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The Missoulian from Missoula, Montana • 16
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The Missoulian du lieu suivant : Missoula, Montana • 16

Publication:
The Missouliani
Lieu:
Missoula, Montana
Date de parution:
Page:
16
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Kalispell Gets New Civil Defense Plan KALISPELL A 250-page comprehensive civil defense plan was approved Monday by the Flathead County Board of Commissioners. Ralph Slator, county civil defense director, said the plan is a revision of an original 500- Missoulian, Wednesday, October 4, 1967 197 from Neufeld Builders of Kalispell, and $17,369 from Ray Lenrude Construction of Kalispell. The bids will be turned over to the Economic Development Administration office in Seattle for consideration. Gunshot Wounds Youth, 15 Mike Reighard, 15, of Garrison was reported in "very serious" condition in St. Patrick Hospital late Tuesday night with a gunshot wound in the head.

He was reported shot with a hand gun about 9 p.m. The incident is reported to have occurred in a car parked near the Richard Finkbeiner home, two miles east of Deer Lodge. It was reported from Deer Lodge that Reighard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Reighard, two friends, Joe Benzig, 17, and James Medici, 15, were visiting at the Finkbeiner home.

According to Reighard's companions, they left him in a car with Barbara Lunberry, Finkbeiner's daughter, and were walking away from the vehicle when they heard a shot. The gun apparently was given to young Reighard by one of the two youths last week. The wounded boy was taken to Powell County Memorial Hospital in Deer Lodge and after examination was placed in an ambulance and brought to the Missoula hospital. Highway Official To Attend Meet On Highway Link GREAT FALLS (AP) F. C.

Turner, commissioner of public roads for the Federal Bureau of Public Roads, advised the Great Falls Chamber of Commerce Monday that he will attend a meeting next Tuesday to discuss a proposed interchange at Glendive linking Interstate Highway 94 and Montana 20S. William J. Wenzel, chairman of the Great Falls Area Chamber of Commerce highway committee said the mayors of all towns on highways 20 and U. S. 2 have been invited to the meeting.

A Bureau of Public Roads study considered the west Glendive interchange impractical, and it was dropped from an inal master 1 Interstate plan drawn highway for the system purpose of estimating, costs, Roy Jones, BPR officer, said. Corvallis Man Missoula Speaker HAMILTON Jack Iman, Corvallis, will appear on a panel at the Western Montana Soil and Water Conservation District Meeting Wednesday in the Hotel Florence in Missoula. Iman, supervisor of the Bitter Root Soil and Water Conservation District will appear on the panel discussion on rural and urban development. 3M Co. Displays New Products AT THE DEVONSHIRE MOTOR INN 5TH MAIN, KALISPELL THURSDAY, OCT.

5, NOON TO 7:00 P.M. Business, Government, Education Professions are invited to visit our display 1. New 3M Automatic Dry Photo Center (New rent plan or you can buy.) 2. New Revolutionary 3M Background Music (Buy 'don't lease) 3. New 121 Overhead Projector 4.

Hundreds of printed transparency originals for class instruction 5. Exciting new data processing course for secondary and college instruction (Teach data processing without expensive data processing equipment.) 6. Plus many new ideas for class room instruction and business meetings 3M Business Products Sales. Inc. 126 W.

Broadway Hamilton to Host Grange Conclave page document drawn up, in 1958. Slator, who authored both plans, said the new plan contains 19 separate annexes dealing with all foreseeable contingencies. He said the revision was needed to simplify emergency procedure. The annexes cover details from early emergency warning to continuity of city and county government. Slator described the more essential aspects of the plan.

He said warning signals have been arranged with local fire department in lieu of a separate siren system. Eighteen fully equipped shelters were provided under the 1958 plan and a number of new shelters have been planned for the near future. In other county board business a bid for a four-wheel drive grading vehicle from HallPerry Equipment Co. was accepted by the board. The HallPerry bid was $26,800 for an Austin-Western motor grader for the county road department.

Bids were opened for the construction of two buildings for the planned Bigfork Sewage treatment plant. The bids were for $9,485 from Fishbaugh Construction Co. of Bigfork, Arlee Woman Kills Grizzly ARLEE Mrs. Rosemary McClure of Arlee shot and killed a marauding grizzly bear about 7 p.m. Tuesday in a pasture about three miles south of Arlee.

According to Bud Love of Arlee, Mrs. McClure waited for the bear in a parked car near the place where a bear had killed a cow the previous day. She waited several hours and when the bear returned, she killed him with a single shot from a rifle. Everest Jennings WHEEL CHAIRS Folds to 10 Inches Rentals Sales Terms MISSOULA DRUG CO. STRAWBERRY CHEESECAKE ICE CREAM I HANSEN'S ICE CREAM 519 So.

Higgins STUDENTS Rent A TYPEWRITER at our New Location 520 Burlington (Next to Nygard's Cafe) ANDERS OFFICE MACHINES Phone 549-4143 HAMILTON More than 300 members of 26 Montana Granges are expected to attend the 29th state session of the Montana Grange in Hamilton Thursday through Saturday. J. A. Asleson, dean of agriculture at Montana State University, Bozeman, will be the featured speaker at sessions to be conducted in the Elks Temple. The session will commemorate the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Grange movement in the United States, according to Orin P.

Kendall of Thompson Falls, master of the state Grange. New state officers will be elected Friday morning. Lars Nelson, master of the ton State Grange and a noted agricultural economics expert, will address the Friday afternoon session. Other speakers include Henry Roberts, president Grange Mutual Life Insurance, Nampa, Idaho, and Van Horn, president of the Grange Insurance Association, Seattle. On Saturday night an allstate banquet is scheduled.

Awards to be presented include trips to the national Grange session in Syracuse, N.Y., for the winners of the state prince and princess and young couple of the year contests. The arrangements committee is composed of Gilbert Gander, Jack Iman, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Nordheim, Mr. and Mrs.

Don Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Moran, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Thompson, Mrs.

Myrtle Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. Kent Connor and James Patterson. Montana Record A. Nelson in Polo, Mo.

She came to Pol- Frank ST. IGNATIUS--Frank A. Nelson, 66, a former resident of St. Ignatius, died of a heart attack in Marina, Tuesday. Born April 3, 1901, at Irwin, Idaho, he farmed west of St.

Ignatius for a number of years before moving to California about 10 years ago. Mr. Nelson was preceded in death by his daughter, Glee V. Nelson, who drowned Sept. 4 near Sones Boro, as she tried to reach a child in danger.

Her funeral was Sept. 15 in St. Ignatius. Survivors include his widow, Zilla, Marina; daughter, Mrs. Janiel Parker, San Jose, sons, Gene, San Jose, and Worth, Travis AFB, brothers, Melvin, Arlee, and Harris, Shelly, Idaho; sister, Mrs.

Arvella Field, Idaho Falls, Idaho, and five grandchildren. Services will be Friday at p.m. in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in St. Ignatius with Bishop Reuben Moss officiating. Interment will be in the Mountain View Cemetery at Ronan.

George Johnsrud COLUMBIA FALLS Services for George R. Johnsrud, 51, are pending in the Van Leuven Funeral Home. Johnsrud was killed Monday morning in a highway accident near Lakeside. He was born May 4, 1915, in Hinsdale. He married Palma Gysler in Great Falls in 1942.

He was employed as a road construction worker except for three years while serving in France and Germany in the Army during World War II. He and his family moved to Columbia Falls in 1946. He had been engaged in building logging roads this summer in the St. Regis area. He was a member of the Operating Engineers Union.

Surviving besides his widow are sons, George James and Ronald, all of Columbia Falls, and Kermit in Army at Ft. Jackson, S.C.; mother, Mrs. John Johnsrud of Hinsdale; brothers, Walter of Hinsdale; John of Seattle; Roger of Cascade, Lyle of Fort Benton, Douglas of Twin Bridges and Julian of Sacramento, sister, Mrs. Palmer Scott of Helena. Helen Martin POLSON Graveside services for Mrs.

Archie (Helen) Martin will be conducted Saturday at 2 in Lakeview Cemetery with the Rev. Donald Jacobson officiating. The cortege will leave the Mosley Chapel at 1:45. Mrs. Martin, 53, died Saturday in Anchorage, Alaska.

She was born Dec. 14, 1913, son at the age of four and remained in Polson until 1951. Surviving are her husband in Anchorage; daughter, Mrs. Harold Dufrand, Missoula, and Mrs. John Martin of Anchorage; son, James of Anchorage; brothers, William J.

Brown of Seattle and Clayton W. Brown of Spokane; sister, Mrs. Edgar Coffelt of Twin Falls, Idaho. SUCCESSFUL MOOSE HUNTERS ST. IGNATIUS These former St.

Ignatius residents, monton in the Lesser Slave Lake area. The spread is Steve and Charles Schufletowski, father and son, 48 inches with 22 points. The "palms" are 12 inches stopped in St. Ignatius to display the fruits of a hunting wide. The elder Schufletowski now resides in Wenatexpedition to northern Alberta.

This huge bull was shot chee, and his son lives in Phoenix, Ariz. (Robert along with a smaller one, about 300 miles north of Ed- Larsson Photo) Highway Commissioner Says State Is Falling Behind in Road Needs By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Montana's newest member of the five man State Highway Commission, Kalispell's John J. Leary, sparked a rash of discussion with his statement Tuesday that Montana is falling behind its highway needs. Leary met in Kalispell with State Highway Engineer Lewis Chittim and Bureau of Roads Engineer Grant Meyer. The meeting, held to discuss highway problems with civic leaders, was at the halfway point of an 800-mile inspection tour of the state's highways being made by the two engineers.

Leary, after saying Montana isn't meeting its highway needs, Livingston Claiming Bozeman's Ski Area By ROY ANDERSON Editor, Livingston Enterprise Written for Associated Press LIVINGSTON (AP)-A group of Livingston businessmen and women have set about quietly to add $100,000 to Livingston's economy and in doing so, appropriate a mountain. And they are getting encouragement from the Yellowstone Park Co. and the Northern Pacific Railroad. The Livingston group is the Innkeepers Association and the mountain is Bridger Bowl. Bozeman long has laid uncontested claim to Bridger Bowl, one of the finest ski areas in the world.

Livingston, a top tourist town in summer months, has been casting around for more tenants for its tourist accommodations during the winter months. So the Innkeepers staked a claim on Bridger Bowl, feeling that skiers can add $100,000 to the winter economy of Livingston. Local skiers have claimed the bowl as their own for years. The Innkeepers feel they can present a ski package which will attract skiers to Livingston as headquarters for the bowl and for snowmobile trips. The Yellowstone Park Co.

and Northern Pacific will help the Innkeepers with nationwide distribution of promotional material aimed at skiers and outdoorsmen. The innkeepers group expects to create a "second season" for tourist trade. Livingston can accommodate 600 persons per night, so that becomes the goal of the booster group. "The Northern Pacific gets 50 per cent of their business in the summer months, and skiing can be a lucrative business," said Bob Gault, an NP staff member. "The NP will give fullest cooperation." A representative of the park company said additional snowmobile trips are being planned for the winter, as well as the traditional New Year's Eve party at Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone National Park.

Hamilton Weather Hamilton Weather Partly cloudy Wednesday and Thursday. Continued cool with frost likely Wednesday night. High both days near 60 and low near 30. Chance of rain 10 per cent. Kalispell Weather Kalispell Weather KALISPELL Partly cloudy today with scattered showers mostly over the mountains.

PICASSO, DAUMIER, OF BASKIN, others ROUAULT, ONLY TODAY SALE CHAGALL, ONE 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA Fine Arts Building Arranged by FERDINAND ROTEN GALLERIES, BALTIMORE, MD. Evelyn Ricketts KALISPELL Services for Evelyn A. Ricketts will be Wednesday at 2 in the Waggener Campbell Chapel with the Rev.

Fred Paxton of the Central Christian Church officiating. Burial will be in Conrad Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Ricketts, 77, wife of Richard R. Ricketts of 339 Eighth Avenue West, died Sunday in Kalispell.

Charles W. Nadeau launched a proposal for a pronged attack to solve the problem. "The first way," he said, "is simply to attain more money for the state's highways. The second is to take a long, hard look at the laws of Montana which limit us to hop-scotch type highway construction." Explaining the term "hopscotch," Leary said that under today's system of highway appropriations in Montana, the Highway Department has enough money to build a five or 10-mile stretch of limited access highway, but doesn't have enough money to add to the project for several more years. "You're sitting with a stretch of beautiful four-lane highway," he said, "approached at both ends by two-lane, multiple access roads." Leary said the state needs "more continuity in its highway construction program." He suggested the state re-evaluate its present thinking on needs to gain such continuity, and wrapped up his proposal by asking the commission to undertake a study of highway needs, cost of construction and other relevant factors.

Such a study, he said, could result in a plan to be presented to the next legislature with proposals "that would permit us to step out ahead, or at least keep pace." other discussion at the Kalispell gathering, Chittim voiced concern that right-of-way costs on U.S. Highway 2 construction near Libby might get out of hand and "jeopardize all construction jobs in the area." Because of Libby Dam's commercial potential, Chittim said, a land boom in the area is causing right-of-way prices to rocket. Chittim and Meyer planned to "look further into the problem" Wednesday. By Tuesday, the inspection tour had covered almost 400 miles of a planned 800. Chittim termed safety and maintenance standards on U.S.

Highways 2 and 15 "good, needing only some spot safety improvements that can and will be made." He said that Wednesday he and Meyer would look at the alignment of a future stretch of highway "that is a potential prizewinner." Funds Allocated For KalispellWhitefish Road WASHINGTON-Allocation of $400,000 to improve Montana Route 206 on federal land between Kalispell and Whitefish was announced Tuesday by Secretary of Transportation Alan S. Boyd. The purpose is to provide improved access to the Whitefish winter sports area in the Flathead National Forest. The money, allocated for the present fiscal year, is part of $12,786,425 to be spent in 19 states to improve roads on federal land. Boyd said the money "will help make our outdoors accessible to the American people for vacations, recreational opportunities and the general enjoyment of nature." Missing Kalispell Hunters Are Found COLUMBIA FALLS Three Kalispell youths were spotted early Tuesday morning by a National Guard airplane after spending the night in the wilderness.

Terry Fry, Darin Tyre and Scott Isaacson were reported missing Monday night after they failed to return from a hunting trip in the Lost Trail Divide area. After being rescued by Flathead County sheriff's deputies, the young men explained the brakes on their vehicle malfunctioned in the back country. Rather than risk a drive through the wilderness without brakes, they decided to spend the night there and seek help in the morning. Male students! Save on car insurance with Farmers Good Student Discount. If you're under 25, unmarried, and have B-average or better, check Farmers new money-saving plan! FARMERS INSURANCE FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP GROUP 2100 OXFORD 926 EAST BROADWAY Les Ellison Denton Kensmoe Jim Johnson Harold Fowler 543-3113 549-6752 WHITEFISH Services for Charles W.

Nadeau, Columbia Falls, who was killed Tuesday in a highway accident near Whitefish, are pending in the Van Leuven Funeral Home. He was born June 7, 1917, in Dodson. His family moved to Whitefish when he was 5. He later moved to Columbia Falls. He was a World War II veteran and served many years on the Columbia Falls Fire Department.

He was self-employed as a radio and television repairman. He is survived by a sister, Mrs. George (Louise) Thomas of White Salmon, brothers, Roland of Whitefish, George and Victor, both of Seattle, nieces and nephews. WANTED BODY FENDER MECHANIC Good Working Conditions Good Salary TURMELL-DeMAROIS CO. 230 WEST MAIN PLEASE EXCUSE THE MESS We Are MOVING to 708 South Higgins and we hope to be settled in our new location by mid-October.

WESTERN MONTANA LIGHTING SUPPLY 137 West Front YOU CAN'T BEAT EXPERIENCE It takes experience to help folks hear better. Experience in testing a hearing loss, experience in analyzing the proper hearing aid for you (if you need one), experience in helping adjust. Mark Ballheim 11 Years Call me today. My experience has helped hundreds. District Manager SAYS: "A HEARING AID IS NOT ENOUGH" NEW! MODEL 35 with AUTOMATIC telephone pick-up that always works.

You also need personal Local Service. Get it at SONOTONE of MISSOULA STILL AT THE SAME CONVENIENT LOCATION! ACROSS FROM POST OFFICE NEXT TO LIBRARY HEARING AID CENTER DILLON HOTEL, KALISPELL SATURDAY, OCT. 7 HOURS 9:30 A.M. TO 3 P.M..

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