s Homeless In Northeast Floods: 105th Year 2 SECTIONS 1 6 PACES Tho Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Monday, October 17, 1955 PRICE 5c No. 204 Thousand U Plil 11 I II I II II II II II II I. I IM rWLAlKCn T II T 1 1 II If V ISuS. II II II VII II II : ' " ' : ' ' ---'.-'! " BOUNDED 1651 ' - ''! ' t : ; ' ' ' ' t 34 iDesad in Six States Swollen Rivers, Streams Show Signs of Receding; President in 'Full Salem Girl, Friend Bag tiger ' in India Control of D DENVER (P) President Eisenhower is "fully in control" of the duties of his office, White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty said Sunday. Questions about delegating presidential powers which were raised after Eisenhower suffered a heart attack three weeks ago are now completely academic, Hagerty said. HP 033JDS Yesterday I offered some com ments respecting the GOP free-for-all which is shaping up for- the presidential - nomination in 1936. Today let us take a look at the Democratic paddock where entries for 1956 are being groomed. . -, Adlai Stevenson and Princess Margaret seem to have much in common. Both have a big secret. Both are keeping it to themselves Both are expected to announce their plans very soon. Both are exoected to sav "I will." Adlai will make the race for the presi-: Parties and his departure Satur dential nomination; and Princess daT for the Big Four foreign min- llargaret surely is going to say she will renounce her rather ten uous claim to the throne for the sake of the one she loves as did her uncle, King Edward VI, whe surrendered his crown to wed Mrs. Simpson. Adlai assures us we shall not have long to wait, and Margaret can't play ducks and drakes much longer with the British public. The Stevenson forces got a sur prise and a jolt when ex-President Karry Truman almost gave his anointment to Governor Averell Harriman for the 1956 Dfmocratic nomination. True. Truman since j has been playing innocent of mak ing a choice, but his praise of Harriman at Albany and his evas ive response respecting Stevenson came close to an endorsement of Harriman. Previously Truman had beenindicating his continued loy alty to Stevenson. Now he has at least gone astray. Instead of injuring the Steven- con cause this may actually - help it (Continued on editorial page, 4) Alerts Family To House Fire Statesmaa Newt Servte , FOUR CORNERS A barking dog that woke the children led to the discovery early Sunday of a fire , which started in a home made walnut drier in the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Keidtaz, 3845 June Ave. The . Four Corners Volunteer Fire Dept. extinguished the 4 a.m. blaze with chemicals. The fire caused minor damage to the floor and mopboards but a great - deal of smoke, according to Fire Capt. 'Richard McKee. .McKee warned against the use of Improvised driers over floor furnaces because of the high oil content of walnuts which makes them hihJxJ&flammable. Nippon Tot Has Unofficial Visit With Emperor TOKYO to Three-year-old ToshikoT Nomoto got lost at a sports meet in the Imperial Palace compound. '-- She wandered to a spectators' tent. Startled officials tried to shoo her away. Toshiko slipped past them. v She climbed into a chair next to a mustached man. He beamed at her. Offcial frowns turned to grins. -,. : - ;- . - Later Toshiko was atked you like the Emporer?' She said she did.1 " Did! ANIMAL CRACKERS' V WARREN Orf3RICM. Last Thursday, The Oregon Statesman's librarian 'during routine checking found that "Animal Crackersn for t h i s week had not arrived. A wire was forthwith sent to Warren Goodrich, New York, N. Y. Here was the replyj "After 20 years of writing gags and drawing "Animal Crackers," Tm pooped! "Please consider this as notice of termination of the service. The cartoon of Oct 15 is the final release. "Your long and faithful patronage of my feature is ap preciated." "Sincerely ' "Warren Goodrich." The abrupt termination leaves T!ie Statesman (and many other newspapers) with no . immediate replacement We shall evaluate other avail able cartoons, however, and choose the best within the next few days.' , O Barking Dog uties 9 Eisenhower s assistant, Sherman Adams, filled the President in on the Northeast flood situation. The Denver White House decided that a declaration of emergency issued last August when hurri canes and floods struck the area probably still applies. Full Report But the staff in Washington is checking that and will give a full report Monday. In addition. Presidential Press Secretary James C. Hagarty marked the start of an accelerated presidential work schedule at Fitz simons Army Hospital by announc ing this schedule of official visi tors for this week: Monday, Secretary of Defease Wilson and Adm. Arthur Radford, chairman of the ' Joint Chiefs of Staff. Third Examination Wednesday, Secretary of State Dulles, returning for his second call on Eisenhower, m advance of a Washington conference Thursday th congressional leaders of both isters meeting in Geneva Friday, Atty. Gen. BrowncD, coming in to discuss justice depart ment matters. - And on Saturday, Dr. Paul Dudley White, the eminent Bos ton heart specialist, will return for his third examination of the 65- year-old President, now ' into' his fourth week of recovery from a Sept. 24 heart seizure. Dressed in yellow pajamas and a blue bow tie with red polka dots, the chief executive was lifted into an easy chair in his room and sat up for 30 minutes twice as long, as Saturday when he got into a chair for the first time. State School Principals to A two-day conference of the Oregon Elementary School Principals-Association will , open to day " at the Manon Hotel,, with some 400 delegates expected to attend. . . . . , ;f - ; Featured at the session will be j appearance in a speaking role of Dr. Harold G. Shane, Evanston, 111., widely known educator and professor of education, at North western University. Dr. Shane and his wife were honored Sun day at a tea held at the home of Miss Florence Beardsley, associa tion executive secretary. Registrations will open the conference schedule today at 8:3(1 a.m., after which delegates will be welcomed by Rex .Putnam, state superintendent of public instruction. . Dr. Shane will discuss "creative in-service educations" at an open ing session this morning and will be main speaker at a banquet tonight at 6:30 p.m. at the Marion Hotel. ' Miss Lovina E. Wilson, Eugene, incoming president of the asso ciation, will preside at a noon luncheon today; Outgoing presi dent is Harold J. Shepherd, Tilla mook. . The ' conference, sponsored by the Oregon Education Associa tion, Department of Elementary Principals and the State Depart ment of Education, will conclude Tuesday noon. Weathermen Say Continued Fair . Another fair day is due for Salem area residents, according to the daily prediction of McNary Field weathermen. Patches of fog should clear up by, early morning. Temperatures will be about the same as Sunday with a high near 75 and a low tonight about 40. Today Princess Attends Church; Town send Stays at Home (Picture on wirephoto page) BINFIELD, England Prin- cess Margaret, with perhaps the most fateful weeks of her life ahead, emerged unsmiling from her romantic rural hideaway Sun day to go to church. " Group Capt. Peter Townsend. the divorced war hero whom millions of Britons expect her to marry. stayed home. The princess hurried straight back to him after meet - i v-. al.. IBS uer iiiuuier; uie uwiuuig cprvirr , J r-1 - erit. - las she emerged from the fenced - Monday the country idyll ends.;in hideaway in Windsor Forest Margaret and her 40-year-old flier : where she and Townsend are week- are siaiea 10 return to uonaon sep- ii-atolv TiipeHaif lh 9VvarwiM fun-loving princess goes on public parade in a whirlwind of official WW. -. - - "- j - . . i - functions, with church affairs high on the list Most Britons appear convinced Margaret has made up her mind to marry Townsend. i But two big Sunday papers Back from India with fruits of successful big game hunt are Warren McMurray, visiting Salem from Savannah, ,., and Jane Pearmine, Salem, shown with head ef tiger they bagged in India's Central . Province. Photo was taken at farm home of Miss Peannine's parents, 12 mile north of Salem, where tiger head and attached skin are a much-prized trophy. (Story of their thrilling hunt and picture of tiger as he fell in jungle appear in Sec. 1, page 7). UF to Seek Funds Front Missed Homes The not-at-homes missed in the Salem United Fund campaign's solicitation of residential sections can still do their part, leaders in the drive said Sunday. Campaign o f f i -cials suggested that residents not at home when solicit ing was done in their particular neighborhoods can help by mailing or bringing their donations to head quarters. Drive workers will pick up donations if phoned in. The Salem campaign, now $120,- 798 toward a goal of 205.000, hasjpioyes told police. gamed in momentum the - past week. Officials are hopeful that next reports to be made at a Tues day meeting . at the Marion Hotel will show another big stride toward the goal. ! 1 Salem Girl, 5, Loses Finger A 5-year-old Salem girl lost a finger Sunday afternoon when a ring she was wearing caught on an unknown object while she was sliding on the hay her father was loading, j Julie Bader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bader, Route 5. Box 109, was reported in "fine" condition at Salem General Hos pital after the stump of bone that remained following the accident had been removed. Bishop Dagwell To Retire in '58 PORTLAND ( The Rt. Rev. Benjamin D. Dagwell, bishop of f the Oregon Episcipal diocese, has announced the date of his sched uled , retirement. In an article appearing in the Oregon Churchman, a church pub-; ally before they had breakfast lication, the bishop said he would (with other friends at a hotel retire in July 1953. Dagwell indi- j where she stopped, cated his retirement plans somej Reporters and photographers time ago when he asked that a spotted them together in the hotel coadjutor be appointed. lobby after the breakfast but Mor- A special convention of EpLsco-ins left quickly before pictures of . . I A I A. 1 J 1 I palians will open Monday to select the coadjutor. : I warned against taking too much for granted in face of the immense ; ccnsuiuuonai complications- Townsend match would pose. One oi tnem saia k was wrong to as sume an engagement would be an nounced this week "or at all." Informed circles expect that if the marriage is to be, a move to relinquish Her right of succession to the throne will be made soon , ri ,. . r !!"" - ,tluu" 20 nrincnt. tons end n0US3 jryests of her cousin. A : f-:ij i i aLV muea 10 utd awavuie cur- - - . - lOUS. - acy failed to keep away the curiou i P,h" ' nin lo ; . i i Little change in temperature with A crowd numbering more than the highest today near 75 and the 400 waited near Allanbay Lodge, loweit tonight near 40. where the princess and the pilot wJT,tur at 11:01 ajn-..tod" are staying in the heart of the salem precipitatm) 1 forest where their romance first J"1" ' 1 1 in 1 ear Lut Year Normal okvssomea. - - j .aa ui 2 ti Armed Robber Raids Food Store 8talrmaa ALBANY, Ore. The Safeway albin streets in downtown Albany was held late Sunday , afternoon. The loss was not Albany city police. State police set up road blocks in the robber was still at large early ' Only one man is known to have been involved. . Holding a re volver, he forcd employes to put the money from the tills into a paper sack. He wore no mask. One Customer Only one customer, a woman, was at the checkstands at the time,, according to , police.. The robber ordered her to put the money from her purse into the sack, but she did not comply, em- Later, while the robber was shepherding employes into the back room, she left the store, ac cording to the police report Her name was not learned. Slender Bandit . The robber was described as about 5 feet U inches tall, age about 35, slender build, dark complected, wearing a dark hat and blue suit coat. A coat of the same description was found later behind a funeral home llJx blocks waft of the store. -ijftcr ordering employes into the back room, the robber left the store by the front door. Boy Friend Bumored for Miss America DENVER Ufi Talk was cur rent here Sunday that Miss Amer ica has a "boy friend" Mike Morris, 28, a Denver attorney. Miss America is Sharon Kay Ritchie, 18, a Colorado Woman's College co-ed before .she won the crown at Atlantic City last month. People who keep track of iich things -said Morris dated Miss Ritchie eight times before she leftLfatai shooing accident victim ol i u nHMf.Mi for Atlantic City. They said he talked with her several times by telephone during her four-day visit here between appearances ana .. that he greeted her once person- "e. iwo couiu oe maae. A reporter asked Miss Ritchie: "Have you two " mentioned any- thing about the future?" "I have seen htm. Miss Ritchie replied, "but there's nothing it." to TWISTER HITS V LONG BRANCH. N J m A two-minute twister Sundav leveled a Dj? barn at Monmouth Park Race Track, knocked down a rail- 'road telegraph pole and broke tree branches over a wide area. The Weather Max. Mln. Precis. 75 3S .M 68 45 ..00 27 .00 ' 78 46 .00 ! 76 49 .00 .f 8 52 .00 ' 63 51 m S7 53 .CO 54 41 J Salem Portland Baker Medford 1 orl Bena North Bend jjioseourg . San rranctsco 'J? Angeiei York"" " 8 57 " .75 Willamette River 1.1 feet.' FORECAST (frnni U. S. weather , uurcBU. v McNary field. Salem I: I Tnir today, tonight and tomorrow Albany Kew Service grocery store at 3rd and Broad- up by an armed robber disclosed, according to area but reported the this morning. Woman Shot; Heart Attack mm i Hunter LEBANON, Ore. ( A woman lost her leg and a man died of; a heart attack in a hunting acci dent in the woods near here Sun day, i Wayne R. Wood, 37, and his wife and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis J. Copple, all of Lebanon, had gone to the wdods to hunt five miles' northeast of here Sunday. j Mrs. Ccpple suffered a serious gun shot wound in the left ' ankle when her gun accidentally dis charged a; she fell. Her husband and Mrs. Wood, her sister, remained with her while Wood ran fourth of a mile to a house by the highway to summon an ambu ance. Wood then ran back to Mrs. . Wood and helped carry her out. , . After She was picked UP by the in ambulance Wood complained of August, again were criss-cross-pains in his chest. His wife flagged jng fic-oded areas in errands of a own a passing moiorisi, wno picked up j the Woods. He died en route to a! Lebanon hospital, j Meantime at the hospital, Mrs. Copple's leg was amputated below the knee. Wood was the third fatality of the Qregdn . defcr hunting season. One other man has died of a heart attack an another suffered fatal gunshot wounds. 1 Mrs. CoDDle was the 13th non- ' l,.,c sc i !-"-"" ..... I Her' condition was described by,acros' ,t.he Sunday in the surgeon as "satisfactory" fol- lowing me ampuiauon. : Wood, a lifelong resident of Leb-i anon, leaves two children Rifle Bullet Kills-Hunter ROSEBURG (if) Clyde Brittain, 40. of Roseburg was fatally wound- ed by a bullet 'while hunting in the hills near here Sunday. Brittain was leading a party f three hungers up ers up a trail. Follow - in" him Was a npiphhnr Oonp Steele, and then came Wendell .Carter, als Roseburg. Steele v-as carrying his gun over his shoulder, Carter tapped Steele's gun to re mind that it was pointing toward Carter. Stiele then swung the gun over " his shoulder toward the ground and it discharged, the Pal let striking Brittain in the back, state police officer Joe Haystead reported. British to Hike Cigarette Prices LONDON Most British brands of bi?arettes will cost more from Monday The giant Imperial Tobacco Co. announced a package of 20 will go up one penny to three shillings eight pence (51 cents), of which more thaii half is tax. The com pany blamed rising costs. Three-Day Torrential Rains Reported Slackening ; By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . ' Spawned by a three-day downpour, the Northeast's second major flood in two month! Sunday night left at least 34 dead or missing in six states ;and caused property .damage in the millions. (Pictures on Wirephoto Page). ; ' . Thousands were driven from their homes by raging rivers and streams. Transportation was brought to a near-standsiill in many areas. The rainfall tapered off to a 3 drizzle Sunday night and flooded streams showed sigru of receding. Gov. Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut said ' National Guard reports indicated high waters everywhere in his hard-hit state jwere going down." The Weather Bureau in Bos ton backed this up with a report that the torrential rain had been slackening for about six hours. From Eastern and Central New York State, where 4,500 were driven from their homes, came more encouraging reports, of streams reaching their peak and then subsiding. However, more intermittent rain was forecast for Monday. Resume Operations Another indication of improved conditions was an announcement from the New Haven Railroad that it would resume a part of its service between Boston and New York. Brig. Gen. Robert J. Fleming of . the Army Engineers said in Hartford, Conn., that the damage "does not compare" with . the havoc left by the Aug. 19 hurri cane Diane floods. ' Freak Storm The freakish storm started Fri day morning with' gale force winds. .It was caused by 'a low pressure area that got stalled off the coast and drenched Connec ticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Is land, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania with torrential rains. It even dusted parts of Massa chusetts and New Hampshire and Vermont with snow Sunday. Lower Connecticut caught the brunjt of the storm. The Red Cross said 4,129 fam ilies .were affected in that state. Ribicoff said 48 towns were di rectly affected, 29 of which also were bit by the August flood. A great stream of relief sup plies food, tents, stoves, trucks, blankets, pumps, generators and searchlights, poured into the dis tressed areas. Travel Stalled Travel, except in emergency helicopters and amphibious ducks, was at a virtual standstill. More than a dozen towns were in a state of emergency. Many were without electric power. The number ct homes evacuated mounted into the hundreds. Army, Red Cross, state and ci vil defense authorities, in excel- lent practice from the August floods, proceeded with their work at high gear. The hurricane Diane flood two months ago was the most disas trous in Northeast history. It left 169 dead, 2Q missing, and caused damage estimated at more than 1M billion dollars. . Helicopters Used Scores of rescue vehicles were j on their way to sodden Connecti ' cut. ! Helicopters, which proved. thmcplvf a Amen tim nvpr in rescue. (Story also in Sec. 1, Page 2). Record Made By Stratoliner SEATTLE ( The Boeing 707, ; America s ; cummemw , jw tranennrt niano flow rminsi.rrm record time of 8 hours and 6 min utes. '; The big plane flew from Seattle to Washington, D.C., in 3 hours and 58 minutes. This clipped more than one-third off the conventional airliner mark. After a brief stop over at Washington, trie 707 set what's believed to be an east-west transcontinental record by taking 4 hours and I minutes to fly from Washington back to Seattle. The craft averaged an announced 592 miles per hour eastward, and! 570 miles per hour westward. The 707 winged over the control tower in Seattle at 3:29 p.m. (PST u - - . . S""'V after leaving Washington at 11:1 !a m- ,fai' or P m: Ex-FW Tells of Russ Slave Labor Uprising CAMP FRIEDLAND, Germany Ur) Dark secret of the Soviet police a slave labor revolt crushed by tanks and numerous Westerners held in nameless 'cap tivity were bared Sunday by Germans returning to from Russia. freedom & Cltrvivu 1' A 9 Cfln man on4 0Mav, duiu fc.-yw iiilm Bi'U iate prison camps at Kingir, i'kw wuiireii nciu iu iiufrc ucmt in desert Kazakhistan, staged an up rising for sir weeks last year against their police guards. "Never before have foreign and Russian slave workers challenged the Soviet power for so long a timeysaid Karl Paffen, 50. of 16 Cars Tangle South Of Salem, Block Road A'line of 16 cars piled up Sunday evening at the Santiam River bridge south of Salem on Highway 99-E, blocking traffic completely for a time and permitting only one-way traffic lor" almost an hour. ; No serious injuries were reported by state police but four cart had to be towed to Albany. Cracked windshields testified to head- New Storm Strikes West i Indies Isle ! i (Map in sec. 2, page 5.) MIAMI, Fla. If) Hurricane t Katie, a small but dangerous storm, sprang up suddenly Sunday in the Central Caribbean Sea md shprtly before midnight struck the south coast of Hispaniola, second biggest of the West Indies Islands. "Forecasters said Katie, traveling on a northeast course, probably never will offer - a threat to the U, S. mainland. - ' . ! At 11 p. m. (EST), the Weather Bureau at San Juan, Puerto Rico, said the storm, with top winds of 115 miles an hour, had reached the Hispaniola Coast in the .vicinity of Cabo FaLso, Dominican Republic. The sub-tropic island of Hispan iola, which lies between Cuba and Puerto Rico, contains Haiti and the Dominican Republic, with a com bined population of more than six million. . v j Although the high . mountain ranges of the island will take much of the steam out of the hurricane. forecasters said it probably will reform - and gain new .strength when it moves off the island north ward into the Atlantic. Located 12S miles south-southwest of Port Au Prince, the capital of Haiti, and- 850 miles southeast of Miami, Katie was moving on a northeast course which takes her away from the U. S. coast. Only a freakish westward turn could make her a threat lo this country. The top winds of 115 miles an hour circled a small area near the storms "eye." ' Gale wiads whipped outward 60 miles in all directions. " t Hurricane warning flags flew on the south coast of Hispaniola from Aquin in Haiti to Barahona in the Dominican Republic. Residents cf that area had to make quick prep arations for hurricane winds, heavy rains and high storm tides. Clark Gable To Be Father HOLLYWOOD UP) Clark PWIH s . -5ire1n1our, Gable is' going to be a papa forjfvro.und nd immediately lookup the' first time come May. his fifth wife disclosed Sunday ! The former Kay .Williams Spreckles told a reporter that the 54-year-old actor is really hamming up the role of expect ant father. When her doctor gave her a prescription for vitamins. Gable asked for a prescription, too. : I "You mean they don't give the fathers anything?" he asked. Mrs. Gable said she found 6ut the news Fridav "but wantpd to keep it secret because they had just gotten over denying an earlier report. ! "But we went to a big party at Mervyn LeRoy's house Satur day night and Clark bragged to everybody about it" i The couple was married last July 12. The baby will be de livered by Caesarean section. 1 VOLCANO ERUPTS AGAIN ! KAGOSHIMA, Japan in Saku rajima volcano erupted Sunday for the sixth time since Thursday. Smoke and ashes shot into he sky from the volcano on Japan's south ern island of Kyushu. Cologne. "Then army forces with tanks arrived and wiped out resist ance. The camp I was in had 300 : As nearly 1.500 Germans reached til a f)lfflt MlMlKlis wit-Kin 41 Virvr this weekend, they told of mystery prisoners left behind, including: 1 r. XL Eugene Stanley Fabian. X" f "Vi in.itn a. V. n .ni J U , Ll VHlVfliJU, -VIIIV 5atU 11C WdJ seizeu dv ooviei asenu in 194 in Austria, where he was serving in the 11 S. Army's Counterin telligence Corps. He was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment as an alleged spy. Four other Americans were re ported last week as having been seen in Soviet captivity. aches and stiff necks, and sev eral drivers and passengers com plained of bruised shins. Trailer Stopped Four state policemen were dis patched from the Albany and ; Salem offices to untangle the snarl. The bumping started when a car pulling a house trailer .stop ped on the bridge, according to information gathered by State Policeman Floyd Morrill. - The trailer did not get bumped. The name of the driver was not known and neither was his reason for stopping, Morrill said. Banged Behind The car behind the trailer was banged from the rear and the next nine cars also received dam age to either the front or back or both ends, Morrill said. Lloyd Henry Davidson, Tigard, driver of the last car in the line to receive substantial damage, said 16 cars in all were involved. Cars Towed Cars towed away were driven by Davidson; Everett Burton Stiles, Portland; Minnie Ella Plunkett, Roseburg; and Edward Joseph Doll, Eugene; according to. Morrill. His list of the 10 cars most seriously damaged con tained no names from the Salem area. . No persons injured in the acci dent were taken to the Albany hospital, according, to attendants there. ' . Westingliouse CIO Workers Gdl Walkout PITTSBURGH (A The CIO In ternational Union of Electrical. Workers early Monday began ax national strike against . Westing- house Electric Corp. At a little past the midnight (local time) strike deadline, a CIO-IUE spokesman declared: The strike is on." The strike call came as nego tiators for the company and union remained closeted ,in an attempt to resolve a'contract dispute. Union officials had sent out strike instructions earlier to some 44.000 members in 29 Westinghouse plants. . ; , Placard-carrying pickets were on hand at the big East Pittsburgh 1 1 a, a I rt i nJ "'fr Real effect of the strike was not expected to be felt until later Mon day morning when most of the plants resume operations following the weekend. , - Current negotiations are under a wage reopening clause in a two year contracPSfnich expires rext year. 1 ' Originally, the company offered a nveyear contract, which it sua provided a minimum pay increase of cents an hour- durin i P noa The union demanded a 13-cent increase under the wage reopener. Workers now average $2.10. Havana Blast Fatal to Eight 11.1 vuud ur rtt icoofc eight persons perished and 50 were injured Saturday night in a violent explosion which destroyed a two story building in downtown Ha vana. The death toll included a father and mother and their two sons in a house next door. Several of the injured were re ported in serious condition. Hund reds of fire me j and police searched the ruins for additional victims. , . Police 'said the explosion was caused by leaking gas, and esti mated $500,000 damage. The blast occurred 150 yards from the offic es of the governor of Havana r : r .i i . . . i rrovmce m uie nean ot me city.- jTodov'S St QtCSlUQIl ' Classified Comics .. Crossword ..M. Editorials ...U I Home Panorama 1 Radio, TV, Sports II Sports ...II Star Gaztr 1 Valley 1 Wirephoto Pago ..II, See. Page .11 6,7 It 3 4 , 4 6 ..4 .1.2 . . S