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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1956)
4 Arrest Follows Jury Action Walter 8. Lamkin, prominent Salem attorney, it pictured ai he came out of Marioa County Circuit Court Friday afternoon following hit arrest on a charge of embexxlemeaL (Statesman photo) Salem KnlferThought:: Captured in Coquille The man believed to be the assailant in a knifing fray In Salem two weeks ago was captured Friday in Coquille and identified by police as a former federal prison escapee unco listed on the Federal Bureau of Investigation's list of 10 "most wanted" criminals. - The knife wielder who injured two ,men in an early morning altercation April I at The Ranch restaurant, 2360 Portland Rd., was 1 identified by several persons through a picture as Orb Elmer Jackson, 49, of Portland, police said. He was one of the FBPs "Top 10" In 1950 at the time ot his eapture near Aloha, three years after escaping from Leavenworth Penitentiary, where he was serv ing a 25-year sentence for armed robbery of a post office in Mis souri in 1936. Returned to Leavenworth He was returned to Leaven worth, but has been free on a "conditional release" for the past year, under the supervision of the U. S. Probation Office in Portland. Following the assault early this month in Salem in which John C. Voungren, 470 Fir Knoll Lane, Salem Attorney-W. S. Lanildii Indicted on Embezzling Count By CONRAD PRANGE i He was charged pecifir3!lT 'rates a substantial amount of Staff Writer, The Statesman , j with "converting to his own use money entrusted to Lamkia by Walter Sj ; Lamkin, 50, long - U22 entrusted to him by llrs. , various other clients over the time Salem attorney was indicted Mattie White, a 65-year-old Sa- past several years remains unac Friday by a Marion County grand m widow. .counted for." jury on a charge of embezzling District Attorney Ken Beta "A complete, investigation will client funds. Brown said "investigation indi-, he accomplished prior to the dis posal oi mis eas, ne added. Salem City Detective David Houser, who has been investigat ing the case since early last week said Lamkia made an oral ad mission Friday of the embezzle ment charge in the Mrs. White case. Secret Iadictmeat A secret indictment came out of a special grand jury quietly called Friday morning by District Attorney Brown. Lamkin, who has resided and practiced, in Sa lem many years, was arrested at 2.30 o'clock Friday afternoon. "Information on this case first came to me from the Marion County Bar grievance committee and from officials of the State Bar who had investigated it for several months," Brown said. "When the results were made available to me I ordered an in vestigation to determine the pos sibility of criminal action. The results of these two investiga tions were turned over to the grand jury." Background Cited Brown said background lorthej' indictment was: In November, 1951, Mrs. White, widow of a former Salem barber, gave her attorney, Lamkin $1,000 to "loan out at interest." Later Mrs. White entrusted the attorney with another $100. " Lamkin, with offices in the Oregon Building, loaned this money out to a third party and when it was paid back to him in November, 1954, "he convert ed it to his own use," according to the charge. It was indicated that this was only a portion of the entire amount of Mrs. White's funds ultimately involved. 5,00 Bail Lamkin appeared before Cir cuit Judge Val Sloper Friday af ternoon and through his attorney Walter Winstow posted $5,000 bail. He requested arraignment for early next week. Penalty on conviction of an embezzlement charge carries a possible prison term of from one to 10 years. Brown said. When asked about reports of POUNDBD 1651 lMrh Year 2 SECTIONS-! PAGES The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, April 21, 1954 R!C! i Ne. 23 mm n US Special Stamp L Issue Pays for Royal Marriage MONTE CARLO 1 The sale of the-tpecial stamp issue honoring the wedding of Grace Kelly fnd Prince Rainier HI was a big success. It more than took care ot Monaco's share of the wedding bills. Monacan officials reported Friday night the sets of eight stamps priced at $2.38 per set brought in about $571,000 from buyers over , the world. the officials figured the principality'a end of the wed ding cost at about half that much. Hitchcock Campaigns Through Mid-Valley A 31? 1 3LMOQ0 Ed Schreder used to run a mar ket the Four Star Market, he called it at the corner of State and Commercial streets. Like good merchants he had his standard I markup on merchandise, and ap-l plied it to a certain item whose I trata namo Wflt iimnn It Km i prepared and distributed by the; d Leonard LuU, Corvallis. were Borden Company. The company i iuueu nu ainru .ecu had "fair-traded' the item, that is 'times, Jackson dropped from it had signed an agreement with sight and the FBI entered the certain retailers that the resale case with a federal warrant, price should be X cents. Schreder ' Neither Youngren nor Lull was had signed no contract with ret- inujred seriously, although their erence to resale price. When Bor- wounds required hospital treat den found out that his price was 1 ment. a little less than their contract j a warrant has since been is retail price, the company tried to j lurd by the U.S. Board of Parole make Schreder raise his price, lie for Eolation of conditional re declined, so Borden's took it to lease Jnd thj. charge faces Jack court under the state fair trade ; , ,fter pro,ecution here on a -a m.S ...... aaa. t IIAI Cnhaiuliw i " an. jni w hi i:-... mt. Charge of assault with a danger- M&F Bomber j Gets 20-Year j Prison Term j PORTLAND l Clarence Fed-: dicord was sentenced to 20 years in prison Friday for the extortion bombing of a Portland department store a year ago. i The blind, Jg-year-old Portland i chemist confessed the dynamite bombing earlier, saying it was part of a plot to extort $30,000 from Aaron Frank, owner of Meier and Frank Department store here. No one was injured In the April 15, 1955, explosion. Peddicord said that his sister-in-law, Mrs. Joyce Keller, helped him in the plot. Mrs. Keller, who is to be tried later, has denied any knowledge of the bombing. A -1 U.ti... K DaMl- j. i . in viva lur viuuauuii vi nuur disciplinary action by the Ore- cord lF .Uorney was denied by Cir gon State Bar, state president I cuit jurtge Aifred p. Dobson, who said: "It seems apparent that you George Rhoten of Salem said. "I am not permitted to comment at this time." f Birthday' Bandits Get Prison Terms , Two youths charged with a 'birthday party" armed robbery near Marion last month were sentenced Friday to seven years in State Prison. Both Luverne Truitt, 18, and Earl Eldon Lane, 18, both of Salem, had entered pleas of guilty before Marion County Cir cuit Judge George 'Duncan.' Truitt previously had pleaded innocent but changed his plea Friday prior to sentencing. The two youths were arrested after investigation of the armed robbery of a group of women at a birthday party March 14 near Marion, (Peddicord) who should be par ticularly concerned with prevent ing injury to others, with cool, premeditated deliberatjoo jeop ardized the lives and safety of many people innocent bystanders and threatened one ot Oregon's highly esteemed, civic minded citizens." Peddicord, blinded It years ago when some refrigerant got in his eyes, appeared shocked by the sentence. "I've lost everything my wife, my children and now my free dom," he said. "V it V Sends State Police To View Portland 'Criminal Action9 it'' 7 - Newsmen Make Effort to Stop Investigation by Multnomah DA rORTIAND (AD-Two invrsti cations of Portland icw conditions were planned Friday in the wale of newspaper charge! that Seattle underworld f ietiros had tried to move in. One was ordered by Oregon Jov. Elmo Smith. He moved state police into Multnomah county to 'conduct a complet iuvcsti2atii)nof newspaper charges that public officials art ed in criminal activity." t 1 " MONMOUTH Shirtsleeve campaigner Phil Hitchcock pauses Monmouth street Friday te shake hands with William Letting, who with his father Fred Letting (center) were pa"mg aarviee ne'e in this Polk city. Hitchcock visited Monmouth la a swing threuih Marioa aad Polk Counties la "meet as saaay voters as humanly possible." Stops during the day Included Dallas, ladepeadrace, Salem, Weedbura, Ml. AageL Sllvertee, Slaytea aad Mill CKy. Thief Wipes Out Summer's Work Mama Quail Laying Eggs All Over Town TYLF.R, Tex. If) There's a little old mama quail that's' got this whole town talking. Bernice, as she's called, started laying eggs about 10 months ago and forgot to stop, according to George C. Stodghill, state quail hatchery superintendent here. The 282 eggs Bernice has pro duced in the past 10 months is an unofficial national record, Stodg- Hitchcock, McKay Face Each Other at Session ' " By TROMAI G. WRIGHT " Mail Writer, The Ratessaaa MILL CITY Oregon's two top Republican candidates for the U.S. Senate nomination face each other across the campaign stump here Friday night for the first time, but neither Douglas McKay or Philip Hitchcock used the occasion to take issue with the other. - The meeting ground was a candidates' session sponsored by the Marion County Council of American Legion at which 33 state and coun ty candidates were represented. ous weapon, officers said. won in the circuit court, but the1 Ciinfnmt Pnnrt rovorKeA t ha Hprt. I sion in an opinion by the late Burtlr Tools -Jiistic llflrrv Belt, so Ed had to! At the time of his arrest Fri raise his price or else quit han dling the item. This week Sdiredcr must have rubbed his eyes twice to read that the Oregon Supreme Court had de clared null and void the state's fair trade act insofar as non signers of sales contracts were concerned. I confess I was curious over how they got around the 1947 decision in the Borden Schreder case. Justice Walter Tooze who day, Jackson was in possession of burglar tools, according to Coquille authorities. Sheriff Denver Young said he would return the prisoner to Salem over the weekend. A bicycle thief has' wiped out the strawberry and bean picking efforts of a seven-year-old Salem hill ..... bly;:.: . I "She's still laytn' them and T .! VI U.C ..IC.l . O....IU.U (h(,re. JJ y. , tn. Jgy. Cough who lives at 399 Mission ing season," he says. Ninety per St. with his widowed mother, j cent nave 'halchefj The second hand bicycle, which was taken from the garage at the residence, represented the boy's savings from harvest and odd job work last summer and fall. Hitchcock took the occasion to belie reports that. he is a World Federalist. While endorsing the United Nations, Hitchcock said he was not for world government. "Soverignity of individual nations should be maintained," he said. McKay, at the end of a week's long swing through Central and Eastern Oregon, made his re marks brief. He said he did not have to de fend the Eisenhower administra tionthe record speaks for itself. The remark followed Hitchcock's talk in which Hitchcock said he was "not the one on the defen sive." All the candidates were guests of the county council at a dinner following the meeting, which was held in Mill City School. (Add. details page 4, sec. 1.) Stodghill says Oklahoma previ ously claimed the champion hen with 100 eggs during a laying sea- son. Snow Drifts case, justice naucr luuze wnoiw -j wrote the majority opinion quoted: Mn - gkkf- twr from Belt's opinion. The late jus-! Ill 11 CH 1 Ul i tice noted that the defendant, Schreder. who had challenged the.j WATERTOWN, N. Y. I t'p constitutionality of the fair trade t five inches of snow fell Friday (Ctatianed en editorial page 4.1 B-TVDENT BOOTED CHAMPAIGN, 111. t - The University ot Illinois announced Friday it has dismissed 23 stu dents In eonnectios with the theft of I set of examination questions. in northern New York, state police reported. Temperatures were be low frezing. The five-inch fall was reported at Gouverneur, 37 miles norlheaft ; of here. Watertown had two : inches. Politics on Parade . . . . Who's Running for What Office Sam Rayburn To Head Demo Convention Tea Drinking May Reduce Tooth Decay ATLANTIC CITY I - A Phila delphia scientist Friday recom mended more tea drinking be- gining on a small Kale at as early age as one as a possible aid in preventing tooth decay. But it should be unsweetened and children should be sure to drink Just as much milk as ever, ho said. Declaring tea has a relatively high content of fluorine, the tooth decay-delaying chemical. Dr. J. F. McClendon said new experiments with rats on a tea-containing diet have shown a significant protec tive effect.. He said the rat tests indicate tea-drinking might be of "some help" in humans as an auxiliary source of fluorine. But he stressed that the tea to be of any this score should be drunk "like the Chinese drink It unsweetened Highway 20 Detour Work Nearly Done involved ia criminal activity The other was set up by Dlst. Atty. William Langley, who or dered a grand jury investigation. An effort was made to halt the Utter probe by a newspaper at torney who said In court that Langley a Investigation would be improper as It would "place his office in the position of investi gating itself in that The Oregonian bad accused him of bring an inti mate with the gamblers who tried te move into Portland. State Studies Interchange NearBrooks Surveys are underway for a (possible new traffic Interchange The probes were touched oft by on the Salem Portland Express- a series ot copyrighted articles bow appearing in a Portland news paper. The Oregonian. The two reporters who wrote the articles, William Lambert and Wallace Turner, and Herbert Lundy, edi tor of the papers editorial page, were subpoenaed as the first wit nesses before the grand jury. Galaed Delay " However, David Fain, attorney for the newspaper, gained a post way north of Salem, the State Highway Department reported Friday. - The new Interchange, It ap proved by the State Highway Commission, would be due west of Brooks. At present there la no traffic Interchange on the Ex pressway between Hayesville and the Woodburn area. Deputy Highway Engineer W. C. Williams said the survey ponement by going before a cir-; was undertaken following request cuit judge and contending that i of Salem Chamber ot Commerca Langley i calling the pand jury : fur a w ir.ffj, interchange was Improper. ' i north of Salem. Circuit Judge Frank Lonergan Through traffic is expected to begin moving again on U.S. High way 20 Wednesday, according to state highway officials in Salem. ud Crosby once tried te get him took the argument under advise ment and continued the subpoenas until Monday. ' 1 at ti trial ntiiuinraarf akatfltatat lit ih. it. tht h iu niinnxi u wntemplated subpoena Clyde C. Crosby, inter national representative lor the Teamsters' Union, who was active tn an attempt te legalise plnball machines la Portland last year. Link Reperted Crosby wat linked by Portland newspapers with attempts to in fluence city political and police affairs. Mayor Fred L. Peterson W illlsms said the commission probably would decide on the In terchange at iu April 27 meet ing. He said no new road wis between Brooks and the expressway. Drafting of Sales Tax Bill to Start Work of draftinf an Ore f on sales tax bill for presentation to the 1957 legislature which meets early in January will irt uniW the Portland Exposition-Recrea-1 way at the eapitol today, the 1953 (Ion Commission, which wiU build legisaltlve interim committee on and operate the city's proposed , taxation announced Friday, eight million dollar sports center, state Sea. Rudle Wilhelm. Mayor Peterson demanded Cros- j Portland, later im committee by's resignation after the newspa- chairman, said the committee per articles disclosed that Crosby I probably would use the 1855 sales Construction of a detour route to fire Police Chief James Pureell to bypass the huge slide which i Jr. closed off the South Santlam I Crosby nas r e 1 1 g a e d from route April 10 is being rushed over the weekend. E. A. Collier, state highway department maintenance engi neer, said the grade on the de tour will be about the same as the normal roadbed, although thei WM aB wonvict, having served ' tax bill ss a base for the new bill curve will be somewhat sharper. The bypass cut will be surfaced with gravel and two-way traffic will be maintained, he said. The main roadbed will probab ly not. be repaired for several months. Geologists are current ly inspecting the scene of the slide, which is believed to have been caused by underground water. WASHINGTON I - The Demo cratic hi ah command, heading in to the Presidential campaign n near-desperate financial plight, tapped Speaker Sam Rayburn Fri day to preside at the party's na tional convention next August. Estcs Arrives For Portland ;5 Stay Today a prison term lor Durgiary zt years ago. Limited Protertlea Langley said his but indicated there would be some changes in it. The 1953 measure, which pro- probe also innrnval in tha hmiu tint had been "limited protection' lor!,Pmted debate. If the bill had safecrackers and that there were ; been approved In both houses blackmail attempts and wire-lap- and signed by the governor It ing involving Portland police. would have reduced Income In ordering the state police in- taxes, vesication Friday, Gov. Smith, income tM Wfr4 increased ,: . . ., ., ' it -v . approximately 60 percent, in "I am today directing the Ore-;efudin ,he 45 p,rwnl iur,, gon State Police to move into. Approval of a sales tax waa Multnomah county with all of the I announced by the interim eora- investigatlng resources available mittee last month. rffiSuPi inSf irfmm nn' " truciure with those of officials are involved in criminal h,r iitf Sa,ur(ljy.t mM,jnf ''l!?1?- - - of the full Interim committee will 1 111 vurv 111c prui!v ui uir (Edllar't Nl: Xht Oreion autum.m Mrllr Totltlr-l Para trrtn li wrlttra v r for tbt ranllri lhlv Th IrrUI l rnrntre u a public wrvlff. without foit or bllsatloa to inyonr, mn4 aT or uy lot la etori wiik th tdnorl-J aollrln t thU atwt- " . . . PORTLAND - Sen. Estes ion have full con idence in the EI,":.. 7.1. i;" '"':. "".I -because sugar is definitely de- Kefauver DTenn) was to arrive ! ability and Integrity of the State 1 m uk VlJ lV thi .Zr cay-producing." here hy plane from Los Angeles Police in this mstter. Their n- n y ' "f"00- He cautioned that If mothers early Saturday for a one-day cam- port will indicate the course of j. give tea to their children .they , P'gn trip. The Democratic presi-1 action I should take in enforcing ' r e T should also make sure that they oenuai aspirant win address a 01 wrron ana prmm. 1 .lirVil 1 1 IS I Jill ..... ,. 1 .1 hinniM-t .Kiinr) mt in Vnun mg the public interest." VJVS f unio -LHllt Hi c tin 111 tiiarii usual aiiiuuut wi - , milk "including plenty of milk in Democrat slate convention here j The financial cncis facing the the tea, because they definitely aaiuroay-wgw. ? 1 party was the outstanding prob- need their milk. I The to-a plate dinner will close lem arising at the start of a two- i WILBERT CARL FRANCIS (Bdidalo Far j A Horary General R) ! (I nopnidl i State Sen. Carl Francis of Yanv : ! r , "iih i nnnn.it, on admitted to the bar that year and TRACE OF JETS . aT.Ijtlj i oplson lB Dayton. in nruun- can primary, His interest in problems of con and with a long stitulional law and statuatory con- I graduated from Fairfield grade 'school and from Gcrvais High j School; attended Willamette Cni versily, and obtained his law de gree from Northwestern College of . Law in 1937. Senator Francis was day strategy conference which ' jr fT 1 has a brought together Democratic lead-1 J O U 0 V MnCCS M i" ers from across the nation. ' j J explai This is the picture: The Demo-j rixtnw.n.l Jjw rals have about $100,000 in the, IjOlCrCU U It ank, debts of more than t23.0O0. . . . . nnriTf a vr .am k t u IRISH CHIEF'S WIFE DIES Dt'BLIN, Ireland - Mrs. Ida the convention program. Kefauver . Costello, wife of Ireland's Prime' 1 has announced that his talk will . Minister John Costello, died Fri- answer to the President's" day in a private nursing home. explanation for his farm bill veto, I Mrs. Costello was in her sixties. Dies in GrasI 1 PORTLAND - As the ther- NO McCHORD AIR FORCE BASE 1 uP An Air Force rescue plane combed the mountainous country; around Darrington in Washing-! ton's Snohimish County Friday but . reported no sign of two jet planes missing since February. Miss Truman, Newsman to Say Wedding Vows Today The Weal her Mix. Mia. ttrrif. U 4 . .te 44 IS 4 41 4S 4 S4 a ... J SA ! 00 on .fi firl rraarls Hat yevtl nw he able H tee wwere yWre I"! with my bet rrcord of nub- struclion has been recognized In lie service to the legislature and he has served his credit. He on the judiciary committee of ei has served lher the House or Senate since continuously in in the I " 1 session, and again the O r e g 0 n I" the 1953 session, he was chair legists lure man of the house judiciary corn since his first mittee. He has also chairmaned a election in 1942 number of other powerful commit and In six of tees of the legislature; (or 10 years his seven sue- participated in interstate ncgotia- eelv elections he was the nomi-t'n as a member M the Commis- nee not only of the Republican ion on Interstate Cooperation, and 'parry but of the Democrat party as i now a member at the Lejisla- wrll He has also served as mayor Counsel Committee whose ,of his home town ot Dsytmv on relates to bill drafting and ' seven occasions; when first elected atatute revisiiin he was rrportrdly the second Sen. Francis is married and has younjest mayor in the I'nited two damhtirs. He is a member of i States. the Presbyterian Church.- the ll was horn In Portland. Ore.. American I rKinn KIU tiilJIi-l. iT.h.i4ol'h.JI,unir.A.V'rr"! March 20. 1915. and was educated low., Crance and a numler of i a.ir! rarririT.Tioy in the public schools there as well other civic and fraternal oraama j ai.rt ot wihr Vr rrt t t In Marion County. He altendrd tions. alii n irammar Kbool in Woodburn;! (Tmarrew: Rabert TlwraUal t crals bank. 1 turnliK of less than 175 0OO and ticket sales to a 1100 a plate fund niometer rose to in degrees here raising dinner Friday night have ; frtAay, groups of high school boys been going slow. in two city schools turned up . n n h Ti TJT'rnP ' Z , V hTT' 1 - " Hreph-. Ml. -t - "What . Butler charged that the OOP has The expanse of knohbv knees F r . k. " . . .. a ..r..n.. . .... u (... i.i lin.i.i. i It Rl TH t OWAN hours'? a lilatt'ii tuiitti iru, .aiiriuii,T .i'it- was itru iimkii tut hiiuui utiiitaii, ' II p til I ceived effort to dcorive lis of time and the bovs had their lone oants 1 INDEPENDENCE. Mo. UP - ne repueri to get our story to the American back on again before the day was Margaret Truman, who has never " people." by refusing to ioin in a out. 'lllrl 10 rt UP rar''. laughingly . joint television denate at nnworx spokesman for the superin- 'Xitia1 """ ,ltr nrT mar expense. ,nd. nt of schools said there was rli,K h Pectl lo rise early no rulin coverin the knees, but nou!h rt breakfast for her it would be up to the individual B'nwn husband CORVALLIS - A nine-year-old boy,, bicycling to school with a bunch of cherry blossoms la hit hand, was killed Friday when a truck ran into him. H was Leo Cochran, son of Mr. ' and Mrs. Leo Corhraa Sr., whe 1 live outside Corvallis, a few blocks from the accident scene, j Sheriff's deputies said the truck are . jour working "lver. Leonard H. Wilson. S2, renorter akrd Daniel forvallli. told thrn that the bt m. I 30 a. m. to J 30 awervea nit oicycie into the pain 01 the truxk. Salrnt t'nriland riakrr Mnlliird Nmtrt Bnd . nnhtl!l Kaa franmco J' M' I r Anlfln . 73 Lmra'fu Hrw Vork . 11 Wlll.inrllo Htvor IS IOHIITAST llrom I' g nllirr burvau. McNary fifld. 8almi: Variahk- hih rkiudtnofta todMV. to nlfhl and Sunday, with aunt low tliMidlnoia early ".unrtav: tltshtly ronlr. with th hifh UkIiv 77. low I Irtl, Temperatures Hit JsTew Highs Northwest trmperatures elimb ed to new I9.S6 nihts Fridav; Salem reentered 2, Portland M Mrdford M and Kosrburg 90. Some cooling is rxpeclM today and Sunday, McNsry l ield weath erman predict a bich todsy nf 77, and 72 fir Sunday. Northern Oregon beaches will be coolrr, and eUiudv, they narnrd. 1 Some low cloudiness i prilirt jtd iur Salem kundajr morning. : scnouis. The daughter of former Presi dent Truman Saturday is marry ing Clifton Dnnirl Jr., assistant lo Ihe New York Times foreign edi tor. After a rehearsal at Ihe Trinity . Episcopal Church where, the cere- i "'. . ': i . ' ' mnni will lak plr, ilartjrrt rsnrtr must irtn , .. , .. , .ah.;iwoi r-mii.nd ".-anil Daniel went tn the memorial i tn (.. a. a fip, ttrre fc'headrpisrlrta AIS.K rranclS U Anf.1.4 I up ,j I reporters j Mhen the question a akeii ! alwut her grtting up ; said Church Newt Cage Sec. 7 1 Mariaret Wked a little- tired. Former President and Mrs. Tru- TAelaivVe rlataiaa man drove to the church withi,0aajr JIHieSman Margaret and Clifton fur the re-, hearsal from the Truman home just a lew blinks aaay. Daniel at the news conference ; got a large numlM-r of the ques tions . A reporter told him Mar- j garet had said in her autobiocra-; phy. how appearing tn Good lmirkeeping. that his sense of hnmnr at ttrst attrved her la. Clastifiesl IMS. AvoRirA i r .(.i r AI I Irvrland 3 IJ.linil I AI N.w Vi. k 7 H',ln t AI K.o.a. ( lit I ( liu.f.i AI H.llirtior S. Waihimtun I NTtoVl. I MM r AI PUKtviifh a. Rtfinklvn I AI rml.'IrlpliH ? N.w Vmk I AI rnir.m II. r m-irn.ll I AI i-auia 4. Milaauk.a hi... "- . " ' - "Whit'lrarl. f'r Interested you in her' ' he was asked"" ."r Daniel gave the question hntii;W - and M.irgarH giant ed early she his ,, rhiu kling 'That will do ll ami iurn nr ,nu J "There are reporirrs here ho ' She had on a very lovely dress know me, and know I don't like to and she looked very pr"tty. That get up earlv But III he rising was enough to arouse my Inier- (early enough to gel breakfast," tL" k 1 Comiti Cronword Idilorials Home Parweme Markers .... " Obilvfariel " . . .T Sat.. Sun. TV... Sports t, 10.. Slar Caier .... 1.. Valley I.. Wirephoe Page 14.. World This Week - 1 U 4 J )l 13 11 .11 ...II ...II ...I I lH :.n it ..n ii . I . it ..I