U OF ORZSVA LIB3ARJ
E'JUS.NS, OR.
6-1-59
In The-
Day's lews
By FRANK JENKINS
Problem news:
In Little Rock yesterday, more
than 230 white seniors began class
es in a makeshift private high
chool opened by a citizens croup.
The school, it is asserted, will be
financed by private contributions.
More than 3,000 high school stu
dents have been idle for the past
seven weeks because the four Lit
tle Rock high schools have never
opened. Arkansas Governor Fau
bus kept them closed to keep them
from being integrated.
Question:
Who will be the sufferers? This,
I think, is the answer:
1. The CHILDREN.
2. The state of Arkansas and
the South, If it follows Arkansas'
example.
An educational system based on
private schools must inevitably
limit education to the children of
the better-to-do. It can't be other
wise. Neither the state of Arkan
sas nor the South as a whole can
afford to limit education to those
pi its children whose parents can
'afford the- cost of private school
ing. If such a thing is attempted,
the South will fail behind the rest
of the country.
The world changes.
The South must change with it.
jOr suffer the consequences.
Back to politics.
If I might be permitted a pious
and impartial word about the
slam-bang politicking in California
in which the GOP is currently
expected to take a bad licking
I think the GOP troubles there
track back to TOO MUCH POLI
TICKING by the Republicans last
spring.
They gave the appearance then
of getting together and deciding
among themselves WHO' SHOULD
BE ALLOWED TO RUN FOR
THIS AND WHO SHOULD BE AL
LOWED TO RUN FOR THAT. The
voters, acting traditionally, didn't
like it regarding the choosing of
their officials at THLIR business,
rather than the business of the
politicians.
When the people don't like what
is going on, they are apt to give
expression to their displeasure in
their voting.
We had an example of that in
Oregon when at the last minute
Douglas McKay resigned as Sec
retary of the Interior and rushed
back to Oregon to file for the
Republican nomination for U.S.
senator.
He won the Republican nomina
tion by a considerably narrowed
majority but lost in the fall to a
Democrat. Mr. McKay is a good
man, with a long record of excel
lent service to his state. But it
seemed to the voters, under the
circumstances, that some political
thimhle-rigging had been going on
back in Washington.
This feeling was reflected in the
voting.
Treasury Men
Reject Plea
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Treasury
officials and the chairman of the
Republican National Congressional
Committee today rejected Com
merce Secretary Sinclair Weeks'
plea for a national sales tax on
manufacturers.
They asserted that the adminis
tration will not recommend such
legislation despite Weeks' an
nouncement that he will try to sell
the President on the idea.
Weeks told reporters last Satur
day that he will urge the ad
ministration to include in its leg
islative proposals next January a
board uniform excise tax levied
at the factory. He said federal
revenue is too dependent on the
income tax which falls off
sharply in times of economic re
cession.
Weeks emphasized he was
speaking only for himself. Never
theless, the wide publicity given
his statement in the closing weeks
of the congressional election cam
paign caused some dismay among
GOP campaign strategists, lhey
fcCred voters might tend to as
sociate Republican congressional
candidates with Weeks' advocacy
of a new, and unpopular tax.
Rep. Richard M. Simpson (R-
Pa.l, chairman of the Republican
National Congressional Commit
tee, took the lead in publicy re
pudiating Weeks proposal.
France Dampens Talk Chances
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP)
France's blunt warning that she
will not feel bound by any U.S.British-Soviet
agreement to sus
pend nuclear weapon tests
Burma Elephant
Just Loves Beer
CHESTERFIELD, England
(fPli That was no pink ele
phant in the bar at the Portland
Hotel.
That was a l-'i ton, eight-year-old
Burmese elephant.
She walked into the bar, sat
down at a table ." rak a pm
of beer.
"She loves hrr." Mud fcriiasr
Gosta Kruse. "St afe
the circus. Iwixi J Ml ft s-Un for nuclear
Kni.e said it tfcs !r tro ivgui lw uly if the Geneva
he had ever takt im ujfcijtvi nsruw' isrecment on (li
into a public hour ci"urt v- cassation of tests. (2
It was not no hn tv-wrH rdnctio of atomic
bar-cic)'d0 fcM '3 ft-controlled end
Price Five Cents 12 Pages
Parley Opens
In Formosa
On Red Crisis
TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) Secre
tary of State Dulles and President
Chiang Kai-shek opened their con
ference today against a backdron
of renewed Red cannonading of
yuemoy.
Alter a 214-hour meetin2 be
tween Dulles and Chiang, a State
uepartment spokesman said that
"Mr. Dulles is not here to twist
anybody's arm or apply any heat
or pressure.
While the talks progressed, the
Chinese Communists put their
shore guns into action for the sec
ond day but on a much lighter
scale, ihe Uelense Ministry said
up to noon only 362 shells had hit
yiiemoy, compared witn more
than 11.500 Monday.
But there was no doubt the ab
rupt Red decision to end the Com
munist-imposed cease-fire had an
important bearing on the Dulles-
Chiang discussions.
Joseph Greene, special assistant
to Dulles, said Dulles' first con
ference with Chiang was "a stock
taking of the present situation.'
He said the political and military
situation was being assessed along
with Communist propaganda.
Greene took this tack on reports
that the United States might bring
pressure on Chiang to cut down
the off-shore islands in the hope
of obtaining a permanent cease-
fire. r
He said applying heat or pres
sure would not be in tune with
the relationship of mutual trust
and coniidcnce of the two coun
tries as allies."
Vice President Chen Cheng.
Chiang's right - hand man, de
clared that to cut the size of the
garrisons or to pull out of the off
shore islands would "definitely
lead to a large-scale war.
General Tells
Atomic Policy
WASHINGTON (AP) Gen.
Nathan F. Twining said today that
U.S. national policy "calls for the
use of nuclear weapons in any
case where such use would be ad
vantageous to us."
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff added that national strate
gy calls for fighting an enemy "on
our terms and not on his."
Twining, in an address to the
Assn. of the U.S. Army Conven
tion cautioned the armed services
against beliefs that only one mili
tary service should be built up for
any particular type of war, gen
eral or limited.
In an apparent effort to offset
Army pleas for greater airlift and
larger manpower, 1 wining said
that airlift, though obviously desir
able, had been accorded a rela
tively lower priority by the joint
chiets.
Work Dispute
Pacts Noted
DETROIT (AP) General Mo-I
tors today announced three more
settlements of local-level labor
disputes, bringing to 203,226 the
number of its United Auto Work
ers employes back on the job.
GM, still about 70.000 short of
its normal UAW production force,
rolled its assembly lines with 1959
model cars for the second day
since a strike shut down its na
tionwide network of plants Oct. 2.
The new settlements involved
1,470 workers at a Fisher Bodv
Plant in Norwood, Ohio; 2,100 at
a Chevrolet Assembly Plant in
Tarrytown. N.Y.; and 650 at a
Brown-Lipc-Chapin Parts Plant at
Elyria, Ohio.
GM and the UAW now have
reached settlements in 87 bargain
ing units.
Chrysler Corp. was troubled
with a strike that idled 1.000 at a
parts plant in Detroit. The cause
of the walkout was not learned
immediately.
aiouscd fears today for the
chances of the Geneva arms talks
opening Oct. 31.
Diplomats wondered whether
the Soviet Union which was
quick to blast the French position
might use it as an excuse to re
fuse agreement and continue her
own tests.
French disarmament expert
Jules Moch caused a stir in the
U.N.'s 81-nation Political Commit
tee Monday by serving notice that
any agreement reached at Geneva
would be "drawn up without the
participation of France and not
applying to kr."
Fraaces ssvermreit has been
K-sig vetp its own atomic
Mir n tket frivice can join the
bmcUm-club.
man vitm that France
I?
',''
WicJ -'V 4" trVsO, f- i
NEW ETNA HIGH SCHOOL is expected to be complet
ed in December and to be occupied after the Christmas
holidays. Construction on the new school building be
gan in June, 1957, and will include six classrooms, two
shops for metal and woodworking, a home economics
SHOOTING HOURS:
OREGON
October 22
OPEN
5:54
CLOSE
5:20
CALIFORNIA
October 22
OPEN CLOSE
5:54 5:14
Fall Weather
Clings To U.S.
United Press International
Fair fall weather clung to most
of the nation Tuesday, with the
only rainfall of significance dous
ing the Carolina coasts.
A third day of dry weather was
seen for southern Texas, and the
lower Rio Grande River contin
ued to subside from its record
flood stage.
The river, which at one time
spread to a width of six miles,
narrowed to three and one-halt
miles at Abraham, Tex.
The drop in the river enabled
hundreds of persons to return to
their flood damaged homes, but
an estimated 6,000 persons, most
of them on the Mexican side of
the river, still were homeless.
Cool air in the West pushed as
far south as the Mexican border
in Arizona and Mexico during the
night and as far east as Minne
sota, Iowa and Kansas.
Lowest readings in the cool air
were in the 20s and 30s over the
Rockies and plateau states, but
from there temperatures rose to
the 40s in the Dakotas and south
through Kansas with 50s common
near the edge of the cool air.
Wind gusts of 30 to 40 miles per
hour whipped the northern and
central plains.
Rainfall along the Carolina
coasts dumped amounts averag
ing about one-half inch.
to production of atomic weapons.
Soviet Deputy foreign Minister
Valerian Zorin said he interpreted
Moch s statement t mean France
"does not intend to contribute to
the reduction of the atomic threat
or take any concrete steps in the
field of disarmament.
Some diplomats felt Zorin might
try to depict the French position
as evidence of Western bad faith
on the eve of the Geneva talks.
The French will not take part in
the talks, but they usually work
closely with the other two Western
powers on such questions.
USE JET PLANES
SANTA FE, Argentina 'I'PIi
Smugglers are using jet planes to
fly contraband into Argentina, po
lice said today. They announced
arrest of two men at a secret air
field used by the smugglers ami
seizure of a truckload of J100.W
worth of contraband from thf
United States.
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON', TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1958
Sergeant Denies Charges
At Army Court-Martial
FT. JACKSON, S.C. (AP)-Sgt.
George Sovie of Ogdensburg, N.Y.
denied at his general court-martial
today seven charges of recruit
maltreatment. He admitted he
ordered two young privates to eat
dollar bills.
The greying, 30-year-old purple
heart veteran said he had occa
sionally made recruits hoist foof-
lockers, weighing about 38 pounds,
as penalties for violating disci
pline. He admitted also that on
instructions from a commissioned
officer he ordered two recruits to
eat dollar bills.
Sovie denied, however, that he
had a trainee dipped head first
into a mess hall grease trap and
said he had never ordered recruits
to jump bodily into the pit of slimy
grease.
The, government rested its case
against Sovie at the outset of the
second day of the court-martial.
Defense Atty. William Townsend
of Columbia put two captains and
another sergeant on the stand as
character witnesses before ovie
testified in his own behalf.
Capt. Robert J. Crossland of
Boston, Mass., and Capt. Ernest
W. Moore of Havana, Fla., testi
fied that they considered Sgt.
Sovie one of the finest noncom
missioned officers ever to serve
under them.
Sgt. Leslie G. Duncan of Arte-
sia, N.M., the clerk in the Recruit
character witnesses before Sovie
an extremely competent lirst ser
geant who has a knack tor get
ting the job done and is always
fair.
1st Lt. John Shea of Rochester,
N.Y., prosecuting attorney, ques
tioned Duncan closely about the
chain of command in Co. B.
Duncan said Sovie, not the com
pany commander, usually handled
disciplinary problems that arose
DENY REPORTS
CARACAS, Venezuela (UPD
The presidential palace has
denied reports that the Venezuelan
cabinet submitted its resignation
to Rear Adm. Wolfgang Larraza
bal, president of the government
junta.
Blabber-Mouth Mynah Bird
Convicted Of Being Pest
LONDON (AP) A mynah who
couldn't keep his mouth shut has
been convicted of being a major
nuisance.
The Magistrate's Court at near
by Kingston-on-Thames was told
the talking bird made a noise like
squealing brakes, sang "Pop Goes
the Weasel" and other ditties and
whistled at the girls.
In the respectable suburb of
Esher, on London's southern
fringe, that was toa much for the
neighbors.
The mynah, a tye of starling,
lived in an aviary with 21 other
tropical birds at tke bottom of po
tato merchant John Luttmer's gar
den. The bird was not brought to
court, but to the stand came
neighbors to imitate its cries.
Middle-aged John Puddy "a
ird lover all my life" described
he mynah call as "Ou. ow, ow,"
lecidedly raucous.
Mrs. Doreen Corderoy thought
room, a gymnasium with an enclosed stage, a teacher's
conference room and a cafeteria. A vote will be held later
in the year for Fort Jones residents to determine whether
Fort Jones High School District should unionize with the
Etna District.
Col. John R. Smoak of Orange
burg. S.C, the presiding officer
of the court-martial board, inai
cated amazement that "nonjudi
cial company punishment was
handled by the first sergeant
rather than the company com
mander, 1st Lt. Gerald Wheatley
of Bridgeton, N.J.
Red Soldier
Leaves Post
PANMUNJOM, Korea (AP)
The U.N. Command announced to
day that a Communist guard in
the demilitarized zone between
North and South Korea killed his
captain and deserted to the South.
The guard, Pfc. Kim Yung Chul,
20, was picked up last Friday by
an American lieutenant.
The North Korean told investi
gators for the U.N. Command
that he had been on guard duty
at the entrance to the Panmunjom
joint security area where Commu
nist and U.N. representatives
meet on armistice matters.
He said he first suggested to his
captain that they both desert hut
the captain was unwilling. Kim
said he then fired at the officer
three times, killing him, and fled.
No specific reason for the sol
dier's defection to the South was
given.
West Reich Boss
Makes Donation
LONDON (AP) - Visiting Pres
ident Theodor Ileuss of west Ger
many has given the people of Cov
entry 5,000 pounds ($14,000) to
help rebuild their cathedral, de
stroyed during World War II.
Hcuss also laid a wreath on the
tomb of the British Unknown Sol
dicr during the first day of his
four-day visit. He arrived Monday
as the first German head of stale
to visit Britain since before World
War I.
it went "Ack, ack, ack." The bird
also whistled at the girls and sang
"All tho Nice Girls Love a Sailor,"
she testified.
Mrs. F.liza Riley likened the
noise which bothered her to "the
scratching of knives on plates."
The mynah had its friends in
court.
Kx-Detcctive Charles Vanstone
said he had spent several week
ends with the Luttmcrs and the
bird was "not an atom of trou
blc."
Luttmer himself claimed his my
nah was popular witi ntst pc
pie.
"Everybody is very intrigued
with him," he said. "They enjoy
his conversant iirt Dit ci
ness."
After a six-hour hrii! the
court ruled against the mt. Lutt
mer was fined 2 pounds '$:)
ordered to pay 42 pound '$117
court costs and told: "Muffle the
mynah."
i
Telephone TU 4-8111
No. 6211
Wcatiier
FORECAST Klamath Falls and
vicinity: Fair tonight; mostly
cloudy Wednesday with showers In
nearby mountains. Low tonight
28-36; high Wednesday 60-65.
High yesterday 46
Low last night 29
Prectp. last 24 hours . ...0.01
Since -Oct. 1 . .0.34
Same period last year 1.41
Normal for period 0.73
Fire Danger Today
LOW
Fires will not spread beyond the
heal of a campfirc or burning
brush pile. Fires may start from
open flame but will (end to go out.
Northern California F n I r to
night; rain mirth of Ukhih Wednes
day, spreading to Suntn Rosa and
Red Bluff by evening. Cooler
Wednesday. Coastal winds vari
able, 7-14 miles an hour, becom
ing southerly, 15-30 miles an hour
from Point Arena northward early
Wednesday. Low humidity.
Bonelli Nears
Extradition
MEXICO CITY (UPD-The first
phase of formal extradition pro
ceedings against William G. Bon
clli, former California Board of
Equalization member,' was com
pleted today with reading of a
lengthy notification document.
Bonelli, under indictment in Riv
erside and jan Diego counties for
illegal solicitation of campaign
funds, appeared before Judge Mi
guel LaValle Fuentes in Criminal
Court Monday when he heard the
judge read the final section of the
120-page document.
Bonelli now has until Thursday
to enter a plea of guilty or inno
cent to charges in the two Califor
nia Grand Jury indictments.
His attorney, Gonzalo Baranda,
said he would attempt to block
extradition categories in Mexico
and the U. S., and therefore, the
case does not fall within provi
sions of the extradition treaty be
tween the two countries.
Council Reviews Mills Traffic
The traffic p.ittern in Mills Ad-i
rlition and the parking of delivery
trucks were the principal topics
ol discussion at the regular Mon
day night session of the city coun
cil.
A delegation ot residents from
Mills Addition appeared before
the council to ask the status of the
traffic study of their area. Robert
Heath, 2404 Kadcliffe. acted as
spokesman for the group.
He reviewed his knowledge of
the studies to date, pointing out
that at one large meeting the res
idents of the area had decided
upon East-West through streets
and North-South slops. "Some per
son changed this.'1 he charged.
He lamented what he termed
"buck passing" on the issue.
Others in the delegation ex
pressed their views and suctr
alternating stop s.tjns and otVr
ideas. Rev. M. A. McKinnie. 2IM
Garden Avenue, took issue with
Hjath stilting, "No one ft my sec
tion ol Mills is in l.ivor of the
through street plan. They fear in
Demos Plastered
By Eisenhower
In California Talk
By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH
LOS ANGELES (AP) Presi
dent Eisenhower lambasted Dem
ocrats Monday night as political
radicals and called for an end to
Republican "family bickering" in
the party drive to capture control
of Congress.
The President flies north to San
Francisco today for two more
campaign addresses after making
perhaps the hardest hitting speech
of his political career to a cheer
ing crowd of about 6,500 GOP
workers in Los Angeles Shrine
Auditorium.
In a peppery, fighting mood for
the first time on this coast-to-coast
tour, Eisenhower sailed into
the Democrats as a party "hope
lessly split right down the mid
dle." He touched off a round of
laughter in saying they have polit
ical schizophrenia, or split per
sonality. "The opposition record," said
Eisenhower, "is one of ever high
er taxes of dollars worth 50
Clerics Draw
For Rooms
VATICAN CITY (AP) - Forty-
one cardinals of the Roman Cath
olic Church drew lots today for
the three-room cells they will oc
cupy from Oct. 25 until they elect
a new Pope.
The draw was set to favor the
most elderly and the more ailing
of the cardinals. They automatic
ally drew the apartments in the
closed conclave quadranglo near
est to the Sistine Chapel, where
votes will be cast, and the Borgia
Guardroom, where meals will be
served.
For the others, however, it was
an even chance.
The rooms have been prepared
for the past week and will not be
ready until Saturday, when the
cardinals are locked in conclave.
Each cell consists of a bedroom
for the cardinal, a study, and a
room for his clerical aide.
Jose Maria Caro Cardinal Rod
riguez, archbishop ot Santiago,
Chile, who at 92 Is the oldest1
member of the Sacred College,
received one of the favored loc
tions.
Martial Law
Hits Thailand
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP)
Marshal Sarit Thanarat once
more was in active control of
Thailand's government today, ap
parently as the result of friction
within the army group long domi
nant in the Southeast Asia king
dom. Sarit turned out the civilian gov
ernment he had installed Jan. 1
and proclaimed martial law Mon
day night. The constitution was
suspended and the National As
sembly dissolved.
An olficial announcement said
Premier Thanom Kittikachorn
quit voluntarily. He had been a
weak premier, and corruption,
mismanagement and general drift
government had increased
since he reluctantly took office as
a front man for Sarit.
Sarit himself had been out of
the country for most of the year,
undergoing treatment for a seri
ous liver ailment resulting from
heavy drinking. He was opcruted
on in Washington last spring, and
had been in England convalescing
for the past three months. Ho re
turned Sunday and went into se
cret conferences from which the
government overthrow resulted.
Land Mine Blast
Kills Soldier
NICOSIA. Cyprus (AP) One
British soldier was killed and an
other seriously injured today when
their vehicle was blown up by an
electrically detonated mine.
The ambush took place in north
Cyprus.
In Famagusta, three soldiers
were slightly injured when three
bombs were thrown at their patrol
car.
creased speeding."
Charlie Bane, chairman of the
Traffic Safety Commission, re
plied by reviewing the minutes of
the group. He pointed out that the
croup had spent many hours of
study on the problem, and that
they had carefully considered all
angles, including that of traffic
salcty as well as movement of
traffic.
He emphasized there had been
no buck passing. He reviewed
traffic counts that had been taken
which showed no clear cut pattern
ol traffic movement. We arc
charged with traffic safety," he
ptintt-a and realize that
every time ya mofee a street a
tkf struct Mia ipcod t it ta
cr.i it Koh W aWs fs tquis.
", tw BMrMiu t K-
triwi nM u4 ! accidaat
rm. hm4tim the children
that mill save to cross through
slfiats ! get ' Mills School, our
roinoicnd;iion was that a four-
Mi4g stop be installed at Radcliffc
cents of sky high prices of an
economy harassed into producing
fewer jobs, chronic unemployment,
labor strife and fear of the fu
ture." The President said the record
of the administration on the other
hand is one that justifies support
for Republican candidates from
LOS ANGELES (UPD About
100 reporters waiting In a press
room at a hotel Monday for
President Eisenhower to make
an appearance thought the chief
executive had arrived when
they heard loud shouts of fem
inine Joy.
Rushing out of the room, re
porters saw a large crowd of
women hovering around actor
Clark Gable.
coast to coast In the fields of
foreign policy, defense, agricul
ture, and the nation's economy,
and others.
Eisenhower was interrupted by
applause 35 times at the party
rally where nearly every seat in
the auditorium was filled. The big
gest round came when he said
that under this administration:
"Ladies and gentlemen, things
aro good, and getting better every
day."
Eisenhower came to California
mainly to boost tho candidacy of
U.S. Sen. William F. Knowland in
the race for the governorship, and
the bid of GOP Gov. Goodwin J.
Knight for Knowland's Senate seat
and to try to heal a party split.
The split is over Knowland mov
ing into the gubernatorial contest
alter Knight had announced he in
tended to seek reelection, and
Knowland's championship of a
highly controversial "right to
work proposal" which would bar
the union ship in California.
Knight, running for an office he
didn't want, is against the pro
posal and has said he may not
vote for Knowland. organized la
bor also is fighting Knowland on
the "right to work proposal" and
he currently faces the gloomy
prospect of defeat by ms Demo
cratic opponent, State Atty, Gen.
Edmund G. iPat" Brown.
With Knowland and Knight side
by side on tho speakers' platform
with him in an outward show of
harmony, Eisenhower told his ap
plauding audience: Let's have no
more family bickering fancied
or real. It just helps defeat what
we want."
Knowland and Knight joined the
prolonged applause.
A bit later the President said
the Republicans "have had our
family spats." But he went on to
say at that point that the Demo
crats are worse off that they are
hopelessly split. .
At one extreme is a wing
whose campaigns were largely
settled in Southern primaries held
weeks ago, " Eisenhower said. "At
the other extreme is the stronger
wing, dominated by political radi
cals. . . .
These self-styled liberals are
the ones who really challenge
sane, sound, forward-looking gov
ernment in the United States, It
is against tho spread of their rad
ical influence that we are waging
this campaign."
Elsenhower picked Vice Presi
dent Nixon's home state to say
this about him in his prepared
text: "If only all of us go full out.
as our fine vice president, Dick
Nixon, has we, together, will
achieve victory."
But In making the speech the
President deleted that sentence
and said Instead that Nixon is
one of our most effective leaders
in this great fight" to win control
of Congress from the Democrats
in tho November elections. Eisen
hower added: "He is giving us a
shining example of dedication to
the cause of good government.
In reply to questions, While
House press secretary James C.
Ilagerty said the President re
vised his remarks about Nixon
because ho wanted to make
them stronger."
To some the original version
seemed to add up to a warm en
dorsement of Nixon's campaign
technique, often sharply criticized
by the Democrats. The revised
Eisenhower version was keyed
less specifically to praiso of Nixon
going "full out" In his campaign
ing. nd Martin, and the rest of Mills
Addition be left as is."
Tratfic Safety Committee mem
bers present reaffirmed their be
lief in tho decision, and it was
adopted by the council.
Complaints were registered by
those present about squirreling
and drag-racing on Radcliffc. Po
lice Chief Charlie Howard re
ported that juveniles were appre
hended, cited, then turned over to
juvenile authorities, and the po
lice department had no knowledge
of what action was taken against
them.
We hope to have this situation
corrected soon," Howard st-atcd.
The delivery truck prb1t imisi
nnencnted Iw Bnh Thmtft'Bn-. it
rarer motwr- and awn i (SiJffiU-l
KV fed Hm3j. I ?.
Waltea lwutfe. ($.ftf&tal
Creamery mis rftsnv.
Following a considerable discua
(Continued on Pagi Four) t
i