Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 62, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 29 June 1964 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
Monday With Marilyn By Marilyn Knudsen
Having spent part of the week„ in “the city of brotherly love,”' and the other part from the trip, the reporter apolo-e gizes for any evident shortage in?' news. Enroute the train had sev | eral special cars filled withNegroes, and these cars Were dis-Jj joined at Pittsburgh to proceed to;j Washington. Since the senate hadg just passed the civil rights bill.g presumably they were going inconnection with that passage z Attractively dressed and well-~ mannered, they certainly were afar cry from the who have recently been ing the New York subways. Many 2 of them were young men and wo-H men, of the age to which this= column pertains, and while they_were not from around here, they 2 deserve commendation for the-r way they promote the conception of conscientious youths which we are trying to preserve= all over the United States. Phila-g delphia itself is undergoing a= process of change: new buildings g are springing up everywhere; 3 Project 66 is engaged in tearing g down buildings to preserve the 2 mall around Independence Hall' as it once was; and the city hall=is being cleaned and to welcome delegates to the tional Democratic convention. T Kathryn Rash and Marilyn Har- 1 " man of Decatur, and Maris Moeschberger of Monroe went to Fort Wayne yesterday morning to catch two chartered, air-condi-tioned buses backed with girls
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Decatur Stores Will Be Open All Day Thursday July 2nd. ft • .4— . . . . w ...» I •
„and suitcases galore and colorful- ■ ly decorated with formals in plas--5 tic bags. Having been selected ato serve as delegates from Ad"ams county to Girls’ State, the L young women, all going to be senjiors next year, were headed for jthe Indiana University campus in where they will pazjjticipate in the government of a J mock state, electing officials to = city, county, and state positions. ■Kathryn is sponsored by Psi lota 7Xi of Decatur; Marilyn by the " American Legion auxiliary of sPost 43; and Maris, by the Adams ~ Central parent teachers associa- = tion. In anticipation of the activir = ties which have been scheduled as E traditional events, the girls in- ; eluded in their list of things to | take, art supplies for the posters z_ which will be used for the po- = litical campaigns. Before leav- = ing, they made individual plans = for a talent skit required for = each girl. = Flitting among the Lady Bugs, | Honey Bees, and other groups of ' “buggie” Brownies, members of s cadet Girl Scout troops are help- " ing at the annual camp at HannarNuttman park. Working with the - Brownies, the' girls assist the ■ regular leaders. One of the other - cadet troops, which includes girls ; between thirteen and fourteen, has - elected to help at another camp site-in their council. Accompanied by their leaders, Mrs. Arthur Girad and Miss Margaret Cook, troop 222 has been giving their efforts to Camp McMillen in Fort Wayne.
Burroughs Member Os Attack Squadron CHERRY POINT, N. C. (FHTNCJ — Marine Staff Sargeant Robert B. Burroughs, son of Melvin Mallonee of Route 4, Decatur, Ind., is a members of Marine Attack Squadron 225, Seccond Marine Aircraft Wing, Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point, N.C. The squadron recently returned from carrier qualifications aboard the Navy anti-submarine warfare aircraft carrier USS Lexington off the coast of Florida. I Huntington Youth Is Fined In City Court Jerry Waritland, 19-year-old resident of route 8, Huntington. was fined $5 and costs in city court this morning on a charge of being a minor in possession of alcoholic beverages. The total fine amounted to $25. Wantland and four youths under age 18 were arrested at 11:05 p.m. Saturday in the 100 block of W. Jefferson St., by the city police. The juveniles, two boys aged 17 and two girls, 17 and 15 years of age. will be referred to juvenile authorities, according to the police. A charge of assault and battery against Alfredo E. Ojeda, 26. of this city, was continued by Judge John B. Stults. Ojeda was arrested last week on an affidavit signed by his wife. Two Autos Collide Saturday Evening Autos operated by Kenneth Knittie, 54, of route 2, Convoy. 0., and Marcus D. Brodbeck, 34, of route 3, Decatur, collided at 231 N. Fifth St. Saturday at 8:43 p.m. in the city’s only weekend accident. -■ Knittie was southbound on Fifth street and Brodbeck northbound when the Knittie auto struck the left rear of Brodbeck’s car. Cars parked on both sides of the street gave the two vehicles little room to pass each other. Damages were estimated at SSO to Brodbeck’s vehicle and $5 to the Knittie auto. - li you lave something to sell oi -j-ade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results
»• • r • ' '~lr wt. •( Resume Hunt For 3 Civil Righters
PHILADELPHIA, Miss. (UPD U. S. sailors resumed the search today for three missing civil rights workers and police set up a roadblock to question local residents for sonw due to, their fate. The three vanished a week ago and one state game warden participating in the massive hunt said “about 60 per cent of the people” in this ru- . ral area a believe the three youths met foul play. “About .40 per cent don't know what to believe,” the warden said. The highway patrol said Sunday night tiwo white men similar in appearance to the two missing white men were seen last Monday near the spot where their burned station wagon was found. It was near this spot — 12 miles northeast of here — that a roadblock was set up today and all motorists on their way to work were stopped and questioned. About 100 sailors from a base at nearby Meridian — ordered into the search by President Johnson — took the day off Sunday but were back in the fields and along the rural roads this morning to look for clues. Gwin Cole, chief investigator for the patrol, said a local resident reported he saw two * “young” white men standing near a station wagon resembling the one driven by the workers at 11 a.m., last Monday, about 12 hours after the three workers disappeared. Two of the missing workers, Mickey Schwerner, 24, of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Andrew Goodman, 20, of New York, were white. The third James Chaney, 21, was a Negro from Meridian, Miss. Cole declined to elaborate on the latest development in a , search of nearly a week for the missing trio except to say “one was heavy — ’ like Schwerner, and the other was lighter.” But he said the resident reported the men were standing only a few hundred yards from the point where .searchers found the missing workers’ station wagon abandoned and burned. The station wagon had not been burned when the two men were seen beside it, the patrol said. Cole said troopers -today would set up a checkpoint on the highway that passes the spot to s‘op all cars and ask the drivers “if they have seen or heard anything.” Sailors,/ were to take up the search again today for. the missing workers after taking a day off Sunday. Searchers also planned to begin dragging man-made lakes and ponds in the area. Authorities indicated they were pinning their hopes on the theory that more than one of two men
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were involved if the workers mgt foul play. The more persons involved, they reasoned the greater the chance that one of them might eventually let slip something that could unlock the mystery. Dewitt Hutton, warden supervisor of the state game and fish commissidh's district six said skiffs with dragging equipment covered 55 miles of. the Pearl River Sunday. Two Persons Hurt In Cycle Accident Two persons were injured, two drivers were arrested and two automobiles were totally demolished in" weekend traffic accidents in Adams county. Ivan L. Davis, Jr., 21, of 521 S. 13th street, and his 21-year-old wife, Carol, suffered sevete friction burns in a motorcycle accident at 7:05 a.rm Sunday on U. S. 33, a mile southeast of Decatur. Davis was operating the motorcycle east on 33, with his wife as a passenger, when he neared the county farm road and saw an auto driven by Donna J, Bowers, of route 6, Decatur, pull into the intersection. He applied the brakes of his vehicle and the motorcycle skidded 111 feet before he laid it onto its side in an attempt to halt the slide. The cycle slid another 141 feet on its side before coming to rest along the edge of the road. Davis suffered severe friction burns and abrasions to the left arm and buttocks, while his wife also suffered severe friction burns and abrasions to the buttocks. State trooper Dan Kwasneski investigated. Driver Arrested Robert W. Brandt, 18, route 2, Decatur, was charged with reckless driving following a one-car accident at 1 o’clock this morning on U. S. 27, two miles south of Decatur. . . Brandt was northbound on .27 when he lost cpntrol of his auto and left the east side of the road. The vehicle traveled 90 feet and then came back onto the highway and left the west side of the road and traveled another 192 feet before crashing into a cement abutment at the south edge of the Yost Addition. The auto knocked down three mail boxes and a newspaper box while out of control. Deputy sheriff Harold August, who investigated, considered the car Brandt was driving, which was owned by Elgene Bienz/a total loss. Teddy M. Hauk, 20-year-old res-? ident of. route 3, Bryant, was charged with failure to yield the
right of way after a 4 o’clock Saturday afternoon mishap three miles west of Berne on state road 118. Marvin Dale Hirschy, 26, route 1, Geneva, was westbound and slowing down to make a left turn onto county road 37 when his car was rammed in the rear by the Hirschy auto. Sheriff Roger Singleton and state trooper Gene Rash investigated, and estimated damages at S4OO to the Hauk auto and $250 |o the Hauk car. 1961 Car Total A 1961 model auto driven by William A. Montgomery, 22, of route 1, Geneva, was considered a total loss after a mishap on county of Geneva, at 7:15 p.m. Saturday. ~ ' Montgomery was entering a curve on the county road when his auto went out of control on loose ’gravel along the side of the road. The car traveled 180 feet sideways before the right ■rear struck a tree. Deputy sheriff Harold August investigated. A car operated by a Baton Rouge, La., resident, Lynelle J. Wheat, received an estimated S2OO damage when it went out of control on county road 26Vi, six miles east on Monroe, at 5:25 p.m. Sunday. . The lady was traveling north at approximately 20 miles per hour when her auto skidded on loose gravel and traveled 54 feet before crashing into a bridge abutment on the west side of the road. <
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olWff A'rw , POW-WOW— Girl Scout day camp at Hanna-Nuttman park was the scene of this fierce-lboking gathering which congregated Thursday to perform ceremonial Indian dances for the rest of the 173 girls register, ed for this year’s camp. This year’s eJay camp, headed by Mrs. Dean Boltz, has about 40 more girls registered than last year. Other camp personnel are: Mrs. Ben Eichenauer, assistant director, Mrs. Richard Fuelling, nurse; Mrs. Wayne Bodie, business managerand Mrs. Ruth Fox, assistant business manager. Present for the dances were Miss Joanne Webster and Mrs,- Cary Zahn of the Fort Wayne Girl Scout officej and Mrs. Beverly Gensciec of the camp council. —(Photo by Mac Lean)
MONDAY, JUNE 29, 1964
