News-Herald, The (Newspaper) - December 4, 1963, Mansfield, Ohio I Weather Mostly cloudy with occasional light snow this tonight and tomorrow Nor much change in temperature Yesterday's high 33 Low 26 High this afternoon and tomorrow 30 tow tonight 24 t THE WEST LAKE COUNTY OHIO MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dilemma British 0 but deadly W represents a major problem for Johnson The confused situation is reviewed by deToledano on Pg 4 today's Year No 285 Wednesday Evening December 4 1963 SEVEN CENTS plan down VOTERS VETO PAROCHIAL AID Society unveils grim A deadly weed PORTLAND Ore AP You are past 40 Been smoking since age 15 or A new barrage of figures linking smoking to disease and death may seem centered on you The broadest study of the subject yet made shows death rates increase with extent of exposure to cigaret smoke says the American Cancer Society fff ITS REPORT TODAY came on the heels of a posal by the American Medical Association's Board of Trustees for a research program on tobacco and health beyond statistical evidence The American Cancer Society's report was based on men who filled out detailed questionnaires and then were traced for an average of 34 3 months Dr E Cuyler Hammond the society's director of statistical research outlined the new findings at the 17th annual clinical meeting of the American Medical tion The figures confirm previous findings and go further he said Dr Hammond reported death rates were far higher among cigaret smokers than they increased with amount of smoking and they were lower among of a year or longer than among current smokers The latest study aimed at refuting challenges to six earlier ones includes many new factors One parf of it compares death rates of 36.975 matched pairs one smoker and one The were matched for age race height urban See Page 2 Col 6 They'll sell shares in marsh Anyone can own a share of Mentor Marsh The Mentor Marsh Committee hopes to raise through the sale of shares in the unique area Shareholders will have no gal equity in the marsh THE COMMITTEE needs to complete the chase of 80 acres of marsh from the New York Central Railroad A down payment was contributed by the H a n n a Foundation The committee has one year to raise the rest of the purchase price Another will be used to buy fringe property that committee feels is needed as a buffer between the marsh and residential developments Mrs Raymond Evans of the committee announced the share plan to about 55 attending a meeting last night at Mentor High If the committee buys the railroad land it will control 470 acres of the marsh Gifts of 300 and 90 acres have been re- from the Morton Salt Co and the Diamond Alkali Co THE COMMITTEE is ing to save from two fates what it calls the only sizeable ural resource area of its type in this part of the US 1 A report by the ning firm of Carroll Hill Associates proposes that See Page 2 Column 3 By Newsy Suzy Thirty voters went to the polls in Wickliffe yesterday but didn't vote Election officials say signed the books and went in- to booths but only ed levers Maybe they didn't know how to use the machines and didn't want anyone to know it so they didn't ask Suzy gests Some people think all you have to do is move either the yes or no key They forget about the arm with the red handle Pope going to Holy Land VATICAN CITY AP Pope Paul VI decreed a vast reform of Roman Catholic worship today called on the bishops of his church to share with him in its government and then announced he would make an historic trip to the Holy Land next month It will be the first trip by a Roman Catholic pontiff out- side Italy in 159 years since December 1804 when Pope Pius VII went to Paris to Crown Napoleon f IT ALSO WILL BE the longest trip ever made by a Pope The Roman Catholic ruler in office scarcely five months took the actions at a closing ing in St Peter's Basilica of the second session of his menical Council He and his bishops gave Roman Catholicism its first two councilor decrees in 93 on liturgy the other on mass then recessed the council until September Continued on Page 2 Column 1 No in sight ON THE INSIDE Classified 79 Cross-section Dear Abby 9 Lou Mio 14 Sports Women's News School Page 72 Flakes to thicken area snow blanket The second snow blanket of the season covered Lake County today and this time it's likely to stay a while There's no thaw m sight The first snow was that heavy Cigaret proposal too harsh Two weeks ago Man ager RoberL Moon was order ed the juvenile and make for solving it Last night Moon came up with what he called tions lhat might honestly work They were too strong for blood MOON SAID the city could be effective only if it really put its foot down If it wished to be effective recommended Banning cigaret machines Arresting juveniles smoking in public places or on the street Finding out where they got the cigarets and prosecuting the merchants or parents to the full extent of the law I DON'T think this would stop smoking anymore than stopped Councilman Joseph Atzberger argued About the only thing you can accomplish here is turn the kids to snuffing agreed cilman Richard Kostic head of the safety committee The people who own these machines are victims of They don't make anything on them They put them there for the customers convenience and the kids and take advantage of them MOON DIDN'T press it They asked me what I thought they could do and I told them he said briefly after the meeting Councilman Don Krueger a Oswald modeled in clay Jean Eraser a sculptor at the famed Waxworks in London puts finishing touches on clay head of a model of Lee Harvey Oswald assassin of President Kennedy Oswald was himself slain on Nov 24 two after President Kennedy died by a nightclub operator in las police headquarters cable from London CEF leader sees vote as first step The primary objective of the Wickliffe chapter of for Educational Freedom CEF is accomplished says Spokesman Robert P Woodman We wanted to make the ple of Wickliffe aware that a third of our children are ing their education without lax benefit A publicity couldn't have done what wet one of mid-November but it didn't last long Between then and now er Nature has made a few hearted attempts to force some snow on us but they fizzled out Last night's snow will last longer The highest temperature in sight over the next two or three days is 30 which is below freezing TONIGHT it will drop to 24 and there will be a little more light snow but not much i the chamber and ask it to warn if the merchants don't fall in Early season snows several councilmen said play havoc with driving as consider harsher aren't yet ready to with conditions and today no exception MAYOR ROBERT R Brewer There were plenty of slippery i agreed with council but only roads in West Lake County and ter asking council if it thought lot of traffic but e's were cautious and there were no serious accidents this could be construed as ing the buck The controversy over began after Mentor High CREWS were working to get counselor Ross King and the highways reporter watched a 13 year- traffic but many side j old boy buy tobacco at 27 of 33 See Paje 2 Column 3 businesses he visited in Mentor was accomplished by pulling the issue up lo the voters man explains ATTENTION has been ed on the problem The way is open for dialogue The opposition agrees there is a problem he adds The thing we have to do now is get together and work it out The amendment's particularly Civic League of Wickliffe Voters not only knowledges is a problem bul il is trying lo do something about it says man Let them come forward Now is the time to hear ideas Lcl us together work out a tem that will afford similar for all Wickliffe dren J WOODMAN a Catholic and father of seven says he See Page 2 Column 1 i Many cite tax increase Money conscious voters turned out in record bers for a special election in Wickliffe yesterday and overwhelmed the plan Final score was for the city charter amendment and against A total of voters to more than expected trudged through slush in a de- tei mined parade to the city's five polling places BAD WEATHER and usual special election lack of interest was supposed to keep them away but it didn't By 10 it was apparent that the total vote would proach the who turned out Nov 5 The plan would have ted both public private school rate of at least a child to be paid to his school by THE amendment would have raised taxes 4.8 mills or about lor the average homeowner A school levy won by 371 votes to in the Nov 5 balloting The levy will cost the average homeowner about a year Many voters said another was too much AND THE controversial issue would have raised at least two legal questions its critics ed out 1 Could the public school accept the 2 Would passage chip away the wall of separation between church and stale erected by the first amendment to the United Stales THE WICKLIFFE chapter of the Citizens for Educational Freedom backer of the plan maintained lhat the Sec Page 2 Column 8 Rhodes sets talk here Ohio Governor James A Rhodes will address the Chamber of Com- merce at a p.m dinner meeting Monday at pel's Inn The governor who is pecU d to return to Columbus that evening will comment on his industrial expansion and economics program WELL WORTH WHILE Robert P Woodman spokesman for the local chapter of the Citizens for Educational Freedom says his group's promotion of charter amendment defeated yesterday was well worth while Reading record is all-new collection An all-new collection of children's songs poems and stones with a booklet in which they can follow the stories as they are told is on Reading Record No 8 released this week It is being offered by The as a public vice for For mail orders add 15 cents The new record of stories by Miranda includes The Worried The Talking Clock and many others For mail orders clip the coupon and send name and cash or check to Beading Records The 38879 Mentor Ave Willoughby Ohio CLIP AND MAIL WITH YOUR ORDER READING RECORD COUPON Record No 8