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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1956)
Journal THE WEATHER. CONTINUING MOSTLY clear to. night, Thursday except lor patches ef lo( In morning. Law tonight, Hi high Thursday, 54. 2 SECTIONS 28 Paget , ' 68th Year, No. 284 Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, November 28, 1956 " , , ,i u 0S o 0 J 0 Capital m So. Salem City Move Gaining' Petitions Put Out; Response Said 'Wonderful' By DOUGLAS SEYMOUR Capital Journal Writer Response "has been wonderful" to petitions being circulated in the area south of Salem asking the Marion county court to call an election to form a new city, ac cording to Howard Gardner, 4085 Dakota Rd ' who is coordinating the distribution of the petitions, prnnnIIi in inni-nnroto 'iho large area south of Salem into a authorities under $10,000 bail. They city to be called Salem Heights, I are charged with violation of fed was made public at a meeting of eral bank robbery statutes, the South -Salem Chamber of Charles Edward Simmons, 40 Commerce a week ago when it year-old logger of Springfield, who .was endorsed by that body. I admitted taking $2,000 at gunpoint Work lor Betterment -from a young woman bank teller At a mosting Tuesday night the '.Monday at Eugene and Donald board declared that lis intention Otto Howard, 23, of Eugene, ad was not to compete with the city miticd driver of the getaway car, of Salem, but rather "to work for the betterment of the greater Sa lem area." The board also voted to continue its study of details concerning the proposed, city and to contact the League of Oregon Cities for in- formation "as to the means of b;t!rrine the community where we live." Tile city, rs envisioned at the Chamber meeting, would t be bounded on the north by the pres ent Salsm city limits, on the south by Boone road, on the west by Bclcrest cemetery and a line ex ten'ng south to Boone road and on the east by Fairview home, the Southern Pacific right of way cut ting west to 12th street near oa Hill avenue. Take In 3 District - .arca,r ujm. ? vtnmi B present Sn em H-ighls, Morninc; side and Vista water districts and part of the Salem Heights Fire district.' Proponents of the new city es timate that if it is formed t will have a population of 8,000, (Continued on Page 5 Column 3) 12 Wknesses To Appear at Blast Hearing A dozen or more witnesses will be called at a public hearing Wed nesday afternoon to investigate the blast that destroyed the Dennis Howarth home, 785 North 20th St., last Wednesday, The hearing is to start at 2 o'clock in the council chamber at City Hall, and will continue into Wednesday night if necessary to conclude it today. The City of Salem, the Howarth family, insurance companies, Port land Gas fc Coke Co. and any other Interested parties, will be privi leged to have attorneys present, but ' all the questioning of witnesses will be done by members of the mayor's special investigating com mittee which has called the hear ing. The gas blast which utterly des troyed the house burned and in jured Mr. and Mrs. Dennis How arth and their daughter Deeann, 5 years old, all still in Salem General hospital, but all are reported in ntisfactory condition. Robert DeArmond, chairman of the special committee, said eight or 10 witnesses would be called from among the neighbors of the Howarths. Representatives of Portland Gas tc Coke Company, the A & R Equipment Co. which Installed the furnace, and Sears Roebuck & Co., from whom the furnace was pur chased, will be permitted to offer statements and may be questioned by members of the committee. State Float Entered for Rose Parade The state of Oregon will have an official float In the Pasadena Tour nament of Roses parade on New Years day to match the appear ance of Oregon State college in the Rose bowl. Gov. Elmo Smith announced to day that the float will be spon sored by the Oregon Development Commission whose executives di rector, Foye Troute, was named by the governor as chairman of the Oregon Tournament of Roses Float Committee. . Earlier. Pasadena parade direc tors informed Oregon State Col-' lege that a parade spot had been reserved before entries closed for the states or colleges represented in the Bowl game. - Gov. Leo Heogh of Iowa an nounced several days ago that; Iowa would have an official state float. The University of Iowa is1 Oregon State's opponent. Weather Detail Mlmnm ytntrtAr 5: minimum Mi. 2. Tll 14-hmtr prrlplt , !,: : for mtvt": firml.( nil. 113. RItm h'tcht. w. ( port fcjr V. S. Wratner Burtaa.) 'Foolish ' Say Con f esse BankRobbers Bandit and Helper Shifted to Jail In Portland By VICTOR B. FRYER Capital Journal Writer The marriage-bound confessed Eugene bank bandit and his part ner, arrested near Salem Tuesday by alert Oregon State police, were taken to Portland Wednesday wnere tney were jauea Dy teaerai both agreed they were "foolish' to attempt the robbery. - Arrested on 'Hunch ' Simmons was nabbed Tuesday morning when police Lt. Farley Mogan decided to have a Spring' field cab he saw driving on the freeway stopped on a "hunch." The hunch proved correct. Sim- mons was in the cab and had nine State Speeds Stumbo Strip Londemnation Coilft Procee(Hll2S Will 01" LV" " g8. V Be Filed Today for Title to Road The Oregon Highway Commis sion will - file condemnation pro ceedings Wednesday afternoon to acquire title to the 16,i-(oot sec tion, of the Pacific Highway that Is owned by the stumbo clan oi Wolf Creek and Glcndale. The-proceedings will be filed In Douglas County Circuit Court, Robert L. May Jr., assistant chief counsel for the commission, an nounced. May said the fact that the Stumbos are selling four-square-inch tracts of this property makes it urgent for the commission to file its suit quickly. Filing of the suit will make It impossible for the Stumbos to sell any more of these little tracts, because property under condem nation proceedings can't be sold. We have to do this now," May said, "because if we wait, we would be faced with having to file condemnation suits against hun dreds of property owners." However at Roseburg three county officials said maybe the Stumbos' land-selling had come to an automatic halt because they had failed to file a plat. Commissioner Frank Ashley, Clerk Charles Docrner and Sur veyor Fred Darby agreed that not more than three plots con be recorded unless a plat of the prop erty is filed with the County Plan ning Commission. None was. Whats more, the officials said, the Stumbos can be prosecuted for not filing a plat. AH Is Not Roses 4m Th; ll.llr tlnr ht! rli''t lo lrk mirTttiil m he innr irital he did ! be rlnlned tin rd It't ihettl fo-d or sh-H-r br hit iiiers. Nfijlihors M the erners m-.Tfd out. "leek, stork end barrel." from lh"lr hime foolh ef Pr'i tcnnil I Wrdnendar and lefl Ihe dot brMnd. He wat lound chained behind tbe house Tuesday. (Capital Journal Photo) Act d ExPl $20 bills taken In the robbery on him. With Simmons at the time were his bride-to-be Maudie Hon eyman, 25, and Miss Honeyman's 17-year-old niece. Simmons confessed after ques tioning and implicated Howard. Police arrested Howard at the home of relatives near Hopewell. Howard at first denied his part in the crime, but later confessed, Capt. Ray Howard of the state po lice, said, The two men are not related. Bride Most Disappointed' Probably the most openly disap pointed at the turn of events was Miss Honeyman, who was virtually left at the altar. She and Simmons had made the round of bars and taverns in Springfield and Eugene following the robbery and had de cided to drive to Vancouver, Wash, and be married. She and her niece and the cab driver, who were not believed in volved, were released by police Tuesday- afternoon. Planned for Some Time Questioned Wednesday morning in Marion county jail, Simmons said he had planned the holdup for some time to "pay off some bum checks I had written." Simmons said he had written several "bad checks" in Eugene while on probation for a similar charge and was afraid his proba tion would be lifted. "I needed money all right, but not this bad," the tall, dark tim ber faller said as he looked at bars in his cell this morning. Driver Howard, who drove the robbery car, said he had never been in trouble more serious than traffic tickets. He blamed drunk enness on his actions. ' Approximately $1709 of the stolen I money has. been accounted lor,! Capt. Howard said Scared During Holdup -Simmons said he was "plumb scared" when he handed bank tell er Mary.Laharty, 20, a note Mon day afternoon in Eugene which read, "This is a holdup. Give me ftMinn ." . '"Ifi'she" had said no! -V think I would have turned and run," he said. He told police both he and Howard had been drinking but he was not drunk. Miss Laharty said she didn't be come scared until after the hold up man had left. "I was too shocked," she said. The money was taken from the West Eugene branch of First National bank. ' In addition to state police the FBI had also been working on the case. Woman Found Dead in Home WOODBURN (Special) Mrs. Wilma Hoover, about 50 years old, was found dead in her home at 809 N. Second St., Wednesday morning, by neighbors who investigated her failure to make her usual morning appearance about the place. Coroner Lcston Howell and sher iff's deputies opened an investiga tion to establish the cause of death. The body was to be taken to the Ringo-Cornwcll Funeral Chapel. Friends reported that Mrs. Hoo ver had been in ill health for about a year. She is reported to have a daughter living in Beaverton. i Rail Ruins osion Kills-Two 7 Hurt as Salvage Crew Works at Wreck Site MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. Wl Two train wreck crew members were killed Wednesday by an explosion in the wreckage of a crossing crash that had already killed two trainmen and a gasoline truck driver Tuesday evening. Seven other workers were In jured, one critically, by Wednes day's explosion. A third member of the train crew was burned Tuesday in a rescue attempt just after the crash of the truck into the side of the Chesapeake & Ohio freight train. Touched Off By Torch ' State police said Wednesday's explosion apparently was touched off by an acetylene torch burning into the dicsel fuel line of the wrecked locomotive, -which had been burning all night. The two torch operators, report ed unhurt, were trying to cut into the engine to get the bodies of the two trainmen killed in the crash. Killed Wednesday as the ex plosion blew the bottom of the wrecked engine 40 feet were Otto Kechn, 48, Wanatah, Ind., and George Marquardt, 56, LaCrosse, Ind. The trainmen trapped and killed in the burning locomotive of the 65-car freight train Tuesday were Ray Powers, 55, engineer, and Robert H. Johnson, 38, fireman, both of Grand Rapids, Mich. The gasoline truck driver was Charlie Wilson, 50, Mishawaka, Ind. New Autos Burn , Wreckage of the Iruck, two loco motives and 10 derailed freight cars blocked the C. & O. line. Five of the derailed cars burned with die locomotives and truck. One burned car - contained new auto mobiles. The train, hound from Grand Rapids to Chicago, was carrying mostly auto parts, scrap and salt. : Fight 2 Coast Forest Fires Two Oregon blazes covering ap proximately 2,200 acres are being battled Wednesday ny crews num bering between 310 and 360 men, the fire fighters including state forestry department men, loggers and mill men. Largest of the blazes is one covering about 2,000 acres ap proximately ?n miles from Nc halem in the Tillamook burn area which has been burning out of control since Thanksgiving. The second blaze, about 200 acres in size, is on the Trask river and started Tuesday night from an unknown source. There are 60 men, two caterpillcr trac tors and two tankers on that blaze. From 250 to .100 men arc fight ing the fire near Nehnlom, which started from controlled burning on Oregon American Co. land and has burned mostly on that land, with some burning on state land. Controlled burning had been go ing on in slash for some time. but cast winds fanned it out of control and the state moved in with help the day after Thanks giving. Ted Maul, administrative assist ant in the protection division of th; forestry department office in Salem, said Wednesday green tim ber was not involved in the Nc- halcm blaze and about half of the area was slash that would have been burned over in controlled burning. There are some scat tcrcd reproduction losses In the area, he said. Two caterpillar tractors had been' used on the blaze Tuesday. but one of those was lost in the fire Tuesday night and because of the difficult terrain the men bat tling the hlaze have had to resort to hand fighting of the tire. Maul said that fires this laic; the season were not unheard of, iZ"ZJl, rZJ' v,h . " , unusual. Fern lires, however, oc- said glumly. "1 haven't any como cur in mid-winter. ment on it." NEIGHBORS TO RESCUE Pup Left As Family Moves A dog chained out in Ihe cold and left foodless by a family that moved out on it has brought a new nomination In the "meanest man" category from residents south of Pringle school. Neighbors said the little black and white dog of uncertain breed apparently didn't have much to diva Ihankt Inr nn Thnnkcpivino day after his owners moved out I-Hf. mA Ui t..i..l In a bracket In Ihe ground behind k...... .n tn,w. In fret, he didn't have much a deputy raj aligned to look Into The vls't mny lorn nut lo be an it wns h.tuling from the Philip- less" were believed missing, to sive thank tnr ler several lite metier. No indication was eflort hv Chou to turn Nehru Into pines to Tncomo, Wash . ahilled in Small poll-e boats battled moult f. odless days and unsheltered made as to whether a charie a middle man In 'Stalemated ne- heavy seas. An earlier report snid tainous waves through Ihe night lo niahtv Tursdav friend, ol one U. S. Securing Arms Principals in fe- " r ' Principals In the Indecent literature trial which opened Wednei- day morning In Marlon county circuit court are. pictured Just prior to start of the trial. Left it Mrs. John Plclller, fillverton, who originally brought charges against two Salem magazine dli Iributors, At right It Mrs. Rex Olson af Silvertoa, one of the' group with Mrt. Plellfer.. In center background, Jack St. Clair of American News Agency, defettdanVln the case, tits waiting for the trial to begin. (Capital Journal Photo), (See other picture, Section 1, Page 13) , i-- - ......w,.-. - DAME' CHIEF EVIDENCE Jury Chosen in Trial Of 'Lurid Book' Case By FRED ZIMMERMAN Capital Journal Writer Five women and seven men. comprising a Marion county cir cuit court jury, will have to read the pocketbook "A Dame Called Murder" or have it read to them, IkeAppoints Bunker New India Envoy AUGUSTA, Ga. (UP) President Elsenhower today named Gils worth Bunker, retiring president of the American Red Cross, as the new ambassador to India. Bunker was given a recess ap pointment, subject to later Senate confirmation, to succeed John Sherman Cooper, Republican re cently elected to the Senate from Kentucky. Earlier, the President announced the appointment of Dr. Lawrence Gridley Derlhick, Chattanooga, Tenn., to be federal commissioner of education. White House Press Secretary James C. Hagerty declined to comment on press dispatches from London reporting increasing Brit ish concern over differences be tween this country and the United Kingdom over Middle East poli cies. Told that British Acting Prime 1M1 AiiiNB rnmi- Minister II. A. Butler had called a special Cabinet mer-llng tt avcrt Chained the hungry animal when they went to look over the house as a pos- sihlc rental, j A boy from the family was lm- mediately dispatched with some food, apparently the only thing the dog had had to cat since he was left behind Wednesday, The lomily lhat left (he young rir.0 twhinri rpnnrtnrllv hnft mtiveft to another home neanT lo Salem. A mnlinl nn tlii. rajlr9lnMnl M the oog win mnoe in me vinnon .rtiintw nhi- nil Tttfi!nv and would be lied against Ihe owner Warns Syria to Indecent Literature Trial whether they like It or not. The paper-backed volume, sell ing for 25 cents, with a rather lurid picture of a woman on the front, is destined lo become the principal evidence in Iho trial of Jack St, Clair, operator of the American News Agency. St. Clair Is being tried before Judge George R. Duncan on a charge of soiling indecent litera turethe particular literature be ing the book mentioned above. Few Witnesses Expected When a recess wns taken short ly hclorc noon Wednesday alter the Jury had been selected, it wns evident that few witnesses would be called. The district attorney said he wns not sure how many he would place on the stand. Counsel- for the defense indicated the defendant would be the only one to appear. Mrs. John Pfeilcr, Silvcrlon housewife, who was largely instru mental in bringing evidence before a grand jury that indicted St. Clair, was in the spectators' sec lion and undoubtedly was sched uled to take the stand. In his preliminary statement to the jurors. Judge Duncan said tu 1,-.- i j,B,i'Post olfice was broken Into last they would have to determine,'. .,. . .. . ,.,. ... , whether the book was or was not Indecent. The mailer of Ihe sale of the volume Is not Involved. Challenges Made During the hour and a half Ihe jury was being selected, attorneys exercised seven peremptory chal lenges. Those finally selected were: Naomi King, Snlrm; Roy i .. Ui....i.. T;. ..,!,.. n,,rL. , . ,,'.,'',,,',,,, M ,,. Sn (,m. Int(p McCll Sncm. ,,, . Salem; A rli-n Howes. Salem- Miss Josephine llrnnd, Stnylon: Harold Young, anient; Betty Everitt, Salem; Hoy David- son, saicm, ana uarence uison, Salc-m. Questions asked prospective jur ors droit primarily with the mat ler of holding a defendant innocent until proven guilty beyond n rea sonable doubt. None of the jurors had rend the book Involved In the case. In fact few of them had read any books ol Its nature. . A ,.,!,,,-. V'llOllVI IIVCS Iii Delhi for Neli ni Parley NEW DELHI, India Chou Kn.ljil. nri-mier Ann Inrpicn mm. iter of Red China, nrrlved here U'nHnnt.t- fnr 1.ftnu annA u ill visit nnd tiM'ts nn vorm pinnies u-th Primn Mm!.,li Win, , solutions between the United British Reveal U.S.Fleetin Invasion Path LONDON (UP)-The Admiralty announced today - that the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean caused "temporary inconven ience during Britain s attack on Egypt last month. Viscount Hailsham, first lord of the admiralty, said personal mess ages between the commnndcr of a British carrier task force and the American fleet prevented any in cidents. He praised the "good sense and judgment" of the American and British commanders in a way which suggested lhat the fleets had a close call in the tense wat ers off Egypt. Hailsham was asked In the House of Lords about reports lhat the American Mediterranean fleet "closely crossed" the British in vasion force as it approached Egypt. "There were no conlacut be tween the U.S. Sixth Fleet and our landing force as suggested in the question," he replied. "There were contacts between Ihe Sixth Fleet and our carrier task force, which not unnaturally resulted in some temporary lncon vcnience to both fleets. Adams Postal op 111 kJtllC OldalCU; ADAMS. Ore. (UPi-Tlw Adams ifl AllliiA inn hpAban Inln Inst night and the safe carrying all of fice receipts was carried off and blown open. A farmer found the safe along a county road early today. It had been blown open and all its con tents removed. Post office inspectors said Otey had no Idea how much money was in the snfe thnt wns tnken some time between 8:30 p.m. yesterday nnd 7:110 a.m. Indny. A 7Jlftl).S LOST AT 46 Yanks Safe as Gales Batter Asia MANILA Ijfl . Hundreds of Asian seamen were missing and (lie crew of an American freighter was reported abandoning ship Wednesday as storms continued to sweep the South China Sea and the Western Pacific. Globe Wireless Intercepted a message from . the 11,292-ton freighter Charles E. Dant saying the captain had ordered his 46 crewmen off In l.lngayen Gulf, on the west coast of Luzon Island. The U.S. Navy ship Muskingun had been standing by nnd pre cimnl,li Innlr llin mim nhnnrri ine nam toon a mm list wnrni l,n rnran nt pimnnr i-nnrnntrn es a tne Fnip naa reacnen nn itni :ihh I age in the gulf, five miles south Ihe shin had reached an anchor from State Department Says Soviet ; Heightens Mid-East Tension By Delivering Weapons WASHINGTON OB The State Department said Wednesday Russia is "adding to tensions" in arms to Syria. i ll aisciosea tne American iiih- bassador has expressed to Syria this government's concern over continuing soviet weapons oenver-, les. ' ' A department spokesman said, We know of substantial shipments of Soviet arms of various types and weiehts to Syria in recent months. We understand that since the Middle East crisis further shipments have been made." , Types Not Specified He did not say what specific tvnes and quantities of Soviet weapons had gone to Syria. But informed officials said more man 30 million dollars worth of such Communist military equipment has been delivered, including light tanks, armored cars and troop carriers, machipe guns, some ar tillery and other light weapons. White said he did not know whether this government has pro tested to the- Soviet government against the recent Russian arms Khinments. ' American Ambassador James S. Moose Jr.. has discussed the So viet arms problem in Damascus with the Syrian government, u said. , U.S. Might Help lrao. ' Asked to comment on the sharp verbal exchanges In recent days ociwccn syria ana ncignuunnu and nctgnDoring area are not coming from Iraq. ' . . TTVKai - White added in replying to outer Questions . that . nothing he 'said ruled out- possible deliveries of American weapons to Iraq, . Iraq last Monday .formally"; reguested jet planes and anti-aircraft 'feuns from the united states, BEIRUT. Lebanon m. The drumhead tension between Syria and Iraq mounted today. The feeling grew that some sort of break cither in Damascus or Baghdad might come within days. . . . Open Coup Likely Informed circles saw the likeli hood of an onen coun by Iho army clique that has taken control of Syria in recent weeks. The army faction, pro-Soviet although non Communist, Is led by Col, About Hamid Saraj. There were Increasing signs ot unrest. A Baghdad dispatch quot ed and government statement as saying two civilians were killed and a number of policemen and civilians hurt In a demonstration at Najaf, a Moslem holy city in southwest Iraq. It did not say wnat set off the trouble. Damascus dispatches quoted an Iraqi who claimed to be a refugee as saying Iraqi army officers had attempted a "mutiny" against the nrcscnt regime in Ungndnd. lie snid this occurred 12 days ago in nrotcst against permitting British planes to refuel to llnhbaniya air base near Baghdad. The refugee claimed demonstrations flared in Baghdad and other cities when the people learned the officers were arrested, and that "dozens" oi people were ktiiea ana wouna- The Syrian-Iraqi crisis built up In a nnnlinnina nvhnnon nt hitler char.H Jordan', decision to cut , " Its ties with Britain and consider closer relations with Russia under lined tho possibility of deeper Soviet penetration Into the fermenting Middle East. Iraq accuses Syria of conducting a subversive campaign against the government of Iraqi Premier Nuri Said, an opponent of Soviet moves to extend lis middle east tnlluencc Syria charges Iraq with seeking (Continued on l'ngo S. Col 41 SLA of Santo Tonias port, but laler the captain reported Increasing swells were threatening to cap size the vessel. Hope dwindled for hundreds of Malay and Chinese fishermen mis sing off Ihe east coast ol Malaya as more bad weather grounded British air force planes nnd kept Royal Navy ships out of the area. A gale early Monday smashed AO fish traps olf Johore State. Built of poles driven In deep wa ter and fitted with nets, the trnps - 1 each hod up to half dozen men l ill n imn htltS On mem. - .innurc im" "m,...u : nnfl USI men ninyoe mnrc - 1 pick up seven more stirviMirs, i im k i,r.n i,m o... ........ bringing the total saved to lit. Stop Russ the Middle East by shipping Refugees Scorn Hungary Reds , Amnesty Offer: Kadar to Forgive Them If They Return by , End of Year VIENNA (UP) Hungary's pup. pet government offered an airio-" esty today lo the 92,000 Hungarian'.' refugees from Communist terror; If they return to their homeland . by the end of this year. The offer was broadcast over Budapest Radio to a nation still ' crippled by a bitter general strike, -The thousands of refugees crammed Into emergency camps in Austria received the offer cyn- - Ira IV. w th nn thnlioht nl nrppnt ntf It. Radio Budapest, citing the gov-' eminent, organ Nop Szabadsag,'.' , said tne amnesty law had boon' annpni.nrf Ki, It, , Af :, .1 ...: i. :. "adar.lt said the text of the de cree would be published "shortly." . . .The announcement said no ac tion would be taken against any ot r the men, women and children who fled across the Iron Curtain to free dom in the toake of the Hungarian rebellion, provided they return to Hungary before Jan. 1. . Still Fleeing Connly Kadar obviously hoped to play on the traditional homesickness of Hungarians who have left the land of. the Magyars. But the surge of refugees into ' Austria continued. In the past 24 hours, another 4,800 crossed the Austro-Hungarlan frontier. This was a slight increase after two days in which the numbers de creased. At the same time. Radio Buda pest kept broadcasting reports of the alleged return to work of striking miners and factory work ers who have kept the country tied up economically for weeks, France Pulls Units, Denies Sending More UNITED NATIONS, 'fo.Y. 11 France announced Wednesday it had withdrawn an infantry com pany and a naval commando unit .' of undisclosed size from Egypt within the past week. It an nounced preparations for the with drawal of other forces. The English speaking delcgatta got the impression that a com bined unit of battalion strength had been pulled out. An interpret er's error left this Impression, but a check ol the original French indicated that the word battalion was not used, . The announcement was made In the U.N. General Assembly by French delegate Vincent Brous tra. who vigorously denied reports lhat France had sent new tank units into Ihe Port Said area. News in Brief For Wednesday, Nov. 21 ; NATIONAL Two Trainmen Killed By " - Indiana Blast ...... Sec. 1, P, I Ike Appoints New Envoy . to India Sec. 1, P. I LOCAL ' ' Indecent Literature' t Trial Opens Sec. 1, P, 1 STATE state Speeds Stumbo Strip - Condemnation sec. l, r. I FOREIGN '.1 U.S. Warns Syria to Reject Russ Arms . .. ... Sec. 1, P. 1 Hungary Reds Offer Refugees ':; Amnesty Sec. 1, P. 1 SPORTS i Americans Sweep Olympic Hurdles .. Sec. J, P. 1 Breakup of PCC Hinted Sec. 2, P. 1 REGULAR FEATURES Amusements Editorials .. Locals ...... ..Sec. 1, P. 1 ......Sec. 1. P. 4 Sec. 1, P. ....Sec. 1, P. -7 ..... Sec. 1, PJ0 .... Sec. 2, P. It Sec. 2. P. 11. 11 or,v.""i Television , Want Ads Markets Sec. 2., P. 1 Crossword Puzzle .... 8ec. t, P.W Home and Garden . Sec. a, P. 4, 1 ot the families in the area noticed tot the dog. J states and ilea (.tuna.