Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Salina Journal from Salina, Kansas • Page 8

Location:
Salina, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

11 rt i -t I i ir r- i Deaths PERRY L. HES5LER L1NDSBOUG Perry L. Hessler. 81, lifetime resident of Assaria, died Sunday at the Lindsborg Community Hospital ufter a short illness. He was bora July 3, 1881.

He was a member of the Assaria Lutheran Church. Mr. Hcssler was a retired fann- er. Survivors are two sisters, Mrs. Lillie Warner, Portland, and Mrs.

Almquist, Assaria. The funeral will be at pm Wednesday at lhe Assaria Lutheran church, the Rev. Lawrence Sundell officiating. Burial will be in the Assaria cemetery. Friends may call Tuesday from to 9 pm at the Danielson-An derson Funeral Home.

GEORGE F. ELDER George Franklin Elder, 83, 517 N. 12th, died Sunday at St. John's Hospital. He was born March 14, 1880, in Saline County.

Mr. Elder was a lifetime resident of Saline County. He was a retired farmer. Survivors are three sons, Jesse Salina RFD Frank, Salina RFD 2, and Robert Mammoth, four daughters, Mrs. Robert Gutka, Salina RFD Mrs.

Jack Tollman, 3G6 Maple Mrs. Ray Metzger, Buffalo, N.Y., and Mrs. Myrtle Carter, Riverside, and three brothers, Henry, 708 S. Front: John, Wichita, and Will, Gentry. The funeral will be 3:30 pm Tuesday at the Assembly of God San Jose, police say Ricardo Mello has Church, the Rev.

F. W. Prather Congress May Jerk "Aid" Purse Strings Encouraged By Critical Report LATEST MARKET NEWS GRAIN LIVESTOCK FINANCIAL By Jack Bell beginning July billion more! than this year. Kennedy, is expected to send a message to this week cutting back! I his aid request by $200 million or i more. But one high official remarked Ithat the administration will be WASHINGTON with a prestden- ucky to with a reduction tial committee recommendation to tighten up the for-j 0 no more than si billion.

eign aid program, Congress appears likely to respond a hard nUting reportt the by pulling in the purse strings to the extent of presidential upj $1 billion. The signs on Capitol Hill indicate the program will be the main target of efforts to trim President Kennedy's budget. jof 10 private citizens headed by I jGen. Lucius Clay told Kennedy) Kennedy has asked for $4.9 bil- jthe program was too lion in foreign aid for the year to do "too much for too many." ho; three sisters, Savilla Ins-i the Rush Smith Funeral keep and Mrs. Lulu Rawch, both of Fort Collins, and Lelia Parks, Salina, and several nieces and nephews.

now stands. Home 11879, at Peotone, 111. He was a member of the United Church of She taught in the Salina schools for two years before being mar- RUDOLPH FREDERICK HULDTQUIST LINDSBORG Rudolph Frederick Huldtquist, 73, Lindsborg, died early Monday morning at the: Lindsborg Community Hospital' Sermon Aroused Public after a short illness. Mr. Shields' nomination Christ, Holyrood.

Survivors are the widow, of lied to the Rev. David H. Shields (the home; the daughter; a sister, in 1901- Mrs. Mary Schwerdtfeger, Bush- Mr. Shields was pastor of ton; six grandchildren and three Grain Futures Mixed, Quiet Monday, March CHICAGO futures prices were mixed today in rath- quiet dealings.

Wheat was cent a bushel igher to Vt lower, May orn lower to higher, May oats lower to Vt high- May cents; soybeans Higher to lower, May Dejected Suspect admitted tampering with basement boiler in San Jose store shortly before it exploded and killed three persons. Education Advertisements Irk Legislators is the 40 per cent figure and that it is misleading to talk of it as a national average. "If you compare state aid in Kansas with tha state aid in near- jby slates that have similar systems of schools and school fin- jance, you will find that Kansas is very near the equal of any of them," Hill said. officiating. Burial will be in Gypsum Hill cemetery.

Friends may call at the Guy H. Ryan Sons Mortuary until 1 pm Tuesday. AXEL W. ISAACSON Axel W. Isaacson, 74, 210 N.

Monday, March TOPEKA mem- bers of the House said today they I were angered by advertisements appearing in several Kansas newspapers. The advertisements urged Kan'. sas people to write their legisla- tors and urged that slate support of schools be increased. State support of schools now is than 30 per cent but the ad-j Mondayi March vertisements proposes thai it he TOPEKA (AP) A increased to 40 per cent. Resolution Seeks Blue Cross Study died Saturday night at St.

John's Hospital. He was born Oct. 18, 1888, near McPherson. Frist Christian Church for years. During his pastorate, church organist.

He was born Feb. 18, 1890, in! 171 01 resulted from a £uneral 13 gre at-grandchildren. Friends may call at the Chapel Funeral Home, Salina, until Tues- i day morning and at the church or jfrcm 10 am Tuesday until the SLAIN Jane Langdon, 21, daughter of a Fort Worth, judge, has been found shot to death near Phoenix, Ariz. Lindsborg. He was a cost accountant in the Panama Canaf Mechanical Division in Balboa, C.

Z. until he retired and returned to Lindsborg. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge in the Canal Zone. Survivors are two sons, R. F.

and E. G. Huldtquist, both of the Canal Zone; three sisters, Mrs. Hedvig Lysell, Lindsborg, and Mrs. Marie Kellam and Mrs.

Esth- Eermcn he delivered which aroused the people against the existing city government. According to C. B. Dodge his brother delivered the sermon Weather Conviction Overturned Monday, March WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court overturned today the of i following the murder of Robert tolu ht and Tuesday. Cold- JR.

Gibson, onetime head of the Mr. Isaacson was a retired er Magnuson, both of Forturia, farmer and lived most of his life two brothers, Elmer, Lindsborg, and Arnold, Butte, and one grand daughter. The funeral will be at 10 am Wednesday at the Danielson Anderson Funeral Home, the Rev. Leslie Heise, Marquette, officiating. Burial will be at Elmwood cemetery.

The Masonic Lodge, Lindsborg, will conduct a graveside At the bottom of the ad the resolution calling for a study and survey of Blue Cross-Blue Shield programs names of the state representative! in Kansas was introduced today and the state senator for the dis-lj the House by its insurance trict in which the ad was pub- committee. lished were carried in large type The joint for lhe with the suggestion that the read- sfudy invcs gat on to be ers write these men. In far smaller print was the legend that the advertisements prepared and paid for by Gwei nor Committee on Blue the Kansas State Teachers Asso- Cross Blue cialion and the Kansas Congress of Parents and Teachers. Introduction of the in Salina. He was a member of St.

John's Lutheran Church. Survivors are the widow, Olive; two sons, Milton, 210 Penn, and Donald, Scotia, N. three daughters, Mrs. Herbert Coe, De- calm-, 111., Mrs. Leslie Mortimer, Salina RFD 2, and Mrs.

Forrest Ireton, Great Bend; four brothers, Oscar, La Junta, Arthur, South Gate, Leonard, H03 W. Cloud, and August, Niles; two sisters, Mrs. Jennie Anderson, San Diego, and Mrs. Hilda Anderson, LaJunta; 10 grandchildren, and one great- grandchild. The funeral Dardoner in an alleged house of illj er tonight.

Lows near 30 Miami, branch of the Na- jnorthwest to 40 southeast. Association for the Ad- The Shields' moved from near 60 east to 60s vancement of pe Gibson was convicted for refus- lina about 1910 and lived in Eureka, Kokoirm, Canton, Ottawa, and Mitchellville, Iowa, where Mr. Shields held other pastorates. He died in IMS. Mrs.

Shields also is survived by west. FIVE-DAY FORECAST Temperatures Tuesday through Saturday will average about 10 degrees above nor- made by the University of Kansas Center of Government Re- will be 2 pm Wednesday at the Guy R. Ryan Sons Mortuary, Dr. Walter Moeller officiating. Burial will be in Gypsum Hill cemetery.

Friends may call at the mortuary. service. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7 to 9 pm Tuesday. ORVILLE HAMILTON Orville Hamilton, 79, a retired Abilene businessman, died at his home Sunday morning. He had been in ill health since 1955.

He was born Jan. 14, 1884, in Decatur, 111. He had been a resident of Abilene since 1914. Mr. Hamilton owned and operated the Abilene Windmill and mal west and 3 to 5 degrees a daughter, Mrs.

Wilma S. Kauf- ab norma cooling trend man, who with her hus- ear 'y in the tumin warm- band, Charles, is stayng at the th week normal high A. W. Dodge home for several days; another brother, Harry E. Dodge, Topeka; a sister, Char- L.

Dodge, Santa Barbara, two grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Mrs. Shields was a member of the PEO sisterhood in Grinnell. KAN.SAS CITY LIVESTOCK KANSAS CITY calvej 200; slaughter steers aci! heifers 2 higher: cows atrong to 23 higher; calves and vealers cteady; to 50 higher: cliolce Hf'rs 22.25- choice heifers 22.00-23 2S: utility and commercial cows 15.i5-lt.00: food and choice veal- ers HOKS 6.000: barrows and tilts Bleadj- to 25 lower; 25 lower: 3-3 190-250'Ib barrown and gllta 13.75-H.OO: 275-400 Ib lows 12.50-13.00. Sheep 2.600: slaughter lemDf steady to atrong; iteady; feeder Iambs scarce; choice to prime spring lamba 19.50-2000; good and choice 18.00-19.00: cull to food ewes 6.50-7.50; good 5.006.00; good and choice feeder iambi H.50-J5.50.

KANSAS CITY PRODUCE KANSAS CITY tKf.t: Laree A 29-11; medium A 27-2S; small A 17-21. Wholesale Uarse 80 per cenl A 32-34: medium SO cent A 30-32. Poultry: Heavy type heru 5 Ib up, 16; llKhl type hem Ib up umler 5 Ib capons 7-8 Ib 16; capons 5 Ib IS; ducks white, over 5 Ib 15. Missouri and Arkansas live (ry- fra and broilers: at farm 14; at Butter: Graua A. Ib solid 67; grade Ib 63.

CHICAGO PRODUCE CHICAGO eteady: 93 score AA 57Vi; B2 A SO 69 cars 80 57ii; 89 57. EBBS about 70 per cent or better grade A whites 34; mixed mediums 32; standards dirties 30! i. 54 to lower 60s, normal low 26-38; little if any precipitation expected. NORTH-CENTRAL FORECAST Zone 3 Fair through Tuesday. Colder tonight.

in 60s. Lows 35-40. ARTHUR REUBEN RASMUSSON Pump from 1920 until his re- LINDSBORG Arthur Reuben tirement in 1945. He also had Rasmusson, 58, lifetime Linds- been a warden and deputy WILLIAM H. BECKER The funeral for William H.

Call It Misleading came after the House resolution adjourned last week without action on bills House members took the bring Blue Cross and Blue to denounce the advertisements Shield under regulation by lhe es misleading. slate insurance commissioner. Rep. Clyde Hill, K-Yates Center, said the advertisements not Killed By Non-Action only were misleading in an im- Under a deadline for considera- borg resident, died Sunday after a sudden illness. He was born Dec.

1, 1904, near Lindsborg. He was a retired farmer. Mr. Rasmusson was a member of the Bethany Church. Survivors are two sons, Marvin, Mountain Home, Idaho, and Marion, Stockton, sheriff in Dickinson County.

Survivors are the widow, Aimee, of the home; a daughter, Mrs. Fred Suden, Abilene; a brother, Richard Nulick, Boston; a granddaughter, and other relatives. The funeral will be at the Martin Funeral Home, Abilene, plication they were published byjtion of certain types of legisla- daughter, Mrs. John Buckmas- legislators but that the "40 on ne measures were killed ter, Alameda, two broth' ers, Martin, Lindsborg, and Leonard, Parsons, and three sisters, cent" aid proposal, also is mis-! when lne House did not act. leading.

A joint resolution, to be effec- Hill said there has been an at- 1 live, must pass both the House (Mrs Gertie Larson, Mrs. Clara tempt to make it appear thai na- and the Senate and be signed by Anderson and Lena Rasmusson, tional average of slate support to the governor. of Lindsborg. schools is 40 per cent of the cost The insurance committee also Tne funeral will be at 2 pm of operating the schools. a resolution calling at the Danielson-Ander- Hill said this was not the case.

a Legislative Council study of son Funeral Home, Dr. Anton He said the 40 per cent figure Kansas laws relating to insurance. jNelson officiating. Burial will be was obtained by listing all the Rep. Frank Lill, D-Emporia, in- in Elmwood cemetery.

in the orijer that state Itroduced a resolution for a Legis- funds are used in the support of schools, including states which have entirely different systems of finance in which the state sup'- plies virtually all the funds di- reclly. Hill said that with all the arranged in order, a count Mond March -5. 4 f. O'lt. r-4 nf A 7 Friends may call Wednesday lative Council study of the pre- from 7 to 9 pm at the funeral sent system of paying state highway employes.

FDR Jr Okayed home. GLEN PARKS A graveside was made down to the 24th stale to find, the median. He said this The Salina Journal The Home-Delivered Daily Newspaper For Central and Northwest Kansas Published five days a week and Sunday at 333 South Fourth Street. SaHna, Kansas, by Salinn Journal, Inc. Whitley Austin Editor and President WASHINGTON Senate gave overwhelming approval today to President Kennedy's nomination of Franklin D.

Roosevelt 48, as undersecretary of commerce. SecoBd-tfasi postage paid fet Kansas. Founded Febrasur 1C, 1S71 service for dlen Parks, 57. Portland, who died Fri day, will be at 2 pm Tuesday a the Delphos cemetery. He was born Aug.

27, 1905, nea Delphos. Survivors are his mother, Mrs. Sena M. Parks, 337 S. 8th; two brothers, Maurie, Kansas City, and Stanley, Twin Falls, Ida- Htudi: Glenn nisr.spng editor: Jofcr city editor; Fred advtr- tislr.R maERgeT; Eugene LauL'engAyei, classified manager: O.

L. Kearney, composing room fortmr.n; O. E. press TOOTH loremar. circulation manager; Arlo Hofcertson, iilficc und credit manage: Waller Frederklng.

mailing foreman. MEMBER ASSOCIATED PREE3 The Asjociated Press If entitled ex- tlusively to the use for jrjuUcatlon oJ i til the local newi printed in (his paper ti veil HI AP ili- pitchec. Dial TAylor 3-C3G3 St'BSCUIITION KATES Single Copy 5c, Sunday 13c. By Carrier Convenient monthly rare S1.50. By Mnjl In Kansas: One ytor 1 2.QO.

Six months $7.00. One S1.25. Elsewhere: One year six months i9.00. One rr.omh S2.00.' fail to receive Journ.il Snllna, dial TA 3-C3G3 between pm, 9 am and 12:30 pm. 2 pm Tuesday, the Rev.

Wyeth Vuthnow officiating. Burial will in the Abilene cemetery, HERBERT W. HEIN Herbert W. Hein, 75, 225 Allege, died Sunday at Hospital. He was born Nov.

1888, at Gaylord, Kas. Mr. Hein had lived in Salina 1926. He was retired switchman for the Union Pacific Railroad. Survivors are widow, Grace; two sons, Chester, S29 S.

12th, and Robert, 304 Rahm; four stepsons, Maurice Williams, Wichita; David W. Williams, 232 E. Beloit; Roger Williams, Enid, Okla, and J. Elton Williams, Oklahoma' City, a stepdaughter, Mrs. E.

H. Maddux, 1015 Harold; a brother, Robert, Medford, two sisters, Mrs. Ottilie Wilkens, Alexandria, and Frieda Church, Enid, 20 grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Mr. Hein was a member of the Masonic Lodge, Greenleaf, the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen and the First Methodist Church.

The funeral wffl-be 2 pm Tues- ay at the Guy R. Ryan Sons Mortuary, Dr. J. Russell Throckmorton officiating. Burial will be in Roselawn Memorial Park.

Friends may call et the nwc- tuary. Becker, 84, 2020 Marc, will be at 2 pm Tuesday at the United Church of Christ in Holyrood, the Rev. Thomas Dry, officiating. Mr. Becker died at 2:20 pm Saturday at his home after a long illness.

He was retired after farming in the Holyrood and Bushton communities until 1928. He and bis wife, Mary (Mollie) then lived in Holyrood until two years ago. They celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary Mr. Becker was a director of the bank at Holyrood. Two years ago Mr.

and Becker moved to Salina to live with their daughter, Mrs. Oscar Tappendick, at 2020 Marc. Mr. Becker was born Jan. 5, Zone Jewell, Cloud, Clay, Ottawa.

Lincoln, Republic. Washington. Oiborne. Mitchell. Ellsworth.

Eallne and Dickinson. SALINA WEATHER Monday- City Airport: Temp, at pm 64. Min. Monday 52. Max.

Sunday BO. FAA reported at 1 pm: Barometer 30.10. Wind N-NW 15 rnph, gnsting 28. Relative humidity 38 percent. Lowest this date 10 in 1904; highest 93 in 1909.

Tuesday sunrise 6:25 am; sunset 6:49 pm. Airport (Br FAA): am 2 pm 7fi 2 3 78 4 80j 4 7S 73! ing to produce a list of association members for a hearing by a committee of the Florida Legislature. He was sentenced to six months and fined $1,200. Justice Goldberg delivered the igh court's 5-4 decision throwing Kit the conviction. Juitice Harlan dissented with in opinion in which Justices Stewrt, Cfark and White joined.

Locking For Reds In the 1959 hearing, the Florida egislative committee was looking nto possible Communist infiltra- ion of NAACP. An investigator for the commit- named 14 persons as mem- of the Communist party and said they had taken part in NAACP affairs. Gibson then was asked to take the Miami membership list to a committee hearing, refer to it, and state if any of -the 14 were NAACP members. He was told he would not be required to submit the entire list in evidence, where it would be open to public inspection. Gibson, based his refusal on the Constitution's guarantee of freedom of association.

Stock Market Up Irregularly Monday, March NEW YORK The stock market moved irregularly foigher in fairly active trading early Ihii afternoon. Big Three motors, nonferroua metals and selected blue chips in other sections of the list made enough gains to move the overall average to the upside. Wall Streeters saw the economic background as fairly encouraging. Presidential. Economic Adviser Walter Heller said it looked as if March retail sales will show a 2 per cent gain over February's record.

Average Up The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .2 at 257.8 with industrials up .2, rails up .2 and utilities off .1. Chrys'er was up more than a point. Ford and General Mctors added fractions. American Motors dipped slightly. U.S.

Smelting was up than a point. Fractional gains were posted for Anaconda, Kenne- eott, Phelps Dodge and Homestake. Sunruy Swamptd Swamped with sellers following late Friday's news that Sunray DX Oil has no talks under way regarding a merger or assets sale, Sunray opened more than an hour after the start of trading and sank ZVt to M'A. About 50 points was clipped off the high price of Superior Oil as profits were taken on its surge last week. Lorillard, up a point, was strong among the tobaccos, others showing slight losses.

Steels were about unchanged. Some W3akness showed in aerospace issues, Boeing and United Aircraft losing about a point tract with New York's eight) The Dow Jones industrial aver- closed daily newspapers. But the age at noon was up 1.76 at NY Printers Okay Contract NEW YORK (AP) Striking printers have ratified a new con- Insnlfkient Justification Goldberg's majority opinion for the Supreme Court said that the sajFIorida committee did not have sufficisnt justification for including the Miami branch of NAACP 9 JO 11 13 Mtdnljht 11 I 12 Noon 1 pm last of four striking unions, the 679.59. photoengravers, continued to hold out today for a belter work pact, delaying an immediate resumption of publication. As things stood today, the 108th day of the newspaper shutdown: were to meet again with publishers to try to come to terms on an agreement that would remove the last stumbling block in the way of publication.

if photoengraver union negotiators reached contract accord today, indications were that the eight major dailies couldn't get on the streets until time print Tuesday editions, or more ikely Wednesday's. Won't Picket Lhicc other nine newspaper un- ons continued to refuse to cross the photoengravers' picket lines at four struck dailies. The other five major papers closed voluntarily when the printers began the strike against the four dailies last Dec. 8. printers have ratified in its investigation.

Prices on the American Stock Exchange were mostly higher in moderate trading. Corporate bonds were generally higher. U.S. government were a shade lower. stocks pm.

Sew York time, from A. G. Kdwardi and Sam Anaconda 45 Am Cyn 53VI Am Motors Am Airline 1 Am Tabco 30H Avo Corp Bethlthem Steel SO 1 Chrysler 81 Dn Font Z3S 1 Ford Motor Gen Etec Gen Motor 64'i Inter Harv Std Oil NJ 63-V Penney Kan PAL 62 Olln Math 37 Phlll Pet 40-1 RCA MVi Sears Roeb Sunray Santa Fe 27 Std Oil Ind 55 Socony 66 Sperry Rd IS 121 ft Un Pac 35U Steel 45H Wool worth Illi Funerals Both Zippier Than Sound Jane Ford and Col. Charles Yeager each have zipped through air faster than sound. He congratulates her for being second woman in U.S.

history to break sound barrier. He is first man to do so. She is a Beverly Hills, stockbroker, who fliei for fun. MRS. DAVID H.

SHIELDS The funeral for Mn. Dodge Shields, widow of a crusading Salina minister who once was ejected mayor OB a reform ticket, will be at 11 am Tuesday at the Rush Smith Funeral Home. "Die Rev. Onan Yale will officiate. Burial will be in Gyptum Hili cemetery.

Mrs. Shields, 85, died Sunday in Grinnell, Iowa, following i long i illness. Sister of the Dodges She was a sister of C. B. Dodge i Warren Hotei, and A.

Dodge, 725 S. Santa Fe. Mrs. Shields was born Aug. 6, 1877, in Salina, daughter of the Mr.

and Mrs, Allen L. Dodgt. Her of birth WM wtwrt by a 779-vote majority the same settlement they rejected by 64 votes a week earlier. Their new contract gives them a $12.63 pack' age over two increase in wages and fringe benefits the first year, and a $6.12 increase the second. striking mailers like the printers, on affiliate of the International Typographical has ratified a new work pact with terms similar to those accepted by printers.

The mailers thus ended the strike which they began.Jan. .9. slereotypers union, which joined the strike March 5, came to terms earlier and ratified a new contract March 17. but two of the six non- striking newspaper unions have reached firm or tentative settlements. MAItSEI Fridas-: 12.06.

H.flO 65c. Pen) try Heairy Heaj Ic. Light Hem 4c. Old Roosten 4c. Efff Current receipts Ifle, Under trades 15e.

BnttcrflU Firm He. Lincoln Man Gets Boat Free LINCOLN Arnold Lincoln, had a wonderful surprise waiting for him when he and his family returned Sunday after a weekend away from home. It was a letter naming him a second-prize winner in a Reader's Digest sweepstakes drawing. He won a 14-foot boat with an 18- horsepower motor. The letter said the boat would be delivered in few weeks.

There were 100 second prizes awarded. First prizes were 100 cars. In January, Ziers received a letter. He signed it, mailed it back. It was one of the letters drawn for prizes.

Sfocker Market Full $1 Higher Wllsea Livestock AnctioB By LonUe Wilswi Local stockmen and iriany out of state buyers, braced by higher market trend again, pushed the stocker market fully $1.09 higher' at the Wilson Livestock Auction Saturday. One-hundred and eighty-two thia whiteface stockev heifers weighing 350 to 450 pounds sold from $25.35 to $26.40, while 34 whiteface steers weighing 530 pounds topped their class at $26.65. Twenty five whiteface steers on the heavy end of the medium class at 678 pounds, sold at $24.90, while 45 brockleface steers weighing 801 pounds sold at $22.05. Feeder heifers sold from $22 $24, with heifer calves bringing $25 to $27. Steer calves sold from $28 to $30.90 with light higher.

Fat cows topped at $17.65 for 1240-pound weights, with bologna bulls selling from to $18.30. Eleven red hogs weighing 204 pounds brought the top of $13.80. Taking Note Of A Note Three members of three bands and guest conductor Dr. Clarence Sawhill, professor of music and director of bands at the University of California at Los Angelea, get together during a "break" during rehearsal Hutchinaon, McPherson and Salina high school bands will present a "Tri- City Concert" at 7:30 pm Monday in Salina High gym. Left to right are, Duane Brown, Hutchinson, Gary Davis, McPherson, Dr.

Sawhill and Dena Phillips, 417 E. Kirwin, (Journal Photo) To Telecast Via Satellite NEW YORK U.S. television networks ABC, NBC and broadcast tonight from Paris via the Relay 1 satellite. The orbitir? space traveler be available to all three net- jworks for transmission for the I first time. All the programs wfll be taped and shown during the networks' newscasts at 10 pm (Salina time).

Road Overtime Bill Killed TOPEKA Senate committee killed today a bill which would have allowed the state to pay overtime to highway work crews. The House-passed bill died ta the Federal and. State Affain Committee. Earlier, William Tur. rentine.

an official of the Kansas Public Employes Association, had asked the bill be amended to allow overtime pay for all state hourly workers with a base salary of less than $5,000 year. Journal classified adi get results..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Salina Journal Archive

Pages Available:
477,718
Years Available:
1951-2009