The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, March 04, 1957, Page 1, Image 1

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    The Weather
Today's forecast: Partly
cloudy, tcattarad thowart to
day; cloudy, occasional rain
tonight. High 56, low 40.
(Compltto report part t
106th Yaar
Salem Safe Peeled
By Burglars; Loss
Of$1,500probed
More than $1,500 was reported stolen Sunday morning
after a raid on a safe in a dowiftown Salem- store, police said.
lne burglary in Marilyns
HP
mum
Not much of a battle developed
in the House over HB 163, the bill
setting up machinery for school
district reorganization. It passed
by a vote of 48 to 10 and has gone
to the Senate.
This Is a third attempt for gen
eral reorganization of school dis
tricts looking to developing larger
units for administration. The first
was in 1939 when it was recom
mended by the then governor. A
very good bill was passed, but its
teeth were pulled in the Senate
committee on education ot which
the late Sen. H. C. Wheeler of
Lane county was chairman. An
amendment let each district de
cide for itself whether or not to
accept the reorganization plan
The result- was that only about
30 redisricting recommendations
were accepted.
After the war Dr. T. C. Holy
was employed to make a survey
of the Oregon school system. He
saw what a hodge-podge of dis
tricta we have and recommended
reorganizing districts into what'he
called unified districts that would
maintain elementary and high
schools. A but to set up these uni
fied districts was passed in 1951
but on referral to the people it
was defeated in 1952.
The new bill is a product of the
deliberations of the interim com
mittee joa education. It follows
closely the pattern of the Holy re
port, but the new title for the re
organized district is "administra
tive" instead of "unified" district.
In brief &Tb 163 calls for selec
tion by schoolboard members with
in each county (save those under
a county unit! of a committee of,
nine. .. . , . .'
(Continued an Editorial Page, 4.)
Bullet Kills
Youngster. 13,
At The Dalles
THE "DALLES, Ore,, March 3
I A rifle bullet fatally injured
William John Willis. 13, as he
played Just west of The Dalles to
day. . .
- He died in a Portland hospital,
about seven hours after being
felled.
State police said they had not
determined who fired the bullet,
which came from a small-caliber
gun. They said the bullet struck
him just above the left ear. The
area often is used by week-enders
for informal shooting at cans and
bottles. , 1
Two teen-age boys said they saw
young Willis' stagger, then fall.
Police were called. The teen-agers
were Monty Hill and Frederick
Eugene Smith.
Tears Flow as Turncoat
Greets Oklahoma Mother
OKLAHOMA CITY, March S UH
Smuel David Hawkins, .23, Ko
rean "War turncoat, landed at Mu
nicipal Airport here today, climax
ing his journey which began 'at
Peiping. China last Monday.
Some 400 persons witnessed the
tearful reunion of the six foot,
handsome Hawkins and hit moth
er, Mrs. Carley Jones of Okla
homa City. . .
Hawkins, who refused to return
to America from the Red China
prisoner of war camp at the end
of the Korean War, was smiling
but tremulous.
.He had not seen his mother
since he was a soldier of 16. He
was captured by the Reds only
" two" months after turning 17.
As he poshed through the gener
ally friendly crowd, he sighted his
. mother across the ramp. ,
"Ma!" he shouted. (
After their embrace, Hawkins
told his mother, "I eel good. I
slept all the way." He arrived
here from Lot Angeles.
Newsmen asked Hawkins what
iind of reception he expected
'here. He replied: .
"I don't know. I'm not through
that gate yet."
The Oklahoma City Industrialist
M. H. Champion who paid
Hawkins' transportation here from
' Hong Kong, escorted Mrs. Jones
and her ton to his automobile.
They were to spend the night at
a friend's home, "away from the
phone." ,
Hawkins left his Russian wile,
; -. i
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y : . s
-1 3" PAGES
Shoe More,-US N. Liberty St.,
was discovered about 11:45 a.m.
by Max Williams, co-owner.
It occurred after7 the store was
closed at 5:30 p.m. Saturday and
possibly after 8:30 am. Sunday
when Jerry Williams, co-owner,
was in the store to set his golf
clubs and noticed nothing out of
the way, police said.
The heavy front plate was peeled
from the sate door and an inner
door pried open, police said. Loss
was reported as $1,556.17, they
said. : ' ,
. The store was entered by prying
open one of two front doors, police
aaid. An attempt apparently was
made on the second one, they said.
Also reported missing was an
estimated $3 in dimes and two
pair of shoes.
Lost Girl's
Body Found
In Jersey
.BELLMAWR, N.J., March 3 1
A missing four-year-old girl, ob
ject ol a week-long search, was
found dead in a , closet of an un
occupied new ranch bouse today.
The house was next door to the
home where Mary Jane Barker
had last been seen alive.
A puppy which had been miss
ing with the child also was in the
closet but the animal was still
alive' and frisky. .. -
There was no report on bow the
girl died, although x a reliable
source said preliminary indjta
tions were she died of natural
causes. Bellmawr Police Chief Ed
ward Garrity, however, said indi
cations were that the child had
been placed in the closet only re
cently. Camden County Coroner Robert
J. Blake said information as to the
cause of- death would have . to
await the outcome of an autopsy.
TlieiHttrf'ldecliu',''lMid
been the object of the biggest
search in history in this southern
New Jersey community since her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Barker .reported her nyssing last
Monday.
At a press conference tonight,
it was announced that county
authorities had decided not to
make any further statements until
the autopsy results were com
plete. .
Garrity said there was no sus
pect, nobody had been arrested
and nobody taken into custody.
Today's Statesman
f ' Psb
. Ann lander :7
Clauifiad 10,11"
Comics .......m...:...6
Crouword .. 10
Editorials .. ................4
Home Panorama 7
Obituaries 10
Radio-TV ...6
Spdrts 8,9
Star Guar .. 2
Valley Naws ... 12
Wirephoto Pago ........6
Tanya, in Peiping. She had writ
ten Mrs. Jones that she wants to
come to the United States and is
having difficulty finding employ
ment because, she explained, the
Chinese know she wants to leave
their country,
Hawkins has been promised a
job here by Champion. Hawkins
is the seventh of 21 Americans
captured (luring the Korean fon
flict to return home. One died and
13 others still are in China.
5 Out of Every 100 Persons in
US. Listed on Public Payroll
WASHINGTON... MarclL L.HtA
record 7,685,000 persons were on
public payrolls last October. They
drew paychecks totaling $2,509,
400.000 for the month, the Census
Bureau reported today. "
This compared with 7,432,000 on
public payrolls and drawing pay
checks of $2,264,500,000 in Octo
ber 1955.
The bureau's annual survey al
ways taken in October showed
that almost five of every 100 per
sons in the United States are on
public payrolls.
Local . governments - accounted
for more than half the total num
ber of employes and almosp-half
the total payroll. The Federal gov
ernment was next In both cate
Tho Oragon Statotman, Salem,
Princess Unimpressed by
V
v J.
:-! ,: -
RABAT, Morocco, March 3 Princess Lalla Amina, 2-year-old
Mohammed V, Is sober-faced at she Is held by smiling Pat Nixon, wife of Vice Pres
fdrnt Richard Nixon, outside palace of Sultan in Rabat. Crown Prince Moulay Hassan
wears a big smile. The Morocco tlsit was the first stop for the Nixons on African good
will tour. (AP Wirephoto)
Vice. President
Turns-Tables on -U.S.-
Reporters
ACCRA, Gold Coast, March 3 (
Vice President Nixon turned the
tables on reporters accompanying
him today and interviewed them
when they arrived here.
The plane carrying 20 American
reporters arrived four hours after
Nixon because of engine trouble.
Tired, sleepy and grumpy, the re
porters found Nixon and his wife.
both wearing armbands marked
. press ; ,standing at the foot of
the ramp with notebooks, in their
hands smiling broadly.
The vice president welcomed
the reporters to Accra and inter
viewed them solicitously about
their flight.
(Story Alsa on Page 2.)
Holt Returning
With 76 Waifs
SEOUL, March 3 P - Harry
Holt of Oregon today left here
with another 76 mixed blood Ko
rean orphans for adoption by
American families. .
Today's departure brings theJa-
tal number of Korean waifs taken
by the Creswell, Ore., farmer to
376.
The orphans, 38 boys and 38
girls, are being flown directly to
Los Angeles in a special Flying
Tiger DC-4 Chartered plane ac
companied by eight adults,' in
cluding Holt and his daughter
Barbara. 1
Holt said 70 more orphans still
remain in Seoul to be taken to the
states under hit arrangements,
adding he hopes to make another
trip to Koreai
Clouds,. Cooler
Weather Seen
Cooler weather is expected today
with a high temperature of 56
compared with 61 Sunday,' McNary
Field weathermen said.
Partly- cloudy skies . dropping
scattered showers during the day
will become mostly cloudy with
occasional rain for tonight and
Tuesday, they predicted.
Rain Sunday amounted to .09
inch in ..misty showers scattered
throughout the day.
gories., followed by. state govern
ments. The breakdown by employes
and payrolls showed: Local governments,-
3.953,000 and $1,184,100
000; federal government acivlli
aq), 2,410,000 and $943,700,000;
state governments, 1,332,000 and
$381,600,000. :
Although the federal payroll hit
a record monthly nigh of nearly
950 million dollars, the number of
employes has been exceeded sev
en times . since the survey began
in 1940. The peak was in 1945, last
year of World War II, when there
were more than 1 14 million em
ploye!. ,'
The October 1958 figure ef 2,
410.000 iederal workers it 'the
highest since President Eisenhow
MUNDID
Oregon, Monday, March 4, 1957
'' - ' -J
Fire Crumbles; Historic
Rock at Lebanon School
Suteunan Newi Strvlc
LEBANON, March 3-A historic rock on the Lehanon High
School campus crumbled to half its size this afternoon when
students fired it with oil to burn off several layers of paint-
.The rock, which stood about four feet high, was the
Mundt Cites
Need of Union
Legislation
WASHINGTON, March Vs (-
Sen. Mundt (R-SD) said today
Senate rackets investigation has
already demonstrated a need for
legislation to promote better
membership control of labor union
funds and activities.
Mundt said in an interview the
hearings point to legislation to re
quire regular onion elections and
meetings, safeguard union finan
ces, and prevent "misuse" of .un
ion political powers. -
He said he based his view not
only on the week-long hearings al
ready held but also on "what I
know is going to come out" of fu
ture hearings. The sessions re
sume Tuesday.
At least a dozen more witnesses
are due to be heard in the Port
land phase of the hearings.
Robert Kennedy,- committee
counsel, said among witnesses this
week will be William Langley,
Multnomah, County district attor
ney, and Clyde Crosby, inter
national- representative of the
teamsters in Oregon.
Man Acquitted
Of Killing Wife
ROSEBURG, March 3 Wl A
circuit court - jury-early- today
found' Laval Lloyd Geisler inno
cent of tbe gunshot slaying of his
wife because of temporary insan
ity. He was accused of first degree
murder in the Jan. 29 death oH
the woman at their home near
Roseburg. . ,
Geisler was overcome and broke
into tears when the verdict was
announced.
He testified that his wife's in
fidelities drove him to the shoot
ing. -
er-took office in 1953, but is al
most 200,000 lower than in 1952,
the last year of the Truman ad
ministration.'' ,
The number of federal employ-i
es jumped from about . 1 million
to 21 million in 1951 and bat re
mained close to that figure ever
since. During tie same period the
monthly payroll has risen about
86 million dollars, reflecting the
higher salaries paid today.
x The Census Bureau said educa
tion accounts for 30 per cent of
all public employes and. national
defense about IS per cent ; health
and hospitals 1.4, postal service
6.7, highways 6.5, police protection
4, natural resources 3 Wire pro
tection 2.4, general administration-
7.1 and all other U,
PRICE 5c
Mrs. Nixon
A
daughter of Morocco's Sultan
object of many night-time ."raids"
over the years.
Traditionally, it has been painted
with the senior- class year num
ber and colors, but other classes
made their own tradition by frt
quently chang mg..,,the colors, and
numbert t their own.
.And, several times yearly, stud
ents of other high schools which
were rivals in athletics would
slobber it with their own decora
tive ideas'.
Raiding Parties
' Raiding parties have come from
"as. far away as' Corvallis, to change
the color of the rock.
The rock itself has been the
center of some pretty hard-fought
'.'athletic contests" when Lebanon
High School students caught
"raiders" at work on it. -.- - .
The eracking today was acci
dental, Asst. High School Supt.
Lawrence Page believes. He said
paint had been burned off many
times before and fires of old tiret
had even been burned on the top
of the rock by "guests" from
other schools. .
The rock's frequent color
changes were a tradition when he
came to Lebanon 17 years ago and
ha does not know how long it
had been going on, Page said.
City police said they believed the
rock was kept on the campus just
as "a good outlet for the students'
emotions."
Trail's End
The rock was originally placed
sometime . in the dim past by
daughters of the American Revolu
tion to mark the end of the Oreenn
Trail, Page said. A placque call
ing attention to this fact was re
moved from the rock to a safer
place in the 'school library many
years, agp. ne added.
Shattering of the traditional rock
may have been symbolic, as the
high school moves next fall into
a new building now under con
struction. Burglars Leave
Standing Room at
Legion Building
SYRACUSE, N.Y.; March 3 (fl
it will be standing room only at
the clubrooms of American Legion
Post 1367 for some time.
"WEen post officials checked the
clubrooms over the weekend they
found that burglars had backed
up a van and made off with 20
red- lcathe r .chair, is.. Joungs
chairs, 5 davenports, 79 gray met
al chairs, J coffee tables, a juke
box and a; bowling machine.
The. clubrooms. . several, miles
from the city, are used only once
a week.- A '.
June Allyson '
Has Pneumonia
HOLLYWOOD, March 3 IB
Actress June Allyson was hospi
talized today with what her phy
sician said was bronchial pneu
monia. She was taken to the UCLA Med
ical Center Hospital in .vest Lot
Angeles by her secretary, Bar
bara Salisbury, on doctor's orders.
V
v
No. 342
Bill Flow
Expected to
Gain Tempo
Fewer major hill . herinRs
are on tap for the Oregon leg
islature . and the interested
publicthis work, hut the flow
of hills ta the floor of Senate
and Housn is expected to pick
up a little speed.
Compulsory meat inspection and
a "move to abolish; Saturday bank
ing will got the most attention at
hearings this week. .
At o'clock this morning a
hearing is scheduled by the House
state and federal affairs committee
Legislature Today
8 a.m. House welfare commit
tee considering bills on nurses'
practice, Room 326.
8 a.m. House State and Fed
eral Affairs committee hearing
on HJM 5, asking for convention
to amend U. S. constitution to
restrict amount of federal in
come taxe levied. Room 321.
10 a.m. House and Senate
meet. ?
on a proposed memorial to Ton
gress seeking a limit on federal
income tax.
Rep. Robert Bennett R. Port
land, and others are sponsors of
the move to ask for a convention
to amend the U.S. constitution by
putting a ceiling on how much
federal income tax could be levied
The meat inspection plan, (HB
420) will be considered by the
House agriculture committee at its
regular 3 p.m. meetings both Tues
day and Thursday in Room 326.
A bill to keep banks closed Sat
urday (SB 268) will be given hear
ing by the Senate financial com
mittee at 2:30 p.m. Friday.
House state- and federal- affairs
will consider the bill for a state
development department (HB 445)
as asked by the governor, at 8
a.m. Wednesday. The forestry com
mittee of the House will consider
bill (HB 565) to abolish timber
marketing areas at 8 a.m. Thurs
day.
Wreckage of
Lost Airliner
Foundr5 Die-
PORT ANGELES. Wash.. Mar.
3 WV-A ground party reached the
broken, burned wreckage of an
Alaska Airlines OC4 today and ra
dioed back that all five aboard
were killed when it crashed, late
yesterday in the Olympic Moun
tain foothills.
Bodies of the two nasseneers.
pilot, copilot and stewardess were
recovered from the scene of the
crash and brought to Port Angeles
late this afternoon by a mountain
rescue council team. The team
had been ferried within a mile.of
the crash scene by Coast Guard
helicopter.
The downed DC4 was spotted
this morning by a Coast -Guard
helicopter pilot near the top of a
heavily timbered saddleback at
2,000-foot elevation.
TTie airliner crashed just 18
minutes away from the end of a
l,55B-mile flight from Fairbanks
to Seattle.
Last word from the airliner was
at 5:18 p.m. yesterday when the
pilot, Capt. Larry Currie of Seat
tle, radioed he had just reached
northwest Washington over Dun
geness, 20 miles east of here and
18 minutes out of Seattle.
Cause of the crash could not be
determined,
On the Brighter Side . .
I ppaaasMManaMSMg!M '
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Wriicflo HalrorJ D,vl1
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DsraeDis to
Withdrawal Seen Despite Stiff Opposition at Home
By ROBERT TUCKMAN
TERL'SALEM, March 3 (AP)-Indications crew tonicht that Premier David Ben-Gurion
will announce to Parliament
coast' and the Gaza Strip.
The divided Cabinet deferred decision on withdrawal
or no tomorrow. '
But enough leaked from;
to the latt'lui step despite ris
ing opposition inside the cxnin-
try.
Not only the Cabinet major
ity but a Parliament majority
were reported, willing to sup
port the decision If it means
avoiding V. N- sanciionaand
breaks with the United States and
with the U, N.
The U.S. stand contributed to Is
rael's indecision Sunday.
Slessage Studied
While Hebrew newspapers used
such terms as . "deceit" and
"treachery" in criticism of tho
American stand for withdrawal.
Ben-Gurion met with his Cahinet
and studied a message from Pres
ident Eisenhower in an inconclu
sive four-hour session.
Eisenhower said he hoped the
pullout "will go forward with the
utrriost speed." He pledged the
United States will work to help
realize Israel's hopes 'for peace
and security in the Middle East.
The Premier, still lacking the
ironclad guarantees he has
sought for Israel's security at
home and at sea, said he would
announce the decision to Parlia
ment tomorrow after another
Cabinet meeting.
Shipping Freedom
In Ben-Gurin's words, "free
dom of shipping and freedom
from Egyptian attack on Israeli
citizens" remain prime Israeli ob
jectives. He set that forth in a
message Friday to a London news
paper editor, Charles Eadc of. lne
Sunday Dispatch,-in response to a
fmessageNif sympathy from tade.
He said his country s struggle is
"not against an enemy but against
a triena uie Lnnea siaies gov
ernment.
WASHINGTON. March 3 Wi De-
sfpite hesitation in Jersusalem. dip
lomatic officials, here said today
they expect diplomatic withdrawal
from the Sinai to be under way by
midweek unless unforeseen hitches
develop.
' CAIRO, March 3 in Two Cai
ro newspapers said today Egypt
is not bound by any "bargains
which ,may have been made to
induce Israel to withdraw from
the Gaza Strip and the Gulf of
Aquaba.
All the city's morning papers
said in editorials they more or
less expected current Israeli de-
lajr in'withdrawing.-"------
W. D. Browne,
Ex-Portland
Officer, Dies
PORTLAND.. March 3 l-Capt.
William D. Browne, former chief
of detectives in the Portland po
lice force, died in a hospital to
day. He ws 60.
Browne was widely known for
his police and American Legion
activities in trying to expose
Communists and suspected Com
munists. He frequently was in
volved in controversies over this.
A native of Spokane, he began
his. police career there 37 'years
ago as a sheriffs deputy. He
joined the Portland force as a
patrolman in 1924 and became
chief of detectives in 1948. He re
tired last month, suffering from
the heart condition and leukemia
that ended his life.
Browne served in the Army in
both World Wars.
He leaves a widow, two step
sons and a Drotner, utnnjr
Browne, Vancouver, Wash.
Gooley, 1097 N. Winter St., doesn't whistle much any more
hft iost Wg front teeth. But he's pretty good at yo-yolng.
tomorrow Israel's decision to
,
the Cabinet meeting to justify assumptions the Cabinet will aeree .
New Methodist District
Superintendent Named
PORTLAND, -March 3 ( The
appointment, of Dr. Recter W.
Johnson, Eugene, to ' become
superintendent of the Salem . dis
trict of the Methodist Church was
announced today. .
Bishop A. Raymond Grant, gen
eral superintendent of the church
in Oregon, Washington and Idaho,
said the appointment will become
effective alter the June 14 Meth
odist conference in CorvallisJ
Dr. Johnson will succeed Drvf
George G. Roseberry, Salem, who:
is completing his sixth year in the:
position, the maximum allowed
fr. Johnson is pastor of the
First Methodist Church at Eu
gene.
In his new position he will super
vist the activities of 42' churches
between McMinnville and Harris
burg and from the coast to the
Bend-Prineville area.
(Dr. Roseberry said Sunday
night that Bishop Grant will ap
point him pastor of a church 'in
Oregonr- Washington, or Idaho,- at
the time of the Oregon Methodist
Conference in Corvallis in June.)
Copters to Carry Ike From
White House to Golf Games
By VERN HAl'GLAND '
AP Aviation Reporter
WASHINGTON, March 3 (AP)-President Eisenhower is
goine to. use helicopters ta fly between the- White Houso and
his favorite local golf course, thus avoiding street traffic.
Sources reporting this today said two helicopters have ben "
Five Vehicles
In Smashup
Near Dallas
Sutriman Newi Strvlr
DALLAS, pre., March 3 Five
cars piled up in two related ac
cidents this afternoon on Highway
22 at Biftawaltr Hill, about' one
mile north of Dallas.
Two persons were hospitalized
for observation ' but hospital at
tendants said neither was believed
to be in serious condition.
. Larry Southwick, Dallas, was
taken by Dallas. Ambulance to
Dallas Hospital, where attendants
said he had an arm laceration,
undetermined back.injury and pos
sible head injuries. Mrs. Harry
Allen Anderson, 4304 Kurth St.,
Salem, was taken to Bartell Hos
pital. Attendants there said she
was under observation for back
injuries.
The nileup started with a minor
collision between a car driven by
Gladys Helen Buhler of Dallas and
one being backed from a drive
near the toD of the hill by John
Pitichardsonof Dallas, state police
said.
Cars driven by James Stilwell
of Albany, Harry Allen Anderson
of Salem and Robert L. Soendker
of .Dallas then crashed in rear-end
collisions without striking the cars
in the first, accident, police said.
Mrs. Anderson was riding with her
husband and police said South
wick was with Soendker.
.
John Erickten
Reveal
withdraw from the Aqaba Gulf
again today and prpmised a yes
Dr. George G. Roseberry,
Salem, who will conclude
his service as superin
tendent of the Salem Dls-.
trict Methodist Church in
June.
selected for the President. They
are small, four-place- Bell mach
ines of the familiar glass bubble
type. The first will be flown here
this week from the Bell 'Aircraft
Co. plant at Fort Worth, Tex.
The White House announced re
cently that plans were under way
for the President to use a heli
copter to avoid automobile con-
gestion on trips between the White
House and National Airport, but
nothing was said of amy plans for
commuting to the golf course. This
usually involved an even greater
traffic "problem. "
The. helicopters will be stationed
at the Military Air Transport Serv
ice operation center at the airport
and will be able to operate from .
the White House lawn, a fairway
at the suburban Burning Tree Golf
Club, or any convenient open
space.
The distance from the White
House to Burning Tree Is 9.4 miles .
by helicopter. , ' ,
As in the case of the presiden
tial plane Columbine HI and the
smaller Aero Commander, the
original purchase price of the hel
icopters would be charged to the
Defense Department budget as an
Air Force equipment. But wheth
er the cost of individual trips to
and from the golf course would
be charged to the Air Force or t
the President's expense allowance
was nnt learned..
Portland Tot, 3,
Makes 100-Block
Solo on Tricycle
PORTLAND. March 3 WI
David Draper, 314. years old and
a likely cycling champion, finally
was corralled today. But net
stopped.
The family began searching for
him only minutes after he peddled .
away on his tricycle.
Later . a policeman reported a
small figure pumping vigorously
away up a street part-way across
town. But it was so far away the
family concluded it could not be
David. The search continued at a
nearby .park.
It 'Was 100 minutes . and 100
blocks away before a patrolman
finally nabbed David, still ped
dling. To the hoosegow they went, but
Uhe family was out searching and .
ii was two nours Dei ore me poucv
could notify them of David's safe
ty. - '
Meanwhile David got hit tricy
cle and peddled around in the po
lice station.
Spelldownl
(Editor's Natal roliowtnf art kuM
wordi for th enrrrnt SUtofmaa
K8LM Speltlni ConWM for 4,M rta
dmti In t mier Mhools. To o
vouraf aay-to-day itiidy bo fom
poilt (lit will bl iTalUblt Oally .
worm Inn Uard toxtbookt
Contrrt la frco wltfe boUUbi lo toy
or Mil).
janitor ------
radiogram
jungle
thirsty
immediate
"historical
- unconscious
wilderness .
appeal
normal -
mention
lieutenant
monument
suspicious
minister
departure -ioUtude
-scholar
toboggan
f'i. X - -Jr .
A
'