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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1957)
Journal THE WEATHER. MOSTLY CLOUDY with nllht and morning lo(; chance of light showers Friday. Utile change in temperature. Low tonight, 57; high Friday, 43. 4 SECTIONS 36 Page 9 xaiMVl 69th Year, No. 3 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, January 3, 1957 tnttrtd ib tcon nttttr at Salem. 1 Caoital A M 19 Perish In 4 Fires Iii Houses lSChildreiiAmoiiff Victims in East And Midwest My UNITED PRESS House fires in four states today claimed the lives of 19 persons, including 13 children. The two worst blazes took six lives each at Reading, Pa., and Jeffersonville, Ga. Five more per ished at Marshall, Mo., and two at Balltown, Iowa. A family of six was killed when flames swept through a frame house rented by A. Lucius Ring wood, about 40, near Jefferson ville. The dead were Ringwood, his wife, and their four children. Kerosene Blamed Fire which apparently started from a kerosene stove which may have been leaking was blamed for six deaths at Reading. Killed were Mrs.- Esther Roth ermel. 48: her grandchildren, Jim my and Peggy Probst, aged 1 and 3; and her nieces and nephews. Donna Rothermel, 2; Carol Ann Fromm, 4, and Eddie Rothermel, 4. Another woman and two child ren fled to safety. Flames wrecked a four-room house near Marshall, Mo., and five persons apparently suffocated in their beds. An overheated stove was blamed. Family Wiped Out Deputy Sheriff Henry Hoff iden tified the Marshall victims as Or vcll Swisher, 37; his wife, Edith, 34, and three children, ranging from 3 (o 9 years old. At Dubuque, Iowa, Frank Curiel, 41, and his daughter, Frances, 15, died at a hospital of burns they received in a fire at their Ball town home Wednesday night. Five other children were hurt, two ser iously. Curiel suffered his burns in making three trips into the burn ing house to rescue his children. Federal Judge Upsets Florida Bus Ban Laws MIAMI, Fla. A federal judge Thursday ruled that Flor ida laws and Miami city ordi nances requiring segregated seat ing on municipal buses are un constitutional. U. S. Dist. Judge Emett Choate made the oral ruling in refusing to dismiss a petition by Florida branches of the National Assn. for Advancement of Colored People requesting an end to segregated bus seating. The judge refused to convene a three-judge court to hear argu ments in the case. He said there was no substantial question of constitutional law in view of the recent U. S. Supreme Court de cision banning segregated seating on ouscs in Montgomery, Ala. it iins a private eniornrk. .nH not an arm of-the slate. He gave the city of Miami 10 days to file an answer to his ruling. The judge's action touched only segregation on city transit buses, hut G. E. Graves Jr. of Miami, attorney for the NAACP, said "it is apparent that the decision has a much more far reaching effect than that. It can be extended to trains, suburban and interurban buses." SP&S, Union Accept Delay WASHINGTON Tnion and management have agreed to a de- lay in presidential board actiom S p o k a n e-Seattle-Portland I Railroad labor dispute, the Na- nonai Mediation Board said "me oi ner appointment to the today in East Berlin. A West Ber Thursday. (board she had been serving as a lin newspaper said Pieck's al Eugene C. Thompson. Mediation: member of the Justice Depart-j ready bad health has been wors Board secretary, said the Brother- ment's Parole Board. ' ened by a stroke, hood of Locomotive Engineers and railroad officials extended un til Jan. 14 the date for the start of hearings by a three-man presi dential hoard. The emergency hearing group, authorized on Dec. S, has not yet been set up. Thompson said ihe White House was expected mo mentarily to name the members. Fon Ret urns. Due to Stav Dismal, wet fog Thursdav morn- Ing followed the brief interlude of sunshine that came out Wednc"- a m r i. i. ii.. it . . -?h, J I J ' "UJfj morn'n? w!,h possibility of hght ram later to- , . Highway travel vas reported iZVJ,. Ur!T;'!P t'oromt:but this proved impossible. I ley spots along the mountain routes. Weather Details Miximtin minimnm rion: ff mnnth: .v: Tmm ' aain rripitittflii. 1 1 : normal, ,rf,1Alhf.. 11 l. . Hvainrr nartia.i Governor Officer Fired, Faces Sheriff Assault Count CORVALL1S m James A. Steadman, 28, fired as Philomath police captain . after being jailed here New Year's Day, will have preliminary hearing Friday on charge of assaulting Benton Coun ty Sheriff Clifford N. Lilly. The sheriff, who collapsed of a heart attack shortly after a strug gle with Steadman, was reported somewhat improved Thursday but still in critical condition in a hos pital here. Two charges were put against Steadman Wednesday. He pleaded guilty to being drunk in a public place, but asked a hearing on the assault charge which accuses him of "beating and bruising" the sheriff. The sheriff went to a nightclub outside Philomath early New Year's morning in reply to a call from the proprietor who said Steadman had been ejected and was trying to get back in. The sheriff said Steadman scuf fled with him before submitting to arrest. Then on getting out of said, Steadman banged an elbow the sheriff's car here, witnesses , ' ., . . . . The sheriff, 62. went down and Steadman fell on top of him. A short time later the sheriff collapsed. Mrs. Lee Gets SACBTopJob WASHINGTON i.fl President i Kisenhower Thursday chose Mrs Dorothy McCullough' Lee of I'ort - land. Ore., to be chairman of the Subversive Activities Control; na,med 1 ,'lcr, -"- Uoar(j Peter was the iast person signed Mrs.' Lee. a member of the'?n 'he ma"''1 ' refugees air board since last Aug. 31, succeeds l,ftedJ s,nce "hl,e i nomas j. Herbert as chairman, i Herbert resigned Jan. 1 to be- come a member of the Ohio Su preme Court. Mrs. Lee. a Republican, is former mayor of Portland. At the HOPE Git 'EN IP FOR 'Copter Pilots Rescue 8 Stranded on Mount Blanc CHAMONIX. Franco IP-Daring helicopter pilots Thursday , snatched eight marooned alpinists from the snowswept slopes of Mt. " ,1LX V, k nlt n f l L JT X days ; Tne fescl" Pilots had hoped to; hover above the pair - French- man Jean Vincendon. 2.1. and Belgian Francois Henry. 24-and 'lower men down to put them in . baskets hanging from the 'copter. ' Both may already hae died. ' Suffering from extreme frostbite. ! weather conditions, the would-be or coma." laid LeGall. "We the main prison continued lo eat they were bundled in sleeping rescuers bundled them into sleep- j cannot rtk new lives to bring and work and hehave in the bags in the wreck of a helicopter ing bags in the wreckage and then thir bodies down. The bodies "normal" way. apparently unaf which crashed earlier trying to made the perilous climb to the 0 abandoned until spring- fected bv the demonstration of UV save them. 1 "r ,wo ?n"nK mn tun days bffore Christmas tn cap Mt RUnr riptmla Adverse . - Elect, Wife Ready New Salem Home Oregon's new governor, Robert D. Holmes is just like any other husband when it comes to moving ... his wife wants him there. Both Mr. and Mrs. Holmes were busy Wednesday and Thursday moving into their new residence at 2745 Alvarado Terrace. Holmes points to window which affords view of city of Salem. (Capital Journal photo). (Other pictures section 4, page 6). NO SEARCH WARRANT Benton Judge JRnles Slots Seized Illegally CORVALLIS (UP) A Benton I the property and seized three slot county district judge ruled here machines, today that state police made an Judge Richard Mengler made unlawful search of the Corvallis the ruling while allowing a de- Country Club when they entered Last Refugees Flown to U.S. As'Lift'Ends MCGU1RR AIR FORCK BASE. N.J. (A The last passengers to leave Munich under America's his toric airlift of Hungarian refu gees "Operation Safe Haven" landed here Thursday. Forty five of them a r r 1 v e d aboard a c"8 Liltnwsler. Amongley turned over'to the c o u n t y I Ihem wa naspnipr Kn 700 in airlifted ui, ai nougn nis was ine last ;pr j T. L .1 , . ! uled to be the last lo arrive here, there was one more Military Air Transport craft to come. It was snowed in at Newfound land and now is due here late Thursday. It is a hospital evacua tion plane carrying 35 passengers, including nine litter cases, five of l"V ".V""1 . Among ine passengers aboard' ,l'e las! pla"e ll"nih was , V""' an ii-monin-oia noy "h"- s..""- PIKCK il YEARS OLD BERLIN I Communist East a , Germany's President Wilhelm Pieck marked his 81st birthday 2 Two light Alouette helicopters ! eight men down in three hours succeeded in making shuttle land- A fina trv , .., vinren ings at the 12.000 loot level, whereldon ,nd H' ' ad" h' the eight men were huddled in a Krench helicopter pilot Jean Bou- . V Z M' holds the worlds heli- h 5P T,ar ,V '"c"",n" copter altitude record, and Com- awa y J'mandant LeGall. director of the The eight men had been trapped r"cue Pel'aion'; on the 15.781-foot mountain in ear- 0n ,helr lasl fl'h violent wind lier rescue attempts, lour when 1 ,""5 . and lhlclt 'm ' their helicopter crashed near the Pded snow blown up by the two climbers. The other four had h'llC0P "iors prvented the parachuted to the site. I aircraft getting close to Ine I nable to move the helpless pair far because of the hazardous shelter. rr.'tu" iiiEnts eot unnr way! at dawn with the firt favorable helirontrr Ovine urathr in Iua -- . fen.se motion to suppress the ma chines as evidence. Judge Mengler said the search last November should have been made with a search warrant. He ruled that the constitutional rights of Leo P. Herb, club manager, had been violated when the police en tered the premises of the private club without a search warrant. The court further ruled, how ever, that the three slot machines were legally seized because they are contraband and subject to seizure anytime and anvnlace. A motion tn have the machino! and the money in them returned ! sonnel and materials between the to the club was denied. J u d g e j United States and the Canal Zone. Mengler said he would order the'11 is one of tl,e lines 1,iree -shiPS machines destroyed and the mon - treasurer. The judge's ruling was seen as virtually killing the com plaint of illegally possessing gambling equipment that had been tiled against Herb. Boy Attacked, Four Arrested PORTLAND (UP) The police caniDaien against iiivinile vin- Ipncp in Portland rntnllprf in Dm arrest of four persons just outside the city last night where a small newspaper boy was attacked. Police said the boy was assault ed on SE 92nd Ave. on Ml. Scott and that another youth was beat en on east Burnside and 1431 h Ave. Arrested were 21 - vear - old Charles K. Gilt and Donald W. Butcher, 18. Also booked were a 17-year-old boy and a 15-year-old girl. Gift was booked on a traffic charge and Butcher was held for being a minor in possession of tobacco. trappt1 Pa,r 'Henry and Vincendon are dead ,time." All ine rerueo; men were nn - citalired. sufferinff from vanom rlTrMi nf frnchii Lnm ti .. t. None Hurt as Ships Collide OffN.Y.Port NEW YORK (UP)-A U. S. gov ernment ship with 145 passengers aboard and a Venezuelan vessel collided "in perfectly clear weath er at dawn today off the en trance to Nevi York Harbor, the toast Guard reported, it said the collision was not "too serious" although the 9.978-ton Cristobal of the Panama Line and plates and railings smashed on her port side and had to be towed to the Todd Shipyard for repairs by a Moran Towing Company tug. The other ship the 4. 214-ton Ciudad de Bnrqulsimeto, proceed-: ed to the harbor from the collision scene olf Ambrose Lightship un der its own steam, he said. There were no injuries. The Cristobal was en route here from Panama. I The Venezuelan ship was depart ing. 1 The Cristobal is operated by the Panama Canal Company, trans- porting primarily government per wnich f'Sured n a recent inves- ligation of free congressional trav el. UN Bars Reds, Invites ROKs i;nited nations, n.y. The U.N.'s Political Committee Thursday rejected an Indian pro posal to invite Communist North Korea to take part in the forth cominK U.N. debate on the Ko rean problem. The vole in the (tfl-nation com mittee was 20 in favor and 40 against, with II countries abstain ing. Those supporting the Indian proposal included the Soviet bloc. The commitlee then approved a U.S. resolution inviting South Ko rea tu participate. The vote on this was 51-10, wilh 12 abstentions. The decisions opened the way for a general debate on the Ko rean problem. The vote was pre ceded by an Kast-West clash which took up the entire morning session of the committee. Four Convicts Give Up 4-I)ay Hunger Strike The four-day hunger strike in the segregation building at the state penitentiary began to break up Thursday when lour of the who have refused to eat sinre last Mon day morning, consumed their breakfast. Four older convicts of the orig- j '' inal & in ihe demonstration hav been placed in isolation. Warden Clarence Gladden said, bpcau.se of disturbances caused by thern in the desegregation colli. Gladden said the four had been jumping on their beds and slamming food travs around. Warden Gladden said the re maining men in segregation as well as the approximate 1500 in small group nf makonten's. 1 u wan rpvrHipn inai inrr m th irouhlr makr had been ' nlarwH in lh itnlatinn warri at - Demok Lunch Senate bv 49 - 46 on Lausche Vote; Rules Debate Set Friday 6-Hour Debate Scheduled on Filibusters WASHINGTON W The Sen ate agreed Thursday to vote at - -- , - -- - - -;i vt ajihiimi iuin me House 6 p.m. Friday on a motion aimed JThursdav ordered a Saturday ses. at rai'icina Ana a riln ca am Ia . . . i. . ti ... r ru . crs. Sen. Anderson (D-NM1 offered the rules proposal at the opening! Senate session on behalf of a group of Democratic and Repub lican senators seeking to clear the way for Inter enactment of civil rights legislation. I Debate Limit Set Democratic leader Johnson of Texas won unanimous agreement to limit debate on the motion to six hours, beginning Friday. He said this arrangement had been worked out with Anderson and with Sen. Knowland of Califor nia, the GOP Senate leader. Knowland earlier had thrown his weight against the proposed change. I believe not only that the Sen ate is a continuing body but that it has continuing rules," Know- land said. '.'Any other . decision would lead to a very chaotic con dition in the Senate." Advocates of a rules change want to replace an existing one which requires the votes of 64 senators, or two-thirds of the en tire membership, to shut off a debate. They contend that rule! enables Southern Democrats to talk to death civil rights meas ures. Short-Cut Try Charged Sen. Russell (D-Ga) accused the group yesterday of attempting to lake a short-cut to change Sen' ate rules, and said that such ac tion in legislative matters "leads to tyranny." He spoke out after a meeting of Southern senators in his office. He indicated that the Southerners, in fighting the move of the North ern-Western coalition, were pre pared to bring all other Senate business to a standstill if neces sary. The decision lo introduce (he Anderson resolution at the start of the new Congress today was taken yesterday at a meeting of six Democratic and eight Repub lican senators in the office of Sen. Douglas (D-IIM. U.S. Air Base Due Formosa iMiniri vnmn din. Ti,a TAIPEI. Formosa (UP-Jhe I'nited States will build a 125 mil lion jet fighter and strategic bomb er base on Formosa for the Na tionalist Chinese Air Force, the U.S. Embassy announced today. Military sources said the new construction would permit (he big gest U.S. strategic bombers to use Formosa as a base for the first time. This would put American jet bombers within 1.7W miles of the Chinese Communist capital of Peiping. The U S. Air Force will be able to use (he base under terms of the American milHary agreements with Nationalist China. FROM PASADENA R . C. Rice Named Scout Executive A man who has been in profes sional scouting for a decade has been selectpd as executive for Cascade area council. Boy Scouls of America. The area ronsi ts of Marion, Polk and Unn counties. The new executive is Richard C. Itice, M. of Pasadena. Calif, who will report for duly next Monday. He succeeds (he late Gordon Gil inore. who died following a heart seizure Nov. 4. Hue has served scouting in var ious capacities in the los Angeles area since 1!46. His most recent a-isijmnipnt has been that of as sistant scout executive of San Ga briel valley' council, with head quarters at Pasadena. The new executive was attached to the V S. Marine Corps for three years, is married and has a son, aged Zxi years and a four-months-old daughter. Rice, born in Colorado, received his public school education in Ios Angeles, attended Santa Monica college, Arizona State college and was graduated from Louisiana State university. The appointment of Rice was mane hy ihe lorai councils exe - ruin committee from a Brnuo of vai1hU mm lr fnllnu th rti. -east message Ike to Go Before Session Saturday s,on to hear President tisenhow er deliver a message on the Mid-1 die East crisis. It passed and sent, to the Senate a resolution for a joint session that day. Secretary of State John Foster Dlilles told congressional leaders yesterday the situation in that area; "is highly dangerous" and the "Soviet Union may well move to expand its own influence" there. The resolution Kisenhower seeks as outlined in tentative form by Dulles, wo ild: 1. Authorize the President to "undertake programs of military and economic cooperation with free nations in the general area of the Middle East in order to strengthen and defend the inde pendence of those nations." 2. Authorize the spending of 400 A-Arms Supplied to 6th Fleet's Marines Gen. Pale Reveals Troops Move in Crisis Midst WASHINGTON (UP) - U. S Marines aboard ships in the Med iterranean have been armed with "live" atomic military equipment a reporter for the Scripps-Howard newspapers said today. Staff writer Jim G. Lucas said his information came in an exclus ive interview with lien. Kandoipn Pate, Marine Corps commandant, published today in Scripps-Howard newspapers. He said Pale told him the Sixth Fleet Marines have a "ground Atomic cntiahi lit v ' exo aining 'that this meant they have atomic- warheads for their artillery They soon will be armed with Honest .lohn rockets, also having atomic warheads, Lucas quoted Pate. Lucas said (.'en. Pale also re vealed : I. That two reinforced Murine battalions secretly put to sea, one each from Norfolk and Japan, during the Middle Kast crisis with orders to proceed to the Mediter ranean and Persian UuU and stand by lor orders. 2 That a reinforced company was down to Port Lyautey, Mor occo, after the Mediterranean area naval commander, Adm. Waller F. Boone, received a tip that Arab extremists might try lo storm the big U.S. naval base there arid seize its ammunition. 3. That Marines attached to the Sixth Fleet were prepared lo fight Iheir way inlrt Cairo 'if necess ary" to evacuate Ainericun civil ians at the start of the Suez fight ing. At the height of Ihe Middle East crisis, a battalion of the Third Marine Division in Japan put to sea and had reached the Arabian Sea before its orders were can celed. Pate told l.tuuv It is now en executive to the top position In any given area. 1 orman rree. prestnrni nt i nv rad Council, has been serving a avamihia tha rfnsih nf Ci. , . v. li?Z RICFIARI) C. RK K million dollars in economic aid to the Middle East over a pe riod of two years beginning next July 1. Those terms of the resolution, still in tentative form, were de scribed in a statement released by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee with Dulles' approval after Dulles met with its mem bers and Senate leaders for more than two hours in a closed-door night session. "The secretary viewed the res olution as a deterrent to aggres sion and as a positive action on behalf of pence." the statement said. "Without the resolution, he thought the danger of war would be increased." 'r Earlier, Duties spent more than an hour with a similar group from the House. route back to Japan, the general said. A battalion of the Second Div ision at Camp Lejettne, N.C., left Nnrtolk for the Mediterranean hut turned around when the fight ing ended. Pate said the men were now ashore but their heavy equipment still .Is aboard ship and they could re-embark "in a matter of hours. 5-Ceiit Letters Move Charted By Post Office WASHINGTON tfl The Post Office Department said Thursday it is "giving consideration" to a move to raise the postage rate on letters from 3 to 5 cents. I The department made the state ment in response lo inquiries about reports . that Postmaster General Surnmertield advanced the idea at a While House con ference of Republican congres sional leaders Monday. Any in crease in (he rate would require congressional approval. Suminei field, in the last ' two sessions of Congress, unsuccess fully urged making the letter rate 4 cents an ounce instead of (he present 3 cents. Of the 5-cent plan, the depart ment said Thursday that it is un der consideration "but no final proposal has yet been developed. When the plan is finalized, it will be announced in detail." In the same statement, the de partment asserted that it is- cur rently "studying a revolutionary plan for a substantially improved mail service," but is nol yet in a position to announce details. Smelt Arrive In Columbia PORTLAND (1'Pi - The firbt Columbia river smelt catch of the season arrived here today, seven days earlier than last season. The fish were oflered at Ih cents a pound, same price as last year. Some 20 pounds of smelt were gillnetlcd by Ray Suti near Clat skanie yesterday afternoon. Gill net smelt fishing closed at Wed nesday midnight and will open again Saturday noon. Earth Jolted In Manchuria PASALKNA, Calif. UP) A major earthquake in the region of Mjik-Iiiii u was recur (led at 4: 3D a in. PST today on seismographs of the California Institute o( Tech nology. Or. Charles Richter said the temblor, with an intensity of 7 and some 5..VW miles to the north west, occurred at a depth of 4t0 miles below the earth s surface. He said quakes at that depth are not infrequent In Manchuria, BADLV Rt'RNED BV WATER (.RANTS PASS (A James K. Kelley, 75. of Merlin, suffered sec ond and third degree burns when he fell backward as he was lifting a teakettle of boiling water frnm the stove Wednesday evening. He suireren severe snocn, condition at Josephine hut his General i H-icnita! Thuririnv was 1it1 as . -- 85th Congress start Marked By 'Scare' WASHINGTON Un Demoerati took control of the new 8oth Con gress Thursday but only after a brief Senate scare and started a session already confronted with a momentous foreign affairs issue. President Eisenhower will en before a joint session Saturday to present this Brave Question a rp. quest for advance approval to usa u. s. troops against any Commu nist aggression in the Middle East. Silent Up to Climax The Democratic scare in th Senate arose from the silence of Sen -elect Frank Lausche of Ohio, right up to the climactic moment, as to whether he would vote for the Democrats to organize tha Senate. He did, and the Demo crats prevailed on a 49-46. vote. Sen-elect Javits (R-NY) wii absent. the House, the. Democrat. look over in routine fashion re installing the veteran Sam Ray. burn of Texas as speaker on a vote of 227-199. Lausche, elected as a Demo crat, had once intimated he might voie to let Kepublicans have con trol of the Senate organization since the White House is held by inai party. Wilh Lausche silent as tn his in tentions, the air was heavy with tension as the senators met at noon. Adlal in the Gallery The galleries were packed. Ona of the spectators was Adlai E. Stevenson, the unsuccessful Dem ocratic presidential standard bearer in 1952 and 1056. Lausche took his stand when the senators were called on tn vote for a president pro tempore, ' Lausche went along with Ihe rest of the Democrats in voting for Sen. Ifaydcn, Arizona Democrat. As it turned out. the derision did not hinge on Lausche's vota since Javits was not there to vote. Before the gavels banged at noon in the .Senate and House chambers, formally launching tha session, psrty caucuses by sena tors settled party leadership ques tions in routine fashion. In the House, party caucuses were held Wednesday. The party division in Ihis new Congress is: Senate, 49 Demo crats and 47 Republicans; Ilousa 233 Democrats, 200 Rcpublicani iind two vacancies. (Continued on Page 5, Column 3) Ike Schedule For Congress WASHINGTON (UP)-ScheduIej of addresses and messages which President Kisenhower will send to the new Congress: Middle Kast message, to be de live red personally to a joint session of both houses on Saturday. State Of The Union message, to be delivered personally to a joint session Jan. 10. Htidget mesrage, week of Jan, l-t-IK. Kconomic message, some Um in January. Inaugural address, Jan. 21. Other special messages may h sent to Congress from time to lime on separate issues such as school aid, health, civil rights etc. News in Brief For Thursday, Jan 3, 1957 NATIONAL House Fires Kill 19 In 4 States Sec. 1, P. 1 Demos Clinch Senate 49-48 on Lausche Vote ...... Sec.l, P. t Ike Rejects Arms Talks I'roposcd by Soviets . Sec. 1, P. 1 l.OCAI, Boat Club Plans Two Story Home. Sec. 4. P.I New Area Scouting Kxecutive Named .. Sec. 1, P. 1 STATE Hit Must Maintain Gcrvais Station Forever Sec. J, P. S Ollicer Fired. Faces Sheriff Assault Count Sec. 1, P. t SPORTS LA Scribes Blast Beavers iSporlmeleri Sec. 4, P. 1 Fullmer Bulldozes Way lo Title Sec. 4. P. 1 Saxons Cop Thriller .. Sec. 4, P.l REGULAR FFATl'RES Amusements Editorials Locals Society Comics Television Want Ads Markets Dorothy Dix Crossword Putil FOOd a, a... .... Sec.l.P.l ... Sec. 1, P. 4 ... Sec. t, P. S Sec. 1, P. 1-2-3 Sec. 4, P. S ... Sec. 4, P. 4 Sec. 3. P. 10-11 ... Sec. 3. V. 10 ... See. 4. P. 4 ... Sec. 4. P. J Sec. j-oiuci iuiciaai. .iic odirieu puma naa urejin serious conoiiioa, we ouiw w utr uciuuusuauvu (iom oi doi eievaung an assisiam . more. . iar t 1 -