The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 21, 1956, Page 1, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Polk County Wife Mibiig Three Women Slain in State
Woman Victim in Shooting
' ''1
I .'fe,
DALLAS, Ore. Mr. Margaret Fanning, 41, (left) was tbot to death
Sunday evening at her hense near Ballston, about II mile aorta
of Dallas. At right is Bayless Gilbert Fanning, 57, Ballston area
farmer who was arrested ia connection with the shooting. Fan
ning will be charged with first degree murder Monday, Dial
Atty. Walter Foster said.
Air Force, Army Feud
Healthy, Claims Solon
WASHINGTON (-Sen. Francis Case (R SD) and Rep. Mahon Pj
Tex i said Sunday they think a new outbreak of Army-Air Force
rivalry is a "healthy thing."
Case said "it keeps them from getting sloppy." Mahon said now
that the dispute which "has been brooding under the surface" is out
in the (j m all Americans have a part in the "historical decision '
tHDQXCH
Voting at the primary election
last Friday followed forecasts so
closely there is little occasion
for much Monday morning "quar
terbacking." The few surprises
were in the margins of the vic
tors rather than in the fact of
their victory. A few reflections,
however, seem in order.
Oregon Republicans till love
Ike well toward 190,000 of them
favored him; and over 32,000
thought well enough of Vice
Prpcirlint Mivnn tn write in hie
name, which makes Eisenhower
and Nixon the Oregon prefer
ence for President and
Vice
President.
The presidential test which
held national attention was won
quite decisively by Adlai Steven
son over F-stes Kefauver on the
Democratic side. This rare was
not nearly as close as had been
anticipated. It puts fresh life in
the Stevenson campaign and lets
some (Minnesota! air out of the
tires of the Kefauver bandwagon.
Similar wins fnr Stevenson in
Florida am) California will make
him the odds-on favorite at the
Chicago convention.
Douglas McKay won the GOP
nomination over Phil Hitchcock
but the m.inrin wa much less
than pre-election polls had indi
cated. Hitchcock was under great
pressure to withdraw when Mc
Kav rame out with White Hoi'se
sanction to run for senator to de
feat 'Vayne Morse, and he
showed real courage to stav in
the race and make the battle. I
believe it was a good thing for
the Republican party that he did
so. even though he met with de
feat. And the competition was a
good thing for MrKav too Now
McKay stands as the definite
choice of Oregon Republicans,
not just the selection of a few
men in Oregon and Washington
The contest has livened up the
Republican party in
(Continued on editorial page 4.)
Fair Forecast J
In Salem Area
Fair skies are forecast for to
day, tonight and Tuesday, accord-'
Ing to the McNary Field weather
man. High temperature today is ex
pected to be 74. low tonight 48.
The predicted high Tuesday is
78. I
Northern Oregon beaches will
probably be cloudy this morning I
but are expected to become fair I
this afternoon and evening. Pre-:
dieted high today is 60, low to
night 45.
"Don't tell me I've been feed
ing you starch foods . . . you've
been playing with my LAUN
DRY STARCHI"
WILBERT '.
nehs -.;.-;srrn
of what role each service should
play in the future.
Sen. Jackson (D-Wash said he
didn't consider the rivalry a
healthy thing. He said "taxpayers
are concerned about waste of
funds" which he contended result
from efforts of the Army, Navy
and Air Force to developcom
peting weapons.
Mahon, chairman of the House
military appropriations sub-committee,
was interviewed on a TV
radio show (CBS-Face the Na
tion). Jackson and Case appeared
in a television debate 'NBC-American
Forum) just one day after
published reports pictured the Ar
my as feeling that continued em
phasis on air power can lead only
to "national disaster.'
Mont Unfortunate
This public feud was termed
"a most unfortunate business" by I
Secretary of Defense Wilson, who I
said Saturday he would look into!
it personally. j
Case said he was not disturbed
by sharp rivalry among the serv-
I !".but felt, on the contrary, that
it strengthens the defense effort
1 y neeping me services on weir
toes.
Wanted Ff forts
Jackson, howevpr, said this riv
alry has produced "waste and
duplication of effort," particularly
in the field of missile develop
ment, The Weather
Mil.
Ill
... K5
. 79
. 7
M
... 72
.. K5
.... 71
. 71
Mln. Preelp
(Ml
Salem
Pert land
Rsker
Mfdford
North Bend
Roscduik
San Francis,
I.05 AnKrlts
Chicago
New York
m
Irare
mi
114
no
mi
.00
It.ice
trace
69
Willimett. R.v.r II
forec ast ifrom v s weather i
bureau. McNarv field. Salem I:
r hit iiKd. uiniKni ano iuesa.iv
Hifh temperature toriav 74. low to-
meni . Mutn iuesrt.iv ,a
Temperature at 12 01 , ,n today I
sm fm prfcipitxtiov
since suit of Heather vear sept, i i
Thii Year
I. at Year
S4 74
30 72
.17.22
Two U. S. Navy Battleships
. - i t an iriTT i
, itf? r r
.v-:.vf?r..v -.' y "t. dff
,';v-vr:' ' ml ;- X). '4
' Ss' V
A ? J
I !
!r
PORTSMOUTH, Vs. A section f the sew of the unfinished bcttleship Kentucky bangs from a giant
crane at the naval shipvard here. The section will h fitted to the hMtleshie Wisconsin, whose bow
was badly damaged 'n a collision with the destroyer Katon twe weeks ago. The Kentucky has been
, la drydock at aearby Newport News, Va. Construction on her was stopped ia 1930. (AP Wlrephoto).
Mate
Held in
Killing
Two Women in
Portland Die; 1
Hurt in Eugene
By HAL NORBERG
Valley Correspondent
DALLAS, Ore. - A Polk
County man was arrested Sun
day night after his wife was
found shot to death at the
couple's home one mile cast
of Ballston.
The Polk County sheriff! office
listed the man as Bayless Gilbert
Fanning, 57. Dead was. his wife,
Margaret, 41.
Fanning was booked at the Polk
County jail.
District Attorney Walter Foster
said Fanning would be charged
with first degree murder Monday.
The Ballston shooting was one
of three shootings in tha state Sun
day. At Portland a mother and a
daughter were killed, apparently
by the daughter's suitor. In
Eugene a 60-year-old woman was
critically wounded by another wo
man s enraged husband.
Long Time Resident
Fanning has been a farmer in
the Ballston area for about 40
years. Ballston is located about 10
miles north of Dallas.
Polk County sheriff's office said
Mrs. Fanning's body was found by
her step-son, Milton Fanning, 29,
whose home is located about 100
feet behind his father's.
Milton called state police at Mc
Minnville and an ambulance.
' State police said a .38 calibre
revolver was found in a desk
drawer in a room near where the
body was discovered.
Single Shot
Milton reported he heard a
single shot about 7:20 p.m., ac
cording to state police. Two flashes
were observed following the shot,
he said. At his father's house he
found Mrs. Fanning's body lying
on the back porch he told police.
His father was standing about a
foot away, Milton said.
Margaret Fanning was Fanning's
second wife, his son said. His first
wife died several years ago.
Two Killed
Mrs r.ertrude Chetnev. 74. and
her daughter, Gladys, 31, were
killed at Portland, the Associated
press reported. The daughter re-
cently had refused to marry Roy
BredahL
Witnesses heard the shots short
ly after Bredahl had entered the
house. One of them rushed inside
in time to see Bredahl shoot him
self twice in the chest. At the
hospital attendants said he was
in critical condition. j
At Eugene 55-year-old John A.
Emmlck went looking for his
estranged wife with a pistol after
he had been served with divorce
papers. He first tried the home
o( Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hunger.
where he took one shot at Hunger i
and two more at Mrs. Hunger '
Searched for Wife !
From there he went to the home
of Mrs. Lena Irwin Poyfair, about
go ;
The enraged Emmick fired sev-'
eral shots in the bedroom where
r.1111111111 5 uiunig, urn ay-
parently did not know she was
there
,, , . , , ,
He then headed home. Police
surrounded me place, ann entered
aft(ir (jrn ga, jn,idp Tnpv
found Emmick dead.
i..s Pnvfair was shot in the
shoulder and abdomen.
luMiil
106rh Year
Inl-Bomb Fury (UMeaslhiedl
Scooter Wrecked
While Elderly
Owners Worship
DALLAS, Tex. -AP A 3
wheel motorscooter is the only
transportation of Albert D. Travis,
SO, and his wife, Gallic, 76, who
live at the edge of Dallas.
He uses it to sell kitchen supplies
and cosmetics door-to-door to
augment their pensions.
Sunday they went to church on
the scooter.
While they worshiped, vandals
wrecked the machine.
Idaho River
Level Tops
Flood Stage
BONNERS FERRY, Idaho W
The level of the Kootenai River
rose two feet above flood stage
here Sunday and Gov. Robert E.
Smylie declared a state of emer
gency. The troublesome Kootenai, fed
by a heavy mountain snowpack,
reached 33.6 feet Sunday after
noon in the wake of a heat wave
but there was no immediate
flooding.
Flood stage is listed at 31 feet
but dirt dikes protecting this
North Idaho town of 2,000 can hold
back water up to 37 feet. Dikes
around 40.000 acres of rich farm
land are 35 to 37 feet.
The governor's declaration,
made through the state civil de-
fense agency and relayed here by
telephone, started federal help on
the wav. I
An Army convoy of 500 infan
trymen and engineers left Ft.
Lewis. Wash., late Sunday for
Bonners Ferry. The convoy in
cluded 4 huge cranes with shoves,
40 dump trucks, 13 bulldozers, 20
radio-mounted jeeps, and 10 elec
trical lighting sets. The Army es-
tlmatca it would take 17 to n
hours to cover the 350 miles from I
Ft. Lewis,
Dayton Farm
Home Burns
" vl
DAYTON The farm home of
Luther Poe, located about one
mile north of here, was partiallv
destroyed by fire Saturday night.
The blaze apparently started
from an exploding hot water
heater, firemen said. Flames
spread quickly through the house.
reported indicated
Most of the
household furnishings were lost.
Davton and McMinnville fire
departments answered the call.
, No estimate of damage was made
Make One
II.. II
XI V
2 SECTIONS-14 PAGES
Giant Jet Bomber Drops Hydrogen Bomb
I- t.
' .re,.- ..
? -. v
..: -
USS MT. McKINLEY, Off Bikini Ung awaited kydrogea bomb air drop, first by it U. 3, wan suc
cessfully accomplished early Monday ia Pacific test area by giant B51 8 trato bomber similar tn
one shown above. The luge Jet was piloted by MaJ. David Crltchlow of Sacramento, Calif. Bomb's
force was estimated equal to II million tons of TNT. (AP Wlrepnoto).
East Side E-R
Plan Wins in
Close Ballot
PORTLAND ( A hot fight
between east and west Portland
over a proposed eight-million-dol-
lar iports center ended Sunday
with a narrow decision for east
Portland.
Not until the last precinct was
counted from Friday's election
1 could the result be determined.
There were 128.011 Dailots east
and the east side won by only
406. The count was M,20 to (3,-
lS.
The city is divided by the Wfl-
lamette River. A mayor s com'
mittee had picked a site on the
west side, next to the downtown
business center. Protesting east
side residents put the matter on
the ballot.
The measure that passed says
the sports center, also planned as
a convention hall, must be built
on the east side.
Debt Increase
Sets Record
WASHINGTON' AP Net pri
vate and public debt in the United
States increased by 51 billion dol
lors last year the largest dollar
increase on record for any peace
time year, the commerce depart
ment reported Sunday.
The gain of 8'i per cent brought
the total net private and public
debt to t5A billion dollars as of last
Dec. 31. The percentage rate of
increase was less than in. 1950
after the outbreak f Korean
hostilities.
The department said the large
volume of new 1955 borrowing
largely reflected an upsurge in
gross private domestic investment,
This included outlays of 24 billion
for producers' durable equipment,
16 billion for non-residential con
struction, 16'i billion for new
residential construction and 3
billion for inventories.
In addition, consumers spent 35
billion for automobiles and other
durable goods, the
said.
Train-Car ("rash
Costs Eight Lives
ELYRIA, Ohio ufl - Eight per
sons were killet' when the auto
mobile in vhich they were riding
was hit by a New York Central
passenger train at the west edge of
Rlyria Sunday night. The State
Highway Patrol reported.
l Mt paum rhiu a si-dun was , , ... n...
being conducted along the tracks j crats Sunday asscr,ed I) n:laS
in the vicinity of the crash for : McKay will go into the fall dec
ninth person believed to have been 1 tion as a minority Republican
in the car. ! candidate to oppose Democratic
The victims were not identified ;
immediately.
mm
NoSTHwrsT Xf. err
At Trl-Clty 6. EufeiM 7
At Wtrutchte
15-3,
Yakima 2-9
At L-rwuton 10-IS.
Spokane II-IS
Faciiic coabt lraove
At Portland S-J. Sin rnnciwo 1J-1
At Hollywood 4-3. Los Anieita i-o
At San Ditto io-3. Sacramrnto 5-0
At Stattle 6-3. Vancouver 1-1
NATIONAL I.EAOir.
At PltUburgh S-S Mllwaukr 3-0
At Philadelphia 1-S Cincinnati 8-4
At New York t-b St, Uiuia 0-1
At Brooklyn S-S. Chicago 3-3
AMERICAN I.RAr.ir
At KanMS OH i New York 4
At Chlrain S-l B .Jton 12-2
Al Cleveland -S Baltimore t-1
At Detioit 4-7. Waarunfton 2-1
Tha Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Monday, May 21,
' y
Narrow Margin Passes
Park Maintenance Tax
A 135,000 annual special tax for park maintenance apparently has
received the blessing of the city's
Sunday as primary election tabulations were received from the last
two of the city's 53 precincts.
Complete but unofficial totals
with (.652 in favor and 6,573 against. Last precincts from which
tabulations were received were
20S and 22. When returns from
the final two precincts came in
Sunday 'the measure led by 79
votes.
Close Vote
Apparently defeated was the
$700,000 park bonds tenure for
new parks and improvement of
present parks. A total ol (,909
votes were cast against this
measure compared to 6446 in
favor, according to figures from
S3 precincts.
Favorable Vote
Results rom 45 precincts in
dicated three otber city money
measures got a favorable nod
from voters. These were a $3
750,000 bond issue for a new
water supply line from the North
Santiam River; $140,000 worth
of new concrete bridges; and a
$188,000 widening program for
Fairgrounds Road, Market and
South 12th Streets.
Precinct' 22 (Parrish Junior
High), last in the city to finish
work, completed its count about
6 p.m. Sunday. This board's task
was complicated, by exhaustion
which forced two workers to drop
out. Some members labored 28
hours with little more than a 30
minule break.
Among measures apparently
rejected according to returns
from 45 precincts Were fluorida
tion, and airport, library and fire
men's tax issues. Also given the
axe was a $65,000 bond proposal
to finance a fire alarm system.
Final Count
Meanwhile, County Clerk Hen
ry Mattson and his staff wiil i
complete the tabulation of the
(vote in Mariort County's 127 pre
cincts today.
The count this far holds up the
trend established in tabulations
,k:.k ;--!.. a. a n,,ti.i ri
... .
in some cases, complete in oth-
ers, from nearly every precinct
Hnrtmn!in (he county right after the
UtpamilCNl
oolls closed rriday nignt i
K ' , , . , .
The city count under direction
of City Recorder Al Mundt also i
will be finished today.
Oregon Demos, GOP Wrangle
Over Significance of Primary
PORTLAND Oregon Demo-
Sen. Wayne Morse
"The most significant result ol
Friday's primary election was
that a clear majority ol regis
tered Republicans voted against '
Doug McKay for United States
senator, whereas only a tiny frac-
twwtf -about one out of-! Ptmn-
crats voted for Sen. Wayne
Morse's opponent This is a very
food omen of Sen. Morse's vic-
tory in November." said Monroe
ix tla.j Henwralie national
eeliana, uemmrauc national
1 committeeman for Oregon
I With returns almost complete
; in Oregon. McKay. Interior De
partment secretary who resigned
t to seek the Senate nomination,
had 118.105 votes compared to a
combined total of 121. VII for his
.three opponent. The Wrongest
j McKay opponent was Phil Hitch
I cock, church leader and former
KUNDID 1651
t n . " . . .
f 0'. - ' ' ' r
voters. That was the indication
had the measure narrowly winning
Porpoise in
Panic nearly
Drowns Diver
MIAMI, Fla. W-A panicky
porpoise, snarled in i diver's air
line, yanked the man s helmet off
with near-fatal results Sunday in
front of spectators at Miami's
seaquarium tank.
Kenneth L. Brown, 32, was
rescued oy raaicj aurr Deing
scraped aiong me suu.uuogaiion
tank's jagged coral bottom by
the thrashing porpoise. The wa
ter is 16 feet deep.
Brown, revived by artificial
respiration, was placed in an ox
ygen tent at a hospital which
listed him in good condition. He
suffered possible rib injuries as
well as near-drowning.
Brown tried to struggle
through milling sharks and other
fish to the surface but his weight
ed suit drsgged him down.
Pope Confers
With Truman
ROME Ofv Harrv S Truman.!
former President of The United
j States, spent an hour and a half
a 30-minuie audience with Pope
Pius XII. Then he went to Protest -
t services
. i
Truman, an advocate ot renewed
, stinlnmalif rnlotinne with the V nl.
, js (he flrst s chK,( of
Ktate to he received at the Holy
See either in office or alter
for 37 years. President Woodrow
Wilson paid a formal visit on Popo
B(,m,djct xv jn ,,, drjnc World
yVar I peace talks The Inited
'States has had no diplomatic re-
'.Jl. 1S7II
'"" " ' "'"" ,,.....
Truman was alone with the pon-; At the instant of release, the
(jf( (()r s mlmllp, ln nis library,! B52, piloted by Maj. David Critch -
after being introduced by Bishop ikw of Sacramento, Calif., banked
Martin J. O'Connor of Scranton.
stale "senator who polled W.94.1
after arKiiinj; ne coiiki sums a
number of votes away from Mnrse
in a tail campaiun.
Morse piled up 191.1.19 to 39.221
for Woody Smith, a politically un
known sirvKe station operator
(rom Hood liiver Republicans eran from Portland, announced
said this represented a sizeable his withdrawal from the race he
protest voir acainst Morse's cause ol a heart condition,
switch to the Democratic Party When Holmes emerged with a
With only a handful of precincts margin of only about S.oufl votes
unreported Adlai S'evenson main- in the 200 000 cast, there was
tfiinrri h't '': """i'"
Kstes Kefauver in their write-in
campaign for presidential nomina
tion Steviiisiiii captured Oregon's 16
delegates tn the Democratic na
tional convention, hut his support
ers said even more important
miiiht he
vntmi: wil
California
:he effect the Orejun
hate tin Florida and
pr muni's in the near
future
!l:trh, . k
from '!" K.i
ik in i mini ies awav
all in the ncrinil
areas upstate
tural and Vrl
The late returns also confirmed,
mmm
195
NIC!
Bon hw rp
Explosion Equal to 10
Million Tons of TNT
(Map en Wirepheto Page)
By ELTON C. FAY
USS MT. McKINLEY. OFF BIKINI (AP)- Amcr-
ica's first air-tlronncd
lion tons of savage fury, burst above a Bikini atoll tar
' get island in the black pre-dawn Monday.
I At nrnicAlu tllA Crh3r1lt1w1 fnctanf Clf 5v!?l Sl.TTl.
(9:51 a.m.,) Sunday, (PST),
the darkness just above the
Even through the almost
opaque filter of high-density
goggles, the swiftly-growing,
unearthly brilliance of the ex
panding fireball was daztling.
An observer, taking a cau
tious, quick glimpse over the rim
of his goggles, quickly put them
back on.
Swelling swiftly, the fireball
raced out to what seemed more
than a 3-mile diameter In a mat
ter of seconds.
From its initial silvery-white
brilliancy, the fireball began dim
ming Into a creamy white, then
into orange and red as It started
to shrink.'
Up from the dark rim of the
horizon rose the point of an ama
zing brilliant red arrow of lighted
cloud, ascending at a speed of
hundreds of miles an hour.
Mnshroom Forma
It pointed a finger at tha mush
room beginning to take shape over
head. Down over the target island of
"Namu, at the northwest end of
Bikini Atoll, a "base surge" dev
elopeda broad, low-lying bank of
dirty clouds made up of dust and
moisture drawn into the air as ine
hot gases o' the mushroom cloud
mounted above it.
By 11 minutes after detonation,
the too of the mushroom had
reached an estimated altitude of
25 miles.
The width of the mushroom as
It flattened out was Bearing 100
miles.
The observer ship Mt. McKlnley.
with 15 correspondents and a score
of civilian defense observers on
board, was 34 nautical miles (39
land miles from the target.
Ware
The shock wave reached the ship
2 minutes, 43 seconds after the
explosion. It came as a prolonged,
deep-toned, grumbling roar.
As the mushroom cloud rose
above the dark bands of natural
clouds, touches of brown appeared
in it. This was evidence of oxides
of nitric acid produced by the
explosion.
A few seconds after the burst,
a half dozen small, brilliant points
of light were noted close to the
(arming cloud. These were not Im
mediately explainable.
Ranging outward were some of
the other 33 planes assigned to
cover the explosion. j
The exact height of the burst j
v?s a military secret, but the,
angle above the horizon suggested j
it must have been not lower than!
10.000 feet.
First unofficial study of the
cloud suggested it was moving
. 'hi. ' the safe course predicted
! dropping whatever radioactivity
'it contained along a path directly
northward from the Mr -hall Is-
i an1 iiit in Iha omniv Afnn
""-
; Plane RflurB
About one hour after the dctona-
. I ion, ?ar Adm. B. Hall Ilanlon, t
commanding joint Task Force 7,
said his combat information ccn-
ler aboard the command ship;
Kstes. reported, "All aircraft in
the area at detonation time got
away Irom the shot, mis speciti -
rillv inrhirf.wt thj. RV rirnn nliiu "
, sharply in a 180-degrec turn.
the surprisingly narrow victory nf
Hubert D. Holmes. Astoria radio
station manager, over Lew Wal
lace for Democratic nomination
for governor. Holmes had been
expected to win by a big total
because " allace. a political vet-
"" Tpm'ffltion Wallace, might
demand action because his name
had been crossed out in advance
bj some election officials
Wallace q u i c k 1 y denied he
planned any action.
Holmes' opponent in the fall will i
lie Republican Gov Klmo Smith
who was second on the ballot only
to I'resident Kisenhowrr.
Kisenhnwer had 221.471 votes
Smith had 217. 941 to 22 909 for his
opponent, Karl Dickson, a politi
in"v unknown Albany grocer.
Fewer than i of the state's
2.519 frecincU wcxs unreported.
Sc
Ne, IS
H-bomb, with at least 10 mil-
a pinpoint of light pricked
Public Views
Launching of
New Missile
PATRICK AIR FORCE BASE,
Fla. If) The Air Force launched
a Martin Matador guided missile
here Sunday for the first time la
public.
The missile, resembling a Jet
fighter plane in site and shape,
took off before an Armed Forces
Day audience estimated at J0.00
to 23,000 persons. , . t 5
A burst of flame from an
orange-colored "booster bottle"
attached beneath the tail sent the
missile thundering into the air
across the coastal highway from
which all traffic had beta cleared
half aa hour earlier.
The silver-colored pilotless ;
plane, flashing in the sun.
streaked northeastward somewhat
to the north of the customary mla
sile-launchings from this area.
I The instant it was under way
a North American FN Sabre)
tighter flashed across the airfield
just above it to serve as "chase
plane" and observe Its flight. ' -
The missile accelerated to swift
ly that it appeared to be fleeing
from the tighter plana. To assist
la the visual tracking, the Matt,
dor had beea equipped with a
purple dye to that It left a .beau
tifui cherry-colored trail out
across the blue water. ' . -
It was the first missile launch
Ing from this ease near neadquar
ters of the Air Force missile teat
center which operates the 3,000
mile aerial testing range extend
ing from Florida into the Carib
bean and out into the South At
lantic. Although the length of the mis
sile's flight was not disclosed, it
reportedly was to fly about 35
miles before being dumped into
the ocean.
This would be accomplished by
g fuel cutoff at a predetermined
point on the flight. -
The "Matador Is the first Air
Force tactioal missile to go into
operation. Two Matador squad
rons, the 1st and the 69th art
operating in Germany.
Mayor Race
Runoff Sure
PORTLAND un -A runoff elec
tion in the fall for mayor ot Port
land became a certainty as final
primary results were posted Sun
day. The runoff, to be held at the
November general election, win
pit Sheriff Terry Schrunk against
inclumbent Fred Peterson.
Schrunk has 67,233 in the Bon-
(partisan primary voting to $1,183
jfor Peterson. There were seven
lkr. i. tk. n.M ik. .i.kJ
nnu, n mt; nn
up a combined total of about 33,-
looo votes, keeping anyone from
! getting a majority. Schrunk came
close. His total
was 43 per cent
of the vote.
Today's Statesman
' Page Sec.
Classified 12, 13 II
Comits 14 II
Crossword 11 l
iditorials 4 I
Home Panorama ,...6... I
Obituaries 12 II
Radio, TV 11 II
Sports 9, 10 ...II
Star Caier I I
Valley News 3 I
Wirsphoto Page ..14 II
Sold Horn lit Day
Ad appeared Suitdajf and
brought five calls. Owner
very happy.
NfW 3-bearMm ti, fir.
place, force air oil keat,
tile katfe. lie. rm , rm ,
kltchea ainetU. atlUtT
mom. BlaitereS SftfM. I
hlk Na. city Haalta. Ill.Stt.
Milshire Dr. Pk. i-mi.
e Make life easier
and more economical
Read and use the
Want Ads. Ph. 4-M1L
5
t