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The Billings Gazette from Billings, Montana • 8

Location:
Billings, Montana
Issue Date:
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8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

l.HM 'titem m. it1T ulfr KHUings (Sazrttf Monday, January 10, 1966 Morning Edition Elmer L. Rodell, Suicide Victim Hospital Pledges Reach $290,993 Mrs. E. K.

Wiita, Billings, Dies Elmer L. Rodell, 36, 2620 Burlington died of an Surviving are the widow, Mary; his mother, Mrs. May Paine of Circle; five sons. apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound at 11 p.m. Saturday in vvuuiiu at ii.

u.iii. joimuflj Mrs. Esther Katherine Wiita, Leonard, Robert, Charles ana GLENDIVE Pledges to the vw wnnrair nf npnnU all of Lewistown, ana Glendive Community Hospital'69. 50? S. 30th died Sunday ti; mot TMintRav nf the family home; live Beven said Sunday.

step-daughters, Debra, Paulette Vivian Rrenda and unaa morning in a Billings hospital where she had been a patient for a few hours. Tuneral services will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in Smith's The chief said Rodell placed! Campaign have reached the campaign committee announced Sunday. Executives and employes of the First National Bank contributed $9,307 in addition to Hourly temp. 6 p.m.

a.m. I I II II 1 2 1 4 37 35 34 35 35 34 34 34 32 32 30 31 Hourly temp. 6 a.m. p.m. 4 7 I 9 10 II 12 I 2 14 5 31 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 35 35 34 32 Sunrise 7:54 a.m.

Sunset 4:50 p.m. MONTANA AND OUT-OF-STATE DATA Max. Min i Max, Min. Hansen all of the family home and a half brother, Keith Drew the barrel of a .308 hunting rifle in his mouth and pulled MMKtlTtlMtUTWfttl NCt.MWttAST of Dallas, Texas. Chapel with the Rev.

John Shannon, First English Luther- $10,000 pledged earlier by the Belgrade 34 22 Fort Worth 68 46 Mrs. Rodell heard a shot and! Funeral services will be held went to investigate. 1 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Miche- bank, the committee reported. an Church, officiating.

Burial a ii coin cho "uupnt lntti-Sawvers Mortuary witn will be Joliet Cemetery. 29 Honolulu 80 16 Indianapolis 45 Jacksonville 60 20 Juneau 13 24 Kansas City 57 BIRTHS Boys Mr. and Mrs. Z. P.

Eldridge, 307 S. Broadway. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Petterson, 208 N.

34th St. Girls Mr. and Mrs. Gary D. Roe, 45 Adams St.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kasten, 1840 Wyoming Ave. Mr. and Mrs.

Marvin Maley, 916 N. 23rd St. DEATHS Mrs. Esther Katherine Wiita, 69, 509 S. 30th St.

Elmer L. Rodell, 36, 2620 Burlington Ave. Mrs. Wiita was born Sept. 22, outside and checked the camp-; Dr.

Vera L. Kungman, first 'Glasgow 11 5 Los Angeles 70 Glasgow 11 1896, at Hanna, daughter er and found her husband had Methodist Church, omciaung. of Mr. and Mrs. Matt Warila MttrmtiAmeitutT Broadus 37 Butte 28 Cut Bank 28 Dillon 32 Drummond 32 Great Falls 33 Havre 13 Helena 36 Kalispell 33 Lewistown 32 Livingston 36 Miles City 30 Missoula 35 w.

Vel'stone 23 Whitehall 38 shot himself." There was a Burial win De mvCiviC single empty shell in the Cemetery, Circle, 2:30 p.m. weapon. Beven said Rodell left, Wednesday. $22,854 Research Grant Is Approved WASHINGTON (AP) U.S. Sen.

Gale McGee said a federal grant has been approved for a cooperative re 14 Louisville 48 4 Memphis 55 28 Miami 72 27 Milwaukee 40 12 P. 34 27 New Orleans 59 16 New York 30 24 Okla. City 67 7 Omaha 48 25 PhiladelDhia 30 two suicide notes. Rodell was pronounced dead Announcements COUNCIL SESSION Lethbndge 10 12 Phoenix 70 search program at the kinder at a Billings hospital. He had PUBLIC STENO been in ill health for the last 107 jsj 27th 252-0118.

Adv. year. He was born May 11, 1928, at, BOOKS want to Albany 18 Albuquerque 55 Atlanta 48 Bismarck 32 garten level. The U.S. Office of Education approved the grant or two rep Circle, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Dugan, City Fluoride Vote Sparks Agenda 1 Pittsburgh 30 23 Ptlnd. Me. 22 21 Ptlnd, Ore. 44 2 Rapid City 44 22 Richmond 37 10 St.

Louis 58 5 Salt Lake 43 18 San Diego 63 17 San Fran. 59 13 Seattle 44 31 Tampa 68 28 Washington 36 20 Winnioea 7 Boise Boston Buftalo Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Denver Were Good Men, Cusses" and "Land of Nakota." Harold Ruth, 111 Alkali Cr. Rd. Billings. Adv.

She moved with her parents to Scofield, Utah, in 1897, to An-nandale, and to Red Lodge in 1906. She was married to Svante W. Wiita at Billings Oct. 11, 1920. They lived at Red Lodge before moving to Billings in 1944.

Mr. Wiita died last May 15. Surviving are two brothers, Aloe Warila of Big Timber and Enio Warila of Pomona, and six sisters, Mrs. Wendla Aliment of 414 10th St. Mrs.

Lillian Apsel and Mrs. Edward Armstrong, both of San Diego, Mrs. Victor Krook of Boyd, Mrs. Velma Ennis of 910 N. 24th and Mrs.

Elsie Dem-mel of National City, Calif. resentatives of the Wyoming Department of Education Wil- Leonard Rodell. He received his elementery education in Weldon Community and graduated from Circle High School. In 1949 Mr. Rodell moved ma Hirst and Betty Lou Pagel.

He said the federal grant is GAINAN'S Billings' only Des Moines 46 Detroit 36 Fairbanks 26 -36 I When to hold a public vote on letter of appreciation from the Precipitation Cut Bank .01, Boston .14, salt Lake city fluoridation of city water; resig' to Miles City and worked as a ith cab driver for five vears. In "-c 6 Portland, Me. .50, Winnipeg .02. nation of Police Judge Fred N. aimed at identifying at the kindergarten level factors that make for future success in reading, as well as potential reading deficiencies in future studies.

1959 he moved to Circle where; BILLINGS' COSMETOL- hie tw mnr. OGISTS will meet Monday at 8 No Relief ROM PAGE 1) Dugan and appointment of another to the city court post will be discussed at Monday's meeting of the City Council. Aldermen will try to resolve a hassle with Mayor Willard E. Fraser who wants a vote on Salvation Army to the council for leasing the Southside fire station for Salvation Army use. a report of the League of Women Voters.

recommendation of the City Engineer to deny a 50-ft curb cut application at 230 Broadwater Ave. request of Park Superintendent to advertise for bids on Veterans park Memorial, and request for council approval for Roncalio Proposal EAST OF DIVIDE Partly cloudy Monday, mostly cloudy Monday night and Tuesday, 20 to locally 40 miles per hour westerly winds near eastern slopes of the mountains and warming most sections, scattered rain or now showers western mountains Tuesday, highs Monday 35 to 45 southwest and 10 to 20 northeast, lows Monday 1 night 25 to 35 southwest, 5 to 15 northeast. WYOMING Generally fair 2 Monday, fair south, partly I cloudy north Tuesday. A little "warmer Monday and in east I Tuesday. Highs Monday 40s east, 30s mountains and west of the Continental Divide.

Locally I windy both days. 'airport weather data From United States Weather Bureau for 24 hours ending at 5:30 p.m. Sunday: -Maximum 37 Minimum 29 Precipitation: Trace; so far this month, trace; total for same period of January a year ago, total since Jan. 1, trace; for same period a year aio. ried Deloras Beeler April, 1951, PM," the Security Hos-in Miles City.

Pltallty Room (4th "oor-Adv- Mr. Rodell came to Billings in 1961 and worked as a heavy Are you prepared for spring equipment operator until a year landscaping of your new home? ago when his health failed. Call Jim Toole at the May- Gels Wide Response Austin Tucker, he said, all the other issues fluoridation at the November would fall into line. state and national general elec- enuinment onerator until a nursery. Billings, Dies tion.

Aldermen rejected by an 8-to-2 vote Dec. 28 a recommen- He married Mary Hansen 1 WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep. Teno Roncalio, has announced he has received nationwide response to his proposal that every window on a commercial airliner be con dation by the mayor's fluorida- revised resolution authorizing June 27, 1964 at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. tion committee to include the open space land grant to pur Austin Marvin Tucker, 53, 1141 N. 30th Billings carpenter, died of lung cancer in Merle Norman Studio, West Park Plaza, hours will be: 1 p.m.-5:30 p.m.

Mon. thru Fri. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Sat. beginning Jan.

10 thru Jan. 29. Studio owner attending school. Adv. chase Don Stewart property for park and recreation pur verted to an emergency exit.

ia Rillincrc Vincnitol otttrloir poses. T7j a. a i request of police to call for bids for replacing police cars. endorse his proposal and said Reliable man wishes janitor work. P.O.

Box 157, Bigs. Adv. item in the November election in favor of an April, 1967 date, the city general election. Last Monday aldermen failed to override Fraser's veto of the 1967 setting contending his action was "illegal." The 1967 vote still stands, according to the council, because the action was a motion and not subject He was born Nov. 1, 1912, at Mountain Grove, Mo.

He spent much of his younger life in the Richey area. He came to Billings in 1963. normal for Jan. 1-9, normal for Mrs. Lyndes, 77, Of Powell Dies POWELL, Wyo.

Mrs. Mary A. Lyndes, 77, 50-year Powell resident, died Sunday morning in a Powell hospital after suffering a stroke Wednesday. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday in First Baptist Jan.

i to Jan. 9, .14. agreement with William and Lydia Fox on installation of water line on 24th Street West extending north of Grand Vista subdivision and east along lots he would endorse a stricter FAA ruling or will introduce legislation to assure adequate evacuation facilities from planes. He said there "is firm public The TWU, which represents 36,000 subway and bus employes, originally demanded a 30 per cent wage increase which would cost the TA an estimated $680 million. The union reports it since has scaled its demand down to a 15 per cent increase this year and another 15 per cent hike next Jan.

1. The TA said a fair settlement would be a 3.2 per cent wage increase, which would be within the guidelines against inflation set by the Johnson administration. The authority also has moved on the legal front to break the strike. A hearing was scheduled for Monday on a TA petition to fine the TWU $323,000 a day for showing contempt in violating Mr. Tucker was a member of the Carpenters Local No.

1172. 1 and 2, Rose Park Subdivision, to Fraser's veto. Surviving are a son, Gary Al belief that many lives have In a memorandum to the first flling- council Mondav Fraser said easement from Don c- and; been lost in recent crashes due len of Waynesville, th th touncu Monuay, rraser saia installatinn i k. sUi-orc Mrs Albert Pfipfpr nf hnHrcn at roweu witn ine nev. Foote for installation to number of exits sisters, Mrs.

Albert Pfiefer of Congress from PAGE 1 tend coverage under the wage and hour law, and overhaul the unemployment compensation nroeram. Labor, which feels inadequate ho tiTQO Vflf Aitirt A I rl nrtn ri linno William Howrey officiating hi. nuo vwiuiiic; njuti mail iucii i- 1 a i of water and sewer lines Smith's motion na sewer lines. setting the resolution Huntley and Mrs. Donald Coe of Plains.

A brother, Ward Tucker, died at Mountain Grove three weeks ago. Burial will be in Crown Hill Cemetery at Powell. Mrs. Lyndes was born Oct. 5 1RH9 at T.anham Nph Casper College Will Get Grant fluoridation issue for the city election "to save the council! amendment of tract from the folly of its all too-j4 of SUr" hatv acts" ivey 678, sec 29' as an Dale Madson, 5th ward, mem-! addtition the cj- Prober of the major's fluoridation i to be purchased by the eWtinn mmmittPP will mnvP city for additional dear lone at accepting plat of ihnt if" li'ic 1 frfnlir AitnplnAlrn4 ROBERTS FUNERAL HOME Roundup STRAYER Funeral services for Frank A.

Strayer will be held at the Roberts Funeral home with the Rev. Dr. Charles Hanko of the Congregational Church officiating, on Tuesday at 1 p.m. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Park, Billings. Friends who wish may make memorial contributions to Yellowstone Boys Ranch or a charity of their choice.

WINTERS Funeral services for Mrs. Ethel A. Winters will be held at the Roberts Funeral Home Monday at 2 p.m. with Rev. Dr.

Charles Hanko of the Congregational Church officiating. The body will be taken to Billings for cremation. The body will be taken to daughter of Mr. and Mrs. The; Mountain Grove for funeral c.eoree L.

Faxon She was LiiaL it. .1 i i i i iivci iinirrii WASHINGTON (AP) 1965, is pressing for action on these measures. U.S. Department of Health, Ed--services and burial. Smiths Fu married to Jay G.

Lyndes at ucation and welfare has an- neral Home was in charge of Logan Field nounced a grant of $95,045 to i local arrangements lwo "ureat society grams given congressional approval but no financing last request of the board of water commissioners to invest funds. claims and estimates, committee reports. Lanham. They ovserved their golden wedding anniversary several years ago. They moved to Wyoming in 1916, homesteading north of Shoshone Project near Powell.

Shoshone Project near Powell. Mr. Lyndes died last May. Mrs. Lyndes was a member state law that forbids strikes by city employes.

Despite the vague reports of weekend settlement, most New Yorkers were preparing for more havoc and frustration when the back-to-work movement starts Monday morning. Stricter Traffic Measures' In a move to ease the tremendous traffic congestion Former Wyoming Legislator Dies Casper College to aid construction of a student center building on the campus. The center is estimated to cost $590,688. Sen. Gale McGee, said the federal grant is 95 per cent of the $101,338 approved for year are slated for an early reappraisal this year.

They call for rent subsidies io? low-income families and creation of a teacher corps to help children of the poor. PpmiKlinnnc nlrpnHv rmvo Monday that the issue be put to public vote in November. The council is expected to accept Dugan's resignation as police judge and appoint Donald Bjertness to the post. At a meeting Wednesday night to discuss the resignation and appointment, eight aldermen agreed with Dugan's recomemndation of Bjertness, now deputy county attorney. Duaan was reelected tiolice SALT LAKE CITY CAP, of First Baptist Church, Re- Casper Training Project Approved the federal government's share Charles W.

Spence, 79, former bekah Lodge and Modern Home of the project under the 1965utah and Wyoming state legis- Club. that clogged the city's thor- called for an overhaul of the 1965 poverty war program. They it is too wasteful and is riddled by local politics. Higher Education Facilities Act. lator, died Saturday at his home Surviving are three brothers, of cancer.

I Cheney and George Faxon, both i T4 11 I T7 i 1 oughfares during business the 52-week course is sought by He was a member of the I UIr alu "Kri raxton WASHINGTON (AP) Wyoming Sen. Gale McGee said a manpower development and training project to provide 30 unemployed workers with train- the Wyoming Employment Se of Odell, Neb. hours last week, city Trattic Commissioner Henry A. Barnes Sunday announced plans for harsher restrictions. Judge last April and had more than a year to serve of his term.

A proposal to ammend present city ordinances to allow United Mine Workers Union curity Commission and Voca- Funeral Home is in tional Education Department.1 of America for 25 years and was Hp sairl if u-nnlH hp nnpratpH president of the Wyoming 01 Easton arrangements. aslcpd dancing in citv nightclubs will ing as auto mechanics has been He said he has by Casper College at a total 1U administrative Judge John M.be submitted by Dale Madson. i approved lor casper ril I ml He moved to Utah in 1930, Other business will include: a The Wyoming Democrat said cost of $148,990. Murtagh to increase fines from Glendive Woman's Mother Dies GLENDIVE Mrs Donald H. after serving in the Wyoming i Legislature in 1927 and 1929.

JUST ASK AND SEE! Spence later served as a Utah mine inspector and as a Utah i Fralick, 87, Glennwood, Another backed bill left hanging in the air when the last session adjourned provides for a form of home rule for the District of Columbia. Both the Senate and the House approved it but their different versions are poles apart. Republicans, vastly outnumbered in both branches, aren't sanguine about their chances of halting the march of the Johnson program. But they hope to slow it down. They are outnumbered 294-141 in the House and 68-32 in the Senate.

The GOP strategy for the coming session apparently will be to back up the President in international affairs and to center its fire on domestic fflichelotti-Saujjers 1001 Alderson Ph. 252-3417 Mortuary Parking Adjacent RODELL Elmer L. Rodell, 36, of 2620 Burlington Ave. Funeral services will be held 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at Michelotti-Sawyers Mortuary with Dr.

Vern L. Kling-man officiating. Interment will be in Riverview Cemetery at Circle Wednesday 2:30 p.m. KESSLER Walter B. Kes-sler, 43, of 422 24th St.

W. Funeral services will be held 11:00 a.m. Wednesday at Peoples Lutheran Church, 1301 Ave. D. Interment will be in Custer Battlefield National state senator.

His final legisla-: mother of Mrs. L. C. Jiggs) tive term was as a represen- i Allen of Glendive, died Thurs-tative in 1961. day in a Glenwood, hospital, according to word received here.

Everybody's an Expert When It Comes to Mail He was born in Rock Springs, in 1886. Funeral services will be Tuesday, with burial in Rock Springs. $15 to $35 for parking violations that obstruct fire hydrants and block cross walks. He said the measures were necessary to keep traffic moving. As the strike moved into its second work week, its impact was felt most severely in the pocketbook.

The losses to New York's giant business community were well on their way to the $1 billion mark. The New York Commerce and Industry Association said the strike already had imposed the greatest hardship on New-York's wage earners thousands of whom were stranded in their homes with no way to get to work since the great depression of the 1930's. She frequently visited her daughter in Glendive. Aside from Mrs. Allen, survivors are the widower; son, Charles Fralick of Nashua; daughter, Mrs.

Shirley Dotson of Eugene, and 11 grandchildren. Funeral services will be Monday in the Glenwood Congregational Church. Rev. fAchar's Mother Succumbs in Ireland By ARTHUR EDSON be delivered by the next day WASHINGTON (AP) Fewno small item, since two-thirds other issues in this time ofof a11 mail never leaves the Well, officials dream of mail untouched by human hands; much of it will be presorted by business firms. LAUREL Mrs.

Catherine flaming controversies Viet state which it originates. Nam, the war on proverty, civil Recent tests in states where Right now it's possible to pick Mahar, mother of Rev. John up mail at a plant, tote it to a I Mahar of St. Anthonys Church, railroad, put it on a train and! died in her home at Shanakill criticism nas Deen strongest show that in South Dakota 99.19 COLORFAST YORK flTPn Thpro'c rights can whip up as many conflicting opinions as these per cent of the mail got there then load it aboard ship and; County Tipperary, Ireland Sun-i nn nppri fnr mlnrpH oarmpnt simple questions: Do vou think the mail service1 he next day. With North Dako- it will never be in a post office; day.

incP thpir anneal hpfr. thpir is getting better? Worse? Or do1 ta at 99.12 per cent, Iowa 98.42 until it reaches London. Funeral mass will be cele-! normal wearing span has Defectors and Minnesota 98.35. von hplipvp it is nlain lnncv' "In 1966." Ford said in a weekend Republican National Committee radio program, "Congress should devote its thought and energies toward correcting the many oversights in new legislation that sailed through the House and Senate in 1965. Obviously we must fully fund our military needs.

But to prevent runaway inflation the nonessential domestic spending must be reduced." Ford called also for creation of a bipartisan Hoover-type commission "to examine the size and shape of the executive branch of the federal v. i Whv' luecnanicai scanners ana brated by her nephew Rev. John ended. Continued improvement sorters will zig the mail along to at Sacred Heart of colorfast dyes has mde it 553 sectional centers throughout i church in Templemore, Ireland increasingly possible to launder Impressive? Certainly. But That 2 Per Cent! There are a few people still ROM PAGE 1 uie uduuu.

uuuumgs win on Tuesday. Father Mahar will colored fabrics with liquid But as William J. Hartigan, around who don't fancy themselves military experts or wel- SMDTM'S Funeral Home Established in 1896 BOYD Funeral Services for Mavor S. Boyd, father of Mrs. Richard Strutz, will be held at Smith's Chapel Monday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock.

Interment will be at Mt. View Cemetery. WIITA Funeral services for Esther Katherine Wiita will be held at Smith's Chapel Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. Interment will be in Joliet Cemetery. the east, when the mutiny broke fare economists or human rela-iout.

jtions counselors. But since all equal service and saving post-; Father Bezdicek as deacon and1 dyes are applicable to man- Foochow. capital of Ftti Province, is 150 mi es across the exPtrls- Wlt a researcnjtwo oer cent that didn't eet ix-, Wlhnratnrv nn farther avuov then lw" HCI -cm man power it iaK.es a post- Father Geisdhunas as sub dea- i made fibers as well as the men to deliver the mail in New basic cottons and linens. service. rormosa strait irom laipei.

than the mail box. Landing craft had sailed at I If you assume the Post Office 1 (auestion York Mate Building. By Best Service Airmail stamps will be abolished, and priority or preference mail will be used instead. Then the department will give the best service available, plane, train, truck or boat. Outside of wartime, perhaps no other government propagan is 98 per cent pure in meeting a reasonable schedule for its mail, whatever the class, you still come up with a staggering statistic.

With 72 billion pieces of mail sent each year, this would mean that 144 million letters, packages or junk mail were tardy or lost. li i 1 ia an aui tunc ik) cAauiuie midnight and during the black-the Post Department. I ness of the night, according to i the ministry's account, seven of Wobbling Through Revolution I the crew mutinied. It's struggling, or wobbling, i Although four of them were through the biggest revolution I slain in a pitched battle with the I in its history. It has turned to three diehard Communists new sectional centers for sepa- aboard, the three survivors i rating mail, to new-fangled managed to head the craft for I ideas like ZIP codes, to dizzying Matsu only 40 minutes after advances in mechanization, in-! leaving Foochow.

eluding machines to scan and What should I do in the event of an emergency death of someone in my family? da drive has been as intense and as prolonged as the Post Office's attempt to win approval If the errors are gargantuan, son tnose 6ir cooes, to new so is ine iod. DAHL BROWN Billings Funeral Service soon riiscnvei-ed it was a hL i philosophies on how the mail! The Census Bureau figures; of the ZIP code those cold bent on surrender and steamed snould be handled. i the nation has from 50 to 52 mil- numbers so symbolic of the au- out to escort it in to safety. The Every announcement and in-! lion families. Each day the Post tomated age.

But not everyone flotilla arrived in Matsu' just terview, from the new post-1 Office's 600,000 employes must before dawn master general, Lawrence F. 0'- deliver, on the average, four Brien. on down, burbles with Dieces of mail to every house- Some critics maintain the department has fuddv duddied n3tver Phone 248-8807 10 Yellowstone Ave I HARGRAVES Committal i services for Walter E. Har-1 graves of Kernville, will be from Dahl-Brown Funeral Chapel Tuesday at 10 a.m. in Mountview Cemetery.

Visitations will be Monday until 9 p.m. i Draft FROM PAGE l3 on the exact needs for t'ne immediate future. Hershey brushed off a request the American Veterans Com-niittee that he be replaced. The committee in a letter to President Johnson said Hershey has condoned local draft boards using classifications to punish young men for disagreeing with U.S. foreign policy.

"Of course, that's a matter od opinion," Hershey said. "I deny it. I don't know anything about A'iet Nam policy." Hershey said the regional conferences are aimed at feeling jout the state directors on their views for filling rising quotas also impressing them wit'n ine necessity of meeting quotas. The draft chief was asked his Reeling about draft-card burning. "I feel it is rather a shame that a citizen would think so of his country as to flout its laws," said Hershey who has been head of Selective Service iince 1941.

He said such persons Should be made available for jnilitary service and if they re-fused then it would be up to the 'Justice Department to take action. I i cau excitement over goodies to hold, from the isolated farm to endlessly and fallen far behind included two heavy machine come slum200 million et. private industry. It didn't even euns- Most people aren't so much ters. jhave a research division until The Defense Ministry did not concerned with what service Worse, volume soars faster1 1958.

say whether the bodies of the will be like two, three, 10 vears than the population. Within 10 Others and this includes the seven crewmen reported killed from now as thev are with'what vears 100 billion pieces of mail union leaders claim it is had been thrown overboard. happened to last month's check, will be sent annuallv. pushing too fast, lining up pro- The rank of the three muti- And why did Aunt Mildred's u. grams without pretesting them.

Emergency, accidental, sudden or violent deaths are always accompanied by terrific tension and considerable emotion. There is no hard or fast rule what you should do nor even what you can do in these situations except to be as calm as possible and to be sure that your interests and those who survive are being protected. After the proper legal authorities have been notified ttie very next contact should be our personnel at the Michelotti-Sawyers Mortuary. As result of our many vears of experience we will be in a position to be certain that your interests are being safeguarded. We hove a thorough knowledge of the death benefit provisions of the Federal and State compensation laws.

Federal Employers Liability Law and the regulations that apply to sudden death. Should a death of this nature occur in your family at any time in Billings or in another city, notify us immediately, night or day. neers was not stated. package arrive looking as if it It is obvious that, while rural SETTERGREN-CAREY Funeral Homt 721 N. 29th Ph.

252-2888 Serving the Corn.nuniry Since 190t Matsu is 3.8 souare miles in had been mauled bv a wrecking complications arise areas may suffer, mail service later! I 1 1 4 miles crew? from shying population pat- between the larger cities should jaiea ii.t nines 1 i 4c thD itr.r. a n.J i terns. As the switch from a area and is situ from the China mainland. Sunday's defection was the Appears It's Gone to Pot rai to an urban nation has upset lem here defies solution. Judging from complaints the nation's politics and eco- New Yorkers, for example, flooding in some coneress- nomics.

so has it affected second involving Chinese Com- niunist military personnel since men say their mail gripes run "overwhelmed" might be a officials don't know what to do 11, when three airmen de- into the thousands mail serv- more accurate word the mail ahn.it it v0, vnri- traffic ic II- fected to Formosa in an yushin 28 jet bomber. iv ii. avtt i ui i uiii. mo ice has gone to pot. i service.

bad mail trucks can't get The problem, of course, is The nation has 34.000 post of- through either IHichelotti! amy rs Announcement Rates 50c per line, 40c per line for former consecutive insertions same copy For Cards of Thanks. 30c per line, 30 letters and spaces per line. Capital letters count double. For announcements call 245-3071, Ext. 71 DeaE line 4:00 p.m.

day before txceot sat. urday. Saturday deadline, Please Check Your Adl If you find an error in vour 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. Under long-standing offers of this: What is good service? fices, but 68 of them handle 70 The basic question what is rewards by the Chinese Nation- It won't please everyone, but per cent of the business. good service? has to remain alist navy, the three navy defec- postal officials have one meas- tion advance for ams Sunday, unanswered.

Economy in a tors would have been entitled to ure of good services. They Jan. 9 service organization almost in- 300 ounces of gold, the equiva- figure that air and first-class What is the shape of postal variably means a curtailment of 1001 Alderson Ave. Phone 252-3417 lent of sent within a state should things to come? service..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1882-2024