Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, February 18, 1954, Page 1, Image 1

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    G apit al
THE WEATHER
MOSTLY CLOUDY with occasion
al rain tonight,' Friday. Little
change in temperature. Low to
night, 34; high Friday, 48.
FINAL
EDITION
66th Year, No. 41 ?JZ0Z Salem, Oregon, Thursday, February 18, 1954 (32
. -rrt, rt.
4 More Errors
Discovered in
New Blue Book
Use of Photo of Judge
Who Died Last July
Most Glaring Mistake
By JAMES D. OLSON
Four more serious errors have
been discovered in the new Ore
gon Blue bock, the most glaring
being the use of a picture of a
circuit judge who died in July,
1053, and making no mention of
the successor who has been on
the bench for more than six
months.
. The first error found in this
book, compiled and issued by
Secretary of State Earl T. New
bry, was use of the late Justice
Arthur D. Hay's name under the
photograph of Associate Justice
William C. Perry. Small slips
carrying the name of Justice
Perry were printed and distri
buted to all who had been isucd
one of the first 200 copies of the
book.
Present Judge Not In
The newly discovered errors in
clude the use of the picture of the
late Circuit Judge Charles H.
Combs of Lake county, who .died
after hearing a case in Bend last
July. Judge Charles H. Foster
was appointed by Governor Paul
L Patterson on July 7, 1953, to
(Continued on Page 5, CoL 4)
Freight Wreck
At Yoncalla
UOSEBURG MFl Fourteen cars
of a Southern Pacific freight train
were derailed north of Yoncalla,
north of here, at 6:15 a. m. Thurs
day. No one wa.s injured.
Officials said it might take up
to 20 hours to clear the track,
which will hold up traffic on the
Siskiyou line. The main line traffic
into California is not affected.
One hundred yards of track were
torn up when a gondola car left
the rails on a straight stretch . for
a reason hot immediately deter
mined and 13 cars followed.
One of the cars was loaded with
rails, which will be used in the
repair.
The Rudolph Wiley home beside
the tracks wa.s narrowly missed by
one car. The Wiley automobile was
damaged.
Mrs. Wiley said that last year a
train hit a logging truck near the
same place and a log sailed
through the air and nearly hit the
house.
Chilly Weather
Moves in Valley
Chillier temperatures moved
In on valley areas during the
night, although Salem's mini
mum for the morning was down
to only 34.
In some areas adjacent, how
ever, there was a bit of ice with
temperatures skirting the freez
ing mark, and there was a light
fall of snow in some of the near
by foothills.
Heavy snowfall in the moun
tains over -Wednesday make
chains necessary on most of the
mountain passes, the highway
commission reports.
The greatest fall of snow in
the 24-hour period ending at 8
am. Thursday was on the Wil
lamette pass, 14 inches. The San
tiam pass reported 12 inches.
Forecast for Salem and vicin
ity tonight is for mostly cloudy
skies with occasional rain.
Warren Hearing
Again Delayed
WASHINGTON iffi - A Senate
judiciary subcommittee Thursday ;
put otf until Friday a closed door;
meeting for further study of Earl ;
Warren's nomination to be chief i
justice of the United States. '
Chairrran I.anger 'R-Md1, in
announcing postponement of the
meeting, reported he had received
several more letters concerning
the nominee. He told newsmen enc
was favorabl to Warren and sev
eral unfavorable.
The group also will review a
"limited" FBI report on the for
mer California governor.
NATIONALIST ASSEMBLY
CONVENES
TAIPEH. Formosa . Nation
alist China's National Assembly
convenes Friday with President
Chiang Kai-Shek scheduled to ad
dress the opening session.
Weather Details
Mailman tflrcUr. M: minimi"" In
!. sf. total Sl-hiiir arrHatlMInn: '
, ..ml.: l; rm'i. '
HUM. . Irrt. iR'anrl I '"'
Ham..)
Bank Makes
Realty Deal
For Expansion
United States Na
tional Adds 71 Feet
On South Commercial
Announcement was made Thurs
day by the United States National
Bank of Portland that it has pur
chased a 71-ioot frontage of prop
erly on South Commercial street,
adjoining the Salem Branch of the
hank on the south, and will use it
for expansion of the Ladd & Bush
Salem branch. ,
In the transaction is the Sim
mons building, a 25-foot frontage
purchased from the Roy Simmons
estate through Grabenhorst Bros.
Realtors, and the adjoining 4o-foot
building purchased from the Gra
benhorst firm. The bank paid
$125,000 for the two properties.
The transaction gives the bank
a total frontage of 172 feet on
South Commercial. It already own
ed 1G6 feet on State Street, so its
Salem banking property now cov
ers a little more than a quarter
block.
Drive-in Facilities
The expansion plans of the bank
will require a general reconstruc
tion of the property. A drive-in
entrance will be built on South
Commercial and drive-in windows
will be provided on the south side
of the present building occupied by
the United States National Bank.
The project will be co-ordinated
with the building plans of the C.
L. Corporation which recently an
nounced that-a new business and
office building will go up in the
block within a year. The bank will
make off-street parking available
(Continued on Page 5, Col. 4)
Lost Diplomats
Said in Prague
BERLIN (UP)-The West Ber
lin Telegraf reported today that
Guy Burgess and Donald McLean,
Britain's "missing diplomat," are
living in Red Prague in a residen
tial area reserved for government
officials.
The newspaper quoted unidenti
fied "eastern newsmen" as the
source of the report.
Burgess, a former official of the
British Embassy in Washington,
and MacLean, head of the Foreign
office's American Department,
left England suddenly and without
explanation on May 25, 1951. They
were traced to France, but there
the trail was lost.
Last summer, MacLean's Amer
ican born wife, Melinda. who had
moved to Geneva, vanished with
their children, i
Repeated reports that the two
men fled to Iron Curtain territory,
and that Mrs. MacLean joined
them there, never have been con
firmed. Snowfall in
t'ew England
(By The Aorlatrri PreMt
More snow fell in the northeast
ern section of the country Thurs
day but generally fair and mild
winter wealher was in prospect
elsewhere.
The snowfall in New England
diminished during the night and1
earlv Thursday continued onlv in!
Maine, New Hampshire and Vcr- j
mnnt. More than 9 inches of snow
fgl in Caribou, Maine, since
Wednesday.
Skies cleared over Northern
New York after two days of snow
and rain had curtailed travel,
broke power lines in six commu
nities and closed many schools.
iAiitlifrlv u-imlc cnnl larmop air
w..u....v . ...V.
over most of the Midwest while with a hammer at lamed Madam rre jimi m
mild winter weather continued ; Tussaud's Museum Thursday. i about $30,000 to clean up affairs,
over most areas westward to the i . While a party of schoolgirls I He said the Indians as well as
Pacific Coast. Rain fell early Hooked on in horror, museum at-1 stale and county officials in Orc
Thursdav along the West Coast i tendants grappled with the attack-, gon approved of full independence
from Northern California into Ore-1 er and pinned him down until po- for the 60 small bands, tribes and
gon. I lice arrived to arrest him. 1 groups of Indians living between
Youth s Arrest Ends
Town's Reign of Terror
SILVERTOV -- This town's
reign of telephone terror was
ended Wcdncsdcy night with the
arrest nf a juvenile joker, a 15-year-old
high school student who
admitted makin. the calls.
"I just did it for fun and
meant no harm,' 'the youth told
Sheriff Denver Young when he
was taken into custody.
The boy was remanded to cus
tody of Marion county juvenile
nfliccrs and was brought before
Circuit Judge Joe Fenton for a
hearing Thursday morning.
Arrest of the hoy came after
nearly a month of phoney phone
calls to residents nf Silvcrton,
warning of bank robberies, order
ing groceries and plumbing work
at fictitious addresses and in one
instance threats of death were
made.
CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR WELCOMES IKES TO CALIFORNJA
n 1
Yn J - I O :fe;
I ' v hn It-
Imlah Wants
To Die Soon
Donald Dwaine lmlah, 19-year-old
youth who is scheduled to
die in the gas chamber next
Tuesday, wants to die, he told in
terviewers Wednesday.
lmlah. who murdered Bruce
Houck, Parkdale rancher, near
Hood River, said he would rather
die than get off with a life sen
tence. lmlah said he doesn't want his
lawyer to appeal to the Supreme
Court, and that Gov. Paul L. Pat
terson shouldn't commute the sen
tence to li(p imprisonment.
He was paroled last May from
the State School for Boys at Wood
burn. Houck took the boy into his
home.-.' ' ' - '' ' "'
On July 7, 1953, Imlah shot and
killed Houck.
"I got the bright idea I was
going to kill somebody and he was
the nearest one," lmlah said.
Imlah's mother said goodbye to !
her son last Saturday.
Milk Trading
Stamp Probe
PORTLAND I The Slate
Milk Marketing Administration in
i tends to investigate a report that
j a Klamath Falls firm is giving
I trading stamps with purchases of
milk and other food.
Allien Nordquist, head field man
I for the administration, said some
' nthnr Kl.im.-ith F.-ilU stores have
! cut the price of milk a half-cent
! to 24 cents a quart, in order to ,
I meet the trading stamp compcti- j
; tion.
He said the price cut was legal,
since the minimum price set for
Klamath Falls was 21 cents.
He added, however, that the giv
ing of trading stamps is a viola
tion "of the milk administration's
code,
The Klamath Falls firm reported
giving '.he trading stamps with
food purchases is Oregon Food
Stores, which has three units there.
WAX FIGURE OF
CHURCHILL SMASHED
LONDON iti The wax figures
of Prime Minister Churchill and:
two members of his cabinet were ;
smashed to smithereens nv a man
- . J
At another t.mt the prankster
ordered numerous residents to
hoard their water supply because
the main: wouk be shul off for
24 hours. One call informed a
cafe operator that several cus
tomers were suffering from
food poisoning after eating in his
restaurant.
The boy was traced, accord
ing to Police Chief Hell Main
and Officer Martin Kasscbaum,
when it was found thai most of
the calls came when the hoy was
absent from school. One call
was received by the high school
principal W o was subjected to
profane abuse on Ihe telephone.
The younger sisters of the boy
an- to be ques'inncd by juvenile
authorities to discover if they
were induced to participate in the
hoaxes.
PALM SPRINGS, Calif., Feb. 18 California Governor Good
win Knight stands beside President and Mrs. Eisenhower as
the presidential couple greeted a crowd of 3000 which wel
comed them to this desert resort last night. They arrived on
the president's plane, spoke a few words to the crowd and
then drove quickly to the Smoke Tree Ranch home of Paul Helms,
a Los Angeles baking lirm head, where they will stay five
days. (AP Wircphoto)
ike Enjoys Vacation
in California Sunshine
PALM SPRINGS. Calif. UFI , The President and Mrs. Eisen
President Eisenhower, warmly wel- hower arrived here last night for
corned to this desert vacation re-
sort, looked forward today to soak
ing up plenty of sunshine much
of it on the golf course.
Teamsters to
Keep Raiding
MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (,fl The
powerful AFL Teamsters Union
Thursday refused to sign a pro
posed AFL - CIO "no raiding
agreement which has been re
garded as an initial step toward i
merging the two federations. !
Dave Beck. Teamsters Union !
president, said the union's general j
executive board voted unanimous-1
lv ocainst going along with the
! plan to bar unions from one feder-!
i ation from trying to take over j
, members already organized by j
the other federation.
I Beck, at the same time, said
the teamsters' board agreed with
him that John L. Lewis' United
i Mine Workers Union should be in
: vited back into the AFL.
'The board unanimously sup-
....t.l
my position that Lewis
should be taken back into the AFL
nm sliould be a party to any unity
agreement arrived at," Beck said.
iHeed Year for
Indian Freedom
WASHINGTON I It will lake
at legist a year and maybe l'.i
years before the government can
step aside as guardian of Western
Oregon Indians.
So reported Morgan Pryse, the
Bureau of Indian Affairs area di
rector from Portland. Ore., at a
Joint liousc-.cnaie innian nnoirs
subcommittee meeting here Wed-
nrsiwv.
, . .
the Cascade .Mountains ana ine
ocean in Oregon.
Pryse added that a few of the
estimated 2.100 adult Indians had
urged delay, however, until expect
ed government funds are distribut
ed to them. The funds are the re
sult of judgments awarded them
in settlement of their tribal claims
to lands taken over by the govern
ment years ago.
Crime Prevention
Proclaimed by Mayor
Mayor Al I.oucks has rssued a
proclamation marking the observ
ance of National Crime Preven
tion Week as being irom rcoru
ary 14 through February 20. He
urged the citizens of Salem to do
their "upmost to interest them
selves in this educational program
and to support all agencies ami ef
Inrts to put down crime and the
breeding of crime in this commu
nity." The national Exchange club ini
tiated the annual observance of
National Crime Prevention Week
seven years ago.
five days of rest after a 9-hour
nuubiup uigni iruin rvaMiiiiKiuu.
A crowd of about 3,000 persons
turned out at the' airport and
cheered the couple as they de
scended from their private plane,
the Columbine. Smiling, the Presi
dent flopped to "S battery of micro
phones and declared:
"We are delighted to be back
here once again. We have been
looking forward for a long time
to this trip. We are delighted to
be in this state." j
The Eisenhowers together with
the first Lady s mother, Mrs. John
S. Doud were welcomed officially
by California's Gov. Goodwin J.
Knight.
(Continued on Page 5. Col. 1)
Reserve Officers
Loyally Tests !
WASHINGTON A') Secre
tary of the Army Stevens laid j
down a policy Thursday that any
reserve officer who refuses to i
answer questions on loyalty data j
"when properly asked" will for-1
fcit his commission and be dis-
charged "under conditior.s other '
than honorable." I
Stevens acted because of
questions raised by Sen. McCar-j
t!.; (R., Wis.) in connection with
case of Maj. Irving I'eress. He
disclosed his move by making
public a letter to McCarthy.
Percss, a dentist, refused at a
hearing in New Yor Thursday to
answer questiors from McCarthy
as to whether he was a Commu
nist while on active duty.
Percss, a reserve officer, was
given on honorable discharge
from Camp Kilmer, N. J., Feb.
3.
McCarthy has accused him of
communism, and had suqcsted I
to Stevens that Percss he court-1
martialcd.
Mason Resigns
Over Manion
! WASHINGTON 'l'1'i-A Repub-
j lican congressman angrily quit
President Eisenhower's Commis
sion on Intergovernmental Ucla-
! lotions today in protest against
White House dismissal of Chairman
1 Clarence Manion.
i flcp. Noah M. Mason of Illinois
resigned wilh a sizzling slatement
that Maninn's ouster "smacks of
I autocratic dictatorship."
Mason's parting shot al the
White House dramatized the bitter
dispute within the Republican par
ty over Ihe proposed Bricker a
mcndmc.it on presidential treaty
powers. Manion. former dean of
Notre Dame Law School, an
nounced yesterday he was fired
because he supported the Bricker
amendment. Ho said he quit at
request of Presidential Assistant
Sherman Adams.
Mason, l GOP right winger, said
he had come to regard Manion "as
one of the biggest men in the coun
try, a man big enough and capable
enounh to be President of the Unt
ied Stales."
Big 4 Agrees to Far East
Peace Meet with Red 'China
Flying Hero
Defends Germ
Confessions
WASHINGTON Ifl A decorated
flying hero testified at the Marine
Corps inquiry in the case of Col.
Frank H. Schwable Thursday that
there were reports in Korea some
Air Force pilots were instructed
to do more talking, if they were
captured, than the traditional rules
allow.
The brief account, from Marine
I Col. R. E. Galer, bore on a cardi
I nal point of Schwable's defense
l against criticism of his action in
making a false germ warfare con
fession ' under Communist pres
! sure.
I Counsel for Schwable said
Wednesday he intended to show
that the colonel, in yielding to the
Red pressure, had acted in accord
with official directives.
Witness Also Shot Down
Galer, holder of the U. S. Medal
of Honor and of the British Flying
Cross, flew in Korea and like
Schwable was 'shot down. But he
was rescued in a short time. He
is now a student at the Air War
College. His Medal of Honor is for
exploits at Guadalcanal in World
War II.
Galer, a volunteer witness, was
not pressed for details on the re
port of Air Force briefings.
(Continued on Page 5, Col. 7)
Tribal Leader
Fears Freedom
WARM SPRINGS. Ore. (IP)
Fear that the federal government's
ans to drill Hack to reliance on
medicine men and midwives, was
expressed here Wednesday
night
by a tribal leader,. '
Frank Supan, ''member
N
of the
Warm Springs tribal council, said
that was perhaps the biggest ha
ard in plans to close a 22-bcd hos
pital here.
A three-man delegation, headed
by Charles Jackson, council chair
man, will leave Monday for Wash
ington to offer suggestions. Jack
son, in an interview, said this is
the situation: I
The local reservation hospital is
viewed by the government as too
expensive to operate and is to be
closed June 30. Indians needing
care will go to one of the several
hospitals available in Central Ore
gon towns.
But. lie added, it is standard
practice of the hospitals, when an
Indian appears for non-emergency
care, to make a financial respon
sibility study before admitting him. ;
East Germans
Forced to March
BERLIN W One hundred and
fifty thousand East Berlin workers
marched under orders of their
Communist bosses Thursday in a
monster anti-West demnnsirntion.
A rival "iltnt m.'irrh" nf nro.
lest against Russian tactics in the
Big 'our conference was due to
start a little later.
The East Zone marchers carried
banners proclaiming support of So
viet Russia's proposals at Ihe Big
Four conference table and de
fiance of the Western stand, no
tably the American position,
The mammoth narade and rally
on snow-covered Unler den Linden
got under way an hour alter the
foreign
ministers of Russia, ! sources saia tnc mounting air ai
the United Slates and tacks n'adc it increasingly un-
France
Grcat Britain sal down to their likely' that Ihe Victminh would
final session. ' try a fullflcdgcd assault on Dion
No disturbances were reported. 1 Bien Phu.
Claims He Saw Amelia
Earhart in So. Pacific
George Putnam of the
Journal, who has been
Capital
getting
mail intended lor his famous
namesake, the lale George Palmer
Putnam for Ihe past 40 years,
today received an air mail spe
cial delivery letter from an ex
serviceman in Pittsburgh. I'enn..
who claims to have seen George
Palmer Putnam's wife, Amelia
Earhart Putnam living with na
tives on a South Pacific isle dur
ing World War II.
The ex-service man wrote Put
nam in the belief that he was
Amelia Earhart Putnam's hus
band. The noted aviatrix disap
peared somewhere in the South
I'acilic region while on a global
airpl:.ne flight prior to World War
II. Th? letter lo the Salem man
".as written by John Bnrizink, 5925
Locust street, Pittsburgh, 23. Pa
postmarked Coraopolis,
Pittsburgh. It follows:
luhurn ol
"While I was in the service of
45 Jets Refuel
20.,000 Feet
Oyer Bermuda
HAMILTON. Bermuda Wt -Forty-five
American jet bombers
racing toward Morocco replen
ished their fuel tanks Thursday in
a spectacular refueling operation
20.000 feet above Bermuda waters.
The warplancs and the 22 ac
companying tankers the tactical
arm of the 301st U.S. bomber
Wing took off from Barksdalc,
La., Wednesday for a 60-day stay
at Moroccan stations, 4,575 miles
away.
The speedy B47s began to ren
dezvous with the tankers an hour
before midnight, each taking up
wards of 5,000 gallons of fuel. The
tankers then landed at Bermuda to
load still more fuel for planes still
to come through.
The wing the first bomber
outfit to take regular station in
the new U.S. built airfields in
French Morocco is expected to
take about 10 hours for the entire
flight. It will carry out its first
exercise from the Moroccan bases
Friday when it takes off for a
4,000 - mile simulated strike at in
dustrial areas of France and Brit
ain. Italy's Reds Call
Strike on Scelba
ROME Iffi Italy's Communist
labor bosses Thursday called for
nationwide demonstrations Friday
at a moment when the fate of
Premier Mario Scelba's new gov
ernment will be before parlia
ment. ' ,
The Red-led General Confedcra-
I of a series of municipal general
strikes and demonstrations' that
have, taken, live- lives, and,, left 2B
jnjfared' In clashes with Scelba's
tough riot police. Officially, the,
strikes are bids for wage In'
creases but Iheir major purpose
, . , . .!,-- n. .,
has been to embarrass the gov-
ernment.
Two-fisted, 52-year - old Scelba
faced an aroused Parliament for
the first time as Premier Thurs-
day- Bitter debate over his gov.
ernment and program is expected
to start in both houses rriday,
Indochina Reds
Driven Back
HANOI, Indochina I Crack j
rebel Vielminh troops surround- j
ing France's northwest Indochina
fortress of Dien.Bien Phu moved
still farther back Thursday to es
cape baltlc-secking French forces.
Gen. Itene Cogny s troops pushed
three to five miles north and west
of Ihe heavily fortified plain with
out contacting any units of the
Communist-led rebels.
Cogny. French commander in
north Indochina, for several days
has been sending out 4.0110 to 5,000
,rooPs
troops daily in an attempt to
draw major units of the estimated
.16,000 Victminh soldiers into hat
tic. The rebels have been cn
entrenched around Dien Bien Phu
for three months but have never
attacked.
French airmen in American -supplied
warplancs strafed and
bombed the Vielminh positions
around the plain for the 62nd
j straight day. French army
the U.S. Army in World War II.
in AT 4: SF and was docked on a
ship in an inlet I was given per
mission to explore the forests and
jungles. I encountered a village
of gross huts and a number of na -
lives living there.
I was positive I saw your lost
wife, Amelia Earhart, living with
the natives. She could not talk but
stretched her arms out as if Iml
taling an airplane, uttering "mill
bird." She stared at me and raised
her right hand above her head
with the palm down.
"While I was standing there
with her. two large colored natives
with a large club and a large
knife gestured for me lo go on
and quickly took the woman into
Ihe grass hut.
"I was alone al Ihe time and
after walking about four or five
hours l reaenca tnc snip, wnicn
was docked, and told my fellow
(Continued on Page 8, Col. if)
Chance Offered
Restore Peace
In Indochina
BERLIN I - The Big Four for
eign ministers formally proposed
Thursday night a Korean peace
conference to be held at Geneva
on April 26 and agreed that the
problem of ending the Indochina
War should be discussed at the
same time.
The announcement was con
tained in a four-power communi
que issued at the close of the 23
day Berlin conference. It stated .
the purpose of the Geneve parley
would be to reach "a peaceful set
tlement of the Korean question."
Participating in the Korean dis
cussions will be Communist China,'
North and South Korean govern
ments and other countries which
had armed forces in the Korean
War and which wish to attend.
Pciplng Regime Agrees
The Pelping government has
agreed to take part and the Swiss
government at Bern has granted
permission for the meeting in Ge
neva. '
The four agreed "that the prob
lem of restoring peace in Indo
china will also be discussed at the
conference, to which rcpresc'a
tives of the United States. Fr
the United Kingdom, the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics, the Cm
nese People's Republic and other
interested slates will be invited.
It was understood the other in
terested slates would include the
three Indochina states Viet Nam,
Laos and Cambodia and possibly
some neighboring nations.
(Continued on Page 5, Col 6)
Court Martial
WASHINGTON H) - The Army
I Thursday ordered Cpl. Edward
Dickenson to stand a court martial
... hni. Ih, h ;rnrmaA
. fnnu, imrl- ... j
collaborated with his Communist
captors to gain "better treatment
for himself.
Dickenson was arrested Jan. 22
al Waller Reed Army Hospital
hero and has been undergoing a
pre-trial Investigation since Jan.
26.
The Army said the general court
martini will lake place at Ft. Mc
Nair. Washington, on a dale to be
announced later. The hearing will
be open to the public except when
matters concerning possible mili
tary secrets are being discussed.
Britain's Record
Defense Budget
LONDON (ifv Britain announced
Thursday a record peacetime
war prevention defense budget
and warned Russia that Ihe free
world holds Ihe superiority in
atomic weapons.
A government white paper sub
mitted to Parliament said Britain
was building up its atoipic air
power with a force of modern
bombers as r deterrent to "ad
ventures on the part of the Com
munist world as their aggression
in Korea."
Defense expenditure for I0.14-5.),
the while paper said, will be 1,
ain.0nO.0O0 pounds S4.591.720.000t.
This compares wilh 1.6.16.760,000
pounds i$4.5BS.72B.0O0i allotted for
i the 1953-54 fiscal year ending in
i April.
Coastal Waters to
Be Closed March 1
PORTLAND (UP) - The State
Game Commission said today that
coastal waters will be closed to
angling for two months beginning
on March 1. Stcclhcad fishermen
had inquired about continuing to
fish in coastal waters until March
1 15 on the assumption that last
1 year's -cgulations would remain in
i effect through the winter season,
but the commission said rules
adopted in January became ef
fective Feb. 6 and supersede all
others In other areas, with the
exception of the Rogue and Urn
qua rivers. Ihe winter season will
continue through March and April,
ending with the opening of trout
season May 1.
tVLST GERMANY
(ONTHIIUTKS TO NATO
BONN, Germany ' Wst
Germany has agreed lu continue
paying WW million marks $M2.
nmi.oooi a month to help support
the Allied armies here, the gov.
ernment announced Thursday. ...
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