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The La Crosse Tribune from La Crosse, Wisconsin • Page 2

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La Crosse, Wisconsin
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2
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Rally Defines As Antiwhite, Crosse Tribune, Monday, July 24, 1967 9 Deaths Traffic Toll To Pace Of '66 (By The Associated Press) 1967 traffic death toll moved out ahead of the record pace of a year ago again today, reaching 538, compared with 536 at this point in 1966 with at least nine weekend victims. John D. Gray, 18. of rural Westfield, was killed Sunday: night when the car in which he was riding left Highway 21 near Coloma and overturned several on times. 'Black Power' Anti-Christian Peace Awaits Response From Hanoi: Rusk Man Pleads Guilty, To Be Sentenced STOCK QUOTATIONS By 5 HEARSON, HAMMILL CO.

Member New YorK Stock Exchange By AUSTIN SCOTT itional, employment and law en- Cassius returned his NEWARK, N.J. (AP) Black forcement institutions, including heavyweight title. Power, for one year an unclear paramilitary training for black boycott of black rallying cry shouted at civil youth. church and all religious institu- of Sta Dean Rusk in La Crosse Circuit Court. rights rallies and scrawled on Some termed it the start of tions that do not join the black we 0011 Sokolik, walls during riots, has taken on black Christianity was meaning distinctly opposed to A deep distrust of white socie- termed white religion that present American society.

ty was evident as the delegates has taken the diamonds and The first national conference cheered through proposals to set minerals of the world in ex- i up permanent contacts with Af- change for the bad VvS rican nations, independent, I VC black-controlled political parties or voting blocs, and gear the be in Vietnam. are not asking North Vietnam to surrender a single acre of Rusk told a International Association Convention black militia to train we are asking them to do July 24, 1967 Noon Quotations Allied Stores Allis-Chalmers A La Crosse man charged! with causing great bodily harm Amer. jei. Tei. Anaconda to another man in a fight last Burlington MIAMI BEACH, Fla.

(AP) May will be sentenced Aug. 28 Foods DuPont Eastman Kodak Electronic Specialty Epko Shoe Ethyl Ford General Aniline General Electric General Motors i General Telephone earlier plea from innocent to Goodrich sponse from Hanoi there would of 820 Rose appeared be- the once cloudy concept products of Negro artists and black families in all aspects of produced a string of resolutions professionals more closely to self defense and racial survi-1 south Vietnam for the purple Angelos Drivas, 71, of Waupa- Sunday that would in effect set needs of black people and a school for black po- XuktozTnr these counfe un a hlark-nnpnted sorietv dis- Cnooiorc uvei cuuuuies by force. We are prepared to move for ca, was killed Sunday in black-oriented society dis- Speakers who used the word litical organizers, a two-car collision on Highway tinctly antiwhite, anti-Christian were shouted down. a 10 two miles northwest of antidraft in tone. Negro is a white national a re- Sandra Konop.

23, of community repre. Most of the dozens of resolu- grams and a national antid'raft abouUeace BuTno thp start of ho four- tinnc nnf rtrnof ctuocr JJCdUC. DUL IIU fore Judge Lincoln Neprud Monday morning with his lawyer, Carrol Weigel, to change his guilty. The judge continued the case to permit time for a sentence investigation and for an up-to-date report on the condition of the injured man, Peter Jablowick, 60, of 1620 Moore St. Sokolik and Jablowick got into a fight May 20 in the 500 block fusal to accept birth pro-; 3k Copeland Avenue.

Dist. Atty. Green Bav, died Sunday the start of the put great stress on the movement. position is hell produce a No'th noon of injuries received earli- meeting, it was clear at he troubled history of Negroes-the no, we shouted one Siamese anywhere with er in the day in a two-car crash sfession Sunday the unwilling removal in chains workshop chairman. talk peace at a Manitowoc intersection.

militant separatists had won. from Africa, the systematic Consumer education pro- us re- Lloyd A. Westerback, 39. of s.m Uf Negr0 nationwide duce the violence mutual Superior, was killed early Sun- Cn(- for thf. seg, black and action.

Let us demilitarize the day in a two-car Polk County resolution called for negation that once sanctioned buying campaigns to force job demilitarized zone Let us stop accident on Highway 35 one mile startmg a national dialogue on wholesale lynchings and still upgrading in local communities so'i of Osceola the desirability of partitioning exists in schools, housing and were also adopted, along with Michael Payette, of rural Le- United States into.two sepa- jobs. rate nations, one white and one They included: black. demand that black ath- small home and business loans. Cambodia The nearly 1,000 delegates, letes stay out of both the 1968 The conference had earlier jbe secretary continued Burleigh Randolph told the the fighting in Laos and stop the infiltration through Laos. Let us na and Miss Robin Hensberger, of De Pere, both 16, died early Sunday in a one-car crash on Oconto County Trunk one mile east of Klondike.

Earl Dickman, 19, of Sauk- Mack-oriented financial, educa- ville, was killed Saturday night in a two-car crash about three miles west of Newburg. Eleven other persons were injured, one of them seriously, and were taken to a West Bend hospital. Authorities said there were six persons in each car. Michael Arloszynski, 16 of rural Greenfield died Friday night when his motorycle collided with a car on south side. Michael Thomas, 7, Milwaukee, died Friday night when struck by a car as he crossed a street.

plans for black credit unions exchange prisoners of war. Let and black bonds to finance Klcwrt Monday that Jablowick sustained a severe head injury when Sokolik knocked him down and his head hit the sidewalk. Randolph added that Jablowick had required surgery, that he is still hospitalized and that his abilities may be permanently impaired to the point he will not again be able to care for us guarantee the neutrality of himself. Sokolik was unable to post $2,000 bond required while he is Great North. Ry.

Grumman Aircraft 41 Vi Gulf Oil Heileman Brewing 39 International Harv. Interna. Tel. Tel. 101 Interstate Power 23 Jim Walter Corp.

37' i Jones Laughlin Koehring Kresge Minn. Mining Mobil Oil 417a Montgomery Ward 24' i Monsanto Chemical 45' Mortgage Guar. Ins. 47'a Northern Pacific 64'a North. States Power 31'a Northwest Bancorp.

52 Olln-Mathieson Pepsico 43'a RTA 52'a Rexall Drug 38'a Ryder Systems Scott Paper Sears Roebuck 34 Sinclair Oil 24' 2 Sperry Rand 58 Stand. Oil, Calif. 14 Stand. Oil, Ind. 53'a Stand.

Oil, N.J. 49'4 Swift 3534 Texaco 48 Trane Co. 487a U.S. Steel Universal Oil Westingh. Electric 27'i White Motors Woolworth 477a Dow Jones Average Industrials 906.15 23'a Railroads 272.58 .41 104' a Utilities 132.67 .10 84'4 Volume 2,720,000 472a NYSE Composite 66 Index 52.05 .13 Commodities Dec.

Wheat 1.60*4 Nov. Soybeans 2 69'4 Sept. Eggs 35.95 Dec. Corn Fabri-Tek, Inc. 59'4 Gateway Trans.

Godfrey Co. 23-24 35 Hamilton Mfg. li'4-19 5934 Howell Instruments 60 Lincoln Natl. Life 65 McQuay, Inc. 32-33 30'4 Nekoosa Edwards 29V4-30 Ramada Inns 56'2 Rockwell Mfg.

Roy. Dutch N.Y.6OV2-6I '2 Rust Craft 35W37 607a Wallace Business 24-2434 Warner Elec. Br. 257a-263a 307a Werner Trans. 14-1434 Wis.

Pow. Lite Wis. Pow. 8. Lite Local ana Regional The following were compiled a approximately 9:00 a.m.

Bids are representative Inter dealer prices and do not Include retail markdown or commission. Asked prices 1.22*4 have been adjusted upward to include approxi- THE MARSHALL CO. mate markup. National The following -------------quotations are obtained La Crosse Cooler 11-12 from the National Asso- La Crosse Telephone 22 bid elation of Securities Deal- Pyroil Inc. 1 ers, Inc.

They are repre- Boston Fund 9.12-9.97 sentafive inter dealer Chemical Fund 18.53-20.46 prices as of approximate- Eaton Howard ly 9:00 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do not Include retail markup, markdown or commission. Transport Dial Finance First Bank Stock Bal. 11.94-12.97 Eaton Howard Stk.

17.12-18.61 Fidelity Fund 19.79-21.29 Manhattan Fund 10.66-11.65 Mass. Inv. Tr. 17.07-18.66 Mass. Inv.

Gr. National Investors 7.92-8.56 Puritan Fund 11.93-12.90 Wisconsin Fund 8.27-9 03 WINONA LIVESTOCK SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK Swift Winona, Minn. SOUTH ST. PAUL, Minn.

Highway 61 West calves 600; slaughter These quotations apply to livestock ancj heifers fairly active, steady delivered to the Winona Station by noon t0 2j higher; extremes 50 up from last many in Africa-derived clothes, Olympic games Mexico City gone on record as supporting most anything we do is escala- awaiting sentencing, so he was cheered every proposal for and out of professional boxing Negro violence as right of Almost nothing the other returned to County Jail, black-oriented fmannal pdnra- until Minister Muhammad All an oppressed people to side draws that word Two other persons appeared Rusk continued, North in court Monday to enter inno- Vietnamese forces are in Cam- cent pleas: Allen L. Steege, 19, bodia at least in division of 1820 Miller accused of strength. But if we were to put a taking four cars in one day, company of our own men across May 31, without the the border to find out about consent, and Roger Olson, 18, these people, there would be of 902 S. 8th accused of taking part in the April 24 point robbery of a La Crosse youth. Their trials will be scheduled later.

Neither was able to post Salem Area Farmer Dies Of Injuries School Continued from Page 1 28th Street and will be bounded on the north by Birch Street. Vergin said the school is designed so a one-section addition can be added on the east for approximately $400,000 in 1970. Funds earmarked for the school in the capital improvements budget are $650,000 for constniction and $125,000 for site improvement and equipment. Vergin said eight general contractors have asked for plans and specifications for bidding, but whether all will submit bids remains to be seen. Carl W.

Schubert and Associates are architects for the school. RECORDS WEST SALEM, Wis. Ward W. Quackenbush, 87, who was injured in a tractor accident Friday on his farm near West Salem, died Monday in a La Crosse hospital. Quackenbush was injured when he fell off his tractor Byrnes' Bill Strikes At 'Industry Robbing' screams of Break-In, Thefts WASHINGTON (AP) every taxpayer must help John W.

Byrnes, pro- pay posed legislation today to strike down what he called a tax Jerome, he added. Dannrtorl avoidance device now being asked its 35 voters to approve a 1 used by 35 states to lure new $20 million bond authorization A boathouse break-in, the industries and jobs from the oth- for a knitting mill. theft of an outboard motor and er 15, including Wisconsin. He said the bill maintains tax four billfolds stolen from swim- whilp rirqaaina chnrMv He said he was introducinS a exemptions for bonds for recog- mers were reported to c. noon remove federal tax nized Crosse police over the weekend.

Firms Countv Traffic Officer ee exemPtion on interest of state such as toll roads, water works. Irene C. Martinek, 1460V2 Red I Totals $312 Wnlf haf ev Hence at and bonds municipal docks, airports and field reported late Saturday L00t 1 1 reported that evidence at 5-npd finance new industrial rtoe nzofor 21.75-22.25 21.50 18.50 25.75 today. HOGS The hog market Is steady. Butchers-Meat Type 200-230 Butchers 200-230 Sows 270-300 CATTLE The cattle market is weak to 25 lower steady.

Hi-Choice and Prime Choice Good Standard Utility Cows Canner Cutter VEAL The veal market Is steady. Top Choice Good Choice Commercial Boners week's dull closing trade; closing trade; cows steady to weak, all other classes steady; utility and commercial slaughter cows 18.00-18.50; canner and cutter 17.00-18.00; utility and commercial slaughter bulls 24.00-25.00; cutter 21.0024.00; good 550-850 lb feeder steers 23.5025.00. Hogs early sales barrows and steady; trade only moderately ac- 24 tjve. P2 200-245 lbs 22.75-23.00; feeder 22.00-23.50 steady, 1-2 120-160 lbs 21.00-21.50; 16.00-18.00 boars 15.00-17.00 hi CAGO PRODUCE CHICAGO (AP) Chicago Mercantile Exchange Butter 93 score AA 66, 92 A 66; 90 8 89 C8rS 90 64'4; 89 6034. Eggs 75 per cent or better grade A 34; mediums 27; CHICAGO GRAIN CHICAGO (AP) Wheat No 2 hard 1.59 n.

Corn No. 2 red 1.50'4-51'«n. Corn No. 2 yellow 1.29. Oats No.

2 heavy white 707an. Soybeans No. 1 yellow 2.80'an. Soybean oil 9.03n. 21.00-24.00 20.00 down 36; mixed standards immediately the $1,000 bond set Detroit in each case, and both were re- turned to County Jail.

CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO (AP) USDA Potatoes arrivals 218; on track 263; total S. shipments for Friday 348; Saturday 235; Sunday 88; supplies moderate; demand fair; market weaker; carlot track sales: California long white 4.00-4.25; Texas round reds 5.15-5.40. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) USDA Live poultry: roasters 27-29; special fed Continued from Page 1 ock largest city Sunday and today, defying a massive array of police and National Guardsmen as they turned miles of homes and businesses into a wasteland DEATHS tad catodVOuacken t0, electric, gas, water or sewage morning the break-in of a boat- An estimated $212 was taken o( fire and Iooting maicaiea for pnvate businesses, disposal facilities. house off Cooeland Park some- from ImPort Motors and MRS. GRACE DELL disposal facilities.

house off Copeland Park some- from ImPorl Motors and Grace (Cahak) Dell, 83, This, Byrnes said, is an indus- Byrnes said con- time within the last two weeks. about from Thorp Finance of 5822 S. Trumbull Chi- trial development inducement stitution bars its governmental a back door was pried open. in break-ins Saturday night As day broke, mobs evaporat- formerly of La Crosse, t'orirrfp tho fipM a grow to a billion- unit from borrowing money for Missing are a six-gallon gag, antJ.Sunday evening. ed and the littered streets ap- djed Sunday.

July 23, in a Chi- the scene bush had been caught in the! drag and dragged about to circle the field. A wheel of dollar volume this year, the tractor may have passed over him when he fell off. Quackenbush was born Aug. 5, 1879, at Melrose, the son ot Mr. and Mrs.

Theodore Quackenbush, and he married Bessie Radcliffe Oct. 9, 1901. They lived near Melrose until 1918, when they moved to a farm near West Salem and had lived there ever since. The couple observed their 65th wedding anniversary Oct. 1966.

He is survived by his widow; three sons, Forrest of Brookston, Earl of West Salem and Gerald of Elmhurst, three daughters, Mrs. William (Geneva) Cain of West Salem, Mrs. Marjorie Jacobson of West NurSe Attends Allis and Mrs. Maurice (Ruby) Lokensgard of Anchorage, Alaska; three sisters, Mrs. Maude Vogel of Sparta, Mrs.

Martha Baumgartner of Billings, industrial plant financing. was diodes, sinks and Means Committee, said the Green Bay; 7 Hurt bill was prepared in consultation with the Treasury Department. sf pri-iwere injured' two of them se-jwas taken from his boat while riously, Sunday, when their 30- it was docked next to his boat vate business in one state paid i tank, valued at $26; fire extin-- break-in at Delta guisher, $11; three boat cush-made through a west door and ions, $3 each; and water skis, was discovered about 10 a.m. Sunday by an employe. The cash Joseph R.

Fuchs, 428 Liberty was missing from a cabinet file STURGEON BAY Saturday reported a 22- en Milwaukee area residents horsepower, 1961 Mercury motor for by the citizens of all craft exploded, house on the Black River across burned and sank Green Bay from the Northern Sates Power and it should be a small town of 917 9, persons in Kentucky, for Byrnes said, an off Chambers Island. Co. plant. He valued the motor Samuel Gilbert, 40, of Mil- at $200. waukee and Harris Shepet, 49, Four wallets containing rnon- milhon municipal bond TssuVto of were transferred ey and personal papers were be used for the benefit of a pulp t0 st- Hospital Burn Cen- stolen Sunday afternoon from and paper company, the free- ter Milwaukee with second the Pettibone Park beach, ac- dom from taxation on thp intor- and third degree burns over cording to Leon Kasuboske, est is a subsidy to the company about 40 per cent of their N.

8th a lifeguard. ----------------------------------------bodies. Billfolds were taken from the which was broken into. Nothing was reported missing tool cabinet which was pried open in the service department. Police Officer David Hutchison discovered a rear door pried open at Thorp Finance, 6th and Main about 11:13 p.m.

Sunday. The money was taken from a three-door, fireproof cabinet. Papers were scattered about on the floor. Two desks also were pried open. peared deserted.

Isolated shots cag0 hospital, rang out throughout the area, Services will be Wednesday however, and the occasional morning in Chicago, breaking of glass and nearby she is survived by one daugh- constant ringing of burglar ter, Mrs. Eva Wise, and one alarms could be heard. son, John, both of Chicago, and City Fire Chief Charles Quin- two grandchildren. Ian issued a list of statistics Victim Of Cave-ln FIRE DEPARTMENT La Crosse: July 23, 4:56 a.m., to 803 S. 15th mattress fire; bed destroyed, floor and walls damaged; possible smoke damage through apartment house.

July 23, 12:45 p.m., to Losey Blvd. and Ward shed fire; and nine great-grandchildren, total loss. Robert Fowler, own- Services will be at 2 p.m er. Thursday in the West Salem July 23, 1:40 p.m., to 1603 S. Presbyterian Church, Rev.

Wil- 8th fire in rear seat of car liam Slosser officiating, and bur- owned by Clara Norskog. ial will be in Neshonoc Ceme- July 23, 11:11 p.m., to 6th and tery. Friends may call at the Badger false box alarm. Jostad Funeral Home Wednes- July 24, 12:37 a.m., to 4th and day evening. State false box alarm.

July 22, 6:51 p.m., to 1608 Johnson smoke reported coming out of house; fumigating, no fire. July 22, 1 a fire reported WAUKESHA, WIS. at 215 N. 13th charcoal grill, Memorial Hospital no July 22, daughter to Mr. and Mrs.

Dennis J. Boardman, 1319 Hawthorn Drive, Waukesha. 2-Week Course he said makes the rioting FRANK Wt ijeg ENBART ably the most expensive from a damage standpoint in the his- ran. tory of the nation. f27 Johnson died in a local Overtaxed firemen, forced July lack of manpower and the dan- was h.

i in La Crosse, ger of snipers, were forced to let manv fh-es 20 unchecked i ls survlveri by hls V.i 8 uncnecnea. daughter, Mrs. Les- Whole blocks in widely rated sections of the West and ar0 er a-' Northwest Side burned on into and. Services will be Wednesday at AT 9:30 a.m. in the Sletten-McKee More than 1,000 people were rx A funeral Home and at 10 a.m.

arrested, some of them whites D. in Blessed Sacrament Catholic Nancy J. Higgerson. 415 S. juries.

10th has completed a two- Door County Sheriff and Mrs. Elizabeth sfmpson of week cardiovascular i a Bridenhagen said private boat $15. River Falls- nine grandchildren nursing course at Marquette pulled the seven from University, Milwaukee. The the water and took them to Jossits ADolied nearby Fish Creek after the blast, of undetermined cause, In Marsh Areas ripped apart the craft wife and three of following: I I their children and wife Dale Strand, Jackson Leaves Hospital ti were being treated at a hospital Allen Nibbelink, 2006 Herman Henneman, 32, Stan- 'vbo iobied the looting as the Church Rev Keegan will here for shock and lesser in-20th Robert Gassen, 1616 ley, was discharged Saturday IV an ni8 0 lolin8 wore officiate and burial will be in S. 16th $5 and change; and from Lutheran Hospital where on- Catholic Cemetery.

Friends may Hollis Gerald Jansky, 1202 S. 6th he had been hospitalized since call at the funeral home Tues- Nancy J. Higgerson AMBULANCE City July 23, 11:05 p.m., Chandler I Parents Campbell, 49. of 1629 King of La Crosse) to Lutheran Hospital, by squad PASADENA, CALIF, car; illness. St.

Hospital July 23, 8:19 p.m., to Powell July 23, son, James Michael, Park, West Ave. and Jackson to Mr. and Mrs. James W. Lay- Gerald Bishofsky, 24, of 1231 iand, 2211 E.

Washington Mississippi to St. Francis Pasadena. (Charlotte Nemeth; Hospital; injured leg while play- Layland formerly of La Crosse) ing ball. July 12 when he was buried for five minutes in sand. Henneman was working on walls of a trench which collapsed.

He regained consciousness last Thurs- The tunnel and bridge to Can- day from 7 to 9 p.m. Rosary ada, however, which lie across will be at 8:30 p.m. the Detroit River from the city, were closed to traffic. HENRY A. KORTHALS The deaths came late Sunday.

Henry A. Korthals, 79, of 2228 Fogging equipment will not Authorities expressed amaze- South Aye be used Monday night. Instead, Kathleen Nelson, 18, of 804 ment none had occurred earlier Kramer Sentenced park department employes will Cass injured June 22 in an WAUKESHA (AP) Robert aPPJY tossits to a11 marshy accident on Highway 16 D. Kramer was sentenced today areas in and near tbe city- wasL reported a hospital to up to 27 years in State Pris- Eugene Fry, director of parks, spokesman as still in serious on in connection with an assort- said of Plastic condition, but showing improvement of charges involving young balls wil1 be thrown into marshy ment. areas.

When temperatures rise, women last year. He still faces trial on two tbe covering dissolves and scholarship was awarded by the counts of decree murder the inside fluid escapes and La Crosse County unit of the in the knife siayings two forms an oily cover on water to Wisconsin Heart Association. others. prevent the hatching of mosqui- A nurse at Lutheran Hospital Asked by Circuit Judge wil. i0 larvae, the intensive care unit Miss liam whether he had The process was to begin at 1 Higgerson received her degree anything to the 27-year-old m.

Monday, and continue un- from Southern Illinois Umversi- Milwaukee laborer replied, aii mosquito-breeding areas innocent. Some day are treated. this nut will strike it, 1IU11C IldU UULUIICU CdlUUl 1 as the destruction and looting jn Vernon County, Dec. 5, 1887. He is survived by his widow, Lydia; one son, Harry of La ty in 1966.

WEATHER Political Backing ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)-Rich- Mrs. ard W. a member of the WIFE DIES CHICAGO (AP) Parsons, wife of the Commission on Ur- Problems says public LA CROSSE AND VICINITY: Fair tonight and Tuesday. West winds, mph tonight.

Lower 60s tonight; upper! c- sos Tuesday. I first Negro to receive a perma- ban Wisconsin: Fair, cooler tonight.jnent appointment as U.S. Dis- housing could be vastly im- :haenge.y' 5unny' 1 trict Court judge, died Saturday proved with stronger political Minnesota: Fair tonight and Tues in a Chicago hospital. She was backing. a' ntonight and Her husband was appointed have any trouble chance thundershowers over to the federal bench in Chicago getting $2 billion for a plane LA CROSSE of the state tonight.

Vx extended forecast Tempera 10 1961 by President John F. that can land any airport in Robert J. Tyler, Douglas, tures during the five-day period lues Kennedv. the United States, and we could Mich and! Nancy house all the poor in decent sen, 2154 Winnebago to 86; normal low 64 The word veto means if we had political sane- married July 29 in La Crosse. bid." he savs.

coursed crazily from one end of the city to another, reaching from the area of fashionable shops downtown seven miles nearly to the city limits. Police theorized that early orders not to return fire or to restrain looters, but merely to Child, 4, Injured A four-year-old La Crosse a show of force, kept the girl received bruises on the toU of dead and injured down scalp and face when she ran Despite the massive array of into the path of a car about police and Guard power, looters Rev FriD'Mil a 3:48 p.m. Sunday on George burners continued burial Ji To. 'rampaKe unchecked there mjjak Grove Grange, one sister, Mrs. Irvin Gatz of Washington, D.C.; two brothers, John of the Town of Hamburg and Herbert of Spokane, and three grandchildren.

Services will be Wednesday at 2 p.m. in First Lutheran Church. the Sletten-McKee Funeral Home Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m. and at the church Wednesday from 1 p.m. until the service.

U.S., S. Vietnam Troops Kill 149 Reds July 23. 6:57 p.m., to 608 S. MARRIACZF IICFNSFS 11th Mrs. Eugene Henry, 84.

of Viroqua, to St. Francis Hospital; illness. July 23, 6 p.m., to alley in 300 block on Market Thomas Price, 59, of Milwaukee, to St. Francis Hospital; injured head in fall. July 23, 12:25 p.m., to North Star Tavern, 1732 George E.

L. Taylor, 68, of 1602 Main to Lutheran Hospital; ill- ness SAIGON (AP) The South namese troops first invaded the a heavy enemy mortar and spotty weather. July 23. 11:39 a.m.. to 1420 army patrolling the demilitarized zone in rocket barrage at the start of Marine pilots in one of their Jackson Cletus DuCharme.

balf tbe demilitar- for a massive sweep of positions the four-hour engagement in the deepest strikes of the war hit another presidential adviser, 29, of Hazel Green, to Lutheran zone kdled 25 Viet-the Communists had in the steaming jungle. the Thai Nguyen power complex are making a swing through Hospital; illness. namese regulars Sunday about southern half of the zone. After As an infantry patrol came some 40 miles above Hanoi be- Vietnam and other nations al- July 22, 12:42 a.m.. Karen3 mde once-neutral a running series of battles, the into heavy initial contact, 4th fore dawn.

lied in the war seeking more Slaughter, 8, of 1311 North a Vietnamese Americans and South Vietnam- Division artillerymen began a Air Force and Navy pilots, in troops and other increased par- to Lutheran HosDital bv sauaci sPoliesman sa'd today. ese withdrew. rajn of 3,320 shells on the North addition to usual strikes on sup- ticipation by the allies, illness. Elsewhere, U.S. 4th Division Since then, American troops Vietnamese.

ply lines farther south, raided infantry with massive artillery have been back only once, but U.S. headquarters reported all three rail lines running north Southwest of Saigon Viet FIRE DEPARTMENT support wiped out a North Viet- the South Vietnamese have four B52 raids in South Vietnam from Hanoi the northern link to Cong gunners landed 81mm La Crosse: namese company in the central made several patrols in and out today including two in the dense Thai Nguyen and the northwest mortar rounds on one of the July 24, 10:21 a.m., to Bur- highlands near Pleiku, killing of the zone, their of the A Shau Valley, and northeast lines to Red Chi- U.S. new inflated rub- lington Railroad right-of-way, I24 an estimated 150 enemy disclosed today. The spokesman The valley is a main Red base na. her hospitals and damaged near the La Crosse Country soldiers.

implied this was a regular thing camp and infiltration route to- Retired Gen. Maxwell D. enough of the buildings to put it Club, grass fire caused by hot and further patrolling in the ward the central highlands and Taylor, an adviser to President out of service. Seventeen hospi- box on freight car. American pilots attacking zone could be expected.

the northern section of the na- Johnson, told newsmen in Sai- tal corpsmen and maintenance North Vietnam struck north of The U.S. Command said 22 tion and has been hit about 25 gon the war was not stalemated men were injured slightly, but Hanoi at the vital rail links with Americans were killed and 39 times this month. but admitted in response to a no patients were hurt Red China. They reported no wounded in the action west of question that U.S. policy has Also in the meetings with enemy MIGs and Pleiku and that eight enemy Air Force, Navy and Marine had ups and and fired on a U.S.

Navy patrol no losses to ground fire. prisoners were taken. Most of pilots flew 120 missions Sunday that the pacification program boat, killing one sailor and U.S. Marines and South Viet- the American losses occurred in over North Vietnam despite has not been going as rapidly as wounding another. Street near Hayes Street Susan Poellinger, 2134 Charles was'little overt hostility on the was taken to Lutheran Hos- part 0f most; rioters in the early pital by squad car.

She was hours except at the heart of the reported in satisfactory condi- trouble on the near West Side, tion Monday by a hospital spokesman. The car was driven by Theresa Homestead, 36, of 11 in theJ2tfh HARLEY HAGEDORN Sparta. the Slde Harley J. Hagedorn, about 61, three miles from downtown De-Tvvo Rivers, formerly of La lhat tbe aPParently Crosse, died Monday morning, Karlin Hmh inhtc a July Two lYcJUlU myimyilld police raid on a Negro after- He is survived by his widow hours drinking spot former Marjorie Niebuhr of MONDAY Officers arrested 73 persons La Crosse; three daughters, p.m., Blue Star con- and about 200 Negroes began Dorothy of California, Nancy of cert. pelting police with missiles.

Colorado and Rita of Milwau- p.m., Hi Fi Con- Pollce Iater released 61 of those kee; two sons, Jack of Milwau- cert. arrested. Negroes at the scene kee and Melvin of Two said violence started because his mother, Mrs. Otto Hagedorn police kicked a handcuffed teen- of Milwaukee: and two sisters ager down a stairway. Cavan- and one brother, agh said an investigation dis- Services will be held in Two proved this.

Rivers. had been hoped. Taylor and Clark Clifford, POLICE AMBULANCE Onalaska: July 22, 11:55 p.m., Gerald Renwick, 14, Onalaska, to Lutheran Hospital. In Respect To The Memory Of LOUIS H. PITZNER, WE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY TUESDAY, JULY 25 PITZNER'S CLEANERS.

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