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Rutland Daily Herald from Rutland, Vermont • 2

Location:
Rutland, Vermont
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

RUTLAND DAILY HERALD MONDAY MORNING MARCH 1ML to Reconsider Bill Is Afoot Move Beer Storekeeper Up in Arms! beer on Sunday from noon to Over lalk of House rrkJ th ouse piste4 Reversal bill by a narrow 117 IIS Action Must Ik by Some one Who Voted for Bill Cloudy weather Is predicted for New England Monday (Herld-AP Wlrephot Map) margin after vigorous debate over moral Issue and the economic impact of the bill Led by Soulhview Market proprietor Charlei Johnson Springfield merchants came out strongly on a petition Saturday urging Rrp Billing to refrain from efforts to kill the bill The Springfield lawmaker been opposed to the legislation ainre it introduction Billing could not be retched over the weekend Some tahl he remiined in Montpelier Contirted at hia home here Storekeeper Johnson said "Were losing buslnes 11 the time to these New Hampshire retailers who sell on Sunday" New Hampshire ltw a pasted more than a year ago and Johnson maintains the cash registers of merchants arroat the Connecticut River art ringing merrily Sunday afternoons as Vermonters go to tha Gran (Vermont lre Bureau) MONTPELIER There wu good deal at talk here on the I weekend that a mote will be made Monday to re consider action by the House in passing a (blll to liberalize Vermont Sunday aalei of beer and wine I The bill passed Friday H7-tl3 I Storekeeper with particular emphasis on towns bortWlng New Hampshire began a atrong movement on the weekend to avert a reconsideration Springfield atore ownera were up in arm over a report that Rep Harold Billings ft Spring-field plans to seek reconsideration in the House Monday night But Rep Billing! voted against the bill Friday and under House rules motion to reconsider muat be made by someone who voted In favor of the bill wished away by warm rains some of the worst flooding in the history of the sra could result could with Billings approval buy in Vrrmont Johnson contended It la not a moral issue because people will get th beer even if Vermont prohibits it tale on Sun-days He said Vermont storemen near the border are losing business all the time with the liberal New Hampshire law affecting aalet throughout the week a well as on Sunday I started the petition'' he said "and I mailed it to him this morning lie should have It tomorrow (Monday) to be will know how we feci A Springfield source said Sunday it ia believed a motion to reconsider legislation that has passed would require a two third approval Any reconsideration could mean possible death few the measure since lawmaker were not present for the vote Johnson said a "atrong majority" of Springfield atorekeep-ers signed the petition Speaks On Civil Rights Snow Winds Slash Again At Northeast THE MOST COMFORTABLE GIFT YOU CAN GIVE BffuSh PcappsCG' IRlAIMlIf EStUSlffD PSGSKW CASUAL SHOCJ it worn ike It would allow stores to sell ite State for beer that they 995 MORTGAGES Are Our Specialty FHA CONVENTIONAL Bethel Man Worsens Till Perfect Gift I ttfiht 12 ounce! per shoe Bouncy crept sole steel shank support Resists dirt repels water Brushing cleans restores leather Sues and widths to fit Bit cost important man in your Lie Renewal Plea Maine Dailys Prize-Winner Senate OKs College Aid Assistance for Dependent Children Would Continue to 21 for the Students By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The North Centra! states1 reeling under a iuecesskn of spring snowstorms and bitter cold battled a new March storm Sunday 1 Snow fell from the northern Great Like to the central and northern Rockies but th hesv-lest fall wss concentrated in Minnesota the Dakotas and the northern part of Iowa The Weather Bureau ald central Minnesota would get a foot of new snow Huron SD recorded 11 inches in th morning hours and Watertown SDj was covered with five inches Pierre snd Mobndge both in South Dakota got three inches As the inowpack built up through the Upper Mississippi Valley the danger of serioua Hooding Increased The Weather Bureau laid that if the one-to-four-foot snowpack in the area should melt suddenly or be Gl Dress Right-you tonrt afford rot to! RUTLAND SAVINGS Tha Friendly Bank Merchants Row at Canter St Member FDIC Bennington College to Hear Representative of SNCC on Saturday BENNINGTON (Special -Miss Prathia Hall an active worker in the Student Nonviolent Co ordinatinf Committee (SNCC) will visit Bennington College Saturday to meet 1 1 u-denta and later to apeak after a showing of a SNOC film "A Dream Deferred" Mis Hall will be at the college during the later afternoon to meet student informally before the a er hour The half-hour film will be shown at 7:30 pm in the college theater followed by Miss Hall remarks on the role and activities of movement The public Is invited to meet Miss Hall and attend' the film showing Miss Hall is a native of the South who received widespread publicity when she served a Jail term rather than post bail after being arrested in connection with her part in a civil rights demonstration Her appearance at Bennington College is sponsored by the faculty student Special Events Committee and was arranged through the national headquarters of SNCC at Atlanta Ga and the Capital District Friends of SNCC in Schenecady NY Miss Hall also will speak at several other colleges in th Troy Schenectady Saratoga area Fiery Helicopter Crash Kills One Injures Three Craft Wrecked in Plunge Onto Highway Just After Takeoff Total of 16 Stolen Coins Marketed MONTPELIER (AP) The Vermont Senate passed a bill Friday which would extend the Aid to Dependent Children program for youngster attending college Presently ADC payments end when the child reaches 18 But th bill which now goes to the House would continue payments up to the age of 21 if the child is attending school EASTER BLOUSES in white pastels from $4 Tin ilmp BOSTON (AP) The Bangor Daily News has won th seventh annual Sevelloo Brown Memorial Award for disinterested and meritorious public aervlce among New England newspaper In 1964 The Daily News Is th first Maine paper to win the coveted honor Announcement of the winner was made Sunday by Richard Early a i editor of the New Bedford Standard Times and chairman of the awards committee for the sponsoring New England Associated Press News Executives Association (NEAPNEA) William Dickinson manag ing editor of the Philadelphia Evening and Sunday Bulletin was the contest judge The Bangor Daily News was honored for Its campaign in be half of urban renewal in the eastern Maine city to which Dickinson noted there was strong opposition" In the face of this opposition Dickinson slid the Daily News laid down a drum-fire of new stories and editorials which resulted in approval of urban renewal by Bangor voters in the largest turnout of voters on a municipal question in the citys history" Henry Therrien Victim of Gunshot in Critical Condition at Hospital RANDOLPH (Special) -Henry Tbrrrien 46 of Bethel who was shot March 20 was listed fa critical condition al Gifford Memorial Hospital Sunday adter infection aet In Friday night Florence Therrien hi wife will be chsrged this weak said James Wnght states attorney for Windsor County Dr James Woodruff who spent six hours operating on Therrien after he was shot astd that the infection was from the original wound "It was probably a germ carried into him by the shot he added Therrien was shot with a soft-nosed bullet from a Marlin 30 30 rifle at dose range during what wai apparently a family quarrel Therrien condition improved a day or so after the shooting but took a turn for the worse Wright did not state what charge would be made against Mrs Therncn She hss been undergoing questioning from Wright and state police officers for a week The Tberriens have been married about nine months Mrs Therrien was in the house with her three-year-old daughter by a previous marriage when the shooting occurred Guggenheim Grant Given Johnson Poet MERCHANTS ROW and CENTER STREET BOSTON AP) One person was killed and three other injured Sunday when a helicopter crashed wnd burned momenta after taking of from Logan International Airport The dead man was identified a Richard Thomas 32 of Lynn who rented the Massachusetts Helicopter Service cruft for a sight seeing trip Listed in critical condition at Bcston hospitals were Thomas 3d year old wife Marilyn and Linda ONeil the 9-year old daughter of Mr Thoma by a previou marriage Mrs Thomas suffered a broken jaw a broken ankle and multiple head Injuries The pilot Albert DeLnt 27 of Brockton was reported suffering from multiple injuries at Massachusetts General Hospital The helicopter crashed on the highway few hundred yards from the airport shortly after taking of The wreckage block ed the principal road to Greater Bostons North Shore area and the East Boston rapid transit line of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority BENNINGTON (Specials New information received here from Boston Mass police officials is that 16 coma of the collection of 93 stolen from the Bennington Historical and Art Museum March 14 were sold to Boston dealers before Mary Hoover 31 alias Mary Stone of Roxbury and Watertown Mass was arrested trying to sell two others to a ea 1 there The entire 18 coins have been recovered according to word received by Richard Barret curator The woman Is missing however having jumped bail of $1-000 which she furnished when arrested She failed to appear for hearing in Boston Municipal Court last Thursday after a weeks continuance had been granted Immediately after the local theft Curator Barret contacted Kenneth Bressett formerly of Keene and now editor of the coin supply division of the Western Printing and Lithographing Co in Racine Wis The thieve took the only known existing Inventory of the coins and Barret remembered that Bressett while in Keene had photographed and catalogued the collection in 1954 in connection with his hobby a atudy of coins Bressett forwarded all the material he had to Bennington Areas Weekend Tally: 16 Perish Violently Thirty Lives Are Lost During Period in New England Death On Interstate (Continued from Page One) Tuesday Hearing For Educational TV Bill That tax cut last year may be adding up to big headache for you Because of certain bookkeeping oversights you'll probably wind up owing money! Get the cash you need for taxes for paying off aii kind of bills in a hurry Borrow it all $600 at terms that are easy on you JOHNSON (Special) -Hayden Carruth of Johnson has received a 1965 fellowship from John Simon Guggenheim Foundation for creative writing in poetry The 43-year-old Carruth was one of four out of the 313 recipients of this year'a Guggenheim grants to be given fellowships to pursue creative writing in that field The other three are Allen Ginsburg of New York City John Haines of Fairbanks Alaska and David Ignatow of New York City A total of 45 of the fellowships were given for creative work of some sort writing painting sculpture or music The rest of the 313 were for scholarly research many in scientific subjects The awards are to allow the recipient to spend the year working in the subject outlined in his application There were 1869 applicants this year Carruth a native of Water-bury Conn has made his home at Johnson for about two years He is the author of The Crow and the Heart "Journey to a Known Place and Norfolk Poems He has received a number-of awards for poetry He said Sunday night the project for which the Guggenheim grant was given involves a trip to the West and started getting in touch with leading com collectors in the nation to alert them of theft and to ask their assistance in recovering the collection The Wisconsin man reported the col lection of Vermont colonial coins to be the finest in existence Many were irreplaceable 141 WEST ST RUTLAND VT 775-5591 1 1 MAIN ST SPRINGFIELD VT PHONE 885-454 1 MONTPELIER (AP) A public hearing will beheld Tuesday at 7 pm on a bill to establish a statewide educational television network The House Education and Appropriation Committees will hold the hearing in the House chamber The committees plan to show a movie on ETV in addition to hearing speakers on the proposed legislation By TIIE ASSOCIATED PRESS Six persons dead in a Connecticut fire A Lynn Man man killed inahelieopter crash Massachusetts teen ager killed oil the Connecticut Turnpike these death Sunday helped swell the weekend toll in New England to 30 lives lost The Connecticut fire victims were among 11 persons who lost their lives in weekend fires By 6 pm Sunday there were 16 persons killed on New England highways There was one drowning Saturday in the waters of Warwick RI and a Haverhill Mass woman was injured fatally Saturday when a car she sought to enter lurched throw-ing her to the ground Only Maine among the six New England state reported no accidental deaths during the weekend starting at 6 pm 6 Ytm Oil IliPOmB II 80TTLC FROM CMO BY SIMM MIM IMPOSTTM IXfc DETROIT MIC 86 PROOf 8UK0E0 CHRlOIH WHISKY near the 13th mile marker on the Interstate indicating the spot was 13 miles north of the Massachusetts border Notice of his death was the 13th entry on the blotter at State Police barracks Saturday at Bellows Falls Assisting Trooper Alexander were Sgt Russell Patnode of Brattleboro Cpl Alfred r-rison Cpl Edward Prescott all of Brattleboro and Cpl William Smidutz of Bellows Falls Also at the scene and assisting were members of the Brattleboro Police Department Fire Department and Resue Squad Rooney was born in Colchester March 14 1939 1 JAMAICA PRIME MINISTER BUSTAMANTE IS STRICKEN KINGSTON Jamaica (AP) -Prime Minister Sir Alexander Bustamante 81 suffered another stroke Thursday Doctors said it was milder than the one he suffered Jan 24 Why people who like Scotch and Bourbon w- on merchants row dowitownMland SO VERY POPULAR From Our Exclusive Collection BESTFORM' no finer fit at any price Threats to Seaver in Doubt New Aspect to Case of Controversial Montpelier Man Teacher Has One Interpretation Others in Strong Denial MONTPELIER (Special)-Was Edward (Ted) Seaver threatened indirectly or wasnt he? That was the question but by tween Seaver and the School Board the findings of which would be made public Seavers attorney John 1 1-liams of Rutland said he thought the Montpelier minister was himself the object of a threat I have been threatened myself since I became allied with Ted Seaver Williams said Sunday night Seaver maintained Sunday night that he intended no misinterpretation The amount of vacillation going on up here is fascinating Seaver said Sunday night nobody seemed to have a definite answer Seaver civil rights partici pant whose conditional contract as a Montpelier High School English teacher was revoked by the School Board in February has been trying to get a pub he hearing on the matter since At the time the board said only that Seaver was not rehired because of his "attitudes unbecoming a school teacher Seaver said he heard about the supposed threat of Montpelier Saturday afternoon Saturday night a Montpelier minister strongly denied Seav-ers interpretation of his state-men He had talked with Seaver by phone Sunday no one could tell just what had been said and silence was general Seaver said he wa told a member of the School Board believed someone could "reach down to Mississippi and make things rough (for Seaver) after hes gone Seaver said he believed the rough time could mean an effort to cause trouble for him when he' goes South for civil rights work this summer that impression in his phone conversation Seaver plans to live with his family in Mississippi for a year starting this July He will operated a freedom school Seaver did not identify the Rev Mr Howard as his informant at First The Rev Donald Howard said Saturday night: I presume I am the person implied in Mr Seavers statement "I deny the substance of the statement that is that a threat of that nature was made the Rev Mr Howard said Sunday night of his statement he would say only: Since my previous statements have been misinterpreted in the light of peoples purposes I consider it best that I say nothing more The Rev Mr Howard said Sunday night three other Montpelier ministers also denied any knowledge of School Board statements against Seaver The Rev Albert Anderson the Rev Wallace Short and the Rev Jasper Steele concurred with the Rev Mr Howard Tte four ministers are members of a committee trying to THE RUTLAND HERALD Published every Morning ex-' eept Sunday al 27 Wales St Rutland Vermont by Herald I Assn Ine I Secondclas postage paid al Rutland Vt MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Pres Is entitl-1 ed exclusively to the ose of al) (he local news printed in this newspaper as wed as all AP news dispatches SUBSCRIPTION RATES Home delivery by carrier cents per week Mail outside Rutland In Vermont New TH GHMOLD EXTRA LONG-LEG PANTY (Style 5824) Nylon taffeta front pa net flattens the tummy power net sections slim the sides Non-bulge garters tucked inside Non-roll top White Sizes S-M-L-XL PLAYBACK" LONG-LEG PANTY (Style 5720) Only the special elastic section at back opens and closes as you move The rest of the garment stays right where it should without creep- ing or riding Lycra power net reinforced sections for extra jT monthl S9 50 one ye tummy support White M-L- 1800 Mail outside Vermont XL A New Hampshire New Vopk In United States S2o0 per month Canada and other countries $225 per month r'RVSfCFEBS murcsTi 'v-aV 1 399 The minister denied he gave arrange a private hearing be- 1.

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Pages Available:
1,235,212
Years Available:
1862-2024