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Beatrice Daily Sun from Beatrice, Nebraska • Page 1

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Temperatures 3 p. m. (Unofficial) 50 High 41 Today's Low 27 High Year Ago 54 Low Year Ago 35 BEATRICE DAILY SUN "If You Didn't See It itt the Sun It Didn't Happen" Member of the Associated Press Weather Partly cloudy tonight and morrow With rising temperature! low 32; high near 50. BEATRICE, NEBRASKA, MONDAY EVENING, NQVEMBEttJL3 Sheriffs 1 Convention Opens Here 60 Register For Two- Day Annual Peace Officers Convention Sheriffs and police officers stormed the Paddock hotel here today 60 strong, but they were not investigating any crime. They were attending the annual two-day convention of the Nebraska Sheriffs and Peace Of- ficprs Association.

Things sot under way tin's morning when the meeting was called to order by Emmett Trosper, sheriff of Red Willow county and president of the association. Mayor Welcomes Group Rev. Alva H. Clark gave the invocation and Mayor Harry Price delivered the address of welcome. Clarence E.

Hagstrom, Wahoo, Saunders County Sheriff, presented the secretary-treasurer's report. Opening the afternoon session, Joseph f. Volova, Omaha, U. S. District Attorney, told the group, "To be permanent and stable, law must have, and does 1 have, the almost unanimous consent of all the members of the community.

Speaking generally, law is the people's assent to a rule of conduct." He stated there is at least one serious crime committed for each 100 persons, annually, and he stressed there are only about In per cent of convictions for such crimes. "It isn't the public officals who are to blame if laws are not he said. "Unless we, the people as a whole, want these laws enforced, they are not enforced. Unless the people want the criminals apprehended, tried and convicted, they will not be apprehended, tried and convicted." Lou Richter, from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, spoke on the responsibility of law officials. "There is an increase in responsibility of state and local officers because of the present disturbed conditions now existing," he said.

He went into the matter of public relations of officers to get the cooperation of the general public, "The average citizen," he said, "doesn't have general intereset in the problems of peace officers." W. C. "Bill" Condit, president of the association and ex-State Sheriff, was scheduled to talk later this afternoon. The banquet will be bald tonight in the ballroom and will feature a speech by Judge Fred Messmore, Nebraska Supreme court, formerly of Beatrice. Lockwood is MC Entertainment will be provided by Miss Lucille Reilly and associates.

John Lockwood will act as Master of Ceremonies. Father St. John, Episcopal parish, Wyomore, will open the Tuesday program with a Memorial service. Tuesday speakers include Captain C. J.

Sanders, Chief of the Nebraska Highway Safety Patrol; J. L. Dalton, agent in charge of the Omaha office of the F.B.I.; and William T. Gleeson, from the State Attorney General's office. The convention will close Tuesday afternoon with the election of officers and selection of the 1951 convention site.

Kreuchi Gets Lump Sum Of $1,484.73 District B. Ellis this morning approved a $1,484.73 lump sum settlement, in addition to compensation fees already paid, to Albert Kreuchi, who was injured, Aug. 3, 1949, when the Gage county truck he was driving was struck by a locomotive. A workman's compensation suit was brought, against the county and Kreuchi was granted $22 per month for 67 Va weeks. The lump sum settlement is in lieu of fur- fier weekly recompense.

Claim Miami Visitor Filched Of Million MIAMI, Nov. 13 The Dade county grand jury reported today that one winter visitor "was filched out of half a million dollars in one evening in a gambling casino" in this area. The visitor was not identified by name, nor was the spot in which the enormous loss occurred namsd in the report, The disclosure came in the jury's final report along with a batch of indictments, Names of those indicted will not be released until they have surrendered. 375th Flight Over North Pole Is Made FAIRBANKS. Alaska.

Nov 13 The U. Air FpYce 375th Weather Reconnaissance squadron had its 375th anniversary flight over the North Pole in the books today. FHA SUPERVISORS MEET Farmers Administration pf Falls City, Nebraska City, York, Fairbury and Beatrice jnet; here today tQ discuss mutual problems with p. P. Moulton, LJncpln, dis- trlct supervisor.

Supervisors of the district get together every few months for this purpose, HEAVY, HEAVY HANGS OVER THE 200 feet above Cuyahoga river valley flats in Cleveland, the truck cab shown above was a precarious seat for driver Jacob Bohland, 25, who scrambled after his truck went out of control and slid through the Lorain-Carnegie bridge's guard rail. The rig went out of control when Bohland, who was a victim of shock, turned to avoid hitting another driver. (NEA Telephoto). Eighty Pints About 3 P. M.

Blood Taking Begins Today; Extends Through Tomorrow Eighty pints of blood had been received by about 3 p. today at the city auditorium where the Red Cross bloodmobile unit is making a two-day visit. The unit arrived here about 10:30 a. m. equipment was set up and the taking of blood began at 12:30.

About 175 persons were expected to donate today. The hours were from 12:30 to 6:30. Tomorrow's hours will be from 10:30 to 4:30. Doors remained open until today so that persons who work until 5 p. m.

could contribute. Slightly more than 314 persons had been registered up to noon today. The quota for the two-diy stop was set at 400 pints. Mrs. Katherina Morrison, secretary of the Gage county Red Cross, said this morning that more donors are needed, adding that there were still vacant spots on the schedule for both days.

She urged that those persons who desire to give blood, but have not yet signed up to call the Red Cross office. Sharp Forecastings Feature Sun Contest The football forecasters are getting sharper on their teams as the season progresses. Again it took a high score to get even honorable mention in the Daily Sun's eighth weekly football contest. And again there was strong competition for top honors. Eighteen 'entries picked 14 out of 16 games correctly.

All of them missed only the Maryland-North Carolina tie and Texas upset of S.M.U. This week the comparison of scores favored Mrs. L. H. Spence of McCook for the $5 first prize.

She picked exact scores for the Missouri (21-19) and Illinois (21-7) victories. Hazel Bachman, 1105 Elk picked the score of the Michigan game (20-7) to cop the $3 second prize money. The third prize money of $2 went to Tom Ernst of Columbus. Honorable mention winners, all of whom picked 14 games correctly, were: Harvey Ideus and Margaret -Genoa, of Peru State, Teachers college, Jerry Reed, Pawnes City, and Harold Will, Jerry Hayes, Robert Walker, Joe Roland, Rolland Decker, Lester Smith, Dale Harmer, Mike Loth, Mrs. Wm.

Lenhart, Howard Baker, George Loth -and Edward Bond, all of Beatrice. (See Sports Page for correct contest scores.) his Angelo A. DeLillo Passes Away Here Angela A- DeLillo died at home at 1608 Elk Saturday about 10 p. m. He would have been 51 years old pn Sunday.

Mr. DeLillo had the contract to deliver the mail between the postoffioa and the depot. He was born Nov. 12, 1899, in San Francisco, and had been a resident of Beatrice since 1941. He was a member of the Elks and Masonic lodges, Surviving ere his Wilma; one brother, John, San Francisco, gild one sister, Mrs.

Margaret Eastwood, Daily Calif. Funeral services will be Tuesday at Jl a. m. at the Harman mortuary with Dr. Alva Clark of- negating.

Burial will be in Oakland, Caljf, Dewey Sees A Trend Toward Isolationism WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York said today there is some evidence of a trend toward isolationism in Ihe Republican party, but Senator Taft (r-Ohio) said there are no isolationists any more. They gave these contrasting opinions to the magazine U.

S. News and World Report, published here. Dewey and Taft were among a number of prominent winners and losers in last week's elections interviewed by the magazine by telephone. Asked whether it could be inferred from the vote results that, the GOP was tending back toward isolationism, Dewey replied: "I'm afraid there are individuals of that kind, but as long as I have a position of responsibility, I'll be fighting it." Taft, asked whether isolationism cropned up in the campaign, replied: "I don't know what they mean by Nobody is an isolationist today. That's just name calling and I don't, think it means anything.

They kept calling me an but I don't think anybody paid any attention to it." Taft, GOP policy leader in the senate, attributed much of the Republican success in the elections to lack of confidence in the Truman administration's foreign policy. Taft told more than 125 reporters at a news conference later that the major problems of the next congress will be to decide how hie; a military program is needed for the country, "where wo will get the money and how we shall prevent inflation." Calling for a congressional review of proposed military aid to Western Europe, the Ohio senator said he believes such aid must be given but wants congress to assess the situation before it acts. Union Hires Flash Pickets Attempt To Snarl Long Distance Use; Omaha Co. Picketed NEW XORK, Nov. 13 distance telephone operators in New York City charged today they were "locked out" when they reported for work after striking equipment workers removed picket lines.

The American Telephone Telegraph said that the charge of "lockout is absurd." The CIO Equipment Workers struck against the Bell system in 44 states last Thursday in a dispute over wages and length of contract. Hit And Run Tactic Removal of the picket lines in New York was part of the "hit and run" picketing tactics of the CIO Communications Workers of America to snarl Bell system long distance lines. The picketing was designed to catch management unaware and throw long distance service into chaos before enough supervisors- can be mobilized to man switchboards. In Nebraska, Omaha had its first sample of picketing in the strike. A token picket line was set up before 6 a.

m. today at the Northwestern Bell Telephone building in Omaha. Less than two hours later the picket line was removed. Second Example Today's picketing was the second sample of "skip" picketing Nebraska has had since the start of the strike Thursday. The first was at Chadron the day the strike began.

There are about 55 installers in Nebraska, most of them scattered over the state. Eighteen are assigned at Omaha at present. Meantime, federal mediators said neither union nor management had budged over the weekend in the strike. New talks were set for today in the pay and contract dispute. Old High School Walls Coming Down The old Beatrice high school is slowly going down.

The west wall where the library used to be has been torn down and about half of the ceiling over the study hall. Portions of the wall were shaken loose by the "headache ball" and the remainder was pushed out by a bulldozer. Excavation is going full swing for the southwest corner of the new building, where the vets housing units were located. Some of the concrete footings have already been layed. Hunting Mishap In Ogallala Kills Lad OGALLALA, Nov.

13 UP) V. Kildare, 14, of Ogallala died in a local hospital yesterday of an accidental gunshot wound suffered while hunting. The shot came from a .40 gauge shotgun carried by his companion, Bobby Brown. The two boys were walking through an open field after a duck hunt on the South Platte river. Somehow the gun barrels bumped together and Brown's gun discharged.

The two boys were frequent hunting companions. Overcast Skies With Cold Will Continue AuocUted rreii Somewhat overcast skies and continued cold temperatures are to he Nebraska's weather lot for another 24-hours, forecasters said today. Grand Island reported yesterday's high of 43 and Sidney and Burwell shared the overnight low of 15, CASE DISMISSED The appeal of Clarence 0. Grensemann et al, who had tested award mads in condemnation proceedings by the Consumers Public Power District, was dismissed in district court today, on petition of the plaintiff. Williams Takes Lead Again In Gov.

Race DETROIT, Nov. 13.. (m The lingering see-saw race for the Michigan governorship, still undecided jix days after the state election, swung back over to Democratic Governor G. Mennen Williams today. A change in the canvass returns gave these state totals, with official canvasses still narrowly incomplete: G.

Mennen Williams (d) 935,128. Harry F. Kelly (r) 934,570. Thus, with a half dozen of the state's 83 counties still to report their official canvassed figures, Williams takes the lead of 558 votes over his Republican rival, two-time former Governor Kelly. Slash Use Of Aluminum NPA Chief Orders Cut In Non-Military Supplies As Of Ian.

WASHINGTON, Nov. 13. The government today slashed the ifbn-military use of aluminum by about 35 per cent starting in January. William H. Harrison, administrator of the National Production Authority, announced the order at a news conferenoa.

Replying to a question he said the order "very likely" will cause some unemployment in particular factories but he would expect that industry would have some opportunity to prepare before January and use some substitutes for aluminum. Harrison said that in the final analysis this order does not take aluminum away from non-military uses. Mora than 30 per cent of the supply is directly needed for the present defense program, including stockpiles, he said, "and this order simply distributes the available supply to all non-military users in accord with the pattern of use earlier in the year. Blueprint Vast New Plan For American Aid Global Survey Made In View Of Fresh Red Threat WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 blueprint for a vast new American foreign aid program, including economic help to Western Europe beyond the scheduled end of the Marshall plan, was made public by the administration last It probably will form the basis for President Truman's foreign economic recommendations to the new congress next year.

Billions Needed The chief executive made publir a global survey of economic prospects and American aid in the light of the Communist threat and the western rearmament program. The survey calls for far-reaching developments in American policy to provide help running into billions of dollars over the next few $8,000,000,000 or more. Mr. Truman released the report, prepared by former Secretary of the Army Gordon Gray, as a document deserving "the attention and study" of the American people. But administration officials said there is no doubt that its main recommendations will largely shape the President's foreign economic proposal in his State of the Union message to congress in January.

This will pose squarely the issue of how long and how much the United States wants to give or lend friendly nations to hrlp them rearm and strengthen their political and economic life against the threat of Communism. Faces Rouqh Go The administration had hard sledding getting funds from the present congress to finance the third vear of the Marshall Plan for Western Euronean recovery. There is every indication that it will have a rougher time with the now congress in obtaining annvov- al for an extension of help to Eur- one bevond the scheduled end of the Marshall Plan on June 30. 1952, -The attack of the enlarged Deposition may not. Be.

however, so much on the point of furnishing some assistance as on the related issues of how much and under what conditions. Steve Buckelheide Succumbs At Hallam (The Sun'i Own Service) HALLAM, Nov. 13. Otto (Steve) Buckelheide died Saturday morning at the age of 48. Funeral services will be Tuesday afternoon at two at the Hallam Methodist church with the Rev.

Harry Kirk officiating. Burial will be in the Clatonia cemetery. Surviving are his wife, Grace; four brothers, John, Will and Harvey, all of Clatonia, and Arthur of Kansas; and two sisters, Mrs. Frank Krauter of Dalton and Mrs. Fred Krauter of Crete.

Speakers For New Version Of Bible Rev. Wayne A. Greene and Merle G. Jones of Beatrice have accepted planes' on the speaker's bureau for the Revised Standard Version Bible Observance in the fall of 1952, from Sept. 20 to Oct.

5, when the entire Revised Standard Version of the Bible will be published. Rev. Greene is minister of the First Christian church, Mr. Jones is president of Store Kraft and a prominent Presbyterian layman. They will be available on the special day of the oslebration, Sept, 30, 1952, for speaking engagements within a radius of 500 miles, according to Dr.

Harold E. president of the Univer- I sity of Pennsylvania, who has been president of the International Council of Religious Education since 1942. Extensive plans are being made for this observance, two years hence. It will include mass meetings in at least 3,000 communities in the United States and Canada. Completion of the Revised Standard Version of the Bible (the New Testament section was published in 1946) will mark an epoch in the religious life of English speaking peoples comparable to that marked by the issuance of the King James Version in 1611.

Woman Doctor Released On Bond In Kidnaping Charge SANTA FE, N. Nov. 13. UP) Dr. Nancy Campbell, 43-year- old Yale-trained woman doctor, was released from jail today on bond pending trial on charges of kidnaping a contractor's nine- year-old daughter, The $25,000 bond was signed by two doctors and two other property owners; Dr.

Charlotte Jones, close friend; Dr. Herbert Ellis, vice president of the Santa Fe County Medical association; David Hughes and Walter G'. Turley. Her attorney made immediate plans to send Dr. Campbell to an Albuquerque hospital.

The District attorney's office said arraignment i a pping charges, carrying a penalty of five years to death, would be in a week or two. Through the night, a suicide guard stood watch Jn Pr, Campbell's jail oeil, placed there by her attorney. Dr. dressed in men's was caught red-handed Saturday night when she reached for $20,000 ransom cash and 30 hidden FBI agents and police said she shouted as they hurtled into her! thinking she was a man, But in her yellow convertible only a few feet away they found her bedraggled victim blonde Linda Stamm. The little girl was groggy from a dose of sleeping medicine and chilled from exposure to the 9-degree freezing temperature, but otherwise unharmed Later, after they found two more ransom notes and a 25- caliber pistol In the women's pockets, the FBI said she admitted luring the child away Friday from the Stamm's ranch estate in the" wooded outskirts of Santa Fe.

Dr. Campbell, who has a four- year-old adopted son, Rufus, said she was besst with debts and unpaid bills and'worried about, her elderly parents, both Injured in an auto crash lasc month. Delivered Son Linda's mother, Mrs. Allan, Stamm, was shocked to find the admitted Kidnaper was the same respected women's specialist who had delivered her second son, Craig Stamm, just two years ago. But after her 30-hour ordeal rusted her in the darkness, she had little sympathy for, only a gonbetween!" they' Marines Push Ahead Five Miles Through Snow Covered Hills U.N.

Seeking To Neutralize Chinese Issue Assure Communists Manchurian Power Will Not Be Cut LAKE SUCCESS, Nov. 13. United Nations mounted a diplomatic offensive today, seeking to neutralize Communist China and to prevent the Korean campaign from exploding into World War III. On the eve of the departure from Peiping of a Red delegation to the Security Council, diplomats moved swiftly to keep the war localized. Assure No Designs The basic strategy was to reassure Chinese Communist leaders that U.N.

forces had no designs on their territory, would not interfere with China's supply of electric power from North Korean dams and would build a united, democratic, independent Korea which would present no threat to China. This was combined with a clear warning, however, that continued Red Chinese intervention in Korea would lead to drastic action. As though to point, up these efforts, a spokesman at Gen. MacArthur's Tokyo headquarters announced that the current Allied push toward the Yalu river is just a "limited offensive." Informed observers here considered this indicated that the U.N. military command also was treading gingerly, hoping to win a decisive victory over the North Koreans giving the Chinese an opportunity; to withdraw- mimmum loss of face.

Ready to Negotiate Australia's James Plimsoll, a member of the seven-nation Korean commission, flew to Korea to be available, with other commission members, in case Peiping wanted to negotiate a border settlement. There was no indication that the Chinese Reds had made any approaches in this direction, but Plimsoll's flight was regarded here as further evidence of U. N. determination to leave no door unclosed in an to solve the question peacefully. Other commission members are Chile, Pakistan, the Netherlands, the Philippines, Thailand and Turkey.

Troops In Germany Told To Be Alert FRANKFURT, Germany, Nov. 13. American troops in Germany are being warned this week that they "must be constantly alert, and prepared to meet the possibility of new armed aggression by international Communism." The warning is given in information and education classes which are part of every military unit's training program. The "information bulletin" used as the text for these classes tells the soldiers: "The Communist program of world conquest has now placed one-third of all the people on the earth under Communist dictatorships. "The events of the past 30 years seem to indicate that there can be no compromise with international Communism, no negotiating with it, nor any 'getting along" with it." The bulletin added that U.S.

troops in Germany must maintain a state of combat readiness. Labor Union Official Succumbs At Superior R. R. E.ustace of Superior died at the Superior hospital Saturday afternoon following a heart attack. He was about 66 years of age.

He had retired from the Burlington as section foreman a few years ago because of poor health. Eustace was secretary and organizer of his labor union with grand offices in Chicago, He had visited in Beatrice many times. Surviving are his wife, daughter, Gwen; and son, Virgil of Kansas City, Mo. Funeral services will be in Superior Tupsday at ten a. m.

Graveside services will be Tuesday afternoon at the Smith Center, cemetery, ELECTED TREASURER by ijw'i Own WNGQLJN--, Miss Joan Tnober, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Clyde M. Thober of Rt- 6, Beatrice, been- elected treasurer of the "Yellera of the Brown" campus pap club at Nebraska Wesjeyan, Thaber is a graduate of. Beatrice high school in 1948 and is now a junior, MODERN MEDUSA What appear to be writhing snakes are the startling feature of a new headdress dreamed up by Antonio, top-ranking Parisian coiffeur. They're made of metal- lized, lacquered hair and gold.

Photo by Rene Henry, NEA- Acme Staff Photographer. Leftist Meet Plans Change To Move To Warsaw After Top Leaders Put Out Of England SHEFFIELD, Nov. 13 UP) bob-tailed peac'e congress met in chaotic session today to devise means of moving quickly to Warsaw, Poland. The Sheffield city hall, where the Communist-line congress had engaged an auditorium for a five- day meeting, was for a few hours a strongly guarded fortress. Dozens of stewards admitted only delegates with credentials, and some people were left, out in the rain because they could not find their tickets.

Reporters and the public were not allowed inside. Some of the hundreds of persons who got past the screening at the doors and came out said the practical problems of making a thousand-mile shift in scene on short notice were being considered. These problems were largely financial but delegates were taking what comfort they could from reports that the Polish government is willing to meet the costs of an adjourned meeting in Warsaw. There, on Thursday, the travel- lers will open their week-long cqn- gress to demand a Russian-style ban on the atom.bomb and reduction and control of armaments. Britain's rejection at her borders of some "hundreds" "of including many of the congress' leaders forced cancellation of elaborate plans in this steel and arms center.

Poland stepped in when plans went awry with a promise of hospitality. Adams Junior Class Gives Play Nov. 28 (Tlie Sun's Own Service) ADAMS, Nov. The junior class of the Adams high school, under the direction of Coach G. A.

Young, will present "Out on a Limb," a three act comedy- drama, Tuesday evening, Nov. 28, at the high school auditorium, Members of the cast are: Arlene Faulhaber, Dale Van Gent, Marjorie Nelson, JoAnn Werner, Bruce Wiebe, David "Pete" Fritz, Marlene Finkner, Dorothy Schmutte, Russell Huetson, Shir ley Rapp and Donald Rabel. Car Badly Damaged After Striking Post Sun'v Own PLYMOUTH, Nov. cat- driven by Gale VanLam'ngham, Harbine, was badly damaged in a one-car accident one and one half miles east of Plymouth Friday. He reported to officials either a tire blew out or his steering' gear broke, and he struck a concrete post at the end of ft cuIVert, Damage to the was esti mated at $200.

Hacks In Escaping Picker OQLUMBUS, Npv. hand caught in a ing machine, farmer- Frank jasa, fWfiated, and tugged for quarter of an in i vain to free bjrosetf. Then, lack Units, put In a CctlJl anwutAtadl. No Resistance Met During Push For Dam Tanks Bogged Down By Soggy Terrain; Planes Give Support SEOUL, Korea, Nov. 13 Parka-clad U.

S. Marines pushed cautiously five and a half miles through undefended, icy hills the great Changjin reservoir today. While the Marines advanced in the center of the front, there was dogged fighting near both coasts. Complete Line Back of the front, United Nations forces drew a solid defense line across the narrow waist of Korea. The line was completed by the junction of the Third division, built up to battle strength by the addition of South Koreans and Puerto Ricans, and the South Korean Eighth division.

The advancing Marines, bungled like Eskimos, wound through a corkscrew gorge in subzero weather without tank support. Tank tracks churned the mountain road into a soggy mass that bogged down the heavy equipment. Marines planes flew close cover. Even that was unneeded as the Leathernecks ran into only a scattered handful of Chinese i Communists, remnants of the 124th division, garbed in padded cotton uniforms. The Reds were eliminated without Marine loss.

To the west, Communists appeared to be digging in or fighting 'delayed actions; but on the 'east coast they swarmed to the attack. -Attack In.Snowttorm North Koreans guarding the approaches to the Soviet border attacked in force on the east coast Monday under cover of a blinding: snowstorm. The Red spearhead battalion was led by tanks 'and self-propelled guns. Fleets of B-29s ranging back of the fronts hammered again at Sinuiju and set three main supply points aflame with fire bombs. A spokesman at General MacArthur's Tokyo headquarters said both bridges across the Yalu river from Manchuria to Sinuiju were believed knocked out after Monday's attack.

Forty B-29s made the fire attack. They loosed 340' tons of incendiaries on Sakchu and Chosan, on the Yalu river' northeast of Sinuiju, and on Namsi, communications center between Sinuiju and the northwest front. No Late Information MacArthur's Intelligence officer had been no information for two days on whether Chinese Communists still are sending reinforcements in large numbers across the Yalu. Intentions and capabilities of the Chinese forces still are not apparent, the intelligence officer said, The Peoples Daily of Peiping, official Chinese Communist newspaper, said American forces could not be halted in Korea "unless we check them with force." Col. Homer L.

Litzenberg commanding 'the Seventh regiment, said he was moving cautiously despite lack of opposition to tain security of his flanks. Businessman Rejects Dollars For Ministry LOS ANGELES, Nov. 13 41-year-old businessman today said he has given up tne "mad scramble for the almighty dpWar? to enter the Episcopal ministry, J. Philip Bartlett, a seminary student at the University of fornia, said he sold a thriving farm machinery business jn Satt Diego because "the eternal sure of the business world WM not worth it," By everyday standards he'yfti off, Sajtlett related, 5 felt there was something in his life. 1 "I was forced to follow, ethics wWch were Chf, explained.

"'They werevlwjr.ett ics that would put a modern A For 1.

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