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Edwardsville Intelligencer Saturday, July 15, 1967 ,
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   Billings Gazette (Newspaper) - July 15, 1967, Billings, Montana                                Cloudy Variable Saturday and Sunday with few storms in the vicinity during evening noun Highs Saturday and Sunday near mid Ms low Saturday night 56 More er vitals page 6 Final 73 Teaching Is Helping aide Miss Josefina Angel 24 of Sidney helped with the guage barrier in the summer pilot migant workers children at Sidney She was also nice to have around when a pair of scissors didn't seem to do what a young man wanted them to do in an art photos by Tutokey Montana Saturday July IS s Set For Western Days Parade Boots saddles and old ears i will get an extra dab of for Saturday's Western Parade which will start winding its way through Billings at 5 p.m i Yellowstone County Sheriff JRoy Stewart will be marshal of the parade on the highest stepping of the high-stepping horses in the Shrine Horse Patrol j By Friday noon there were 150 entries and more were Among the entries will be two marching bands four ing bands a large drill team 30 antique cars and 47 floats Included in the floats will be a goodwill entry from I bridge Alta Canada Following Stewart will be the Sheriff's Posse color guard the j Caledonian Pipe Band and the VIP's Pioneers of Eastern Montana will be honored guests in the parade Two stage coaches will j carry them on the parade The western parade will line up from east to west on 3rd Avenue North at 5 p.m j Saturday with Street as its starting line j It will march roll creak squeak and j pnt west on 3rd Avenue to j Division Street where it will tarn left and head south to First Avenue North It wiH turn left and go east on First Avenue until it reaches Street Awards for the parade be presented at the street dance on North Broadway between 2nd and 3rd Avenues at 8 p.m The Ben Northridge Memorial Trophy will go to the best entry I in the parade says parade chairman Eldon Piper will be in cash awards and 30 trophies for floats Float competition includes a junior division for Boy and Girl Scout Troops and 4-H lOc h M This Is No Boat Ramp There has been no traffic on U.S Highway 14 at this point east of Lovell Wyo since rising waters in Yellowtail Reservoir flooded the road several weeks ago Meanwhile Bureau of Reclamation is getting criticism at the other end of the reservoir below Yellowtail Dam because release of water there is flooding some acres near Hardin Until inflow is reduced sharply residents at both ends of the reservoir are likely to remain by Kenneth Anderson Millions in Planes Lost VC Rockets Blast Da Nang Air Base By Mike Feinsilber SAIGON UPI Communists firing about 50 from a mountainside caused heavy American casualties and destroyed or damaged scores of planes in an unprecedented attack on the sprawling Da Nang FOR 147 MIGRANT CHILDREN IN SIDNEY Pilot School Puts Fun Back Into Summer air base early Saturday The air base was forced to close down At least 12 servicemen were killed and 135 others 40 seriously Commission Favors Free Farm Markets By William H Blair C York WASHINGTON A tial commission I preliminary casualty Friday that agricultural 1 ties for the future be built around free markets rather By Sandy Blackner Gazette Staff Writer SIDNEY For more years than a migrant child can re- member summer has meant waiting in a hot car playing games between rows of sugar beets or staying home in the average weather-beaten shack But a new pilot program in Sidney has turned waiting into playing into painting and just sitting into singing for 147 children during live summer weeks There's six-year-old dina one of nine children in her family in the program They called her Little Mother as she shepherded her two- year-old sister and another small brother from one class to the next Shyly and the blonde Latin American gal in the ered dress told how she helped those two plus three more younger brothers and sisters get ready for the school bus after her parents left for the sugar beet fields each morning AT NIGHT tired youngsters fell asleep against her on the way home after a day of ming music arts and crafts stories and games And now she has a new one to Mother teachers at the school gave her a doll for helping all the little ones find where they were to go next There is Armando his large black eyes gleaming behind his glasses as he dis- played his Red Cross beginner swimming certificate Others with musical names like Angel Alfredo Luis selda and Donato contributed to art work that line the halls of the old Central Elementary School They depict a ship ers sheriffs and a snug house with smoking chimney and cap- tion This is the kind of house I would like to live in TREATS ON final day of the tacos made by four of the er girls The project was introduced this summer in Sidney Hardin and Bigfork with a mentary and Secondary tion Act Index Vitals Weather Obits Markets Landers Astrology Comics 12 II 14 tt In Sidney it's an attempt to Only hardcore subject on the disorganization compounded by having only 41 in the but enthusiasm in language is even more a lem two aides Mrs Dale Graff and Jiss Josefina Angel chatted with children and explained how they read stories Continued on Page 3 Col 4 teachers and children made up Daniel Sidney program super- Isaid A military spokesman in Saigon said 35 Marines were injured in the rocket attack The dead included five firemen who died fighting blazes caused by exploding bombs and fuel Damage estimates were ally put at million as three air force transports six ot eight Phantom jet fighters two Marine Crusaders and a number of helicopters went up in flames i Air Force Col Robert Maloy commander of the cal Fighter Wing said the i whole base is just covered with shrapnel He said every i plane on the base has one kind of hole or another in it Three partially occupied Air Force barracks were destroyed by fice Two of them took a direct hit and one burned to the ground in the resulting fire Continued on Page 5 than government programs However a majority of the national food and ber commission called for con- of federal farm grams until the problem of ex- cess capacity in farming is and farmers are able to earn incomes from the ket that are comparable to non- farm incomes i The commission split 16 to 13 on the need for continuing federal aid to agriculture but both sides agreed that freely functioning markets were the best mechanism to guide the needed changes in agricultural production and resource use The minority urged that programs including price supports and production controls should be phased out as soon as possible but called ed out of commercial ture This help would be in the form of direct payments to ease the transition The majority call for price supports to be set modestly be- low a moving average of world market prices Coupled with this would be direct payments to enable efficient commercial farmers to receive parity of in- comes with nonform workers when returns from the market do not provide such incomes Bulletin WOLF Wyoming man was killed in a hicle accident about day night about two and one- half miles west of Wolf Point on U.S Highway 2 The Highway Patrol said the truck involved went off the right side of the hit an approach came back on the roadway and rolled over crushing the driver The name of the man is be- for some protection to small j ing withheld pending farmers who are being cation of next to Mideast War Rages Again Press planes made four attacks and and west banks Israel claimed By The Associated antiaircraft fire three Egyptian tanks were Egypt and Israel battled with out and reported five and artillery Friday Israeli soldiers killed and more the Suez Canal and Israel jets w m killed j than 20 wounded j The United Nations an- punishment as big guns eight its cease-fire observers roared all morning and into the i Operating at the canal afternoon from the canal's Continued 3 Col 3 I Sunday in an attempt to stop the j fighting that has flared cally i An Israeli communique i Israel's jets hammered artillery positions in the jarea of Suez City at the south end of the waterway to j stop harassing fire and permit army to remove the deadi i and wounded Set to Strike i Anaconda at Midnight Cairo radio said the Israeli BUTTE AP More than Anaconda Co employes in four Montana cities were Nn Mistresses uled to go on strike at midnight Sorry No Mistresses ftw a negotiating Was It The success of any tude of the people definitely mirrored two-year-old Delia program is reflected in the it is aimed at And success is in the snapping black eyes of Perez youngest child in the Sidney pilot summer program for as she gets some help from an older sister in the art of handling a crayon One sweet-looking lady postmaster attending the annual convention of the Montana branch of the tional League of ters in Great Falls has re- why there are no postmistresses I once queried the as to why we are called lady she said The answer came back quickly M far as toe post office ment Is concerned Uncle Sim will tolerate no tresses turned down the proposed three-year con- tract Friday morning Anaconda Company employes Sat plants in Butte Anaconda i Great Falls and East Helena instructed by union I ers not to report for work after Refining Company plant in East Helena was expected to be shut down at the end of the night shift Friday according to ley Lane of East Helena ASR spokesman Negotiations between ASR and unions were conducted in ver The Anaconda Company's con- tract said proposal a included an spokesman board increase totaling cents the first year nine cents Saturday Negotiations between the Continued on Page 3 Col pany and the striking were scheduled to resume July 28 under an agreement asked I of both parties by Carl J Great Falls federal labor mediator I The American Smelting and 0 w The really kappy Is the one who cai the scenery when fee has te take y   

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