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Omaha World-Herald from Omaha, Nebraska • 30

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Omaha, Nebraska
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A A A Martha Gale Hits Panama Hazel Takin 11-25 (N King Features Syndicate, 1969. World rights reserved. "And they wonder why the alligator is becoming extinct." Rites Today For Ag Chief Washington (UPI) Funeral services will be held today in Bethesda, for Milburn L. Wilson, one of the early architects of federal farm and a leader in programs nutrition programs. Wilson, 84, grew up on a farm Atlantic, and became a near nationally known agricultural official 30 years ago.

He died Saturday after a brief illness. the 1930's Wilson During developed a "domestic allotment" plan still used in farm support programs and served as assistant secretary and undersecretary of agriculture. In 1940 he became head of the Federal Extension Service and was prominent in efforts to national nutrition and improve 4-H clubs and other promote youth activities. Since his retirement in 1953, Wilson had served as a consultant in both state and federal programs. Wilson held degrees from Iowa State University and the University of Wisconsin.

Before entering federal service, he had been a tenant farmer in Nebraska, a homesteader in Montana, one of the first county extension agents in Montana and head of the agricultural economics department at Montana State University. Wilson is survived by his wife, Ida, who lives here; a daughter, Mrs. David Simons of Ithaca, N.Y.; and three grandchildren. 2,134 Abortions Under New Law Washington Post Service. Martha Gale Hazel Rites Today Omaha World-Herald, Tuesday, Nov.

25, Deaths and Funerals Adkins, Roger W. Hagedorn, Christian S. Barnett, Miss Diane Marie Hanson, James R. Barrett, Terrance J. Haskell, Frank J.

Beckett, Roland Hooker, Bernice Blumer, Mrs. Emma L. Lynch, Nora J. Caster, James E. Manning, Hugh H.

Cockle, Albert L. Martin, Joseph Wesley Cuva, Maria Miller, Mrs. Alice Davey, Bruce C. Smith, Thomas A. Dolezal, Dr.

Joseph B. Tower, William R. (Bob) Dale W. VanEverdingen, Peter L. Fimple, ADKINS Roger age 50 years, 1702 Ave.

N. Scottsbluff, former Omahan, November 23, 1969. Survived by wife, Vir. ginia; son, Roger W. 11, Hay Springs, daughter, Mrs.

Lar- N. Miss Elaine Adkins, Scotts(Janet) Grosshans. Alliance, bluff. his mother, Mrs. Vera Adkins, Omaha; brother, Selden: sister.

Mrs. Don (Margie) Smith, both Illinois. Services and burial Scottsbluff, Neb. 1 Tuesday. BARNETT-Miss Diane Marie, 18 1530 Survived by parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Ridgewood Saturday, years. Ronald Barnett, Omaha: grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.

William G. Evers, Mrs. Ruth Barnett: F. Evers, great- 24th all Omaha: aunts and uncles, Mr. grandmother, Mrs.

William and Mrs. Robert E. Mann, Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Waller, Omaha.

Memorial services 4 p.m. Tuesday from First Central Congregational Church. 36th and Harney Rev. T. Merton Rymph, officiating.

No visitation at mortuary. Memorials acceptable to First Central Congregational Church Library Fund. CROSBY-KUNOLD MORTUARY 32nd Ave, and Farnam 345-1886 BARRETT-Terrance age residence 24 years. 1215 Drexel November St. 23, Survived by his wife.

1969, Rita Marie: daughter, Miss Tari Lynn; James Douglas, all of Omaha; grand- 24th. 2 sons, Patrick Michael and parents, Mrs. James Helen Barrett, Omaha; Barrett, Ralston, a sister. Mrs. Raymond (Sharon) De Loa, Omaha; a brother, 154.

R. Darrell, Funeral Omaha. services, Wednesday, from Member of F.O.E. the Larkin Chapel at 8:30 a.m. Inter- to St.

Agnes Church at 9 a.m. Recitation ment. Calvary Cemetery. of Rosary, Tuesday, 7 p.m. LARKIN FUNERAL HOME 24th.

Sts. 733-0493 Neb. BECKETT-Roland, Survived by age wife Felicita; 37, Norfolk, daughter Michaela; and Mrs. parent Wauneta Mr. Beckett: sister Mrs.

Roland Hux- 32nd Wylie Beckett table. Services Tuesday 10:00 Norfolk. St. Neb. Mary's InCatholic Church Omaha, N.

terment Calvary Cemetery, 3:30 p.m. Houwser Mortuary, NorTuesday. Rosary Monday, 8:30 p.m. folk. Neb.

Mrs. Emma age 87 BLUMER years. Papillion, Rt. 1. 2 Funeral services, Mortuary.

Interment, Voss Tuesday, p.m., Mohr Kahler Cemetery, Millard. Memorials may be made to the Millard Rescue Squad KAHLER or your MORTUARY PAPILLION favorite charity. James age 77 CASTER 205 S. 25th Apt. 4.

years. Funeral arrangements later. N. P. SWANSON KENNETH GOLDEN MORTUARY Harney 342-1060 3205 COCKLE--Albert Mr.

age Cockle 79 is years, sur- 3522 211 vived S. by 37th his St. sons, George, of Omaha, and John, of Milwaukee, Woodward, daughter, Mrs. R. W.

Mrs. Phil er, Jolie, Seattle. Seattle, sister, 10 grandchildren. Tuesday, 10 a.m.. from the Burket Services Chapel.

Graveside services Nebraska Cemetery at the 12 Avoca noon. Memorials acceptable to Rotary Club Service Fund. THE BURKET CHAPEL 345-0090 3405 Farnam CUVA-Marie, age 68 years, 3014 Se- N. 66th bastiano; St. sister, Mrs.

Louise Italia, Survived by husband, Omaha; 3 sisters and 1 brother, in Italy. Funeral arrangements to be anMILLER MORTUARY 24th. nounced. S. 10th St.

341-0130 1234 47 years, Card DAVEY-Bruce age 302 Hackberry Omaha. Survived by wife, Beryl. Funeral services, Wednesday, Evans- 11 ton, Ill. Interment, Rose Hill Cemea.m., Hebblethwaite Chapel. tery, Chicago, Ill.

Fund Memorials Charity preferred to the Heart or of your choice. JOHN A. GENTLEMAN WESTSIDE CHAPEL 72nd and Western Ave. 391-1664 In DOLEZAL-Dr. Joseph Prairie 58 Village, years, former Omahan at John, of Columbus.

Tom, RobKans. Survivors, wife, Anna; sons, ert and William, all Prairie Village, 2 grandchildren. Funeral Wednesday, 10 a.m.. St. Bridget's Church, Omaha, Neb.

Interment Calvary Cemetery. FREEMAN MORTUARY KANSAS CITY, MO. FIMPLE 27 years, passed away San Francisco, Calif. Charlotte; Survived by wife, Peggy; daughter, parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Dale Fimple, Susan Omaha, 3 sisters, Mrs. Jones, Mrs. Charlotte Mander and Nancy Fimple, all Omaha. KREMER FUNERAL HOME SERVICE HAGEDORN Christian age 78 years. formerly of of 604 Ashland, passed S.

30th Omaha, away Saturday. Survived by wife, Dorothy of Omaha; daughter, Mrs. Ed (Judy) Wilits, of Omaha; 2 grandchildren; 1 sister, Mrs. Maggie Madsen, of Spencer, Ia. at the Funeral 10:30 a.m.

Tuesday Marcy Chapel, Interment Ashland Cemetery. 675 MARCY MORTUARY, ASHLAND died HANSON- Sunday, James hospital age Omaha, Pres81 years, ident of the Hanson Audit Company, Fremont. Neb. Survivors, wife, MarEmma (Robinson): daughter, jory Hanson, R. Washington, Albert (Barbara), Mrs.

Edmund McLean, son, James R. grandchil- Hanson Columbus, 0.: 7 dren: 2 brothers. Alfred L. Hanson, San Diego, Willard B. Hanson.

Fremont, sister, Mrs. Grace Sherwood, Fresno, Calif. Funeral service 10 a.m. Wednesday, Congregational Church, Fremont, Neb. Interment Ridge Cemetery, Fremont.

Neb. BADER-ROZANEK COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME in charge. HASKELL age 95 survived years, 4816 Cass St. Mr. Haskell is by his wife Valeera, niece Mrs.

H. Patience Love. cousin Earl Burket, all of Omaha. Funeral services Tuesday 2 Interment p.m. from the Burket Chapel Prospect Hill Cemetery, passed away Sunday, November 23, HOOKER-Bernice, Ainsworth, 1969, at Yutan, Neb.

Survived by 2 children, Harold Hooker U.S. Navy, Mrs. Tim Sprecher of Oregon; Mrs. sisters, A. G.

Crisp, Lincoln, Ruth Havronek, Ponca, Mrs. H. H. Peters of Yutan, Mrs. L.

B. Semon, Grand Island, brother, Harold Borden, Tecumseh, Neb. Funeral services 10 a.m. Wednes-13411 Corporation Filings Lincoln (AP) Articles of Incorpo ation filed Menday, with the secretary of and state, inwith authorized capitalization corporators: Hass Aquila, Omaha (ladies clothing Fraser and and specialty); Omaha. Robert G.

Robert R. Veach of D. A. D. Cox A.

Construction Dean Hascall Bellevue; of Bellevue. J. A. Wood Lake (farms and and ranches); James Lake. L.

Hanna Alta B. Hanna of Wood Whaley Land Cattle Norman Reynolds, LexLexington, and Lloyd S. Whaley and L. D. Ington; $1.5 million; both of Long Beach, Callf.

Livestock Management Roger H. Vandenack, Service, Millard, and Judith E. Sundberg, Omaha. $30,000: Ancersor Thomas Motor L. Anderson, Grand Isulnd; Grand Islund.

Richie's Pizza Richard J. Chicken, Huntzinger ord Omanu; Thomas F. Ryder of Omaha. Thomas A. Elia, Raymond ConOmaha, Inc.

(general purposes); don and Robert W. Chaplick, all of Now York City. Midwest Ambulance Service, and Inc. Morris Lincoin; Con M. Keating J.

Bruckner, both of Lincoln. There are now about 80 different electrical home appliances, compared to only 19 in 1930. Dele From U.S. WEATHER BUREAU ESSA 30 20 20 COLD 50 60 60 Shewers FORECAST 60 STATIONARY Snow Flurries 60 70 Figures Shew High Temperatures Expected For Daytime Tuesday Iselated Precipitation Net Indicated- Consult Lecel Forecest -AP Mop. day at Congregational Church, Ainsworth Neb.

Interment Ainsworth Cemetery. Wisda Funeral Home, Ainsworth. in charge. LYNCH -Nora age 82 years, 519 28th Ave. Survivors son, Cincinnatti, Ohio; daughters, Mary K.

Lynch. Mrs. Patricia Wallerstedt. both Omaha: daughter-inlaw. Mrs.

Helen Lynch, Kansas City, brother. Edward Smith. Aurora, S. 16 grandchildren; great-grandchild. day Rosary, 8 p.m.

Hoffmann Requiem Mortuary, Mass, St. MonJohn's Church Tuesday 9 a.m. Interment Calvary. Member of Hibernian Auxiliary and St. Ann'e Sodality.

LEO A. HOFFMANN and Dodge Sts. 342-3900 MANNING--Hugh age 61 years. residence 2809 S. 32nd November 24, 1969, Veteran of World War II.

Survived by his wife. Patricia sons, Michael and Thomas: daughters. Mary Pat and Maureen. all of Omaha; sisters. Mrs.

Anna Allen, Round Maine, Eleanor Patterson, Newton. brothers. William Manning. Greenfield, Ted Manning, Springfield, Mass. day, Services.

9:30 Larkin a.m., to Chapel, St. Church. 10 a.m. Interment, Calvary Cemetery. Recitation of Rosary Tuesday, 8 p.m.

LARKIN FUNERAL HOME Sts. 733-0493 MARTIN-Joseph Wesley, 356 N. 36th Friday. years. Survived by wife Merle Esther; two sons, Grant of Omaha, Dr.

Joseph J. of Ann Arbor, Michigan: two daughters, Mrs. John K. (Frances) Shirck of Lee Summit Mrs. Walter (Marjorie) grandchildren; Williams 5 great of grandchildren.

Services Wednesday 1:00 p.m. at Mortuary. Interment Forest Lawn. Memorials acceptable to First Central Congregational Church Building Fund or Omaha Home for Boys. CROSBY KUNOLD MORTUARY Ave.

and Farnam St. 345-1886 Alice. age 75 years, Monday, November 24, 1969, 4910 58th formerly of Madison, Neb. Survived by 2 daughters, Mrs. Harry (Delores) Krueger, Mrs.

Harland (Jeanette) Norenberg: brother, Robert. Madison, sister, Mrs. Merton Brooks, Waldron, 4 grandchildren. Funeral Wednesday Ressiquie Funeral Home, Madison, Neb. SMITH- -Thomas 70 years, at Mexico City, Mexico, 4511 Shirley.

Survivors wife Florence, sister Gertrude Smith Omaha, brother James San Francisco. Funeral Tuesday, 1:30 p.m. at mortuary, Rev. Dale Erickson, Mount Calvary Lutheran Church, officiating. Interment Memorial Park Cemetery, Council Bluffs, la.

HEAFEY HEAFEY Farnam 345-1251 TOWER -William R. (Bob), 244 East 3rd Papillion, age 66 years. Survived by mother, Mrs. Nellie TowPapillion; 2 stepdaughters, Mrs. Robert Gloe, Papillion, Mrs.

Vasko, San Mateo, 1 stepson. Richard Randall; Beatrice, nephew, Gary Brandon of Papillion; also several aunts and cousins. Services 2 p.m. Wednesday, Kahler Mortuary. Interment Fairview Cemetery.

Memorials to the Papillion Rescue Squad. KAHLER MORTUARY, PAPILLION VanEVERDINGEN-Peter age 84 years, 3947 N. 36th St. Survived by friend Burton Van Horn. Services.

Hoffmann Mortuary Wednesday, 10:45 a.m. Interment, West Lawn Cemetery. LEO A. HOFFMANN Dodge 342-3900 of Thanks McWILLIAMS-The family of Jimmy (Bo), McWilliams wishes the friends. relatives and neighbors for the cards of sympathy, flowers, and food, and memorials sent during the time of his death.

Marlene McWilliams, Mr. and Mrs. Jim McWilliams Sr. and Family. Memoriam PAULSON (Centamore) In loving memory of our beloved grandma.

Everyone forgets someone but it different with you, dear; We will always remember you, grandma, Our love for you could never disappear; Two years it has been, and still our hearts Reach out for you. Oh, how we miss you, grandma, Your love, it was so dear. Your Grandchildren Main. Centamore, Peterson, and Comstock. RHODUS loving memory of my beloved mother, Virginia who passed away Nov.

25, 1966. one who ever knew or loved thee could ever forget thee. Gone but not forgotten, still loved, still missed, still very dear. Son. H.

James Rhodus. Florists DUNDEE FLORIST N. 50th St. 551-2443 EDERER FLORIST 451-1795 391-6700 RAY GAIN FLORIST-551-0658 Fine Flowers Occasions Dally Deliveries-4224 Leavenworth SAY IT WITH FLOWERS SURIS FLOWER SHOP, INC. 1620 Douglas St.

342-4909 KILPATRICK'S FLOWER SHOP at the Westroads Open 9 to 9 Phone 391-6562 3512 MILLER'S Leavenworth St. FLORAL FASHION, 342-2260 Funeral Directors BRAILEY, Hamilton DORRANCE St. -558-1111 MORTUARY BREWER-KORISKO MORTUARY 4609 S. 24th St. 731-1234 John A.

Gentleman WESTSIDE CHAPEL 72nd St. and Western Ave. 391-1664 P. SWANSON 3205 KENNETH GOLDEN MORTUARY. Harney St.

342-1060 CROSBY-KUNOLD 345-1886 733-1111 ROEDER MORTUARY 50TH AND AMES AVE. 453-5600 HEAFEY HEAFEY 345-1251 733-0246 6302 MAPLE BENSON" 553-3155 KREMER HOME John Farnam A. St. Gentleman 345-1664 CME Futures Chicago Mercantile Exchange Monday: High Low Close Pr.Cl. LIVE BEEF CATTLE Dec 29.57 29.40 29.57 29.25 Feb 29.60 29.42 29.32 Apr 29.87 29.65 29.80 29.60 Jun 29.90 29.70 29.80 29.57 Jun Aug 29.90 29.97 29.70 29.87 29.97 29.80 29.80 Sales: Dec 740; Feb 572; April 306; June 409; Aug 91.

LIVE HOGS Dec 28.80 28.55 28.80 28.40 Feb 27.40 27.15 27.40 Apr 26.10 25.75 Jun 26.80 26.60 26.72 Sales: Dec 309; Feb 239; April 61; June 22; July 10. SHELL EGGS Dec 57.40 a55.20 a55.20 57.25 Jan 50.40 48.20 48.20 50.25 Feb 45.50 42.95 43.20 44.90 Mar 44.65 42.90 43.05 44.75 Apr 38.40 37.75 37.75 37.90 Sales: Dec 1830; Jan 1384; Feb 271; March 166; April 29. IDAHO POTATOES May 128. 5.36 5.28 5.33 5.31 Sales: May FROZEN PORK BELLIES Feb 46.37 44.60 45.75 45.35 Mar 45.65 44.75 45.00 44.77 May 45.00 45.00 44.40 44.55 44.55 44.25 Mav Jaul 44.40 42.40 43.90 43.90 41.97 43.72 Aug 41.92 Sales: Feb 8032; March 2461; May 677; July 260; Aug 85. Open Interest: Feb March 6423; May 4087; July 2297; Aug 634.

Use World-Herald Want Ads. The Weather Everywhere Daily Forecasts By the U.S. Weather Bureau. Panhandle Fair and colder today. Highs near 40.

Precipitation probabilities near zero. Sand Hills Clear to partly cloudy through Wednesday. Highs today 40 to 45. Precipitation probabilities 5 per cent through tonight. Platte Valley and South Fair to partly cloudy through Wednesday.

Highs today 45 to 50. Precipitation probabilities 5 per cent through tonight. Eastern Nebraska Clear to partly cloudy through Wednesday. Highs today 40s. Precipitation probabilities 5 per cent through tonight.

Lincoln Fair to partly cloudy through Wednesday. High today 45 to 50. Precipitation probabilities 10 per cent through tonight. Iowa Partly cloudy through Wednesday. Highs today 40s.

South Dakota Fair to partly cloudy through Wednesday. Highs today 32 to 45. Northwest Missouri Partly cloudy through Wednesday. Highs today near 50. Kansas Partly cloudy through Wednesday.

Highs today 50s. Colorado Fair through Wednesday. Highs today 45 to 55 lower elevations, 30s mountains. Wyoming Partly cloudy through Wednesday. Highs today 35 to 45 north, 40s: south and 25 to 35 mountains.

Over North America lows Highs for. 18 hours and Birmingham 72 New York are for 12 hours, precipitation for 24 hours Bismarck Okla. Philadelphia City 88 39 ending at 6 p.m. Monday. Boston 48 .05 Phoenix Boise Brownsville 78 .80 Pittsburgh The Midlands Buffalo Vt.

40 Portland, Portland, O. North Omaha 61 33 Casper Raleigh OMAHA Burlingtn, 30 Chadron AFB 61 55 Chari'ton, W.V. Richmond Offutt Charl'ton, S.C. Reno Alliance Charlotte, N.C. St.

Louis 76 58 Scottsbluff Chicago Cincinnati 50 52 Tampa SaltLakeCity 47 59 Cleveland 43 43 San San Diego Antoniot 62 No Platte 62 Ft. 55 Fran'co Rapid Mullen City 52 58 Denver St.Ste. Marie Worth San Detroit Seattle Soo Falls Duluth Shreveport 72 Goodland El Paso Spokane 38 Concordia 63 Fairbanks Tucscon 69 Topeka 61 Fargo 50 Washington 58 Beatrice Moines 62 58 Great Falls Des Helena Canada Soo Mason City City 61 Houston 67 3 .06 Edmonton 37 Spencer Honolulu 82 .02 Calgary 43 57 Jackson, Indianapolis Miss. 48 46 Ottawa Montreal 30 .02 .12 lOttumwa Wichita 62 Jacksonville 76 Regina 39 Dubuque 52 Juneau .02 Toronto 40 Lamoni 58 Kansas City Winnipeg Davenport 56 Las Vegas Vancouver 48 Little Rock Over the Nation Los Angeles Weather Extremes Albany, N.Y. 42 31 .18 Louisville 43 High and low temAlbuquerque 50 24 Memphis 42 States peratures in the the United Amarillo 25 60 17 25 Miami Beach ception of Monday, with Alaska and ex: Midland, Tex.

Asheville Milwaukee Hawaii, were 86 at Long 69 New Orleans Paul 78 Beach, Alamosa, Colo. and 7 at Billings Over the City Time Temp. City Aberdeen noon 37 Hong Kong Ankara 3 54 Lisbon Athens 2 pm 70 London Auckland mdnt 55 Madrid Berlin 1 pm 34 Malta Birmingham noon 36 Manila Brussels 1 pm 41 Moscow Cairo 2 pm 75 New Delhi Casablanca noon 63 Nice Copenhagen 1 pm 34 Oslo Dublin noon Paris Geneva 1 pm 45 Rome The Omaha Summary Monday's high temperature, 62 at 2, 3 and 4 p.m.; low, 31 at 5 a.m.; mean, 47; normal, 35. Total departure from since Jan. 1, -535.

Record temperatures Nov. 24: High, 64 in 1915; low, 3 in 1898. Temperatures year ago Nov. 24: High, 55; low, 29. Monday's heating degrees, 1 18.

Seasonal total, 1,046. Seasonal normal, 1,012. Precipitation 24 hours ending midnight Monday, none; total this month, total this year, MOON PHASES NOV. 1969 Last New First Full Quarter Moon Quarter Moon Nov. 2 Nov.

9 Nov. 16 Nov. 23 28.39. Surplus since Jan. 1, 1.82.

Total to date last year to midnight, 30-31. Relative humidity at 6 p.m., 48 per cent; at midnight, 69 per cent. Wind at 6 p.m., four miles an hour from southeast; at midnight, 10 miles an hour from north. Barometer at 6 p.m., 30.17 inches; at midnight, 30.34 inches. Sunset Tuesday at 4:58 p.m.

Sunrise Wednesday at 7.24 a.m. Missouri River stage, 6.5 feet; 24-hour change, .1 of a foot. Past IRS Officer Funeral Is Today Funeral services for Thomas A. Smith, 70, of 4511 Shirley Street, will be at 1:30 p.m. today at Heafey and Heafey Farnam Street Mortuary.

He died of a heart attack Friday in San Jose Putura, Mexico, while he and Mrs. Smith were on a 60-day vacation tour. Smith was retired from the Internal Revenue Service as a budget officer. Other survivors include a brother, James of San Francisco, and a sister, Gertrude of Omaha. Burial will be at Memorial Park in Council Bluffs.

$216,000 for Book London (UPI) Kenneth Nebenzahl, a Chicago book dealer, paid a record $216,000 at Sotheby's Auction House Monday for a first edition of "The Birds of America" by John Audubon. The four-volume set contains 435 plates engraved in aquatint and colored by hand. It was published between 1827 and 1838. By the Associated Press. Tropical storm Martha, her winds down to 50 miles an hour, struck a desolate coastal stretch in western Panama about noon Monday, then beat against a mountain range 15 to 20 miles inland.

U.S. Southern Command headquarters reported gale winds at 39 to 46 miles per hour. The storm, which at one time packed 85 m.p.h. winds, had picked forward speed when it reached land. Through most of her trek towards land, Martha had been on a south-southwesterly course, raising fears that she could devastate banana plantations in the vicinity of Almirante, in Bocas del Toro Province near the boundary with Costa Rica.

The brunt of the storm hit land about 125 miles southeast of Almirante and about 85 miles west by southwest of Howard Base. Persons familiar with the stretch of coast along the Gulf of Mosquitoes described it as pretty desolate, with only a few fishermen's hamlets at the mouths of rivers. Whether residents got the word in time to move inland was not immediately known. More than 10 inches of rain and tides three feet above normal had been predicted in the area. It was the first time in 36 years that a storm of such magnitude had struck the Atlantic coast of Panama.

Leaflets Support Grape Campaign Omaha Friends of the California Grape Boycott will hand out leaflets at selected grocery stores in the city Wednesday, a spokesman said Monday. The Rev. John McCaslin, cochairman of the committee, said that a leaflet campaign was conducted Saturday. He said 200 to 300 persons passed out handbills at 25 to 30 stores. The World-Herald found grape boycott handbills being passed out at only one of five major grocery stores that were checked Saturday.

Father McCaslin and Don Marquez another co-chairman, were in Kansas City, Saturday conferring with Cesar Chavez, national leader of the boycott, Father McCaslin said. Father McCaslin said that while participation "has been less than what we had hoped for, we are still pleased with the receptive response we have had from the shoppers." Man Goes to Court With Treats for Press Chicago (UPI) Joseph "Pops" Panczko, who had made a career of sorts by getting arrested on burglary charges brought doughnuts for the press room, Monday when he appeared in court on a new charge. A lawyer commented, "I've been practicing at the criminal courts for 15 years and every time Pops appears in court he always brings doughnuts or something for the press room." Newspaper at N.U. Studies Drug Issues Lincoln (AP) The student newspaper at the University of Nebraska devoted almost its entire issue Monday to drugs, especially marijuana. Articles in the Daily Nebraskan included a survey of the forms drugs take, reasons people use them, their availability, their prevalence in Lincoln and the state, their various effects and the penalties for their use.

Court Backs Ruling On Rockwell Burial Richmond, Va. (AP) The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Monday the Army's right to forbid the burial of the late George Lincoln Rockwell in Nazi ceremonial trappings at an American military cemetery. Rockwell, a Navy veteran and former leader of the American' Nazi party, was shot to death Aug. 25, 1967 in an Arlington parking lot.

Thunder at Niagara To Fall Again Today Niagara Falls, N.Y. (UPI) The mighty American falls, dammed for nearly six months, will start to flow again today. The flow was halted to permit engineers and geologists to explore damage done by recent rockslides and attempt to find ways of preventing similar damage in the future. The Record Calendar Today Selections from the Lawrence-Myden Foundation collection of American Art, Sam Francis Lithographs and Picasso Linocuts, Joslyn Art Museum. 8 a.m.-6 -Fontenelle Forest open.

10 a.m.-5 p.m.-Joslyn Art Museum open. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Citizens program. Christie Heights Recreation Center. Musicale concert: Leslie Parnas, cellist, Joslyn Art Museum.

Symphony Chorus rehearsal, Northern Natural Gas Co. Recovery, St. Andrews Episcopal Church. In District Court Divorces Asked Jeannine L. Thomason vs.

Richard H. Wilson E. Wilkins vs. Bette Lou. Betty L.

Zinn vs. Gerald E. Gloria Tibbs vs. Jerome. Eugene Ennis vs.

Claudette, Iona Bool vs. Earl A. Divorces Granted Glendora N. Zlesemann from Raymond H. Carolyn Pappas from Douglas.

Sharon K. Wagner from Harold W. Jr. Marriage Licenses Pete Patricia Roy Ellen Edgerton, Quandt, Hubbard, Eidora, 39. 52.

Dennis Jo Edward Thomsen, Colgan, 4510 4228 Crown Grant Point 22. William Germaine Pullen, 4547 Raiston, Pierce, 24t Gavie Geason, Mark Franklin Erickson. 4428 Redick 16. Donna Mari Devney, 3356 Grand 17. Paul Joseph Riederer, 3337 Lothrop Monroe 30.

Patricia Ann Stark, 3654 19. Joel James Kohout, 3640 Grover 26. Jo Lene Gallegos, Bellevue, 23. Vietnam Victim Army Capt. Harvey Kelley, 32, was killed in combat Thursday while serving his second tour in Vietnam, his family said Monday.

He and his wife, the former Yvonne Hansen, were graduated from the Irvington High School in 1956. His mother and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Kuhl, live in Blair. Vending Machines Robbed With Torch Intruders used an acetylene torch to cut the coin boxes out of four machines at the Omaha Manufacturing Engineering 3900 Dahlman Avenue.

Police said coin boxes were cut out of pop, cigarette, candy and soup machines and the offices were ransacked. Leo Geist, 3414 Craig legal. Steffie Serpan, 2128 S. 62nd legal. Fred H.

Thoma, 8218 Bowle 59. Mildred Karen Vosseler, 8222 Bowie 54. William Ezekial Sturgill, 4719 Wakeley 22. Kathleen Marie Becic, 1317 S. 8th 21.

Michael Edwin Chaney, 3924 Kansas 20. Barbara Joanne Tompkins, Richmond Hills, N. 21. Robert Virgil Williams, 4902 Grover St. 37.

Virginia Stuart Hand, 4834 Farnam 32. Glenn Romeo Ellis, 2438 21. Beverly Ann Washington, Oklahoma city, David Kenneth Litt, 6531 Grand 22. Caren Lee Chorney, 6531 18. David Michael Hendrix, Puxico, 19.

Jeannie Kay Eberly, 8917 Charles 20. Building Permits George Sevick, 4650 store building, $11,500. Don Nelson 9921 Broadmoor dwelling, $20,135. Council Bluffs Births Sons Crisler, David and Kathryn, Malvern, la. Hestness, Robert and Connie, 112 Beal St.

Jones, Larry and Trisha, Missouri Valley, la. Kinyon, Paul and Connie, 808 S. 21st St. Moore, James and Peggy, Glenwood, la. Daughters McGurren, Dennis and Billye, 2308 S.

6th St. Parhan, Lawrence and Barbara, Pacific Junction, la. Roberson, Willard and Bobbette, Macedonia, la. Schwery, Duane and Kathleen, 7506 Ontario Omaha. Scott, Ronald and Mona, Tabor, la.

Past Fremont Mayor Dies World-Herald News Service. Fremont, Neb. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the First Congregational Church here for former Mayor James R. Hanson, 81, who died Sunday in an Omaha hospital.

Hanson, president of the Hanson Audit Co. in Fremont, served four terms as mayor from 1941-1947. He also served as president of the Board of Education from 1934-41. He was a past president of the Fremont Chamber of Commerce and a former member of the board of directors of the Nebraska League of Municipalities. He also served on the Dodge County Selective Service Board and the Fremont Public Library Board.

Hanson is survived by his wife, Emma; daughters, Marjory Hanson of Washington, D.C., and Mrs. Edmund Albert of McLean, son, James R. Jr. of Columbus, Ohip; brothers, Alfred L. of San Diego, and Willard B.

of Fremont; sister, Mrs. Grace Sherwood of Fresno, and seven grandchildren. Burial will Ridge Cemetery in Fremont." Omaha. Alfalfa No. 1 25.00; sample 20.00.

meat Feed scraps tankage 107.50; 60. a per bone cent meal 97.50. 98.00; protein Soybean meal 44 per cent protein, new process 90.00; linseed meal 34 per cent protein, cent new protein, process old 87.00; process cottonseed 85.00. meal Dehydrated alfafa meal, 17 per cent protein, sacked Omaha. 50.00.

Hay and Feed Dealer selling prices of cars t.o.b. The Movie Clock Code letters in system this of list the from Pic- me Indian Your Association of adlusted to classifications, comply with city ordinance: Motion general; pic- Wagon" (M). All evening showtures classifled as follows: suggested for mature audiences with no lings at 8, with matinees at 2 age and restriction; unless to by persons older cuardian; accompanied under p.m. Wednesdays, Saturdays parent admitted, or adult and PC, fIlm released one prior to the MPAA code's effective date, Nov. and Sundays.

1, 1968. Undefeated" (G), Admiral "De Sade" (X), 7:05, 9:25. 7:30, 10:00. Cassidy and the Omaha "The Gypsy Moths" Kid" 1, 3:15, (R), 12:15, 2:10 ,4:10, 6:05, 8:05, Sundance (M), 5:30, 10:05. 8, 10:15.

Chief "Three in the Attic" Orpheum "The Sterile (R), "De Sade" (X), Cuckoo" (M), 12:15, 2:12, 4:10, 10:30. 6:05, 8:10, 10:10. Cinema Center "The Gypsy Six Cowboy" Moths" (R), 6, 7:50, 9:50. (X), 6:15, "Alice's RestauCinema II "Easy Rider" rant" (R), 6:00, "Sterile (R), 6:15, 8:05, 9:55, Cuckoo' (M) (in two theaters), Drink the 7:30, "Marlowe" (M), 6:30, "The Graduate" ter" (G). 1:20, 3:25, 5:30, 7:30, 9:35.

(PC), 6:15, 8:15. Dundee Theater Medium Cool (X), 1:10, 3:16, 5:22, 7:30, 9:35. ARe Reputation for The 3405 FARNAM PHONE 345-0090 Earl H. Burket Randall H. Bigsby Washington Post Service.

Washington A total of 2,134 legal abortions were performed in Maryland in the first year after its liberalized abortion law went into effect, the State Health Department has reported. A majority of the legal abortions were permitted to preserve the mental health of the mother, according to Dr. Mathew L. Tayback, the state's. assistant secretary of health.

The need to preserve the mother's mental health as well as her physical health is the major feature of the 1968 act, among the country's most permissive. According to Dr. Tayback, there were 5,153 requests for legal abortions from July 1968, when the law went into effect, to June 30, 1969. The 2,134 legal abortions performed equaled about three per er cent of the number of births in the state during the 12-month period, Dr. Tayback said.

World Time Temp. City Time Temp. 8 pm 63 Saigon 8 pm noon noon Sofia Stockholm pm pm Sydney 10 pm pm 72 Tel Aviv 2 pm 77 8 pm 79 Tokyo pm 3 pm 39 Tunis pm 72 Vienna pm 59 Warsaw pm 16 Buenos Asuncion 8 am pm Aires am pm 63 Montevideo 9 am Scrap Price Upturn Seen World-Herald News Service. New York The lull before the industrial list storm has the ferrous scrap market guessing this week, Iron Age magazine says. Word from some market areas is that the situation is tight and that lists will push prices high in December.

The reason for this is increasing talk about material shortages coming on top of steady exporting and hard-to-find freight cars. Dealers and brokers in other areas say the market has quieted down until industrial lists are out. They say that business will continue as usual with current strengths lasting at least through the end of the year. Another strong rumor is that stainless scrap prices, which have held at near-record levels for two weeks now, will again march upward when the full effects of the nickel strike are analyzed and the current nickel price hike is reflected in the scrap market. The Iron Age composite price for No.

1 heavy melting increased 67 cents this week to $34.17. Violence Strikes At Boston Jews Boston (UPI) The Boston Jewish community is taking steps to defend itself against an "epidemic of fear." In the Jewish section there are about 30 assaults a week on Jews, a local Jewish lawyer said. The elderly, afraid to venture out in the streets even during, tear daylight gas as hours, protection. carry The greater Boston Jewish community Sunday met with representatives of the Jewish Defense League, which claims 7,000 members nationwide. The Bostonians want to establish a local chapter to deal with increasing terror and violence against Jews in the Roxbury, Dorchester and Mattapan sections.

IRREGULAR? DUE TO LACK OF FOOD BULK IN YOUR DIET TRY Kellogg's ALL Black Panthers Plan Free Medical Clinics Oakland, Calif. (AP) The Black Panther party announced Monday it is setting up a series of free medical clinics "in Harlem, the Bronx and about 30 other underprivileged areas." Masai Hewitt, minister of education, said the militant Negro group's aim is to meet basic health needs of the communities. "All ethnic groups, including Mexican-Americans and Chinese, have accepted our offers of help," he said. "Personnel is no problem, but housing is finding places in underprivileged areas where we can do the job," he said. Omahan Is Charged In Saturday Shooting Willis L.

Crenshaw, 43, of 1721 Willis Avenue was charged Monday with shooting with intent to kill, wound or maim and with being a felon in possession of a firearm. He is accused of shooting Georgia M. Gafford, 24, of 1417 North Twenty-fourth Street, about 8 p.m. Saturday. She was listed in satisfactory condition Monday at Immanuel Medical Center.

Municipal Court Judge Jay P. Gibbs set Crenshaw's bond at a total of $10,000. Forest Lawn MEMORIAL PARK Omaha's most beautiful burial estate conveniently located In Northwest Omaha. Serving Omaha and the Midwest since 1885. A lot owner NonProfit Association.

Prices From: 8500 Including Care and Maintenance FOREVER Easy Terms No Interest Concerned Assistance Without Obligation 451-1000 "I CAN HEAR AND I CAN UNDERSTAND. Conversation, Radio, Television and in Church with my new Radioear Hearing Aid." Try one without obligation. PHONE FOR 342-7442 BETTER NATURALLY I HEARING, Claude W. Campbell "CERTIFIED HEARING AID AUDIOLOGISTS" 310 SOUTH 15th STREET OMAHA.

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