under fairs. My picture is enclosed David Lawrence, is a strong de- land aftor the Battle of Hastings? The latest on the state level is being held Thursday and crusade. Please try to get me a husband" Friday at Silver Springs under the sponsorship of the Flori- The crusade started in 1945 when ' iromg back to the Senate and get-!tHitler. They are now supporting . . . Champion walkers of the Pres- votee of the Eisenhower adminis- A William the Conqueror. tration. Eraser's son. Gary, then four years ' tinp" through an enabling act" to : h c n(nv order and a-re taking their da Patrol Com?rns?ion. It wi]] bring together circuit and old. was struck down by an auto-1 permit the bond issue election. He direction from the new elite who ident's official family are White Despite this, the two manage to !! county judges, state attorneys, sheriffs, ministers, publishers mobile. Both his legs were crush-1 clid so twice, and the voters twice jriu nfull BlH u"ho is convinced, who House aide Sherman Adams, an get together in the evening for an s ed. Since there is no hospital m j approved. It had carried four to ' i n >" converted, who is conform- ex-mountain climber, and Com- occasional visit. The other day, and psychatnsts for a two-day workshop or thorough exBaker county, there fir&t but and who merely acquiesces, merce Secretary Sinclair Weeks Editor Scott dropped in at the ploration of their experiences, problems and recommenda- ing 30 mile dash for was an agoniz- one at theinvalidvote lack the elec- ino? one can say. No serious Ger- who prefers hiking along ]evei Morse home looking glum. child and par- tion was for of a 50 i take frequent constitions. "What's the matter?" asked the per cent participation by those on j m a n believes that what is going ground Both aII ents to Jacksonville. U "When I began to go into the the voter rolls. Fraser then got the i well enough in this time of boom K^ f?f y * the way to or senator from Oregon. Congressional committees also are studying the problem from the office . . . A new group of soon after the shock "I I were' purged of and here in Pensaco3& a great deal of ground work has been situation, too found that therecounty rolls the second inactive electors, and sobe counted on in time of war Democrats spearheaded the clean- Scott.just sold my cattle, " replied ' of adentirely many Baker and vote resulted in could sweeP victory fa New Jers done by the Youth Service League. ' "How much did you get for babies being- born in automobiles j the Senator's triumph. The hospi- versity. Archibald. Alexander former As them?" The statement that the delinquency is with the parents while fathers were rushing their tal money will come from Baker's It is this condition of things which sistant Secretary of the "Seven cents.*1 mothers to hospital in the passing, and rather than the children has become trite though true. It is ville or Lakea City," recallsJackson- share of race track taxes.of Acting accounts for almost desperate the "How much did you pay for Fraser. Fraser, a close friend overtone of intoo late to change the parents now. Perhaps something can "Furthermore, I found that the lack Governor Johns for, two decades, sistence, with which Adenauer and them?" r C e ' n f SNEA be done to prevent delinquent parenthood among the com- of a hospital was hurting Baker has been paying his oWSi expenses his intimate collaborators plead for ton and George Brurmer mayor "About twenty cents." At the rate films and movie county in its efforts to get new v/Mle working here to help Johns the European Army and for Euro- rt "You don't mean to say," gibed n e ng generations. Meanwhile, counsel and advice must be industry and thus give better balperformers are coming on to overcome the mass of administra- j pean integration They believe that act opposite of Mayor Frank CI- Morse, "that your friend Eisentfforded those facing the immediate problem. television. Arch N e a r b r l t e , .,, the ance to our economy. The first ,~ detail ._* goes along with -~! t his is the only'way in which the hower would do that to you?" tive ,,*., that thinks sponsors will soon have thing prospective manufacturers office of Governor. Fraser is a per- German nation can be kept surely f AI Gordon Per- Mrs. Scott quickly interrupted. to start a home-delivery pop"You boys had better talk about asked was what kind of hospitals sonable young nurseryman whose within a democratic order if hard sons of Alabama, elected with vigThe first brick building at Harvard University was orous labor support, has now something else," she said. corn service, and he's trying to and sister Aline been pri>rected for Indiana students, but they did not make suffi- found schools we had. When they vate secretary .long hasTreasurer J. 'j times return, figure a way of handling the' turned vigorously against labor. . . we had no hospital at all, to State (Copyright, 1953, (Copyright, 1953, cient use of it, so it was converted into a printing shoo. local business.' they simply were not interested." Edwin Larson. By the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) 'New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) Ex-Attorney General Jim McGranP*feiiari*d rrery Sunday morning by B? county Publishers. Inc. Application fter Soeond Cits* entry pending. Joan H. Perry. Chairman of the Board, 18S1-18M JOHN H. PERSY Jr. President OS8U B Keller Publisher Tom Veverka.

In this wild world the fondest A JefaB H. Perry Newspaper. Founded by John a. Perry, 8r., No*. X, 1952 and best are the most tried, most troubled and distressed.-^-Crabbe.

Titanium Research Develops Statewide Interest In Meta!

Cracker Politics

Puines Can Be Deadly

Benson's New Acreoge Contro s Are Rough -Paw Act On Farmers; Case Refuses

Views Of Other Editors

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Florida i J News Briefs


:

NAPLES DAILY NEWS

Thur*., JUM 27,1974

SECTION B

Insects and Disease Fight Authorized


ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Florida nursery and farming interests have agreed to join with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to form a special committee to improve methods of protecting the state against foreign-bred insects and disease. Discussion of establishing such a committee has been going on for some time, but the decision to act came in the wake of Japan's rejection of two shipments of Florida citrus found to be contaminated by Caribbean and Mexican fruit flys. Thomas Darling of the USDA's animal and plant health inspection service acknowledged during a Wednesday meeting with growers that the federal government could not guarantee that contaminated produce from foreign ports was not reaching Florida. For example, Darling said, USDA import restrictions do not apply to Puerto Rico, the home of the sugar cane borer weevil which one citrus grower said had been found near Apopka.

Detoxification Center Plans Still In Limbo


/'''"" .< IMMOKALEE - A group of Immokalee civic leaders, representing several community organizations, have not yet met to develop plans for a temporary detoxificiation .center. Last Wednesday the group met with George Clarke, an official in the Bureau, of Alcohol Rehabilitation, Division of Mental Health of the state Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, and were told that about $35,000 in state funds are available to operate the temporary center. At that time representatives of the district mental health board said they were willing to call a special meeting to apply for the funds as soon as the Immokalee group came up with a plan. . : C.J. Jones, Jr., president of the Immokalee Chamber of Commerce and one of the '! leaders in getting a detoxifica- ; tion'center for Immokalee, said this morning the civic < leaders have not been able to ! get together in the past week. ! During last week's meeting ; with Clarke several civic ; leaders indicated that they < wanted to move as soon as . possible to alleviate the probr ; lems of drunks roaming ar: ; ound the town. ; The temporary center would , be operated until a district- | wide detoxification center is ; established sometime prior to Jan. 1. The center would ser- i vice Lee, Collier, Charlotte, ! Hendry and Glades Counties. -]

EAL Woman Engineer Was Top Student


-MIAMI (AP) - The only woman among Eastern Airlines' 150 . engineers says she was tinkering with mainsprings while other girls were playing with dolls. But Geraldine Cohen says it still took time before her coworkers accepted her. "The other mechanics "used to look at me and say, 'Whose secretary are you?' or 'Are you lost.' But now they've gotten accustomed to seeing me around," she said. Mrs. Cohen, 30, says she had a similar problem at the University of Miami, where she was the only girl in a class of 18 aspiring electrical engineers. But, she says, "at least I graduated as the top girl in my class."

Everglades City Is Drying Out


Photos by Tippins

UNDER WATER - Less than two months ago, county cattlemen were complaining that the drought was seriously affecting the food supply for their cattle. After this week's rainstorm, the main concern might be the cows drowning. This is one of several grazing fields oil the Naples-Immokalee Road that was still flooded Wednesday afternoon.

Jacksonville Must Pay Pollution Cost


JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - The State of Florida is demanding that the City of Jacksonville pay for water pollution which authorities say caused the death of 4,000 fish. A pumping station broke down May 6 and sewage overflowed into Moncrief Creek. This depressed the oxygen content and killed about 4,000 mullet, the Florida Department of Pollution Control said. -The state has; demanded the city pay $7, pay for the fish and $243:for the cost of an investigation.

EVERGLADES CITY - This small fishing village was just about recovered this morning from the heavy rainstorm which flooded it earlier this week. .. , Mrs. Dorothy Sheppard, city clerk, reported this morning there was still standing water on vacant lots but the roads were clear. Clifford Geiger, city manager, noted that tides were beginning to back up some storm sewers this morning and could cause some street flooding later in the day. .Geiger said it didn't appear that the city had lost any equipment in the storm, and that it was toofarly to te|l if there was any salt water damage. At the height of the storm there was two to three feet of standing water in the city and SR 29, the only road into the community. Although the road was not closed, it was virtually impassable because of the high water.

i Tallahassee News Briefs


Ranch Purchase Hearing Scheduled
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - A public hearing on the state's proposed purchase of the 4,182 acre McLeon Ranch in Alachua and Columbia counties will be held July 1 in the Columbia County Courthouse at Lake City, says Natural Resources director Harmon Shields.
STALLED This distressed car, located at the entrance to a labor camp off Pulling Road, sat in the same spot all Wednesday afternoon, and Will likely remain there until the water recedes.

Bill Giving Crewleader Free Rein Is Vetoed


He said he would ask the ure intended to increase the fee '. TALLAHASSEE,' Fla. (AP) - Gov. Reubin Askew has ve- Board of Business Regulation for mailing new tags and regis- ', ..'" ' ; toed a bill he says would have to work with legislative com- tration papers. left most migrantfarm-workers mittees in developing recom- The amended bill provided '. who pick citrus at the mercy of mendations for reform of li- that all counties would havejo [ any unscrupulous crew leaders. quor-licenses procedures. sell the 68-number tags in adfl,i- ', The veto was one of four is- "Only with overall uniform tion to the series designated for ; sued Wednesday by the gover- procedures can the difficult de- that county. ;!' ; nor. He also nullified two local cisions of licensing be made in Tags of the 68 series hay! ; liquor-license bills and a meas: a fair and consistent manner," been sold by the Division' ;pj .tire that would have required . Askew said. persons 'ouj counties to sell license plates The provision that led to veto Motor Vehicles toFlorida tagsj '. ' of the auto license billwas an of state who need bearing the "68" prefix. ' / _ He said the farmworker bill amendment added to a meas-_ such as military personnel. "' ; 'would have exempted some 1,500 citrus dealers from an existing law regulating the activities of crew leaders who decide when, where and for how much migrants will work. : "The effect would be to remove very substantial numbers Carlton said federal prosei of farm workers from the pro- MIAMI (AP) - Vassar B cutors asked about "who- { tection and benefits the law in- Carlton, former chief justice of knew and how long I knew; ,j tended to provide," Askew said. the Florida Supreme Court, them and whether they were J "The abusive treatment 1 of says prosecutors questioned . migrant and seasonal farm him about his acquaintances good friends " appearance!' ; \ Before workers by some unscrupulous .when he went before a. federal the grandCarlton's from se'y; i jury heard crew leaders in the crew leader grand jury investigating al- eral Miami men They include!) \ system has'been a continuing leged gambling activites. Jack Grill, chauffeur for reputf j Carlton, who retired unexproblem in Florida," he added, "To my knowledge, nothing pectedly in January amid re- ed underworld financial wizard * J has transpired to change the ports that he was the subject of Meyer rLansky announced 5 4rt ; Ca I vulnerability of the farm work- an investigation by .the state January l t o n he was retiring ', that ers in the citrus industry, nor JudicialQualificationsCommis- after 33 years as a judge to re? ; to afford them protection from sion, spent more than an hour enter private law practice so he1 the exploitation of crew leaders Wednesday before the jury in could make more money I who may be guilty of abuses." Miami The liquor-license bills would "The smart thing to do some- He denied at that time that have made it easier for Pasco times is to take the Fifth he was the subject of any inCounty golf courses to sell al- Amendment, but 'I did not," vestigation by the Judicial choholic beverages and would Carlton said. "I wanted to tell Qualifications Commission, a have granted a special license them as much as I could, but I disciplinary body that polices -^ to the Sandpiper Club, a non- couldn't recall all the details judges' conduct '% profit corporation in Lee Coun- for some of their questions: S e v e r a l newspapers Had "The trouble with not taking ty pre"I have long opposed the es- the Fifth is that when you can't quoted sources as saying aCarlinvestigation of tablishment of special licenses remember all the details, they liminary other Supreme Court ton and either by local act or general sometimes get people on per- justices was underway. jury " legislation," Askew said.

i Shields said in a news release-Wednesday that the area is being considered for purchase as environmentally endangered land

"Acquistion of the property will provide the state with the entire natural bridge, sinkholes, the river sink and rise and additional three miles of the Santa Fe River," Shields said

Law Partners

Former Chief Justice : Queried On Gambling

Senate President To Be Sworn In


TALLAHASSEE, Fla (AP) - Sen Louis de la Parte, D Tampa, will be sworn in as Florida Senate president Monday by Supreme Court Justice Richard Ervin De la Parte will replace Senate President Mallory Home, D-Tallahassee, who is resigning to campaign for the Democratic nomination to the U S Senate seat held by Republican Edward Gurney De la Parte, whose Senate term expires in November, has said he will not seek te election He will serve as Senate president until legislators hold elections in November Democrats, the legislative majority, have already decided to elect Sen Dempsey Barren, D Panama City and Rules Committee chairman, as president in November

2 O'Malley Associates To Testify At Hearings


TALLAHASSEE, Fla (AP) - The Leon County grand jury that is investigating the financial affairs of state Insurance C o m m i s s i o n e r Thomas O'Mallev hears today from two of his former law associates; Piccardo G. Ciravolo and Bennett H. Feldman of Miami were subpoenaed to appear before the 18-member panel Special prosecutor T Edward Austin, guiding the grand jury probe, has already subpoenaed bank records pertaining to the two lawyers as well as to O'Malley, his wife and several of their friends. Records of the Florida Bar indicated that O'Malley shared office space with Ciravolo and Feldman in 1970. Former state Sen. Gerald Lewis, D-Miami, later moved into the offices. O'Malley and Ciravolo. were partners in 1971 and Feldman and Ciravolo are partners now, according to legal records Austin has already subpoenaed financial records of Lewis, Ciravolo and Feldman Lex Hood, vice president of the State Bank of Jacksonville, was the only witness to go before the jury Wednesday The grand jury is said to be conducting a complex probe of O'Malley, including allegations that insurance companies were pressured into buying paintings at a Miami art show sponsored by Mrs O'Malley The grand jury is slso investigating allegations that O'Malley may have accepted $40,000 from a fuel marketers group that was seeking to keep self-service gasoline stations out of Florida: O'Malley has denied receiving any money from the Florida Petroleum Marketers' Association He also denied that there was any pressure on insurance firms in the 1972 art show. The grand jury issued a new subpoena Wednesday for Ollje Evans J r , the insurance de partment's general counsel, to appear before it next week Florida Department of Law Enforcement agents had been unable to serve him with a subpoena issued last week by Aus tin's staff Jerry Davies, O'Malley's press aide, said Wednesday that Evans was th O'Malley in California late Tuesday continuing an investigation of alleged improprieties in the state's purchase of land on St George Island in the Gulf of Mexico near Apalachicola Davies said he didn't know when O'Malley and Evans would return to Tallahassee.

Correction Official Promoted


TALLAHASSEE, Fla (AP) - Anabel P Mitchell, superintendent of the Florida Correctional Institution at Lowell, will be the new deputy director of inmate treatment for the state prison system Corrections Director Louie Wamwnght announced the appointment Wednesday Mrs Mitchell is the highest-ranking woman in the state Corrections Division and was the first woman to serve as warden for a prison housing both men and women Mrs. Mitchellis to replace Al Cook, who at his own request, will become superintendent of the Glades Correctional Institution at Belle Glade

Orthodox Rabbis Fail To Interest The Young


MIAMI (AP) - American Orthodox rabbis have failed in their quest to interest young Jewish intellectuals in Orthodox Judaism, a spokesman for a rabbinical group says. Rabbi Fabian Shonfeld, newlyrelected president of the Rabbinical Council of .America, said Wednesday that Orthodox Jewish leaders had not developed new methods of interesting Jewish youths in the Orthodox branch of the religion. "This failure has resulted in the pursuit by many Jewish youths for all sorts of new ideologies and the adoption of radical leftist political philosophiAPWircpholo es," said Rabbi Shonfeld, who FORGOTTEN MAN - Jesse Queen had big plans for April. He was to he married on Ihe Hlh. was elected to the post WednesInstead, Jesse spent that day - as he has almost each one for the last four months - lying day. immobile and despondent in a bed on the third floor of Alachua General Hospital in Gainesville. The council, which represents His friend, nurse Pat Poppell looks on. ' nearly 1,000 Orthodpx rabbis who serve more than 1.5 million congregants, is conducting its 38th annual convention. Shonfeld also criticized the organized rabbinate for its failure to combat "the corrosive forces of secularism and nihilism." Later, Rabbi Walter S. Wurzburger, editor of Tradition, a journal of Jewish thought, said that in sharp contrast with a generation ago, nine out of every 10 Jewish youths attend a university or college. "These youngsters think in terms and concepts unknown to their'fathers and they expect those who wish to communicate with them to utilize these selfsame intellectual concepts," Rabbi Wurzburger said.

AP Wlrepholo

BLISS LOOKS BACK - Lake County Sheriff Guy Bliss poses outside the office in Tavares where for 1ft years he has directed a campaign to rid his county of the (-, "Iwo-gun" image of his predecessor Willis McCall. '

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These PGDN election pictures prove that the EYES have it

Tartly c l o u il y and warm through Thursday. Hi^h today Sunrise o:49: sunset 7:35. High tide 2:09 p.m.: low tido u. mHI\KK K

Dear A l > h > KdiloriuU


ObiluurifN Sport*

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52.5

Broad

23rd Year

No. 74

12 Pages

Fort Walton Beach, Fla.,

Wednesday Morning.

May 21, 1969

Single Copy 10 Cents

Mclaughlin, Rigdon, Palmer, Guidry win


Around Florida
GATOR PROTECTION BILL TALLAHASSEE. Fla. (AP)The Senate approved a bill Tuesday that could send alligator butchers to jail for up to five years, while a House committee okayed a measure providing for a 10-day prison term for convicted poachers. The Senate poacher penalty proposal would up the fine from $1,000 to $5.000. Besides calling for a jail sentence of at least 10 days, the House Conservation Committee's bill would authorize rewards for information leading to the arrest and conviction of alligator poachers. KIRK INGORES PROTESTORS TALLAHASSEE (AP'- Some 300 youths marched on the state Capitol Tuesday and demanded Gov Claude Kirk come forth to talk with them about what they called repression at Florida State Universil>The demonstrators sat for two hours in the hot sun without as much as a glimpse of the governor.. A spokesman for the group rejected K i r k s offer to meet with one-of the crowd and hear grievances.

CITY CANDIDATES:

Some new faces, butsameanswers


By CHARLES BRADY The person who took a definite stand at election headquarters Tuesday night was Kathy Poulsen, 13^ of Bayou Trails Girl Scout Pack 122". "I'm for Joe Guidry," Kathy said, "because I know him." The s e c o n d most definite stand was taken by Kathy's girl friend Patty Ameel, 12, who said she also was for Joe Guidry. Patty said she didn't know Joe but was for him because Kathy was. Of the nine candidates only Ray Jones was missing from the scene. But for quoting purposes he wasn't missed because the eight candidates present gave the same answers to the same questions. Asked to comment on the large voter turnout Maurice McLaughlin said: Wonderful," Harry Harris said .-"Fine," Bull Rigdon said: "Real Good," George Palmer said: "Delighted." Joe Guidry said: "Wonderful." And "wonderful" which was the most popular adjective was also said by Elbert Davis. "Great," was the word used by outgoing Mayor H. French Brown while Sill Rogers was: "Very, very happy." The candidates said the large voter turnout was due to interest in the campaign which figured, but attorney Erwin Fleet, a non-candidate, said the large turnout was due to the "beautiful weather." The first break in the unanimity came after the results were announced because now the candidates were no longer candidates but winners and losers. Said the losers: Harry Harris, "Next time it's going to be better." Sill Rogers, "I'm happy the people turned out in record numbers." Elbert Davis, "The people made their choice." Said the winners: Bull Rigdon, "It shows the See COMMENTS, Page 2

No runoff as King concedes to Guidry


By BILL TENNIS Funeral director Muurico McLaughlin was elected mayor of Fort Walton Beach Tuesday defeating realtor Elbcrt Davis by a vote of 1.584 to 722. Incumbent City Councilman C.H. Rigdon defeated Sill L. Rogers, George A. Palmer defeated Harry G. Harris and builder Jack King conceded victory to incumbent Joe Guidry after winning a spot against him in a run off runoff election t h a t would have been held June :!. In making his surprise statement that he would concede the election to Guidry, King said he would make a full statement today as to why he would not run but t h a t he was very pleased with the number of people t h a t turned out for the election and t h a t the people had gotten what they wanted. A record 2,327 votes were cast in the largest t u r n o u t of voters in the city's history. Some 45 absentee votes still remain to be counted, but will not affect the outcome of the race. In defeating former mayor E 1 b e r t Davis, McLaughlin polled the highest number of votes of any candidate in the race. The unofficial tally showed McLaughlin with 1584 compared to 722 for Davis. In the Group One race for city council, building trades executive George A. Palmer reSee ELECTION, Page 2

Gulf Federal breaks ground


jp MlC6Vill6 By EMMA GOGGIN NICEVILLE Ground w a s broken Tuesday afternoon for a new branch office for Gulf Federal Saving and Loan Association on a Niceville site fronting the John C. Sims Parkway and the head of Boggy Bayou. The 2 p.m. groundbreaking ceremonies were conducted by the association's board of directors: Hervis Ward, president; Wilson Minger, vice-president; Kenneth Boles, executive vicepresident; John Brooks, secretary-treasurer; Randall P. Roberts and Dr. Andrew F. Giesen. The permanent local branch building which will replace the present facility at 72 John C. Sims Pkwy. in Valpariso, will be of brick veneer construction. It will contain 1,541 feet of floor space and will offer a drive-in window and night depository. Costing. approximately $49,000, the building is being constructed by Quails Construction Co. of Fort Walton Beach and is expected to be ready for occupancy on or about Sept 15. It was designed by Lewis C. Medlin, Jacksonville architect.

JACKSONVILLE POLLUTION JACKSONVILLE ( A P > A pollution expert charged Tuesday that the state is prosecuting only the "little fellow" under new pollution laws and letting the big offenders continue to evade regulation. Reid Diggs. who has 25 years experience in the field and is a member of Jacksonville Mayor Hans Tanzler's advisory committee on water pollution, made the charge while testifying before the City Council Health and Welfare Committee. "For 25 years we had no enforcement agency in Jacksonville." Diggs said. Under new state antipollution laws, "they're tending to interfere with the little f e ll o w the little fellow; not the big fellow-and they're picking on him. "The big fellow can get away with things the little fellow can't." Diggs said. He said one paper company, which wasn't identified, is polluting the St. Johns River as much as a city with 1.4 million people would. "Baptist Hospital Lord knows how much corruption goes in from there," Diggs said. STATE COURT CHANGE TALLAHASSEE (AP) The Florida House Tuesday approved by a 77-34 margin a proposed constitutionai amendment to streamline the state's court system. The compromise resolution, similar to one alreadyapproved by the Senate, provides for two trial courts in counties with populations of more than 100,000.

CHERRY DAHNKECherry Dahnke, 17, a j u n i o r at Choctawhatehoo High School is a contestant for the Miss Billy Bowlogs title. Cherry is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William P. Dahnke Jr., 224 Crewilla Drive.

Physical checkup precedes Apollo 10 inspection of moon


By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL Associated Press Writer SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) The Apollo 10 astronauts got a physical checkup across 200,000 miles of space Tuesday with only hours separating them from their hazardous inspection of the moontugging ever harder at their tiny craft. "Right now the moon looks as big as earth," said Navy Cmdr. John Young as the astronauts got their first view of both heavenly bodies at the same time. They were less than 50,000 miles from their destination. Air Force Col. Thomas P. Stafford, Navy Cmdr. Eugene Cernan and Young were scheduled to be asleep as the spacecraft entered the mysterious and unfelt twilight zone where the pull of earth gravity wanes and the moon's begins. At 4:45 p.m., EOT, Wednesday, they arrive at the point where they fire their engine out of sight and hearing of e a r t h and go into moon orbit leading to Thursday's separation of the bug-like lunar lander and its climactic dip to within 9.3 miles of the lunar surface. Stafford and Cernan will be aboard the LEM. Young, alone in the command module and maintaining the 70-mile-high lunar orbit, will be available to come to their rescue. Dr. Charles Berry, the astronauts' chief physician, held a conversationnot carried to news mediawith the spacemen for reassurance that they were physically up to the 2>/2 day trial ahead. See APOLLO, Page 2

Reinke asks injunction against school board


B.v MARILYN PASSELL F o r m e r Okaloosu C o u n t y Commissioner R. J. Reinke has filed an i n j u n c t i o n against the Okaloosa County School Board seeking to prevent the school board from using general tax monies to pay off bonded indebtedness of the special tax districts established in the southern part of the county. Reinke's a t t o r n e y . Ferrin Campbell, said the i n j u n c t i o n was basically designed to restrict the school board from using general school board funds to pay off (he bonds of the special tax districts which were approved by the freeholders of the district several years agoCampbell said the d i s t r i c t was designed to provide money for buildings, improvements. ,md c a p i t a l o u t l a y in the tax districts. The board, according to Campbell, is using general f u n d monies, created by mill levy on the entire county, to p a r l i a l l v support the special district. No date has been'set for a hearing on the in.junetion said Campbell, and no answer has vet been filed by the School Board. School Superintendent Max Bruner. Jr. said Tuesday t h a i the i n j u n c t i o n was an a t t e m p t by Mr. Rernke to make the School Board increase the milSee REINKE, Page 2

World briefs
BUENOS AIRES (AP> Driving his bus back to the garage for repairs, driver Enrique Pascua was hailed by seven youths who explained they were in a hurry to get to a friend's wedding. When he told them he couldn't pick them up, they stormed onto the bus and beat him up, he told police from his hospital bed. LUSAKA, Zambia ( A P > Finger means yes and foot means no. For the benefit of illiterate voters, the symbols of a finger and a foot will appear on paper ballots June 17 in a referendum on proposed constitutional changes. BAGUIO, Philippines ( A P ) In a plea to burglars who ransacked his home, Gov. Alfredo G. Lamen said he would let them keep the valuables they took if. they returned one item a colorful loin cloth, still worn by many natives in the province. JAKARTA, Indonesia ( A P ) An elderly woman was shot dead and dragged through the streets of her village by a soldier who claimed she was a witch who killed his 9-year-old son with black magic, police said. The boy's illness had been diagnosed by doctors as brain cancer.
Photo ti> Marilyn Taiwoll

No danger of says Taylor


By CHARLES BRADY Brooks Taylor, Crestview attorney, said Tuesday that he is in no danger of being disbarred. " I don't l i k e t h e word disbarred," Taylor said. Taylor has pleaded guilty to a contempt of court charge and a newspaper article cited speculation by legal experts that Taylor's career is in jeapordy. Taylor cited law which states In affect that an attorney punished by court action may not be disbarred for the same action. Taylor is free on $10,000 bond for the contempt charge. The charge arose after Taylor failed to show up on numerous occasions to defend one of his clients, Billy Sanders, of Milton. The two finally made it to court Friday in Pensacola and Sanders pleaded guilty to a perjury charge. He will be sentenced June 20. Sometime after that date Taylor will be sentenced for the contempt charge. The embattled attorney is also under a federal indictment by a Tampa grand jury for his alleged part in selling moonshine liquor to federal agents. The moonshine turned out to be water. Taylor is free on $5,000 bond from that charge. He made the statement on t h e heels of a Sl.<>98 fine slapped on him Monday by the Court of Record in Pensacola. The penalty was for a contempt charge to which Taylor plead guilty.

I shop cleared; back in business


Officials of Phase I, a poster and mod clothes shop on Main Street, were told Tuesday afternoon by city attorney Walter J. Smith t h a t the shop could reopen immediately. The officials voluntarily relinquished t h e i r license last Thursday. Attorney Robert Tongue represented the Phase I corporation in a brief meeting with city officials at city hall. After the meeting Smith released the following statement: "After city officials conferred with the owners of Phase I and their attorney with regard to return of the occupational license which was voluntarily relinquished to the city, the city agreed to return the license since it was in no position to charge any violation of city ordinances or state laws." The shop is housed in quarters leased from Ron Getz, owner of the neighboring Jackie's House of Diamonds. An official of the Phase I corporation said his group is interested in purchasing a building at the corner of Main and Perry Streets to house a coffee shop. The site is the old Rhodes Furniture store which is presently being used to house the Billy Bowlegs Art exhibition. However, unless church backing could be secured, the official said, his corporation would definitely not go ahead with the idea.

A h u s b a n d can't consider himself henpecked until he has to wash and iron his own aprons.

FATHER AND DAUGHTERCity council candidate Jack King puts a loving hand on his daughter, Kay's shoulder as he listens to the results of the election race Tuesday night. King and Joe Guidry ended in a runoff for the council seat, but King conceded Tuesday night after the election.

PHASE II?Owner of Phase I, Major Paul Martel, ( l e f t ) talks over plans to open a church endorsed coffee shop with Rick Bartron, one of his corporation officers. The businessmen are considering as a site for the coffee shop the old Rhodes F u r n i t u r e building at the corner of Main and Perry Streets.

rSPAPERI

._

'** 'v,K^r?^F^^^

Florida East Coast Canal Association News


DEPARTMENT OF THE NEW SMYRNA NEWS
THIS PUBLICATION IS DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE EAST COAST IN GENERAL AND THE EAST COAST INLAND WATERWAY IN PARTICULAR NO. 4 ' convene in the city hall, Bantcrd;'Friday afternoon, February 2nd next, at 3 o'clock. Consulting Engineer, Isham Randolph ot Chicago, Editor Manufacturers' Record, Richard, J. Edmonds, of Baltimore; also Jacksonville's well known attorney, P. A. Vans Aguew and others, will address the meeting, giving the invited delegates and assembled friends the benefit of their experience tmit their views. Will you be present? You are needed, your judgment and council are respectfully solicited and we urgently request that you let nothing prevent your attendance. Kindly favor our secretary with prompt reply, stating whether we may definitely count on seeing you at this representative meeting at Sanford, February 2nd. If you cannot come, please send delegate in your place, and kindly send me his name. C. R. WALKER, Chairman, E T. WOODRUFF, A. P. CONNELLY, F. F. BUTTON, FORREST LAKE J N. WHITNER, F. L. MILLER, G. F. SMITH. SANFORD BOARD OF TRADE. NEW SMYRNA. FLORIDA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1917. H. I. HAMILTON, Secretary NAVIGATION DISTRICT PLAN RALLY TO OUR SUPPORT Your association has been doing ENDORSED AT TITU8VILLE Issued the first Friday of each month good work for three years on very lit The East Coast Chamber of Comus a department of the NEW SMYRNA NEWS tie money, and that money has been merce met in Titusville on the 9th in the interests, of the Florida East I forthcoming. On entering the fourth and 10th of January and what they Coast Canal Association. year of our usefulness the way has lacked In numbers was made up In No subscription charge to Association suddenly broadened, the work become life. A resolution was adopted urgmembers. intensely heavier and the expense ing the attorney-general to file suit has rapidly mounted higher. Right against the Coast Line Canal and H. I. HAMILTON, Editor (Asbociation Secretary) now there is urgent need of : Transportation company to cause the money than we have needed In the title of the East Coast canal to reOFFICERS President three previous years. This year, too, vert to the state and to prevent the FRANK W. BAKER Miami, Fla it has' been very low comlr t In. Secretary-Treasurer canal company from charging tolls. H. I. HAMILTON . New Smyrna, Fla. The proposed organization of this The following preamble and resoluVice Presidents MONROE COUNTY navigation district h&* cisate-J an tion covering the toll matter was HON. J. N. FtXJAIlTY ...Key West endless correspondence and necessi- adopted: DADE COUNTY " .--HON. JOHN AV. WATSON Miami tated many trips about the state. All BROWARD COUNTY "WHEREAS, The Florida Coast ROBT. J. REED Pt. Lauderdale this takes money. We are glad we PALM BEACH COUNTY Tallahassee,' Fla., Jan. 31.Attor- pensive transportation. This canal have been able to carry on the work Line Canal and Transportation comSTANLEY HITCHING Stuart ST. LUCIE COUNTY ney General T. F. West, late yester- company received from the state by f nd we, feel assured that results are pany has not and is not maintaining R. Li. GOODWIN Ft. Pierce a canal at the depth and width proBREVARD COUNTY day instituted mandamus proceedings legislative grants, more than one mil-close at hand. J. J. POLLAK . . . . . Malabar Stop for a moment In yr.uv daily vided for by contract under which it against the Florida Coast Line lion acres of land valued at from two VOLUSIA COUNTY J. P. VINING ....Ormond Canal and Transportation company, to five dollars an acre, for the pur- rotaine and consider what the im received lands from the state of FlorST. JOHNS COUNTY 4 St. Augustine S. T. KIDDKR. JR to compel this company to maintain pose of aiding in the construction of jirovement of the East Coas,t canal ida, be It DUVAL, COUNTY RESOLVED, That the attorney-genits canal leading from Mayport to Mi- its canal and the state is therefore In river, the Kissitumee rive". Lake W. A. HOURS Jacksonville NASSAU COUNTY ami, and a writ of mandamus was is- terested in having the company per- (Aeechobee.the St. Johns river, the eral be requested to file Injunction or HON. HAKRY GOLDSTEIN Fernandina mandamus to prevent said company sued this morning By the supreme form its duty and maintain the canal Oklawaha river, the canals OBJECT court of Florida against this company. so that it may be used by the people and the Caloosahatchee river west from collecting tolls, at any point o(jj The object of this Association is to secure from the Federal Congress apThe writ commands the canal com- and serve the purpose for which it will mean to the south and east of the East Coast canal and requiring propriations for the acquisition either by the state of Florida. What has built said company to remove all chains or pany to proceed forthwith, to restore was created. purchase or condemnation proceedings, the entire East Coast Canal flom JackIt is charged in the writ Issued to- UP the great west? Transportation other obstruction from its waterway." its canal to the width and depth resonville to Key Wi*Kt. To work in Mr. Geo. B. Hills, of Jacksonville, conjunction with the Atlantic Deeper quired by the agreement entered in- day that the company has neglected facilities. With adequate, reasonable Watcrvvuj s Association in the furtherto with the state and to maintain it to maintain its canal at the width and transportation- provided, the state oft representative of the Isham Ranance of their project. in this condition. The suit was depth required by law and is evading Florida will produce $25 where it pro- dolp Engineering company, of Chibrought in the name of Thos. F. West and shirking obligations which it duces one now. Why? Look at the cago, was present, and spoke at Attorney General, In behalf of the owes to the general public and Is 18 counties invited to participate in length on the proposed navigation disstate of Florida, and Is regarded as a thereby subjecting the public to great the forming of this navigation dis- trict and its great value to the state, suit of far-reaching importance since inconvenience and loss, depriving the trict. In only one of them is over 4 especially this section. The Chamber then took this action: it is an exercise of the power of the people of transportation intended to per cent of the land under cultiva"DEEP WATER," Our Slogan. state over public service corporations be afforded by the canal and defeat tion, and in 12 out of the 13 less than "WHEREAS, A movement has been to require them to perform duties and in a large measure the Intent of the 2 per cent of the land is under culti- organized for the creation by special MANY YACHTS DAMAGED state in aiding in the construction vation. Why? inadequate transpor- act of the next legislature of a naviservices they owe to the public. One of our members, who lives (Continued from Page One.) tation facilities. gation district combining the salient This suit Is especially Important to and maintenance of the canal. along the banks of (his famous, ca- years as secretary of the New Smyr- the people of the East Coast as this Friends, the harvest is ripe, but the features of the existing state drainBy the writ issued in the case this nal, now owned by a private corpora- na board of trade and as secretary of canal was intended to provide a pro- morning the company is required to laborers are few, and they need your age law of 1913, the road district law tion who agreed with the state of the Florida East Coast Canal associa- tected inland waterway down the en- forthwith restore Its canal to Its orig- support. Tell me, how much would and the school district law, and havFlorida to dig a canal six feet deep, tion Mr. Hamilton has been a. booster tire East Coast country, giving to the inal dimensions and thereafter to free, open, adequate, inland water- ing for its purpose the development fifty feet wide, and keep it so, writes and a consistent worker for the Im- people of that section safe and inex- maintain it as the law requires. way along the East Coast mean to of commercial waterways in the' genas follows: "In the past six weeks, | provomeiit of our inland waterways you? Figure it out and then send me eral territory embraced by the East yachts and freight boats have, to my and the opening of the inlet at New a check. Remember, all this labor Coast, the St. Johns, the Klssimmee, knowledge, been damaged over one Smyrna. He is one of the best post- elety shall be the discovery, collec- ceedings of eath meeting, shall con- and expense is for you and the state Oklawaha and Caloosahatchie valleys - t h o u s a n d dollars worth by running j in the state of Florida. tion and preservation of books, maps, duet the correspondence of the so- of Florida. You should support it. as parts thereof; therefore, be it. on (.0 various obstructions and yel ed men on the sufojeef of waterways charts, maunseripts, documents and ciety, call special meetings when di- So far this fiscal year, or from Nov. RESOLVED, That the Florida Easf the company is collet ting thousands At the meeting held last Saturday relics pertaining to the history of Vo- ] reeled by the president and have the 15. 1916, you have contributed: Coast Chamber of Commerce does of dollars for toll each month. How night five of the nine directors were lusia county and the state of Florida i custody of the records of the society, 'ocoa $ i.oc endorse this movement," oasy aro the public." Brother, there elected, the other tour being appor- with special reference to tb,c early I Tiie treasurer shall have charge of Delray $ 1.00 A committee was appointed comis a time when a long suftering pub- 1 lioned to DeLatid and Daytona. settlement of the Spaniards at New the monies of the society, and at each Dania .-. 2.00 posed of Geo. B. Hills and P. A. Vanr Ha raises in wrath against such John Y. Dctwiler was the founder Smyrna irom 1C12 to 1819. annual meetingand oftener if so di- Daytona 400 Agnew, of Jacksonville, ahd H. it. tice and if you watch stars closely, ind first editor of the Broezc, was Articlo III. Any person shall be eli- rei-tedshall present a detailed re- jFt pjer(.e 5.00 Hamilton, of New Smyrna, to draw you may see them begin to shoot be- 1 president of the Flofida fish commiG- Bible to membership in this society. "ort ot the financial condition of the [.vilsmere 1.00 up-a prospectus of the proposed navifore long. MOII irom 1S99 to 1900, and honorary Said membership is of three classes, j ^-Ifty. The librarian shall have the Ft. Lauderdale 1.00 gation district and prepare a bill to president of the same from 1906 to to-wit: Active, associate and honor-' tody .of the books, maps, charts, Homestead 1.00 be presented to the next session of BIG MEETING AT SANFORD 191fi, a delegate to the National Fish- ary Active membership shall be con-' manuscripts, documents and relics of Hawks Park B.OO the legislature. This committee met The following letter of invitation ery congress, 1898, and to the Pan- lined to residents of VoluMa county.' the society, and to each annual meet Miami :. 11.00 in Jacksonville on the 17th and prehas been sent out by the Sanford ama-Pacific exposition. 1915, and is an Associate membership shall be conshall present a report of "the ac- Merrltt .. _ 1.00 pared resolutions that will be preboard of trade throughout the east- honorary member of the Florida His- fined to persons interested in the ob-,'''^ions during the year. He shall Melbourne 1.00 sented at the meeting this afternoon rc arc a ern and southern part of the state, torical society. ject of this association. Honorary "" P l' catalogue of the books New Smyrna ............................... 2.00 and indications are that a goodly atCharles B. Todd is an author and members may be elected as mark of,*"" other property of the society Ormond ........................................ 9.00 at Sanford. tended meeting is to be held today I journalist of national reputation, and distinction. when so directed. Oak Hill ........................ 1.00 in that live city on the St. Johns riv- has been honored with Article VI. Amendments to tilt Stuart ......................... .............. 3.00 Article IV. 1.00 constitution may be offered by any St. Augustine ............................. 32.00 Carbon, W. Va er. This certainly is a banner boost- Irom the governors of Connecticut Total $91.00 er movement and I have faith in the and from William L. Strong, .the1 re- ciety shall be a president, three vice menlber at a ny regular meeting, and Titusville ...................................... 4.00 presidentsone from each of the 8hal, be acted upo^ at the -ne)[t reg. good judgment of the people of Flor- form mayor of New York City. West Palm Beacb ....... 2.00 and I as your secretary have dug my hand into my own pocket since Janlida to believe that today marks the Rev. Robert A. George was for 27 three cities of New Smyrna, DeLand u(ar meetlng. it tncy rcce|ve a two- White City....................................I.OO and Daytonaa secretary, a treasur- th|rds yote of those presenti they beginning of one of the greatest de- years pastor of a prominent church Darlington, Wls ........................... 2.00 uary 1, 1917, for over $70, to keep the er, a librarian and a board of nine dl-1 shalt become a ,.,. o( the Con8utuball rolling. You are not men who veloping movements Florida has ever in Cleveland, Ohio, a lecturer on the want your secretary to do all the seen. Watch us grow: chantauqua circuit, and is now pastor rectors, who. shall be elected by the tion. sist of three members of the board. members at the first annual meeting. work and put up the cash too for you My Dear Sir: By-Law* of the Congregational church of New At all regular meetings the order of to reap the benefit. You are men who Article V. It shall be the duty of Article I. A candidate for memberEvery citizen of Florida Is vitally Smyrna. want to carry your part of the load. Interested in our waterways. We J. J. Birch is the editor ot the New- the president to preside at aH meet- ship shall be proposed by a member procedure shall be: Tiave not thus far been able to ac- Smyrna Breeze and has been a resi- ings, to appoint all committees not and the nomination shall He on the Reading of the minutes of the last There Is urgent need of more funds at once for the association is using complish what we desire, to any large dent of New Smyrna for many years. otherwise appointed, to call special table until the next regular meeting, meeting. $160 or more a month and the.work meetings when in his judgment _ such when it shall be voted upon. Voting extent. CONSTITUTION AND BYLAWS Reports ot committees. is where it cannot be dropped. W1B The constitution and bylaws adopt- may be required, and with the board i shall he by acclamation, but any memThoughtful minds have studied out Nomination of members. - MUST GO ON. of directors to have general super-'her may demand a ballot vote if dea plan which is believed to be feas- ed for the society are as follows: RALLY TO OUR SUPPORT vision of affairs of the society. The | utred. A two-thirds vote shall be re- Election of members. Constitution ible for producing results. We want Article I. The name of this society vice presidents, in his absence, shall quired to elect. Unfinished business. your opinion of this scheme, and for New business. that purpose a meeting of representa- shall be the Volusia County Histori- perform the duties of the president You can get anything printed t Article II. The initiation fee for In order of seniority. The secretary active and associate members shall Adjournment. tives from various parts of the state, cal society. the News' up to date print shop. in which you are included, is called to Article II.' The object of this sc- shall keep a careful record of the pro- be two dollars, which shall cover the first fiscal year's dues; thereafter the annual dues shall be one dollar. A | member three months in arrears for i dues may be dropped after due notice by the secretary. Upon payment of twenty-five dollars, any member may become a life member and shall thereafter be exempt from fees and dues. ~ "WE KEEP THE QUALITY UP" Article III. All officers shall be elected by ballot at each annual meetIng by a two-thirds vote of those present at the first annual meeting. Three WE BELIEVE IN THE SPIRIT OP of the directors shall be elected for a CO-OPERATION AND IN OUR EFterm ot three years, three tor two years and three for one year. ThereFORTS TO MAKE THE BAKING after three directors shall be elected PROBLEM AN EASY ONE FOR THE at each annual meeting to serve three years. HMMMMI HOUSEWIFE WE CONSTANTLY Article IV. Standing committees KEEP IN MIND THAT THE QUALshall be: On finance, on auditing, on membership, on publicity, on printITY OF OUR BAKING GOODS ASing and publication, to solicit membership, contributions of money, SISTS MATERIALLY IN THESE EFbooks, relics, etc., for the society; all FORTS. THEREFORE, to be appointed by the president unless otherwise directed at the annual meeting. Article V. Annual meetings of this I "Wt KEEP THt QUALITY UP" I 'society shall be held on the third Monday In January. lUgular meetings of this society may be held on the third Monday In each month. A quorum shall consist of eight members, at least one of whom shall be member of the board of directors. A quorum of the directors shall con-

ASSOCIATION NEWS

ATTORNEY GENERAL BEGINS SUIT AGAINST CANAL GO.


In Name of State of Florida Steps Are Taken to Compel Restoration of Canal Between Mayport and Miami to Width and Depth Required by

HISTORICAL SOCIETY ORGANIZED HERE

OCEAN HOUSE
NEW SMYRNA, FLORIDA

New Smyrna Home Bakery

Northern Home Cooking. Hospitality

Southern

On the Indian River and Centrally Located


UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT ! WRITE FOR RATES

New Smyrna Home Bakery


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PLAYGROUND DAILY NKWS, Wednesday Morning. August 21, 19B8Page 5

Turlington Blasts McCarthy Over Democratic Platform


By DALE PUULJEN Daily News Bureau. WASHINGTON Eugene McCarthy's campaign coordinator, Richard N. Goodwin, "seems to be working to see that nothing ge done by the platform committee," a committee member from Florida said today. Ralph Turlington, speaker of the Florida House of Representatibes, said Goodwin, former speech writer for Presidents Kennedy and ohnson "makes a point of working to see that nothing gets done." Goodwin, Turlington indicated, was coordinating all the noise and discord at the StatlerHilton Hotel here Monday at the opening session of the Democratic party's platform committee. , McCarthy, the U.S. Senator from Minnesota, wants a platform plank that calls for a halt in the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam, a coalition South Vietnamese government which includes the national liberation front (Viet Cong) before national elections are held. F r o n t running Democratic presidential candidate Hubert Humphrey, a g r e e s national elections should be held. But he has opposed an immediate bombing halt and an immeidate coalition government noting that both should be subject to negotiations now underway in Paris.

McCarthy supporters said Monday that both the full committee and subcommittees had sign. HOLLYWOOD(AP) Kids used uniors $2; children under 11, says a signingThe cigar-puffing scheduled witnesses predomiLewis, autographs, says to climb over back-lot fences il; under 6, free. n a n t 1 y favoring the JohnsonUniversal has bo far the big his biggest kick is in meeting to get into movie studios. Humphrey administration's Adults rode in on delivery *est tour operation, receiving v i s i t o r s from foreign lands Vietnam war position which trucks, posed as process serv- about 6,500 sun-drenched visi- where the series is still showMcCarthy strongly opposes. ers, or claimed to be actors' ors a day. That's up 1,000 from ng. Supporters of McCarthy take Probably the s t i l l biggest at i year ago. The crowd total relatives. a dim view of the committee Four years ago the film com- n four years is estimated a iraction is the stuntman show, chairman Hale Boggs, U.S. Repwhere movie good guys and panies found a way to cater 3.5 million. resentative from Louisiana, beIn slakes, shorts and mini- badmen demonstrate fight fakto this curiosity for cash, of cause of Bogg's avowed support course- with studio tours. This dresses, r i d i n g 93-passenger ery, bullwhip prowess, gunplay of the administration's Vietnam summer the rich sideline is big- "glamortrams" and clicking with .45-caliber b l a n k s and DAILY NEWS BUREAU FOURTH GRADE Miss policy. cameras, t o u r i s t s see such dives off two-story buildings. ger and busier than ever. VALPARAISO The instruc- Mary Claire Cox, Mrs. Judith Turlington, who said ho atA new attraction is closedAbout 500 people a day ride standby attractions as: Lana tional staff at Valparaiso Ele- Foster, Mrs. Judy Kelly and tended a Goodwin press conferTurner's dressing room. . . circuit television where tour sightseeing buses through mentary School for the 1968- Miss Virginia Martin. ence Monday afternoon "and MGM, visit out-of-use sound Backlot sets ranging from jun- guides invite visitors to try 69 school year has been comFIFTH GRADE Mrs. tried to eavesdrop and learn evstages, etc. On the deluxe $7.50 gles to E u r o p e a n streets. . spontaneous action. A guide pleted and is announced by Bil- Merle Buffkin, Mrs. Dorothy erything I could everywhere," sets up the situation depending tour they see film clips in a .make-up demnstration Hubert, Miss Louise Sandifer said he found it hard to underly Moss, principal. on available sound-stage sceprojection room and lunch with .Stunt-man show. stand what Goodwin was talking The staff members and the and Miss Freida Spence. Do visitors see stars? Only nery: The ^ a r r o o m pickup, producers a n d directors on SIXTH GRADE Mrs Tere- about. grades they will instruct are roast beef followed by apple by chance. J o h n Wayne irate citizens calling on the Turlington, who had certain sa Barry, Mrs. Jean Dearman, listed as follows: pie made from the recipe of emerged from a stage one day, mayor, etc. KINDERGARTEN Mrs Jack Garnett and Miss Nancy doubts himself about the admin Performers then see the tape the late h e a d m a n Louis B. shook hands and signed autoistration's Vietnam policies also Antonia Brewer, Mrs. Nancy Smith. graphs. Tourists temporarily playback and, says anexecuMayer's mother. SPECIAL AREA TEACHERS attended a committee session Leather-wood and Mrs. Sandra Twentieth Century-Fox limits trapped Raymond "Ironside" tive: "Some of those tapes Mrs. Mary Evans, Special Monday night. Pueller. could sell for a million dollars." He says B o g g s "received PESSIMIST c a r r i e s n o t visitors to 1,000 a day because Burr for autographs as he was Education; Mrs. Frances KinKNDERGARTEN TEACHER unanimous support from the one, but two umbrellas of "Hello, Dolly" and other pro trying to make his way from AIDES Mrs. Lucretia Johnston law, Reading; Mrs. Carolyn for a bus near duction activity crowding the sound stage to restroom. Mrs. Georgia Mosteferis and Miller, Music; Mrs. Carol Ogg, committee on the way he has while waiting p e r a House. To make up for uncertain lot. The two-hour walking tour the Paris O Librarian; Mrs. Amy Watson conducted the procedure . Mrs. Sarah Price. contract actors takes in the "Peyton Place' stargazing, and Richard Walker, Physical the meeting was completely Judging by the sizes, per* F.IRST GRADE Mrs. Martown square, stunt emonstra mingle with t h e crowds. Education; Mrs. E l l e n Haw- sweetness and light. Problems haps one is for light rain garet Heflin, Mrs. Nell Kimbro tions, a comedy scene, etc "Watch for Al Lewis, Grandpa AFRICANS FACE Mrs. Jacqueline Ryals and Mrs. kins, Lirary Aide Mrs Alphis were resolved before the session and the other for a heavy Adults 16 and above are $3 Munster of 'The Munsters',' FAMINE downpour. Sadie, Sr., Special Education even started." Cathye Walker. A c c o r d i n g t o Turlington, FIRST GRADE A I D E S Teacher Aide BULAWAYO, Rhodesia (AP Assigned to the secretariat Boggsand his lieutenants solved More than 200 African families Mrs. Ida Brabham, Mrs Lettie are Mrs. Diana Dudas and Mrs the problems by agreeing with Rowell, Mrs Ellen Tula's, and in d r o u g h t - s t r i c k e n southwest Faye H o w e 1 1. Mrs. Juanita t h e McCarthy supporters to Rhodesia are f a c i n g famin,e Mrs. Ethel Wright. S E C O N D GRADE Mr. Michlo is s c h o o l nurse and hear any witnesses they sugTswana-speaking tribesmen in the Pauline Anderson, Miss Mar Louie Platt is in charge of cu^o- gested. Mpoengs Reserve near the Bot- Beth Ashford, Mrs. Doris Cogh- dial services. "There has not been a singl T h e lunchroom employees person who has asked to be swana border are reported worst lad and Mrs. Ruby Hendricks. are Mrs. Mabel Wood, manag- heard who has not bee sched hit. )assing near Orlando and St. TALLAHASSEE (AP) The Bureau of Sanitary Engineering Augustine and through the Ocala THIRD G R A D E Mrs. er; Mrs. Alice Decker, Mrs. uled," Turlington said. About 20 families have qualified Ladies Might Every 38e ALL At one p o i n t when Boggs State Air and Water Pollution and the Game and Fresh Water National Forest. Hon. ft Tue. Cocktails EVENINI for government famine relief so Joyce Gardner, Mrs. Elaine Katherine Decker, M r s . IsaControl Commission has started Fish Commission began under far. The drought caused failure o Mott, Mrs. Betty McDaniel and belle Owens, and Mrs. Dorothy agreed to hear witnesses urgec an investigation of the causes of the commission's direction aboul by McCarthy supporters, the pollution along the St. Johns a week ago, he said. Simpson. Mrs. Lorena Reynolds. the vital corn crop. McCarthy supporters turned River Valley on Florida's east He said it will take until about their complaints to insistance February to complete the surthat administration spokesmen coast. vey because "the number of Nathaniel for the Vietnam policies be member andReed, a commission sewage plants alone is so colosGov. Claude Kirk's heard, according to Turlington sal that it will take until then to who added he was confused b; conservation aide, said Monday give everybody an idea of where that the purpose of the study is that switch. ^- the trouble is." Apparently the word got back to pinpoint trouble spots and The system starts at the St provide data for the commission to the White House. Secretar to formulate a program to clean Johns River marshes in Indian River and Brevard counties and HOLLYWOOD (AP) Any Western. But its trappings are iishment in an all-male lumber of State Dean Rusk is scheduled the river valley system. to appear at a special session as MILLIE shrewd observer can tell that pretty confusing. amp is depicted as a rather tonight. Work by staffers from the proceeds north to Jacksonville, - ROSS HUNTER'S The new ABC series is being irimitive but pleasant soft drink "Here Come the Brides" isn't a shot in some familiar settings: 'Stablishment. the muddy main street lined by Shooting of one scene was deshanty-like shops, the local ayed several minutes this week gathering place for fun and or the remodeling of the neckfights called Lottie's. But in- ine on Miss Blondell's rather TRINGASTHEATRE TIMES: 3:45-6:25-8:45 stead of horses twitchit their modest period costume: It was tails at the hitching posts, there deemed too revealing for youthMAIN ST. ADM: $1.50 8. 50' are totem poles stuck here and ul eyes. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. (AP) vision spots and other engage- dren's Theater will start them CALL 2433633 on the road to stardom. there. Instead of those familiar Our heroes could pass as Now in its 21st year at the ments. rocks hiding the bushwhackers, cow-country pioneers, except fabled Atlantic City Steel Pier, Perhaps that's one of the reathere are painted backdrops of hat they wear knives instead of the Tony Grant Children's The sons why young performers and Col. Lester C. Curl, USAF majestic trees and snow cov- juns and bits of fur peak out at ater is the only complete theater their families try so hard to the tops of their boots. None of inthe country that devotes itself showcase their talents at the (Ret), president of the Air ered mountains. "I guess you'd call it a North- the men playing the Bolt broth- entirely to the discovery, devel- Children's Theater. They are Force Association (AFA) in Florida, will attend a dinner western," said a production ers is well known, but the one to opment and display of the bud- willing to go to the expense of keep your eye on is Robert ding talent in young teen-agers traveling great distances and meeting of the Eglin Chapter man. "Mostly comedy?" asked a Brown, the star of the show. and children. paying for their own accommoof AFA on Friday. Singer-actor Frankie Avalon, dations at the resort in hopes who plays the eldest. Curl is a resident of Mel- bystander. "Well," said the unit man Male viewers of the series will who now is one of the country's that an appearance at the Chilbourne Beach, and is responsiabout ble for a total of nine AFA thoughtfully, "I think a better enjoy looking at the assorted top stars earning as he $18,000 a recalled brides. The kids will like the ac- week, chuckled chapters in the state. The local word is roistering." The roistering series is set in tion. But the females in the fam- when he got his start in Grant's one is the newest. Phyi's Clam Cocktail The AFA is a national, non- one of television's favorite time ily audience are likely to be- productions for several summers. Scrambled Cggs with Irish Bacon profit, patriotic organization of periods, post-Civil War, but the come Brown-watchers. "It's amazing the experience Blueberry Corn M u l f i n s Beverage U. S. citizens who are dedicated scene, for a change, is the lumit gives you," he said. "He to the welfare of the U. S. Air ber camp that became the city taught me how to bow, how to PHYL'S CLAM COCKTAIL Force in all of its endeavors. of Seattle, Wash. The format is get on stage and how to wait for 1 teaspoon tomato catchup pegged vaguelz on a real inciThere are just a few less than 1 teaspoon lemon juice the applause." 100,000 members of AFA, about dent, although it is hardly a Connie Francis, Peggy March 1/2 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce half of whom are USAF officers novel springboard for fictional and Ronnie Fields, who won an 1/8 teaspoon celery salt plots: the importation of marand airmen on active duty. doing the 1/2 cup tomato juice, chilled The remainder of the mem- riageable girls for the bachelor NEW YORK (AP) Eliza- award last year for "Cabaret" 1 bottle (8 ounces) clam juice, chilled choreography for bers are busnessmen, industri- pioneers. beth Taylor and Richard Burton into a small mixing bcml (at least This device is useful in televi- are in New York for a few days, also got their starts in the Steel alists, professional people, and 1 p i n t ) t u r n the catchup, lemon juice. sion since it permits the whole- so that the Welsh actor can re- Piei Children's Theater. all others who wish to particiGrant travels all over the Worcestershire and celery salt, stir pate in various programs sale introduction of pretty girls turn one of his daughters to a together u t i l blended Gradually stir offered by the Association to 100 in the new senesinto the former wife, Sybil Christopher country auditioning acts to ap- in tomatonjuice Add clam juice and pear on the Pier Last winter, story lines. Mail-order brides in support and enhance the effec The Burtons arrived Mondav from November to May, Grant mi\. Pour into 2 large or 4 small movies and TV are always on the liner Queen Elizabeth. tiveness of the Air Force. reviewed nearly 5,000 acts glasses, add ice cubes Serve at once There are now more than 350 beauties And the assorted prob Miss Taylor, looking pale, Makes 2 to 4 servmus members in the Egln Chapter, lems of courtship provide a tired and tense, wore a white throughout the country. He selected 240 acts for the and these are about 50-50 split great excuse for fights and skull cotton eylet dress with a loosely10-week season24 acts are Between military personnel and duggery. fitted waist, white stockings. '"downtowners" in the area en- The principal characters are Her black hair was pulled back used every week. The show is entirely new each week There compassing Pensacola, Crest- three brothers, Jason, Jeremy into a white, petal-like hat. WILL CONSIDER are tour shows a day comprised view, Fort Walton Beach and and Joshua, timberland owners On July 22, Miss Taylor, 36, G whose holdings are in constant underwent a partial hysterecto- of 12 acts. And every act has a all locatioms in between. HANDLING Curl is serving his second peril because of the scheming my in London. A spokesman foi backup act Grant says that the total numyear as AFA president in Flori- by the show's villain, the saw- the couple said she was "well, ber of performers in his acts NON-CONFLICTINC da.He has very effectively vital- mill owner. but tired." adds up to about 150 youngsters ized the state organization, and With this wealth of basic in As they posed for photograwas honored with a Merit cita- gredients, the series could run phers, Burton was asked about weekly ADVERTISING "I trv to get the most outtion at the national convention j'ust about forever, merely by rumors of an impending separa \ TECHNICOLOR, 1ECI TIMES 1-250-4-50-7-9-15 picking any two elements to tion. He quipped, "Yes, we're standing amateur talent in the in Atlanta this past June. ACCOUNTS A Half-Hour Laugh Fest' country," he said He sparked the establishment combine in a single plot. ADM SI 50 & 50' that Tuesday. Piei owner George A. Hamid Best known performer in the planning the first for know." of the Eglin Chapter last year, You'll be to says there are always some tal and participated in the presen- series is Joan Blondell, who Claude Jenkins cnt scouts in the audience tation of the chapter charter plays Lottie, warm-hearted and Young performers often are at a dinner meeting here in generous like all TV's lady sal picked up for commercials, teleoonkeepers. Since the series is October. Information about the local to be shown early on Wednesday chapter and its program can eveningsan hour when televi ANTIQUE HEARSES be obtained from Col. (Ret.) sion worries about the children RESTORED in the audienceLottie's estab Bud West of Shalimar.

Hollywood Studios Cash in As Tourists Attractions

Val-p Elementary Announces Staff

St. Johns River Valley Pollution Study Ordered

Here Comes The Bride^ A New North Western

ie Andrews

Curl To
Address

Steel Pier Launches Young Talent on Road to Stardom

AFA Here

MEET THE MOB THAT SET CRIME BACK 100 YEARS!

Burtons Return Ri ft Is Denied

WALT DISNEY

UAN DYKE *"*" ROBINSON

MOW!

PALM THEATRE

I* V

New Principal Is Former School Superintendent


Niceville's new pnncipal, Col1\ V. Williams, is a man who bolioves that "sound education doesn't just happen." He came to Okaloosa County from Washington County, wheip ho was formerly Superintendent ot Schools. He has been in\ol\ed in teaching at all levels, as a teacher, principal, supervisor and superintendent. Basically. I believe that a hieh school should be a com ploto program which, of course, moans a good athletic program, d muMCpioc;ram a good student' activities program, to back up and build a good academic program. Tho academic program is the heart of it," he said recently. Wo would like the pupils, wlion they havo finished school, to RO into the world feeling that school has really meant something to them, and that they aro prepared for whatever is ahead." A member of the Baptist Church, Williams is also an activo participant in community affairs; a Kiwanian, a Mason, a Shriner and a member of many state and national educational organizations. He has bron active in the American Rod Cross, the Chamber of Commerce, and t h o Cattlemen's Association of Washington County and he is listed in "Who's Who in the Southeast" and "Who's Who in American Education." "Our program as we have it designed," Willams said," is that we feel we can take care of all the differences in preparng p e o p l e f o r vocational work as well as college. For this reason, as well as working with OWJC, we are working closely with the elementary and junior high schools which feed into this high school, so that their curriculum will dovetail with ours."

K A N K A K E E , 111 ( A P ) Owning horse-drawn hearses anc restoring them to original condi lion has become an in-stvle hobby although the "funeral cars" went out of style about 1915 Dick Clancv. a funeral director, and three other area collectors have restored four models built between 1890 and 1910 "You )ust don't see many of them around any more." Clancy .said. Clancy has yet to enter his 55year-old model in a parade "It's surprising how hard it is to find a matched set of horses." he said, "and almo.st as difficult to locate a competent driver "

Lewis

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PANAMA CITY .YEWS-HERALD, Panama City, Florida, Sunday. *PrU

Pollution: Big Threat To Florida's Tourism


'*. note: J'iorida iias Klor da. u h i c h lures th.e free- brought in an,] carried in .sew-(lion Control Board to an advis:;:-; !a\\s f.':--Ai.::g \ \ . t b . air and voon.iing t . i i i r i s t w i t h a .promise age into t h e ocean There could ory capacity. .- nr.liiiiii'i! 1 .. Bui e n f o r c e m e n t of c l e a n air and \ \ a i e r , lace's a be a catastrophe- t h a t u o u l d ! While Leach pushed his cases .""."<; he::d-o"! c.'l!:sion w i t h long, harii and perhaps losing b a n k r u p t every hotel owner on , vigorously, Chairman John Gib; son was saying the board ought . - . . ' : 1 .!. ' , ; : . - a i a:v: m . i u s t r i a ! b a t t l e a g a i n s t t h e r i s i n g t i d e of the beach." ' The s t a t e , ti.o. has a lough p o l - j t o protect business and industry poHuiH'!',. T::e 'golden tourist t r a d e , h i i i o n law. And ii also faces ;rp-; f r o m "over/enlous enforce- h. v. : M ; : ; . - , ; ' , , .;.;!! -:p not .- :P C":;r.:y :\<Mi "L:<M kicked m u i i i c i i lirings t h e s t a t e au .-mtuuil mendoiisd i rpressures, i r i e s . 1 1 j u s t . merit." firm charged by Leach "bur One ii. m a n / a of more t h a n $r> b i l l i o n , f : , , m " t y i r . d u s s e v e n : i . m - s t i i e payroiis ol from ci'ies subdivisions and w i t h submitting false reports! counties d g sued him for .-ill I n . i u s t r v a l r e a < i \ ' may he wau-ru.-ivs u m p i nthe 1'ihli into the ' l h a i h o u s e d 527)0,000, charging| and atmosphere. his auihorily toj in (ian.gei'. And \ \ i d o l \ - - i i i l f i i s e d a u t h o r i t y i n ; t h r e a t e n the f i r m . Circuit: Judge j Air p o l l u t i o n i'.y i n d u s t r i e s :s the s l a t e ' s conlro! setup m a k e s ; R a l p h Culk'n found that the m a K i n g i i d i t f i c u l t l o r landlord's enforcement extremely d i t i i c u i i . ! company had "no cause of aeMIAMI ' A P ' tu rent a p a r t m e n t s in parts of : vHch I-io!\s like t'n.e > k i n n \ Sen Lawton Chiles of Lake- tion" , ' . : v \v!>i i^ a l w a y s g e t t i n g s.mu some large Florida c i t i e s . Real land .-alls the P o l l u t i o n C o n t r o l ; Then Gibson went before Slate e s t a t e salesmen c o m p l a i n f r e - Commission, headed by Director! Ally. Richard Gerstein with sev',<,. .-c^fi in his lace by the ;y. sis eleven at the b^acii. l-',!;t no ap- q u e n t l y to the Florida Air and Vincent A. p.-nton. "a h.ydra-1 eral charges again'st Leach. The >.-H.ranci' l o i d d i ^ e sr^re de-cf-i\- Water Pollution Control Com- hejtded monster" u n a b l e to t:ic- [ mosi serious involved an alleged mission t h a t o t h e r w i s e v a l u a b l e kle i t s i'.b e l i e d i v e l y because no i conflict of interest in helping For 4i"i ;:IO:H^S. me avigry, '_':)- land has become unsaleable one is direct I v responsible to the ' Keller Industries. Inc.. in a de\,^a:--oM Leadi s:on-;>c<i on t h e because of d i r t y air or w a t e r . peoi'lc. " , vplopment of a device to reduce Reckless chances are taken in -.i.->c of iii^ii-pou'ered i n t e r e s t s "Tlie people have no confi-1 a uto exhaust pollution. Gerstein r u r i n c c<ir:'ii"i ion i n t o ihi'- \\'a- areas where tourism is the liie- deiH-e i l i a ! ap.uhiim is going t o ! found no evidence of any illegal -:* and exi'^lliivj: noxious gas- blood. Several months ago, a be dune, ' Chilis said. "The only: ac .(, saying that Leach's work es i n t o t h e air of Daiie County. dysentery epidemic broke out wav M, give ihcm ihat c o n f i - j Nvas jn n n e with his official ilu'.:',. lo a degree, he wa!s be- along Miami Beach's Hotel Row. deiice is in pul one rnan out in ; t i l , s ;U1(1 he received no money ::iTining to stem the t i t l e of pol- Leach said the source was the s p o t l i g h t . In stand or f a l l o n ; r,.,,,,, t|1(, company, traced by his engineers to raw the m e r i i s of t h e job he does. ; 'Y\im Leach stubbed Iris Ine. :-:tion. p.ut today Ij-ac'n is f i n i s h e d , sewage being dumped by a ho- That man oujn to i'"' tbi 1 gov-.j [ t -, f H |se!y claimed to hold a : 'rs pffr'cTi\'"'!tess destroyed by a tel iust SO feet offshore. crnor. master's 'degi-ef in chemical en"It was f l o a t i n g right bark up ir^wing list of enemies. . j . i h n Q Cimen doesn't know, ojneering when he applied for "1 was caught in the middle to the iieach.es," Leach said, Vir.ee P a t i o n . But he knows he j m p.mbership in the Florida Entwins to ficin the political or- "and the people were swimming votes for the governor, and^ >H ^jneering Society. .':rr and make private business in it." he t h i n k s he's noi get t i n g action; * I!is opponents demanded he be -op the line u n d e r a very 'strict Divers for the G r i f f i n Pollu- he can -40 to the ballot: box." ' f i r r d for lying. ':-=w." he said. "I got kicked in ' t i o n Control Corporation probing 1 The commission, created in n ,.j t was ~ stupid." Leach said, ' t h e "Rose Bowl." the ocean House - Senate compromise. is i p x p jaining that he did it so his t h e face.'' In 1!W5. \viien Da<ie County area 7.000 feet offshore where composed of 'lov. Claude Kirk, jo jrj c , e would have access to enadopted one of t h e nation's ; the City of Miami Beach pours Secretary of Slate Tom Adams. | O .j nce i n o; re-ports bearing on his toughest anti-pollution laws. ! its untreated sewage, found four Attorney General Karl Fair- j .mk e made no claim to a Leach was lirought in by Coun- i outfalls gushing like broken l i r e ; cloth. C'nmmi.ssioner of Agricul- master's degree when he was tv :\Ianager Porter Homer. He 'hydrants in water only 4o feet ' m r e Doyle Conr.or. Kirk's c-onser- employed by Homer. v a i i o n advisor, Nathaniel P. was told lo enforce the law, no : deep. "Enforcing pollution control holds barred. Filth covered ihe sea bottom Reed, and John P. Roberts. _Mi- i.,..- Leach said, "means Leach look his orders serious- to a depth of one foot or more : a m i oanker appointed by Kirk. : liaht ' ino . (hf . ,,Ower structure and ? ivate enterprise system. ly. plunging into b a t t l e with ev- and G r i f f i n ' s chief engineer, : "I 'mil it can be meaningfully , ' ^ livpri m a world xvilh erybody from the owners of a i James J. Keilum. said some- i i n v ^ n e n K v l . " A d a m s said " the , small coffee roasting plant in Uimes variable tides "sweep the Dilution law will amount to lit-; hilosophy that what is good tie more than good intent ion. __ j ' ' hnsjnpss ;s g00d for AmenHialeah to the City of .Miami i stuff in close to shore."' -The commission ,s undem- 1 tr hut; we.re sU ll tied of ;;nd the Slate's biggest publi "People come to Miami Beach ]rue bu,. %vc - re sti n tied m utility, the Florida Power & 1 from all over the world," Kel- nanced and understated, Aa-; d mical orcle r. Li 2h t Co m { > a n y . him said. "Suppose typhoid was ams went on, "and our pollu- ; "\Ve were moving toward a dean environment, because we :n<~ant what we told these people." Leach said. "But we were General 'handles the i over. Industries want to o : making too much headway. The i 1ju .,,. jt , "' under the same conditions pressure built up. I've been in j i "The Pollution Control Com-idid up north. They want to take a pressure cooker in this job mission is stik in the middle, j money out of here, but: they do now for six months." j ' o a" as' enforcement goes.! not want to spend the money to. Breaking a long silence i m - j It's not much more than a pap | protect the area from then opnosed <>n him by Homer during shuffler between the other two ] erations. the time he was under attack agencies If the commission is "There is no question that by his enemies. Leach told The crnino-' to do the job properly, if some of the biggest industries Associated Press: must" run the whole show." supported the attack on me My "I made a lot of enemies, j Patton while insisting that the . f r ; r nds have been accosted on They set out to undermine my | commission is off to a good.,- n ,> street and told thai: I was effectiveness with a smear cam- j start admits that the road back taking payoffs. You tell a he :i?.ign and they forced me to | to clean air. and water will nc of , en enough and people are goquit. It was the only way they | ., i^nrr one. C'ou ft appeals colliding to begin to believe it. This r-ruild get rid of me. I've aged | mean in terminable delays in the was what thc'se people of the %v tn an awful lot this last year. | ' business community did. cases of large industries "I don't sleep well at night, j unlimited legal resources. "As public official, I could j _.%a a ,,,.,_ ... because I tried so hard to do '. "If I order a big company to no, sue f o r slander. I had no re:his job and they stopyed me.) spend S-! million to clean tip." uOU rse hut 10 take it." Now all this work is going to be j Patton said. "They can hire a lot a e f o r o Leach resigned, the undone. It takes day-to-day en- j of lawyers for a lot less money ; Controversial Pollution Control fr-rcement, ar.ri when enforce-! STYLIST Marian Ann t h a n t h a t . Board, leaving Leach unanswer.nTt ceases, that's the end o f ; Brown, fashion stylist for The s i 1 u a t i o n seems littic able to no one but Homer. Eight j Simplicity Pattern Co., ciiantied from the years when days before its life ended Feb. | Homer, who once accused: will be at Belk Hudson ihe Slate Board oi Health, >S'. the board, a f t e r a session, Leach's opponents of "non-pick- 1 ch.irued with fighting pollution, ifrom which the court reporter] :n~." accepted his resignation ' Friday and Saturday of followed a futile policy of "per'was barred. unar,imously_ grantwith reluctance. ; this week to conduct the suasion and conciliation" in its ed FP&L a variance until July "He was a good man," Said i 'Simplicity Young Ameri- dealings with the special inter- "1 from compliance with polluHomer, who had backed all of j can Fashion Show', offi- ests Loach savs Florida is in tion law in its hot water dis-, I^eaeh's antipoliution moves. ! the shaw it is today because,-Biscayne Bay. Satur- "for i5 years the State Board of; rn ^ prvatioms1s have ap He just made a mistake and : cials announced Conservationists have appeal-j : hi.= enemies seized or; i - . \Ve will day. Everyone is invited. Health let the stage go downhill ed ihe action, charging that the . ' y 10 gel another man l i k e : Time and dates of the to protect the power board "in effect has accepted a i-nnsent decree from the utility i show will be advertised lures." If Chiles succeeds in the corn- which will permit damage of i The ease -f Paul L"-ach is j in the News and Herald. in t; session of the Legislature in any magnitude from now on." j an indicator t h a t the State o f ' p u t t i n g one man in the pollution M a r i n e experts testified that i hot seat, t h a t u-.an would do well a /.one of "nearly complete riev to contemplate the fate of Paul a - t a i i o n " of sea grasses and al-1 Leach. f-ae - - the basis of nearly a l i i Hired from Ihe Robert A. Tail : fl Sanitary Engineering Center in marine life reaches ' fi to TOG 1 yards offshore in line w i t h the, Cincinnati. Lcich jumped on the ; _ Waters with both feet. Shun- poeer p l a n t s mam ---,--, nm^^omacv. he shut down all channel. FP&L con.ends ,na,_ i : huildin- construction in 10 areas has not been proven 1n:u Ine not j ' o f Dade Countv until the utility w a t e r did the damage. , the troop. She is Mrs. Flor- Companies pufin proper sewage !; All over Florida, ci.ios. tovvn, | By DOTTIE PATRICK _ _ r ence McCormick of Panama t r e a t m e n t an' disposal faci!i- subdivisions, paper mills, citni.-.: Brownie Troop No. 1S5 in :,lants. chemical works and oil j ihe Highland Park area is de- Nursing Center. Recently the ties. girls took her an Kaster arroranr.g candies with melted "Boy you never saw people companies pour sewage, acids | wax from 01 her colored candl- rangement and a box of Pias- scurry around so fast alter I and effluents into the i ivers and | ter candy. The girls do things shut "them down," Leach said it Hows in a thickening stream! T5. Th<^y are then making fr"m time to time for her. "We had Drnper plans in here_ , i n i r , the lakes and down to the.-! v.. r;;ndie holders out of sprayed hair sr-ray tops and putting This troop also made Easter in about a month. The builders se^v. Accidental spills of oil and : Egg Baskets from plastic botchemicals frequently cau.se mas- ; H ;'i<:v.cr arrsn'^err.Tit around tle bottoms sprayed and with "h" bottom of the candle. They ;t about 35 private s.ive fish kills. '; "We've artificai grass in them. They u t i l i t v com H ?.rn b w ing assisted hy Their in Dade CounFarmers and citrus placed all sons of Easter said. "Th.-y couldn't use water for irrigation, then | i'.:ader. ^irs. Px-th Hatcher. candy in then:. The girls were c;:; e lf.. . clfan \vnier. pump it b;ifk into the lakos. assisted by their leaders. Mrs. Thr-v'r," onl " i:t to a tliir-k \vith fr-rtilizer, pesticides! R e b e c c a Thomas, and Ms. a'ir<: muck. The lakes explode i Krownie Troop No L'L'2 from u s f-ollfct all .with unwanted groxvlh. Algae j Jovce Hinson. o St. Johns C'atholir; School ;;-? m^n'e Kaster Baskets out of our u a s t f - sou ,{% ' ;md ihcy'rni blooms, dies and sinks, muck on * * r construction paper for their Brownie Troop No. 254 of si!ii[)os--'d to tr'-at. it. properly. : t he tottom thickens, the oxygen banned Easter Esg hunt on the CaSlaway area held an But thcv iu-'t ivp it a lirk and is "Aiiausteri and a lake dies. j . r . .\ odnc'-dsy April U. The lead- Kaster Egg Hunt and Hike a j.rorr.W- an then they throw T h e S t . Johns River, loaded > will fi-M the .sir's basket on .March '.'9. The girls hiked it into our \valf-nvavs, v.herc our with human wastes, oil and ac'. ;;h candy and the hunt will from ihe Callaway school to kid* are s w i m m i n g and fishing, ids, pours a nood of corruption ewers, into the Atlantic. At the mouths -- at Oakland Tfrrace park. t h e Methodist Church arid on "The c - . - i n n l s arc <>\ ":'.e Je^dc:' of t h i s troop is They s t i n k I ' l h i ' . ' i i heaven.. Th.'-y of polluted streams, commercial j to ?vlrs. Bartieid's house to oyster and shrimp beds are poi-; I . ! . - . (Ja"'!-.'.n .-'. .\.THP.:. b<- t a k e n on a t o u r of a turkey pour t h ' - i r ' - u r n i p t i f i t i in'" the uriri some chickens i n n ' she \VJien the bacterial count in a ; * * has. Mrs. Ban-field told the H; ^vvnir;' T;'/*p /-" . 1-iR in reaches 1.000 per 100 j r i] i poy.it ion. stream g i r l s how to u-il the d i f f e i e:n;i ' Parker areH -!;k 'r; {;f>rn M i a m i rnilliliters. t h e water is consid-; park'-:' Methodist f'hur'-h be;w:"n a t u r k e y e_-g an<: a inciner- prod unsafe. In the Miami R i v - i chicken e-_-g. The girls v.ere '. the (.-"i-lcadfts homo '<> er. sluggish with f i l t h , the count t of i p-, ai-'-omuanied .-in t h ' - i r h i k e soars to a deadly li^O.OOO where:

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
8-SEKV1CES OFI<'EUED

WANT AD RATES
AND INFORMATION

PIANO TUNING end Repairs By Registered Guild Technician. Work Guaranteed. Call Lires S. Lolley, 785-2415. REMODELING Repairs Additions Roofing. Free estimates. L. Hall. Phone 785-0626. ADDITIONS, R E P A I R I N G , Rooli:'g. Concrete Work. Free Estimates. L. Mali. 785-0626. WEATHER"5 CONSTRUCTION CO. Painting, Raoting, Remodeling Free Estimates. 763-2437 Blown Insulation - Free estimates The Mice Company Phone 785-B78I

Custom Drapery shop7S5-081!, /631189. Draperies, slipcovers, etc. 314 W. 8th. Etnelyn Hinson. (Mrs. C.A.) DEAL OBSTRUCTION CO. Bldgs., Repairs, Remodeling. Fre* Estimates. 265-5670, Lynn Haven.

There Are Lots of Ways To Skin A Cat...


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Sunday rate: 75c per Hue M inimum 3 Lines " LODGE NOTICES INMEMORIAM CHURCH NOTICES CARD OF THANKS lie Per Line Flat Combination (Minimum 1 Inch) CASH RETURNS For Want Ads must b claimed within 15 days. . No copy change is pennited on these rates and all advertising is set in 5'/i point gate type. Errors in classified advertising should be reported immediately as the NewsHerald WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR MORE THAN ONE INCORRECT INSERTION.

BAY MATTRESS AND UPHOLSTERY CO. Anything in mattresses ond uphol story. One day service it desired. 763-1591. 29 W Beach Drive.

37 x 503g Jalousie

Dixie Window Co.

$15.95

MMIIrons Construcnoii Co. Remodeling, additions, cabinels, paneling, roofing. Free estimates. 763-56?. TORGINOL seamless, waxless flooring. Remodeling, addition',, painting, carpentry, etc. Free estimates We arrange to tinance. HAL COGGINS Paint Supply. 700 N. Cove BlvH., 78i-7<l73

8A. FLOWERS AND GIFTS


FUNERAL designs, tiospital arrangements. Fresh permanent plants & arrangements. Turner's Florist, 2625 W. llth. 735-0213. FRIENDLY Flower shop Is as ciusi as your phone. Flowers for all oecnsions. 2515 East 15th 785-3692._

.1. NOTICES
Regular Meeting of Bay Lodge No337 Monday, April 7. 1969 at 7:30 p.m. E.D. Brogdon, w.Al. Stated meeting, Acme Lodge No. 22:!, Tuesday, April X, 1969, 7:30 p.m.
AS OF THIS dote I will not be responsible for any debts madt by anyone other than myself. H. E. Bailey Icut about April 8. Can accommodate one. 763-5875 before 8 p.m. BUDGET WAVES at Pearl's Chat Curl, 27U W. Hwy n. Compute permanent $5.00. 763-1927. I WILL Not Be Responsible for Debts Made By Anyone Other Than Myself. W.A. Glover REGISTER NOW EPISCOPAL DAY SCHOOL 4 * 5 year Kindergarten. Grades l-(. Phone School Office 763-5Z41. HAVING TKCUBUE getting outo insurance? Call Al Resnikoff, l E. 4th 785-0574.

NURSERIES FLORIST GIFTS PHONE 785-4457

16. NUKSEHIES
BABYSITTING in my homt. By thi day or week. For more information, telephone 785-106<! TODDLE TIME NURSERY Mon-Fi Toddlers to 7. Sep. ploy yds. KIN->F:GARTEN 4&s yr. 785-HJ3. AAA NURSERY, babysitting, day, night. 509 N. Hwy. 22-A. Springfield area. Ph. 785-6741. (Licensed)

17UADIO & TV KEPAIK


TAKE UP payments, GE 267 q. in. color TV consolctte. $10.00 month. Phone 763-3986

News-Herald Classified Ads


The power of a Classified Ad can fill rental property with desirable tenants, return lost articles and pets, find jobs, locate reliable workers, sell homes, cars or businesses and more; But probably, the job Classified Ads' do most often is add welcome extra cash fo family incomes.

KiRBY T\VT
B.C.A. SEBVICE 303 W. 15th St. 763-3801 31. KELP WANTED FEMALE
WANTED Saleslady. Full time. Apply in person. Erma's, 1024 E. Hwy 98. MAIDS, N.Y., N.J., Conn, Boston, Cleveland to S100 wk. Free RoomBoard. Fare sent. Write PAUL'S 1630-4 Ave., N. B'hom, Ala. WAITRESS WANTED: Apply Airport Snack Bar, and Surf Restaurant at Mexico Beach. Over 21. Apply Mr. or Mrs. Whitfield. No phone calls. WANTED housekeeper. Own portation necessary. Care of home and 2 children. 5 day 8:00 a.m.<!:30 p.m.. Forest if not interested in permanent please do not apply. transsmall week, Park, work,

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
MEETINGS TUESDAY AND THURSDAY :OO P.M.

39 E. BEACH DR.
For Information Write To P.O. Box 684 Panama City, Fla.

MENIAL HEALTH
Information write Bay County Assn. for MenUJ Health. 126 Cove SU.. Panama City, Flor Id*

BEAUTICIAN NEEDED Junior or Senior. P.G. Beauty Nook, 1732 Boyview. COSMETOLOGIST Good opportunity. Plaza of Beauty, inside Grants. Call 785-0571 after 4 p.m.

B.P.O. ELKS
nrst ane Meetinf Supper tMrd Monday 7:38 p.m. 7:to p.m

"MAIDS UP TO $100 WK NEED 100 MAIDS


WEEKLY
Top permanent. It summer live-in jobs. Best homes In heart of Nnw York City, f ' r t f room, board. Brine; f r i e n d s . Far* sent, rush refs. F r e e Gift. Write Dept. H1B MISS PIXIE AGENCY 300 W. St., N.Y.C. 1001H
PACKAGE STORE clerk, over 21. Must have experience. S30 weekly. Phone 763-2604. WAITRESSES Cocktail or food waitresses needed immediately. Permanent ond port time position! now open. Allied Personnel 785-3495-13U. Harrison Ave. [In rear). LOCAL LAV/ FIRM seeking experienced legal secretary. Only applicants with legal experience will be considered. Send resume to Box M17, Panama City News Herald. WANTED Experienced v/aitrer,ses. Good salary. Home and Meol> Furnished. Apply in person to Mr. Hughes, nf Restaurant, Edgewoter Gulf Beach Apartments. EXPERIENCED Cras Pickers Or Lady with seafood exoerience willing to learn to pick crabs. Call 785-3091; or come to 123 S. East Avenue. N E A T , ATTRACTIVE, EXPERI EMCFD Cashier Hostess. Apply at Joby's Seafood House. 1213 W. 15th Street. Year Round Employment. FRY COOK needed Year round employment. Apply Joby's Completa Seafood House. VIVIANE WOODARD Cosmetics excellent opportunity for ladies who enjoy fashion ond glamour. Ph. 7859711, Tues.-Frl. 425 Harrison Ave. WANTED Lady Experienced in Secretarial Work. Must Know Shorthand. Good Salary. Home Furnisher) if desired. Apply in person to Monaqer, Edgewoter Gulf Beoch Aoarimcnts. WE HAVE ENLARGED~NEED *xperienced waitress. Year round employment. Sec Joby at Joby'j Seofoof" House, 1213 W. 15th St. V/ANTED housekeeper for one adult. Five day week, S30 per wk. Transportation preferred. 265-2349. STENOGRAPHER" Needed Immediately. Short bond, tpted approximately M words per minute, excellent salary and workins hturs. Allied Personnel. 7153495. HU Htrriien Ave. {in rear) FNSURAWCE GIRL If you hove experience in Ftr and Casualty this it toe job for you Allied Pirsonntl today. 7IS-3495.'1314 Harriian Av (in rear). Mr. Vic Wilson. WAITRESSES needed for Holiday Inn Restaurant. Apply In person lo SECRETARY General Office work. Full time. Typing required. Apply in person. SURPLUS i, SALVAGE SALES 1701 E. Bus. Hwy. 98 MATURE, Intelligent laoT~w7;n~generol office experience and best of references needed to operate NCR 4 0 0 Electronic Bookkeeping Machine, IBM Executive Typewriter, and othtr office machines. Apply In person 9 lo 11 a.m. weekdays, or call 7*3-8429 for appt. Crosby Aernmorine Company S203 W. Hwy. 98, Bldg SO, Panama City Port RECEPTIONIST ~ If Yeu art share and have n pleasant eriontlily. all* typeColl inday w* have gust the job far you, Allied Pcrsnonrl. 7R5O4r<i nii nor ninn A*> (to rear)

If you're lifce most families, chances are you 'have good things around your home that have outlived their usefulness. Maybe a piece of furniture, a musical instrument, some power tools, sports equipment or outgrown clothing or toys. Why not take a look around when you have your list (ust dial 763-7621 and give it to the courteous Ad Writer who answers. That's all there is. to it. Soon, you're in touch with folks who pay you cash for things you honestly didn't use anyhow.

4. PERSONALS
WANTED: All newcomers recently moved to Ponamo City, Boy County, that hove net been welcomed to coll Panama City Newcomer Welcome Service at 763-1780, 785-3537, 763-7900, 763-4113, 785-0087. S30.00 REWARD rat nnyone sending a new or used cor buyer to Dov? Long at Cook-Whilchccd Ford, 730 W 15m. St. Ph. 763-5336. REMOVAL OF u n w a n t e d hair Electrolysis, sure, sate, permanent Thanna Richardson. 735-0193. 763-3053 HOUSEHOLD Odors? Let fantastic "Deodoreez" wipe them out, 24 hrs. o day. Lov/ cost. 785-2010.

Girl Scout News

-LOST Si I-'OIJND
LOST BlocK Dachshund. Oakland Terrace Vicinity. Ansv/crs to namt of "Bruno." 735-25X<. D R I F T E D off April 2, 12' gray wooden boot i. 4' Whit* wooden boot, St. Andrew Boy. Pleas* call 763-0637.

So remember, there are lots of ways to skin a c a t . . . but the smartest, easiest way to get a job done is with News-Herald Classified Ads.

LOST vicinity 600 Block Jcnks A v e . Prescription glasses. Black cose. Reward. 763-X458 or 785-9522.

*SEKVr,ES OFFEKED
ADDITIONS, Renovations, Corpen Iry, M o I o n r y. Painting, Closets, Paneling, Cetlinqs, Carports, or Build a house Financing available Call Al Boker. 7*3-4201, call after 4:20 '' no answer. GEMERAL TRACTOR W O R K Bushnogolna., Discing ond Plowing Tetephon* 265-2835.

Go through your home today. Then dial PO 3-762] to start the powerful Classified Ad that brings buyers with cash in hand right to your door.

.Mrs. H'JIOW-

Bar<-;iejd. Mrs. Carthiers. and Mi s. Han inmorj. + *

tiv- M i i l v i ' - e p.if;i jiiesented T! ai the the Prr-.sirifnf of the M i l i v i l l e Oskiarid T^tTace area have Kl'Tnentary school I'TA.. Mrs. Kelly, with a eertificato of apdivided i n t o Two groups w i t h the fourth .traders 'o nr.-c-t at ijreciation lor their sponsort h e co-Jea:;ers nouse. Mrs. ship. The c ' - r t i f i c a t i - was pref ',':c.r Smith and work on sented on March 20 at the "heir rooking hadK r ; and The regular PTA meeting by t h r e e r.idor girls area planning a of the girls in u n i f o r m . Th;s t i - n ? campine; t r i ; weekend. Brownie troop also went on i :-,r. ]r>;-der. .Mrs. Nancy Roban Easter Lgg hunt -A ith the ::? '.\ii! ac'-ompany the girls Junior Troop Xo. 22.'; fiorn the 'jn ihe camping tri;>. Millville area. The two troops went to the Bob George Park * * accompanied by the leaders, Bay County Senior Troop Mrs. Milliron.s and Mrs. God> o. .55 recently completed a win. ("amp Craft Skill Day on April :-.. On Apr;! 11, a group of * * ; h p i r I. from the Senior Brownie Troop No. 220 of T:oofr \ \ i | ; iv-fjin a Rod -Cross ihe cove s e c 1 j o n recently 5-^nriHp! First Aid Course. planted bulbs for future Mothers D*y gifts. They were ashy the I p H d e i s . Mrs. ICP U W h i t e and Mrs. :| ; : . ; : ,r id m rn hflS s jiandinuUi'-T for (.'

to age. The count, reaches 79.000 at. t v '.'> the discharge channel of a pria.ke S'il''- t iial a ,'ie". iricineravate utility. til ; WOiild nol ( c i l l l i t e The state has citation.-; on file d h-'.-fv > P H" ;!;.plie against many polluters, but its 1 and lie orders to get into compliance b; g "dirty nir;ust ri"S chiarged 'the Klor i'!;) ' v , i t h t h e law are rarely, if ever, .promptly met pollution" oi South Bis'-ayne Bav by discharge of hot water Board of Health notified the i from il.s ;i'><-l''ar piant at. Tt;rkey City of Miami Beach its waste I Point. oischarges into the ocean vio-; "The eorn:iiiny is pour-ing bil- luted state law. "You are or-: lions of j.',j!i'ins of hot v . a t i - r n , dered and placed on notice that! da;. into h<- bay iV-ach said. I v jifojf, go day.s. . . you shall fur-! "f. = a / , - a i i ; i - !:<!<! (iesignatpd: i^f, :j n a scherlule for construction I ;i K . i t i o r i . ! i ; . ' ; . ' i i i . c n i . It's sup- of control measures," the cita- . a M;:';'!,:a! p a i k s o r n e finri s a i f i . ! day. These measures wei'e to i n - : "But i t ' s ;;oing !> be ruined j cinrip extension of the ocean o,:"-' before I bat ..,< Florida j f ; i | j anrj construction of treat-' ; Power & j.j o,rig to hurnjmpnt facilities. ; t h e place u Nearly l.'I months later, the : H s damaging rtjty ha.s submitted plans only for i FP'&L the :irea. extension of the outfall fo fhp Ix'ach -:ay- t i ; e pressure on; edge of the Gulf .Stream. Miami ; him 1'iega n a f i e j ihe I Jade Coun-1 Beach lis, city officials say, t y f ' i , n - r r i'-sinu ::<-.!' bin-) f i i U ' " r m l y an esrtirtie problem" sn'i pollutinn i-oniirii p.iwers, l i n u i - t i : j s w i l l be solved by dilfusion . 1 1 - . t i n , . ' ; i : i ; , ' s r , ! ( . - m a n I'oli'j-1 .if Ms u a s l f - Jn Ibf Gill/
s;,erif i S.VKI, til HI c\-;r;i
fXI.Vc 1 tO '.I''

pl

j. !". j { e r::i!i:?>e|l

en I

News-Herald Classified Ads Phone PO 3-7621

Wt PLACE CONCRETE

ly CONTRACT .r YARD
. Walkt

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All Materials Inspected And Tested By The State Rood Oept. Fast and Easy . . . Fre* Estimates!

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Swedish Actor On His Way To Stardom


HOLLYWOOD ( U P I ) - Bo Svonson is a law-boned, Iantorn-jawed Swede who is well on his w a y to movie stardom in .spite of what he calls his Swedishness. "I don't like the emasculated type of male the Swedes r e p r e s e n t , " said the big man. He h a s no trace of a Scandinavian accent. He left his native land at age 17 a n d returns infrequently. When he does get to Stockholm he a p p e a r s on local television to upbraid his countrymen for their paucity of macho. Bo's disdain for his own tribe has not endeared him to Swedish men. " I don't care what they think," he said. " I ' m not a conformist. They a r e . I'd go b a n a n a s in a week in Sweden. I put them down for denying individuality. "Swedes do what they think they should, not what they feel like doing. No wonder Swedish women a r e crazy about Latins and other men who react on instinct." Svenson is 6-foot-5 with blond hair and blue eyes. He is muscular, tough and intelligent. He also can be abrasive. F o r nine years he worked at a variety of jobs from bootlegging moonshine to selling life insurance, laboring on the docks and serving a hitch in the U.S. Marine Corps. Currently ho is working with Robert Redford in "The Great Waldo Pepper" which requires him to walk on the wings of airplanes several thousand feet above the ground. "I became an actor because it is the occupation that most closely resembles what I a m , " the big guy said. "Every day I do something different. In one picture I played Frankenstion, then an international courier, and now a dare-devil pilot. " I ' v e only played a Swede once. That suits me fine. You will notice there have never been any big international s t a r s among actors who a r e from Sweden. " E v e n Max vonSydow Isn't a big n a m e at the boxoffice. I think it is because Swedish men are passive. Nobody wants to see that kind of hero on the screen. Maybe the director, Ingmnr Bergman, h a s some thing to do with the way other nationalities look at Swedish men and actors. "In Bergman's films the women a r e always dominant. Females a r e the ones who demonstrate courage or deter mination or whatever it is that makes the plot work. "Swedes a r e victims of their culture. How can a Swedish actor play a colorful man unless he has that colorful facet within him? ' "Certainly there a r e colorful Swedes. But it just happens such exciting or colorful men are not actors in that country. The colorful ones a r e seamen or athletes or businessmen perhaps." What of the magnificent doesn't speak of marriage, Viking heritage? He h a s a black belt In judo "Well, the Vikings really originated in- Denmark," Bo and Is a Ph.D. candidate in explained. "Those who settled psychology. Svenson Is a highly in Norway became fishermen. sensitive man with little use for The ones who populated Sweden Hollywood frills, He says what he thinks. And one of the things became farmers." Non-conformist Svenson lives he thinks Is: "Swedish women with his friend Lise and their are liberated. Swedish men a r e daughters Pia and Maja. He not."

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Attack Probed
ST. AUGUSTINE, ( U P I ) - A Pennsylvania woman remained hospitalized with head injuries w h i l e t h e s e a r c h for h e r assailant continued in the area around the nation's oldest city. Tina Steele, 33, of Malvern, Pa., w a s listed in satisfactory condition at Flagler Hospital, w h e r e s h e has been under treatment since last Thursday. Miss Steele was choked and struck on the head with a rock in what police a r e listing a s an attempted murder. St. J o h n County Sheriff's deputies said they were looking for a m a n about 30 years old who picked up Miss Steele while she w a s hitchhiking near St. Augustine. He drove her to a deserted beach about 16 miles south of the city, where the two left his car and went for a walk. The attack occurred at that time.

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Pollution Body Wants Ruling


TALLAHASSEE, ( U P I ) - T h e pollution-control board wants the legislature to 'clarify its authority over dredge-and-fill operations, a partial reaction to a dispute between the board and lawmakers over Grassy Point in the St. Johns River. J o h n Robert M i d d l e m a s , P a n a m a City, is a board member. Dredge-and- fill operations "often result in water quality d e g r a d a t i o n a n d so m a y reasonably be expected to be a s o u r c e of water pollution," board chairman David E . Levin said in a letter to legislators. He said that the law has been " j u d i c i a l l y c o n s t r u e d " to authorize the pollution-control d e p a r t m e n t to regulate the dredging and filling. "Nevertheless, there has been much conflicting discussion and comment by m e m b e r s of the legislature and the public over the proper role of t h e d e p a r t m e n t in dredge-and-fill m a t t e r s , " he said. T h e board h a s adopted resolution asking "for direction" from the legislature If no directives are forthcoming, Levin said, the board will be forced to set its own regulations " t o meet its responsibilities to the public." T h e board h a s found its authority to regulate dredging and filling challenged by the Jacksonville legislative delegation. Pollution-control staff m e m b e r s recommended last y e a r that a permit for the port of Jacksonville to dump dredge spoils on Grassy Point not be renewed when it expired at the end of last year. But the Jacksonville delegation pushed through a bil m a k i n g Grassy Point a " p e r p e t u a l " spoil-dumping area. Jacksonville legislators argued before the board earlier this month that they no longer need the board's approval for t h e d u m p i n g , b e c a u s e the legislature has designated the " p e r p e t u a l " spoil area.

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Scientists a r e experiment ing with chlorella, a common one-celled g r e e n form ol algae, as a potential food source for the earth's grow ing population. This algae could also supply oxygen for astronauts in outer space.

Sale Prices Good Thru Tuesday

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763-6611

Pollution Of Stale Waters Stirring Up United Action

PXO 7 NBH'S TRIBUNE, I'ort 1'lcrue, Fla.. Mntv, April ,

By HKN li'UNK venal, the most mnssive ol a 'Next door In the court, rfWN Writer fivo-mnnlli scrim of JO fish kills house," Tan/.ler said, "they're A.s u young college engineer- which had llllerrd Ihe coast for milling up signatures fjn pctlliil! graduate workini! (or tils fa. miles fH.'currorl on ilm bay. '|tions lo have me lewdled. Sfirnc ther In (i sciifiMXl business on uniunini'cd II in the open people )ast don't want lo face Mobile I5:iy, IAV/TCIICC It. H!|Kh lienrlnj;," Illp.sh salil. "It fuels and jay the cosl of cleansaw llio rlcli marine pawning brought down Ihf house.' ing up the river." grounds of the historic bay Ijitor, n federal-slate confer-' > Kiid llir- rrodiform strangled liy man's reckless j>ol. onco conduct<il by the U.S. Walutlon, ter Pollution Control Administra- count In (he river is 1,000 tlmns When llio seafood Indusliy tion led ID orders to polluting greater t h a n n safe level fo: 1 was wi|KMl oul al Mobile, llipsh Industries lo cut hack 91 per watci contact .spurts and die air wnnl Ijack to college to sillily cent on carton and nlliogen di.'x "!s three times d i i t l c r ih;m ; law. Thr>n he moved to Ponsa- charges ami 00 per rent on| any other city in Fioi'lda." cnla nnd found Another great phosphorus wastes. The oidois "Vou can sit here and watch, bay, tlscambia, suffering the have Just been approved by In them violate the law every same fnle. terlo:- Seciclavy Waller .7. day," I/ivelace said. Through "ll puts' chill humps up nnd Hic-kei. j l h e window of his office, on the down your hack when you sec "We educated the people to 12lh floor ot the Independent ivaters dying Jay hy day," Hlpsh peak concern," Ifipsii says. "We Life Building, belching smoke. said. And lie decided It was embarrassed public officials un- stacks filled the air with fumes. time lor a "loud-mouthed law- Ill we forced state anil federal Under one ol the chimneys yer lo round up some loud .'hearings." VCTO Bend) men wero presmouthed newspaper, TV and ra- "Industries and municiixiliiics sils the Gator Bowl football eril nl a recent Annual Recognition dlo men nnd start raising some .had violate! the law for 30 statriuni, an exposed-stool stnic-j Dinner- nf (he Gull Stream Council -"" ' |years in squelching any Icgisla- lure so (.oi-roded by polluted a i r j Hiiy S c (i u I s of America. Pictured Thai was |ust 10 months ago.Uion with teeth in it," Hipsh maintenance costs are fantastic-! abiive ];>;i lo right are .Spnigcon P. ally high. but the ruckus stirred up by Isold.

Hipsh and his noisy cohorts of| "We now have tens of thoas-i The Si. Regis Paper Co. heads the news media already prom- ands ol people on our side and the list of 150 polluters of Ihe ises to pull Esearnbia Day back all agencies are attuned to Hie St. Johns, discharging SO million from Ihe grave. public voice. They know they gallons a day of untreated mill T.ncal politicians were goaded are being watched and Ihey are waste. Tne City of Jacksonville Into action, "dirty industries" doing their job tetter. That '.vas|lx)m.s ,3 mi]|lon ]lons Q[ raw have pledged so /ar to spend $9 what we wanted, but it will takej se , rage a day ,, river and million on pollution control dc. constant surveillance from ti-jbutares vices, and stale and federal authorities have been pulled I n t o - "We're telling them to clean "I've seen peop!n fishing right the picture. up the human waste by getting under sewage outfalls," LoveAs the 1970 Florida Legisla- what money they can from the Lace .said. "The fish smell like ture went into session, people state and federal governments, kerosene." all over the state were in i-e- then increasing the sewage bill "The polluters don't fish in volt against reckless environ-! a dollar a month. Nobody's go the St. Johns. They go lo the mental destruction that threat-1ing to complain about that. They ^\ T ""','T' "Ki Jens not only the $5.2 billion an-jdon't need to float bonds." ' ! ' lasllas' "e saw. jnual tmn-ist business but the| "Politicians make a complcxi Mrs. Helen Bird, a Jacksonvery way of life of the residents!problem out of something that's'ville housewife who has long themselves. jvery simple," Hipsh said. jbeen active in the Auduixm So President Lyrnan E. Itogcrs of| In Jacksonville, where air and ciety, formed the Southeastern Conservation 70s, n militant I water pollution is the worst in Environment Council to bring new organization claiming 250,-iFloridn, a public light also Is all conservation organizations 030 backers, predicts that public shaping up. But Curtis I^ovelace, into a united fight against pollupressure will force the legisla- an insurance agent and leading tion in Duval and Nassau counture to put the brakes on pollu- "hell raiser," says the chance of ties. tion and turn Florida back to- winning there is "almost hope- "We're not rabid," she says, ward a healthy environment. less." "but we're activist and we are Similar hopes were dashed in "Our environmental deteriora- willing to go to court if neces QUEEN OF THE CROP Lovely Lynno Fen-is has baen selected as Queen over all (lie good food the 1969 session, when most con tion is almost unbelievable," snry to force our officials to do products from Florida, to rein as "Miss Florida serration bills died in commit- Txivelace said. "The polluting in- their job. AIR TRAVELERS were experiencing delays as air- controllers continued their "Icfc Products Wuel;", April ^7-May L*. Lyrine, who lives Ices. Rut Hipsh has demonstral.|terests and the government arc "When pollution o f f i c i a l s out." This photo, taken in Los Angeles, points np one of .the problems fMlag a pilot. ed how pressure by an out-Uo closely interwoven, you can't Ihrough malice, ineptitude or Towering structure* too otten stand very ear airports, -compitotag the effort in Orlando, will be crowned by Gov. Claude Kirk ! disinterest neglect to perform quired for safe landings and take-off s. at a luncheon sponsored by Winn Dixie Stores in raged public can get results. separate them." Starting with a handful of sup- Mayor Hans Tanzler told a their duties," Mrs. Bird told a Orlanrln on April 21, honoring food growers porters, he soon had so many U.S. Senate subcommittee he mmittee, "it Is 'behind him that commissioners and city councilmen could lose suffers discernCOTONOU, Dahomey (AP) long elections for a presidency iof Escarr.bia and Santa Rosa their jobs if they demanded a even death." Lt. Col. Paul Emile dc Souza, and legislature and declared a counties called him in and cleanup of the St. Johns River, Grand Jury in (retained him to investigate th which winds through the heart ring to light the chairman of the military direc- "government of national union" I extent of the problem. oi the city and oozes into the vested Interests that are im torate that seized power last De- will be formed .within a month. cember, has annuled month- No detatis were announced. Hipsh induced Gov. Clandejocean thick with raw human on all environ |Kirk to call a slate hearing in-wastcs. chemical effluents, dethis communi Pcnsacola. On the day it con-ltergents and oil. jty?" TALLAHASSEE Fioridianslthe fresh vegeiables that this will be getting a better look at couniry consumes durin< the the more tlian. 1,000 lood items winlcr months." that are either .grown, proces While much attention has sed or packed in this .state dur been paid to citrus and veget-' ing "Florida Food Products able piwluction, Florida dairy-i Week," April 27 May 2. men and i-anchers have made: Approximately 1,500 super, giant strides in -raising their le-i markets, various high school vels ol production and efficien-] fccor.e economic classes ar.d co- cy. Florida's 517 comir.eroia!' dtyionie extensica agents wiU>daific.-i prodv.ce all &e be participating in this \veA- mj'.l; tliai iu consumed "oy ti'.ei long campaign acquainting Flor- state's residents. idtans with the mammoth agri- Florida's beef cattle industry cultural industries in the Sun- has advanced to become one of shine State. the leading cattle producers aIncluded in the week-long pro- moag the states east of the motion will be demonstrations Mississippi River, and is 17lh and displays ot Florida pro in the nation. duels. The Department of Agri- Florida's pouUrymen are now culture and Consumer Services i providing all of the eggs that is providing educational materi- are consumed in the state, Egg al and recipes to home econo- pi-oduction has increased to a mic teachers and home extens- noinl where Florida is no longer ion agents throughout the state. a deficit producer. Volume supSupermarkets will be featuring plies are now being shipped to Florida producls throughout the Northern markets. week In special displays and Ornamental horticulture, forsales. estry, tobacco, sugarcane, hon"This week will give every ey and purebred horses are othFloridlan a chance lo actually er agricullural industries that see the dynamic agricultural in- aie important assets to Flor. dustries that have grwvn up in ida's economy. "As you can see Florida ngri. their stale." Agriculture Commissioner Doyle Conner said. culture Is a big business a "There is much more to Flor- multi-billion dollar business." ida agriculture than the golden Commissioner Conner said. "I oranges and the sun-bright hope through this week-long grapefniils that are grown here campaign Fiorid:ans will get a In such abundnr.ee. Florida pro- better look at how important duces nearly 80 per cent of all agriculture is to the slate."

executive, Region fi,

~'/jy .Ss-'jufs of America; II. Alillon Link of Vei'o Head), preside!)! of the 1 ' n .Su'Ciim Council; VViilly Skiscim oi Vero Beach; Sismfmaslei'; Alrtin ''. ";iiiii(!r, fhic-f Seoul executive, Boy Souls of Aim>ricn t nnd Jan Krurnhniil *.i V: rti Reaf:h, Seoul master, all pros<'.it ;il Iho annual event.

Elections Are Ou t in Daliomey

READ
THE

Florida Food Products Week to Be Observed

News Tribune Moves Merchandise

CLASSIFIED

TV Set of the Future' Is Built by Students


PASADENA, Calif. (AP) roll out the front, electronically Ten California Institute of Tech- printed and including subjects' nology students have built, as of your ciiotce. they see it, the television set ol| "All the technology for this the future. icxisls today." Fakl Ira Moska-j By pushing buttons-like choos- tel, 19, physics major, editor of Ing a tune on a tavern jukebw- the campus weekly and one ol, you'd get what you want in edu- the model builders. cation, news and entertainment, Another, ,lim Hlnck, 20,i Rich category could be trig- electrical engineering major,' gciwi with a hand-hole! control explained a. calegoiy Inlwlfxlj ijito alrnast limitless subdlvl- "Community Malrix." Through, It vlcwere at home could hold a | slons. Education would tutor eveiy- town mcellng-and click t h e i r ' one frcjn preschool toddlers to votes lo a headquarters on their j college-graduate spednllsU. hand controls. Political cannl You could luive a general news dates' latest pronouncements on summary or Ihc latest In nny Issues could 1 insmnlly rerun., one fieldstock nuirket, reli- Fiwn home, housewives could gion, polities, etc. [see waits and prices nl the s u - ; Choices under entertainment, pci-market. on the mock-up mixlel, nrc on camera in the i "Low-Brow Drama," "High- front of the sel would permit: Brow Drama," "Ixrw-Brow two-way video phono calls. Comedy," "lUsh-Brow ComeBeck said more sophisticated dy," "Travelogues,'> model.') Ilinn their design could bo In USD by llio year they have loons" nnd "Sport.!." cither pltkod-lDM. Sciiions probably News would prlnleu or pictorial. At your would lx> flat, ami ixnlnblo like eommnml, t. new.i sheel would mirrors.

Its name alone puts you money ahead.


Through the years, Ihe name Cadillac has altainal sudi < reputation for excellence that new owners have always fell assured of Ihe wisdom of their choice. Ami .ill tlw tMilltion.il qualities lhat have made It the Standard of Ihe World are present again in Ihe 1970 Cadillac. You'll always know i Cadillac. Brilliant styling and lln elegant inlcrior mnrk the QdllU.c as a true l u x u r y car. And you cn cn|oy it all the more with such available features as * Dual Comfort front cat, Automatic Climate Control and Cadillac's exclusive
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Outstanding performance features are standard. The 472 V-8 f ngine performs effortlessly, with an ample reserve to power .ill ol Cadillac's advanced aeccssorir-i. And you'll enjoy .1 host of standard Cadillac features like Tuibo Hyiir.i-m.ilic ti,\nsmission, variable-ratio power slcorinp, power ftout disc brakesthat typify Ihe Cadillac Ir.ulilion nf englncerip); Icjdi'rsliip. The Culillac Invnlmcni ftclor. Thost qiinlllics which h*ve made the name Cidllhe

synonymoue \vlth ill that's th fines! In i luxury cr, also make it an cititstandins motoring investment. Countloss loyal owners will testify to Cadill.ic'c lr,ulllionjlly high icsale valve at trailing time. More car for your money. In total, Ihmifih a Cadillac nwy cost more originally than mosl cars, you will enjoy much more car for your money. Does owning a CndilUc r]ir any further (usllfldillon? Visit your .uilhorlml dealer >nd sec why this ll K p.irlicul.uly prartlral time to mako the move.

IOII.OW THE MASTERS GOLJF TELF.GVST, PRESENTED BY CADILLAC, AVRIL 11 AND 11, CliS-TV.

PLAYGROUND DAILY NEWS, Fort Walton Beach, Fla., Moa. Morn., Dee. 1> **

Pme

St. John's River Pouring Poison Into Atlantic Ocaan


JACKSONVILLE (APLike a into the pockets of county landgigantic sewer, loaded with owners for pulpwood. human wastes, oil and toxic "Buckeye is our bread and acids, the St. Johns River pours butter, the backbone of our local a flood of corruption into the economy," says editor Pete OsAtlantic Ocean. borne of the Perry News. Black and slimy and fatal to Recently, the county voted on everything it touches, the Fen- a proposal to allow pollution ol holloway River winds through two tributaries into "Black Fen' the forests of Taylor County and to attract other industries. It empties its filth into the seafood passed 4 to 1. Buckeye argues that the Fenbeds of the Gulf of Mexico. The St. Johns and :'Black holloway is a small river am Fen" are two of the most vivid has been used by antipollutior symbols of the rape of natural forces as "a convenient horrible resources in Florida that has example." And the argumen been condoned in the name of has merit, for many larger Flor progress. And they are not the ida rivers are badly polluted. "We must stop it somehow,' only ones, by far. Lakes and coastal waters once says David B. Lee, battle clear, blue and s p a r k l i n g scarred head o; the State Boarc streams, now are a dirty brown, of Health's Bureau of Sanitary Engineering. "If we don't man yellow or black. Cities, towns and housing de- age our garbage, it will manage velopments defile the waters us." with human sewage, often raw and untreated. "Dirty industries" use them as receptacles for toxic wastes. Citrus processing plants dump their refuse. Farmers and citrus growers use the water for irrigation, then pump it back into the lakes, thick with fertilizer, pesticides and muck. Real estate developers cloud the waters with silt. Fishing and pleasure boats manned by people who cry the; loudest for unspoiled waters foul: them with garbage and oil from the bilges. And, as the pollution flows into the sea, it despoils thousands of acres of submerged coastal lands possessing great PL3S6EMJND DAILY NEWS i potential for commercial seafood production. Oyster beds off Brevard, Volusia and Pinellas coun- EIGHT YEARS AGO ties have been closed by the December, 1958 State Board of Health because Okaloosa County Sheriff, Ra to harvest them would endanger Wilson, spoke on "Law Enforce human health. ment" at a recent luncheon o A rising voice of protest was the Fort Walton Beach Lion heard in 1966 against the pos- ;iub. He was introduced by Cir sible destruction in a few short years of natural beauty cher- cuit Judge Erwin Fleet.provid Two ordinances that ished by Floridians for genera- for pension plans lor Fort Wa tions . ton Beach Firemen and Police But as public alarm height- men cleared City Council re ened, the waters gr'.w dirtier cently with approval on . fina and dirtier. readings, the ordinances pro Dr. Sanford A. Mullen, chair- vide for a one percent assessman of the Citizens Advisory ment against Insurance compaCommittee on Water Pollution nies doing business in the City Control at Jacksonville, calls the with funds to go lor the City St. Johns "the lousiest river in contribution to the pension fund, Underprivileged children of Florida." the Fort Walton Beach area will Ninety per cent, of the raw hu- be given a Christmas party by man sewage dumped in all of the Fort Walton Beach Kiwanis Florida's rivers, he says, goes Club, at the Community Center. into the S'. Johns in Duval Coun- Classwork has started in the ty. Tributaries feeding into it are new building constructed by the Okaloosa Association l o r Reopen sewers. tarded Children, according to This is only half the problem. Walter Lindners, president. The The vest comes from paper building is located between the mills, fertilizer plants and other Mary Esther cut-off and Hollyindustries, and from vessels and wood Blvd., across from Fort facilities cl-.'mping oil near the Walton Beach water tank. river's mouth. T h e Shalimar-Fort Walton Heavy oil slicks form, suffo- Beach girl, Miss Joanne Mccating the fish, and sea birds Donald, who won second place perish, grounded by oil on their in the 1958 Miss America contest, left here recently for Pawings. sadena, Calif., where she will apFlorida's water pollution prob- pear at the Tournament of Roslem grew rapidly critical after es, and attend festivals before world war II, when its popula- and after the Rose Bowl Foottion mushroomed and new indus- ball game on New Year's Eve. tries moved down from the Bill Harris, president of the Bank ol Fort Walton lor 3 '/ north. years will resign his top execu There were two great induce- Live bank position at the end ments for industries which of the year, according to informoved to Florida from dirtier mation recently given to the climes. Because of the clean air Playground Daily News. and water and the recreational facilities it was easy to attract F.A. S h e r m a n , 30 Kepner Road, won top prize in the labor forces. Christmas lighting contest sponThe second lure was a willing- sored by the Gulf Area Garden ness by the people, in exchange Group, according to Mrs. Jack for payrolls, to surrender the O'Gwynn, president. He was waters as dumping grounds. presented with a plant by the organization. Taylor County, in economic sponsoring Miree, a student at Miss B. difficulty, offered to make the the University of Alabama in Fenholloway an "industrial" Tuscaloosa, will be spending the stream to be used in any way parents, Mr. desired and the Buckeye Cellu- holidays with herMiree, owners lose Corp. took the people at and Mrs. Willis Destin. the their word. It made the river its of NextBeach Hotel, of the Playproduction private sewer. ground Players will be "Blithe Today, there is no life in the Spirit" a comedy by Noel Cowriver and none on its banks. ard, to be directed by Danie: When the wind is fresh in the Fager, and produced at the pines, the disgusting stench of Moose Club in February. the river drifts for miles, overMANY SHEERS powering the sweet aroma of the F o u r million skiei\sthree forest. times more than 20 years ago In return for the river, Buck- glide down hills and mountains eye gave jobs to 840 residents from Maine to Hawaii. Th and pays them about S6 million number increases at 20 per cen a year. Another $3 million goes a year.

GOV'T GRADE

"A"
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YOUNG HEM THIS COUPON GOOD FOR 200 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH A 10.00 PURCHASE
VOID AFTER 12-21-66
PRICES GOOD THRU WED, DEC, 21st

TURKEYS

WITH THIS COUPON AND


The Purchase of Pkg. Palmetto Farms

CRANBERRY SALAD
VOID AFTER SAT.; DEC. 24

BROAD BREASTS GRA8EAT0MS-

TURKEY ROAST t, 89* VV.ENIRS IS GROUND BEEF 3 U, f" SHORT RIBS


PINKY PIG FRESH PORK 4* . .

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newcomers move lo town, we prrc-t them with a personal message from friendly and progressive businessmen. Primarily we endeavor to eonlaet potential customers who we believe are seriously interested in establishing residences and remaining in llir area. In time, instead of acquaintances, they become friends and customers, because.we extended a w elcome hand to them when they were new in our area. Ours is the oldest continuous Newcomer Service in the area, and we intend to continue. Wr sponsor the original and only Newcomer Club, which is continuously prowinp and adding new members.

Newcomer Greetings Service


Mrs. RUTH HAILS. Hostess for Ft. Walton Beach. Valparaiso and Nieeville
For information call 243-3805

CHINA DOLL RICE 19< PIK CHICK CRACKERS 37* TRISCUIT WAFERS 37 SIP'N CHIPS CRACKERS 37< CHEEZ-ITS *-29 HI-HO CRACKERS ' 25>; FRESH Lb. Box CRANBERRIES
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PANAMA Cli'Y HERALD, Panama City, Florida, Tuesday Afternoon, June 10 1969

Page 3

Adams Issues Charters To Three Panhandle Firms


Corporation charters have been granted to three firms in this area, according to Tom Adams, secretary of State. The newly chartered firms include: The Aaron Company, 2500 W. 15th St., Panama City. The firm was authorized 1,000 shares of common stock at SI par value, dealing in operation of utilities. Incororators are R o b e r t E. Hike, Carol L. Rike, Reginal Vickers, all of Panama City. Miracle Strip Boat & Motors Headquarters, Inc., 5601 W. Highway 98, Panama City. The firm was authorized 1,000 shares of common stock at $10 par value. It will be dealing in the sale of boats, motors and other marine equipment. Incorporators are John Frank Mahan, Wallon N. Carter Jr., Walton N. Carter HI, all of Panama City. F & L Servicing Corporation, Marianna Industrial Park, Marianna, was authorized 1,000 shares of common stock at $100 par value. The firm will deal n real and personal property. Incorprators are: Robert C. Cowen, Jeanne Cowen, both of Marianna and J. Lee Wieland of Atlanta.

DEALER EARNS TITLE Panama City Standard Oil dealer James Gartmen, (left) receives his certificate of training from instructor L. C. Bell after completing a three-week training program at Standard Service Station management training center in Jacksonville. The training center is one of six in the South devoted to teaching a variety of special skills necessary for the successful operation of a modern service station.
The world's largest producer of cocoa is Ghana, followed by Nigeria. Brazil and the Ivory Coast.

FLORIDA-BREDS The U.S. Bureau of Sports Fisheries and Wildlife has placed an additional 140,000 Florida-grown stripers in the Choctawhatchee Bay off the U.S. 331 causeway at Freeport.

The Florida Game and Freshwater Fish Commission called it a giant step towards home-grown stripers. Heretofore, it was noted, stripers had to be brought in from North Carolina. Expensive Birds Don't Neglect Slipping

This is one of the most frequently asked questions regarding social s e c u r i t y . We are By aware that most of you do not have birth certificates. HowevBill Fields er, a baptismal record made before you were age five is just ASS MAK2KG as good. You should check to THE BIG BKEAK see if this record is available. Men have been slow to accept It is not necessary for you to change? in everything from obtain a delayed birth certifisportswear to formal dress. Oh, cate. I don't mean "the youngsters with There are many other records (heir fods. but old dad has alavailable that we will use. v.-ays stuck pretty dose to the School records and marriage idea of business-like suits during records made before age 25 ar< working hours and dark colors very good. You may not know after 6 p.m. Well, things have where to write for a record or changed. even if it would be available Men have suddenly realized Our office has a listing of all (hat Ihey have a very great latschool records, marriage rec itude in fashions. Why shouldn't ords and voting records availthey wear new and exciting outable for Florida, Alabama, Misfitsafter all, wives have been sissippi, Georgia, South Carolidoing this for many years now. na, North Carolina and TennesIt makes sense for the men to see. We will be glad to check seek new colors and elegant acthe listing and tell you where cessories. to write for the record. A simple change of tie, pocket Family records made at birth handkerchief, and a different or during childhood are also exshirt, gives you a whble new Ceylon's tea crop in 1968 to- cellent sources of proof of age. look. Shirts are offered in many taled almost 496 million pounds, However, if this type record is colors, while matching ties and compared with 486 million in used we must see the original record. A photocopy, even a cerhandkerchiefs are very much in 1967. tified photocopy, will not do. vogue. Get in line today, try the These are only a few of the modern way.. records we will accept. If you have some records but are not sure whether.or not. they,will be sufficient, call us ahead of time We will be able to tejl you whether or not you will need additional evidence. If you do not have any proof of your age, you can call our office and ask for the form to obtain a U.S. census record. We will be glad to send you this form and will assist in completing it. Let me urge you to contact us before you plan to retire, but do not delay filing a claim while waiting for a record showMr. Na Dawkin* ing your age. Go ahead and contact us now. Our office is located at 1135 Harrison Avenue, Panama City 32401. The telephone number is FROM 763-5331. The office is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 ALL FLORIDA HEARING AID CENTER a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Marie Motel, Panama CHy, Fla. Ask at Office Summer Students WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1969 10 A.M. to 1 P.M. Find Part-Time WASHINGTON (AP)The Detese Department Monday released the names of seven Florida Army men who died in Vietnam. Killed in action were S. Sgt. Robert D. Dixon, son of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Dixon, Route 6, Plant City; Pfc. Robert E. Langston, son of Charles L. Langston, 4310 Dunmore Ave., Tampa; and Pfc. Joseph R. Scott, husband of Mary A. Scott, 1106% Arch St., Tampa. Four other Army personnel died not as a result of hostile action. They were: 1st Lt. Charles Vale, son of Mr. and Mrs. C h a r l e s F. Vale, 3600 Chickasaw Trail, Orlando; WO Joseph V- Zappini Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph V. Zappini, 3815 East Finch St., Orlando; Spec. 4 Marvin J. Gude, husband of Margaret V. Gude. Rt. 1, Holt; and Pfc. Gerald W Altritton, husband of Francine C. Albritton, 2307 Emery Ave., Bradenton.

DAD *LAD

Seven More By DOUG GAMBLE Director Florida Men 'I don't have a birth certifiDie In Vietnam cate. How can I prove when I was born?"

Pulp-Paper Firms Eye Ant L-Pollution


ATTENDS SESSION Art. G. Ereckson, vice president and cashier of First National Bank, has entered Stonier Graduate School of Banking for the annual summer session this year at Rutgers State University, New Brunswick, N.J. The school sponsored by the American Bankers Association runs through June 20.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) Pulp and paper companies in Florida plan to spend S47 million on additional antipollution devices in the next few years, the president of the American Paper Institute said today. Dedwin A. Locke Jr. of New York, speaking to a civic club, said in the next three years $22 million will be spent at mills in the Jacksonville area and $25 million in other mills around the state. "There's no doubt that the paper companies contribute to pollution, although not as much as many people think," Locke said. He quoted survey reports that transportation contributes more than half the pollutants in the air of major cities, including Jacksonville and Los Angeles. "The government's tax decisions can go far to slow or speed up the drive against pol-

LONDON (UPDTwo birds in a gilded cage are worth $11,520. Do false teeth drop, slip or wobble talk, eat, laugh or sneeze0 At least, the ones at when youannoyed and embarra&sed Don't be Sotheby's of London. by such handicaps. FASTEETH, an The cage was made of solid alkaline! non-acid) powder to s,pnnkle on your plates, keeps fake silver and the birdstwo more firmly set. Gives confident teeth feelparrots a half-foot highof pale ing of f-ecunty and added comfort. or feeling. green amazonite with rubies for No gummv. gooey tasteessential to Dcntuies that fit are lution," Locke said. "That's why eyes. set was sold at Sotheby's health See your dentist regularly. Get FASTEETH at all drug counters. ['m deeply concerned over the The recent action of the administra- Monday. tion in asking Congress to repeal the 7 per cent tax credit for new investment. Our industry has been counting on that credit to ease the financial burden of acquiring antipollution facilities." He also expressed concern over projections that the presTry Our ent 18 million acres of commercial forest in Florida may be reduced to 16 million by 1975. "The problems of pollution and conservation are mutual problems requiring for their solution the cooperative efforts of government, citizens and industry," Locke said.

FALSE TEETH

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FAMILY WARDROBE STORAGE BARGAIN

Sales Tax Collections Up In May

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) Sales tax collections in Florida were 28.7 per cent higher in May than the total for May of the previous year, State Comptroller Fred Dickinson reported Monday. TODAY Dickinson noted that the May 6:00 p.m.Engineer Cycle Club, members homes collections, based on April sales, 6:30-p.m.Bay Yacht Club Auxiliary of St. Andrews, was the first time since the sales tax rate was increased in Yacht Club April of 1968 that the receipts 7:00 p.m.Panama City Commission, City Hall for the new tax rate could be 7:00 p.m.Lynn Haven City Commission, City Hall compared with the same month 7:00 p.m.Oakland Terrace Men's Club, Oakland Ter- a year later. The report showed collections race Clubhouse May totaled S51.2 million an 7:00 p.m.East Bay Optimist Club, Bonfire increase of $11.4 million over the amount collected in May of 7:00 p.m.Cedar Grove City Commission, City Hall 7:30 p.m.Panhandle Gun Club, Junior Deputy Club- 1968.

Yes, we will store your entire family's wardrobe (except furs and furt rimmed) for six (6) months in our COLD STORAGE VAULT. The entire bundle will be insured for 250.00 valuation by a special all risk policy plus BARNES professional guarantee - additional insurance may be obtained at our low rate. You may include households such as blankets, quilts and draperies. Now is the time to clean out those crowded closets and enjoy professional protection all summer long on your entire family's out of season wardrobe for this one low bulk rate price. CONSULT US TODAY YOUR
INIAY COUNTY

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Free Hearing Test! Free Service to All make* of Hearing Aids! If you have a hearing problem, you are invited to come in for a free electronic hearing test, and demonstration of several makes of World Famous Hearing Aids. No Obligation. Don't miss this opportunity. Here is your chance to try the newest and finest of all hearing aids. If you hesitate to use a hearing aid for fear of being stared at, th* latest, lightweight - All In The Ear, attractive model may be the answer to your prpyers.

Jobs With City


A number of college students home for the summer have found work with the Panama City Engineering Department. D i r e c t o r of Public Works Charles Peterson said he has hired at least 15 students, a few of them still in high school, to help with laying of sewer lines at Edgewood sub-division. Peterson said the city started hiring summer students three or four years ago when the mosquito control needed help.

house 7:30 p.m.Acme Lodge 222 F & M Acme Temple 7:30 p.m.Jordan Shrine No. 13, York Rite Hall 7:30 p.m.Coast Guard Auxiliary, Courthouse Annex 7:30 p.m.Panama Art Association, Gallery 2, Auditorium 7:30 p.m.Millville Dad's Club, Bob George Park 7:30 p.m.U.S .Navy Reserve Officers School Room, 108, Gulf Coast Junior College WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m. Beach Optimist Club, Panama City Beach Restaurant 9:00 a.m. School Board Meet, School Administrative Building 12:15 p.m. Kiwanis Club, (Panama City), Seven Seas Restaurant 1:00 p.m. Duplicate Bridge Club, Garden Center 2:00 p.m. West Panama City Beach Commission, City Hall 7:30 p.m. Bay County Medical Assistants Association, Capt. Anderson's Restaurant 7:30 p.m. Circle 9 C.B. Club, Clubhouse 7:30 p.m. Order of Amaranth, Rush L. Darby Court No. 28, Acme Temple 8:00 p.m. Panama City Hair Dresser's Association, Gulf Coast Academy of Hair Design

Widow Leaves $6,000 For Dog


PROVIDENCE, R-I. (UPD A dog's life is sometimes worth $6,000- It was to Mrs. Doreen Messner. The Providence widow who died two weeks ago left her ,000 estate to veterinarian oseph Belinsky to provide for he lifetime care of her 18month old mongrel dog, accordng to her will filed Monday in 'robate Court.

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HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS RECENT HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES MEN WHO HAVE RECENTLY COMPLETED THEIR SERVICE COMMITMENT
(Ex-Servicemen approved by the Veterans Administration for benefits may receive them in addition to the regular compensation described below.) The Marine Engineers Beneficial Association and the Nations leading Steamship Companies are jointly sponsoring a two year Marine Engineering Cadet Program. QUALIFIED APPLICANTS for this program will receive $200.00 per month cash grant throughout the two year course. Free Room and Board at the School of Marine Engineering in Baltimore. The Course consists of one year at Baltimore and one year aboard ship as a Marine Engineer Cadet. Cadets who successfully complete the course are elegible for a Marine Engineers License issued by the U.S. Coast Guard. Marine Engineers aboard American Flag Ships receive $10,000 - $12,000 per year starting salary, 75-120 days paid vacation per year, ,20 year retirement, 50% retirement pay after 25 years service.

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Rural Housing Credit Aiding St. Lucie Area

deavored to develop the area to ** NEWS TRIBUNE, Fi .If highest *rxi best use pattern. Fierce, Fit., SOB,, Af. t, Wt . Where the PCD has been able :iOJ2 FBI i / to obtain isind in fee iitle, It will 4 34 Ed Sullivan lie opened to. public use. UnforT : 5 7 ;.Bili Cosby ' ' < turiately, the FCD was not able I: 4 34 'Cprnedy Tonight (o obtain complete ownership of 57 Bonanza all "the land, but instead only - ' - . 30 12.Movle - : received .water flowage etat: "Seconds" ; ments. . . . U:tt 4 34 Mission: Impoisib!* 5 7vBold Oat* ' Some of the lee title'land pur'.;chased was'bbtaiiiable only .with U: 5.7 News, V/etther, - restrictlori giving the previous .: Sports . - . " : ''- - .owner use. for various numbers -i '34 News /. ' ' . . - . ' . { of years, the FCD fell that It ' 4 News Weekend' was better, to have restrictions lor lip fo 10 or 15 years, than '.- ."Son'of-FUry" only have easements "in ! which ;12 Movie^ "'Medusa Against the Son of case the public could never, use the land. In these cases, whep ^s/- Hercules"-.; :. the restrictions are eased, the Hi^O 7 Johnny Carson - public will then-receive addition- l\:!l 4;Merv GMffifi'"',. al recreational, benefits. \ 5 Movie "The Houst s pf Fear". .: . 10 J2 N'mvs. 11:1510 Mq\'ie -\ 12:15 12 Holi>-\v'bod An'r\Tiie Stars. . -,-'' l.-IW 4 News en Espanol
MORNING PROGRAMS Monday-Friday

Families in rural areas ol St. Lucie County are borrowing Irom tlie Farmers Home Admini stration to build and Improve their homes, the Federal agency's County Supervisor, William A. Eldridge, reported today. . . . "These funds, advanced under the Farmers Home Administration rural housing program, provided belter and more comfortable homes Jor St. Lucie County families," Eldridge said. He quoted James V. Smith, Natioial Administrator of the Fanners Home Administration, as reporting that more than 61,500 rural families across the nation participated in tho lural SUNDAY housing program last year, borrowing a record S5S7.9 million. Jlore tian 250,000 persons are August 2, 1970 hving in better homes because of the progmm. Morning "We are attempting lo keep 5:M) 10 Across (he Fence housing credit flowing into ouri 7.M 4 Tliis is The Life Resmall towns despite the tight]. ^^'^ ENTRANCE ,. _ . .ST. _JOHNSJRIVER . At .^ TO THE . . . . < , ! . _ r,, T . I . . . prc- enterprise facilities. The FCD's Recreation nnd CpiVservalfoa-Deom-,1^ -ia,.o own fn,,, ,,..M.,. ligion money situation and the nation- sent there are few P ublic access points lo thc St. Johns River ... partment is planning approximately 20 recreational sites in the . 5 (Color) Farih Almanac al general housing const!ut-'io.i the Indian River and Drevard Counties area. Camp Holly, jocalUpper Valley. Earh .site will provfde a boa! ramp for entrance JO Learning Ladder slump," FHA County Supeivis- tcd on U.S. 192 near Melbourne, is'one of the favorite' private to the river. 12 Big Picture or Kidridge said. "At lire same 7:30 ( Faith For Today time, we are encouraging bui'.d5 (Color) Florida Agtlers and developers to step up! Business - Report their efforts to invest in rural; By RUSSELL KAY jmcnt. Would ftey bring m o r e ; 12 Big Picture America by increasing the volMost ot as used to lake our'.air and water pollution, destroy! 7 Underdog ume of rural home comple- environment /or granted. We ad-inatur.nl beauty and wildlife? tions." vertised for new industries, 7:45 5 Agriculture Report Eldridge noted that local i sought more residents and join- Xot only did we ask about pro8:00 4 ChMron Gospel Hour banks and lending institution.;! c( , Ulc chamber o! Commerce posed projects, we took another 7 Charlie Reads the participate in providing loani; n p0 irni ng with pride look at those already in progComics ress and lot funds which arc insured byj communi ,y. s glwjj, and dcvcl- rcss ard a a loof us 12 Revival Kires what "" saw. his agency. He added that na-!opment. '""' we "" t ; ona;iy more than 98 per cent TJ;en came over - population,! (Farf \1 ot n 1'arfs) nil thc way (o Jacksonville. This be- available through private en- 8:15 5 (Color) Flair For Living We qUes(ior,cd such projects' of individual fnmily rural hous32 Film slums and ghettos, pollution o!jas the C;-oss State Barse Canal i ' j The Upper SI. Johns River will enhance thc scenic river by tei-pri.se. Some private sites are 8:30 4 The First Kstate ing loan funds were provided '***. rive,, and ,U ams, sn,o making ii possible to make a now in existence. It is hoped O g (lle w^^ an f ce^ain^ ^nds I by private investors. mil n\r nnllnl nn sinisi fisti, i],. | . y cans', met ion. We asked isaiiii ,,, a 10 ,-,i, a boon round (rip by way of the Inlra. . 5 Oris Mays nu air poiiuuon, dead fieri ,.. Manas ^m reap that others will later be develop w 7 Flintstoncs important fringe bene- birds and animals, t,i^ n 1;., .lg ra d >vrrt: a,,,i ommolc higher liv. . .. . _ "om '<? IVOl J-lOllUa iegislawhat proposed Atomic Reactor livc Acl wl,ic|, pe,.mi,s lhc Cfm_ coastal Waterway and the St. cd. 12 Oral Roberts Eld ridge Johns River. "d i^lfr'^S SrS mbbiai, gaibagc an ^"-^T*longer | > - -,,,0,, Florid, Fiood ^ 5 The FCD plans nrs not a hard 9:00 4 34 Tom & Jerry chitS.snoi[a0e,, ^ , . H o w much - - nlr 0 l District lo expend ad Fishing (i enviromiloll Co drcn loan program is creating more sewage disposal problems, be enhanced and fast set o! rules. It is not continue to dredge ourj va lorcm lax (umis (o, r ,-ccrea- through the assurance of n bel- wedded lo the existing plans, 5 Christophers than 35.000 man-years of . suddenlv we t on a ihuilai ter water supply in the basin as but will update them according 10 Protestant Worship ploymen,t, contributing !well as the upland reservoirs. to new thinking developed in the Hour ly to tho income of rural peoFish breeding grounds will be future. '.2 Hex Humbard ple." unities grew and dove.oped^, ^Flo,^tSTH^ ' "" 7 Jambo ;iven all the protection possible ghl Fai-mers Home Administra- our faith in tl, "Bigger andjlike t , 15 v.nrs irom 7,cw?!P n tlle e ]0 0 (Florida ' histoiy" to permit re-l'brcc[Ji valley. Additional f i s h The FCD Is discussing its 9:15 5 Sacred Heart tion housing loans arc made Better" policy began to fade.' Would smog ard dill replace creation nnd conservation to hc! g grounds will tie mads plans with other stale agencies, 9:30 4 31 tColorl Batman only to applicants unaKc to ob-'ou5 (Color) Faith for Today as piirl of (lie ovcr- available by a better water sup- planning committees and other tain credit from other sources,ith concerned persons in an at7 (Color.) Horizons of , and who live in communities ol environment Jresh ... rlraB i roun<!s _, s - - - "recdasjail Upper St. Johns Project. ply. Desirable breeding areas, lempt lo come up with a unia Faith . "|" * 'roy or fcirncd fish-'Hence, conservation of fish and now subject (o often rcoccurring form statc 1an ll th on w 1 not more than 5,500 population, water, natur , ......' a 10 (Color) Jewish Worship , i 1 and bird -"" animal ..it, itvinuuv; ivtia !,I\L'[I V^OII5UIl.-l'tlUU]1 --a-., will be coveivd with lifeTJwilrilife was riven consideration droughts, .., *... *U.\,*.->A ...m; . . P Thp nffipf* ^prvin^T thic oivm ic ...\~ "* and ... W l d ttrr bD s d k as Flour - Religion Sated m tScie Ian Bui'd I v," T^ "?" and other " , (.r **** I***'** Corpslocated the Mcdellan Bwi.d-l Honda, California ^^t {tx)d afe to oat ^a=,.' fitln'toler.A.Allas'mserwtton otadd,Jon. - during the breeding seas-|nnd possibly compromise for the 10 :M 1 31 Lamp Unto My Feet ! nr nf of these aspects wot-to' on .i ,i,n tn ^nJl cat, air I. mg acress from the Courthouse! test growing ,-ii-eas began lo breathe? est overall use plans. 5 Day ot Discovery [man's enjoyment and rccrca-| ,, , , . lvl11 bc movp clcsir in Okeechobee. It is one ol 'worry about tomorrow. \vh e n 7 Still Small Voice - Plans developed by the FCD ,iion;il possibilities. 1,700 offices sen-ing the 3,003Jdevoiopmcnt projects provide outdoor rec10 Amazing Grace counties of rural America. I posed we began opportunitlos for ev12 Knnlastlc Voyage Phone: (813) 763-2252. [they might do : including small boat nnv- 10:30 12 Spldcrmnn i, fishing, some hunting, 5 Spotlight on Education owners until 1957. (ho agency Audubon Society, Floiida Feder- was years ahead in planning for in the ,irea because of thc moreSincluding water fowl in season; 7 Southern Baptist Hour abundant water. wild scenic areas and bird walation of Garden Clubs and oth- recreational purposes. 10 Mass For Shut-Ins ers, thc proposed development In early 1!BO the FCD was A preliminary recreational ching. 1 34 Look Up nnd Live of the Miami International Jet- instrumental in the formation of muster plan for the area was. In addition to supplying the, 11:00 10 Pan Americana poii on the edge of the Ever- the Upper St. Johns Rccreation- developed following a field trip answers lo the problems of 5 Church Service . Baptist glades was brought to a Iiall.al Dsvelopmenl Committee throughout Die valley by mem- flood control and water conser7 Church And Thc World ' bers of the Upper St. J o h n s vation, tile FCD has endeavored public officials Recreational Development ComToday If you would like to learn ].o which to answer (he pressing problems and 1'2 Bullwlnklc tins was accomplished I sug- frcm Orangcn Bveval'd,rn In' .IIUMI-L, the UiO.il. V. t;(|l I til fFlor-- of the conservation of natural ' .. J*-) mittee, iin,- East Central 1U[ SHOPSHOP Bring your Dry Cleaning to out Children gesl }-ou read hvo features in dim R.ver Counties,;rh,s com- i((a R [t)ml p , resources and the development IN and take it home with you when yoi/r 4 Camera Hirer the August issue of the Reader's mittee originated thc initial FCDJ 0(fi of the FCD, Florida of public recreational facilities. FORT PIESCE thru shoppinjl Digest under the heading of reci-eatonal plan for Hie area. Gil. It wanl.s to allow (he citizens of 11:3(1 4 Face Thc Nation This committee which was ap- Conimissiotl and 1012 Discovery Florida and thslr important No Extra Charge for! Hour Service "Toward a Livable Environ- pointed by the FCD Governing Board of Parks and th 7 Movie Historic Me- tourist guests to enjoy fishing, ment". Divided into two pavls, "The While Warrior" At REGULAR PRICES they are titled, "Victory jn tlte One provided tlm al. structures . hunting, sightseeing and boating cl oalj()!la| planni opportunities offered by the St. MU-rnoon Please lielp us serve you belter by always having your Everglades'' and "A Sensible delivery receipt ivilh you. Thank yon. . ' "T..V.al.ey pr:.ld M ! Plan tor Future Development".i v i galional boat locks, Thc scc,i-Uo- combined into the Dlvte- Johns Valley. Sport /ishing, both :tW 4 Mister Kd jion of liecrsation and Parks). will help a"quainl 5 Insight lellals bo with why it is imperative we, 4 Movie 20 recreational sites at Upper St. Johns River are une-l Monday Tuesday Wednesday pr vide act now to safeguard our pnvir-j " b "Hmv Groeii Was My various points throughout the quailed m th,. State of Florida.! AUGUST 3^ 5 lu.on led o, basin. All sites are designed toj Unfortunately, "ck onment. Development is neces-l Valley" sary but it must be controlled.!"1' i > U 12 Face to Fnce . . , *> (o various areas of access lo thc Upper awaitmg, thc b^-m a|1[! wj|1 va|.y accord. is ; mos( casps oxlremcly j We do need jetports, power' 10 Job Line MEN'S and LADIES' SUITS il approval, 1 :M plants^ r,e\v industries and more ,, ing 10 location. Sonio will bejcrudc and rather frightening to 011 1CSS has been slower' 12 Film housing, but I*- la nut necessary- t l R rn i r ^recreationalI cenler.c tcomplete; Hie inexperienced, or less hardy! """'"ii, "M". it is not l;i.i;n;ill V U ,._--, UI.MJ.H -,\. J L I U I ,-s, viuiiitu ALSO PLAIN DRESSES nd;1 Lc 10 News Icde.troy lo O hlain them. | ha " "1 f)"n,r c 8is'ilture '"Iwilh campgrounds and bath- souls. With the advent of better! lanmovm,. n wcll aq o[ller highways nnd Ihimigh an intel-. 4 Movie There i, a Pl^ for every-'puWic "hn* foT^^aljS ' S ' " , Somo llgent planning process, caferi "Mississippi" thing. Ine tuck is to tmd il-|puiposcs. However, ii is expert-1,.,.,... 'm ' ' (SAVE 91 c) 5 7 Meet Iho Press as cn> and teller public access can be! Before any hig development isjcd thn hill will ultimalely u o l t r , " ' , 10 Newsmaker '70 created. launched we should seek thcjapproved for construction ofi it .' SHIRTS , Al v II 12 Filrti-"t)..S. Navy" boat 'Jim FCD realizes that (he Upvighl place for it. where the .some type of boat lock, or ljo.it' ramps. BEAUTIFULLV LAUNDERED AND FINISHED per St. Johns Project should he 1:30 T) Jewish Dimension least damage lo our livable lift, in conjunction \vil!i all val- Tlie FCD will cooperate with a multi-purpose program offer7 Movie "The Duel at vironment will result. ley structures. Silver Creek" ,;, ..... , various county governments in ing flood control, conservation With II,,.. atalily to pass small ,,lp developiment of some sites, of natural resources, good fish10 12 Issues nnd Answers (SAVE 31c) 50 or li gh t h o val Tllislrv,.,.,! Vo.wl ^1 I"*' , '' "" ' ' However, It is 'expected (hat ad' ing and hunting, camping, sight- 2:00 10 Electric Eye bJlStCfCCi VaiUlaJ lW slniUr.. it mil be posrf- dlUonal sitos win ,1C (lKc] eloped seeing and bird watching, as d 12 Movie "The Climbble for small pleasure crafi to by Ihn counties or other povem-jwcll as thc much needed coners" & "Thc Vanquished" .fACKSO.YWI.LE RF,ACH. Fla.icnler thc Upper St. Johns Riv- mental agencies. Some .-sites willWvatlon of wnlcr. It has enBLANKETS (1)flul)le or Si)1Rlcl 4 !.<is'. In Spnco (API Police arc hunting ajcr from ihc Inlracoasial Water-, DRVCLEANED, MOTH PROOFED, .5 Roller Games vanrinl whri mav have hlislersiway Ihrougii tho Sohastlan Riv-i PACKAGED IN PLASTIC BAG .1! Movlr "Son of Fury" on his hands. Thc charge: dig-W Canal 51 jus,, north of Blue ,1:00 5 Upbrat ging a four-incti wide ditch in thejCj-press Lake. From there the 3:00 4 Amateur Hour asphalt across Eighth Street. |bo:itcr can navigate tho river 10 Film - "The Kilcrs" (SAVE 46c) ACROSS 7 Movie "Katie Did it" 3:SO 4 NFL Action 'i. Forelcol 31. Inquire 3-i AAU Track Meet 7. Fingerprint 32,Cctbof NEW STORE HOURS 5 Jack Pnnii!.-"dsnicr bascbill For Your Convanienci We Ara Now Of>on ]2.Bfore 4:(I01 Password 33.Mminis!er !3.Hoise!e!d 34. Funtli:n 5 Movie K.Hcwl 35. Drain passags "Knights nf Terror" 16,Pkorn'jstrse 36. Copycat A.M. to U P.M. 4:80 7 Movie "Francis" 17,Ccsmiccy:les 39.learwd 4 Movie MONDAY fhtu SATURDAY 18. Risen '42. Monk parrot SOtUTION OF YfSlERDAY'5 PUZZLE "The Big Circus" 19.Jewel 43. Melcdy DOWN .14 NFL Action 5. Wiles Jl.Shilsr ANU DON'T FORGET . . . 6. Small' 23. Hallway deck "The Seven Little Foys" WE PBE-SPOT AND MOTHrilflOf BVF.RV GAIIMPVT l.Ratilebird THAT WE D l t V Cl.RAN "n->lt.M /.Stralagtm 25. SesiCsnl 45. M3ssc(:ce 12 Hero Comes The Rrldcs 2.Frtrichdar.te ODORLESS DRY C L E A N I N G 8. Once around 16. Avail 3,0.)klrte B:l)0 10 12 Golf Tournament 28.' "' 9. Jspanase sonj '..'t?. fxpiOSIVS FRSSH AS A FLOWER IM JUST ONE HOUR 4.Goober 31 Western Star Theater 10. Caved Idler 4:30 5 Lou And Thc I,n\v Featuring MARITNIZ!5. Urtconlfred ING as advertised In 34 Amrileur Hour' 18.You and me l/onk, t.tlr nnd Esquire 19. Benjamin's Magazines. Evcntntc first bom 20. :00 34 News 21.E>psrt 10 News 22.Enor 7 Florida Forum 23. Favorili 5 Call Tho Doctor 24. Gainsay "Ncuro-SurRory" 26. Creeper 27. Man B:HO 4 News Weekend 30. Temperament 5 Frank MeCoe Report 32. For 10 J2 Nmv.s 34. Rum 34 Insight 35. Sweet (lag 36,V/hileVjslr.un! 7:M 5 Film 4 .14 Lassie 37, Parson bird 12 10 Land of (he Giants 38. Miscalculals 7 F Troop 7:il57 World of Money Behind the Old Post Office 31 To Rome With

August 3, ltt . 5:35 10 Understanding Our World 6:05 10 Who Will Watch The Watchers? :15 4 Summer Semester 6:3510 At Home 7 Sunshine Almanac 6:45 4 News En Espanol 12 News 6:50 10 News 7 Community Report 6:55 12 Paul Harvey 7:00 4 Popeye Playhouse Children
5 7 Today

Too Late To Classify.

Recreational Development Of Upper St. Johns River Basin Covered By New Bill

10 News 12 Sunshine Almanac 34 News 7:15 12 Cartoons 7:30 34 The Best of Hollywood 8:00 4 Captain Kangaroo 10 Learning Ladder 12 Kimba S:SO 12 Lassie 9:00 4 David Fi-ost 5 Fashions In Sewing 7 Virginia Graham 10 Lucille Ball 12 Romper Room 31 Captain Kangaroo 8:10 5 Theatre 5 5:30 10 Beverly Hillbillies 32 Jack La Lanne 10:00 5 7 Dinah Shore 10 For Women Today v II Lucille Ball 12 Divorce Court HI: 3D 4 Galloping Gourmet-. Cooking ; 5 7 (Colo*) Concentration 12 Jungle Jim ; 34 Beverly Hillbillie* 10 Movie ; "A Woman's Vengeance" 11:00 4 34 Andy Griffith " Comedy 5 7 Sale of the Century12 Bewitched 11:31)4 34 Love of Lit* : 5 7 Hollywood Squares 12 That Girl Afternoon l~>:0 4 (Color) News, Weather Sports 5 7 (Color Jeopardy J2 Best of Everything 34 Where tile Heart Is 2:23 34 (Color) News Edwards Doug

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Press Freedoms Battle Started


SAN ANTONIO. Tex. (AP) Contending that democracy it self is involved, a New York news executive announced a nationwide campaign aimed at blunting attacl<s on press freedoms. Using tiie Associated Press Broadcasters convention as a forum, Artliur R. Taylor, presi dent of Columbia Broadcast System Inc., appealed for sup port from journalists and nonjournalists alike. "There are many here today who may feel that this new wave of official censorship is a problem affecting journalists alone," he said, "that it does not concern the lawyer or the businessman or the government official or any other citizen. "But it is too often forgotten that freedom of the press is basic to the rights of all citi zens; that without the lines of communication provided by the free press to the body politic, the other b a s i c rights of indi viduals b e c o m e lifeless extremeties."

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED WINN-DIXIE STORIS, INC. COPrRIGHT1975

The fund is to be adminis tered by the Reporters Commit tee for Freedom of the Press, a volunteer organization of working reporters founded in 1970. Taylor will be chairman. The committee operates as a national clearinghouse for in formation and legal aid for re porters whose rights are threat ened, defending them in court cases and against abuses of press freedoms. "The broad basis of support that we have sought is both in tentional and important for it emphasizes that this struggle is not one of journalists alone," he said. Lawyers, he said, must real ize that the legal and journal istic professions "have a com mon interest in opposing the abuses that threaten to pervert the legal system to tyrannical and expedient ends." Business leaders, too, he said, must realize that freedom of the press is vital to their concerns, that a business enterprise can not flourish in a sick society. "Public officials at all levels also must realize that this is not a partisan effort, and that it is directed against no branch of government. ". . . the conscientious public servant knows that, in the long run, secrecy in government leads to ineptitude, to arrogan ce and to corruption the very evils that he or she is commit ted to combat." No one is seeking special privileges for reporters, he said, "but as memijers of the institution of the press, they are serving the interests of society by fulfilling its constitutionally assigned roles a s the public's ombudsman, as the unofficial fourth branch of government."

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HEALING MASKS-Behind the pressure masks they must wear constantly, Cindy and Randy Woodard have begun to mend from the fire injuries that nearly took their lives in Wichita, Kan. The masks, proven to pervent facial scarring, can come off in 6-12 months, but the children will require various treatments for the next 16 years. Carol Woodard, their mother, says it's a miracle they're alive. (AP Wirephoto)

GRADE A' WHOLE

Senate Awards Cash Settlements


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) The Senate awarded $957,795 to a West Palm Beach construc tion company that was sued by the Department of Transportation. On a 30-5 vote, the Senate sent the claims bill (HB172) back to the House for agreement on an amendment ordering immediate payment to the firm by the state comptroller. The House had approved the bill on April 25. The bill awards the settle ment to Cleary Brothers Con struction Co. of West Palm Beach which contracted with the Transportation Department to build a bridge for Interstate 295 in Jacksonville. Backers of the bill said the pilings built by the firm to department specifications ex ploded because of a chemical reaction to St. Johns River pol lution. The department sued Cleary causing the firm $957,795 in le gal expenses and other costs resulting from loss of a bond on the job. The Senate also passed, 35-1, and sent to the governor anoth er claims bill (HB469) provid ing $50,000 to Connie Ueker and her daughter, Sabrina. Mrs. Baker is the widow of Trooper Claud Baker, who was slain in 1973 when he stopped a car oc cupied by Henry Payne, an es capee from a prison work-re lease program. A bill to compensate the troper's widow died on the Senate calendar in 1974.

Taylor announced the launch ing of a major, two-year effort to raise $2 million to establish an endowment fund for legal defense of journalists' first amendment freedoms. "This First Amendment Re search and the Defense Fund will be available to all journal ists, regardless of whom they work for, whether they are broadcast n e w s or print, regar dless of their ideological outlook, " h e said.

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Stock Market Regains Footing


NEW YORK (AP) The stock market floundered for most of the past week, but re gained its footing Friday^in a sharp rally that left it with a modest net g a i n . The comeback on the final trading day of May also kept intact the market's string of gains every month since the start of 1975. The Dow J o n e s average of 30 industrials, with a 17.29 jump Friday, e m e r g e d with an ad vance of .39 for the week and 10.95 for the month. According to data from the Hirsch Organization's "Stock Trader's A l m a n a c , " it was only the second M a y since 1964 in which the D o w had gained ground . The other came on a 6.55 rise in 1972. Standard & Poor's 500-stock index showed a weekly gain of .57 at 91.15, and the New York Stock E x c h a n g e composite in dex was up .41 at 48.46. Big Board volume in the holi day-shortened week came to 80.14 million shares, compared with 89.30 million over the five trading d a y s of tlie previous week. The total w a s enough to push the month's volume on the ex change to a record 457.51 mil lion shares, about 4 million more than t h e previous high reached in March. The market's hesitancy from Tuesday through Thursday was attributed to continued profit taking and s o m e possible con cern that a n e w $l-a-barrel in crease in oil imjJort tariffs an nounced by President Ford might aggravate inflation. The sudden change in atmos phere on F r i d a y was attributed to several developments. A principal one was the gov ernment's ref)ort that its newly revamped index of leading eco nomic indicators which is de signed to detect developing eco nomic trends posted a record gain in April. There followed on Friday a report from the Ford adminis tration that it expected the re cession to h a v e some sharper effects than earlier projected but also that it foresaw a more marked economic recovery next year than it previously had been looking for. Analysts pointed as well to the temporary easing of New York City's c a s h squeeze with a $200 million advance from the state. The general belief was that the new had had the effect of lifting a weight off of the market that had been helping to hold it back for several days. The overall NYSE tally showed 1,014 advances and 693 declines a m o n g the 1,988 issues traded. There w e r e 276 new highs for the year, against only 19 new lows. While m o s t analysts said Ford's energy plans, which also include an e n d to price controls on domestic crude oil, had a generally dampening effect on the market a s a whole, they seemed to g i v e oil issues a strong lift. Among the actively traded is sues in the group, Texaco gained 1% to 25%; Gulf was up 13/g at 20%; Standard Oil of Cal ifornia rose 2y2 to 293/4, and At lantic Richfield jumped 63/4 to 97.

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Panama City, Fla., Saturday Morning, September 13, 1969

MOON CREW ARRIVES Several Panama City and Tyndall dignitaries were on hand to greet Apollo 12 crewmembers Pete Conrad, Alan Bean and backup man Dick Gordon, previous to Friday nights AFA activities at Tyndall Air Force Base. From left to right are: Gordon; Brig. Gen. James

L. Price, weapons center commander at Tyndall; Gerry Griffin, Apollo 12 prime flight commander who arrived Thursday; Bean; Conrad; Panama City Mayor J. W. Silcox: and Col. Olin Wilson (Ret.), local chaof-- president of the AFA. (staff Pnoto

Philippine Airline
HONOLULU (UPI) Hawaiian military police raided three Honolulu churches today and arrested 12 AWOL servicemen who had taken sanctuary in them six weeks ago. The raids took place shortly after dawn at Church of the Cross Roads where eight uere picked up. at the Unitarian Church where three were pulled in, and at the Quaker Meeting House where a lone Navy man was staying. About 20 AWOL servicemen had been in sanctuary at the churches since early gust. ROME (AP) Italy is trying to establish Diplomatic relations with Communist China, Foreign Minister Aldo Moro said Friday, but -s no intrntion of pulling out of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Moro made the remarks to Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee in his first foreign affairs statement since the Christian Democrat minority government took office Aug. 6. He confirmed that the new government was continuing the policy of seeking recogni'on of Peking, a direction charted by former Foreign Minister Pietro Nenni, a Socialist. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) Secretary-General U Thant called Friday for sustained and concentrated efforts of the four big powers to reverse the deteriorating situation in the Middle East. Thant expressed hope that the foreign ministers of the four powers will get together during the 24th General Assmbly session which opens in New York next Tuesday and try to speed a solution. MOSCOW (UPI) Premier Alexei N. Kosygin briefed the politburo Friday on his secret talks with Chinese Premier Chou EnLai, informed sources said. The 65-year-old Kosygin met with other Politburo members at his villa outside Moscow where he retired after his return from the talks Thursday in Peking, the sources said. S-niet President Nikolai V. Podgorny returned from an official visit to Bulgaria during the day and presumably joined the discussions. No details of the Peking talks, officiallydescribed as "mutually useful," were disclosed outside the top Kremlin leadership.
MANILA CAP) A Philippine Air Lanes jet on a domestic flight struck a tree on an approach to Manila International Airport Friday night and crashed, killing all but two of the 4T persons aboard. An airline spokesman said the weather was fair with visibility up To eight miles and it was not known what caused the accident. The plane crashed near Antipolo, about 20 miles east of Manila, on a flight from Mactan in the central Philippines. The spokesman quoted Jesus Asuncion, who lives in Antipole, as saying he saw the jet flying at a low altitude Then it struck the tree. The Manila Times said the ]et may have had a faulty altimeter." It reported the Diane passed over the Manila airport tower for its approach run by way of Antipolo and the tape recording of the conversation between the tower and pilot showed there was nothing wrong aboard. Five minutes after the jet passed the airport, the tower lost contact The airline spokesman identified the survivors as Paul Brazil, a flight steward, and Santos de los Santos, a passenger. He said the plane carried a crew of five and 42 passengers. The crash was the worst in the Philippines this year.

America's Apollo 12 will barrel down the well-traveled avenues of infinite space Nov. 14 with instructions to go two steps further than historic Apollo 11 on its July moon landing, Prime Flight Director Gerry Griffin told a capacity banquet crowd Friday night at the Tyndall Air Force Base officer's club. "Apollo 12 will carry out two maneuvers on the moon whereas Apollo 11 carried out one; and, will aim for a bullseye landing whereas Apollo ll's mission was to set down in a general vicinity," Griffin said. Listening to him were Al Bean, lunar module pilot and Pete Conrad, Apollo 12 commander, the two who will take America onto the lunar surface for the second time in four months.
The occasion was a meeting of the Air Force Association, which will remember for a long time to come having men destined for the world's history books as its principal program. Also, state, county and city dignitaries were in the huge audience, along with Brig. Gen, James Price, commander of the Air Defense Weapons Center and Maj. Frank Woods, a 90year-old gentleman, who stood at Kitty Hawk the day the Wright Brothers made their own brand of history. "We intend to put the lunar module down close enough to Ranger 3 (one of America's unmanned soft-landings) for the astronauts to inspect it," Griffin said. The landing will take place in the Sea of Storms, south of the moon's equator. Prior to Griffin's 15-minuto talk, a 30-minute color film was run depicting every segment of Apollo 11. Though the photographs were magnificent, Griffin pointed out that Apollo 12 should be even better. "If all goes well, we will show (Turn to APOLLO, page 3)

Scott, Baker Seek Senate Leader Post


WASHINGTON (UPI) - Veteran Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania and youthful Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., of Tennessee entered the sweepstakes Friday for the post of Senate Republican leader. Scott offered himself as a "status quo" candidate to avert a damaging ultra-party fight. Baker pictured himself as a younger Republican without ideological labels. Scott, 65-year-old action GOP leader and former national Republican chairman, and Baker, 43-year-old son-in-law of the late Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen, formally announced their candidacies for the coveted post. Sen. Roman Hruska of Nebraska, rated the most likely contender from the conservative wing, was reported still canvassing to find out whether he has the votes to win. Some sources said Hruska had decided to run. Sen. Gordon AUott's office said the Colorado senator would announce his decision Monday. There was speculation that Sens. Robert Griffin of Michigan, James B. Pearson of Kansas and John G. Tower of Texas might be active contenders.

SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)Moon rock samples brought to earth by the Apollo 11 astronauts were given to six scientists from the United States and England Friday, the first time the priceless samples have left the Manned Space Center. The scientists were required to come to the center to pick up their sample. They promised to keep it in their possession until tliej returned to their laboratories. The samples must be returned to the Space Center after the experiments. Dr. George Reed, a geochemist at the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago, said armed guards would meet him at O'Hare field to accompany him to the laboratory where the sample would be deposited in a safe. Dr. E L Fireman, an astrophysicist with the Smithsonian Institute in Cambridge, Mass., changed his travel plans for the safety of his samples.

GLAD IT HIT THERE Panama City Police Detective J.D. (Shorty) Nolin points to a bullet mark on his car which he used in a frantic, high-speed car chase marked by mutual exchange of gunfire following a shooting Thursday night. The bullet that caused this damage ricocheted into the windshield causing a near miss for Nolin.

Authorities Press Search For Escapee


A 23-year-old Fort Walton Beach man, a prospect for parole from his five-year term, escaped from a State Division of Corrections road gang in the vicinity of Transmitter Road shortly after noon Friday. An extensive search was still under way Friday night. Officials of Prison 35 identified the man as James Anderson, convicted two and a half years ago for fondling a child. He was described as white, 59, medium build with dark hair and brown eyes. "He is not a violent type," a spokesman said.

A 23-J ear-old L > n n Ha\ en welder is in Bay County Jail today charged with the Thursday night gangland-style slaying

Classified Comics Coming Events Deaths Editorial Society Sports Stocks

.U/-..5 10 2 2 4 5 8-10 11

By LARRY HARRIS

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) An Internal Improvement Fund staff member said Friday the Jacksonville Port Authority is converting the St. Johns River into "an industrial cesspool" on a piecemeal basis and is reluctant to admit it because of adverse public reaction. "The St. Johns River is an open sewer in the Jacksonville area," Fred Vides told a group of aides to state Cabinet members reviewing agendas for Tuesday's Cabinet meeting. Vides said he has asked Port Authority representatives to present a long-range plan of what they intend to do to the river but was told the Authority's attorney "recommends that they go on a piecemeal basis." TAMPA (LT!) Four U.S. Army helicopters here were airlifted Friday from Fort Bragg, N. C., to Guatemala, the U.S. Strike Command reported. The helicopters will be used to assist in the flooded areas hit by hurricane Francelia.

WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon oidered the end Friday of a 36-hour suspension of B52 bombing raids in South Vietnam which the White House said was undertaken to test the Communists' intentions on the battlefield "At this time the other side is back to the pre-ceasefire period" of offensive activity, said White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler. Accordingly, he said, "we have resumed the B52 flights." Announcement of resumption of the raids was made while the President was reviewing the entire Vietnam situation during a three-hour, 40-mmute White House meeting with his highest military, diplomatic and intelligence advisers from Washington and Saigon. Future U.S. troops withdrawals from Vietnam doubtless figured in the discussions, but Ziegler said any decisions reached at the meeting would become apparent in the coming weeks. After first refusing to comment on reports of the bombing suspension as a strictly military matter, Ziegler summoned newsmen and sought to counter impressions in Paris and Saigon that the halt was diplomatic gesture of de-escalation aimed

at encouraging a brcakthiough in the Paris peace talks 'Our action was not in itself intended to be a signal to the other side," Ziegler said. "We wanted to determine the intent of the other side as to the level of activity and give them the benefit of the doubt," he said. "We wanted to determine whether Hanoi had already made a decision and determine

wnether it had political significance beyond the dcain of North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minn " Ziegler added The press secretary said the United States had wanted to halt B5? flights for a few days after the Communists' 72-hour ceasefire in respect for Ho's memory, but when they icsumed limited attacks the raids were continued at half tnc normal level for 12 hours.

Staff Writer "In all the years I've been in this, I've never seen anybody shot down like that I've seen somebody argue, or fight and then shoot, but nothing like this " Lt. J. D. (Shorty) Nolin, recounting the preceding 24 hours, sat in the police station Fridaydescribing some of the events, which included a shooting-death at the intersection of Harrison Avenue and 15th Street and an ensuing high-speed, gun-firing car chase "I iust glanced over at the car and saw the two motorcycles pull up. . saw them poke something out the window of the car and then saw the gun blaze," Nolm went on The shooting Nolm described resulted in the death of Sgt. William E. Ward, 22, of 2906% E fath Court and has since resulted in the jailing of Lynn Ha\en welder Dean Evan Haricll, T>, following his arraignment Fuday afternoon foi f u s t degree murder charges "I saw the shots fired, saw

the boy on the motorcycle slump against the car, which drove off, letting the body slide down the automobile and then to 1hc ground behind it," Nolm continued. "My first reaction to the shots was to see whether he shot to scare him or at him. When he slumped and fell over, I knew." Xohn then sped down Airport Road after the car trying to get close enough to read the license plates. "I don't even know how fast we were going. I didn't have time to look," Nolm added (Turn to LOT, pa see Z}

of an Air Force sergeant. Dean Evan Harrell was arraigned Friday afternoon before County Judge Joseph Mathis and bound over to the next term of circuit court when he'll answer charges that he gunned down Sgt William E- Ward, a 22-\ca -old airman attached to Ihe 4756th transportation squadion at Tyndall Air Force Base. Ward was shot from his motorcycle in the time it took the Harrison Avenue-15th Street traffic light to turn from red to green. He was hit twice by .30 calibre slugs once in the head, the second time in the side. The second shot, according to an autopsy report, pierced his left arm en route 1o ms side. He was hilled instantly Investigating officers said a .38 calibre pistol was found close to the body. Harrell was apprehended by Panama City Police Lt. J. D. (Shorty) Nolm, who happened on the incident just as it occured. Nolm said he pursued Harrell, who was riding in an auto(Turn to SLAYING, pa^e 2)

SAIGON (UPI) American B52 bombers resumed raids o\er South Vietnam Friday night, poundmg targets in two sections ot the country after a 36-hur suspension of the ^aids failed to inspire any scaling down of the v\ai by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops. Military spokesmen said the eight - engine Sti atofortresses flew one mission late Friday and two more Saturday morning, dropping at least 270 tons of bombs on suspected Communist positions in Long Khanh

Frounce, about 28 miles northeast of Saigon, and near Phu Cat. 285 miles northeast of the capital The raids had been suspended earlier in the week during the 72-hour Viet Cong cease-fire in memory of the late President Ho Chi Mmh of North Vietnam. Four raids were flown before dawn Thursday prior to the 36hour suspension of the raids. Military spokesmen s a i d Communist troops shelled 16 targets in South Vietnam with rockets or mortar rounds Friday night and early Saturday. Communiques showed,

however, that giound fighting subsided Frida> Only four of Ihe overnight shellings caused casualties or damage, spokesmen said. JThe targets included the U S Marine base at Quang Tri, 85 miles northwest ot Da Nang, where there were light casualties reported In the onh clash involving American forces reported Friday, iiehcoptci gunships filing rockets and machine guns killed eight Communist soldiers near Trang Bang about 2S miles northwest of Saigon. Spokesmen said there were no American casualties.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) An escaped prisoner chased down by police less than 24 hours earlier, was indicted Friday for fiist-degrcc muider in conncrtion with f u e sla>mgs hei e in less than a month. ITe is charged with killing all five victims in the perpetration of robberies. George Howard Putt 23. was appichended shirtless and, police said, with bloody hands Thursda\ after witnesses said a man matching his description fled from the apartment wrier:; Christine Pickcns was loand dead, stabbed several times in the chest. "I was getting ready to go to work," said Emma Gross f nurse, who lives in the apartmort house. "It was 1:05. I was fixing a sandwich and I heard my neighbor scrPam. She sci earned: 'Murder' Murder Xo. don't 1 Don't kill me 1 Don't do it.' 1 went running down the stairs to catch him. He was at Christine's door. He showed me the knife, i was afraid."

\ st then. Walter K Armstrong happened into the hall. He saw Mrs Pickens' door had been broken open, raced back into his own apartment, grabbed a pistol and started firms? The shots fngntened the assailant away, aroused the neighboihoodand the police. Police, massed on a roundthe-clock basis to find the killer 01 killers of the first four vic(Turn to MURDER, paaje 2) "5!rS!~" T l k A f f * Panama City (CDT) I-i'^h T2:nO a.m.. low 7:46 a.m. Port St. Joe (EOT) H-;h MS a.m., low 8:39 a.m. Apalachicola (EDT) Mi^h 5:12 a.m., and 5:51 p.1)?. IA>\\ J2:14 a.m., and 12:14 p m. RIVER, READINGS -Jim Woodruff . 14-4 Plonntstown 5.0

nDE TIMES

NEWS-HERALD, Panama City, Fla., Tuesday, May 30, 1972

Page I B

Dirty Tire

Movies Marky

SMe*Ared#Locd

TALLAHASSEE (UPI) Ray Marky has seen enough dirty movies and read enough dir ty books to last a life-time. "Personally I prefer war movies," Marky said. But as the state attorney general's office resident expert on pornography, he is con stantly being called on for an opinion of wheth er this or that movie or this or that book should be banned. Recently, he sat through a showing of the movie "Tittilating Tex." at the French quar ter Petite Cinema in Tallahassee at the request of vice Squad Capt. Burl Peacock. He advised Peacock he felt he had grounds to take the film projectionist to court and that was that. Marky went back to the office and Peacock made the arrest. "My friends have been giving me a fit about going to all these dirty movies," he said. He got into the field by accident, when he marina in Panama City. The "ecology ECOLOGY DIVE Members of the was called on to defend a state judge against a dive" Sunday cleaned the Bay floor of Birmingham SCUBA Association sur federal court mandamus action in a suit in hundreds of pounds of discarded equip vey some of the litter they retrieved volving pornography, ment, metal parts, pipes and cans. from under water around the downtown "Once a guy has handled one of these Cases, he tends to get them all," he said, and "now I am supposed to know more about por nography than anyone else." Constantly, he gets called by police and sheriff's deputies who want advice on whether to take a book dealer or a movie theater man ager to court. "It's a very undesirable aspect of my work," Marky said. "Personally, I've seen more dirty books and movies than a person of society," Askew added. WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, R e g i o n a l Education Board needs in a life-time." T h e m e e t i n g continues ( S R E B ) here, specifically W. VA. (UPI) Southern He said he has a "happy sex life" at educational leaders were told n a m e d adult education and a through today with Gov. Linhome, and never goes to dirty movies except Monday that despite the turbu l a c k of meeting manpower wood Holton of Virginia leading a discussion of "ways to make lence of the 1960s, progress was needs as short-comings. as part of his job. made at southern colleges and "We cannot feel satisfied with the desired changes in higher "Personally, I think a woman with a universities. education." our progress in either area," he sheet draped over her is more attractive than "While no one couid have fore-* said. a woman in the raw," he said. seen it at the time, the years of Also addressing the meeting Today, it is hard to distinguish what is the 60s were not stable at all, w a s Florida Gov. Reubin Ask but full of turbulence," said ew. legally pornography and what is not, he said. Duke University President and Pointing to the progress that "It depends on how explicit the sex is, former North Carolina Gov. Ter has been made. Askew said: whether it's blatant. If it's just nude women ry Sanford. "New universities have been "In spite of that turbulence, built, junior colleges have multi running around; it is not obscene. If group sex BRONSON (UPI) A 25orgies are involved, it probably is because progress was made," he said. plied and expanded across much year-old Wisconsin m a n pleaded "However in some areas we fell of our southern landscape, col i n n o c e n t Monday to four that takes it out of the realm even of sex- obviously short of the goals we lege doors have opened to a charges again-t him stemming education." set for ousselves." much greater percentage of our Sanford, addressing the an young people, graduate and pro from an April 17 escape from If there's no dialogue or plot, that is a the Levy County Jail. factor, he added, noting that there often is a nual meeting of the Southern fessional programs have in David Conrad Ritchie of Mercreasingly attracted students "ruse plot" as it's called in the trade a riol, Wis. pleaded innocent be from all parts of this nation and Aging Council story that is a facade to legitimize pornogra fore Circuit Judge John Crews from many other nations as to charges of escape, assault phy." well." with intent to murder, grand Holds Classes Askew, however, also pointed Marky said he'd just as soon share some larceny and possession of fire out some deficiencies. of the work-load. arms. The Bay County Council on "We must now ask ourselves Crews set. tho trial date for "I told the general (Attorney General Aging is sponsoring classes in h a v e our universities and col June 19. ceramics and leatherwdrk from leges kept pace in recent years Robert Shevin) 'I'd like him to spread it On April .17 Levy County depu 10 a.m. to noon every Wednes with out society as a whole?" around a little." ties apprehended Ritchie after a day.

Ship Sinking A t Dockside

College Progress In

Bay County Projects L e t


Two Bay County road construction proj ects are among the 38 contracts let this month by the Florida Department of Transportation, at a total cost of $25,931,370. This includes .951 mile of roadside beautification on U. S. 98 and a fishing walk along Bailey Bridge over North Bay, Lynn Haven. The beautification project, under an $18,588 contract let to J. W. Conner & Sons, Inc., Tampa, extends from SR 30-A easterly to the Hathaway Bridge on 98. Soule Construction Co., Pensacola, was the low bidder on the Bailey Bridge fishing walk, which will be of treated timber and steel. The construction bid is $57,630. Included in the projects let was the final segment of Interstate 10 between Tallahassee and Jacksonville. Located in Jefferson County, the 4.9 mile project received the apparent low bid of $4,211,560 from Anderson Contracting Co., Old Town. A news release from the office of DOT Secretary Edward A. Mueller relates that the bids let during an eleven month period ex ceeds the 1970-1971 total contracts let by $20 million.

Franklin Law Agencies Receive Federal Grant


APALACHICOLA A federal grant of $79,847 to municipal and Franklin County law enforcement agencies has been confirmed by Franklin County Sheriff Jack Taylor. The funds will be alloted as follows: sher iff's office, $62,576; Apalachicola Police De partment, $9,011 and Carrabelle Police De partment, $8,260. Taylor said the money will be used to sup plement existing communication facilities into a completely modern Telecom system. The new system will tie into all mobile and headquarter radio phones for instant con tact with all law enforcement agencies, in cluding the Florida Highway Patrol.

from its precarious position. JACKSONVILLE (UPI) ping channel halted their en-< The Oriental Warrior was far Firemen splashed w a t e r and gines and drifted past to avoid enough from t h e channel that it foam on the 537-foot freighter stirring up a wake that might was not expected to affect ship Oriental Warrior here Monday wash out sand and silt under the ping at the b.usy port. trying to contain a blaze feeding hug" ship and cause it to slide on fuel oil as the ship sank slow ly a t dockside. The ship was leaning pre cariously at a 45-degree angle over the dock, its stern resting on the bottom of the St. Johns River in 36 feet of water and its bow sinking slowly. Eighty firemen poured on the w a t e r and foam, but F i r e Chief W. E . Smith said there was little hope they would be able to ex tinguish the blaze. "If we could get someone down in the hold to pour foam on that oil, we might have a chance, but I'm not going to en danger anyone's life by asking him to go down t h e r e , " Smith said. " W e ' r e going to let it burn out," he said. "But it could take s e v e r a l days." The Liberian-registered ship caught fire in the Atlantic off the Florida coast Thursday when a broken piston splashed diesel fuel over a hot engine manifold. All 80 crewmen and 20 passengers abandoned ship and were rescued. A salvage tug brought the Ori ental Warrior into port a t Blount Island here Saturday night. An attoney for the ship's liw suror said, "In terms of eco nomic value, the ship is appar ently gone." He said the 9,000ton freighter is insured for more than $1 million. There was fear that if the ship continued to leak and then slid out, it would break its rigging on the dock and splash 800 tons of diesel fuel into the river. SINKING The Liberian freighter Oriental Warrior, Robert Peace, managing di which caught fire at sea Thursday, sinks at its moor rector of the Jacksonville Port Authority, ordered oil spill clea ing in the St. Johns River at Jacksonville coming to nup equipment readied. rest on the bottom with the decks barely above water. Divers continued to try to Fires still burned in the ship's holds and divers were close sea valves and repair port attempting to find and patch the leaks before the ship holes to stop the ship from tak ing on water. capsized. (By UPI) Askew said colleges and uni 25-mile chase involving blood Vessels passing by in the ship Sgt. Tony Simmons, Panama versities are turning out too hounds a n i airplanes. Ritchie, City Police Department, will m a n y "would-be executives or serving a one year sentence for teach leathercraft, officials said. engineers and a deficit of Mrs. Grace Miller, volunteer ce should-be mechanics or plumb auto theft, had escaped with a 14-year-old girl prisoner after ramics instructor, is leaving on ers or health technicians." wounding a. deputy sheriff. vacations. A request has been "If these shortages are not The deputy who was shot dur made for persons who have had cured out capacity to function as ing the escape, Milton Simms, is ceramic experience and would a highly technological society still paralyzed from his wounds. like to help to contact the cen m a y be seriously eroded," he The girl prisoner, who was ter, 785-6367. warned. being held as n runaway, testi "This leads to the conclusion Officials said a few openings fied earlier this month that she exist in these classes. Interested t h a t one of our p r i m a r y goals of exposed het body to Ritchie persons m a y come by the coun the 70s must be to make our G r o u n d checkout operations from inside her jail cell to entice A special emergency kit has cil office, 850 Harrion Ave., or educational system more re CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)' would be speeded u p and th t x him to escape. been designed to convert the sponsible to the changing needs call 785-6467. The United States will be able to t r a seats installed. module rescue American astronauts in three-nian command space for the first time next into a five-seat rescue ship. The A f t e r the last crew is year with its Skylab Space Sta-i Apollo would carry only two launched, a fourth Apollo and men on a rescue flight, dock tion Project. with the skylab using a spare Saturn will b e prepared for launch, solely o n the possibility The Skylab rescue capability docking, port, pick up the three t h a t a rescue m i g h t be required. will exist two years before the space station crewmen and re U. S. and Russia carry out a turn to an ocean splashdown If everything g o e s well, it will be returned to s t o r a g e . joint rendezvous and docking with five men. mission to test equipment and Space agency officials esti The extra room in the com m a t e it would t a k e 45 days to techniques for Soviet-American mand module would come from rescue flights. r e a d y an Apollo for a rescue removing scientific lockers, tele-i launch after the preceding one Skylab is an ambitious pro vision equipment and other gear takes off. This is considered fast g r a m designed to keep three mounted on the aft bulkhead of men in Earth orbit for up to the command module cabin. Two enough because the Skylab will be equipped w i t h enough sup eight weeks at a time. The extra couches would be mounted plies to support a l three crews space station is scheduled to be beneath the three regular com for a total of five months in launched into Earth orbit April mand module seats. space with s e v e r a l weeks of re-< 30, 1973, and it will be occupied serve. If something happened to for a total of five months over Under the normal plan the the Skylab itself, t h e crew would an eight month period. three Skylab crews will be launched May 1, July 30 and return in the Apollo. Astronauts will fly to and from Skylab in an Apollo com Oct. 28, 1973 by Saturn IB rock If there were a problem with mand ship, leaving it docked to ets. The first crew will stay aloft the orbiting Apollo transport ship, the trouble would be t x the station while they live and for four weeks with the second pected to come n e a r the end of work in the roomy laboratory. and third staying up for eight weeks. the astronauts' s t a y in Skylab The Skylab itself will not be able and then the r e s c u e ship could to r e t u r n to Earth. As soon as one crew is be ready for l a u n c h in only a Because of the possibility launched, engineers will start few days. something might go wrong with preparing the next Apollo and the low bidder on the 4.9 mile project at the Apollo during such a long Saturn IB for flight. CLEARING THE WAY Initial work The fourtli Apollo will be pre period, project officials decided If an emergency developed in pared for flight o n Dec. 15,1973, $1.95 million. The state's earlier esti has begun toward the four-laning of to h a v e another Apollo ready to space, the plan is to use the next if necessary, although the last mated cost had been $1.7 million. State Road 77 to Lynn Haven. Florida go up and retrieve the stranded available Apollo-Saturn com crew is not scheduled to leave Asphalt Paving Co. of Panama City was Skylab crew. bination as a rescue ship. the Skylab until D e c . 23, 1973.

Education Leaders Recall

60s

Man Pleads Innocent

S p a c e Rescues Possible During Sky lab Mission

Forbes Island Finally Part Of Franklin


By GEORGE BAXLEY State Editor APALACHICOLA It's offi cial! After 137 years, Forbes Is land is in Frarklin County al though listed in Gulf County on most maps, including maps re leased from the Florida Depart ment of Transportation. Thus ends a long-standing con troversy between the two coun ties, although it has been gener ally accepted during the past few years that the 5,000-acre plus island was located in Franklin County. But a special bill passed in the last legislative session relating to the Franklin County bound aries specifically includes the historic island in the Franklin County boundaries. The uninhabited island is lo cated in between two large riv ers, Apalachicola and the Broth ers. All existing state maps place the island in Gulf County. Althougn named Forbes Is land, the tract is not a part of the 1.25 million acres obtained by the Forces Co., successor to the giant Indian trading firm of Paton, Leslie & Co., during the early 19th century through a series of treaties with the In dians. Known as the Forbes Pur chase, the treaties h a d the bless ing of Spain, which then owned the Floridas. However, when Spain ceded Florida to the United States in 1821, most residents believed the Forbes Purchase no longer was valid. After seven years of litigation t h e United States Supreme Court ruled in favor of the giant land-holding company and in-, directly created the town of St. Joseph. Through the litigation period, Apalachicola had developed into a major shipping port, handling cotton coming down the Apa lachicola Ptiver from inland Southern cities. And many residents found themselves squatters on Forbesowned land they had hoped the courts would decide w a s govern ment land available for settling. However, the Apalachicola Land Co., a subsidiary of the Forbes Co., was organized al most overnight following the court decision, and f i r m officials began using what newspapers of the d a y termed as "high-hand ed" methods against citizens the company considered squatters. E n r a g e d at being ousted from land they considered their own, the m a j o r segment of the Apa lachicola business community started looking around for a new settlement. They agreed on the present site of Port St. Joe, and mi grated to that area to settle a city in competition with Apa lachicola. Since that time Forbes Island has been somewhat of a noman's-land, separating the two counties created in 1925. The is land, not included in the Forbes Purchase land grant, was in doubtful ownership until the 1880s according to G. A. Dodd, Apalachicola, who has become somewhat of an authority on the island's history. Dodd says that at one time, the island contained the finest stand of timber in that a r e a , but timber grabbers took c a r e of this by the time the island own ership was established. Gulf County Circuit Court Clerk George Core said the is land ownership was disputed by individuals in both Gulf and Franklin counties for many, many years. In fact, Core said that at one time both counties carried the island on its tax rolls. However, a s years passed it became a gradually accepted fact that the island w a s in ,Franklin County, and taxes were paid to Franklin, although state maps still listed the island in Gulf County and the state statutes did not specifically in clude its boundaries in Franklin. Now owned by International P a p e r Co., Forbes Island was purchased by that firm from Stimrad Co., Mobile, Ala. Other early owners are not known. The amended Florida statute which now clearly defines the boundaries of Franklin County, and includes Forbes Island, is as follows: "Beginning at a point of the Apalachicola liver, known as the mouth of Black or Owl creek; thence northerly up the western bank of said creek to where the same intersects the middle section line of section twenty-six, township five south range eight west; thence due east on the middle section line to the eastern bank of the Ocklocknee river; thence south and easterly following the eastern bank of said river including the islands in said river; to a point directly north of the eastern most point of James island; thence easterly to the boundary line of the State of Florida; thence south and westerly along said boundary line including the waters of the Gulf of Mexico within the , jurisdiction of the State of Florida, to the Forbes line, produced southerly; thence following the Forbes line to the Jackson river; thence follow the Jackson river until it joins the Apalachicola river; thence northerly along the Apalachicola river to the mouth of the Broth

County
e r s river, thence follow the Brothers river until it intersects the stream known a s Brickyard cutoff; thence follow Brickyard cutoff to the Apalachicola river; t h e n c e northerly along the thread of said r i v e r to the place of beginning.

Cargo Plane Explodes


BRASILIA (UPI)An air cargo Constella tion aircraft exploded in mid-air Monday near the city of Cruzeirio Do Sul in western Acre state, aviation authorities here said. Officials said the plane had just taken off from Rio Branco, the state capital, when it blew up in the air. There was no immediate word on the num ber of crewmen or survivors.

ivers Isolate Controversial Island

GlRlElAlT
SUPIRMARKf '

U.S.D.A. CHORE

Pg 11 NEWS TRIBUNE, Fort Fierce, FU., Wed., Hcpi. u, 1. Hlp Wtnttd/Fwnfl*---

CUSS/F/ED
Advertising
1102 South 4th St. ;u. s. HWY. *)
Phen.4iV20M
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XPERIEKCED fma> 1" toss*. Me, V medicare formi; _?*". Ifiee: 41i days week. Writ* Ttlune Adv. E-1SZ.

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CAPABLE Person who ii wlHJ>< o, assume the combined rejposslUlttes of in Orderly, . Porter nd Ualr.'.Tnance Man Is needed. TM alary wlD depend upon lh spall' ants capability, experience, performance and desire to Improve. In- crested persons are asxtd to chd- !e a pre.employment Interview by ailing 562-3246. ' . VANTED: Experienced Mechanic.Apply in person Zanella rarmf, Stuart; 8 miles wed o[ Stuart 'oil--Route 76 on Route 7SA. Man to operate new BEAR Front 2nd Equipment. ALSO rebuild atarers and generators. New eo.ulp-. ment. 464-S342.

RATES ft INFORMATION
CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT' OPEN s .m, u > p.m. wctuaji 1 a.m- to 1 p.m. luuudayi For bct reiulu ua IOWMI coit, 41 t recommended th'lt ill k< tiUeed on tb IB dir biilf. ' (EfltcUvi J.B. L.1KI} It Lucie, lndn liner,' MUtta li oxcfetioDer Caaotlei 4e ,fe' U*e H ' Ik* mintnvm Consecutive Insertions Sliding fit* ecrctiei to m per lint 11 yi or

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a

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SUN. 8 AM-6 PM
RATH BLACK HAWK ., '

ami

m
_ ^_

iKLOW TIP ROAST U.S.D A. CHOICE

FERTILIZER Factory has jioslttoa, open for General Maintenance Man., or repair work on factory machinHen' JM cancel so an, TOT pi;ery & eeml trailers. Catt 481-2230 only (or thi actual number of dayt or appointment. ill it ran. t tnat diyt rt. DEADLINES) (or nen , cor- EXCELLENT opportunity for' t o p ' reeuoni or cancellations: earnings as full time membership rut id IT IBIU rrtdiy edition! sales representative for American 4:30 . m. Automobile Association (AAA) In Ft' iindfty f Muoaay edition fierce. Vero B e a c h , Stuart and, Saturday 11 'a.m. Dkeechobee areas. Complete trainA CoOTlermi A4-VUOI ing program including use of visual Kill Help Ion. aides. Commission and bonus basis.' Excellent fringe benefits. Call 4616972. , ' ' 6 TIMES 10 TIMES V>M WJNI NCH, 1818 Orange Avenue. Toft P i e r c e . Male for General Office Work including typing. Good future with growing company. Apply by let. ter to the NCR Company, P. O. Box 1183, West .Palm Beach, Fit. 33402. BUILDING Materials Sslesman Wanted. Only experienced need ap- > ply. Salary open. Many company oenefils. Apply In person East Coast

LINK SAUSAGE ,PKC 38$ SMOKEY MAPLE BJ.CON P" 68< QUIK FROZEN YOUNG SPRING BLADE LAMB SHOULDiR CHOPS... L 58*
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SIRLOIN STEAK
tESH PRODUCE
THOMPSON SEEDLESS ot RED TOKAY GRAPES
CHOICE UB

ANNOUNCEMENTS
1. Personal!

r The world Is like a book, ho who t-' Pierce. does not travel reads only one pase. 50 Call American Travel Asejicy 464- MOTOH GHADER Operator. lours'per weeJr, time 4 half far all 0311 to lurn the paje. over 40 'hours. Call 464.2364.

LAMB SHOULDER ROASWE.."48t ALL MEAT SLICED BOLOGNA ^ 58

6. Schools & instruction*


SPEEDWRITrNG, Shorthand taught In this area exclusive by East C<sast College. Write 100 WPM In 6 months attending just 2 nights per iveek Next class starts September Mid For free information, write 121 N. 2nd 6t. or phone 481-3585.

TRUCK Mechanic: Career, opportunity open for experienced mechanic. Excellent pay & company bandits. Apply in person at Ryder. Truck Rental, Inc., JSZO'So. Federal Highway.

FRESH JUICY

23
. .

LEMONS.... 6 FOR254
FRESH G R E E N

BELL PEPPERS "7f


ALL PURPOSE WHITE

EXPERIENCED . . . L.P. GAS SERVICEMAN . PITTS GAS CO.. 100 Ave. k NOW At HARHIS MUSIC CO., (Seals lown) Prolesstonal ORGAN and PI- DELIVERY Service Driver SalesANO Instruction; % or 1 Kr. Let- man for fuel oil,- gasoline, etc. Experience helpful. Call 431-i3M. sens. Ph. 461-4210. . BEGINNERS Accordion, FJerio. Or STANDARD Oil Company (Ky.) has gan and Violin l e s s o n s In ynur openings at stations in' Ft. Pierce 'ome or mine. Mri. Klne 481-6319. for Salesmen.Alter.danls. TraintoK provided wllh guaranteed salary LEARN accounting. New evening while In training. HospltallzaUon. Inclasses now forming. Professlona surance, retirement benefits, stoclfaccomtant as instructor. Call or purchase plan. Slandard Oil' Comwrite East Coast College, 121 N pany (Ky.) Is an equal opportunity employer. Write or call Harley L. 2nd St. 461-3588. Shacpe, Standard Oil Company P. O. Box I4S4. Ft. Pierce. Phone 4817. Lost & Found 9C2I, LOST OH TOUND Your DOG or CAT. Contact HUMANE SOCIETY. <61-0687 MANAGER TRAINEE . . .National Consumer Finance Company ba'i openings for men holding a high school diploma. Good company benefits, life & health insurance and retirement plan. Apply in person, WANTED .-. i Above averaga.man desiring high Income earning, but willing to work for it Position offers professional status. Apply at 3012 Orange Ave., between 9 & 12. SHORT ORDER COOK Good ho'jrl. Apply In person The Breezeway Restaurant, Vero Beach: GENERAL MAINTENANCE Full time permanent position. Set Ray Wetmore Plar.t Superintendent |Warrens Laundry-Cleanerj. 131 N, .3rd St.

POTATOES 10^ 59*


VALUABLE WHYPAY33f GOLDEN QUARTERS

8. Nursery School*
CHILDREN from 1 to 6 yearj. MO N. 32ni 6U Call 461-4702

V^'

GRADE A

HIHDQUARTERS

TURKEY

WESTERN ICEBERG

Mrs. Filberts MARGARINE

L3
NET

EMPLOYMENT
11. Help Wanted, Female
WAITRESS Good hours. Appls In person The Breezeway Bestau ranC Vero Beach. COCKTAIL Waitress. ..Friday a n c Saturday nights, 8 to 2. Apply Met ry-Go-Round, after 5 p.m.

LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON ONE COUPON PER ADULT CUSTOMER GOOD THRU SUN SEPT 15 GOODATORIAT VALU

WHY PAY 31 HOZ BTI.

STOKELY CATSUP

Also HelpPART TIME Employment. 5 day iTV Serviceman: TV, Man as Tmm er. BHODER'S Sears week. 18-40 referred. Typing requlr Phor:e 461.3123. ed. High school graduate. Salarj open. Finance office. Call 46L207 J MECHANIC for Machine Shop Assembly. Vero Beach. Write Tribur.t NIGHT WAITRESS. Neat in appear- Adv. E-151. ance. Must be over 21.. Apply 1 person, LUM'S. South U.fi. -No. 1. FULL TIME COOK, 15 to 35. Apply FULLY qualified Seamstress need Chicken. ed ror alterations on belter ladles reajv lo wear. Excellent salary .EXPERIENCED PAINTERS WANTED. TOD Dav. .Contact T)ayp Hanlon. 23rd St. & Avenue I. Fort Pierce. SECRETARY-CASHIER wanted for loc&l Insurance ottlce Five day PERMANENT Year Round work, ' . week. Typing and shorthand exper- distributing advertising material Apply Florida Health Agency, 5013 , ience necessary. Call 401-6272. Orange Avenue, 9 to 12. A REGISTERED Nurse who actually enjoys providing patient care, teaching and supervising aides, and build- 4, Help Wanted, Male or, ing sincere Interpersonal relationFemals ships with patients and their relatives; employes and llieii families, MARRIOTT HOT SHOPPES the physicians as vveil as assodled agencies and unofficial groups Is Now has opentr.gs for the abova being sought. If you are interest' average Waitresses & Wallers for ' "* ed in obtaining sucli a position you above average wages for following~~~ -' are urged to ctll met 562-3216 to sched- shifts: Two 6:00 a-m. lo 2:30 p.m.; Three 2:CQ p.m. to 10:30 p.m.; Two ule a pre-*rnPlo>' U Interview. 10:00 p.m, lo 6:30 a.m. Benefit*) HELP WANTED IMMEDIATELY. 2:P1il vacation, credit union.' hosBeauticians Call Z37-71D1 for flppoInl-'PitplSzntton. life insurance, meala, uniforms. For appointment & inter* view call Mrs. Fornella, RO 3-3325. 'ULL TIME Employment. 18 to -iO Ft. Drum Plaza. An equal opportpreWrrcd. 5 dny week. Typing re- unity employer. utrefl. High scliooi graduate, alary open, .Finance nf/:ce. 461- WAKTED: Bookkeeper, 4 days iwi \vcek wtvk In Okccchobee, G o od salary. Call n03'26. rlslmas R starts ear* with Avon. Earn 500 to SI .000 for Qurself during the season selling 16. Agents, Salespersons orld famous Avon products In your pare time. Write Avon manager, Direct Sales DislributoriMp Eellinj Light House for the Blind prod'jctj. .O. Box 3366, Ft. Pierce. By appotnlment^only. Prime terrl- ' ENIOH OPERATOH ot B u b y ' i lory open. Hfehejt commfislons. !?' 3<auty Salon, 3C<!8 Orange Avenue Lion Indus Irles for lh Blind, t can 4M-5387. ) So. Dixie. West Palm Beacb.

LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON ONE COUPON PER ADULT CUSTOMER GOOD THRU SUN SEL*! 15 GOOD AT GREAT VALU '

NIBLETS

CORN WHYPAY 23 (
29*

HEINZ

BABY FOOD
HAWAIIAN

PUNCH ALL FLAVORS


46 OZ
CAN

4fcAA w HYPAY
,

N,\:. '''l! '"/'/

HEINZ

Yelveeta

PORK & ' s BEANS OR VEGETARIAN BEANS


/, X

i ',''/ /

Lady Scots FACIAL TISSUE


LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON ONE COUPON PER ADULT CUSTOMER GOOD THIU' SUN SEPT 15 GOOD AT GREAT VALU

St. Lucie's Green Hue Just a Bloom of Algae


STUART Richard P. Saun> obtained samp!es at W o o d ' s lers, marine biologist witti the Cove, he gave them to Gone C. Marine Reoearch Laboratory of Brown, liaison oflicer of tha time, to take he Slate Dept. ot Conservation, corps here at thefor sampling. lo Jacksonville aid in a report received here The study made Tuehday, that the green hue of Dept. of Health lab by the State at Jacksonhe waters of Uie St. Lticie Riv- ville for the Corps was reported >r a fortnight ago was a heavyjin substantially the same manner a Koorn of algae. s the Conservation Dept. , Istudy. Saunders reported to Cbnseration Agent J. W. Cooper that The green hue seems to have jsappeared from the river staco 'It appears to have originated he closing of St. Lucle Locks. n nearby fresh waters due to A similar condition has been ev'ufrophlc conditions (low oxy- dent in areas of Lake Okeechogen and high nutrient levels,) bee near Okeechobee City. "Unless additional blooms occur In inland or some 1m. pediment 1? the flow of water LOOK FOR to the ocean arises, ihe conditions in Ihr, Inlet should iliaTHE slp?Jc within a few days to a week." COUPON He identified the algae as microcyslis, a blue-green algae, WORTH (he most abundent organism 'ound. But added that substanEXTRA tial numbers of anabaena were also present and a lew cells ol Top Value green algae chloreila were recorded. STAMPS The bloom was found r,t about the time Col. John F. McElhea ny, district engineer of the U.S Army Corps of Engineers, vi sited l:ere. He viewed it from the air, and when Ezra Woot
In Today's

WHY PAY 79* 130Z5IZEK.T.K. OR REG

EMIR SPRAY

LIMIT TWO WITH COUPON ONE COUPON PER A"'ILT CUSTCMER GOOD THRU SUN SEPT J5 GOOD AT GREAT VALU

DOWNYILAKE

WAFFLES
PAY

2/330

BIRDSEYE PEAS-CUT CORNPEAS &CAROTS

18

EA

PAGE SIX

HEBCE. FLOBID'

SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, 1964

Water Pollution A Multi-Million Headache To Florida Municipalities


Down Jensen Way
By DOROTHY KALB COMMUNITY
AT 7-OMC

Problem Ranges From Bad Well To An Entire River

Haydon Burns Will Launch His Campaign Labor Day

go it created a utilities departBy DON NORTH sided, owing lo the absence of on! and started buying up ft. Rev. Newton Tweedy and Ihe President Mrs. McCuen. The TALLAHASSEE (ADWater ancially solid private water family arc hack after a month's project of the group this year lollution is a 550 million-a-ycar nd sewage utilities. v a c a t i o n , spent mostly c a m p i n g to make school bags for the icadache to Florida's cities. George Lohmeyer, Board o! and visiting. The Tweedjs re- children of Africa, and fill them This is Ihe average annual earth sanitary engineer (oc port they visited 11 states and with essentials. After the meetreward, says the idea is to traveled over 5,MO miles. The ing, every one took part in ixpendiliire statewide for treatiminatc septic tanks, which high spot for the children was rolling handages lorn from do- ncnl plants and facilities to ct the major blame for caust h e visit to the very wonclcr- nated sheets. These will be irevcnt sewage and industrial ig pollution. fnl zoo at St. Ixniis. Mrs. sent (o Hie United Medical Hos- vaslcs from reaching precious Lohmeyer said that, in noighTweedy was happy to see her pital in Metal, India. Refresh- water resources. or hoods using septic tanks, ailing m o t h e r ; ami to meet her ments were served by the hostLast year, the State Hoard of ainfielcls reach canals, pondj brother, whom she hadnT seen ess. lealtli reports, it e x a m i n e d nd wells. With s a n i t a r y sewers, i'l 16 years. In fact, it was a BENEFIT >!ans for SSfi million worth of his waste could be chemically wonderful meeting wilh all the Mrs. John Herrmann, former such equipment. The year be- cated and rendered almost clan. ly of Jensen and now a resi- fore, the figure was $59 mil- armless. The Tower Chimes staff meets dent of Port St. Lucic, is spon- .ion. "There seems to be a growon Wednesday at 9 in the soring a benefit card parly for But pollution, ranging from a ng public awareness of pollu morning; Ihe afternoon crew Ihe .soon to be established F.pis on," says Lohmeyer. "For'1 copal Mission in Port St. Lu- bad well to the spoiling of an jauclerdiilc is building a seven-' will meet at 1:30. entire river, continues to be cie. Those friends in Jensen BAPTIST problem as the state's growth nillion-gallon treatment plant I, nd D a n i a , l l a l l a n d a l e , Pom!. The Training Union Depart- wishing to make reservations accelerates. nay do so through Dorothy Kalb ment of the I n d i a n River BapSecretary of State Tom Ad- iano, Dcerfiehl and Hollywood! AT 7-0946). There will be des tist Association will hold its ams has warned that millions oJ ithcr are building or expandmonthly meeting al the Glen- sort, table and door prizes; rio dollars are being spent on fresh ng." hatched. "Would you lake my pitcher, mister?" she nation, 50 cents. The affair wil Treatment plants themselves dale Baptist Church in Vero \valcr conser v a t i o n projects asked. She overcame something of a delicate fear of held at Ihe Port SI. Lucic Reach on Monday, the 10th, at which are wasted if the projects ccounl for sonic pollution. the little monster, so badly did she want herself reMarina on Tuesday, Aug. 18 The city of St. Petersburg 7:30 p.m. become polluted. ' corded on film, as her expression shows. She's a Four-year-old Mary 1'al Hamilton of Dtmcdin visilcd p.m. The Sunday School DepartAdams proposed that the f>eg lives its sewage a "primary" relative of Stuart Vice-Mayor William P. Todt. LUNCHEON Stuart's House of Refuge Museum In inspect lite ment of the Association will islature arm the Stale Conser, r e a t m c n t before discharging it (1'holo by Ed Glueklcr.) turtles, was I here when a batch of rare trunkbacks Mrs. August Bruning and Mrs meet on Monday the 17th at vation Department with new nto Tampa Eay. This I r e ) IMary Bellinger were co-host 7:30 at Ihe First Baptist Church authority and send it into the uent is not sufficient to p r e esses at a luncheon held of Stuart. There will be conbattle against pollution being sent Ihe discharge from cfmMilans. After lunching, the aminaling Hie bay. ferences for workers wilh Ihe waged by local government. guesls proceeded to Iho, horn The Board of Health has <j'isvarious age groups. "We arc throwing our money of Mrs. Earning and cnjoyei away if we strive to preserv ipprovccl shellfish taken f m m WOMEN'S ASSN. f n afternoon of cards. Th he bay (once a major i n < | u s There were over 50 members guests included Mrs. Edwi a resource such as water ant ry) and a number of beacihes then find it polluted and unus pnd guests who enjoyed the Miller, Mrs. Harry Miller, Mrs have been tagged unfit for dessert card party held at the Chris Connell, Mrs. Williar able," says Adams. .wimming, ST. AUGUSTINE ( A P I - A lie said waste from septi clubhouse on Monday. Mrs Mercer, Mrs. Koy lleppe, Mr. The city plans to build two He repealed an earlier s.ale lest of the civil rights acl al 17 Mack Costcllo was the chairt a n k s , detergents, salt water .1ACKSONVILLK (A! 1 ) An j:;iiiiotl support because- Sen. Hubert Klein, Mrs. Andrei secondary t r e a t m e n t p'lanls Intensive ciRhl weeks a c t i v e H u r r y C o U K v a t e r of An/.nnn h mcnl H i n t lie will r u n for gov- St. A u g u s t i n e r e s t a u r a n t s and man, assisted by hostesses Mrs, Wilkie, Mrs. Gladys Fochr, Mis industrial wastes an:i raw SITU starting t h i s year. W i l l i a m c- 1 mp;ntiti for ^ovcnior will l>o I lie K < publican no mi nee for ernor on his own platform niul motel's h;ts hren delayed ,i( Olive Donaldson, Miss Zillah Xillah Khoads and Mrs. John ?.gp n r c flowing inlo the stale' Dunn, head of the sanitation dirsoL on Ihe n a t i o n a l D e m o c r a t i c least u n t i l Monday. critical fresh water resource pin Labar Oay, s a y s Mayor PiTsHcnt, Hums r e p l i e d : [ Hhoads and Mrs. Orlena Braun. Puls. vision of the Health DepartThe businessmen filc'l noliec in an ever-increasing volume. Haydon 1'unis of ,Jn<*ks:mvilk', Tile door prize was won by VACATION "t'rohably Hie must atlr-ii'livc p l n l f u r m . 1 of appeals Friday of three in"The problem is serious an ment, says this should make Hit Democnilic nominee for foahnv of Ilirr C l u l i I w a U T c a i n Mrs. Ruby Robinson. The next Mrs. Joseph Kling is back at ;hc bay safe again. j u n c t i o n s ordering I h e m , effecp'Tprnor. dessert card p a r t y will be held her posl in the Post Office, g e t t i n g worse," said A d a m s , ad pui^n is I h e c i v i l i'ij;bls i.ssuc*, Jacksonville's commer Ic i a ] t i v e t o d a y , to .serve Negroes on ding that steps must be t a k e on Ihe 17lh, with Mrs. Al San- and reports h a v i n g had a wonAt an i m p r o m p t u news crm- and since his view closely ]>ar;illl'e s a m e b a s i s a.s v,hile p e r now because Florida's imhistr lifeline, the St. Johns Rixier, is foionce KrUl.ny. Burns said lie | lels my nvvu, f i i s [(3tilclwater's) dell and Mrs. Chris K a l b as co- derful v a c a t i o n in Traverse Cily, heavily polluted d e s p i't e the sons. hostesses. Reservations may be M i c h . She spent almosl a m o n t h a) development and pop'.natio city's $15 million sewage, treatwill l a u n c h Ins a c t i v e c a m p a i g n ! fd I lowers in Hie .'I ale would not Tlif\v a .s k e d t r S. J ^ i ^ r i e l are leap-frogging. nmiinsl Cliarles Uolley of St. ! lie ;U1r;ielc;1 a w a y from me j u s t m a d e wilh them or wilh presi- visiting with friends and relaCourt Judge Jiry.-in .Simp.'-on, .'Warns respnndcd fo a state men! plant. The river is classed rpterslmrs with n La bur D<iy i liecansf Mr. l l o l l e y linppens to i dent Marie Miller. Mrs. M i l l e r tions. Mrs. Kling was accomwho issued tin 1 i n j i m ^ t - n n s . to wide Associated Press survc as an industrial river a r l used 1 speech iU M\:um before a south i lie Uiy UcinibHfiin nominee.' M I A M I ( A T ) The president delay their effecl until Ihe ap- reminded all lo save Tuesday. panied by her son Raymond, tp.kcn to learn whal is bein for the disposal of b o t h , indusVltmda delegation ol ovfi<uii7,e<\ Oct. i;i, for a luncheon-card her molher, Mrs. M a r i a n ScnHums empbnsi/ed Hut he of New College has called on prMs are heard. done about water pollution. Th trial and sanitary wast'fs. hlw. .spoke only of ( I n * c i v i l r i j : h l s is- KhiuUi lo lake its u n i v e r s i t y Eut officials are working to He said lie w o u l d n ' t grant I p a r t y anil faslre-n show to be skc, and Mrs, Gencvieve Wrighl. survey shows much pollution Rums sni<i lie \\i\\ tip nt I h e > u e when he said Ills and U u U i - system out of p o l i t i c s , I'lal m u c h d e l a y Hit n o i i l r l n l - ; held at Port SI. I.ucie Counlry B I R T H D A Y and much nr.der way to chcc clean up tributaries of ' the St. ( lull. There will he favors for O 'snci Clinic in New Or terms \v;iler's view were s i m i l a r . Johns such as Long Branch, A surprise b i r t h d a y party in it. Mr. George I ' . a u g h m a n , whose l:>\v a fe\r C!.T>'S if I h e d r f e r u l a n l s Tuxl week for an (Uimml jihyMHums said he will ho .111 al- college will open n e a r S n r a s n l a w a n t lo ask the I'.S. ;>lli Circuit a l l w h o a t t e n d , (able prizes, the form of a picnic was givM i a m i , perhaps, has lake Doer Creek and the O r t e g a Rivc;-! clieck. i ternnlo delej^ale lit I he Demo- next f a l l , .said tile s l a t e was Court of Appeals for a slay and m a n y , m a n y door prizes. en in honor of Mrs. Freda the biggest single step (owar er, Hillsborough County - S a n i t a r 11 is a r o u t i n e checkup. I h e crnlic NatiniKiL ('ojivenlion in h u r l i n g its i m a g e by allowing p e n d i n g t h e a p p e a l . j The fashion show will be spon- S c h l i m m , Guesls present were cleaning up her waters. Tl c <; mildn t c s;i lit. a nd I he re i.s A t l a n t i c <'ity. will vote for Pros- ]>;>IUics I D i n t e r f e r e \ \ i l l i t h e As atl a l t e r n a t i v e , Frank Up- sored by one of (he large dc- Mrs. Waller Lauer, Mrs. Harry Dade County metro governmcr ian Henry Crowell rep [iris t h a t nolhinfi worrying liini about his ident 1 -yndon II. Johnson and mm 'erMtk's. W i t h o u t i m p r o v i n g r h u r c h -lr., St, Au'-'nsline attor- i i a r l m c n l stores, and they will Greif, Mrs. Sam Sanquigni,Mr.s. adnpled a sweeping ordinanc Tampa has completed a large interceptor sewer to flcan up hr:l!h. will ca mpai^n u-illi .lohnson if t h e m , i i ; i u g h m a n lold a civic t u y , stig'^eslfd Jud'^c S i m p s o n ; provide t h e models. Reserva- Fred Mullerbach, Mrs. Mae last year aimed at conlrollii the Hillsborough R i v e r by diAsked if he frit Hoi try lias the President comes to Flnrida. dub F r i d a y , Florida will never follow w h a t e v e r a c t i o n . l u s l i c e j tions must be paid and m a d e Filson. Mrs. J. Houghlon and both w a t e r and air pollution. vcrling sewage from Temple I lug:) Hlack of Ihe U.S. Supreme j in a d v a n c e : Mrs. Miller will Mrs Arthur Eckslrom. The ordinance lias real tcet n l l r a c t scienee and i i u l u s t r y . Terrace. Crowell s a > t s condi. Court takes on a request for de- be t a k i n g reservations starling D E S S E R T Among other Ihings, it bans tl B a u g h m a n is Ihe latest public by in two similar civil rights (he firsl regular m e e t i n g in lions are generally good otherMrs. Frank Spelz cnlertained use or sale of "hard" dele September. f i g u r e lo hike sides in Ihe grow- act casi*: f r o m Georgia. wise. at a dessert card p a r t y , and gents after J a n u a r y firsl ing d i s p u t e about how lo run Pcnsacola has hired i engineers her guests included Mrs. John next vear. K l a c k i.s expected lo rule by C H U R C H W O M E N Acouslicon ad Zcnjll) (o design a sewage ((realment , he July meeting of the U n i - 1 Herrmann, Mrs. Robert M a c F a r M ' M i ' i a y s i n c e in j u n c t i o n s in the ' Hard delergcnls arc ll ln All new stylrs at sensible prices Georgia cases are lo t a k e effect led Church Council of Women lane, Mrs. Kugene G r i m m , Mrs. which c a n n o t be consumed by plant to give second 3 ry treat Service on all makes of instruments was held nt the home of M r s . Roy lleppe, Mrs. Jack Kuhn, bacteria, with the result t h a t mdct ant! rid Pcnsaccii'a Bay at AARP-NRTA special program by d i - ] H l l o develnpiHl a f l r r Tue-clay. Judge Simpson said lie m a y Sydney l.owrie on Ocean View Mrs. Chris Kalb and Mrs Jo- they r e m a i n in Ihe water, infil- the pollution caused by disAcousiicon. (lonl'.iii Blackwell resigned .is Free Hearing Test in Homo or Office Bo/one prc-1 scph Perlberg, ' I r a l i n g wells and contaminating charge of primary se\rage from ficsuU'nl of Florida Stale l;ni- t n k e one of I h r c e courses: the existing plant. CARL BECKER Batteries Cords Molds l'\illo\v J u s t i c e H l a c k ' s acopen bodies of \vater. v c i s i l v ' , ami SrcroUiry of Stale There are $12 to 5/15 million Another section (if the ordintion. Tom A d : i m s snid lie U-fl onl of ( I r a n i a d . b y u n t i l A u g . in ance sets s t a n d a r d s ior new in- worth of sewage trc?Hment prof n i s i r a t i i m w i t h t h e admimstraFORT PIERCE 441.3266 7W ORANGE AVE. or dustrics and requires existing jects under way no\v( along the l i v e setup. "1 may deny it (a slay) flatI industries to gel in line by 1968. east coast of Volusia Counfy, ly and s n y at two or three The Broward County Commis- reports Dr. D. V. Galloway, o'clock Monday a f t e r n o o n no :ion also has acted. Two years county h e a l t h officeif In Orange City, t i l l ? Board of hold.s are barrcrl." Health issued an oo:ler Aug. 4 The j u d g e .said the part of Ihe JACKSONVILLE ( A n FloAid to a g r i c u l t u r e amounted warning local resiel-anls to boil i n j u n c t i o n s which r e s l r a i n segtheir water after oiie of three regation leader Hoisted R i c h a r d ridi.Tiis rei'O'.yed S'^rtf million un- t o $10,363,001). The N a t i o n a l water company weU.s was conWILL YOUR DREAM HOME M a n u c y and others f r o m inter- der federal "rant programs dur- G u a r d and Civil Defense redenmccl. fering nre not del.iyed. hut are ing (tie fiscal year Iflltt, Ihe ceived $7,752,000. REMAIN A DREAM? Slate Chamber of Commerce reThe Chamber of Commerce Public housing, conservation in full effecl, calls Orange Cily "[The Town of In appealing the injunctions, ported Saturday in its weekly of n a t u r a l resources and Pure Water." the r e s t a u r a n t and motel men b u - i u c ^ rev.ow. riety of research projects got The f i g u r e \viis almost liO per lesser amounts. claim tile civil rights act is unc o n s t i t u t i o n a l and violated t h e i r cent more u 1:11 the previous In addition to the S2.13 million r i g h t s by depriving t h e m of year. in grants, Florida got federal properly \vilhout due process of Kivlera) grant programs, in f u n d s through contracts to busilaw. general, are to assist state and nesses, federal payrolls and purIn t h e Georgia eases, a t h r e e - Infill ;;o\'ertunctUs with educa- chases, flood control and water .imlse roiirl lield Hie act is coil- |j on , hicinva.vs ami public lic.illh improvement projects. slitutional. .T to help individuals overcome misfortune. v Of t h e l o t a l , Sl?0 million was paid to s!;Ue or local governments, m o s t l y i n m a t c h i n g funds, and S74 million was paid to individual Floridians. Cuban refugees in the slate BINfiHAMTON (AIM Roses sre ri. fire hydrants too. and rot SM milliin. If I his were deWHY HERE? Because \ve can help you with in the cily of Rinshamton. no d u c t e d , the fiscal 1963 Rain WASHINGTON ( A P ) F u n d s 1 would I n v p been 10 per cent the saving and with 1he financing later. other hue unll do. for more t h a n $1.5 billion of milThat's what Mrs. Charles Ra- This still exceeds the national Knowing property values, we can suggest itary conslruclion in Ihis councho\-chin learned afl?r she gain of 6 per cent. a sensible savings program. And we'll pay Florida received $53,875,000 for try anci overseas won Senate appainted Ihe fire hydrant in front you top earnings from the start on every D A R Y L A. W A R N E R ! highway construction u n d e r the proval Saturday afler brief <Ieof her home nil orchid color. PKX^ACOl.A, Tl.A. ( F H T N C ) dollar saved. Come by soon. Be a homeA city public works crew federal program, Schools re- lialc. D a r y l A. Warner, photograowner before you dream possible. repainted Ihe orchid-colored by- ceived $2:i. 183.000. Passage was by unanimous pher's m a l e a i r m a n . USX, son For public health, Ihe federal dranl to i t s original ml Friday. ' vole of fit senators. of Mrs. Clara E. Warner of Mrs. K.irhovchin likes orchid. government save Florida $!!>,Her porch f u r n i t u r e and petuni- 171.000. This was for hospital The measure now EOCS back lo 1702 Hinney Dr.. Korl Pierce. construction and a m u l t i t u d e of the House which is expected lo Fla., recenlly graduated from as are t h a i color. But city officials informed her research projects. n a m e conference romniiilecs lo Basic Photographer's M a l e No capital outlay needed School al the N a v a l Air TechSpecial aid 1o individuals in- work oul compromises. she had violated a water departwe pro\ da all maintenical T r a i n i n g Unit, Naval Air ment regulation. The penalty j eluded S40 million for old age 1 nance Cor venient, economcould he a S2A fine, 25 days in ' a s s i s t a n c e : S20 million for de- I The breakdown for Florida of Stalion, Pcnsacola, Kla. ical,depei dahhsthecomHe studied Ihe lechnical aspects pendent children; $10 million for funds approved by Ihe Senalc plelely ca -efree wayl Call j.iii, or both. committee, with House-approved of photography, including operus now i ar the exciting They indicated they would the blind and disabled: S6.fi mildetails! drop any plans for prosecution lion /or surplus food donations, j figures in parentheses included: ation and maintenance of v a r 1 ious types of photographic e if she would drop the paint and $6 million for unemploy^^^l*****'**^ N'aval Air Station, Key West. quipmen! employed by the Navy brush. I ment compensation, $617,000 ( s a m e ) ; Naval Slalion. and M a r i n e Corps. Key Wesl, S42S.OOO ( s a m e ) , " " I \miuuttmn'11 Air Koree: A t l a n t i c Missile ESTABLISHED 1914 ELECTRICAL F. am) A. M. "Tropig**; Inc. of Florida AND LOAN Range, Cape K.-nneiiy, $1,210,CONTRACTOR FORT PIERCE LODGE 17 j 000 ( s a m e ) ; Patrick AFB, Cocoa 2101 O'i:t*chob Rd ASSOCIATION Mt*H ASSETS OVER Reach. 11,300.000 ( s a m e ) ; PalQUALITY WIRING - COMMERCIAL MAINTENANCE $cond nd Fourth Monday* 40 MILLION ORAWE A SECOND OF FORT PIERCE ricli AC nci W Cocoi Beach, 4oMMO Avtnu* A jnd Stti SI. PHONE HO 1-lin $128,000 ( s a m e ) .

Rare

Rights Test Is Delayed

'Take U n i v e r s i t y System Out ()(' I'd i lies,' Urges

HEARING

AIDS

HEARING AID CENTER

253 Million To Florida Under Federal Grants

!N THE

SERVICE

SAVE THE HERE!

DOWN PAYMEN1

EJosf s Are Red. And So Arc Fire llvdranls

Aiiiitary

Construction

Bill Approved

OWYOU EASE GAS DITIONING

IRST HEDERAL

AVINGS

(TR(I)PIGAS' **^. i ^^

NEWS-HERALD, Panama City, Fla Thursday, .tunc i$7,1974

Pagp 1G

Reply Decision Praised, Deplored


. MIAMI (UPI)-tflorida news readers, who are the court of paper executives and political last resort.'' figures praised and the plaintiff However, Tornlllo said In deplored Tuesday the.U.S. Su Miami, "I believe they (the preme Court decision striking justices) are incorrect and I be down the state's 61-year-old lieve a majority of the public right to reply law. believes that individuals and In Its unanimous decision, the ' public officials have a right to high court found unconstitution newspaper editorials that atal the 1913 law requiring news papers to print replies from per- (Whs they criticized in their editorial columns. The case was appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court by the Miami Herald after the law. had been upheld by the Florida Su TALLAHASSEE, (UPI)' preme Court. The State National Association The state high court made its for The Advancement Of decision July 18,1973, in a suit Colored People (NAACP) Wed brought by Pat Tornlllo, an of nesday charged that North ficial of the Dade County Florida post office officials (Miami) Classroom Teachers have discriminated against Black job seekers. Association, a teachers union. The Herald had refused to State NAACP Field Director print Tornillo's replies to its Rev. R.N- Gooden said only two criticism of his' candidacy for Blacks work In post offices in the Florida Legislature in 1972. Walton, Holmes, Washington, Lee Hills, chairman of Knight Jackson, Gadsden and Jeffer Newspapers inc., publisher of son counties. the Herald, said in a statement In Leon county, said Gooden, after the decision was announ n o B l a c k s , w o r k as ced, "The court placed the administrators or supervisors r e s t r a 1 n t s on newspapers in the north Florida Sectional squarely where they belong, in post office. the hands of the people. The Mrs. Evelyn Gowdy, person reader has the final say and nel director for the sectional without his consent a newspa office in Tallahassee, denied Gooden's charges and said per can't exist." Don Shoemaker, editor of the postal officials will meet with Herald, said, "We are gratified, the NAACP to listen to specific not for ourselves, but for our complaints. "I don't know where Rev. Gooden is getting his infor mation," said Mrs. Gowdy. "As a federal office, we are under strict orders to follow laws conThe Disney film, "Tattooed c e r n i n g equal opportunity Police Horse", will be presen employment. We don't think ted by the Bay County Public Rev. Gooden's statistics are an Library on Friday, June 28, at accurate reflection of both sides 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. This is of the issue." Gooden said he filed a com the story of a race horse who was unsuccessful as a trotter plaint with the Florida Com and had to be given to the police mission of Human Relations. d e p a r t m e n t . Everyone is He also said he may file suit in a invited to attend. Admission is federal court. free. tackthem." Florida Publishing Co., pub lishers of the Florida TimesUnion and the Jacksonville Journal, which had filed a "friend of the court" brief in the case, said in a Times-Union editorial, "it is a victory for freedom of speech and expres sion...." James Clendinent, editor of the Tampa Tribune, said, "This decision is of national signifi cance in reaffirming the long established principle that a free press must remain free of governmental compulsion. It is of state significance in that It questions the competence of six justices of the Florida Supreme Court... However, Chesterfield Smith, Lakeland, Fla., president of the American Bar Association, said in Washington that the decision leaves unresolved the question of how the public Is to get all the information it should' have, Smith had supported the law. State Sen. Lori Wilson, I-Merritt Island, who had attempted to get the legislature to repeal the law, said she was "ecstatic" over the decision. Attorney General Robert Shevln said, "I'm absolutely de lighted. I have always opposed this state Supreme Court judg ment."

NAACP Post Offices

PREPARING FOR WORK - A group of Jvtosley High School students were recently involved in a vocational group exploration experience. The young people discussed the need to clarify values and establish personal guidelines for deriving satisfaction from work. Shown are Lynita Powell, Teresa McDaniel, Davie Nelson, Paula Namynanlk, Susie Williams, Mrs. Hattie Burch and G.E. (Woody) Whittington. Mrs. Burch is a guidance counselor and! Whittington is an occupational specialist. Both are employed at Bay High School.

Career Education Program Prepaires For 'Work World'


The Bay County School System is concerned about the numbers of young students who graduate from high school only to find themselves unable to qualify for job positions. Unfortunately, even many college graduates are unprepared for the "world of work". Last year was the beginning of the county-wide Career Education Program here in Bay County. Its purpose is to begin preparing students for the necessary concepts, attitudes and facts to enable them to be self-supportive at whatever age their education becomes terminated. One of the special tasks that high school guidance counselors must now face is making each student award of various occupations and the personality traits that best fit the various career possibilities. This summer each of the three county high schools, four junior high schools and sixteen of the twenty elementary

Receivers Charged To Commonwealth

schools are holding summer workshops to evaluate possible materials; for Career Education use. A number of students work with the instructors and coun selors so that all materials can be tested for, "student appeal". One of the most important aspects of discussing possible career choices with high school students is the need for good s e l f - c o n c e p t and c a r e e r satisfaction. Most surveys taken of adult employees show a greater need for self-image, possibility of career advan cement, and personal satisfac tion. James Gautier, coordinator of the Bay County Career Education Program, is in the process of setting up a career TALLAHASSEE, (UPI) - receivers and ordered all e d u c a t i o n " a w a r e n e s s , Two court-appointed receivers Commonwealth customers to exploration, and discovery" were put in charge of the finan continue doing business with program for grades kindergar cially -troubled Commonwealth the firm. ten through twelve in all Bay The receivers were told to County schools. The program Corporation Wednesday to try Arm.ed Forces Recreation make reports in 30 to 60 days on received State Department of Week is being celebrated this to get it back on its feet. T h e r e c e i v e r s are Lee the status of the company, one Education funds for next year week at Tyndall with several Everhart, Tallahassee building of the southeast's largest mor in the amount of $117,000. This special events scheduled. contractor and developer and tgage banking corporations and is the second of the three-year The Tyndall-Marina, in con program to set up career junction with .the special former mayor, and Charles G. the fifth largest in Florida. The judge said he may awareness programs all over activities, will offer the Tyn-' Haynsworth, executive vice president of the Maryland appoint additional personnel to the state. dallite catching the greatest National Corp., Baltimore, an assist the managers. number of fish while using a He set another hearing for 2 affiliate of the Maryland marina boat this week one day's National Bank, one of Common p.m. Friday on the firm's free use of the boat, of his petition for reorganization wealth's largest customers. choice, including equipment and fuel. Federal District Judge David under Federal Bankruptcy L. Middlebrooks appointed the laws. The Base Library's Smokey Gov. Reubin Askew announ Bear Reading Club will host a ced Wednesday he has appoin special children's story hour ted W.D. Frederick of Orlando Saturday, June 29, at 10 a.m. as chairman of the state The Base Gymnasium is pollution board and has named holding a tennis tournament Y . E . H a l l , Jacksonville ending Saturday, June 29. The business executive, as a new Tyndall Tigers Fast Pitch Soft The appointment of James T. Association, international member. ball team will play Craig AFB Mann as administrator of Association of Business Com John Robert Middlemas, here Friday and Saturday public affairs for Florida for municators, and Florida Public P a n a m a City i n s u r a n c e International Paper Company's Relations Association; member executive, is a member of the evenings at 7:30 p.m. The Tyndall Youth Center has Southern Kraft Division was of the board of directors and board. scheduled several special even announced today by Joel R. publicity chairman of the Bzy Hall, a member of the Baker, manager of the com County Chapter, American Can Jacksonville port authority, ts: Today the center will hold a junior and senior girls table ten cer Society; member of the pany's local mill. succeeds David H. Levin, Pen- nis tournament with trophies According to Baker, Mann board of directors of the Mental sacola, who resigned to work in will be responsible for coor Health Society, member of the the Askew campaign for reelec for first and second place win ners. dinating the company's govern Panama City Kiwanis Club and tion. Friday, the Youth Center will public relations chairman for ment and public relations in Levin, a former Pensacola hold a horseshoe tossing tour the National Air Pollution Con Florida, in addition to his law partner of Askew, has been nament at 3 p.m. for all mem responsibilities at IP's Panama trol Association Convention. chairman of the board since bers, singles and doubles. City mill where he has been ser 1971. On Saturday the center will ving as administrator of public sponsor a physical fitness day relations. at the track by the base gym Mann began his career with nasium at 1:30 p.m. Events will International Paper, in 1967 at include a girls' and boys' the company's Southern Kraft accuracy and distance frisbee Division h e a d q u a r t e r s in Dwight M. Funk, 74, of 3923 throw, a softball throw for all Mobile, Ala. A year later, he Auburndale Road, Orlando, age groups and a tug-a-war con was named administrator of died Tuesday. Funk resided at test. public relations for IP's Mobile Panama City Beach from 1950 Anyone interested in any of mill, before moving to the to 1962. He is survived by his the Youth Center events should Panama City mill in the same wife, Aldonna Funk of Orlando; be at the Youth Center one half capacity in 1971. a son, Charles D. Funk, hour before starting time. A native of Alexander City, P a n a m a City Beach; a Swimming events are only open Ala., Mann attended, public daughter, Barbara Chosewood to students in the swim classes. s c h o o l s t h e r e and w a s of Lenexa, Kansas; a grandson, WINS CONTRACT graduated from Auburn Univer Charles D. Funk, Jr., of City Iron Works of Panama sity with a B.A. degree in jour Panama City Beach; and four City has received a government nalism. other grandchildren. ' contract in the amount of Among his activities, Mann Graveside services will be $16,849.11, according to Tyndall has served as a member of the held today at 2 PM at Vero procurement officials. The con Public Relations Committee of Beach, Fla. tract is for replacing cast iron the Florida Forestry JAMES MANN

Library Plans Disney Film

NEW MILL Charles Whitehead, left, co-owner of the new H.C. Hodges Lum- j ber Co. of West Bay, Inc. inspects some freshly dried lumber with general mill manager Tom McCall. Dedication of the mill is scheduled for Saturday. (Staff ] Photo.) '

Mill Dedication Slated


A new lumber and chipping mill said to be the "most modern in the Souh," by one of its co-owners will be formally dedicated with a fish fry and ribbon cutting ceremony Satur day. Whitehead, "But we probably won't ever go over that," he added. The Hodges Mill has entered into contract with the St. Joe Paper Company whereby the mill will receive an average of 300 cords of wood per day from The H.C. Hodges Lumber St. Joe and will return furnish a Company of West Bay, Inc., will 100 per cent chip return, based produce board lumber, as well on weight, to the St. Joe plant. as, chips, for use in paper The $4 million plant mill will manufacturing. employ between 100 and and 110 Very little wood waste is persons on the mill site. expected at the mill. "The bark The mill will supply between will be used to fire the boiler to 100,000 and 130,000 board feet of drive the kiln which will dry the lumber per day as well as 20 lumber and anything not fit for tractor trailer loads of chips per making into lumber will be day. The kiln at the Hodges mill is ground into chips for paper," said Charles Whitehead, said to work on 26 hour cycles and is capable of drying 130,000 co-owner of the mill. board feed of lumber in each Whitehead along with H.C. cycle. (Jerry) Hodges, co-owner, The mill is located on Steel began negotiations on the mill Field Road in West Bay. 2 ^ years ago. Actual construc Hodges of De Funiak Springs, tion of the mill was not started is president of the company. until seventeen weeks ago and Vice President - Treasuer is production started three weeks Whitehead, Secretary George R. Miller, De Funiak Springs ago. "We are working at about 60 per cent capacity now," said attorney. Also on the board of directors are Herbert Barr. an Enterprise, Ala., certified Public Accountant (CPA) and W.J. 'Bill' Cook, Jr., of Panama City.

Tyndall Celebrates Recreation Week


valves at the Lynn Haven POL facility. The contract resulted from an advertised procurement in which four bids were received. Award was made to the lowest bidder. EXCHANGE FACILITIES CLOSE Inventories will be conducted today a t Tyndall's base exchange retail facilities. The Main Store, Annex, Four Seasons, Shoe Box and Hospital Annex, facilities will be closed all day today. The Tyndall Marina and Beverage Store activities will be closed all day today. The Tyndall Park Store will close all day today.
-

Gray Heads \ Fund Raising j


Randall Gray has been! named fund raising chairman, for the Bay County Democratic! party executive committee. j Mrs. Bertha Brooks has been! named as local chairman for; the national Democratic! telethon to be presented over the CBS network June 29-30. Gray said envelopes are being distributed to remind per-. sons to watch the show and donate to the campaign fund if possible. Gray said it is hoped the telethon can be funded through donations from individual families rather than big business. His phone number is 785-5453.

New Pollution Head Named

Paper Company Appoints State Public Affairs Head

Death Takes Dwight Funk

CLOTHING SALES STORE CLOSED Tyndall's Clothing Sales Store closed Monday and will remain closed until Monday, July 1. The facility is undergoing the annual year-end inventory and conversion to Base Supply's computer system. The store will open Monday with fiscal year '75 prices In effect. Business hours are 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday, including all lunch hours. MEETINGS SLATED Four meetings are scheduled at the Air Defense Weapons Center this week. The Base Security Council will meet Friday at 3 p.m. "in the Weapons Center conference room. All members of the Security Council should attend or h a v e a representative present. The First Sergeants' Meeting will be held today at 2 p.m. in the Weapons Center conference room. The Newcomers Orientation Briefing will be held at 1 p.m. today in the base theater. All newly assigned members and their dependents are invited to a t t e n d t h i s informative briefing.

Motion Made ByMcMullen


City Commissioner John McMullen made the motion at Tuesday night's Panama City city commission meeting to keep the Millville fire station open and fully staffed, equipped and operational pending a sur vey ordered by the commission to determine the overall fire protection situation in the city. Wednesday morning's news story concerning the meeting incorrectly stated that the motion was made by Com missioner Ralph Burgess. Commissioner Gordon Hill seconded McMullen's motion.

GCCC Instructor Named Writing Awards Judge


Mrs. Doris B. Joh son English instructor at GCCC has been named as a judge in the 1974 Achievement Awards in writing program sponsored by the National Council of Teachers of English. Achievement Awards in writing are given annually to h i g h s c h o o l s e n i o r s to encourage students in their writing and to recognize publicly some of the best student writers in the nation. Mrs. Johnson explained that "the winners are recommen ded to colleges and universities as candidates for admission and for financial aid, if needed". Mrs. Linda Harvey national director of the awards program contributed the success of the swards to "the careful work of the judges", adding "Mrs. Johnson will certainly be an asset and we are greatly pleased by her willingness to contribute her time and talent". Dr. Richard Morely, president of GCCC sees the National Awards as "a valuable e n c o u r a g e m e n t to young writers". "We at GC are always proud to have out faculty participate in such a meaningful way", Morley concluded. Mrs. Johnson will serve during her free summer time but will return to her regular teaching duties at Gulf Coast Community College in late August. '

Firemen Plan Benefit Fry


Bayou George volunteer fire department will sponsor a fish fry S a t u r d a y at Oakland Terrace park from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tickets are $1.25 and may be obtained from any fireman, m e m b e r of the women's auxiliary or at the park. Proceeds will go to the building fund.

MRS. DORIS JOHNSON

RISKS RETURN TO JAIL

Super
GOLDENROD, Fla. (UPI) In a boathouse press con ference at a castle called "Village Of Anything Is Possible," super salesman Glenn Turner announced Wednesday he would run for the U.S. Senate at the risk of going to jail. "I know I'm putting my freedom on the line," said Turner, who faces a second trial for mail fraud and is still under a federal judge's gag rule. "But I just can't sit around and keep my mouth shut any longer." The 38-year-old son of a

Salesman
sharecropper, who built a fortune with pyramid sales schemes, said he would seek the Democratic nomination for the seat now held by Sen. E d w a r d Gurney, a Republican from nearby Winter Park, near Orlando. With his business empire in shambles and weary from more than eight months in a Jacksonville federal cour troom, Turner said he would prefer to run as an indepen dent because both major parties "have done a lousy job." But he says he would not

Tfirows Hat Into U. S. Senate Race


seven of his associates on 26 counts of mail fraud and one count of conspiracy is scheduled to begin Aug. 5, just a little over a month before the Sept. 10 primary. Their first trial ended in May with a hung jury after eight and a half months. " I ' m qualified because I'm the only candidate who was indicted before he ran for office," Turner said. Turner, whose flamboyant enterprises once spanned continents, is under a gag rule imposed by U.S. District Judge Gerald Tjoflat in Jacksonville. "I've been gagged by the federal government for over a year and I think this is unconstitutional," he said. "I think that as soon as this hits the papers, they're going to have a meeting in Washington around some mahogany deskwhich we paid forand decide which federal agency is going to go after me next." Turner, a former sewing machine salesman born in a' charity ward in Columbia, S.C., estimated his fortune at $150 million before he got into trouble with the govern ment, particularly the Inter nal Revenue Service. He said he plans to cam paign around the state in a motor home and would "ask the little people to send me $1 apiece." "A dollar won't hurt anybody if they believe like we do," he said. Turner, who now lives with his wife and three sons in an apartment over a stable n e a r his unfinished $3 million castle, said he would return from Washington every four months arid hold "town meetings" in eight cities around the state. "I want to hear what the people have to say," he said. "I'm just going to be their button-pusher in Washing ton." While constantly involved in litigation in several states and sometimes on trial, Tur ner has never been convicted of any crime. "I've been ridiculed and put down and I've made some mistakes," he said. "But I think my intent has been right." While admitting the judge could hold him in contempt of court for calling a news conference, Turner said he doesn't feel he is in violation of the gag rule "as long as I don't talk about the trial." "I wish I could talk about it, because things were going on you just wouldn't believe," he said. " I' m not worried about the trial," he said. "If I go down at least I'll go down fighting." Visitors to the castle Wed nesday were greeted by a baby blue sign, alongside a muddy road, which said "Village Of Anything Is Possible."

have time to collect sig natures of 175,000 voters and get them to the Secretary of State by July 23. Florida law requires a candidate who runs as an independent to. collect signatures of electors equal to five per cent of the number registered for the last general election. Turner said he also could not afford the $17,500 he would be required to pay the Supervisor of Elections for checking the list. "I think that's unfair and unconstitutional," he said. A new trial for Turner and

NEWS-HERALD, Panama City, Florida, Sunday, September IK, lin2

P a g e ID

Crisis On The Apalachicola


SNEADS Sept. 26 promises to be a memorable d a y for area residents, one way or anothier. That is the day decisions are expected by two agencies, one state and one federal, on per mits which would clear the way for a barge port on the Apa lachicola River. The initial hurdle w a s cleared Aug. 29 with approval b y Flor ida Cabinet members, sitting as Trustees of the Internal Im provement Fund, over objec tions of several agency repre sentatives. Now the Jackson County Port Authority needs permits from the Florida Department of Pol lution Control and the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers. The control board has set, Sept. 26 a s the date for a public hearing, while Army engineers say t h e y will make a decision the s a m e d a y on a dredge and construction permit sought by the port authority. The Corps, which has jurisdic tion of t h e project, issued notice Sept. 6 setting Sept. 14 as the deadline to receive public com ment. And there was comment, a spokesman from the district of fice in Mobile, Ala., said Friday. "The permit may or m a y not be issued," Richard D a v i s said in a brief comment before re ferring questions on the status of the permit to Jim Chamber lain, a public affairs spokesman. "We do have some comments to consider from the public," Chamberlain stated. Although he did not disclose the nature of the comments he said "a deci sion should be reached b y Sept. tage of their area's new status with the federal government and late in 1970 decided the time was ripe to try for the bargeprart. T h e y applied for a federal grant through the Commerce Department's Economic Devel opment Agency and without much trouble received $818,000 for barge port construction. Port Authority members quickly began issuing another $1.5 million in general revenue bonds and were at that point r e a d y to begin consti-uction, once they secured state approv al of the dredging necessary to g e t the project underway. The permit would be granted or denied by State Cabinet members, but not before a half dozen state agencies dealing with environmental protection had their chance to make rec ommendations. All of these agencies three weeks ago made strong pleas that the permit be denied until a full environmental study qf the project could be completed, but Cabinet members turned deaf ears to all the pleas. A c c o r d i n g to State Rep. W a y n e Mixson, D-Marianna, who with two other powerful Panhandle legislators is backing the bargeport, the objectors are in many cases misinformed. "Sometime back in 1970, when we first applied for this permit to build the terminal, I attended so m e of the environmental meetings in Tallahassee about it and I thought it w a s going to be a routine thing," he said.

^^^^^^ ^^^^^^

inalists Girc For The


A platoon of candidates for two B a y County Commission seats has been cut down to four finalists wlio will bump heads in the Oct. .3 runoff. In District 1, where George Gainer is seeking re-election, the battle will be between the incumbent and J, F . (Jim) Faircloth. A total of six men had jumped into the District 1 primary race when Gainer waited until the deadline to file for re-election. A huge field of eight men went out for the District 5 seat after incumbent Wilmont (Pete) Ed wards dropped out to run for the sheriff's office. The District 5 winner will bo settled when Dennis Pledger and John Mullins square off Oct. four years and campaigned on his record, claiming a number of achievements during his ten ure. Faircloth, 36, lO.'j Springfield Circle, is manager of the au tomotive center at Grant's and has never held political office. He won the runnerup spot in the primary after campaigning on the theme of "a common sense approach in handling the governmental affairs of B a y County." The race for Edward's post in District 5 will now be between two businessmen, neither of which have held office before. Pledger, owner ot Pledger's Camper Inn on the beach, w a s the top vote-getter in the eightman race, being named on 4,433 ballots. 3. Mullins, owner ot Mullins A u t o Both races are expected to be Parts and Machine Shop in P a n close. ama City, c a m e in second with Gainer was the top vote-getter 3,691. None of the other candi in the prim;iry, jiolling 6 , 4 0 9 to dates came close to the leaders. Fairdolh's '1,064. The incumbent Pledger is a Bay County na has been in office for the past tive and has a background that includes minor league baseball (as a pitcher), a ixilice officer and part owner ot a beach mo tel. He lives a t Dellwond Beach, has three children and is a l a y e V a n g a 1 i s t at St. Andrews Baptist Church. Mullins has been a resident of Bay County for the past 15 y e a r s MIAMI (UPI) Customs and is past president of the P a n agents have seized 1,652 Ameri ama City Auto Parts Whole can gold coins with a face value salers Association. of ,'i;8,180 and arrested an He has been active in Little American living in Mexico City League, serving as president on charges of trying to smugand leader of Little L e a g u e them into the countrygroups. He has four children A spokesman said the coins and is deacon and Sunday had been purchased for about School director of the First B a p .530,000 would be worth more tist Church in Southport. on the American coin mar Term of office for both com ket. The coins bore minting mission positions is four years. dates of between 1869 and the .192ns. Arrested on smuggling charges was Salvadore Abrams, 46, who agents said was carry ing the coins in a home-made "smuggler's vest" designed to hide what he was carrying. The coins weighed about 30 pounds. Abrams arrived here on a A n e l e c t r i c a l short w a s plane from Curacao. blamed for the total destruction

FEANKLIN OYSTERMEN ALARMED

JAMES

FAIRCIX)TI1I

Gold Coins Seized

The permit application was not acted upon then because the Port Authority w a s busy getting 26." its bond issue together. The A lot of people around here m a t t e r did not come to a head are delighted that the Cabinet until this, summer. members, as trustees, ignored The prime request of the its own advisory agency repre state's environmental advisory sentatives and approved the agencies tteee weeks ago was port even at the risk of giving that final action on the appli the state executives a say-so on cation be deferred at least 60 future industry at the port. days. Although, if approved, the T o M i X s o n , though, the port terminal will serve a s dock agencies have been dragging age for the hundreds of barges their feet. that each year ply the river be "These agencies had plenty of tween the Gulf of Mexico and time to inform themselves about ports along Lake Seminole in this project," he said. "They all Georgia and Alabama. know very well that there will However, it is expected to be be no detectable change in the surrounded in the future by in w a t e r quality of the river dustrialization to an extent caused by our dredging and our which would stagger the minds, contention is that the cabinet and swell the pocketbook, of the has the power to approve or people who live in this area of deny any industry we wish to the Florida Panhandle. bring to the terminal. The action by the trustees in "We were simply saying be granting the dredge and con fore that these barges couldn't struction permit, over objections stop in Jackson County, because of other agencies, p a v e d the there was just no place to stop. way for development of one of And now we're trying to give the state's last undeveloped ma them a place to stop. And. jor waterways and at the there's bound to be an economic same time stunned environmen boom here. talists a s well as commercial "Well, we just told the Cabinet fishermen 100 miles a w a y in the we only want to float on the wa Apalachicola area. ter, not to spoil it," Mixson said. The backers of the project It is seldom that a dredge and claim t h a t damage t o the river fill permit reaches the State caused b y dredging will be min Cabinet which, sitting as the imal a n d t h a t the terminal itself Trustees of the Internal Im and whatever industry sur provement Fund, has the final rounds i t will be carefully moni state say is such matters tored t o prevent pollution. without at least one objection But the environmentalists, the from one of its advisory biologists, the sanitation engi agencies. neers and the fishermen claim And it is even rarer for the that not only might the project Cabinet to receive objections destroy m a n y miles of river but from all of the agencies. And to that the inevitable pollution it ignore them all. causes will probably destroy the The application asks per world famous oyster fishing mission to dredge a basin 1,650 grounds in Apalachicola B a y , at feet long, 270 feet wide. 11 feet the river's mouth. deep, and an upland barge slip But powerful political and fia150 feet wide and 170 feet long nancial support is behind the along the west shore of the riv project and, so far, the objectors er, about two miles south of the have held little sway with any of J i m Woodruff d a m and locks the various decision making that mark the river source in bodies before which the termin L a k e Seminole. al project has been discussed. It also asks permission to con The Apalachicola R i v e r begins struct a marginal wharf 300 feet at the southern end of the long b y 200 feet wide at the west e n o r m o u s , man-made Lake end of the basin. Seminole and twists its w a y in a T h e terminal would be located series of switchbacks and immediately adjacent to a small sweeping bends more t h a n 100 power generating plant operated miles t o t h e Gulf at t h e smaU b y the Gulf Power Co. fishing village of Apalachicola. T h e staff of the Trustees a For m a n y miles it sldrts the separate staff with an executive western boundary of the Apa director exists to investigate lachicola National F o r e s t and such permits and make recom for scores of others i t flows mendations to the Cabinet mem t h r o u g h virgin forest land, bers wouldn't buy the permit uninhabited except by bear, application. deer, turkey and other woodland ''Staff recommends dis creatures. approval of this request for is The river is currently a high suance of a dredge permit pend way for barges bearing rock, ing favorable review by the sand and gravel, oil products state of an environmental im and various hard goods from p a c t statement as prepared as Gulf ports to Columbus and contemplated in the National Bainbridge, Ga., and Dothan Environmental Policy Act," was and Phenix City, Ala. the official recommendation to But once a barge enters the the cabnet. river, there is no place for it to Such a statement would be unload until it reaches i t s desti prepared by the Commerce De nation and there is little danger partment and would direct itself of pollution causing spills. toward both long and short term Pollution has not been a prob environmental aspects of the lem. project. All this will change if the E a r l M. Starnes, director of barge port near Sneads is con the Division of Planning in the structed, critics of t h e project state's Department of Adminis claim. T h e y envision series of tration another of the agencies fish kills throughout t h e river which advises the cabinet and devastation of the marine- in such matters also objected based economy anyplace near to issuance of the permit. the river. "This project," said Starnes, The current controversy ac "could ultimately cause far tually had its beginning i n 1965 reaching socio-economic and en when the U. S Department of vironmental effects on a sizable Commerce designated an 11portion of the state, its people county Panhandle a r e a sur and its natural resources. rounding Sneads, which is in "Therefore we believe an en Jackson County, as one i n which vironmental impact statement economic development could be to be unequivocally in order," expected to take place on a large he said. scale. A n d Vernon E . Keys, a shellf For reasons that a p p e a r to ish sanitation engineer in the have been obscured b y t i m e and state's Division of Health, said: changes in federal adminis "Inasmuch as this proposal will trations, the region i n and definitely have an adverse envi around Sneads was identified as ronmental effect on the Apa the center of the growth area, lachicola River watershed, I the place in which heaviest de urge that an environmental im velopment should be fostered. p a c t study be developed and By a special act of the state fully discussed before this pro posal is finalized." Legislature, Jackson County Dr. O. E. F r y e Jr., director of commissioners set up a Port Au the state's Game and Fresh Wa thority board, with members ap pointed b y the governor. For ter Fish Commission, said the y e a r s , b o a r d members planned following about the proposed >|irious w a y s of t a k i n g advan barge port:

CLEAN INDUSTRY IS. ONE PORT REQUIREMfiJi^J'i.'


'We remain of the opinion that the channel dredging asso ciated with the project will be destructive to the aquatic habit at and ecosystem. As mentioned m our earlier letter, this is one of the most productive sections of the river. "Reboval of bottom material will result in a loss of habitat for food organisms and removal of overhanging trees on the banks of the stream will result in a loss of fish food and shelter. "We also reiterate our con cern about the probability that chemical and biological pollu tants stored and processed at the industrial site will enter the river. This would also include the presence of bilge and oil wastes which will lead to the eventual degradation of the riv er." Frye didn't even request that action be delayed pending more study. He flatly recommended against issuing the permit. Robert A . Routa, chief of the survey and management divi sion of the state's Department o( Natural Resources, said he agreed with the report issued by Frye. He went further to s a y that the Apalachicola River functions a s a.n important spawning ground for Alabama shad, a spe cies he feared might be endan gered by the project. "Along with the direct effects the project could have on habit at utilized b y shad and other fish, the possible long-term ef fects of pollution from this pro posed facility and associated in dustry Apalachicola B a y should be considered," Routa said. "Since oysters ai-e filter fee ders and selectively concentrate contaminants found in their en vironment, an important oyster producing area could be sev erely damaged if industrial pol lutants enter Apalachicola Bay. O t h e r marine animals and plants could also be adversley affected b y pollutants flowing into the river and bay," Routa said. B. A. Barnes, chief of the Bu reau of Permitting in the state's Department of Air and Water Pollution Control, noted that wa ter quality in some parts of the river was already bad and that a project such as the barge ter minal might worsen the situ^ ation. He, too, recommended that an environmental impact study for the comnlete .^rlalachicola River system he conducted and care fully studied before the barge terminal permit be acted upon. One of the staunchest backers of the barge terminal is William J. Avery, secretary and for all practical purpose chief officer of the Jackson County Port Au thority. "We certainly do hope that de velopment surrounds this ter minal," said Avery, who lives in Marianna. "But we have both verbal and written agreements with agencies of government that we will not entertain any industry that has any indication of pollution contrary to state laws. 'We will approach state agencies first and let them in vestigate before we get involved with any industry and w e are seekinc only those industries compatible with the environ ment." But according to one member of the Trustees staff, who asked that his name not be used, tliis agreement might bear consid erably less weight than project backers attach to it. The staffer feels the agree ment is window dressing, a bit of fluff added to placate the en vironmentalists. It m a y well be unenforceable, he said. But his very agreement was the single most important factor influencing state Cabinet mem bers to approve issuance of the permit. Puring the more than two hours of debate over the issue. Cabinet members on numerous occasions cited the pi'oviso as proof that no potentially dan gerous industry could be located on t h l banks of the river.

Mobile Bay Dredge To Continue Activity


BAY MINETTE, Ala. (UPI) A circuit court judge has refused to order a halt to dredging of oyster shells in Mobile Bay after witnesses said such an order would damage the economy of three states. Judge Telfair Mashburn said that Alabama Attorney Genei^al William J. Baxley, who sought a temporary injunction against the dredging, failed to prove the activity would cause irreparable harm to plant and animal life in the bay. Mashburn also said Baxley had failed to ask Gov. George C. Wallace to avoid a lease agreement between the state and Radcliff Ma terials Co., which permitted the dredging op erations. James Bozeman, manager of the Ideal Ce ment Co., plant at nearby Mobile, said his company would be forced to shut down if the court prohibited the dredging. "If that dredge stopped, Ideal's operation would stop within a day," Bozeman said. He added that it would cost $5 million and take from 11/2 to 2 years to convert the plant to a limestone process. Monroe H. Slaughter, Ideal's sales manager for Alabama, said a halt to the dredging would bring the construction industry in Northwest Florida, South Alabama and South Mississippi to a standstill. "If you stop the dredge," said Slaughter, "there are going to be about six-thousand people in the construction industry in Mobile and Baldwin County out of work." He said a current shortage of cement was the worst he has seen in 19 years in the busi ness. In pressing for the injunction, the attorney general's office offered a movie film as evi dence which allegedly showed the dredge op erating over areas that shelter live oyster beds. Under a franchise from the U.S. Corps of Engineers, Radcliff is licensed to dig from the floor of the bay the shells of dead oysters that have been buried for many years. In addition to its use in making cement, the material is also valuable a s a poultry feed material and for other uses.

UEORGi.!; G A I N E R ,

Fire Destroys Beach Home

of an eight room house that c a u g h t fire early Saturriay morning at Panama City B e a c h , according to Joe Flynn, chief of the Panama City Beach F i r e Department. Flynn said no one was injured in the blaze and the home's own er, Mrs.- Dorothy Bertolino, of Lt. Gordon McCall, supervisor Route 3, B o x 187X, was at work of the Panama City,Marine P a while fire gutted her house. She trol office, announced Friday was the only resident of the home, reports showed. that Marifarms, Inc. will re lease twenty million baby Upon arriving at the scene shrimp into St. Andrews B a y shortly after midnight, firemen saw the structure totally eng Monday. ulfed in flames, they said. Release of these shrimp is in accord with Marifarms' lease Flynn said if the alarm had been sent out earlier the house with "the state of Florida. Mari might have been saved. The fire farms has released twenty mil chief went on to say that an un lion shrimp for the last two pro known passerby gave the first ceeding years. alarm. Harmon Shields, director of Units from the Panama City the Florida Division of Marine Beach Fire Department labored Resources, Department ot Natu along with crews from the Hiral Resources, Marine Patrol land Park and Northside Volun and Edwin Joyce, .Tr., chief ot teers, and the Naval Coastal the Bureau of Marine Science, .Systems Laboratory firemen, to Department of Natural R e control the blaze from spreading sources, will come to Panama to nearby buildings. A total of 22 City Monday afternoon to super men worked at the scene, Flynn vise this operation. said. Shields says that the release The home was being re-modof these shrimp should improve olcd and reports show there w a s the local catches of commercial paint and other flammable m a shrimp and sport tishin-g in all local bays. . terials in the house.

Baby Shrimp To Be Released By Marifarms

M! I.! I N S

CANDID COMMENT
D o W e Have Too M a n y Elections!
By -TOK A U v E N SUiff Writer Beginning with the presiden tial preference primary last spring, the Democratic primary, Sept. 12, the Democratic run-off, Oct. 3, and the November gener al election, we have lots ot vot ing to do. It is our American right to vote and thereby voice our opin ions. If you dn so in every elec tion this year, you will find yourself pulling levers four limes, all on different occasions. Do you think this is too many elections? Or is it not enough? Well, the News-Herald Candid Comment reporter ventured out to Lynn Haven Saturday to ask local residents "Do you think we have too many elections?". . . "I don't think so. They have to have elections because leaders are needed in government, in or der to projiorly run the cities." Owen Starling Lynn Haven "I don't think it is loo much. 1 have not been able to vote in all of them because I am a regis tered Republican. I think they should change the election sys tem so that everyone could vote for all city and county officials. As it is now, you have to take "sides" before you can vote in the primaries." Mrs. Jyois Whitenor Lynn Havon

BRIEFS

Sneaky Snakes Stalking


JACKSONVILLE (UPI) A drunk who was taking a walk was so startled when ho found a seven-foot boa constrictor in his path he im mediately flagged down a police car. "I've been drinking, but you won't believe what I've found," the unidentified man told Patrolman J. G. Stelma. "We believed he was drunk, but wont with him," related Stelma. After searching for a few minutes with a flashlight, the patrolmen found the snake on the sidewalk in front of a house. The officers got a burlap bag from a neighbor and finally prodded the snake into the bag with a billy club. Stelma said the drunk told them ho was af raid to go home, but once the snake was cap tured the man said "Now, I can go in the house," turned and walked away. JENSEN BEACH (UPI) Elsie Dean, who designs advertising layout for the Jensen Beach Mirror weekly newspaper, felt some thing, crawling at her feet a s she sat in her chair. She looked down and confirmed her worst fears it was a rattle snake. Her screams brought advertising manager Jim Driscoll on the double, brandishing a yardstick. He dispatched the baby, foot-long rattler with three blows, but it took more than that to dispel the near panic that ran through the ad vertising department. If there was one baby there was sui-e to 1* more.

HK(>V>N "It is not I'OMliy ton many. They are necessary to clotor^ itiinf who llu' ')cm(K!ratic and f^ppuhlican i i o i n i n p e K will be.
Thou y o u ha-.c the gener'al OIPC-

tiori to finalize thf results, and see who gpts in office." Mike Noiris l>ynn Haven "The number of olections that wp have gives tho public more time to look over the candidates and what llipy have done. I don't know what i.ho cost is, but 1 think wo in some w a y are j)aying l o r it."
!'",dilio Bishop

WHITKNKK

I'KliUS

"I believe there are too many, bccuase it is confusing. The av erage man doesn't know the in dividual who is running for of fice. In order to make a fair judgement, he must l)e better in formed about the candidates." John L . A. Peuhs Lynn Haven "Actually I do not think it is too much. People want to t r y different candidates. They m a y not exactly know just how good a job a certain candidate m a y do. By having this many elec tions, if a person sees an elected official that is not doing his job, there is more of an opportunity to rei)lace that official. More elections give the voter a much broader picture of just what is going on." Willie Brown Lynn 5laven

Lynn Maven "I don't think there are too many. I only wish the people would take advantage of one of the few privileges w e have left." Jim Mowat Lynn Haven

STAKTJ.NT,

ANDERSON

"I think it is, because I be lieve four elections in one year is too many. The elections should be spread out over a pe riod of time, not aU at once." Mark Anderson Linn Haven

I-

Uncle Sam Will Float Long-Term Raise Needed JZ Billion


WASHINGTON (UP)The Treas- (highest rate the Treasury has ofury will begin peddling a new fered since 1941. kind of government bond next The high rate of interest is conmonth to help carry out President sidered anti-inflationary because it Eisenhower's long range program means that savings banks, insurfor halting inflation ance companies and other larger Republican administration lead- holders of personal savings will iners believe that ore 01 the biggest vest their funds in these bonds. thieats to "sound money" is the Thus, the government can borrow war-swollen federal debt, which out of money which already exists no\v totals $264.500,000,000 money which is being saved. Thea eventual goal is to stop the Otherwise it would borrow from debt from growing, by balancing legular commercial banks, which the federal budge*, and then be- might be cheaper, but is felt to be gin paung it doun But right now inflationary. W h e n commercial the government s still spending banks lend to Uncle Sarn, they set more than it takes in, so the new up an account in has name, but do admm'stration will have to borrow not have to put up the actual cash } 52,000,000,000 from the public next until the bills come in. Meanwhile, r month. taey may lend tne cash to others, S'nce it has no choice but to bor- thus inflating the supply of money row, the Treasury is tr>mg to. in circulation float the loan in a way that will Ultimately, Secretary of the hu\e a 'minimum." inflationary Treasury George M Humphrey effect to refinance e. substantial Half the money will be raised hopes of the shiftMay 1, through sale of a bond hunk it fromfederal debt by short ing inflationary, which will not come due for an- term bank notes to long term other 30 yearsthe longest term of boiroxung by the Treasury bonds since 1933 Buyers of the new bond will recene 3 1-4 per cent interestthe PANAMA CITY NEWS Friday April 10, 1953 \VDLP-590 On Your Dial Try ROy/UlS New Kind of Pudding >bu Dorfc Hove to Code!

WEEK-END

OUR. STORE HOURS: 7:00 a. m. to 6:30 p. m. Monday Through Thursday. 7:00 a. m. to 8:00 p. m. Friday and Saturday. Closed Wednesday at 1:00 p. m.
Your friendly home owned and operated Tip Top Grocer/ would like for you io check the items listed below and see if you can't save money on your food when you shop at our store. We have five walk-in coolers and carry one sf the largest stocks of meat in town. We have meat io suit everybody'e budget. Armour's Star beef. Swift's U. S. good and Swift's tender baby beef. Select your brand of beef and sea it cut. We have five good meat cutters to serve you with experience ranging from 35 years, 20 years to 10 years. Your patronage is appreciated. UKULELE SLICED ALL BRAND CANNED

BIG BILL LARGE SAY A PRAYERAs fighting- continued around the neutral Panmunjom truce area in Korea, an American Manne patrollike the one pictured here during a pra>er serxice led by chaplain Father James Kelly killed, or wounded 63 Chinese in short but bftter battles. (NEA Telephoto)

Man Inventor' in! Mature is His Leader

BAMA BRAND PURE APPLE

PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (UP) Man can boast of his progress, but nature always anticipates him and probably will until the end of time, according to Dr. W. F. G. Swarm, director of the Bartol Research Foundation and senior advisor to the Franklin Institute Laboratories for Research and Development. The physicist said bats had radar long- before man ever thought of it. a little insect flies as fast as a jet plane, a fish has been using bi-focals for ages and a certain moih, during breeding season, can sense its mate t\vo miles away He said the octopus could claim a patent for jet propulsion and the archer fish, which shoots water at insects and knocks them from the air, is as accurate as any modern gun But the physicist placed man a step ahead of one lowly creature "It seems reasonable lo suppose." Dr Swann said, "that man has a greater potentiality for joy than a snail "

Human Body May Be Protected Against Killing Atomic Rays

PINEAPPLE No. 2 Can 23? MILK 2 14-oz. Cans LIMA BEANS 2 u>. ceiio Bags 35? PEACHES No. 2% Can JELLY 2Lb. Jar _ SLAB BACON LK TRIPE 24-oz. Can 37$ BEEF LIVER Lb.
OAKHILL BRAND SPICED PICKLED ARMOUR'S STAR WILSON'S CER1 SWIFT'S TENDER YOUNG MAYFIELD GOLDEN CREAM STYLE LEAN FRESH PORK

270
SLICEt) FREE

for Richer Flavor Oeom/er Easy Digestion!

be read, pointed to an eventual By DELOS SMITH understanding of how a certain United Press Science Editor CHICAGO (UP) Science todav body chemical can be made to dereported progress in its search to cease the vulnerability of our provide human bodies with the bodies to radiation damage. ability to withstand killing doses of The chemical is cysteme which atomic radiation without d\mg. our bodies extract from cystme, an In an age when one atomic bomb ammo acid "building block" of our could irradiate scores of thousands flesh. Cvsteme is an indispensable of humans with sufficient intensity part in the making of many proto kill them all, few, if any scien- teins. By a means now unknown tific quests could be of more prac- it serves to decrease radio-sensitivity when present in quantity. tical or immediate importance Sylvia M Mayer and Harvey M. They were assigned an entire section of the annual meeting- of Pratt of the commission's Argonne the American Physiological Society. National Lboratory, LeMont, 111 , one of six organizations of the Fed- demonstrated that mice injected eration of American Societies for with cyst.ne withstood almost twice the aosage of X-rays as other mice. Experimental Biology. They found that if the injected The physiologists were to recene 51 reports on radiation and its mice were given oxygen just before "effects". Almost all stemmed ana auimg the time they were befrom research sponsored by the ing inadiated, their tolerance of Atomic Energy Commission in its the X-rays was increased by ap12 laboratories and in 169 univer- prcramatly one-sixth. Their preesities, colleges, hospitals, and pri- sent studies, they reported, may vate laboratories For reseaich in "deteimme more directly -whether biology, biophysics, and medicine, the protectne effect of cysteine is Dredge Begins Work the commission spent $23,864,170 in related to the availability of oxygen To Free Big Tanker in the biological system " the fiscal year, 1952 No one suggests it -will ever be JACKSONVILLE UP) A dredge BY A HAIR was to begin work today or tomor- possible to make radiation harmNAUGATUCK, Conn. (UP) Pa row on a project designed to re- less. But it may be possible to inlease the SS Stanvacfc Durban, a crease the ability of human bodies trolman Harris Burke became sustanker siranded on a St. Johns to withstand heavier and heavier picious when he saw three teen-ag doses which now would be lethal. River mudbank. at because The dredge will cut a channel Titles of some of the papers to be boys \vas7 30 a m , "Lads of their tha to the Stanvac and then remove read beginning tomoircm indicated hair should mussed. have their hair age at least mud from around the vessel's hull. the progress being made in this combed at that hour," he said. His It ran aground last Saturday morn- direction One, which was made part of the hunch was correct they were ing while enroute to a local shipfederation's proceedings but -won't running away from home yard.

CORN 2 No. 303 Cans


WILSON'S CER/TCTTED CORN BEEF

SHOULDER ROAST
ARMOUR'S STAR PURE

Lb

HASH

Lb. Can

BORDEN'S BAKE *N EAT

LARD
25?

16

J2.19
Sliced Free

BISCUIT
SWIFT'S PREMIUM

Scans

WILSON'S PECAN BRAND SUGAR-CURED SLAB

BACON Lb
Lb
TENDER JUICY

FRANKS 1 Lb. Cello Pkg.


FRESH

FLORIDA GRADE A, DRESSED & DRAWN

4 Large Ears
EXTRA FANCY FIRM RED RIPE

25c

TOMATOES Lb. _ TOMATOES 2 No. 303 Cans CALIFORNIA SUNKIST LEMONS 490 Size _
STANDARD PACK. WILSON'SFINE FOR BAKING

CLUB STEAK
BRANDED U S GOOD HEAVY WESTERN BEEF

CHUCK ROAST
FRESH GROUND ALL-MEAT

*Ei Lb.
TENDER, JUICY ROUND

IIII H'S? BUI T C BAKEIllTE

Q 3Lb. Can

STEAK
PURE PORK PAN

SESSION'S WINTERIZED COTTON SEED

OIL No. 10 Glass


AMERICAN BEAUTY BRAND

$1-45
LE/1N ALL-MEAT

Lb. Lb.

PORK and
PICNIC BRAND

2 2Vz Cans....

29c STEWING BEEF


JUICY TENDER T-BONE

MAYONNAISE

Full Quart

49$ STEAK

Lb. Lb.

NO. 10 GLASS KETTLE RJSNDKRED PURE

Qieety
very latest Velon Plastic

LARD
LONG ISLAND

79* HOOP CHEESE


LEAN, MEATY COUNTRY ARMOUR'S 3 LARGE CANS

WILSON'S WISCONSIN

WHITE POTATOES 10 Lbs.


Armour's Mayflower Colored In Sticks

Lb.
WILSON'S KORN KING SLICED, RINDLESS

Lb.
AMERICAN BEAUTY TOMATO

EACON
2!

Lb. Layer
SLICED FREE

GRADE A SUGAR-CURED TENDERIZED

6ATSU P
TRELLIS

2 14-oz. Bottles

rlltlllU HAM? Lb.


THIN SLICED TENDER

31^111 A UHfiflfi*

PEJIS 2 No 303 Cans


ARMOUR'S GRADE A, SHIPPED, LARGE, GRADE, A, FLORIDA. DRESSED AND DRAWN

Fid LIVI

Lb. Lb.

SMALL FRESH LEAN(SLICED FREE)

EGHS
BIG BILL BRAND BLACKEYE A

TENDER MEATY BRISKET

Lb.
PURE PORK SMOKED COUNTRY

L Lb. Cello Bag


Full Qi. ....390

PICNIC BRAND

Lb.
FRESH RD3 IN

ipeciaf
and one e<irton coupon from Wilson's Crff6*d Margarine

WILSON S CERTIFIED GRADE A, SHIPPED MEDIUM TENDER SKINLESS GORJDY'S

(Sliced Free) Lb.


FINE FOR HOT DOGS

WATERPROOF PROTECTS CLOTHiS


This attractive, cheery Tea Apron for serving is a genuine >alue at twice the price! Bares neat and pertcharmingly youthful, m assorted, gavlycolored patterns.. Every lovely tone and print so extra flattering, you'll want several! Lavishly trimmed, too, with the new fashionable ruffled edge. Ties easily m back, and of course, made of practical Firestone Velon Plastic. To get YOUR 'Waterproof Serving Apron, simply send the Certified Margarine carton panel which reads, '''SAVE THIS COUPON!" Enclose one carton panel with 256 (not postage stamps) andfilled-m coupon below This offer is made to introduce you to the delicious, wholesome goodness of Wilson's Certified Margarine, "the spread that betters jour bread". . betters > our baking and cooking, too! Be sure to eetyoui Serving Apron now while this limited offer is still being made'

26-oz. Boxes
SOUTHERN DAISY

Lb.
TENDER JUICY

10-lb. Bag
TENDER, JUICY, MEATY BEEF

25-lb Bag
Lb.

Lb.
FRESH LEAN

Lb.
FULL QT FULL FT. TENDER JUICY

FRESH HOME GROWN

Lb.
HILL'S BEST GRADE STREAK OLEAN

1-lb. Cans
BETTER BRAND PURE PORK

Lb. Roll
BRANDED U S. GOOD SHOULDER BEEF Send only and the carton coupons with order form APRON P. O. Box 6338Chicago 77, III. Enclosed find Wilson's Certified Margarine carton panel (s) with cents ( dollars) for which please seed me : Serving Apron (s) as advertised. (Send 25 and one carton panel for each aproo. No stamps, please). Q Send roe your FREE premium catalogue. Name. Street. Zone
Tbaoffergixuto*b txbaxtttd.

BRANDED GOOD U S HEAVY WESTERN BEEF


*O* m SSS I B B * M 4-J*-/

AIR CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT


FANCY FIRM RIPE YELLOW

4-DAY SIZE, CALIFORNIA ICEBERG

L I I vvt
PRAIRIE BELT State '
"> '>>' Contrt'ntal US S r-r when s&Pb

L Large Heads
No. 5 Can _____
840 HARRISON AVi. E. i. GODFREY.

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