o O O CJ o Ttrtunrcrasitni o o 000-00 odoo oa O O O.DO odd raan o o c n . u JOS o i Jerry on the Job 4' .-r' 4vs Sxef-.J - - . .V : .. I .2.. . -r!,l ..' - : . 1 - J t .: . ' . . -. '- ,. i r KUNDID 1651 NINETY-SEVENTH TEAR 12 PAGES Th Orgoa Slatosmoa. SoUm. Or. Tvcsday. July 1, 1947 Pric Sc Europ tUppinf t In the bve picture are Carl Grelder and Jerry, hit See ln Ey dor. Grelder, wounded while tervinr as a marine In Uerld war II, Just returned frera Morrlttewn, N. where he trained a manth with the dog . Jerry, a German shepherd, is if aeeend aeelnf eye doc In Salem, the ether being owned by Frank Ilealy wht graduated from Willamette university law school this June. (Photo by Don Dill, Statesman staff photographer.) (Story also on page 4). TP Indian Service School Starts At Ghemawa Cooking Helps Odor of Eels WARRENTON, June 3(MA) Don't mell now, but that sweet - scented blonde may be wearing a Willamette river eel. In transmuted form, that is. Eel oil is one of the products processed here from the mil lions of eels tiow being trapped at Oregon City. And among the things the oil may be used for are perfume, cosmetics and soap. More than 160 tons of eel, whose stench in the unproces sed state, drives Willamette ri ver bank residents indoors in horror, have been cooked In the steam vats of Warren ton's Bio products, inc., so for this sea son. They emerge as fat, oils, and proteins. L. T. Critchlow, Oregon's eel harvester, plants traps at Ore gon City each May when the eels start from the Pacific ocean toward spawning grounds. The eels actually they re lampreys climb up a wall by means of their suction mouths, and kid into Critchlow's traps. ean Aid Talks Bog Down PARIS, June 30 The Bri tish, French and Russian confer ence on a United States proposal for. financial aid to war-impover ished Europe bogged down in complete disagreement today and French sources said tonight the meeting would end tomorrow with the two western powers accepting the plan without Russian partici pation. One French official quoted Bri tish Foreign Secretary Ernest Be vin as saying "the case is hope less, at the conclusion of his third session win Foreign Minis ter Georges Bidault of France and Russian Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov. Bevin had indicated previous ly Britain would proceed with U. S. Secretary of State George C. Mai snail s plan without Russian cooperation, if necessary, and a decision by France to Join Britai would mean the formation western bloc. One remote possibility existed that the talks would continue. Both Bidault and Bevin agreed to consider further Molotov's pro posed method of qualifying for American economic aid and to re ply tomorrow. The chief point of disagreement appeared to be Molotov's conten- WASHINGTON, June 30.-;p- tion the three-power conference I The government released the soft should determine only how much coal mines to their private own- help should be asked from the ers today and put the burden of United States, while Bevin and avoiding another strike on John Bidault believed- a comprehensive I Lewis and the operators. iuSiMt ur use m sucn neip Because ine miners are on va- should first be presented. Midwest Waters Falling ofa U.S. Releases Worker-empty Pits to Owners 7n f he BlacU U.S. Closes Years Boohs WASHINGTON, June 30-D The government starts tomor row on a new fiscal yrar with spending plans far from com plete, but with a balanced bud get for the old year safely in the books. A bellrr-than-balanced bud get 1 anticipated, too. for the fiscal yei.r now beginning, but only one of the 12 appropria tion bills to run the arlous aictrtci's has vlrarrci rongreM. As the bills stand they would be below Mr. Truman's own rrcommendatHrHi and these en- tsiigrd a urplus of revenue above -nding The fiscal year ending at midnight t the fint In 1? years with a balance in the black. Figures for all but the Ul five davs show a surplus of f 1,142, - 925.000. A search of the records shows that the government has ope rated In tike blak "3 years, in TT C a. The Indian service summer J , J OH 11 11 C&tS school at Chemawa opened Mon- C?Cj day with registration, of 124 men W.p friT I I i and women associated with Ind- OJXC XfJl U o 1 1 o . ian aervic work.and related fields. Moat of them are vfrom I A iTTISri H niPPG mithwMt urn mlddl.west states. --B- tUVyt-- A Ul t-AO Every year former residents of southwest and middlewest states. Salem residing In Portland bold a picnic in Laurelhurst park. The 1947 picnic took place Sunday and on invitation of the onicers, ut LAKE SUCCESS, June 30 School officials said the regis tration is unexpectedly light. prouaoiy oetauBC 01 uic unwea- viuu i-vca vmt- rft Truman rWlarH an nri tainty of employment which has ed NaUons mUiUry staff commit- SSSlifiT3 wSidW." II. and cation, the pits were as empty to day as they were 13 months ago when President Truman ordered them seized during a strike. The American flag over the mine openings was lowered at the more than 2.500 soft coal mines at 12:01 p. m. Washington time today. The K rug-Lewis contract of May 29, 1946, went with it Auth ority to run the mines expired at noon - - six months after Presi- ST. LOUIS. June 30 -JT- The ' Mississippi river flattened out at St. Louis today after surging to j its highest level here in 103 , years, and damage generally was confined to the Immediate river front ditrirt. The rampant river breached one dike on the Illinois side north oT St. Louis proper, but army engineers said they expected the I stronger barriers behind it to ! flood waters out of the highly industrialized cities of Venice, Madison and Granite City. 111. Elver Shows Fall The river remained at 39 3 feet at St. Louis for 61 hours but I gradually fell one-tenth of a foot I shortly after noon. The govern- 1 ment weather bureau said the 1 river probably V would remain 1 stationary for 24 hours and then the red S3 years, not eounting drop gradually. i the year ending tonight. A sharp earth shrxk at 11:25 p.m. (EST) yesterday which was felt throughout St. Louis and ; points as far as 20 miles away 1 was of more concern to St. i Louisans than the flood last night. Quake Rocks Buildings It rocked large buildings, rat- ' tied dishes and windows and j brought thousands of the city's residents out Into the streets. Al though it was the sharpest quake recorded since St. Louis univer sity set up its seismographs In 1910, no serious damage was re ported. A chimney toppled from one house. The Red Cross said 3.000 per sons who had sought refuge from flood waters in Iowa had moved back into their debris-strewn homes. The agency revised slight ly downward to 31.000 its esti mate of the number of homeless persons In Missouri, Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska. Increases Allowed By Bill 1 WASHtKCTOX. Jjno 9 -T-1 Presideet Trumaa t mity igrw4 a tnad;fed rent roctrat b-U but railed It "samly trjleif" iM sure to ri tho tent tut nc-J lions cf fairulktL Exprrsrg his d.slate la message to rtr-gTru, ho d ) signed as ve lesser f two r lls." th rOr being no rent c trol at all after vut.mgM t-vugt l Aiot-g lih hu sJ-.arj waris U rongrrvs, Mr. Trumaa 6ma64 an tmestigatiosi of th real o Uto Utj" which, he at as figt)Ung tt atfaUnistraOao's hnuo- WEST SALEM, June 30 The ing rrttfrarn with a ruUe 1947-41 city budgtt was apprtned regard cf the pub'-.r wrL'ar." by a vote of 37 to 10 here today. .New fYofraaa ftougM The budget totals IC3.000. of And he raAod anesr for a rwn which $30.(20 must bo raised by i prehenars-e" . federal program to taxation and of whkrn 117.243 ta spur the conetrurt ion of home in esress of the per rent lim itation. The 1H4-47 budget toUled 43160. of which $21,345 as raised by taxation. Today's tote will be ranvaed by the city council at a special meeting at 7 p. m. Tuesday. Reg ular July meeting for the roun-1 gang and &A their ouppurt U cU will be held neat Monday, election to 141 " The budget approxed today in-j Halle k aotd te:e ore simrter dudes 4500 to cover an estimat- Implies ixne ta Mr. Truman's at ed deficit of that amount in the j tack upon the hor af U4 W. Salem Approves Tax Levy la the rue. Hep, tsek f Indiana, the reparon fVntr leader, snapped bock with a state ment sajir.g: 'President Trumaa'a umii at hamefuL "He has reached new low to his efforts to ppeoo tro 1944-47 budget resulUng from the 'members of rcrvgreu acute water shortage of last sum- March, 1944, DeoeUtoo mer when the council toted to purchase the BoufHer well to aug ment the then aailabte aupp)ly. Floyd Dayton, president, and followed drastic cuts in the pro- tee remmended tenUUvely to-reiinqUished his wartime au- rrH4 Tiraeer. secretary. 1 wenvi posea inienor n mak talk to the "ex-leral budget patriates" who still cherish a I ciassworx win tegin toaay in urm offeinn for old Salem, various buildings of the Chemawa Being a comparative "newtimer" school campus. A get-acquainted 1 carriers to keep world peace. I felt a bit out or piace, especial- i aance win oe neia in ine scnooi ly when men with such intimate j gymnasium tonight. Most per- arouainvance wiui oaicm j i sons nere iot uw ioui-wu as RalDh Moody and L. H. Mc- course are living on the campus Mahan had appeared as speaxers i m addition to speciaiizea ciass- . MEMPHIS, Tenn, June 30-(,F) Spring cotton chopping continued placidly in the lower valley to day behind massive, man-built levees which U. S. engineers promised would tame the Miss issippi river on its latest tear. Leave It to a Texan He 4 Found9 Flying Disk; World's End Predicted EL PASO. Tex, June 30-VTroy Prndergraas came up today with a solution to the flying disk mystery. He said he found one. , He said he chased a flying disk Sunday afternoon until it landed in Ash Canyon, in the southwest corner of Elephant Butt lake to New Mexico. The disk was a five by eight piece of UnfotL . . Pender gra said he and friends , were watching birds in the sky at Judges iXamed For District Court Posts The t U signed toley estene federal rent control unul .Mart I. 194. It allows toTre up to IS per ett.t where larUlird and tenant agree to a lewao mrjbf f through Dec. I. 1944. It arrf governmr.t control orer bu-i.r.g matertals U rorrjnerrial ctv structiro except far projorts ? amusement or recrea Ucnxl bwo trig. department fed- day that the security council thorit. to ooerate strike-bound KMII m KAaiA Vawma f IQnn I - " H1IUU1U XXAWUZ OK LMBlt: XUK UU" mjm. aSOUU I mm I A ZVZSA. rrh Postal Branch was uuim tvroill 0lUIUJ UilUfTi Soviet nmrs of to ranking J f the Krug-LwU agree- miUtary group in the U.N. at the TV . same time declined to make any ireaoy io,wu sieei ana rauroaa sueirestJons. The Russians con- employes have been made idle by tended the 11-nation security .growing coal shortage. Many Marian naa appearea f""" in aaaiuon u apecutiiAea miners iumneri the nm nn their in previous years., The day. how- WOrk and discussion group, dur- eotmeU must .gree on fienel ".JZrt week to nrot.t ever, was nerfect for a picnic, and fng the days, a lecture series open the dinner was of usual picnic to all is on the school program, Drooortions. so "a good time was beginning at 8:30 p.m. Wednes- had by all." I day and continuing almost night One thing which has impressed w it is conducted by Dr. Willard me about Salem, as I remarked WrBeatty of Chicago, director of principles for a world police force vc:uon lm .? Jnf r J V 1 before getting down to actual ffalnst the Taft-Hartley labor warships. Sunday, is that its founders built well. Not only were the streets broad and provision made for a civic center along Willson avenue, but the architects and builders did education for the U. S. Indian service, on the general subject of "The Philosophy of Indian Edu cation. Besides numerous Indian ser- a far better job than in many CP vice denartment heads, six out- ties burgeoning in the mid-19th j ,ije instructors in various fields French Thwart Military 'Coup' PARIS, June . 30 -OP)- France Lewis is demanding a 35 cents an hour wage increase, an eight hour day to replace the present nine-hour day, and doubling of the five-cent royalty on each ton of coal for the United Mine Work ers welfare and retirement fund. century. The three important are on the faculty, including Dr. announce w-J u,ai nr awrrj y . i . structures along the axis of State Robert Virtue and Dr. Mildred police had thwarted a sensational ffj lllSpeClOrSll ID and Court streets were the old Doster f th heath service de- plot by a right-wing tmderground l I Strickland Cains capitol. the courthouse, the First Vlethodist church. Each was a fine model of a particular type of arch itecture: the capitol with its well proportioned dome, of Roman style; the courthouse, of French Umbia university: Dr. Lois Meek townnan style:. ana ine cnurcn SU)ll and Dr. Herbert R. Stolz, wiui lis tau spire, lis nying out- renearrh assorfatea at the insti Uesses, its pointed arches, its tut of children's welfare at Uni (Continued on editorial page) VerHir of ralifomia. school t a : ill fi.il -v Black Maquis" to overthrow the lil.u " ' 7 " s . uwu. i ...uii in F"""! ticia waa iwurn Ohio, director -of -." Z.ZnX . ml M" posUl inspector Monday iJ r',"tC.7 and will leave this week for Wash Existence of the Black Maquis "- Ul '., BRB UJ was disclosed by Interior Min- """""" "v,;,v," 1C" ister Edouard Deoreux. who un- eral nment. MricKiana, wno was on military partment in Denver public schools: Dr. Charles F. Good. Cleveland, school health; Willard Rhodes, as sistant professor of music at Col folded a tale of conspiracy and intrigue. leave nearly four years of his ten- The minister described the or- ure here, is believed to be the onlv ganization as "very widespread," Salem postal clerk ever accepted To Open Today The third Salem branch post office at Hollywood, will open this morning in the Red Dragon restaurant, 2083 Fairground road. Postmaster Albert Cragg an nounced Monday. Marvin jStuhr will be in charge of the branch. Money orders and stamps will be sold, letters regis tered and domestic parcel post received. Gragg said. Packages for foreign countries shoujd be bropght to the main postoffice. Hours will be 8 a.m. to S p m. The former north Salem or Hollywood branch was closed In 1943, records in the postoffice show. Other Salem branch postofflces are at the drug store In Four Corners and at Kingwood market West Salem. Control Offices To Watch Rent; Boards Slated Appcictmmt cf eterabrrs ef I p. m. when they first saw the rewt mini kMr.'ivu.rt. fly ing object. : eight Oregon ewotral distntU, -It was so bright couldn't ; under a new federal rrr.t ror.tid leu now big it was or how far law signed tr Pres. lent 7rvw-.n Official appointment cf district court judges for Marion. Lane and Clackamas counties, under a new law of the 1447 legislature creat ing district courts in these coun ties, was announced by Gov. Earl Snell Monday. The appointments become effective July 7. The appointees are Joseph B Felton, Salem, for Miflon coun ty ; John Bryson. Eugene, for I me county, and Paul C. Fischer. Ore gon City, for Clackamas county. All three of the appointee are now serving as Justice of the peee. Governor Snell said that in or der to obviate any possibility of a legal question the JuMiee o 1--peace had agreed to resign their present offices and then accept ap pointment as district judges. The legislative act provides for away It was.' He said that the tin foil was shghUy heavier than that used for gum wrappers and was ery crin kled. It looked l.ke ft had bent wrap ped around a round object, he re lated. He said It was parUaDy burned and melted. A Biggs Field. Tex, of nrer aaid he saw a piece of Silvery Insula tion material picked up from the ground and carried 1.000 fret by a gust of wind, and sd that was a will be OMkuunrod br Cox. Ei Snell so mm m o'rwpy of tt act Is itctfred here. It was rt ported ot-the eaecutive 0(mjV ment Monday. Warning thot rer.tats cannot b lncusMil owtasnaUcalTy under tt law was -oced by Clare A. Lee. to charge cf the Saleea area rt t control 4Ucm. Inrreaar raa to mode rJy if the ter. set vo:ur.tw lly agree to sign a i mtVt the owner for bmt resertcwd to IS rr rent and ansrn acrer- r .a m r.iiRAi piivr ttpxirniva i-saacrai 01 ine VmaM aabMaaiM aw as w m 1 m A . . . I s mf " W ' T UOIt,(ll VVPWI Vltm W B VVVklT.U NEW YORK, June 3(HAVThe "omer , nowara oi xne unicago and ,aid that notcd resistance into the inspector's department, round-the-world Pan American Constellation America, carrying a group of editors and publishers, completed its globe circling flight a. 45 p.m. (EST) today at La Guardia Field. The plane left here at 1:1? p.m. June 17, inaugural rng commercial round-the-world passenger air service. Animal Craclccrs By WAN GOODRICH headquarters of the Indian ser- Jeaders and "possibly part of the He passed examinations two icr, uirciiui, i. . i f rencn army were implicated Chemawa superintendent, busi ness manager, and Edgar L. Sam ons, Mescalero, N. M., dean. Forest Travel At least six persons have been arrested, he said, including Gen eral Guillaudot, inspector-general ofthe national gendarmerie. months ago and was sworn into the service Monday by Fred Vin son, postal inspector in charge of this district. U.S. Job Service To Be Part of FSA WASHINGTON. June 30.-OVA 42 to 40 vote in the senate today killed a reorganization plan pre sented by President Truman which would have kept the United States employment service permanently in the department of labor. It will go instead to the federal security agency. Kules on 1 oday , . W7 wnTriNn 0 . Complete War PORTLAND, Ore., June 30-W) I , 'oad Building Delay Seen as Fund Sliced said. in counties hat ing more than 50.000 and less than 200.000 population. . I - w ppc answer to w source of menu must be rea.t brtre tneunxoii. jju aDd rrrrjer JI of The material was brirur used in .r ! Ur QuanUUes at Biggs Field, he , Thewe leoaeo prtnllmg for tn- rreooed tenuis, Leo a Med. tnt be filed with the arwa rewt rot.!tU office withrsi IS days atier t tng aurned and wti: not bo vt raUve until the tnt haa berw made. All appeals fraea rxsaune of the areo rent control rerre aenta lives small bo mole to tt new adrwery board fx- aett bmbL Soswe features of eeiforresnret retnam la the hands ef the bous ing expediter who. under tho law. as a num. siuJ to apply tr rcurt snhnarUona agaowt toUt- creaUon of the new duuict courtsirl ''171 Tk 2a ZT . : .i T stales were the advance ruard of LA GRANDE. Ore, June 30 C9VA nunirter listened to more reporU of flying saucers today and opined that the end of the world Is at hand. The Rev. Lester Carlson, castor of the Gospel Tabernacle church, declared that the shiny flying disks reported O 7) O tions on Oregon and Washington r-wt. ' ia ' i Failure of roneress to Increase 4 x i4. 4 I vlllireo ftUf KUCI III 4 I rl tH!m Ucd on with Generalissimo materially the forest road appro- morrow, the U.S. forest service Cnian- Kai-Shek decided today priations recommended by the announcea toaay. .... to order complete mobilization of house appropriations committee Smoking while traveling is for- manpower and resource for to- will retard Oregon's postwar high bidden except on highways, camp- gi0ves-off warfare with the way construction program with a fire permits must be obtained ex- communists, highly informed financial loss to the federal gov- vt in jwncu lampKiuuiiun, urtv- gourceJ reported. elers must carry fire-fighting tools. And, of court e, no fire works. Auto Death Rate Ilit8 Record Low Members of the Koumintang political council and the central I I executive committee were openly jubilant as they men, having just received news of the govern ment's re-entry into Szepingkai, important Manchurian railway junction. Oregon's traffic death rate for Weather May hit an all-time low of 42 tor each 100 million miles of mo- tor vehicle travel; Secretary &tate Kooert s. rarren, jr., an- cnicaco nounced Monday. New York Accident records list 19 deaths i fonnna OI I Kan rrannlim Max. ss - S4 6S 83 "IW remarkably ambidex trous to iaytfrc Least. Mln. Preclp. S3 410 50 M 0 trace 10 trace Willamette river 0 feet. rnnrriiT Kmm 11 a M..ih.. k. for that month while motorists reau. McNary field. Sale'm): Clear to- set 8 new high in traffic volume, oy. Highest temperature expected S3. - Annjiatnn :i I low S3. Except for afternoon winds. , " 1 w i-w,i,uu which will Jnterftre with dusting. "-- weatner lavoraoia lor au larmme. emment and inconvenience to mo torists, State Highway F.ngineer R. II. Baldock declared upon his return Monday from Washington, D.C. While in Washington Baldock appeared before the senate appro priations committee along with a number of state highway officials from various other western states. Records were placed before the senate committee, Baldock said. showing that 10 years ago receipts from the sale of timber from the national forests, mostly in the western states, aggregated only $3,000,000, which was increased to $16,000,000 in 1948. The state highway engineer predicted that in 1947 receipts from these timber sales would total $20,000,000 "We argued that no good would result from the construction of ac cess roads In the forests unless they are sufficient to sustain the kg roads , Baldock averred. An other argument in favor of a larger appropriation for Oregon was that 40 per cent of the stand ing timber in the national forests of the western states adjacent to forest highways is in this state. Under the house appropriations committee recommendation Ore gon would receive only 3700.000 for forest road construction this year as against $3,500,600 which would be available hal the $29. 300,000 proposed 'for forest road construction in the United States been approved. Baldock said. He said failuYe to increase the appro priation might result in partial closure of the Alsea highway next winter and delay in opening the Warm Springs highway. Forest roads in Oregon, Baldock said, are an important part of the state highway system. 80,000 Strike In Shipyards CAMDEN, .NJ, July l-(Tues- day)-OPr-A strike oi SO .000 ship yard workers began at one minute past midnight today in 71 Atlantic and gulf coast yards. The strikers join 40.000 workers in 10 Maryland. Massachusetts, New Jersey and New York yards, operated by the Bethlehem Steel Co. who quit work last Thurs day in a dispute over wages. Announcement of the walkout wa made by an official of Local 1. ClO-Industrial Union cf Marine and Shipbuilding Workers. The union seeks a 13-cent hour ly wage increase, six pid holi days a year, and three-week paid vacations after 20 years' employ ment. Skilled workers receive $1.38 an hour and laborers 94 cents under present contracts. i Child Disappear; Grandfather Dies Of Heart Attack WFSTWOOD. Calif . June 30 j (Ay- Former Congressman John I II. Tolan, whose small grand daughter has been mising near ML Lasaen national park since Sunday, died in a hospital here tonight of a heart condition brought on by the child's disap pearance. Tolan, who was 70. suffered heart attack Sunday after his j grandchild. Greta Mary Gale, be came lost from their summer va cation home at Lee's Camp, near the southern edge of the national park. Two days of search by parties estimated to total 150 persons to night had uncovered no definite trace of the whereabouts of the little girL the second mm ing cf Christ. . The millennium, added the rev erend, will rcme at any minute. Leland Jones, LaGrande high school student, said he and two Catholic nuns saw nine of the disks late last week. They were weaving In and out of formation. Jones said. "They looked bright and round, and as rind to have fins." Mrs. Morton Elder, a farm wife living south cf Pendleton, aaid she saw seven of the objects fly ing speedily toward the northwest at 11 a. m. Sunday. They hum med, she said, like a musical top. One theory --that the disks might be a new navy plane railed the "Flying Flapjork" -- blew up when the navy said it had only one such plane, which has never left Connecticut Train Crash Injures .57 WESTVILLE. Ind. June 3o-oT A Baltimore 4k Ohio streamliner, the Columbian, plowed Into an "pen switch while1 going 7$ miles an hour today, derailing seven of the nine passmrer cars and in juring at least $7 persons. Trainmen said 1M persons were aboard the flyer brund fiom Chi- fay ors ef the maatmum rent curtixl provisions. Oregon Swaps Liquor Stock rORTJ-AND, Jura 3-tfVOre-gon as ataaured of a two-year sup ply cf national o4ertave4 brands cf whkky as the mUt of liqucr-ewapptg tnp juvt completed. Hugh Kirkpstrsrfe, Lebanon, chairman of the stale liquor control cocnnussa.sa aad torts y. With Ccenmisaioner Genrge F. Lilley, Biker, and Witber Mcth. derson. corcmiMion atDrner. ho returned from the ea after sell ing most cf the fate's rea: !y 1.0O0 barrels of bulk whisky to leodir.g donnera. In return tte sUte wtll get known brands. Portland's Only Strike at End PORTLAND. Jiine 33-T- PorUand s Uat sliUe m-led v cago to Washington Marriage License Seekers Decrease Marriage license appliralknns at the Marion county rteik's offe have skidded front last year's peak, according to office reeurt Moo day which showed $23 applica tions Issued during the first sis months of this year ar against $4$ for a similar period In 14$. During June of this year 114 application were Issued 20 fewer than for June. IMC. and 41 more than In June. 1343. Last year's record license application total , - - - - m ' a - t . L. , iw i 4--. pu viuijig to itgwm m r t by County Clerk lUrXMn Judd. Seventy AFL r!teTrnakete 'agreed to return to 1$ faundnre with a 17-omt-e.n-rxH.r wage in crease rttrvortive to April I. an.f double pay for overtime. It UI I bring the acoUe to lX.lt aa hour. .... i . - - Our Sena!:rs e