Ante
5 . ftcc-T h-w
f mhg Sigiitei
1
I
SB Ahmd -feared -Pw
51 . -;X
STOWAWAYS AT GUAM In an attempt to satisfy a
longtlmo dream of living, on a tropical isle Jerri Mc
Daniel (right), 20, or Walnut Grove, Calif., and Maxino
Allen, 23, of.Tatoma, Wash., stowed away in an Air Korce
B-29 at Sacramento and flew some 0,000 miles to Guam.
' They are shown examining a bit of coral at Tumon beach.
VThetgirls may be given temporary employment to help
pay their fare home. Two airmen friends arc being held
lor Investigation.
InTbo
1 1
Iplf
i. Iw.irini' -ifi ' - '
By FRANK JCNKINfl.
From Moscow:
"Generalissimo Btnlln. looking
murb as usual (Inl and aasav. ac
cording to the general run ol hit
pictures), reviewed the annual Mv
Day parade of Bovtel labor and
ARMED MltlltT Irmn l.enln's mar
ble tomb Una morning'
, I Imagine Hie old boy Is feeling
pretty chenlv thene days. Id bo
feeling Uiut way II Ruviln't Slcfl.
oil end lumber Industries were
cloned down or hull crippled mid
ll Uie commie were growling and
snapping at colli oU.er. biting rurh
other In Uie leu and chewlnv each
olher'a eiir and thumb.
Wouldn't Uml bo wonderful?
From Tokyo
"rom Tokyo: in one of six per
Twenty Uiousand communM-led ,rP on Hie ballot
Gov; Warren
Schedules
Visit Here
Gov. Earl Warren of Calllornla,
who Is KoekinK the Republican nom
limtlon for President of the United
Stales, will open lib campalKn lor
May IS primary votes In Klamath
rails next Monday.
He la scheduled to iprnk here
at 3 p m . but the alte of his ap
pearance has not been announced.
Clov. Warren will come Into the
alale that morning, doing llrst lo
Mcuiord wnere ne i ncnrduled lor
a talk. Then he will fly to Klam
ath Falln for the afternoon visit
and go front there lo Portland.
He nrouauiy will make a re
turn trln to KlumaUi Falls later
In Uie campaign.
The California governor. OOP
vice presidential candidate In 1IM6
It one of six persons who names
anll-Amerlcan rioters IoukIH no
lle with flubs and rlones in front
ot the Javanese imperial naiace
today AMERICANS Wr.IlK
ATrACKKD. STONED AND
MAULF.I) .... Twelve American
automobiles were overturned and
burned .... It was Uie worse
run In Japan suice Uie end ol the
war." -
? t M1'r"'"'';''"'',""
' Well, we're sitting now in the
eat where the British sat so long
and nobody ever loved the British.
For llml matter, going farther
back. NOBODY EVER LOVED A
ROHLAN In the centuries when
Rome was the world policemen.
As I read history, nobodv ever
loved anybody who was Irving lo
run the world which Is the lob
we've been heaved Into, whether
we wanted It or not.
From Portland:
"Governor Adlol Blovcmon of Il
linois was In Oregon today, still
trying- to convince the skenllcnl Uial
he Is not a candidate for the Demo
cratic nomination lor President.
"(juiiixed by reiwrteis as to
wheUier he would accept a draft at
the convention he replied:
" ! don't believe ' Uiere Is any
anrh thing as a draft. I have anld
I won't be running for President
while I'm running lor re-election
as governor of Illinois. I can say
nothing more than I have already
said.
I suppose you are familiar with
these lines, spoken ov ivinrs. Antony
In Shakespeare's Julius Caesar:
"You all did ace Umt on the
Lunercnl
- "I Uirlce presented him kingly
crown.
"Which he did thrice refuse; was
this sniDumn?
Antony waa sneaking at Caesar's
funera I. Brutus ana unwmis una
their followers flguied that when
Caesar thrlco refused Uie Kingly
crown he was Ju.it noting coy and
walling lo be drafted. Bo they
cooked up a plot nnd Brutus
stabbed Caesar to death as he was
entering a meeting of the Roman
senate.
U has always been hard, you
scar, for ncople to believe that any
b'Juy would refuse nigh office and
great power.
as seeking Ore
gon's IB delegates to the Republi
can national convention, and may
be the only one to actively cam
paign In Hits alale.
Thnt brings us bn,:k to Ike, who
has been honest enough to refrain
from aaylng, coyly or otherwise,
that he wouldn t accent the Rcpub.
llcnn nomination for President. He
snld he would nccept only If the
nomination cumo lo him as a clear
call to duly end niudo It plnln that
he wouldn't gel out ana campaign
for It In tno traditional drum
pounding bush-beating manuor.
He lias stuck to his guns on thnt
point, nnd It Is beginning to look
like tho nomination mny come to
lilm as a olenr call to duty. "
Hliown the returns from Massa
chusetts, where he got (10 per cent
of tho totnl Republican voto In the
prlmnry popularity contest, ho said
to rouortars In Paris:
"It overwhelms ma. It hns be
gun to look sorb of serious."
It Is serious, Ike.
If and when you are nomlnnlcri,
you'll Into perhaps the toughest
Job any American hns ever been
called upon to tackle. For 20 yenrs
your country has been treading the
primrose puth. Now we have to
fny tils' piper. Oolng Into debt Is
ots of fun, but onying yourself
out of debt In grim nnd hard.
Thoso of us who lire for you,
Ike, nren't Hist riding your cont
tnlls to power nnd pleasure. We
know thn going will ba hnrd. We
hnvie fnllh In you. To us, you nre
morn a holy causa Uinn a candi
dates 1 tint's frightful responsibility,
but wo think you can llvb up to 11,
Wind Blamed
For Damages
High winds were blamed today
for extensive ranch damage In the
Aincoori area yesteraay.
A a Ike break which flooded
hundreds of acres was blamed
directly on the strong wind and a
fire which destroyed ranch build
ings, seed and equipment was said
fanned out of control by the wind.
The dike break occurred on the
Melsa ranch operated by J. C.
Stevenson. The dike, holding; wa
ters of Melss Lake, broke after
being pounded by wind-whipped
water. Hundreds of the 4.000 acres
under Uie dike were Hooded. The
ranch Is seven miles (Southwest of
Mncuoei.
A wlnd-whlpned fire on the Jim
my Butler runch esrly yesterday i
afternoon did damage estimated
at 110. 000. The flames destroyed
a granary, macnine snop and
cellnr.
The Butler ranch Is l'J miles
south of Macdoel.
US; StOpS
Travel In
Red M.tK
WA8HINOTON Ml The. Slate
Department Thursday banned
American travel In live Iron Cur
tain countries without sneclfto per
mission. In three outer countries,
no travel at nil will be permitted.
A department announcement
called nttentlon lo "the dangers of
traveling In countries where ac
ceptable standards of protection do
not prevail."
Travel was banned altogether In
China, Hungary and Czechoslova
kia In a continuation of previous
department lullngs.
The five countries added to the
restricted travel llxl aro Russls,
Poland, Romania. Albania and Bul
garia.
The deonrtmcnt snld It will al
low trips to those countries only
lor "leglllmalo reasons."
VALIDATION
All new pas'porls will be stomped
as "not vnlla for travel" In the
eight countries "unless ypeclflcnl
Iv Indorsed under authority of the
Department of State."
Passports now outstanding will
be stamped in the snme wav when
Uiev are turned In bv holders or
otherwise submitted to department
olflclali.
Ofllcials said Ihe nw remricuons
had been under consideration tor
a long time.
Authorities said nrlvstelv there
nre two balo reasons lor the re
strictions: 1. To prevent "snenk visits."
2. To protect venturesome Amer
icans who might not realise the
risk of visit to Iron Curtain countries.
1 (of(FiiOiTi,i ftffif?fi!Drfctete
ey II n sJt - I
Price Fix Cents 1 Pages KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, THURSDAY, MAT 1, i95t Telephone (111 Ne. 2808
Strike (uts Gasoline hpply
Is Stevenson
Unavailable?
PORTLAND ll Oov. Adlal E
Stevenson of Illinois denied here
agn In Thursday that he Is a candi
date for the Democratlo nomina
tion lor President.
But he failed to convince most
of a scoro of newspaper and radio
reporters at a press conference
Unit lie Is "unavailable."
After hearing Uie denials and
the governor's rofusal to answer
questions bearing on the possibility
that he might be drafted Monroe
Bweetlnnd, Oregon Democratic na
tional committeeman, snld:
"f think the rioor Is nnen tn a
drnft."
f'nAHII KILLS NINE
NEW DELHI. India un An
American woman mlsslnnnrv mri
eight other persons wero killed
Wednesday In the crash of a Deo
enn Alrwnys plane which plunged
Into a siihurbnn field In a think
dust -storm.
Commies Lead
Riot in Tokyo
By JIM BKCKER
TOKYO un Twenty thousand
Communist-lcd anU-Amerlcan riot
ers foughl police witn ciuos ana
stones In Ironl pi the Imperial Pal-
THt,rll,4t ' ;
It was .Uie worst rtot ' In Japan
.inns the end ol the World1 War
and the first- m which American
property was damaged.
Americans were attacked, stoned,
mauled. But none wa seriously
hurl.
Club-swlnntns rioters charged 1,
000 steel-helmeted police Uiree
limes. They clubbed 218 officers to
the ground. Injuring 61 seriously.
Bui each Ume Die police beat
back the human waves witn tear
gas. clubs and guns fired Into the
ground.
LANUALTIEB
Uncounted hundreds ot rioters
also were injured. One was report
ed killed by gunfire. .
Riots also broke out In Kyoto,
templed former capital of Japan,
2.10 miles southwest of Tokyo.
There 3,000 Koreans stormed city
offices and fought with police. They
were halted by tear gas. Seventeen
rioters were arresiea.
A U. S. embassy spokesman said
no official protest was contemplat
ed as a result of Uie Tokyo riot.
Demonstrators stormed through
the streets shouting antl-Amerlcan
slogans, waving Red banners and
carrying pictures of Stalin and
other Communist leaders.
Order was restored - after five
hours.
AMERICANS
Twelve Amerloan-owned automo
biles were overturned and burned.
Americans were shoved and bit by
rocks. Two U. 8. sailors were
thrown Into the palace moat. The
wife of a Navy man was mauled.
Two American photographers
were roughed up. Associated Press
Photographer Oeorge Swecrs was
stoned three times.
j ne orawung nnncn iraiuc lor
three hours In front of the palace
and the Dal Ichl building, for near
ly seven years headquarters for an
Allied occupation that ended three
days ago.
Demonstrators chanted Inces
santly: "Oo home, Ynnkees,"
ADout three million Japanese
turned out throughout Jnpnn for
more Uinn 400 scheduled rallies.
N.V. Bakers
To Strike
At Midnight
Br The Aosoclated Pruss
Bakery workers numbering 10.-
000 prepared to strike at midnight
wholesale plants ov?r a work week
duputc.
Federal conciliators at Seattle
met with employers and officials
of the International Bakery It Con
fectionery Workers Union tAFLl
in last minute, efforts to rescb a
settlement.
But Frank Hoover. International
representative of Ihe union, said
IN KLAMATH
The Northwest baker's strike
will not affect bakeries In South
ern Oregon and Klamath Falls,
Fred Iloagland manager of Fluh
rer's Bskery here ssld Ihe labor
trouble waa restrlt-led lo Port
land, Spoksne, Seattle and Ta
coma areas.
at Seattle:
"A strike can not be called off
at this late hour. Even If an agree
ment was reached with the em
ployers before midnight. It could
not be ratified by members of the
locals until 10 o'oclook Friday."
Bakers are scheduled to strike at
midnight In mnlor Washington cit
ies apd probably In Portland. Ore.
- Union '-spokesmen at Portland
said Wednesday night the weposed
strike would be delayed there, but
William T. McOuern. union Inter
national vice president, said at
Seattle the Portland walkout would
occur as scheduled.
The principal dispute centers
around the work week. The union
is seeking a work schedule of live
consecutive davs. with Saturdays
and Sundava off. Emnlovers con
tend the flve-consccullve-day week
is imnractical In mnlor naxeries
because of uie perishable nature oi
the products.
A strike would not anect smsu
retail bakeries where the baking is
done on the premises.
Court Refuses
To Stop Steel
Wage Increase
.;. J. ROGER DE'S
Former Jaycee
Chief Coming
A past president of the Califor
nia State Junior Chamber of Com
merce, J. Roger Deas of San Fran
cisco, will be principal speaker
Saturday night at the convention
banquet ot uie Oregon jaycees.
The convention starts here Fri
day, with some 300 persons ex
pected to attend. Registration and
convention headquarters will be at
Uie WUlard Hotel
The Saturday night activities
Include a cocktail party at the Ar
mory, starting at 6:30 p.m., the
banquet and later a dance.
Deas Is nubile Information man-
ager lor the American Can Com
pany and is reputed to be an ex
cellent speaker. His topic wlll.be
Miracles inrough service.
In his talk he will touch upon
Oregon's $100,000,000 canning indus
try as a source or income to uie
state's farmers and workers and
how Oregon-canned foods help make
America the best-tea nation in uie
world.
Deas once was a secretary and
aide to California's Gov. Earl War
ren and from 1944 to 1D48 was sec
retary of the San Francisco Plan
ning Commission. He served as as
sociate consultant to the U.S. dele
gation to the coundlng convenUon
or tn united Nations in mi. .
The public Is Invited to the Sat
urday night banquet, and reserva-
Uons may be made at tne unara-
ber of commerce ouice.
NEW COLLEGE HEAJ
PORTLAND m Phil V. Put
nam, former school superintendent
at Prairie City and Oakland, Ore.,
will become president of Palomar
College In San Diego County,
Calif., July 1.
Custer Appeal
Hearing Opens
The appeal of Dr. Alva T. Cus
ter, who operates the Standard
Optical Company, 716 Main, of a
ruling by the Oregon State Board
of Optometry Examiners ordering
his license to practice revoked be
gan Thursday morning In Circuit
Court.
The optometrist's license was or
dered revoked last Dec. 28 follow
ing a hearing conducted by the
board In Portland, on grounds of
unprofessional conduct.
Dr. Custer appealed the revoca
tion order to Uie Circuit Court
here and eventually Uie case may
go to the sute Supreme Court.
CONVICTION
He was convicted by the board
of various types of alleged unpro
fessional conduct, particularly in
connection with his relationship
with a corporation, the Standard
Optical Company of Utah. One al
legation was that the doctor was
subordinate to the corporation and
Uint the corporation was practic
ing optometry in Oregon by use
of Dr. Custer's license.
Tho appeal was bnsed on sever
al points, In particular that the
bonrd's hearing and action denied
Dr. Custer of his constitutional
guarantee of due process of the
law.
R. R. Bulllvant, of the Portland
(Continued en Take 4.) -
Weather
FORECAST Klamath Falls and
vicinity and Northern California:
Partly sunny Thursday,- clearing
Thursday night and sunny Friday.
High Thursday 60, lew tonight 32,
lllrh tomorrow 65.
High temp yesterday 59
Low last night 33
Preelp yesterday - 0
Since Oct. 1 14.31
Normal for period 10.24
Same period last yr 13.87
(Additional Weather on Page 4.)
Republicans Argue Massachusetts Votes'
Significance, Demos Talk Stevenson Draft
WASHINGTON tfl The U. S.
Court of Appeals bv a & to 4 vote
refused Thursday to bar the gov
ernment from raising wages of
steel workers while It holds the
seised mills.
The vote denying a plea from
major steel companies that the
court enjoin Secretary of Com
merce Sawyer from doing anything
about wages and working condi
tions was the same as that by
which the court returned the steel
plants to government control Wed
nesday night,
NO ACTION
Only a few minutes before the
court decision was announced. Saw
yer had said in a statement he
did not intend to late any - precipi
tate" action about wages.
The government manager of the
steel mills said the sltuaUon was
so fluid that "Uie employes and I
myself, and the operators, too. are
at the moment to a revolving door.
We are neither coming In nor going
out." ' -
Sawyer also' called tn Ins state-
mi nN.rherol(BtIons y the lndns-
riiy ani th , CIO Sieelworkers un;.
Ion looking towara a parxucu av
tlement of Iheir differences.
X Action by Congress to give
the ' government some clear legal
basis for dealing with situaUons
such as the steel strike has creat
ed.
Cabbies Snare
Wild Fugitive
PORTLAND I Taxicabs
roared four abreast down a West
Side Portland street at 1:30 a.m.
Thursday in pursuit of a, fleeing
motorist. Another taxi blocked an
intersection but Uie motorist
squeezed by. Still another can
brought Uie speeding car to a stop
In an unintended collision.
Tn toll: Four smasned; taxis,
battered Chevrolet, a burned
Cadillac and a Jail sentence for
Richard Edward McAfee, 38.
FLAMES
It all started when Lyle O. Tate,
driver of a Radio cab saw a man
run from a parked Cadillac and Uie
Cadillac burst into flames. Since
there have been more man a aozen
parked cars burned here in the
past month,1 Tate took out after
the man who sped away to a
Chevrolet.
Ax he started Uie chase. Tate
called his dispatcher who called
police. Other cabs picked up tne
broadcast and swung into line.
And then Uiev went into an abreast
formation, police cars Joined, and
another can swung irom a sine
street Into an Intersection ahead
of Uie quarry.
The fleeing McAfee took the
corner on two wheels and there
was still another taxi blocking the
street. He slammed into it, smash
ing a fender, and got by. As he did,
ne skidded into another taxi con
taining two patrolmen,
CAPTURE
The chnse went across Uie Wil
lamette River and there It ended:
McAfee ran a red light and plowed
into another cab which happened
to be going about Its own business.
The driver and fare were thrown
to the street with what appeared
to be non-serious hurts, and Mc
Afee was nabbed as police closed
in.
Hours later he was fined S2O0
and sentenced to 190 davs for reck
less .'and hit-run driving. Whether
an arson cnarge would be added
was undecided.
ny The Associated Press
Tho presidential. panorama
Thursday: Some Republicans .dis
puted the ninninv ol the Massa
chusetts vote, some Democrats
tnlkcd of n "drnft" and most nom-liintlnn-seekcrs
got sot for a tele-
Islon show.
Conflicting Inferences were
rirnwii from Tuesday's Mnssnohu-
sotts election by supportors of the
front-running rivals lor Remibllcnn
noiiiliintlon Sen, Tuft of Ohio nnd
Gen, Elsenhower,
Nonr-eomploto returns show El
Keiihowor got (19 por cent of tho
Republican voto In tho pnnulnrltv
poll, nnd 27 of tho 28 nominating
convention dclcgnto posts at stake.
Thus, with 804 votes needed to
nominate, the Associated Press
compilation, of dologate strength
bnsed on concessions, pledges. In-
mictions and statements shows:
Taft,274. Elsenhower 270. Tnft
forces clnlm more than 300.
In Washington Sen. Snltonstnll,
(R.-Mnss.t, nn Elsenhower parti
san, culled the primary a "great
groundswell." He Snld the genoral
would get at least 34 of Massa
chusetts' total 38 delcgntes.
A Taft mnn. Sen. Young of North
Dakota, brushed this aside.
Voting In the west and midwest.
he snld, will toll n different and
more favorable" (to Tnft) story.
Tnft attributed tho outcome to
Democrats who voted as "Repub
licans for one dav only." In Pnria.
Eisenhower's comment was: "over
whelmingIt has bcaun to look
sort of serious."
Democratlo leaders, meanwhile,
talked of a new movement to draft
Gov. Stevenson of Illinois for the
nomination,
Stevenson. In Oregon Thursdsv,
was still trying to convince tho
sceptical that he Is not a candi
date. Portland reporters asked hiin If
he would nccept n draft. He re
plied "I don't believe there is anv
such thing as a draft. I have said
I won t be running fort president
while I'm running for re-election
ns Governor of Jlllnois:" , . .
in Washington, a move, was un
derwaybacked by some party
lenders skilled In convention man
euvering not to tako Stevenson at
his' latest word.
This group was described ' as
being opposed to Sen.. Kefauver
ot Tennessee, tops so far In dele
gate strength, and at least Indif
ferent to the other avowed as
pirants: Sen. Russell of Georgia,
Sen. Kerr of Oklahoma and Mu
tual Security Director W. Averell
Harrlmnn.
In Cincinnati Thursday night
most candidates for presidential
nomination go before ABC televis
ion cameras In a nation-wide pro
gram sponsored by the League of
women voters..
' About the only exceptions:' Rus
sell and Tnft. who snld Uiev had
oilier commitments. Paul Hoffmnn
was Invited to represent Eisenhow-
In Europe os Allied Defense
Chief until nbout June 1.
Missouri Republicnns hold four
district' conventions Thursday to
choose eight more convention dele-
antes. Eisenhower forces claim all
six to be picked In the St. Louis
metropolitan area. . v
Nationwide
Shortage
Threatened
DENVER m The nationwide
ftrike of nearly PO.000 unionized
oil industry workmen went into its
second day Thursday with short
ages ot gasoline for motorists al
ready reported In scattered areas.
Some filling statiois in Uie steel-
producing area of Gary. Hammond
and East Chicago. Ind.. reported
Ihey were out of gasoline Wednes
day night, less than 24 hours after
the strike began.
Other stations were expected to
run out Thursday. Similar short
ages were cropping up eUewhere in
the mid-west.
EXPECTED
In Washicjrton, government offi
cials said tfiortages must be ex
pected if the strike Is prolonged.
They estimated the country has
about a 45-day supply of gasoline
and Said reduction of current stocks
by one-half would mean a nation
wide shortage of ma for proportions.
Industry spokesmen had said
earlier tne gasoline stocks were at
an all-time high and the strike
might cause spot shortages in the
near future.
The Oil Workers International
Union fCIO; in Denver, represent
ing refinery and pipeline workers
and beading a coalition oi x uu.
AFI and indeoenoent oil unions.
Lsaid ''the most promising" negotla-
fttorw-'sjeie going on--in San ; Fran-
DEMANDS CUT
Officials said the union In talks
with Shell OH had trimmed its
original demand for a 25-cent hour
ly wage boost to 22 cents ana s
lot of other compromises are be
ing kicked around."
The unions also are asking in
creased differential pay. They want
six instead of four cents for Uie
4 p.m. to midnight shut and 12
instead of six cents for the mid
night to dawn shift.
The average wage In the in
dustry now ranges from $2 to $3.10
hourly. .
McMahon Hat
In Big Ring
NEW YORK W! Sen. McMahon
of Connecticut Thursday announced
his candidacy for the Democratic
presidential nomination.
McMahon told a press confer
ence he intended to undertake no
widespread personal campaign.
He is chairman of the Senate
Atomic Energy Committee.
He entered the wide open Dem
ocratic race after being informed
officially here that the Connecticut
Democratic State Central Commit
tee bad endorsed him for Uie nomination.
Air Search
Finds Ship
In Brazil
RIO DE JANEIRO Wl A miss,
ing Pan American World Airways
Stratocruiser has been found brok
en in two and with no sign of life,
airways officials announced Thurs
day, i v
The plane, with SO person'
aboard, including 19 North Ameri
cans, baa been missing since Tues
day. ......
The officials said a PAA search.
plane piloted by Capt, Gin Cowing
radioed Just before noon that a
plane tne size of the missing craft
had been sighted about nuaway
between Carolina, Brazil and Bar
relras. The two ciUes are about
40O miles apart. The pilot said it
had broken in two and there was
no sign ot life.
PAA officials in Miami said mes
sages indicated tne aircraii nao
split In two and burned.
The wreckage was spotted by a
searching PAA C-46 type cargo
plane In the vicinity of Carolina,
some 400 mues soutneast of neiem. '
Carolina is a river port of about
3.500 population and has a large
airfield.
The stratocruiser apparently was
heading there when it went down.
The one and one-quarter million,
dollar craft disappeared on a flight
irom Buenos Aires to New York.
Scores of search planes have
been covering a vast area of jungle
and plateau land In an effort to lo
cate it.
United States Air Force para
medics were Immediately dis
patched to the scene from Belem.
Pacific Air i
Defense Set i
SAN FRANCISCO Wl The com
bined military forces of the entire
Pacific coast were prepared Thurs
day to detect and repel possible
air attacks.
Details of a completed radar
oi enemy oomoera ana ineuioas ox
shooting down invading aircraft
were disclosed by top ranking of
ficers of the Western Air Defense
force at Hamilton Field. .
Maf. Gen. Walter E. Todd.
vAur commanamg' general, wiu
a meeting of the aviation writers '
association that: -:
1 The radar network - guarding
the Pacific Coast is in complete
operation, and Is the finest in the
world.
2 During the recent ; two-hour
air alert when aircraft were re
ported approaching Alaska coast,
"one sighting was not identified."
Other officers admitted it could
have been an unfriendly plane...
27 Arrested ;
In Road Check
State Police nere held their sec
ond traffic check within a week
Wednesday afternoon at the inter
section of Highways 66 and 33.
Officers reported 61 cars were
processed, resulting in 27 arrests
and 17 written warnings.
Six arrests were made for ho op
erator's license; six, no vehicle
cense; nine, inadequate brakes;
three, no stop light; one, no horn; '
one, no PUC permit and one, im
proper wheel covers.
Court Refuses
Daylight Test
SALEM W) The Oregon Su
preme Court refused Thursday to
consider an attempt to force Port
land to go back on standard time.
The high court, after hearing ar
guments by Ray Kell, Portland
lawyer, attacking Portland's day
light time proclamation, ruled that
it would not accept Jurisdiction in
Uie dispute.
This means that Kelt, If he wants
to continue the' court fight, would
have to do It In Multnomah' Cir
cuit court; !
The court announced Its decision
at the end of Kelt's opening argu
ment. It didn't even wait to hear Alex
ander Brown, Portland city attor
ney, who was going to argue on
behalf of the city.. , 1
lis . jkIJ
; H:.V
9 O'CLOCK talk was caught by the photographer on Main
Street this morning between Frank VV. Pleas, 526 N. 12th,
and Hans Hanson, manager of the Coast-to-Coast store, v