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The Progress from Clearfield, Pennsylvania • Page 10

Publication:
The Progressi
Location:
Clearfield, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE TEN THE PROGRESS, fHHptburg, Meihannen Saturday, October Mansfield Asks Ike for Advice on Viet War 1,800 Expected At Cool Mining Institute 1,800 persons are expected to attend fense Attorney Homer E. King. Official Plans Radical Change In Post Office By STEPHKN M. ALG WASHINGTON The Post Office Department 1 new assistant postmaster general i a revolution a a a trolled revolution" a would create a mechanized post office. Dr.

Leo S. a a former business executive who a i to having seen the inside of only three post offices, was confirmed hy the Senate two weeks ago as head of the a new Bureau of Research and Engineering. In the nexi (wo a Packer he a to double of post office engineers engaged exclusively in research and development and begin "a planned management-controlled revolution." The revolution would a a a i post office but not simply a few more conveyor belts or a couple of extra computers. "There are means of nications which are different from the letter with the a on it, that arc the legitimate concern of the Post Office a ment it is the concern of the department to be aware of he said. Packer.

46, engineering a a of Xerox says the department no longer will depend on "technological droppings from industry" for its new ideas. But he realizes there are vast differences between the methods of private industry and those of the government. "What we're building here I visualize is a long, uphill stephenson 17 of i na, who climb," he said in an interview. i started to litre Bad (From Page 1) illHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllllliiiillllllllllMlltlllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU News From Around The World I Deal hs Of The Area attorney and the state police were admitted into evidence over the objections of the De- the 42nd a a ladies night ban fiuet of the Moshannon Coal Mining I i to be held at 7 o'clock this evening in the a a Mosque at Altoona. A stage show from Pittsburgh i provide the a i Approximately 100 door prizes will be distributed to the women.

Dr. H. Beecher Charmbury, secretary of the a of i and Mineral Industries, will be a guest of honor at the banquet. Seymour Weishorger of Altoona, president of the i Coal Mining of Osceola i is president of the insti- and will preside over the dinner party. Greetings will be extended by Mayor i i a Prosser of AUoona.

The Rev. R. Wayne Focht of Philipsburg i ask the invocation. Earlier state police had testified that they had informed the defendant of his Constitutional rights, including the right to re- a i silent, before any statement was taken. The main points of both a ments were the same.

In them Yount that after leaving his classes at the DuBois Area High School April 28, he went to the B. F. Goodrich Company where his wife is employed and got their station wagon in exchange for their foreign sports car which he said needed repairs. He decided that it would be a good i to look over some land in the Luthersburg R. D.

area which he and some teachers were interested in buying for hunting and fishing purposes. the district attorney he recognized her for she was in his class and described her as "a Philipsbur? dent. as the first As he was traveling north on This year's banquet will sur- Town ship Road 353 he noticed paw any previous ones a a a a of He loU I new safety chapters at Brockway and Somerset -were organized by the institute i lhe past vear. The organization was formed nice girl interested horses. Dec 1923 at Philipsburg Continuing statement, i a Joseph Knapper of Yount said he stopped his car presi- and a exchanging greetings he asked Pamela about some land in which he was particularly interested and she pointed it out to him.

He then offered her a ride home and Pamela got in the car. In his statement to the district attorney Yount said: "I must have suggested a we go for a ride or something. I don't remember. She got upset, as naturally she would. She started to get out of the car and I grabbed her coat to pull her Lind'a back.

She must have thought I was trying to insult her. She Accidents (From Page 1) wood. Police reported the impact tore the roof off the Ball sedan. Two passengers were admitted to ttie Philipsburg State General Hospital. They are Ronald R.

Boyer, 25, of Middletown, who is listed in poor condition, a "The restraints on management in government are stronger than what I had expected." Currently, the Post Office spends $20 million a year on research and development out of a budget of nearly S6 billion. is listed as fairly good, driver was taken to the hospital but was not admitted. The truck, owned by Elwood C. Queen of Irvona, sustained S100 damage while loss to the Ball sedan also was set at $100. A 15 vear old Frenchville the statement continued If the Post Office were private fa i a She ran across a field and I tadustry Packer says, it would iniurv 3:25 eslerdav told yOUr Un mn ga when he failed to negotiate a Covington Township road.

He lost control of his 1956 truck and it came by police for operating a vehicle without a license. Damage amounting to S500 resulted at 9 p. m. yesterday in a car-truck collision at The ou nd re- a business, since such a small fraction of your budget is for ha i ir n1 research." Packer believes his primary problem will be to find new methods to cope with the continued, growth in mail volume -especially the millions of magazines and other publications of a literate society. At that point Yount was quoted as saying that he had picked up a wrench from the floor of and struck Pamela on the head a couple of times.

I remember letting her go watched her. Then I must have tried to catch her. I never could have if she hadn't fallen down." He described her condition as hysterical" and said an effort to quiet her to her, he Johnson Averts I Airline Strike By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON President Johnson has averted for at least 60 days a strike by 12,000 members of the AFL CIO Transport Workers Union against Pan American World Airways. Johnson signed an executive order Friday creating a three-member board to investigate the dispute and report its findings within 30 days, but did not immediately name the members. Washington Papers Go to Press WASHINGTON Washington's newspapers and their printing pressmen agreed on major provisions of a new contract today, ending a short-lived strike, a federal mediator reported.

The Evening Star and the Washington Daily News, both afternoon papers, prepared to publish regular editions. Underworld Chieftains Appear in Court 5 NEW YORK. Seven alleged underworld tains appeared before a Queens grand jury Friday and apparently gave only their names and addresses. r. Five of the seven used the luncheon recess to return lo the La Stella restaurant in Forest Hills, where a police raiding party broke up a meal last week.

Rawhide TV Series Star Drowns LIMA, Peru Actor Eric Fleming, 41, drowned Wednesday in a remote river in Peru's back country while filming a jungle picture, the U. S. Embassy an- nounced Friday. embassy spokesman said Fleming, star of the television series "Bawhide." was on loca- tion in the Tingo Maria area 340 miles northeast of Lima. Fleming was born in Santa Paula, Calif.

Newspaper Magnate Buys London Times LONDON Lord Thomson of Fleet, a Canadian- born newspaper magnate, has achieved his long-time 5 ambition by acquiring control of the Times of London, 5 one of Britain's most prestigious daily newspapers. South Koreans Urged To Fight in Asia SEOUL, South Korea South Korean President i Chung Hee Park today urged his armed forces of more than 600.000 men to display their might as the "bulwark of freedom" when called for the duty of "crusaders" against any forces threatening peace in Asia. Hitler Aide Appears in Argentine Film PRAGUE Czechoslovakian television viewers were shown films Friday night of a man identified as Dr. Joseph long-sought camp doctor of Hit- ler's Auschwitz concentration camp. The Czechoslovak News Agency the film was made by Brazilian journalist Adolfo Cicero in Argentina last March.

It said five survivors of Auschwitz identified the man positively, as did members of Interpol, the interna- tional police organization. nlUimilumiimuiilllillllllllHIIIHlllimimiffimmimimillllliiiumii 5 T. WILBUR BUTTERWORTH PHILIPSBURG Thomas Wilbur Butterworth, 66, a lifelong resident of Gearhartville, Philipsburg R. died at 11 a. m.

yesterday in the Philipsburg State General Hospital where he had been a patient since Sunday. He was a retired employe of the Morningstar Baking a life member of the Chester Hill Hose Company and a member of the Central District Volunteer Firemen's Association. A son of Alexander and Clara (Beamer) Butterworth, he was born at Gearhartville May 29, 1900. He is survived by his wife, the former Grace Millard. They were married at Clearfield in 1928.

The following brother and sister also survive: Rosewell, Gearhartville; and Mrs. Ralph (Marjorie) Westley, Chester Hill. Friends will be received in the Dahlgren Funeral Home this evening from 7 to 9 o'clock and tomorrow until 2:30 p. m. when services will be conducted by the Rev.

Ralph Phillips and the Rev. Bryan K. Swartwood. Interment will be in the Philipsburg Cemetery. It was then that he "blacked called was feeling weak and up- TI a 3 Narrows between Clearfield and a 8 It is.

he says, a complex A set at his stomach. He said he problem beyond the reach of the traditional approach of manual labor. We need to plan and carry out a program of mechanization. a by Joseph 0. Williams, 72, of 17 Road Trailer Court, Clear- was headed toward the same time much of field when i( the equipment is sophisticated a the of an and we need a new breed of pos- oncoming tractor-trailer tal employe that can live with operated by Lester G.

Stephens, it; and we don't have them to- Clarendon Street. Hyde. No one was injured and to lhe car was placed at and to the truck. $200. Shortly a last i i Iwo cars collided in the North tion that makes intelligent Second Bridge Street intersec- jd a i i at planned use of programmed tion with to i he washed a burned all his blood stained clothes with the exception of his suit.

After i on fresh clothing he went to the baby- William D. a i 22, of and picked his two i -n i cniluren. retro la K. l. Pa.

was a TT i i i i c. He said a he had elmg east into Bridge Street ood Qn fi a it off with an cars collided. a a to he a car a to He a a sk day." Packer says he hopes, i i the next decade, to see a "transfer from a predominantly manual operation to an opera picked up his hat which had fallen on the ground and started toward his car. As he went up the hill toward veered7o lU ad he Uced somethi co me ten i on the grouncl It was the wrench which he picked up a threw out of his car on his to his home at DuBois R. D.

2, a section known as Gelnett. "I don't know why I 'threw the wrench away." he was quoted in a "I don't know why I did anything I did." Continuing his statement, Under cross-examination by Defense Attorney King, she stated she had transcribed her notes into a rough copy of the statement immediately upon returning to Clearfield from the DuBois Substation. She said, however, that the "corrected copy" which she had brought to the witness stand had been made some time later but only typographical errors had been changed in it. This brought an objection to the admission of the a by Mr. King on the grounds it was not original a point on legal technicalities.

It is just a year ago tonight that the verdict was returned by a jury in the Richard F. Lines murder trial, the last murder case to be tried in the county Another odd coincidence Yount's home was formerly in the Sabula area, the same section where Kenneth Aljoe murdered 12- year-old Eugene Conaway. equipment." anci injuries. But for all the research and James B. Anderson, 26.

of whatever it results. Packer West a a i a 1962 adds, the letter carrier and his sedan, was a i east off a i i a leather pouch may be Nichols Street Bridge and around for many years. China Pledges (From Page 1) only the original notes, a granted by the court. A short recess was called during which Mrs. a got lhe shorthand notes taken at the a tion and read these into record.

Trooper Bernard Gorman of the DuBois Substation was also called to testify a and told of finding Iwo pieces of Understand a deputy sheriff was asked to explain why he wasn't carrying out his assignment of guarding the jury on its way to the courthouse from the hotel. He wasn't seen in the picture of the jury appearing in the newspaper. It wasn't his fault, however. He was at the head of the procession. He just happened to be cut off by the photographer.

MRS. WILLIAM S. WILSON PHILIPSBURG Mrs. Isabel Wilson, 72. of 207 Gertrude Chester Hill, died at 11:05 o'clock last night in the Philipsburg State General Hospital where she had been a patient for the past three months.

A daughter of Thomas N. and Anna (Frazier) Blake, she was born at Osceola Mills R. D. on Feb. 24, 1894.

She is survived by the following eight children: James Edward Wilson, Osceola Mills; Roy Chester Hill; Mrs. Charles (Doris) Salzman, and Mrs. Joseph (Jean) Zaccardo, both of Stamford, Mrs. Clyde (Betty) McGonigal, South Philipsburg; Mrs. Andrew (Willmina) Ropchock, Hawk Run; Mrs.

Joseph (Evelyn) Materkowski. Clearfield; and Mrs. Leo (Eleanor) De Sanctis, Boston, Mass. A brother. Thomas N.

Blake Sr. of Philipsburg. and a sister, Mrs. Margaret Taylor of James- tow-n, N. survive her as do three half-sisters: Mrs.

Gertrude Leonard. Newark, N. Mrs. Sarah Ann Burkley, Johnstown; and Mrs. Minnie Blake, Wash.

Twenty two grandchildren and 12 great- grandchildren also survive. She was preceded in death by her husband in 195S and six children. She was a member of the Church of the Good Shepherd at Hawk Run and a charter member of the Phiiipsburg Chapter of the Women of the Moose. Friends will be received at the Dahlgren Funeral Home this evening from 7 to 9 o'clock and Sunday from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 p. m.

Burial office will be said Monday at 2 p. m. in the Church of the Shepherd. a Run, by the Rev. Willard G.

Wilson, 'interment will be in the Ashcroft at Hawk Run. U. 5. Says Raids (From Page 1) CALVIN J. WITHEROW I A Calvin J.

i row, 92. of Irvona. died in the Philipsburg State General Hospital yesterday at. 6:50 a. m.

Born at May Hill, May 1874, he was a son of Wil- Red China's three a blasts, which "smash the nuclear a a i of (he Soviet Union and the L'nitcd States. The showing of the i and the mass rally in Peking i lighted the celebrations. For the first i since 1959 i of the a took a in the parade through a The New China Nws Agency said about one i i Red a poured into the a which was a i red a slogans a portraits of Mao. The a a described the a a "seething scene of revolution." Despite Red a rc'iuesis a Mao address the the 72-year-old leader a i silent. No chiefs of a or top foreign a were on the a i i a greetings sent from Comm i i were cool.

The. Soviet Union pledged i a i i i people but i i i t.he Chinese- 5 a President Tito, in a message in a as the coldest a most i a he has ever senl lo a head of a a a Chinese President Liu Shao-chi ancl wished "welfare to the Chinese people." A 22-year-old i a Springs i was a at. the Clear- i i a ancl released following an a i accident in Bradford Township. i i a Peters was a i west on Tiouie r22 when he lost several a rails and He was a lo the i a by a passing i a the mishap o'clock. A parked car was by a i a Osceola i a i caus- itie a a i a at $275.

police reported the 6:35 m. a i on 53 i more a i of town when H. a -11. of Houlzrlale, a his car i a of it. i a i i on the i a The of the car a by a hy M.

Thomas, 22. of R. D. It a a a a i i a i a a a i a i i F. 4-1.

of Tree H. I). 1 i ribs a a a A i a i a al i after she lost of her ear and an a on 23(i, 1.2 i of i nl 5:30 m. Thin sday. a a (o her sedan wax placed al $200.

Bombers Pounrf (From Page 1) IOAS of the a The a was a two-place Air Force F4C Phantom. One errw was rescued and (he other re ported missing. In Friday's a i a i based a pilots reported a a i day in i on barges along (he coast from i to a Moa. Of some 80 i a i a i i i or a a i Air Forcr i i a a i Mireess a a i i a i i a a a a i i i wide i i a a i a i a They Ill seen i a i 13 i in i i i i i i oil a i i i i i i i home from the babysitter's, he said. "It seemed like it really a happened.

I felt a any mom I i a up." When his wife returned home from work she told of a i the news of the girl's and said "The police are looking for a car i ours." Yount said a he was a lo sleep a i and a i he aroused his wife and (old her what had happened. "I i what to do. There was no use i a a I had to face up to what I had done. my wife lo go and my and a he was as a i Me denied in his a to i i a a a been i i down a road looking for a a He said the only reason he stopped to a lo was (o ask her a the a in which he was i erl. The a a to Mr.

i a a a 7 a. in. on i i i of A i 29. a two hoim a a i i a poliee a' i a i a a Trooper a Bedford, i i i ease, was 1,1 ken a 0:30 a. m.

Trooper Hertford i i yes- a a i a a Younl a a i i a a a en a one of his pockets. This, along i i ua.s senl to the a poliop i a a a i i a soe- relar.v i i A i a a i in a i i i i I a hv i I i ll I I a a a i ion. the blood-stained suit of the a While the a police were a i Yount jail at Clearfield he had shown the spot between and Rockton he had the wrench. The a i suit was by Trooper a and Trooper John George i 1 were a i a a ad- a home. I a i some boards on a second floor, i a said.

i a recalled a a a a i i i i a i wagon which he had a a police i lab for i i a i He a i he had -a'ecl a i wagon a of a in lhe area and had removed for a a lysis a i ere bloods a i Sidelights (From Page 1 One of (he few a i mrnis in surh a case came l-'riday when Cherry began a i (ions of a witness. Defense At lorney i jumped to his lee! and a I object to (lie court a i a i qurs. (ions of the witness?" "Vps, you may Ohjpr- tion overruled," thp jiiflgp replied. whose i a a a i UK- i i i i ha- lo i i (TM.S.S a i i a ,011 up in puts it this way: "Such raids do not weaken the grip of the regime. Indeed, they may strengthen it." Beyond a U.S.

i i a say such a a only give Castro new a a a a i a -and sometimes embarrasses Washington. a i i a said to- a the U.S. is investigating the latest i raid to i has been a violation of U.S. neu- a i laws. The government-controlled a a a radio this week said a "pirate plane" had dropped bombs a coast city of i a a a sugar-loading port.

Only one of the bombs exploded, and it fell a 1,500 feel from its a a ent target, an i power plant i broadcast said. It blamed "U.S. imperialism" for the new attack. Spokesmen for Iwo i groups in i a i said 1.200 pounds of explosives were oil tfliik.s, a a a base and a power a i lhe raid, which said caused considerable a a One exile leader said the a i from a base outside the liniti-d Stales and returned there a In a i a a Dep a i i a repealed a statement a a i "Our slrong opposition to this, kind of i i i i a irresponsible a i i has been made repeatedly clrar." The a policy, he added, applies to the Sept. 22 explosion of a homemade bomb i win (lows in lhe in a a An in i a i als: 1 imed i i i for this i i of the Church.

Mr. Witherow is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Lorraine Hazleton of Irvona and John a Ascro of i Spring, ten a i and 30 great-grandchildren. Me was preceded in a by his wife, the Roberta Mc- a in 1945. Services i be held Monday at 1:30 p.

m. in the Hunter-Lloyd Funeral Home here with the P.ev. Mickey, assisted by the Rev. George Henry, off i i a i Interment will be in Crown Crest i a Park at Clearfield. Friends may a in the funeral home from 7 p.

m. today i i of services. MRS. ERNEST A. QUICK MORR1SDALF.

--Mrs. a M. Quick. fi8, died at 4 a. m.

yesterday in her home at Oak Grove, Morri.sdale R. D. A a of John and Charl a a born nl a a A i 10, 1898. She was a of the Hill RUB She is i by a son and a a i Quick, York; and Robert Conder, a a a N. two a i and four sislers.

Mrs. Agnes Quick. Mrs. Vergie a and Mrs, Bessie Quick, all a a a Chloe a of Morrisdale. Friends i he received in (lie W.

Weaver a Home from 7 o'clock tonight until 2:30 p. m. Monday when services will be held i a and at 3 p.m. in l)u i i F.UH Church i Rev Homer Snii'h of i i a i i i 1 I i i MRS. ROBERT MAINES Mrs.

Gertrude Maines, 46, of New Castle, wife of Robert Maines and a former resident of Clearfield, died Sept. 29 at 10:55 a. m. in the St. Francis Hospital at New Castle.

Mrs. Maines was at Clearfield, Dec. 23, 1919, a daughter of Nehemiah William and Mae Bloom Robison. In addition to her husband, she is survived by her mother of Clearfield; two daughters: Mrs. Clifford (Jean) Keyes of New Castle and Mrs.

Walter (Patricia) Maines of Bigler; these stepchildren: James and Boyd Gutherie, both of Mineral Springs; Mrs. William Milligan of Clearfield; these brothers and sisters: William Robison, Mrs. Calvin (Elda) Lansberry and Mrs. Kemp (Sylvia) Leib, all of Clearfield; Mrs. Ann Peters of Baltimore, and Leonard Robison of Niagara Falls, N.Y.

She was preceded in death by her father. Funeral services will be held at the Fred B. Leavy Funeral Home tomorrow at 2 p. m. with the Rev.

Vernon Orner officiating. Interment will follow in the Bigler Cemetery. Friends will be received at the funeral home from 7 to 9 tonight and tomorrow until the hour of service. PETER KOPCHAK HOUTZDALE Peter Kopchak, 81, of Houtzdale, died at 5:45 p. m.

Friday in the Philipsburg State General Hospital where he had been a patient for four days. His death followed a long illness. He had been a resident of the Sterling area of Houtzdale since 1933. He was born in Austria in January rSSS and came to this country alone in 1907. He was employed in the coal mines until his retirement.

He is survived by his wife, Nancy, and the following children: Michael, Pittsburgh; John, Osceola Mills: Mrs. Susan Tishman, Mrs. William (Mary) Wlt- te. and Mrs. Charles a Gunkel, all of Long Island, N.Y.

Friends will be received at 5 p. m. today in the Raymond M. Hayes Funeral Home. Parastas will be said this evening at 6:30 o'clock and tomorrow at 8 p.m.

Funeral services will be conducted at 9:15 a. m. Monday in the funeral home with the Rev. Fr. Nicholas Solak officiating.

Interment will be in St. Mary's Church Cemetery at Osceola Mills. African (From Page 1) With Asian cosponsorship, they introduced it in the assembly Tuesday. There are now 52 sponsors. The resolution would have the assembly say it "decides to take over the mandate and to assume direct responsibility for the a i i a i of the mandated territory" and "establishes a United Nations adminis- i a i to prepare the territory for independence.

It asks a the a i "proceed i i a i its work in the territory" and that the i Council "take the necessary i measures to enable lhe a i i i authority to discharge its function." When the U.N. special Committee on Colonialism was considering a somewhat i i a proposal 14. Soviet delegate Pavel F. Shakhov objected, saying a for United Nations to assume direct responsi- i i for Africa would not be "the best solution." lie said it might a the a i a liberation move- The proposal passed the i next day by a consent. a some A i a a expressed belief a the Com i had been a lo support of the assembly resolution the exp a i a they would got a i on the adminis- i a i In the a Friday.

Soviet a i a i T. Fc- a "We support the a of A i a a the United Nations a and a i declare a it a over the ad- i i a i of the a a from South A i a This is a lhe United a i do now." The i says the ad- i i i a i is to rec- a dale for the independence of the i lo lhe assembly not a a the 19057 session, which i run lo just before Christmas. Some informed observers believe a gives South A i a a a or more lo a off the i a i if il can bring ilself to avoid a i "no" lo resolution righl But unless South A i a i a ly says "yes," the Africans argue, council a must consider enforcement action. such aclion results i depend a i on the i a and i support ii i i i South A i a trade a im e.siinenls. General Calls For Enough Force To Win By HARRY KELLY WASHINGTON A Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield suggested today forirer President wight D.

Eisenhower spell out to President Johnson his view on what is needed to win the Viet Nam war how many men and what kind of weapons. Eisenhower, who led Allied armies to victory jn Europe in World War II and was president when a cease- fire was declared in Korea, advocated at a Chicago news conference Fridy the application of "as much force as we need to win." The five-star general avoided a direct yes or no to a question whether he proposed use of nuclear weapons. But he said: "If they gave me the problem, I'd take any action to win." Mansfield noted a lack of specifics and said in an interview, "If Gen. Eisenhower has any specific ideas as to what he would do if he were in President Johnson's shoes I would suggest he make his views known to President Johnson." Mansfield, who has opposed escalation of the war. said he was sure Johnson would receive any Eisenhower suggestions "most gratefully and consider them seriously and with great respect." But the Democratic leader said Eisenhower's statement "needs amplification and answers to such questions as does he think we need 750,000, 1 million, 2 million men to win? What kind of weapons would he use and what does he mean when he said, 'I'd take any action to win'." When newsmen in Chicago asked Eisenhower to elaborate on what measures he would take, the general said, "I'm not sure I'm not on the ground.

I'm not familiar with all the political considerations." Despite the general's disclaimer, Mansfield expressed belief Eisenhower "is very familiar with the situation in Viet Nam because I'm sure the President has kept him informed of much of the developments either personally or through emissaries to him." United Nations Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg conferred with Johnson Friday and later told newsmen "the door is open" to the possibility of Viet Nam peace talks. While emphasizing that he did not want to inspire optimism, Goldberg indicated he was not discouraged by public Communist reaction to his proposals last week for promoting a Viet Nam settlement. "It would have been unrealistic to expect i i a a considered reply" from the Communists, Goldberg said. Johnson also met at the White House with 10 governors with the discussion ranging from anti-inflation moves to Viet a Concerning the war, Johnson said he told the governors, "I the situation had improved there from the i i a viewpoint and from the a i i a i viewpoint and i are getting better every day." In Mexico City.

Secretary of State Dean Rusk said the United States has "tried in a ways and more a a the governments in the United Nations have tried to bring about nego- i a i on Viet a "The United a has said yes to all these proposals. Hanoi has said no. So our problem is to find someone with whom to i a about peace." Rusk told reporters as he a i lo a i i a in i a a i of a new Foreign a i Building. He repeated a i state- a he is ready to meet a i any place for peace talks. Economic (From Page 1) you." But one governor who met i the President earlier in the week.

i a Henry Bellmon of a a said Johnson is to a for i a i Bellmon told an a a City news conference the federal should curb i spending before asking the stales In. Bui Bellmon a a i get i point over to Johnson. "There's very i discussion when you meet i he said. "Mostly, it's just listening." The bill i (he tax a a a was approved by the House on a vote that a but not enlirely followed a lines. Democrats urged the action as part of Johnson's anti-inflation pro-ram which also includes an announced $3 billion cui in i under budget figures and a hold up in certain of (Turnout agency borrow i EWSPAPER MEWSPAPERI.

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About The Progress Archive

Pages Available:
137,242
Years Available:
1920-1976