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Salisbury Times

   Salisbury Times, The (Newspaper) - May 13, 1964, Salisbury, Maryland                               WEATHER Warm showers ending tonight See Pige 14 TEMPERATURES At 7 65 low last night 63 rainfall 21 inches for 24 hours up to S p.m high M low 60 A year high 61 low THE SALISBURY TIMES HOME EDITION Delmarva's Largest Daily Newspaper VOL 41 NO 139 PHONE PI SALISBURY MARYLAND WEDNESDAY MAY 13 1964 54 PAGES City Banker Stricken Dies W Tracy Holland 58 vie president of the Union Trust Ci here died unexpectedly day in the emergency room o Peninsula General Hospital Mr Holland was stricken i the bank about 4 p.m as ta was about to leave for hi home on New York Ave H was taken to the hospital i he Salisbury ambulance an death came just before An autopsy disclosed tha death was caused by a rupture abdominal blood vessel accord ing to his attending physician Mr Holland's banking caree began at Union Trust the Farmers and Merchants at th age of 18 just after his gradua tion from Wicomico High School On his 21st birthday he wa advanced from teller to assis tant cashier and continued t advance through his 40 year with the banking institution A NATIVE OF St Martin's in Worcester County Mr Holland as the son of the late Thomas and Ida Massey Hoi land The family moved to Sal in 1914 Mr Holland was a of Group 6 Maryland Banker Assn and numerous other bank ing organizations He was an active member o Trinity Methodist Church and his other memberships include See HOLLAND Page 20 McKeldin Asks Stores Union To Meet Him BALTIMORE AP Mayor Theodore R McKeldin grocery store operators am clerk's union officials to meet with him tomorrow The union has been on strike against Acme 17 The operators of six other grocery chains closed their doors the same day contending a strike against one was a strike against all Some 225 stores are closed McKeldin in his telegram ing for the meeting said unions have a right to strike and agement has an equally strong right to try to counteract strikes There comes a time McKeldin said when the interests of the public supersede any private considerations and it is my firm opinion based on the outpouring of ex- pressions of public indignation that such a time has arrived in the chain supermarkets labor dispute Something must be done and done promptly and I in- tend to do everything possible to see that such positive action is taken immediately in behalf of the citizens of this area About people em ployes of Safeway AiP Penn Fruit Grand Union Food Fair and been idle Man Acquitted Of Murder Charge A Wicomico County jury acquitted a Salisbury of a murder charge Calvin J Anderson pleaded not guilty through his attorney Walter D Webster Jo the der of Pearl L Jackson 29 of Willow SL Salisbury Police accused Anderson in the fatal shooting of the woman in her apartment Feb 7 Anderson testified he ed the apartment to find Mrs Jackson lying on the bed ing an old pistol He said he toW her lo put the gun away and grabbed it by the Mrs Jackson grabbed Hie weapon by the barrel and It went off be said fn Today's Aim Landers 17 Bridge 7 Classified Ads 21 to 24 i 25 j Crossword 24 Deaths Funerals 20 Drew Pearson 17 Editorial Page S Happenings 12 Market Reports 20 Polly's Pointers 7 Shore 7 Pages H Tide 14 Goldwater Bucks Strong Nebraska Write-In Tide YACHT BURNS IN BAY Heavy smoke billows from a yacht which was destroyed by fire yesterday in Chesapeake Bay Barely visible near the bow a person is seen leaping into the water All six aboard the Sea Saw IV owned by Vernon M Starry of Baltimore were rescued The picture was taken by ahead the freighter Atlas Victor up Fire Yacht 6 Rescued EASTON Md AP Six escaped without serious injury when a new yacht the Sea Saw IV burned to the waterline on Chesapeake Bay ear Poplar Island Tuesday The vessel was described as a otal loss It was valued at The Army Corps of En- the hull ashore relative of one of those aboard aid the fire apparently started in some electrical wiring behind the pilot house Aboard were Mr and Mrs Vernon Starry of Severna Park Herbert Cox and Frank stone both of Baltimore George Keen of Rivera Beach and Mrs Irene Clark of Pasadena Five of them were pulled from the bay by a lifeboat from a freighter bound for Baltimore and the sixth was rescued by a pleasure boat 13 Face Trial In Racial Disorders CAMBRIDGE Thirteen ivil rights leaders return to Cambridge today to face erly conduct charges arising rom Monday night's violent con- between Negroes and National Guard Meanwhile an uneasy quiet after a noisy but demonstration Tuesday flight and the uncertainty about urther protest marches The 13 arrested Monday in- luding Mrs Gloria Richardson of the Cambridge lent Action Committee were n to the National Guard ry in Pikesville just outside They were held in what Asst Uy Gen Robert Murphy de- as civil detention Murphy said charges would be against them at a hearing today Maximum BILL'S SHIP CAFE City Opens tomorrow p.m Enjoy seafood N E W fi C H 1 V is six months in jail d or fine Tuesday night's demonstration began at tire Waugh Methodist Irardi where John Lewis onal president of the Student Coordinating Com- pleaded for a peaceful About demonstrators them young strode out of the marched at rapid cap bout blocks and wound up near the church at corner of High and Pipe Streets A National Guardsmen with fixed bayonets haUed them As you know we can't Jel you demonstrate they were iold Bng Gen George M commander of National Guard forces in Cambridge you've a noisy round here Why don't you dis- Lewis then to the who were down in the rain-soaked street a few feet from the line of men We have a perfect right to protest he said We must make it clear that this is just the beginning There will be no peace no until justice and freedom are available to all people You have demonstrated here tonight that we can protest whether they like it or not he said The group then walked slowly about a block down the and dispersed McNamara In Final Round Of Saigon Talks SAIGON South Viet Nam Secretary ert S McNamara held a final round of talks with U.S tary officials in Saigon today under heavy guard Before leaving by plane for Washington McNamara was also to meet with Maj Gen Nguyen Khanh South Viet Nam's strongman premier to review the general and economic situation in the country No important new dations on the war against the Communist Viet Cong were ex- from McNamara's 30 hour visit an aide to the tary said McNamara followed up his last visit two months ago with wide-ranging recommendations for increased U.S aid and more American combat advisers if necessary This trip was described as mainly to update McNamara on progress made in the past two months McNamara and Gen Maxwell D Taylor chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff met this morning with Gen Paul D Harkins commander of U.S forces in South Viet Nam and Lt Gen William C land who replaces Harkins Aug 1 American and Vietnamese curity officials maintained a state of alert declared several days ago A ring of armed U.S soldiers stood guard Tuesday around a sports club's swimming pool McNamara U.S Henry Cabot Lodge and Lodge's wife took a dip The U.S request to its allies for assistance in Viet Nam con- to get a mixed tion The Danish government was reported planning to give an evasive answer Nationalist China said it was studying ways to expand economic assistance Communist North Viet Nam said the US call for aid from other North Atlantic Treaty nations was a brazen intervention in Viet Nam's internal affairs Man Accused In Area State Police today said a tal of 17 charges have been so far against a old Register St man caught breaking into a Fruitland ern May 7 Officers said Gilbert Dean was apprehended by Tpr I.e John G Fuller as he was breaking into coin operated chines in the Silver Dollar ern i According to police Dean is accused of breaking into merous county business places luring March April and May The State Police investigation s continuing Salisbury Police said they have charged Dean with al breaking and in the city Police said Dean will be ar- this week LEAP NOT FATAL Jose Reposo 40 leaps from the Northern Boulevard viaduct in Albany yesterday toward the street about feet below But firemen caught the University of Havana graduate in a net and he later was reported in satisfactory condition at a hospital Later he stabbed himself fatally with a scalpel AP Wirephoto Plunge Fails Doctor Fatally Stabs Himself ALBANY NY the very hospital where he hac learned how to save a lonely Cuban doctor plunged a scalpel into his heart Tuesday night and won his hours long fight to die Dr Jose Reposo 40 a geon began his suicide effort Tuesday afternoon when he slashed himself in the chest and abdomen but inflicted only wounds Frustrated he went to a viaduct and prepared to jump 60 feet to the ment Police were summoned The officers approached the man who clung to the viaduct railing his body arched out over the street his toes wedged in ing outside the railing Don't jump a trolman cried We want to help you Reposo clung to the railing about 15 minutes While police on the bridge held his attention spread a net below A crowd of about 300 ered The onlookers watched in silence as the firemen braced or his jump He relaxed his grip and dropped arms spread wide to the street Cheers went up as firemen caught him in the vas net He looked surprised to be said Lt Howard er one of the firemen He said Do you have a He told police he was ly very lonely Reposo chatted with at- tendants of the ambulance thai took him to Albany Medical Hospital He appeared rational and a medical center man said Suddenly as the surgeon turned his back the Cuban snatched a scalpel and stabbed it deep into his chest It was a surgeon's the hospital spokesman said It rent the heart opening a big wound that made it easy for doctors to get to the heart and massage it He died about two hours later despite the efforts of a score of medical men and nurses to save him Reposo who attended the University of Havana Medical School and was a 1949 graduate of Albany Medical College was scheduled to begin a residency in internal medicine this mer at the hospital where he died The hospital said he was di- and the father of two His mother reportedly lives in Cuba i He had come here from fornia about two months it was not known what had been doing there He hadj lived here in a rented room j NATO Studies Demands From Gen De Gaulle THE HAGUE Netherland AP Foreign ministers o the North Atlantic Treaty Or took up in a secre session today the demands o France for a stronger role i the alliance's affairs Emerging from a session Foreign Minister Ger hard Schroeder of West Ger many would say only that h thought the meeting had cleansing effect on NATO structural problems This was an apparent refer ence to differences France and Paul Henri Spaak outspoken foreign minister o Belgium over the role NAT should play in the years t come Before the ministers wen into session Spaak declared h would ask the French to spel out just what you think i wrong with NATO and how i should be righted Otherwise See NATO Goldwater Says U.S Must Cool Violence Fires By JAMES DEVLIN NEW YORK Bar ry Goldwater says there will to more violence m our streets unless the nation gets an ad ministration that will cool thi and tempers of in rights struggle The Arizona senator a candi date for the Republican nomination said Tues day night at a rally in Madison Square Garden that Republicans do not wan to see government as the cheer leader for a frightful game of violence destruction and dis obedience The turnout of nearly 20.000 in the home state of a rival for the nomination Gov Nelson A Rockefeller was the largest of Goldwater's campaign The tisan crowd cheered and plauded wildly throughout Goldwater told the crowd which included some Negroes that if the precepts of God were observed the differences be- tween whites and blacks would be wiped off the face of this nation He said the oldest law of all was that you cannot pass a law that will make me like you you like me This is thing that can only happen in our The right to vote of he said The right to seek an education of course There are laws to secure those rights But until we have an tion that cool the fires and the tempers of violence we simply cannot solve the rest of the problem in any lasting sense Expected For DPI Event GEORGETOWN A record of people is ex- at the annual Plate fund of the Delmarva Poultry Industry sociation Tuesday ai the comico Youth and ter Last year 1.522 attended Dinner this year will hear famed humorist Edmund Harding of Washington NC feature speaker of Uw evening Final report will be made on remits of this year's drive lo provide the la's poultry association with funds for its industry ment and market promotion projects Goal for ed Feb 27 is As of the tabulation by the has END OF THE LINE stand heM by after notching a art a half Ike streets bridge The alws 191 were met fcy fee awl they the area last fright AP known figures as Sen John J Williams of Delaware Rep Rogers C B Morton of land and Edwin P of Wilmington Honorary chairman of the board of directors of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States Reporters and commentators from newspapers and and tele- vision stations on Delmarva and elsewhere also wall attend as special guests Nixon Shows Strength In Primary Race By LARRY OSIUS WASHINGTON AP Sen Barry Goldwater was the top in Tuesday's ka Republican presidential primary where he was the only candidate listed But he ran into a strong tide of write-in votes for former Vice President Richard M Nixon and others The Arizona senator was bare- ly scoring the majority of votes his supporters had predicted be- fore the election He had just over 50 per cent of the vote while in 1960 had the presidential nomination that Goldwater seeks this about 31 per cent Goldwater's major announced rival for the nomination Gov Nelson A Rockefeller of New York polled a sizable vote in the uncontested West Virginia preference primary Rockefeller had no write-in competition because such votes are not counted in West ginia Returns from of ka's precincts gave water votes The write-in votes went this to Nixon to Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge to Rockefeller and 983 divided among a handful of others In West Virginia with of precincts reporting feller had about 64 per cent of the total vote cast in a lackluster Republican primary There were no Democratic preference contests in either state but President Johnson rolled up a substantial write-in vote in Nebraska With precincts reporting he had 776 votes Gov Frank Morrison had write-in votes Atty Gen Robert F Kennedy had 363 and Gov George C- Wallace of Alabama had 799 The vote for Gov Morrison who also won the Democratic nomination for a third term was a gesture to boost lis vice presidential stock Nixon's showing in Nebraska was by far his best in any of the spring primaries He is not an announced candidate for the nomination but has said he would accept it A last-minute drive for n votes spearheaded by former Secretary of the Interior Fred Seaton found fertile ground in a state which gave Nixon his est majority in the 1960 election per cent West Virginia and Nebraska named delegates to the Republican and Democratic con- and also chose nees for governor senator and he House See PRIMARY Page 20 Man Decapitated In Saw Mill Mishap CAMBRIDGE AP A man was kilted today when his head was decapitated in a saw mill accident State Police said Use victim Robert Pollard Dickinson 21 of been paid or pledged so far The dinner will began at 6 30 p m A Eugene Baitey of Beach immediate president of DPI wall be ter of Among distinguished who have already sent their acceptances are such Jog peeling machine when a I log fell Jran a conveyor and knocked him into the conveyor father owns the saw mill Star Diy N SaL ferlin Holds Municipal Elections BERLIN Fewer than one out of ten voters registered in town turned out for elections yesterday to re-elect Mayor John toward Burbage and two ilmen All were unopposed Town William L Hand said today that only 36 of the town's 597 registered their right of in Mayor and ce D Quillin and Thomas K avior All will serve until May 968 Mayor Barbage received 55 otes Mr Taylor received 54 nd Mr Quillin 53 Mr Hand said The next town election will be held in May 190 to elect three remaining coundlmen Harrison Heads Delaware GOP DOVER Del Clayton S Jr former ton Republican chairman is the new Republican chairman of Delaware Harrison in a cret ballot last night defeated incumbent William V Roto Jr by vole four ballots voided Roth had been appointed chairman in 1961 and ejected lo two year term hi 1962 Bay Factory Direct Furn access Inc Berlin Sat UJ 9 p m Sun EH JL'S SHIP CAFE Ocean Opens Enjoy seafood It   

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