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Show Paul Harvey Convention City Held For Ransom By PAUL HARVEY Parti National leaders of and black nationalist groups are in Chicago preparing to disrunt anti-Vietna- m the Democra- tic National Convention in August They LSD-linque- nt; their comic-crusade- efforts during a clandestine meeting near on Ur. Hanrey Chicago March 24. They will plot specific strategy at another conference in mid-June-. Organizers of this effort are not amateurs; they are trained troublemakers: Ren-ni- e Davis, David Dellinger and Vernon Grizzard. FOR BRIDES FOR GUESTS it's m $9 0: m OF PRESTON BRIDAL Dellinger led the October antiwar march on the Pentagon. Grizzard is organizer of draft resistance in Boston. These insist they are seeking to give "peaceful direction to demonstrations which might otherwise become bloody." Other threats to disrupt the convention have come from Timothy Leary, the from Dick Gregory, the and others. Chicago's Mayor Richard Daley, pledged to protect the party and the President from embarrassment when he solicited this convention for Chicago, is spending astronomical sums of tax dollars to try to wet down the fuse on this time bomb. His Summer Jobs for Youth Committee is ordered to find Jobs for 20,000. Chicago School Superintendent Redmond figures he can keep 417,000 busy this summer, in school or in other educational programs. He says 32 million. The it'll cost mayor says he'll get it. Chicago city police are ordered to help find jobs for youngsters, to take others fishing or picnicking around convention time. The Fire Department will attach spray caps to fire hydrants to keep West Side youngsters cool. The Park District will promote increased attendance at its 98 pools and 30 beaches, to keep the powder wet. Big city politics is a numbers game. They'll keep the youngsters busy the same way they keep voters happy, and with the same meticulous allocation of responsibility. The Fire Department's quota is 146,000 youngsters; Police Department, 70,000; Board REGISTRY Exclusive Gifts to give and enjoy for CAN D I r, EASTER ES of Education, 417,000; Park District, 272,000. The Lakeshore water show and flower show and the summer theater should divert, if only temporarily, 580,000. The to Eoverty program promises quiet. Allowing for overlap in some of these efforts, Chicago City Hall believes X has most potential demonstrators peaceably preoccupied this summer. Mayor Daley has or will get as much money as he needs to try to divert, distract or otherwise occupy all the city's idle hands this summer. He will need, and doubtlessly get, enough more of a slush fund to buy off key men among the misleaders with cash. Chicago is being held for ransom and you will pay. bread-and-cir-c- ? frV-- Rn.m.lf;-E:ri:i-V' ' V -- ' 'Ho Grazing' Period Nears :' - : IsV-- y-'-'- v:- -. j-jl- the recent Farm Bureau Safety poster were (front row, left to right) Martha Ann Call, Bartdroft; Susan Toomer, Dorma Lee Monroe, Soda Springs. (Back row) Roxanne Humphreys, POSTER WINNERS Farmers were reminded today that the "no grazing" period for diverted acres under the 1968 feed grain program .. J Winners in Carlos Mayor, Bancroft, and f ! 'vijn " 0 0 I I u vlilr la through tha widait lalaclion inddl.ry in tha country. Lotail ityl.i. SADDURY RANCHWEAR Whan Browio . of waitam doHllnf. Fair prlcat. . WESTERN BOOTS Wclfe Jacke RANCHWEAR rf Ii I 1 J 1 jg Sanlng rha Notian (ran tha Haert af Ika Wall Salt Lain City, Utah 14111 62 Emt 2nd South Stmt I Patty Parkhouse, Grace. start April 1. It will continue for the following five months through August 31. Blaine Gamble, chairman of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Franklin county committee, explains that farmers who are diverting acreage under the program have agreed not to graze the diverted acres during a specific per iod of the growing season and not harvest a crop from di verted acres at any time during the year. Farmers participating in the Conservation Reserve and Cropland Adjustment Programs have agreed not to graze land diverted under these programs or harvest any crop from such land during the life of the agreements. County farms signed up to participate in the 1968 commodity diversion programs for corn number about 46. will five-mon- th FFA Members To Slate Go Preston Chapter FFA will represented at the state e FFA convention to be held in VIerdian March 28, 29, 30. William.a Owen will be chair- nan of tne scrapoooK Frank Johnson will be receiving his State Farmer "c2ree. Phillip Geddes will )e a delegate on the program f work. Dick Johnson will nainly be concerned with the larliamentary work, Mark Forsgren will be the delegate m finance, and Kim Ilollings-wort- h will be there to get information for next year's scrapbook. 1 m com-Tiitte- ASSORTED CHOCOLATES 1 lb. box $1.80 2 lb. box $3.50 e. MINK CREEK BRIEFS Mr. and Mrs. Bill Carver of attended sacrament meeting here Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Lar-se- n attended sacrament meeting in Ogden Sunday. Guest speakers were Mr. and Mrs. Lenard Rucrette, recently returned from the Southern States Mission. The women are sisters. They spent the night with their daughter, Mrs. Dorthea Bell and family. They also visited other members of their family in Ogden, Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Larsen and family and Mr. and Mrs. Doran Barlow and family. On Monday, they called on his sister, Mrs. Lera Evans, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Roy Wendt, in Logan. Jackie, Todd and Shane Christensen of Preston spent the weekend with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Keller, while their parents attended the world-widhorse races in Pocatello. They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Brent Christensen. Ogden EASTER CHOCOLATE GREETINGS BOX COVERED $1.45 MARSHMALL0W EGGS 90$ AUTMONZfO DOOM MMJXS reston Dodge, Inc. e EASTER BASKET $1.40 FRUIT AND NUT EGG TWIN EGG BOX $1.40 $1.65 MM FOR JOHNSON DRUG STORE PRESTON. IDAHO CARPET SEE Carlson's ffaf CHRYSLER 29 West Oneida Preston, Idaho s |