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The Pensacola News du lieu suivant : Pensacola, Florida • 2

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Pensacola, Florida
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2
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The Pensacola News Saturday, June 7, 1969 Sales Tax Bill Goes to Kirk the House bill. The senators passed a bill which was the same as present law. The House refused to accept the Senate version and passed bill which contained the agriculture and industry tax. Again the Senate refused along and a conference committee named with Sen. John Broxson Gulf Breeze one of the members representing the Senate.

The conference committee recommended acceptance of Senate bill. This was the report that caused the House to rise up a minor rebellion, contendthe senators were not respecting the wishes of the House. Middlemas made the motion that the report be rejected. Middlemas contended the House on two occasions overwhelmingly voted for adding tax on leased agricultural lands and the tax on heavy equipment purchased by the industries for pollution control. been the history of the considMiddlemas is claimed it has eration of tax measures that, "small groups have succeeded blocking the movements to include these groups in the tax bills." Middlemas claimed he was tired of having government by conference committees.

He whenever a conference committee makes a report the Legislature has to accept or reject it in full. He contended was government by 10 people instead of the two houses. Rep. Don Reed of Boca RaRepublican minority leadpleaded for acceptance of report, saying the intentions were merely to repass 1 the law which has been in effect since February 1968. It was originalpassed thore special session provide money for the schools.

Middlemas said he wished Legislature was considera bill to really revise all tax laws to laws so as to remove all inequities. Howevhe said, the action of the House was a step in the right direction. members rejected the report by a vote of 76 to 37 House members saying would no longer continualgive in to the Senate. Northwest Florida representavoting to reject report were, Roy Hess of Reeves Pensacola, and Middlemas, James Gordon Tyrrell of Pensacola. Voting to accept the report Reps.

Joe Chapman of Panama City, H. D. Elmore Crestview, Ed Fortune of Pace, Jerry Melvin of Fort Walton Beach, Wayne Mixson Marianna, Tom Tobiassen of Pensacola and R. D. Woodward of Quincy.

The conference committee another meeting and this came back with an amended report which providfor the fourth cent of the sales tax on heavy machinery purchased by public electric plants. The House approved this report. This time the Senate had its chance to oppose the report. Sen. W.

E. Bishop of Lake contended this was an "unfair, undemocratic way to extend the sales tax. He contended the original intention merely to repass the present law. He called this sysof placing the tax on leased agricultural land was back door approach which increases the real estate tax on farm property. Sen.

Mallory Horne opposed calling the action of the House and "unmitigated display of political pomposity." He said the House was assaulting the dignity of the Senate. He said they placed the tax leased that agricultural refused lands, "but it noted they place it on newspapers." Broxson pleaded, for acceptance of the report. He said that during the meeting of the conference committee he voted for placing the tax on leased agricultural lands "although I do favor it," thereby breaking tie vote. "However," he said, "on two occasions we have made attempts to get together. As result it was time for someone take action to stop this Mexican standoff.

When two immovable objects meet one or the other must give some in order move." He pleaded for acceptance instead of playing a delaying action. "This is the last day fact the last hours of this session," he said. "People are interested in us, staying here another day at a cost some The report was rejected by Senate by a vote of 18 Voting to reject the report were Sens. Reubin Askew Pensacola, Barron, Sen. William D.

Barrow of Crestview, Bishop and Horne. Voting Youth Advisory Boards Planned By President FROM PAGE ONE sons not over 30 years of age. The President said in his announcement that he hoped the establishment of the nationwide youth committees "will answer questions about the conscription process which are now held by many of our younger citizens." The woman in the delegation, Debra Anderson, 18, Lansing, said she thought women should help decide about the "because it's our boyfriends and our husbands that are being drafted." Asked by a newsman if she favored ed drafting of women, Miss Anderson said she wouldn't mind going into the Peace Corps, "but most young ladies I've spoken to think universal service would be women shooting guns and they don't favor this. Lloyd told newsmen, "I don't think anyone here is asking at the present time that we junk the whole draft But Harold Studley, 27, New York City, a veteran, said "the whole system seems inequitable." Jesse Green, 26, New York City, said he asked the President to include representatives of all minorities on local draft boards. Green is a Negro.

Nixon sandwiched the meetbetween sessions with advisers in preparation for the summit conference on Midway Island Sunday with South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu. Others who met with Nixon were Bernard B. Blackwell 21, Jackson, Marvel Lang, 20, Bay Springs, Jon Bogle, 21, Lansing, King Hung Lum, 19, Lawton, John Patrick Livingston, 21, Norman, Okla. Annapolis Honors 3 Pensacolians Three U.S. Naval Academy graduating seniors all of Pensacola received special awards this week during an awards ceremony at Annapolis, Md.

They are Ensigns Edwin Stevens Potts, Michael Louis Sloneker and Richard Dale Gano. Ens. Potts was awarded the Capt. Robert Cecil track trophy which is presented to a graduating midshipman who has done the most to promote track and field athletics at the Naval Academy. Ens.

Sloneker received the Ladies Auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign War prize presented to the midshipman who shows the greatest improvement in weighted average marks. Ens. Gano, who was commodore of the Academy Power Squadron, won the Adm. Thomas L. Gatch award for proficiency in powerboat squadron operations.

In addition, Sloneker and Gano were awarded advanced educational opportunities in the education program at the U.S. Naval Post Graduate School at Monterrey, Calif. Physical, Mental Problems Linked To Accidents WASHINGTON (UPI)-The government says research shows truck and bus drivers' health and emotional problems are an increasing cause of accidents. Federal Highway Administrator Francis C. Turner proposed Friday drivers be required to get physical checkups every year instead of every three years and that procedures be set up to remove drivers who become a threat to safety through drunkeness, use of drugs and bad driving records.

Boy and Girl of Year Miss Jean Buettner and Andy White, Woodham High School students, have been named Boy and Girl of the Miss Buettner is valedictorian of her class this year and Month of May by the North Pensacola Exchange Club. won three scholastic awards in French. She plans to attend Newcomb College in New Orleans next year. White plans to start at Auburn University in the fall. He is president of the Woodham National Honor Society and was president of the Key Club his junior year.

He won the outstanding teen-ager award this year and was one of 10 top graduating seniors at Woodham this year. Miss Pensacola Events To Be Held Tonight Miss America beauty eant hopefuls will compete at 8:30 p.m. today in swim suit and evening gown divisions during the Miss Pensacola beauty pageant in Municipal Auditorium. The Fiesta of Five Flags annual event is a preliminary to the Miss Florida and Miss America Pageants which will be held later on this year in Orlando and Atlantic City, N.J.I Peking Course Said Anti-Red FROM PAGE ONE ties "only in formal principles which, worthy as they are, are not always honest." He said his delegation could not subscribe to the document as it now stands and offered a series of major amendments, particularly seeking a clear statement on the. principle of nonintervention.

Aarons said the document, which has been in preparation for nearly a year, "made a superficial and sometimes contradictory analysis of the imperialist world system and the international situation." Regarding China, Aarons was earlier reported to have said the issue would be best not discussed, but if it is brought up, the Czechoslovak question also should be aired. TOKYO (AP) Communist China announced today it has agreed to meet with the Soviet Union in a Soviet border city June 18 to discuss questions of navigation on boundary rivers between the two countries. The announcement of the meeting--apparently limited to navigation questions- came just one day after the Chinese charged that Soviet troops had fired across the border, intruded into Chinese territory and harmed and kidnaped Chinese in incidents "still occurring incessantly." German Measles Vaccine Coming WASHINGTON (UPI) -The nation's first vaccine against German measles, which endangers the unborn children' of pregnant women, is expected to be licensed early next week. Standards governing production of the vaccine were published Friday on levels of safety, purity and potency. Children will receive the first vaccine available.

First prize will be a $400 scholarship to any accredited college and second place award will be a tuition scholarship to Pensacola Junior College. Miss Taris Savell and Jack Renney will serve as masters of ceremonies. Musical entertainment will be provided by the Fiesta Choir and Ray Parker's Orchestra. Judges will be Sharon Tench of The Pensacola New-Journal, Sally Henderson of WCOA Radio, Dr. Chester O'Bannon of Pensacola Junior College, Oliver Leonard and Lt.

Tom McPherson. Contestants will be Cheryl Elaine Adkinson. Annete Laughter, Anita Thornhill, Jane Hamilton, Duchess Dietz, Deborah Freeman, Katherine Marie Blanos, Eleanor Cushing and Deborah Lea Clark. Also Helena Wallace, Carla Michele Knowles, Susan Evelyn Wrzos, Meredith Ann Willis, Donna Kirkland, Patricia Ann Bellanova, Cathline Clara Mitchell, Penelope Gassman, Eva Elizabeth Thompson and Colleen Berry. 14 Gils Convicted In Stockade Strike FROM PAGE ONE ranging from nine months to 16 years, but three sentences were later reduced to two years each.

A total of 27 prisoners were involved in the protest last Oct. 14 when they refused to report to work details and sat down in a circle in the stockade yard ard sang protest songs. All were charged with mutiny, 22 have now been tried and convicted, three escaped from the stockade and are believed to be in Canada and two are under medical treatment. The two found guilty of lesser charges Friday apparently benefitted from psychiatric testimony on their behalf during the trial, one of the longest in U.S. military history.

Pvt. Larry L. Sales, 22, Modesto, found guilty of failure to obey a lawful order. He had a long history of psychiatric problems and enlisted in the Army the same day ted was released from a mental hospital. Pvt.

Danny R. Seals, 22, Orangevale, was found guilty of willful disobedience. He was kicked in the head by a horse as a child and testimony indicated he suffered organic brain damage. The defense had argued that all 14 were in a highly upset state the day of the tion and were not responsible for their actions. Data From U.S.

WEATHER BUREAU ISSA 50 40 40 50 50. 60 COLD 60 Lain Showers 60 Shaw FORECAST Flurries Figures Shew Low Temperatures Expected 70 Until Sundae Marina Chance of Showers A wide belt of showers is due Saturday the Dakotas. Other shower areas are due in night from the Pacific Northwest across the Nevada, New Mexico, Texas and southern nation to New England with the exception of Florida. It will be cooler in the North. (Pensacola News-AP Wirephoto Map) 70 Are Arrested In Indianapolis Panther headquarters.

Police reinforcements then arrived and went inside the Black Panther headquarters where they confiscated two loaded shotguns and arrested 20 to 30 Black Panthers. FROM PAGE ONE BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) Police raided a "people's park annex" where hundreds of young people have been camping out nightly, dispersed about 150 of the campers and dismantied some facilities they had set up. About 30 officers descended on the area shortly before midnight Friday after police had broken up a torchlight protest parade at the original "people's park." More than 30 persons were arrested in both incidents, mostly for vagrancy and failure to disperse. Several, people at the "annex" later they were clubbed, but police denied hitting anybody.

Witnesses said officers knocked over a half dozen newly planted trees with their nightsticks, overturned a slide, a swing, a table, and tore down a tool shed. A few bricks were tossed, police said, but there were no injuries or mass fighting. Police said they were acting on hundreds of complaints of noise and illegal burning at the area, where young people have camped in tents since a May 15 riot over the original "people's park," a mile away. Before the raid on the annex, up to 1,000 persons held a California's rally at University! of Sproul Plaza and tried to stage first torchlight parade to the park, on land owned by the university. Police in flak jackets kept the crowd moving past park and gradually dispersed the marchers.

The torches had been banned by the fire department as a hazard. The raid came on the eve of a meeting by the UC Board of Regents' building and committee to consider for the university to lease the "people's park" land to the of Berkeley to continue ing it as a park. The May 15 riot, at which 130 Nixon Leaves For Midway Conference FROM PAGE ONE ceive full military honors. The drive immediately to the resident of the base commander for an hour and 45 minutes of private discussions--just the two of them. At the same time, their senior advisers will be in session at an officers' club.

After a brief break, Nixon and Thieu will arrive at the club for a working luncheon with their delegations. This is billed for an hour and 15 minutes. A final two-hour session is slated for the presidents and their senior advisers at the club. Nixon heads for Washington, breaking the trip to spend Monday night here at his home overlooking Pacific. back at 8:15 p.m.

The schedule, will get him EDT Tuesday. Another question over the conference is participation of the National Liberation Front, political arm of the Viet Cong, in the future government of South Vietnam. In his May 14 address, Nixon made no mention of a coalition government but said the United States is "prepared to accept any government that resuits from the free choice of the South Vietnamese people." He added that all political elements prepared to participate in political processes without the use of force should be permitted to do so. During visits recently to South Korea and Formosa, Thieu said he would never accept a coalition government with the Communists. Rogers offered a possible compromise at his news conference Thursday.

He said that perhaps a coalition commission that included the NLF might be set up to supervise the election. The delegation with Nixon includes, besides Rogers, Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird: Henry Cabot Lodge, chief U.S. delegate to the Paris peace talks; Henry Kissinger, presidential adviser on national security; and Gen. Earle G.

Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, U.S. commander in Vietnam, will go to Midway from Saigon.

The site of Greenwich Observatory has served as England's prime meridian since 1800. Search Pressed For SAC Plane accept the report was Broxson. The conference committee then met again and the last report included the tax on heavy equipment purchased by industries to fight pollution in addition to the tax on leased ag land and public electric plants. This time, even though still a member of the conference committee, Broxson fought approving the report. He contended the state should encourage industries to install machinery to fight pollution.

He said unless polluting of waters is stopped there will be few places for fishing. He cited instances in which fish are being killed in large numbers. "I oppose that tax on industries. The incentive for an accelerated program against pollution should not be taken from industries," he said. however, said that industries can afford to pay this tax.

He said he had received numerous pressures to tax. "Citizens can pay a tax for being placed on a car," he said. "This is a safety One must do it to obey the law. Big industries can sales tax on heavy machinery which they purchase so they too are obeying the law which says they must stop polluting air and water." Barrow fought the reporting saying Withe senators voted it they fools. "How in the world can the Florida Legislature in 1967 tell industry if they come here and install machinery to fight pollution 1 they will be exempt from the that sales tax while purchasing machinery.

It's not right." he would rather stay in session another day than to rush this bill through merely because it was time for adjourning. Barrow said many companies are now in midst of antipollution work. He said they get the exemption but a firm which has not started the program at this time will be required to pay the tax. He called this discriminatory. Both houses adopted the conference report with the tax on agricultural leased lands, on heavy machinery purchased by industry for pollution control, and on heavy machinery purchased by public electric plants, such as those operated by cities.

Shouts of joy greeted the decision as the legislators then quickly adjourned their 60 day 1969 session of the Legislature. Red Pressure Is Kept Up FROM PAGE ONE Despite being outnumbered more than 10-to-1, field reports said U.S. forces repelled the regiment-sized attack with artillery, bombers and helicopter gun ships bringing heavy fire on the enemy. Military spokesmen reported 63 rocket and mortar attacks overnight on bases and towns, including Da Nang, South Vietnam's second largest city. The U.S.

Command said casualties and damage from the shelling were light. The new upsurge in enemy activity, which began Thursday night, has been linked to Sunday's conference on Midway between Thieu and Nixon. Military analysts described it as a continuation of attacks that periodically reach a high point of intensity aimed at "influencing the political situation" and making an impact at the time Nixon and Thieu and their advisers are holding key strategy talks. In the attacks on Da Nang, Viet Cong gunners fired 45 rockand mortars into military installations in the city. Terrorists staged seven attacks.

Five persons were known dead and 37 wounded. First reports said four of the dead were U.S. Air Force men killed when eight 100-pound rockets slammed into Da Nang air base. While U.S. and South Vietnamese forces had their hands full in fighting along the corridors leading from Cambodia to Saigon, a new threat appeared to be developing along the demilitarized zone.

North Vietnamese antiaircraft fire fatally wounded an observer aboard a U.S. reconnaissance plane that was flying over the zone. The plane returned safely. Enemy troops also launched an attack on a U.S. Marine night bivouac 15 miles south of the zone, killing 10 men and wounding 24.

Enemy casualties were five men killed. The aerial observer was the first American killed on a flight over the DMZ since the halt in the bombing of North Vietnam last November. Ten of the light singleengine craft have been hit by enemy fire since that time. FROM PAGE ONE FROM PAGE ONE were injured fatallycame after the university put up a fence around the disputed three acres. Dissidents then used the "people's park annex" for a staging area with the permission of the Bay Area Rapid Transit District, which owns the land.

It was first series of clashes since the last of 2.80 National Guard left Berkeley Monday. a go the in ing the in said that ten, er, the ly to the ing the er, with they ly tives were of of Jr. held time ed City was tem it on to not the to to not the 26. HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) Hartford, under an 8 p.m.

to 5 a.m. curfew, was quiet Friday night after four straight nights of looting and vandalism in the predominantly Negro and Puerto Rican section. A thunderstorm struck the city about 9 p.m. and a police spokesman said "the rain reduced tension to a Mayor Ann Uccello declared a state of emergency earlier in the day, imposing the curfew and calling police to standby duty. Some 80 troopers reported but were not called into the streets.

City Manager Elisha Freedman said the curfew would be in force again tonight. The state of emergency will also continue to enable the calling in of state police if necessary, he said, although he hoped to be able to announce the end of the emergency Sunday morning. Freedman had met with Mayor Uccello and other city official for more than an hour. The report they heard: no injuries and no looting, although a few windows were smashed and bottles thrown apparently before the curfew began. The worst of the disturbances during the week came Thursday night, when about 35 stores were looted and some 100 persons arrested.

earlier it had received a report from one of the search planes which said it had spotted a life raft in the sea with four or five men aboard. The agency said the message pinpointed the alleged position of the raft and Japanese fishing boats already were en route to the scene. Nineteen men were aboard the RC135 Thursday when it took off from Shemya, a oneby-three-mile speck of land at the western end of the Aleutians, headed for Fairbanks. Seven were officers, 12 enlisted men, according to accounts from Washington. The four-engine jet, a Boeing 707 in civilian parlance, vanished shortly after takeoff, triggering a search by American planes and ships that covered 400,000 square miles between Alaska and the Soviet Union.

Earlier in the search, spotters sighted an orange-colored object in the water and at first thought it to be from the RC135. It turned out to be a fishing float. The Pentagon in Washington ruled out the possibility the plane had been shot down. Normally a reconnaissance aircraft carrying electronics "snooping gear," the plane was serving as a courier flight this time, military spokesmen said. The Soviet ship Georgy Ordjonikidge and the Japanese ship Shiyo Maru joined two S.

Coast Guard cutters and 10 Navy planes in the search area, about 700 miles from the Soviet mainland and 800 miles from Alaska. The hub of our galaxy lies in the constellation Sagittarius. Deaths Funerals BENBOE FUNERAL HOME Miss Clara B. Jackson Funeral services for Clara Bell Jackson, 13, of 308 Gulf Beach who died by drowning Saturday will be hela at p.m. Sunday at the Jesus Christ Free Will Holiness Church with Bishop S.

A. Wainwright officiating. The body will be taken to the church at 10 a.m. Sunday. She is survived by her mother, Elder father, John D.

Morrissette; four sisters, D. Jackson Morrissette; her. stepMrs. Carolyn Kimbrough, Voncile Jackson, Eartha three Jackson and Johnnie M. Morrisbrothers, John E.

Jackson, Alexander Jackson and Larry Morrissette, all of Warrington and her grandmothers, Minister Cora Porter and Prophet C. B. Jackson, both of Warrington. Burial will be in Rest Haven Garden Cemetery with Benboe Funeral Home directing. BENBOE FUNERAL Lonnie B.

Frazier Lonnie B. Frazier of 910 North St. died in a local hospital after a short illness. Mr. Frzier was a retired employer of Public Works Civil Service.

He is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Arlene Finklea of Cleveland, Ohio; two brothers, William (Bill) Frazier of Pensacola and David Frazier of Warrington; one sister, Mrs. Alice Higgins of Warrington; six grandchildren. Services will be at 1 p.m. Monday at Benboe Funeral Chapel with the Rev.

J. W. Cole Jr. officiating. Burial will be in Zion Cemetery with Benboe Funeral Home directing.

WATERS HIBBERT FUNERAL HOME Mrs. Elizabeth Holzer Cartwright Mrs. Elizabeth Holzer Cartwright, 60, died in St. Petersburg Wednesday night in a local hospital. She has made her home in St.

Petersfor the last 10 years and was a former resident of Pensacola and a member of the Episcopal Church. Survivors are her widower, Charles Cartwright, St. Petersburg; a son, Lt. Commander Claude Everett Edwards Jr. USN; her mother, Mrs.

Elizabeth Holzer, St. Petersburg; a brother, Curt Holzer, Orlando and four grandchildren. Services will be at 2 p.m. Monday at the Chapel Waters Hibbert WITH Michael C. Boss of St.

Christopher's will Episcopal be in St.Johns Church officiating. Cemetery. Honorary pallbearers will be Hugh Weekly, J. Leo Schwartz, Marco White, Jerome Duburg, Dr. Ed White and Babe Hosler.

Activepallbearers will be Norborne Brown, E. B. Lawrence, Ray Brigman, Paul Knight, Bruce Morrison Jr. and Ralph Weekley. Waters Hibbert in charge of arrangements.

BENBOE FUNERAL HOME Mrs. Anience (Pinkie) Sheffield Mrs. Anience (Pinkie) Sheffield of 1340 North St. died in a local hospital Thursday. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Benboe Funeral Home.

HELMS FUNERAL HOME Lester (Rush) Walther -Lester (Rush) Walther, 51, of Miami died Wednesday after a short illness. He was native of Santa Rosa County but had resided the last 20 years in Miami. Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Cathy Walther of Miami; two sons, Michael and Patrick Walther, both of Miami, two daughters, Miss Kim Walther and Miss Colleen Walther, both of Miami; parents, Mr. and Mrs.

W. C. Walther of Allentown; three sisters, Mrs. Carrie Lee Carpenter of Moss Point, Mississippi, Mrs. Irene, Blaisdell of of Allentown; Pensacola six and broth- Mrs.

ers, James Walther, Woodrow Walther and Cecil Walther, all of Pensacola, GorWalther of Baker, Earl Walther Tuscaloosa, Ala, and Norman Walther of Chumuckla. will lie in state at the Helms Funeral Home Chapel until 2:30 p.m. Sunday. Burial will be in the Coldwater Reorganized Church of Christ of Latter Day Saints Cemetery for graveside services at 3 p.m. with the Elder Leonard Wolfe and Pastor Leslie Kelly officiating.

Nephews will be pallbearers. Helms Funeral Home directing. JOE MORRIS FUNERAL HOME Fredrick Jackson MILTON Funeral services for Fredrick Jackson of 201 Alice Street will be at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Mt. Pilgrim Baptist church officiating.

with the Rev. J. B. Survivors include the parents, Mr. Mrs.

Elbert Jackson four brothers, Elbert Elfert and Roger, all of Atlanta, Ga, and Calvin Jackson of Milton; grandparents, Mrs.Georgia Dun1ap of Milton, Mr. Sharif Morrison, Akron, Ohio, Mrs. Mattie Jackson of Atlanta, Ga. both great-grandmothers. Burial wi'l be in Milton Cemetery with the Joe Morris Funeral Home directing.

JOE MORRIS FUNERAL HOME Mrs. Mary Ann Foster. Services for Mrs. Mary Ann Foster of 1236 W. Scott Street will be at 1:00 p.m.

Sunday in the Englewood Baptist Church with the Rev. E. L. Causey, officiating. Survivors include the widower, ClarFoster: daughter, Mrs.

Jane Clark of Gary, Indiana; a brother, Frank Laster of Detroit, Michigan; four grandchildren and neices and nephews. Burial will be in Mt. Zion Cemetery with Joe Morris Funeral Home directing. McLAUGHLIN MORTUARY John Peter Kirtz FORT WALTON BEACH- -John Peter Kirtz, 55, RI. 1, Box 86 died Friday after long illness.

He was born in Rose Creek, Minnesoa 'retired civil service employee and member of St. Mary's Catholic Church. Services will be at 10 a.m. Monday from St. Mary's Catholic Church with the Rev.

Father Patrick Cunningham officiating. Burial will be in the Beal Memorial Cemetery with McLaughlin Mortuary directina. Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Annie Mae Kirtz; a daughter, Mrs. Ruth C.

Duke; a son, John Peter Kirtz all of Fort Walton Beach; two brothers, Leo Kirtz and Bernard Kirtz, both of Austin, four sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Underahl, Mrs. Mary Hobbs and Mrs. Lona Keist, all of Austin, and Mrs. Madlyn Adams of Mcintire, lowa.

Active pallbearers will be Don Fisch. er, James C. McLellan, B. M. Helms, James Gillis, Buddy Lowery and Ray Helms.

Honorary pallbearers will be W. R. Brown, William McLellan, Earl Helms, M. T. Duke, Howard Jordan, and Bert Hawkins.

McLAUGHLIN MORTUARY Fort Walton Beach Second Lt. John Hayes Lakin FORT WALTON BEACH Second Lt. John Hayes Lakin, USMC, 22, of 10 Linwood died in action in Vietnam May 24. He was a native of Waterloo, Iowa, but had resided in Fort Walton Beach since 1955. He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church.

Funeral services will be at noon Monday in First Presbyterian Church with the Rev. James Anderson officiating. Burial will be in Barrancas National Cemetery in Pensacola with full military honors. Survivors include the parents, Mr. and Mrs.

John Lakin, a brother, Robert Lakin and two sisters, Miss Judith and Virginia Lakin, all of Fort Walton Beach; and the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lakin of Waterloo, and Mr. and Mrs. O.

H. Harned of Cedar Falls, lowa. The family request that flowers be omitted and memorials be made to the John H. Lakin Memorial Fund First Presbyterian Church. BENBOE FUNERAL HOME Mrs.

Estella White Mrs. Estella White of 801 W. Baars St. died in local hospital after a short illness. She is survived by one daughter Mrs.

Laura Elder; three sons, John Miller and Nathan Dortch; three sisters, Mrs. Beuah. Bettis of Gosport, Mrs. Janie Richardson of Pensacola, Mrs. Willie M.

Thompson of Snead, three brothers, John and Amost Thompson of Pensacola; Henry Thompson of West Palm Beach, nine grandchildren. Services will be at 4 P.M. Sunday at the Benboe Funeral Chapel with the Rev. S. P.

Ellis officiating. Burial will be in Zion Cemetery with Benboe Funeral Home directing. NEWS PHONE All Departments, HE 3-0041 Classified Direct Line HE 3-0056 CLASSIFIED DEPT. Daily 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

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CIRCULATION DEPT. Sunday Hours 8 a.m.-10:45 a.m. The Pensacola News Published every afternoon except Sunday By Pensacola Division of Perry Publications, Inc. Pensacola, Florida 32502 Second-class postage paid at Pensacola, Florida Member of Asociated Press All advertisements in this newspaper accepted for, publication on the premises that the advertisement true and that the merchandise or service described in the 'advertisement is available to customers at address and will be willingly sold at the published price and in the manner described in the advertisement. CARRIER RATES News News News News And or or And Jour- Jour.

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À propos de la collection The Pensacola News

Pages disponibles:
237 885
Années disponibles:
1889-1985