Man Who Escaped Jail And Reformed Is Glad It's Over LOS Beverley's ANGELES nightmare (P) is Frank over. del fears a tap on the shoulno longer der and someone with wasn't badge reminding him he really, Frank A. Beverley at He had been living under that name eight years since the day 1947 when he walked away from in an Alabama State Penitentiary farm gang. He wasn't Beverley, then, He was Oscar Fred and he'd served two years of a one to fiveyear sentence on conviction of embezzling $150. had served two years.
for a crime I didn't commit," said. When Twildahl became Beverley he headed, for California. He behis neighbors a He model married citizen and the and he verospered, a son, now 6. They live in a $15,000 home. unleash shoulder.
July 8th Beverley came they tap ar- on rested the old fugitive warrant from Alabama. Only then his wife learned of her husband's past. She had met him on a blind date and they were wed three months later. She staunchly stood him, saying. "He's been a wonderful husband and Beverley found he had friends.
Doctors And Dentists On Protest Strike Times Tuesday; August 2, 1955 Kingsport Abe Spiegelman, operator of the restaurant chain for which Beverley worked as a manager, declared "I trusted him still trust him." Spiegelman provided a bail bond retained an attorney to represent Beverley. And he wrote letters of recommendation to Alabama authorities describing the life the 45-year-old man had led since coming to California. Monday in the court of Municipal Judge Louis W. KaufmeAn a letter was presented bama. Department of Corrections.
It said that Gov. James Folsom had decided against seeking extradition. Negotiators Resume Efforts At Kohler CHICAGO (P- -Negotiators representing the Kohler Co. and the CIO United Auto Workers today were to resume discussions aimed at settling the bitter 16-month-old strike. Lyman Conger, chief negotiator for Kohler.
said after Monday's meeting, "'We're making progress at finding out what the problems are." The big stumbling block toward solution of the strike appeared to be about what to do about too many available employes. The plumbing ware company sisted that all of an estimated 2.300 employes who have remained on their jobs or who have "been hired during the strike be kept on the payroll. The union has insisted that its Local 833 be returned to their jobs. The union, was bargaining agent for 3,300 workers when the strike was called. Screen Guild Sets Strike Date Friday HOLLYWOOD (P) The Screen Actors Guild has set Friday for the start of a strike by all actors in filmed television shows.
A spokesman for the guild said that 40 weekly TV series are now shooting in New York and Hollywood. John L. Dales, the group's executive secretary, said that 96.3 per cent of the membership authorized the strike. "The principal issue he said Monday, "is the refusal of the producers of filmed television programs agree to make any residual payments whatsoever to actors for second run of a video film." The three-year contract which expired last week gives actors payment on the third to sixth runs, inclusive, in addition to the original showing. The walkout will not apply to production of theatrical motion pictures.
WHITE FLORAL CO. FLOWERS All Arrangements Guaranteed WE ARE AS NEAR AS YOUR TELEPHONE DIAL CI 5-5174 Nights and Sundays DIAL Circle 6-6657 Photo By Blair CRUISING DOWN THE HOLSTON RIVER- -These six campers left from the banks of the Holston near Rotherwood Bridge Monday afternoon in their bid to reach Knoxville by canoes. The group said they hope to hit Gay Street in Knoxville about 10 a.m. Thursday. Death Notices J.
D. Hawk J. D. Hawk, 89, died: Monday afternoon at the Smith Convalescent Home in Johnson City. He was the oldest member of the Centenary Methodist Church near the Tri-City Airport.
He born near Holston Institute in 1865, one of the six children of Johnathan and Louisa Gray Hawk. He attended grammar schools at Hiltons School House and Bond's Camp Ground School in Sullivan farmer and later spent about County. Early in he was 20, years as an oil field worker at Bakersville, California. He returned to Morristown where he and his brother, J. B.
Hawk farmed jointly. He had lived in Sullivan County for more than 20 years--the last eight he lived in Kingsport, 144 Warpath Drive. The last survivor family, he nad never been married. His survivors include four nieces, Mrs. Frank Deck and Mrs.
S. L. Gott, both of Kingsport, Misses Fannie and Leona Barnes, both of Blountville, and two nephews, D. C. Slaughter, Rt.
3, Kingsport, and Kyle Slaughter, Daytona Beach, Fla. Funeral services will be held at Beulah Baptist Church, at 3 p.m. Wednesday. Burial be in the adjoining cemetery. The body will remain at Hamlett-Dobson Funeral Home until one hour before the service, then will be taken to the church.
The Rev. P. H. Horner will officiate. Pallbearers will be Tommy Deakins, Joe Barnes, Meredith Gott, Ray Gott, Howard Millsaps, P.
G. Jones and Jim Ford. David S. Everhart David Sylberter Everhart, 79, died yesterday at the home of his son, Harvey Everhart, 1937 Ft. Robinson Drive.
He was a native of Hawkins Survivors include sons and daughters other than Harvey, Everhart and Mrs. Lula Stwart, Kingsport, Clarence Everhart, Morristown, Mrs. Elsie Stwart, Persia. Mrs. Lucille Huff, Church Hill; 17 grandchildren; six brothers, Arra Everhart, Greeneville, Keller Everhart, Canton, N.
Cleve and Adrian Everhart, Kingsport, Luther Everhart, Saltville, Everhart, Honolulu; six sisters, Sara Smathus, Ava, Alice and Marie Everof Canton, N. Mrs. McCain, Martha Candler, Gibson, N. Persia. Mrs.
Funeral service will be helc at the Peria Methodist Church, Persia, at 2 p.m. Wednesday, with the Rev. Bobby Ely officiating. Burial will be in the Persia cemetery. Mrs.
Wanda O. Puckett ABINGDON, Aug. 2-Mrs. Orfield Puckett, 72, died in an Abingdon hospital last night. Survivors include her husband, J.
D. Puckett of Abingdon; two daughters, Mrs. W. A. Collings of Kingsport and Mrs.
Frank Linder of Kannapolis, N. seven sons, G. T. Puckett of Mooresville, N. H.
L. and C. A. Puckett of Kannapolis, N. R.
H. Puckett of Baltimore, J. D. Puckett of Kingsport, E. L.
and G. H. Puckett of Abingdon: and four sisters and three brotHers, grandchildren and eight great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at Memphis Board Considers Charges Against Official MEMPHIS (P- The five-member City Commission took the John Vesey case again today, with a newspaper predicting misconduct charges against the suspendPark Commission chairman would be dropped. The Commercial Appeal said Vesey was virtually assured of reinstatement as a result of action taken yesterday after a week of hearings on charges he wrongfully used commission labor to remodel his house.
Commissioners Claude Armour and 0. P. Williams moved that Vesey be "reinstated and the charges dropped with a reprimand." City Attorney Frank Gianotti Jr. then asked the commission to postpone a decision until today, butCommissioner Joe Doyle moved that he be overruled. Before vote was taken, Mayor Frank Tobey ordered a recess until today.
The Commercial Appeal interpreted Doyle's move to mean he would support the motion to clear Vesey, thus assuring the motion of majority support. Prior to the reinstatement motion, Vesey testified commission employes who remodeled his house were supposed have been on his payroll. esersonal that late in 1953 the commission ran over its budget and that Curtis Turner, maintenance superintendent, decided to lay off some men before Christmas. "I asked if were men he would like to keep," Vesey said during his hours of testimony. "I said I would help the park budget and help my work, too, by using some of the men." Park Supt.
H. S. Lewis and Turner were present at the time, Vesey said. "I told them, 'see that the men are taken off the park payroll and I am charged with all I get. don't want anything from the Park Vesey was charged on 12 counts of wrongfully using commission labor and materials.
The charges are not criminal and maximum punishment would be loss of his $300-a-month, part-time post. Prisoner Makes Break Just Before Freedom SALEM. Ore. (P A prisoner walked away from a work detail at the State Penitentiary farm annex Monday just when legal freedom was at hand. Donald Neal Ware, 21, serving a term for forgery, had been one on parole status since May 2 while prison authorities tried to locate employment for him.
Warden Clarence Gladden ceived word Monday job Ware had been in CalYoutha' ifornia, but the prisoner left before finding out. The warden said Ware would have been freed through normal channels in a few days. 3:30 p.m. Wednesday at the home with burial to follow in the family cemetery. Henderson Funeral Home in Abingdon will be in charge.
SAFETY FIRST Don't go boating, less you know and First principles of In a funeral procession, your car, and follow of you as safe driving swimming, fishing or hunting uncan put into practice the Safer your sport turn on the bright neadlights as close to the car in front will permit 117 E. CHARLEMONT Funeral Dome CI 5-3134 Dr. W. Broughton Hutchins Dentist Announces The Resumption Of His Practice August 3, 1955 104 E. Market Street Kingsport, Tenn.
Phone CI 5-3241 Negotiators In Recess Today MOLINE, Ill, (P) Negotiators seeking a settlement of a strike at eight Deere Co. plants in Illinois and Iowa were in recess today after failing to reach a settlement in a 10-hour meeting. The next meeting between the company and the CIO United Auto Workers was set for 1:30 p.m. (CST) Wednesday. The negotiators met until 1:30 a.m.
today but spokesmen declined to comment on what progress, if any, was made. Earlier, a union spokesman said he was hopeful of an early agreement in wage dispute involving about 12,500 UAW members. The strike started Monday at the company's three plants in East Moline, and one each in Moline and Dubuque, Des Moines, Ottumwa and Waterloo, Iowa. The union has asked for a substantial wage increase. A UAW spokesman said the average wage of Deereworkers is $2.28 per hour.
At East Peoria, a settlement formula for the strike of 18.000 CIO-UAW workers at Caterpillar Tractor who have been off the job since Saturday, was to be submitted to a ratification vote today. There was no official confirmation of the terms agreed upon by company and UAW negotiators but it was learned reliably that the union won its demand for a union shop and an 8-cent hourly wage increase which would bring the average pay scale to $2.48. Negotiations also are in progress between the CIO-UAW and a AllisChalmers at West Allis, Wis. Although union has threatened strike action, there a has been no work stoppage. In Chicago, the UAW is negotiating with International Harvester Co.
The Harvester contract does not expire until Aug. 28. Contracts of the other three tractor and farm with the UAW midnight equipment manufacturine. firms Sunday. Seniority Agreement Made At Studebaker SOUTH BEND, Ind.
(P) An agreement has been reached in the seniority dispute which led to the closing of the Studebaker plant here 11 the past 13 work days, officials of the CIO United Auto Workers said Monday night. Studebaker-Packard Corp. officials were available for comment. William Ogden, president of the Studebaker local of the UAW. and Raymond H.
Berndt, a regional director, said workers are to be given rights on the basis of seniority. "Bumping" privileges assure a worker with longer service to the firm the right to claim a job held by a person with less seniority in the event of a layoff or job reshuffling. The shutdowns of the past few days have stemmed from the refusal of about 55 workers on the a final assembly line to work pending a decision on the seniority matter. Their action halted production, and the firm sent home about 9,000 other employes. Both union and Studebaker officials called the stoppages "unauthorized." Ogden and Berndt said the seniority settlement "should insure continuous production permit the local units and management to start negotiations on a new agreement." Studebaker laid off nearly 1,800 workers last July 6 as new, plantwide production standards went into effect, and the union claimed seniority was not followed in the layoff.
The Weather Picture By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chicago, clear 94 75 Detroit, clear 95 70 Des Moines, clear 97 74 Indianapolis, cloudy 92 72 Marquette, cloudy 80 Milwaukee, clear 91 71 Helena, clear 96 Albuquerque, 92 65 Los Angeles, clear 80 66 Denver, clear 92 65 Kansas City, clear 97 78 Boston, clear 98 79 Cleveland, clear 94 73 Fort Worth, cloudy 98 76 Atlanta, 85 71 Miami, clear 86 74 Paul, cloudy 98 80 Omaha, clear 91 72 S. Ste Marie, cloudy 86 63 Traverse City, cloudy 95 65 Portland, cloudy 76 54 Seattle, cloudy 70 52 Phoenix, cloudy 98 79 Salt Lake City, clear 91 70 San Diego, cloudy 75 66 San Francisco, clear 72 53 Memphis, clear 93 72 Oklahoma City, clear 98 71 St. Louis, clear 97 78 Louisville, clear 96 75 New York, clear 96 Washington, clear 92 New Orleans, rain 79 Guilty Of Mop Fraud CHARLOTTE, N. C. began a six-year prison term today after pleading guilty to false pretense in Superior Court on a charge that his mop business wiped up a few households.
Police said Caldwell sold mops to housewives, then returned to trieve the mops from different members of the families, saying they were broken. He never turned them. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY Mother Uses Body To Cover Infant On Train Tracks MONROE, N. C. (P- -A 25-year.
old mother was recovering here today from injuries received when she threw herself across the body of her three-year-old child as train bore down on the tot. Mrs. Dorothy related Monday how her daughter was knocked down by a box car as the pair crossed railroad tacks Friday. "I couldn't snatch her because it would have cut her in two," Mrs. Wilson said.
"My mind told me to jump down on her and I did. "I was lying there on top of her and the train was moving over me. I remember seeing some of the box cars pass over me. I was scared out of my wits. Then I remember something hit me on the head." Mrs.
Wilson received 16 stitches in her hip and 14 in her head. escaped with minor bruises. Scott Frost Leads Trotters In Race At Hambletonian BUENOS AIRES (P -Thousands on doctors and dentists began a 24- hour national strike today protesting the death of Dr. Juan Ingalinella, a Rosario physician and Communist leader who died in police custody after his arrest June 17. Official reports said he died of heart attack under questioning, but his associates claim he was tortured.
His body was thrown into the Parana River by seven federal policemen who confessed the act and are now under arrest. Only urgent cases are being treated during the strike. Hospitals said operations not acutely necessary have been postponed. I MONEY F. School Expenses Take care of all those back-to-school expenses with a personal loan from us.
Phone or stop in our office today for the noney you need. Borrow Much Monthly As Payments $200 12.77 $300 19.15 $400 25.54 $500 31.98 $600 38.31 ger Terms Available Desired. Ft Interstate FINANCE 837 E. Center 84. Phone C1 5-3195 Bill Vollmer.
Mgr. 6 Campers Take Canoe Trip Down S. Holston River Canoe traffic on the Holston River is expected to be heavier for the next two days than 1' has been since the Indian days. Six campers of the Rockwood's Circle Bar Camp left from near Rotherwood Bridge about 1 p.m. Monday and hope to hit Gay Srteet in Knoxville about 10 a.m.
Thursday. Making the trip are Allen guson, 6925 Stonemill Road, Lonnie: Roberts, 2905 Green Meadow Lane, and David Rule, 4300 Lionsview Pike, all of Knoxville. Instructors include James A. Moore and Bobby Sexton, both of Knoxville, and Nick Hyder of Elizabethton. The three 13-year-old boys will be accompanied by three instructors from the camp.
These youngsters are not amateurs for they have completed the junior course of instruction in lifesafing and 10 other safety courses. Each boy was loaded with canned food and equipment for the trip. The boys will make four stops for water on their three-and-a-halfday trip. Nearly 200 Arrested In Morocco Rioting CASABLANCA, French Morocco (P) Nearly 200 persons were under arrest in French Morocco today in the wake of bloody weekend riots during the Moslem feast of Aid-El-Kebir. Some 30.
persons were reported killed in the rioting at Moulay Idriss and Marrakech. Reports said 128 arrests had been made at Port Lyautey, site of a big U. S. naval air base, and 60 persons had been arrested at Moulay Idriss. If Summer Comes, Can Winter Be Far Behind? Be Prepared For Winter Have Your Oil Tank Filled NOW! ON A SUMMER FILL- UP DISCOUNT OF PER GALLON! Bill will be made October 1st, or you can do away completely with the worry of a large "Lump-Sum" fuel bill Inquire about our popular "BUDGET PLAN." Shell Furnace Oil with FOA-5X eliminates a major cause of oil burner service calls LOOK AT THE DIFFERENCE when your oil burner uses SHELL FURNACE OIL with FOA-5X Filter screen using ordinary Filter screen using Shell Furnace Oil heating oil after one month with FOA-5X after entire heating looked like this season is clean as a whistle SHELL Shell Furnace Oil costs no more than ordinary heating oil.
You get the added protection of FOA-5X at no extra charge. Call us today! HEATING OILS KINGSPORT OIL CO. Phone CI 6-4531 Farmer In Russia Heard By Teen-Age Short- Wave Fan GREENSBORO. N. C.
-Mrs. William E. Reed Monday night heard from her husband for the first in more than weekthanks Radio Moscow and a time, we Greensboro teenager who is short-wave fan. Her husband, a professor of agriculture at College here, is touring Russia with a group of other Americans. Taylor Doggett, 19, radio was when listening he to picked his short Radio Moscow Monday night.
They were interviewing Dr. Reed, Taylor reported. The Greensboro educator said he was impressed with the Russians' hospitality. Mason-Dixon Holds Company Meet Here Seventy-five fied managers and representatives of Mason and Dixon Lines Inc. are now attending a three-day general meeting of the company at the Kingsport Utilities building.
Regional managers, district sales managers, terminal managers and sales representatives from the company's 26 terminals are taking part. The meeting began Monday and will close Wednesday afternoon. All phases of operation of the company are being discussed by company officials. Yesterday the group toured the terminal here. Dinners and luncheons have also been scheduled.
Guest speakers include Dr. E. E. Wiley, pastor of Broad Street Methodist Church; R. L.
Churchill, vice president of Eastman Chemical Products; A. B. Coleman, secretary of the Chamber of Commerce; Tom Outlaw, executive of North Carolina Motor Carrier secretary Association: and Barney Hollinsworth of Charlotte. N. C.
Company officials addressing the group are E. Ward King, president; S. T. King, vice president and general manager; King, vice president; E. William King, treasurer; and A.
E. Green, vice president of industrial relations. The closing session tomorrow afternoon will be devoted to questions and answers concerning previous discussions. Bristol Man Held In Big Stone Gap BIG STONE GAP, -A 21- year-old Bristol man was arrested by police here this morning and is being held for Bristol police. Douglas Eugene McMurray was arrested on information from Bristol that four felony warrants were on file there for his arrest.
McMurray was arrested in a downtown cafe by Patrolman N. H. Barnett and Deputy Sheriff Paul Willis after they saw his car. The officers said Bristol police were en route here to pick up McMurray, and said they did not know the charges against him. Pair Abandon Jeep When Rattlesnake Seen PORTSMOUTH, Va.
P- Three's a crowd in an Army jeep, ly when one of the three is a rattlesnake. Capt. John F. West and Capt. George N.
Sanders were bowling along at a 40 m.p.h: clip Monday when the rattlesnake reared its head between them. West shouted, "Don't jump." Sanders didn't hear him. He'd already jumped a roadside ditch, head first. West stuck it out a few moments. then jumped too.
The jeep rolled into a ditch and stopped, unscratched. The rattlesnake slithered off into the grass. West and Sanders, bruised and dizzy, still wonder how the snake got into their jeep. Groseclose FLOWERS Night Sunday Phone CI 5-1245 DIAL Circle -6-6108 All Arrangements Guaranteed GOSHEN, N. Y.
(P) Harness horse fans who look in on the 30th Hambletonian Stakes Wednesday may be seeing the greatest 3-yearold trotter since Greyhound won the sulky classic just 20 years ago. That was the general impression today as Scott Frost stood out like a lighthouse in a field of 11 of the nation's fastest trotters. Scott Frost is owned by Sol Camp, Shafter, potato and cotton farmer, and he bids fair to take racing's second big prize back west this season. California's Swaps won the Kentucky Derby, and Scott Frost is the early 3-5 favorite for this trotitng counterpart of the derby. Hoot Mon holds the Ha mbletonian time record of 2 minutes flat for the mile, and Scott Frost is a son of that 1947 winner.
Scott Frost is one of three horses Butch Hanover has entered by Camp, andestablemate to grab second money. The other Camp contender is Home Free. The main opposition is Galophone, owned by William T. Maybury, Dexter, Maine, machine tool maker, Childs Hanover, property Texas oilman, K. D.
Owen of Houston. Galophone is 4-1 and Childs Hanover 6-1. Robinson To Manage Winston-Salem Nine WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. P- Aaron Robinson, former catcher with the New York, Chicago and Detroit major league teams.
Twins manager of of the the class Winston-Salem a Carolina League. Robinson was named Monday night to replace Ken Silvestri, who was fired Sunday. No specific reason was given for Silvestri's dismissal. Tuesday City Court Ruling that certain numbers on back of a laundry ticket did not constitute evidence of gambling, Judge Lacy West dismissed gambling charges Tuesday against Kingsport truck driver. The man, when arrested, had socalled "baseball tickets" on his perand a laundry ticket on the back of which were numbers.
Police said the numbers represented a sequence in the baseball gambling pay-offs. But the judge ruled that stantial evidence of such a nature was not proof of guilt. The man was represented by counsel. In other cases Tuesday bonds were declared forfeited for: Public drunkenness (2); driving while drunk (1); illegal parking (2); violations of the parking meter (24). Steam Heat Sets Off Fire Alarm At HVCH Firemen reported the fire alarm went off at Holston Valley Community Hospital at 5:45 a.m.
Tues. day when the steam pipes in the laundry got top hot and melted sprinkler head. Firemen reported no damage. 75 74 Pigeon Looks For Home LINCOLNTON, N. C.
IP--That's no stool pigeon police here put on parole. William Green brought in the homing pigeon who obviously doesn't know where home is. Green said the puzzled pigeon tried to break into his house via the front screen door. It wears an aluminum band engraved with There are no known pigeon fanciers in this area. Police paroled the vagrant in Green's custody.
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