Chattanooga Daily Times from Chattanooga, Tennessee (2024)

a THE CHATTANOOGA TIMES: CHATTANOOGA, TENN. FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1960. 11 BORIS PASTERNAK BURIED IN RUSSIA Poet Rests Beneath Pines Near His Home- -Scene Deeply Moving One By 08GOOD CARUTHERS New Fork. Times News Service MOSCOW- -Boris Pasternak was given poet's burial Thursday 1 under three tall pine trees on a flowering hill in his beloved Russian countryside. More than 1,000 friends, neighbors, poets, writers, artisti and actors came from all parts of the Soviet Union to pay final tribute to the great Russian author.

In a simple ceremony at the cemetery, weeping admirers cast" bouquets the open grave, one of his closest friends declared in a burial eulogy: "We can accept or reject his opinions but as long as Russian poetry will play a role on this earth Boris Leonidovich Pasternak will stand among the greatest. "His disagreement with the present times was not with the regime or the state but he wanted a society of a higher order. he never believed in resisting evil with force and that was his mistake." Pasternak died on Memorial Day after a critically complicated illness. His body, open to view, lay in state this afternoon in the living room of his brown two-story dacha, or country home, amidst the tall pines in the village of Peredelkino, 25 miles west of Moscow. Lawn, Garden Filled Hundreds of persons filled the lawn and garden around the house after having traveled to the village by private cars, taxis, buses and on the electrie interurban train that runs nearby.

Throngs of admirers filed sadly across the threshold the weathered old frame house, treading on freshly-cut pine boughs on the floor to view the wasted face of the 70-yearold. poet. His open casket was surrounded by massive banks of flowers, most of them handpicked from the countryside. From another room came the clear slow music of an old. upright piano slightly out tune.

It was played alternately by Pasternak's. stepson, Stanislav Neuhaus, and then by Svetoslav Richter, who is widely considered to be one of the world's greatest living concert pianists. strains of Chopin's heartbreaking, the Marche: more sternly Funebre digni- and fied Funeral March of Beethoven wafted through the open windows. Scores of those waiting for the body to be carried across the valley to the cemetery near a lovely old Russian Orthodox church sat in the shade of the deep pine forest behind the house and listened intently to the music as it blended with the sound of the wind through the trees and the song of a single mockingbird. Love for Nature It was the kind of setting that had inspired Pasternak's immense love of nature and had rooted him to his motherland even when comrades in the writers union were crying his explusion two Soviet.

years ago after he had been given the Nobel prize for literature for his novel "Doctor Zhivago." Such, peaceful surroundings plus, the rich warmth his close friends in the fields of art and literature and phillosophy had made him reject the prize rather than give them up. Although Pasternak, a Jew, had converted Christianity during the. early days of the Russian Revolution and had stood firmly by his convictions, there was no religious funeral service. There was no priest in attendance, no cross, candles and no icons in the room where his body lay in state. And when the coffin, preceded by wreaths from many friends, was carried by 12 young men along the country road a quarter of a mile to the cemetery there was but the simplest kind of ceremony.

However, it was a series of testimonies to Pasternak's greatness and he had engendered that gave the burial a mood of intense emotion and mystic solenmity. PAULA HITLER DIES; SISTER OF TUEHRER BERCHTESGADEN, Germany (AP) -Adolt Hitler's sister Paula died here Wednesday, police said. She was 64. Although officially known as Paula Hitler, she had called herself Paula Wolf to avoid identification with the Nazi. fuehrer.

Paula had often said she never got along with the fuehrer, who had provided her with only a small income while he ruled the Third Reich and never invited her to social functions. After Nast Germany was defeated in 1945, Miss Hitler withdrew more and more from the world. In the last few years she lived on tiny rovernment pension in a small room of the old house where -she died. SHIPS ARE TO PARADE IN PRINCE'S MEMORY LISBON Ships of nations will rendezvous off Sagres, Portugal, Aug. 7.

to salute the memory of Prince Henry the Navigator, the "father of navigation." who died just 500 years ago. He established a navigation school at Sagres. The ships will parade to Lisbon, arrive Aug. 9 for the unveiling of a monument to the discoveries on the shore of the Tagus River at the point where the Portuguese explorers set forth on their voyages of discovery. Mrs.

Lurelle Spencer Is Dead at Age of 35 DIRS. ELLIS L. SPENCER Mrs. Lurelle G. Spencer, 35, wife Ellis L.

Spencer, office lengineer the City of Chattanooga, died Thursday morning in a local hospital. She lived at 6832 Robin Dr. Mrs. Spencer is survived by her husband; two daughters, and Spencer, Chattanooga; parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Walter Griffin, Fulton, two brothers, Hassel F. Griffin, Huntsville, Wyatt Griffin, Norfolk, sister, Mrs. Eloise Swain, Fulton, Miss, Funeral services will be held today at 2:30 p.m. at the East Chapel of the National Funeral Home, the Rev. John W.

Stair officiating. The body will be taken to Fulton, where. services will be held Saturday at 10:30 a.m. at the Trinity Baptist Church. Burial will be in Hill Crest Cemetery, Fulton.

The body is at the National Funeral Home, East Chapel. MRS. MAUDE STEWART DIES; SERVICES TODAY By Times Correspondent BENTON, Tenn. Mrs. Maude Garner Stewart, wife of the late J.

W. Stewart, died in an Athens hospital Wednesday night. Mrs. Stewart was an active member of the First Baptist Church, and for a number of years served as a Sunday School teacher, and was active in promoting the Pine Ridge Mission sponsored by her church. She contributed to missionary work outside the church, and following World War II assisted in supporting a German child.

Several of Mrs. Stewart's poems have been published, and she held membership the Pen and Quill Club, Cleveland. Mrs. W. D.

Chamberlain Ethel Chamberlain, 65, wife of the late W. D. Chamberlain, died Thursday morning in a local hospital. Mrs. Chamberlain was secretary of Mertins Cleaning a firm established in 1897 by her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. F. A. Mertins. She is survived by two stepsons, and Walter Reece Chamberlain, Chattanooga; brother, Clifford J.

Mertins; aunt, Mrs. P. J. McGuire, Atlanta; several nieces and nephews and cousins. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 11:30 a.m.

at the East Chapel of the National Funeral Home, Dr. William G. West officiating. Burial will be in Forest Hills Cemetery. Nephews will be pallbearers.

The body is at the funeral home, East Chapel. CHS CLASS OF '60 GIVEN CHALLENGE From Page- Three on earth, he asserted. Bright Future Seen said, if a concerted effort is made by all citizens. Merely a continuation of 1 the postwar growth will lift the gross national product by 50 per cent during the coming decade, he said. "America had to be," Dr.

Martin asserted. It was the fulfillment of Old Testament prophesy, the realization of the dreams of Plato and other philosophers and poets in ages past, he said. Today it stands as the envy of nations the world over. In Chattanooga in one week, the university president sald, more than 1.400 boys and girls have graduated from high schools. This could happen in no other country The best way to make this country greater, he emphasized, is to study and pattern present-day thinking after those who made America great in the first place.

In presenting the students to Supt. Letson, Principal Creed F. Bates. described the class of 1960 as "A class of superlatives. Bates also recognized and presented an "endowment diploma' in absentia to Miss Ella Dyer, a member of the class of 1885.

Miss Dyer's health prevented her from attending Thursday night's exercises. The students filed into the auditorium and overflowed the stage to the strains of "Pomp and Circ*mstance." played by the school band under the direction el Jewell S. Tilson. The school choir sane two selection: the invocation was delivered by the Rev. Arnold Stater, pastor Pilgrim Congregational Church, and the benediction by the Rev.

William T. Holt rector of St. Timothy's Episcopal Church. FRANK WYLIE HEADS KNOX GOP CAMPAIGN KNOXVILLE UP Frank Wylie has been named campaign manager for the Republican party's county ticket, the Knox County Republican executive committee announced Wednesday. Wylie, a Knoxville real estate dealer, said he will open GOP campaign headquarters Monday.

CHARLES JAY, 61, DIES IN RINGGOLD Lifelong Resident Was in Business There for 31 Years- Rites Today Times Correspondent, RINGGOLD, Charles A. (Gus) Jay, 61, died unexpectedly Wednesday night at his home here. He was a lifelong resident of Catoosa, County, member of had the First Baptist Church the and been engaged in cery business here for 31 years. Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Sallie Childers Jay; a daughter, Mrs.

Carl Cofer, of Ringgold; three sone. Charles W. and Jack Jay of Ringgold. and Jimmie Jay of Chattanooga; a brother, Jesse Jay of Ringgold, and a sister, Mrs. Lula Cooper, of Rossville.

Funeral services will be held Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the First Baptist Church here. The Rev. W. I. Pritchett and Elder Paul Childers will officiate.

Pallbearers will be J. R. Ralph, Ed Jay, James Chapman, Erman Chapman, Benny Chapman and Ralph Clark Jr. The honorary escort will meet at the church at 2:45 p.m. It will include Walter Atchley, Ruel Williams, Henry Epps, G.

C. Abney Jr. Roger Bowman, Horace Stamey, Arthur Teems John McGhee, Willie Childers, J. M. Nance, Bob Meek, Harold Hall, Tom Johnson.

Watson Abney, Dr. T. A. Cochran, Dr. Lewis Williams, Dr.

C. W. Stephenson, Joe Clark, Harold Adams, J. F. Fortenberry, Luke Baxter, W.

P. Bridges, Ted Gordy, Clyde Barton, A. B. Fisher, Harold Black, Bill Dunn, James Helton, M. C.

Deaton, Smith, John Payne, L. Lovingood John Wiggins, John D. Stewart, Bert Ward, Earle McDaniel, J. M. Pack, E.

D. Dycus and Frank Self. Burial will be in Anderson Cemetery. The body is at the Wallis and Bomar Funeral Home. JOHNSON GROUP LAUNCHES PUSH From Page One quarters have been directed from Austin, Tex.

Rayburn said Thursday's announcement was of the Johnson campaign because "I think this campaign been kicked off for some time." Ar regarded for whether, it announcement should be of the Johnson candidacy, he pointed that the senator had already said his name would be placed in nomination at the convention. Tentative plans call for Johnson to leave Washington late Friday for Newark and meet with New Jersey delegates, to before the national conven- New moving into York. His office declined to give details until the trip had be been definitely arranged. It was understood that the senator would be in upstate New York Sunday. There was no word on any plans to visit New York City.

The Humphrey action concerning Stevenson dovetailed with signs detected by reporters who accompanied Johnson to Los Angeles Tuesday that Humphrey was trying to hold together delegates pledzed to him prior to his withdrawal from the race. The apparent aim is to start an early-ballot push for Stevenson with about Humphrey delegates as the nucleus of support. Rayburn said the Johnson campaign is "progressing in fine fashion," with support in more than 25 states. He emphasized that the 500- vote first-ballot estimate of the senator's strength was a minim say The choice of Chapman and Mrs. Edwards was calculated, at least in part, to offset the largely Southern flavor of the Johnson candidacy and to link the campaign with elements of the party's liberal wing.

Mrs. Edwards told reporters that she had been sounding out New York delegates to the national convention in the past few days and found "a lot of strength" for the senator. Chapman said several Washington officials from the New Deal and Fair Deal era had expressed interest to him in working for the Johnson campaign. He stressed the senator's record as "one of the earliest and ardent supporters of the New Deal." M'KEE PREDICTS CHRIST'S RETURN Conference Head Greets Seventh-day Adventist Bodv at Collegedale Thousands of Seventh-day Adventists gathered Thursday for the opening of the annual GeorgiaCumberland Conference at Southern Missionary College, Collegedale, and heard Elder A. C.

MoKee predict "the imminent return of Christ." Elder McKee is the president of the Conference of Seventh-day Adventists whose headquarters are in Atlanta. He was elected to the post at a constituency meeting of the conterence held last spring. The organiaztion holds its regional Bible Conference each year on the Southern Missionary College campus. Guests who will speak today are H. W.

Klaser, statistical secretary of the General Conference of Seventh Day Adventists; D. A. Delafield. associate secretary of the White Publications office of the General Conference: T. R.

Flaiz, secretary of the medical department of the General Conference, and F. A. Mote. general field secretary of the General Conference. All are from the International headquarters of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Washington, D.C.

McKee said that it is becoming more and more plain to all men that the evils of the world which turn the hearts of men from. peace to war cannot be overcome by assemblies, councils, courts, treaties. conferences, commissions or trusteeships. The only hope of mankind is in a complete, change of the individual life by Jesus Christ, he said. "It is the fond hope of many that world leaders may be able solve the troubles of the world by means of the agencies set up in the United Nations, by treaties of peace, by a Security Council.

by an international Court of Justice, by understanding and agreement, and most of all through the influence of religion." he said. "Christian people should face the future with confidence. These developments which disturb and distress the world have not come to them unexpectedly. They have all been told in their guidebook, the Bible. he said.

"Until just recently, when people talked of the end of the world. they were looked upon as cranks and religious fanaties. he said. "But now the scoffing has ended. The world's great men- its scientists, its statesmen, its educators today are among the prohpets pointing to a catastrophic finale for this planet." "'The use of atomic and hydrogen bombs and intercontinental ballistic missiles has violently altered the thinking of the world;" he remarked.

He went on to say that it was up to certain of 'God's people' to interpret the meanings of the times in which they live In one of his closing statements, he said that according to the events now being manifested, "the end of all things is at hand." HYPNOSIS MACHINES CRITICIZED BY DOCTOR CHICAGO -Promoters of s0- called "hypnosis machines" came in for criticism recently from Dr. Harold Rosen, chairman of the American Medical Association's committee on hypnosis. One of the latest such devices offered is called a "brain wave synchronizer," which purportedly simplifies hypnosis by emitting a flickering light. Dr. Rosen says conipetent hypnotists need neither drugs nor gadgets only the spoken word.

Myles Horton Buys Tract in Jefferson DANDRIDGE, Tenn. (P)- Myles Horton, head of the controversial highlander folk school at Monteagle, has purchased a 60-acre tract of land in Jefferson County. The Rev. Roy T. Houts, a member of the Western North Carolina Conference of the Methodist Church, said Thursday he sold the property on the Knoxville-Dandridge highway, about 12 miles east of Dandridge, to Horton for an undisclosed sum.

Horton said in New York Thursday night that he has no immediate plans for the property. He added, "I hope to stay at Monteagle for the rest of my life." The Fringe of the News From Wire ST. LOUIS -A riding the $3,500 estate of St. Under terms of Green's friends to be trustee of the estate "to pay such funds as they see fit for the care of the 23-year-old horse, named Willy. If the funds last longer than Willy, the balance will go to the Humane Society of Missouri.

not, the will said destroyed." Willy to bel Green formerly was president of the Trail Riders Association here. He rode the horse each Sunday in secluded sections of St. Louis County, Reprieve ANGELES -When the Judge said "30 days," Actress Greta Thyssen's pretty brown eyes went wide and her mouth turned down. But Municipal Judge William Rosenthal added: "Jail term suspended," and Greta's eyes sparkled happily again and she smiled. However, the blonde beauty from Denmark was fined $52.50 170 PERSONS HURT IN POLISH RIOTING Catholics Battle Official Takeover of Building Used by Church WARSAW, Poland (AP) policemen and 80 civilians were reported injured in antigovernment riots Monday in the western Polish city of Zielona Gora.

The violence WAS reported touched off when local government officials tried to take over part of a state-owned building being used by the Roman Catholic Church. About 5,000 persons were believed to have taken part in an all-day street battle that resembled religious riots in the southern Polish steel town of Nowa Huta five weeks ago. Told in Red Paper Informed sources in Warsaw said the Zielona Gora Communist party newspaper, Gazeta Zielonogorska, published Thursday a report of the riots and events leading up to them. Informed sources in Warsaw gave this account of what followed: local priest Sunday informed his parishioners of the government's decision to take over part of the building and declared the church's right must be respected. When local officials arrived to take possession, they were met by women demonstrators who drove them off.

The women stood guard until quitting time at the local factories when they were joined by workers. The swelling crowd advanced on a small force of local police who retreated to a police station where the crowd surrounded them. Some of the rioters stoned the building while others set fire to two police cars. Riot police from nearby Poznan relieved the beleaguered local police and battled the angry mobs with tear gas bombs and clubs. About 100 persons were reported arrested.

KENNEDY SHIFTS POLICY ATTACK From Page One federation and endorsed the senator for President. The 1,200 textile workers in the Grand Ballroom of the Conrad Hilton Hotel broke into a fiveminute demonstration when Kennedy entered. There were shouts and cheers and much waving of placards with the senator's picture. The signs and assorted noisemakers were supplied by the Kennedy staff. Kennedy, whose endorsem*nt was engineered by close Massachusetts and New England political associates in the union, praised the union's record and said, "I 1 accept your nomination and endorsem*nt, and I can assure you that this year as the Textile Workers Union goes, so goes the United States." "I have been supported every time I have run for office in Massachusetts by this union, and I have won," he said.

Point Out False Friends Kennedy drew applause when he predicted that the minimum wage legislation would come to a vote and thereby separate the false friends of labor and that the legislation to provide medical care for the elderly under social security would passed this year. At the news conference he discounted Adlai Stevenson's suggestion that a special peace and disarmament agency be set up in the State Department. The senator noted that he and Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota had introduced legislation along that line, and that he would naturally accept the concept if Stevenson meant that such an agency was to be limited to technical aspects of the problem, such as measuring nuclear tests.

That was the idea in the Kennedy bill. Kennedy observed that broader aspects of pace are the President's responsibility. GIRLS HURT IN CRASH One Driver Cited After: 2 Cars Collide Two teen-age girls were injured slightly about 6:45 p.m. Thursday in a two-car collision at Central 'Drive and Nelson Road. Mornita Campbell, 16, of 126 Melrose and Sharon Smith, 16, of 748 Gentry received treatment from a private doctor.

They were passengers in an automobile driven by Richard M. Weintraub of 210 Chickasaw which collided with a car driven by Scott G. Rhineheart 702 Graysville Dr. Rhinehart was cited to court on a reckless driving charge by investigating officers Marion J. and Harry P.

Bible. ROCKEFELLER VISITS NORTH DAKOTA TODAY NEW YORK (P) Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller will plunge into a senatorial contest in North Dakota Friday with a round of campaign activities that also will remind voters he is available for the GOP nomination for President He will spend the next two days stumping for Gov. John E.

Davis, Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate in a special election June 28. Rockefeller will fly to Fargo, N.D., to begin a fast-paced schedule that includes speeches, news conferences, a political rally and campaigning along sidewalks and in shopping centers. He will breakfast Saturday on a farm, a good setting for a candidate's helper or a candidate in the politically important farm belt. The farm question is a major one in the contest between Davis and U.S.

Rep. Quentin Burdick, the Democratic candidate. WILLIAMS' GAINS. From Page One is his trademark. Small Crowd on Hand Steabler.

a popular figure in Democratic ranks, may become Kennedv's campaign manager. This was not affirmed however by anything that was said on the ferry ride. Kennedy was lauded in a formal statement in which Williams declared that the senator "knows what America wants and knows how to ret it." He said his administration will be "intellectually dynamic and spiritually dedicates" and that Kennedy will shape events, rather than let events him. Aware of Move Kennedy, who had been advised that the resture was imminent when he flew to northern Michiran, said he was most appreciative of William's support because of his record and because of what he stands for in the party. The governor, who is sensitive to allegations of Walter Reuther's dominance in the state's Democratic party, asserted that Reuther did not know the statement was imminent, but Reuther's agent the state central committee, Mrs.

Mildred Jeffrey, was on hand for all the talks and Reuther's backing of Kennedy, a rumored fact many months, was clearly implicit in the decision to make an early announcement. Williams had earlier declared that he would stay uncommitted until the convention. The Mackinac conference was carried off in high style. Williams, known for his flair for dramatics, met Kennedy at the airport in the company of his top party officials. He was wearing the polka-dot tie that Williams then escorted the senator and his party over the 100-million-dollar Mackinac Bridge, posing for photographs along the way.

The day was cool and clear and the blue water of the straits glistened in the sun. Then they boarded the ferry for the trip to Mackinac. A small crowd carrying homemade placards met the ferry at the dock and cheered the senator as he mounted one of the horse-pulled lorries which are the island's chief form of transportation. The group talked around the dining-room table for more than an hour while the reporters sat on the broad veranda and enjoyed the cool breeze and sweeping view. Their enjoyment of the afternoon was suddenly marred when one of the Detroit reporters learned by telephone that the Williams announcement had already been released in Washington by the office Sen.

Philip A. Hart -Mich) Apparently this was a of the timing that had been arranged by the governor to give his announcement the broadest circulation but it stirred the reporters wrath. The circ*mstance. marred- the holiday aspect of the occasion, but not the anticipation of Kennedy and his aides that Williams' move will accelerate the momentum in their direction. 4 DEMOCRATS GET HIGH RED'S NOTE From Page One the Soviet Union in the summit conference have meant under these circ*mstances? It would have meant to endorse the aggressive policy of the militarist circles of the U.S.A.

to help them to pursue the policy of war under the cover of negotiations for peace, as well as to acknowledge the right of American militarists to impudently defy the sovereignty of the Soviet: Johnson commented to the Senate that this came from a man who "walked out of -Paris after refusing to negotiate on the basic issues of war and peace." Saw Press Conference of people throughout the world had the opportunity to observe the famous press conference in Paris," Johnson said. "At that conference, Premier Khrushchev made it clear that his attitude was not one of conciliation and In a related development, the White House rejected a statement by Khrushchev that Eisenhower made no "sincere effort" to meet with him privately in Paris. Khrushchev's statement was published Wednesday in the Soviet government newspaper Izvestia. White House press secretary James C. Hagerty noted that while in Paris Eisenhower issued statement saying the United States was prepared to "undertake bilateral conversations between the United States and U.S.S.R." Khrushchev ignored the offer, Hagerty said.

STEVENSON SAYS NOTE IS HOPEFUL ON SUMMIT NEW YORK (P)- -Adia! E. Stevenson said Thursday he felt Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev'8 letter to four leaders "sounded conciliatory, and for renewed hopeful (sum- about mit) negotiations." Stevenson issued his statement from his New York law office. He said his copy of the letter from Khrushchev was in his Chicago law office, and that it was read to him over the telephone. "I canot agree that President Eisenhower was solely responsible for the failure of the summit meeting.

But in other respects my first impression of Mr. Khrushchev's letter was encouraging. "It sounded conciliatory and hopeful about the prospects for renewed negotiations. I was interested that he saw fit to answer our cablegram at such length." Color Sets SCHENECTADY Color television receiving sets contain about twice as many parts as the black and -white picture models and also: require about three times as long to assemble in the factory. CATTLE FEED MADE OF PAPER IS TESTED LOS ANGELES -The newsprint used in newspapers is similar to hay in cellulose concontaining per cent cellulose.

West Coach researchers testing a pelleted cattle teed made from newsprint, vitamine, and minerals. Impetus is given to the experiments by the fact that Scandinavian farmers already feed newspapers to cattle- a cow's stomach breaks down the paper into a digestible form of starch. OVERLAND MAIL TRIPS WEST TOOK 25 DAYS D. A. DELAFIELD T.

R. FLAIZ GOVERNORS PLAN STRATEGY TALKS From Page One national convention, Collins May Decline to the breakfast, including Gov. John Patterson of Alabama, who has announced his support for Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts.

Ellington was asked if it also would include Gov. Orval Faubus of Arkansas, who has been mentioned as a potential States' Rights candidate for President, and Gov. Leroy Collins of Florida, who will be permanent chairman' of the Democratic He replied that invitations are being extended to them but that Collins, because of the necessity of maintaining neutrality among aspirants for the Democratic nomination, might decline to attend. "I am sure he will be an impartial presiding officer, and we would not want to do anything that would embarrass him in his position as permanent chairman of the convention," Ellington said. The breakfast session will be devoted to a discussion of problems likely to confront the South in the national governor's conterence, as well as to Democratic convention politics, he added.

The governors' conference agenda is devoted to the usual noncontroversial subjects education, federal-state relations, highway financing and safety, and problems of the aging. In view this, any discussion of strategy in 1 the governors' conference would of relatively minor importance when weighed against the South's political problems in the Democratic national convention. Ellington, who is a close personal and political friend of the Texas senator, was pleased by the Scripps-Howard newspapers' endorsem*nt of Johnson for the Democratic nomination. "I think Johnson is the best man for the presidency," he declared. "He is a man who understands our situation and the world Scornful of Michigan Ellington saw an expected endorsem*nt of Kennedy by Gov.

gan as being helpful to Johnson. "I don't think the voters are going along with the radical, leftwing element of either he said. Besides Ellington and Daniel, other Southern governors who have declared their support for Johnson are Bert Combs of tucky and J. Lindsay Almond Jr. of Virginia.

Ellington said some other Southern governors favor Johnson but are holding off a public declaration because of current political situations in their own states. He did not identity them. He was confident the convention will avoid another fight over the loyalty during oath, 1952 such as developed the and 1956 meetings. "The information I get is that there is not going to be any loyalty oath as such," he said. MacFarland Illness Creates Problems From Chattanooga Times Bureau NASHVILLE Gov.

Ellington said Thursday he hopes soon to solve problems resulting from the illness of Revenue Commissioner Alfred T. MacFarland. MarFarland suffered a heart attack two weeks ago and has been confined to a Gallatin, hospital. His doctors state he is making rapid progress toward recovery. MacFarland soon said will he be hopes able to meet with the revenue department staff and to sign necessary papers.

State law imposes some duties on the revenue commissioner and prevents their being delegated. Ellington said consideration is being given to revising the law in the 1961 Legislature to prevent a recurrence of the pres'sent difficulties. will continue as commissioner if he wants to after recovering from his illness, the governor said. stagers of the Butterfield OverST. LOUIS But Horse-drawn land Mail began their first nonstop dashes to and from the West Coast in the fall of 1858.

The mail-and-passenger route was 2,795 miles, from St. Louis to San Francisco. Scheduled time for the trip was 25 days, the fare, was $200, each passenger allowed pounds of luggage, and the postal rate was 10 cents a letter. The stages set forth twice a week from both east and west. Picture Takers ROCHESTER Photographers, most, of them amateurs, snap about five million pictures day throughout a year.

Peak season is in the summer vacation months. Deaths 65. wife CHAMBER late W. D. Chamoeriain, aled Thursday morning in a local nospital, Mrs.

Chamoerlain's parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Mertins, started the Mertins Cleaning Co.

in 1897. Mrs. Chamberlain was secretary of the company. She is survived by two stepsons. James and Walter Reece Chamberlain, Chattanooga: brother, Clifford J.

Mertins; aunt, Mrs. P. J. McGuire, Atlanta, several nieces. nephews and cousins.

Funeral services will be held at 11:30 Saturday from the East Chapel of the National Funeral Home, with Dr. William G. West officiating. Interment will be in Forest Hills. Pallbearers will be nephews.

The body at the National Funeral Home East Chapel, JAY Ringgold, CHARLES Ga. A. died (GUS), unexpectedly age 61, at his home Wednesday evening 9 0 clock. He was a life long restdent of Catoosa County. a member of the First Baptist Church and had been actively engaged in the grocery business for 31 years Ringgold.

Surviving are his wife, MIs. saille Childers Jas; a daughter, Mrs. Carl Corer of Ringgold: three sons. Charles and Jack Jay Ringgold: Jimmie Jay oL Chattanooga; live grandchilaren also survice. A brother, Jesse Jay, of Ringgold, and a sister.

Mrs. Lula Cooper of Rossville. Funeral from First Baptist Church in Ringgold Friday afternoon, 3 o'clock. Services conducted by Rev. W.

I. Pritchett and Elder Paul Childers. Pallbearers selected are J. Ralph and Ed Jay, James, Erman and Benny Chapman and Ralph Clark Jr. Honorary escore to meet at the church at 2:45 and will include Walter Atchley.

Ruel Williams. Henry Epps. G. C. Abney Roger Bowman, Horace Stamey, Arthur Teems 8r John McGhee, Willie Childers, M.

Nance, Meek, Harold Hail. Tom Johnson, Watson Abney, T. A. Cochran, Dr. Lewis Williams.

Dr. C. Stephenson, Joe Clark. Harold Adams. J.

F. Fortenberry, Luke ter. W. Pr Bridges, Ted Gordy, Barton, A. B.

Fisher, Harold Black, Bill Dunn. James Helton. M. Deaton, Bill Smith, John Payne, M. Lovingood John E.

Wiggins. John D. Stewart, Bert Ward, Earle McDaniel. J. M.

Pack, E. Dycus and Frank Self. The body will main at the funeral home. Interment In Anderson Cemetery. Wallis Bomar of Ringgold in charge.

-MORRIS. age 28. of Vance Circle In Chattanooga. in a Chattanooga hospital at 12:15 Wednesday afternoon. He was member of the East Ridge Church of God.

He WAS employed by Mueller and WAS a member of Local of the machinist union. Survivors are his wife. Beverly Penney; three daughters; Deborah Ann Penney. Linda Carrol Pennev Joan Lorrie Penney, all of Chattanooga: parents. Mr.

and Mrs. George Penney of Soddy, three sisters. Mrs. 8. D.

Olive Jr. of Florence. Mrs. Virgil Caldwell of Soddy and Barnard Johnson of Soddy: brother. Lewis Penney.

Daisy, grandmother. Mrs. Sam Penney of Soddy, and several aunts and uncles. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Friday from the Soddy Church of God.

conducted by Revs. J. Neweby Thompson and Howard McGee. Interment will follow in Hamilton Memorial Gardens Cemeterv. Active pallbearers will Bobby Ray Uren.

Raymond Keith, Paul Keith. Billy Morgan, Bob Adams and Jim Adams. Honorary pallbearers will be employes of Mueller Corp. and Men's Bible Class of East Ridge Church of God and Boddy Church of God. The body will remain at funeral home.

Arrangements by Williamson Funeral Home in Soddy. -MRS. LURELLE 35. 6832 Robin Dr. died Thursday morning in local hospital.

She is vived by her husband, Ellis Li Spencer. office engineer for the city Chattanooga engineering department: two daughters, Misses Beth and Spencer, parents. and Mrs. Walter Griffin. Fulton, two brothers.

Rassel Griffin. Huntsville, Wyatt Griffin. Norfolk, sister, Mrs. Eloise Swain. Fulton.

Miss. Funeral services from held at 2:30 Friday afternoon the East Chapel of the National Funeral Home, with the Rev. John W. Stair officiating. Following services here.

the body will be sent the Senter for Funeral Home, Fulton. services to be held 10:30 Saturday morning from Trinity Baptist Church. Fulton. terment will be Crest Cemetery. The body 18 at the National Funeral Home East Chapel.

WILCOXEN- MRS. ABRIE. 76. of dy. passed away at the home of granddaughter.

Mrs. James Green, Highway. Signal Mountain. Thursday afternoon. She was a member of the Hickory Grove Baptist Church and she is survived by daughters.

Mrn. Ollie Lewis. Signal Mountain and Mrs. Clift, grandchildren, 30 greatFuneral services from the Mount Carmel Baptist Church Saturday 2 o'clock with the Rev. Houston Baggett the Rev.

C. M. Gooden officiating. in Wilcoxen Cemetery. Nephews will serve as pallbearers.

body will be at the Howard Ewion Funeral Home In Dunlap. REV. OCIE. of Dewberry, passed at the home of his ter. Myrtle Bette.

1705 Ivy Thursday a morning after an illness. He member of New Salem Japtist Church. Dewberry. Survivors are sister. Mrs.

Myrtle Betts: niece, Miss Ruby Betts. Chicago: nephew. John Betta: cousin, Mrs. Mabel Rice, Springfield. Ohio.

and 8 host friends. Funeral arrangements be announced later by Buchanan, 2628 8. Broad phones AM 6-6105. 6-6106. IN MEMORIAM In sad memory of my mother, Leona Scott Tate, who passed AWAY one year AgO today, June 3.

1959. are gone, but not forgotten. Sadly missed by daughter. Mrs. Nancy son-in-law, Mr.

Mose Anderson; sister, Mrs. Gizella Evans; granddaughter, Theola Anderson. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our friends neighbors for their many expressions of kindness and sympathy shown time of the death of our mother. Mrs. Cleter Smithson Young.

Also, for the beautiful fipral offerInks. The family of Mrs. Cleter Smithson Young. CALL US FOR THE FINEST IN FLOWERS 3 PHONES AM.6-7168 39. Patten Parkway 1S at in of 15 Bob W.

BaxClyde: C. L. re- and 6111 died 8 the and the be the the of surof Lisa Mr. to at the In- Sodher two will EST, and sis3 Dispatches horse is sole beneficiary of Louis Atty. Robert S.

Green. will be appointed two and placed on a year's probation for arguing with a traffic officer over a ticket. Miss Thyssen, who had pleaded guilty to disturbing the peace, said she thought the officer was going to kiss her, not write a ticket for running a red light. Protest JEANETTE, Pa. Vegetables and flowers are growing on a main business street in this western Pennsylvania com- munity.

Tomatoes, cabbage, corn, petunias, geraniums and other items have been springing up In a symbolic protest by merchants against delay on a The project tarted about widening and repaving, project. in three months ago sevenblock section of the street. It was to be finished by now. But slowed-up installation of lines and a gas company strike have impeded progress. of win Mrs.

An- and us dear.

Chattanooga Daily Times from Chattanooga, Tennessee (2024)
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