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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1956)
45 Dead, 21 Hurt in Military Passenger Plane Crasli Anti-Reds Capture Hungary Airliner in Airborne Battle Plotters Crash-Land Plane on U.S. Airfield in Germany t 1NG0LSTADT. Germany (1 Bevci aau-Cemmanlati eaptared a Reel Haagariaa alrllaer ia a wild flKht with faaa aaa1 ire reds high rrr Huagary Friday aad flew U Weil Germany. '' Their long plotted break for freedom wai led by a Huagarlaa World War II pllet. He aelied the airllaer'i eoatrolf at guapoiat aad brought the plaae to a eraih laadlag at a U.S. air Held arar here. Evea after the plaae (kidded to a baH there were brawla betweea the. aatl-Cemmaalttf aad the who waated to retara to Huagary. Cermaa police laid It persons, Including passeagera and Comma alst crewmen, were Injured, one aerlously. "Boaa! Adraauer! Cermaajr! fried the tint of the triumphant plottrri to leap from the plaae. Hit fare wai bloody. The dramatic itory of the flight to the Wrot wai told Friday might by aae of the aevea. He la Joarph Jakaby, IS, a Budapeat student. Jakaby aald the coup had beea planned tor a long time. The plot ters decided they waated to go to Wett Germany. . Their chance came Friday. The tevra. one a young woman,, boarded the twin-engine airliner la Budapeat. They all carried iroa rodi , The former pilot, Identified only ai "the lieutenant," aloe had a gua. The flight was bound for Sum bathely, provincial capital feulb west of Budapest. . Jakaby said Jest before they' boardrd the plane they were tipped that a Communist secret police officer was amoag the pas sengers. Thus they had to suspect everyone. "When we were aear the to a of Gyer," Jakaby related, "(he lleuteaant drew his gua and hit the man sitting beside him ea the bead. "That was the signal tor us. All of us drew our iron rods aad hit aU the people who did not be long to us oa the head. You have to realize we bad to suspect each of them of being a secret police man." The secret policeman drew his pistol. Before he could fire, the ringleader knocked him dowa. "While all this went an," Jaka by continued, "the Red pilot, who apparently aotlced what had hap pened, flew loops, turning every thing la the plaae upside dowa More passengers were Injured." The. lleuteaant . managed to break Into the cockpit, forced the crew at gunpoint to withdraw to the passenger department, and took over the controls." Tbe pilot landed the plaae at the U.S. Air Force's Maaching field, which still Is under eoa- structloa. Among those la the Ingolstadt bospllal was the secret police man. He was suffering from head injuries. () (Story in Column 4) ElMltl TOUNDBD 1651 lOAth Yaar 2 HCTIONS-14 PACES Thw Oregon Iteteamsn, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, July 14, 1934 MICI S No. 109 TO lira A "constitution party" is to be formed in this state at a meeting called for Portland on August 4th. The advance caucus named Dean K. Child of Portland chairman and Mrs. Edith Phetteplace of Eugene v ce chairman. .The announced ob jective is to work for the nomina tion of a "true conservative" for President. Mrs. Phetteplace, whose frequent contributions to the letters column of the Register Guard have proven her qualifica tions as a "true conservative" in an interview with that newspaper explained some of the purposes of the new party. Vie want a return to constitutional government," she said. In her view "the liberals have taken aver both parties. She added: "We're a group who are sick and tired of buying destruction through financial support of the United Na tions, and through high taxes to sup port foreign fov.rnm.nta. We're soiling out our sovereignty that way. Now I confess to a secret envy of the "true conservatives." It must bo very satisfying to enter tain firm philosophy whether in politic or religion . . . or aat, When you know you have the revealed gospel you are embar rassed by no doubts, forced to no equivocations. You can pity those (Continued oa editorial pal. Smileroo Ball To Fete Q ueen Soviet Asks U.S. to Join European Atomic Pool ( By STANLEY JOHNSON MOSCOW I The Soviet Union proposed Friday a Europe-wideJ organization to control peaceful uses of atomic energy including Com munist and non-Communist nations. Both the United States and the Soviet Union would belong. The organization would replace a West European oreaniiatlon now being developed, known as Kuratom. This is to pool the atomic resources 01 i ranee, west oer many, Italy, The Netherlands. Belgium and Luxembourg. The Soviet Union charged that Euratom would be a tool of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza tion, make more permanent the division of Germany, and enable the Germans eventually to pro duce atomic weapons. The Soviet Union disclosed its proposals in a note to the embas sies of the United States, Britain, France and so-called "neutral" nations, including Switzerland and Austria. The proposal is reminiscent of the Soviet call during the Big Four summit conference in July ",5 for a general European treaty on collective security to supplant NATO. Russia has agreed with the United States and other countries to set up under United Nations auspices an international agency for the peaceful development of atomic energy. An M-nation con ference will meet in New York in September to consider a charter. In addition, Communist coun-, tries announced last March their own atomic organization the United Institute of Nuclear Re search. Euratom is in the treaty drafting-phase. The French national assembly this week approved French participation. The plan. was approved in principle by the six governments in May. Safety Chief - '""" C-118 in Jersey SUteenua News Service DALLAS A newly crowned queen will be honored at the Smileroo Queen's Ball Saturday night at Dallas Armory. The dance, sponsored by Tank Co. 90 mm.), Oregon National Guard and the Guardcttes, will be honored by the presence of the Smileroo Queen, her princesses and their escorts. Music will be provided by the 2341 h Army band. Early evening activities preceding the dance will be the Fun Parade on Main Street and the coronation ceremony at the junior high school field. The Saturday events are pre liminary to the main Smileroo celebration, scheduled July 27-29. Hoffman on Ike's List of U.N.JDelcgatcs GETTYSBURG. Pa. I Pres ident Eisenhower, Ignoring a pro test by Sen. McCarthy iR-Wisi, Friday picked industrialist Paul Swamp Plane Crashes On Take-Off for Trip to England FT. D1X, N.J. Of) A military air transport plane with M Eu rope-bound servicemen and civil ians aboard crashed Friday in a pine-wooded swamp during a rain and hail storm. Forty-five persons Including' two women and two children- were killed and 21 injured, An airman aboard, one of the least injured, said the giant C-111 fiit "an air pocket" as it took off from nearby McGuire Air Force Base runway and plummet ed: to the ground. . The four-engine craft split as landed on its belly but did not burn. Parts of the wreckage were scattered over a half mile area of brush and trees, some of which were 100 feet high. The Douglas Liftmaster, head ing for Burtonwood, England, was taking servicemen and military Dependents to foreign poets. It carried a crew of 10, and its pas sengers included 41 enlisted men, nine officers, and six civilians. An Army doctor, Lt. Col. Pedro M. fouia, blamed most of the deatfls on fractures. He said most of the passengers had not releas ed themselves from safety belts and - the impact left them dead or injured, still in their chairs. Only six were thrown clear. Badly Injured Some of the survivors were so badly injured that they are not expected to live through the night, according to Maj. Huly Bray, in formation services officer at the base. Only one member of the crew Uie flight engineer sur vived. Tbe big craft took off about 4 p.m. during a storm which cov ered most of south Jersey. A vio lent -ireax windstorm at Camden, anoui 20 miles southwest of here, had wrecked a diner, pushed around parked cars and shattered plate glass windows an hour and a half earlier. The first word of the crash came when military police saw Pvt. Thomas F. Kiley of Lawrence. Mass., a passenger, wandering down a road a mile from the crash scene. He was among the injured First Fatal Crash The Military Air Transport Service said in Washington Fri day's crash of a C118, known as the Douglas Liftmaster, was the first fatal accident suffered in five years of operating such craft. Bulldozers were used to clear a path to the wreckage for doc tors and nurses. Troops cut pines and set them director for the past seven years, mattress-like fashion along a announced by Gov. Elmo ,ana. u,u oauaozea tnrougn the Fid EimgjiujDffs CeimtiiroD r-egon Mitchell Isolated, No Everywhere Carl Goes, the Lamb's Sure to Go James R. Banks, Oregon's new state traffic safety director. Capt. Lansing Gets New Job; Aide Promoted James R. Bank! ' was named Friday as director of the traffic safety division of the motor ve hicle department to succeed Capt. Walter Lansing. Appointment of Banks, assistant Venetian Blind Proves Vulnerable fi Hoffman at a mpmher nf th'c:ti. ...i.- -t- j WOOdS, V , j , .. ' '. .. .. ,i,l"'" niso namra mm execu Ameriran delegation to the U.N. .., , . u Ceneral Assemhlv. tlVf Tctr of th M Eisenhower sent the nomination 'organized Oregon Traffic Safety of Hoffman and other delegation , Commission. mcmorr, io ine arna.e mr con- wmsmg, veteran slate police of- DKS MOINES -A Dps Moines m:-: y?J"Zr :,:r':Z "cer on PM -foment .. woman complained to police Fr Hoffman has been making traffic safety coordinator, will take that a, she r- men., which "could on.y be made charge of . revised and expanded b-V '"?Lu ?, Commun,,!il-i. , ,t",e Plic ,ra,nln Prog"". room window and between slats of He called Hoffman a huckster I The new director has been with'a Venetian blind and pinched her. of one of the major themes of the traflic safety division since She told officers the hand and arm the Communist Party line, that , 19,7 when he graduated from the disappeared when she screamed the fight against Communism .is University of Oregon. He has! destroying our civil liberties." j served as consultant for the prcsi- CYPRIOTS REJECT PLAV Hoffman is chairman nf the dent's committee nn hichwav safe. Kirncii r..r... i t. . 'I 1 - I-...J.U-I. . . . -. . ... ' ....,,, v.ju mi uim PORTLAND I Multnomah ' ""a i auiiwoaaer - racxaro. iy in i!, i5i and ihso. Cypriot leaders rejected Friday County Dist. Atty. William M. I Corp. In 192 he headed Citizens Unsing drew high praise from1 Britain's bid for cooperation in Langley and Portland Police Chief , "J Eisenhower In the Truman Cov Snil(h for hi, long .j in Cyprus. They insisfed they first James Purcell Jr., Friday de-'. administration he was head of the, lra(ic faMy and nolpd tha( his must have guarantees of the right ... .... . ,....... iL.ir.r(innmil f nnnrri inn AHmimctra. , . . . ... .... ... ... rlinea to testily voiuniaruy in me - long experience) wouia oe retained to oecine if netner thev want to Langley Silent, Purcell Answers Jury's -Subpoena, "1" ' ' ' 3 Casualties Reported South Oregon Lightning. Hail Storm , Cuts Power Lines, Damages Crops BEND, Ore. (APKA flash flood roared out of the. taint Into the Central Oregon town of Mitchell Friday night and cicsrroyea m mwciings, dui mere apparently were no cas ualties, state police reported. . State police said one of its patrol ran happened to be in the town at the time and, although radio communication waa difficult, the patrolman had man- FRUiTLAND Oat saeata ago Dick and Carl loMas. 5S55 Fraltlind Hi, received a fear-day-eld lasab for a awt. Now, everywhere that Dick sad Carl go, the lasnb Is sura to g alaw. Carl is shown wltk "Saaie" la the John Derrick raspberry patch Fraitlaad Rd. Botk keys pick Berries there. Tag-along Susie- alwayccompaaies taesa a ma joa. tstaieimaa rnote.) Age Limit for Polio Scrum 17 Teenagers aged to get out one message say lnf there were no casualties. No casualties were reported In the two calls for help that the town got out ever a Forest Service telephone line, and there were In dications that the 400 residents had warning of the flood and made their way to safety. Cloudbursts, however, cut the roads leading Into Mitchell, locat ed U miles northeast of Bend on highway 26, and state police could not learn the situation in the tows in the first hours after the flood struck. Mitchell, a lumber and ranch town, is located on the canyon of Bridge Creek, a stream running out of the Ochoce Mountains en Its way to the John Day River. Neted River Rise A truck driver who came over highway shortly before it was cut said workers at a lumber mill near Mitchell noted Bridge Creek starting to rise and quit early. heading (or their homes at Mitch ell. - Later that stream rose In a ram page and tore out bridge near tbe null, five miles west of town. All normal communications were knocked eut, and apparently the only remaining link with the town was the Forest Service line. After the two early calls for help, how ever, no further word was beard. Families Hi State police' said those calls re- rani or and Inrv invt ioal Inn ' Hon lor a time, of vice in Portland. A named to the U.N. dele- Chief Purcell then was sub- Ration was Senate Republican nnonaed and went before the iurv. "T William F. Knowland of Tha inrv vie ivi Inrtiralinri f , California on the traffic safety commission. join the Island colony with Greece. A saWy device invented by a' The other three nominees to the I delegation were the American am ' bassadnr to U.N., Henry Cahol Son. Humphrey (D- n i j I Minn! ann r tivnrin II Hnnlrnp of Seattle men had conspired with 'president of the American Red ',ni man for night driving on some Portlands to set up a vice .Cross and former ambassador to - Argenuna ano naiy. rive aner- - K.V" .. u , nates also were named. 1 he-Month Club Jury thatbr- Thit .. . r.inv rtav thoi tnni 1 gnnwation announcea rnoay in the President confined to his farm j U Angeles. Calif home and sent Vice President ! Tnc inventor is Ralph K. Dens- Nixon from flying up from Wash' ington. ' whether it would subpoena Lang- ley. ' TKa nrnVui twifjin June S aflprl urinal artirles in the Portland' I-odge Jr., jninn' ana ring In Portland. Salem Man's Night Driving Safety Device Wins 'Gadget-of-thc-Month' Designation WILBERT "Mem, cent ewickl The met ejuite It still alive hut Vm4 paif a evtl Tlie Weather Max. Mln. Prerlp. Salrm .11 M .(HI Portland 1 t M Rakar :i 6 .IKI Mrdfnrd S2 0 M Norm Bend S4 S4 .no Roarhurf 71 to .M San rranrlaro 1 SI .no Ixa Anailaa Ml It M Chlraso ....... S Nrw VnrK 71 .13 Wlllimalle Hlvr -17 ft. rORITC AST itrom U S. wathr bu reau. Mi Nnry .drill, Halrmi: Partly rlouriy Saturday and Sun day xrpt Inr night and morning rloudlnrxR. Llttlt thanaa In trmtwr- atura wltrt tha high Salurriay nar 7S and the low Saturday night nrar M Trmreraturt at II 01 am, today was to SAI.rSf raMIPtTATION pir piart er wwnrr itar pet, ! mi u.w u I Icy." flow, 1260 N. 24th St., and his In vent ion turns on an auto's fog light immediately and automati cally in case nf headlight failure. Dcnslow said the idea came to him alter a close call eight years ago on a mountain road in Colo rado. A thinking man, he had prat I iced turning on his fog light i quickly in the dark, and It wati this loresight that "saved myj nerk" in that emergency, he said. Denslow perfected the equipment and installed it on his own car; within a year, 1 he, said., lt was. patented four years aco and sub-' muted lo Gadget-Of-The-Month Club last year. The club will sub mit the item to manufacturers for' bids. . Denslow hns 'been salesman fur II. L. Stiff Furniture Co. since, Shortly alter moving to r.aiem Raph K, n,,,,!,,,, Salrm sales nine years ago because he and his. man and honv. mechanic. he imca me wiiiamctte vui-i has invented aa , w Eligibility Increased . to 29 Another 200.000 persons became eligible for polio Inoculations Friday when the Oregon State Board of Health voted to raise the liimt for commercial vaccine ti 29. . At the rasne time the board, holding an all-day meeting in Salem, authorized Slate Health Officer Harold M. Erirkson, with- the advice of the Polio Advisory Committee to remove the limit altogether or reduce it, depending on the vac cine supply. Announcement of the new policy signaled a renewed effort by the board doctors and public officials lo get eligible persons Inoculated before the polio season begins. - Leading off the campaign was Gov. Elmo Smith who recom mended parents "take advantage of the available supply of vaccine well before the height of the polio season so that as many children as possible can be vaccinated be fore Sept. 1." "Oregon has an adequate supply of Salk vaccine on hand now and can get additional supplies if needed. Rough estimates show that only about 300,000 Oregonians have received one or more shots out of the 577.905 persons thai are at present eligible," the governor said. Marion County's heslth officer. Dr. Willard Stone, said he was unable to estimate just how many county residents were affected by the new ruling. Increased quantities nf the vac cine coupled with a backlog of un used supplies accounted, for the raised age limit, health officials said. Oregon citizens are using only about one-fourth of the tax-purchased and commercial vaccine available, officials said. This could result in a transfer of Oregon's allotment nf, vaccine to other slates where the demand is great er, or, within the stale. NORTHWEST LEACt'K At Eugtna 0-3. Salem . At Law Hem t, Wrnatchte 10. At Spokane s, Yakima S. PACIFIC COAST I.KAGl'C At Portland 10, Ban Dlrgo T. At Lot Angrlra S. Srattla 1 At San franclftco II. Hollywood t. At Vancouvar t-11, Sacramento 1-1. AMERICAN I.RAOUI At With niton li. Detro t 11. At Baltimore 1. Kanaaa City 9. At Nrw York 10. Ckveland t. At Boiton I, Chicago 4. NATIONAL I.RACt'R At Cincinnati 4. Philadelphia S. At Milwaukee, S-t. Brooklyn t-. At Chicago 1, Plttaburgh I. At SI. Loull '7. New York S. safety light. He does M per cent of his home repairs, including electrical, plumbing and painting, and serv (Ires his own car, with about $!. 200 investment In hand precision tools, he said, but estimates a 5200 list would be more prsctical for the home handyman. A former auto dealer and war-time welding instructor in Nebraska, "I enjoy having possessions in top shape both from the standpoint of safely' ana appearance, me -ycar-oia South Dakota native says. "My father insisted that we learn at least two trades." he adds. His are selling and welding. "He was a railroad man and a mechanic from the word go' and he fell it was very, important for us lo, learn to do something with our hands." Denslow 's Interests, however, extend far beyond the home and the store He is a member of the First Methodist Church board and Toastmasters International,' and spends quite a bit of his little spare time at fishing, color photo graphy and "a little pheasant and durk" hunting. He also is working on "a couple' automotive, n,h''r '"" which may be patent I able, he taia. Iii Raid Fined, 6 Deny Guilt lutfimaa News Service ALBANY Seventeen teen-agers, arrested in a dance hall liquor raid, Friday drew fines of $30 each and a stern courtroom lecture. Six other young people pleaded innocent to charges that they were drinking beer in cars parked out side Cottonwoods dance -hall, be tween Albany and Lebanon. " Judge Wendell Tompkins told (he guilty teen-agers that he could have sent them to jail. He said the fines were imposed mostly to discourage any more drinking by those involved, rather than as punishment. The pleas were heard in Linn County District Court. Ranging from 15 to 19 years old, the group included girls and boys from Salem, Sihtrton, Wood burn, Staytnn, Jrflersitn, Lebanon, Albany and other cities. They were attending a danre where Fata Domino's orchestra was playing. Domino was involved in a dance hall" "rock 'n roll" riot at San Jose, Calif., Sunday. All of the arrests here were made In parking srra outside the hall. Bid Rejection To Delay 12th Street Project Delay In comoletion of the 12th Street widening project was IndV rated Friday la action of the State Highway Commission In rejecting bids for widening of a bridge ever Shelton Ditch on the route. G. S. Ptxm, head of the high way department's bridge division. am uie ww era oy concrete Struo hires. Inc. of Portland for Ul.ttsg waa about 15 per cent above es timates, raxon aaid the project would be readvertiaed for opening at the August meeting of the commission. Just how much of a complication for the project would be caused waa not determined, but City En gineer 4. Harold Davis said It would produce bottleneck. Much of the widening work ea llth between Union Street and the south city limits has already been . completed, but paving ami curb separation of the Southern Pacific Railroad lines remains. ' Another part of the 12th Street Project was advanced when the commission awarded a lis.aofl ported a number of families home- contract to Trowbridge Electric leu. The police aiked residents ofi of Roteburg for installation of iramc signals at Its Intersection with Center, Marion, State, Capi tol and Union streets. Keizer Sand and Gravel Ca.. Salem, won a $23,941 contract for roadside improvement of the Port land-Salem Expressway in Mult nomah. Clackamas and Washinsv too counties. , Today's Statesman age Church 7.. Classified 11-13 . Comes the Dawn .4... Comics ;..14... Crossword ..I... Editorials L.4... Home Panorama . 6 ... markets .... Obituaries Radio, TV Sports Star Gaier Valley News .. ...II . a.. 910. 6.. 3.. Wirephore Psge..l4.., Sec. Z ii II n . i .ii . i . i the nearest towns te start blan kets toward Mitchell, and notified the Red Cross, which started prep arations for relief of the town. The bridge washout cut the town off from communities te the west. and slides blocked all ether reads, the ' police said their radio cars had reported. Cloudbursts struck elsewhere In Central Orejjon, cutting .several roads in the mountains. I raeaeratlve Nights Summer 'storms of violent rain. hail snd lightning have swept Cen tral Oregon five consecutive nights. There have been repeated flash floods, but most have struck in the unpopulated forests snd sagebrush hills of this high coun try A number of roads have .been washed out, however, and one damaged some buildings at Ml. Vernon, southeast of Mitchell, ear lier in the week.' Merv Jenkins, a reporter for the Central Oregonian at Prineville. reached the bridge washout snd said debris had been washed SO feet high on the canyon wall there, five miles west of Mitchell., Read Plied High "I found a child's teddy hear, a bicycle tire and other debris. You can't imagine how the high way looks. It's 'piled with logs, parts of houses and furniture snd millions of pieces of debris," he said in a phone call from a high way lodge near the washout. He said the torrent had lorn out 200 feet of highway there. He said the creek obviously had dropped greatly from its crest, but still was swollen far above normal level. End Near for Highway Dip Sutleaawa News Serrtee . AMITY - "Whlteson Dip". hazardous stretch of highway W-W two miles north of Amity, will soon be eliminated. The State Highway Commission announced Friday that it will let a contract In August for replacing 11 miles of road In the area at a cost of approximately I1M.0OO. ' Improvement of "Whlteson Dip", scene of msny accidents, has beea a longtime project of Amity Com mercial Club. The landmark takes Hi name from a dip In the highway as it snakes Into the community of Whiteson. Heavy Bones, Hospitalize Man Partly Cloudy Skies Likely Little change in temperature and partly cloudy skies are expected in the Salem area today, according to the McNary Field weather fore casters. Some night and morning cloudi ness is predicted for both today and Saturday. High today will prob ably be near 78 apd the low tonight near 54 . Northern Oregon coastnl arras are expected to receive night and morning low clotids with partial clearing this afternoon. Predicted hitfh tndnv la AO In fi.Y thp low at niuht ui in Riu'h inrl will 1 damaged heavily probably be westerly 10 to 20 miles ' I'pwards nf 50 fires were p,,r hour I touched off in the Soulern Ore- Fire danger in western and ren- gon forests. Foresters said none tral Oregon is expected lo be mod- was out of control, crate today and Sunday. Humidities! The lightning started more than above 40 pei cent are predicted for 100 forest and range-fires in Ccn Ihe west side of the Cascades Con- town. I slorated on the canyon nf tinuing thunder storms are due in ed 'i miles northeast of Bend on southwest Oregon. 1 (Story also ea Tage Z, Sec. 1.) A barrel of bones sent a Salem man to the hospital Friday. John tamentind. 1142 Kdgewater Its !St., was taken to Salem Memorial Hospital by Willamette Ambulance One flash flood Thursday night 1 Service about 10 a.m. Friday when derailed a I'nion Pacific freight he collapsed after lifting a barrel tram at Cobb Junction, 10 miles of bones St the Salem Rendering west of Welser, Idaho. ' . I Company. The rushing waters struck the Cameniind waa treated for a middle of the train, overturning bk Injury and released Friday several cars. No one was hurt, j evening. Tralfic was delayed several hours, ! hut later got hack to normal. I HORSE ERA VANISHING Kuhatatlea Out FT. LAV. TON, Wash. A Southern Oregon was hit hard remnant of the Army's horse and by lightning. One bolt knocked out I mule era is vanishing t this 8e a substation nf the California Ore-lattle base. Fifty-year-old Stables gon Power Co. in the Grants Pass I which onee housed horse and area. Manager W. J. Moyer said mules are oeing . torn town lo it would have to be rebuilt com- make way for 44 family units. nlelelv I About 125 transformers were knocked nut in tha ares north and west of Grants Pass. Nearly an inch of rain and hail ripped down on orchards around Ihe fruit center of Medford. Some orchardists aaid their crops were Mothrly Care - - Flit response obtained with this Statesman Want Ad . NKr.D ainthrrlT care fee kevt, I a S, vour home, rnglewe4 liltt, m. !- alter t a aa. Want-Ads The heart -beat of our fclty" Solve many prob lems daily. i'