o
o
o
o o
Ta
iovernor
pud
Assessor Slioivo
Tax Levy Mills
Total
tax levy on most real,
property in Medford for
the I
1957-58 fiscal year hag been set
at 69.3 mills, according to Coun
ty Assessor Ray Schumacher.
The levy is 6.5 mills more
than 1956-57.
Schumacher reported that
there is no levy for county
government this year. The small
continuing levies for Jackson
County Historical Society and
the county juvenile detention
home have been absorbed by
funds on hand.
For the taxpayer,' a tax levy
in mills means the number of
dollars he will be taxed per
$1,000 assessed value of his
property. This can also be re
ferred to as a "millage rate." A
"mill" is one-tenth of a cent.
j The 69.3 mill figure combines
city government and school dis
trict levies. Levy for city govern
ment services alone is 25 mills,
and taxes paid at this rate, plus
revenues received from other
than property tx sources, will
support the estimated city ex
penditures of $810,912 during
the fiscal year.
Medford school district 549
has a total levy of 44.3. an in
crease of .6 mills over 1956-57.
Money collected a! this rate sup
ports the school district budget
of $1,530,818.76.
Highest combined levy of any
city in the county is 10X9 mills
for Jacksonville, an increase of
17.3 mills over 1956-57. Other
rity levies are: Talent, 98 mills;
Phoenix, 82.2 mills; Eagle Point,
73.5 mills; Gold Hill, 72.1 mills
Rogue River, 70.9 mills; Butte
Falls, 70.9 mills; Ashland, 62.5
mills; and Central Point, 61.7
mills.
Levies have been set for school
districts within the county. A
school district levy can be any
one or a combination of rural
school levy, special school levy,
cr school bond levy.
School district levies for 1957
58 are: Jacksonville, district 1,
73.1 mills; Griffin Creek, dis
trict 2, 74.7 mills; Ruch, district
3, 64.7 mills?-Phoenix district
4, 54.5 mills; Ashland, district
5, 47.9 mills; Central Point orig
inal, district 6, 46.9 mills; Cen
tral Point consolidated, district
6, 46 mills: Eagle Point original,
district 9, 52.8 mills; Eagle Point
consolidated, district 9, 51 mills;
Lone Pine, district 10, 69.7
mills; Talent, district 22. 77.1
mills; Rogue River, district 35,
61.6 mills; Applegate, district
40, 61.6 mills; Trail, district 45,
62.9 mills; Prospect, district 59,
79.6 mills; Wimer, district 62,
61.6 mills; Shady Cove, district
89, 80.3 mills; Butte Falls, dis
trict 91, 61.6 mills; Pinehurst,
district 94, 61.6 mills; Howard,
district 100, 67.7 mills.
Schumacher said that 80.5 per
cent of all monies collected by
taxing in the county will be
used to support schools this
fiscal year.
Levies have been computed
for all taxing "code areas" out
side cities. Code areas are sec
tions of land within any special
taxing unit (such as a city, or
Edwards Bound Over,
Waives Pre-Hearing
James W. Edwards, Portland,
was bound over to the grand
jury and bail was set at $1,500
in district court Thursday on
charges of obtaining money by
false pretenses. Edwards waived
preliminary hearing and was
lodged in county jail.
L. R. Phillips, 355 Charlotte
Anne rd., Medford, also appear
ed in district court Thursday be
fore Judge James M. Main. Phil
lips, who pleaded innocent of
obtaining property by false pre
tenses, waived preliminary hear
ing and was bound over to the
ffrar.d iury. Bail was set at
$1,500. -
Jacksonville Citizen
Hurt In Woods Area
Hester Knutzen, 50, Jackson
ville, was injured in a logging
accident in the Beaver Creek
area this morning, it was report
ed. Medford Ambulance Service
took him to Sacred Heart hos
pital in Medford where he was
reDorted suffering from a leg
tninrv.
Knutzen is employed by Ober
Logging Company.
Portland Fire Trucks
Called to Large Hotel
Portland W All available
downtown fire equipment sped
to the Multnomah hotel at 8
am. today after guests report
ed they smelled smoke on the
seventh floor. '
No fire was found. Firemen
said the smoke apparently drift
ed in open windows from some
where outside. -
school or fire district) or a com
bination of districts. Residents
llVlUg W1UJ111 ajJCHCtl lAlll uia-
tricts must pay the tax levies
of those districts.
Special taxing districts also
include those such as water, sani
tary, and other districts
Levies for code areas may be
for a combination of rural
school, special school, school
bond, water districts, sanitary
districts, or rural fire protection
districts, 9s well as the county
and city.
A list of tax levies in mills
for all taxing districts (code
areas) in the county outside of
incorporated cities appears on
Page 12. o
- o
Rackets Committee
Stops Questioning
Teamster Official
Washington (W The Sen
ate Rackets committee abrupt
ly broke off its questioning of
Teamsters Vice President James
R. Hoffa today on grounds that
further questioning was use
less."
It did so afte accusing Hoffa
of buying miniature wire re
corders to spy on union, political
and grand jury proceedings and
hearing him plead, "I can't re
call." Chairman John L. McClellan
(D-Ark.) said putting more ques
tions to Hoffa would be a
"waste" of time."
The hearing, he said, "has pro
ceeded to the point where the
witness has no memory."
McClellan did not announce
when Hoffa would be recalled.
List of Conflicts
In dismissing Hoffa from the
witness stand, the committee
made public a 48-count list of
"conflicts of interest and ques
tionable actions", by the team
sters heir apparent,
Hoffa - admitted he bought
about four minifons-miniature
recorders but could not re
call if they were ever used.
Earlier Hoffa promised to
clean up New York's racket-ridden
phony locals if he is elected
president of the Teamsters Un
ion. Hoffa, now teamsters vice
president and front running can
didate for the top post, told the
Senate Rackets committee that
retiring President Dave Beck
made the decision to charter the
bogus, memberless union locals
in New York.
Conspired With Dio
The committee has charged
that Hoffa conspired with rack
eteer Johnny Dio to set up the
locals in a move to give Hoffa
control of all teamsters in the
big city. Hoffa was then and still
is czar of teamsters in the Mid
west. .
Committee counsel Robert F.
Kennedy shouted at Hoffa early
in today's session, "You were the
one" who recommended that the
phony locals be chartered. But
Hoffa insisted "the decision was
made by President Beck."
Hoffa, almost certain choice
to succeed Beck next month at
the union's convention, then told
Senate investigators that he
would "absolutely" run a good
union if he is elected.
Questioned about his dealings
with Dio and others with long
criminal records, Hoffa assert
ed that as president he would
"deal with individuals who will
not bring any harm to the labor
movement."
City Planners Meet,
Announce A Hearing
The city planning commission
met briefly last night -to call a
hearing Tuesday, Sept. 3 at 5
p.m. in the council chambers.
At that time a petition will
be discussed on permitting con
struction of a filling station in
Rogue Valley heights.
Six Senators Propose
Washington (IPI Six Pa
cific Northwest senators today
proposed a sweeping revision of
the federal power act torevent
government licensing of "in-j
ferior" private dam projects
without congressional approval.
The move was a new slap at
the Federal Power commission's
authorization of the controver
sial Idaho Power company dams
ir. the Hells Canyon reach of the
Snake river on the Idaho-Oregon
border.
Democratic Sens. Warren G.
Magnuson (Wash.'. Henry M.
Jackson (Wash.), Frank Church
(Idaho), Mike Mansfield (Mont.),
James E. Murray (Mont.) and
Richard L. Neuberger (Ore.)
joined in the proposal, the latest
move in the public vs. private
power controversy.
The senators all are strong
33nd Year
M
EDF0RD
United Press Pull Leased Wire
22 Pages
Syrian President
Says Statement by
Ike 'Regrettable'
Kuwatly in Egypt
For Talks on Future
By WALTER LOGAN
United Press Correspondent
President Shukr? El Kuwatly
of Syria said today President
Eisenhower's statement on Syria
was "regrettable" and that the
West, particularly the United
States "should leave us alone."
Kuwatly made the statement
in an interview in the inde
pendent Cairo newspaper Al
Ahram as he prepared to join
Egyptian president Gamal Ab
del Nasser in talkes today in
Alexandria, Egypt, on Syria's
future.
Kuwatly joined acting Syrian
Defense Minister Khalid El Azm
in denying that Syria was Communist-dominated
and renewed
charges, of an "American plot"
to overthrow the Syrian govern
ment. Kuwatly's statement blasting
Eisenhower's contention that
the Soviet Union's ultimate aim
was to control Syria highlighted
a series of Middle East develop
ments in cludiflg:
Report From Cairo
Reports in Cairo that Saudi
Arabian Ambassador Sheikh
Ibrahim Suleiman Ibn Okeil
might Join Nasser and Kuwatly
for talks on the Syrian crisis.
A meeting in Istanbul today
of King Hussein of Jordan with
King Feisal of Iraq and Turk
ish Premier Aelnan Menderes.
Hussein flew in Istanbul Thurs
day for the conference on Syria.
-A charge today by Moscow
ffadicr that -the United States
used "Machiavellian methods"
in Syria in an effort to over
throw the government and that
Syria's only fault was rejecting
the Eisenhower Doctrine.
A new flareup in border
fighting between Israel and
Jordan. A Jordan military
spokesman said three Isaraelis
fwere killed in a day-long skir
mish Thursday when an Israeli
patrol penetrated Jordanian ter
ritory. Report in the London Daily
Express from Damascus that
"Russian volunteers are now
coming into Syria by sea and air
in the thousands" and disap
pearing into military training
camp and secret jet air bases.
Wheat Men Told
Of Bank Program
Wheat farmers in Jackson
county were notified this week
of the acreage reserve program
of the soil bank program for
the 1958 crop year, according
to Harry E. Martin of the Med
ford office of the commodity
stabilization service of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
County wheat growers plan
ning to take advantage of the
program should fill out the
crop information requested in
the application sent from the
local office.
The application, will be ac
cepted at the local office be
tween Aug. 26 and October 4.
New to the soil bank program
this year is the "bast." This is
the average of the amount of
land from which soil bank base
crops were harvested on the
farm in the two years 1956 and
1957. The base for a farm will
be established by the county
ASC committee.
advocates of a "high" federal
Hells Canyon dam which was
turgied down recently by the
House Interior" committee.
The senators introduced a bill
which would amend the federal
power act to Drovide a "new
yardstick" to direct the FPC in
licensing dams.
Under the measure, the FPC
would have to obtain "speciffc
congressional authorization to
license inferior projects."
"This provision would have
required the FPC to submit the
Hells Canyon question to Con
gres and to have obtained con
gressional authorization to li
cense the three Idaho Power low
dams," said Magnuson, principal
sponsor of the bill.
He said a revision of the act
is necessary because "the FPC
in reality is an arm of Congress
MEDFORD,
U. Sv Kussiq Test Devices
Reds Resume Tests
On Rejecting New
Suspension Offer
Detonation Was of
'Substantial Size'
Washington HP) Russia re
sumed testing of big nuclear
weaons at its Siberian proving
ground Thursday just as Moscow
Radio was rejecting a compro
mise western offer to suspend
the tests for two years.
A brief bulletin this morning
from the Atomic Energy com
mission hinted that Russia is
testing H-Bombs or megaton-
size weapons. It said the explos
ion was "of substantial size."
Rejects Offer
A Moscow Radio broadcast
Thursday night rejected the new
western offer to suspend the
iests for two years, as Russia
has insisted. Moscow's official
voice repeated Russia's demand
that the suspension of tests not
be linked to over-all disarma
ment terms.
Chairman Lewis L. Strauss of
the AEC said in the announce
ment: "The Soviet Union has re
sumed testing of nuclear weap
ons at its Siberian proving
ground. A detonation of sub
stantial size . took place Aug.
22."
A spokesman for the commis
sion said he could give no
further details. '
' It was the 24th in a series of
U.S. government announcements
on the , detection of Soviet' test
explosions. President . Truman
made the first on Sept. 3, 1949.
The latest was made by
Strauss last April 16, reporting
wha proved to be the final of a
series of five detected explosions
in the spring testing schedule at
Russia's mid-Siberian proving
grounds. .
The tests are understood to
be conducted in a desolate area
north of Pakistan and Afghanis
tan and west of China. ,
The western powers have
made clear that they also intend
to continue tests in their de-
velopment of nuclear weapons
until an international agreement
is reached and put into effect
to ban testing as part of a
broader first step disarmament
pact.
The speed with which the U.S.
detected and reported the new
Soviet explosion makes it clear
that the test 'device was radio
activity "dirty."
A "clean" H-bomb would not
have shot enough radioactive
debris into the high atmosphere
to make detection as speedy and
certain as it appears to have
been.
Police Launch Check
On Unconscious Man
Police are investigating pos
sible in jury of Murlie F.
Brown, 46, who was found un
conscious in the alley behind the
Owl club this morning.
Medford Ambulance service
was called and he was taken to
the Rogue Valley hospital where
his condition is described ' as
fair. According to hospital re
ports he had recovered con
sciousness by noon but still had
"lapse of memory spells." He
suffered minor bead lacerations,
police said.
Brown lives at 1027 North
Central ave.
Power Act Revision
and was intended to function as
such."
The senators also said their
amendment would require' the
FPC to consider flood control,
water storage, irrigation, recrea
tion, navigation and other bene
fits in issuing a license. They
claimed this was not done in the
Idaho Power case.
Jackson said "not enough
emphasis is provided in the pre
sent law for consideration of a
dam's contribution to over-all
river basin development." He
added, "neither has the FPC
given sufficient consideration to
studies by administrative
agencies such as the Bureau of
Reclamation and the Corps of
Army Engineers."
. Magnuson said water storage
is a "vital factor" to consider in
granting FPC licenses because
OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST
"Congress Just Isn't Giving Us
Much Leadership"
V iVV i ni r
l-,iljaT-i f ,- . '
Defense Witness on
Stand in Libel Trial
Hollywood (IF) Confidential
magazine's defense counsel
called a surprise witness to
court today to attempt to pin
down the date that the magazine
contends Irish - born Maureen
O'Kaja, jcomaoce.d. aJiyLatjrvlovr.
er" in a Hollywood theater.
Michael Patrick Casey, 28,
former assistant manager of the
theater, came to court under
subpoena and told reporters he
recalled that Miss O'Hara "or
her identical twin" was in the
theater with a boy friend some
time between Feb. 8 and April
14, 1954.
Previous testimony by defense
witness James Craig, a former
usher, had put the red-haired ac
tress in the arms of a Latin in
Heroism Evidence
Seen at Crash Site
Bend (IPI Search parties
reaching here Thursday from
the Cascades where wreckage of
a plane that crashed in M56 was
found Sunday reported grim
evidence of heroism at the site,
of the crash which cost the lives
of two Oregon men.
-A skeleton ' identified as that
of Dr. Ralph Johnston of Leba
non was found not far from the
spot where his light plane lay
crumpled among fir trees.
No trace of the other man,
Hartwick Hanson, Salem, has
been found.
Searchers said it was evident
that Hanson must have' stayed
by his companion's side until
death came. Johnston, it ap
peared, suffered severe injuries
in the. plane crash and Han;,on
apparently stayed beside his
side to comfort the man until
death came. : -
It is now presumed that Han
son met death himself wander
ing around in the dense Cascade
wilderness searching for a way
to get out. . ..
The two men were en route to
Minneapolis to join their, wives
who were visiting relatives.
"storage can firm up power pro
duction at downstream dams."
The senator said the FPC "failed
completely" to take storage into
account' when it' granted the
Idaho Power licenses. ;
Magnuson said ' storage po
tential "throws an egtirely dif
ferent. light on any project under
study by the FPC."
The senators also proposed
that the federal power act be re-
vised so the FPC would be re
quired to use federal interest
rates in estimating costs of fed
eral projects and private fi
nancing rates in projecting costs
of private dams.
"By . assuming identical fi
nancial costs; as in the Hells
Canyon case, the" FPC distorts
cost comparisons between pri
vate . and federal dams," : they
said.
TRIBUNE
23, 1957
a back row seat some time in
November, 1953.
Testimony Challenged
That testimony promptly was
challenged out of court by Miss
O'Hara who, produced her pass
port -to-prove- she-was in -Europe
making a move until January,
1954.
Casey told reporters "I don't
remember the exact date, but it
was some time between those
two dates' during which I was
employed at the theater." ;
Casey now is a Hollywood di
rector of television commercials
and Craig is a free lance TV pro
ducer in London.
The first witness to take the
stand in the criminal libel trial
of- Confidential this morning
was novelist William Bradford
Huie, author of "The Revolt of
Mamie Stover." He was called
by the defense in an attempt to
pin down what is and is not ob
scenity. Besides criminal libel, Confi
dential and its sister publica
tion, Whisper, and their agents
are charged with conspiracy to
print obscenity.
Fatality Driver
Appears In Court
Mrs. ' Eunice Fisher, 73, of
Stockton, Calif., appeared in dis
trict court Thursday afternoon
on a charge of negligent homi
cide. Attorney H. B. Collins was
appointed by the court to repre
sent her and bail was set at $1,
500. Mrs. Fisher, driver of a car
that struck and fatally injured
James Alfred McKitrick, 84, of
819 North Central ave.; apart
ment 3, was released on her own
recognizance and was scheduled
to be arraigned in district court
today at 1:30 p.m. '
McKitrick was killed about
8:50 a.m. Thursday while walk
ing east on Main st. across the
south intersection of Fir st.
Mrs. Fisher has been staying
at the home of Edward Zander,
Central Point.
Teen-Agers Own-Up
To Break-In Series
Two Butte Falls boys, ages 13
and 15, admitted to sheriff's dep
uties Thursday a series of break
ins during the last month.
The admitted break-ins includ
ing several reported at Medford
Corporation property in ' Butte
Falls, and Scotties cafe, also ad
mitted were the Iheft of a bi
cycle from Medferd High school
grounds, the breaking of win
dows in cabins, damaging of
spark plugs in a tractor, cutting
of two small fruit trees and the
knocking of fruit from .several
trees all at Bear Creek orchards,
taking a speaker from Starlite
Drive-in theatre, and the theft
of gasoline from various Butte
Falls businesses during the past
year.
The youths were released to
their parents pending investiga
tion by juvenile department.
Price 10
United Press Full Leased Win
No. 133
'Doppler' Fired
1,500 Feet Above
Ground in Nevada
AEC Says Shot Will
Have Little Fallout
o
Angel's Peak, Nev. (IB Sci
entists won their battle against
the weather and unexpected me
chanical problems today by fir
ing the 13th nuclear device of
the 1957 test series from a plas
tic balloon 1,500 feet above the
Nevada Proving Grounds.
The device, .given the code
name "Doppler," was set off by
a mechanical timer at 5:30 a.m.
(p.d.t.). It unleashed a loud
"boom" and power equal to
about 10,000 tons of TNT.
Thunderstorms and a leaky
balloon had forced postponement
of the shot since Monday. But
perfect weather conditions pre
vailed durfhg the last 24 hours
and the Atomic Energy commis
sion ordered the launching in
the pre-dawn hours of its now
"leak proof" balloon designed
to carry "Doppler."
Eight experiments were re
corded on the sequence time.
About 30 military planes took
part in support missions minutes
after the familiar mushroom
cloud resulting from the earth
quaking blast zoomed skyward.
An orange glow appeared for
nearly 40 seconds following the
blast. The mushroom cloud rose
to 20,000 feet but its long fin
gered stem . didn't reach . the
ground.
Some 500 troops witnessed the
blast 'fi'orn "trenches "3,500 "yards
from ground zero. The test was
closed for observation by the
press at Newsnob.
No fires were started from the
explosion. The flash was seen
in Los Angeles and appeared as
"bright white" in Salt Lake
City. Early risers in Las Vegas
and Reno also got a good glimpse
of the flash.
The AEC predicted that there
would be "little or no", fallout
from the shot. The drif ing mush
room cloud seemed to partly dis
appear in a cloud formation.
, Scientists breathed a sigh of
relief with the detonation of the
device. Two days ago the bal
loon developed a leak and its en
tire supply of helium escaped.
The AEC fixed the leak but had
to wait another 24 hours for an
other shipment of helium.
An AEC spokesman said he
believed there would be no fall
out because the fireball didn't
touch the ground. The atomic
caused cloud was 10 miles east
of ground zero 15 minutes after
the detonation. 1
Scientists feared earlier in the
week that the weather would
give them trouble with shot No.
13. More than two inches of rain
fell over the test site in two
days.
BLM Reports Major
Range Fires Out
Portland (IPI The bureau
of land management office here
today reported all major range
and forest fires in the state
under control. But it warned that
fire hazards remained at critical
ly high levels.
John Hunt, fire control officer
for the BLM, said lack of rain
fall and dangerously low humid
ity readings combined to create
an explosive condition in near
ly all the state's forest lands and
the dusty rangelands of eastern
Oregon.
The hot spell spread also to
the normally cool Oregon coast
where curjents of warm water
made surf bathing ideal and
fishermen were making tuna
catches close to shore. Water
temperatures along the entire
west- coast were reported . the
warmest in years.
Weather
FORECAST: Fair throurh
Siturdav and Sunday except for
possibility of afternoon thunder
tnrmc over higher mountains.
Low tonifht Hirh Saturday
ss. Hirh Sunday near 90. '
TEMPERATURE
Highest Yesterdav - 5
Lowest this Mornlnf M
Our Skies Tonight
sunrise
5:27 a.m.
Sunset
7:01 p.m.
Tbe moon risinr Saturday.
1:35 a.m.. travels on an orbit
iround the Earth at an average
distance of 238,857 miles. At
V'tw Moon (Aug. 25) It will
oe on that part of Its path
that lies between the Earth and
he Sun.
Legislature Will
Consider Relief
Because of Surplus
Estimate $70 Million
Left Next June
Salem (in Gov. Robert
'D. Holmes will call a special ses
sion of the Legislature Oct. 28
to provide 17 million dollars of
property tax and income relief
during 1957 and 1958, and 22
million dollars per biennium of
tax relief thereafter.
The governor said he was
basing his call for a special ses
sion on an estimate of the State
Corrallix IIP Stale Rap.
Wayne Giesy (R - Monroa)
charged today that Gov. Rob
ert Holmes' proposed tax cut
plan for ihe special satsion of
tha Legislature was "another
premeditated political man
euver." Giesy, a memberi of tha
Legislative Tax Interim com
mittee and House Tax commit
tee, blamed tha governor for
"unrealistic" lax surplus asi
mate that was presented to
ihe Legislature while it was
in session this spring.
Ha alleged that the Govern
or "compelled" ihe Slate Tax
commission to issue a low
asiimata as' part of tha so
called political maneuver.
Tax commission that Oregon
will have a 70 million dollar sur
plus by June 30, 1958.
Last previous estimate of state
surplus was 48.6 million dollars
at the end of the biennium.
"It is now apparent that such
a surplus win be much Digger
than heretofore has been anti
cipated,", the governor said. He
said his information, was based
on a detailed study by the Tax
commission and the department
of finance.
First Since 1935
The last special session of the
Legislature was in 1935. Two
special sessions were ' held in
1933 to deal with prohibition and
the economic problems of the de
pression. There have- been a total of
nine special sessions, the first in '
1865. . . ....
The governor said he had talk
ed with various state leaders be
fore making his special session
call. . ' .
The governor said the leaders
had agreed the state could safely
provide five million dollars an
nual property tax relief through
an increase in basic school sup
port by $10 per census child and
that six million dollars - annual
income tax relief also could be
provided.
The governor said that inac
curate estimates by the previous
Tax commisison were respon
sible for the income tax rates
adopted by the last Legislature.
False Estimate ' Cited
"On the basic of this false esti
mate on the economy, the Legis
lature prepared its tax pro
gram," the governor said. "Upon
adjournment in May, the Legis
lature concluded that an esti
mated 37 million dollar surplus
and the revenue anticipated
would meet a budget of 272 mil
lion dollars and leave a surplus
on June 30, 1959, of some nine
million . dollars," the governor
continued.
Gov. Holmes said he asked
the reorganized Tax commission
under Chairman , S. W. John
Horn, and Director of Finance
John Richardson to find the
true" picture.
"Apparently, the new analysis
of Oregon's economy indicates
no lessening of the surplus by
the end of the biennium. Such
situation indicates that sub
stantial relief to Oregon prop
erty and income taxpayers
should be provided immediate
ly," the governor stated. .
Plans for the special meeting '
were apparently okayed here
Thursday by Senate President
Boyd Overhulse, House Speaker
Pat Dooley, Ways and Means
Chairman Alfred Corbett, for
mer representative Robert Stew
ard, House Tax Committee
Chairman Clarence Barton, Sen
ate Tax Committee Chairman ,
Horn of the Tax commission, and
Walter Pearson. Chairman S. W
Finance Department Director
Richardson.
Automobile Accident
Injures Local Youth9
A 17-year-old youth was in
jured during a one-car accident
last night on the Foothills' rd.
when a car rolled over, state
police reported.
John Harvey, 17, 1917 Ore
gon ave. was taken to . the
Sacred Heart hospital where he
was reported In good condition
this morning.
The driver, Dale Cuwley, 18,
517 Bessie st, was reported un
injured. State police cited him
for violation of the basic rule.
The car was reported, dam
aged beyond repair.