Winona Daily News (Newspaper) - November 26, 1963, Winona, Minnesota Decreasing Cloudiness And Warmer Tonight Wednesday WINONA DAILY NEWS RISES SETS FULL MOON NOVEMBER 30 Year of Publication WINONA MINNESOTA TUESDAY NOVEMBER 26 1963 TEN CENTS PER COPY Hired to Kil Father And FOUR-WAY HUDDLE England's and United Stated top leaders go into a four-way conversation at Monday night's reception in the State Department in Washington Sir Alec left British prime minister chats with ident Lyndon Johnson while United States Secretary of Stale Dean Rusk listens to Prince Philip at right AP Talks May Thaw Chilly Relations By RICHARD K O'MALLEY WASHINGTON thaw In the chilly tions appears possible following the announcement that dents Johnson and Charles de Gaulle will meet here early next year The surprise announcement came from President Johnson after he had spent 18 minutes {n private with the French president at a reception late Monday for foreign taries who attended President John F Kennedy's funeral Johnson obviously plunging into the monumental tasks be- fore him with rapidity came out from the conference room and said We have decided he would come back and talk more early next year To give it further emphasis he told Sure you can quote me De Gaulle originally had planned to meet with Kennedy probably in February and ar- rangements had been ed It appeared the two men swiftly came to agreement on the need for early talks to clear up standing differences between the two long-time allies The tall French president was Flood of Orders Supports Stocks NEW YORK stock market launched a strong rally today upon reopening be- ing closed for the funeral of President Kennedy The surge to buy was in sharp contrast to the panicky selling that followed word of Kennedy's 6 Wisconsin Hunters Dead By Gunfire By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS After three days the death loll for Wisconsin's 1963 d e e r hunting season already has equaled last year's figure for the entire nine-day run Six were killed fay gunfire and 11 died of heart attacks Milton 28 of Minong Wis was shot and killed day while hunting wilh four companions about six miles west of Minong in Washburn County Authorities said an in- quest into the shooting will be held Dec 14 in Shell Lake Harry Messer 56 a truck driver from Sauk City suffered o fatal heart attack Monday while he was helping his ing parly drag a deer of woods near Pray in son County Also reported Monday was the death of lames J Coffey 70 of Brown Deer who died of a heart attack while hunling In he Spider Lake area of yer County Youths Ask Juvenile Hearing Minn AP Petitions have been filed here for a juvenile delinquency ing for wo high school seniors held in death of Rolene Madison 17 County Ally Herbert J Cook filed the petitions Monday with Probate Judge Robert Marlin Judge Martin will decide er Ray Van Straaten and Leslie Hammond both 17 should have their case considered in nile court or whether it should be moved lo district court A hearing on delinquency petitions was sel tentatively for Wednesday assassination Friday afternoon At that time prices plunged and exchanges were closed early Chrysler advanced to Other gains included eral Telephone to Standard Oil New Jersey to and Texaco to A New York Stock Exchange spokesman said the trading floor was more crowded than usual He estimated sons were on the floor com- pared with the normal n Badger Supreme Court Upholds State Bar Poll MADISON Wis consin Supreme Court released today its decision thai mitted State Bar to go ahead with a membership poll on the qualifications of David Rabinovitz to serve as a al judge On Nov 7 the court denied a petition to stop the poll and a tabulation showed an over- whelming majority of Wisconsin lawyers responding found a Sheboygan labor at- torney unqualified lo serve as a federal judge Rocky Barry Plan Political Rest By JACK BELL WASHINGTON AP Gov Nelson A Rockefeller of New York and Sen Barry Goldwater of Arizona say they plan no political speeches for a month in deference to the late President John F Kennedy Rockefeller who has declared himself a candidate for the 1964 Republican presidential tion said Monday he will not push his candidacy during the period of mourning which he has decreed for New York State Goldwater leads nulls as a potential GOP presidential nominee but has yet to declare himself in the running old a reporter he has canceled three television appearances and will make no more political es this year Since the assassination of Kennedy is an absence of anything political to talk Goldwater said Rockefeller said in a ment that during the mourning period I shall not participate personally in any public in connection with the Republican nomination nor in any public activities with tion of those falling wilhin my official duties as governor of New York Stale given the center of attention at the reception as he has been since he arrived Sunday for the funeral He was in relaxed chatty form Announcement of the meeting came amid general speculation on how Johnson and De Gaulle will get along The answer would appear to be that they get along well personally but any changes in policy would have to come from the American side De Gaulle who regards world affairs in the broad historic sense is a stubborn man with fixed ideas devoted to France He is not malleable as he illustrated in his differ ences with Kennedy Problems confronting successor and the French chief of state are fold but some of the larger ones are De Gaulle's atomic defense policy his operative attitude toward the North Atlantic Treaty tion his chilly attitude toward the limited nuclear test ban treaty and his lofty position on the Common Market But De Gaulle never hesitates to make it clear that in any showdown France would come quickly to America's side Johnson has the reputation oi being a seasoned astute cian who knows how to work with people and get them to work for him He also has the reputation of being a miser al least in the realm of domestic politics Grand Jury Indicts Ruby DALLAS AP A Dallas grand jury indicted Jack today on charges of murder wilh malice in slaying of Lee Harvey Oswald man accused of assassinating dent Kennedy New President Outlines Views To Governors WASHINGTON Here are from President son's speech to 35 governors at the White House Monday night as released by the White House Gentlemen I want to tell you low deeply I feel in your or not only your coming to Washington on this tragic casion but for your being so un- of me and being willing here and visit with me this evening j I am sorry I am late al De Gaulle had to return to Paris He has had a long day of it and he is flying back to night He talked a little longer I anticipated Even then we did not finish so we have another meeting set up for early in the year when he comes back to this country Circumstances over which I had no control brought me into this position that I occupy night The difficulties and the tribulations are great and this is the time when our whole tem has gone on trial not just the Republican party and the Democratic party but the American system of ment From the standpoint of lation we have less people than the Soviet standpoint Union From of resources the many respects she has greater resources than we have She has tillable acres of land while we have She has 208 million people while we have 180 million people She has greater water resources and greater potential oil and power but the thing that is really to determine whether we win or lose in this struggle of philosophies is how well our tem works We think we have the best system I think without con- fusion has got to be our word and has to be the key to our system For that reason I am going to address the Con- gress on Wednesday I am going to tell that Con- gress that we intend to honor the commitments we have made at home anti abroad and I am going to tell them I un- my own limitations but I am going to do the best I can with your help and God's We live under a system of checks and balances We do so because our founding fathers figured properly that the only sure method of preventing anny was a political system in which no one person or no one group of persons can have er without limitations v JOHNSON SHAKES HANDS WITH MIKOYAN ident Johnson shakes hands with Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan of the Soviet Union at a reception at the State De- in Washington Monday Soviet Ambassador toly Dobrynin is at center Mikoyan attended the of John F Kennedy as official representative of his ment AP Hard Day for Mrs Kennedy By FRANCES vi UJC WASHINGTON AP The president's grave at her request day for Jacqueline Kennedy had on the silent hillside been a long and crushing one Her brother-in-law Gen But shortly before midnight she Robert F Kennedy was at her slipped out of the White House se er and rode through the darkness dignitaries had crowded the to place a sprig of flowers on area during graveside rites for her husband's new grave the fallen leader At night the two stood alone After 10 minutes they back to the executive mansion Some of Mrs Kennedy's plans for the future may be made known today according to White House press secretary Pierre Salinger She must seek a new way of life for hersel and her two children Among the foremost question are how long will she remain at the White House where wil she make her new home what will become of the White House school she set up for daughter Caroline and some other children Mrs Kennedy a widow at 34 never sought nor relished thi public role she came to play as the wife of John Kennedy She married him in 1953 when he was a young senator from Massachusetts When Kenned became president in 1961 Mrs Kennedy looked with some dis may at the life ahead LEADERS AT RITES Many of the world's leaders stand in reverent silence in Arlington National Cemetery as body of late President Kennedy is lowered into its final resting place Mrs Kennedy President's widow is at right foreground Among al graveside include France's President De Gaulle center with Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie beside him and scores of others from all parts of world ranged around AP However here is one point that must always be borne in mind It is that a government by checks and balances will work only when people are ing to cooperate and work gether for the common good If they insist on glaring al each other refusing to work gether and standing firmly on prerogatives and forgetting re- nation will quickly be paralyzed Foi these reasons I consider it vitally important to ask for your I want you io operate 1 need your heart and j your hand Our has j a grievous shock The I transition while a term is still going on is always a difficult test for democracy It is doubly difficult in these days of quick decisions on mailers lhat in- volve the fale of humanity j I o keep in constant louch with you My permanent purpose is to maintain the ric of your nation intact and in the days lhat lie ahead I hope lo work wilh you to this end WEATHER FEDERAL FORECAST WINONA AND VICINITY Decreasing cloudiness late day warmer through day Low tonight high Wednesday 50 LOCAL WEATHER Official observations for the 24 hours ending at 12 m Maximum 44 minimum 28 noon 34 precipitation none ON BIRTHDAY John F Kennedy Jr three years old Monday carries a booklet leaving St Matthew's Cathedral after the funeral Mass for his slain falher Sister Caroline who will be 6 Wednesday looks up She clutches her mother's hand AP fax Arbitrators Drop Firemen Jobs WASHINGTON al arbitrators ruled lhat 90 per cent of jobs on diesel yard engines and freight trains should be eliminated They said this should be done by attrition or wilh job lion for most of the un ion members affected The ion board in the long dispute over railroad work rules was under a law enacted by Congress in August which vided lhat its finding would be binding on both parties However a spokesman the head of the assassinated Thompson Case Resumed in Minneapolis MINNEAPOLIS AP Dick Anderson testified today le made a contract with Gorman to kill Mrs Thompson and that ar- were made to kill he woman's father in six or ieven months The sensational t e s timony at the opening session of he sixth week of the murder rial of the woman's husband r Eugene Thompson Under questioning by William Randall son fold of meeting Mastrian 3 through Richard Sharp Twin Cities hoodlum who was an earlier witness Anderson quoted Mastrian as saying one of the two slayings must look like an accident Anderson said he asked what meant by the other ailing Anderson said Mastrian the broad's father will be next in six or seven months Mrs Thompson 34 was tha daughter of Otto Swoboda a St Paul plumbing contractor Mrs Thompson was and stabbed last March 6 a slaying the state claims was plotted by Thompson ar- ranged by Mastrian and ed by Anderson Only hours earlier Mrs Kennedy traveling home Anderson said abroad to 13 countries alone an crowds by the thousands anc became a goodwill for America on her own Anderson said Mastrian gested in the March 3 meeting that the killing might be dona with dynamite in Mrs son's car Tha final arrangements wera made the night of March 3 An- derson said when Mastrian called and Do you want to contract Anderson said he replied yes but demanded half the money beforehand He said Mastrian agreed to call him tha next morning on that matter Previous testimony has been that two payments totaling 300 were made to Anderson from Mastrian via Sheldon ris charged as an accessory Swoboda was himself a ness earlier today He testified there appeared a generally good relationship between Thompson and his wife Anderson's said the mention of a second killing was made the night of March 4 when he and Mastrian met in a cafe near Lake and Hennepin in south Minneapolis Later that night two days be- fore the slaying Anderson said he and Mastrian drove to the Thompson home Still later Mastrian drew a diagram of all three floors of the Thompson Anderson said a rubber hose with her husband speaking was taken by Mastrian from un French Spanish and Italian a J she went soon carved for her ulu mrs self a niche of fame She drew Thompson was to be struck at Cont on Page 3 Column 1 THOMPSON for two of the five said the arbitration award and the law under which it was made would be attacked in eral court RECEIVES FLAG Mrs Jacqueline Kennedy is handed the American Flag which covered the casket bearing the body of her husband John Fitzgerald Kennedy to its final resting place in Arlington National Cemetery AP