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Times-Advocate from Escondido, California • 2

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Times-Advocatei
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Escondido, California
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2
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CALIFORNIA MARCMON 1966 What In The World's Going On The global report WASHINGTON (UPI) President Charles de Gaulle's NATO as the gravest internal ance since its inception in U.S. officials regard French move to withdraw from threat to the Atlantic Alli1949. The United States and 13 other Allied governments are working on a draft of a joint declaration endorsing the NATO defense alliance as a reply to De Gaulle, If approved, the statement would be issued within the next few days. ACCRA, Ghana (UPI) Hungary and Czechoslovakia today became the first Communist states to extend recognition to Ghana's new military regime. WASHINGTON (UPI) Vice President Hubert H.

Humphrey said Sunday it may be possible to contain aggressive thrusts of Communist China without isolating her from the international community. But Humphrey stopped short of suggesting any moderation of U.S. opposition to seating of Communist China in the United Nations, or indicating a major shift in American China policy was coming. Across the continent NEW YORK (UPI) today boosted the wholesale increase was expected to a penny a pack. The boosts erican Tobacco Co.

and Philip Two major cigarette makers price of cigarettes and the result in a hike to smokers of were announced by the AmMoris, Inc. Names in the news LOS ANGELES (UPI) Britain's Prince Philip discussed use of leisure time today in a speech at the University of California at Los Angeles and said each individual should be permitted to follow his preferences without restrictions from "the self-righteous." Philip received an honorary degree of doctor of laws at charter day ceremonies marking the 98th anniversary of the university. Later he was to visit 20th Century-Fox studios and lunch with a group of stars including Bing Crosby. On the war front PHAN RANG, South Viet Nam (UPI) Seventeen U.S. Air Force F4C Phantom jets landed today at the new air strip at Phan Rang, 65 miles northeast of Saigon, after an 18-hour flight from the United States.

LANDER, Wyo. (UPI) year-old Wyoming mule, is mascot of the 1st Cavalry good, noisy bray. She will mule who was shot and killed sentry when she failed to "Sagebrush Sally," a 5- going to Viet Nam as the Division because she has a replace "Maggie," a quieter in the dark by an Army answer his challenge. WASHINGTON (UPI) The Joint Chiefs of Staff are urging an expanded air war against Communist North Viet Nam, with oil storage depots and refineries in the Hanoi-Haiphong area a top priority target. It is expected that President Johnson will, in time approve the broader air campaign heavier blows against a widening target list if Hanoi makes no move toward the peace table.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Treasury Secretary Henry F. Fowler said today the war in Viet Nam does not require either "drastic" taxes or direct wage-price controls to keep the U.S. economy on an even keel. Around the golden state LONG BEACH (UPI) mercial jetliner, the Douglas its maiden flight today from plans called for the plane to an hour and at a maximum The world largest comDC8 Super 61, took off on Municipal Airport. Flight fly at speeds up to 345 miles altitude of 31,000 feet.

It shouldn't happen WHITESBURG, Ky. (UPI) A teacher in a oneroom Kentucky school today blamed low salaries for his alleged moonshining activities. The teacher, Alvin Cornett, 28, of Gilley, and Maurice Lewis, 24, also of Letcher County, were free under $500 bond each following their arrests by federal agents last Friday. Agents confiscated a 60-gallon copper still and destroyed 100 gallons of fermenting mash at the still site. Political sideshow PACIFIC PALISADES (UPI) Republican candidate for governor Ronald Reagan was downed by a second attack of influenza.

Reagan, with a temperature of 101, was ordered to bed Sunday by his physician and his schedule for the coming week was placed on a tentative basis, according to a campaign spokesman. More from the Prowler (Cont. from page 1) in each city. They can be obdido Chamber of Commerce to tained through April! 5. get a letter off to Sacramento.

For some time, there has been a feeling that the Board of Regents of the University of California should include someone from San Diego County, and the letter to Gov. Brown urged this. Came a reply recently to the effect that the governor has "taken the matter under advisement." ABSENTEE BALLOTS for elections in Escondido, Vista and San Marcos now are available at the city clerk's office 1 Gemini 8 delayed one day CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) Space officials today postponed the Gemini 8 hookup and spacewalk spectacular from Tuesday to Wednesday at the earliest because of leaks in the rendezvous target's Atlas booster and the capsule's breathing system. The double trouble shattered a smooth string of preparations for the ambitious three-day spaceflight of astronauts Neil Armstrong and David Scott. "The March 15 launching of the Gemini 8 mission was postponed for a least 24 hours today," the Federal Space Agency said.

The agency said leaks were discovered in the Atlas late Sunday night during fueling checks and other leaks were found in a Gemini spacecraft system that supplies oxygen to the Astronauts' space suits. The oxygen leak was traced to a device that separates moisture from re-circulated cabin air, engineers reported. The Miami weather bureau reported that weather conditions for Wednesday launchings of the Atlas-Agena rendezvous rocket and the Gemini 8 spacecraft were satisfactory with partly cloudy skies expected at the launch site. "Project officials are trouble shooting the Atlas fueling system at complex 14 and the spacecraft environmental control system at pad 19 to determine the exact cause of the leaks," the agency said in a statement. If the troubles are corrected in time, the Atlas-Agena rocket will be launched at 10 a.m.

EST Wednesday with Armstrong and Scott following in pursuit 101 minutes later. The mission, one of the most ambitious yet undertaken in the U.S. man-in-space program, calls for two rendezvous attempts, four two-satellite hookups and a record space stroll by Scott. Sunday was a rainy day of review and rest for the two astronauts. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) reported they spent the entire day in their plush quarters at the new moonport west of the Cape.

CRACKED OPEN LIKE PEANUTS' SP derailment: $1 million loss CHATSWORTH (UPI)- Damage may total as high as $1 million from the derailment Sunday of four diesel locomotives and 47 cars of a 75-car Southern Pacific freight train, according to an SP spokesman. J.H. Long, SP division superintendent, estimated the damage to railroad equipment was between $500,000 and $750,000. He said damage to freight in the cars might increase the total loss to $1 million. The train, loaded with 4,000 tons of general merchandise, was traveling at 60 miles an hour when it reached an area where an automobile had knocked the tracks out of line after crashing through a barricade.

Link to Chou led to ouster of Subandrio SINGAPORE (UPI) Military leaders decided to seize power in Indonesia after discovering a plot by Foreign Minister Subandrio to eliminate "rightist elements" within the army and government, it was learned today. A source said documents captured by students who ransacked Subandrio's foreign ministry last Tuesday included an "agreement" between Subandrio and Communist Chinese Prime Minister Chou En-Lai calling for a purge of anti-Communists. The students forwarded the documents to military intelligence officers after learning of their importance, the sources said. Diplomatic sources here, meantime, reported uncertainty about the fate of Subandrio and 14 other leftist Indonesian cabinet ministers. Early reports said Subandrio and the ministers had been arrested, but later information indicated that he was with Sukarno at the presidential palace and was not under guard.

The source said the documents also contained details to a secret defense pact which would provide China with a base in Indonesia "at an appropriate time." The army was reported to have arrested 22 persons on Subandrio's intelligence staff. Vista council to hear two CAT proposals VISTA The City Council Tuesday night will hear representatives of two television antenna companies desiring to operate here. The meeting will be at 7 p.m. in City Hall. Vista Cablevision, and Warner Brothers Television will explain their systems in an effort to gain a franchise.

Following the airing, the council plans to establish a committee to incorporate the data and establish a policy for granting licenses. The council will continue a hearing to establish Mar Vista Drive as an 84-foot collector street. Residents of the area have expressed discontent with the plan and have petitioned to have Mar Vista remain a 60-foot street. U.S. Crime Commission will cull new ideas in crime fighting WASHINGTON (UPI) Holy net gun! Here come the riotbusting helicopters with a marching band sent into action by those tiny microphones hidden in the storm drain.

Is it the Caped Crusader and the Boy Wonder marshaling another mission? No, Virginia, it's the National Crime Commission, and it's all part of an effort to crack down on crime. The commission begins this week to cull new ideas in crime fighting which range from a gun that shoots a net over a suspect to the microphones, which would carry cries for help to police stations. With the aid of the Institute for Defense Analysis, the commission hopes to find this and "yet unimagined contributions" efforts to control lawbreakers. If the institute finds any ideas feasible such as the net gun they will be incorporated in the crime commission report to President Johnson, who last week called for congressional action on anti-crime measures. The net gun is but one of the notions to be considered.

One advanced for riot control is the use of helicopters to carry large television screens over the combatants in hopes the rioters might break it up when they see what they look like. Yet another would send a marching band into the riot scene on the premise that the martial strains might turn people from mugging one another to marching. the institute will examine a proposal that tiny microphones be installed at strategic sites. The idea is that the microphones could pick up cries for help which could be heard in police stations. One of the institute's jobs will be to see if a filter could be devised to screen out the other noises of the street so the cries could be heard.

The computer emerges as the most promising new addition to police weaponry, speeding the collection and analysis of data for the investigator. These ideas are in just one area of science and technology to be investigated by the crime commission, which will also study subjects ranging from prison reforms to the psychology of which will help police in their To cut down street crimes, the criminal. Cancer crusade drive scheduled The American Cancer Society fund drive Redington, Escondido chairman; Mrs. Lou- will be April 16 to 18. Officials condido campaign include stal Hoffman, Mrs.

Tommye 2 As the train hit the bent rails, the freight cars piled up in a tangled mass of wreckage that burst into flames, apparently from spilled diesel oil. Firemen from a nearby fire station extinguished the flames. Police said the driver of the car, Ronel Knisley, 31, Santa Susana, sustained a fractured arm and broken nose. PREMIER CASTRO Violent speech Red Chinese denounced in Castro blast MIAMI (UPI) Premier Fidel Castro bitterly denounced Red China's leaders today for using rice to "blackmail" Cuba and warned the United States he has "magnificent weapons to fight any kind of war, conventional or non-conventional." "We can never be defeated," he shouted in a Havana University speech monitored here. But he gave no specific clues as to the type of arms his Soviet-supplied island now controls.

In a bellicose anti-Chinese harrangue, Castro threatened to curtail diplomatic relations with Red China and, at one point, referred to Chinese Communist boss Mao Tse-tung as "feebleminded." The Chinese, Castro said in a four hour and 30 minutes speech, had "committed a grave historical error which will prove very costly to those responsible" for reneging on a sugar-for-rice deal with Cuba. He said the trade backdown was "for purely political reasons" and gave Mao and other Chinese Communist leaders a tongue-lashing for these tactics. Anti-poverty board in Vista meets tonight VISTA The steering com- mittee working for establishment of a Community Action Council to combat poverty here will meet tonight at 7:30 at the Santa Fe Elementary School. Arnold Elliott, Palomar Family Service senior counselor, heads the committee attempting to attract members of Vista's poverty-stricken group. Efforts to establish an action council failed last week when no one from the poor community showed up at an organizational meeting.

Church women meet Tuesday VISTA The Grace Presbyterian Women's Association will meet at a 10 a.m. coffee hour Tuesday at the old church facilities, 114 N. Hillside Terrace. Cora Zuber, welfare coordinator for this city, will be the guest speaker. Mrs.

Zuber will discuss facilities for helping needy persons in the community. Firm doesn't rent products ESCONDIDO Opportunity Enterprises, 1670 Valley a distributor of the ZestWay San Diego, does not rent its products, according to Richard Suda, manager. Zest-Way distributors, which sell a variety of items including a home "Fountainette," originally rented them on a monthly basis. However, the Escondido branch never has rented its products, Suda said. Engineer George Graves told investigators he saw the rails had been knocked out of line in the predawn auto accident, but said he was unable to stop the train in time to avoid derailment.

Graves complained of back pains, but the other six crewmen were merely shaken up, according to an SP spokesman. "Freight cars were strewn all over the area," said one policemen at the scene. "Many of them cracked open like peanuts." The train was bound for Los Angeles from San Francisco when the accident occurred along an unhabited stretch about 25 miles northwest of the Los Angeles Civic Center. Entry CC didn't know of wins VISTA There were a lot of red faces at the Chamber of Commerce this morning. The organization won a $600 prize for an exhibit at the National Orange Show in San Bernardino, but no one at the chamber knew that a display was entered.

Elmer King, chamber manager, said he received a call from the Orange Show Friday notifying him that the Vista display had won an award. To King's surprise, the Vista Chamber of Commerce did have a display at the show, prepared by Dave Miller, a Santa Ana nurseryman and landscaper who was under contract last year to prepare displays for the chamber at various Southland shows. What was the theme of the exhibit? No one seems to know! Obituary Notices ESCONDIDO Rex A. Detrick, 75, a native of Julian, died this morning at the home of his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.

Elmer Bader, 1516 Valley Blvd. He made his home with them. He was born June 27, 1890, the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Deterick, pioneer Julian ranchers.

They built the original Pine Hills Hotel on their homestead in the late 1800s and operated the 27-bedroom structure until it burned to the ground in the early days of this century. The Detricks and Ed Fletcher then built Pine Hills Lodge, a mountain resort which still operates in that area. Rex Detrick and Margaret Shaw were married in 1912 in San Felipe and honeymooned on horseback with a ride up Palomar Mountain. He operated a butcher shop in Julian and was noted as a hunter and fisherman. The Detricks moved to Escondido in 1942.

He was a carpenter until his recent retirement. His wife died Nov. 23, 1964. He was a charter member of BPO Elks 1687. Surviving are his daughter; two grandsons, Robert S.

Anderson of La Habra and Donald A. Anderson of Long Beach; four great-grandchildren; and a brother, Arnie Detrick of San Francisco. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Alhiser-Wilson Mortuary. Lulu C. Juch Rex A.

Detrick JULIAN Funeral services were held at 2 p.m. today in the Julian Community Baptist Church for Lulu C. Juch, 99, widow of Arthur Juch, who was known as the Julian apple king. She died Friday in a San Diego hospital. The daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Yancey, she was born in 1866 in Tucson, and came to the North County area in a covered wagon. Her father drove a freight wagon to San Diego and other points. The Yanceys first lived along the old Overland Stage Route on the edge of the desert, near Vallecito. Then they moved a bit further north and west to Banner.

The a ly-day grammar school which Mrs. Juch attended as a girl is located in the same area of Julian where she made her home at 2508 near the intersection of Second and B. CALL 745-6611 It you haven't received your Times-Advocate by 5:30 p.m. Call before 6:30 p.m. and a paper will be delivered to you.

DAILY TIMES-ADVOCATE FOUNDED IN 1886 226 East Ohio P.O, Box 1477 Escondido, California 92025 Phone 745-6611 by a California Published A evenings except Sunday Corporation. Jerene Appleby Harnish, Chairman Carlton R. Appleby, Publisher Ronald Kenney, Managing Editor Joseph Anthony, Retail Adv. Mgr. Ralph Tammariello, Classified Mgr.

Donald Freeman, Circulation Mgr. Ralph Shidner, Mechanical Supt. Roy Laux, Accountant Second class postage paid at Escondido, Member, Audit reau of Circulations. SUBSCRIPTION RATES $1.50 monthly, home delivery or mail During Julian's 1956 Apple Days celebration, she reigned as pioneer apple queen. She attended that community's first Apple Day celebration Oct.

9, 1909. She was a life member of the Julian American Legion Auxiliary. Surviving are three sons, Flournoy A. Juch of Mill Valley, Stanley S. Juch of Oakland and Louis D.

Juch of Julian; six grandchildren, eight greatgrandchildren and one greatgreat-grandson. Albert J. Portoon and Leonard Schreiber, both affiliated with the Radio Church of God, officiated at today's last rites. Burial was in Julian Cemetery, under the auspices of the Paris Mortuary of El Cajon. Bernice Peluso RAMONA Graveside services were held at 11 a.m.

Monday in San Diego's Holy Cross Cemetery for Bernice Peluso, 65, of that city. She died Thursday. She was the sister of Clara A. LeRoy and Julia Nueffer, both of Ramona. Rose Martinez ESCONDIDO Rosa Martinez, 80, of 1130 Gamble died Sunday in a San Diego hospital.

Among Mrs. Martinez', survivors is a son, David N. Martinez of Escondido. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Alhiser-Wils Mortuary. Bertha Hubbard ATASCADERO Services for Bertha Mason Hubbard, 87, aunt of Viola Hammer of Escondido, will be held here Tuesday.

She had lived in Los Angeles before moving to Atascadero, where she died Friday. Clarence D. Vandiver ESCONDIDO Services for Clarence D. Vandiver, 94, a former Escondido resident who died Friday in San Bernardino, will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Alhiser-Wilson Mortuary Chapel.

Rev. Coy T. Maret, pastor of the Emmanual Faith Community Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Oak Hill Memorial Park. Sprinklers stolen FALLBROOK-Henry D.

Jay, 630 E. Dougherty reported the theft Sunday of sprinklers valued at $75. Jay said the sprinklers were taken from a grove across from the 700 block on North Olive Street. NOT EVERYONE finds money on the street and turns it over to the police for return to the rightful owner. Jimmie Wilken, 11, of 355A Lansing Circle, did so this morning.

He found the money in a case near the intersection of Hickory Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. There was no identification. Full description of the items in the case are withheld pending a claim by the rightful owner. If it is not claimed within 30 days, Jimmie will keep it. SOMETHING SPECIAL at ORANGE JULIUS THIS WEEKEND for the Es- is Whyte; and (from left) Cry- chairman.

Hewlett; Jim ton. (Photo by Paul Darrock, North County The women will assist RedingJohn Daly).

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Years Available:
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