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The Daily Courier from Connellsville, Pennsylvania • Page 19

Publication:
The Daily Courieri
Location:
Connellsville, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1967 THE DAILY COURIER, CONNCLISVILLE, PA. PAOINtNITMN CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT Auction Ltgols Legal Notice IK NOTICE hereby given fl UlHt Ordinance No, known the i a i Tax Ordinance cunuted November 14, low, for the purpose of providing ieneral revenue for the City of Con- nt'llaville tor the year 1907, which the following licentc anil taxei, to-wit: (a) A fee of W.OO upon every in the luisineM of wholesale or retail vendor or dealer in goodi, warei and merchandise, und upon every conducting a place of mmibeinenl or a or PERSOINAL I other place where food, or icfreshments lire sold. drink (In A license lee of $4.00 upon every person endued in the huaineit of wholesale and retail vendor or dcHlcr in jjoocli, iind merchandise. Wholesale vendors or dealers in goodf, wares and a tax at the rate of one null on each dollar of the whole volume of the gross receipts of the business transacted by him. i Retail vendors or dealers in Koods, wares and and all persons merchandise, engaged in TMi au I 'lu places where food, drink or Darl Mulhom have been refreshments are sold, and all persons conducting of amulement, a tax at the rate of one and one-half nulls on eacli dollar of the whole volume of the gross receipts the business transacted by him.

(e) Wholesale and retail vendors and dealers in goods, wares and merchandise, a tax nt the rate of Mrt. Kenneth P. (Mildred) Hoch of Dunbar, R.D. 1 (Little Summit), received a birthday telephone call early Thursday morning from her husband, Sergeant First Class Hoch, who is stationed with the armed forces at Nha Trang, Vietnam. Sgt.

Hoch has been in service for the past twenty years. He also spoke to his stepfather and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pinkney, with whom Mrs. Hoch is residing.

Rummage a Saturday, December 2, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., East Side Fire Station, by H.l.M. Class of Central Methodist Church. Advertisement --29-nov-3t. Thomas Thomas, Michael Lo- Nigro, Stacey Fosbrink, Mrs.

Margaret McNatt, Shirley Ritenour, Lucille Felgar, Janet Homonai, Mrs. Elizabeth Butler and son, Mrs. Christine Lowman, Harry Denny and discharged Connellsville State General Hospital. James R. Hammaker of Wooddale was discharged Wednesday from the Presbyterian- University Hospital, Pillsburgh, where he underwent surgery on November 7.

Hammaker, prin- Unit 1 of Area School Continued From Page 1 is convalescing at his'100 members of the 272nd Viet i ing snow, home. Con regiment in three days The U.S. cted by said pnn Forpit RNiconflict, around Bo Dop and the brunt of substantial iurs JQ nIN ame license and Miss Betty J. Furtney RN, uus a of one mill on each dollar the whole volume of the receipts ol the wholesale business Vin-il nf transacted by linn, and a tax OI at the rate one and one-half' the Connellsville mill on each dollar of the whole volume of the gross receipts of the retail business transacted by him, has been reenacted by said City Council without change and the same fees and tax imposed for the 'u '11 year beginning' January 1 1968 ot LOnneliSVllle, by Ordinance No. 1005 enacted October 23.

1967. and by Ordinance No. 1007 enacted November 21. 19B7 amendin 0 Section 19 of Ordinance No. 1005 to read: This Ordinance is nf ct nder th authority of tion of i professional Act 511 approved December 31 i 1965 and its amendments, and I organization, held a a WORD-A-DAY By BACH ARE YOU THROUGH WITH THE FINANCIAL In Sfofe affectation.

THE ASSUMING OF A MANNER WHICH 15 NOT ONE'6 OWN; PRETENSE; DISPLAY; AS, AN AFFECTATION OF WEALTH Allied Troops Fight Off Red Attack On Cambodian Line Nine Deaths Attributed To Snowfall Continued From Page I across Route 286 and was struck broadside by a tractor- trailer. Earl Buchanan, 52, Home RD, Indiana County, was killed when his car struck the school bus on Route 210 near Creekside. Three Deatht Three highway deaths were attributed to the storm in the Philadelphia area. The victims were Joseph Ponzio, 61, of Philadelphia, Schauer, 72, Philadelphia, and Carl H. Smith, 45, of Myersdale, Somerset County.

Smith was the driver of a tractor-trailer which collided with another rig just north of Lancaster. I Jacob Tomko, 68, was found idcad on the back porch of his in Munnall, near Pitts- I A J. H. RICHTM John H. Kichter, of Narrows Koad, died Thursday afternoon in Cynnellsviile General Hospital.

He was born Dec. 27, 1880, in Dawson, a son of the late William and Harriett Baker Richter. He was a member of the Church of God. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Nora Garletts Richter; a son, J.

C. Hichter; two stepsons, Roy J. Fulton of Vanderbilt and Simon R. Fulton of Glenfield; four stepdaughters, Mrs. Esther Fosbrink of Connellsville, Mrs.

Blanche Gadd of Grindstone, Mrs. Orpha Worley of Grindstone, and Mrs. Ida Williams of New Salem; 20 grandchildren; 18 great-grandchildren. The body will be at the Me- Cormick funeral home afler 7 p.m. loday.

The funeral will be held there at 2 p.m. Sunday, with the Rev. Marian Eck, min- MARTIN PUNIRAL The funeral for William V. Martin, 84, of Dunbar, who died Wednesday will IIWQI I be held at 2 Faces Revision p.m. Sunday at the Burbans funeral home, Dunbar, with Elder Larry C.

Engel of the Seventh-day Advenlist Church officiating. Interment will be in Mount Auburn Cemetery. Among survivors are two! brothers, including Frank of Dunbar, and four sisters. SAN FRANCISCO (UPl)-' Lloyd Yoder, captain of power- ful Carnegie Tech when it upset Knute Rockne's previously unbeaten Notre Dame team 19-0 in 1926, died Thursday at Chil-; ren's Hospital after a lengthyj illness. Mount Pleasant Council Tentatively Approves Deficit Budget for 1968 EGYPT CLAIMS TWO ISRAELI JETS DOWNED By WALTER LOGAN United Prett International Egypt said its antiaircraft MOUNT PLEASANT A 1 deficit budget of $32,829.12 for 11968 wu tentatively by 'Borough Council during 'special meeting Thursday but jthe probability is it will undergo numerous changes and tax 'millage will be increased prior to final adoption.

The budget as presented by Robert 0. Morrison, chairman, Yoder, 64, played tackle and batteries shot down two Israeli on behalf of the finance corn- captained the East Shrine team pi ane today near Suez City I mittee estimated income at after the Notre Dame upset. firit Israeli-Egyptian compared to expendi- The next year he played lackle! i as since Israel deslroyed tures of $221,484.12 during 1988. for Ihe Wesl after moving toiEgypl's oil refineries at Suez'Taxes and salary of all borough will be in Green Ridge Memorial Park. PRINCETON, N.J.

(UPD- Mrs. Helen Dominick Smith, widow of former U.S. Sen. H. MRS.

PEARL I Alexander Smith, died Thursday Mrs. Pearl Ada Friend, a heart attack. She last Oct. 24. remained unchanged.

The announcement came from, Most of the i i ap- Cairo as Israeli Premier Levi proximately $21,000, is money Eshkol called in Jerusalem for to be paid as a result of the a permanent Middle East settlement but on Israel's widening of North Church St. Final adoption of the budget terms. He outlined a five-point must be made prior to Dec. burgh, after starting to fu Friendsville, 1Wd, died early was 81. ipeace program which includedIM.

The fact radical snow Thursday she traveled widely with passage the Suez are anticipated Valentine Miller, 73, of Pitts-' Memorial Hospital, burgh's Knoxville district died Md. Oakland, husband member of a heart attack while shovel- while he was a Canal, which Egypt refuses, of the Senate from A military communique particularly in the, Cairo said Iwo French-built in were 0 eighty-four nurses from District 6, Pennsylvania Nurs Near Dak To Vietnamese government forces reported 1 peeled. accumulation Ihe late William and Alice iVanSickle Riley, and was a i member of the Blooming Rose ana Methodist church of Friends- was ex- iVme Surviving are four daughters, prior changes to that Teachers time was indicated by the lengthy discussion which was more often than not much of Mirage jets intruded over the an argument western bank of the Suez Canal i A a i a 7 1 0 a We have a deflcl and we fighting their way out of Philadelphia public and paro- inc i uding 6Mrs ae Frazee of, i vkH i i i i mi.iuuui 6 nio. Association, who were dele- Communist ambush and killing chial schools were to open to- Markleysburg; five gates at the 1967 state conven- 40 Communists The clash day but some schools in the including Robert of Have atffi hill sllhlirhc nrnnrari nlncoH ho i each year until amended or repealed by proper ordinance of the Council of the City of Connellsville. (Mrs.) Mary J.

Boyd Acting City Clerk 1-dec-lt-fri Pa. District 6 includes Allegheny, Armstrong, Butler, Fayette, Greene, Washington and Westmoreland counties. Mrs. Ada Kaetzel of has returned from a two- Notice is "iVereVy" given a month visit with her son-in-law occurred three days ago were ordered closed be- was not previously reported. No cause of dangerous highways.

government casualties were listed. INDIANA, Pa. (UPI) Markleysburg; 44 grandchildren and 23 great grandchildren. She was predeceased by husband, Henry, and a son, will be in the Blooming NOTICE Ordinance No. 991 enacted by! a the City Council of the i a of Connellsville on November 28,1 Earl A.

1966. for the purpose of providing general revenue for the fiscal year 1967. which imposed a per capita tax of S5.00 on each and every resident or inhabitant of the City of Connellsville of the age of twenty-one years or over has been enacted by the said City Council without substantial change, and the same tax imposed for the fiscal a beginning January 1, Ordinance No. 1004 1968. by enacted October 2.

1 1967, and by Ordinance No. 1006 enacted November 27, 1967, amending Section 16 of Ordinance No. 1004 to read: This Ordinance is enacted under authority of the Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of 31, Pennsylvania, of 1965, (Act No. December 511), as amended, and hereafter the tax levied hereunder shall be a Tnl anrl Mrc arW MTS. Lilley and children, Terry, Melody and Kathy, of Malmsrom Air Force Base, Mont.

The Lilleys' son, James, recently returned from Germany, where he ihad been stationed for a year with the U.S. Army, and spent a 45-day leave at home. He will be reassigned to Vietnam. E. R.

Guesman, son of Mrs. Harry Cole of Coolspring, is stationed with Siratcon at Fort Huachuca, Ariz. He and his wife and children, Katie and Karl, have moved into a new continuing tax each year until amended or repealed by proper ordinance of the Council of City of Connellsville. home in Tucson, Ariz. (Mrs.) Mary J.

Boyd Acting City Clerk 1-dec-lt Mrs. Bertha Haught and Mr. Mrs. Lavern Earl Wolfe and children of Hopwood re- Sealed NOTICE proposals will received by the Supervisors of Dunbar Township, a County, at Dunbar Twp. Office, Pennsylvania, until 10:00 o'clock Eastern Standard Time 12 December.

19G7, for the following improvement: Approx. 880 the following: square yards of One (1) in thick wearing course ID-2, two (2) in thick binder course ID 2, eight (8) in thick crushed aggregate base course. Plans, specifications, form of contract, instructions to bidders, proposal forms, may be viewed at the home of Eugene Frazier Secretary. Board of Supervisors, 171 Ofilevce Lane Connellsville, Pennsylvania. Each proposal must be accompanied by a certified check in the amount of SliOO.OO.

made payable to the treasurer of the board of supervisors of said Dunbar Township. All proposals must be upon the blank forms furnished by the undersigned. The supervisors reserv.e the right to reject any or all proposals. 5-9-dec-l CLASSIFIED INFORMATION THE DAILY COURIER Connellsville 62-2000 Scottdale 887-9440 Mount Pleasant 547-3527 RATES THIS IS AN ad containing 4 lines. Cost $2.88 Cor 6 days.

It's easy. Dial your local Courier office for an ad taker. This 5-linc advertisement contains twenty-five words. Six consecutive days cost 13.60. When results obtained cancel ad--nay only for days ad Birth $1.50 Card of Thanks Box Number 2a In Memoriam line .10 ERRORS Should be rcDortcd promptly.

The Courier will be responsible for one day only and only for the space in error. All ads are restricted 1o proper classification and cannot be accepted except for insertion in correct classification. NO ADVERTISEMENT Or cancellation after 10:00 A.M. for day's edition hours. or after WANT AD OFFICE OPEN DAILY--8 A.M.

to 5 Saturday 'til 12 Nocn. 628-2000, 887-M40 or 5473527. cently Glenn visited Mr. Haught of and Mrs. Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, and Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Haught of Akron, Ohio. Danny Jones, a graduate student at Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, recently visited his parents, Atty. and Mrs. A.

E. Jones of Hopwood. Barbara Ann Zuzin, a student at Kittanning Campus of Indiana State University of Pennsylvania, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Zuzin of Oliver No.

1. Mrs. Elizabeth Upton of Santa Ana, who has been visiting relatives in. Little Summit since October 8, returned to her home Thursday. En route to California she will stop in Chicago, 111., to visit friends.

Mrs. Upton, a native pfEverson, is the former Elizabeth Wettgen. Roy Johnson of 136 East Peach St. is a patient in the Presbyterian-University Hospital, Pittsburgh, where 'he is undergoing observation. His room is on the fifth floor.

of the service. The Rev. George Lovelace will officiate. The Dak To action erupted Buchanan, 52, of Home RDl, In- Franklin Ihree miles north of the ridge-jdiana County, was killed The body is at the Williams rimmed strongpoint where the day when his automobile col- unera i home, Markleysburg, South Vietnamese reported with a school bus on ing 109 Viet Cong in an earlier' one-lane bridge near here. iwov battle.

The new fighting brought The bus driver and 10 students unfiTTipin Saturday" the to more than 1,700 the number, aboard the bus were not in- Communists killed around' jured. Dak To. i In guerrilla terror action, Viet i Cong mined a train leaving Nha; Trang along the central coast Thursday but no one was killed. A terrorist mine exploded in 1 front of the Can Tho Court ofi Justice in the Mekong Delta; government said. The terrorists Catholic priests were on record escaped.

today in opposition to the Cath- Three Die In Crash In Indiana iand that both caught fire and pilots parchuted when Egyptian antiaircraft batteries opened fire. I Cairo said one pilot landed in the waters of the Suez Gulf south of Suez City and that the haven't even considered giving the employes a Albert Kozak. other landed territory. There have INDIANA iiiumiiA, in Israeli-held been several clashes between Israeli and 'Jordanian forces across the River in recent weeks, none with Egyptian forces, of the Suez oil raise," said "We should consider something for them. I know it's going to come from he tax dollars but it's some- hing that's just going to have be done." Dr.

Richard DeBpne also ipoke of salary increases, itating some had been proposed in budgetary requests by the police committee of which he Priests Opposing Parochial School Support by State Cemetery. School, dismissed early because, of a snowstorm, were killed Thursday when their automobile was struck broadside by a rtn 9ftfi in i QI.LVJL. Li alld vll XXuuWJ wOO 111 nearby Glen Campbell. apparent 24 retaliation was for in the budget MRS. ELIZABETH GOWER an( Dead were Mrs Alice Costa Ar ab si missile sinking of the Israeli destroyer Elath.

Eshkol, in outlining his new peace proposals, accused the On the North Vietnam coast, 'olic church's effort to secure U.S. 7th Fleet destroyers state funds for parochial school Edna Conner of Mrs. Elizabeth Brown Gower, Burnside, Clearfield County, 66, of High House, died at 8 and Miss Madeline Bell of Ma- p.m. Thursday in Uniontown haffey Clearfield County, All Hospital after a brief illness. were tne i 505 Police said the rig struck the She was an officer of the Fayette County Sunday School a member of Grace Chapel Presbyterian Church, teacher of its teenage class for I i ICCl.

3 A A 4 A A A A A 1 4 i 1 shelled the Phu Nghia boatyard on grounds that such support many years chaplain 31 miles north of the city increase racial imbal- iance in schools. The Rev. Donald W. Mcllvane, WASHINGTON (UPI)--The'active in Pittsburgh area civil Senate has called on President, rights movements, said many Johnson to consider taking an i Catholic parents enrolled their "appropriate initiative" at the'children in Catholic schools to United Nations to bring action avoid their attendance at pub- on a Vietnam peace resolution. lie schools which have a large The recommendation enrollment, made' in a "sense of Senate" resolution adopted 82 lo assistant pastor of St.

Joseph's German Grange No. 785 for many years and a member of the Needle Club and the Homemakers Club. Surviving are five daughters, including Mrs. Earl I a Diamond of Smithfield, R. D.

2, and Mrs. Holland (Betty) O'Brien of Uledi; two sons, including Donald W. of Smith- car, operated by Mrs. Costa, after it skidded across the highway. The driver of the truck, Ralph R.

Romero, 19, of Pittsburgh, was not injured. The accident occurred a half hour before classes normally dismiss. rebuild for war while carrying out terrorism and sabotage. A field; 25 grandchildren and two The Rev. Joseph A.

Corrado, eran dchildren. Her Say McNamara Had to Prod Army Brass on Copters Governor Maddox Grants Reprieves To 547 Prisoners 0 on Thursday. Church in New Kensington, Senate leaders said during' pointed out that the National debate that nations of the U.N. Security made to Council should stand up and be be Association for Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) also opposes state aid. He is a native of Uniontown.

"Most Protestant and Jewish ter-- organizations are against its passage," said Father Corra- wasido, "and many Catholic counted on the Vietnam issue, and the United States should risk its prestige on the matter- win, lose or draw. The Senate resolution drawn up by the Senate Foreign priests and people are also Relations Committee, whose its passage." chairman, Sen. J. The Catholic Church actively Fulbright, called the war "revolting and degrading." "The United Nations can hardly beg the question ot Vietnam any longer," Fulbright said. "If it continues to avoid it, the U.N.

may well go the way of the League of Nations." A U.S. peace resolution is supports a bill pending in the Legislature that would grant state aid to private and parochial schools. "How can Catholics ask for more state aid for their schools," Father Mcllvane said, "when these schools are contributing to growing segre- already pending in the United i gation and inferior schools?" Nations, but a vote has yet be taken on whether to lay it before the Security Council. Apprehension has been expressed in some charters that U.S. prestige might be sharply set back should the U.S.

resolution fail in the Security Council and be carried to the great grandchildren. Her husband, James, preceded herj ATLANTA (UPI)--Nearly 7 per cent of Georgia's prison population received a reprieve today, compliments of Gov. Lester Maddox, and headed more volatile General Assembly. Fulbright noted that Convention Opens For Rewriting Of Constitution Continued From Page 1 iel B. Strickler, Lancaster; for- jmer Sen.

Robert P. Casey, Scranton, and former Auditor General Weldon B. Hayburn, i Delaware County. Present plans, which are ex- itremely flexible, call for a five- iwiiti tt iwuciir mum day work week for Ihe conven-1 continuance of the war in; victim was found St tion with task forces on the Viptn.im Rut he added a Democratic Leader Mike Mans-i Penn State Student Dies of Injuries UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) A Pennsylvania State University graduate student from Philadelphia, who was th studying nuclear engineering, byi died Thursda a er he oy i HicunvoroH in death.

The body was taken to the Honsaker funeral Masontown. MRS. FRANK LIZANICH Mrs. Helen Lizanich, 72, of Allison No. 1, died at 8:35 a.m.

Thursday in i General Hospital after a lingering illness. She was born Jan. 19, 1895, in Bustria, Austria Hungary, and had lived in Allison for the past 45 years. She was a member of St. Nicholas G.

C. Church of Brownsville. Surviving are -her husband, Frank; seven sons, four daughters, including Mrs. A a Withowski of Allison and Mrs. Margaret Cramer of Grindstone, 22' grandchildren, two i great grandchildren and a brother.

A prayer service will be held at 9:30 a.m. Monday in the Skirpan funeral home, Brownsville, followed by divine liturgy at 9:30 a.m. in St. Nicholas G. C.

Church, Brownsville. Burial will be in the church cemetery. was discovered unconscious un- field, had 59 co-sponsors. an overpass. Thomas W.

Luckow, 24. died four subjects quickly. to begin work and specific U.N. action. force Next Monday, which will be designated "Governor's Day," work will begin on rules to govern the convention.

The pre- Senate's feeling. Iparatory committee has submitted a set of recommendations, I but individual delegates will be JUSTINE WEAVER SCOTTDALE Justine Lynn Weaver, infant daughter of Jerry and Elizabeth Gricheck Weaver, of Connellsville, R. D. 2, died at 7:50 a.m. today in i Community Hospital, Mount Pleasant, where she had been born Thursday.

Surviving with her parents President in matters of timing" graduate of Villanova i are a brotner Jcrrv Lee Weav- oTirl rtafjarrifll a 1 of the Senate with the Coroner W. Robert Neff. The vjeuiara. -l police on College Avenue the Senate "defers to the! a a about 5 a.m. Luckow was the son of Mrs.

i I i a The Senate resolution lacks Luckow 326 Wegt parents, Mr and rce of law and merely voices Philadelphia I Weaver of Optn House Sunday. Penalties Stiffened. HARRISBURG (UPI) Pen- cr, at home; paternal grand- Mrs. Roy 11 a 1 Star Route, and the maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Claude Gricheck of Scottdale. The body was removed to Ihe Use Four Steps When Finding Victim of Fumes f-cc to make their own sugges- Hoboes Model Railroad Club allies for shoplifting have been Murphy memorial home, lions from the floor i 0 en nouse rum I 1 stiffened legislation "days" through the to 6 Sunday at the home; signed Thursday by Gov Ray- week and part of the next will be devoted to Pennsylvania's congressmen and U.S. senators, of Lloyd Roseck, Route 119 near jmond P. Shafer. Sponsored, by Connellsville Airport.

A new Rep. Gust L. Stemmler, D-West- MRS. LENA GREENSPAN Mrs. Lena R.

Greenspan, 82, of Uniontown died Thursday mine and streetcar line willjmoreland, the measure raises Uniontown Hospital. the General Aaeembly, the added features this year, the penalties to a minimum A native of Europe, she ar Have you ever wondered what to do if you find someone overcome by gas? The Western Pennsylvania ecutive branch, distinguished citizens outside government and I the judiciary. This display is open to the five and a maximum of 90 days public with no admission fee. a $25 to $500 fine, or The club has been active Current law provides for rived in the United States in 1900, and had lived in Unionlown for 65 years. Ntw Bill.

o( HARRISBURG (UPI) New Year's Eve revelers will bene- 14 years, and has a membership a maximum fine of $50 and 10 Surviving are two sons, Her- Safety Council says that under legislation signed by the contaminated fresh air. area into measure, made law Thursda allows bars to remain open iiaiciy cu i TWj. should remove the viclim from Gov. Raymond 1M lay, thU is not possible, 31, even though it falls on all doors and windows and shut i Sunday. Sponfored by Rjjp.

John F. Byrne, UM bill permits the sale of alcohol- Give artiflcal respiration Im- ic beverages only on Sundays mediately which also lo New Call a doctor. Year's Eve. off the source of the poisonous behind bars. Traffic Crtih.

An auto driven by F. Peter Stolzer, 26, of 11A Greenwood Cheek Receivtd. HARRISBURG (UPI) The Greater Wilkes Barre Industrial Fund, is in possession bcrt and Harry, at home, and a brother. Her a Solomon, died in 1944. home to their families for the Christmas holidays.

A total of 547 prisoners were released from state prisons, state and county work camps, and juvenile detention homes. All had good conduct records and less than three months to serve. Each also signed a pledge to stay out of trouble. In announcing the mass reprieve Nov. 21, Maddox said he was releasing the prisoners so "a lot of little kids will have daddy home for Christmas." The release was also timed to let the prisoners earn as many as three paychecks before Christmas Day.

It was the second such reprieve granted by Maddox in three months. On Sept. 8, he released 153 youths from the Georgia Industrial Institute at Alto, and, since the early reprieve, only nine have again run afoul of the law and one was killed in a barroom fight. Killed in Vietnam. HAZLETON, Pa.

(UPI) Spec. 5 Michael Brown, 22, an WASHINGTON (UPI) Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara actually had to prod reluctant Army officers into developing the helicopter war fare that has become standan in Vietnam. In April 1962, during the early stages of U.S. involvement in Vietnam, McNamara wrote two memoes ordering the Army to take a "new look" at possibili ties for "land warfare mobility' through increased use of the air.

The memoes became public for the first time in a volume testimony released earlier this week by a Senate government operations subcommittee on national security headed by Sen Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash. In them McNamara called for a study "in an atmosphere divorced from traditional viewpoints" of how aircraft of all types could replace "conventional military surface systems." Dr. Alain C. Enthoven, assistant secretary of defense for systems analysis, submitted the memoes to the subcommittee at a closed hearing last Oct.

18. In his testimony Enthoven said that before McNamara applied pressure "airmobility- minded officers in the Army were having a very difficull time getting their ideas heard." He said the memoes gave them the "charter they needed" to sead their proposals. The result, according to Enthoven, was the formation of several experimental units, including the llth Air Assault chairman. 'It's a $32,829.12 a and we want deficit to add more to the deficit," pointed out President Charles F. Cronin.

He expressed a belief the first need is to get more money and then be concerned with salary increases. "Where we're gonna get the money is the most important thing." The fact it is a tentative judget was suggested by Ernest a confidence "there will be some changes made." Roll call vote brought no's from both Thomas Miller and Dr. DeBone. But seven affirmative votes carried the motion. This budget will now be advertised, it will be placed on public inspection for a minimum of 10 days and final adoption will come up 30 days hence, no later than Dec.

31. A possible solution to the deficit appeared to lie partly in increasing real estate tax millage. This presently stands at 18 milla which is expected to bring in $73,800 property evaluated at $4,800,000. Munk advised the Councilmen they can go as high as 25 mills. Each mill brings about $4,000 annually into the borough's gem eral fund.

Receipts estimated for 1968 are down from those estimated a year ago whereas there is a jump in anticipated expenditures. It was last March 29 Council 1967 budget which then estimated $193,145.78 in receipts and $208,145.78 in expenditures. Estimated receipts for 1968 were from Army language specialist from Division. This was the predeces- Hazleton, died of wounds re- sor of the 1st Calvary Division ceived in Vietnam last Sunday, his family was informed Thursday. Army authorities told Brown's parents, Mr.

and Mrs. (airmobile), which has fought in Vietnam using helicopters for logistics, actual deployment of Neil Brown, that their son was'fire. struck by an enemy bullet during a Viet Cong attack on a truck convoy. Young Brown, who spoke fluent Vietnamese, troops in battle, and support Student Killed. READING, Pa.

(UPI) A was sent to Vietnam last collision of two autos i killed one Kutztown State Col- student and injured two others Thursday on Route 222, ruary. Acquitted by Jury. WEST CHESTER, Pa. (UPI)'eight miles north of here. The Herman Gallimore.

dead student was identified as Chester, was acquitted Thursday night in the fatal stabbing May 19 of Robert Jackson, 33, Cindy Lou Blatt, 18, Temple, whose sports car collided with an auto operated by Janet L. Malvern. A jury of seven wom-jBeard, 20, Fleetwood RD 2. en and five men Beard and Judith Ann five hours in Chester court before returning the verdict. Jackson was stabbed to Tobias of 111 South Temple, who was riding in Miss Blatt's car, was admitted to Reading death outside bar in West (Community Hospital for X-rays.

Chester. Diet in Crash. LANCASTER, Pa. I and i Carl Smith, 45, Meycrsdalcj road materials, $.1,000, totaled $188,655. These summarized as: Taxes current levy, taxes of prior years, miscellaneous sources, non-revenue sources, $3,200.

I i miscellaneous sources" are: Parking meters, wage tax, deed transfer tax, per capita tax, occupation privilege tax, garbage collection, $,600. Expenditures in 1968 were estimated as totaling $221,484.12 and summarized as: General government, protection of persons and property, health and sanitation, $610; highways, 7 7 8 0 7 8 3 library, a i $4,170. Here was brought to light Council's thinking of another large loan. Morrison said to borrow $300,000, which is twice the present amount, it will cost $18,240 annually in payments. Unchanged in the various parts of the budget were salaries of all present employes.

Included were: Mayor, $600; Councilmen, secretary, treasurer, $720; solicitor, 1866.20; engineer, $500; police chief, assistant chief, four a 1 8 6 6 1 9 1 meter man, six crossing guards, four radio street commissioner, four a $19,951.36. Other items adding to Ihc budget as tentatively I adopted by Council on Thursday I include: Police car rental, 000 from the Pennsylvania Rosary 1 i i im in in Heights, collided with a parked of a cncc lo( a totaling truck, owned by the Tip Top Bread Company, Kerr Uniontown, on Morrell Ave. at 10:45 a.m. Thursday. Damage to the Stolzer auto was estimated at $350 with no reported damage to the truck.

Recite Rotary. Confraternity nf i i a Hospital. Parents of Son. A SOn Was born to Ml'. i a i i ommi, ivit yursuaiC I i nmu 111011:1 Mrs.

Earl Prills Jr. of Indian Somerset County, was i i and rebuilding of Head at 9:21 p.m. Thursday Thursday when his Nireel at Connellsville Stale General'er and another rig collided 17,000. dustrial Development Aulhorily presented Thursday. The loan will be used as a second mortgage on a new structure in Wilkcs-Barre for Luzerne Products, Inc.

parishioners of Society and St. Vincent, DePaul R. C. Church, Lciscn- Continue Job Tax. Council voted ling a snow storm on the Route bypass, just north of here.

iThe driver of the other rig was to identified as Ixjwis T. Kncpp, ring No. will recite the rosary continue the $10 al 7:30 p.m. today at the Fink i privilege tax next year funeral home for Mrs. Kathryn I making under $1,000 a year to General Hospital for occupational Middleburg, Snyder County, year, those He was treated al Lancaster Koslclnik.

I be exempt. cuts. of Son. Mr. and Mrs.

I Dautfhcrly of R. D. 4, became parents of a wn i a 2.T9 a.m. Wednesday in UniorUown Hospital..

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