The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994, August 21, 1958, Page 2, Image 2

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    Teaimsteir
Baker Admits
Bragging About
Harriman Ties
WASHINGTON (AP) Robert
(Barney) Baker admitted today he
probably bragged he had a close
friendship with Gov. Averell Har
riman of New York. Little white
)ie," he said.
"1 might have been bragging,"
the 300-pound aide to Teamster
President James ii. II of fa sheep-
ishly told the Senate Rackets In
vestigating Committee.
A few minutes earlier, Baker
had sworn that his divorced wife
and an ex-sweetheart were lying
when they testified Baker often
mid of close ties with the New
York Democratic governor.
Baker's former wife Mollie lesti
ficd Tuesday that Baker often told
her he and Harriman were the
closest of friends.
"An absolute lie! I'm not kid
ding," Baker shouted when asked
about an assertion by Mrs. Mollie
Baker that he left her with a brag
that Harriman would find him an
other wife, and he then would be
safe from the law.
Baker denounced her as "a very
vicious person."
Baker s present wife, his third,
is Mrs. Carol Ann More Baker.
daughter of Jake More, former
Iowa Democratic national com
mitteeman. They were married
last April.
Baker and Mrs. Mollie Baker
were divorced in 1953.
Just before Baker was asked
about Mrs. Mollie Baker's testi
mony, he had denied any knowl
edge of or hand in a variety of
crimes, including killings, beat
ings, and traffic in stolen jewels.
Mrs. Mollie Baker said her mar
riage to Baker broke up over his
attentions to a Miami blonde who
hud been convicted of slaying an
other boy friend.
Baker swore to the senators that
he didn't use Teamsters money to
support the blonde in luxury in
IBM. He said he couldn't remem
ber exactly where he did get the
money.
' Baker, $125 a week teamsters
union organizer at the time, said
the funds he put out for blonde
Mrs. Ituth Brougher were "noth
ing like" the $20,000 to $25,000 she
has testified he lavished on her.
He set the fiRure Wednesday at
17,000 or S8.000.
Pressed by the Senate Rackets
Investigating Committee to tell
the source of the thousands, the
300-pound Baker pleaded, "I can't
rcmomber. I don't want to per
jure myself."
One-Time Muicleman
- Baker, an ex-convict described
hv nolice as a onetime muscleman
on the New York waterfront, said
he had no recollection of threat
ening to kill Mrs. Brougher s law
yer or trying to strangle a Chi
cago hotel roan who had com
plained about his bill. But he did
not flatly deny he did those
things.
lie did .deny giving to Mrs
Brougher's lawyer, George Ever
ett, in an effort to fix the courts
on her appeal from i manslaugh
ter conviction.
Mrs. Brougher, , now is serv
ing a 15-year sentence for the
July, 1954, Miami parking lot slay
ing of Murray Dubois, a boy
friend. She said he was pistol
whipping her and was shot in
struggle over the weapon.
Baker said he could pin down
the source of only $4,000 of the
money he spent on Mrs. Brougher
in less than a year while she wait
ed out her appeal in plush sur
roundings. Borrowed Money
He said he borrowed that much
from Mert Wertheimer. He identi
fied Werthcimer as a "boss" at
the Colonial Inn in Hollywood,
Fla . a night club operated by
Frank Costello. Joe Adonis and
and other mobsters.
As for the rest of the money,
Baker said, "1 borrowed money
from a few people." When asked
the identity of the loaners, he re
plied, "I can't recollect."
He vaguely remembered, he
added, borrowing some money
from a St. Louis bank. When
pressed for details, he replied, "to
the best of my knowledge, 1 don't
know."
lie first denied asking Mike
(Trigger Mike) Copola, notorious
Miami mobster, for money to help
.Mrs. Brougher.
L'nder examination by commit
tee counsel Robert F. Kennedy, I
oaKer uuer said: "me only time
I talked to him (Copola) was lo
try to help Ruth Hroiicher...(I
said) she needed some money."
Mrs. Brougher. brought under
guard from a Florida prison to
testify here, told the committee
Wednesday Copola gave her $.',
oon. She said she had no idea where
the money Baker spent on her
came from. Chairman John 1..
McClclIan (D-Ark) had asked
whether it came from Baker's
own funds, the teamsters treas
ury or was stolen or kidnap money-
LOGGERS
AND
TRUCKERS
Radiators! c .
Radiators! ..,..
Radiators! Nlw4Uli,
Fair Guaranteed Service
United Radiator Ser.
450 N. I. Gdn. Veil,,
Pliant OR 1171
Big Pile Of Work
Still Confronts
Senate And House
WASHINGTON ifi New fights
over Supreme Court bills and other
unfinished legislation confronted
Congress today as leaders clung
to hopes for winding up the cur
rent session this weekend.
Senate Democratic Leader Lyn
don B. Johnson of Texas set Sat
urday night at the target for ad
journment. But a big pile of work still lay
ahead the bulk of it with the
Senate.
Today, for the third day in a
row, the Senate considered legis
lation aimed at lessening the effect
of recent Supreme Court decisions.
Opponents last night lost a move
to quash debate on a measure de
signed to prevent state laws from
being ruled invalid because they
parallel federal acts. A move lo
table the bill, which is similar to
one passed by the House, failed
46-39.
Earlier, the Senate killed by a
49-41 vote a hill lo curb the re
view powers of the Supreme Court
and to undo the effects of several
rulings in Communist cases.
Should the Senate clear the decks
of the court bills, Johnson said he
hoped lo move on today to consid
eration of the foreign aid money
bill and a measure to hike the na
tional debt ceiling from 280 to 288
billion dollars.
Johnson listed a dozen pieces of
legislation which he said the Sen
ate must act on before quitting for
me year.
A new snarl developed when the
Senate and House differed on how
much control Congress should ex
ercise over the new civilian space
agency.
The Senate, by an 86 0 count, in
sisted on keeping its provision lo
require mat me agency obtain con
gressional consent each year for
its programs. The House, bv a
238-126 vote, rejected the Senate
provision, which had been tacked
onto a compromise $3,694,805,478
appropriations bill covering a var
iety ot lederal programs.
The Senate requested a new con
ference with the House in an ef
fort to break the deadlock.
The House accented without dis
sent a Senate amendment In bar
spending any money for studies of
a possible American surrender in
an atomic war.
Blanche L. Jensen Dies
In Canyonville Hospital
Blanche l.aVerne Jensen. 56. of
Myrtle Creek, died Wednesday at
a anyonvuie nospnai.
She was horn Jan. 9. 1902. at
Gardiner, and was married to Wal
ter H. Jensen in Lafayette, Calif.,
J.in. 1, 1933. They had been living
in the Myrtle Creek area the past
13 years, moving from Richmond,
Calif.
Mrs. Jensen was a member of
the Methodist Church at Rich
mond. Survivors Include the husband:
two sons, Edward Sergeant and
Freeman Sergeant, both of Olvm
pia, Wash.; a daughter, Mrs. Vir
ginia Lowrie. of El Cerrito, Calif.;
eight grandchildren and one great
grandchild. Funeral services will he at Gnna
Mortuary, Myrtle Creek. Friday
at 2 p.m. with the Rev. Cyril Dor
sell of the Myrtle Creek Methodist
Church officiating. Interment will
he in the Masonic Cemetery at
Canyonville.
Douglas Co. Fair Opens;
Judging First Activity
(Continued From Page One)
At the main gale of the Fair
grounds stood a huge replies of
the castle at famed Disneyland
replete with varicolored banners.
Al the other end of the Fair
grounds the south end were
the restful International Gardens,
featuring plant life displays typi
cal of various countries. Flower
arrangements, ranging from arti
ficial and driftwood displays to
tiny, living arrangements, were set
up along a roofed arcade nearby.
Next to the too was the buildine
housing grange displays. Life-site
figures set amid colorfully-arranged
fruits and vegetables and a
huge pastoral scene fashioned from
glued seeds of various natural col
ors were highlights.
The fair will continue through
Sunday, with special entertain
ment events starting tonhight by
the first round of the Ricketts Mu
sic Store talent contest starting al
7:30 p.m. and modern dancing at
8 p.m. j
Friday, the sixth annual Dotic-i
las County Sheep Dog Trials will i
be at 2 -...m., with another talent I
round al 7:30 p.m. and square I
dancing at II p.m.
Hutcheson Must Answer
FOREST PARK. Pa (AIM The
AFI.CIO Executive Council today
ordered absent Council member
Maurice Hutcheson. head of the
Carpenters I'nion, lo answer cor
ruption charges before the Conn-
SO ELKS
LODGE
MEETING
THURSDAY
8 P.M. . Its Cool Here
X The News-Review, Ronburg, Ore. Thur., Aug. 21 19S8
NOT ALL GERMANS, but nevertheless a German bond,
these musicians will provide entertainment during the
Douglas County Fair today through Sunday. Practicing are,
left to right, Clair Andarson, Jim Keefe, Dick Mayer and
Don Thronburg. Doug Donaco, of Portland, will join the
group. (Paul Jenkins)
Leroy R. Thompson Dies
At Myrtle Creek Home
Leroy R. Thompson, 87, of Myr
tle Creek, died at his home early
today.
He was born Feb. 27, 1871, at
Chithanne, Mo. He was married
lo Carrie Leslie Springer Aug. 11
l'JOo. in Pratt, Kan. They moved
to this area 12 years ago from
Wichita, Kan. Mrs. Thompson died
April 12, 1955.
He was a member of the Wichita
Masonic Lodge and of the West
side Presbyterian Church, Wichita.
Survivors include a daughter, Dr.
Mary Williams, Myrtle Creek; two
grandchildren, Richard and Mary
Frances, Myrtle Creek; and two
brothers, Walter A. Thompson,
Oklahoma City, and W. W. Thomp
son, San Leandro, Calif.
Funeral services will be Friday
at 4 p.m. at the Myrtle Creek
Methodist Church with the Rev.
Cyril Dorset! officiating. Following
services, the remains will be taken
lo Eugene for entombment in Rest
Haven Mausoleum.
Pacifists Given
Maximum Fines
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) Two
pacifists received maximum fines
Wednesday for attempting to halt
construction of an Atlas missile
launching installation near here.
Fines of $100 and costs were as
sessed against the Rev. Mr. Theo
dore Olson, 26. of Fallsington. Pa.,
and Ellanor Calkins. 22. of Chica
go by Justice of ,the Peace Tosh
Suycmatsu. They were charged
with trespassing.
Olson also was fined $20 and sen
tenced lo two days in jail when
Suyematsii found him in contempt
of court for saying he would con
tinue resistance action at the mis
sile base.
A plea of innocent to a charge
of trespassing was entered by Ar
thur Springer, 23, of Brooklyn.
Springer was released on $350
bond.
Kenneth Calkins. 23, Mrs. Cal
kins' husband, has a similar
charge against him. He is in a
hospital here with a broken pel
vis suffered Tuesday when he was
struck by a truck while he sat at
the gale to the missile installa
tion. Portland Woman Killed
In Head-on Collision
VENTURA, Calif. I A head
on automobile crash killed a Port
land, Ore., woman and injured
nine other persons Wednesday.
Mrs. Lois Ann Johnston, 34, Port
laud, died in the collision on High
way 101 about four miles north of
here. Among the injured were Mrs.
Johnston's children, Brice, 8, and
Leslie Ann, 6.
Also injured in Mrs. Johnston's
car were Mrs Pauline Hale. 24, of
Oxnard, Calif , and her children.
Vickie, S; Danny, 4, and David, 5
months.
Three persons were hurt in Ihe
o'.lier car.
'the injured all were taken to
Vtmura General Hospital.
ASSUMES BUSINESS NAME
R II. Gladwill, 138 NW Garden
Valley Bld. has assumed the busi
ness name of Log Cabin Richfield
Service al Canyonville, a service
station. He filed notice Wednesday
with Ihe county clerk
Sk
Wv' AUG.
1 VvtO
Hospital News
IMtrcy Hospital
Admitted
I Midical: Nathan Davidson, Dil-
iuiii, rieu nuiicu, iamaiiu, 1111 a.
William Hansen, Roseburg.
Surgery: Lloyd Thornton, Rose
burg. Discharged
Mrs. Joe Cole and baby, Kelli
Jo; Mrs. Lee Schmeltzer, Rose
burg; Mrs. Lowell Kessinger, Oak
land.
Douglas Community Hospital
Admitted
Medical: Charles Mauler, Dehra
Bernard, Roseburg; Mrs. Waller
Shuck, Winston.
Surgery: Mary Woods, Rose
mary Bernard, Roseburg; James
Wilkinson, Sutherlin.
Dtschargtd
Mrs. Cecil Alexander, Mrs.
Frank Poole. Joe Allen, Wendy
Grove. Roseburg; Mrs. Robert
Cart, Myrtle Creek; Laura Busby,
San Mateo, i Calif.; Mrs, Robert
DeCamp, ldleyld Park.
Sutherlin Miner Dies
In Eugene Hospital
Herbert Claude Worman, 66,
Sutherlin, died Wednesday at a
bugene hospital.
Burn at Minden, Neb., Oct. 24,
1891. Worman made his home
there until 1937 when he moved to
Sutherlin. He and Edith Godfrey
were married Feb. S, 1917 in Kene
saw. Neb.
He had worked as a miner for,
Bonanza Mines near Sutherlin for
Ihe last 18 years. , 1
Surviving are his wife, hdilll, of
Sutherlin; two daughters, Mrs.
Phyllis Montgomery, Springtield,
and Mrs. Eileen Cox, Sutherlin,
and four sons. Elton J., Lebanon;
Edward ('., Portland; Dale. Yak
ima, Wash., and Lynn, Sutherlin.
Funeral services will be in the
chapel of tang & Orr Mortuary
Saturday at 10:30 a.m. with the
Free Methodist churches of Cala
pooia and Roseburg in charge.
Burial will be in Roseburg Mem
orial Gardens.
Ex-Roseburg Resident
Succumbs In Portland
Mrs Armour (Clare) Murdnrk
died tliis morning in Portland aft
er a lingering illness.
She was born at Rucoda. Wash.,
and had lived in Roseburg from
1 5i( lo 1052 when she moved lo
Portland to live with her daugh
ter, Mrs. Robert Miodstrup. She
was a member of the Order of
Eastern Slar of Roseburg, and of
the First Presbyterian Church of
Roseburg and later transferred to
the Rose City Park Presbyterian
Church of Portland.
Surviving is a daughter. M r s.
Helen Bjodstrup. Portland: a sis
ter, .Mrs. tauise Donovan, Valleio,
Calif.; a brother. William Gerspai
hcr. Tacoma. and two grandchil
dren of Portland, Ann and John
Bjodstrup.
Funeral services will he Satur
day at II a m. in the Rose City
Park Presbyterian Church with
Dr. William Shane officiating. Cre
mation will follow. Remains, will
be brought lo Roseburg later.
Come And Bring Tha Entire
FAMILY
FUN FOR ALL FROM BABY
TO GRANDPA! SOMETHING
NIW IVERY DAY!
DOUGLAS
21-24 ROSEBURG
Engineers Sign
Agreement With
Contractors
PORTLAND (AP) A contract
running to March 31, 1961, was
signed today by the Associated
General Contractors and the
Hoisting and Portable Engineers
Union for Oregon and Southwest
ern Washington.
Terms of the contract were
worked out in a conference of the
two sides with Gov. Robert D.
Holmes and brought an end last
week to a five-week strike-lockout
affecting 400 million dollars worth
of construction protects.
The settlement was a compro
mise and an AGC spokesman said
these are its terms: A 25-cent
hourly increase retroactive to last
March 31, a 25-cent increase next
March 31, and a 15-cent increase
March 31, 1960, plus a 10 cent
pension payment into a jointly
administered trust fund.
Travel pay will be computed
from 34 basic cities in Oregon and
three in Southwest Washington,
measured in air miles from the
city halls. Effective next March
31, the daily payments will be 75
cents for 15-25 miles; 85 cents for
25-35 miles; and $1.35 over 35
miles. Jobs within 15 miles draw
no travel pay. The payments will
increase March 31, 1960, to $1.00,
$1.50 and $3 for Ihe three distance
zones.
All men employed in the con
struction industry are to offer
initiation fees and dues to the
union after 31 days.
Still to be announced are terms
of the Teamsters Union settlement
with the AGC.
Bert C. Sandide
Funeral Will Be
In Tennessee
Funeral services for Bert C.
Sandidge, 41, Roseburg, who died
TllPSHav from inilll-i0 llffa.arl in
a logging accident, will be in
iviugspori, ienn.
Sandidge was born in Gate City,
Va., Dec. 22, 1917. In 1947 he and
Marv Rprrv wprn mnrrinH Thau
moved to Roseburg about three
inonms ago.
He is survived by his wife, Mary:
mother, Mrs. Effit Sandidge of
West Virginia; four sisters, Mrs.
lrvin Alley, Kingsport, Tenn., Mrs.
Pete O'Neil, Downing, Calif., Mrs.
Rrurp Hiilletl V lihart v
and Mrs. Richard Vnlcnn Port
land; and two brothers, Robert of
Denver, 1.010. ana Everett of Dal
las, Tex.
Long It Orr Mortuary made ar
rangements for taL-in.0 tha hnHu In
Kingsport for services and inter-
meni.
Shop The
ATTEND THE DOUGLAS COUNTY FAIR THIS
PICNIC SUPPLIES
Close-out of our entire stock, buy now
and sovt
LAMP SHADES
Several styles and sixes to choose from,
decorator colon for any room in the
house. Reg. 66c NOW
BACK-TO-SCHOOL
For all your clothing and school supplies check Van
Let's Super 88, First! You'll find tremendous sav
ings on the things you Nieed to send your child
Back-To-School.
GARDEN TOOLS
Set of three hand tools with wooden handles.
Regulor 88c, while thty last per set only ....
BOXED NOTES
Aiirti stylat to chooit from.
r bridft print-. Your choico, whilt thty lost.
CAST IRON SKILLET
Large 10-inch silt at a real value. At your
Super 88, whilt thty last (Limit ont per
customer) . .
RED TAG SPECIALS
Shop Van Lee's Super 88 every day for Red
Tig Specials. You will find many items great
ly reduced. Creater savings are always yours
when you shop Van Lee's Super 88 . . FIRST.
Using
AFL-CIO Leaders
Claim Recession
Is Stark Reality
FOREST PARK, Pa. (AP) -AFL-CIO
leaders said today there
may be prosperity again on Wall
Street but for unemployed mil
lions the recession remains a
stark reality.
The labor union chiefs took a
gloomy view of the nation's eco
nomic outlook particularly be
cause of what they said is a re
turn by President Eisenhower's
administration to a tight money
policy.
Statements approved by the
AFL-CIO leaders criticized a re
cent Federal Reserve Board ac
tion pointing toward higher inter
est rates. They said increased
interest rates may plunge the
economy into a sharp new decline.
The federation's Executive
Council, meeting here, predicted
continuing heavy unemployment
for the next 12 to 18 months. Un
employment totaled 5.300,000 in
July, or 7.3 per cent of the labor
force.
"The unemployed cannot live on
graphs of slowly rising output
that make Wall Street investors
happy," the AFL-CIO leaders
said.
The Council Wednesday ordered
the. International Union of Oper
ating Engineers, target of Senate
Rackets Committee corruption
charges, to carry out reforms in
its Newark, Philadelphia, Chicago
and Long island, N. v., locals
The union also was ordered to
seek recovery of allegedly mis
appropriated union funds from its
former president, William JS. Ma
loney.
Ousted Bus Drivers May
Form New Co-operative
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bus drivers who lost their jobs
when the City Transit Lines quit
operating buses in Salem and Eu
gene may form a drivers' coopera
tive bus company.
Joseph Ratty, business agent for
local 1055 of the Motor Coach Em
ployes Union, said in Portland
Wednesday night the drivers dis
cussed such a co-op at a Wednes
day meeting.
City Transit was succeeded by
a new firm, Cascade Transit Lines,
and buses began operating again
in Eugene. Service still has not
resumed in Salem.
Ratty said the drivers' group is
making inquiries about buying or
leasing equipment "with a view
toward giving the transit patrons
of Salem-Eugene the service they
are entitled to."
Store With Nothing
' " Pric.
44c
22
C
45
TR
88
C
Ptrftct
88
c
mm
Lane Companies
Buy Two Tracts
Salvage Timber
Lane County companies bought
two tracts of Umpqua National
?...... .iivine timber in a tale
this week at the Layng Creek
ranger station. Both are in me
Bohemia Ranger District south-j
east of Cottage Grove.
M&L Logging, Eugene, paid $32
a thousand for Douglas fir in pur-
.1 : irtA nort htarri feet of tim-
ber for $5,382. The timber had been
r ppraised at $3,84 ana uouri.s i
at $22.40. Western hemlock and
..1 nll fnr the annrais-
ed price of $6.55 a thousand. Other
bidders were ui rauiu uuggmg vi
Eugene; Porter Bros. Lumber Co.,
r-ntuM Grove, and Myron Everett
Yearous, Cottage Grove.
Porter Bros, bought the otner
tract by paying a nickel more than
Ika nnrnicftH nflf. Of $2.65 I
thousand for minor species in a
tract totalling 310,000 board feet of
timber. Douglas fir sold for the
:.-a nf tia iS The
pppraiscu pnvc . . -
timber, appraised at $4,961.50, sold
lor jusi au cents mui " "
figure. Di Paolo and MIL bid
against the purchaser.
Klan Leader Is Jailed
For Failure To Pay Bond
LUMBERTON, N.C. oft North
Carolina Klan leader James W.
Cole, who planned a series of
"evangelistic" meetings in the cen
ter of Lumbee Indian country near
here, was jailed Wednesday for
failure to pay a bond fee.
Bondsman W. G. Smith turned
the itinerant preacher over to
Sheriff Malcolm McLeod for fail
ure to pay a $200 fee on a $3,000
bond.
Cole had been free under the
bond pending an appeal to the
State Supreme Court from a two
year prison sentence for inciting
Indians to riot.
Mp5rPSBIG outdoor SNAPSHOT CONTEST
t'TaT7il fttPttp $1,500 SEASWIRl BOAT A TRAILS
Xg&Sg! PJ $1,200 ALIO HOUSE TRAILER
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Pdu THKIi JIMS KODAK CAMIRAS IVHY WHKI
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M.II trainliM to: IOTD COfMf CO., f.O. BOX 1131, POaTlANO 7, Oil.
SOYO S WINNERS OP 1HC WEEK,
W. I. IMC
Ticima 1, WllhiRltM
Nil.
Klimath
K M Ma t aw wttk, M
CUSHIONS
Auorted colon i titti, alM ntck
cuihion. Idiot cuihiom t takt t
the fair
MEXICAN CHAIRS
Children's site, wicker seat, red' blue and
yellow.
SOUVENIRS
Perfect for out-of-town guests. Friends and rela
tives in distant cities will appreciate ant of our fine
gifts. Your choice of many, many types all of low
Super 88 prices.
PLAY SHOES
Littlt woman heels for little girls. Tht right
gift for tht littlt lady who likes to play drtss-
"P .
PAPERMATE PENS
Your choice of Paper Matt ball point pens
with silvtrtd tips. A real value ot only
BLUE JEANS
A clost-out of blut denims. Sin 6 only
While they last only
YcLn.,e.els.
734 l' JACKSON (Located across from Indian Theatre)
OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 5:30 P.M.
F
s
Senate Kills Bill
To Curb Review
Powers Of Court
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Sen
ate today killed a bill to curb the
review powers of the Supreme
Court and to undo the effects of
its decisions in several Communist
cases.
Defeat of Ihe bill came amid
the hottest congressional contro
versy over Supreme Court deci
sions since the days of the New
Deal when the late President
Franklin D. Roosevelt proposed
his court revision plan.
The measure, proposed by Sens.
Williams E. Jenner (R-Ind) and
John M. Butler (R-Md) was the
most far-reaching of the numer
ous bills aimed at recent rulings
of the court.
It was killed with the adoption
of a motion by Sen. Thomas C.
Hennings (D-Mo) to table it. fhe
bill had been offered as an amend
ment to a minor measure relat
ing to appeals from rulings of fed
eral administrative agencies'.
Jenner opened debate on the
measure with an assertion that
the Supreme Court has handed
down decisions "usurping legisla
tive functions and destroying the
internal security, of the country."
The vote to table the bill was
49-41.
Exploding Nitrogen Tank
Seriously Burns 2 Boys
JEFFERSON ifl An exploding
tank of nitrogen seriously burned
two Jefferson boys Wednesday as
they probed through the ruins of
a fire-damaged warehouse.
The fire destroyed a grain and
machinery warehouse and a grain
elevator. Seven hours after tha
blaze started, the youths were in
jured. t. C. Niltl
Falls, Oreim
Mr. I Nti. till. S. Mm
Plttlal II, Oiiiii
Ul 1NIIIH EUSII11 K GtAND MlZill
Over 88'
WEEKEND
44&881
88'
66
88
44
una
M W .