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Carroll Daily Times Herald from Carroll, Iowa • Page 1

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Carroll Daily Times Herald Vol. 95 206 Return Guaranteed Carroll, Iowa, 51401, Monday, August 31, Pages Delivered by Carrier Boy Each Evening for 40 Per Week Photofix Wire Picture Visit Sen. Hubert Humphrey questions his host, President Lyndon B. Johnson, about some cattle as the two visited the President's birthplace on the LBJ Ranch yesterday. Johnson and Humphrey, accompanied by newsmen, inspected the recently restored Johnson birthplace on a tour that wound up a weekend of rest and campaign planning for the top Democratic nominees.

Vacant House is Symbol of Low Livestock Prices Anti-U. S. Demonstrations Continue in Nasser Backs Makarios on Cyprus NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) President Makarios won a pledge of support today from the United Arab Republic in his dispute with Turkish Cypriots on troubled Cyprus as anti- American demonstrations continued in Turkey. President Gamal Abdel Nasser also warned against outside interference in the island's affairs, said a joint communique issued in Alexandria at the clusion of talks between Nasser and Makarios. Nasser did not specifically pledge military support, however.

Nasser's pledge to Makarios came on the heels of renewed demonstrations in Turkey's key cities. The United Arab Republic thus followed the lead of Greece and the Soviet Union in ing help if Cyprus were invaded by Turkey. "The U.A.R. is prepared to provide Cyprus with every possible support for the sake of strengthening the efforts of the Cypriot people in their struggle to safeguard the unity of their island." the communique said. "The two sides agreed that foreign military bases are a threat to international peace," it added.

Nasser is known to be opposed to the presence of Western military bases in the eastern Mediterranean. Britain retains two military bases on Cyprus under the 1960 treaty of independence. A British base on Cyprus was used as a staging area for the British-French attack on Egypt during the 1956 Suez crisis. Reliable sources said Makarios and Nasser also discussed a possible shipment of Soviet arms to Cyprus via Egypt. Before departing for Cyprus, Makarios told a news conference Nasser had promised him "all possible assistance to meet the danger of any new aggression." The people of Cyprus should decide on enonis union with "under the condition that no foreign bases By RON SPEER Associated Press Writer MURRAY (AP) A white farm house stands vacant about a mile and a half south of this south-central Iowa town.

"It's a nice the guy living there just couldn't make a go of it on the farm anymore," says Gale Palmer, who farms near Murray. "He moved to Lorimor and works in a gas station now," Palmer says. "A lot more of us will have to do the same thing if things don't get better on the farm." Palmer. 26. is a member of the National Farmers Organization.

He is convinced that the holding actions such as the one under way now the only organization that can save the family farm. "Nobody else seems to be trying to do anything about farm problems," Palmer says. "And if farmers aren't able to set their prices and have to leave, farming will become big business. "You can bet that if corporations do the farming, they aren't going to let somebody else de! cide how much they get for their products. "Go along any country road and look at all the vacant farm homes and you'll see what I mean." says Palmer, a veteran of holding actions.

He kept his livestock off the market for the duration of the month-long holding action called by the NFO in 1962. "We're ready to hold as long as we have to," Palmer says. "We can't go on like this. We think the NFO holding actions are the answer." Other NFO members agree, but many economists and officials of other farm organizations say that holding actions defeat themselves. They contend that animals held off the market gain NFO See Page 7 The Weather IOWA FORECAST Partly cloudy to cloudy through Tuesday, showers and thunderstorms west and central late Monday night and Tuesday morning; locally heavy rains likely.

Warmer north Monday night, lows 55 60 north, south. Highs Tuesday 75-80 north, 80-85 south. Further outlook Warmer, partly cloudy with scattered showers and thunderstorms Wednesday. Al Molirors Sell Home to Jim Webers Mr. and Mrs.

Alvin Molitor and children James and Amy Jo have moved from 510 Parkview Drive to 1130 Forest Street. They sold their former home to James H. Weber, new industrial arts instructor at Kuemper High School. Mr. and Mrs.

Weber and three children have moved here from Exira. Mr. Molitor teaches mathematics and coaches at Carroll Public School. Kuemper's Year Begins On Tuesday (PICTURES: Page 8) Kuemper High School will convene Tuesday with 279 freshmen reporting for a full day of classes. following day, 794 sophomores, juniors and seniors will be enrolled.

Students will assemble in the auditorium at 8:30 a.m. and will be welcomed by the Rev. Donahoe. He will give the students their homeroom assign- s. Homeroom teachers will distribute the class schedules in the respective homerooms.

Freshmen girls will not be required to be in uniform on the opening day of school. The uniform material ordered for the original shipment was not acceptable and was returned to the factory. The new uniforms will be available in mid October. However, the Kuemper High School uniforms will be required of the sophomores, juniors, and senior girls on the opening day, Wednesday, September 2. The hot lunch program will be in operation beginning the first day.

Price per meal will be 30 cents and students may purchase meal tickets on a weekly, monthly, or quarterly basis. Cafeteria personnel, under the supervision of Mrs. Jess Bayliss, includes Mrs. Leo Greteman, Mrs. Frank Halbig, Mrs.

Ed Hannasch. Mrs. Walter Hoffman, Mrs. George Kitt, Mrs. George Nees, Mrs.

Barbara OTool, Mrs. Clarence Reinart, Mrs. Fred Satterlee, Mrs. Regina Schlichte, Mrs. George i 11.

Mrs. Lawrence Tranter, Mrs. Bernard Willenborg, and Mrs. a Wessling. Two serving lines will be in operation this year with balanced entry from north and the south cafeteria doors.

Notable events on the September calendar are: Monday, Sept. 7, Labor day, classes will not meet; Wednes- Kuemper See Page 7 IOWA TRAFFIC DEATHS By The Associated Press Aug. 31,1964 530 Aug. 31,1963 430 FIVE-DAY IOWA FORECAST Temperatures will average near normal Tuesday through Saturday. Normal highs are from 76 to 82 degrees and normal lows in the 50s.

Temperatures will be rising at the beginning of the period, turning cooler toward the end of the week. Rainfall will average .60 to .80 of an inch, and locally over an inch, in scattered showers and thunderstorms, mostly toward the end of the week. CARROLL-NORTHWEST Partly cloudy Monday night, warmer north, lows in the 50s. Tuesday partly cloudy, scattered showers or thundershowers and warmer, highs in the 80s. The Weather in Carroll Courtesy of Iowa Publics Service Compunj) Yesterday's high 76 Yesterday's low 56 At 7 a.m.

today 58 At 10 a.m. today 74 Barry's Campaign to Start in 'Lucky Town Weather A Year Rainfall in the 24-hour period ending at 7 a.m. a year ago today amounted to .08 i h. The temperate was 64 degrees at 7 a.m. and 65, at 10 a.m.

PRESCOTT, Ariz. (AP)Republican Barry Goldwater formally opens his presidential campaign here this Thursday in the city where his uncle, a staunch Democrat, has been proclaimed Man of the Century. Prescott, Elev. 5,354, Pop. 18,037, was the capital of Arizona during the rip-snorting territorial days.

Pine-scented and mountain-rimmed, it now dreams of becoming the summer White House. It always has been Barry Goldwater's "lucky town." Were he launched two successful campaigns for the U.S. Senate. Here he learned merchandising, starting as a stock clerk in the family store that had the distinction of being the first brick building in Arizona. Here he got his first taste of politics, passing out handbills for his Uncle Morris, who was mayor of Prescott for 23 years and both speaker of the House and president of the Senate in the Territorial Legislature.

Morris Goldwater, who died in 1939 after a full and rous life on the old Arizona frontier, helped organize the state's Democratic party, order of Masons and constitutional convention. Lake Goldwater, the city's reservoir, is named for him. Sen. Goldwater will kick off his campaign on the steps of the handsome, Grecian-pillared Yavapai County Courthouse. Directly across the tree- shaded plaxa still stands the roaring remnants of Whisky Row, with its famous Palace Bar, and, on the opposite side, the Goldwater store.

Most of the signs of its pioneer beiginnings have disappeared, including Prescott's Chinatown, once the West's largest outside of. San Francis CO. But Montezuma Street, alias Whisky Row, still leaps to life every Saturday night when the cowhands and the miners flock in from the surrounding ranches and lead and zinc mines. The faro tables and roulette Goldwater See Page 7 Photefax Pleturt Clare Mrs. Clare Boothe Luce, a backer of Republican presidential nominee Sen.

Barry Goldwater, appeared on a New York television program Sunday where she announced she would not seek the Conservative Party nomination for the U.S. Senate from New York State. The move left state GOP leaders more optimistic about the chances of liberal Republican Sen. Kenneth B. Keating's reelection against the expected challenge of Attorney General Robert F.

Kennedy, the likely Democratic nominee. Synhorst Favors Doing Away With Salary Book By HARRISON WEBER (Iowa Daily Press Writer) DES MOINES Secretary of State Melvin Synhorst believes the state salary book is outmoded. The salary book, which was first published about 1940 when George Wilson was governor, 8Killedin Accidents on Iowa Roads By The Associated Press Eight more persons were dead Monday as a result of motor vehicle accidents in Iowa: The victims were: A young woman who was killed Monday in a car-truck collision on Highway 163 about 20 miles east of Des Moines. The Highway Patrol said her car crossed over the center line and hit the rear dual wheels of a trailer truck, knocking the wheels off the truck. Her identity was not immediately learned by authorities.

Marvin Kelley, 20, of Independence, killed early Monday in a car-truck crash on Highway 20 about 3Vi miles east of Fort Dodge. The truck driver, Odell Cowe, 45, of Milan, 111., escaped injury. Chuck Jergenien, 18, of Algona, killed Sunday night in a two-car collision at the intersection of a Kossuth County road and U.S. 169 about two miles north of Algona. A companion of Jergensen, Tim Vipond, 18, of near Algona, and the occupants of the other car, Mr.

and Mrs. Arthur Harris of Boone, were in fair condition Monday at an Algona hospital. The Rev. Marvin Vandenberg, 32, of Newburgh, N.Y., fatally injured Sunday when his car Deaths See Page 7 lists the salaries of all state employees. Synhorst said it has become "very expensive" to publish this list.

Some 2,600 copies are published by the state at a cost of $3 for each copy. The state official said that although he favors dropping the publication of the salary book he "certainly wants this information available to the public." Synhorst said with the new computer system the state has in operation it would be possible to provide this same basic information to reporters and other interested parties. Under the present set-up, Synhorst continued, the salary Weber See Page 7 Classes Convene at Public Schools A tentative enrollment of 843 was announced at noon Monday after classes convened for a full day in the Carroll Public Schools. The figure is one more than a year ago. High Herman Koch, 69, Dies in California SIOUX CITY (AP)-Herman H.

Koch, 69, Remsen native and longtime northwest Iowa newspaper man, has died in San Fernando, Calif. Koch was a Sioux City Journal reporter in 1914 before going to France in the military service. He died Saturday night. He was city editor of the former Sioux City Tribune in 192023, publisher of the Mapleton Press, a weekly, in 1923-29, publisher of the Beverly Hills, Bulletin in 1930-31 and co- publisher of the Spencer News- Herald in 1931-32. He became advertising manager for the Iowa Public Service Co.

at Sioux City in 1932 and retired in 1961, moving to California. Koch was a founder of the American Legion's Monahan Post 64 here and helped organize its marching band, which won honors in national competition before World War II. Survivors include the widow, two daughters and a son. St. Lawrence Open House Draws 900 Nine hundred registered at the St.

Lawrence parish "Operation Understanding" open house Sunday afternoon. Many others toured the church. "We feel this was a successful venture in ecumenism," said Mr. and Mrs. Lee Johnson, general chairmen and leaders for the St.

Lawrence Christian Family organization, whose members planned project. "Of particular satisfaction to us was the response in goodwill from the pastors of other communions, showing how Carroll and the surrounding communities subscribe to the ideal of Christian brotherhood." Tours were arranged for the guests with guides assigned for each group. As the visitors entered the church, they were seated at the rear as groups were assembled for tours, which lasted about an hour. They were taken to the side aisles first for explanation of the confessionals, where doors had been removed so that the interior could be easily seen. Next they stopped at the side altars for explanations of statues of Joseph and Mary.

At the center aisle behind the communion railing the sacred vessels were displayed, with explanations of communion and the manner of reception. Vestments were displayed en tables in the center aisle, where most of the questions concerned their use and design. A Bible and missal display on a table had been built around the mass of the day and the books were opened to the Psalms, epistle and gospel which had been read earlier at mass. The stations of the cross, commemorating the path followed by Christ to Calvary and Including 14 plaques above the side aisles, were explained next. Another table held rosaries and medals and their use Open House See Page 7 school enrollment was 230, compared with 256 a year ago.

Elementary enrollment is expected to reach 613. Last fall, 586 were registered. Enrollment the high school was announced by Principal George Fair as follows: Freshmen, 24 boys, 27 girls, total 51; sophomores, 28 boys, 35 girls, total 63; juniors, 31 boys, 30 girls, total, 61; seniors, 27 boys, 28 girls, total 55. Principal Walter Blake of the elementary school said approximately 150 kindergarteners are expected to make up the final count In both morning and afternoon classes. Figures for other grades, according to enrollment prior to opening of school, are first grade, 62; second, 65; third, 49; fourth, 63; fifth, 56; sixth, 61; seventh, 51, and eighth, 56.

Kuemper High School freshmen will report Tuesday. Sept 1, and upper grades will report Wednesday, Sept. 2, with the entire school in session Thursday, Sept. 3. Holy Spirit parish students will begin school Wednesday, Sept.

2, with all former SS. Peter and Paul and St. Joseph Parish school children attending school in the SS. Peter and Paul building, which is now Holy Spirit School. St.

Lawrence opening has been delayed a week and children in that parish will report Tuesday, Sept. 8. The Antonian School of Practical Nursing will begin the 1964-65 school year Sept. 8 with a maximum class of 35 students. 'Walk-in' Blood Donors Welcome Donor appointments have been made by telephone, but walk-ins will be welcome for the bloodmobile visit here tomorrow from noon to 6 p.m.

at Holy Spirit auditorium. The quota Is 200 pints of blood. However, ISO donors are needed to offset the normal number of re(ects for health reasons. The blood received here goes to the Omaha Red Cross regional blood bank, of which St. Anthony hospital in Carroll is a member.

It is issued free of charge to those requiring blood transfusions. The only charge is for the administration. should be located on Cyprus," he said. Makarios said Turkish priots who compose about 20 per cent of the island's population "will not be allowed a veto power." It was Makarios' tempt to end the Turkish minority's veto on major legislation that began the Cyprus civil war last December. The Greek Cypriot leader, who flew to Alexandria Saturday to confer with U.A.R.

President Gamal Abdel Nasser, said Sunday that Nasser "reassured me of his support in several ways." In an address In the Greek Orthodox cathedral in Alexandria Makarios, archbishop of Cyprus See Page 7 N. Y. GOP Backs Barry and Keating NEW YORK (AP)-New York state Republicans joined in a massive demonstration Of unity today for both Sen. Kenneth B. Keating and the party's national ticket of Sen.

Barry Goldwater and Rep. William E. Miller. Rep. Paul A.

Pine of the Bronx, who had pledged to oppose Keating's renomination because the senator hat refused to endorse Goldwater, dropped that plan and joined In the unity movement. Mrs. Clare Booths Luce, who up to Sunday had planned to run against Keating and remained critical of his stand on Goldwater, accepted an invitation to appear before the GOP State Convention meeting here. Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon also accepted an invitation to appear.

Keating's principal opponent in the fight for the Senate seat he now holds will be Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, to be nominated by the Democrats Tuesday. The executive committee of the Republican state committee, at a two-hour meeting, adopted unanimously a resolution endorsing Keating and also the Goldwater-Miller ticket, although Keating has continued to withhold his endorsement of the national slate.

The resolution said that the party was "broad enough and big enough to embrace Republicans of varying points of view." The resolution was immediately sent to the state committee, which is meeting as a nominating convention. Fino told a news conference he would have preferred that Keating support the national ticket but the overriding issue was "the re-election of a Republican U.S. senator from New York State." He withdrew a strongly worded statement he had distributed which sought to force a pledge of party loyalty from Keating. Republicans were optimistic about Keating's chances of withstanding the challenge by Kennedy, particularly because of Mrs. Luce's decision not to run as a third-party candidate.

Late News Off The AP Wire SAIGON, Viet Nam (AP)-A student leader today threatened new mass demonstrations if the ruling triumvirate names men to the promised National Assembly who are unacceptable to the students. Ton That Tue, a member of the newly formed Leadership Council of Saigon students, told a news conference such demonstrations would be organized only as a last resort. MISSISSIPPI BILOXI, Miss. (AP)-Sixteen Negro boys and girls quietly took seats beside white first graders in this resort city today, the first public school integration in Mississippi below the college level. SIGNS MONEY BILL- JOHNSON CITY, Tex.

(AP)President Johnson signed day a bill appropriating $4.4 billion for the Atomic Energy Commission and for water projects in most of the 50 states. The public works money is for the fiscal year which started July 1. It includes almost $40 million in Army Engineers projects in Iowa. QUELLS UNION REVOLT- DETROIT (AP) United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther was to face his familiar foes today after apparently quelling a brief but stormy revolt within his union's ranks.

Reuther was set to put in another personal appearance at the bargaining table as the UAW and Chrysler Corp. continued efforts to hammer out a new and pattern-setting contract RIOT IN NEW YORK- NEW YORK (AP) Residents of a predominantly Puerto Rican block, apparently angered over a fatal shooting, threw gasoline bombs, rocks and bottles Sunday night. Their targets were Negroes and policemen and firemen fighting a tenement house blaze. 2 COUPLES ANOKA. Minn.

(AP) Two couples were killed Sunday night when their car collided with a Great Northern Railroad train near here. Killed were Mr. and Mrs, Edward Jarnig of Anoka and Mr. and Mrs. Edward J.

DeHaven of Golden Valley, all about 50. The Anoka County coroner's office said the two couples reportedly had attended a golf tournament and might have been going out to eat when the accident occurred..

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About Carroll Daily Times Herald Archive

Pages Available:
123,075
Years Available:
1941-1977