The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 03, 1943, Page 1, Image 1

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    t r i
f
"in minus
9
' There will be general rejoicing
over the state, and special re
joicing in Salem, over news that
the Portland high schools will re-
loin the state high school athletic
association, malting ; possible re
newal of competition between the
high schools in Portland and those
upstate. Salem's special interest
lies in the basketball tournament.
which for many years past has
lacked the spark of Portland com-
. petition. . ; :
It was just one of -those dis
putes In which each side felt it
was right, and refused to budge.
,The result was a division between
Portland and the rest of Oregon
that was disappointing both ways.
."While the Portland high schools
are -". larger than those upstate,
Still there was real competition
, when teams from the; city and the
country met The fact is, there
are some good-sized high schools
upstate, like, Salem, Eugene,
Klamath Falls, ; Medford, : schools
.which have for years turned out
fine athletic outfits. The last time
Portland participated in the bas
ketball tournament -i little Bell
fountain with its team of finished
players beat Lincoln high for the
, title. That was in 1837. -
There is no question but what
there will be greater ' interest and
larger attendance with Portland
represented in the basketball tour
nament The short distance be
tween - Portland and Salem , en
ables hundreds of Portland bas
ketball fans to get up for the
games, particularly if Portland has
a top-notch team. And with Port
land schools Holding out, , any
championship "title would have
one-third nick in it.
' The reunion will be a good
thing for Portland too helping to
acquaint the metropolitan schools
with the -hinterland." The city
kids : get something besides ;
knowledge of geography when
they go up against their country
cousins. And the Portland school
that can top its city championship
title with a state title will know
that it must be good.
- This year is a good time for
. interscholastie -competition to be
resumed, because with college
football perforated ; with . enlist
ments and; inductions the high
schools can capture most of the
public attention. The time would
seem favorable for a real game
this fall for tha stetec football
championship. . tu.v.'U'"
Just what the terms of the treaty
of peace are we do "not know. It
took a world war, to reconcile the
two scholastic groups. It is to be
hoped that peace and the return
f a few Portland coaches doesn't
end the truce. :
R. Harrington
Dies in Action
The death of Staff Sgt Robert
T. Harrington, 19, Salem youth in
the air corps in North-Africa, be
came known here Monday when
his mother, Mrs. Martha A. Har
rington, 594 North Liberty street,
received a telegram from the sec
retary of war stating Harrington
. had been killed in action July 16.
3t was presumed the youth died
- during the Sicilian raids. Letters
to his mother and sister dated
July 11 had just been received.
. Harrington was : born Septem
ber 31, 1923, in Tillamook, son of
Mrs. Harrington and the late C
T. Harrington. The family moved
to Salem in 1S23 and he attended
school here. He was a member of
the national guard until 1939. and
was employed at the Don. Cannon
service station when he entered
the army air corps in 1942 The
boy received his training at Shep
ard.Field;Texas, Las Vegas, Nev,
and - Gowen Field, Boise, Idaho,
where he took engineering. He
was stationed , -..at. ? Casper, Wye,
Salina, Kan., and In Florida be
fore going overseas
- Harrington had .been home on
furlough last April. ; Surviving be
sires his mother is a sister, Doris.
Pre Pearl Harbor Fathers
Due for Draft After Oct. 1
t WASHINGTON, Aug.
xocai aran boards were author
ized by selective service today to
call up pre-Pearl. Harbor fathers
after October 1,. but only to the
extent "absolutely; required to
meet their monthly quotas.
One authoritative estimate was
that only some 300,000 fathers liv
ing with and supporting children
born before last September IS and
not engaged in non-deferrable
work would actually be inducted
this year.
-. Another 150,000, however, ' pro
bably will have to be sent to in
duction stations in order to get
00.000 fully qualified men.
Since there are 6,569,000 non
farming fathers, .this would Indi
cate that only about one out of 22
will be put into uniform in 1943. '
The 744,000 fathers regularly
engaged In agricultural work will
continue virtually draft-proof for
occupational reasons.
Preparatory classifications may
teia at once, but local btjards
were forbidden to order fathers to
report for induction before Octo
KSIZTY TIIISD YEAB - 12
Significant
Made
Salamaua Is Hit
By Yank Artillery
And Aerial Bombs
By c
. YATES McDANIET
D HEADQUARTERS
"ALLIED
THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC,
Tuesday; A ug. SOfpi-American
ground forces drove forward 500
to 1200 yards along the Ulunda,
New Georgia, front yesterday as
allied artillery for the first time
brought the Japanese base at Sal
amaua, New Guinea, under fire.
r Reports from the south Pacific
command of Admiral William . F.
Halsey, jr gave" not details about
the, manner and direction of the
first gains against the Munda air-
base recorded in several davs. ex
cept . that i "considerable quanti
ties of material" had been cap
tured. ca 1
, Commonlqne , from alll e d
headquarters said a general ad
vance af from 500 to 1200 yards
had beea made "along ; the
whole line." The last previous
, position repert said the Ajnerl
cans were within 1900 yards of
'the airport. The new gains thus
would : have brought . them - to
within net less than 1400 yards
at - one . peint and perhaps as
dose as 700 yards.
The artillery fire on Salamaua
was directed at the enemy air
drome there. Planes caught on the
ground, were destroyed and a 60
foot section of the Francisco river
bridge was knocked out
Matching the intensified ground
sttacks on Munda,-American
army and navy : planes delivered
punishing , blows at the enemy's
base on nearby Bougainville is
land. One large freighter-trans
port was set 1 afire, - a tanker was
hit and eight barges were sunk.
At Kahili." the communique
dropped on s 'large concentration
of enemy aircraft on the airdrome,
damaging many planes and caus
ing large fires."
The artillery bombardment of
the Salamaaa airdrome . was ac
companied by a' heavy ; bomber
assault en the town Itself. Fly
ing Fertreasea . dropped S4 teas
of. bombs en defenses and
stallattens fat the area, starting
a numerous fires and eanslar
heavy damage. The bombers
also hit Lae, aboot 10 miles up
the coast.
An enemy destroyer was at-
tacked and set afire by a night
reconnaissance bomber , south of
BHf,i ,
hif vZr, n
f?rht. m.oV4 ,- r.,m.. s
drome. Then the warplanes swept
I (Turn to Page 2 Story E)
Murphy to Retain
Real Estate Post
Is Latest Report ,:
Approximately two months aft-
his original -term expired.
Claude K. Murphy will be reap
pointed state real estate commis
sioner- today or Wednesday by
?.. - M-i 9 .1
UCM,se mraa oi
c . j . , i
Advance
Upon Munda
-1 . J'une.J s aaany RojaJ House of Savoy now
"!UBi the Italian govSunenl
. w TVr reappomi-
SW
A.wav .. aus; , IUU1 CAU1XCU. U1ML
Murphy was- considering other
opportunities and was not anxious
to remain In the office.
ber 1 If they are maintaining a
bona fide home relationship with
children born before last Septem
ber 15, and are not workers in the
. activities classed as non-defer
rable. . . .
Also, the boards were instructed
to continue calling single and
childless married men first if they
ground for deferment and to make
reclassifications out of the : fath
ers group, 3-A,
S5S.SS'VfS.;Plaiis Ssts
to meet the demands
board for men for military terr
ice." ...;V '
The calling of fathers will be
according to their draft -order
numbers regardless of the num
ber or age of their children, un
less , they are granted defermer t
as "essential" in agriculture or in dustry
or unless their ; inducti: i
would mean . "extreme hardsti p
and privation, to their families.
The policy of not drafting men
oyer S3 continues. : - j '
; The decision in each man's case
will be up to his local beard, sub
ject to appeal. -
rfh rli r f) f -1 - re -i r-?r,
PAGES
Wd 017 D
rMles Attack
Pcrlinpfn'itAG
a; . la-llf V UC1 VKjO i
New Warnings
I Delay, by Badoglio
Assailed; Yanks
I Take San -Stefano .
! Associated Press War Editor
; By RICHARD McMURRAY
1 Allied armies . advanced In
general offensive against the fi
nal axis defenses in Sicily Mon
day night while their air and sea
power struck, softening blows at.
temporizing Italy which was sol
emnly promised .imminent inva
sion with all the scourges of cruel
war.
San Stefano fell to .the Ameri
cans, shattering , the Germans'
right flank anchored on the Tyr
rhenian sea. . The . British Eighth
army repulsed counterattacks and
gained Jmportant positions before
Catania. i -i The p Americans cap
tured 10,000 more prisoners,
mostly Germans at Mistretta. The
total rose above 90,000. A dozen
towns felL The Canadians pushed
forward in the high center against
suicidal nazi foes.
; Naples recked ; anew to . the
thud af Flying Fortress bombs.
Allied men of war bombarded
Cretene, Yalentia Marina and a
railway bridge across the Ollva
river. All are en the Italian
matnlsad. American naval units
added their shells to the artil-
, lery curtain laid before Taften's
troops.
(Turn to Page 2 Story U)
Hull Suggests
To Military
WASHING TON, Aug. 2-JP)
Secretary of , State Hull, asked
about reports of apprehension in
England over American policy
toward , Italy and the . Badoglio
government, suggesxeq xooay mat
I " nen-i
tion instead to the actual Criitin
i The main purooTt of what he
Policy Be Left
has been hearing from United Na-K
ns quarters, he told his - press
conierence, that the military
snouia oe given a cnance to light
-XSl
Turn war wiumiT tiAfntf haiminm.
Hull previously has indicated
that he relied on the judgment of
General Dwight D. Eisenhower in
the Italian situation and President
Roosevelt sal( Friday that when
surrender time comes he does not
care with whom we deal, so long,
as he is not a member of the fas-
cist party. Asked whether he-sol
regarded Premier Badoglio, the I
president said he was not going
"
what prompted the press con-
Uo today Pwas a-
ported desire amonsr Enarllshmim
for assurance that an Italian rul-
in class must not emerge
Of the
type which Lord Vansittart, for
mer chief diplomatic adviser ' to
the British foreign office, describ
ed in a weekend broadcast thusly:
i "Sort of a backstop,' half-re
pentant, semi-benevolent totali-
tarianisml a" leonard that
changed Its spoU and manicured
Itt datvi in a h.a,,f, M -
1 Such criticism, of AmriPaA
icy toward the French generally
that It dealt with some men : not
cleansed from the taint of Vichv
nas drawn statements from Hull
limilnr n the tm i maA fn
i-that mnitarr ; .twTo
savincf f iniHM .tJL.M
sWe"tion.
'
Dive Record -
xjuuux, August . 2-C5T- An
American test pOot ; in .England
iravt.ung raster toan sound, or
core vm . j nules an hour, has i
ma v. - a verUcal cuve cf almost five J
miles, btleved to be the longest
in. aviation cistorr. it
nounced tonight.
Tne lly er, Lieut Col. Cass S.
..oush, cf Plyratuth, I.Iich., tech-
cxal caiector cf the eighth fight
er command, hxis been awarded
u.9 clsunuished flying cross
PCUNDDD
Salem. Oregon, Tuesday Morning, August 3. 1S43
Allied Bombers Revisit Devastated Naples
f9l
t. . -
True to General Elsenhower's !
paanded Nsples anew. Photo shews how the, city leaked to returning airmen after the last raid
by 500 KAF and US bombers. Shewn are: (1) Royal arsenal, all boildings . damaged, (t) . Torpedo
works, all bulldmgs damaged. J) Kaflraad tracks twisted and torn, roadbed filled with craters.
(4) Freight and passenger trains burning and destroyed. . (5). Engine round, bouses, repair sheds,
heavily damaged; countless hits en tracks and eaal dumps. (0) Ofl tanks destroyed, some still -bum-tag.
7) Factory destreyed. (S). Tracks severed and large bulldmg destroyed at north exit of yards.
0) Olelflclo ligouri oil refinery knocked nt. 10 Heavy damage U aU balldmgs of an engineering
and aircraft factory. AF photo from army. APTelematji V .
Berlin Radio Rep orl
Reds Fighting in Orel
By JAMES
LONDON, Tuesday, August 3
announcing today that the big
i-i fmni rwi
" , C ,7 ir
,tself although indications
in error, it appeared that the
Orel to the Soviet forces closing
im..? j: . t
I r:
Pal" 811(5 to Reuters news agen-
iUiOTUr ol ugnung
rEJ "f! ?H DmJ
' -T 1
I " "vv""kti"
v
Although this same quotation
was heard by several listeners,
there was . no other confirmation
and it seemed that the announcer
may have aide a slip of the
tongue or read a-faulty English
translation while Intending to say
fighting: was especially heavy
outhwest of , Orel.. .r
Nevertheless, while the Bus-
suns, were announcing in another
special communique that 70 more
populated places had been taken
from the Germans In advances of
from four to six miles on the Orel
(Turn to Prge 2 Story G)
Luther M. Ramage Dies After
trmli F-mA.
' 1Ji MMnJi
SEATTLE, August HIV Lu
ther' M. . Ramage, 87, of ' Salem,
Ore, died Monday h night in King
county, hospital - of "Iniuries ! re
ceived Sunday as he participated
in the great western, horse show,
Rnage-was-thrown .from his
horse when the mount collided
with another horse ridden by Van
Weider Salem. Weider
racf1 wtu muior injuria.
Both were members of the Sa
lem mounted potae. -.. .".
Mr. Ramage,-who served Mar-
M. county in the house of repre-
. : .
Knuuva uunng xne receni siaie
legislature, was chairman of '' the
special farm labor committee of
the Salem chamber of commerce
at the time of bis death.
For, the past 20 years, i since
bringing his family here from
Montana, he had cnerated a ' bev
erase bottlins establishment in
lem. He was a Mason end raein
ber of the First. Presbyterian
church of Salem.
Mrs. Ramase and tieir younger
son, Robert, went to Seattle on
informed that what had at first
been thought not. to be a severe
injury had left hftn in critical con
dltion.
Survivors also Include a son, Dr.
John Ramage, cow somewhere in
' . ..- "wr .4 - , .
151
promise of resumed bomhlar af IUlUn cIUm. nia hmtim
M. LONG
- flP) - The Berlin radio was heard
Russian offensive aealnst the east-
i-t
"s " ure
were that the broadcast might be
nazis were preparing to give up
in from seven directions.
J . .
everai wnoon morning news-
Oregonian in New
Navy Casualties
WASHINGTON, Aug. 1 -fl)
The navy announced - today 92
casualties, including, 3 " dead, ' 12
wounded and :77 missing. '.
: This brings to 27,849 the total
of ; navy, marine .corps and (coast
guard casualties reported to next
of kin. since December 7, ! 1941.
The total Includes i: 8769 ; dead,
4849 wounded, 9858 missing and
4168 prisoners of war. . ,,;
.The casualties announced today
included: s r. : l.
Neill Sheldon Walker, missing.
Mother, Mrs. Armilda C Parker,
Otis, Ore.
V.ef
8s kJ&UlllXZ
xuni
Canada In "medical 'service ' at
tached o the navy, and a daugh
ter, Louise, in the marines; his
mother,-Mrs. John Ramase end a
sister, Miss Josephine Ramans,
both of Martinez, Calif.; one bro
ther, William Ramage, San Fran
cisco, aud four grandchildren. Ills
eldest son, Webb Hassans; died in
ICC 3 as result cf injuries received
in an automobile accident
IV.ce Cc
vxovelJL
Wounded Says
Japs Worsted
, SOMEWHERE IN NEW GUIN
EA, August 1 -(Delayed) (ffJCapt
Dow Lovell, Salem, Ore, in a field
hospital here, relates how "We ac
counted for many more Japs than
we lost, when his outfit encoun
tered a Jap trap near Boisi vil
lage on the Salamaua battlefront
Lovell wears an elaborate cast
because his upper arm was frac
tured by a bullet Two miles south
of Tambu bay, his outfit took an
observation- post and then moved
forward with other units to, secure
the bay. ,
The Americans stopped short of
the trap, silencing their mortar fire
within two minutes, Lovell de
clares. ' '
10 Killed in
Glider GrasK
ST. ,LOUIS. Aug. : 2MJPr-Tht
crash of an army glider, which
lost Its right wing and plummeted
Its 10 passengers to death Sunday
afternoon, was under investiga
tion today by at least five groups
of official probenu ; : : ; ' t
Mayor William Dee Becker, sev
eral other city officials, two army
officers and Maj. William B. Rob
ertson, whose manufacturing com
pany built the. glider, were among
those killed. .- .
The official army investigation
of, the crash,, reported. to be the
first since the army undertook
glider operations two years ago,
is in the hands of a. seven-man
board of officers from Scott Field,
EL. The FBI aided them. :
The board met today to com
plete its report, to-be submitted
to the war department in Wash
ington,' which will announce later
the results of the Inquiry.
Another probe Is being, t con
ducted by four representatives of
the array's glider experimental
branch at 7riht Field, Ohio. The
group -includes ...three officers and
Francis Aicre. vice president of
Waco Aircraft corporation. . who
signed the glider.-" -
TOrZIIA,, Kan., -Av- 2-iT)
One cf five men killed Curs day la
the -crash of a f our-r-: '-red
tcmLing plane near Coons, - la.,
was First Lt Xlelvin S. I Iccker c:
DsUrs, Ore, it wss annoiniced by
the pullia relations, effice st the
army base here Monday.
Dim out
sunset 8:41
sunrise 5s55
Ko. 110
Salem Fires
Bring Losses
Of $75;coo
Salem Supply Firm
Building, , Doolittle
Service Station Burn
Two fires which broke out with-
in a 2 5-hour period darkened two j sidewalksewere clear of virtual-sections-
of Salem Sunday andlT all persons except Dolica and
Monday -and caused still un tallied
damages variously estimated at
from $75,000 to $100,000.
t A freak accident . Involving
If a m -
ugnt ouio ana a truck's gasoline
tanx was jaid to have caused the
Monday night blaze which almost
leveled the sheet Iron building of
ujb oueni ouppij company on East
Moyt street south of the city Jim-
its near 22nd street .:
Origin of the fire which appar-
ently had Its start In the stock
room of the Doolittle Master Ser
vice station at Center and North
Commercial streets - was undeter
mined. There, would-be helDful
t . .
glass windows and tearing out fix-
tures of the smoke-filled Tour-
1st cafe. ! .
Loss in the' late Sunday after-
noon blaze was estimated at $35. -
000, much of it In tires, and all
utugown saaea xo tne damage of "en"ea, naa Deen round list
fire and water by breakine ulate ed among the identified dead, thus
covered by Insurance with thlor the state guard, ordered the
exception . of equipment of the
cafe, which Is operated. by Mrs.
Odessa Carter. A one-story build
ing owned by the T. B, Jones es
tate was badly damaged, as were
the Doolittle ' tire shop and the
restaurant kitchen.
A . loaded gasoline truck stood
near the alley entrance to the shop
when the fire was discovered, res
idents of the neighborhood said.
The service station was In opera
tion Monday, and Frank Doolit
tle, proprietor, who estimated his
pUc', damaie t more than $20.-
commence within a week.
City firemen with one truck
from the central station and one
from ' South Salem battled the
Cames at the supply company
plant for more ' than five hours
Monday night
Oil, tar and equipment went up
in the hot black smoke and leap
ing flame, they said. The fact that
there was plenty of water on the
premises : aided them in finally
quenching the flame but could not
help save the plant, firemen de
clared.
The supply company -fire had
its start between 6:30 and
o'clock when Charles Chlttick,
truck driver, tossed a lighted bulb
on an extension! cord into a po- j At 10 p. m. Monday the tele
sition where it would help him j phone rang. It was long distance
locate soma fault In his truck's
gas feed line, east Salem firemen
who are also city first aiders said,
j When the globe broke or the
cord cracked the feed line took I wakefulness into complete un
flame, the gas tank exploded, I consciousness when a voice at the
burning Chlttick severely, and the
nearby plant stocks took fire, they
believed.
Chlttick, resident of 2342 Adams
street, received first, second and
third degree burns on both arms
ead his right side First aid men
took him to Salem Deaconess hos-I
pitaU..Jv'--"-1'rY;'
Fires at me Spaulding log dump
on " the Salem riverfront and, at
2360 State street, where trask was
burning;: also called out firemen
Monday night
Chicago Banker Dies .
CHICAGO. Au.
Mulroney, .45, vice president of
the Federal Reserve Bank, of Chi-
cagevand former second deputy
comptroller 01 we currency, died I
or. nean disease todayr - I
Phillips Elected
Bomfy
William L. Phillips, automobile
dealer, was unanimously' elected
to the' Salem city water commis
sion at-Monday night's city coun
cil session, which also tossed the
bicycle licensing problem back
into the hopper, argued the estab
lishment of a junkyard on the
river front and accepted the resig
nation of Alderman Lloyd Moore,
sixth ward.""' ;---
t Moore, employed by a firm
which repairs ships, said his work
was likely to send him to almost
any port in this area but that he
and his family i hoped to - make
Salem their home at the close of
the war. Ccuncilmen spplauded
Mayor I. M. Doushton's brief end
complimentary farewell address.
FhiHIps was recommended for
the water ccznrnission post ty eth
er' mcnilrrs cf that 'ccracilsslca
when'ChsndTer P. Crown resign
ed last r--'h to enter the navy.
;.. V-'" r "-' Vfollowin lls.tl-.ird
1, -. 1 w.'dlrrce which would
hav ur.2 away v.i'Ji city liccr.s
L'Z cf bicycles for, the duratloa
cf the war, council mer.-.hers ex
Mobs Emtio
Millions
Not a Race Riot,
Says 'La Guardia ;
False Rumor Blamed
NEW YORK, August 2 -,7)
Order appeared restored in Ilar
ler Monday night after an ear
lier outbreak of rioting that re
sulted in the deaths of five ne
groes, injufies to 543 persons,
500 arrests and property damage
estimated at S3,000,0C0.
Within minutes after a curfew
clamped down at 10:30 p. m. the
I volunteers patrolling , the debris-
I strewn streets.
I At an hour when ordinarily the
a I taverns are burr, the theatcra full
I '
j"1" streets crowded, the resi-
cents of the nation's largest neirro
neighborhood disappeared. The
Jwea s population is about 300,000.
n only , activity other than
that of the patrolling police was
. I the repair work being done tinder
l floodlights on store fronts dam-
aged during looting last night and
early today.
As the situation became more
relaxed, police disclosed that one
1 death victim, previously listed as
I .tJ.Ul! - - J
I rea"cing we previously, announ
I c3 tou irom six to five. .
I A force of 6,000 police was on
(duty m iile -"rea to keep the peace.
1 Meanwhile, at 6 p. m.. Major
Gneral William Ottmann, head
8000 members of the organization
In New York City's five counties
and the suburban counties of Suf
folk, Nassau and .Westchester to
report Immediately to their ar
mories for drill..
Governor Thomas E. Dewey. In
the city on state buslnev. said no
formal request for mobilization
had been made but it was re
ported that various officials
agreed it would be wise to have
the men on duty.
The mayor was Joined by Wal-
' TT
im.it. a . . ..
tne Kev. a. Clayton Powell, pas
tor cf : the Abyssinian - Cantiit
church and a member of the city
council. In asserting that the butt
break was, "not a race riot
Said Mr; Powell: .
"It Is a blind, smouldering and
unorganized resentment against
Jim Crow treatment of negro men
in the armed forces and the usual
high rents and cost of living
txurn to page 2 Story B)
$1000 Radio
' Award Is Won
I from New York for Mrs. Zena
Sharpnack. Mrs. Sharpnack was
in bed, but she got up to answer
and nearly passed from half
I other end of the line said. This
Is the Pot of Gold program and
I Mrs. Sharpnack, you've Just won
$1000. i
By 10:30 p. m. the five Sharn-
nacks, mother, a housewife; fath
I r. who works at the First Chris-
uaa cnurcn: uua, 19; Betty, 17,
h&d Planned to
I tt last detail Just how they
I would remodel their home at 223
I Evergreen avenue and Just how
tnucn would be left ever to put
into war' bonds. .
Mrs, Sharpnack has listened to
the Pot of Gold several times but
not recently, she reported, so that
the award was a complete sur
prise to her last night In fact
she was still pinching herself try
ing to believe It and waiting for
the morning paper In which she
would ft all in wv r
white.
to Water
Council
pressed their belief that the licen
ses have proved more value than
nuisance and that they ' are, in
addition, source of fair revenue.
' Doughton settled a tie vote In
the junkyard argument taking
the side of the group that wanted
any decision postponed until at
least the next meeting of the
council. Philip Steinbeck, appli
cant for permission to erect a hi;!
wooden fence on waterfront prop
erty back of the Salem boaihouse
to enclose metal scrap piles, said
he was required to move at once
from Oregon Pulp & Paper mid
property currently in use and that
he had purchased th!j land.
Not only would the board fence
t a violation of the city's build
ing code, but existence cf the
yard would hinder any move t
beautify the waterfront, c?r.-:.
councilmen declared. Those v. h--
took the middle ground tv- . ' - :
that Steinbock be author!-' -'I '
go ahead with establii.hr-,--t
the yard there es a vrt - 2 : ,
tut that he te rtr'' 4 1
Turn to Pr -? 2 :. . .