The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 July 1965 — Page 1

lUDrm STATS LIBRARY If.'BIAL'APOLIS, IIIDIAfJA

Weather Forecast Partly Cloudy

VOLUME SEVENTY-THREE

The Daily Banner

M lt Waves For All"

"W» can net but speak the things which we have seen or heard." Acts 4:20 GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, JULY 5,1965 UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL SERVICE NO. 215

COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES COUNCIL TO MEET

William C. Kelly To Be Speaker On July 8th

Miss M. K. Wright Milwaukee Is Dies Saturday Circus City

William C. Kelly, Superintendent of Parks and Recreation at Salem. Indiana, will be the guest speaker for the July 8 public meeting sponsored by the Community Activities Council. The meeting will be held in the Junior High School auditorium located on Spring at

Walnut St.

Traffic Toll Still Climbing

By United Press Internotionol

Fourth of July weekend traffic death mounted rapidly today. Safety officials said they feared the toll would set an all-time

summer holiday high.

A United Press International Mr. Kelly, who has held his tabulation at 4:30 a. m. EDT present position m Salem for showed 387 killed in traffic acover four years, has had twelve cidents since the holiday weekwars of experience in recreation end started at 6 p. m. Friday. *nd five years in coaching. He Or ownings, airplane crashes and received a Bachelor of Science other accidents killed 127 more. Degree at Indiana State Uni- The breakdown: versity and was a graduate stu- Traffic 414 dent at Toledo University and Brownings 88 Indiana University. Mr. Kelly Planes _ - 4 received his Master of Arts De- Miscellaneous 48

Homemade Firecracker uses Loss Of Hand

Taxi Driver

Return To Jobs

Miss Mabelle K Wright died Saturday evening at the Greencastle Christian Home, after an extended illness. She was bom July 10, 1891, the daughter of Henry and Mary Barwick Wright. She is survived by her mother, Mrs. Mary B. Wright. Miss Wright graduated from DePauw University in 1911, with Phi Beta Kappa honors, received her music degree in 1912 and studied one year in

PROVO, Utah UPI-A young Germany. She taught in colMormon missionary remained in le&es in Kansas and North Dacritical condition today after kota and after returning to

MILWAUKEE UPI—Milwaukee was Circus City USA today as the largest, longest circus street parade in history draw hundreds of thousands of visitors for a look into the thrills of yesteryear.

Guerilla Forces Overrun Government Outpost

The five-mile-long extravaganza recalled the circus parades which flourished from

1880 to 1920.

To Rush Votes Registration

SAIGON UPI — Guerrilla forces today stormed through the government outpost at Ba Gia 335 miles northeast of Saigon, killing one American military adviser and wounding an-

other.

A U.S. spokesman reported

left hand and two

radio and macadam roads, but for the third successive Independence Day holiday were re-

Greencastle, she was associated created here through the efforts

■ ^. h !! nght hand When with the Alumni Office at De- of the Circus World Museum at NEW YORK UPI Thou <■ ^ homemade Pauw University. She was a Baraboo, Wis. drivers returned to their jobs Rogers 19. Chicago, Sorority, DAR., Woman s Club

also suffered injuries to his Morning Musicale, and Go-

By United Pre»» International

Summer volunteers began arriving today in Mississippi to

„ , . , , push a voter registration drive, heavy Vietnamese losses in the

Those parades vanished with „ , , , Most of them were adult vol- overwhelming Communist as-

unteers who will undergo a two- sault.

day orientation period before

, . , , . In air action, giant American

being assigned to various coun-

ties for the summer, according

B52 bombers flew across the

today, ending a seven-day

strike for union representation, arms and abdominal region. bin Memorial Methodist Church.

: !«i

Funeral services will be held

The explosion took place San- ^esdav afternoon at 2 p in. a day in a dormitory at Brigham ^ the Hopkins-Walton Fu-

gree in Recreation from I.U.

Total

556

In Chicago, a similar strike

continued.

N^ionaf Labor^elations^oard Y<Hm * UniverSity ’ , wll€re ^ neral HomeVwith ^rial in For-

est Hill Cemetery. The Rev. Claude McClure will have

Pacific Ocean from the Strate-

to the sponsoring National As- gic Air Command base on sociation for the Advancement Guam and raided a suspected

Forty exquisited carved and of Colored People (NAACP). Communist stronghold in the painted parade wagons, the Charles E\ers. Mississippi north of Saigon,

showpieces of the old-time eir- NAACP field secretary, said the cus, were hauled here aboard a program will be vastly differcircus train pulled by a 1923 ent from the 1964 project which

It was the second such B52 raid in the past two weeks on

steam locomotive.

The topic of Mr. Kelly's talk will be. what a Superintendent of Parks and Recreation does; what his responsibilities are; how he coordinates and inte-

grates a public recreation pro- JACKSON, Miss. UPI — Misgram in a community at our sissippi's first Republican maysize. and. how such a program is ©rs since the Reconstruction era financed. He will be happy to take office today.

Republicans To

Take Office

election, was announced Sunday

night by City Council President I * Peparatwn for * churcil

sion abroad.

era was .studying German in

mis-

answer any questions you might

have.

The Community Activities Council urges you to come to ♦his important meeting so that we may all learn how we can further the expansion of a recreation program in our own

community.

Swearing-in ceremonies were

Paul R. Screvane following a meeting with representatives of drivers and taxi fleet owners. Screvane, who is acting mayor while Robert F. Wagner is visiting Denmark, told newsmen: “I have just secured a settlement in the taxi strike.” Under the agreement, some 15,000 cabbies go back to work

Two other youths were treat-

of the services.

may can at the fo-

od for minor injuries and re- Hferaj home after 7 p m. leased. The force of the blast evening,

knocked out a window, riddled

< *>»*.•.

a desk and tore holes in walla. Edwin Butterworth, a BYU

spokesman, said the youth ap- — parently was trying to put to- Miss Florence Woodrum,

They had star billing In a parade that also featured 31 bands marching imits, cowboys and Indians, mateh*4 teams of draft

and wild

horses, and perfo:

animate

Miss Woodrum Dies In Brazil

Bros.

resulted in the murders of three the Communist-controlled area workers at Philadelphia, Miss. known as vvar zone D -

Evers said the summer workers would assist in voter registration, conduct “citizenship clinics” and work toward upgrading Negroes generally.

e parNorth

scheduled for attorney Paul ^ h °^ t any inime ^ iat ® S^Ans, gether a Fourth of j u jy Greencas ti e resident, died late bousing

Riding at the ade was Henry who grew up in Baraboo when II had winter

g now

quarters in

Grady at Hattiesburg and for- ^ a tem P° rary Orator, former City Councilman R. D. Har- rDer ma y° r aI1 ^ Judge \ incent mond at Columbus, along with Bupellitteri, win rule on any

the city officiate around the

with unstable ments.

chemical ele-

REMEMBER: the date, Thurs. day, July 8. The time, 8:00 P.M. The place. Junior High School

Jtonum. Come with

state.

The two new mayors — both former Democrats—were elected last month in the Mississippi Republican party's strongest bid for power at the local level in modern times. Six other Repub-

your iioan* won election as aldermen

in four other municipalities.

discharges sought by owners.

or suspensions

Sunday evening County Hospital

where she

Now You Know

By United Preu International

About 500 million years ago, Bn pre-Cambrian times, the

Mrs. VanCleave Dies Mrs. Norma Van Cleave, wife

Private Still 'Seeks Justice'

FORT MONMOUTH. N. J. UPI—Declaring “I only seek justice,” Pvt. David Ovall entered hi.s third week of fasting today to protest the Army’s reftMtl to discharge him as a

at the Clay in Brazil, a patient

. .

The parade YfUipt together by museum director C. P. Chappie Fox and financed by the

Brewing Co, as part of Id M&iaukee" cele-

authentic

PARMA. Italy UPI—Authorities counted at least 14 dead early today from Italy's worst tornado in decades.

of Robert Van Cleave of Bain- OOOBCientlous objector-

bridge, died at Memorial Clinic in Indianapolis at 2:00 A.M.

North Pole him located near Monday. Hawaii, according to the Na- Funeral arrangements will be tional Georgraphic Society. announced later. Withholding Tax Scale To Get New Study

July 4th Display

Injures 20

The 23-year old draftee from Los Angeles said his parents IffeVe sent a telegram to Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas asking for help. Ovall tried unsuccessfully to meet with a physician-friend from the University of Pennsylvania Sunday to get a civilian diagnosis of his condition. He said his friend. Dr. Ameer Dixit of India, was a believer in • 'GteOCientioiis objection and a supporter of his cause.

The big storm slashed through a dozen northern towns Sunday, producing hail stones ranging in size from eggs to grapefruit. Heavy property damage was reported all along the tornado’s

30-mile path.

of he'

a menu

Church Eastern SfhiR Jlo. 255. Survivors are one

Dr. W. \V. Woodrum,

Colorado; one nephew, Glen

At least 163 persons were hos- Woodrum, Greencastie R. 2. She pitalized—12 of them in grave was preceded in death by one condition—and countless scores sister, Mary, and two brothers, more were given emergency aid 55 alter and Edwin V oodrum. at field units. Funeral services will be held

Wednesday at 2:00 p.m. at the Rector Funeral Home, with burial in Forest Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home after 2:00 p.m.

Tuesday.

the past She was

1873 in Pu

ter of Levi aii<f' Ctear

II"

ite hospital was aSorosSlIlSIparade, from a pat- the replicas of t|ie old circus

to the ht$ge satin drap-

18 elephants ,‘ard of Bara-

ialist. e in this city. She was

First Christian Cecil B. BeMille would have the Greencastie loved it—the £olor, noise and

Roman Catholic Criticizes Luci SAN FRANCISCO UPI —

Episcopal Bishop James A. Pike criticized Luci Johnson’s rebaptism as a Roman Catholic in order to further the ecumenical movement, the bishop said Sun-

day.

Fragmentary radio reports

on the Ba Gai fighting said guerrilla troops overran the outpost in Quang Ngai Province, inflicted “heavy casualties” on its battalion-sized force of defenders and captured two

105-millimeter howitzers. The outpost “fell in a matter

of minutes.” according to reports received here. Government reinforcements were believed to have reoccupied tho garrison after the Viet Cong

had done their damage.

A communique said only that "a number'’ of the Guam-b -sed

In my near! and mind, I felt bombers hit a jungle area 25

miles northeast of Saigon on

“a spoiling mission.”

The announcement did not mention results. It said the raid

Uni%

vision

it to be my duty to speak out against what I regard as an act contrary to the ecumenism that is aboard in the world of today.”

Pike said after delivering a ser- u - as designed to harass the enmon strongly critical of the sec- e my and “disrupt his operaond baptism of the President's tions, facilities, communications youngest daughter. and morale.”

Pike, leader of the California

Episcopal diocese, mounted the The garrison at Ba Gia wa« ____ high pulpit at historic Grace badly mauled by the Commu *

to think any Cathedral Sunday and called for last Maj -9 and officials

earned of staging, an apology from both Miss

Johnson and Archbishop Patrick O'Boyle, archbishop of

Washington.

Low

Minister of Internal Affairs Paolo Emilio Taviani declared the zone a disaster area and promised aid for the injured and

homeless.

NEW YORK UPI — The highest temperature in the nation Sunday—excluding Hawaii and Alaska — was 117 at Palm Springs. Calif., the U. S. Wea-

^ _ , . _ , five years, there has been ther Bureau reported. The low (i .

this morning was 40 at Devils

Lake, N.D.

Rise In Defense

WASHINGTON UPI — Despite a sharp decline in the Soviet economy during the past

a

“conspicious rise in defense expenditures.” a congressional

study warns.

WASHINGTON UPI — The Johnson administration is working on a sliding scale payroll withholding rate aimed at the

DETROIT UPI — An aenal P^blem of “underwithholding bomb came down at a fireworks which forced many taxpayers to display Sunday night sponsored cough up much additional money by the Dad's Club of a Roman to ^ goverrun€nt la3t April 15

Catrolic church and exploded,

injuring 20 persons. A system of graduated with- A home-made bomb tossed The agency said the accident

lice Assign Ixtra Patrols LONDON UPI—Police assigned extra security patrols around American-owned buildings today to guar 1 against terror bomb-

ings.

European Playboy ^ ans ^ a Y ^ In Accident Rest At Ranch

PARIS UPI — Porfiro Rubirosa, the millionaire playboy, was killed in an auto accident today, the French news agency

reported.

JOHNSON CITY. Tex. UPI— President Johnson planned another day of work and play at the restful LBJ Ranch before wrapping up the holiday weekend and heading back to Wash-

ington.

The Chief Executive was ex-

Communist China Is Under U. S. Study

WASHINGTON UPI—A report indicating that Contmunist China may have made major strides toward construction of a powerful submarine fleet is

Sf. Louis Man Killed In Crash

said it was understrength when the Viet Cong attacked today.

Seven other Americans, all

Marines, were wounded today by a Viet Cong mine during a Leatherneck patrol near th« airstrip at Chu Lai, 360 miles northeast of Saigon. Six of the wounded men were reported in “good condition.” The seventh

was discribed as “fair.” A U.S. Army pilot was killed

and four American advisers wounded Sunday in heavy fighting 110 miles southwest of Saigon. A Communist battalion was routed, and 90 guerrillas bodies were counted on the bat-

tlefield.

U.S. authorities, in announcing the B52 attack on Zone D. did not disclose how many of the big bombers took part in

the raid.

It Helps

ALAMOSA. Colo. UPI- Colo-

Police said Edward Kaplan. 18. Detroit, took the bomb from the lap of Frances Bigman, 21, Detroit, and tried to throw it clear of the crowd when it exploded, nearly blowing off parts of his left hand. About 18 persons in the crowd of nearly 3,000 received minor injuries. Miles From Earth PASADENA, Calif. UPI — Tmerica’a Mariner 4 spacecraft, launched last Nov. 28 from Cape Kennedy, today was 124.509.238 miles from earth cruising toward Mars at 62, 017 miles an houd at noon PDT. 20 Years Ago U.S. planes bombed the Japanese mainland for the 30th consecutive day. Carl Torr arrived home after serving two years in England. CpL Harold Coffman was here from England on a 30-day furlough. The K.J.U. Class of the First Christian Church held a picnic supper at the some of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bee.

holding rates is now being designed at the Treasury to replace the present 14 per cent rate. The new rates would go up or down depending on the taxpayer’s income. Although always a problem, underwithholding was particularly acute last year because in cutting taxes. Congress cut the withholding rate even faster. Some taxpayers — no one knows for sure yet how many— were faced with having to make additional payments in April Others found their refund checks smaller than usual. The administration has been studying the idea of graduated withholding for some time. It is not yet certain whether the House Ways A Means Committee. where tax legislation originates in Congress, will have time to change the withholding system this session. But a source close to Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark-said that even with its full schedule, the committee would take up graduated withholding this session if the Treasury' presented it. He predicted the committee would approve it.

from a moving car shattered windows Sunday at the office of the American Express Co. in the heart of downtown London. The Independence Day bombing slightly damaged the door to the office. Debris littered the road in front. Detectives found fragments of a note among the debris. They said it appeared political extremists from a Caribbean country “who have a grudge against the U. S.” tossed the bomb. They would not name the country or give the wording on

the note.

Democrats Lead In Japan TOKYO UPI—Japan s ruling Liberal Democratic party led today in elections for 127 seats in the 250-member upper house of Parliament. It was the first test of strength for Premier Eisaku Sato and his pro-American gov-

ernment.

Sato candidates campaigned on a foreign policy plank supporting U. S. in Viet Nam. The Socialist Party, main opposition group, opposes Sato's

position.

happened in the Bois du Boulogne. a wooded area in Paris not far from the place where Prince Aly Khan died in a car crash a few years ago. Rubirosa was 56. Parents Acquitted Of Child Neglect INDIANAPOLIS UPI—Special Marion County Criminal Court Judge Lewis Davis, who said “they both suffered enough.” Friday acquitted the parents of three small children who burned to death in a house fire last winter. Orville Rowley. 26. and his Wife, Carol, 26. were charged with cruelty and child neglect in the fire Jan 29 here. Firemen found the children, Tamara. 5, Delco. 3, and Daytona, 1, in an upstairs bedroom. The children were home alone when the blaze broke out. Davis ruled the state had fail d to prove its case against tne couple, who also have two other children that were in school when the blaze broke out. “I can’t convince myself beyond reasonable doubt this girl was cruel and negelcted her children/’ Davis said.

pected to fly back to the White House tonight or early Tuesday. Johnson’s top aides have been on the scene, including Bill Moyers who arrived Sunday night. The President and -Mrs. Johnson, both looking suntanned and rested, have had a relaxing weekend, swimming and boating with Texas friends. Sunday, they attended Fourth of July services in the First Christian Church in Johnson City. The church was initiating a new air conditioning unit which Johnson, a long time member, had donated. After the service, the President got behind the wheel of a white station wagon and led a motorized pied piper swing around his recently restored boyhood home. Both Johnsons were in an expansive mood. The First Lady, who plans to remain at the ranch for a couple of weeks, greeted spectators gaily. “Hello everybody,” she said. “I hope you’re haring a nice vacation. We are glad to be back and hope you're having a nice Fourth of July.” The Johnson girls were elsewhere. Lynda Bird, 21, had flown from Washington to Laramie. Wyo., Sunday to be on hand for a trailer roundup. SI ^ is touring the West in a trailer.

under study by U.S. intelligence experts. The report, as yet unverified, says that 30 Chinese-built undersea craft, some with a surface missile-launching capability. are operaing in the waters off Shangtai alone. Up to now the Red Chinese have been credited with only 26 to 28 submarines in the standard manuals cataloguing the world's fighting ships. These were considered to have been built in Russia, though some were assembled in China. The new information would still leave China far behind the world’s major naval powers in undersea technology. And there was no indication the Chinese have acquired either nuclear power or an underwater mis-sile-firing capability such as possessed by America's Polaris submarines. But the intelligence is considered highly important evidence that the Chinese Reds have a base for extensive submarine training and the construction of a more advanced undersea fleet. The infromation is also bemg related to a veiled prediction by Navy Secretary Paul H. Nitze that the Chinese will have hydrogen bomb warheads within four years and intercontinental missiles by the mid-1970s.

EVANSVILLE. 111. UPI — Alben Braun. 62, St. Louis, was killed Sunday when his car collided with another auto on Illinois 3 two miles north of here. The other di'iver. Robert Schibt, 18. Prairie du Rocher, was seriously injured.

rado Gov. John A. Love, presenting astx-onaut Edward H. White and his family with four fishing rods for use on their Rocky Mountain vacation: “I didn’t bring you a fishing license, but I have the power to pardon you in case you get caught.”

NATIONAL WEATHER OUTLOOK imiiww

INDIANA WEATHER: Today partly cloudy, cooler in north, with scattered thundershowers in south. Partly cloudy and cooler tonight. Tomorrow fair in north, partly cloudy and cooler in south.

Minimum

65*

6 A.M. 7 A.M. 8 A.M. 9 A.M. 10 A M.

65* 66* 68* 72*

*«*•««»« Mtra*M t m»«*

77*