The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio (2024)

Akron Beacon Journal Tuesday, March 16, 1965 Arthur P. Kroger Dies In St. Louis Arthur P. Kroeger, 57, an tor of marketing for the organic santo Chemical Co. with Monday in that city.

was stricken in his office ante died in a hospital a short time later. He made his home in Kirkwood, Mo. MR. KROEGER joined Monsanto in Akron in 1929 as a sales representative in chemicals and had held various sales posts in United States and Japan. He was a graduate of the University of Akron and a member of the Glendale, Lutheran Church.

He leaves his wife, Jean a son, James Alan, and daughter, Jane Ruth Kroeger, all of Kirkwood; a brother, Akron attorney Clarence E. Kroeger, and a sister, Mrs. Helen Krausman of Fullerton, Cal. The Billow Akron Chapel is arranging services. Memorials may be made to the Glendale Lutheran Church, Glendale, Mo.

WALTER W. LEE A retired civil engineer, Walter W. Lee, 81, of 1631 Wiltshire died Monday in the Middlebury Manor Nursing Home. He was born in Byesville, 0., and was a member of the Woodland Methodist Church here. He was past master of the Cambridge, Masonic Lodge.

Mr. Lee leaves a daughter, Mrs. William (Lucille) Arnold of Akron; a son, Rennard of and a grandson. Services will be at 1:30 p.m. Thursday in the Evans Funeral Home, New Philadelphia, where friends may call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.

m. Wednesday. Burial will be in Byesville Cemetery. MRS. LYDIA ANN GEIER Service for Mrs.

Lydia Ann Geier, 68, of Phoenix, formerly of Akron, will be at 10 a. m. Wednesday in the Al Moore Son Funeral Home, Phoenix. Mrs. Geier, who died in Phoenix Saturday, was the wife of E.

P. Geier, retired Akron policeman. She was a member of Ne-Hta Chapter, Order of Eastern Star. Besides her husband she leaves daughters, Mrs. Lorna Conn and Mrs.

Marjorie Hemphill of Phoenix; three grandchildren; two greatgrandchildren; sisters Mrs. Laura Vanburen of Apple Creek and Mrs. Mary Smith of Barberton and a brother, Loren Heiser of Akron. CLINTON I. WOODBURN Services for Clinton I.

Woodburn, 72, of Largo, for. mer Akron grocer and real estate salesman who died Saturday in Florida, will be Wednesday at the Seminola Beach Chapel, St. Petersburg, Fla. Burial will be in St. Petersburg.

Mr. Woodburn was born in Middlebury, W. Va. He owned and operated a grocery store on Buchtel av. 25 years before joining Stanson-Stroup Realtors as a salesman.

He retired in 1952, when he moved Florida. He leaves his wife, Sarah Mae; two sons, Clifford J. of Hammonton, N. and Richard T. of Ft.

Lauderdale, seven grandchildren, and a great-grandchild. MARILYN MILLER WESSON Mrs. Marilyn Miller Wesson, 39, of Riverside, a for. mer assistant director of the YWCA in Akron, died Monday in Riverside after a short illness. She moved to Riverside 12 years ago and worked for the YWCA there.

She was married there. Born and reared in Akron, she was a graduate of Ohio University at Athens. Mrs. Wesson leaves her husband, George; a son, Tad; a daughter, Gale; her mother, Mrs. Harry Miller, and a brother, Allen Miller, all of Riverside.

Services and burial will be in Riverside. RAYMOND W. GLOVER for Raymond W. Glover, 78, graveside services of 166 Cuyahoga will be at 2 p. m.

Wednesday in Mount Peace Cemetery. His death Friday at his residence was ruled a suicide by the Summit County coroner's office. Mr. Glover was found by neighbors. His throat had been slashed.

Mr. Glover was a life resident of Akron. He retired five years ago after being ed 31 years as chauffeur for the William O'Neil family. Friends may call at the Stewart Calhoun Funeral Home after 2 p. m.

today. MICHAEL SIMOVIC Services for Michael Simo. vic, 60, of 439 Margaret will be at 2 p. m. Wednesday in St.

John's Lutheran Church. Burial will be in East Akron Cemetery. Mr. Simovic, who died Sunday in Akron City Hospital after a long illness, was a chef at the Goodyear Plant 2 cafeteria six years. Born in Yugoslavia, he came to the United States and Akron in 1908.

He was a member of St. John's Lutheran Church and Goodyear Local 2, United Rubper Workers. Mr. Simovic leaves his wife, Oberlin Economist Says: Akron native who was direc. chemicals division of Monheadquarters in St.

Louis, died Nellie; his mother, Susan Simovic; daughters Mrs. Helen Weisel of Akron and Mrs. Ruth Wolcott of Bolivar, stepsons John and James Friend of Akron; a brother, Andrew of Indianapolis; sisters Mrs. Mary Sandor of Akron and Mrs. Juliana Sandor of Medina, and seven grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the Kucko Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p. m. today and at St. John's' Church after noon Wednesday. RUTH M.

Ruth M. Pritchard, of 387 Cross died Monday at Akron General Hospital after a brief illness. She was a native of Akron and a member of McKinley Avenue Church of She leaves her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Pritchard of Akron, and sisters Mrs.

Mary Hyatt of Barberton and Annabelle Pritchard of Akron. Services will be at 2:30 p. m. Thursday in the Prentice Co. Coburn Street where friends may call after 2 p.

m. Wednesday. Burial will be in Uniontown Cemetery, Uniontown. ALICE G. JOACHIM CUYAHOGA FALLS--Mrs.

Alice G. Joachim, 2643 Sixth st. died Monday? at St. Thomas Hospital, Akron, after a two-weeks illness. Born in Pomeroy, she lived here 62 years.

She was a member of Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, its Altar Rosary Society and Women of the Moose. She leaves sons, James Douglas at home, John Ran-1 Mrs. Joachim dall of Washing. ton, D. and Garrett C.

of New York City and one granddaughter. Requiem Mass will be Thursday at 10 a. m. at the church. Burial will be in Oakwood Cemetery.

Friends will be received at Funeral Home tonight and Wednesday where Women of the Moose will hold rites tonight at 7:15 and the society will recite the Rosary at 9 p. m. Wednesday. SANDY PORTER MUNROE FALLS Sandy Porter, 88, of the Summit County Home died there Monday after a long illness. Born in Petersburg, he lived in the area 46 years.

He was retired from Atlantic Foundryes are being handled by Stewart-Calhoun Funeral Home, Akron. MARY D. FOGLE ALLIANCE Services were today for Mrs. Mary Dawn Fogle, 37, wife of former Akronite, Esmond treasurer of Roberton Heating Supply here. Besides her husband, she leaves daughters, Beth and Grethan, and son, Tom.

BEN A. EMERSON COPLEY TWP. Ben A. Emerson, 87, of 2901 Colon dr. died Monday at home after a long illness.

Born in Sweden, he lived in the area 57 years. He was an employe of the park division of Akron and was a member of Bethany Lutheran Church and Eagles Lodge 555. He leaves his son, Ralph of Copley; daughters, Mrs. Martha Houchin of Akron and Gloria of California, two grandchildren, and four greatgrandchildren. Services will be Thursday at 3 p.

m. at Adams Funeral Home, Akron. Burial will be in Greenlawn Cemetery. Friends will be received at the funeral home from 4 p. m.

Wednesday. Area Deaths Debra Greathouse, 3, of 130 S. Prospect Hartville, found dead in a bathtub. Stark Coroner is investigating Mrs. Emma Wecht, 93, of W.

Main Ebbert, 92, of Winesburg Wilmot, a Bert B. Archer, 78, of 117 Harris Lodi, retired freight agent for Baltimore Ohio Mack Coppage, 71, of 116 S. Pardee Wadsworth, retired from Ohio Injector Co. Lester G. White, 56, of 1155 Norwood Kent, assistant to the president at A.

C. Williams Co. DIVIDENDS Rate Rec. Pay. Reduced Cont Conn A .075 3-22 4- 1 Higbie Mfg 4-15 5- Increased, Initial Reda Pump new .25 1 4-12 Regular Amerada Petrol .60 4-15 4-30 Bobbie Brooks .125 3-26 4-15 .09 4- 1 5- 1 DiGiorgio Cp .20 4-16 5-15 Fidelity Phila Tr .65 3-31 4-13 Fisher Foods Inc cum pf 1.25 3-22 4- Gin Co .18 5-14 6- Hamilton Cosco .15 6- 1 7.

Int Milling .30 3-25 4-15 Interphoto Cp A .175 4-15 5- 3 Maust .25 .375 4- 3-29 9 4-20 Motorola Inc 4-12 Nat Fuel Gas .35 3-31 4-15 Park Chemical .075 4-30 5-14 Sheraton Cp Am .10 3-31 5- 1 Youngst Metals StI .10 .35 3-25 3-26 4-15 4-15 Std THE WEATHER Dots From U.S. WEATHER BUREAU 20 30 COLD WARM FORECAST Flurries Figures Shew Low Temperatures Expected Umil Wednesday Morning Isolated Net Indicated Consul Local SNOW in the north and central Plateau area, the central Plains and upper Missouri valley; flurries in New England and showers from Arizona to the lower Ohio valley are expected tonight. It will be colder over most of the western half of the nation and warmer in New England and the southern Plains.AP. and 25-30 south. Wednesday Ohio cloudy with rain south and mixed rain and snow north.

Mostly sunny south today and considerable cloudiness Not much change in tempernorthern sections with a few ature. snow flurries in extreme Lake Erie north late afternoon. Little temperature change, high Northwest winds 10-18 today 38-44 north, 44-52 knots this afternoon and south. Mostly cloudy tonight northerly 10-15 knots towith scattered snow flurries night. Mostly cloudy, with and cooler, low 20-25 north scattered snow flurries.

Temperatures In Other Cities Maximum Minimum Maximum Minimum Yesterday Last Night Yesterday Last Night Atlanta 65 46 Los Angeles-cloudy 60 54 Bismarck 29 12 Louisville-clear 53 28 cloudy 42 28 Miami-cloudy 78 71 Buffalo-cloudy 33 29 Paul-clear 31 14 Charlotte-clear 66 30 New Orleans-cloudy 74 56 Chicago-cloudy 38 31 New York-cloudy 47 37 Denver-cloudy 27 Pittsburgh-cloudy 37 31 Detroit-cloudy 34 San Diego-cloudy 62 55 Indianapolis-clear 49 26 Tampa-cloudy 76 64 Kansas City-clear 56 40 Tucson-clear 71 42 Washington-clear 51 31 Falls Sanitation Chief Dies At 67 CUYAHOGA FALLS -James of the city sanitation department home after an apparent heart Born in Killbuck, he lived here 46 years. A veteran of World War he was employed at Goodrich 17 years and during World War II worked at Goodyear Aircraft. In 1950, he was director of the local March of Dimes. A MEMBER of First Methodist Church and its Men's Club, Mr. Gray lived at 437 Keenan av.

He leaves his wife, Alberta; son, James C. at home; daughters, Mrs. Margaret Jane Noethen of St. Petersburg, and Mrs. Sally Ann Smith of Akron; sister, Mrs.

Basil Dearth of Cuyahoga Falls; brother, Neal of Akron, and five grandchildren. Services will be Thursday at 1 p. m. in McGowan-Reid Funeral Home. Burial will be in Oakwood Cemetery.

Friends will be received at the funeral home from 2 p. m. Wednesday. MUTUAL FUNDS Bid Affiliated Fd 9.23 Am Bus Shrs 4.29 Am Mutual Fd 10.56 Atom Ph Sc Fd 5.76 Axe-Houghton: Fund A 6.57 Blue Ridge Mut 13.12 Boston Fund 10.56 Broad St Inv 16.36 Bullock Fund 15.26 Can Gen Fd 21.66 Canadian Fund 20.30 Chase Fd Bos 8.29 Chemical Fd 15.01 Colonial Fund 13.34 Investmt 10.72 Commonwealth: Concord Fund 13.80 Delaware Fd 10.94 13.40 Divers Gth Stk Dividend Shrs 3.87 Dow Th Inv Fd 5.96 Dreyfus Fund 22.06 Eaton Stk 16.30 Energy Fd 24.15 Fidelity Cap 12.90 Fidelity Fund 18.42 F.I.F. 5.25 Fundamtl Inv Securities: 11.66 Common Stk 15.25 Imperial Fd 4.47 Incorp Income 10.08 Invest Investors Co Am Group Funds: 12.51 Mutual Inc 12.55 Stock 21.51 Selective 10.38 Variable Pay 7.92 Intercontl 6.72 Keystone Custodian Invest Bd B-1 24.62 Med Bd B-2 24.73 Lazard Fund 18.12 Lexngtn Inc Tr 10.93 Life Ins Inv 9.69 Life Ins Stk 7.44 Inv Grth 9.80 Mass M.I.F.

Inv Fund Trust 18.21 17.57 M.I.F. Growth 12.01 5.66 Nation- Wide Sec One William St 14.93 12.80 Price, Grth 19.16 Street, Puritan Fund 10.32 Putnam Geo 16.29 Putnam Grth 10.72 Selected Amer 11.09 Sharehl Tr Bos 11.77 Stein Roe Funds: Balance 41.54 Stock 38.40 Intl 17.11 Televisn Elect 8.69 United Funds: Accumulative 17.34 Income 14.34 Science 8.28 Value Line 6.70 Wall St Invest xd 10.93 Wellington Fd 15.29 Whitehall Fd 14.54 Fd 17.04 260-280 lbs. sows $12-15. packing CLEVELAND LIVESTOCK CLEVELAND (P -Cattle, 200, slow weak undertone; choice steers $24-25, nominal; good to choice $23-24; commercial and standard $21-23; choice heifers $21-23; good $18-21; common and dairy heifers $16-18; commercial fat and fat cows $12-13; canners cows and fat yellow cows $10-12; bologna bulls heavy bulls $14-17. Calves, steady; prime $30-33; good to choice $25-30; commercial $20-25; common $14-20.

Sheep and lambs, 220, weak to .50 lower; choice wool lambs $24- 24.50; choice clipped lambs 24.00; common $15-20; choice ewes $6-7; choice Wether $6-7; cull and medium $3-5. Hogs, 450, .25 lower; U. S. 1-2 190- 220 lbs. 220-240 lbs.

240-260 lbs. BANK STOCKS Bid Bankers Tr 64 Chase Manh Fst Nat City Morgan Guar Wells Fargo Bk xd INSURANCE Aetna Life 71 Am Re-Ins Conn Gen Gen Reinsur 236 Ga Int Life Glens Falls 56 Hanover Ins 43 Hartf Fire 74 Home Ins NY Midwn Un Life 82 Nationwd A Ohio Casualty Ohio State Li 59 Phoenix Prov-Wash Springfd Ins 79 Travelers Fid 64 West Res Life Values Hold In Mixed Housing' From Our Columbus Bureau COLUMBUS Ohio would be a more prosperous state if it had a Fair Housing Law, declared here today. Economics Prof. William F. Hellmuth sought to discredit reports that housing values decline when nonwhites move into a previously unmixed neighborhood.

DETAILING a study of 000 different home sales, Hellmuth said the odds are about 4 to 1 that house prices in a neighborhood entered by nonwhites will keep up or exceed prices in a comparable allwhite area. The study was made in San Francisco, Oakland and Philadelphia. "Homeowners, landlords, realtors, developers and financial institutions miss a sizable part of the market for their homes or their services if they insist on segregation in housing," said Hellmuth. Fair Housing proponents wound up their case before. the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee today, with 21 scheduled witnesses and others who asked for a chance to speak.

The largest committee room in the State House was jammed. ANOTHER witness, Eric Nord from Oberlin, was counsel for the city when its fair ordinance was enacthousing, week the ordinance was held constitutional by the Supreme Court. Nord said the ordinance was triggered by a builder's announcement that he was coming to Oberlin to erect 200 homes that would not be open to Negroes. 2 Workmen Are Freed In Cave-Ins Cave-ins at Akron construction sites have trapped two workers in two days, but both victims escaped serious injury. John Palma, 24, of 392 Fifth st.

SE, Barberton, was buried to his waist this morning at a sewer construction project near 922 Independence av. He was pulled out by fellow Kenmore Construction Co. workers and Akron firemen. Palma was taken to Akron City Hospital, where his condition was listed as "good." CHARLES PAPASODARO, 51, of 594 E. Tallmadge was buried to his chest at 4.

p. m. Monday when a 12-foot trench caved in on the new Kenmore Expressway. He was dug out by fellow employes of Harry Miller Excavating Co. Papasodaro was treated for bruises at St.

Thomas Hospital and released. Record Principal Retires CLEVELAND (P) C. Clark, principal of Horace Mann Junior High School in Lakewood for 41 years, announced he is retiring in June. He holds the record for having been the principal of one school in Ohio the longest. Tighten Tax Law NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) Whites living in the east African countries of Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania no longer be allowed tax deductions for vacation, educational or health trips back home.

Officials said the new ruling will net the countries another $700,000 in tax revenue from upper income groups. Cleveland Industrial Stocks OVER THE COUNTER Asked Giant TI Gilmore In Glidden pfd Globe Ind Greg Ind Growth Cap Halle Bros Hanna Min Hansen Mf Hauserman Hickok El Higbee Co Hoover Co A Inter Sway Feiss 11 Kaiser Stl Leas Trns Lee Wilson Leech Nev Lubrizol Cp MacDonald Mohawk Monarch Monroe AE Nat Screw Am Van Oh Tel Norwalk Tr 6 Oglebay Ohio Crnks Oh Sav Ag Oh Wat Ser Osborn Mf B. Gray, 67, superintendent since 1948, died Monday at attack. JAMES B. GRAY since 1948 Rifle Found Beside Dead Akronite Summit County Coroner A.

H. Kyriakides will rule in the death of Hudson L. White, 66, of 878 E. Buchtel av. dead at St.

Thomas Mr. White was pronounced after other tenants in the building found his body sprawled across a bed at 10 p. m. Monday. There was a bullet hole in the head and a rifle beside the body.

A native of Conneaut Mr. White was a draftsman who had lived in Akron since 1921. He had worked for B. F. Goodrich for a number of years and most recently had been employed by Hottle Engineering Co.

He leaves two brothers, Kirk of Akron and Nelson of Washington, Pa. The Adams Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. The body will be sent to Linesville, for services and burial. Bid Ajax 13 Albee Alco Chem Am Aut Amer Fin Am Gr A Am Vit Pd API Ins Arvida Cp Barton Dist Bath Cyril Big Drum 16 Boston Cap Brown Fint 14 Brush Beryl Buck Stl 30 Burdett Oxy 11 Carlon Pd Clev Trnch Cle-Ware Cole Nat 20 Cowles Chm 35 Crft Mstr Curtis Noll Dover Cons Erie Tech Faultless 22 Ferry Cap Un Fisher, Fd Flexible Frisch Rest Bid Asked Park DF Penton Pub 20 22 Pepsi Bot 15 Phillips Rand Dev Ridge Tool 40 Roadway Ex Rochest 18 Sawhill Tub 15 Scott OM Scott Avia Scott 20 20 Seaway Fd 14 Sexton Inc 22 Shaker Prop Smucker JM 66 Solon Ind Steel Imp Sterling 5 Stowe Wd Tappan Co 33 Techno Fd 2 Tel Ser Oh 28 Them-0-D 32 Tinnerm 40 Trans Gas Tremco Mf 18 Troxel Mf Union Fin 9 US Realty US Truck Valley Vernors Inc Charles Madigan SAYSYou wouldn't buy a pair of shoes without trying them for size. Make sure your Life Insurance is properly fitted to your particular security needs.

Dominion Life's wide variety of plans and flexible option provisions enable us to assure satisfaction at minimum cost. CHARLES R. MADIGAN Let's Talk It Over Branch Manager 572 W. Market St. Our modern Group pension plans proAkron 44303 vide carefree retirement.

Phone 535-2101 When it comes to insurance it's Dominion THE DOMINION LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY, WATERLOO, ONTARIO for Life an Oberlin College economist Since passage of the ordinance, said Nord, there has been no great rush in Oberlin for Negroes to move into white neighborhoods, but there has been a gradual opening up. Slap Back With Skirts RICHVIEW, Ill. (P) Jerry Newcomb, Chuck Hall and Roger Cohlmeyer, 13-year-old pupils at Richview School, took masculine offense Friday when several girls arrived for class in slacks and men's athletic shirts. They retaliated this is week by appearing for classes in skirts and blouses. There was no protest from school officials.

Akron Organizers Begin County Drive For Teachers Union The newly-formed Akron attempt to organize teachers Summit County, temporary said Monday. Its first effort will be Thurs. day at a 4 p. meeting for Barberton teachers in Barber. ton High School.

Sweet and James Sullivan, field representative for the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) from Cleveland, will speak and distribute liter. ature and membership forms. ORGANIZED last month as a local of the AFT, has more than 100 members. It is seeking official recognition as a teachers' organization from the Akron Board of Education. Currently, although 2,055 of Akron's 2,300 teachers belong to the Akron Education Association, this group is not officially recognized by the board.

Sweet said there are no AFT organizers in the Barberton area but that the new union already has about a dozen enthusiastic backers among the teachers. "WE HAVEN'T set up meeting dates in other districts," he said, but indicated that teachers in several districts are interested. In Barberton, most of the more than 300 teachers belong to the Barberton Teachers As- Can't See Ex- Slays Self CINCINNATI (OPS)- -Paul Allen, 40, shot himself to death at the police station Monday night after he was told he Jeri could Allen not Shelly, and see his his 36, went ex-wife, former for wife. Mrs. drive earlier.

She said he slapped during an argument. She jumped out of the car, went to the station and said she wanted to file a charge. Allen followed her. When police refused to let him talk to her, Allen pulled a pistol from his raincoat and shot himself twice in the right side. Dividend Directors of Firestone declared a quarterly dividend of 30 cents a share on common stock today.

Payment will be made April 20 to stock of record April 5. Rezoning For Ward Store Nixed BARBERTON- -City Council Monday night rejected rezoning of a 12-acre parcel adjacent to the planned Austin Square shopping center to "Round accommodate a $1.25 million retail Mont store for About omery Ward. re resentative Jack Wood, Us of the Bernard truction center developer, had no comment on the 6 to 3 rezoning defeat. CONSTRUCTION of the Teachers Union (ATU) will in every school district in union chairman Richard Sweet sociation, a local, independent organization. Membership in that group dropped slightly this year after a dues increase.

At least 10 members are needed to organize an AFT local, Sweet said. A new local would be formed for each school district, he explained. Rubbermaid's I Caldwell Quits Board WOOSTER James R. Caldwell, founder, former president and retired chair. man of the board at Rubbermaid resigned from the firm's board of directors today.

Caldwell, who over 30 years ago took over Wooster Rubber Co. and turned it from a tiny balloon making Caldwell plant to a large Caldwell and leading houseware manufacturer, resigned because of pressing activities in Boca Raton, Fla. He has lived there the last several years. Caldwell retired as board chairman in December, 1963. JAMES M.

DAWSON, vice president and economist for the National City Bank of Cleveland, has been named to succeed Caldwell on the board. A graduate of College of Wooster and Wharton School of Finance, Dawson has been associated with National City since 1948. a Taylor Upped By Sheriff Capt. Howard Taylor, 43, was named today as assistant chief deputy by Summit County Sheriff Robert Campbell, succeeding Maj. Robert Simmons, 50, who was appointed chief deputy Monday.

Taylor of 395 St. Leger also was promoted to major. He will be in charge of the jail devision. He was in the traffic department and supervised the school patrols. Simmons, of 497 Fernwood fills the position vacant since the death last Dec.

1 of Paul Wein. $3.75 million center will begin this Spring as planned, Wood said. It is to be located on a 25-plus acre site at Robinson av. and Fifth st. The center has been the subject of a legal battle that carried all the way to the Ohio Supreme Court over whether zoning permitted shopping center use at the site.

PAY HIKES RETAINED GREEN TWP. The Board of Education Monday night listened to complaints from teachers and members of the Ohio Education Association but refused to review the salary schedule it approved for teachers March 1 for the 1965- 66 school year. The new scale reflects increases of varying amounts in different categories and shows these ranges: Three years' training, no degree, $4,450 to bachelor's degree, $5,000 to five years' training, $5,150 to $7,810, and master's degree, $5,300 to $8,100. of PATROLMEN BACK SPRING FIELD TWP. The resigned patrolmen have returned here but Jack Rife reports he will quit his newly appointed post as head of the township police force.

So the police protection issue here remains clouded. However, Sheriff Robert Campbell has let the township out of a 30-day pact with department. The township Saturday rescinded earlier action to have deputies supervise Springifeld police. DIE IN AREA MISHAPS Asked 9.98 4.65 11.54 6.29 7.14 14.34 11.54 17.69 16.72 23.67 21.96 9.06 16.40 14.58 11.72 13.80 14.64 11.99 4.25 6.44 23.98 17.61 24.15 14.02 19.91 5.75 12.78 16.69 4.86 11.02 13.78 13.64 23.38 11.16 8.61 7.26 25.69 26.98 18.37 11.95 10.59 10.71 19.20 19.69 6.12 13.00 14.93 12.80 19.16 11.16 17.80 11.72 12.00 12.86 41.54 38.40 17.11 9.47 18.95 9.05 7.32 11.95 16.66 15.72 18.52 Asked 69 115 43 71 161 240 28 85 18 61 64 17 A power shovel operator from Rittman and a Cleveland Heights man who was towing another vehicle with his car were killed in area mishaps overnight. Marion L.

Bechtel, 43, died Monday when he was buried under a pile of earth at an excavation for expansion of Republic Steel's Eighth st. NE plant in Canton. Bechtel, an employe of the Heckett Engineering formerly the Hanna Trucking Excavating Co. of Akron. Dennis Klein, 24, died early today when the car he was driving went off Interstate 71 in Southern Medina County.

He was towing his sister's car, which had broken down in Ashland County. SPORTSMEN-Watch Class 71 "Sport Section" in the Want Ads. Guns, golf clubs, fishing equipment at bargain prices. Bid Asked 4 62 25 26 26 55 56 14 24 14 22 22 23 33 8 23 92 96 34 17 34 35 The game of chess, which is be- THE right move a is visit with an experi enced Trust Officer at our bank. RIGHT He'll be glad to explain how a Live more and more popular in America today, originated during or before the 7th century probably ing Trust arrangement, prepared by your attorney, can relieve you of in India.

Those who participate learn quickly why chess is called "the royal game." the day-to-day burden of investment management. look Through Living Trusts, we are freeing more and To excel one must develop the ability to of before making a move. more busy men and women for the joys of living. at all sides a problem the lack of time So, before another day goes by, telephone us an for Perhaps one of your problems is If so, the appointment. Make the right move.

right now! to handle your investments properly. TRUST DEPARTMENT The FIRESTONE BANK.

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