The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 20, 1946, Page 1, Image 1

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Vandenberg
ayAMnMy tit Monte Essential to Foreign Polipy
Shortages Stymie Completion of Houses
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- Q A-r. Ji
1 . ',j
tr i - . .....
fibwUtn f nunr lie km still arc bldlnc up eomp
Arr some mt the bemes bclnr built for veterans b
stewed br sbortace. Lower right Is a part T lb
balldlns for Cecil Clark. It was bernn nearly a r
Clark bad a smaller borne built into which his
M to IS per rent. Clark now Is selJinr the one pi
f the year. Lower left photo Is a brifbter side t
with little experience in carpentry. Is makinc ra
st West Salem, and if he can set plamblnc and h
(Story on bonsln oa page ). (Photos by Don Ol
letioa of scores of houses In the Salem area. Abere
y Dr. E. E. Getxlaff. route 4. on South 12th, all
e luxurious home which C.1E. Denhem has been
ear are. and was so hampered iby scarcities that
,-imily could move. Finding; -costs Increasing: from
ctared here. Denhem hopes to finish It by the first
o the housing- picture G. Van Hess, a war veteran
pld progress building his own home at 1191 Eighth
eating fixtures be hopes to finish It within a month.
11. Statesman staff photographer).!
CRT
THDCDDS:
Failure of the Friday night con
ference of school officials to solve
the-problem of educating the 170
grade school children residing in
the farm labor colopy near the
Salem airport has driven the par
ents of the children almost to
the point of desperation. A com
mittee of them called at The
Statesman office Saturday and
left a communication which we
j.nnt in our Safety Valve column
today. It is a plea for action which
Marion county can answer only
with action: and that must not
be further delayed.
These children occupy homes on
government property situated in
the Rickey and Pr ingle school dis
tricts. They are eligible to attend
the school in their district, as
much entitled by law to attend
ance there as the child living next
door to the school house or who
has Ivied in the district all his
life. In fact, the law compels at
tendant unless the element of
distance interferes.
The scchoolboards of the two
districts say they haven't room
in their Khixilhuuwi and no funds
budgeted to provide teachers.
However, space is available at the
colony, and the practical plan is
to set up a school there.
Mrs. Booth, county superinten
dent. hs worked hard to solve
the problem. Baffled by refusal
of the school boards concerned to
take action, she intends to call
a meeting of the district boundary
buard to see if the area can .be
transferred to the Salem school
district. However, the latter says
lis budget is all committed for
the current year.
Some sword must be found to
rut this legal Gordian knot that
keeps these youngsters cut of
school. Five weeks of school are
alreadj passed, and It will be dif
ficult at best to bring them up
to grade in the time remaining.
The responsibility rests on the
school districts, on the group of
business men and farmers who
set up the colony to provide farm
labor, on this whole community.
We must not longer neglect the
duty that lies at our door. Read
the letter in today's Safety Valve
anoVsee if you are not moved to
demand action.
British Eye Road Across
Africa, Vast Naval Bases
LONDON, Oct. IJM-fl3 Reorganization of Britain's lifelines to
the Orient may include establishment of tremendous military bases
on both the east and west coasts of Africa linked by a 3,000-mile
super-highway bisecting the dark continent. 15
The shape of this gigantic Imperial defense program was out
lined today by Whitehall, colonial office and war office sources as an
imposing il group of middle east-
Army Engin
eer
Animal Crackers
Py WARREN GOODRICH
44 Under the circumstances
you'll have to eat fish and
like it!"
Tells Details of
Santiam Dams
. PORTLAND. Ore., Oct. 19 -(P)
Col. O. E. Walsh, district army
engineer, told details today of the
three dams proposed for construc
tion on tributaries of the South
Santtarn river.
Public hearings on the propos
ed dams will be held at Lebanon
November 9. . ' . i -
The largest would be the Green
Peter dam on the Middle San
tiam. seven miles east of Sweet
Home. It would be 316 feet high,
storing 255,000 acre feet from a
drainage area of 279 square miles.
Of earth and rock construction,
it would cost 113,200.000 and
could include power installations
for production of 21,000 kilowatts
if the dam were made 25 feet
higher.
Smallest would be the Jordan
dam on Thomas creek, seven
miles east of Scio, 120 feet high,
of earth and gravel, storing 53.000
acre feet and costing $1,900,000.
The Wiley creek dam, five
miles southeast of Sweet Home,
would be 205 feet high, storing
42.000 acre feet from a drainage
area of 53 square miles, and
costing $2,600,000. j
The three South Santiam dams
would store 350,000 acre .feet
from 402 square miles, costing
$17,700,000 at present estimates.
Pro
cress
In Ship Strike:
By the Associated Press I
Assistant Secretary of Labor
John W. Gibson and U. S. Con
ciliator Frederick Linvingston an
nounced last night that "very
substantial progress" had been
made in adjusting difference be
tween striking maritime unions
and ship owner representatives
at a conference at the offices' of
the American merchant marine
institute in New York.
In Pittsburgh an early end of
the 26 day old power strike ap
peared as a possibility. George; L.
Mueller, president of the striking
independent association of Du
quesne light employes, expressed
the belief the 3200 strikers would
vote in favor of arbitration at a
general membership meeting! In
Pittsburgh Sunday.
ern experts and leaders, in both
military arid political fields, gath
ered in London for a series of
conferences, i
Behind the 1 planning lay i the
British decision to withdraw from
Egypt, the manifold political trou
bles of the middle east and the
costly leson of world war SI
that the; Mediterranean link is
far from Invulnerable.
Colonial" Secretary Arthur
Creech Jones! disclosed that r
plan is being discussed to set up
in Nigeria; on Africa's west coast.
a huge installation similar to that
which Whitehall sources earlier
had said was being considered for
the east coast colony of Kenya.
Creech Jones, confiding: his re
marks to colonial activities; i did
not elaborate ; on the plan but
from an Informed military source
came the disclosure that if the
two coastal bases are established,
defense advisers will then recom
mend construction of an arterial
highway linking them across
Equatorial Africa's deserts, jung
les and swamps.
Portland Man
Dies in Wreck
Neai Brooks
! A head-on collision claimed the
life of L. Glen wood Wheeler 40,
of Portland, at about 3 o'clock
Saturday afternoon, approximate
ly three miles north of Brooks on
U. S. Highway 99 E, investigating
state police report.
One-way traffic was enforced
by police for about an hour and
a half, while wreckage of the cars,
which were virtually demolished.
was cleared away.
Wheelef was a passenger with
Robert P. Lewis, also cf Portland,
who reportedly lost control of his
car as he passed a log truck head
ed south, and Sideswiped a second
auto before colliding heatf-on with
a car driven by Frank Borwieck,
Vancouver, Wash.
Borwieck and his companion.
Mrs. Jenny Bond, route 1, Or
chards. Wash., J were still confined
to Salem General hospital this
morning. : Mrs. i Bond incurred lac
erations and possible internal in
juries and Borwieck incurred lac
erations, the hospital reports.
Lewis and another passenger, L.
Dykstra, i Vancouver, Wash, were
treated and released from Salem
General hospital last night. Lewis
incurred !: a broken collar bone,
Dykstra a minor knee fracture,
authorities at the hospital said.
Uninjured were the two women
riding; in .the sideswiped car.
Demands
WarTalk
Stopped
WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 -(A)
Senator' Vandenberg (R-Mlch)
tonight described "America's bi
partisan foreign policy" as one of
peace, not war, and predicted it
will succeed "unless it is scuttled
here at 5 home."
'Asked the flat question whether
war with Russia some day, is in
evitable, Vandenberg replied, that
it must not be allowed to be
come inevitable." He decried
American groups which over-
zealously seek ot make their own
peace ideas impressive by using
war as the frightening alterna
tlve."
i "I wish we could quit talking
bout 'war'.' he said,
Vandenberg expressed his views
In an interview here with George
Cushing of radio station WJR,
Detroit, for a Columbia broad
cast.
"Is it a fair description," Cush
jng asked, "to call this new bl
partisan American foreign policy
a 'get tough with Russia' policy?"
Those were the words used by
Henry A. Wallace in the critical
New York speech which led to
his ouster from the cabinet.
'Friendly firmness'
-"It is not accurate." j Vanden
berg replied. " 'Friendly firmness'
is the correct phrase. :
; Wallace was not mentioned di
rectly in the broadcast, but Van
denberg assailed "appeasers" and
"missionaries of confusion here at
home. . . . I hear much more
war talk here than I did in
Paris. ...
"In my opinion, if it happens
it will come from some tragically
unfortunate incident which may
well be the result of somebody's
miscalculation as to how far we
will tolerate some policy which
either threatens our own security
or which violates our conception
of human rights and fundamental
freedoms.
Ask Parties Support
Vandenberg pleaded for a unit
ed American foreign policy, sup
ported : generally by members of
both major parties, "so there will
be no delusion abroad that we
are vulnerable because we are at
the mercy of Internal divisions.
On Saturday's Gridirons
(Other Scores en Sports Paces)
UCLA 13 California 6
Oregon 0 Wash. Stale 0
USC 28 Washington 0
San Jofte? St. 26 Idaho 14
Yale C. Cornell C.
North Carolina 21. Navy 14.
Si. Mary's 33. Ford ham 2.
Amy 48, Columbia 14.
Georgia 33, Oklahoma A&M 13.
Tennessee 12. Alabama 0.
Mississippi Stale 48. USF 20.
Northwestern 14, Michigan 14.
Montana 20 Mont. St. 7
Stan fort! 33 Santa CI. 26
Linfiehl 6 Col. Pug. Scl. 6
Whitman 21 UBL 13
Georgia Tech 2. La. State 7.
Iowa 13. Indiana 9.
Illinois ?7. Wisconsin 21.
Pardee 14, Ohio State 14.
fexas 20,; Arkansas 9.
Texas A AM 74. Tex. Christian 9.
enver 29. Utah J4
Portland 13. Arizona State 0.
OP A Attorneys
File Demurrer
In Koehler Suit
A demurrer by OPA attorneys
was filed in Marion county circuit
court Saturday in the injunction
uit brought several weeks ago
Henry B. Koehler, local land
lord, seeking to enjoin OPA from
establishing rent control in Mar
ion county.:
Defendants demurred to Koeh
ler's complaint on grounds that
it does not state sufficient facts
to constitute a suit, that the court
has no jurisdiction over the sub
ject of the suit or of the defen
dants and that Paul A. Porter, ad
ministrator of OPA, is not named
as a party in the suit but that his
presence is necessary to determine
the case.
The demurrer Is signed by Dav
id London of the chief appellate
branch of the OPA,, Francis E.
Harrington, Portland, OPA dis
trict enforcement attorney, and
by Howard Bergman, special trial
attorney of OPA from Portland.
Defendants named are E. J. Ed
munds,! state OPA head; Jackson
Moore, state OPA rent control di
rector; ' and J Don C. Wilson and
Carle A. Lee, field representatives
for OPA.
At the outset of the proceed
ings one day after local landlords
began j registering with OPA,
Ralph 1 T. , Moody, attorney for
Koehler, said that main conten
tions in the complaint are that
OPA expired last June 30 and that
when congress voted to extend jit,
it was extending an act that no
longer existed and that rent con
trol here Is Illegal because this
area has not been designated as a
defense housing area.
Shoe Controls
To Continue
WASHINGTON, Oct, 19 -UP)
Estimating the present shoe short
age at 550,000,000 pairs, officials
emphasized today that price ceil
ings will be held on leather and
footwear as long as possible de
spite the decontrol of livestock.
"If we pulled off controls now,
leather and shoe prices would
skyrocket," an OPA authority told
a reporter.
He explained that the controls
on hides can be retained even
though the cattle from which they
come i are decontrolled under
President Truman's onder.
School Districts to
Talk of Unification
MONMOUTH, Oct 19 Direct
ors of 12 Polk county school dis
tricts ' will meet at Monmouth
high school here Friday, Novem
ber 1. at 8 p.m., to consider pro
posed consolidation. Districts in
volved are Monmouth, Independ
ence, Parker, Buena Vista, Airlie,
Valley View, Highland, Hopville,
Oak Point, Antioch, Suver and
Mitletoe.
Special notices have been sent
all school directors. The proposed
consolidation was recommended
by Dr, C. L. Huffaker of the Uni
versity of Oregon.
NMD 1651
NINETY-SIXTH YEAR 20 PAGES
Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning, October 20. 1946
Pike Sc
No. 171
rj(0) Don PanfoflD
Limit On
Spending
Junked
Buyers'
Strikes To
Increase
CHICAGO, Oct. 19-OP-The re
moval of OPA controls has sent
the price pattern -for most major
items in the American food budget
into a dizzy whirl and there were
indications today of growing con
sumer resistance to those products
which turn up with a higher sales
tag.
The impact of sudden decontrols
hit the markets an erratic blow
and it was too early to tell how
the food dollar of the near future
would compare with its buying
power of last week. The prices of
all livestock shot up, despite an
avalanche of receipts, and record
SEATTLE. Oct. 19-P-Seat-,
tie housewives, who have organ
ised to force high prices down
I by a boycott, have joined forces
with a similar group In Portland,
, their leaders said tonight.
"We have been In telephone
communications with the Port
land women, Mrs. R. F. Horan,
one of the leaders said, "and we
find they have been In touch
with a New York group. We
hope te work together and in
terest ether cities."
highs were established in some
markets before a downward trend
set in.
' Reports of buyers resistence to
higher meat prices came from
many cities. In some instances,
resistance was building up against
higher prices for dairy products.
4 The American meat institute,
saying prices would be higher un
til demand , is met, urged house
wives to "shop around for the best
buys." Some dealers refused to
buy meat at high prices and the
president of the New Jersey Inde
pendent Butchers' association
urged consumers to ''strike" until
meat prices come down "within
reason." i
. In Helena, Mont., housewives
started a chain telephone call
movement advocating buyers
strikes against butter prices of
89 cents to $1.00 a pound. A simi
lar campaign among women's
groups was started against a two
cents milk price boost to 18 cents
a quart in Portland, Ore.
Brown Pleads
Guilty, Fined
For fHazimr'
A fine of $50. and costs was
meted out to James, Brown, 760
ti. Winter St., after he pleaded
guilty in Silverton justice court
Saturday to charges of assault
and battery involving the recent
hazing of student John Day, 3355
D st.
Brown appeared in the Marion
county sheriffs office voluntarily
Jesterday, returning from Corval
is where he is attending school.
Dudley Slater, 370 Rural st, who
was involved in the same com
plaint, , was fined , the same
amount 1 last week in Silverton
justice court, and Douglas Yea
ter, jr, j 1930 N. 18th st, named
in one of the warrants, is report
ed to be in California.
The . complaints against the
three were filed recently by Mar
ion County District Attorney Mil
ler B. Hayden. They charged that
the three allegedly paddled, Day,
a student at Salem senior high
school.
Maze of Ballots To
Face Voters Nov. 5
By Wendell Webb
Managing Editor, The Statciman
There is going In be a little
confunion in Marion county on
November 5, and perhaps after
ward. But even so, it probably won't
be quite so noisy as the next
15 days during which candi
dates for election will come out
staunchly for home, mother,
peace and a return to the meat
standard.
The confusion, come two
weeks from Tuesday, will arise
when an unsuspecting body
strides to the polls to exercise
his right of franchise and be
handed a fist-full of white sheets
of paper ranging in size from
6 by 7: inches to 9 by 24 inches.
If he lives outside of Salem
he'll get four such sheets, if in
Salem only three. The four will
include (1) the general ballot
for state and county offices,
state measures, non-partisan and
judiciary posts and whatever
local ' candidates are running;
(2) the ballot to determine whe
ther there should be a three
year tax levy to provide $600,000
for a new courthouse; (3) the
ballot for precinct committee
men by parties, and (4) the
ballot on whlher a public utili
ty district should be formed
outside of Salem.
No Local Vote on PUD
Salem won't get that fourth
ballot, but there have been no
complaints about being slighted.
It's the PUD issue, for good or
bad, which adds particularly to
the slight daze the day may
bring. If it carries, also for good
or bad, the daze may last days.
If it doesn't, the supreme court
might clear its calendar on time.
The PUD problem, in the
main, centers on the fact that
17 of the county's 56 precincts
(outside of Salem) are split
part of each being in corpora ted
areas and part in unincorporat
ed. Under a state law, ballots
on the same issue must be Iden
tical within precincts. Under
PUD regulations, ballots for in
corporated and unincorporated
areas must be totalled separate
ly. Ballot Proves Difficult
The question which faced
County Clerk Harlan Judd,
therefore, was how a PUD bal
lot could be identical within i
any given precinct and yet be
kept separate for Incorporated
and unlncot prated areas.
Judd took the only course
whUh seemed feasible - some
PUD ballots for uh overlapp
ing precincts carry a line "out
side city" and some "inside city,"
with each voter getting one or
the other and the vote being
totalled separately.
The rest of the PUD ballot Is
identical. So far as is knon.
there has been no challenge of
such ballots on the ground of
illegality, but such a potibility
remains.
The precincts so involved
(those transcending municipal
boundaries) are Aumsville, Aufc
rora, Donald, Eait Gervais, Wet
Gervais.l Eat Hubbard. West
Hubbard. Jefferson. Eat Mt. An
sel, Went Mt. Angel. Scott Mills,
St. Paul. Stayton. East Stayton.
West Stayton, Sublimity and
Turner.
Split Vote May Aric
Several other questions in re
gard to the PUD issue also have
arisen, such as what would hap
pen if one precinct within a
town vote for it and one against
It (such as could happen- In
Wood burn or Silverton), and to
what extent it could be dis
approved and still become effec
tive in certain localities.
The answer to the first ques
tion is: The total vote in any
municipality is conclusive as to
what the entire, municipality
will do about it precincts with-
' in municipalities cannot art on
; PUD separately.
Combined Vote Count
The answer to the second
question: If the combined vote
of all 56 precincts (both Inside
and outside municipalities)
: shows a balance against PUD,
there will be no PUD in any
part of the area regardless of
each precinct's vote. If the com
bined vote is favorable, and
municipalities favoring PUD
would be in it (if one is or
ganized by the state hydro-electric
commission) and if the en
tire unincorporated area of the
county votes for it that area al
so would be in It. But the un
incorporated area ciild become
part of It only In toto-not ny
separate precincts.
Anyway, from the number of
ballots which Marion county
voters will use next month it
appears the Boy Scouts could
well put on another paper drive
, later on.
India Moslems
On Rampage
COMILLA, East Bengal, Oct.
19HP)-Jtsidents Qf this eastern
Bengal city who are caring for
victims of communal violance de
clared today that the Moslems
who comprise a majority in this
area are waging "undeclared civil
war" against the Hindu minority.
More than 5,000 refugees from
Noakhali have streamed into this
Tippera district city bringing
with them gruesome tales of mur
der, rape, arson and looting.
The refugees say the Moslems
are making determined efforts
to wipe out every member of the
minority community ' or compel
them to embrace the faith of Is
lam, j
1 Aircraft Carrier to be
Parked at Courthouse
Don't be alarmed if you see an
aircraft carrier near the High
street entrance to the county court
house Monday.
For 1 30-foot long model "jeep"
aircraft carrier is part of a dis
play of navy equipment which Is
here with the recruiters of men
for the naval reserve unit being
established in Salem. A complete
radar unit and a model floating
drydock are also included in the
mobile unit.
STRAYER RITES Tl'ESDAY
BAKER, Oct. 19 -(vF)- Funeral
services will be held here Tues
day for State Sen. William II.
Strayer, veteran Baker attorney.
Burial will be in the family plot
at Mount Hope cemetery.
Long-Standing Complaints Over Election Laws
Cause Marion County Clerk to Draft Changes
By CONRAD PRANGE
Staff Writer. The Statesman
Rumblings of discontent among
Oregon county clerks and citizens
over certain long-standing sore
spots in the state election laws
may come to a boil a4.the county
clerks' convention in Portland in
November.
Marion County Clerk Harlan
Judd, in spearheading an attack
on certain "obsolete and antiqua
ted" sections of the present elec
tion laws, is this week sending a
draft of proposed changes in the
law to all county clerks in Oregon.
He intends that they be studied by
the clerks prior to the conven
tion. '
The changes which Judd advo
cates include:
1. . Changing time of the pre
cinct committeeman ballot to the
primary election from its present
position at the general election.
2. Place justice of the peace
and constable elections on sepa
rate ballots instead of on one bal
lot as .they are now.
3. Place no precinct name on
the general ballot thus creating a
general ballot that would be iden
tical in every precinct. Stubs
could' be numbered consecutively
when printed to facilitate count
ing the amount to be sent to each
precinct.
4. The county clerk to make
duplicate cards for voters'registra
tions at the clerks' office. Thus
one card could be used to compile
a master index file and the other
card could be filed as to precincts.
The precinct cards could be kept
in loose leaf lock binders and sent
out precincts at election time in
stead of the present typed poll
books, eliminating the necessity
of typing up of poll books at each
election.
5. Prepare both registration
cards so that a change of address
or of precinct could be noted on
a new line and precinct copy re
moved and filed as the voter
changes address.
6. Change from a "party" pri
mary to an "open" primary and
have no party designation on reg
istration cards. Thus a voter could
vote any party in the primary
elections, and candidates would
declare party affiliation only upom
filing declaration of candidacy.
7. Cities over 2000 population
to conduct elections in their area
and keep their own registration
files.
Because of the state's increas
ing population and economic and
social changes, agitation among
county officials for streamlining
of election laws has become more
intense, Judd said. Most of the
proposed changes are being suc
cessfully adopted in other states,
he declared. Before any of the
proposed changes could lec-ome
law they would have to uri-e in
and be passed by the state legis
lature, Judd said.
WASHINGTON, Oc ft -The
administration l'r.Kht j ,r,.f
President Truman's w,o f c Q
limit on federal pob;!c work r"
Jects with an order !!oiri 14
agencies to spend an ettrs l,
000 000 nn cotitru ti n in tf.e jtur
ending June 30
. This will let thee ssiHr ator.e
spend a total ot 1.2 ),riM).mi.
and more lnnears are on t.e
wav for additional agnr!r.
The order was Utue1 br reron
verion djrertor Jc hn K I Me-!
It does not lit specif. c pro tt
that is up to the stenre. It
means the I2.I0O OOO.Ow e-onmy
program mpf.ed lat A" it tf
Ireident Truman it at et J
tially out the window,
Impesecf MaraUrlant
That program alL'd, srrrg
other things, for hArl;ni d n
eral public work e;f"l.t..r t
1900.b00.000 In toe rurrrnt f . I
year ecmpared wlt!i I,fi ' Omj . 'I
approved by rongre. It irr.t .l
a 60-day moratorium on g em
inent projects and Crdered a ul
ing out f t the le imortnt irn
Congressmen beMowei ; vi hn
some of their p-t projects v. ere
hit. And there already had Un
some vthitling av sy st the re
strictions. The lid on fl '""1 f r
trol expenditures wit tilled to
ward Thursday from 133,000 tvCO
to $130,000,000 !
lieod Central Reviewed
Steclman said in sUlemer.t f
night the budget bureau u :e
viewing limits on the interior in
payment's reclamati'ft Uitki,
the commerce drartmr.t. ar.d
Civil works of the armv -r, , t.
which include rivers aihd hart re
as well as flood enfrn imprr ce
ments. !
"It is espected he sa d, -that
final action on thl rrinram tsit
be taken nest wee. j
The agencies g.ven the ff.ro,
000,000 clearance Unight are u.
navy. Interior, agriculture. J..M.ce,
treasury and state d;utrr.-r ta
leterana adminlstfa'i n, federal
works agency, reconduction fi
nance corporation, maritime rt m
mission,' Tennef.ee valley author
ity, Panama canal, rational s1v,
ory committee for aei ntitir. n!
war department m:l;tary brr. r
Hamilton to
Retire from
PGE Position
William Munroe Hamilton -t
urday announced hi p'tjnn t r i -tirement
as Salem diniiri frar&
ger for the Portland fierier! I .r -trie
Company, position whUh tm
has held for 34 year. Ite w.il
leave the. company's service Janu
ary I, 1947. His suecesKor h-t r
been appointed.
Hamilton began; working f
PGE in 103, after Uliin a cr
le pondence sc hool rixire in e er
tricity and came to Salem in lt)Z.
A dependable rttc le Irr, he
three times president of the cf um
ber of commerce, predet.t c f no
tary, a boy scout director, K;rjf
Blng of thar Chertian and li a
member of the HlkM lodge.
His father, a rfvtl em it r,
moved went frotm lltrr.utt r.'a
birthplace. Battle Creek. Mi-h, a
few months after he was born.
Women Mentioned
In Windsor Theft
LONDON. Oct. 19-VS'.t!.n.l
Yard looked Into the ; poiLiit
today that two well-groomed ret
tery women, guesti at recent ?!y
fair society pa.rt.es. my have
helped Contrive the ahrettd Mi.-
000 theft of the Duches of Wind
sor's jewels. I
Secrecy shrouded the :ioten. e
72-hour-old lnvetigin. but the
yard did not preclude the visi
bility that the women, thui f-r
unidentified, might hate g-r..I
the necessary information f. r the
wily "tat burglar."
CI RH W ON IN JERt ftAf I f
JERUSALEM, Oct. ! -i4'i- The
rtritUh slapped a hoje rutfew i n
the Jewish quarter of Jetu)tni
today because of "seilous reru
desrence of Jewiih terrottttie ac
tivity In; the Jeruaalem area 6ut
Inf hours of darfcrn "
Tlic Weather
Mas.
ateas - M
fort land . M
Kmn lianclMO a?
C'hicaso )....,..
Nrw Vuih : SI
WillanM-H tlvvr - J f
FOHM AMTIllnm I' 1 flr
htu, Mt Nar)r flV -!? I ,..1 r
tMlay ltn iifht rm in t '"
inf and lain tmrr In "'. i.
llishrit teniiwi aluta . Lat !.
! t
I 44
! i
4