The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 21, 1946, Page 1, Image 1

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The Weather
Max. Min. Frecip.
44 M .23
Portland 44 33 .24
CMctro M X7 JW
Wiltmtt liver S.7 ft.
FORECAST (from US. weather ba-
ran. McNary field. Salem): Cloudy
with continued rain ahowcra today and
tonight. Highest tempera tur 48. Low-
mZtTTT-SXXTH TEAR
City Water Supply Sources Figure in Court Suit
AA " '"-ICvSTN
8EESDDQS
Industrial relations remain the
most acute problem in the domes
tic politico-economic field. Ten
sions remain. Fears are general
that fresh demands for stiff wage
advances will result in another
wave of strikes to tie up produc
tion. Naturally people are turning
to the new congress for some re
lief from the country's "labor
pains." The expectation is that
congress will enact legislation to
curb the powers of labor unions.
Some industrialists look for con
gress to repeal the Wagner act and
. put labor in its place by other
drastic legislation. More practical
minded men anticipate no such
erasure of labor's gains. President
'Truman remains an important fac
tor in any fresh legislation be
cause of his power of veto. It is
timely to take a look at the pres
ent situation both as to law and
as to evils which fresh lawmaking
might seek to cure.
Foundations of organized labor's
.present security are the Clayton
act exempting unions from pro
visions of the Sherman act banning
conspiracies in restraint of trade;
the Norris-LaGuardia act cupping
the authority of judges in grant
ing injunctions in labor disputes;
the Wagner labor relations act en
forcing collective bargaining and
invoking punishment on employ
ers for "unfair" labor practices;
the Wages and Hours act govern
ing minimum, wages and length of
.the work-week. To these may be
added the opinion of Justice Mur
phy in a picketing case which
gives constitutional immunity to
picketing as an exercise 01 free
dom of speech. It hardly
(Contiued on editorial page)
Parking Meters
Due in 65 Days
Parking meters will be In
stalled in Salem within 65 days,
according to the contract which
Mayor I. M. Dough ton nad City
Recorder Alfred Mundt Wednes
day signed with the Michaels Art
Bronze company of Covington,
Ky. The contract was signed by
the two city officials on order of
the city council.
Authorized by the council on
October 15, 1945, execution of the
contract was delayed by the
Henry E. Morris injunction suit
attacking its validity. The state
supreme court, last week, in over
ruling a Marion county circuit
court opinion upholding the in
junction, ruled that the city of
Salem was authorized to sign
the contract.
Animal Crackers
By WAPREN GOODRICH
"Never ' mind what I use if
., for just build that nest
W nmi place else!"
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OjlT
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1 PlsTl I
V
14 PAGES
1 t ir-
l . -t"---J fill i- ;
Pictured are mm f the InstalUtiena at Mlnte isUnl, a few miles! Berth f Stayton mm the aWV-1
river, which flgw Im the salt breoght by Gardner Beuett, SUytM, agalawt the city ef Saiesa U
restrain the diversiea of water frm the river, the first hearing kt which wUl be heM la Marion
eonnty elrenlt conrt teoay. (Story an page 7.) At naper left the three pomp houses ever the M-foot
wells which augment the regnlar water sapply ef the city from seepage wells. The dam shown on the
apper right belongs to Bennett
uuues d nun. mwct iuw
Is cleaned before being piped to
Photographer.)
Boy Arsonist
Admits Setting
Costly Blazes
FRESNO, Calif., Nov. -(District
Attorney James M. Thuesen
said today that a 14-year-old boy
has admitted setting a $15,000,000
bonded brandy warehouse fire
south of Fresno August 28, as well
as a series of other incendiary
blazes here and elsewhere on the
Pacific coast.
Thuesen said three arson
charges would be filed against the
boy here.
The boy, who gave his name as
Billy Williams, was arrested by
Undersheriff Ross Cochrane and
Deputy Sheriff William Gann of
Tulare county.
Thuesen said that fires which
the youth admitted setting includ
ed a lumberyard in Sacramento,
a theatre in Chico, a structure in
Phoenix, Ariz., three houses near
Portland, Ore., a grocery store in
Vancouver, B.C., a warehouse in
Los Angeles, a residence in Stock
ton and a brush fire in Gerber.
Auto Strikes
Elderly Couple
An elderly couple were in Sa
lem Deaconess hospital last night
after being struck by an auto as
they crossed 12th street near Lee
street, according to Salem police
reports.
Both John Tibbits, 76, and his
wife, Fannie, 69, of 887 S. 12th
st., were reported suffering from
shock and Mrs. Tibbits incurred
a compound fracture of her right
leg, below the knee, hospital of
ficials said. Tibbits incurred a dis
located shoulder and a minor cut
on the back of head.
Walter S. Frederick, 1170 Hines
sL, driver of the car which struck
the couple, was cited to apepar in
municipal court at 10 o'clock this
morning on a charge of failure to
give right of way to pedestrians.
85 Polk County
Tax Roll Collected
DALLAS, Nov. 20 Eighty-five
per cent of the Polk county tax
roll was collected or in the mail
at the end of the period, Novem
ber 15, Sheriff T. B. Hooker, tax
collector, has announced. Cash
received totaled $595,598.60 out of
the 1946-47 tax roll, of $789,
005.70 or 75 per cent of the bal
ance was in the unworked mail
in the tax collector's office. -
Camera Photographs'
U. S. from 65 Allies Up
WASHINGTON. Nov. 20 -UP-
Scientists who sent a motion pic
ture camera aloft in a German
V-2 rocket obtained photos of earth
at an altitude of 65 miles, they
disclosed today.
At this altitude more than one-
half of the United States theoretic
ally would have been visible to an
observer with unlimited eyesight
and unobstructed vision.
Snlnm. Orwgon. Thursday
Motnng.
and diverts water to the Bennett
pictures (no settling Basins ana
the city water works in Salem,
Clouds Slay Screenf
Eclipsef Saturday
PORTLAND, Nov. J0-VA
partial eclipse of the sun is due
at 8:14 sun.; Saturday, but local
astronomers l- fear it is going to
be rained out
iThe semi-annual eclipse will
be most clearly visible in the
east, with 56 per cent of the
sun hidden ; in the New York
area. In this section, only about
per cent of the sun will be
covered by the moon.
And that -part will probably
take place behind clouds, any
way. Seamen Strike
To Continue
Over Weekend
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 20-
AFL picket 'lines kept all hands
except security crews from strike
bound ships in the San Francisco
bay today, and even the most op
timistic mediators conceded t
would be at least Monday before
the seven-week west-coast tieup
could be fully broken.
Some longshore work, however,
is expected to be resumed before
that. l I J
The new? pickets were placet!
early this morning two hours be
fore the scheduled' return to work
of CIO unions by the AFL mas
ters, mates ' and pilots. The MMP
officers said they were "protecting
our interests" until they had tirte
to vote upon acceptance of a con
tract proposal by shipowners. !'
Omar Hoskins, federal concilia
tion commissioner, said he would
bring the MMP and the Pacific
American Shipowners association
together: as- soon as the MMP
votes were counted. A count
expected b? Saturday.
Fine, Jail Term
Rent fNon-Registration Penalty
Possibility of a $5000 fine and
one year in jail, or both, face
tjhose landlords who failed to reg
ister with the Salem OPA rent
control office within the specified
45-day period which ended No
vember 14, Francis E. Harrington,
OPA enforcement attorney tin
Portland, declared yesterday, f-
r ailure to register, as provided
in section 7 of the rent control
regulation, constitutes a violation.
Such violations subject the land
lord to the criminal penalties.
civil enforcement actions, and
suits for treble damages,- pro
vided in the act," Harrington said.
"Section Z05B of the price con
trol act fixes a maximum penalty
of $5000 fine and one year in laiL
or both, for wilful and deliberate
Violations of the act. In addition
Nrrmbr 21. 1U3
Starting Today
-
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i - , Jft,
power canal which supplies Stay ton
screening bouse where Salem's water
(fhotos by Don Dill, Statesman Staff
I
22 Houses for
Salem Okehed
By FHA BoSd
Veterans' priorities for 22 houses
in Salem were approved by the
federal housing administration in
Portland yesterday and S5 were
approved for Lebanon according
to The Associated Press.
The civilian production admini
stration also announced approval
of a permit to Reinholdt St Lewis
company, Salem Venetian blind
manufacturers, to construct a
$12,000 custom lumber manfae
turing plant here, but rejected
the local Isaac Walton league's
request to build a $21,500 club
house and turned down a request
by Evelyn Sowa to build a $2,000
beauty shop at Brooks.
The veterans housing priorities
approved for Salem went to A. W.
Hill for six houses to sell at $7,
750 each; Lee Ohmart foe six
houses to sell at $7,000, Ralph C.
Lee, for five houses to sell at
$9,400, and Less E. Lowe,! five
houses to sell at $6,750.
Jack Mann Given
Stayed Sentence
ALBANY, Ore., Nov. 20 -VF)-
Jack Orville Mann, held in the
Linn county jail for 11 months
awaiting disposition of a burglary
charge, today was given a three
years -stayed sentence which Judge
Victor Olliver said was issued
pending Mann's good behavior.
Mann pleaded guilty to burglary
of an Albany confectionery .store
prior to a Brownsville safe crack
ing job in which he was involved
as a suspect and held since De
cember, 1945.
Tvoy Moore, Portland, was later
cciivicted by a Linn county; jury
in the Brownsville case after Mann
turned state's evidence against
Moore and -Douglas Day, who died
while the trial was in progress.
Held Possible
violators may be the subject of
injunction suits for treble dam
ages, he added.
Since October !, when federal
rent control was established in
this area and registration of Mar
ion county and West Salem land
lords began, up to the deadline on
November 14, approximately 5000
of the estimated 7600 landlords
had registered, leaving about one
third of the landlords unregis
tered, j
Figuring strongly in the local
rent control situation was im In
junction suit brought against
OPA rent control in Salem by
Henry B. Koehler, local! land
lord. The suit was dismissed
Monday by Circuit Judge George
R. Duncan on grounds that the
state of Oregon has no Jurisdic-
uon in the matter.
Nx 203
lime
In West
Salem experienced rain and a
lew flakes of hardly-noticed snow
while the worst November storms
in a4 quarter of a century con-
tinued in other parts of the north-
west : Wednesday.
Washington, British Columbia,
and other northwestern points as
far east as Salt Lake City and
south to Medford. Ore., with-
stood heavy snowfall and freez-
ing temperatures were recorded
as low as 19 degrees above zero
in some parts of Washington.
.Winds varied from 45 to 55 miles
per hour. Washington storm fata-
lities rose to five,
Flurries of snow were reported
in Portland's rural areas. An inch
or two of snow was reported at
Klamath Falls, Grants Pass and
Bend.
Trains Delayed
Storm conditions were reported
from all parts of the northwest
Trains were delayed, private cars
stalled, buses slowed, schools clo
sed, long distance telephone calls
hampered, plane flights cancelled
and thousands of telephones in
Seattle, Tacoma and other cities
were put out of commission
At Lakebay, across the bay
from Tacoma, the phone company
initiated wireless voice path ser
vice after that area had been
without inter-city service since
Monday, Associated Press reports
said.
The University of Washington
in Seattle was closed "indefinite
ly" because of a coal shortage,
due to a power failure at a coal
A TJZ V "CTttu "In;
mine. Snow kept Seattle public
schools closed.
Travel Hazardous
Travel conditions continued
hazardous In the mountain dis
tricts of eastern and central Ore
gon and the northern section of
the Oregon coast highway. R. H
Baldock, state highway engineer
reported.
Motorists were' warned not to
cause oi a Diizzara ana use oi
chains in the LaGrande district
was advised. The highway n -
gineer said weather over the state
was expected to clear Thursday,
when snow crews would have a
chance to clear the roads.
Wednesday's road report
SanUam snnamit 24 degrees
Snowing intermittently.. 14 inches
new snow with total of 25 inches,
Highways plowed but slippery
Chains required. No sanding until
storm ends.
Odell lake. Willamette highway
15 degrees. 7 inches new snow
with total of 21 inches. Packed
snow throughout district Chains
advised
Siskiyen summit. Pacific high
way 4 inches new snow. Road
plowed, but chains required
The Dalles Snow throughout
district in depth of 4 to 8 inches.
Snow plows and sanding trucks
in operation. Still snowing lightly
Wednesday
Grange Urges
Labor Courts
PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 20-JP)-
Special courts to handle labor dis-
putes and empowered to order
nvcmmnt irnr m,T MOTtn-
4 v,w 4v- M.
..v. j
orange convention as an am to-
ward industrial peace.
Delegates also called for a
laiAir-iiiuusMj'aKricuiiuni con-
Pricw 5c
Storm's
L.ont
ference to draft a program for 512 votes. The opposition vote in-peace-time
production. eluded: national peasants, 255,183:
The powerful farm group, tak-
ing a-stand on the labor situauon,
proposea special courts to wmcn
either party of a labor dispute
might appeal for a prompt public
hearinc The resolution advocated
that these tribunals be empow
ered to order state or federal
seizure of a company if strike or
lockout should endanger public
health or safety.
Boy Receives Cut
In Auto Accident
Richard Bagger, IS, of route 2,
box 8, Salem, was treated by first j
aid men and at Salem Deaconess I
hospital last night for a cut on
his left temple incurred in an
auto accident ' at High and Che
meketa streets at about 9 o'clock
last night.
The boy was riding In car
driven by Harvey Finn, route 2,
box 4, Salem, which collided with
an auto operated by Theodore R.
Rappe, 1820 Cross st
RETIREMENT COMPULSORY
Employes subject to the state
retirement law must retire from
their state positions when they
Lreach the retirement age, Attor
ney General George Neuner ruled
here Wednesday. The opinion was
asked by the state retirement
commission.
Oul-
Cilv
aterL
Sefejan. 1
One hundred out-city users of
Salem's water or sewer systems
had notices today restating the
dty council's action of last August
5 ordering: discontinuance of such
services effective January 1.
The notices, sent i out by the
water department, said the only
exceptions would be users who
constitute ! government agencies,
public utilities or whose property
is crossed by the main water line
of the Stayton island water main.
Also excepted are the VUta
Heights and Morningside water
districts, which now obtain water
from the city,
I Districts especially effected by
the council's action include those
south-east and north-west of Sa
lem, Carl Guenther, water de
partment manager, said
The city council's order once
applied to considerably more than
the 100 users now affected, but
since its issuance seven adjacent
erritories have been annaxed to
Salem proper and therefore are
entitled to continued service.
The 100 homes affected under
the order also have recourse to
the formations of water districts.
under which plan they could ob
tain city water for 25 per cent
more than is paid by city rest
dents, it was pointed out by Carl
Guenther, water department man
ager.
There was no indication that
the city government-elect which
takes office January 1 would al
ter the council's original order.
VA Suspends
Cuts, Funds to
500,000 Vets
WASHINGTON, Nov. 20-A-
Veterans administration officials
today more than half a mil-
,. , .ui
iivu itwiaiia aaa ax- w va
training will find their monthly
government checks reduced, elim
inated or temporarily held up
They Include:
1. More than 150,000 trainees
throughout the country whose
payments have been suspended
because they neglected to report
their outside earnings by Nov em
ber 5.
2. About 300,000 whose sub
sistence will be reduced under the
G. I. bill limiting amounts in sc-
1 coVdance with size of earnings.
3. About llv.OOO whose pay
ments will be chopped off for theJ
same reason. The next pay date
November 30.
The VA also disclosed it is
spending $1,800,000 on a survey
and regular inspection of schools
and establishments offering job
training. In most cases, the states
will do the work.
As soon as delinquent veterans
turn in their reports, the checks
will be mailed to them if they
qualify for payments, the VA
said.
Those feeling the pinch come
under the GI bill which stipulates
that if a veteran's subsistence
payments and job earning exceed
$175 a month, without depen
dents, or $200 with dependents,
his allowance must be cut to come
within that maximum.
These restrictions do not apply
to the 159,389 disabled veterans
in job training and educational
institutions under public law 16.
Communists Win
Romania Election
BUCHAREST, Thursday, Nov.
2 1 -fin Romania's comraunist-
dominated government bloc rolled
"P immense lead today over
opposition parties in .Tuesday's
parliamentary elections.
Results from 22 of 58 election
districts, inc-ludinv Rnrhirt
rrenuer ietru uroza s bloc 1.535.-
independent socialists. 528.901. and
national peasant democrats, 544,-
719.
Tnilfa Hirofl tt
"V'lYO IlirCU lO
Gather Leaves
City Engineer J. H. Davis has
hired two of the trucks which the
city council Monday night author
ized him to employ to aid in re
moving leaves from Salem streets.
At least two more dump trucks
wul be used if they can be ob
tained, Davis said.
Hirinor nf f K BrMitti-trtal n,olr
Davis and the council's ans-
wer to complaints registered by
citizens against lack of leaf re
moval in some parts of Salem.
Leaves are being raked into piles
by a sweeper, then hauled away
in trucks.
OPA FUe Rent Ceiling
Cases' in Portland
PORTLAND, Nov. 20.-4Vrhe
first OPA rental ceiling cases here
asking 'restitution to tenants of
alleged overcharges were filed In
federal court today.!
In line with a U. S. supreme
court decision authorizing such
restitution, the, OPA brought suit
against three Portland landlords,
asking that they pay treble dam
ageson third to the tenants,
two-thirds to the government.
Tmiflinniainr Urges i
IPresse.dl Tnifey
WASHINGTON. Nev. tl-Tbnf4ay)-AVTh natWn eaaae faee
U-faee with another crippling sett ml walannt tedr and the tav
ern meat girded fer an attempt te punish atlenUydefUnt Jaka L
Lewis en contempt ef eeart charge.
Lewis, whs bad served nntiee thai Ms contract with the tavern-,
sent wenld be veid last aaldnlfkt. let the deadline cenme and t
wUnent a net her weed, atthenc h Federal Jadgc T. Alia GeMaberentfc
bad lasned a restraining erder calling en bins te caned the neUee.
. With mm ward freea Lewis that be was retreating fraaa his pat
tien. his miners apparently began a general walk eat. Nearly a third
of the 400,00 miners already were idle before lt midnight and '
field reports early today indicated many more mines were closing.
Operators in the Pittsburg and Johnitown areas said thousands of
workers failed to show up for midnight shifts. '
President Truman, vacationing at Key West, , Fla swiftly In
structed Attorney General Clark to press today for a contempt cita
tion against the United Mine Workers chief a citation which could
mean jail or fine, or both. i
But there was little doubt that Lewis Intended to fight the charge
to the hilt, in a historic showdown between he government and on
of the moft powerful labor leaders In the world.
Under the procedure, as outlined by a high authority at Key
West, a subordinate of Clark's will go Into the federal district court
General Coal Mine Walkout Begins !
PITTSBURG. Nev. tI-(Tlinrdsjr)-jP-A general wslkent
ber an teday In the sett real fields with the esplrstlen ef the
contract deadline given to the government by the United Mine
workers. ' i
Mines that had been operating steadily nnUl! last night be
gan "ceing down" In the ruttbarr and Johnstown areas ef the
Pennsylvania bUnmlnons coal fields. .
Operators reported night shifts with several tbenaaad work
ers falling to report for work at the time they were scheduled te
start before Wednesday midnight.
A I read r work stoppage In the fields bad Idled approximately
1 . miners In 12 tales prior to the Lewis deadline. This
represented more than one-third of the nation's IHJM I'MW
members.
Operator reports from West Virginia also told t tailor
of workers to show np on the nlcht shift.
In the Illinois coal fields, an II p.m. shift did not start work
at the United Electric company's fidelity snln at Da,aeln. The
mine, employing SM. was the last Mbr operation to ties In
a southern Illinois srea employing lt.ttv UMW worker.
Reports from other far western states. Indicated a similar
trend.
here today. He will argue that Lewis silence amounts to a strike
call the miners do not work in the absence of a contract and that
therefore Lewis is in contempt of court.
Even before the midnight deadline, 139,710 of the 400.000 bi turning
ous miners had quit work.
President Truman, it was stated, was not budging on Inch front,
his determination to fight the strike threat every inch of the way.
Lewis' defense was not outlined in advance, but the CIO n(
AFL, in rallying to his support, gave a hint of its possible na.tutnj
They called the restraining order illegal under the NorrU-LaGuardi
act which curbed the use of injunctions In labor , disputes. '
Lewis himself was not availabl for comment on President
Truman's signal for the great court battle, lie had retired to Ml
whit frame house in nearby Alexandria, Va. A reporter who knock
ed at the door was told by the houseman: I
"Mr. Lewis to not to be disturbed." 1
Earlier Lewis had stalked away from his UMW headquarieri
In Washington without a word about his Intentions. r
Previously, In a manner reminiscent of foot ball team pla
President William Green of the AFL, another old min worked
took the ball himself.
Green, in a statement which was made available to reporters ef
Lewis' headquarters, predicted that miners who have, walked ou(
will "voluntarily refuse" to return until a new contract Is signed. ,
Green did not urge them to stay out. The Sraith-Connally oof
forbids anyone to promote a strike
ne mcreiy expressed roe opinion
IT C T .1 1?
u. o. iiLUtiitw .rrcigui iuiijargu i. lan
A new development came with the report that the government
is readying an embargo on all
essential commodities.
A transportaion official who withheld! the use of his name told
reporter that the order will be Invoked "in a day or two If th
strike comes off."
All commodities except food,
be kept from the trains.
Another government official
the possibility of a general demonstration by union members li
Lewis should be jailed.
Worried as they were at other possible effects of a coal min
strike alone, government officials appeared to be giving little present,
concern to the possibility of a general strike of organ I red labor, i
The coal strike alone could
resurgent automobile industry,
necessities, dim the lights of millions of people and deprive peopld
of fuel with severe winter weather ahead.
Lewis obviously is out for
guess is that he wants pay for a 40-hour week equivalent to wha
miners now get for a 54-hour week. The top now Is $73,23. i
Big 4 Agree on
Trieste Points
NEW YORK, Nov. 20 -UPh- The
foreign ministers councM reached
agreement tonight on all but two
major points in their long dispute
over Trieste The removal of for.
eign troops, and the economic ad'
ministration of the free Adriatic
port.
Persons present at the deliber
ations said that Soviet Foreign
Minister V. M. Molotov had now
agreed to practically everything
in the plans for Trieste as the re
suit of two new compromises to
day.
Settling their dispute on the
city's foreign affairs, the ministers
agreed that the governor should
have power to prevent enforce
ment of treaties in conflict with
the laws of Trieste, but ruled that
they must be signed jointly by the
governor and a representative of
the U.N. security council.
The ministers' argument over
the Judiciary was settled by a
clause providing that the governor
can appoint candidates offered by
the council, or from among other
persons after consultation with the
council.
Signals Flash
From Plane Crash
PARIS, Nov. 20 -UP)- Reports
that the crew of a British trans
port plane had seen light signals
flashed from a mountain ridge in
th French-Italian border region
spurred new hopes tonight for the
rescue of survivors of disabled
U.S. army C-35 transport which
crash-landed in th wintry Alps
Tuesday.
There wer 11 Americans
aboard th plan which
down in below zero weather.
in a government-seized Industry
mat iney would stay out.
l.a 17 l. Til ,
freight shipments by rail except fog
J .
clothing, medicines, fuel, etc., would
' '
speaking privately said he feared
.
stop steel mills, shut down the now
stall transportation of thousands ol
more pay, The commonly accete!
, 1
3 Hurt in Wreck
Near Wood I) urn
S1LVERTON, Nov. 20-f'NIn.
Schaefer, 18. of the Marquam dis
trict near Wood burn, was serious
ly injured in an automobile ac
eident on th Silver Creek roadj
early today and two other pen
sons were hurt. Anton Pfelfer, .
route 2, Silverton, incurred a frac
tured Jaw. Francii Pfelfer wJ
treated for cuts and bruises. (
Miss Schaefer suffered a skull
fracture. She an Anton Pfelfes
remain In a hospital her.
Also in the car wer Robert
Pfelfer and Joseph Ehll.
Their car overturned in a diUU
when a tir blew out.
CIO Opposes Coal
Strike Injunction
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J- No
20-;P-CIO convention deiecaten
gave Indirect support to John L.
Lewis AFL mineworkers today
and then heard Gen. Dwight D,
Eisenhower plead for steady pro
d action as a major factor for
world peace.
A resolution passed unanimous.
ly blasted th government for
court injunction agslnst a walk
out by Un nation's soft cot
miners.
DOO OWNERS WARNED i '
WEST SALEM. Nov. 20.r-hU
of Folic W. if. Porter sald t4
day that h had received nunu
erous complaints that dogs wer
oeing allowed to run at larro. '
and that officers would b in
structed to en fore atrirtlv thn
ordinance providing that dor
should b tied up.
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