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The Tribune from Seymour, Indiana • Page 3
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The Tribune from Seymour, Indiana • Page 3

Publication:
The Tribunei
Location:
Seymour, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 Five On Stolen Car Detail Face Charges GARY, Ind. (AP) The five men on the Gary Police Department's stolen car face charges in connection with the alleged sale of a stolen car. Detectives Tom Haslett, John Kepchar and Andrew Williams and Patrolmen Reuben Roy and Edward Kepchar arecharged with conduct. unbecoming an officer, neglect of duty and conduct unbecoming to the public welfare. Williams also is charged with destroying evidence- -the alleged removal of the identification plate from the car.

Gary Police Chief James Hilton filed charges Saturday and said the Gary Police Civil Service Commission would conduct a hearing early this week. Use Tribune Classified Ads NOW! JUST RIGHT CARE FOR ALL YOUR DRYING PROBLEMS VERSATRONIC DRYER MONDAY, OCTOBER-20, -1969 cent Iceland literacy, is a nation of 100 National Geograpper says. The per capita publication of new books is almost 20 per cent greater than in the United States. Heed The Need Support JACSY VOSS SONS funeral Service PHONE 522-5558 "Feels" the moisture in your -shuts itself off! 4 Automatic Fabric Selections Damp Dry Selection Convenient Lint Trap Location Separate Start Switch Drum Light Air Fluff Selection Porcelain Enamel Top Clothes Drum MODEL DDE 7200L. installation 19 range, Ask Available heaterduring customers electric to for Public dryer, installing or October-November, Service an electric details electric Indiana water 1969.

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Jane Jolly Dies, Rites Wednesday Jane Ellen Jolly, 19, Seymour R5, died at 8:30 p. m. Saturday at Robert Long Hospital, Indianapolis, after an illness of 10 months. A lifelong resident of Jackson County, she was a 1968 graduate of Seymour Senior High School and a 1969 graduate of Bel-Mor Beauty Academy of Columbus. Jane Jolly She was a member of the Cortland Christian Church where she served as a Bible school teacher.

Born Dec. 3, 1949, in Seymour, she was the daughter of Marvin and Frieda Herekamp Jolly. In addition to the parents, she is survived by one brother, Allen Duane and one sister, Ramona Kathleen, both at home. Funeral services will be conducted at 10:30 a. m.

Wednesday from the Cortland Christian Church with the Rev. Leonard Tippie, pastor, officiating. Burial i in Robertson Cemetery at Cortland. Friends may call at the Burkholder Funeral Home after 7 p. m.

tonight and at the church after 9:30 a. m. Wednesday until time of The family requests that memorials be given to the cancer fund. Eight Fined In Weekend City Court Eight persons appeared in Seymour city court during the weekend, seven of them charged with traffic violations. All pleaded guilty and were fined by Judge William M.

Jones. Dennis N. Baker, 19, Seymour, was fined $5 and costs on a charge of a minor entering a tavern. He had been arrested by city police Friday. Raymond Sizemore, 30, Austin, was fined $1 and costs on a charge of no registration plate.

He was cited Oct.10. Maurice A. Tindell, 27, Seymour, was fined $1 and costs on a charge of false registration. He was cited by police on Oct. 8.

Gary L. McIntosh, 19, Seymour R1, was fined $1 and costs on a speeding charge. Lawrence Black, 48, Columbus, was fined $1 and costs on a charge of disregarding a stop sign. He was cited Oct. 13.

Martha A. Banta, 18, Seymour, was fined $1 plus costs, with all of the costs except the $2.25 fee for the bureau of motor vehicles suspended, on a charge of parking where prohibited. The citation was issued Oct. 4. Two cases were heard on Sunday.

Lawrence Baurle, 25, Seymour, was fined $5 and costs a charge of failure to yield the right of way. He had been cited following a traffic accident on Oct. 15. Robert C. Judd, 49, Glen Ellyn, was fined $1 plus costs on a charge of failure to yield the right of way.

He had been cited following an accident on 50 Saturday. Methodist Men Hear Mayor Trinity United Methodist Men held a supper meeting recently at which Mayor James L. Laupus spoke on increased population today and on the increased knowledge for children in schools and colleges. The meal was served by Mrs. Wilbur Lunte, Miss Martha Wichman, Mrs.

Clarence Wichman and Mrs. Carl Moman. Glen Schneck, chairman, presided at the meeting and introduced the guest speaker. W. W.

Stradley led in devotions and the Rev. Carl Moman gave the benediction. Agnew Blasts Leaders Of Antiwar Protest By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Backers of Nixon administration Vietnam policy, led by Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, have launched a counter-offensive against effects of last Wednesday's Vietnam Moratorium and those planned for days ahead. Agnew Sunday blasted leaders of the antiwar protest movement as "hard -core dissidents and professional anarchists" who are being enCouraged" by "an effete corps of impudent snobs who characterize themselves as intellectuals." But like President -Nixon's promise that he would not be affected by demonstrations against the war, Agnew's attacks were likely to spur Moratorium leaders to greater efforts.

"We think that it would be un-American and immoral to stop our actions now," said Jerome Grossman, a stationery manufacturer from the Boston suburb of Newton and one of the Moratorium's earliest organizers. Sen. Barry Goldwater, R- proposed in Long Beach, that Americans demonstrate in support of U. S. troops in Vietnam on Nov.

11-Veterans Day. And Gen. William Westmoreland, former commander of U. S. forces in Vietnam, said American fighting men were Record Yields Of Corn, Beans Is Predicted Indiana farmers may establish record yields this fall of the state's major grain crops- corn and soybeans.

State-federal agricultural statisticians at Purdue University, forecasting as of Oct. -1, estimate a corn crop of 456 million bushels and an indicated yield of 95 bushels an acre. The yield would be one bushel larger than the previous record of 94 bushels an acre established in 1965. Soybean production, estimated at 99.3 million bushels, would average an indicated 32 bushels an acre. This would represent a record yield, topping the previous record of 31.5 bushels an acre set in 1968.

Sorghum grain production. is expected to total 897,000 bushels, up 24 per cent from. last year. Indicated yield is 69 bushels an acre. A larger tobacco crop is also in prospect.

Total production is forecast at 14.5 million pounds, nine per cent larger than in 1968. Yield of 2,500 pounds an acre is larger than that of either 1967 or 1968. Indiana's hay crop is expected to amount to 2.1 lion tons, two per cent smaller than last year. However, an indicated record yield of 2.31 tons an acre is forecast. Potato production is forecast at 1.6 million hundredweight, up five per cent from last year.

An Indiana apple crop of 85 million pounds is 47 per cent larger than last year. Peach production at 15 million pounds is nearly three times larger than in 1968. Hoosier dairy herds produced 195 million pounds of milk during September. This i is one million pounds larger than the September, 1968, milk flow. September egg production of 214 million eggs was down eight per cent from last year.

Pulpit Exchange Successful For Local Churches Pastors of St. Paul's Lutheran Church at Cortland and Zion Lutheran Church at Seymour. exchanged pulpits Sunday morning which clearly demonstrated the fellowship between the two congregations belonging to different synods. The Rev. Darrel Geitz, pastor of Zion Church, preached at the 10 a.

m. service at Cortland and the Rev. John Tangman, pastor of St Paul's, officiated at the 10:15 a. m. service of the Zion Lutheran Church.

Both pasters reported very good attendance at the services and were pleased at the warm reception of both congregations. St. Paul's Church is a member of the American Lutheran Church (ALC) and Zion Church is a member of the Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod (LC-MS). Formal announcement of the fellowship of the two church bodies was made in Chicago on Sep: tember 22 when representatives 'of the two synods met to implement resolutions for fellowship passed in their respective I conventions. Man Arrested After Crash Landing Plane ANDERSON, Ind.

(AP) An Anderson man who managed to take off again after crash landing a light plane near here Saturday found police waiting for him when he returned to the airport. William Ray Harmon, 27, was charged with operating a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. State Trooper Earl Francis said residents of Anderson's south side complained the plane was "buzzing" their homes. He said Harmon's rented plane also struck power lines in Delaware County and crash landed. But Harmon took off again despite a shattered windshield, holes in the propeller and a radio antenna burned off by the power lines.

"He didn't have a scratch on him," Francis said. ROSES ROSES CENTRAL CITY, Colo. (AP) Yellow roses that bloom in Central City are survivors of the bushes that gold miners brought with them from Cornwall more than 100 years ago. OPEN The origins of the El Molo tribe of Kenya are mysterious. Some anthropologist believe they were originally Masai, who later mixed with nearby Gelaba, Rendile, and Samburu.

PAGE THREE. This would explain their language, a' dialect of Masai: Others believe the El Molo are the last survivors of an unknown people unrelated to any other Kenya tribe. disillusioned and disappointed by the Oct. 15 call for. an immediate.

withdrawal from the southeast Asian country. The vice president, apparently. selected to be, the administration's spokesman on antiwar protests, said last Wednesday's demonstrations served only an emotional purgative for those who feel the need to cleanse themselves of their lack of ability to offer a constructive solution to the problem. "Unfortunately, we have not seen the end. The hard-core dissidents and professional anarchists within the so-called peace movement will continue to exacerbate the situation," Agnew said at a Republican fund-raising dinner in New Orleans.

Grossman said Moratorium Day planners hoped to focus on local activities rather than large; central rallies during November. He said local committees will urge congressmen to return home to discuss. Vietnam with their Various groups have planned activities for Nov. 13, 14 and 15-with one group calling for a massive demonstration in Washington Nov. 15.

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