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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1957)
Capital JLJoumai THE WEATHER. ' CONTINUED FAIR tonight and Sunday with patches of late night and morning (og. Little change In temperature. Low tonight, 24; high Sunday, 45. 3 SECTIONS Pages 69th Year, No. 5 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, January 5, 1957 tmra at cona eliu iitttr it slm Oregon Price 5t Marie McDonald Set Free, Lurid Tale Told Police Beating, Rape Recounted ByStar BULLETIN INDIO, Calif. (UP) An ex amining physician at Coachcl la Valley Hospital today dis puted Marie McDonald's claim 4 that she had been raped. Rv AT.1VF MIVCRV United Press Hollywood Writer KLAMATH FALLS Ul - Two luinin runr iiid ai county officials, critically wound- M.TcViTci.wttoBil whc",a 'usillade ( w Los Angeles police today she was ?" embittcrcc I pensioner killed a criminally attacked by two men I thlr? P"50" Fndcy' report whom she said kidnaped h e r d, ho'd,ne their own ,n a hosp,tal Thursday night from her San Fer nando Valley home. She told officers questioning her about her 24-hour disappearance that the two "pachuco-type" men. one of Mexican descent and with an Elvis Presley haircut and the o.her a Negro abducted her under tircats to harm her three chil uren. She said they forced her to perform unnatural sex acts while she was held in a Los Angeles house, blindfolded, "with a sack over my head." Found on Highway The K e n t u c k y-born former movie queen, 32, was found wan dering dazed and incoherent along U.S. highway 60-70 in the desert Friday night by a truck driver - hauling merchandise to Phoenix, Arh. Sheriff's deputies and Coachclla Valley Hospital attendants report ed her face was bruised as from a beating, she had a black eye and portions of two front teeth were missing. Kept under sedation Friday night, the recovered sufficiently by 9 a.m. today to relate to offi ce from Los Angeles her lurid tale of being kidnaped from her palatial Encino home. . Smear Test Taken A routine vaginal smear test was taken at the hospital on ar rival. Results were not immediate ly disclosed. Clad only in a nightrobe over pajama tops, she was found by truck driver Richard D. Corn, 38, of West Covina, who turned her over to the sheriff's deputies whom she told, hysterically, that she had been beaten, raped and robbed of her 22 carat diamond. Deputies said, however, that she had $167 in cash m her robe pocket. Shc was kept under sedation all,tention of retreating from it." night, giving officers no chance until this morning to start unrav el ing the prize dilemma of the decade for Hollywood authorities: Was she kidnaped or involved in an elaborate hoax that backfired? The California Highway Patrol established road blocks at all im portant intersections to apprehend the "pachuco-type" men she said were her kidnapers. Shoved Out Of Car The beauteous movie queen and former chorine of Ceorge White's "Scandals" bore lacerations in ad dition to the bruises and told Im perial County sheriff's deputies she was shoved out of an "old model, light-colored sedan with green upholstery." She told officers she was driven from a house in Los Angeles to a point near Cactus Citv. about five miles east of India, where one of jAlaslf he saidi shouid be made the men said: We have to get I slate whlle -recognizing that rid of her here because we are provislon ,or adequate national de cettins close to the border.'" ... .. ...Then she said, they knocked, Tier out of the car and down a'( 25-foot embankment. The roadblock vigil failed du ring the morning to come up with the suspects, who would have had roughly an hour's head start that could have taken them nearly to the Mexican border before the blockade was established. Meanwhile, Miss McDonald's mother, Mrs. Marie Tuboni, left her San Fernando Valley home v ith Miss McDonald's latest pub licized romantic interest, actor Michael Wilding, to comfort her daughter and take her home. The glamorous movie-queen told deputies who took her to the hos pital about midnight that the two men kept her blindfolded "with a sack over my head" in the Los Angeles house. She said she lay in the ditch 10 minutes before re covering her senses. There was little similiaritr, ex cept tor me aesen ioca e, in met rla'e diDDearance of evanee-: nsi Aine aempie "- vwo u.u .B . V" halt filibusters - or endless de bizarre drama unfolding in the bgte cjvil ri2hts bj,s or movie colony world. .httr m., Th. Vftt. -rnpH A1155 ."MlT iieiMIl "OS HTU Mflliv- ing into the surf of the Pacific Ocean and failed to turn up for weeks until she popped up in the r J I l..Zl:Z "t tion"' from her followers. Weather Details Maximum f itfrda, 44: minimum today, 3. Total 4-hAur prerlpua- 'win' prrripiuctnn. ii.J: normal! I er beaut, a i f a tool. Shooting Victims Still Hold Own Welfare Officials Undergo Surgery During Right Saturday morning. Mrs. Altha Urquhart, 49, county welfare director, and Jerry Raj nus, 49, a county commissioner, underwent surgery. Rajnus was the more seriously wounded. Mrs. Urquhart was reported in satis factory condition although a bullet penetrated her stomach and liver. Fatally wounded when Guy Earl Cramer, 76, of nearby Bonanza emptied a .38-caliber pistol at a crowded welfare commission meeting was Fred Peterson, 75, commission chairman. Cramer, who brought two pis tols to the meeting to complain about his pension payments, was arraigned on a first degree mur der charge. Dist. Judge D. E. Van Vactor bound him over to the : grand jury without hail. County Judge U. E. Reeder said Seaton Thinks Partner Power Plan Essential No Retreat From It, Secretary Says at Conference WASHINGTON (UP) Secretary of Interior Fred A. Seaton says it "is essential" that the adminis tration continue i'3 partnership power policy. Partnerships with local groups "is the basic concept of the power policy," Seaton tolc a news con- lurttnrf FriHav "We have no in- FIT Estimates Told He said the Federal Com mission estimates it will cost $40 billion over the next 10 years just to provide enough additional power "to keep up." He said the price tag over the next 20 years will be $94 billion. "That is why the partnership policy is essential." he said. "It is just impossible to get that much federal money." Seaton also said he plans to re main in the cabinet. He said the President "asked me to stay on and I plan to." Statehood Favored He also said: The administration expects to push for statehood for Hawaii and Alaska in the current session of Congress. He said Hawaii should be granted outright statehood. Tb adminlstral;0n will continue .. in , rcir,i,.i IU UpUJt Olij p.u.. .u ..vn.. ..... u high dam at Hells Canyon on the Snake River on the Idaho-Oregon border. He said he had not had a chance to study a Bureau of Rec lamation report on a proposed high dam at the Mountain Sheep Pleasant Valley site on the Snake River below Helis Canyon, Senate Civil Rights Backers Defeated in Filibuster Fight WASHINGTON ( Senate sup porters of civil rights proposals said today they believe such leg islation may be passed by Con- gress this vear despite defeat of a move to curb filibusters. Senate voted 55-38 last night . . .. ., . ' to kill the move to change Sen- iate rules and make it easier to I , tint B 'VT Sen. Humphrey fD-Mmn) said, "We almost doubled our vote over defeated 0-21. Humphrey said 'good . lance" the Sen-'. I there is . late rules slill may be chanced this yfc-ir and i..at civil nchts mils cotild he enacted. The battle centered around ef- forts of a coalition of J'orthern and Western senators, both Dem-;tbe ocrats and Republicans, to chaneejthat new rules may be adoptedsaid this would apply to proposed t Senate rule that requires the! at the opening of a Congress. They; changes in the rules, as well as votes of M senators to shut off i Cramer entered the meeting, dumped a pile of papers on Chair man Peterson's desk and started demanding an increase in his pen sion. The commission listened to him about a half hour, Reeder said, then Peterson broke in with, "Well, that's all for now, Mr. Cramer. . . . We are through." "He didn't move. He just put his hand in his coat and came up with a gun,- saying as he pointed it at Peterson's chest: " 'Well. I'm not through with you fellows." Then he let fly with a bullet that went right through Peterson's chest." Before Reeder and others could overpower Cramer he fired more and hit Mrs. Urquhart and Raj nus. Dist. Atty. Richard Beesley quoted Cramer as saying he had planned the shooting for some time. Officials said Cramer had been sentenced to six months in 1926 for assault with a deadly weapon and also served a year in the state penitentiary in 1935 on a larceny charge for stealing lumber. Cramer, a wizened five-foot eight man. came here Wednesday from Bonanza where he shared a jsmpll cabin with another man. He lived in a dingy Klamath Falls, hole while he awaited the hear.'. ing. Cramer told officials he had been getting a "raw deal." Sher iff Murray Britton said the first thing Cramer asked after his ar rest was. Did I get the woman? "Indeed you did," Britton re plied. He quoted Cramer as say ing then: "When you get Into a den of coyotes, it's a good thing to get tnom an. Lynx Hunted After Sheep Found Dead Farmers and game authorities are attempting to hunt dawn or trap an animal, believed to be a lynx, that has killed at least 13 sheep in the Silver Creek falls area recently, Marion county live stock control officer Ervin Ward announced Friday. Although no one has reported seeing the animal, all indications are that it is a lynx, Ward said. The sheep's throats were slashed and the blood sucked from their bodies, a trait of the lynx. Large claw marks on the sheep's backs also indicated a lynx was the kill er, he said. Jay Blakney reported Tuesday that nine animals were killed at his ranch and Wednesday reported four more dead. The lynx is a rarity in this area. Ward said. He said farmers had been advised to keep their animals inside at night. Traps set thus far failed to catch the animal, he stated. Girls Die in Fire At Warm Springs REDMOND I Two girls died here Saturday of burns they re ceived late Friday when a fire flashed through a frame house on the Warm Springs Indian Reser vation near Madras. They were identified as Caroline Hunt, 5, and her three-year-old sister, Agnes, who apparently were alone in th" house. debate. This same rule bars any limitation on debate of proposals to change the Senate rules. Backers of the move aimed at 'gaining adoptijp of new Senate jrules by majority 'ote argued that the present system gives a small r . group of senators veto power. But Southerners, who have used the filibuster tactic in past years 28 Republicans voted to table, to block civil rignts legislation, j They were opposed by 21 Demo contended the issue transcended , crats and 17 Republicans, civil rights. They said it involved However, Know land although the traditional freedom of debate ! opposed to the procedure followed in the Senate. j by the Northern-Western group- Senate Democratic Leader Lyn- announced he would introduce on don B. Jrhnson of Texas and Re- publican Senate Leader Know land of California teamed in opposition to the rules chany move. Thy jargiied that "legislative turmoil." as Johnson put it. would result if ; the Senate accepted t.e idea of Northern-Western coalition supported the view that the Sen-1 6 Persons Killed in Collision Tractor-Trailer On Road Hit By Big Bus LEXINGTON. Va. KV-A double- decker Greyhound bus carrying a capacity load crashed into the rear of a parked tractor-trailer north of this Shenandoah Valley town Friday night, killing six and injuring 34. The dead included the bus driv er, a former official of the Stude- baker automobile firm and a young Pennsylvania mother and ber 8-week-old child. 16 In Hospital Sixteen of the 42 passengers were admitted to a Lexington hos pital and 18 were given emergen cy treatment and released. The truck driver, Michael Powell of Troutville, Va., escaped injury, as did two bus passengers. Killed were Seherer S. Sutliff, 48, of Roanoke, Va., the bus driv er; Col. Milton Barbee Rogers, 61, of Rockbridge County, Va., for mer assistant general manager of Studebaker; Mrs. Regina Marie Bell Jackson, 21. of Scranton, Pa., and her son, Edward E. Jackson Jr.; Mrs. Joe S. Jackson of Wytheviile. Va., and Kenneth Tyacke, 49, of Washington. Runs Over Flares State Trooper S. W. Talbert quoted passongers as saying the bus ran . over warning flares put out by the driver after the truck broke down. The trooper said he was told the truck was parked partly on the roadside and part ly on the pavement. The crash, which almost sheared off the front of the bus, occurred on U.S. II, one of the mail, norlh-south highways in the ... , , . , . ,. " ""I"""" " ""'""" bus, en route from Memphis, Tenn., to New York, was not harmed. The blood, on its way from Roanoke to Waynesboro, was returned to Lexington for treat ment of persons hurt in the crash. Hopes Fade for Solution in Suez Dispute UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. OPV Hopes for solving the Suez Canal dispute dimmed today after Egypt let it be known it will not dis cuss any such settlement with France. Egyptian sources made this clear as word went out that French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau is expected here next week. There have been reports he is coming to take part in Suez talks between Egypt, France, Britain and U. N. Secretary Gen eral Hag Hammarskjold. The Egyptians have made no secret of their belief that France was chiefly responsible for the Suez invasion. Egyptian informants also indi cated they will try to increase pressure on Israel to pull out of the Gaza Strip and S'nai Desert by asking Hammarskjold to re port on the Israeli troop situation if they are not out in 10 days. An Israeli spokesman said the troops are withdrawing in ac cordance with a U. N. timetable. Diplomatic sources said Ham marskjold's top aide, Andrew Cordicr, had disclosed that the first convoy of ships is expected to pass through the Suez water way by early March. The group will be limited to ship, of 10.000 tons and carry only dry cargo, they added. MORE REFUGEES ARRIVE VIENNA Wi Austria offered asylum to 703 more Hungarian refugees during the past 24 hours. This brought the total who have reached the West since Oct. 23 to l.iA.329. late Is a continuing body and that its rules carry over. I The issue was decided, for the present at least, when the Senate voted to table a motion by Srn. Anderson D-NiV, 'leader of the coalition, to take up consideration of new rules. On that -ote, 27 Democrats and Monday an amendment to present rules. This would be designed to rn-kc it pa:er tr ehrrk filibusters. K norland said Irs propi-al, would permit donate to be halt-1 ed by two th:re" of the senators; present and voting, instead of o thirds of all W members. And he I to other matters. President For Aid Organizations Open Polio Fimd Drive , . u-vl ' v A j j." - I i ' " j ' " ' '-' ' ! V-..'- '.-'.if J .:.( Marlon county organization! itarted off their eign Wan, hopci January "Work ol Dimci" polio tund campaign of Dimes. The Saturday with volunteer! holding down post! Saturday. (Story throughout the Salera area. Here Charlea Dreei. Photo) commander of Marion Post 661. Veterans of For- UN Economic Group Sees Hungary Needs Kadar Keeps News Of Delegation From Nation BL'DAPKST, Hungary Wl A' U.N. economic delegation has ar- rived here to study the needs of' revolt-torn Hungary, but the flus-! s an-suonorled Government of Janos Kadar is keeping the Hun garian people in the dark about it. The four-man mission is headed by Philippe de Scynes, U N. un- dersecretary for economic mat-.tn. country, even to .study relief ters. It arrived Friday, with no'n(,H ' " fanfare whatever, to remain about four days. The members registered at the Grand Hotel, but were not avail able for interviews. Presumably they were out talking with gov ernment officials and inspecting Another Capital Journal First . . . You won't want 1a mis a single chapter nf "The FBI .Story." starling Monday In the Capital Journal. J. Edgar Hoover hlmnrlf puts the seal of approval on Don Whitehead'! runaway best seller. Whitehead, twice a winner of Pulitzer prlzrs a an Associated Press rrporler, has written the Mr lit authoritative history of this far-flung organization. The story Hill appear In 30 in ktallmrnts In the Capital Journal. Did you know that agents In at most rvery FBI office worked at one time or another on the HlM-Chambprs case? Did you ever hear of the SIS? Probably not, since the Special Intelligence Servire'i work has been a closely guarded tee ret slnre World Wai II and li de- rlhed for the first time In Whitehead's hook. You'll get all this Information and more In one of the moil interesting slorie ever written tUartinx Monday in the Capital Journal. Don't mist It. The Editors Troop Plan factories, many of which are closed down or on short work weeks now because of a coal shortage. Neither the press nor the Buda pest Radio, both r ntroPcd by Ka dar's government, told the Hun earian neonle a word about their arrival. The Soviet-imposed government of Premier Janes Kadar granted Permission for the experts to en- " 1 . un muiumi muii visit was not publicized in ad vance, the ollicials said. Although welcoming U. N. relief offers, the Kadar regime in Ihc past had refused permission for nnv ftffjmi ir m miinn u. nii.r The General Assembly's pealed demands for the admission of U. v. observers to investigate the Soviet army'a actions of the Oct. 23 revolution and charges that Russia deported thousands of rebel fighters were refused on the ground any XL N. investiga tion would infringe sovereignty. Hungary's FBI Catches Exiled Former Red Leader NEW YORK W-Irving Potash, onetime top American Communist who in 1955 chose voluntary exile to Red Poland rather than (ace . further government prosecution, j was seized by FBI agents last i nigitt for illegally re-entering the , United States. Government agents grabbed the '."Vt- ?ar-old Russian Sorn alien in la Bronxville, . Y., restaurant, in Westchester County, just north of the New York City line. Further details of the arrest were not dis closed. It was the first official intima tion that Potash bad returned to this country since he sailed March 4. I."5, for Pol;md. S-nce then, he ha b'en reported in various Iron ( . urta.n eountnes. including Rjs- sia and CommunM China j Details of how and when he I managed to re-enUr the United States were not known He is to be arraigned In federal court later today on charges of illegal entry. Ask Use, in Middle rvrryone will join the Mnrch lollcltallons will continue each on 1'age 7 (Capital Journal One More Con Gives Up in Hunger Strike One more convict has given up to the demands of his stomach, Warden Clarence T. Gladden of the Oregon state penitentiary said Saturday noon. Indications are that the entire food strike will hrcak soon or at least several more will Rive in as hunger pangs get the best of them, he said. Saturday's defection cuts the original 20 on the hunger strike to J5. Four gave in Thursday and are now eating. Apparently their supply of Christmas candy is giving out after five days and the men are beginning to feel the ef- fet",s ' tne aelt ' 'notl- ('fdden said. The one who changed his re-'n,ini1 mid afPted lood .Saturday j slal, f t,,ut "e didn t realize what a if nil i whk tiianiii'n ri'nnrieii. The strike began Monday among a group described by Gladden as chronic trouble makers. Seven have since moved to isolation cells for creating disturbances. The j others are all in the segregation section. Potash was one of 11 top Ameri can Communist leaders convicted Oct. 14, 1949, for conspiracy to i teach and advocate the violent o-crthrow of the U.S. govern ment. At the time of his convic tion. Potash was a vice president of the old CIO International Fur Workers Union. (liven a five-year sentence. Pot ash as released from the Leav enworth. Kan., federal penitenti ary Dec. 9, 19M, after serving three years and five months, with lime off for good behavior. He was immediately rearrested on an untried second count of the Smith Act, making it illegal to 'knowingly belong to a which advocates vich-nt party over- throw of the government, i Faced with another five-year jail term if convicted. Potash agreed to voluntary exile to Po- and and the government dropped the second charge. The govern ment had been seeking his depor tation since 1948. ,0 authority Economic Ike Gives Congress Message In Person, Asks for Free Hand to Use Forces WASHINGTON API President Eisenhower Saturday asked Congress for advance authority to use American troops to curb any "ambitious despots" or "power-hungry Communists" who might resort to "armed aggression" in the Middle East. In a special message delivered personally to a joint session of the Scnato and House, Eisenhower also said he will seek 400 million dollars for a two-year eco nomic aid program for Micjdlc East nations. Rlski Noted Eisenhower acknowledged that "the policy ' which I outline in volves certain burdens and indeed risks for the United States." But he said "the occasion has come for us to manifest again our na tional unity in support of freedom and to show our deep respect for the rights and independence of ev ery nation. lie said he wants a free hand to use American forces "to defend the territorial integrity and the po litical independence of any nation in the (Middle East) area against Communist armed aggression." He said such authority would be used only "at the desire of the nation attacked" and "subject to the overriding authority of the United Nations Security Coun cil ..." Eisenhower said "our thoughts turn naturally to the United Na tions as a protector of small na tions." But, in the light of the Soviet Union s callous indiffer ence" to U.N. censure of its mili tary oppression against Hungary, Eisenhower said: "The United Nations ... can not be a wholly dependable pro tector of ircedom when- tne am bitions of the Soviet Union are involved." VN Role Cited Eisenhower said the Middle East "has abruptly reached i new and critical stage" a situ atfon which he said is made the more threatening because "inter national communism needs and seeks a recognizable success" after Its trouble.? with the rebel lious eastern European satellites. Ills message, carried nationwide on television at. ' radio, also asked Congress to authorize a regional program of "military assistance and cooperation with any nation or group of nations which desires: such aid." I Eisenhower said his program is designed to deal with any case! of Communist aggression in the Middle East, either direct or in direct. He said it would authorize "em ployment of the armed forces of the United States to secure and protect the territorial integrity and political independence of such nations, requesting such aid, against overt armed aggression from any nation controlled by in ternational communism." Way Cleared to Sell Surplus Food to Poles WASHINGTON The gov ernment today cleared the way for Communist Poland to buy sur plus U. S. farm goods and hinted it would give similar privilege to other satellite countries loosening their tics with Itus.sia. Secret ary of Commerce Week s announced his department will consider applications for licenses to ship surplus farm commodities to Poland for U. S. dollars at world market prices. .lthough the stressed that eas ir of the licensing restriction ap plies only to Poland, Weeks added in a statement that "at some fu ture time consideration ma he give to applications for exports of such commodities to certain other Kastern Kuropean coun- trii- " !( Hid nnt n.imo nnv nthpr countries. At the same time, he said the Eisenhower administration is con- tinuing to study ways in which! further eeonomic aid may ne civ- er. to Poland and economic rela tions with that country expanded. Atom I'lane Forecast WASHINGTON un Rep. Pat terson tit-Conn) has predicted the Air Force will un'eil the first atomic-powered aircraft "within six months." He gave no de ta.,s. The congressman, a member of the Senate-House Atomic Energy Conn ittee. mude the prediction in t weekly newsletter. Secretary of the Air Force ' arles has indicated that such plane is in the development st ic. hut that it is still several years from being flown. East Request Brings Mixed Opinion From Congress Praise, Sharp Dissent Heard Concerning Ike's Message WASHINGTON Ml President Elsenhower'! appeal to Consresi Saturday for emergency new au thority to help keep peaco in the Middle East w met with praise Irom some members and sharp dissents from others. Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Tex as, the Senate Democratic lead er, described as "an, effort to act in tne interests of freedom Eisen hower's plea for atandby author ity to use u.s. troops in the ere if he dcemi such action necessary to counter any open Communist aggression. But he made no com mitment of support, adding In a statement: "Congress will examine the Dro- posal care.ully and thoroughly ,to determine whether the uction is justified, prudent and in accord with the best information avail able." Hep. Martin of Massachusetts, Republican House leader, predict ed that the Democratic-controlled congress will approve he request Dy an overwhelming vote. But reservations were voiced by some members of Eisenhower'i party. Sen. Goldwater (R-Arii.) said ho is "very afraid" of the nro- posal and where it will lead, add ing that "I don't like It." Sen. Jenncr (R-Ind.) said "The President's proposals on the Mid. die East involve issues that will affect the security of our country for generations to come. Some as pects of the proposals need espe cially careful analysis." Sen. Aiken (R-Vt.). a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said "until I know more about it, I'm making no commitments." Sen. Ervin (D NC) said he sees no reason to grant the authority Eisenhower Is asking. Chairman Vinson (D-Ga.) of House Armed Services Committee said he will support the request, and he added: "1 believe this is the proper step to take because it strengthens us and keeps down aCKression." ADKNAI'KR NOTES BIRTHDAY BONN, Germany ifl West German Chancellor Konrad Aden auer observed his 81st birthday Saturday. Gifts and tributes poured in from around the world. News in Brief For Saturday, Jan. S, 1957 NATIONAL Marie McDonald Released, Tells Story Sec. 1, P. 1 President Asks Permission To Send Troops to Middle East Sec. 1, P. 1 LOCALS Board of Control Appoints Prison Warden Sec. 1, P. J STATE New Bank Assured Albany .... Sec. 1, P. 1 Mamath Pair Still Alive A1,rr Shooting Sec. 1, V. 1 FOREIGN l.'N Group Visits Hungary Sec. 1, P. 1 SPORTS Viks. Saxons Both Win Sec. 1, P. 1 PCC Adopts Athletic Assistance Pl.m . . . Sec. 2, P, 2 Ex-Coach Defenits OSC in "Sportmeter" Sec. 2, P. 1 RKGl'LAR FEATURES Amusements Editorials ... Locals Society ...... Comic-i .. Sec. 1, P. 2 ... Sec. I. P. Sec. 1, P. 7 Sec. 1. P. 4-5-8 Sec. 2. P. 4 Sec. 2. P. S Sec. 2. P. M-8 ... Sec. 2, P. 6 ... Sec. 2, P. 4 ... Sec. 2, P. 1 j Television i Want Ads Dorothy Dix Crossword Puzzle Church