The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 June 1965 — Page 3

I

AFO Attorney

Offers Aid WASHINGTON T'PI —

(cases for the unions decided against filing petitions for reconsideration or rehearing. As for getting legislation through i Congress to override the high 1 court, most labor officials doubt

CIO attorneys were called to a that 11 would stand much chance special conference here this P a;?sa ^ e -

week to assess the impact of two Supreme Court decisions limiting the anti-trust im-

niunity of labor unions.

J. Albert Woll. AFL-CIO general counsel, arranged the meet-

, lunch. Bliss ordered this meet- 'least 654 compared with 559 on ing to be held behind closed this date last year.

doors. In recent years, the GOP s

^ ... . ... A fiery car-truck collision

National Comnuttee has held f ^ J ^

.... . Saturday near Scipio on Indioccasional, brief clased sessions „ , . , .. f. , ^ ^ ^ , . . .. ana 7 claimed the lives of Mrs.

but has opened most of its

meetings to the press.

Republicans Meet

With Bliss

WASHINGTON UPI — The

ing of labor lawyers to discuss Republican National Committee the probable impact of the nil- and GOP state chairman gathings and the steps unions can ered today to hear what Naf&ke to protect themselves. tional Chairman Ray C. Bliss - The decisions provide that un- has done to get the party movi»ns lose their traditional ex- ing again. emption from antitrust prosecu- Former President Dwight D. Uon — or civil triple-damage Eisenhower was to address a muts — if they make an agree- lunch session of the two-day tnent with one employer to fan- meeting today.

Juanita Griffin, R.R. 4, Colum'bus, Lee Waltz, 23, Highland,

The agenda Included filling ant j w if e> Barbara Ann, 19. three vacancies among four ■ two women were killed invice chairmanships of the com- stantly and Waltz died a few mittee, and advice from Mayor hours later in an Indianapolis William Cowger of Louisville, hospital.

Ky., and Robert Walker, execu- I

tive director of the Republican Melvin Browning. 20, Cicero, Associates of San Diego Coun- and Hubert Rose - 22 - Chesterty, Calif., on how Republicans field - were killed early Sunday

can win in metropolitan areas,

in a two-car collision on Indiana 19 near Civero. Five other

persons were injured.

}x>se uniform wage standards en competitors. They were handed down in

Bliss called the meeting to offer a progress report after he had been in office only three

cases involving the L*nited months. He took over the naMine Workers and a small Ten- tional headquarters April 1,

succeeding Dean Burch, a protege of Barry M. Goldwater, the defeated 1964 presidential

nominee.

Except for the Eisenhower

nessee coal company, and the Meat Cutters’ Union and the Jewel Tea Co. grocery stores

in Chicago.

The lawyers who fought the

Twelve Persons Killed On Hoosier Highways By United Press International At least 12 persons died between 6 p.m. Friday and midnight Sunday in one of the worst-non-holiday weekends of the year on Indiana highways. The deaths, including five in just two accidents, raised the state's toll for the year to at

A new convenience has been added at The Laundry A changer that will accept one dollar bills has been installed for your convenience. ON BLOOMINGTON STREET

Richard Wise, 38, Mishawaka, was killed Sunday when a station wagon driven by his wife pulled from a county road into the path of another car on U.S. 20 near Mishawaka. Ten other persons, including seven children, were injured in the crash. Mrs. Nadine Pitcher. 66. Fort Wayne, was killed Saturday night in Fort Wayne when another car collided with one driven by her husband. The Pitcher car then slammed into a parked car. Thomas Hoagland. 21, Redkey, was killed Saturday night when his motorcycle went out of control on a Jay County road near Redkey and struck a culvert. Four other persons were killed in separate accidents Friday night and early Saturday. A dozen weekend traffic fatalities send Indiana's death toll on a sharp climb to at least 655 compared with 559 a year ago. Five were killed in two of the accidents in which 12 fatalities occurred, and Clarence Miller. 48, Lafayette, died Sunday night in an Indianapolis hospital from injuries suffered April 5 in a head-on collision on U.S. 52 bypass near Lafayette.

Four Persons Drowned In

Hoosier Waters

By United Preu International

Four persons drowned in Indiana over the weekend as Hoos- ^ iers flocked to lakes and streams to escape from heat which reached the 90-degree mark in some

sections of the state.

Edward Redermacher, about 20, Munster, drowned in Lake i Michigan Sunday afternoon while swimming with a group of friends at an unprotected part of Indiana Dunes State Park. The friends said they heard Redermacher call for help but were unable to reach him. State police divers recovered the body Sunday night in 10 feet of water about 150 feet from shore. Anthony Robert Uloza, Jr., 18. Hobart, drowned Sunday morn- ; ing while swimming with a j group of friends at Wahob Lake ! near Valparaiso. Members of j the group said they were swim- ; ming around a raft and suddenly realized Uloza was missing. Porter County sheriff’s deputies recovered the body a short time

later.

Mrs. Jo Ann Henderson, 39, Terre Haute, drowned early Sunday when the boat in which she was riding struck a log in the Wabash River near Terre Haute and capsized. Her three companions managed to swim to shore safely. Mrs. Henderson’s body was recovered Sunday morning. Mark Walters. 9. rural North Salem, drowned early Saturday night while fishing in a farm pond near his home. Authorities believed he slipped into the water from the bank. His body was recovered a short time later.

Celebrates 85th I

Birthday

The Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Indiana Monday, June 28,1965

Col. Houari Boume-

EASTON, Conn. UPI — Helen Keller, whose trimuph over blindness and deafness has become legend, quietly celebrated her 85th birthday Sunday. Now frail with age but still alert, Miss Keller sipped her favorite champagne and munched on birthday cake at a small gathering of family and friends in the white clapboard house which crowns her little estate here.

em states, quietly interviewing i ed aide, dissident Klansmen, victims of dienne.

Klan violence and law enforce- Communist China led the ment officials who have dealt fight to hold the conference as with the hooded nightriders. 1 scheduled despite a weekend But the investigators are en- bomb blast that ripped the

countering instances where niee t in £ ball.

The so-called

such persons are being threat-

ened with economic and social | the sources . said ’ headed

reprisals and in some cases even physical violence if they

cooperate.

Committee Finds Scare Threat - WASHINGTON UPI — Congressional investigators looking into the activities of the Ku Klux Klan have found that potential witnesses are being frightened off by threats of violence or of economic and social reprisals. Sources reported during the weekend that investigators for the House Committee on UnAmerican Activities were finding it difficult to persuade prospective witnesses to appear either at the closed or the public hearings on the KKK planned for this summer. Committee staff members are operating in a number of south-

Conference Is Postponed ALGIERS. Algeria UPI— The postponement of the second Afro-Asian conference, a bitter blow to Communist China, almost caused an open split between so-called “moderates, and a pro-Peking bloc, informed sources said today. They said that a face-saving agreement to hold the conference next Nov. 5 with a surface show of unanimity precented a real showdown. Those lined up with China in taking a hard line included Algeria. Indonesia, Syria, Ghana, Guinea, Kakistan and Cambodia. The leaders of Communist China, Indonesia and the United Arab Republic held a “little” Afro-Asian summit conference Sunday in Cairo. The collapse of the main Afro-Asian conference, originally scheduled to open Tuesday, came 10 days after the overthrow of Algerian President Ahmed Ben Bella by his tnist-

“moderates.”

by

Japan, included the Philippines, India, Thailand and Turkey. They also counted some of the British Commonwealth African members and Iran, Tunisia and

Morocco.

A third group, led by the U.A.R., included most of the i remaining Arab countries. The postponement also was a bitter pill for the Boumedienne regime which had maintained almost to the last minute that j the cnoferenee would be held. Communist China, lobbying for the conference, went as far | as issuing a public statement j Friday saying that “rumors” that Peking sought a postponement were being spread by “imperialists and reactionariea trying to sabotage the confer-

ence.”

DR. BURNS, D.C. CHIROPRACTOR NOTICE My Office will be closed June 26-27-28-29 teeth JocVion t Suni.t Drive Phone Ol 3-5814

Anf it

m , '

COLD STATISTICS

*

- • ~ ‘ i * „ ip „

ATHENS, Ga UPI — Per capita consumption of frozen vegetables has increased 15 times since 1941, according to the University of Georgia extension service. The average American at only seven-tenths of a pound of frozen vegetables in 1941, the service said.

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. .(he mij wile peop/e qel ahead

I. V. Highlights By United Press International “It’s What’s Happening, Baby!’’ CBS. This is a 90-minute rock ’n’ roll show, and is produced in conjunction with the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity, the entertainment being interspersed with advice about opportunities available to out-of-school youngsters. The host is a disc jockey, Murray the K. Also ! scheduled to apear are Ray Charles, Bill Cosby, Fred : Gwynne. 8:30 p.m. CDT. “Where the Action is," ABC. Debut. Daliy half-hour rock ’n’ roll show. 1 p.m. CDT. Summer Playhouse, CBS. A vacation series of half-hour test films for programs that failed to make the grade. The opener is about a man who inherits a bankrupt town. It is a comedy. 7:30 p.m.

CDT.

Jonathan Winters Special, NBC. A repeat hour with Bob and Ray, the New Christy Minstrels. color. 8 p.m. CDT. Alfred Hitchcock. NBC. Peter Fonda as a poor farm boy who seeks revenge from a politician (Robert Emhardt) who murders his father. Repeat. 9 p.m. CDT. Ben Casey. ABC. Maureen O'Sullivan as the over-protective mother of a handicapped high school boy. Repeat. 9 p.m. CDT. ABC's Nightlife. Les Crane returns as host for four weeks. Dave Garoway. comedian Nispey Russell are regulars. Check local times.

SAVINGS AND LOAN HSSOCIRTIOn

STEPS DOWN—District Judge Joe B. Brown (above), who told Jack Ruby be must die in the electric chair for the slaying of presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, has withdrawn from the legal entanglements of the case in Dallas, Tex. He did not offer an explanation.

LAST WEEK! Sutherlin Big TENT SALE

Freezers

169

NO EXCISE TAX

- Easy Terms

350 LBS.

CHEST

YOUR

CHOICE

$

No Money Down

• Porcelain Enamel Interior • Fast Freeze Dept. • Dry wall construction

• Adustable temperature control • Freezer Shelve* • Storage Trivet

$ 169 LAST WEEK OF SUTHERLIN BIG TENT SALE

Tent location: Next to Pat’s Shell Station A FEW STEPS North of KROGERS