Winston-Salem Journal from Winston-Salem, North Carolina (2024)

the On the Inside Amusem*nts 34 Obituaries Classified 30-33 Radio-TV Comics 34, 35 Sports Editorials 4 Women's Markets 16, 17 Negro WIN WINSTON-SALEM 62ND YEAR- 290 WINSTON-SALEM, N. FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 6, 1959 36 PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS Bell Court Bills Pioneer IV Are Introduced Is Leaving RALEIGH (AP) Longawaited bills to carry out court reforms proposed by a North Carolina Bar Assn. committee reached the Legislature yesterday. In House and Senate, bills were sent up to rewrite provisions of the state constitution to combine the state's courts into one system, with the chief justice of the Supreme Court as its administrative head. Sen.

J. Spencer Bell of Mecklenburg, chairman of committee which drafted the court plan, introduced the measure Senate. Meanwhile, Rep. John W. Umstead of Orange introduced bills to reshuffle permanent improvement projects under bond issues, and recommended the by Advisory Gov.

Budget Commission. Umstead, chairman of the State Hospitals Board of Control, said the changes would make available money for needed mental hospital projects. For a bond issue to be submitted to a referendum, Umstead proposed a total of 275,000, instead of the 29 million recommended by the budget commission. He also suggested that million dollars recommended for a new legislative building be cut to 3 million. 6-8 35 27-29 19-22 News.

26 Legislators Expect Action On Reforms Two Court Plans To Choose From By Marjorie Hunter Staff Reporter RALEIGH Many legislators think this session of the General Assembly will enact some sort of court reform legislation. Just what it will be, though, no one is quite sure. Opinion on court reform has not yet begun crystallizing around legislative halls, despite the large. amount of off-hours conversation on the subject. Introduction yesterday of the Bell committee court reform bills brings before the assembly a topic that up to now has been limited to those late-at-night legislative bull sessions in hotel rooms or lobby.

From here on out, the assembly will be talking more and more about court reforms. Four Years of Study The far-reaching Bell plan, product of some four years of study, will considered by the same House and Senate committees as a less drastic plan drawn up by the State Constitutional Commission, headed by Victor Bryant of Durham. Already, the two proposals have been tagged with the names of the Bell plan and the Bryant plan. It is possible still more plans will be suggested before the assembly reaches its verdict. "Frankly, I don't think most of us have decided yet just, what ought to be done." Hubert Humphrey of Guilford, a young Greensboro attorney, said yester- day.

Informal Survey An informal survey of legislators, including number of lawyers, seems to bear out Huhphrey's statement. Most of those questioned favor some sort of court reform, particularly on the lower level. Many favor a uniform system of lower courts. But few of those questioned feel that the rule-making power should be vested in the State Supreme Court, as suggested in the Bell plan. More seem tor be leaning toward the Bryant plan.

See Many, Page 10 Scheidt Defends Patrolmen In Strike Payton Blasts Hodges' Action HENDERSON (UPI) Motor Vehicles Commissioner Edward Scheidt flatly denied a union leader's charge yesterday that state highway patrolmen were being used as strikebreakers in a textile strike here. Scheidt said he had investigated charges by Boyd Payton, Carolinas director of the striking Textile Workers Union of America (AFL-CIO), and found them to be "entirely false. Payton had accused Gov. Luther H. Hodges of sowing "seeds of discontent and hatred" through his use of state highway patrolmen in the dispute over an arbitration clause in a new contract for Harriet-Henderson Cotton Mill workers.

Follows Quiet His telegram to Hodges followed comparative quiet on picket lines at the mills despite down Wednesday in negotiations. The union accused of "talking about everything else" except the arbitration clause which it says is necessary for a contract. Management said the union had abused the clause in past contracts. Payton noted a "strong protest" in his telegram to the governor. It was turned over to Scheidt who has control of the patrol which at one time this week had 146 extra troopers reinforcing local officers.

While Payton, Hodges Scheidt exchanged strongly-wordwand ed telegrams, Superior Court Judge William Y. Bickett continued in effect for the duration of the strike a restraining order i issued Feb. 13. The order came three days before mill management reopened the gates for workers to return to their jobs despite pickets. Restrain Union Members Bickett had issued the order to restrain union members from interfering with the return of workers who chose to ignore picket lines.

Neither union nor company attorneys objected to, his keeping it in effect, although TWUA attorney William Moore Nicholson of Charlotte sought unsuccessfully to modify it. He wanted to allow pickets to patronize a store which lies partly within the area 75 feet from mill gates. The area has been off limits to pickets under the order. Rackets Prober Remains in N.C. Special to the Journal WASHINGTON A spokesman for the Senate Labor Rackets Committee estimated here yesterday the staff investigator sent to Henderson to probe labor violence there will not complete the assignment for at least another week.

The investigator is in daily contact with the committee staff here, the spokesman said, but has not yet made a formal report. There are no plans to send additional staffers to the strike-torn area in light of present conditions, he indicated. The committee announced last Friday it had decided to check the situation of violence at Harriet Henderson Mills as well as the reported assault on labor organizer Robert Beame of the American Federation of Hosiery Workers at Franklin N. on Feb. 10.

According to the source here, the investigator will quite probably go to Franklin immediately upon completion of the Henderson assignment. Umstead said his changes would make available: 000 for construction of 540 additional beds at the Butner Training School for feebleminded; million for construction somewhere in western North Carolina of a training school similar to the Butner institution; 2 million for a hospital and admissions building at the Goldsboro State Hospital; and $300,000 for a classroom building at the Caswell Training School tr Kinston. Other new bills included one sponsored, by Rep. Transylvania James to re- C. vise laws covering prison industries.

State prisons director W. F. Bailey said the measure would provide "a constructive work plan" for convicts to learn a trade, while producing articles for sale to help earn their keep. bill would require state departments and agencies in purchases to give preference to articles produced by prison industries, but Bailey said, "We would have to meet standards of quality and Bell got his court proposals in ahead of another plan of reworked out by a constitutional study commission. A main difference in the plans is that the legislature would retain more say-so over adminSee Court, Page 10 U.S.

Signs To Protect 3 Countries Anti-Red Baghdad Pact Reaffirmed ANKARA, Turkey (AP) Iran, Turkey and Pakistan scorning Soviet threats and denunciations, signed separate defense pacts with the United States Thursday providing that the United States "will take such appropriate action, including the use of armed forces, as may be mutually agreed upon" in the event of aggression against the three powers. Thus the United States is welded more firmly to the antiCommunist Baghdad Pact, embracing Britain, Iran, Turkey, Pakistan and Iraq, the last named inactive since last July's military coup unseated a pro-West regime. The United States has sent economic aid to the pact powers and belongs to important committees but never has formally joined the pact. Close Cooperation Reaffirmed "We welcome the conclusion of these agreements," said a British Foreign Office spokesman in London, "which reaffirm the close association of the United States with our three allies in the Baghdad Pact." In Washington, the State Department said underscore "the importance the United pacts, States attaches to the collective efforts of Turkey, Iran and Pakistan to develop their economies and maintain their independence." The United States has said repeatedly it would regard threats to the independence of the three powers with great gravity. The new agreements are certain to bring down the wrath of Soviet propaganda.

Relations Broken Off The Kremlin has warned all three nations that by signing defense agreements with the United States they lay their territory open, to attack in event of war. Moscow has issued implied threats of invading Iran, pointing to a 38-year-old treaty giving the Soviet Union the right to enter Iran if the Soviets consider their southern border endangered. Iran last Monday denounced this article of the 1921 treaty as outmoded. The Soviet Union broke off negotiations with Iran last month for a nonaggression pact. Actress Sarah Churchill Fined On Disorderly Conduct Charge LIVERPOOL, England (AP) Actress Sarah Churchill was carried shoeless and struggling into court Thursday by four policemen, and was convicted of drunk and disorderly conduct.

Placed in the prisoner's dock, she refused to discuss the charges "until you tell your constabularly to take their hands off me and give me back my The police took their hands off and an attendant gave her back her shoes, kicked off in the struggle. The case proceeded. But not in an orderly manner. Asked by the clerk if her name was Sarah Beauchamp, she said loudly: your regret and to my Sara Her husband Anthony died of an overdose of sleeping pills in 1957. Having heard the charge read by the clerk, she pleaded innocent.

Then came Constable Kenneth Hill, arresting officer. There had been a bit of a do between Miss Churchill and a taxi driver over a fare of two shillings, nine pence -38 cents. "She said, 'Go to hell, I have no the patrolman said Miss Churchill told him when he asked her to give the cabbie his fare. JOURNAL Ike Calls Congress Leaders To Talk German Strategy; Parley to Be Bi-Partisan Reviews Berlin Crisis With Security Council NORTH High 50s Clearing and Weather data CAROLINA: Rain ending today. mountains to near 70 lower coast.

colder tonight and Saturday. on Page 10.) National Security Council. The White House also said that Eisenhower had heard from British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and there would be a further announcement Friday. It presumably will say that Macmillan has accepted the President's invitation to come to Washington later this month. White House news secretary James C.

Hagerty said the Friday meeting with congressional chiefs was called simply for a discussion of the situation and German problems generally. The session will come on the heels of several new developments including (1) Macmillan's trip to Moscow; (2) Russia's conditional acceptance of a foreign ministers' conference on Germany; and (3) Soviet Premier Khrushchev's statement at Leipzig yesterday that he might postpone for a month or two his May 27 deadline for settling the Berlin From Journal Wire Reports WASHINGTON-President Eisenhower Thursday summoned top congressional leaders of both parties to the White House Friday to discuss U.S. strategy the Berlin situation. This was one of two steps the President took to cope with continuing crisis. Earlier in the day he had reviewed the matter at a two- special session of the Weather Earthlings For Good Today to Bring Final Contact WASHINGTON (AP) Pioneer IV's radio sent strong and clear signals to earth Thursday, bridging a widening space gulf of more than 330,000 miles.

A British astronomer said information streaming from the far-ranging U.S. satellite has back, brought much closer the day when man will make his first flight i into space. Tracked by powerful radio telescopes in California's Mojave Desert and in England, the Pioneer's 13-pound coneload of instruments moved toward a solar orbit that may never end. The Goldstone tracking station in California lost contact with the tiny space craft at 4:20 p.m. EST as it dropped below the horizon.

To Beat Russians According to calculations by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Pioneer was 000 miles from earth at 5 p.m., traveling at a steadily diminishing speed of 4,107 miles an hour relative to the earth. When contact is re-established by Goldstone at 7:30 a.m. Friday, U.S. space scientists expect they will have bettered a tracking distance claimed by the Soviet Union with its Mechta, which was launched on Jan. 2.

As of 7:30 a.m. Friday, NASA technicians -who have racked up 64 hours of tracking Pioneer-calculate the space cone will have reached 403,000 miles toward the sun. The Soviets say they tracked their Mechta for 370,000 miles over a 62-hour period. They say their space probe has gone into an orbit around the sun. Batteries to Die Out Government scientists estimated that Pioneer's radio batteries will last until about noon Friday -84 hours after the gold-covered cone blasted skyward from Cape Canaveral, Fla.

They think radio telescopes will be able to track the probe for a bit longer than that. When the batteries die, Pioneer will keep going but earthbound space specialists will be unable to get any more of the data they've been collecting by radio since early Tuesday. Radioed reports showed Thursday the temperature inside was 41 to 42 degrees centigrade- 105 degrees Fanrenheit. A man could liev in such temperatures, uncomfortably, What really excited the scientists was information indicating Pioneer had met no lethal radiation belts beyond two discovered by earlier and closer-in space shots. Discoverer 1 In Polar Orbit turned as it sped through space.

To Stay Up 30 Days INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP)-Discoverer I is a mystery satellite no more. The Air Force said Thursday it definitely has achieved the first polar orbit, as planned. The reason its fate has been a question mark since it was blasted aloft last Saturday is that, instead of pointing dart-like at the horizon as it circles the earth, it has been tumbling. This made its radio signals, directional like a flashlight beam, extremely difficult to track.

Apparently to blame is a scanning device intended to keep the 19-foot-long cylinder horizon When it failed, the satellite apparently twisted and It circles the earth every 95.5 minutes, with a maximum altitude of 519 miles and a minimum of 176. It should stay up at least 30 days. Discoverer I is the first in a series designed to solve the problems of getting man into space and back safely. Later shots in the series will send mice and monkeys aloft. The first was but a test of hardware.

Mounted on the nose of a Thor intermediate-range ballistic missile, it thundered aloft from Vandenberg AFB, last Saturday. Both the Thor and second stage Bell Hustler rocket engines worked perfectly. It was aimed due south, into an orbit that will carry it over virtually every point on earth as the earth spins beneath it. All previous U.S. satellites, fired from Cape Canaveral, have orbited the equator.

Plane Crash Kills 14 in Nicaragua MANAGUA, Nicaragua (P)-A four engine Taca International Airline plane carrying 18 persons crashed shortly after takeoff from Las Mercedes Airport here Thursday, killing 14. J. D. Brock, Taca vice president of New Orleans, said the dead included the captain and the copilot. The four survivors included two stewardesses.

A passenger or crew list was not immediately available. Brock said the flight, No. 770, was en route to Mexico. Khrushchev Easing Up On Berlin Now Says Deadline Is Not Ultimatum issue. Herter to Talk Invited to the 10:30 a.m.

White House Friday were Vice President M. Nixon, meeting, Speaker Sam Rayburn, Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson, Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen and House Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck.

Acting Secretary of State Christian A. Herter, who is subbing for the ailing John Foster Dulles, will brief the congressional leaders along with Defense Secretary Neil H. McElroy. Herter, McElroy and Nixon were among those attending Thursday's special session of the Security Council, held in Eisenhower's office immediately the regular weekly session of the Security Council. Also present was council member Leo A.

Hoegh, director of the Office of Defense and Civilian Mobilization. Twining Present Sitting in, although not members of the Security Council, were Gen. Nathan F. Twining, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Allen W. Dulles, director of the Central Intelligence Hagerty said that Berlin and Germany were the topics discussed at the special meeting.

Subjects discussed by council, the government's top litical planning board, are secret as a rule. What prompted Hagerty to announce the subjects was not made known. McElroy told newsmen later "we are doing a great deal of planning." Without going into detail, he said the Joint Chiefs of Staff are working on various contingencies. The said he did not Berlin, defense, secretary, adding that the situation was "still, in the realm of negotiaBut. he said that if fighting should erupt over Berlin, it would See Ike, Page 10 Reynolds Stock Sets New Record High The price of a common share of stock in R.

J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. continued its advances again yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange. Active. trading pushed the stock price to for a high Thursday, moving up from the closing price of the previous day.

It was a new high for the stock. LEIPZIG, East Germany (AP) -Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev eased away from his May 27 deadline on Berlin in a freewheeling talk Thursday and offered lightly to sign a Westerndrafted German peace treaty. He punctuated that with another warning to the West: "Whoever bumps us with his elbow will break i it." The Soviet leader took the floor in high good humor after drinking a series of toasts to peace and trade-in white wine, cognac and red wine-at an impromptu luncheon given by Leipzig's mayor. He said his deadline for an end to the four power occupation of Berlin might postponed, if the West will negotiate sensibly, until June 27 or maybe July 27. Staff Photo by Frank Jones Produce merchants assemble wares on sidewalk across from gutted market.

Cause of City Market Fire, Other Questions Unanswered A shell of heat-warped iron ing, twisted steel and watersoaked produce was all that remained yesterday after fire swept through Winston Salem's indoor curb market on North Cherry Street. The Thursday morning blaze ruined tons of produce inside the market, destroyed at least a dozen vehicles and forced a score of persons to flee for their lives. The fire prompted these tions. What caused it? What will be done to replace the market? What will produce dealers do with the large quantity of fruits and vegetables, some damaged by the fire, water and smoke, others unscathed? What farmers and city apparently, residents who operated stalls in Training School Fire Kills 21 Teen-Agers LITTLE ROCK, Ark. Twenty which teen razed boys locked died dor- in a mitory at the Arkansas Negro Boys Industrial School at nearby Wrightsville Thursday.

Forty-seven other youths escaped from the flaming building through windows, after kicking out heavy metal screens designed to prevent escape. Twelve bodies were found under one window. The other nine bodies were scattered in the ruins, several still in charred beds. "It was a madhouse," said George Williamson, 16, who was awakened about 4 a.m. by the screams of other boys.

"The room was full of smoke and it seemed like everybody was trying to get out the same Doors to the dormitory were locked and there was no key in the building. One of the survivors ran 150 yards to the home of Supt. L. R. Gaines get a key, but the building was sheathed in flames before Gaines arrived.

Orval E. Faubus, who visited the scene before the bodies were removed from the smoldering termed the fire toll an inexcusable occurrence. promised a full investigation. P. R.

Parks, a teacher who regularly sleeps in the building, was hospitalized three weeks ago. No For 20 Bucks? Nothing Doing! PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (-For just $20 Richard Grosser will sell you a machine that does nothing. has $20 for nothing? Grosser says that in two years he's had 500 buyers for the machine which he makes in basem*nt of his suburban Merion, home. Among those owning the machines formally known as nuttin' boxes- -are such persons as John Foster Dulles and some folks using the names Du Pont and Rockefeller.

Grosser, an economics student at the University of Pennsylvania, started building the battery-operated gadget for his family, just as a gag. It is made of gray, hammerstone aluminum, 4x5x6 inches. It has two rows of four yellow neon bulbs that flash on and off in no set pattern. That's all it does. No Hurry, He Says the market do for a place to continue business? Answers to these questions were scarce.

City Fire Chief E. M. Dixon said cause of the fire had not been determined. He said it is believed that it started in a small room on the north end. No estimate of damages would be available for several days, he said.

The fire apparently began about 1:10 a.m. and coursed through the 65,000 square-foot structure within minutes. Night watchman Dan Farrington said flames were already shooting through the roof when he discovered the fire. Gas and oil from produce trucks parked in the building fed the fast moving flames. Spectators heard several explosions.

Several persons who were inside the market escaped as the fire closed in. Henry Amason, 35, of 314 East Eighth Street, wrapped old bedding around himself and escaped See Cause, Page 12 one was assigned to replace him. Cause of the blaze was not determined, but Gaines indicated faulty wiring might have been to blame. The fire apparently originated in an office in the basem*nt of the U-shaped dormitory, where 68 boys slept in bunks. Only part of the walls of the building were standing when firemen arrived from Little Rock.

"You just never something like this to happen," said Gaines. "Those were my boys in there. I can't look at them." Gaines said the boys be quartered in other buildings until the dormitory could be replaced. "We have an appropriation before the legislature now to renovate that building," Faubus said. "Now we'll "We'll make it fire-resistant this time," he in said.

the dormitory ranged from 15 to 18 years. Younger boys are quartered in another building. Flames Kill 4 In Hotel Fire HAZLETON, Pa. (AP)-Flames roaring up an elevator shaft with blast furnace fury turned a fivestory hotel into an inferno early Thursday, taking at least four lives. A woman is missing.

Sixteen persons were hurt, one of them, a man, critically. All but four were receiving treatment in hospitals for shock, burns, cuts and smoke poisoning. Fire about 1 a.m. in the Gary Hotel. Within minutes hotel, 75 years old and standing in the heart of the business district, was a seething, swarming scene of terror.

From many of the 100 guest rooms men and women, in pajamas, nightgowns or lingerie, came screaming. They shinnied down cables, scrambled down fire ladders, or were carried to safety. Samuel Mednitsky, the owner, said the hotel 63 registered guests, and one other resident, Clarence Krapf, 65-year-old night clerk. Ten of the 63 were not in the hotel. Four were out of town.

Five, members of a jazz ensemble, were playing in a club across the street. Management and authorities said that but for Krapf's courageous efforts the loss of life might have been greater. The owner's tentative estimate of damage was $200,000. Cause of the fire had not been determined. "We are in no hurry," he added, and, for what it was worth, tossed in an old Russian saying: "Never count your chickens until fall." Khrushchev insisted the deadline is not an ultimatum.

At the same time he reiterated that the Soviet Union will sign a separate peace treaty with Communist East Germany, an eager potential heir to Soviet occupation controls, if the West refuses to sign an all-German treaty. His government has proposed that foreign ministers meet next month to consider the Berlin issue and a German peace treaty. Hint of Apology There was a hint of apology in one remark: "I have'nt said anything new, but repetition is the mother of West Berlin is isolated 110 miles inside East Germany. Last Nov. 27 Khrushchev threatened to let the East Germans take over the road, rail and air routes into the city unless he got an agreement in six months for his plan to convert West Berlin into a demilitarized free city.

It is not a good idea, Khrushchev said, to try to scare the Soviet Union with threats of warthe Soviets are already afraid of what war might bring. But he hinted that they have no more need to be scared than anyone else. 'A person who does not recognize coexistence should drown himself," Khrushchev advised. A bit later, he said: "If capitalism is so strong, there should be a confederation of the two German states. It should have nothing to fear." Asked by Mikardo whether he considered British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's recent mission to Moscow a failure, Khrushchev shook a finger at him and smiled.

"That is a secret between myself and Mr. Macmillan," he said. "We must wait and see whether good deeds follow good Johnson Expects Action on Bills WASHINGTON (AP)-Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (D- Tex) said Thursday the Senate may act on six or eight bills cluding Hawaiian statehood -before the congressional Easter recess. One of the first probably will be a bill to authorize an additional 48 million dollars for the civilian space agency, approved by a committee headed by Johnson.

He also listed for early action a four -year extension of the draft act, already voted by the House; a new system of federal tax on insurance companies, also passed by the House; and an increase in U. S. contributions to international monetary funds. Most congressmen expect an Easter recess from March 26 until April 6. Miss Churchill now and again interrupted Hill's testimony.

When Hill was finished she insisted on hearing his testimony again. "Were you unable to hear the officer?" asked Magistrate A. J. McFarland. "Not completely.

I'm a little hard of hearing," replied Miss Churchill. "Sir," she told the magistrate, "I am sure that Liverpool is a fair city. "At no time did I hide my identity. I thought I was monstrously overcharged on my taxi Miss Churchill made a somewhat similar in Malibu, appearance on Jan. 16, 1958, and paid a $50 fine on a charge of being drunk in public.

Magistrate McFarland found the evidence sufficient. He fined her 40 Apparently there was not a pence in Miss Churchill's leopard skin coat or her slacks. "I have no money, she a announced. "Will the court accept a check?" Before the court could rule on this point, a sympathetic and anonymous spectator handed up the money. Miss Churchill left the courtthis time under her own power.

Blinding Snow Clouds Paralyze Many Sections of the Midwest By The Associated Press were almost four feet deep in the hurt when a bus skidded on icy business district. 77 near Oklahoma City and Blowing, drifting snow blocked deaths turned over in a ditch. roads and closed schools in some Two Iowa traffic were Rural roads snowed shut blamed on the storm. were parts of the Midwest storm zone in the Freeport, area. Thursday.

Many schools suspended classes Many rural schools were closed The fall ranged up to a foot Nebraska in Lincoln in southern Wisconsin. in Nebraska, including the Univerin depth. The wet, white blanket sity and The storm moved into southern of extended from Oklahoma 700 Minnesota, slowing traffic and Creighton in Omaha, a nummiles northeastward into Wiscon- naments were postponed. Some sending rural school pupils home ber of high school basketball tour- sin. stores in downtown Omaha closed early.

their em- Thunderstorms hit areas in Winds that at times topped 50 an started early get southern Georgia, Alabama and hour to m.p.h. churned up blinding clouds ployes Illa of Ogallala, northwestern Florida. home. of snow. Motorists were urged to Campbell, 16, steer clear of the areas of drifts was killed in a car-truck and low visibility.

pell, collision Neb. on an icy road in Chap- City Area Swept The storm was termed the Crews spreading cinders and By Chilly Drizzle worst of the season in -with salt on Omaha's major streets spring only 16 days away. were unable to keep ahead of the A cold drizzle swept the WinSome highways in the eastern snow. ston-Salem area yesterday afterpart of Iowa were blocked. About The snow cover ranged up to a noon and last night.

100 trucks were stalled on High- foot in Nebraska--a heavy serv- After a low of 31 yesterday way 92, east of Council Bluffs. ing of moisture that pleased morning, the temperature moved Fairfield, Iowa, was virtually farmers. to a high of 48 for the day. paralyzed. A foot of snow fell Winds that scaled up to 58 The weatherman indicated that there, followed by rain.

All Iowa m.p.h. piled up huge drifts and there would be some clearing by City's schools were closed for the blocked highways in northern tonight, but more rain sometime second time in 40 years. Oklahoma. Two passengers the weekend. SARAH CHURCHILL "She began screaming, 'I hate you.

I hate Hill said he decided Miss Churchill was drunk. He persuaded her to get in a taxi, took her to the central police station. There, he said, she struggled so violently he had to summon fellow officers..

Winston-Salem Journal from Winston-Salem, North Carolina (2024)
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