The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 04, 1955, Page 1, Image 1

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    nn i
POUNDOD 1651
105th Year
3 SECTIONS-28 PAGES
The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Sunday, September 4, T93S -
R1CI 10c
No. 161
State Fair Off ify
Off
'Shirtsleeve
y::
'Record Start
Weather! Fills Midway at Fair
- -..
Richard Nixon has impressed
me as a "young man in a hurry"
to go places, might -well be add
ed. Richard H. Rovere. nrnfps-!
sinnal journalist, uses the tiile
"Nixon: Most Likely to Succeed"
for bis analysis of the young and
active vice president who seems j
to be a favorite of .Eisenhower's !
and a phobia with Democrats. H;s
article appears in Harper's for :
September.
itovere s , Mon is well groom-
ed, serious about his business
which is politics, abstemious, co
operative. Not once is he referr-;
ed to as the Veep, the nickname
that seemed to fit the homesoun
Albea Barkley. Rovere fits nim'
right onto the pattern of modern
business promotion as an expert!
in "public relations." With Eisen
hower disdaining politics and nec
essarily limited m his outside !
contacts, Nixon takes on the chore j
usually assigned to at least one'
vice president in a corporation:
"public relations." Of course he
is used even more widely than!
lining the . traditional role in
Washington as the one seated
next to the hostss at the usual
round of winter dinners. He has
been the President's emissary to
the Far East, toj Central Ameri
ca: and soon he is to visit the
Middle East. (This- last should
be real test, of mT talent. If he
can sell a bill of goods to Morocco
and France and to
(Continued on Editorial Page 4A
1 e " ' ' : "3
I u V ' ' - L ' ) ' got off to
I 1 .y V ,- " - J5"TPTr7 I Saturday
I r ' . P- . 5 . - . V tering
1 w - ' - -O ,JVJ :V than
C V 1 J lAZ L J IlH And
b-iuu
t - f' I" n r frf "i i ii iirr tt i - ' li i i -- - yl- -- i-- , , --1
Cright pennants and animal cnt-eots decorated, the midways at the Oregon State-Fair Saturday as
cpening day erewd thronged -through the gates U see the sights ef the 90th state-Wide extra va
ganza (SUtesmaa Photo) (State Fair pictures oa page 10, see. 1, and page 5, sec. 2.)
Today at the Fair
7:00 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
1:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
3:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
12:00 p.m.
SUNDAY, SEPT. 4 -
Gates open.
Judging begins Beef cattle; Aberdeen Angus;
milk goats. j i
4-H senior dairy showmanship and beef : !
showmanship. .
Band concert in front of stadium.
4-H Sunday service.
Free Midway act, front of stadium.
Circus in Stadium.
Free Show Gay Nineties Revue, (Forest Grove
Gleeman), Grandstand. i !
Free show Folk Dancing (Oregon Dance Federa
tion) on grounds.
4-H sheep showmanship, dairy showmanship.
Circus in Stadium. f
Band concert in front of administration building.
Free midway, act, front of stadium.
4-H awards event. International Farm Ybuth,
change show, 4-H hall.
Circus, Stadium.
Stage revue, Grandstand.
Gates close.
Arson Squad
Plans Blaze
Investigation
By JERRY. STONE -Staff
Writer. The SUtesmaa
Speculation that a firebug may
be operating in the Salem vicinity
nas arisen in the wake of two
major fires which hit Salem the
past week. -
Flames which gulled a vacant
Portland Road feed warehouse
Friday Jiight were of auspicious
origin, Fire Chief Ellsworth L.
Smith said Saturday. Smith added
that certain aspects of the blaze
were similar to a Wednesday night
fire - which caused an estimatel
$30,000 damage at the Salem Laun
dry Co. j
Smith said he will make a re
quest that the state police arson
squad investigate the $25,000 blaze
. which struck a building formerly
occupied by the Oregon Feed and
Seed Col The fire started about
9 p.m. Friday and was brought
under control by firemen about
half an hour after badly charring
the one-story structure. The laun
dry fire also started about 9 p.m.
A man- working at the nearby
fairgrounds about the time of the
Friday night fire told Smith he
first saw flames licking outside
the southeast corner of the build
ing, located in the 2G00 block of
Portland Road. There was no con
nection between the blaze and a
small grass fire in the area earli
,cr in the j day. Smith maintained.
' The chief added that the grass fire
" burned no closer - than 30 feet
from the S building when extin
guished about 3 pjn. some six
- hours prior to the two-alarm fire
in the warehouse.
The fact that the structure was JERUSALEM W Sharp fight-
vacant and thereby without many ; ing broke out again Saturday along A burgiar with a liking for sil
of the usual fire hazards wras me the Gaza demarcation line between th. nJwt ;f .
basis for I firemen's suspicions. : Egypt and Israel. It came just ss vcrware was the object oj a
James Brazie. owner of the build-! the trigger-tense area was begin- search by Salem policy Saturday
ing. said the damage was covered jhing to hope for an effective cease- after , 250 teaspoons, 250 forks
by insurance. fire. and an undetermined amount of
Aiarmea oy wnat ne cauea ine tables were taken f rom
verv spnous events. Mai. Gen. K.
i r Rnrns ii N trnr snrwr. First Methodist Church, State'
renewed his appeal to both jna tnurcn Mreets, somei me
rriuay or cany auiuruuy. )
Police hope also that the thief
Opening Day
Crowd Top
For Weekend
By LILLIE U MADSEN
Farm Editor. The Statesman
Oregon's Gay Nineties State Fair;
a gay and record start
with 69 more people en-
the gates the first hour
entered during that time a
This year's 9 o'clock
was 488.-
all day , long the figures
back and; forth, giving
first last year, and, then this year,
the edge on attendance, ending
with the final 11 o'clock night
count at 41,070, a
day opening, compared to the
1954 final opening" day count of
40.330. ' j .
Betting was excellent, with the
paramutuel handle making a new
Saturday opening day record of
$116,678. Last year's stood at
$91,957.
"Knock Out" j
Although those cpming out of
the night revue said it "was a
knock out," a "riot" and "the
best yet," attendance figures of
2,892 were short' of the 1934 open
ing night attendance; of 3,062. Cir
cus attendance, too, was down
this year, with 2,389 going in.
compared to the 1934 count of
3,373 for both rnafinee and night
performances.
Perfect weather brought a hu?c
afternoon flower-loving crowd to
the open air garden Show, one of
the finest ever seen at Salem.
Marvin Black, Salem, won the
sweepstakes for the most out
standing garden in the exhibits
which includes those of nurseries,
growers and professional land
scape architects. Judging here
was difficult, judges Said, as they
admitted they had difficulty in
settling between Black's desert
garden, and the patio arrange
ment by Fernll's Nursery. Fer-
Multiple Names
Of Lif tie Value j
i - i
CHARLOTTE, N. C. (UP)
Judge J.S.D.J.N.S.W.E.D. Hen.
derson observed his 76th birth
day Saturday, still stuck with
all those initials. - 1
He, said his mother named
him after; all his uncles in the
hope that; one of them would
leave him something. But Uncles
Jackson, Ezekiel, David, James,!
Nathaniel, i Sylvester, Willis, Ed-!
ward! and Demosthenes all pass
ed dn without leaving him a
dimei. !
Bijeak Seen in
Los Angeles
Heat Wave
LOS ANGFI.FS IJR ' Th
record Saturzling Southern .California heat wave
that pas boosted temperatures
above jthe 100 mark for four davs
in a tow is beginning to break.
the Weather Bureau reported Sat
urday night. ...
The high mark in the Los Angeles
Civic Center Saturday was 103 but ' mill ditch. Years ago
i urneri o
Drowns In
Mill
Ditch
Victim
Nonvay Ship
Fights Free of
Greenland Ice
Weather Bureau forecasters
sea breezes are beginning a cool
ing treid that will continue through
the Lajor Day weekend. The fore-'
cast for Sunday is for a high of
96 herfe and SO at the beaches.
Warm air flowing from Texas
and the Gulf of Mexico and hot
desert (winds brought the heat that
started Wednesday with a high of
101. Thursday the mercury hit 110
to setijan all-time record for. Los
Angeles, f riday the maximum was
108. j
Saturday temperatures at some
beach preas were as much as 20
degrees below the marks in the
downtown Los Angeles district.
But as the heat continued in the
plus-lOOj range Saturday the Los
Angele:; County coroner's office re
called ( ff-duty personnel.
Heat prostrations caused 10
deaths but Dr. Lester Adelson,
chief deputy coroner, said many
Artificial Respiration Fails to Save
Boy After Fall Into Foot-Deep Ditch
SLattsmAB Kw Servica
TURNER An 18-months-old bov drowned in a shallow ditrh in
front of his home here Saturday. , -
Dead is Jimmy Leon Bones, whose parents Mr. and Mrs; Lester
N. Bones, were at the State Fair when the tragedy occurred about
4 p.m. : -
A high school girl was supervising Jimmy and bis four-year-old
brother, Billy, when toe toddler
fell into the ditch.
The boy's father said the baby
sitter apparently went into the
house to get a washcloth; and the
child toddled about 30 feet from
the porch to the ditch and fell in.
Bridge Over Ditch .
The ditch is about 20 feet wide
but scarecly a foot deep. Bones
reported.! Supposition was that the
child fell from a foot bridge that
connects the yard with the street
Fire Chief Albert Jensen said
the babysitter retrieved the child
and took him across the street to
the C. G. Hunt residence.
Hunt and others applied artificial
respiration for an hour while fire
men attempted to revive the child
with a resuscitator.
The ditch in which the boy
drowned is known here as Turner
it supplied
said ' water power for a flour mill.
Works ia Salem .
Jimmy was born March 8, 1954,
at a Salem hospital and had al
ways lived at Turner. His father
works for an auto parts firm in
Salem. j
Surviving besides his parents and
brother are grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Klockstad and Mr. and
Mrs. Vester Bones, all of Turner.
Services ; are pending at the Vir-,
gu T. Golden Chapel, Salem
more e
ing of
by the
The d
by the
erase
The
poultry
three
forest
1.).
I ALESUND, Norway WV-A small
Norwegian ship, trapped for at
least two days in Greenland pack
ice. was reported free Saturday
night and en route to Denmark
under its own power.
j The U.S. Air Force announced
earlier that planes from its Thule,
Greenland, base were trying to
rascbe the 33 persons aboad the
483-ton seal catcher Jopeter.
rill received a blue ribbon and
$123, Black received, in addition
to the blue ribbon cash prize? $75
for sweepstakes. Red! ribbon win
ners in this division received $90
each, and white ribbons drew $30.
Formal Garde - .
Claggett's Garden, a neat rest
ful, small formal garden, won a
blue ribbon. This featured blue
steptacarcus and achimines. as
well as begonias. A b'ue ribbon
was also won by Doerfler's Gar
dens which featured la contem
porary theme, using greenery,
some of the delightful, small blue
edging, plant. Exacum iaffine, and
of the orange colored zinias.
Blaze. j
Jack Brydon won a red ribbon
as did also John and Rudoloh
Henney, while white rjbbon
ners in this division were Men's i rison
Garden Club of Salem; Benedict i owners,
Nursery, Nelson Nursery, both Oi'iooo.
balem, and Bernard bcheidlcr i Three
derly people are succumb-
natural causes aggravated
heat.
vcrnight death toll checked
coroner's office reached
93 Saturday compared with an av-
M 23.
100-plus heat has caused
casualties estimated at
million dollars. California
fires story on page 2, sec
Third Lebanon
Mill Burns
LEBANON W The
Nursery of Mt. Angel.
Waterfall
Outstanding exhibit,
non-competitive, is the
and rockery with its carden of
Lebanon
10 davs
area s third mill fire in
destroyed the Lebanon Wood Prod-
win- jucts Mi$ early Saturday. Bob Gar-
and Charles Nugent, the
estimated the loss at $30,-
drying kilns, the sawmill.
bailer, machine shop and two
lathes wlere destroyed. A truck and
although tractor were pulled from the area
waterfall ! and escaoed damage.
, - J V.
v - - 4 - - - ,
v - . "'if '
Vandals Batter
Fire Engine in
Bush Pasture
An early-day Salem fire enfiine.
donated by. the Salem Fire Depart
ment for children to play with was
badly damaged by vandals at Bush
Pasture, it was discovered late
Saturday night. - ;
; The outfit, located in the --south
east section of the park, was
dented about the body, spark
part of the metal footboard at the
part of the! meal footboard at the
rear was ripped off, police said.
The fire engine was' one of the
Salem department's earliest
motor-driven apparatuses. A few
weeks ago it was donated to the
city parks commission to be used
for children to play on in Bush
Pasture. i .
Police said the vandals appar
ently threw rocks at the truck
which caused the damage.
Mercury Hike
On Forecast
green ferns and shrubbery, ar-
r . v
A smkesman for Peter Brandal ngea Dy r.rnesi luier;
and Co., owners of the ship, said' . .'.m Hal1- SaIem f'reman, ex
the company received a message I hibiting "just for fun'; won a
reporting that the ice was break- i b'ue ribbon and $125; on his
ins ud enouuh to allow the vessel u'u"i . ic siucii
was
replete even
from the
Israel, Egypt
Fight Renews
Burglar Raids
Silvcrivareat
Salem Church
in rvinHnit its vnvn cfp
The Jotieter was renorted carrv. ! low ing
ing 19 passengers and a crew of 16 : tne service yard.
from Danmarkhavn, Greenland,
to Copenhagen. It is under charter
to the Royal Danish Trade Depart
ment, a Danish government
agency.
The U.S. Northeast Air Com
mand at St. Johns, Nfld., said
earlier a message from the skip-
to ( the wash
clothesline in
Holiday travellers will find Sa
lem area weather warm through
Monday, according to McNary
Field weathermen. A "blistering"
high of 90 is forecast for today,
compared with Saturday's maxi
mum of 87. ;
Hioha'avc lA5u!n7 in ant frnm
burned, knd the loss was estimated j Salem were ! Daoked st.it nnliri
at $40,000. The following dav 2 i foniirf tSair tllo o tiara miAn
The. Lebanon Wood Products
Mill has operated here for 11
years, and employed four per
sons. Itl manufactured plugs for
paper rolls.
Last Thursday night a mill which
manufactured vegetable boxes
Textiles drew immense crowds
of women. Mrs. W. B. Taylor of
1362 Third Street, Salem j won the
cotton bag contest and a new
sewing machine, taking a blue
ribbon in a mother and daughter
costume, a blouse and a. luncheon
: cloth. She will compete for the
stud mill burned with a loss of $10,
ooo.
NEGOTIATION'S HALT
PARIscn French officials and
Morocca nationalists Saturday
suspended their negotiations for 48
lor area
fully.
At the
be fair today with a few! patches
of morning fog.
motorists to drive care-
coast, it is expected to
FIRE 'CONTAINED
TURNER Jimmy Leon Bones.
1 18-months-old tot who drowned
at bis borne Saturday.
State Records
Five Deaths,
U.S. Toll Rises
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
j"ive persons met accidental
deaths in Oregon Saturday, the -first
full day of the long Labor
Day weekend. ;
A man was killed in a traffic
accident, a baby and man drowned,
a woman died in a house fire and '
another woman fell off an ocean
side cliff. .. -
Jimmy Leon Bones. - ls-month-
old son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Bones,' drowned in a shallow ditch
in I front of his home at Turner
Saturday. ( Story above.).
Head-Oa Wreek - -
Donald O'Neill Hovgaard. 25. of
Cascade Locks died in a head-on
collision near Hood River. County
Coroner Roy Edwards said Hov
gaard apparently died instantly
when his car trashed into a big'
crane truck. .. -A
two-alarm fire in a Portland
rooming house early Saturday re
suited in (he death of a' woman
and serious injury to her husband.
. Mrs. Marian June Scott was
found dead in .her second story
apartment Her , husband Charles,
70, suffered second degree burns
and was taken to a Portland bos
pital.
Fall fatal
Patricia Anne Trute, 24, Port
land,'! apparently slipped and fell
to her death at Whale Cove, on the
Oregon Coast.
Her companion, ftkhard G.
Krenek, Portland, sajd they had
planned to go fishing and had
separated in the brush at the edge
of the bluff. He said he heard her
scream and ran to the cliffs edge
where he saw the woman's crum
pled body 50 feet below.
Body Recovered
The body of Uno Eckbloom, 40,
Tiernan, was recovered Saturday
morning from the Siuslaw River
where he had gone fishing the
night before. "
Eckbloom was fishing in . the
ocean Inear the river jetty when
his craft apparently broke up, said .
state police, sometime Friday
night or early Saturday. '
National Toll High
The 1 nation's three-day Labor
per reported the ice had tilted the Rational title of 1955 Cotton Bag! Morocco
vpssp! in a 4.VHp?rPP anlp nnrf hp sewIn VUeen.
A later radio message said the! Frank H"bk-
nwn Ave., roruana.
hammed
throne.
ice slackened its push and the im
mediate danger had lessened.
Train Kills
S ' : -
SP Conductor
SPRINGFIELD, Ore. (J) A
Southern Pacific Railroad conduc
tor was killed Saturday when he
visor.
sides late Saturday night to put an
end to the shooting. He set a dead
line of 5 p. m. Sunday for firm
answers.
Israel promptly announced ac-
reotance of Burns proposal in. a
may be napping same likely
place, for two pillows; are also
missing. The silverware was
taken from the church kitchen.
letter to be delivered Sunday .
But a Foreign Ministry; " u mwui
parenuy maae mrougn
Freight Rams
Auto; Salem
Man Escapes
A Salem man escaped serious
injury shortly after noon Satur
day when his car was demolished
in a collision with a freight train-! mare
oil Eastwood Drive, state police
morning.
was dragged several hundred feet spokesman declared "It goes with-
ny a switching train which he was out saying that if the other ide
continues its aggressive actions is-,
rael reserves the right to self de
ment door, police said.
directing.
He was R. E.
Hatch, 33. A mem
ber' of the train crew discovered ', fense."
the accident in the SP switching ! Heavy artillery and mortar tire
yards here. . - - j shook both sides of the border of
Hatch is survived by his widow the 6x30-mile Gaza Strip for most
and a small daughter.
The Weather
Salem
J-ortiand
Baker
Bedford
North Bend
Roseburg ....
Max.
M
84
- SI
102.
66
91
Win.
M
67
41
54
48
56
52
54
66
80
Precip.
.M
.00
.oo
M
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
.00
San Franctjco 87
Chicago 4 79
New York 77
Anrelea 103
Willamette?
FORECAST (from U. S. Weather
Bureau. McXary Field. Salem
Fair and continued warm through
- 1d1' .HlEtl temperature todiy
neaf 90. low tonight near 55. Tem
perature ,t 121 ,.,. todsy w
SALEM PRFXIMTATIOV
Jlnee Start ( Weather Year Sept. 1
k'J.'" 1 Yr Normal
of the day.
The Israelis admitted losing one
killed and eight wounded m what
they described as a punitive expe
dition against forces that had been
carrying bn a campaign of infil
tration against the Israeli border.
An Israeli spokesman said the
artillery fire along the border was
touched off by the Egyptians lay
ing down a barrage on two Israeli
settlements, ueen ana xau wur
dechai. ' '
WITHDRAWAL PLANNED ' j
MUNSAN (UP) - The Lnited
Nations Command announced Sat
urday . that -neutrar ; inspection
teams will be withdrawn Tuesday
from the Taegu and Kangnung
ports of entry in South Korea.
BendixAir
Race Delayed
PHILADELPHIA (gi Bad
weather Saturday forced a 24-hour
postponement of the coast-to-coast
Bendix Trophy race by sue Air
Force pilots flying the nation's
fastest jet fighters. j j
But despite a limited ceding and
hazy visibility, the three-day Na
tional Aircraft Show opened as
scheduled before an estimated 60.
000 persons at International Air
port. !
The 2,32-mile cross-country
flight of the supersonic j jets was
delayed for one day because Air
Force officials feared the planes
would be unable to land due to the
low ceiling. j .
w" P"ireport- Tne sitc is approximately
a base-j0nc mjje 0 Lancastcr DrjVe.
City first aidmen said the car's
driver, Orville Halverson, 1274
Park Ave., .was treated at Salem
General Hospital for a cut knee
and released.
NORTHWEST LEAGUE .
At Wenatchee 5. Salem T
At Eugene 11, Tri-Clty 3
At Spokane 7, Lewis ton 5 .
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
At Portland 5. Seattle
At Los Angeles 12, Hollywood i
At Oakland 8. San Francisco
At SarvDiego S. Sacramento 2
AMEH1CAN LEAGUE .
At Kansas City C. Detroit 11 -At
Cleveland 6. Chicago 1
At Baltimore 1. Boston 2
At New York S, Washington 10
NATIONAL LEAGUE
At Brooklyn 4. Pittsburgh
At Philadelphia 2. v York 2 -At
Milwaukee C. Crticinnttl t
At Chicago 2, St Louis
6716 S.E.
won Best I
of the Fair in the Crochet contest
with a table cloth of original de- i
sign. Her table cloth will be en
tered in the national contest. j
Mid-Willamette Valley featured I
large in the winnings of light
horses, only a" small class; being
exhibited. Rex Hartley, Marion
County-judge, showed the .grand
champion quarter horse mare ,
with his yearling "Little Choice". !
Ursualla A. Mathias of Jefferson 1
had the reserve champion j mare, i
Jean Kronbeugel, Sublimity, ;
showed the first prize for; aged ,
and yearling stallion in ;
Morgans, and Bonnie Jean Kurth, j
baiem, the lirst prize American :
Saddler. i i
Cattle Shov
The big Aberdeen Angus ishow
will get off to judging at J a.m.
Sunday, with the show closing
Monday at 2:30 p.m. with a busi
ness meeting.
Warm weather was hard on
some of the animals apd three
large boars succumbed during
opening day, two owned by Har
old Schmidt of Dundee and one
by Florenz Zielinski of Salem.
Happy, band music, mostly
teams of three score years jago,
added much to the opening day's
gayety. Monte Brook, Portland,
directed the .band Saturday.
Additional state fair news on
page 7, sec. 1.)
VIOLENCE FEARED
RABAT. Morocco If) Spurred
by the danger of more violence in
troubled French Morocco, the U.
S. Air Force has. begun moving
families of its men into trailer
camps on the big American bases
here.
hours while French authorities in r BAKER, Ore. i.Ti A stubborn 4 Day weekend holiday death toll
isought to ease Sultan Mo- forest fire about 30 miles -north of
Ben Moulay Arafa off his : Baker was contained but not con
trolled Saturday. ii
Statesman Linked to
I i -
Wirephoto Network
I ! '' '
The Oregon Statesman became a part of the world
wide Allocated Press wirephoto network Saturday!
Thd
hibit id
Oregon!
The
initial wirephoto link was made at a special ex
the Willamette Valley Industrial Exposition at the
State Fair! Some of the photos thus received on a
3 and 7. of
temporary hookup are reproduced on pages 2,
1 . r
sec 1.
pictures, approximately 60 daily, are; received via the
new Photofax equipment which
in The
Statesman-Journal plant
will be installed permamently
a week front today with full-
time use to start immediately thereafter.
Phoiofax pictures arrive via voire as positive prints all
ready ipr quick enprartng and publication. An average
size picture talfces five minutes to transmit from New York,
or anyiphere. i .
Salem area pictures also will be placed on . the wire
photo 1 etwork for just as rapid transmission to all parts
of the nation for publication in other newspaper-members
of Associated Press, I ;
I i i ' " ' ! . -
Addition of the wirephoto network, Willi tne brand new
Photofai reception is one more step In The Oregoa Statesman's
progress and development the service 01 tbit valley.
Another pending development which; will link this
newspaper with the Associated Press' two major transcon
tinental
will be
high-speed trunk wires operating ; 24 hours a day-
detailed soon
Ydur COMPLETE Newspaper
mounted steadily Sunday, as traf
fic accidents swelled the' fatalities
total it
At. 1:30- a. m. Eastern Standard
Time, 141 traffic deaths were re
ported in an Associated Press sur
vey. Drownings took 19 lives and
miscellaneous causes claimed an
other -17 to bring the overall vio
lent death toll to 177.
The National Safety Council ob
served that the rapid rate of traf
fic deaths was running far ahead
of calculations used by the' council
in estimating a few days ago that
400 persons would die in traffic
mishaps.
Tax Cut Hope i
Warning Issued.
WASHINGTON W Rep. Daniel
A. Reed (R-NY) raised a big ca
tion signal Saturday to Republi
cans and. Democrats who nave
spoken hopefully of income tax
cuts next i year.
Citing dangers of inflation and a
need for continued high military
spending, Reed said such talk is
premature and may be "overly
optimistic.
Today's Statesman
. 1 ! Sec. Pag '
Classified .;-. ,. 11.. 7-9
Comics ..... Ill ,
Crossword ll.- A
Editorials 1 4
Garden 6
Home Panorama. 1-3
Radio, TV Il 6
Spopts L I 8, 9
State Fair , t , 1
Star Guar - 4
Valley I I-J. .4