The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 21, 1952, Page 1, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Dtp
Weather
Salem , ! SI
Portland 83 S3
San Franciso , 63 49
Chicago , ?1 90
lift
traee
txmem
B33IQ3
0 VCN
NfW Vnrk M ft I -ml
Willamette River 1 foot.
FORECAST (from U. S. weather btt-i
reau, McNary field. Salem); Partly
cloudy with a few showers today anal
tonight. Huh today 68 to M,; low to-'
night 40 to 42. warmer Thursday. Tern--perature
at 12:01 a.m. waa SO decrees.
SALEM PRECIPITATION '
Since Start of Weather Year . 1
This Year Last Year ; Nermal
40.05 48.47 f .3S I
POUNDDD 1651
mum
Senator Mike Monroney of Ok
lahoma comes up with a new an
gle. He predicts a deadlock will
develop in the Democratic nation
al convention. So he is boosting
Speaker Sam Rayburn as a com
promise candidate. Rayburn pre
viously had counted himself out,
but many of his Texas admirers
want to promote him for the pres
idential nomination.
As for a compromise candidate
the report has been that Vice
President Barkley is pla"ing the
game low in hopes of getting that
call. The Veep, who is 74, is cre
dited with good health and sharp
wit. Also he is said to hold the fa
vor of various factions among the
Democrats, though the same is
true of Speaker Rayburn.
All of which points up the fact
that for the first time in a quar
ter century the Democrats are
fumbling over selection of a can
didate. In 192C Al Smith took an
early lead; and in 1932 Franklin
Roosevelt held the pole from the
start of the race, and had no com
petition in 1936, 1940 and 1944.
Doubting Thomases over Truman
sought earnestly for another can
didate in 1948, but Truman was
in the preferred position and was
nominated on the first ballot.
It's different this time. Tru
man declines to run again; Ste
venson says he is busy in Illinois;
Justice Douglas disowns efforts
in his behalf. Senator Kefauver
admits he wants the office and
is busy picking up delegates, but
by no means looks like a winner
at the convention. Senator Rus
sell's hope is not for winning the
nomination but to force compro
mise with the South on the writ
ing of the platform and selection
of a ticket. With Governor
Byrnes of South Carolina
(Continued on editorial page 4.)
Sec. Newbry
Envisions
New Hospital
A new mental hospital probably
will be needed in Oregon in the
next 10 years. Secretary of State
Earl T. Newbry said Tuesday at
the board of control meeting.
Newbry, one of the members of
the three-man board which runs'
the state institutions, said the pro
posed hospital should be in Port
land. He said the present hospitals at
Salem and Pendleton have as many
patients as they can care for.
No institution can be located
outside Marion County unless the
people approve by vote.
Fire Fighting
Relia All Set
For Parade
You've heard the one about the
fire horse? Well, Tuesday, the Sa
lem central fire department was
displaying what the fire horse
once pulled.
Parked in front of the depart
ment on High and Chemeketa
Streets was a genuine Capital En
gine, built by Honeyman Builders,
Boston, Mass., in 1860.
With the water tanks filled, the
relic, owned by the fire depart
ment dripped generously at the
.reams as though waiting even yet
for active duty.
The engine is to be loaned for
the Odd Fellows parade scheduled
to begin tonight at 7 p. m.
It's Called 'Spring Madness'
Also Plain Simple-mindedness
By The Associated Press J
Spring madness swept another '
batch of college campuses Monday j
and Tuesday, turning thousands I
of feverish young men into baying, i
brawling panty raiders.
Nearly a dozen schools wit
nessed riots or near-riots as the
males stormed co-ed dormitories
in search of sexy souvenirs. It was
the biggest outbreak yet in the
snowballing, weeks-old fad.
Animal Crackers
Bv WARREN GOODRICH
"Left-overs again? And from
Sunday" .
XT MTI
102nd YEAR
Grand Patriarch Takes Over
V!
Hurh Lewis of Yamhill (rlffht) takes over the ravel Tuesday as new
grand patriarch of the Grand Encampment. Odd Fellows group,
from George Houck of Portland. Ilouck, retiring: grand patriarch,
conducted the Encampment's annual convention as part of the state
IOOF conclave in Salem this week.
New Arrivals Swell IOOF
Registration; Grand Lodge
To Be Today and Thursday
The Odd Fellows convention increased in tempo Tuesday as
delegates swelled registration lists in anticipation of the opening of
the Grand Lodge sessions today.
A total registration of nearly 1,000 Rebekahs, the IOOF womens
groups, and about 350 male IOOF members, was reported at registra- :
tion headquarters in the IOOF Temple Tuesday.
Sound Yields
Four Bodies
From Sloop
BELUNGHAM -Four bodies
of persons who were among seven
aboard the sailboat Prelude which
vanished Sunday night were re
covered Tuesday in Northern Pu
get Sound waters.
There was no indication of the
cause of the disaster.
The bodies found were Identi
fied as Ed Jukes, Mrs. Don Card,
Mrs. Paul Fordyce and her son
Kenneth, all of Bellingham.
MISSING PILOT FOUND
ALBANY, Ore. f7P)-Seareh for
a pilot who was thought missing
was called off Tuesday when he
turned up at an emergency field
near Newport. The pilot was Rus
sell Strait.
It was good clean fun In some
spots. But not in Columbia, Mo.,
where the National Guard was
called out to cope with rioting
University of Missouri students.
And not at Colorado University
where one youth broke his hip.
At Corvallis, Ore., campus po
lice spoiied a lingerie stealing raid
by 250 Oregon State College
students.
The men made forays on two
dormitories and three sorority
houses as the newest college craze
spread to Oregon. But less than a
dozen men got inside Waldo Hall,
the first dormitory raided, and
they were given the bum's rush by
the co-eds who then locked win
dows and doors. They got no
trophies.
At the next dormitory, Sackett
Hall, they found doors and win
dows locked. Neither did they get
into the Alpha Omega Pi or Delta
Delta Delta sorority houses, though
they did manage to break some
windows.
A few made it inside the Alpha
Chi Omega house, but the women
occupants quickly shoved them
out.
L. E. Darling, assistant dean of
men, appealed to campus frater
nities and officers ordered their
members from the group. The
number had dwindled sharply be
fore the forays ended.
Darling said he did not know
whether discip ry action would
b taken but that the raiders would
have to pay for broken windows.
The panty raids, weirdest col
legiate fad since the goldfish swal
lowing 1930's, have been blamed
by psychiatrists on everything
-from sex to simple-mindedness.
14 PAGES
i, $ ,
i - "H
iwore uaa r eiiows were expect -
ed to report in today for the
Grand Lodge of Oregon conven
tion today and Thursday. George
E. Lyons of Portland, grand mas
ter, will conduct. the Grand Lodge
sessions in the IOOF Temple. A
feature will be the colorful 14-block-long
parade "which ' will
move south along South Commer
cial Street from Marion Square
at 7 o'clock tonight.
Conducting sessions Tuesday
were the Rebekah Assembly and
the Grand Encampment. The Re
bekahs will continue meetings to
day, with election of officers slat
ed for 10 a.m., and will adjourn
Thursday afternoon, as will the
Grand Lodge.
Installed as Grand Patriarch of
the Grand Encampment Tuesday
afternoon was Hugh Lewis, Yam
hill He succeeds George Houck,
Portland, who was elected as rep
resentative for two years to the
sovereign Grand Lodge.
George V. Naderman, Salem,
was seated as grand high priest;
Herbert M. Munsell, Klamath
Falls, grand senior warden; Peter
Stolsig, Eugene, grand junior
warden; John Gtbbs, Dayton,
grand marshal; Garland Meador,
Myrtle Creek, grand sentinel;
Charles Bowman, Monmouth,
grand outer sentinel; Earl H.
Shank, Portland, grand scribe, and
E. M. Bowman, Hillsboro, granj
treasurer.
A crowd of more than 1,200
jammed Crystal Gardens Ball
room for the grand reception
Tuesday night and to hear Pres
ley Horn, past grand master of the
Idaho jurisdiction, outline the his
tory of the Odd Fellows. Also
speaking were Mayor Alfred W.
Loucks and Gov. Douglas McKay.
(Story also on page 14)
Freighters Hit
In Mid-Atlantic
NEW YORK (M-Two freighters
collided in a fog in the Atlantic off
Block Island, R. I., early Wednes
day, but radioed they were in no
immediate danger.
The ships were the President
Tyler and the Michael Tracy.
The Boston Coast Guard dis
patched three cutters.
Western International
At Victoria-Salem, rain.
At Yakima 5, Lewiston 6
At Wenatchee 6. Spokane 8
At Vancouver - Tri-City, rain.
Pacific Coast League
At Portland 1, San Francisco 3
At Los Angeles 4, Sacramento 3
At Oakland 3. San Diego 1
At Seattle-Hollywood, rain.
American Learue
At Chicago 3. New York 4
At St. Louis 0, Washington 2
At Cleveland-Boston, rain.
At Phuadelphu -Detroit, rain.
National Leaxne
At Brooklyn -Cincinnati, rain.
At Bo ton-Chicago, rain.
At New York-St. Louis, rain.
A PhlladelphU-PtttsburcA. rain.
Reds RlOt
In Prison;
One Dead
PUSAN, Korea (JP)-V.S. soldier
guards Tuesday stamped out a re
bellion in a big Pusan prison camp,
killing one Red prisoner and in
juring 85 in a wild battle lasting
nearly three hours.
It was the first bloody prisoner
uprising on the Korean mainland.
It came as the U.S. Eighth Army
disclosed that two minor revolts
had been squelched without blood
shed on nearby Koje Island last
week.
Starts in Hospital
The Pusan fighting broke out at
a prison hospital enclosure where
both Communist and anti-communist
prisoners are treated.
The Army said a small group of
fanatical Reds who served as hos
pital attendants defied orders to
leave the compound for transfer
elsewhere.
Battle With Clubs
Combat-seasoned U.S. infantry
men went into the compound to
get them, and the fighting erupted.
The infantrymen were armed, but
they fired no shots in the battle of
clubs and fists.
One soldier was injured slightly.
About half of the 85 prisoners in
jured received only minor hrts,
the Army said. It did not say how
the one prisoner died. Possibly he
was bayoneted.
Rioting Predicting
The Army gave few details, and
correspondents were not permitted
to enter the camp, known as Com
pound 10. It was not known
whether the prisoners were North
Koreans, Chinese or both.
The Peiping radio virtually pre
dicted the revolt. A broadcast
heard Tuesday night in Tokyo said
"Korean and Chinese prisoners in
mainland camps who are alleged
not to want to return are thinking
of rialing." That was before the
news had reached Peiping.
Boy, 15, to Get
Life Sentence
For Murder
EUGENE. Ore., (JP)-A 15-year-old
boy, accused of the gun shot
slaying of an 18-year-old deaf
mute girl, was found guilty of
first degree murder here Tuesday.
A circuit court jury which rec
ommended leniency for the boy
Eugene Harlan Belcher deliber
ated the case for four hours.
Judge C. F. Skipworth said the
recommendation for leniency made
a sentence of life imprisonment
mandatory.
The boy was accused of firing
the shot that killed Mary Ellen
Campbell near Cottage Grove,
April 4.
District Attorney C. E. Luckey
said the boy, when arrested ad
mitted he killed the girl because
his school friends had taunted him
about her pregnancy.
The boy later repudiated the
confession.
Bids Opened
On Woodburn
Sewage Plant
Statesman Newi Servic
WOODBURN Bids were open-
! ed at the Tuesday meeting of the
I Woodburn city council for con-
struction of a sewage treatment
j plant and a trunk sewer. No con
tracts were awaraea.
A $150,000 bond issue proposed
in 1950 was presumed to be close
to the cost of this work. Six bids
were submitted on the trunk sew
er ranging from $59,000 to a $45,
000 bid submitted by P. S. Lord,
Portland. Five bids were submit
ted for the treatment plant rang
ing from $101,000 to a $78,880 bid
from Browning and Randolph in
Salem. P. S. Lord was the next
low bid at $79,000.
Pay Raises Effective for Over
3,000.000 Service Personnel
WASHINGTON (JP) More than
three million men and women in
uniform got a raise Tuesday when
the White House announced that
President Truman has signed a bill
increasing military pay and allow
ances by 484 million dollars a year.
Everybody from, buck private to
five-star general gets a 4 per cent
boost in base pay beginning this
month.
Allowances for food and rent in
the armed services go up 14 per
cent.
The increases were voted by
Congress to help offset higher liv
ing costs. They apply to all ranks
in the Army, Navy, Air Force and
Marine Corps, including retired
personnel.
'They also extend to cadets at
West Point, midshipmen at An
The Orecon Statesman, Salem, Oreaon, Wednesday, May 21. 1952
Honored
The Rev. George H. Swift, pastor
of St. Paul's Episcopal Church,
who received the Eagles Lodge,
Aerie 2081, third annual sur
prise citizenship award at the
evening meeting at the lodge.
Eagles Award
For 1952 Goes
To Rev. Swift
Recipient of the Eagles Lodge,
j Aerie 2081. third annual citizen
I ship award this year is the Rev.
! George H. Swift, pastor of St.
Paul's Episcopal Church.
The Rev. Mr. Swift, who is not
a member of the Eagles, was sel
ected by a board of past presi
dents to receive the award on the
basis of his personal contributions
to the community. A plaque, com
memorating the award, was pre
sented to him at the Tuesday eve-
. ning meeting ot the Lodge.
The annual award was created
three years ago as a recognition
: by the Lodge of personal service
and sacrifice to the community.
"The organization this year felt
that Rev. Swift more than fulfilled
tnese qualifications, past presi
dent Dr. Fioyd Utter said Tuesday
evening.
The first award was made by
the lodge to R. (Tad) Shelton and
last year's award went to David
O'Hara.
Move to Form
New City in
Canyon Starts
A new move for incorporation
of a city in the Detroit area of the
North Santiam canyon was shown
Tuesday by petitions signed by 42
.residents and filed with Marlon
County Court.
The petitions, calling for inclu
sion of some 510 acres in an ir
regular shape about one mile in
both east-west and north-south
directions, were filed by J. Cal
SchLador of Detroit. This is just
north of the present community,
which will be inundated by the
Detroit Dam reservoir.
If the petitions show that the
signers comprise 20 per cent of
the areas registered voters, the
County Court is to set an election
in 30 to 50 days.
Proposed incorporation of a
larger area, including Idanha, was
defeated a few years ago.
Boys Discover
S2,180 in Pond;
Each Gets Third
PORTLAND 7P) Three boys,
playing in a shallow pond, found
$2,180 in currency Tuesday. The
money was inside a floating jar,
they told sheriff's deputies.
It was thought to have belonged
to James Stevens, 71-year-old re
cluse, who died Feb. 21 in a near
by shack.
The finders, Edwin Hill, 7, My
ron Whitcomb, 9, Melvin Weaver,
11, divided the money. The mother
of one of the youngsters reported
the find to the sheriff's office.
napolis, aviation cadets and mem
bers of the Public Health Service,
the Coast Guard and the Coast and
Geodetic Survey. In all, an esti
mated million persons are af
fected. Under the new law, the raises
range from $3 a month for pri
vates and seamen to $65 to two
star generals and rear admirals,
the equivalent flag rank in the
Navy.
Most low-ranking enlisted men
have no dependents and their food
and lodging is furnished by the
government. Consequently they
will not be affected by the increase
in allowances. For enlisted person
nel with dependents, the monthly
increase in pay and allowances
will range from $13 to $19.
r1 ' 'T ;
. Ktftff :
i 1
Officers Who Refused to Fly
Given Honorable
But Surrender Commissions
President
Possible
By ED CREAGH
WEST POINT, N. Y. P)-Presi-dent
Truman said Tuesday Korea
has put the free world on the
right track "to preserving our
freedom without paying tie
frightful cost o world war."
"I believe we are well cn the
way . . . ," he said witn .ober
but unmistakable optimism. "We
are on the right track."
He held out hope there may
still be an armistice in Korea
but insisted: "We must also be
alert and ready to meet treachery
or a renewal of aggression if
that should come."
The president spoke at the
U.S. military academy's 150th
anniversary celebration. He tcid
West Point cadets the nation's
future generals that "as a result
He Housekeeps
So What? She
Gels a Divorce
LONDON t,Pi-Mrs. Betsy Clarke
was awarded a divorce Monday
because her mate insisted on do
ing the housework.
Mrs. Clarke said husband Syd
ney, a butcher, took over her role
of housewife right down to
cleaning, shopping and cooking
in 1949.
I Clarke told the judge: "I thought
I was a much more efficient
housekeeper than she was."
McGranery
Appointment
Gets Approval
WASHINGTON (JP) The Sen
ate approved Tuesday night Presi
dent Truman's appointment of
Federal Judge James P. McGran
ery of Philadlphia to be attorney
general.
The nomination of the 56-year-old
jurist to succeed J. Howard
McGrath in the cabinet post was
confirmed by a vote of 52 to 18.
Action had hung fire since' April
3 when President Truman named
McGranery just after he had let
McGrath out of the cabinet in a
follow-up of McGrath's firing of
Newbold .Morris as government
corruption investigator.
Sens. Ferguson R-Mich. and
Watkins R-Utah led the opposi
tion to McGranery's nomination.
They assailed his as a man of
'most questionable" integrity,
ability and veracity.
Chairman McCarran D- Nev. of
the Senate Judiciary Committee
and other Democrats described
j McGranery as an "honest, sincere,
j God-fearing, fair official.''
All 18 votes against confirma
tion were cast by Republicans.
Sen. Morse of Oregon voted for
the confirmation. Sen. Cordon of
Oregon opposed it.
Three Missing
On Pacific Run
SEATTLE 7P-A 48-foot ketch
with three persons aboard is nearly
a month overdue on a run from
Honolulu to Seattle, the Coast
Guard reported Tuesday.
The ketch, the No Name, sailed
from Honolulu April 7 and was
expected to arrive here April 26.
Aboard are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Wolbert and a crewman, Gus Ol
son, all of Seattle
McMinnville Goes on
Daylight Time June 1
McMINNVILLE (JP) The City
Council has changed a previous
decision and has now voted to
switch to daylight saving time June
1. Earlier the council voted to stay
on standard time.
BENNETT THROUGH
PORTLAND (JP) The Portland
City Council Tuesday accepted the
resignation of Commissioner Jam
es E. Bennett, recalled in last Fri
day's election.
5 FLOATS EXPECTED
PORTLAND (AVSome 50 floats
are expected to be entered in this
year's Rose Festival parade June
13, officials of the festival said
Tuesday Friday is the entry deadline.
PRICE 5c
Warns of
Treachery
of Korea, the free countries are
infinitely better prepared to de
fend themselves than they were
two years ago."
But he tempered his optimism
at points and, in words as grim
as the gray, dripping sky above
this Hudson River redoubt, told
the cadets:
"But I don't want anyone to
get the impression that there is
any basis for relaxing or letting
up . . . No one should assume
that the possibility of world war
has become remote."
In his prepared speech, Tru
man added tersely and omin
ously: "An atomic artillery piece has
been developed and tested and
will have to be reckoned with in
the future."
Five-fold Hike
For Columbia
Power Seen
PORTLAND (JP- The Bonne
ville Power Administration Tues
day outlined a Columbia River
Power system for 1960-61 which
would be five times the present
size.
Its capacity of seven billion
kilowatts is necessary to meet re
quirements of the area, the an
nual outlook report, called an "ad
vance program for defense," said.
To do this dams now under
construction must be finished on
schedule, more plants built and
transmission iaeimies improved.
The program also calls for con
struction of Hells Canyon Dam,
which has not been authorized and
is opposed by Idaho Power Com
pany interests. It contemplates
construction of Ice Harbor Dam
which has been authorized, but Is
not yet being built.
At the same time Bonneville
said that rising costs would force
an increase in its rates in De
cember, 1954, when the next ad
justment is made.
Power supplies, even under the
present schedule, will be critically
short for the next two to five
years, the report said.
The report also called for pro
duction by federal fuel fired
plants in 1955 with an output in
1956 of 440,000 kilowatts. A three
quarter million kilowatt expan
sion of private utility facilities by
1955-56 also is included in the
program.
Sale of Indian
Up in Court
PORTLAND JP- Trial of the
federal government's suit to set
aside the disputed sale of 800
acres of Indian timberlands at
Gold Beach, Ore., got underway in
federal court here Tuesday.
The land was bought from two
Indians through the Portland Of
fice of 'the Bureau of Indian Af
fairs for $135,000. U. S. Attorney
Henry L. Hess contends the land
is worth more than $300,000.
The land, after a complicated
transaction, wound up in the
hands of a white man.
Among spectators at the trial
was Clyde Flinn. former Indian
Bureau land officer, who was
suspended following an investiga
tion of the land sale.
One Killed, Two Critically Hurt
By Log Toppling From Truck
Statesman New Service
LEBANON A log killed one
man and critically injured two
others when it toppled from a
j truck onto a car on Highway 20
near Sweet Home Tuesday. A
fourth man was seriously injured.
All were from Lebanon.
Dead is Oliver Goodwin, 23,
listed by state police as the car
driver.
Wilmer Greer, 53, and Arthur
Starr, 45, were injured critically.
The injuries of William Cooper,
22, were termed "serious."
Police said a blow torch was
used to extricate Starr from the
back seat of the crushed sedan.
He was taken to Salem Memorial
Hospital. Attendants said he in
curred a possible skull fracture
and a compound leg fracture.
The other men were taken to
Lanmack Hospital, Sweet Home,
l where a spokesman said Greer
No. S3
Dis
WASHINGTON (JP)- Th Air
Force announced Tuesday it is
missing "under honorable cerwii-
Livijo anu wjiuuui tuuri ;;mazTjiai
12 reserve officers who refused to
fly- s
The action, first disclosed jrt
Scott Air Force Base, IlLji by tte
Air Training Command, dispose'
of all but one of the 14 reported
cases of that kind. j
The men were stationed at Ran- .
doiph Air Force Base in Tet
and Mather Base in California.
Sentence Cancelled
A spokesman at the Pentagon
explained that the 12 wilt b re
lieved of their commissions by ad
ministrative action because their
cases have not reached thi formal
court martial stage. One I of the
others already has been dispeeed
of and the 14th is pen-din'.
First Lt. Verne Goodwin of Pea
body, Mass.. was convicted h-w m
couri martial but tha sent
was cancelled upon review
headquarters and Goodwin's
signation was accepted
'lor the
good of the service."
One Case AwaiU Review
CaDt. Carl J. Izard at
Hazle-
hurst. Miss., originally was sen
tenced dv a court martial tn hu.
months at hard labor and dishon
orable dismissal. An lntermidia'le
reviewing authority knocked out
the imprisonment sentence: but let
the dismissal decision stand. Air
Force headquarters said the cane
now awaits review by top officials
of the service. j
Ten of the 14 reserve officer
involved in the refusals j to fly
were involuntarily recalled! by tbV
Air Force. The remaining four
volunteered for active duty. Only
two of the 14 were receiving pay
for drill and air training activities
in the reserves prior to their ire
call. M
Ten of the 14 saw combat duty
during World War II. ?1
Let Kefauver,
Ike Fight It jOat
Os West Says
PORTLAND OT-TWsM Vbrf
Democratic governor of Oreaa
from 1911 to 1915. rrlohnisH vi
79th birthday here Tuesday.
ine former governor, who has .
earned a wide reputation for his
observations on politics, had this
to say of the current presidential
race:
"If God still reigns, and 'wishes
to preserve" this government from
crooks and wastrels. He will HV
rect the Republicans to nominate
Eisenhower and the Democrat
Kefauver, and leave them free to
select their own running mates.
Atomic Blast
Again Delayed
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (JPHSoWiers
on pass were rounded up early
Tuesday for a previously-postponed
atomic bomb test, but tbs
M. P.'s did the job to no avail.
For tUe second time ; officials
pressed the button and nothing
happened.
The A EC put it down to mecha
nical failure of the sequence tim
er, and put the much-delayed
shot over for at least another 4t
hours.
43 Casualties on
New Korea List
43 CASUALTIES 18-2 pge 1 .
WASHINGTON (JP) The De
fense Department Tuesday night
Identified 43 more Korean. waL
casualties list No. 568. Of the to
tal, 19 are dead, 23 wounded, -one
missing in action.
suffered brafn concussion, severs
neck lacerations, compound frac
tures of both bones in hia left ana
and serious head injuries.
Cooper's condition waa .termed
fair. He suffered shock, multiple
bruises and lacerations over hi
entire body.
Goodwin died shortly ' after he
was taken to the hospital.
Police identified the truck drives
as Selmer Norlyn Brown, Swsef
Home. Officers quoted him as say
ing he did hot know the log had
dropped from the truck. They said
he was traced by brand marks a
the logs and was cited for haulii
a loose and shifting load. t
The mishap occured two miles,
east of Sweet Home on j Highway
20 about 7:45 a. m. The Lebanon .
men were eastbound for: the San
tiarn Lumber Co., at Sweet Home!
where all were employed.' ;j j
missal