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Albert Lea Sunday Tribune Sunday, November 16, 1952,
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Appleton Post Crescent Sunday, February 10, 1963 ,
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Colorado Springs Gazette Sunday, February 10, 1963 ,
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Coshocton Tribune Sunday, February 10, 1963 ,
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Joplin Globe Sunday, February 10, 1963 ,
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Salt Lake Tribune Sunday, February 10, 1963 ,
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Albert Lea Sunday Tribune

   Sunday Tribune, The (Newspaper) - February 10, 1963, Albert Lea, Minnesota                                THE SUNDAY TRIBUNE SNOW VOLUME NUMBER 34 Full oil Dolly and ALBERT LEA MINNESOTA SUNDAY FEBRUARY 10 1963 TWENTY TWO 15 CENTS TO BE RAZED This old landmark the water tower referred to in some circles as the tallest light pole and the prairie lighthouse will be razed beginning Monday Work crews from the Twin Cities are scheduled to bring in heavy equipment Monday with the actual razing to be done as soon as the preliminary work is completed Tribune Photo 20 State Banking Groups Indicted by Federal Jury New Snow Blankets Albert Lea City and State Crews Busy With Plows Sand Trucks The Albert Lea area is again blanketed with a new three-inch fall of snow Highways in a circle about the city are and slippery and as a result driving is In the city itself cars and trucks are having their troubles especially on hills City street crews were out early Saturday morning with plows and to scrape down the snow and then add a covering of salt and sand to prevent skidding The weather report for today calls for considerable cloudiness land colder with occasional snow flurries Arctic Air Returns Arctic cold eased somewhat in the northeast today after a second subzero night rubbed in winter's coldest for the populous north Atlantic seaboard Boston's mercury reached 3 be- low zero early Saturday coldest reading of the winter New York City which had a winter low of -2 Friday bottomed out at 11 above today before getting upward into the teens In the mountains and near Canada's border rigorous marks recurred -23 below at Pellston Mich -22 at Alpena Mich and -10 at Burlington Vt and land Maine Mild In Far West Unusually mild temperatures in the Far West provided a contrast to the Northeast with low marks in the 50s along the California coast But it stormed on the West Coast with high surf pounding beach communities heavily The intense storm off the southern California coast brought welcome rain to the shore areas dry from chronic precipitation shortage Gov Edmund G Brown declared jsome Orange County shore areas Goat Gets Dog's Goat Owner Pays Damages HASTINGS Minn case of Billy a ing goat and Queenie a dog with a nervous stomach has been settled court The suit was filed in Dakota County District Court by Travis Sparkman He claimed a bor's goat upset the ment of his German shepherd Queenie According to Sparkman Queenie charged through the house when T G Sommer's roaming goat peeped through a window Queenie charged through the house knocking er furniture plants lamps and a television set Before the matter came to trial Sommers agreed to pay Rebel Bullets End Rule for Iraqi Premier BEIRUT Lebanon details of his reported death It firing squads have executed Iraq's was believed by some that he I overthrown Premier Abdel Kerim could have fled from his besieged and three of his top defense ministry and made good death beneath the feet of the pie Indicating that rebels may not yet have extended their supremacy everywhere tenants the Baghdad radio has his escape by boat on the Tigris announced River I er broadcasts urged people to re- The executions took place after I Another broadcast today said Port to recruiting centers and en- the capture of Kassem and his that the bodies of two of Kassem's list to defend the revolt against aides by army rebels who staged lieutenants had been found by I Kassem's supporters a lightning revolt Friday the diers in the of the Borders and airports remained broadcast said out ministry As soon as the an- sealed off from the rest of the Earlier broadcasts by the new read his statement other world and Iraqis were warned regime had said voices were heard shouting that that violators of a curfew would Kut I mart ham met his be snot Syria Iraq's northwest neighbor Closed its own borders and braced for possible trouble from the Nasser new regime The situation in Damascus where students had demonstrated against the government last month was described as tense Turkey Alerts Forces Turkey on the northeastern sem was destroyed but gave no the mad dictator has met Marshall and Mondale Top Legislature Action with a disaster area after four days correspondent called a quick news conference high wave damage In Syracuse where the MINNEAPOLIS relations government has begun a banks Friday night to deny the charges legal action Correspondent banks are those We seem to be the guinea temperature got down to -13 20 Minnesota banking and in smaller towns which rely on said J H Colman main power lines cial institutions marking the first big city banks to clear checks and man of the board of First Bank from coy some use of the Sherman Antitrust law make loans larger than the legal Stock Corp a big bank stock limits applied to the rural banks holding company Officials of Minneapolis banks Missile Base against banks Three indictments returned by a federal grand jury Friday named 18 banks a bank holding company and a clearing house in the criminal action Government attorneys said they will bring companion civil suits Monday asking courts to prohibit A the rate-fixing activities charged in the indictments AT- 4 The climaxed an in- WASHINGTON AP A that began in teman missile complex with Called Test Action homes and businesses went without electricity for an hour The cold front a gift from The bankers said the j eastern Canada concentrated ment's move is a test action England New York State determine if and to what extent I Pennsylvania and New Jersey It antitrust laws apply to banking spread with lesser intensity into Maximum penalty for each de- the west as far as the Mississippi fendant in the criminal actions Valley would be a fine Chief cers of each bank must appear for arraignment Monday U.S District Judge Edward J Flatow a torney n Department at- sota banks acted in concert to fix rates terms and conditions on fixed 30 days built at Grand Forks flle the in- i Indictment Charges Young of u charges j banks in Minneapolis St Paul and said formal an- fixing terms and the New Midwest Snow Temperatures in the Midwest Friday generally were in the teens with fresh snow falling in amounts of one to two inches over the Dakotas Minnesota Iowa and Northern Illinois But west of the Rockies it was springlike and balmy in the Southeast and Southwest A low center in the central Plains caused considerable iness through the northern Plains p and Southeast and through much By ADOLPH JOHNSON ST PAUL AP The best show in the Minnesota Senate this week came whenever anyone said appointments Almost anywhere else around the Capitol the names Marshall and Mondale sparked the liveliest action Gen James C Marshall state highway commissioner has been the center of controversy almost since the 1963 session opened Of late he's been carrying on a ning feud with Atty Gen Walter F Mondale Marshall brought things to a boil when he told the Senate nance Committee that Mondale's office is overstaffed and overpaid Mondale charged right back with an accusation that Marshall was making misstatements and that he ought to resign Committee Calls Mondale At week's end their private fuss got right into legislative activities when Mondale was directed to pear before a subcommittee of the house Appropriations Com- Mondale is a tives control all legislative com- Rep Richard Fitzsimons chairman of the appropriations committee referred in a letter to Mondale to about the effectiveness of Mondale's staff Fitzsimons said that makes it necessary for the committee to make a complete analysis of your staff and the relationship be- tween members of your staff and the state departments to which they are assigned Fitzsimons said the question to be considered involves whether de- should be served lawyers who are civil service em- rather than lawyers signed from the attorney general's office Rep John Tracy Anderson St 1 Paul a conservative and man of the appropriations on state departments said the state tax department had it could operate more with its own attorneys Sen Val Imm of Mankato man of the Senate Finance Com- before which Marshall voiced some of his of- Mondale an opportunity to appear before the subcommittee Blame Premier 2 Dief Aides Resign Soviet Troops In Cuba Only Instructors for tomer services including checking accounts and Defense Department sources It would be the second man missile complex in North Dakota which has another com- plex at Minot 200 miles to the west now under construction A The indictments list dates and CHICAGO AP Labor policy Minuteman installation is also i country iat the Abraham The third charges Duluth banks racking riant rate-fixing on services and j Labor Policy centered on the Rapid City MOSCOW AP Khrushchev told newspaper Burdick said Grand Forks base nate Roy Thomson today that chosen as the support base viet troops in Cuba are there only he 6th Minuteman Guided to instruct Cubans in advanced Missile WinS Squadron He added or the project is in Thomson said the Soviet pre- the 1964 budget and if approved mier told him there need be no WI start fall concern by the United States The amount of money and about a Soviet arms buildup in ber of missiles involved was not I known yet But Burdick said it where bank representatives are to have met and agreed on practices The plant of John Morrell Co in Memphis has not yet been de- the company's chief ex- grand jury said the meetings were said Joday held between January 1956 and February 1961 11 Of State's Largest The indicted banks include 11 of Minnesota's largest The president of the state's largest bank John Concluded on page 2 President W W McCallum said that employes of the firm's Beale Street branch will be moved ing the weekend to the Abraham plant purchased last week from Wilson Co These employes are members of the United house Workers of America Thomson met Khrushchev in the Kremlin for hours and told newsmen afterward that their discussions were most frank and ranged over many subjects Thomson said he asked how many Soviet troops are in Cuba and the premier replied he did not know the figure and would have to look it up Thomson said he asked if the Americans should be concerned about reports of a new Soviet arms buildup in Cuba He said Khrushchev Absolutely not Khrushchev indicated Thomson said that the German problem was the most crucial problem in the cold war and that with its settlement the cold war would largely end Forecast Partial clearing with snow ending north mostly cloudy with light snow south locally a little colder Cloudy and colder today tonight Broke Code of Hills When Moonshiners Open Fire On That Means War NEWPORT Tenn The revenue officer's a comm gonna tear yo still house down This refrain from the mountain ballad Darlin Corey might well have been written about Cocke County which Alcohol Tax Unit agents call the moonshine capital of thr world And this time the are coming with a vengeance The code of the hills has been broken Sheriff Kin Holt says he arily is not interested in raiding or cutting stills as he calls it but when moonshiners shoot at 1 revenue men that's another ter State and federal agents moved into the county's hill I miles east of masse this week after moonshiners opened up on two State Revenue Department agents with rifle fire Monday Since then 75 state and federal agents have broken up 40 stills and poured gallons of good corn mash out on the j ground The excitement stems from ri- fle f i r e at the ATU agents car Eight bullet holes were found in the vehicle Nobody was hurt but this broke e code of the hills which says revenuers and shiners don't shoot at each other ATU Chief William Watkins When we would apprehend a man at a still and ho ran we would never shoot at him If we could not run nim down then he got away Holt says making moonshine is something the community accepts Years ago everybody did it and they took their chances on getting caught Some whisky is sold locally the sheriff said but most goes into neighboring counties Moonshiners are wary about running it across into nearby North Carolina for fear of more trouble from federal agents he said Crackdowns are pretty less the sheriff intimated In a few months they spring up he said Friday a city newsman arrived to cover the raids and soon en- countered a moonshiner Had the agents destroyed all the stills in he asked I The moonshiner just laughed OTTAWA more inet ministers deserted Prime Minister John G Diefenbaker's caretaker government Saturday charging his defense policy gered Canada's security and harmed relations with the United States Trade Minister George Hees a key figure in Diefenbaker's con- party and Acting De- fense Pierre handed in their resignations in the dispute over Diefenbaker's failure to cept nuclear arms for Canada in its role as a partner in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and in North American aif defense This was the by U.S State Department of Diefenbaker's that brought the downfall of the Conservative minority government last Tuesday and forced an tion for April 8 Hees and Sevigny were the ond and third members of Cabinet to turn on the prime minister who is reported preparing a hard anti-American line for his campaign for tion Defense Minister Douglas ness quit last week saying ada should have nuclear heads for its missiles and planes based in Canada and under NATO in Europe Commenting Saturday ness said I'm not a bit prised if there are more tions Opposition leader Lester B Pearson of the Liberal party chief opponent in the election said the resignations con- firm deep divisions within the Cabinet which would appear to be a breakup of the The Conservative remains in power in a caretaker role until the elections In their letters of resignation Hees and Sevigny denounced any anti-American attitude in the or in the dispute over clear weapons 1 hey indicated they believed the United States was right in demands on ada to accept nuclear weapons 1 on state departments Imm said the committee also would hear those of a contrary opinion In another development five conservative representatives a resolution calling for ation of a legislative commission to study the personnel and money requirements of the attorney office I On another highway department front the subcommittee of the House Highway Committee named to study charges state highway patrolmen are under a traffic ticket quota system set first ings for next Thursday Marshall and other department officials Concluded on page 2 2 Collisions Kill 6 on i State Roads By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A pair of crashes day killed six persons in southern Minnesota and on the Wisconsin border at Hudson Three persons died in each of the two of them a mother and her 6 months old son from suburban St Paul The father and five children in the family were injured Those killed in the smashup on the Wisconsin side of the Inter- state 94 bridge over the Si Croix River at Hudson were Mrs Francis Weber 29 ville Her son Robin 6 months Mrs Richard Peeney 24 Claire Wis Dead in the accident on sota 19 three miles west of New Prague were Dr Bernard D Kaiser 34 Belle Plame physician Mrs Vernon Schauer 47 Ar- lington Gerald A Schauer 43 ton a brother-in-law of Mrs Schauer Authorities had incorrectly Gerald Schauer earlier as Mrs Vernon husband Francis Weber 42 was at Hudson m critical con- dition His injuries included leg fractures The couple's injured children were Elizabeth 13 as 7 Michael 8 Teresa 5 and Kathleen 3 Also injured was Feeney 30 whose condition was listed as der alerted its gendarmerie and air force units on the frontier Prime Minister Ismet Inonu was quoted in the Turkish press as my guess is Nasser has j a finger in this affair j The tenor of accounts in the Turkish press indicated the ers believed the revolt was fied The three executed besides were Col Gadel Abass El president of the Court Taha Sheikh Ahmed described as a notorious nist agent and a Lt Kanaan of the military police The bodies uncovered in the De- fense Ministry ruins were those of Col Wasfi Taher and Brig Abdel Kerim El Jedda the radio said Taher was Kassem's chief military aide and El Jedda was chief of the Defense Ministry guard Battle Rebels For Hours It was there that Kassem and his loyal troops held out for hours while the rebels strafed with planes and bombarded with tanks A communique said Kassem and his aides were arrested by the armed forces and a military court was set up to try them It passed on them the sentence that they die by firing squad The was carried out at EST Main threat to the new regime appeared to come from Iraq's well-organized and fanatic com- sometimes suppressed and sometimes tolerated by sem The junta ordered a crackdown on the Communists And through the night an order was repeatedly broadcast to the police and the National Guard to annihilate Communist agents If the Communists managed to their supporters onto the streets bloody rioting might lead to still another government over Name President and Cabinet The junta named a transitional president and cabinet but kept powers for itself Abdel Salam Mohammed Aref an outspoken supporter of dent Nasser oi the United Arab Republic will be president until the end of the transitional od said a communique broadcast by the Baghdad radio Aref was a of the bloody tion that had brought Kassem to power years ago but later was imprisoned by him for a reported assassination attempt Col Ahmed Hassan Bakr was named to head the cabinet as prime minister Bakr had been discharged from the army by Kassem for suspected tion in a revolt against him in 1959 The junta headed by Col Abdel Kerim Mustafa took for itself the powers of of the armed forces a position that was held by sem and normally would have gone to the new president The move suggested that Aret might be a figurehead SLIPPERY Two and a pickup truck find the street too pery in attempting to climb the hill on West Main Street The city street crews have been kept busy sanding the city streets Tribune Photos ABDEL KERIM KASSEM   

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