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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1956)
1 ' r 2-(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Mon., Sept. 24, '58 Assassin's Bullets Removed -From Nicaragua!! President By LUIS P, NOU PANAMA. Se rt. U (AV-Preal dent Anastasio Somour of Nicar agua waa flown here today and operated on for . aeriou bullet . wounds Inflicted by an assassin. ' Hit condition afterward was de scribed as satisfactory, t . - Four aurieons performed three separate operations 1.. turn at the V. 8. government's Gorgas Hospi tal at Ancon in the Canal Zone. - Somoza'e right leg had been partly paralysed by a bullet in his spine. . . . r . Another bullet was lodged In the muscle of his right shoulder, Ha waa on the operating table ' tour sours ana JO uinutes. . A bulletin ' issued by the Canal Zona Health Bureau immediately after the operationa aaid it was, difficult to tell now whether So moza: would regain use of his ; right lcg. , y Ballets Renewed Bullets were removed from his spinal column and from his thigh. It was not considered necessary to remove the bullet in his shoul der. J. Police arrested about 300 per sons today in a search for possi ble accomplices of the man who tried to kill Somota. Among those arrested for ques tioning are Pedro Joaquin Cham orro, editor of me oppoaitioi aauy La Pxensa, and Diego Manual Chamorro, editor of a political weekly. v Fedra Joaouln Chamorro waa convicted in 1954 of complicity la a plat to assassinate Somoxa, a chsrn he denied. Twt political leaders also were caught In the police roundup. They are Gen. Emiliane Chamorro. heal : of the Conservative party who waa president of Nicaragua befor Somoxa rose to power, and Enoc-Aguado. Aguado has been trying to organise an Independent Ike, Mamie Given Books By Minister WASHINGTON, Sept 'u President and Mrs. Eisenhower attended services at the National Presbyterian church today and heard the Rev. Edward L. R. El aon pronounce religion one of the main, bulwark against commu nism. ' At the close of the services, Dr. Elson presented the President and hit wife each with a book. The pastor told reporters the volume he gave to Eisenhower was a diary. "The Big V edited by B. L Wiley, professor of history at Emory University. - He de scribed Wiley as a leading author ity en the "War Between the ' States.!' J. ; Part of the action In the book takes place near the Gettysburg, Pa., farm of the Eisenhowers. Dr. ' Elson said, and that is the reason he wanted the President to have it Dr. Elson gave v. Eisenhower a copy of his own book. "America 'a Spiritual Recovery." which he said was originally dedicated to Eisen hower. He said he wrote in an Inscription to the effect that it should also be dedicated to her. 1 0,000 Delegates Expected At Christian Church Meet DES MOINES. Sept. 23 UM)ne of the nation's largest annual church gatherings, the Interna. - tional Convention Assembly of Disciples of Christ (Christian Churches) opens here Friday with mora than 1.000 delegates sched uled to consider topics ranging from church union to racial bar ; Tiers,,' - ,. The assembly is a mass meet ing of representatives from local Christian Churches in the United States and Canada. There now arc mora than 1,000 such Disciples of Christ Churches with nearly two million members.- Local churches are autonomous but cooperate in national Disciple programn. 1 - "Tie greatness of our assembly may prove to be our deeper com mitment to a program of united life and action ; for the future" says Dr. Riley B. Montgomery, Lexington, Ky., president .' the Indianapolis, Ind., executive sec retary of the convention, aays the Des Kloines assembly to be held in Vftersns Memorial Auditorium which will aeat up to 15.000 per-sons--will be the largest ever held by the church. It will end Oct I. Assembly Advisory The assembly will hear reports from' 11 national Disciple agencies and pans on significant resolutions and recommendations. It la an ad visory body but is the most In clusive of all disciple meetings. Resolutions to be considered al ready have been revieved by the Committee on Recommendations, . a group of approximately 200 rep resentatives elected by state con ventions. ' H.;h on the list is one which atks the assembly to reaffirm ac tion taken at Buffalo. N.Y. in 1M7 authorized the Disciples' Council on Christian Unity to continue to explore possibilities of sharing in the movement toward union of the CopRrr-itinnal Christian and the 1 v ' ual and Reformed Chii! , i,p.s. .' 0:'t resolutions to be present el to the assembly call on the r nrri'r.pnt to "continue patiently i e t .irrh for disarmament," op- 0 universal military service, 1 r rubers of the church to look j "encmirasing the' develop- ; of nr ; !iborhoods where per- r y live without racial bar " f d nrze airport for ade- ! f .-"King of , the public ' rWffrrrallnn " I rentsition on P'ib ., t .us ty t'sa De Liberal party to oppose Somoxa's bid for re-election. Oilier Enemies Luis Somota, the president's son told a news conference authorities art investigating the possibility that other enemies of his father plotted with the man who wound ed the president at a political ral ly in Leon shortly before Friday midnignt. . The assassin, Rioberto Lopes Czechs Flee To West in Stolen Plane PASSAU. Germany, Sept. t A young Czech air force lieu tenant and a mechanic knocked out a Communist guard todsy and fled in a stolen air force plane to West Germany. They landed their small, slight ly damaged trainer in a meadow near the Bavarian town of Vil shofen, about a 120-mile flight, walked to a farmer's bouse, tele phoned police and asked for politi cal asylum. Their '.'freedom flight" was the fourth such escape from behind the Iron Curtain in a little over two months.. , Police brought them here for questioning and planned to turn them over to U. S. agents at Nuernberg for further interroga tion. They gave their names as Lt. Vladimir Viral. 22, and Ludo vic Sebela, 24, who aaid he recent ly had been - released from the Czech air force after a term of service aa a mechanic. The two men told police they "couldn't atand living conditions" in ' Communist Czechoslovakia. where they said they didn't have the ' freedom they wanted. The lieutenant, a pilot, said his air force career had caused a rift and separation from his wife. He has no children. Sebela. nnmarr'-d. said Czech authorities bad classified him as politically - untrustworthy" and had isolated him with a like group. He left parents la Czecho slovakia. CliemawaGirl Struck by Car K ' ' SHU ii Mtws Sarrlea . HAYESVILLE, Sept 11 A 15-year-old Chemawa Indian School students suffered a leg fracture and lesser' injuries Sunday afternoon when i struck by a car at Chemawa ported. The Injured girl, Delores High Eagle, was taken by Willamette ambulance to Salem General Hoe pital, where her condition wai re ported to be satisfactory. In addi tion to the facture, she also suffered cuts and bruises . Officers aaid the car was driven by Dick Clark Mowry, Brush Prairie. Wash, in the 1:4S p.m. accident partment of Social Welfare of the United Christian Missionary Society, .also says: "Wt support without - equivo cation the Supreme Court's deci sion outlawing discrimination in the public schools. We protest all effort to establish privately con trolled schools designed to support enforced segregation. . . ." - Also reported ia the result of a Disciples of Christ survey regard ing inclusion of all races in lo cal church membership. The re port shows 464 congregations of the church which are in some de gree "racially mixed," an addi tional 997 congregations that say they would welcome a person of another race as a member, and 191 congregations which say they would not welcome persons of oth er races. A out one-third of 1.(52 congregations returned question aires in the survey. States which rank ' highest', In Disciples of Christ membership are Indiana, Missouri,' Illinois, Ohio and Kentucky.' ' J T NOW SHOWING: ' """T"' A , V If wa "fif TWCMMif ana: aicMt ' ' AI.EO . . y TNBH1II ) L : - . ' ) Perez, was slin by presidential guards immediately after the shooting attempt. Luis Somoza, president of the Chamber of Deputies, and his brother, Anastasio - Somoza Jr., commander of the National Guard told reporters Lopez Perez was 27, a Nicaraguan who had been both Journalist and typesetter. They said he had worked for most of the past six years in El Salvador as a sanitation department em ploye. This is the official account of the shooting: The president and his wife were seated at the edge of the work ers' club danoe floor during are- ception in Leon in Somota 's honor after the Liberal party had pro claimed him candidate for re-elec tion. Suddenly Lopez Perez pushed through the crowd and fired his brand new revolver point blank at Somoza. Betted Assassin Armando Ramirez, a civilian engineer, seized the assassin by his hair and pulled him to the floor as he was firing his last shot. Someone pulled the engineer off . and presidential g n ards pumped sub- machinegun bullets into Lopez Peres. The president was rushed to St. Vincent hoepital in Leon. V. S. Ambassador Thomas Whelan brought the helicopter of the In ter - American Geodetic Survey from Managua to Leon at dawn and returned Somoza to the capi tal, where, the president was taken to the general hospital. Officials indicated Lopez Perez' body has not been buried but is being tested for drugs and alcohol. They hinted he might have Com munist connections. Gvil Rights Talk Planned By Browncll WASHINGTON, Sept. 23 W -Atty. Gen. Herbert Brownell said today he will make a speech dur ing the campaign on civil rights and the program of the Eisenhow er administration. Brownell declined to reveal de- . ., .ti i . . ... LJ,!.i,0f..hJ, reh'.JS .! he did say. "One thing I'm going to talk about is the program wiZrJ . the administration in the area of , seeing that everyone in the coun try, regardless of race or color, la allowed the right to vote. "That was a very Important part of the President's civil rights program. He believes, as I cer tainly do, that this is at the bot tom of the whole problem that if we can see to it that the right to vote is not interferred with, re- gtt-taf o, Mce, creed or color. then at the local level you'll have a big start on the readjustment that must come." Commenting on the hearings by the House District subcommittee; into integration in Washington schools, Brownell said: "Assuming the investigation pro ceeds In an orderly manner, I don't think anyone should fear the state ments that are made. They com mittee members are calling teachers and educators to state the facts. If they stick to the facts. I think we ought to be glad to have everv one of the problems involved the West German freighter Monika ZLZ7.C?. I?,! , !rinr Amov Harbor vesterdav. kill- dScVionalhwm ! point out any inaccuracies that may coma out In the testimony." Stevenson Bows To Tradition, Sits For Photographer DENVER. Colo.. Sept. 23 Adlai Stevenson says he's confi dent he will win the presidential election but, just to make sure, he Srft for a Denver Press Club photographer last night. It a an old superstition among Denver newsmen that no candi date for president can win unless his picture has been taken in the club. If he is elected, the picture will hang alongside those of all other U. S. presidents since 1900. Every one of them visited the club and sat for the photographer. There s only one hitch: D wight Eisenhower's photo graph was taken in the club during the 1952 campaign. He beat Ste venson to the punch. . AT SAIEM'S ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS HOMO ttYOND ifll V ninirn $i MADISON J MtMUIS GINN ) ' 17 -A - 11 I m : 4 NEW ORLEANS, La., Sept 23 of mala force of Hurricane Pontchartraln here today Briton Shot in New Violence By Cypriots NICOSIA. Cyprus. Sept. 23 - A British soldier was killed and three others were wounded today in a new wave of underground bombing, and shootings. The dead serviceman was caught in a blast as a security patrol poked into a cave outside Limassoi on the south coast. In vestigators believed the cave was booby-trapped. Three time bombs blew up on a British servicemen s recreation beach near Kyrenia, on the north coast, injuring two soldiers Gunmen wounded a British sol dier and bis wife as they walked home from church rith their 10- year-old daughter in the south coast town of Larnaca. Two sus pects were arrested. The soldiers condition wrs grave He was struck in the head and groin. His wife was hit in the leg. Her wound was not consid ered serious. Two bombs were thrown at a oi mail miiiiaij wail ui vai m coast port oV.m.gusta. The British military patrol car at the ZZZa.Z::2 'ZTZ '"r..."",' r" untouched, In Nicosia, gunmen killed a G,reek Cypriot waiter at a down town coffee shop. The gunmen es caped. The British blamed the wave of violence on EOKA, the Greek Cyp riot underground fighting for un ion with Greece. The soldier killed in the cave explosion was the 44th British serviceman to die since EOKA opened its campaign of violence lt months ago. West German Ship Shelled By Red China . HONG KONG, Sept. 23 - Chi-! , , nese Communist shore guns shelled;"5' of ,llfal ""migration from; ing a German officer" and wounding two crew memDers, me snip si"- -- jy- chief officer said when the vessel ; provided by Congress, new pro- arrived here tonight. .. Chief Officer Hans Mayer. 50, of I H.mhur. told reporters the shio I was heading for the harbor seek ing refuge from Typhoon Gilda when the shore batteries opened up without warning. Mayer said Red Artillery hidden in the hills fired 200 rounds at the ! 1. 160-ton vessel, which took about lots and hostesses. The instruction 10 direct hits. Shells hit the ship is to teach flight crews how to on the port side and tore through ! save their lives and those of pas the other side. I sengers in case their planes are The dead man. Third Engineer ,orced down at sea. Harold Martens, of Hamburg, was in the passageway outside the : REBELS KILL FARMERS cabin of Capt. Ewald Dirala when a shell went through the cabin, Mayer said. The explosion tore his chest open and he died almost in stantly. He was engaged to be married. The two wounded men were not seriously hurt. The mute swan, which can hiss but cannot sing, has had the sta tus of a royal bird in England since 1482. Gates Opea 1:45! JAMca fltWART t DOR I DAT V u SCWWICOLOU Sensational Ce-Uit! ka k. W '" I CMdt ton nor OHMART TRYON LAWRANCE msv NAT KIN (T COLE , - DON'T FORGET MONDAY NtGHT IS KOCO NIGHT! 11 a w a w m t Hurricane Flossy s Winds Lash New - V 7' ;. V' f Strong winds travelling; ahead Flossy lash the shores of Lake driving waves over the sea Neuberger Cites Mining Claims Aid of Ellsworth By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ( Story also oa Page 1) The Al Sarena issue was in jected again into the Oregon po litical picture Sunday. Sen. Estes Kefauver said that the only advice he recalls giving owners of the mine at a 19M meet ing in New Orleans was "write me a letter." U.S. District Catching Up With Docket , WASHINGTON, Sept. 23. Federal district courts are begin ning to catch up with their work in civil cases. Reporting this to day, Henry P. Chandler, said: "For the first time since 1951, the federal district courts disposed of more cases than were filed and thus brought down the pending case load." Chandler, retiring director of the Administrative Office of U. S Courts, said in his annual report to Chief Justice Warren: "For many years it has seemed that many trial courts, not only federal but state, have been in a long, dark tunnel, getting blacker all the time. "Generally the number of civil eases filed in federal district courts in any year has been larger than the number terminated, with the result that the backlog of pend ing civil cases has been steadily increasing. In 1936. although the problem remains, there is a gleam .... ... ' of light ahead Chandler's report for the fiscal year ended last June 30 said crim inal case businpss in fpdpral courts showed no significant i change from the preceding year. I New cases filed dropped to 28.739. as comoared with 35.310 in 1955 ..,;i....i " coj , .... . ; Chandler said improvement in, - ceaures lor speeding up court dus . .-ij .if.rf "!ss' n.d c..nS 'ff.?rt of i vu,iiA up vuui , uua- , lne en"r lcaeral JU'c.ary. SURVIVAL TRAINING NEW YORK, Sept. 23 i-The Coast Guard gave survival train ing here this summer to more than 1,500 commercial airlines pi- ALGIERS, Algeria, Sept. 23 IT I Strongly organized rebel groups raided a village in the Oran area west of here during the night, kill ing three European farmers and an Arab and setting a dozen farms afire. HELD OVER OPEN 3rd Smash Weak! 8no Groct Frank' CROSBY KELLYS1HATRA M--M Prtstnts k SOL C. SIEGEL w-stiriioi nd aii itnt it wesie nuLiYi y. ani luuij niuiiwiitUMU dmw . dk JDKiCOlENraK Battl - y 4 v' wall, flooding the adjacent panied tne wind! lashing the city. Two were reported killed. (AP Wlrephoto). (Story ea Page lL Sen. Richard Neuberger, cam paigning in Oregon on behalf of Sen. Wayne Morse, Douglas Mc Kay's Democratic opponent, also issued a statement on the case. He said Rep. Harris Ells worth iR-Ore was the "sole mem ber of Congress to contact the Interior x Department after Mr. McKay became secretary" in the interest of the McDonalds. Greater Emphasis "It is well for' the public to note that far greater emphasis is being given to one very general inquiry by Sen. Kefauver than to the fact that the totally unprece dented procedure in the Al Sarena case was worked out with Con gressman Harris Ellsworth, who wrote many letters demanding 1 iK.t .v.- .t... k. I ' M'v scsvrisia i aniitCM. He said McKay "allowed a pri vate assay made in Mobile, Ala., to cancel out the contrary find ings made by the Fores Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the Bureau of Mines." N EiplaaatLa Neuberger. speaking in behalf of State Sen. Robert Holmes, i Democratic candidate for govern or, said that Republican Gov. El- mo Smith has "yet to explain to ; the people of the state why he opposed legislation fixing mini mum salaries for school teachers, why he opposed a proposal for a system of sick leave for school teachers, and why he opposed the establishment of Portland State College." State Sen. Monroe Sweetland. Democratic candidate for secre tary of state, told a Condon au dience Sunday that "82 years is WT" C"M" ln "y nffl. ' Ii, IBlH ihqi Ik. In., t m I a Democrat was elected to the j post he is seeking was in 1878. Morse, speaking at Condcii, ,ald ,nat hls tr,P throuhh r.ast- er" .urefi1on na ,ven mf mucn ddlll0n1 P- '"' th' farmers of our s,at re ' serious price squeeze and from high interest rates and hard mon- d of tne Eisennower ad. ministration." DISRUPTION FORT PIERCE, Fla. OT-A five foot alligator disrupted play in a nurry wncn ne waaaieo on 10 me diamond during a boys' Pony , . j. j " .. League baseball game. Ttu e was an immediate uproar which sub- sided only after Ken Gordy, a team manager, managed to lasso and tie the reptile and turn him over to police. The saurian ap parently was flushed from a near by drainage ditch by dogs. DALLAS MOTOR-VU Gates Open 6:45 Show at 7 The picture of the year!!! Ernest Borgnine Betsy Blair In "MARTY" . . . Second Feature . . . Robert Mitchum-Jaa Sterling in "MAN WITH 1 WIT AGAIN! :45 Production Technicolor ViSTAVlSION ill nun jonn lunu r of Gettysburg A Historical Masterpiece Orleans 1 J boulevard. Heavy rains accom Integration Probe Linked To Southerns WASHINGTON, Sept. 21 UK-A Negro spokesman todsy de nounced the congressional investi gation of integration in District of Columbia schools as an attempt "by some Southern congressmen to force their views and those of their constituents on the nation through the mechanism and pub licity of a congressional hearing." Roy Wilkins, executive secreta ry of the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People said "it's a Georgia and Missis sippi hearing, not a hearing of Congress." mw"T ' speakers at a Wilkins was one of a parade of leakers at a mass protest meet ing who denounced the hearincs and the subcommittee conducting them. The subcommittee is made up predominately of Southern Democrats, under the chairman ship of Rep. James C. Davis D Ga. Some 400 people attended the meeting. Eugene Davidson, president of the District of Columbia branch 1 of the NAACP, read from Adlai Stevenson, a teirgram Democratic presidential candidate, which said I think the hearings are serving no constructive purpose." Last week President Eisenhow er, through an aid, sent a tele gram to Davidson saying he thought the hearings would not im pair desegregatioa in the District. V. . TO HOST DOCTOR" MADRID, Sept 23 liT-The 19M meeting of the International So ciety of Internal Medicine will he held in the United States. The 1.300 physicians attending the 195 meeting here instructed a commit tee to choose among Atlantic Citv, N.J , Philadelphia and Washington as the site of the next session. Every adult who presents a'Lucky '3 and an "0" in the serial number vik . CeeveM I'M, Aifc Mwrav kic . - RULES I, Te win yee nwet areMMt la aawaa yeur en.' teller Bill wHk ,IS" enS eav r' h ft terlel awbar.He4 It I. M yeur mw.t Ankur ! Only ene "wlnwlci')" kill iinan Irem mmm ,. iMliviaVMl. - Je Sfft SlflbsW 4ly VrSH V4MftM9M&S by paiaat. , , , j . 4. ArW Merref txe'enH M elia ikle. ARTHUR E11URRAV 445 FERRY ST., PHONE 4-6891 Nation's Public Servants Lead Hectic Week By JOY MILLER NEW YORK, Sept. 23 UB-A pub- Llic servant's life is rarely un- rammeled, but last week I seemed more hectic thaa usual. The county clerk at Lovington, N.M., received this letter from Roswell: "Dear Sirs: I would like to have a duplicate of Roy K Miller and Oneta Nance marriage license. Bugs ate the other one up I don't know what kind of bugs these were but they were black Yours sincerely, Roy E. Miller." The office seat a duplicate post baste. Police la Los Angeles probably felt somewhat out on a limb. A man stumbled over a woman'a art ificial leg on the sidewalk, turned it over to them. Now they're wait ing for somebody to claim it with no questions asked. Chicago police had this chore: A man fell off a kitchen chair and broke three ribs. At the hospital he was unable to give his last name because of the treat pain. The first name was Waller. Po lice went to his home to copy the name off the mail box. It was Anoryszicewicx. The deputy U.S. marshal In Nor folk. Va., was searchinf a neiah- borhood for a probation violator. To identify himself to a housewife he wanted to question he showed her his marshal card with hit photograph on it. She studied the picture closely, then shook her head. "Cap'n." she said, "I don't oeueve 1 ve ever seen that man around here." And the Johnstown. N.V.. post master came out in favor of the oldfashioned nib pens that used to adorn post office writing desks. "No one ever stole them." he said Just last Monday he chained 10 new ballpoint pens to the desks By Saturday every one had been stolen. Child, 2, Lost in Minnesota Woods ISLE, Minn., Sept. 23 Na tional Guardsmen, law officers and volunteers combed heavily wooded, swampy terrain today in a futile search for a 2-yar-old suburban Minneapolis girl who wandered from her parents' cabin about noon. As darkness fell and slowed the hunt, the guardsmen stationed themselves in the woods for a rWAw LrJto I., The girl. Dennise Reynolds. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Reynolds, Hopkins. Minn , disap peared after leaving her paj&its' hunting cabin to join her grand mother outside. The grandmother returned to the cabin moments later without seeing the tot. Woodburn Drive-In Sundsy-Moadsy-Taesday Open 1:45 Show 7:11 "DADDY LONG LEGS" Fred Astalre Plus "NOUS! OF IAHB00" Rlrhard Ryan 8 EXNIAR? Look at all your one dollar bills. Any of the aerial numbers contain a "3" and an "0"? Then you've got a lucky "Dancing Dollar and simply by handing it in at your near est Arthur Murray Dance Studio you win $25.00 Dance Course. This wonderful offer it being made to show you the fun and good timet that can be had at an Arthur Murray Studio. You see, learning to dance is to much fun because you go to party after party ...practice dancing with many different partners. So don't mist the chance to become more popular than you've ever been before. Check your wallet bow for a "Lucky Dollar.", Studios openJaily 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. TUDIOS AIR OONDITIONID), The Weather Max. Mta. Rati, Tort Worth Lot AnftlM Miami ... . Ntw York San rranrlaco SaatIM Spokan. 71 Waihinrton, D. C. SS Todav'a fortcart (from IT. I. Weath er Buf.au. McNary riald. Salami! Moatlv rloudv with a poMiblllly a frw llfht anowtrt today and to. ntlht; parti? floudr Tuaidayj hlfll tod it 12. If tonight 41. Willamette Rlvar: l.S fa.L Temp. U.'Ol a m, today S4. Salem Preclplutl uon a M Slnre Start ( Weather year, Sent I T. eU La it year Normal .SI 1.3S Mail Carriers To Ask Wage Scale Jump PORTLAND, Sept. 23 IA1 The National Assn. of Letter Carriers, holding its regional meeting here Sunday, voted to ask the next Congress for sn annual wage of at least $5,300 a year. Delegates from Oregon, Wash ington, Idaho, Montana and Alaska, also approved a resolu tion asking that every letter ear rier be provided a caddy cart, a golf-type, two-wheeled, pushing vehicle to carry heavy mailbags. Delegates announced that they approved the voting records of these legislators: Sen. Wayne Morse D-Ore; Rep. Edith Green iD-Ore'; Sen. Warren Magnu.ton ID-Wash) : and Rep. Morris Tel ly (R Washt. Freight locomotives on U.S. rail ways run an average of 147.2 miles per day. Cottonwoods Tuesday September 25 Little Richard and Rock & Roll Band Plus Johnny Fuller and Cordelia DeMillo Dollar' with a will receive a AH.ua i w 4i .pi Baktr ; 74 - SI - . Mtdford ., .... ,S4 41 M North Brad .' M Portland 7J 4S .00 Stlta .. 1 S M Chlcara . 'L 1 SI M Denvr 7S 4S .OS ST U M 75 (1 .W) ..,,- IS .OS ...J,-SS SI .14 .L. , S3 17 ,0S U .01 SO .09 M .01 - ;y, , -.-. -eat : C- J IT i