{ title: 'Ogdensburg journal. (Ogdensburg, N.Y.) 1932-1971, July 05, 1967, Page 11, Image 11', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031165/1967-07-05/ed-1/seq-11/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031165/1967-07-05/ed-1/seq-11.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031165/1967-07-05/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031165/1967-07-05/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Northern NY Library Network
1 OGDENSBURG JOURNAL, WED., JULY 5, 1967 VISIT TO OGDENSBURG CANCELLED— Congressman Robert C. McEwen's office notified the Journal today that the visit of the USS Ingraham to Ogdensburg sched- uled for July 10 had been cancelled by the Commander of the Atlantic Fleet because of the inadequate depth of the water here at the Madden Dock where the Destroyer was to have docked July 10-12. The Ingra- ham and the USS Vesole will both dock at Massena at the Copeland Oil Terminal Dock and will both be open to inspection by the public. Both destroyers are visiting Expo '67 at Montreal and then coming up the St. Lawrence to Massena. They both have the newest type of sonar domes on their hulls for detecting submarines. Ad- Nine Found Dead Aboard Family Of Four Is Killed In Fiery Plane Crash; 49 Die In July 4th Accidents An Air Force family of [ford that claimed the life of four, killed in the flaming!his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Bur- crash of their light plane, was ton. among the 49 persons who ] Coram — Jacob Jones, 13, perished in accidents in New ICoram, drowned while swim-!New York and Vermont. They York State over the longming in Long Island Sound l -- : -'- 5 --' iU -e '---\ Fourth of July weekend. Fire Island — Alfred C ,,... ± ,, , I ton III, 16, of Bohemia, In addition to the plane ; dn>wned Tuesday while crash Saturday, 36 persons ! swimming with a friend died in traffic accidents, 5; Ncw York _ M Albert; I™^^™'y^ drowned and 4 were killed in| Blue > ^ o f The Bronx> tw o- ' W other mishaps. One was a ica r collision | One plane had crashed and 13-year-old boy who died of a | R 0e kville Centre — Judith [burned in the Catskill Moun- Gale, 14. of Hewlett, auto [tains near Ellenvile, N.Y. It overturned after it struck a \ contained the charred bodies of curb, fence and utility pole. lAir Force Capt. Stephen Orens- 'tein, 35; his wife, Roberta, 30; Stillman Duprey Dies At Age 47 Stillman (Stutzi Duprey 47 of 509 Jersey Ave., died abn J i p.m.. Tuesday fJuly 4, 1%7 shotrly after being admitti d '.•> Hepburn Hospital. Mr. Duprey, who appeared to • be in his usual good health v ^ • suddenly stricken ill al his •>.' e and was taken to (he ho-m. in (he liescuc Squad ambul i , • (He and his younger son, Danny ' [had been putting up a fence in' [the back yard of their home dul- ling the morning and early altet- [noon. Mr. Duprey was a seil-em-, ployed trucker and drove tilt mail truck between Ogdensbuig and Prescott. The funeral will be Friday at 11 a.m. at St. John's Church, 1 with the Rev. Nelson B. Skinner, curate, officiating. Burial .viil be in the Ogdensburg Cemetery Friends may call at the tain-, ily residence, 509 Jersey A'.e,, at their convenience, beginning this afternoon. Surviving Mr. Duprey are his wife, Jean; two sons, Michael JS.. this city, and Danny, a mem- 'ber of this year's graduating .class ai Ogdensburg Free Acad-j |emy; his mother, Mrs. William ii Blanche) Duprey Stevenson,] i'this city: one sister, Mrs. Mil-! jford (Betty) Logan, this city; j Three Planes^\™'\ - \ ol Mr. Duprey was born in Og- KINGSTON, N.Y. (AP)—CivilIdensburg, March 15, 1920, son Air Patrol pilots have located j of Blanche Trotter Duprey and the wreckage of three small pri-* e late Henry Duprey. On vate planes that, crashed onlAprit 16, 1941, he married Jean separate mountains in eastern !C Davison of this city, in An- 'niston, Ala. The Rev. Dr. Clark officiated. He was a veteran of World War II. Mr. Duprey was a member of St. John's Church, the V.F.W. umaJ Swanson ot uic \tlanlic Command told Congressman McLwen thai sounding- taken Monday at the Madden dock showed depths of 27 feet at the east end, 26 feet in the center, 22 at the west end. The Admiral said that the average depth must be 23 feet. He told Congressman McEwen \A mud scratch on the sonar dome would cost $50,000 as the dome would have to open and inspected. A real scrape on the bottom could cost $500,000 or more to repair the highly sophisticated sonar equipment. We are terribly sorry we can- not visit Ogdnesburg, but we just do not have enough water for safety of naviga- tion.\ Moscow Film Festival s Puritanism Aheac H Pulchritude, Parties Iv t-PED (OI LM MOM On \i - u J an in ] 1 n 1 k lilt 1, 111 n It tiv -il j i]\ >hs dmiii piomi es political tue\oils Prize award-, in tht past hivi pitied Soviet juro' s seehng to honoi S \n t films vilh k p nurd a„unst foil ^n ]ui irs dtm mdin^ MI oniti m f i m hi cliH\emfnts hom im id Moves to honoi controveisial tilms ftoin the \\c>t havt on frmed dtadlv em u Scvict nil l }ie tn 1 II ed vil ! hi h h i ti f tm 1 But h S i t il h mo^ry sue h f hi idp pt i\ iti n o* i jnl ol heit netmitlm. \I CI !,> I StlV ll it I \ | I 1 itt nd J ltd /inni m mn did St inlev kidiritt Zinnemann film \ Man Fr \]\ Scisons will be shown is he Bn ish rntt William J, Rowen. 80 Died July 4 S II ( fol he i yielded th bodies of nine per- Alfred Clif-jsons. ! Searchers continued to look \ for a fourth light plane which is i assumed to have gone down in ruptured lung after a fire- cracker exploded near him while he was swimming. The tally, recorded during the 102 hours between 6 p.m. Friday and midnight Tues- day, was well below the toll of 58 in the three-day Inde- pendence Day holiday last year. Twenty-two persons perished in drowning and Post here, and Company M Home Guard, The Nichols Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. \H\ ZO\r COMM \M>I R — \e v York State Police Su peniueiiuu \ i 'I ius ,JJ\ mt uutd t xi iv Hnt Lt. Robert L Pii-e - wou'u be Zone 3 ( ommandei Can ton. effectrvf in no rn L* Herbert I Lmaihs who ha' been Zone ' ' e 1964 MM b n mt /m Commandei ai \\<. i-> It. ut. Powers shown above was first appointed > 'it <* c\le Police in 1949 being assigned to Troop A he reassignments were the promotion^ • i > I men. Lt. Raymond M. Kisor, Saranac LaLi h i- b^c -• liomoted to Captain and trans- ferred to Ma oie I Jp'gt of BCI activities. Senior BCI Investigator Jerome Merry\ McNulty has been promoted to Lieutenant and will remain in Malone. Captain Henry J. Resting, who has been in charge of BCI at Malone, will be in charge of BCI Activities in Troop E. Canandaigua, which is a new troop now being formed. All appoint- ments are effective July 6. production of critic al films Moil r i v i i of tl i ii dcao luc 4 1 *6~ c* ^ i uit 'f<sp. ii lunu td •• ii nit r pn nounced .mocii July d at Hcp- d nsbur . The\ vir>l tht pic ntur ti>n til n it t val D \ Di Lauchlin Laku award bestowed on pioductons The funetal wll l be Fndav ir the onlv SOUP' ipprner ait <i 1 ii ill ( re 11 m the American film Who & •Afraid of Virginia Woolf?\ will be shown outside the compel i- (ion to an invitation-only au- Idience of Soviet film workers. j The public won't see it. j The Soviets always invite ineraf home'after iscores of the worlds stars toj day _ and at their t 2 | it i tlu ! i\ < Mmn I uni 3 II ii Laud with the Rev. Philip Gausby, Epis- copal rector of the Wadding- ton and Morley churches, of- ficiating. Burial will be in the Morley Cemetery. Friends may call at the fu- p.m., to- convenience 2 Car Accidents In County On Fourth Of July Canton — Sheriff's deputies boating mishaps during thatiwere called out to investigate! and their sons. Bryan, 8. and Scott, 5. They left the Orange County airport at Newburgh in a rented Piper Cherokee last Saturday to visit his parents in Syracuse. Meredith's March, 6 A Beginning' (AP) President, Mrs. Johnson | Revisit Her Old Home | Karnak, Tex. — i AP) — Lyn- : son's hometown and visiting idon B. Johnson took his bride-'with old friends before return- ;to-be. Lady Bird, away fronving to their LBJ Ranch near [this crossroads hamlet 32 years; Johnson City. They may remain ago in an old coupe. He brought'there through next weekend. her back Tuesday in a jet-pow-' jered presidential helicopter. attend but few appear partly untu the time o f the f L because the schedued showing Surviving Mr Rowan are of heir films is worked out only jon e sist e Mrs w ^ t H 1} aithelastminue Short, Madrid- one brother This time any Leslie Caraij Fred ^ - Morf ^ aim French actor Robert Hos-| niece s and nephews - sein, both jury members, are, Mr Rowen J was ]yQm &t ure tuaaena. jCanton. Dec. 7, 1886, son of Americans, George I David and Martha Heckels Rowen. He never married. .listed as j Among Americans, George I David 'Hamilton, Warren Beatty. Shir- ley MacLame, Shirley Temple ' and Jack Palance are tentative- Miss. Earlier in the holiday ;he First Family witnessed the bap- The Johnsons spent about V/z !tism of their first grandchild, Canton, James H. Meredith character-j hours touring sentimental land-: Patrick Lyndon Nugent Some 30 miles to the north, a : ' ze s ni s march through Missis-jmarks in the area of Mrs. John ' J5k octa weamna periodT which'was consider-itwo car accidents in St. kw-j^.P 81 ^ re ™ v « 1 Tuesd f $P?fcfindI fJi^ fear\andf n ius ably warmer than L shower-'rence County on the Fourth 0 f^e bodies of a Canadian coupe,| ^ the end fo. fear and injus- dotted, partlv cloudy weather iJuly, the first occurring in the M. Guy Boisvert, 41; his wife,,|tite. of the past weekend. Traffic ! early morning hours and the L«, 24, and their 6-month^ld accidents claimed 30 lives isecond, late in the evening. Only over the 1966 holiday. ' mi \ O T ™W^ were sustained In Albany's suburban Col-;\i b°* h accidents. onie, young David J. Gilbert; A t 1;4 5 a _ m a 1962 stat j on died after a thrown \cherry wagon operated by Gerald P. bomb\—a small but potent Rock j 38> o f Route 1; Peru > N .y., firecracker — exploded near ; wa s involved in a one-car ac- him while he and several;'cident at the intersection of other boys were swimming in [Depot and Union Streets, town- the Six Mile Waterworks. The | ship of Brasher. Rock was boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. [driving east on Depot Street and, Perry Gilbert of Colonie.i approaching the intersection, whispered to friends before:was unable to negotiate the left turn into Union Street. The car skidded about ten feet and struck a utility pole, traveled another 12 feet and came to rest against a large tree. Rock suffered cuts and scratches to the face, head and right knee. Wes Wilbur Jr., 18, of Keene, N.H., passenger in the car sustained a cut over one eye. he died, \I know you didn't mean it. I forgive you.\ It was the only death re- port related to firecrackers, which — unsupervised — are illegal in New York State. Deaths reported since Sun- day: MONDAY Clayton — Kevin Marshall, 15, Clayton; drowned while swimming in the St. Law- rence River. New York — Nicholas Or- lando, 54, Lindenhurst; plunged 60 feet from catwalk at the new Juillard School of Music. Sodus Point — Rocco Car- pino, 26, of Clyde; drowned in Lake Ontario after boat!36, of Tupper Lake and James drifted away from where he [Sutherland, 48, of Newton Falls, was swimming. I ^ s t- ne Sutherland vehicle, a TUESDAY I' 962 Dodge sedan, was turning Mooers — Ronald Buskeyjinto a side road, the Lavallee 22 and his cousin Rodney |car, a 1963 Rambler, struck it Buskey. 17, both of Mooers; [ m passing, auto hit tree along Route 22 TODAY IN HISTORY The third plane was found on Haystack mountain in Vermont, with two bodies on board. The four-place Cessna had been missing since Sept. 27, 1965, when it was rented to Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Brooks of Wells, Maine. The Brooks had been on a flight from Rochster, N.H., to Hartford, Conn. The fourth—and still missing —plane contained newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Stev- enson, enroute from Baltimore Rock was issued a summons )t o E w [ n MontreaL They for failure to keep nght by ! digappeared June 25 . Sheriff s Deputies John W. Man- ; ning and Harry Caringi. The second mishap occurred at 10:15 p.m., Tuesday, on Route 3. at Newton Falls, town- ship of Clifton, and involved cars driven bv Albert A. Lavallee. , _ , . . , The last steps of the 165-mile daughter Guylame, from• a J walk brought the 34-year-old crash site near the peak of 3,- cjvi l r i ht s fi t 0 the courl . 900-foot Doubletop Mountain. j house s 6 quar e 6 her e m Independ . Their wrecked Beechcraft j ence Day. Bonanza had been spotted on; Mo „ riifh „ oi j iU „ , ,•„ JBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MnnHnv ThP nW hart Wt Car-' Meredith Said the completion 3^ i q Wprinfisdav _ Julv 5.JVV does not signal a victory. It is a greater manifestation of the black world's historical, traditional and more fundamental defeat,'' Mrs. Francis Bissonette of Helena, the 17-year-old bride, who was severely injured in an accident which took the life of „ T , ,. „ . , , „ her 22-year-old bridegroom Mr. and Mrs. Richard S, short] y afle r the coupl e , e b f{ o n home town since they planned Granam, New lork, were^heir wedding trip May 27 re- to be in Texarkana, just 50 guests over the weekend of: main s cr i ticai a J- th ' e Mary miles to the north, for the funer- William Spector of Spector! F j etche r Hospital in Burlington, Mrs. Johnson asked the Presi dent to take her back to her Mrs. Bissonette Remains Critical; Still Unconscious al of Mrs. Wright Patman, wife Cadillac - Olds Co. Mr. of the Texas Democrat who is' ham a^ 1 Mr - Spector chairman of the House Banking classmates m Cornell G> ra \i Vt. She has never regained con- were ;sciousness. ^ ni \; The tragic accident occurred Monday. The plane had left Car- . . , , tierviUe, Que, on June 18 bound [ ?L_if \.\5Z.™ ,.,. for Philadelphia. south of Mooers. Rochester — Gary Buda, 21, suburban Greece; car etruck a utility pole in the community of Sweden. New York — Rose Piggott, 70, fire swept her West 32nd Street apartment. Binghamton — Patricia Spring, 17, Johnson City; of injuries suffered when an auto in which she was riding struck a tree. Albany — David J. Gilbert, 13, Colonie; of injuries suf- fered when a firecracker ex- ploded near him while he was swimming. Rochester - Pillsbury, 25 ; Lavallee then lost control of his car which went off the road. Ther e was extensive damage to both vehicles, and Lavallee received a cut on his nose and a bump over an eye. He was is- sued a summons for unsafe passing by Deputy Sheriff Bert Rowe. Greece; car struck a tree near nearby Naples. Warsaw — Radioman 2.C Harold Burton, 38, Neptune FUNERAL HELD TODAY FOR MRS. JOSEPH SANTAY, AGED 91 The funeral tor Mrs. Mary Lawler Santay, 91, of 719 Mont- gomery St., widow of Joseph Santay, who died Saturday aft- ernoon, was held at 9:30 a.m., today at the Ramsdell-Ewart Funeral Home and at 10 o'clock Mrs. Judy [at St. Mary's Cathedral. The suburban i R ev . Myron Hawkins celebrated the funeral Mass of requiem. Burial was in St. Mary's etery. Bearers were Charles Cem- Mar- Beach, Fla., died Tuesday of'ceau, Kermit Cole, Patrick Rites Held Today At Hermon For and Currency'Committee. jversity. Mr. Graham is a par- iabou t si x mi]es west o f pj atts . The Chief Executive obliged ' tner m the - Ne w York Stock; burgh a f th e intersection of the ith the helicopter trip to Kar-!Exchange firm of Reynolds &[ 01 d Military Turnpike Road the 186th day of 1967. There are|nack. near the Louisiana borderj Co - [and the Miller Road when the 179 days left in the year. in the piney woods country of v,Trrt7»-in v v** 1 Bissonette car was struck by a Today's highlight in history: I F Texas. ,. Co L™ * h \.^ d * J _ n . h 'J^VrW driven by John Canon. \ On this date in 1811, Venezue- Here the most prominent Col. & Mrs. Edwin E, Keat-I c ley, Exeter. N.H. are guestsLf fyringham.' Mass. Canon mark is a dilapidated, two- f01 ' several days of their son-l fajled t o obsen ,.g' th e sto p sig n London. In 1935, President Franklin D. Egypt And Jordan Are Tallied Up Vietnam Casualty Hermon — The funeral forifj| n Pfc. William S. McBroom, 20,. nOVy LOSSCS Cy who was killed in battle Thurs- day (June 22, 1967) while serving in Vietnam with the 173rd Air- borne Regiment, was held at 2:30 p.m., today at the Green Funeral Home here, with the Rev. Jack M. Wells, St. Law- rence County Presbyter, officiat- ing- Surviving, besides the parents, Claude and Clemis Roberts Mc- Broom, are nine brothers and sisters, including a brother serving in the Air Force in Thailand and a sister serving with the WAFS at Sheppard Air Force Base, Texas; his paternal grandmother and his paternal grandfather. Private McBroom, a June, 1966 graduate of Knox Memorial School at Russell, enlisted in August of that year. He was home on leave in February of this year and left on March 5, to join lus unit in Vietnam. He said he had failed in one of his primary purposes be- cause \the fear that permeates the life of the Negro in the United States has not been elim- inated.\ But he said he exposed that fear. \If Negroes no longer fear,\ he told about 40 Negroes who gathered as he spoke, \then;Roosevelt signed a bill creating the whites have only two choic-! the National Labor Relations es: to kill them or let them be!Board. free.\ ! In 1945. Gen. Douglas Mac- ., , . . ,, ,.. J Arthur said the entire Philippine No crowds greeted Meredith j lslands had been !iberate d by when he walked into Canton onj hi s Wor! d War n f orces . Liberty Street. A handful of< I n m0 g^ Lvndon B, John- Negroes across the street from. so . n announ ced that he was a the square shook his hand when' can didate for the Democratic he reached the nearly deserted|nomination for president. center of town. la became the first South Ameri- ^ can country to declare her in-1 storj J™k buildup -once R dependence from Spam. general store — that still dears J On this date- \the name, in fading red paint, In 1798. Napoleon Bonaparte [of Mrs. Johnson's father, who captured the Egvptian port of;died in 1960. Alexandria. ' I The si S n reads: \ T - J Ta >' lo r In 1865, William Booth j—dealer in everything \ founded the Salvation Army- landowner and cotton planter. His widow, Ruth Tay- lor, the First Lady's stepmoth- er, still occupies the family home -an antebellum man- jan d s< m Scott have returned! Hospital' sion on the outskirts of town ;to thej[ . home i n Laconia j N.[fjy in-law and daughter Mr, and| aftheiniersection and stpuc k Little, Pots-| tne Bissonette vehicle in mid- dam - I section. r, ~^ ii-n- I Criminal action is pending, Mrs. Dorothy Williams, . ' 5 Sarasota, Fla. Mrs. Bettv Ax-[p T . , elson, Gloversville. and Mrs.j^Omier LlSDOrt 1^™. .^— ^!S y wer: b Sent1ues?t!Resident, 60, Dies their sister, Mrs. VV.O. Stur-i Mrs _ Marv Martin Strick- geon. 508 Crescent St. [i an d Rockville Center, N.Y. , ,T 7T7,, n • I formerly of Lisbon, 60 died Mr. and Mrs. Walter Quinn.jThursday, June 29 at Mercy Rockville Center, built with slave labor and plant- ation-made bricks in 1854. 1 Ten years ago — British Com- i monwealth prime ministers, Uvinding up a meeting in London, j called for normal relations with I Communist China, i Five years ago — Scores i persons were killed in fi i between Moslems and Europe- Amman, Jordan - (AP) _|ans in Oran. Algeria Casualty reports from Egypt One year ago and Jordan indicate that the.-u, two! in Indonesia stripped President H., after spending the past! Funeral serv ices were held few days with Mrs. Qumn si Ju]v : 1967 at 1 0 a m from mother and brother. Mrs.i Pe ttit - Place Funeral Home. Charles Farley and Charles. Rockville Center. Burial fol- 314 Adams Avenue. Mrs.iiowed in Kensico Cemeferv. Quinn, the Cornier Elaine Balhalla. N.Y. Farley, owns and operates a Surviving Mrs. Strickland Dance Studio in that city. are ner husband, R.T. Strick- [land: a son. R. Martin Strick- Linda Gail Bush, Miss Thou-1 Louis Williams Jr. and Henry ; land > Harrisburg, Pa., a sand Islands for 1967, will com-;Mendard, both boys 13 years of! daughter. Margaret, at home: of pete with 24 other candidates age, went to Expo'67 on the Ex-, a sister > Mrs , j 0 'i m i nez •-•-\ \ r of the Canadian Nation-1 CnaeneVi Canton. SLU Sophomore Will Participate In State Contest girting f rom a1 ' P art s °^ \ l e s!al e f° r ;P oli '' urope- the title of Miss New York -al from Prescolt on July 4. This State during the week of July was their first trip away from The Congress 10 at Olean, N.Y. I home alone. Louis is the son ., of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Williams, C uuuu lt - , Mrs. Thurlow Cannon, wife of H th e so n o f Mrs , Ad a nations lost more than 15 times| Sukarno of his title ot president^ Director o f Public Relations | Mendard . at St. Lawrence University, has : been selected by hte Pageant: Scot t Moss, eight-year-old Cnmmiltee to serve as official son 0 r Hcv, and Mrs,'llibbcrt chaperone for Miss Bush; w Moss > Jr __ Kansas City, throughout the week al Olean, ,Missouri, underwent major heart surgery at St. Luke's as many killed or missing as! t0 T ' Israel did in last month's war. No casually figures were available from Syria, the third major Arab belligerant. Body Recovered From River May Be Former Patient Investigator j Jordan's Premier Saad Jumaa said 6,094 Jordanian troops were killed or missing in the war, 762 were wounded and 463 taken prisoner. He said most of the prisoners, returned recent- ly, were also wounded. About 5,000 Egyptians were killed, according to an editorial written last Friday by Moham'of Maurice Pelzoldt, a former ed Hannanein Haikal, editor in!patient al the St. Lawrence When you are using a bag^hicf °f t n e authoritative Cairo'State Hospital. holding seasoned flour for coat-j newspaper Al Ahram. ; There was no apparent foul tag chicken pieces, add only a! Israel's Defense Ministry re--play and St. Lawrence County few pieces of chicken at a time'ported Tuesday that 730 Israeli \ coroner, Dr. Hugh Frame, au- to the bag. This way you have'troops were killed. It said 2,800 [thorized the removal of the body A sophomore at St. Lawrence „ . „m T ,.„ tnr . University this fall, Miss Bushj'^P 1 tal in Kansas City June . Ca ^ 7vv C , T .T If^'wn the title of Miss Thousand 30 His condition is reported Gerald F. O Neil of the State,, ,^ ^ . { m Miss satisfaotory ub-station here is con- JThougan d ]s |.; nd s Pageant he i d \~ **\• I at Watertown. ] The State Pageant is a pre- Police sub-station here is con-j^™^-^,--^- j^-j^ ld | Mrs Moss is the former tinumg I he investigation of tne, a t Waterlown ;Elma L. Kelley, daughter of badly decomposed body recov-; The Stete j, fe a pre .;Mr S , A. J. Kelly 501 King ered at 4 p.m., Tuesday, from, (h e Mig g America ;Street, and the late Mr. Kel- the St. Lawrence River at Red; p ^ whjc h wl| ! be he] d a t ley II ,s believed to be that A * n , j r cj| t , al ,_ Mills. miunes suffered Saturdav in 1 Hacked. Williim Pennington, ] the besl chance of having the I were wounded, 1,700 of them [to the morgue at the St. Law * .'..vo-car crash near Rush-'John FarreU and John Barr, letting even. |permanently disabled. 'rence State U^spilal. Rev. and Mrs. Kelley lived for many years in the Black One to two tablespoons of Lake area He was pastor of ; cornstarch will thicken the syrup the Stone Church before mov- : iplus water to make one cup) jing to Kansas City to become, from a one-pound can of fruit, ithe pastor of the Faith Pres-. The amount of cornstarch youjbyterian Church there, use will depend on how thick; Their address is 8507 Ever- iyou want the sauce; also on how ett Road, Kansas City 38, Mis- [ much sugar is added. Isouri, 64K.?. I •V gulfstream