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The Leaf-Chronicle from Clarksville, Tennessee • 5
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The Leaf-Chronicle from Clarksville, Tennessee • 5

Location:
Clarksville, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Clarkivillt Uaf-Chrsnlclt, Sept. 28, 1965 Paa 1 Fate Of (Continued from Pago 1 i (' I i I ')) province said he feared about 4,. from" surrounding the lake. i if 1 Information about survival In a fallout shelter during any type of emergency. requirements of the course was spending the night of September Cave fallout shelter.

The classes were conducted this month at School. (Chronicle Photo by J. Souza) CIVIL DEFENSE GRADUATES ClarksvMle-Montgomtry County Civil DcftriM Director John Russell presents a certificate to Mrs, Rachel Tat as a portion of the 50 other graduates who took the recent shelter management course look on. Shown standing second from left In the photo Is John B. Woods, one of the two instructors of the nurse.

The students are now tllgible to teach shelter management and the Mrs. Htffibree Mrs. Anna Lee rfembree, 50, died Monday night in Clarksvillc Memorial Hospital after a long Illness. She was a resident of Route 1, Cunningham. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m.

at Daggett's Chapel Church of God of Prophecy, by the Rev, Lloyd Ashby and Rev. Owen Black, Burial will be in the church cemetery, Wiseman Funeral Home In charge. The body will be at the residence until the funeral hour, Mrs. Hembree was born June 27, 1915, in Montgomery County, daughter of Mrs. Susie Mockbee Ilaneline of Cunningham and the late Charles Mockbee.

Survivors besides her mother are her husband, Gayther Hembree; a brother, Epps Mockbee, Cunningham; a sister, Mrs. Lue Ella Phillips, Clarksville. A.B. Nale 4. Nale, 79, died Monday in Memorial Hospital after an extended illness.

He was a resident of 1673 Valley Road and was a retired barber and farmer, Funeraf services will be conducted Wednesday at 2 o'clock at the McReynolds Funeral Home by the Rev, Isaac Jones. Burial' will be in the Pleasant View Baptist Church Cemetery. Mr, Nale was born July 14, 1886 In Stewart County, but had lived most of-his iife in Montgomery County. He was the son of the late James and Betty Walker Nale. His wife, Mrs.

JCatherine CarverNale, died May 25, 1961. Survivors are a son, D. Nale, Clarksville; three daughters, Mrs1, Louise Loya, Clarksville; Mrs. Martha Goddard, Charleston, Mo.and Mrs. Catherine Pierce, Mt.

Juliet, a brother, Alex Nale, Ridgety, a sister, Mrs. Douglas Suiter, Clarksville; eight grandchildren and five great-grandchildren, He was a member of the Macedonia Presbyterian Church Some Bishops Want Catholic Church To Use Freud Lessons document of some kind, and they're afraid It won't be very good." This Is the first council document In church history to deal exclusively with problems out side the Church. It ranges in scope from marriage and faml- Dominican (Continued from Pago 1) quin Castillo said earlier that weapons taken from civilians In the rebel zone would be turned over to a government commls-slon today. This Is the first phase In the demilitarization of the zone. The reintegration of rebel sol dlers into the armed forces is to follow.

Then will come the removal of the physical barrt ers dividing the city and the withdrawal of the Inter-Ameri can peace forces to a pre-desig. nated place outside Santo Domingo to await evacuation from the country. The soldier who shot the stu dent has been" arrested, the president said. Garcla-Godoy also announced the restoration of the national police to civilian control, under the interior ministry. JDJ0X HATS KNOX v.

FASHION i I Take your fashion cue totally new, decidely from Knox. Note the brim It's the todays popular natural i 000 people would have to be evacuated from various areas. He issued ah appeal for food and clothing." Troops were sent into the province to Insure order and care for the refugees. nrOIJ TIIUiMB and FAMILY Clarksville Plaza 0PENIN3 SOON Mi 1 THE HENRY FONDA GREGORY PECK DEBBIE RENOIDS JAMES STEWART JOHN WAYNE BCHARO Wit) MARK PLUS FABULOUS tt i TREASURE! X. i WOMAN! 4-t RUKS TKXJ The screen lf -tf enchantment as delightful T7 as its hit tune -f "Hi-Lili HY.V A woxonnv TECHNICOLOR S45-14IS RUNS THRU WED.

PLUS sVssisiartJ 0 AWMisktiVtl i kj' jiM mtisi wmtv muss I COMING luf yuf ftckati Mwt Pravtnl itandlnf In line, THE BEATLES I I' ttt atRlM I 5T.V fMt ill RUNS THRU WED. WiSf vim 1 TtCHMOlOK' lb 1 mnnsioH' By late afternoon the periodic blasts from the volcano appeared to be subsiding. Howev. er, authorities said It was still far too dangerous to send boats from the outer shores of Lake Taal to determine the fate of the Islanders. The volcano had been making ominous noises for some time, the temperature of the lake had been rising, and those living on its slopes had been fearful.

Re ports from the scene said they began fleeing the Island during the night. The last eruption was in 1911, when, according to local, esti mates, 1,335 people died. The eruption today came at 2:30 a.m. and was seen by a passing airliner which flashed word to the nation. By dawn President Diosdado Macapagal was on the way for a look, and rescue and relief measures were under way.

The eruption set off a towering electrical storm which spc tators described as terrifying. Ash and lava rained for miles around. A plane flew within three miles of the crater, then turned back, when its windows became so muddy the crew could no longer see. i Thousands watching from the outer shore of Lake Taal were covered in mud a mixture of ash and lava thrown up with mountains of water. Throughout the morning the volcano belched fire and smoke.

About 12 hours after the Initial blast it appeared to be settling down to an earth-shaking roar every five minutes or so. About 40 military trucks were sent to the area to evacuate villages being Inundated with mud and ash. The governor of the FISH STORY SHEFFIELD, England (AP) This is a real fish story, George Holland, dropped his bait can into the Derwent River, then dropped his car keys trying to recover the can. Worse followed. He fell Into the river trying to recover the keys.

He had to force a side window to get into his car and, without keys, had to short the ignition to start the engine. But he couldn't turn the wheel since the anti-theft device on it was Pardon us for tootin' our own horn but we're darn proud of our Volkswagen dealership. We're proud of the service we give you economical. You see, our mechanics are factory-trained with Slenty of experience be-ind them. We're darn proud of the whole VW line.

Come see. JiiaAyeirS.lnc. Nashville Clarksville Phone 647-3232 7-, and that the council may not have time to fully act on it. Bishop Sergio Mendez Arceo of Cuernavaca, Mexico, speaking for 10 Latin-American bishops, told the council the modern world document needed consid erable revision. He complained that It overlooked the anthro pological and psychological factors of the Individual man.

"It would be a mistake to ig nore the conclusions of Freud," the bishop said, referring to the Viennese pioneer In psychoanalysis, Slgmund Freud, Bishop Mendez Arceo is noted for his progressive views. Mem-bers of a monastery in his diocese have undergone psycho analysis with what church au thorities call beneficial results. Most of the debate in St. Pet er's Basilica today centered on atheism, according to council briefing officers. Few of the council fathers who spoke found favor with the modern world schema's treatment of atheism.

Most asked for an understanding approach to the Individual atheist rather than condemnations of the phe nomenon as such. Fire Destroys Two Rooms Fire destroyed two rooms of; a Wheeler's Alley residence shortly before noon today. Clarksville Fire Chief Gordon Keel said that all clothing and furnishings in the two rooms was destroyed. The four-room structure was located at 204 Wheeler's Alley and was occuppied by John Elliott and his son, Charlie. Keel said the cause of the fire but investigation was continuing; (Continued from Pago 1) eating too much; second, stop going and doing too much, and third, stop smoking.

The speaker pointed out that not only can cigarette smoking cause lung cancer, it also causes heart disease (hardening of the arteries) and emphysema, a lung disease. Dr. Hampton said that although lung cancer Is rarely curable the heart disease is the more common killer among cigarette smokers. In giving statistics, he pointed out that over 68 percent of all men in the United States smoke and 33 percent of all women. "Smoking is a dirty, expensive and unhealthy habit," he said "but apparently hard to break." He added that there is a 70 percent higher death rate among male smokers than non-smokers, and that the death rate increases with the amount of smoking.

The speaker suggested at the conclusion of his talk that cigar ette smokers who find it too diffi cult to stop, should switch to pipes or cigars. Among the pipe and cigar smokers, the death rate is lower, he said. Following the showing of the film and the comments, a question and answer session was con-; ducted. VurzyAvro Co. Ph I fUr I Council sources said most of the 2,200 bishops at the Roman Catholic assembly fear there is not enough time left In this fourth and final- council session to make the document truly satisfactory, It was widely felt that the document, after more rewriting and revision, would be promul- gated as a decree before the council ends, probably In December, "This Is what has so many of the fathers worried," said one source, "There has been so much publicity and pressure they feel they've got to come up with a Bodies Of 3 (Continued from Pagsl) Metter, Ga Monday.

The rites were conducted by Company First Battalion, 502nd Infantry. Sgt. Taylor, resident of Campbell Heights, is survived by his wife, Mrs. Evelyn Taylor, a son, Ernest Winston Taylor, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Ernest Taylor. Capt, Rawlsy a commander of Company," was Wiled while leading an attack' off a hill held by the Communist Viet Cong In the central highlands of Viet Nam, the Defense1 Department said. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Joan Rawls; and six chil dren, Mary and Jon, 9-year-old twins, Penny, 5, Julia, 3, Robert Shannon, 2, and Robin Suzanne, 3 months; all of Clarksville; his Mrs. Frances B.

Rawls of Arlington, Va.f and two brothers, Vernon of Corona del Mar, and Jon Rawls of Bran- dels University, N. and his granamomers, Mrs. l.ou coring i Lakeland, Fter Capt, Rawls was born In Lake land and attended Michigan State University before entering the S. Military Academy at West Point, from which he was graduated in 1957. He served four years in Germany before Joining the 101st division at Ft.Campbell and had Just recently been as signed to Viet Nam.

Hummingbird 3rd Si Commerce Clarksville GUITARS i I 1 3 course gave One of the 17th In the Dunbar the St. Bethlehem Pallbearers will be T. H. Nipper, Roland Phipps, Raymond Swift, John Freeman, S. S.

Skel- ton, Abernathy, Roy Yar brough, James and Tom Weak ley and Garnet Mrs. Pulley Mrs. Lillian Pauline Pulley, 54, died Monday In Clarksville Memorial Hospital following stroke. She was a resident of Route 1, Cumberland City, Tenn. Funeral services will be con ducted Wednesday at 2 p.m.

at Scott's Chapel Free Will Baptist Church. Burial will be In the Scott's Chapel Community Cemetery, MiUigan Funeral Home, Do-ver, In charge. The body is at the residence until the funeral hour. Pulley was born October 4, 1910, InStewart County, daugh-1 ter of Frank L. and May Odom Pulley, dieJJurie 6, 1964.

Survivors besides the parents are eight sons, Verlln and Harold, Granite City, Cleveland, Ray and Henry, Cumberland City; Billy andCarmack, Nashville; Woodrow Pulley, Indianapolis, three daughters, Mrs. Eloise Bryant, Erin; Mrs. Evle By GERALD MILLER VATICAN CITY (AP) A group of Latin-American bishops urged today that the Roman Catholic Church make use of the psychological lessons of Freud. They told the Vatican Ecumenical Council that "psy choanalysis can be useful In all fields of church activity." The proposal came during a council debate on the document on modern world problems, which deals with subjects ranging from atheism to nuclear war and birth control to poll-tics. Some informants said the document Is In "deep trouble" Senate (Continued from Page 1) calls for repeal, and the House already has passed the meas ure, 221 to 203.

Zack dismissed as idle rumor talk that the White House, with Congress anxious to adjourn, may not go all out to push the bill through the Senate this year. "I expect that President Johnsotris going every. thing 'he thinks is necessary to repeal MB Zat Bald. Metsa man of his word," Labor lobbyists how are seek. ing from some Senate opponents of repeal pledges that they will not Join actively in the Dirksen filibuster.

The Right to Work Committee is out to enlist more senators In the threatened talk-fest. Nellor said 26 senators have agreed to sign on, in response to letters from Dirksen and Sen. Sam J. Ervln, D.N.C., seeking filibuster recruits. The bill is not expected to come up before Friday, "Dirksen is trying to bluff," said Zack.

"We don't think here." Both sides said they are using the traditional tools of the lob byist personal talks, letters from home and messages from local leaders In their Capitol Hill struggle. Mary Morgan (Continued from Pago 1) generous recognition for his distinguished effort. "The Commended students have considerable ability, which should be developed through fur ther education. They deserve every encouragement, and their promise is great. They repre sent an Important intellectual resource which our nation needs." Only the highest-scoring stu dents in each state, the Semi-finalists, remain eligible for further consideration In the competition for Merit Scholarships.

Although students receiving Letters of Commendation advance no farther in the MerltProgram, their names are reported to other scholarship granting agencies and to the colleges they named at the time they took the NMSQT as their first and second choices. NMSC also reports home addresses, test scores, anticipated college majors and career intentions of the Commended students to the same colleges. TELEVISIOn RCA-MOTCROLA Ma ly planning to the Christian approach to politics and the Church's attitude. on consclen-tlous objectors and nuclear war. It Is the council's only docu ment addressed to all men, not just to Catholirs.

India, Pakistan (Continued from Page 1) He said the resolution should be directed at Pakistan alone, Insisting that It was to blame for cease-fire violations. He charged that Pakistani Presi dent Mohammed Ayub Khan had made plain that his govern ment did not really want a truce. Pakistani Foreign Minister Z. A. Bhutto countered with charges that Indian forces had breached the cease-fire repeat edly In the Lahore sector and the Slalkot area of Kashmir.

He said India had asked for a delay In the cease-fire deadline last week not for the purpose of Informing Its field commanders but to gain more territory. When this failed," he said, "India went ahead and continued trying1 to'lrtffJrbve' Ui post- ltstrQops, eyea after, jhe cease- fire had gone into effect." ITAT3 KNOX EaTJ I V) 6 L5- FOCUS ON I 3 Phone 647-3660 from Madison Avenue debonair tat style correctly proportioned perfect complement to look of elegance. Bryant and Miss Earlene Pulley, Cumberland City; three brothers, Archie, Granite City, Leo, Madison, 111., and Maydell Pul- lev. Dover: six sisters, Mrs. Mary Brunson.

Mrs.Lorene Bry ant, Cumberland City; Mrs. Maggie Bryant, Erin; Mrs. Birdie Smlther, Granite City, Mrs. Mildred Stokes, Mrs. Martha Sherman, Salem, Ore, and 18 grandchlldren; Mrs.

London Dolie London, Route 1, Guthrie, died. Monday after an Illness of several days. Services will be conducted Thursday at I p.m. at Foston Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. E.

L. Hicks. Burial will be in the Evergreen Cemetery. Mrs. London was bom in Montgomery County, daughter of the late Maggie Young Johnson.

Her husband, Dallas London, preceded her in death. Survivors are one son, Jessie Johnson, St. Louia, end two stepsons, Howard and Charles London, Clarksville. The Amazon River's bottom is mostly a series of sand dunes, rippling over long stretches with underlying layers of dense; gray clay. CmV.

Him USED TV SETS Watson Si Jobe "There It No Substitute For Quality" Television Rental Service 12.C0 Par Month 2 f.lcdem 20a Nw PrevidWa llva. 116 S. 2nd St.

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