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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 20

Location:
Bismarck, North Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i a Bird Unit Okays 20-Friday, June 30, 1972-The BISMARCK TRIBUNE Death Knell Leeway Wildlife Refuge By The Associated Press Sen. Quentin N. Burdick, D- N.D., said Thursday the U.S. Migratory Bird Commission approved the formation of a national wildlife refuge in North Dakota's Ramsey and Towner Counties. Burdick said the refuge is to be established under the authority of the migratory bird conservation act and thus the commission's approval.

Gov. William L. Guy gave the proposal state endorsement earlier in the week. formal notification to the senator, the commission said more than 5,700 acres of land in the area was already under refuge and flowage easement. The commission the acquisition of additional acres would provide the necessary degree of control over water and surrounding lands to provide a production of 10,000 waterfowl annually.

Postal Official Finishes Career FARGO (AP) Donald Fraser, district manager of the U.S. Postal Service, retired Friday after nearly 20 years of service. Fraser was appointed district manager when the position was created last year. The district, headquartered at Fargo, includes 982 post offices in North Dakota and most of Minnesota. Fraser's retirement almost a year ahead of his 60th birthday was prompted by a postal service plan liberalizing retirement benefits.

No successor has been named yet. Clean Air Bus Put on Display NEW YORK (AP) A comfortable, low-polluting bus designed for congested city streets has been put on display in Rockefeller Plaza. The bright orange van, which seats 15 and has standing room for five, takes up about the same space as a long luxury limousine. Called the Ginkelvan, for its designers, van Ginkel Associates of Montreal, it has padded seats with armrests, a wide sliding door, large tinted windows which can be opened in the roof, and carpeting. The van was built at the request of the city Office of Midtown Planning to take shoppers and others short distances "in style and comfort." It has a diesel engine that reportedly meets U.S.

federal pollutionprevention standards for 1975. Seed-Spitting Meet Is Okayed NEOSHO, Mo. (AP) Neosho has received official sanetion for a world championship watermelon seed-spitting contest July 8. Jim Morris, news director of KBTN radio, said Wednesday the event was sanctioned by Frank Spencer, editor of the Pawhuska Journal Capital, Pawhuska, and owner of International Seed-Spitting Institution, Ltd. In a letter to the radio station, Spencer said the $10.000 sanctioning fee would be waived due to "the excellent relationship between Missouri and The world record in sanetioned competition is 44 feet, 1, inches, held by Dale Blaylock of Paul's Valley, Okla.

Wildlife Camp Has Openings, Scholarships The North Dakota Wildlife Federation is reminding youths that it still has openings at its summer conservation camp for three girls and two boys with some scholarships still available. The program, to be held July 9-16 at Lee's Resort on Lake Sakakawea, includes tours to study geology, a firearms safety course, and demonstrations on ecology, the outdoors, and air quality and noise. Further information may be obtained by contacting Betty Morgan at 223-8384. BANNED IN JOBURG JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) A spokesman for a British paperback publishing firm estimated that about 30 per cent of books published in Britain are banned in South Africa. BUY Ads O0 IT BETTER WANT AD RATES DEATHS Rites Are Held For Earl Voeltz Funeral services for Earl Voeltz, 49, Walla Walla, a former Bismarck resident who died in an airplane crash along the Montana -Idaho border in April, were held June 20 at Walla Walla.

Mr. Voeltz was born to Mr. and Mrs. Glen Voeltz of Bismarck on Oct. 29, 1922.

He had been employed as a photographer by the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers for the past 27 years and was a former Bismarck and Riverdale resident. He married Gladys Kearns at Hebron. He leaves his wife; a daughter, Michele, at home, and two sons, Randy, Brookings, S.D., and First Lt.

Bruce Voeltz, Fort Riley, Kan. He also leaves a sister, Mrs. Herb Senger, Williston, and a brother, Don, Glasgow, Mont. The Rev. E.

R. Thomas officiated at the services. Burial was in the Odd Fellows Cemetery, Walla Walla, and pallbearers were Col. Richard Connell, Calvin Harbert, Virgil Long, Andrew Leier, Lynn Shelton and Dean Corn. Former Mandan Resident Dies Funeral services for Anna Schauss, 88, Seattle, former Mandan resident, who died Monday at Seattle, will be held at 1 p.m.

Monday at the Buehler Funeral Home chapel, Mandan. The Rev. Richard Hagestuen will officiate at the services and burial will be in the Mandan Union Cemetery. Pallbearers will be David Johnson, Victor Nelson, Leland Olsen. Ernest Ellison, Olaf Larson and Clarence Hendrickson.

Mrs. Schauss was born in Norway April 27, 1884, to Mr. and Mrs. Ole Pederson. She married John Schauss at Mandan in 1902.

He died in 1954. She had been living in Seattle for the past 20 years. She leaves three daughters, Mrs. Marie Stolliker, Dana Point, Mrs. Ray (Lillie) Rath, Camano Island, and Mrs.

Clifford O'Neal, Seattle; six sons, John and Joseph, both of Seattle; Benjamin and Paul, both of Richland, Anton, Torrance, and Daniel, Portland, 28 grandchildren and 26 greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Schauss was a member of the First Lutheran Church. Friends may call at the Buehler Funeral Home. Memorials are preferred to the First Lutheran Church, Mandan.

C.L. Sampson Of Killdeer Claude S. Sampson, 61, Killdeer, former operator of Sampson Coal Mine and Excavating at Manning, died Wednesday night at St. Joseph's Hospital, Dickinson. Funeral services will be at 3 p.m.

Saturday at St. John's Lutheran Church, Killdeer, the Rev. Donald W. Homme officiating. Mr.

Sampson was born at Manning Oct. 30, 1910, to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Sampson.

He grew up at Manning and lived there most of his life, farming and operating the Sampson Coal Mine and Excavating Company. He had lived in Killdeer since 1969. Mr. Sampson graduated from Hanson Auto Mechanic School, Fargo, in 1929 and was a member of the Eagles in Dickinson for 13 years. He leaves two brothers, Grant Glendive, and William Killdeer.

Burial will be in the Killdeer Cemetery and pallbearers will be Walter Bandle, Roger Basic, Anton Kadrmas, William and John Stroh and Frank Regeth. Mischel-Olson Chapel, Dickinson) Mary Leif, 64, Services Set Funeral services for Mrs. Peter (Mary) Leif, 64, who died Thursday at St. Alexius Hospital, will be held at 12 noon Saturday at the Sacred Heart Church, Wilton, with the Rev. Theodore Gustin officiating.

Burial will be in the Sacred Heart Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Anton Krush, Alec and Carl Wardner, Edward Hencz, Joe Schillinger and Omer Tweeten. Sentencing Guides Bother Justices MARTIN J. McNALLY Did Police Have Brush With Hijack? DETROIT (AP) The FBI is investigating the possibility that Martin J. McNally, arrested in the parachuteransom hijacking of an airliner last weekend, had been stopped and let go near the parachute landing site by an Indiana police chief.

"It appears McNally was the same one picked up and let go Saturday night by police in Peru, an FBI spokesman said in Detroit Thursday night. Peru Police Chief Richard Blair said he questioned a man who identified himself as Patrick McNally, and he identified a picture of Martin as the man he stopped. McNally was arrested at his Wyandotte, home Wednesday night and appeared in a U.S. District Court in Detroit Thursday, accused of being the air pirate who hijacked an American Airlines Boeing 727 near St. Louis, collected $502,500 ransom and two parachutes and bailed out over Indiana last Saturday.

A bag containing $500,000 of the ransom was found in a field by McNally, 28 and unemployed, was held on $100,000 bond, then lodged in the Wayne County jail. A hearing was scheduled for July 11 to consider moving him to St. Louis for arraignment. Chief Blair said he saw McNally walking along a highway late at night. He said he picked up the man for questioning but didn't arrest him because he was polite, well-dressed and didn't match the description of the hijacker.

Police said a -nosed pistol was found in a highway drainage ditch near where the man was picked up. Mrs. Amy Martin, a clerk at a motel near Peru, said a man who identified himself as Patrick McNally checked in between 11:30 p.m. and midnight Saturday. "The skin was scratched on one side of his face," Mrs.

Martin said Thursday. "He looked like he hit his face on the ground or "I don't know why," she added, "but I asked him if he was the hijacker. I was just kidding." She said the man "just grinned and didn't say a word." She said he later told her he had been in a fight with his brother, who he said lived in Peru. She also said two FBI agents who were participating in the search and staying at the motel passed the defendant on the stairs Monday night. The investigation is continuing and FBI agents said possible involvement of other persons has not been ruled out.

Tart Cherries Crop Increases WASHINGTON (AP)- This year's crop of tart cherries in the Great Lakes region is estimated at 148,700 tons, up 18 per cent from the 1971 crop, says the Agriculture Department. Larger production is expected in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan, the Crop Reporting Board said. Output is expected to be down from last year in New York and Wisconsin. By BARRY SCHWEID WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court decision outlawing the death penalty as it is now imposed leaves the door open for Congress or the states to write new laws that would be considered valid. But the door isn't open very much.

The only reason there is an opening at all is that only two of the five justices in Thursday's majority seem to have concluded that capital punishment is prohibited by the 8th Amendment crimes and under all circumstances. They were Justices William J. Brennan Jr. and Thurgood Marshall. The three others, Byron R.

White, Potter Stewart, and to a lesser degree, William 0. Douglas, quarreled constitutionally not with capital punishment itself so much as with the looseness of sentencing procedures. That is, the legislatures left it to judges and juries to choose to impose the death penalty in one instance of murder or rape and to impose a lesser sentence on another defendant for a similar crime. White said that as a result the odds are very much against execution. "When imposition of the penalty reaches a certain degree of infrequency, it would be very doubtful that any existing general need for retribution would be measurably satisfied." he said.

Stewart said: "I simply conclude that the 8th and 14th Amendments cannot tolerate the infliction of a sentence of death under legal systems that permit this unique penalty to be SO wantonly and SO freakishly imposed." Put another way, Stewart said the death sentences before the court "are cruel and unusual in the same way that being struck by lightning is cruel and unusual." Douglas, meanwhile, said the 8th Amendment requires legislatures to write criminal laws that are "evenhanded, nonselective' and nonarbitrary" and requires judges "to see to it that general laws are not applied sparsely, selectively and spottily to unpopular Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, one of the dissenters, took heart in the Stewart-White position. He said: "Since the two pivotal concurring opinions turn on the assumption that the punishment of death is now meted out in a random and unpredictable manner, legislative bodies may seek to bring their laws into compliance with the court's ruling by providing standards for juries and judges to follow in determining the sentence in capital cases or by more narrowly defining the crimes for which the penalty is to be imposed." But even Burger had to conclude that, "since there is no majority of the court on the ultimate issue presented in these cases, the future of capital punishment in this country has been left in an uncertain limbo. "Rather than providing a final and unambiguous answer on the basic constitutional question, the collective impact of the majority's ruling is to demand an undetermined measure of change from the various state legislatures and the President Nixon, while volunteering that "any punishment is cruel and inhuman which takes the life of a man or woman," expressed hope the ruling will not prohibit the death penalty for such federal crimes as kidnaping and hijacking. Justice Lewis F.

Powell in his dissent, wrote that the decision not only wipes out all 600 death-row sentences in the nation and laws in 39 states, but denies to Congress and all 50 legislatures "the power to adopt new policies contrary to the policy selected by the court." Some Officials Enraged At Death Penalty Ruling By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS "They ought to let us out in the yard for our own Independence Day," rejoiced one Washington death row inmate upon learning that the U.S. Supreme Court had barred capital punishment as it is now imposed. But if the news was generally welcomed in U.S. prisons, some public officials and law officers took strong exception to the decision handed down Thursday. Utah Atty.

Gen. Vernon G. Romney called the ruling "one of the most terrible decisions we've had of the Supreme Court in years. It is probably the biggest judicial afterthought in Several officials predicted the ruling would have a major long-range impact on parole procedures. Legislators in some states said they would work to reinstate capital punishment, an option which the court left open under certain circumstances.

Whatever the ultimate effect, the immediate reaction on death rows was cheering, elation and relief -but also some measure of concern about what would happen next. "It's like having one foot out of the grave," said Curtis X. Davis, 25, a convicted murderer in Pennsylvania. "It's quite a relief." "They ought to let us out i in the yard for our own Independence Day," declared Ernest James Tyler, 43, oldest man on Death Row at Washington State Penitentiary at Walla Walla. In Michigan City, several of the death row inmates were less than happy with the decision.

"I had a better chance of winning an appeal with the death penalty," said Charles A. Frith, 31, of East Chicago. "I don't care for the ruling," said George R. Brown, 40, of Hobart, on death row for nearly 15 years. "I can't live with the type of prisoners they have here Law enforcement and public officials gave varying reactions to the ruling.

"I have long felt that the death penalty had not proved to be a deterrent to crime," said Washington Gov. Dan Evans. "States that have had a death penalty have not had less crime than those states that have not had it." Mississippi Gov. Bill Waller commented, "I believe we can have better law enforcement with the death penalty as a deterrent it is Georgia Lt. Gov.

Lester Maddox attacked the ruling as "a license for anarchy, rape, murder." He predicted strong vigilante groups would form within five years. The Illinois Senate passed emergency legislation to keep 500 persons charged with murder from being automatically freed on bail. Philadelphia Mayor Frank Rizzo, a former police chief, termed the ruling "a mistake" but noted that it came from the nation's highest court and said, "The law abiding people will uphold the law of the land." Prisoner Evaluation Center Gets Emergency Panel's Okay By The Associated Press The State Emergency Commission gave its stamp of approval Thursday to plans to establish a pretrial and presentence evaluation center at the State Penitentiary near Bismarck. As requested by the Department of Institutions, the center is to be financed by federal money available through the State Law Enforcement Council and the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation. Hopefully the center will be in operation by early September.

said Walter R. Fiedler. director of institutions. The commission authorized a budget of $164.016 for the first year of operation. The plan is an outgrowth of recommendations made last month by a special board of inquiry named by Gov.

William L. Guy to look into recent disturbance at the 100-inmate prison. Services provided by the facility would replace evaluation work now conducted at Jamestown State Hospital. Such evaluation services are used to determine whether accused persons are mentally able to stand trial and to suggest rehabilitation programs for convicted criminals. Fiedler said that although the budget is computed on a one-year basis, the decision of whether to continue the program beyond next June 30 would be up to the 1973 Legislature.

The plan calls for the Law Enforcement Council to contribute $75,000 for office equipment and salaries and the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation to kick in $189,000 for salaries and other operational costs, including $25,000 to remodel facilities at the prison to house the center. Fiedler said the center would be operated by the Vocational Rehabilitation Division under supervision from the Department of Institutions. In other action, the emergency commission: Approved a request from state atty. Gen. Helgi Johanneson for authority to accept $15,000 in federal money to continue programs of the attorney general's fraud division.

Authorized the Department of Public Instruction to accept $50,000 from the U.S. Office of Education. The money is to be used to hire personnel and establish workshops in connection with an interstate program for education of handicapped children. Fischer Pressure Play Disliked Chess Champ Faces Blacklisting AMSTERDAM (AP) The president of the World Chess Federation has threatened American champion Bobby Fischer with blacklisting following reports he is holding out for a cut of the gate receipts from his World Series with Boris Spassky of Russia. Dr.

Max Euwe, the world federation president and veteran Dutch grandmaster, said Thursday night that if the 29-year-old American fails to appear Sunday for the start of the world chess championship in Reykjavik, Iceland, he stands to lose his rights to play for the world title "not only this Ads running less than 3 days will be charged at the minimum rate, that is, up to 15 words, $2.25. ADDITIONAL DAYS OVER SIX WEEKLY WILL RATE BE PER CHARGED DAY AT THE RATE OF OF 1-2-3 4 5 6 ONE OF NO. DAY DAY 6 DAY OF WORDS (15) DAY DAY (17) (19) (20) MONTES RATE. 110 $2.85 $3.00 $12.00 .50 15 $2.25 $2.55 3.04 3.20 12.80 .53 16 2.40 2.72 2.89 3.23 3.40 13.60 .57 17 2.55 3.06 3.42 3.60 14.40 .60 18 3.23 3.61 3.80 15.58 .63 19 2.85 3.00 3.40 3.80 4.00 16.00 .67 20 21 3.15 3.57| 3.99 4.20 16.80 .70 22 3.30 3.74 4.18 4.40 17.60 .73 23 3.45 3.91 4.37 4.60 18.40 .77 24 3.60 4.08 4.56 4.80 19.20 .80 25 3.75 4.25 4.75 5.00 20.00 .83 OUT OF STATE RATE 12c PER WORD, PER DAY $3.00 MINIMUM CARD OF THANKS AND IN MEMORIAMS Up to 50 Words 51 to 75 Words 76 Words and Over $3.00 FIND YOUR CLASSIFICATION WITH THIS WANT AD INDEX ANNOUNCEMENT MISCELLANEOUS 1. Card of Thanks 28.

Auction Sales 2. Personals 29. Heavy Machinery--Tools 3. Lost and Found 30. Miscellaneous, Sale 4.

Special Notices 31. Rummage Sale 4a. Legal Notices 32. Miscellaneous, Wanted 33. Miscellaneous for Rent BUSINESS FINANCIAL 5.

Business and Professional Services 6. Business Opportunities MOBILE HOMES 7. Investments 34. Homes for Rent 35. Mobile Homes, Sale EDUCATION 36.

Mobile Homes, Wanted 8. Schools Colleges 9. Music Instructions EMPLOYMENT REAL ESTATE 10. Employment Agencies 37. Rooms for Rent 11.

Help Wanted -Men Women 38. Apartments for Rent 12. Salesmen Saleswomen 39. Apartments Wanted 13. Work Wanted 40.

Business Locations 14. Yard Work, Landscaping 41. Homes for Sale 42. Homes for Rent FARM RANCH 43. Homes Wanted 15.

Farms, Sale Rent 44. Residential Lots 16. Farms Wanted 45. Commercial Lots 17. Land 46.

Resorts -Lakeshore18. Feed Seed Hay Cabins 19. Farm Implements 20. Livestock, Poultry, Pets 21. Farmers Miscellaneous AUTOMOTIVE MERCHANDISE 47.

Aviation 22. Boats Outboard Motors 48. Cars for Rent 23. Business Equipment 49. Motorcycles 24.

Merchandise Snowmobiles Household Goods 50. Garages 25. Sports Equipment 51. Autos 26. Campers 52.

Trucks Musical Instruments 53. Automotive, Miscellaneous Business and Professional Directory Consult This Guide for Quick Reference Accounting Services BOOKKEEPING AND ACCOUNTING assistance or supervision. Call 223-7537 Schneider's Accountina Service. Appliances USED RECONDITIONED washers, dryers, ranges, refrigerators. 30-day warrantv.

Ace' Hardware, 223-9255. 405 4Th St. USED TV sets, refrigerators, washers, and deep freezers. Corwin-Churchill Appliance 223-1170, 2nd Main. Barber Shops PLAZA BARBER SHOP for your hair service needs.

Hair pieces, styling, razor cuts, accessories. 255-1821. Bottled Water BOTTLED WATER Crystal pure bot. tied water, electric coolers for lease. Bulk hauling.

The Hartwood Company, Har 255-3177. Corporate Records CORPORATION RECORDS, including indexed permanent records, corporate seal and stock certificates. Complete. Call Bismarck Tribune, Commercial 255-3900. Draperies FREE In home estimates, in or out-oftown, for drapery and carpet.

We will bring samples to your home. We do a complete job from make-up to installation. Join the thousands of satisfied Penney users. Call now. J.

PENNEY CO. 223-1090, Ext. 53 HAVE YOUR DRAPERIES custom made for less. Invite our decorator out for free estimates. Choose from complete range of beautiful fabrics.

Herberger's Drapery Department, 223-4665. Elec. Appliance Repair APPLIANCES, TV AND RADIO repair. Dakota Appliance Electric 222 S. 11th 223-1893.

Electrolysis PERMANENT REMOVAL of superfluous hair. For apppintment call Lu Goetz, certified electrologist, 223-0854. Etchings HALFTONES AND ETCHINGS. Complete art work facilities. Bismarck Tribune, 222 4th dial 223-2500.

Fireplace Fixtures FIREWOOD Presto logs. Free delivery and stacking. Fireplace Call: today, 255.3177. The Hartwood Co. Guns GUNS: WE PAY CASH for guns.

Scheels Our Own Hardware. Arrowhead Shopping Center, Bismarck, 223-8678. Ice BLOCKS, CUBES, wholesale and retail 24. hour service, merchandisers available Hartwood, Insurance THE FRANKLIN LIFE Insurance George Stevens, district manager, 223- 4668 or 223-0256. Lawn Mower Repair LAWN MOWER AND small engine repair.

Experienced service man. Coast to Coast, Bismarck. Phone 223-5840. Display Advertising assistance is free by dialing 223-2500, ask for display ad. vertising.

Lawn Supplies LAWN SUPPLIES New and used lawn mowers. Fertilizer and all lawn care supplies. Sales, Rentals, U- Rent, 223. 1632. Plumbing and Heating CALL THOMPSON'S Little Plumber for fast, efficient service.

205 Seventh 223-3393. Printing COMMERCIAL PRINTING of all kinds, from letterheads to catalogs. Quick service. Bismarck Tribune, 2306 East Broadway. Dial 255-3900.

Refrigeration Service COMMERCIAL, DOMESTIC, anywhere. 24 hours emergency service, 255-4254. Capital Refrigeration Air ditioning, Bismarck. Rentals CAPITAL RENTALS, Import Repairs. 820 South 18th Street.

Repairs, tune ups, 255. 2707. Miscellaneous rentals, 223-0399. Sewing Machines NEW, USED MACHINES repairs, any make 26 years experience. Litt Sewing Service, 715 11th Street, 223-9310.

Upholstering upholstery EXPERIENCED FURNITURE and repair. Supplies, fabrics, picture frames, lemon oil polish. Jensen's, 510 Main. 223-5353. IF YOU ARE in need of upholstery and rugs, call Aberle's Upholstery 663-9288 in Mandan.

Free estimates. The latest in rug and upholstery samples. Free Pickup and delivery. Window Screen Repair WINDOW SCREEN repair. Aluminum windows and doors sales and service.

We renair all kinds, A Window. 223.2901. time but perhaps forever." Fischer was seen Thursday night at New York's Kennedy airport, but Icelandic Airlines said he did not board its flight to Reykjavik. When newsmen tried to question him, his bodguards fended them off. The next flight from New York to Iceland is tonight.

But Fischer in the past has refused to fly on the Jewish Sabbath, between sundown Friday and sundown Saturday. Informed sources in Reykjavik said that Fischer informed the Icelandic Chess Federation that he wouldn't play unless he got 30 per cent of the gate receipts. This would be in addition to his share of the $125,000 purse and 30 per cent of the receipts from the sales of television and film rights already agreed to. The Icelandic federation was reported seeking a compromise in negotiations with Fred Cramer, former president of the American Chess Federation, who is acting as Fischer's advance man. The Icelanders said they have already spent about $200,000 on preparations, and if they meet Fischer's demand they can't break even.

The gate receipts probably will be considerable. Matches will be played three to six days a week in a sports palace with seats at $5 each. And the series is expected to last two months. Euwe said he didn't expect the Icelandic Chess Federation to meet Fischer's demand. He added that it would have grounds for legal action against the American challenger if he didn't show up Sunday.

"I don't like Mr. Fischer in our chess world." said Euwe. "He's a good player but every day we are getting another ultimatum from him like this." A TREASURE, TROVE IN THE WANT ADS Classified Ads.

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Pages Available:
1,010,379
Years Available:
1873-2024