Chronicle Tribune from Marion, Indiana (2024)

4 A 1 Marion, Indiana, Chronicle Aug. 6, 19651 Deaths, Funerals Nelle C. Rybolt Mrs. Nelle Christman Rybolt, 42, 48 Colonial Park, died at 5:45 a.m. today at Marion General Hospital where she had been a patient for, two Mrs.

Rybolt had been ill for the past six weeks. -A life resident of Grant County, Mrs. Rybolt had been employed as a secretary at the hospital and attended the Methodist church. Surviving are the husband, Delmar; father, Christman, Marion; four sisters, Mrs. Oscar Smith and Mrs.

Gerald Dooley, both of Marion: Mrs. Raymond Foust, Ridgeville, and Mrs. C. E. Conn, Tuscon, Ariz.

Funeral services will be conducted at 2:30 p.m. Monday at 400 E. Main Gas City, by the Rev. Jay Morris and the Rev. Wesley Bullis.

Burial will be in Grant Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funerhome after 2 p.m. Saturday. Elmer Fulton HUNTINGTON services for. Elmer Lewis Fulton, 74, a resident of Huntington, will be held at 2 p.m.

Sunday at the Bailey Mortuary with the Rev. Gary L. Forbes officiating. Burial will be in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr.

Fulton died at 1:32 p.m. Thursday at the Wabash County Hospital. He had been in failing health for two years and had heen in serious condition since October. He was a native of Wabash County. and was a member of Asbury he, Methodist Church there.

He retired four years ago from Utah. Radio Products Huntington. Survivors include the widow, Lucille; one son, Lemoine (Pood) Fulton, Huntington; one daughter, Mrs. Hale Harvey, Andrews: one brother, Ford Wabash; four grandchildren and seven great-grandchil-1 dren. Friends may.

call at the funeral home after 7 p.m. today. Local Couple. To Attend World Church Session 3 Rev. and Mrs.

G. Lavon! Fisher, of the First Christian Church here will leave by plane early Monday to represent the church at the World Convention of Christian Churches. in San Juan, Puerto will convene Aug. 9. to Aug? 15.

v. The Rev. Fisher said representatives from all over the world will be attending the assembly which meets every five wears. He is to be the leader of one of the study breakfasts held on three mornings of the convention. 'The Fishers will return to.

Marion Aug. 16. Also attending the convention from the local church will he the Rev. and Mrs. Keith B.

Hall who recently returned to Marion on furlough from missionary work in India. The Halls will leave for Puerto Rico Sunday. Vote Rights Bill Signed (Continued from Page One) gro, and all others who have been denied the right to vote, can walk through those doors, use that right, and transform the vote into an instrument of justice and fulfillment. me now say to every Negro in this country: You must register, you must vote. And, you must learn, your choice advances your interests and the interests of the nation.

For your future, and your children's fudepend upon it. "This act is not only a victory for Negro leadership, it is a challenge to that leadership. It is a challenge which cannot be met simply by protests and demonstrations." Some of the civil rights leaders who 'led demonstrations were present as Johnson spoke. The President said the new act further means that "dedicating ed leaders must work to people their rights and responsibilities and to lead them to exercise those rights and responsibilities." "If you do this then you will find, as others have found before you, that the vote is the most powerful instrument devised by man for down injustice and destroying the terrible walls which imprison men because they are different from other men." GIVES DAUGHTER CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) Pres-1 Ident Gamal Abdel Nasser Thursday gave his eldest daughter, Hoda, 19, in marriage to Hatem Sadek, 27, a government official. REAL PAINTING MADRID, Spain (UPI) A museum official certified Thursday that a painting found in a village church near Madrid is a genuine El Greco.

The painting. "Our Lady and Saint Julian," hung in the church of Valdemoro for nearly two centurles, he said. 11 Persons Treated For Minor Injuries a William R. Thomas today of the William Friends here received. word R.

Thomas, 58, Daytona Beach, Fla. Mr. Thomas died in Daytona Beach July 23. He was a native of Grant County but left here about 15 years ago. Funeral services and burial were in Florida.

Merle Stephens YIP Lewis Kirkpatrick. LAFONTAINE-Funeral services for Merle Stephens, 67, resident of the Masonic Home in Franklin, will be conducted a't 2 p.m. Sunday at: the Brenneman-Hunter Funeral Home, LaFontaine. Mr. Stephens died at the Masonic Home Thursday night.

Chaplain Charles: Funkhouser of the home will officiate at the services, and burial will be in Mount Etna Cemetery. Mr. Stephens was a native of Huntington County; and was former resident of Wayne Huntington County. He was a retired salesman and inspector for National Cash Register Co: He was a member of the Banquo Christian, Church and Mt. Etna Masonic lodge.

Survivors include four sisters, Mrs. Raymond Kem, Banquo; Mrs. Terry LaFontaine; Mrs. Alvin Hedrick, Huntington, and Mrs. Frank Olds, Lagrange.

Friends may call at the funeral home after noon Saturday. 1- UPLAND Lewis Dale Kirkpatrick, 22, a resident of Rt. 5, Upland, died suddenly at 10:45 a.m. Wednesday at Groton, where he was stationed with the U.S. Navy.

The cause of death has not been determined. Mr. Kirkpatrick is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Kirkpatrick, Rt.

5, Marion; a brother, John E. Kirkpatrick, two, sisters. Mrs. Phyllis Justice, Rt. 5, Marion, and Betty Kirkpatrick, at home, and the maternal grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Clyde Edwards, Marion. The body will be returned to the Jones Funeral Home here. Funeral arrangements, have not been completed. CD Officials Are Ousted: (Continued from Page One) officer, and Mrs.

Bicket family activities officer. The two staffers "resigned" but with the understanding they were to be given other state. jobs. Robert S. Bates, director of the department, who was the center of an earlier fruitless fight with the federal government, also conceded "There's not much you can do with Washington." Bates said Strohl, former Portland police chief.

and a businessman there for 20 years before moving, to Indianapolis, met all qualifications for his job, as Bates understood them. Mrs. Bicket, who was a memher of the Marion County from 1954 to 1961 when she joined the CD staff, said that while she had not taken a merit examination, Strohl had and passed 'it with a high Strohl confirmed that his merit examination grade was 93.25. Both staff members, who served since 1961, had efficiency ratings of 90 per cent in their jobs. 83 Casualties In Jet Crash (Continued Page One) hurts.

Another B57 crashed into the Saigon River Thursday night; U.S. bird dog observation plane crashed' in Chuong Province south of. a Vietnamese AlH 'Skyraider crashed at the Qui Nhon airfield; a U.S. AlE Skyraider crashed at Bien Hoa, 15 miles north of Saigon. One of 10 U.S.

helicopters tryto aid 'the besieged U.S: Special Forces camp at Duc Co, in the central highlands-250 miles north of Saigon, was forced down by enemy ground fire. A. U. S. transport plane made a "miraculdus" landing at Saigon after Viet.

Cong ground fire shot. off, part of. its landing gear when it tried unsuccessfulto evacuate from Duc Co. NAMES GWIAZDA WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Johnson has named Hentry J. Gwiazda, a probate judge of New Britain, as chairman of the National' Selective Service Appeal Board.

PHOTOS STUDIED WASHINGTON (AP) The Defense Department said today that aerial photographs of the two North Viet Nam missile sites hit by U.S. planes July 27 are still being studied. STACK OF A LIFETIME CHICAGO A trade writer says the average American housewife washes about 340 tons of dirty dishes in her lifetime. a CARRIED FOUR TO FLAMING DEATH- -This is the charred 4 Persons 1- Die In Fiery Collision CHICAGO (AP) Four persons burned to death early today when their taxicab burst into flames after it was struck by a speeding auto on Chicago's North Side. A policeman who witnessed the crash said two of the victims died in the cab while the two others were thrown from the vehicle, their bodies still burning.

A spokesman for the coroner's office said the victims were two men and two women. er as 48. Police the cab drividentifieda One of the victims was identified from her. driver's license as Elsje M. Dillon of Chicago.

Occupants of the other vehicle were critically injured. They were identified as Byron Johnson and Michael Novogrucki of Chicago. Flames from the cab's ex-' ploding gas tank. shot into: a res: taurant. The fire in the' restaurant was extinguished within 15 minutes.

3 The policeman who witnessed the accident said the speeding vehiclej was moving at between 80 and 100 miles an hour. Works Board Accepts Bid (Continued from Page One) tion favoring such a move at its meeting Tuesday night. A request by the Mississinewa Boat and Ski Club to clean -out the lime sludge, in the Mississinewa River was delayed for investigationi of cost of pumping out the accumulated sludge and to find out: what is being done on a proposed federal project bv. the Army Corps of Engineers to dredge the river from the Charles Mill Dam south to Gas City. The club also asked the city to take down street lights at its docks since they no longer were needed.

The club ad paid for the utility. The Police Department, however, felt the lights should kept for illu-1 mination of. the area near Charles Park. The board approved a motion ta retain the lights at a yearly cost of $143 which Cochran said was the city's obligation. Changes in 10 street lights were approved after recommendations were presented by Earnest Durr of Indiana Michigan Co.

The proposals involve installation of three mercury vapor lamps on concrete poles on Sixth Street between Boots and Gal-. latin Streets, two mercury vapor lamps -on wooden poles at the alley on Boots Street between Fifth and Sixth Streets and the alley on Gallatin Street in the same area, one mercury vapor lamp on a concrete pole at Fifth and Gallatin Streets, one mercury vapor lamp on a wood pole on the alley between Adams and Washington on Seventh Streets and three mercury vapor lamps on wood poles at the Christian Church, Eighth and Boots Streets. In each case, the new lights will replace incandescent lamps on wood poles. Total cost of the improvement project would be $187 each year. A petition for a street light in the 1000 block of S.

Race Street was referred to. City Engineer Gurdon Huntington for a- report at the next board meeting. Similar action was taken on a sewer petition along' E. 33rd Street. Cochran said the entire area, there' is in need of sewthat the petition should be delayed until a program of sewer installation and improve, ment can be planned for the area.

petition for water service was approved for Robert Cassidy, 602 E. 44th wanted to connect to atwater main being, expended to property of Marion College. Approval was Eleven persons were Thursday in the emergency room at Marion General Hospital and later released. Ronald Vermillion, 17, son of Harold Vermillion, 4105 S. EdgeCourt, suffered a possible injury to his left ankle while playing ball at home.

William Hartley, 26, Rt. 4, Marion; received contusions and abrasions of the left. hand when he was pinned against a wall by a cow. Joyce daughter of James Davis, 711 W. 11th lacerated her right index finger, wrist and elbow on a soft drink bottle.

Tracy Ledbetter, 19-month-old son of Waymon Ledbetter, Rt. 1, Swayzee, the big toe on his left foot in a mishap at home. Beth Ann Nelson, 4, daughter of Lester Nelson, Fairmount, was treated for a cut on her left; foot she sustained when she stepped on a play fire truck. Tamara Watkins, 3, daughter of Ona Watkins, Fairfield Trail-. er Court, fell on a coffee table and was treated for a cut 'on her left eyebrow.

Phillip Sherry Yeakle, Yeakle, 3, 2818 daughter Lincoln of was treated for a cut on her scalp she suffered when, she fell on a cement porch. Kathy Drummer, 7, daughter of Earl Drummer, 527 Kem was treated when she cut her knee on a fan. Regina 42, Sweetser, was treated after she sustained a puncture wound on her left hand from a screwdriver. Renita Pyles, 7, daughter of Virgil Pyles, 2820 S. Brownlee fell off her bicycle and was treated for bruises on her forehead and both knees.

Ronnie Wilder, 4, 408 N. Miller was treated for a possible BB wound in his chest. 1,400 Persons Reported Killed In South Sudan LONDON (AP) A' Roman, Catholic weekly reported today' that more than 1,400 persons were 'killed last month in the Toddler Injured In Accident two-year-old Grant County girl. was admitted to Marion General Hospital about noon today after she ran. into the side of a truck near the corner of Fourth Street and Western Roberta Sue Freital, Rt.

1, received cuts. and bruises of the head, arms, legs and hands. Marion Police, who investigated the mishap, reported that the youngster ran I. between two parked cars and into the right side of a panel truck driven east on Fourth Street John E. Hamilton, 30, 2127 Westwood Hamilton was not held.

U.S., 8 Other Nations Open Naval Exercise WASHINGTON (UPI) -U. S. Atlantic fleet units and forces eight Latin American countries' soon will 'start their sixth annual series, of "Unitas" antisubmarine warfare exercises in South American waters. The Navy. announced Thursday that its ships would depart their home ports Aug.

9 and return Dec. 8 after exercises in the South Atlantic and South Pacific with forces of Argentina, Equador, Brazil, Chile, Columbia, Peru, Uraguay and Venezuela. The. joint exercises will begin Aug. 18.

The' U.S. units will circumnavigate South America and transit both the Panama Canal and the Straits of Magellan, visiting various South American ports along the exercise route. WRONG DATE Rev. John Putney, a missionary who has spent the last five years in ombia, South. America, will speak at 7:30 p.m.

next Friday at Bethel Tabernacle on the Wesleyan Methodist a p- grounds here. An earlier story in The Chronicle said that he would speak at. 7:30 p.m. today. AUTO STOLEN LONDON (UPI) Film: star Charlton Heston Thursday reported the theft of his Jaguar automobile.

He offered a $280 reward for its return. AUSTRALIA SKI HOST BRISBANE, Australia Australia's Gold Coast, 50 miles south will be the site of the world water-skiing championships Oct. 22 to 31. South Sudan in clashes between' Arab government troops and Negro residents and in a general massacre on the night of July 8. Quoting a Sudanese priest identified only as Father Joseph, the British Catholic Weekly Universe said; "The Arabs rose against Negroes in every town of the South on the night of July 8 without warning.

Innocent people were hunted down like wild beasts and either shot or tied in sacks which were then set alight. "They continued to plunder and burn all night and next day until afternoon. "In the city of Juda both the Catholic and Protestant cathedrals were machine gunned but no one was hurt. "Arabs pursued Negroes who'. fled to one of their own mosques and shot them down inside." The priest denied government claims that the.

Negroes had staged an insurrection. The Father Joseph was in a seminary at Kit when the attacks began. It said he escaped to Uganda. The Sudanese government appeared to be intensifying its military campaign in the southern part of the country. The government radio at Omdurman announced Thursday night that government forces were battling rebels in three southern areas warned anyone living there to head north to safer ground.

Sudan has about four million Negroes in the south. The Arab population totals about eight million. Shipping Lincs Plan Regular Channel Service STOCKHOLM Two Swedish shipping companies, the Swedish American Line and Swedish Lloyd, plan to open regular service across the English Channel, starting in the summer of 1966, with vessels that travel on an air cushion. Two Westland Hovercraft; each accommodating 38 passen-. gers, will be used at first.

By. 1968 the planners hope to be using craft that will hold either passengers and 34 cars or 500 passengers. The Hovercraft are to skim from Ramsgate, England, to lais, France, in 25 to 30 minutes; the 'regular channelsteamers take about hours. SEATED WOMAN TALLER CHICAGO-A woman's torso accounts for a greater proportion of her body weight than a man's-so that a seated woman is relatively taller than a seated man. OUTLAY $1.6 BILLION CHICAGO-Since World War I America's railroads have spent $20 billion.

And this year they plan to lay out a recordbreaking additional $1.6 billion. SMORGASBORD EVERY FRIDAY SATURDAY NIGHTS 5:00 TO 8:00 P.M. 7 6 different meats 50 appetizing salads vegetables 20 delicious and unusual desserts Adults 2.25 Children 8 and Under 1.25 Westwood Cafeteria 2nd and Miller Ave. wreckage of a taxicab in which four persons burned to death today after it caught fire in la collision with 'another auto Chicago's north side. Coroner's office said the victims were two men and two women two of whom are tified.

Two others. are hospitalized! (AP 'Photo) Moustronauts Make Short, Sub Orbital Rocket Trip OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) ha's space heroes, veteran astromouse McDermott II and rookie astromouse Black, went through a vigorous debriefing session today. They were rocketed 738 feet into space Thursday: The two tiny munched on crisp lettuce gobbled a tasty mixture of oatmeal and fresh water while anxiously awaiting the plaudits of the nation. The.

brains behind Thursday's space spectacular were Mike Most, Eldon Zorinsky and Tim Meyer, all 15 years old. They huddled in safety of a slantroofed blockhouse while the two brave mice were shot skyward in a sub-orbital flight from Cape Alfalfa; a vacant lot near the boys' homes. After tension-filled countdown, McDermott lI' and "Black rode their foot rocket high into the sky and were parachuted safely to earth. The boys said the shot was 'a. "perfect success." It was also a vindication of sorts for McDermott lI's namesake, McDermott who met an untimely death when.

he fell from the nose cone during a previous launch. 14 The two moustronauts took the pre-launch period calmly Thursday, lounging around and casually nibbling on sunflower Informed sources in the block house said the mice were relieved at being spared the normal pre-flight physical test. "We killed too many during previous tests so we had. to abandon Mike said. 'McDermott 1I was the first to enter, the rocket.

He went i in tail first, and observers noted he appeared somewhat reluctant to leave the ground judging. from his. spraddle-legged approach the nose cone. the launch area was cleared of reporters. and other dignitaries, Mike pushed a trig.

on a 12-volt car battery, the three rocket engines ignited, and the bird zoomed upvard. There was no vapor trail, although cameras were set up on a nearby hill to. trace the rocket's trajectory. The moustronauts fluttered to earth dangling beneath red and white parachutes, and landed on a window air conditioner in a house near the launch pad. A rescue team, amid shouts of "they're And "what a rushed to recover them.

After the flight, the astromice seemed. little wild. Black, apparently in la fit of pique, bit a newsman three times, Today the space heroes were resting comfortably, awaiting an invitation New York Iowa for a ticker tape paCity or even Coon Rapids, rade. Today In Washington WASHINGTON (AP.) Although the unemployment rate has dropped to an eight-year. low per cent of the labor, force, President Johnson says it is still far too ly among teen-agers and Ne-1 groes.

Johnson issued. his statement, in which he, expressed pleasure lover the general improvement in the employment situation, after the Labor Department issued its. July figures Thursday. There. was actually a big rise in jobs for teen-a'gers 1.6 million but they continued to pour into the labor force in such large numbers that their jobless rate dropped only from 14.1 to 13.2 WASHINGTON (AP) Congress has passed and sent to President Johnson a five-year, $185-million measure to extend, expand and accelerate an Inte- 5 DIE; IN BLAST KUWAIT (AP) Five persons were killed and 40 others injured in an explosion and fire aboard the Japanese oil tanker Kaizo Maru, at the port of Ahmadi.

BILL APPROVED WASHINGTON (AP) The Senate Labor Committee approved 12-1 today a bill extending President Johnson's antipoverty program for a second year. granted subject to annexation to the ciy. An agreement was from the Indiana State way Commission for installation of a traffic signal at Second Street and Western Avenue with they condition that the city pay the utility bill. The agreement was approved. A letter from.

Mrs. Stefan Ansbachel requesting cutting back of the sidewalk at the northwest corner of Second and Washington streets was referred to Huntington for a recommen'dation. Mrs. Ansbacher had asked that Second Street be widened along a building she owns at that corner. City Controller Harold Vice was granted permission to in; vest $15,000 in surplus funds from the Consumers Deposit Account of the Water Department in short term treasury notes to draw interest.

Hospital Notes NY 1 VISITING HOURS' Noon to 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. No visitors 'under 14. Third floor: 11:30 a.m.

to 12:30 p.m.; 2:30 p.m. to 3:30. p.m. Bables and are 6:30 shown to from 7:30 3 to 3:30 p.m. and to 7:30 p.m.

No visitors below 16. UH rior Department program to convert salt water for drinking. Both House and Senate acted Thursday after al conference committee worked out final details of the legislation. The bill authorizes an extra $185 million. The administration velopment whith when added to: unappropriated funds brings the total for fiscal 1967 to $35 million.

The bill also requires additional congressional authorizalions for amounts above $90 lion with such totals limited to $18t million. The administration had asked for $200 million. over five years with no provision for further congressional approval. WASHINGTON (AP) Republican congressional leaders have attacked administration spending. which they said has failed to reduce unemployment but has raised prices.

Senate GOP. Leader Everett M.i Dirksen of Illinois complained that the cost of living was up for the third" straight month. He, said such inflation "offsets the billions being expended in the highly- publicized war House on poverty." Gerald R. Ford of Michigan, sharing the rostrum Thursday with Dirksen at a joint news conference, charged that spending programs offered as 'panaceas for unemployment" not attained the administration's 4- year-old "interim goal" of an unemployment level of 4: per cent. Walkways.

Separate Pedestrians, Traffic LONDON One of the first cases of pedestrian and traffic separation will be ia a leading ture Barbican, rebuilt section of the historic City of London. Three 44 story apartment buildings are: planned. Parts of the development are connected by elevated walkways. Most buildings will have underground parking and street loading. NEPAL BUILDING.

HUGE KATMANDU, Nepal -The Singa Durbar, Nepal's government headquarters, is one of the Eastern Hemisphere's flargest buildings. It has more than 800 rooms. ADMISSIONS Andrew Eugene Kindler, 629 E. Bond Ave. Lyle Eugene Loper, 626 Farlook Dr.

Nursing Carrie Home. Smith, Golden Age Idella W. Newman, Gas City. Cynthia Eltzroth, Rt. 1, LaFontaine.

Franklin Smith, Sweetser. Aaron L. Hofer, 5513 Lincoln Blvd. I Paul E. Moore; 612 Miler Ave.

Mildred F. Royal, 414 E. 42nd St. Charles F. Shearouse, 3702 S.

Nebraska, St. Kinder, Fairmount. Mary R. Sullivan, Indianapolis. Paul S.

Smith, 702 Euclid Ave. I Michael R. Beeney; North Manchester. Judith Ann Bryan, Upland. Shawn P.

Beeney, North Manchester. Mark Hiatt, Sweetser. Oren Woodard, Warren. Gladys S. Kain, 630 E.

Wylie St! Fourth Bertie St. 0. Brown, 1413. We Mary L. Van Ness, Jonesboro.

DISMISSALS Mary L. Asbell, 3901 S. Nebraska St. Marcia L. Neeley, Rt.

1, Swayzee. J. Frank Charles, 202 N. Adams St. Barbara L.

Peters, 402 Wiley St. William E. Denham, 2243 W. Eighth St. John R.

Ferguson, Rt. 4, Marion. Penny D. Fischer, Gas City. Paul G.

Francis, Swayzee. Charles Shields, Fairmount. Esther L. Reese; Gas City. Steve, S.

Ott; 217 S. St. Janet Rose Zaucha, 1019 Terrace lAve. George A. Ditton, E.

19th St. Lillian H. Nashville. Rosemary M. Huffman, Huntington.

Goldie Eva Wallace, 419 E. Third St. "Lewis Leon Mullen, 3748 S. Boots St. Stanley E.

Day, City. Patricia Hosier, Gas City. Lucinda D. Norton, 2229 W. Seventh 4..

BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Charles Poe, 118 S. girl, 10:02: p.m., Aug. 5.

Mr. and Mrs: James Rodabaugh, 1649 W. 12th. boy, 11:26 p.m., Aug. 5.

Mr, and Mrs. Jimmie Blackburn, Fairmount, girl, 2:12 a.m., Mr. and Mrs. Glen England, Fairmount, girl, 7:23 p.m., Aug. 5.

Mr. and Mrs. Rolla; 1115 W. 52nd boy, 1:25 a.m., Aug. 5.

Mr. and Mrs. Steven Dawson, Gas City, girl, 10:26 a.m., Aug. 5. Fifth Of Venezuela's Budget In Building CARACAS The Venezuelan government plans to spend 20 per cent of national budget on public works.

an item that cost, more than $200 million last year. Projects include roads, hospitals, schools, housing, aqueducts, dams and waterworks. JAPAN BUYS TALLOW TOKY0-Imports of U.S. tallow by Japan increased from $20 million in 1959 to $26 million last year. 176 MILLION CARS WASHINGTON-Federal government analysts expect the United States to have about 176 million passenger cars by the year 2000.

1 re,.

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