The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 June 1964 — Page 3

THE DAILY BANNER

GREENCASTLE, INDIANA

SATURDAY, JUNE 13,1964 Page 3

ENDS TODAY Flippers New Adventure" end— "Gold For the Caesers"

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EDWARD ANDREWS • KAMALA DEW V

STARTS WEDNESDAY 'Hey There Yogi Bear"—A full length Cartoon Feature—Plus Western

Negroes Halt Race Protests ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. UPI —Negvo^s today postponed further racial demonstrations in this tense and troubled city pending outcome of new federal court action, but militant whites vowed to organize a second and larger march into the narrow streets of the Negro section tonight.

House Is Taken FLINT. Mich. UPI —Someone robbed Floyd Ray’s house in Grand Blanc township this week. The thieves took everything, including the foundation. Ray, who recently bought the unoccupied house, told police he returned Thursday after an absence of two weeks and found a vacant lot there, with holes where the foundation and septic tank used to be.

MAPLECROFT AUTO THEATRE East of StUesville TONIGHT Frank!* Avalon Annctto FunicoHa "MUSCLE BEACH PARTY" Plus **13 FRIGHTENED GIRLS" Plus "WEST BOUND" SUNDAY AND MONDAY "TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD" Plus Rack Hudson—Doris Day "PILLOW TALK" JUNE SPECIAL Admission Monday thru Thursday 60c Rogular admission Friday, Saturday and Sunday—7Sc

Meadowbrook DRIVE-IN THEATRE

TONIGHT Elvis Proslay's Ntwost "KISSIN' COUSINS" (Color) Robort Taylor—Joan Caufiold "CATTLE KING" (Color) SUNDAY THRU WEDNESDAY Honry Fonda, Mauraan O'Hara "SPENCER'S MOUNTAIN" (Color) Susanna Ploshotto, Ty Hardin "WALL OF NOISE" Wednesday $1.00 Carload

Gov. Scranton Bids For Votes DALTON. Pa. UPI — Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton flies to his native Connecticut today to bid for support in his 11th hour drive to snatch the GOP presidential nomination from Sen. Barry Goldwater. The governor was to leave his home here at noon EDT to go by chartered plane to Bradley Field, Windsor Locks. Cornu He was scheduled to address the Connecticut Republican convention in Hartford at 2 p.m. Connecticut Republicans, who Friday night heard an endorsement of Scranton from their keynote speaker, Rhode Island Gov. John H. Chafee, must elect 16 delegates to next month's GOP national convention at San Francisco. Scranton stood a good chance of picking up at least 12 delegates, with four said to be Goldwater sup-

porters.

Connecticut is familiar ground for Scranton—he w T as born in Madison attended prep school at Hotchkiss in Lakeville and was graduated from Yale University and Yale Law School at New Haven.

U.S. District Judge Bryan Simpson was to hear an appeal : today b> the city for injunctive ! powers, taken away recently by : the judge, to halt demonstra-

tions.

In a starkly dramatic new 'chapter in this tourist town's racial crisis. Approximately 300 i white men and women marched ; through the darkened streets of the Negro section Friday night | under heavy police guard. They were led by J. E. Stonier of Atlanta an arch-segrega- : tionist who somehow brought i the first semblance of organized discipline to the roaming band nl young whites who, uni til Friday night, had simply been intent on smashing Negro I integration drives. Marching with Stoner were | many who had been seen at the | forefront of strife when Ne- | groes entered the downtown ; area wo nights this week. Negroes earlier had staged ! two inarches—one just at darkless— on the old slave market. I There were no incidents and very few white spectators on hand. Police arrested 57 persons during a series o? sit-ins at a number of segregated restaurants in the city. The white marchers were held in check by almost 200 officers. Police cars were parked throughout the line of march on sidestreets with their engines running. High powered rifles and tear gas grenades, kept in the cars, were never needed.

Medal For Truman WASHINGTON UPI — Ambassador Kim Chung Yul of Korea announced Friday his country would award its highest medal to former President Harry S. Truman. June 25. . Kim said he w’ 1 ! present Truman with the “Order of Merit for National Foundation Joongjang” to the elder statesman *or v-'c “cc itribution to the cause of human freedom and democracy’’ during the Korean

War.

CORRAL DRIVE-IN THEATRE SeeleyviUe, Indiana Boxoffico Opon 7:00 Shew at Dusk NOW THRU TUESDAY "IRMA LA DOUCE" Jack Lommon—Shirloy MacLaina (Color) Alto "SOME LIKE IT HOT" Marilyn Manroo—Tony Curtis Jack Lontman

MIDWAY DRIVE-IN TONIGHT DUSK TO DAWN FREE COFFEE AND DONUTS "Kiss Of Tho Vampiro" "No Nam* On Th* BulUt" "Th* Big Beat" "Day Th* Earth Caught Fir*" Abbott and Costello in "Wistful Widow Of Wagon Gap" Plus Cartoons and Other Features SUNDAY AND MONDAY Paul Newman in "THE PRIZE" Plus Rod Taylor and Jana Fonda "SUNDAY IN NEW YORK"

LADON - Roachdalo 7:30 Frt. - Sat. 2:30 Sun. TWKEBHP TtlES’ TOMCM ID

Johnson, Erhard Warn Soviets WASHINGTON UPI —President Johnson and W’est German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard have warned the Russians that they will be held responsible for any trouble In Berlin which might result from the new- Soviet-East German treaty. Erhard holds a news conference today to wind up a twoday viut which brought full agreement between him and Johnson on some aspects of the German question, but failed to trigger any immediae Western iniatives to promote German reunification. Erhard also planned to meet with Christian A. Herter, the administration’s special trade negotiator, for a discussion of problems connected with the current “Kennedy round” of tariff negotiation* at Geneva. The warning to Russia came in a joint communique issued after two meetings between Johnson and Erhard Friday. The two leaders said they sawnothing explosive in the Moscow “friendship” treaty at this time, however. The communique acknowledged that the Soviet Union, in serving some advance notice and cautiously phrasing the treaty, had been careful not to step on Western toes. The joint communique said Johnson and Erhard took note of the treaty. But it added that - | both agreed that “no unilateral move by the Soviet Union could in any way affect the rights of the three Western powers or modify the obligations and responsibilities of the Soviet Union wkn respect to Germany and B iriin.”

Barry Will Get Delegates Today WASHINGTON UPI — Sen. Barry Godwater’s GOP presidential bandwagon was expected to pick up a flock of convention delegates today despite Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton's ’ast-ditch efforts to derail it. The battle grounds were state ; Republican conventions in Con- I necticut, where Scranton was to make a personal bi^ for support in Virginia, New Mexico and Idaho. Th' latest United Press International tab' ’ation of delegate strength gave Goldwater 553 pledged de’'gates with 655 needed for nomination at next month's San Fran isco conven-

tion.

Scranton was credited with 97 after he made his formal announcement of candidacy when Alaska switched to give him 10 of its 12 first ballot votes. Previously, the bulk of Alaska's votes were for New- York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. Rockefeller had 121 committed delegate votes; Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodgo, 43. former Vice President Richard M. Nixon 10 and 163 were scattered among various other candidates. There were 189 votes uncommitted with the convention a month away.

Ex-Veep Nixon Scores Scranton NEW YORK UPI —Former Vice President Richard M. Nix- j on early today scored Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton for “vacillating” on a decision to enter the race for the Republican presidential nomination. Nixon said Scranton had a “fighting chance” but warned the governor “must now >e his own man. He must make his own decisions and not appear to be a puppet maneuvered by someone else.” Specifically, Nixon criticized Scranton for weakening in his resolve to enter the race last week following a reported telephone call from former President Dwight D. Eisenhower. “I must say that Gov. Scranton made a very unfortunate impression on Sunday by his weak, vacillating attitude on the CBS ‘Face the Nation’ telesion program,” Nixon said. “If a man receives a phone call and then changes his mind, he isn’t a very strong man,” observed the former vice president an arrival here from a two-day business trip in Lon-

don.

“Not even if the call is from General Eisenhower.” a newsman asked Nixon at Kumedy International Airport. “No.” said Nixon.

Flat For Rent LONDON UPI — The Daily Telegraph today quoted this advertisement for an apartment in a literary magazine: “Professional flat for furnished and newly decorated

lady.”

Catholic Session Starts Sept. 14 VATICAN CITY UPI — The Ecumenical Council reconvenes in St. Peter's Basilica Sept. 14, to discus" matters ranging from divine revelation to a condemnation of anti-Semitism-and possibly to birth control. Vatican sources disclosed Friday the revised list of decrees that will be put before the gathering of Roman Catholic bishops at its third session. Some of the less important items will merely come up for a vote without debate, but even so it is not certain that the council will be able to deal with all of the proposed topics. Among the main items on the 13-point list is a statement on the Christian unity movement with annexes on religious liberty and on the church’s stand regarding Jews and other non-

Christians.

Woman Victim Of Con Came ELKHART UPI — A 70-year-old Elkhart woman lost $1,500 of her life savings Wednesday through a confidence game in which the man who bilked her of the money posed as a bank official trying to solve an embezzlement mystry. The woman told detectives a man telephoned and identified himself as an Elkhart banker. He told her somebody in the bank was embezzling money and he asked her to help trap him. He told her to go to the bank and withdraw $1,500 in $10 bills, put the money in an envelope, and. if asked about the withdrawal, she was to say she intended to buy bonds. “You’ll get a $500 reward for your help,” the man said. She was told to take the money home in a cab provided by the “banker.” Upon returning to her house, the phone rang again and the man informed her “an officer will be at your door in a few minutes to pick up the money.” A moment later, there was a knock on the door and a welldressed man flashed a police badge and asked for the envelope. After waiting 24 hours and thinking it over, the woman contacted the bank and discovered she had been robbed.

Crashes Into Home RIVERSIDE, Calif. UPI — Pinkey Viola Straily of Colton, Calif., Friday swerved her car to avoid hitting another vehicle and crashed through a twobedroora home that only the day before had been vacated j by a family of five.

Lake 'Monster" Scares Workers SISTER LAKES, Mich. UPI —The “Monster of Sister Lakes” is posing a serious threat to southwest Michigan fruit farmers. The “monster,” who has caused a stir in these parts most of the week, has driven some of the migrant workers from the

fields.

“It may be a joke to some people.” one farmer said, “but it’s no joke to us.” Another said his migrant berry pickers had heard that the “monster” had already eaten four people. Four families packup and fled one farm and workers on still another had to be prodded to return to the fields. Meanwhile, even the zoologists were haggled by the “mon-

jster.”

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