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Greeley Daily Tribune from Greeley, Colorado • Page 8

Location:
Greeley, Colorado
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8 GREELEY TRIBUNE orest Fire iouses Crash tilling Pilot ter, S.D, was lulled Ule Satur-j day his light plane crashed! MAYCI ALLIH in smoke from the Ore. Al'LT Cuejtj ie the burnt i McFaddin's body was GU Daugntaj i Sunday afternoon from wreckage! 1 1 SOB Bob sist Mrs-i the plane at Sand Mountain Berin STM CRAIG. Colo. (API A forestjfour miles north of Hjyden; The'; Calif re that caused a fatal airplane to Routt Gatos, Calif. Missj report under 1 ruled several hundred torthtasi of Craig.

Maurice McFaddin. of fire was aul control briefly when it jumped the main lire walls, but a Forest Service spokesman said Hcondiry walls apparently have contained the blaze. bomber loaded with fire-fighting chemicals to the scene. school will bt held at the Evans rf in the homes of her friends, Methodist church beginning Moo- Mrs. Barber and Mrs.

Don Bos- lay, Aug. 20. Nancy Nurn' will be superintendent. The sessions will run through Aug. 29, and will held from nine to 11:30 a.m.

each week day. Children from our years old through the sixth grade are welcome. to cover cost xioks will be asked. QUICK QUENCHER! Buy It at Your Favorite Mcrchanti Evans IMS. RCA FUMSTOCK EVANS Daily vacation Bible of Mrs.

Daughtrey and her guests oa Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Wally Forbes aod ibtir daughter, Kelly, of Greeley. Mr. and Mrs.

Gerald Foot and their MB of Denver: Mr. and Mrs. Chet Forbes of Greeley. Mrs. Effie Kelley entertained he visitors from California, Mrs.

Daughtrey and Bob at luncheon on Monday. They were dinner guests MOD' day evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Barber of Eaton. Mrs.

Bering will be entertain- small study The 4-H Agricultural Club participated ai a swimming party and wiener roast at the Ralph Casey home Wednesday night Two new members, Carolyn anc Tom Hamblin, were present. After the social hour, a shor business meeting was conducted by Jerry Numoto. A dance was planned for the latter part ol August. The plice and the dale of the affair will be announced later. Committees appointed are follows: Eileen Reid, Myrna Armes, and Calvin Gibbs, adver tiling; Kathleen Armes and JCH Ellen Whlsman, refreshments Joan Burbach, BUI Warner am Tom May, decorations; Mike Graff and Charles Grams, clean up.

The next meeting of the club will be held on Tuesday, Sept. 4 at the high school. in the wake of Typhoon Palsy, which roared through the centra! up to 90 miles an hour, official sources said Sunday. Police sale most of the dead and missing dents of Ault and Greeley. were caught in boats at sea.

WARSAW. Nmi 1 kf MA icriouily wounded labor uaieas. Last Fata rived aboard seat eight wA Lovelond Water Main Bursts, Flooding U.S. 34 irealroeorurwarsa7'bo5ilals. acitte I I I Tom at Greeley before returning to California.

Mrs. Perry Anderson was hostess to group one of Woman's Society for an afternoon tea in the fellowship room of Congregational Church. A. A. was a visitor.

The business meeting was conducted by Mrs. Fred Hoffner. leader. Worship service was giv en by Mrs. Elton Doughty.

A dinner was planned for the Lions Club. Group Two was received by Mrs. C. L. Neister for a business discussion.

Lions Club i was planned for Aug. 13. Mrs. V. F.

Lowry gave the devotions. She chose the topic: "The Art of Friendship." Mrs. S. L. McDonald described her trip to the World's Fair at Seattle.

The hostess served refreshments to 11 members and one visitor, Marsha Ann Stone street ol Anaheim, Calif. Ladies Auxiliary to VFW held a business meeting to plan a dinner to be served to the Onion Growers Co. on Aug. a. The dale of the annual family picnic for the Auxiliary and VFW Post was announced as Aug.

12. MANILA (AP)-At leaat 23 per- Mmes. Earl Conger and Ro- sons perished and IS are missing land Nance left Portland, Ore. mobile accident while en route to Portland on leave from his post with the Air Force at Peru, Ind. The Christian Women'i Fellowship met in the church for an afternoon missionary discussion.

Mrs. J. 0. Whanger presented a lesson on missions. Mrs.

J. E. Cuffell, vice president, preiided. Mrs. A.

G. Thompson gave the last week after receiving word of the accidental death of their Philippines last week with winds nephew, Jimmie Turney, 19. He was the youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Turney, former resi- Turney was killed in an auto- 'How toon eating you LOVELAND AJr A Winch: water main burst about OIK mile) west of here early Sunday, gushing between M.MO and 1M.000 1 gallons of water before the flow.

was turned off. The water shot about three feet into the air from the ruptured; pipe and footled about a half of U.S. 94. The break was reported by a motorist, who telephoned the city, engineer. The main was shut off and repairs were started immediately.

The reason for the break was Dot immediately determined. The rupture occurred in a section of wooden water pipe which is reportedly about 30 years old. The pipe is one of two big mains serving Lovelud. The city has a daily water consumption of tout 45 million gallons. 'a Polish plwe Saturday night for to Algeria to help the eatment ia Warsaw 'hospitals, The wouaded, several'facilitjes- YOU REMEMBER LAST WINTER? If your car had to sit out in the below zero weather, then wouldn't start, you probably envied those who had garages.

Why not build a garage this summer? TV for Jungle Villagers Stuns American Solon WASHINGTON (APt-Tlie idea of jungle villagers learning their ABCs around a lelevukn let- worship services and members perhaps powered by. a merry-go- responded to roll call by giving Bible verses and quotations. Visitors were Mrs. Tom Dearden of Brighton, who is visiting tier parents, the Rev. and Mrs.

Whanger, and Mrs. Dora Walker. During the social time, Mri James Chapin served as hostess. U.S. Balance Of Payments Deficit Off WASHINGTON (AP)-The U.S.

balance of payment! deficit dropped sharply to an annual rate of ibout a billion dollars in the April-June quarter, the Commerce Department, reported Friday. This figure, which is subject (o revision, compared with an annual rate of 1.9 billion in the jirst three months of 1962. For the first half of the year, the deficit ran at an annual rate of just under $1.5 billion. For all of 1961, the deficit was $2.5 billion. The payments deficit represents the difference between the amounl that Americani spend, lend, In ud give away tbroad and round has flabbergasted Rep Porter Hardy, D-Va.

"About the screwiest proposition I ever heard of," said Hardy chairman of a House Foreign Op- rations subcommittee. He and the committee had just heard Friday from a foreign ait official that 1.000 television re- had been ordered for resi lentj of remote villages who havi 10 electricity 'and have never ieard of television. The plan, according to Dr Gerald F. Winfield of the Agency or International Developmen AID), is to bring educations elevision to about "300 million children who can't go to schoo and SOD million adults who never went to school" in underdevelopex areas of the world. antga give tar.

intri 'dollara 'which they may use to buy American gold. Persistent deficits during the tsi decade have led to a steady rain on U.S. gold reserves, which ave fallen to a 23-year low of 11.1 billion. Thf government is rying to eliminate the deficit situation because continued losses ol old would threaten the stability the dollar in international money markets. Two factors apparently were paramount in causing the April June improvement in the deficit First, the nation's trade surplus ixpanded as exports rose by near $300 million while the increase in imports was held to million.

Second, Canada's balance payments difficulties curbed the flow of capital to that country. MWBFU mw nnmi cuus OOGGBTOCTS in ojfrTyl MVN AGAIN tWt Mint ywr MlM ToilM Otdlnuy ptunfen Juit -don't mt property. Thty pomit comprauil Kir and ID tpluh btck. Thut you not only have mm, but you IOK Uu rwy prawn jou Md to ctaf the otttractioa. With aprady daifMd la uiltn, no er w.ttr CM a- The full praaun plowi throuih the mm mat iwiiba it down.

Cin't mint DOMLMUI car. aouMtmuu KIMIHD TO nil AHT cnnn incir. UWT HID tnon TAnMD Till. KHI.TWtT 1 ully fiun.lMd HIIHOHIH STOUS ivumtut KODAK CAMERAS AND EQUIPMENT Hove you a camera that needs some slight repair? See us. A A REPAIR MZ-2412 Offer Good Aug.

13 thru Sept. 1 A New Service Drop it off in the morning-Pick it up an your way home. Join Our Baker's DOZM Club 13th LOAD FREE! We Give Pioneer Stamps Pllill Irlng Your Own Htngtn NEW HOURS Mondiy thru Friday to 1:30 p.m. i.m. f.m.

CLOS1D SUNDAY CLEANING CENTER LAUNDRY AND CLEANING VILLAGE 2460 8th Avenue 353-3974 WELL-BUILT GARAGE WITH EXTRA SPACE FOR STORAGE No longer is the garage just a stall for your car now it's a spot for the power mower; the bicycles, the fishing equipment. it's more than a garage. Let us show you the plans of a garage with plenty of storage space. EASY PAYMENT PLANS No need for ready cash! Have your new garage now and take 36 months to pay with our convenient time-pay plan. We will be happy to recommend competent workmen if you wish.

1715 352-2131 Fastest draw in the West! the reputation of Empire Sayings. When with to draw on your savings at money is ready for yov immediately. Empire Empire families build their future. CUWIMT I I A A A I A I MfOMCH OVH MHUON GRtfLIY OFFICE: 900 tifhth Art. HOMt OFFICE: DowwUwn Denver OTHER OFFICES: Loflfmont, UveUnd, IraomfitU, Unrveriity Hilli, Ctnttr..

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About Greeley Daily Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
251,094
Years Available:
1916-1977