The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 03, 1954, Page 1, Image 1

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I : ;..!." .-: - m . ! ; ." I ' n '
I' I ' J ' ' '1 ; POUNDID 1651' . ! ii .; i-"'--
Patter son to Join
' Dr. 'Martin Gumpert, writing in
the New York Times Magazine,
says that in our civilization "Mid
dle age is closer f o death than old
age." tie asserts war u a man
reaches the age of 60 be "can al
most count on reaching the age
of 80 or more." And he sets tip. a
gallery of ten "grand bid men"
who have shiwn powers of sur
vival, both mentally and' physical
ly. .His' selection of an honor roll
of age is interesting: j - '
Frank Lloyd Wright, who at 84
is- still the revolutionary in archi
tecture and culture. Besides lec
turing and wHting he j recently
. set ud an exhibit of. his work in
New York, produced a radical de
sign for a museum, and proposed
a daring plan for a bridge of re
inforced concrete across San
Francisco Bay; . j
- Abraham Flexner at 87 is act
ive though officially retired. He
was a generator of ideas for the
application of private wealth' to
projects of human betterment
Perhaps . hisf greatest ) achieve
ment was his; report on the coun
try's medical schools, made over
. 40 years ago1, which resulted in
the vast and rapid improvement
of facilities Sn medical, instruc
tion. . r - .
" Sir Winston -Churchill is 79,
has rallied from a stroke he suf-
4 nwrtA lef mst i KfinliiKf
..great efforts; toward removing
dangers of another world war.
Bernard Berenson"one of the
last specimens of profound hu-
manistic training and spirit," is
88, but he still "has no peer
i Pnnplndert n FHitnrial Tt A.
Morningside
School Opens
Tomorrows
.After several false starts, the
'184 students living in the school
. zone of Morningside School are
scheduled to: head for school Mon
day morning and really go to
the new Morningside structure in
the 3300 block of South 2th
Street. I
Adverse weather, unexpected
Doumers o mammotn propor
tions and other delays' have
halted the previously scheduled
AlUkninff flof Ac et (ka 19 AAA
structure, During a series of
delays since! last fall, pupils have
attended classes at Hoover, Gar
field and Richmond Schools.
, Another " delay, which proved
a costly one to -Marion County,
occurred when property owners
in the Morningside area com
plained to the school board and
county court that the 12th Street
hill was unsafe for youngsters to
walk along jen route to classes.
After much debate I a steel
guarded walk was' constructed
along the road, which also serves
as a truck by-pass for Highway
99E. at an I approximate cost of
$7,500. Warping signs and yellow
markers, defining the! area as a
school zone; are to be! placed by
the county engineering depart
ment j ,
I Robert Dj Morrow, Salem, was
contractor on the school project
and William I. Williahns, Salem,
the architect
Suburbs Pian
Temporary
Bus Service
PORTLAND UFi Residents of
some suburban areas southwest of
Portland arranged Saturday for
makeshift bus serviceV now that
the line serving that area has quit
business, i j
The- Tualatin Valley stage line
. shut down Friday, leaving such
communities as Tualatin. Metzger,
Garden Home and Multnomah
without service.
Neighborhood meetings ar
" ranged temporary service for some
of these areas. '
Operators of the Tualatin Valley
line and Charles Heltzel. state pub
1 i c utilities commissioner, are
scheduled to meet Monday on the
problem. The operators indicated
they would resume business
- Heltzel would grant them a nickel
increase to .20-cent fares.
50 DIE IV; AVALANCHE
TEHRANl Iran ifi The news
paper Poste Tehran said Saturday
50 persons! died ia an avalanche
which swept away the village of
Seej in mountainous Azerbaijan.
Bishop Family Gift
f I!
A new health center building
will .be provided for Willamette
University! as . a gift from the
descendants of Charles P. and
Fanny Kay Bishop, It was an
nounced Saturday by University
President SG. Herbert Smith.
This will be the third building
in a new construction program
of the university. A fine arts
building and auditorium and a
women's residence hall are
planned in connection with a
Million Dollar Challenge Fund
being raised by the , university.
The health building win be
worth between $60,000 and $80,-
000, estimates indicate.
The health center : is .being de
signed by Salem Architect James
L. Payne as a one-story building
with brick veneer exterior, lacing
west and located between the
Governor Race
In May
Gov. Paul L. Patterson, whose
topic of much conjecture in jecent months, announced Saturday
he would seek election to the governorship post he now holds.
: The announcement adds the second candidate for the position,
both Republicans. Secretary, of State Earl T. Newbry, now serving
his! second term, entered 'his candidacy several j months ago. No
I
koV. PAUL L. PATTERSON
His Hat Is in the Ring j
KnowlandAsks
Pakistan Get
Military Aid
WASHINGTON UP - The Eise
hower administration was urged
Saturday by Sen. Knowland ; (R
Calif) to ignore objections by India
and extend nrilitary aid to Pakis
tan.
Knowland. the Senate Republican
leader, said in an interview he
believes Pakistan . "has the pros
pect of becoming another Turkey
in: strength and dependability'' for
Free World defenses if it is given
American aid.
The California senator said he
has made his views known to Sec
retary of State Dulles.
Such an aid program would in
volve the dispatch of American
equipment to build up Pakistanis
armed forces. It would not involve
the establishment of American
bases in Pakistan.
"To withhold American aid be
cause of the protest of neutralist
India would be discouraging to
those nations willing to stand up
and be counted on the side of the
Free World," Knowland declared.
Fears Neutralism
"These nations then might think
it was better to play the game
of Indian neutralism than to throw
in their lot with -the free nations."
The State and Defense Depart
ments, have been reported consid
ering starting a moderate program
of military aid for. Pakistan.- In
dia's Prime Minister Nehru has
protested publicly against any such
course on the grounds that it might
upset the balance of power in that
section of Asia.
Might Restrain Reds
Some administration officials
have contended that Pakistan's
geographical closeness to Russia
makes it an area in which a mea
sure of increased military strength
might restwrtSTpossible Communist
expansion in that part of Asia.
i Knowland said he regards Pak
istan as "one of the key, important
countries in the entire world," so
far as concerns defenses against
communism.
He expressed belief that; help
could be extended out of existing
foreign aid funds. He said only an
executive decision would be re
quired to start such a program
under provisions of the law by
which Congress made a blanket
appropriation for Asia in the last
session.
CONFER ABOUT ITALY
WASHINGTON tfi Clare
Boothe Luce, ambassador to Italy,
conferred with Secretary of State
Dulles and other officials for 2
hours Saturday on ways of
strengthening U.S. - Italian
relations. ' J
Max. Min. Precip.
Salem 51 M A3
San Francisco 53 38 : Trace
Portland 52 45 ! JO
Chicago . 48 36 Trace
New York 45 32 i .00
Wfllamette River 3.5 leet. !
FORECAST (from U. S. Weather
Bureau. McNary Field. Salem):
1 Showers and periods of rusty wind
today and tonight. Possible snow
showers early this morning. High
today near 45 and low tonight near
33. Temperature at 12:01 a. m. 36.
SALEM PRECIPITATIOV
Since Start of Weather Tear Sept. 1
This Year Last Year Normal
19.R8 11.90 18 69
t
A new health center bnfldiat,
' Payne's aketdi'aboTt, Is plaimed for addiao to-tas iruumentiw uo rtmuj oc utun sr. mm
Primary
political future has been the
Democrats' have announced,
though. State Sen. Richard Neu-
berger of Portland has been men-
tioned frequently as a possible
candidal.
In announcing his plan to seek
the Republican party endorse
ment at the May primary elec
tion, Gov. Patterson set " down
seven principal objectives on
which he would base his cam
paign.; At the same time he
squelched rumors that he was
slated for and would accept a fed
eral judgeship appointment ' V
'Challenging Year
"The year that I have served
as governor of: Oregon has been ed local power and telephone out
the most challenging of my life," ages.
Patterson said. "My strongest im- Weathermen expected the blust-
pression is the; great number of
people wining and eager to con-
tribute their time and effort to
achieve good i government for
Oregon. I will be a candidate for
the Republican nomination for
governor in me aiay primary eiec-
tion to further; this goal."
Patterson, who assumed the
governorship from his president
of the senate post on the resigna-
tion of Gov. Douglas McKay, said
Saturday that rumors concerning
a possible judgeship appointment
ior mm were untrue, i wisn to
assure the people of Oregon that
uutiug uV Fici wu-
Maertne pyernorsnip my jod
ana n eieciea next iNovemoer i Eitric Co.. which reported wind
will neither seek nor accept ap- blown p failures in the
r".rl lu WU,C1 olu"u
U. of O. Graduate
uov. Patterson, a native oi
Ohio but longtime resident of
Oregon, has been active in the
state's political affairs since his j
graauation irom i niversity oi telephone line, cutting communi
Oregon Law School in 1923. He cations to 25 to 30 Pacific Tele
was elected to the state senate phone and Telegraph customers
in 1944 from Washington County in the Brooks area.
and served in the senate until his
Ttfnv 9n 10V
sec. 2.)
Hit-Run Death
Added to State
Holiday Toll
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A Portland area traffic death, I
described as a hit-run fatality,
raised the. New Year's - holiday
oeaui iou in uregon w inree.
Oscar Peter Farsdale, 73, Port-1
'"
Junes suffered when he was struck
i ... . .
Dy a carwnue waiiungin asireei
on the outskirts of the city. .
rouce oku rrea Anuerson saiu
tZVr . ",-:,, r:
laier caueu police ncdU4uari
ZZZZ. . ..iX" li fi,. ..";"
tenTne: "
The other holiday vicUms also
w:n-4 i .nniHnt.
Robert 'Harrison Darnell, 63,
Actnria anH tr .T A T.ivinpcf nn
" o- f
rau
parnell wai hit by an automo-
Kill a. h waltl orrnw a rnaH
at Astoria. The driver, Arnold
rhrictonwn Arfnria vii nrt hM
Mrs. Livingston was killed -in
the plunee of; a car from a nar
row road east oi ttoseourg.
Polk Political
Entrants File
Statesman News Service
DALLAS, Ore. First filings
for political office in the 1954
campaign in i Polk County were
made here Saturday.
Calvin M. i Barnhart filed for
county judge! on the Republican
ticket Currently, he is a real
estate salesman in Dallas.
Present county judge is Jack
Hayes of Dallas who has stated
he will seek . another six-year
term.
Also filing Saturday was Coun-
ty Commissioner Gay V. RempeL
Perrrdale Road resident who
will seek re-election as commis -
sioner. He is a Republican.
Polk County also will elect a
state senator, state representa-
tif-e, surveyor and county clerk
this year.
to Bf rpvldb IrOealth
represented by Architect James L.
103RD YEAR 3 SECTIONS
Tax Revision Piytn to Lob $
''-.! ! t . I i i is i- - i i I
o j ft ' 1
TfltiTI C r Alltlfl
Ul - UtllW t VUUU
Valley, Gutting
Power, Phones
Two storms, rolling on gale-
force winds and only a few hours
a nart. cave the Salem area a one-
two Doundine SatUrdav and caus-
ery condition to ease off some to-
day with some shower activity in
prospect A 1,500 foot freezing
level early this morning gave rise
to the possibility that som snow
showers may fall in th Salem
area before noon, weathermen
said. S
The cale which moved slowly
across the Pacific Northwest Sat-
urdav brought death to one per-
son. Lou Bechenhauer, about 64,
was electrocuted by a snapped
power line at Hicks Lake, five
miles east of Olympia, Wash,
jnany Outages
Hardest hit in Salem by the
storms,was portland Gcneral
Spongs Landing, Brooks and Mis-
dividual outages sDotted about
the vallev
a PGE pole, blown down in the
gale which reached to 51 miles
$n hour in gusts, tripped Across sl
RepairingLilles
i vui nmw miuijwu; iicits tuu
noon repairing damaged lines in
the area and one telephone crew
was splicing the burned-through
line at Brooks. The telephone
company apparently escaped with
only individual troubles else
where.' two where poles blew
down in Salem.
Salem Electric which services
much of west Salem and some of
the downtown district,' reported
only one outage: which might be
attributed to the, storm. It occur
red when a connector apparently
downtown. Citv i nolice reDorted
limbs blown off trees but no dam-
age.
Roads Hazardous
Snnur anH r mari wctt-n
rwCTo ,iw Ttr.m.i h...
ardous, state police reported.
cnnvr u ,c t r,n.
I ftvil nvdb VI, Adtiaj UU Ul
the Gfand Ronde makj
rnast hvhv,v ta .iinn. .nn
i j, -,.. ,u..u ...
ry chains, police warned
Sn. , tt ...t of
highway 22 and
chains were necsesary to negoti-
Santiam Pass, police said.
tVAt.".- -:C'"S. .,,ff
uiotucu 04iurudy ujkul py laiien
.
iiid Kcm.jr U4UK. xkv was
i wi j u: rfkn.... ko ur:i
xiigucsi njuus 111c ut were
reported at about 1:30 p.m. when
RUStS UP to 51 DllleS an hOUf Were
le,cor,ae?, l Dc-aV ,,.ci
l of .43 inches of rain fell Sat-
urday with most falling late in
the afternoon. A 10-degree drop
in temperature between 3:30 and
4:30 p.m. accompanied the drop
in winds and temperatures con
tinued zngid through the rain
and recurring winds of Saturday
night;
(Additional storm Jstory
pages 2. sec. 1.)
on
Roast Porcupine,
Cottonwood Bark
On Scouts' Menu
SHERIDAN, Wyo. Wl Roast
porcupine and ! cottonwood bark
stew were on the menu for a group
of Sheridan area Boy Scouts who
braved knee-deep, zero weather
in a ! two-day Vsurvival hike."
The: boys took no food or tents
and ' lived off the land
They couldn find any game
the first day so dined on cotton
1 wood f bark stew. But the second
day they were able to kill two
porcupines,
. For dessert they had one candy
bar. dropped from a circling air
1 plane.
I UnlTersity campus as a result f
32 PAGES Th Oregon
New Lights Add - Brilliance to Bridge Ramp
I 1 - 11 MINi-Pllil whhimMIHHMMIMHMRMMH-V
4 ' '
nazzlinr brilliance of new Center
W-- witty?? I
.. .. . t- ..l.l. II "ID11 1T T"
is shown above in this time exposure taken from the West end of the Marion Street Span. Th
mercury vapor lamps 30 in all are turned on automatically by a sun switch located on Union
Street (Statesman Photo.)
Crowds at Japan Palace
Leave 16 Dead, 43 Hurt
TOKYO W-A vast throng, upward of 700,000 persons, who
wanted to wish Emperor Hirohito a happy new year milled inside
the Imperial Palace grounds Saturday and trampled to death nearly
a score of persons when imperial guards tried to close the main
palace gates.
Protesting thousands, pressing forward as the gates began to
Local Teller
Stacksl&OO
SilverDbllars
The teller at i local savings
and loan association had an un
usual chore Saturday. She had to
count ind stack Some $1,400 in
silver dollars. i
The sum was brought in in
bags by a retired employe of the
papermill who said he had been
gathering them since 1935. He
brought them in lor deposit, he
said, fearing that if he died they
might not be found.
The dollars were brought in
in canvas bags. Some were of
such old minting that their stack
fell short of the height of those
of later minting, j
Chur chip Open
Cornerstone
I
Box Tonight
A small hermetically sealed
copper box,, hidden "behind the
cornerstone of the old St Paul's
Episcopal Church isince 1922, will
be opened tonight .at the parrish
annual meeting. !.
The box was removed Saturday
bv a committee of vestrymen led
by G. S. Paxson, senior warden of
the church and chairman of the
building committee. The old
structure at Chemeketa and
rhnrrh Streets is slated to be
levelled sometime this week.
The Rev. George Ht Swift
nastor since JuneL 1929, said Sat
urday that he did not know what
the box contained, Dut presumea
they would findi historical data
and relics of the church at the
Sunday evening i opening. The
Rev. Henry D. Chambers, now de
ceased, was pastor of the old
church at its dedication in 1922
when the cornerstone was placed.
Several parishioners, however,
are members of the church now
who were there at the time, the
Rev. Swift explained. i
He said that contents of the box.
wil be examined and then placed
with other items of today behind
the cornerstone! at dedication
ceremonies of the new church,
1444 S. Liberty St, on Jan. 31.
a gift to the school from members
aui. uunes r siUBopw
Statesman, Salem. Oreqon. Sunday, January: 3, 1954 j
Street Bridge lights which went on
s ; J
close.; swept away a police cordon
and rushed over a double arched
bridge. j "
M e n. women and children '
shrieked in agony as they were
trampled underfoot in the panic.
Emperor Hirohito was greatly
saddened by the tragic mishap,
a spokesman of the imperial house
hold announced. j '
Metropolitan police reported
their jlatest count showed 16 dead
and 43 injured.
Chinese Boy !
Kyodo news agency said one of
the fatalities was a Chinese boy.
It' said several other children
strapped to their mothers' backs,
died or were injured in the crush.
There was no exact estimate of
the number of these children hurt.
A Canadian officer! at the scene
said he saw people! so flattened
that bones protruded from ribs,
legs, arms and skin.;
Twisted Bodies
"It! was remarkable the way the
bodies were twisted, "the Canad
ian said, "the sharp edges of their
bones thrust right out from their
skinsi"
A British officer who witnessed
the crush said two American ma
rines: probably saved lives when
they 'charged through the mass of
people to pick up the injured. The
marines were not identified
Police reported one unidentified
American woman was bruised
slightly and released from a hos
pital after first aid attention.
The newspaper Asahi said the
Imperial Police Guard criticized
the Tokyo police as being, partly
responsible for the stampede.
"We have asked for reiirforce
ments over and over again, for
we are short handed," an Imperial
Guard officer told Asahk. "But the
reinforcements came after the dis
aster." j
U.Jp. College Editors
Tour Russian Gties
: i i
MOSCOW W Seven American
college editors left Moscow in two
groups Saturday fori a two week's
tour (inside the Soviet Union.
One group went to Leningrad.
Minsk. Kiev, Sochi, Kharkov and
Tbilisi. j
The others flew to Baku in the
Caucasus and will! visit Tbilisi,
Rostov, Yalta. Odessa, Kiev and
Minsk. This group includes David
Barney, Reed College, Portland,
OreJ i j
present gymnasium: and the site
for the fine arts building, j
The Bishon family has been
identified for many years with
the Oregon woolen; industry and
various business and civic inter
est The health, center building
will be a memorial to the late
Charles P. and Fanny Ray Bishop,
pioneer Oregon residents and
Salem civic leaders.
Participants in the gift, all as-
sociatd with Pendleton Woolen
Mills, are Clarence M. Bishop, a
son; and the four: grandsons of
the; Charles P. Bishops. They are
Robert and Charles Kay Bishop,
sons of the late Chauncey Bishop,
and Broughton and ..'Mor.t.osm When he came down, the tavern
Bishop, son ' of the- Clarence
BishoDS.
! (Additional details on page 5,
see, L)
liSBillid
for the tint time New Year's Eve-
f
Sabre Jet Sets j
. j j 1 : i
CoasMb-Coasti
NEWORK U) An Air Na
tional Guard Commander sped his
F86 Sabre jet from coast to coast
in a little over! four hours Satur
day, nipping five minutes off the
record. j f
The pilot. Col; Willard W. Milli
kan, then landed his trim but
powerless j:raft at Idlewild AirpoH
four minutes later.
He explained he ran out of fuel
after crossing his finish line at
nearby j Floyd Bennett field.
Millikan, 35-year-old World War
II ace, zoomed out of Los Angeles
at 10:19:55 a. n. (EST), j
He touched ddwn at Omaha's
Offutt Air Force Base two hours
and 15 minutes later, spent about
six minutes taking on fuel and
was off again. : I
The -Air Force announced lie
crossed Floyd Bennett at 2; 13 p.
jn. (EST), for an elapsed time of
four hours, eight minutes and five
seconds. . i J
The Air National Guard esti
mated he averaged 615 miles an
hour. Millikan said be hit a top
air speed of 740 m.p.h.
The record Millikan broke was
set on Jan. 26, 1946, by Col William
Councill. who covered the distance
in four hours and 13 minutes,' aver
aging : 584 m.p.h., in
shooting star.
P80
I
Storm Keeps j
Climbers From
Mtt Hood Peak
TIMBERLINE LODGE. Ore.Stfl
High winds and blinding snow
repulsed all efforts of climbers Ho
conquer Mt. Hood . Saturday.
Three climbers, Fred Hart i of
Corvallis, Art Maki of Ridgefield,
Wash., and Lay den Walsh of Olym
pia, made it to the top of the
11,245-foot mountain on: the last
day of; 1953, but no one has suc
ceeded -in what is an annual con
test to be the first up in the new
year, j f - - ri
Four climbers got up to the 10,-000-foot
level tFriday night, but'
were forced to turn back. They
tired to make: camp fori the night
there, ) but howling winds blew
away two of! their packs. They
came back down the slopes when
daylight returned, reaching Tim-
berime Lodge at 10 a.m. Saturday.
They were Andre Iseli. Portland,
and three Hood River brothers,
Ron, Roger and Rich Getchell.f
Iseli. recounting the experience
said. '"The first night wasn't bad
at all. because we were well dug
in. But last night was terrible. We
had tried to climb farther .Friday,
but had to quit after we lost most
of our i gear . . was awfully
cold."i - i
- He said they had no food except
chocolate Friday night! and that
they had to melt snow for drink
ing water by holding their can
teens against their bodies. . I
- Iseli is' a 21-year-old junior at
Linfield College at McMinnvffle.
His home is in Portland. I
Bafck Flip Only j
Half Successful 1
: "I ' ; -.4-
PORTLAND (J A soldier was
so .elated at winning a shuffJeboard
game in a tavern here that be im-
pulsively tried a back flip
called an ambulance. The soldier.
Lyman Campbell. 23, needed treat
ment for face cuts and a broken
nose.
if
PRICE 10c
No. 279
Measure Aims
At Removal
ties
By CHARLES F. BARRETT
WASHINGTON Lfl Treasury
and congressional , staff experts '
have agreed on major points in
a sweeping tax revision proposal
providing for almost 1 Vi. billion
dollars annually in tax cuts in
many .fields.
Informed sources said Saturday
only minor -details need to be
worked out before the proposal
can be laid before the tax-writing
House Ways 'and Means Commit
tee," probably within 10 days.
For the first ? tune since 1873.
the entire revenue code has been
reviewed at one time. Thousands
oil pages of tax laws have been
rewritten with the aim of giving
both individuals and business
firms a better break, ending con
flicts and confusion and uncertain
ty, and removing inequities.
Not Major Rates
The streamlining program does
not deal with major tax rates.
But it provides tax cuts never
theless for almost all businesses
and .individuals in the form of
new or bigger deductions for med
ical expenses, child carecosts for
cal expenses, child carecosts for
working mothers, business depre-
ciation. dividend income, more lib
eral allowances for dependents,
and other points. .
TriA nnw honAfue urm i irl nrr an-
ply to 1953 tax payments due
March 15.
For Over Year
More than a score of experts
from the treasury and from con
gressional committees have been
laboring privately over the project
for more than a year.
"oja ouu .4ctijo viiuii limn uxnm
iel A. Reed (R NY) has pledged
it will have first, priority after
Congress reconvenes Wednesday.
Informed sources said these are
the staff recommendations on ma
jor points, subject of course to
change by Congress: .
Medical expenses Under the.
present law, medical expenses
must exceed 5 per cent of income
before thev become deductible.
The new proposal would lower
this to 3 per cent Further, present
limits on the maximum medical
deduction would be almost dou
bled, i -
Child care no deduction is
allowed now for the cost of child
care for mothers who must work.
The new proposal provides that
actual expenses up to $300 annual
ly may be deducted from income.
But it applies only to single heads
of households, not to married cou
ples, and only to children under
seven.
Dividends For a long time,
business has complained that corp
orate income is taxed twice: first
under regular corporate income
taxes, and again under individual
income taxes as profits are passed
out to individuals in the form of
divideds.
The proposal is to let share
holders deduct 5 per cent of their
dividend income from their tax
bill. This is only the first step
the percentage would be stepped
up by law in future years.
Depreciation Businesses, are
allowed to deduct from income a
figure- representing depreciation of
plants and equipment. Under the
present law, depreciation usually
is apportioned equally over the
useful life' of the article 20
years or more.
The new proposal would let a
business deduct two thirds of the
cost of a new asset over the first
five years. The aim is to encour
age business to invest in modern
and more productive facilities;
Dependents Under present
law you cannot count as a de
pendent anyone earning more than
$600 a year. The new proposal
would waive the $600 income limit
and permit dependency credits sa
long as you provide more than
half the support for the claimed
dependent "
This applies to all children und
er 18 and to children over 18 if
they are still in school or college.
Dependents would pay their own
taxes on income above $600.
urownea Jtiunicr s
Body Recovered
EUGENE OH The body of
Paul) G Adams, 26, Springfield,
was ! recovered Saturday from
Fern ; Ridge Lake, where be
drowned last month while on
duck-hunting trip.
Henry Harrison, who found
Adams' oar on. the shore and his
kayak floating in the lake Dec 9.
also found the body. Harrison . is
a Fern Ridge Dam maintenance
employe. - . . .
Today's Stafesmsn.
SECTION 1
Editorials, features ..... 4
Sports .10-11
SECTION 2
Society, women's -1..1-6
' Garden news ,-... .... 5
Valley news . 8
Crossword puzzle ... 9
Radio, TV ...... ......10
. Classified ads ti 10-11
SECTION S v :
rultcolor eomica
Of Inequi
I
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