The Paducah Sun from Paducah, Kentucky (2024)

I TWO -DEMOCRAT, PADUCAH, KY. WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 1970 Heavy Fighting Reported 50 General Motors, UAW Open Miles West Of Phonm Penh Contract Talks In Detroit Court Says Women Can Serve As Bartenders By ROBERT TUCKMAN Associated Press Writer SAIGON (AP) U.S.-trained mercenaries began an outflanking movement Tuesday at Kiri Rom while other Cambodian troops fought to maintain a toehold in that mountain resort 50 miles west of Phnom Penh. A dispatch from the Cambodian capital said three battalions of the Cambodians from South Vietnam, who learned to fight under Green Beret tutelage, had struck out through the jungles in an attempt to outflank the 1,000 enemy troops who seized Kiri Rom on A military spokesman in Phnom Penh said other mercenaries had taken the main hotel and other positions in Kiri Rom but fierce fighting continued. No casualty figures were given. This latter force has been under heavy pressure since it shot its way Monday to the crest of Kiri Rom, which means Health Air Mountain.

While the fighting raged in and around Kiri Rom, a large North Vietnamese force -some estimates said 1,000 men attacked a government battalion based a Srak Neak, 25 miles to the south. Fragmentary government reports from the remote site indi-. cated the defending Cambodians were hard hit. A Cambodian military spokesman described government casualties as "fairly heavy," a term he never used before. The North Vietnamese were Enemy (Continued From Page One) casualties destroy a unit's combat effectiveness and leave wounds to morale that are long, in healing.

Although the military high command attempts through censorship and news management to suppress much such news, the word has traveled through government units. Saang was followed by a massive assault Saturday on about 300 men defending 1 Kiri Rom, a mountaintop resort. The troops had poor fortifications and fighting positions and too little ammunition for a major battle. The unit was overrun with the survivors fleeing into the jungle. One survivor said he was forced to leave 40 dead and wounded clustered in one group.

Tuesday 1,000 North Vietnamese fell on a government battalion headquartered about 25 miles south of Kiri Rom. Sketchy government reports from the remote area indicate the defenders were at least partly overrun. A military spokesman called Cambodian casualties "fairly heavy," a term virtually unheard before in official briefings. Walter E. Keith Services Today At Hickman HICKMAN, July 14-Funeral services for Walter Earl Keith, 77, of Hickman, will be held 4 p.m.

Wednesday at Chaney Funeral Home here with the Rev. J. T. Neely officiating. Burial will be in the city cemetery.

A veteran of World War he died Monday at his home. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Nellie Williams Keith; a daughter, Mrs. Monette Malone of Hickman; two sons, Floyd Earl Keith of Hickman, and Carl Keith of Paducah; a sister, Mrs. Pearl McQueen of Crystal, and six grandchildren.

Friends may call at the funeral Funeral Rites Set For Mrs. Brittain CAVE-IN-ROCK, July Funeral services for Mrs. Essie Brittain, 85, will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at Rose Funeral Home in Cave The Rev. Richard Hubble and the Rev.

Donald Minister will officiate. Mrs. Brittain, a teacher in Hardin County schools for many years, died at Monday in Riverside Nursing Home, Paducah, Ky. She is survived by her husband, Henry Brittain, Rock; one son, Walter Weldon Hamilton, Carbondale, and two grandchildren. Burial will be in Cave Hill Cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home. Massac Memorial Hospital Notes Dismissals: Larry Thompson, Metropolis; Mrs. Martha Ann Crews, Karnak; James McAfee, Metropolis. believed to have withdrawn er although reports from the area were incomplete and left the situation confused. Military sources in Phnom Penh said the enemy objective now appears to be to inflict heavy casualties on Cambodian units to damage morale.

They considered most earlier fighting in Cambodia as merely skirmishes. Another objective in the attacks at Kiri Rom and Srak Neak may be to threaten Highway 4, the main highway for the Mercury Study Planned WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of the Interior Walter J. Hickel said today a team of experts will pinpoint areas where mercury is a threat to health and lay the groundwork for its control. Hickel said "the administration is developing hard evidence and will seek court action in any confirmed case of mercury pollution if corrective measures are not taken swiftly on local levels. Hickel sent telegrams to governors of 17 states urging strong action in cases where mercury pollution of waterways has been detected.

The states are: Alabama, Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin. Mercury, the liquid inside or, dinary thermometers, is a heavy metal, poisonous to humans. Scientists, who previously thought it dissolved too little in water to pose a threat to health have now found that mercury compounds are present in many of the nation's waterways, largely as a result of the dumping of industrial wastes. Chest X-Rays Available At Mayfield MAYFIELD, July 14- The Kentucky Department of Health and the Graves County Health Department announced today that free chest X-rays for persons 18 years of age or older will be available at the mobile unit on the courthouse square Thursday, from 10 a.m. until noon and from 1-3 p.m.

The health service uses equipment donated by the Kentucky Elks Association. No one under 18 years of age will be X-rayed unless referred by a physician or unless previous tuberculin skin tests have been positive. All persons employed in food establishments are required by law to have chest X-rays at least once a year. $5 Million Port Is Recommended For Evansville INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Construction of a $5 million public port on the Ohio River at Evansville will be recommended to the Indiana Port Commission Sept. 1, commission chairman Joseph N.

Thomas announced Tuesday. Thomas said a feasibility study will pinpoint the best of three proposed sites near Evansville or Mount Vernon and estimate construction costs. said the commission will seek federal funds to partilly finance the project. The commission will open the $25 million Port of Indiana near Portage on Lake Michigan at dedication ceremonies Friday and Saturday. Cambodian capital to Kompong Som, the nation's only deep water port.

The intensity of the fighting in Cambodia contrasted with the situation in South Vietnam, where only small skirmishes were reported throughout the country, The reduction of American troop strength continued. The U.S. Command announced the deactivation of two Air Force squadrons as part of President Nixon's- phase for reduction in which 50,000 more American troops will be withdrawn by Oct. 15. Taken out of action were the 431st Tactical Fighter Wing of el F100 fighter-bombers stationed at Bien Hoa Air Base near Saigon and the 309th Tactical Airlift Squadron of C123 cargo planes at Phan Rang Air Base on the coast.

The deactivation of the two squadrons will reduce by 690 men the authorized U.S. troop strength, currently at around 411,500. The withdrawal of U.S. forces was one of the subjects discussed by President Nguyen Van Thieu with Gen. William C.

Westmoreland, Army chief of staff. Westmoreland is making his first visit to Vietnam since he left two years ago after commanding all American forces here. Westmoreland also saw Defense Minister Nguyen Van Vy and later met with U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker. Louisville (Continued From Page One) Broadway Street exit from the North-South Expressway, where spectators began lining the streets.

The curbside onlookers formed a continuous line from there to the Federal Building, with the crowd swelling from Fourth Street on to jam the sidewalks. Discordant Note The only discordant not sounded during the entire day was by about a dozen peace demonstrators at the airport who raised clenched fists as Nixon decended from Air Force Once and changed chanted "Peace Now." The same group later raised signs saying "America, Improve It or Leave It," and "Peace Is Patriotic." But the demonstrators were overwhelmed and drowned out by ringing cheers for the. President and a multitude of welcoming and laudatory signs. State Police estimated the airport crowd at 5,000. As Nixon prepared to get into his car to go to the meeting he paused and joined in as the crowd began singing "God Bless America." And the crowd responded in kind when Nixon expressed his appreciation in front of the Federal Building for the warm welcome he had received in Kentucky.

They cheered to Nixon's remark that "I really feel that here in Kentucky we are in the heart of America and we are mighty happy to be here." Nixon's plane touched down at Standiford Field at 11:56 a.m. EDT and left at 5:40 p.m. to fly to Cincinnati for Tuesday night's All-Star baseball game there. Closing Dow- Jones NEW YORK (AP) Dow Jones Stock Averages Tuesday: Close Change Industrials, 703.04 up 0.82 Transportation 123.65 0.40 Utilities 103.08 off 0.13 65 Stocks 220.73 off 0.07 Transactions in stocks used in averages: Industrials 477,500 Transportation 221,400 Utilities 209,400 165 Stocks 908,300 By A.F. MAHAN Associated Press Writer DETROIT (AP) With sources on both sides of the bargaining table seeing a strike as likely, new contract negotiations open Wednesday between General Motors Corp.

and the United Auto Workers. The UAW will begin bargaining with the other Big Three members--Ford and Chrysleron Thursday and Friday, respectively. Current contracts covering about 730,000 workers at all three companies expire at midnight Sept. 14. Contracts have been for three years since 1955.

In the past, tough-knuckled, around-the-c1o bargaining usually was not begun until a couple of weeks before contract expiration. The early weeks were spent with both sides presenting position papers and takling verbal jabs at each other at news conferences. But this year General Motors challenged the union to "begin serious bargaining immediately, not Sept. 1." The union, which has 394,000 members in GM plants across the country, accepted, calling on the company to make a serious offer in early sessions. The companies and the union have said they don't want a strike, but sources in both camps claim that are ample signs a strike is likely.

They point especially to the prebargaining stands of industry and the union. Sales and profits of the automakers are down and layoffs widespread, but the UAW insists it will "not be intimidated" by the current state of the economy -that it is "bargaining about the future." The automakers have taken a tough prebargaining stance, insisting any settlement must be noninflationary. They also have Plans More (Continued From Page One) regional commissions across the country to put more flexibility in federal grant-aid programs. Under the plan, governors? comprising a single commission would share responsibility with the federal government for planning and funding projects. The key to the proposal is local planning, as it is under the Appalachian Regional Commission, a five-year-old agency that has spent $2 billion in the region.

The governors hope that Nixon will adopt the idea as the main concept in his "new federalism' proposals for revenue sharing with the states. C. F. Lovelace, Mayfield, Dies; Rites Thursday MAYFIELD, July 14- Courtlen F. Lovelace, 74, of 223 N.

16th Mayfield, died at 11:55 a.m. Tuesday at Community Hospital. A veteran of World War 1, Mr. Lovelace was a retired meat cutter for Armour Packling Co. in Chicago.

Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Frances Lovelace; one step-daughter, Mrs. Janice Yeary, Alameda, two sisters, Mrs. Grace Hendley and Mrs. Pearl Lance, both of Mayfield; two nieces, Mrs.

Charles Sears, Mayfield, and Mrs. Elmo Shupe, Atlanta, two nephews, Ed Hendley, Louisville, and Harold and four step grandchildren. Funeral services are set for 3 p.m. Thursday at Roberts Funeral Chapel with burial to follow. in Maplewood Cemetery here.

John Hoover will officiate. Friends may call at the neral home. 10,000 Troops March Down Champs Elyssees To Mark Bastille Day By JOHN VINOCUR PARIS (AP) France, with only 2,500 troops at war, marched 10,000 men from its forces down the Champs Day. The army also offered a firsttime glimpse of the nation's nuclear capability. The traditional parade, opening with a flight of Fouga ister jet trainers trailing plumes of red, white and blue smoke, rumbled for an hour past crowds of thousands and President Georges Pompidou who ordered virtually all military punishments lifted for the 181st anniversary of the storming of the Bastille.

complained of what they term a slackening in productivity and rising labor and material costs which, they say, make it difficult to meet foreign competition. The union, on the other hand, complains its members have not received "equity" in earnings of the automotive industry, which it says has exhibited "fabulous profitability" over the years. It quotes the industry's leaders as foreseeing a rosy future. The UAW is under convention mandate to demand "a substantial wage increase," an unlimited cost of living wage escalator, a $500 minimum monthly pension after 30 years' service, regardless of age, and a long list of other costly items. FRANKFORT, Ky.

(AP) Franklin Circuit Judge Henry Meigs has ruled that under the state Civil Rights Act women may serve as bartenders or obtain drinks at the bar despite prohibition by other statutes. The case stems from an appeal by a Louisville woman against a State Alcoholic U.S. Discounts Reports Soviets Pushing For Indochina Meeting By LEWIS GULICK Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. officials privately voiced doubt Tuesday that Indian reports of Soviet interest in a new Indochina conference indicate there is a serious push now for a negotiated end to the Southeast Asian conflict. One major reason is the ap- MURRAY, July 14-Sales on the Murray Livestock Market today totalled 94 cattle and 22 calves.

Compared to last week, slaughter cows were lower( with all other represented classes steady. Slaughter cows, utility, 21.50, cutter, canner, Slaughter bulls, utility, couple over 1,200 cutter, slaughter calves and vealers, mixed good and choice, 180-240 vealers $33-36, good, 240-320 lb. calves, Feeder steers, mixed good and choice, 365-465 good, 355-465 standard at good, 580-720 28.50. NATIONAL Ill. (AP)-Hogs barrows and gilts steady to 25 lower; U.S.

1-3 200-240 lbs 26.00-26.50; 240-260 lbs 25.50-26.00, 190-200 lbs 25.00-26.00; U.S. 2-4 220-250 lbs 25.25-25.75, 250-270 lbs 24.00-25.25, 270-290 lbs 3.00-24.00, 290-320 lbs 22.50-23.00; U.S. 1-2 170-180 23.50-23.75; sows steady to 25 higher; U.S. 1-3 300-400 lbs 20.00- 21.00; U.S. 2-3 400-500 lbs 18.25- 19.25, 500-650 lbs 18.00-18.25; boars 200-300 lbs 20.00-20.50, over 300 lbs Cattle calves 100; slaughter steers steady to 25 lower.

Slaughter steers, choice 950- 1,300 lbs 30.25-31.50; good 28.00- 29.50; heifers, choice 800-950 lbs 28.50-29.00; high good and lo choice 27.50-28.50, good 26.50 27.50. Cows, utility and commercial 20.00-22.00; canner and cutter 18.00-21.00, bulls, utility, commercial and good over 1,100 lbs 26.00-28.0 lbs 24.00- 26.00; calves steady, choice vealers 37.00-41.00, good 34.00- 37.00. Slaughter lambs choice and prime 90-110 lbs 27.50-28.75, good 26.00-27.00; slaughter ewes, utility to choice 7.00-9.00. 2 Kentuckians Die In Vietnam. WASHINGTON (AP) The names of two Kentucky soldiers are on the latest list of combat victims of the Southeast Asia war released Monday by the Defense Department.

They are Spec. 4 William C. Ray, husband of Mrs. Donna J. Ray of Covington, and Spec.

4 Charles D. Pedigo, husband of Mrs. Peggy S. Pedigo of Millersburg. Mrs.

Gracey Black, Former Paducah Resident, Dies Mrs. Gracey Black, a former resident of Paducah, died Tuesday in Sandusky, Ohio. Survivors include two sisters, Mrs. Lillian Bater of Ripley, and Mrs. Pat Stevens of St.

Louis, a daughter, Mrs. Lucy Butler of Sandusky; and a son, Ernest Black Jr. of Cairo, Mich. Funeral services and burial will be in Sandusky. Optimist Governor Speaks At Mayfield MAYFIELD, July 14- Clifford Pash of Bardstown was the honored guest and speaker at the weekly meeting of May-.

field Optimist Monday night. Pash is Optimist governor of the Kentucky-West Virginia District of Optimist International. Pash congratulated the Mayfield club for its outstanding record in the district and suggested several means of improvement. I By SY RAMSEY Associated Press Writer parent failure of either the dian or the Soviet so far to tell the United States about the purported Soviet pro-though versions have been given to the press in New Delhi. "We have no information would tend to confirm or verify these State Department spokesman Carl Bartch said.

"We have asked our embassy in New Delhi to provide any information available on this he added. It is privately suggested here that Moscow may be trying some diplomatic one-upmanship by suggesting to others its interest in ending the war. Or perhaps, it is speculated, the Indians are trying to refurbish their image as peacemakers after having failed to attend last May's Jakarta meeting of Asian nations seeking a solution to the Cambodia fighting. Officially, the United States favors reconvening a Genevatype conference on Indochina provided unacceptable conditions are not laid down in advance. North Vietnam and Red China have been cool to the idea.

The Soviet ambassador to the United Nations, Jacob Malik, last April publicly sugested a new international conference to settle the war. But when U.S. diplomats pursued the point, they got from the Russians what Bartch termed a "drawback from that idea." The latest version of Soviet interest in a new Geneva conference follows the visit to New Delhi by Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Nikolai Firyubin, en route home from Hanoi. The Soviet diplomat met with Indian Prime Minister Indira Atomic Plants (Continued From Page One) from the SEC appropriation bill the administration budget figure of $300,000 to establish a corporate directorate designed to effectuate sale and transfer of the three Instead, it added $16.1 million for upgrading and improving the three plants. The House went along with this action by recently passing the AEC money bill, The bill is pending in the Senate AppropriCommittee.

Opposing any plan to sell the plants, Evins in a recent House talk said that "we want these plants to continue to operate as a part of the AEC team -under public ownership in the public interest." "We do not want the important enrichment plants sold to private special interests to give them a monopoly to control the vital and important process of the uranium -the key to the fueling of nuclear power plants to provide electricity." Mrs. Ooley, 68, Dies In Murray MURRAY, July 14-Mrs. Hazel Ooley, 68, of Hardin Rt. 1 died at 10:30 p.m. Monday 'after an extended illness in Murray-Calloway County Hospital.

She was a member of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church at Liberty and of the Order of the Eastern Star at Aurora. She is survived by her husband, Walker A. Ooley; one son, Vernon B. Ooley Pimen- to, three sisters, Mrs. Marie Steele of Coffeeville, Mrs.

Irma Byers of To-, peka, and Mrs. Pearl Sutherland of Parsons, and six grandchildren. Funeral rites will be conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the J. H.

Churchill Funeral Chapel. The Rev. Harold Bates will officiate. The body will be removed Thursday morning to Drescher Funeral Home at Spencer, where services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday with burial in the Spencer Cemetery.

Eastern Star rites will be conducted at the funeral home here at 7 p.m. today and friends may call' until the hour of the funeral I service. Gandhi before flying back to al Moscow Tuesday. According to the Indian version, the Soviets would like a Geneva- conference to be I accompanied by a U.S. gesture -such as a Washington commitment for a phased withdrawal of American forces from Indochina--in order to help persuade Hanoi to attend the conference.

The New Delhi accounts said nothing about what peace move North Vietnam would be urged to make in advance of such a conference. Body (Continued From Page One) were halted about 6 p.m. Monday. Members of the McCracken County Rescue Squad began dragging operations about 8 p.m. Sunday and continued on an almost around-the-clock basis until operations were halted Monday.

Wallace was at the island with his wife, another couple and a young boy, about four miles south of Smithland when he apparently stepped into a hole and was dragged under water, the state trooper said. The other members of the group attempted to rescue him, but were unable to reach him. Wallace did not know how to swim, members of the party told authorities Sunday. He was a 1968 graduate of North Marshall High School, a recent graduate of Paducah Community College, and was a Church. member of the Sharpe Baptist Survivors include his wife, Betty Clark Wallace; his parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Curtis Wallace of Sharpe; two brothers, Pvt. Barry Wallace, U. S. Army stationed at Fort Campbell, and Jason Wallace, at home, and a sister, Miss Dixie Wallace, also at home.

Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. Wednesday at Roth Funeral Chapel with David Hardin and the Rev. T. D. Tucker officiating.

Burial will be in the Mt. Kenton Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home. Walter Draben, Marion, Dies; Rites Friday MARION, July 14 Walter Draben, 71, died at 10 a.m. today at Crittenden County Hospital here.

Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Lillian Draben; two daughters, Mrs. Betty Norvell, Evansville, and Mrs. Laurrell Carroll, Steger, two sons, Warren Draben, Steger, and Murriel Draben, Florida; three grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m.

Friday at Sugar Grove Cumberland Presbyterian Church, with burial in the church cemetery. Masonic rites will be conducted. at 7 p.m. Thursday at Hunt Funeral Home by Bigham Lodge No. 256, F.

A.M. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 p.m. Wednesday. Preston Foster, Movie, TV Star Dies At 69 LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) Preston Foster, who played both heroes and heavies over more than two decades in movies then became a star of television, died Tuesday.

He was 69. He succumbed at Scripps Memorial Hospital after a long illness. Foster, born i in Ocean City, N.J., started his career as an opera singer but quickly switched to the stage. He appeared in numerous Broadway dramas before coming to. Hollywood.

A good looking 6 foot 2, 200 pounder be played leading men in the 1930s and in later years sometimes took roles as a heavy. He starred for two years in the 1950s as a tugboat skipper in TV's "Waterfront" show, then played many other roles. age Control Board decision to suspend her retail beer and liquor licenses for five days. The action was taken against Mrs. Dixie Sherman Burke, doing business as Dixie's Elbow Room, 516 W.

Sixth on grounds she employed a woman bartender and allowed women to serve at the bar. "Whatever wisdom or legislative policy may have dictated (this) prohibition," Meigs said, "reason and equality of right have, like women, come a long way since its enactment." If the state Civil Rights Act of 1966 has not expressly abolished "such anomalous and anachronistic distinctions," he said, "the clear and necessary implication of its intendment is to remove every such discrimination." The statutes involved say women may serve only as waitresses, ushers or cashiers in premises where alcoholic beverages are sold and may be served only at tables where food ordinarily is served. Meigs said in his ruling: "If, as in this case, a woman may be licensed to engage in operation of the business of selling beer and liquor by the drink, it is absurdly unreasonable to say she may not employ another female to perform those functions. "The very fact of licensing such business operations, with all of the regulatory and police authority inhering in their control, removes every logical basis for maintaining such arbitrary distinctions, be the. licensee male or female." The state anti-discrimination statute does not specifically ban sex bias, the judge said, but the preamble adopts the spirit and policy of the Federal Civil Rights Act which includes sex.

"Accordingly, the order of the ABC Board is unreasonable and contrary to law and therefore reversed and set aside," Meigs said. There was no immediate indication whether the ABC Board would appeal Meigs' decision to the Court of Appeals, Kentucky's highest tribunal. Gen. Groves (Continued From Page One) spread use of atomic energy to benefit man in such pursuits as medicine and agriculture, and power production. Born in Albany, the son of a Presbyterian minister, Groves said after the first bombs were dropped on Japan that "this weapon must be kept under the control of the United States until all nations.

of the world are as anxious for peace as we are." Groves, starting from scratch in a field of technology for which there, were few guideposts, was known as a driver of the scientists, engineers and other personnel under his command at the vast but secret facilities at Oak Ridge, Los Alamos, and Hanford, Wash. "But he drove himself, and never asked anyone to do any more than he would do himself," his long-time secretary, Mrs. Jean O'Leary, told a reporter Tuesday. She was his executive assistant during the bomb-building years, and privy to all the secrets. Lilburn Fuqua, Farmington, Dies MAYFIELD, July 14- Lilburn Fuqua of Farmington died at 1:45 a.m.

today at Mayfield Hospital. Mr. Fuqua was a retired employe of the South Bend, school system. He is survived by two brothers, Lubie Fuqua of Sedalia and Ben D. Fuqua of Farmington, and two sisters, Mrs.

Jones Jenkins of Farmington and Mrs. Boyce Thomasson of Mayfield. Funeral services are set for 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Roberts Funeral Chapel with James Shockley officiating. Burial will be in Harmony Cemetery.

Pallbearers will be Joe, Richard, Bill D. and John M. Fuqua, James Bowden McNeely and Julian Jordan. Friends may call at the funeral home. Heavier than normal details watched traditional street dances after crowds of leftist students, many wearing red scarves, broke windows and damaged cars early Tuesday morning near the Place de la Bastille, where the French Revolution is popularly considered to have begun.

There were 15 arrests in Paris. Leftist students also sacked a police station near Rouen, in Normandy, after haranguing a crowd at a street dance. The parade got back some of its old color with the first appearance since 1966 of a Foreign Legion contingent. Standing under the trees on the Champs, the crowd saved its loudest applause for the legion's white kepis, its slow march step and bearded veterans. The legion, de emphasized after its anti-Gaullist role in the colonels putsch attempt during the Algerian war, now forms the nucleus of the French combat force of 2,500 troops trying to put down rebellion in the former African colony of Chad.

A snub to the legion this year would have been a major political error within the armed forces. Among the 650 vehicles in the line of march were a nuclear missile transport and two missiles charges used for the legion of missiles in their silos. Mrs. Hobbs Rites Set In Rosiclare ROSICLARE, July 14- Funeral services for Mrs. Lydia Hobbs, 81, will be held at 2 p.m.

Wednesday at General Baptist Church in "Rosiclare with the Rev. Harris officiating. Mrs. Hobbs died at 8 Sunday in Hardin County General Hospital, Rosiclare. Burial will be in Fluorine Cemetery.

Friends may call' at Rose Funeral Home in Elizabethtown..

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