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Auto Insurance Rales NEW YORK (AP) - Automo- bile insurance rate revisions — almost all of them upward — will go into effect in New York State next Wednesday. For example, the statewide. of liability insurance will p an average of $3 J7 for each private passenger car, or, 3.3 per cent. This type of insurance covers bodily injury and property dam- age to other parties* and is man- datory under the state's com- pulsory insurance law. The 3.3 per cent statewide Increase represents an average decrease of 0.8 per cent lor Manhattan, the Bronx and Brooklyn sad an average in- crease of 4.4 per cenf for fee rest of the state. The State Insurance Depart- ment announced Thursday that 1% bad approved die rate revi- \The new rates,\ the depart- ment said, \reflect the harsh faetg °* car insurance experi- ence. '.'More motorists are making more claims and receiving high- er payments. Medical care oasts are steadily rising. The cost of car* and repair^ to those dam- ned continue their upward march. Auto thefts also keep rfataf.\ H» Automobile Qub of New or*, the chief spokesman for motorist*, said the rate in- creases are \unfortunate\ tart they reflect accident exptri- we. Under the oew rates, car own- err'wiU pay up to pi more for lMbility and comprehensive-coi- T*e owners of #41,000 compact cars wlil get an additional in- crease because the 10 per cent discount they have had win be eliminated. .The Insuranos De- partment said these cars nave produced an \adverse experi- ence.\ Several other dates al- reaay nave wrapped oompswi car discounts. Basic rates on auto bodOy in- jury liability coverage, which generally makes up the iargest share of a policynolder's aitto insurance bill. wUl be reduced by an average of 4.5 per cent la Manhattan, tie Bronx and Brooklyn. Elsewhere in die state there will be an average increase of 1.4 per cent. The net effect, the Inswap t)«pari-4 in me basie rate, the Insurance mem said, win be no change la the statewide average bodily injury basic rile. An insurance industry sj man said: \So far this auto liability rates the United State, have rUen by an average of 9 per cent, com- pared with the current 3.3 per cent boost for Hew York.\ Only 2 per cent of the 5.5 mil- lion passenger car owners in New York State pay the basic rate. About 83 per <*m of ear owners qualify a t sals driven and get a 10 per cent reduction Infc institute axuiesaw, . . .urcharget of 10 to 150 per oent, depending on how bad their accident and traf- fic c^ent* records are. Applications ft* the new rates were filed by the three leading r * t e-mp king organisations, which write about 15 per cent of the auto coverage m the stile. They are the National Automo- bile Underwriters Association (NAUA), the National Bureau of Casualty Underwriter and the Mutual Insurance Rating Bu- te* individual tcheduks, are as t* apply lor higher because they traditionally follow the lead of the bureau members. The new rates go into effect Wednesday on all new Pricks and on policies renewed that day. Rates for auto physical dam* age insurance (collision, fire* theft and comprehensive) will be increased by an average of **m*nMty vw wpnvm as •«•> ag« of UJ per cent sfetewidt. The rate adjustments ar* ao companltd by a numbs* of chan«ts in ta« tarritorial bouad- arttt of ratio* son* «ad aubdi. vlsloas <* previous n** twti- ONLV DAILY NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED IN THE ADIRONDACK* DAILY Weatfw Forecast SEVENTY-FOURTB TEAB VOL. LXXm NO. 142 Friday, July 21,1S67 PHONE Saranw Uke TEN New Jersey Couple Wins First Double 587 Lottery Winners Today From 2.4 Million Tickets in Drums ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — With 2.4 million tickets in the drums today for renewed drawings in New York State's new \thorse- bowl\ lattery, a New Jersey couple came up with the first double victory. ' From the big, Y-shaped drums in a State Tax Department of- fice, 587 winners were to be pulled during the second day of drawings here for the final batch based on Jutie purchas- es of the $1 tickets. Two lickets bearing the names of Mary and Sol LeVin of Jersey City were drawn within ten min- utes of each other from the s£me drum. On opening day, Thursday, the first four million tickets were in the four drums, and more than 1,000 winners were picked. The suspense will linger, bow- ever, for winners will not know whether their prizes—in the first lottery in the state in 134 years —will be $150 or $100,000. That part of the drawing will be con- ducted next week in New York City. Among the early names (Sr3wn 'todtflv WAS *V xoT^^&tt^^ ^* —Anne Johanne Motzfeldt, Lov- •nskjoidsgt 11, Oslo, Norway. HIT AN© RUN An unknown vehicle left the icene of an accident about 2:15 a.m. this morning after back- ing into a car owned toy James Searle, Jr. at the Holiday Inn Motel parking lot on Lake Placid. State police reported that the door of the Searle car, a 1967 Chevrolet, was damaged. Continued warm and humid with variable cloudiness, this afternoon through Saturday. Scattered showerg and thunder showers likely this afternoon and evening and a chance of d dh St g scattered mundershowers urday afternoon. Sat- In contrast to Thursday's gathering of about 200 onlook- eTs, only two spectators, in ad- dition to newsmen, were on hand for the opening today. On Thursday the names of Charles M. Huckins Sr. of Leo- minster, Mass., and Lena Down- ing of Baltimore, Md., were the first to be drawn from four large Y-shaped drums. Susano F. Gonzales of Ossining, whose name was on the third ticket, wets the first New York State winner. The 1,5*7 persons whose names were drawn Thursday will win at least $150. Some will receive more, with the top $100,- 000 prizes going to six persons. The drawings next week, to determine the amount of the in- dividual prizes, will assign horse race posts to winning tickets, and match these positions with the results of a hors* race an the state mis week and the post positions of the horse*. The winners are to divide- about $l,934,200-the amount aet aside lor prases from the June proceeds of nearly $6.5 million. Net t from the $1 tickets is earmarked for educational purpose*. State Tax Oramfeskiier Jo- seph H. Murphy drew the first tickets at about 10:22 a.m. Thursda'y. The drums had been rotated for about 30 minutes be- fore the drawing. Approximately 200 witnesses in the Tax Department building groaned and laughed when he announced that the first winner was an out - of - state resident. There were cheers when the name of the first New York State resident was drawn. Each winning ticket was scrutinized under ultraviolet light to assure that it bore the authentic watermark seal of New York State. News in Brief 380 Enemy Killed in Vietnam SAIGON (AP) — South Viet- namese and South Korean troops reported killing 380 Com- munist soldiers in two savage battles Friday while, over North Vietnam, American carrier pi- lots blasted three MKJs from the sky and probably downed a fourth. The aerial action was the first significant dogfight over the North m six weeks. Soutti Vietnamese headquar- ters said an elite airborne bat- talion killed 240 enemy soldiers in northernmost Quang, Tri Province along the coastal plain in a fight with what was evi- dently a Communist battalion of about 500 ajen. Tne Commu- nists were Jeported to l»ve abandoned 89 weapons on the field. About 100 miles to the south in coastal Binh Dion Province, troopers of South Korea's White Horse revision overran jungle headquarters of the Viet Cong's 95th Regiment and reported kill- ing 140 guerrillas. They cap- tured 70 weapons. Congresswoman Shirley? WOODSilDE, Calif. (AP) — Shirley Temple Black is think- ing seriously of running for Con- gress. The former child movie star expects to announce her decision within two weeks. Mrs. Black, »;..* Republican, said Thursday she was consid- ering entering a Nov. 14 fP^} eiecliuti v avfc bfccaua* State Sen* Richard J. Dohvig, Athertan at- torney, had decided against run- ning. He was my candidate,\ Mrs. Black said. Gov. Ronald Reagan on Thursday set for Nov. 14 the special election-to-fill the 11th district seat vacated by the death of Rep. J. Arthur Young- er. He died June 20 in Washing- ton of leukemia If no candidate wins a majori- ty in the Nov. 14 voting, a runoff election will be held Dec. 12. From Rags to India But Broke NEW PELHI, India James J. Tahey, a garbage truck driver from Waltham, Mass., arrived in India today to dedicate a Roman Catholic, ehurah built wftti royalties from « boofc \Pacific War Diary,\ at his experiences *as a sail- in Worjd War H. \It has made me broke but what' a wonderful way to go broke,\ Fahey said of the church'**© be dedicated Sunday, tfjs &th birthday, in Mettupatti, a village i? Madras State 1,300 miles south erf Delhi •-The pastor of the church and myself will both be as poor M church mioe but we'H also Ib* tna bappi**t paojda » the world,\ he said. Fahey has never met the priest, the Rev. S.K. Michael, although the two have r corre- sponded for several years. Fa- hey heard about Father Michael from a resident on his garbage route. Fancy's one-week trip to India was financed by Waifoam resi- dents. \If I can leave India with the satisfaction that I've done a lit- tle something to help relations between various religions and between Indians and Ameri- cans, r u be happy,\ he said. Fabey will go to Mefcupatti for three day f of dedication c*lebr***». USSR Tries to Persuade Arabs to Compromise WORK IS UNDER WAT on a larger show rin|: {or thte ye*r'g Rotary Club Hone Show, Aug. a at the former lmcetiTuOt onthe Woomigdale Road. Chet Beemaa, <» the Jtep, aad \6omy\ Moody holding tiw post, are pulling ports the easy way , while Bob Reyell does the job by haad in the background. A larg- er rfeg will be needed this year for the Western events and the larger number of horses entered in the show at Phil Hyde's place. jLVoDcman Photo) Powell Returning to New York NEW YORK (AP)-De P osed Congressman Adam dayton Powell was en route to Nejw York today to begin an attempt to appeal a criminal contempt of court citation against him. It was learned that Powell, due to arrive at Kennedy Air- port at 11:32 a.m., will be met at Ifce airport by 1he New York County sheriff* who will place him under technical arrest. A il confidant -said Powetf would not be detained. The arrangement wag worked out with the courts by Robert L. Carter, chief legal counsel of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Pe- ment. The House of Representatives refused to seat Powell March 1 after a special committee ac- cused htm* of misusing public funds. . He was overwhelmingly re- elected in a special election Ap- ril 11, but he has made no at- tempt to take his seat. He is- appealing to the U.S. By WTJXIAM N. Oati, UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) l — The Soviet Union was reported trying to persuade Arab nations today to accept a U .S.-supported compromise linking the withdrawal of Israeli occupation force s with the end of the Arabs' 19-year-old state of war against Israel. But the Ar- abs, led by Syria and Algeria, were reported adamantly resist- ing the Soviet pressure. The 122-nation General As- sembly, seeking agreement on a resolution before it ends its five- week emergency session on the Middle East crisis, was to meet this afternoon. Some diplomats expected another quick adjourn- ment until Saturday or Monday to give the compromise efforts more time. East European sources said the Russians were attempting to reach a compromise on the ba- sis of a modification of the Lat- in- American resolution they rejected earlier? It celled for Israel to pull its troops out of Egypt, Jordan and Syria if the Arabs ended their state of bel- ligerency, and informed sources said the revised draft preserved the principle of reciprocity. Despite the reported Soviet reversal and the Arabs' depend- ence on the Russians to make up their losses in the June 5-10 war, diplomats said Algeria and Syria were holding out for an assembly demand for uncondi- tional withdrawal of Israeli forces. This along with the Lat- in-American resolution failed on July 4 to muster the two-thirds majority necessary lor approv- al. In Tel Aviv, informed sources said Soviet annt shipments to Egypt to replace losses in the war have included limited nuf- bcrs of the new MIG23 and Suk- hoi fighters, a s well as about 200 earlier models of the air- craft and quantities of tanks and artillery. Israeli estimates put Egyptian plant losses at about 500. In London, where reports of Soviet wishes for a compromise between Arabs and Israelis ar- rived from various capitate, British officials appeared oon- vinced that the Soviet military replacements are likely to be far below the level needed for any new Arab campaign. . Race Violence Hits Minneapolis ople, and Henry Williams, Pow- ell's Harlem lawyer. The lawyers will go into State Supreme Court today aUd seek an application for a stay of court order requiring his arrest. They also seek an*order to appeal the contempt crtatioh. Powell, 59, faces a jail term of at least SO days for criminal contempt. A State Supreme Court jury found him guilty last fall of evading court orders in connection with a libel judg- Dugan Cites Ticket As Police Honesty W. E. Dugan, Saranac Lake lawyer who is now crusading for higher pay for policemen, was given a parking ticket yesterday while he was collect- ing signatures on a petition for higher police salaries. Dugan this morning cited 4he incident to demonstrate \the and efficiency of -t h e police force. At the same time, Dugan said he was spending his time in the current campaign \because I believe in justice and in the welfare and safety of Saranac Lake, it s r e sr i d e nts and visitors.\ ^^ Asked if he were prepared to pay higher local taxes, Du- gan answered affirmatively, \if it were necessary to assume adequate police protection.\* Police Chief William Wallace reported this morning that he had given a provisional appoint- ment as a' patrolman to Gilles Miron. He would be the eleven- th man on the force, not count- ing Dormer Stephen who covers the desk six days a week. v The original police force number- ed 12, before the resignations of Deputy Chief John Moody and Patrolman Wallace Gay. fSee Mr. Dugan's letter on an inside ptfie) ) Supreme Court a decision by a Washington federal judge that the court was without power to order his reinstatement by the House. Powell has not appeared in New York for about a year and a half. He has been at hi s is- land retreat on Bim ini off the Florida coast. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Rock throwing, at least tsvo shootings and a dozen small fires were reported as violence flared up in Minneapolis, Minn., Thursday night and early today. A police inspector said the second outbreak in two nights occurred on the Negro North Side of the city. There were no fatalities from the shootings but two injuries. Earlier, Mayor Arthur Naft- alin blamed the Wednesday night outbreak of street fights and firebombing on a few \law- less\ individuals and said the Negro community was not at fault. \We're dealing with a few individuals who want to inflame the community/* he said. \For many days rumors of impend- ing trouble have been cir- culating. In certain measure it was organized around the ru- mors themselves.\ In Durham, N.C., some 300 Negroes staged a relatively peaceful march to City Hall to Ellen Straus and Anne Hartwell: Giving Help by Phone in N. Y. C. (Editor's Note: Th« follow- ing NEA story has to do with New York City. But it is also about two active housewives who are summer residents of Saranac Lake, both of them here right now. Mrs. Ellen Suhflberger Straus has lived at Knollwood on the Forest Home Road every sum- mer since infancy, parents before ,that, nd and her her grandparents, on her mother's ide, before that . . . since 1900. And now the Samuel Hart- wells hav e bought the house at Knollwood right next door. If the area has a spat of rain this summer, maybe the two activ- ist gals will be using the unlim- ited local telephone service to stir up some trouble. J.L.) whole some By AILEEN SNODDY Newspaper Enterprise Amn. NEW YORK - (NEA) — There are several hundred consider the old saw \the hand that rocks the cradle rules the world\ electrifying, not trite. Their Teason? They ran head- on into a group of 50 women volunteers guided by Mrs. Pet- er Straus, wife of the head of WMCA, a New York radio sta- tion. Mrs. Straus, like s o many ac- tive womei| in their early 40s with children, wanted to do more than shuffle papers in an ofiice. A Smith graduate, she early channeled her special en- gi^f into doing things. First it was a paid job with the New York City League of W o,m en Voters. She earned $18.75 a week with the league and then went to the Atomic ^Energy Commis- sion and wag involved in its school educational campaign. The year 1949 was a busy and romantic one for Wr. Active in the campaign for the late Sen. Herb ert Lehman, she and Straus \courted on so und trucks.\ Throughout her job experi- ences she had the nagg i n g thh l h i thought, g says, that energi- es of volunteer women were wasted. She explains that \I fin* ally decided there were an en- ormous numbers of people do- ing good things but most of them were only making reports. \I was convinced that there was something better for wo- men's civic groups to do other th i d i than raise boards. gps money and sit About three years ago Mrs. Straus and the station came up with Call for Action. \We needed a proj ect where moth- ers could come in at 9, be out at 3:15 to be home by 4 when the children got out of school/' The result was a perfect mar- riage, ^e says, and a beginning cleanup of frightening hous i ng conditions in New York's slums. underline their demands for bet- ter housing and other social re- forms. A battalion of National Guardsmen was dismissed alter the march, but a small number of the guardsmen remained on the scene where policemen, sheriff', deputies «al - slat* highway patrolmen—all heavily armed—lined the rout^ of the march. An organizer of the march, Ben Ruffin, said, 4 'We went downtown to demonstrate to the white folks we could march peacefully. Now they can take the money they spent on all those police and spend it for improvementa^' A group of Negro leader 9 in Cairo, 111., warned the city offi- cials Thursday to expect more racial violence If demands wer e not met by Sunday afternoon. \Cairo will look like Rome burning down,\ if the Negroes don't obtain their satisfaction, one of their spokesmen said. The Illinois city had been hit by firebombing and sniping last ^Sunday\\nlghl~and there\ were fires ignited Tuesday night despite a strict police surveil- lance and the presence of Na» tional puardsmen. At the black power meeting In Newark, N.J., H. Rapp Brown, national chairman of the Stu- dent Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, said President Lyn- don B. Johnson was ready to help \racist authorities\ stop violence in Newark but made no move to improve conditions In July 1966, for example, 100 buildings were declared public nuisanc e s, direct result of a new law forced by public in terest stirred up by Call for Action. (Continued on P. 8, Col. S) police said restrictions clamped on after a policeman's death might be lifted if today remain* quiet. \We're optimistic,\ said the state police commander, David 8. Kelly. Mt said no further •earth was planned for 42 stolen military carbine* +till missing and be- lieved hidaen in the Ne«ro dis- trict ringed by armed guards. Negroet from ^ Washington, who said they represent \inter- ested citizens,\ arrived at Jack- son, Miss., to inspect hunger and poverty in Mississippi. \We heard of our sisters and broth- ers who are hungry,\ said Mrs. Willie Hardy, one of the three visitors. for Negroes. At Plaihfield, N.J., 2 Youths Arrested In Lake Placid Two-outxjf-town youths were arrested Tuesday in Lake Pla- cid on charges of trespassing and were given suspended sen- tences when arraigned Wednes- day before North Elba Police Justice John Shene. Patrick\Faber7 20,~of DarT- mouth, Mass, was arrested for trespassing about 7 p. m. on the complaint of Jack Davis o' the Hotel Marcy. Hi s suspend- ed sentence was for ten days in jail. Richard Vincent, 20, of Gro- ton, N. Y., was arrested on three charges - trespassing, as- sault third degree and disorder- ly conduct. The complainant wag Charles Gadwaw of the Holiday Motel. He was given a ten-day suspended sentence state each charge. \ What's Doing In The Area? Visitors To The Tri* Village Area I Are Welcome At All Events | For special event*, dining, daa- cin*. boating, horseback ridU« attractions, swimming, folflnj. gee Page 5. For Movies and Summer Theater, 6e« Page S. Archery — at clubhouse aad rang© on Kiwassa Road, days at 6 p.m. Children be accompanied by Fri- TWO SUMMER RESIDENTS at work in the Big City. Mrs. Aone Hartwell (at fee-phone) and Mrs. Ellen Straus direct fifty volunteer women in giving telephonic adviee, to thousands on Medicare and, Me- l caid from their office at radio station WMCA Wn- ed by Mr. Straw. \ Playgrounds: William Morris Park, Baldwin Park, Saranac Lake; Municipal Park, Tapper Lake. Adult supervision. Swimming: Municipal Beach, Saranae Lake; Village Beach, Lake Placid; Little Wolf Beach, picnic area, trailer park acrt playground, Tupper La*e. Life- guards present ait all these beaches. Bridge: Mondays and Fri- days. Hotel Saranac, 7:45 p.m. Saranac Lake Free Library, 102 Main Street. Open Monday through Saturady, la a.m.-5:M p.m. Extensive Adirondack****. Robert Louis Stevenson Cot- tage, end of Main Street, Sara nae Lake, hours 9 to 12 and 1 to « p.m. John Brown's Grave, . Lake Placid, f to 5 daily. Adirondack Wildlife. Rod of Stevenson Laos. Prop. Thomas Sterling Alaska Fur and Game Farm, Koute 86, Lake Placid. Open t a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Leib'» Moonstone Mine and Bock Display, Route 3 between Saranac Lake and Blooming dale. Overnight Camping. Tennis: 8. L. High School Courts, Petrova Ave.; L. P. at southern end of Mirror Lake; tapper Late at Municipal Park Fish Hatchery, exhibits of Brown, Brook and Lake Trout. N. Y. Stale Conservation De- •clnn, (Rt. io). Olympio Bobsled Run, six miles east of Lake Ptacid oa Rt. 71. (Only bobsled run in Western Hemisphere.) Olympic Sid Jump, Just east of Lake Placid on Rt. 73. Whiteface Mountain Memorial Highway, summit ope n 9 a.m. to 6 pum. Aerial ehairlift 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Six Nations' Indian Museum —Onchiota, turn off Rt. 199 at Gabriels off Rt. S sU Vermont- ville or Loon Lake. Cornell Maple Sugar House: Bear Cub Road in Lalfe Placid, open to Public, Tuesday through Saturday, 1 to 5 p.n> Golf Course* open to public: Saranac Lake Golf Course (Lake Placid Rd.); Craig Wood Championship Golf Course, (Rt. 73. t mile* SJE. of Lake Pla- cid); Tapper Lak« Ouunpidn- shlp Golf Ouwi (Rt. MS); Sa- in* fiolrpMOM (St. 1*. r'l*'