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Montana Standard-Post from Butte, Montana • Page 6

Location:
Butte, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Standard-Post Strike leader Bismarck will try a new warns Labor approach to Job Corps government Hoynes to speak at Dillon rites BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) Six months ago residents of this capital city were bitterly debating establishment of a federal Job Corps camp near Bismarck. TTiis week, about 75 Bismarck couples attended orientation conferences at the center, indicating they might be willing to bring corpsmen into their homes to show them what family life is like. Is it. a change of heart from last December when the controversy split the all-white community into a battle with racial overtones? Not exactly, but the furor has died down.

Most believe the attitude now is one of waiting for W. M. Saunders, 86, Madison native, is dead "ENNIS William Millard Saunders, 76, a lifelong Valley resident, died in his ranch home between Jeffers and Ennis Thursday. Death was to a heart attack. He was born to 1880, oldest of Mr.

and Mrs. J. W. Saunders, pioneer area residents. He married Virginia Southern ki March, 1916, in Jeffers.

Survivors besides his widow Include a son, Harrison of Ennis; daughters, Mrs. John (Betty) Leopold, Billings, Mrs. Erwin (Louise) Warner, Kalispell, and Mrs. Frank (Mary Ellen) Searl, Great Falls; brother, Theodore, Ennis, seven grandchildren and nieces and nephews. Arrangements are pending in the Raper Funeral Home.

Patti Pennock oi Butte dies Mrs. I. G. (Patti) Pennock, 79, of the Tripp Dragstedt Apts. died Thursday in a local hospital.

She was horn In St. Johns, N. Canada, Oct. .11, 1886. Mrs.

Pennock, the former Adlena Armstrong, came to 1 Butte as a child. She was married to the late Isaiah Pennock. Mrs. Pennock worked as a secretary for the Butte Chamber of Commerce until- her retirement 10 years ago. She was a member of the Episcopal faith.

Survivors include a son, Charles Butte, and grandchildren, Toni, Denise and Michael Pennock. The body is In Sayatovic- White's Funeral Home, where tervices will be Saturday at 11. the Job Corps to prove itself. The 200 trainees to be assigned to tte center won 1 arrive until mid-August. About 100 of the youths will be Negroes.

Part of the preparation blossomed in what is called the "family welcome plan." First of its kind in the nation, center officials say it is their attempt to turn out a "whole" corpsman who can take his place In society. "You can't teach 'family' in the classroom," asserted the renter director, Douglas Duncan. "These kids have got to see what a family is like." The family welcome plan, as proposed by Duncan and the Bismarck Ministerial Association, would involve a family inviting a corpsman to its home once or twice a week just to take part in whatever the family is doing that day. The Rev. Arnold P.

Spain, one who criticized fellow clergymen for not taking a firm stand in favor of the Job Corps last December, termed interest in the plan "a return to sanity by the community." Other clergymen say the association is only carrying out promise it made when bitterness was being voiced. It was the association's social action committee that contacted the families for support of the family welcome plan. A Methodist minister, the Rev. William R. Lindsay, said five of 20 families he contacted turned him down, three because tihey opposed the Job Corps.

"Four families who said they were interested," he emphasized "specifically requested they be assigned a Negro boy." Bismarck's population is about 19,000. J. B. McGarvey, Bulls, is dead James B. (Specs) McGarvey of 933 N.

Main died Thursday In a local hospital. He was a Butte native. He was employed by the Anaconda Co. as a boilermaker's helper. He was a member of' the Boilermaker's Union and St.

Lawrence Church. As a young man he played football on Centerville and Dublin Gulch teams in the old Independent League. Survivors include his widow, Mary Margaret; son James, Butte; daughters, Mrs. William Kelly, Walkerville, Kathleen and JoAnn, both of Butte; brother, Donald, Butte sisters, Mrs. Agnes Fagan, San Francisco, and Mrs.

Frank Van Dorn, Seattle, nieces 'and nephews. Arrangements are pending in Duggan Merrill Mortuary. LONDON (UPI) -The leader of the striking National Union of Seamen (NUS) Thursday night threatened that if Prime Minister Harold Wilson uses Royal Navy ships to break the four-day-old strike it "could mean the downfall of the Labor government." The threat came after a union leader accused the government of using the Royal Navy for strike-breaking purposes. Wilson decided, meanwhile, to4 postpone new emergency measures in the strike that already has idled more than 400 ships. Wilson received reports on the strike at a cabinet meeting late Thursday.

The walkout by the union is gradually clogging this island nation's vital ports. William Hogarth, NUS general secretary, cautioned Wilson not to push the union "beyond the point of no return." "If the gauntlet is thrown down." he warned, "our members will not be backward in accepting the challenge." 'No room' now This bluebird and its mate soon discovered "vacancy" sign on birdhouse erected by Ricky Kilgore, 9, behind bis Birmingham, home. DILLON D. J. Hoynes, i secretary of Montana School boards Association and a former assistant professor of English at West, ern Montana College, will be speaker at Beaverhead County High School commencement exercises Monday evening, Principal B.

W. Lodge announced. A record class of 109 seniors will receive diplomas during the ceremonies which open at 8 in the school auditorium. Baccalaureate services will Sunday evening at in the auditorium with the Rev. Donald L.

Simmonds, pastor of Dillon's First Presbyterian Church, as speaker. Hoynes, who attended elementary and high school at Malta, received his BA in English from the University of Montana in 1950 and received his master's degree there the following year. Chosen as a Fulbright student, he was assigned graduate work in comparative education at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1952-53 and returned there as a Fulbright teacher In 1962-63. A World War II veteran, Hoynes is a former teacher, principal and superintendent at Fort Benton schoo's. He joined the Western Montana College English department in 1963 and the following year accepted his present post.

J. HOYNES Dillon JC delegation going to convention DILLON A large delegation of Dillon Jaycees and Jay- ceens will attend the state convention Friday and Saturday in Helena. The Dillon chapter's vintage fire truck will be among parade entries in the capital city and Jayceens will be diligently supporting the candidacy of their member, Mrs. Marvin Lundberg, for state vice president. DEATHS Gexge W.

Howard, died in Denver Thursday. Services will be in Butte. Peter A. McDonald, S3, of 2607 Harvard died Thursday. James B.

(Specs) McGarvey of 933 N. Main died Thursday. Mrs. I.G. (Patti) Pennock, 79 of Tripp Dragstedt Apts.

died Thursday. NEW ARRIVALS In St. James Community Hospital: Mr. and Mrs. Lee Holmes, 617A S.

Jackson, a daughter, May 12. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Mohr, Dillon, a daughter, Thursday.

Mr. and Mrs. Leroy A. Ford, 939 W. Copper, a daughter, Thursday.

DIVORCES ASKED Helen Jo Harwood from Robert W. Harwood Jr. Delores J. Koepplin from Carl M. Koepplin.

FUNERAL TODAY Andrew Maki, Wayrynen Funeral Home, Mount Moriah Cemetery. George Howard, 65, attorney, is dead Many birds like to bathe in fresh water or dust. This activity discourages vermin, but pleasure seems to be the bird's main motivation. George W. Howard, for- merry of Butte, died Thursday in Denver.

He was born in Queen City, June 6, 1900. He attended Montana College of Mineral Science and Technology and received a law degree from the University of Montana. Mr. Howard practiced law in Butte a number of years and served as city attorney and U.S. commissioner before going to Washington, D.C., where he worked for the Interstate Commerce Commission.

For the past 10 years he has been with the ICC in Denver. He retired in January. Mr. Howard was married to Nita DeTour of Basin, who was a nurse in Butte. He was a member of the Montana Bar Association.

Survivors include his wife and son, George D. of Denver; sisters, Mrs. Fred Henningsen, Mrs. Fred Schwanz and, Mrs. C.

L. Thomas, all of Butte, and Mrs. William Twohy of Helena. The body will be taken to Pygmy Negritoes in the Philippines hunt with poison-tipped arrows in sight of the huge Clark Air Force Base, only 45 miles from bustling Manila. Butte and is expected arrive here Saturday.

Services will be in Sayatovic White's Funeral Home Monday at H. The body will be taken to Helena for burial. i Got a Sheet Metal Job? FLOWER BOXES DOWN SPOUTS GUTTERING KITCHEN HOODS Anything in Sheet Metal CALL JOHN E. BURLEY ENGINEER NG 830 S. Main Ph.

723-412! Heart patient returned to surgery HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) Walter L. McCans, the artificial- heart patient, was returned to surgery again Thursday as doctors sought to halt a persistent bleeding tendency in the chest. An artificial pump ttat had assisted McCans 1 damaged heart nearly 27 hours was removed from fte patient's chest Wednesday. Surgeons said the natural heart had improved sufficiently to assume its normal function without assistance.

A midafternoon hospital advisory said McCans' 'heart, despite the hemomhagic tendency, continues to function well. The morning bulletin had said McCans had been transferred from a special three-room unit to regular unit at Methodist Hospital. The 61-year-old retired Navy man from Woodinvflle, was returned to surgery at 12:15 p.m. (EOT). "A large volume of fluid was removed from his chest," the advisory said without stating specifically whether the fluid was blood.

McCans received the partial artificial-heart implant during a five hour operation Tuesday. Tubes forming a bypass of the damaged left ventricle, the heart's main pumping chamber, were implanted. A plastic pump was attached to the tubes but remained outside the chest. Only the pump was removed during McCans' first return to surgery Wednesday. Will it rain or shine tomorrow? Where can I find a good used car for What time does the movie start? Who's playing today? What's the price of chop meat? Where can I find a split level? What's a 7 letter word for trip, starting with a Did the stock market go up today? I.

For all the answers, turn the pages of this newspaper. Every day your newspaper helps you makeadozen differerrtdectsions-frtjmwhethertowearyotir raincoat or leave it home to whether you should go out to a movie orwatchoneat home. To bringyouthis important package of local happenings and world news requires a vast team of trained reporters. Right here we have our own fine reporters. Everywhere else we have The Associated Press.

Everything that's going on, goes into our newspaper. That's why you get so much out of it THE MONTANA STANDARD-POST A MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.

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About Montana Standard-Post Archive

Pages Available:
6,737
Years Available:
1960-1966