The Weather FORECAST (frm r I. weatker kareaa. McNary rteM, SaleaO: Mostly cloudy with erettered ahow era early today with cloudiness) and ihowtn decreasing through Sunday. Hih temperature today as, low to. nit hi 41. High Sunday T. TmatnUn at UM a at. U4tf was SI SALS mriFITATIOM Star Start of Weather Vtar trpt. 1. Tan Tu Last fear Normal MM 31 8 M m irt to eW CwvA ! frtfM FOUND0D 1651 104th YMr 2 SECT10NS-H PACES Hi Oregon Statesman, Satan, Oregon, Saturday, June U, 19SA PRICI S lie, II Irate Farmers Seek to Block New Road Construction Lebamioini rDneni Feairedl Lmt 4. A sother flaih betweea Joe Hariaad, ltc conitraciioa rrtwi pushing a land occurred Friday at (pot cranes Uarlaad's private raad. OP 0333 While President Eisenhower has recovered sufficiently to transact important public business, sign jpapers, and even to receive as visitor Chancellor Adenauer of Germany, his illness revives inter-; est in the question ot the exercise of executive .functions if the Presi dent is incapacitated for a period of time. The constitution has this provision in paragraph six, section one, article two: "In eata of tin rrmaral of tho President frmui office, or hit death, reitsnatiea, or inability to discharge tha powers and duties of the said office, the same shall devolve on the Vice President. -ano tha t'ontress may by law provide for the case of removal, death, resignation, or Inability, hnth of the President and Vice President, declaring whst officer ahall then act as President, and aurh officer shall art accordingly until the disability be removed or a President shall be elected." The succession of the vice presi dent has occurred in six instances when presidents died in office: Taylor, Harrison,- Lincoln, Gar field. McKinley. Roosevelt. But none has assumed the duties of the office because of the inability of the President to discharge the powers and duties of his office Congress has determined the order of succession to the presidency after the vice president, hut has made no attempt to give leRal recognition of the inability of the President to act. The house judiciary committee has been considering several bills on this subject but Chairman Celler of New York stated last week that no legislation would be recom mended at this session. The com mittee doesn't want to project the issue into the political campaign. (Continued on editorial page, 4.) Decreasing Cloud Cover Forecast Clouds and scattered showers are due in the Salem area today but both clouds and showers are expected to decrease through Sun day, according to ihe McNary Field weather station. High temperature for today will probably be 65, the low tonight 48. High Sunday is expected to be 70. Northern Oregon beaches are expected to he partly cloudy to day and tonight. WILBERT "Than my mothar said, 'AU right so he don't bthave, but you're nt tha only borbor in town,' than sha found out ha lvat.n Polk Caaaty farmer, and the eri-j "aew highway through hit farm-1 thowa a a are where aew roadbed Hariaad. shown above la sports Words, Dirt Fly as Polk Farmer, Builders Squabble Over Highway By CONRAD PRANCE Stiff Writer, The Statesman RICKREALL- 'Words and dirt flew thick and fast Friday morn ing on the Joe .Harland farm where construction crews are building a state highway. And, before the dust settled there was heated name calling and talk of rifle fire. The argument was apparently one of a series Harland and his BrownkeDam Finance Plan Gets Approval WASHINGTON i - Idaho Pow er Co.'s plan to finance construc tion of Brownlee Dam in Hells Canyon with 20 million dollars worth of primjssory notes was ap proved Friday by the Federal Power Commisssion. The FPC overruled objections of the National Hells Canyon Assn. and other, public power groups that the validity of the firm's li cense to build the project has been challenged in court. The association, which favors federal construction of a single high dam on the Snake River lite, also contends that Idaho Power has not received an Oregon water use permit before starting con struction of the project. New England Hot; Storms Rake Texas By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS It was hotter in northern New England than in parts of the Ari zona desert Friday. Portland, .Maine, sweltered in 94-degree midafternoon heat, while some weather stations in the desert Southwest had readings barely reaching 90 at the same time. Much of the eastern two-thirds of the nation simmered in sticky heat. But cool northerly winds kept afternoon temperatures in the 50s and 60s in the Pacific Northwest southward into Califor- nia and eastward into the plateau states and the Rockies Winds of hurricane force bat tered parts of the Texas gulf coast. Two private planes anda hangar were destroyed at Bay town, near Galveston. Winds reached 79 mph at the Galveston airport. Heavy rains flooded some streets and three underpasses at Houston. Some utility lines were knocked down in the storm area. A cloudburst and strong winds hit the Chicago area, causing flooding of basements, damage to power lines and a quick cool-off. RESERVATION BAN ASKED PORTLAND W A Klamath Indian delegation asked the state Game Commission Friday to close tht reservation to all hunters ex cept tribal members. The Weather Max. Mln Prrrlii. SAI.RM Portland ii .! SI .00 44 .13 47 trace Ml .17 S4 .04 SJ .00 ss SI Baker MedfAr (IfArd S3 rXi Rend !W Rnsetrtirs Ssn Frannsro -Los VfBreT----47J Chiario as Ml . .... ,00 72 .IS (fw Vork (Ml 7 .00 Hlllamctta Biter 1.1 feeL 1 1 NaT-;--" V- Jacket (wilk bark la camera) aad hit argue with Babler Braa. caaitraetiaa aa Hariaad road. Bath Harlandi jrua arer them belora morlag. They family have had with construc tion workers and highway offici als since the work on the Dolph Corner-Rickreall cutoff to the coast began about a month ago. Friday's flare-up began when Harland's private, road to his farm, which is crossed by the new highway, became partially blocked. In laying the roadbed, crews laid a two-foot mound of dirt over a part of Harland pri vate road. 'Done Deliberately': Harland said -this was "done deliberately" to spite him, be cause he had denied several crewmen the use of hit road tha night before. He said he couldn't drive his car over the dirt block ade. A string of barbed wire, which workers said they used as a guide to line up fencing they were placing along each side of the new right-of-way, was cut. Harland said the workers had no right to block his road with the wire. A construction foreman for Babler Bros, -construction com pany, which has the road-grading contract, ordered his men to car ry on their work of spreading the roadbed with their mammoth dirt-carrying vehicles. Father and Son Harland and his farmer son, William, said they were going to stand "on our road and you'll have to run over us to do it." The discussion grew heated at this point and mention was made about "getting a 30-30 rifle.' By then a small horde of con struction workers, state highway surveyors and officials, two city officials from Dallas - (without authority), a Polk County deputy sheriff, newspaper men and pho tographers, and a state senator (Walter Leth) began milling around the dusty scene. Maurice Juve, assistant high way division engineer, and Ar thur Duffy, resident engineer on the Rickreall job, arrived and assured Harland that the dirt piled on the road would be grad ed on either side so that he could pass over. Refused to Move While they were talking, a grader drove up and the driver attempted to slope the side. At first Harland refused to move, but finally tacked away. Meanwhile the huge earth movers continued roaring back and forth with ear-splitting noise, laying the road bed, showering rocks and dirt on the partici pants. Harland, who has fought pas sage of the new road through his large farm since the plan was Langley Answers Subpoena; Appears Before Grand Jury PORTLAND I Sheriff Terry D. Schrunk spent most of the day Friday with a giaod juryttvesti gating Portland vice conditions. -T, Dist. Atty. William Langley ap peared in answer to a subpoena but he was excused to return early next week. Also appearing Friday was Clyde C. Crosby, international representative of the Teamsters Union, who has filed a libel suit against The Oregonian and two ot its reporters. He was with the jury for about an hour. A series of copyrighted articles in this newspaperdetailing what rK?aidwe.r attempts by Seattle gambler to set up a vice ring here, touched ott the inquiry. Oev aa. William, seated aa ground rrewmembcrs aver dirt dumped threatened la let heavy machinery finally moved. (Statesmaa Photo) first announced, has bad brushes with the construction and high way crews before. His legal battle to halt the road is now before the State Supreme Court. Ha lost the first round in the lower courts. Com demnation proceedings against Harland and a dozen of his farm er neighbors, by which the high way commission offers compen sation for right-of-way land and damages to remaining farm land, are still pending in Polk County circuit court. Dallas Mill Adds $175,000 Los. Barker Statesman Newt Service DALLAS - Willamette Valley Lumber Co. has installed a new mechanical ring barker here at a cost of $175,000, it was announced by Paul Morgan, resident manager. Morgan said the machine is cap able of removing bark from 300,000 feet of logs during an eight-hour shift. Situated on the company's mill pond, it serves both the saw mill and sheathing plant. The machine is designed to handle logs five feet in diameter. First step in the firm's 1956 expan sion program, the barker installa tion is another step toward full utilization of timber and should contribute to mill safety, Morgan said. Arizona Fire Levels Woods HOLBROOK, Ariz. (JtwThe worst forest fire of the year in Arizona had destroyed an esti mated 18,100 acres of timber in the Sitgreaves national forest Fri day night and was still spreading. The forest service said-the fire burning between 30 and 40 miles south of Winslow was nine miles long and three miles wide. A report from the fire lines said wind remained turbulent and that continued high winds were ex pected. "Control depends on a drop in the winds," the report said. A forest service spokesman said good progress was being made in construction of fire lines. "With continued progress," he said, "it is anticipated that the spread of the fire will be checked by Sun day.' ' Gov. Elmo Smith removed Lang ley from jurisdiction in all crimi nal matters and ordered Atty Gen. Robert Y. Thornton to head the investigation. Thornton brought in state police and began collecting evidence. Thornton was asked by reporters Friday wheth er any witness has declined to an swer questions. He replied that only the grand jury could answer that. Sheriff Schrunk, Police Chief j James Purcell Jr., Mayor Fred i Peterson and H. G. Maison. super- intendent of state police, all have testified before the grand jury by i invitation. Langley has been the only official to decline, so he was subpoenaed. 'Paper Hanging1 Job Lands Man In Law Trouble HOUSTON. Tex. - Dalton Southern, charged with conspir ing to forge and pass a $60 check, had a novel excuse to offer fed eral judge Alien B. Hannay Fri day. "1 was. in the employment of fice trying to get a job when a man came up and offered me a job "paper hanging,' " Southern said. "I didn't know he meant passing bad checks until I had already gotten mixed up with him and couldn't get out of it." Southern received a six-month prison sentence. Deputy Lane DA, Circuit Judge Feud EUGENE A dispute over whether to submit a case to a grand jury ended Thursday when Circuit Judge Frank B. Reid dis missed the case and sharply re buked Frank Alderson, deputy; district attorney. Judge Reid called on Alderson, former Klamath County district attorney, to submit a' district at torney's information writ so that Lee G. Bawden, Springfield, could be brought to trial. Alderson said Dist. Atty. Eugene Venn wanted to submit the matter to the grand jury. Bawden, accused of obtaining i property under false pretenses, had pleaded innocent and waived a grand jury hearing. Judge Reid said that in such cases M is com mon practice to issue an informa tion writ. Alderson said be was merely presenting the district at torney's position. Judge Reid then dismissed the case. The hearing transcript showed Judge Reid told Alderson: "You know you had a little trou ble down in Klamath Falls with Judge Vanderiert and I just want to serve notice on you here and now that I am running this court and not you. If you want to start a fight like yon did down there I guess you nave already started it wc win see who is going to end it." Alderson, came here last August from Klamath Falls, had frequent verbal disputes with Circuit Judge David R. Vandenberg over legal points. Alderson resigned as Klamath district attorney last July to take the Lane County position. Reds Release U.S. Priests HONG KONG Ml TTwo Ameri can Roman Catholic priests re phone Saturday "please tell our loved ones we have been released and we are well." The two priests talked with the Associated Press by telephone. The two are the Rev. John Wil liam Clifford and the Rev. Thom as Leonard Phillips, both from San Francisco. Pieping radio an nounced Friday they are being released. The two priests are expected to reach Hong Kong within a week The priests are the first U. S. citizens to be freed by the Chi nese communists since Dr and Mrs. Homer Bradshaw, Presby terian missionaries, were turned oose last Dec. 20. Eleven U. S. citizens remain in Red Chinese jails. Father Clifford and Father Phil lips were freed exactly three years after they were arrested in Shanghai. Columbia Drops Nearly One Foot PORTLAND UP Another de cline of nearly one foot was ex pected overnight Friday as the lower Columbia River receded from its earlier peak and contin ued to ease pressure on the levees. The river dropped to 24.2 feet Friday at Vancouver, Wash., more than 30 inches below the crest recorded earlier this month. The Vancouver flood stage is 15 feet. ITB8MI NORTHWfST LFAGCB At Salem 4, Vtenalche 3 (11 ln- mngsi. At Eusrne Spokane, rain. At Levuslon S'akima, rain. PArlFIC COAST I.CAGtr At Portland San Fianciaro, rain. At Hnllvwnod 1. Los Anteles 0 At Sestlle 9. Sacremento 2 At Vini-omer San Diego, rain. AMERICAN l.KArili At CliusBo 7 Wa'hlnston I. At Kansas Cltv 0. Baltimore 1. At Detroit S Boston J At' Cleveland 2. New York 9. NATIONAL I.r.Af. I r. At New York 4. Cincinnati 3 Af Brooklyn S, Milwaukee 4 At Philadelphia S-S. fhlraso S-l. At Pittsburgh"' 12, St. Louis 1. 7 -Mile Error Claimed In U.S. H-Bomb Drop HONOICU! I The Honolulu Star-Bulletin published a story Friday saying that the air dropped hydrogen bomb at Bikini May 21 missed the target islet .of Namu by seven miles. Reports current in Washington said it missed by about two miles but the Air ForO had only non committal comment and ' the Atomic Energy Commission had nothing to say. The Star-Bulletin's story quoted "a technician based at Eniwetok but now in Honolulu. He was not otherwise identified. He was quoted as saying the May 21 blast knocked out a num ber of vital recording instruments and took place over another islet of the Bikini atoll, seven miles from the Namu bullseye. He said at least two men on Eniwetok,' ISO miles west of Biki ni, were permanently blinded by the explosion. "We were told to cover our eyes," he said'The flash was so Ex-Judge Pleads Guilty to Embezzling, Given 3 Years ROSEBURG Iff A surprise plea of guilty brought an fmmediate three-year prison sentence Friday for attorney Elmer G. Baldwin. 39- year-old ex-district judge here. Circuit Judge Carl E. Wimberly Imposed the senteneejwd rejected a probation plea from Baldwin's attorney, Ben Johnson of Eugene. Johnson said Baldwin had paid back the $3,000 involved and was re Paper Firm Plans Giant Astoria Plant PORTLAND l The Crown Zellerbach Corp., large Northwest paper manufacturer, has begun preliminary planning for l new 30 million dollar paper mill, vice president E. P. Stamm said Fri- dayt It possibly will be (orated in Astoria, Ore., near the Colum bia River mouth. Stamm said the proposed milt would have a daily capacity of 400 tons of heavy kraft paper and paper board, using; fir pulpwood as the material. He said locating the plant in Astoria would depend on integration of the company's large tree farms with state owned timber. "We have been looking for a possible site for a new mill for some time," Stamm said. "As toria is among these." . The new operation would em ploy some 300 workers in the plant and 400 loggers and other em ployes outside. Crown Zellerbach has proposed to the Clatsop Coun ty court that a co-operative sus tained yield agreement be worked out with the state board of forestry to govern sale of state-owned tim ber. Officials Move to Avert New Tieup Of Subway Trains NEW YORK LB City officials took legal action Friday night in an effort to avert a threatened new strike on New York's subway system next week. The transit authority obtained court order requiring that the re cent formed Motormen's Benevo lent Assn. show cause why it should not be enjoined from strik ing again. The MBA called Thursday's the city s transportation, it was the first citywide subway strike in the citys history. EX-STATE OFFICIAL DIES GARIBALDI (At - Donald C Ellis, 7fi, former member of the State Fish Commission, died here Wednesdav. Funeral services are to be held at Tillamook Saturday Tale of Russ Kidnaping 'Brawl' Between U.$. Washington - a story in-1 dicating that Russian spies tried to kidnap a defected Soviet air man, handcuffing him in a res taurant near the While House, blew up with a bang Friday night. The senate internal security subcommittee acknowledged that it was contused U. S. agents who put the handcuffs on airman Pe ter Pirogov, in the belief that he was about to be kidnaped and re turned to Russia. The latest version indicated that the U. S. agents, due to a "mo mentary failure to identify each other." engaged each other in something of a brawl. All the ; while, according to this version, real Russian agents who were on the scene looked on calmly. The weird incident occurred in August, 1949, in Three Musketeers bright you could see the bones and arteries through your flesh. These two guys couldn't resist the temptation to watch the bomb go off. "Their eye were all right for a while, but by supper time that night they couldn't see their hands in front of their faces." He was quoted further as say? ipg that technical personnel on Eniwetok lived "in constant ap prehension" for fear of "a radio active tidal wave if a miss should drop one of the bombs in the ocean." SAIaj. Dwight E. Druner. of Charlotte, Mich., bombardier of the H-bomb plane who is sta tioned at Kirtland AFB in Albu querque, had no comment Friday when asked about the reported seven-mile miss. Richard G. Elliott, director of information for the AKC's Santa Fe operation Aftice, which con trols both Los Almos and Sandia bases, also refused to discuss the report. h pentant. The judge said "restitution doesn't wipe out tha crime... The deterrent isn't the severity of the punishment, but the certain ty." In a surprise move Baldwin had entered hia guilty plea Friday morning in circuit court on a charge that he took $3,000 from the estate of Chester Stiltner. Baldwin originally had beta scheduled to a preliminary bear ing in district court. In his plea for probation John son said It war Baldwin's first probate case, and added, "Every oricK in nit castle has come turn' Wing down around him." . r After the sentencing Baldwin smiled weakly and shook hands with his attorney and Dist. Atty. Robert Stults. Stults had filed the information writ against him Baldwin refused comment as Sheriff Ira Byrd took him into custody. Salem Lad, 9, Becomes Real Firefighter A nine-year-old Salem boy turned fireman Friday afternoon and helped hold a garage blaze under control until the arrival of city fire equipment. Keith Stafford, 910 Broadway St , spotted a fire in a garage at 538 E Street about 4:13 D m.. firemen said. He told his mother to notify firemen and then be gan wetting down the roof of the garage with a garden hose, the fire department reported. Two women in the neighbor hood brought additional water hoses Into play. When firemen arrived only mop-up action was required, they said. Only three feet separated the garage from the home of Lucille Lane, the department said. Cause of the blaze was un known. Firemen estimated dam age to the roof of the garage at about $130. Merry Gay Christmas Arrivf-8 During June LOUISVILLE. Ky. A little Christmas that's both "Gay" and "Merry" arrived in June Thursday Merry Gay Christmas, an eight- pound, 14-nunce girl, was born to Mr. and Mrs. John Christmas. Restaurant on Connecticut Ave., two blocks from the White House. Pirogov gave his version at a secret hearing Wednesday before the Senate subcommittee, which made the testimony public Friday Pirogov with another Russian, Analole Barsov piloted a plane through the Iron Curtain. in 1948 to seek refuge in the West. Pirogov told the subcommittee that in 1949 Barsov vainly tried to talk him into going back to Rus sia. He said thai in August ot that year Barsov invited fiim to meet him in tho Three Musketters. He related that when he entered i the place there wre two pretty girls sitting on a couch and he heard one of them say "him'' in Russian apparently putting the Later, he said, four or five men jumped him in a corridor ot thelly. Victim of Fall t : t . .e ' - - JI DITH CATES Diea ef Fan lajariea Plunge From Horse Fatal To Salem Girl An 11-year-old Salem girl who was injured in a fait from a horse Thursday died at a Salem hospital about I a.m. Friday. Judith Cates, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Cates, South River Road, waa injured about 4:30 p.m. when her galloping horse collided with a rural mailbox, her family said. The girl apparently struck on the head by the horse as she fell. The back of her skull was fractured. . She was rushed to tha hospital by her mother but did not regain consciousness. Judith, who would have been sixth grader at Liberty School next year, has twin lister, Joyce. She was bora Dec, , 144, in Salem. Survivors include her parents and twin sister, another lister, Ann, and her grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. W. F. FoUU, Salem. Funeral services will be bald Monday al I; JO p.m. at First Bap tist Church under tha direction ot the Howell-Edwards funeral home. The Revt. Ben Owen and .Ken neth Tobiat will ffieiata, - - Pinball Ban Suit Tossed Out of Court PORTLAND Wl - A suit brought by a baby shop owner to block the city from enforcing its pinhall ban was dismissed Friday by Cir cuit Judge James R. Bain. The judge described as frivolous an attempt by Hazel Newhill, op erator of the Unexpected Baby Cap p. to block the antl-pinbaD or dinance approved at the May 11 primary election. The suit said the ordinance would outlaw certain mechanical and electrical chil dren's toys sold by the plaintiff. Deputy City Atty. Marian Rush ing said the ordinance would not apply to these toys. Judge Bain scheduled a hearing July 2 on another suit brought by the Amusement Service Co., seek ing a temporary Injunction against enforcement of the pinball law. As it stands, pinball games will become illegal here June It unless the ordinance Is restrained. Mayor Fred Peterson has until that date to officially proclaim passage of the antl-pinball law. Steelworkers, 3 Firms Deadlocked NEW YORK I A deadlock developod Friday between the "By? Three" steel firms and. the United Steelworkers of America in negotiations on a new contract. The impasse appeared to knock out previously expressed hopes by both union and management for an early settlement. It also raised the possibility of a strike by the 650,000 workers in the basic steel Industry when pres ent contracts expire June SO. Discounted; Agents Told restaurant, and he was slugged with a gun. Somebody put a hand cuff on one wrist, he said, but he managed to attract the attention of friends in the place, and got free More he was completely handcuffed. He said he could not be sure the assailants were Russian but that he felt he was about to be kidnaped. Reports have been current that the agents involved represented the Central Intelligence Agency nut these have . not been con firmed. rrinay mem s statement was the first disclosure that Barsov was arrested hy V. S. agents for deportation. I'p to now he ha been described as a man who re- defected'' mure or less voluntari- Rescue Units Plan to Start Search Today Sutr Air Search and Bescue) was organizing early today to srarth tor two Lrlianon mm feared missing in the Cascade Range in a light plane. The men, listed at Dr. Ralph T. Johnson and Hartley Hanson, were reported missing about 10 p.m. Friday when Johnson's wife railed Lebaaoa from Minneapolis, Minau, because sha had not re ceived a telephone call from him which had been arranged for Friday evening. uchi rune The mea took off In a Fair child 24, single-engine, high-winf monoplane, about 8 p.m. Thurs day, bound for Minneapolis, Earl W. Snyder, State Aeronautic director, said. They did not file a flight plan, but indicated to friends they would land at Red mood. Bend. BoiM er Pendleton. The plant did not land at any of these points or Burns, Snyder aid. Because of the evening takeoff, two hours before dark, and the low clouds which obscured moun tains in spots Thursday erenmg. the search will be concentrated in the area east of Lebanon. Snyder said. Low clouds are expected te hamper mountain search until about noon, however, he said. Pboae Qaery McNary Field weathermen laid they received a long-distance tele phone query a be at 4:30 pm. Thursday as to weather to the east, but the caller did not give his name or his location. He was , advised, however, to fly up the VUSUlllUHi 1,1 IAJ, UVUIIWS V poor visibility in the mountain, they said. Snyder said the plana was equip ped with radio but Johnson is a relatively Inexperienced pilot. , $100 Million Boost Gains WASHINGTON W The Sen ate Foreign Relations Committee voted, to boost President Eisee hower'i foreign aid bill another 100 million dollars Friday in the face of an expected bitter fight on the Senate floor. The vote, restoring the remain der of a JOSMTiiUlion-dolIar Prest oeniuu i una iot Asian ccooorrue development which Congress au thorized last year but which the House voted this year to repeat, brought the blU's total te 713 mil lion dollars more than the House allowed. j ;f I , . . I iA It would bring total spending authority in the bill to M.51S.O0O.. ooo although the 100 million dol lars restored Friday is not new authority. The figure also Includes 75 million dollars in military as sistance previously authorised. while It was another temporary victory for Eisenhower forces, the big fight in the Senate next week will center on the committee's ac tion in voting f-S Thursday te raise funds for foreign military aid by COO million dollars. The House slashed this program, by a billion dollars. Familiar Story Has INew 1 wist, Judge Learns BALTIMORE (AP) Two met were in police magistrate's court Friday on a familiar story of fighting over a woman. Philip Te lavia was charged with conking the other man over the head with a stick. The other man, John W. Hall, was charged with stabblnf Telavia with a paring knife. I think you're both acting like juvenile delinquents," said Mag istrate Howard Aaron. He or dered them to come back tomor row with the woman. Telavia is 81 years old. Hall is 64 years and blind. LIQl OR LICENSES SUSPENDED PORTLAND Jl Sixteen estab- lishments will lose temporarily their licenses to sell alcoholic beverages. The 'Oregon Liquor Control Commission announced Friday. Today's Statesman Church Classified . Comics Crossword Editorials Homo Panorama ..... 3..-. I Markets 11.ll Obituaries 1 1 H Radio, TnSat.).....6 I Radio, TV (Sun.) 11 11 Sports 9-10 II Star Gaier 3 I Valley News I Wirephoto Page 4 I Foreign Page Sec 7.. I . 11-14 II 6 I 1111 4. I