Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1951)
Ridgway 'Backed Mac in Bid : To Use Nationalist Troops if- ' mmm Vete ran Con Exchange Bloody Blows WASHINGTON, June 22 -ff-Two veteran congressmen staged a brief but bloody fistfight in a house corridor today. , The apparent wia-er: Rep. Clar ence Canno (D-Mo), 72, chairman of the appropriations committee. He didnt have a mark on him. His opponent. Rep. Pohn Phillips (R Galif), 63, suffered a lip cut which bled profusely but turned out not to be serious. .. - ; Phillips went tin to seclusion for a while but appeared in the house chamber several hours later, wear ing a small piece of adhesive tape over his wound. He told report ers: "Out where I come from, when a man calls you a liar and thon Pami-Ainni IPSairae- Lost ; ugh Avncaoi Jiamgle ' DAKAR, French West Africa, June 22-4-A Pan American Constel laHnn bound for New York lost its bearings and vanished with 40 per sons early today over a damp and 111? 933JJQ0 U VJJ UUUU ' The Paris marathon talkathon came to an end Thursday. After 74 meetings of - deputies of the foreign ministers of the four big nations, prolonged through " 16 weeks, the sessions came to an end. And the end was stalemate, : The deputies gathered in Paris on March 5th to frame an agenda for a proposed conference of for eign ministers of France, (the USSR, Great Britain and the USA. Despite hours of conversation and argument and exchange of many communications they were unable to agree on the menu for the pro posed conference. A direct effort to set a conference in Washington on July 23rd, leaving the agenda open failed when Russia replied "yes, if . . ." The seances began in a none-too-hopeful mood on March 5th. The purpose was to plan a con ference in which the tension in Europe might be relieved. Russia xouowea lis customary lacucs oi bringing up incidental or extrane-" ous matters in time - consuming ways, always flourishing its peace alnzans and denouncing the war mongering of the west. The final clash was over in cluding the North Atlantic pact and U. S. bases overseas on the agenda. The west's deputies said the treaty could be discussed but cot acted on. On this division the series of meetings was adjourned, but not until Russia's Gromyko had delivered the usual prolonged apologia i or tne U5iK ana pro claimed Russia's intention to con tinue the fight for peace! ; : To what extent the result in the French elections Sunday encour aged the western representatives to bring the futile sessions to an end one can only surmise. Previ ously none had wanted to take that step, not wanting the onus of appearing to walk out. The de lay until after the elections Sun day in France, which showed re verses for the reds and gains for the right, may have been just what , the west was waiting for to terminate the conversations. The tension persists: the cold war will go on, leaving still the threat of a hot war, the war that nobody wants. EBB Max. ( SI M SS Mia. Prerip. f alem Portland San Franciaco . Chicago U M M trace M trace 4 M New York 78 Willamette River -Z feet ; FORECAST (from U. S. weather bu reau. McNary field. Salem): Fair to day, tonight and tomorrow; high to- cajr near 84. low tonight near 47. - SALEM PRECIPITATION . Sine Start ( Weather Tear Sept; 1 Tola Year Last Year Normal 49.77 43.49 3848 Animal Crackers gy WARREN GOODRICH "Don't borW Papa. dar -He's try 4aa RvaU end i-Mtr gressmen ! something else, he's supposed to smile. He (Cannon) didn't smile, so I slapped him. It didn't hurt him. Then he got me with a left." The two had been arguing about the appointment of house confer ees to meet with senators and seek agreement on the independent of fices appropriation bill An eyewitness, Rep. John Taber (R-NY), said Cannon called Phil lips a name, Phillips "started after Cannon" and then: ' . i : "Cannon struck him and I grab be... Cannon and got between them before anything else happened. Cannon , wouldn't . admit any blow was struck but told inquir ing newsmen: ,"I only ;cted: in self defense." ' .- I jungled area at the base of the rencn, iberian ana American fliers joined in a hunt for it, Native tribesmen fanned out aground in the search. t , The four-engined giant, on regular I run from Johannesburg, South Africa, carried 31 passen gers and a crew of nine. It disappeared in drizzly weath er about 2:45 ajn. (10:45 pjn. eas tern standard time Thursday) while it was seeking Roberts field, the airport for: Monrovia, Liberia. A regular stop had been made in the darkness at Accra, a gold coast city 800 miles east of Mon rovia. . i j .. , Turned Back te Held (A dispatch from Accra reported the plane had! landed at Roberts field and then took off for Dakar, 650 miles up the coast, but radioed there was interference on the ra dio beacon and turned back to Ro berts field. A blackout came after the plane asked for landing in structions, according to Accra sour ces. The dispatctrsald a magneto cave trouble I on the way north from Johannesburg, but was chan ged at Accra.) - The constellation's route took it over areas now going through their rainiest season.' It gets an average of 160 to 180 inches a year, mak ing it among the wettest of the tropical :areas of the world. Deep jungle surrounds Roberts field. which was built for u. 5. military planes in World War II. or Shys From Morse KLAMATH FALLS, June 22-ff) The state federation of labor to day shied away from Senator Wayne L. j Morse but refused to give up its practice of endorsing political candidates. Delegates sidetracked a resolu tion urging that the federation support Senator Morse for the re publican: presidential nomination. They sent the proposal to a com' mittee, then adjourned. ; Br a sum margin ox seven votes they defeated a proposal that would stop federation officials from endorsing candidates. They nominated J. D. McDonald, Portland to run without opposition for another two-year term as pres ident i j i James Marr Portland, was un opposed' for executive secretary, the job he now holds, s Two were nominated for first vice president: Cecil Jones, presl dent oft the Portland Central La bor council: and Alice BisseL Eu gene. Nominated for second vice president were W. J. En dress, Sa lem; Anne Chambers, Oregon City, and. George Potucek, Portland. Leaking Gas Starts Blaze Gas from a' leaking gas main ignited and started to burn a bridge across the mill race at 18th and Ferry streets Friday night City firemen quelled the blaze and Portland Gas and Coke com pany men shut off the gas flow. Firemen reported little damage. Gas company spokesmen said that apparently some strain tin the pipe where it crossed the stream had damaged a connection and that no service was effected. The branch line was capped off. . Western International At Salem U. Wenatche 1 At Spokane 8. Vancouver 4 , At Tri-Clty S, Yakima S At Tacoma S. Victoria a 1 1 Coast Leajrae 1 At San Dies o 2. Portland U At Hollywood B. Los Angeles 1 At Sacramento 8, Seattle At Oakland 5, Baa rrandace 4 " 'f- American LetfM -At Boston S, Chicago At New York , Cleveland 0 -At Philadelphia 5. St Louia t At Washington S. Ctrott National Leagiia At Pittburg?i 4. Brooklyn I At St. Louia r7 JBotton S At Cincinnati s7 Philadelphia S Lab At C toao Maw xora (Ut ; By Borer D. Greene WASHINGTON. June 22-tffV- An official message disclosed to day that Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway supported Gen. Douglas MacAr thur last December. in urging an immediate invasion of red China by Chinese - nationalist troops based on Formosa. It was for publicly advocating this step along with a naval blockade of China and the bomb ing of enemy bases in Manchuria that President Truman fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur last April 1L. Succeeded MacArthur Gen. Ridgway at the time was field commander in ' Korea. . He succeeded Gen. MacArthur as su preme commander in the far eist. Senator' Knowland (R-Calif) put the' Ridgway message into the record at the senate inquiry look ing into the dismissal of Gen. Mac Arthur ami the whole broad range of the administration's far east policies. Ridgway said he and Gen. Mac- Arthur agreed that nationalist farces under Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek should be permitted to operate without delay and without limitation against the mainland of South China." Wiley Makes Charge The nationalists have been "neu tralized" on Formosa since last June 26 when President Truman dispatched the U. S. 7th fleet to guard the island from invasion by Chinese reds and to prevent the nationalists from invading the China mainland. ' In another development at to day's inquiry, Senator Wiley (R-Wis) charged in effect Jiat Mr. Truman's "neutralizing" order led to the entry of red China into the Korean war. Wiley dropped his charge into the hearing as the senate inquiry committee received testimony from its next-to-last scheduled witness, Maj. Gen. David G. Barr. Bait was former commander of the U.S. 7th division In Korea. Dayton Awaits Visitor Influx For Buckeroo i , - Statesman Newt Service ' DAYTON. June 22 This com munity tonight is preparing for a heavy Influx of visitors expected to attend the annual two -day Buckeroo which opens with a pa rade at 10 a.m. Saturday. Floats and marchers will start from the new grade school grounds, circle the city park, and disband at the old grade school. Queen Ann link and her court, high schoo bands of Amity and Newberg and many other entries are assured for the line of march. ! Judges for parade prizes will in clude Tom Parsons of Sheridan and Dr. W. C. Smith of McMinnville Les Leach, Buckeroo association president, will lead the parade. 1 The ; rodeo, featuring cutting horse events and top-notch riders will begin at 1 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday. 1 A street dance will be held Sat urday night. Youth Injured In Auto Crash A two-car collision about mid night resulted in a citation by city police on a charge of defective lights for one teen-age driver. The cited driver, John Floyd McDonald, 16, 125 Gerth st, suf fered a cut lip. Jack Emmons, passenger in the other car, suf fered a bump on the head, police said. - Driver of , the other car was Donald UUman, 16, 1730 N. Capi tol st. Fairview Home Escapee Held in Auto Theft Case t PORTLAND, June 22 -(ff)-Police today held a man they iden tified as William Mabre, an es capee from the Fairview home at Salem. i They said they arrested him un der the name of Jesse H. Morris after he was in a traffic collision here early today. The car Mor ris was driving was a stolen auto mobile, they said. What's more, he had stolen a radio from a house earlier in the night, they said. iThey charged him with escape from the Fairview home, theft of a radio and a car. Young Nurse Found Safe After 13 Days "... By Philip Garde Sevierville, Tenn- June 22 Evangeline Lorimore, a young nurse who has practiced fasting, related today that she stumbled through a smoky moun tain wilderness for the past IS days without food, ; Found after a widespread search, she told newsmen from her hospital bed a fabulous account of how she she survived in ' the awesome Great Smoky Mountains national park with few ill effects. (The 21-year-old religious minded nurse said the only things that passed her lips during the ordeal were water from mountain streams and two sour huckleber ries. She lost 18 pounds. She disappeared June S after setting out from her camp site to hike up Spectacular Bunker Hill dees & th -park. As dusk Jell, 101st YEAH. 12 P&GZ3 Record By Francis X. Kelly WASHINGTON. June 22-(flV The house today approved a record-breaking $7,200,000,000 tax in crease, including a 12 per cent boost in individual income taxes. The measure, largest single rev enue bill ever to come before con gress, now goes to ' the senate, where the finance committee plans to open hearings next week. ' The vote on final passage of the bill was 233 to 160. It came after administration backers beat down, 220 to 171, a republican; move to ran r? tha hill haclr fn frtmmittw One Democrat Against On the motion to recommit, 15 j republicans and one independent joined 204 democrats in opposi tion. Only one democrat, Garmatz of Maryland, voted with 170 re publicans to recommit the bill. On final passage, 36 republicans and one independent joined with 196 democrats in support of the bill, while 11 democrats and 149 republicans opposed it. j ' Two Days in House ; Here is where the government would collect the additional mon ey: 1 - Individuals, $2,847,000,000. Corporate income and excess profits taxes, $2,855,000,000. Excise taxes, $1,252,000,000. Miscellaneous changes in the revenue laws, $245,000,000. The bill, with two post-Korea tax bills passed previously, in creases taxes by a total ol $17, 000,000,000. It sped ' through the house in two days under procedure which prevented i individual members from offering amendments. The recommendations of the tax-writing ways and means committee prevailed in every respect. Condemned by GOP J Republicans in general . con demned the increase as inequit able and unnecessarily large. They argued that spending should be cut drastically before more taxes were piled on the people. , Democrats rejoined that the bill was fair and that every section reflected the judgment of a ma jority of the ways and means unit. Over a year's operation; individ ual incomes taxpayers would pay 12 per cent or one-eighth more than they do at present. But since the bill sets the effective day of the increase on next Sept. 1, thus applying to only one-third of 1951 income, the increase in tax lia bility this year would be only 4 per cent. ; Atlantic Mark J Expected by Superliner I NEWPORT NEWS, Va, June 22 -(ff)-American ship experts are confident l the superliner United States, which 'will be christened here tomorrow, will snatch the transAtlantic speed record from Britain's Queen Mary. . ; . The United States lines, which will operate the new ship, and the TJJS. maritime administration mod estly rate her speed at SO knots. But ifs a good bet she'll do much better than that. Shell have to do better than that to capture he blue ribbon from the Queen Mary, which won it in 1938 by racing from New York to the English channel entrance in three days, 20 hours and 42 minutes for an average speed of 31.69 knots ITALIANS STAGE STRIKE ROME, June 22 -(ff)- Govern ment emnlovea stacred a one-da v strike today for more pay. All did not walk out and the chief effect M 1, S was in cunauea mau service. Taxes Passed in Smoky Mountain Wilderness she said, she found herself lost in the dense, rock-strewn thickets. An experienced hiker, she spent the first night on the bank of a stream, thinking a searching party would look there. Clad In shirt, jeans and low white shoes, she said she wandered for days, occasionally "screaming my lungs out" when she thought she heard shouts. "No one heard. Then I prayed." ' -f During the first week,- "food dldnt bother roe." she said. "Why is everybody so Interested in -food? It's not so important. Just experimenting, I had -done without it for as long as a week before." . I - v . ;. , But the second week she was lost, "my : stomach was ! sore on my backbone ... X dreamed about food." ? "I found nice places to sleep two nights on soft leaves under an overhanging rock." she said. That OrsHjoa 1 Salem Visitors Boost Hood River Festival These four Hood River girls donned Indian garb while la Salem this Hood River music festival set for August 1-5. The girls called en Gov. Douglas McKay with a spe cial Invitation and otherwise publicized their hometown festival while attending Girls State here. Left to right are Elizabeth Cole, Peggy Jakku, Cecil Bratton and Jeanette Sargeant Reds Drop Fire Bombs as Air 1 . . .... . War Intensifies TOKYO. Saturday, June 23-(ff) -Red planes grew bolder and red ground defenses brisued norm oi Seoul Friday. A new red air raid er made a frontline rocket attack tbday. The developments accented re ports that the communists were getting ready to launch a new lim- U.J I ' . lieu ouensive oa wuue iuai anniversary of the Korean war. Field dispatches reported a marked stiffening of red defenses in ai 50-mile arc north of Secul where the Reds hurled back an allied armored spearhead and threw up a heavy artillery bar rage ''- - - - Red jets challenged allied jets Friday for the fifth day in the last six. In two new sky battles nearji the Manchurian border 55 Russian-type MIG-15 jets tangled with 34 F-86 Sabre jets. The reds lost two planes and had three damaged. This brought red losses In five days! to 11 destroyed, one prob ably destroyed and 21 damaged. Allied losses acknowledged for four! of the days were two de stroyed and two missing, with none, reported for Friday. Red planes also became bolder far south of the Manchurian border. A red plane bombed Seoul and its airport Friday. The Pyongyang radio said the bomber hit an al lied j truck convoy and the Seoul railway yards. Seven freight cars were set afire, the broadcast said. Two bombers dropped fire bombs and also rocketed and ma' chinegunned allied positions for two hours early Friday near Chor won; At 1:30 a. m. today a plane fired two rockets in the Chorwon area The p re-dawn attacks Friday marked the first reported red use of fire bombs against allied troops. The raiders pressed the attack by the light of parachute flares de spite intense allied anti-aircraft fire. Falls Gty Approves Water Bond Issue Statesman Ntwa Service FALLS CITY, June 22 Voters here today, approved 76-11 a spe cial bond levy for $30,000 to repair the icity water system. They also approved, 82-25. . a measure re questing $3,557 in excess of the six per cent constitutional limitation on property for operation of tb I 1 . --A A i uijr : govcrumeaw Being Tost5 But j sometimes she was drenched by hard rains N I Just huddled up and was miserable." Although the park is known for its bears, she saw only one The most vidous attack came from in sects and briars, and she blistered her feet. The hospital said she was in very good condition. At last she saw a tiny trail twist ing through the brush. As nightfall neared yesterday, she heard a cow bell tinkle in the distance and followed it to the house of a ranger. She was 10 miles from the camp site.'' - But acting park superintendent Robert White said he thought she had been only half-lost. He said she I had remarked that she de cided it was time to come out" because she had to return to duty Monday st Cincinnati's Jewish Hospital. She and her father were on vacation. ' PCUNDSD tasmec;, Ccdeia. OnqcA Zatatdarf, 'a 17. N. Delegation Wives Mistaken For Shoplifters : UNITED NATIONS. N. Y June 22 -HffV- The United States apologized to Pakistan today for the arrest ef three of Its United Nations delegation's wo menfolk by New Roc belle, N. Y, police who mistook them for gypsy shoplifters. In a letter t Prof. A. S. Bok hara head of the Pakistan delegation,- Ernest Gross, acting chief U. S. delegate, said the authorities of New Rochelle had asked the United States mission (to the U. N.) to transmit -their sincere regrets for the nnmili- ation and Inconvenience caused them.' -.'., .; 'Admits' Part In Revolt Plot BUDAPEST, HungaryJune 22- (ff)-Archbishop Joszef Groesz and three of his associates poured out hours-long confessions at the opening of their trial today on charges they plotted with Ameri can help to overthrow Hungary's communist regime by armed re volt, i The 64-year-old archbishop, successor of Cardinal Mindszenty as head of the Roman Catholic church in Hungary, and eight co defendants went on trial in the same courtroom and before the same presiding judge and prose cutor who tried the cardinal and American businessman Robert A. Vogeler. The trial is. before a court of first instance for capital crimes. Testifies ef Promise With deliberate calm. Archbish op, Groesz testified he gave the American legation a written prom ise he was willing to become the new chief of state in Hungary and even submitted to the Americans a list of men he proposed to take into his government. His three co-defendants who ad mitted guilt today testified in just as cool and collected a xasnion. - "Archbishop Groesz apparent ly was arrested about the middle of May. His trial and confession appear to have been prepared in an unusually snort time. ! (Eastern diplomats In Vienna said the trial apparently is part of the steady communist campaign to undermine the Roman Catholic church by pressure and infiltra tion until it is the . voice of the Kremlin, not the Vatican). The N. 2 defendant, Endre Farkaa, 65, a lawyer described as advisor of legal matters of the conspiracy, said the American legation promised a loan of $296, 000,000 when the Groesz govern ment should be established. He named Albert W. Sherer, jr., a third secretary at the legation, and Chris Petrow, his predecessor who is now in Vienna, as the Ameri cans who kept contact with the plotters. .; Lr. Lassie Herey, tt, a former chief of section of the Hungarian cabinet accused of representing the pro - Hapsburg Monarchist group in the conspiracy, said the group planned to arm 30 or 40 men with the 14 rifles and other mall firearms displayed in court. It was planned to get more guns by looting military depots Jbe said. Dr. Pal Eozsik. C7, a priest and member of the parliament Def or the war, charged with being the chief political planner, was the last defendant to confess today. He said the ultimate aim was to re establish the Hapsburgs. Archbishop Junm 23. 1S51 i TTUCS 5c n- n . o sum week, to draw attention to the ees i NEW YORK, June 22-ff)-The CIO Maritime tinionr reached agreement with Atlantic and Gulf coast shipping companies tonight at the end of the seventh day of Its work stoppage. i xne agreement is based . on a 40-hour work week at sea, to be placed in effect next Dec. 16. Two other CIO unions involved in the tieup that hit American flag snipping tne American Radio as sociation and the National Marine Engineers Beneficial association are to meet with operators tomor row. -. : .; Joseph Curran, president of the 52,000-member NMU, said. he be lieved the agreement would set a pattern for the. NMEBA, which has 7,000 members, and the ARA with 1,400 members. 7 t Because ships can not sail with out a radio operator, . resumption of activity in ports up and down the affected coasts must await the ARA s agreement. .-- V j Curran said, however, that NMU operations would be back to nor mal within 24 hours. The settlement, with Its pro visions retroactive to last Satur day, grants . an - eight per cent across-the-board wage Increase. Hake Suicide Speeds North ABERDEEN, WASH- June 22- (ff)-Piscatorial hara-kiri spread to Washington ocean beaches today. In plainer words, thousands of fish are committing suicide. 1 Like their brothers who hurled themselves out of the sea along the Oregon coast -two .weeks ago, great schools of hake were re ported swimming in with the tide and dying in shoreline sands from Washington's Willapa harbor to Grays Harbor.' Fisheries experts said the hake, distant cousins, of codfish, appar ently lose their sense of direction when they get into the sun. JEFFERSON MAN ELECTED CHICAGO, June 22-(ff)-Eugene Finlay, Jefferson, Ore- was elect ed vice president of the western district of the American National Fur Breeders association at the annual meeting here yesterday. UnionAsT To End East; Gulf Strike Young Sttawberry Pickers Two young pickers will have shiny new bicycles to show for their strawberry- season work to day, as well as their pay for more than 200 carriers of berries each. "Beverly Hamman, 13, and Don Hart, 12, will receive bikes this noon from Vic Williamson, Hazel Green grower who offered the bi cycles to the boy and girl who picked the most berries. Since this inducement at 'the start of the berry season, William son farm has had three platoons of boys and girls picking regularly, as well as other help. The 120 chil dren picked a total of over CO tons of strawberries since the end of their school year. All the platoon members are from Parrish Junior high and High, land" school in Salem. Williamson lined up this picking force by ar rangement with the farm labor of fice which contacted the schools. Leading the platoons have been two teachers, Audra Ames and n i i i rested BUENOS AIRES, June 22-P)Sr The army ministry announced to-? night that, five 1 Argentine -army officers had been: arrested oa ' charges of plotting a revolt against the government of Presi dent Juan D. Peron. I The ministry announcement cli maxed eight days of' scare bead- lines in pro-government pers on reports that a plot afoot to overthrow the govern ment and assassinate Peron' bia wife and other high officials. It said those arrested were Capt. Francisco Figueroa de la Vega and four lieutenants, Atilio Jam Demichell, Julio Enrique Villa Melo, Edgardo Arturo Fehrrnaa and Alberto Attias. 4 - j Accused of Plot t f The ministry said the five- weaa arrested in connection with a investigation of those participating in "a plan to create confusion -aad disrupt public order" which "had been disclosed in the newspapers." It accused the, arrested men f trying to draw other young ff cers into the plan to disrupt the army corps of officers . to whkta they belong.- : : i - : It said the arrests were ordered after army officials learned mt the tfes 41... iimm gfc.v at kuv were detained "in order to deter mine the responsibility of military personnel" n the plat Which the pro-Peron ; newspapers have re ported. ; - : i Many Questioned f There have been unconfirmed reports circulated during the past several days that 55 young offi cers had been questioned in oa nection with the supposed dot, which the semi-official newspaper Democracia charge! was financed by Wall street capitalists. j The newspaper said - the WaU street men were supplying money to the government s opponents, in- , eluding members of the radical, conservative, socialist, progres sive - democrat 4 and communist parties, retired army officers,kAr gentine exiles living in Uruguay, the American Council for the; De fense of Democracy with head quarters In Montevideo, Uruguay, and the Venezuelan gemocratie ncuon party. j J ; - - r It also charged that "some for eign news agencies," as well am newspapers, abroad,-had joined in the plot against the Peron gov ernment. 1 I ! ' Keizer May ; Change Name To Kaiser, If Keizer community, in the anidsl of Keizer Days celebration, as considering changing its name -the spelling that is.; Honorary. Mayor Ray H. Lafky of Keizer sent a telegram Friday night to Shipbuilder Henry J. Kaiser, Oakland, Calif., as fol lows: . . j - i "Community 'at Keizer with 6,000 population is celebrating Keizer days today. Will consider changing name 1 to ; your spelling? if you provide proper incentive Ray H. Lafky, honorary mayor Lee Wiens, spokesman for t Keizer celebration, said thai fcy "proper incentive" ! they had la mind donation of a play ground or park by Kaiser.: f 1 SOVIET WAK HERO DIES 1 MOSCOW, June 22 -ff-Thi death of CoL GenJ Ivan Grishin, 50, one of Russia's military lead ers and heroes, was announced bp the Soviet press todayr" , j n 5 Army Officers Ar rded Bicycles for Speed Leona Golz. 1 Williamson expressed satisfac tion with the incentive plan,' ex plaining Friday that the good work done by his youthful pickers aniea mm to get four pickings his so acres of berries, while comparable berryfieldJ were be ing picked only twice for lack f labor. Williamson offered, besides the bicycle prizes, free soda Bey i the children daily. ? . Most of the pickers averaged Xt a day and some mad far soon a than that, leaders said. . . ; The girl winner is daughter ct Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hamman, 1C1 Garnet st. Beverly is a arria student. - 1 Don Hart, boy bike winner 3 son of Mrs. Minnie Hart, 2C 19 IL Commercial st is e Statesman newspaper carrier who kept p to route while going out daily to fidx berries. He finished Highland school and will enter Parrish i-x the-falL -.. -,i i t -