. y 1 y,-, - , ij, -- l,,- 1
Gag
urrenders to FoMce.in Alaska
Oveross
J0F
Unaware
ofChara
IhSilverton Slaying
By THOMAS G. WEIGHT Jr.
Staff Writer, The Statesman
Casper A. Oveross. wanted here to face a first degree murder
105th Ytar
Teamsters Urged
To Md Movement
Of Basic Supplies
; LOS ANGELES VP) A potentially paralyzing strike and lock
out forced the West's trucking industry into low gear Friday, as
truckers appealed to AFL Teamsters to join them in continuing
shipments of hospital supplies, milk and government freight, in
cluding maiL
Chairman William H. Allen of the California Trucking Assn.,
tTCTD
I II I
mm
ana
The Argentine chamber of dep
uties voted 121 to 12 to separate
church and state in that country.
The measure which has been push
ed by President Peron now goes to
the Senate whose 34 members are
- all Peronistas. So unless Peron him
self calls a change of signals tee
Roman Catholic will no longer be
the state religion of the Argentine
Republic.
This indeed marks a definite re
volution for a Spanish - speaking
country. The Catholic faith came
to what is now Latin America con
temporaneously with the Spanish
explorers and settlers. It is the
prevailing if not the official reli
gion in all Latin America.
Americans are so accustomed to
the doctrine of separation of church
and state that they. hardly under
stand why other countries continue
an Established Church. It goes
back into history of course. Such
identification of church with state
is by no means confined to Catholic
countries. In Britain the Anglican
church is the Established Church.
Ia Scandinavian countries the Lu
theran church is the official church.
Freedom of worship however is
extended to. followers of other
faiths.
-What happened in Argentine is
wit any 'spiritual" awakening. The
dictator,1. Peron. is determined to
brook no rival in the management
of affairs in his country. Some
dictators, have established good
working; "
(Continued on editorial page. 4.)
Country Man
Glad to Leave
Urban Laic
A Paisley man was happy to get
back to the sagebrush country to
day after being confronted by a
shotgun and two police prowl cars
in the Keizer area early Friday.
The whole affair started after
Mrs. Gilbert Ward, 4360 Toni Ave.,
arrived home late Thursday with
her two children and a woman
friend and heard a knock at her
door.
Mrs. Ward, suspicious, called the
Marion County sheriffs office.
grabbed herhusband's shotgun and
exchanged words with the "intrud
er" and deputies. The sheriffs of
fice, meanwhile, alerted state po
lice. The man left after asking direc
tions to a home in the area. A few
minutes later, state police picked
him up on North River Road.
The man maintained he had lost
his bearings and was seeking a
borne in the area at which he was
visiting. , State police, convinced,
gave him directions to the resi
dence and sent him on his way.
As the man approached the resi
dence, a sheriffs car roared up and
the "intruder" was again nabbed.
"After repeating the whole story,
the man was again sent on his way.
His -parting comment to deputies
was TH sure be glad to get back
to the sagebrush country where
th"re aren't so many policemen!"
Mrs. Ward said her suspicions
were aroused because of a report
of a prowler in the area the night
before.
BLAST KILLS 3
NAPLES, Italy i Three per
sons were killed and ten injured
Friday in an explosion .hat
wrecked a small fireworks factory
on the outskirts of Naples. The
plant makes fireworks for religious
holiday celebrations. -
"ANIMAL CRACKERS
. ntRRii BOODRICH
"We have fond that puck is
the easiest thing to serve at a
prt7 ttia afaeV
EC
" '; " PCUNDQD 1651 V
2 SECTIONS 16 PACES
'emergency traffic committee tele-
graphed Director H. L. Woxberg
of the AFL Council's western line
drivers asking to discuss plans
with him as soon as possible.
Earlier a Teamster spokesman
said his union would do everything
possible to keep emergency sup
plies and even perishable commod
ities like vegetables moving to
market.
Moving East
The work stoppage, which, began
in the three Pacific Coast states
Friday, moved steadily eastward.
Already ordered shut down are
trucking companies in California,
Oregon, Washington, Utah. Idaho
and Nevada.
The idleness stems from a strike
Thursday by AFL ' Teamsters
against three major firms. Con
solidated Freightways, Pacific In
termountain Express and Pacific
Motor Trucking Co.
Wage Dispute '
The dispute involves wages and
health welfare and pension bene
fits for 100,000 Teamster Union
members in 11 western states. The
membership includes 28,000 driv
ers, and dock and office workers
- Trucking will be affected as far
east as Chicago, Kansas City and
St. Louis.
However, the full impact of the
tieup will not be felt for another
two days,-truckers say. Deliveries
in transit when the strike was
called still are being made to con
signees. Strike Curtails
Truck Traffic
In Salem Area
Nearly all of the major freight
hauling trucking firms in the Sa
lem area ceased operations Friday
following a AFL Teamsters strike
of three carriers Thursday, f
A half-dozen firms contacted by
the Statesman Friday afternoon
said they had halted all over-the-
road hauling and even local deliv
ery or pick-up freight.
Several said they were continu
ing local "cartage" hauling mov
ing of household goods. Apparently
nnf atfanlA of lo acf immaiafAlv
by the: shutdown trucking of fuel
oil, gasoline and foodstuffs.
Approximately 60 to 70 local driv
ers, and possibly other employes,
are being idled by the dispute over
signing of a union master contract
covering Teamsters in 11 Western
states.
50 to M Tracks
One Salem operator guessed the
shutdown Has halted a daily flow
into Salem of between SO and 60
trucks. Much of this freight, it was
indicated, would now go by rail.
One immediate effect of the para
lysis is that several Salem indus
tries, who receive regular ship
ments of heavy freight will now
have to do their own hauling to and
from the railroad depot.
Other than that no other hardship
was reported. The teamsters origin
ally i struck three carriers all
members of the Trucking Associa
tion. Other members said the strike
against the three actually was
"move against all of us" and so
ordered the shutdown in sympathy.
; Trucking firms who reported they
had closed down Friday included
Willamette Valley, Silver Wheel,
Pierce. Senator Lines and Larm
er's. Remaining closed since the
beginning of the strike Thursday
were Pacific Motor Trucking, Con
solidated Freightways and West
Coast Fast Freight
Hearings Planned Tuesday on
Three Coast Roads Projects
Three State Highway Commis
sion public Bearings anecung
several Polk and Yamhill County
communities and much traffic to
the coast will be held Tuesday at
RickreaU. Sheridan and Dayton.
All three concern controversial
proposals for bypass or cutoff
highway routes. These are:
1 Straightening out the coast
highway from Salem with a new,
straight section of highway be
tween the Dallas road just north
of Oak Knoll golf course and
Dolph Corners, about four miles
north of Dallas on the present
route. Hearing on this will be
at 1 p. m. in RickreaU grange
hall.
2 Bypassing Sheridan and !
Willamina with a new section of
the Salmon River Highway,
Route 18, between McMinnvffle
and the coast This hearing is at
10 a. m. Tuesday jn Sheridan.
The Oregon Statesman,
Phone
ATLANTA tfl The
long, costly
and strife-ndden strike against
Southern Bell Telephone and Tele
graph Co. was settled Friday
night v
Weary 'v negotiators reached
agreement at 9:45 p. m. ou terms
of a new contract covering approx
unateiy 50,000 workers in nine
southeastern states.
The end came 68, days after
members of the CIO iCommunica
tions Workers of America walked
out of the company's 1,043
changes in a contract dispute.
ex-
The strike was the -longest ever
called against any of the 22 oper
ating units of the Bell System, lhe
previous record was the 60-day
strike against the Indiana Bell
Co. in 1953. j
During the walkout; workers lost
millions of dollars in pay and the
company reported more than 3,000
instances of major damage to
property. The union repeatedly dis
claimed any responsibility for
damage. j
U. S. Decides
Not to Lower
Vaccine Dose
WASHINGTON UB - The govern
ment Friday night decided against
reducing dosages of the salk anti-
polio vaccine as an attempt to
stretch out the scarce supplies.
This threw into further doubt
just how soon millions of still un
vaccinated children can receive
the treatment
A team of experts met all day
here to consider whether smaller
dosages, possibly injected just into
the skin rather than into the mus
cles, would be advisable.
But Friday Surgeon Gen. Leon
ard A. Scheele of the Public Health
Service announced ; this advisory
committee has recommended that
the present generally accepted
scheduled of three doses of one cc
each of the vaccine be continued.
The experts recommended the
vaccination continue to be injected
into the muscles rather than just
into the skin. j
The team of experts also took
up another question: whether the
vaccination campaign should be
suspended in late summer, the
height of the polio season, out of
fear the injection j might provoke
a type of paralysis.
On this score, the experts rec
ommended: !
1. In areas and i periods where
polio is prevalent,! the first shot
should be given "only after evalua
tion of all the circumstances."
2. But the second shots can be
given in such areas and periods
"without appreciable concern for
the phenomenon of provocation
The experts explained that slight
immunity resulting: from the first
dose of vaccine will most likely
provide protection against any
such effect
NORTHWEST LEAGUE
At Eugen 3. Salem 0.
At Wenatche 11. Spokane
At Yakima 4, Lewis ton 11.
10.
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
At Seattle 11. Portland 3.
At Hollywood ?. Oakland 3.
At Sacramento 2. San Diego 8.
At Sa Francisco S, Los Angeles 3.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
At Chicago O. Kansas City 1.
At Detroit 11. Cleveland 4.
At Washington 3. Boston 1.
At New York 7, Baltimore 9.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
At Milwaukee 2. Chicago 4.
At Cincinnati 10. St. Louis T.
At Brooklyn 3. Philadelphia S.
At Pittsburgh 3. New York 6.
3 Bypassing Dayton with re
alinement of the secondary high
way connecting the "three-mile
lane" road out of "McMinnville
with Highway 99-W near Dayton.
Hearing set for 3 p. m. at Dayton
city council chambers!
After hearing i citizens' reac
tions, the highway commissioners
are expected to consider the re
location plans at .their regular
monthly meeting in Portland
Wednesday and Thursday.
Salem Chamber of Commerce
is planning to send u delegation
to Rickreall to endorse the pro
posed coast highway cutoff which
last month won ; approval from
the chamber's executive commit
tee. V
' Othpr husincc nut wpplr he-
m.
the commission will include
blds OB some 40 highway projects
1 valued at over $3,000,000. .
Strike
Ends
Salem, Oregon, Saturday, May 21,
Patient Collie
' V
SWF.GLE Here's a trick that would make Lassie jealous. But Dusty, collie dog of Mr. and Mrs.
Hillard Hanson. 4427 Market St., appears to be wishing those . robins iwould go sit On somebody
else's noggin. Mrs. Hanson adopted the three rob'ns two weeks ago when their nest fell ont of a
tree near Swegle School, just east of Salem. They are nearly f nil-grown now and Mrs. Hanson re
ports they are as tame as Dusty, on whose back they sometimes ride around the yard. She ex
pects they will fly away soon, however. (Statesman Photo, by John Ericksen).
Independence Gulch
Hides Fatal Accident
Statesman Newt Serrie
INDEPENDENCE A gulch near the City Park hid the
wreckage of a fatal auto accident for nearly 12 hours here Friday
after a car drove off a dead-end street
Dead is Maxwell Robert McLean, 34, Monmouth logger, lone
occupant of the car. He was Polk County's sixth traffic victim of
the year and the 13th in the Marion-Polk County area.
HP A
Safe Driving
Rodeo Sunday
Approximately 50 students of
Salem schools will show, their
driving skills and road courtesies
at the Teen-Age Safe Driving
Rodeo Sunday in the parking lot
at the Capitol Shopping Center.
The contest, which tests vari
ous driving techniques, is spon
sored by the Salem Junior Cham
ber of Commerce. Several hun
dred dollars worth of prizes, do
nated by the Salem New Car
Dealers Association will be
awarded.
Two winners in a written test
given previously to the driving
test, will be announced. They are
Jim Fortmiller of South Salem
High School and Ken Simila of
Parrish Junior High. Both at
tained a score of 96.
The driving contest starts at 2
p.m. but contestants are to be
registered and briefed at 1:30
p.m. All contestants must turn
in their entry blanks, signed by
their parents, before the driving
starts, according to Jaycee Doug
las Sheldon, general chairman.
A-Powered
Liner Ey ed
SEATTLE Wl A new atom
powered running mate for the big
liner United States is possible
within the next six years, a U. S.
Lines official said Friday.
Raymond M. Hicks, executive
vice president of the steamship
company, said in an interview that
a replacement is needed soon for
the 980-passenger SS America,
built in 1941.
"Of course we are considering
atomic propulsion." Hicks said.
"You cannot consider any long
range ship replacement in these
days . without looking at atomic
power."
Students Strike
Against Exams
LIMA. Peru (UP) Students
in Peru's two major universities
struck Friday against p re-medical
examinations they claim are too
strenuous.
Students at San Marcos, oldest
university in the Western Hemi
sphere, first walked out in support
of five students who went on a
hunger strike last Monday. Stu
dents of Arequipa University fol
lowed suit
1955
PRICE
and His Feathered Friends
f ' -::a i i s A
i
4 The wrecked
car was
not sighted until 11:30
a. m. Friday, but Deputy
W
Coroner Earl Thomson estimated
McLean had been dead since "1
or 2 a. m." He said the victim
suffered a crushed chest and
posible skull fracture.
Police Chief Ray Howard said
McLean was headed west on C
street and continued on for 165
feet through the1 edge of the City
Park after the street ended.
The chief said the car barely
missed a small building, then
shot down a 30-foot bank into a
dry creek bed where it struck a
stump.
C Street is a north of Mon
mouth Avenue, the highway Ahat
links Independence with nearby
Monmouth where McLean lived.
A resident of the area noticed
the wreckage and notified police.
(Additional details on page 2,
sec. 1.)
On Forecast
Fair Weekend
Salem area residents planning
fishing trips, picnics and other out
door ventures over the weekend
will be blessed with good weather,
said weathermen at McNary Field
early this morning.
The forecast calls for fair, sun
ny skies today and Sunday, though
some early morning cloudiness is
expected. Today's high reading, is
predicted at near 73 and the merc
ury is not expected to drop under
42 tonight. ,
The weather outlook at North
Oregon beaches is for fair condi
tions through Saturday at least,
with late night and morning fog
and clouds. Temperature range
will be about 45 to 58 with winds
10 to 20 miles an hour afternoon
and evening.
MULTNOMAH APPROVES LEVY
PORTLAND Multnomah
A a
county voters rnaay approved a
four-year, 4 4 mill tax levy to
forestall curtailment of county
services.
rare ffl(VM-ffflffijH
Max. Kin. Pred
. 7 4 .M
. M 43 .00
. 7i 49 .13
.74 59 M
. 65 47 .00
.70 S3 M
. 8 51 .80
. 77 54 .00
.71 55 .00
Salem
Portland
Baker
Medford
North Bend
Roscburg ,
San Francisco
Chicago
New York
Lm Angeles
76 5S AO
Willamette River 3J feet
FORECAST I from U. S .weather
bure-iu. McNary field. Salem):
Fair today. tonigRt and Sunday,
except for early morninc cloudiness:
tmgh today 75-77. 78-SO Sunday; low
tonifht 42-44. Temperature at 12:01
a.m. today was 45.
SALEM PMCIPITATIOV -Since
Start of Weather Year Sept. 1
This Tear Last Tear formal
30.73 41 U ' 17.11
No. 55
Professional
Group High in
G of C
The professional group made the
greatest gain the past week toward
its goal in the Chamber of Com
merces Forward Salem" cam
paign, it was announced at a Fri
day noon luncheon 'at the Marion
Hotel.
Officials announced the combin
ed efforts of seven groups enlisted
in the drive have pushed the cham
ber campaign 72 per cent of the
way toward a minimum goal of
$60,000 with subscriptions totaling
$43,245. A total of 134 new mem
bers j have been enlisted since the
beginning of the project on May 12.
The professional group all but
monopolized honors according to
reports made at the Friday lunch
eon. That group made the greatest
gain toward its own goal with col
lections the past week jumping its
total ; to $3,482 as against a mini
mum goal of $5,000 and a "real
potential" of $5,500. The profession
al division also turned in most new
members, numbering 18, and also
had highest percentage of cash col
lected with subscriptions.
Still tops in the-overall cam
paign, however, is the real estate
and insurance group with 86 per
cent j advancement ($3,033) toward
its minimum goal of $3,500.
In i attendance at the Friday re
port luncheon were 97 drive work
ers. ; with Otto J. Wilson and Wil
liam' H. Hammond, co-chairmen of
the (business groups division, pre
siding. (Additional story on page 3,
sec.j 2.)
SCHOOL THREATENED
SPOKANE A telephoned
bomb threat apparently from a
youngster who had been dis
ciplined, brought evacuation of the
2.160 students at North Central
High School here Friday.
5
Voters Approve Salem
School District Budget
By VTNTTA HOWARD
Staff Writer, The Statesman
Salem School District voters
approved the largest budget in
district history Friday with the
largest vote for an election to ex
ceed the tax limitation since 1944.
The final count showed . 1,344 yes
votes and 891 no votes for a total
votes of 2,235. Last year the total
vote was 1,232.
Consolidation of Brush CoUege
School district with Salem also
gained ' approval in both Salem
and Brush CoUege by large mar
gins, 87 to 63 in Brush College
and 1,322 to 863 in the Salem dis
trict Of Salem's 10 school voting pre
cints all but one approved the
$5,177,321 budget of which $1,
166,809 is outside the sjx per cent
limitation. ;;.,.; :
The budget was turned down
by! precinct number three, Grant
School, where 119 no votes and
102 yes votes were counted, Vot-
charge, turned himself in to authorities at Fairbanks, Alaska, Friday
after being contacted by his Salem attorneys.
Oveross was indicted last Monday by a Marion County Grand
Jury for. the February 17 slaying
two miles south of Silverton in
.
Parade, Feed
Mark Scout
Grcus Today
Circus clowns, trapeze artists,
"wild animals' bands, cowboys-
and-lndians and other circus fig
ures will cavort through Salem
today and at Waters Park tonight
as the annual Cascade area Scout
Circus comes to town.
The theme of the circus is, ap
propriately enough, "Circus.-
Some 2,000 Cub and Boy Scouts
are to participate.
Gathering at the Capitol Mall
at 1 p. m. the boys will step out
at 2 p. m. The parade will go
west on Chemeketa, south on
High street and east on State
back to the Capitol area.
Boys will then go to waters
Park where they will be fed. At
7 p m. the merit badge exposi
tion -and vocational' exploration
show will open to the public. The
circus proper will begin at 8
o'clock. It will include three
rings of stunts, snows, demon
strations, music from six bands
and will last about one and a
half hours.
Tickets will be available at
Waters Park. The circus is spon
sored annually by Salem Lions
Club and proceeds are used to
build facilities at the council's
Camp Pioneer in the Cascades.
French Agree
To Remove
Saigon
SAIGON. South Viet Nam W
Premier Ngo Dinh Diem won an
important victory Friday in his
drive to lessen French influence in
South Viet Nam. His deputy de
fense minister announced France
had agreed to withdraw its troops
from the capital city of Saigon.
The minister, Tran Trung Dung,
said that eventually the entire 75,-
000 -' man French expeditionary
force will be shifted from the big
southern cities to two or three
coastal embarkation points. Diem's
government contends the troops in
their present concentrations have
angered the Vietnamese people and
fired up Communist propaganda.
Dung s announcement v followed
disclosure that Gen. Paul Ely,
French commissioner general in
Indochina and commander of the
French armed forces here, had
asked Paris to relieve him of his
post. Dung and Ely are working
out details of toe troops regroup
ing. Ely's .move came as a sur
prise. But it obviously was an out
growth of his clashes with Diem
on military and political policies,
and of American support for Diem.
Father Uses Son
As Bullet Shield;
Shot Wounds Lad
SOMERSET, Ky. OH - Sheriff
Gilmore Phelps said a father used
his 10-year-old son as a shield
Friday in a gun battle that left
four persons wounded.
The son, shot in the head, was
reported near death.
Phelps said Deputies Raymond
Meece and Claude Daulton and
two other officers went to the
home of Otis Whitaker, 37, to serve
a warrant charging him with hav
ing untaxed whisky.
He said Whitaker called to the
officers to "come on op" when
they arrived, and. pulling the son,
Otis Jr., in front, of him, began
firing a shotgun.
The sheriff said the officers re
turned the fire, hitting the boy
once and dropping the father with
shots in the leg, shoulder and twice
in ' the abdomen. Daulton and
Meece were hit by Whitaker's fire,
The father and Meece were criti
cally wounded.
ers there also turned thumbs
down on the Brush College con
solidation by 113 to 105.
Superintendent Walter Snyder
commented he was "pleased that
the public expressed its conn
dence in the school system and
the budget"
The large turnout in voters,"
he said, "shows a growing inter
est in school problems."
The unofficial vote tabulation
on the budget:
Yes Ne
Highland School . 97 . . 85
Washington School 114 - 55
Grant School 102 119
Englewood School 201' 125
Admin. Building -.128 . 106
Richmond School J.151 103
Leslie Jr. High School 205 155
Morningside School 192 75
Four Corner School ... 68 36
West Salem School ... 83 32
Approval of the budget means
a 6.5 miLLage increase for the
school district
Troop
of Ervin. Kaser at Kaser's borne
the Evergreen community. He had
I been object of a widening police
hunt since thee, and only a few
hours before he surrendered at
5 p.m. Alaska time the FBI had
been called into the case.
Oveross gave himself up to the
district attorney who in turn turn
ed him over to Alaska Territorial
police but the murder suspect was
not taken into police custody un
til .early today.
Talked to Attorney
Attorney Otto R. Skopil Jr.
member of the firm of Williams
and Skopil who are attorneys for
Oveross, said his partner Bruce
Williams had been in telephone
contact with Oveross at Fair-'
banks. He said Williams had ad
vised Oveross to turn himself in
to police there immediately.
The attorneys said they learned
of Oveross's whereabouts Friday
after mail arrived, addressed
to his daughter at her home in
the Evergreen community. They
said it was the first news of his
destination since he left the area
April 17 because he said police
had been hounding him.
Skopil said Williams had made
the call to Oveross from Reno,
Nev., where he had gone for the
weekend. He said Williams had
talked to Oveross sometime be
tween 6 and 7 p.m. (PST) and
considering the . two hour time
differential Oveross had apparent
ly turned himself in immediately
after.
Skopil said Oveross was not
aware of the indictment here un
til Williams advised him of the
grand jury action.
California Check 1 v
It had earlier been presumed
that he had gone , to California
to visit relatives, but police
checks with two brothers in
Northern California brought
denials that they had seen Over
oss. Police also determined he
had not traveled through any of
the California border .stations.
According to the attorneys,
Oveross had been working as a
carpenter in the Fairbanks area
and presumably staying with a
cousin who lived near the city.
Whether he traveled to Alaska in
the 1950 Ford ia which he left the
area, or whether he went by air
or boat from Seattle was not
determined Friday night.
FBI In Case
., Location, of Oveross came al
most at the same time the Fed
eral Bureau of Investigation was
stepping into the case. FBI Agent
Verne Davis of Salem said the
Bureau was "in" the search Fri
day afternoon after a fueitive
complaint was filed with the U ?.
Attorney in Portland earlier by
Marion County District Attorney
Kenneth O. Brown.
Sheriff Young said search for
Oveross had been extended to
Alaska before news arrived here
of his location. He did not say
why police suspected the slender
carpenter might have gone to
Alaska. .
Immediate Trial
Oveross' attorneys said he
would be advised to waive extra
dition to' hasten the process in
having him returned here to
stand trial They said they would
ask for an immediate trial
The wanted Silverton man was
not jailed immediately, according
to reports received here late Fri
day night by Marion County Sheriff
Denver Young. Because Alaskan of
ficials at Fairbanks had no inform
ation that. Oveross was wanted,
they ask him to jail himself vol
untarily until they could make a
check, Lt.' William Trafton of the
Alaska Territorial police reported.
Trafton eaid Oveross declined and
said ne was returning to his Fair
banks residence to await develop
ments. ' v
Tried ia Salem
According to Trafton. Oveross
said he had been tried in Salem
on the murder charged and freed, -but
had been advised bv his at
torney to turn himself in at this
time. Trafton told Young he was
dispatching police immediately to
take Oveross into custody.
Oveross was arrested and charg
ed with murder five days after the
night-time slaying of his one-time
neighbor. He was freed six days
later when the grand jury refused
to lftdict him on the evidence then
at hand.
After discovery of a rifle which
tests proved was the murder wea
pon. District Attorney Kenneth O.
Brown called a second grand jury
on the case and they returned a
unanimous decision for indictment
last Monday.
Sheriff Young said it would pro
bably take two or three days to
complete the preliminary proced
ures before he could leave for Fair
banks to return Oveross. He indic
ated Oveross would probably be re
turned from Alaska to Seattle by
air and said he hoped that a second
police officer could accompany him
on the trip.
Today's Statesman
Sec.
1
Pago
-'7
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Heme Panorama
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Sports,--. II.
Star Gazer . I
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