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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 7
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The Akron Beacon Journal du lieu suivant : Akron, Ohio • Page 7

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Akron, Ohio
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I Not A Race As Delta Queen At 37 Runs Off From Belle HAROLD HARRISON stream on the return leg -Cincinnati's Delta Queen fast by jet age standards a watery track. There was a brief flurry, however, when the time came for the Queen to make her turn in the river and head downstream. That was where everyone had been told the Queen might have trouble and lose any lead she might have. Diners gulped food and hurried outside to watch. You had to gulp, however, because the Queen made the turn so quickly many missed it.

"It was the fastest turn she ever has made," said Capt. Ernest Wagner. THE QUEEN'S passengers headed for the deck 'again, however, a bit later so they could not miss one opportunity to shout at the Belle. The Queen was headed down- By LOUISVILLE, Ky. (P) is 37 years old and she isn't but she sure runs well on She finished SO far ahead of Louisville's Belle of Louisville in a steamboat race today that it wasn't any contest.

In fact, the Delta Queen's public address announcer had trouble stirring up much enthusiasm after the first few minutes. But the landlubbers loved it even though were so far ahead they couldn't shout at the enemy. WITHIN A FEW minutes after the Delta Queen took command, the word came "soup's on" so most of the regular passengers and the invited guests headed for a buffet dinner. They could watch the river and the progress of the race as they ate. By that time the Belle was far behind.

while the Belle still was going upstream. Such a race was all new to almost everyone on the Queen. When the Belle was delayed getting away from the dock for the start someone sug. gested the Queen ought to go over and give her a push. Another wag cracked, "Maybe her battery has run down." As far as the finish of the race was concerned the most exciting came as the Queen crossed the finish line and a fireworks display started.

It hadn't been a close race but one woman, who never had seen one before, remarked, "I never have enjoyed anything so much." The Delta Queen now heads on for her home base at Cincinnati after a cruise to New Orleans. But she'll bring another load of pasesngers back here this weekend for the Kentucky Derby. House Bill Limits Benefits? AU Might Get Only Half Of State Aid It Expected By ROBERT Of Our Columbus COLUMBUS Did officials ipal universities, at Akron, count their chickens before There were indications today, as Gov. Rhodes' $1.3 billion budget came to a vote in the Ohio House, that the municipal universities might receive only about half the State aid they were led to expect when the budget was first presented in March. "On the of what we now know, we'll get considerably less than what we orig.

inally anticipated," said H. R. Reidenbaugh, assistant to the president at the University of Akron. AT A BUDGET briefing in March, State Finance Director Richard Krabach said the budget contained funds to provide the municipal universities the municipal universities with $200 per fulltime freshman in 1964 and $200 per fulltime freshman and sophomore in 1965. Akron University officials anticipated receiving $200,000 in State aid the first year and $420,000 the second based on Krabach's statement.

The appropriations bill contains same total of year State aid it did in for community colleges, municipal universities and state university branches in 1964, and $2,994,600 in 1965. But an amendment prepared by the Finance Department and incorporated in the bill last week appears now to limit drastically the amount municipal universities can expect. STATE Rep. Robert Reckman, majority floor leader of the House from Hamilton County, said he frankly doesn't know what the amendment might do. "We won't try to change it in the House." he said, "but it will be something for the Senate to study." Republicans are expected to the appropriations bill to passage today over opposition of Democrats who will offer about four amendments to hike public school, university and welfare allotments.

LAST WEEK'S amendment to the appropriations bill appears to endanger the municipal universities' allotment of State aid in two ways: FIRST, it sets up a formula Akron Traffic Accidents In Last 24 Hours 48 Total 1963 Traffic Accidents 3,780 Cleveland Industrial Stocks OVER THE COUNTER Asked Gen Indu Giant Tig Gilmore Greg Ind Grow Ca Halle Bro Hana Hansen Hauser 25 Hickok Higbee Hoover A 10 Feiss Kaiser St. Kromex Kulicke Lease Wilson Neville Lest Eng Maco Ch MacDon 26 Metalpho Mid Tel 5 Mohawk 8 Mo Mark Monroe A 20 Morgan Nat Cleve Period 24 Nat Serw Oh Tel A Van 6 Norw Tr Ogle Nor Ohio Cnk Ohio For Ohio Sav Ohio WS Osborn 10 Dr 12 Park Parsons 22 Pent Pub Journal 1 1 Wednesday, May 1, Akron Beacon Akron Stocks Onoted by Bache Second National Bldg. Tuesday Final Quotations FINANCIAL Last Bid Akron Sav Loan 40 Akron-Dime Bank 36 First Natl Bank 60 Barb. State Bank 27 RUBBER Gen Tire 27 Firestone com do $5 pf Goodrich 49 Goodyear Co. 36 Mohawk Rubber 25 Seiberling Rubber 11 11 do pf 48 do 5 pf 43 MISCELLANEOUS Aid Investment All States Frt Alsco Alside Am Beverage Babcock Wilcox 54.

Con Freight Enterprise Mfg 30 McNeil Mach xd in stock Nat Rub Mach (new) 22 21 Ohio Brass 26 Ohio Edison com 49 Pitts Plate Glass 55 Quaker Oats 62 61 Roadway Exp MUTUAL FUNDS Bid Affiliated Eds 8.12 Am Business Sh 4.13 Am Mutual Fd 9.31 Atom Physics 4.75 Axe Hought A 5.65 Blue Ridge Mut 11.71 Boston Fund xd 9.64 Broad Street Inv 14.09 Bullock Fund 13.39 Canada Gen Fd 17.08 Canadian Fund 17.38 Century Shrs 14.22 Chase Fd Bos xd 6.28 Chemical Fd 11.07 Colonial Fd 11.50 Comw Invest 9.94 Concord Fund 12.42 Delaware Fd 11.37 Divers Gth Stk 8.59 Dividend Shrs 3.41 Dow Th Inv 4.81 Dreyfus Fund 16.82 Eaton Stk 13.90 Electronics Inv 5.49 Energy Fund 21.58 Cap 8.46 Fidelity Fund 15.93 F.I.F. 4.34 Fundament Inv 9.80 Grp Sec Com Stk 13.41 Incorp Income 9.61 Invest Co Am 10.25 Invest Grp-Mut 11.40 Grp-Stock 18.61 Inv Grp- Select 10.42 Inv Grp-Var Pay 6.69 Inv Grp-Interconti 6.07 Keystone B1 25.14 Keystone Cus B2 22.96 Lazard Fd 16.37 Lexington Tr 11.19 Invest Tr 14.68 Mass Invest Grth 8.12 M.I.F. Fund xd 14.98 M.I.F. Grth Fd xd 4.27 Nation- Wide Sec 22.52 One Wm St 12.93 Pine St Fund 12.00 Price. TR Grth 15.41 Puritan Fund 8.63 Putnam Fund 15.00 Putnam Grth Fd 8.66 Scud St Clark 19.37 Select Am Shrs 9.67 Sharehldrs Tr 11.07 Sovereign Invest 14.67 State Street Inv 39.25 Telev Elect Fd 7.48 Unit Accum Fd 14.45 Income Fd 12.33 Unit Science Fd 6.62 Value St Line Invest Fd 9.28 6.43 Whitehall Fd 13.55 DIVIDENDS Stock Rate Record Regular Am do 5 Potash pf 1,25 .30 5-31 5-31 Am South Af .20 5-10 do pf A COOK 1.00 5-31 Am Tobacco .375 5-10 Baldwin Mont a .25 6- 7 Beaunit Cp .30 5-15 Bell Intere .25 6- 6 Burndy Corp 2 .15 5-10 Champ Pap 2 .30 5-10 do pf 1.125 6- Ches Ohio 1.00 6- 3 do pf .875 Cooper Bess .40 5-24 Know .30 3-29 Deere Co 6- 3 Dorr Oliver 5-16 do pf 5-16 Duke 7 Power 0 1.75 .45 5-27 5-27 0 do pf 1.34 5-27 FMC Corp 0 .20 6- Food Mart 0 .15 5-10 Foster Wheeler .125 5-15 Grant wt ..30 6- do pf .9375 6- Hunt Foods .125 5-15 do pf A 1,25 5-15 do pf 1.25 5-15 Int Bus Mach 1.00 5-10 Lane Bryant .25 5-10 Marathon Oil .40 5-17 Mead Corp .425 5-10 do pf 1.0625 5-10 Minn Pow Lt .45 5-10 do pf 1.25 6-14 Mohasco Ind .10 5-28 4.2 1.05 5-28 do 3.5 pf .875 5-28 Olin Math 25 5-15 5-10 Packaging Am .20 Penn Controls 0 30 5-31 Richardson Mer 5-15 Thatcher Glass .35 5-31 Thomp Ramo .35 5-24 do pf 1.00 5-24 Un Bag Pap a .375 6- US Steel .50 5-10 do pf a 1,75 5- 7 Increased Borden Co 45 5-10 No Nat Gas 45 6- 3 6-20 Phillips Pet .50 5-10 6- Omitted Compo Shoe Stock Marathon Oil 2 pc 5-17 6-28 BANK STOCKS Bid Asked Bankers Tr 58 Chase Manh Fst Nat City 104 Morgan Guar Wells Fargo 79 Insurance Aetna Cas Aetna Life 138 Am Re-Ins Conn Gen 156 163 Gen Reinsur 211 221 Glens Falls Hanover Ins Hartf Fire 70 73 Home Ins NY 79 Maryland Cas Nationwd A 15 Phoenix 128 Prov- Wash Ins Travelers 182 188 Fid 64 ELECTRIC trains, chemical sets, model airplanes and dolls sell for cash through Beacon Journal Want Ads.

To get cash quickly, phone your Want Ad to Miss Dodge, 253-1111. WIRE JUST RECEIVED! 30-YEAR MORTGAGE LOANS INTEREST -NO DISCOUNT This fast message DL Dev Lever CLASS OF SERVICE WESTERN UNION SYMBOLS unless its deferred chat- NL- Night Letter peter is symbol. indicated by the TELEGRAM 1201 (4-00) proper Lesser Telegram W. P. MARSHALL.

PRESIDENT The bling time shown in the date line on domestic telegrams is LOCAL TIME en point of origin. Time of receipt is LOCAL TIE (55 nation CTB062 1963-APR 22 AM. 11 04. CT CB094 CLEVELAND OH 10 22 1022A FIRST AKRON CORP, ATTN JOHN HUNTER, DONT 611 WEST MARKET AKRON OH COMPANY NOW WILLING TO CONSIDER 5 PERCENT CONVENTIONAL RESIDENTIAL LOANS UPTO MAXIMUM TERM OF THIRTY YEARS SUBJECT TO FOLLOWING CONDITIONS LOAN AMOUNT NOT TO EXCEED $30,000.00 2. AGE OF PROPERTY NOT TO EXCEED TEN YEARS.

"THINK FIRST of FIRST AKRON for for further information CALL FR-6-6811 JOHN B. HUNTER HARLAN T. CHAPMAN J. HUNTER HARDESTY Fist Hiron Coperation 611 W. AKRON, MARKET OHIO ST.

Member of National and Ohio Mortgage Bankers Ass'n. 71 1 1 Employe Dies At 72 BARBERTON Oakley Hetrick, 72, a retired road worker for Summit County, died Tuesday at Wadsworth Municipal Hospital where he had been six weeks. He leaves his wife, Ruth and daughter Celia at home; sons, Donald of Barberton, H. Russell of Bellview, Richard of Chagrin Falls, Oakley Jr. of Gulfport, and Samuel of Tampa, daughters, Mrs.

Ruth Porter and Mrs. Bonnie Brenner of Barberton, Mrs. Thelma Fowler of Doylestown and Mrs. Betty Morgan of Youngstown; stepsons, James Hamilton of Chicago, Jack of Barberton and David of Martinsburg, W. a sister, Mrs.

Merle Carpenter of Akron; a brother, Dewey of Copley; 21 grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. Montices, will be Biggs at 1 p. Funeral m. Home, Rev. Gerald Wilthen liams officiating.

Burial will be in Copley Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 p. m. Friday. HORTENSE JOSEPH Mrs.

Hortense E. Joseph, 60, an Akron resident most of her life and recently of 2497 E. Turkeyfoot Lake rd. in 1 Green died Tuesday at Barberton Citizens Hospital. She was a member of St.

Matthew Catholic Church in Ellet and worked at the ron Children's pharmacy. She leaves two sons, Richard H. of Benton Harbor, and Gerald P. Akron, and 11 grandchildren. Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.

m. Thursday and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m. Friday at Prentice Co. Funeral Home in Akron.

Akron Deaths Charles Toloczko, 72, of 1200 Tulip retired Akron, Canton Youngstown Railroad employe Mrs. Lillie L. Schermerhorn, 94, of 472 Palisades dr. Charles W. Rhyne, 60, of 247 Arch brother of Harold Bonnette and Mrs.

J. Gerald Schutz of Tallmadge Joseph McElroy, 72, of 127 N. Adams st. Wayne R. Ross, 58, of 1625 Eastwood retired Goodyear balloon room employe.

Fred E. Elkins, 55, of 624 Garry Firestone tirebuilder Mrs. Laurel B. Rush, 303 Campbell st. Mrs.

Ag. nes Oliver, 47, of 89 N. Walnut st. Mrs. Minnie Walker, 86.

of Madison Akron area resident for 65 Mrs. Alice Devlin, 606 Corice st. Mrs. Mary Salmons, 57. of 1347 Sorin mother William A.

and Edward M. of Uniontown Harry J. "Jess" Reese, 67, of Key West, former Akron resident William C. Carbaugh, 68, 1512 White Akron sewer department worker Mrs. Pearl L.

Smith of Toronto, former Akron resident Paul Bettes, 67, of 2223 Eighteenth st. SW, retired General Tire calender room employe. Area Deaths Mr. Sherwood Ingram, 65, of Bath, retired 45-year Goodyear worker, father of Mrs. Robert Hoskins of Akron (at Mr.

VerBillow, Weckbacher, 49, of Wadsworth, printer, brother of Ralph of Mrs. Florence B. Monroe, 95, of Hudson, mother of Rear Adm. Jack P. Monroe, commander of U.

S. naval forces in the Philippines. Deaths Elsewhere Mrs. William Robinson Leigh, 81, designer known as Ethel Traphagen who organized the first professional course in costume design for the City Board of Education in 1910 and opened the Traphagen School of Fashion in 1923, in New York. Gregoire Mihail Manoilescu, 64, former Foreign Minister Romania and a member of the Iron Guard in World War II, in Alicante, Spain.

George Percival Simon, 70, managing director of the Daily Telegraph and the Sunday Telegram, in Woking, England. Rep. Arthur H. Greenwood, Indiana Democrat, the Democratic whip in Congress during the first 100 days of the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration.

He died Friday. Josef Tesla, 58, a Czechoslovak Communist Party Central Committee member, in Prague. G. Butler Sherwell, 59, vice president of the Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. of New York, in Lisbon, Portu: gal.

William J. Wenzel, administrative assistant to the trustees of the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad, in Glendale, N. Y. Dr. Cornelius F.

Holton, 73, former president of the Medical Association of Geor. gia, in Savannah, Ga. Floyd G. Sease, 66, former assistant general sales ager of the American Motors in Jacksonville, Fla. PROFITS PEAK Corporate income hits high despite peak depreciation.

50 Corp. Profits vs. Depreciation (HIT $70 BILLION, IN 1962 Depreciration" OF 20- BILLIONS -Net (After Profits Taxes) -to 1929 '33 '37 41 45 49 53 '57 YEARLY DATA Data: U.S. Dept. of Commerce Morris Kate Is Easy Money Tax Slave' An opponent of the Akron income tax described it Tuesday as a "wanton extravagance" and an "unreliable source of revenue." Thomas Crawford, chairman of the Summit Federation (SCTF) countienTas seeking repeal of the Akron tax, charged that the Erickson Administration has become a "slave" of the "easy money" the tax is reaping.

Speaking on "We do not need the income tax," before the Akron Lions Club, Crawford repeated many of the arguments he has advanced in talks over the last year. Mayor Erickson spoke to the Lions Club a week ago, citing the "vital" role the income tax is playing in mov. ing the City forward. Crawford is a Republican who has been mentioned a possible mayoral candidate. E.

S. Myers Dead At 78; GAC Retiree A former Goodyear Aircraft Corp. employe, Ernest S. Myers, 78, of 104 Castle died Tuesday in his home after a lengthy illness. Mr.

Myers was a native of Canton and lived in Akron 35 years. He was with Goodyear Aircraft 20 years before retiring. Mr. Myers was a past governor of Akron Moose Lodge 62. a member of Akron Senior Citizens Club, St.

Vincent Catholic Church and its Holy Name Society. HE LEAVES a son. John E. of Santa Rosa, a daughter. Mrs.

George M. Logan of Akron; a sister, Mrs. Hugh R. Grable of Canton, and two grandchildren. Requiem Mass will be Thursday at 9:30 a.

m. in St. Vincent, with burial in the church cemetery. Friends may call at the Hummel Funeral Home today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m.

The Moose will hold services tonight at 7:30 and the Holy Names Society will say the Rosary at 8. Champ Shows How He Wins At Checkers Visiting champion Newell W. Banks of Detroit took the honors in an exhibition of simultaneous chess and checker games Tuesday at the Firestone Clubhouse here. Under sponsorship of Fire. stone Chess Club, Banks took on all comers, in either game.

He is a national champion. Banks won all the checker games and eight out of 15 chess games. Two of the chess games were won by Ted Jubin and Art Plueddemann and five others brought draws with contestants E. C. Roberts, Farley K.

Hutchins, Tom McClancy, Rudolph de Jong and Allen Keller. 1963 Asked 37 63 28 50 37 12 52 47 5 13 27 50 51 IT SEEMED like old times overnight as the last of the April showers came in the form of snow. Jean Pontius, 134 Oakdale found her windsnield scraper and went back to the task which was oh, so familiar over the Winter. Helped Alcoholics Dr. Louis F.

Lombardi Stricken At 53 Dr. Louis F. Lombardi, alcoholic ward and a general died this morning in the hospital hemorrhage. He was 53. Dr.

Lombardi, of 249 Crosby was a brother of Common Pleas Court Judge L. A. Lombardi and former City assistant law director Paul Lombar. di. Dr.

Lombardi maintained offices at 96 S. Maple st. A NATIVE Akronite, Dr. Lombardi was graduated from St. Vincent High School, took his pre degree at University of Akron and graduated from medical school at the University of Loyola, Chicago.

He interned and was a resident at St. Thomas before serving as a captain in the Army Medical Corps during World War II. With the 3rd head of St. Thomas Hospital's practitioner here for 18 years, after suffering a cerebral Armored Division, he won the Purple Heart and saw action in France, Belgium and Germany. DR.

LOMBARDI set up private practice after returning to Akron in 1945. He was a member of the Summit County, Ohio and American Medical Societies. The doctor leaves another brother, Frank of Cuyahoga Falls; sisters, Mrs. Mary Pappano of Akron and Mrs. Lucille Cully of Youngstown, and his mother, Mrs.

Caroline Lombardi of Akron. Services are being arranged by Dunn Quigley Funeral Home. cities, delivered: Large A white 33- 40, mostly 35-36: medium A 29-35, mostly 31-32: large white and brown 30-37. mostly 31-32. Poultry prices at farms, quality fryers 14-16, mostly hens heavy 16: light mostly 9-10.

CASH GRAIN CASH GRAIN CHICAGO (P -No wheat, oats or soybean sales. Corn No. 2 yellow 1.20: No. 3 vellow 1.17½-20: No. 5 vellow 1.16½; sample grade vellow 1.09½-15.

Soybean oil Ace Barley: Malting choice 1.23-1.30N: feed 1.00-1.08N. Maryland's Slots Doomed MARKETS CLEVELAND LIVESTOCK CLEVELAND Cattle, 150. steady: prime steers nomichoice to $23-24: good to choice, $18-21: $21-23; choice commercial heifers and $22-23: standgood $20-22; common and dairy $17- 20: commercial and fat cows $15-16: utilities and cutters canners and fat yellow bologna bulls $19-21; heavy bulls $15-18. Calves, 125, steady: prime $30-35: good to choice $25-30: commercial $20-25; common Sheep and lambs, 200, steady; choice clipped lambs medium to good $16-18; common $12-15: choice wether $5-6: choice ewes $5-6: cull and medium $3-4. Hogs, 500, steady to weak; No.

190-220 lbs. $14.75: No. 1-2 190-220 lbs. No. 2-3 190-220 lbs.

260-300 lbs. 240- 260 lbs. 220-240 lbs. 160-190 lbs. packing sows CLEVELAND PRODUCE Special to the Beacon Journal CLEVELAND-Homegrowers market changes: Asparagus: 8-qt.

bkts. loose med. to 1g. best Greens: 12-qt. bkts, dandelion $1.

Spinach: Nothing offered. Northern Ohio District Greenhouse Grown Commodities: Cucumber: Supplies moderate, demand light, market slightly weaker. Bkts 245. U. S.

No. 1 xx's 30s ctns. 12s $1.50. Lettuce: Supplies light, demand fair. market, about steady.

24-qt. bkts. leaf Tomatoes: Supplies moderate, demand moderate, market about steady. 8-lb. bkts.

U. S. 1 med. mostly $2.35, sm. mostly cins 10 pkgs.

5s and 6s CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (P-Trade was fairly active in the butcher hog market today but the supply of 7,000 head sold steady to weak. The extreme top held at $14.75 but it was paid very sparingly. Only 45 head brought price. Other 1 and 2 grades weighing 190-225 lbs. 1-3 went grades at at and Heavier mixed and mixed 2s and 3s were $13-14.

Sows cleared at Slaughter steers were steady to 25. cents lower in a slow trade. Mixed high choice and prime moved at for lb. offerings and most of the average choice at Good grade was Sheep marketings continued light but they included a few mixed choice and prime Spring slaughter lambs sold at $24.50 and a few choice wooled lambs at $21. EGG MARKET COLUMBUS -Eggs, prices paid at farms after candling and grading: A jumbo 22-30, mostly 27-28: large 19-28.

mostly 24-25: medium 16- 24, mostly 19-21; small 13-21, mostly 16-17: large 16-22, mostly 19-21: undergrades 10-17, mostly 13-14. Prices paid to country packing plants for eggs delivered to major Ohio cities, cases included. consumer grades, including U. S. grades, minimum 50-case lots: Loose, large A 28-31: medium 25-29: small 21-22: 26-28: carton large A 33-39: medium A 31-35: small A 26-31.

Sales to retailers in major Ohio Tibetan Refugees Suffer In Heat KATMANDU, Nepal (UPI) -About 1,000 Tibetan refugees en route to India from the Nepal Tibetan border have been stranded at the NepalIndia border for four weeks India refuses to grant them entry visas, it was reported here today. The refugees, accustomed to a cold climate, were reported suffering from the scorching sun. Asked 8.78 4.47 10.17 5.19 6.14 12.80 10.54 15.23 14.67 18.67 18.81 15.54 6.86 12.04 12.37 10.86 13.42 12.43 9.41 3.74 5.20 18.28 15.02 6.00 21.58 9.20 17.22 4.75 10.74 14.68 10.50 11.20 12.32 20.12 11.15 7.23 6.56 26.24 25.05 17.25 12.23 16.04 8.87 16.19 4.61 24.36 14.13 12.12 15.57 9.33 16.30 9.41 19.37 10.46 12.10 16.07 42.00 8.15 15.79 13.48 7.23 7.03 10.14 14.65 KOTZBAUER Bureau of Ohio's three municCincinnati and Toledo, they hatched? whereby all community colleges, municipal universities and branch universities must compute their fulltime student enrollments, counting only those who take at least hours. This in students, itself could outrule most municipal university night-school students. all these institutions would share the State funds available according to the formula.

In effect, it puts the municipal universities in competition for funds with branch univer. sities and community colleges. SECOND, the amendment (and now the bill) provides that a municipal university cannot receive more than $507 per fulltime student from all tax sources. ($507 is the per student amount granted by the State to most state universities). A municipal university thus would deduct its local tax support, in Akron's case about $380 per student, from $507 receive the difference in stater aid.

in Akron's case about $127 per student. But there's another complication. If an institution maintains a "professional graduate school, such as medicine." the total local and state tax support it could receive would be $793 per student. No one here was prepared to say Tuesday whether Akron's law school qualified it for the higher figure. U.

S. Curbs Urged Mail Order Arms Replacing Zip Guns' WASHINGTON of style with New York City's order guns are cheap and so said today. Lawrence W. Pierce, deputy commissioner in charge of the New York Police Department's youth program, told the Senate Subcommittee to investigate juvenile delinquency: "Ten years ago the zip-gun was the principal bullet-firing weapon in the arsenal of juveniles and youths. It was Hold Services In Fla.

For Lemuel Bye A memorial service for for. mer B. F. Goodrich arvertising department executive Lemuel S. Bye, 64, was to be held in Fort Myers, today.

Burial will be in Lisbon, O. Mr. Bye, former manager of identification in Goodrich's advertising department, died Sunday in his Ft. Mr. Bye Myers home.

He lived in Cuyahoga Falls for 33 years and with Falls Rubber Co. and Miller Rubber Co. before joining Goodrich. He retired from Goodrich three years ago. Mr.

Bye was a 32nd degree mason and a member of Tadmor Temple in Akron. He leaves his wife, Mildred. MERCANTILE EXCHANGE CHICAGO -Chicago Mercantile Exchange: Butter wholesale buying prices unchanged: 93 score AA 92 A 90 89 cars 90 89 57. Eggs about steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; 70 per cent or better grade A whites mixed 28 mediums 24; standards dirties checks -Live poultry: Wholesale buying prices unchanged: roasters special fed White Rock fryers -Homemade zip guns are going out young thugs because mail much better, a police official the 'firearm' peculiar to these groups and some of them were quite ingenious. But that has all changed "Why spend time.

to contrive what is at a crude firearm when, for a few dollars, a more reliable working firearm can be bought!" PIERCE'S testimony came the committee resumed its study of the mail order gun business. Chairman Thomas J. Dodd, Connecticut Democrat, (has proposed amendments to tighten Federal laws governing the interstate sale and transportation of such weapons. A major problem for New York police, Pierce said, is the starter gun for firing blank cartridges. One type, he said.

was being shipped into New York City with a plugged barrel for as little as $6.95 retail. Shortly after would come a bored. rifled pistol barrel which could in minutes be attached to the starter pistol, giving the buyer a "working. lethal firearm capable of fir. ing a .22 caliber bullet," he said.

Pay. able 6-14 6-14 6-14 5-31 6- 1 6-29 6- 1 6-27 5-21 6- 7- 1 6-20 8- 6- 6-13 7- 6- 6. 6-28 7- 1. 6-17 6-28 5-24 6-14 ANNAPOLIS, J. Millard Tawes signed into law Wednesday a bill that will gradually abolish Maryland's thriving legalized gambling industry.

Gambling, largely in slot machines, was introduced into southern Maryland in 1941. In recent years nearly $14 million has been clinked into slot machines annually in the four southern counties. Commercial bingo parlors in southern counties- some with as many as 1,000 seats have taken in another $4 million a year. Bingo, however, is not affectled The by the impact new will law. be gradual.

The first phase calls only for a reduction in the number of machines on July 1, 1965. The number will be progressively reduced to zero over the following three years. The maximum penalty for violation is one year in prison or a 000 fine. State officals conceded that enforcement will not be easy until the absolute ban becomes effective in 1968. Bid Ajax Ma Albee Ho Alco Chem Alloy Ch Am Aut Am Fin 19 Am Gre A do Am-Monr Am Vitri 21 Ampoules Arvida Assembl Barton Bath Co Big Drum Bost Cap Bowater Bowman Fi Brush Br Cst 24 Burdett Carl Prod 4 C1 Cie-Ware Cole Nat Con Life Cof Cowles 22 Curt Ind Diebold 51 Dover Con Erie Resis Faultless Ferry Cap F.

U. R. Fisher 12 Fla Steel Frisch 11 Ga In Lit Gen Corp 5-31 5-31 5-31 6-10 6- 1 6-10 6- 6- 1 7- 6-15 6-15 6-15 6- 6. 6 6-15 6. 6-14 6-15 6-13 6-14 6-10 5-20 6- 1 Bid Asked 16 12 21 23 117 122 8 29 32 13 2 3 23 19 48 13 35 23 25 53 9 23 25 39 33 35 28 31 20 6 14 Bid Asked Pepsi Bot 14 Ph Lamp Pneudyn 11 Premier Rand De 3 Ridge TI 31 Rd Ex Co 49 Rochest 15 Sawhill OM Scott Scott Av 9 10 Scott 31 33 Seaway A Sexton 1 Smucker 31 33 Solon Ind 3 Steel Imp Sterl Stowe Tappan Techno Fd TelS of0 28 Therm Tinnerm 33 Toledo 24 Towmot 28 Tr Pipe Tr TV 19 Troxel 11 Un Fin US Real 9 10 US True 22 Un Utilis 36 Upson Valley Vector 43 Vernor Wakefield Jim Walt Warn WR Life 19 Wm Co 31 Workwr 16 PICK YOUR OWN PREMIUM FROM TOP VALUE CATALOG.

"HANDY SAVINGS" 1,000 TV stamps free with $50 Ge. count. 500 free with $25 account. south akron savings association 1092 south main street.

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À propos de la collection The Akron Beacon Journal

Pages disponibles:
3 080 993
Années disponibles:
1872-2024