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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 1

Publication:
The Missouliani
Location:
Missoula, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ike -Cautions GOP Governors Against Political Disunity KEEPING With Jones Deane Jones, That Is mmmmmmmmmmmmmMmm Good Morning. EDWARD S. CHINSKE. Eddie Chinske and I registered together at the University back in 1926, and we were roommates at" intervals during the "It may be we could talk a little more freely with Governor Reagan and Governor Rom-ney elsewhere," he said. Two other governors will also be unable to attend: Raymond P.

Shafer of Pennsylvania and Warren P. Knowles of Wisconsin. Earlier Wednesday the Western Governors Co.iference closed in West Yellowstone, 100 miles away. Its chairman, Gov. Tim Babcock of Montana, said he did not believe the western Republican governors would unite behind a regional candidate for the the governors ought to try to reach such an agreement.

"No I don't at this time," he replied. "The nominating convention is more than a year away. The world moves, and it changes. There will be primaries next year, We Republican governors are determined to name a winner, but I don't think we plan to do it here." Love said, in response to another question that the absence of the two potential presidential candidates might actually make it easier for the meeting to agree on a common course of action. Romnry might be able to keep his engagement in Wyoming after all.

In any event, both the Michigan and California governors have representatives on at Jackson Lake Lodge, as does Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York is here in person.

At a news conference, Love predicted that no agreement would be reached during the two-day session on a presidential candidate for next year. He was asked if he thought the take place here. The two Republican governors regarded as major presidential candidates both sent word they would be unable to attend. Governors George Romncy of Michigan and Ronald Reagan of California are both embroiled in persuading recalcitrant legislatures to balance bulky budgets by cuts or new taxes before the respective fiscal years of their two states run out on Friday. But later in the evening, word was received here that leader-ership agreement had been reached in Lansing on the new Michigan fiscal program and New York Timei Newt Service JACKSON HOLE, Wyo.

-Former President Eisenhower called on the nation's 25 Republican governors Wednesday night to lay aside' any differences based on doctrine or personality in the interest of electing a president in 1968. Eisenhower, who was himself nominated in one of the party's bitterest clashes of philosophy and personality in 1952, made his suggestion in a message aimed to a meeting of the Republican Governors Association that opens here Thursday. "I know that they (the Republican governors) will not al low differences of opinion concerning doctrinal details or specific personalities to deny them the opportunity to influence exert their unified influence in fundamentals," Eisenhower said in a telegram to Gov. John A. Love of Colorado, the association chairman.

"Guided by Republican principles and their own common sense, they will do much to restore our party to the national leadership which it deserves and the country needs." On the eve of the governor's meeting, it seemed unlikely that any clash of candidates would next four years. The fierceness of Eddie's competi-tion on the playing field was rivalled only by the loyalty of his friendship off the field. Any 1 5 0 pounder Jones The fifes who could play halfback in the MORE SUMMER Generally fair through Thursday and Friday with little change in temperatures. High both days near 85. Overnight lows 45-50.

Chance of rain 10 per cent. HOME EDITION SINGLE 1 ft Carrier Delivery Founded May 1, 1873. I vw Prlct li Lower COPY Missoula, Montana, Thursday, June 29, 1967 mm Land Resolutions Receive Approval rcau of Land Management be halted until the review commission makes its recommendations Hawaiian Is New Chairman By J. D. HOLMES WEST YELLOWSTONE (AP) Ha-waii Gov.

John A. Burns was elected chairman and Washington Gov. Daniel J. Evans, vice chairman, as the Western Governors Confer WEST YELLOWSTONE (AP) The Western Governors Conference refused Wednesday to admit Texas to membership in its water i PS by the end of 1968. Other resolutions adopted In the closing hour of the conference which began with a Sunday night reception: Threat to Water Urged Congress to end the council or to ask for an embargo on land-law changes prior to comple tion of a federal agency's threat of federal pre-emption of control of intrastate waters originating on federal lands by passing a statute upholding the study.

Utah Gov. Calvin L. Rampton ence ended its four-day principle of state water law su tried unsuccessfully to get the conference to admit Texas to the Western Water Council. He premacy. Urged the secretary of Agriculture to obtain a noxious got support from governors Jack weed control law affecting fed William of Arizona, David F.

session Wednesday. The 58-year-old Burns, a former Montanan, replaced Gov. Tim Babcock as the head of the 13-state group. Babcock, stepping down from the post, quipped, "We still have a Montanan as head of this conference for the ensuing year." Burns, vice chairman during Cargo of New Mexico and Stan ley K. Hathaway of Wyoming However, they lacked one vole erally owned lands.

The resolution noted that the Department of Agriculture is limited In its authority to control such weeds to the protection and productivity of range land. Expressed concern "over 1L the failure of agricultural in of the eight necessary even to get formal consideration of the floor-offered resolution. Backing Hathaway said he felt the political muscle of Texas, if applied to western water problems, might justify council membership for a state outside come to keep pace with the rest of our economy." The resolution then mentioned "the unfair competition of foreign imports." IT MEANS WHAT IT SAYS The driver of this truck found out the hard way that the sign means what it says. He was probably so disconcerted that he failed to note that the sign misspells 'buses' or perhaps he can't read. The accident occurred near an Atlanta, packing plant.

(AP the past year, was born to a military family at Ft. Assini-boine near Havre. A state representative in Washington, 1956-1964, Burns served as House minority floor leader. He also vas a chairman of the Democratic Party in Hawaii. No Selection Asked before his election opposed any acuon wnicn would erode further the original of the conference.

Cargo said intent of the mandatory oil im old Pacific Coast Conference had to have courage plus excellence, and Eddie did. The world could use more Eddie Chinskes. He was my candidate for sportsman of the year several times. o-O-o BUMMING AROUND. That recent yarn about hoboing has elicited the gift of a book from Robert L.

Peterson, a Hill professor of history at the University. Bob and I were chatting over coffee the other day when I mentioned the techniques of free-loading on the trains, and he sparked right away. He's preparing a history of the Northern Pacific Railway, the first ever compiled, and was interested in a discussion of some old-time yard bulls. The book is Nelson Algren's "Somebody in Boots," a bitter account of hoboing back in the depression days. The boots were the mark of authority on the sheriff's deputies, constables, cops and yard bulls who made life miserable for the dispossessed travelers of that era.

o0o COLORFUL PAGES. While John "oole and I were coffee-ing up, he suggested a series of profiles on some of the colorful personalities who shared in the making of Missoula. Just a few of the string of names he rattled off brought a flood of memories Doc Willard, Judge Duncan, W. J. McCormick, Fred Angevine, Doc Parsons and Harry Parsons, Lynde Catlin, Matty the Cop, C.

H. McLeod. All in good time, John, but not in this column. Each of those fellows is worth a feature story unto himself, not just a hit-and-run commentary here, 0 A COLLECTION PIECE. But, speaking of C.

H. McLeod, there was a merchandiser. Friend Billy McFarland has a collector's item that was given away by the Merc back in 1895, a dozen or so years after Herb started running the place. It's a bound volume entitled "Gladiators of the Prize Ring-Heroes of All Nations," "compliments of the MM Co. Clothing Department." It came to Bill from the late Fred W.

English, a building contractor who later served as a city commissioner. Jim Corbett was heavyweight champion of the world at the time the book was compiled by one Billy Edwards, former world lightweight champion. Of the thousands of words depicting the lore of the old-time boxing greats, here's one little yarn that Sonny Liston might ponder. It seems that John L. Sullivan once broke his left arm in the third round of a fight with Patsy Cardiff and went on to defeat Cardiff in the sixth round.

With a performance like that from Liston, maybe we wouldn't have the situation of a world champion choosing jail rather than military service. oOo FROM THE BEGINNING. Marvin Tschudin is the new and proud possessor of a 576-page book "History and Genealogy of the Judy-Judah-Tschudy-Tschudin-Tschudi-Schudi Family of America and Switzerland, 870 A.D. to 1954 A.D." When Marv was on the staff of the Montana exhibit at the New York World's- Fair a couple of years ago he looked up a relative who told him of the book. So now he's reading up on the family's beginnings, starting with a serf back in Switzerland.

He also has the family coat-of-arms, which includes an uprooted fir tree. Seems that the family line almost came to an end only a few generations after it started. One old boy was engaged in battle when his sword broke, and it looked as though the jig was up. But he grabbed an uprooted tree and swung it lustily at the foemen. slaying nine of them.

Hence the coat-of-arms. New Mexico has some water problems in common with Tex port program set up in 1959 to assure adequate domestic oil supplies. Hathaway explained as. Israeli Withdrawal Demanded whether Hawaii would be the site of the 1968 convention, The consensus of the meeting that the purpose of tne resolu apparently was that Texas Burns replied, "I think it would be entirely possible." No action on a site was taken at the con would gain little by shifting ffnm He nraconi nhcartnr stntiia By DREW MIDDLETON iliament, of a law making Jeru-j United States, the Soviet Union the Middle East from the Gen-! salpm a sirwlp ritv under Israe-iand Albania and that it be sub-eral Assembly back to the Se-. tion is to maintain tne on import quota at 122 per cent.

Pollution Laws Said state laws dealing with air and water quality con 0 mrmrHTMiiu in ine waier mitted to a vote by the emer- li administration. ference. Evans, 41, a civil and struc curity Council. But as long as agency. Texas' right to have New York Tlmei New Service UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.

-Yugoslavia presented a draft resolution to the General As- the Soviet Union retains a veto i two observers attend all coun- Foreign Minister Abba Ebanency session of the assembly of Israel announced through by Friday afternoon at the lat- in the Cnunril few wesfprn din- cil meetings was not changed trol should be enforced, tnat I sembly Wednesday demanding i neieciea was a pruuusdi iu delegation spokesman just after 1 est. lUlllOUJ CALTCll LUII3U ULUVC that Israel immediately with that passage of laws for these purposes where none exist should be sought "and that full the Yugoslav speech that his tural engineer, won the post some thought would have gone to Colorado Gov. John A. Love. However, Love is chairman of the Republican Governors Association which opens a two-day meeting at Grand Teton Nation Essentially, the resolution is oeacemakin work there.

draw all her forces from Jor government intended to keep Je- compromise between the Ameri-' Frank rnmpr Npw ir dan, Syria and the United Arab rusalem united and would ad- cooperation with the federal gov 1111 Ul II IV. VUIIVIII Whuuj wj can and Soviet drafts. It does land's representative, speaking the Public Land Law Review ernment for tne attainment oi 'minister the city's holy places nnt rntlrfpmn icraPi a5 the Commission. This commission in the assembly, made a blis these ends should be sought. al Park in Wyoming Thursday.

He is expected to be re-elected tering attack on Soviet policy and Premier Aleksei N. Kosy- Approved the recommendations of a committee that the 13 states should set up a west to that post Love headed the nominating The draft, submitted by Yugo-jwith scrupulous respect to airgressor as tne document slavia with 14 other nonalignedj faiths. does. But it is more emphatic countries as cosponsors, seeks Stressing the urgency" ere- aiKj unconditional on withdraw-to prevent Israel's "annexation" jated by Israel's "flagrant" vio- aj tnan tne American draft, of the Jordan part of Jerusa-jlation of the United Nations Yugoslavia's cosponsors are lem. Delegates repeatedly ex- charter.

Ambassador Daniloj Afghanistan, Burundi. Ceylon, has a Montana hearing scheduled in mid-July. Leading the opposition was Colorado Gov. John A. Love, who said he feels the commission has adequate communica- gin speecn to tne AssemDiy.

Corner said that the Soviet Un ern interstate nuclear compact committee with Utah Gov. Calvin L. Rampton as vice chair ion, through its "partisan stance" in favor of the Arabs, and that the committee be continued for the purpose of pre- man. Rampton and Burns were pressed their concern wednes-jLekic ot Yugoslavia a sue a the former French Congo, the only Democrats among the day over the passage Tuesday that his draft resolution be giv- Cyprus, Guinea, India, Indone- had made "a mockery of re- tion with the western governors, course to the Security Council The governors did accept a paring a linai araii lor suuima-sion to Congress and the legis- 13 governors. by the Knesset, the Israeli Par- en priority over uiose oi me sis Malaysia.

Mali, Pakistan, Tanzania to problems reso kmg that land of western states. of the Middle East." 'classification work of the Bu- Arnerican Samoa and Guam. a lie uiou icuta vii uiniaij General Thant to "insure com pliance" with withdrawal and i with the help of the U.N. Truce Supported action and incentives by the federal government which will stimulate and encourage the domestic gold mining industry. North Side Storm Sewer Bid Opening Set July 18 Tim Babcock's Grand Entrance 'Supervision Organization to se-j cure "strict observance" by all parties of the general armistice agreement.

The secretary general is asked i Collection Concludes a. 1 -k 1 a iL i hmI nwtnnJInit In tVA Availability by 9:30 cias are 10 De openea juiy oi roison ana exienaing norm- uiy minis mu caicuwub uh. t(j "urgently" to the as- 18 in Helena by the Montana easterly is also on the program sembly and the Security Council Highway Commission for con- for contract letting. rSSPtivl on Israel's compliance with the went about the business, of crawlinff throueh the window By ADDISON BRAGG The Billings Gazette nf hi mom which bv fortu- A. G.

Sanda. 320 Burlington. Other nroiects. bv countv'i-ij WEST YELLOWSTONE To lrft un-'rollected his thoughts and some surfacing on 7.9 miles of the appreciate this story you should locked items arouni the place he no Blaine, Primary north road, beginning at miiv -th have been standing outside the ab-longer needed, then placed a struction of a storm sewer from the Urlin Avenue Interchange to the Clark Fork River in Missoula, the Associated Press reported Wednesday. The storm sewer is planned i 1 Dude Motel here about 1 a.m.

uant ad Evervthir.2 was cone tion of a 25-foot concrete bridge isi oireci in iturct auu caicuu- Wednesday after the breakup of Tim bv 9:30 a fmt day tion identify him as Gov. Tim by 9:30 a.m. the first day! the state dinner which climaxed over an irrigation canal and resurfacing of 5.2 miles of the Harlem Dodson Road beginning Babcock. SIMMONS -coil- Vio Woctprn f.nvprnnrt fonfpr to carry the heavy spring run- ing northwesterly. Glacier, Secondary Construction of fence on portions of the Birch Creek-Browning Road, beginning at the Pondera-Glacie County line and extending 11.8 Turntable food ccnditioct.

J4H1 OOO appreciate it you Among the many souvenirs5 ence. To really off from Waterworks Hill and about one mile within the Fort to prevent flooding of the North Belknap Indian Reservation and Side in the event of a heavy extending northwesterly to Har- This sort of action from the to know that the conferees took home with them would have miles northwesterly. rain storm or heavy snow melt lem; also, the surfacing of 1.5 26 23-37 26 23 26 6 33 in the spring. Bids also are to be opened on lighting of two intersections at the junction of U.S. 93 and Area News Astrology Classified Comics Dear Abby Dr.

Molner Editorial Markets Sports TV' Schedule man who lost or mislaid his were burnt leather name plates want ad seldom fails to produce motel key was no less a per- which identified each gover- a happy customer. Plan your sonage than an honest to-good- nor's place at the square confer- jown one day soon. Just give ua ness governor, who after futile ence table. a ring, then sit back and wait attempts at arousing the man- They were made by a priso- for the action. May we count agement.

took the only way in- ner at Deer Lodge. you in for quick action, to a locked room. I "It was a rush job, too," a quick cash. But to savor the story to its Helena man in the kno said. puL jy.jui fullest, vou'd have to know the "The guy got the job just name of the man whose wife few days before he was due for to place your ad.

ask for classi- miles of the Zurich-North Road Park. Secondary Fencing of; beginning at U. S. 2 and extend- 16 miles of the Gardiner-Living northerly. beginning at the Pondera-Gla-Cascade, Urban Lighting on ier County line and extending Central Avenue West from 9th 11.8 miles northwesterly.

SL to 14th SL in Great Falls. I Yellowstone. Secondary Madison. Primary Surfacing Fencing portions of the Laurel of one mile of the main north road, beginning at 1st 12 and the junction of U.S. 93 and a county road at Lolo on the Lolo-Missoula highway.

2. 21 13 Surfacing of two miles of the Poison north and west roads be- Twin Bridges Road, in Twin St in Laurel and extending 7.9 ginning about 3.5 mika north, Bridges, beginning at the north northwesterly. ml held bis dinner jacket he parole. He had to curry." Oed. It as easy as that!.

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Pages Available:
1,236,429
Years Available:
0-2024