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Mt. Vernon Register-News from Mt Vernon, Illinois • Page 2

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THE REGISTER-NEWS MT. VERNON, ILLINOIS SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 1968 DEATHS G. Churchwell Funeral Sunday At Fairfield GraH Churchwell of MHI Shoals died at 2:30 a-m. Friday at Fairfield Memorial Hospital at the age of 83 years. Funeral services will be heH at 2:00 p.m.

Sunday at Nale Funeral Home in Fairfield. Rev. Harry Corcoran" will officiate Burial will be in West Antioch cemeteiy. The body will lie in state at Nala Funeral Home where friends may call after 3:00 today. Ml'.

Churchwell was born Feb. 7, 1885, in Wayne county, the son of George and Eliza (Felbt) Churchwell. Sui-vivoi-s include two broth- ere, Bert Churchwell of Fair- tield. and A. W.

Churchwell of Mill Slioals; and a sister, Mrs. Susan Little of Fairfield. James E. Cluck, Of Carterville, Dies At Age 68 James Elton Ouck of ville, died Friday in Carterville at age of flS years. Funeral services will be at 2:00 p.m.

Monday at Donelson Funeral Home in McLcansboro. Burial will be in Knight's Prairie cemetery near McLeansboro. The body will lie in state at Donelson Funeral Home where friends may call after 2:00 p.m. Sunday. Mr.

was bom Oct 13, 1900, in Hamilton county, the soil of George Washington and Kathy CWillis) Cluck. Survivors include a brother, Arthur Quck of Galatia. Battleship Is Recommissioned PHILADELHIA (AP) The battleship USS New Jersey, bound for Vietnam duly after 10 years in mothballs, was missioned Saturday in colorful cerianonies viewed by several thousand invited guests at Philadelphia Naval Base. "We salute her captate and her crew," Navy Secretary Paul R. Ignatius said in prepared remarks, "wish, them Godspeed and smoom sailing, and express our confidence that she win be a of her country's cause in the difficult days that lie ahead." The 1,400 -mBp crew of flie New the normal ship's the batOewagcm's freshly scrubbed decks for the ceremony.

Guests viewed the traditional naval pa- gentry from dockside. She will proceed to Vietnam by Hiiere she will lie on station, blasting targets inland from miles at sea. Her 16-inch guns are capable of hurling pound projectiles more than 20 miles. 76-Day Liffed Helkopters in Khe Sanh Base Weather Here And Elsewhere MT. VESRNON WEATHER Friday high 42, low 35.

Rainfall to date 196S 9.16 taches. One year ago high 80, low 47. Five years ago high 68, low 35. Ten years ago high low Sunday sunrise 5:35, sunset Monday sunrise 5:33, sunset 6:31. (GST).

ILLINOIS WEAimas By THE ASSOCIATED FBKSS The sun quickly dispelled nearly general morning frost and pushed temperatures into the 50E and low 60s in Illinois today. The Weather Bureau aaid the warming will continue through Sunday, but shower.i may develop in the southern and western sections. Only the southern quarter of the state escaped the forst this morning, when tenipera tures dropped below 30 in most areas. The lows included 27s along tile Mississippi River the Quad Cities northward and the Wabash River. High temperaturp.s Fridny were nearly all in the low 40.s State Temperatures: Moline, cloudy 43 28 Peona, cloudy 44 28 Springfield, cloudy 39 29 Rookford, clear 41 28 (Juincy, clear 42 29 Vandalia, cloudy 40 36 Belleville, clear 42 31 Chgo Gr.

clear 36 33 Chgo Mid'y, clear 39 29 Midwest Dubuque, cloudy 43 27. Madison, dear 43 23 South Bend, clear 38 25 Paducah, cloudy 42 38 Burlington, clear 43 27 The Weather Elsewhere By AS.S0CI4TED PRESii Hisrh Low PI. Albany, clear 65 28 Albuquerque, cloudy 70 46 Atlanta, cloudy 62 36 .11 LBJ OPERATES FROM WHITE HOUSE 'FORT' (Continued From Page One) American ships and property here and abroad to be flown at half staff until tiie burial of tiie civil rights leader Tuesday. He led a host of government officials and others attending a memorial service for King at the Washington Cathedral. Looting In Downtown As looting and arson spread into downtown Washington late Fridny afternoon.

Johnson signed a proclamation declaring tliat "conditions of domestic violence and disorder e.vist" and tlial loual police were unable to tlie situation. llo signed an executive order; of any armed forces necessary to put down the rampage. Police and Secret Service guards at the White House were augmented by National Guai-d and regular Army troops. Adjacent sidewalks were roped off and blinding toward the set up inside the iron fence that surrounds the Executive Mansion. Press Pass "Badges" Newsmen who cover President Johnson were ordered to attach their White House passes, normally carried in their pockets, to their without precedent in recent decades.

Johnson will address a joint session of Congress at 9 p.m. (EST) Monday. He said he wanted to present "suggestions for this hour of national need." The President made this announcement in a hastily arranged television-radio appearance after conferring witii 10 prominent civil rights leaders and several top government officials. Presidential secretary George Christian quoted Johnson as telling the civil rights leaders: "I need your help. The country needs your voices now, calling for unity, nonvlolenoe land social Bismarck, cloudy 47 27 Boise, clear 51 29 Boston, dear 60 32 Buffalo, cleai: 41 25 Chicago, clear 39 29 Cincinnati, cloudy 43 36 Oeveland, clear 40 21 Denver, clear 59 30 Des Moines, clear 45 29 Detroit, clear 43 28 Fairbanks, cloudy 44 19 Fort WOTth, dear 60 42 Helena, clear 50 32 Honolulu, clear 84 68 Indianapolis, clear 40 28 Jacksonville, cloudy 86 87 Juneau, rain 41 34 Kansas Gty, clear 50 36 Los Angdes, dear 68 54 Louisville, doudy 42 38 Memphis, clear 50 32 Miami, clear 77 74 Milwaukee, clear 38 24 cloudy 43 32 New Orleans, clear 70 50 New York, dear 62 Okla.

City, clear 57 37 Omaha, dear 48 36 Philadelphia, clear 6'. .33 Phoenbc, clear 83 55 PlttsburgSi, clear 48 21 Pflnd, clear 62 28 Ptind, ram 54 36 Rapid aty, cloudy 65 38 Richmond, cloudy 71 45 St. Louis, clear 40 26 Salt Lk. City, snow 5C 32 San Diego, cloudy 67 58 Sari clear 57 51 Seattic, rain 55 43 Tampa, cloudy -81 70 Washington, cloudy 37 Winnipeg, cloudy 42 29 (M-Missing) .11 .10 .01 .15 KHE SANH, Vietnam (AP) Relief forces landed in Khe Sanh today and some of the allied outpost's defenders ah-eady were pushing outward to join the offensive against North Vietnamese ti-oops who besieged them for 76 days. The enemy siege was official ly declared broken Friday after a allied relief column moved within a mile of the base and began fanning out around it.

But the first linkup of relief forces witii the -man Khe Sanh U.S. today when hell' copters lifted a company of South Vietnamese paratroopers into the base. Just before the paratroopers landed', tiie 400 Soutii Vietnamese rangers who have been holding the Khe Sanh base's southern perimeter charged out and. seized enemy trenchlines extending as far as 200 yards from the perimeter. They met no resistance.

In one trench, the rangers re- portied finding the bodies of three North Vietnamese soldiers, all well equipped. They apparentiy were hit when U.S. artillery and air strikes pounded the trenches; Earlier, about 1,000 U.S. Marines had inoved nearly two miles southwest of the base in an effort' to. root out North Vietnamese troops lurking in the hills near the Laotian border.

Marines Tto Withdraw Soiith Vietnamese troops were expected io take over defense of most of the opening the way to withdraw sonie of the Marines or send'them out on additional offensive thrusts. U.S. once expected one of the biggest batties of.thie wai' to develop at Khe Sanh, and estmated that 20,000 enertiy' troops the base. But the latest estimate was that gnly 7,000 enemy soldiers remfiined arid the rest had withdravvh into the mountains toward Laos, under massive U.S. aif iThe relief set out Monday on Oipetatipn Pegasus, and parts of it swepit the mountains east, south and west of Khe Sanh today.

Reopen Highway 9 But the biggest push involved Pope Blesses Palm Fronds VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope Paul VI starts Roman Catholic Holy Week Sunday morning by blessing palm fronds and celebrating the first papal Mass in St. Peter's Basilica wifli no Lat- ki and no noblemen. The pontiff hands out the palm leaves to cardinals and other members of the pontifical chapel, the Pope's religious court, to remind of Christ's en tr into Jerusalem the Sunday before He was crucified. Holding a pabn in his hands, the Pope will lead a procession tiirough the huge basilica but this year no Roman noblemen will be following him. In a decree March 29, the Pope did away with the Roman nobility in Vatican offices.

Then Pope Paul will read tile entire Palm Sunday Mass in Italian. From March 24 on, the Italian bishops ruled, no Latin may be used in public Masses. SEEK LONG- NOSED MAN AS SLAYER Mourning March In St. Louis ST. LOUIS (AP) A mass march to mourn the death of Dr.

Martin Luther King was set for Sunday by a coalition of Negro dvil rights and religious leaders in St. Louis. Plans for tiie meeting were made Friday at a meeting of the Mid-City Community Congress, during which clashes erupted between moderate and militant Negroes. The march is to begin at 1:30 p.m. beneath the Gateway Arch and move westward along Franklin Avenue to Forest Park.

There it Is to disband. RcAotion to the death of Dr. Martin Lutiier King in St. Louis seemed to be principally shock, sorrow and loss. The Metropolitan Church Federation Scheduled a memorial service for 4 p.m.

Sunday. Other memorials were annotlnced by individual groups and churches. (Continued From Page One) downtown area. Plan Monday March As his body was borne back to Atianta Friday by his widow in a chartered plane, union leaders and civil rights workers throughout the country continued planning for the Monday march. Spokesmen said they anticipated that as many as 40,000 persons from 11 states would take part, following guidelines laid down by a federal judge.

King had termed the strike by the Memphis garbage men, 98 per cent of them Negroes, as the second phase in the fight by Negroes for equal rights. He said his Montgomery bus boycott in 1955 started the first phase, the fight for desegregation, and that the garbage collectors were now engaged in the battle for economic equality. The buUet tiiat kiUed King came from a communical bathroom in a flophouse behind the motel. Police were looking for the man who had checked into the place, paying for his $8.50 a week room with a crisp $20 bill. Bessie Brewer, manager of the i-ooming house, told police the man gave his name as John Willard.

"He was a clean, neat Hit-Run Mishap At Hospital A hit-and-run driver damaged an automobile late last night or early this morning at (3ood Samaritan Hospital. Doris Boldrey, 1315 south 25th street said her car was hit on the parking lot while she was working at the hospital. It was damaged about $50, HospStaf Notes a Marble coluW of .15 WASHINGTON MOBS ROAM AGAIN TODAY (Continued From Pag6 One) eruption of violence which reached its peak in the final hours of daylight and dusk Friday. A night-time curfew was Imposed. Police and soldiers ordered to duty by Pi-esident Johnson cordoned off the areas hardest hit, and kept watch on the generally deserted streets through the night- It was the second night of violence for Washington, where 500,000 Negi-oes live, and, it was far more severe tiian the first angry outburst tiiat followed tiie assassination of Dr.

Martin Luther King Jr. "We were informed that the situation appears to be quieting down and as of the moment appears to be in hand," former Deputy Secretary of Defense Cyrus R. Vance told a news conference early today. Mayor Walter E. Washington said he asked Vance to help coordinate the violence-quelling effort Vance is a top troubleshooter for President Johnson.

dres Billows of acrid, black smoke still rose from the looted, torched buildings. Firehjen said there had been some 250 blazes, many the wark arsoniBts. leiy and engineers reopening Highway 9, the only overland supply route' fo the base. The column was. three miles east of Khe Sanh on its westward push.

Highway 9 has been closed since August, partly by enemy action and partiy by monsoon weather. A U.S. general said reopening it ''will give us a good solid base for offensive operations in the Khe Sanh area. We won't have to depend on air as we were all last winter." The general added, "From herp on in, it's mainly a one-sided U.S. air cavabymen supported by armed helicopters reported killing 50 North Vietnamese late Friday near the town of Khe Sanh, two miles south of the Marine Base.

Tlie enemy seized the town last January and turned it into a regimental headquarters. Earlier, cavalrymen fought an estimated 150 enemy troops four 'riiiles east of the town. Nine enemy and one American were reported killed. South Vietnamese ters reported today that Viet Cong gunners continued scattered shellirigs, causing only light casualties. Three allied airfields and three government militai-y posts were hit with mortars and rockets Friday night and today, after 11 allied installations had been hit in the previous 24-hour period.

Suspecting a North Vietnamese ti-oop building up in the central highlands, tiie U.S. Command sent B52 bombers on five missions Friday night and today against suspected enemy positions nbrtliwest of Kontum City. U.S. Planes Shot Down Elsewhere in the liighlands, enemy ground fire brought down an Air Force FlOO Super- sabre 28 miles east of Pleiku City. The plane exploded when it hit tlie gi-ound and tiie pilot was killed, U.S.

headquarters said. It was tiie 244th U.S. warplane reported lost in combat over South Vietnam. Near coastal Tuy Hoa, 250; miles northeast of Saigon, a force of South Vietnamese and South Korean troops reported killing 106 Viet Cong Friday. Seven South Vietnamese were reported killed and 27 South Vietnamese and one Korean 1 were wounded.

I Over North Vietnam, monsoons limited U.S. pilots to 86 missions Friday. In what-appeared to be further curtailment of the akeady limited attacks ordered by President Johnson, a U.S. spokesman said the deepest peneti-a- tion was about 110 miles above the demilitarized zone, or about 3ft miles below Vinh. There was no official confirmation that bombing limits had been tightened but no strikes north of Vinh have been reported-in nearly 48 hours.

said. (Hharlie Q. Stephens, who had the room between that taken by, Willard and the bathroom, described the man as "clean shaven" and that he had a "long, sharp nose. He had normal eyes and a square chin, thick hair at the front and receded on each side." Saw Man Leave Others said they saw the man walk away after the shot was fired. Clark, who made an eight- hour visit Friday, said evidence "indicates a single individual" was involved in the assassination.

"There is no evidence of a widespread plot" The investigation already has widened to several states, he said, and "will spread as far as ready spread several hundred miles from the boundaries of Tennessee now." Clark also said that evidence in the case was considerably more than police "usually get in cases like this," but he refused to elaborate. "A number of studies of prints that may establish the identity" of the sniper are being made by police and FBI agents with the aid of the FBI laboratory in Washington, he said. JEFFERSON MEIVIOBIAL Admitted: Tony Bubany, Nason. Elza Howard Satterfield, 1708 Grove. Thomas A.

Bonner, RFD 4. Velma Neal WUliams, 901 south 21st. Claude Sammons, 621 souOi 18tii. Marion Wallace Beardon, S07 south Sixth. Sherry Schuster, 1811 Stanley.

Discharged: Carole Ann Watts, Ina. Rado Belle 'Wallace, 308 south Nintii. Betty Jean Borders, McLeansboro. Philip Doyal Edinton, Fairfield. GOOD SAMARITAN Admitted: Alfred Donoho, RFD 7, Helen Gordon, Herrin.

Orillian Lee, 723 south 17tii. Kathryn Eddington, 704 south 12th. Delores WeUs, RFD 1, 'Woodlawn, Estella Richardson, Belle Rive. James Morgan. 101 Opdyke.

Ernie Pigg, RFD 7. Bernice Bowles, 1708 Lambert. Gilbert Heck, 720 Conger. Lutiier Medlln, 713 Park. Marshall Flanagan, 'Woodlawn.

Vida Lipe, RFD 7. DIchharged: Ronald Henderson, 1505 south Nmtii. Jewell Tliompson, 1104 soutii 13tii. Norma Jane Romani, Valier. Mrs.

Vickie Gay Livengood and baby, Amy Lynn, 2526 Cherry. Mrs. Arkene Owens and baby, Jasen Alan, 910 south 22nd. Brian Joseph Davis, 2917 Jamison. Chloe Thomason, Bluford.

Cecil Robinson, RFD 2, Ashley. Minnie Malone, 1207 Logan. Jack Roach, RFD 2, Nashville, ni. Ricky Panzier, 2403 Westcott. Orillian Lee, 723 south 17tii.

Elliott Eiler, UIO Park. RESTORE ORDER WITH BAYONETS (Continued From Page One) damage. Ten Negro families from the trouble area fled in their cars to a closed service station several blocks away where they were waiting for tiie disturbances to cease. Witnesses said several Negro families on West Roosevelt packed their belongings In their cars and left the area. Some 280 persons were arrested in connection with the disturbances that started on the South Side and spread quickly to the West Side, downtown area and near North Side.

Police reported 343 persons were arrested in various sections of tho city, induding -40 juveniles and 20 women. The dead included two men shot by snipers, ahotiier shot in an exchange of gunfire with police, three found shot to death behind stores, and one found shot on the balcony of his northwest side home. The man who bled to death, police said, may have cut his leg by falling through a glass door or window or by falling on broken glass which littered the area. In some blocks, both sides of West Madison Street appeared to be a solid mass of flames and dense smoke, and in others there was scattered looting and some minor fires. The fires started some three miles from the Loop and spread away from the Downtown area.

350 Injured Some 350 persons were treated in hospitals for injuries, including a fireman who was shot in the leg. A policeman was shot in the arm by a sniper at a police station on the Southwest side. Crowds in the area taunted police and firemen, yelling, "A white man killed Martin Luther King." There was sporadic shooting through tiie night as police tried to chase looters from stores. Canine patrol dogs were used to guard a handful of buildings along West Madison, including a sporting goods store which police said had a' large supply of weapons. The trouble came at the start of school Friday on the South Side when several thousand pupils failed to report to classes and many youngers milled outside school buildings.

Fires were set in waste baskets and several false alarms were turned in. Close Kgh Schools Board of Education spokesmen said classes were canceled in 19 high schools, including nearly all schools in Negro or border areas. Most West Side schools also were closed. Many of the initial closings were to allow pupils to attend memorial services King. Later a group of youths threw rocks and botties at three dozen store fronts and marched through blocks of a business section on the South Side at 63rd Street.

Some 200 teen-age girls and boys ran down Madison Street in the Loop, smashing windows and lootfaig. Rock-hurling youths smashed windows and looted several stores on the North Side in the afternoon. Employes and shoppers in a grocery locked themselves in a back room when 13 youths smashed windows and stormed through tiie store. Another 3,000 guardsmen were placed on alert in armories. Miss Teenage America Arrives STEPHANIE CRANE, Miss Teenage America, Is greeted at tlie Mi Vernon lata yesterday as she flew Into town on an Oiark prop Jet to appear today at the Hi-Xrl spring conference at Mt.

Vernon high school. From the left are Kathleen Kenney, Vickie Plnaszl and Alice Wilson, of Mt. Vornon, Miss Crane and Betty Harrison, air Itae stewardess. Miss Crane, was guest speaker at the Hl-Tlri conference this momhig. (Delo Photo Croft) Burglary And 2 Thefts Are Reported Here A bmrglary and two thefts were reported to Mt.

'Vemon police yesterday. Police said aproximately $50 was stolen draing a break in at the Taco Villa Drive-In, Tenth and Westcott. They said someone entered the through a window and broke into tlie cigarette machine. Robert W. Hudson, of Sesser, reported Friday afternoon that someone stele a box of tools out of his truck.

Mrs. Nolen Pliillips, Belle Rive, -reported that a fivo shirts and two p.iris of trousers were stolen from her car while it was parked at tiiy shopping center. Cars Collide At 15th, Broadway Two cars were considerably damaged in a collisjon at 7:45 p.m. Friday at 15tli and A car driven by Hazel M. Owens, 63, Route 3, was damaged over $100.

Tlio oflier auto, driven by Pearl L. Phelps, 58, 1113 soutii 21st sti'eei, was damaged about $85. BIRTHS The test for glaucoma, second leading cause of blindness, is simple, short and painless. Ophthalmologists advise everyone over 40 to have such a test at least once every two years. BOB SAYS: LOOK UP A LUMS FOR A DRAFT BEER AND A DOG AND SOON THERE WILL BE A LUMS RIGHT IN MOUNT VERNON This remarkable Mount Vernon Cafe a member of America's fastest-growing restaurant chain Is available now for franchising (and to create Instant profits for the franchlsed Investor who moves fasti) Taste a LUMS hot dog steamed In beer ano covered with kraut you'll soon see why discriminating Investors have recognized the top profit potential In LUMS cafes.

Consider the fantastic LUMS track record and you'll discover why this fabulous franchlsed chain can say LUMS has (ver closwl; no LUMS hat aver (ailed to make a profit. You can stefx into the LUMS cafe in Mount Vernon with an investment between $35,000 and $40,000 your restaurant will be ail equipped and ready to gol You'll receive management Training at an LUMS cafe experienced personnel will help you open your new business and get It going quickly right Into the instant profit columnl Write or call Dept. for immediate, complete Information on this valuable franchise. E. C.

K. CHIVERS ASSOCIATES, INC. exclusivo Lums sales agent Suite 510 3000 eiscayne Boulevard Miami, Florida 33137 Phone (305)373-6373 Mr. and Mrs. Glen Schuster of 1811 Stanley are the parents of a son bom at 7:25 o'clock this morning in Jefferson Memorial Hospital.

He weighed seven pounds nine ounces and has been named WDliam Frederick. Mr. and Mrs. Lindell Panzier of Ashley are the parents of a son bom at 1:04 o'clock this morning in Good Samaritan hospital. He weighed seven pounds twelve oimces.

Negro Stars Out Of Academy Awards Show HOLLYW'OOD (AP) Actor Gregory Peck says Monday night's Academy Awards program may be cancelled or postponed because of the assassination of Dr. Martin Lutlier Kini; Jr. A meeting of academy members was scheduled today witl) decision oxpected tonight. Peck said Friday. He is president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

Four Negro performers- Sammy Diivis Jr. Diahann Carroll, Sidney Poitier and withdrawn from the ceremonies out of respect tor the slain civil rights leader. The American Broadcasting Co. and the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. had planned to carry the awards on television and Peck said, "We are trying to do the appropriate thing, to suit Uie mood of the people." II .11 Other Cities Help Chicago Fire Fighters The richest United States tribe of Indians is the Osage, who hold oil lands in Oklahoma.

In 1909, Sehna Lagerlof became the first woman to win the Nobel prize for literature. CHICAGO (AP) Communl- ijes near Chicago sent in firemen and fbv-fighting equipment Friday night to fill voids in fire protection created by demands for fire-fighters in racially dis turbed areas of the city where blocks of buildings were afire. East Joliet, Lockport, Northwest Homer and Troy Township sent in men and equipment. New Lenox sent firemen. The additional men and equipment were assigned to engine houses left vacant when extra- alaim fires drew the city's men and equipment from peaceful areas to parts of the city hit by looting and' burning of stonis.

The assisting firo deportment? were told that they would not be used in areas hit by violence. No Grazing' Period Near For Diversion Acres Farmers were reminded to- day tiiat tiie "no grazing period for diverted acres under the 1968 feed grain program will- start April 14tii. It will continuie for th6 following 5 months until September 15th. Parker Pierce, chairman, Jefferson County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservat 1 li Committee, explains that fann. ers who are diverting acreage under the program have agreed not to graze the diverted acres during a specific 5-month period of the growing season and to harvest a crop from diverted acres at any time during the year.

Farmers participating in the conservation reserve and cropland adjustment programs have agreed not to graze land diver- ted under these programs or harvest any crop from such and during the life of the agree- ments. 981 county farms signed up to participate in the 1968 modity diversion program for. corn grain sorghum. Woodlawn Boy Injured By Car Marshall Flanagan, seven- year-old son of Eldon and Alma Flanagan, of Woodlawn, was' struck by a car on Woodlawn' road in front of the grade school in Woodlawn at 3:30 p.m. yes- terday as school was dismissing for the day.

He was rushed to Good Samar- itan Hospital by Litton ambulance. He is reported in fair con- dition today at the hospital. Clara Tinsley, 16, of Dix, was driver of the car which struck the child, according to State Trooper Jack Willis. Glaucoma affects the eyesight of more than a million persons in this country and has bllndetd more than 45,000 Americans Uv- ing today. Air Conditioned Special '65 Ford Gafaxie 500 $1695 Here is the best price yet on a car of this It's an extra nice '65 Galaxle 600 four door sedan and it's fuHy equipped for comfort' able motoring.

Included Is air conditionlnsr, power steering, power brakes, automatic drive and engine. Bring your old car. Ret my special deal on this Galaxle and take it out for an drive. Bob Willioms W-G MOTORS Can 242-6420 "The Dsetl Car tjeader" Wed. LADIES' AND MEN'S April 8, 9, 10 NOW SWEATERS SLACKS PLAIN SKIRTS Reg.

600 1006 Main Downtown Mfr. 242-4949 NOW! Drive In Facilities In Rear.

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About Mt. Vernon Register-News Archive

Pages Available:
138,840
Years Available:
1897-1977