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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1
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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 1

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TODAVS WEATHER CINCINNATI and VICINITY: Partly Cloudy And Leu Humid WithChanre of Late Afternoon Thunderthoweri. High Near 90, Low 75. tvu. dituj. tur on rios is.

Lirtitt Cincinnati Riwiiiptf MAT PAID CIRCULATION DAILY: 189,591 SUNDAY: 271,400 TiokwM: Art My 170 Cluifi4 Want As: CArfWM I J0 HVE COTS THE CINCINNATI Em 1 12th YEAR 0. 82 DAILY FINAL 30 Piis TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 1, I WS SERVICES: N. Yorf rim.i nifo lii MLKER i 1 aw J(o) DEFENSEBILL- President Agrees WORDSJCTS Voted By Senate To Modified Bill Are Not Related On U. S. Controls Carries $46 Billion For Fiscal 1953 In Soviet Propaganda For Keith, Note Says Lives Of 13 Are Lost In 24 Humid Hours; Mercury Gets To 92 LITTLE RELIEF IS IN SIGHT Ease HumidityHigh To Be About 90 Cinclnnatiana ahould get some relief today from the eight-day old heat wave but not much.

The Weather Bureau said the weather would be partly cloudy and lesa humid, with a chance of late afternoon thundershowert. It aaid the high would be near 90 and the low 73. Meanwhile, the number of per- sons dying Irom the heat or ill THEY'LL RULE ON RULES FOR COP Squaring off and getting aet for the delicate job of "ruling on rules" for the Republican National Convention are these members of the subcommittee on rules. They are, left to right, seated: Mis Bertha S. Adkins, Maryland; Harlan I.

Peyton, Chairman, Washington; Ezra R. Whitle, Idaho. Standing: Ralph F. Gates, General Counsel, Indiana, and Mrs. Kathcrina Brown, Ohio.

AP Wirephoto. Error In Courtesy Admitted, But No Apology Is Offered To Britain On Korean Raids THEN HUMIDITY RISES You can't beat the heat. Many Cinrinnatians, noticing that yesterday's 90-degree temperaturea seemed somewhat easier to bear than on previous days, were told that it was a result of the low relative humidity. At the peak temperature of 92 degrees shortly before 3 the humidity stood, at 43 per cenj. But when the temperature started falling, ihe humidity rose, going from 37 at 4 p.

m. to 48 two hours later. A spokesman for the Weather Bureau here said it wss the usual thing for humidity to increase when the temperature dropped. In other words, you can't win at least during the current heat wave. Allied Chiefs Scorn Reply Of Russia To Protest Against Badgering AT.

Y. Times Cable BONN, Germany, June 30 Soviet actions in Germany belie Soviet professions in favor of German unity, the United States, Britain and France charged today in Identical notes signed by the Allied High Commissioners and sent to the chairman of the Soviet Control Commission in Eastern Germany. In scornful language the Western Commissioner rejected the June It reply to the allies' original protest of May 29 agalnat harassment of the population along the Intenonal border and the curtailment of Interzonal traffic and communications. At the same time, outraged German public opinion expressed itself in an emotional appeal to the population of Western Germany to give material and spiritual help to the new refugees from the East zone. Not only Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and the state governments of varied political leanings signed the document but Kurt Schumacher, the Socialist leader and bitter opponent of virtually all of Chancellor Adenauer's policies, joined in the appeal as well as the denunciation of Soviet tactics it contained.

MoCLOY SEES CHIEFS In the European command headquarters in Heidelberg, the U. S. High Commissioner, John J. Mc-Cloy, discussed with Maj. Gen.

Thomas T. Handy and Army post commanders the problem of securing Western Germany's interzonal border. It was the regular monthly post commanders' meeting but it was highlighted by the consideration of recent proposal by Chancellor Adenauer for increased military support of the German border police, No outstanding border Incidents were reported today. However, the Mayor of Coburg, small city In Northern Bavaria, has not been seen since Saturday. He was reported kidnaped by the East German Peoples Police, who were said to have dragged him across the Interzonal boundary when he was working on his farm.

This follows the pattern of other incidents. Incidents such as these have noticeably modified a good deal of the expectations held by the West Germans that the forthcoming allied note to Moscow on German unification might lead to successful Four-Power talks. The text of the proposed note, drafted by the Big Three Foreign Minis-sters in London, is being studied by the West German Government. PLUG FOR TALKS For suggestions before it is dispatched to the Soviet Union, probably later in the week, Eugen Gerstenmayer, one of the leading members of Chancellor Adenauer's Christian Democratic party, said in a policy speech yesterday, "we have only one desire, namely that a Four-Power meeting will come about and will be over as quickly as possible." Expressing succinctly the views known to be held by Chancellor Adenauer and many allied officials, Herr Gerstenmayer said the conference, if it should come about, would demonstrate to the "dreamers" who was blocking an agreement on German unity. Chancellor Adenauer, in speech at Frankfurt University this morning, cautioned against "vacillation" in making political decisions.

The speech was generally nonpolitical. lay associated PRisai WASHINGTON, June 30-The Slate Department disclosed tonight that Dean Acheson, Secretary of State, told British lrgis-lators in London Thursday that the United States made "an error" in falling to consult Britain before American planes bombed Communist power plants in Korea. The department lifted the off-the-record label on Secretary Acheson's remarks to clarify what it called "conflicting reports" of what the Secretary said. Sen. William F.

Knowland Calif.) had demanded the full text of Secretary Acheson's remarks after London dispatches had reported that the Secretary apologized to the British lawmakers. The text, released by the State Department, shows that Secretary Acheson at no point used the word "apology" or expressed regrets. What he said was this: "It only a result of what in the United States Is known as a 'snafu' that you were not consulted about It. "What I want to ay In that you are a partner of ours In this operation, and we wanted to consult you; we ahould have, and we recognize an error." Secretary Acheson, in his explanation, insisted that Britain had no absolute right to be consulted; but he indicated that the United States wished to consult. He said on this point: "If you ask me whether you had an absolute right to be consulted, I should say no, but I don't want to argue about absolute right." The Stalei Department cabled Secretary Acheson today to get his permission to remove the off-Ihe-record label from the remsrks.

Afterward, it gave Senator Know-land a copy for his information. Secretary Acheson made his remarks before some 200 British legislators who afterwards gave him a Vote of thanks for his ex-planatlon on the Korean problem and other East-West issues. In his talk, he defended the decision to bomb the live Communist power stations as "a very proper action, an essential action." The Secretary said tb decision waa made nn military ground. The United States had not bombed the plnnts before because they had been dismantled and the United Nations wished to keep them Intact In the event of Korean unification. But, he said, the Commiininta had put the plants Into operation again, and "they were supplying most of the energy which was lined not only by airfields which were operating againtt hut by radar which nas directing fighters against our planes." nesses aggravated by the heat reached 18 yesterday when 13 such deaths occurred.

Yesterday's temperature! ranged from a high of 92 at 2:40 p. m. to a low of 77 or less late last night. This represented some relief from Sunday's weather, in which the thermometer soared to 97 degrees at 2:40 p. m.

Yesterday was the eighth consecutive day and the 16th day In June with temperatures In the 90s. The Weather Bureau said cnol air seeping down through the North, Northesst and Great Lakes areas would make it more com-lortable today. BLAMED FOR ILLNESS Dead as a result of the heat were; Dowell Willlaina, 48 South Street, Sllverton, who apparently suffocated when he fell headfirst Into a cinder tipple after collapsing from heat yesterday at the Duro Block Losantivllle Road and the Pennsylvania Railroad. John Nolan. 80.

3456 Vine Corryvllle, died last night at General Hospital after suffering a heat stroke. His body temperature shortly before he died was 108 degrees. Andrew Frankenhoff, 77, 1751 Queen City who toppled from his wheel chair at home. His death was attributed directly to, heat exhaustion. Jaaon Panky, 42, 330 W.

Fourth who apparently collapsed from the heat when carrying a number of articles, Including an electric fan, up the stairs to his sixth-floor room at 330 W. Fourth St. He fell backward to a fourth-floor landing. He was pronounced dead at General Hospital. Mrs.

Daisy Sanderfield, 37, 3(HH O'Bryon laundress in charge at the Home for Incurables, 2140 Pogue who collapsed and died at work. Mrs. Minnie Murdrnk, 59, 34 Mercer under treatment for a heart ailment for three years, who was found dead on the floor at her home by her son, Victor Murdock, Florence, Ky. Earl Crlder, 60, who Was found dead in his room at the Hotel Leska, 303 Broadway. Herbert Krogman, 52, 32 W.

Mc Millan who complained of pains in the chest, then collapsed and died when working in the warehouse of the Rollman 435 Reading Rd. Charle Ventgraf, 76, 107 W. Elder who died at General Hospital. His body temperature was 109 degrees. Mrs.

Carrie; Waldvogel, 72, 4551 Montgomery Norwood, who Other Funds Approved To Speed Up Building Of Larger Air Force N. Y. Timet Special WASHINGTON, June 30The Senate passed tonight an appropriation bill carrying $46,403 million in funds and contract authority to run the Department of Defense through the fiscal year that starts tomorrow. Vote, after nine hours cf hectic debate, was 66-0. The measure nnw goes to conference with the House which approved it April with an all-rash appropriation of $46,207,177,554.

Conferees will write the final draft before the bill is sent to the White House. More than $70 billion of appropriations for the new year remain unenacted. To prevent stoppage of vital functions, to provide otherwise payless pay-days for the armed forces and some million civilian government workers, the Congress will have to adopt interim authorizations for expenditures. This has been done previously so many years that it has become a matter of routine. One of the greatest of the congressional logjams has been in its money bills.

ADJOURN BY SATURDAY? The record speed made on this largest of other large appropriations measures gave a new spurt to the effort of Congress to adjourn sine die by Saturday, thus leaving members free to dash toward the party jiominating conventions opening in Chicago on July 7 or to their home bases. The Senate also voted, 79-0, for funds and contract authorizations designed to attain, by July 1, 1855, 143-wlng air force, the strength estimated currently to repulse any attack. This date was the one set by President Truman when the budget for the new fiscal year was made up. The Joint Chiefs of Staff, In the light of Soviet buildup for atomic warfare, had called lor the 143 wings, 126 of them modernized combat groups and the remainder in transport and other supporting units, by the middle of-1954. AN ECONOMY MOVE1 Paradoxically, the Senate action for the speed-up plane building was treated as an economy move.

Instead of allowing the House-approved $12,125,044,000 in cash, the Senate voted $4,685,044,000 in currency but $8 billion in contract authorizations. Sen. Joseph C. O'Mahoney and floor manager of the bill, told the Senate that this would provide sufficient cash to meet Air Force needs, and still supply the Impetus under contract obligations to bring the 143-Wing date year earlier. There was a hurdle yet to be taken.

Several year ago, the House stopped approving contract authorizations. It was found, the argument went, that Congress was getting too loose with such authorizations, voting them as though money waa not Involved, I and then learning that these authorizations had to be met with appropriations. In today's case, Senator O'Mahoney called for a roll-call vote. Members appeared puzzled, as adoption of the O'Mahoney amendment was assured. But when the vote was taken, it indicated that 79 members had called for a return of the contract authorization approach and that the House might give in, at least in this instance.

May Grim Month! Council Warns All: Careful On Fourth CHICAGO, June 30 (AP) The nation's accident death toll for May shot up to 3,160 the highest May figure on record, the National Safety Council announced today. Last month's toll was a 12 per cent increase over May in 1951 and an increase of 94 deaths over the previous high for May 3,066 in 1937. Using the fatality figure as a warning, Ned H. Dearborn, President of the Council, cautioned motorists about the forthcoming Fourth of July week end: "With both the Memorial Day-holiday and the entire month of May setting new records of death and tragedy on the highway, it must be apparent to everyone that summer time is danger time. Be extra alert this week end.

Prevent the one accident you can prevent the one you might cause." was found dead at her home Vy relatives and friends. Robert A. Paul, 58, 4390 Eastern a furnace operator at the Cincinnati Steel Treating Co, Marlemont, who collapsed and died whpn working yesterday, Thomas Adams, 57, 227 E. Fourth Covington, who died yearday In St, hospital. Mr.

Maggie Bragdon, 84, 1310 E. McMillan who died at General Hospital, where she waa recuperating from a fractured hip. Her body temperature was 106 degrees. Charle. MeCauley, 61, 1353 Linn who died Saturday at General Hospital, also was listed yesterday by the Coroner as a heat victim.

In addition to the dead, at least 40 persons in Cincinnati have been treated for heat prostration in the last six days. Additional heat prostration sufferers reported yesterday included: William Juilfs, 66. 236 Albion Edward Bruns. 60, 3911 Taylor Don Buckley, 58, 1317 Wal. nut George Romlne, 35, 2807 Vine Mrs.

May Davis, 69, 2477 Beckman Edward Mar. tini, 70, 832 Terry Eugene Bryer, 831 Hathaway Mrs. Viola Hines, 38, 541 Liberty Thomas Puckett, 78, 170 Dor-sey Robert Kitchener, 57, 223J Victor Ted Blackburn, 47, 49 Clyde Florence, Ky. DRY HUMOR! A sign on the first pole beyond the Cabana Restaurant, Dixie Highway, near Erlanger, Ky announces the water shortage in that area. The sign reads: "Welcome to Death Valley." VIEWS ARE NOT TOLD Truman Is Not Strong For Measure, But Keeps Silent (BY ASSOCIATED JPRISSI WASHINGTON, June 30 A 10-month extension of the basic authority for price and wage controls was signed into law late today by President Truman, but he delayed a statement telling what he thought of it.

What he says about the extension, which Congress voted to replace the old law expiring at midnight tonight, probably would not be complimentary. The extension with amendments which, price-control officials contend, will weaken the effectiveness of their weapons fall far short of the two-year continuance and strengthening which Mr. Truman asked. Congressional leaders who talked with Mr. Truman earlier In the day said he was not enthusiastic about the bill which Congress sent to hi desk Saturday night.

The White House indicated then that he would sign the bill nevertheless and issue statement setting forth his views. Late in the day, however, the White House said the President had signed the extension into law, and that the statement would not be issued until tomorrow morning. If he had not signed the bill all wage-price, rent and allocation authority would have expired at midnight. The new bill extends for a full year, or until June 30, 1953. authority for allocations and priorities covering scarce materials.

RENT CURBS END IN SEPTEMBER Federal rent controls will go off in three months, on September 30, except in areas which () take affirmative action to request that they be continued or (b- have been certified as critical defense housing areas. Some 53 million persons live in noncritical areas but under rent controls at present. Chicago, Philadelphia and San Francisco are examples. The new bill also prohibits price ceilings on processed fruits and vegetables canned, frozen, dried or otherwise modified from the raw state. Office of Price Stabilization (OPS) officials estimated that this would remove from controls aa much as 20 per cent of the average family's food budget.

It exempts such popular food items as canned and frozen vegetables, fruits and fruit juices, prunes, apple sauce and the like. OPS was stilll analyzing the measure, and withheld a formal statement on the full effects, but one hign agency official who asked not to be named said: "Every change in the act is calculated to raise prices substantially." Many Legislators who voted for it contended that inflationary pressures were easing and thai the need for strict price controls had lessened. The House originally voted to take off virtually all price controls, but the compromise worked out with the Senate continued the basic authority. NO CHANGE IN REGULATION Government officials announced that there would be no immediate change in Regulation which fixes minimum cash down payments for home purchases. The announcement was made jointly by the Federal Reserve Board and the Housing and Home Agency, which administers real estate credit curbs.

The new law contains a provision calling for relaxation of Regulation but because of the complex machinery set up to put any such relaxation into effect it appeared likely there would be no changu for at least five months, or until December 1. The bill would forbid the administration to require a down payment of more than 5 per cent on houses if the number of new houses started under construction ran below the rate of 1,200,000 a year. Most estimates by housing experts are for no more than 1,100,000 starts in 1952. But the President must first make estimates of the number of housing starts each month, and on the basis of these estimates make an estimate of the annual rate of starts. If for any consecutive three the number of housing starts stays below the annual rate of 1,200,000, Regulation is supposed to be inoperative.

The President would then be directed to publish official notice in the Federal Register of "the beginning of a period of residential credit-control relaxation." But the period so proclaimed would not start until the first of the second month following the three consecutive months during which the annual rate of starts had dropped below 1,200,000. BREAK IS GIVEN TO VETERANS Thus, if the President's estimates of starts in July, August and September showed a start rate below and he put notice in the Federal Register, October and November would pass before the down payment was lowered to 5 per cent. Present down-payment requirements on the general public are graduated up from 5 per cent on houses costing $7,000 or less to 40 per cent on those costing $25,000 or more. For veterans, present requirements arc easier nothing down on houses costing $7,000 or less, and down payments scale from 4.8 per cent on $8,000 housing to 35 per cent on housing costing $25,000 or more. Word that President Truman did not think much of the controls extension which Congress approved came from House Speaker Rayburn (D Tex.) and the Senate Democratic leader, Senator McFarland of Arizona.

Speaker Rayburn told reporters the President was "not too well pleased with it." He added, however, that signing was the only thing the President could do. The President wished authority to control wages and prices extended for two years, until June 30, 1954. He had asked that the present controls provisions, contained in the Defense Production Act of 1950, be strengthened. However, Congress knocked out some of the controls authority and placed a 10-month limit on the extension. Although the final bill which Congress handed to the President was considered something of a victory for the administration after the House voted to end nearly all price controls Rayburn said the President "didn't seem very enthusiastic" over it.

The controls compromise, finally worked out in a long Senate-House conference committee session, would continue Federal authority to regulate wages and prices for 10 months through next April 30. Authority for allocation and priorities on scarce materials would be extended for a full year. A major change would retain the Wage Stabilization Board (WSB), but with limited power. It would make the appointment of its members subject to Senate confirmation, and the board would be deprived of its authority to make recommendations in labor disputes unless management and union agreed to ask the WSB how much of a wage increase might be granted in a dispute. The measure also requests the President to use the Taft-Hartley law in the steel strike.

This is not binding, however, on Mr. Truman. Under the Taft-Hartley law he could ask for an 80-day strike-halting court injunction, but the President has said such action would accomplish nothing permanent, The administration's major victory cam in the compromise which eliminated a House-approved amendment by Representative Talle Iowa), which jvould have exempted from price controls everything not rationed or allocated. Since nothing is rationed, and little allocated, this would have meant an end to nearly all price controls. Extradition Treaty Is Agreed; To Halt Canadian Racketeers N.

Y. Times Special WASHINGTON, June 30-Unit-ed States officials said today that a new extradition agreement with Canada would end the fraudulent operations of confidence men who have been swindling American investors out of millions of dollars a year. The agreement, on which authorities in both countries have been working for 15 years, Is alined principally at stock promoters, working largely out of Toronto, who use Intensive telephone and mail campaigns to sell bogus securities In the United State. Richard B. McEntire, a member of the Securities and Exchange Commission, estimated that the racket has cost Americans as much as $50 million a year, and that the annual loss seldom falls below $10 million.

The ajfteemcnt, which came Into being when the. Canadian Parliament approved it last Thursday night, includes mail and telephone among the offenses for which perpptrators American or Canadian may be takpn across the border for prosecution. The United States Senate approved ratification of the agreement several weeks ago. Existing extradition arrangements between the two countries, dating back to 1900, have proved unsatisfactory in coping with techniques of the promoters who have represented themselves as dealing in gold and silver mines, oil fields, and more recently in uranium deposits. Aged Couple Found, Prostrated Bv Heat Jurors Once More Convict Drinking Driver; Honesty Saves Another From Jail Term For the second time in a week, a jury in Judge Daniel C.

Hand-ley's Municipal Court returned a Meanwhile hilltop sections of Kenton County in Northern Kentucky were faced with an acute water shortage. A spokesman said that because of diminishing water pressure in Covington, which supplies water to these sections, only one pump was in use. Plana were made for the installation of a booster pump at 12th and Bullock Covington. The Cincinnati Waterworks pumped a record or near-record amount of water during the June 22-29 period, Harry Nickum, Waterworks statistician, reported yesterday. The week's total wo 788,632,000.

The total of 125.812, 000 gallons pumped last Thursday was a record for one day, Mr. Nickum said. Several air conditioning dealers reported yesterday they were selling their own air-cooling units to meet the demand. Air conditioners and fan; of all types have been extremely scarce since the begin-ing of the heat wave. A survey showed only one or two window unit air conditioners remaining to be sold.

One department store manager aaid his department had sold every air cooling instrument it could supply. The body of R. L. Thompson, 26, 4036 Colerain who drowned in the Big Miami River at the Miami town Bridge late Sunday was recovered by county police under, Lt Charles Yoas yesterday. Copy Of Enquirer Reveals Their Plight Neighbor Summons Police A copy of The Enquirer yesterday led to the finding and revival of an elderly couple who were prostrated by heat in their second floor apartment at 1213 Vine St.

The victims were William Har-rell, 78, pensioner, and his wife. Emma. Revived by the Life Squad, they were removed to General Hospital. Mrs. Harrell was reported to be in serious condition, her husband, "fair." Life Squad members reported that their body temperature was 107, but that they lowered it to 104 before the victims were taken to the hospital.

Mrs. Clelia McDermott, second floor rear, became worried shortly before noon when she noticed the Harrells had not yet taken the morning paper from in front of their door. Mrs. McDermott summoned police. LL Harvey Hummeldorf and Patrolmen Martin Black and Ellsworth Greiner forced entrance into the apartment and found the Harrells, unconscious on the floor of their bedroom.

An electric fan was running, but all windows were of guilty I TTTj yesterday in a I drunken driver I trial. The Jury I convicted Juni us Mosby. 39. 13320 Drexel of driving when under the influ tenced one to the Workhouse and admittedly gave the other breek. Stick Jones.

51, 509 Poplar father of six children, was sentenced to two days, fined $100 and costs and suspended from driving for three months. Robert Alexander, 23, 827 Oak was fined $100 and costs and suspended from driving for three months. He was spared a jail sentence because, Ralph Cors, Assistant Prosecutor, said, he was the first person within his memory to place himself voluntarily in jeopardy on a drunken driving charge. Patrolman Arthur Manigan testified that on the night of June 29 Alexander, a porter at General Hospital, was involved in a collision with a parked automobile on Sycamore Street. Shortly thereafter, Alexander, who admitted he had been drinking, walked into the District 7 Police Station, Beecher Street, and told Manigan, "I think I made a mistake," and told of the collision.

"I think yon deserve break," the court declared In passing sentence. Cors agreed. Jones was arrested April 12 by Motorcycle Patrolman Charles Black at Seventh and Elm Sts. Black and two other officers testified they saw him stop his car in a "No Parking Any Time" area on Seventh Street and that he refused to move when told to. A urinalysis indicated Jones was highly intoxicated.

He readily admitted this in court, but contended another person was driving the car. He was granted a 30-day stay of execution to appeal. Bond was set at $500. Others fined and suspended were Frank Wiley, Concord, N. $25, 30 days for driving an unroadworthy vehicle; Robert Evans, 1308 Vandalia $25, 30 days; Dennis Whalen, 3864 Lenox and Harold French, 1779 Dre-man $10, 15 days, each, all for speeding; Gerald Sanders, Portland, $10, 10 days for reckless driving; Howard Melton.

R. R. 3. Batavia, Ohio. $10, 10 days for following another vehicle too closely; William Cunningham, 1559 Baymiller costs, seven days, and Norman Brooks, 550 York $5, 30 days for unlawful backing.

In hi term just ended, Judge Ltiebbers sentenced a near-record number to the Workhouse for drunken driving and established an all-time high when he jailed 12 motorists in one session. Judge Handley will take over the bench in July, August and September. closed. INSIDE THE ENQUIRER: ence of alcohol. Judge Handley sentenced Mosby, a steelworker now on strike, to 10 days in the Workhouse, fined him $100 snd costs and suspended his right to drive for a year.

The sentence was stayed pending a motion for appeal. Mosby, who testified he had had only one drink of liquor and a beer, said he was tired because he had been up for 30 hours when he was involved in an accident near Reading Road and 13th Street tober 13. 1951. Don Burkholder, Assistant City Prosecutor, through Dr. Otto P.

Behrer, City Chemist, offered testimony that Mosby had consumed at least five ounces of liquor. In completing a three-month term In Traffic Court, Judge A. L. Lnebbers yesterday convicted two men of drunken driving. He sen Temperatures ABBE OBSERVATORY Page Amusements Bridge 11 Faf.

Obituaries lt Opinionnaire Politics 2,9 Radio-TV St a-io, Columnists 4, II BROTHERS GET LIFE YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, June 30 (AP) Two brothers were sentenced to life imprisonment today for the murder of John Harkins, a policeman of suburban Strut hers last January. "The electric chair is where you belcng," said Judge Erskine Maiden as he passed sentence on John and William Corey. A jury's recommendation cf mercy made life terms Court News 8 Comics 17 Crossword Editorials 4 Smiles Socitey News 10 Sports Sft-It Star Gazer If a. m. SO p.

88 9 a. m. 84 I p. as 10 a. m.

7 p. m. 84 11 a. m. 89 8 p.

m. Hi 12 noon 91 9p.m. 80 1 p. n. 90 10 p.

m. 19 p. m. ,,..91 11p.m. ....77 3p.m.

Midnight It 4 p. 88 1a.m. 79 Journey's End 23 Weather Map Women's 9, 11 Word Game ftiarxets i-ia Mirror of City.

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