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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1961)
HERALD AND 'Big Spender9 Needs Jarring By ANN LANDERS ." Dear Ann Lander: I'm a wid ow who hai gone with a bachelor for three yean. My friend U it tractive and charming - but he has spent exactly 35 cents on me in all the time we've been dating. This man is absolutely a genius when it comes to finding free places to go. We seldom eat out and then we split the check even the tip. We al ways use my car because he had a chance to get a good price tor ms ana soia u. His idea of a great evening Is a home-cooked meal at my place, a free concert in 9 park, then back home for a nightcap and TV. I must say he is witty company and treats me nicely, but he nev er talks of marriage and I'm afraid he never will. I hate ag gressive 'women and don't want to be one. What shall I do? ALICE , Dear Alice: A foolish woman b less desirable than aa aggres sive one. After three years a gal has the right to know what a man's late nitons are. This ba't pushy It's sensible. And how did The Last of the Big Spenders get trapped into helling out that 35 cento. I'U bet he bought some peanuts at the hand concert and then discovered you had lost your purse. Dear Ann Landers: I'm a high school senior, male, who is plagued by a mother who can out-talk any living human. We have a brand new sedan and I can't go near it We also have a second hand car which Is O.K. for me to drive, but I have to buy gas and oil and keep it in shape and that's fine. My dad has a good car which he uses fori business. Last week, out of the clear blue sky, my mother decided that any one who can't support himself shouldn't be driving a car, so all of a sudden I'm a pedestrian. How can I support myself when I'm still in high school? I get good grades and have never been In any trouble. My dad and I get along fine. He sees my side of it. What can I do?-ON FOOT Dear On: "Seeing year sMe of II" isn't enough. Yew dad should latenrene la your behalf. A Ugh eheal hey should he arnlii - - - m BU4alnMi Ink or by doing chores al home in exchange for his allowance. If you used to bay gas and U for the second-hand car where the money come from? . I suggest both your parents (and you) sit dowa with a guld aace counselor or teacher and set ap a workable program. Ei ther I'm getting only part of the story or you're, getting we Beck f the caickea. Dear Ann: I now that you nev er recommend divorce. But after the couple have decided to tell it to the judge, why is it that some divorced couples can't stand the sight of each other while others are friendly, mix socially, and even go to each other s homes? Please teach me something. I'm EAGER TO LEARN Dear Eager: It all depeads a the temnerameat of 'the dl Tweed parties, and the dream, stones under which they spilt up. Some divorces are nasty and Bitter. Other are lets tempest' mm and even amicable. Generally aaeakiag, divorced cm pies who far themselves E. DITTRICH Have Heat When It Counts! Caul Oa 1 Onlllsaae saline Oil Pkeae TV -alM . fv M1-, Visit LaPointe's Stork Nook O Dresses O Skirts O Tops Pushers O Capri Pants IT'S A WONDERFUL STORE :," St'tw y;!.' W NEWS, Klamath Falls. Or. are less hostile to former mates. To learn the difference between a marriage that "settles down" and one that "gets dull," send for Ann Landers' booklet, "What To Expect Krom Marriage," en closing with your request 20 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed stamped envelope. (Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope.) Meg Kept Outside Monastery BIRR. Ireland (UPI) - Rigid monastic rules today kept Prin cess Margaret out of an Irish monastery she wanted to visit. Margaret, who Is here to visit her In-laws, ran up against the regulation that no women are per mitted in Mt. St. Joseph's Abbey unless they are heads of state or accompanying a head of state. The 30-year-old princess wanted to visit Father Boylan, a religious author she admires. In order to do so. she hoped to enter the enclo- sure of the monastery from which women are barred. The princess could have entered the section of the monastery which is open to the public, but she de cided against it because she is beginning to fear rubberneckers, When she asked if the Irish gov. eminent could guarantee the prl vacy of such a visit, an official of the department of external affairs said: "We can give no such guarantee." Thus far, Margaret has proved too big a public drawing card, Here as in Brussels, any public appearance by the princess has been the signal for a near-riot by her admirers. She was almost crushed by a crowd of well- wishers Sunday on her way to church. Irish police today kept an eye on crowds outside Birr Castle, where Margaret and her husband, Antony Armstrong-Jones, are va cationing with the Earl and Coun tess of Rosse, bis mother. Man Is Sought For Inheritance A man who once worked In a Klamath Falls restaurant is be ing sought by a Seattle lawyer. JamM A. Sin carls, who worked In tha New Wav Cafe. 1034 Main Street, in 1936. is one of the bene ficiaries in a will left by his hmthor Cmrm Cares; He lived at 1130!4 High Street. The amount of the bequest is unknown. Singaris also went under the names Gares and Garres. Anyone having information as to his whereabouts Is asked to contact A. J. Button Jr., 1422 Northern Life Tower, Seattle. 1.656 Foreign Students Listed BERKELEY (UPI) The Uni versity of California announced Monday that 1.656 foreign students representing 90 nations are en rolled at the Berkeley campus. More than half of the foreign students, 881 or 53 per cent, come from countries in Asia, the Middle East and Africa. There are 172 students from the Republic of Chi na and 159 from Canada. Only two students from the So viet Union were studying at Ber keley during the fall semester, but a university spokesman said three more were expected to enroll in the spring. I h S-V.-V iMMah's Tuesday, January t, 1M1 ' Biting Cold Gets Grip On Midwest By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Biting cold weather held an icy grip on northern Midwest areas today, with temperatures again plunging far below zero. For toe second straight morn ing, the mercury dropped to more than 25 below zero in International Falls, Minn., as the cold air mass held over Minnesota, the eastern Dakotas and parts of Iowa and Wisconsin. It was -16 in Dululh, Minn. Temperatures stayed close to zero in many parts of the ice belt Monday. Near seasonal readings were re ported in other sections of the country. It was above freezing along the Pacific Coast, extreme southern parts of the Plateau and Rocky Mountain region, the Gulf Coast states, the Tennessee Valley and northward into the middle Atlantic Coast states. ' Light snow fell in the northern Plains, the upper Mississippi Val ley, the Great Lakes region south ward throughout the Ohio Valley and eastward into the Appalachi ans. Snow on the ground in Pell ston, Mich., measured 20 inches and it was nearly two feet deep in Caribou, Maine. Weather Table By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS High LOw Pr. Albany, snow 27 8 T Albuquerque, clear 38 20 .. Atlanta, cloudy 44 31 .. Bismarck, cloudy 22 15 .. Boston, clear 35 23 Buffalo, snow 22 14 .04 Chicago, clear . 31 17 .05 Cleveland, snow 28 12. .01 Denver, clear 29 12 .. Des Moines, cloudy 27 -1 .. Detroit, snow 28 20 .04 Fairbanks, cloudy 12 -S .22 Helena, clear 33 11 .. Honolulu. M MM.. Indianapolis, cloudy 31 25 Juneau, rain 42 37 .61 Kansas City, cloudy - 34 20 .. Los Angeles, clear 67 46 Louisville, snow 32 31 T Memphis, clear 38 24 .. Miami, clear 77 56 .. Milwaukee, clear 30 7 .03 Mpls.-SL Paul, snow 11 1 .05 New Orleans, cloudy 58 43 .. New York, cloudy 36 31 .. Oklahoma City, clear 41 27 .. Omaha, clear 15 1 .. Philadelphia, cloudy 35 28 .. Phoenix, clear . 63 36 ! .. Pittsburgh, snow 1 28 23 ,.04 Portland, Me., cloudy 32 18 ".. Portland, Ore., clear 40 24" .. Rapid City, clear 28 13 .. Richmond, cloudy 27 28 .. St. Louis, clear 34 22 .. Salt Lake City, clear 36 JJ .. San Diego, clear 64 45 .. San Francisco, clear 55 38 ... Seattle, clear 41 25 .. Tampa, clear 65 45 .. Washington, cloudy 41 33 .. (M Missing; T Trace) Seek To Save Scenic Shore WASHINGTON (UPI) - Califor nia congressmen will introduce legislation to keep 53.000 acres of pine-scented, sunny and scenic sea shore safe from spoilage in Marin County, it was announced today. Companion bills backed by Sen. Clair Engle, D-Calif., and Rep. Clem Miller, D-Calif., will be sub mitted for the second time. Both lawmakers are asking Con gress to establish a national sea shore in the Point Reyes Penin sula area, about 30 miles north of San Francisco. The Senate Interior Committee approved the seashore suggestion after hearings in Kentfidd, Calif., lost April. If approved by Con gress, the Interior Department would staff the area with life guards, forest rangers, engineers and other workers. EXPENSIVE CARS BUENOS AIRES (UPI) The newspaper Corrco de la Tarde, analyzing astronomical prices paid for cars at recent auctions here, calculated today that an average Argentine worker who banked 10 per cent of his pay each month would have to save for 666 years to buy a luxury automobile. Prices paid at the auctions ranged from around $4,000 for midget European "bubble cars" to nearly $50,000 for a new Cadil lac. TOM ODEN, Agent TU 4-7101 Ret. TU 2-1 1ST II Scuth 1 1ttt Jerry I. Shelley District Atnt They'll Do It Every WUVZZIT? THIS GAS AND ERL 7r. iut uii CUAN6E FROM A TWENTY- l" "n pswM5 YOUR 1 VVANNA MAKE- fZ-Ci Jandpive li-- nnAaWi mauve pia surevwre Kl 1 Republican Today To Bring Back The Soil Bank WASHINGTON (UPI) - A farml state Republican will introduce legislation today to put the gov ernment back in the soil bank business. Rep. William Avery, R-Kan.J said his bill also would expand soil bank acreage from 29 million to about 60 million acres. He said the present national payment rale Sketches Introduce New Soloiis In 87th Congress WASHINGTON (AP)-Here are thumbnail sketches of the new comers to the Senate, convening today as the 87th Congress. J. Caleb Boggs, 51, a Republi can elected to the Senate from Delaware after two 4-year terms as governor. The only Senate newcomer to unseat an incumbent in the Nov. 8 elections, he de feated Democrat J.' Allen Frear Jr. Boggs, a lawyer, served three terms in the House (1947-53). Spoke out against federal en croachment on states' rights and charged Truman administration with creeping socialism. However, Boggs is regarded as more liberal than Frear on some economic issues. 1 Joe Hickcy, 49, a Democrat, decided to relinquish , the gover norship of Wyoming in the midst of his 4-year term to have him self appointed to the Senate. Va cancy was created Dec. 9 with the death of Rep. Keith Thomson, a Republican elected a month earlier to Senate seat from which veteran Democrat Joseph C. O'Mahoncy retired. A quiet, un assuming roly-poly lawyer, Hickcy is a stickler for economy in gov ernment. Associates have called him more conservative than most Republicans. - Edward V. Long, 52, a Missouri Democrat, was appointed to the Senate last September after the death of Sen. Thomas C. Hen- nlngs Jr.,' and then won election Nov. 8. A lawyer, Long has been active both in politics and busi ness. He has served as a prose cuting attorney, a city attorney and a state senator. He is presi dent of two banks and several loan companies and life insurance com panies. He also owns a 1,600-acre farm. He is a past director of Rotary International. Lee Mctcalf, 49, new Demo- cratlc senator from Montana, has spent most of his adult life in public service in the Montana Legislature, in the Army during World War II, and as an associate justice of the Montana Supreme Court before his election to the House in 19S3. In the House he was active in the liberal Demo cratic group and urged action to clip the power of the House Rules Committee. In the Senate he suc ceeds James E. Murray, another Police Find Little Girl With Body Of Her Mother NEW YORK (UPI) Thrce - year-old Patricia McKiernan struggled today for the life that started ebbing from her when she was locked in a bedroom for six days with her dead mother. A ooliccman who broke into Mrs. Jennie McKiernan's Tom Oden ' Aiki:. "Inferesttd In $10,000 Pie ttcfiaa for 75c Per Month? Inquire About FARMERS INSURANCE GROUPS Nome Liability - Your Ittt ..Insurance Buy" Time Will Introduce Measure of $14 an acre "might have to be increased slightly." Chairman Harold D. Coolcy, D- N.C., of the House Agriculture Committee, however, commented that Avery's bill sounded like a re-write of an Eisenhower admin istration bill proposed in the last Congress. That bill failed to pass. Cooley said, "We will consider Democratic veteran who - didn't seek reelection. Jack Miller, 44, a Republican, won a Senate seat from Iowa by defeating Democratic Governor Herschel Loveless. He has been a state senator since 1956 and be fore that was a member of the Iowa House. A tax lawyer spe cializing in farm tax problems, Miller once headed the American Bar Association's committee on tax problems of farmers. In 1946- 47 he was an attorney in the In ternal Revenue Service's chief counsel's office. He. succeeds Re publican Senator Thomas E. Mar tin, who did not seek reelection. Maurine Neuberger of Oregon gives the Democrats a woman senator to balance off the Repub licans' Margaret Chase Smith of Maine. In the Senate Mrs. Neu berger will take the seat held by her husband, Richard L. Neuber ger, who died last March. A slen der, friendly woman, Mrs. Ncu berger was a school teacher before her marriage in 1945. She and her husband worked closely together in politics and at one time were both members of the Oregon Legislature. Claiborne de Borda Pell, 42. Rhode Island's new Democratic senator, succeeds a man more than 50 years his senior, Theodore Francis Green, 93. A Newport socialite and a former foreign service officer. Pell defeated two ex-governors to win the Demo cratic nomination. He speaks French, Portuguese and Italian and has been active in behalf of refugees and increased immigra tion quotas. His father was a House member from New York and altogether he counts four members of Congress and a vice president among his ancestors. Benjamin A. Smith II. 43, takes over the Senate seat of President- elect John F. Kennedy. A close friend and former Harvard room mate of Kennedy, Smith was ap pointed to fill out two of the four remaining years of Kennedy's senate term. A Democrat, Smith is a former mayor of Gloucester. Mass., where he is president of fish product companies and a box factory. Like Kennedy, he served as a naval lieutenant in the Pacif ic during World War II. Hnent aionaay louna uie nine LI 1- U. t I l 1 . ' . '"V"", "Vasy to catch. The duck scooted sirensin w g on ner Knees. cordia Hospital where she reported in critical condition. w 83 Police said P a t r i c i a was apart-(trapped in Die bedroom alter Mrs. Mchicrnan locked the door with a chain too high for the child to reach and lay down for a nap seven days ago. The 33- ewdi',hCr; ' WidW, "5 . Ki.lr. nf k.arl lr,,hlo on. i parently died shortly after lying down, the coroner reported. Police were alerted when Mat thews Mahoney, Mrs. McKier nan's brother-in-law, asked them to investigate because he bad been unable to reach her for two days. Mrs. McKiernan's husband died two years ag?. police said, and since then the mother has kept a very careful watch on the child. That is why she locked the bed room door Tatricia had a habit of wandering off and Mrs. Mc Kiernan didn't want the little girl to hurt herself in the hallway. By J immi Hatlo But THE TRADING STAMPS WE 6ET5 WE'LL BLOCK TRAFFIC' TEN MINUTES COUNTING THEM" some kind of a soil bank bill. It will be. some kind of a bill to retire acres and for payment-in-kind." He suggested, however, that to be effective in reducing surpluses the soil bink acreage level might have to be raised to 75 million acres. "If you don't put the acreage high enough," Cooley said, "all you get is marginal land in the soil bank." .- ' He added that surpluses could not be reduced until good pro ducing land was retired from cultivation. Avery's bill would get at that problem a bit differently. He pro posed authority for entire farms in the soil bank. "When whole farms go Into the program," Avery said, "we take out of production both high pro ducing land and marginal land." Avery said the 1960 Democratic campaign platform was critical of the soil bank idea. But, he added, "I have noticed that there has been a change in attitude from party spokesmen for agriculture since the election." The Kaasan said he would press for early passage of his bill, or a comparable one, because farmers must plan their 1961 crops in the next 60 days. Cooley indicated, however, Agri culture Committee' emphasis may be needed more in other areas. He said he planned to put in a bill extending the Sugar Act, slat ed to expire in March, to Dec. 31. The Foreign Agricultural Serv ice reports that the Soviet Union has a well-established program for artificial insemination of sheep. Willi artiiiciat insemination, one ram is required for 1.000 to 1,500 ewes, in contrast with one ram to 30 to 50 ewes for natural mating. Artificial insemination of sheep requires intensive veterinary serv ice and close flock supervision and is practical only where there is a plentiful supply of cheap labor. Artificial breeding has been used for many years in the important sheep-breeding areas of the U.S.S.R. In recent years more than 50 per cent of all ewes have been bred artificially. Quality improvement has been the most important advantage of the program. In one district 87,000 ewes were bred to fine wool rams The offspring produced more than two pounds of wool more than their mothers. Policemen Nab Drunken Duck WOODSTOCK, 111. (AP) - A weaving, quacking duck, stagger ing around Woodstock New Year's morning, was picked up by police alter a hectic chase, It was the only drunken duck jailed for celebrating New Year's, Policemen Don Liston and Tom Vcrnie got a report that a duck was waddling along the icy streets and sidewalks, occasionally (lap ping its wings. The policemen found that a jllri. .. if .vi... , ' " ' " ...,. ,.. , fpul inrh., ,ho cround. sailed over a snnw hank j something the policemen couldn't Z ' . ".u7... ...V.l lV iimh vhmi. up mm mill. Then he took off again. Finally he ran into a garage and the po licemen captured him. Liston and Vcrnie speculated ithe duck was a tame one and Pably had ome New Year's: 'WW- X WILLIAM WYLER'S TONITE AT7;30 V4J!"';,, mmmmmwmmmmmm CniMrea (under It) 7 p aaH I I I I 1 s HURRYine-. S ? jlMultimillion Leaves Canada En Route To Poland DERBY LINE. Vt. (AP) A multimillion-dollar art treasure crossed the Canadian border into the United States today on its way back to Poland. It had been moved about for more than 20 years to keep it out of the hands of first the Nazis and then the Commu nists. Two huge moving vans, accom panied by several cars, reached U.S. customs at Derby Line short ly before 6 a.m. A Royal Canadi an Mounted Police escort handed over responsibility for the ship ment to Vermont State Troopers. GOP Head Says Kennedy Won't Get All He Wants WASHINGTON (UPI) -The 87th Congress convening today is geared to throw its first full ef fort behind President-elect John F, Kennedy's anti-recession pro gram with prospects of rubstan tial success. .' , , But Asst. House GOP Leader Leslie C. Arends, , 111., predicted the new Democratic President would not get his five-point prior ity program passed "just the way he wants it. Arends said there was a big question mark" in the outlook for enactment of a medical aid program for the aged tied to the Social Security system. This bill must 'originate in the House, and some legislators feel the House Ways and Means Com mittee might only hold hearings this session, putting off a show- down until the 1962 congressional election year. Predict "Satisfactory" Passage But House and Senate Democra tic leaders insisted that Kennedy's program would pass in some "satisfactory" manner. Here is what Kennedy wants first from Congress: A medical care plan for the aged within the Social Secur ity program. A hike In the tl-an-hour fed eral minimum wage. Expanded government hous ing programs. Federal aid to education. Help for areas suffering from chronic unemployment. Beyond tliese priority bills are others with uncertain futures. They include a farm bill, still to be worked out even in general terms; a variety of government reorganization plans, including creation of a new department of Bridge Claims First Victim '. Of New Year 1 SAN FRANCISCO (UPl) - The Golden Gate Bridge claimed its first suicide death of 1961 early today when a woman identified as Mrs. Betty Anne Brown, 38, Ir vington. leaped to her death. The Highway Patrol said Mrs. Brown parked her station wagon near the south tower before jump ing to her death. On the vehicle's front scat were several notes, in eluding one to her husband read ing: "My darling. I'm scared, but 1 know I must jump this time. 1 love you." The victim's husband, Russell, could offer no explanation for his wife's suicide. He reported that she had got up and left the house around 2 a.m. without explana tion. Movie Cowboy Has Troubles PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -Movie cowboy Roy Rogers had a little trouble with his shooting irons while riding a float in the Tournament of Roses parade. His trusty six-gun, loaded with blanks, went "phht" almost every other time he fired it. Later, when the weapon was functioning more regularly, horseman rode up to the float and asked Rogers to hold his fire down to a reasonable barrage. Seems the rider's mount w as a bit ,,.hv n V' SUGGESTION FOR NIXON WASHINGTON (UPI) - Wash ington Post Times Herald colum nist Bill. Gold today reported a reader's suggestions that Vice President Richard M. Nixon open a law firm with former President Truman and former New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey. The firm would be called, "Tom. Dick and Harry." - Dollar Art For, more than a dozen years Poland s Communist government has been trying to obtain custody of the collection, valued at $50 million or more. It includes tapes tries, gold-encrusted coronation robes of Polish kings, bejewelled swords and other items including a gold saddle. Officials in charge of the convoy declined information about its des tination or its route across New England. They indicated they would have been happier if there were less public knowledge 'of the shipment. urban affairs and housing; foreign aid, unemployment compensation expansion and possible civil rights bUls. i . Most of the Kennedy adminis tration's troubles will come in the House, as things now stand. ' Arends said the House probably would resist adding federal aid fof teachers' salaries to school construction funds in an educa tion bill. . Support 15-Cent Hike He said the House would stick to the 15-cent boost in the mini mum wage it approved last year and would insist on more limited coverage than the 25-cent hike the Senate passed in I960. The Social Security approach backed by Kennedy for a medical aid plan was rejected by the House Ways and Means Commit tee last year by a 16-9, vote. The committee lineup has not changed materially in the new Congress, so the prospect of an early re versal Is not bright. Over-all, the Republicans have 21 more seats in the House this year than they had in the 86th Congress. But, offsetting this increase in voting strength, the Democrats will have the backing of the White House and the responsibility to deliver on their party pledges. L" 1.. ( L . .I--' .u.j, .u.l, mem, ""UisubKrlbw. not receiving delivery et Will face opposition from Some "wr Hereld and Newt, plee pnene ,,,,, r, southern Democrats. SfTffSffi ENDS TONIGHT I SmSSEmiX 'TARZAN THI I MAGNIFICENT" ft "7 WAYS FROM SUNDOWN" STARTS WEDNESDAY All Die Temptations And Torments Of A Small ' Southern Town! ,uitii-iititnt in TaobVtn aassal J til Hates Mnjrf,l I toriHsoal -V. -J rA. JaJfeJW I m x 1 m mm MaMx Treasure One of the van drivers ex pressed surprise when a newsman told him of the value of the ship, ment he was hauling. He said he had not been told what his cargo was. Antoine Roy, Quebec Province archivist, finally signed an agree. ment last Saturday for the re-" turn of the treasures to the Wawel Polish State Museum a Cracow. The agreement was announced Monday night by the executive committee of Polish National Uni ty, an organization of Poles abroad.: ' The treasure, in 24 blue trunks, was taken from the Provincial Museum on the Plains of Abra ham . M. Dobrosielski, a deputy of the Polish ambassador to the United States, said the treasure would be taken to Boston and loaded on a Polish ship there. The treasures were removed from Poland for safekeeping at the start of World War II. Two representatives of the Polish gov ernment in exile brought them to Canada in 1940. They were moved from one hiding place to another. In 1948 Premier Maurice Du plcssis of Quebec ordered them transferred at night to the provin cial museum when he heard that some of the treasures might be sent back to Poland. iVrato ai Jeter Klametn Falli, Oregon Serving Southern Oregon and Northern California Publlihed dolly (except Sat.) and Sunday by Southern Oregon Publishing Company Main at Esplenede Phone TU-ieoo Mill W. S. SWEETLAND, Publisher Entered as second cless matter at tha post office al Klamath Palls. Oregon. on August 20, IMS, under act at Con- grass. Marcn 3. tev. secono-ctase posv go paid at Klamath Falls. Oregon, snd at additional mailing offices. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Carrier I Month S l.Tt I Mentha S10.SO I Yeer H1.00 , Mall in Advance . I Month S 1.11 Months ...S10 M 1 Yeer tll.M Csrrler and Dealers Weekday & Sunday, copy leg UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION Gene carpenter, nrcuietien liueo a-am batara i r-j. ENDS TONIGHT "TARZAN THI RAYMOND BURR MARTHA HYER JOAN BENNETT Win nia t i ton IMUlAir. LLWIUr! wanciur CaAScOtl JEFF RICHARDS MARGIA DEAN PETER FALK fneane sr aw Cessna ansae si skuw a nnan a mmw si naou) Tinosgrr a an Cessna Pmmm mi tvaaal H Mtt iMitWal 1 r