Stronghold After; Surrender n r ' jJJ,-- , , - ----"""" '' s Sv ; I J ' ""-' tX - ,r BUENOS AIRES The Navy Ministry building in Buenos Aires, stronghold f rebels during the bloody fighting in Argentine's capital, is shown after its surrender. Almost all windows are broken. In the foreground is one of the anti-aircraft guns .used In the fighting. The Army has taken complete control of Argen tina. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Buenos Aires). Peron Resignation Demand Mn Offing' .By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hints and speculation from Buenos Aires Sunday indicated a shift in power giving President Juan D. Peron less authority may be in the making in Argentina. Fred -L. Strozier, Associated Press chief of bureau in Buenos Aires, in a telephone conversation with the AP in New York stressed it was the army that had the situation in the country under com plete control. CRT E Mjxm mum Moral Strength Sought SAX FRANCISCO (JB Secre tary of State John Foster Dulles called Sunday for a world mobili zation of moral strength ''to as sure the continued vitality of the United Nations." Dulles spoke before 16,000 peo ple at the Festival of Faith held in San Francisco's famous Cow Palace under the sponsorship of religious groups ofnany faiths. The secretary declared that the past 10 years has revealed that the power of the U.N. "was pri marily a moral power, derived fr.om the judgment of the partici pating nations and their peoples. as to what was right and what was wrong. Religion People He said the religious people of the world have not always done what they could to impress moral principles on the world and make them felt "To recognize these facts is to accept a challenge for the future, Dulles said. "The first ten years of the United Nations teaches a clear lesson. "The lesson is that the people of the world who are committed to the moral law have a great re sponsibility to assure the continued vitality of the United Nations and its .capacity to influence the course of international conduct" Greater Hazard Dulles said the future "contains greater hazard than any future men have ever faced, but it also contains greater opportunity. "That opportunity can be grasped with confident hope if men and women of faith through out the world develop and mobilize moral strength so that moral stand ards will increasingly prevail in the United Nations." i Participating in the meeting were representatives of Buddhism, Christianity, Confusianism, Hindu ism, Judaism and the Moslem faith. United Nations Part II Perhaps the first point to be made with respect to United Na tons as its Assembly convenes in San Francisco to Celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Charter conference is that it still exists. Consider that it has been caught in the middle of the cold war, be tween two great power blocs, one headed by the United States, the other by the Soviet Union. It has survived in a period when the .lat ter sought to consolidate its power in th nnctwap iwruvl mntrarv to its agreements at wartime confer-! Minister Franklin Lucero, who has ot neaus oi me auieui""" ucuiku uj.iavu im urc major role in crushing the navy revolt of last Thursday, is emerg ? He added that according to in formed speculation" new develop ments might be expected. Demand Planned A Montevideo dispatch from Chi cago Tribune correspondent Jules DuBois quoted diplomatic circles in Uruguay as saying the Argentine army is making plans to demand Peron s resignation. : The dispatch said the reins of Argentine government under the present state of siege "are virtual ly in the hands of Gen. Franklin Lucero. army minister. EI Clarin of Santiago. Chile, a tabloid-type newspaper which in the past has printed some sensational reports, declared Peron had "sub mitted" to the army and had agreed to annul recent measures taken against the Roman Catholic Church. . ' The dispatch was by the news paper's correspondent in Montevi deo, Uruguay. ' "Real Power Wielder - NBC correspondent Bob Lindley in a radio- report from the Argen tine capital Sunday said Army v - latent! POUNDBD 1651 105th Year 2 SECTIONS-U PAGES Th Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Monday, June 20, .1955 PRICE 5c No. 85 Kaye Hopping Mad A t 'Honey- Charge LONDON UP) A London columnist said Sunday Danny Kaye addressed Princess Margaret as "honey" in a backstage conversa tion at The Palladium. The columnist. Rex North, in The Sunday Pictorial, registered indignation, as did Kaye when informed of North's jottings. "I'd like to spit in his eye," Kaye thundered. "Ask him (North) ; : ;if he was there (backstage). Chosen ences powers, which provoked the free nations to combine for their own defense. Not only has it survived but it has for the first time in h;story invoked the principle of collective security and successfully repelled armed invasion. In addi tion, its fire-fighting brigades have put out threatening conflagrations in Indonesia, Kashmir and Pales tine, and patrolled the border of Greece until security was restored. That United Nations has lived and functioned through 10 tumultuous years, and held aloft the torch of world peace, is an achievement of no small magnitude, It has, however, a more positive ing minute by minute as the real wielder of power. "Peran will never again wield he extreme dictatorial power which he had when the first rebel bombs fell on Government House. Lindley added that "the govern ment is being governed by the army" and "Peron, technically, is no longer President of Argentina." When Lmdley was questioned about Peron's status, however, his broadcast was broken off in Bue nos Aires. Must Be Catholic Argentina's constitution says the President must be a Catholic. Pe- Knifing Kills Mother, Two Small Sons SEATTLE W Two small boys were found slain at their home here Sunday. Their mother, eight months presnant, died several hours later. The Kini County's sheriff office termed the deaths a suicide and double slaying. Sheriffs detectives said Thomas W. Reimers, 5, and Gerald John Reimers, L were found slain in the older boy's crib early Sunday. Officers said it appeared both &p- parently had been battered with a rolling pin found in the crib and slashed with a butcher knife. ; Their mother. Josephine, 29, was found critically wounded on the floor of her bedroom. Police said she had been slashed on the throat, wrists and groin. A bloody butcher knife lay nearby.;: The tragedy was discovered shortly before i a.m. by the hus band and father, Charles Reimers, 30. an airplane company employe, when he. arrived home after being away from late afternoon Satur day. Detective Lieut. Harold Wieland said it appeared that the younger child bad been beaten to death in his crib,' then picked up and hurled into the other bed. 20th Century's Great Eclipse Darkens Asia By DON 'HUTS' MANILA Uft The longest total eclipse in this century some sci entists say the longest in nearly 1230 years Sunday rolled an 18- mile wide path of darkness over Asia. - . The moon blanked the sun over an estimated 1,276.000 square miles of the earth's surface. The streak of darkness started in the Indian Ocean and raced at 24 miles a minute for 7,200 miles across Ceylon, Thailand, Indochi na, and the Philippines into me Pacific Ocean. Lasts 7 Minutes Along the central line, the total eclipse lasted 7 minutes 7.8 sec onds. In the PhDippines.the long est totality was 7 minutes 4' sec onds. Partly cloudy skies spotted the Philippines which has not experi enced a total eclipse since May 9, 1929. An American scientist flew in a jet trainer from the U.S. 13th Air Force headquarters at Clark Field here to get an unobstructed view of the phenomenon. He recorded the event on special cameras mounted in the plane. Philippine scientists gathered at Dilliman University in Quezon City on Manila's outskirts to observe the progress of the eclipse. Other teams of. scientists were stationed in various parts of the islands. Manila in Path Manila was in the path of to tality but not in the center. The moon began casting its shadow on the sun here at 10:47:32 a.m. C:45 p.m. PST, Sunday). The first phase lasted until 12:18:5 when to tality started. Government offices were closed and employes dismissed early to permit them to witness the event Thousands of observers gathered on rooftops and other - points of vantage. The next total solar eclipse vi sible in the Philippines will not be until March 18, 1988. Anyway, it's a pitifully poor way to till a column to hop on things like that" North said the princess and some friends walked backstage to see the American comedian after one of his Palladium shows and that things .wen: this way: Hello, Honey "Hello honey," said Kaye, "I didn't expect to see you back here." -The columnist said Margaret swallowed once or twice and countered, a little limply, "Hello Danny." The columnist commented: -"In my view there are times when it is permissible to call a woman honey if you happen to know the sort who doesn't mind this sort of saccharine sweet en dearment. Other Moments 1 "There are other moments in his tory, when speaking quite personal V', I would address the young lady concerned as ma'am- The moment would have been at the theater after the show. "I should add that in America any woman of any rank, who has been met socially a few times is almost automatically a honey." if :nSs Luc Man Drowns I: M ill Greek LOUISVILLE, Ky. Francis Smith, Salem, Ore., elected here to be president of the Associated Credit Bureaus of America. Nation-Wide Bureau Led By Salem Man West Awaits Return of 5 GI Turncoats Francis Smith, manager of the Salem Credit Bureau, has been elected president of the Associated Credit Bureaus of America, it wasJ rear war and was injured ser , . . 1 : t l i: l j: record of accomplishment. Be-; ron was excommunicated by the cause of the ministrations of its Vatican last Thursday, but h has U N. Children's Emergency Relief ; since asserted he was stfll. a Catho- organization, thousands of children cast adrift by toe -war now are living in wholesome surroundings. UNRRA brought food and medical supplies (Continued on editorial page, 4) Silverton Road Home Burns lie. News dispatches from Argentine were subject to censorship. Tele phone communications with the outside world were restored Sun day for the first time since Thurs day. (Other stories on page 2, sec tion 1.) Statesman N'ewi Service FOUR CORNERS The home cf Mr. and Mrs. August Fandrich, Salem Route 6, Box 166, in the Middle Grove district northeast of Salem was destroyed by fire Sun day. Flames broke out in the upper story of the old-style, two-story , dwelling at about 10 ajn. Althugh ' the property is not located in a rural ,fire protection district. Four Corners volunteer firemen! responded to the call, and saved some of the furniture. All of the couple's other posses sions were . destroyed. A storage jhed adjacent to the house was saved. The hom, which was par tially covered by insurance, was located on Silverton Road three miles east of Lancaster Drive. S&lrm .... Portland Baker Max. Mm. Precip. .M 41 .M .7i 45 .00 . S4 42 .00 .90 47 M .62 44, .00 . S3 41 .00 . 64 43 -.00 .88 67 .10 TI 67 .10 . 80 59 . .00 Medford , North Bend Roseburg San Francisco . Chicago New York Los Angeles Willamette River 0.2 feet. FORECAST (from U. S. weather bureau. McNarr field. Salem) Partly cloudy Monday and Monday night; more cloudiness and a little cooler Tuesday. High Monday 78. low Monday night near SO; high Tuesday, near ix Temperature at 12:01 a.m. today was 32. SALEM PRECIPITATION Since Start of Weather Tear Sept This Tear Last Year Normal : 31.22 44.54 38.68 Pen Escapee f Wanted to Aid Spouse' A state penitentiary trusty Sun- aay afternoon attempted to tiee but was caught a few minutes later across State Street near the state forestry buildings. "Evidently, he got a letter from bis wife saying she was in finan cial difficulties," said : Warden Clarence T. Gladden. "And he thought he could leave here and give her some assistance." ) Gladden identified the prisoner as Emile Elbert, 33, serving five years from Multnomah County for burglary not in a dwelling. As a trusty, it was his duty to water the front lawn. Prison LL Ralph E. Pribble captured him while four city police and two state police cars were ringing the area. The prison was alerted when a state policeman spotted Elbert crossing the street. Wife Charged In Slaying Of Husband PORTLAND M) Police report ed Sunday that Cherry Lucille Mor ns, 31, had admitted slaying her husband, Claude M. Morris, 42, Saturday night by firing a rifle bullet into his chest. Dets. Mike O'Leary and John Hunt said the woman signed ' a statement in which she said she shot her husband after he had threatened her with a hammer, hatchet and rifle. Mrs. Morris said she called po lice to their home after firing the fatal shot. At first ' she said she found her husband shot and dying when she returned home for an outing. After prolonged question ing, she admitted the shootng, po lice said. She was booked on a charge of first degree murder. Ike to Make 'Big' Policy Declaration SAN FRANCISCO W Presi dent Eisenhower arrived here Sun day night to open the U.N.'s 10th anniversary session Monday after noon. Informed quarters said he would make an important policy declaration. Meanwhile, the first high-level contact between Russia and the Western powers was made at a dinner party Sunday night. There was no indication, however, wheth er or not the meeting was any thing more than a social occasion. The Big Four foreign ministers will hold their first business dis cussions Monday night after a din ner arranged by Secretary of State Dulles. Dulles did not attend .Sunday night's dinner given by the Colom bian ambassador. Eduardo Zuleta Angel, but the United States was represented by Ambassador Henry Cabot J-odce Jr. Soviet Foreign Minister V.M. Molotov, British Foreign Secretary Harold MacMillan and French For eign Minister Antoine Pinay also were present. The President drove directlv to his hotel from international airport after his non-stop flight from Wash ington. He conferred briefly with Gov. Goodwin J. Knight and Mayor Elmer E. Robinson and later opent a half-hour with Dulles before re tiring for the night. Paul E. Pearson, 21, 1157 S. 15th St, drowned Sunday in Mill Creek in , the pool behind the first concrete dam south, of State Street Pearson, who worked for Blue Lake Packers, was accompanied by Les Eitelgeorge, 21, 1935 Maple St,, who ran lft miles to the state police office to report that Pearson didn't come to the surface after diving into nearly eight feet of water. Eitelgeorge cannot swim. The body, in the muddy water about 45 minutes, was recovered by city first aidmen using grap pling hooks. Eitelgeorge said Pearson, who had stripped down to his shorts and light shoes, . urged him to accompany him into the pool and then made the dive. Waits Minutes Eitelgeorge said he waited perhaps eight to 10 minutes be fore making the long run to the state police office on State Street City first aidman Bert Iverson dived about in the pool in a futile attempt to locate the body. Pearson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Pearson, was unmarried and lived with his parents. Born Dec. 26, 1933, in Santa Paula, Calif., became to Salem in 1935 and attended St Joseph Catholic School and Sacred Heart Acad emy. Served in Navy He served in navy in the Ko- announced here Sunday The election took place Saturday night at Louisville, Ky., where Smith is attending the 41st annual International Consumer Credit con ference. The national Credit Bureau organization is a credit bureau and collection service trade, group, wifh 2.850 members. It announced that plans for the coming year, under Smith's leadership, include an "emphasis on better credit bureau service and the need to promote I greater public understanding on the value and use of credit." Smith is a former ACB president of Oregon and of the Pacific North west organizations and has been active as a committeeman and director of the national organiza tion. He operates credit bureaus and collection service offices in Oregon and Utah. He started in 1933 in Tillamook, where he was a deputy district attorney. iously enough for a medical dis charge while his ship was. in Korean waters. Besides his parents he leaves a twin sister, Paula Pearson, Denver, another sister, Audrey Pearson, Portland; three half sisters, Nettie, Dianne and Jean Pearson, at home, and a half brother, William Pearson, also at home, r The body is at the Howell Edwards funeral home. ' SUMMER TO ARRIVE new yukk. w summer, in case you've forgotten, arrives Tues day. The American Museum-Hay-den Planetarium offered the reminder. l8WWHHl NORTHWEST LEAGUE At Salem 11-1, Coos Bay 5-0 (exhibition) At Tri-City 3. Lewiston 5 At Spokane 9. Wenatchee S At Eugene 1-6, Yakima 2-5 PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE At Hollywood 2-1. Portland 9-5 At Sacramento 5-4.. Los Angeles 9-2 At Oakland 2-1, San Diego 7-3 At Seattle 7-6, San Francisco 3-1 AMERICAN LEAGUE At Baltimore-Detroit, rain At New York 7-5. Chicago 1-2 ' At Boston 11. Cleveland 7 At Washington-Kansas City, rain NATIONAL LEAGUE At Cincinnati 2-4. Pittsburgh 5-0 JA Milwaukee . New York 7 At St Louis 4, Brooklyn 7 At Chicago 0-8. Philadelphia 1-7 Demo Social Security Raid Charged Springfield Woman Dies In Car Crash GREEN RIVER, Utah W Two cars smashed headon near Green River Sunday, killing a 31-year-old Oregon woman and injuring three others. Killed was Mrs. George Ann Glenn of Springfield. Ore. Her 12-year-old son, David, was hospi talized with a dislocated hip and a possible skull fracture. Resley D. Glenn, 39. her husband, was re leased after treatment for minor injuries. Mrs. Glenn, the Utah Highway Patrol reported, was driving on U. S. Highway 50-6 west of Green River when her auto slammed into a car driven by Olden Bueh- ler, 36, Wichita, Kansas. Buehler was reported in fair con dition in a Price Hospital with a hip injury. Church Outing Lost 6 Hours On Mountain PORTLAND W Fifteen chil dren and five adults, members of a Seveith Day Adventist Church organization known as the Path finders, were lost for' six hours Sunday in the Larch Mountain area. Lawrence Lashier, 13, and Ed ward Drury an adult, both from Portland, found the party and led it back down the mountain to "he Multnomah Falls Lodge. Some of the children were hys terical by the time they reached safety. A. R. Hanson, manager of the lodge, said: It was a danger ous trip there v. as no moon, and I don't know how the adult lead ers mananged to keep the party to gether. The group became lost when it split off from a larger group of church climbers who were in the area. The two who found the miss ing party were members of the group which had made its way down off the mountain safely earlier. Boat Up sets: Grants Pass Father Dies GRANTS PASS W A father drowned Sunday after his outboard-powered boat overturned, but his five children and his broth er were rescued. The victim, in the accident on the Rogue River about three miles upstream from here, was Collis James Dolmage, 41, a Grants Pass tile contractor. Witnesses told state police Dol mage lifted off the outboard motor to keep it from snagging in debris and the boat veered into a stump, throwing the party into the water. Two fishermen helped Dolmage s brother, William, 29, Los Angeles, and the others to shore and pulled out Dolmage. The father did not respond to first aid, however, and was pronounced dead on arrival at a hospital here. The Dolmage children are aged 4 to 19. TOKYO UH Western officials Munaay awaiiea me return ot tives tormer united Nations soldiers three Americans and two Belgian who are leaving Red China which they once preferred to their homelands. Peiping radio announced Satur day the five had changed their minds again but gave no indica tion of when or where they would cross the border. Usually several days -elapse from the time of such a Communist announcement and the actual return. ,' The ; men are expected to come back to the Western world at Hone Kong, usually crossing point for those ; leaving Communist China. The American, consulate in Hong Kong kept a three hour border watch for them Sunday. On Lookout A consulate ' automobile will be on the lookout again Monday, and for a "few more days, if neces sary," Hone Kone dispatches re ported. The three Americans were among 21 U.S. soldiers captured by the Reds during the Korean War who elected to stay under communism after the armistice. One has since died. The remaining 17 were offered an opportunity to return to the West, now or at any time in the future, the official Communist Pei ping radio reported. The three are the first to change their minds again after actually living in Communist China. Returning Tanks The returning Americans are William A. Cowart of Dalton. Ga.. who wants to live in Japan; and , Otho G. Bell of Olympia, Wasb and Lewis W. Griggs of Jackson- " ville, Texas, both of whom want to return to the United States. . They made the choice in the face of warnings by the VS. State : and Defense Departments that re- . turning POWs will be held account able, "for any wrongful acts. The men have been given dis honorable discharges from the Army, and since they are civilians will be returned through the State Department. .(Picture on page 2, sec. 1.) ANIMAL CRACKERS V WARREN OOOORICM 4X "He hates U be snuck op on.' WASHINGTON I Republicans! on the House ways and Means Committee charged bitterly Sunday a Democratic move to boost social security benefits for women and disabled persons may be a "politi cal raid on the social security trust fund. Chairman Cooper (D-Tenn) has announced the committee will start closeddoor action Tuesday on bis proposals to provide immediate monthly benefits for disabled work ers and to lower from 65 to 62 the age at which jromen become eligible for benefits.' . The Republicans, in an unusual open letter to Cooper, said "the ultimate social and economic im plications of these proposals are tremendous. It is unthinkable that public bearings not be held." GOP committee members said ithe new benefits would cost be- tween Vt and two billion dollars a year, but Democrats have been1 silent on any plans for financing their proposals. This vast sum of money can only come out of the social se curity fund built up by the pay roll contributions of our workers," the letter declared. "It will be a sorry day for Amer ica should the time ever come when bur workers retire after years of contributing to the fund only to find that the money to which they have looked for their old age security has lone since been spent." The Republicans charged the closed-door procedure ws decided at a "secret caucus" of the 15 man Democratic majority and said they stfll would insist on open hear' ings. "The public is entitled to an op portunity to decide whether these proposals are an honest attempt to improve the system or whether they simply constitute a political raid on the (social security) trust fund," the Republican letter said. "It is difficult to escape the con clusion that legislation which is presented in this fashion is not honestly and sincerely conceived." This was unusually sharp lan guage aimed at the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, one of the most important posts in Congress. The letter, released by Rep. Jen kins vR-Ohio), was signed by nine of the committee s ten Republi cans, including Rep. Holmes (Wash.). Rep. Daniel A. Reed of New York, has- been recuperating from an illness in Italy. CooDer was unavailable for com ment immediately: Mountainous Waves Kill 22 OUISTREHAM. France W Mountainous waves swept over a small wartime landing craft con verted to a tourist boat Saturday night ""off this Normandy beach. drowning 22 French holidayers, in cluding four children. Eight passengers managed to leave the craft before it sank. All the victims were attending an out ing of a French film company for its employes. Partly Cloudy Day Forecast Partial cloudiness is expected today and tonight by McNary Field weathermen who see a high near 78 followed by a night low near 50. Tuesday is expected to be a little cooler and a little cloudier. At the beaches partial cloudi ness is predicted lor Monday when a high temperature of 65 is expected. Light, variable winds of 6 to 12 miles per hour are forecast Today's Statesman Sec. Pag II....4, 5 3 I 7 l 4 I 6 Sports . II 1, 2 Star Gazer 5 TV, Radio 3 Yallty ; L 3 Classifieds . Comics ' Cossword ,. Editorials Homo Panorama Police Raid Eagles Lodge At Newport NEWPORT. Ore.UB Four slot machines were seized by a state policeman Saturday night at the Eagles Lodge Hall here where he had been invited to a dance. The patrolman. James Pearson, arrested Charles E Pabst, 62, man ager of the lodge. Pabst was booked on a charge of possessing gambling devices. He is to appear in justice court Monday. Pearson said he had been invited to the dance by a friend who was playing in the orchestra for the Eagles' regular Saturday night dance. There were about 100 peo ple in the hall at the time of the arrest, Pearson said. STORMY MEETING FOGGIA. Italy Ml The teach ers held their annual term-closing meeting here Saturday night. The students, 300 strong, raised a ;ry outside that the teachers had been too severe with them and peppered the schoolhouse with stones and beer bottles. Twenty were arrest ed, ten slightly 'njured. New Era in Legislation Predicted PLAINFIELD. Vt. Ufi A pro phesy that the United-States mov ing into an area of " greater hu manitarian legislation" was voiced Sunday by Sen. Richard L. Neu berger (D-Ore.) Speaking at Goddard College commencement exercises, Neu berger said the guaranteed annual waee plan worked out by the CIO Auto Workers Union and the Ford Co. would prove an incentive to other groups seeking further eco nomic security. Neuberger said some Americans have accepted as normal many government subsidies to "inani mate objects but not necessarily to human beings." He said few persons "question the wisdom of federal land grants to railroads, of mail subsidies to airlines and steamship corpora tions or of payments to farmers whose crops are in surplus. But subsidies for children are quickly challenged as inimical to our way of life." The whole future of America, he said, depends updn the health, ideas and attitude of the next gen eration. "If a government subsidy can improve our chances combat ting juvenile delinquency, then I favor such a subsidy," Neuberger added. Salem, Keizer School Districts To Vote oil Consolidation Today Salem School ' District voters i Brydon or John R. Moore, is to will elect two school directors hU the unexpired term of Mrs. from a field of four candidates Monday, and will vote on the pro posed consolidation of Keizer and Salem School Districts. In Keizer and in Salem the polls will be open from 2 to 8. Salem has designated 10 school buildings for polling places. Keizer will vote at Keizer school. Candidates for the five-year term on the Salem board are Gus Moore, current board chairman, and Charles C. Edwards, co-owner of Howell-Edwards Funeral Home. The second position, which will be filled either by Mrs. Edith David Wright, who died last year. The term expires July 1, 1957. Mrs. Brydon, Salem housewife, was appointed to fill her posi tion by board members until the next school directors election. Moore is secretary-treasurer of the Salem Retail Clerk's Union. Salem school board members and administrators are hoping for a large turnout at the polls. The las school directors election saw a total of only 761 ballots cast But even this was the largest turnout since 1952 when 2,059 voted. Some directors have been elect ed to the school board when the total vote was only 43. The dis trict has approximately one-half of the county's 49,000 registered voters. Polling places Monday will be: Highland School, North 5th and Highland Ave.; Washington School, 3165 Lansing Ave.; Grant School, North Cottage and Mar ket streets; Englewood School, North 19th It Nebraska streets; Public School Administration Building, 1309 Ferry St; Rich mond School, Richmond and Mill streets; Leslie Junior High School, Howard and South Cot tage streets; Morningside School, 3113 S. 12th St; Four Corners School, South Elma and Beck Avenues; West Salem School, 1117 3rd St 1