Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, April 09, 1957, Page 1, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Capital jLJonnial
THE WIATHER
FAIR TONIGHT, partly cloudy
Wednesday except for nine early
morning low cloudiness. Slightly
cooler Wednesday. Low tonight, Ml
high Wednesday, 66. .
2 SECTIONS
20 Pages
69th Year, No. 84
Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, April 9, 1957 m.uly ,
Entered u second dan
Prii 5c
PO Chief
Trial Aim
Of Porter
Mishandling Cash
Charged Against
Sunimerfield
... WASHINGTON (UP)-A demand
Was made in Congress Tuesday
that Postmaster General Arthur E.
Summerfield resign immediately
and be prosecuted for allegedly
mishandling Post Office Depart
ment funds.
The demand was made by Hep.
Charles 0. Porter (D-Ore.) in a
letter to Rep. John A. Blatnik (D-P
Minn.), chairman of the Legal
end Monetary Subcommittee of
" House Government Operations
Committee.
Tremendous Boners
Porter accused Summerfield of
' Making "tremendous miscalcula
tions" in apportioning his depart
ment's operating funds.
Summerfield has asked for an ex
tra 4? million dollars to tide his
department over to July 1. He has
laid that if he is not given the
lull amount he will stop mail de
liveries on Saturdays and make
other reductions in postal service,
starting this weekend.
A House Appropriations Sub-
committee has tentatively voted
to give Summerfield only 17 mil
lion dollars but will decide Friday
whether to change ils mind and
' Vote him the additional 30 million
' aouars.
v Other congressional news: I
Civil rights: Martin and Senate
GOP Leader William F. Knowland
denied there is any "deal" be
tween Republicans and southern
' Democrats to delay action on the
President's civil rights program.
Martin said he expects the bill to
reach the House floor after the
Easter recess.
Airways: Knowland told report
ers that Eisenhower will send a
special message to Congress, prob
ably Thursday, asking for crea
tion of jet-age airways moderniza
tion board. The board would study
ways of improving civil aviation
facilities to enable them to cope
with the problems of jet transpor
tation. Housing: A congressional drive
L' t10 Pna f. ouuon aauars in vet-'
r"Mr.n life inonnp. l,,r,Ai In nrn.
...u..u ..... ........ u... ......... ...
mote GI housing loans received
a setback. The. House Banking
Committee approved' the proposal
last week, but the Veterans Com
mittee decided Tuesday to oppose
It on the House floor. The move
also has drawn strong opposition
from the administration.
Soviet Orders
Scientists to
A.
Heed Ideology
MOSCOW Wl The Soviet gov
'ernment Tuesday bluntly instruct
ed physicians and biologists to
make Communist theory, rather
than Western methods of objective
research, the guiding factor in
their scientific work.
- The scientists were told that
ebjectivity in science is approved
. when it fits with Marxist-Leninist
political and economic ideology,
but otherwise, objectivity must be
stamped out. The warning ap
peared in the newspaper Medical
Worker, organ of the Health Min
istry. (The article revives the view
of science which prevailed under
Stalin. In the brief era of de-Stal-inization,
Soviet scientists at
tempted to break away from this
concept, which was considered
harmful to scientific progress.
Thus, its revival can be consid
ered another evidence that the
practices of the Stalin era are re
turning in the Soviet Union under
Its present 'collective leader
ihip."
ICCManRules
Truckers Must
I Haul Hot Stuff
. WASHINGTON W An exam-
: Iner recommended Tuesday that
the Interstate Commerce Com-
, . mission move to cancel operat
. ing permits of truck lines refusing
to handle freight labeled "hot car-
go" by the Teamsters' Union.
' A "hot cargo" clause is incor
porated in most Teamsters' Un
ion labor contracts. Under such
clauses, employers agree their
i. b.ji
goods held bv the union to be
unfair" or "hot "
i!ninn nte these term to de-
Keribe coods coming from estab
lishments involved in a labor con
troversy. Toesdav's finding by exam
iner Frank R. Saltzman, if upheld
bv the ICC, means that employ
ers refusing to accept "hot car
go" shipments could lose their
federal permits to carry freight
on the highways.
The case coming before the ex
aminer involved a complaint by
the Galveston Truck Lines, Hous
ton. Tex., against a group of
Southwest area truck lines. The
lines had refused in mid-1955 to
handle shipments from Galveston
Lines, originating in Texas, for
telav at Oklahoma City to other
' sections of the country.
Concrete Pilings Go Down
This maze of huge concrete pilings was
the beginning of the finish of a new bridge
going in on 25th street near Trade. A
pile-driver was banging the poles deep into
the Mill Creek bed and its banks Tuesday
Span Started
On Mill Creek
At 25th Street
Concrete piling, which will sup
port a new bridge ' across Mill
Creek at South 25tl street, arc
being driven in place today.
The structure is the - final of
four bridges to be financed by a
$140,000 bond issue voted last
spring. Bridges across Shelton
Ditch at High and Lee streets and
over Mill Creek at N. 14th have
already been completed.
The concrete structures replace
wooden bridges which previously
stood at the sites.
After the piling work is com
pleted, concrete caps will be
poured and tnen me aces win De
poured. The bridge will be 69 feet
long.
Completion or the job is expecled
sometime in Mey.
Contractor for the project is
O. C. Bernard. ,
1,200 to Join
Cancer Funds
Drive Tonight
From 6:30 to 8 o'clock this eve
ning, 1.200 crusaders against can
cer will make a door-to-door can
vass of Salem homes.
During the 114-hour period, they
will distribute literature dealing
with the danger signals of cancer
and accept contributions with
which to finance a campaign
against the malignancy.
Mrs. Marvin McClain has been
selected to direct the residential
solicitations while Oscar Engcr
will spearhead the drive in the
business area beginning weanes
dav. Assisting the general chairmen
in various parts of the city will
be Stanley Schofield, Fred Lund,
D. R. McGeorge; Mrs. Marina
Hagan, Mrs. Olga Tonning, Chuck
Nielson, Mrs. Milton Chadscy,
Mrs. George Beane, Dick Kelm,
Mrs. Bessie Loomis and W. H.
Velton.
Vandals Break
13 Windows
Vandals broke out 13 windows in
J" Vista Ave., with
c,tKls and BB 8uns' ,he Manon
County Sheriff's office reported
Tuesday.
Charles Brunk is tenant at the
home. It is owned by Mrs. Rose
Gilmour, deputies said. Twelve of
the wtnrfnwv wprp 19 hv 90 Inrhec
and one 24 by 26 inches, they
said.
n naawi were also oroKen our
at the house on two or three
- i..., .l
uwdaiuiu iosl iiiuuui, mulcts eie
told.
Wpather Details
Maxlmam yesterday, S7; mini mam
todar. 31. Total 24-hoar precipitation,
; for month, ,3; normal. M. iraton
precipitation. ItM: normal. 3434.
River neliht, 4.1 feet. (Report bjr
u. 8. w earner Bureau.;
! w
STATE MAY SHARE
Council OKs 4-Lane
Plan on State Street
By DOUGLAS
Canitnl Journal
After considerable discussion, in which strong objections
were raised to a plan to ban parking on the street east of
17th, the City Council Monday night approved a proposal
which would eventually make State street a four-lane thor
oughfare east of 12th street to
8,000 Call Off
Seattle Metal
Trades Strike
SEATTLE m A four-day
strike of 8,000 Seattle metal trades
workers ended early Tuesday
when management and union ne
gotiators agreed on the terms of
a new, two-year contract calling
for a 6V4 per cent pay raise.
The agreement is subject to
ratification by rank and file mem
bers of the four unions involved,
the Machinists, Boilermakers,
Molders and Foundry Workers
and Automotive Machinists.
A. F. O'Neill, business represen
tative of the Boilermakers, said
the Seattle settlement probably
would set the pattern for ending
similar metal trades strikes in Ta
coma, Everett and Portland.
QueenElizabeth Takes Auto
Tour Through Paris Streets
PARIS UH Looking a bit tired
from her strenuous arrival day.
Queen Elizabeth II was driven
through crowded streets Tuesday
to pay her respects to the 2,000-year-old
city of Paris.
In fluent French broadcast
throughout the nation, the 30-year-old
British monarch told an
applauding audience at the Hotel
de Viile (the city hall). "Your
capital is a home away from
home toward which, at each new
generation, the United Kingdom
has sent its elite, attracted by
the radiance of your science,
spirit, art and good taste."
Elizabeth was visibly movedlrl
when she was presented flowers
ny a smau rrencn ray anu gin,
! ch because they were born
! or, the same days as her two chil-
drcn. Prince Charles and Princess
Anne.
The National Assembly recessed
for its members to watch the
i Queen's 25-car procession pass its
hnme the Palais Bourbon.
An excited, cheering throng had i l' H
Ijammed the vast Place dejA-J'
vwn umit uic cm,j
day to see the Queen.
1 Thmicanlc chnveH ana tussled
i
for vantage points. Many scram -
h ed on bio of chairs and tables
in nearby sidewalk cafes. Scores
were nearly irampiea.
A mighty cheer went up wheni
Elizabeth and her husband Prince,
Philip appeared briefly on the bal-
cony oi ne opera nouse aner a
gala performance in the British!
monarch's honor. 1
for Bridge
morning as workmen hurried to finish the
bridge by summer. The pilings dwarfed
workmen, two of whom stand under the
driving rig in the center of the picture.
(Capital Journal Photo by Jerry Claussen)
COST
SEYMOUR
City Editor
the city limits.-
mi 1 ...III I t l It.- dm.
me pian win ut; sunt, w mu vie-
gon Highway Department for ap
nroval. The department has indi
cated a willingness' to snare in me
cost of the street widening.
To Shift Center Line
As envisioned by the city, the
plan calls for four 12-foot traffic
lanes between 12th and 14th
streets with parallel parking on the
north side or the street and angle
parking on the south. It is also
proposed to relocate the center of
the street two feet north of the
present site.
From 14th to 17th streets Is sug
gested to have four 12 foot driving
lanes with parallel parking on
both sides of the street.
Between 17th street and the east
city limits it is proposed to keep
the pavement at its present width
but to create four 10 foot driving
lanes by elimination of parking.
It was primarily the climina-tion-of-parking
proposal which
sparked opposition to the proposal
which was passed by a 5 to 4 mar
gin on a show of hands.
(Continued on Page 5, Col. 7)
j 7rVv,
v.i
A! ,V
.! V
,7
1 '-CiJ
i 7 r.
;i V
r i - ' I? V I
TK E . . I K.-x J .LIU II
TNTVM '
Queen Elizabeth II of F.ngland stands with her husband,
, pnM.n on ba.onv of
Wirephoto)
irir
Mouse r yjus'
Indicted Public Officials
'Nuisance'
Taxes Cut
In Britain
Suez Impact Less
Than Expected
On Finance
LONDON Cfl Britain's Con
servative government Tuesday
announced a cut of 100 million
pounds in the taxes Britons
pay for entertainment, gasoline
and some household goods.
The cut, equivalent to 280 mil
lion dollars, disclosed in the
House of Commons by Peter
Thorneycroft's message, was
greeted with cheers from Con
servative benches.
He declared there were "some
grounds for cheerfulness" in the
country s economic outlooR, but
he stressed that emphasis must
remain on exports at the expense
of belt tightening at home.
Budget Balanced
"Against the background of a
budget nearly balanced, I can
make a reduction in the burden
of taxation by around 100 million
pounds, Thorneycroft said.
Before getting into the details,
he told the Commons the Suez
crisis "affected our commercial
position less than might have been
expected, the Middle tast nas
always been a key to the British
economy with the Suez Canal
often described as a lifeline.
First tax relief went to Brit
ain's entertainment industry
especially theaters and movies
which has been affected adversely-
by television. .The entertainment
lax has totaled one-third of all re
ceipts.
Theater Tor Ends
Thorneycroft abolished tho lax
on tickets to state theaters, wnicn
have been hard hit, and slashed
the taxes on movie tickets by an
estimated 6',i million pounds a
year.
Hungary Kicks
Out Yank Aide
For Espionage
BUDAPEST 10 Communist
Hungary Tuesday accused Capt.
Thomas It. Glcason, assistant
U.S. military attache, of "open
espionage" and gave him 48 hours
to leave the country.
A spokesman for the U.S. le
gation said the charges against
Glcason do not constitute espion
age under international custom
and usage, and were "largely in
accurate." Gleason, of 11 Urbana. III., and
Col. James C. Todd. U.S. mili
tary attache from Tulsa, Okla.,
were stopped on a Hungarian
country road last Wednesday and
questioned for more than five
hours. They were accused of
photographing a Russian-occupied
barracks.
wZii.
m9m
jjk
riv... p,iac. i p,r. (Ap
in
LATE FLASHES
ASTORIA (UP) Two long
shoremen were killed Tuesday
when a cargo-loading crane top
pled oft a tower on the new 272
foot ocean-going barge, Pacific
No. 2, at the Shepard-Morse mill
dock at Westport. Authorities
Identified the victims as Ralph
Knutinen of Astoria and Rusty
Sumner of Portland. Bodies of
the two men, who were crushed
Inside the crone, still hadn't been
removed at noon.'
The Oregon Senate Tuesday
passed Senate joint resolution
35 to authorize the Stale De
partment of Veterans Affairs to
borrow up to 122 million dollars
tor Ils home and farm loan pro
gram for veterans. The pres
ent limit Is 81 million dollors.
Wreck Kills 2
In Stolen Car
At Vancouver
VANCOUVER. Wash. Ul The
crash of a speeding stolen auto,
mobile against a bridge abut'
mcnt killed two 14-year-old Scat
tie boys Tuesday under circum
stances almost duplicating the
fatal ride of two other Seattle
youths less tnWh two months ago,
Killed outright in Tuesday's pre
dawn crash were Dennis Woody,
the driver, and Ronald P. Pullis.
The car smashed into a con
crete abutment at the west end
of the Interstate Bridge, at the
same soot and almost the same
hour where Timothy W. Fisk and
Dean Watson, both 16, died Feb.
17.
Both accidents occurred as driv
ors of stolen cars drove at break
neck speeds in an attempt to shake
off chasim! patrol cars. .-
Tho pursuer in Tuesday's chase
was Sheriff s Deputy Lynn King.
King spotted the pair putting air
in a tire at a north Vancouver
service station. As they drove off,
the officer decided to stop them
for questioning, though he was un
aware at the time tho car was
stolen.
When he sounded his siren, the
car took off at high speed. Travel
ing an estimated 80 to 90 miles
an hour, it failed to make a slight
turn in the Vancouver Freeway
and slammed into the bridge abut
ment. Pullis was thrown from the
car to a bank below (he bridge.
The car was demolished.
City Planners
Meet Tonight
On Re-zoning
The City Planning Commission,
meeting Tuesday night, will hear
a report on an application for
change of zone from R-4 residen
tial to M-l light industrial involv
ing property immediately south
of Bcllevuc street and extending
almost a block cast of S. 21st
street.
The property adjoins the loca
tion of the former Rcinholdt &
Lewis plant, now Wcstwood Prod
ucts, the firm wants to have the
properly rezoned so it con mnke
further industrial extension. Tho
proposed change was initiated by
the Planning Commission,
A letter will bo ready from the
YWCA requesting a hearing rela
tive to off-street parking for the
swimming pool that the organiza
tion expects to build next fall.
It probably will be referred lo
a commiltoo. The pool, for which
a fund drive is planned, will he on
South Winter street east of the
association building and south of
Salem Public Library.
At the Tuesday night meeting,
public hearing is scheduled on the
application of Dr. and Mrs. Gor
don 11. Cooley for permission to
build a dwelling at 565 Ben Lomond
Dr., with a modified front yard
setback.
No plats are on the agenda for
examination or action at the Tues
day night meeting.
2 Big Tankers
Sail Into Suez
CA1RO Ml The two biggest
i!,niir in mi ihp Suez Cnnat
sincc it was blocked last Novcm -
hcr entered the waterwav l Porl
Said today the first day the
farA fhannol wn nrwtwri in
L "' ... . '
snips oi up io ions.
One was the 19,418-ton Belgian
tanker Elizabeth, the other the
20,776-ton Italian Fina Canada,
iney were Douna ior ivnnaie r.asi'fiii. m cdumc.
ports to pick up oil. Four other
Lemnllpr fthtn were in the south-
4: bound convoy.
ine urst passenger vessel to
use the canal since the British-French-Israeli
invasion was due
at Port Said later today to begin
the 103 mile trip south to Suez.
The ship is the 12.U9-ton Italian
liner Oceania, headed for Austral
ia with 809 passengers.
A"Jjq-rn -1
Refinery
Blows Up;
500 Safe
Plant at Arkansas
City Edge Burns
After Blast
EL DORADoTArk. Wl An
explosion Tuesday touched off
a spectacular fire that destroy
ed the heart of an American
Oil Co. refinery just outside
the city limits. -The
blaze brought all available
fire units and ambulances to the
scene but apparently none of the
500 refinery employes was hurt.
Early estimates of damage by
company employes ranged from
$250,000 to-$500,000.
Near Louisiana Line
El Dorado Is a city of abnul 25,
000 just 20 miles from tho Louisia
na line, 120 miles south of Little
Rock.
Employes said the explosion, of
undetermined origin, occurred in
a 75-foot tower in the thermal
cracking unit, the heart of the re
finery where crude oil Is cracked
into gasoline and other petroleum
derivatives.
A resident who lives half a mile
from tht plant said he felt a rum
ble from the explosion. Tho smoke
from the on-led flames was visible
for miles.
: Flames Contained
Tho firo was reported about
10:20 a.m. and was still burning
an hour later, but liremen suc
cessfully contained Iho flames in
the cracking unit. Fora time 'the
cntiro refinery was threatened.
Company officials said luckily
no employes wcro in tho tower at
the time of the explosion and that
the 15 employes in tno area at the
time havo been accounted lor.
Marines Oust
Officer Guilty
Of Misconduct
PARRIS" ISLAND. S. C. M
First Lt. William D. Conroy Tues
day was sentenced to a dishonor
able dismissal from tho Marine
Corps by a sevch-mnn general
court-martial.
Conroy pleaded guilty to charges
of conduct unbecoming an officer
and gentleman. The charge
stemmed from an assault March
13 on Pvt. David L. Porter. The
court deliberated 50 minutes be
fore passing sentence.
The sentence is subject to re
view by Brig. Gen. Wallace M.
Greene, the court-martial s con
vening authority. It then is sub
ject to review hy the naval judge
advocate general.
Both of these reviewing author!
tics can lessen the sentence. They
cannot increase il.
Conroy will remain on acllve du
ty until the review is completed.
JURY OUT 44 MINUTES
Dr. Adams Freed
Of Murder Charge
LONDON IJB Dr. John Bodkin
Adams was acquitted today of a
charge of murdering an 81-year-old
widow to get a chest of antique
silver and a Rolls Roycc from her
estate.
AMy. Gen. Sir Reginald Man
ningham Butler immediately
quashed a secret indictment ac
cusing Adams of killing a second
wealthy patient last summer.
Dr. Adams was allowed to walk
out of the courtroom on bail but
he still has minor charges hang
ing over him of violating the crc
mntion act.
The jury of 10 men and 2 wom
en deliberated only 44 minutes in
acquitting the 58-yearold bachel-
or society doctor. The verdict end-
ed a 17-dav hearing in l.nn-
ldnn's famed Old Bailey, the long-
est murder trial in British history.
Adams had been arrested alter
n nroloni'cd Scotland Yard lnves-
ii..;. (hat h had
" ,''"
profited from the deaths of
an unusual number of his wealthy
aged paiienis in me scasioi
The 260-pound, Irish-born doctor
heard the verdict with the same
composure that he had main
tained throughout the trial. He
h.iri nleaded innocent to the
charge but did not take the stand
in his defense. cases mrs. raorrcu nan sm-
The prosecution contended thatifered a stroke two years before
he had pumped massive doses of her death in 1050 and that
heroin and morphia into Mrs. I Adams' treatment was intended
Edith Alice Morrcll. turning her I only to ease her pain.
penamg
Debate Scant, Bill Passes by
40-17; Suburban Service
Districts Rejected
By PAUL W. HARVEY, JR. '
Associated Press Writer
Gov. Holmes would be required to susnend in
dicted public officials by a
by the House luesday and
The bill, which would make the Governor susnend
Dist. Atty. William Langley
anu roruana s mayor i crry-
hciirtniK, provoked surprisingly
little debate.
If it becomes law, the Governor
would name a temporary succes
sor to Langley. The Portland City
Council would appoint somebody
to fill in for Schrunk. ,
Would Draw Pay
Both officers would receive their
full salaries while under suspen
sion, which would last until after
Ihcir. cases were finally disposed
of by Iho courts.
Tho bill was introduced by the
House State and Federal Affairs
Committco at the request of the
Governor.
In other action, the House killed
,31-27 a bill to let suburban nrens
create service districts to provide
the same services that cities
maintain.
At tho same time, the House
received a new bill that would
put the state in the power busi
ness. The service district bill, pre
pared by an interim committee
after a two-year study of tho sub
urban problem, was beaten by
legislators who feared it would de
stroy any incentive that tho sub
urbs might have to be annexed
by cities.
it would have let inc people in
these areas form the districts to
provide these services: Firo pro
tection, parks and recreation, san
itary service, street lights, streets
and sidewalks, and water,
Johnson Lends Fight
Ren. V. E. Johnson (R). Eugene,
led tho fight for the bill. Ho called
It just ono more tool to solve
suburban problems.
But Ken. Kcitn Skoiton (U)
also of Eugene, said, "If you pass
this bill, the incentive for annex
ation would be lost. People in the
suburbs have an obligation to sup
port the cities. The bill would set
up little cities surrounding the
large cities."
Rep. John D. Mosser (R), Port-
Innd, pointed out that separate
districts now can 1 perform these
services. The bill would, ho said,
merely consolidate those many
districts.
The bill Is one of the most Im
portant of a scries of Interim
committco bills dealing with the
fringe nren problem. The others
would provide home rule tor coun
ties, and permit annexed areas to
pay reduced taxes for a period up
to 10 years.
The power bill, under Democrat
ic sponsorship, would create an
elected state Power Commission
of three members. This commis
sion could build dams, operate
power plants, and sell and dis
tribute electricity.
Could Issue Bonds
The commission could Issue 120
million dollars worth of general
obligation bonds.
(Continued on Page 5, Column 1)
DR. JOHN ADAMS
into a drug addict and finally
ending her life.
A medical expert for the
defense claimed that the treat
! mcnt was not unusual in such
wrr---
v
bill which was passed 40-17 ;
sent to the Senate.
of Multnomah County
DA Langley's
Trial to Start
This Afternoon
PORTLAND W Muluiomah'
County Dist. , Atty. William M.
Langley was scheduled to go on
trial here Tuesday, the first major
defendant in Portland's lengthy j
vice Investigation.
Langley, 41, is charged with will- ,
fully refusing on March 18, 1955,
to prosecute a person guilty of vio
lating state gambling laws. It is a
misdemeanor.
Langley also has been indicted '
on charges of malfeasance in of
fice, conspiracy to obstruct public
justice and conspiracy to commit
the felony of receiving a bribe.
Even as Langley prepared to
go on trial, another grand jury
here continued Its investigation of
vice and corruption charge
touched off by a series of stories. . "
in The Orcgonian.' Langley first ''
was indicted last August by the .
grand jury which took up tht .
newspaper's charges.
More than 30 persons have been
Indicted, including Mayor Terry .
Schrunk, Portland policemen, ?
Teamsters, and self-styled Port
land racketeer James B, Elkim. .
Elklns is scheduled to en on
trial on the federal charges here '
next Tuesday before Judge Wil
liam East. No date has been set
for Schrunk's trial nor has he en
tered a pica.
Navy to Build
Big Scope to
Tune Planets
WASHINGTON (A - The Navv
announced Tuesday it Is building
near mversioo, Md., one ot the '
largest radio telescopes in the "
world to pick up radiations from
the planets and celestial bodies.
The antenna, which will be con
structed principally of aluminum,
win look like a dish about 84 feet
in diameter and will be mounted
on top of a steel tower.
The radio telescope was de
signed by the D. S, Kennedy Co.
of Cohasset, Mass. The Navy said
it will be the largest radio tele
scope in the United States and the
largest known of Ils kind to be
mounted with one axis parallel to
that of the earth. This mounting '
will permit aulomntic tracking of
celestial objects, a system fol
lowed in many largo astronomical
telescopes. -
INcws in Brief ,
Tuesday, April 9, 1957
NATIONAL
Tornadoes Leave Six Dead
in N. Carolina Sec. 1, P. 2
Texas Church Given $2 ,
Million Tithe .. Sec. 1, P. 8
LOCAL
Salemites May Vote in Spring
On Park Bonds Sec. 2, P. 1
Police Warn Not to Drink
Ditch Beer Sec. 1, P. S
STATE
Tight Money Pinches Lumber "
Industry Sec. 2, P. 10
FOREIGN
Soviet Agrees to Study U.S.
Disarm Plan ... bee. 1, r, 8
SPORTS
Scnalors Win 1st
Exhihilion Sec. 2, P. 4
Elks Golf Tourney
Pairings Told ... Sec. 1, P. 4 .
Milwaukee Picked lo
Win Pennant ... Sec. 2, P. S
REGULAR FEATURES
Amusements Sec. 1, P. 2 ,
Editorials Sec. 1, P. 4
Locals Sec. 1, P. 5 .
Sec. 2. P. 1.
Society Sec. 1, P. 6-7
Comics Sec. 2, P. 6
Television Sec. 2, P. 3
Want Ads Sec. 2, P. 8-9
Markets Sec. 2, P. 8
Dorothy Dix Sec. 2, P. 3
Crossword Puzzle Sec. 2, P. 6 '
Farm Sec. 2, P. 7