Easy Scan and Print appears to be accelerating, the graduate placement center. k ■ "More students.-were freed volume remains less than oneduring the 1970-71 fiscal year third of what it was two years than the previous -year, al though the problem of job ago. ." "We're slower in Montana shortages continues/' Hood feeling the impact of a tighter said. "Part of the problem is economy and. therefore slower reflected by the fact that fewer to show a .decrease in job job recruiters are visiting the offers,11 Hood stated. - Hood sugge3ted~studentsyincampus "As of now, 27 recruiters vestigate as early as possible NOTICI TO CREDITORS estate of Clara M. ■ Battling, Deceased: ^.Notice Is Hereby Given by tho under- sYgned Executrix of th* «tt*to of Clan M^ Bohltng. Deceased, to the creditors of and.all persons.having cWlrns.against -tho said Deceased; to exhibit them with th© necessary vouchers, within four 14) months after the tint publication of Mils notice, to tho said.Claire B. Zlon, Execu trix, at 312 Montana Building, Great Falls, Montana, tho same-being the ptaca for- fho- transaction of mo business of said estate In the County of Cascade. Oaled March 1, .1972. , Bohling, Deceased. have=interviewed Orviiie Gray, Attorney for Executrix, 312 Montana Building, Great Falls, Mont. ftBTICE OF HEARING PETITIONS FOR -appointments to interview UM advantage- of ..the services Btudents during - the -1971-72 available at the UM Graduate Placement Center. : year compared with JOone """Students will just have to year ago-." Hood said most recruiters try harder," Hood emphasized. appear optimistic that the trend ■ CLAIRE B: ZION, Executrlx-of-tho-Estalt- of~CI«ra "M. They cannot afford to sit back is changfog and mor&jp^ FORMATION OF A COUNTY SEWER DISTRICT AT VAUGHN, MONTANA. Before the Board of County Commis sioners of Cascade County. In the matter of the Vaughn Sewer-District. ■ Notice Is Hereby Given, That a regular meeting of the Board of County Commis sioners will be held April IB, 1972, at 7:30 p.m., at the VaughtrSdwol for 1ho purpose ot hearing petitions for tho for mation lcf_a-County_ Sewer District .at Vaughn,- Montana, when and wIlbib anr person interested may appear and show cause why said petitions should not be oranied and all written protests as shall have been tiled wilh the Cascade County 'Clerk and Recorder prior to said hearing, By or on" TwhalT "of owners of taxable Newsmen to Air Con property 11 of Opinions on TV Tonight hearsed Capitol Bureau HELENA — Newspapermen Twha-covered the-Conslitutional Convention will be given an op portunity to air their opinions on ~the coijvehtionrand its-pro3uct most areas. "The in an un- Re-regulator Dam at Libby— Recommended stream from Libby, Dam has been favorable recommended panel,, discussion mended by the Engineers fo -Rivers and Harbors;would cost $16 million and would hel meet the heavy demands foi power in the Pacific Northwest The proposal goes to the chie of engineers for further eval g th t^to utationand othej tw^to b be ^ s.ked by moderator Al Dougher- 1 the following show- . " . » j-j«t»CT >k».> I T- Peiitlotvers constitute' at least ti»n to nominate candidates they „,. cen, ,,0<>b, of me registered voters ,. Cascade County rarrinilitencialr or intereshi^T-p^-fHiHionefv-des*^ n»at. a county the .=» .- . -. , j of '. John Kugliri of the Great Falls ohn Schiltz, Billings; Iross, Glendive.; Louise Arlyne. Rei- poux, Kalispell; George Harper, Helena; and Jerry Leondorf. Helena. Dennis Curran, of the Lee Newspapers, picked Schiltz; anduTarlie Mahoney, Clancy. Charles Johnson, Associated Press, named Ben Berg, Boze- Dan Foley, Lee newspapers, named Graybill/" Murray, and Wade Dahood of Anaconda. Frank Adams, Tribune picked Robert Kelleher, Billings as the most interesting. hour-long discussion will ast of a series of some,25 hours of public service* conven tion coverage over the past 10 (at~7 p.m. in most arous on the 3ohn Toole. _ within sewer district, to be known as the Vaughn Sewer District, bo organized ind educational channel normally flow of water -entering the dam and will also help th occupied by'KUBD), Dougherty completed structure to meet it will interview convention presi dent Graybill and vice preiidenl proposed power potential 1' —/*_ territory district. . administrator, said the stru tions, Inc. • I m mediately prior to t lie pane) lure will be a "rp-iegutatci 800,000 kilowatts. the mOSt OUlStand- |0 be included within the proposed sawtr weeks by the Montana CnbJe TV ^Nelson Morrow, Libby Dam Association anl Telecommunica which will contr^ also bo I Montana, for tho formation of a county by the a division oi the Army man; jind jJ. C. Garlington, Mijmla. Melcalf said the plant retom boundaries shall mlssioners ot Cascade County, Stats of no/) oarlipr m in WO thft wepk ped-earlier wcbr, ~Corps~ of "EngWersT Srir~Cr~ Metcatf, D-Morit. said Friday. the tana. res. Leo Graybill, Great Falls; WASHINGTON (AP) - A 50,- Marshall Murray* Kalispell; -360 kilowatt hydroelectric plan Russell .McDonough, Glendive; Mae Nan Robinson, Missoula; to be placed 10 miles down dam," within The undersigned, qualified registered voters and residents within tho boundaries :hert, Great Falls, Rich Cham- fore'final approval. situated proposed district 'flbone-^apitol- Bureau:-picked ^^^ "-■■■•• reporters, the heard. Dated March 29, 1972. . J. L. LENNON, Clerk and Recorder. JOHN ST. JERMAIN, Commissioner. MILO F. DEAN,. Commissioner. Petition tor the Organization of ■ Couniy Sewer District at Vaughn. Mon . ri- ' Revised Cod* 3. A map of the proposed sewer dis trict Is attached hereto «» "Exhibit A" and by this reference nvtd» a part here of. The boundaries of tho proposed di*. tricl shall be as follows: Beginning at Ihs section comw com mon to sections 23, 24, 25 and 26, T31N. RIE; Ifience south 1630.4 feel along me west line of Section 25; thence east, J10.0 feel; Ihence north ISJ3.6 ttet to Ihe south righl-of-way line of the E-W Big Skv Vista access road; thence N B3O37*E; 1320.2 leet along Ihe south rloht-ot-way line; thence M «?'1I'E, 72 feet along said right-of-way to Ihe west right-ot-way line pi Imo county road running throuen (he ct*nlcr of Section 24; thence east, 60 teel to ihe east rlahl-ol-way lino of the county road; thence N 0'2S' E, 147& feel to the south rfshl-ol-way line of Montana Highway No. 200; thenct northeasterly along the south right-of-way lino of said highway approximately 1720 foet to an Intersection with the wtst bank of Muddy Creek; thence northerly along said creek bank to an Intersection with me south rlflht of-way line of the Burlington North ern Railway; thence northwesterly along said rlghl-ol-way tine to an Intersection wilh a 1/16 section line being the NorNt line of the SEU, NW'j, Section 24, T2IN. RIE; thence west J00 feet along laid • trt»-lme,-thcnce ■ swrthj-IMS t- (en — to the north rlght-ot-way of tho Burllnglon Northern Railway (Sun River Line) i thrnce westerly 10001- feet along said rloht-ol-way to the west line of Section 24. T2IN, RIE; thence south along th* SQ. FT. OUR REG. $5.25 THAT'S ONLY 62.14 per M 31/2X24-INCH R REG. $7,60 west lint of Section 24. 18151- feet to Ihe south righl-al-way line of Montana Highway No. 200; thenct. H 72°»'E, 235Oi (pel along said right-of-way Ihe-most westerly property corner Mogstrad properly; Ihtnct ' S 43*4J*Et 172.0 feet; Ihenw S WW, 1M.7 fMh thence S- «*43-E, M.0 fttt; thenct N e9°U'W. 120.0 tett To the west rlBm-ofway Una at Ihe county rotdi thenct S 0'2»*W. 891,6 ftet along tht west rlaht-ot way llna of the county road, to ttit North line of Section 2S. T21N. west along sild tine 2494+ point, ot beginning RJCi thtnee fttt to tho 4. The establishment of the propoied sewer district will te cgflduclve to th« public health, conve^lflnct. IIWJ wtttere, and will benetlt Ihe properly. Included within the boundaries of th« proposed district. Wharetorr; your petitioners pray thai a hearing-«n Ihls pelillon be held al such lime a* JIM Board of Commission ers ol Ian*, Cnstade County. shall dcilgnitte and Stato thnl of Moiv nv-such hearing said dltlrtekbe organlzatl ind .. poralsd. ~\ Incorpd DRtrdr February, 1»72. f-ugtn* A. Roberts., sterllh c. Nitlira, Juan Gurntty. JimH W.-' C«rpfnlor .•Phyllis M.:.C«rptnttrv. .Thtrj" «rt V THAfS ONLY 62.14 per it FREE ROOFING ESTIMAT Did 01' Man Winter take a tittle something c your roof? Our Expert crews can repair or' ins aw roof for you Quickly, Efficiently.aricTECOl ICALLYl Just Call Us . . . 2300 OR STOP local (ofter home care, capita payment* be invested l«r:;'»evopi . After the seven-year nod, any amount U>e:Blaclde«t Trft)al Court. r11» Bureau.of Indian account will be Ghecki will be made out to i« further directed remain account - from the grammed for land | jurchaae anc over.' Parents^>f children under oae.recelving a riiare and 18 shall, receive all per capita persons duly en- educational purposes, e by this ruling; reat to Libby Dam, Geologists Agree Earthquak The-geologists found no'rea raised "to only a partially KB The report of the committee Professional GeoloBaid "there appears to be headed by Clifford A. Balster, son to question the quality or level until observation* as«t» them that the hazard la unlik*. extent of the geological work ByJ. D. H0CME8 AP Capitol Writer ENA ( geological reason for Billings, admitted an increase - A^grou or has been rentedied," the rej from being fjUel as sched events "may be possible, but is at the damsite on the Koptenai Fletcher Newby, y executive l River, a tributary to the Co ficer not likely to be serious." . Qjiamy^ Council today uled/'" • » r ■' Enyiromneirtal h it;'appear3 feasible to fill Quality Council, said tha cbun-" "In cur evaluation," the com lumbia. * he professional evaluation Coocanusa," the reservoir was Mu&t by the state council mittee members said, "we con They said personnel of cil will discuss the report, at its the nearly completed after DrT/Bichai-d L. Konizeski, sidered the overriding factor to corps pointed out that a hazard April 7 meeting. million libby dam in hydrologiat-at the University of be probability of hazard rather exists in the form, of potential Last week, the Board of Con 'estern Montana, Montana,- contended that' filling than possibility of hazard, be slides near the east abutment sultants to the Corps of Engi report by the Environ- the •reservoir could increase cause society does not operate of the dam and remedial meas neers reported It found no. dan-_ dam, from eatth~ earthquake, activity in the area under a concept of certainty of ures are being considered. I Geology Committee quakes. Meanwhile, the lake will ontana Section, American and lead to failure of the dam. events." )fesslonal Biologists lit preventing Lake Koocanusa in the intensity of seismic done by the Corpsi of Engineers NATURAL ELEGRICITY to GO UP ^HARPtYHuHiecrting COSTS NOW! «* w*^r. Jut beltnt neany '♦»» ^^^ck« Your Home will be WARMER all W Easy Scan and Print fefeV ^ ^ docu>iBnt|i ratified June (T By ;C£«ILB8 S. JOHNSON Amcteted Proi Writer ;(AP),r ^ cltiiwna n tefir ■ stitutional rights, g con yg dtlzen-under the of IB yean will (ind*that age aod'-allow cltlxens the state and local governments uvenile-authorlUas and law enticlpAe in iheir government for Injuries^ or property dam brcement authorities, as Veil citizens also will be able to sue ge age all state and local author Dahood said. "The average citizen is going to find government, both state accessible" to Montanana his ; inquiry," " Dahood said. "This will require (he officers BLONDIE ity, will be more considerate position as a person in and employes oi the state to ex he [state of Montana," Dahood ercise greater cars in all of said. Is not to. say that minors Another section is designed to will not have to obey laws, he ^q of rights. nize that: their paramount func circumvent a 1071 Montana Su said, but that they will bs given Jhe- chairman of the Con tion is to serve the interest of preme Court decision unpopular their rights. with worklngmen and attor Delegates also voted to lower stitutional-Convention BUI of the citizen." /will;retaut^all /extstlfigf rights "Government officials and em hd1i^T)^#' ones In ployes will nfbre clearly recog Rights Conimtttee, Wade J.r6a> Some Montana their activities," Dahood satd. newspapers neys. Dahood was the losing at hood; RrAhaconda, said "he was" and the Montana Press Associ pleased" delegates voted to keep ation resisted the righUo-know existing-rights- intact and add provision that passed, saying it could be used by bureaucrats to som'enew ones. "This is the greatest bill ol conceal documents. It-gives the rights that any state has writ public and press access to governmental documents .and the h Ad Anaconda attorney tt ten, meetings except when the right said. Among the new rights ar? the to individual privacy outweighs g to know. TightHo-know-and-partLclpjte the right the right to sue the state and The two rights coupled to its subdivisions, the right of gether should make it more dif- torney in the Ashcraft vsrMorc tana Power Co. case last year. third parties under the work men's compensation laws. holic beverages and enjoy other adult rights. Most of the con fr hnw the section wcul affect the worker, Dahood said "When he is hjrecHo; wpxk a large installation, or at one the^major plants hi Montana b n—individual contraetorr-1 will be assured that the plai of work will be safer and th epresentatives of the seven Inlian reservations in the state, ll heavy" and highway ' con- has a safe environment. raetors with current projects Speakers are to include Vihce all the.resp!Oiw\bi\Hies_and^obot adUitnood Mwe ligations the law." "In our judgment, there can now be no excuse for the type irrpapnnsihjUtv that has characterized some of the dem onstrations and activities of the decade. Tnternatinnai. Tony Softicti, administrator of Montana's Labor Standards Division, said discugsion topics will include training programs, WASHINGT6N <AP)^-« Rep as well as, contractor, union, Dick Shou{f, ;• B4tont., laid and ' Indian . Involvement EquaL^EmploymenUJ i ISLfiNTREO* .... vwwvwwwSATURDAy Qnd SUNDAY YORK STEAK BEETLE BAIL Baked Potato or French Fries and Sizzler Toast il rights officer for the Federal Support for . old DorretTDenver, regional civ Bosh is from. Great MVTWORrK Next: Local "government. professor of Indian studies Montana State University; Har Reeee Hammond, Washington, D.C., representative of Oper- DOLLER BILL KNOW WHO* younger citizens within the last 2501 Highway;; Administration;- and Shoup Sees SNUFFY SMIT While 18-year-olds would gain The court ruled he could no these rights, Dahood empha collect damages from the util sized that they also would have Staging the seminar is the La Bosh, president of the Montana bor Standards Division of the AFL-CIO; Barney Old Coyote, Montana Department of Labor include business activities, drink alco-| manenlly disabled after a fall persons involved .Jn heavy and highway .construction .in. Mon tana are expected to attend an in the state and union represen Equal-Employment Opportunity atives involved in such projSeminar in Helena Tuesdjayand will 18-year-olds Ashcraft, employed by an in stitution, if approved by voters dependent contractor hired b] June 6, would not become effec Montana Power, was per tive until July 1, 1973. ' ub Equality and Industry. - Participants said ers redress against negligent legal contracts, participate in Construction Men to Get Wednesday. Dahood The section guarantees work would have the right to execute ty for negligence. HELENA (AP) - Abkt.200 ^iggeptadulthpj^Jrpm|9J° u ff % IZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE i 10th Ave. South Great Falls Easy Scan and Print jfficials. """■''■■: s ' ity ti tailor its governmental Despite all the critlcisrn of structure to its own needs p 'tised to commission-manager form used couTIty-fihd "city :eilatin| Mrs. Erdmann was confident bypass \.& stubborn legislature lature. With seif-goverhrnent y could enjoy jy ' affect Montana Citizens. If County residents might face a ari* overwhelming, vote , of ternalive forms of government. (erj they t pg seltgov^ pow,ers",,w1ih the state;. •vjradtticnarconiidence in our present sys- Those unite.adopting, the document is ratifiedi i ll ernment charters also could ex Hi -Jane 6. i 'structure with three county com tern. f Coiiventltjd. inay By CHARLES sT JOHNSON : On r the review probably would show that refused to provide: for al- missloners and 10 other elected Ask said delegates tried to r»al Associated Pn HELENA (AP) - Maybe voU Petroleum County. —era still-canHrbeat citjrhairTJi "IMS" courthouse, but they can do who. served on the Local Govern away with them under the pro ment Committee, -called the voter review section "the key to posed constitution. It requires voters to review the whole local government te structure of. local govern article.' "People, will get to participate ment" units within four years after the passage of the constitu in< choosing their kinds of tion and every 10 years there- government," he said. "When they find out they have a inafter. ■We tried to write an article that will fit a Iowirbf"200r1b ■ city of 80,000," he said. ''Of course the legislators will have to Implement this, and-I think they will." ~ Local residents unhappy with the traditional forms of govern- mentcan design their own, sub ject to legislative limitation* and voter approval. Only _...„ the legislature now has _." One alternative form of city chance, you will get more parUcipation, and I think this will • the power to draw up charters, ^and. county governments must make for much better govern and local residents can accept Ibe submitted to voters along or reject them. .i.with the existing forms within ment." Committee members, During debates, former Mayor ,Jour years if the document is j ^-aproved June 6. while Marian S...Erdmann, B-Greal not anticipating a rush toward charters, said - Missoula residents, for ex-■ alls, said the review would bej self-government w be ottered aiheallhr^r local government i they^could be used by a local Treasure State Deaths WHITEFISH - CALVERT. William Henry, 74, died Friday. Ground Search Planned For Missing Aircraft |"A man is pretty small against Funeral services will be jn the , By thh associated mem " „ Austin Chapel at % p.m. TuesAn aerial search for a light jail that area." ,/day. Burial will be in ©acjer plane missing and feared down) Wilson said he would arrange .Memorial Gardens Cemetery. in the snow covered Mission any aerial support requested by L.He was born in Sand Coulee. He Mountains Primitive Area of! the sheriff. He said that after I began mming when he was 11 Montana has been called off-a| the snow melts there would be * •years_joldJn....the Sand Coulee I ground search- is beingTOfgan-! two days-of-concentrated-aenal i searching southeast of Poison, *!ares. H81 was employed in -the commented that before -Copper Mines in Butte for a -short time before moving to " Trego. He was engaged in farm try to organize a ground search cult. ing and logging operations there. for the plane. Up to three feet of new snow He married Agnes Latham, Jack Wilson, Montana Aero- has faljen m some areas off ^ th April 11 1921 in Great Falls. autics Commissiofi_J»archjm jssjon Mountains,_Phillips. ■servations have been called off. |sa^e missi men are ^^ Trego; two daughters, Harold Ebaugh, Havre, until the snow melts, and that Monlana Kiwams dub officials, nno. may be a week or longer. The|r ,ane wag last spotted and Mrs. Norman Calvert, San Aboard the atrpfane were Ed-^^n on a late n5ght Calif.; two brothers, Tom grips, men's right-or left-hondod, women's right-handed only. garschwartz of Anaconda-and fl.^rt_Al '-li^["~tTtiie^aot Falls, Glenn and two sisters, Howard of .Missoula. IL"?111oward Schmid. Schrnid.rf ^^.Jschwartz had reported icin£ of Wilson met Saturday with the . . s- ^ lane d5s. his wings. Since the plane dis sheriff and the wives of the two appeared there has been n< Wash., and Mrs. George Harmen who were aboard the trace of the craft or its passen charick, Great Falls. plane when it disappeared from gers. WITEF1SH - DAVIS, Mrs. radar screens March 15 on what Blanche, 87, died Saturday. Fu- was to be a 40-minute flight I neral neral serviceswin.be services-win.—be—in-thfrfronrKalispell-to-Missoula inbithfr omKalispelltoMisso t "It wilt be difficult to search -Austin Chapel at. 10:30 a.m. Monday. The body will then be those 100.000 square miles of forwarded- to -the^^Wayrynen- territory," Sheriff, Phillips said. * Richards Funeral Home in Butte Mrs. Long, m Puyallup. Stolen Art 3 Wo Easy Scan and Print its governmental i era" ' under the existing 1889 charters, which reverses -the i own needs ... . constitution. They can-do only preqent. situation^ &fclpoJnted~out, thoughjocal used to what is-pertnltted^by-tiurlegls^ voters would always have the iborn legislature lature. With - self-government char final .say by approving or re > provide for al5 of government, ters, they could enjoy "shared jecting the charters. proposed constitution bu could units also hav< receive some from the legisla operate and ture; __ der the'pToposed;c in importanti "We didn't want to givje them county. ^__ more power now," Aslc said, forbids "but if they improve their without the approval^ ymts choosing not to go forms of governments, I think jqrity of. those, voting^Jjf,, , the - charter-writing the legislature will in the fu- county affected. >ra also could ex- ities could exercise all power through Next: Natural Resources not expressly prohibited in the process would not be granted ture." wer. 'J constitution, by law or fry their any additional powers ir "allocated adopting self-gov- powers" with the stale;. Local AiHi A Men's and Women's Store Closed Easter Sunday-April 2nd Prices effective thru April 4th Complete Selection. For Golfers Starter Set 2 Woods-5 Irons Men's Clubs PerrmFtor"" woodvoll-weather grips, men's righl-or left-handed, women's right-handed only. 3 Woods - 8 Irons a|d, ^ Easy Scan and Print AND> THEY'RE OFF — Children 5 years old and younger scurry after hundreds of Kaster eggs at the start of a giant Faster egg hunt Saturday after noon at the Friendship Inn. More than 500 needy children collected approximately 1.000 eggs during the hunt sponsored by the FALCON organization and Friendship Inn. The older children had a separate egg .hunt. Following the Easter egg hunt the youngsters at far right gathered around to play with a little rabbit owned by 11-year-old Linda Santiago, right. The other children from left are. Lee Santiago, 5fa Johnny Olson, .10 months, and Jarrett Perry, 2. (Statf Photos) County Clerk Dislikes Con Con Vote Directive "This is going to cost the tax-> Lennon said he had been payers of Cascade County a trying to get in touch with Leo C. . , , i ' a d Graybill Jr., chairman of the chunk of money,",, />■ Clerk and Re-Con>t.tut.onal ^^ for corder Joe Lennon said about flldher discussion" and possible! the Constitutional Convention's clarification of the situation. i It- —,.airective-that~-voting-machines-.--■-How-much -will—it- cost?'"-j •would • nu I" be~uscd"for vot ing -on ^LfflnoTT*'a*§lffit!—Sfitt—aTlSWeT5~d" the proposed constitution. jwith"\he question, "Who knows? "We don't have any booths."!But there is one thing for Lennon said. "We don't have;certain, if the county has to buy any extra ballot boxes, we will j all of this equipment and hire all have to hire many extra election!of the additional help, it will cost judges and they will have to a bundle." !&.. •work much longer which will The Constitutional Convention, ~. tcall o ratification June ""delay the results."" The *county"officer noted that1 stipulated that the county com- the county's machines areimissioners in each county shall capable 6£ handling the constitu-: furnish separate p o 11 b o.o k s , tifltiasaaeparateiballot*ecausevprj»i«t repatersr tatty sheets 15-ln.Diago Colo TAf Easy Scan and Print AND THEY'RE OFF — Children 5 years old and younger scurry after hundreds of Kaster eggs at the start of a giant Easier egg hunt Saturday after noon at the Friendship Inn. More than 500 needy children collected approximately 1.000 eggs during the hunt sponsored by the FALCON organization and Friendship Inn. The older children had a separate egg .hunt. Following the Kaster egg hunt the .youngsters at far right gathered around to play with a little rabbit owned by 11-year-old Linda Santiago, right. The oilier children from left are. Lee Santiago, • 5fa Johnny Olson, 10 months, and Jarrett Perry, 2. (Staff Photos) County Clerk Dislikes Con Con Vote Directive "This is going to cost Uie tax- Unnon said he had been payers of Cascade County a trying to got in touch with Leo>C. , , . „ ,,, , * . T5 'Gravbill Jr., chairman of the chunk of money," Clerk and Re- C(m^tuHona\ convention, for corder Joe Lennon said about jl|r|her discussion* and possible! the Constitutional Convention's clarification of the situation. i directive-that -voting-machines.;—--How much will \l cost?"! nRrotritrTiot-btrusrd-for*TothTgTm'^x?nTfi3Tf—fTSRFti—aTTtl—arfswerat the proposed constitution. iwiih^he question. "Who knows? "We don't have any booths." But there is one thing for Lennon said. "We don't have certain, if the county has to buy any extra ballot boxes, we will all of this equipment and hire all have to hire many extra electibn jof the additional help, it will cost judges.and they will have to a bundle." jg.y work much longer which will delay the results." The Constitutional Convention, call for " ratification The county officer noted that' stipulated that the .county com- the county's machines a r e j missioners in each county shall capable of handling the constitu-; furnish separate p o 1 Lb o.o k s , ticn as a separate toallotbecause \ precinct registers, tally sheets of the "lock-out11 systems em- and any other supplies neces- bodied in the machines. sary for holding a separate elec- "Either way, though," Lennon tion. said, "we will have to have aj rThe secretary of state said separate register to tabulate the, separate ballots will.be neces- ng, Heating Men & AMPor Play De Easy Scan and Print a% j~aid the section JflnafeCOTF ventkf •xtraction of natural reaources SneK&fflBo proposes must be reclaimed, ~ buF"does tt; .which goes before ot specify to what extent. Concerned . about. ..pofldble especiallyv Important strip mining damages -In -poaJ- SfttiMrc^^yw^cott&er that most ^& cJttxens docomeBt proved-June 6. Is ap- delegates came herewith th© t*rnkiU stored to'si'good-Mi^ rich eastern Montana,'the Nat shall-prbvide hllbid ite remedies for the dation and provide adequate ronnwiit haa lt» nidie In the ab^? depletion arid'degradation proposed cooatitution, but con of natural resources." vention delegates - disagreed McNeil said this provision dl-: ^^^^b'W" (effective recto the' legislature the provbiona will be. ^ 5lW»ol«m, sure whatever we have now not going to be degraded." . How will ;ttie» provisions, af they conatltuU the strongeet en vironmental protection state feet the 'Montana family' tha ment found in any state con likes to camp, boat and fish on stitution; He was principal au the weekends and is concerned about the environment thor of the subsections. To others, they are only win - It all hinges on the legist* dow dressing to a pressing ture. problem. These delegates, led But McNeil said the first sub by Louise Cross, D-Glendive, section -places an battled futilely for what they duty on each citizen to clean up considered—Jgovisibns with idea of streamlining <3onsUtutiQn,._but_they believed more teeth Jrth Much will depend mi the leg the environment so "important islature, which is directed to they added a new provision," pass laws to enforce the con he said. Mrs. Cross and others failed stitutional statements. "Probably the most impor in trying to declare the environ tant part is the affirmative ment a publi ctrust. duty of everyone in the state of Under the doctrine, the envi Montana* including - the state, ronment • would have individuals (fad corporations, to public trust held by the stateimprove our environment," for its citizens and managed'fjy ^-' McNeil said. "No other state the legislature. constitution has such a provi sion. The benefieiary^'the public, would haveJwd the right to sue The section says: the stable if the legislature and "The state/and each person state agencies did not protect shall maintain and improve 9. the environment adequately. clean and healthful environ Convention opponents termed ment in Montana fpjvpre.sent the public trust doctrine "socia and future generations." listic" and "anarchistic." Critics in the convention The environmental questiojvhow effective this pro- also includes a section on rec visjoif will be, but McNeil de- . fended it. rthe~constitution," he said, adding that the two other subsections, re lamation. It saysjajids_disturbed by_the_ quire legislation to flesh out the FFA Conference ments. Slated at MSU skeletal constitutional state 'This means if the legislature BOZEMAN - Cliff Saylor 'doesn't do it," yoTTcan vote the 19, Pacific Region vice pre& scoundrels out," he said. ident of the Future Farmers 0 The second subsection directs America from Glendale, Ariz the, legislature to provide for will be a featured speaker ai the administration and enforce the Montana State FFA Lead ment of the duty. ership Conference to be hek ~Tnis lawmakers could back Friday and Saturday on thi up with a tough rigEfto-sue law Montana State University Cam to alW citizens to suepollu- pus in Bozeman. —... ters arid ^gbvernmeht: agencjtes SOFAS 1 only-Brown Nylon 2-Cushion Sofa was 169.99. . NOV 1 .only-Plaid Sofa and Chair. Set was 169.99 NO\ 2 only-Sofa and Chair Sets * -" "100%" Nylon, Avocadp orGold, wsr« 238.88 sat ..... . ... £ >1 ... NOW I 3 only-Modem 3-Cushion Nylon Sofas ~~ 3 colors, wor» 249.99 ' '.. ....... Chairsato Match.... 3-Pc. Modern Blue-Green Sectional • ^ i Walnut Wood Trim, was 529.99 Xonly Velvet Curved Sofa— ......3 NOW~ NOW ".— " Green, Gold or Orange, wer« 399.99 ... 1 aniv fioM BrAcadfi 3.Cu«hian Sofa . NOW * $fl iJi 5 1 "Ffl Easy Scan and Print ''vi ronirifliitfll y-v ^protftc tlop~^-*v stfltc* Ukw to camp,1 boat and fish oif about th thor of the silbseietions. It-all To .qUiere;-they? are only win- ehvli'briment pressing tun£ probleh^. these delegates,; led . But McNeil said the first sub| by Louise---Crosi; T>Glendivei section -places an affbroatiyl battled futilely ..for... what they -consideied^^proviaions more teeth in lOBem. ;: with duty on each ciU«en-to-clean ^ idea of strearniining the ol — consUtutioiC_bjit^they believe^ Much will depend on the leg the environment so.important islature, which is directed to pass laws to enforce the con stitutional statements. "Probably the most impor tant part is the affirmative duty of everyone in the state of .Montana, including the state, they added a new provision," he said- Mrs. Cross and others failed in trying to declare' the environ ment a publi ctrust. Under the doctrine, the envi ronment -would have been a individuals atad corporations, to public trust held by the stat improve our environment," for its citizens and manag HERE 452-6464 ^>>" McNeil said. "No other state the legislature. The benefidBjyr^the public, constitution has such a provi 3 Ways tp dtorgo would have Iwra the right to sue sion. The section says: the 8ta>-if the legislature and "The state,nand each person state^agencies did not protect | shall maintain and improve a the environment adequately. clean arid healthful Convention opponents termed ment in Montana Jpp^ and future generations." listic" and "anarchistic'.' Critics in the convention The environmental article questiojvtiow effective this pro- also includes a section on rec- visierfwill be, but McNeil de- tarnation. fended it. It says .lands disturbed by the "Ifs mandatory in the con stitution," he said, adding that the two other subsections re quire legislation to flesh out the skeletal constitutional state FFA Conference 1 only-Brown Nylon 2-Cushion Sofa wai 169.99 ... T only-Plaid Sofa and Chair. Set wat 169.99 2 only-Sofa and Chair Sets 100% Nylon, Avocadp or Gold; "This means if the legislature "doesn't do it, you can vote _tfie scoundrels out,'rhe said. The second subsection directs the. legislature to provide for the administration and enforcement of the duty. "This lawmakers iould back BQZEMAN - Cliff Saylor, 19,_P^dficJBggioiLvi^pres token provision, which also ap- pareiitlyl would meet the cow stitutional mandate. The third susbectton also is contingent on legislative action the "environment. But~like-other-constitutional goals aid directives, the enyirorimental section will be o little value without tha legisla ' 3 only-rModern 3-Cushion Nylon Sofas ident of the Future Farmers ol America from Glentiale, Ariz., will be a featured speaker at the Montana State FFA Lead ership Conference to be held Eriday_jaid; Saturday on the up with a tcughrighWo-suelaw Montana State University Cam to allow citizens to sue pollu- pus in Bozeman. ters and government agencies not enforcing the environmental dut# : • ' Or; they could enact a weak NOW wor« 238.88 sat Slated at MSU ments. finn^ baclc itinp. SOFAS the public trust doctrine "socia 0HE5T0P Electrical Service -novt Chairs,to Match.... 3-Pc. Modern BIut-Green Sectional Walnut Wood Trim, was 529.99 .. 3 only-Velvet Curved Sofa Green, Gold or Orango, wars 399.99 . only Qotd Bromide 3-Cushion Sofa Traditional, skirted, wai 29$.99 . '1 NOW 1 only Modern Pillow-Back Sofa , X-Lon&.Arm Covers, Print, was 399.99 NOW _4"J#J • Electrical f ixturts • Wiring f Contracting • Electric Ma>or* & Signs ' Wo Buy AUJUakes Motors CASCADE ELECTRIC COMPANY SAVE -«03i6in%Ayi. North -t-mljrHi-BacirTradilional-Sefer Mint Grtcn. QtiilNd w« 449.99 S288 NOW 3 only LowtiMit, 1 Sponijlr, " " ' Quilt*d, wa> 499.99 tl/All w«n» 319199 259,99 1 only Nylon Vtlvct 4-wMon Sofo. Pillow-back, l-*nly3 colon OoU T» ff;TT«ai«~- [ war* to zfty.yy your chtflrt ' SAVE SAVE i NOW LARGE Easy Scan and Print ;wtoi^i}Um1Tufoi& Department of AgricaJtur«- In tiki constitution. directed the legislature to *Pvt~^ pi^fiale furids^'to proteop '"JS HERE'S YOUR TO CLEAN UP 452-6464 I D 3 Ways to charge tn... SOFAS >n 2-Cushion Sofa ... now 98 md Chair Set now TO hair Sets . now Cufhion Nylon Sofas Gretn Sectional n, was 529.99 .. 1 only Hi-Bock Vttvtt Tuftid Choir was 199.99 . 4WW $99.99 •, HQW$99.99 1 only Wine Velvef Tufted-bcck Chair was 169.99 eacjpbr Gold, ich.. . . TAKE A CLOSE LOOKr , 107 rr-^NOW NOW .'■ -■"'■ ." .*'- >range,;war« 399.99...... NOW IOO $88 1 only White Acrylic Fuzzy Rocker, soiled was 169.99 . «ow$8B 1 ody Orange Velvet Chair, soiled was 169.99 ■6 only ■ rfrBncfc SwiveHocktrsT-folmc, were 169.99 ■.■;.1 aaly 6ord Velvet Ki-Back Club Chair was 199.99 1 only Black and White Fur Swivel Chair was 169.99" KOW $98- 2 Hue Print Ht. and Mrs. Chairs, swivel were 179.99 .kow$98 Hflugohyde Recfiners, 5 colors wire 149.99 1 only Red, Crushed Velvet ClubJhair was 169.99 .. KOW $98 KOW $99.99 Easy Scan and Print ?mm [J::< Cou r Gaffick SAIGON (AP) - A Vietnamese commander VK ADAMS apitol Bureau Tuesday the North Vieta i. Robert Woodahl Monday Mfick matter Into the lap invasion has been halted allies launched a n counteroffensive includin y Attorney Thomas Dowling phibious landings across Vietnam's northern fron Navy committed i , says Woodahl, "my office the prosecution of George gest force_ since the 1968 ime_jcrony of Gov, JF-prrest ardinator of the noy^efunct^ ing halt." The 7th Fleet assemt ncil on Natural Resources, least four aircraft carric e council unearthed' alleged ,f the $11,000 in travel re/ McGaffick over a 29-month ;e claims as high as 6,000 plained trips, a number of four destroyers to back 000 South Vietnamese troops. Another 5,000 Vietnamese reinforc were ordered to the n front. g- o prosecute fraud charges Thousands of South V ese made an amphibii ipreme Court ruled last Fri- law enforcement officer has 5S the county attorney whom the district court had denied jecuterhrtfod find that there sault on the banks of t Viet River to secure tliw line from enemy forces to encircle Quang Tri prosecution. the legislative audit report ihl assigned one of his depullllime task of investigating ng evidence for prosecution, move south. The pr capital is 19 miles souti CHAPLIN BACK — Charlie Chaplin arrived in New Demilitarized Zone. There was no major reported, in the initial he ork Monday alter a 20- ed Connor to bundle up the more than two months and yeaT^bsence. The silent- Woodahl before the jurisdic- Tuesday at a film gala, at which his famous The United States b counter air and naval across the northern fro; efforts to block North V lonnor in McGaffick's prose- 1921 movie, "The Kid," will be featured. Chaplin is ese. tank, artillery, and : reinforcements and e Supreme Court, saying he d the Tribune Monday that 4 men." He added that "the • right-to-investigate, before icument and there's no sense i of effort here. It'd be a ney-and-oLmy-staff," „.,._ he had an investigative staff work of building a case for Tepliedr^dust-the sheriff.. is also a personal friend of I he considered it a barrier act that his wife, Diana, has U^Ohot at all" film star will be honored shown above in a scene from Quang Tri City. _ Lt- Gen- Hoang Xuar actor registered his presence speechlessly, using the tools . jj£th_whjchjie isjso elequent v —motion gesture an3"glance7'~ Accompanying him was his Agile,-Oona, 46. (AP Photo)— Nixon Signs at she has been working hg |^Woodianl;! r ^ ^ ■ u . -li-- -'—-J " *U'«» it' sVi« 'Antie was holding. the r defeosi but we don't know if tl attack mnre," he said. have taken very heav alties. They have stop resupply and reorganize Nearly a score of B51 ers hammered North \ ese forces, and navs opened up against the southern half. fib^ alt during the; juiisdic ting 'her back shortly. —-. md<his wife have not decided commander of front/, said the offbbmbsroh-enemy troo WASHINGTON AP) - Pres- acing Quang Tri City g Easy Scan and Print ers nammerea iNonn Vietnam- ese forces, and naval guns opened, up against'the DMZ's southern half. acing Quang Tri City at points WASHINGTON AP) - Pres only "a minor Jem." eti lo consider acting Wednesi. McLaughlin inistration will eral fund ex-. lay to day n n Great Falls ley will accept §0,000 worth of arranls. rihg a general > to $559,000 in II suggested a jleclion. AlderHana said that report lo an m; Ihe same i apply to the e-said nobody ident Nixon signed legislation Monday formally devaluing the dollar, saying the action is only part of a move toward a'more stable international economic -oi=der. :—: The dollar has been devalued, for. practical purposes, since December to a varying dein terms of other cur rencies. . . The law Congress enacted at Nixon's request carries out the formal devaluation in terms of gold agreed on with major trading countries. RaisinK the pmToTan ounce of gold from $35 to $38, it cuts the gold value of the dollar by 7.89 per cent One formality remains: offi cial notification of the dollar change to the Monetary Fund. International such an understanding But administration refused to predict United States Inow Vietnamese targets. Earlier, deputy pifess secre- American' crewm^were -missy 11 to 15 miles south and 19_ ; -tary Gerald L. Warren dis- ing and feared dead. miles southwest of the provin closed Nixon had i sailed into Air, strikes w.6re .underOswiy/.. cial capital. session the Washington Special around the clock; near Quatig Warplanes from thre 7th Fleet Action Group—WSA(p—a panel Tri. Fighting raged at several carrier Kitty Hawk, recalled that usually meets only in a from the Philippines, joined the -erisis-situatien. The group- was- points within 16 miles of the -^eity-and-at a fire -base^3 ir aerial strike? forces of the goral analyzing the Nortl Vietnamto the south. 17 miles west of Sea and" Hancock. The Con ese offensive and pr paring op-. Hue. stellation steamed toward the Tonkin Gulf from Japan. The carriers, along with 250 Air Force planes in South Viet nam and Thailand, provide .an aerial armada of more than 500 planes. Overcast skies had hampered operations of the attack iets. but sources said massive raids against North Vietnam were imminent in retaliation for the biggest enemy push since the Tet offensive, of 1968. Deslroyers from the 7th Fleet were reported bombarding tions for U.S. action. At the Pentagon, meanwhile, spokesman Jerry W. Freidheim said that the seven I .S. combat maneuver battalions remaining in Vietnam are committed -to U.S. inthe security of stallations and are not involved In the current action! Nixon did not attend the hour-long meeting of I the WSAG headed by Henry Kissinger, his assistant for national security affairs. But he conferred in his oval office with Kissinger and Other fighting was in prog ress ^ Fire Bases. Anne. and Barbara, 8 and 16 miles south- west of Quang Tri, and at Fire Base Bastogne.r a post west of Hue manned by.the South Vietnamese army's 1st Division. . _Jtbfi_JI.S. air strike iorce. gained* strength Monday with the return of the 7th Fleet car rier Kitty Hawk to the Tonkin gulf to rejoin the Coral Sea and the Hancock. A fourth Carrier, the Constellation, was steaming toward the gulf, from Japan. ols. for requcst: revenue, c.n O'Conncll the Great Falls mercc for what ;kmail threat." As,Candidate for Office State hertntepprela- / evening tel<v orl about the I city financial On Con Con Delegate's Rights said the news at the chamber II the aldermen endum if the business license jxei'utivd chamebr. vice at- ing ;tnd lie dismell. iing ' is under the chamber."' alleged, recall said that (liree immbcr hired a study the city's d prepare suk- inK.lhc budget. . the chamber's Affairs C o m- ccoin mend ic study to the i of directors >tes and -Exchange ntradietcd * hib HKLENA- (AP) indications- or that Montana's Convention - some Amid doubt Constitutional has completed its business, at least from a legal standpoint, the. Montana. Su- jjreme Court look original'juris diction Monday of an action lusting a delegate's right seek other public office. lo is the deadline for filing for the June 6 primary election, the high court scheduled an ad versary hearing for 9:30 a.m. Friday and asked Woodahl to participate in Mahoney*s action against Murray.' form of questions put to. Philip W. .Strope from the bench as the Helcnn lawyer asked the court to require Secretary of Stale Frank Murray to let Charles H. Mahotjey file for Re publican nomination as state treasurer, i Harrison who • first "Then what are these com about the request of Rep. Oscar mittees doing?1" asked Associ Kvaalen; R-Lambert, for an abate Justice John Conway Harrk., torney general's opinion on the son. He referred lo a number of right of the convehtionito spend subcommittees set up to "sell" money after adjournment and the constitution to the voters who will ratify or reject at the June primary. "What if the delegates find It was Chief Justice James T. The indications came in the indicated doubt that the convention'has finished all of its business. "Your interpretation of 'sine die' is that they can't meet again?" he asked Strope. "Yes it is," was the reply. The chief justice then called attention to the adjournment they have left out. something important," Strope was then asked. "Do you mean to say they can't come back?" "That's right." Strope an swered. "To hold any ether way would be to imply they have some sort of perpetual ex istence." The chief justice noted that the 1971 law setting up the conmotion by delegate Lesli* Eskildsen of Malta, which men-' . venlion does not expire, until tioned "no.further business con- July 1. 1973, and that it pro . Clancy in Jefferson County, had vides the delegates can recess his nominating petition and $150 , cerning. the drafting of the pro from time to time. posed constitution." fee rejected by Murray on the Mahoncy. a delegate to the Constitutional Convention from Harrison added.;.that there -seems to-be "a lot more busi ness.* They've got money left Mahoney tried to file on. the •and they're going-to spend it." basis of Atty. Gen. Robert L. • .Strope contended that thelOO ground he still is a delegate and, thus, cannot bid for a sec ond office. .a Sen. Hubert eahwhlle, -burst, . Woodahl's ruling that-delegates campaign day; ..could, .seek other public .office' nd S. Muskie~ap=. 1 after the conventlon) adjourned ision. tor support, '.'sine'die,1;which, it did. on he.primary. - In accepting jurisdiction be cause of the fact that April 27 March 24. - - . - ' delegates lost all of their Tunc- tliSns when they-signed the proposed constitution before ad journing without setting a data ifftftKh meeting. on "political" purposes. Kvaalen told Woodahl he felt that, if such expenditure is law- tal, the money availa.ble^sfiojildlbe divided betweenrp^panehfr and opponents. • "I think he's right," Strope told the justices. SJrope described a m"™"right to file for Ipublic,&» is "a very ^sacred tiung^Mi he doesn't feeKthestate should^have;•:< authority, over that:v At one point, tk£?( said "it-seems ment between "Where do they get the right to adjourn sine die?" hevasked. Mr. Mtiiray." because he asked Sfrope wasn't "named ' journed because they no longer -brought I, had any functions. Strbpe said he . •'That brings up their right to spend money/' the chief justice, tlcn to-Woodahl Slrope replied^that they ad said.••-•■.Strope then mentioned an As sociated Press story Sunday |v ■ During the 18-minute hlaffcigr Into the case. Easy Scan and Print _. ratehearings lii welfare levj^;-^. w|| The first iectlcn could be a By CHARLES 8; JOHNSON It directs the leglsiature to theti governor .; . ] ::.^SJ:| "It The Becond. proposal; creating all/' ^|y funded Bjid^imple- consumer counsel^Vcb^ul keep ce Montanans' utility bills down. corporations, Jndlyiduals_or as Service Commission, which seta their requestsvfor ness of the legislature to imple sociations.'* utility rates. : The proposal, Heliker said ment them, like the environ could be "very significant, de mental flections." Heliker, a University of Mon pending on what the legislatur tana economics professor, was does." Legislators could enact far chairman of the Public Health Ferde Grofe, whose orchestral suites painted ff vivid audio picture of America, died Monday in Santa Monica, Calif., at the age-of. 80. Grpfg_djedjit his home. He. recently had suf fered a series of protection with a comraiseton ^ "We have given three rtuuv provide "protection and educa- The legWature must, create tion for' the people against the;office,-which is to represent contend that utilt harmful and unfair practice! consumer interests "in. hearings Montana -rower>V Montana Public thousands of dolli by either foreign or domestic before the dales no the leglalati*e," —-Aigoetated-Presi Writer — TJeorge BrHeliker, D-Missoula, HELENA (AP) ~ Many of said; "the long-run influence of the reforms in thai proposed which depends on the willing- constitution will change nothing until the legislature decides to • implement them. Three such proposals came out of the recommendations of the Public Health; Welfare, La- consumer w.j:>..;;. boon to Montana wnsumers if illpthe'dbcumtot Is *ajji' islature to pass a statewide meflted^.",- ■prbvBd?;June^.::- .;■,;:.':; _ and education laws or meet the by They w^uld «t up'conflumcr. l^Gf'u63^C¥J which he composed in 1920, was his best-known work. Hnand Chen, the Communist Chinese ambassador, left Paris Monday for a vacation in Peking and his aides said he could be away for a month. Huang and. U.S. Ambassador Arthur K. Watson have begun a series of talks on improving relations between China and the United States. Maureen Btngham, who admitted she nagged her husband into spying for the Soviet Union, is being treated at a Plymouth, England, psychiatric hospital, the hospital an nounced. Her husband, David, a naval officer, was sentenced last month to 21 years in jail for selling defense secrets to the Russians. Mrs. Bingham has been ordered to appear in court April 11 on a charge of trying to persuade another per . " " ■ "I regard this as a necessity but no one reprea sumers. considering our Public Service The section also Commission," said Heliker the consumer coil who tried to replace the three- to be financed by member elected commission on tise.net income HUD Quits Dun & Bradstreet WASHINGTON. (AP) r- The Department of Housing and Ur ban Development has sus pended its contract with Dun & Bradstreet, the New York cred it-rating firm involved in a fed eral grand jury probe. The department announced the formal suspension Sunday night and said that all HUD re gional offices have been or dered to do no more business with the firm. Dun & Bradstreet and its Long Island district manager-, Arthur. Prescott, were each charged with .24 counts of. mak ing false statements in a feder Prakash Chand helped hold his 3%-year-old son while the boy was hacked to death by"an uncle and two aunts.to satisfy, al indictment made public lasl Wednesday. the soul of their dead father, police in New Delhi, India said. The grand jury indicted.a to Officers said that wfien they arrived, the remains were being offered to a Hindu goddess at the family home 200 miles north tal of 40 mortgage bankers, of New -Delhi. Ancient practitioners of the Hindu faith once lawyers and realtors in anal leged scheme to inflate mort used human sacrifice to ward off bad luck brought on by un satisfied spirits of the dead, but the practice has been unused gages and collect Federa son to violate the official secrets act. for centuries. Chand, his brother-and two-sisters-were charged with murder. ... . ' Bruce Herschensobn resigned Monday as director of the U.S. Information Agency Motion Picture and Television Serv ice in the aftermath of a controversy in which he labeled views of Sen. J. W. FnIbrighW DrArk., as "naive and stupid.1* . In a letter, to U.SIA director RMk^Shakes^are, Herschen-. sohn said, "the recent opinions I expressed publicly regard- - kigSenrPuIbright's-views-might damage the U.S. Informa tion Agency unless 1 were to resign." Alexander I. Solzheoitsyn, the Russian novelist, in his first on-the-record interview with a Western newsman is nearly a decade, has described for The New York Times what he -<salled-an-6fflcial-campaign-^to-suffocate~me." Soizhenitsyn,- who won the 1970 Nobel Prize for literature, told of being barreii from access'to eovemment archives he needed for Housing-Authority insurance. Anthony._Accetta, the .assist ant U.S. attorney who led-th Isix-month probe, said last weel Ithat the scheme could hav< cost FHA $200 million. Bu PORTAMEALS ^ Cm. ice director V^Edward Boertiiiahr-lefl kitcheiLemploye TerryJElariwigJoMedj full of hot meals into the port-a-meals vi the opening day of a'new community fi program. Two meals, one hot and one HUD said Sunday the estimate loss has been placed !3;805,000. HUD Secretary George Rom- Sulfur Oxides Can't Be Ign firms named in the indictment would be suspended from doing business with FHA and other Anderson's'Lin lney said last week that the HUD agencies. (5) have to write a Easy Scan and Print •iw-ry consumer, protection with a commissioner appointed enue~of regulated-companies. tlon lav« ot meet the by the with a i^ failed;' 'it, too, will depend oh how from smaller counties tended' tf stoner. Governor. The plan c -.-. .;. .. -;V'!'- : legislature sets it up and congregate in urban counties The eight-hour "It shouldn't be necessary at funds it," he said. "That's true because of greater job oppor given constitutional. ind proposal; creating all, "he said. "The Public Serv with the commission too. It tunities and better {welfare fa The legislature, though) ^counsel, could keep ice Commission riibuild protect could do a better job with more cilities. Some argued that Ithis system change it "to promote the i1 utility bills down. funds." '" the consumer."' i?/: ! . welfare." This Mature must, create Critics o| the. existing system Heliker had attempted to placed a disproportionate load which is to represent contend that utilities -such as overhaul public^ utility regu- on taxpayers hi lar{ er counties. presumably would allow Under-thenwdpcfsalm-the duatrjcs to fldopfr-ienger—dayf^uTMo^taTa'Wtr failed-to interests, in hearings Montana Power Co. <Sn~l constitution, the legislature is and shorter weeks. e Montana Public thousands 61 dollars preparing muster the needed votes. "The eight-hour day Is sig mmltiBlon, which seta their requests'for higher rates A third change would shift directed to provide for the as ss. " ■ ■■( but rib one represents the con the -responsibility of welfare sistance. It could, use a state nificant to some people," HeUwide levy, leave financing up to ker said, referring to organized funding to the legislature. d this aa a necessity, sumers. . At present, the burden is on the counties or combine the* two labor. "But how significant is g our Public Service The section also provides that open to question." ; m," said, Hellfcer, the consumer counsel office Is counties; which must levy taxes approaches. Next: General Government Another measure! offers con to replace the three- to be financed by a special tax to provide for indigents. But witnesses at committee stitutional status to! the Depart- and Constitutional Revision, elected commission on the net income or groBs rev- Weather Warnings To Improve WASHINGTON (AP) *- The U.S. Department c£ Commerce? announced Monday improved warnings of hazardous weather and expanded meteoriogical services will be available in tho states of Wyoming, Montana and Colorado beginning July L The weather wire service from the department's National Oceanic and Geographic Ad ministration presently dis seminates forecasts, warnings and advisores to the public and mass media in 20 states. Also scheduled for Wyoming later this year is an agriculture weather- service- that will pro^ vide specialized observations, forecasts, warnings and reports delivered during the noon hour to invalids and persons unable to secure or prepare food for them selves, many of which require a special diet, such as diabetics." The van~wsr~purchased by Columbus Hospital Auxiliary and donated to the hospital.. T-A-MEALS — Columbus Hospital food serv- director" V, Edward Boertman, left, and diet ten employe Terry Haxt>v1gv loadeo! a container of hot meals into the port*a-meals van Monday, opening day of a' new community food service (Staff Photo) ram. Two meals, one hot and one cold, were to the agriculture communityOfficials of the National Weather Service attributed the success in obtaining the two new weather facilities to ~a weather- seminar, .sponsored. late..,., last year by the Wyoming Asso ciation of Broadcasters. Building Permits M^lispell ur Oxides Can't Be Ignored, Says-EPA inderson's 4Line Out' Muddies Geanf Air Plan xt- u mi OUTE (LttttEfl have to write a plan for Mon-i •. il.< »j i r.j But the health board insisted I board's iut,ni *u« »innn nti. nnf cimnlirlximulH Pass SI Million KALISPELL - KalispeU has its-lOth-year-in a row -dLjmi. plan, the EPA plan construction valued at $1 million nnf ■'nnuunnt" the nr mni*. It is the first time in Easy Scan and Print feet _ .___ _.^ , „-_,,- {^stubborn K If the nwsesaary/iigqaturea eWfeAfcowfe could Slock the docuniept Gratified June £ M& theiuppoft of of the "members 'in "each' electorate would render the fi reaching,the ballot. If the pro cumbersome;" and 'difficult ifl decision. By CHARLES 8. JOHNSON Anodated Preii Writer HELENA (AP) — Mbntanaiu finding parts of the proposed constitution unpalatable may wind up voting for_it so they can change them later. They will find the proposed constitution much easier to amend than the existing 1889 posed document la approved, made this" arduous process? If, theflegislature went The Constitutional Conventioii the bloc could be evaded by ier too. along,-the proposed amendment also lifted the restriction limit taking the two-thirds of the to Citizens w:ill h* to .outlaw-1 registrations then kg the number of propose^ tal number of legislators. to petition for a © wou# 8° before the electorate. that can'go on the For example, with a legisla like in the existinj The proposed constitution will ballot to three. Legislators, for ture njade up of a house of 100 They must meet t allow amendment by initiative, inatance^coukl vrt»;fo'pl»ce six members and a-senate of 50, a centages as requii if approved June 6. Sports amendments' on « general'elec total of 100 Votes, would be an amendment. men's groups could circulate tion -ballot, and the' public needed. Eight representatives A vote of two-th petitions to amqnd the con through initiative, could adxjl and 20 senators could make up I number of h stitution. three more. --'.-"■ • . r the total. the two-thirds ma To place the issue on the bal Legislators also will find tb lot, the groups would have to amendment process easier.. For the first time citizens can meet- these conditions: While th* 188* constitution re initiate the amendment process At least 10 per cent of the quires two-thirds of the legists through petitions and bypass number of Montanans who tors hi each house to approv theNleg|slature entirely. Voted for governor in the last an amendment, the propose* Take, for example, gun ~nr- general election—called quali ganizations, which lost their fied electors—would have to battle to have the new bill of sign. document. "Hopefully if there are some house .presently heeded revisions-, they can be be needed to plac done by amendment," -Robert whether to call a Vermillion, D-Shelby, said, re the ballot. ducing the need for con- Another stitutinoal conventional signif H< places the quesll MSU Researchers See Other Uses for Radi ^ Electronic Cattle 'Brands W Eye Airwest's In Taxes Paid by RRs Tribune Capitol Bureau Latest Offer PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) — A identification than just reducing suppose some am HELENA — Electronic live rustling. Hanton says he has tain feedlot sudde. stock identification as a supple been talking with one large with brucellosis," ment to the more traditional cattle operator who figures he "Then they'd like spokesman for some 600 strik HELENA (AP) - Montana's ing aircraft mechanics said visual branding may be just c°uld save enough in one year to those animals car railroads paid $7.7 million in Tuesday that union members over the horizon as the result of jPaY fox the equipment — just herd of origin. W property taxes to state, county ad voted on the latest contract researcji at Montana State Uni using it for inventory of his could sit there wit and city governments school districts, and John L. De lano, director of the Montana Tuesday. - Delano sajd the total includes taxes from Burlington North- em, Milwaukee Road, ifnio: Pacific, Soo Line and Butte Anaconda and Pacific rail roads. cattle. >ffer made by Hughes Airwest. versity. "We're not going to count the Working with a $1,000 grant The USDA is considering a otes until «we have received from the Montana Livestock "unding proposal for the project them from all our stations,' Commission, the electrical engi from the viewpoint of tracing he spokesman said. 'It'll prob-' neering department has d e- and eradicating diseases. "Let's ably be another week before we veloped a prototype oE a tiny know what the vote results radio, transmitter ultimately destined for the insides of cows, are." Members of the Aircraft Me horses, and other large live-1 chanics Fraternal Organization stock. have been on strike since De Upon interrogation by a piece cember, saying contract offers of equipment on the outside, the The total does not include ex and back-to-work conditions transmitter would, identify the cise and other- taxes, Delano were not acceptable. animal by emitting a coded said. He said railroads pa_ This is the first time we've series of pulses. taxes in every Montana, county called for a Vote on any of the despite the fact that Garfield, company's offers," the spokes Dr. John Hanton, assistant professor of electrical engineer; Powder River and Carter coun man said. "We felt jt was time ing, says the transmitter would ties have no railroad mileage. for the membership to voice an be housed in a capsule about 2lk inches long and a half inch to The spokesman declined to three quarters on an inch in di throughout the state results i say if he felt the latest offer ameter.— about the same size payment of more than 4% mi1 would be acepted. ~ as medicinal capsules put into He said Airwest officials sub cows with a boiling gun: lion tax dollars annually direct]; to schools from kindergarten mitted another offer in late Although the prototype trans through higher education," De March which he described only mitter has not been installed in as "better than previous ones." an animal yet, Hanton says lano said. "The nature of railroad prop erty and its wide distributio opinion." nas-Deen tesien unner oaiei .situation 'tworse"Jhan^cattie — .-1. ....11 IT- -«. brands on it. an where it came f particular way o would probably I some kind of ce Easy Scan and Print to hold a convention "1 the hgU .improved aa Xba al prMpi^^ stubborn rhlnorlty nient la approved, contfentlon^rfll ibe years, |f not submitted to the honrwho Ied;;tbe fight for booth'registration. <(We Issued a directive but not The most cw»trbyer ilalf rights of initiative and referen- before the C^eral liiin Committee—gambling--was ferred to voters oa a June 6. They will-deckle whetiP t ti th t 1 >uid be evaded by iwo-thirds of the towlft liave live the power po proved measures to the people. stitutional ban or to of legislators. to petlitloiii for a^ convention, Recall was deleted altogeth emotional issue with' like in the existing conatituUon. delegates believed <A ahotm ot WO They must irieet the same pper the delegates ^ ;6f; 50, a centages as required t id tqjnitiate ample opportunities to get -rid removing the 6 *votes,/woujd be ght representatives ■tors could make up f if there are some laions-, they can be mendnient," Robert i an amendment; A vote of two-thirds of the to tal number of legislators, not the two-thirds majority in each house .presently required, will be needed to place the issue of whether to call a convention on D-Shelby, said, re- the ballot. need for conventlona1" con- of bad public servants. Delegates also voted to allow groups to hold bingo games and the legislature, if it chooses,' to a system off poll-booth llbh Some favored a statewide lot registration. It would eliminate tery, but no delegate advance voter registration, per Nevada-style gambling. mitting anyone of balloting probvote as late as election day. odds are stacked Another significant change "At least court9 can't say it's against allowing the legislaturi He places the question of whether unconstitutional,'* said to authorize gambling. Other Uses for Radio Gadget trie ' Rustlers •n than just reducing suppose some animals in a cer- puter at Ihe time the capsule ianton says he has .tain feedlot suddenly come down was put into the animal. Then ;ig with one large with brucellosis," says Hanton. we'd immediately know the herd ator who figures he "Then they'd like to know where;of origin. Just give the computer enough in one year to those animals camet from — the|(ne number e equipment — just herd of origin. Well, an animaj ar inventory of his could sit there with three or four If the USDA approves the brands, on it and who knows funding request (that decision )A is considering a where it came fawn? But this cotiid come next week), the MSU >posal for the project particular way of identification researchers would work with the viewpoint of tracing would probably be. logged with Los -Alamos, N.M." scientific ating diseases. "Let's some kind of centralized com- laboratory. » The 1889 constitution and 197 enabling act require; that side issues muster an absolute ma: jority of those voting on the main issue—whether to approve or reject the proposed con stitution. Unless this*" ma jority is at tained, the constitutional ban —Advertisement— Helps Solve 3 Btggtsl FALSE TEETH Worries and Problems Consider a denture adhesive. FASTEETH* Powder doea all of this: 1) Helps hold uppers and lowers INC. 1225 lOthAve.S. Phon* 761-3430 longer, firmer, steadier. 2) Holds Don't worry about the Down you eat more naturally.. Why worry? Payment...Well workom ^an easy budget for you! them more comfortably. 3) Helps Use FASTEETH Denture Adhe sive Powder. Dentures that fit are essential to health. See your dentist regularly. on pue snag xor easy '• NOW PRICED NICE 'n EASY* Easy Scan and Print by.the,Con*iJtuUonal Convent Mytotion's spending,) w«l Be challengedTin flftipR Supreme' Court by a legislator M -to .the 6oiiveri2pnrs '^Silhg1 authority.*, *" "^ ' ' who fears a one-aided sell job of a.constnution he "disapproves of 'Kvaalen.- veteran* of fix asBembllei, layi hip purpose'la to legiilatow, elT'em what we "d34 and for the best. ■ »>i^^4peo^|e,: '.get.' tin i»ed interpretation of this ojnan «ven keel. If'the _ thevaotfcn. ^Scrlbher>aaj» he's pients of this thing have IfiO.OOO to spend, that puts the people new: constitution." atailrig.towanl presenting an ap- For instance, he says, he got a who are In doubt or in opposition .plication for original jurisdiction summary of the constitution in at a decided disadvantage." to}the co^^dayjmprning. He the mail the'other day. And in Kvaalen is not among the pro declinedto go into detail "before one article he was familiar with I've given the court the courtesy — revenue and finance — "they of my challenge." left out any mention of removal w ponents. He says he's going to vote against the proposed constitution June 6, "and bas of the 2 mill limitation on The^. court has scheduled a property tax for support of state ically on the basis of the legis hearing for Friday morning on. government. Now that's a major lative article. I think we need what .may be_a related,issue/ tKing._in_thia_ constitution kvA-__i annual sessions like we need and holes, in the head..l..think._we that of convention delegate they didn't mention it. And it need another 20 days or some Charles Mahoney's test of a seems to me that little things delegate's right to seek other that could • sway-the constitu thing like that and It would do the job. public office. A question in both tion one way or another and I cases is the status of the conven "I think annual sessions are think people, should be made going to seriously, limit, the peo ple who are running. It would be "I frankly have mixed feelings terribly inconvenient for people about removal of that 2 mill witji families to move ujl to limitation. I can see some Helena every year for 60 days. advantages of it. And I can see It's going to be people who are that in this last session we might retired or independently tion and Its delegHtes-after-tt^ aware-of4henL____ final adjournment of March U. Kvaalen says that if delegates can seek other office after ad journment as per Atty. Gen. Robert Woodahl's ruling, "then it^eems to me they have no have been tempted to use that wealthy." authority to spend public thing and raise $10 million and money." In other words, if dele- go home.". Kvaalen has filed for re-elec tion, but he says he seriously Lumbermen Object to Beaverhead Plans Wilderness Proposals Draw Fire .^JDNjJtoi. (AP) - Min presen^multiple use system in iireas, according ing, timber and IumBer~uf stead or^dopfing~tlTe~wiiaerService spokesmen. dustry representatives from four states voiced objections Tuesday to proposed wilderness classifications for seven areas in the Beaverhead National Forest of southwestern Mon tana. The classifications would af fect 812,440 acres. Under the ness proposals. Areas, in the Beaverhead Na tional Forest being considered are: Hilgard, Red Rock, Italian Peak, West Big Hole, West Pio neer, West Pintlar Pioneer. and East to Forest T^~ Opposition to the plan came from the Burlington Northern, geologists, mining engineers, ranchers, farmers, sportsmen, timber and lumber men and their organizations. The deadline for testimony The Sierra Club of California had teams in Beaverhead Na- and recommendations is May 1. proposed classification, no Urn tional Forest last summer lookber sales, mining explorations, ing % over proposed wilderness ~1roa.<is; dams." or~ power lines would be permitted on the land. Spokesmen-for groups from Oregon, Washington Utah and Montana said they disapproved of Oie_p^oposed plan whjtejonly three persons^ including a rep- Glacier Park For the same reason y Canadian Lord Ca — $535 4/5 Qt $1^65 $ %GaL '■"": IMPORTED CANADIAN WHISK • A BLf N 0 •80 PROOF • CAU8ERT DIST. Easy Scan and Print or an bW "gave Frances that p ta'i spending Informational activities of, the OMnmftfee "would be otfjectivi. lays te, veteran of ihj/L- 'erii 4wffirt we "did, and jt tturbest. t ' *' liei, lays hli purpose is to , \ "And It would put everybody; sure 1he'people t'gftt an an even keel. If the pro* Md interpretation of this emU of this thing have |«0,000 jonstitutkm." to spend, that puts the people instance, he says, he got a who are In doubt or in opposition laryof the constitution in at a decided disadvantage." ial1 the other day. And in Kvaaleh is not among the pro rticle he was.famillar.with ponents He says he's going to renue and finance — "they vote against the proposed Jt any mention of removal constitution June 6, "and bas te 2 mill limitation on ically on the basis of the legis rty tax for sup>ort:of state lative article. I think we need nment Now that's a major annual sessions like we need -iln this ^constitution and holes ln-ihe.head.-I-think-we didn't mention it. And It need another 20 days or some i to me that little things thing like that and it would do could sway the oonstitu- the job. >ne way or another and I "1 think annual sessions are people should be made [oing to seriously limit the ; of them, g rankly have mixed feelings terribly inconvenient for people removal of that 2 mill with families to move up to ition. I can see some Helena every year for 60 days. itages of it. And I can see It's going to be people who are a this last session we might retired or independently been tempted to use that wealthy." and raise $10 million and Kvaalen has filed for re-elec ime.' tion, but he says he seriously to Beaverhead Plans Proposals Draw Fire nt multiple use system in- ureas, according to dr^dopting Therwilder- ^rvicelipokesmen. proposals. For^s ~T Opposition to the plan came ;as in the Beaverhead Nafrom the Burlington Northern, l Forest being considered Hilgard, Red Rock, Italian geologists, mining engineers , West Big Hole, West Pio- ranchers, farmers, sportsmen West Pintlar and Bast timber and lumber men an ;er. . , : their organizations. ---•-• The deadline for testimonj teams in Beaverhead Na and recommendations is May : Sierra. Club of California I Forest last summer lookover proposed wilderness lacier Park Jp— For the same reason you drinfc Canadian Lord Calveri IMPOBTEO CANAOIAN.VyHISKY A BLf NO -'80 PROOF • CaLoERT DIST. CO.. N.Y.C. Easy Scan and Print ¥f^ *>s SAtT £AKEircmrr, Dtah frdra San (APi - The pilot ,Qf 8 hijacked was airfo United Air tines-7#»jetliner heading said early Saturday that' the gunman who commitadeered enough i\ * The h seventh-1 the plane and demanded and got $500,000, and'- fd(tf para* chutes tailed out over Provo, months ransom, i H[ reporfcjhal pjl the man bailed out over Wilson W prehende UtahJ})* Inhere said. oy. The only 4 bailed oi lines 1i Creek, Nev,, proved'false.. -A United spokesman in San. Francisco,, where the .hijacker originally forced the plans to land, said, "The hijacker has jumped from the plane In the vicinity of the Provo airport." The United spokesman said the crew members aboard the between Friday' over the long afte DeuV< 0531 [ttj ira n?a zz; mr\7r> w the hijacker, gone. The passen- solved v • ger§ were allowed to deplane hi San TVandsco. from Ne1 geles- Harry Nowaskey, night dls- The p .patcher-for -the-state-highway^ patrol, said, "As far as-we know the pilot feels he (the hi- jacker) bailed out nine miles southeast #6f,Provo." . ' • At about 10 p.m. PST, almost nine hours after the hijack be- IngJto tf fire call hadto take recourse to a city hydrant six blocks away, aay, fotilely emptieii-their truck tfngui^h g^ a trailer ar home fire iieir Hoses ran dry and they Above, firemen hastily roll their hoses in the dash" to-Holland Thomp Thompfor more water, the. home belonged toHolland son Another photo, son. photo page 8. 8 (Staff Photo by Ray Ozmon) «—x^-_- fiO4itkdti^^ Id, Sebtt Leave - ^an-Rw at 4:15 was fueli 'wa? on] chutes \i - sponse l quest, gan, the plane had been report- 7 SaitXake City. _ said the ed about 75 milgs- southwest of • : ' The hijacker had" released all, the plane's passengers before ' ordering the craft to take off Good Morning! Shortly line spot ,, had~beei ramp-^b ; plane ah lawyer Tdh on April 16 esideatr.Nixoh's visit ^meetingivith Premier Chou En ^nd. that he would , lai. and other Chinese govern :.,..?. ^^^1 - -the^iutiie.""^" ^"^—-_ 1«3f Mifafiejd' sdld ihe""group AP Capitol .Writer e.v Helena. ..we nijauAer gone, Easy Scan and Print uws pasaeu- gehr-.were flowed to deplane in San Fnfiicisco. • ^ Hany Nowaskey, night dis- -^patcher-fcr-the-state-hi^Tway patrol, said, "As far as we know the pilot feels he (the, hi jacker) bailed but nine miles it six blocks away, inguish the blaze, iqses in the. dash, to Rolland Thomptfto by Ray Ozmon) southeast of. Provo." At about 10 p.m. PST, almost nine hours after the hijack be gan, the-plane had been report ed about ,75 milgs southwest of Salt take City. The hijacker Had released all the plane's passengers before ordering the.craft to take off The plane was diverted to San Francisco-when* it lauded at 4:15 p.m. was unloaded sponse to quest. to a public vole on June 6 as scheduled. [ Speaking as. 4 "friend of the "Don't tell me how sick she Is. How well Is she?" court," Helena lawyer Wesley W. Wertz pot it this way to the five justices: "if the convention Weather Forecast wasn't adjourned by yesterday of Divide — Partly cloudy and cooler with lal showers today. Highs 35-45 northwest, 45least. Lows tonight 25-40. of Divide — Variable cloudiness and continued ighs 40s. Lows tonight-35-35,—— — (Thursday, April 6) there can't be any election on June 6." . He explained this is because, the 1889 constitution, in provid ing for a future constitutional convention, requires that a pro posed constitution go before the electorate ''not less than two nor more than six months after traers Won't Arbitrate; illplayer8~Map Charges Story on page 9 the adjournment thereof." Wertz was one of five Helena lawyers ■ arguing an action brought by Charles H. Maho ney, a convention delegate, who wants the court to requite Secretary of State Frank Murray 15 9-10 .13. 2 TRIBUNE TELEPHONE'761-6666 Chest Pains WitlBJ w ;d in - possibility arose th« hjjac^d plane might be heading toward Montana. The incident, remini scent of the Nov. 12 Air Canada ujacfcecLftat ..tied upJtafcerna tkmal Airport during a night of suspense,, kept officials on the alert most of Friday night. If Not, No Election vention isn't already finally and officially adjourned the docu ment it produced cannot be put a re plane and picked up. that if the Constitutional Con an re said the half a million dollars had o been delivered—left on a ramp about 100 feet from the __ Supreme Court was told Friday clos- in hijacker's line spokesman Mardy Leaver HELENA (AP) - Montana's y to the Shortly after 7 p.m. PST, air AP Capitol Writer :s 1344 Sports word .■.-".-,..■-■ 14 —IV Guide rial 6 Weather and the para chutes were 'delivered By J. D. HOLMES Markets Great Falls law enforcement officers were alerted and - of- ■ ficials at the International. Air-. port were contaieted ' wTSen?the^ Con Con Adjourned? The Lockhorns 15-19 PST. The craft was fueled, all baggage aboard Lawyer Tells Top Court Good Morning! ified and a pistol. from Newark, N.J., to Los An geles. . In Hospital to let him file for Republican nomination as state treasurer. Philip W. Strope, speaking for "Mahoney, expressed the main-issue-Iikethis: "When did" the office of constitutional dele gate expire?" He then gave this flat reply: "After March 24, 1972, the dele gates .became private j citizens without public office or func tion!" ^ • The March 24 date was when the 1972 convention adjourned "sine die" -^without setting a date for another meeting. Acting on the basis of an opinion by Atty. Gen. Robert L. Woodahi that delegates could seek election to other public of fice after the convention ad journed "sine die," Mahoney tried to file for treasurer. Despite - . However, Huss added, 'it re* mains a question of fact as to whether they (the delegates) have in actuality completed" task of the convention." He said the attorney general jj "is without knowledge of facts sufficient to form a conclusion as to the completion of these. duties." Huss did advise the court that the convention still has three people on its payroll in the Capitol — John Hanson, Melba McGuinn "arid Al Brown Jr. John fiT Riskeri, who spoker WoodahPs- opinion, Murray refused to let Mahoney,.. file — and this action developed to the point where, as Wertz told the judges, "the narrow is sue of, whether Mahoney can file for other office has become relatively insignificant to " the other ramifications'." He said Murray did a service to the state by raising the ques tion of whether or not the dele gates still are- public. officers and thus unable to try for an for the secretary of statersaidr Murray felt it was his duty — because of constitutional" and statutory provisions — to refuse to let-Mnhoncy file for-other of«fice when-he already Risken also said the enabling legislation provides, for dele£ gates to be elected in the same1; manner as state .representa tives %which' indicates terms! that last for two years. He additional office. argued that the vention resolution setting up a —Lawrence-B—Hussr-de'puty-at-" 1-member committee- to in? torney gerieralTsaid Woodahl's form the public about the docu opinion was purposefully based ment empowers the committee en the_term "adjournment sine -headed-by Pr^ident^a^G die""because" that vfias• been in ..bilL Jr. to -do everything, terpreted b~y' tnriMB|rmean~ convention could' do- except' the convention h^HHPtpieted its duties. . \ Continued oh page 2,; col. 'Norman C. Wheeler, Bozeman 3rd GOP Files lor HELENA (AP) —Saying he "wilt nn< attpmnf in hppr»mp a ':% con-? a servant for the Far East, MirlHip Fln«t nr Naar V.ust " ho to my campaign with" one laiinn/ r,« ••nn»^ u~u ' 4 Easy Scan and Print T__,_ in* namese regular army and mi bombers will be permitted to i the demili- litia m the invasion area are range in what shapes up as a wflBng- "holding their positions well nonstop ah* campaign. ^^ ate seriously. has shown no seriously nego* fiiaioM Paris," Laird told a imaimm '^jfktfXfSQtitU * It h&S ShOWn ""^^"•wck across the those conditions Burse, we wiH con tinue to use the necessary pow er in order to protect our forces as .they withdraw from South-- east Asla.WT, At ihe same time, the defense secretary made it plain that U.S. ground troop* will not be sent back into South Vietnam to help -the' hard-pressed South Vietnamese.army deal with a "'I am not going to discu the specific operating auto Bomb Raid ity," he said. But he. did forth Vktaamesehave "com- n*t Itotiiit}*' under. m fc led to the bombing halt. Other defense officials have i Johnson awl Nixon admii%; indicated that the main concen-, ijratkn officials have said there trattori will be fa an area'of UQ "untltrstanding at the perhaps 50 mild in the lower that therNorth Vietnamese North Vietnamese panhandle d not violate the DMZ and from which they say the in litack South Vietnamese cities vasion is supported with sup H, negotiations were pursued. SAIGON AP) — The U.S. air plies and reinforcements. rlhe North Vietnamese have de raids over North Vietnam Laird indicated that more nied ever entering into any uninflicting heavy damage on U.S. warplanes and naval war ceritandings. highway, bridges, surface-to- ships are being readied for . Laird's words did suggest air missile sites and antiair commitment to trying to beat that" the new chapter in U.S. craft artillery batteries, official back the North Vietnamese at bombing goes well beyond the sources said Saturday. tackers. •protective reaction" policy in Damage Is Heavy Chicago WASHINGTON A) "It looks good," said one The United States already effect for the past three years. Hamilton, an issoc source. "We are experiencing a has sent additional B51 bomb Under that plan, U.S. war- growing North Vietnamese of sor of finance at Lo; fensive. great deal of success." ers to the western Pacific, rais planes were permitted to strike The U.S. Command thus far ing the number of the heavy at North Vietnamese military sity > ta;;GWcago,v "We will £0 forward with the by Presider withdrawal," Laird said, prom has not issued any official jets to -about 100. about the targets, principally an ising that "we will meet" Pres bomb damage assessment re strength of this force in South missile and sun sites, in re ident Nixon's next withdrawal ports on the strikes which be- east Asia at the peak of tire sponse to NonnVletnamesefir objective of-droppingJLSJroop^gan Thursday. bombing campaign, in 1968. A ing on U.S. reconnaissance and strength in Vietnam down to ~Tfiere~"Were-indications that Also, FI05 fighter-bomber^ other planes. 69,000 by May 1. That strength the raids might' be intensified are being sent back from the > "Protective reaction is an en is now below 95,000. over the North and even widen United States, with other air tirely different matter than the Laird expressed confidence ed. craft on alert present rules," Laird said. it L learned Friday. Kleindienst Hearings to Continue WASHINGTON (AP) - The squelched while Kleindienst Senate Judiciary Committee was deputy attorney general,, . Kleindienst had already won put new life into the Richard G; the committee's approval to Kleindienst hearings Friday by succeed John N. Mitchell as at narrowly deciding to continue torney general, but asked that ihem for at least: eight days, the hearings be resumed.after and to explore new allegations publication of a controversial of a cover-up by the Justice D& memo by columnist Jack .An committee, former Internal Revenue Service agent A. Da vid Stutz said U.S. Atty. Harry D. Steward choked off an inves tigation into bribery and illegal political contributions in 1969. ; Shej will replace 1 Whitman, another: as the lone woman mission which seta Niiofi's: price «— £ fiU-a vacancy on th ber Price ConimiM stab Americanism fort Mrs. Whltmai moved up by Nixon the first woman me Event-Sjuiday- Advisers. important Council o -r- At Wolf Point Mrs. Hamilton; t graduate with a Ph. of P< - WOLF POINT—Air American- University siam program at 2 p.m. Sunday worked on a study at the Masonic Temple here, will cago Labor market feature Rev. Reginald A. on's director of thi Peltier, a retired Army Lieu Management a 'Among those_mentioned in tenant colonel George Shultz, whet the life story was C. Arnholdt Peltier 3a presently executive professor at the Ui -partment. ■ •-••-•-— derson. **• Smith, a longtime Mend of assistant to the commander of The 8-7 agreement to contin The memo, allegedly written She will have to b< ue the hearings until April 20 President Nixon and heavy con the Safeguard Depot activity at by International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. lobbyist Mrs. tributor to Republican election count as the source of the votes campaigns. Dita Beard, drew a connection which carried it. between a commitment of at As deputy attorney, general, The compromise had been least $200,000 to the Republican Kleindienst, on the basis of an considered a Democratic victo National Convention and the FBI report, on Steward's activi ry, but in the end six Republi out-of-court settlement of anti- ties, cleared him of any cans and two Democrats'voted trust suits filed by the Justice wrongdoing. was as.surprising for the close the Glasgow Air Force Base. Participating in the program will be Masonic, Eastern Star, Rainbow, Demolay and Boy Scouts units. by the U.S. Senate f( Commission post, been left vacant : Whitman's nominati end of January. for It " Department against PIT. "I have investigated the mat Chairman Sen. James O. After l12 days of hearings on ter and determined there has Eastland, D-Miss., said the that.subject, however,.the com been no wrongdoing," he said committee, hearings will re- mittee will now turn to an ex irttrfime sumeiMondayr.,calling federal ploration of the .San Diego Stewardisstai ttefU.Srattorofficials from San Diego to tes charges originally published by ney m San Diego and is ex tify about allegations that. a Life magazinsjL ' pected to be among the first investigation meri_j*as. affidavit to^ the witnesses called avit.to_i Is Election Issue pagTl make new; proposab for equated """was the re The .cohventkm p United States, with other air- tfrely different matter than the Whitman, another economist, as the lone woman on the com present ruleSj" Laird skid. To Try to Halt Bombing mission whkh sets policy for fort. Mrs. Whitman has been moved up by Nixon to become the first woman member of the important Council of Economic policy as outlined by the 1 President De Gaulle in Po PARIS — North Vietnam Penh in 1966 remained i appealed to France Friday to changed.. In -that Jspeech Advisers. try to ha t American bombing of Qaullexalled for Amerioprw Mrs. Hamilton, a Wellesley its territuv. .; Vgraduate with a Ph.D from the A request to the French Gov rlgnt ()f self determination of Pennsylvania ernment ,to use its influence with the Vietnameeepeople. Alpb WOLP POINT—An* Ameriean- University sism program at 2 p.m. Sunday worked on a stjidy of. the Chi Washington to halt the air was also said to hiivereca at. the Masonic Temple here, will cago Labor market with Nix attacks Was made by Hand's recent s^teinenta by Presii feature Rev. Reginald A. on's director of the Office of charge d'affaires in Paris, Pompidou and Fpreign Mini Peltier, -a* retired Army Lieu Mahagemi^nt and.Budget Nguyen Thuan lieu, in a meet Maurice Schumann Critid George Shultz, when he was a ing with' Herve Alphand, sec American air attacks. tenant colonel. . Peltier la presently executive professor at the University of retary general of the foreign Another offer of good off assistant to the commander of Chicago. was" reaffirmed by Kurt W ministry] the Safeguard Depot activity at She will have to be confirmed rhere was no Immediate heim, the United Natit the Glasgow Air Force Base. by the U.S. Senate for the Price French faction to the unusual secretary general who r c-> Participating in the program Commission post, which has appeal. The French are known pleted a two-day official will be Masonic, Eastern Star, been left vacant since Mrs to disapprove of the present here. After lunching with I Rainbow, Demolay and Boy Whitman's nomination at the escalation of the fighting on both pidou, Waldheim said he Scouts units. end of January. sides anjd to be hoping for re ready to use U.N.- service sumption of the stalled peace help settle the Vietnam prol talks. Tpey have made their by negotiation but on bond Americanism 9 committee, former Internal Revenue Service agent A. Da vid Stutz said U.S. Atty. Harry p. Reward choked off an inves tigation into bribery and illegal political contributions in 1969. Among JUiose^menticned i Jfoejyfe story was C. Arnholdt Sjnith, a longtime friend of President Nixon and heavy con tributor to Republican election campaigns. As deputy attorney, general, Kleindienst, on the basis of an FBI report on Steward's activi ties, cleared him of any wrongdoing. At Wolf Point "I have investigated the mat ter and determined there has been no wrongdoing/' he said at tfce-tuifC Steward is still the U.S. attor ney In San Diego and is ex pected to be among the first witnesses called. Violence of Londonderry. The soldiers said they drew 70 rounds with out injury but believed a gun man fell in the exchange of fire. The violence broke out de spite WWtelaw's release of some of the internees suspected ournmeiit Is Election Issue Continued from page 1 equated," was the reply. The convention planned to the spend $58,962 in state and fed make new proposals for constitutiooe. eral funds to "sell" the docu Shortly before the hearing got ment to the people. under way, Risken's law part The court.spent about two ner—W. A. Scribner—asked the hours during the morning hear tribunal to also take original ju ing both the Mahoney end risdiction of a protest by State Kvaalen matters. Rep. Oscar S. Kvaalen,, R-LamScribner told the judges that bert, against the spending M the convention exceeded its aupublic funds by delegates ww> thorty in delegating its powers no longer are public officers.-^? to the 19-member committee. The question was touched He said money spent by the upon during the hearing by committee will, represent an unWertz who noted that janitorial fawfulgjypenditure. for a halt in its gar- valid. ." • From the . bencn, .■."■■* Justice tfee lfl-delega n tfio opcciol convention committee and also State Treasurer Alex B. ernment said last month when Frank I. Haswell asked Wertz on it took over the Ulster govern if -he equated the spending of Stephenson, Auditor E. V. Omment the practice would be public funds with such janitoholt .and Atty. Gen. Robert L. phased out if no new terrorism ria^duties. Woodahl. "I do not think it can be resulted. Senate Bill Hikes Study Cloudy and Cooler fj —"3fr - LawiStown'""Vi.'.Y^ $1.3* SO LtvlnsOan Mtt*.aty a Mluouta ... — 46 Thompton ;F«lls 51 Wt YdIti Vftltfhtll. Cltr . '' - 31 36 33 ".... Mlfl 30 AHwqu«rque, daar ..74 ;AffMrtH&-^l»f ...j. 74 aB* cJowty .... 26 Port Worth, clear .... Houston, daar tadtanapolte, daudy .. . M Jacksonville. d»r .„. .(V Joneau. doody. ....... 90 97 33 «4 45 L!Ht« Rock, etetr . Looltvlllt, clouoY . NATIONAL 'Albany, cloody T .01 Low » 41 51 16 Mecnptibr tain M4aml, ctear ..... Mllwauke*. douoY . _ tSl, - - i»- ticor clear .. ■« NftWOrMWM;; dear d .... M 71 70 33 37 = 6S .72 23. .05 2 » According to North Vietnam of U.N. action during the pit Government Plans Curb Oil Pet Turtle Shipment WASHINGTON (AP) - The Salmonella, the most government moved Fridae to re mon form of food poise strict the importation and inter causes vomiting, diarrhea state shipment of pet turtles which it said cause salmonella poisoning of 300,000 children an nually. The* proposal would require breeders and shippers to prove fever. In rare instances it prove fatal, although the said it has received no re of deaths linked to pet turt The FDA said the ti }jne bacteria are transm their turtles are free of the bac directly by handling the p teria. Federal officialsjgajdjre- indirectly by contaminate vious attempts to control the kitchen sinks and cou in from turtle tank water.' disease with, .chemicals Of the 15 million pet ti breeding ponds have failed. Interested • parties have 60 sold in the United States days to comment on the propos year, about 10 per cent an al. - • • -' .. . ports, the FDA said; Banned Braille Playboy Puzzling to Authorities 'JOHANNESBURG *(KPJ~= etfectijf~then»nftscations"o Authorities seized illicit imports job. . "But the worst; thing is of Playboy magazine this week, the damn things weren't fo: but were puzzled over what at all," he protested." course to taKe~^wuTTri>railte: were forthe puSOc'prosecut WASHINGTON (AP) - The version of the banned magazine. work with." TO- 9 good offices available to both that all parties accepted Ui sides to further a negotiated Nations participation. He a< that there was little possit settlement. ese sorces, Alphand said French fighting. ^f belonging-toftelRArThere and-miniaterial duties-are-perLater, the Supreme-Court set were among 700 detained'under formed regularly after the adan adversary hearing on Kvaaemergency laws passed last journment of legislatures. How Ien's request :for 2 p.m. April August. ever, . he said it is personal 18. opinion that the practice, if The IRA is demanding an end The court ordered that the or to Internment without trial in challenged, would be held ^in der be served on at least two of rilla tactics. The British gov • am fcrk ftmti T Senate passed 62-0 Friday a bill designed to step up sharply the Jose Feliciano, a blind A ican musician,-posed a diff< brought into South Africa was government's program attack problem when he arrived w the September 1963 Issue, but ing heart and lung diseases and braille Playboy. The; pilWici strokes. ^* ^—The-billr .03 to the Hou The last Playboy legally this doesn't stop local fans from carries the text but net the amiigg^ppr copies : fa itftfe lx UPS from the regular edition authorizes $1.47 billion over the luggage when returnih from T^eliciano still has his Ini Easy Scan and Print cornTTTunltle. lM^S«r3 —Jn^incluaes 11 communities Retreat Center.,-, Rev/Pat,He)i|^i wiil conduit the event, apdnoired by; Solo Mothers. It win begin at 7 p.m Friday and conclude about 3 p.m. Sunday. The theme will be scriptural prayer. Further information may be obtained by calling Ursuline Retreat Center and"a number of schools in Mon- communities around tik tautff California, Alaska: Idaho The 'establishment of bli and They are • located on 'ev the T~wj'*mtmm m ■*»■■*?• »-^» •*»*jfv*ftV4 116176 Jj.njt.beeh named. doesn't feel nhefia center for good;' tx be looking over it ferent point of view concern over the future of the be stronger fn The large Santa RosWrsfcline retreat 'center after her de- may dal angle community and high gcKdol is partumMother Dolores replies, famiUar to Mother CtoibVe1>'|Se P'M it's* God's work it wiU The retreat cante beginning to attri was superior there nlneiyaariin|«icceed" The laymen's board of groupevThtershe a between the 10 years, 1M7-57, people from both Protestant and the joy she has ex she served here as a teacher at Catholic churches has been having fellowship, ^ continent, about 35 in'aU. ecumenical Ursuline Retreat Center here is largely the result of this .nun's dream, her or ganizational ability, religious faith and even her willingness Atothe/" leatfonce if year in\Roihe with other; provincials or"Uriuttie |b those "who havo expressed Helena Con Con Delegate Writes A11 clergymen Urged to Promote Constitution throughout . He suggests that citizens place Montana are being asked by the old constitution beside (he Constitutional Convention dele new one and 4hey will have no gate Rev. George Harper of doubt which is better, Helena, to urge their "Yet Montanans often vote parishioners to vofiFTor—the "and proposed new Montana constitu- it would be a tragedy if the hew of 100 votes. icipal of Great, Falls "The basic thing lo realize," High School, and Rev. _.„„ Harper suggests, "is that the old -Scanlin, Congregational Church reason for two houses, one lo Billings. represent the people and one to Harper said he __F represent the territory er mdrfey battle on the gambling g issue. is gone. The one man-one vote "Gambling doesn't d' 6 primary constitution failed because we concept is the law now and both money," he asserts. -all—take it* pflgsafy fqr ifr rnif nf Harper, minister of St. Paul's granted." ■— AWtod-Methodist^liui^hHs-aiso —In urging-churchmen's support tion. "With legitimate businessmen 100 mombfirs in ona into- tha pocka recommending support for the for the one-house legislature the legislative house, I figure we unicameral (one-house) legisla minister-delegate said this could save $1 million every four operators. We will have to Work ture afnd votes against the system, in his. opinion, would be years and get a more like everything to beat the mov ballot's special proposal that more accountable to the people, responsible, efficient legislature to make gambling legal." . The Helena pastor said the irould-^permit""legislative—au would eliminate buck-passing to boot." ballot marked 3B .will .read: thorization of gambling'in this between two houses and "would Harper states that the four "Against allowing the people or state. stat save taxpayers Upie, talk and 'othei: clergymen who were Con the legislature to authorize In his letter to 750 clergymen money jCon delegates all urge approval gambling." He suggests use of and leading churchmen in Mon "In many cases now the of the unicameral legislature. the word, '.people' is a smoke tana, Harper emphasizes he is minority rules because, in a They are Rev. William screen as the issue is whether to makingg the he recommendations re as House of 100 and Senate of 50, it Burkhardt of Plymouth 'ifidiidl and a Con Con- takes only 26 votes for a Congregational Church, Helena; allow the legislature to authorize an'ifidividual gambling. The people delegate and not as a, majority to kill any bill in the'Rev. Gene Harbaugh of United change the Constitution representative of any church, benate. Under a unicameral j Presbyterian Church, Poplar; initiative any time "they want to council or .organization. systemit .would always take 511 Rev. Harold Arbanas, new' prih- j he reminds. Lutherans To Hear Evangelist t Eastern Orthodox Easter At midnight tonight Easter!at 7:30 p.m. and continued with Covejumi Players To Appear Rev.C. 6. Rossenius Norheim, Sunday begins for those of the choral music at 8:30 and the The Covenant Players, a tours y n o d i c a leyangelisTbf the Eastern Orthodox faithr-- Thejsymboliic-watGh-at-9-pjn, ing-groupDf four young-men and; congregation of Sts. Constantine Church of the Lutheran Breth- Iren and direeC tor of the Lutheran- Gospel Hour broadcast' The watch saw the priest lead Greek Orthodox his people out of the church, Church "here"Drill—begin— its each bearing- a~ lighted candle Service of Resurrection at the and following a cross, and and Helen mictaigftt hour mtjx Rev. J. A, marcti three times" women, will present an evening of "Christian Dynamics" Thursday at Malmstrom Air ^arce^ Base Chapel., Installation Chanlain ~R c. v . I visual aids, era more attractive Easy Scan and Print ail ages ag anjll faiths. fith / ^ "All our sfeters,^ from the year-olds right down the iine, i . .gaining and;t#yU- superfor'of the Los Angelei lulines. l , h ,.,-:,-— Dolores says, she working leaving the ■faiths," people leader j other ecumenical 0 westerS province but' if Mother Dolores betwee1fr..ais|| says has her way there will be. ter;iuccessor & superior here aoaw^feehihefls center for good, because she'll They've found a great new ijtqt been named. be looking over it from a dif realization of the richness of our Music students, too, wilt miss Mother Dolores. She has. 'o those who have expressed ferent point of view and her help one God." icern over the future of the may be stronger from a provin reat'' center after her da- cial angle. ture 'Mother Dolores replies ^ the retreat canter is just now it's God's work it will beginning to attract youth ceed.-The-laymen?s-board of groups Thte, she saysradds to pie from both Protestant and the joy ahe has experienced in nolle churches has been having fellowship, prayer and il of Greats Falls Central h School, and Rev. Donald nlin, Congregational Church, ings. arper said he expects a ;le on the gambling issue.— 3ambling doesn't produce ley," he asserts. "It timate businessmen to put tha rators. We will have to work everything to beat the move oake gambling legal." tie Helena pastor said the ot marked 3B will read: [ainst allowing the people or legislature to authorize ibling." He suggests use of word 'people' is a smoke >en as the issue is whether to w the legislature to authorize ibling. The people can nge the Constitution by an talive any time they want to, reminds.. covenant Players To Appear he Covenant Players, a tour- group of four young men and nen, will present an evening "Christian Dynamics" irsday at Malmstrom ce Base Chapel. Air organized aijd directed .a band "In fa& it's our oldest sisters at Our Lady of Lourdes and who are most loved by the peo Holy Family Schools and has ple who are coming — Who have also taught singing. the most influence by the deep When sh^ came to the spiritual life that shines out in academy thejhuge brick building their persons. When their class at 2300 Central Ave., was little room years are over, instead of used except as a home for the titutioii more attractive t. chUdre,. Here Gordon Lovlu^C °U- children duties her family in ^Moscow; Idaho, where she grew up. She also plans a weetW-herself-in a mountain hideaway for spiribial preparation. Easy Scan and Print iDot; frying, to;'ieU\ll it jhecdver ot'Qio sfan- the money before it adjo fi a bad word wi&Tiii. It's /betojruietf-by people who1 mary. catriesfthei caveat that Actually, ate didn't signs are-trylng-to-give us a bad '.'not everything about the the salary checks until t) image. We're being very objec convention is m there and some after. Does that mean the ,-----•*■ tt$Mk» Urn « tive and I think we have been His conunent\ came In points of interest to some people checks are no good? response ty(ajfattempt by Hep. ■ Wfo, uniuual^that Kvaaten objective." <IWntt! try to contact the dele Kvaakn gave as an example might not be covered." doesn't make sense. We'v Oscar Kvaalen, R-Lamoert, to gate! to any way to find out of bias the fact that a summary Kvaalen's central argument mltted the money by halt the spending of some $60 000 "what in fact we are doing Be to Inform the public about the cause fee truth of the matter is constitution prior to the June 6 that we have certainly been and ratification election. Intend to continue to be entirely of the constitution makes no seemi to be that the convention mention of the deletion of the 2 no Ion ger has authority to spend mill statewide property tax public funds since it adjourned limitation. last March 24 Equalization Columbus Youth Gains Star Farmer Award Payments FFA Taps Members To Change BOZEMAN - David Holm resolution. It seems to i certainly have the autho do that. But of course ttu legal argument" » for Honors LaFrance, Bridger, for Loren H. Young, Fairview. Mussetter, Gary Schaff,: water and air manage These- boys will receive an exG. Campbell and David School, was named Montana's ment; Alexander Frank, Joliet, pensej paid trip to the grain Absarokee; Dennis W Star Fanner at the annual for forest management and marketing facilities in Fried, Baker; Sherman V awards session Friday night at Rodney Campbell, Absarokee, Minnesota. i Bfelfryi Dean Sirucek, B the 42nd annual future Farmers for home Improvement. The; Flathead Chapter of Dennis Spencer, <Bridgei of^America_ Leadership. C o n- The Stillwater Valley.Chap Kalispell and the Miles 'Cfty Fortner, Broadus; < Mrs. tolburg'B~office~sar<r.. ian.-Holmgren ter of Absarokee received Chapter were named fo re Hofeldt, Bob Herdegen, \ is designed to help take finan was presented with $200 and a the "Building Our American present Montana at the national Oehmcke and Richard cial pressure off the state's plaque for his achievement in Communities" state plaque. FFA convention in Kansas City Chinook;, David Pal general fund. fanning and leadership. He is This award is for the chapter next October. David Holmgren, Coll The new payment plan di- the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul doing the moat to hrfp tf Agriculture tRachpnL.recffiang Tom Miller, Culhertenq; < paynwntnmo~flve" Holmgren of Columbus. His community become a better plaques for 5 years service were Davis, Deer Lodge. parts rather than the two vocational agriculture teacher in place. Gary Paulson, St. Ignatius; James Bolstad, Brad presently used. Don Owen. ' . The plan was developed by Holmgren began- his farming Tim Laden, Dillon, won the Gary Prbpp, Big Timber; Van and David Broere, Denton $400 Union Pacific Railroad Shjelhamer, Conrad; and Alden Freeman, Fainleld; The the- superintendent's office in program as a freshman in high scholarship. Irish, Belt. Fifteen year plaques Paschke, Fairview; Scott conjunction with the state con school with 2 hogs and a couple Montana Power Co. $200 went to Jim Lewis, Helena; Fort Benton; Mike Hill, troller and several local school of cows. Now he has 60 head of scholarships were awarded to Perry Mathews, Helena; and berg; David Lee McNan districts. It has been approved swine, 18 beef cows and three Duane Gebhardt, Simms, and Dr. Douglas Bishop, Bozeman. Rick Zier, Hardin; 1 by the Board of Education. horses. Justin Mader, Broadus. Riley-Childers of Montana As Drabbs, Hinsdale; Ale Mrs. Colburg said the plan Awards of $100 from the Na The. Chinook Chapter won first sociated Utilities, Inc., pre Franks Dave ArthUn, was developed as .the result of tional FFA 'Foundation for pro place in the Montana Quality sented -gold keys to Henry Mark Lalum^ Steven Kn a Senate Resolution motivated ficiency in various agricultural Grain Production p r o g*r a m Haagenstad of Red Lodge and Casey Stout, Kajspell; by the fact that 60 per cent activities were made to Stephen sponsored by the_J»eavey jCo. HowardJBreitbach of Baker for Wente,_Lewistown,^ Walte - payment of equalization aid Davis, Deer Lodge, for place The chapter advisor, \Jern Lift, 20 years service* Jim Schultz of Tom OstendorfT Miles funds each December has for ment in agricultural production; will receive an all expense paid Lewistown received a fishing Mike Ross, Plentywood; r several years forced the state Kevin Kovanda, Columbus, for trip to the grain marketing rod and reel from Montana As- Haack, Poison; Phillip - -ygeneraWundrbalancrinto-the crop production; Mike Wente, tacumes at Duluth and Minnea- sociated Utilities tor having foTaekT Sacd; Neil Ba red. Lewistown, livestock produc polis chaperoning individual achieved 25 years as an agri Leslie Gilman, Sheridan She said a continuation of the tion; Ronald Ries, Conrad, for winners in the program. culture teacher. Walsh, Doug Woods, old-system-would~have-r.esiilted -ilacement"lnr sales* and/or Individualrwinners are William Boys-receiving the Farmer Bridges; and-Mike Han in the writing of a nowsuf- ^ service; Duane Hanson, Billings, Oehmcke, Chinook; Mark degree, the highest award given Barry Scott and David ficlent fund check, with the for agricultural mechanics; Vandolah, Three- Forks; and at the state level, were Robert Worden. bank— holding the account HELENA (AP) - The super intendent, of public instruction, Dolores Colburg, said Friday a new system; of payment of state equalization aid to public school districts would begin this fall. Jeff gren, a senior at Columbus High soil, —■ W i— i ill »!■■■»■■ w w> ^^THI 1 »*M charging interest on the over drawn amount. . She also said the new system will relieve fiscal pressures at the school district level. The first payment, -which Business Resumes in Fire-Stricken Anaconda comes .due Sept. 30 and is 20 ANACONDA,. Mont. <AP)- ational by this morning, per cent of the total,, amounts Anaconda Mayor Paul Beau- added. to $8 million. The-ofher payments are: Jan. soleil, said-today_that the-ruins . The mayor sai .1ft HA «11 tc .. *%f fu/A hnlMmrra In he damage. had hnSPS laid and roaihr far A light rain also He also thanked the r helped sparks from the blaze four fire departments th to_the_: Easy Scan and Print GraybUl says in response; GraybUl says tt's<hWj Wellnthe toHvcutlui cwuiiUtied that-the convention—"has* tbeium- the money before caveiLlhat the In there and some . _ ,. dEfi points of Interest to some people rKva«jei gave as an exempt night not be covered." jrfjp Actually, .we didn't sign g son e of the salary checks until the day y after. Does that mean the salary checks are no good? That doesn't make sense. We've com mitted the money by proper resolution. It seems to jri< we afIitroative_dutyto' arrange educate the, pubUc_about . and the way* they've done itcis through the committee. "The convention, in--the* enabling act, has a duty to present this matter hi an elee fjblfl« th« Mk that• nimniaJ Rvaalen'i central argument tion. And it seems unusual to me ofthe constitution-makes rq rq seems to be.that the convenUon that someone would argue wllh the matter Is mention^ of the deletion of the 2 no longer has authority to spend certainly have the authority to a straight face that we should do itofy been and mill ill statewide ttid property tax public funds since it adjourned do that; But of course that's the so without helping the Voters to be entirely limitation. last March 24. legal argument." » understand it." Youth Gains Star Farmer Award Heroin-Addict liana FFA Taps Members for Honors Dies in Jail Cell at Butte David Holm- Jeff LaFrance, Bridger, "for Loren H. Young, Fairview. Mussetter, Gary Schaff, Rodney BUTTE (AP) - A federal deoIumhua.High soil, ..water and .air .manage These boys will -receive an ex G. Campbell and David Pellon, itainee beind held in Silver Bow cd Montana's ment; Alexander Prank, Jollet, pense paid trip to the grain the annual for forest management and marketing facilities in T! ¥ %] Si:5 of Dennis Spencer, 'Bridger; Tim •lday night at Rodney Campbell, Absarokee, Minnesota. itureFarmera for home improvement. The Flathead Chapter lership. ConThe-StUhg8tgr_Va]ley Chap-KalispelL and.^the Miles 'Cfty an. Holmgren ter of Absarokee r e ceTvTtt Chapter—were—named to reth $200 and a the "Building- Our American present Montana at the national ihievement fai Communities'1 state plaque. FFA convention in Kansas City ership. .He is This award is for the chapter next October. cd Mrs., Paul l^ fte" most to,help their .Agriculture ilumbus. His community become a better plaques for 5 years service were ore teacher in place. Gary Paulson, St. Ignatius; Fortner, Bcoadus; ^ al1 Prlcr to treatment center died Thurs CI a r k day. Hofeldt, Bob Herdegen.^William Coroner Leo Jacobsen said Oehmcke and Richard Stuker, Edwin Bruce Craig, 34, died of Chinook;. David Patterson, excessive fluids on the lungs. David Holmgren, Columbus; U.S. Marshal Louis Aleksich, Tom Millar rih^ Davis, Deer Lodge: James Bolstad, Brad Poser taken to an addiction treatment Tim Laden, Dillon, won the Gary Propp, Big Timber; Van and David Broere, Denton; Lynn center in Arizona. l his farming 1400 Union Pacific Railroad SJjelhamer, Conrad; and Alden Freeman, Fairfield; Theordore He said the victim was a ihman in high scholarship. Irish, Belt. Fifteen year plaques Paschke, Fairview; Scott Perry, ; and a couple Montana Power Co. $200 las 60 head of scholarships were awarded to >ws and three Duane Gebhardt, Simms, and Justin Mader, Broadus. from the Na The. Chinook Chapter won first tation for pro- place In the Montana Quality s agricultural Grain Production program tde to Stephen sponsored by &e_Peavey ^Co. je, for place- The chapter advisor, YernTKtff, al production; will receive an all expense paid Columbus, for trip to the grain marketing Mike Wente, facilities afBuiutn am Minnea itock produci, Gonrad, for aTea~wA/m inson, Billings, 1 mechanics; went to Jim Lewis, Helena; Ft Bt Perry Mathews, Helena; and berg; David Lee McNaneyy and and turned himself in for treatment Rick Zier, Hardin; Francis under the Federal Narcotic Ad Dr. Douglas^Bishop, Bozeman. Riley Childers of Montana As sociated Utilities, Inc., pre sented gold keys to Henry Haagenstad of Red Lodge and Howard Breitbach of Baker for 20 years service: Jim Schultz of Lewistown received a fishing rod and reel from Montana Assooatea utilities tor having polls chaperoning individual achieved 25 years as an agri winners in the program. culture teacher. Individual^winners are -William Boys-receiving the Farmer Oehmcke, Chinook; 'Mark degree, the highest award given Vandolah, Three Forks; and at the state level, were Robert Drabbs, Hinsdale; Alexander dicts Rehabilitation Act 111. Frank, Dave Arthun, Joliet; Mark Lalum, Steven Knox and Casey Stout, Kalispell; Mike Glasgow JCs Elect Wentejjiewistown[ Walter Rolf, Tom OstehdorTT Miles CityJ ' ^GLASGOW -"GenTHartsockT Mike Ross, Plentywood;. Lonnie a member of the Glasgow Jay- Hk Poison; "Phillip SudHaack, : sees Joiii(LyjEaisjand_an_oiacer Brack; Saco; NelT Leslie Gilman, Sheridan; Ken for seven, is the new president Walsh, ' Doug Woods, Twin of the local club. Levon Bridges ;•■ and - Mike Hammond, "Smiley"- Johnson is first vice Barry Scott and David Beard,! president; Tome Grewe, second Worden. ——puce president; Ttonrns -— Christianson, secretary, a n"d Jerome Garsjo, treasurer. Four dness Resumes in Fire-Stricken Anaconda \Iont. r Paul (AP)— ational Beau-added. by this morning, he damage. '? that-the-ruinsL^-The. may«y sp\i\ fjrpTwn still in the <*onfn>i!had hoses laid and readv for A light rain also nnA \Kr year terms; Brad Nimmick and Jack Bright, one year terms. He also thanked the men of helped sparks from the blaze four fire departments that anftom-sprfiading,Jie_said swered the rail to the firs atj #*. directors elected are Dave Miller and Dan Taylor, for two I INDOOR-OUTDOOR -—CARPET 1 Easy Scan and Print Great Fall*, Montana, Monday April 10, 1972 $SO0,01 wer SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP) — A law enforcement stu dent and skydiving enthusiast who said he was a Green Beret and helicopter pilot while in Vietnam was arrested Sunday and charged with the $500,000 extortion-parachute hijacking of a United Air Lines 727 jet on Friday. The FBI saicl the money had not been recovered. Richard Floyd McCoy Jr., 29, a Brigham Young University student active in the Church of Jesus Christ- of Latter-day Saints (Mormon), was arrested at Mb home, a neat, brown brick'bungalow in Provo, Utah. McCoy, the father of two, said he hid been preparing for drill with his Army National Guard unit when arrested and appeared for his arraignment before U.S. Magistrate A, M. Ferro in military fatigues. McCoy was held without bail on charges of air plracy~arid in terfering with flight crewmen. The maximum penalty is death. A preliminary hearing was set for April 19. The FBI refused to comment on whether the parachutes and weapons involved in the hijack had been found. McCoy is accused of commandeering a United flight from Newark, N.J., to Los An geles shortly after it made a scheduled stop in Denver. The plane was diverted to San Francisco where it re mained on the ground for three hours while four parachutes and the 1600,000 was delivered. Then, the passengers were let off and the plane began a zig- za,g flight over the Northwest. The hijacker balled out over Provo, a community of 75,000, and the plane went on to land at Salt Lake City. The complaint against McCoy said the FBI was led to him by a highway patrolman, Robert Van Ieperen. were bailed Provo and r before a 1! cers e ing ch the u Ieperen knew McCoy, accord- two bl ing to the complaint and heard him talk about the possibility of hijacking an airplane. Ieperen was quoted by the complaint as saying McCoy told him he would demand $500,000 if he Frid sevent just i agents with cludini Con ( On L HELENA (AP) — The president of the embattled Montana Constitutional Convention told a hastily assembled meeting of delegates Sunday that opponenta are out to scuttle the new on the issues. The convention adjourned "sine die" March 25. Since then suit has been .filed beforejhe Montana Supreme Court challenging the right of the convention to spend money on a voter-information program. ^Thi-constitution. is".face ..to face with a test on legalistic and moralistic grounds rather than substantive issues," Leo Graybill Jr., D-Great Falls said. The convention president had gathered officials and delegates named in the suit for a meeting of the state -Capitol to map -Strategy jn thejegal action and to. discuss the affect on the pro" constituion. of a suit b v n a t s "5 A e p: 2. vi ir Ji m le si in pi th tv cc th Easy Scan and Print Sm^i$e^ i^SI*!^^^ to-land ir^lb geks;;;shortly, aft&;?lt ; hdUdt^ih^ ^^ Ait At^ a Thef pfe?^||aiwrtied ;to -said tfi^FBI Wattled % him by a high^vpatirtrfmari, Robert Van Ieperen. 'A : iepeiien Knew McCoy, accord- San vPrOTcisco;^»jl^e fit re- iiig to the: conplaint and heard hours<-, while ^f^^paradiutes; fajaddJBg ■afivaJrplfiiie. Ieperen Then- the passengers-were let off and the planeiiegaa a ag-. raying McCoy told him he ,. would.demand. $500,000 jf_ he mmrtedI<)We-gra^ and the $600,000 was delivered. was qSbted?by tiie complaint as were a hijacker. The hijacker bailed out of the jetliner over Provo in southern Utah's lake and mountain country short y before midnight. A 12-hour search by 200 of cere ended with the FBI sta ing out McCoy's residence _. the university city of Provb, two blocks from the city center. Friday's hijacking was the man known as It still ;s6\igH^after^^l|ng^t *. over Eastern tyasbington Sjfith- $200,000 he got from^Nortfiw^t * Airlines." ~-. "■" ■ 5?r ~.*M '• "l " An FBI spokesman in Salt Lake said, "we're not working on the theory" that McCoy, and Cooper were the same person.' He said the agency could find no link between the two. —*. -seventh involving parachntes-m just under five months. FBI —Neighbors of the Mceoys said he was a former Sunday school agents say it was not connects with any of the others, in teacher and Mrs. McCoy was a case worker with the county, welfare .department. cluding the one _ involving. Ja Con Legal Tests HELENA (AP) - The presi dent of the ^nbattled Montana' Constitutional Convention told a hastily assembled meeting of delegates Sunday that oppo nents are out to scuttle the new document in court—rather than on the issues. The convention • adjourned "sine die" March 25. Since then suit has been filed before the Montana Supreme Court chal lenging the right of the con vention to spend money on a voter-information program. "This constitution is face to face with a lest on legalistic and moralistic grounds rather than substantive issues," Leo Graybill Jr., I>Great Falls said. The convention president had gathered officials and delegates named in the suit for a meeting of the state Capitol to map h- _ strategy in the legal action and to.discuss the affect on the pro- vention has concluded its busi ness by adjourning "sine die", any further spending wjouTd be tantamount to private citizens spending public funds. ; Delegates at the Sunday skull The recently adjourned North _D§to?ta Constitutional Con» session disagreed: ThiMnas~Mr vention had budgeted $90,000 on Ask, R-Roundup said the mon voter education, delegates ey was spent when it was ap propriated by delegates on Jan. 21 for the purpose of. informing voters on what the new docu ment will mean if it is ratified June 6. The Voter Education Com mittee is only administering, tile _ expenditure, he argued. Graybill noted that the state legislature does not slay in ses sion just to oversee the spend ing of funds allocated for some program. Thirteen delegates^ ten. of them lawyers, attended the two-hour session in a House committee room. The lawyers agreed fo donate their time and effort in gather- ^^-Wmation WlioWlIig ruling by the secretary of state barring Constitutional Con* vention delegates from seeking elective office. A public information program budgeted at more'than $45,000 Js_at^stake in tire suit. Veteran the money''has not legislator Oscar" Kvaaen, R-Lambert has brought suit against convention officials and members "of the Voter Edu cation Committee of the conven tion. He argues that since the con- the basic structure of the Voter Education Committee and the enabling act that established the Constitutional Convention. submit to tho court. Adversary hearings on the case are scheduled for April 18. The lawyers plan on drawing up the brief Saturday at the home of Jerome Loendorf, RHelena and submitting it to the high court April 17. Basic issues to be discussed d include precedents set by con stitutional conventions in other states, the powers of the con vention as set out in the present constitution, the plenery powers of the convention, pointed out. "None of the opponents came around during -the -convention," - ..-Li to offer their views, -Graybil] argued. He called the suit "a challenge after the fact." " .. He asked the lawyers to study thelplehei7~p^wers~orther convention. In effect, he ^iaid, the convention is empowered to do everything to place the new constitution before the public, and that means educating tha public too. • In addition to Loendorf, other lawyers involved in preparing the brief are: Marshall ^Mur ray, R-Kaliapelfc; -chairman of. the Rules Committee at tho Convention; BetfJE. Berg Jh« B'Bozeman; thomas F. Joyce, D-Butte; Bruce.M. Brown, IMiles City and Bob Campbell, D-Missoula. "As a non lawyer, I can't imagine a better group to rep resent me," John Toole, R-MissouJa,_said. The convention- first vice- president is named-in the siijt. "I didn't kntnrit would be so exciting, I've never been/sued beforeAsaid Jean Bowman, RContinned on page 2, coL 1 Youths Beat, xrr Easy Scan and Print promise any longer. jpi=j_JatTnmjan had scolded him. He said the -flbn Can Meets Continued from page 1 p Billings, the convention secre-' break, wiih ^Truman riffl t»mci uuti] he made a 1949 speech criticizing some* of the Utah (AP^^tman midnight, the . hijacker with air piracy in the chuted from the plane an to be identified, called "silly" a president's domestic programs. statement by Gov. Forrest H. From 1951 to 1955 Byrnes was extortion-hijacking of a Anderson that.urged delegates [overnor of South CaroBna. "He * -tary; was described by neigh ,/ In his suit, Kvaalen asks that to "forget politics, and sell" was named to the U.N. post in bors jSunday as a personable 1953: As governor, he set in mo- Sunday school teacher. tbe spending is then document to the public. ren\arks .T* -■r"n~~»-"w gcieu lUHas-ue-aivniecrn—~i—. Richard Floyd-McCoy Jr;, 29, designed to equalize Negro and between opponents and!ma<Ie.atihe formal <*>sin a skyjiver who said he was a _. # it ... .. Gill On I PC 4rvr fha /t/\«%«*A«.i.» white schools. "It is our duty to i0T the convention. ^supporters of the constitution. forme- Vietnam helicopter pi J - "It is an outrageous assump- Delegate Berg called thesuit P™^ f°r foe races substan- lot, was taken early Sunday utes later & landed saf Salt Lake International A FBI agents Sunday 1> around the quiet, green-] neighborhood. The-house 360 South, 200 East, n from the center of fhis I; tion that we will 'sell' the con "a frustration to the public.'.' tial *!q1 equality "—"*" in :~ school "*■"' facil from a neat, brown bungalow a* Asked their purpose stitution," Joyce said, "sell is a He said opponents, of the con- ities," he said. in this1 university iit city. i agent said, "We're here |lhorrible word that we all use— are trying to block it Byrnes opposed the 1954 Su.Wi i He lived there with his wife, cure our interests. ,but we' are only going to say by. withholding, the neededtP1"6016 Court decision calling g an investigation t Karen, and two children,jhave whaftbe document will do, not funds to educate voters on thelfor- an,, end to separate parate but iduct." P-'whether we support it." &■", "Information I've been pre proposal. "Nothing they (the iequal schools. "The court did Chantj:, 6 and Richard, 1. >A"ni " Records revealed he was a: *»* um.ua ncic maw» The" blinds were drawn oppo-i"01 the Constitution," student in law enforcement at home. The children wen i1 interpret fate pared is objective to the point nents) have done could have at- ^ said' '<Ule ^^ tended Brigbam Young University and | ing outside in the mqrnii of being boring," Graybill tracted as much voter attention it.". taught Sunday school until a;were taken indoors when added. as this suit," said Otto Habe- Byrnes, splitting with the month ago at a ward house of nien arrived. When the Voter Education dank, R-Sidney. "This should Democrats in 1952, supported lurch of" Jesus Christ of j Aworaan met a newsi Committee,was formed it was really, get Wui out W1C the vuic —,.^ ^ kte Dwight D. Eisenhower Saints (Mormon). |the door with: "I hope y< agreed that it present only an Graybill said he would write £f B^^ over »e ^te Adian took charge of awards don't come back aj ^;qaMh»alfects - iL- -otht - 07 diluiiaUa b«u1^ Stevenson. cfcfc_ ^7 plane Fri- | Jessica duff, a iik ~fbt constitution would have. A this week to inform them of In 1956, Byrnes backed the fay while it was on flightisaid, "I can't believe he ^-special—objectivity —subeom- what"happened at the meeting late-Sen.-Harry F. Byrd, D-Va., . ~ *" "■•■' •*• *^««> wt«., :rom Newark. NrJ. A4Hh 1 mittee was even organized. and asking them for sugges- *?.r P*^5'^01- complaining that "He was .a real kind That subcommittee ticns. {Eisenhower's views on inp of information released Mufray saidtie'wiil sure the brief submitted ., by the Voter Education Com high court seeks a ruling on the' mittee. ~i— ~... suit and the Mahoney case at' Lake City. Shortly before!out of the ^now when i One delegate, who asked not the same time. Great Foils Tribune morning by Groat Falii 12) 4th Street North. m. Second claw postFallt, Montana 59403. PublHtwr ' Operations Mgr. - Executive £dltor Managing Editor 'Associate Editor City Editor Advertising Director .Retail Adv. Mgr. National Adv. Mgr. Circulation Mgr. Controller Production Mgr ,, Fair, and Nbt So Windy Today The Mahoney case has an af-; feet on the fate of the proposed! constitution as well. \ While delegates at the Sun-1 day session said they were not concerned whether Mahoney is iv(Cr««l Faltf aM vkMty - Fair and " ** allowed to file for the RepublM fetWo p?. can nominatiwi as state treas- i hIO'Bhturer, they said the outcome ofji,0^^ £*"•* his case could change the com- T»»*» »•*• ■?<««,' .„ ..^ plexion of the constitution. Mahoney argues that the con vention is adjourned, and there fore he is no longer a delegate, freeing him to run for another- ! elective office. ,.....„. Supreme Court justices want- co-ofi' $i8.m tto.sojed to know under what authorsjity the convention was finally :. I adjourned. And that raises the S*m« moo«i to date It* year Normal tttii month to date Jan. | to d*t« la*t year .. . Jan. r to da4e, 30-year normal west poHwn Tuesday *nd TvtMMy 4S to a. L . Jhowers Tuesday. - - today. Liiltt — Widely Shower* scattered tonight lemperature and change Htghs today and Tuesday In 4M. Low* tonight, 20s. •i HHjhMonday of March 25. SO. Ch«n« of mMiurable praciDitatlon V> ptr cent through Monday. If the convention is still in Monda*. Chanct of thowan.Midthroggh coofer coofer M ay session then the proposed con Tuesiay. Low* it night %. High Monday *<K» of 5L2* I™"*" «*>«• Ch f per cent, through Monday stitution cannot be submitted to •howe voters "June 6. The present «onMONTANA stituUon Bpeclfically states that cnv any jew constitu«bn beisuo- Billings kroadw mitted no less than two months after adjournment of ihe; Con stitutional W6re~ffiah"~six~ Tnontfis ttjatdate. FORECAST — Showers are forecast for the cem Pacific coast area with the rest of the, nation enj ing clear skies Sunday. Cold .weather is predic over the Great Lakes and in parts of th^Southw. (APMap) Anchorage- Afhtvllk *• - 7._ Easy Scan and Print C3 get; more farmers am ops 'involved lit ^politic Naden said the worl be nonpartisan and w both-RepubIican_and )gresa uction defi- rfthe peak «r of tic spokesmen. mond the firspaj c^-fired plaiitat ^ti^iai v Waaiiiv is in operation, and tfet Trojan Nuclear Clayton Yeutter, < strategist for the Cor Re-elect the Presidei plant atlRanier^Or^p-iai under construction, Richmond report ed. ■.;..;;■•. ;.;;..:, _ . one of the worksite -,; AddiUonaTplants are planned in Wyominft-^SsT"1^1 elsewhere. re Sen. Warrm G. MagnusonrDWash., asked Smith if Interior officials had cut Bonneville's Smith said the cut was very Magnuson BPA minor." said the smoot budget was trimmed again by the Office of Management and Budget. Rep. dress- He requested that details on Asso- the two budget cuts be supplied the for the hearing record. ire. is idnot y i s National Documentary Developing Con Con: 'We Have Something to Brag About' care, to all : new ; best n the of ini spe- ■ that lealth . drait h oseality if the bed sional s fall, lering lerate By FRANK FRANK ADAMS ADAMS Agency — if the proposed newlmind a-soDhfettaatpH siiHA.t9n»i.i~..».u <u ,... Tribune Capitol Bureau HELENA — The image-con ,PauL.Starzy.nski,_an_ .audio-screen, inexpensive movie made i Starzynski also indicated h* scious Constitutional Convention vidual producer at the USIA.up of photos taRen"on the^p^rtwura^^eepTnTalieye'OTtatl may find itself the subject of a Washington headquarters, got'and graphics explaining govern- Supreme Court decisions affectdocumentary by the image-con the idea from a Time Magazine mental details. He plans to bring i ing the convention before scious United States Information story en the convention. a crew out to Montana, aroum heading for Montana. "What I have in mind is 'the lne June 6 ratification elecion election to to The Time article that sparked ofjhe voting.and YoujSf4 votingand »»»,. "pictures -—«,.-, USIA interest, is. permeated with: know, right now we're very big visit ^e people who worked the standard awesome regard of jffersonian spirit spirit lives' Jeffersonian lives effersonian _,. Holly Sugar Updating Sidney Unit on Jff Jefferson. drafting the constitution ... and metropolitan reporters for Mon "People have certain ideas get some ^paper photos to tana and her citizens, including iri of the usual reference to Helena's about the United Stales and this some way reflect the spirit is reinforced by foreign media the state and tell the history of it main street (Last and misinformed friends and ill- — how the old constitution re Gulch-. flected, the power structure of Time immortalizes a comment informed enemies. "In this case we have, if 1 can the times and how it changed by delegate George Harper, |ra -« . . . how government was re from Helena Helena^ |§ COLORADO SPRINGS, CoJo. believe the Time Magazine sponsive to me< times and the Methodist minister frm alified "Praise the Lord and pass the article, something we can really (AP) The Holly Sugar Co. nnel— people." brag about." aining will spend more than $1 million aining this year in modernizing its Sidney, Mont.; factory, a com pany spokesman said Monday. inwide Factory ihahager John Nigro aid he said the sum is in addition to ed to A»AV 4U#\ Starzynski constitution." As one observer says he If the constitution passes has in Starzynski would stay on to put it, "it wasn't the greatest•>. j un «/1 thing tiling ncujjei Harper saia said during during me the gather more material. But if it'convenUon, but it's nationwide." Volks to *<<\ I fie STHOO Easy Scan and Print .?■<■ ^-HmCou"fi^armer Co*1 of the Consumer aridlS operatives w^Miold a series ofiService in the aEEtV — ^ginning Tuesdayjpartment, hTresSed fift. IvUI , •- "e'P ^Quaint co-opicember to join thelNki facts of p011"* cal camp Yeutter will talk on "How' a Other regional sessions are Politician Determines Hiif scheduled for April 18 at San Friends11 during the workshops1. FJranciseo, May 2 at Chicago, Others scheduledlfor the meet and May 4 at Syracuse, N.Y. Kenneth D Naden, executive ings include Daniel Minshew, vice -president oLJhe council, told a reporter the national workshop series Is the first of Its kind by his group and repre sents a stepped-up campaign to get more farmers and their co ops involved in politics. an aide to Sen. Herman Talmade, D-Ga -Tony CoelhOrwith Rep B F. Sisk, DJCaUf.; James Thornton, an assistant to the Senate Agriculture Committee; »nd Ken Gruenther, with Sen Jacob Javits, R-nIy. Naden said! the participants Naden said the workshops will will "steer away from any finbe nonpartisan and will include both Republican and Democra ic spokesmen. Front End Alignment Clayton Yeutter, chief farm strategist for (he Committee toRe-elect the President, will be! one of the workshop parUci-j FOfi APPOINTMENT 453-4318 Don RebalM^^ THE WINDSOR GUABQSMAn| Taste Canada^ smooffiesFwhisi torse, Wenatchee, Wash., displays the skulls, ftfked together. Morse found the evidence of i Columbia some 180 miles west of Williams down a $1,000 offer from tne late Walt Disney : his 1 wo trips to the area cost him more than MngtoBragAbout' sophisticated slide-tape)(doesn't pass, the project would >n, in effect a wide be dropped like a hot potato. nexpensive movie made _Starzynski also indicated he lofijs'"'taken "on the~spoT woiilH be keeping "an eye on"stale )hics explaining govern* Supreme Court decisions affect tetails. He plaivs to bring ing the convention before but to Montana, around heading for Montana. 6 ratification election to The Time article that sparked tutt»s_ofJhe voting^and USI A. interest.is.permeated -with; e people who worked the standard awesomeregardo| the constitution and metropolitan reporters for Mdiif e newspaper photos to tana and her citizens, including ay reflect the spirit of the usual reference to Helena's1 : and tell the history of it main street (Last Chanel h 1t:30iT CORNED BEEF CABBAGE AT THE DUTCHMAN'S 801 Snxfkr AV«tW .. Easy Scan and Print No?l«7-86th Year GreitFiJli, Monitiu, Sttnrdiy, April 15 Ammaice To Canada OTTAWA ^^ President: Nixon assured Canada Friday From Commission A resolution calling for the re moval of Leo C. Graybill Jr. as a member and chairman of the can domination. Going before me Canadian Parliament after agreeing in private talks with Prime Minis ter Pierre Elliott Trudeair fer ■aeek a resumption of stalled trade talks, Nixon also aimed Great Falls Airport Commission is scheduled for submission to oblique criticism at the Soviet tho City Council at the Monday night meeting. Union for supplying arms to" North Vietnam. Author of the resolution is As he stood oh the floor of the ornate gold-and-green House of -Commons chamber:*. he ad libbed a sentence beamed at Moscow's aid to Hanoi. "The great powers," he said, "can from the Fifth Ward. The resolution points out that the official code of the city pro vides for removal of any mem not avoid the responsibility for the aggressive actions of those ber of the city Airport Commis sion by written resolution and a two-thirds vote of the council. Nothing in the resolution indi cates a reason for the action other than that it "would be in the best interest of the City of (hat the United* States want* its northern neighbor to build a na tional economy free of Ameri to whom they give the means for embarking on such action.-' MRS. HELEN OCONNELL LEO C. GRAYBILL JR. Continued on page 2, col 1 Great Falls." The action by Alderman O'Connell follows submission of letters of resignation to Mayor John J. McLaughlin and the City Council by four members 'of the Airport Commission Thursday. Offering thekr resignations wert Vice Chairman Joe Mudd, Dr. John F. McGregor, J. W. Connelly and Kenneth Knight. Alderman Jack Throckmorton also serves on the commission because he is chairman of the council's Airport Committee. The four commissioners" leged a dispute between them selves and Graybill, contending that accomplishment through.a commission ia almost impossible if the chairman and members hoM opposite positions. Graybill Sees Resignatu As Move Toward His Oi Leo C. Graybill Jr., expressed shock and sadness Friday by the resignation of four commis sioners from the Airport Com- -missicn,_hut_said_thaLthe_most important consideration in the airport controversey is an excel lent airport for Great Falls. He contended that the resignatinns apparently were designed to encourage the councH. to re move him from the commission. "I deeply regret the action of my iellow commlKyiwiers-Dc^ cause I have always favored full cBaeusaion and exchange of ide iting Chinese table tennis play- course, I am willing to abide by In backgrounding the situa tion, Graybill said that "When I left Great Falls for Helena in January,- the basic decisions; had- Been made and agreed toby all of the parties, including the air lines, to build a major terminal on the center site. "When I returned from the convention, llw uile liad been changed, and I have asked re peatedly the reasons for this." He'said, that "so ft commitments to build this road have existed since 1969. contended that "airport commissioner Jarnes Connelly and Highway Commissioner Bill Kessner arranged a secret meeting in Helena from which a recent letter from the Highway Commission resulted." He said that "The letter claims the road cannot be built soon but it flies in the face of past promises and, in my p ^ fa p rf an excuse for moving the airport site." site a Feb. being or.at fact me i after Tribt the situa have man} -cnanj have ■•• ^^-^-;^ y d . g secret meeting was In Helen* after I' rehrtf Easy Scan and Print they're finding out that It's * lot I was particularly of concern ion's Voter Education tea?*** "■" * " u was even known what the final studiously product produt might iht be: b: is wrestling with the state of Montana needl ■But fiie" burnmg' quei g quei t update dte the th one, good coostitution to d intentions itti to the < * objectivity as they .,.. ^iPresenting the j of their'convention and ittk back bk m 1889?" He written tended; that the word 'update p their jroduct to the people. They're finding out what it tkML News Analysis means to suppress their feelings and biases I posed constitutuon But "we're not trying to 'sell' Kvaalen frankly it,-' said Convention President\pects a one-sided sell job, al- and Leo Graybill recently. "That's a and hopes, e. tell it like it is. And bad word with us. It's only being that the present constlbhid the times and in tutioi is behind need of updating. He suggested using the word 'revise* instead. Another spot began, '•Mon frbm^groflp o^pMplel muA want their iabbrii p^^^p| hire -a commercial . . put their education" program tog though his suit challenges not tana's present constitution was tne convention's objectivity, but written in 1889. Most of it came The IS-rainute film be its authority to use public funds from the constitutions of CaUV duced by Sage Advejiisii for "voter education" now that fornia and Colorado." Schiltz a case in point. used by people who are trying to give us a bad image. We're being very objective and I think p has adjourned sine die. Legal Advertising uggested that the second line be Because of the nabs stricken, since, although com- written document of 1 of )letely true, it somehow seems Ur UIV ITCH I ^. — —■»»« that ^» — -*w •• • •*•**» f 4 111 £ concern has~~ been it'sM I| •Friday, "I'm super-cautious" o imply that anything based on words, the film, previe the committee Friday, is g Gci<ft«n), doing . «. N^how not right for ppublic of- about objecUvity. y ^institutions of California and documentary of the cu chairman of the ob- Colorado can't be too good. lhan of the proposed < RURAL DIRECTORIES, wirti offteMtr O7 Strain Bolldtno, Greal (something to the puWic. That jectivity subcommittee of the 19- we have been objective*" AWDAV1T As delegate John ScWltz put it ^i' d^li? "*? PVWic *»* «•>*" I &hilte ^ hi FaBi, Montane* ... „. NANCY L. GOLDBBRG Subscribed and Swam to baton me Mils 22 day of March 1?7Z - LA-fcuE-SMITH Sof«ry PubHe-ferth^Jfc^. Atol Broadsides mldlna it Cr«af tMtelttjj M mcriTieuf namb amidavit STATE OP MONTANA)) CoftitynM'Cd) MCiicadi) u; ^THH UNDERSIGNED UPON HER OATH STATES: I «m Nancy L. Gohltwra. (Spins i d>- —iEBjSB^PrlnttogLjHHfoW* •• r*ote proprHSriWp^saer~lJf* -firm - nimr ind *tVt» o< AHMr-Mon Publlshlno Co., with onto** at 407 Strain Bulletins, Graar Fallt, Montana. NANCY L. GOLDBERG Sutocrlbad and Swom To this "22 day Of March-1P72. To Precede June Vote By J. D. HOLMES AP Capitol Writre LA RUE SMITH vention is currently involved \tvm lawsuits. HELENA (AP) - Five night As the Voter, Education Com ly television telathon shows are mittee meeting began, with 1< set for prime-time evening of its 19 delegates present pmetime evenin CIRTIflCATI OP FICTITIOUS NAM« OP PARTNERSHIP NAMI Graybill said, "We'll meet ,i«H«se Is Hareby Given that the unoer. -- just •— ahead of. the June indar- hours sorted persons have formed a partnership public VOte the state's pro- Whether its official or unoff for .thy/transaction of business at 301 J^"j _.„ Notary Public for 1t\a Stata of Montana, residing at Crest Fails My cammtoton axplret 8/19/73. Those points, and others,tion. And it's a,staged Canada Oil Exploration Either* the C Given Spur CALGARY, Alta. (AP) - An incentive discovery allowable and an increase in the min imum production allowance -HELENA^fAP) A-J tive Council subcommitl tatively decided -Friday ommend two alternative present FcundationHF method of funding were granted Friday by the Al schools. berta Energy Resources Con One alternative woul servation Board to help spur the effect of shifting the cial, we don't know." new constitution titti — pro Sootti. In ft» dty of Great Palls, County exploration and development ty tax burden from the orctacatto. State of Montana, under the viding no legal barrier is He announced that printing is for crude oil. fictitiou name off BOOK B fictitious CITYj that Mm district to the county. true names and homo addresses of al erected by th^ Montana Su to begin Saturday in Billings of the partners are: DALE A. DIVISH, 1602 The board's decision was in The other alternative, 385,000 tabloid-size copies of the Wh- Avenue South, Great Palls, Montana; preme Court. partial response to an appli- ered necessary if the pi MUCH A. SEMANtCK/ 3» Belt) Drive, Great Falls, Montana; and that the •Details of the panel-type proposed constitution, complete catioBwby the Independent Pet constitution is approved undersigned are the only persona or with explanations of the partners .haytno. any Interest whatsoever shows were given. Friday to the roleum Association of Canada voters June 6, would In saw bmrnes* . Voter Education Committee by changes from the present 1889 for the provision of a discovery DALE A, DIVISH for a statewide-property document. Constitutional Convention Presi allowable. STATE OP MONTANA) The suggestion for ; Conty of Cascade) ss. At first, he said, it was dent Leo Graybill Jr., D-Great On this a, day or^March; h, xm, 1W2, before thought the copies would cost IPAC asked that oil pools dis the tax burden to the Falls. me, the underelohed, Notary Puailc for the State of Montana Monta personally «pp»ar«l_ »l DALE A.-DIVISH ADIVI Iknown to me tho whos* mint h s«b. b I TraS^^ In- that hia»cutad tnasome. IN,WITNESS,'WHEREOF, I have tier*. unto set my hand end affixed my official Mtnttwday and year In this certificate SSSS the counties 13 cents each to mail .to_ all registered voters. However, arrangements were made with the Post Office to be made possible by buying for get them under a bulk rate, so He said the shows, — on the Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday janti Sunday nights preceding_the election - will about $7,000 the TV movies scheduled for those nights. Each show will last two hours and_be_aired_on_elght stations at varying times between 6 counties now will pay only 5 cents each — a saving state wide of $28,800. Committee members general ly-agreed-that-the moet-often- asked question has to do with how to obtain copies of the pro Graybill said present plans posed constitution. call for five or six delegates to Other" frequent questipjis_njii XftfM a panal to leply py tu delegates concern the twopan. and 10 pan. covered since May 1, 1969, be would, in turn, redu granted a discovery allowable equaities in the present ranging from 30 barrels a day 'or wells of less than 3,000 feet to 190 barrels a day for wells letween 11,501 and 12,000 feet. The board allowed 28 barrels day for the shallow wells, and KAUSPELL-HALVO increased to 40 barrels a day Mrs. Mary Rawding, 89, i the allowable for the deeper KalispeU. Services will be ►nes. Johnsorrehapel-Saturday-. It increased the minimum al- p.m., burial JlKithelConra owance in its crude oil prora- morial Cemetery. Born at ion-plan by 50 per cent for wood. S.D.. sKb moved tc ihaHow wells, and decreased to spell about .50 jyears., State Dea a' it i:L' married Phil Ramiimr out do much VotoYeiV1 nlVHf 9Dd WHW "Such a diabolical! thought not «ajy toask update tfe< one goodv odv intentions itti t the to th hadn't entered ray head," Graykill * i_ j» ^^ probtWy going to conw away bill commented.(wrylyi). •■ ojediv^ip^seo^ d(wrylyi). th wtm feeling fli that h those Another objectivity problem is particularly because t_ with the the word 'update' 6S£ctMrp can be deUgatet are a doggone human POMl by the present const!- 'from a group of people prime-time telethon believe In whattbjy*ytipat to y the primetime id the times and in 'much want their labors to be aS bunch of people and I don't «hows scheduled far gether. (The final vot#-j(9r. the fa just jt before bf Sing. He suggested .proved by the people and^rho know what their constitution is the June 6 ratificatknelectton. proposed, cowtitutkn wit und 'revise1 Instead. hire a commercial advertising all about but fay George I'm Delegates are tolanswer .ques animous, although K) Mu»iu gonna vote for it tions from viewers and it w«s did not vote.) «t began, No one could reasonably ac suggested that other education' Hie delegates are finding out t constitution was cuse the committee of deliber be used to field the phone calls what every newspapennaa 9 Most of it came The lS-minute film being pro* ately trying for a Mil effect, and frame the questions. Just knows — that objectivity era' be isututions of Call- duced by Sage Advertising Co. is though, and it was apparent how many of the proposed con a troublesome' thing, Antf when Colorado." Schiltz a case in point from a comment by Dorothy stitution's warts will be brought afl is aald and done, objectivity : the second line be Because of the nature of a Eck of Bowman that the dele out in such an arrangements re Is probably — like beauty ~ s, although corn- written document of 12,000 gates consider it a pretty objso- mains to be seen. However, largely in the eye of the be it somehow seems words, the film, previewed by Lve movie. If the court refuses Graybill did say that if the Su holder, anyway. anything based on the committee Friday, is more a to let the committee spend its preme Court "says wi have to of California and documentary of the. convention Katie Payne of Mtaoula illus voter education money, said be fairer than we are, we can t be too good. trated the problem when she than of the proposed constltu- Mrs. Eck, the delegates could have non-delegates on the pro laid, "I'm being objective when is, and -others, tion. And it's a staged rather j new rtthft burning qu Birtthft question pay for the Sage Advertising gram with us." da Oil or State Property Levy iration iAlta. (AP) — An covery allowable ase in the min- say, 'Vote Yes'." HELENA (AP) —A Legiala tive Council subcommittee ten tatively decided Friday to rec ommend two alternatives to the present Foundation Program method . of funding publii for SdiooT dation Program because differ gram scheduled to an average the most. ences in wealth are less at the of the total expenditures for fis Tabled was a suggestion that county level than at the district cal 1971-72. school districts be consolidated for administrative purposes. level. Discussion "at the daylong iction allowance would be funding of 90 per cent, No decision was made to a meeting of the eight-member Friday by the Al- schools. \ instead of 80, of. the maximum suggestion for a single state subcommittee headed by Rep Resources ConFoundation Program budgets wide school district, with subOne alternative would haw J. Q. "Boots" Asbjornson, Rird to help spur the effect of shifting the proper that can be adopted by districts districts for administrative pur ind development ty tax burden from the school Winlfred, indicated statewide without a vote of the people. poses. tax would be in line with recent district to the county. Dropped by the committee Details of the alternatives se court ruling on school taxes. '■ decision was in The other alternative, consid was a plan to remove net-pro lected for possible recommen Thought to be close to ase to an appli- ered necessary if. the proposed ceed valuations from each dation to the legislature in 1973 presently accepted levels is the Independent Pet- constitution is approved by the school district and tax the pro are«to be worked out by Mika iation of Canada voters June 6, Would provide plan for shifting the burden to ceeds from minerals, coal and Meloy, the council attorney, for the county from the district. ion of a discovery for a statewide property tax. oil at the state level The mon discusson at the subcom The suggestion for shifting This would be dene by In ey would then be redistributed, mittee's next meeting on May that oil pools dis- the tax burden to the county creasing the Foundation Pro with poor districts benefitting .9. May 1, 1969, be would, to turn, reduce m- scovery allowable equaities in the present Foun 30 barrels a day ss-than 3,000 feet > a day for wells . and 12,000 feet, lllowed 28 barrels shallow wells, and State Deaths Meat Price Linked to Organized Crime .. j'w.y- ""hod8e-podge" of beef prices, KALISPELL - HALVORSON, Melcher, er, DMont., called Friday especially the sharp escalation eastern cities as compared to ..calledFriday f 40 barrels a day Mrs. Mary Rawddng, 89, died in or a federal probe of possible of retail cut charges as the beef Midwest cities cannot be ac L-for the deeper Kalispell. Services will be in the rganized crime influence on moves from the Midwest to the counted for by freight, labor or Johnswr.ehapel-SaturdayaHtSa ib tore populous eastern mar_ distribution-costs, there have to The congressman, in a Wash' ets. the minimum al- p.m., burial in the Conrad Me :— vedTand news release, release, sai said He has sent letters to the Jus g, D.C. news crude oil prora- morial Cemetery. Born at Dead- ington, the Manhattan grand jury intok th ti ft wood. S.D.t she nwved to Kalihe took the action after receiv •w pur Witt lOr tice Department at th General vestigation now underway inand decreased to spell aoout so years ago.^BBe Accounting Office asking for an the allowable for married Phil Rawdmg who died 1ft« Tn iflSfi she* inarriaA Easy Scan and Print fireman for 82;yeart, day in t ioc^l Mcnday-at-2 Son* chapel i Charlea M. Vogt Burial will be In Cemetery; After retiring froz Department in worked for the Mont Co. and also for Ri< chine Shop. He was of Eagles Lodge Lodge No. 84 of ti order, Scottish Rlti Mrs. Halt] Satisfacto After Cra, -Great--FaJIs-» satisfactory cond Deaconess Hospital Sixteenth Avenue. Harriet W. Haldor after the car wni( driving collided v driven by Robert ; 14th Ave. S. Ray v police for making . Constitution to Get Widespread Publicity Have you seen the pro-., posed new Constitution? If you haven't, you can' see it at the Public Library. Or, you can ask one of the local Constitutional Con vention delegates for one of the advance copies. Or, you can read about it and listen to speeches about it and wait until early May when you receive a copy in the mail. The proposed document is now at the printers in Bil lings. After it is printed, it -will-be-sent-to-the~SeCTe- tary of State's office, from where it will be distributed to the offices of county clerks and recorders, who will mail a copy to every registered, voter. According to Mrs. R. D. (Margaret) Warden, a member of the-convention's Public Information Commit tee, now called the Voter Education Committee, a tabloid publication includ ing the Constitution and ex planations of the new areas will be mailed. -who—have—read Gi-eeii Thumbers JVIove For Summer Projects Local Green Thumb workers, This past year they have retired farmers supplementing worked in national park areas their incomes with employment on soil erosion projects/ and on community improvement cleaning out rivei; beds, parks projects, have been transferred and roadsides. to suinmerjwOTR-areas in Belt, Mraarch,_Neihartl__and Sun •V • ' , • the existing Montana Con stitution will be surprised to see the new one," she said, "because it's really very readable and easy to fol low." On May 21 every daily newspaper in the state will carry a tabloid, with a copy of the Constitution and a copy of the Warden said. baUot, Mrs. "The newspaper publica tion also will carry an ex planation of the ballot, a left turn. w Because of recent concern over spending of . state money on public informa tion, Mrs. Warden also pointed out that delegates are available to speak local ly without charge and, in fact, pay their own expen ses for speaking engage ments, such as traveling ex penses. A passenger In Mondik, 131 High treated and The collision inv< driven by Mark W 14th Ave. SW, and i •by Eugene A. Lobde Ave. S. Police cited ing to yield right-of- resume of each article and - some—of-_ the—most-asked, questions about the docu ment," she continued. The publication is being sponsored by Montana State University, BozemanTunder;~ a Title I grant of the High er Education Act of 1965, Mrs. Warden pointed out. In charge of the publica tion are professors Pierce Mullen and Richard Roeder, who was a delegate. Rceder is writing the text to accom pany the Constitution, Mrs Warden said. n Deaconess Friday following a two-ca Thirteenth Avenue Fifth Street. When You Think e SEA FO Donald-William Avery. St., Shrine JTempie and.Church p7(4Ul«h«, N.t tamer city the Incarnation, Episcopal. COME JOIN THE FUN "A BOY CHARLIE Avery was. bom in Terre Haute, Irid., Feb. l, 1895, and came to a ranch at Carter with Monday at 2 p.m. at Croxfcrd his parents in 1900. He moved & Sou chapel with He?. to Great Falls in 1017. Charles VL Vogt officiating. Survivors are the wiapw Burial will be in Highland Anna* son, Donald W. Jr. and flitter, Mm. Edna Prideaux, all ^eroetiry:-■—--of Great Falls, nieces and nep After retiring from the City Fire Department to 1060, Avery worked for the Montana Power Co. and also for Riverside Ma chine Shop. He was a member of Eagles Lodge, Cascade Lodge No. 34 of the Masonic order, Scottish Rite, Baghdad SPECIAL MATINEES SKoopr is TODAY HERE TOO, & AHD ALL THE REST SUNDAY ONLY! OF THE PEANUTS DOORS OPEN 12:30 COJWLfTf SHOWS AT MX) S 3:15! GANG. UNDER 12 75t A four-year-old Shetland pony McReynoIds Eleganft Empress Wilkinson of Great Falls, ha -TOfiGHf- won six titles In recent Area VIII competition. X AMflT COMfof The awards indude first [satisfactory condition at model-marer senior champion Deaconess Hospital following a and girls, jbe activity jnunity service program, er youngsters launching two-car collision Thursday after serve grand champion mare noon at First Street South and The pony_competed.._against lixleenth Avenue. Harriet W. Haidoraon. 1713 1st after me car whid of Area VIII representatives from Montana, Washington, Oregon Mgt^i Tftah aril \\n\j Robert Louis Stevenson | _™' ADUEAITURE J —*•"<-• *a«c puiues ior snow know - and a FISTFUIiSf 44's shows it EXACTLY at H was - NO punches pulled. ghcejor makmg an improper E,egant Emp^ J^ Because of recent concern spending "G" RATED FILMS ABOUT! The Wilkinsons, Wilkinson Lane, raise ponies for show and I4th Aye. S. Ray was^dted by sale at Sunset Acres Farm driving collided with „ ^ driven Robert „. J. nay, Ray, lout 1819 —~,. by v/ ahikui, Publicity over ONP flF TUC oerTifcl T amateur mare, child's roadster, second place aged mare and re' state money on public informa tion, Mrs. Warden also pointed out that delegates are available to speak local ly without charge and, in fact, pay their own expen ses for speaking engage ments, such as traveling ex A FI A passenger in a taxi, mtecSBT^ Moncok, 131 High Street, was can ShefflSjrtlS treated and released at The pony has hadiohly Deacpness Friday m o r n i n g ond-place ribbW ™ ^t\KJ!mH!USouth *"* anajin at\0t- anexhibttion tat lw W model* - ALSO - "SCREENTEST The collision mvolved a car ?Lue? by Mark w- HaU> 10" 14th Ave. SW, and a cab driven by Eugene A. Lob-dell,: 402%-2n BAR sHownV 1:00 & 3=10 - 7:00 g 9:1Q{ penses. , OF THE YEAR' FOR-HER ROtB JN - - ALSO - STARRING OQNM0 SUTHtRUHD. VONNIE, NoWManaser -ACADEMY AWARD INCLUDING J^ MANAGEMENT... OPEN NIGHTLY OPfN £ 30 - '4W AT 7M j 9A5 - "dim1 *, AP Capitol Writer vate citizens when they ad veniioh, said his "function must March 24 and therefore afternoon .*Hne> dayjwo Tueajourned Court can- no HEBSN3TWtTJbhh Han' ritufeul Convention a3 der^was assigned by the the committee .---—„ money after it ■■--, adjourned. funds. longer sp " Another pcTnF of "contention says the delegates took an oath be purely educational-there must be no -promotional work of no-hosf luncheon and a i cocktail hour. any kind/'. The1 group rejected a propos ~ r: ' there-were no objectl al that Hanson report on any the idea, so GraybUL a "It's a challenge of our right to support the constitution and delegates" who aren't supporting would work out the ctetaiJ shouldn't be put -"selling" in the field. Aa one of the to spend the-money we saved other one. \ Before ^e daylong . three convention employe* still for voter.education," said Hel- Loendorf and the half-dozen Contention President Leo mittee meeting a4Journe> rraybill Jr. proposed t semi- next FYiday, more thoui ™ *\^-*« ofirs are anat kwyer Jerome T. Leon- other lawyers on the committee • one of the committee's 19 plan to spend much of the nar be held In Helena for legia- the pending litigation w< ^ars; and state officials. pressed. JMba-MeGutatt.and.iU Brown Jr.-Hanson was present aa the committee^ left it to his dis cretion to give talks as he trav nbejs.- weekend drafting-a-briefoir be He said the Lambert legisla half of the defendant committee members. els the state prior to the June 6 vote. "Let -them tell -us- what's -Mentioned- was -the-^a wrong, or what they like about Montana's 1889 conventi. it," nfe went on. "It's high time we let these guys participate." His idea is for talk and ques tion sessions both morning and two committees operatin it adjourned sine die — • setting a date for anothei ing. Helena Meeting to Consider B.nlding Plant State Source of Pest-Control Chemical Toxicants Dries I possibly build its only manu facturing plant for chemicaj loxicants used—to- sources continue to dry up lands' order on the non-use1 Judge pointed out a recent toxicants on federal .presidential order said it is the Bureau of Sports Fisheries inipant and cause widespre Pocalcllo, Idaho has now dried j truction of wheat crops. -i—£?V" Tom Jud8e. fnade the announcemenTTTcTe' Friday. -He !«overnmaenrs policy to forbid j The meeLing, Judge is a candidate for governor. .This will be one of the Judge said the meeting will be alternatives discussed in Helena in thee Governors Governor's Conference I _ApriL2l_durJng a^session.called -Room_in_ihe state capitol in Because of this order, Mon The complaints say that withtana's supply,...which has-been, to ponder the recently issued Helena at 10 a.m. out_the_ toxicants,_gQphers_and coming from the Federal other-rodents will become ram ,nouncement^.said, will thlppossfbiltty of estaBir commercial producer ii tana that would be licer the State Departmer Agriculture_ihus_avQidi interstate commerce pro! Alberta Beefs U] Pollution Contr« EDMONTON, Alta. (A! bill to establish strongc trols over air pollution < trcduced Friday in the . Legislature. TJie clean air amei acts would give Envir> o prescribe maximun missible levels of an< aminant and establish n or determining air polli Great Falls Lodgo A. A-RfcOL SpecL _ ^ have a., td stale funds;" 11 -has power.to the Idearsb " ehitrwpp ! Pbortitiitioii. Pid President Before federal funds. out ^tiraybiil ^said he believes the: Leo mitteee meeting ,dSf 3 "one di our best argument" is ™, next Friday th . Mini* ,... •o™^ -M-—— i next Friday, morethoughUTon the fact that by adopting a budget and a certain resolution fate officials. the convention Actually spent n-tdt-ttt- what's Mentioned- waa .WWJt. inai *1 .^"cation funds prior to adthat hat they, like about ■ Montana1* 1839 convention had ournmenT. ^:""!!U»igh time wo committees operating after The committee now simply guys participate." It adjourned sine die — without in Helena for led*, Plumbing and H«dting Electrical ^C*?E^LeCTRlc" ras ministerial duties to per form in connection with the i—:„ _ _ fertilizer NACHURS UQUID FF.HTIIIZFR Organic- will nQ| " Filing Time Toxicants Dries Up Is Monday F Harriet Hi ^L!^:^ !"*"- -« widespread Spread do, dc ^ laho has now dried truction of wheat crops i HELENA fAP) _ i s of the state have- uun p_La ijLt s. — ton, Columbus and aints aay that with th The meeung. Jl]dge, ^5^^sjof campaigning in ■ WILL^APPLV ROt6-TlLLiNG~ Cjaryio MTko — 76HQJ9 ROTTED MANURE "flS^YARO _qtotiU^452 Houie Moving ZION SUI* ROTO-TILLING—GOOD ^REASONABLE RATe^ T" ROTO-TJIL/NG _ Fi-«njcyo«lle lnCOnie wcsl- Sewer—Water ^•mlana Friday, s-.-iid sh,.. T«ks >RfpARrD — rw^.uu.vjr u, caiaoiisnmg a:WMI n'^MoiJda^ior^theJLtenio-:~- 'll'^-*ii-?»4 »><?, \ commercial producer in Moih<™Uc nomination for the wi>si- — Londicaptno lana that would be lirPn«H h,, cm district Congressional seal. Expert Landscape" Service we State Department of "In talking with hundreds of Pow'r r*kin°' lrimmlnn '*" —■■-Agnculture_dua_.tvoiding the people_in_western Montana I interstate commerce problem. have found a strong under current of discontent with the -.—vh»viu Alberta Beefs Up Pollution Controls T1JLU UJti way things are," Miss Miller said. "People are expressing ^satisfacUon with government ._ I trols over air pollution was in- implications for the coming' traduced Friday in.the Alberta elections." In the past two weeks Miss Legislature. The clean air amendment Miller has addressed more than 24 meetings in five western counties. • • to prescribe maximum per -She-said-she "will-campaign missible levels of any con- into the northern section of the state next week. Miss Miller i ne CLASSIFIED ANNOUNCEMENTS PHONE 761-6666 FOR INSERTION IN Y OR SUNDAY SU DAILY TRIBUNE OFrlCE HOURS: 8:00 A.M. TO i P M. MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY Public Notices —Advertising— _ . sT.BfieirtL.a>r*iervrefrfever. whit RATES FIGURE 5 WORDS TO LINE ' LOST~~ CASH CHARGE I - tow 'o 29 —sntion GreotFaUiLbdg«#11& '—" Times lo 6 $ .33 $ iri" .40 .44 Senior Citizens You and your friends are cor- dially invited to attend the for V A.F.&A.M. Special and mal opening of the LEWIS- Coliran Inch Rale Displayed: (Per Agsla Line) i ri»y c_U. *««w»u '4OUI1, a luimer Mou -stiidenl cent <* the cost^ottlirfirst ma getting the pdwer V^BtoMAN -EntfneeVs PPUed for a Patent-for hi "The cpnstrucfecost perlkio- rendpus problem." TJie^. -^EntfneeVs at has aPPUed >MpnSHa'State ate University are fe"?1-" fe"?1-"We ne«l about $200. watt^wbuld;be about $l,200t com- neerk believeithe most I feasible mmceixthat an invention by I000 000 tobuiId tobiId pared with about $50b per KW way 'to draw out power would be lac* natural fuePresbur^ to have the; r generator feed tot hydroelectric^generation and pow<ir "We certainly don't i through- the rails. »50 per kilowati for a convenas a cure-all for the Storage of the generated elecJ isteam .generation plant Iriciiy would be another prob- problems *f the World, could_help,V Powe said. «siwTBre5iaioroii. TBre5iai-ii —'"Ons isossibility; the engU Another problem, Bishop said , say, would be to use the " The amounFof energ electricity to pump water to a able from.harnessing Mi tag with Ills idea about 1% fift. "We-can make,the_cars go wind "is impossible to ago "w^er^pretty skeptical?" Istruct an oral track with a cTr- round and round the track, but reservoir.. The -pumped^water hendr-Powe-said.could then run downhill, gener said Dr. E|ig$ne; Bishop, chair-!cumference .<* about 10 miles. [eleoxdogists at MS ating power through turbines man of thtf'debartmAnf I The cars would carry airfoils Is extracting the electrical ener- "At first we thought. boy!1" Powe. 1. agreed Prof. wher) energy was needed. "Or," Powe said, "the water could be used for irrigation." u—1 Uke aircraft wings Ralph "First we looked at using1 a sail "He brought us some draw ings of a wind machine and asked us if we thought ft was technicalljkspund. After we look but we decided it was not feasi ble to construct anything that large for a land-based opera tion," Powe said. Each kilowatt There are some natural loca tions for wind generators, the engineers say, including the gusty Livingston area. • of generating capacity awill re ed at It, wa^found his proposal quire about 25 square feet of saiLarea. After racing down the lo be feasiWd?' Powe said. . track one way, the airfoil could 'We don't need a wind veloci l.v of 40 or 50 miles per hour. , We'd only need a wind speed of ; about 10 miles per hour ior this Basically, Davison's plan was be shifted on each car for the ..to tap the wind of northcentral rclurn trip. Powe admits the ;; Montana-fn huge sails attached project is "marginal",from >in - 2?" I to work," Bishop said. ' Even a slight increase in the *o cars -•.« running iumunS on uij tracks. ucicks. The me economic viewpoint. Bui. Bui once a economic viewpoint. wind velocity over 10 m.p.h. would mean a tremendous in crease in (he power available. cars would "carrX generators |(»iprototype is conslruclcd later corojrt^nc^enai^IIfcTo^^ tncal energy. isbuctod for -^i id_ be con li^ The engineers believtTtnat Yo To Appear Before Supreme Court W^fegates Prepare for Con Con Suit -._o_.^ ^ "»= icgajjy em-neiena. The /•nrtuonfinn)n _:_i_i . »f ,, „_.. ™,. ^H 1C '^^S. His Uti- !Milp.<5 CUv~ '"••' .■' "cic- uons '■ in otner states were '--,-. i sf>f%l:C if\ AlfAoin.^ i.K _ mm _ .seeks to overturn the ruling and' jmay hinge on whether the con vention has adjourned all busi I Republican Addresses Stoekgrowers ^Candidate Opposes New Wilderness ,ness. | The present activities of the ! Voter Education Committee led ;lo court questions-about the ad- Wbiiie Caiiito] Rorpnn ,™u««_ _■ » -..'... ; r.tribiiiie piireaa written so they do not hinder SHERIDAN - GOP guber- production, or increase con stubble mulch tillage, deferred i Loent*orf said the brief would grazing and wildlife habitat, e subml«ed Monday. • natorial candidate Ed Smith sumer costs, of materials pro development. develoDnipnf ; Saturday night criticized advd- duced from the state's natural The three-term legislator * cates of new new wilderness areas. resources," he said. from Dagmar has just comSmith fftW tl Smith Pointed out that in I9fi2. nlefed a four whw»h tonl- him i.