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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1963)
Obituaries CATHERINE M. GRIFFIN Katherine M. Griffin. 71, of 4079 South Pacific highway, died io a local hospital Sunday. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Perl Funeral home. ALBERT N. SOLISS Albert N. Soliss, who died at Compton, Calif., on Sept. 25, was formerly a resident of southern Oregon. He moved with his parents when quite young to Jackson ville where they lived for some time, later moving to a farm his parents, D. B. Soliss and Margaret S. Soliss, purchased in what was known as the Grif fin Creek area. After complet ing his education, Mr. Soliss was admitted to the bar in Ore gon and opened his first law office in Jacksonville, but later moved to Ontario, Ore. He later returned to California, where he was born, and practiced law until he retired. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Bertha Rose Soliss; a son, A1 bet R. Soliss, a government en gineer in Alaska; and one sister, Mrs. Evelyn Cooper, San Jose. Interment will be in the An geles Abby mausoleum, Comp ton. WILL M. DODGE ASHLAND -Will Marshall Dodge, 80, of 600 Siskiyou blvd., last surviving member of J. P. Dodge and Sons, early Ashland business firm, died Saturday night following a long illness. Mr. Dodge was born Feb. 19, 1883, in Greenville, Iowa, and came to Ashland with his par ents as an infant. The family for many years owned and oper ated J. P. Dodge and Sons Fur niture and Funeral parlors. Mr. Dodge was married in 1909 to Ina Hunt, who died in 1934. In 1935, in Portland, he married Jessie Margaret Seese, who survives. He was a member of the Elks lodge and of the Masonic lodge, AF and AM. both Ashland, the First Methodist church and Ro tary, in which he was a charter member. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 1, at Litwiller's Mt. View chapel with members of the Elks lodge officiating with the Rev. B. J. Holland of the First Presbyte rian church. Interment will be in the Ashland cemetery. MRS. OLIVIA EVANS Funeral services for Mrs. Olivia Evans, Portland, a form er resident of Medford, who died Friday in McMinnville, will be conducted Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the Chapel in the Trees mor tuary, within Siskiyou Memorial park. The Rev. Gordon Dalton of the Glenhaven Bap t i s t church, Portland, will officiate. Interment will follow in Siski you Memorial park. Funeral arrangements are en trusted to Siskiyou Funeral service directors of Chapel in the Trees mortuary. Over-the-Counler Western Stocks By United Press International Bid Aked Bank America 65'i, 68 Boise Cascade 3034 323i Cal Pac Util S5. 27'. Con Freight m' ll'i Cvprus Mines 22 24J. Equitable S&L 33 3S First National Bank ....72 76 Jantzen 23', 25'i Morrison Knudscn 2!'a 31 '3 Mult Kennels 4'n 4"i N W Natural Gas 33, 35s Oreeon Metal 1 l;'n PGE 21". 27, PP&L 26s. J74 US, National Bank 8B'2 92', Tektronix 20', 21 ', West Coast Tel 23', 25 Weyerhaeuser 33s. 35 'j Investment Funds Noon quotations on selected stocks- Fund Bid Asked Bullock 1367 U!) Chemical Fund 11 77 12.79 Colonial Ener .. 12.41 13.56 Eaton Howard Stk 14 10 15 24 Fidelity 16.53 17 87 Fundamental Invst 10.1)3 10.00 Group Sec Avla-Elec 8,67 7.32 Group Sec Com Stk 13 52 14 81) Hamilton HDA 5 04 5 51 Keystone B-3 16.78 18 31 Keystone B-4 10 15 1108 Kevstone K-2 5.31 5 80 Keystone S-l 22 06 24 07 Keystone S-2 13 36 14 58 Kevstone S-3 15 23 16.61 Keystone S-4 4 30 4 70 Mass Inv Growth Stk 8 33 0 10 National Growth .... 8 10 8 85 Stock ... ., 10.18 20 74 TV - Elec . 7 52 R 20 United Accum . 14 03 16 32 Untied Income . 12 58 13 75 United Science .6 98 7 63 Value Line Ins 5.37 5.87 Vanahlc 7.12 7.59 Wellington 14.67 15.07 ENDS TUESDAYI On At 7:30 t 11:30 P.M. SMQ HITI 1A.M.-' ts. .- 4M&ON CUMMWl CCXO tr Dt III Local and Articles Stolen James Hugh Bayne, route 1, box 398E, Cen tral Point, complained to rher iff's deputies Sunday that some articles were taken from his vehicle. They included false teeth, cigarettes and a radio. Deputies said they are still in vestigating. Hospital Patients Convalesc ing at Sacred Heart hospital following surgery is Ralph D. Mason, Star route box 473, Shady Cove. A medical patient there is Frank J. Finchum, Pipp route, box 7, Butte Falls. Kill Rattler Barrv and Bruce ; Holt, 615 Franquette ave., killed Medford, has returned from Se a 46 inch rattlesnake Saturday attle, Wash., where he attended afternoon on Roxy Ann, it was the annual Northwestern Dis reported today. The snake had ! trict meeting of the Mayflower nine rattles and a button, they saia. Driver Arrested Cecil Ralph Welburn, 42, of 2550 Griffin Creek rd., was arrested by Med ford city police Saturday on a charge of driving under the in fluence of intoxicating bever ages. He was lodged in Jackson county jail. Permit Issued The Medford building department has issued a permit to Lee Garrett to re model a residence at 106 Cot tage st. at an estimated cost of $1,900. Brush Burns Patrolmen of the state department of fores- try battled a six-acre grass and , brush fire on land adjacent to j iAuiuwn cemetery in ine Apple gate area on Saturday after noon. Patrolmen said that the blaze began along the road, but that the exact cause had not been determined. Four pumper trucks and a tractor were used at the scene. Jackson Named to Advisory Council SALEM (UPI)- A 25-member advisory council to the Legisla tive Interim Committee on Tech nological Employment has been named by Sen. Don. S. Willner (D-Portland), chairman. Thtrtonn nf tho arlt.icnnr mam. bers are from Portland: Donald ! G. Balmer, George Brown, Thomas C. Donaca. Bishop A, Raymond Grant, John S. Grif fith, E. Shelton Hill, Donald V McCallum, William S. McLen nan. John Parks, Leonard A. Runkle, Mrs. S. N. Stanley, Mon sigiior Thomas J. Tobin, and Allen P. Wheeler. Members from other commun ities include Paul G. Ackerman Canby; Philip N. Bladine, Mc Minnville; George Dewey, Sa lem; Howard E. Hunt, North Bend; Glenn L. Jackson, Med ford; Freeman Schultz, Bend; Charles E. Smith, Springfield; Fred Sohn, Roseburg; R. L. Sundstrom, St. Helens; Howard Vollum, Beaverton; and Dr. Donald A. Watson and Joe L. Williams, Eugene. Willner said the advisory council is composed of leaders from all parts of Oregon's eco nomic life, including industry, labor, agriculture, education and the general public. Three Teen-Agers Anesrea ror i nerrs i Three teen-age Medford boys were taken into custody by city ponce aaiuraay auernoon on a charge of larceny from an j auto. The youngsters, two aged 15 j and one aged 14. were lodged in Jackson county jail on the j advice of juvenile authorities because of inadequate space at the detention home. The boys were arrested after they were observed prowling a I parked car on Bartlett st. be- tween Third and fourth sis.,, according to police reports. 1 ! MAYORS ON TOUR PORTLAND (UPI) A group of 15 Japanese mayors arrived here Sunday to continue a tour in which they are studying various types of city govern ments. GAS TAX NEW YORK (UPI) - The combined averaue of state mt'. federal gasoline taxes is more . . . . : than 10 cents a sallsn. The fed- eral tax was increased three times in me t'.ios, according w : Oil Facts, Pff&s Htf JfceW tAmtle Witk Clteem Potatoes oi the half shell libe the best chefs prepare tke ea sily can be prepare! at ke. Use three large bahisg pt tatMs: one cap oratotl ckos one-kaif cup conirck1 sw cream; salt and pepper tt task; two tablespoons chopped chives; four strips bacon, cooked and crumbled. Bake potatoes at 400 degrees until done. Cut in half length wise. Scoop out center, leaving : skin intact. Mash potatoes un- til fluffy. Fold in remaining in ' gredients and put into potato shells. (This may be done well ahead of time ) Bake at 4no de- 5rem for 20 minutes. Serves six. Personal Switch Overheats City fire men were sent to Rogue Valley hospital about 12:30 a.m. Sun day when an overheated switch was reported. They said there was no damage. Grass Fire Ashland firemen were called out at 7:35 p.m. Sunday to control a grass fire near the old Taylor mill site be low the Southern Pacific rail road tracks. Cause of the fire was not determined. It burned an area about 100 feet square. Returns from Meeting Dave M. Franklin, president, Frank- lin's Transfer and Storage, Warehousmen's a s s o c i ation. Franklin, as district vice presi. dent of the Mayflower associ ation, presided at the meeting, Irrigation Canal To Be Repaired EAGLE POINT Water in the main canal of the Eagle Point irrigation district will be turned off sometime Tuesday evening in preparation for repairs, ac cording to Larry Silvcira, dis trict manager. Silveira explained that, tem porary repairs in a section sev eral hundred feet lone had been made during the summer, but plans are now to gunite the canal in this area Water will be out of the ditch for the balance of the week, it was reported. Freshmen Boost SOC Enrollment ASHLAND Freshmen enter ing Southern Oregon college have substantially boosted the registration figures for the fall term at the college, according to Mrs. Mable Winston, registrar. Figures for registration through Saturday show 1,527 stu dents compared to W364 at this time last year. Of the total 634 are freshmen, up from 509 at this time in 1962. Present figures show 698 women and 829 mcn Man Arraigned for Thett of Timber Bill Gallentine, 38, of 1603 Jasmine ave., was arraigned before U. S. Commissioner Frank J. Van Dyke Saturday af ternoon on a charge of stealing government property. According to the federal com plaint, Gallentine is charged with taking 302 trees contain ing 276.000 board feet from the bureau of land management while logging in the Howard Prairie area. The stumpage value was reported to be $3,518.55. Gallentine's logging operation of windfalls from the Oct. 12 storm was near the BLM access road from Dead Indian rd. to Green Springs highway near Keno. Gallentine, who was arrested by federal agents Saturday, is being held in Jackson county jail with bail set at $1,500. 'Full Disclosure' Law . c,, t..-,j-.. SALEM (UPI) Oregon's relai, installment financing act thc ..(ull disclosure" law - f goes into cf(ect TueSdav, Atty. ,Gen. Robert Y. Thornton re- minded today, , The measure is similar to the law regulating motor vehicle , retail installment contracts. j Thornton said "the full dis- j closure law prohibits hidden I charges and requires listing of the terms and conditions in an ; understandable manner." Portland Livestock PORTLAND lUPIl USDA Cattle 1900 Mixed high good choice steers 25: good 24: standard-good 22. high good-choice heifers near Rfln lb. 24: standard good lR-2l)5n: utility cow. 16 50: standard 18 50:: cutter utilltv 14 15: canncr-cutler 10-14; cutter-utility bulls 17.50-18; good, lew choice Iceder steers 21-22. Calves 300 Good - choice veal ers 26-28, feeders good - choice steers 24-27. those at 27 near 300 lb Hogs 700 Mixed I - 2 grade 1650 . 17. 1-2 grade 177 lb 16; 183 lh is. ' 2 'nd a sow. sso. ! 400 lb 13-14 Sheep 1600 No early sales slaughter lambs ewes utility 4 50- , s "r"'" fartland Produce PORTLAND i UPI i Dairy market; Egg. To retailer. AA extra large 50-54c. AA large 48-52c; A large 4H-4R, AA medium 40-43C; A small 23 - 30r: cartuns 1 3c higher Butter To retailers AA and A prints 67r. cartons 3c higher; 1. prints ntk- Cheese .medium cured! To retailers 46-4Rc: processed Amer ican 5-10 lb. loaf. 43.48c PCTLAND i UPI' Dressed chickens No I grade dressed to retailers: Frvers. whole drawn. 2R-34C lb : cut-up 34-40C lb hens light type, whole drawn 10. 23c lb: light type hens, cut-up 22-20C lb; heavy whole 34-30C lb Doert Optn 7 P.M. "LONGEST DAY" 7:15 Nit.lv MEDFORD 'Cloak and Bv RICHARD II. GROWALD L'nited Press International FRANKFURT (UPI) Vc3t " ' ' fVmoiK sdv ' Germany's most famous spy chief, Reinhard Gustav Gehlen, stil is an awesome man of mys tery to most Germans but the legend of his infallibility in the cloak and dagger game has been shaken. The recent trial of two Gehl en aides on charges of being So viet spies has damaged the pres tige of one of Europe's most successful anti-Communist spy masters. His Federal Intelli gence agency once commanded ; GRANGER - To Mr. and st icdaovrd Zi T St.. Mcaiora. sept. iJti.. a girl, m pounds, at Rogue Val-; ley hospital. ! The CIA governs most Allied IMHAUSEN - To Mr. and i intelliEence in West Germany Mrs. I. H., 1490 Thomas rd., d u reaches out in many di Medford. Sept. 29, 1963, a girl, 5 pounds, at Rogue Valley hos- j pital. McVAY - To Mr. and Mrs. Gordon C, 714 Dakota st., Med ford, Sept. 29. 1963, a boy, 8'i pounds, at Rogue Valley hos pital. PHILLIPS - To Mr. and Mrs. James, route 2, box 72C, Cen tral Point, Sept. 29, 1963, a boy, 73'4 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. LENKER To Mr. and Mrs. John, Red Blanket id., post office box 158. Prospect, Sept. 29, 1963, a girl, 74 pounds, at Rogue Valley hospital. LASCRUAIN - To Mr. and Mrs. Arthur, 2870 Springbrook rd., Medford, Sept. 29, 1963, a boy, 54 pounds, at Rogue Val ley hospital. MILNER To Mr. and Mrs. Ted, Kerby, Ore., Sept. 19, 1963, a girl, 54 pounds, at Cave Junction Medical Center. Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity. Fair and warm tonight through Tuesday night. Low tonight near 48. High Tuesday near 90. Western Oregon: Night and morning fog or low clouds along coast and north interior; other wise, partly cloudy, except fair south interior through Tuesday. Lows tonight 45-55 High Tuesday 72 in north to 85 south interior, in 60s along coast. Northern California: Fair to night and Tuesday, except a few thundershowers in south portion nf high Sierras and low clouds and patchy fog near coasl LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mrnn yesler dnv 68' alinve normal 7. Record high this date 02 In 1043. Record low this dale 29 in 1950. PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to midnight 0, Midnight to 10 a.m. 0. Tola! this month .26 in.. .30 in. below normal. Total since Sept. 1 .26 in.. .30 in. below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest vesterday 31 r; . highest this a.m. 83fS.. High 4:00 24 CITV Yester- a.m. nr. day Low Prec. Brookings 60 Grants Pass 79 Howard Prairie 80 Klnmnth Falla 84 MEDFORD 85 Portland 75 Seattle 73 Spokane 82 Yak i ma . 86 Eureka 60 Red Bluff OR Sacramento OR San Francisco 67 Lol Angeles 102 52 45 47 54 r.8 71 4R 45 77 46 48 Phoenix . 102 Denver 80 Chirago 50 Miami Bench 01 fr York .... 65 Washington. DC. 75 1.77 .24 FIVF.-ll.W FORECAST (Through Oct. 5): Wciem orecon-U'eslern Wash Inctnn No precipitation southwest Oregon. Less than normal precip itntion nnrlhtvest Oregon and Western Washington Above nor. mal temoer;ttiircs. Highs mostlv in 70s in we.-te-o Oreenn and nnp-r ROs western Washington. Lows 45 55. Northern California No precip. Itation likelv thrnuch Saturdav. Temoe-atures continuing above normBi iff Warn 6 - Courtesy of Tht MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON' Dagger' Network Is , iinphnllnnppd rosiiect in the ; West German oarliament. Now parliament's three parties are demanding an FIA shakeup. ! The West German Eovcrnment estimates there are 16,000 Com-1 Gaulle tried to use Munich as munist spies in the country, j a base of operations. Since 1946 This, added to the number of ; jfs been Gehlen's home. Western agents and counterspies Gehlen, 61, turned up in Ba here, indicates that about one varia when American armies person in every 2.000 in the ; swept across southern Germany country is an intelligence agent, in 1945. With him were four Western agents are fairly dozen large crates of files of easy to locate. A spook's tour i intelligence reports on the So "spook" is cloak and dagger j viet Union during the war linco for scent of West Ger-: he headed German Army intel- manv could start here in Frank- j jur CIA in Charge U. S. Central Intelligence agency local headquarters are said to be in the "Little Penta- r k bombers spared i which AlUea oomoers spmtu for post war use as U.S. Army hnafinnartprs hprfi. : ,ion.s roar of Frank. furt's famed zoo is a drab brick turn - of - the century building whose occupants specialize in sneaking into the Soviet Union. The building houses the National Alliance of Russian iouaansis . . i i f ! a nervous mil spirited uanu ui ex-Soviet citizens, including Red , Army deserters. It also includes at least one former assassin of the Soviet KGB espionage or ganization who came to kill the NTS chief but defected instead. From the iron-fenced building at 24 Merian strasse pour mil lions of propaganda leaflets which are stuffed into Soviet hands whenever a Russian ship docks at a non-Communist port or wherever a Moscow delega tion arrives in the West. The leaflets are credited with inspir ing 300 Red Army defections during the 1953 East German workers' revolt. But the CIA is more interest ed in the NTS' success in pen etrating Soviet territory. A ta voritc method is said to be put ting agents ashore on East Ger many's Baltic coast and far ther "north into Soviet-seized Es tonia, Latvia and Lithuania, whose populations reportedly do not frown on anti-Communist ac tivity. Six miles outside Frankfurt, in the green foothills of the Tau nus mountains, is another cloak and dagger center, the U.S. Army's Camp King. The military intelligence post serves as the center for inter-, rogating defectors from Com munism. A recent guest in the well - guarded base was Maj. Ryszard Obacz, the Polish air force officer who (lew with his wife and two sons in a Polish j trainer to West Berlin. Phantom Corps Nestled in the post - war glass and steel office buildings of Co logne, Hamburg and Duessel dorf are the unmarked offices of Gehlen's phantom corps of 5. 000 agents whose network shoots 1 out to the Soviet Ural Mountains and to Communist China. But the nerve center is in Munich. Marriage Rate Continues Climb NEW YORK (UPI) - The number of marriages in the United States went ud 1.9 per cent in 1962, the fourth consec utive year to record a rise. The Metropolitan Life Insur ance company said there were about 1,579,000 marriages in the country last year, compared with 1,550.000 in 19K1 and 1,525, 000 in 19(i0. Last night I dreamed he took me to Dinner in the CANDLE ROOM. A Ji 1 1 The Rsvarian caDital has no- liiical intrieue in its blood. Adolf Hitler made his famed beerhall i putsch there. Recently, French f,Hs of President Charles de licence in Russia. Washington put Gehlen back in business in l' v,wy 1u.leu'- a"c,,Le " , his golden rule, . Even though the Soviets, it is now known, penetrated his Gefhlen,on, s,iKht-rVil known facial photograph of him Sometimes he is 20 years old. Sometimes he wears a mustache. He always carries a pistol. His floodlit and armed, guarded house has one sign: "Dangerous Dog." Few persons see Gehlen. But the Communists claim his hands reach into their preserve. They blame his agents for the 1956 Hungarian uprising, among oth er things. Western sources credit Geh len's organization with netting o rTwf'hntslnvalt snv rinp that on- -r -- crated throughout the country. planting an agent in East Ger man Communist leader Walter Ulbricht's cabinet. Gehlen's Rival Gehlen once had a West Ger man rival. The challenger was Dr. Otto John who defected to East Germany in 1954 but re turned later and served a term in a West German prison. John, a hard drinker with a prima donna's temperament, had head ed West Germany's office for the Defense of the Constitution. The office is an FBI-like body handling internal counter-espionage. John early in 1954 flew to Washington to seek dominance over Gehlen. Former CIA direc tor Allen Dulles turned h i m down. The CIA until 1955 kept direct control of FIA activity. Dulles' decision to stick by Geh len apparently nudged John into his double defection. Although espionage headquar ters may operate elsewhere in to instal ilOO. MIS Modern electric appliances and clean electric heat make life easier and more pleasant for thousands of families in this area. Brt many homes - even new ones are not properly wired to meet the demands of modern electric living. ColOrc Electrical League heating and wiring contractors again can pay you for a limited time to install modern wiring and clean electric heat in your home, new or old! WE WILL PAY YOU A $100. BONUS ALLOWANCE if you install a 200-ampcrc service entrance panel and mod ern electric heat (6 kilowatts or more), plus circuits to pro vide for electric range, electric water heater and electric washer and dryer. THIS ALLOWANCE MEANS THAT YOU CAN INSTALL A TRULY MODERN ELECTRIC SERVICE ENTRANCE IN YOUR HOME AT A GREAT SAVING. HOW TO QUALIFY FOR THIS BONUS ALLOWANCE Allowances will be made only on permanent installations (mobile types excluded!, rind this allowance will apply on'v to those who fl) arc customers of COPCO Division, Pacific Power and Light Company, Klamath Falls, Lakcview, and Mturas Districts of Central Division, Pacific Power and Light Company; City of Aihland, and Surprise Valley Electrification Corporation; SPECIAL WIRE-ON-TIME PLAN AVAILABLE: In oddition to the big cosh saving from this special bonus allowance, home-owners and home builders on PP&L lines can make use of the Company-sponsored special Wire-on-Time Plan. Includes both home wiring and electric heat installations. Maximum $1,000.00, no down poymcnt, as little as $10.00 a month, 36 months to pay. For complete dctoili DEALERS Broolti Electric t Plumbincj Co 771-520 Beaxr Electric t Plumbing Co 77J-4S49 Electronic Service 77J.811J Enloe Electric S3S-1S1S Feldmen t Olion Electric 773-7751 Herriion Electric 464.201 Modern Plumbing 6 Sheet Metal 773-S368 Norpac Supply 773-4645 Rogue Electric Service 772-6603 Trowbridge Electric 773-6241 Al Thompion Electric 664-1422 Routine in Germanv. the hornet s nest is , Berlin. In the U. S. sector of West Berlin, behind a long, high red brick wall, is the center of ; the nest. 1 But almost 20.000 spy recruits Like the twin "U. S. Mission" have been less trouble they in Stuttgart, the building in West ! turned themselves in to West Berlin's "Little America" or j German authority. "Golden Ghetto" has a steady j Since four of five West Ger stream of visitors with the i mans have relatives in East crew - cut look of the CIA. The ' Germany, the Communists have men in appearance all could , felt free to force westerners or have played left half at Ohio I refugees from the East into spy- State. I Referring to CIA work, Presi- j dent Kennedy told retiring Allen I Dulles after the Cuban "Bay I ot ngs -mciaeni. iroursucces-igard ses are unheralded, your fail ures trumpeted." The men be hind the red brick wall in West Berlin can point to at least one trumpeted success. Joke on Hrils In 1955, U. S. agents dug a 500-yard tunnel under the East Berlin border. At the Commu nist end of the tunnel they tap ped the telephone and telegraph lines servicing Soviet Army headquarters in Germany. They tapped lines poured out a flood of secret data. Almost a year later the Red Army stumbled onto the tunnel. West Berliners still laugh at the Communists about it and some "spook s j little joke When the amazed and en raged Soviets crept into the tun nel, they found a sign at the point where it passed under the East - West border. The sign told the Russians they were now entering West Berlin. The Berlin Wall presents no difficulties that the Communists cannot overcome for a nickel. It costs only a nickel 20 pfennigs to use the Communist-operated elevated railway running over the wall. At the Eastern side stations are jnck bootcd and armed East German guards and overly - polite func tionaries who, defectors testify, can easily photograph a West ern tourist's passport during the "routine" inspection. There is no barrier to Communist spies at the Western stations. It is only at the airline, auto bahn and train exits to West Germany that Communist agents must trouble to show a forged passport. Allied agents in West Germany are said to have had a bad week when they fail to turn up a few dozen East MODERN WIRING CLEAN ELECTRIC on how lo quolify for this S100 MONDAY. SEPTEMBER West Germany German agents More than 2.000 Germans have been convicted of spying in Wert Germany since the war. ing. Spying is the price the vic- tim pays for no harm coming to kin in the East. This has helped make West Germans re- spying as almost as rou. time as bending an elbow at the neighborhood beer hall. In Frankfurt, members of the United Press International staff about twice weekly see the same black sedan pull up at 3 p.m. in the square below the UPI office windows. One of the two men always in the car gets out, droits a small packet into wastcbasket standing at the nearby bus stop. The pair wait in the car. Soon another car ar rives and the driver steps out plucks out the packet and drives off. The macK sedan men leaves. Told of this, West German po lice made a casual inspection. am WAS SHE AT 15? is headin'voorwav WEDNESDAY :. y "V- ADULTS (2) Applications before November 5, 1963 on residential con struction only (wiring permits must be dated between August 5 and November 5, 1963) (3) hav their heating and wiring thereto installed by authorized OlOre Electrical League contractors. See eligibility rules and qualifications posted by heating or wiring contractors displaying the CalOre Electrical League Emblem ollowonce, coll your wiring or heating PARTICIPATING DhSTRrJTM EltCTRIG MATING rUkWISr The Sloen Co. King Wh n4fc Tilmtn-Booth ChrormlOi! elecfttrMt Weitinghomo Electric Supply W.eljnfl Modern Plumbing ft Sheet Metal Carrier Heat Pump A 11 One officer said: "Ach, it's just Americans," He shrugged and did nothing. As this is written the two cars still rendezvous. METRO-GOLDWYN-HAYER mums A MODERN LOVE STORY! PANAVISION' and METRO COLOR LAST DAYS HEAT controctor. 30. 1963 G