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The Daily Times from Salisbury, Maryland • 14

The Daily Times from Salisbury, Maryland • 14

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The Daily Timesi
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Salisbury, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
14
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a PAGE FOURTEEN THE SALISBURY TIMES. SALISBURY, THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1957 Key Witness Testifies At Bribery Trial WASHINGTON, July: 3 (-John Cye Cheasty swore today his only motive in turning in James R. Hoffa and Hyman I. Fischbach was his as a citizen." Cheasty, New York lawyer-investigator, is the government's key witness in the bribery-con(spiracy of trial the of Teamsters Hoffa, Midwest Union, and Fischbach, Miami attorney. Charged With Bribery Hoffa and Fischbach are charged with bribing Cheasty to get a job with the Senate Rackets Committee and feed them its secrets.

Under cross examination for the fourth day by Hoffa's attorney, Edward Bennett Williams, Cheasty asked about 1 his motive in reporting the alleged plot to the Senate committee. Cheasty replied that it was his intention from the start "to carry out what I felt was my duty as a Attention Focused Furthermore, Cheasty said, "this situation focused my attention sharply on the work of the committee and I felt it was about time for me to do something to further the work." "I believed in the work that the committee was doing," Cheasty said. Cross examination of Cheasty resumed after Judge Burnita S. Matthews rejected defense motions for a mistrial on the ground that the racial issue had injected into the case. Motions Denied In the jury's absence, the judge merely said: "The motions to declare a mistrial are denied." Then she ordered the jury brought into the courtroom.

She recalled that on Friday there had been "something said here concerning the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People, the Tallahassee bus boycott, and a Florida legislative investigating committee." are matters not related to this case and they have no place in this trial," she told the jurors. She said the jurors, when they mke no mention of the incident make no mention fthe incident in their deliberations and "you are to give it no weight or consideration." Continued From Page One IKE The President said, too, he doesn't understand fears voiced by Southerners that his right-tovote bill is, as Russell put it in a Senate speech yesterday, a "cunning device" to force racial intermingling at bayonet point. To Ask Brownell He added, however, he doesn't "completely understand" some phrases in the bill himself and means to ask Atty. Gen.

Brownell about them. Eisenhower declined to commit himself on several questions. He said, for instance, it's too early to tell whether the $6-a-ton price increase announced by U.S. Steel-just after the President urged both industry and labor to go easy on price and wage creases was justified or would prove inflationary. I-Hope-Not Reply And he limited himself to an I- hope-not reply when asked if he expects Congress, for all its economy talk, to spend more this year when the final bells are in than his budget called for.

Eisenhower turned a trifle tart when asked about a suggestion by Sen. Kefauver (D-Tenn) that the administration provide a calendar of developments in the Idaho Power Canyon controversy, as it did during the Dixon-Yates power fight. "If he has said any such commented the President crisply, "he has said it for public consumption, and not to get any action, because he has not made any such request to me." Noncommital He was smilingly noncommital again when asked if he spotted any 1960 presidential material among the Republican governors with whom he met June 20 at Williamsburg, Va. "I thought they were excellent and wonderful gentlemen," said the President, just as if he hadn't heard any mention of 1960. On other matters, the chief executive said: Agrees With Dulles 1.

He agrees with Secretary of State Dulles that this country should offer to help to both sides in trying to solve the French-Al-lion gerian dispute rather than back the Algerians. Thus both Eisenhower and Dulles took issue with a proposal by Sen. Kennedy (D- Mass) that the United States start working "toward political independence for 2. He thinks the French are entitled to try U.S. Army Specialist 3.C.

Dewayne McOsker in the killing of an Algerian in Paris. Eisenhower said he understood the episode occurred in a cafe, while the soldier was off duty, and so McOsker is subject to trial in local courts just as an American tourist would be. Russian Subs 3. He regards it as "unhelpful" to Middle Eastern peace for the Russians to send submarines to Egypt, as they have done recently. Eisenhower opened his meeting with newsmen by saying the White House would have an announcement later in the day about more uranium-235 being made available by the government "for use both home and abroad" for power and other peacetime purposes.

Legality Of Trailer License, Inspection Law Questioned FEDERALSBURG Residents of two trailers within different parts of the town limits will question the legality of an ordinance which provides a quarterly inspection and license fee mandatory. On Dec. 17, 1956, the Mayor and Council passed an ordinance making it unlawful to have trailers within the town limits for human habitation or offices. Some time later, letters were sent to two occupants of trailers informing them that they were violating the ordinance. One went to Noble Handy who had provided his mother-in-law with a trailer on his residential lot next to his home on W.

CenItral Ave. The other went to George E. Sooy and his wife who occupy a trailer on a lot adjacent to and owned by the Church of God. BOTH HANDY and Sooy obtained signatures on separate petitions by neighbors declaring that the use of the trailers provided" no nuisance. Handy, whose petition contained 30 signatures, filed it with town officials June 13 and Sooy filed his with the mayor the following day.

It contained 50 signatures. Everngam and Hughes, Denton attorneys, were engaged by Handy and Sooy, and a bill for declaratory judgment was filed in the Senate Unit (Okays 'Clean Election' Bill WASHINGTON, July 3 (P-A Senate committee today approved a 'clean elections" bill that would, for the first time, permit paign contributions to claim income tax credits. It also would overhaul the whole system of collecting, spending and reporting campaign funds. The bill, approved by a 7-2 vote of the Senate Rules Committee, would boost current ceilings on the amount a political group can spend in elections to federal office. But it also would require more stringent public disclosure of who contributed the money and how it was spent.

To Encourage Contributions In an effort to encourage small campaign contributions from thousands of Americans, the bill would give a special income tax benefit to persons contributing up to $20 in any one year. The giver could deduct half of his contribution, but not more than $10, from his annual income tax payment. Larger contributors also would get a tax break. They could deduct from taxable income any political gifts up to $100. The amount of money they would save would depend on the tax bracket they were in.

Can't Guarantee Action Chairman Hennings (D Mo) said he couldn't guarantee the Senate will act on the bill in these closing weeks of the 1956 session. If not, he said, it will still be ready for action when the Senate reconvenes next January. When it does come up, Hennings said he will press for an amendment that would bar individuals from making campaign gifts totaling more than $10,000 in any one year. Individuals now can now give $5,000 a year to as many political committees or candidates as they wish. Gained Momentum Demands for a revamping of laws governing political spending gained momentum in advance of last year's presidential election.

A Senate Elections subcommittee held hearings during and after the campaign, winding up its work with a report that known campaign spending topped 30 million dollars. The Elections subcommittee heard the chairmen of both the Republican and Democratic national committees testify that present limits on campaign spending are "unrealistic." Measure Would Permit The measure acted on today would permit national committees to spend 20 cents for each vote cast in the preceding presidential election. On the basis of the 1956 vote of 62 million, this would put I the 1960 ceiling at about 12 million dollars. The present limit. is three million dollars.

Campaign directors get around the present limit by organizing a stable of separate committees, each permitted to spend three mildollars. The bill would not bar such a strategy but the Rules Committee reported it felt the higher ceiling would dry up the incentive for establishing separate groups. The bill also would boost the maximum amount that can be spent by Senate and House candidates, now $25,000 and $5,000 respectively. Continued From Page One KHRUSHCHEV to hold over 1 the heads of any dis- senters. Malenkov, Molotov, Kaganovich and the others who are humiliated may be roughly handled from the point of view of their humiliation, but it seems doubtful this shakeup will go so far as to spill the blood of men who have held high posts in the so-called However, the indications in the Soviet press are that this purge is likely to go deep.

Having rooted out Stalinists at the top, Khrushchev and his followers must also root them out in the party ranks. Stocks Go Up In Pre-Fourth Rally NEW YORK, July 3 The stock market had its own preFourth of July celebration today, making the most vigorous rise since June 11, That was the day after Presi-770 dent Eisenhower's "upset stomach" and the market advanced on good news about the President's recovery. Industrials Up The Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose $1.50 to $185.30 with the industrials up $3.50, the rails up. 20 cents and the utilities up 10 cents. Volume of.

2,720,000 shares compared with 2,450,000 shares yesterday and was the highest since June 11. The gain in the AP 60- stock average also was the greatest since June 11. The most active stock was Avco, up at on 102,500 shares. Second was Bell Howell, off at on 47,400 shares. Third was Chrysler, up at on 39.100 shares.

Next came Electric Musical Industries, up at and Bethlehem Steel, up at 49. Heavily-Traded heavily traded stocks included Foster Wheeler, up Aluminium Ltd. up United Aircraft up 2 and Northrop Other gainers included Amerada up 312. International Business Machines up 10, Du Pont up Goodyear up 2, Anaconda and Kennecott up 1 each, Allied Chemical up Johns Manville off 21, Youngstown Sheet off and Goodrich off Trend Higher The trend was generally "higher on the American Stock Exchange. Volume totaled 840,000 shares compared with 740,000 yesterday.

Among the gainers were New Jersey Zinc, Imperial Oil, Mead Johnson and Molybdenum. Corporate bonds advanced. U. S. government bonds drifted lower in light dealings over the counter.

Continued From Page One FIRES Late yesterday afternoon about (an at acre the of timber Westover and Labor brush Camp. burnNine acres burned in a Berlin fire Wednesday night and approximately four acres were lost in a fire about a mile south of Shavox. Little or no damage was reported by Salisbury firemen in three brush and grass fires yesterday. A spokesman from Salisbury's Headquarters Company said six of their men spent almost an hour battling a fire in about three acres of brush off the Dykes Rd. The land owner, Upshur Morris, said the land had been cleared in preparation for subdividing it.

Attempts had been made to burn off the brush, several days ago. The fire last night about 7:10 was a flare-up from the original fire. EARLIER yesterday afternoon, Salisbury firemen were to fight a grass fire on property owned by the City of Salisbury, at Druid Hill Ave. and Loblolly Lane. This fire, reported at 2:56 p.m.

required some 15 minutes to extinguish. At 4:15 p.m. firemen said they were called to S. Salisbury near the Booth Glass Co. where they spent about 40 minutes estinguishing another grass fire.

MEETS TONITE. MEUSE POST 194 V.F.W. Home CIRCLE AVE. SALISBURY, MD. Market Reports DEATHS and FUNERALS C.

Brady Ewell ELLIOTTS C. Brady Ewell, 52, waterman of Elliotts, died Tuesday night in the Cambridge-Maryland Hospital where he had been a patient for several weeks. was the son of the late Lyman and Bertie Dayton Ewell of Elliotts and was a member of the Elliotts Methodist Church. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Flossie Gray Ewell; two daughters, Mrs.

David Shock of Baltimore and Mrs. Vetra Hurley of Cambridge; seven grandchildren; a brother, Franklin Ewell of Cambridge; and two sisters, Mrs. Syl-Elliott of Elliotts and Mrs. Alice Hurlock of Cambridge. A funeral service will held tomorrow at 2 p.m.

from the Elliotts Methodist Church. The Rev. Manuel Buarque, pastor, will officiate. Interment will be in Dorchester Memorial Park. Friends may call at the Willoughby Funeral Home tonight.

Planner A. Meredith CAMBRIDGE Funeral serv- ices were held yesterday from the Thomas Funeral Home for Planner A. Meredith, 89. He died Monday at the Cambridge Maryland Hospital where he had been a patient for the past three weeks. Born at Wingate, Lower, Dorchester, he was the son of the late Mr.

and Mrs. Amos A. Meredith. He was a waterman and affiliated with the Pilgrim Holiness Church here. Survivors are one son, Preston Meredith of Cambridge and Toddville, two grandchildren, one greatgrandchild, and several nieces and nephews.y Mark H.

Bowman, pastor of Pilgrim Holiness Church, officiated. Interment was in Dorchester Memorial Park here. Nathaniel S. Smith LEWES Nathaniel Stewart Smith, 79, a retired government inspector of died Tuesday at The Stan-Moore Arms on Savannah where he and his wife had been living since April. His health had been failing several years.

Born in Chincoteague, he was the son of the late Dr. Nathaniel S. Smith and Julia Caulk Smith. In early manhood he settled in Lewes where he was married to Miss Marian Barnes, only child of the late Lewes pilot, Capt. John Barnes.

They had one son, John Barnes Smith, a pilot apprentice, who was accidentally drowned several years ago. In addition to his wife, he leaves two sisters, Mrs. William Smith," and Miss Retta J. of Washington. The funeral will be tomorrow at 2 p.m.

in St. Peter's Episcopal Church here, conducted by the rector, the Rev. Frank L. Moon. Burial will be in churchyard.

John H. Smith GREENWOOD John Smith, 82, a farmer in this area, died the Sunday in Kent General Hospital, Dover, after a long illness. seph He J. was and the son Parade of late the O'Day Myra late Smith, Jo- W. and husband Smith, who died June 2 of this year.

He is survived by six children: Mrs. Hulda Johnson, of near Greenwood: Mrs. Mary Elma Phillips of New Haven, Mrs. Ruby Wilson of Milton; John Robert Smith of Richfield Park, N. and Joseph A.

Smith, and Miss Lina E. Smith, both at home near Greenwood: 15 grandchildren, three great grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. Laura Passwaters, of near Bridgeville, and Mrs. Mollie Smith, of New Haven. Funeral services were held yesterday at Oakley Methodist Church near Ellendale.

The Rev. Roland Brittingham, pastor of the church, officiated. Interment was in the adjoining church cemetery. Ira Smith SEAFORD Ira Smith, 70, manager for the Phillips Packing Co. in this area, died suddenly at his home near Oak Grove Tuesday.

A native Federalsburg, he was a son of the late Joseph and Susie Downes Smith. He had been associated with the canning industry in this area for 49 years. He had been in ill health for the past year. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Helen C.

Tubbs Smith of Oak Grove, near here; a son. William Ralph Smith of Bridgeville and a daughter, Mrs. Iva Matthews of Federalsburg. Three grandchildren and five great-grandchildren also survive. Funeral services will be held Saturday at from the Harry E.

Darby Funeral Chapel here. The Rev. Milton Elliott of the Seaford Methodist Circuit will officiate. Interment will be in Odd Fellows Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral chapel tomorrow from 7-9 p.m.

Triple Threat NEW YORK UP) Actor Arnold Moss has a assignment on the summer strawhat circuit three tour of Shaw's "Back to Methuselah." He is co-producing with the Theatre Guild, editing the lengthy opus down to conventional length, and impersonating the author. Celeste Holm is to star in the production. WALLACE FUNERAL HOME DIAL PI 9-5206 Ocean City Rd. Salisbury, Md. Baltimore Livestock Caroline Circuit Court seeking the constitutionality of the ordinance.

Judge J. DeWeese Carter gave the town 20 days to defend its ordinance. IN A TOWN meeting Monday, the Mayor and Council repealed the ordinance prohibiting trailers in town but replaced it with one which requires that any such conveyance when used for sleeping quarters or as offices must obtain a license every quarter of each year, and that the fee for each license is $40. It also provides that before any such license is issued there "shall be submitted to the mayor and council of Federalsburg a certificate from the inspectors relative to electrical, sewer and water connections." Everngam and Hughes revealed that they will petition circuit court to amend the request for the bill for declaratory judgment so that it will be applied to the new ordinance, claiming the facts are the same and that the new ordinance in invalid, unconstitutional and void. The petition calls the ordinance unreasonably discriminatory legisand that it infringes upon the rights of property.

further calls it arbitrary and retroactive since the trailers where at their locations before the ordinance was passed. Father Charged In Fight Over Daughter An Army sergeant here is charged with assault preferred after a fight over his daughter and a 14- year-old boy. Sgt. Charles Barlow of 309 Carrollton was scheduled to be heard in Peoples Court yesterday, but State's Attorney Hamilton P. Fox asked that the charge be continued pending further investigation.

City Police said that Barlow went to the home of Mrs. Kathleen Michael of 404 Hastings when he learned that her son Paul, 14, had been with his daughter, Janice, 15, on June 26. Police said they answered two calls at the home Monday and advised Mrs. Michael to get a warrant after she complained Barlow Meanwhile, Michael is being held in Wicomico County Jail. He will be brought to Juvenile Court Tuesday, according to Mr.

Fox, on a possible violation of his probation. Michael was placed on probation by Judge Taylor in a hearing in early June. He was one of three teenage youths charged with larceny of an automobile in which a 16-year-old died in a crash near Georgetown. The daughter, taken before Juvenile Court authorities Tuesday, was committed to the Montrose Training School for Girls by Judge Rex A. Taylor.

Continued From Page One DEMOTED expert and deputy premier, A. I. Mikoyan, the party theoretician, M. A. Suslov, and the old Soviet warhorse, Marshal Klimenti shilov, who is president of the U.S.S.R.

Molotov, former foreign minister, has been minister of state control recently. Malenkov has been minister of electric power stations. Kaganovich held a job in the control of labor, and Shipilov in party propaganda work. Decision Reached June 29 The decision on them was reached June 29. An official statement said Central Committee members demanded the removal of the members of the group from the Central Committee and their expulsion from the an extreme penalty in the Soviet Union which would deprive the accused of their right to participate in party and government affairs.

But evidently the final decision was somewhat lenient. Resolution Voted The plenary meeting of the Central Committee voted a resolution to: Condemn as incompatible with Leninist principles of our party and fractionary activities of the antiparty group of Malenkov, Kaganovich. and Molotov, and of Shepilov, who joined them. To exclude Comrades Malenkov, Kaganovich and Molotov from the membership of the Presidium of the Central Committee and from the Central Committee. To remove Comrade Shepilov from his post as secretary to the Central Committee and to exclude him from alternate membership of the Presidium of the Central Committee and from membership in the Central Committee." BALTIMORE, July 3 (-USDA: Cattle 200; small lot choice and prime lb fed steers 25.50, load choice 1097 lb fed steers 24.50, few individual head high good to choice fed steers 23.50- 24.50, small lot choice and prime lb fed heifers 23.50, few standard and good slaughter heifers 18.00:20.00, utility and commercial cows 13.50-16.00.

few standard to 17.00, canners and cutters: 12.00- 14.00, few light weight canners down to 11.00. Calves 75: not enough on sale to test trade. Hogs 400; bulk mixed 1-3 180- 230 lb barrows and gilts 20.00-50, No. 1-3 200-220 lbs- 20.75, mixed grade 160-180 lbs 19.00-20.00, 230-270 lbs 19.00-20.00, few 270-300 lbs. No.

3. grade: 17.50-19.00, sows No. 1-3 400 lbs down 15.25-16.75, 400-500 lbs 14.75-15.25, 500-600 lbs 14.00-75. Chicago Grains CHICAGO, July 3 Profit taking and hedge selling pushed wheat futures downward more than two cents a bushel in some cases on the Board of Trade today. Corn and oats held fairly dy and showed little change.

Soybeans were strong and more than a cent higher most of the time. Closing futures: Wheat old: Jly 2.11-10; Sep 2.13: Dec 2.17%. Wheat new: Jly 2.10%-%: Sep 2.13½-%; Dec. 2.18¼-12; Mar 2.20-19%: May 2.16%-%. Corn: Jly 1.314-%; Sep 1.32%• Dec 1.28%; Mar 1.224a; May 1.36.

Soybeans: Jly 2.38-38½; Sep 2.33⅜-½; Nov. 2.28¼-⅝; Jan. 2.32; Mar 2.34⅞. No 1.34¼-¾; wheat, sample corn No. grade 1 yellow yellow 1.29-1.32; oats No.

I mixed heavy No. 1 white heavy 78, 2 white heavy No. 2 white no soybeans. OPENS CLUBHOUSE. Actress Marilyn Monroe is center of attraction July 2 at opening of new Sidewalk Superintendents' clubhouse overlooking excavation of 47 story Time Photo.

Kimble Urges Rewriting Law On Jobless Pay BALTIMORE, July 3 (P-Robert B. Kimble, director of Maryland employment security, said today that if a 1956 ruling on jobless pay is sustained the "essence of collection bargaining" in the state will be destroyed. He urged rewriting the law to define more clearly what kind of a work stoppage disqualifies idle ployment benefits. The law now states that workers are ineligible for the weekly benefits if the stoppage is "caused by a labor dispute." Interpreted For 19 Years For 19 years, Kimble told a committee of the Legislative Council, had been interpreted to mean if the workers struck. But last year, the Employment Security Board, ruled differently.

Employes of Bethlehem Steel authorized their negotiating committee to strike if necessary, Kimble related. The company claimed that constituted a work stoppage because it was losing business on account of the strike threat and laid off employes. The company asked the Employment Security Board not to allow the employes benefits. The board, Kimble said, in a reversal" of past decisions agreed. Kimble, a member of the board, dissented.

The board was abolished June 1 and Kimble made director in a reorganization of the department. "If this interpretation is sustained," Kimble said, "no more in the future could labor organizations take a vote authorizing a strike because it immediately would become a work stoppage. "It would destroy the essence and every principle of collective bargaining in the state of Maryland." He backed a bill by Sen. Dempsey (D-Balto 3rd) to substitute for "labor dispute" the word or in Kimble's words, "some other definite evidence on the part of workers to refuse to do their jobs." Opposed Any Change Paul M. Higinbothom, lawyer for two industries, and the Baltimore Assn.

of Commerce opposed any change. Higinbothom opposed specifying a strike as the only cause for disqualifying workers from benefits. unions never would call a strike," he claimed. He suggested a walkout by key departments could cause plant wide shutdown and "we'd have to pay benefits to these men who are putting us out of business." Industries contribute to the unemployment fund. Continued From Page One DROWNING about in the pond when the younger Hall boy went into deep water.

The older boy went to his brother's aid, but he and the other boys could not swim well enough to help him into shallow water. Hall could not swim well, either. Realizing the need for immediate help, the Shockley boy and the Mariner boy ran to summon the farm owner. Police said that Mr. Jones plunged into the water and dived under several times searching for the missing boy.

UNABLE TO find him, Mr. Jones summoned the Snow Hill Fire Department, and dragging operations were started. Police said a fireman, Thomas Smack, pulled the boy out about 4:45 p.m. The Snow Hill Volunteer Fire Company ambulance was standing by with a resuscitator, police said, but the boy was dead by the time they found him. Robert Cooper SNOW HILL Word was received this week of the death in Korea of Robert Cooper, 23, of Baltimore.

Cooper, who had been in Korea Mrs. Edward Cooper and the since A April, was the grandson of nephew of Elwyn Cooper and James Cooper of Snow Hill. He was the son of the late Luther Cooper, a former Snow Hill resident. Death was attributed to a "military accident." Cooper was servling as a medical technician. and Life building near New York's Rockefeller Center.

Watching through window is crane operator Michael L. Drexel, who brought along camera to record (P) Business Notes Named Manager CRISFIELD Rollins T. Bradshaw has assumed his duties as manager of Bata Shoe store here, filling the vacancy created resignation of Robert Maddox. Mr. Bradshaw is a native of Kingston.

He received his training at the Bata store, in Pocomoke City. Fire Destroys to of Country Store GOLDEN HILL While the owner of a large country store was attending a public auction sale at Denton yesterday, fire destroyed' his store near here. Firemen from Cambridge, Church Creek, Hooper's Island, and Lakes-Straits kept the fire from spreading to the home of Clifton Riggin Sr. which is about 40 feet from his store. Mrs.

Riggin collapsed during the fire and was treated for shock at her home. Firemen are not sure of the cause, but think that it may have been defective wiring in the 'apartment at the rear of the onestory frame building. The fire broke out about 9:30 a.m. Firemen stayed on the premises until noon and saved two small rented houses also on the property. The extent of the loss was not fully determined.

Hurricane Dead Estimated At 700 LAKE CHARLES, July 3 -When the waters of Hurricane Audrey seep back into the now calm Gulf of Mexico and her full ravages are revealed, the Louisiana coast may count about 700 dead. The latest official estimate put the figure that high, Sheriff Ham Reid of Calcasieu Parish told reporters today there are 296 known dead. Dr. Harry Snatic, the parish coroner, quickly added: "I think at least 400 more persons are missing." Any accurate total of dead, however, has become more complicated by a new plan to bury the dead of nearby Cameron Parish wherever they are found. Mental Patient Drowns In Lake WESTBORO, July 3 (R- Mrs.

Virginia Stern, 28, charged with murdering two small children last March, and later committed, as mentally ill, to the Westboro State Hospital, broke from attendants today, plunged into a lake and drowned. The Department of Mental Health said she was out for a nature walk with other patients when she darted to the lake's edge and plunged in. Mrs. Stern, the former Virginia Marcus of Brookline, was taken into custody with slashes on her wrists last March 13 three hours after her husband, Malcolm, found their children dead in their Natick home. Stern, a Boston architect, said he found his son, Jonathan, 3, dead with a cord about his neck and, in the bathtub, his daughter, 8-month-old Robin, drowned.

Mrs. Stern appeared at a hospital with slashes on her wrists. Fireworks To Be Held In Cambridge CAMBRIDGE Sponsored again by Francis V. duPont and the City Council, the annual fireworks display at Long Wharf on the Choptank River in Cambridge will be held tonight. Fireworks of all types will be part of the hour-long display beginning at dusk.

Crowds of 000 or more will assemble in Municipal Park, Man Is Jailed Leslie Webster Smiley of Delaware St. was sentenced in Peoples Court yesterday to six months in the House of Correction for non-support of his two children. Smiley, a Negro, was brought into court by his wife, Bessie, who charged that he had failed to support his family since January. This the third time he appeared before Judge Fanny B. Murphy on non support charges.

Smiley pleaded guilty. Continued From Page One DOGS since the number of inoculations done privately by veterinarians has not yet been tallied. At the five clinics scheduled this year, however, there were a tal of 483 dogs inoculated, according to Mr. Longfellow. This was 58 at Mardela, 291 at the bury Animal Hospital, 123 at Johnson's Animal Hospital, and 90 at Bivalve, according to Mr.

Longe fellow. Complete figures will be able next week. Under the present dog licensing and inoculation laws all dogs over six months of age must be licensed by July 1, of each year and inoculated by Aug. 1. The ty provided for violations of the law is a fine of from $5 to $25.

There are about 80,000 different kinds of pests in the U. and 7,000 are injurious to crops. Take over Joe, I'm heading for the SHORE BOOTERY MID SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE BLUEBERRY PICKERS NOW! WE HAVE THE CROP AND WE HAVE THE BUCKETS COME AND ENJOY YOUR STAY AND CARRY HOME THE PAY! Esham's Blueberry Plantation U. S. Rt.

50 (at Railroad Crossing) Between Parsonsburg Pittsville PHONE PI 2-1364 WANTED SOYBEANS We will pay $2.25 per bushel for yellow soybeans if delivered to our warehouse July 5 and 6th while we are loading a freight car. V. V. HUGHES SONS W. ISABELLA STREET SALISBURY.

MARYLAND.

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