2 $. 1) Statesman, Satan,
Story of
'Battles
In Small
SAN MARINO w - The story
of America was being told in the
simple mountainside homes of San
JIarino Friday night in a dramatic
effort to oust the only Communist
government in Western Europe.
Since 1945 the coalition of Com
munists and Communist - bossed
Socialists- have controlled this old
est and smallest republic in the
world.
On Sunday most of the 7,311
Court Hears
Rail Service
tut Argument
, (Story also on page 1)
-' Arguments, on whether the
Portland Traction Company can
reduce its service between Port
land and Oregon City consumed
the better part of six hours Fri
day in Marion County Circuit
Court before Judge Val D.
Sloper.
The case involved attorneys
from the Public Utilities Com
mission which issued an ( order
that the service must be contin
ued on the present basis pend
ing an investigation and hearing
by Commissioner Charles H.
Heltzel. The company -went to
court soon after Heltzel's ; order
was made.
Not Proper
PUC Attorney John R. Mc
Cullough told the court Friday
it would not be proper to per
mit! suspension of the. traction
company's passenger operations
while they are being investigat
ed by the state agency.
"We wouldn't have anything to
investigate," he said.
The attorney for the traction
company, Clarence Phillips, said
he has "always doubted the com
missioner's jurisdiction over
timetab'es. This company is los
ing hundreds of thousands of
dollars a year on its passenger
operations, and is entitled to re
lief." ;
Ap attorney for patrons of the
line took the opposite ; view,
maintaining that the company "is
one of the most profitable op
erations in the United States.4
While it might be losing money
on its passenger. traffic, its over
all profits are large, John Shel
riaht Orppnn Pitv attnrnv ai
No Trolley
"This isn't any toonerville trol
ley. In 1954, after a 39 per cent
rate increase, it carried 1,309,000
passengers, Sheldahl said.
The decision due Saturday
noon by Judge Sloper is expect
ed to have some bearing on the
current battle between Southern
Pacific Company and Heltzel over
the now discontinued . Rogue
River run. Virtually the same
legal questions are involved. .
Now Playing!
I r THE MN ywll
r never forget! f
JAMES
STEWART
in . i
VMSN I
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aeoLUMat rmm
aWLUAH 00CTZ
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totcout
W$Ltt S3 I'KHFU & - ItlUtl
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TV HANDS OPFI SHrS I
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DENNIS O'KEEFE
A8BE LANE
pins
For Your Personal
fleasure and Entertainment
L Here'i Lookinc at You",
i:: TOMORROW!
( Got, Colorful aid Woiiertill
?.
LJ
'( .c5sl 5 Supper
K&h li8IB.-.
V M-t J' peters I
Or., Saturday, Aug. 13, 1955
America
Comhi
ws
Rep
ublic
eligible voters go to the polls in
new elections. . I
At stake are 60 seats on the
grand council. At present the Com-
munist-Socialists control 31 and the I
anti-Communists 29. Only 127 popu-'
lar votes separated the two slates
in the 1951 elections.
Hera's Welcome
Friday 70 San Marino emigrants
to the United States who have not
yet become American citizens ar
rived, back to a hero's welcome.
The rugged mountain folk lined the
streets and shouted: "Long live
America!" as the expatriates ar
rived. Twenty-seven other San Marino
citizens who now live in America
had already come back by ship and
plane. Most are from Sandusky,
Ohio, Detroit, Mich., and New
York City.
The American task force lost no
time.
Minutes after arrival they were
visiting relatives and friends, tell
ing them what democracy had done
in the United States and urging
support of the Christian Democrat
candidates they , will vote for Sun
day.
Listened With Wonder
The San Marin ese listened with
wonder at tales of working and
living conditions in ? the United
States. Here, under a Communist
regime, a worker received $1.23 a
day; there is so social security,
no pension.
"The outlook is very good. The
San Marinese from America are
having a wonderful effect." said I
tain itiiviiviviUf nt aiiviVi il
munist women's leader who
organized the flight from America.
San Marino, located oh a slope
of Mt. Tiano in the rugged Appen
ines. is entirely surrounded by Ita
ly. Its three turreted castles have
kept this 38-square mile republic
independent for 1644 years.
3 Named for
Junior Red
Cross Camp
Three Salem high school students
have been selected by the Marion
County Chapter of the American
Red Cross to attend the annual
Junior Red Cross leadership camp
at Camp Collins, near Gresham,
Aug. 21-28.
Mrs. Harold Ransom, newly
elected chairman of : the Marion
County Junior Red Cross, said se
lections were based on interest and
leadership capabilities.
Selected for the leadership train
ing are Sara Mayers, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mayers, 5180
McLeod Lane; Helen Willis, daugh
tei of Mr. and Mrs.: Jack Morri
son, 625 N. 15th St., and Allen L.
Stevens Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Allen L. Stevens Sr., 1215 N. 24th
SL
LEBOLD 'GOOD' !
Emory Lebold, 49, hospitalized
Thursday at Salem Memorial for a
heart condition, Friday was report
ed as "good." He was admitted in
"fair" condition. Lebold, 250 S. ISth
St., owns Lebold'i Ice Cream, 1265
State St
Now Playing!
1WW
Added
"Mississippi Traveler"
( "Calypso Cruise"
News Cartoon
LAST DAY
Tony Curtis
Purple Mask"
and
"The Man From
Bitter Ridge"
ft?ifir i
! Henry FONDA
CAGNEY
" William
I iThatWGalrn
At The Theater
Today 'j
EUDfOBE
"MISTER ROBERTS" with
Henry Fonda. James Cajney. Wil
liam Powell and Jack Lemmon.
"MISSISSIPPI TRAVELER." j
-CALYPSO CRUISE." 5
CAPITOL j
"THE MAN ntOM LARAMIE;
wita James Stewart. ".
"CHICAGO SYNDICATE" with.;
Dennis O'Keefe and Abb Unt,f
j GRAND
"THE PURPLE MASK" with
Tony Curtis and Colleen Miller.
"THE MAN FROM BITTER
RIDGE" with Lex Barker and.
Mara Cord ay. ;
NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IN f
"FRANCIS IN THE NVY" with!
Donald O'Connor.
"RAGE AT PAWN" with Ran
dolph Scott .
HOLLYWOOD ;
-BLACKBOARD JUNGLE")
with Glenn Ford. Anne Francis,
and Louis Calhern.
"ADVENTURES OF H A J J I
BABA" with John Derek and
Elaine Stewart.
Cash Drawer
Raids Told by
Salem Police
Two Salem restaurants Thursday
lost a total of $175 to two daylight
operators who release cash regis
ter cash drawers from the rear
without the sounding of bells add
without leaving tell-tale readings
on-the tapes, Salem police report
ed Friday. j j
The restaurants were the Spa,
382 State St., which turned up 9120
short at day's end. and Clark's
Sandwich Shop, 479 Court St.,
which wound up $55 shy.
Police Chief : Clyde A. Warren
said one of the pair seems to
screen operations from employes
and customers with a newspaper
while his partner opens up a door
in the customer-side of the coun
ter cash register and springs ia
lever which opens the drawer. He
then reaches around and takes
the money.
Warren described the door on the
back of the cash register as the
emergency door opened by a key
retained by the agency respon
sible for maintenance of the ma
chine. ;
Manager Herman Rieck Jr. of
Clark's said he believed his till
was robbed just after he returned
from the bank with change, and
that the man was working on the
back of his machine just as be
was unloading this change into
the till.
Descriptions of the two men be
lieved to have tapped the tills
were vague.
Drill Team .
Back Home
After Victory
An orchestra and a large dele
gation of parents and friends late
Friday welcomed home the drill
team of Job's Daughters, Bethel
43, which Thursday placed third in
its class at national competitions
at Boise.
The welcome was at the Scottish
Rite Temple. The 21-member drill
team is made up of junior high
school-age girls whose drill captain
is Karen Thomas and whose drill
master is William Shriver.
Winning team of the class 24
girls or less was from Vancouver,
B.C.: the Tucson, Ariz., unit plac
ed second. The girls made the trip
to and from the national session
by chartered bus.
OSC Names New
Dean of Women
CORVALLIS tfi Dr. Clara L.
Simerville. Corvallis, will become
gon State College this fall. j
ne succeeds janet uougias, wno
resigned in July to be dean of
women at Eastern Washington Col
lege of Education.
Dr. Simerville has been an in
structor in sociology and psy
chology for the State System of
I Higher Education's general exten
sion division. She is a 1928 grad
uate of Willamette University. ;
TRICK FOUND GULITY
Edward Trick of Salem Friday
was found guilty of driving while
intoxicated by a Salem Municipal
Court jury. He was arrested July
14.
Gates Open 7-Show at Dosk
ENDS TONITE
DONALD O'CONNOR
"FRANCIS
IN THE NAVY"
Also
In Technicolor
RANDOLPH SCOTT
In
RAGE AT DAWN"
-starts tomorrow
two Technicolci Hits
VICTOR MATURE
JEAN SIMMONS
In
"THE ROBE"
In Cinemascope
Also
LEX BARKER
In
THE MAN FROM
BITTER RIDGE"
I
w
, ! Treat The
... i
I Delicious i
SEAFOOD DIN1R
At'The Famous
Delightful Atmosphere Ocean View ,
Only 60 Miles From Salem Ocean Lake, Ore.
Rehearing of
Hells Canyon
Issue Asked
EVERETT I A resolution
urging the National Hells Canyon
Assn. to ask the Federal Power
Commission for a rehearing on
the Hells Canyon dam issue was
adopted by the Washington Public
Utility Districts Assn. Friday.
The PUD representatives called
for full recourse through the fed
eral courts if the rehearing is de
nied "to prove by any possible
means that natural public re
sources shall not be wasted by po
litically prompted decisions made
against the specific laws of Con
gress." The PUD Assn. pledged finan
cial support and called on others
to also help the voluntary National
Hells Canyon Assn.
Ken Billington, executive secre
tary, said, "The Federal Power
Commission completely ignored
the downstream power which will
come from the high Hells Canyon
storage. This downstream power is
what Oregon and Washington
would get out of a high dam devel
opment. "We lose more than 500,000 kilo
watts if Idaho Power gets their
way on this stretch of the Snake
River."
The resolution adopted by the
PUD officials states, "The high
dam divested of all political in
nuendo and double talk means
more power at lower cost for the
Pacific Northwest in the same way
at Grand Coulee Dam."
Salem Man's
Hymn Picked
For Publishing
A hymn text written by Prof.
Burton C. Bastuscheck of Willam
ette University was one of 14 chos
en for publication by the Hymn
Society of America. Some 300 en
tries were submitted in the com
petition.;. The announcement was received
here Friday from W. W. Reid of
the board of missions of the Meth
odist Church in New York. Reid
said the interdenominational Hymn
Society's publication is the result
of a quest for hymns to "express
the needs and aspirations of people
in the churches and communities
of rural America."
Bastuscheck, 45, now at the Meth
odist Iliff School of Theology at
Denver working on his PhD de
gree, is assistant professor of reli
gion at Willamette. He also teaches
rural sociology.
Before coming here a year ago
from Keosauqua, Iowa, he was a
Methodist circuit pastor for several
country churches. Bastuscheck and
his family live at 715 N. 20th St
Bean Picker
Call Issued
i
About 3,500 bean pickers are
needed in western Oregon at once
and the shortage may grow even
more acute over the next three
weeks, according to reports receiv
ed Friday from local offices of the
State Employment Service. Family
groups are specially in demand and
temporary quarters are available
jn most places. j
Hillsboro, McMinnville, Corvallis, !
Eugene, Grants Pass, Albany, Leb
anon and Portland as well as Sa
lem are among the areas where
pickers are in demand, while Med
ford i and possible others expect
shortages to develop by the end of
August The pear harvest in South
ern Oregon may last into October,
it was said.
With the grain harvest rapidly
approaching a peak, eastern Ore
gon points report available labor
in good supply at present. Apricot
picking around The Dalles is al
most complete and late harvests
ot potatoes, sugar beets and other
crops will not start for some time.
French Agree on
Settlement for
Morocco .Problem
PARIS 11 French Cabinet
ministers said Friday they had
agreed what to do about terror
ridden Morocco. Usually well-in-
formed sources said that France "Ptl .1 VT.,
would offer at least partial home,1"113"" VfOmail
j i rule under the present Sultan
: Premier Edgar Faure refused
to announce the agreement with
the plea that he must first inform
President Rene Coty, who is vaca-
turning in the Alps.
Motorists Pay
j' Extra $12,150
WASHINGTON in - Parking on
downtown Washington streets has
been free since the city's transit
strike began July 1.
But forgetful motorists are still
feeding coins into the parking me
ters. In fact they spent $12,150.44
unnecessarily that way last month.
The 44 cents came from pennies
put ia by mistake.
Fanilr To A K
Director
- . - , ' ' 1
. , i ZjY ,
G. Scott Kallenbanfh, Ohloan
just appointed Oregon state
accident prevention director.
Former Ohio
Official Takes
Oregon Post
r. cwf v.ll.nK.., .;.)..
superintendent of the division of
safety and hygiene of Ohio, has
been appointed director of the'P05"01 cnest injuries-
accident prevention division of
Oregon's State Industrial Acci
dent Commission.
Commissioner William A. Cal
lahan said Friday Kallenbaugh
has been engaged in accident
prevention work for more than
22 years.
: He served as director of un
employment compensation of the
bureau of unemployment com
pensation for Ohio for nearly
three years and was personnel
and safety director of the Mor-
gan Engineering Company at Al-;
liance, Ohio.
Callahan said the appointment
was made following a nation-wide
civil service recruitment cam
paign. He replaces Leonard A. Wes
ton, who has resigned to enter
private employment
Death Takes
Ex-Concert
Singer Here
Walter Robarts. 85, former con -
pprt sinupr nf mm T.ihprtv Rrl
died Friday at home He lived in j 65 Per cent- Tne total deaths so
Salem six years coming here from'far tnis vear in tne country is 191.
Eazle Rock Calif
6 ' '
Born Nov. 19. 1869 in London.
r.n.i,j tl ,,-f-.
England, Robarts lived in Austra-
lis. New Zealand. South American
and Tahiti and ultimately the Uni
ted States. He lived in Eagle Rock
16 years before moving here. Rob
arts also taught singing and speak
ing. .
1 In Salem he married Mrs. Emma
Whealdon. who died a year ago.
After her death he lived with Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart Smith in whose
hcus he died.'
Survivors include three step-sons.
Rowan Whealdon, North Caldwell,
N. J.; Alfred J. Whealdon, Mc
Minnville; Everett Whealdon, Sal
mon Arm, British Columbia.
Services will be 10:30 a.m. Mori
day at the Virgil T. Golden funeral
home where the Rev. W. Harold
Lyman will officiate. Burial will be
in Lee Mission Cemetery.
Opposition from
SI
'Asset'
livers
For Stevenson
WASHINGTON UPt - Sen. Neu
berger (D-Ore) said Friday that
opposition to A d 1 a i Stevenson
voiced by Gov. Shivers of Texas
should "become a powerful asset
for Stevenson in at least 44 states
the states which lost heavily
through the tidelands decision."
Gov. Shivers criticized Stevenson
Thursday at the Governors' Con
ference in Chicago, saying the
former Illinois governor was not
qualified as a presidential candi
date. Shivers was an Eisenhower
Democrat in the 1952 presidential
campaign.
Sen. Neuberger said Shivers was
"the chief proponent of taking
from the federal government the
valuable offshore oil reserves and
bestowing them upon just the
four states Texas, California,
Florida and Louisiana.
Burned Fatallv
PORTLAND ( A Portland
woman was fatally burned early
Friday in a bedroom fire at the
home of her sister near Longview,
wash.
Mrs. Helen Caplan, 50. wife of
Ben M. Caplan, a Portland jew
eler, was dead on arrival at a
Portland hospital. Attendants said
Mrs.. Caplan was reported to have
fallen asleep while smoking a cig
arette. She was taken to a Long-
view hospital' and then brought
here.
W SO'i Modem Must 1
A Tl ' Fox Trot Swing tf-i 1
l Walt Rumba Samba I V
M Tango-Mam U Tax 1
iDlCKSOM'S '-
11 1H Miles Sooth f Salem City limits ea WE JJ
2 Woodburn
Women Hurt
In Accident
r
Statesman Newt Service
SILVERTON An 87-year-old
Woodburh man emerged unhurt
from the back seat of a car in
which his two daughters were
seriously injured , in a two-car
collision four miles east of here
Friday at Rocky Four Corners,
i Listed as critically injured by
Silverton Hospital is Miss Myrtle
Birtchet. 56. of Woodburn. Less
seriously injured is Mrs. Evelyn
Wllkins, 49, also of Woodburn
and also at Silverton Hospital
They occupied the front seat
Their father, f W. Birtchet,
was checked , by physicians and
sent home.
State Policeman Robert Ander
son listed the driver of the other
car as Herman, Wesley Hunt, 22,
Gresham. Anderson said neither
Hunt nor his passengers were
injured. Their car was struck in
the side and spun into a tKch,
where it faced in the direction
opposite to that which it was
traveling. .
Miss Birtchet's injuries includ-'
ed a fractured skull, a compound
r a. 41 1 . ft 1 m
iraciure ai uie leu nee ana con-
lTt lT' Wullkl," "ETV
sible broken shoulder blade and
South Leads
U. S. in Polio
Inoculations
i
WASHINGTON (Jl A survey
showed Friday the South is pio-.
neering public programs to give,
second Salk polio vaccine shots to
the nation's school children
The survey, conducted by The
Associated Cress among state
health offices in all 48 states and
the District of Columbia, turned
pip statistics which must be treated
as tentative.
The figures, not yet evaluated
scientifically, indicated a 46 per
cent drop in polio deaths below
last year's level, generally regard
ed as a fairly average one.
They showed a total of 1,080,329
youngsters have been given second
shots 75 per cent of them in Cali
fornia and seven Southern or bor-
der states; Florida, Georgia, Lour
siana, Mississippi, Oklahoma,
South Carolina and West Virginia.
It was in these eight states that
lthe survey showed the biggest de-
i chne in polio fatalities a drop ofi
vumyaicu iu ooo up w mis ume
lacf fiiir
' .i -k-.
omi otjj anuntu.
, c,, mi,iin f;Pt 9nri
second graders in the country who
got a first shot there were 247
cases of polio, of which nine proved
fatal.
2. Eighteen of the 48 states are
waiting for fall to resume the pro
gram. Few have made any plans
for a third injection, which experts
say would provide maximum im
munity, and three Texas, North
Dakota and Colorado said parents
will have to get third shots pri
vately. Allotments for
Vaccine Made
WASHINGTON Ufi The U. S.
Public Health Service Friday night
announced state allotments under
the 30 million dollar polio vaccine
aid law signed by President Eisen
hower Friday. i
Allotments by 'states included:
Idaho $138,225; Oregon $269,842; j
Washington $384,315. I
The law ' provides for allocation j
of the funds under a formula in-,
volving the number of unvaccinat-j
ed children under age 20 and ex
pectant mothers in each state, the
relative per capita income of the;
state, and the per capita cost ofi
vaccine. -j
- Under the law a single official j
agency in each state will be desig-.
nated for the program and will j
submit a plan to the Public Health I
Service when applying for its al-!
located payment. j
SALES BILL SIGNED
WASHINGTON UH President
Eisenhower Friday signed a bill
designed to spur sales abroad of
American farm surpluses. It dou
bles the amount of products the
government may sell for foreign
currencies.
mmmmmmmmmmmmu,
j Good Music Big Crowds
Sat. Nite
' '
Crystal Gardens
; Ask for Your Free Prize Tickets
Z1
STAR
DJ Ul-A 1
y8 MAfta
ma
K Your Ooif Aetmfy Guiie M
According to fh Sttrtl
To develop message for Saturday,
read words corresponding to numbers
of your Zodioc birth sign.
2-17-24-34
38-44-82-83
yf TAUIUS
1 Keep
2 Prestige
3 Accept
4 News
5 Or
6 Morning
7 Or
8 Mail
9 Extend
10 Write
It Be
12 Letters
13 Tactful
14 Invitotions
15 Some
16 In
17 And
18 Con
19 Be
20 Attention
21 The
22 And
23 Cleor
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
I lV MAY Jl
mi 5-33-48-53
KV77-8 1-881
MAY a
JUNE 25
37-41-44
50-59-75
CANCH
JUNE 23
JULY 23
ni9-26-30-4a
V65-78-87-OT
uo
YQ JULY 24i
AUG 23
24 Credit
54 For
SV63-72 86-90
25 Atmosphere 55
26 Wory
56 Are
27 -Bring
28 Circulate
29 To
30 Of
(5) Good
57
58
59
60
vateo
fitfW SEPT. 22
Rock-Marooned Boat Yields
Last Will of Lonely Mariner
PORT ANGELES, Wash. ibody claimed the trim craft they
A last will and testament, scribbled might sink it as Dvorak had willed,
by a lonely mariner whose dreams : The name of the book in which
of many years of sailing around, the will was found: "This Great
the world ended in tragedy, was i Wide Sea," by Robert Coker.
found Friday. I 1 1
The brief document was in a
book in the cabin of the small boat
in which Ladislav A. Dvorak, 61,
was found shot to death two days
ago. His 27-footer, the Dehelusay.
was wedged in rocks within 25
miles of where the Strait of Juan
de Fuca opens into the Pacific,
He had sailed from Seattle.
The will read:
"It was in the lap of the gods
and they have spoken. My wish is
to have this ship pulled out to sea
and sunk, without ceremony, with
out notifying any relatives. The
money is to cover the expense.
Lad A. Dvorak."
Campers on the beach saw
Dvorak work fruitlessly to free
his craft Tuesday evening. Finally
he disappeared into the cabin.
Coastguardsmen found him dead
on his bunk. The rifle that had
blasted away his life and a dream
lay loosely in his hands.
A Seattle acquaintance told earl
ier this week how Dvorak, "a jolly
I persons," had saved for years for
the planned around - the - world
i trip. The sloop was loaded with
provisions,
The acquaintance said Dvorak
i came to Seattle about two years
ago from Philadelphia but author-
iuci were unaoie to connrm mis.
I A nioi.. f r I : 11..
I k,- ZTZ' .u- ... " !
uv3 vouiu gave uic nisi i-iue
m nvnraf. a
ed some time in 1946 listed Julia
Dvorak. Edgar. Wis., as the wr
son to be notified in the case of
accident.
The book which held the will also
contained ,100 in 20 dollar bills.
CoaSt Guard officials said if no-
Burna Prove Fatal
To Medford Woman
MEDFORD ) Burns suffered
in a family workshop accident a
week ago proved fatal Thursday
to Mrs. Glenn H. Johnson, 48.
There was an explosion when
her husband cut into an oil drum
with a torch. He was burned se
verely. Woodburn Drive-In
...............,...........
Ends Saturday
"HERE COME THE GIRLS"
Pins
"ALASKA SEAS"
Starts Sun
"ELEPHANT WALK"
Plus
"COMBAT SQUAD"
DANCE
Saturday Nite
Larry & His Cascade
Rarige Riders
"Western Dane Band"
AUMSVILLE
PAVILION
CAPITOL RACING ASSN. PRESENTS i
stock" HARD TOP
'AUTOCRACIES
FEATURING A
50 LAP MAIN EVENT
SAT NITE-AUG. 13
TIME TRIALS 7:45 P.M.
HOLLYWOOD BOWL
SALEM
PH. 4(121
SPECIAL OFFER
ADULTS 1
GAZER' H
JL rVJIXAN
SEPT 23
3- 5- 9-I4BT1
122 28-39 t I
See
Some
Interesting
Other
Clears
Are
Welcomt
On
Freely
Fmonces
Your
Borrowing
Is
The
Can
Leodership
Of
New
Influentiol
And
Things
Person
Satisfying
61 Conditions.
62 With
63 Interesting
64 Bring
65 Beyond
66 And
67 Good
68 Up
69 Which
70 Arouse
71 You
72 News
73 Women
74 Results
75 Now
76 Today
77 Into
78 Your
79 Exchonge
80 III
81 The
82 Uptrend
83 Now
84 Feelings .
85 Ideos
86 Or
87 Proper .
88 Picture
89 Limits
90 Gift
scoano
OCT. 2
NOV 22
11-.3-16-55ir
162-73-76 HA
SAGfTTAIlUt
NOV23 ,
OK B f3i
1-23-47-61
69-70-80-84'
CAPtaCOM
wan
fa
DEC 23
JAN 20
20-29-40-45V
M7-74
AOUAMJt
JAN 21
4- 7- 8-43Cs
Dealing
M-54-71 V?
People"
Looking
Initiative
mas
MAR 21 t-r
Comes
qc8'tra3
hO-12-31-49
te7-AA.79-85U
PUBLIC INVITED
4-Corner Bar-ttQ and -Western
Jamboree
Sunday, An : 14
Musical entertainment free
includes Lvle & Hi5 Western
airs Curt Ferguson & the
Rootin THters, T:mmy Kini
ah. Uncle SAe and His Stars
of Tomorrow; games for all
the family Bar BQ dinner
tickets onlv $1.25 and 75c at
the 4-C.rnrrs Business firms.
ADMISSION FREE
Ml
SOt Phone 4-4713 20
ENDS TODAY! OPEN 6:45
"BLACKBOARD JUNGLE"
"ADVENTURES OF
HAJJI BABA"
Starts Tomorrow - Cont. 1:45
SEE AFRICA IN
CINEMASCOPE!
COLOR CO-HIT
YJYOWMG i
PHIL CAREY
Cm tfara Mba
.EVAXS' HTEt BISHOP
. SPECIAL KIDS MATINEE
Every. Saturday 1 to 4 P. M.
SKATELAND
650 7th Sr., West Salem
NOW !
AIR-CONDITIONED
Please Observe Dress
Rules: No Jeans,
Levis or Shorts
PH. 45527
00 Kids Under : 12
FREE wifh Parents
Adverse