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The Daily Capital News from Jefferson City, Missouri • Page 3

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Jefferson City, Missouri
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3
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Wallace ability doubted WASHINGTON (AP) A fellow Southern governor questioned Tuesday whether George C. Wallace is capable of an all-out 1976 presidential bid -and said the partially paralyzed Alabama governor would have trouble getting as much Southern support as he has had in the past. "I personally feel right now that his candidacy is remote," said Gov. William L. Waller, D-Miss.

He that his view was based on his personal percep- tion of Wallace when he was the only governor at his third term inaugural last month. In effect, the Mississippi governor discussed publicly what many top Democratic politicians have considered privately, whether Wallace would be capable of making the Democratic presidential bid he is reportedly plan- ning in the wake of the 1972 assassination attempt that left him confined to a wheelchair. However, Democratic party sources said they under- stand that planning for Wallace's fourth presidential is going forward. They said the Alabama governor discussing such questions as how and when he will 'formally announce his candidacy. On the Republican side, meanwhile, Gov.

Arch A. Moore Jr. of West Virginia said he doesn't expect for- mer California Gov. Ronald Reagan to challenge President Ford directly for the 1976 GOP nomination. But he said New Hampshire conservatives may well place Reagan on their state's presidential primary ballot even if Ford runs, and that a Reagan victory there could throw the GOP race "wide open." The discussion of the electoral prospects of Wallace and Reagan came as the nation's governors attended a round of committee meetings on the opening day of their three-day, mid-winter conference here.

Open sessions, at which they will meet with top administration officials headed by Vice President Nelson" A. Rockefeller and congressional leaders, are scheduled today and Thursday. Gov. Calvin L. Rampton, D-Utah, this year's national governors' conference chairman, said one major effort would be to persuade Congress to waive at least part of the requirements for states to put up some portion of the funds for federal-state highway projects.

Unless that happens, Rampton told a news conferen- ce, many states will be unable to take advantage of S2 billion in impounded federal highway funds released last week by President Ford and a like amount made available by a federal court order. Baby's future weighed WICHITA, Kan. (AP) --The cries of 18-day-old Jacquee Culkin may seem more shrill than those of other newly-born infants at Wichita's Wesley Medical Center. They are a symptom of Methadone addic- tion. Born otherwise healthy, towheaded and plump on Feb.

1, Jacquee is the city's first re- ported case of infant meth- adone dependency. The doctor who supervised 'her delivery and the mother who gave her birth both insist they have Jacquee's best interests at heart, while dif- 'fering drastically on what best interests are. The mother, 24-year-old Suzie Culkin, wants to keep her daughter despite the possibility she will be imprisoned for a drug violation. She wants to move to California and start a new life. Her former life, however, may prevent such a move.

Jacquee's methadone depen- dency began six months ago in the womb while Suzie was undergoing treatment for heroin addiction. The doctor, Russell Nelson, wants the Sedgwick County ju- venile court to decide whether Suzie is competent to take the child or whether she would be better cared for in a foster home. Last Friday, Judge Michael Corrigan of the juvenile court accepted a dependency and neglect petition against Suzie, awarding temporary custody of her child to the state. A hearing on the petition will be held later this month to deter- mine permanent custody. To further complicate the matter, Suzie expects to be sentenced this week on a heroin possession charge.

Jacquee's father already is in jail on an alleged parole Violation, she says. Nonetheless, she plans to fight for custody. She says she has changed. She believes her love for Jacquee will over- come the addiction. She hopes the past six months which she says have been free of heroin will be proof of her sincerity.

"I know six months isn't vary long compared to six years, but six months is all I've got," she said. "When I found out I was pregnant then I started to think for the first time in my started thinking about things like it finally hit me that she was a live little person and it was high time I started growing up that I couldn't keep getting in trouble like this and I couldn't keep sticking a needle in my arm." Dr. Nelson cannot talk specifically about Suzie's chance of keeping her baby. He may have to testify against her at the hearing. But he talks generally about Jacquee and all children taken into custody by the court.

He con- siders it the obligation of anyone with knowledge of a possibly troubled child to report it. "Our role is not a role to con- demn parents," the doctor said. "The role is to do something for the child and the goal should always be to put the child back into the natural home. You can't always attain that goal, that's the tragic thing." Jacquee's fate, and part of her mother's, will be decided in the court hearing before Judge Corrigan. Hoping the child will be returned to her, Suzie has converted a bedroom of her mobile home into a nursery.

She has joined book-of-the-month club for children and has saved some money. The changes are a stark con- trast to the six years of inter- mittent drug addition that be- gan shortly after Suzie gradu- ated from high school here. The addiction continued as she studied for a marine biolo- gy degree at three different colleges and universities in Kansas, Oregon and Califor- nia. She added three abortions hr Crashes kill two in state Three inmates in custody of the Missouri Department of i a a Tuesday in Cole County Magistrate Court and volun- tarily waived their rights to preliminary hearings. Kenneth Ray Richards, an inmate at the Missouri State Penitentiary, will stand trial in Circuit Court on a charge of first degree murder.

He is charged with the Nov. 25 death of Finis Sylvester Rankin, another inmate. Information filed with the charge states that Rankin died as a result of blows inflicted a hammer. Eugene R. Gurtner, con- fined to the Intermediate Algoa Farms, ill stand trial on a charge of to return.

According to information filed by F. McHenry, Cole County prosecutor, Gurtner 'failed to return to Algoa after 'a three-day furlough to Blue Springs in mid-December. Donald K. Sears will be tried a charge of inmate escape. is accused of an escape from the Church iFarm Dec.

1. Lddue Republican riqmed to panel 4 'JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) Edwin B. Meissner, a Republican from Ladue, has been appointed to the state Transportation Commission, Gov. Christopher S.

Bond said Tuesday. If confirmed by the Senate, Meissner will replace Jack Curtis, who resigned in December. Meissner, a retired steel ex- ecutive, is a member of the St. Louis Crime Commission and formerly served on the Bi-State Development Agency in St. Louis.

Body of man found in alley ST LOUIS (AP)-The body of Robert E. Myles, 32, was discovered Tuesday morning in an alley on the city's central west end, the victim of an apparent slaying, police said. Myles had been shot twice in the officers said. He was the city's 42nd homi- cide of the year. Authorities continued to investigate the At least two persons were killed in Missouri high- way traffic accidents Monday and early Tuesday.

Burl R. Bridgeman, 72, of Shelbina, was killed Monday morning when his car was struck by a train at a railroad crossing in Shelbina and was carried about 1,150 feet by the train, the highway patrol reported. Mary. Louis Walker, 25, Mt. Vernon, was fatally injured about 12:45 a.m.

today when the car in which she was riding ran off the road and struck the end of a bridge, the patrol said. The mishap occurred on Mo. 39, about four miles south of Mt. Vernon in Lawrence County. In area accidents, Carl D.

Sherrell, 27, of Edinburg, suffered serious injuries late Monday afternoon when his car hit the side of a bridge railing, the patrol said. The accident happened on Mo. 17, a mile north of Route KK in Miller County. Sherrell was treated at Charles E. Still Hospital and then transferred to the Veterans Administration Hospital, Columbia.

Weather The Thermometer High yesterday 36; Low yesterday 33; High past 57 years 74 in 1930; Low past 57 years-8 in 1936. Precipitation News Tribune Weather Bureau Reading trace for past 24 hours ending at midnight; heaviest rain same date in 57 years 1.05 in 1926. Total to date this month Normal this month to date 1.14; This year to date 4.06; Normal 3.24. The Sun Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow 6:54. and River Stagts Jefferson City 9.8, up 1.8; Hermann 11.9, up Lake of the Ozarks 67.5, up .2.

Highway worker killed near Rolla ROLLA, Mo. (AP) A 53- year-old Missouri Highway Department worker was killed Monday in a freak accident along Interstate 44 four miles west of here. The highway patrol said Ev- erett L. Bullock of rural Rolla was working on seeding the right-of-way along the high- way when a wheel and axle on a pickup truck being towed by another vehicle came off the truck, crossed the highway and struck a sign that hit Bullock in the head. Bullock was dead on arrival at Phelps County Hospital.

Wheat harvest estimate cut LONDON (AP) --TheInter- national Wheat Council Tues- day announced that it again lowered its estimate of world wheat production in 1974-75 to 346.6 million metric tons, from last month's estimate of 349.8 million tons. The January figure was cut by 2.2 million tons from the December forecast. The latest estimate is a 6 per. cent decline from record 1973-74 output of 368.3 million tons and is mainly dile to revision of the forecast Soviet Union crop to 83.8 million tons from 88 million tons, the coun- cil said in its latest wheat market report. Total estimated export availability for 1974-75, based on data at Nov.

30, ranged 65.8 and 69.1 million tons, com- pared with estimated total import requirements of million tons, the council said in its review of the world wheat situation for the 1973-74 released Tuesday. The review commented that prospective supply-demand balance for 1974-75 has become progressively tighter since the start of the crop year as expectations of another large world harvest gradually lessened because of setbacks in some leading producer regions. and two arrests to her record during that time, Suzie says. Suzie says she was straight when she returned to Wichita last summer, but she met'old friends and began shooting heroin again. In early fall, she discovered she was pregnant.

Three weeks later she was ar- rested on suspicion of possess- ing heroin and unauthorized methadone, she said. "I knew it was going to hap- pen; it was kind of like I just knew it would happen," Suzie said. "I think I wanted to get arrested. I think it is a way of calling for help." She decided against a fourth abortion and sought help at the methadone clinic, using the synthetic drug to break her addiction. She still is being given phenobarbitol to offset the methadone dependency, but is expected to be in the hospital for no longer than three more weeks.

Her main problem is where she goes from there. She says she needs her child and be- lieves Jacquee needs her love. "The only reason I wouldn't mind going to jail and doing two years is if I know that she's out there," the mother said. "I'm positive I want her, just positive. I can't explain why I want a normal life, that's all.

I just want a normal i and I know nobody believes me." Charges filed in drug case A 23-year-old Jefferson City woman has been charged with distributing a drug listed under the controlled substan- ces act, a felony. Mrs. Linda Fleetwood, 91i a i appeared Tuesday in Cole County Magistrate Court. She is charged with bringing a quan- tity of amphetemines to her husband, Jewell Lege Fleet- wood, an inmate at the County Jail. She was released on $500 bond.

Magistrate Randall Waltz set a preliminary hearing in the case for March 19. Her husband is being held in the jail awaiting trial on a charge of operating a motor vehicle without the owner's consent. He recently pleaded guilty to a burglary charge, and Circuit Judge Byron Kin- der has ordered a presentence investigation. Fund From page 1 for illegally dispensing drugs, and a federal appeals court ruling allowing public access to Air Force Academy files in honor code actions. The impoundment case con- cerned water pollution-control funds for fiscal years 1973 1975.

Congress authorized $18 billion, but the Nixon administration allotted only $9 billion. a i a administration officials, who acted under orders from Nixon, lacked authority to do this under the Water Pollution Control Act of 1972. "As conceived and passed in both houses, the legislation was intended to provide firm commitments of substantial sums within a relatively limited period of time in an effort to achieve an early solution of what was deemed to be an urgent problem," Justice Byron R. White said for the court. While the case was in the courts, Congress passed legislation under which the administration now must i i a approval before impounding funds.

Mental From page 1 and employers which could be used for the program. Robb said that 33 states cur- rently use such a system to de- liver local mental health care. Leading the opponents of the measure was Mrs. Harriet Cave, a registered nurse who formerly worked at the Fulton State Hospital. She said she had delayed returning to work there to allow herself the op- portunity to oppose the bill.

The bill would reduce the services delivered at state hospitals, Mrs. Cave said. "You're going to take money to pay for district coor- dinators which won't be used to take care of patients," she said. Mrs. Cave noted that state hospitals have gradually been closed in the states where sim- ilar legislation has been enac- ted.

Other testimony was given by Fulton residents who said the bill would take money away from that hospital. Obscenity convictions ERA trailing in Utah AILT CAP1TAl 19, 1f75 3 upheld JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP)--The misdemeanor con- victions of four St. Louis adult bookstore operators for viola- tion of state obscenity laws were upheld Tuesday by the Missouri Supreme Court. In the unanimous decisions, the court said contentions that the introduction as evidence of publications obtained at their stores during the summer of 1973 was unconstitutional be- cause the material was illegally seized at the time of arrest were unfounded.

While noting that none of the men claimed the books were not pornographic, the court said there was no question concerning "seizure" of the material since in each case a police officer purchased the publication before making the arrest. The rulings also noted that other contentions concerning i stitutionality of the law itself as applied to adult bookstore operators had not been properly perserved during lower court proceedings 'to permit appellate review. The high court decision up- held the convictions of Donald Flynn, David L. Hughes, James Richardson and Henry Shouse, all of whom were found guilty by Judge Richard J. Brown of the St.

Louis Court of Criminal Corrections. 14 children on bus injured I BEACH, Mo. (AP)--Fourteen children on a school bus and two other per- sons were injured Tuesday when the bus skidded on a snow-packed county road near the Lake of the Ozark and col- lided with a car. the Missouri Highway Patrol said. Most of the children, who ranged in age from 9 to 15.

as well as the bus driver and driver of the car, were treated and released at a Camdenton clinic. Two youngsters were sent to clinics in Springfield for treatment, but their con- dition was not believed to be serious. The injured children were from the Sunrise Beach area and were on their way to schools in Camdenton when the accident occurred on Route F. Press activity debate favored ST. LOUIS (AP)--Newsmen should report on themselves to the same extent that they cover other persons and institutions, says a Princeton University sociolgy professor.

"It seems wrong that the practices of the press should not be debated," said Marvin Bressler Monday night as he addressed the Princeton Club of St. Louis. "By nature the ramifications of the press are political. The constituional guarantees it receives mean that it is not thought of as a business, like some other businesses." Bressler said the press was the only institution that had "achieved freedom of the press." He added, however, that all such regulation, except libel laws, should come from within the industry and suggested that every newspaper hire a reporter to cover its jour- nalistic and business dealings. Bressler also criticized in- vasion of privacy and the leak- ing of supposedly secret grand jury information by the press, although he said he opposed any sort of federal censor- ship.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) The Utah House of Represen- tatives, after hearing debate on whether the Mormon chur- ch was trying to pressure it against the Equal Rights A rejected the amendment by better than a 2-1 margin Tuesday. The 54-21 defeat was the sec- ond consecutive setback in as many days for the bid to write into the U.S. Constitution lan- a banning sex dis- crimination. The Georgia, General Assembly rejected the ERA on Monday. To become law.

the ERA must be ratified by 38 of the 50 states before March 1979. In the three years since Congress passed the proposed amend- ment, 34 states have approved it although two of them have voted to rescind their ratifica- tion. The Utah vote followed an afternoon-long debate before a packed gallery, with an over- flow crowd in the Capitol ro- tunda. The previous night, 25 ERA supporters staged an all- night vigil on the Capitol steps i 25-degree peratures. They were flanked by candles in paper bags arranged to spell ERA." The amendment has been a hat issue in Utah since the leg- islature convened last month.

At that time an editorial in the Church Nevs, publication of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon), opposed the ERA on grounds that men and women are dif- ferent and have different roles. A church spokesman later acknowledged that it would be "a fair assessment" to say the church had taken an official stand against the measure. The population of Utah is more than 50 per cent Mor- mon. An Associated Press poll last week indicated the ERA a i predominantly Mormon Utah House. In other ERA action Tues- day: ---T Nevada Senate's Judiciary Committee voted 4 to 3 to send the amendment to a Senate floor where chances of passage appear slim.

The Nevada Assembly approved the ERA last Wednesday 27 to 13. --The Montana Senate's Judiciary Committee voted 5 to 2 against a resolution aimed at rescinding the ERA. The Montana House voted in 1973 to ratify the amendment, and the Montana Senate approved the measure in 1974. It is unclear whether a state can rescind its ratification. Legislatures in Nebraska and Tennessee have voted to res- cind their ratifications, but they are still listed among the 34 states which have passed the ERA.

The matter may be settled in the courts if or when a total of 38 states ratify the proposed amendment. Hourly wage change pushed JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. A Bills establishing a S2.25 hourly minimum wage and elimination of the waiting week before unemployment benefits can be received were recommended for approval by a Labor a Management Relations Com- mittee Tuesday. i i a i i i a requirement that time and one-half must be paid to those working in excess of 40 hours per week. Employers vio- lating the bill would be guilty of a misdemeanor.

The bill exempts certain groups of workers, including those working for non-profit, i i educational or a i a organizations, domestic employes, those under 16 years of age and others. a i a i a each claimant for unemployment benefits serve a one-week waiting period before being eligible for benefits. It would be a substitute of the one-week waiting period provisions signed by Gov. Christophers. Bond last May.

would be printed before taking effect. In addition to allowing the legislature to keep track of a state agencies are enforcing, Bradshaw said the proposal would "give the public an opportunity for input." The Missouri Register would be published by the Secretary of State's office at a cost of 5100,000 the first year. After sales of the register begin. Bradshaw said the prin- ting of the regulatioas would be selfsustaining. Deliberation of the school foundation formula in the House saw Festus Democrat Howard Garrett fail in his ef- fort to insure that no district would take a loss in state aid as a result of formula changes.

His proposal would have re- placed a provision calling for no losses to districts through the 1976-1977 school year and then a graduated decline in some districts so that there would eventually be an equal- ized distribution of aid among all districts in the state. But the sponsor of the revi- sion bill, Normandy Democrat Wayne Goode, opposed the proposal, although he later ac- knowledged that it would not have totally ruined the bill, which would distribute more than S300 million in state funds annually. "There's only about S6 mil- lion or S8 million in a grand- father clause so financially it doesn't wreck it," Goode com- mented referring to the Garrett proposal. "But in principle it does. If we have a formula, all districts should live by the formula." Much of the discussion re- volved around adoption of technical changes in the for- mula itself.

In that area, a proposal from the floor was approved changing the weight in the funding design given to average daily attendance over average daily enrollment in schools. The House Education Com- mittee had recommended a 50- 50 split in weight given the two items, an attempt to win sup- port from both urban districts where actual attendance is be- low normal and rural districts where it is normally higher. But Democrat Carl Muckler of St. Louis County won approval for his proposal which would place 75 per cent emphasis on actual attendan- ce and only 25 per cent on enrollment. Goode said the change does hurt funding prospects for ur- ban districts, but he said he did not consider it major.

"The bill is a balanced bill," he said of the revision plan. "This will provide some help to i i i urban problems. It will provide some help to rural districts with low assessed valuation." Interest -k From page 1 in offering the substitute that the real need for relief was in the area of somewhat higher loans. Under the current usury a approved during a special legislative session late last year, all loans over S500 can bear no more than 10 per cent interest. A provision raising the small loan ceiling to the $800 limit was removed from the legislation approved in the special ession.

State Finance Commissionr William Kostman told the House panel that he felt there was not sufficient information a a i a d-etermine whether a change in the law was needed. He also conten- ded there has not been time to determine the effect of the 2 per cent boost authorized in the usury rate. But supporters of the in- crease pointed out that rates on such loans for the eight states bordering Missouri range from a low of 16.6 per cent in Kansas to a high of no limit at all in Arkansas. Even with the increase pro- posed in Heflin's measure, the new state rate would still be .4 per cent below that of Kan- sas. Jack Pierce, representing finance firms, claimed that because of dis- crepancy in the usury laws of the state, retail stores can fi- nance purchases with interest up to 18 per cent while small loan companies making the same loans can only charge 10 percent.

The morning report Police reports Frank a manager at the Ramada Inn, reported Monday the theft of two color televisions valued at SVOO from adjoining fourth-floor rooms. Clarence Lueckenotte, an employe for the Roy A. Scheperle Const. reported Monday the theft of four yellow caution lights from a barricade at Broadway and West Main Street sometime during the weekend. Ollie Tucker, Route 2, repor- ted the theft of a battery from his car while it was parked on the K-Mart Parking Lot Mon- day.

The battery was valued at S28. Theresa Jaegers, 1102 A St. a reported Tuesday that her radio anten- na was broken while her car was parked in the 1100 block of St. Mary's Monday night. The antenna was valued at S8.

Jim Libbert. an employe of the Capital City Water reported Tuesday the theft of a fire hydrant valued at S300 that had been previously broken off in an auto accident from the 500 block of West Dunklin Street. Magistrate court Keith Douglas Hale. 20, Henley, fined S13 and S16 costs for speeding 68 mph in a 55 mph zone. Mark Bryan Towner, 22.

Holts Summit, fined S10 and S16 costs for speeding 65 mph in a 55 mph zone. Milburn Henry Schenewerk, 57, Centertown, fined S25 and S16 costs for failure to yield. Patsy Ann Ortmeyer. 21. Route 3, fined $12 and $16 costs for speeing 67 mph in a 55 mph zone.

Reta May Seals, 21, Linn, fined S20 and S16 costs for speeding 71 mph in a 55 mph zone. Dale Edward Johnson, 22, Centertown, fined S10 and S16 costs lor speeding 65 mph in a 55 mph zone. John Glendon Klossner, 44. St. James, fine S25 and S16 costs for operating an over- weight truck.

Demos From page 1 immediate fiscal relief. He asked that at least part of the requirements for states to provide matching finds be waived. Meanwhile, many of the governors attending the con- ference said their states can't afford Ford's budget cuts and generally disapproved of the President's program. --James L. Mitchell, under- secretary of the Department of i and a said housing industry is already on the brink of an upturn.

He opposed emergency measures to lower mortgage rates and help avert foreclosures. --The Senate agreed with the House and voted 70 to 20 to raise the federal debt limit to S531 billion. The limit was scheduled to drop to S495 bil- lion, which technically would have rendered the govern- ment unable to borrow to meet its payroll and other expenses. --Charles R. Owens, a for- mer assistat administrator in a Energy Administration, said Ford's pian to tax oil imports while engaging in deficit govern- ment spending is bound to backfire on the economy.

--Rep. James C. Wright chairman of the House Democratic task force, said Ford's energy program would erode the average family's purchasing power and over- whelm any benefit from a tax cut. --REA Express the na- tion's major private surface and air delivery service, filed a petition for reorganization under federal bankruptcy laws. Its board chairman a "effects of the recession." --Chrysler which lost $52 million last, year, said it is also losing money in this quar- ter and probably will have to i i operations further.

--Stock prices rose in fairly active trading thanks to declining interest rates. Hospital admissions St. Mary's Mrs. Janet Basnett. 715 Ohio Floyd Stulce Holts' Summit; Mrs.

Minnie Scott, 214 Lafayette St. Mrs. Ruth Martin, Ver- sailles; Mrs. Bernadine Jan- sen, Box 1071; Miss Kelly McKnelly, 1213 Elmerine Mrs. Stella Hughes, i a Mrs.

Leona Lecuru, Bonnots Mill; Mrs. Errna Taylor, Eugene; Oscar Ash, California; Mrs. Jeannie Stiles, 418 Meier Mrs. A a Backues, Belle; Robert Kelso, Linn Creek; Miss Eleanore St. Thomas; Phillip Green, A a Miss Estelle Knaebel, 614a Clark Mrs.

Katheryn Propst, 1018 Fairmount Mrs. Wanda La Verne, McGirk; Barney Flaugher, Tuscumbia; Harry Schreiber. 1508 Bald Hill i 2105 Southridge Miss Betty Dinwiddie, Eldon; Mrs. Ora Gike, 813 Madison Mrs. Edyth Martensen, Syracuse.

Charles E. Still Mrs. Cecil Ridenhour. Belle; Albert Reaves, Climax i Mrs. i i i a Morgan, Camdenton; Ben- jamin Christian.

710 Maple Atnel Hays. Tipton; Mrs. Mary Stockman. 3404 North Ten Mile Jay Elbert Hud- son, Linn; Mrs. Gladys John- son.

Macks Creek; Mrs. Myr- tle Moon, Vienna; Miss Amy Crow, Owensvilie; John Hill, i a Mrs. Donna Branch, Holts Summit; Virgil Helms, Tipton. Ralph Trogdon, Vienna; Mrs. Carolyn Troesser, Bon- nots Mill; Mrs.

Mary Severan- ce, Camdenton; Mrs. Joyce Grisson, Kingdom City; Mrs. Nellie Smith, 708 E. Miller Mrs. Sylvia Brewer, Vienna; Lawrence Hert, California; Michael Borghardt, Califor- nia; Mrs.

Catherine Graessle, Freeburg: Mrs. Delia Skin- ner, Kansas City; Mrs. Florence Thompson. Holts Summit: Mrs. Eleanor Ober- mark.

Linn; Mrs. Ann George. Russellville; Ralph Hutinger, a Mrs. Bertha Schell, Iberia: Mrs. Donna Koop.

Eldon: Mrs. Lucille Teal. Eldon. Memorial Miss Eleanora Mueller. 1105 E.

McCarty James Bray, New Bloomfield: Mrs. Hallie Smith, 620 School St. Claude Peterson. Osage Beach; Haywood Billings. 803 a Richard Elliott.

Jamestown; James Morris, Eldon: Mrs. Lois Clif- a a i i a Clarkston, Route Orla i a George Bishop, 1402 Hughes Mrs. Jean Roan, Dixon; Mrs. Daisy Farmer, Califor- nia. Marriage licenses George Edward Birdsong, Jefferson City, and Bonnie Maire Luper, Centertown.

Michael Markiano and a Kay Susan Cliburn. both of Orlando. Fla. Alonzo Kenneth Jenkins and Letha Joy Avery. both of Jef- ferson City.

James Richard Renninger, i i a A a a Patricia Ann 0'Haver, Jeffer- son City. Circuit court Sam Porter Schaumann and i a a a a i i a i a dissolution ordered. Custody of one minor child granted to Mrs. Schaumann. a i Sue Hartrnan, petitioner, vs.

John Robert a a marriage dissolution ordered. Petitioner's maiden name of Saathoff restored. The Salvation Armv THRIFT STORE NEEDS 4- Used Furniture Clothes 4- Miscellaneous Items Won. thru Sat. 9-4 leave at Store or Call 635-1463 Your Contributions Will Help You to Help Others 100 Lafayette 38 Cards for All Occasions 88 By American Greetings The TREASURE HOUSE 104 E.

High NEWSPAPERS-MAGAZINES-PAPER BACKS ft IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING MONTGOMERY WARD ADVERTISEMENT IN TODAY'S PAPER. The "Air Cushion" tire advertised in this sec- tion is described as a polyester tire. This is not correct. The Air Cushion tire is a nylon tire. We regret any inconvenience this error may cause..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1910-1977