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Deadwood Pioneer-Times from Deadwood, South Dakota • Page 8
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Deadwood Pioneer-Times from Deadwood, South Dakota • Page 8

Location:
Deadwood, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Daily Tuesday, December 27, 1966 8 Publishers of Death of President Granted Delay for Settlement NEW YORK (UPI) -Attorneys for the book publishing firm of Harper Row today were granted two days additional time to seek a settlement of their dispute with Mrs. John F. Kennedy over "The Death of a President." State Supreme Court Justice Saul Streit scheduled hearings Thursday on the order Mrs. Kennedy obtained 11 days ago requiring Harper Row to show cause why they could not forbidden to publish the controversial book. Look magazine, which plans to serialize the Kennedycommissioned book about the assassination of President John F.

Kennedy beginning next month, already has settled its differences with Mrs. Kennedy. Streit set Jan. 16 for hearings in the case of William Manchester, author of the book and the third party named in the show cause order. Manchester is under treatment for pneumonia in Middlesex Memorial Hospital, Middletown, Conn.

The judge ruled that Manchester must do nothing further with tape recordings of his! interviewers with Mrs. or with letters she turned over to him prior to the January hearing. Most of the material Mrs. Kennedy wants to exclude from the book is contained in the recordings or the letters. Manchester was removed from the critical list at the hospital today.

He was reported on a regular diet and no longer restricted to complete bed rest. Dr. F. Erwin Tracy, Manchester's physician, said his patient is now less concerned by his bout with pneumonia than by a scratch on the cornea of his eye inflicted by a pine needle while he was trimming the family Christmas tree. The doctor said Manchester will remain in the hospital for about a week, after which he will recommend that his patient take a vacation to recuperate.

Tracy said Manchester's resistance to illness had been impaired recently, probably because of worrying about Mrs. Kennedy's lawsuit. George Pascoe Dies; Rites Set Funeral services will be held Friday in Spearfish for George Pascoe, former resident and uncle of Ted Pascoe, Lead. Pascoe died Christmas Day at the Veterans Hospital in Farmington, N. M.

where he had been a patient since Nov. 2. The final rites are set for 1 p.m. Friday at the Fidler Fueral Chapel with Rev. Thomas Campbell, All Angels Episcopal Church, officiating.

Interment will be in the Black Hills National Cemetery. Born in Lead, Dec. 2, 1891, Pascoe attended the local schools but left as a young man for Midwest, where he was inducted into the U. S. Army on June 28, 1918.

After serving one year he was discharged and moved to Tulsa, where he made his home until his retirement in 1956 in Farmington. He is survived by a sister, Mrs. Madeline Vigna, a niece, Mrs. Richard Sachau, both of Spearfish; three nephews, Ted, Lead; John Vigna, Spearf is Joseph Vigna, Hot Springs. He was preceded in death by his parents, two brothers, Joseph and Chester, and a sister, Catherine.

Some of the elaborate mud nests built by the ovenbird may weigh from five to 10 pounds. of Deadwood SALE STARTS 9 A.M. TOMORROW THAT COATS SUITS DRESSES SPORTSWEAR Price (DEADWOOD) All Sales Final, Please All Sales Cash No Layaways, Please Charges on Alterations Rites Wednesday For Lillian Ewing Funeral services for Mrs. Lillian Ewing, will be held Wednesday at 10:30 a.m., at the Wells Funeral Home Chapel, Deadwood. Rev.

Charles Grooms, minister of the First Baptist Church, Deadwood, will officiate. Interment will be in Mt. Moriah Cemetery, Sundance, at 2 p.m. Mrs. Ewing, a resident of Deadwood since 1944, and mother of Mrs.

Everett Bacon, Deadwood, died early Saturday in the Dorsett Home, Spearfish. She was born in Summer, Iowa, Jan. 25, 1879 to Mr. and Mrs. James Donaldson.

After attending schools in Iowa and Kansas, she was married to Samuel Ewing on May 1, 1897 in St. Francis, Kan. He preceded her in 1 death. The couple lived in Edgemont, Sundance, land Deadwood. Survivors are her daughter, Mrs.

Bacon, two sons, Louis, Gillette; Amos, Sundance; a sister, Mrs. Tom Jones, Sturgis; 9 grandchildren, 21 great grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews. A memorial has been established for the Dorsett Home and may be left at the funeral home. Bowling Scores Gold Crown Handicap Prospector Bar 948 Mont. Ward 976 B.

W. Novelty 779 A. 998 Rosenkranz Ins. 1040 Forest Service 937 Midtown Motors 895 McKay Jewelry 1026 Barber Trans. 936 Franklin Grill 955 Elks Lodge 945 B.

H. Mere. 1000 High Team McKay Jewelry 1026 High Team B. H. Merc-1076 High Individual Cliff Caserio 176 High Individual Cliff Caserio-265 CLEARANCE GROUP FL ABOUT TOWN Lead High alumni, students and guests are reminded of the formal Holiday Ball in the boys' gym of Lead High School tonight from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.

The Sweetheart of the Future Homemakers of America, Lead Chapter, will be crowned at intermission; music will be furnished by Henry Phillips and the Four Aces and punch and walers will be served. Four winners in the Lead Value Day program are Mrs. Beiva Hall, Western Drug; Mrs. Dean Michels, Finola's; Mrs. Agnes Quam, Anderson's and Mrs.

Wenslow Miller, Keeko-88. Names of the winners were drawn by Janet Bruce, 6, and Dean Bruce, 8, both of 306 Grier Apts. Each winner was presented with $25 in merchandise script as a gift of the Lead Chamber of Commerce and participating merchants. A marriage license was issued Tuesday by Marie Lawler, clerk of courts to Eddie LeRoy Harris and Linda Marie Torres, both of Lead. Snow flurries also were reported in the Great Lakes region and over the northern Applachians, including an inch fall at N.Y.

Elsewhere, however, skies were partly cloudy to clear. New Mexico's would-be twister caused extensive damage to homes and businesses, setting down in the middle of Pojoaque, a village in the northern portion of the state. While New York City dug out from the northeast's white Christmas cover, skiers in Vermont took advantage of Killington's 27 inches of snow that fell since Sunday afternoon. The Weather Bureau at Burlington reported late Monday night, "it's still coming down." In Switzerland, 90 per cent of all mustard is sold in squeezable metal tubes. Hilda Johnson Rites Thursday Funeral services will le held Thursday in Spearfish for Mrs.

Hilda B. Johnson, resident of the Northern Hills since 1934, who died Sunday. The final rites are set for 2 p.m. at the Fidler Funer Al Chapel with Rev. Ronald Reimche, Seventh Day Adventist Church, officiating.

Interment will be in the Rosehill cemetery, Spearfish. Mrs. Johnson was born in Bay City, Nov. 5, 1885 and was married in Clyde, Ohic, Jan. 23, 1906 to William Merlin Johnson.

The couple homesteaded at Bowman, N.D. in 1908 where they lived until moving to Spearfish in where they farmed until 1958. She was pre- 011 HURRY! Ends Tonight! SHOW 7:30 ONLY! BROTHERS PRESENTS RETURN OF THE SEVEN' YUL BRYNNER JULIAN MATEOS ROBERT FULLER CLAUDE AKINS ELISA MONTES NATURAL COLOR Starts TOMORROW! ONE PERFORMANCE NIGHTLY AT 7:30 ALL STAR CAST IN GEORGE STEVENS THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD Signs Contract CHICAGO (UPI) Chicago cutfielder, Tommie Agee, the 1966 American league rookie of the year, signed his 1967 contract Wednesday with the White Sox. Agee, who led the Sox in nine offensive departments in his first major league season, signed the pact before leaving for his home in Mobile, for the Christmas holidays. ceded in death by her husband on Oct.

30, 1963 in Spearfish. Survivors include three daughtors, Mrs. Jim (Merle) Ray, Mrs. Ted (Mary) Hoffman, both of Spearfish; Mrs. Emil (Ethel) Hagele, Reading, three sons, James Willard, Clear Lake, Carrol, Hamburg, Edwin, Spearfish; 17 grandchildren and 14 great grandchildren.

Walter Ruzick Jr. Ruzick Joins 1st Nat'l Staff Joining the staff of the First National Bank of the Black Hills at Lead, is Walter Ruzick well-known former Lead grocer. William J. Schoen, vice president and manager of the Lead bank, said he was happy to announce the addition of Ruzick to the staff effective Tuesday. Ruzick, was born in Lead and has been a resident of the city since, attended local schools and graduated from Lead High School 1937.

A veteran of World War II, Ruzick served in the Marine Corps from 1942 to 1946. Following the war, Ruzick returned, to Market Lead with his operate father, RuzWalter Ruzick and became sole owner of the business ten years later, which he managed until he closed the store in November. He and his wife Lillian are the parents of one son Walter Ruzick III, a student at the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, and they have one granddaughter. The draft of the Declaration of Independence was written by Thomas Jefferson. NEW FABULOUS SPECIAL NEW YORK ROSE QUEEN, blonde, blueeyed Barbara Hewitt of Pasadena, will reign during the 1967 Tournament of Roses parade Jan.

2. (NEA Telephoto.) Midlands Are Blasted By Blizzards United Press International Near blizzard conditions struck the nation's Midlands today. Heavy snow were issued as far southwest as New Mexico. Five inches of snow in northern Arizona and up to seven inches in northern New Mexico stalled traffic in both states. A state policeman reported a tornado-like gust of wind in New Mexico, resulting in extensive damage.

The wintry warnings were posted in Texas, Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri. Snow fell as far west as Utah, as well as the south and central Rockies. On the fringe of the blizzardlike system, Montana received a spread of light snow. Hitting the warmer air to the East of the center from Eastern Texas to Louisiana and eastern Oklahoma, the snow changed to rain. 1017 1000-2965 1063 975-3014 947 890-2616 956 913-2867 1036 975 -3051 900 912-2749 1005 915 -2815 1075 974-3075 929 1 1003-2868 958 926 2839 944 900-2789 1076 978-3054 Series, 9743075 Game Series 265 154-595 Game YORK THE STORE 9 of A.M.

SALE Deadwood STARTS TOMORROW BLACK HILLS WAITS FOR EACH YEAR! REDUCTIONS UP TO NATIONALLY KNOWN BRAND JACK WINTER STRETCH Hose-3 pr. $2 Slax $9.95 ANNUAL FALL AND WINTER (DEADWOOD) IllorS suggest If Santa brought you a check for Christmas a watch is a gift you will always remember WIll orris. Jeweler STORE'S SALE STARTS 9 A.M. TOMORROW.

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About Deadwood Pioneer-Times Archive

Pages Available:
77,855
Years Available:
1876-1982