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The Billings Gazette from Billings, Montana • 12

Location:
Billings, Montana
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Page:
12
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Mrs. Almo Jackson I James Drummond 12 CTljr billing (Sasrtir Sunday, February 11, 1965 Morning Edition Mrs. Edward Hegel GLENDIVE Mrs. Edward Hegel, 21, Glendive, died early RED LODGE Funeral services for Mrs. Almo Olivia Jackson, 87, former Red Lodge Who's Winnina What? Saturday morning in her trailer Highs Sunday 45-55, except 25-35 resident, who died in Sacramen- northeast and some higher val- Calif.

Thursday, will be 2 I CftlifhiiTOpt nnM i Ih mire i leys southwest Lows BIRTHS Girls Mr. and Mrs. Russell B. Knut- son, Grass Range. Mr.

and Mrs. Daniel L. Sturde p.m. Tuesday at Olcott Funeral portion. Sunday night 15-25, except 5 be By Tom Wicker (C) mi New York Times WASHINGTON Last November, Ambassador Bunker and Home in Red Lodge.

The Rev. Orville Zimmerman will officiate. Burial will be in Red Lodge Cemetery. She was born Jan. 18, 1881 in Marion County, Mo.

She was married to U. S. Jackson July low to 5 above some higher valleys extreme southwest. WYOMING Generally fair west Sunday and Monday; partly cloudy and a little cooler a te border Sunday and his considerable reputation for integrity and professionalism behind the assertion that the government of South Vietnam controlled 68 per cent of the population of that unhappy country. When challenged on the figure, he repeated it, said it represented a 13 per cent gain in category of hamlets was not really secure, and many officials and reporters in South Vietnam believe it was not, then Bunker's over-all figure for government control of the population dropped from 68 to 44 ner rent.

vant, 2931 St. John's Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Gary L.

Leonard, 620 N. Broadway. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kills Right, Lame Deer.

Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Ruona, 2429 12th Ave. N. Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas Thomp- General t-moreland came SCOBEY James Malcolm Drummond, 83, Scobey area homesteader, died Saturday afternoon in a Scobey hospital He had been ill about a week. Funeral services will be 10 a.m. Tuesday at Scobey Lutheran parish with the Rev. Stanley Knudson officiating.

Burial will be in Scobey cemetery. He was born Mar. 21, 1884, at Langdon, N.D., a son of Mr. and Mrs. James Drummond.

He was reared in North Dakota and Saskatchewan, Canada. He worked as a blacksmith at Saskatchewan, for three years, before coming to the Scobey area to homestead in 1909. He married Nora Tande in June 1912 at 1 a w. They lived on his homestead 15 miles northwest of Scobey until 1961 when they moved to Scobey. He hnwo r-t-n home of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Dawson County Coroner L. W. Silvernale says Mrs. Hegel shot herself in the right temple with a .22 caliber gun about 2 a.m. and died instantly.

She was born Darline Marie Vincent March 14, 1946 in Glendive, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Verlyn Vincent and was raised in Glendive. She was married to Edward Hegel in Glendive March 15, 1963 and they moved to Baker after their marriage. They returned to Glendive in 1965.

Monday. High Sunday 40's east, pnn tn rmnvinrc'' 35-45 west, 25-35 in 1902 in Missouri. They moved and Wind River Valley. to Red LodSe after their mar" the American feS nrn 1 1 the last year, and termed this 3UII, iatt Ldliis UMK. EVEN STRONGER repudia- Boy nagc.

I Mr. Jackson died in Red Lodge in 1958. Mrs. Jackson uon 01 tsumcer ciaim now nas Mr -mH Mrc Mrs. il U1IU 4111 J.

A VU1 1VIV AIRPORT WEATHER DATA From United States Weather Bureau for 24 hours ending at 5:30 p.m. Saturday: K. Maximum 50 Minimum 28 Precipitation: None; so far this month, none; total for same period of February I a year ago, total since Jan. 1, 1.22; total for same period a year ago, people the war in Vietnam was being won. It now can be seen what the had to say represented poor judgment, gross overstatement or Chandler, 519 Ave.

D. DEATHS had been living with a daughter in Sacramento the past few years. She was a member of Red come, ironically, from Secretary of Defense McNamara. In his so-called "Posture Report" on the Department McNamara said the "Hamlet "steady but not spectacular" progress. Hedrick Smith of the New York Times showed the 68 per cent figure depended entirely upon the third of six categories into which South Vietnamese hamlets are classified, according to the degree of government control of each.

If that third William C. Arnold, 84, 716 N. 74' '2; normal for WICKER Lodge Methodist church. I I nuui ijr iciiip. O.u 7 I 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 Evaluation System," which sets Paul Morase, 50, Laurel.

Surviving are the widower; a son, Kevin; a daughter, Carri; 40 39 38 37 37 37 36 35 33 31 30 29 was an old-time dance fiddler! up the six categories, "indicates fire CALLS Surviving are a son, Glenn worse. Bunker, for instance, placed Hourly temp a p.m. 12:31 a.m Saturday (City) 2 '33 '3'7 4'6 530 Jackson, 1949 Patricia Lane; a qnrui Ul 1 -ii. -L ouuu uiuuk uuuntry cir-; Sunrise 7:23 a Sunset 5:34 p.m. a ill i wouu- row.

Sacramento: a sister Mrs aoout by per cent oi me peopie of South Vietnam live under allied military protection and some form of continuing (government of Vietnam) MONTANA AND OUT-OF-STATE DATA tj vA A in the Scobey area many years. Mr. Drummond is survived: by the widow; daughter, Mrs. Dallas Gaines, Flaxville; broth-' ers, John, Dryden, Ontario; sis-1 ter, Mrs. Victoria McCrimmon, Flim Flom, Manitoba; five Midland Empire Briefs ma, (viii una, vim.

Baker 37 20 Des Moines 20 ii granacnuaren ana tnree ereat- Detroit 13 grandchildren. cle. Car fire caused by backfiring carburetor. Damage to wiring, battery, hood paint and carburetor. 2:58 p.m.

Saturday (County) 640 Main St. Grass fire burned off about three acres. a by persons burning grass. Belgrade Billings Broadus Butte Cut Bank Dillon Drummond 21 50 46 24 48 32 33 35 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. Waller Funeral Home in Scob- Charles A.

Waite 36 62 4 40 29 22; 53 the parents; a brother, Dale Vincent, U.S. Navy in Korea; two sisters, Mrs. Marilyn Crawford, Glendive and Mrs. Jack-lyn Schuh, Butte; paternal grandfather, Percy Vincent, Loyal, Wis. and the maternal grandfather, Charles Stewart, Spokane.

Funeral services will be 2 Wednesday at Glendive Congregational Church with the Rev. Kenneth Biel officiating. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Gardens. Koch-Huebl-Silver-nale Mortuary is in charge. Glasgow Great Falls 55 is in charge.

UTICA -Charles Arthur 11 Hardin 28 Fairbanks 33 22: Fort Worth 65 11 Honolulu 77 21 Indianapolis 17 7i Jacksonville 61 2 Juneau 31 18 Kansas City 28 26 Los Angeles 63 28 Louisville 24 23 Memphis 56 23 Miami 68 7 Milwaukee 11 21 P. 6 27 New Orleans 66 16 New York 19 26' Okla. City 62 16' Omaha 23 22 Philadelphia 20 Waite, 66, Utica rancher, died Harlowton Havre Helena Kalispell Lewistown Livingston Miles City Missoula Red Lodge W. Yel'stone 55 11 Phoenix 65 11 Whitehall 40 3 Pittsburgh BILLINGS AND VICINITY -Mostly fair Sunday and Monday. High both days near 50.

Low Sunday night near 20. EAST OF DIVIDE Mostly fair Sunday and Sunday night. Monday, partly cloudy east, mostly fair west. Somewhat colder east Monday, otherwise little temperature change. Saturday morning in the Lewis-42 town hospital of a heart attack.

14 25 He was born Feb. 19, 1901 in 14 Utica, a son of Mr. and Mrs. s'0 Walter Waite. He attended schools in Utica and graduated 29 from Hobson High School.

Later Y6 he attended Montana Tech in J' Butte. 54 37 He married Eileen Rooney June 3, 1924 in Stanford. 10 Sheridan 45 Albany 18 Albuquerque 55 Livestock Meetings FAIRVIEW The Richland County Extension Office and the Fairview FFA Chapter will begin, this week, a series of area livestock meetings in the Fair-view High School. The first meeting on Feb. 12, will have for its speaker, N.

A. Jacobson, extension livestock specialist, Montana Extension service. There will be four meetings in the series with outstanding speakers in various fields. Farm Bureau Meets SIDNEY Richland County Farm Bureau members heard a talk on changes in the Keogh Bill at their meeting Thursday evening in the Sidney Cabin. Larry Carlson, Glendive, explained a change in the present 49 Atlanta 20! Ptlnd, Me.

8 Ptlnd, Ore. 54 38 Rapid City 44 28 Richmond 33 9 St. Louis 24 271 Salt Lk. City 51 16; San Diego 62 5 San Fran. 57 3: Seattle 57 8: Tampa 64 4 Washington 24 21 1 Winnipeg 5 On Dean's List SIDNEY Vernon Keller, a Sidney student at York College, York, has been named to the Dean's List at the college.

He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Keller, of Sidney. Institute Set BUFFALO, Wyo. Bob Quade, county agent, has announced the annual Ranch and Home Institute will be held Feb.

14, at the Catholic Recreation hall at 10:45. Speakers will base their talks on information concerning livestock, ranch and home management. Those who will preside in-elude William K. Heinbaugfr, appraiser for the Federal Land Bank, his program will be about land values; Dr. Tracy Rhodes, veterinarian, will talk on livestock.

Vice president of Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Denver 15 50 31 9 16 21 11 56 He was a member of the Prprinitation: Boston .16. Cleveland .08, "Allied military protection" obviously is quite a different thing from real control of the population by Saigon. The latter term, used by Bunker, has no significant meaning 1 it implies that 68 per cent" of the people are loyal to the Saigon government, look to it for protection and justice, and devote to it their energies and allegiance; none of these things need be true under "allied military protection." But these exposures of the "68 per cent" of the population supposedly "controlled" by the "government" in Saigon are not really necessary. Striking with startling force and persistence in every major city of South Vietnam last week, the Viet Cong delivered a blow which showed that in no part of the country are the people secure from their attacks, or will with certainty alert the South Viet-n a Army to the Viet Cong's presence and preparations. That being so, it cannot be said any part of South Vietnam is truly under a i 's "control." And this will be all the more so if the effect of last week's attacks is to make the people even less confident of "allied military protection." WHY, THEN, were the Amer Philadelphia .02, Phoenix .31, Pittsburgh Church nf Christ Splinter Groups To Meet By The Associated Press Two Montana political groups law which will permit seu-em ployed persons to claim greater income tax exemptions on part with widely divergent viewpoints Surviving are the widow; five sons, Walter L.

Waite, Conrad; Charles Waite, Coburg, Dorcy Waite, Utica; Don Waite, Alexandria, Va. and Robert Waite, Bozeman; two daughters, Mrs. Charles Fellows, Lodge Grass and Mrs. William Miller, Great Falls; a brother, Day Waite, Portland, a sister, Mrs. Felix Aubuchon, Los Angeles and 12 grandchildren.

Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Monday at Cloyd Chapel in Lewistown. Burial will be in Utica Cemetery. James W. Yecha WINIFRED Funeral serv- Paul Morase LAUREL Requiem mass for Paul Morase, 50, Laurel, who died Saturday morning in a Billings hospital of burns received in a fire at Yellowstone County Nursing Home Feb.

3, will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Tuesday at St. Anthony's Catholic Church in Laurel. Burial will be in Laurel Cemetery. Mr.

Morase was born in Lewistown March 8, 1917, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Morase. He was raised in Lewistown and moved to Laurel in 1958. He moved to the nursing home in 1964.

Byron Owen Jr. CASPER, Wyo. A former Montana man died Thursday after an incident which sent another Wyomingite to a Denver hospital. Funeral services for Byron Owen 42, who has been in Casper two years as manager of Dowell, a division of Dow Chemical will be at 2 p.m. Monday at First Baptist Church in Seminole, Okla.

Burial will be in Seminole. Dale E. Wheeler, 36, of Casper, is in critical condition and is being treated in a Denver hospital for arsene gas poisoning. The two men were priming a centrifical pump on a water well which they thought contained fresh water. An inhibitor, put in the water to prevent corrosion of steel, exuded the fumes which caused Wheeler's illness, a Dowell official said.

Cause of Owen's death will be determined in an autopsy expected to be released later this week. Owen was born April 12, 1926 in Nevada, Mo. He was graduated from Oklahoma in Stillwater. He married Carrie Carr on April 25, 1952 in Gainesville, Tex. Working for Dowell in the Rocky Mountains for 14 years, he began in Wilson, N.D.; worked in Glendive; Williston, N.D.; Roundup; Rock Springs, and Casper.

Owen was a member of College Heights Baptist Church in Casper and was a Mason. Surviving are the widow; two sons: Paul Ourcell, Vernon paratrooper in Vietnam; the parents: Stillwater; a sister: Mrs. Thurman Smith, Seminole; three brothers: Bill, Announcements OUR THANKS We wish to express our sincere thanks and appreciation to our many friends, relatives, neighbors for their kind expressions of sympathy with a special thanks to the nursing staff, 3 floor, St. Vincents Hospital. Your kindness was a great help in our recent bereavement.

The family of Mrs. Arthur Nutting. CARD OF THANKS We want to thank each and everyone for all the acts of kindness, flowers, food and cards shown us during our time of sorrow. It was greatly appreciated by all of us. Mrs.

Lauretta Strieker And Sons Mrs. George Sticker And Family Mr. Mrs. Louie Sticka And Family CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our sincere thanks and appreciation to all who so thoughtfully extended comforting sympathy and help in our recent sorrow. To the member of the Billings Police Department, Yellowstone County Sheriffs Dept.

the Billings Lions Club, other organizations and his many friends for the cards, floral tributes and memorials. To Mrs. Albert Scheid and Rev. John Houlihan. The family of Donald "Blackie" Johnson.

the Omaha National Bank, David R. will discuss credit and livestock; Robert Bergstrom assistant professor will hold separate meetings Feb. 17 in the Placer Hotel in Helena. William G. Cregg, Missoula, chairman of the Montana Democrats for McCarthy Club, said his group will meet to plan strat of earnings set aside for retirement.

Sidney Births SIDNEY Births at Community Memorial Hospital in Sidney the past week were those of daughters born to Mr. and Mrs. Gary King, Feb. 2, and Mr. and Mrs.

Gene Fisher, Feb. 9, all of Sidney. Sent to Prison SIDNEY A Glendive youth, of veterinary science at the University of Wyoming, will head a program dealing with internal parasites of livestock, the causes, symptoms and remedies for the ailment; Ken Faulkner, Wyoming extension livestock specialist, will give in-formation about increasing lamb production and improved ican people given Bunker's rosy estimate and Westmoreland's egy aimed at dumping Lyndon Johnson from the party's 1968 ticket in favor of Sen. Eugene McCarthy, D-Minn. The Montana Conservatives, a November prediction "the end begins to come into view?" In the lurid light of last week's He was a foster child of Mr.

llgilt-WllJK KIUUU, Will XllCCt 41 ff Ia, JT 7rtUrt OO the same time in the same hnrel Sand Mrs. cnaries Mcuvony ot Laurel to stress "education and the bal Viet Cong attacks, in the ominous echoes of the great Com methods of sheep management; kdward Pexton, an instructor at the University of Wyoming, Arnold Gaetz, 18, was sentenced munist buildup at Khe Sanh, are Americans to believe they Charles E. Jones to serve two years in the state will discuss the topic of quality and values of wool; Mrs. lot box to regain the Constitutional guarantees given us by our founding fathers." Speakers include Mike Foley, Helena sawmill operator who recently declared he would not comply with the state's anti-air pollution law prison at Deer Lodge after he were deliberately misled or were rather the victims of Mayme Schoonover, former Wy plead guilty to a charge of sec Wyo. Funeral services for Charles E.

Jones, 88, retired Lovell area farmer, former Winifred resident, who died Friday in Idaho Falls, will be 11 a.m. Monday at Creel-Gurnett-Retz Funeral Home. He was born March 2, 1885 in Czechoslovakia and moved to Kansas in 1907. He homesteaded near Winifred in 1912. in 1915 he married Frances Dolizal in Winifred.

He farmed in the Winifred area until 1952 when he moved to Chicago. In 1966 he moved to Idaho Falls to live with a daughter. He was a member of Czecho- oming extension specialist, said she plans to base her subject ond degree assault. The sentence was imposed Wednesday faulty official judgment? Sen. Robert Kennedy, offered one answer in his at died at ms Novell nuiue said.

in district court by Judge L. C. Gulbrandson. Gaetz has been held in Richland County jail since Jan. 9.

The assault, to for homemakers on high altitude baking. Growers Elect SIDNEY Montana-Dakota Beet Growers Association re Thursday night, will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at the LDS chapel in Lovell. Bishop Clarence Morrison will officiate. Burial will be in Byron Cemetery.

Haskell Funeral Home is in charge. Mr. Jones was born Sept. 29, which he pleaded guilty, occurred the evening of Jan. 9, tack on the war policy in Chicago this week.

It was, he said, "a policy founded on what had been shattered by the Viet Cong offensive was "the mask of official illusion" exemplified by the Bunker-Westmoreland statements. The McCarthy meeting will be attended by Curtis Gans, McCarthy's assistant campaign coordinator, and Paul Becthol, regional coordinator. One other group meeting the same day in the Placer will be when Sidney Patrolman Harry slovakian National Council of America. Buffalo, N.Y.; Earl Lawton, I Jack, Las Vegas; One 1879 in Beaver, 111 elected Eddie Buxbaum of Fair- Surviving are a a T-fo married T.avina Jane! view, president, and Albert grandchild. SMHTIB'S Funeral Homo Established in 1896 REED Committal services for Harry Reed, Eagle Hotel, will be held at Mountview Cemetery Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock.

the State Democratic Women's the executive board. "We have misconceived Jones in Salt Lake City Oct. 11, Mrs. Frances Cavanaugh, Idaho 1905. They moved to Falls; two sons, Stanley Yecha, Groskmsky, of Sidney, secretary-treasurer, at a meeting here Announcements nature of the war," Kennedy Wvo.

from Sieurd. Utah and to ruilJ1. wasii. ana viaor ie- Lovell in 1964. Burglaries Solved Monday evening.

They also ac- said. "We have sought to re-cepted the same type of con- solve by military might a contract as last year's for the 1968 flict whose issue depends upon croD and voted to heb in build-1 the will and conviction of the Schmidt stopped a car containing Gaetz and several others on a downtown street where they were pursuing several Sidney youths in another car. Other youngsters in the Gaetz car jumped out and ran but Gaetz, when asked for identification, drew a blackjack from his pocket and struck the policeman on the head. Schmidt was not hospitalized but received medical care. I Surviving are the widow and ing two storage bins for bulk South Vietnamese people." That will and conviction were sugar at the Holly factory here LEWISTOWN (AP) Lewis-town police apparently have solved four house burglaries committed in recent weeks with the arrests of two 17-year-old youths.

Named as directors for missing, he said, because the OPEN HOUSE 50th Wed-d i Anniversary for Mr. Mrs. Henry C. Tietz on Sunday, Feb. 18, 3 p.m.

at St. Joseph's Hall, Fromberg. No gifts please. Adv. Dr.

C. P. Smith, optometrist, will return Feb. 26. Office will remain open.

Adv. Exceptionally good rummage sale Saturday night, all day Sunday 25th Mont. Adv. dumps in this area were Homer South Vietnamese people found Selby, Marley; Lee Niles, Dore, noining to ngni lor a corrupt viit ji nib iuicianM aj a brother, Eugene Jones, Cody, Wyo. Fultz Services Funeral services for Mrs.

Dorothea F. Fultz, 67, of 423 Clark wife of Walter S. Fultz, were held Saturday in Michelot-ti-Sawyers Mortuary chapel. The Rev. Paul Seastrand, pastor of First English Lutheran Church officiated.

Pallbearers were Jere Eikel- Also in Wednesday's session, In.D.; Andy Cayko, Hardy; committed Thursday evening, whose officials are interested TV, Gene Denowh, Ludington; Her SETTERGREN-CAREY Funeral Home Serving the Community Since 721 N. 29th Ph. 2S2-2888 MELANI Robert Melani, of 413 S. 30th, funeral services will be conduct ed Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Set-tergren-Carey Funeral Chapel.

Interment in Mountview cemetery. burglary in the first degree. Po Kenneth Eschenbacher, about 35, of Sidney, pleaded innocent to a charge of bigamy, and was freed on $1000 bond. The case will be heard at a jury term, probably in late March. man Propp, Ed Propp, and Bill Badt, Sidney; Don Steinbeisser, Piche; Leonard Hagler, Huff-manville; Harold Wind, Savage and Warren Prevost, Duell.

lice reported a number of items taken in the four burglaries were found in the home of the two youths. Among the recov- eroA itpme uprp in rash a cna, ian Mateo, nine grandchildren and one greatgrandchild. Lon Ulvestad Lon Kenneth Ulvestad, 19, a student at Montana state school for deaf and blind, Great Falls, died Saturday in a toboggan accident. He was born July 16, 1948, at Glasgow, a son of Mr. and Mrs.

Arne Ulvestad. He attended school in Seattle, in 1955. He and his parents moved to Billings in 1956 and he enrolled in Great Falls that year. Mr. Ulvestad was a member of Peace Lutheran Church in Great Falls, was an Eagle Scout, belonged to the Literary Club, was treasurer of the class of 1968 and was on the basketball and bowling teams.

He is survived by his parents, 1627 brother, Dennis Lee, family home; sister, Mrs. Ted LaBard, 643 Howard paternal grandmoth- 1 1 Directors at large are Harold YOUth Center StUd lea Re 1 1 e- Joe Steinbeisser, and Merle Norman Cosmetics Mail orders filled promptly. 626 Central Great Falls, Montana, 59401. Adv. Zuck's Studio will be closed from Feb.

10 to March 4th. Adv. i wina. iney, along witn regional only in lining their own pockets, and which could provide neither security nor justice for its own population. THE ADMINISTRATION has pointed to the same necessity of providing the Vietnamese what Kennedy called "a stake in their own society." Yet, it has persisted in Americanizing the war, trying to win a conflict which, manifestly, Saigon has neither the will nor the ability to win for itself, even with American support.

This week, American troops had to help valuable sapphire and diamond berg. Jy KT a 1 1 Les ring, liquor and the contents of a Campbell, Jake Letwak, Harry woman's purse Ellls and Norv Sell. Burial was Both of the 'youths arrested Mountview Cemetery are nn narnlp from thp Pinp Hill I Mrs. Fultz, who died a "I I I A I TTT-J 1 1 school at Miles City. BUFFALO, Wyo.

D. F. Skiles, chairman of the county commissioners and the Johnson County Fairboard, met with a group of 11 high school students to discuss the need for a youth recreation center. directors Buxbaum and Selby and alternate Arnold Dige, will attend the regional meeting in Billings. Reassigned Bluings nospuai weunesuciy iui-lowing a heart attack, is survived by the widower, a stepson, a sister and one Don't forget her Valentine flowers! Call now, we'll deliver Feb.

14. Gainan's, Ph. 245-6434. Adv. Illicheloffi-Sauigers 1001 Alderson Ph.

252-3417 Mortuary Parking Adjacent Wolterman Rites The students asked for the exhibit building at the county William Arnold miaY Lyie beaman, as- queu insurrection in the capital' COLUMBUS Requiem mass sistant county superviser at the city itself. for Gerhard F. Woltermann, 85, Farmers Home Administration! i fairgrounds be considered for aj se anc iui ui-c lcwici. ii uic yiau uince nere since isw, nas Deen; we imjuu may ue wai wniif urday morning at St Mary proves feasible Skiles said it reassigned to the FHA office in the administration has publicly icatholic Church in Columbus might be 1 I to obtain Forsyth. He has been with the insisted it is fighting only forThe ReV- Micnael Kelly officiat.

the freedom and self-determina- some federal funds to help fi- FHA since 1965. Replacing him FUNERAL CHAPEL 10 Yellowstone Ave. 248-8807 William C. Arnold, 84, 716 N. er, Mrs.

Georgine Ulvestad, 32nd died at 8:15 a.m. Sat- Seattle; maternal grandmother, urday in a Billings hospital i Mrs. Hazel Scarborough, Bil-where he had been a patient lings. since Jan. 31.

1 Dahl-Brown Funeral Chapel is Smith's Funeral Home is in charge, handling arrangements. "West Park Plaza opportunity" Business space for Ph. 252-1726 9:30 to 6 p.m. Adv. POLLY'S Cleaners havej opened their NEW Quality Dry Cleaning Plant in ALPINE VIL-LAGE-1126 16th St.

West to better serve West End customers. Cali 259-6957 and POLLY'S radio equipped trucks will pick up and deliver your cleaning. Please call EARLY for prompt service. Adv. at the Sidney office will be tion of the South Vietnamese nance tne project.

ed and burial was in Mountain-view Cemetery. Rosary was recited Friday night at Cashmore Memorial Chapel. Gary C. Gamble, who will train people, at their request, it has under County Superviser Billie privately had in mind an Amer- j. Burns.

iiamDie, a iaeo pouucai goal oi maintain Pallbearers were Jerry Fa- Mr. Arnold was born a son of Mr. and Mrs. Carlile Arnold on Louis A. Gorr ing a line in Asia against both lgan John Fagan Earl Wolter.

Communism and Chinese na uate of Utah State University with a degree in agriculture grew up on an Idaho ranch. He mann, Roger Woltermann, Ron tionalism Nov. 16, 1883 in Antrum, Crum-' lin County, Ireland. MILES CITY Funeral serv- Remodeling of building would include repairing the roof, putting in a floor for roller skating and dancing, building a snack bar and installation of toilet facilities. An adult advisory board would be expected to aid the students in operating the Woltermann and Larry Holten.

liK fcJ is married and has one son. Mr. Woltermann died Wednes He married Frances A. Gill ices for Louis A. Lrorr, ot Thus, no matter what the fail- THE YARN SHOP, Buttreys Center, invites you to use our PAY AS-YOU KNIT ures of will and effort of the tne Columbus hospital on April 9, 1914 in Toronto, i Miles City, who died Friday in South Vietnamese people the an( 1S survived by five sons, They moved to Billings the a Miles City hospital, will be at Club Loses same year.

Mrs. Arnold died in 10 a.m. Tuesday at Trinity Lu- two daughters, three brothers, administration persists in the BUFFALO, Wyo. The -5 e5 a I at President and his advisers be falo Rifle Club took a beating 0 sisters, 19 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. Frank Glenn Billings on Dec.

4, 1959. theran Churcn in Mues uty. Mr. Arnold married Mrs. Ida The Rev.

R. K. Thomas will Agnes Dawson in Billings on officiate. Burial will be in Cus-Dec. 8, 1962.

ter County Cemetery. He worked 30 years as a mill- Mr. Gorr was born May 10, er for Russell Milling now 1 1894 in a Minn. He New Minister at the hands of the Sheridan shooters. Final score stood at Over the counter cash dis-c a WALLY'S CLEANERS "Heart of the Heights" 645 Main.

Cleaning with a reputation. Adv. lieve it is an American war for American interests, and, as McNamara once put it, "We will be far better off facing the BILLINGS MONUMENT COMPANY 3523 Montana Ave. Ph. 245-3391 Hazelton Brothers The Only Authorized Rock of Ages Dealer in Established 1896 Cpen Mon.

thru hi. 8:00 Till Noon Sat. Eve. and Sun. by appointment.

SIDNEY The congregation 1943 to 1934. of the Church of Christ will MILES CITY Funeral serv- Peavey Flour Mills, before re- farmed in Minnesota and Top scorers for Buffalo were issue in Vietnam" than nearer Walt Christensen and Dean Fir- our own territory. welcome a new minister, Mr. Gene Goben, of Sidney, ices for Frank Glenn, 73, of tiring in 1952. moved to Miles City in 1944.

He Miles City, who was found dead He was a member of First was employed by Babcock and nekas. Lee Truck Lines and moved to i Even if those judgments are in his apartment Friday, will Christian Church. who is expected here sometime Sheridan's best scorers were correct and they are, instead, be at 2 p.on. Tuesday at Graves Survivors include the widow; Loretta DeVries formerly of the Palace Beauty, also Ann Shepherd have joined the staff of Bev's Beauty House who extends a warm welcome to all wishing the utmost in personal beauty care. For appt.

ph. 252-5900. Adv. Funeral Home Nelson and Reed. judgments about which there is a son, Morris, 11 Valley Drive; 1 considerable question the a d- next week.

He will replace Evangelist Richard Dacus who left Sidney last month to serve a church in Casper, after serving as minister of the local church since 1960. Mr. Dacus Billings in 1948. He retired in 1960 and returned to Miles City. Survivors include three daughters: Mrs.

Clarence Ferguson, Miles City; Mrs. Eliza The Rev. W. H. Boyles, Assembly of God pastor, will officiate.

Burial will be in Custer County Cemetery. a daughter, Mrs. Kathleen Stewart, Cypress, a step-son, A. H. Dawson, 2309 Grand three step-daugh Church Anniversary ministration has not been willing to fight the war on such a basis of self-interest.

It has pre FAIRVIEW The Zion Lu tended to be doing one thing He was born Brazil, Ind. ters, Mrs. Mary Towner, King- was honored at an ali-cnurch beth Morton, Decker; Mrs. Dar- Mr. Glenn man, Mrs.

Lois La Roy, lene Steir, Belle Plaine, dinner by his congregation, and theran Church of Fairview will while doing another, and from on July 31, 1895 Announcement Rates 50c per line, 40c per line for furmer consecutive insertions same copy. For Cards ot Thanks. 30r per line, 30 letters end spaces pei line. Capital letters count double. For announcements call 245-3071, Ext.

71. Deao line p.m. day hefo-e except Sat urday. Saturday deadline, 3:30 p.m. Please Check Your Ao! If you find an error In your ad notify us the first day of such error and we'll correct It.

Sorry, but if error continues after first day of error, responsibility Is yours. was presented with a gift of observe its 50th anniversary; that kind of deception "in the moved to Miles City in 1926. He Seattle; Mrs. Lodema Lowe, a son: Robert, Chaplin, money in recognition of his this year in July. The church national interest" it is an easy moved to Otter and worked on Sitka, Alaska; two sisters, Miss- two step-children in Minnesota; Will the practical joker who removed from my wagon parked in West Plaza lot, 2-7-68, my hat coat, and 2 bags containing urgently needed business papers please return them to 213 N.

30th. Reward offered. Adv. was organized on July 14, 1918. leap to the shabby employment a ranch, but returned to Miles es Lill and Ada Arnold, Ire- a brother: Ted, Rapelje; two City and was a janitor, Pastors who have served as i of generals and ambassadors in service.

The new minister is married and has two children, Randy, 9, and Pam, 8. well as former members will be.t he propagandizing of the iana; 11 ve granacnuaren; live sisters Minnesota; ib grana-great-grandchildren; eight step-(children; six great-grandchil-grandchildren. 'dren. A brother, Thomas, of Miles City survives Mr. Glenn.

invited to the observance. 'American people. ft.

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About The Billings Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
1,788,611
Years Available:
1882-2024