They'll Do It Every
two op 'em Amd rr -waV tSp V
' ihcn wuk MUKb WIDGET SMOI7T- VI
MOODS JUMP ME-I iZ7 ORDER COOK T S V
OF6CDSCOrU1S"AKJ- SIXTONI WMOTOOKMIM ) mEV, MILDEIV.A
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A6TO JK-1SU-y MASU' POTATOES ) IjACK O'BRIEN .' M
rv at me- v & " krTrrnPiS.
Sf1 '' 'lltfujvii Explaining the
V'k -- "i TTT V-'i r4fe55M BUMPS AND BCUIaES
Ifrl 9 R ,, H:M r-crCTd TO TWE OFFICE
rV-vU- ttffnr NOMBELIEVEI3S
kJr vti chuck?10
Classic Wilh Dash
9016
SIZES
12-20
U you're wise, you'll give
this swinging, 8-gore casual a
leading role in your 1963
plans! A classic with dash
it has smart, casy-sew tucks.
Printed Pattern 9016: Miss
es' Sizes 12. 14, 16, 18, 20.
Size 16 requires 5' 8 yards
35-inch fabric.
FIFTY CENTS In coins for
(his pattern add 10 cents
for each pattern for first-class
mail. Send to Marian Martin,
Mcdford Mail Tribune. Pat
Icrn Dept., 232 West 18th St.,
New York 11. N. Y. Print
plainly NAME, ADDRESS
wilh SIZE and STYLE NUM
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WILL AMERICA
J)
LEARN TOO LATE?
Our lead in science and inven
tion, in business, trade and
world affairs came from learn
ing how. Today higher educa
tion is the main teacher of our
future leader ... in technical
-kill and in world outlook.
Hut higher education is fac
ing a crisis. Colleges are in a
siltieczc. Many have actual
shortages, while in less than
lo years college applicants will
dmihle.
If uc arc to hold our lead,
our higher institutions must
h;tc modern laboratory facili
ties, more classrooms and,
r.liovc all. qualified teachers.
HELP THE COLLEGE
OF YOUR CHOICE NOW!
To l-afn mo'B ebout the college criiil
t to HIGHER EDUCATION, ftoi
36. Ne York Timei S'otion, New York
36. N. Y.
ro'fir rrrt in
i-f A orti lirtw,
mm
I IT
fe1
:t'.fiV--
Time .t.
DAYS
CWAsED
Try and Stop Me
By BENNETT CERF
RESERVISTS HAVE revived the World War pleasantry
about the sergeant who barked, "When I say 'fire' I
want all of you to fire at Will" whereupon one recruit
jumped up and ran like
blazes. "Who was that
man?" demanded the
sergeant. The answer:
"That was Will."
"English in the vernacu
lar," writes Penny Droke,
'can be a pretty painful
thing: sometimes. Once the
great American public gets
hold of a good phrase, it
often worries it to death.
Like this: Time-wise, you
do better on the turnpike,
but traffic-wise, the old
road is better Or 'food-
wise, it's the best place in "'
town, but it's not much atmosphere-wise. Or that other current
favorite: 'He's an actor's actor,' or 'a writer's writer, or what
ever. We recently heard a Skid Row hotel referred to as a 'flop
house's flophouse.' '
.
An extravagant king of Saxony once borrowed every cent
that his court jester had put away for a rainy day. "Now,'
sighed the jester, "I understand the meaning of that old adage:
a fool and his money are soon parted!"
1962, by Bennett Cerf. Diati ibuted by King Feature! Syndicate
The Medical
tf, V
Diet For Mentally
Retarded Child
I am always sorry when I
receive a flood of letters
which show me that 1 have
too greatly
raised the
hopes of many
unhappy
mothers. Evi
dently when I
recently wrote
about two
very rare di
seases of in
fants dis-
Aiv.rez seascs wnicn
if not quickly recognized and
quickly treated will cause
mental retardation I did not
make it clear enough that a
special diet will save the in
fant's mind only if it is pre
scribed right after the child is
born.
This is why I was sad when
so many mothers wrote to say,
"I have a mentally retarded
child 5 years (or 10 years or
15 years) old; please send me
the diet to cure her." In the
first place, the chances are
great that the child did not
have phenylketonuria or galac
tosemia, and in the second
place, as I said, a diet is of no
value unless it is given in
early infancy.
I am happy to say that to
day, all good children s spe
cialists are testing every in
fant as soon as it is born to see
if it has any one of the few di
seases for which there is a
treatment available.
1 am sorry to say that in
many cases, when a child's lit
tle brain is born perhaps
poorly developed, and later
does not grow well, there is
little we physicians can do. As
yet wc have no medicine that
will cause a detective or under-developed
organ in the
body, like the brain, lung,
pancreas or kidney, to grow
or to develop normally. The
inability to do this often dis
tresses us.
There is one type of retard
ed child who can be helped
with a drug. He lacks enough
thyroid hormone, and can be
greatly helped if given thyroid
substance early in his life.
These children can often be
recognized at a glance.
Excesi ol Calcium in Blood
Quite a few people write
wanting to know why they
have an excess of calcium in
their blood. Perhaps they also
have some stones in their kid
neys. If I were to develop
stones in my kidneys, the first
thing I would do would be to
get measurements made of
the amount of calcium and
phosphorus in my blood. Es
pecially if the amounts of
1
By Jimmy Hatlo
ME STAVED OUT OC WORK THREE
TMfc MICKjET MUST V El
HIM OUTA TOWN
LAST TIME UE
SAID WE uOT
WIS POCKET
PICKED.' ME
COULDN'T TELL
MIS OLD LADV
IT WAS STUD rl
POKER.'
7,1
Roundup
r.merltui ci
omulunt In Medicine
Mavn Clinic
Enierltui Professor of Medicine
Mavo clinic
(Register and Tribune Syndicate,
1962)
these substances were found
to be abnormal, I would have
the measurements checked a
few times, and then if no
doubt remained about the ab
normality, I would want to
talk to an expert on diseases
of the parathyroid glands.
There are normally four of
these tiny glands bodies as
big as large grains of rice
which lie behind the thyroid
gland (just below the Adam's
apple in the front of the neck).
Sometimes these parathyroid
glands function too poorly and
sometimes they function too
actively. In both cases there
can be a number of distressing
symptoms.
Some persons suffer from
loo little parathyroid function;
this usually follows accidental
removal of the parathyroid
glands during an operation for
removal of a goiter. What hap
pens is that the level of cal
cium in the blood falls very
low. As a result, the muscles
and nerves become very irrit
able and tend to go into
cramp-like contractions. The
patient often becomes de
pressed, irritable, anxious and
even mentally disturbed. The
symptoms may be so mild and
vague that it is difficult to
guess what they arc due to.
These persons often become
weak and tired and complain
ing of palpitations, with numb
ness and tingling in their
hands or feet.
More commonly, one sees
people who arc suffering
from excessive activity of the
parathyroid glands. They tend
to have too much calcium in
their blood. There are a num
ber of forms of this disease in
which there are different
symptoms; sometimes there
arc mild convulsions, some
times there are peculiar cystic
(hole-making) changes in the
bones, which can be seen in
x-ray films.
Unfortunately, because the
disease is rare, we doctors
sometimes do not quickly
think of it; wc do not look for
signs of it, and so we common
ly fail to make the diagnosis.
To obtain a copy of Dr. Al
varez' booklet, "Thyroid
Troubles and Goiters," send
25 cents and a stamped, self
addressed envelope to Dr.
Walter C. Alvarez, Dept.
MMT. The Register and Trib
une Syndicate, Box 957, Des
Moines 4, Iowa.
Are Substitutes For
Teble Salt Safe?
People keep asking me if
the common substitutes for
table salt are safe to use. Ac
cording to Dr. Ogdcn C. John
son, writing in the Journal of
MEDFORD
mJ
REASONING BEHIND TWO-STAGE TAX CUTS
"If a patient is seriously ill and a major operation is called
for, you don't fiddle around. It's an emergency, you rush
him to the hospital and you operate at once.
"But if the patient's trouble is that he is just not as well
as he could be with an operation he can play nine holes
of slow golf, but not a normal 18 in normal time then
you schedule the proper operation at the best time for him.
To lessen the shock to his system, you also consider doing
what's necessary in stages over, say, a cou.jle of years."
Thus, a high Treasury official explains the reasoning be
hind the increasingly firm administration decision that Presi
dent Kennedy should submit to Congress in January a sub
stantial across-the-board tax reduction to take effect in two
steps the first big cut in 1963, the second smaller reduc
tion in 1964.
The "patient" is the U.S. economy, of course. Our econ
omy is not seriously ill. In fact, since the Cuban showdown
and the Chinese drive into India, both business and the stock
market have shown signs of perking up a bit.
But the U.S. economy is not what it should or could be.
and this is lh heart of the matter. Our unemployment
rate is stickily high, there is widespread idle capacity in
industry, our rate of growth it limply not lufficienl to take
ud the slack in manpower or machinery.
What the economy needs
to par, and there is remarkable unanimity among informed
observers that the operation needed is substantial tax reduc
tion for individuals and for corporations in order to give
consumers additional spending power, to increase demand
for goods and to spur industry into investing many more
bill ons in modernization and
The situation, though, is
danger that a single, major operation would be too great a
shock. The logic, then, is for tax cuts in two stages, in 1963
and in 1964.
This is the reasoning in simplest terms. While final de
cisions are still to be made, it appears more and more prob
able that this is the tax package and timing that Kennedy
will submit to Congress.
With the federal budget deficit for the current year to
end next July already estimated at close to S8 billion and
with still another deficit shaping up for the fiscal year 1964,
how Congress will respond to a Presidential request for multi-billion
dollar tax slashes is highly questionable.
Resistance to cutting taxes and swelling the deficit to an
all-time high for peacetime is certain to be considerable. But
guessing what Congress will do at this early date is futile.
The key point is that the administration is wrapping up
n narkace of r-rcat and permanent tax reduction and reform
and it s getting set to ngni nam lor uie pacnasc in una imi
Congress.
Just as the prime legislative target of the Kennedy admin
istration in 1962 was the revolutionary Trade Expansion act.
so the prime legislative target of the administration in 1963
is to be deep, broad tax reduction ano overnaui oi our ousu
lete tax structure.
The administration won ill battle for the most sweep
ing tariff reduction powers ever given to a U.S. president
this past session because it fought with every weapon at
its command. Months before the trade act was even intro
duced, supporters of the bill were fanning out through the
country to gain approval of key industrialists and labor
leaders as well as lawmakers. Some of the concessions
made during the light were so obviously designed to win
votes they were embarrassing.
Yet, in the end the administration won hands down.
The same strategy is being readied for the tax bill. On
tii siiMrv mipsiinn of closing of tax loopholes, for instance,
nfiirials sav that every "reform" proposal will be measured
acainst one yardstick: Will
economy's growth? Only if the answer is yes, will the reform
be pushed. "The biggest reform of our tax structure would
he reduction of the tax rates themselves," is the significant
comment of one policy-maker. "This is the reform we arc
after." . .
What Congress will do is an unknown. What the Admin
istration will do barring a world crisis is known. It will
fight for a historic cut in taxes and pcrmament revision of
our tax structure.
Applicants for
Peace Corps Have
Variety of
Washington- UiPU -A kindly
person listed as a reference
by a youth trying to get into
the Peace Corps reported
helpfully that "even police
patrolmen that have arrested
him in past years stated they
liked him."
This showed up in the pro
cess of checking the nearly
50,000 applications the Peace,
Corps has handled in the past
18 months. Officials said to
day its hard to tell who's best
at torpedoing applications -the
applicant or his refer
ences. One applicant, asked to list
his primary skills, wrote re
gretfully "I don't remember."
Another, arriving at a ques
tion asking what he hoped to
accomplish In the Peace
Corps, summed it up in a nut
shell: "Peace."
One youth described liiin
sclf as a "jack of all trades,"
and added plaintively "I wish
I could be the master of one."
One said his occupation
was "connector of steel
girdles," and another had ex
perienced "gorilla warfare.'
The references ran the
gamut from malice to bumb
ling helpfulness.
Manpower Training
Checks Sent Out
Salem - 'LPH - The Oregon
Employment Department said
today it has sent out the tirst
checks to persons enrolled in
two programs under the 19(12
manpower development and
training act
The checks went to those
enrolled in a program to train
formal waiters in Portland,
and to a group of women
learning to be electronics as
semblers in Grants Pa
The government subsidizes
the trainees during the period
of training.
the A M.A., they appear lo be
fafe. They arc made of fairly
simple chemicals.
MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD.
Your Money's
Worth
By SYLVIA PORTER
Copyright, Hill Syndicate, Inc.
is an "operation" to get it up
expansion ot u.a. pianis.
not critical and there is some
the reform help accelerate our
Replies
One applicant was describ
ed as "making good strides to
ward developing from a shy,
self-conscious girl into a per
servcring, salf-confidcnt lad."
Another said the person In
question "is Catholic, but tol
erates an occasional Baptist."
One hopeful got this glow
ing report: "I have seen licr
react favorably when her
hand was smashed in a car
door."
One reference reported
darkly that the applicant
"hasn't been arrested yet."
British Half-Penny
Said On Way Out
London - UIPU - The British
half penny, like the farthing,
may be dying out.
John James, deputy master
of the royal mint, reported
today that the mint made no
half-pennies last year for the
first time since 1869.
The half-penny, pronounced
"havpny," if worth about one-
half of a U S. cent, although
it looks much grander than
that. It is a copper coin some
what bigger than an American
quarter and, with the tin
wicldly penny, is responsible
for wearing most of the holes
in British pockets.
"II is fairly certain,"
James' annual report said,
"that the useful life of the
half penny is nenring its end."
If so, it will follow into
oblivion the farthing, which
was worth only one-quarter ot
a penny.
TRADE REVIEW ENDS !
Moscow -iIPIj- Canadian and
Soviet officials have conclud- ;
ed a trade review and signed
a protocol aimed at promoting
economic relations between
the two countries, the official 1
Soviet news agency Tass said
i Monday, it said both nations
i "exchanged opinions" on ex-
, lending their current trade
! pact, scheduled to expire next
April. No other retails were j
I given. '
OREGON
The Family Council
Kdltor't nnte: Tha Family Council d 1 1 1 1 1 of a )udc.
pMrhutrl.t, three clergymen, three editori and a women's editor,
tvarh arllrlr U a nummary of a family disagreement nreiriilrd to the
Council. The Couni-H dealt with problem, major and minor,
encountered br guidance coumelora and torlal workeri, tdlted by
by Mrs. Alma Utnny (Copyright br fieaer-4 Features Corp.)
Mrs. T. P I pine for the
Great Outdoors, yet he never
takes me on his camping
trips.
Mr. T. P My camping
trips are usually part of busi
ness trips and no women are
along.
Mrs. T. P. I'm a woman
of 50 and up to the time of
my marrige last year, 1 neia
a responsible position as cafe
teria manager and cook in
the school system of New
Mexico. While visiting my
brother in California, I met
Tom. We correspondend for
several months and were mar
ried last Thanksgiving.
Maybe his disregard of my
tastes comes from not know
ing me well enough. I can't
believe it's because he doesn't
care. But he not only moved
into a city apartment, even
though I've lived on farms all
my life, he also leaves me
behind during his frequent
trips, into the woods and
mountains.
I hunger for the wide open
outdoor life. I used to get my
fill of it. Now I'm starved for
a spell of fishing and camp
ing. Also, I miss the compan
ionship of my three sons and
seven grandchildren, especial
ly since I get so little of
Tom's.
Mr. T. P. I'm in the lum
ber business and my camping
trips aren't pleasure jaunts.
They're business. Nobody
brings a wife along. We ex
plore limber forests, visit
mills and work out deals.
Rcgina would be completely
out of place. I'm sorry she
takes this the wrong way.
This is the only fault I have
to find with her. She's too
sensitive, never seems to un
derstand my position. The
other day when I was packing
to go, I happened to say,
"Well, I won't see your smil
ing face across the table for
a few days." She began to cry
and accused me of being tired
of her.
I have very little real rec
reation. When I do, I still like
some of it with my old pals,
and I save some for Rcgina,
loo. But she's not working
now and she's perfectly free
to get out in the country by
herself whenever she wishes.
Tha Council: Home, home
on the range, and the discour
aging word for Mrs. P. is gas
range. That's not the range a
free-roaming soul Jike she
wanls to be tethered to.
How dense can a man be?
Here he's plucked a woman
from her accustomed milieu,
moved her hundreds of miles
from her family and friends,
isolated her from the familiar
haunts and activities, and
then expects her to fill In the
blanks by sitting around wail
ing for him or wandering out
into new byways and trails
all alone.
He, on the other hand, goes
along In exactly the same sort
of life he led before marriage,
except that now he has a good
cook on steady contract and
a female companion when he
wants one, which doesn't seem
lo be very often.
Nevertheless, there's still
romance and music in the air
for this pair whose prime-of-lifc
marriage occurred rather
suddenly. Evidently they
knew neither each other nor
the nature of marriage very
well.
The missing ingredient here
is compromise. How? By do
ing the considerate thing by
each other, even though it's
not llie comfortable, conveni
ent thing. To Mr. P. we say,
this lady married you to en
rich her life, not impoverish
it and we're not talking of
cash. Surely you can tear
yourself awav from business
plus those "old pals" more
often and take Rcgina out to
the "wild and woolly" acres
she loves and misses.
But to Mrs. P. wc say
there's nothing unnatural or
insulting about a husband en
joying some solo recreation
nor a wife, too, for that mat
ter. Instead of moping around
and feeling so sorry for your
WILL BUY
SMALL FIR LOGS
6" & LARGER DIAMETERS
Especially Interested in Salvaging
Timber Blown Down by
Recent Storm
For More Information
Phone or See
CHENEY FOREST PRODUCTS
Phone 664-1271 Central Point
self, sign up at the nearest
V or community house and
attach yourself to a like-minded
group, be it hikers, hostel
ers, or birdwatchers. It isn't
fair to leave the entire burden
of tilling your time to Tom.
With each reaching out to
meet the other's needs more
than they have. Mrs. P. won't
object to all of Mr. P's lone
expeditions and he won't mind
her occassional absences from
the "range." Some of them
will be spent together.
Peyton Slaying
Case Two Years Old
Portland it'Pli Two years
ago today, a Portland lovers'
lane yielded a brutal dis
covery. The body of a wcll likcd
young student, Larry Ralph
Peyton, of Portland, was
found slabbed and beaten in
his car. There was a bullet
hole in the window. Six
weeks later, the body of his
girl friend, attractive coed
Beverly Ann Allan, 19, of
Port Townscnd, Wash., was
found near the Sunset high
way. What happened to the Port
land State College student
and the visiting Washington
State University sophomore
between the time they left
Peyton's home for an evening
in Portland and the time their
bodies were found remains a
mystery.
County detectives have fol
lowed uncounted leads, sifted
mountains of information, in
a search for clues that might
solve the double slaying.
Similar slayings in other
parts of the country have
been investigated.
But today, two years after
the savage murders, the Peyton-Allan
case remains un
closed and unsolved. '
Jiffy-Knit Hit!
Cozy, cuddly slippers ring
the bell with the barefoot set
especially the reindeer.
Knit a slipper In an eve
ning one flat piece plus bell,
trimmed band. Pattern 7117:
charts; directions, children's
sizes 4 to 12 included.
THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (in
coins) for this pattern add
10 cents for each pattern for
first class mailing. Send to
Alice Brooks, care of Mcd
ford Mail Tribune, Needle
craft Dept., P. O. Box 1B3,
Old Chelsea Station, New
York 11, N. Y. Print plainly
NAME, ADDRESS, PAT
TERN NUMBER.
1063's Biggest Necdlccrafl
Show stars smocked accesso
ries it's our new Necdlc
crafl Catalog! Plus over 200
fresh-to-you designs to knit,
crochet, sew, weave, embroi
der, quilt. Plus free pattern.
Send 25 cents now!
ill
TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 27. 1962
STAR
-By CLAY X.
w Aaitl I
Your Doily
According
1 2. 8 28 3 J
To develop meoie for Weci'vedo,
read words cone ponding to numbers
of your Zodiac birth iign.
F-H-oa 87-88
, iauius
APR. 21
1 Ne
2 Slgrr
Z Pree-l
.11 Trip.
33 Twl
J4 I,
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3 (it ixWd
3 Your
40 Adverti .i
X6i-73- 84-90
b N 3u II
O'ooge
7 0i
8 NtxeM9ry
9 Coy
10 Af rog
1 1 Ui
1? And
ij Mo.e
14 Vo,ie
Jb K.'lflHWlCf
le Duel
17 Dnf,t
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19 tnterta-fl
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30 Aroointmenfi (MlWait
(ijT) Good Adverse
Crippled Children's Clinic
Is Discussed
An Informal discussion of
the crippled children's cere
bral palsey clinic was con
ducted at the noon meeting
of the Jackson County Inter
Agency council recently.
Dr. H. L. Boehnkc present
ed factual data on the clinic
and its operation. He pointed
out that the clinic headquar
ters is located at the Rogue
Valley hospital and the clinic
meets once a month.
He noted that referrals
were made by local doctors
and school nurses and that
reports were prepared on each
child with a copy ot mis re
port, Including recommenda
tions, was sent to the child's
physician.
Mrs. John R. Porto empha
sized the growth of the clinic
since its inception one year
ago. She said a full time
social worker is needed now.
The interest of the commun
ity in this program was of
vital importance, she explain
ed, and added that anyone de-
siring an application should
call her at the Rogue Valley
hospital.
Lindsay M. Vinsel, repre
sentative of the local Mental
Health group, announced the
opening of the rehabilitation
house for mental hospital pa
tients in Portland. He said the
Mental Health association of
Oregon will direct this project
through a rehabilitation house
committee composed of repre
sentatives of the Stale Divis
ion of Vocational rehabilita
tion, the Public Welfare com
mission, Stale Mental hos
pitals and prominent citizens.
First of This Typ
He emphasized that these
groups have been instrument
al In the development of the
project and a major objective
is to demonstrate by the re
habilitation house program
more effective utilization of
slate and voluntary agency
resources. He also noted this
was the first facility of this
type established in the Paci
fic Northwest to test the re
habilitation house concept.
Specific objectives of the
rehabilitation home arc:
1. To confirm and further
demonstrate the effectiveness
of this type of therapeutic in-1
SOBBING
T7
H-0 TRAIN SETS -CARS
LOCOMOTIVES - ACCESSORIES
HUSTLER SET-Loco & 3 car 7.77
LOCOMOTIVES from 3.88
FREIGHT CARS , 88c
1.98 Box Roadbed FREE with $10.00
or Moro Purchase
OPEN MONDAY t FRIDAY - 7 to 9
SIMS
A 13
GAZER'J
POLLAN-
Activity Gvidm
to the Start.
LIBIA
iUT. 2J
OCT. 21
26-42-47-52
61 Dai
SCORPIO
G"'lfnimc'it
OCT. 24
t3 Leiiars
NOV, 22
fi4 TtnmfjhH
J May
Cd Vi.r
67 Model
16-17.21-30 jj
38 51-47 l
SAGITTARIUS
MOV .23 s
MC 22
8-39-43-58Ti
7. H A
74 Ci
7 ?te
77ThaW
7? rtaCht-.jnt
7 Of
fO CKariiabit
r2-A4-79-83iL
CAfRICO'N
CLC 2J
JAN. 20
22.M-49-50
6-71-74
AOUAUUS
82 AJ
fc4 Mmieis
r A r
FST.me
'"'Or a.3iH
MCI1
MAR. 21
Neutral
6-I4-24-377V
141-5648 V.
by Council
tcrvention in the treatment
and rehabilitation of the
mentally ill.
2. To improve and extend
the techniques for the re-or
icntation, social adaptation!
personal and vocational ad
justment of the mentally ill
and contribute to increased
rehabilitation efforts for this
group of disabled persons.
3. To compare "successful"
and "unsuccessful" patients
admitted to the rehabilitation
house in an effort to ascertain
which may guide agencies in
serving residents of state hos
pitals and
4. To help dispel ignoranca
and misunderstanding of men
tal illness In the community
and, specifically, to demon
strate to employers that re
covered mental patients Bra
valuable employees.
Vinsel said that recipients
would be screened through
the three state hospitals.
Brazilian Crash
Takes 26 Lives
Rio Dc Janeiro (UTII Air
force officers said today tha
verified toll of Monday's col-lision-and-crash
of a Brazilian
airliner and a light plane is
26 dead.
Helicopters of the air force'l
search and rescue service be
gan flying bodies out of the
mountain area, about eight
miles from the town of Parai
buna, where the two planes
crashed.
An air force board will con
vene today to try to determine
the cause of the collision.
A spokesman confirmed that
all of the airliner's 18 pas
sengers and five crewmen
were killed in the crash. Three
bodies were found in tha
wreckage of the light plane.
KEEP IT QUIET
Derby, England 'UPD A mo
torist charged with speeding
asked a judge Monday not to
mention the offense on his
driving license. He said he
had applied for a job with the
Royal Society for the Preven
tion of Accidents.
SIMS SAYS:
SAVE ON THIS
9-Foot
PAPER BALL
CHAIN
For Your
TREE
(Rog. 1.25)
49(
Wilh
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2 FOR 88c
limit 4 to Ad
Cycle & Hobby Shop
23 North Fir 772-2472