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The Daily Republic from Mitchell, South Dakota • Page 2

Location:
Mitchell, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page Two THE DAILY REPUBLIC, Mitchell, S. Saturday, Aug. 21, 1965 I CM TELL JUST WHE MEN ALL UEK FROM THE DIRT u)E(5E DOUM 8V THE TRAIN SPENT THE DAY BeRKEOOUNATTHE I DONT HAVE TO LISTEN TO ALL OAY AT THE 8RICIC Injuries Minor In 2-Car Crash In Mitchell accident at 5:45, Cattle Steady To 25 Lower At Sioux City SIOUX CITY (in (USDA) A two car a.m. Saturday at the Saturday Cattle for the week lion of Burr and Havens in 23.000; last week a year teen-age' mother, Oklahoma. His; the millions across the country Mrs.

Leroy Gordon Cooper Sr. of Carbondale, Snid she worried about her son watching the lift off on television. He was at the White House. nearest rocketeers ever flying in the early days, but'came before to a launch exact- then came to realize "God's upjly on time was on the last shot there the same as on the of the Mercury program May Mitchell injured one passenger in each of the cars. 'T.

J. O'Brien. 86, Mitchell, and Mrs. Joe Cwik, 35, Arvada, ago 22,000. Trends; steady slaughter 25 lower; steers slaughter heifers 50 75 lower; cows steady; bulls 50 lower.

Slaughter steers: choice were treated at a local hospital and released. I O'Brien was a passenger in a 1150 Ibs. 25.75-27.00; (Jar driven by Edward L.I choice 900 1050 Ibs. 25.50-26.- Kobes, 65, Mitchell and Mrs. i 25; good 900 1150 Ibs.

23.00- ground." After graduating from high school in 1945, Cooper joined the Marine Corps and entered the Academy Preparatory 15, 1963, a mission flown by Cooper. He was off four minutes behind schedule. Ground stations closely monitored medical and other data crs to raise themselves a few capsule into orbit about the from the U.N. special fund in miles higher. moon, with two of the astro- April and May to meet payroll This is the highest that any nauts dropping to the surface in 'and other urgent hills.

While the U.S. astronaut has ever flown a special capsule. After explor- special fund has been repaid. topping the 176-mile high record ing they will launch themselves will again become necessary for of Walter Schirra in the Mcr-land dock with the mother ship, him to borrow from the fund lo cury program in 1962, but still i for the trip back to earth. jmeet the September payroll, shy of the Russian record of Cooper and Conrad also were Of concern now is about Sou 307.5 miles.

to test for the first time a new million owed for the peace-, Shortly after Gemini 5 entered 1 power supply intended for use'keeping operations, orbit, the control center at on all future U.S. manned U.N. officials say that receipt Houston asked how the fuel It is a fuel cell system power system looked. One of the which converts hydrogen and astronauts replied: "The fuel to electricity. Problems cells look very good." of $65 million in voluntary contributions would ganization from rescue the or- its immediate in fueling the two fuel cells plight.

Fifty millions would be The problem of loading some concern earlier applied against the into the cells contributed to the, this week. keeping dabt, and $15 million postponement of the flight on Gemini 5 was the third repaid into the U.N. wo, king Thursday. straight U.S. man-in-space fund.

The new system Is being fight scheduled since Soviet Naval School. 1946 and attended the University overhead at more than 17,500 He was discharged in rom Gemini 5 as it whipped of Hawaii. It was there he met and married the former Trudy Olson of Seattle, Wash. miles an hour. The United States now hs.s flown in space for the first time, replacing the old power storage batteries which were much heavier.

Dr. George Mueller, NASA associate administrator for manned space flight, called the countdown "the smoothest Cooper received an commission while at the Univer- A sent 10 different men into space, Army two 0 Cooper and. Virgil Cwlk was in a car driven by her husband. The accident was investigated by Officer Duanc L. Payne.

Damage to the Kobes car was listed at $200 and the Cwik car received $300 damages. Mrs. M. Loehr, Mitchell, Dies Mrs. Minnie Lochr, 81, Mitchell, died this morning at her home.

Funeral arrangements under the direction of the Milliken Funeral Home are incomplete. Sam Burnison Funeral Rites Slated at Alpena By Republic Newt Service ALPENA Funeral services for Sam Burnison, 68, will be held Monday morning at 10 o'clock at the Methodist Church with the Rev. Louis Wargo officiating. Interment will be in Rest Haven Ometery with the Walter Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. Mr.

Burnison, who had been an implement dealer in Alpena for many years, died Friday at the Huron hospital where he had been a patient for 10 days. Survivors include his widow, daughter and three sons. 25.50. Slaughter heifers: choice 9251025 Ibs. 24.00 25.00; good and choice 22.50-23.75; good 20.00 23.50.

Cows: commercial 14.75-16.00; canner and cutter 12.50 15.25; bulls 14.00 18.00. Feeders and calves: choice 600 900 Ib. steers 24.00-25.50; good and choice 22.00 feeding heifers good to choice 20.00 21.25; low good 17.75-19.50; choice steer calves 25.5027.50; good and choice 24.00 25.25; good 21.00 22.00; choice heifer calves 22.50-25.50. Sheep: For the week, last week a year ago 6,000. Trends: Spring slaughter ambs and spring feeder lambs steady, shorn 25.50 higher; slaughter lambs shorn slaughter ewes steady to strong; not enough others to test prices.

Spring slaughter lambs; choice to prime 90-110 Ibs. 24.5025.25; old crop shorn slaughter lambs choice No. 1 pelts 95 Ibs. 21.25. Shorn slaughter ewes: choice No.

1 pelts 7.25. Spring feeder lambs: choice to fancy 64 75 Ibs. westerns 24.00; choice 60-75 Ibs. natives 22.00-23.00. sity of Hawaii.

He transferred to the Air Force and in 1949 was called for extended flight duty in Germany. He earned a bachelor's degree in aeronautical engineering in 1956 from the Air Force Institute of, Technology at Wright- Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. He later became a test pilot at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif. Conrad for a total of 12. The Russians have launched 11 cosmonauts, including one woman, but none has made a repeat trip.

Russia has not had a space shot since last March 18, we've ever had in the pro- The on-time firing the launch the rendezvous and mission scheduled for Gemini 6. Riot Union sent cosmonauts Pavel Belyayev and Alexei Leonov up for a day last March 18. NASA officials said it was difficult to assess whether the United States or the Soviet Union; George Papandreou have ion will have the lead in thei causef mor than 500 injuries (Continued from Page 1) moon race if Gemini 5 flies more than a week. will give and resulted in the death of one student. The street disorders started after the 25-year-old king fired a That mission will involve first the launching of an Agena sat- a i ellite into orbit and then firing NASA officials said it, was difficult to assess whether the united stales'or the Soviet Union i Papandreou July 15 over ri I will have the lead in the moon! dispute on con ro of the armed aocKing raM if Gemini 5 flies more than a week.

Dr. George E. Mueller, asso when Alexei Pavel Leonov, Belyayev and collaborated on 11 Injured In Riot At Job Corps Center (AP) A Job Corps spokesman says trouble at the Camp Breckinridge center which fostered a 45-minute riot among 80 trainees apparently stems from "a certain protection racket (that) has been in operation for about two weeks." At least 11 persons were injured, Charles Preston, camp public relations director, said that the "protection racket and a rash of burglaries" have brought FBI agents onto the post several times in the past few weeks. A mob of about 75 attacked a firetruck they apparently thought was coming to settle fighting which began between knots of people," said fceymour Bryson, director of Student security. Fireman Stuart Lovell, 30, MorganfieH, was pulled from his truck by the rioting youths who hit him with tire chains, and belts.

He was taken to a hospital in nearby Evansville, where he was reported in fair condi tion today. It was determined later that the firetruck had arrived be cause of a false alarm. Ten job corpsmen were treat cd at a camp hospital. Most of them had stab wounds, many had cuts and bruises, authorities said. Names of the injured were not announced by Job Corps officials.

A team of corps officials, in three from Washington investigates the incident. Gov. Edward T. Breathitt dis patched State Police Directoi James Bassett and 35 troopers to the camp in case of further rioting. U.S.

Atty. William Riv crs gave permission for the authorities tq enter federa property if needed to keep or Committal Rites Scheduled for Ex-Miichelliie Committal rites and burial for Mrs. Francis (Alena) McCarthy, San Diego, formerly of Mitchell, will be held in Calvary Cemetery in Mitchell Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock. Funeral Mass was celebrated in California Saturday morning. Mrs.

McCarthy died at a nursing home in San Diego Aug. 8. Survivors include two sons, fayne, Oswego, and 'homas, Anaheim, and ne sister, Clara A. McClure, an Diego. Her husband died in 938.

(Continued (rom Pa us One) ended up Pete as a compromise." Now, he is Pete to everybody. Conrad was born in Philadelphia, June 2, 1930, His parents since have divorced. His mother, Frances V. Sargent, lives in Haverford, Pa. His father, Charles Conrad lives in Sarasota, Fla.

The younger Conrad graduated from Princeton University in 1953 with a degree in aeronautical engnieering. He met his trikingly beautiful wife, the former Jane DeBose of Uvalde, while she was attending school at Bryn Mawr. They married the day after he was graduated. A few days later he joined the Navy to become a flier. Conrad is the only Ivy League astronaut.

And on his upper left arm there is a big tattoo of an anchor, stars and initials of the U.S. Navy. That makes him the only tattooed astronaut. The Conrad boys are Peter, 1 Thomas, Andrew, and Christopher, 4. The blonde, blue-eyed Conrad drives a flashy, fire-engine red, sports car, like many of his as tronaut friends.

He zips along the roads, honking the horn and waving at friends as if this were Leonov's historic walk in space, a feat marked later by America's Edward White. Successful rendezvous today would lead to an attempt to dock the Gemini 6 spacecraft with another satellite launched separately in another maneuver which must be developed before moon journeys. the Gemini astronauts 90 minutes later to begin the chase. Halfway through the first orbit over Australia, Cooper fired jet thrusters to increase the speed of the spacecraft by about seven miles an hour and raise the low point of the orbital path from 100 to 106 miles. The high point remained at 216.

The maneuver was a preparatory move for the later rendezvous exercise. Over Australia, Conrad re- ciate administrator for manned space flight, said: "I don't think any one flight or achievement is going to determine leadership in space. The flights over the long term will provide us with a sound basis for leadership." Viet Nam forces. Just before Friday night's riot, the king swore in Tsirimok- os as premier. Demonstrators shouted insults against the Tsirimokos, royal family and 58, who recently The docking flight, which will ported seeing a large city.

The be piloted by astronauts Walter control center said it was Perth. Schirra and Tom Stafford, pres- on previous U.S. maned ently is scheduled for Oct. 25, but the date could be advanced if today's shot is successful. Gemini 5 is to stay aloft 191 hours, 53 minutes, just seven minutes shy of eight days, and splash to a landing in the west flights, the city has turned on most of its lights as a beacon for the astronauts.

Cooper and Conrad were to zip around the globe 121 times, traveling 3.12 million miles. During the long haul the as- ern Atlantic about 500 i 1 Itronauts will exercise with a southwest of Bermuda about stretchable cord, to keep 'their 8:53 a.m. (EST) Aug. 29. Cooper at one point early in the flight reported to the ground that he had "lost IPS on Stage 2." This referred to an internal lower system in the spacecraft hat apparently gave him a bad reading on his instrument muscles from weightlessness.

Chris Matzke Services Slated At Canova CANOVA Funeral service for Chris Matzke, 58, school cus todian, will bo held Sunday a 2 p.m. at the Cougregationa Church. Mr. Matzke died at bis horn Aug. 19.

Read The Want Ads any small town. He attends an church regularly. Episcopal j. Highland, Mitchell, Dies Grover Highland, 77, Mitchell, ormerly of Artesian, died Friday evening at a Mitchell nurs- ng home. Funeral services are incom- ilete.

The Milliken Funeral lome is in charge of arrangements. Flight (Continued from Page 1) rad sons watched the launching on television home. Only in their Houston one other astronaut's wife, Mrs. Sqott Carpen ter in 1962, watched her husband's launching frpm the Cape jarea. President Johnson was among GUARANTEED PROTECTION NAME SPEAKERS SIOUX FALLS MB Fulton Lewis III, son of radio commentator Fulton Lewis will be the featured speaker at the 965 National Teen Age Republican Camp at Lake Herman near Madison, next week.

About 125 younger Republicans from across the mid- west are expected at the meet- ng. Other prominent Republican ipeakers will include Gov. Nils Joe, Rep. Ben Reifel, a number of state constitutional officers, and others. Cooper (Continued from Page 1) pecdboats.

He has entered sev eral national speedboat races and owns a boating company on Galveston Bay- He and his wife, Trudy, are excellent pilots and have their own plane, They fly all over the country, taking their two daugh ters, Cartula 16, and Janita is, with them. Cooper, a native of Snawnee, is quiet, thoughtful man. He does not talk any more than is necessary. In this re gard, he and his Gemini 5 partner, Navy Lt. Cmdr.

Charle Conrad complement each other. his friends call one of the seven origi nal Mercury astronauts. Only three members 01 the Mercury team still are considered able to make a space flight. They are Cooper, Air Force Lt. Col.

Virgi I. Grissom and Navy Capt. Wai lei' M. Shirra Jr. The 150-pound, 5-foot-8 Coupe received a ilyiug license while a lonrad's thighs will be, inflata- )le cuffs which will pump con- inuously to help his heart work more normally.

For comparison, Cooper will not wear the panel. However, said ground Mission Control stations were receiving good data from the IPS system and it was believed to be just a faulty gauge reading in the spacecraft. The center said that had the IPS gone out, the astronauts could have switched to an auxiliary system. Dr. Charles Berry, director of Gemini medical operations, reported that during the launch phase both Cooper and Conrad had lower heart rates than an ticipated.

He said he was surprised when the readings showed that Conrad's rate was 145 beats a minute and Cooper's 135. During Cooper's previous flight in 1963, he registered a peak beat of 168. He normally has a beat of 70 and Conrad between 70 and 75 when they are at rest. Although the spacecraft was thrown into an orbit about as planned, the control center said this is slightly below the alti tude required for the rendez vous maneuver and that about 50 minutes into the flight the as tronauts would iire their thrust going soft Attached (Continued from Page 1) were caught in the open and an air observer' estimated 55 were killed. Nine planes from the U.S.

carrier Oriskany bombed highways and weapons sites in North Viet Nam. Four FlOSs hit the Phu Son military area about 70 miles southeast 01 Vinh, destroying four buildings and a ferry slip, a briefing officer said. Other air strikes were against North Vietnamese trucks, barges and army barracks. All planes returned safely and planes spokesman said. encountered or ground no enemy fire, the bolted from Papandreou's Center Union party.

Tsirimokos indicated he would crack down on street protests during the parliamentary confidence debate on his government, scheduled to start Monday. Observers said Tsirimokos fears more rioting may result in a vote of no confidence. The new premier made a personal plea to Papandreou to exert influence against "the downhill course to abnormality." The demonstrators set bonfires and smashed shopwin- dows. Papandreou planned to start a two-day speaking tour today through central Greece to drum up support. Killing (Continued from Paga 1) Daniels, 27, who had completed cu ff SAIGON, Viet Nam two years of a three-year course To pass the time, the rrorist threw a grenade the Episcopal Theological 1 nauts will attempt to schedule two Americans and a Vietna-'Seminary in Cambridge, Mass.

from U.S. bases; conversing with astronaut Scott Carpenter 200 feet beneath the surface of the Pacific in a diving bell doing oceanic research; checking their eyesight; studying the moon, stars and other celestial objects, and snapping hundreds of photos of space and earth features. The rendezvous experiment is considered particularly important. Rendezvous and docking techniques must be perfected for moon trips. The first U.S.

flights compatible work, sleep and eat- mese but three esc a ed Critically wounded was Fa- ing cycles. a military spokesman her Richard Morrisroe, 26, as- Other planned experiments nclude observing missile sai today. sistant pastor a. St. Columbanus He said the Americans were 'church in Chicago.

He was tak- talking with a Vietnamese man; en to a Montgomery hospital on a Saigon street Friday night when a car stopped and a man got out, and threw the grenade. U.N. (Continued from Page 1) created to spur the economic well-being countries. of underdeveloped It is setting up its main headquarters in Geneva. Thant said the U.N.

financial situation remains precarious. where two teams of doctors op erated on him in shifts Friday night. Sheriff Frank Ryals said he understood the two were shot after Coleman went to the store, one-story frame structure about 500 yards from the county courthouse, to check a report of a disturbance. Ryals said he was out of town at the time and could not give a detailed However, a Negro girl, Ruby Sales of Columbus, said slie been released from jail thp two men and were with thorn when they were shot. She said in a statement released by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee that they had stopped at Ihe store to get some food.

"A man we assumed to be (he proprietor looked at us with a shotgun in his hand and told 'Get off my sn 'e said. "He shot before we had a chance to tun. around." Alabama Atty. Gen. Rich, mond Flowers promised a full, scale investigation and vowed, "If this is murder, it will prosecuted to the full extent uf the law." President Johnson instructed Atty.

GeL. Nicholas Katzenhach to begin "vigorous and immediate" investigation and Justice Department ordered an FBI probe. Coleman, a gray-haired resident engineer for the State Highway Department, often worked without pay a part- time special deputy sheriff, He is married and the fatlier of two children. involve launching a three-man I He had to borrow $4 million'and three other 'Neg'rpes had 0 me Worker lor Whole family AilNewdeiim All New performance All New peper hendllni lyttem All New finaertip control Panel All New exclusive features All New All New decorator colon All New deluxe, higMeihion carrying case Plus famous Royal touch end full size office keyboard ASK ABOUT OUR lAlY PAYMKNT PUN. ROYAL Portables start at 49.95 5 models to choose from IRWIN TYPEWRITER GO.

108 E. 3rd JUUIT HMO MM AGAINST LOSS Every Keepsake diamond is guaranteed for a full year against lots from the setting replacement assured by the Keepsake Certificate. Convenient terms arrtnged to lit your budget KNODEL Jewelry ChMM totw fee Ktepecke Cecil Duncan CECIL DUNCAN WINS AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING INSURANCE CONTRIBUTIONS of quality service to the public as evidenced by an excellent record of maintaining in force and extending the benefits of health insurance Cecil W. Duncan hereby presented this HEALTH INSURANCE PERSISTENCY AWARD In witness wliereof the undersigned join in presenting this certificate for 1965 Lile Insurance Agency Management Association International Association of Health Underwriters National Association of Life Underwriters Executive Vice luidcat and Manigtn Vice Ftesident.

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About The Daily Republic Archive

Pages Available:
75,074
Years Available:
1937-1977