Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 22, 1963, Image 1

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TITO AT L.N linitod Nations Secretary GcnecciKive later addressed the General Assembly,
ral U Thant wclooomes uposlav President lito.(LPl)
left, to UN headquarters. The Yugoslav Chief Ex
Tito Claims Change
En
Outlook
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.
fUPI) Yugoslavia's Marshal
Tito said today the world stands
at an atomic age crossroad
which demands "a radical
change in our outlook onvinter
national relations."
The Yugoslav president cal
led upon the United Nations to
"further elaborate and to codi
fy the principles of coexist
ence." "The Moscow agreement (on
a partial nuclear tost ban) and
the other steps that have recent
ly been taken arc vivid evi
dence of the existing trends to
wards the overcoming of the di
vision which has hitherto split
the world into military and po
litical groupings, Tito said in
state speech to the General
Assembly.
Strong security measures
were enforced to safeguard Tito
whose entourage was plagued
Monday night by incidents that
stemmed from an anti - Tito
demonstration outside the Waldorf-Astoria
Hotel where the
Two-Sfory House Is
Damaged by Blaze
The two-story frame home of ,
the Harold G. Geigle family.
Bellinger rd., near Arnold lane.
was reported a complete loss ,
from fire this morning, accord-
ing to tne stale toresiry aepan-
ment.
The house was nearly half ,
burned by the time the truck ;
arrived about 11:30 o'clock this
morning, it was reported. The
state truck was standing by this
afternoon to protect nearby
buildings. '
KWS(BREFS
ITtMS FROM Jr AROUND TH1 OlOU
ERIIARD TO CONFER WITH KENNEDY
WASHINGTON (LTD New West German Chancellor I-tid-wig
Erhard will confer with President Kennedy in Washington
late next month, the White House announced today.
VESSEL REPORTED STRAFED OFF CI HA
NEW YORK (CPU A (IW-lool American-owned ore rarrirr
was heavily strafed for over
hv Cohan plane. 12 miles olf
it Mas rexrtrd hrre.
tOM.MANUOS SAID LANDED
.MIAMI (UPI) The leader
savs a hanri nl arnica comniaooos nac idiiuru in iund s nuiii
canc-raagcd Oriente Province lo wage ar against Fidel taslro
and his Communist followers.
BOILERMAKERS TO GET W.U.E INCREASE
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Boilermakers In seven western
Hales, Including 4.300 in California, will get a 66-ccnt hourly
wage Increase and fringe benefits under a nrw two-year con
tract, It was announced Monday.
t. S. TO CUT AID TO VIETNAMESE
KAIIpON. South iet Nam (UPI) Thr Initrd Siatrs has
Informed President Ngn Dinh Diem'i government (hat the MHin
itur special forces troops, used in l hp crwUrwn on the
Bym.ii.s.s. nl hr t"' off Irom their M milliM Miaal U. S.
illancp until thry return to rnmhit.
MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1963
ff -V Ami d
a)'
i
1 in
n r...i....r i
Yugoslav leader was slaying. , police and Tito's personal body
Two young Yugoslav refugees ' guard,
worked their wav to Tito's hotel U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stcv-
floor. Earlier five emigre dem-)
onstrators scuffled with three
members of the president s par-
ly, including one man said to
be head of the Yugoslav secret j
Halting of Liquor
Funds To Counties
Being Suggested
PORTLAND iUPD Legis- could not be used to help
lators arc so hard pressed to weakened general fund.
raise money that it has been,
suggested distribution of liquor j
revenues to cities and counties
be halted. Slate Sen. Anthony !
Yturri, R-Ontario, said Monday. I
Yturri, (he Senate minority j
loader, said he doubted such ac-1
tion would be taken. He dc-
scribed the suggestion as an ex-
ample of lawmakers' "despcra-
tion" in their search for funds. '
The potential loss o cilies and
counties for the rest of the
biennium was estimated a1. $10
m;i1inPt ,
vtmT spokc . ln lcJgu f
0vcRm cities here. ,
He sajd j( tn pgisl3ture
did dccide l0 kcp tle liquor
rcvcnucs he money would go
jm0 tne gcnorai (unci. Oiics and
counties might In
counties might b; partiady
compensated for the loss b y
more money from gas W.x.
motor vehicle resist ralio:i and
weight mile funds, he said
Yturri said the latter slate
funds could be spent for
highway purposes only and
an hour early today, presumably
Ihe Miulhwestern cnavt nf luna.
IN CLB
of a militant (uhfii rule group
Tribune
' y iV.1
ft m
4
eede
enson said he was telephoning j
President Kennedy to reassure ;
him every security measure
was being taken to . insure
Tito's safety.
lh
At present cities share 10 per cent,
counties 19 per cent and I h e
state 71 per cent in various
motor vehicle funds.
Dr. Richard Zettcll, a Califor- j
nia Institute of Transportalion
and Traffic Engineering official, j
told the league similar funds in
that slate go 16 per cent I o j
cities, 23 per cent to counties ;
and 61 per cent lo the state, j
Keynote speaker was Mayor
Arthur Naftalin of Minneapolis,
He said local government should I
l.n r,.onfl fi-nm i-nclt-i,'linnc u.-hirh 1
have pacpd (hcm jn a tinancja .
straitjackcl." He suggested '
legislative consolidation of local
government units, sharing of1
siatc income with cities and
subsidization for either public or
private mass transportation sys-,
terns. !
Hatfield's Plan
Finds Agreement
SALEM (UPI) - Twenty-one
of the 29 Republican House
members have voiced agree
ment with Gov. Mark Hatfield's
plan to cut basic school support,
and re-pass the $12 million one
shot speedup of withholding tax
collections.
House Minority Leader F. F.
' Montgomery. Eugene, said the
GOP caucus Sunday did not de
cide whether the legislature or
! the governor should make the
cuts in basic school aid.
' Montgomery'. wno has been
calling for a sales tax to be
r rc(orrcd t0 tne pcopic. sajt the
Republicans agreed with the
Democrats that there should be
no bills to increase taxes now,
but that does not preclude con
sideration of a sales tax."
p i cl,v
mr. ruui
i To Mead Auxiliaries
PORTLAND ' UPI ) Mrs.
Paul Selby of Medford Monday
was elected president nf the
Oregon Association of Hospital
auxiliaries, meeting here.
The president-elect is Mrs
Moms Crothers. Salem.
cther officers include Mrs
William A. Fisher. Portland.
j vice president, and Mrs. L. A.
Klees. Grants Pass, secretary-
treasurer.
58th Year Price 10 Cents
No. 184
High Winds Lash
Washington; Fire
Threatens Town
Northern Oregon
Receives Soaking
By United Press International
High winds with gusts up to
73 miles per hour smashed into
the State of Washington Mon
day bringing damage on both
sides of the Cascades including
a range (ire that for a time
threatened the town of Chelan.
A power line felled by high
winds in the Okanogan Valley
started the range fire which
burned over about 3.000 acres
before it was brought under
control early this morning.
On the other side of the Cas
cades, the Coast Guard said it
had its hands full as gale-force
winds hit Puget Sound.
Teen-Agers Rescued
Two teenagers were rescued
when the 18-fool sailboat they
were trying to move to quieter
waters capsized. Numerous oth
er small craft were reported
drifting loose and several log
rafts were reported broken up
near Seattle.
Power lines were down in the
entire Puget Sound area. The
winds blew out window panes in
downtown Seattle and telephone
service was interrupted in many
communities.
Several scattered power out
ages were reported but no ma
jor damage resulted from the
storm.
Decreasing winds were fore-
cast for loclav along with scat-!
tered showers in the Puget j
Sound area and in Eastern
Washington.
Oregon also had blustery
winds and rain Monday. Astor
ia, on the coast, had 1.7 inches
while Portland and Salem had
about half an inch.
The Weather Bureau said
rams snould decrease over
northwest Oregon with only a
few showers west of the Cas
cades on Wednesday.
Winds will bo less than on
Monday with gusts mostly 20 to
30 miles per hour in shower
areas.
Several power outages were
reported in northwest Oregon
A falling tree snapped a limb
and resulted in about 1,400
customers of Portland General
Electric Co. in the Molalla area
being without power for about
an hour Monday night.
Other outages were reported
in the Woodburn, Dayton and
West Salem areas.
Falling tree limbs resulted in
some individual service failures
in Portland.
County Employees
Object to Meters
The Jackson County Employ
ee's association has gone on
record opposing the extension
this week of the one-hour park
ing zone around the courthouse.
The resolution to be submitted
lo the county court states that
the association considers t h e
extension of the one-hour park-
thS ,viui'n ;.h ; ZIZ
was being used prior to the ex-
tension, the letter staled. ,m.
mediate relief in Ihe fnrm ,if nff.
street parking was requested.
A spokesman for the associa
tion said the zone extension
causes employees to park two
or three blocks away from their
offices and works a hardship
particularly during stormy
weather and al the noon hour.
Cabinet Approves
Home's Decision
LONDON (UPI) The new1
British cabinet today approved
a decision by Prime Minister
Lord Home to ask for a delay
in Ihe re-opening of Parlia-
ment until after he wages a
Scottish by - election fight to
win a House of Commons seat.
Lord Home met with his cabi
net for the first time today aft
er telling the nation in his first
major statcmen as prune min-i
iser that he looked forward to
, Soviet Union in negotiating set-
t ements of cold war issues.
The new prime minister, who
has announced he will resign
1 his earldom and run for a Com-
mr,nC tp.;ji in u Vm- 7 rniiish
bv election, plans to ask Queen
Elizabeth II to postpone the re-
.... . .
owning ot Parliament scnea-
uled for this month until alter
the vote As a peer, hc is now
barred from conducting govern -
menl business or defending
1 government policies in the
House of Commons.
Pt'r ;..- .n
KICADY l'OK -Bic; I.II'T'
Division at Fort Hood, Texas,
Entire Armored
Division Moving
A ll '
A(TfK; At flmlf
MVI U JJ '-'"""'H'
FT. HOOD, Tex. (UPl)-Sleek
military jetliners and hand
bellied transports streaked
across the turbulent Atlantic
from Texas to West Germany
today in an aerial ferry for
16,000 Gl's, including an entire
armored division, that was
working "like clockwork."
Light hours alter the tirst jet
thundered
off a runway at
Bergstrom
Air Force Base at
Austin, Tex., there were 71
planes aloft moving the van
guard of troops from the 2nd
Armored (Hell on Wheels) Di
vision on their way to Frank-
(urt jn ..Operation Big Lift." It
was the biggest transatlantic
aerial armada of troops ever
attempted.
Six C135 jet transports, four
C130 prop-driven transports and
1R C124 Glcbemasters were in
the vanguard. Platoons of
planes were leaving every hour
from four bases in Texas.
Each plane carried an aver
age of 84 persons including 72
soldiers, 9 crewmembcrs and 3
newsmen.
'Very Well Pleased'
The start of the 72-hour oper
ation "went like clockwork," a
spokesman al Ft. Hood com
mand headquarters said
We are very well pleased
with Ihc way things arc going
right now, everything is on
schedule," he said.
Jack Eaton Resigns
Technician's Job
Jackson County Planning
lechn.c.an Jack Eaton. As , land,
has resigned Irom his job ac
! ''"dlnS 10 a received yes-
lerday afternoon by the planning
commission.
In his letter addressed lo
Planning Commission President
C. O. Lovcjoy, Eaton wrote:
"Please accept my resignation
as planning technician effective
Nov. 1. My decision is deter
mined by olher interests."
Eaton wrote that he has en
joyed his work wilh the com
mission and staff. He has been
ill approximately two months
and sent the letter Irom his
home.
Eaton has been in the county
planning commission office
about seen years and spent
j part of that lime as planning
consultant to the county,
FBI Agent Conducts
Class in Medford
A Portland FBI agent is in
Medford today to conduct a class
tor area law entorcemeni otti
ccrs on the topic of sex crimes,
; Special Agent Harold Clark
will instruct the classes today
and tnmorrnw at the Huhert
Santo Reserve Center.
About 40 law enforcement of-
i
liters irom jacKson, aoscpninc
ana isiamam counucs are ai-
tending the class.
. Agent Clark will discuss Ihe
different types of sex crimes and
criminals as well as the stale
mws governinj sex crimes.
16,000 Soldiers
On 'Big Lift'
- i
Soldiers from the 2nd Armored
line up at dawn at Bcrgstrom Air
Pilot Program for
Advisory Jury of
Youth Set to Start
ASHLAND An experimen
tal program, in which a "jury"
of high school and college stu
dents will advise Judge Rich
ard C. Collie of Ashland Mu
nicipal court on cases involv
ing persons under 21, will gel
under way here in about two
weeks.
Plans for the juvenile advis-
"V )u, y were outlined by Judge
i,uuie ai h uuiiiui iuuuiuik ictai
night at the Oak Knoll Coun
try club. Ten of Ihc 12 Ash
land High school and Southern
Oregon college students who
will serve on the jury were in
troduced. Also present were fac
ulty leaders from both institu
tions. Padgham Studies
Amendment Idea
Medford Businessman Henry
F. Padgham Jr. is investigat
ing procedures for initialing a
Constitutional amendment
measure, which he would hope
to have appear on the Novem
ber MM ballot.
Padgham has written lo
ll.unll Annlinn -ll- Ornnnn's
secretary of stale, for informa-
lion about Ihc steps necessary
to have his amendment placed
on the ballot.
The Padgham amendment
would provide for a unicameral
lnnicl'.jtiirA 1 nnn hriHtn incleHri
of the present two body, house
and senate svslem). composed
of 60 members who would bc 1 If the conclusions of the juve
clectcd for two-year terms. nile advisory jury do not gen
He proposed lhat scats bc orally agree with Judge Cot
apportioned under the system tel's, Mien he feels it will be
currently in use. time for the courts to "reexain-
Thc amendment also provides ine our procedures."
for an annual session of the leg- Jhe JudKc ;,ls0 a'd hc "'o'"
islature, for establishing the hc program wouid give young
slate's fiscal program on an an -
nual basis (instead of the bicn
mum) and for representatives
lo be elected on a non-partisan
basis at each general election.
Three Killed in
Oregon Accidents
Hy United Press International
three persons lost their lives
in traflic accidents in Oregon
Monday.
Richard Peel, 30, Durango
Colo , was killed when his tuny
luoucii iiikb"k ""
weKnLakev,ewab0Ut " milc
Slate police sai' feel's truck
went down a grade too fast.
struck a bridge abutment and
rolled over. He was working on
a logging job in Southern Ore -
gon and was living al Beattv.
Kenneth Beaslcy, 26. Florence,
died when his car plunged off a
road and over a 40-foot embank
ment into the North Fork of the
j Siuslaw River near Florence.
Beaslev's 22-vpar-iild wife. Ad-
rella, and small son, Kenneth,
escaped. They were hospitalized
r. . ... i
lor ireaimom 01 snocK.
i-awrcncc r.vans. ,n, ine uai-
les. lost his life when his truck
and trailer loaded with bakery
goods went off Interstate 5 and
plunged inlo Courtney Creek 17
miles south of Albany.
W , V
j.'1-':SOTl?-
.4 V WIM
V
mmtmMmimimiiim
Force Base lo board a C-1115
troops to Europe. (UP1)
To yer
S?!ected to serve on the jury
were Bon Bovce, Mike Dawkms,
Pain Demo, Janice llassell,
Kandy Korthasc and Jon Bob-
crson of Ashland llmh school,
and uuss biair, non u.mer.
Doug Olson, Hick Pierce, l.anh
Schroeder and Jeane Foischcd-
cl ot South Oregon college.
Olson and Blair arc-l to!
serve as co-chairmen of tho
: I
The snideou will serve siv at
. .;... .. ti i ,nnt-
a mm;, un i inn ii.ni v i;vi-iiiiiko,
iiu'linn Mm. 7 The iv.mpni-
bcr iiiiics will serve on alter
nain Thm-uHau ninhic (mm fhin
on Thev will act in an advi-
enrv frinafilv .lllrlcn r'nllln em-
phasized. I lewill retain the right
lo make the final decision in all
cases.
The judg,- said last nighl, he
is anticipating one of two pos -
siblc results from the experi-
ment; cither the decisions of Ihe
advisory jury will agree pretty
much with his own, or they
won't.
If Ihey do, he feels this fact
will help deter juvenile crime.
,4A .rmilti ti'hn it.n'1 nimrl ul
sports or studies may commit ! M fsitxi of Ihc stale legis
a crime to gain recognition with j , A I , wl" bc 'orkfd
fellow students." Judce Cottle!01!1 willlh w"l "ave as little
! reasoned. "When he comes lino
When he comes into
COUrt. he I lillkS O llinscll US il
martyr being tried ly tne aiiuii
world.
"if instead he were In receive
the same verdict from six o(
his peers, his acts would no
longer gin recognition from
his fellow SllldciltS and Ili.S 1'Oa-
i son for committing the crime
would bc eliminated
. people
chance lo show Ihe
public Ihey can hc responsible
citizens.
Earlier, Judge Edward C.
Kelly of Jackson County Cir-'
cuil court told the students
they could perform a valuable
function in three ways.
"First, this Is a good pilot
program," he said. "If it works
out well other areas will copy
it. Second, you can see first
hand from the. cases what is in
volved. You can then report
back lo your classmates the
situations as the law enforce-'
mi-tit iiffieers see Diem 'I' h e n
third, you can let the judge
know wnat current student
opinion Ih about things that R
n,;(h Judge Cottle and Judge
! Kelly expressed the hope that
(he piogram would improve
communication between t h e
1 adult and students worlds, and
norhans have a heallhv effect
on both
i Sunnort for the nroiecl was
- : voiced by others present, among
them Dr. Elmo Stevenson, presi-
j dent of Southern Oregon college:
riuilnrd Simith iirinriii:il nf
' Ashland High school: Ashland
Police Chief Herb Haves: Mrs.
.. ,. , V .
Peggy .wick, uean ot girls al
Asiuana ilign; jonn .Mccouum, ioe pup, nui wem nam 10 sieep.
1 assistant professor of educa-, Finally the insistent animal
tion at Southern Oregon college enme lo her bed and whined
and Pierre Roberts, vice princi-; more urgently, but Mrs. Theiss
pal of Ashland Junior High, said she was sleepy and relused
1 school. 1 lo get up. Then the pup began
1 Wilis t, ,
-TIT'
as Operation Big Lift moves
'Tentative Welfare
Budget Cuts Topic
i Of Local Meeting
The Jackson cnuntv public
welfare rnmmissinn Ihis mnrn.
mR discussed possible tentative
wofllrp hudgel cuts due. to the
defeat of the stale tax measure,
hut im.k m wiinn
County Judge Earl M. Miller
read a mimeographed letter
from slate Public Welfare Ad
ministrator Andrew Juras which
was issued before the special
! rleclilin' A rcstudy of the budget
.situation since .the election has
iraiiauve ounfin ctns
. . , , ,
- '"0' "early as severe, according
10 wo I the state public
welfare commission yesterday.
County Judge Miller narticu-
I '.'"'y objected lo the proposed
111 1'"' rent reduction of the allo-
I cation lo nursing home patients
as mentioned in the Oct. 8 Idler,
; This will mean the county will
have to make up the difference,
he said.
To Release Figures
Mrs. Mary Carpenter, acting
welfare administrator in absence
of Dave Kuhns, said final fig
ures will he released after the
.etiea as possmie
'" " i"winir on wenarc
, " lll"u. .w MIU
Rolh Judge Miller and Countv
Commissioner Donald E. Fabcr
tntitl,,,! 1t if j .
".",V.UV" W"""C t,rnan-
ment
S 11)11 (I hn :li-lflni 'l imit
outline all ahl hn,li,i ,
ien.s on the. county work pro -
gram. This should include those
?r and older. Miller said
This would help cut down on
welfare expenditures, Miller add
ed. WEATHER
I mil.fsT: (Ik
iI r.iiii rmiiKht
liv .Hill .1,1
sniil hrr I v ind
IK. Midi t-(ltl
iNtinnl pertfirls
rtltir s
tNiuiMl uiiitv
Low tuiiight
1.IV tij.
Plielir-,1 rslfTd.iv
l.iinpsl 'f Ills .Mor it in t;
I'lrc. lo III a.m. lmLiv
Our Skies Tonight
StltnM
!0 n ni
Mnitlsp t.iiniirr.itt ...
M.i.iMM'l lii.iiijil
I I r vl If'MHrr
I'ltOMIS I.M Si l
I oiii.iHi.iiiI , low in
.eiiili
V IMIII.i: I'UVBIS
PMIIS. M'tN
7-11 a in.
n : 1 1 p. Ill
. Oct.
lo. n p ni
fi ll n in
UP Mllllll
:s p.m.
lllsll III tnllth-
Launched
Puppy Credited With
a a I f
SdVIIig MlStreSS LlTC
' "BoBo," a puppy of mixed an-
cestry, less than five months old.
purchased two weeks ago for $3
from the Humane Society, was
, credited with saving the life of
his new mistress Monday.
1 Mrs. Helen Jo Theiss of Anlc-
lope rd. gives the small dog.
part Chihuahua, full credit fori
her existence today.
i Monday, Mrs. Theiss got her
' husband. Carl C. Theiss. off to;
work al 5:30 a.m., then went i from the Rarage. The White City
back lo bed. She was awakened i station of the Central Point Rur-
11: i...i...l : ,fllt':. .1 ..Imnl pncnrtrtrtorl
several imics ov ine wiiionik
Pricing Policies
Believed Reason
For Jury Action
Industry Officials
Decline Comment
NEW YORK (UPI) - Steel
prices and pricing policy wers
tossed back into the national
spotlight by the barrage of sub'
pocnas fired al most major
steel companies by a federal
grand jury here.
Industry observers indicated
the grand jury action was taken
in connection with the spate of
price increases on a broad line
of slccl products this year, but
suggested that the inquiry
might broaden itself into an in
vestigation of so-called "admin"
istered prices."
Companies Nanuil
Prominent among the compa
nies which reported Monday
and today that they were suli
poenacd were U.S. Steel Corp.i
Bethlehem Steel Corp., Jons Si
Laughlin Steel Corp., Republic
Steel Corp., Wheeling Slncl
Corp., Pittsburgh Steel Co,
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co.,
National Steel Corp., Kaiser
Steel Corp., and Armco Steel
Corp.
Industry officials gener ally
declined to discuss the siti a
tion, olher than to contirm re
ceipt of the subpoenas.
Approximately 75 per cent of
all steel products have been af
fected by these piecemeal price
increases and only a few weeks
ago President Kennedy told a
news conference he was watch
ing "with concern" the recent
round of increases put into ef
fect by major producers.
The action apparently caught
the steel makers by surprise
and comment was withheld hy
all the companies except Repub
lic where a spokesman said his
company had been asked In pre
sent some records to the federal
panel.
This latest legal move hy I ho
government came at a tuna
when it appeared relations be
tween the steel industry and tho
Kennedy administration had al
most if not completely recov
ered from their clash in April,
1962.
Al that time U.S. Slccl or-
dcred an across-the-board in-
1 crease of $6 a ton in a market
where the demand for steel had
been on the decline.
,1 . , . t
ivitnin two nays ine duih or
the nation's other major steel
producers fell into line ana
I raised their tonnage price
similar amount.
In a spectacular confrontalion
between the Kennedy adminis
tration and "big steel" the steel
industry rescinded the price in
crease. Colorado Man Dies
In County Jail
Warren Butler, 32. Fort Col
lins, Colo., died in the Jackson
county jail early this morning,
apparently from natural causes,
the sheriff's department report
ed. Or. A. Erin Meckel. Jackson
county public health officer, said
this morning an autopsy would
He nerfnrmeri hv a local natholo.
" ! J . '. . . .
Risi ur incu uy inu -...
1 m "1;,
Butler was returned here re
cently from the Washington stata
reformatory, Monroe, Wash., on
a district court warrant charg
ing him with uttering and pub
lishing a forged check.
Butler was reported as ill yes
terday morning. Dr. Merkel ex
amined him and prescribed ap
plication of heat on his chest.
Butler was given some medii ina
hy another physician, when ho
continued to be ill later in tha
day.
Fellow prisoners summoned
deputies shortly after midnight
last night. An examining physi
cian pronounced him dead.
BODY RECOVERED
THE DALLES (UPI) - The
body of Virgil Mortimer, 39,
Portland, missing since Sept. 15,
was recovered early today from
the Columbia river near Celilo.
j barking and howling,
She listened and could hear
. something crackling above his
j voice. Perhaps just the wind,
she thought, but almost simul-
tancouslv she stncllcd smoke.
She rushed from her bed to find
the living room wall on fire from
an overheated stove pipe.
She urabbcd the pup, called
the fire department, and ran out
of the house to move the car
ui ai r ue ucpaimni" h.-k"""- "
The stale forestry department
also arrived at the scene, and
the house was saved wilh minor
damago from the flames, Mrs.
Theiss said, "all because ot
BoBo." .
"t
'3
O
03
O
v