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The Montgomery Advertiser from Montgomery, Alabama • 2
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The Montgomery Advertiser from Montgomery, Alabama • 2

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Montgomery Advertiser July 10, Tuesday 1962 STATE, LOCAL DEATHS MEMORY CHAPEL B. R. BROOKS M. N. ROMEO CREIGHTON, Mrs.

Mary S. Services for Mrs. Creighton were held from Leak-Memory Chapel Monday at 2 p.m. with Dr. Eugene Peacock officiating.

Burial was in Oakwood Cemetery with Leak-Memory Chapel directing. Active pallbearers were Mayor Earl James, Harvey 0. Marshall, William P. Chambless J. R.

Thornbury Earl T. Chambless, and Garnett C. Class Jr. Honorary pallbearers were Walter J. Knabe, Dr.

George: S. Peters, Dr. Paul S. Mertins Francis Brooks Higgins, E. A.

Erwin, A. K. Davis J. 0. Hicks, G.

S. Bayne, William L. Battle, Harry W. Clements John Howard Mosley, John F. Gillespie, Barney B.

Beaird, George W. Harrison, Milliard G. Smith Earl Garner and P. R. Perdue.

JONES, Miss Daisy, 1100 Woodward died at her ho.ne Monday at 8:30 a.m. following and extended illness. was a member of First Methodist Church and a resident of Montgomery for 12 years. Survivors include two brothers, George David Jones, Montgomery; Woodfin Grady Jones, Spartanburg, S.C.; two sisters, Miss Mary Clare Jones, Montgomery; and Mrs. Morning J.

Gaston, Montgomery. Funeral services will be held from the chapel of First Methodist Church today at 3 p.m. with Dr. Joel McDavid officiating. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery with LeakMemory Chapel directing.

Active pallbearers will be Morris Putnam, John W. Gaston, Dr. Fred M. Haston, Ed C. Hall, J.

E. Elgin, and John Williams. BROCK, Mrs. Rebecca Lamar, 86, a resident of 1949 Graham St. and a resident of Montgomery for 76 years, died at 5:25 a.m.

Monday following an extended illness. She was a member of First Baptist Church. Survivors include two sons, Dr. A. F.

Brock, New Orleans, J. Dan Brock, Miami, four daughters, Mrs. C. J. Carter, Anniston; Mrs.

Jesse M. Williams Montgomery; Mrs. G. K. Witmer, Montgomery; Mrs.

W. S. Parsons, New Orleans, two brothers, Robert J. Lamar and John W. Lamar, both of Montgomery; a number of grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Funeral arrangements will be announced by Leak-Memory Chapel. WHITE CHAPEL H. S. DURDEN-G. E.

VICKERY HANNON, Mrs. Orie, a resident of Manitowoc, for five years and a former resident of Shorter, died in Mantiowoc, at 10 p.m. Thursday after a brief illness. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. L.

Bernhardt, Mantiowoc, two grandchildren, Robert Bernhardt and Richard Bernhardt, both of Manitowoc, an uncle, J. H. Hamilton, Shorter; three nieces, Mrs. M. L.

Wilson, Montgomery, Mrs. George Smith, Savannah, and Mrs. Carrie Lee Beasinger, Phoenix, a nephew, Hamilton Cloud, Washington, D.C. The funeral will be held from White Chapel Tuesday at 10 a.m. with Rev.

Walter Bozeman officiating. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. BOYD, Gus 75, a resident of Hope Hull for 42 years, died suddenly at his home Sunday at 11:50 p.m. Surviving are the wife, Mrs. Lora L.

Boyd, Hope Hull; a son, Gus Boyd Hope Hull; four daughters, Mrs. Ruby B. Sellers, Mrs. Mary B. Lassiter and Mrs.

Margery B. Henry, all of Hope Hull and Mrs. Marie B. Moore, Darien, nine grandchildren and a number of nieces and nephews. The funeral will be held from the Pintlala Baptist Church Tuesday at 3 p.m.

with Rev. Robert Lowery officiating. Burial will be in Memorial Cemetery, White Chapel directing. The body will lie in state at the church from 2 p.m. until 3 p.m.

Pallbearers will be Eugene Boyd, George Boyd, Mason Boyd, Dudley Boyd, James Boyd and Alto Boyd. Honorary pallbearers will be the Brotherhood of the Pintlala Baptist Church. WATFORD, Mrs. Nellie Me ek. The funeral for Mrs.

Nellie Meek Watford was held from White Chapel Monday at 11 a.m. with Rev. Lewis Marler officiating. Burial was in Memorial Cemetery. Pallbearers, were E.

J. M. Meek, S. M. Post, R.

T. Woodham and F. Goggins. GARRETT, Roy Stuart, 67, a lifelong resident of Montgomery, died at his home 965 Cloverdale Road, at 4:20 p.m. Sunday after a brief illness.

Surviving are the wife, Mrs. Vivian Stanley Garrett, Montgomery; a daughter, Mrs. R. A. Bryson, Decatur; three brothers, Col.

James M. Garrett George T. Garrett and Frank B. Garrett, all of Montgomery; a number of nieces and nephews. The fu- The Best In Flowers Capitol Floral Company 910 Adams 265-6728 (Continued From Page 1) land to New Zealand, and aroused prompt and angry denunciation in Moscow and Peiping.

Some disruption in Pacific communications was reported but not as much as had been feared. H-Blast brilliant glare fading into a glow of rainbow colors, lasting six utes. Honolulu is 750 miles northeast of Johnston Island. In Auckland, New Zealand some 3,843 miles south of Johnpeople were startled glowing light sweeping across clear sky from northern to southern horizon. Auckland watchers saw a ening red band of color, through with quivering white shafts of light.

At Wake Island 1,500 miles northwest of Johnston-the more than 200-mile-high blast was as bright lightning. Watchers the Fiji miles away -saw a glow changing through green, blue and yellow and finally to orange and red. Moscow radio called the highaltitude hydrogen device blast crime. BLAST FROM MOSCOW "The "T.S.A. exploded its clear device in space despite decisive protests of all mankindprecisely on the day when World Congress for General armament began its work in Moscow," the broadcast said.

Communist China's official China News Agency declared test conducted "in defiance of strong worldwide public opposition." The successful test followed attempts that failed because missile malfunctions June 4 June 19 and four postponements of the third try that worked perfectly. "By golly, we finally got one," exulted an official of Joint Task Force 8, the nuclear test team which has carried 26 previous smaller and low-level tests since April in the current Pacific series. Confirmation that the explosion was thermonuclear with a hydrogen device came from the Atomic Energy Commission in Washington after it first had said that the blast involved a nuclear device. SMALL DEVICE Joint Task Force 8 officials ported the United States fired small atomic device at about miles altitude over the South lantic in 1958. "But this is the highest explosion ever tried with a device this type," a task force spokesman said.

Official information available the blast's size and altitude vague. Official sources refused to port precise altitude but Joint Task Force 8 sources advised more than 200 miles was a sound estimate. The highest reported altitude for a Soviet test was "over miles." President Kennedy gave this figure in his March 2 speech announcing the United States would resume atmospheric testing. MEGATON PLUS The Russians have not nounced any figures on their altitudes. Joint Task Force 8 officially classified the blast force as megaton plus--meaning more than million tons of TNT.

Unofficial timates ranged to 10 megatons. This would be 500 times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima, rated at 20 kilotons or 20,000 tons of TNT. The blast's shattering effect the ionosphere--the band of ticles encircling the atmosphere which bounces radio waves around the earth-washed out signals of Honolulu radio stations briefly. CONNECTIONS OUT In Tokyo the Japanese Overseas Telephone Telegraph Co. ported radiotelephone connections with Honolulu, California Buenos Aires were knocked for a short time.

However, the Federal Aviation Agency in Honolulu said it no immediate reports of serious interference in radio communications. It said radio service tween Hawaii and California normal. The device was fired with a force -plus more than a million tons of TNT 15 minutes after its booster Thor missile blasted off from the Johnston Island test base. It exploded precisely on schedule at 11 p.m. (4 a.m.

Eastern Standard Time Monday.) BRILLIANT GLARE The magnitude of the flash was so great that it filled heavy clouds over Hawaii with a Six Men Hurt, One Critically, In Plant Blast BUTTE, Mont. (AP) Six men were injured, one critically, urday night in an explosion at copper mine compressor plant the Anaconda Co. Another man was hospitalized smoke fire which inhalation after in fightding raged near the Bell Diamond plant. Bob Melvin was in critical dition with burns on the face, arms and hands and a leg injury. Also remaining at the hospital for treatment of face and hand burns and lacerations were James and Ed Bonner, general superintendent of the Butte mines.

The explosion rocked the Butte area at 5:10 p.m. and started fire that was controlled about hours later. The explosion apparently triggered by a small grass which spread under a 10-inch compressed air pipe. The blast was heard and five miles from the mine. Billowing clouds of black smoke were visible for 10 miles.

From BUREAU 80 COLD 100 90 FORECAST 100 For Daytime Tuesday Piques Shew High. WEATHER BUREAU by Scattered showers and thunderstorms are expected the from the Mississippi Valley to the Rockies. Fair skies should remain the same except for some cooling along the upper Mississippi Valley and the Great Lakes region. widREAPPORTION NOW Jefferson Pair Urges Rejection Of 2 Bills BIRMINGHAM (AP) Two officers of the Jefferson County Democratic Campaign Committee said they asked the state House of Representatives Mo n- day to refuse to adopt either of two reapportionment bills now pending in the legislature. Davis Vann, committee chairman, said he telegraphed the House, in care of Speaker Virgis Ashworth, asking that the "use the short time remaining before July 16 to enact a (reapportionment) plan under the Constitution." The legislature, now in special meet a federal court deadline session, has until July, 16 to on a reapportionment plan, A three-judge federal panel at Montgomery has said it would act to reapportion the legislature if that body did not act.

Vann's telegram, as released here, objects to both House Bill 59, and the proposed 67 senator amendment. SIX REASONS He listed six reasons why the House bill fails to comply with the state constitution and five reasons why the proposed constitutional amendment does not live up to the constitution. Vann said HB 59, as amended: Two Die In Suicide Pact PANAMA CITY, Fla. A law officer who had been alertled by Connecticut a found telephone call bodies from of the a Navy employe and his wife in their trailer home Saturday night. Sheriff Charlie Abbott said Howard C.

Freer, 46, and wife, Annemarie, committed suicide by running a hose from the exhaust pipe of their car into the trailer. A dog and two parakeets also were found dead. The couple left a number of papers, including instructions to pay several bills and to bury the dog. Abbott said he received call from Miss Anna Freer of Bridge: port, sister of the dead man, asking that he check on the Freers. The sheriff quoted the sister as saying she received a letter from Freer dated July 4 indicating they might attempt to commit suicide.

Miss Freer said her sister-in-law was a semiinvalid and the couple was despondent over her condition. Abbott said the two were said they apparently had been found fully clothed on a bed. He dead since July 4. The bodies were sent to Jacksonville, for cremation and were to be sent to Bridgeport for burial. Freer was an employe of the Navy Mine Defense Laboratory here.

Mooresville Native New Reception Chief WASHINGTON (AP) Maury W. Rice was appointed Monday to be administrative officer of the new Bureau of Outdoor Recreation, Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall announced. Rice is a veteran financial management official, having had more than 25 years of civilian and military experience in his field. He has been with interior since 1951 in executive positions in budget and finance operations.

A Native of Mooresville, he lives now in Falls Church, Va. The Appointment does not mean any change in Rice's salary of $14,705 a year. School Of Nursing Honors Montgomerian Mrs. Patricia Battle Simmons, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Dudley Battle, 3369 Cleveland Avenue, was named to the dean's list superior students in the School of Nursing at the University of Alabama for the second semester.

Mrs. Simmons, who was grad-3 uated from the School of Nursing in June, was named to the dean's list every semester during her college course. She is now employed University Hospital, Coral Gables, Fla. Her husband, Grayson Simmons, Monroeville, is attending medical school in (Coral Gables. Couple Held In Murder Of Teen-Ager neral will be held from Chapel Tuesday with Rev.

Earl Hall officiating. Burial will The be in Greenwood tery. family requests omission of remembrances. Pallbearers will be Ed Auerbach Cecil Eagerton, Eason Cook, Jimmie Durr, Jim Hegenwald and Reese Harvey. KNIGHT, David 86, a resident of Montgomery for 45 years and a resident of 2205 E.

4th died is a local hospital at 4:30 p.m. Sunday after a long illness. Surviving are a son, K. C. Knight, Montgomery; a brother, Joe Knight, Cross City, six grandchildren and a number of great grandchildren.

The funeral will be held from White Chapel Tuesday at 2 p.m. with Rev. G. Nelson Duke of officiating. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery.

The family requests the omission of rememberances. Pallbearers will be James C. Floyd, Stanley Norris, Ralph Hobbie, Douglas Williamson, William L. Coker Jr. and W.

M. Martin. Honorary pallbearers will be the Men's Bible Class at the Forest Park Baptist Church and the Mens of Bible Class of the Capitol Heights Baptist Church. LUNSFORD, Mrs. Annie Lou, a resident of 153 Riverside Drive, died in a local hospital at 5 p.m.

Sunday after an extended illness. Surviving are the husband, J. S. Lunsford, Montgomery; a son, James R. Lunsford, New Orleans, three brothers, W.

J. Snell, Montgomery, E. E. Snell, Columbus, and Chris Snell, Siluria; three grandchildren. The funeral will be held from the Clayton Street Baptist Church Tuesday at 10 a.m.

with Rev. H. Mac Johnson Jr. officiating. Burial will be in Oakhill Cemetery at Prattville, White Chapel directing.

Pallbearers will be W. E. Young, Warren Wood, Lamar Miller, Charles Kreamer, Ray Cook and Tom Doran. TARVER, Henry 71, a resident of Montgomery for 30 years and a resident of 416 W. Jeff Davis died in a local hospital at 8:50 p.m.

Saturday after a brief illness. Surviving are the wife, Mrs. Myrtle P. Tarver, Montgomery; a sister, Mrs. Willie T.

Guerry, Fresno, a nephew, William T. Guerry, Fresno, several great nieces and nephews. The funeral will be held from White Chapel Wednesday at 2 p.m. with burial in Greenwood Cemetery. STATE DEATHS Elba HURST, Alex Franklin, 20, died in Enterprise Sunday.

Funeral services will be held 10 a.m. Tuesday from the New Brockton Baptist Church with the Rev. C. M. Messick officiating.

Burial will be in the church cemetery, Hayes Funeral Home directing. Survivors include the mother, Mrs. Alex Hurst, Elba; four sisters, Mrs. Foy White, Elba; Mrs. Cecil L.

Wicker, Ft. Rucker; Mrs. Foster, Wambles, Bellwood, Ross Ammons, Castro Valley, Calif. Dothan GRIFFIN, Mrs. Aferine, 82, died in Eaton Park, Sunday.

Funeral services will be held 2 p.m. Tuesday from the Rehobeth Baptist Church with the Rev. C. C. Balcom and the Rev.

J. R. Morrow officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery, Johnson Funeral Home directing. Survivors include three brothers, Sam Character, Lakeland, Jim Character, Phenix City, and John W.

Character, Lineville; a stepson, K. A. Griffin, Dallas, five stepdaughters, Mrs. In ez Jones, Mrs. Tom Campbell, Mrs.

Alene Owens, Mrs. Eunice Thomas, and Mrs. Hess Hurry, all of Dallas, several nieces and nephews. Rockford grandchildren. A Montgomery Negro, Samuel Lee Motley, 20, was reported in "serious" condition Monday at McEWEN, Ben 60, died Wednesday.

Funeral services were held 11 a.m. Friday from the Sears Chapel with the Rev. James Maples and the Rev. Roy Walker, officiating. Burial was in the church cemetery, Service Funeral Home directing.

Survivors include the widow, Ben McEwen, Rockford; a daughter, Mrs. Mildred A. Smith, Montgomery; a son, Vernon McEwen, Rockford; four sisters, Mrs. Ida Radabough, Mrs. Annie Darnell, and Mrs.

Fannie Crosley, all of Akron, Oio; Mrs. Tullie Hammonds, Reform; three Tom brothers, McEwen, J. S. both McEwen of Rock- and ford; George McEwen, enter; three grandchildren. Titus HOLMAN, Wade 64, died at his home Monday.

Funeral serv-ing ices will be held 4 p.m. Tuesday from the Buyck Methodist Church with the Rev. J. D. Williams, the Rev.

Marvin Ennis and the Rev. Roy E. Walker officiating. Burial will be in the Holman Cemetery, Campbell Funeral Home directing. Survivors include the widow, Mrs.

Wade Holman, Titus; son, Hampton Holman, Rockford; a daughter, Mrs. John Favor, Cocoa Beach, six brothers, Robert Lee Holman and Dewey Holman, both of Montgomery; Charlie Hol- man, Brewer Holman, Truman Holman and Mason Holman, all of Titus; a sister, Mrs. T. E. Cooper, Titus; five grandchildren.

QUAILES, William Andrew, 94, died in a local hospital Sunday. Funeral services will be held 10 a.m. Tuesday from the Lawrence Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Bo Posey officiating. Burial will be in the Pineview Memory Gardens, Lawrence Service directing.

Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Rebecca B. Quailes, Selma; three sons, William A. Quailes Charleston, S. James W.

Quailes, Selma, and Lamar S. Quailes, Montgomery. Prattville Selma HOLLON, Bobby Wayne, 26, drowned near Wetumpka Sunday. Funeral services will be held 2:30 p.m. Tuesday from the Liberty Baptist Church with the Rev.

Frank Lowrey officiating. Burial will be in the church cemetery, White FunerHome directing. Survivors include the parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.

J. Hollon, Prattville; a sister, Mrs. Harry Golson, Prattville; two brothers, Reese Hollon and Winston Hollon, both of Prattville; a number of aunts and uncles; several nieces and nephews. Franklin GRIFFIN, Sybil Elane, 2, died in Monroeville Monday. Funeral services will be held 4 p.m.

Tuesday from the Franklin Assembly of God Church with Mrs. Mary Wadford officiating. Burial will be in the Bryant Cemetery, Johnson Funeral Home directing. Survivors include the parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Ira K. Griffin Franklin; a sister, Betty Griffin, Franklin; the paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Griffin, Franklin; the maternal grandfather, Rayford Rowell, Franklin. Brundidge HENDERSON, George Robert, 77, home Monday.

Funeral services will be held 3 p.m. from the Bethlehem Baptist Church with the Rev. Charles Kerby in officiating. church ial will be the cemetery, Jackson Funeral Home directing. Survivors include three sons, L.

W. Henderson and Arnie Henderson, both of Brundidge; W. C. Henderson, Columbus, two daughters, Mrs. Cleo Clower, Montgomery, and Mrs.

George Rogers, Blakely, a brother, Wiley Henderson, Crestview, two sisters, Mrs. Mandy Moore, Columbus, Mrs. H. C. Dickey, 14 grandchildren; 16 great grandchildren.

Montgomery WOLFE, Mrs. Lela 73, formerly of Montgomery, died in Chattanooga, Sunday night. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. Survivors include one brother, Fred M.

Stewart Chattanooga, two nephews, T. Sgt. Fred M. Stewart, U.S. Air Force, Lake Charles, and George W.

Stewart, Aiken, S.C. She was the widow of Brownlee Wolfe of Montgomery. Orthodox Jew Leaders Hold Meeting MIAMI BEACH, (AP)Jewish Orthodox leaders grappled Monday with secular and religious problems confronting them in imparting the spiritual principles of Judaism to the American Jewish Community. The consensus of these leaders attending 26th Annual Convention of the Rabbinical Council of America was that only the can implement any deep and meaningful concept for American Rabbi Theodore Adams of New York, a former president of the Council, was Critical of lay of the rabbi in purely leaders who reduce the influences areas. The rabbi has always ence occupied and a authority position of preemit: line said.

matters "Without religious doubt, communities recognize this learning and influence of the Rabbis." Montgomery Negro Shot During Argument St. Margaret's Hospital after beshot twice in the stomach following an argument with another Negro man. The Youth Aid Bureau said Motley and another Negro became involved in an argument at the corner of Oak street and Jefferson Davis avenue. The other Negro, officers said, sudpulled a .22 caliber pistol from his pocket and shot Motley twice in the stomach, Officers said no arrest has yet been made. They said four witnesses are being questioned about the shooting, but are "being very uncooperative." FORECAST over the Gulf coast region Tuesday and should prevail elsewhere.

Temperatures the Atlantic coast and some warming in -AP Wirephoto Map -Discriminates against over 70 per cent of the citizens of Alabama. -Fails to fairly equalize the representation House on the of population. -Provides a Senate controlled by representatives of 27.6 per cent of the state's citizens. -Creates five Senate districts with less than one-half the population required by Alabama's constitution. -Assigns 19 counties to two or three-county districts which have populations larger than the smallest county created.

-Gives senatorial power to citizens of one district which is 20 times that of a citizen of Jefzens of the 35 districts ferson County, and gives citipower 8 or more times that of Jefferson County. OBJECTIONS LISTED The 67-senator amendment, Vann said, is "the most discriminatory reapportionment He listed these objections: discriminates against 80 per cent of the citizens of Alabama. replaces the present stranglehold control of the Senate by 25.1 per cent of the people with death-grip control by a mere 19.4 per cent. provides 44 districts which would be more than twice the size of the smallest district. largest district is 60 times the size of the smallest district.

four counties, whose total combined population is less than that of Jefferson, are given over 50 per cent of the SenForty counties, with a combined, Jefferson population and smaller Mobile (counties) are given the 60 per cent vote required for proposed changes in the state constitution. The petition is signed by Vann and Robert S. Vance, vice chairman of the committee. The committee was recently allowed to intervene in a reapportionment suit through which the Montgomery federal court set its reshuffling deadline. Vandiver (Continued From Page 1) state owned mountain 18 miles northeast of Atlanta.

The Governor said that although he had ordered the troopers to keep the Klan off mountain, he didn't blame the officers for yielding and allowing the KKK to hold what it called a religious ceremony on the mountain. Vandiver said the officers were outnumbered more than 20 to 1. "If it takes a thousand armed National Guardsmen to prevent a recurrence of incidents, they will be used," governor suche said. "These Klansmen showed their great bravery when they stuck women and children out in front to lead their fight." The incident was the only violence during the past week which had the National Association Colored. the Advancement People and the Klansmen holding meetings here.

Two Klansmen were clubbed by troopers and several officers were struck by stones before an agreement was made a Klan ceremony and prevent' further violence. Guard Guard (Continued From Page 1) 1st MTB (Headland) 1 p.m.; Co. Co. C. 1st MTB (Opp) 12 noon: 1st MTB (Hartford) 2 p.m.; Co.

1st MTB (Brantley) 2. p.m. AUGUST 10 Hq. Hq. 156th Bn.

(Linden) p.m.; Co. 156th (Butler) 2 p.m.; Co. 156th (Livingston-Linden) 3 p.m.; Co. 156th (Grove Hill) p.m. AUGUST 11 Hq.

Hq. Btry. 2nd How. 203rd Atry. (Au-' burn) Btry.

203rd (Union Springs) 1:30 p.m.; Btry. 203rd (Tuskegee) 12:30 p.m.; Btry. 203rd (Tuskegee) 12:30 p.m.; Btry. 203rd (Goodwater) 1:30 p.m.; Service 203rd Phenix City) 1:30 p.m. The Weather The weatherman says it won't be quite so hot Tuesday, but don't look for cool, fresh breezes.

The difference can be measured in degrees three degrees, according to forecast. It's 91 for a predicted afternoon high, opposed to Monday's 94. TEMPERATURES U.S. Department of Commerce Weather Bureau Montgomery, Ala. 24 Hours, ending at 6 p.m., July 9, 1962 Maximum Temperature 94 Minimum Temperature 76 Mean Temperature Normal Temperature 82 Excess Today 3 since first of month 5 Excess since Jan.

1 133 Total precipitation 0 since first of month 2.08 Excess since first of month 37 Excess since Jan. 2.18 Hourly Temperatures 7:00 a.m. 80 4:00 p.m.. 92 8:00 a.m.. 84 5:00 p.m.......92 9:00 a.m......

86 6:00 88 10:00 a.m... 88 7:00 85 a.m...__. 90 8:00 p.m... 82 12:00 9:00 79 1:00 p.m.. 93 10:00 75 2:00 ...93 11:00 .73 3:00 p.m....

.93 12:01 a.m..... .72 Relative Humidity 12:01 a.m..._.. 80 12:00 58 6:00 a.m..... 82 6:00 p.m. 56 Sunrise 4:46 a.m.

Sunset 6:55 p.m. Moonrise 12:33 p.m. on July 10. Moonset 12:20 a.m. on July 11.

Next phase of Moon full on July 17. River stage 7.6. TUESDAY'S TIDES At Pnama City High .1.1 6:07 a.m. Low ..0.5 8:00 p.m. At Pensacola High .1.1 6:50 a.m.

Low .0.5 8:44 p.m. At Mobile High .........1.1 8:44 a.m. Low .0.8 10:57 p.m. Red Nations Seeking New Trade Bloc WARSAW, Poland (AP) Soviet bloc economists and planners met Monday in a campaign to integrate East European economies as the answer to the Western Market. Compren than 600 experts from Russia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania, East Germany, Bulgaria and Hungary gathered for a five-day session.

It was called to order by Dr. Oscar Lange, a former University of Chicago professor who is now vice chairman of the Polish State Council. Albania was not listed among participants. Lange and Polish Vice Premier Eugeniusz Szyr indicated in opening speeches that the meeting has two major purposes: to boost production to work out common tools and standards to promote greater, economic cooperation bloc. The session opened against a background of growing pressures that reportedly are causing Eastern European countries to revise basic economic plans.

These pressures include Moscow's desire for more economic help from the satellites, plus lagging investment, low productivity, poor crops and the prospect of being frozen out of the Western European market for farm products. Broad policy lines for the Warsaw meeting were fixed at a Moscow session last month of Comecon, the East Bloc's organization for economic cooperation. It is understood the experts and technicians gathered here are charged with writing the blueprints. Negro Cleared In Knife Death A charge of murder against David Brooks, Negro, of 815 Mill was dismissed in Recorder's Court Munday following testimony indicating he killed another Negro in self defense. Brooks was charged in connec-1 tion with the July 6 butcher knife slaying his cousin, Glyndon Brooks, 51, of 1049 Oak St.

Witnesses said the two men started fighting in the defendant's house and the fight carried on out into the yard, where Glyndon Brooks fell fatally wounded. According to testimony, Glyndon Brooks pulled a knife first and then David Brooks got a butcher knife. The defendant had been cut 33 times, Detective J. E. Burt said, while his cousin received only the one fatal wound.

No News Conference WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy will not hold a news conference this week, White House press secretary Pierre Salinger announced Monday. Asked if was any particular reason, Salinger replied that there was not. JENNINGS, La. (AP) Abel Ortego, a one-armed man, and his wife have been charged with murder in the sexual multilation and death of Gerald Davis Fontenot, 19, Dist. Atty.

Bernard Marcantel of Jefferson Davis Parish said. Marcantel accepted the charges against Ortego, a 45-year-old worker in an Elton rice dryer, and his 29-year-old wife, Mrs. Anita Ortego, on the basis of a confession made by the woman. Fontenot's body was found in a canal near Kinder on June 24. All three were from Elton.

Chief Investigator Jack Sirman of Allen Parish said Mrs. Ortego made a statement saying she and her husband mutilated Fontenot while he was still alive, slashed his throat with a razor blade and then held his head under water in the canal until he drowned. Mrs. Ortego said she had known Fontenot for some time, Sirman said, and had been intimate with him on numerous occasions. Sirman said Mrs.

Ortego said Fontenot asked to come to her home on the night of June 23 and said her husband approved. She said she picked Fontenot up and returned to her home where she was again intimate with him, with her husband's approval. HANDS, FEET TIED Mrs. Ortego said she then left the house and when she returned her husband told her he had tied up Fontenot. She said tenot was lying on a bed, unconscious and naked with his hands and feet tied together.

Sirman said the Ortegos moved Fontenot to the kitchen where they mutilated him. They then put him in the back seat of a car and took him to the canal where they slashed Fontenot's throat, Sirman said. Fontenot was still struggling when pushed into the canal, Sirman said Mrs. Ortego told him, so Ortego had his wife get a lug wrench from the car and he hit Fontenot with the instrument and then held his head beneath the water. Authorities held Ortego in the Allen parish jail at Oberlin, His wife was in custody and would be returned to the Oberlin jail, Marcantel said.

Plane Crash Bodies Being Brought Out BOMBAY, India (AP) The task of bringing out the bodies of 94 persons killed in an Italian jetliner crash proceeded slowly Monday in the rain-swept jungles east of Bombay. Reports from the scene said wreckage was scattered over a wide area on a jungle covered hill 55 miles east of Bombay. Sixty-eight bodies have been recovered from the plane, a fourjet DC8 of Alitalia that carried 85 passengers and 9 crewmen to their deaths Saturday on a flight from Australia. The Rev. J.

S. Anderson, an American missionary in the district, said there was wreckage on the hillside the search teams had not yet even reached. A section of the jungle of about five square miles is being searched for bodies. A plane was sent from Bombay to drop raincoats and boots to the search parties. Bodies were being brought to Bombay to be claimed by relatives.

The big plane went down in a fierce rainstorm shortly before it was due to land at Bombay en route to Rome. All aboard were believed to be from Asia and Europe. Three Negro Men Get $100 Fines Three Negro men charged in aggravated assault and battery cases were fined $100 and costs Monday by Recorder's Court Judge D. Eugene Loe. They were Nathaniel Gadson Rt.

2, who threw another Negro man down on the floor of the City Jail, inflicting a serious head injury; Eugene Power, 612 Howe who cut a man across the stomach: and Cliff Robinson, who cut a Negro woman. Gadson was also given a fiveday jail term. Also fined $100 and costs was Sandra Edwards or Mobile, charged with vagrancy. In other cases, Howard Gra: ham, 754 S. Jackson was fined $50 and costs for having moonshine whisky; Roosevelt Harris, 1121 Sheridan Alley, was fined $25 and costs for assault and battery; and Marion Seamon, 1617 Dewey was fined $25 and costs for passing a bad check.

FLOWERS WILL SAY What Words Cannot Gardens Phone 262-7731.

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