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The Billings Gazette from Billings, Montana • 6
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The Billings Gazette from Billings, Montana • 6

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Billings, Montana
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6
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Wednesday. August 9. 1972 100 ilfjr tilings (Sazrttr Striking dockers clash with police Vitals Of tnm HtliOxU. arf U4ltt we Kawaa llw Uw Tanaantwea t.pimtj iMlaw ewp.a'' ta44- CH Weather Rose Roller Funeral mass for Mrs. Rose Roller, 77, of Dickinson, N.

mother of three Billings residents, will be at 10 a.m. Thursday in St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Dickinson. She died Monday. Mrs.

Roller, widow of Adam Roller, had moved from New England, N. to Dickinson in 1968. Her husband died Aug. 8, 1955. She was born June 2, 1895, in Krem, Russia, and was married in Dickinson on Nov.

27, 1911. They lived in Scheffield, N. D. She had lived in the United States since 1904. Survivors in Billings include a son, Andrew Roller of 326 Burlington and daughters, Mrs.

Pete N. Anton of 5054 Dan-, ford Drive and Mrs. Steve Anton of 5062 Danford Drive. Other survivors include sons Jerome, Ralph and Leopold of Dickinson; daughters Mrs. Ve-ronic Hellman of Dickinson and Mrs.

Joe Freed of Mandan, N. 31 grandchildren; and 37 great-grandchildren. Mrs. Roller had been a member of St. Marten's Altar Society.

Rosaries were recited Tuesday and Wednesday evenings in Mis-chel-Olson Chapel in Dickinson. The Rev. Edwin Volk of St. Joseph's Church will be cele I The dockers walked out Jury 28, shutting down all the country's main ports, to back demands for greater job security and the right to handle all loading and unloading in container depots, even at inland sites. But for the first time since the shutdown began prospects of ending it appeared brighter.

A' joint union-management committee, which is seeking to settle the dispute, ended nine hours of talks Tuesday and Wednesday morning and reported some progress. It said it would meet again Friday. Jack Jones, head of the 1.7 million strong Transport and General Workers Union and a cochairman of the committee, said further discussions are necessary, "But quite definite advances have been made," he said. He said if the next round of talks is "positive and satisfactory" he might be able to convene a conference of longshoremen's delegates next week to vote on terms for a LONDON UPI)-Hundreds of striking longshoremen bat- tied Wednesday with 500 massed 1 policemen guarding a dock in northeastern England where nonunion workers continued unloading ships. They hurled rocks and bottles at trucks entering and leaving under police protection.

Sirstrikers were arrested. It was the second successive day of violence outside the dock at Scunthorpe, a small port on the River Trent. Before it erupted, police searched cars and buses on roads leading to the dock and seized" an armory of weapons, including meat cleavers, hammers and garden forks. The new flareup started when strong police forces drafted into the area fought to keep a way open for about 20 loaded trucks leaving the wharf. Windshields were smashed and police helmets were knocked off.

But the trucks got through. The new confrontation built up in the 13th day of a nationwide walkout by Britain's 42,000 longshoremen. Rain or showers are forecast for most of the? Atlantic coastal states Wednesday. Showers or rain are also forecast for the southern Plateau and the central California coast. Temperatures are expected to continue warm -in the southern tier of states, with cooler weather elsewhere.

5 t. MARRIAGE LICENSES Randy L. Welch, 22, Shepherd, and Margaret D. Hastings, 20, Shepherd. Harold J.

Kelly, 24, Great Falls, and Mary J. Dill. 21, Billings. Stephen L. Zimmerer, 19, Billings, and Brenda L.

Steffes, 19. Billings. Floyd W. Weber, 41, Billings, and Verdean L. Whitherall, 35, Billings.

William A. Buska, 21, Laurel, and Victoria T. Rabben, 21, Billings. Ronald L. Mathews, 30, Billings, and Suzanne M.

Gilluly, 36, Billings. CITY DEATHS Ace Morrison, 69, of 1020 Bench Blvd. Frank Andrews, 60, of Laurel. Mrs. Beulah Wolfe, 80, of Glen-deen Nursing Home.

AREA DEATHS Mrs. Rose Roller, 77, of Dickinson, N. D. Carl Owen Jerrell, 54, of Miles City. Benjamin Franklin Townsend, 68, of Sheridan, Wyo.

Winifred N. Goodwin, 74, of Casper, in Buffalo. Mrs. Helen J. Bates, 84, former Billings resident, in Santa Barbara, Calif.

Mrs. Martha Jackson, 84, Lewis-town Roy C. Longman, 79, formerly of Lewistown and Stanford, in Santa Ana, Calif. The Rev. Ernest H.

Williams, of Dubois, in Lander Mrs. Anna Eilers, 86, Red Lodge Mrs. Jessie Roberts Schneider, 74, in Greeley, Colo. John W. "Bill" Lange, 52, of 1128 Ave.

near Cooke City. Clarence A. Hare, 73, of Helena. FIRE CALLS 11:01 p.m. Monday (City) 930 N.

31st, to check electrical circuit breaker box. Popping noise reported. 2:54 p.m. Tuesday (City)-Third Meelcs FROM iAG6 ll) Ave. 22nd St.

N. False box alarm. 5:23 p.m. Tuesday (Cityi 24th St. W.

Central Ave. Grass fire. 10:45 p.m. Tuesday (City) 2425 Central discarded mattress outside former Golden Rule store. Probable cause, children playing with match-' es.

AIRPORT WEATHER DATA From limed States Weather Bona fir 24 kowseneinf at Mem Tus.Aag I Mumrnmn MimmmiM Pranpuon a. se far this month, I II total for nine ffnod of Aug 1-1 a year ago. OS total sum Jan 1. 12 1. total for same period a year aav.

7 normal for Aug 14, normal lor Jan I to Aug i 07 Hourly temp Moa -5am Tue 1 I It II It 1 2 Hourly temp (am Mon-Spm Tues 1 II 12 I 2 2 4 i 3 SS 70 7S 77 7 7 10 ti II II Samsel Mam. Sunset 8 32 Montana Weather Table City Billings High Low 82 Precip 58 54 48 51 60 54 59 73 65.26 Belgrade Broadus Butte Cut Bank Dillon Glasgow Great Falls Havre Helena Kalis pell Lewistown Livingston Miles City Missoula Missoula W.Yellowstone 94 81 91. 85 93 82 89 92 90 57 95 60 78 56.01 84 53 78 78 96 84 61 61 55 The Weather Elsewhere By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HighLowPr. Albany, cldy 74 57 Albu'que, clear 87 60 .20 Amarillo, cldy 91 62 .50 Anchorage, cldy 61 Asheville, cldy 82 58 Atlanta, cldy 89 69 Birmingham, cldy 91 71 Bismarck, cldy 70 44 Boise, cldy 101 66 Boston, clear 84 65 Buffalo, cldy 67 60 .06 Charleston, cldy 92 71 .31 Charlotte, cldy 89 67 Chicago, clear 7351 UNDER THE SAME regulation, Empire Sand and Gravel and Midland Materials Companies must be tested to determine the extent of their pollution, Glenn's report said. "Permits to operate (for the two companies) are being withheld until an emission test of these asphalt batching plants can be performed," the director's report said.

"Permits to operate (for the two companies) are being withheld until an emission test of these asphalt batching plants can be performed," the director's report said. GLENN TOLD the Air Pollution Control Board that a state-owned stack tester to analyze the emitted gasses will arrive later this month. Meanwhile, he said, "they are continuing to run in technical violation of Regulation 001 (Air Pollution Control Construction)." Charles W. Paris, outgoing Pacific Hid enied operating permit Cincinnati, cldy 80 56 Cleveland, cldy 65 56 Denver, clear 82 57 Des Moines, cldy 67 50 Detroit, cldy 62 57 Duluth, clear 61 42 Fairbanks, cldy 63 54 Fort Worth cldy 100 74 Green Bay, clear 68 43 Helena; cldy 90 57 Honolulu, clear 76 Houston, cldy 91 78 Ind'apolis, clear 76 52 Jacks'ville, cldy 93 74 Juneau, rain 57 49 Kansas City, clear 83 57 Little Rock, cldy 95 69 Los Angeles; clear 86 69 Louisville, cldy 84 63 Marquette, clear 54 50 Memphis, cldy 91 74 Miami, clear 87 78 Milwaukee, clear 68 51 cldy 66 47 .02 .17 .01 .03 .17 .01 .27 .63 .13 .06 otri board chairman, said the proximity of the companies' plants to the fairgrounds, being used this week, makes it imperative "that we mike sure these people (company owners) understand the problems we can have." GLENN'S REPORT also said that West Parkway Service, on the Laurel Road, has been issued a notice of violation of Regulation 005, Preventing Particulate Matter from Becoming Air-borne. Glenn said nearby residents have complained of dust from the Parkway's large, unpaved parking area, used by large trucks.

The Parkway was ordered to pave the area or apply a dust-suppressant "on or before Aug. 21.7 THE BOARD elected member Jean M. Bowman, 2244 Fair-view Place, as chairman. Mrs. Bowman replaces Paris, who was named vice-chairman.

Reappointed to the board and Fur Trinity Lutheran Kindergarten, 202 Belvedere Dr. Christ in education, complete readiness, experienced teacher. Call 656-102 1, 4564327, 245-5095. Adv. August back-to-school permanent Special- try our new capless short or shag coiffures.

Horiion Hair Fashions, 4402 I like those SHAG haircuts, CHARLOTTE. Classic Beauty Salon. Ill ri. 30th, phone VOICE I BRASS LESSONS 259-8997 between 9 8. 5 weekdays Reorders of Mary Kay cosmetics or fof your FREE facial skin analysis by a trained beauty consultant, call Marge Breshears.

245-7251. DR. W.ERZBINSKI WILL BE OUT OF HIS OFFICE FROM JULY 17th TO' AUGUST KINDERGARTEN Mrs. Mercers on 13th St. few vac.

252-3382 Dr. Sidney i. Hayes will be out of his office from August 3rd until September 5th. KINDERGARTEN, register now for fall. 2150 Fairpark Dr.

Central Heights. Mrs. Darlene Hackmann, 656-1916. Adv. KINDERGARTEN 19th St.

West Howard now taking registrants for fall. Call Margaret Floerchinger, 656-5399. Adv. SEE the largest selection of stitchery in the WEST. Kits materials for Crewel-Needlepoint-Bargello-Nordic Weave- Old World Embroidery.

FREE INSTRUCTIONS WITH PURCHASE. THE THREADED NEEDLE on Level 3 in the heart of downtown Billings, Slapleton Bldg, 104 Broadway KINDERGARTEN-Few openings. Register now. Exp. teacher, Mrs.

Emerson, NOW ISTHE TIME Register FALL DANCE Classes Tap Ballet-Acrobat Jazz Give your child the opportunity to study under Billings finest professional teacher. Donna Reta Schmaing, 1233 Ave. D. Ph. 252-8103.

Ages 4 yrs. 8. over. Special ladies exercise classes. Arts Crafts Bazaar American Handicrafts Store, August 26, 10 A.M.

-9 P.M. Display and sell your arts and crafts projects. Call 656-2478 before Aug. 19. ATTENTION MOTHERS! All previous students of the Donna Reta Dance Studio, please come in to studio order new fall equipment now, leotards, shoes, etc.

SETTERGREN-CAREY Funeral Home Serving the Communify Since 1906 771 N. It Pk. JS7-WM M01 Aidant PkoM 2S2-3417 LANGE John W. "Bill" Lange, age 52, of 1128 Avenue D. Funeral services will be held 10 a.m.

Friday at Michelotti Sawyers Mortuary. Interment will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. Should friends desire memorials may be made to the Boy Scouts or the charity of their choice. REYMER-Otto Reymer age 90, 1010 North 29th. Funeral mass will be offered 9:30 a.m.

Thursday at St. Patrick's Church. Interment will be in Mountview Cemetery. Friends will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Michelotti Sawyers Mortuary to recite the rosary.

Should friends desire memorials may be made to the Intensive Care Unit at St. Vincent's Hospital or the charity of their choice. FUNERAL 10 Yellowstone Ave. Phone 2414107 SMITH'S Funeral Ilome Established in SCHNEIDER Funeral services for Mrs. Jessie Roberts Schneider, of Greeley, Colorado, formerly of Billings, will be held at Smith's Chapel Friday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock.

Interment will be in Sunset Memorial Gardens. MONUMENTS See the Actual Memorial You Buy! PRICES RIGHT Billings Monument Co. Hoielton Brothers 3523 Montano Ae Ph 245 3391 irob.ihed in 1896 Open 00 30 Moo. thru tOO fil Noon Sot. Eve.

ond Sun. by Appointment NOTICE Eff active July 1, 1971 lnfl A events CtrdafrfMrnk. adWla "alai: i5c per ane-ona day Sv am an'kTlSS ait for Clauifwd beparuntnt Tjam, cktti 7r aa! If wul correct Sony, but if ih. Woafof enT PWbaitjr.ouB 2r av Mh Panml, Thank Taw. ay, ftmt Photofai forecast New Orleans, cldy 94 75 New York, cldy 87 73 Okla.

City, cldy 100 66 Omaha, cldy 73 52 Philad'phia, clear 85 68 Phoenix, clear 103 79 Pittsburgh, cldy 70 63 Pt'land Ore, clear 96 62 .46 .19 Pt'land Me, cldy 43- 58 Rapid City, cldy 78 52 Richmond, clear St. Louis, cldy Salt Lake, clear San Diego cldy San Fran, clear Seattle, cldy Spokane, cldy Tampa, clear -Washington, clear 6 69 84 53 .03 99 61, -77 67 63 56 93 58 .103 71 92 79' 84 67 Canadian Cities Edmonton, cldy Montreal, cldy Toronto, cldy Winnipeg, cldy 83 55 -3 69 58 68 58 -64 49 .29 .10 .25 rvr- re-elected as board secretary was member Rex B. Stratton? 1525 Ave. E. Glenn announced two new regulations, one reducing from two to one pound per million British Thermal Units the content of sulphur in liquid or solidv fuel burned in Billings.

said this regulation applies to new equipment only. THE OTHER regulation requires gasoline storage tanks to be fitted with a submerged fill-pipe to cut down evaporative losses. Farmers and ranchers are exempt from the law, Glenn said. The board approved a motion to have Glenn and Steve Du-' ganz, former county sanitarian and now Glenn's assistant, evaluate the problems involved hi forming solid waste disposal districts for Yellowstone County. Although formation of the districts is the decision of the cdun-ty commissioners, board member William R.

Reinhardt said tight air pollution and open buming regulations have gener- ated a solid-waste problem. "ACCUMULATION wastes poses several hazards hardt said, "includine a health' hazard." Member Edward L. Stow who is also the city sanitarian said the air pollution agency should not "do what theibunty commissioners are obligated to employ other people to rteinnarai proposed that a theoretical and logical De pionea against costs sohaf it could be presented the commissioners for considera- tion. IF A PLAN is not adopted soon, Reinhardt said, "I think the county's going td be inundated with solid 4 The Board also: Received an open-Burning repon snowing 43 permits Is sued in July, including 24iigri cultural and 19 special cases Three permits were A pollution monitoring re port showed that equipment failure at Midland Empire Packing Co. in July caused "in-' A By RONALD J.

SCHLEYER Gazette Staff Writer Pacific Hide and Fur 777 4th Ave. has been informed it is violating county air pollution emission regulations and must take corrective action by Sept. 2, it was revealed Tuesday. In his monthly director's report, James L. Glenn, director of Yellowstone County Air Pollution Control, said the company was recenUy "informed of the denial of an operating permit due to ineffective control of their wire reclamation furnace." RECENT REVISIONS in the county pollution control law empower Glenn to issue operating permits for all except heavy industry in Billings, which is supervised and regulated by the state Department of Health and Environmental Sciences.

Glenn has ordered Pacific Hide and Fur to modify the furnace and bring it into compliance "on or before Sept. 2," the report said. tions after Wednesday might be raised if they were given back, and then found valid by the court, Klundt decided to keep the petitions. "I am not accepting them (petitions), but since there might be some question about adding signatures after the deadline I will store them here (in EMC fftOM PAGET) or minor as an eventual result of his, it would require board of regent approval," says Hey- wood. "But the development of their owncultural center and Hh thfee courses specifically lafceted NAS will give the Indian students chohesiveness." 'The concept xl the Indian study program will attract Indi-: students to EMC at a time when the white population on campus seems to be dwindling," Juneau says.

"We have a potential of becoming a college with a reputation of a fine native American studies program. ''THAT WOULD be a good thing for the college, the city and the state." Juneau says Wamb-di Gub udents will be continuing their lectures ana lours oi scnoois in Billings and nearby reservations, explaining the NAS pro- gr am and its potentials. The cultural center, he says, will help promote Wamb-di fashion pow-wows, cele- brations and on-campus Indian lectures. Rims XOM IN SEPTEMBER, the City Park Commission recommended that the planning board buy the land. But the summary said no ac- tion was ever taken and the same month, the owners exclu- "sively listed the property for sale (wlth Llewellyn Associates which includes Harry LLewellyn.

a member of the City-County Planning Board. The property was subsequently bought by the three men for $80,000 (the difference being the Seller's commission) and in February of this year, the planning board approved the plat for the development. ef, would be totally destructive ,1 wikUife in the area. A historical summary also 'described how the ctoud came to own the oroDertv after thp Resources Life Insurance Company foreclosed on the property. In July, 1971, the company offered the 20-acre area to the City-County Planning Board as park land for $72,000 payable ever a three-year penod.

Child serious after accident Nine-year-old Lin Daberkow brant at the mass. Grandsons will be pallbearers. Burial will be in St. Pius Catholic Cemetery in Scheffield. Helen Bates Requiem mass for Helen J.

Bates, 84, former Billings resident and wife of DeWitt C. Bates of Santa Barbara, was offered Monday in San Roque Church. Burial was in the Calvary Cemetery in Santa Barbara. The Bates had lived in Billines from 1916 until 1956, when her husband retired from the railroad, and they moved to Santa Barbara. She died Thursday.

Mrs. Bates was born Jan. 2, 1888, in Portland, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Geoghegan.

She was married in Portland on Feb. 22, 1912. She had been a member of the San Roque Church Altar Society, the Santa Barbara Women's Club, and active in women's groups at the Santa Barbara Recreation Department. Survivors include the widower; two sons, Frank Bates of Honolulu and John Bates of Seattle; a daughter, Mrs. Albert Dahlberg of Spokane; eight grandchildren, and three greatgrandchildren.

Gun plan rejected WASHINGTON (AP) Here is how area senators voted in the 75-16 roll call vote by which the Senate Tuesday rejected an amendment by Sen. Adlai Stevenson, to a handgun control bill to require registration of all handguns and licensing of the owners. inn AMMWKtmtiits IvU C4f Thanks KINDERGA RTEN Register now for fall. CHILD CARE avail. Drop-ins welcome.

Grand Ave. Day Care Center Zina Swanson will be teaching children's creative dance classes for boy's and girl's ages 4, 5 and 6. 2211 Lewis, formerly Jack JIM Nursery) -654-4482--Adv. JACK JILL KINDERGARTEN Readiness, music, creative dance 2211 Lewis Ave, Barbara Forsythe, Zina Swanson. Open House, Fri, Aug.

11, 10-12 noon. Ph.25-3406or656-44.-Adv. The family of George Walter (Sunny) Humiston wishes to express their sincere gratitude and appreciation for the many expressions of sympathy and kindness shown to us during our time of sorrow. Mr. and Mrs.

W. E. (Curly) Humiston Family June Austin Dance registration Creative dance 7 8 yrs old; Ballet 9 up; Modern Ballet comb. teenage. Call 656-5494, after 11 a.m.

Out of town Aug. MRS. BELL'S NURSERY SCHOOL, 2-3 day wk, 3 4 yr olds, qual. teachers, 656-3691. -Adv.

A few openings are available for the YWCA Kindergarten classes beginning Sept. 5, excellent teacher, equipment, and planned field trips. Contact the at 252-6303 today for further information. -Adv. THE CASTLE bows to Progress (new curbs gutters) therefore we will be closed until Aug.

15. Please call 252-25)5 for further Information or for special tour. Adv. NURSERY SCHOOL. Reg.

now for fall. 3 4 yr. olds. 2433 Poly Drive. Call Ruth Drummond, 656-5977 for more info.

Tired of your hair looking nice? See Chuck at Chateau De Hair Fashions, 27 'j Custer. Adv. Attention Knights of Columbus Mass of the Ressurection for OTTO REYMER be offered Thursday at 9:30 a.m. at St. Patrick's Church.

Burial will at Mountview Cmtry. Rotary will bo rocitod at Micholotti-Sawyers mortuary at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Edward G. Wirts, Grand Knight SIR KNIGHTS 4th Degree Knights of Columbus Father Pauwelyn Assembly Mi memory of SIR KNIGHT OTTO REYMER ess of ft IfSsarocriM wit of.

tare 1M ajB. Tkwsday at St. Patrick's Ckarck. Uriel wil to to Wnatview Ceawtery. Rotary wit it recited at RUdMtotti-Sawyert awr-laary at 1M fm.

Weaaesday. M. fclneiaor fathhi tanigoltr my office) until after the court makes a decision," he said. HERNDON SAID afterwards that no court action could have been initiated until the petition drive was successful enough to have petitions presented and turned down at Klundt's office. "I am considering several possible legal actions one of them could be aimed at the clerk of court or another at the county commissioners ordering them to force Klundt to accept," he said.

"But there are many avenues and I don't want to be pinned down now as to what I will do." Despite the setback, Mrs. Meeks said her venture into politics has been "fun I am very determined and I think we'll win." BESIDES CARLSON, Mrs. Meeks will also have to face the Democratic candidate Leo Kamp 27, of Laurel. Herndon said the "whole affair," also raises the question of equal proportioning of the three commissioner districts in Yellowstone County. "Based upon the 1970 census," said Herndon," District 1 (Carlson) has 29,847 inhabitants; District 2 (Audrey S.

"Bud" Roberts) has 16,637 and Chairman Myron Edgar "Mike" Mc-Clintock's (District 3) has "As you can see there are some serious questions about the whole districting system in the county, and this might be raised." Herndon said he will have something filed in District Court in behalf of Mrs. Meeks within a week. Ace Morrison Asa "Ace" Morrison, 69, of 1020 Bench ditch rider for the Billings Bench Water Association, died Wednesday in St. Vincent's Hospital, where he had been a patient for five days. He came to Ryegate when a young man to work as a ranch foreman, then later was associated with the Truck Terminal in Billings.

He ranched with a brother in Joliet from 1942 to 1966, when he returned to Billings. Mr. Morrison was born Sept. 18, 1902, in Blakesburg, a son of Mr. and Mrs.

John U. Morrison. He had farmed with his father near Centerville, la. before moving to Montana. He married Lela C.

Hebert on March 21, 1940, in Billings and was a member of the Jehovah Witnesses. Survivors include the widow; a daughter, Mrs. Charles E. Snell of 2706 W. Bridger Drive; a brother, Orville, of Hamilton; and three grandchildren.

Sievices will be at 10 a.m. Saturday in Settergren-Carey Funeral Home. Burial will be in Mountview Ceneterv. Beulah Wolfe Mrs. Beulah Wolfe, 80, of Billings, died Tuesday in Glendeen Nursing Home, where she had been a resident the past year.

She had lived in Billings since 1919, and was the widow of Grover Wolfe, a Billinp gor-cer. They were married Aug. 13, 1917, in Billings. Her husband died Nov. 9, 1962.

Mrs. Wolfe was born March 11, 1892, in Iowa, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Jones. Survivors include a sister, Mrs.

Ethel Harkin, of Glendeen Home; and a nephew, Dr. James harkin, of New Orleans, La. Settergren-Carey Funeral Home is in charge of Nixon coffers fROM PAGET) Schoenhoffen to $250 or less from retailers in Denver, and Virginia Beach, Va. ANOTHER $6,000 came in 13 separate checks from officials of the spice and food flavoring firm of McCormick Co. at Hunt Valley, Md.

Among the larger individual donations disclosed were these: $24,000 from Edward J. Hand, vice president of Ryder Systems in Buffalo, N.Y. He gave $6,000 checks to the four Nixon committees. $18,522 from Foster G. McGraw, former board chairman of American Hospital Supply in Evanston, 111.

$15,000 from Paul V. Trousdale, president of Trousdale Enterprises, in Los Angeles, who made contributions to four national committees and one state group. $15,000 from Lloyd I. Miller, president of American Con-trolled Industry, of Cincinnati, and his wife. $12,000 from David Rockefeller, chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank, New York.

$12,000 from Nixon's former law firm of Adams, Duque and Hazeltine, which he joined in Los Angeles after losing his first try for the White House in 1960. Another $12,000 apiece from New York investment banker Neil A. McConnell, retired Denver businessman A. E. Johnson, and Anthony T.

Rossi, head of Tropicana Products in Bradenton, Fla. Special White House counsel Richard A. Moore also chipped in $11,311. From Las Vegas came $9,000 from Jack and Benny Binion at the Horseshoe Casino; Mrs. James R.

Hoffa, wife of the convicted former Teamsters president, gave $200; an official of the Aristotle Onassis-operated Olympic Airways sent $5,000. THE NIXON CAMPAIGN showed its first incursion into what has been traditional Democratic money in southern California with a $12,000 total from three members of the Max Factor family plus another official ef the cosmetics firm in Los Angeles. Board chairman Davis Factor had been a Humphrey donor in 1968 with $5,000, but gave $3,000 for Nixon this time. Cosmetics heir Max Factor HI, however, remains in the Democratic camp with a $20,000 loan listed for nominee George S. McGovern.

Billings tonight George Hammer Chapter Mother's Club 7 p.m. at Masonic Temple. Civil Air Patrol 7 p.m. at Air Force Dispersal Base Logan Field. George Hammer DeMolay 7 p.m.

at Masonic Temple. Weight Watchers 7 p.m. at Broadwater Shopping Center. Billings Charter Chapter of American Business Women Association 7 p.m. at OHara's.

LaLeche League 7:30 p.m. at 2708 Custer Ave. Jaycees Board Meeting 7:30 p.m. at 3421 Montana Ave. Plumbers and Steam Fitters, Local No.

30, 7:30 p.m. at Labor Temple. Rimrock Lodge 149, AF and AM, 7:30 p.m. at Masonic Temple. YSA 7:30 p.m.

at First Methodist Church. Duplicate Bridge Club 7:45 p.m. at 10th and Lewis. Round Dancing 8 p.m. at Shi-loh Barn.

Alcoholics Anonymous 8 p.m. at 204 Grand Ave. Treasure State Racing Club 8 p.m. at Clyde's Tavern. Alcoholics Anonymous 8 p.m.

at 245 Broadwater Ave. Junior Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors 8 p.m. at KC Hall. Women of the Moose 8 p.m. at Moose Hall.

St. Thomas Altar Society 8 p.m. at St. Thomas Church. creased emissions of particulate of Sand Springs, who received matter." The condition was cor-, facial injuries Tuesday night in a rected Jury 29, the report said.

head-on collision 19 miles west Was notified that sulfur Sand Springs, is listed in seri-dioxide levels rose to 0.14 parts ous condition Thursday in Bil-per million on July 19 and 20, lings St. Vincent's Hospital, about 60 per cent of the state vHis mother, Janice Daberkow, limit for any one-hour Jrkxt- nd- 7-eaM)ld brother, Kip, The main source of the tonic ga were both treated and released in Billings is heavy industry by the hospital after the acci- Announced formatien-of adent.jv. "smoke school" Avg. SsaS 24 TM ffighway Patrol reported at the city shops to' acquaint inrwo men died from injuries re-clnerator operators on Ihe meth-f' ceived at the northeastern Mon-ods of recognizing visible emisK 'Stana collision site on Montana sion standards violations: i 'Highway 200. 4.

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