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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1937)
I bob mmmmmmm i . " . . -w - Salesa, Oregon, Friday Ilornir., Jsitcary 1, 1837 EIGIITY-SIXTU YEAR Prfcs 2c; tleircctkzij Ec SB ft. to TITITOQk 'W : Year - Q Celebrations I'Eers Orderly;, p Four Arrested No Serious Mishaps Mar Occasion ; ' Few Calls Come to Police I Sheriff Has Battle With Suspected Inebriate, . Suffers Scratches i .A horn-tooting, shouting throng of Joyfully1 celebrating citizens last I Bight painted a nourished ; "3 0" I across Old Man 1936 and his" bag of returning prosperity and -wildly r wared the welcome sign at that young hopeful, Master 1937. t The : dim , of downtown Salem bore evidence Chat times were far different from those' of the de pression years., when celebrating was done but not so ifbole-heart-jedly. The absent steam whistle (reverberations of other dayi were, to the city center observer,: shrily r echoed in a chorus of , raucous automobile horns. Here and! there a firecracker added to the auraal upheaval. . 1 ' Midnight Show" j , Flay to Capacity ' - ; I Throughout the city In family (and club groups men, women and children assembled- to celebrate; others crowded theatre, midnight shows to capacity, j . . But the celebration was largely ione of orderly conduct. Dp to i (Turn to page 18, col. 1) Strike Sprcnctiiig In Auto Jndustry (By the Associated Press) New wajkouts in plants; serv ing the automobile Industry! add ed yesterday to growing concern that all " motor car, production, with the' exception of the! ! Ford company, might be tied up. ; William 8. Knndsen, exec u tire vice ' president 'of the General Motors corporation,, whose j wide spread ' interests in the aoto.no blle industry ) were the most di rect target of ' strikes, with, 30, - 000 employes Sidle, Indicated will ingness to negotiate In . a : s'ate : ment Issued iat Detroit. ! 1 A company spokesman said collective bargaining must be cr .rted . on with ; Individual j plant managers, - however, and piropos ed that "sit-down strikers jr acate iplants before -negotiations- were begun. ! Activity was halted at the Guide Lamp company, Ander son, Ind., nnit of the General Motors corporation, when I 2,900 employes quit work. - ; I Another CMC subsidiary, the Chevrolet and Fisher Body com pany plant at Norwood, O.j near Cincinnati, was shut down; by a walkout cf 2,200 men. Postal Receipts All-Time Record , Postal receipts for 1936: set a new all-time high, with a possi bility that completed figures may -send the figure over the $300,000 mark. Postmaster H. R Crawford said yesterday. With number of receipts yet unreported the; gross Income for the office during the .year stood at $295,955 late yes- terday. This is an increase of $29, 190 over the $2 CM 6 5 registered, in 1935. j , In checking oyer the receipt records for the last 45 years! Post master Crawford pointed out that the receipts in 1902 were $23,819. That was the year that the; pres ent postofflce building was occu pied. With -the construction of the new bunding about to start be stated that the business of the office will probably be over the $30f,000 mark before it Is occu pied. This will represent an in crease in business of more than 1200 percent during the 34 years the old building has been in use. Extra Copies j Available of !: Today's Paper This Issue of Tbe States man consists of four sec-, lions, 42 pages, one sect ton for general news and thiw -sections dvoted to, special feature of the New Tear's edition. 7 Extra copies are available at The Statesman office at 10c apiece. The supply Is limited, so orders should be placed promptly. Rice Winds Up 22-Year Service as Treasurer; Lqiids Public Support Twenty Million Dollars in' Cash or "Equivalent Is Handled in That Time;. Retiring Official . . . Speaks Good Word for Successor . ' AMAJ grayed with -22 years in his eity's service but still able to smile in the face of air impending; unhappy event, Clyde O. Rice yesterday afternoon spoke a good word for his successor and locked the city treasurer's office; Saturday he , will be plain John Citizen and Paul H. Hauser will be treasurer..'.. t if-U- " ... . V- r ' r" ' O More than $20,000,000 In cash. I 111 tlfT XatltsisWncaH v: I VIiail OCIllClilsCU ; A Sentenced To 10-Year Terni But Early Pardon Hinted ; Ypung Ularshal Likely to Leave Country - r ..' j J KANfclNQ. Dee. ; 31.-(iip)-Mar-shal Chang Hsueh-Llang, who led a : rerolt in I Shansl : province and held F Generalissimo Chiang Kat Shek captiye for 13 .days, today was : sentenced to ten years in prison, .but : persons close to the government believed he would be pardoned soon. - 'p . , j The military affairs commission, sitting -as : a court martial with General Chiang presiding, handed down the prison sentence together with five years deprivation of civil rights, authoritative sources dls closed. - ' , - : 1 Pardon By Today Is oa Prediction J .- This .was the "young marshal's" punishment for the mutiny-which he led ' December 1 2 at Slant a. capital of : Shenst province, where be held the generalissimo prisoner nearly two weeks. I - ! Authoritative reports that Mar shal Chang, former 'overlord ot Manchuria, was sentenced to spend the next decade in Jail, were: fol lowed quickly by others that hs (Turn: to page 2 coL 2) Linabergh Money Rumor Is Denied TRENTQN, N,:J.. Dee. Z1-JP The Lindbergh kidnaping, crime of early 1932, tonight greeted still another year - with i newspaper headlines. ;.:;7, This time -the development was the denial of Governor Harold G. Hoffman and other officials that a cache of $21,650 in "gold backed" Lindbergh ransom money had been found, as reported in a Philadelphia newspaper. A , year ago it was the arrival Tof the Lind berg -.family in England, where they fled for privacy! Two years ago the -approach of Bruno Rich ard Hauptmann's trial; Saying he knew "nothing" about the reported find, tbe gov ernor said in a statement: "It is undoubtedly another of the long list of Journalistic pipe "dreams conceived in confusion and de signed to further mislead the pub lic In its understanding ot the Lindbergh case.". 1 i Col. Mark O. XCImberllng, head of tbe state police, said -'There's nothing to this latest thing. Mt. Ahgel Creamery Shows : Record Volume of Business MT. ANGEL, Dec. j 3 1 Nearly 11 00 persons gathered at. St. Mary's school here today for the greatest , annual patron's meet ing and.bananet in history for the ML ; A n g e 1 Cooperative creamery, and heard R. -J. Bern tef; president, report a record volume of . business - for tbe creamery and record returns to the farmers for 13V the 24th year of the organisation's activ ity. Bernlng, tn bis annual addrssa, urged the dairymen to work against the cream grading, bni slated . to come before the leg islature and - declared the Nil "Jnsl another wedge to drive the producer and eiaamery far apart." He said the blU would necessitate two more graders at the ML Anjrel planL Pooling of Prod net , , . Declared Essential Frank Hettwer, manager mt the co-op' creamery, presided at held during Vin f morning-and afternoon. " f "Unless dairymen pooi arr milk and- creato and unless they control the marketing of thslr dairy - products, t h. e dairymen can never hold Uieir ovn, Ber nlng said la bis annual addrass. He declared the ML Angel cream ery in 1236 returned approxi ebecks, warrants and bonds has passed across the counter behind 111 mm Tfuavia wi ikivo spent : those 22 years he esti mated. But a rest from the munici pal bookkeeping an ties and a multitude of citi zen -puts Ques tions will seem strange and - a little . empty to him. As old ac qua intanees dropped Into the - ciyd o. Eie treasurer s oiilce to bid shim a pelasant new year and speak a friendly word, ,Mr. Rice looked back upon bis 11 con secutive terms in office and de cided, he said, that his "biggest satisfaction has been that all of my associates aU of these years are my friends." ' " "The people have been mighty nice to me," Rice said, adding that be had been opposed at only three ot the 11 elections through which he passed. ' ' ' , ,- I Blacksmith Helpor Early in Career By dint of studying at, Willam ette university and : business col lege. Rice as a young man gradu ated from a Job as blacksmith's helper to the position . of keeper of the capital city's moneys. He dropped the hammeV on the anvil and began ' operating a "concrete mixer" typewriter and an adding machine as treasurer in 19 15. The typewriter was outmoded long ago (Turn to page 13, col. ) Bombs Are Found In Workers' Cars Connection With Worsted . , Company Strike Seen;J : One Employe Hurt . PORTLAND, Dee . 31P Three employes at . the strike troubled Oregon Worsted company found nnexploded bombs I under the hood of their automobiles today. One person. Art Serianni, plant electrician, received m 1 n o r in juries when he touched off the cap of one of the objects to test tt, ... .:?, ;iS ' 'r;. i -Mechanics found the explosive attached to spark plugs on Clar ence Hopp's machine when the motor "missed." Hopp, the fore (Turn to page 2, col. 6) ' mately two cents more per pound for butterfat than : any other creamery in tbe state. " The co-op manufactured 1,800, 000 pounds of butter- in 1936, an Increase of 9 per cent over 1935. Cash value of this -product for the first 11 months of -1935 and 1936 showed a 11.09 per cent gain for 1936. The co-op gained more than 200 . new pat rons, in -1936. ' " Notable Speakers Heard as Meeting ' t Chief speakers were Rufus Hoi man. state treasurer; Rev. A. Ward,- manager of the Pacific Wool 'Growers' association and president of the Oregon Co operative " council; ' Solon" T. White, director of agriculture for Oregon; and Clyde Smith, president of the Sheridan co-op, creamery. The reciprocal trade act Is not proving beneficial to - the Am erican farmer. Ward - told the dairymen and declared that under it this country is "really giving away but not , getting much tack." He cited i Importations of cheese- from Canada as one fac tor proving bis point and 'said that a year ago th&t country (Turn to page 2, coL 4) y Mere Building Tops Past Records, ; More in Sight $1,893404 Is Total ; for 1936;' Salem Top Oregon Community Capitol, Postoffiee and ; Other Projects Will -Make '37 Bigger - Salem broke 'an existing .. rec ords' In. 1936 for building opera tions; yet 1937's construction program will exceed that of the year Which ended last nlghL : .'That Is .'the prosperity, picture painted -in bold strokes across the books of the city building de partment, headed by Inspector E. C. BushneU. The : city'j construction report for 1936. f 1,893,246.24, repre sents an upward bound of 442 per cent from 1935's more 3348 359,05, ' H exceeds . the former record year. 1929, by 50.35 per cent and even surpasses-the com bined valufe of permits for the six " years 1930-35 : by .6 per cent. '"'.' With i these facts in mind, the citizen -' interested - in , building statistics is not at all surprised that Salem stands above -13 other I Oregon cities, . including Portland, in point of upturn m construction : activities. Pendle ton, in second place, has report ed a gain of 305 per. cent over laat year. Publie Bnildinss Assure- Continuance Definitely assured public con struction which w ill go Into 193? building permit records the state captlol, barely started, and the new postofflce -ajone will amount to $2,261,737. Add ed to this total apparently will be at least $100,000 for apart ment houses, $36,000 for 'two new churches and. In tbe opin ion of Inspector BushneU, - more than $340,000 in construction of new one-family honses. . . "It is safe 16 say that build ing permits in 1937 will "run over $3,000,000," BushneU de clared last nlghL "I have no doubt that residential construe tlon will at least equal that of 1936 and while it is bard to tell about commercial building, there certainly will be a great deal accompanying ' the public build ing -.program." . Further prospects for a still busier construction scene for 1937 lie in proposals for erection of a new county courthouse, of a new state office building and of a state library' unit, the inspector pointed out. More Than Half Is - New Construction A breakdown of 1936 building projects shows that $1.7X9,844.90 worth of new construction and (Turn to page 13, col, 1 ) ; Ray of Hope For - Pontiff Appears VATICAN CITT, Dec. l.-flV A small ray of hope pierced the cold mists hanging over Vatican City tonight and revelations that the clogged rein in the pope's left leg bad cleared and local circula tion bad been restored. ' ' Tbe general circulatory condi tion, however, continued critical and there still were clots in the pontiff's blood stream that might bring death at any moment. The terrific pain, which it was disclosed,, today had caused the pope to 'groan aloud throughout the night Tuesday, lessened some what and tbe holy father was no ticeably more cheerful. lie told attendants be knew that he now is cured. His physician. Dr. Amantl If Hani however, shook his head, - observing that despite the lessening of pain the pontiffs con dition is most critical. . Vidal Denies He Plans to Resign WASHINGTON, Dec. HHT Eugene I. Vidal said toda teat be had not prepared his resigna tion as director of air commerce. "When I entered publie ser vice," he said, "I did so with the purpose of ' carrying out I.: a definite program for the advance ment ot civil aeronautics. That program has not been completed- - : . v . ' - High s6urces have" said that Vidal would resign to enter pri vate industry Contact Made itTitlilOdiiaper ! Kiimors Claim Cut Mattson Denies Any f Developments; Asks - Leks Puhlicity Police punt Apparently I at Standstill; ; Junes l e Not Reported r v. f"'" r,.t".' ' "'mmamK!"'!' "'' TACOMA, Jan. l-(Friday)HUP) -Dr. W.W. i Mattson said today be bad beard no direct word from bii sonr Charles since the 10-)rear-bld boy was kidnaped Sunday eye- Ping.- -r.-'c-: r t -: . i ": In an Interview, na ' was asked the qiuestlon, "Have yon had any direct iword front: Charlesi" i He answered: ; 'No, nothing. No. There Isn't a thing." ! : , The doctor' flat negative came in, the face of -persistent reports, well estabBshed, that the family had made (contact with the kid naper who piolds Char lei for $28,- ooo ransom. Observers were qluck t? point oft Dr. Mattson' state ment did not deny be bad received wora from the kidnaper. The doctor also expressed con cern over tbe amount of publicity being given the search for bis son. Suggests Rose Bowl . As Substitute Thrill i . , " "If only the papers would play up something else for a while 1" he aald. "Cant they find some- luiu( iu iwreryune wuuiu oe in terested In There's the Rose Bowl game. Why don't they use that? If - there could only: be a lull in the publicity at a crucial time like this!". . j .: , Dr. Mattson, former University of Washington and Pennsylvania football lineman, was interviewed as? he sat with feis family in the home , on .the ex ot New Tear's and hii lit. birthday. Tbe f 6tb ltoafr-ot LisaQn'e absence. .rbsd passed shortly before without defi nite developments in the case, i While the Mattson family eat at borne, the kidnap bunt outside came to an apparent standstill. Justice Department " . - Shows Inactivity " ' Department - of justice agents, after their assistant chief,. Harold Nathan, had greeted newspaper men Vok no further action that (Tarn page 2, coL 1) - Confidence Maries View on New Year WASHINGTON, Dee. 31.PV- A high note) of confidence sounded tonipnt in statements and resolu tions with) which government leaders greeted 1937. R.; Walton Moore, acting secre tary of state, 'epitomized the New Tear attitude by saying: ''Never, at the beginning of any year I in the j present century has there beenl stronger, reason for confidence than now exists. That is my message of faith and hope as we look forward to an increasingly peaceful, happy and prosperous future. - ' , Secretary! Morgenthau 'Tbe nation has a right to look to the new year with renewed confidence and courage. Business activities. have i increased, the national in come has risen, opportunities for profitable work in all : lines hare broadened, and an earer demand tor government Issues at h 1 g h prices demonstrates the high state of the nation's credit." Secretary! Ickes "In 193? we will .consolidate tbe gains 1 made in the first! Roosevelt administra tion and move steadily forward." Baby 1937 tomes; Is Son of Former Rosedale Pastor ! I ' Meet "Baby 1937!". Each new year is pictured as an infant, but for Rev. and Mrs. Milo Clifton Ross,-New Tear 1937 will always mean Just that; . ,i " '':,' . Tbe baby son - of ReV. and Mrs. Ross,, weighing C : pounds 1$ onnces, was born at 1:05 .o'clock this New Tear's morn-' tag : in the Deaconess ' hospital. -4 Rev. and Mrs. Ross now live at ; Greenleat, , Idaho, where Rev. Ross is "pastor. He was formerly pastor of 'the Friends ; church at . Rosedale a n d a leader la young people's work -In the Salem district. , - v ,, .-, - .-.-jr.- Auto Struck by Engine t- . Cut ( OccupzrAM Unhurt Mr. and Mrs. II. Sterner" of Portland escaped injury when their truck was struck and dam aged: somewhat by a freight train engine at 14th and Mission streets early - this S morning. They were traveling eastward on Mission. The engine hit the front of the truck and slid it ctt tbe tracks. The Sterners had come to alcn to visit relatives - J HI' I I I I VI "-' i I I ' Parents Report II o News' of Boy r r Dri and Mrs." W, W, Sfattoon of ' Tacoma who claimed Thursday night to be still without news - Of their soii, Charley 10, kid ! ; uaped ' last - Baada-y.- - - hmp oyners T.lest;;; Two Uniori Groups i - - i 1 . Claim Concession Offered Firemen and Officers; - . No Accord Reached SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. Shipowner met two unions lira "surprise" peace move today but the conference "ended on a sour note, assuring continuance of the long maritime strike deadlock into the new year. . ( .' Operators . came out... of the meeting asserting they had offer ed "major concessions" in an at tempt to end the - stalemate over preferential hiring for union., mar ine firemen ''and masters, mates and pilots. This has been termed the toughest; issue in the i 3-day tleup. - - Union Leaders Bring - Different Report - : Union leaders countered with statements asserting the. confer ence had not discussed proposals publicly mentioned by the - em ployers. . ' - Employer Spokesman T. O. Plant's statement said bis -group had offered wage increases, cash payvfor overtime work, -union re cognition "and a clear cut guar antee not to discriminate against officers for" union activities." . ' vln a4etter to tbe masters, mates and ' pilots, - plant: said the offer was made "in return for an agree-' ment assuring non-interference in our. selection -of . licensed person nel and subject to early accep tance." ; ' - . A joint union , statement said' the two worker groups made "def inite modifications in our stand, (Turn to page '2, col.. 8) Millions Paid to Celebrate , : Nohy Arrival of Year 1937 " (By tbe Associated Press) , "Happy New Year." ' That was the watchword from dusk to dawn as millions of Amer icans cheered the abdlctlon . ot 113$ and the accession of 1937 and paid millions of dollars for the privilege. " . From coast to coast they gath ered in hotels, clubs, theaters, hot spots, taverns, homes and cafes, intent upon fulfilling pro fessional hosts predictions of a New Year celebration rlralling the mass scale revelery of boom times. Whoopie I2znporians Fricee are Boosted . Plate prices at the wboopie em poriums ranging from $3 to $20 and beyondwere ; somewhat higher than last year. But .'that seemed to make no difference to patrons enjoying the .financial lift ot bonuses, dividends and ray hikes. ,.' More silk toppers were in evi dence in. the throngs in the bright light belts. - -. Probably the largest turnout was la New York's Times Square. Ttoasandi jinmei tbat area to JTt it oponsorslfiip ITo'BeR t - . , ' . .. ! " ' ' , 1 ' : ',, . v '1 j1 , , "a 02,430,000 Flood and Erosion Cont-cl i f Program Visioned 7ilit;'';Largcr AppropHation Asked Later Santiam, Molalla, t. -Tribntories Included in . Huno Development Plan Hero 1 STATE BpQrisorship of a $2,430,000 flood and erosion ccr. trol program la the Willamette valley will be asked th ;LComino; session of the state legislature, Senator D;lzi IIcKay, chairman of tbe. Greater Willamette Valley preset . ispmmittee, announced yesterday, The project. McKay r -id, would be in contemplation of army engineers' recomrr la tions of a future ?50,000,000 1 flood, irrigation, navisrat on, pwer and drainage program.' i if Engineers have been studying the project for more tvon I year under a $300,000 appropriation from congress. Hcr-nt-ly an additional $15,000 was given to complete the surrey It la expected to be finished next month. Sheriff Has Bond ! Of Another Firm Company Seeking Changes In System Left Out 1 in Cold, Result l ' After informing the ; county court -and Sheriff A. C. Burk that bis tompany would not accept the 130,000 bond of the sheriff nn iss individual bonds were placed on deputies handling ea4h, Gy lord B"Eckles, state 'manager- of the United States Fidelity and Guaranty company found himself ut In the cold yesterday. Sheriff Bark presented newly signed bonds In the amounts of $50,000 and $ 1 0,0 0 0 as required by the court., signed by the Great Ameri can Indemnity, company. , ; ! Eckles had told the conn on Wednesday that the bonding com panies had agreed that the bond should not be written only oa the sheriff but should be spUt up a niong the deputies. Under the new bond the chief deputy in the tax collection department is to give personal bond to Sheriff Burk in the amount of $10,000. . 'At the meeting yesterday after, noon when Sheriff Burk present ed the new bond to ,the . court, which - was accepted, he accused Eckles of bad faith In waiting until two days before the start of I i (Turn to page IS, col 3 ) . -. . . Sioux Falls Blast j (Maimed Gang Jot r - . i . Bandits: Execute Member, ; Wounded Girl States; M - Is Expected, to Die '!"" . i r r SIOUX FALLS, S. D., Dec. 81. -Jpy-A terrific explosion of dyna mite and black powder, reported td have been set off by a robber gang- to kill one of their members, shook: this city and vicinity to night; . ' The explosion occurred at I: SO pi. ! m., and " was heard S 0 miles a Way. Helen Snyder, a Sioux City, la., girl, was found, shot and V'! (Tarn to page 2, col. t) , greet tbe infant 1837 at the 'cross roads of tbe world. i Newspapers ; estimated . New York celebrators would spend $10,000,000 or more. - ; Revellers la other cities were expected ; to lay proportionate a niOunts on the line for a . long night of dancing-, drinking, bell ringing; born tooting and confetti tossing. - 1 Twelve loop hotels welcomed betwen 15.000 and 20.000 parti cipants in Chicago's merrymak ing. The top charge there was $ 12.50. The total bill ia tbesa inna alone was reckoned at be tween $300,000 and $400,000. i They Opened the doors to sell out crowds : in Washington. A $7.75 tariff was paid at oe of the 'favorite spots.". Fourteen members of tlie - Ad AraAn club climbed Pike's Peak ia Colorado to welcome the New Year with''fireworks.t:---"'.;-..':V.'.- President Roosevelt sat down to a New Year's eve dinner with his tons, James, Elliott and John, and fcther guests and later enjoyed a rrivata motie. Secretary of tbe Treasury, i:cr- ; (Tarn to page -2, cel. 7) - ...... - .... roTiaorll Plar. Blaiy'o and Oil i O senator McKay said Represen tative Grace Kent Magrueder ac other legislators as well as Cov- ernor Martin favored the state sponsorship. I . . One,1 million j dollars woul 1 re to the Willamette river irork, $40,000 to the I Clackamas, $ 310. 000 to the Tualatin, $250,000 on the Molalla, $110,000 on the an tlam, $70,000 on the Marj' and Muddy rivers and $80,000 era the Mckenzie.' ' ; Half Down Daau oa - Veillamette Planned . 7 ' i The "proposed $50.000, CS lde-' relopment takes into cocEl'ra--tlon at least half a dozen dam on the Willamette, flood control. Ir rigation, drainage, navlsaiion, stream purification and develop ment of hydro-electric powrr. m Should the program'recelre ap proval, officials estimate that the region would care tor $25,09 ad ditional farm famllfee and add materially " to! city populations. Low unused lands would be put Into cultivation, and lands suf fering from lack of moisture would be put Jon a profitable basis, they declare. For Salem. It is pointed out, the possibilities of an all-year-round water traffic from Portland to Salem open an avenue to the development ef ad ditional industries here. Naviil Limtaticn Hopes Lie Buried LONDON, Dec. Sl-iay-Tbe 15. year struggle of tbe sea powers to limit war fleet by treaty died to night. For its eulosrv there were yuuB iqr nigger snips ana sixger guns from sea jto sea. The' Washington and London treaties! of 1822 and 1139, re- ' spectively, by Which the. naUons sought to curb the sfse of naval . forces,, expired with the old year, : In their place was a two-thirds un- : ratified treaty among the L'n fted ' SUtes, France and Great Dr..,:!2, f which provides a limit for the size ; of individual men owar, bet puts no curbj on numbers. '".-. Everr one r,t th H a tions, America, Britain, Frsace, Italy. Japan, is ready to build more, bigger,-faster warships. Ia the same race are soviet Russia and rearmed Germany, bitter ene mies from every political siani point. T I ' - - L . Great Britain paced tbe rest tonlgbt. With everything arracired to lay the keels tor two 25.000 ton capital sh:pB on New Tear's day and to add 97 more by 1940 to .ur wvui targesi tonnage oi 1, 222,113, his majesty's adclrali began thinking of land guns in the paelfle to keep natal russ. away, . Parked Cara Hi I By Irain Suilcr Two antcnjciilcs, one r ecru pied, were fcacry Camaged wftn a southtound Couthern P a i f 1 c frt.'lt - train ' strnck a r-.rl.c! cos re wbic'j irrs. irair.i r-; cf l,wicr3 wt s slttlrs i i f'.ore I It acs.Ir.Et axictisr - r raa f?.he. a larga sc', cw-i ly C'arI-3 L. Unrum:, .; t r . : . i. f.i Kti f're-t Ia frr t c! V j i' tr!?t::t-r-l I ' : : - ? :t :C7 o'clock y-ter!ay artrr- - ' n. Al ttonc L r err v-1 L:;.t.;y .i n- red, Ilrfl. L..Lcji tzr :1 i-i-:rr-The Uru'a t c. a v: 2 1 tlatei r .: - the s!v3.!k .: I t.t cvtr 11 i : c-r Harry 1 ' : (''-; - i 1 'j t: -I ;1) t:r. . rcn t.t 1 f J ! ten