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Ironwood Daily Globe from Ironwood, Michigan • Page 7

Location:
Ironwood, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
7
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IRONWOOD DAILY GLOBE, IRONWOOD, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, JUNE 24, I960. i Trade Slackens In Mixed Late Market Report NEW YORK (AP) Cross-currents ruled in a mixed stock market late this afternoon as trading siackened from the recent vigorous pace. Volume for the day was estimated at 3,100,000 shares compared with Thursday's 3,620,000. Changes of key stocks were mostly narrow, going from fractions to a point or so.

A few volatile or high-priced issues made wider moves. International Business Machines added about 8 points. Automatic Canteen dropped 3 of Thursday's 7-point advance. Texas Instruments tacked on a couple of points. Vendo dropped about 2.

U. S. Steel was firm. General Motors lost a fraction. Jersey Standard and American Telephone eased, A string of stop uoss orders tripped Parke, Davis and Pfizer to losses 'of more than 2 each.

Schering rose more than a point in the uneven drug section. Martin Co. slipped more than a point Phelps Dodge dropped about 2. Gains of a point or so were scored by Montgomery Ward, Magnavox, and Texaco. Zenith hopped around 4 points in a continued runup on its pay television news.

Baltimore Ohio was around a point ahead as rails milled irregularly. Government bonds eased in listless trading. The corporate market also eased a shade. Obituaries Stock Market NOOK QUOTATIONS NEW YORK (AP) Stock list: (Figures after decimals are eighths) Allied Ch 56.7 Goodyear 39.2 Am Can 38.1 Inland Stl 44 Am Motors 22.4 Inspir Cop 3.2 Am Tel Tel 90.1 Interlafc Ir 25.7 Armour 4: Co 32.3 Int. Bus Mch 521.4 Bait Oh 37 Int Nick 54.6 Beth Steel 45.7 Johns Man 0.6 Calum Ches Chrysler 46.6 Cont Can Det Edis 44.4 Dow Chem 90.1 iu Pont 20V.2 East Kod 126 Ford Mot 68.4 Gen Fds 126.3 Gen Motors 45 Goodrich 67 24 LOF Glass 51.4 Oh 60.7 Ligjc My 80.4 Mack Trk 37.6 Central 23.4 Penney, new 43.5 Pa RR 14.1 Republic SU 63.3 Std Brand 49 Std Oil Ind 38.3 Un Carbide West Un Tel 48.3 Zenith August W.

Swan berg August Wilhelm Swanberg, 67, of 602 Bonnie died Thursday at 11 p.m. at Grand View Hospital where he had been a patient 34 days. He was born Dec. 18, 1892 at Jonkoping, Sraoland, Sweden. He came to the United States and to Ironwood in 1910 and had resided here since then.

Mr. Swanberg worked at the Scott Howe Sawmill and at the Foster Wool Lumber Winegar, Wis. In 1912 he started working for the Oliver Mining at the Puritan Mine. Later he worked at the Norrie Mine. For a period of 10 years he worked in various mines i Newport and Pabst--during the winter and did carpenter work during the summer and also installed furnaces for Holland Furnace Co.

during that period. While carpentering he worked on the construction of O'Donnell-Seamens Building, the viaduct and many homes. In 1923 he started working at the Geneva Mine and worked there 30 years until he retired in 1953 due to ill health. His hobbies were reading and knitting. He was married here June 21, 1913 to the former Edith Hanson.

The deceased was a life long member of Salem a Church and also was a member of the Scandinavian Lodge and he Viking Club during their existence. Surviving, besides his wife, are 'our sons, Carl of Ontonagon, of Wakefield, Luther of Vlorton Grove, and Oliver of xonwood; two daughters, Mrs. iVilliam Jobe of Ironwood and Wurs. Ivar Johnson of Duluth; three jrothers, John of Ironwood, Everett of Smolandstena, Sweden, and Sari of Dola Jorma, Sweden; sisters. Miss Signe Swan- 3erg of Kenilworth, N.

Miss Helena Swanberg and Mrs. Matilda Cronburg of Sweden; 14 grandchildren and six great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Monday at 2 p.m. at Salem Lu- iieran Church with the Rjev. Dean eyik of Grace Lutheran Church officiating in the absence of the Rev.

Earl G. Gustafson. Interment will be at Riverside Cemetery. Friends may call at the Nyberg- Miller Mortuary beginning at 3 p.m. Sunday and until 9 a.m.

Monday when the remains will be taken to the church to lie in state until the time of services. U. N. Endorses Argentina View UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.

(AP) --The U. N. Security. Council has endorsed Argentina's contention that the capture of Adolf Eichmann by Israeli agents violated Argentine sovereignty. But Israel still has Bichmann and obviously is going to keep him for trial The council late adopted an Argentine criticizing the Nazi official's secret transfer from Buenos Aires Israel and calling on Israel to 'make appropriate reparation." The mild, vague resolution did not ask for Eichmann's return to Argentina, as Argentina had demanded earlier.

And Israeli Premier David Ben-Gurion already had said flatly Eichmann would stay in Israel to stand trial on charges that, as chief of the Ges- Jewish section, he supervised the extermination of six million European Jews in World CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)--(USDA)--Hogs 4.500; active, butchers steady; mixed lots 1-2 and 1-3 190230 Ibs 17.50-17.75; around 150 head 1-2 at 17.75; mixed lots 1-3 and 2-3 190-240 Ibs 16.75-17.50; 2 and 3s 240-270 Ibs 16.00-16.75: 2-3 and 3s 270-300 Ibs 15.50-16.5; mixed grade 2-3 and 3s 300-400 Ib sows 14.00-15-25; 400-550 Ibs 12.75- Cattle 200; a few sales cows, bulls and vealers about steady; a load of good 805 Ib slaughter heifers 22.00; small lot utility and standard steers 20.00; commercial cows 15.00-17.00; utility 14.5015.25;^ cutters 14.25-16.00; canners 12.75-14:00; a few utility and commercial bulls 19.00-21.50; a few good and choice vealers 24.0028.00. CHICAGO PRODUCE CHICAGO (AP) i a Mercantile Exchange Butter steady; receipts wholesale buying prices unchanged; 93 score AA 92 A 90 56; 89 cars 90 89 56. Eggs steady; receipts buying prices unchanged to 1 higher; 60 per cent or better grade A whites mixed mediums standards dirties checks 26. CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO (AP)-- USDA Potatoes arrivals 97; on track 295- total U. S.

shipments 545; old- supplies insufficient to quote: new -supply moderate; demand good; market stronger, especially for round reds; carlot track sales: California long whites 4.35-4.40: California round red 4.25-4.50; Arizona round reds 4.00. Man Injured In Mine Blast James Richard Juntunen. 28, Ironwood Township, was admittec to the Grand View Hospital for injuries sustained in a mining ac cident yesterday. He was. working at the Newport mine when he was caught by a delayed powder blast.

His face seriously injured, reported the attending physician. No were broken. Cars Are Damaged in Intersection Crash WAKEFIELD--Charles Barnes 62. BeUingham. Washington and Ronald Massi.

17, Gogebic, were involved in an accident at 3:45 p.m. Wednesday at the intersection of Main and Park St. in Ramsay. Major damage resulted to the Barnes car which was pulling a 17 foot house trailer. The vehicle had to be towed away after the impact.

Minor damage resulted to the Massi car. No one was injured. Massi backed out of Park St. and hit the Barnes car as it was proceeding along Mam St. Massi was issued a summons for failure to yield the right of way and will appear before Judge William Baird, Bessemer, on the charge.

$50 Bond of Magazine Saleswoman Forfeited Forfeiture of a $50 bail bond which had been furnished by Marjorie E. Karr of Iowa, who was arrested by Hurley city police Wednesday for going into private residences to solicit for the sale of magazines, was ordered this morning in Iron County Court at Hurley. i Mrs. John Belany Mrs. John Belany, 82, of 141 W.

Pine died yesterday afternoon. She had been hospitalized for a week. The former Katherine Ponoch was born "Oct. 22, 1877, at Iglo, Czeckoslovabia. She married John J.

Belany there on Nov. 21, 1898 Mr. Belany. came to Ironwood in 1900. She followed him in 1902.

He died Sept 21, 1945. A son Joseph die'd 1957. She is survived by four Mrs Thomas Barnes, Ironwood; John, Ashland; Frank, Detroit and Mrs. WUliam Dunn, Detroit; nine grandchildren and nine grea! grandchildren. The McKevitt-Kershner Funeral Home will be open at 2 p.m.

Sunday. Rosary will be said at 2:30 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home Funeral Mass will be celebrated at 9 a.m Monday at the Holy Trinity. Catholic Church with the Rev. Ambrose Matejik officiating.

Interment will be at the Riverside Cemetery. Mrs. Thomas Harris Mrs. Thomas Harris. 223 Day died last night at Divine Infant Hospital, Wakefield.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete. The remains are at the Chappell-Zielinski Funeral Home. Shoot Won by State Police SPRINGFIELD. Ill (AP)--The Michigan State police team won the first Illinois invitational pistol meet Thursday. Michigan, which won the .38 caliber team title Wednesday, added the .45 caliber crown Thursday.

The host Illinois team captured the .22 team title Tuesday. Michigan's aggregate team score for all three weapons was 3,379. Illinois had Indiana 3,344 and Ohio 3.340. Patrolman Robert Tucker of the Lansing, department won the .45 individual title with 837 of a possible SCO points. Trooper Lester Doubled ay of Michigan State police was third in three gun aggregate with 2,541.

Trooper Richard Brantner of Ionia. the .38 caliber individual titlist, was fourth in the aggregate with 2,540. Thursday resolution War II. In Buenos Aires, the undersecretary, Miguel Police Puzzled Over Empty Car JACKSON (AP) A stolen car led police today through a gunfir- ing chase, a barricade shattering crash and a phantom-like mystery. The 115-mile-an hour chase started on Interstate 94 superhighway between Jackson and Albion and ended in the violent death of Ira Giles, who is believed to be from Chicago.

Shreiff's deputies and State Police are working with police in Chicago and Detroit in an effort to fill in 'the details. They also sought an unidentified hit run driver. Shortly after 1 a.m. deputy sheriffs Ed Hardy and Harold Wolf spotted a speeding car. They chased it toward Albion.

Unable to overtake it, they radioed ahead to a Calhoun County sheriff's patrol and Albion police to block the highway where the Interstate 94 connection ends two miles east foreign of Albion. Meanwhile a patrol Angel car from the State Police post said his government here joined the chase. might consider an apology from Israel sufficient reparation. But the trunk of the car but failed to Argentine President Arturo Fron- halt the driver. Troopers Morris dizi, at a news conference in Vincent and Robert Boyer in a Paris, refused to clarify whether State Police cruiser pulled along- the demand for Eichmann's re- side the car and also failed to turn to Argentina would be stop it.

vi J.AJ. tin jci. Frondm said he was "favora- The driver of the fleeing car kept bly impressed" with the council going and plowed into a barri- action because it had "approved cade, careened into a -'the principle of international law sandfiHed w.v. WA iw HIK spinning for each nation. Consequently it car stopped on the shoulder of the did not support the violation of road, these rights by Israel." Sheriff's men and State Police Ben-Gurion, in The Hague on a braked their cars alongside the European visit of his own, said wrecked car.

No one was inside he had not read the official text it of the council resolution but that tie wanted to make two ments: "One--that Israel has Seven miles eastward on the state- superhighway they observed a big semitrailer truck which had come always to a stop. The driver, Doyle Rob. -is with erts 22 of St. Joseph, Argentina and will continue to was looking in horror at the pave- have these as far as we are con- ment in front of the truck where earned." "Two--that maintained friendly relations with Eichmann will be judged in Israel." Both Argentinians and Israelis at the U. N.

expressed satisfaction with the Security Council's handling ol their dispute. The vote on the resolution was 3-0, with Poland and the Soviet Union abstaining. Argentina, the llth member of the council, did not vote, being a party to the dispute. Israel, not being a member of the council, could not vote. The United States, Britain and France said they considered that reparation had already been made to Argentina with the Israeli apology and adoption of the resolution.

They termed the tase closed. HST Backs Ike On Foreign Aid WASHINGTON AP) Former President Harry Truman todaj voiced "strong support" of Pres ident Eisenhower's request for restoration of the million dollars which the House cut from the foreign aid program. His stand was disclosed in a message to Chairman Carl Hayden (D-Ariz) and read at a public hearing of the Senate Appropriations Committee, considering the foreign aid money bill. "Events of the past two months demonstrate that this is no time to cut down the mutual security program, or to impede its oper ations," Truman said. "In particular, deep slashes in the funds requested by the administration for economic assistance the development loan fund anc technical assistance would be dangerous." The Point Four program was inaugurated under Truman's ad ministration.

It provides for economic aid to underdeveloped coun tries. Truman's message opened day of comments from nongovernmental witnesses. The hearings will be concluded Monday when Secretary of State Christian A. Herter and Secretary of De fense Thomas S. Gates are scheduled to make final pleas for restoration of the House cuts.

Holly to Campaign For New Industry DETROIT (AP) The Society of Industrial Relators voted Thursday night for a full scale campaign to put a new industrial tenant in the building being vacated by American Spring of Holly. Inc. American Spring, which has been in Holly more than is moving to Charlotte. N.C.. to cut costs, the company says.

Births Hansen. Mr. and Mrs Llcwlyn Hansen, Milwaukee, a daughter, Cheryl Ann. June 18. Mrs.

Hansen is the former Marjorie Berg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Berg, Bessemer, and Mr. Hansen is the son of Mrs. Viola Hansen, Ramsay.

Zadra. Mr. and Mrs. Mario B. Zadra.

Barberton, a daughter June 17 Mr. Zadra if the son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Zadra Anvil. Nevala.

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald D. Nevala. Montreal, a daughter, June 23 at Grand View Hospital.

Hellman. Mr. and Mi? Robert Heilman. Bcssemci. a son.

June 23 at Divine Infant Hospital, WaK'e- field. Baseball Game Is Postponed The r-Hurley High School baseball game which had been scheduled for this evening a1 the Montreal Field has been postponed until next Tuesday evening Hurley Coach Bill Zell announced this afternoon. a Zell said the game which had originally been scheduled for.last night and had to be postponed because of rain, to be postponed again today when it was learned that the Montreal Field would not be available for the contest this evening. Present plans are for the teams to play the game at 6 Tuesday evening at the Montreal Field. Sharp Increase in U.

S. Polio Cases June 11, The 30 ever, are paralytic cases, how- comparable week in 1959 but above the same week in 1958. Saxon Driver Fined On License Charge Clarence E. Leavitt, Saxon, who was charged by a Wisconsin state officer with driving without an operator's license May 20 at Hur- loy. paid a $10 fine and $3 costs this morning in Iron County Court, at Hurley.

Deputy Wolf fired a round into barrels. ditch and The spinning ii. A i lay the body of a Negro with head smashed. Officers said the clothing of the dead man was similar to that worn by the driver of the phantom car. But they were unable to figure how he got out of the car without being seen by his pursuers.

Montreal Scouts At Camporee The Montreal Boy Scouts Troop 323 left for Otter Island at 3 a.m. Thursday, to attend the Scout a being held there through Sunday. Otter I a located in the Apostle Islands near Bayfield, Wis. will have approximately 2,000 scouts and leaders on its shores for the outing. The boys who made the trip were Joseph Perelli, Glen Rinta- maki, Rober.t Genisot, Paul Flateau, Michael Baxter, Joseph Lillstrom, Wayne Nasi, David Morello, Frank Negri, Michael Bennetti, Victor Galore, Philip Laguna, Larry Urli, Jerry Secor, Donald Pretti and John Zanella.

William Baxter, Eugene Lillstrom and Richard Flateau, fathers of some of the boys, accompanied the boys to the island this morning. Other fathers who will join the boys either Friday evening or Saturday morning are Emilio MoreLlo, Arne Nasi, Jim. Perelli, Ronald Tenlin and Jerome Secor. The group plans to around 6 p.m. Sunday.

One Holdout in Rails Dispute CHICAGO (AP)--The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen has reached wage agreement with the nation's railroads, leaving only one operating union still in dispute with the carriers over pay. The agreement Thursday with the 45,000 member brotherhood was patterned after earlier settlements between the railroads and trainmen, engineers and conductors unions. It calls for a 4 per cent, or 10.108 cents hourly wage boost over 16 months. A railroad spokesman estimated the new wage increase will cost the carriers 13 million dollars a year. The Switchmen's Union of North America is the lone operating union still to reach a wage agreement with railroads.

The union's 15,000 workers have demanded a 12 per cent hourly pay hike. A presidential fact finding board entered this dispute June 1, I960. Also, 11 non-operating unions have not settled with the carriers. These unions number about 550,000 members. Thursday's agreement specifiec a two per cent wage boost effective July 1.

1960, another effective March 1, 1961. The workers now average S2.53 an hour. The contract runs to Nov. 1, The union had asked a 14 per cent wage increase June 15. 1959; the earners had countered with a proposal for a 15 per cent reduction.

WASHINGTON (AP)--A sharp The a 8 reem ent also calls for a increase in the number of polio f'- ccnt cost of living ad- cases was reported last week, the retroactive to May 3957 Public Health Service said today. Thirty-seven cases, 30 of them were reported for the week ended June 18. Nineteen cases. 16 of them paralytic, were reported during the week ended Hospital Notes GRAND VIEW, Admitted Thursday: James Richard Juntunen, Route 2, Ironwood, accident; Michael Toth, 102 W. Ash surgery; Henry V.

Voss, Route 1, Hurley, Nante Maki, 337 Leonard medical. Thursday: Joseph Alisamkas, Hurley; John A. Borich, Bessemer; Edgar Johnson, August Slivensky, Sandra Owens, Mrs. Lydia Hein, Ironwood. I I INFANT, Wakefield.

Admitted Wednesday: Louis Hill, Marenisco, Charles Gerber, Bruce Crossing, i a admitted Thursday: a i Bembroski, Paulding, accident. Discharged Thursday: Joseph Trombi, Montreal; George La- Maide, Louis Hill, Marenisco; S- Sgt. Amos Pete, Amarillo, Mrs. John Kent, Gerald Warren, Wakefield. Broadcast Curbs Blamed in Series JOE F.

KANE WASHINGTON (AP) Recent newspaper and magazine articles on congressional expense account practices stemmed -from government efforts to discipline the broadcasting industry, says Rep. Oren Harris (D-Ark). Harris got a standing ovation from the House Thursday when he finished a hour speech in which he centered an attack on the Knight newspapers and Life magazine. The Knight papers charged in a series of articles this month that some House members had charged off expenses such as night club bills and liquor tabs on their government expense accounts. Life published a summary of the articles.

Harris, one of several members whose expenses were mentioned, charged at the time' that the report was a smear. He said Thursday he had no apologies to make and would welcome a public inspection of any congressional expense account he had signed or approved. Harris is chairman of the House subcommittee that investigated payola and quiz show rigging. His speech opened House debate on legislation to outlaw such practices. Final House action on the measure may come late today.

He said broadcasters and large publications which own broadcasting facilities "do not want legislation of this kind." He said moving in" bill received committee approval, but he did not say what form the reported pressures took or where they originated. Harris repeated several times that both the Knight chain and Life magazine have extensive broadcasting holdings. pressures began shortly after the and cancellation of the cost of laving escalator clause. Depth Charges Awarded DETROIT A The Small Business A i i a i announced Thursday a $241,881 government contract for the man- jfacturc of practice depth charges las been awarded to Marweld Steel Products Corp. in Ellsworth Mich.

Church Events Church of the Transfiguration, Episcopal. The Altar Guild will meet Monday afternoon in the church parlors. Salvation Army. A rummace ale will be held Saturday from 8:30 a.m. to 12 noon in the Citadel basement.

Youthful Solons Wind Up Session LANSING (AP) Informal lawmakers of Wolverine Boys' State resembled their official counterparts Thursday as they wound up their eight day operation of a mythical 51st state. Scores of bills died in the rush toward final adjournment. The youngsters took over legislative halls in the capitol after marching to Lansing from their encampment at Michigan State University. Boy Gov. Bill Holland of Albion sat at Gov.

Williams' desk and penned a letter on Williams' official stationery. The boys' State Senate rammed through several measures but few got by the House. "A lot of them were silly so we killed them," explained House Speaker Michael Staebler of Ann Arbor, son of Democratic State Chairman Neil Staebler. Justice Thomas M. Kavanagh of the State Supreme Court addressed the 1,045 delegates from the capitol steps.

Gov. Holland and Jay Herbst of Brighton were picked as delegates to Boys' Nation in Washington next month Robert Tobias of Ann Arbor and Joseph Sweeney of Mount Pleasant were cited for the greatest contribution to boys' state. Other special awards: Gary Norris, Lansing, outstanding organist: Fred Dewhurst, Battle Creek, best orator; George Aspury, Biringham, most dependable; Jack Smith, Buchanan, best bandsman; Calvin Scott, Ypsilanti, best development in civics and government; and Jon Boston, Detroit, top speaker on Abraham Lincoln. Rain, Mud at Guard Camp CAMP MCCOY AP) Wisconsin's 9,000 32nd National Guard Division troops pulled out of the field to end maneuvers at their Truman Way Out Of Step With Fellow Demos Funerals MRS. JOSEPHINE LERZA Funeral services for Mrs.

Josephine Lerza, 67. of 16 Oak Hurley, were held Thursday morn-! mg in the St. Mary a i Soviet Stall on Disarm Talk Seen By JOHN M. H1OHTOWEK WASHINGTON AP) U. S.

offi- By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (AP) Former President Truman is away out of step with the presidential candidates of his own Democratic party. Just a few days ago Truman -rsi Ann Prock, Mrs. Steve Baima, Mrs. Lloyd Baima, Mrs. George Comparin, Mrs, Alphonse Riccelli and Mrs.

Angelo Maffesanti, members of the Catholic Woman's made a plea for bipartisanship in Council. Other members of the council attended in a group. Active pallbearers were John foreign policy. He said he'd fuss with President Eisenhower "on local affairs but on foreign affairs people ought to back him up." But before and after he said it the Democratic candidates were already lacing into 'Eisenhower's handling of foreign affairs, making it clear that they consider foreign policy a major issue in the 1960 campaign. The one candidate who'd be happy if all Democrats shared Truman's view 'is Vice President Richard M.

Nixon who, since he was so much a part of the Eisenhower administration, will have to defend it from attack. There's Sen. Lyndon Johnson of Texas, majority leader of the Senate Democrats. Until recently he was playing the role of the great pacifier and spreader of oil on troubled waters. He tried to quiet Senat- criticism of foreign policy after the U2 plane incident.

But Sen. John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts. the Democrats' front-runner for the nomination, wouldn't listen and went along merrily blasting Eisenhower's handling of foreign affairs. Johnson, either because he changed his mind or thought he'd better get moving if he hoped to stop Kennedy, began booming the foreign policy issue himself Now he's calling the Eisenhower foreign policy a policy of "drift" and is accusing the administration of a "depressing lack of new ideas." On June 14 Kennedy not only went after the Eisenhower foreign policy but produced a detailed foreign program of his own.

He said the real issue of foreign policy is: "The lack of long-range preparation, the lack of policy planning, the lack of a coherent and purposeful national btrategy backed by strength. "As a substitute for policy, Mr. Eisenhower has tried smiling at the Russians; our State Department has tried frowning on them; and Mr. Nixon has tried both. None have succeeded." Thursday night Adlai Stevenson, who refuses to say he's a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination but still won't take himself out of consideration, seemed to be wearing two hats.

He said both parties should keep Premier ISHkita Khrushchev out of the campaign. He said the Russian's aim "is American weakness and disunity." But almost immediately, as if he were having second thoughts, Stevenson said there is a need for a full and frank discussion of the international situation. How this can be done without bringing Khrushchev into it is, at the moment, a Stevensonian secret. Even Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri, Truman's choice for the Democratic nomination, has been critical of the Eisenhower foreign policy.

So among Democrats Truman, whose own handling of foreign policy was roundly assailed by Eisenhower in the 1952 campaign, stands alone in avoiding criticism of Eisenhower on foreign affairs. Not even New York's Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, who'd like to get the Republican nomination, has kept quiet on the subject. He's made it clear he definitely thinks American foreign policy needs improving.

Nixon, as the Republican candidate, may offer some new ideas on foreign affairs but he is not in much position to criticize what's happened in the past. As he said himself last June 11: "I've been a part of this administration for the last seven and a half years. I'm proud of that record, and instead of running away from it I intend to run on it and to build on it." Castagna, Alex Raineri, William Trolla, Louis Lopez, Theodore Gentile and Joseph Erspamer. Out of town p'ersons attending the services included Mr. and Mrs.

Blase Pauline and daughter Sandra of Milwaukee, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ochietti of Kenosha, Mrs. Mary Giammattei and daughters Mrs. Marie Ferraro and Florence Mazzie of Newburg, N.Y., Mr.

and Mrs. Ear! Mittelstaedt and sons of Toledo, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs. Aurelio Ochietti, Mr. and Mrs.

a Ochietti, Mrs. Natale Ochietti. Mrs. Alban Bolen, Mrs. Jenny Cersoli.

Mr. and Mrs. Bob Fontecchio, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Andrini, Larry Andrini, Mr.

and Mrs. Francis Brouillette, Mr. and Mrs. James Bloomquist, Louis, Tony and Clara Lerza and Mrs. Filoniena Ochietti, all of Iron Mountain.

MRS. CORNELIUS KELLY Funeral services for Mrs. Cornelius Kelly, 64, 224 W. Aurora who died Wednesday, will be held Saturday at 9 a.m. at St.

Michael's Catholic Church with the Rev. Francis X. Ronkowski officiating. Interment will be at Riverside Cemetery. Friends may call at the Chappell-Zielinski Funeral Home be- at 6 tonight.

The rosary will be recited at the funeral home at 7:30 tonight. Pipeline Firm Expands Plant Work is under way on the construction of an addition to the Lakehead Pipeline company's pumping station in the Town of Kimball, Iron County, Wis. The present building is being extended 28 feet to house another pump and an engine. Work on the project was started last week. The Lakehead Constructors Co.

of Superior has the contract for the project. Moore's Electric of Ironwood has the electrical contract. A report received today from the Lakehead Co. states that daily crude oil shipments through the summer encampment here today, combined Lakehead and Interprov- taking with them memories of incial Pipe Line Co. systems av- Jurors Notified Not to Report Iron County residents who had been notified earlier this week to report Monday morning for possible jury duty in Iron County Circuit Court at Hurley were being notified today not to report Monday.

Fred J. Ebli of Hurley, clerk of Circuit Court, said Judge Lewis J. Charles of Ashland notified him this morning to cancel plans for calling in a jury and to notify the jurors not to report Monday. Ebli said a court session will still be held Monday morning and that the trial of John S. Carli's S50.000 civil suit against the city of Hurley and two Hurley police officers will be discussed.

Selection of a jury to hear the Carli case had been scheduled to begin at 9:30 Monday morning. Last Tuesday, Judge Charles denied a motion by Carl's attorney for a postponement and ordered that the case remain on the calen- as previously A er a change of administrations in Washington. Authorities said that the Soviet government probably is reluctant to make a definte break-off move for a time, but two developments indicate they are maneuvering in that direction. In the 10-nation disarmament conference, Communist spokesmen at recent sessions have accused the United States and other Western powers of stalling and of failing to display any interest in real progress toward agreement. For their part they have insisted that the West accept Soviet proposals as a basis for negotiation, and so far have rejected all efforts to draw them into detailed discussions even on their own plan.

In connection with the three- power negotiations for a treaty prohibiting nuclear weapons tests, the Soviet Union recently sounded out the United States informally about shelving the conference until after the November presidential elections in this country. A Soviet diplomat at Geneva is understood to have suggested to a U. S. diplomat that no progress was possible so long as President Eisenhower remains in office. The United States rebuffed the Soviet approach about a long recess but authorities here considered significant.

Suspension of the conference would be in line with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's campaign to discredit President Eis- enhcnver as an effective U.S. leader in the search for peace. Officials said the United States and its allies have no intention of agreeing to a long recess in either conference. They are not how matters will develop in the nuclear test negotiations during the next few weeks but are pessimistic about any real progress. They expe i little accomplishment even though the belief still prevails in official quarters that in the long run Khrushchev wants a nuclear test ban.

dar for Monday, scheduled. Congress Trip Costs Are Set WASHINGTON (AP) House members have been ordered to limit their government-paid living expenses to a day while on congressional trips. The new ceiling adopted Thursday by the House Administration Committee will become effective July 1. Employes of the executive rain, mud and chilly nights. The troops will pack their gear and head for home Saturday.

Thursday, the last full day of training, was rough even in soldiers' terms. Rain pelted the area and wherever there was a footprint or a tire track, there was mud. It was a repetition of several previous days. The division kept on with its training despits the weather and drew praise frofh training officer Lt, Col. Arthur J.

Kessenich of Whitefish Bay. Lt. Col Kessenich had particular praise for the 132nd Signal Battalion Milwaukee a Waukesha for putting in a communications network for the entire division. Certificates Are Hit SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP)--The leaching profession was urged today to launch an all-out attack on public acceptance of makeshift certificatei.

eraged 367,636 barrels during the first five months of 1960, compared to 337,413 barrels daily in the same period last year. The report also states that crude oil deliveries during May averaged 353,081 barrels per day, compared to 280,960 barrels in May, 1959. Last month daily deliveries averaged 56,058 barrels per day to U. S. points, 97.955 to Western Canada and 199,068 to Ontario.

Air Force Promotes Ex-Wakefield Man WAKEFIELD Ernest B. LeRoux, formerly of WakeJielct, has been promoted to the rank of major in the Air Force, according to information received by relatives here. Maj. LeRoux has been in the service since before the United States entered World War II. At the present time he is stationed at Plattsburg.

N.Y., Air Fprce Base. branch are limited to $12 per diem allowance while on government trips. The committee said Thursday that any members who plan to ask more than the $12 a day for expenses such as hotel rooms, meals, laundry and tips must get approval from their committee chairmen in advance. But it said up to $25 a day could be paid "where necessary subsistence costs are unusually high" or where hotel bills alone would use up the $12. Members staying within the $12 limit do not have to list their expenses in detail, but those spending more than that will have to itemize their costs.

The ceiling on expenses was ordered following a series of copyrighted stories by the Knight newspapers. The series said some members spent as much as $103 a day on hotel accommodations, food and drink while on congressional trips. Engineers Study River Project Army engineers are making a study of the proposed flood control project on the Montreal Rever between Hurley and Ironwood, according to information received bv Mayor Sam Giovanoni of Hurlev from Congressman Alvin E. O'- Konski of Mercer. "The St.

Paul office of the Army Engineers has informed me that they are going to make a. thorough study of such a project," O'Konski wrote Mayor Giovanoni. "As a matter of fact, I think that thev are already working on it and expect that they will be ready with a complete and full report within a matter of a month or two. "If the cost of such a project is not too high, the Army Engineers may be able to go ahead with funds out of their working a i a However, if the cost should be in excess of several hundred thousand dollars it will necessitate an appropriation by the Congress, which I am sure I can get." Mayor Giovanoni has requested federal officials and the Army Engineers to investigate the possibility of dredging the channel and erecting retaining walls on both sides of the river jfrom Silver St north to the US-2 bridge. TEMPERATURES IN IRONWOOD ir 24, JIIHO.

2 R-, P1 endl a noon. p.m. 63ilO p.m. 49! 6 a 4a 4 p.m. 6i Midnight 49 a 0 p.m.

5a 2 a.m. 47,10 a m. 8 p.m. 531 4 a.m. 48,12 noon 64 Barometer: 6 a.m.

29. 58 12 noon 29 6 THE WEATHER ELSEWHERE By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pr A IK Albany, cloudy Albuquerque, clear Anchorage, cloudy Atlanta, clear Bismarck, clear Boston, rain Buffalo, cloudy Chicago, cloudy Cleveland, cloudy Denver, clear Des Moines, clear Detroit, clear Fort Worth, cloudy 73 49 Promotion Sunday to Be Observed 26 ROCKLAND Promotion Sunday will be held at the Metho- dist Church June 26 at 7-30 i Helena clea The children will receive perfect attendance awards and also their promotion certificates. A program is planned and lunch will be served following the program. All interested persons are invited to attend. Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas Cuculich have returned to their home in JDetroit after attending the Hoffman-Pi cotte wedding. They were accompanied home by their nephew. Willard Hoffman, who will visit his grandmother, Mrs. Matilda Cuculich and other relatives.

Mrs. Jane Trudeau of Duluth is visiting her sister, Mrs. Eliza 53 94 65 64 52 94 73 34 84 64 81 60' 68 51 56 79 70 76 20 "08 Spitz, ville-. and brother, Arthur Ver. Pfc.

Glenn Hoffman returned to Fort Hood, Texas, after attending the Hoffman-Picotte wedding and visiting relatives. Ellen Carlson, an instructor in the Dearborn Schools, arrived here to spend the summer at her home Mrs. Rhea Cooley, daughter Theresa, Iron River, and son, James K. of California spent a few days here with friends. Mrs.

Howard Kerr and son, Clayton, Duluth, are visiting her parents, Mr. snd Mri. Llewellyn Pness and family. 82 98 77 83 77 Honolulu, clear Indianapolis, clear Kansas City, cloudy Los Angeles, cloudy Louisville, cloudy Memphis, cloudy Miami, clear Milwaukee, cloudy St. Paul, clear 71 New Orleans, cloudy 91 New York, cloudy Oklahoma City, rain Omaha, clear 58 64 77 45 74 63 80 62 84 58 81 66 2.58 96 77 87 82 70 57 51 74 .22 79 74 84 106 77 69 62 54 69 ,77 66 ti HL( j) Portland, cloudy 86 58 73 48 90 66 87 62 84 53 60 55 55 75 .44 INEWSPAPERif Philadelphia, cloudy Phoenix, clear Pittsburgh, cloudy Portland, cloudy 78 Portland, Rapid City, clear Richmond, cloudy St.

Louis, cloudy Salt Lake City, clear 84 San Diego, cloudy 74 San Francisco, clear 64 Seattle, cloudy 82 Tampa, clear 92 KANGE SKIES Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow 5:08. Moonset today 9-08 p.m. First Quarter July 1. Prominent Star Antarcs. due south 31:15 p.m.

Visible Planets-Jupiter, low in southeast? 9:21 pm Saturn low in southeast 10:41 p.m- Mars, due cast 3:38 aim. SPAPEfcfl IC i VI.

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About Ironwood Daily Globe Archive

Pages Available:
242,609
Years Available:
1919-1998