The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, March 03, 1955, Page 1, Image 1

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    New volcano
104th YEAR
OTP
pcdxh
CHICAGO Arrival of three
issues of The Statesman of last
week (deliveries of second class
mail are quite irregular) has en
abled me to catch up on Salem
and Oregon news. The big story,
of course, was the arrest , of a
Silverton man charged with the
murder 'of Ervin Kaser in the
Evergreen district. (The charge
later was dismissed.) How long
lias it been since a murder sprung
from deliberate intent to kill has
occurred in Marion county? The
last murder case, as I retail, was
where a man bludgeoned a wo
man to death while robbing'ner
home. Other murders doubtless
have occurred in brawls or in
commission of other crimes. But
how long has it been since the
whole crime was murder, first
degree murder, murder on pur
pose? I do not recall any in my
residence of over 25 years in the
county; but my merapry may be
faulty.
I notice 5 Sen. Mark Hatfield's
prognostication that Oregon Dem
ocrats will try to have Sen.
Wayne Morse named x as their
party's vice presidential nominee.
Hardly, unless they would run
him for Senator at the same time.
With the margin of control of the
Senate so thin, (one vote now),
the Democrats are not going to
pull Morse out of the Oregon
Senate race to use him as a running-mate
to Adlai Stevenson in
a very hazardous race aeainst the
probable Eisenhower-Nixon tick
et Also, Democrats over the
country may not be as ready to
advance the newest convert so
fast in party honors.
The proposal of thes Oregon
Motor Court Association to in
crease the number on the state
highway commission to five from
the present three does not im
press me favorably. The com
mission is well distributed now
as far as . s
(Continued on editorial page, 6)
Army
Warns of Germ
War Attack
WASHINGTON ITi The Army
said. Wednesday it has a device
which can give instant warning of
a germ warfare attack.
called an aerosoloscope, it can
count ' germs, dust and moisture
particles in the .air. It was de
veloped at the Army's biological
warfare center at Camp Detrick,
Md.
The gadget can count micro
scopic particles germs, dust,
radioactive particles at the rate
of i00 per second.
Particles - ranging in size from
one: micron (forty millionths of
an , inch) to 64 microns can be
counted and measured "one thous
and times faster than by the ordi
navy method of collecting them in
a medium or on a suitable surface
and examining them through a
microscope." - -
Concentrations of airborne parti
cles up to 15,000 per millimeter
are drawn through the instrument
Bridgeport Girl
Device
Contest; Pedee Boy Second
FALLS CITY Poised, sure-spelling
Carol Nelson of Bridgeport
School topped off her efforts with
"efficiency" and then spelled
. ''poisonous'. Wednesday night to
win the semi-finals of The States-man-KSLM
Contest here.
The 12-year-old 8th-grader out
lasted Harry Cummins, 13, in" the
8th grade of Pedee -School who
placed a good second.
1 Carol and Harry will participate
in the Grand Finals of the contest
next Thursday, night March 10,
at Parrish Junior High in Salem.
Carol, who was fifth in the semi
finals last year, is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Nelson, Route
2, Box 131, Dallas. Her teacher
1 Principal Alice Lund., .
Harry is the son of ' Mr. and
Mrs. Dewey Ctammins II of Pedee.
His teacher is Principal Alice E.
Murphy. His brother, Dewey, was:
in the Grand Finals two years in
a row. : : . - -
ANIMAL CRACKERS
BY WAR RE IV OOOORICM ,
x mm
Td like to leave a call for
April 15Ul
4 SECTIONS-28 PAGES
Stocks
Probe
WASHINGTON (J Sehj Ful
bright cautioned stock market
traders . Wednesday night not to
get trigger-happy over an investi
gation of the market, . starting
Thursday. -. ' ll
People who jump to conclusions
on the basis of one day's j testi
mony may find the next day that
they "suffered from an excess of
haste, said the Arkansas Demo
crat M
He is chairman of the; Senate
Banking Committee, which j opens
a three-weeks probe into the wall
Street boom. First witness will be
G. Keith Funston, president of the
New York Stock Exchange.;
At New Highs . j
Stock prices started zooming
back in September, 1933, and have
recently been rising to new j highs,
But Fulb right said: i
"The basic issue x x x i before
this committee is not whether
stock prices are too high, whether
they can safely go higher, or
whether they should be (driven
down." ll
He said the aim is to determine
"whether the public interest is be
ing safely and wisely served" by
the exchanges. I I
Fulbright said the question was
being asked everywhere ''whether
the wheel of history was about to
make a full turn: whether a new
stock market collapse on -the 1929
model lay directly ahead.' i
Released in Advance 1
This committee is not in any
present position t o answer that
question either in an encouraging
or warning voice, he said in
statement prepared for opening of
the hearings but released! in ad
vance. f
"Nor would I, for one, even con
sider commenting on it until
long and careful , survey I of the
facts is completed! if then."
Gas Drops to
21 Cents Per
Gallon Here
".' - : .' . ! i ; '
Regular gasoline prices drop
ped to 21 cents per gallon in
many Salem stations Wednesday
in the latest round of the spread
ing gasoline price war.i ?
Some steadfastly hung to pre
war price? like 31 cents, whereas
middle - of the roaderj, ' directly
across the street from I 21-cent
men, maintained big posters pro
claiming theirs at 2a cents a gal
lon. Some compromised on 23
cents. H
The operator of- one near
town, two-pump station ; put his
customers to work filling their
own tanks while he coped with
four cars at once. Midway through
an after-supper siege! he tele
phoned home for a. helper.
Jap Earthquake
Caused by Love?
TOKYO (UP)-An earthquake
shook (Tokyo Tuesday while Pfq
Pat Sheridan was playing the tune
"Love Can Cause an Earthquake"
over the Armed Forces; Radio net:
work. ft!
"That was Love Can' Cause An
Earthquake," Sheridan! announced
when the song ended, f !
A second quake promptly jolted
the city. I !
Wins Spelling
The two- Grand Finalists were
alone on the stage of Falls City
High School for the last 93 words
pronounced, and showed no sign
of weakening , until Harry finally
slipped on efficiency, which
Carol then spelled and; won with
the next word. W
Carol received a Webster's New
Collegiate Dictionary for placing
first Both top winners received
special certificates of merit, as
did the third-place winner, Lor
raine-. Kinsey, 13, in the 8th grade
at Gutfane, who dropped an e
out of "volunteer." , - j !
Lorraine is the daughter of Mr,
and Mrs. Lawrence Kinsey, Route
TURNER TONIGHT
Spelling champian i Of Clover-
dale, Jeffersoa, Marion, Macleay,
Riverside, Shaw, Sonnyside and
Tomer will compete! in a semi
finals of The Statesman-KSLM
Spelling Contest at 7:43 tonight at
Turner Elementary School, wila
the public invited without charge.
2. Dallas, and her: teacher is
Principal Elina Brewster.
Beverly Cook, 13-year-old 7th
grader from Valsetz, had an extra
letter in "laughter;"! Helen Bow
man, 13, of the host school's 8th
grade, left a syllable out of "char
acter;" Yvonne Ahlberg, 13, ' an
8th-grader at Oakhurst, tumbled
on "innocent" and Margaret Eg
gert, 13, in Oakdale's; 8th grade,
inadvertently slipped up on 'copy."
Host principal was J. Herschel
Bond. Herb Johnson.! program di
rector of KSLM, was master of
ceremonies and Wendell Webb,
managing editor of The Statesman,
Ready
called the words. -
' If ' - I: PCUNDETD 165! .
Tht Oregon Statesman,
Committee
An overflow crowd of nearly 200 took In the sales tax hearing be-the faced the committee (in picture above) Is R. E. Kerr, Lane Conn
i fore the House tax committee Wednesday afternoon at the Oregon ty filbert grower who represented the statewide Oregon Farm Bureau
CapitoL Reading a prepared statement in favor of a sales tax as J
Farmers Call for Sa les Tax to
Relieve Burden on Property
Withholding Tax
By ROBERT E. GANGWARE
City Editor, The Statesman
Twenty Oregon citizens appeal
ed to the House tax committee
Wednesday for a general retail
sales tax. Most of them were
armers who said such a tax
would relieve the burden of prop-;
erty taxes. 1
Toes of the sales tax, also in
cluding several farmers, replied
that these citizens just didn't real
ize what they were asking. ;
While familiar pros and cons of
the sales tax issue which appears
at every Legislature held the at
tention of some 200 persons pack
ed in the committee room at the
Capitol, it was actually the ; in
come tax which received major
attention Wednesday from the
committee.!
Would Double Tax
In recommending passage of a
bill to double the state withhold
ing tax, the House tax group add
ed weight to the growing indica
tions that higher income taxes are
being eyed as the prime source
of additional state revenue.
This taxi committee faces the
task of finding new revenue to
pay an estimated $45 million oper
ating deficit and to finance essen
tial state construction lr the next
two years, j I
The withholding tax bill which
the committee stamped "do pass"
at a morning session would mean
that 2 per cent of wages or salary
would bej withheld against the
wage earner's annual state in
come tax f bill. Present withhold
ing is 1 er cent
Agricultural Employes
A major feature of the with
holding bill is inclusion for the
first time of agricultural employ
ment If higher income taxes are
enacted, the 2 per cent withhold
ing would come closer than 1 per
cent to make the income tax "pay
as you go."
A Democratic tax program calls
for a 30 per cent increase of in
come tax, by a surcharge. A labor
farm program also calls for high
er income tax rates.
The afternoon sales tax hearing
centered on House Bill 413, pro
posed by Rep. Earl Hill (R),
Criminals Repent
In Pennsylvania
WAYNESBURG Pa. (UP) -
Waynesburg police said Wednes
day the town's criminal element
either has reformed or gone soft
First a heavy tombstone stolen
from a monument works several
days ago was returned. Then $238
stolen Monday night from a local
furniture store was found at the
store's entrance when employes re
ported for work Tuesday.
Max. Min. Preetm.
- 4S . 33 M
Salem
Portland -
- M 32 traca
37 , 27 J6
- 43 1 37 .11
46 37 trace
.. 37 36 trace
. 58 43 .00
63 43 .00
v47 -32 . - .00
Baker
Mediord
North Bend
Roseburg
San Francisco
Los Angeles
Chicago
New York
56 40 AO
Willamette River 5.0 feet.
FORECAST (from U. S. weather
bureau. McNary field, Salem)
Partly cloudy with a few scattered
showers today. High today near 45.
Taif umxgnv with a low near 26.
Temperature at 12 ."01 a.m. today
- - , ,
SALEM PRECTP1TATIOV
Mace Start of Weather Year Sept.
This Year - Last Year Nermal
2L1S 35.30 2S.63
Salem, Oregon, Thursday, March
Room Crowded as Sales Tax
Hike Wins Vote
Cushman, as a 3 per cent tax on
all retail sales with but few ex
ceptions, including feed, fertilizer,
gasoline laireaay uxea at con
sumer level) and food animals.
The tax which would raise an
estimated $60 million would be
earmarked for support of local
schools in an effort to reduce lo
cal property levies and avoid a
state property tax.
All Should Share
"All people, not just few, should
share the burden of school costs,"
declared sponsor Hill at ihe hear
ing. He was the only legislator to
speak, among a dozen or more
representatives sitting in on the
hearing.
Opponents declared the sales
tax would be a heavy burden on
low income groups -and emphas
ized also that businesses like saw-
THURSDAY HEARING
On crop dusting law changes
House agriculture committee,
Room 325, at 3 p.m.
mills and banks would be spared
property tax under the plan but
wouldn't have much reason to be
paying the sales tax in return.
Will Take Week
The House tax committee took
no action on the sales tax bill and
Rep. Loran Stewart (R), CotUgeL""". -,i .
Grove, its chairman, said it would Fhe cmit7 Ca in
probably be a week before the
committee reviews the bill.
In other legislative action Wed
nesday, final approval was voted
by the Senate on bond issues for
college housing construction, com
mittee endorsement went to a
plan for a constitutional convention-
and employer and employe
groups renewed arguments, over
unemployment compensation at a
hearing. '.
(Additional . details and other
legislative news on page 6, 7, sec.
and page 2, sec. 1.)
Partly Cloudy
Day Forecast
Snow continued to fall in many
sections of Oregon Wednesday as
some sections of Salem got a little
early -morning snow, which did
not stick, and late-morning down
town sleet
Today is to be partly cloudy
with a few scattered showers, say
weathermen. Fair weather is pre
dicted for tonight . .
Travel was hazardous Wednes
day on state mountain highways,
the highway commission reported.
Chains are required at Govern
ment Camp, Timberline, Sunset
Summit, Santiam Pass and Aus
tin. ' 7. -. '"" -
Ice spots were reported at Sis
kiyou, Bly, Lakeview. Brothers
and Lapine. -
' Plows were operating at Gov
ernment Camp, Timberline, Green
Springs, Santiam Pass, Willamette
Pass and Wilson River Summit
Ike, Airs. Eisenhower
Honored by McKays
WASHINGTON W President
and Mrs. Eisenhower were hon
ored guests Wednesday at a dinner
given by Secretary of the Interior
and Mrs. Douglas McKay. .
The dinner, to which McKay
also invited fellow cabinet mem
bers and their wives, was at the
exclusive 1325 F Street Club here.
31955
PRICE
' -ft
Federation. (Statesman photo.) (Picture also on page 7, sec. 3.)
Angry Arabs
In Wad Riots
At Palestine
GAZA, Egypt-Held Palestine UPi
Hundreds of Arab refugees
from Palestine rioted in this coast
al Palestine city Wednesday. Of
ficials said the refugees, embit
tered by their fate as homeless
person for more than six years.
were expressing, wrath against
the United Nations and Israel
At least seven persons were
wounded as police and Egyptian
troops fired on the stone-throwing
mob. .
Reports', from Khanyounls, refu
gee center 15 miles south of Gaza,
said a mob burned a U.N. store.
The food destroyed would have fed
for a month 50,000 refugees in the
area
Tuesday's rioting, climaxed by
a prolonged attack with stones on
U.N. truce observers' headquar
ters here, erupted after a clash
between Egyptian and Israeli
troops Monday night near their
wmistic demarcation border.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. Ul
urgent session Friday to, discuss
Egypt's charges of aggression . by
Israel near Gaza m the frontier
zone.
Ike Says U.S.
In Atomic Lead
WASHINGTON tf Presided
Eisenhower said Wednesday the
Western world still leads Russia
in atomic and hydrogen weapons
But he said it is problematical
"how long that lead can be sus
tained."
Eisenhower also told a new con
ference: "
"There comes a time, possibly,
when a lead is not significant in
the defensive arrangements of
country. If you get enough of
particular type of weapon, I doubt
that it is particularly import an
to have a lot more of it.
(Additional news conference stor
ies on pages 4, 5 of sec. l)
High Soviet Shakeup Deposes
Ministers of Coal, Agriculture
V By STANLEY JOHNSON
MOSCOW ilfi The Supreme
Soviet' Wednesday fired two min
isters for inefficiency and switched
a third to a new post.
' The shakeup affected coal and
agriculture. It underscored recent
widespread criticism by officials
and in the press of lags in the
economy. -
The Presidium's announcement
was broadcast by Moscow radio.
It said the changes were made on
the recommendation of Premier
Nikolai Bulganin, The Presidium
under the constitution is the top
state authority when the Supreme
Soviet,'-Russia's' parliament, is not
in session.
The announcement said the Pre
sidium had deckled to release AJS.
Zasyadko as minister of the coal
No. 341
Discussed
5c
I I
1
Walton-Brown
i . - - -
Building Sold
To Milk Firm
Sale of the Walton-Brown Elec
trie Co. plant in southeast Salem
to Damascus Milk ' Co. of Port
end for use as a milk distribution
center, ' was . announced Wednes
day. : 'j
New owners will take possession
of the ' property, located at Simp
son and Ford streets, about .April
1. Purchase price was about $40,
000. s
James . Walton, owner and presi
dent of the electrical firm, said
his firm would "remain in opera
tion." New business site ,for elec
trical company will, be announced
later, he said. !
The sale transaction was -made
through Grabenhorst Bros., Salem
real estate firm, which describes
the property as consisting of six
lots with a frontage of 300 feet
on Simpson and 124 of Ford street.
Three buildings are on the prop
erty. The include space for stor
age, warehousing and the Wal
ton-Brown modern offices. j
None of the buildings built in
recent years will be removed, ac
cording to Alden H. Schwabauer,
' tant sales manager for the
company, who will be Salem
branch manager. j
i The DaniaKMis 'enmnanv will
use the offices, and will make con
siderable alterations, including ad
dition of refrigeration, he said.)
The milk firm purchases a great
deal of its milk from dairy farms
in Marion County, said Schwa
bauer, and location of the branch;
distribution center here is for the
most adequate service to the com
munity." " j
Operating in Salem for the past
two years the Damascus company
has had temporary offices in the
Pacific Building. Schwabauer has
been here since Jan. 1.
Probation Officer
Tackles Prisoner
PORTLAND CP A speedy
probation officer foiled an "escape
attempt by a federal prisoner here
Wednesday. : ' )
John Gregg ran after Donald ;W,
Rogers, 20, Wenatchee, when -he
made a break for freedom ind
overhauled him in the federal
courthouse after Rogers had
pleaded guilty to a charge I of
driving a stolen car from Wenat
chee to The- Dalles. Gregg brought
down Rogers with a flying tackle.
industry ''because of unsatisfac
tory work." A.N. Zadenudko jwas
named to succeed him. 4 '
The presidium also ' released
"Comrade A.I. Kozlov" as minis
ter of state farms "because he'
failed to cope with the work.? -To
succeed him, "Comrade LA. pen
ediktov" was "released fromJ the
duties of U.S.S.R. minister of ag
riculture No successor to Ben-
ediktov was announced. - !
Western diplomats here have
been expecting the shakeup ia ag
riculture ever since the Commu
nist Partyss denunciations of the
country's farming methods have
been publicized. These T expecta
tions increased after Georgi M.
Malenkov took the blame, for ag
ricultural failure on his own shoul
ders when he resigned as premier
Feb. S.
E
r irate
Hawaii Field
By ROY ESSOYAN
PAHOA, Hawaii (AP) A new Tolcano split a
half mile crack in a cane field on Hawaii's tormented
eastern tip Wednesday and exploded a 200-foot high
fountain of red-hot rock
plantation workers. All escaped unhurt.
Fountains i of molten lava spewed all along the
fissure and two, boiling streams
burned paths through the sugar
cane.
National Guard trucks fanned
out northeast and southeast from
Pahoa to evacuate about 100 more
persons whose escape routes were
in danger of being cut off by the
newest eruption. ..
400 Removed
Four hundred j persons were re
moved Earlier from villages and
farm homes on the rich sugar cane
and coffee lands of Hawaii Island's
eastern slope. -.
The National Guard plane which
spotted the newest eruption ran
out of gas and made an emergen
cy landing north of Kapoho, an
abandoned village near Hawaii's
easternmost tip.
The plane landed on a small air
strip less than a' mile from the
advancing river of molten rock.
The pilot obtained gasoline and
flew out.
The newest eruption came In
mid-afternoon, about four or five
miles northeast of the cane field
where Hawaii's underground fires
burst open a new crater Monday
morning. '
Smoke Shoots
l cl.i.:.. 1 t ci ti i
oiiajiiii iiivc a jeai, ouunji l&eua,
29, told of the newest eruption.
"I was working in the field and
the first thing I noticed was smoke
shooting up next to my house,"
Ikeda said.; "I thought the house
was burning. I dropped,.everything
and ran ,and then I saw this lava
shooting ' up j right next to my
house.
"I didn't know what to do. My
friends were working behind me.
My house and all the things I have
were in danger but my friends
were more important.
"I turned around and ran to
warn my friends.
"The last I saw the fountain was
shooting high over my house but
I think. the flow Vas going the
other way."
Earth Rumbles
Throughout the day the tortured
earth groaned and rumbled. Huge
cracks opened, splitting fields and
roads. Steam hissed out of the
ground.
A string of long dead craters
curves down the eastern slope of
Mauna Loa, a massive volcanic
mountain, from its famed Kilauea
crater to the sea.
The new craters have burst like
fiery blossoms in cane fields. The
first one Monday erupted close to
the old Puulena Crater.
All are part of the Kilauea vol
cano system, a volcanologist on
the scene said.
Meat Marketing
Demonstration
Friday Morning
Salem and other Marion County
meat consumers are invited to
the first meat marketing demon
stration held in this area in a
(long time. The event will be
held Friday at the Senator Hotel
starting at 10 a.m. auj is spon
sored by the Marion County Live
stock Association.
Bill Ward, Senator chef, is pre
paring a buffet luncheon from the
economical cuts, and this will be
served in the Cave Room for
those attending the demonstra
tion. During the afternoon, new
methods of preparing and cook
ing meat will be shown. (Addi
tional details on Farm Pages 4
and 5, sec. 2.)
War ds Fight
Gathers Speed
LOS ANGELES W The fight
or control of Montgomery Ward
k Co. gathered speed Wednesday
as the seweu Avery forces an
nounced a door - to - door cam
paign for stockholder support to
offset the efforts of a young finan
cier to take over the company.
Louis E. Wolfson, 43-year-old
Miami financier, is trying to wrest
control of the big mail order house
from' the 81-year-old Avery, board
chairman and head of the firm
for 23 years. '
Holloway Namedh
To State Board of
Higher Education
Charles R. Holloway Jr., Port
land, was appointed Wednesday to
the State Board of Higher Ed
ucation by Gov. Paul Patterson.
Holloway, vice president and
general manager of the Liberty
Fuel and Ice Company, succeeds
Edgar W. Smith who asked to be
relieved of his job on the board
prior to the expiration of his term
Wednesday. -
Holloway, 43, is a graduate ol
the University of Oregon, and ob
tained' a law degree form North
west College of Law in 1940.
(Additional details on Page S,
Sec 3.)
From
only 200 yards from 12
Oregon Efforts
Against Pelton
'Encroaciing'
WASHINGTON UT Oregon
efforts to prevent construction of
Pelton Dam on the Deschutes
River were described to the
Supreme Court Wednesday as
"unauthorized encroachment" on '
federal property.
The jassertion was made by
Willard W. Gatchell, general
counsel ' of the Federal Power
Commission:
He argued that the court should
overturn a lower court decision
that cancelled an FPC license to
Portland General Electric Co. for
construction of the dam.
The cancellation was ordered by
the Circuit Court of Appeals at
San Francisco after Oregon and
its fish and game commissions had
objected that the dam would
injure fishery resources.;
The Deschutes River flows in
part through federal lands, and at
the Pelton site one bank is on the
Warm Springs Reservation.
Gatchell told the court it would
have to decide whether Congress
has rights to water flowing across
federally owned land. j
Arthur C. Higgs, assistant attor
ney general of i Oregon, argued
that ui the 1877 Desert Lands Act
Congress irrevocably surrendered
to the states all regulatory power
over non-navigable waters on arid
or semi-arid lands uv public
domain. !
The Circuit Court said federal
ownership of land at the Pelton
site did not give the federal
government power to i use Des
chutes water "contrary to Oregon
law." , ' ,
Gatchell insisted the project
would provide new pool facilities
and "win hot interfere with,
invade or - encroach upon any
rights to the use pf water In the
stream."
S129 Stolen in
3 Break-Ins
At Perry dale
Statesman Newi Service
DALLAS, Ore. Three overnight
break-ins at Perrydale netted bur- -
glars $129 in cash and checks, the.
Polk County sheriff's office re
ported Wednesday.
Deputy Robert LeFors said the
$129, about half in cash, was taken
from a fireproof filing cabinet at
Perrydale High School.
The culprits also broke into
Elliott Feed and Seed Co. where
they apparently overlooked small
amountsof money in desks. They
also broke into 'the postoffice, lo
cated in the old railroad depot,
and sprung" open a chest which was
bolted to the floor. f)nly records
were kept in the chest.
Nothing was reported missing
from the grain company or post
office. Home Sold to
Make Way for.
Store Expansion
Sale of the colonial-style Rob
ert K. Powell home at 2895 S.
Commercial St to Erickson'i
Markets for planned expansion of
their S. Commercial and Alice St.
store was announced Wednesday.
Details of plans for the lot
were not available Tuesday, but
a portion of it will be used for
additional parking. The purchase
now gives Erickson's a full block
ironiage on a. commercial
between Alice and Hansen Ave
nues. Powell, .who said the consider
ation for the property was $32,
500, said his family wouldmove
soon to a new home at 2360 Bluff
St v -
The transaction for the two
story, four-bedroom home built
in 1941 by VirgiLT. Golden was
bandied by Grabenhorst Bros.,
realtors of Salem.
Today's Statesman
Sec Pago
City Briefs l 7
Classifiods JV 4-6
. Comes the Dawn I 6
Comics. JZ. II 6
Crossword 1V - 4
Editorials , , . I 6
Farm 114, 5
Legislature
Markets .
J!l6, 7
.IV 4
.IV 1-3
-III 7
JH 7
Sports
Star Gazer
TV, Radio
Valley
II 3, 4
Homo Panorama IL1,2