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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 12
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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 12

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Louisville, Kentucky
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Page:
12
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SECTION 1 iii i 1.01 isvn.i.i;. satirdw mo rim no. june 6, i96t A in i (I Tr i 1 ii I (fl) Goldwaler, Nixon Get Invitation AM) DP Li After our recent bubble tale we found in our warehouse over 300 TV's, appliance and air conditioners. We have no room on our display floors and this merchandise must be sold. Prices have been slashed to an all time low.

Some or brand new in crates; some are floor samples and demonstrators and some are one of a kind. All sales are subject to prior sale. YOURS FOR THE ASKING 1st PAYMENT JULY 15TH fc-Iv I 1 vWP dlr JzB SUN-GLOW WARRANTY 90-DAY HOME TRIAL ON TV'S APPLIANCES Sun's fabulous extended service warranty entitles you to a 90 day exchange privilege on TV's Appliances at no loss in price. This is to safeguard you from getting a black white or color TV or Appliance that might be a "lemon" or that might be otherwise defective. You get this protective warranty absolutely free and in writing.

Ike Strategy Hit By Montgomery From AP nd UPI Diptcht Omaha Beach, France Allied governments and military forces yesterday joined relatives and friends in 20th-anni- versary D-Day tributes to the dead of the Normandy campaign. General Omar Bradley, who commanded the United States Normandy was a great Allied forces 20 years ago, led the effort teamwork and that American delegation. neither ally could possibly But amid the simplicity and have done without the other." dignity that marked the cere- Aftcr watching the show, monies came a jarring note Lord Tedder, Marshall of the from London, where Britain's Rovai Air Force, said, "This Field Marshal Viscount Mont- outburst is a pitiful example gomery asserted that in his of a man's second childhood." opinion General Dwight D. Earlier on the C. program Eisenhower never really under- Tedder had complained mild-stood the strategy of the Nor- jy tnat the program inclined mandy campaign.

to give a predominantly Brit- "He seemed to me to get jsn version of the invasion, the whole thing muddled up," an(j added, "We should not said Montgomery in a British forget that it was a team Broadcasting Corporation TV project." program marking the anniver- Tedder was deputy supreme sary. commander under Eisenhower The former U. S. President at the time of the Normandy was Supreme Allied Com- invasion, mander in the European Another distinguished Artier-Theater of Operations and jcan military leader arrives in Montgomery's superior. Normandy today, General Max-Montgomery's attack on well Taylor, chairman of the Eisenhower startled his listen- Joint Chiefs of Staff.

He para-ers. Many telephoned the chuted into Normandy with the B.B.C. to check whether they 101st Airborne Division on D-had heard him right. Day. After Montgomery spoke, some military experts from Veterans Turn Out London newspapers expressed Hundreds of American, Brit-regret that the field marshal ish, and Canadian veterans of had brought in such personal the invasion roamed over the remarks, 20 years after, on beaches and hedge-lined fields a program that was dedicated that they came to know June to demonstrating the teamwork 6, 1944, and the following that went into D-Day's success, weeks.

In Gettysburg, a spokes- Thgy CJJme wjth thejr mem0. man for Eisenhower said the io(! anfl )hir -amprae 9nd YOUR CHOICE FREE Astociawa Prttt Wirvpnoro 6-TRANSISTOR RADIO or UNIVERSAL CORDLESS ELECTRIC TOOTHBRUSH with Hi evrchau TV moj.f ppHomt et dyrtiil rkt mt nm WAR'S JUNK USED FOR PLAY A French child sits in a rusting jeep near Caen, France, where equipment used in the D-Day invasion of Normandy 20 years ago now is just junk. Eisenhower Remembers That Day In June, 1944 Continued from First Page "But it's a wonderful thing these, and here again, in the tot. i-n i to believe, to remember this, 20th Century, for the second L.C.I, fi ed with seasick men what those fellows were fight- time. Americans, along with np tnr 9nH sa i i i -v SI DOWN DELIVERS, 1 1 Buy this set at advertised price and get I III YOUR CHOICE OF 6-TRANSISTOR RADIO OR I ELECTRIC TOOTHBRUSH FREE Continued from First Page Rhodes, could be crucial to Goldwater's nomination.

Associated Press surveys of major uncommitted or favor ite-son delegations and of the states where delegates are still to be chosen show that Goldwater will have more than the 655 votes needed barring major shifts among the dele gates in the next five weeks Vote shifts recorded yester day boosted the Arizonian's front-running total in the AP poll of delegates already chosen to 470. And estimates by political leaders are that Goldwater could get as many as 200 of the 258 delegates still to be chosen, Conventions Coming Up He is expected to start gath ering some of that support in state conventions in Colorado, Washington, Hawaii and Ala bama this weekend. A source close to Goldwater said, "We have a hell of a process of education to do" in the next few weeks. By this he meant it was felt neces sary to counteract charges that Goldwater is a reckless extremist. The Goldwater camp believes that their party op ponents, at first numbed by his California primary victory, will soon begin a personal at tack on the senator, claiming that his nomination would bring a massive defeat for the Republicans and endanger the two-party system.

A possible rebuttal tactic in mind is to argue to delegates that what really bothers Gold- water's opponents is that his nomination threatens the "con trol" of the party by Eastern and liberal elements. Governors Watched Four of Goldwater's top lieutenants are in Cleveland this weekend to watch his in terests at the Governors Con ference. They expect attempts by some of the 16 Republican governors to explore an and Goldwater strategy, but several governors said yesterday that no such move was afoot. Rockefellers office said is in the race to stay. The comment followed a New York Times report that Rockefeller sent word to party leaders in major uncommitted states that someone else must take the initiative now if Gold-water is to be stopped.

E. P. Mengel Estate Goes To Friend John W. C. Fox, a lifelong friend of Edwin P.

Mengel, an attorney who died May 2, will inherit the bulk of the attorney's $215,000 estate. Under terms of the will filed for probate in County Court yesterday, Fox will receive all of the estate except that left in special bequests. It included a half-interest in 42 acres on Schuff Lane which the City is buying for part of its zoo. Value of the site was listed at $100,000. Mengel's mongrel dog, Boy, also was listed in the will.

However, Boy burned in a fire in May, 1963, at Mengel's home, so his $20,000 bequest goes to the Kentucky State Humane Federation. Hector E. Rose, who was named executor, said Mengel has a brother living in Tennessee, but he wasn't mentioned in the will since he is finan-cially independent. Fox, 338 Wildwood Place, is a former deputy Jefferson ItumloHtag Ratifies Ban Bonn Wi Germany's Bundestag, the lower house Parliament, unanimously rati-fied the limited nuclear-test-ban treaty yesterday. The upper house is expected to act by the end of the month.

former President would have no comment. B.B.U IS SCneOUiea 10 leie- visp tnnirht a film rpenrdini? vise lonigni a mm recoruinj, of Eisenhower's pilgrimage to me ixormanuy invasiun sue last year. Eyes Flash Montgomery, his eyes flashing, delivered his attack on Eisenhower from a screen on which he appeared in civilian garb. He claimed that Eisenhower and other Americans tried to grab all the D-Day glory for the United States and to picture the British as falling down on the job. Montgomery said: "The strategy of the Normandy invasion was British and it succeeded because of first-class teamwork on the part of all the forces engaged-British, Canadian, and American.

"I do not believe that Eisenhower ever really understood the strategy of the Normandy campaign. He seemed to me to get the whole thing muddled up. The unsound and muddled statements which were made i i larpr nv were ui- terly monstrous. Tedder Comments ThV tour of the landing area "1 enaea at me American ceme- tery at St. Laurent-on-The-Sea in Vnrmonfiv urtth Ficon Vinti-at saying to Cronkite: Walter, this D-Day has a raeanirwfor me.

And Im nt referring merely the anxieties of the day. ieV going to give their lives, or be maimed forever. Remembers Own Son B.ut my mind goes baCk so often to this fact-on D-Day town. fon auated from est Point, and after his train- inS 71st Division, that was some time after this event. But on the day he was graduating, these men came "ere.

British and our otner Allies, and Americans, 10 storm these beaches for one purpose only, not gain any- thin? frr mircplupc Tint in fnl. I had for c.uest- to DresrvB frPPHnmsvcfpm nf sen-government the world, uiuusdiiua vi men have died for ideals such as -f UP TO 3 VA YEARS TO PAY 029-1 1 Buy this set ot F. II It usually with a few extra inches around the girth. Many hrmirht their wives alnnP anH uTJ snmp had thpir children. In every case they were searching for the personal landmarks of their private wars In the lit le British cemetery er-hatted men with rows of Aliocittid Prtu Wirtpheto VISCOUNT MONTGOMERY j.i- meuais pin ieu iu i icir cnesis stood side by side in the rain with Frpnrh schoolchildren.

nnnnnic in 111C1C. They Sing And Pray They sang hymns and recited the Lord's Prayer, then stood at attention while a military band played the national anthems of France, Canada, the United States, and Great Britain. Because earh villace in the invasion area is anxious to have a role in the D-Day commemoration, the cere- monies will be spread over two days. The ceremonies yesterday were concentrated in the Brit- ish sector. Today the scene will shift to the Omaha and Utah Beach areas in the American zone.

Omaha Beach today is a quiet stretch of sand where French families go swimming and picnicking. The rusted guns, the burned-out trucks and tanks, the barbed wire, and the concrete fortifications disappeared years ago. 1 YOUR CHOICE OF RADIO OR ELECTRIC 6 th. roe tha but Americans had to come across the ocean to defend tnose same values. "Now, my own son has been UnA a very full life since then, He is the father of four lovely chiidren that are ver? precious to my wife and mey Tut Off In Prime' "But these young boys, so many of them, over whose graves we have been treading, looking at, wondering, and contemplating about their sacrifices, they were cut off in their prime.

They had fam- ilies that grieved for them, but they never knew tne gj.eat experiences of going through life like my son can enjoy devouUy hope hat we will never again have to see sucn scenes as tnese tmnk and hope, pray, that humanity wjjj iearn rnore tnan we nave learned up to that time, "But these people gave us a chance, and they bought time for us, so that we can do better than we have before, "So, every time I come back tu, uu- lu. 'V 3 20 years ago now. I say onc in mo tniu cviiiv nuj to work to peace, and to, reany, to gain an eternal peace for this world." trustees oi centre touege, ana is vice-president of the Rose Anna Hughes Presbyterian Home. He was a delegate from the Presbyterian Church, U. to the 1959 meeting of the World Presbyterian Alliance in Brazil, and to the third as sembly of the World Council of Churches in New Delhi in 1961 Vr and Mrs.

Caldwell have lived a' 532 Barberry Lane since 1936. They have three children. Mrs. Caldwell, the former Fanny Robertson Wells of Elizabethtown, is a former president of the Louisville Presbyterial, a regional Pres- bytcrian women's organization They plan to move to Char lotte about September 1. Jty il impress12" form, nuns, and military honor- panies to battalions, and bat-that the British forces on the guardsmen for the re- talions to regiments, and tn.rllt Siiv.

nH Ugious ceremony honoring the ments to your division, there to pull the chestnuts out of airmprl hlripH do. He doesn't know what is ALL COLOR TV'S DRASTICALLY REDUCED Admiral-Motorola-Muntz-RCA Victor-Zenith ifsl Caldivell Resigns Fi 'om Seminary Continued from First Page Dr. Caldwell holds four hon- orary doctorates two from Christian fellowship for which Centre College and one each we shall always be grateful." frora Southwestern at Mem- A longtime leader in the fhjs, Tenn. and MaryviUe Col- Presbyterian Church in the lege, Maryville, Tenn. U.S.

(Southern), he came with- is a member of the Louis- in 12 votes last year of being vllIe Club, the Penden- elected moderator of the de- nis club-. and the Doard of were followed by patnetic scenes of men ing to shrink and cower behind beach ob- ctnW nntil th. rkin tirfp mnrte them mnvp "Now sometimes they he behind the vehicles that had get htt hen because the tide came in. You and it comes up very quickly, so there was danger of them drowning; so they got up here. "They were under fire all the time, and finally some hardy soul just got up and said: 'Come on, fellows, I'm sick of this, and let's try and we began to see these little individual acts of hero- ism, leadership coming to its very acme, you know, and a fellow starts off for that high ground up there and gets two or three behind him, and they become 20 or 30; and finally you've got some real power and things begin to loosen up." Tht advance n-n as disoraan, i- me general expmnea wny.

"You see. up until you get communication between com going on. "It had to be the local commanders, the platoon leaders, and the squad leaders. "Was there any thought of withdrawing the troops from Omaha Beach?" Cronkite asked. "No," replied Eisenhower.

He said General Omar N. Bradley, commanding the First Army, told him later it would have been impossible to re-em- bark tne men. iiraaiey aia study the possibility of shifting the follow-up units to Utah Beach, Eisenhower said, but men, oy miaaiternoon, "we De gan to make a real penetration everything began to loosen up and we gave a sigh of relief." Eisenhower said he found the pleasant, peaceful present day beaches of Normandy "al most unreal to look at. "Everything the horizon is peaceful and outside there it's vacant, and there's no smoke and fire and all the rest of it," said Eisenhower. of labor 60 61 62 I 63 64 the fire lor them, which of course was not the case.

"They tend to play down the fact that invasion of Two Sentenced AfterGuiltyPleas Two men drew prison sentences in Criminal Court after pleading guilty before Judge J. Miles Pound yesterday. Wallace W. Cook, 49, of 1123 S. First, received 21 years for voluntary manslaughter, a charge amended from murder.

Police said he stabbed Mrs. fmma Celeste Dougherty March 16. Curtis Lee Ray, 22, of 1618-P Brashear Drive, received five years for stealing from a public building. He was indicted on a charge of taking a typewriter from Oakdale Methodist Church, 3750 Oak-dale, last November. U.S.

Joh RCA Whirlpool AIR CONDITIONER 8,500 BTU 115 Volts Executive Model MUNTZ CONSOLE 23 TRANSISTOR TOOTHBRUSH FREE Ivy tM ttm vrtl' prk mn4 yur chk TIANSISTOt RADIO 01 ILICTtIC TOOTH- uush nu. 1 CHANNEL $0095 TV BARGAINS G.E. 48 90 21" TABLE MODEL ADMIRAL 21" CONSOLE 51 50 1 1 ft TODAY ONLY 1 Rate Improves IN MUIONS OF PtHSONS 6 U.S. UNEMPLOYMENT uu with trade nomination's General Assem-bly. He is a former moderator of the synod of Kentucky and of the presbytery of Mississippi, his native state.

Pushed For Union His stature among the 000 members of the "Southern" Pppehvtprian Hiiirr-h ia tinfeH with controversy, mainly be- cause of his views on church union. For years he was a leader in efforts among the more liberal Southern Presbyterians to unite the church with the United Church, U. S. A. (Northern).

As secretary of the Southern Presbyterians' committee on co- operation and union, and later as its chairman, he preached, argued, and worked for unity through the South. The committee's efforts failed in 1955 when Deep South Presbyterians turned down union with the other two denominations, which became the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Born in Corinth, Dr. Caldwell might never have entered the ministry if he had not flunked mathematics at the United States Military Academy at West Point. Enrolled In Law Returning to his native state, he enrolled as a pre-law stu dent at the University of Mis-sippi.

One day he heard Dr. A. Vander Meulen, then presi dent of Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, speak in chapel at Ole Miss. The next day he went to the Louisville seminary to study for the min istry. He received a bachelor-of-divinity degree from the seminary in 1925, got a bachelor of-arts degree from Centre College the next year, and later received a doctorate from the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.

He also has studied at New York University and Yale Divinity School. Invasion Rumors Plague Cypriote Continued from First Page from bars, cafes, and from i- t- their homes. The result was plicate the Middle East situ- that night life in Nic oaia At stopped abruptly shortly be- Lemnitzer flew into Ankara fore midnight, unexpectedly yesterday. Johnson sent a message to Turkish Rumor Flies KELYINATOR DEHUMIDIFIER 32 pint capacity While they last ONLY Continued from First Page level for this category since July. 1957.

The rate for all men declined from 3.8 to 3.6 percent, the lowest in nearly seven years, and that for women fell from 5.4 to 5 percent. Only among teen-agers was there no substantial improvement. Their rate, which has remained persistently near its historic peak, dipped slightly from 16.2 to 15.9 percent. At the same time, total employment rose by 200,000, to 71.1 million, a record for any month. Eliminating teen-agers from the computations, the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate in May would have been 4.1 percent instead of 5.1 percent.

Teen-agers are counted among the unemployed even though they may be seeking part-time jobs after school or to help their parents out on college expenses. Harold Goldstein, manpower expert for the Bureau of Labor Statistics, said employment in durable-goods industries and construction showed particular trength. The total labor force grew by more than 1.6 million over the paM 12 months. Reconditioned MOTOROLA OOOO 17" TABLE MODEL ZENITH 34' 00 21" CONSOLE Win thmrm for dullvtrv Mrvlca Sovm: U.S. Dporfmnf 54 55 56,5758 59 --fiffl 1 1 rm 3 3,600,000 1 Premier Jsmet inonu fhurs- Rumors swept through Nico-day.

Johnson has invited Inonu 8ja that Turkey had assembled to Washington to discuss the sjX ships off the northern coast tense situation on the island. 0f Cyprus There was no of- High sources in Nicosia said ficial confirmation. 30,000 national guardsmen had At the same time, Cyprus been called into action to de. sources said the U. S.

Sixth fend all coastal areas. Fleet was hovering somewhere The action was taken after a near the area, as it often docs, series of political moves in the But there was no evidence to past two days, climaxed by a show whether these two fac-declaration by the Turkish tors were related. Foreign Minister in Ankara The British forces, who have yesterday that Turkey may been here longer than any find it necessary to intervene other units in the U.N. contin-in the Greek-Turkish dispute gents, restricted their men to on Cyprus. barracks in Nicosia Limasol, The men were called up and Larnaca..

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