The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, February 24, 1950, Page 1, Image 1

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ELYA FORREST, employee of Lester's Gift and Model .hop, ti
shown with two "befor" and "after" figurines a now typo
which you finish at homo. Tho whit china-powder figures and
jowol boxes aro colorful and shiny aftar an application of baia
paint, ragular colors and Drasden china lacquar finish. Mrs.
Forrost is holding tho fairy tala charactar "Tha Balloon Man."
Tha figurines ara aasy to finish and won't (hack or datariorata,
sha says.
Crackdown Of Florida's Law
Halts All Types Of Gambling
Governor's "Get-Tough" Order
Given Statewide Compliance
MIAMI, He., Fab. 24.. (API At tha paak of Florida's
wintar saason, gambling in avary form is at a virtual stand
still throughout tha stata.
In tha walca of Gov. Fuller
to. all sheriffs, constables, county solicitors and law enforce
ment agencies survey of the
Is truly on. '
In the Day's News
' By FRANK JENKINS
n did wa break diplomatic
relations with Communist Bul
garia? Well, here is an illuminating
little tale:
In our embassey at Soifa (Bul
garia's capital) we employed a
Bulgarian as a translator. A while
back he was arrested by tha Bul
garian police. He was questioned
continuously for 32 hours and then
was tortured into making false con-
fessions of sabotage and spying mt
which he implicated . personal
friends and officials in the Ameri
can legation. He was threatened
with deatii, but was released after
signing an agreement to return to
the American embassy as a com
munist police spy.
He came back and told our peo
ple all about what had happened.
We tried to protect him. But a
couple of days ago he was seized
by the Bulgarians. We assume that
death will be his fate. f
.
OUR State department tells of
another pleasant little incident:
Last summer the Bulgarian po-
(Continued on Page Four)
BODY FOUND IN WOODS
NEWPORT, Ore.. Feb. 24--tPL-A
search party yesterday found
the bod of Delhert Hargis, 27, in
a forest' where he disappeared the
previous day.
A heart attack was blamed. The
body was found within a mile of
Melco landing on the Siletz river.
Service To Others Best Kind
Of Happiness, Educator Says
Dr. R. C. McCall Of U. Of O. Speaks
At Annual Drain C. Of C. Banquet
True happiness end satisfaction in life ara best found in
service to others, Dr. Roy C. Me Call, head of the speech
department of University of Oregon, told a large audience
attending the annual meeting of the Drain chamber of com
merce Thursday night.
The banquet meeting was held
in the grade school gymnasium,
where the dinner was prepared by
the Civic club and served by girls
from the 8th grade.
Commending Drain's civic work
ers for their enthusaism and dili
gence. Dr. McCall told of the work
of his department in endeavoring
to correct speech defects and of
the satisfaction and pleasure re
sulting from success. The same
feeling of happiness is found by
civic workers when they see their
work for others bearing fruit, he
asserted.
The speaker described various
speech defects and afflictions
Warran's "gat tough" lattar
state shows that the "lid"
' . ' v ' v
- r ronv-rensacoia io Rey wen me
picture was the same: gambling.
if any, wis being conducted on a
sneak basis. Slot machines had
disappeared. Bookmaking activi
tivities were practically at a stand
still and the plush gambling casi
nos of Jacksonville ana the "boia
coast" were either dark or simply
a rving dinners and cocktails.
Sheriffs of almost every county
in the state reported their county
"clean" with little or no activity
in the world of fast money.
Operators of the expensive rou
letter and dice parlors on the Flor
ida east coast were reported high
ly irritated at the governor's edict
to shutter.
It came at the very crest of the
Florida winter season the last
fl wjth iM.mmtyti vi,i.
tors dodging winter snows.
Several phases of the unprece
dented gambling "brownout" were
open to conjecture.
Although many law officers re
ported they bad not yet received
the governor's letter sent
(Continued on page Two)
Homer Whitt On Trial
On Money Theft Charge
The trial of Homer White, it, of
Albany, opened Thursday in cir
cuit court here w i Jude William
G. East of Eugene presiding, in
th absence of Judge Carl E. Wim
berly, who is reported to be ill.
Selection of the jury was com
pleted Thursday and testimony was
presented this morning. White is
charged with the theft of a billfold
containing some $800. from the Spot
Tavern las'. January.
Jurors include Keith W. Ronk,
Margaret Reece, Vivian Harth,
Margaret Ijurence, William Upde
grave, Ethel Webb, Fred J. Porter,
Earl Smith, Christina Micelli, T.
P "usenbark, Beatrice Churchill,
and Audrey Bellows.
which, he said, affect one out of
ten persons, with three out of 100
having defects of a serious nature.
Causes and methods of treatment
were discussed by the speaker who
gave his subject much humorous
treatment.
The program, with Jim Whipple
as toastmaster, included the invo
cation by Rev. W. N. Byars. in
troduction of guests, piano solo by
Dorothy Randall, and vocal selec
tions by a male chorus.
Visitors were present from Cot
tage Grove and Rose burg. Inelud-
(Continued on page Two)
TIm foatwot
Chaoety with mind rale
today SNtd Sertvretery, little
Sunset toaky 1:14 p. m.
Sunrise) tomorrow 4:St av m.
Itfoblithoe 1173
Coal Strike Contempt Count Holds
Court Refuses
Union Request
For Dismissal
Trial Ordered Monday;
Miners Standing Pat On
"No Contract, No Work"
WASHINGTON. Feb. 24
Judge Richmond B. Keeca refused
today to drop contempt chargea
against the striking coal miners
union and ordered a trial on Mon
day. Ketch told union attorneys they
could have a Jury trial if they
desired.
Welly K. Hopkins, chief UMW
attorney, said be would consider
over the weekend whether to ask
for a jury trial.
Assistant Attorney General H
Graham Morison asked that the
trial start tomorrow. He noted that
since the original court back to
work order, issued Feb. 11, "there
John L Lewis' Ailing
Irother Kills Himself
SPRINGFIILO, III., Feb. 14
MP Themes A. Lewis, I1",
brother of John L. Lewis, head
of the United Mine Workers, was
found shot to deem today In his
heme here.
Deputy Coroner Catherine
Rutherford said he had shot him
self because of III health. She
edded that Lewis, a retired lm
mi rafen service employee, had
been bt HI health far seme time
and suffered e severe heart at-,
teck yesterday. ,
has been no increase in production
of the bituminous mines of this
country."
Urging the need for speed in the
case, Morison said:
"At least 20 states have adopted
emergency measures to take care
of the coal supply.
"Virtually all of the nation'! ci-
(Contlnued on page Two)
Plunge Kills U S.
Aide In Austria
VIENNA. Austria, Feb. 24 UP
A man identified by police as the
U.S. Naval attache to Bucharest
pljnged to his death in a railroad
tunnel south of Salrburg yester
day. Semi-official sources said to
day there is "no hint of foul play."
(In Washington, however, offi
vials said they were not elimina
ting the possibility that the officer
m. v ave been slain. Formal com
ment was being withheld pending
further word from abroad.)
U. S. army investigators tenta
tively identified the man as Capt.
Eugene Karpe, who was a close
friend of Robert A. Vogeler, the
American businessman sentenced
on charges of being an American
on charges ob being an American
spy.
rrom unofficial sources it was
learned that Karpe's home town
is Delhi, La.
Karpe, 45, was a destroyer com
mander in the Pacific during the
war. He was awarded the Legion
of Merit and th. Navy Commenda-
ti i Ribbon for outstanding war
service.
Man And Wife Held As
Suspects In Burglary
A 90.var.Alr1 man and his vounff
wife are being held in the county
)ail in connection wun uie Bur
glarizing Wednesdsy night of Po
well's Snorting Goods store, 308
W. Cass.
Chief of Police Calvin Baird re
ported to day that city police,
uiA.lrina nn a tin ohtained bv the
sheriff's office, arrested Geroge
Dully, ana nis wue, vena vuiiy,
19, in the Greyhound bus depot
Thuridav afternoon as they were
preparing to leave town.
Sherifl u. T. oua wrier nu
Deputy Dallas Bennett recovered
the two pistols and a portion of
tl . money allegedly taken from
the -tore, earlier in the day, after
they had received a reliable tip
where the loot might be located.
Duffy and his wife were schedul
c f jr arraignment in Justice court
today.
Savings Bond Drive
Will Commence May 1 S
WASHINGTON. Feb. 24
This year's U.S. Savinge bonds
campaign will begin May IS and
run through July 4.
Secretary of the Treasury Snyder
said today that the help of several
million volunteers is expected to
"assure the success of the drive."
The Treasury department has
adopted a campaign alogan of
"Save for your Independence." The
Liberty Bell is the drive symbol.
LOGCIR KILLID
CRESCENT CITY. Calif., Feb.
24 (.R Stephen W. Matthews, 40,
logger formerly of Klamath Falls,
Ore., was killed by a rolling log
yesterday on a tree-felling Job north
of Smith river.
Aa the tree fell, it dislodged a
to- which rolled downhill and
crushed Matthews. He is survived
by his widow and two children.
ROSEBURG, OREGON
Senate Committee Halves
Truman's Housing Program
For Middle-Income Groups
WASHINGTON, Feb. 24. (API Slashed in' half by the
Senate banking committee,. President Truman's middle-income
cooperetive housing program appeared today to be headed
for still more trouble.
Senator Bricker ( R.Ohio) said ho and other foes of tha
bill intend to carry their fight for oven mora drastic revision
to tho Senate floor.'
"It is going to be quite a battle," Bricker fold a reporter,
"and I have a feeling we may win it."
; ; 1 Faced with strong opposition
Alleged Slayer
Freed After 16
Years In Prison
CHICAGO. Feb. 24 W
Theodore Marcinkiewici, 41, slight
and balding after serving more
than It years in prison of a W
year sentence for murder, was
freed in criminal court yesterday.
One of the first persons to greet
Marcinkiewici upon his release
was Joseph Majczek, who was con
victed with him in the slaying of
Policeman William Lundy in the
attempted holdup of a delicatessen.
Majczek, after serving 11 years,
was pardoned in 1945 when he was
d -lared to be innocent. Two years
later he was awarded $24,000 by
th . Illinois legislature as damages
for unjust imprisonment.
M jczek, whose fight for free
don was protrayed in the film
"''all Northside 777," now Is an
i .surance salesman.
Chief Justice Thomas 3. Lynch
ruled that Marcinkiewici's consti
tutional rights had been violated
in that he had not been given a
fai ' 1. He said that a statement
to police by the owner of the de
licatessen, Mrs. Walush Kasulis,
was suppressed but if produced
bv the state might have had a
"very good influence on the jury."
Mrr. Kasulis had Idnetified Mar
cinkiewici as one of the slayers.
But assistant Public Defender Kr-
win Block told Judge Lynch that
bifore the trial Mrs. Kasulis had
told police in a statement that she
could not identify the slayer.
Fire Dept. Call Blocked,
Flames Destroy Home
CYPRESS, Calif., Feb. 24
-"Oh, that's an eld excuse to
get trie line," someone laughed
when John Ogle broke Into the
conversation en his 10-perty tele
phone line to call the fire de
partment. While the conversation was
resumed and Ogle ran to a near
by ranch to use the phone there,
his house burned down, leav
In the Ogles end their five chil
dren homeless, yesterday.
36-Hour Prayer Vigil Set
To Protest Hydrogen Bomb
NEW YORK. Feb. 24 WPV- A
marathon meeting starts at the
Community church of New York
tonight to protest making of the
hydrogen bomb. -
A discussion session, sponsored
by the interdenominational church
and several peace groups, will be
followed by a 36-hour prayer vigil.
The church said some persons
will remain at prayer throughout
the night, all day Saturday and
Saturday night, until shortly before
services at 11 a.m. Sunday.
GREw em THI AXS L. H. I till I Gregory, guest speaker at tha Peewee baseball benefit
banquet held lest night in tho junior high school auditorium, received an unexpected surprise
when herd of Paul Bunyens swooped down on th dean of Northwest sports journalism
and initiated him into their ranks. Performing th rite were, left ta right. Bill Tipton, head
f th organization, L. B. Hicks, and Al Melee. Gregory nervously shiver in th middle as tha
cold blada of th sue tickles his neck. (Staff photo. I
FRIDAY, FEI. 24, 1950
backers of the original program
compromised and got a scaled
down version of the administra
tion's cooperative housing plan
through the banking committee
late yesterday. The vote was to 4,
but some members reserved the
right to offer amendments dur
ing the Senate debate, expected
next month.
The original cooperative pro
gram called for $2,000,000,000 in
government-guaranteed loans to
cooperatives made up of families
whose income ranges generally
from (2.400 to $4,700 a year.
The committee voted to cut the
loan figure to tl ,000.000,000 and
to change the financing plan to
bring it in line with a recommenda
tion by tha federal reserve board.
Other Slashes Agreed On
The group also agreed on deep
slashes in other bousing programs
the bill covers.
It decided, for example, to au
thorize Federal Housing admin
istration (FHA) insurance of an
additional $1,750,000,000 worth of
home loans by banks and other
private lending institutions. The
original figure was $2,750,000,000.
That FHA program, in operation
for years, is entirely separate
from the proposed new cooperative
plan.
The committee also made a 50
percent cut in the FHA loan In-
(Continued on pago Two)
Gun Kills Negro. v
In K-Falls Chase
KLAMATH FALLS, Feb. 24.-WP)
A man accused of threatening
a girl here exchanged shots with
police last night, then apparently
took his own life.
Police said they found the body
of Robert Mclntyre. 46. Negro.
plumber's assistant, in a shed in
uie oroaa aireei negro aisirici,
where they had chased him after
answering a girl's call for help.
Dr. George H. Adler. county
coroner, said Mclntyre apparently
had snot nimseit through the head
with a .38 caliber revolver.
Patrolman Carl Kelley said he
end patrolman Bud Switzer went
to the scene when a 17-year-old
girl, Troy Mae Peters, reported
Mclntyre had threstt.ied her with
the gun. The man fired a shot at
them, then ran for the shed, Kelley
said.
There he fired another shot.
Switzer fired back. A final shot was
heard in the shed, Kelley said. Po
lice fired tear gas at the shed,
entered and found the body.
SHOPLIFTER FINED
Nina Burr. 5, Brockway, charg
ed with shoplifting, was fined $25
upon a plea of guilty in justice
court Wednesday, Judge A. J. Ged
des reported. She was arrested by
city police Tuesday on a com
plaint filed by a local store.
4e-50
Loyalty Files
Demand May
Reach Courts
Senators Trying To Find
Reds In State Dept. I red
By Truman's Attitude
WASHINGTON. Feb. U.-iJPt
Republicans today threatened a
court fight to get secret loyalty
files into the hands of a Senate
committee ordered to hunt down
any Communists in the State de
partment.
That cast some doubt on wheth
er Senator McCarthy (R Wis) will
furnish the committee with a full
list of the tl persons he said are
Communists who either had been
or aro now working for the de
partment. McCarthy said he doesn't know
whether it will be worthwhile to
go ahead with the investigation
if the filea remain locked up.
The Wisconsin senator called the
President's decision "an obvious
attempt to cover up Communists
in the State department," adding:
"The adminislratin is afraid to
face the facts. I don't think the
Senate will take this as final."
The Senate voted previously to
clothe the foreign relations group
wun autnority to subpoena the loy
ally files.
Chairman Connelly (R-Tex) told
a reporter he doesn't think Con
gress has the power, to get files
(Continued on pago Two)
Uncle Accused In
Death Of Infant
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 24 -UV-A
coroner's jury recommends that
L- lie 3teele, 21-year-old truck
driver, stand trial in the beatini
deth of his niece, Starlen Jean
Bevan, aged I.
The baby'a mother, Mies -Helen
Iverson, 20, testified at the inquest
yesteraay mat ane loanea uie baby
to ner sister, Mrs. Dorothy Steele,
10, "because it wouldn't mad
me." she added: "I don't think
she knew I was the mother,"
The L " nt died at the one room
Steele apartment Sunday. Neigh
bors testified that "three or four
times w week" they heard the b oy
being beaten so that "sharp
cracks" resounded through the
walls."
Policeman Robert L. Barham
told the jury that Steele admitted
whipping the child with a leather
strap because she disturbed his
sleep. The officer produced pit
tures showing Starlene's body
b-isied from head to foot.
The report of autopsy surgeons
Frederick Newbarr and Victor Ce
falu showed that the baby'a vital
organs were so broken she bled
to death internally.
Bail Posted By Woman
On Drunk Driving Charge
Phyllis Wellman Jennie, 33, Rose
burg, charged with driving a motor
vehicle while under the influence
of intoxicating liquor, was released
Thursday upon posting $150 bail,
Sheriff O. T. "Bud" Carter report
ed. George Pichette, 42, Roseburg,
charged with assault and battery,
was relessed Tuesday upon post
ing $50 bail. Carte, added.
British Conservatives Trcil By
Close Count In Election After
Even Standing At Four Periods
LONDON, Fab. 74 (API The Labor party has won a
plurality over tho Conservatives and Liberals in tho Now
House of Commons.
With 27 districts out of o2S still to report, Labor hold
310 seats against 211 for th Conservatives and seven for th
Liberals.
An absolute majority of tho new houi Is 313.
For time, th Leborites and th combined oppoiition war
all even. Four times in IS minutes of counting th opponents
were dead level, and four times Labor went on seat ahead.
Then th Laborites forged ahead by several saats again.
Th Conservatives cam back sharply in today's counting
aftar overnight results had cast pall of gloom over head
quarters of Winston Churchill's party. When a recess tn th
count was taken early today, th Laborites held lead of 41
seats.
In th old House of Commons, which had 440 seats, th
Laborites outnumbered th Conservatives 381 t 202.
A Labor spokesmen said his party needed majority of
30 teats to function effectively in th new Houi.
Roseburg Folks To
Join Tour By Air
Four Roseburg folks are join
ing the "Look Up, America," da
scribed as the "world's most am
bitious air tour," which will take
oil tomorrow on a flight from Port-
una, ore., to Havana, Cuba.
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Winston
and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hull are
planning to leave Roseburg early
Saturday, flying to Klamath Kails
for refueling and thence to Las Ve
gas, where they will join some 250
aerial ambassadors of goodwill
from Oregon, Hying then own
light planes, US of them.
ine route will take them to Phoe
nix, tl Paso, Dallas, New Or
leans, Jacksonville and Key West,
then 100 miles over the ocean to
Havana, Tha round trip, which is
scheduled for Feb. 25 to Mar. 4,
will cover a 7500-mile route.
Purpose of the tour is to spread
the fame of Oregon, with lis Port
land Rose Festival in June. Pen
dleton Roundup, its scenery and
its old time western hospitality.
ina winstons ana riuita will ny
in the same plane, a four-place Ry
an navion.
Also listed among the flyers are
Dr. R. E. Williams. Myrtle Creek.
and Omer Larson, Reedsport.
Reformatory Housekeeper
Murdered; 3 Inmates Held
IONE. Calif.. Feb. 24 UP)
V a. Anna Corbln, 52, head house
keeper at the Preston reforma
tory, was found slain in her office
yesterday and today authorities an
nounced three Inmates had been
placed in isolation wards.
The three not identified, had
spots on their clothing which ap
peared to be bloodstains. Tha cloth
ing was found In a systematic
check of belingings of the school's
657 inmates.
Superintendent Robert A. Chand
ler said the woman'a death was
"definitely murder."
Mrs. Corbin had been beaten
so brutally about the head and face
it was impossible at once to tell
whether she had been bludgeoned
to death or stabbed, the coroner
said. A rope had been cinched
tightly around her neck.
The attractive housekeeper had
b. model in a matrons' group
at a fashion show here the night
before she was slain.
Price Cuts Announced
On GMC Trucks, Cars
DETROIT, Feb. 24 UP) Price
cuts ranging from $10 to $40 on the
prices of all ita cars and trucks
were announced today by General
Motors Corp. The reductions are
eflective immediately and come
with announcement of downward
adjustment in the cost of living
allowance to be paid GM employes.
An adjustment of the cost of
living allowance given GM employ.
es is part of the contract between
GM and ita hourly and salaried
workers. It is revised according to
the cost of living Index of the
Bureau of Labor atalistics.
Under the terms of- the adjust
ment formula, there will be a two
cents an hour reduction in the
cost-of-living allowance for 290,000
hourly rated employes and a $10
quarterly reduction in cost of liv
ing bonuses paid approximately 72,
000 salaried workers. This revision
will be effective Marrii 1.
Oregon Fish Board Raps
Four Proposed Dams
PORTLAND, Feb. 24 -WPV- Op
position to four dsms proposed for
the Lower Snake river was reiter
ated yesterday by the Oregon Fish
commission.
The group sent word to Sen. Guy
Cordon (R-Ore) that it considers
the dams a death sentence for sal
mon runs in the Snake.
The commission also said it could
not aell an acre of ground at the
mouth of Herman creek to army
engineers for use aa an Indian
fishing aite, since it would destroy
the value of a fish hatchery on
the creek. The engineers sought
the site to replace sites flooded by
Bonneville dam.
Daughter Of Lost Filer
Stricken With Pneumonia
FORT WORTH, Feb. 24-(,P-Peggy
Ascol, 18-month-old daugh
ter of one of the five B-3t fliers
missing off British Columbia, is ia
Harris taspital with double pneu
mr 'a. Her condition is "critical."
Lieut. Holiel Ascol, vetersn of
21 years service, was bombardier
on the lost B-M.
Twelve of th IT me aboard
th plan were rescued.
Churchill, reelected In his own
district by a big margin, spoke
to his constituency at Woodford.
The wartime prime minister said:
"We cannot tell and I am cer
tainly not going to pronounce what
ia going io nappen, but it la ob
vious parliament ia going to b
in a very unstable condition.
"All we can do ia to keen our
eyes steadily fixed on the main
purpose to bring our country back
to the forefront of the nationa and
to make her a home for all our
people."
The popular vote at S p. m., was:
Labor 11.S98.099. Conservative
10.938,204, Liberals 2,318,247.
With the race to close It wn
possible that votes in four con
stituencies in the remote parta of
Scotland could have an Important
ueanng on me issue. Because ol
travel difficulties they will not re
port on how they voted until next
Monday.
Many of the districts still to b
(Continued on page Two)
Czechs Free, Expel
2 More Mormons
PRAGUE. Feb. ft. t!P- Two
American Mormon missionaries
held by Czech police since Jan. 2a
on charges of entering a "pro-
nioitea area" were released from
jail today and expelled from tho
country.
Th missionaries ara Stanley C.
Abbott of Lehi, Utah, and C. Aldoa
Johnson, . of Idaho Falls, Idaho.
They were released at a time when
the Mormon church ia withdrawing
all its American workers here in
accordance with Czechoslovakia'
new church law.
Eleven other missionaries, two
of v horn also have been expelled
on chargea of constituting a "dan
ger to the safety and security of
the state," left Prague Monday to
take up new missions In the United
States, Great Britain, and Western
uermany.
Czech church laws decree that
all officiating clergymen must be
Czech citizens, swear an oath of
loyalty to the government and re
ceive their salaries from the stata.
In all, 17 Mormon missionaries.
Including Johnson and Abbott, hav
been expelled from Czechoslovakia
since last May.
Johnson and Abbott were arreat.
ed as they traveled through Mo
ravia to visit church member
living near the Polish border.
Mrs. Alexander Thompson
Ex-Legislator, Passes
PORTLAND, Feb. 24. OP) Mr.
Alexander Thompson, one of Ore
gon's first woman legislator and
leaHee in fni-miil-tintf h.-hh -J
the stale's educational laws, died
ai ine iroutaaie tuberculosis boa-
nilal Wilnul,v eh ia
Mrs. Thompson first plunged in
to politics in tha battle for wo
men's auffrage, heading the Wasco
county suffrage campaign in 1912.
In 191$ she was elected to th stata
legislature for the first of three
She was instrumental in passing
the eight-month minimum school
bill, a minimum salary for teach
ers, an elementary education tax,
and a child welfare law.
Mrs. Thompson is survived by
the widower hera a Hanchta,. miA
two grandchildren. '
Prayer-Song Marathon
Lasts Eleven Hours
WILMORE, Ky., Feb. 24-WP
Their religious ferver still at high
pitch, students of little Asbury col
lege planned to meet again today
to take part in the world day of
prayer.
An outburst of songs, testimo
nials, confessions and prayers last
ed 11 hours ycterday, ending at 11
p.m. It began at a regular chapel
service when one student got up
and said he wanted to offer a testi
monial. His act of faith was infectious.
Before the service ended last night
most of the 900 students of tho
inter-denominational religious
school had taken part. Separata
prayer meetings were held in dor
mitories. Levity fact jj ant
By L. F. Reiiensteln
Now that Portland's council
bat liftod tit ban (legally) tm
Hi colored race, orhaot Ola
Mae Oregon will follow by
lifting the bee
J