C apital jLJournal THE WEATHER CONTINUED FOGGY through Sun day, slight afternoon lifting. Low tonight, 25; high Sunday, 32. 3 SECTIONS 24 Pages 68th Year, No. 310 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, December 29, 1956 1 tr.trd u aecond cut Price 5c alter tt Salem Ortfon Randall Kester Named to High Court Bench Portland Attorney to Fill Vaeancy Caused by Death Of Walter L. Tooze By JAMES D. OLSON Capital Journal Writer Randall B. Kester, 40-year old Portland attorney, was named associate justice of the state supreme court Saturday by Gov ernor Elmo Smith. He will fill the vacancy on the supreme court caused by the death of the late Walter L. Tooze who died December 21. His appointment becomes effective on Jan. 3. The new justice has been a part-1 nrr in the Portland law firm of Macuire. Shields, Morrison and , Bailey since 1940. He has been an active member of the Oregon bar in general practice and trial work and is just completins a term as president of the Multnomah bar association. Competent Attorney' Governor Smith said the state is fortunate in obtaining the services of such a competent and well rounded attorney to succeed Jus tice Tooze. "In seeking a replacement for t1s position, I looked for a rela tively young man of unimpeach able character who is held in high e teem by his legal associates and respected by the public as well as members of the bar." Appointment Surprise The apopintmcnt came as a dis tinct surprise to capitol observers and members of the bench and bsr. Hester's name had not been mentioned as one of the possible fvpointccs and while Kester is I iwn by many of the stale off i c ' 'Is and administralors, he is not a man whose name has figured in the news to any extent. At 40 years, Kester is believed to be one of the youngest, if not the youngest associate justices to serve on the Oregon supreme court. Born In Vale Kester was born in Vale, Ore gon. October 20, 1916 and spent his early life there before moving to Ontario where he went through the 8th grade and three years of high school before moving to Blooming ton. Wis., in 1932. He was graduated from Bloom ington high school and returned to Oregon in 1933. He graduated from Willamette university in 1937 and from Columbia law school in 1940. Vpon graduation he joined his pre sent law firm. Prominent Scouter In addition to being president of the Multnomah bar association, he h is been chairman for the past three years ot the committee on continuing legal education tor me state bar association and a mem b?r of the American Law Institute. He has taken a prominent part in mountain skiing and other out door activities and has been vice president and a member of the executive board of the Portland prea council. Boy Scouts of America. He is past president of the Maza mas, a mountain climbing organi 7'Hion: past president of the Mount Hood Ski patrol and also past pre sident of the mountain rescue safe- ty council. Kester is also interested in boating as a hobby. The new associate justice was lurried to Miss Rachel Woodhouse of Bloomington. Wis., in 1940. They,:"r ' """ """ have three dar.shters. ase 14. 12 BrA 9. He is a member of the Uni versity club. City club and Mult nomah Athletic club. William C. Perry, newly elected chief justice of the supreme court. had this to say about the appoint - ment of Kester: 'I have known Randall Kester ior a numoer oi jears ana minx he has a very fine legal mind with a great deal of experience in the active practice of law." 'He is known among his asso ciates as a very industrious work er and with combination of indus try and a fine mind. I am sure he will contribute a great deal to, the court and will be of great service to the people of Oregon." Perry Named Supreme Court 'Chief Justice William C. Perry is thr " w chief justice of the Oregon state; s jprcme court, Friday by the six Histices of the '.body fluids It would be an enzv-, Diseases affecting body organs ; detectable in other fluids, -clud-supreme court. He will serve a mt nr v t.t may release extra amounts o' cer-liri spinal fluid or fluids accumu- tuo-year term. The new high officer of t h e court has been a just;ce for four vrarc and nrinr in that u . cuit judge for Umatilla and M or- row counties for two years. He u a in nnvatp aw nnrt r. i. Pr,k before named fo the circ:t judse post. la;e Jrtfir !! wlm'iilml m krnn. o,.i Jusljre but his death last weekjmichl even tell where the cancer neceVsitated election of r new per- ion u me ouice. 1 New Justice Randall B. Kester. 40, Port land attorney, today was ap pointed associate justice of the Oregon Supreme Court. Budapest Heat Plant Closed By Coal Lack Most City Dwellings Loft Without Heat In Freezing Cold BUDAPEST tfi Most of Buda pest's apartment houses and one- j family dwellings were without central heating in below freezing j temperatures Saturday. The capi- j tars central heating plant closed tor lack of coal Budapest rcsidenls faced the coldest weather of the winter with nothing but small stoves to heat their' homes and no fuel available. and telephone hoaxes reached epi Normally they would be buying domic proportions. Four fake coal lor the second half of the winter January but there is none to buy Production Declines The government press reported, meantime, that production in the mines declined again this week. On Dec. 27. the first work day f" .L"lma? noiiaays I . ner went dowr. into the "f'T sHp,,s han n- 21 ' V" ' produ,CCd ""'if ,ons.' a1bo:" Absenteeism during the holidays and heavy snowfall increased the difficulties at the mines. Adding to the Bloom was the , . . . . police action doing away with any 1 prospect of a public celebration'" !cr on New Year's Eve. ! Miss Crane formerly o' San The government made a con- Francisco recently -vas sentenced ; ciliatory gesture to the people by nriino th m,rraiu fr.- Christmas Eve but refused to take similar action for New Year's. The authorities advised that res - taurants and cafes could remain ATun ,.r.m a v... v..,,-. yvp 1 New Kind Find Hidden Disease Forecast Bv ALTON L RLAKESI.EE AP SCIENCE REPORTER NEW YORK ijf A brand new kind of chemical test mav come fnr Park- Ht.i,A, f h.Hn rii. papsrwrhan nm fnrrm of cancer It would make simple chemical rhecks of your blood or t This kind of 'detective work is I already being used to help tell j in the blood or other fluids, Dr. 1 how hadly a heart was damaged iWroblewski explained. ; k - i . ... . Kiel Hpart disease increases the helped spot a wiou liver dis- ca--in'ectious hepatitis-four to u-f... ti ,. , r anv ot' signs of the disease. I FvmMailv it mi-H lead to a wi i.. n...j r, rv ...' - , .. r"' was located ine latest research ana poien Road Deaths Beneath Rate At Christmas By Tbc Assoc la t erf Press Traffic deaths for the New Year holiday period were run ning well under the record Christmas rate Saturday. They also were falling short of ad vance estimates. The trend though subject to change was regarded with cau tious optimism by the National Safety Council, and It evoked a Keep-up-the-goodwork plea to motorists. By midday fatalities number ed 56 in traffic, 6 In fires and 4 In accidents of other kinds for a total of 66. At about the same time on the Saturday of the Christmas week end motor vehicle fatalities to taled 113. Police Appeal For Surrender Of Terrorist 'Mad Bomber' Episode Brings New York Scare Hysteria NEW YORK' (UP) -Police ap pealed directly to New York's "mad bomber" today to surrender and end an epidemic of bomb scare hysteria that has swept over the city. He was promised "the best psychiatric treatment available." Police Commissioner Stephen Kennedy urged the elusive terror ist to give up and avert possible tragedy. Kennedy made his appeal after the bomber's latest episode touched off a wave of hoax "bomb" plants and inspired scores of crank calls. Police officials bolstered their guard oi detectives in movie theaters and other public places. which have served as the bom ber's targets. The apparent psy copath has deposited at least 32 lethal calling cards since 1940, causing injury to 15 persons. A suspect picked up in the wake of the "bomber's latest strike fell dead ' while being questioned Fri day. Police said the victim, George Cernac, 63, of Bethlehem, Pa., was . acting suspiciously in Grand Central Station shortly after a fake bomb was found in the terminal. . Cernac, police said, was carry ing some wool and nylon socks, similar to those in which the mad bomber had wrapped some of his weapons. They were sent to the police laboratory for examination. Stepping up of the search was ordered after tests of the maniac's latest two bombs t- discovered be fore their detonation showed both to be capable of killing per sons nearby. The devices, discovered at the New York Public Library and he Paramount Theater, were detonat ed Friday by police and Army ordnance experts on the beach at Fort Tilden in Queens. In the wake of the bombers' lat est bomb plant Thursday at the I Paramount Theater, bomb scares , bombs were found, including one at crowded Madison Square Gar. den Friday night, and at least 35 "scare calls were received. 1 Couple Marry Before Prison Term Begins ASTORIA -Nancy Ue Crane and Kichard E. Harral were mar- ; j L De ng iransponea 10 aaiem 10 oe- - in i. in the state to a 60-year term under the habit - u0ri tin Falls, Idaho, was convicted cf, ! for'-ry ' two guests at the civil cere- mony were Sheriff IVil Kearney nit f.. ittnrnfw t v. i Rrnwnhill of Chemical Test lo ftialilies of enzyme detection were 'described today to the American ' Asn. for the Advancement of Sci - ence by Dr. Felix Wroblewski r't the Sloan-Kettcnng Inttitute, ;scw York. :l Enzymes are chemicals for the hea'thy functioning of the body cell?. There are mar- kinds tain enzymes, which then appear a- nt of several .'ifferent enzy - mes in the blood. Th- fact is hcni! usea 10 nciD a'-nse in? severity of the att-':. Luer diseases it varying ra tios of c-rtain enzvmrs isio lie ' Mead. w:th the omounls var; ms ; according to how the dis- " ' h continued. - 1 dj Hunt for Arsonist Started Three California Fires Remain Uncontrolled By HARRY BOYLE United Press Staff Correspondent MALIBU. Calif. (UP) A youth ful arsonist driving a yellow con vertible was sought today in con nection with the latest in a series of major brush fires that have erupted daily since Christmas in drought-stricken Southern Califor nia areas dotted with movie stars homes. , The latest blaze, which broke out before dawn today in foothills near palatial homes at the Palos Verdes Estates, was controlled by 12 engine companies after consum ing 1,500 acres. Approximately 20 miles to the north three other fires still were out of control in the Malibu movie colony area. A box of oil cons and rags, found at the scene of the Palos Verdes fire was held by sheriff's arson investigators. Two suspects were held briefly for questioning and released. Officers told resi dents a youth wearing a leather jacket was seen driving from the area in a yellow convertible at about, the time the fire started. Asst. County Fire Chief Harvey Crutehfield told United Press re porter John Kendall a container! "like a Karo syrup can" with a wick in it apparently was rolled down into the brush from a hill top. However, a local police chief was noncommital on the posibil ity of arson, saying only that "it was being investigated." The new fire added to the list of major brush fires that have plagued the region. Dog-tired fire fighters battled for control of three other major brush fires as tern-1 peratures remained in the 80s and humidity was at a tangerous low. More than 1,500 homes within the 100-mile perimeter of the fire have been threatened and a trib ute to tre heroic fire crews, regu lars and volunteers, was the fact that less than 4 per cent of the homes have been lost to the roar ing flames. Of the 75 persons Injured, per cent were firemen who hourly risked their lives. Civilians were herded out of the region or pro tected by rings of cooling water until the flames swept by. The men lay in wait for the flames, handkerchiefs to mouths, goggles covering their eyes as they played jet streams of water onto (he onrushing blaze. Some stood on housetops or moved from house to house as the threatening conflagration rolled on relentlessly. Diminishing winds during the night gave fire fighters hope that they could halt the brush fires that have destroyed at least 65 home and caused more than $tW million damage to property and vital watershed in this beach play ground. Two of the three fires menacing this beach playground joined Fri day night and the third inferno re portedly was exhausting itself in rugged, uninhabited terrain, Girl Tells of Bomb Threats SPOKANK ifi A prelly, 14- S J teephoned'bmnbhrea, P M,TmJS 'Kb in Spokane this week. j Fire investigators and city de - tectives took the girl into custody calls earlier this year. They said'1'0;1 Kiscnhower she' is the same one' who bom - ko.-,t,H thn r lu hal u- Ifhhnarri I several months ago with false ! fire alarms and accident reports' ' from Spokane's north side. 1 The officers said they visited (ho eirft hnmn Friri.v "on a hunch" and alter questioning, the girl admitted making the calls, "I thought it was a good joke." she told olficers. Sh was takpti to the luvenile detention home. ', is possible to detect infectious hep- j atitis long before there is any oth- ;er clue, he said. Incrers in one t. pe of enzyme In the niooa nave ne-n icur.o in 1 some humnns suffering f hie- "j! "S't?zs; some humans suffering f ; WrobWski said. And thai- arc s:3n this increase m. a!so lx" . latina in the chest or ;' emtnal cavities in certain cases. Eventually the enzyme lest ! micht detect cancer rn'--e it be- ' comes malienanl and begi- spreading Thft uould give the dp ' narxe "i iurr. One way of Mect;na cancer is bv horsv. Ii'.l m-ars tak;".2 sur?.raH a m' fsi in am'n-nt it un-.er -npe. The "F. ' lesfs holds out eventual hope lor a method ot cncmical - Attacks of Snii 5l Night Runs of Busses in Montgomery ! pi?- ffJiftl M 1 S 0 ... President to Make Tour of Drought Areas Ike to Visit 6 States -In Southwest, Midwest Tour AUGUSTA, Ga. m President Eisenhower's inspection tour of drought-hit areas of the Midwest and Southwest will take him into six states Jan. 13-15, his head quarters announced Saturday. Eisenhower plans to make stops in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and Kansas for an on-the-spot survey of the worst parching of that region in many years. I he While House announced earlier this mdnth tliat the Presi-, dent would make such a survey in mid-January. The specific dates were made known here Sat urday as Eisenhower was enjoy ing a weekend of golf in advance of the reconvening of Congress next week. The President flew here from Washington yesterday, smiling broadly as he stepped from his private plane, Columbine HI, in midafternoon. Within a few minutes after the plane landed at Bush Airport, the President was on his way to the links and within the hour he ! was playing the course. " white. He plans to fly back 10 w"'"'" Sbor .ht lor I his may he his last vacation I conferences Monday and Tuesday i" . ... . ! r rZZlZ Z will meet l'1" Republican leaders to discuss , "' hunuiiimi miun s lCglS!IUe P"ram for 1957. That White House session will 1 mostly with Eisenhower s aomcsuc pians. nc next aay New l ear s JJay, the agenda will ; be given over to foreign policy for, i the year ahead, with special at-; j tent ion to these main immediate ; problems: ! 1. The danger of Communist t : penetration of the Middle EaM. and discussion of Ihe United j states' role in the future in deal- , uin mill in, it (ill cm. 2. Whether to admit lo the I'nit- ed States more than 21.300 Hun garian refuges, the quota current- fixed by this government In- at ions arc the number will be hiked if the congressional chiefs are willing !n go along. jyiis is Eisenhower's second vjv1, tn Augusta in a month, and h,s 12th since he was elected pres- dpm m vnember. 1902. rwi r i two Wounded 111 Porlland POllTLA.D Two men POItTI.AND - Two ,were uounaea in s.-pardie nmur- i day morning shooting incidents here. i C; -les Cottrell. 3. pitalized Mh sh-mMe i. wa hos and inti-r-Caslro. 2fi. "rfi r i mm was h t in Ihe wrist and Eron ;n tbn s-ennd h'io! rg i- nt. Polte ftid CV.Irr-H m'-rr'1 h wujnds af'T a s-i't ny xlrs l.ois Ingram at hr r ru'ine Me was cnareen wiin assauu wi.n a oan- Icy Fog Blanket Covers Willamette Valley A discarded Christmas tree covered with froxl was all that remained of hntldny cheer In the Popcorn school area went of Sit I em oh cold fog gripped the Willamette valley this week. Loom log through the haze In the background U the Summit church near the school, which once in a while hag been getting a taste of sunlight while lowtr elevations lny burled under the ley blanket, (Capital Journal Photo by Jerry Claussen) AumsvilleYoutliDies In Traffic Accident Site of Collision Mile West of Silvcrlon SILVERTON (Special) -An 18- ycar-old Aumsville youth was fatally injured Friday nislit in a collision of a car, an empty log truck and a parked pickup truck the Salem-Silvcrton highway Portland Boy Victim After Road Accident By THE ASSOCIATED PHESS OreRon headed into the second day of the New Year's holiday Saturday with the deaths of two youths in highway traffic acci dents recorded. midn.Bhl Friday. Dead are Tom. i my Kugcnc Johnson. IB. Aumsville, j and Lester Keith Wridge, 11, Porl- land. Young Wridge and his hrother, Douglas, lfi, were riding a motor scooter on a street just outside i porlland wnen H was struck from kf.iunH hv a r:ir nncrnti-H hv C:ir. '-roll Conrad Haase. 32, Portland, ; sherilf's officers ad the car skid- ; dt,d m fpct before striking the ..machine. The boy died enrouta to a bus- fjuai. ins Miutnii fluniiiu yiMM a dic leg iraciurt's, ms luiiuiuun i i w, rann precipitation, n.2i; nor urn tfrinnc nial, 17.61. Klvrr hHht. 21 feel. , , , .. iiaase was nooKen on a nf-jn- had 1 n a'nbulancc headed for the ene was involved in a iie winch then bminc-i three-car an autoinobili into another car, Three persons suffered slight injuries in Ihe acci dent . Kipli Sees ii''ci' Population (iain The annual Kfpllngfr Wash ington letler report on popula tion forecasts 221.uou.ooo rmidenls in th- I illicit .MaK-i In 1975. TtiU mighty upsurge In population will mean murh to building tradei, automobile dealers, family inrumn, schools etc. Just what will thii mean to citizen nf Ihe Salrm area? W hat are the fastest growing states? Hhrrr Aw Oregon I'.and In pnnuliitlnn Increases? You'll find the antMrrn: In Srr. 1 on piize S nf Salurrfiiv' Capital Journal, f or thoe win look ahead a few yearn, this Information ! Invaluable. about a half-mile, west of Silver ton, stato police reported. Tommy Kugcne Johnson, 18, Rt. I. Aumsville, was dead on arrival at Silverlon hospital after the 7:20 p.r.i. accident, officers said. Death was apparently caused by head and neck injuries, they said. PassenKer In Car Johnson was a passenger in a car driven by Ronald Joe Swan- son, m. Staylon, when the car collided with a log truck driven by Carl I.. Skirvin, Rt. 2, Silver ton, and then bounced off to strike a pickup truck parked alongside lhc highway, investigating Patrol man Walter Karau said. Appar ently the car sideswiped Ihe log truck and bounced off the big rear wheels and into the pickup occupied by James Jay Illeakney. Silverlon, who was just preparing to pull onto the highway, Karau said. Car Demolished The car was demolished and the log truck heavily damaged, police said. Swanson was treated for aceraljons al lhc h(, it , d leased. Skirvm and Rleakney. were not reported injured, Swanson was cited to court on a charge of failure lo drive on the right side of the highway, police said. The death was lhc 23rd in .Mar ion county this year. Funeral arrangements for the Johnson youth are in charge of the Wcdrilc Funeral Home at .Staylon. Weather Details Maximum vMiirday. 32: minimum i 1(,n. fl. f()r monih: 2.KT ; normal, (HfpOTl by V. S. Wralher llurcaii.) FIRST SICi: I9H9 I TT W ''formal For Inauguration Another major event was added to liovernnr-elfct Hnhrrt Hnlmf' Inauguration day festivities Friday' when it was announced that the first Inaugural hall since V.m will le held in Salnm Jan. 14. Nut since the inauguration of Cov. Charles A. S;irague in l!:t9 has any governor-elect had the big. if.rmai nan tn nis honor, uunng the war years, the affair was rut out then Douglas McKay and Paul L. Patterson chose not to fenew the event when they were inaugurated in 1948. 19.7) and 1W4. The $.Va-couple affair is sched uled for the Salem Armory and Marion hotel (iold Room hej'.in Pin al 9 p in on inauguration day Plans for the hall were made l:uhlic hv Mate Democratic chair man Kohert Rover who said it w ill he planned by the party organization. Fop: in Valley Will Continue This Weekend Frigid Temperatures Due lo Continue. 25 Scon Tonight The pesky foe is hanging on fn (he valley at least through Sunday, says the weather bureau, although some slight lifting is slated by to - morrow afternoon. Frigid temperatures continue the order, the minimum hitting 26 in Salem Saturday morning with prospects of a low of 25 tonight. Maximum for Friday went only to 32, the freezing mark, and a similar temperature is due today and also Sunday. ItainfnII is way below normal for the month here, only 2.87 inches being recorded lo date. Normal fall to thin time Is 6.34 inches. 3 Killed in Algeria Riot ALGIERS ifl French mourn ers of the murdered chairman of the Algerian Mayors Federation attacked hundreds of Moslems throughout the city Saturday. At least three persons were reported Kilted. The rioting followed the funeral of Amrdee Froger, who was shot and killed Friday by a Nationalist assassin. About 10,000 Frenchman marched fn a grim freral pro cession throughout the cily. The first shot was fird by a French man who claimed an Algerian watching the cortege made an in decent gesture. When the shot missed, the crowd attacked the Alger an, shooting him down as he fled to a car. After the burial the mourners swept through the city, burning automobiles and attacking Mos lems. W J W 1 g nail oet Mrs. Sylvia N'emcr of Portland, ! tunial vfnl f-hairman fur thr state committee, will be in charge ot the ball. Thp artv will climax a day in' wMch Holmes is slheduld to ii,n .,r i,u wi.-.i,.'. i,,n mii,.o fnim (if)v. Klmo Smith. Both are i to delier messages to the 1957I , legislature which convenes on that day. The only block in the way of cffici.'il inauguration of Holmes on Jan. 14 is the 15-15 deadlock in the senate, which must be resolved before the senate can reorganize end inaugurate the new governor. ' 'Ihe hail will go on anyway. Demo- Itepublican senators were mcrlinx in Salem Saturday to seek an answer to the question of who will organize the slate senate. Neero Woman Shot While Riding MONTGOMERY, Ala. tfl In move to end sniper attacks on Montgomery's newly integrated buses, the City Commission Sat urday ordered a halt of a!1 night runs through New Year's Day. No city buses will be permitted to run after completion of their p.m. trips through Tuesday un der a resolution adopted by the commission following a two hour conference with bus lire officials. No statement was issued by the - commission or the bus company. Cit Ally, waller Anabe said the action was taken under ih city's police power to preserve peace and protect private proper- Ruses were making treir usual runs titter a young N"sn woman was lr t in both legs while riding bus rnday night. It was the third bus shooting within 48 hours. No one was hurt in the two previous incidents. Meanwhile. City Commission members went Into a closed hud dle with J. H. Bagley, manager of Montgomery City Lines, Inc., to discuss night bus operations. All shootings have been under cover of night. The same bus on which Mrs. Rosa Jordan, 22, Negro laundry worker, was wounded about an hour after dark was attacked again when it resumed its run through a fringe neighborhood where Negro and white residences meet. Detective Lt. E. Y. Lacey said the bus was hit by stones the second time and gunlire was heard but no bullet holes from the second attack were positively identified. "We have absolutely no leads, nothing to work on," Lacey said. Salvage Team Begins Job of Clearing Canal SUEZ, Egypt m A United Nations salvage team Saturday 1 began the job of clearing major obstructions from the southern en- trance to the blocked Suez Canal. The clearing operations got un der way when Flip Gwoud. a' Dutch diver, went down into tht canal waters to work on the wreckage of the 1,200-ton Egyp tian warship Abukir. It lies in the middle of the canal near the Suci entrance, completely under water. The diver went over the side of a motor launch sent from a Danish salvage tug, the Protector. In the background was a Suei Canal authority ship, Hercules. submerged save for its smoke stacks. A third vessel clogging the southern entrance to the canal is the 600-ton Castor, another Sucx Canal authority ship. v. The entrance to the harbor of the Port of Suez is blocked by the Zamalek, a 4.000-ton Egyptian vessel. Egyptian crews began work on its salvage three dayi ago. Sunken ships, damaged bridges and other debris still litter the channel, wreckage of the Suez fighting that lasted only six days nearly two months ago. Clearing them out is expected to be a long and complicated operation. The only previous work done to open the canal consists of limited operations by three British -and. French vessels in the Port Said area and removal of some mines by the Egyptians. News in Brief For Saturday, Dec, 29, 1956 NATIONAL Attacks of Sniper Close Bus Line Runs Sev. 1, V. 1 Highway Deaths Below Christmas Itate . . Sec. 1, P. 1 LOCAL Population Upsurge to Include Oregon Sec. J, P. 6 Drivers Face More Cold Weather, Fog Sec. 1 P. 7 STATE Cnih Kills Aumsville Youth . Sec. 1, P. 1 Kester Named to Su preme Court . Sec. 1, P. 1 KORKK1N M'vage team Marts Operation in Suez Sec 1. P. 1 . Coal Sh?rtaPp ( l(?s,es B"da' . n , ! "lin 1,131,1 St'C' ' P' 1 ' SPORTS Willamette Rej.ches f'na's Sec. a, P. 1 ! ur'u t.",m51 JU"ll-u I Building in Salem Sec. 2, P. 2 Prothro Hits Team Attitude Sec. 2, P. 2 FEATURES Sec. l, P. 2 ... . Sec. 1. P. fl REGULAR Amusements Editorials 1 nenlc Sec. 1, P. 7 I . ' ; iTele-isinn ar,i Ads t Uorolhy Dix j Crossword Puzzle Church See. 1. i. -5 Sec. 2. P. 4 Sec. 2, P. 5 Sec. 2. I . 7-a . Sec. 2, P. i .. Sec. 2, P. 4 ...Sec. 2, P. I