fin n lnlG!IgiSiSlISiiDf5S mm. ( j t : POUNDEXD 1651 Adniiiiistration' 101st YXAB 14 PAGES The Oregon Statesman, Salem. Oregon Wednesday, July 18. 1S51 PEICE 5c No. 112 .if Jt ; Mm u u - - j . . ! t . - - - - ! ' , - o , o o Buildup 'Cleair.Parley Siitf Ii Peine Session v. . .. . . ... r ,i : SEOUL, Korea,. Wednesday, July 18-C-Allied and red ; cease fire negotiators met today for their sixth session in Kaesong while United Nations-forces kept a wary eye on a communist troop build up northeast of the conference site. - J, . - "l - The U. S. eighth army disclosed that while Tuesday's fifth session was in progress Allied tanks, and soldiers drove inside red lines EH? same "T. was on the Lupercal X thrice presented him a kingly crown And thrice did he refuse .... - Ambition should be made of sterner stuff." So spoke Marc Antony In Shakespeare's version of his fun eral address for Julius Ceasar. ' General Eisenhower T Is some what in parallel though not as to the funeral. A military man whose armies got across the Rhine, as did Caesar's he has been turn ing down "offers' of the presi dency for years; The inference held by Brutus and Cassius was that if Marc had made another offer Caesar would have grabbed the crown and put it.on his head. Now the talk is going round that General Ike will yield to pressures and - accept the nomination for president. At least that is what some republicans are saying, and in Oregon Sen, Tom Mahoney has said he would circulate petitions to enter Eisenhower in the demo cratic primaries in this state.. ; The general really is in a tight corner. He has a Job, one that he Is fitted for, one that he likes, the Job of mobilizing- countries un der the Atlantic pact for self-defense. He has another job to be ure from which he has taken temporary leave, that of president of Columbia university. He liked that too, and thus far has dodged 11 political bouquets thrown his way, including that of Governor Thomas E. Dewey. But Ike is a good American and conceivably might yield to ap nea's or to pressures if he could ' be convinced that it was his "duty" to stand as a candidate for the presidency. But that 4s only part ox the ' (Continued on editorial page ,4.) Bids Sought On 3 Projects AtFairview Bid calls on three building pro jects at Fairview home, including remodeling of the fire-gutted hos pital Into a classroom structure. were ordered Tuesday by the state board of control. The basement and three floors of the old hospital will be com pletely remodeled to rurnisn classroom and teachers rooms sDace at the home. The project. with William I. Williams as archi tect, is expected to cost $112,000. At the same time the board call ed'for bids for two doctors resi dences at the home, each to cost 116.000. Architects were authorized to proceed with plans on two pro-H Jects at Eastern Oregon state hos -pital at Pendleton. They are a 3Q.0O0 dairy barn, and $20,000 addition to the laundry. The board also approved spending $47,650 to remodel the old dairy building at Oregon State college. A. ; contract for installing screen to the capitoi group's sprinkling system was awarded to W. R. Ransom and Sons, Salem. The project, to eliminate dirt from the automatic system, will cost S 1.938. Water Is piped from Mill creek near the state penitentiary. Animal Crackers gy WARREN GOODRICH ". .. and ftey fcVtd hpp3y EVER ill fir for a lul 2 4yT Bed Sife; He!d I northeast or Jvaesong. ine proDing forces punched hard at red troop concentrations near the Kaesong five-mile neutral zone, Patrols crossed the Jmjin river and lashed at Chinese units at a half dozen spots northeast of Kae song and north of Korangpo. Skir mishes with reds also broke out in central Korea near KumhWa. At day's end, each side held to a i lis OKI pqnuons au across jvorca. New Point Raised 1 t - The allied negotiators, who were confronted . by the; . reds with one "new, point" Tuesday, went by road to today's ! session which ended with no report on progress maae. : ; , .r - It marked the first time that at least; some of the five delegates had hot proceeded to the Kaesong meeting in helicopters. : Although there have been no of ficial reports other thin that the first five meetings! were congenial with "some progress made, it, is generally believed that the ques tion of withdrawal of U J, troops from Korea is holding up agree ment on an agenda, j Ready t Strike f The Chinese-Korean red 400,000 man army is arriyed across the Korean front and bade of it to the Manchurian frontier, j It is re ported poised to strike if the talks break down. Communist negoti ators and repeated red broadcasts have made it clear they want to discuss the withdrawal of "all for eign troops from! Korea. The U.N. representatives, head ed by Vice Adm.iC. Turner Joy, were believed to consider this po litical and out of their .realm. ' Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, su preme allied commander, and Van Fleet have been fully informed of the talks, . ;i ; . Oregon Police Alerted for Red Furtive Oregon police ! agencies . were alerted Tuesday to be on the look out for Robert George Thompson, one of four communist leaders who Jumped bail in. New York, believed to be somewhere in the northwest area. . f - - i 'a, Thompson, 38,1 Is ft native of Grants Pass. He was convicted in federal court in New York of con spiracy for the violent overthrow of the United States and was sen tenced to three years in prison. He and three others failed to report to begin serving sentence July 1 and since has been the object of a nation-wide manhunt. Thompson was reported to have left Seattle, Wash., last Saturday headed south. He is believed to be driving a green 1948 Chrysler with New York license places 4C5674. Thompson is described as 3-foot 9-inches tall and weighing 170 pounds. He has greying brown hair, brown eyes, light complexion and of muscular build. - Vote Due on Plan, End Valselz Strike PORTLAND, July 17-JP)-A ten tative settlement of a three-month old strike against the Western Log' glng Co, Valsetz, by f CIO Wood workers, will be voted on Satur day at Dallas. I Harvey Nelson,: president of the Columbia River council of the un ion, said the 200 men involved would deturn to work Monday if the settlement, reached with Fed eral Conciliator George Walker, is accepted. : i - . The dispute Involved stripping and scaling pay. Nelson said. expansion o fGtvMailD elive To Rural Salem Scores of houses in the Salem rural delivery zone soon will get city deliv y of their mail from the .. Salem postoffice. - But they'll need house numbers first, and Postmaster Albert Gragg is wondering wholl number them. In a letter to the city planning and zoning commi? ion Tuesday night, Gragg asked if that group could authorize him to issue house numbers outside city limits. Zoners hazarded that their lim ited authority to six miles outside Salem didn't extend to house numbering, but they instructed a committee headed by Milton Mey ers to look into the matter. City Engineer J. IL Davis said his of fice cooperated with the postoffice in house numbering inside the city. . . -: . t Grass's letter did not Indicate where the delivery changes are to be rnade, but it said the plan was f cr the "not too distant future." In other matters the commis sioners recommended that the city Big Gun Nov J t - it First comes the cleaning and then the use of this 99 mm. anti-aircraft gun ? by members of battery D, : 722nd AAA battalion of the national guard in Salem. Starting in with the brasses are Sgt. 1st cL Rob ert Berg (left) and Sgt. 1st cL Robert Dreyer, at the 25th and Lee street training center. The big gun, first to be received here for training, hurls a shell, nearly four miles. (Statesman photo.) Bids on Detroit, Big Cliff Dams Top Estimates PORTLAND. July low bid of $7,397,547 was submitted today for construction of Big Cliff dam, a unit of the Detroit project on the North Santiam river, and' for completion of the; Detroit dam power house. j i . The Portland district corps of engineers said, however, the bid from Consolidated Builders, Mill City, exceeded by $119,500.63 the allowed 25 per cent above the gov ernment estimate. Government es timate for the job was $5,822,197. 10. ; - The project includes construc tion of a concrete gravity dam and power house complete with pen stock, track racks, stilling basin and other appurtenaijces.'-----we The only other bid of $3,912,855 came from Guy F. Atkinson Co. and Ostrander Construction Co. They also submitted a bid of $6, 541,996' for the Big Cliff dam only. Government estimate for the dam alone was $4,430,943.' Bids were taken under advise ment, v. I ' Consolidated builders holds the contract for building; Detroit dam. Forest Fire Hazard Eases By The Associated Press Improved weather conditions further relieved the forest fe hazard in Oregon woods today and the weather bureau forecast pos sible showers in the Willamette valley by week's'end. :v h The only fire still! causing con cern last night was one east of Coos" Bay which had spread to some 1200 acres. ' . State Forester Dwight Phipps reported the . blaze, which had burned some valuable timber, was trailed on three sides and it was expected to be completely sur rounded last night ( A small but potentially danger ous blaze flared up at 4 pjn. yes terday a mile 'west of Cascade Rocks. A tree snapped the main Bonneville power line into Che city and set a wooded area ablaze. . Crews worked on the blaze throughout the - night as strong winds pushed, it toward a . stand of timber. ry Areas Planned council establish a new class HI-x business zone that would enable Robert E. Carolan to establish a nursery , school In a residential building on Mission street between Winter and Summer streets. - Referred to the zone revision committee were zoning proposals which would permit N. P. Jensen to build a four-unit apartment house on Center at 23rd streets and would permit L. E. Hammer to build an auto repair shop on a Liberty street lot adjacent to the Portland General Electric substa tion in north Salem. - The zoners tabled, until further word from the petitioner, the con troversial zone change for Dr. Roy Reynolds at 1144 Center" st- A committee was instructed, to advise the city council on an offer from E. Halvorson. Saleraxon trac tor, to dedicate to public use the present streets in his Rose Gardens-motel property. Halvorson told the toners, he is planning fur ther development cf his 9-acre property In north Salem. in Salem for Guard Training t. ? Truman Views Hood Aid Program Devised j $ By Calvin Manon I un, mo, July i7 aerial tour of the vast flood area and into eastern Oklahoma today of the worst this country has ever suffered from water." In a -statement before taking off again for Washington at 8:57 pjn. (EST), Mr. Truman said federal officials are ."expecting to work Nom illations ruman Irk Douglas WASHINGTON, July 17-flV Senator Paul Douglas- (D-Ill) to day challenged President Tru- man's decision to go over the sen ator's head in nominating two fed eral judges.; Douglas asked the Chicago and Cook county, 111., bar associations to take a poll to decide which two men are better qualified! the sen ator's candidates or the .men the president nominated. j The conflict arose . from Mr. Truman's July 13 nomination of Judge Cornelius J. Harrington and Municipal Judge Joseph Drucker to fill two new pqsts in the feder al district court for northern Illi nois. This was nearly six months aft er Douglas, acting according to what he called "time honored prac tice, had recommended the ap pointment of William H. King, jr. and Judge Benjamin P. Epstein. Douglas complained that the pres ident did not consult him on he judgeships. Congressional insiders interpret ed the president's appointments as another indication of a growing coolness between him and the Illi nois senator. ' Boy Puts Out Forest Blaze A 13-year-old, Detroit boy Is credited by the forest service with the discovery and extinguishing of a potentially dangerous forest figt near the North sanuam river Sunday. " ' - The boy, John Wallace, has been awarded a i "Service Under Fire'' award for his actions by the Keep Oregon Green association. District Ranger S. T. Moore of Detroit said young Wallace dis covered the small forest fire near reservoir clearing operations, ex tinguished the blaze and then re ported it to the forest service. LEBANON RIOTS CALMED BEIRUT, Lebanon, July n(JPh Order was restored today after ri oting killed one man and wound ed nine in demonstrations over the assassination of Lebanon's ex-premier Riad El SoSi in Amman, Jor dan. : .-- : , - ::-;v-. Western International ' . At Salem 4. Tri-CJty t , - . At Vancouver S. Tacoma 1 ' ' At Victoria 3, Wenatchco 1 At Yakima S, Spoaaao t (14 huL) ' Coast Leafao At Portland 1, Hollywood IS At Seattle 2, San Francisco 1 At Oakland 11. San Dief S - " (Only games scheduled National LeagM . . At Brooklyn S. Pittsburgh 4 At Boston S, St. Louis At Kew York 4. Chicago T At Philadelphia S-10. Cincinnati - American Leam At Cleveland S. Boston At Chicago 4. New York S (IS ten.) At St. Louis 3-2. Washington 7-4 At Detroit 8, Philadelphia S BvT w t i 4 V 4 - AJ) - 'resident Truman made an from St. Louis to western Kansas and declared the disaster was "one together to see if we can meet this situation xxx to alleviate suffer ing and to put the community back on its feet again." Major Gen. Lewis A. Pick, chief of army engineers, briefed, the president on the awful destruc tion during his flight west of here. Defense Mobilization Chief Charles EJ Wilson, who flew here with Mr. Truman, said the presi dent f ha4 ordered "an organiza tional setup that we hope is going to enable us to cope with the situ ation x x x." Mrs. Truman, land MarsareL daughter-of the president, accom panied him on the flight from Washington to Kansas City's Grandview airport. They left the plane at Grandview to motor to their; home at Independence be fore the president made the major portion of his inspection trip. Areas Dieting Oat As the president made his flight the major effected areas were just beginning to dig out of the muck and wreckage left by the torrents and the fire that has burned seven blocks in Kansas City since Fri day noon.! f - - As his plane paused at Grand' view airport on the outbound por tion of his trip the president, who had just 'flown over the lower Missouri, commented: "The flood is terrible awfuL it s in worst uung l nave ever seen." j ' As the flood poured down the Missouri toward its junction with the Mississippi at St. Louis, low lands were flooded and there was the threat of serious overflows In the St Louis area. Told to Evacuate . Residents of two flood-threaten ed areas at West Alton, Mo- and Kaskaskia Island near Chester, I1L, ignored warnings to evacu ate. An abandoned railroad em bankment- still stands between West Alton and the Missouri near its mouth, but the coast guard said it probably wouldn't hold. Upstream Boonville' and . Jef ferson City have been warned to expect - record . flood crests by Thursday. , Workers abandoned their ef forts to save West Alton (400 pop ulation) last night after water be gan pouring over a levee protect ing adjoining areas. At Kansas City a fire that has burned seven blocks since last Friday noon flared up again and more. fire companies were called back to reinforce those still at the scene. The latest flareup was in a furniture store In the burned area. WASHINGTON, July 17 -Wh Congressiput up 125,000,000 for flood relief - today as President Truman flew west for a personal look at the ravaged area in Mis souri, Kansas and Oklahoma Final action was taken' by the senate which overrode its own ap propriations cognmittee to go along with the : house action m raising the amount. The house had voted the $25,000,000 yesterday, up $10,000,000 from the sum request ed by Mr. Truman and the budget bureau. The cash is for, the presi dents emergency fund. Spare Tire Back On New Autos WASHINGTON, July 17 The spare -time is back on new autos. - . .The national production author ity dropped its three-month, rubber-saving ban on spares, effec tive today. It said a recent one fifth cutback ordered in current automobile output does away with the need for the ban. The ban was imposed in April iwttn the aim of saving rubber. Commence Today" - , ... ..:. . "i. ', " ' .' .- . ... ..-," .... . ' . i ' " - Opening of the Willamette valley chest X-ray survey will take place today in Marion and Polk counties as the program begins its drive to secure X-rays from a potential 390,223 adults in an eight-county area. , i Three mobile units will be in operation today in Salem and one in Idanha. Units will be At 13 locations in Polk county today and tomorrow. ; ; : : , - Purpose of the free x-rays is to detect tuberculosis and chest- ail ments. . : , ' ; The x-ray survey was brought to this area through the planning and coordination of healthdapart ments, medical societies and tu berculosis associations in each of the eight valley counties. Accept ance of the plan followed wide publicity and public mass meetings in each county, officials said. 15t Technicians - 4 Dr. Bertrand Bennison, medical officer in charge Of the $500,000 worth of U. S. public health serv ice equipment and the 150 techni cians involved in the survey,- said this was one of the largest pro grams undertaken by the team. "We have conducted surveys in more populated areas than the Willamette valley, said Dr. Ben nison, "but never one involving so much territory. This is the 16th survey conducted in the past four years by this team. Until August 21 The survey in Marion county will continue until about August 21 and for about the next two weeks in Polk county. All of the Salem units operating today, Thursday and Friday are for state and industrial employes only. Open to the general public are the units at the Idanha and Bald win's in Detroit. Survey officials said the units will be ' shifted around frequently to reach as many men and women as possible. The four Marion county units today will be at State and Waver- ly streets, Court and Waverly streets, Front and D streets in Sa lem, and at the IGA store in Idan ha. One Polk county unit will be at Savery's Drug store in Dallas. (Additional details and complete list of schedules including Polk county on page 5.) Adm. Sherman Asks Franco ... " For Terms MADRID. July 17-JP)-U. S. Ad miral' Forrest P. Sherman has asked Generalissimo Franco what he would want in return for Unit ed States use of Spanish air and naval bases,, reliable informants reported today. The sources said the American chief of naval operations asked Franco at their two-hour meeting yesterday for the right to use four naval bases and three to five air bases. American sources said the talks were "exploratory" meaning that Sherman is feeling out the Span ish asking price. McGrath to Protect Price-Cutting WASHINGTON, July Vt-UPh Attorney General McGrath today threatened criminal prosecution for anyone attempting to force cut-rate merchants to raise their prices. " s He said he intends to take prompt action under the anti trust laws against producers, wholesale distributors or retailers using coercion or pressure to pre vent free price competition. In a formal statement, McGrath appealed to the public to report any such instance of which they have knowledge to the nearest FBI office or the justice departments anti-trust division. SEP. IEEE'S WIFE ELECTED BLUEFIELD, W. Va- July 17- (AVMrs. Maude Elizabeth Kee, widow of Rep. John Kee, demo crat, today was elected to fill out his unexpired term in the U. S. house of representatives. Kee col lapsed and died while presiding over a meeting of tn house for eign affairs committee last May. CAB Takes Salem's Decision Under WASHINGTON, July . 17 The civil aeronautics board took under advisement today a pro posal that Salem, Ore., be served by West Coast airlines instead of thepresent United Air lines. : 'At a hearing in connection with renewal of West Coast's operating permit, Robert Letts Jones of Sa lem declared that shippers would suffer if UAL service was drop ped In favor of; West Coast. : Jones, Salem publisher repre senting the Salem Chamber of Commerce, said Salem required "one-plane service to handle perishable products shipped from the area to avoid delays which would result from transfers nec essary If shipped by West Coast. - Jack Lorch, UAL counsel, told the board that Salem is an import ant stoo on the line's San Fran cisco-Portland flight He said It is one which, "generates substan tial traXTicJ" Eagles Back Courthouse Cupola Plan The Salem Eagles lodge voted unanimous endorsement last night for a courthouse preservation pro ject proposed by its major activi ties committee and approved by its officers and, trustees. -iv The $10.000-plus program calls for the removal of the entire court house cupola, with clock and stat ue, and re-erection intact as a memorial somewhere else in Sa lem, possibly in Bush Pasture. Members of the major activity program which proposed adoption of the plan re V. L. (Vick) With row.i chairman; Mayor Alfred W. Loucks, Herbert Barker and Elmer Church. - Tonight the Eagles have sched uled a 3-act floorshow for mem bers and guests at the club's hall. A watermelon feed has been sched uled for next Tuesday. it With Czechoslovakia WASHINGTON, July 17 -(AV Senator Monroney (D-Okla.) urg ed tonight that the United States break off diplomatic and econo mic i relations with communist Czechoslovakia unless that coun try frees Associated Press Corre spondent William N. Oatia within 80 days. ' . - ! Monroney made the proposal as demands multiplied in both houses of congress for this country to halt trade with Czechoslovakia un-' til Oatis is i liberated from prison. The Oklahoma " senator Intro duced a resolution calling for a complete break in relations and declaring: j "Persecution by the government of Czechoslovakia of an American citizen is deplored by the people of the United States and through out the free world. Earlier, Senator O'Conor (D Md.) introduced a resolution to bar all foreign communist news menincluding Russia's from the United States. Death Takes Korea WASHINGTON. July 17-HTV- The army said. that no VS. soldier was killed in action in Korea yes terday, the first day without a combat death since the first Amer ican was killed July 1, 1950. The army report covered th July 17, Korean time and covered only the UJS. army units in Korea. The report said that a small num ber of soldiers were wounded yes terday. :.-.---. In the first year of hostilities U. deaths by direct enemy action averaged more than 30 daily. . j ,,:). : ;';.. Actress Lucille Ball Mother of Daughter LOS ANGELES. July 17-W- Actress Lucille Ball gave birth to a baby daughter today by Caesar- ean section. The child Is the first for Miss Ball and her husband, orchestra leader Desi Arnaz. Named- Lucie Desiree, it weighed seven pounds, six ounces. , United also uses Salem, some 53 miles from Portland, aaan alter nate emergency airport for Port land. ; i- West Coast has applied for per mission to stop at Salem Instead of McMinnville and to stop at Klamath - Falls and Bend-Red mond .on a Medfprd-Fortland Bob Henry, West Coast counsel, testified today both these were feeder operations and. are not in line with United' operation as a trunk carrier. He said West Coast's economic 4 position would be strengthened by addition of th stops '4.-- t ; '. He added that he does not ob ject to suspension of West Coast's certificate : to several smaller Washington and Oregon cities, in cluding Grant Pass and McMinn- trule. r . it senator ur UiS.Spl Holiday Airline Advisement Ranis Tliroush Compromise By Roger D. Greene 1 WASHINGTON. July 17-JTV- The house today voted to swtatat - the present rollback on live tf prices and to permit a 10 fer" $ cut in the price of all other tarn products selling above parity. ; j l he-vote was 207 to 123.? ' '. ; In a sudden surge : of strenatfe administration forces ram m4 : through a compromise to thatt-H'" feet and also beat down three ma- j jor attempts to curb price Frj backs 4n the bitter house fit hi over controls. The compromise is still subiert to a final vote when the control ; ' bill is completed. , " i . After the four maior voles, th : house went on to reject an adU . ministration request for authoiity to license businesses. The vote was - 127 to 27. , . The chamber next turned down an amendment by Rep. Talle (B- lowa) to give the -secretary agriculture a veto over ceil in prices imposed on farm prices by ine oince or price stabilizata The count was 87 to $1. Last-Ditch Victory - -: The big vote on price rollback came as a dramatic last-ditch vic tory for administration forces whe had been severely buffeted In pre liminary tests before the 5 show down today. -r i The compromise bars the carry- ing out of two further beef pile ' rollbacks ol tj per cent eaeo which had been ordered to go into effect on August 1 and October L Price Director DiSalle told a re porter he was "very happy and encouraged over house action re taining important provisions of the : administration's economic control plan. : . f Will 'Hold the Line I He said letting the 10 per rent beef rollback stand will "permit us to hold the line on beef price , . beef prices will not rise.. Economic Stabilizer Eric Johns- ton applauded the house action- a "good news for the consumer. Besides adopting the administ ration compromise, the house km rapid-fire order: " . f - 1. Defeated a republican-spot-sored compromise to continue the 10 per cent beef rollback but pro hibit all further rollbacks, far and industrial alike. The vote wa 129 to 65. , ' v &.-'.'.' 2. Rejected an amendment by Rep. Cox (D-Ga) to outlaw H price rollbacks.; Th votet. JU.te 89. ; -I' 3. Turned down a proposal by Rep. Cooley (D-NC)-backed by arm state members to wipe out the 10 per cent cut in live beef prices and ban all further roll- . backs on farm commodities. The 1 vote was 217 to 124. i i or g ns St&tecmaa Ntws Senrlcs WOODBURN. Julv 17FJmr H. Mattson, who began his third term as Woodburn mayor nine months ago tendered his resigna tion at a meeting of the? council here tonight Mattson said he wa making the step on advice of hfcs physician. Pending action by thj counca on a replacement, Jess; riktin. council president' will serve mi acting mayor. The resignation wa tabled until . the next meeting! August 7. .; : i t In other action the council killed an ordinance which would nave eliminated parking on Grant street from the alley to Front street and approved an ordinance to Improve a portion of High street Salem Boy Hurt Fighting -Forest Fire at Coos Bay A Salem boy was Injured while helping fight the 900-acre forest fire east of Coos Bay Monday, hi family learned yesterday.! He Is Gordon Morris, If, whe telephoned parents Mr. and Mr a. Leslie Morris, 445 N. 24th st, te say he was in a Rosebuxg horpital with sever leg bruises. A leg had struck him while h was cn the fire line. ' . Morris is one of several Salem high school boys spending the summer working at the Cama valley state fire camp between Roseburg and the coast; Amonf the others are Larry Andrews, sob of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Andrews, 8S3 N. Capitol st, and Del Dixon, soa of Mrs. P. W. Church, 3257 a- con ave. ' a m t!M Max. - 1 - "s :- - 7S VIM. SZ ft - 4 : 2 Trp, talem Portland Ssn Franeisce Chicago .. ... Kw York SO 13 WiUamett River -IS - yORKCAST (from V. a. Weuf m resa, McNsry field. Salem): CWmr dav n4 tonight except for torn rnon ing clouds. High today near W; rm tonitfat Dear S2. . :. - SALEM WtEdPTTATIOK -Siac SUrt f Weather Tear, Ft I Tb:Yer Lart Year - J""l 4BM 43.8S ilZl Woodburn May