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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1946)
ft JVL i MS TL mum si. rnr? UUNJLJ 0! i FL fo)fl LAiU WOULD SERIES 1st Com SL Louis JL Boston 3 2nd Cam r St Louis 3. Boston 0 (Details en H perls Pace) ! mun. IASI NTNTTY SIXTH YEAR 10 PAGES Salm Oron, Tuesday Morning, October 8, 1948 Price) Sc No. 165 CP S3GESTDB WD0DQI5; Republicans rolled In their hea vy artillery last week, with ad dresses at Portland by Senator Kenneth Wherry and former Gov ernor Harold K. Stassen. The for 'mcr uaed hm bIK-kbuter lo de 'mohsh the new deal artmJnUI ra in in Washington. In typical Hilly Sunday style he excoriated the new deal bureaucrat. Ilia gospel ' oply one f "turn the rascals out." Harold Stassen had a different approach. He realized you can't just substitute a vacuum for the present national administration, so he laid down a six;-point pro gram and called on republicans to furnish "leadership" for the pott war days. Stassen urged: 1 Less government control we do not believe that a govern ment of free men can regulate the details of the lives of its people In time of peace." 2 A new national labor pol icy to cut downThe number of ' strike." 3 A new fiscal policy "to counteract the! sharp fluctuations " of a free economic system. 4 Increased production "is the real basis of the strength of a na tion." S I nternatlon alism "We should set forth that we recognize that the problems of all the world are inter-related, and that we do have a concern that is both hu manitarian and practical in the future welfare of the peoples of other parts of the globe." ft Opposition to fascism and communism "but with equal em phasis, we should make it clear that our concern for peoples in other, parts of the world does not mean that we condone treasonable conduct of our own citizens and that we will firmly oppose both fascism and Communism in Am erica." ? ' District May Hem W. Salem -',: l , i "I Notices of m special election for formation of the King wood Water district, which would all but -i velope West Salem to the north west and south, were drawing in creasing attention today, i They specified the vole will be held from 8 a.m.' to S p.m. at the office of Frank Doolittle on the Wallace road next Tuesday, October 13. The proposed district, on the south of Weil Salem, would In clude King wood Heights ami reach eastward to the Dallas ' highway (Edgewater street). It would also extend along the western boun dary of West Salem and northward to a point on the Willamette river. It is estimated about 700 persons reside in the area. The election was arranged via petition following several weeks of difficulty in obtaining sufficient water for homes outside the West Salem city limits, sponsors said. The Kfngwood Water district. under ; the plan to be voted on, would be formed as a municipal corporation and would elect five commissioners. Nominees from which the! five would be chosen are Rex Gibson, Francis Smith, K. II. Burrell, James II. Maden, Charles K, Ramp. Edward Maiek. Harney Van Onsenoord, Jess 11. Wlllett and Kinley K. Adams. Shipping Peace Threatened by asse IT union imp I confess to' preference for the Slassen approach over that of the (Continued on Fxlitorial Page) Woman Safe After 3 Days With Gun Trio PORTLAND. Oct. 7 - W) At tractive Mrs. Margaret llavely, 27, was back with her husband to rught and three men accused of alxiurting her were en route irom Ileppner to fare kidnapping ha i fir. I'oiue teamed the woman, ap- itsrently unharmed, from a mouti tan isbtti. 35 miles south of Hep- pner. elerday, ending a state' wide March that started when she disappeared from an East Port land -cafe Friday afternoon. Two of the men, James. W. Neal, 24. and Krnest W. Avery, 21, were arrrnted as they drove Into llep poer for gMline The third man. A K in (Bud) Dahl. 17, was found at the cabin, guarding Mrs. Ha- ely. He did not resist arrest. Mr. Havely told police, "they never laid a hand on me. I begged 'and pleaded and I guess my tears and my prayers protected me, for they never did me actual harnv She said the trio forced her at gunpocnt to leave the cafe Friday They changed automobile licenses, flayed at a hotel until B p m , then drove east, sleeping In the car ihat night near lieppner. The next day they went to the cabin Ernest William Avery, one of the trio of gunmen arrested In Eajtem Oregon in connection with robberies and an abduction in Portland, was sentenced to two years in prison by a Marion coun ty court on July 20. 146, for ob taining money on false pretenses .but was released on a bench pa role. Avery is alleged to have worked with L. O. Nolan, Grand Ronde. in passing bad checks on the Sehrock Motor company and Don Madison. Animal Crackers By WARREN GOODRICH t i - Ky Sun jiU I "She can't hit worth a darn but $hc' a good catchmr? SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 7 -cVPi-i n apparent impasse over the union contractual status of 16 hlps in the Pacific coastwise lum ber trade threatened today to block immediate , maritime peace. The issue was a separate con tract for "steam schooners," the name customarily applied to coast wise lumber ships. Harry Bridges, head of the CIO international longshoremen and warehousemen's union, announced that unless "this dispute is set tled, the strike will go on regard less or ine settlement" which may eventually be reached in Washing ton between government concilia tors and the CIO marine engineers beneficial association (MEBA). in another press conference, r ranx t oisie, president of the wa terfront employers association, ac rusea ivrines . or "reneging on verbal agreements last week over the steam schooner iue. Meanwhile, Harry Lund berg, head of the SUP. informed the I'acifie American Shipowners as sociation, that AFL sailors "will not abide by any decision made by Mr. Bridges' organization or the maritime commission dealing with work now performed by and under contract to the, SUP." 200 Pupils at Night Classes Approximately 200 students, in cluding 48 daytime workers of 18-17 years, who must attend school until they are 18, were present at last night's first meet ing of high school night classes at Salem high school and at Parrish Junior high, George Porter, night school director, reports. Classes are held from 7:15 p. m. to 9:45 p. m Monday and "Wed nesday nights. Other classes, of fered by the state system of high er education, give college credit to students who enroll. These classes meet only one night weekly. ROLOW HEADS UNION R. L. Rolow, Salem, was elec4 ted president of the Oregon coun cil of Retail Clerks union at the Labor temple in Salem Sunday. Delegates-from the Oregon-Washington retail clerks councils to the October 16 Los Angeles conven tion were chosen. Wedding March Heralds Death J fee r X S. Firm On' Issue ieste OfTr 4 V 1 ' 4 r . ' , . t ' ' '" Vl ' PARIS, Oct 7-tVTVThe United States served1 notice on the, Euro ! pean peace conference today that It will make no further conces sions in the east-west struggle ' over the Trieste free cone as the delegates began final considera tion of peace pacts for the five former satellites of nasi Germany. The American declaration was fallowed: by 'immediate charges by a member of the Slav bloc that the United States had Insulted both Yugoslavia and France dur ing drafting of the Italian peace treaty. Thus, delegates of the east and ' west at a conference plenary ses sion locked horns In their last ef forts to write their ideas of peace into the treaties for Italy, Ro mania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Finland. , ' s America's stand-pat policy on Trieste wa made by Senator Tom Connally (D-Tex), in urging con ference approval of! the report drawn up by the Italian politica commission. ., The white-maned Texan opened debate o the first of the commls sioh reports to hit the full cfonfer ence, thus starting the first of nine days of hard gruelling work ahead before the scheduled Oct. 15 ad Journment. Connally denied Yugoslav charges that Britain and the Uni ted States wanted to make joint military base out of Trieste for their future operations. rv' .:- - a.; . - . I ' ' J' : . a 7-;! r i . e K '. 1 1 ! 1 f I - J ) I v MIAMI. Fla.. Oet. i t-0T)Plate glass wlndews aleng the exiKMed Miami. Fla bay frent were bearded mp earlier ( teday as a sre caatlen against the harrlesne winds which a 'few hears later swept down en Florida. (AP Wlrphole). I IN WOOD. N. Oct. 7-(JIVIIer bridal veil covering her face. Rose De Febrlilo arrived at Our Lady of Good Counsel church today en the arm of her father for her wedding te John Msstsntueno, 20, Government - sponsored i negotia Negotiations In Maritime Strilic Slow Up WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 -WV s childhood sweetheart.' As the wedding anarch rang eat, (he 21- yesr-eld girl collapsed (below) and died. (AP Ulrepbete Copy right 1846 the NtW Trt Dally News). ! '7" Doomed Nazis Avait Final ! Death Plans , NUERNBERG. Germany. Oct. frnU. S. army authorities." stead fastly refusing to disclose raevans of i how Adolf Hi tier's aoomea henchmen are spending their last davs. said today the allied control council would meet Thursday to arrange f nal details of ine execu tions aet for Oct. 16. i i Typical of the secrecy was tne news blackout imooseq on mc visit to the Jail this afternoon of Emmy Goering, wife of, the for mer relchmarshal. j No one in the security office would say whether she actually visueo nerinusDana. Representative tf the lour oc cupying powers, who nay oeen In sMiion here to receive appeals of the defendants and discuss ar rangements for the executions, went to Berlin to present!, their recommendations to the control Shortly before their departure. Grand Adm. Erich Raeder peti tioned the council to change his sentence from life imprisonment to death, i " I : Meanwhile a Stuttgart dispatch disposed that German polite there arrested Hjalmar Schachti former Nai finance minister, onesof the tonfe Nazis acquitted by the inter national military tribunal. ?t was indicated that he would be tried by a German denazification court in Stuttgart on charges involving his: former connection ;wlth the Nal party; f ' TIARRIMAN TAKES OVER WASHINGTON, t Oct : 7. WV- WJ Averell Harrlman f officially took over the commerce? depart ment todar succeeding Henry A Wallace and made it plain that no far-reaching changes in policies or organization are planned.; Alaskans Face Statehood Issue At Polls in Far North Toddy lty the Assorts lad Press Alaskans are going to the polls today to choose territorial offi cials, a ' delegate to congress and decide whether they want Alaska to become a state. If the outcome of the statehood vote is favorable, bills to put It Into effect will be Introduced in the next congress. Alaska would become the 49th or 30th state if congress finally approves the bills, for Hawaii already has voted to ask for statehood, and bills will be introduced in the next congress to give it to her. The territory has an elected delegate in the house to speak for senators and one representative to speak and fight for the things Alaska wants. If Alaska is admitted to the Un ion as state, it will be the na tion's largest state. -It has 586,000 square miles of land as Compared with 287,339 in Texas. ; It has 26,000 miles of coast line com pared with ' 400 along the Texas coasts. - s I ': The territorial voteVs today will go to the polls from Ketchikan In the southeast to Dutch Harbor, far out In the ! Aleutians and to the naval oil reserves that border the Arctic ocean In the north; Booths open at 7 a.m. Pacific time in east ern Alaska! and continue to open it, but he has no vote. Under an hour later In each of the three statehood Alaska would have two time zones to the west. West Nob HUl Wants to Keep Its Own Name tions in the maritime strike were recessed until Tuesday at 10 a.m (EST) after conciliators reported no progress in four hours of talks today. In the background was a union threat to walk out of the con ferences. In protest against their tack of progress. The parties were so far apart at resumption of negotiations this afternoon that no Joint confer ences were held, a labor depart- A street hv anv other name ment spokesman said. , Meetings might not please its residents. 1 were new by councuators ana one or It MmMt imt nitht whtn or the other I the unions ana West Nob Hill street residents pre operator groups Involved. To tested to the city council acainst morrow s session will be a Joint last month's suggestiori by East one, however. Nob Hill street residents that, to avoid confusion caused by the two 1306 To TiVkfcj parallel streets In south Salem, 1 Osl U 9 1 CCHa lha nmwnm of Wmt tJnh If ill tui I ' cWb1V,r Limits Members name had "beauty and dignf as is and that for ail it cared. Ea Nob Hill could drop the "east from Its name. Membership will be limited to 1.0S1 members and annual dues wilt be Increased from $4 to $3, The dty planning and toning Capitol i post No. 9, American cununiwian wiu aeciae., Supreme Court Begins Term ' Legion, resolved last night. Com mender Rex Kimmel's proposals for a full-time post executive sec retary and publication of a post bulletin were tabled for discus sion at the October 21 meeting. First Vice - Commander Law rence Osterman presided in Com mander Kimmel s absence. Con WASHINGTON. Oct J 7 -ftt- rd Paulson was appointed finance With feuding Justices Black and officer, a post vacated by James Jackson studiously avoiding each Lewis' resignation and B. E. other's eye, the supreme court I Owens was appointed assistant fi led by rred M. Vinson, new chief 1 nance onicer. Justice, got away to a ion-ex plo sive start today on its Important new term. ! uring the new term the court is-expected to pass on many im portant questions. Among them are the Tidelands oil dispute, vali dity of Georgia's unit voting sys- Scouters Plan Round Table A ronnrt IfiVil nf u-ont mAmrm tern, the Georgia case j Involving including leaders of packs, troops the charge that railroads have unin unid win mmi uh. conspired to fix frleght rates dJs- Uesday, October 16. to plan the irjmiii.Hjrj iu xnm wuw, ana saiem scout district fail activl Oklahoma's challenge of the Hat- iies. it was , decided at a scout ch "clean politics act : commissioners' dinner meeting at Nohlgrens last night. Fall scout Activities will Include the annual round-up and waste paper drive. This was thel first fall dinner meeting of the; commissioners. . Don Seamanj of the Portland r.all tltitm mnA T I V fl Cnr- CAIROr Oct. 7.-MVCOI. C. S. L .rrrw mir rnmi iiaixm offl. (Bill) Irvine, commander , of the !o-r htun the air aronta mil Pacusan Dreamboat, said today h he air corns, were euests of the sruies an nour on iu; non-stop nop rrom Honolulu to vrario to 1 in t 1 a" test Arctic flying conditions estab- LAU 111 I'll I IO ll 1)111 distance. 118(1 IJllCHllOniMl Dreamboat Sets Flight Record MaJ. N. P. Hays, navigator, said the distance covered by the flight WASHINGTON, Oct. 7U")-Th V". rr" '"r? iVS?552 U. S. court of appeals questioned c . V00 llnautical mit9m - ." today the authority of the civil statute miles) as announced yes- Mronauucg board to reopen the terday. The Weather lilta Portland Stss. . M . 1 west coast-Hawaii air routes rase to consider service between Los Angeles and Honolulu. The court Mia Tttip. oraerea uie Doaru to postpone 4 . .11 'I decision In the Los Angeles-lion- se t lolulu nhase of the case, reargued of Its procedure. .00 JBO San Francisco S Chicago 1 S4 New York S3 SI Wluamett river; -is reet. FORECAST (Irom U. 8 weather bu reau. McNarr fie Ml. aiem: fsrliy r lnu1 v ifidi and tonlsht with one or two widely ac a tie red showers, some I a tor W II. Straver suffered early morning Jog. Illshest tempera- puriini stroke, and entered a hos lure today SS. Lowest temperature to- IT. , k 11L ' msht as. I pi tat here today. SEN. KTRAYEB ILL BAKER, Oct. 1,-A') Slate Sen- Chest Goal in View, $69,506 Mark Reached Within sight of their $80,065 goal, Salem community chest workers met with the Salem Chamber of Commerce for lunch eon Monday and reported a total of $69,500, or 87 per rent of the goal already pledged. Mrs. Roy Nelson, women's divl slon chairman, reported her group has a total of $8575 pledged or 95 per cent of its $9000 goal. Orchids were presented to Mrs Nelson's group leaders, Mrs. L. V, Bensop, Mrs. Glen iPaxston, Mrs. George Spaur, Mrs, Charles Mc- Klhinny, Mrs. Clarence nyrd. Mrs W. M. Hammond, Mrs. 1eslie Bur- detle, Mrs. Silas Glser, Mrs. Philip Allison and Mrs. Al Anolplmon. Mrs. W. L. Philips and Mrs. Rob ert Titzmaurice were unable to be present. Edward Majrk. chairman of the professional division, was the see ond to report 100 per cent. West Salem's division directed by AI Lamb having oversubscribed Its goal last Friday. Edwin Schre der, merchants dlvUlon, reported $11,093 of Its $12,000 goal for 90 per cent of Its quots. Education and Industrial reported 80 per rent each; contractors had 82 per cent and the automotive division 93 per cent. , Stepinae Case ChargcsTold ZAGREB. Yugoslavia, Oct. 7- OP)-Public Prosecutor Jacov Bla- sevlc, ! summing up the govern ments 's case against : Archbishop Alojzllc Steplnac, charged tonight that the prelate hid behind the cloak of the Roman Catholic rhurth in. his war-time political activities and followed the propa ganda line of Paul Joseph Goeb bels, nazl propaganda minister. Stepinae is charged with collab orating with the enemy during the war. i Blazevic contended that Stepinac's tie-In with the enemy had been proved, that he had been in league with the puppet govern ment, I that a pastoral letter con doned the forceful conversation of orthodox Serbs to the Catholic church and that he "tried to anni hilate all those who were nut Catholics." i NO f)NrOPPOSEM YAKIMA. Oct. 7 HP)-Accuslng Harry- P. Cain of avoiding com mitments on specific Issues, Dem ocratic Senator Warren G. Mag- nuson tonight called on the re publican senatorial candidate to "get down to cases, and quit talk- ng about God. home, mother and the UNO, which we all favor." New Cciihiih for We8t;Salci.i AhIumI To HoohI Income WEST SALEM. Oct. 7 A bid for more of the atale monies ap portioned on the bais of popula tion was entered by the city touh cial tonight when it voted to ak Secretary of State Robert H. rr rell, jr., to take a new census. Elve hundred and fifty-five houses were counted In a recent houe survey, it was declared by Robert Pattlson, city recorder. The figure. Indicated a itopulaUoti of 2200 to 2300, Mrfyor Guy New gent said, ! as compared with the 1940 given West Salem in the 1940 federal census. (Additional details Pag 2) ; Big Har Cliemeketxms Elect Council, Plan Events The nine members of the Salem Chcmekelsns council, elected' at last night's annual buinss meet ing at the YMCA. will chose offi cers for the local club in a pe dal council meeting at 7 SO o'cIim k Wednesday night, In the General Electric company offices. Paul Deuber, 1-ean Gelger, Adolph Greenbaum, Kenneth Jen nings, Robert Kendall, George Lewis, Harold Melchert. Dorothy Middleton I and IJele Smith ate the members of the council for the (Coming year. Initial plans were made for a Halloween party Saturday, Octo ber 28- The policy of having two outings monthly will be continued through the Chetneketans' new yr. Fruit j vest I Menaced By Ute AaaurlateS rVeea ! A trrpiial hurnrere that spfsrg up In the wfern C'arriwr, r..i surfed along the Gulf rl Mrs io with a verity rep .i te. Ut es reed 100 miles an hr fr,.k Inland near I Tamps ao.f seft acrots Hot ida eaily Vmity at' greatly climinlvhed f c. Tlte weather bureaj at Mismi reported the whirling win U v ere -20 miles east of Taropa at I 90 am. (I1ST), Would r Mittntj er the rlh Plot Ida titrus lielt ilh its $I50.000.CK0 In tinhsrvestj-1 t,,i and strike the Allsntir miit tf Jacksonville later, in the fy, New Warning tmmmtd It lateial ieed ha te (-e. tip to 20 to 32 mi'n mn ,.jr but Its circular veloritr tad drnptert. Tbe wesff.r Uuitut Gained, lM,weer, that rer.trsl riorida was In for blows of g.ie forte. , Winds up to 70 mikes an tr already lad been esperient i at Orlando, rear tle enter of tre tate, the advisory .!. fleports of devastation, n-.e-n-whlle. were mlaning from tr Tampa aiea. Observes Uiere .! they Iteltevtd the U -A kr-pi u .1- el f lorida Meat rnet teeiai hat eacaped feared havmvAf u.e 1 storm. Thousands Lrsve llaeaas AM had bten pre(Kre f ,r the worr-t. Thousands of lr.hatitar.ts hurried fromLesiMiaNl aett:rrr,r ts In the Tana area to pUces f , les danger. I Others a I. wig ir.e ' coat to Uie sotrth liewie f.e.J in the face of the hutricana thieat. There r till was no g4rr tee that riarif'r was pat Th wrttur biiteau urged co1in'ie.l presu- Horn sgainat shlftirg gU rur central and northern fiord ar..f against Vxreanlng hlh ti tea r,n the Athrtic coast mirth of Dy tona I3ea h, 1 The j hurricane whl h whir pef across I the estreme wt et,i .f Cuba late Sunday n'(ht so l M. day morning csuel dsmt In fruit and tcbarco rrops eafimate at $2.bfin,fino. Iatet t-r't tntn Plnar Del Hio city, rapit4l .f the proMme, said several prt were slightly Injure! when tf.ree rUxMled fivers wiiUI awsy huts and farmeis flimsy houses. Auto Deaths Show Increase Cash and human cost of oper ting automobiles' In Oregon Is skyrocketing at an unprecedented rate, the 1948 edition of "Oregon Traffic Accidents tacts," released Monday by Secretary of State Robert S. Farrell. Jr., disclosed. Its 32 pages cover 42,022 wrecks due largely to 'driving speeds. These wrecks claimed Uie lives Fuehrer Had Son, Wife of Official Says MUNICH, Germany, Oct 7 (4i Mrs. Otto Meissner, wife of A iif Hitler's former secretary nf i!.t, said todsy that Hitter ha I a n by the wife of Paul J xwpri re bels, narl propagatid minu'er The nm was born in Minh, 1935, and died In the suiride f ti Goehbels family in :th l-t is before Merlin's fall. Mrs. Mei.t er said In an Interview. Hitler's ol wai I rotme.1 If.l muth and was the iruli of a r mance whila he nasi fuehrer ar,. Ooel,lelt' ash-blond wife, May ta, while vacationing on the Itjte sea in 1934, Mrs. Meoer sai l ' CPA Atltls lo Building Bans i WASHINGTON. Oct. 7 4,' -Ti government tonight banned () of 352 persons and injured 8,050 1 construction of swimming others. The economic loss was es-' lxard walks, roller-roatter, dr t e- tlmatecl at 110.00,0(K. One ve hicle In every five and one driver In every eight was Involved In a reported accident during 1945. ftlNATRA. WIMC ENTRANGEII HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 7-on- While friends denied divorce plans are Immediately contemplated. Crooner Frank Sinatra and his wife Nancy have become estrang ed after eight years of marriage. The singer was reported to have moved out of his home and to be staying temporarily with friend while looking for an apartment. in theaters, parking lot, rerrtr.t tennis court, and wa;U and fen. res of wood, brick or rxnirla when any f tiiese propria cete more than $200. j i The civilian prodjirtJ n admin istration alto ieduei from !. 000 to $1,0(10 the amount rf t palr end other work that n.a ) done In Induatrlal. utitity and transportation buildings without a permit, unless the b-i.l bngt I u.e a floor jrea bf 0.00a a inie fet or more and lit pomi a !2l ton sutsldy lb wiie nail mrni facturers to Ijncreaae thetr -m'! ut. City Council Votes to Ask Traffic Signals for Mainline Rail Crossings. Gut in Train Speed The! mainline rail crossing at which three youths met oeuin lard and trains hereafter will be Hm ted to 25 miles an hour Inside SalemJ If last night's action of the city council is followed through. The council Instructed City At torney Lawrence Brown to ak the Southern Pacific for Installation of ignals at the Madison street in tersection, scene of the triple trag edy, and also the Tile, Market and Mission crossings, and to draft an ordinance resuicung train speed. ! , - aa Z M at Traffic problems, inciuaing a new flareuo In j the controversy over the Parrish Garage gasoline jumps on North Capitol street. claimed tne spouignt at tne coun cil session. A compromise resolution spon sored by Alderman Kenneth C. Perry, to rescind the city order for Parrish garage to remove gas pumps and to substitute a plan of laying curbing and sidewalk round the garage site which ex tends Into heavily-traveled Cap itol street, was entile ted by Al- deiman Albert C. Gille, onaor month will have a wig-wag slgnal.J of the original move to fori Uie garage business off tne highway. To Perry's aawrtion that the present construction tleup would force the garage out of business if the city enforces its order (al ready the subject of litigation tak en to court by the lleltel etale which owns the property), Gille replied that "sal of all the gas they could sell In 60 years would not be worth the life of a single pedestrian at this hazardous spot," Perry withdrew his motion for adoption of the resolution, pend ing further itudy by the police and traffic committee. In other traffic matters, Uie council: Ordered prohibition of light turn from Fairgrounds road Into North Capitol street. ( Directed city engineer to11 con sult -with stste highway depart ment regarding traffic signal lights at 12th-State, Market - Capitol, Fairground - Capitol and Fair grounds Highland Intersections. Keferied to streets Mmmnfn a ollie and f taf f e , cnrr.it'e te(rnmerUtlon that aue pr- hi hit ion of parking on Nrth Cap- ' itol street front Court Id L'r.J n streets would rotutitute a hard ship to prcierly owner. i tenr g of the highway woull Ine lie fer able. Directed city engineer, if fe concurs after studr. l mik .( t downtown bus pat king rmtea i f 30-53 feet length eah at ( already in use. Referred to streets committee two remonstrances, one from (4 Miller street property owner 'm the other from 2 J Owenc t'leet profierty owners, IkiIH prof eat. council's actum In ordering a raw Owens street approach frt'n r Commercial street to SHjh f.er road and closure c( the preiert Miller street approach. Received ' recuest fr slop s'gn at the Mill-lfr-th street U.tert tlon. Approved angle parking fur the S00 blork til North IHgM aUeet.