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Winona Daily News
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Winona Daily News

   Winona Daily News (Newspaper) - July 30, 1963, Winona, Minnesota                               Occasional Scattered r Temperature Same WINONA DAILY NEWS TOMORROW SUN SETS FULL MOON 5 108th of Publication JULY 30, 1963 TEN CENTS PER COPY SIXTEEN PAGES Killed in K New Wisconsin Tax Goes to Governor Reynolds Will Sign Measure By FRANK CREPEAU Wis. tfi A budget and tax lacked together to save Wisconsin from financial is on Us way to Gov. John W. Reynolds today after clearing the Legislature on i 50-39 sembly Assembly approval came day as 28 Democrats and 22 Re- publicans voted for the The Democratic governor has promised to sign the measure Into But he doesn't like it any better than do the lawmakers who sent it to Spawned by ed state government that was deadlocked for seven the calls for million in new taxes to finance a record state Midget for 1863-65. The measure also con- tains enough money to meet million slate Most lawmakers dislike some provisions of the proposal ad- by a special committee of eight legislators and the The measure does have It is the only that could pass both houses and receive the approval of the Democratic chief And it solves for two years financial Stoatt week the by a solid 24-8 The Assembly followed suit to ad- vance it to the governor's Assembly Democratic and Re- publican leaders used their in- fluence to keep the free of eight proposed All the suggested changes were de- in roll call voles or ruled out of Debate lasted only two hours the sole rough spot was an amendment offered by Albert which would have eliminated the bill's income tax filing Tadych called the fee an more regressive than a sales he Nikolay of the assistant Democratic moved rejection although he said personally find it very hard to The amendment was rejected 41-40. Before the final roll Robert Huber of West Allis described the as the only remaining to Wisconsin's financial He said both parties to swallow pretty to vote for Ihe Paul Alfonsi of the GOP Assembly said the represents an attempt resolve our problems by com- promise when every other effort has fact dilemma because of what happened in the last Alfonsi hope that as a result of this the Wisconsin voters in November of 1964 will decide to send a Democratic and a Democratic nor or a Republican Legislature and Republican governor down In setting slate spending for the biennium which began July 1 at the com- pares wilh a million budget For the 1961-63 Income tax increases and nev Bales and excise taxes are the ma jor ingredients of tha bill's rev enue By HARRY KELLY WASHINGTON Senators working on ways to settle the dispute say they are en- by a union official's an- that the brotherhoods have submitted a new proposal to the L. J. president of the Order of Railway Conductors and the Senate Com- merce Commutes the new was made Saturday in the re- opened bargaining He said no reply had come from New Armour Plant For Will Employ 315 Minn. Armour announced today jt will build a new pork slaughtering plant in Worthington with opera lions scheduled lo start by mi summer next The employing about 375 will be able to handle 300 hogs an officials is about 90 miles from Sioux where Armour closed a packing plant The new the firm will be a two-story building on a 40-acre tract in an industrial tion of the northeast edge of the Unions Submit New Plan to Railroads Ihe carriers and said he didn't be- lieve they had had time to pre- sent set Daniel p. president of the Association of American was at the hearing and when asked by a re- i; porter about Wagner's I. he have heard about a ing that amounts to The railroads and unions re- Labor Department gaining sessions Friday under prodding from legislators who ex- pressed fears that Congress might a dangerous pattern by step- ping into the OF Soviet Premier receives an Indian pipe of peace in Moscow from U. S. of Agriculture Orville winding up a tour of Soviet agricultural presented the two- foot long gift in a conference room next to Khrushchev's Kremlin Khrushchev said he didn't smoke but accepted it as a Man extreme behind is a Communist Party presidium Other man is a New Summit Talks Unlikely Sen. John 0. the Commerce Committee's ing has said he doesn't think two sides are too far apart to reach an agreement Secretary of Labor W. Willard has cautioned he sees no chance of a settlement ex- cept through To give Congress a chance to the railroads have postponed again until Aug. 29 the new work rules which will eliminate sands of jobs and which the unions have said will trigger a ide Representatives of the five op- unions continued their timony Monday in opposition to President Kennedy's dations for averting a strike by turning the dispute over to the Interstate Commerce The Senate Commerce tee stayed in session until almost 10 p.m. to hear the last union P. dent of the He told the committee long i the carriers know that a strike will not be tolerated in the road industry there will never be collective He said he will all forts to turn over the economic destiny of these men to a third party who has no understanding of the the and the difficulties which we face Spring Valley Man Dead in Crash at Sparta By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Spring truck driver was fatally injured late WASHINGTON expressed strong doubt today that Secretary of State Dean Rusk's forthcoming talks in cow will become a prelude to a summit They said Rusk will carry a Minneapolis Bank Robbed Of MINNEAPOLIS A local taxi driver played an unsuspecting lead role when a gunman robbed the Franklin National Bank of an estimated in a lone raid i- late Joseph G. the said he had no suspicion that the well-dressed passenger he waited for outside the bank had looted the place in the about five utes he was Tha raider asked to cash When William J. Ryan a vice president offered to help man pulled a ordered Mrs. Jane a to fill a brief case he carried with As she the holdup brandishing the told Mrs. Ashenbrenner and Mrs. Sharon a neighboring teller to it easy and don't attract He then zipped up the case after putting the gun back into it with the money and stepped back into the McCarthy said he had picked the man up at the bus had been ordered to drive to and But a block from the bank at Blaisdell and the ln senger had the driver saying he to cash a McCarthy said Ihe man unhurried when he came He left the taxi at Blaisdell and 28th eight blocks south of the robbery letter from President Kennedy lo Soviet Premier but it is expected lo be only a reply to the message Khrushchev sent lo Kennedy via Undersecretary of State W. Averell Khrushchev's high ing sources expressed his wilh the agreement to ban all nuclear tests except underground but did not offer any suggestions on further steps to ease East-West Kennedy's reply is expected to express similar feelings without attempting to break new Stale Department officials de- nied any thought is being given to a meeting Khrushchev and Prime Minister Harold Macmillan of Great Brit- That possibility was mentioned by a Lord British at Ihe test ban treaty talks in Officials here pointed to remark at a press con- ference July 17 that is no evidence that a summit is or U.S. officials don't believe Khrushchev himself a mit meeting WEATHER FEDERAL FORECAST WINONA AND cloudiness and little ature change through Wednesday wilh scattered showers and mostly afternoon and at Low tonight 62-68, high 80-90. LOCAL WEATHER Official observations for Ihe hours ending al 12 m. 87; 77: AIRPORT WEATHER Max. temp. 85 at 5 p.m. min. 67 at a.m. 73 at noon overcast at visibility 10 with light wind 5 from barometer and humidity 71 24 miles a gravel truck collided on a county road graveling 10 miles north of Killed was Henry 70 rural His death raised the Minnesota highway toll for the year to 386, or 51 more than a year Driver of the truck was John 58, Minn. Red Raiding Party Caught Behind Lines By ROBERT EUNSON Korea med U.S. Army patrols backed South Korean national ailed four heavily armed North Korean Communist infiltrators day in a hunt for Red raiders have slain three U.S. soldiers AMBUSHED FAMILY The family of Army Pvt. David A. 24, posed outside farm home after learning he had been killed in a Communist bush in From the Mrs. Joan 20, a his father and Mr. and Mrs. Erich brothers 22, 8, and 13, and another Mrs. Ralph 17. Dynamite Squads Attack City By PHIL DOPOULOS Yugoslavia Dynamite squads spelled the final doom today of what remained of 90 per cent of which was ripped be- yond repair by Friday's Rescue crews dug 10 more sons from the rubble before the blasting began Monday Trapped for more than 80 hours they were located by a tiny mi- inserted into the In case there were more the dynamite charges were in buildings where no one could be The government hurried to level this once bustling city of Fear of a typhus outbreak left no The government promised that capital of Yugoslav Ma rise for rebuilding or whether ors should begin life anew at an- other Dynamite blew apart cracked buildings checked first for signs of life with the so sensitive it can pick up the sound of a man The of dead stood near Hundreds more bodies were believed buried in acres of Two of the bodies recovered were presumed to be those of U.S. Air Force Sgt. Harold R. Stacy of and his man Other Americans known to have been in Skopje Under government 150- 000 residents had left by Monday Crews labored in an almost un- bearable stench of the dead and Monday when his vehicle collided with an army truck near Sparta Wis. He was Gerald 30, who was thrown from his semitrailer after it collided with the army vehicle which was attempting to turn into Camp Officers said Foster's semi skidded 200 feet and rolled 30 more after colliding wilh the truck driven by Bernard M 26 soldier stationed at the By ROGER LANE who was not n NEW YORK General live products and highs in A western Minnesota man also made million a al employment and personal in- was killed Monday when his car y m May and and a gravel truck collided on a and Sundays included Earnings Mark Set By General Motors and probably no other ness ever made it The No. 1 automaker and world's largest industrial tion set eight sales and earnings records in the second Company officials said the ex- quarter results re- fleeted continued high demand Profits soared to GM said Monday in. reporting to stockholders on this spring's un- precedented auto Earnings were higher at million in the last three months of But that included million from sale of GM's inter- est in Ethyl Corp. last Second quarter net Income came to a share of common The comparable sum in the fourth quarter of 1962 was after a deduction of 19 cents a meeting wilh share owing to the Ethyl Worldwide factory sales in the debate an enactment at BURIED ALIVE 80 HOURS Rescuers help pull a 13-year- old Yugoslavian girl from rums of building m which she was buried for 80 The girl was found beneath Ihe rubble by a French group that heard sounds from her by using an One of the French islai is in behind Two Yugoslav soldiers and a doctor aid in Ihe rescue of girl yesterday in Skopje that was hit by quake on July 26, The death toll as leveling of ruins GM's automotive and broken A heat wave and a water shortage compounded the atmosphere of The government predicted thai once a fleet of tractors bulldozers and earthmovers rollet into high the city would be cleared in a matter of Officials discovered that dreds of hastily dug graves were too Hygiene teams were ordered to spray them with dis- infectant while deeper trenches were dug for mass Other workmen set up facilities to make life less terrible for those who must see to Skopje's Power was restored in some parts of the Shower tracks provided limited bathing facilities While the tragedy lingered over an earthquake destroyed a village of about in Southern on It was not known if there were casu An earthquake also was report ed to have shaken a city of about 450 miles east of on No deaths were More than persons died in earthquakes in northwest Iran second quarter 747 including passenger cars and trucks and es produced in the a U.S. vehicle total of less than a year Kennedy Renews Plea for Tax Cut WASHINGTON Kennedy called again today for congressional action on the ad- tax cut House Speaker John W. McCor told reporters the President at a White al the need for getting the to the House floor for est possible McCormack said he was hope fill the House Ways and Committee would send the the he two Looking every in IB words of one U.S. commanding the forces hunted down In- saboteurs on missions by the headquarters of the 4th Cavalry Regiment com- mand six miles south of the Korean demilitarized The fighting was the farthest south of buffer area since the Korean armistice was signed July 1953. The action was set off Monday by the ambush of a U.S. jeep in which two U.S. soldiers were killed and a third be- low the Korean armistice With vigilance renewed and the hunt began for those As troops and police scoured Ihe another American dier and a South Korean police officer engaged in another clash that cost their lives in the grassy bottomland south of the near In Washington the Army Cpl. George F. Larion Jr. of as the soldier killed 24, was the son of Mr. and Mrs. George F. Larion of Col. George the U.N. Command spokesman who con- firmed the four North Koreans were said they could be part of the same raiding patrol which a 1st alry Division jeep killing two U.S. soldiers and wounding another on their way to guard duty in the demilitarized There also was speculation four North Koreans killed were agents bound on a mission ot violent They carried automatic weapons and hand The first North Koreans were gunned down about 9 a.m. It was in clash that a soldier of ths Seiler U.S. 7th Infantry Division and tha Korean police officer At about 4 the other two North Koreans were surrounded in deep grass west of the road to Panmunjom and about a mils south of Freedom While an American Army copter hovered about 50 national policemen and half a dozen U.S. soldiers closed in. Two hand grenade explosions were leading to speculation the agents took their own Tress photographer Kim and reporter An arrived on the spot ly before the shooting started this They interviewed the husband of an old woman who was held captive by the four Com- Yang Chon 52, was out collecting mushrooms in the bushy area where grass is head Suddenly someone grabbed her by the wrist and de- are you here? This is a firing Da you have anyone working in the Lone Survivor of Sneak Attack Tells of Shots ASCOM Korea Hi The ebony skinned soldier with the tube in his back after the Jeep I ber their hand grenades and 1 tried to get but I was under on his pillow and through a the sickly grin don't David A her Mch except the j by the first blast of It was Pfc. William Foster of Baltimore lone survivor of a sneak machine gun attack in Ihe First Cavalry Division area early Monday was sitting in the hack Foster said His eyes were glazed and he spoke barely above 3f f the Jeep North rean Pfc. Charles T. Dessart 111 of Drexel Pa was found dead lying behind the One bullet entered Foster's back at the of his rib then deflected up through his chest and is in The first shot knocked me front of his spine I I fell down across Ihe we'll just leave it back seat ol the 1 said U. Col. Harold Hamit her the Jerp rolling over and of Mill Calif. being under the I heard them firine from UD on the road has done all the damage it's tft An to William  

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