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The Sunday News and Tribune from Jefferson City, Missouri • Page 7

Location:
Jefferson City, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Sunday. April 14, 1963 THE SUNDAY NEWS AND TRIBUNE, JEFFERSON CITY, MISSOURI Georgia Youth Admits Killing Two Aboard Boat KEY WEST, Fla. (AP) A wide search for a bedeviled Georgia boy and two Key West fishermen ended when the Coast Guard found the blood-stained lad alone on the fishermen's boat, out of fuel close to Cuba. "I murdered them and threw them overboard," Coast Guard- men said Roger Foster, 17, told them Friday night on the 32-foot cabin cruiser of Douglas Trevor, 47, and his son, Edward, 22. The 95-foot patrol vessel's crew gave Foster first aid, put him under guard and towed the boat-blood-splotched also, they said-toward Key West.

Waiting there were Monroe County's sheriff and grief-stricken friends and kin of the Trevors. VVaiting also--and not informed at once of what had happened--was Dr. H.A. Foster of i i who flew here when the search for nib son began. Suicide Note A suicide note found in Roger's blood-spattered Key West motel room had said, "I think I am insane." urged authorities, "Do not publicize my death.

Be careful when you tell my father because he has a bad heart." A Key West naval physician, ckecl up a ln-i nee a ft. Ten-ell Tanner, refused to newsmen where his friend, Dr. Fosier, was spending Friday night. "I intend to break the news to him Saturday." Tanner said. "I think it would be better for him to have what rest he can get before he hears what the Coast Guard found." A picture of mental turmoil over American Naziism, the Communist party and Cuba's dictator Fidel Castro began shaping up from information police gathered about Roger Foster, He was described by his mother in Griffin as "a brilliant boy (who) seemed to have strange ideas" that prompted his pdrents to have him interviewed by a psychologist.

After Castro "Maybe he was trying to get to Cuba and go after Castro on his own," Mrs. Foster said. "Roger tried to start an anti-Communist club at Griffin High School." Key West Police Chief George Gomez said a looseleaf notebook, found in the boy's motel room, had the word "Rockwell" in quotes on Its cover and the word "propaganda" in parentheses below. Gomez said this and a check he made with Griffin police convinced him the words alluded to George Lincoln Rockwell, head of the American Nazi party. He refused to reveal contents of the notebook.

Roger's mother said distress over a knee injury that prevented his competing in school athletics may have led him to disappear Monday without leaving any word. At Key West, Roger evidently arranged passage on the Trevor's boat Dream Girl. Shortly after noon Thursday the Trevors departed. Another fisherman said he saw the Dream Girl, capable of 20- kno'i speed, streaking away from Business Notes Berry Haug of Kansas City Purchases Warwick Village Purchases Village i i i note louncl in Koger'sm Key West area about 6 -spattered Key West motel lhe timp Trpvnr sairi hn wn the time Trevor said he would be home. A search was then be-1 gun.

Radio Messages An hour later, the Coast a garbled ra-l message that included the words "dying man on board." In other radio cast by someone evidently Berry Haug cy, emergency" were heard by fishermen. A Coast Guard plane spotted the Dream Girl Friday night, out of fuel and adrift in the Nicholas Channel only 20 miles north of Cuba's northern coast. The patrol boat was dispatched from Key West and made the pickup. Auto Insurance Costs GETTING YOU DOWN? Save money with the best auto insurance buy in America today! As you save, you get modern, broad form coverage, fast, fair, friendly service! FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP For information call JAMES C. BUTCHER District Manager Farmers Ins.

Group 705 Jefferson Dial 635-6117 Hot Air Balloon Crosses Channel CALAIS, France (AP)-- The hot air balloon Raven carrying two Americans landed Saturday at Gravelines, near Dunkerque, after crossing the English Channel. It landed on French soil about hours after going aloft at Rye, England. It was the first balloon of its sort using heated air instead of gas to make the cross-channel trip. The last attempted crossing in DAR Convention Monday With Innovations WASHINGTON A The Daughters of the American Revolution come to town this week with innovations. They plan to adopt only 1J policy-making resolutions, instead of the usual 20 or more.

There'll be an open forum to I discuss the resolutions a day I ahead of voting. And Mrs. Robert V. H. Duncan of Alexandria, a president general, has arranged a special extra forum on DAR history, policy and current goals.

Both forums are now "unofficial, extracurriculuar and volunteer," says Mrs. Duncan, but they are part of her campaign to give the DAR a new public image. Citing the often controversial nature of DAR resolutions in the past, Mrs. Duncan explained she wants the forum to discuss all the pros and cons, for "better understanding and fuller clarification" Missed Sub Trip 1 i O.11U A VIA a hot air balloon ended tne voposed resolution, which 180 years ago wnen sparks set thei balloon fabric on fire. The American crew waited eight days before making its crossing, held up by contrary winds and threats of thunder the balloonists' greatest hazard.

Riding a platform beneath the 50-foot plastic-covered nylon bag were two Americans from Sioux Falls, S.D.-- Ed Yost, 43, and Don Piccard, 37, employes of a Sioux Falls balloon firm. Piccard is the son of the late Jean Piccard, noted balloonist. An alternate pilot, James R. Smith, 43, also of Sioux Falls, was waiting mates. in Paris for his team- Black Muslim Leader Cites Improvement Aims ST.

LOUIS (AP) A chieftain in the Black Muslim movement says that one Muslim goal is to "develop racial dignity and re-' form habits that Negroes are dieted to." Malcolm in St. Louis Friday for a speaking engagement, said problems of American Negroes are no closer to solution than they were 100 years ago. He said the National Association for the advancement of Colored People has never had a Negro as its president in 54 years. Malcolm said the Muslim goal is for "us (Negroes) to be set organizational policy for the DAR. The 4,000 DAR delegates open their weeklong activities today with a memorial service for 3,869 members who died in the past year.

Monday night they launch their annual conclave. The first official reading of the resolutions is slated for Tuesday morning. Instead of spreading out the voting on resolutions over several days, Mrs. Duncan has arranged for resolutions and by-laws to be acted upon at the Wednesday morning session only. On Tuesday, the DAR delegates will elect seven nice vice presidents.

Among the nine candidates is Mrs. Loyd Bentley Cash of Springfield, Mo. The Congress ends Friday night with a banquet and installation of new officers. Berry Haug of Kansas City has purchased Warwick Village, intersection of East McCarty and East High streets, from the James Kolb Realty Co. The village contains 39 units, iully air-conditioned with television 'acilities in each one.

Haug, who has been manager of the Blue Hills Country Club the year and of the Indian Hills Country Club for eight years prior to that, said he plans extensive renovation of Warwick Village with emphasis on improving the dining facilities. He said steak dinners and Sunday buffet dinners will be featured. The Sunday buffet will begin today from 11:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. with emphasis for the family.

In addition to the 39 units. Warwick Village contains a large dining room, the Village Square Cocktail Lounge and ample parking facilities. Haug said renovation of dining room facilities is aimed at providing the "most unusual place" in Jefferson City. Haug's wife, Jean, will help in operation of Warwick Village, They have four children: John, who is living with them at the village; Nina, who is attending Nebraska University, and Julie and Mat, who are attending Kansas Cityj Junior College. i i Jack Bush, a department ager at the J.C.

Penney Co. store, here for the past two years, has! been transferred to 111. He will be sales and merchandise manager for the new J.C Penney Co. store in Jacksonville which will open June 1. He will leave for Jacksonville Monday to buy merchandise for the opening.

Bush, who came to the Jefferson City store from Chillicothe, attended Journalism School at the University of Missouri. Terry J. Sears, formerly with the local IBM outlet, was recently promoted from senior staff assistant of the district director in Kansas City to administrative supervisor of the Oklahoma City office of IBM. Four salesmen of the National Life and Accident Insurance Co. nave won one-week trips to New Orleans, for themselves and their wives.

They are H. E. Larm, 521 Nelson C. H. Walton, 106 Westmore S.

C. Vanderlinden, 1203 Edgewood and R. C. McElvain, Indian Meadow Dr. The four men completed the highest sales totals for the grand prize in the National Life and Accident Insurance Co.

competition. The four couples will leave Monday on their trip. Joseph W. Mosby, former supervisor of Corporate Registration and Commissioner of Securities for the State of Missouri, has been elected a vice president of Waddel! and Reed, Inc. of Kansas City, national distributor of the United group of mutual funds.

Mosby, a resident of Linn, joined Waddell Reed in April, 1962. Before serving as securities commissioner, he was corporate counsel of the Missouri Secretary of State. He opened his law prac- Lt. Raymond A. IVIcCoole of Portsmouth, N.

a crew member of the missing atomic submarine Thresher, talks to newsmen at the Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth. The young officer, granted a last-minute leave to care for his sick wife and five sons, would otherwise have been aboard that submarine presumed Botulism Alert Page 7 Warning Issued on Kosher Tuna Supply iBy tlit Associated Press) A spokesman for the FDA said Grocers and housewives have i "We don't think a large amount been alerted to a new botuHsmjhas been sold." He said the ship- threat, this time in canned tuna I per had notified all recipients the Jewish Passover I last week of the possibility that 'he canned tuna was contaminated. season already under way. The Food and Drug tion in Washington announced Friday that some defective cans of tuna gave indications of being contaminated by the deadly clostridium botulinum type E. The cans in question were shipped to six metropolitan areas within the past two months, FDA officials said.

They bear That firm, shut down since March 22, also packed tuna which apparently led to the deaths from botulism of two Detroit women last month. They had obtained their tuna from an AP store in Detroit. The FDA said The spokesman said about 10! tcsts snowed type botulinum in defective cans had been unused portion of the tuna and most showed indications botulnium. All, he said, were found in the metropolitan New York area. The FDA said the tuna-- kosher Cans Removed AP removed all of the suspected shipment from its shelves and subsequent checks showed no oth- contaminated cans.

stamped serial numbers WY2 and doubly supervised for, WY3 and the labels read, in Jewish Passover season to en- Passover--net 7 oz." The areas are New York, De- theito meet Jewish dietary restric-L nn ui-. i oy vvasnjngion king and shipped to a Cali- sure that no leavened bread 0 troit, Chicago, Cleveland, burgh, and Augusta, Ga. Pitts- contained it it--was packed by the Washington Packing Corp. of San Francisco. Good Friday in Jerusalem Christian Pilgrims Re-Enact Christ's Crucifixion, Burial The FDA said the earlier AP i shipment and the Passover tuna now in-question were the only interstate shipments it knows of from the Washington Packing Corp, In California, state health officials Friday ordered removal from grocery shelves of all tuna kosher or non-kosher packed by (ho i since it opened last December.

Type botulinum is a poison. Usually associated with fish taken i i.r i Jordan A a were in the Holy Land for from cold lost in the Atlantic. (AP Wire- 'Thousands of Christians have'Eastertide. becomo toxic if not cooked under 'flocked to the Holy Land for I Earlier in the day the i specified temperatures and pres- Eastcrlidc to share in the i a 1 the footsteps of 5 Last the California the of Pontius Pilate's a said the tuna marking the i i i i a a i hrough the Streets i thc lot Dipped to AP stores Inacfivafion Set For Bomber Wing At Whiteman Base resurrection of Christ. 'Sorrow to Calvary.

Eastern and Western churches Sonic carried heavy crosses to' hold four separate i a services emulate the Savior's i on Good Friday. Today thc pa- sai Others j's-oantry of worship turns to the' of Easter. cooked longer and at higher i had her Jen who followed Christ his death over ourselves, whites." not over the 222 Madison (Up-Town) We Do Alterations Accident Causes $350 Damage Minor property damage resulted from two car accident at the junction of Highway 54, 63 and 94 just north of the Missouri River Bridge Saturday morning. According to the Highway Patrol, the accident apparently oc- cured when a car driven north by Katherine Sue Quinn, 20, of Jefferson City made a left turn in the path of a southbound car. The southbound vehicle was driven by Robert B.

Fennewald, 19 of Holts Summit. About S200 damage was done to Fennewald's car and about S150 in damage to the Quinn machine. Both drivers claim they had a green light. The accident occurred at about 10:55 a.m. No arrests have been made yet, according to lithe Highway Patrol.

commenced in 1959 and hrough June of last year, approximately one-half of the Air Force 3-47 units had been inactivated. During this fiscal year. Air Force tice in Linn in 1952, after his graduation from the University of Missouri Law School. Charles H. Fechtel.

of Fechtel's Beverage and Sales, of Jefferson City, will attend the regional sales meeting of the Carling Brewing on April 17 at St. Louis, as the local representative. Approximately 100 distributors from a nine-state area will attend. Henry E. Russell, Carling president, and Robert C.

Garretson, vice-president of marketing, both of Cleveland, Ohio, will address the group of representatives. The company's marketing, advertising and sales programs for 19G3 will be presented at the meeting. All for Cycles HERMISTON, Ore. (API--Motorcycle enthusiasts knew what to do with 21 acres of sagebrush land they acquired here. They started construction of a quarter- mile flat track, a half mile WHITEMAN AFB TM Pilgrims knelt beneath flirkor-j i a ''ly 2.000 years ago.

ing candles at Calvary on Throughout thc afternoon pro- aid a at a a Good TMday night as priests lifted an i of Christ's body from (ho.tonm.es- cross and buried it in Jerusalem's fes't Nva ligh-performance a i a into I Mr Force inventory, the Air Force cross and buried it in Jerusalem's st The st which la- New i a large Jewish a SCe gTQcery Church of the Holy Sep. -here he and fell, and tuna ulchre--to most Christians the exact site, of Christ's crucifixion. Calvary is now a balcony inside the church doors, its bare rock i i i i Lt LULll; I I Jll i a where he was nailed to Dagim Tahorim warehouse the cross and died. Brooklyn. in inactivating another five B-471shielded with rich mosaics, candles and clusters of glowing I a wings.

As a part of this overall program, the Air Force is planning to inactivate the 340th Bomb Wing, Whiteman AFB, this coming summer. Remaining at the base will be the Strategic Air Command 35 Is I Strategic Missile Wing, ICBM Minuteman, for which lamich and other facilities are currently under construction. Building: Shift Many of the buildings currently used by the 340th Medium Bomb Wing will rerequired for u.se by contractors on the i a construction program. Some of these buildings will be made- available us the Wing phases out. Inactivation of the 340th Wing, is expected to result in a reduction of approximately 700 personnel from thc current military and civilian totals.

Economic effect of this reduction will partially compensated for by the large numbers of Minuteman contractor employees who will be working in the vicinity. About 3,500 contractor personnel will be participating in the Minuteman construction program in vicinity of Whiteman. A the missile wing becomes operational, the Air Force is planning on a base population of approximately 3,200 military and civilian personnel. Placements With regard to thc civilian em- ployes whose jobs are scheduled to be eliminated, Department of Defense officers and U. S.

Civil Service Commission will cooperate in placing these employes on other jobs. Employes who are willing to relocate outside the immediate area of Whiteman will be given a i placement assistance consistent with law and regulations for employment throughout the Air Force. terns. Pilgrims from many lands bowed in the dark vaults of the church crumbling with age and resounding with chants of hymns. They watched robed and bearded Catholic priests withdraw nails from the cross on Calvary.

Christ's effigy, wrapped in sheets of linen, was anointed. Then, to the chant of prayers, it was carried to the candlelit sepul- chre. Officials said about 15,000 Chris- Royal Ambassadors Meeting in Hannibal HANNIBAL, Mo. (AP) The! 19th annual state Royal Ambassador Congress meeting got under way Friday in Hannibal. About 1,500 boys and their counselors attended.

The Congress, which promotes missionary education and other church-related activities of men and boys, is a youth brotherhood representing 100 churches in the Missouri Baptist Convention. SPRING REVIVAL Starts Tonight April 14-26 7:30 P. M. Nightly The Church Choir Will Sing Nightly! Rev. Hugh Smith Will Be Ihe Guest Evangelist Rev.

Hugh Smith, Evangelist NURSERY PROVIDED EACH NIGHT! MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH 1200 Madison Jefferson City, Mo. Names in the News WARD Mr. and Mrs. Walter But-1 ler, of Cuba, are parents of a daughter born April 8 at Phelps County Hospital in Rolla. She has been named Lisa Lynn.

Butler is the son of Mrs. Opal Butler, 428 W. Dunklin St. Cadet John S. a member of the Air Force ROTC of Wash-i ington University recently a promoted to Cadet A i a Third scramblers track and set the rest Class.

He is the son of Mr. and aside for parking. Mrs. John F. PleU, 803 Fail-mount.

Over Zealous Company NEW YORK A A organization that seems determined to remain listed last in the Manhattan phone directory calls itself the ZZZYZZY ZTAMP ZTUDIOZ CO. SPECIAL April 15, 16, 17 Wed. Thurs. Plain SKIRTS SLACKS or TROUSERS SWEATERS CLEANED AND PRESSED Fur-trimmed and pleated garments extra FREE Insured Storage Moth Proofing All Storage Garments Cleaned at Regular Prices Garments in by 4 P. Out the Same Day, Including Sat.

No Extra Charge for One Hour Service NOTICE TO HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS Key Punch, Tab Courses Computer Programming Train on IBM MACHINES Best Facilities in Mid- West Free Nation-Wide Placement Over 100,000 Graduates America's Largest Private Training: Organization --Write-Automation Institute 1627 Main K. C. 8. Mo. Name Aft Address City State McDonald's Amazing Menu Pure Beef Hamburger 15(2 Tempting Cheeseburger Triple-Thick Shakes Golden French Fries I2c Thirst-Quenching Coke Delightful Root Beer Steaming Hot Coffee Full-Flavor Orange Drink Refreshing Cold Milk Hwy.

50 West-- (Across From Plaza) PRE-VIEW! TUESDAY NIGHT! APRIL to 9:00 P.M. -REGISTER FOR VALUABLE FREE DOOR PRIZES Numerous "Give-Aways" and Refreshments BE FIRST TO SHOP THE HUNDREDS OF SPECIALS IN THIS PRE-VIEW OF WARD WEEK! THAT DATE, AGAIN TUESDAY APRIL 16th 6:30 to P. M..

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About The Sunday News and Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
65,268
Years Available:
1933-1977