Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Longview Daily News from Longview, Washington • 3

Location:
Longview, Washington
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Daily News Longview, Washington Tuesday, Sept. 22, 1970 Indian fishing rights trial opens Briefly told Northwest news Meanwhile, a group of Puyallup Indians said it plans to reestablish a riverside camp. But they said progress has been stopped, because they lack teepee poles which cost about $100 apiece. NEW on the Oregon Coast Planning a seashore vaca tion, honeymoon, business trip? If so, plan to stay al the new Cavalier. You'll en joy luxury living in a beau tifully furnished suite look ing out over white sand and blue sea to the distant hori zon.

Call or write today for information. RENTAL UNITS AVAILABLE Be our I guests! (AVAL16R BEACH FRONT CONDOMINIUM (503) 764-2353 GLENEDEN BEACH. OREGON 97388 TACOMA (AP)- A trial to determine what is "reasonable and necessary" to Indian fishing rights in the Puyallup River began here Monday with attorneys for two state departments disagreeing in their approach to the issue. The case was remanded in 1968 from the U.S. Supreme Court to Pierce County Superior Court after the federal bench decided the state had the right to regulate Indian fishing for resource conservation.

Fisheries Department counsel Wil- Son protected from pushers PITTSBURGH (AP) A local man, arrested on charges of raising marijuana plants in his backyard, said fatherly concern prompted him to cultivate the crop. "I grew it for my son so he would not come in touch with the bad element which sells marijuana," Louis C. Catz, 40, said after his arrest Wednesday, according to Allegheny County detectives. Catz waived a hearing on a state drug charge and was released under $2,000 bond. His 2-year-old son was reportedly out of town.

Dr. Cornfield says campus law adequate OLYMPIA (AP) Existing legislation is adequate to deal with the threat of disruption and violence on community college campuses, Dr. A. A. Can-field has told legislative committees.

Canfield, state community college director, released a formal response to a statement on campus disorders issued by the Legislative Budget Committee and the Joint Committee on Higher Education. He said the community colleges had complied substantially with the committees' recommendations. They recommended that college employment procedures be reviewed to prevent employment of advocates of violence and that rules be published requiring expulsion from school or dismissal from the faculty for acts of violence or intimidation. Area transferred OLYMPIA (AP) Gov. Dan Evans has signed a proclamation transferring the Cliffdell area from Kittitas County to Yakima County.

The governor's action followed approval of the transfer by commissioners of both counties and voters of the area in a special election. WASHINGTON (AP) Three more Washington servicemen have been killed in action in Southeast Asia, the Pentagon reported Monday. They were Army M. Sgt. Lonnie M.

Swinson of Olympia, Spec. 5 Donald G. Chmiel of Tacoma and Spec. 4 Daniel R. Fenn of Toppenish.

Earlier, Chmiel and Fenn had been listed as missing. ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) John A. Earley, owner of Earley Tire Co. of Aberdeen, has been elected president of the National Association of Tire Dealers and Retreaders.

He was named to the post during the group's annual convention here. SEATTLE AP) The nation's first workshop for vocational training of the "chronically unemployed" will open here Friday, operated by Seattle Central Area Industries. The program is designed to give persons who have been unable to maintain a job some training in basic skills. The project is financed by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and the Seattle Model Cities Program. ARLINGTON, Wash.

(AP)-Author-ities here searched a brushy area near the Lincoln Street Bridge Monday for clues in the Sept. 16 disappearance of Jeanette Miller, 17, Arlington. Officials said she was last seen near the bridge over the south fork of the Stillaguamish River on her way home from school. OLYMPIA (AP) Rod Belcher, radio and TV sports personality at KING Broadcasting Co. for nine years, was named public information director for the State Highways Department in Seattle and Northwest Washington Monday.

OLYMPIA (AP) The State Highway Commission ruled Monday that colleges without 600 students can no longer have a highway direction sign telling how to reach it. The ruling applies to roads other than interstate highways. Previously, there was no enrollment limit on schools, with all institutions less than three miles from a roadway qualified. MUKILTEO, Wash. (AP) Between $2,000 and $3,000 was lost at Mariner High School Sunday night when burglars broke a window in a counselor's office and smashed a hole in an office wall to reach a safe, authorities reported.

School vice principal Jack Campbell said the money included receipts from a football game and shop, store and book department fees. i the best of the rest liam M. Gingery said he presented a brief last week. In it, he said, the department recognized Indians have special fishing rights under the 1854 Medicine Creek Treaty. He said it would be up to the court to decide what those rights are.

But Game Department attorney Joseph L. Coniff said he would ask for a permanent injunction against net fishing in the river. Fisheries representatives are concerned with salmon, while the Game Department has its eye on steelhead. Indian representatives were divided over an internal jurisdictional dispute. Assistant U.S.

Atty. Jeral Olson represented the tribe. Jack Tanner, Tacoma, and Arnold Barer, Seattle, represented tribe members Silas Cross, Robert Satiacum and James Siddle. The state has obtained a temporary injunction against Indian net fishing in the river. Earlier, 56 Indians were arrested during a State Fisheries Department raid.

Rent A Piano before you buy Rent will apply to purchase KORTEN'S 1400 Commerce 455-3400 i TL A roundup of SWEET HOME, Ore. (AP) A 29-year old hunter from Winlock, was found in the central Oregon Cascades Monday. The Linn County sheriff's office said Edward Kaija was safe and apparently in good conditiin. He was reported at a search party base camp at Big Lake, in the Mt. Washington primitive area about 50 miles east of Sweet Home.

THE NATIONAL CHAIRMAN of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, William H. Brown III, said in Seattle Monday that discrimination complaints handled by the commission now are 45 per cent sex-based. Washington is the only state of five in the commission's Northwest Region that excludes sex discrimination from its law barring employment bias. THE FBI ARRESTED Joseph Brad Warra is National Merit semi finalist NASELLE Brad Warra, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Fred Warra of Na-selle, is a semifinalist in the National Merit scholarship program. Warra was student body treasurer at Naselle High School, is a member of the National Honor Society and the school band, and turns out for football and track. He maintains a straight A average. The high school senior has not decided yet what school he will attend next year. of LOCATED IN THE TRIANGLE SHOPPING CENTER LOCATED IN THE Thomas Sherman, 33, who gave Vancouver, B.

C. as his address, in Bel-lingham Monday and charged him with bank robbery in connection with the 1968 holdup of the First Pennsylvania Banking and Trust office in Philadelphia when $1,683 was taken. DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE David A. Hughes may be removed from Washington State's 1st District congressional ballot because he might not have received 10 per cent of his party's vote in the primary. If Hughes is disqualified, Republican Tom Pelly will run unopposed.

A 1963 law requires a candidate to draw at least 10 per cent his party's vote in his district. Sen. Henry M. Jackson, the party's top vote getter received 166,239 votes and Hughes received 8,488 1st District AN ASSISTANT PROFESSOR of chemistry at the University of Oregon, John Froines, has quit his post saying America has made him a revolutionary. Froines was one of the Chicago 7 accused of conspiracy during the 1968 Democratic national convention in Chicago.

UNITED FARM WORKERS organizers will ask for union authorization votes at more Eastern Washington hop ranches following a weekend vote at Yakima Chief ranches at Mabton and Outlook, union spokesmen said Monday. A CALIFORNIA DEMOCRAT, Rep. Jerome Waldie, said the Republican administration is making a concerted effort to distract American voters from the issues which most affect them. Speaking at the annual convention of the Western Pulp and Papers Seattle headquarters (With nearly 100 offices in Washington State.) vaMMW Workers in Portland, Waldie charged Vice President Agnew has not had anything to say about unemployment and inflation. A BORING FARMER shot and killed a 250-pound female African lion on his property as the animal was mauling one of his hunting dogs.

Dan D. Tanory said the lion was one of sev-veral wild animals kept by his neighbor, Wilbur Tracy. A CITIZEN of West Germany, Goetz Johannes Spiewok, 29, a former resident of Klamath Falls, was arrested in Portland Sunday and charged Monday in connection with a bomb threat extortion of $25,000 from Western Airlines in Anchorage, Alaska, the FBI said. Port Calendar SHIPS CM PORT Hoegh Mntnda, Weyeiiaeusa- Co. dock, Norwegian ship loading pulp and lumber for Australia Kasho Maru, Weyerhaeuser Co.

dock, Jananese Slip loading chips for Japan. Tijuca, Weyerhaeuser Co. dock, Norwegian ship loading pub for South America. Eriri Port of Longview, Greek ship loading grain for the Far East President Boras, Port of Longview, Philippine ship discharging plywood from the Philippine Islands. Grand Fair, Port of Longview, Nationalist Chinese snipdisdiarging plywood from Japan.

Pernlake, Port of Longview, Norwegian ship loading paper for Hong Kong. Washington, Port of Longview, American ship discharging general cargo from the Far East. SCHEDULED ARRIVALS Wednesday Nngato Maru, Port of Longview, Japanese ship to load logs for Japan. hgellan. Port of Longview, French ship to load paper for France, Holland and Germany.

Malacca Maru, Port of Longview, Japanese ship to discharge canned pineapple and plywood tram laiwan and Christmas decorations from Iking Kong. Atlas Promoter, Port of Longview, forean ship to load grain for Korea. 1VM Laud, Port of Longview, Greek ship to discharge plvwood from the Philippine Islands. of Longview, American ship to discharge general cargo from the Far East London NBofC Is ready to serve you around the corner or around the world. Visit your nearby NBofC office and meet the people who make banking easier.

President end Mgr. NBof makes banking easier in Washington State and around the world. At Nu Dimensions Figure Salons for Wonen only you relax away all those ugly inches and flabby pounds. Tell us the dress size you want to be and we'll tell you how fast you can become your perfect dress size. Become a trim, slim MINI in just a few short weeks.

NO exhausting, muscle building exercise NO disrobing NO shots or harmful drugs Each Nu Dimensions program is designed with just you in mind to help you get those ugly pounds and inches OUT OF SIGHT. Nu Dimensions will help you get your shape back into shape fast. New York JMUiH i Sll WHY WEIGHT? Don't put it off another minute. Call the Nu Dimensions Figure Salon nearest you now and make an appointment for your FREE FIGURE ANALYSIS No obligation whatsoever. You'll find out in just 20 minutes how soon you can become your perfect mini dress size.

Tokyo Hong Kong Singapore NBC LONGVIEW OFFICEt A Salons In principal U.S. cities Salon Hours 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. longvievv Triangle Shopping Center 1036 Washington Way 6360320 NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE 14th and Hudson Robert F. Crook, Vice.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Longview Daily News
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Longview Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
727,386
Years Available:
1924-2024