2-(Sec. 1) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Mon., Nov. 12, '56 ungdry Sought By WILLIAM N. OATIS UNITED NATIONS. N. Y Nov. 11 U. N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold (aid today he had asked .Hungary for prompt in formation on how much outside relief its people need. He also disclosed Hungary ig nored his requests for permission to send in U. N. observers until he asked Russia last night to help him get an answer. The Soviet- backed Hungarian government Hunt Goes on For Missing Navy Plane NEW YORK. Nov. 11 Un-Navy planes and ships, searching the Atlantic for a missing seaplane with 10 men aboard, converged to night on a Spanish freighter which reported sighting a white flare. The freighter, , the S.S. Astro, laid it saw the flare about 300 miles northwest of Bermuda.' No further details were available. The Navy last heard from the Bermuda-based patrol plank - at : p.m. EST, Friday. About a half-hour later a Liberian freighter reported seeing a plane going down in flames about 400 miles north of Bermuda. The ship also reported feeling the impact of what appeared to be the crash of the plane on the ocean, and later saw a bobbing light, possibly on a liferaft, . A Navy spokesman said tonight there was still a possibility that the missing men could have sur vived on liferafts, and that the search would continue indefinitely. Socialist Win Indicated in West Germany FRANKFURT, Germany,- Nov. 11 UP West Germany's opposition Socialist appeared headed for a new victory in today's community elections in the states of Baden Wuerttemberg and Rhineland Pa latinate. Election officials said a definite trend would not be knows until more votes were counted. . About II per cent of seven mil lion eligible voters balloted. First returns indicated the Socialists would repeat the victory they won In similar elections in three other states two weeks ago. These early returns indicated Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's Christian Democrats were holding their own. The. big losers, as in the previous community voting, seemed to be the Free Democrats. Formerly they "were Adenauer's allies but have opposed him for everal months. The voters chose' about ,300 new city, county, and village eoundlmen. Bomb Threat Halts Planes NEW YORK. Nov. 11 OH -Flights of five Pan American World Airways planes were de layed tonight after the airline re ported receiving a call that one of its planes would be blown up "within an hour. Telephone operator Evelyn Cu need described the caller's voice as "male, with a rather heavy foreign accent, possibly Chinese." The call was received at 10:55 p.m. Just as one Pan American flight, bound for San Juan, Puer to Rico, had left the starting gate at Idlewild Airport. The plane, with its 31 passengers aboard, was ordered to return. The pas sengers were unloaded. That plane, plus four others, all bound for Latin America, were ordered searched. r ' EAST GERMANY FAILS BERLIN, Nov. 11 Commu nist East Germany admits it has been unable to deliver 900 rail road tank cars it promised Red China. The East German trade paper, Die Wirtschaff, said the cars were to have been delivered this year but only 775 have been completed. A SHATTUC'S MONDAYS 7 ;:70v;;i saieh :;:iTS Need for Relief by U.N. Secretary then replied In a matter of hours that it was weighing the request. The Hungarian and Middle East crises top the agenda for the U. N. General Assembly's annual regu lar session opening tomorrow. A V. N. spokesman announced that Maj. Gen. E. L. M. Burns, chief of the U. N. command for an international cease-fire force for Egypt, would talk with Egyp-. tian President Nasser in Cairo to morrow afternoon and arrive here Wednesday to confer with Ham marskjold. Swiss Air Ferry Ready The spokesman said Swiss Air would be read; late tomorrow or early Tuesday to begin ferrying the U. N. police fore' to Egypt from a staging area at Capodi chino Airport, near Naples. Mili tary units, from seven small na tions are gathering there. . He said the U. N. still is waiting to hear from Egypt, as to where the men could be based. The force is being sent there in line with Assembly resolutions to su pervise the cease-fire and with drawal of British, French and Is raeli troops. - ---' Hammarskjold made public cor respondence he has carried on un der a U. S. resolution adopted 504 in an emergency U. N. session a week ago. The resolution called on Soviet troops to withdraw from Hungary where they have been crushing a popular uprising. It asked Ham marskjold to send observers to Hungary to report on the situa tion, ,- .V.; No Reply Received - The Hungarian government failed to reply - to a copy 6f the resolution, which Hammarskjold forwarded without comment' and! to a formal request that it let in the observers. Meanwhile, the Assembly Fri day " passed another resolution calling for withdrawal of the So viet troops and for relief to Hun garians. In midafternoon Hammarskjold dispatched notes both to Hungary and to the Soviet Union. The one to Hungary said if he got no reply this time, he would "submit the situation to the General Assembly for consideration and the steps it may wish to take." . . , . . . . The one to Russia asked that it "support my demand to the gov ernment of Hungary" to admit the observers. Note Acknowledge ' Hungarian Deputy Foreign Min ister Istvaa Sebes messaged Ham marskjold last night he had re ceived the note and "the Hunga rian government is weighing its contents." ,- Hammarskjold then made pub lic a note sent the Hungarian gov ernment yesterday asking quick information on "the needs of the Hungarian people for medical sup plies, foodstuffs and clothing from abroad." He also disclosed that he had appointed two coordinators for re lief to Hungary and aid to Hun garian refugees They are Philippee de Seynes of Paris, U.N. undersecretary for economic and social affairs, and James M. Read of Philadelphia, acting U. N. high commissioner lor refugees. . Crises Tot .71 Items Hammarskjold'! announcement came on the eve of an annual ses sion in which the Assembly will have the crises in Hungary and the Middle East at the too$pf a list of 73 items proposed for de bate.. The first-listed business for the Peace Urged On Arabs by Soviet Head LONDON, Monday, Nov. 1J OB The Soviet ..Union's .President Klementi Voroshilov urged the Arab peoples today to "stop ag gression and restore the peace and security of the Middle East. Voroshilov sent a telegram to King Saud of Arabia which was quoted by Moscow radio. "On the natibnal day of Saudi Arabia, I beg your highness to ac cept the very best wishes of the people of the Soviet Union for your country, " the telegram said. "I should like to take this op portunity to express my con fidence that in this grim hour of aggression by colonial powers against Egypt the Arab people, like all other peace-loving peoples of the world, will make every ef fort to stop aggression and re store the pesce and security of the Middle East. I "I hope the friendly relations ; existing between our two coun tries will continue to develop in a spirit of mutual understanding for the good of the peoples of Saudi Arabia and the Soviet Union." P.fl Assembly's three-month - regular session will be the election of a president 'and the admission of three new members raising U.N.. membership to 79 countries. , Prince Wan' Waithayakon, for eign minister of Thailand, if ex pected to be elected Assembly president.'--" Morocco, Sudan and Tunisia are expected to be admitted to the U. N. Legion Head Asks U.N. . . Expel Russia NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 11 0B W. C. Daniels, national command er of the American Legion, tonight said the United Nations should ex pel Russia for "its crime against humanity, the genocide in Hun gary." - . ... J'.; , Daniels, speaking at a Veterans Day observance' said "surely we can no longer pretend that God less, ruthless, - barbaric,- Commu nist Russia is entitled to be treated as a peace promotion nation.'1 But, he said. "I doubt whether the United Nations will take this necessary action." Daniels said, "The American Le gion tonight submits that Commu nist Russia has firmly and finally ended the second phase of the cold ' war . . . and) has thrown down the' gauntlet to the free' world." Russia, he said, Baa told the free world, "we're through pre tending. We intend to dominate the wo-ld." Daniels called for a revitalized foreign policy in the United States, saying "The time has come for Uncle Sam to stop being Uncle Sap." The country, he said, must "find out whether our multi-billion "dol lar military and economic foreign aid program- hat bought us any thing more than time. To ask our selves honestly whether we can count on anybody but ourselves when the chips are down." As American citizens, he said, "we should look first to our own interests and safety. We are citi zens of the United States . . . not of the world." 'Eloise' TV Debut Slated For Nov. 22 By CHARLES MERCER -NEW YORK. Nov. 10 ufWEloise Is and lives at the Plaza Hotel in New York with her nanny be cause her mother is always away seeking the sun somewhere. Besides being a widgit who lives at the Flaza. "Eloise" is a book and a popular recording and now she's going to be a television j comedy. On Playhouse JO (CBS TV) Nov. 22. with 7-year-old Ev etynJRudie, playing line .. title jole, and a large cast including Monty Woolley, Ethel Barrymore. Louise Jourdan, Mildren Natwick and Conrad Hilton, the hotel man. And. of course, Kay Thompson. For Miss Thompson, who has created much music and laughter in night clubs and movies, also created "Eloise." Not on purpose, but accidental like. Back in 1948 she came into Las Vegas to play a club with the four Williams boys. It was 114 degrees or something in the shade and everybody was either tired or tense when Miss Thompson, who can imitate almost anything, be gan talking in the high, penetrat ing voice of a very small girl. So "Eloise" was born. The Wil liams boys and others within ear shot were so delighted they re fused to speak to Miss Thompson. They'd only talk to Eloise. As the years passed, Eloise grew in popularity, People would ignore Miss Thompson and speak only to Eloise. People took to calling Miss Thompson and ask ing to speak to Eloise. Inevitably, she had to put Eloise in a book. She was brilliantly abetted by an artist named Hilary Knight, who drew the illustrations and finally reduced the elusive little girl to a line drawing. They took the child down the street to Simon k Schuster, the publishers, who ran her through the presses almost as fast as you could run through the Plaza lobby, v. French Unknown Soldier Honored PARIS, Nov. 11 in President Coty today laid a wreath on the grave of the Unknown Soldier at the Arch of Triumph after review ing a military parade commemo rating the anniversary of the 1911 armistice. Among the thousands present at the ceremonies were Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, retiring supreme Allied commander, and a Soviet military attache. - I am, w"t!k. I Now Open ficldtyizti'l lunch. (Inner 112 SI 440 Jtitt Aawiilowi 1 , Heroic Dog Leads Boys GREENWOOD LAKE, N. Y, Nov. 11 Robert Lane, left, 10, and James Harrington Jr., 11, give James' dog Ginger a glass of milk at the Harrington -home here today after the pooch led boys to safety In Ramapo Mountains. The boys were lost for 22 'i hours while on a hiking trip. (AP Wlrephoto) Russian Volunteers Flood Egypt Embassy in Mosfcow , (Story alt ra Page 1) By HAROLD K. MILKS MOSCOW, Nov. It W - Soviet volunteers continued to pour into the Egyptian Embassy today even though the United Nations is ready 'to move its police units into Egypt for p8trol duty. While these' Russians applied in person And by letter to join Egyptian forcs-n a "battle of independence," Western students of Soviet affairs believed - there was -.tr possibility the Kremlin's main attention might be shifting Pilot Jumps From Burning Jet Fighter , ,. GREAT FALLS, Mont., Nov. 11 ijTWThe pilot of an FMF jet fight er successfully ejected, from his aircraft shortly after noon today after a fire developed in the plane's engine. He parachuted aafely, landing between Beatton River and Ft. Nelson. B.C. 1 An Air Force spokesman said he was flying with a group of Strategic Air Command jets from a Georgia base, making a rou tine navigational training flight: The spokesman declined to name the baee. The plane crashed in a desolate area. The pilot was identified as 1st. Lt. W. I. Bostwick, Daytona Beachr-Fla; Z'SZZZl Finnegan Says Eisenhower Win 'Ironic' PHILADELPHIA, Nov. It James A. Finnegan, Adlai Steven son's campaign manager in the recent presidential election, said today the Democrats were "con ditioned for defeat" in the last few weeks of the contest. Finnegan, at home for a few days before taking a . vacation, outlined his views of the election and the reasons behind President Eisenhower's " overwhelming re election victory. ' "It was ironic," Finnegan said in an interview, "that the Eisen hower administration benefited from the mistakes it made. "Here you saw an unbelievable buildup of sentiment in which the President could do no wrong, while his administration was mak ing mistakes," he said. The Eisenhower foreign policy, he said, eventually resulted in the present situation in the Middle East and made it easy for the Russians to take further steps of aggression. "These mistakes actually result ed in gains for the Republicans in the election," Finnegan said. Maine Senator Won't Run in '58 AUGUSTA, Maine, Nov. U Sen. , Frederick G. Payne R Maine) announced tonight he will not seek re-election in 1951. He is St. The completion of his single six year term in the Senate, he said, will mark the completion of ap proximately 25 years of public service. Payne said be has no plans for a career after he retires. AfMflfc VtNTID GAS HEATERS AT Chtrry City . Eltctric & Gas 1040 N. CiMl Ph. 471 k " x - a iV from Egypt to other Arab nations. A spokesman' at the Egyptian' Embassy was, asked whether any of the volunteers have actually left for Egypt. Government Authority "I can't say," he replied. They could leave the country only with the Soviet government's authority. The Soviet press made much of the departure of a group of Rus sian pilots to help man the Sues Canal after President Nasser na tionalized that waterway July 26. Then there were two or three days of -silencefollowed by a Cairo an nouncement that the Russian pi-! lnta Mrr alraarlv in fh ranat ' zone. If the Soviet- Union wants to move , its volunteers out of this country en route to Egypt it is likely no outsiders here would learn of it. Getting them into Egypt might be a mere difficult maneuver. Top .News Play; Although the Soviet press and radio are still giving Egypt top position, some veteran observers expressed belief the Kremlin, is shifting the emphasis of its plan ning to the situation tri other Arab nations such as Syria and Jordan. - Under the U.N. police program.) it is hard from this point , to see how either Soviet arms or Soviet volunteers could help Egypt with out violating the U.N. moves for peace. Rut the other Arab nations are outside the sphere of the po lice, operation. Statements by Soviet leaders in dicatObey. ..consider :. .Britain and France, by their military inter vention in Egypt, have thrown the entire Middle East open to a new arms race if the Russians consid er it essential to protect "the new-found independence of the Arab nations." -Key t Policy President Klementi Voroshilov's recent promises to give Syria "all the necessary assistance" seems to be a key to the Soviet Union's present Middle East policy. Should the Soviet Union dissat isfied with the rate of the British French withdrawal order volun teers into the Middle East, it ap pears there are no barriers here to providing hundreds of thousands of trained men for the crisis area. -.The Soviet Union has-more than ample material, without touching the regular armed forces, in 1.200. 000 soldiers and officers whose transfer into reserve status was announced last May as a move toward peace. MEXICAN 'WAR CASUALTY MEXICO CITY, Nov. ll-Ra-mon Macias is a casualty of the conflict in the Middle East. He was stabbed three times by Dan iel Garcia. They disagreed over the situation in the Suet Canal zone. i ..... OOX OFFICE O TICKETS NOW ON SALE , Rovach & Rabovsky V TtwfMln Nv. IS 1:15 PM Sin Art A4iMrim FIRST ARTISTS B'NAI B'RITH RISiNTS ' - 'Stars of Tomorrow' ' AMIRICAM IIOION HAll ' . Sirw4.y Hv. 17, S 4S P. M. Portland Sympohny m-sr siw Store Hours 9:30-5:30 Ivory Day - For Reservatient Dial 4-2224 to Safety I f Theatre Time f ahle ELSINORC (Continuous from 1 p.m I 'WAR tc PEACE" 1.00. 5:84. I OS. CAPITOL (Continuous from 1 p.m.) MAVERICK QUEEN": 3:12. 6 51, 10 4S "DOCTOH AT SEA": 1:00, 4:47. S34 HOLLYWOOD' "THE PACK": 1:45. S 40, : MUBAL": J;3S, 7:30 Nation Pays ! np oj . I 1 riDUlC lO War Dead (Picture si Wlrephot Page.) WASHINGTON; Nov. 11 )lP-The nation's capital paid tribute to America's war dead today at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier, where "rests in honored glory an American soldier known; but to God." More than 2.000 persons stood with heads. bowed in silent rev-; erence in Arlineton National Cem- crencc in siriuiKiun wauuuaj v,cui-i etery as a presidential wreath P(rmpint PnlloA was placed on the tomb. !x "IIiaiieni I OllCe Harvey V. Higlcy, veterans adt SiirrvoKtPf 1 ministrator, represented Presi-; r ur,-e CHIJIgtMeU dent Eisenhower, who spent most ' of the day at the White House be-I LONDON, Nov. 11 tm British cause of the press of the foreign ! Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd crisis. ' j suggested tonight the United Na- Army bugler George Myers of ,ions establish a permanent police Indianapolis sounded "taps" after "ady to act to keep -the Higley placed the wreath on the 1 peace. tomb. ' j He told newsmen on hi depar- Film star James Stewart, World War II bomber pilot, was the principal speaker in the memori al service that followed. Stewart said the nation today was paying "double tribute . . .to those who gave their lives to pro-; necessary it is, in order to be ef vide a new peaceful future for j fective. to have some permanent America . . . and to those wo re- j body able to take action and I turned to serve their country j Ibmk that will contribute to the again, by developing its strength i peace of the world." for peace with honor . . . for the well-being of all its citizens." CURTAIL WHITTLING JACKSON, Ky.. Nov. 11 OP The old art of whittling will be a thing of the past here it a new law is enforced. The coun ty sanitarian warned citizens against whittling, and said it in cludes -"the results - of sharp knives between the Bus Station snd Jett's Grocery, also near the River . Side Restaurant and the Courthouse." SAN SHOP SPECIAL New York Cul Sleak of Choice Grade Beef French Fried Potatoes Cole Slsw with Sour Cream Dressing, Hot Rolls and Batter $1185 Served Daily After 5 P.M. Golden Pan-Fried CHICKEN French Fried Potatoes Cole Slaw with Sour Cream Dressing, Hot Rolls aad Butter 1.50 Olhtr Dinnr$ from 15c The San Shop The Oregon Heme of Sloppy Joe-A GREAT SANDWICH - Portland Road at North City Limits For Orders to f.o Phone 2 C7M TV. OPEN lit ' MIDNIGHT The Weather Max. Mia. lUim 45 ,00 S3 .00 SS .00 - Aitorta Baker . .3 ..sa Med lord North Bend Portland .., Salem .- 55 SO ... ..S 71 ; 77 . 8.1 .7 . 54 J 43 41 45 41 S7 39 44 97 54 29 47 3S 34 trace .00 Chicafo Denver Fort Worth Lot Angelea Miami , New Yorh San Francisco Spokane Washington, D. C .00 .00 .on .00 .00 .00 .00 .00 .00 - Tnl!T"foriit (from V. 8. WtH- r Bureau. McNiry Firm. Slm): Fof and low clouds today, clearing partially this altcrnooq: moally cloudy with a few ahoweH. tonifht and Tueday high today 40, low to nifht 42. Willamette nivtr: -It) feet. Temp. 1101 a.m. talay: IS. SALEM parCIPITATIOM Since Start of WraUer Year, Sept, 1 To date Lat year t Normal I.S4 10 94 1.23 'Looting' Said Strong Factor In Uprisings WASHINGTON, Nov. U W-The U, S. Information Agency said to day Soviet economic "looting" and cultural domination were strong factors behind uprisings in Hungary and Poland. - The agency made this point in the second part of a 100 000-word survey on "Communist Colonial ism and Intern ationatCommu nism." Part 1 was an account of how lit million persons in 16 coun tries and areas fell to the Com munists during the last If years. The latest installment, published today, details economic and cul- tural factors which the report said contributed to anti-Communist re volt in Hungary and nationalist demonstrations in Poland, i It said: i' "The people living in the Soviet orbit have no assurance that they will benefit by any increase in foreign trade through centralized planning. Past experience indi cates that national populations J under .. Soviet economic colonial j ism' endure shortages and depri i N ations while increased production lis skimmed off in the form of exports." USIA said Moscow hud manipu lated its trade agreements with the satellite countries to obtain much needed goods at prices so low they were often leu than the . ,i. i lites were generally sold at prices higher than their real value:- The Soviet cultural program, USIA said, was designed to "root out all traces of Western culture" and impose upon the national tra ditions of the satellite states the educational, historical, literary, artistic and. scientific foncepts of Soviet' communism. I TiiJl-wl IVntiriiia J 11 1 1 C ' 1 ' d 1 1 U 118 1 ; ture- for the U N: General Assent- bly in New York: "I know we have come to dif ferences of opinion with members of the United Nations, but I be lieve the results will show how HELD ( DUE TO THE LENGTH OF THIS PICTURE WE WILL PLAY IT ONLY ONCE EACH EVENING, STARTING AT 1:30. BOX OFFICE OPEN :45. WaXU'S NEATEST NOVEL jf AUDBY mow m tiic sckecn mmmm m rrnnrn MfYlllll mm mm iimia I 1 Tfcl MST aipfficMl sai t-tltg a sltM Hm Be - saw avid sf Ike scttMl .v. - Mi. , a A ;...! HIMEDII.TAKS H I I . . a 7 V O .cinBfiiiMimoEi Tfc3 r.-cvcricIlOuccn NATURAMA tf RtPUilie HCTUKFJ CORPORATION raicetew 'Confusion' Theme for Week's News By JOY MILLER NEW YORK. Nov. 11 A reporter at Norman, Okla., was checking last week on a report of a stolen Inter-City bus. He called the sheriff's office at Purcell. "I wouldn't know anything about it," the voice answering the telephone said. "I'm just a pris oner in the jail we answer the phone for the sheriff at night." Which set the theme for most of the week's news: a salute to general confusion. In Omaha, a house-to-house salesman crossing he street looked up to see a car bearing down. The vehicle knocked him down and went on to crash into a power pole 100 feet away. As the man told police about it: "1 lay there wondering who that fool driver was.. Then it dawned on me, it was my car." He had parked it on a hill and the brakes slipped.. , A young man walked into Mu nicipal Court in Pasadena, Calif., carrying a 40-pound sack of pen nies. He wanted to pay a M traf fic fine. The judge, ' unamused. set him4o- work counting the pen nies and putting them into en velopes. It only took a few hours. A fellow who would love to be able to pay traffic fines wrote a letter from.- his home-4n-Pelskar Poland, to the Cincinnati City Council. He explained it was his "greatest desire" to own an "un pretending"' mo(3r car" but he didn't have the money. He said he was writing to several coun cils with a "cortial request for Improvising a petty collection and for sending some dollars to the address of my brother." His brother lives in Elyria. Ohio. "He the brother will then pay the total amount in a post office and I'll get a snug motor car in my country and my dream wiircome true." An advertisement that probably had nothing to do with racing mo tors appeared in a New York city daily: "Wistfully I hope to find a Girl Friday for my boss whom I leave with regret. Should be literate, hep and willing to work in pleasant-midtown atmosphere for peanuts." FIRE DESTROYS EGGS CHEHALIS. Wash , Nov. 11 IP The main egg station of 'Perry Bros, and 300 cases of eggs were 0,ally destroyed by fire of unde-1 termined origin tonight. Prices This Engagement Only Adults 90c - Students 50c Children 20c OVER! Now Playing! What A Crew! What A Cruist! What A-Laugh! Th Merry Crew of "Doctor in the House" Goes to Sea! 1 "DOCTOR At SEA" Starring Dlrfc Begarele , Bridfjefte lardof Ends Tomorrow Of First Run the mama r or -the THE rowH-l1C.INE HUTlNr I Wendell COREY f J Walter PIDGEON V 1 1 Edmond O'BRIEN Hit Aims FRANCIS ? K Lee MARVIN t JUBAL : H i T Ask Anyone That Saw Our Sneak Preview Just Hew Funny This Show III France Reports 2 Photographers Missing in Egypt PORT SAID. Nov. U l-Two ews photographers accredited to the French forces were missing today and may be- in Egyptian hands. Reports from the front said David J5eymour of Magnum Photo Agency, New York, and Jan Roy of the weekly magazine Paris Match, drove in a jeep to the area of El Cap, 25 miles south of Port Said. They then crossed Into no man's land. Grace Kelly Wedding Stamps NEW YORK. Oct. li-The wedding of Prince Rainier III and Graces Kelly is, of course, of general interest . . . but to stamp collectors the event is of very special interests ... for the gov ernment of Monaco has issued a special set of wedding stamps; beautifully printed in large form at bearing pictures of the Prince and his Academy Award winning bride . . . The stamps were on sale in Monaco for one day only, and already have become a "col leetor's item." Because the wedding set has evoked a lively interest in stamps of Monaco Elmont's Paris office has prepared a collection contain ing not only the Grace Ke.llyset of five, but the popular Olympie and Enthronement issues and the Bos'o Art set: a total of 22 mint stamps, which we are pleased to offer for just $1.00 to introduce our approval service. Order to day. ELMONT STAMP CO., 6f West 35th Street, New York 1. N. Y. E47 eCOKNS FROM TH1 GRAB YOUR HAT . .. Today's the Dayl I'll meet you In the Coffee Shop anytime from 5 to 8 p. m. euz today we start serving our band new BUFFET DINNER Remember . . there'll be a daily selection of not one b it three en treesthe main one Roast Baron of Beef! You can fill up oh oth er stuff, too, cur we'll hive salads, cheeses, r e I i s h es, vegetables, potatoes, desserts and beverages galore I The price? M.75 for adults $1.00 for children under 12 Your whole family can fill their plates as many times as they can stand it and believe me you'll really enjoy the food, the atmosphere and the price. FRE- PARKING tool Tickets validated st ' -the Marion Hotel Car Park. Remember - in Salem it't the HOTEL MARION Phone 3-4123 HTM OIL BM.HI V 4 k. -.,.,, n, ....A-wawaaaaaaaaaa