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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1956)
Capital A THE WEATHER. FOG LATE tonight, low tempera ture, 40; increasing cloudiness Tuesday, high temperature) 10. X SECTIONS 24 Paget 68th Year, No. 234 Salem, Oregon, Monday, October 1, 1956 Catered as second class latter st Sslem, Oregon British Jet Bomber Crashes at London Airport Big Crowd Sees RAF Pride Fall 2 Surviv,e, 4 Die; Plane Arriving From N.Z. I . LONDON- m A hum delta i winged plane, one of Britain's secret atom bomb carriers, crashed and exploded in fog and : rain at London Airport Monday ueiure nurriiiL'u uignuanes wei- ' coming the plane home from New i Hair-triggered ejector seats :v touched off just before the tour- i jot Vulcan nosed toward the i earth, saved the lives of Air Chief : Marshal Sir Harry Broadhurst " and Squadron Leader D. R. How ard, captain of the plane. Wreckage Litters Runway .,: Four bodies were recovered from the smoking, flaming wreck .j age which littered the airport's "Lucky No. 7" runway for 200 ;S yards. Broadhurst and Howard ' received minor injuries in their - fall of about 300 feet. Parachutes A ,Un. t II... .nrl a Witnesses nd a spokesman for ? the builders of the Vulcan, the A. V. Roe Co., said the canopy i mysteriously came off the plane as u swept n lor a lanaing aner ', its 26,000-mile testing-proving flight to New Zealand and Aus tralia. Thcnose sagged. Two town bangs signaled the ejector seats sending - out the only survivors. " And then the big plane whomped down. May Have Bit Something A company spokesman said that as the bomber approached the runway "it seems that it hit some thing, possibly an obstruction. He 3 HEART ATTACKS Death Toll Up to 5 in Hunt Season By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The death toll in Oregon's deer hunting season, which got under way at sunrise Saturday, stood at five Monday morning. Three persons died of heart seizures, including Yamhill Coun ty Commissioner Charles Newman of McMinnvillc. One man was fatally wounded while preparing for a hunting trip. And another man was dead from undetermined causes. He was Donald Barron, 20, Klamath Falls mill worker, who disap peared in the Lake of the Woods area near Klamath Falls Friday night. Barron's three companions .said he became separated from them. A huge search party combed the woods Saturday and Sunday and the body was found Sunday night by bloodhounds owned by Norman Wilson of Dallas. Police said Barron's body was in a clump o'f bushes. The face was bruised and bloody. Dr. George Adler, Klamath County coroner, said that a preliminary examination showed no wounds. Newman, 65, was stricken with a heart altack Saturday, while hunting in the Redmond area. - The other heart victims were Haymond A. Wallace, 57, of Flor ence, who died Sunday while hunting some 10 miles southwest of Florence, and Halbert Belche, 48, of The Dalles, who was stricken while tracking a deer in the Cherry Heights area near The Dalles Saturday. James F. Miller. 23, of St Helens, was the first hunting fatality of the season. He was accidentally shot and killed by a companion ; Friday night while preparing for a hunting trip. Two hunters, lost over the week end, made their way to safety Sunday. They are Carl Mitchell of Klamath Falls who was lost near Bonanza, and Thomas Chapman, 45, Oregon City, who was lost near Estacada. Judge Upholds Book Dealers' Indictment 2 Must Face Trial Unless Defense Appeals By FRED ZIMMERMAN Capital Journal Writer Indictments returned by a Mar ion county grand jury against Claude Cummings and Jack St. Platr . Knlpm mj)Pfl7.inp aftents. (the pilot) immediately turned hisai charging them with the -selling engines on' to full power in an attempt to climb away but at this point, although he gained some height and went back into cloud, he recognized that the" aircraft was out of control and, within seconds, gave the order to aban don ship." . " The spokesman sqid there were no indications "whatsoever that anything was wrong with the bomber. All four engines were op erating as usual." Russians, Brass at Scene A large group of Russians, at the airport to welcome Bolshoi Ballet dancers arriving from Mos cow in Soviet , jetliners, saw the crash. Nearby was a welcoming delegation from the Royal Air Force, the British government and families of the crew mem bers. Marshal Broadhurst had planned a news conference immediately after the landing to tell how the world's largest delta winged plane performed on its long flight. and distribution of indecent books were deemed sufficient in UF Campaign Past $100,000 Mark Monday) United Fund collections rose to $100,743 Monday at the week's ini tial report luncheon at the Marion hotel. This is 44 per cent of the goal of $227,800 and a jump of some $15,000 over last Friday's final figures. Chairman William Hammond urged leaders to concentrate their efforts during the next few days. He said this week will be the criti J cal time for UF collections, which have lagged slightly behind those of a year ago. Several division leaders, he ex , plained, have waited until the first of the month before starting con centrated canvass efforts. The Utilities division continues to lead the percentages with 88 per cent turned in. They have $7,661 out of a goal of $8,690. Federal workers have contrib uted $779 of their $1,000 goal for 78 per cent. Industrial division has contributed $21,460 for 61 per cent of its $35,000 goal. Other divisions now over the 50 per cent mark are General Gifts and Contractors, Hammond said. Other report luncheons are sche- duled Wednesday and Friday at the Marion. McMinnville Man Fatally Shoots Self A, young McMinnville man died in a Salem Hospital eany sunuay of a shotgun wound suffered when he shot himself in the chest on a Salem street a few hours earlier. Vernon Altimtts, 28, shot himsell in the chest with a .410 gauge shotgun about 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the 1000 block of Norway street, city police reported. The shooting occurred shortly after Altimus had left a woman friend s nome, oiu cers said. A note in his pocket In dicated desnondencv. they said. Altimus was rushed to the hos pital where he died about 1:30 a.m. Sunday. The body was shipped by Howell-Edwards com pany to. McMinnville for funeral services and burial. Suez Unit Set Up by Users LONDON 11 British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd formally declared the Suez Canal Users' Assn. inaugurated. Monday after 15 nations announced their deci sion to join it. Llovd was presiding over a con ference of' 18 nations which- have pronounced themselves in favor of international control of the Suez Canal. Three countries Japan. Ethiop ia and Pakistan have not yet de cided whether to become mem bers of the LJscrs' association Their delegates nevertheless at tended Monday's opening session and Lloyd invited them to con tinue participating as observers until their governments have fi nally made up their minds about membership. a decision issued Monday by Cir cuit Judge Geo. R.. Duncan. The ruling was made in connection with demurrers filed by the de fense. This means that the two men will have to stand trial on the charge unless defense counsel de cides to' appeal Judge Duncan's ruling to the state supreme court. No Decision on Appeal . At the offices of Scopil and Williams, defense attorney for Cummings, it was said that no decision would be made regard ing an appeal until there was opportunity to study the decision. Delonse counsel in Dotn cases held that the indictments were unconstitutional and that they were insufficient. . "Indecencies of numerous kinds were penalized at common law and the publication of inde cent books was made indictable and punishable," points out Judge Duncan in his decision. He quotes precedent covered by a certain statute which held that "a statute penalizing 'any act' (without defining the act) which 'openly outrages the public de cency and is injurious to public morals' was sufficient to sustain conviction for operating betting pools. A reasonable degree of indefiniteness is unavoidable in the criminal codes. Word in Common Use "The' word indecent is a word in common use though its mean ing varies within reasonable lim it? to fit .the occasion. As appli ed to a book, it may generally be said to mean that which is unfit to be disseminated among the general public because it tends to coarsen and degrade the minds of its readers, or tends .to suggest or induce immoral or lascivious thoughts or conduct. "It is fair to assume that as a whole our adult population is :ompriscd of individuals of ordi nary experience, intelligence and moral sensibilities capable to a reasonable certainty of distin guishing between decency and in decency, according to existing standards." The indictments were returned a few weeks ago after a number of persons appeared before the jurors. Mrs. John i'lciier oi an- Tram Hits Car, 2 Die AtGervais Woodburn Couple Victims; One 79 And Other 81 GERVAIS (Special) A train car crash claimed the lives of an elderly Woodburn couple here aDOUl b:w p.m. aunoay. Dead arc Mr. and Mrs. Lothair C. Wood. 995 North Second -St., Woodburn. Wood was 81, and his wife, Mary, was 79, the Marion county coroner s olfice reported. Struck by Train Witnesses said the Wood car was westbound when it was struck by a speeding Southern Pacific pas senger train at the crossing near the depot. They were apparently killed outright. Wood was thrown from the car by the impact while the body of his wife was found under the car after the train came to a halt. . The Woods had been shopping and visiting in Gervais only a few minutes before the fatal accident, residents said. A number of towns people were in the streets in mid- town Gervais where the accident occurred. One resident told police he yelled at the Woods in an at tempt to warn them of the oncom ing train but they apparently didn t hear him. . Didn't See Train The crossing offers a fairly good view to the south but the victims apparently failed to sec the flash ing headlight of the oncoming Klamath passenger train, officers said. Funeral services will be' Wednes day, October 3, at 10:30 a.m.. from Ringo-Cornwell chapel. Burial will be in Belle Passi cemetery.: Mr, Wood was born April 30. 1875 in Richland Center, Wis. He (Continued on Page 5, Column 1 LATE FLASHES BINGEN, Wash. WV-A chimney iweep'i long-handled brush con tacted a 6JMW0voH power line here Monday, killing the man outright. The victim, Walter Zlegele o( Hood River, Ore., was An the roof of an automobile building preparing to clean a chimney. BALTIMORE (UP)-Dr. Milton Elsenhower, the youngest broth er of the President, was in stalled today - as president of Johns Hopkins University and said he "has no political ambi tions and does not aspire to the presidency." WASHINGTON W The In terlor Department announced today that William C. Strand, 45, director of Information and special assistant to the secre tary, had resigned to Join the staff of the Republican National Committee. It was understood he probably would return to the department after the Nov, $ election. i Ike Lashes Demo Failure To Stem Inflation Tides Ike Greets Party Faithful Salem Youth On Hunt Dies As Car Rolls An automobile accident Satur day claimed the life of a young Salem man cn route to central Oregon on a deer-hunting trip. Douglas Wray McKcevcr, 18 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray McKcever, 2015 Carlton Way, was killed when the car he was driving left the highway and went over an embankment about a mile west of the Santiam sum mit on U.S. Highway 20, state po lice reported. Noland Rayford Raines, 3550 Shell Ave., Salem, a passenger in the car, escaped from the acci dent suffering only a bruised eye and shock, it was reported. He told authorities that he was asleep in the front seat when the accident occurred. Raines reportedly was walking dazedly away from the wreckage when other deer hunters arrived at the scene from nearby. They were parked around the curve to the west of the scene when they heard the crash, they said. Young McKcever and Raines had left on their hunting expedi tion about 3 a.m. and were on their way home about 11:30 a.m. when the accident happened, his parents said. He was born April 13, 1938 at Sharon. Kansas, moving to Salem verton was" the principal mover 'in .July, 1046. with the family. in !ho rail, and over a DerlOfl or l"e viuimi "1 " ' several months considered quan tities of magazines and books which she presented in evidence. Weather Details Maximum yeitfrdiy. 71: minimum today, 39. Total 24-hour prrrlplutlon: S; (or month: 0 normal, .M. Sr-nson precipitation. 7; normal. I.SJ. Hlvpr heliht, -1.7 fet. (Report by U. 8. Weather Bureau.) parents and a sister, Mrs. Gerald McBee. Pittsburgh, Pa. He was a 1955 graduate of North Salem high school. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Virgil T. Golden chapel with Hev. Low ell Holte of Grace Lutheran church officiating. Interment will be in Restlawn Memory Gardens. State Bureaus Seek Total of $710.6Million Budget Requests Above 1955 Appropriations By $91 .Million By JAMES D. OLSON .. Capital Journal Writer . ' Budget requests for the 1957-59 biennium filed by all state agen cies totaled $710,611,377, Robert R. Johnson, director of the state de partment of finance announced Monday. This is $91,032,327 more than was contained in the 1955-57 budget ap proved by the 1955 legislature. Of the total requests, J277.U7Z,- 941 came from agencies seeking appropriations from the general fund, while requests totaling $433, 538,436 came from self-sustaining state agencies,. ' Big Increases Asked Seven state agencies requested increases in budgets amounting In excess of $500,000. These total in creases included the board of high er education, $14,807,399; depart ment of welfare, $501,073; board of control, for institutions, $8,764,037; military deparlment, $1,583,860; state police, $684,910; stale tax commission, $1,398,296, and Oregon Technical institute, $2,524,956. The budget, which will be pre sented by the governor to the 1957 legislature, will be greatly reduced if Gov. Elmo Smiths' announced intention of presenting a balanced budget is carried out. The budget division of the de partment of finance is now con ducting hearings with various state departments, gathering data on the requests. Later the budget di vision and Director Johnson will go over the budget requests with the idea of trimming them in ev ery possible way. Go to Governor The budget Vequests will go to the governor who will review the requests and possmiy mane iur Iher reductions. Finally the budget will go to the legislature where, it past ex Derience prevails, the rccom mended budget will be increased throuch the various appropria tions made outside of the budget requests. The latest report from the state tax commission Indicates that in come tax receipts for the bien nium will be more than $.15,000,000 above estimates made by the last legislature. i-v I W t 1 V II 1 . , 1 : 1 Blast Kills 1, Injures 12 on U.S. Destroyer NICE, France UH One man was killed and 12 injured, eight of them seriously, in an explosion aboard the U.S. destroyer John R. Pierce Monday during exer cises off the south coast of France. The explosion occurred at 10:50 a.m. 75 miles louth of vuic-franchc. The John R. Pierce was firing on a towed target when a snot! burst in the breech of a 5-inch gun. The vessel, built at the Bethle hem Steel Co., yards on Staten Island, N.Y., was launched in September .1944. She displaces 2,200 tons and carries six 5-inch guns, in addition to her other arm ament. Normal complement on a war footing is 350. United Fund Daily Report Goal $227,800 Collected to Date.... 100,743 Percent of Total Today's Report 15,743 Do Your Share 44 Bulganin, Hungary Chief Join Soviet Power Struggle Talks By COLIN FROST LONDON The premiers of Russia and Hungary have joined President Tito and Nikita Khrush chev in mystery-shrouded talks believed aimed at ironing out con flicts in the Soviet circle. Premier Bulganin and Hun gary's Erno Geroe appeared yes terday at the Yalta meeting billed by Moscow radio as a vacation Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov and Deputy Premier Lazar Kagan ovich are said to feel Khrush chev's switch .o a more liberal brand of communism has weak ened Moscow's control of the sat ellites. Tito himself was reported dis turbed over a letter Soviet leaders sent the satellites warning them against espousing too heartily The uncertain status of Soviet- Yueoslav relations has caused in tense interest in Washington. James W. Riddleberger, U.S. am bassador to Belgrade, returned to the Yugoslav capital yesterday after a three-month vacation. He is expected to ask Tito for a fill-in on the Yalta talks when the presi dent eets back from the Crimea The whole question ot continuea oy Moscow raaio as a vacation auainsi cu.-,.,, . , . . H Registration Hours Added Here 4 Days The Marion county clerk's of fice will remain open from 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Wednesday, Thurs day, Friday and Saturday of this week to accommodate persons who need to register for the No vember 6 general election. The hooks will be closed as of 8 p.m. Oct. 6 and no further reg istrations will be taken after that time. Clerk Henry Mattson emphasiz ed that , hit offices will be open through the noon hour each day, .Registration has speeded up during the past few weeks, but it is evident that there are several hundred who have not taken care of this matter. Those who wait until Ihe final day may be com Rain Unlikely Next 5 Days From the five-day forecast, out from the weather bureau Monday there seems little possibility for showers in this area for several days. But of course prospects can change quickly, and a few show ers arc forecast in coast areas and northern Oregon Tuesday and again about Thursday. Temperatures are slated to be a hit above normal for the pe riod, with- maximums in the 70s nd the minimums in the 4us. CLEVELAND President Elsenhower, with Mamie at hit side, ; waves to the crowd that greeted him as he made his first cam-" . palgn appearance In the Buckeye state today. At the left, accom panying the President as he moved through Cleveland Terminal enrpute to a round of conferences with party leaders, Is C. Wil liam O'Neill, Ohio attorney general, who Is candidate for governor In Ihe November election. (AP Wlrcplioto) President to Speak In Portland Oct. 18 Ike Will Spend 5 Hours in Cily On Tour By TI1E ASSOCIATED PRESS The White House Sunday con firmed earlier rcnorts that Presi dent Eisenhower will visit Port land Oct. 18. His schedule, announced In Washington, calls for him to ar rive at 3 p.m., drive to the Mult nomah Hotel where a 5 p.m. reception will be held In his honor, then make a rndTo-TV address at 7:30 p.m. from the Civic Audi tor urn. Alter Ihe taut, me i-resi- drnt is to leave by plane for Washington. While here, Elsenhower is ex pected lo urge the election of Douglas McKay, Republican can didate for the Senate scat now held by Democratic Sen. Wayne Morse. Adlal Stevenson, Democratic presidential candidate, is due in Portland next week on his way to California.' McKnv was to resume his active campaigning Monday after a Sun day rest. He has scheduled talks this week ot Portland and will visit Washington, Douglas and Lane counties. Morse, a former Republican, continued his campaigning Sunday with a statement claiming Demo cratic credit for such projects as Green Pelcr Dam. "If I had remained on the Republican side of the aisle, with Republicans controlling Ihe ap propriations Committee of the Senate, not one cent would have been authorized for such projects as Green Peter, because of the opposition of the Eisenhower ad ministration. (Continued on Page 5 Column 8) Auto Wreck Cuts Polk Area Power Portland General Electric work men Monday finished jcturning power to a scattered few farm homes that were part of a large section of the Eola Hills and Spring Valley areas without power Sunday night after a pole on Wallace road was sheared off by a car. Driver of the car was Mn. Rob ert Hulbert. McMinnville, who told the Capital Journal Monday that her car hit the pole after trying to avoid another which had driven into her lane of traffic. Mrs. Hulbert said she met the oncoming car as she started over a i hill. In an attempt to avoid it she went into the ditch on her side oi IS".?1 :. r.-j k.i:.... - , Tiin' onvprnmont messaged the Yugoslav govern vhh,h7iv. h,. nlit, Tim'. to lose more than half a ment lhat a full return to the ,ons were registered Friday and support for his campaign down-, billion dollars in " nunist crcd- tovM caw W cut oft Amer-".j.-- c-.-i:- t-i-..j 1.. nA in. ro at ont lean help to Belgrade. r"":,r""ni:-lh Tn;; l thl Western informant, believe peneo id wail in line cu.muur- . nlinl,-H , ;. ,or Piv. hnnrlrnrt nrl ninntv Her- ml lw0 ""norru )""' the car were her two children, Adlai Slates Another Far West Foray WASHINGTON m - Adlai E. Stevenson disclosed today plans lor an intensive campaign next week in California, with speeches in half a dozen cities, and in olher far Western states. In a bid for California's 32 elec toral votes exceeded only by New York's 45 and tied by Penn sylvania's quota Stevenson plans speeches in Oakland, Rich mond, Berkeley, Fresno, ' Long Beach and ban Diego. Earlier th. t week he will speak in Great Falls, Mont., Boise, Idaho, Seattle, Wash., and Portland, Ore. The Democratic presidential candidate, who returned to his campaign headquarters hero early yesterday, attended Unitarian church services and then spent the day working on speeches ho will make on an eastern swing starting tomorrow and conferring with aides. Sen. Estcs Kcfauver, his run ning mate, said he and Stevenson agreed at a talk yesterday tne situalion is looking fine, and we are making very good progress, Says Paycheck Robbery Was Condoned By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press White House Writer CLEVELAND. Ohio (UP)-Prei- ident Eisenhower, using the harsh est words of his campaign, today accused the Democrats of condon ing "paycheck robbery ' by not doing enough to halt inflation. He also accused them of filling the voters' heads wilh "wicked nonsense" about his administra tion and with "fancied Ills'' about the slate of the nation. And he said the last time they were in power "special favorit ism, cronyism and laxity" reigned In Washington. 'Opens Up' First Time . Mr. Eisenhower's strong blasts at the apposition party were con tained in a campaign address pre pared lor delivery today in Cleve land's broad Public Square. The speech marked the first time the Chief Executive has. in political parlance, fully "opened up" on ' the Democrats in this campaign. , ne win toiiow it up with a sec ond address tonight a nation wide radio, and television talk to , be delivered at 9:30 p.m. from the University of Kentucky Coliseum ':' in Lexington, Ky. It will be car ried by the Columbia Broadcast ing System, ' More Speeches Added The barbs used In todav'a ad- dress, coupled with a White House - announcement Sundnv- thfll. mnn 1 speeches are being added to the President's itinerary, plainly showed Mr. Eisenhower is touch- ening up his campaign. The new speeches, the White House said, will be part of a campaign swing into Minnesota, Washington and Oregon Oct. 17-19. . ,, ; .,. In his attack today on the Dem ocrats' handling of the inflation problem, Mr. Elsenhower said: , ine men of the odpos tion know perfectly well that one of the main reasons they were ' thrown out of office four years ago was their tolerance of the thievery of inflation." He said inflation cut the value of Ihe average American's pay check by one-third in a seven-year ncriod. "vet the nnnosifinn -did nothing to stop this economic . thievery and they know It." Ihe record shows we not they (Democrats) have made the most successful fight to stop in flation's robbery of every . pay check," he said. . Denounces Democrats In this industrial area where there are thousands of union mem bers, Mr. Eisenhower also paid particular attention to labor. He denounced as "more than political bunk" and "willful nonsense" what he called the Democratic idea that Democrats "alone truly care for the working men and -women of America and that the Republican Party is really a vague kind of conspiracy by bit business to destroy organized la-. bor and to bring hunger and tor ment to every worker In America." This, the President said, 1 wicked nonsense." To the con trary, he said, under the Repub lican administration, organized la bor had grown in quantity and (Continued on Page 5, Column 3 N ews in Brief She said that the car went out nniifflnn 7. and Susan. 44 Wires from Ihe downed pole fell on the car. Mrs. Hulbert said. Dri ver ol another McMinnville bound car pushed the wires off the car and took Mrs. Humeri ana ncr cnn drcn to McMinnville. Although badly bruised Mrs. Hul bert said she and the children did not sustain any other injuries. Most of the residents of the area had power Sunday night following the 8:20 p.m. accident, PGE offi cials explained. But a few people retired early and did not discover and report the outage until Mon day. The area blacked out extended 10 mile nnrlh from West Salem land from Willamette river west 'over Mrs. Palmquist and the two the Soviet Communist party boss in a bitter struggle with old Bol sheviks In the Kremlin. Two veteran Stalinist (onset with Tito began Improving three years ago, the Soviet bloc has showered the Yugoslavs with eco nomic benefits to compensate for the 1S48 Stalin inspired boycott I Hungary. Khrushchev invited Geroe to the Yalta talks to try to erase old friction between Yugoslavia and Saturday st downtown banks and of control as she tried to get it firms under the auspices of the League of Women Voters. Of the total, 302 registered as Re publicans, 276 as Democrats and 13 declared themselves to be In dependent, , . back on Ihe highway and went across the road shearing off the pole. Mrs. Hulbert reporter she was knocked unconscioui. With ber In into the Eola Hills. The car sheared olf a PGE transmission pole carrying lines from Dayton to West Salem. Power was restored about 11 p.m. hut PGE workers - spent a busy day repairing blown trans- Bandits Force Store Boss to Open His Safe KLAMATH FALLS (UP) - Os car Palmquist, manager of the Safeway store here, and his son were watching television lale last night while his wife and daughter were about to retire. Two gunmen forced their way ii.tu the house. One stood guard children while the other forced Palmquist to drive him to the Sale way store in Palmquist's car, and to open the afe. He escaped with an unannounced sum of money alter throwing Palmquist's car keys away and Fo Monday, Oct. 1, 15 NATIONAL ' iKe nays ucmo rauure To Head off Inflation Sec, 1, P, 1 President to Speak In Portland Oct. 18 ....Sec. 1, P. 1 LOCAL Ptiamlinr niraplnr . Nominees Selected ..Sec. 1, P. 5 Judge Upholds Book . Dealers indictment bee. 1, r. l STATE 17 Polk Election Registrars Named ..Sec. 1, P. 5 People Continue To visit wunoit ....sec. i, r. i FOREIGN British Jet Bomber Crashei at Airport ..Sec. 1, P. 1 Bulganin Joins Russ , Power Struggle Talks Sec. 1, P. 1 SPORTS Maglle vs. Ford In First Series Came? Sec. 1, P. 1 Green Bearcats Star . .Sec. 2, P. 1 REGULAR FEATURES formers and (uses. Weaving him bound nd gagged, . iCtossword Punlo ..Set), 2, J Amusements Editorials .. Locals Society Comics , Television .. Want Ads ... Dorothy Dlx Markets ... Sec. 1, P. 2 Sec. 1, P. 4 Sec. 1, P. 5 on- i r. w,i Sec. 2, P. 8 Sec. 2, Pj 9 fc..Seo. t, P, 10,11 scS. B, a i Sea. 2. 7,