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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1953)
1 Thm Statesman, Salem, Oregon. Friday, March 27, 1353 RresGsifc . Aet. Senna, 5 Br DOUGLAS B. CORNELL : WASHINGTON l President Eisenhower 114, - Thursday the ' present ammunition situation in Korea is perfectly sound. . This was the first definite word from the White House that the President believes - ammunition shortages have been corrected suf ficiently to handle present scale eombat operations. - j The President said he had : checked with the military and had been advised emphatically that the yieldiag of Old BaMy by U. S. Divorce Rate Continues to Rise in - The ratio of divorces to mar riages in Marion County increased again in 1952, according to a tab ulation ust completed by the1 clerk of the Circuit -Court's de- nartment of domestic relations. . - The increasing ratio of the past two years Is due both to a slight rise in number of decrees and a steady drop in number of mar riages licensed in, this county. . Number of divorce complaints filed last Tear, however, declined from 419 to 408, the first drop In . fiveyears. - The court -in 1952 granted 287 ; divorces, of which only 58 were -contested .by the defendant spouse. This was equal to 38 per cent of tha year's 787 marriage licenses issued. In 1951. there were 285 da- ereea. 32 ner cent of the 828 mar Hive. In 1950. it was 282 de cree or 27 ner cent of 947. The county's record number of divorces in a year is 514, set in 1946. The trend then was down ward until 1951. . TV Problems' For Eyed at Clinic Problems connected "with the ro posed expansion of television ! the Willamette Valley were dis cussed by a group of approximate 'Sy 108 television salesmen, dealers Sid service men at the Marion otel Thursday night ' The clinic meeting lor TV rep resentatives from Marion and eight surrounding counties was directed by John Gaviezel, Crosley Manufacturing Corporation's new TV market manager The meeting revolved principal ly around all-channel tuning, in ; regard to the projected television stations to be established soon in this area and other potential val ley TV transmitters. ' Gaviezel also pointed out -that there were 525 lines to each TV picture interlaced, and that TV sets received 30 pictures of 350,- 000. dots each second,, and com ' men ted: ' !-' s . : "There isn't a bad television aet made If it will really repro duce picture and sound but some are better than others." . V- The rhinoceros is herbiverous.' DANCING .. IS FUN! ! try a lesson O FREE o Private or Class PAUL ARMSTRONG -STUDIOS 15S Sv Liberty 1 Fhi. S-75ZS . Open 10 "TO 10 Schaefer's For functicmcd dturbemcea. nervous headaches, nervous IrrUabClry, excitability, sleep- $1.C3-$1.75 - Schaofers . " Brng Slore '. Open Dally. :7:3 A3I.-S TX. Sundays, 9 AJkf. - 4 FJH. ' 135 N. Commercial . : Lsiarrf To Dane fOiilYiSi; Even - beginners go - dancing after their very first lesson. Free Dancing -Parties - ; . ..; 'Weekly -' r rJtmod. noW. ; v : y . Join Jn the ftm : . ; DAKCEi STUDIOS ' Gpem It A. IL U II P. a 47T S. CommX Fh. 4-43C2 County Valley Asserts Ike troops' In Korea had no relition to an ammunition shortage. Eisenhower -said, too,' there- is no , conflict between himself and Secretary of - Defense Wilson over maintaining U. S. combat strength at present levels, although desper ate efforts are being made to stpp the government's in-the-red spend ing. ' '-.'-..; y-S'-,.. . -.,. . The briskly- paced news confer ence covered these additional high lights:; ; , 1. After the Kansas legislature and courta pass on the case, the chief executive win make up his mind about Wesley Roberts, the Republican national chairman who la under fire zor an ii,wo iee m the sale of a hospital to the state of Kansas.' Eisenhower said he won't defend anybody who turns out to be guilty but his philosophy always has been not to condemn someone un til the charges have been proved. 2. Eisenhower isn't going to ac quiesce in the building up of claims for vacation time by top level government officials. As he sees it. their responsibilities are always with them and he -doesn't see bow theyj can take, leave. - That was a pot shot at Truman administration officials, including eight Cabinet members, who col lected $700,000 for leave they had not used. Ai:f-or I -1. Coneress wffl. be asked in day or two" for - legislation setting up a commission to study the proper division of functions be tween federal, state, and -municipal governments, and even private enterprise. C: On the issue of a Korean am munition shortage, recently dram atized by the former 8th Army commander. Gen. i James van Fleet. Eisenhower said he has been told the present situation Is perfectly sound, considering the type of operation now going on. ' He said he personally hasn't checked on every caliber of am munition and he couldn't say that ever field commander would have no criticism of supplies he nev er knew one who didn't. But he repeated that the situation is per fectly sound with relation to pres ent operations. So far as-.be knows, Eisenhower said, there is no conflict between his telling , reporters last week there would be no reduction in American combat strength and Secretary Wilson's idea of skele tonizing divisions at horn, to bring about a reduction In the number of persons in uniform. - , Patient Stabs 11 at . SEATTLE (JB A patient crazed by imagined fears went berserk at a tuberculosis hospital Thursday and stabbed 11 persons before a young priest talked him into submission. The knife wielder, Esteban Maranitan Rucero, 37, a Filipino, told authorities I lost my mind. Two 'fellow patients at Fir land Sanatorium were knifed, one crit ically. The other victims were hos pital employes.' " Dr. Roberts Da vies, medical di rector at the county institution north of Seattle, said - Rucero appearing normal was visiting another patient in a two - bed room. The doctor said Rucero sudden ly whipped out a knife, ' walked to the second bed, and stabbed patient in the chest. . Then he walked down the ward. stabbing another patient and em ployes who tried to stop him. ' "He. just flicked, the knife Into each one." Dr. Davles said. For an hour Rucero held , off employes and doctors who cor nered him in a corridor. Then Father James KneHeken, zs-year-oia priest, arrived in re sponse to an emergency can. Father KneHeken persuaded Ru cero to ride, to Jail in the priest's automobile driven by a sheriffs deputy, but. the patient refused to give up his long-hladed knife until he reached the jau. . Detective Sgt. Harold , Wieland said Rucero told him nurses and patients were ''insulting me. They were going to km me. They were talking about me and they tried to give me a shot last night1 that would kill i me.. I lost my mind." ' - : Rucero, a farm laborer, and can nery worker, had been at the san atorium eight months. Wieland quoted him as sayin&r he kept the knife in a bag at the hospital aver since ne arrived. GIRLS WANTED To train U be prfeslonal mo dels. We getyoa modeling Jobs npon completion of yeixr train ing, v r! J0JW.1AR STUDIOS C77 S. ComX Ph. 4-4351 Knife-Wielding Seattle - - 2i Annuel - : r ' . : scneoL nm miD sndu - -; r- .'. .' ; . Cponaored by 1 I lo Ccioi : . -. r ; A3 proceeds po tay Gas Pipeline To NW Slated By Contractors By JOHN KAMFS WASHINGTON W Contractors said Thursday they ' would drill natural gas wells in Colorado and New Mexico and build a pipeline to carry the fuel to 1 the Pacific Northwest.- - They testified at a Power Com mission hearing on applications to pipe gas to Washington and Ore gon that they would do the work for Pacific Northwest Pipeline Co., which proposes to develop the San Juan Basin field and build a 2,000- mile pipeline. ; John -J. Moran, veteran driller from Wichita Falls, Tex., said his company would undertake to drill in the San Juan Basin field for 174,000 a well. ' , Moran said that Moran Brothers which he heads as president,: has completed IS gas producing wells at San Juan and has four rigs working in the field. Robert Thomas of Fort Worth, Tex., general manager of River Construction Co., testified his firm would lay the pipe for 35 million dollars, the construction cost esti mated by Richard D. Ricketts, who designed the proposed line. Thomas said his company would bid. if Pacific gets the necessary license for the pipeline, on the laying of the entire pipeline. The from Ignacio Colo., through parts of Utah. Wyoming and Idaho, to Portland, Ore., Seattle and BeU ingham. Wash. - Laterals would extend to the dry Piney Gas field and Rock Springs, Wyo., and to Spokane, Walla Wal la, Wena tehee and Hanford, Wash. Both Ricketts and Thomas used airplanes to look over the proposed pipeline route. Neither inspected the route on the ground. , Ricketts estimated the pipeline .ff. ..h.i n, ' h. sent three other engineer, over th. I . - . m. am a CU UUVV VUICI TEUalim jUTVA WW route in cars to confirm nls, esti mate only. Minor changes were made in the route over mountain ous country as a result of inspec- noa on the around. Ricketts aald. on on the ground. Ricketts said. Thomas said his eomnanT would! bid only on clearing of the pipeline m w right-of-way. installation of pipe bought by Pacific, and underwater river emsslnrs. I Pacific's project would eost - : - . . I OOul 2UV mil lion aOiiarS. JJITUmX 1 of 480 wells, the objective at snl Juan, would cost 35 million at I 174.000 each. Construction of jo compressor 1 stations and gas processing plants, 1 plus pipeline materials and pipe-1 une consrrucuon costs wouia wingi the total to about 200 mullon. Burma Seeks urn, ion ainst g UNITED NATIONS. N. T. (I) Thr.. .r, -w,. rwj-. tal issue, into the already boiling U. N. cauldron ThursdayT luTZiZ v a. ay-v it i tutu ew ayt. ivum ew -t pBr thfiu.HM, n-r.i a..mM ma's Foreign Minister Sao Hkun Hkio urged the U. N. te condemn rhinr k-oIjchv. wn m.u act As Lilian na government for allegedly di- customary Russian tactic, of oppo recting acts of aggression by Qu-,in to Wet nese guerrilla forces. v - These troops have been in Bur- ma sine their defeat by reds In China in 1948. . The American and British dele- s-atinns here would mrt mmmnt nurma'a .on BTH-ntf h. T,..tvi inT.ATMn. from their awernments. -A Na - nnaHt fThfna nn1reTn at T.U neh. IPormn.. uM hi. m.m. VTH .1. .r nes, in Burma. - The Rangoon cable asked that the case be brought up before the uie case um dtouuh up oeior. m end of this session of the Assem- back its target date for closing to April 15 because of a heavy , load of world issues. v Burma's complaint comes into the category of hot East - West feurfina- whirh h. lr.t th. tt m cracklinar for the cast several weeks. - " i - It especially - puts the United States and her Western allies in a hvk.v. a v.. .... barrassing no matter what action is takenTsinc. tteerSan? su? port the Formosa government and yet have recently signed a mutual security pact with Burma after long, delicate diplomatic negotia tions. ''- - ... . 'The Soviet bloc is almost" certain-to support Burma's charges and try to. make propaganda hay J out of it - - ' uurma nroxe on au relations with Chiang's government on For mosa and gave formal recognition long ago to the Red regime in Pel ping. - Burma last year accused the United States of arming and sup porting: the guerrillas, who have been operating under the com mand of Nationalist Chinese Gen Li Ml . in Burma-China border areas since they were thrown out of Yunnan .Province by the Chi nes Communists la" 1949. - The U. S. denied the charges and since that time relations be tween Burma, and the U. S. have gradually 'improved. - j Formosa is 243 miles long and 88 miles across at its widest point. 12 : rsSt iar..ttdj- clUirsa. ' ! T V Prefers U.S. NEW Y.OKK Guri. Lie, the pret ty blende daughter of U.N. sec retary-general. Try sr. lie, has naked f or U. 8. citizenship. A " Nerweigian. ah. has been la America sine. 1941 en a special visa. She Is la her early JtO'a. (AF Wlrephete.) to U. S. Loses in United Nations By TKANCtS W. CARPKNTK U N naited an overwhelm J N. gn: defeat Thursday on a major UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. UT on propaganda campaign, siarv . .i ii . j i - . a'" I here by gime. " .ivm-. - i It was' designed to brand the United States a-s an " aggressor against Iron Curtain countries. 4JZ'm The CO-nauon Political Commit-1 . . . . VTiea stovak- satenite resolution Intro- duced in the U. W. while Stalin reigned but pushed with greater - t 1 t. f, I i Mi nj ine mmumsw aiier iiihwi wvua auwEumwT wok over. The Reds won a small comfort jin the final vote; 14 countries ab- stained, partly because the west had defended Jews and Zionism against Red assaults. Those absUinirur were: Argen tina and Guatemala of the Latin American group and the following Arab Asian countries: Afghanis tan, Burma Egypt. India; Indone- sia, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria and 'Yemen, The majority result, however, was, interpreted by Western dele- gates as a vow oi cwmaenct in uu United States and. the Elsenhower administration's repeated ; state ments that it is ready to meet the Russians halfway and talk peace. The vote came as Andrei T. Vi- shlnsky, former Soviet foreign minuter -who has been named per- ne tdew r Wndg to T- kw"- " i . m . . . . , Part of the Atlantic voyage but I surprisingly cordial during th. trip. I h wiU quickly whetoer i w mwy a softer policy or keep up the w V ? prh?syk res,?lutioa fbow th Malenkov policy would be mild here. It proposed that the N- Assembly caU on th. United States to repeal the 1951 Mutual Security Act which set aside 100 million dollars to help the free 1 Ptiona and assist persons escap- g through the Iron Curtain. " SUSO asxea Ut ASItmUT W . . . . , . uu m inienvrenc ia lam uiernat affairs of , the Moscow bloc lands xne suDversiv. . activities organ- i . . - - - - -- . - Unlted stat Amer- ica. Andrei A. Qromyko, Soviet am bassador to London who has been heading the Soviet delegation until Y"11 -Und- ;.W--that American aourae-uuK ' was an holding up th. peaceful settlement of east-west differences. tt0!0? W thatwhether w S,T "J"'!: the U. S. has to exist in the same world Soviet Union. Ctvexis- feflv caUed LOT? terferenc. in the mmvc. TT 1 New Shewing Open f:4S Stewart Granger, Deborah Kerr TRISONER OF ZEND A" Alse ' Stanley Clements . V "ARMT BOUND nniUE.Itl THE ATI IE 1 1 j"0 "aBBasraW iX Ph. 2-7S2I 1AX1 SAIBtXS. K168WaT tf ! Gates Open 8:44 ' Show at 7:15 : End Saturday t I ..-In Trneoler ! "Montana Belle" Jane RmsseU U. - Wbs - . , : TAHZAN'S ; SAVAGE FUKT" Tenite(FrL) at 70S Our Cerular Color - Cartoon Carnival They Are Comlngt ' Try Brand Poggi Freed After Serving Illegal Term . (Story also on page 13 OREGON CITY UPi A leeal twist Thursday freed Joe Poggi. 57, after more than 24 years in the state - prison.- - Nearly - 20 of these technically were a legal mistake. But before he . left thei court room," Circuit " Judge- Ralph Hol man told him: i - ,: " "You are a fortunate individual. I dont want you to think, society has done you an injustice. In my opinion there was basis - to send you up, as an habitual criminal 25 years ago Z.-l . "You, had - four felony convic tion. But they (the prosecutors) did it in an improper- maimer and this has enabled (Merlin Estep. Salem, Poggi's. attorney) to get you out. In 25 years you should have learned not to steal. None of yoor past crimes was serious and this has gone into-my decision, to turn you lose . . . "But you jnust understand that if you steal again you will go back to prison for life. Next time they will do , a good Jota and nobody will be able ,to get you out," Poggi was convicted in 1928 of stealing about $2.50 worth of wire. He had been in trouble frequently before, and admitted four felony convictions. This led to flung an habitual criminal char against him. Without bringing evi dence to prove these four convic tions, the state convicted Poggi. He- was sentenced to life impris onment. Poggi'e attorney, Estep, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, arguing that the nabttual i i '- t jv v Circuit Jude Rex KimmeU of the Marlon County court granted the writ, which gained Poggi his free- . m " ol . . . . - lj.i:uiu.i . j iiiiilt . imiiin ri 1111. mediately by filing" a new charge . v.lii . i i ,i. , . - . Mm- .! fc. k,,! rvr. - w. r VSZuL.-- . .a - I.xo.. ia M.imM -nii about the old crimes were either ih. ujjn.n absent or dead, Dist. Atty Winston Wi.uv W. iu MUWHAI Bradshaw asked for dismissal of the new habitual criminal charge. This gave Poggt his freedom: - I W T,.. .M UOnU., lie left for saiem, reportedly-to accept a job there. Church Group Honors Press For Coverage TEV7 YrtBIC LB TJm NiHahiI Raiirfoua PuhiiHtr riiM.n rhiir.. day night honored three - news- naners three reiirfon news raw porters -and the Associated Press i their " coverage of reliaious news. ., - , Meeting in RiversIdSChurch Jn its 27th annual convention, , the i was four days nefore the pre council presented S its -J" award of nt hearing Into Hollywood Corn merit and citations to the Nash-1 munism opened and a month after ville (Tenn.) Banner, the Oregon Journal at Portland. Ore., and tha Associated Press. ' - - Accompanying citations went to Religious Editors Bob Bell Jr.r of the Banner, Ernest W. Peterson, of the Journal, and to George w. Cornell, religious news writer of the Associated Press. DtWKtfWM VX SALEM MERCKANTS JWtQCiailVM ALL DAY FRIDAY MM and ey ; Whh CibletCrsvy Downtown on 5tafej . . ' . r . - ' ; , .Wjr Barton at fte Orsan V; - i - Free prize tickets . ":: I, for everyone A T. V. In Marine Dining Room mm WAIF Belated Ban Ends Sale of Peat Moss The Salem Fred Meyer store waa barred by the Southern Fa clfle frm selling a carload of ; seat moss from a car Thursday. Representatives of the SP said , regalatlons .f the Interstate Commission arehlbited snch practice without special inelasUn ef such permission fat the tariff covering the golds. Railroad ei- ficials advised farther that each permissien is never included la tariff. ; - The SF said, however, that peat man had been sold la ear I Mad lots previeasiy in wis area, "ra go to get it, I'd fetch it." -bat could offer bo particular I Long noted for her. acid wit legal reason why It had been permitted. - . ' How come the bar in tola case, thenT Someone objected, it ap- pearea ibwwuj, do wm i( wh went wknewn. Fred Meyer mU flcUU advised that sale of the peat moss by this method had been performed without question at least two years previous. They said that such a method .f sale resulted in a financial saving te the eonsmmer. Nonetheless, the SF says, If Illegal. Film Producer Denies Reds Backed Work LOS ANGELES 11 Simon La- zarus, producer oi the- controvensi I soia. -M a T7 I filmed recently in New Mexico, denied Thursday that the Russian government or Communist Party nrovidd fin.nH.i barWn Mr thi V1VIHKU UUUU.1U WKUUI XVM. UK I . . i uiuuuluuu. The-Russian-born Lazarus. 58. u w t tt- . i . Aj j I tu. rmmltt..- , - ... L..mi STlSS: I v, - w- from any party. We received moo- I w Tr.i w ley from people, lots of people,' I vaaa vv&v t a.wv wo. vwwi. Then, in response to the prodding questions of Rep. Gordon H. Scher-1 er, (R-Ohio), Lazarus added he did not know the affiliation of the peo ple who contributed money for the film "We didn't ask them." He said that the Mine. Mm and Smelter Workers Union did not put up any money for the produc tion, as far as he knew. He said the independent produc tion corporation, which Lazarus formerly headed, borrowed $90,000 for the film, which Lazarus said would be released in about two months. - Lazarus refused, on grounds of I the First and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution, to identify any of his partners in the venture. He I declined even to give the name 1 01 scnprwnier. i He said ne resigned as president of toe corporation last March is. 1 11 presence or me movie corn- I PnJ ouve& v,ity. .. so.., raisea the ire of the committee. Rep. Donald L. Jackson (R-Cal) previously Identified other officers of the corporation as: Herbert Can rMONg MTM James Stewart ' Janet Leigh "NAKED SPUR." -. Mickey Reeney Peggy Ryan - In Technicolor -"ALL ASHORE" M WJI-JhaiU -Hf moNK s-sose v- W I " Academy 'Winner Antnony ntna. . la Technicolor -, "City Beneath the Sea". o - . Dale Robertson silver wrap Tony Martin Ann Miller la Technicolor -- TICKETS TO BROADWAY" . Wendell Corey - In Technicolor -"Great Missouri Raid" nwirt suaiac ' ' Randolph Seott.. ! la Technicolor - "MAN BEHIND THE GUN i Jennifer Joi "RUBY GENTRY Hsy Kids! TcntcrroY - At Neon -"Beys Xaneh" Gentry SZSIALt CAHTOONSl FRIZESl - PLUS! - Larry V.'ootfs end . I!U Ventriloquism! Q&2 ,-ftD 7 fWHIMTM, JjJ a 1 s McCarthy Defender Demands Lady Astor Arrest for Comment WASHINGTON W A Mid-West editor Thursday demanded the arrest of Lady Nancy Astor for her "too bad it isn't poison", crack about a drink sipped by Setu Mc- Carthy R-Wis. and she whooped with delight at the idea. "They wouldn't have to serve a warrant on me." the Viremia-born British viscountess told a reporter. Lady Astor made the gibe about McCarthy when she observed him miaffin a Hrint at . tH hn hv Senator and Mm. Tft R-Ohiiv Wednesday nicht in honor of Pres ident and Mrs Eisenhower. . me call tor ner arrest - came from John Chappie, editor of the Ashland. Wis.. Dally Press. . who fired a telegram to U. S. Attorney Charles M. Irelan here and sent a copy to The Associated Press. The wire said: "I wish to sign a complaint cnarging Lady Nancy Astor with incitement to commit a felony . . -un tne oasis oz the facts as reported by The Associated Press, please inform me if such a war rant WiU be issued if I win si en the complaint and I win go to the proper jurisdiction at Washington ww w aw Irelan told newsmen he had re- ahl, vice president; Kathleen Sims, secretary; Rose Kolker, treasurer, and Robert Gannon, director. Lazarus was shown a Photostatic copy of a $30,000 check made out f'.iollood screen laeenSims tet ftiUdiniT Stf declined to identify Miss Sims 1 .Vil. V T . i t .... . 1 T .r "i.1 n "tu t- lix c uninu mm - aa i 01 P the Mine, Mill and eittr Wnrb-ara TTninn Km V. identified another photostatic .m OI ww.uw cnecK made out to the umon and endowed S union na enaorsed by Jarrico - . v PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY! KSMTC0ti Special Consultant For TJJSSY C0SMHW! Will be in our cosmetic department Friday and Saturday, March 27th and 28th. She will be glad to assist you with your make-up problems. ? t ; $1.25Yussy GINGER SP1CI SOAP . Box off 4 Bars 39c TOILETRY $3.95 Hoating Pad $2.98 25c Ponds Cleansing; Tissue S?17c $3.96Vitarain "A" ZZ7 $1.99 $1.89 Vitamin -$1.89 Vitamin 0-12 $1.24 Dicalcium PhosbhatCc! 79c 50c Woodbury Shampoo 29c $1.89 Value Wooden Clothes Dry RACK : Compactly VARIETY ' . $2.00 Do Raymond - PERFUf.lE Drams OVC TOILETRY : FRESH SHIPMENT, 10c VALUI Irregulars of the west r3 " " ' Box 50 coast's largest seCing lOe t i M cigar. ; , CLJ : $2.45 TOILETRY. opzii to:::s!it hvl 9 Hi n A7 . fFl : rot THtirrr aurftf U J - . H3 1 KITVS TK2 rJSIIT TO UVu7 CUAimT celved Chappie's message, and he commented: - v . x:' r-r' "We will look into it" '.' But he said he would want more facts before saying a warrant would or could be issued. ' - Reached - at a friend's home. Lady Astor broke into peals of laughter when informed of Chap pie's demand for her arrest. . ; That's wonderfuli" she i ex-. claimed. I never realized I bad hit the bull's eye. Let him come on and try. m win, but I dont want to be made a heroine by him I havent got tune." Then the 73-year-old widow of late Lord Astor declared: . Tm not really a Lucrezia Bor gia, you know. I only said it in fun but." she added, "I said what thousands feel. And Tm amazed what backing I've got -from a chance remark. I havent been able to leave the house all day . . dozens of phone calls. " f "Seriously, I didn't say It with any feeling of vengeance, , but I think it does matter to the world to Russia what McCarthy says, and. it's wrong to say anything that would weaken our unity, isn't it?" Lady Astor, who served as a member of Parliament in the Brit ish House of Commons from 1914 to 1945, said she expects to re main in this country for several weeks before returning to her home in England. . AZALEAS 25c and up VARIflG'S NURSERY 1125 Oakhin Ave. Drive H mi. 8. of City Limits on 99. Turn E. i mL en Oak hin (South Village). Fresh Cut King Alfred DAFFODILS Bunch J 2-o. One Dox. V 13 TOILETRY V $1.09 79c TOILETRY VJiclcer Clothes lIAf.lPER Now Only 52.98 VARIETY . Dura Flesh Flash Dulbs :Ss.- 00c PHOTO n nrrr: . uzzzrr