The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, August 25, 1953, Page 1, Image 1

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Ths Orogoa Statesman Salem Ors-goa, Tuesday, Au
7
QMS
I ' I I .1. I
fust 25. 1953 j PRICE 5c . i No. 143
hr-v , rr - - . , lit
.'nip: - ' - -
-.-vtfcin from Tiw4ir classes
display of unusual bookmarks found over a three year period in
library. Shown puttiag P a pair of 3-D glasses is. Sue Barnes, a
Hon was gathered togeiner oy
erlSajUs to Join Husband,
Plans Fight for Child's Custody
UtDCDIld
It may be clean and well venti
lated but that it about an, inai
can be said in favor of the city
Jail which was described in Suh-
day's Statesman oy i wu w
torter and photographer. Of
course to ,many minds nothlag
should be said in favor of a jail-H
the less attractive it is, the bet
ter. However I have never heard
of persons keeping out of jail be-
cause ol its poor Housekeeping
arrangements. Modern penology
puts more emphasis on; bracing
up the wayward than degrading
them by confinement in( depress
ing surroundings. -
Nor should Salem take com
fort that its jail is bettor than
most of its contemporaries. That
Is thin endorsement, : because
most city Jails have a poor repi
tation. The local ; constabulary
which manages -the jail; can be
commended for its efforts to
make the place as tolerable as the
location and facilities permit. Bift
that doesnt make it a place io
show off to tourists or even to
home folk whose natural disp-
lition anyway is to ignore it. I
No. Salem can take no pride la
Its iaiL It is gloomy, without
E roper natural light, i poorly
ghted By electric lights, dingy
even if it is regularly disin
fected. To say this is not to plus
for a country club replacement r
a college fraternity substitute.
Daylight, lots of it, would be a
cleanser and a tonic? morally. as
well as physically. Better plumb
Ing would help; also a cols
scheme that got away prom th
present dull .prison gryj; j 1
The arrangement to detain j$
reniles in close prosaJJiity !
cells for adults is tat ; Counf
uveniles will be better Scared f
n v -ij l :
(Continued on Editorial page
Hero of Floo
ain
HUNSTANTON, England ! W
Cpl. Reis Leming of the U.S. Ait
Force was back at his specialty
Monday rescuing Britons frop
drowning.'. i . I j 4
On Jan. 31: the tall. 22-year-o5j
from Toppenish, Wash. saved 2?
persons trapped by coastal floods
which inundated this summer r
orL Queen Elizabeth II later gavt
Leming the George Meds) for her
Ism. - - J t .: i: t ,: t U
Monday Leming and another holi
day maker went to the rescue of -
man and woman whose ! sailing
dinghy had overturned 109 yar
off shore. Both were brought. fa
safely. . ' - -IS 1 1 ,
"There wasn't really much toU
Leming insisted. "I just happened
to be on the spot and did what I
could to help . .,,Vf I!j v P
1 Animc! Crackers Si
Bv WARREN COOORICH
Af'S 5" fit, :S
tftrt
. W : :
.
'WOW WOULD YCti LI Kfc-f
TAKE A TOP, DARl
W WW A ' " I
i8tieroA.&
; UlHJSuAl BOOKMARKS
'" THIS tiDnAr.v
to mbd can labels and postage
a uorary employe. taBnwnm.rnow
SEATTLE m An -American
mother has made the difficult
choice between life with her Jap
anese husband or her S year old
daughter.
i Mrs. Sylvia McCandless Inoue
sailed for Japan Monday.
Her daughter by a previous mar
riage. Heather Hill, remained be
hind with her grandmother.
Mrs. Inoue's dilemma came rora
a court decision last month that
she could not take Heather out of
the state. The girl's father, Rich
ard V. HOL a Military Sea Trans
portation Service officer, protested
that removal of the girl to Japan
would infringe on his visitation
privileges.
Divorced, Rewed ,
The Hills were divorced two
years ago. Mrs. Hill later married
Or. Shinya Inoue, member of a
prominent Japanese diplomatic
family who has been on the Univer
sity of ' Washington medical school
staff here.
He is to return in September to
the University of Tokyo because,
he said, he wants to make his
training available to his home land.
Mrs. Inoue is preceding him on
the Hikawa Maru because she is
expecting another child in two
months. She will stay with her
husband's parents in Japan.
Aren't Giving Up v
We still hope to be able to take
Heather to Japan to live with us".
the distraught mother told a re
porter. "We certainly aren't giv
ing up and we aren't just deserting
her.
"We have talked extensively with
Mr. Hill's mother and she is going
to take care of Heather. She is a
former nurse and will be able to
give her the care she needs.
Dr. Inoue echoed his wife: We
haven't given up all hope yet.
Short Starts
Blaze at Mill
. A power pole was burned In
half hi the 400 block of Wallace
Road Monday morning and
touched off a small blaze in the
basement of M&E Box and Pallet
Co., 450 Wallace Rd., firemen
said. .
Fire , apparently broke out
when a transformer on the pole
shorted, firemen said. An adja
cent pole prevented the burning
top of the first pole from falling.
A spark, from the fire set
trash burning in the basement
of the box company, but firemen
quickly put it out. -
Portland General Electric Co.
crews were notified and replaced
the burned pole. No power out-
aged was reported.
Firemen were called shortly
after 9 a. m.
Today's Statesman
Section I
Editorials r: 4
Society News 6
Section II
Sports News r- 1-2
flomics . .L -I.--5
larket News, .3-5
Classifieds
6-7'
Barring of Welcomers for Korean War Vets
GausesNear Rioting; Marines Apologize
ALAMEDA, Calif.. Marine
Corps'euards barring wives, sweet
hearts and relatives from welcom
ing two shiploads of returning Ko
rean War veterans precipitated a
near riot at the Alameda Naval
Air Station Monday.
' More than 200 persons broke
through the guard lines as 2,340
jeturnin troops embarked from
the attack transport Henncoa and
Lenawee. But - a second line of
guards, only a few yards from the
marching veterans, brought the wel
comers under control.
. Many of those .en. hand to wel
come the returning troops had tra
velled long distances and had wait
ed for hours at the piers. ;v
Dr., Dew alt Payne Whittier.
Calif., said he had driven all night
to see his son. CpL Richard Payne,
a.
stamps is shewn above part of
books returned, to the Salem city
library assistant. The edd collee-
Latest G
TOUp
OfPOWsQuiet
At Freedom
By MILO FARNETI
PANMUNJOM un One hundred
thirty - six Americans came out
of Communist Korea Tuesday as
the massive exchange of war pris
oners under the Korean armistice
entered its last 19 days.
The Americans, grouped among
400 Allied prisoners liberated, ap
peared healthy, but they generally
were quiet One carried a pet black
and white bird. His comrade in
captivity looked like a magpie.
Also freed were 250 South Ko
reans, S Canadians; 3 Australians,
2 Dutchmen and 1 Greek.
Officers Released
Nine infantry and field artillery
officers were among the Ameri
cans returned to freedom. But
there still was no sign of high
ranking Allied , officers, who ap
parently are being held back; by
the Red until the last . ' "
Overcast skies and a scattering
of rain marked this 21st day of the
exchange in which nearly 2,000 of
3,313 Americans have been re
turned. The Americans jumped eagerly
from the Russian-built trucks, but
Uhere were few shouts.
Wave Red Flags
Some of the North Korean pris
oners going north were unusually
quiet, also. Most of them waved
Red flags.
Peiping Radio asserted "about
400 United Nations" war prisoners
have said they do not want to be
repatriated. The Red propaganda
broadcast did not break down the
figure by nationalities.
The Red radio said the' U. N.
Command, was being informed
through the Neutral National Re
patriation Committee, which will
supervise the thousands of Commu
nist prisoners refusing repatriation.
Bean Picker
Demand Due
To Rise Soon
As soon as warm weather re
turns this week, Willamette Val
ley bean growers will have an
Immediate demand for more than
1,000 bean pickers, the Valley
Farm Labor Council reported
Monday.
'Beans are near-ripe in all sec
tions of the valley from St Paul
to Lebanon, said A. W. Hoerauf
of the council, and some picking
is in progress already. He
emphasized that the first sunny
day will bring with it the need
for pickers.
Information for pickers is
available at the state employment
office, 710 Ferry SL, where
trucks will leave between 5 and
7 a. m. daily for beany ards.
and declared the action was "cri
minal." ..i H ?' ' ? r :
Many of the women were in tears
when they were prevented fronr
seeing the soldiers they had wait
ed for. Mrs. H. O. Perry of Berke
ley,, saw her- son, Lt Charles O.
Perry only long enough for him to
shout that he would be at Camp
Stoneman a couple of days before
h could see her. : ' t
- Two wives. Mrs. Evelyn Brewer
of Danville, Ohio, and Mrs. Dolores
Ramierz of Cupertino, managed to
break past the guards when they
spotted their husbands.
v They: were quickly chased back,
but not before Mrs. Brewer, had
time to hold op her 11-month-old
daughter, Joan, for Pfc. Joseph
Brewer to see for the first time.
After the big row. the Navy slow
ed the debarkina and used a loud
Council to Seek
Salem Stop for
Second A
By ROBERT E. GANGWASE '
City Editor, The Statesman
Salem City Council prepared Monday night to ask the Civi
Aeronautics Board to authorize
Coast Airlines. ,
The ajdermen at a City Hall
J. L. Franzen and-City Attorney
Chris Kowitz to make the neces
sary application to the CAB.
Franzen said West Coast air
service for Salem would mean
faster transportation to the capi
tal city from many Oregon cities
like Roseburg, Coos Bay, Astoria,
other coast points. He said the
city has received many letters
from such cities requesting air
transportation.
Might Regain Tower
, In addition, said the manager,
the West Coast service probably
would give Salem enough air traf
fic to warrant reinstatement of
the Civil Aeronautics control tow
er here.
When the air traffic matter
was discussed last year with West
Coast Airlines officials, they indi
cated they would be willing to
serve Salem but were not in posi
tion to initiate the application.
WCA now flies over Salem in its
Corvallis to Portland route.
"A bid for traffic changes In
busy North Salem also was set
in motion by the City Council as
it adopted two proposals of Alder
man David OUara directed at the
State Highway Department
Chances Sux rested
One suggests that left turns be
permitted from Capitol Street
into r Fairgrounds Road, with
right-of-way to be obtained across
the sharp triangle now formed
by the. junction of the streets at
Hollywood business district.
OUara said the one-way street
plan which has prohibited left
turns there has proved a great
handicap" to Hollywood ratr-
chants and public.
His other proposal Is for a
bUaker light, oe some, other traf
fic safety signal on the Pacific
Highway at Stortx Avenue sear
city limits. He said traffic enters
the city so fast that residents of
the area findm dangerous to get
onto the highway which is their
only access to the city.
Another major traffic change
was proposed by Capitol Shop
ping Center merchants who seek
an additional traffic lane on Mar
ion Street just east of North Cap
itol and signs indicating a right
turn into Capitol is permitted
after stops for a red light This
would require removal of. some
parking spaces on Marion Street
The request was referred to the
city's traffic safety commission
for a report
(Additional Council news on
Page 2.)
More Rains ,
On Schedule
Rain again Monday, coupled
with the-promise of more wet
skies to come, caused some
weather watchers , to speculate
that the rainy season was upon
the valley a bit too early. They
may be right
The weather .map shows that
rain can be expected for the next
three days, just - how much the
weatherman doesnt know yet
. Already the rainfall for the
month has beaten out the normal
for August Fall so far is ' .50
inches against a normal of .49
inches.
Wind Monday reached 22 miles
an hour in early morning and
again near noon. Some farmers
reported their bean poles had
been knocked to the ground. , '
Several short but heavy, show
ers hit the valley yesterday, but
the Weather Bureau measured
only .07 inches. -
speaker aboard a ferry boat to call
out the names of some' of the men
with families waiting. They were
permitted short reunions. By that
time, however, many of the vet
erans bad already been taken
away on buses.
Lt Cmdr W. L. Meissner, In
charge of Navy security, first said
the ban on the traditional welcome
for the troops was the idea of the
Army, which wanted to speed them
to Camp Stoneman for processing.
An Army spokesman promptly
said it was no such thing and a
spokesman for the Alameda Naval
Air Station commanding officer
agreed and apologized.
Cmdr. Robert Farrington, base
executive officer, said it was "not
intended to keep relatives from
greeting , the returning' combat
troop. . . 1
Line
ir
a regular Salem stop by West
meeting directed City Manager
HudldnsFirm
Sells Interests
To Colonial
The Colonial Investment com
pany,- formed two months ago
and with offices at 687 Court
St, has purchased 'the mortgage
loan business of the Charles
Hudkins & Son firm which will
retire from the Salem business
scene next week, - it became
known Monday.
The Hudkins real estate de
partment will be discontinued so
that Ronald Hudkins, the son in
the firm name, can devote his
fall time to farm operation.
Charles Hudkins, who came to
Salem 30 years ago. said Impaired
eyesight made it necessary for
him to retire from business ac
tivity.
(Additional details on page S).
Trace of Girl
Sought in Four
States of NW
PENDLETON (J) A lS-year
old Echo girl, overdue at1 Great
Falls, Mont, on a bus trip from
here, was sought in four .states
Monday. r ... , rf , . h- -.
The drL Barbara Fuechen.
boarded a Greyhound bus here
Friday afternoon and was due in
Great ' Falls the - next ' evening to
visit a married sister. Her mother.
Mrs. George Jefferson, said the
girl had : $45 cash , and a savings
deposit book, and had been told
to go to a theater near the bus
depot during a five-hour stopover
in Spokane Friday.
The girl was carrying a grey
checked coat and wore a grey
shirt, white blouse, golf sweater
and red shoes. She weights 140
pounds and is five feet eight
inches talL t
Two Feared
Lost at Sea
ASTORIA UP) Two men were
rescued and two others were
feared drowned in two boat cap-
sizings ia this area Sunday and-
Monday. ' '
Feared lost were R. G. Eggman
and Gastav H. Nystrom, both of
Skamokawa, Wash., commercial
fishermen whose empty? boat was'
found by a troUer near the mouth I
of the Columbia River early Mon
day. The Coast Guard towed the
craft to Hammond.
When their skiff capsized Sun
day off Chinooki Wash., - Lewis
Miller, 48, Vancouver, was pinned
in pilings and his companion. John
W. Miller. 53, Lansing, Mich.,
clung to the boat Both were res
cued f by the Coast Guard after
their plight was discovered by
persons aboard a cabin cruiser.
Trusty Flees
Prison Annex
State Penitentiary trusty Billy
R. Milligan, 23, escaped from the
prison annex Monday night be
coming the second annex prison
er to make a getaway this month.
Warden Clarence T. Gladden
said Milligan, is a known car
thief and was serving two years
for grand larceny from Malheur
County. He was received at the
prison Aug. 12. 1952 and had five
more months to serve.
Milligan was last seen at 730
p.m. last night and was reported
missing at the 9 o'clock count
Also sun at large rom the an
nex is Virgil L. Crace, 37, who
escaped Aug. . 15. He was doing
five years from Washington
County for larceny by bailee.
Milligan is six feet 4 inches
tail weighs 140 pounds, has blue
eyes and brown hair and a slen
der build. . j- . . ,v.- ' ' ,. -
Converts Want to Stay , .
, SAN FRANCISCO OB - The Pel
ping Radio said Monday ' about 400
United Nations war prisoners say
they do not want to leave Com
munist lands.
Cautious Driver
Locates Leah In
Town Water Line
, - , . , ; i :, .
TAUNTON. Mass. (D Being
careful ' driver, : Eugene Lecuyer
slowed down when he approached
a damp spot in the street
Which turned out to be a good
Idea.'. ; ' .
For after labor crews hauled
Gene's car out of four feet of mud,
be was bailed as the man who dis
covered the leak: in Taunton's 30
inch water main. ! ' ; 1
Six pumps and a fire truck pump
ed all day on the "damp spot"
By afternoon they were still at
it trying to get the mud bole
empty enough to : see whether it
would be necessary to shut off the
.water supply of this city of 40,000
to repair the leak.
Reindictment
If Lattimore
Aim of Appeal
By JERRY T. BAULCH
WASHINGTON UB The govern
ment, which has said it will carry
the issue to the Supreme Court if
necessary, Monday asked the U.S.
Court of Appeals to reinstate four
perjury charges against Owen Lat
timore. The charges were thrown
out by a lower court ,
Monday's 7 appeal .was from a rul
ing last May by U.S. District Judge
Luther W. YoungdahL In quashing
four counts of an indictment Nrhich
accused Lattimore of lying to the
Senate internal security subcommit
tee about alleged Communist
sympathies, the judge said they vi
olated . Lattimore's constitutional
rights. .
Youngdahl let three lesser per
jury charges stand but said even
these may not "pass the test of
materiality so as to present a jury
issue." : He ordered Lattimore to
trial Oct. on these counts.
The government, in asking the
Court of Appeals to overrule Young
dahl, said; be ''misconstrued the
counts so as to create the sew
and spurious issues of free speech,
conformity of ideas. Imposition of
orthodox views, et cetera."
Lattimore, A one-time occasional
State Department Consultant on
Far Eastern affairs, was indicted
last December as an aftermath of
12 stormy days of testimony before
the Senate subcommittee nearly a
year earlier.: ' , i
The subcommittee was trying to
determine if the , Institute of Pa
cific Affairs, - a . private research
organization, had been infiltrated
by Communists and what if any
influence the group had on U.S. Far
East policy. 1
Lattimore has denied all charges
against him, including what he
called the "pure moonshine" state
ment by Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis)
that he was the top Soviet espi
onage agent in this country.
He is now. on leave of absence
from Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, where he has been di
rector of the Walter Hines Page
School of International Relations. ,
Ob Perjury Counts
The principal count which the
government - wants reinstated ac
cuses Lattimore of testifying false
ly that he had never been a sympa
thizer or promoter of Communism
or Communist interests.
nPicfo rf WntA
- " m.
CKrtre DrinL-oi.
UrillKer
Out, From Suicide
. DETROIT Ml John Drake. 44.
fold police Monday the, taste of'
Detroit River water discouraged
him tn a suicide attempt
Officers quoted him as saying
he. jumped into 20 feet of water
because he was "disgusted about
too much drinking." i .
But he swam" back to shore, he
added, because he "got a mouthful
of that water and couldn't swallow
it"
New Pumper Readied for
r
No sooner had Salem Fire Department's shiny new $17400 pumper arrived Monday afternoon when '.
fWmen washes! it down and applied a little elbew igrease. The 750-galIon truck j will be tested -;
Wednesday and ge Into- action La abat lt days. s1,Hre Chief Ellswerth Smith. It will be sta- .
7 tioned at central fire headqoarters. Firemen puttinrij luster on the finish are left to ri'ht: Mel via
Hagedorn, Dick Craven William
Bitter Laiiguagc,
: '.Charges ;Marked
Kpreanis bpeech
By FRANCIS
TJNITEn NATIONS, N. -Y.
Monday it will refuse to sit on
Korean peace conference.
.' Foreign Minister Y. T. Pyun
"appeasing" afid "trafficking"
with ' the Comniunist ' aggressors.
He told the U. $T. Assembly's Po
litical Committee it would be "next
to impossible" qor. his country to
case pan in ine cotuerence witn
India on the U. J. side. .
After the comfnittee adjourned,
CoL Ben. C. Limb, South Korea's
permanent observer at the U. N.
and r a former foreign minister,
told reporters that Pyui. meant to
say , it would be 'impossible" to sit
with- India on the U. N. side. He
said he was making the chanee to
ciaruy the text
Indian Angered
V. K. Krishna
enon, India dele-
gate, -was obi
isly greatly an-
gered at Pyun'i
speech, but he
told newsmen he ,
iad no) comment
He may .speak
late Tuesday or
Wednesday.
Pyun used um
iually bitter lan-
guage to tell the
committee - that
South Korean President Syngmah
Rhee 'did not want India on bis
side at the conference.
Some delegates have said that
Rhee threatened ti boycott the con
ference if India is Invited, but Pyun
and Limb made itklear they would
not object to India! attending on the
Communist side ii India desired to
do so.
May Walk Out
Pyun said after
the meeting that
South Korea has
right to keep
India out of the
ace conference
but that the Rhe
government has
a right to refuse
attend the con-
ference.
He said South
Corea may walk
out of the conference if the U. N.
Assembly sends Ildia to the meet
ing as a part off the U. N. side.
Pyun's blast at India came short
ly after Sen. Alexander Wiley (It
Wis), chairman off, the Senate For
eign - Keiauons ipommittee, ' ap
pealed in a public statement for
India, to withdraw tfrom the heated
contest; .
Indian Delega
Menon'told- t
reporter that Indi
was not with
drawing, inuring
le aayMenon
talked three timd
with . Russian
delegates but ref
sed- to discuss
the conferences, onje of which was
with Soviet Delegate Andrei Y.N
Vishinsky. Y ; i v v s
Vishinsky Is expected Jo speak
Tuesday. He: may afiswer the ques
tion whether the Soviet Union will
attend the . conferepce under the
condition contained in a Western
resolution that if, as an invited
guest of the Comanunist Chinese
and North Koreanf aggressors.
Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodee
Jr., chief U. S. dellgate. appeared
confident after aj weekend vote
count that he has nough votes to
prevent an invitatSpn to India. He
gained public support Monday from
delegates of Domiiican Republic,
Haiti, Brazil and feru.
Victims of Earthquake"
Found Alive In Cellar
- . . -
ATHENS, CreeceluB The Min
istry of Information Said rescuers
Monday found two J women earth
quake victims who Rad beer buried
alive in a cellar fort 12 days. ' .
The ministry, said the two sur
vived by eating raw potatoes and
drinking water thej) found under
ground. The incident occurred in
quake-ridden Argoslion.
Western Interjnational
At Wenatche 3. EtewUton. S.
A Vaaeouver-Victorla (Rain)
Only game scheduled. -
Coast League
At Seattl 1. Portlad 7.
At Lo Angeles 1. (Hollywood 3.
Only games scheduled.
Ivcrson and Dale ,M anion. (Story
1 1 i
W. CARPENTER
UPi , South Korea served notice
the same fside with India in the
' ii ; 1: . a ,
of South Korea accused India ol
Aspirin Pills
1... I ,-i ...
I An 18months-old Salem gin
who got into the family aspirin
bottle died early Sunday at a
Salem hospital. She was Suzanne
Shlpman, one of six children of
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert C. Ship
man, 1850 S. High St '
'The girl's father said the fam
ily discovered what had happened .
too late- for removal of .an es-
timated 13 to 20 ; aspirin pills
from the baby's stomach. Su-'
zanne, who took the aspirin Fri
day afternoon, was placed under
a doctor's care but a poisonous
reaction proved fatal at 1:30 a.m.
Monday, j
Several I hours after the girl
took aspirin she became hysteri
cal, breathing rapidly and acting
in- an excitable manner, Ship
man said. It was then the family I
found out! she and two-year-old
sifter Kay had opened an asDir-
in; bottle and eaten some pills. .
The older girl apparently suf
fered no 1 effects, j ,
. Surviving besides the parents
and Kay are sister Christine 0,
and brothers Randall, 4, David 3,
and James, 4 months.
FuneraH services will be held
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. in
Cl0ugh-Barrick Chapel with the:
Rev. Edward F. Harmon of Ash
land officiating. Interment will be
at Belcrest Memorial Park.
'Pr "'..c- 'i.. jr rt -4 -;' JS ' 1
Raids of Turleli
Plan for Iran
TEHRAN, Iran l i Iran's roy-
alis police have raided hideouts
of th3 Tudeh (Communist) Party,
and! confiscated stamps labelled ' '
Iranian Republic" and 100,009 pro-r
paganda-books. Tehran's military
governor said, Monday.: .
Finding of the stamps was Inter- '
preted as broof of the now-jailed
ex-Premier. Mohammed Mossa
Tot Succumbs
After Eating
Party Reveals
degh, planned to proclaim a repub
lic followinft the flight of Shah Mo
hammed Reza Pahlevi. :
. Brigadier Dadsetan, military gov
ernor of Tehran, said the raids
on jthe Communists were conduct- '.
A Stinrfav! nipht hv now PormW- -
Maj, Gen. "azollah Zahedi's secret:
police.
As c
conaiuons in Iran naa be- .
come morel chaotic. Mossadegh had '
leaned more and more on the o- .
tensibly; outlawed . Communists for , '.
supper:. ! ' .: '
Mi Ii:'.
Max.
Mia.
- at
54
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.on
.oo ;
Salvia
Portland
Saa Frandaco . M
cnicase .
New Vork -j.. .... M
Willamette River
et.
FORECAST (from
U. S. weathet
ju.hu, McNary field.
1 Mostly cloudy today Mith occas
ional light .showers. Continued cool
witii the high today near 70 to 73
and the low tonight near S3. Tem
perature at ISAl a.m. waa SS degrees.
SALEM PRECIPITATION
Sine SUrt f Weathar Year Sept. 1
This Year j Last Year j . JVerraaJ
- .7 ' . V . 43.73 ;) i , 3S.63
Rre Action
i
on Page 1 (Statesman Photo) .'