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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1946)
CITY EDITION CITY EDITION lation yesterday 24,131 EUGENE, OREGON, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1946 NO. 83 LANE COUNTY'S HOME NEWSDAPEQ. ' .: If jK.'i :. . ' '!' ' ;'.v ' ! " i 107 WPrnntifiK diedbyUN Lory Lie Turns r in.... inn Moves Ifrontiers ren - eto of an American winuiewiui'-j - an on-me-spoi iv..- Stioo on the troubled ' . miHi in an tented move by Secretary- L council reject four lis arising irom L- accusauuuo - Lections had the effect of the UKrailHcm -im.t.-" (iCe, WltD en w Lgj peace on urn iuou Uerand they ended the s concern run we case Biten sessions oi B the past uiree weera. ItAirees Ever, Lie's statement that reserving the rignt, unaer v. charter, to investigate port on any matter which ned I threat to interna peice and security moved Delegate Andrei A. Gromy i council chairman, to re fill he thought the secre- Ural was "perfectly right" fcj the question. right, Lie told tne council ft Soviet veto threat was orer the American pro tor on-the-spot inquiry Greece's borders with Al- Yugoslavia and Bulgaria, him to make any inde investigation he deems 1. 11; afterward, Gromyko in- Itie veto to kill the resolu- kt toward by U. S. Dele krschel V. Johnson which for a three-man commis- nraine incidents along Hoi if Greece's three Rus- keliite neighbors and the i tsk all four Balkan gov iti for relevant information, urn offered his resolution p remark that tht "basic that shooting is taking long the northern frontier lece, and this shooting can international friction." Train Toots Bills Airborne MADISONVILLE, Tenn. OP) Some 50 school boys and girls had joined hangers-on to watch the Louisville and Nashville railroad streamliner speed by when, as one spectator described it, "everyone went crazy and started running, after the train." Hundreds of $20 bills fluttered from the train, blowing along the track and clinging to bushes. The money. Postal Inspector R. C. Hornsby said Saturday, was being sent from a Chatta nooga bank to a Madisonville bank. Suction from the speed ing train drew the mail sack be neath car wheels and the cur rency packet burst open. The inspector said 70 per cent of the bills were recovered. j Residents Seek ;e from Typhoon H - (U.B Forewarned and civilians huddled shelters for seven hours it while a typhoon with gusts blasted away at the islands of Guam and m, causing damage " millions of dollars. a! the weather warnings 7 urologists, residents of ulandi went underground 7 hammering winds and ninj began ripping up R destroying radio facil- jeeps, toppling and strewing personal y across the islands. , of casualties made ".'over the shatters L7 ? "l-the r "quarters of the Fa- d major base of the rered 0,6 jap- f Erupted radio com- o accurate reports SA0.m3!Panand ISnierfM "nian both Negotiations ." "tabiluation pro tti . lWtwmof presi- W """"t'on and Re- Hope Diamond Heiress Dies WASHINGTON M5) Mrs. Ev- ter oi ivirs. jcvaxyn waisn iviciean and wife of former U.S. Senator Robert R. Reynolds of North Car olina, was found dead ir. her bed room late Friday. The body was found beside a switched-on radio by the family physician, Dr. B. W. Leonard, who told investi&ators that death may have been caused by an accidental overdose of sleeping pills. Coroner A. Magruder Macdon ald deferred issuing a death cer tificate, however, until he has made a further examination. Teste To Be Taken In a temporary finding, the coroner attributed death to "acute congestive heart failure." He said chemical tests will be made to determine if a bottle of sleeping pills found near the body had any connection with the case. Dr. Leonard had called at the family home, "Friendship," to treat Jvlrs. McLean, owner of the famous Hope diamond who was operated on recently for a knee injury. The physician went to Mrs. Reynolds' room when her m-ithpr was unable to raise her on the mansion's interphone system. In 111 Health The dead heiress, who had been li; ill health for some time," was tl daughter of the late Edward Beale McLean, Washington pub lisher, and granddaughter of Thomas F. Walsh, Colorado mil lionaire. She married Reynolds, then 57 years old chairman of trie Senate Military Committee, in 1941. They have a daughter, Mamie Spears Reynolds, who will be four on ! Sept. 30. Reynolds, who dropped out of the Senate in 1944, was at his farm at La Plata, Md., when his wife's body was found. Mrs. McLean has always dis counted the popular belief that ill fortune stems from the $2,000,000 blue-white Hope diamond, once owned by Catherine the Great of Russia. hi mm mmm mtmm mhmk mmmmm wmmmmaasm OS . , liV'CHK:dh, i Mt,mumir-rr-;v,- i ,r , - -, r, ' HUNGRY DOGGY? Joyce Arlene Wood. 6. who lust started to school last week, didn't want the nice doggy to go hungry, even if It meant his nosing over the lunch her mother put up for her until he found something that appealed to him. So she just spread hrr coat out on the sidewalk on the corner of Eleventh Ave. and Willamette St. Friday morning and shared. Joyce attends St. Mary's Catholic school. The free luncher's name is Dixie. Mew Type Atom Smasher, Bigger Than Ever, Reported NEW YORK (U.B Construction of new type atom machines, with even more powerful devices to come in the future, was reported Saturday at the annual meeting of the Amer ican Physical Society. These new machines, designed to accelerate 70,000,000 to 300, 000,000 electronic volts, will be used in scientific research into the further possibilities of harnessing power from the universe, particu larly from the cosmic rays. The most powerful new ma chine, called the synchrotron, is being constructed at Berkeley, Calif. This will accelerate 300,- 000,000 million electronic volts. Another is about completed at the General Electric plant in Sche- West Coast Ship Tieup Stays as East Operates Acceptance Of All Seamen Yet Pending By ASSOCIATED PRESS CIO mariners filed back to work on ships in New York Harbor Saturday after mem bership meetings there and in other east and gulf ports voted an end to their mari time strike on the basis of an arbitration award establish ing an industry-wide principle of wage parity. Joseph Curran, president of the National Maritime Union, sa;d that the nation's costliest sea stop, page was "officially over," but ac tual end of the strike elsewhere depended on acceptance of the settlement by all seamen involved. The NMU said members in New York, Philadelphia, Houston, Newport News, New Orleans and Providence had voted to accept the new agreeme.i. which also must be concurred in by NMU members in other ports, the CIO Marine Cooks and Stewards, and the in dependent Marine Firemen, Oil- snlasn:neiers, wipers ana waienenaers- Ticket Mixup Adjusted By MP AUBURN, Nebr OP) The railroad conductor looked, then looked again, at the tickets hand-j ed him by a military policeman and his prisoner. The tickets routed the M.P. one way and the prisoner another. Both would arrive at the same destination, but en route their paths would diverge. The prisoner said, "That's O.K. by me." But the M.P. immediately adjusted the situation. west coast unions before the na tionwide strike would be ended. Stuart Chinese Group Revives Peace Plans NANKING OP) Consulta tions aimed at convening the Stuart Political Reorganization Committee to work out an all party state council for China were revived unexpectedly Saturday. This "activity resulted after a Communist spokesman called on U. S. Ambassador Stuart to get a reassertion of the American prom ise to make, every effort to secure peace for China If the committee should succeed in forming such a council. Resumption of the conversations came at a time when the entire peace negotiations seemed headed for an open rupture, and after a Communist spokesman in Shang hai threatened the party would publish the full record of the ne gotiation unless the government reassemble the Marshall military truce committee. h ..hnn ..... R H E 1 -tt ffli". bo . Schmiu and !i'BCo Cald- i-.,.'"-she. i". P tl), Mar- Search for Slayer Of Woman Continues City and state police continued a vigilant search here Saturday for the suspected murder of Mrs Cora Rogers, slain at her store in Greenleaf a week ago. Descriptions of the SUSP's- were released heie Friday. City police said thov had numerous calls from residents who believed tllPV 'hari rnidail a man nf tha ITIVAn rlbem.illAA hot nt et,.V. 'cads had resulted In arrest of the suspected murdfrer Saturday noon. SAN FRANCISCO- OP) The Pacific Coast shipping tieup ex tended into the 16th straight day Saturday with a prospect of more disputes on the horizon. Standing out among develop ments were: 1. The Pacific-American Ship owners Association, taking the position that actual wage cuts would be involved in acceptance of a federal arbitrator's award, asked for clarification. 2. Striking west coast unions nectady, It will have a capacity of lkePl tneir Pickets on the line, said at least 70,000,000. !nly a written guarantee by the Reports on both machines were I operators of pay boosts would made at Saturday's meeting ofltle the strike and accused the the phvsical society. shipowners of "stalling." At the same time, there were;"' uo "sning discussions on the possibility of machines with 1,000,000,000 elec tronic volt acceleration. British Guest Fails in Voting PARIS OP) British demands for specific treaty safeguards for foreign petroleum interests in Romania snagged on a tie vote, 7 to 7, in the peace conference's Balkan economic commission Sat urday. The r e su 1 1 1 n g parliamentary tangle caused the American dele gate, Senator Arthur Vandenberg, to declare "this procedure has been fantastic." Earlier, the Italian political and territorial commission approved 13 to 6 the separate agreement be tween Italy and Austria for con siderable autonomy rights in the Tyrol, and ordered it inserted in the Italian peace treaty over' the objections of the Slav bloc. Local Autonomy Under the agreement, which was signed here recently by Austrian Foreign Minister Karl Gruber and Italian Premier Alcide De Gasperi, Italy' granted local autonomy to German-speaking residents of the South Tyrol, guaranteed the right to speak the Tyrolese language and pledged thai German-speaking persons would have equal op portunity to hold public office. The two nations also promised to work out mutually satisfactory rail, transit and trade facilities. Experts To Be Admitted The revised British annex to the WASHINGTON OP) Dairy Romanian treaty which ran into products went their way in a free a parliamentary snarl would re- market Saturday but with butter quire Romania to restore or re-and cheese prices under th wary place the losses of allied nationals eye of the Price Decontrol Board. 3. A west coast leader of the AFL Masters, Mates and Pilots said his men "may just go fish Scientists used the so-called1 ing" ev:n if the current shipping cyclotron in early 'smashing of the atom, and now they need these new powerful machines to make further study of the atom nuclei. They cautiously say that the new machines may also produce arti ficially the equivalent of cosmic rays. These are the beams that are found in great density 20 to 40 miles above the earth's surface and have a Component, known as a meson, which has thousands of times as much energy as is re leased in the ordinary splitting of the uranium or plutonium atom. Decontrolled Watch Butter, Cheese Prices in the oil fields, annul discrimin atory legislation and admit key administrative officials and tech nical experts into the country to operate the wells. The British Empire countries Britain, Australia, Canada, India,. New Zealand and South Africa plus Greece carried the first two paragraphs 7 to 8 against the United States and the Slav bloc Russia, White Russia, the Ukraine, Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia. State Restaurants Will Ignore Price Rollback PORTLAND OP) Oregon restaurant operators Friday night attended a mass meeting here and voted to ignore the OPA-ordered price reduction. Some 250 restaurateurs from as far away as Medford condemned the dictum as "an abuse of power by a government agency" and as "an attempt at profit control and cost absorption instead of price control." The group turned aside sugges tions of closure and cutting meat dishes from menu offerings. dispute is settled. ' Meantime shipping remained at a standstill in west coast harbors, except for tankers and a few other ships unaffected by the strike, There was no accurate count of the number of ships idle but best estimates placed it at about 285. Coast Problem Baffling A Maritime Commission order, aimed at equalizing pay for AFL and CIO seamen on both coasts under an award of Arbitrator James L. Fly, settled the east coast dispute but PASA officials said its provisions on the west coast proved baffling. They said some west coast categories did not even exist on the east coast and that in others, such as the electricians, the formula meant cuts on the Pacific side. . Representatives of the CIO Marine Cooks and Stewards and the independent Marine Firemen said they had accepted the Fly award In announcing a decision not to rpimnnsfl rpilmo.c nour 'hi hnat-H declared it would maintain vigi-! lance over the dairy rice trend! and stay ready for any action' which might be necessary. A board official told reporters cheese and butter are the "sore spots" Chairman Roy L. Thomp son had in mind Friday night when he said prices are "ap proaching the critical point." The board nevertheless repeated its decision of a month earlier that milk, cream, butter, cheese, ice cream and other dairy items should remain free from OPA controls because there has been no "unreasonable price increase over June 30 ceilings plus subsidy." Fog Ties Up Eugene Flyer, Landing 'Safe' - REDMON, Ore. OP) Howard J. Houser, Eugene, landed safely in his single-engined airplane Fri day night after finding fog block ing him from his home port.. ' Because of ,an oil-covered wind shield, however, Houser ground looped his plane, knocking off the landing gear and damaging wing. Helicopters Arrive For Crash Victims Food Retailers Are Convicted DANVILLE, 111. OP) The huge A k P food chain, one of the world's largest, 12 of its subsidi aries and 16 of its officers were convicted Saturday of violating the federal anti-trust law. The defendants, including John A. and George L. Hartford, chiefs of the nationwide network of re tail .outlets and affiliated opera tions, were found guilty by Fed eral Judge Walter C. Lindley on both counts of a criminal infor mation. Trade Restrained They were found to have con spired to restrain trade in food products and "to monopolize n substantial part of such products in interstate commerce." The maximum penally for each de fendant would be a $5000 fine and a one-year prison sentence or each of the two counts. A it P immediately announced it would tppeal, saying "We can not conceive of this decision be ing upheld by an appellate lourl for we believe it to be in direct conflict with the facts of the iwse and the letter and spirit of the Sherman (a'lti-uust) Act." Food Retail Controlled The government in bringing the charges against A & P, contended that the rammed organization conspired to control "a substantial part of the ford business of the United States." This was done, the government set forth, through these means: Control of Ihe interlocking buy ing and selling subsidiaries was unified in the New York head quarters, ,. -... . Some retail stores were p?r mltted to operate at a loss to un dersell competing outlets and ulti mately force thc-n out of business. Misuse of proots and price fixing. The sivernment charged that all these prac'ices were concealed from the public. Wallace To Lead Attack Oh Policies Ousted Secretary Declares 'Winning Peace More Important Than Having Office.' Nation Speculates Drift WASHINGTON (AP) Henry A. Wallace, private citi zen, threw down the gauntlet to the Truman administration Saturday for a continuing battle over foreign policy.' The ousted Secretary of Commerce told the department'! employees in a farewell message he was resigning "in order that I may be free as a private citizen to continue to fight for world peace." And in a nationwide radio GANDER AIRPORT, Nfld. OP) Turn Armv QUvmnstArc 4nrh carrying a Coast Guard helicopter, . VS. 30; aggravated assault, 17.9, Oregon Low in FBI National Crime Count WASHINGTON, D.C., OP) The Pacific northwest had a low. er than national average of murd. er and non-negligent manslaught er cases during the first six months of 1946, the Federal Bu reau of Investigation said Satur day. The incidence of lesser crimes, however, placed Oregon and Washington above the U.S. aver age. For every 100,000 persons, Ore gon had 2.29 murder and man slaughter cases and Washington 2.25, compared to , the national figure of 3.13. Figures for lesser crimes listed: robberies, 60.3, Washington 61.5, Storm Lashes England Coast LONDON (IP) At least 11 persons were killed, English chan nel shipping was battered and thousands of acres of harvest crops in Leicestershire and North Hampshire were leveled in Frl day's 100-mile-an-hour winds which struck England's southern coast. The Air Ministry's weather bu reau said that a second gale which had been expected had not de' veloped by late Saturday after noon. Farmers said Friday's storm left their position "the most serious in memory." H. R. Overman, who farms more than 1000 acres in the area, said "the losses now run into millions of pounds, and many farmers will be facing bank ruptcy before the end of the year." Vessel Wrecked Friday's storm finished oft the 7176-ton American cargo vessel Helena Modjcska, which had been stranded on Goodwin sands off Deal since Sept. 12. The ship had broken in two forward of the bridge, and the stern portion swung around at right angles to the bow. Resumption of salvage operations was prevented Satur day by a heavy swell. At least 22 were reported In jured by the wind which caused devastation from Lands End to Dover and was adjudged the worst September storm in 37 years. Four of the deaths occurred in shipping accidents. Ship Swamped Three channel Islanders, bound for London for a belated celebra tion of the liberation, were wash ed overboard when the steamer, "Isle of Jersey" was virtually swamped by a 10-foot wave which hit her at noon Friday, 20 miles off the Guernsey coast. A plane bringing Field Marshal Lord Montgomery home from his visit to the United States, circled for two hours over Bovingdon airdrome and was finally diverted to another field where It landed without incident. landed at Gander Bay Saturday for an attempt to rescue 18 sur vivors marooned at the wreckage of a Belgian airliner in the wilder ness 22 miles southwest of this base. The Coast Guard In New York reported receipt of a message from Gander saying the ground rescue party at the scene had begun re moving the crash survivors to a small plateau where the helicop ters were expected to land and that at least two who were critic ally injured were expected to be brought out Saturday. The first transport arrived from the United States at 6:49 a.m., the second 31 minutes later. Workmen immediately began unloading the dismantled helicopters so they 14.1. 31.8: larceny and theft, 915.5, 920.1, 458.9; burglary, 423.2; 355.9, 197.6; . auto theft, 237.3, 348.9, 121.9. In compiling Its report, the FBI received figures from 26 Oregon towns and cities and 33 in Washington, IWA, Operators Wage Talks Go On Monday PORTLAND OP) Columbia River district logging operators and the International Woodwork ers of America (CIO) will resume contract negotiations Monday after an end-of-the-week deadlock. Operators said they approved hours and working condition changes but would not sign a con. Wyatt Talks Priority With Lumber Dealers WASHINGTON OP) Hous ing Expediter Wilson Wyatt car ried to a meeting of lumber deal ers and retailers Saturday his pro posal that housing priority for lumber 'extend all the way down to the mills. Lumber producer representa tives already had voted against the plan. Informed officials said the Civilian Production Adminis tration also opposes it. But Wyatt reserved his decision until after Saturday's dealer-re tailer meeting and some of his aides believed he would fight the plan through to Reconversion Di rector John R. Steelman If nec essary, address Friday night he de clared that "winning the peace is more important than high public office. It is more im portant than any considera tion of party politics." e removea any doubt that ha would battle on for his "Go-Easy-with-Russia" ideas which brought him into conflict with the State Department and led President Truman to dismiss him from hli official family. "The success of any policy," Wallace said, 'rests ultimately up on the confidence and the will of Ihe people. "There can be no basis for such success unless the people know and understand the Issues unless they are given all the facts and unless they seize the opportunity to take part in the framing of for eign policy through full and open debate." As the lowan stepped out he left Congress members and others ask. ing two major questions: 1. Would the President's action end the uncertainty ever Ameri can policy caused by Wallace's New York address 10 dan ago which contradicted Secretary of state Byrnes' position at many points? Some said It would. Others doubted It. Mr. Truman himsell made clear he intended the dis missal as emphatic notice that he Is standing four-suart behind Byrnes.- . .,...,..... -,. . 2. What would be the effect within ho Democratic party and particularly on its chances in No vember's elections and In 1948? Difference Emphasised A frequently expressed Republi can view was that the disouta emphasized the differences within the Democratic party and en hanced Republican prospects ol winning control of the next Con gress.' Some Democrats contended theit party's ranks had now been closed and its chances improved. One Democratic Senafbr, talk ing with the understanding thBl his name would not be reported, said he thought It was largely a matter of what the CIO Political Action Committee does. He said that no votes were go ing to be changed by the foreign policy row. But if the CIO-PAC makes only indifferent efforts ta get out its votes, he declared, then the Democratic party may !oos some Congressional districts whers CIO help Is required to put over its candidates. could be assembled for the ha?.-'tract until settlement of a Deep ardous pickup of the survivors ; River, Wash., walkout where un 14 of whom were injured serl-jion members refuse to work with ously. I non-members. WD Releases Secret Papers Revealing- Humans 'Cooled Off at Dachau -- Lumber Wage Issue Remains Unsettled Wage negotiation talks Friday between Willamette Valley Lum- jber Operators and Lumber and sawmill Workers again came to no settlement, and the meeting, in the office of George Metzger, secretary-manager of the Oper ators, was adjourned, subject to a I reconvening call at any timo by either party. The union is asking a 20-cents I hourly wag increase. Snell Suggests Camp Use for Delinquents CAT lriwr fli flnvttmnr Furl cii ..,iort svirfav that form- WASHINGTON OP) Naziithat "up to now" he had "cooled " " .. 1 , ... . . . . ft, U.. nn humnn r.nina. Plwe er Civilian Conservation corps (experiments in ireczing numani"" ' am in the mountains be used beings n a study of "the behav- taKcn irom concentration camiw, as boys' camps to rehabilitate 'ior of organisms at great heights" juvenile delinquents. Iwere cited by the War Dcpart- Admiltance would oe more or, mem Saturday in releasing less selective with a goal of re adjustment and correction before the boy reaches the training school or is sentenced to the penitenti ary," the governor said in a pre pared statement. Need for the camps, ne saio, is volume of secret documents seized after the conquest of Germany One '.ie documents, written by .- German air force physician. Dr. S. Rascher, to Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himmler, incongruously discussed the cold-blooded ex emphasized by the story of the i after first tnanking lite oi Mnnem "-'w-! Himmler for sendin, "flowers on who was executed a week ago for the brth of my ,econd on g slaying a state policeman. Bailey g b wrote the story of hji Irf. to he nlmmer state pnsor magazine. Diaming, hi. criminal career on the way he: In a letter dated Feb. 17. 1943. . hrmioht un ai a youth. 'Dr. Raicher wrote to Himmler by stripping them and exposing them to winter air for nine to 14 hours until their body temper atures fell as low as 27 degrees centigrade. vent submerging. These tests were conducted at the notorious Dachau concentration camp. Not Severity-Work . "The best doctor In a concentra tion camp is not the on. who be lieves that he must stand out for Afi- hni,r i nut ih 1 uncalled severity, but the one subjects in a hot bath." the letter jo kP the working capacity at said. "Every single patient was the various 1 abo r commands a lift ic romDletelv warmed up within one nlne5' ievei, hour at most, though some of The volume also contains a re- them had their hands and feet frozen white." Dr. Rascher also reported on subjecting humans to ice baths with the water --educed to temper atures ranging from 12 degrees to 2.5 degrees and the patients strap- rentration camps from ped in rubber life jackaU to pre- 1844. , port by the U. S. Third Army de claring that between 1,500,000 and 2,000,000 political prisoners were known to have been imprisoned and "labelled for extermination" in a chain of 23 to 30 Nazi con 1941 to Fu's Troops Join With Shansi Forces PEIPING (U.B Gen. Fu Tso-Yi's rescue troops pushing up from Sulyuan province were re ported Saturday to have made a Juncture with the Shansi province garrison troops of besieged Tat ung., The Nationalist army forces joined up at the Shansi border nan nt Tah.kannl.n.. OA Sh,!2-'" . Talung" and between tengenen and Tatung, according what Wyatt believes is a "leakage' of house-type lumber, at the mills, into the hands of industrial and commercial users. Under his proposal the "HH" housing priority granted to build ers participating in the veterans' housing program would apply to lumber mills as well as lumber yards and other dealers. Sugar Strike Parley Collapses in Hawaii HONOLULU VP) Prospects of settling the 20-day-old Hawai ian sugar strike were at the low est ebb Saturday as negotiations between union and industry rep- presentatives collapsed with no agreements being reached. The total wage loss during the 16 working day of the strike reached $2,000,000. During that! period nearly $5,000,00 worth of sugar ordinarily would have been produced. to a dispatch from the Suiyan capital city of Kweisui, which is Gen. Fu's headquarters. The vanguard of the Fu troops which captured Fengchen con tinued their adv.- ce toward Tat ung and met the spearhead of the Shansi garrison forces which wai in pursuit of a Chh.:se Commu nist column. Weather HALF-YEAR TRAINING BUFFALO, N. Y. OP) Six months' universal military train ing with the Army plus additional training with four options as to how it shall be taken will be pro posed by the War Department when Congress convens In Janu ary, Secretary of War Robert Pat- Urwn Mya, IT. S. Weather Bureau Forecast: Eugene and vicinity Cloudy with scattered showers Saturday and Saturday night. Slightly cool er, Oregon same. Moderate west to northwest wind off coast. Local Statistics: Highest tem perature Friday, 7 degrees; low Saturday morning, 57 degrees; 24 hour precipitation ending at 10:30 a. m. Saturday, none; total rain fall for month, 2.44 inches; normal for month, 1.99 inches; total since Sept. 1, 2.44 inches; stage of Wil lamette at 7:30 a. m. Saturday, minus 1.90 feet; wl-d direction and velocity at 11:30 a. m. Satur day, west 3; prevailing direction and average velocity Friday, west, 7. Sunrise and Sunset (PST)l Sunday, 5:59 a. m. and 6:11 p. m Monday, 6:01 a. m. and 6:09 p. nv SltlSLAW TIDES Hlch 10:40 a.m. S t ft. 10:34 a.m. Ta H I Urr 4iaak-M aiMtMB. Mil .4 ;':!; 'i ':-. i ' r lift t4 !' H :.--,- : j. 1 .Hi' i ? ill: !i 'A '.Ml HHU:,,,! : Jl' it - "! :HH,:. mm f.. :.' ;'!!;! iff;;;!? ti'" "' ' -i "' i : I I ' 'IT , sH ' U;'t;l;sU'' 'K' Wl.. If! ! f f fU.lt N mi i! '.T.Mf ! ti iM.,v:tVrVi : B p.' 'j'VH.'V: : 4 -a ? l.