Saturday. Aupwt 29, 1955. TEX CAPITAL JOUBNAL, Ukv Onfta Local Paragraphs Townaend Clubs to Mel The Central Townsend club No. will meet at 1 p.m., Au gust 31 at 258 Court itreeU. Parcel Port Ratea Circulars showing parcel post rates when increases authorized by the congress go into effect October 1, are available at the parcel post window of the Salem post office. The rates will be ad vanced approximately St per cent No change in the size of the parcels that may be mailed has been made. Car Collide Cars driven by Elizabeth Fitts, Indepen dence, and Levi Stackwell, Roscoe, 111., collided at the in tersection of Liberty and Mar ion streets shortly after 1 p.m. Wi with mlnnr rlamaa suffered by each vehicle. There were no injuries, police said. Breaks Elbow A fractured .elbow was suffered Friday by Arnold Canales, 26, employee of the Golden Gate hop ranch near Independence, when he fell about 16 feet from a "crow's nest'' , on a truck. Ca nales said he was cutting nop vines from the "crows nest" platform when it broke and he . was dropped to the ground. He was .taken to Sa lem Memorial hospital for treatment. , Dissatisfied Lester H. Far ris, Dallas, was held in the city Jail Saturday in lieu of bail on a disorderly conduct charge after he was engaged in an altercation with Loring Crier, Valley Credit service, 444 Center street, Saturday morning in the Credit service office. Police said Fsrriswas apparently dissatisfied with some dealings with the office. Car Biases City 'firemen were called out to 345 North Winter street early Saturday morning . to extinguish a fire in the car of Melvin Long. Fire apparently started in the wiring, they said. Damage was limited to the wiring and smoke damage in the car. Hera Again, Gone Again Shirts Ahoy II, the rowboat of Frederick Clark, 2175 North Liberty street, is gone again. The boat was stolen on July 31 and recovered. It was miss lng again the next day and again recovered. Then Clark took it home but relaunched it again recently. Friday, he told police it had been taken from its mooring below 2395 N. Front street again sometime this week. Pella and Tito (Continued from Page 1) ed States and Britain occupy "Zone A." It is understood that Pella warned the Envoys of the United States, Britain and France that Italy takes a grave view of the annexation report. He also, according to au thoritative sources, protested bitterly over the growing mil itary cooperation links be tween Yugoslavia and the western powers. Contract Oked (Continued from Psgt 1) The commission said the ini tial charges would be 50 cents an acre foot during the first 10 years and probably would be raised to f 1 after that. Effective period of the con tract Is 40 years which may be extended another 40 years. It will limit water delivery to 160 acres for a single landown er or to 320 acres if held Joint ly by a husband and wife as community property, 2 Army Transports Arrive at Seattle Seattle W) Two transports arrived Saturday bringing 2, 487 passengers from the Far East. They were the James O'Hara, with 700, nearly half of whom were Air Force men, and the Gen. W. O. Darby. The Dar by's 1.78S passengers included 205 Canadian soldiers, 4S4 Army officers and enlisted men, 641 Air Torre officers and enlisted men, and 298 mill- 4 - 4n..1.,. BORN SALEM MCMOaML HOSPITAL KLCCKIK Tt Mr. tod Mm. HT KlKMr. I3S7 Mirktl St., Bin. Auf. II. LADUKE To Mr. ITHl Mra. lrn.it M. LaDtitr. tin a. lltn at., a llrl, AW. II. DS1HS Tt Mr. tad Mil. Duana Dtltl, tin Uari.t St. t llrl. Au. Si. BAI.IM GtKMAL BOVPITAL HINRY Ta Mn. Emmtlt xnrr. 4M0 tifttrtr M . t tlrk Ant. 91. SA NDATROM Tt Mr. ltd Mr I. Hnrr P. aandatroa. Ml Trraa St., A llrl, Auf. II HILLntm-Ta Mr. ana1 Urt. Darta" . Hiiitrica. lata Orttt at, a tor. Alt. it. srv.llTo Mr. ind Mr,. (want 1. eparia. mis portund Kd t tor, Aw. It. ll.VIf.TO! HOSPITAL JORDAN Tt Mr. tad MM. Dtlt Jor dan, t boy, Aut. 27. erTIAM MKMOaiAL HOSPITAL ROT Tt Mr. tad Mn. Doatld Bar. attTton. t till. Aas. It. MLVA-Tt Mr. tad Mn. Aaiawf an. J,ftrOB. a tlrl. Ami. it. AKDCRSON-Tt Mr. lad Mn LtalM arwfwn. Mtrloa, a tlrl. Aat. ft. RREWTOW Tn Mr. and Mrf. C rtataa, SU. i, Bos 1IT, Twratr, s bor, Aat. SI. Jadga Ob Vacation Circuit Judge Rex Kimmell will leave Sunday for Neskowin where he will spend the remainder of his vacation. He will re turn to his office after Labor Day. Judge Kimmell recently visited Idaho, a state In which he spent much of his public school days. " Building Permits A. K. Wilcox, reroof one story dwelling, 2881 Brooks street, 3250. Charlie Wigle, to erect a one story dwelling, 460 Kingwood road. $8,000. Vivian Damaske, to alter a on story dwelling, 15S5 South 20th street, $850. Capital Stock tlaped The Salem Steel and Supply com pany of Salem has increased its capital stock to 3500 shares of a' $50 par value each, ac cording to supplemental arti cles of incorporation filed with the county clerk. Previously the concern, incorporated in April 1846, had 10,000 shares of $1 each. Bark Beetle Battle Depicted Oregon's forestry depart ment's exhibit at the State Fair this year will feature the Kra phic description of the battle against the Douglas fir bark beetle, which is destroying priceless acres of sawtimber in the state. The exhibit, prepared by the forestry department with Hugh Hayea the artist, outlines the research plans which attempt control of the insect attacka on the forests. The beetles an nually destroy more timber than forest fires. , A giant replica of the bark beetle has been fashioned from cardboard and shows in detail this silent destroyer of trees. Since 1951, tremendous loss es have been austained from combination beetle attacks and blow-down from high winds. Estimates obtained from ground and aerial surveys place the lossses somewhere around ten billion board feet of timber, mostly Douglas-fir, that has succumbed. Blowndown timber forms sn ideal wintering-over refuge for the bettle. In the spring, adult beetles emerge to continue at tacks on green timber. Forest ers estimate enough timber has been killed in Oregon to build a five foot board walk from the top of Mt. Hood to the moon. Unless the timber is log ged quickly, Oregon will lose more than $1V4 billion. Other attractions, always popular with forest lovers, are the huge sections of Sitka spruce logs which round out the forestry exhibit. The largest section measures 11 feet in diameter and was cut from a spruce over 525 years old. It is estimated that it was a aapling ten feet high when Joan of Arc led her troops in 1429. The smaller section of spruce, 410 years old, measures 10 feet in diameter. Special attraction In the dis play will be exhibits by Keep Oregon Green featuring Smokey the Bear and the Care, less Hunter. a Hammond Low Bid on ME Home Portland () A low bid of $1,269,898 was submitted Frl day by the Ross B. Hammond Construction Co., Portland, on the proposed Oregon Metho dist Retirement Home south of Milwaukie. The bid was on the msin building Job. Still to be invit ed are bids for plumbing, heating and wiring, expected to total half a million dollars more. The Rev. Edward Terry, president of the home's board of trustees, said work is ex pected to start soon and the borne should be ready for oc cupancy by the end of 1954. Big 3 Otfer Reds Parley on Germany Bonn, W) The big western three powers' new offer to Join Soviet Russia in a foreign min isters' parley on Germany's future probably will be de livered late next week Just before the West German na tional election. Sept. 6. Western officials here said the Washington, London and Paris governments are now studying the draft of identical octet drawn up by their representatives- in Paris. They said the draft covers only one page in contrast to a 3,000 word Soviet note of Aug 16 on the subject. Large .grand ptano. Phone 1-3469 before 9, after 5. 206 Registered Boxer puppies, 6 weeks, Moore's Aquarium. Phone 4-3773. 206 Turkey pickers wanted. Msrion Creamery It Poultry Co, 943 N. Cora l. 206 Fresh killed young turkeys to bake or fry. 39e pound. Or wig's Market. 3975 Silverton Rd. Phone. 4-5742. 1l r' ' ji UtI-SLi . w'"1r- You Can Visit A-Bomb Crater Alamogordo, N. M. Ever had a yen to wander around an A bomb crater? ' The Military is finally pre pared to gratify your wish with a nlce safe hole with no dangerous radio-activity. The crater was made when the world's first atomic bomb shattered the dawn July 16, 1945. It will be opeh. for a guided tour Sept 6 Still standing are the twist ed remains of the steel tower. most of which was vaporized by the bomb. A small section of trinitlte the glassy-green fused desert sand has been protected with a roof and may be seen. " The crater la still there, but the charred sands of much of the surrounding desert have been covered over and planted with grass to prevent the blow ing of radioactive sand. The bombing range - and Trinity site soon will became national monuments. American WAC Long Haired Gl Inchon. Korea VP) The ex citing rumor swept through this reception center that an American - Wae waa coming back from Communist impria ment. True enough, the blond hair of a returned prisoner stepping off an ambulance Saturday came down to. the shoulders. But the freed prisoner turn ed out to be Pfc. Wayne John son of Beaver Dam, Ohio. He went at once to a barber shop, got bis hair cut and kept the shorn locks. "I'm saving this hair," he ex plained, "because my father told me I'd be bald by the time I was 21."' In Ancient Egypt, rocks were split by drilling holes in a line and inserting wooden pegs which split the rock after be ing soaked in water to make them swell, ssys the National Georgraphic Society. COURT NEWS Circuit Court At m vi Vernon lUr CranlM: Or6r rtlfulnt djicltDdftnt from probttlon. Prink Cannon Cltrtnet TV Olfd dm: Order oftrrultni objection! to find- Inn of act In connection with pleln tiffs application lor writ of babtaa corpu. Xllcca Ltni. t nlaor tr htr tutrolta fad llttm. Paullat w. Laat va Wtllaca Carton Jr.. Hrraort Sttppar, Joha SAtp- Pft. suaana MacDoaaM tad Jot Lar. raat: Demurrer ar dtfaadaai fttepptr oa tht trouadi af laaulneitBt facta. Hactn Butena Tueker br Vrlle Turk tr, tuardlen ad litem, Claudia Ear- lene Tucker: Defendant' aniwer and crota complaint aeeklnc divorce, control oi minor caua ana at monuur aupport. Probata Court AMumed buatntve name certificate of OHM Auto Wrecking filed by Ed-trd A. cnanca. oatea, ore. Patricia Ana and Olorla Jean Jamtaon tuardiananip: Order appoint lac Pioneer Truat Co, guardian. UlDtle count. RamptoB aetata: Pinal ao Ptr J. Haienauer estate: Order ap proTinK final account District Court William Kdiar Goodrich, L Porta, Colorado, reckiesa driving, fined t. John Howard Weat, Oakland, Califor nia, TecklCAn driving, eatenced to 10 day la county jail. . , Municipal Court Kennci n Jemta Pteman. mawa road, cited to court. Mornogo Uctntot Albert Ortaaom, , mintatar, Aotiu field. Mo., and Lenola Wilton, , atu dcnl, Rt. I. flalem. Rudolph W. WeiibTock, M. engineering aid, SMf Lancaster, and Lota A. Mul len, la, cannery worker. 1411 Palrhavea, Salem. Daniel Cue en e Barham. tS. teacher. and Betty FUe tatter. If. typtit, Rt. I, Boa 111, Ralem. Gordon Brnejt AUemann. 11. mechanic Rt. I, Box m, and Deru Lauren Chit tick. II. photo fiamhey. Rt. . Boi til. SaJca. o R. C. Relaow. fl. Plumber. a4 Worth Winter St., and Alpha Le Price. M, wattroaa, Tf M. Commerciai, Km. Rrtdle 3 MarDouea.. . laborer. ti South Charrh St., and Rett! E. 1kj, ala woman. fU south Cotiaa. Salem. Amad Z Irian Rum. tl. ailnlitef. Port. land, and Lintan May Ball. 4a, nam treaa, Partlaad. Bkhard Paul Morn, li AAk. Mi Worth lih St., and Prtet May too. 31. itDographer, 44 north Uth. Satem. Cff ft. Branch. M). hoeiHul ate. artd Chle O. Branch, orrapational thf aPiafta koiR otauos A Solca. UNITED STATES GAINS IN Only Russia's tAndrei Vlahinsky, second from right at table, does not raise bit hand as members of the United Nations political committee reject Soviet proposal that Korean peace conference comprise six belligerent countries and nine "neutrals." Vote waa 5-41, with 13 abstaining and India not voting. Voting to reject the proposal are Uru guay's Enrique Rodriquez Fabregat, (left); Henry Cabot Lodge, U. S., second from left; Sir Gladwyn Jebb, United Kingdom, center; and J. R. Jordaan, at right. (AP Wire photo.) r ': i Famed Aviator to Be Salem Visitor Sept. 3 By DAVE . Max Conrad, a SO year old aviator who has ilown a Piper Tripacer twice across the At lantic and Ilown non-stop from San Francisco to New York, will arrive here September 4 at 4 p.m. in the same small aircraft in which he made his previous flights. Conrad's extended flight, in which he will visit all of the state capitals, is in observance of the SOth year of powered flight The last time such a flight was accomplished was in 1929, when Charles Lindberg visited all of the 48 state capitals. On that occasion, the feat took three months. Conrad will take three weeks. Conrad will arrive at the Sa lem naval air facility and will be met by Jack Bartlet direc tor of the state board of aero nautics, Eugene L. Bull, air force master sergeant from the Willamette university ROTC unit who will represent the Junior Chamber of Commerce, and Bill Garrett, commander of the Salem unit of the Civil Air Patrol. A police escort will then take Conrad to , the Capitol building where he will present to Governor Paul Patterson a message from General James Doolittle, secretary of the 80th year observance. A message Reds Shifted (Continued from Page 1) Chairman McCarthy (R- Wis.), charged earlier that an organized gambling ring is op erating in the big government printing plant. This, McCarthy said, poses "a very grave threat to the national security." In a surprise development the Wisconsin senator called GPO printer Carl J. Lund mark, who smilingly declined to aay whether he made 125, 000 last year from taking horse race bets at the plants Tight-lipped, and plainly taken aback by the gambling development, Blatten b e r g e r announced be will suspend im mediately . any employe who like Lundmark refuses to testi fy on the ground his answers might Incriminate him. The public printer's state ment touched off a round of applause, from the audience of more than 200. The subcommittee has been Investigating charges that some employes of the printing office are communists and may have carried off con ldential docu ments. McCarthy, sitting as a one man subcommittee, headed off on a different track baturaay, however, contending that gam bling in the GPO could cause employes to get so deeply Into debt that they might be easy prey for foreign agents. The change sidetracked for a time the scheduled appearance as a witness of Philip L. Cole, deputy public printer snd GPO security officer. Mt. Angel to Have K. C. Picnic Sunday Mt. Angel The Knights of Columbus all state picnic will be held In the St. Benedict Ab bey grounds Sunday, Aug. 30, starting with an outdoor mass at U a.m. Picnickers will bring their own basket lunches which will be served following the mass. A special program of out standing speakers has been pre pared for the afternoon as well ss games and athletic events. A special committee will help care for the children. CANNON AT ATHENS Athens, Greece, () Caven-I dish Cannon airived here Sat- J . - t . I. . .... Uim iwi.( UIUIV W wf 111. iiv-vr ."" - as U.S. Ambassador to Greece. U. N. CROMWELL will also be delivered from General Lucius Beau, national commander of the CAP, to Col onel Kenneth S. Jordan, Sa lem CAP commander. The day will be climaxed with a banquet at the Chinese Tea Gardens where a represen tative of Boeing Aircraf com pany will apeak on the "Next 50 Years in Aviation." The banquet is open to the public. . Salem will be the next to last capital which Conrad will visit. On September 4th he will fly to Sacramento to com plete bis mission, and will then fly non-stop .to Washington, D. is the father of ten children and has logged over 28,000 hours in his Piper Tri pacer. . Astoria Fish Derby Sunday Astoria (U The famed As toria Salmon Derby gets un derway here tomorrow and the weatherman had encouraging predictions for fishermen who have been casting disappointed eyes toward weepy skies this week. The weather bureau said clear weather could be expect ed tomorrow along tht lower stretches of the Columbia riv er. The rains this week should improve the fishing, local fish experts and packers said. With clearing of the skies, several thousand fishermen are expected to be on the Colum bia estuary tomorrow, striving to land prize-winning salmon. 22 Americans (Continued from Page 1) McNeill ssld he understood that the 23 are expected soon at Kaesong, Red assembly point near Panmunjom, to be turned over to the neutral nations re patriation commission. This Is tht group organized to handle the machinery of deciding cus tody of such men. The Red promise to repatri ate all prisoners asking to be returned was in reply to a question from United Nations officials on that point. Numerous prisoners had been sentenced at the time of the truce signing to prison for such alleged crimes as "insti gating against the peace" and "waging germ warfare." At first, reports were the Reds' in sisted on the men serving their terms before being freed. But in reply to U. N. ques tions, the Reds told the com mission: i "Our side will . . . repatriate all the POWs who insist on re patriation. The repatriation of prisoners of war who insist on repatriation Is now approach ing the end. All the POWs un-. der our custody who insist on repstrlstion will be returned to your side by the time the repstrlstion operations con cludes." Correction ON WEDNESDAY In DARBY'S BOYS' SHOP AD Tht Phone Number Should Hare Rtesj 3-9082 .VLB )X Hay Inspection Set Up at K.F. Tht) State Department af Agriculture this week took an other step in extending its serv ice to agriculture throughout the state by making available hay Inspection for tht Klamath area. At requests of persons desir ing to Improve tht marketing of hay in that area, tht Depart ment now baa two licensed In spectors available upon request to the office of Rose Aubrey, federal-state . shipping point supervisor at Klamath Falls, State Director of Agriculture E. L. Peterson said. Inspection will be on the basis of U. S. grades only, with eertuiea federal-state inspec tors performing the service. Legionnaires In Sf .Louis St Louis f The welcome mat it out for soma 33,000 American Legionnaires already streaming into St Louis tor sessions prior to the formal opening of the Legion's ' na tional convention. Official convention activities don't begin until Monday but a fast pace of talks before com mittees already haa been set with more on tap for today. Ma). Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director of the country's selec tive service system, Is one of the high ranking military of- iicers scheduled to report to the legion today. Other re ports will deal with the tour branches of the armed forces. Hotel and motel reservations are thing of tht past as tht Legionnaires beat a steady path to their convention quar ters by bus, ear, train and plane. In a speech yesterday. Sen. McCarthy (R., Wis.), told Legionnaires he plana to con tinue his government investi gations even if they embarrass tht Eisenhower administration. Idaho Vagrant Really Loaded With Trinkets Idaho Falls, Idaho WV- A man picked uu Friday by police for making too much noise was really loaded. Along with 26 cents, the man had these items In his pockets: A Roy. Rogers deputy sher Iffs badge, a Mickey Mouse balloon, 8 smashed tobacco cans,. 5 wallets, 10 combs, 37 books of matches, 19 pencils, 3 ball point pens, 13 empty to bacco sacks, I pairs of glasses, 3 pipes. , A cigar holder, a pair of pliers, 2 screw drivers, an end wrench, 3 old watches two without faces a 6 foot steel tape, a 6-inch pipe with a 2 lnch rubber hose attached, 10 empty cigarette packages, an expired driver's license belong ing to another person. Twenty one keys, a broken whistle, 2 esr polishing rags, a finger nail file, broken win dow bracket, a cigarette light er, 2 pair of ear pieces for eye glasses, 20 pieces of assorted paper, a windshield scraper, a pair of Jersey gloves, a halt box of wooden matches, several tax tokens, '9 cigarette butts sev eral with lipstick en them and 3 notebooks. The female hornblll, an African bird, walls herself up with mud Inside a hollow tree at nesting time, but leaves a small hole through whleh her mate feeds her and tht young. a II MAM!) libn - I I fsr " II it I t f r L Jm mm 1 1 II 1 II , 1 11 AMII V'fLtfSfo II v 1 1 VLto aaaaBBBB aa XB TT' I I r h 1 fa. .at. 1 1 1 p,. v7to. I ll.l V aaWaaVaaaaaaaBaaHaaaaHaiaBBBBa (tan Friday I (J LJ Till Pi 9 P.M.' L i J 1 1 Ex-Con Leads Cops Wild Chase on Hi A California man started 10-day sentence in tht county Jail Saturday only a few hours after he led city and state polios merry chase up and down tht Pacific highway in and north of Salem In the early morning tog. John Howard West. Oakland. California, waa finally stopped In bis 1933 DeSoto sedan by a state police roadblock at tht Gervaia Junction after outrun ning officers in five separate chases at speeds up to 100 miles an hour. He was arretted tor reckiesa driving and was sen tenced to 10 daya In Jail by District Court Judge Val D. Sloper later in the morning. Pellet meanwhile are in vestigating the possibility of West's car being a stolen ve hicle. A check with California police showed it had plates Ike Cooking for Fishing Camp Fraser, Colo, () (ff)Presl- dent Eisenhower's vacation schedule today is "Just plain loafing" at friend's secluded ranch high In tht Colorado Rockies.,. A aore elbow kept tht Pres ident from fishing, but he stayed busy yesterday cootting meals for his vacation buddies. With him art Aksel Nielsen, Denver businessman who owns the ranch, and retired Gen. Lucius D. Clay, board chairman of Continental Can Co. White House officials said the President's elbow Injury is "something like sprain.' Ht suffered it 10 daya ago while casting for trout in the South Platte River at Pine, Colo, 2t More Peak Climbers Killed Rome (fl Twenty-one more mountain climbers fell to their death this week In Germany, Austria, France, Switzerland and Italy, bringing tht sesson'a toll to 224. The death count already is well over that of last year. It is believed to be tht highest since the war. Austria had the largest number of fatalities nine this week bringing the season total to 73; tour In Switzerland, totaling 82, and four in France tor a aeaaon total of 28. ' Dempsey's Daughter Weds O'Flaherfy Los Angeles (fl Joan Han nah Dempsey, 19, daughter of former heavyweight boxing champion Jack Dempsey, and Dennis O'Flaherty, 21, were married Saturday at Our Lady of Loretto Catholic emirch. O'Flaherty, a Loyola Uni versity student, is the son of Col. and Mrs. A. E. O'Flaherty, a.t . anus utmpicj is we aaugnisr of the ex-champion and hit tor onetime New York ahow girl. .1, i iaiv-i-t i 'law ,a,it l i , Till 11 uranom tt that t . Daddy t 111 JiWUHl Salem's Leading Credit Jewelers il IVY V -a. FA L"- - 4 Pi way in Fog registered to a 1932 Plymouth. Tht chase started about 4:41 a.m. after West puiltd in to tht Hollywood Associated service atatloa on Portland road and offered to trade a . wrist watch and a diamond ring for eoma gaaoline. The watch waa worth 3275 and tba ring 3300, he said. service station attanoanu George Rlngnalda and George Wtlkum Jr. accepted tht offer and phoned police at soon aa west left the station. City police spotted him an Portland road and a car gave chase but waa outdistanced by West at 73 miles an .hour.. A few minutes later West waa aeen beading back into Salem and another officer gave chaee but again West pulled away from him. Then word was flashed that West was heading north again. Ont officer posted htaMelf by tht North Salem Drive-in theater and took out after West's car aa it aped by. Ht fell In behind West as West slowed behind a big truck and semi-trailer and sounded hit siren. West roomed around tht) truck with tht officer in pur suit but West left tht pursuing officer at 90 miles an hour in the fog and was last seen by the officer Just south of Woodburn. He passed 10 big trucks and tankers and two busses in tht rhaaa Ka uHlMa mM Suddenly West appeared out of the fog again, heading back ". toward Salem. By this time state police had their roadblock set up at Gervaia and stopped the elusive West. - Tn tha ai nnlli mmA numerous boxes of cheap watches,, rings, billfolds and sport clothes. West told officers that he had bought them lit California at wholesale and waa attempting to tell them. There su no registration with tht car. West explained he had Just bought it for ISO down and $50 a month and had made only tht first payment on It ao far. Police checked tha license numbers to find the plates were oft another car. West waa returned to Salens where ht was booked on tht reckless driving charge and i ii i ,i a a, aaa V ii J jauacu in ucu at tiuw vu Later in tht morning ht waa handed tht 10-day. Jail sen tence. He admitted that ha waa re cently paroled from San Quen tin rlson where he was doing time on a bad check charge, police said. CARD Of THANKS May we take this method of thanking our neighbors and friends for the kind expres sions of sympathy in eur bereavement. These ; expres sions have been deeply ap preciated. Mrs. Jessie Barlow and family. 206 CARD OF THANKS My sincere thanks and ap preciation .to those who have been so sweet and thoughtful during my years In Oregon. Do wish mt luck In my new venture Set you later. June Ellen Woodward, General De livery, Salem, Oregon. 206 anamas' w Treasure I. I 1 l ?i W . uranuma went away tagt i RlchtW My Daddy said ih wag rery happy now, I anal that f .-' " anom a vaj. ' D.. V IL. A out. a hw mc tears in higcyca. ' really understand I don't t wny uranama gaia it was lor met a n . .... ... .1. a aa. i j mpnn riu nuiitttui i ' " I if .; afca ..... I diamond ring tht alwayt wort. tayg Grandma wanted me to hare It Of course, I'm too young now. But, someday never fortret Grandma. ' V and Optieiaas Essy Piymeift - as ai. rSa-J Al K9 I LJ Frfrn rf