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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 24, 1953)
Move Omit - off I Suez of lit for YoW Lives I 1 Fig . . : kundhd 16S4 J - 102sd YEAB 18 PAGES Box in .Vacant Lot Holds $75,000 in iteiveiry Loot LOS ANGELES W .Jewels worth $75,000, taken in recent rob beries of the home of Actress Ar Xine Judge and the Casa De Manana Hotel of La Jolla, Calif., were recovered Monday in a paper box In a vacant lot. Deputy Police Chief Thad Brown announced. He said: "A member of the gang tipped us. off to be at the lot at a certain time today." Harry Meyerhoff, 19, and hi pretty 15-year-old wtfe "Cookie axe in BeverJy Hills jail in con nection with the Jan. 22 robbery of Miss Judge of $40,000 worth of furs and jewels at her Beverly Hills apartment. - San Diego police said complaints Texas, Louisiana and Florida which, bolted their normal "Demo cratic affiliation to, support Eisen hower for President, now want their reward in the way of legis lation vesting title to offshore lands in the bordering states. Cali fornia joins in the demand to re verse the Supreme Court by legislative-action. . - Since the Republican platform endorsed states' rights in this matter, and General Eisenhower expressed a similar view before h Rermhlican convention it would seem that little difficultH CRT TCP COOil - would be encountered in gening a bill through Congress, especially since two previous Congresses had passed such a bill only to have them killed by President Truman's veto. ' ; ; In spite of this formidable line up there is a substantial body of sentiment which opposes divesting the federal government of its f "paramount" interest. Opposition to the bill will be vocal even if it is futile. There is also w the possl- bility that opponents may run a filibuster,., using the. same tool 5 which the " Dixicrats hold in re ' serve against civil rights legisla tion. -t;. . " The Supreme Court did not say that the federal government owned the lands, but that it held "paramount rights." It clearly is within the power of Congress to , dispose of the lands or of the gov ernment s "paramount rights." The question is whether It should. There is sound reasoning to sup port the retention of the offshore lands by the federal government. ine extent ox states' claims is (Continued on editorial page 4.) Sunshine Still On Forecast Fair weather and sunshine to day and Wednesday is expected to be marred only by scattered light showers this afternoon with clearing again tonight, says the weatnerman. , Temperatures for the next two days are predicted to remain In the low 50's with cool nights and early morning, readings dipping below the freezing mark. The mercury dipped to 25 early Mon . day. .. . , . Groundbreaking For Churcli Today Groundbreaking ceremonies for the new St. Paul's Episcopal Church will be held today noon at the new church site in the 1500 block on South liberty Street - The Rev. George H. Swift, pas tor of , the church, will officiate. Contract for construction of : the new building has been awarded to A. N. Minden Company. Port land. James L. Payne, Salem, is me arcnitect- Animal Crackers Bv WARREN COODRICH L 4 - . "... .s Thm Oregon Statesman, Salenx, Oregon, Tuesday, would be issued Tuesday charging three men arrested Friday in Los Angeles with Thursday's $86,000 holdup of the- hotel at La Jolla. The three suspects Walter Basile, 24, -a ' former employe at the hotel; Eddie ,ughan, 19, of St. Louis, " and Don Holcomb, 17, of South Gate were taken to San Diego tover the week end and placed in city jafl. v Chief Brown said about half of Miss -Judge's jewels were recov ered along .with $70,000 worth of the stones taken at La Jolla. The gems had been removed from their mountings in rings, brace lets and watches. ? None of the mountings have been recovered. Mill Gty Girls Top Spellers Amity A girl who likes horse back riding, Darlene Sue CasteeL 13, will be Amity Grade School's c represen tative when this school plays host to the semi-finals of The Oregon Spelling Contest Tues- day night, Marco 3.- ue was cer tified as Amity Soe Casteel spelling champ ion by Principal Albert Yoder after winning a Val entine s uay 8tn grade spelldown and then defeating the 7th-grad-ers. Her teacher Js Mrs. May Lucas. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Loraine CasteeL Box 212, Amity. Glenda Marie Patty, 13, daugh ter of Glen Patty, Amity, was second, and Jimmy M. Allee, 12, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Allee. Route 1, Amity, was third. Glen da is in the 8th grade, Jimmy the 4 in. Mill City Rosalie BassetL 14. Who . likes ' reading and nla v th clarinet in the school band, will represent '.Mill J 8th cndi In f The Oregon Statesman- KSLM Spelling Contest. Rosalie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bassett, Mill City, was certified as c h a m d ion Rosalie Bassett school speller by Principal Vernon S. Todd. Her teacher is Mrs. Evan- gelyn Fleetwood. She is in the 8th grade. numi Aajriur, a, aaugnier ox Mr. and. Mrs. John Taylor, Mill -ity, ana unaries Marttala, IS, son of Mr. and Mrs. Neal Marttala, Mill City, won second and third, respectively. , 1 Rosalie will compete In H the semi-finals with six other school champions at Staytoo Grade School at 7:45 pjn.i Thursday, March 8. The public is invited free. St. Paul Joanne Van Dyke, 13", who won second place in spelling at St. Paul's Academy in 1952. took top honors this year and will represent her school in the semi-finals of The Oregon Statesman- KSIJtf . SnelliM 4 contest at 1 TT - , a wooaourn, I Thursday night March 12. Joanne is in Jeanne ; the 8 th ; grade " Van Dske ' and the daugh- ' ter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Van Dyke, Box 28, St. Paul. Her hobbies are playing the piano, athletics and ceramics. She was certified as top , sneller by Sister Rosanna Mary, princip al, and her teacher is Sister Jose phine Claire. f Second place In spelling at St Paul's Academy was won by Mary Sue Day, 12, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Day, Route -1,' Box 25, Newberg, 'and third " place by Louis Coutu, 13, whose parents are Mr. and MrsW. L. Coutu, Box 24, Springbrook. : Both . Mary - Sue and Louis are in the 7 th grade. Amity, St. Paul, IT 1 j - i - -, L I S9-ggiS ;Aug Sold WASHINGTON; Ifl ' The -Na tion's Capital celebrated; George Washington's birthday in a way that ' - canny bargain hunter prob ably' would have- approved: " With sales of everything, from 89-cent automobiles to five-cent shoes. It's an annual fling here. Almost every store ia town features sales on Washington's birthday. :- ' " ; Usually the spectacular bar gains are limited to one or two cf each item. So the buyer who would latch on to these must.be in line. Coiincil Gets Zone Measure r By ROBERT XL GANGWAKB City . Editor, Thm Stotesnuut Salem aldermen pocketed early drafts of the proposed new zoning code Monday night after getting their first look at it during conference with zoning commis- loners. - ; f Aldermen were expected to come up with some suggestions and citizens will be sounded out an informal neighborhood hear' ings before the Salem Planning and Zoning Commission submits a complete new code to the Council for legislation. North Capitol Street business zoning, buffer zoning, handling of variance requests and hearing pro cedure were ' principal Questions from the aldermen at their brief ing by Zoning Chairman W. W. Rosebraugh and revision chair man. Robert Stanley. - Capitol Street has been a per- Lpetual zoning problem to the Council as business expands along the once primarily residential street The present code draft ex tends business zoning; from the Hollywood area south to Market Street hut leaves the street from there to Mill Creek residential. Dispute Expected This is expected to produce one of the biggest controversies over thA. new code as some property owners want business zoning the entire length of the street and others object to any , further en croachment on residential zoning there. Buffer zones represent the prin ciple ox gradual change in tne character of zones within siven area so that residential zones are separated from the more objec tionable types of business and in dustry. Zoners told the Council mem bers that this principle is observed where possible in the new code which, among other innovations, has a series of 10 basic zones com pared with the present four. Pattern Set But some areas will remain un changed, it ; was indicated, where good housing and Industries adjoin, as the pattern Is already set. To minimize future troubles over res idential area conflicts with near by industry, one code proposal would flatly prohibit the building of homes or schools in industrial zones. At present there is no such restriction. ; Another innovatior would em power the zoning tody to allow certain variances within a zone to meet a problem which would-be peculiar to a certain lot This would cut off considerable minor legislation which now must go through the Council Itself. Another phase of zoning was attended to by the Council in its regular business meeting preced ing the conference. Sl,500 Appropriation The aldermen agreed to appro priate $1,500 from the emergency fund to match county and Salem School District funds in getting a land use survey started as a preliminary in the county zoning program. The survey would aid the city because it would be made in the fringe area of Marion Coun ty within six miles of Salem bor ders. Alderman Earl Burk of West Salem advocated extending the survey work there to take in the Polk County fringe of Salem and indicated he would try to interest Polk County Court in. the project Mayor Alfred Loucks said - Polk County already had declined to participate. (Additional Council News . ' on Page ) College President Offered Position of 'VoiceVDirector WASHINGTON Vfl Secretary of State Dulles was reported late Monday to have asked Robert L. Johnson, president of Temple Uni versity to take over direction of the Voice of America and other State Department information op erations. . , - Dulles met for an hour with Johnson. Aides said afterward that the secretary offered the post to the universir president They ex pressed the belief that 'Johnson would accept but said a final de cision was deferred. : There had been Capitol Hill re ports earlier in the day that John son was the Eisenhower : adminis tration's choice for - the job. lira 1Mb The early bird prize was award ed unofficially to A. J. Maas. a driver for the local, transit com pany. . He showed up, with equip ment ' that made him look some what like an Arctic explorer, at 5:30 aan. Sunday. , ! Thus he had only to wait "28 hours and 30 minutes before the Store opened and he could Jbuy a refrigerator at a $153 discount : Maas is a veteran at this sort cf thing. Last year he went through the same ordeal to get a televi sion set cheap. February 24, 1953 Plenty of Surcharge Comments 1 . f ; . s :s i:::S'jdf ' '""" i ... ' ! - i . U ( " - " x 4 ; ,. , ' t -T.-.tw3S.liM nun i . - - " mini n in-r i ii r rr -i iiiliiri)-l"-f,T,"' " mai&M'MUH..:; ''"rv-i-t- arnwi Letters and cards to State Rep. Monroe Sweetland en his recent elec tricity surcharge complaint to Charles Heltxel. state pablie utilities commissioner, are coming in at the rate of nearly 25 per day. Sweetland Is shown with his secretary, Kay Meriwether of Port land, going ever some of the maiL (Statesman Photo). House to Vote Today On Interim Study of State Racing Funds By HECTOR L. FOX Associated Press Writer The seventh week of the Oregon Legislature got off to a slow start but at least one piece of controversial legislation was scheduled for airing Tuesday. The house will vote today on a resolution to have an Interim committee study distribution of horse arid dog racing revenues. Three- fifths of this revenue now Is distributed to the lairs. 4 Hospitalized In 2-Gar Crash At Woodburn Statesman News Service WOODBURN Four persons were hospitalized shortly after 6 pjn. Monday after a two-car acci dent at Route 99E and Cleveland Street in Woodburn. State police said the entire front ends of both ears were demolished. Rushed to Albany General Hos pital by , Salem city ambulance service were: ' Bruce L. Wood, 18, Albuquer que, r. M possible rracturea jaw; Talbot Santo.J 48, Albany Route S, cuts of head and face, and Jerry Strain, 18, Albuquerque, N. M possible arm and" knee frac tures. None were considered se rious by hospital attendants. Taken to Salem General Hospi tal was Frank J. Kadramus, 53, Woodburn, who suffered a bump on the head and cuts. State police said Wood was driv ing a 1932 Mercury south on 99E. His passengers were Santo and Strain. - . ' Kadramus was driving a 1941 Plymouth and was making a left turn from 99E to Cleveland Street when the accident occurred. Both drivers were arrested by police. Wood was charged with violation of the basic rule and Kadramus was charged with fail ure to yield the right of way. Ballad Contest In Discord PORTLAND Un The Barber Shop Ballad Contest will begin at Forest Grove Friday, but with a distinct lack of harmony. .-The Society for the Preservation and Encouragement of Barber Shop , Quartet Singing in America. otherwise known as tne SPEBSQSA, withdrew its recogni tion of the event ..- . ... The SPEBSQSA said it was or dering its registered quartets not to compete in the .Forest drove event because the sponsors . there refused to. affiliate . or co-operate with the SPEBSQSA. The Forest Grove sponsors said they, would go ahead anyway. ' Hoy Is McKay T Gofting Along? ' " Saleni's Douglas McKay, now: UJS. Secretary of the Interior, has had a busy and interesting, first month in office. The Statesman's Washington 'Cor respondent A. Robert Smith, reports McKay's reactions to' bis new job in an exclusive in terview appearing on page 3 of today's Statesman.' PRICE Sc No. 355 ""Committee work drew most In- terest Tuesday. The Senate elec tions committee buried the bill which would have prevented U. S. Sen. Wayne L. Morse from run ning for re-election, and recom mended defeat of a proposal to re move the state elections division from the state department The so-called Morse bill would bar public officials from changing parties when seeking re-election. The committee had expected to hold a hearing Wednesday, but there was ' no general i response. Morse won election as a Republi can, but now calls himself an In dependent j Legislation sponsored by the Oregon Roadside Council to bar billboards within 600 feet of high ways drew a capacity audience to a hearing by the Senate - natural rtioureii committee. The bill would compel removal of certain commercial-type signs within two years. - Hearing Stalls ' The hearing bogged ' down on whether signs on barns were in cluded. ; - .., j Because of the funeral of Blaine McCord, veteran chief cleric of the House rules committee,' who died Saturday, both houses cancelled many meetings. The Senate tax committee put over until Tuesday consideration of House-approved bills to simplify the state tax sys tem, and also postponed debate on a bill to divide Multnomah, Mar ion and Lane; counties into state representative districts, f The latter proposal also would require senators and representa tives to run for numbered positions oxv the ballot ! To Consolidate Counties i ' Among new bills introduced in the Senate was Sen. Richard L. Neuberger's i plan to -consolidate Oregon's : 38 . counties , Into eight counties. -i Gov. Paul L. Patterson asked the legislature to pass his bill making state income tax personal exemp tions conform to federal exemp tions, or. $600 per person. He said it would not result in a loss of revenue. The governor said his assurance that the conformity would not cost the state - money - came - from the State" Tax .Commission. However, the House ' tax committee took a different view, declaring the switch could mean a loss of upwards of a million dollars , ; State exemptions are $750 each for husband -and wife, and $300 for each child. The governor Wants the exemption for married couples re duced from $1500 to $1200. Couples with one child would have an ex emption of $1800, two children, up from $2100 to $2400, and three chil dren, from $2400 to $3000. -, ."Even si $S0O. exemption for a child is too small in this day and age, the governor said. The "governor sighed ' four bills into law Tuesday. Heading the list was r legislation permitting the highwsy commission to issue $32, 000,cj worth of road construction bor ' ' v ; . ' " ": ' ; ( 'iional legislative news on page 4.) . . , Egy CAIRO (AP) Col. Army chief of staff, declared Monday the British must either pull out of the strategic Sues Canal Zone area or "fight for their lives." Nasser, who has urged British troops if they remained on Egyptian soil, Farmers Union In Salem Today The surcharge and any changes In the nation's public power poli cies will be opposed in a resolu tion slated to come before the 43rd annual state convention of the Oregon Farmers Union to open today at 10 o'clock at the Veterans of Foreign "Wars Hall on Fair grounds Road. r ; Other resolutions scheduled to come before the convention in clude one opposing any changes in Oregon's initiative and referen dum system, and one urging that steps be taken immediately to halt the rapid decline in farm prices; - President - Richard Moeller of Cornelius (Washington County) will preside at the three-day ses sion. Moellers annual report to be given Tuesday afternoon will show the affairs of the organiza tion to be in a healthy condition. Membership has been doubled over, last year. The financial re port will show a surplus In the treasury. Reports from staff members will be given the opening day. Harvey Solberg, Denver, president of the Rocky Mountain Farmers ! Union, Is the headline speaker at! the annual banquet to be held at the Knights of Columbus Halt 725 Shipping St., Wednesday night. Charles A. Sprague, publisher of the Oregon Statesman, will ad dress the delegates Wednesday morning at 10:30. He will recount some of his experiences at the United Nations where he served as alternate delegate. Knifed Con on Critical List At Penitentiary J State Prison convict -Jack 8. Amason, 21, who was knifed Sun day was in critical condition in the prison hospital Monday night Meanwhile Warden CMalley revealed last night that a second convict a partner of Amasott be fore they were sent up, had been cut across the nose earlier Sunday. The warden said he believed the prisoner, identified only as West serving a 15-year sentence for assault and robbery with a dan gerous weapon, was knifed, but that there was no proof. ; The incident occurred in differ ent wings 'of the prison about three hours apart aid O'Malley. Investigation is underway in both cases. . : - Amason received a knife wound In the side, but refused to tell Srison officials who stabbed him. "Malley said his condition be came critical Monday after he had shown signs of improving. A. N. Bush Listed As Seriously 111 A. N. Bush, 95, president of the Pioneer Trust Co, was reported as seriously ill at his home at 600 Mission St Monday. - ' ' -: Bush is former owner of Ladd and Bush Bank and Is the son of Asahel Bush, founder of The Ore gon Statesman, . " Session Open Russia's Flood RclievGitf- LONDON Un Prime Minister Churchill Invited Soviet Ambassa dor Andrei vGromyko to his offi cial residence Monday and thanked him for Russia's - 90,000 pounds (S2S2.000) Hood relief gift. ; -' The Russian gift was the third Instance of generosity toward a non-Communist nation in a week. Western diplomats speculated that it was part of- a new "friend ship offensive" by the Soviet Un ion. They "wondered if it was in tended as a bkT for closer rela tions with Western nations, par ticularly where there are hints of Allied disunity. - " i The apparent warmth of Church ill's response quickly caught the attention of the -diplomats. r Rnssiana Annonnee ,- . . . The Soviet Embassy announced Friday . after many enerous -contributions from the United States and other Western nations to flood sufferers in Britain. The Netherlands and Belgium - - that it had turned over check' for 90,003 iwunds to the Lord -layer i The Embassy said fee money came from Russia's Central Coun cil of Trade Unions, Central Un ion of Consumers' Soviets, tt Red ptian Tells Gomel Abdel NaaeerJ acUng j guerrilla warfare against reiterated this determination. He declared "we . will fight to the death every possible field if our sacred rights are denied us. Premier Mohimedi Naguib's right hand man told the nation In a broadcast that "Egypt will not bargain with Britain" when nego tiations on the future of the vast British military base begin, .prob ably this week. ! On Parley Team Nasser makes up the. Egyptian negotiating team with Naguib and Maj. Salah Salem; who- led the recently concluded Anglo Egyptian talks concerning the Sudan. . These talks resulted ;in agree ment to let the Sudanese decide their own future. They now are ruled Jointly by Britain and Egypt j Meanwhile Prime; Minister Churchill's office announced in London that former chief of the imperial general staff, Sir William Slim, will sit in on the Suez ne gotiations for Britain. " He was directed to cancel pass age to Australia only 24 hours be fore his scheduled departure from London for his new post as gov ernor general . of the common wealth country j Previous Talks Slim has taken part in previous discussions with Egypt on the Suez problem. He held, important 'mili tary commands in the Middle East during both world wars. Churchill's announcement said that "in view of the serious and complicated military Issues In volved" it is important to have available the "advice of a. mili tary officer of the highest rank and experience. In his speech, Nasser said na tions that "bargain with Imperial ists on their freedom! will con tinue to live In slavery . Egypt" be added, will accept nothing but the "immediate, un conditional withdrawal of the 70,000 troops Britain keeps in the Canal Zone under the 1936 de fense pact which Egypt has can celled. - j The best available information in London has been that Britain would reject Egypt's demands un less Egypt agrees first to Join a Middle East Defense Organization (MEDO) sponsored by Western powers. - i Broadcast of Welfare Hearing Rejected The legislative Joint ways and means committee decided Mon day against allowing a radio broadcast of next : Thursday's hearing on . opening up the pub lic welfare rolls to inspection. The request to broadcast the hearing was made by Lawson Mc Call, -Portland, commentator for station KGW. . I Nine members of the committee opposed the broadcast while four favored it j " Max. M SI ft S3 Min. Preclp. JS Jf SI - .00 43' jOO - , S9 .00 M JOO S&lem- Portland San Iranciaco Chicago Mew York 44 Willamette River 4.8 ntt. FORECAST (from U. S. Weather Bu reau. McNary yield, Salem) I rair this morning, increasing clouelness this af ternoon with scattered light shower. Clearing tonight and Wednesday. High todav near 46-48 degree, low near 38-30. Temperature at 13:01 sjtu was 38 degrees. salem pRcnrr AXIOM Sine Start of Weather sVear Scot. 1 This Year UJSZ L-stYear 3S.1S Normal 21 M v Cross of the U. S. S. R. and the AnU-Fascist Committee of Women. Previously, Russia had v an nounced cash gifts for relief for flood sufferers - in Holland ? and earthquake victims in Iran. . . In Russian Limousine . . - ; -Monday,. Gromykoi drove to Churchill's residence In a Russian limousine. Later, in the House of Commons. Churchill j announced asked Gromyko, the Soviet Ambassador, to call upop me so I might express personally my thanks for this act! of kindness which is warmly appreciated by the British Nation. He visited mo at 10 Downing Street for the pur- Dose. lie undertook to convey , my thanks and those of the govern ment to all concerned."- . .. . , The House . cheered - , the . an nouncement. , - . Gromyko took up kls- post here last July amid rpcculatica that the Kremlin would seek to play- upon differences, in the British - Ameri can camp, particularly over Chi na and the Far Xast. tunce then Prime llinister Stalin has indicate ed that his major strategy was based on the premise that the Unit ed States. would fail out wna us Allies. Britain Nationalists Cancel Soviet Peace Treaty By SPENCER MOOSA TAIPEH. rnrmmi M Th. long dead 1945 treaty of alliance man irienasmp Detween Russia and Nationalist China was form- ' , - ally scraDDed Tuesdav hv alissimo Chiang Kai - Shek's gov- ernmeni in a coia war move with hot overtones. Repudiation of th riofimrt narl technically Dut the Natinnalict position to sanction the bombing w. e unmese tnangchun Rau way in Manchuria which is feed in war ' sunnlies mad In Riii to Chinese and Korean Red forces in Korea.. ' Also it would technically permit Chiang to apply mihtary pressure against the Soviet naval bases of Dairen and Port Arthur in Man churia or-take part in United Na tions Derations aeainat th nnH, if such a decision were reached by -L. 1 . A . . V me . international organlzauon. -.; me repudiation embraced the entire trcatv. tnrlnr!inr tiBt tvr. ' tlon in Which the Nationalists tok. ognized the Independence of Out- er jviongona. me Nationalists served notice thpv nut.. Mongolia - as part of China. i : Thus, from Taipeh'a . viewpoint Nationalist guerrilla raids against uuter Mongolia would be legal. theoretical f right now. i In Washington, U. S. officials " looked on Chiang's action as. large ly a ffesture which nut th Hinin. matic record straight and helped : morale. Autnoriues aoubted that it had any connection with talk -of a naval blockade, or Nationalist plans to raid the mainland. j '.. m , 4 F-84 Jets in on Way to Europe ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. CA Ft - U. S. F-84 jet fighters, part of a flight of 16 en route to EuroD. were involved in weekend acoi dents. , One pilot was killed, one ia missing over the Atlantic and the other two escaped serious injury, j Capt D. M. Tooke Jr.. 32. soa of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Tooke of Tyler, Tex radioed from over ths Atlantic that 'his engine quit and he planned to bail out when the plane descended to 5,000 feet i He was - about ' 100 miles south of Greenland. Search planes, ham pered by bad weather, have found no trace of . the plane or pilot The other -three planes crashed Saturday near the Goose Bay Air Base in Labrador. They were re turning to Goose Bay after their flight leader reported his auxiliary fuel tanks were not feeding prop erly. While making a ground radai approach in formation, the lead er's craft ran out of fuel. All thre S lanes struck . the ground about miles east of the air base. A Goose Bay rescue helicopter located the two surviving ' pilots within zo . minutes. One was re moved to the base Immediately, while ' the helicopter crew chief. Airman First Class Thomas Mil lett of Palmyra, Me., remained with the other. Bad weather prevented the hell- copter from making a second trip Saturday. MiHett administered first aid to the Injured pilot and rigged a shelter from the wreckage as a protection . against below freezing temperatures. They were rescued Sunday. The third plane and its dead pi lot were found Sunday. The Air Force notified Mr. and Mrs. Tooke that their son Is miss ing. ,: . , Names of the other pilots have not yet been disclosed. Pendleton Police to Wear Western Garb PENDLETON (fl Pendletof plans to add a touch of the West to its police force new summet uniforms featuring a modifiel cowboy cut shirt and trousers and a modified Western hat. It will be the first change from the year-round blues which the force has worn. Daily Spoiler! (The following words are tmoES those from Which will bo ebose-i the -word for the 1&53 Oreroa. Statesman-KSLM Eptlllzs Con test for 7th gad fa grsicrs tl Marlon, Poli and part cf rtnllJ Countyt .' -" - ' " i( tfliciehcy -1 wildernest ' mlracl ' - pirate ; ; endurance ; ' elementary" mercury ' resident -existence ' pickle exhibit refuszl eligible mineral harm nitre r , - ' - msjori'.'j Acc idents v