Ryan Reports on U.S.S.R. e Russian Peool State Grangemaster Elmer Mc Clure writes in the Oregon Grange Bulletin that the "family size farm and the way of life it created, are threatened with ex tinction." He regrets this, thinks America cannot afford to make the transition and says: "The Grange feels that the time has come when we must make a more concerted effort to save the family-size farm and the American rural community." That threat is real, but the means of salvation do not seem to be at hand. Mechanical power applied to agriculture is reducing the need for human labor, mak ing large-scale farming profita , ble and by increasing the capital requirement for farming decreas ing the opportunity for small farm operators. McClure cites census figures to show that two per cent of the country's farms produce more than 25 per cent of farm produce marketed. The so-called family- size farms which are about 50 per cent of the total number produce only about 25 per cent of produce sold. Farming is fast becoming big business from the standpoint of acreage, capital investment and volume of output There is a counter - current, however, such as we have in the. Willamette Valley and other areas of intensified farming. Certain crops, like berries, are grown usu ally on small tracts. Also part time farming is coming in, where persons divide their time between farming and jobs or businesses. The aggregate marketed produc tion of these enterprises, how ever, is relatively small. : It is regrettable to see the de cline of the old-time rural com munity, which was the spring which nurtured chic, political (Continued on editorial page ,4.) Parents to Take Home 2-Headed Styi INDIANAPOLIS Ufi - Mr. and! Mrs. Cecil Hartley decided Sunday! to take, their two-headed son into . their home near Petersburg with i their three other children as soon as Riley Hospital releases him. Sunday was the first time tbej 27-year-old mother, Margaret Hart-1 ley, had seen her 5-day-old son. Hospital officials indicated the baby could be released before long. The Hartleys , were left alone in the room with their malformed child. They remained a short time and showed no emotion when they tame out. i A doctor assured them the child's condition remains satis factory. However, the baby has been given oxygen treatments pe riodically since he was brought here immediately after his birth in a Washington, Ind., hospital Dec. 13. The hospital said the oxygen has been administered because blood circulation hasn't been nor mal on the left side. The mother was unconscious when the baby was delivered by Caesarean . section. Until Sunday, she bad seen only a photograph of the baby. Dr. J. W. Elbertthe Hartley' family physician at Petersburg, lnd., said Mrs: Hartley has recov ered from the birth. Dr. Elbert said he will come to the Indiana University Medical Center here "some time this week" to discuss the baby's case with Riley Hospital doctors. The hos pital said its examination of the baby has been completed. Throng Pays Final Respects To Sen. Walker Scores of persons paid final respects Sunday to State Sen. Dean H. Walker, prominent Ore gon legislator who died early Thursday, as his body lay in state at Clough-Barrick Funeral ChapeL Filing by the casket between 10:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. were many of Walker's legislative as sociates and prominent officials including Sec. of Interior Douglas McKay, Gov. Paul L. Patterson and Rep. Walter Norblad. Private services were held later at the Walker family residence in Independence with the Rev. Charles S. Neville officiating. Pri vate committal services were in ML Crest Abbey Mausoleum. Animal Crackers Bv WARREN GOODRICH "Ntver mmd.' Restless Broken Pledges Editor's note: William L. Ryan it a native New Yorker' wha for several years has made a intensive stady of Pravda aad other Russia, publications, analyzing their contents for The Associated Press. He has traveled along the Iron Curtain from Finland to Iran, and this fall he went Into the Soviet Union Itself. He spent three months in Moscow and traveliag CM miles to , eight of the Soviet republics. Back In the United States and free from censorship, he now writes of the things he observed and heard la the V. S. S. R. This Is the first of six articles to appear this week. By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Foreign News Analyst The anger of Russian house wives set wheels in motion in the fastnesses of the Kremlin itself. Last spring was a bad time for potatoes and beets and cucumbers to disappear from the city's mar kets just after Stalin's death and on the edge of a struggle for power. When the Secret Police of Lav- renty Beria gripped the country J nuusewue ;aiasna ivanuvaa muttered comments could be ig nored. But Stalin has gone now, and the Secret Police were no longer the reliable instrument of control they had been. Red People Restless Something new was happening. And the Soviet people, more and more openly, were beginning to show signs of restless annoyance. The government of Premier Georgi Malenkov needed every ounce of loyalty and support it could muster. And so the new consumer program was born, to promise more and better goods for the public. Even today. Natasha Ivanovna's anger keeps lights burning late in Communist Party headquarters throughout the Soviet republics. Moscow is angry and anxious. The agriculture program, the basis of Premier Malenkov's promise of better living standards in two to three years, has gotten off to a slow and faltering start. Weary of Promises The Communist Party Central Committee is building fires under its party branches throughout the Soviet empire, to get the program moving, to avoid failure for Mos cow's promises. People of the So viet Union give evidence that they are weary of broken promises. But the i.b ahead is one of ar palling magnitude and dishearten- ing contradictions. In September party Secretary Nikita S. Khrushchev admitted that some areas had livestock be low "1917 levels. The party de-; mands a 20 per cent increase in livestock by next October. To Increase Slaughter' But at the same time, the party calls for a 37 per cent increase in meat available to the public. Can even the Communist Party attempt to increase the slaughter of herds and still increase the number of livestock? Can it kill calves and still in crease the output of milk? Can it produce more leather and more hrric fit th camp timo i wctorn ifri...u,.roi .4 ! estimates, on the basis of figures ; P"bab'y du to be halted presented at the September meet- . , ing. that at lAast millinn hDA of catle died in the Soviet Union in the winter of 1952-33 because j of lack of fodder and shelter,! overcrowding in winter shelter i and disease. He estimates that the same number are doomed this winter. Personal observations in a half dozen Soviet republics indicates the Kremlin's troubles are far from over in this respect. Animal Shelters Bad In mountainous Kazakhstan, swept by icy winds from the Si berian steppes, the few animal shelters are fantastically bad and i fodder bases inadequate The livestock-fodder program al- sc,:ms lu . ' 's ""'"'".j to the concern of the central party . Recently leading agricultural j workers, farm chairmen, machine specialists, heads of departments. Communist Party members and "guests" from Moscow were called into conference in Alma Ata, Kazakhstan's capital, to hear the agricultural situation get a thorough going over. Herds on Decline They were told the number of head of cattle, sheep and goats. In 191 7, an Oregon Senator Came Close to Being the Only Solon to Kill a Colleague on the Floor of the U.S. Senate By A. ROBERT SMITH Sutesmaa Correspondent WASHINGTON Sen. Harry Lane (D-Oreg.) walked onto the Senate floor with a dagzer ready for instantaneous use. His eye was rigidly trained on . . . ,Sen. OUie James (D-Ky.), whose hand was on the revolver hidden benea.th the flowing tail of bis frock coat James had his eye on . . .- Sen. Robert LaFollette - R W'is.) who was staging a dra matic fight with - President Woodrow Wilson which had all E the passion, of today in an ear lier era when politicians backed . up their flaming oratory with : whatever weapons - they could command. May Aid Perspective j This chapter from American l; history. 36 years old, may aid those who. wish some per? pec- ' tive for today's . bitter - battles within and between our major ; parties on issues made extreme ly sensitive by serious interna tional problems. As now, wax or peace seemed at stake. to far from increasing, 'had decreased since 1940. So did the milk yield and the wool yield. They, were told that although almost 30 mil lion acres of grass was mown for hay this year, only 2.3 per cent of it was stacked. Machine tractor station special ists were lambasted for poor use of technical facilities, or violating their contracts with collective farms, for slow progress of mech- anization Under Pre-War Level In the public library in Tash kent, capital of agricultural Uzbek stan, a chart shows that the num ber of dairy cattle in that repub lic is still below the pre-war level. In cotton-growing Tadjikistan, la borious manual labor methods are still predominant, though mech anization has. been promised over and over. Only as one travels westward along the fertile Black Sea coast of Georgia, along the Don River and into the Ukraine, does farm ing begin to look efficient There is a long way to go in the re publics of centarl Asia and much of Great Russia. Waste in Transport Even where farming is better on the whole, transport is so bad and this is true of most Soviet agricultural areas that much waste is encountered in getting produce to market. The party, faced now with Mal enkov's broad promises, is almost beside itself in the effort to get the program rolling. There can be no turning back, because this pro gram has been so widely adver- ! Used. One can see it on billboards and j in the press, hear about it con- j ! stantly on the radio and blasting 1 i into the streets from loudspeak ers . T i r l l Monumental Problems There are monumental problems shortages in manpower, labor- saving machines, fertilizers and animal fodders. There is the great j machinery bottleneck. For exam j pie, the Krasnodar plant for self I propelled combines met only 30 per cent of its goal in September. Something has had to give away. Since the government is loathe to slow down its heavy 'industry pro gram" it has been looking for man power by halting the "veliky stroiky" great projects so dear to Stalin's heart. It is fairly certain, for example. that the Turkmen Canal project has been stopped. Other big labor- consuming programs also are I umurriiw . nuw a wuiikn mokes ends meet. ' C.-jw.t 17rfcVOClcf kIlvl v JL UlULctOl For Northeast United States By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A batch of cold out of Canada sent temperatures tumbling Sun dav in the northeastern tip of the United States. And the U. S. weath er Bureau forecast snow over much of the norlhern area from the Rockies to the northwestern nroot , poo;n Arctic air sent thermometer readingg p,ummeting in northern New York state and New England. Readings of 5 to 10 above were re ported in upper New York and Vermont. Colder weather was ex pected to hit the eastern Middle Atlantic states. . Colder air also was pushing ino the northwestern and Northern Plains states. It was much cold er than Saturday in the Dakotas and western and central Nebraska. Cold alerts were given for western Kansas and Northwestern Okla homa. It occurred early in March, 1917, just btfore Congress was, due to adjourn, as was then automatically determined by the -calendar. Wilson, in desperation to protect American merchant fleets against the Kaiser's U-boats, had asked Congress at the last minute for approval of a bill permitting merchant ships to b armed. ' Isolationism was then more prevalent than today, especially in the heartland of America whence came Bob LaFollette to lead the duel on foreign policy with Wilson. LaFollette argued that the armed ship bill would only lead the United States in evitably into outright participa tion in the Great War that had engulfed all Europe: He vowed to filibuster the bill to death by obstructing a vote until the hour of adjournment was nigh. Shakes Mane ; Jx- As LaFollette stood in the chamber, shaking . his : great mane for emphasis, seeking rec ognition by the vice president. Sen. James moved menacingly Due 12 Burglar MILWAUKEE, Wis. Trim 17-year-old Patricia Ann Tratnick was arraigned in Milwaukee, Wis., district court on a bur glary charge. Detective Lieu tenant Charles Nowakowski said she admitted IS burglaries since April with total loot of about $1,000. (AP Wirephoto to The Statesman). 4-Way Wreck Near Silverton Hospitalizes 5 A four-way wreck, including a crushing headon collision be tween two cars, sent five persons ' to Silverton hospital and dumped a truck load of cattle north of Silverton Sunday morning. Soupy fog which covered near-' ly all of Western Oregon Sunday ; morning was blamed by police j for the mishap about a half mile ! north of Silverton on the Silver- ton-Oregon City Highway. j Taken to Silverton Hospitals were driver Charles Earls, 35, j Brooks Route 1, his wife, June j Earls. 34. son David Earls. 16.1 103RD YEAR father Dave Earls, 70, and Gene By RICHARD R. KASISCHKE Eby, 16, Scotts Mills Route l, MOSCOW m Pravda has operator of the second car. All (blasted Soviet movie distributors suffered cuts and bruises and f0r sending out Id American pic Earls and Eby were released i tures featuring Tarzan, whose after treatment. A second tarls son was uninjured, James D. Painter of the Silver ton police department who was an estimated 150 yards from the collision when it occurred said Earls, heading toward Silverton, was attempting to pass another ; car A stock truck, carrying 17 head of cattle and driven by D. G. Duchat, Sublimity, braked to avoid the pileup and skidded in to a roadside ditch, dumping the cattle into an orchard. None of the animals, enroute to Stavton. was apparently injured. A third ' car also went into the ditch be- hind the truck but was only slightly damaged. The pileup blocked the route for nearly an hour. Both cars in the collision were demolished. Storm Center on Way to Valley A storm center, reported about 200 miles northwest of here early this morning, is expected to bring rain and gusty winds to the Sa lem area by early afternoon, weathermen at McNary Field predicted. High temperature today is ex pected to range near 45 degrees and a cool 37 is forecast for to night Some patches of light fog are possible early this morning, weathermen added. QUAKE RECORDED BERKELEY, Calif. UP - The University of California seismo graph recorded a sharp local quake in the vicinity of Holister, 80 miles south of Berkeley at 5:30 p.m.. Sun day. No damage was reported. toward him, one hand on a re volver under his coat. The Wis consin senator's son and aide, Bob Jr., stood in the Senate doorway watching with horror, wondering whether he had left his father dangerously defense less by an earlier decision to remove the revolver that his father ordinarily carried in a light traveling bag which was then in the corridor for emer gency use. . - " , ... , But - James never drew his gun nor would he have had a chance to fire had he drawn. At least this is the assurance LaFollette later received from his friend and fellow isolation ist, Sen. Lane of Oregon, who was alert to James from ' the start In the biography of the elder Lafollette J just published by McMillan Co. and written by the senator's widow and daugh ter, there is recorded this pas sage in which Lane, a physician and graduate of Willamette University, told LaFollette how he had been set to defend the filibustering orator with a sharp . .... PAGFS Th Oregon Statesman, Salem Oregon, Monday, December 28, 1953 Holiday Fatality Pace Cut By The Associated Press Christmastide's violent death toll in the U. S. mounted to 648 Sunday night as the clock ticked away final hours of 1953's 3-day holiday period. Since 6 p.m. local time Thurs day 473 persons died in traffic: crashes across the nation. An other 76 lives were lost in fires and 99 persons perished in mis cellaneous mishaps. California with 35 and New York with 34 led the slaughter on the streets and highways. The National Safety Council had predicted at least 510 would die in traffic mishaps before the holiday period closed at midnight Sunday. Death Pace Slows . As the traffic fatality death pace slackened, however, the council said it appeared as though the total toll "may stay well within the original estimate of 510, instead of setting a new all time record." The record death toll lor a similar 3-day holiday was set at Christmas time in 1950 when traffic deaths numbered 545. That figure was only 11 short of the all-time 4-day high of 556 for the Christmas holiday in 1952. No Fatalities As the holiday period neared its expiration, Nevada, North Dakota and Wyoming reported no fatalities of any kind. In one Ohio traffic tragedy fiv Toledoans perished when their auto which police said was traveling at a 75-mile an hour clip plunged off a Toledo bridge into the Maumee River. Tarzan's Roars Said Scaring Russian Pigs jungle roars are scaring the chick ens and pigs on collective farms. The official newspaper of the Russian Communist Party de manded that Soviet peasants, in stead of being required tQ watch Americ'an cowboy and pirate fj,mSi "trashy stuff like Tarzan and be shown serious films about Rus- sian scientists, doctors, and teach- ers. ' Tarzan travels from village to : village, from settlement to settle ' ment, from town to town on his ! l'4-ton truck," Pravda said. "His w"a storek is even month in Voronezh heard this (290 miles southeast of Moscow. Planned Weeks Ahead "His visits are planned weeks ahead of time. And when his screams die away, another trashy film will go into the villages where from the continuous screaming and shooting chickens are awakened from their sleep and panic is caused among the live stock in the barns and villages 1 at night.1' . , The old Tarzan films starring Johnny Weissmuller, made years ago in jhollywood. have been the most popular movies in the Soviet Union for several years. Form Long ' Lines The Russians have been form ing long lines in front of Moscow theaters to see the four Tarzan films taken by the Russians as war booty from Berlin. No fees are paid to the American produ cers for use of the films. Since the Soviet film industry makes no pictures on cowboys and pirates also blasted by Pravda it is clear that these also are American-made pictures.) pointed rattail file: "1 had this file in my office, and I slipped it into my pocket If you slip this file inside a man's collarbone on the left side you can reach his heart with one thrust and he will never move again. Within Reach "When you were trying to get recognition and Hitchcock was recognized, Ollie James, who was carrying a gun, started across the chamber toward you with his hand under his coat tails, but he would never have drawn that gun.Before he could have done so 1 would have stopped him with this file. I was right within reach of him, all the time." 5 v , LaFollette ron the day, backed by Lane and Sens. Wes ley Jones (R-Wash.), George N orris (R-Neb.) and a handful of others. The bill died on March 4, 1917, but not without Wilson turning on a withering blast which has since become a famous Wilsonian quote: "A little group of willful men, representing no opinion but' fOUNDID 1651 Ifraf3 Mother, 4 Children Die in Fire rill I -, - v. - . . k ' - V i " ' - V- FLATROCK, Mich.-Only the brick wall, stand where Mrs. Mary ! Hurst, 25, and her four small children perished in the flames of their home in Flatrock, Mich., on Christmas dav. Townsneople ! inspect the gutted home. (AP Wirephoto to The Statesm- j r Censors, Jane Film Needs Cut; By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD CSVJane Russell in 3D is the subject for Howard Hughes' latest assault against the movie industry's self-censorship code. RKO, which is operated by the it will open "French .Line" in St. picture has not received the seal Salem Busy As Travel Hub Over Holidays through Salem were jammed ' th CPS to ny tbeater where it is with homeward-bound holiday ; sn(mn- travelers Sunday, according to, Miss Russell sided with the cen bus, rail and air line passenger sors. Marking her first break in a agents. ! 13-year association with Hughes, Nearly all bus schedules both j north and southbound were run ing three and four sections all day Sunday, Miss Susan Nelson. Greyhound passenger agent, re - vcaled. Most sections were re- ported carrying capacity loads. Reservations on southbound Southern Pacific coaches are sold out through Jan. 5, the passenger agent reported, and added that about the same situation exists with Pullman space. Coach space is still available on northbound trains, he said Or.lv nnp United Air T.inen flight left Salem Sunday because of poor flying weather here and in the southern Dart of the val- ley. The one flight, which left at 3:45 p.m. northbound, was carrying a full load of passengers, United officials said. One flight bypassed Salem Sunday because of fog and three flights were cancelled. A north bound flight, originating, at Med ford and due at Salem this morn ing has also been cancelled. Today's Statesman Editorials, features 4 Society, women's .6, 7 Valley news 7 Sports 8, 9 Comics 9 Radio. TV 10 Classified ads 10, 11 their own, have rendered the great government of the United States' helpless and contempt ible.' - i Zimrnevrpaa Note Bui other .events of the hour were sweeping America to war. The incredibly stupid Zimmer man note, in which Germany proposed (b Mexico that she could have Texas as the reward for allying herself with Ger many against the U. S was made public March 1. The Rus sian revolution was launched March 17. And .during that month five American merchant chips were sent to the bottom by German submarines. ' -Wilson and a fair share of the : populace had had enough. So on April 2 ' the president asked Congress for a declaration of war, and in the wee hours of . April 6 he received it - For -all the passion of the Senate debate only a month earlier, it quickly became but a blinking buoy in a sea thrashed into a whirivooi events of greater moment and more last ing significance.' mum u Russell Agree RKO Adamant Texas millionaire, has announced Louis next Tuesday although the! of approval from the Production ; code Administration, ine 3D musi cal stars Jane Russell and Gilbert Roland. The Breen office, which must see all Hollywood films before the seal is given, has asked Hughes to make certain cuts. An office spokesman was quot ed as saying there -were "some glaring breast shots of Jane Russell and a dance sequence by that lady during her rendition of 'I Want a Man,' . . . that will certainly bring i sn5. sai thoroughly agree with the j Breen office It is the public s safe- p.ad .and l,he a!t?rs.s t00' l. c,er: ; "V"1 00 nwi 7ani a5;oc,aiea a"-v P'ure. euner ior my,,, other conciusion. y'" i " ' ! "c",cu Asks Cuts Made "I fought and beefed and argued over scenes in the picture. I have no more say-so over what finally appears on the screen than I did in 'The Outlaw. I hope and pray the studio will see the light and 1 'ude u,e culs requwicu. i.. ,i i i j .s,h add.?d that the incident I w'!l certainly color any chances "4 '"'S"'" " " Her contract ends in February. RKO had no official comment, except that the picture will go into general release after the first of the year. The Breen office, which dosn't like to wash the industry's dirty linen in public, was also close-mouthed. This is not the first time that Hughes has used Miss Russell to buck the code. When he was an independent' producer in 1943. he produced a sexed-up version of the Billy the Kid saga, "The Outlaw." Made Cuts When the Breen office turned thumbs down, he opened the pic ture in a few cities. He the re moved the film from release for a few years, made certain cuts and brought it out again with the Breen blessing. The latest Hughes move brings speculation over a possible revolt against the code. It was set up in side the industry to curb the ex cesses of certain producers and to eliminate the reason for censor ship by religious and political boards. Picture Denied Seal Supporting those who might try to defy the code is the example of "The Moon is Blue." Because it toyed with words like "preg nant" and "seduction," it was de nied a seal. ' It also was one of the few Holly wood films to be condemned by the Catholic Legion of Decency. But United Artists has announced that the film win gross over four million dollars in this country alone. Wind in Sierras Snaps Off Trees SONORA, Calit (P-Shrieking winds with gusts up to 100 miles an hour struck the High Sierra skiing, country Sunday, snapping off pine trees and damaging ski lift towers in the Pinecrest-Dodge Ridge area. , The Dodge Ridge ski lift was wrecked when two large trees fell across it knocking down "about 1.000 feet of cable. The wind blew the upper landing platform 50 feet off its base. PRICE 5c No. 273 Panel Split on Blame for PW 'Influencing' By WILLIAM C. BARNARD ' PANMUNJOM OP) -The Neu tral Nations Repatriation Commis sion told the Allies and Commu nists Monday to decide the fate of more than 22,000 prisoners of the Korean War who have refused to go home. An Indian spokesman said that if the two sides do not get to gether "we do not appear to have any legal right to hold the pris oners after Jan. 22." Under the armistice time table all war prisoners in Korea become civilians on that date. Both Sides Must Agree An Indian spokesman said the period for explanations to prison ers on why they should go home would not be extended unless both sides agreed. Explanations ended Dec. 23. He said the report asked S",lt "t" T.SJ'nriSSSE "LdntusA 'PT a"e?1.pt bJe,ak.uut after an' H Tuhat ls the date the armistice says the prisoners shall become civil ians. But the armistice also provided that a Korean peace conference should discuss the prisoners' situ ation for 30 days. There is vir , tually no chance that such a con j ference will be convened before 'Jan. 22. . i Mar Screen PWs The spokesman indicated the In dians might conduct their own screening of nrisoners to learn their desires. He said that would depend on reaction of the two compounds to the majority report. The recommendation was made in a majority report. Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya of In dia, chairman, signed the report along with the Communist Polish and Czech members. The Swiss and Swedish members entered a minority report. The majority report accused the Allied side and South Korea in particular of Influencing anti Communist prisoners in Indian custody. "Not Free of Influence' "The commission cannot record a finding that the prisoners of war in its custody (anti-Communists) were completely freed from the influence of the former detainig side, and in particular the author i ities of the Republic o Korea j whose incursions made it impos- ! sible for the commission to come The Swiss and Swedes in their minority report said "it was a fact that prisoners of war arrived" in Indian custody in an organized manner. They concluded that it was not unreasonable with the general spirit of the Geneva con vention that the POWs would con tinue to be organized." Approves Red Tactics As to activities among prisoners in the pro-Communist camp, the majority report said "the commis sion had no evidence of any activ ity of the former detaining side (Communist) in respect of the prisoners in that camp. "While these prisoners appeared to be well disciplined the commis sion again had no evidence which -might have thrown any light on the existence of any organization, its character or objectives." There is almost no possibility of agreenent by the U.N. and Com munist commands on further dis position of the captives. The U.N. Command frequently has promised the more than 22,000 captured Chinese and North Ko reans who did not return to the Communists that they would be freed Jan. 22. The Reds want more time for ex planations. Milk Price Cut In California SACRAMENTO Of) A cent a quart price reductions for milk in Southern California and most of the Southern San Joaquin Valley will be effective Jan. I. The reductions were announced by the State Milk Control Bureau which said they were made pos sible by improved dairy feed con ditions, an abundant milk sunolv and lower production costs. The new price schedule, with the store price preceding that for home delivery . Fresno County, 19 Vx, 20 Imperial, 1V, 22, Los Angeles, 20, 21 ; San Diego, 21. . : - - J - Max. Min. Pretip. .41 J4 . .M . 44 3S i .09 . 70 4S ',' M litem Portland - San Francisco . nrw iwr mv 36 i 1 OlO WUlamcttc River S.7 feet. FORECAST frm- U. S. Weather Bureau, McNary Field, Salem : Mostly cloudy thii morning. Cloudy with raia and fusty . winds this afternoon and tonight. High today near 4 and low . tonight near AX Temperature at 1J:01 a. m. was 43. IAUX fMCIMTATIO! . ' Sine Start Weather Year Sea, t This Year Last Year Normal is is an tl3M