Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Indiana Gazette from Indiana, Pennsylvania • Page 35

Location:
Indiana, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

fc Thursday, June 8, DUKE OF KENT'S BRIDE Katherine Worsley, 28, Is shown leaving her home in Hovingham, England, today for nearby York where became the bride of the Duke of Kent, 25. (AP Wirephoto via radio from London). Queen Elizabeth Of Kent Commoner By EDIY GILMORE YORK, Eng! (AP) The dash- tng Duke of Kent today brought Miss Katharirje coun- try girl and a commoner-r-into the royal family as his bride In Britain's wjedding of the year. Forty-six TV cameras recorded the service At the hedral, known as Anglican Cai York minster attended by Queen Elizabeth II and a glittering guest list of foreign royalty. The ceremony was performed by, the Archbishop of York, Dr.

Wjlliam Ramjiey. It, Was the) second consecutive! It was the first time 12-year-old Charles, who is Prince of Wales, had been permitted to walk in line with his mother. This was a tribute to the increasing responsibilities of his position. The queen and most of the royal family journeyed north to York for the ceremony. Nearly 100 per- the rain for the Minster's first royal weddng since Edward III, 16, married 14-year-old Phillipa 633 years ago.

Not too many years ago, when West Berlin 'Bone In 'K' Throat' JFK Tells Congressional Leaders Editors Note What information, in addition to that included he told Kennedy "you are well on the way to making him a good in his televised address to the na-jone." The Soviet leader indicated tion, has President Kennedy given congressional leaders about his conference with Soviet Premier Khrushchev? At what point did Khrushchev raise his voice? Jack Bell, veteran chief of the AP's Senate staff, discusses the following article the report Kennedy gave influential members of both parties. By JACK BELL WASHINGTON Kennedy has informed congressional leaders that Premier Khrushchev raised his voice when he regards Castro as unstable. Khrushchev told Kennedy that Americans were always giving him credit for engineering coups that he had nothing to do with. He said Iran will be lost to the West, but disclaimed any part in this. Laos Khrushchev said he wasn't interested in trying to make the Laotian government Communist.

He xvould be glad to settle for a neutral regime. Kennedy asked if the Soviet leader would help get the Geneva conference on Laos off the ground he told him in Vienna that West; and he promised so. a awotnwiy Berlin Is a bone that must come' Wars Khrushchev said there'conversations with French Presi- in these, he said the Soviets willjnopoly is gone and the United support such movements. States itself is open to attack. Strained In Tree Planting (Cdntinued from Page 1) Obituaries BLAItt LEWIS, 66, of passed away iii ffldiana Memorial Hospital, Wednesday night, June.

7, 1961. He was the husband Of Florence Jeffries Lewis. Crawford Funeral Home, Marion Khrushchev said the Kennedy replied that the United in Ottawa when Kennedy was Center, is in charge of Union is not interested in fighting States is committed to defend lifting several spades of dirt while A complete obituary will at the end of a long supply line. and would do so. He planting a tree at Government: 156 carried in Friday's Gazette, He said that if the United Statesjcould accept, that so far as Ken-iHouse, residence of Canada's gov-' chooses to do ajnedy was concerned, De Gaulle reference io is but what about the Atneri- ernor general.

The only treatment has been MRS. EDNA RACHEL NEHRtG, can President's successor? He; Use of a hot pad and inject ions'of Americans' business. Nuclear Testing he had to take "the" long pain reliever However Kenne- stuck firmly by his demand forjrange view in thinking of France's dy has at times used crutches Tune At. i widow of Charles J. G15 S.

Nehrig, of Pa, troika" control. Kennedy got the definite impression the Soviet leader is not interested in having any test ban and shows no alarm about the possible proliferation of weapons too ther nations, including Communist China, Kennedy also reported, more briefly, on his "very satisfactory" out of the Soviet throat. 'were three kinds. He predicted The President also reported that there will never be a nuclear Khrushchev indicated he He drew a rough map of Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Soviet Union's land mass, tro as not a Com- fringed with satellites. If it is a mun ist.

conventional war, he says, "we Kennedy briefed influential i will put five divisions where you members of both parties at a 90-'put one." minute White House conference! The third kind was a "holy" Tuesday before he told the of peoples trying to over- tion in a television-radio tyrannical governments cast a few hours later that the Though he denied that the Soviet West is ready to maintain its Union would give active backine rights in Berlin "at any risk." The briefing, during which the President read from his translator's transcript of some of the' conversations, was said to havej disclosed that Khrushchev wasj vitally interested in only two sub- 1 jects at this and a change in the secretariat direction of the United Nations. So reported by responsible! sources, these were some of major topics discussed and the, positions taken in the 12 hours of conversations between the two! leaders: Berlin Khrushchev has not' changed his position of more than two years' standing that he intends to sign a separate peace treaty with East Germany. He fixed no date for this action. He told Kennedy that nobody but the United States still believes East and West Germany can be reunited. The only time Khrushchev raised his voice in the whole period of discussion was when he talked about Berlin and used the bone in the throat phrase he has employed before.

(Kennedy said in his broadcast to the nation "there was no discourtesy, no loss of tempers, no threats or ul-j timatums by either side" during! the Vienna conferences.) The Soviet premier offered again to give Soviet and East German guarantees of continued Allied access to West Berlin. He proposed that U.S:, French, Brit- dent Charles de Gaulle. They talked in frank and cordial language. De Gaulle wants his own nuclear force because he fears that in a showdown the United States might not defend Paris. He argued that times have changed radically since the North Atlantic Treaty Organization was formed.

Then, he said, the United States had a monopoly on nuclear'weap- ons. Now, he went on, that mo- safety. De Gaulle was unimpressed the U.S. move to provide NATOj in I uv Llll VsJ ULV I ICO III i iprivate to ease the strain on Born October 21, 18S8 in Chicago, why not keep them youselves? until Sunday. late Charles Robert and Rosetta Walker.

Most of her life was in in to i II tit 1 M. iiv-i i iic waa They are your missiles and only tl I Palm ispent in Center Township, several you can order them fired. Si, -j Kenn ed art y- years in New Kensington, Pa. and Despite of this, De Gaulle was encouraging about the future strengthening of NATO. The French president believed that he past 10 years in Indiana.

Mrs. 1,1 Nehrig was a member of the Beth, up to the earlierj Unjted Presbyterian church the Womens Missionary Society of might be able to attain a settle-' The President plans to do much church. ment of the Algerian question byiswimmmg, but will play no golf. Surviving are: three daughters, fall, though some of his closest 1 wi be a complete rest.JMrs. Edward (Hazel) Aul, Indi.

advisers said they think more work," his press, amii 3i MrSi C)ay (Gertrude) time will be needed. ta Davis, Indiana, Pa. R.D. Mrs. De Gaulle said that once there! Sa 1n 6 er Kennedy used Reed E- (Mildred) Henry, New "yannis Por t.jKensingon R.D.) one brother, Ken- aaiu mat, unce mere is a settlement and France can 10 65 at pull out of Algeria the 400,000 troops tied down there, he will redeploy his divisions and add some of them to the NATO fdrces home He has not used' neth Walker Vandergrift; two sis.

them in Washington, Salinger terSi Mrs Myrtle W0 odall, Red. said. wood City, California, and Miss Salinger called reporters Into)zelma Walker, Iowa, his office to tell them about the, Fr i en ds will be received after injury. He said Kennedy would: 7:30 today (Thursday) at appear today on crutches. Robinson-Lytle's, Indiana, where But even as Salinger was talk- services will be conducted Satur.

ing with reporters, the President telephoned Salinger to say he would not use crutches today but would wait at least another day to see how he felt. Salinger disclosed that Kennedy did use crutches for two while at Hyannis Port, Mass. was just prior to his trip to Paris, Vienna and London, June 10 at 1:30 p.m. (DST). The Rev.

Howard Cooper will of. ficiate and interment will follow in the Oakland Cemetery Indiana, Pa. passed away Tuesday, June 6, Salinger said Dr'. Travel, scribed the injury as a sacral strain. umbo i moreland Hospital at Greensburg, Pa.

where she had been a patient Salinger said the doctor told him for the past 13 days. definition of a duchess, wedding of a member of the royal he re lied: A uchess is a lady family to a commoner. Princess Margaret, the queen's younger sister, married a year. The Duke of Kent, 25, is a cousin of the queen. Preliminaries were plagued by Intermittent rjain and the wedding service had jiardly been concluded when a railstorm broke.

Outside the church, a crowd suffered stoically through both the rain and the hail, determined to see as much as possible. The bride, a fair-Tialr'ed former tomboy with a nose, is the daughter of a well-to-do Yorkshire squire, Sir William Worsley. She is 28., t(iree years senior to the duke. We'ddiijig dress was of gos- duck." The bridegroom has been a duke since he was 7, when his father was killed in a wartime crash. He spent his childhood with carefully selected playmates.

But tomboy Kate grew up with the chilren of the village of Hovingham, near York. Her father. Sir William Worsley, chose to bring up his daughters in the country. The wife of the village postmaster, Mrs. David Davids, said of Katharine: "There's no snobbery in that girl.

She'd play in the fields and was just one of the village children and the palace will never be able to change her." The Duke of Kent is perhaps the most democratic member of the royal family. the city, and suggested stationing U.N.t roops there. Kennedy replied that the West, is in Berlin legally, not merely I by sufferance, and intends to stay He said Berlin is a foundation stona in American security. United Nations Khrushchev contended the U.N. actions in the Congo, under the direction of Secretary General Dag Hammar-ifor the time being.

The date of skjold, were not neutral but were' FALCONS Graduating Cadets at the Air Force Academy near Colorado Springs, aps into the air after being dismissed yesterday following their graduation from the A total of 217 received their diplomas and became commissioned officers. (AP Wirephoto) the President is suffering "con-i Born August 21, 1922, at New stant discomfort, something like a Alexand a a she was a daugh- steady toothache ter of the late John and Bertha Salinger said Kennedy felt an Aikens Re ine and had ent immediate pain while" planting 10 her llfe the same community, the tree in Ottawa, but made no was a member the Slick, mention of it. United Church. Salinger said Dr. Travell had Survivin ap Her husband, made extensive tests and felt no AIe Pratt, serious concern about the three sons Samuel Jr Jack and He said she found no sign ofY Frank at home; five daughters, ruptured disc or of any infection.

i Mrs Gold Becker, Lenora, Syl- Salinger said Dr. Travell hasj via Pa and Pamela at used Novocain to relieve two Dr hei Arthur Repine of pain. i Hadleyville; and John Repine of Dr. Travell is confident the con-; Black Lick; three sisters. Mrs.

dition will remedy itself, Salinger said. Blames Serious Violations 1 (Continued from Page I) pointed against Soviet interests. the next meeting of the confer- course. Never again, he said, would the ence wil1 announced in due Soviet Union be placed in a position where its national security policies could be interfered with by the international organization. An American source said Wednesday night that the U.S.

on would not attend any dicated of the "troika" policy Iurttler sessions of the conference under which the Soviets would in-! called to cna rt the future of Laos His crowded years have includ- fast cars, loving hotj soldiering and practi-1 Burner silk gauze with an thread. It had bodice with a small; roll collar and long tight sleeves' fastened witjh tiny buttons. Her veil was of silk tulle, held by a' diamond baijideau. She carried hlm a 8" ar little cat." bouquet of ignite roses. Apart from Satchmo's hot trum- The duke, wore the ceremonial pet, the sweetest music in the scarlet and blue uniform of the young duke's ears has been the, Royal Greys.

He greatly'hum of a well-tuned motor in sist that the unanimous vote of until the rebels a real the pro-Communist their attacks and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Lou Armstrong once called resembles tyis late father, who sports car. And while becoming a was killed iiji a World War II soldier, he has also crash. learned a reputation from his Queen Elizabeth entered the ca- friends as a young man who thedral flanged by her husband, i spends a lot of time in London eluding the United Nations jGromyko is flying from Moscow Cuba-Khrushchev does not re- t0 Geneva tonight. Western dele- jgard Castro as a Communist Buti 8ates hoped he would brin 8 instructions for the Communist bloc to get behind the U.S. demand 1 for more power for the interna-j tional truce commission in The American delegates to the, Arrest Pair Of Riders At Airport Helen Detrick, Saltsburg R.D.

Mrs. Isabel Fennell, New Alexan- He said there has been some dria 2 Mrs. Goldie Zagozan, improvement despite the rigorous Ohio; and one grand- schedule carried on by Kennedy daughter, since the injury. i Friends are being received at Salinger did not go into details tne Harold T. Robinson Funeral of the nature of the treatment the Saltsburg, Pa.

where serv- President receiving other than ices will be conducted Friday, the use of Novocain. He did June 9 at 2:30 p.m. (DST). Rev, that there has been no bandaging 'Robert Hultz will officiate and the injury other than a small I corset-like brace which Kennedy normally wears for his previous back condition. In technical language, Dr.

Travell described the injury to Salin- as a strain of the joint be- the lowest lumbar vertebra terment will follow in the Edgewood Cemetery, Saltsburg, Pa. PAUL PORCH, 73, of Indi. ana Street, Homer City, passed away at his home this morning, June 8, 1961. The Askew Funeral Home, Prince Phi Child, Princ ent to her ip, and her oldest stores that sell such things as itching powder, cigars that blow hrone. up and glasses that leak.

French Town "Invaded" By Farmers MRS. NAN NEUGEBAUER Clymer Class Plans Thirty TAru'coKT iwecn in JACKSON, Miss. (AP)-A white' and the sacrum. City, is in charge of arrange- New York State assemblyman. Disclosure of the injury points! ments A complete obituary will ba and a Negro companion were ar-jUP why Kennedy is anxious to get carried in Friday's Gazette, rested today when they tried to some rest at Palm Beach, Fla.

desegregate facilities at the lark He leaves for Florida this after ANNIE of i Jack -'noon, but plans to return to Pa. R.D., died at 11:45 a.m. son Municipal Airport. Sunday today Thursday, June 8, 1961 in A racially mixed group of nine The type of injury described by Indiana Hospital where she had 'Freedom Riders" was en route'the physician is one that occurs' bce admitted May 31. from New to again test frequently among weekend ath-' Friends will be received at tha 'Jim Crow" barriers in the rail-letes and do-it-yourself household-Donald S.

Bowser Funeral Home, road terminal here. ers ho attempt tasks for whiclvPlumville. A complete obituary will The New York lawmaker, Mark they are not in physical carried in Friday's Gazette. iLane, 33, of Manhattan, and Per-' But in Kennedy's case, any back: jcy Sutton, 40, president of a New injury arouses more than normal! REV, WALTER SCOTT BON. jYork City branch of the National because of his history of NELL, 81, retired Lutheran pas- Association for the Advancement with his back.

As ajtor, died at 12:35 a.m. June 2 in Colored People, were arrestedjy oi 8ster he hurt it playing foot-' F.aston Hospital. He was hospital- jalmost immediately after they ball. jized May 16 after a long illness. off a Delta Airlines plane Ar during World War II His home was at 735 Berwick from Montgomery, Ala.

jhack was badly wrenched when a Street in Easton. Sutton protested: "I'm a trav- Japanese destroyer rammed The Rev. Mr. Bonnell was pas. eler in interstate commerce." sank a PT hoat Kennedy com- tor of Zion Lutheran Church, Long as a junior grade Navy Valley, from 1928 until hit Geneva conference forced cancel-, YO A Poiini lation of Wednesday's session aft-' 1x614111 er the Pathet Lao rebels captured' Police Capt.

J. L. Ray ordered Padong with a violent artillery 3 In Jersey Fami NEWARK members death early persons we swept throu; yDie In Home Fire Boy Sentenced In Girl's Slaying PITTSBURGH (AP) -A year-old boy, found guilty of niv-fri Clymer High School, will hold its Wednesday they the two to leave Hie white men's heutenant the Pacific. ment in 1940. After his retirement room.

When they refused necessltaled twn he served as supply pastor in the he placed them under arrest. was erf edTlin Phillipsburg area for '1945 and a second 1954 I he about 15 years, second required eight months of He was graduated from Gettys. curious travelers. were served convalescence. Four Floor MORLAIX, France (AP)-Four 30th reunion at Firs Methodist without incident "in a Montgomery thousand Brittany farmers pro-dong sine" 6nt ed Church social rooms Clymer, Sat- bus terminal restaurant, testing low farm prices invaded Monday in what looked like a urda y' June 17 reunion be- 1 Their arrests brought the num- Morlaix aboard tractors and inted rebuff to the Kennedy- gi with dinner at 6:3 P' ber aile in integration attempts trucks today and virtually took Khrushchev declaration at Vien-.

Na Neugebauer The two New Yorkers were virtually took na vlcn will be featured in the charged with breach of peace-the i tne town. program with her "Nan same as the early integrationists.i I KpinPrW A company of 130 tough riot Qaf Wn hum US 3nd satri The New Orleans 1 Dr 'Dery lice arrived on orders from the knm kll ana ln presentation at the piano. Mrs. included two white a family burned to today and 19 other Injured as flames sentenced to 10 to 20 but Washington ordered is well known in the ed the burg Preparatory School, Gettysburg College in 1905 and from Gettysburg Lutheran Theological Seminary in 1908. He attended Union Theological Seminary' in.

New York City, He was ordained on October 14, 1908, at Hanover by the Western Pennsylvania Luther, an Synod. Early in his life the Rev Mr, Nri vin Jtw 0 Vlolenc a three-story frame Defective. reported ''Previous opposition to discussing dwelling. The dead were identified by (2,000 farmers milled angrily in the Visiting Judge Burton R. LaubUown square denouncing the eov Slate De art ment press officer of Erie imposed the sentence Wed-lernmenfs farm-price stnicturp 1Jncoln hite said in Washington nctcH structure, piano since the age of four.

She is the past Dean of the Pitts- stood by. burgh Chapter of the American citv state nnlirpmon i i iand briber in the latest develop- ff and Slale Island, New York, state policemen in plamclothes mMt of the spreading 6 then se rved as pastor of Christ Guild of Organists and is a composer of light music. She creates. scandals, it was announced today Lutne ran Church in Trenton, New A spokesman for the New Or-i The four, previously named as: Jersey Be fore going to Long Val. group, the Rev.

Robert Wes- coconspirators, in connection withi ley he serve Pennsylvania con, lice as DonJiie Soles, 35; his "wife, nesda on Carlton R. McKeller 0l 'roam' that the United States is 'all of Xf 33 1 a Negr Baptist mini s'er the indictments of Aaron Wagman fegations in Boiling Springs, Dorothy, also 35; and their daugh- suburban Brushton. Under law.jside streets lng to brin about a collapse of them widely throughout the New Aurora, 111., said he expect- and Joseph Hacken, are Dave Sprmgdale and Smick. ter, Alfreda, 8. The Negro family McKellar must remain in the Th the Geneva conference States, Eastern states ed be jajled.

Budin. former Brooklyn College Indiana County. lived on third floor of the de-! stltutlon for a minimum of 10 iin Mnr ga obstructive tactics or other- 1 and the Midwest 'ne riders were jailed at. Jerry Vogel and Dan Born Glen Gardner, New Jer. Itroyed bui ding.

SVears. JL hShwI'v, wise Awards presented to, £0n Wed nesda following unsuc-jQuindazzi, former Alabama play- on August 29. 1879. he was The only member of the fam- He was accused of slaying Syl- 13 ooo anrl Vlolations of the cease-fire in members of the class traveling i cessful attem ls lo desegregate ers, and Lou Brown of North son of the late Augustus and Mel. lly to surkrive, Alfred, 7, wasi Rose last Se 17 their vehicle Th are a matter of great con- the greatest distance having the terminal facilities at an airport Carolina.

vma Martenis Bonnell. He resided thrown out of a window to safety loca! administrative KM cern the United States and in number of grandchildren. and a bus slatlon Th announcements were made 'n Easton since his retirement as by hif father. JaCQUelmP 'it fo several deed tO ther dele atio at having the youngest grand- Thre airborne riders-all Neg- Dist Atty. Frank S.

pastor of the Long Valley church Patrolman Leon Upshaw broke Im PvarOS a en Wnite said. "This is theichild. roes from he St LQUJS area broke open the latest basket-i'n 1940. thjB boy's full as he tried to In hini from i ladder that did not! VJV 1 qu'ne reach the third floor. The! boy suffensd burns and smoke! of the other A- Gray Wilson, Eighty-Four.

ATHENS I when scandals last March The ev Mr. Bonnell was a words, to see to it that the will serve as toastmaster A they au to use segregated! VVagman, 28. a convicted foot- of St. Paul's Lutheran Sub-prefect Jacques Seron, control commission is family picture will be required of facilltles at the Jackson Municipal bal1 fixer from New York, South Side local official fiprf with his given adequate instructions to in-leach "member of the class for ad- Air rl indicted last April 27 on 37 counts' Surviving are his widow the vestigate these matters and to put mission. i of bribe ry and attempts to bribe former Alice A.

Camera- a d'auah Officers planning the reunion are etb r8 ig Ellzab eth Bonnell," CIaI ed man broke the injvred MeliUc North Wind today for a trip The scant local force of a stop to them Ms 5 U.S. President's vacationinei On of ifl 0 0 rc i (cea se-fire 1 James IN. Kamey, vice (AP) -Gen Hacken 49, New York, was in-'Westfield, New Jersev; two sons dieted May 24 on 17 counts of Walter S. Bonnell Jr Philims' bribery and attempted bribery. burg, and John Bonnell Fork." and wiiw iilS" r.rm rs did "ll b.

receive immediate Classed Ad "Itei; tRead Ad dLlS" three grandchildren. The funeral was held June aum C) a SW.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Indiana Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
396,923
Years Available:
1868-2006