The Bulletin, Wednesday, July 24, 19631 r, rmLl for limited ill ' (Lfr 4y MR. AND MRS. ELDON RONALD WALLACE (Colcord Photo, McMinnville) I Couple at home in Sheridan ' after trip to Oregon coast Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Ronald I Wallace (Aurlce Louise Kilmer) are at home at 125 SW Morgan Street, Sheridan, after a wedding trip to the Oregon coast. They were married July 13 at the First Methodist Church in McMinnville. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stacy 0. Kilmer, Sisters. She will be physical edu cation Instructor at Sheridan High Severe storm lashes Bama with rain, hail By United Preti International A severe summer storm lashed Alabama early today with hail, heavy rain and sharp lightning. . The Birmingham, Ala., weather bureau radar was knocked out of service by the lightning. A large tree was blown onto a two- Story apartment building at Bes- cmor, Ala., 15 miles southwest Of Birmingham. The worst of the thunderstorms wero in north - central Alabama. Trees were uprooted and power lines were down with one inch hail reported in the southeast sections of HuntsviUe, Ala. . f , . . Huntsvillo, got 1.09 Inches of. ' rain In six hours, and Charleston, S. C, received .85 Inches.' Two rare heat-caused tornadoes struck Port Arthur; Tex., on the Gulf Coast Tuesday night. One hit an old yacht club and sunk one boat. The other turned over a trailer. Damage was placed at $7,000. Hailstorms slapped Georgia Tuesday afternoon. One inch stones fell near Atlanta. A tornado cloud was sighted the Missouri River bottoms north of Jefferson City, Mo., earlier Tuesday during high winds and heavy rains. Residents of Midland, Pa., clear ed debris from a flash flood which sent up to 7 feet of water surging through homes and business places early Tuesday. For the 24 hours ending Tues day night. Detroit, Mich., got 1.17 Inches, Pittsburgh, Pa., .69 inches Chicago. .42 inches, Little Rock, Ark., .40 Inches, and Seattle, Wash., .41 Inches. In Wisconsin, Gov. John Reyn olds asked Secretary of Agrl culture Omlle Freeman to de clare six more counties making 27 In all as drought disaster areas. He said crops have been cut up to 60 per cent. Tracy continues io improve LOS ANGELES (UPD Actor Snncer Tracy was reported In ' Improving health today at Vincent's Ilosiltnl where he - " 'praling from pulmonary " '' id on the lungs. " v ar o!d actor ws taken l--pi'il after he eollnnsed at actress Katherlne Hep- ,-aibu Teach homa where ore preparing to go on a benool, where she was a senior in 1959. She was graduated this year from Linfield College. The bridegroom, a 1955 grad uate of McMinnville High School, is employed in McMinnville as a mechanic. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon E. Wallace, McMinnville. The Rev. Robert E. Hardman performed the double-ring cere mony, In the presence of 175 guests. A reception followed In the church parlors. The bride was attended by her sister-in-law, Laura Kilmer of Hubbard. Norman Burdon, Willa mina, cousin of the bridegroom, was best man. The bride's father gave her in marriage. Ushers were Charles Burdon, Carlton, cousin of the bridegroom, and Gary Kilmer, Ballston, cousin of the bride. Diane Morris, Springfield, niece of the bridegroom, was flower girl, and Mike Kilmer, Hubbard, nephew of the bride, was ring bearer. Elaine Rogers, Sheridan, was soloist, and Mrs. Richard Hofrichter, McMinnville, was organist. Friends of the couple from Portland and the Willamette Val ley area assisted with the recep tion. Mrs. June Jenkins, Warm Springs, sister of the bride, kept me guest dook. Lor re seeks to block namechange LOS ANGELES (UPD-A Ger- man-born real estate salesman wants to change his name to Pe ter Lorie, but Peter Lorre doesn't want him to. Lorre's attorney was In court Tuesday to object to the petition in which Eugene Weingand, 29, wants to change his name. Weingand told the court his friends think he looks like the famed actor and call him by that name and because of that he has begun to use it. Weingand's attorney said "he wanted his name changed to Pe ter Lorre Jr., but I advised against that." Lorre's attorney said that "un der no circumstances" would his client permit Weingand or any one else to "trade upon" his name. "I don't question this man's right to change his name," said Superior Judge Burnett Wolfson who set Oct. 3 for a hearing. "But why out of 111 million names did he choose this one? Why does a man look for trou ble?" Ruling issued on fund use SALEM (UPD Funds of pa tients at the Oregon State Tuber culosis Hospital can't be applied in the payment of debts they owe the state, Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton said Monday. While patients with sufficient means have a duty to pay the cost of their care at the hosDital. ol. lection procedures authorized by law must oe followed to collect delinquencies, Thornton said. test ban treaty WASHINGTON (UPD-The Ken nedy administration today sought to muster congressional support for the limited nuclear test ban treaty which has been worked out with Russia and Britain. Officials said announcement of the agreement in Moscow was im minent and could come today 'in less the Russians made some last minute effort to tie some strings to the draft of the pact. Any test ban agreement would have to be ratified by the Senate. Two-thirds of the senators voting would have to approve the treaty under the U.S. Constitution. In an effort to win the needed Senate backing, Secretary of State Dean Rusk went before the Sen ate Foreign Relations Committee Tuesday with a copy of the ten tative two-page treaty to outlaw land, sea and air tests. Informed sources said that the senators were generally impressed with the document, which was de scribed as "simple" and contain ing no hidden gimmicks. Rusk was cautious in his public remarks after the closed session with the Senate group, saying the draft was not complete. This reflected the administra tion's desire to avoid giving the impression that everything was nailed down, lest Soviet negotia tors try at the last minute to in sert some new conditions in the draft. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush chev has said he would like to have an East-West non-aggression treaty or pledge tied to the test ban pact. But the Russian nego tiators have not Inserted this in the draft and reportedly have shown no intention of doing so. Under Secretary of State w. Averell Harriman, the U.S. nego tiator in Moscow, is expected to initial the draft but the question of who will formally sign for the United States has not" been set tled. 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