4 4 4 ' - V ! .4 S j t 4. J 00, 000 Fire Destroys -Sawmill East of Stayton Sawmill Complete Loss After Early Morning Blaze - lUlmua Nawi Service STAYTON - A $100,000 fire wiped out the Siegmund Lumber Company mill on Fern Ridge Road, five miles east of Stayton, early Tuesday. Cauia waa no determined. Owner Ralph Siegmund laid ill wai In order when he check ed the mill at 1:30 p. m. Siegrmind retired to hit home, one-half mile north of the mill, Smith Asks for More Data in Eugene Case EUGENE i Gov. Elmo Smith acted Tuesday to clarify a Lane County grand jury investigation clouded by charges and counter actions Involving the district attor- . ney, an attorney and a circuit , Judge. , The governor asked Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton to prepare a summary of the present status of the. investigation. , He also asked Thornton to rule on the governor's present authority in the matter and whether further legal action by the governor is necessary. Writing- Asked Monday, Lane Dist. Atty. Eugene Venn asked Ihe governor to send Thornton back here to "finish the Job" of investigating Venn's charges that Circuit Julge Fr.k Reid bad improperly formed a grand Jury panel. Venn's state ments were made In an affidavit filed in circuit court. Tuesday the governor asked Venn to put into writing his request for extending the probe. Meanwhile plans were announced for a recall campaign against Venn. Fred J. Battels, Springfield, a foe of Venn, said in a radio broadcast that a roup is being formed to circulate recall peti tions. Lsadeea Iadicted Venn has filed an affidavit in Circuit Court here asserting that Judge Reid improperly submitted the name of Bartels as a member of a grand Jury which was to study charges of misconduct by Attoney Ernest Lundeen. Lundeen u indicted by the Jury en a rharie of larceny by bailee, but did not mention Venn's charges against Reid. Bartels said he was taking an active part in the proposed recall because of accusations in Venn's affidavit against Reid. The atfi- , davit described Bartels as a "long-time, personal friend, client and aolitical associate" of the Judge. , State Permits Dormitory Bid Withdrawal The State Board of Control "Tuesday permitted George Moore and associates, Portland, to with draw iU bid of $496,560 for con struction of a new dormitory at the State School for the Deaf here. This bid was the lowest of eight received by the Board of Control last week. The Board or Control was ad vised that the bid contained an error of approximately $60,000 which would cause the contracting firm heavy financial loss. The board ruled that because of the error in the bid and Us later withdrawal, George Moore and " Associates will not be eligible to submit another bid for state con struction for a period of three years. A bid of $511,000. submitted by Jimea Hickey, Portland, waa ac cepted by the board in lieu of the kid withdrawn at xuesoay a meet inf. - Tho bid will receive final con sideration at a meeting of the Stat Emergency Board July 27. Today's Statesman Page Sec. 11-19 II .....14 II .....15....ll Classified Comic Crossword Iditwriala 4 Horn Panorama 4, I I Markets .. Obituaries Radio, TV Sports Star Gater Vsllay Newt .. Wlrephoto Page WiLBERT 15 II IS II ...... 1 4 II IMJ. II 5 I I 14 II Oisul The gjt thai krOOr and was awakened by a crack ling noise from the fire about 1:30 a. m. "I thought it was a jet plane at first," the owner-said. Siegmund telephoned Stayton Volunteer firemen who respond ed. The owner said the mill was a complete' loss. He said there was no insurance on the mill, which he valued at $100,000. The mill formerly wai known as the Golden Penny Lumber Planners Choose Powell Chairman Carkin Resignation Accepted John H. Carkin resigned Tuesday night as chairman of. Salem Planning Commission and Robert K. Powell was elected by the com mission to succeed him. Carkin, who has served at chairman 2'i years, will remain on the Chosen Robert K. Pawell. newly elected rhairmaa ef Salem Planning lemmlaslaa. Test Service Chief to Head Reed College PORTLAND U! Richard H Sullivan, executive of the Educa tional Testing Service, Princeton, N.J., was named late Tuesday as the new president of Reed College, privately endowed institution.' Sullivan, 3S, is executive vice president and treasurer of the testing service, an organization which conducts varied atudies for business bouses and education groups. It also handles entrance examinations for Princeton Uni versity. , The appointment was announced by Harold E. Sanford. president of the Reed board of trustees. Sullivarf will become the tenth president at Reed, widely known for its curriculum and high standards. He will succeed Dr. Frank L. Griffin in September. Griffin, a mathematics professor and mem ber of Reed's original faculty, was called out of retirement in Octo ber, 1954, to serve as interim president after the resignation of Dr. Duncan S. Ballantine. Sergeant Allowed To Bring Wife to State TB Hospital The Stale Board or Control Tuesday approved a request of an Army sergeant to get his Japa nese -wife transferred from a Tokyo hospital to the Oregon State Tuberculosis hospital here. The application waa filed by Sgt. Robert W. Young, Spring field. The sergeant, a veteran of five years in the Far East, had indi cated he would return to the United States if allowed to bring his wife. Governor to Take Part In Civil Defense Test Gov. Elmo Smith will take part in Friay s nstionwlde Civil De fense exercise by evacuating bis office, he said Tuesday. When he leaves his office he will go to the State Civil Defense control center here. Later he will go to Canby to observe the Emer gency Welfare Center. Start of Bean Picking Take Field Workers Off Surplus of transient field work ers, who have relied on Salem re lief agencies in recent days, li ex pected to ease before the end of tho week, Floyd McGlinn of th state employment office- said. Tuev dya .afternoon, ...w,..';,.: , Many of these people, mostly out of staters, have been caught in a squeeze between a short strawberry season and the bean season, McGlinn said. He -explained that they came to the Willam ette Valley and expected to pick enough strawberries to last until bean picking. Not only was the berry 'season short, but it wss poor. Many laborers, aaid Mc Glinn, did not 'make enough money to keep them from tha timo straw Company. Siegmund said had no, plans to rebuild it, He also operates the planing plant and dry kiln at the Keith Brown manufacturing .plant in Salem, . The company employed ap proximately 12 men at Stayton and the Jobs of another dozen at the Salem operation also will be ended when the present stock runs out, it was estimated. commission. He asked to be re lieved of the chairmanship be cause of the press of business and his feeling that the chairmanship should be rotated among members, Carkin in a letter to the commis sion said: "With the recent rapid growth of Salem, the work of the president and the chairmen of some of the committees are now becoming almost full time jobs u iney are to be none in a man ner that satisfies each of us." The new chairman will take over Aug. 1. Powell, who is execu tive vice president of Salem Fed eral Savings 4c Loan, has been serving as vice chairman of the planning body which advises the City Council and his wide powers over platting of subdivisions and issuance of special permits for use of property at variance with the city zoning code. Carkin, Salem businessman and retired state public utilities offic ial, said in his resignation from the Planning Commission, "I have nev er served with a more hard work ing and devoted group." The commission elected Stuart Compfon vice chaiunrii at - its Tuesday night meeting in City Hall. (Addllleaal eemmtttiaa news sa Page t, See. 1.) 20 Candidates After Nevada Justice, Jobs RENO, Nev. W-There are candidates hot after the two juic iest political jobs in Nevada. No, not governor or senator or such. Everybody wants to be Justice of the Peace, either in Reno or Las Vegas. The reason: Justice of the Peace William Beemer of Reno netted $53,000 from marriage fees during the last fiscal year and JP John Mendoza of Lea Vegas did almost as well. Beemer, oddly enough, has only three candidates, including a weekly newspaper publisher, op posing his bid for re-election. Mendoza isn't -even trying for the Las Vegas office again, ap parently because of the local vot ing tradition which limits the Jus tice of the Peace to a single two- year term. Scrambling for the Las Vegas job are 10 candidates, whose oc cupations range from attorney through gambling house dealer to automobile race driver. .,. Bulbar Polio Strikes Boy PORTLAND OB A Malheur County case of bulbar polio the most severe type of the disease was reported Tuesday by the State Board of Health. Dr. Harold M. Erickson, atate health officer, aaid a 15-year-old boy had contacted the disease in the sparsely populated Eastern Oregon county, which had the state's highest polio incidence in 1955. Erickson said another case was reported just across the state line in Idaho. Both were diagnosed by physicians in Nysss, Ore. Neither child had received pro tective vaccinations, Dr. Erickson reported. GENERATORS IN PLACE WALLA WALLA I - The last two of the 14 generators at the 1,050.000 kilowatt McNary Dam on the Columbia River were set in place Tuesday and will "go on the line" by the end of the year. berries were finished until bean picking starts. "It is a situation wt have in part each year, and it works quite a hardship on the relief agencies. This year may have been at little worse than in some former yean as there has been na overlapping" in picking. The Situilion is the same in Washington, from where word was received today (Tues day) to the effect that there la no shortage of help there," Median said. The employment official added that before the season is over "we'll probably be short of help again. I don't aee how we can escape tt." ' One bean grower hat asked for lot pickers for Wednesday morn 104th Year 2 McKeon Pleads Innocent Lawyer Enters Plea for Marine At Court Martial (Picture m WlrephaU Page) PARRIS ISLAND. S. C. I Marine S. Sgt. Matthew McKeon pleaded innocent Tuesday to charges arising from his orders to a recruit platoon to plunge into a black swamp in which six drowned. The defense for the tragedy thinned former drill instructor will now try to prove that when Mc Keon ordered his 74 men into tht mud and water for disciplinary reasons, he was not acting unlaw fully. , McKeon, 31, pleaded innocent to the chargea of involuntary man-, slaughter and oppression of re cruits. His pleas were entered before the General Court Martial board by bis civilian attorney, Emile Zola Berman of New York City. To charges that he had been drinking in barracks and before a recruit prior to the tragedy. Berman said, "The accused stands mute." ' Under the uniform code of mill' tary Justice, a mute pleading makes it mandatory for the law officer, in this esse Navy Capt. Irving N. Klein also of New York, to accept it as a plea of not guilty. (Add. Detail!. Pig I, See. 1.) ., Flood Renews Neuberger, Smith Debates ' Political floodgates, " opened by Mitchell's cloudburst, turned loose a new torrent of words Tuesday between Sen. Richard L. Neuber ger and Gov. Elmo Smith.. The itream ran like this: Sen. Neuberger issued a state ment In Washington, D.C.," in which he waa "amazed" to re ceive a letter from the White House stating that Gov. Smith had not yet requested the president to authorize federal assistance for Mitchell's townspeople hit by a flash flood last Friday. Says Stady Underway Gov. Smith retorted be had asked the state civil defense agen cy to investigate damage in order to determine whether it should be declared a disaster area. "If and when it appears that the area should be declared a disaster area within our powers, the people of the atate can be assured this will be done." "It seems Elmo Smith, is so busy running around playing poli tics that ha cannot seek urgently needed aid for a community in his own state ravaged by floods. I think it is a disgrace," aaid Neu berger. Holmes Joins Debate "Neuberger in my opinion is guilty of cheap politics in trying to exploit the misfortunes of the people of Mitchell and his action should be viewed by the people of Oregon in that light," answered Gov. Smith. . State Sen. Robert D. Holmes, Democratic nominee to oppose Smith for governor in November, issued a statement expressing sen timent similar to Neuberger'i. The Weather Mm. Ml. Tnr Ip. Salem , St M . Portland .. W M .00 Biker 17 43 JS Mtdfonl 101 l .00 North Bnd - 7 SI trin RoMburg M J .00 San Frinriaco 71 S3 .00 Loi Angtln ,. 7! SO .00 Chicago 70 ai trie Nw York SO OS .00 Willamette ltlva .1.1 fct. FORECAST (from U. I. waathtr urvau. McNary field, Salem): Con tinued fair and warm today and Thursday; hlih both days naar N and th low tonight, 13. Temparatura at n oi a.m. may waa 04. BAI.IW FStKCDTTATIOlf Slara SUrt f Wtalhtr Yrar Stat. 1 Tali Ytar Laat Ytar Maratal SS.S1 S.U MM Expected to Relief Rolls ing. Two growers In the Independ ence area will begin picking beans Wednesdsy and at kait that many in the Silverton area, McGlinn re ported. He did not believe, there would be a surplus by the end of this week, and bean picking fie said, wilt last well Into September, and the crop "looks good." In the meantime Salem relief agencies report they have had a heavy run from transient field workers. The Salvstion Army ssid Tuesday that aince the first of July it had taken care of 100 relief cases, with about 25 of them fam ilies and the rest single men. Bar bara B. Lovcik of Catholic Char ities said that agency had approx imately 21 persons a day. She said the fua started after July i 1 SECTIONS - 20 PAGES Senate Votes Social Security ! For Disabled Persons at 50 Newberg People Agree 'She's the Berries' -t yjy, ( II' ' A V- -"" 'A ;) L-. 7 ( ,,, '!::;. .. The Newborn- Berrlane 14 a goodwill visit to Salem Tuesday to Berry Festival Is earning aa Aag. 1 II. After making Gov. Elms Black tan" Robert Hsu-ford (left) and Berriia queen rnyuis Salens aaarket to admire seme of Polk County to Tackle Friday's Civil Defense Exercise By CHARLES IRELAND Valley Editor, Tin statesmaa DALLAS. Ore.' Polk County will play a big role Friday in the operation Alert U5 civil de fense exercise. The evacuation of Portland citi- 'Met' Cancels 56-57 Season NEW YORK (fl-The 7S-year-old Metropolitan Opera announced to night it Is cancelling Its 1956-57 season because of labor trouble. The Metropolitan Opera Assn. said the decision was made be cause of failure to reach agree ment with the American Guild of Musical Artists, representing some 230 opera singers and ballet dancers. It was not wage scales, how ever, but a fight over tne ouai role of aa opera official which led to the Opera Association' action. AGMA aaid an llth-hour pro posal to the Met, aimed at post poning the issue while a contract was signed on all other matters, had been rejected by the opera management. The new season wss slated to extend from Oct. 29 to April 20 and to be the Met'i longest in over 20 years. It would have been the 72nd season for the famed opera house. The Met was opened in 1883. and has missed only one season sincein 1S97 because of a fira in the opera house. Salem Engineer to Scan Hospital Site H. G. Boatwrlght, Salem engi neer will make a topographic sur vey of the WilsonviUe area siU for a new H4.OO0.00O state hospi tal,' it was decided Tuesday by the State Board of Control. He will start work within 10 days and will require about four months to complete the work which Is preliminary to a deci sion on just where to locate units of tho hospital. on tho SOO-acre site. . Rope SlraiTglel Boy" At Tree Qimbing Play BUTTE FALLS, Ore. I A rope he had been using to climb a tree caused tha death by strangulation of 13-year-old Warren James Ellis Monday. The boy became entangled in the rope when be fell from a tree near his home. He wis the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin G. Ellis, Butte Falls. POUNDMC 1651 The Oregon Statesman, their favorite fruit. (Stateaman sens to the Polk County Fair grounds at Rickreall will be simu lated. And all Polk County resid ents are invited to "play the part" of Portland residents, Ted West- fall, Polk County civil defense di rector, reported Tuesday. "I hope that 400 people will turn out, and .nothing would please me more than if we have 2,000," West fall said. , "Two thousand would really make us get out and scramble for food for the free picnic lunch we are going to serve to everyone who comes," Westfall added. Here's how the Civil Defense director said the Friday events will unfold: At 9:45 a.m. fire sirens in Inde pendence, Monmouth, Rickreall, Falls City and Dallas will sound a steady, three-to-five minute blast. At that time, volunteers should proceed to the Polk County Fair grounds, using the south entrance on Highway -W. Each will be registered as an evacuee. At 10 30 a.m., barricades' will close off the fairgrounds. No more will be admitted. As soon as all are registered, a police escort will accompany the caravan of cars to the Dallas City Park where the free picnic lunch will be served. That will end the I civil defense exercise. First arrivals at the fairgrounds will receive civil defense arm- Loggers Back at Work As Fire Truck Found OAKRIDGE on Operations at the Eddie Roberts logging camp east of here were almost back to normal Tuesday. A fire truck that vanished from the job Sunday was found on the edge of Oakridge, undamaged. Missing, however, was a HiO chain saw. Crews laid off Monday to hunt for the truck. State law require that such equipment be provided in logging operations. NOnTlfWCST IlAGUt At SalpRi S, Xugan 1 -At Wnatrhn 2. Yakima 4 At Trl-Uty 1, Spokan. 4 . COAST !.!Ata ' '' r At Hollywood !, Portland t At Slarramento 4, Bvattla 1 At San Piafo a, Vancouver 0 !r Inn. I Only (amea arheduttd. AMintrAN i.tAai't At New York 4. Drtrnlt At Raltlmora l-l. Chlrain 3-1 At Boiton lo-l, Kannaa City 0-0 At Waihlnflon-Clavaland, rain. NATIONAL LRAOl'R At Cincinnati 4. Brooklyn 3 At Rt. Louiil. Ptttiursh4 (1 Inn.) At rnlraffll. Philadelphia I IIS Inn I At Milwauka a. Maw York a (11 taa.1 . Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, July remind folk thst another Newberg Smith an hoaarary Berrlan, "I'nief ungeinacn. naasea at eewaiewa Pkoto). Big Role in bands and will be put to parking other cars. Westfall aaid. They also will be fed first, he add ed. The civil defense director cau tioned the public not to rush to the fairgrounds. "We don't wsnt this marred by any traffic accidents," he said. Oregon Girl In Finals for Beauty Title LONG BEACH. Calif. UH Six teen of the 43 American firla in the Miss Universe contest were chosen Tuesday night as eemi- finalists in the competition for the title "Miss United States." The reigning American beauty will be selected .Wednesday nisbt. with Miss Universe to be named Friday. Twenty-nine from foreign lands also ire vying for the Miss Universe title. Picked by the nine Judaea as the outatanding representatives ef American beauty: Maija Bertulson, Arizona; Nancy McCollum, Arkansas: Karen Keel er, Colorado: Carol Morris. Iowa: Charlene Holt, Maryland: Bar bara Sias, Michigan: Shari Lewii, Nebraska; Dolores Winfield, New Jersey; Shirley Bagwell, North Carolina: Eleanor Wood, Ohio: Maralyn Turner, Oregon; Betty Cherry, South Carolina; Stella Wilson, Tennessee; Jo Dodson. Texas; Cheryl Brown. Utah and June Svediri, Washington. Kcizer Residents Disagree Over Water By -CALVIN D. JOHNSON Staff Writer, The Statesmaa Disagreement among Keicer area residents over the proposed formation of a Kcizer Water Dis trict resulted Monday In Marion County Court members postponing a decision on whether to act a date for a general vols on the matter. About '40. residents., of the north Salem" auburb voiced Varying opin ions on the subject at Monday's final hearing in County Court. Petitions signed by more than 100 Kcizer area residents opposed to the district were presented by Eugene E. Laird. Salem attorney and spokesman for Ihe signers. The petition uked that.no elec tion be held and atated that the signers were opposed to the ex pected taxes the water district would Involve. Otherresideota, U favor tht IS, 1?34 Bill Cuts Retirement Age of Women to 62 Democrats Score Success in Vote; Measure Now Goes to Conf erence 'WASHINGTON (AP)-Thc Senate Tuesday night passed tlte social security bill carrying a trail-breaking program of benefits for disabled persons starting at age 50 and lowerinf the retirement age for women from 65 to 61 . The vote m u 90 to 0. , The measure now goes to conference with the House, whicj voted the same benefits same benefits over- wbelminglya year ago 371 to II. But there were several differences to be adjusted before the bill can go to President Eisenhower. Th final Senate product repre sented a big victory for the Sen ate Democratic leadership In the face of strong opposition from the Eisenhower administration. The Senate Finance Committee under the leadership of Sen. Byrd ID-Va). and aL the request of the administration, 'had largely! stripped from the bill both the disability and the. lowered retire ment age for women. - I'ahM Battle Senate Democratic leaders. holding up votes on the measure, fought an uphill battle in the last few weeks to find acceptable com promises to put them back la. Democrats have made it clear they expect te use the measure as prime campaign material this fall, whether the President signs or vetoes it. The Democrats had their clos est squeak an the disability bene fits, but got this back Into the bill 47-43 after a dramatie appeal for it by Sen. George (D-Gai, re tiring this year - as dean of the Senate after 34 years of service. The lowered retirement age for all women waa nailed Into the bill by an M-7 vote on an amend ment sponsored" by Sen. Kerr (D- Oklal. , . ' r Lower Payment Under this provision, working women, and wives of retired hus bands will have te accept a lower rate of payment at (2 than If they wait until 45. But. for the first time since so cial security was set up in 1933. the retirement age of S fixed at that time for both aexes will now be changed for women If the bill becomes law. Similarly, the disability bene fits section adds an entirely new concept to social security, which heretofore hss embraced only re tirement and survivor payments. Under the George amendment, persona, covered by social secur ity wno oecome permanently ana totally disabled, at age JO will be sble to receive checks averaging about 173 month as a matter of right. WASHINGTON 11 - Oregon fire men and policemen would decide for themselves whether they want eligibility for social security cover age under terms of an amendment to a Senate bill providing insur ance benefits for persons totally disabled at age 50 or elder. - The amendment was offered by Sen. Morse (D-Ore) and won speedy adoption. It was included in a proposal by Sen. George D Ga to pay benefits to the totally disabled through a special new tax. George's amendment la the most controversial one connected with the new social security bill, Dental Ginic Funds to Assure Chewing at Pen Expansion of the dental clinic at the State Penitentiary was ap proved by tho State Board, at a cost of $3,500. Warden Clarence T. Gladden told the board "we are way be hind in our dental work and the alterations will assist us a great deal. We want to provide enough dental aervice to - enable the pri soners to masticate their food." District Plan district, brought up such benefits as decreased fire insurance pre miums and Increased fire protec tion. On the other band one property owner stressed the need for a sewage and drainage district However, Gilbert Groff, member of the engineering firm hired to mske preliminary plana for the district, pointed out that H would be' poor economy to install a sew sge system before an adequate water district. Tbe hearing closed with a com ment by County Judge Rex Hart ley that the matter required addi tional atudy before a possible vot ing date could be set. Hartley itated the court would have to comply with an earlier petition to hold art election if circumstances revealed that a water district would benefit majority of tbe raiideoU. mm FRICI U No. m Second Youth Dnnvns; Heat To Continue A California visitor, the second out-of-state youth in two daya to down in mid-Willamette valley waters, lost his lite Tuesday in Skookum Lake, near Newberg. as the tsmperature climbed to 03 degrees. ., No relief from the beat was la sight. The State Forestry De partment forecast predicted con tinued warm and dry, In the in terior through Thursday, with continued risk of dry lightning la the Southern Cascades spreading northward. Feaad im Deep Water - The California youth, identified by slat police aa Fred Herbert bmery. if, of San Lorenzo drowned about 1:40 p.m. in the small lake between Newberg and sh. ram wnue swimming with lrtends. Bill and Clement Dold, both of Berkeley. Calif., reported that Emery stayed on the lake with a boat while they went to the store In another boat to get towels, and when they next looked in his di rection, he had disappeared, Staid Policeman James A. Hamer aaid. The body waa found about 4 p.m. In about 23 feet of water. It waa recovered by Newberg volun' teer firemen with grappling hooks.". and taken to Howell-Edwards Fu neral Home. ...... .' The victim leaves parents. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Emery, and a sister, all in San Lorenzo. , " Loggia Stopped . . Meanwhile. Marion County aherv iff 'a deputies and Jefferson resi dents failed again Tuesday to find the body of la-year-old William Parks of Newport. Ark., wne drowned Monday beneath the Saa tlam River bridge at Jefferson. All logging operations in tbe Daw troit area were closed .down by noon because of the fire danger in the low humidity for the second straight day. rangers aaid. But oniy about a half dozen for est fires on state-protected lands were reported Tuesday throughout Oregon, according to the Salem. dispatcher. All were out or under control Tuesday night, be said. . - Salem's high temperature of OS was reached about 4 p. m., Mo Nary Field weathermen said. The mercury touched M about 1:30 p. m. and stayed above the mark until almost 4:30 p. m., they aaid.; Belter Elsewhere :'. - Tbe same temperature wu prH dieted for today and Thursday. Higher temperatures Tuesday ln" Oregon were 109 at Medford, and: n at The Dalles. , .. , : ' Humidity meanwhile dropped to 34 In Willamette Valley. at Med-' ford, Ig at Eugene and Roseburf and 10 at Redmond. Associated Press reported, . Smoke Jumpers who dropped in to the Rogue River National ForC est east of Medford Monday had a "sleeper' blaze under control Tuesday, the wire aervice aaid. Nine firea, moit of them caused by lightning, have been reported in that area In the past few days, and 23 have occurred in Fremont National Forest In Southern Ore gon since July 1, it added. Truck Driver Dies In Flaming Wreck PENDLETON'. Ore. uit A 23-year-old Walla Walla truck driver. Edward Dean Baney, died in hia flaming vehicle early Tuesday when it went out of control and crashed into a tree about 10 milet northeast of hers. ' SOLDI Statesman want-ads brought fast action with this 3 day ad , . . Mice f raatlr radnere. kdrm., aitra kdraa. hi Is. kaun't., am. na.. frol. Ill.m wll.aM da. am JrtrVraaa. Ph. ui tat pal. eaawad. paaaaaataa. Call 4-6811 to have your Problems Solved Quickly and Economically.