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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 4, 1954)
; - -' v , : ; ' .- r ' .: fir.-. '!' . " - . . .--ii..- 1 - j '. ' ; ' t . f ' 4 Men f (By The "Associated Press) ' ---- Four men apparently drowned Oregon Coast, state police reported Sunday after a boat was found beached on thej north shore, i j They were! identified as Lyle Marion King, 44, the father of five children; Henry Lee King, 24, the father of three; Alton Robert King, 42, the father of two;; and Loren McWhorter, 25, the father mDOGDCs No one has tome forward with the "corpus delicti" of a flying saucer (which was our requisite for faith), and apparently the reports on such celestial visitants are growing less numerous.- The U. S. Air Force which has tried to keep up with the saucer ob servations had only 250 reports of aerial sightings in. the first six months of 1953 through 1952 it received 1,700 reports. Either the heavenly population is! dim inishing in number or earth bound observers less alert (or less gullible. The Air Force seeks to trace! each reported phe nomenon, and has been able to explain all but 10 per cent of the 1953 crop. The U.S. News and World Report summarizes the AF study: j "Many turn out to be huge, 90-foot balloons now used in upper-air research. Others are the planet Venus or 'inversion reflections.' But some reports still remain sa mystery. Nearly all involve objects detected" at night by radar and seen as lights in the sky." I f : Recently I had a letter from a former colleague at United Na tions, a member of the . South African embassy at Washington. He reportedj an experience with flying saucers. I quote from his letter: "On Friday night, December 11," my family and I were driving on the Newt Jersey Turnpike to New York. When about 50 miles from that city, we suddenly saw a bright saucer-like object dart across the 'sky and disappear from sight. It was followed (Continued on Editorial Page 4) ttriate Welcomed by Bride in an TOKYO (-Cpl. Claude Batch- elor hurried Sunday into the eager arms of his (Japanese' bride whose letters wooed him away from a pro-Red prison camp in Korea and urged her to write others of the 21 Americans btill there. J "I think you can help !me get some of my .friends to come back," the Kermit, (Tex, soldier told Kyo ko Araki afjer their first fervent reunion at a Tokyo Army hospital. "Write letters to my I buddies - just like those you wrote to me. You can tell them how happy I am in the reunion with my wife. Some of them have wives. Maybe your letters will) make them want to come backf 5 1 He told Jier the name of one American in particular but Kyoko, when she j emerged with tear stained face from the four-hour reunion, said he had cautioned her not to make it public. . Kyoko explained that her tears were tears of joy and that her lanky husband had renounced Communism during their: meeting, newsman: I , $ " "I said tp him I hope you don't Jike the Communists. 'And he said back to me 'You know I don't. I have studied Com munism three years and I don't like it.'"j i (Additional Details on Page 5) Camel Comes IndiunaWreck ROCHESTER, Ind. (fl Rich- ard O. Wilson of Plymouth was out for a quiet family drive through this northern Indiana city Sunday when one of his chil dren cried out: , "Look, j daddy, that man just fell off of that camel." I Sure enough. The wind had toppled & papier mache wise man off a camel In a Christmas dis play on the courthouse lawn. By thej time Wilson turned his attention! back to driving, his car had rammed into the back end of another car. Nobody was hurt. Animal Crackers WARREN C000RICH I fW Kepa Jap I ! on wind-swept Alsea Bay oh the of four. v The hree Kings were brothers. They and stcWhorter all were loggers from Alpine in I Benton! County, Oregon. ) Police said the four left Wald port at 8:30 a.m. Saturday in a rented boat en route to a point across the bay where they were employed as loggers and pile driv ers. Search Begins When hey failed to arrive, search was launched. The . boat was found i Sunday' morning by George and Ray Hunt er, Waldport, and Leo Jench, Til lamook. It was upside down, lead ing police to speculate it had been turned over by wind 4 whipped waves in the bay. I ' The families of the missing men spent most of Sunday at Waldport while police dragged the bay. j Dragging will resume j Monday, weather permitting. j I The four deaths would raise the Oregon New Year weekend violent death toll to eight. j j Three persons died in !a traffic mishaps and one was burned jto death since the grim count started at 6 p.m. Dec. 31. I Mary Lynn Padgett, 5-year-old daughter of Cordon . Padgett, 'of Newport, Ore., died in a Portland hospital Saturday from burns suf fered when ber nightgown caught fire. Details of the accident were meager, but it .was reported that the child's nighdress was igmed by flames from a fireplace. Traffic Victims The other victims, all of whom died from traffic accident, injuries, were: Oscar Peter Farsdale.j 73, Port land, who was killed i Saturday night when struck by an automo bile near Portland. Robert Harrison Darnell, 63, Astoria, who was hit by an auto mobile as he walked across a road in Astoria on New Year's Day. Mrs. J. A. Livingston. 43, Glide, who also died Jan. 1 when a car plunged off a narrow road east of Roseburg. 'Ski Widow' Role Safer, Woman Finds Determined to quit the role of "ski widow," Mrs, D, roughs, 2023 N. 18th W-Bur St, tried her luck on a gentle- slope; at Hoodoo Bowl Saturday afternoon. Sunday she was admitted to Sa lem General Hospital with a frac tured right ankle, It was , Mrs. . Burroughs . first time on skis, according to husband who, along I with couple's son, is an ardent ski en thusiast Salem Arcja Classrooms 1 Reopen Today Pupils from first grade through seniors in college ! will return to their classrooms: and books in Salem this morning after the annual Christmas Ihoti day vacation. For some 84 grade pupils in the Morningside district it will mean sniiung siuaies 10 prana new surroundings in the just-completed Morningside ) School at South 12th and Strong Road They have been continuing their education at Hoover, Garfield and Richmond schools while workmen rushed the school to completion after several delays. But tor most students and teachers it will mean picking up where they left off Dec 23, in the case of Salem Public and parochial schools, and Dec. 8, in the case of students at Willam ette University. j Others from Salem, getting their education at University of Oregon, Oregon State College, Oregn College of Education and way points, began I the exodus back to school Saturday: and Sunday so as to be on the scene for classes this morning, t Greyhound Bus officials re ported as many as six and seven xtra sections on each schedule. mostly to carry returning stu dents to college towns Sunday tight i U.S. Businessman Freed by Chinese Reds After 3 Years in Shanghai Jail HONG KONG UlU A 44-year-1 old China-born American business man, lame and near sighted from beri beri. arrived i Sunday ; from three years in a Shanghai jail Americans stiQ ; were; : held there. He didn't know how many. (There have been reports of as many as 30 Americans still held in Red China.) . ! Arnold Kiehn - told - newsmen he was released without explana tion last Monday from Shanghai's Wardroad Jail and given ' seven days to get out of Red .China. He said death and suffering were rampant in the r Jail; that prisoners died at the rate of U a day during one winter; and that Red firing squate are bringing in Chinese at the rate of six to eight 103BD YEAR 12 mm in 11 ) 1 - --- -- m mm NEW YORK The 1S53 list of the Jrio .f Weld', BesNDressed Women JJ Fitttl I?CCforCS , PWs to Beciptiw Free , 'At ImdnigHt ikd. 22 only woman member of the Eisenhower cabinet; Mrs. William Paley (center), wife of the head of the Colombia Broadcasting System; and Mrs. Winston Guest, of New York and Palm Beach. Mrs. Paley is first on the list, with Mrs. Guest second and Mrs. Hobby sixth. List is compiled on basis of an international poll conducted by the New York Dress Institute. (AP Wirephoto to The States man) . ;- U.S. Holiday Deaths Short Of Estimate By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New year's holiday traffic deaths were below forecasts Sunday night as the 78-hour weekend neared its close. At 12:30 a.m. (EST) Monday the traffic death toll was 288. Thirty nine persons lost their lives " in fires and 64 deaths were attribut ed to miscellaneous causes. The total was 391. The National Safety Council had estimated that 360 persons would die in traffic accidents during the three - day weekend beginning Thursday at 6 p.m. (local time) and ending midnight Sunday. : Sundav nieht Ned Dearborn. president of the council, said "the National Safety Council is delight ed that its estimate of 360 is off, means the motorists are driv. inrmore-carefully; a we so often urged them to do. Dearborn said the low toll can be attributed to: 1. Good weather which means good roads 2. The incessant and constant emphasis by the press, television and radio in safe driving cam paigns. 3. The shock of the huge death toll during the Christmas holiday penod when 523 persons died in traffic accidents, which resulted in a "happy hangover" for the new year. 4. A number of states have stepped up traffic enforcement. In a non-holiday 78-hour week end survey last month. The As sociated Press reported 310 traffic laneous. Meanwhile, tragedy struck in the form of fire in Montana, where five persons, including three chil dren, were killed in a blaze a Hardin. M Brother Says He's Not Dead, Checks Corpse CHICAGO iff Harold Glynn, 35, viewed a body Saturday f in the Cook County morgue and said. "Yes, that's my brother, Clare mont. Poor fellow. IH go to his home and break the news to his daughter" ? instead 01 creaking down as Glynn expected her to, Mrs. Shir ley Augustine said: ' "It can't be true. He just left home a few minutes ago." Harold found brother Claremont and they both went to the morgue where attendants also were shocked at the dose resemblance of the dead man and Claremont The description of the victim, and of Claremont: 54-years-old, S feet. 7 inches, and about f 150 pounds. ( 1 1 The man apparently died of a heart attack.: Kiehn. who spent 30 years in China but claims Santa Barbara, CaBL, as his borne, said he was thrown in jail in 1930 on a trumped- up charge of tailing to report ownership of firearms. j '-' Last summer ne forced, a trial by going on a -hunger strike and was sentenced to four years. Kiehn bad so idea why the Reds released him. - ; ;. .. :.;'). He said five others three Rus sians, a Pole and an Italianalso were' let go about the same. time. Most qf 1951 he was in solitary confinement - with his arms and legs shackled. Uving on a.diet of .thin rice, his i weight drooped from 195 to PAGES Th world's besUreised women includes Mrs. Oveta Cnlp Hobby (left), Polk Official New Taxpayers Man of the Year' ! PORTLAND (J Edward B. Hamilton, Polk County clerk, Sun day was named "taxpayers' man of the year by uregon Business and Tax Research. The privately sponsored tax in vestigation organization cited Hamilton for "turning back to the county $4479 or nearly 25 per cent of his 1932-33 budget while adding effeciency features to his office operation." F. H. Young, manager of the organization, said 'unilar award will be made annually. Senators Hold Secret Talks WithGouzenko MONTREAL W) A four-man U. S. Senate investigating team was believed to be holding its much-publicized secret interview with Igor Gouzenko somewhere in eastern Canada Sunday night. Senator William Jenner , (R-Ihd) and Pat McCarran -Nev) of the Senate internal security subcom mittee arrived in Montreal early Sunday, accompanied by a com mittee lawyer and a government reporter They were met by U. S. Am bassador Douglas Stuart and J. R leMieux, superintendent ; of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Following a news conference they were driven through a bliz zard in an RCMP station wagon to the closely guarded ! Windsor Hotel where they were in confer ence with LeMieux for six hours. The conference was held in the ambassador's fourth-floor suite and later in another suite on-the third floor. k House Detectives The presence of house detectives as tight-lipped as the mounties led to speculation that Gouzen- ko, he former Soviet code clerk who broke open Russia s atom spy ring in 1945, had been spirited into the hotel and that the inter view already was in progress. Later, however, a reporter saw the Canadian - American party making its way downstairs. The Americans and their Canadian es corts waited in a side room for the arrival of an official car. No Comment . LeMieux told reporters there would be no statement. He would not say whether the senators were setting out to . see Gouzenko or whether they would return to the United States Sunday .night TOMBSTONE KILLS BOY MEXICO CITY W)i Nine-year-old Mario LaGrage was killed Sunday when his grandfather's tombstone toppled over on him while he was weeding the grave. gan giving :- him bread and he picked up to 150. 'The winter of 1351-52 was the worst ' "One whole block of Wardroad cells were filled with desperate ly sick men who cried and moaned all night," he saidV "We estimat ed later that of 8,000 prisoners, an average of 15 died daily, during the winter. 5 t Kiehn said he believed the Com munists were firmly entrenched on the mainland but "they are be ginning to shoot people again." He said in 1951 the Red government purged as many as 500 persons in threes days m i Shanghai, uKbr he addedj "they r are shooting - only six to eight a day Ortqoa SUrtMman. Saltm. Onqaxu Monday, January v I 'f ' il '' " 1 H 'X .til ' ' V"fe f" V Duchess Drops Best-Dressed Woman Title By DOROTHY ROE AP ffmfli'i EiliUr NEW YORK on The Duchess of Windsor not only relinquished her title of best-dressed woman in the world Sunday she al most slipped off the list. The 1953 champion is Mrs. Wil liam Paley of New York, wife of the head of Columbia: Broadcast ing System. ! For several years it i has been a see-saw battle between the two fa mous fashion leaders, with Mrs. Paley nosing out the duchess for first place-in 1948 and 1949. This time, however. the wife of the former King of England bare ly made the list, tying for 10th place with Mary Martin, Broad way star currently co-starring with Charles Boyer rac the -comedy, Kind Sir." Actually, the list has 12 names, since there also was a tie for 9th place. j The international poll, which has been conducted by the New York Dress Institute since j 1940, tallied votes from more than; 1,000 fashion authorities over thei world in arriv ing at the new list. Ex-Fashion Editor j Mrs. Paley is a daughter of the late Harvey Cushing, famed Bos ton brain surgeon, and a sister of two other famous beauties, the former Mrs. Vincent Astor. now the wife of artist James Whitney Fosburgh, and .Mrs. John Hay Whitney. She is the; former wife of Stanley G. Mortimer Jr., of Tuxedo, N.Y., and was a New York fashion editor before her marriage to Paley in 1947. Compared with many others on the "best-dressed" list, Mrs. Pal ey's wardrobe usually is not lav ish, but is notable for! its simplicity and perfect taste, j 2. Mrs. Winston Guest, of New York and Palm Beach. Chrysler Family i . 3. Mrs. Byron Foy of New York, daughter of the founder of the Chrysler Motor Co.-; and wife of one of its chief executives. 4. Kmc Henri Bonnet, wife of the French ambassador to the Unit ed States. i 5. Mrs. William Randolph Hearst Jr., wife of the publisher of The New York Journal-American. 6. Oveta Culp Hobby, of Houston and Washington, I only woman member of the Eisenhower Cab inet, j 7. Mme. Louis Afpels, of Fans and New York, whose husband is in the jewel firmi of Van Cleef and Arpels. ) 8. Princess Margaret Rose of Great Britain. 9. A tie between Mrs. Henry Ford II, of Detroit, and Mrs. Al fred G. Vanderbilt i of New York. 10. The Duchess of Windsor and Mary Martin. j ; Washington's HolidaV Toll Stands at 0 OLYMPIA. Wash.1 tf State Patrol officials waited out the wan ing hours of the long Hew Year's holiday weekend, 'with fingers crossed and the hope that Wash ington would set an astonishing record of going the entire, 73 hours without a single traffic fatanty. .Not a traffic death had been re ported in the state from 6 p.nL, Thursday, when the nouaay count ing began, to Sunday night The holiday period ended at midnight Sunday. Seven deaths occurred in the same period a year - a go." State Patrol Chief James H. Pryde had predicted the cl$53 New, Year's weekend toQ would be four. The patrol credited the "clean slate to increasing driver cau tion and the continuing .campaign 4, 1954 Sharp Clash With Commies Anticipated MUNSAjl in - The United Na tions command Monday flatly de clared that -au anti Communist prisoners will become civilians at midnight, Jan. 22, and free to go where they choose. A formal letter to Lt. Gen. K. S. Thimayya, Indian chairman of the Neutral Nations Repatriation Commission, placed the blame for the breakdown of prisoner explana tions squarely on the Reds. And the letter, from Gen. John E. Hull, U.N. commander, re jected a NNRC majority report charging the U-N.C. had tried to control anti-Red . prisoners by "agents provocateur." Gen. Thimayya's first reaction appeared to be an agreement with Gen. Hull on the release of prison ers. "It has always been the In dian position," he told 1 newsmen, "that the two sides must agree to any detention of the prisoners after Jan. 22. If the two sides do not agree, we will, of course, have to devise some means' of releas ing them," j ' Qualifies Stand I However, 90 minutes later after an NNRC meeting Gen. Thimay ya qualified that by saying, "We will have to decide how this prob lem is to be solved. If there is a wide difference we will have to discuss what to do." There is almost certain to be "a wide difference." The Commu nists are expected to take the strongest 'possibl stand agains freeing the prisoners until a polit ical conference decides their fate, Fount 133 Willing ThexNNRC Monday cussed Red objections! again dis- to the In- dian head count last week which, ironically, turned up 133 prisoners who wanted to return to Commu nist control. Nofurther details of tne meeting were aivuigea, General Hull's letter: bitterly re jected the NNRC majority report inwhich the i Indians sided with the Communists, Czechs and Poles in blaming the U.N.C.jfor collapse of the prisoners explanations. (Additional Details on Page 5) OldClu Rebords In Seeded Box Church records and newspapers of over three decades ago were among items' found in the small copper box, which rested behind the cornerstone of-the old St Paul's Episcopal Church for 32 years. : The box, hermetically sealed, was opened by the Rev. George H. Swift, rector, Sunday night at the annual ' parish j meeting in the new building. Over 350 per sons were present for the open ing. ! Included in the hot were the names of the vestry of the church when the old building was dedi cated jn July, 1922 and the names of the building committee. The Rev. fcenry ; D. Chambers, now deceased, was rector at that time and served until 1929 when the Rev. Mr. Swift was called. Newspapers, including The Statesman, The Oregonian and Capital Journal, I created the greatest interest among persons present when the box was open ed, according to Rector Swift Many persons at the parish meet ing could recall incidents listed in the three papers, he said. Also .-included was a small American flag. All items in the box were in surprisingly good condition, be added.! Contents i of the box . together with articles of a similar nature from -the present congregation will-be sealed behind the corner stone of the new building during dedication ceremonies Jan. 31, Rector Swift explained. Razing of the old building at Church and Chemeketa Streets is eipected to start this week. ne aaaea. I-' Sfwi- Ulm. Pttdf. Salem .,; , 44 M . , Jt PertUna 41 '-. SS.. ' .M Saa FranclM M 49 J4 CMeac . , M - SI Trfte New York ' , 4 is . M Willamette liver 41 feet Forecast from U. S. weather bureau. McNarr field. Salem) Cloudy with rain this morning. Partly , cloudy with showers this afternoon and to night. Cloudy with rain Tuesday and little change in temperature. High today near 44 and low tonight near 34. Temperature at 111 a.m. 44. SALEM PEECIPATION eisee Start ef Weather Tear Sept 1 Tfcte Tear ' Last Tear Menu! utrhh PRICE 5c Husband's Trek Saves Family Caught in Snov; KLAMATH FALS M5) A motier and her two children who spent 12 chilly hours marooned in aj snowbound automobile north west of here were rescued early Sunday after the woman's hus band struggled 11 mles through deep drifts and found help. A stock rancher and his wife used a farm tractor and another car in the dramatic rescue. Mr. and Mrs. Ted! J. Wright of Klamath Falls and their two chil dren left hare Saturday afternoon on a 33-mile drive to Lake of the Woods in the Cascade Mountains. Wright said they got! off on a side road usually closed during the winter. Car Stalled A sudden wind and snow storm stalled the Wrights' Ijcar and drift ing snow nearly covered it. Wright left his family huddled under a piece of canvas in he back seat, and started hiking! back toward Klamath Falls in the still-raging blizzard. 1 Nearly exhausted; at midnight after walking 11 rniles, Wright flagged down Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Wampler who were;! returning by car to their nearby1 stock ranch. Wampler and Wright used the tractor to plow back to the stalled car and Mrs. Wampler followed in heir automobile Jl Thev reached the scene about 2:3Q a.m. Sunday. Mrs. Wright and!: the children. Betty. 14 and Eddy, only 4, still were in the car, curled under the canvas with their small cocker canvas with their S small' cocker spaniel. Taken to Ranch 1 The Wrights were, taken to Wam pler's ranch, wherej they were re covering from , exposure Sunday. They had had nothing to eat since Saturday afternoonp and wore only light clothing. An emergency state road crew recovered the stalled auto Sunday afternoon. Chehalis River i Sweeps Lvay Cofferdam ABERDEEN, Wash. Ufi - A gi ant cofferdam beiijg used in early, states of work on a new 5 mil lion dollar Chehal?s River bridge here collapsed Sunday, doing heavy damage and setting back construction sevefal weeks, No one was iijjured. but con tracting company; officials said several worxmen wouia nave Deen killed if the cofferdam had given way during a weekday. A bystander. Wayne Lundgren, about 63, was washed into the riv er by the huge fwave which the cofferdam's "implosion" set up. He was quickly 1 rescued by the watchman on thejj bridge job, Dar rell Green, who ilhad moved here late last week from Seattle, Tonoles Crane The wave also toppled a big crane and 20-incJi pump into 3j feet of .water, and broke windows! of houseboats moored along the banks. I j The rectangular cofferdam! about 73x100 feetf around and some; 50 feet deep, ws completed last week. The witer inside wai pumped out last Thursday and con crete footings for a main pier of the bridge were to have been poured at the bottom of the cof ferdam Monday 1 Lundgren was standing on the pier watching the cofferdam when the resulting wave swept him oft Green managed;! to reach out and grab him before he was carried away. f There was no immediate esti mate from McRae Bros., Seattle, the contractor, $n the cause' of the cofferdam's 'collapse or extant of the damage, Commicj Paper Titles Provide -Joke in Berlin BERLIN (M Berliners are chuckling at a new anti-communist joke outjof the Communist sector. It goes like this: I Herr Schmidt wants to buy the Communist papers Freedom and New German. So he goes toj a nevs stand and asks: "Have you got a New Ger many?" l ' . - V "NO." J r - "Have you got Freedom?" I : "No." : "When will you - have Free dom?" r: "When we have a new Ger No. 280 Windy Storm t! n w In Mountains ;.A double-punch storm whicl caused considerable damage is the Willamette Valley over the weekend continued to pile snow oil the Cascades Sunday and made -mountain travel hazardous. j W'inds with gusts up to 54 mile; ah hour were reported in Salem early this morning and are ex pected to reach 60 miles an hour' before 5 a.m. when a fast moving front is expected to pass. Heavy rain is forecast during the front al passage,! weathermen said. fSnow was falling at both San tiam and Willamette Passes early this morning, state police report ed, and Coast Highway 18 was snow-covered in the Grand Ronde area Sunday night Highway 99 south of Medford was reported ice-glazed and police advised all motorists heading for mountain areas to carry chains. Snow Reported I Foothills all along the eastern edge on the Willamette Valley had covering, of snow Sunday morning with two inches report ed at Silver Falls Park and con siderable : more in the upper reaches of the Santiam Canyon. I Fern Ridge Heights just east of Stavton had its first snow coat ing of the season but nearly all Of it washed off during the day Sunday, if I Electric service was disrupted early this morning in East Salem area bordering State Street Port land General Electric officials re ported, -and individual outages were reported elsewhere in Sa. Jem. Power Failure f Four PGE repair crews were out early this morning working on damage mostly caused by fall ing limbs. Isolated cases of pow er failure were also reported in the Woodburn and Silverton areas. Telephone and power lines were back in operation Sunday following some outrages caused by high winds Saturday. Pacific Tel ephone and Telegraph officials said no new trouble is expected unless wind velocity increases considerable this morning. Bus schedules were delayed by driving conditions on Willam ette Pass and on the Pacific High way in the Shasta-to-Redding, Calif., sector. Highways remained open, however, state police ad vised, i Woman Hurt As Bus Slides Off Highway KLAMATH FALLS tfl A Grey hound bus, loaded to capacity with 39 passengers, rammed the rear end of an automobile and skidded off the highway north of here Sunday, 'Only one passenger was Injured, state police said. They identified her as Jessie Fish, 1228 W. 13th St.. Vancouver, B.C. Police said the bus. en -route weaves mo from San Francisco to Portland, hit an , icy patch on snow-covered Highway 97 about 30 miles north , of here at 4:30 p.m. Tne ous tnen rammed a car in which Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Casperson of Spokane, Wash. j were riding. They were not hurt The car plunged off one side of the highway and . the bus went over the other side. William R. Pfaa of Brooks, Ore., was driver of the bus. The injured woman, who suf fered j a broken nose and facial cuts, was taken by ambulance U a Klamath Falls hospitaL Today's Statesman Editorials, features ..... 4 Society, women's 6 World This Week 7 Sports . . Comics Radio, TV . 8, 9 ... 10 11 a oar andsnooang tnem. S5-at in July of 1963 guards be at Wardroad prison. for traffic safety... 24.14 U.M lSJt many. Classified ads ., r ? . . . - '