Cleaning Up After Emmafry. .V.V.V.VMUD, SLUDGE AND DEBRIS left in the wake of Typhoon Emma art* cleaned up by this Ryu-kyuan laborer, helped by small but willing hands,# **The storm which hit Okinawa Friday with .120-m.p.h. winds did great damage. Tower was restored to all communities Friday. (SS Photo)86-MPH Typhoon On Course to Hit P.l.TOKYO (SS)—Typhoon Frecla, carrying winds of 86 m.p.h., was bearing down on the central Philippines Sunday and expected to strike the island of Samar early Monday morning.Air Force Weather Central at Fuchu AS near Tokyo said Freda was located 540 miles southeast of Manila at 7 a.m. Sunday, and was moving west-northwest at 16 m.p.h.They said Freda is expected toNut Hun ter a TreeRODNEY, Miss. (UPI)— Passers-by heard the calls and spotted 73-year-old Charlie Herring hanging upside down, his foot caught in the limb of a tree 70 feet above the ground.They lowered him down with a rope and he walked away uninjured explaining, “I wai after nuts/'be 230 miles southeast of Manila early Monday morning.Weather forecasters at Guam said that if the typhoon kept on its present course it would strike the central island of Samar in the P.l. chain sometime between 1 and 2 a.m. Mondav.MEANWHILE TROPICAL storm Emma, which had been downgraded after reaching typhoon propor-(Continued on Back Page, Col. 3)New Storm Bears DownHELENA. Mont. (UPD—Montana ranchers, reeling under record-breaking snow and cold, raced to save their stranded livestock from starvation Saturday before winter strikes another savage blow at their hard-hit state.The vast cold sweep reachedfrom Montana to the Appalachians, leaving at least 23 dead across the Northern Plains and Midwest. Seven of the victims were counted iii Montana.The Weather Bureau saiif another snow storm was poised on the Canadian border, ready