Electronic 'Slave' Gives Beauty Treatment I - t , , . : . til. ; WUNDRD 1651 106th Yesr 2 seaioNS-20 paces Th Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, May 24, 1954 PRICI 5c Ne, SI aDemm loata- Lost .in. Kbgiae- llapd SCHENECTADY, N. Y. Model Ruth Feldhrim gets a beauty treatment, lipstick, hair do, and all, from the "Yes-Man." the two-armed electro-hydraulic "slave" developed by General Electric engi h kM Th itpwIrrniK mM-haniral device drcirneil nrimirilv for chores in rianrerous radioactive areas, duplicates motions performed by an operator with a twin (AP Wirephoto). Fired Civil Service , . Employe Reinstated A state employe who said he was fired because he was loo curious was reinstated to state service by the Civil Service Commission at a bearing Wednesday. Commission members also ir.timaled that more "time and patience on all aides." could have been displayed in the case of Clvde Hill, dismissed from State Industrial Accident Commission employment last ' IP 3MHE ERDQHi On Mareh 19th last President Eisenhowers. special message' to Congress asking for appropri- ations ot S4,k9,97j,ooo 'or the "mutual security" (foreign aidi I program. Wednesday the House i committee on foreien affairs re- i ,A .. . iH Kill .hnur. v ul . ; ing a cut of 1.109,O0a,0O0 under : the President's fequest. The vote' in committee was quite decisive ' 24 in favor to four opposed. That i would indicate House approval of th !ip! ailoH annrnnrint inn It ic expected, of course, that the ad , ministration will rally its forces to obtain reinstatement of the full. amount in the Senate, and then hope to salvage part at least in was who knows who which deter the ensuing conference. , mined the ratings. His superiors Another casualty in the House also said he hinted at "conni committee was the President's re- vance" between the civil service quest to make commitments for and industrial accident commis- periods up to ten years ot as much , as $100,000,000 a yeas. It is not clear TTnncp rnmmittpp hatchet. The budget submitted had this breakdown: Military assistance $.1,000,000,000 Defense support 'economic aid to countries receiving military assistance 1.130,700.000 Development assistance (economic aid to other countries) 170,000,000 Technical cooperation 157,500,000 Other programs 401,775,000 Appropriations made last year amounted to $3,285,800,000, so the amount recommended in the House bill is still above that figure. There (Continued on editorial page, 4.) Britain Aims at A-Power in Fall , LONDON OH - Britian Wednes day put into operation an atomic, pne it nopes win pusn cieciriciiy , into the nation s power lines Dy this fall. This country expects to be the first in the world to supply elec tricity on a large scale from atom it. nurri - I WIIRTDT 1 IllhWklll "Wilbert's out In the garden fWravoting the flowenl" ill ..a , . v x . . ' Pnl The SIAC said Hill was given a lMay suspension to be followed by dismissal because of "insubor dination and misconduct." Suapeaaioa I'pheld The civil service commission agreed to the 10-day suspension but recommended 4hat Hill, be cause of his good work record, be reinstated to his job as safety in spector with the accident commis sion Hill who works nut of the Fu- gene area, denied that he was in- subordinate or "caused dissention fellow workers; Ho said t ne was uniy iryiuu itj Kfl uutii ma supervisors information on the in-! tricate procedure of civil service merit ratings. I it an Degan last reDruary wnen a vacancy lor a new supervisory I ..-,41. ciAr ..n ! ... . . ; 1 1. 41, cir ! Pi. ui, ,u. uir , v o.nt u. Emploves took civil service exam- jna,jons and grades were posted. I Later the list was changed. It was! explained in the commission hear-i '"K Wednesday the change was made because of a calculating cr- Told Dlssatisfaellon " expressed ms nissausiani on w"h the listing. He wrote the SIAC 1 'llcr w""- "'"""" " I sions just where theValed. He al.eged at the hearing applied its he was never given a proper ex-ja following nis dismissal mih ap-,r planation of the merit system by , his superiors. His immediate su- nervisors rated him as "excellent ". --inr, .non" in vnrhal itiimn. aiiu mo" in ,.i. nv Wednesday Inasmuch as the civil service 'of Dist. Atty. William M. Langley, commission can onlv recommend : who had ordered the raid, reinstatement the SIAC does not; The wire tapping equipment have to reinstate Hill, said Charles j Terry, civil service director. More Clouds On Forecast More clouds are predicted for CnL. rL-ln. liJ-.,' tnninhl -.nil Friday, according to the McNary Field weatherman. IliPh temneralure todav and Fri- day is expected to be 72, the low tonight about 50. 1 State Printer Voters' Pamphlet Surplus A wide difference between nurn- : . ........ ..... .. . , uer 01 vmers pdiiipmco pri.u and number of registered voters in the state was indicated Wed nesday by the State Printing 01 ; fice. Figures from State Printer Charles L'nruh showed pamphlets printed totalled some 130,(X)0 more ed O'Hara, "when persons register than registrations. in one precinct, then move to an- Dave O'Hara, head of the State other precinct where they must Elections Bureau, countered this i register again." Often the result report with an estimate that "not is two pamphlets to the same par more than 4.000 pamphlets re-; ty unless he is listed as an old mained in his office after mailing registrant, it was pointed out. to voters. Lnruh said his omce printed up an order for 913.850 pamphlets at 1 . , , . , - COSl 10 ine State OI W),.IU. O'Hara in turn stated that after first estimates he ordered about 835,000 pamphlets, of which some 830.000 were mailed out. Total rcg istration figures from the secre tary of state's office showed 785, 285. The Election Bureau chief said "Yes - Man" from a remote point. ?oboiDse(1 l or Work in ;Ra(lioaclivity ' ' SCHENECTADY NY (AP) i i-V ' r,cneral Electric to. engineers have developed a machine with mechanical arms and hands to , i -.Hin.Miv .rn u,hr 1 , I it would be too dangerous for a man to work The "electro-hydraulic manipu lator" has two pairs of limbs that can be operated from a distant point, GE said Wednesday. General Electric said, the tf chine works this way: The operator, at one point tPs his own arms and fingers inl the mechanical arms and ; fingers. He then goes through i he flexed arm : ana mger mo- " n, ....u, ui; s using a wrench, a screwdriver or pouring water. A similar ma- chine, at another point, duplicates me movements, me macnines are connected by wires. The op-i 4 i.l u:. i. .! , , L u:- i. . :- ridiui Idil waiiu 1113 wui . vu a television hookup, I-.-l.- liialrto JHI"t llllltS Wire Tapping jy lfll 1 111C1 lllCHal O P0RTLAND 1 District Judge John R. Mears Wednesday ruled that all I'". t.aS8tT'!!l ! and recordings seized in a county ! police raid a week ago be im- igu uc 1111- . """. "; ! Robert V. J. on of vice cond ions here. Mfars ruled that the search and seizure of the equipment was il- leeal and based on a laulty atfi del vi I . In effect, the lunees nilina i- c-- t'"k the matter out of the hands i was seized at the duplex apart- moots of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Clark and Sonny Martin, all of whom were indicted on charges of illegal possession of slot ma chines. Twenty-six slot machines found in the duplex basement were seized by police, ("lark and James B. Elkins, Portland night club financier, also were indicted by the countv crnnd jury on charges of illegal wire I Ti. r, I ..-.A Klkins is the man who gave the newspaper much of the informa-' tmn-includinc recorded conversa-: t ions on which its recent copy- righted vice stones were based Figures Note he always orders some surplus of : nanlhlrl In Ink. nl cili.o. -.:." " "u I lions that may arise O'Hara added that late re-registrations and pamphlet duplication are factors which complicate mak ing of estimates. ' This comes about," comment- O'Hara, in explaining the diffi cumes oi estimating numner 01 i pamphlets to he printed, said or-' . , , 1 1 , i. j i,uit nium r lUlliru III liir dlll-di. . ! of close of registrations He point ed out that he submitted his or- ; der the latter part o! March. Reg istrations closed April 17. The Election Bureau did not get registration totals from all coun ties until as late as May 11, O'Hara said. Hnlin RivPr ot Record High; Dikes Burst BONNERS FERRY, Idaho tfv More dikes protecting farm lands broke late Wednesday night, flood ing more rich land but tempo rarily relieving pressure to this town after the snow-swollen Koo tenai River had crested at an all time high of more than 36.6 feet. Water was lapping just inches from the top of , the 37-foot dikes around the town when Farm Dis fricts No. 2 and No. 16 and the Kerr tract were breached. Some 2,278 more acres of rich wheat land was flooded, but the river PORTLAND The neat few days probably will deter mine whether the lower Co lumbia River area will be hit by a flood this year. The critical action will lake place hundreds' of miles up stream, where the weather in the Snake River Basin of Idaho wilt determine the downriver fate. Elmer Fisher, Heather Bu reau river forecaster here, said that if the Snake River reaches its crest in the next few days perhaps by Sunday the lower Columbia area will escape disastrous flood levels. But if the Snake River crest mond prcsident, announced Wed- 1s delayed, then trouble could nps(jay follow, he warned. He esti- j Th'm. are m,m shares of Ham mated there was a 50-50 -nj n,.t-iaA,B n nnr. rnance ior inr luwrr nrr iw escape. began dropping, the Army Engi- neers reported. Communications to the town ' e interruptpd temporarily and : there was no immediate informa tion on the rate of decline, but alter the water went "over the top" of the No. 2 dike, the river guage here dropped to 35.85 at 10 p. m. Dr. Schweitzer Hospital Given Sharp Rebuke pr-nnr amryv N J. W A i rrMh,ria n,initnr hs. rharred - 1 v . ' r . . I that the African hospital of Dr. Al- j " "" "'" k c now bert Schweitzer, NobJ prize win-; among the lagest in the nation ner. is "filthy" and that "white su- 7 ' bllIn bard Sect under con- nrmv' ;. nrariircH iWp Thn !)m- rip A H Rnhrenheri? n,, nf ih Virsi Prithvti.ri:.n S Church, Metuchen. said Tuesday . Pd from South Carohnato Lane County circut Judge the hospital in Lambarene. French rlf,ansas' ,a,nd P'an,,s ?l Feathor i Frank B. Reid contested Wednes Equatorial Africa, is "filthy be-1 Fa.lls- ca'lf- Bellingham, Ho- ;dav a suit wnicn challenges the yond description" and that "a col-Olympia Wash., and egality of his county's grand or line is practiced there which is Springfield and Toledo, Ore. jury more severe than anything found ' Oregon Holdings junge Reid field a demurrer in in Alabama." In recont ycars ,l has acquired ; the Supreme t)urt. He claimed The minister, whose congrega-. "tensive timber holdings m North-, that the suit, filed by Lane Coun- tion numbers about 1.600. told a 1-ncheon meeting of the Perth Am- ; boy Kiwanis Club that Dr. Schweit - . ... ... . . ... 1, doctrine rf revcrence to w.r du-Buddhist than Christian in re- As a result of Dr. Schweitzer's respect for life, the pastor said, "nothing is killed in the hospital area .. .. including-- insects, animals which deposit their filth every where i n c 1 u d i n g the operating room and animals with serious in fection that mingle with the all white staff and the patients." Mendes Quits Cabinet Post PARIS iT) Pierre Mendes France Wednesday night quit Pre mier Guy Mullet s caoinet His resignation climaxed a long smol- dpB sagwment over French 'u" " As minister of state, Mendes - France served as a kind of depu ty premier. Mollet was in Moscow on a state visit. In his letter of resignation, Mendcs-France said force of arms alone cannot master the rebels. i He added: Any policy which ignores the aciiwiiicriiio anu ,111 1111.-, 1 ii.. ui native nonnlation leads stcD &eiuiineni5 anu me inisv. ti-s u. uic nc bV J. ' r.u .1... : ' slcP .lrom lnr ss 01 ""' 'Benan people, 10 me loss 01 Algeria 11- ast wpek-s primary by a 5-1 mar self and later, inevitably, to the ; , -i, i-i .j : : I lui ui u uur lit min-a The Weather Max. Mln. Prrrlp. Salrm S 4S .H Portland M . M .00 Baker S4 47 .55 Medford 73 55 .00 North Brnd .. , SI M .00 Rnaebur I . ..66 47 Oil San Francisco .. - 0 48 trace Los Anele SS 54 no r-v, ... T.. ,. til it iwi nc York 71 57 RlY'r 2,,.f"i rOHr.C ASF I from t. S IB Wral'irr Bureau McNarv Field Salem Mostly cloudy today, tonight and Friday but some afternoon sunshine High temperature both days near 72. low tonight 50 Temperature at 12.01 a m. today ii 55. SAITM PBr.riPITATION Since Start of Weather Vear Sept. I This Vear Last Veal Normal 54.74 J0.73 37.40 Warden to Allow Convict to lireak Prison's Walls RICHMOND, Va. ( A life termer at the state penitentiary here will get to fulfill the desire of many prison inmates he'll be allowed to knock a hole through the penitentiary walls. Identified only as "Georgia Boy," the lifer heard that the west wall of the penitentiary would be extended 250 feet this summer. He asked superintendent Frank Smyth if that meant the old wall would be torn down. Told that it did, he replied: "Well, would you mind if I tore open the first hole? I've been wanting to knock a hole in that wall for a long time." Georgia Boy, with several guards standing by, will be able to satisfy that longing. Giant Timber Firms' Union Claimed Near SAN FRANCISCO l-A substan tial majority of the stock of the Hammond Lumber Co. of San Francisco has been optioned to the Georgia Pacific Corp. at $310 a share F. B. Birmingham. Ham- i chase of the entire holdings by Georgia Pacific would involve about 79 ' million dollars. The announcement said O. R. Cheatham, president of Georgia- Pacific, had confirmed the grant ing of the option. Georgia-Pa- cific's executive headquarters are in New York and its operationi headquarters in Portland, Ore. Included in the option are the holdings of major stockholders, in cluding the A. B. Hammond Co., a personal holding company for Hammond stock. Other stockhold ers will be given the same op- portumtf to sell their stock to 1 way Commission hearing here were told Wednesday. Georgia-Pacific, Brimingham said. I The hearing was held to let the public voice opinions on the pro Plywood Giant 'posed Albany-Eugene section of the freeway. No protests were re-Georgia-Pacific has become one ported. of the giants in the plywood in - dustry. Founded in 1927 with i headquarters at Augusta, (a . the firm began acquiring Western properties later and moved its op. fating headquarters to the West Coast three years ago. t. i 1 1.1: con - 7 nth aci in AiasKa ano anomer b'"ion in the States. It has six plants in the South, , ern aniornia ana uregon. a pap- mill is planned at Toledo, Ore ; a anomer ai juneau, Aiasna mh U (M)ll Omilll Renews Effort To Halt Morse t. ,T,n , HOOD RIVER tin - Woody Smith, candidate defeated by Sen. Wayne Morse for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senator, indi cated Wednesday he is not yet to give up. Smith, who failed in two court attempts to get Morse ruled off the ! ballot as not being a "real Demo - 11. u. .-..iiu nr arm una -u-Ki am to Morse: "Notice is hereby given that I shall rontrst thr Dpmttrrniic nnm. inn.inn for riinH r jf thp g()vernnr decides to give it !to you Contest will be made on ....,.. 'the KTMind. thai vnn h..r-.m . 1 nnmr,ii mhu1 pying a Republican office of thej United States Senator, thereby breaching good faith that you are a Democrat. My claim on the Democratic nomination for United Slates senator is effective May 18. 1 1956." Morse quit the Republican Partv in 1952. and switched his registra- tion to Democrat last year He l" "".l"l WM y "e won thp Democratic nomination in NORTHWEST LEAGUE At Lewnton-Salem, rain At Eugene 1. Yakima a At Spokane-Wenatchee, rain PACIFIC COXST I.F.A'.l'K At Portland S Hollywood 5 At Angclc. 10, San Dircn fl At S;icr.itopnto HI. San Fr,inrisn 3 Al Vancouver 1" Seattle (I AMf ltH' VN I i: il E At Cliii-aRo 3, naltimore J At Kansas Ci T 7 Washlnclnn fi 1 17 mning-l At Detroit 5. New York 13 At Cleveland 6. Boston 3 NATIONAL I.EAfilT At Brooklyn-Milwaukee, rain At New York-Cincinnati rain At Pittsburgh fi. St Louis (I At Philadelphia 4, Chicago I Paving Advances Two-Thirds 1 'rtM ( X. i: v -". - ,-r. ' -v. v Paving crews the Salem-Portlaad freeway are show laying dowa north of Salem. At far left Is southbaund Uae being gravelled prior ule, can cover two-thirds of a It is being completed to four Freeway in Albany Area to Include Many Interchanges lUloau Newt Strrlea ALBANY There will be plenty of Albany-area Interchange! when Freewav 99 is constructed in this area, persons attendinf State High- , W. C. Williams, deputy highway Judge Defends Lane County ! w -pw Jury Koster ! . J ty Dist, Atty. Eugene C. Venn, doesn't contain facts sufficient to constitute a law suit. The Supreme Court ordered oral arguments in the case be given at 2 p.m. Tuesday. Judge Reid, who brought his demurrer to Salem, listed nine i Eugene lawyers as tiis attorneys.! The grand jury was empaneled ' to investigate an alleged em bezzlement of funds of Moses Moodv, convict at the state pri- 'son. Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thorn- ; ton was ordered to take over the investigation Judge Reid empaneled the jury which Venn says was drawn from an illegally compiled list. At the same time Venn filed the suit against Judge Reid, he filed a similar action against 1 r0Untv Clerk Harrv Chase. Chase iea an answer vteunesaay mau he had drawn a new iurv list. , .... " fiiAi'il r iB A D-; . f,,tt!A- Cyprus - A- Wit- ,sh Wicr wm kdled and ' 'TC WOUIRK-U ncuiR-MW ... m-w . ij u-j 1.... : outbursts of violence on Cyprus.' Squirrel - Headed General Remark Denied bv Truman'so NAPLES (fi - Harry S t... man said Wednesday he didn't want to embarrass anybody-but d.ll .u ll..uaMa that in fart he never held sqmr- rel-headed" generalship respons- ible for the wav Allied landings were carried out below Rome in 1943-44. He had been quoted as saying i Truman parly during its tour of the Salerno and Anzio landings Italy, said the former President were unnecessary "and planned 'had been quoted accurately Tue. by some squirrel-headed general"! day night, and also that there were a lot ol' "My quotes were copies while easier places that could have, the President was speaking to been chosen for beachheads. me and were precisely as record- "I had been listening to the con- j ed." Zusy said. ' Roth in my mem versation of several people who ory and in the notes ritten down had been there. I am very sorry , word by word as he spoke the about it Hut it's an embarrassing quotes are as reported A 1'nit situatinn and I hope you'll clear ed Press reporter lil'-d a similar it up " story of Truman's comment and Truman's secretary, Kugene I stood by it Wednesday Baily. earlier had reported the ! The comment attributed to Tru-ex-President made "a complete! man quickly stirrrd protests in denial" of the quotations attribut-1 both the 1'nitrd States and Bri ed to him Tuesday night. When tain. The armies of both countries reporters asked Truman himself j suffered heavy casualties on the about that, he said; Italian beachheads, mile a "good" day. Ka is dote lanes. (Statesman pnoto). engineer, said an Interchange Is contemplated at the northwest cor ner of Albany Municipal Airport, another near the new Western Kraft paper mill and a third tome three miles north of the mill. Another interchange is schedul ed for the intersection of Airport Road and U. S. Highway 20 and still another at the Intersection of the Lebanon - Corvallii Highway and Highway 99E. South of Albany, an Interchange is earmarked for Halsey- Sweet Home Road. The proposed freeway would leave the present WE route near Wavcrly Lake in north Albany, by pass the city and proceed to Eu gene over mostly new right-of-way. No date for start of work or acquisition of land was mentioned at the hearing, presided over by Ben R. Chandler, chairman of the highway commission. -my ir f QVtn J-' t" f 1 it HI Ready for Ike WASHINGTON (AP) A new farm bill which sets up a billion dollars a year soil bank and many other farm benefits is ready for President Eisenhower' signature. The House approved the com promise bill by a 304 59 roll call vote Wednesday. It won Senate .... . ....j.., 1, , ! vme " f""lrnva 1 . , . The President is expected lo i, th, new legislation which is , suhs V(,,()e( - " titule for the farm bill he.'; " veiopi.1 rtur 1 i. . ... . (Add. details on page a, sec. u t t .mk.rr.. ..! body, especially people who are with me and reporting on me. I .oIH nnvhnrlv u hen thmps don't go straight and I wish you, would clear it up." Fred Zusy. Associated Press re-( I porter who is accompanying the , Mile Per Day IT layer ( blacktop a aertloa Crews, lew acbed- 1st about twt mere moniai want Weather Helps On Schedule Good paving weather has kept repair crews working "right on schedule" on fhe closed section ot the Salem Portland freeway north of Salem. Baring unforseen bottleneckt the announced completion time, set for early August, probably will be met, state highway offi cials said Wednesday. The road will remain closed until then. Two separate crews are pav ing, patching, grading and rock ing two sections. Paving on one lane of a six mile section about 10 miles north of Havesville started Monday. A new southbound lane also is be ing built there by the Porter- Yett Construction Co. Paving on the next nine mile section to the Wilsonville bridge hat been going on since May 1 by Warren-Northwest Co. The paving work there it less than half completed and will require from five to tix weeks to com plete. Other work, tuch as grading, sealing and some shoulder work also remains to be done. While the freeway is closed traffic is being routed over "old" Highway 99 E through Brooks, Woodburn and Aurora. The sec tion of freeway from Wilsonville to Portland ia open to travel. Salem Ambulance Company Hopes To Serve Eugene vivc-vr i cu mh.i. i . r" ! Tirontoth; .. ny - i Kugenr-SprinRfield area. , 1 If U - .f cwfitct ; mai r.ugene anu niriiiisin iu : 1. i., i ;l,.,-!,MK u....u..v? ,.... w, 1 Salem s so he could begin opera- j lions here ' Meanwhile Cecil Hunt, owner of I ambulance services here, re opened for business. He closed last in a snerms saie June 11. Hunt said he re-onened after "J fc- , tt firVn . .riinT (irJ I 10 m"' '""m '',r "S.",; .. I wolllu gc Itw per cent oaimiiK 7 i T. ZliJ ii. ..ih T, ' , ? T' h Ms to rt "to Pratlon m rf- Today's Statesman Page Classified 17-19 Comics 15 Crossword 9 Editorials 4 Farm 16, 17 Home Panorama 6 Sec. II Markets Obituaries Radio, TV Sports 8 17 15 11-13 9 7 Star Gaier Valley Newt Wirephoto Page 15... r I " f v: Keep Freeway Kiver Dumps Craft West of Grants Pass GRANTS PASS. Ore. (AP An outboard motorboat cap sized in swift rapids of th Rogue River, about SO mikl west of here Wednesday, and a Salm man was missing and feared drowned. ' State Police here reported the boat capsized on Washboard Bar about U miles upstream from the river community of Marial. Glea Woolridge, a Grants Past river guide, said he understood three men were ia the boating party. State Police identified them as Richard F. Chambers, A ear a Lane; Dr. Charles Mills, 617 Cbe meketa, and Phil Johnson, 2881 Mountain View Dr, all of Salem, Johnson, about 45, was listed as mT ia ii 14 uifiit Om Ii BmI Woolridge said Mills told him only one man was in the boat when it overturned. Ha swam to shore but then tried to swim back through the swift current to reach the boat when it (rounded on a bar. He was swept away. Woolridge. who has a boat at Marial, said he would take a search party there by automobile early Thursday and take the boat to search the remote area. Three Salem boatmea Involved In Wednesday's Rogue River ae cident were attempting an un usual feat, It was learned Wed nesday evening. Going Upstream The men planned to negotiate the rapid river from Gold Beach to Grants Pass. Usually boats traveling the river make the trip with the current They were within about SO miles at the goal. Grants pass, when tht ac cident occurred, according to As sociated Preia report. Fbtl Johnson, reported missing and feared drowned, operated the Alt Fireside Drive-in, 110 N. 12th Street Ha has been a rati dent ot Salem for about a year and a half, coming here from Fairbanks, Alaska. . He and his wife, Betty, have five children.;' Alaskaa Beat '. 1 .., i: Friends of the Salem men said the trio planned to leave - Gold Beach about 4 a.m. Wednesday, Their Alaskan river boat, which Johnson brought to Oregon from Fairbanks, was equipped with a spare motor and carried about (5 gallons of gasoline, Donald Rich ardson, a friend of Johnson s said. Johnson was reported to be aa experienced boatman. Johnson's father; Frank John son, is a resident of Portland. Mrs. Richard Chambers and Mrs. Johnson left Salem about 4:30 p.m. Wednesday for Grants Pass after a telephone report of the accident. BPA Fears Power Lack Next Winter BOISE tfl The Pacific North-, west may face's serious power shortage next winter, an official of the Bonneville Power Adminis tration said Wednesday, If water supplies are low, a con dition which is possible but not expected, "heavy industry will be pretty much at loose ends" for power, he said.. W. II. Marple of Portland, pro gram co-ordinator for BPA, ad dressed a meeting of the Colum bia Basin Inter-Agency Commit tee. Marple said the power supply for next winter "looks a little M than we had anticioated" because of an increase in use and 1 1L . u,wi.,hi.. jrtJ.TZ Imhi. caoaeilv of Chief Jo- Will HIM Wllllll KUl IIHU Uic ivevca r----. r seen Liiini. Corvallis Voters pprove Bonds Fire station . roitVALLlS I A S100.0M . , , u . tTf s,il,lon was aBnrove1 bv Cor. j vallis voters Tuesday. 1.335 to 247. That cleared the way for the city to sell its present fire station. Roberts Bros, has offered to buy the site. The firm, planning a department store here, already has bought the adjoining old city hall building. It plans an $800,000 store, The new fire station is to go up outside the main business district. 15 Calls -2 Days This ad sold boat trailer on second day . . . HOME-MAliK boat trailer, nc axlr, fS. I'll, kxkvx To buy or sell, . Want-Ads save you money PHONE 4-6811.