Vet Colony S5te
Leased' by ii4y
A site for Salem's new vet
era nt' colony, Mven city blocks
In ares In southeast Salem, has
been leased and at soon at re
paired facilities can be provided
4 federal "defense" apartment
bouses to accommodate 120 fam
ilies will be moved from Seattle
to be erected there.
The property, owned by Otto
Klett, has been leased for three
. years by the city's special hous
ing commission at $1440 a year
111 per dwelling unit per
month), with option to renew on
the same terms.
Bounded on the west by 16th
street, on the north by Pine
street, on the east by the alley
which runs between 19th and
2tth streets and on the south by
Wilbur street, the area is un
broken except for one residence
OTP
S33Q0DB
TKDODCEM
Henry A. Wallace has become
more vocal. The long silence after
the succession of Harry Truman to
the presidency has been broken.
Now he offers his views on various
matters. He renewed his pledge
to his party after the Ickes break
away from the cabinet and fore
swore his own candidacy for presi
dent in favor of his chief. Monday
be carried his partisanship to the
extreme of recommending that
thoserwho did not follow the party
line on major matters be forced
to walk the party gangplank. This
has drawn down on his head the
condemnation of a considerable
company of democratic senators
who refuse to accept the Wallace
definition of "party line."
The major issues which the sec
retary of commerce said were de
cisive, and hence divisive, were:
Control of atomic energy; foreign
relations especially as. they relate
to Great Britain and Russia; full
employment and production. What
he meant was that the democratic
party should force through civil
ian control of atomic energy, grant
the loan to Great Britain, stay
friendly with Soviet Russia and
plunk" for the original full em
ployment bill and "Sixty Million
Jobs." His critics immediately
pounced on his recommendation
as "fascist" (the favorite epithet
of the left-wingers). It Is plain as
a pikestaff that democrats in con
gress are not accepting Truman
a; the party dictator, let alone
Secretary Wallace. The latter re
mains a favorite whippingboy of
party conservatives.
One has learned not to be sur
prised at what Wallace will say,
(Continued on editorial page)
Salem Homes
To Get Phones
Arrival of a large quantity of
new equipment this week indi
cates that many of the 2000 Salem
homes on the wailing list for tele
phone installations may get their
phones in April or May, accord
ing to Manager Harry V. Collins
cf the local Pacific Telephone and
Telegraph Co. office.
Most of the equipment Is for
Interior installation and a special
crew of workmen from the fac
tory has arrived to conduct the
work, Collins said.
proposed Law Would
Penalize Drunken Flying
! PORTLAND. March 20.-(,F)-A
proposal that Multnomah county's
representation in the state legis
lature be limited by constitutional
amendment was made here today
as the legislature interim commit
tee studied the need for legislative
reapportionment
The proposal was made to meet
Upstate districts' fear that popul
ous Multnomah county would .take
a heavy proportion of legislative
eats under a strict population
basis.
Animal Crackers
: By WARREN GOODRICH
mAt last, a perfect mate
tiot a quack out of her"
M give
Chier Sun 5yc!
on the northeast corner of the
16th and Cross streets Intersec
tion, not inclnded In the lease.
The area must be traded;
streets must be put through,
sewers and water service made
ready before the prefabricated
buildings can be brought here
from Seattle Fifteen of them
have been given to the city and
15 to Willamette university to
be rented on a non-profit basis
to veterans. Grounds will be
landscaped; most of the trees In
the area will be left, W. J.
Braun. chairman of the housing
commission, said Wednesday.
Play areas will be established In
each block. Sewer laterals are
already in; a water main runs
down Cross street now and the
city will put in water laterals,
Braun said.
Metal Dispute
Factfinding
Board Named
By the Associated Press
' Labor Secretary Schwellenbach
appointed a fact-finding board yes
terday to seek settlement of a
wage dispute - involving 80,000
workers In the non-ferrous metal
industry.
These were the major develop
ments on the labor front:
1 Edgar L. Warren, chief of
the federal conciliation service,
said the non-ferrous metal indus
try fact-finding board would seek
to end strikes involving 12,600
CIO workers in smelters and re
fineries and prevent their sche
duled spread throughout the in
dustry.
2 International Harvester an
nounced in Chicago it had offered
to meet the 18 cents hourly wage
boost recommended by a federal
fact-finding panel and accepted by
the CIO farm equipment workers
union.
3 Westinghouse Electric corp.
said in New York that it had of
fered an "overall" 18 'A cents hour
ly wage increase but that the CIO
electrical workers union had re
jected it The union, seeking an
184 cents hourly increase "across
the board" said the offer amount
ed to no more than 9.7 cents an
hour, with some workers getting
no increase.
Bridges Scorns
23-Cent Raise
SAN FRANCISCO, March 20.-(P)-Waterfront
employers today
increased their wage increase of
fer by five cents an hour in an
effort to avert a threatened coast
wise strike, but Harry Bridges'
CIO longshoremen promptly re
jected it
The new offer was for $1.38
per hour. The longshoremen have
demanded $1.50 per hour, and
have stated they are prepared to
stride April 1 to enforce theh de
mands. The present wage scale -Is
$1.15 per hour.
A spokesman for the employers
pointed out that the new proposal
means a 23 per cent increase in
wages. .
Schaupp Reappointed
To Highway Commission
Reappointment of A. W. Schaupp
Klamath Falls, as a member of
the state highway commission,
was announced by Governor Earl
Snell here Wednesday.
Schaupp was named for a three
year term effective April 1.
BELGIAN PREMIER OUTVOTED
BRUSSELS, March 20. -JP)-Paul-Henri
Spaak was expected
momentarily tonight to resign as
premier of Belgium, along with his
16 man cabinet, after the chamber
of deputies defeated by one vote
the bid of his nine-day-old gov
ernment for a vote of confidence.
Initiative Petition Filed to Make
Auto Insurance
Compulsory passenger automo
bile insurance, to be administered
exclusively by the automoile di
vision of the state industrial ac
cident commission, would be pro
vided under a preliminary initia
tive petition filed in the state de
partment here Wednesday by W.
H. Downing, W. E. Richardson
and A. E. Smith, all of Portland.
To get the proposal on the
ballot at the November election
it will be necessary to file com
pleted petitions by July 3 con
taining the signatures of 23,108
qualified voters. The insurance
would cover both property dam
age and injury and death protec
tion and would apply to all pas
senger cars registered in Oregon.
Two additional accident com
missioners, one from Multnomah
county and the other from some
other part of the state, would be
appointed by the state board of
control at a salary not to ex
ceed $7500 a year. The three pres
Outpbsts
Attacked
By Kurds
19-Year-Olds
Called Up by j
Iranian Army
TEHRAN, March 0-()-Fight-ing
between Kurdish tribesmen
and the Iranian army was re
ported by a general; staff officer
today j as the government called
19-year-olds to the colors and ar
rested;; Rightist Deputy Said Zia
Ed-Din, often described by po
litical (writers as anti-Russian.
The officer said 3000 tribesmen
had been attacking three isolated
army ! garrisons for a week and
that Iranian planes were trying
to prevent the garrisons from
being cut off: from their head
quarters. 'j j ' ' I
In announcing the conscription
of 19-year-olds, the army, said it
was deferring those in the 22-25-year
bracket, j I
(The Iranian embassy in Wash
ington; said (that ; 19-year-olds
normally are not given training
in the' Iranian army.)
Zia j Ed-Din ; told newsmen, fl
think -they are arresting me be
cause 1 1 am sot . liked by the
Russians." ' j " I j
Prince Firouz, political under
secretary of state and director of
propaganda, said the tightest
leadert was arrested on orders of
Premier Ahmed Qayam Es : Sal
taneh and was being "put under
preventive detention ? pending in
vestigation of certain charges)
Pepper Asks
Big 3 Meeting
To; Gain Unity
WASHINGTON, March 20.-(fl-Senator
Pepper (D-Fla) declared
today Jthat "the United Nations or
ganization is not the way out of
this eb of fear" that the big
three jmust reestablish unity out
side it through an unprecedented
conference of their generals, work
ers, businessmen and statesmen.
He sharply assailed Senator Van
denberg (R-Mich) as leader of the
"newest form; of isolationism" j
exclusive American possession of
the atomic bomb and military con
trol of atomic; energy, I j
Pepper asserted that before en;
tering: the conference the United
States- with Britain and Canada,
"should destroy every atomic
bomb f we have, and smash every
facility we possess" for making It
Specifically he urged:
1. That all knowledge of atomic
energy "be freely poured into the
international channels of science."
I
5: i i
Spring Ushered in
With Sunshine
Spring arrived at 9:33 last night,
with the local temperature at j a
comfortable reading of 48 after! a
dry stinny day that ushered out
the winter and spurred talk and
dress as befits the new season. j
Theimercury hit 63 at 4:30 p.m.,
the highest this year except for: a
March 9 reading of 691.
. I; f i
Proposal Would Limit;
Couiity Representation;
I' m
Officials here Indicated Wed
nesday that the next legislature
would; be asked to enact a law
providing a penalty for drunken
flyers.! f , !
There are now state laws regu
lating jjrunken motor Vehicle driv
ers and the presence of drunken
persons on state highways. j
Compulsory
ent commissioners receive $5000
per annum. I .j, j
The .initiative bill provides that
when a license' is applied for the
applicant shall show a prepaid
receipt of $30 or such fee as may
be designated by the 'commission
which shall be reduced by 10
per ceiit per year for five year.
In case of foreign cars involved
in an 1 accident a statement by
the officer at the scene shall be
sufficient and he shall hold the
car and the damage shall be es
tablished on a scale to be esti
mated by the commission. Copies
of this' scale shall be ; sent to all
sheriffs and other peace officers.
It further provides that the
commission shall recommend to
the legislature revised insurance
rates for trucks. No driver would
be allqwed to operate a car un
less he carries $5000 property
damage insurance and $5000 in
surance for protection- of the' oc
cupants. ; I . " j
NINETY -FIFTH YEAR 12 PAGES
UNRRA
Food Pool
Proposed
Plan Outlined as
Russia Offers
Grain to France
By SlgTld Arne
ATLANTIC CITY, March 20
(P) The world's mounting food
crisis is rapidly crystaludng opin
ion here, at UNRRA's fourth coun
cil meeting, that all world food
supplies must be forced into a com
mon pool from which nations may
share-and-share-alike.
All supplying nations which
may include Latin-Americans and
some neutrals, such as Sweden and
Switzerland are being considered,
but the USSR is foremost on the
list
The soviet union has offered for
sale to 'France 400,000 tons of
wheat and 100,000 tons of barley
and Russia has failed to reply, so
far, to a query from UNRRA as
to whether it could supply any
wheat to help out in the liberated
countries. Assistant Secretary of
State William L. Clayton told the
council.
lie said, "the report (of Rus
sia's grain sale to France) gives
ground for hope that the soviet
union may be in a position to give
a favorable reply to the UNRRA
request"
Australia suggested "there Is no
doubt that the combined food
board (made up of the United
States, the United Kingdom and
Canada) would be a better body
If Russia were to Join and pool in
formation of food supplies."
Goering Denies
Mass Murder
. NUERNBERG, March 20 -(JP)
Hermann Goering admitted today
he had signed numerous anti
Jewish decrees, shared in looted
Jewish art and ordered strong
measures against partisans, but
denied he practiced wanton loot
ing or ordered massacres in occu
pied country.
Both Goering and Chief United
States Prosecutor Robert H. Jack
son showed evidences of strain in
the former reichsmarshal's sixth
straight day on the witness-stand
before the International military
tribunal.
During Jackson's cross exami
nation, Goering repeatedly chal
lenged the accuracy of prosecution
documents. He cast suspicion upon
some pictures of bombings in
Poland, and at some points he
caused the prosecution to shift
from its chosen line of cross ex
amination. Chinese Communists
Deny Soviet Affiliation
CHUNGKING, March 20.-(JP)-A
Chinese communist spokesman
asserted today his party wants
only self-rule for Manchuria's pro
vinces similar to that enjoyed by
states iii the United States, and
denied there was any political
link with Russia.
The spokesman, Chen Chia-kang,
laid the communists did not want
separation from central authority,
but only self-government, which
would be even less than that of
the states in America.
ORDER DEMOBILIZATION
LONDON, March 20.-(J)-The
Moscow radio in a broadcast
heard by the Soviet Monitor re
ported tonight that the Russian
government had .announced the
next six age classes of the red
army enlisted men, both land and
air forces, would be demobilized
between May and September. No
details were announced.
CHURCH LEADER DIES
INDEPENDENCE, Mo., March
20-(5)-Dr. Frederick M. Smith, 72,
president of the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints for 31 years, died to
day at ah Independence hospital.
He was. the grandson of Joseph
Smith, founder of the Latter Day
Saints church.
BOUSE 'GONE TO THE DOGS'
LOS ANGELES, March 20. -(Jpy-Movie
actor Donald A. Cook, his
wife and their four dogs are house
hunting. Evicted by order of Su
perior Judge William S. Baird, the
Cooks must pay their landlord
$1162 for damage by the dogs to
floors, fences and other property,
and for damage to plumbing and
electrical work.
1 0
MUNDBO 1651 !
Salem, Oregon. Thursday Morning March 21, 1946
Snbw Blankets
i .
t r
I T
f I IF
L few " k v. ;
(T- ( ' . ' ' iff- - ' ' ' .
TRUCKEE, Calif., March 10 Gane Warden BUI LaMar Inspects
wreckage ef an amy C-47 plane which was wrecked in the snowy
Sierras 11 miles northeast ef here yesterday, killing 26 military
personnel aboard. (AP Wire photo to The Oregon Statesman)
'Amber' Shatters
Oscillatory Mark
HOLLYWOOD, March 10.
(AVNlneteen - year - old Peggy
Cummins says the was kissed
more today than in all her life.
Winsome Percy was kissed
199 times In five hours before
Director John Stahl decided to
call it a day.
. The scene from Katbryn Wln
sor's novel that was being film
ed saw Peggy meeting II mt-
alien In 'a tavern. Each kissed
her as she served him wine.
Stahl required It takes before
he was satisfied with tbe scene.
"Whew," said Miss Cummins
as she trudged through tbe rain
to her ear, "and to think that a
year ago I was playing 'Alice
In Wonderland' in London."
Bumper Crop
Seen! for U.S.
WASHINGTON, March 20-(P)-Another
bumper crop, carrying
with it hopes that the nation may
be able to avoid a return to food
rationing, was indicated for 1946
by an agriculture .department sur
vey todayj
It showed that farmers plan
357,500,000 acres of crops, com
pared with 357,000,000 year and
355,000,000 for the 1934-45 aver
age. While the indicated acreage for
16 major crops is three per cent
below what the government asked,
food officials considered it gen
erally favorable in the light of
shortages of labor, machinery and
other equipment
Alleged; Plot to Poison
Cardinal Mooney Balked
DETROIT, March 20 -(JP)- The
Detroit Free Press said tonight
that police are investigating an
alleged plot to poison Edward
Cardinal Mooney of Detroit dur
ing a March 12 civic banquet in
his honor.;
Police Commissioner John T.
Ballenger 'described the plot as
"hatched In the mind of a re
ligious fanatic whose plans were
balked by prompt and thorough
investigation."
NAVY OPPOSES BUDGET CUT
WASHINGTON, March 20-(JP)-The
navy itold congress today a
proposed $2,100,000,000 cut in its
funds would force elimination of
15 partly finished ships from its
building program and a "drastic
cut" in its flight training pro
gram. ANESTHETIC DEVELOPED
BALTIMORE, Mauch 20-(JP)-Developmeht
of a new anesthetic
agent known as "metopryl," with
greater power and higher safety
factor than ether, was announced
today by the pharmacology de
partment of the University of
Maryland medical school.
REDS TAKE HUNGARY RADIO
BUDAPEST, March 18.-(Delay-ed)-(i'P)-Reliable
American sourc
es said today the Russians had
assumed control of the Budapest
radio and ithe affiliated Hungar
ian telegraph agency, MTI.
Plane Debris
Crashes Yield
32 Bodies, Onei
Still Missing
SAN FRANCISCO, March 20-f
(VThe wreckage of twin Califor-r
nia air disasters yielded the bod
ies of 32 army and navy men to
day. One other, among 20 who died
yesterday when a C-47 army
transport crashed near Truckee
in the High Sierra, was still listed
as "missing"' tonight after weary
ground crews vainly probed deep
snows about the wreckage.
All seVen occupants of an army
B-29 bomber from Honolulu, lost
Monday night heading for Fair
field army air base near San Fran
cisco, were found dead today when
rescue crews pushed through mud
and rain to the wreckage on Wau
hab ridge 30 miles southeast of
San Francisco. .
The bomber's wreckage was
strewn for half a mile. The big
four-engine bomber came to rest
with tail high in air at a point
some 3200 feet from ocean level.
Ex-Mrs. Boyington
Weds at Yakima
YAKIMA, March 20 -(JP)- Mrs;
Helene Boyington, former wife
of Gregory (Pappy) Boyington,
and George Gilbert, Seattle news
vendor, were married at 1:30 p.ml
today in the First Presbyterian
church in Yakima. The couple
had no attendants. Earlier in the
day another ministed had refused
to perform the ceremony.
PRINCESS GIVEN POTEEN
ENNISKILLEN, Northern Ire
land, March 20-(i5)-Princess Eliz
abeth received as a gift today a
bottle of Irish "mountain dew" j
the famed poteen which is pro-
duced in the illicit distilleries of
the Fermanagh mountains.
Inquiry Started Into Natiohwide
Slaughter Drop, Portland Hit
KANSAS CITY, March 2b-JP)-An
OPA investigation of the
steadily dwindling supply of
slaughter steers in midwest pack
ing houses began today, as the
sharp reduction in beef supplies
threatened meat stocks over the
nation.
Reports that a heavy volume of
cattle on midwestern markets
went to eastern bidders, while
midwestern packers were able to
purchase only a fraction of sup
ply necessary to keep their plants
operating were being investigated
by four OPA representatives
from the district office. One com
pany reported it was able to buy
only seven cattle yesterday. Usu
ally it handles more than 700.
Meatless meals ahead for
Americans were forecast by one
packing company official, who de
clined to be quoted by name. He
stated that a seasonal decline in
the pork market would make the
meat shortage more acute.
rn
Price 5c
No. 307
Mac Ends
Homma's
Last Hope
Gen. MacArtliur
Orders Death
Verdict Imposed
TOKYO, Thursday, March 21
(JP)- General MacArthur today
approved the verdict cf guilty for
Lt. Gen. Masaharu Homma, and
directed the commanding general
of the army forces of the western
Pacific to execute the firing
squad death sentence imposed on
Homma for ordering the Bataan
death march.
Homma was convicted by a
military commission in Manila
on Feb. 11 for the death march
and other atrocities committed in
the Philippines by his troops
early In the war.
After reviewing the case and
the dissenting U. S. supreme
court opinions, MacArthur said:
Deserves Fate
"If this defendant does not de
serve his judicial fate, none in
jurisdictional history ever did.
"There can be no greater, more
heinous or more dangerous crime
than mass destruction under the
guise of military authority or
military necessity of helpless men
incapable of further contribution
to war effort."
MacArthur could find "i cir
cumstance of extenuation! and
declared Homma was given fair
trial, that "no accused was ever
given a more complete opportun
ity of defense, no judicial process
was ever freer from prejudice."
To Keep Uniform
Although he scored Homma
particularly for the Bataan
march, MacArthur did not order
him to be stripped of his uniform
as in the case of Lt Gen. Tomo
yuki Yamashita, recently execut
ed by hanging in Manila for war
atrocities. Yamashita was hanged
in cast-off American fatigue
clothing, stripped of all war
medals.
Russians Seeking
'Friendly' Korea
SEOUL, March 20 -iJP)- Soviet
Russia wants a friendly "demo
cratic and independent" Korea
which will "not become a base for
an attack on the soviet union,"
Col. Gen. Terenty Shtykov de
clared today.
Shytkov, commander in Russian-occupied
northern Korea,
stated his country's aim at the
opening of the Joint American
Russian commission convened to
discuss creation of a provisional
Korean government.
Road Conditions Show
Improvement in State
Road conditions showed marked
improvement throughout the state
Wednesday, and isolated patches
of ice and snow at higher 'eleva
tions were apparently the only
traffic hazard, State Highway En
gineer R. H. Baldock reported.
Roads at Santiam Junction were
clear except for snow between
mileposts 80 and 84, but chains
were not required there, he said.
HAY CEILING RAISED
WASHINGTON, March 20.-JP)-
OPA today ordered an immediate
increase of $1 a ton in price ceil
ings for hay at all sales levels.
"The big packing centers at
Kansas City, Chicago, St, Louis
and elsewhere are being outbid
for cattle by illegitimate chan
nels," Gayle Armstrong, who re
cently directed government seiz
ure of the big packing plants,
asserted in Albuquerque, New
Mexico, today. "Legitimate pack
ers are at a disadvantage because
they must pay certain average
ceilings or lose their subsidies, he
added.
PORTLAND, Ore., March 20-(iip)-Portland
housewives began
planning meatless meals today
after some plants, with no ani
mals to slaughter, sent killing
gangs home at noon.
F. L. Ritter, secretary of the
Oregon meat council, predicted a
beef shrotage noted here the past
two or three weeks would grow
even worse. He said hogs, veal
and sheep also are scarce here.
TO
i
Ask Delay
In Council
Meeting
Sletluiius Urges
Quick Action on
Iranian Dispute
By Jtfcn M. Hlghtower
WASHINGTON, March 20.-(4'V-The
United States and Russia split
lonight on the question whether
the United Nations security coun
cil shall tint an early hearing to
Iran's charge Against the Soviets.
Russia B'kHl for a postponement
of the fcheduled opening of the
council -in New York, from neat
Monday; until. April 10. Ambassa
dor Andrei Gromyko wrote UNO
Secretary General Trygve Lie that
the Soviet government needed
lime to jpiepare its case.
Almost simultaneously Edward
R. StetUniue, jr., American mem
ber of the council, filed with Lio
a request that the Iranian cafe
be placed "at the heal of the
agenda."
Byrnes Reict4
American officials aaid that
when Stettimus made his request
on insUrut tione of Secretary of
State Byrnes and presumably
President Tiuman as well, he had
not knqwn of the Soviet delay
proposition. He expected and hop
ed that the council would plunge
into the Iranian case Monday.
Stettinius also proposed that
both Russia and Iran be requested
to report to the council on their
direct negotiation for settlement
of their differences. While the
Russian! note tonight said that
negotiations ttill were going on.
informed American officials said
that parley which were held in
Moscow evidently ended in failure
ten day) or two weeks ago.
Postponement Unlikely
Both American officials and
aides on Lie's staff said that under
the United Nation charter it
would take unanimous agreement
of the 11 members of the council
to postpone the meeting.
One UNO official said flatly
that "you can count on it thit
the meeting will be held Monday."
Armed Forces
Raise Sought
WASHINGTON, March 29-OTV
A 20 per cent array-navy pay in
crease was asked of congress to
day to ieffset higher living costs
and the enticement of higher pay
in private Industry.
Secretary cf War Patterson and
Secretary cf the Navy Forrestal
told a senate military subcom
mittee that neither service can
get and hold the men it wants at
present pay scales. Legislation
before the committee would rai
pay and allowances 20 per cent.
No-Tribute Clause
Added to Bill
WASHINGTON, March 20.-P)
The senate labor committee com
pleted action on its labor disputes
legislation today by adding a pro
hibition against unions exacting
"tribute" from fanners delivering
perishable commodities to mar
ket. It would make it a misdemea
nor to use violence or threats to
prevent a farmer from transport
ing perishable farm products or
to require him to make a payment
to a labor organization.
It is aimed at a practice in some
larger cities in which farmers de
livering to markets must pay th
charges for a union truck driver
and union unloaders even though
the farmer does the driving and
unloading himself.
NAVY TO SPEED RELEASES
WASHINGTON j March 20-fTV-
The navy ruled today that re
serve officers who are within 4S
days of eligibility for release un
der the I point system and who
services; no longer are required
may leave the service. The rul
ing applies to all officers except
those in the medical service.
CHROME PLANT UP FOR SALE
SEATTLE, March 20 -)-The
$500,000 chrome reduction plant
15 miles southeast of Coos Bay,
Ore., is being offered for sale by
the war assets corporation, the Se
attle regional office announced to
day. FOOD CAMPAIGN GOALS DUE
PORTLAND, March 20 -(JP)
Food conservation goals will be
set in each Oregon county in the
national! food for famine cam
paign, state program leaders said
today.
Weather
Max.
- 1
- M
. S3
. S3
Min.
M
33
S3
lUin
je
Sllem .
Eugene
Portland
San Francisco .
Seattle j
4S
SI
It
Williamette THrer T.7 n.
FORECAST (from US. weather bu
reau. McNary field, Salem): Partly
cloudy today. LttUe changa In tni
perature. Highest today near SO de
grees. Light variable winds.