Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 26, 1956, Page 2, Image 2

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    Salem, Oregon, Monday, November 26, 1956
Pae 2 Section 1
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
Safe Burglars
Take s274,000
From Mansion
Biggest Louisville
Theft Believed
Inside Job
LOUISVILLE. Ky. i Police an inside Job with outside conk-jay
suspected an inside job in nections."
the J274.0O0 push button" wall! The wi'e the 83-year-old
safe thcll at the Oxrnoor mansion sportsman, attorney and onetime
el capitalist William Marshall solicitor general ol the United
rjuiiiu i Slates also indicated to newsmen .
It was the oiggest burglary ever '" wa" d""1' liy someone
committed here.
The money ranging from $10
to SI, 000 'lills was stolen (roml
a concealed all safe in Bullitt's,
s'.udy on the ram'iling 1,000 acre j
estate on Louisville's city limits j
sometime between 11 o'clock Sat
urday night and a a m. yesterday.
Senators Probe
Campaign Cost,
Road Lobbying
WASHINGTON tfl A Senate
investigating committee launches
hearings today to scrutinize lob
bying on the federal highway con
struction bill and to learn how
political campaign funds were
spent.
Sen. McClellan (D-Arkl sum
moned Democratic National Chair
man Paul M. Butler as leadoff
witness, and Republican Chairman '
Leonard W. Hall for tomorrow, to
give "an accounting of campaign
lunns ana activities.
me intiiiiy is one ui a series
I he special committee has been
conducting under a Senate reso
lution instructing it to search for
evidence of any improper or Hie
- gal attempts to Iniluencc senators,
Senate candidates, or officials in
the executive branch of the gov
ernment through lobbying or cam
paign contributions. ""
Committee staff members said
questioning of Butler and Hall
probably would cover some mat
ters already dealt with when J I nil
and Butler testified recently be
fore another Senate Elections sub
committee headed by Sen, Gore
tn-Tennl.
McClellan declined to give any
advance details of the inquiry into
lobbying on the mtillibillion dollar
highway construction bill, al
though he said witnesses would In
clude spokesmen for the American
Automobile Assn
Cancer Society
Finds Smoking
V
Health Hazard
NEW YORK to - The American
Cancer Society anys "tho evidence
suggests Hint cigarettes are a
health hazard." But at the same
timo the society says "the speci
fic effect of cigarette smoking on
a particular Individual cannot he
predicted."
The organization released a 20
page booklet Snminy titled
"Where We Stand Today on Cigar
ettes and Lung Cancer."
The society said It had no final
answer to tho question of whether
smoking causes lung cancer and
added that findings remain "ten
tative and Incomplete."
But the society said the smoker
"who for years smokes heavily
two'.packages or more a day has
abonl one in 10 chances of eventu
ally developing lung cancer."
It added:
"A man who smokes less than
a pack a day has about one in 36
chances of developing the ills
rase. The odds of a nunsmoker
developine lung cancer are about
one in 270."
BRITISH ACCUSE PRIEST
NICOSIA - BrilUh author
ities accusH Hrwk Orthodox
priMl Monday of administering
the anti Hf ituJb wt A Die LOKA
under try.-ui t-rrj; in a il-
hje ctix'rb 7i fc';'jt t.ttrrd
tht r:t-l v Oji .vvi'rt
ljw:t mi tt w! i',l.
rM, u -u-.'h1 t.jiwyr tir
-Ilr-'' ti'WiMt win mnii
0 i;n-trt t , ui'-.i-u'.ioi Mi.-.p
vhi tiimiiU"'! i! tut juu
ri-itn;lt utidi" j:' uiinc
I'sychoIoyiM Finds No Sinus
egrow Inferior in Intellect
WASBiN'vlOX Al ".!-.
V' t JM..M.'llt).('g. A Hi (iMk' hl't
M'fV.U IrpuU-C luirf. Iti tun
Irfilll tli '.V tllld III V.it-U'.l!." 1-..
Ci'lIU ilifl' Nig'UI-l H'i tl-M lll.l'.
LflV tllllll Wlll.t UtVJM
howirt 1). Iwrir, mw.m' .
rjour o' tne hducatitnia hc:wo.i
kuu. New or., Bait H.
Ht p'epared lor tin- Ant. -be
lfl.a'.iull U-MUf O- J) IM! D me,
Jrvntai aorviir wgnniitiiiwv j
"If thr nai.un school nvjii-mi '
nr wgii-giili-d on tin- illiill'i
l i'o'ii. cuioi' luii-t wmiiti oi
nwM-d in wti.v tnai mni in
.idcr ediuiatir of wime ii..-iru'
t'iprilic "
ri-aij i.ond'icla pf)('hvit'j:.t l ttn'.t
and. entranie ri'tjo',oi!f tvi
erondaiy KhocU. Tin- .Nylin it
poitt paid for by the Kind fi
nanced Kund lor It.e Republic,
was released at Ihe Anti-Defamation
Lcaiut'i annual meeting
bar. '
I A $41,000 check also was reported
missing, but later was found.
"Whoever went iii there knew(
what they were doing," County
police Capt. Bert Hart said.
City Detective Bert Hcuser said
he believed the bursary was
w,,u "lllw ""-' scl ul'-
i
County detective St. James
Wyalt said it wasn't known how
the thieves worked the double
combination safe.
The thieves apparently entered
the first floor library o( the man
sion by raising an unlocked win
dow. The detectives said whoever
took the money pressed a point
on the library all which opened
a door disguised as a bookshelf,
Wyatt said when they apparently
couldn't find a outton on Bul
litt's desk in the study that
opens a section of wall paneling
hiding the safe, they forced it
open. s
The break-in was discovered
when a maid told Mrs.. Bullitt
that a window in the library was
open,
Mrs. Bullitt said the library and
study were in order when she and
her husband retired about 11 p.m.
The couple was a'one in the house
during the night. Their daughter
and son-in-law Mr. ami ,iir
Lowry Watkins three servants
and a gardener sleep in other
buildings on the grounds.
The couple heard no unusual
noises during - the night, police
said.
But Wyatt said the gardener,
Milburn Price, 65, reported ne
awoke about 4 a.m -and saw a
car on the tree-lined lane that
winds about a quarter of a mile
from the highway to the house.
He said Price didn't "pay much
attention" to the car because the
estate attracts sightseers at odd
hours.
The home containing 10 fam
ily bedrooms was built by the
iiullitt family about 1700 and en
larged over the years.
Tho Bullills' second-floor bed
room In the east wing of the big
oricK ana stone house is about 51
feet from the study in the west
wing. ,
Mrs. Bullitt said her husband
brought most of the money home
recently from his law ofllcc. No
reason was given
Mrs. Bullitt told police thieves
might have thought she and her
husband were away. They had
planned to fly to Boston Friday
but cancelled their reservations.
Bullitt served under President
Willinn Howard Tnfl as solicitor
general and was a Republican
nominee for tho U.S. Senate in
1914.
He is the senior partner In the
law firm Bullitt. Dawson and
Tarrant. During his 61 years at
the bar he has been director of
numerous banks and financial In
stitutions. Kneeland Rites
Set Thursday
Funeral services for James John
Kneeland. 79. who died unexpect
edly at Idanha Sunday will be held
from the Howell-Edwards chapel
al 1 30 p.m. Thursday.
He was visiting a son, Roy
Kneeland, at the time of his death,
which was attributed to a heart at
Inik. A retired farmer lie lived In
Keizcr at 4979 North River ltd. for
the past seven years alter moving
Irom Lafayette, Ore.
He was born at Plalnvlew, Minn.
June 24, 1877. Mr. Kneeland was a
member of the Keizer Nazarene
churih.
He leaves his widow, Mrs. Ethel
Kni - cland. Salem, whom lie mar-
r"d in Dallas in Wi:; a daughter,
Mf Irvne Iteinhard. San Jose,
t'alif . and three sons. Melvin
hfitlnnd. Tillamook: Merril Knee-
lw). Salem and Hoy Knei'land,
JOjfiha nd six grandchildren.
lunol will be al Amity ceme-
ur
green Ave, al I2lh and Center In Brush Collrte Home Economic
t i l.fcdi.igi itc along Ihe ,i,i-.s about 5 31) p.m., olficcrs club by the Rukreall Home Leo
lii.f ai !b';t of a iroup of said. . nomic club.
:olj!tt who Mid on
l u.ai trfie are no "innate
-.'.a.. L'!'-i.tti m intelligence"
U"wa IM niU and Negro
i i-i
Villanova I'nl-
i-im'j p'v'rawr,
Frank C. J. Mc-
'" wiv, in iw m.n.line 1 1. 8.
4 vwii jtrpwt thai It had
uin-n ' d-nuiiMitrd oer and
,i-, -' ti .ri'Jl II group do
iw in,, i -WBIh rapacity ol
wiii'.i-i
Ni.--ii n.."! n& a..'.i);iig In
h.i.u'i!,i .,..!.. ha'.M-r
ii cinff nt e
inav ui-ll
Ii-mj. u-'vii-u t),f ra.ti
U v e !'-ii iv t- in tf.r cir
cuiiitiatHci uf.ur li.ch Imlnulu
aii ttt-w ov
"The that hereditary
factor account lor dilfrrfncea li
ao weak at lo b virtually bod
ilitrnt," ha laid.
O
Safe Looted in Louisville Mansion
t MM 1
v A No lb-
MJ ; ri II II .
I ;.t;i ' if $m
j CP "jjfp
A (&mm mm I
LOUISVILLE, Ky. Thieves looted this concealed 'wall safe on
the pretentious Oxmoor estate of William Marshall Bullitt early
yesterday of $274,000. The thieves forced the wooden panel hiding
the safe, worked two combinations and then fled with the money
the largest amount ever stolen In Louisville, (AP Wlrephoto)
Russian Navy 2nd to
U.S.; 400 Subs Built
Reds Behind in
Guided Missiles,
Atom Ships
LONDON lfi An authoritative
survey says Russia has built a
navy second in size only to that
of the United Stales but that
it lags far behind the Americans
in guided missiles and atomic-
propelled ships.
the one advantage ol the Soviet
Union reported in the 1956-57 issue
of Jane's Fighting Ships is its
USDA Sights
1957 Farmer
Costs Higher
WASHINGTON (A The Aeri-
culture Department said Monday
farmers' production costs are ex
pected to avenge somewhat high
er in 19"7 titan in 195t.
These fnrm costs have been on
the upgrade in recent years while
the prices received by farmers for
their products have in general de-1
dined.
The department hns been fore
casting, however, that farm net
income this enr will be slightly
higher llinn in 11)55 and will move
up again slightly next year.
Die department said the index
on prices paid by farmers for
commodities use in production
was 3 per cent higher in mid
October than n year earlier. The
cost figures include interest, tax
es and wages.
Since lH7-4!h which the depart
ment said was an unusually favor
able period, prices paid by farm
ers for production items, interest,
luxes and wage rates, have in
creased about IS per cent while
prices received by farmers for
products sold have declined about
H per cent.
Kami machinery prices are ex
pected to be slightly higher. Prices
of feed, feeder livestock and seed
will tend !o fluctunate with prices
of farm products in general.
Prices of farm real estate nre
expected to continno to rise, the
department said, and the trend
toward larger but
will go on.
fewer farms
Accident llrinos
Minor I
II I lll'ICS ;
A car-pedestiinn accident result
ed in apparently non-serious in
juries to a Salem wuman Saturday
evening, city police reported.
Mrs. Eleanor Fry. Al, (M Nortli
2,1rd St., was released after treat
ment at Salem General hospital for
an ankle injury and abrasions.
She was hit by a car driven by
John Victor Wagers, tno.i Ever
Get Ready-Set-and
DOWNTOWN
SALEM
STORES OPEN
TODAY TO
!! of Sarvic Craatatt Valuaa
10 Acraiof IxcitlnoMtrthandiia
great fleet of more than 400 sub-
marines tar more tnan tne uni-1 and Hurries were forecast from
ted States. Jane's said a large the Great Lakes and the Ohio Val
percentage are new, long-range ley east to the Appalachians and
vessels. in the mountains of Tennessee
The United States in r e c e n t"
years has concentrated on build'
ing new types of submarines,
some powered by atomic energy,
rather than increasing the size of
its submarine fleet
Jane's said Russia and the
United States have outstripped all
the other navies of the world, in
cluding Britain's Royal Navy, in
construction and experimental de
velopment. Since the end of World War II,
Jane's said, Itussia has built
more cruisers and more destroy
ers than all the nations of the
rest of the world combined. It said
10 cruisers of the powerful Sver
dlov class have been completed
and six more aie under construe-
uni iviniu .ne niissiiin navy is
being built on traditional lines, it
reported tho U S Navy is de- p w-
velop(ingca revolutionary type "',011131113 KeU
It said atomic energy and guid
ed missile weapons already are
an actuality in the U.S. Navy and
predicted that within 10 years
many American ships will have
atomic power.
tiuided missiles are being in
stalled in all classes from the lar
gest to the smallest U.S. ships,
it said.
.lane's featured the U.S.S. For
reslnl, first of n new class of air
craft carriers, the largest war
ships ever built.
"Without even experimenting
with a surface test vehicle, work
is proceeding with the construc
tion of a large nuclear-powered,
guided missile cruiser, and with
the advanced design and procure
ment of an atomic-powered air
craft carrier which will lie much
heavier than the Forreslal and
will carry guided missiles," the
publication said.
Iii lll
1 i.oiieee
1 11
i
Club Receives
Gift of Clips
BRUSH COI.LEGK (Special) -No-host
dinner featured the Brush
Pn1l..0e t?rnru' mpelinir List week
...i,.,.. vvjmPr I'nwell. master ol
I'ulk county Pomona Grange, was
present.
Other members of Rickre.il!
Grange at the meeting were Mr.
:ini! Mrs .1 11. Itinev. Mr. and
Mrg. s. 11. Holt. Mrs. George Van
Santcn and Mrs J. Hagsdale.
This completed the Polk county
visitation program for the year.
Taking part in the program were
S. 1(. Holt, "Community Service,"
a reading; Mrs. Holt read a poem
of thanks lor Thanksgiving and
everyday living; Mrs. Van Santrn
made a report on civil defense.
Two doen cups wore presented
Go-To
P.M.
(a
Big Snowfall
Forecast for
Most of East
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Heavy snow warnings were
posted today for eastern New
York and much of New England
and North Carolina
Ruin mi in nrntnncl olnno Ihn
Atlantic Coast from Boston to Vir-
ginia. -
The rest of the country was to
have generally fair weather
with warmertemperaturcs in the
nuiiiiern anu cenirai plains ana
lower readings eastward to the At
lantic Coast.
A storm in southern Ohio spread
snow through the Great Lakes,
the Ohio Valley and much of the
Mississippi Valley and some rain
in Tennessee. Pellslon, Mich., re
corded two inches of new snow to
make eight inches on the ground.
Detroit was nit with four inches,
its heaviest fail of the season.
1 Ins storm made driving condl
tions hazardous over most e' M'c
I VII till UlinLil, UIIIU 1 IIIILJ CIIIU
uons ol tne Mississippi Valley,
Chiefs Go to
Soviet Parley
MOSCOW Wi The leaders of
Romania's Communist govern
ment came to Moscow Monday,
apparently in search of increased
economic aid from the Kremlin.
Premier Chivu Stoica said at
the railway station his govern
ment's first task is to "strengthen
friendship with the Soviet people
and other Socialist countries. !
It was apparent one reason for
the negotiations at this time was
Moscow's desire to strengthen its
position in Romania in view of
the recent developments in Hun
gary and Poland and the worsen
ing relations with Yugoslavia.
RFAL BACKFIRE
QUESNEL, B. C. laV-Whcn a
truck driven by H. G. Roulosse
backfired, it produced more than
noise. The resulting fire destroyed
the cab.
r
TUESDAY, NOV. 27
FASHION MODELING
OREGON ROOM,
MM'
il
Austrian Area
Near Bursting
With Refugees'ty rro-Kussian a irong man
12,000 Packed in Zone
Which Has Only Ahout
60,000 Homes
VIENNA, Austria Ofl Aus
tria's little Burgenland province,
on the edge of the Hungarian
plain, was almost bursting Mon
day with
mfiionns
homeless Hungarian
t- ...... -r lk'miy':rT'r"Z XT
packed into an area that has
fewer than M.OOi) homes. 'on Soviet arms and Soviet politial. When Prime Minister Nenru
Although Russian patrols almost support. They permit no criticism made his statement Nov. 19 on
sealed off some border crossing of the Russians. ; the world s crises, the Indian lega-
points, Austrian police reported ! The night .nartiai law was de- tion in Damascus gave the Syrian
that 2,200 more Hungarians found : dared, Damascus had its first government a translation for pub
their way through the old Iron "air raid." Thereafter the sirens lication. Nehru's criticism of the
Curtain Sunday night. The total j wailed frequently Russians for 'no Hungarian even s
for the past 24 hours was 4,500 So far as the frightened and un- was suppressed. Only the Middle
only half the peak level of last sophisticated population was con- East sections of Nehru's remarks
week. But they still were coming i cerned, the raids were real. The were used,
faster than thev could be moved sandbagged and Dlacked-out build-1 This was the work ot Saraj.
to camps elsewhere in Austria, lings of Damascus heightened the, This colonel of about 32 is a na
The whole country itself only 'illusion of imminent danger. Anti-, tionalist in the style of Egypt s
about the size of Maine. is aircraft batteries fired often. Camel Abdel Nasser
jammed with nearly 70.000 refu- The "air raids' also impressed , He is pro-Soviet in the sense
gees who have arrived in the past! on the public the need for con tin-, that he places a high value on
three weeks. Only about 15.000 of j "d martial raw. which left the Soviet assistance. He is not con-
them have been able to leave for
other countries. The total regis
tered arrivals is about 85,000.
In Bern, the Swiss government
announced a decision to grant
asylum to a further fi.OOO Hungar
ian refugees, bringing to 10,000 the
total being admitted to that coun
try. Some 4,000 Hungarians have
already reached there from the
transit camps in Austria.
With Soviet border controls
rightcning. the Hungarians are
resorting to tricks. Austrian fron
tier police reported. They said a
group of 50 Hungarians got away
to safety Sunday by pulling the
emergency brake on a passenger
train running between the Hun
garian frontier towns of Koermcnd
and St. Gotthard. All jumped
Irom tne train and evidently sur
prised frontier guards, who
opened fire too late to stop or
wound anyDody.
About' the same time other
Hungarians succeeded in a more
I dangerous attempt lumping Oil a
moving train and darning for the
border. '
Stolen Auto
Chase Fatal
To5Texans
HOUSTON m - The toll of an
automobile crash involving the
chase of a stolen car rose lo five
yesterday with the death of two
more persons.
The crash occurred late Satur-
day night when the stolen car col
lided hcadon with another in
which four residents of Silsbce,
Texas, were returning from a
football game.
The victims from Silsbce were)
F. R. Jlullins, 38, Elliott Mc
Donald, 38, and Miss Alice Rele
ford, 30. Mrs. Mullins was criti
cally hurt.
Police identified the victims In
the stolen car as Johnnie M. Phil
lips, 17, and Edward Woods,
about 24, both of Houston,
The men in the stolen car here
engaged officers in a running gun
battle at speeds up to 110 miles
an hour.
New Norge
Dryer Only
1.00
See Our Ad on
Paga No. 5
Cherry City Electric
2040 N. Capitol Ph, 4-6761
STREET FLOOR
1:30 P.M.
11
- ' i
it:
SILENT COUP
Syria Army Control Seized
By WILLIAM L. RYAN
A D ITnrnltfn Voire AnalVSl
nV-iRUT lehannn wi-Fevnt's
crSffiihti
ili SvriT
The country was brou-ht under'
martial "taw- proclaimed th dav
mteto ZTCm
lrof.hr,rmy empowered to
enforce the martial law. is in the
k.c r . ,,.,. i nrn.Sr.viei nf.
: (iccr5 unde tnHe clTrrent slr0g
I man. Col. Abdu Hamid Sara .
nis(. But they place a high value
army in iuh luiiiiui
When the big crisis broke in!
Egvpt, the civilian government or- i
dered a military guard around the I
i pumping stations 'or Iraq Pctrole-
urn Co. pipelines. That same night
Planes Land 10 More
Men Near South Pole
i By DON GUY the polar base during the Inter-
MCMURDO SOUND, Antarctica national Geophysical Year (IGY1.
W The lonely U.S colony ncari The chief of the construction
the South Pole swelled to 19 mengrou at the pole sincc last wcei(i
Monday with the arrival of two .. . . , n... f n....
planeloads of construction work-.Lt- Richard A. Bowers of Quon
ers , I set, R.L, and Harnsburg, Pa re-
The new arrivals joined eight, Prtcd by radio that all his men
men who had been living in tents J were getting adjusted to the two-
thc below-zero, snow-swept'
plateau sincc they were landed
Tuesday and a St Louis sergeant
who parachuted down to join them
Sunday.
The sergeant. Richard J. Pat-
ton, volunteered to jump in to di-i
reel Globemastcrs which will par-'
achute 450 tons of supplies for the
scientific base to be built at the
Pole. j
Two ski-equipped Navy Dako-(
las landed the 10 construction
workers, taking off again for the
main Operation Deepfreeze base
at McMurdo Sound otter 30 mm
utes on the polar snow.
Arrival of the reinforcements
was expected to give the construc
tion work a big boost. Bad weatlr
er had delayed the second land
ing. Another flight is planned soon
to fly in five more construction
workers and Dr. Paul A. Siple, the
antarctic veteran who will head
the scientific party wintering at
SHATTUC'S
OPEN
MONDAYS
4 11 r
II M.
I I lra I I
CAPITAL DRUG STORE
405 Stat Strtat (Cornar of libarry)
Wl OIVI HfC GREEN STAMPS
ii it, stations were blown up,
I I.
halting the flow of Iraqi on noi
nnw m the Mediterranean and;
only to the Mediterranean and: A great aumire.- oi Nasser,
lt to Syria herself. Saraj has surrounded himself with
i Iraqi Petroleum is owned by ! a group of officers similar to Nas-
British. American, French and ser's revolution council in Egypt,
Dutch interests). I overshaaowed the army
The press was deliberately chief of staff uen Nazam al Edin
blinded to the Soviet military sub--ndjecame te top man ,n Syria',
jugation of Hungary. Not a line 60 Ottoman army
of news rom anv Western source , Up to four months ago, when
wa, carried by the press or radio.
! Only tne Moscow ranio
w , ((iT news agency Tass
were quoted. .
aiui.-n-u p. w.ui....u.o..
A handsome Arab, Sara is a
powerful, tough-!ooking man about
5 feet 7, barrel chested, with
sleek black hair and piercing
I eyes. Most onservers creau mm ,
mile-high altitude and wore well
and happy.
3
'Special gift plan for new,
small hearing aids.
SONOTONE
W. F. Dodge & Associates
200A Livesley Bldg.
Salem, Ore., Phone 3-9485
fife
MM
Do you have one of
those large, heavy fig
ures that make most
corset fitters say,'
"Sorry, we can't
fit you . . . ? If
so, you just step
right down to see
let us
show you how
the scientific de
sign of a Camp
support is espe
cially ideal for
just your type of
fimiro .
$10.00
I with being sincere in the belief
ue is uoing utiu iui a.mu.
A great admire of Na
: Al Edin 'came chid of staff.
-y""-
enormous influx ol Soviet arma-
mcnt, it took on an offensive look.
IMrch Fiends,
uiOf HELLW
COULDN'T
HAVE PLOTTED BETTEI
THAN THEJIEVISIN6 OF
D I ABO LI QUE!
THE NORIOM MAKE THIS I '
SaOCIEI WMIHf OF THE
DEVI RtMSELfr
4l.Y.Nm
HtMy.ewfi clouzot'S
IMPORTANT no one
will be seated during
the last 30 minutes of
this feature.
PLUS
WONDERS OF
M1KH4IIAN
Hurry! Hurry!
Don't Mist This Big Hill
robert miodihon ,
William Campbell
NEVILLE BRAND yVVT'!
w Bruit B(fitl -C
.it, B0EEI1 0 WtBB r
fitlloeuUBiXKMR
On The Same Program!
RHONDA IICAIDO
FLEMING MOHTALBAH
NOW PLAYING!
Cont. From 1:00 P. M.
mumcunt murna
SPENCER TRACY
ROBERT WAGNER. I
THE R
MOUNTAIN 1-
CLAIRE TREVOR 11
TCCMWOXW
Kor Your Added
Kntertainmenll
A Colorful Short Ol
Canadian Wildlife
"WORLD IN A MARSH"
DRAMATIC FIRST RUN
mmmmam
DiOUUE
MR.
ROCK N ROLUT
in the storr
he wa"pborn
f7W
I IXCITINO KJM
I IXPIRIINCI JF2
I in autMNsn PLr 9
1
V PEREZ PRADO I
r V MARY KAYE TRHJ 1
HELEN GRAYCO