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Albany Democrat-Herald from Albany, Oregon • 1
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Albany Democrat-Herald from Albany, Oregon • 1

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THRONGS ROUTED Veatherman Says: OREGON Rather cloudy with scattered shower today, and cloudiness decreasing tonight; cooler In cast portion today, and cooler over state tonight; and local froct In low valleys tonight; partly cloudy Thursday with ruing temperatures In the afternoon. BY STORM'S BLAST! to WEST PALM BEACH. Sept 16 (UP) A scream SCENTS insr hurricane slammed against 200 miles of Florida's eas. Florida Braces coast resort areas today as mounting winds reached a steady The Albany Herald. Vol.

LXXI, No. 285 WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 17, 1947 strength, oi aoove 75 miles an hour with gnats more than luu. Albany Democrat-Herald, Vol. LXXIX, No.

295 Against Blast The storm uprooted trees, tore down commercial slim board Congressional Inquiry Into High P'ccs Underway 6 U.S. Soldiers WEST PALM BEACH, 111, and ripped shingles off houses here. Most telephone anrj telegraph wires were buffeted to the ground and power faile in nearly all sections of the city. Sept 17. A shrieking hurricane TT1" Streets fronting on the lake were flooded as the him tides i was a few miles offshore early today, but H.

Barnet just leaned back with his pipe and turned on his battery-powered radio. leaped the six-foot seawall and coursed through the dowfr Defy Yugoslavs town area. Marshall Asks Overhauling Of U.N. Machinery By Ckaattasl Vims UNITED NATIONS HALL, 'J 7ZZr Pslm fronds cluttered the groi imdi i "The old house stood the the 1928 hurricane," he said. "I guess A united Press Goltum Tells Of visiting the emergency shelter "at In Border Clash Br Calto4 Tn lt'U last -gain." the courthouse said it resembled! The Barnets buttoned up for war-tune bomb shelter with the storm in four hours of a ham' TRIESTE.

Sept. 17 Half mering, water-storing and shop 1 Girl's Hysteria 5.000 persons huddled together en the concrete floor. -4' Wares Foand Beaches dozen American soldiers sta ping last night Flushing-, N.Y., Sept 17 Male members of the family Secretary of State George C. nailed up shutters. Women filled The coastline had battened down SANTA ANA, Cat, Sept 17W.PJ Marshall proposed today a bathtubs with water, got out of tioned at a border outpost north of Trieste defied a Yugoslav demand for a patch of backwoods Italian land today and stood their ground long radical overhaul of united na George (Bud) Collura, 21, testified today hia sweetheart Beulab hours before the full weight ef the storm struck the southern halt of the state.

storage a radio with battery pow Louise Overall, 18, became ex er, and stocked the icebox with non-perishable food for the family At noon Miami and Miami BeacH tremely hysterical" when she learned her parents were dead tions machinery, limiting the biff power veto, shifting major responsibilities to the 55-na-ticra assembly and confessing the failure of the security past the deadline of an ultim atum they received. of 10. Power Flickers Off were being lashed by 83 mil hour winds with gusts up to 198, aboard their blasted yacht Mary Three U.S. medium tanks E. March IS.

Police Chief R. Croft at Del. To prevent a vacuum from forming, the west door was prop wheeled into position behind "I sat up all night with ped open. ray Beach, present target of -the storm, reported "it's blowing like hell but we're OK so far." 1 said the bespectacled Gollum, on trial with her for the deaths of the outpost to support the detachment, and Lt. Harry Mo-nishi, commander of the bor her parents, financier and Mrs.

The town of 7,000 midway be Mrs. Tom Clark, Barnet't daughter and wife of an army major, grinned wryly and guessed they had "come back from Eur Walter E. OverelL It was his sec der station, made good his or (NSA Tmltmkatm) ond day on the witness, stand. tween West Palm Beach and Miami housed many of its people in twe hotels and a schoolhouse. iginal report to headquarters: ope a little too soon." But they "I am holding my ground.

Pint witness, as the concressional sub-committee Inquiry Into high prices got under way at Providence, r. was Mrs. James B. Hedges (right), president of the Rhode Island lsgue ef Women Voters. Seated, behind table (left to right) are: Senator Raymond B.

Baldwin (It, Senator Ralph K. Handera (It, Vt and Senator Francis J. Meyers (D, Current was turned off there ba were calmly sitting around with the rest of the family waiting for The clash of intentions between the Americans and Yugoslavs was the Florida Power company. He was expected to corroborate Miss OverelL who preceded him to the stand to deny they fatally clubbed her parents and sank the yacht with a time bomb. They admitted buying dynamite at the bulletins on the big wind.

council. Marshall's proposals constituted an American challenge to Russia upon whom the U. S. spokesman placed most if not all the blame for the world's chaotic condition, fa aw "Watchdog Group Marshall told the UN general assembly that the United States bow la prepared to accept drastic limitation of the security council veto right. He asked for the creation of a US-nation standing committee of the UN general assembly to remain in continuous session and take over much of the job originally assigned to the security council.

The Marshall proposal would Heavy waves pounded against the second such touchy encounter during the establishment of the Wholesale Food Prices Hit All-Time Peak the beaches all along the southern east coast of Florida but sea walls The city power flickered on and off early this morning and the Barnets, with other families, prepared to use their candles or home border positions provided by the request of her father. protected most cities, Clewtstesi Fearfal newly effective Italian peace The spot check of 10 represent Speaking deliberately and la a treaty. The Americans won a like ative clUes showed that housewives scheduled a meeting at Washington with farmer representatives to discuss plans for stemming price generators. Essential services con' tinued on auxiliary current The waves splashed aiuBil well modulated voice, Gollum, prompted by his attorney, William test yesterday. Una In Doubt against this city's six-foot seawall.

were taking the government's ad' vice about some purchases. Buy West Palm Beach lumber yards Beirne, told in detail of talking Borne 60 miles inland from the stayed open all night as old-tim A Yugoslav detachment ordered the Americans to surrender the with police officers who advised him to take Miss Overall home the ers like the Barnets waited until virtually the last minute to plank er resistance was developing against butter and eggs, and the volume of retail meat business had dropped still further because low-lying danger area around Lake Okeechobee an estimated 10.004 persons, migrated by train and ear northward from Clewlston. establish a "watch dog" committee night of the blast 60-yard patch of Italian territory, giving them until noon to give way. "On the way out to the Mary up windows. Red Cross Stands By Three hours past the deadline, the housewives were refusing to pay Clewlston, which has a normal after the blast, she was hysterical and incoherent," Gollum testified.

Yugoslavs still had not advanced Food supplies also joined in the high prices. Army sources said the dispute Hth-hour rush; milkmen deliv I would say she was hysterical arose over a discrepancy in map until I got her to her home In ered advance supplies, and grocery stores cleaned out their stocks The survey showed that butter had increased an average of more than 10 cents a pound. The price of eggs jumped almost eight cents population of 3,000, was half emp tied as residents of that city and surrounding communities drove north bumper-to-bumper on the highways and hundreds of others clambered aboard special Flintrldge. After one of the men of cold meat and non-perishables. Br I'atrt tnm Wholesale food prices were at the highest peak ever recorded today, and retail prices at the corner grocery store had ipiraled upward with them.

Dun it Bradstreet announced that wholesale food prices hud risen during the week ended yesterday to a new all-time peak. The index of 31 basic foods jumped from $7.02 a week ago to $7.12 Sept. 16. Meanwhile, a survey by United Press showed that in 10 widely scattered cities retail prices had risen rapidly during the. last two weeks to keep pace with the new round of record-breaking prices at the nation'a big grain and livestock centers.

At Washington, agriculture commissioners of five states charged that "inflated labor costs are the largest single item in higher living expends." The commissioners, from Texas, Georgia, North Dakota, Minnesota and Virginia, of all the United Nations to keep an eye on the world and to step In with recommendations when the security council as has become Its habit fails to act in a world crisis. Marshall Applauded Marshall spoke after Mexico's foreign minister Jaime Torres Bodet charged that the great powers were paralyzing the UN with disagreement and attacked Russia whose "abuse" of the veto, he claimed, "may make peace on the boat Mid the Overells were dead, I went over and told her The Red Cross was waiting, too, a dozen. Meat prices also ndvan ced sharply. increases by boosting food production. At Boston a congressional subcommittee was told by department store representatives that neither wholesalers nor retailers were responsible for high prices.

John S. Parkins, representing William Fi-lene's Sons told the congressmen that profits were the snallest part of the "total cost" of doing business. Administration officials at Washington meanwhile urged housewives to cut down on luxury foods and offered them some hope that meat prices would drop this fall. The commerce department said that the price of meat "is considerably higher than that normally indicated by the volume of meat production and consumer spending, and as a result may decline during the third or fourth quar and she became extremely hyster with headquarters in a three-story frame building and shelters all The average price of pork loin ical." over town in the county court' climbed 10.5 cents a pound. Ba After first driving to his home house, they had already begun to to tell his mother, Mrs.

Wllhel con was up seven cents a pound, ground round beef eight cer.ts and reading. The treaty fixed the boundary line at a point thvee kilometers west of the center of the village of Sesana. The Americans took the Sesana church as tne center of the town. The Yugoslavs chose another point 250 yards nearer the border. Told te Stand Ground Judging from army orders issued to U.S.

troops earlier, the detachment was bound to take no belligerent action if the Yugoslavs insisted on forcing their way past the outpost The Americans had been in fill up with refugees from the low Okeechobee country, resignedly beef rib rolled nine cents. mina Stomel, of the tragedy, he took Miss Overell to her Flint-ridge home. She took a bath and moving in with their own bedding The meat prices climbed most and food. Greeted with vigorous applause went to bed, he aaid. in eastern and far western mar kets.

In Kansas City, Dallas, Den Theatera Give Up The courtroom was crowded to An emergency hospital was at the start and finish of his speech, Msrshall hardly had re- turned to his seat in the spot hear Gollum's story. ver and other western cities In the heart of the meat-producing area ready in the Norton Art Gallery, some prices actually declined and Priorities will go to expectant mo' thers and emergency cases. ter of this year." many remained stationary. In downtown Wast Palm Beach lighted assembly, hall before the Polish foreign minister Zygmunt Modzelewski unleashed a thinly-vetleel attack mf the Marshall plan for Europe's reconstruction. the Florida theater gave up trying structed to stand their ground and prevent passage by persuasion and by citing treaty and commission articles but if the Yugoslavs outflanked them, they were to stay.

Ala ska rr Storm Howls Inland to End After Lashing Bering Sea Coast "I have to state regretfully that to sell tickets to "Dishonored Lady" after only three of 1,200 seats were filled at a show last night But the movie house re 1r all those plana for European ine area which the Yugoslavs reconstruction, the United Nations have been by-passed," the Pole mained open as a shelter. Forresfal Made Defense Leader ABOARD BATTLESHIP MISSOURI Sept. 17. flJ.PJ President Truman said today that he personally ordered Seeretray of Defense James Forres Ul sworn Into his new post ahead ef schedule because of the tense international situation It was ia the Clewlston area la 1928 that hurricane winds tejft Lake Okeechobee spilling over ha dykes with a death toll of mdtfe than 1,800. In the path of the storm, whose center was located at 4:45 a.rp; EST just 100 miles east of Delray Beach, was the state's rich 10Q, 000,000 citrus crop which is nearly ripe.

Fray Wall WW Hold The storm wu blasting against the coast from TiturvUla to Miami' and the cities in between the Palm Beaches, Vero Beach, Fort Pierce, Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, Delray Beach, Melbourne and ether resort communities. Hundreds ef those remaining ia Clewlston and in Moore Haven, South Bay, Canal Point Belle Glade, Pahokee, planned to leave on later relief trains for the higher land of the ridge country, north of the lake. Some tew may stay. The roads leading from there te northern Florida were crammed with automobiles and farm trucks, almost bumper to bumper. They were heading north with entice families and ocly a few clothes and cherished possessions.

NoiSi of them knew what would remain of their homes when they returab On every lip wu the prayer that the earthen wall would hold back the waters when they are churned, by the hurricane's winds. want is about 10 miles north of Trieste and includes only one house and a small patch of ground. declared. "This ia in obvious con' traduction with the many declara British warships and fighter- Frosts Lurking In Heat Wave Wake tions in which emphasis has been laid on the authority of the United NOME, Alaska, Sept 17. 0J.R)-A howling Arctic storm propelled by gale force winds moved in oft the Bering sea, passed over the northern Alaska coast and whirled inland to blow itself out in the icy wastes of the Seward peninsula today.

The brunt of the storm passed the coast approximately 200 miles north of here and headed northward up the Bering Straits toward Pt Barrow, situated on the northernmost tip of the peninsula. U. S. weather bureau officials said Gambell, Alaska, where gales up to 60 miles an hour struck, was hardest hit although there was no report of damage in the community. The storm veered northwest and weather bureau officials said chances were it would blow itself out sometime today.

Nations." Bed Delays Speech Br Tilt rim At least a temporary end to Ore Speaking in the second assembly's general debate which opened today, Marshall fired his first shot gon's September hot "spell" ap bombers put on a show of strength in an atmosphere made tense by disagreements between the British and Americans and the belligerent Yugoslavs. Concert Series Gains Popular Response peared today with the U.S. wea WASHINGTON, Sept IT. (U.R in the current phase of the U. S.

ther bureau forecast in Portland James V. Forrestal took the oath today as the nation's first secre of dropping night-time tempera USSR diplomatic war. Soviet delegate Andrei Y. Vishinsky was originally scheduled to answer late tures throughout the state. tary of defense, setting in motion creation of a historic new form The bureau said Portland mint- Relief Votumelfi November To Fall WASHINGTON, Sept 17 CO.R) The government today announced a sharp cut in November relief shipments abroad, presumably to permit a more accurate appraisal of foreign and domestic food demands and their probable effect on prices.

The agriculture department said November grain exports will be 35 per cent below October and 43 per cent smaller than the July-October average. Meanwhile, the commerce department said some retail meat prices may drop this wall af meat animals start flowing to market in volume. But it said beef and veal prices probably will remain high. The agriculture department said that only 788,800 tons of grain have been earmarked for export in November. This compares with average monthly allocations shipments of 1,382,000 tons during the July-October period.

Allocations for November were smaller even than the October figure of 1,2 13,000 tons which reflected the first official concern over the dwindling corn crop. today, but changed his plans and mums would probably be between of U. S. military establishment 35 and-40 degrees tonight, while in the eastern and southern lections of the state the barometer The oath waa administered by Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson In the office where Forrestal has served as secretary of navy since will not speak before tomorrow or later.

Marshall's long-awaited address was the U. S. counterattack against the Soviet Union's generous use was expected to drop to freezing. Frosts were predicted for rnoun May 10, 1944. of the veto power which Marshall said had wrecked the security council.

tain valleys In central Oregon. The forecast for the Willamette, valley was minimums of around 35 de The ceremony, originally scheduled for the White House next week, brings into being the unifi La Guardia III; Condition Grave NEW YOIUC Sept 17. (U.R Fiorello H. La Guardia, 64, former mayor of New York City and one of the nation's best known public figures, was in critical condition at his home today. His physician, Dr.

George Baehr said La Guardia collapsed at his home last night and bad "sunk into a deep stupor." Dr. Baehr visited La Guardia at 12:30 p. m. Leaving the house later, he told newspapermen: "There is no change in Mr. La Guardia's condition.

He had a few lucid moments this morning. However, he lapsed into a coma again later in the morning." grees tonight cation of the nation's armed aer "The fruits of peace and victory are still beyond our grasp," he said. place of peace, lib arty and economic security, we Sassen Demands Special Session NEW YORK, Sept. 17 (U.R) Harold E. Stassen, candidate for the republican presidential nomination, called on President Truman today to summon a special session of congress to get the Marshall plan underway or risk watching Europe adopt the "communist plan" as the only alternative for survival.

Stassen, speaking before the New York State Chamber of Commerce on the 160th anniversary of the United States constitution, also urged the president to assume leadership of a "nationwide, coordinated, voluntary food conservation program in America." The former Minnesota governor endorsed the general outlines of the Marshall plan and said it must be contemplated as a program of substantial aid over a period of years, "at least five." vices, sets up an independent air force with status equal to the army and navy and makes Forrestal's job perhaps the biggest in the cabinet Unification actually does not become effective until tomorrow Want Drive Teams To Call For Prospects find mensce, repression, and dire want." Frances McKechnle, secretary of the Linn County Community Concert association, announced today that large stacks of mail are being received by her from persons renewing their memberships in the association in anticipation of the coming winter and spring series of attractions. Saturday, Sept. 20, is the deadline for renewals. Ralph Senders, president of the association, stated today that the executive board committee had picked a tentative program, pending confirmation, which will possibly include a dance troupe, a pianist or piano team, as well as a vocalist or two and an instrumentalist. Next week priority will be given to those persons on the waiting list in purchasing memberships, Miss McKechnie and Mr.

Senders reported. Pilot Forsakes Doomed Airplane SEATTLE, Sept. 17 (U.R) An Manager Walter Underwood if with a number of steps in the new setup not becoming effective for as long as two years. Strong Winds Fan California Fires Br V4 tin High winds today fanned score of forest fires throughout, northern California threatening farms, camps and ranches, disrupting power and forcing rerouting of traffic w. Traffic on U.

S. highway 40 wsf being rerouted westbound from Emigrant Gap through Nevada' City. Eastbound traffic was being rerouted from below Aubuxav through Nevada City. Highway patrol officials said the action waa taken because oi the danger of falling and bum ing timber from a forest fire neat Gold Run, Cat The decision to advance For restate oath-taking by almost the Albany Chamber of Commerce today said that while 51 tvo-man teams have been lined up to conduct the Impending Chamber of Commerce membership drive, only a few of the team members have called at the Chamber of Com week came as a surprise. It was explained that since all preliml nary arrangements had been made, it was decided with President merce office for their assignments.

The assignments, said the man Truman's approval to go ahead. In any case, unification would ager, consist of 150 prospects for have become effective automat! increased membership fees and cally Sept 24 60 days after the Trophies To Be Given At Joycee Session Tonight Timber carnival trophies including the national championship tokens will be presented at the regular Albany Junior Chamber of Commerce meeting in the Hub Coral room tonight, it wns announced by John Boock, president. At the meeting will be Timber Carnival Queen Pat and her royal court The ceremonies will follow a dinner scheduled for 6:30 o'clock. 400 prospective new membtrs, all of whom will be apportioned measure was signed into lew Mother and Nine Tots Go to Japan SEATTLE, Sept. 17 (U.R) Mrs.

Leona V. Ferguson and her nine children, largest family ever to sail to Japan to join an army of occupation soldier, will embark from Seattle Saturday, port of embarkation officials said today. Mrs. Ferguson, 36, Kewa, and her children, aged 1 to 14 years, will occupy three state-rooms aboard the transport Gen. Leroy Eltinge.

They will join SSgt Joseph D. Ferguson in Japan. among the two-man teams in such army Hellcat pilot, Lt. J. B.

Case, a manner that no one team will parachuted safely today into Lake Young near here when his F6F SCHOOL SHOWS INCREASE SODA V1LLE Soda ville school opened Monday with an enrollment of 65, slightly higher than that of opening day a year ago. There are 20 in grades one and two, 24 in the intermediate grades and 21 in grades six to eight. be overburdened, with expectation that the drive can be concluded in one day. Floods Follow Wake Of Disastrous JapTyphoorf suddenly developed engine trouble. Lt Case, 28 of Vancouver, guided his disabled craft over an uninhabited wooded area and then jumped from 3,000 feet.

Plate Glass Brought Around Horn MakesWay For Remodeling Work Freedom Train Rolls On Year-Long lour PHILADELPHIA, Sept 17. (U.R) The Freedom Train, rolling shrine of American history, today began its year-long tour to re-dedicate the nation to the principles of American democracy, described by President Truman as the "world's great hope of lasting peace." The sleek, red, white and blue train, bearing more than 100 of America's most precious historical documents, was dedicated here at ceremonies marking the 160th anniversary of the signing of the U. 8. constitution. A message from President Truman, read by Attorney General Tom Clark last night called on Americans to share with the world, the American version of personal liberty, "more important to the world thanthe atom bomb." "In the last analysis, we Americans have but one thing to give to the oppressed peoples of the world." the president said.

"We have freedom to give them." "It is a heritage which we Americans must share with the world, for in this noble heritage ef freedom for the individual citizen, without distinction because of race or creed or color, lies the world's great hope of lasting peace." CAKTENTEES NEEDED Announcement was made today by Tom Palmer, local state employment office manager, that Morris Ss Knudsen, contractor are direly in need of 10 carpenters to work in Alaska and to leave for the north Friday morning. Palmer asked that applicants consult they said Japan would never have been driven into the position at having to tap every possible source of natural resources for the doom ed war effort Flood waters entered the north eastern outskirts of the Japanese; capital at 1:30 p.m. today, whea the Naka river, a tributary of thA Tone, began rising slowly. Japanese worked desperately io build levees and help evacuate, refugees from low-lying areas. 'The Naka was reported rising, about three feet per hour in the Iwatsuki area, and the were advancing from the sprawling outskirts to the metrop litaa area at an estimated rate of abou a mile an hour after a levee bt Red Cross Itinerant Nurte to Hold Classes Jean Anderson, Red Cross itinerant nurse from San Francisco, arrived In Albany today, Mrs.

E. R. Lamb, home nursing chairman announced this morning. Starting Oct. 1, Miss Anderson will hold classes in home nursing at the high school building in Albany, Lebanon and Sweet Home.

Details will be announced later, Mrs. Lamb said. The home service secretary of the Linn County Red Cross, Mrs. Mary Clifton, Is attending a Veterans' Administration conference on veterans' education In Portland today, while Mrs. Virginia Faulkner, executive secretary of the Linn county chapter, will go to Portland tomoirow to attend a conference of state social workers.

Mrs. D. E. Brunskill Hurt By Fall at Residence Mrs. D.

E. Brunskill, 606 Cala-pooia street, is in the Albany General hospital suffering from injuries which she received early Tuesday morning when she lost her footing in the dark at her home and fell downstairs. According to members of her family she sustained several fractured ribs and a broken collar bone. Her husband heard her calls for help and called the Albany city ambulance, which took her to the hospital. Mrs.

Brunskill also suffered shock. She was reported to be doing as well as could be expected today. TOKYO, Sept. 17. 0J.R-Flood waters began rising In Tokyo today as most other areas reported rivers which became raging torrents in the wske of Monday's typhoon begaa receding, and unofficial reports placed the toll of dead and missing at more than 4,500.

The usually reliable Kyodo news agency placed flood deaths at 766, with 1,842 persons reported missing by late this afternoon. Damage wu estimated at more than $20,000,000 in Japan's worst flood of the past 38 years. Earlier i communique from the home ministry had reported the official death toll at 458 with 1,791 missing. The death toll included two American soldiers, who were drowned when their truck carrying Japanese workers ran into a road washout. Many Japanese openly blamed ex-Premier Hidekl Tojo and his wartime government who recklessly destroyed whole i forests to feed Japan's war machme.

The plane crashed and burned in the woods. Flying in formation Case's Hellcat's oil. system went out. The engine died soon after, said his wingman, Lt. D.

C. Hoyle, 23, who radioed back to Sand Point naval air station. Case was pulled from Lake Young by water company maintenance men. He was uninjuted. S.

H. Lorain to Conduct Tour of Mine Projects S. H. Lorain, head of the mining division of the bureau of mines, left Monday on a trip of three weeks to Seattle and Spokane, and Montana. He will conduct a tour of a group of congressmen and senators from Washington, D.C., to show mining projects throughout the northwest.

The party will open Its junket in Montana and will come to Albany on Oct. 4, to visit the Al Plate glass which was brought from the east by the ocean route around Cape Horn is being removed in the remodelling job in progress at the Brown Auto company, 134 W. 2nd street, in Albany. 7. R.

Brown, operator of the garage, has learned of the building's history from many oldUme residents of the town who have followed the job with interest Built in 1877 by Ted Baker, the building was erected from brick which were fired in Albany, hauled, to the job, and laid up in the walls for a total cost of $8 per thousand. Rough estimates of present-day costs put the comparative figure at around 150. Brown does not know how the building was used in its first years, but he has been informed that it has served as a garage for about as long as there have bean auto mobiles. For a short time before the first auto repair shop was in the garage, said Brown, the building was vacant and was used as a drill hall for a boys' troop. After 1903 a business called the Willamette garage used the building and during the depression it housed a "peewee" golf course.

The Brown Auto company has ben in the present location since 1930 when the proprietor came to Albany from eastern-Oregon. The current remodeling Job, which is being done by John Car-rick, will give the building a new reinforced concrete front with large plate glass windows on either side of the entrance. The construction firm has been on the job for a week and should complete the job in 30 days, Brown revealed. The present owne; of the property is A. J.

Hodges. near Yoshikawa village, rowg iwe, and communications were threi 3 ened, the army said. Three U. S. planes dropped i and relief supplies to the cor.

ALBANY WEATHER ALBANY-Maximum tempera' ture Tuesday 67 degrees, mini pletely isolated town of Ichin seki in Miyagl prefecture, which wu Inundated by 15 feet of flood water and waa without drlnUB CALLED TO CALIFORNIA Mrs. W. W. Winkle of Albany has been called to San Pablo. on account of the death of her son-in-law, Ralph maker.

mum temperature this morning 45 degrees. River .3 of a foot below bany bureau of mines laboratory, him at the employment office im-M If Toje had no declared war, low water stage, it waa announced today. stadia tely..

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