The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 21, 1953, Page 2, Image 2

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    t--th'&airam fiaUttOi;
Text of Eisenhower
Inauguration
WASHINGTON, IB The prepared
i text of the Inauguration address
, of President, Dwight 0. Eisen
, 'bower: -
My fellow citizens:
I The world and we have passed
, the midway point of a century of
' continuing challenge. We sense
' with aH our faculties that forces
of good and evil are massed and;
- armed and opposed as rarely be
fore in history.
This fact defines the meaning of
this day. We are summoned, by
S- this honored and historical cere-
mony, to witness more than the
act ot one citizen swearing his
oath of service, in the presence of
God. We are called as a people, to
give testimony, in the sight of the
world, to our faith that the future
shall belong to the free. -
Since this century's beginning, a
time of tempest has seemed to
come upon the continents of the
earth. Masses of Asia have waken
ed to strike off shackles 01 tne
oast. Great nations of Europe have
waged their bloodiest wars.
Thrones have toppled and their
vast empires have disappeared.
New nations have been born,
fj. S. Grews in Power
For our own country, it has been
time of recurring trial. We have
grown in power and in responsi
bility. We have passed through the
anxieties of depression ana 01 war
to a summit unmatched in man
historv. Seeking to secure peace
in the world, we have had to fight
through the forests of the Ar
gonne to the shores of Iwo Jim.
nrl to tne mountain pean 01
Korea.
in the swift rush of great events.
we find ourselves groping to know
th full sense and meaning of the
times in which we live. We be
seech God's guidance. We summon
11 our knowledge of the past and
we scan all signs of the future. We
bring all our wit and will to meet
the question: How far have we
come in man's long pilgrimage
from darkness toward light? Are
we nearing the light a day of
freedom and of peace for all man
kind? Or are the shadows of an
other night closing upon us?
Involves Mankind
Great as are the preoccupations
absorbing us at home, concerned
as we are with matters that deeply
Affect our livelihood today and our
vision of the future, each or tnese
domestic problems is dwarfed by,
and often even created by, this
question that involves all human
kind
This trial comes at a moment
when man's power to achieve good
or to inflict evil surpasses the
brightest hopes and the sharpest
fears of all ages. We can turn
rivers in their courses, level moun
tains to the plains. Ocean and land
and skv-are avenues for our co
lossal commerce. Disease dimin
ishes and life lengthens.
Yet the promise of this life
is
imperiled by the very genius that
' has made it possible. Nations
mass wealth. Labor sweats to
create and turns out devices to
level not only mountains but also
cities. Science seems ready to con
fer upon us, as its final gift, the
nower to erase human life from
the earth..
At such a time in history, we
who are free must proclaim anew
our faith.
This faith is the abiding creed
of our fathers. It is our faith in
the deathless dignity of man, gov
erned by eternal moral and nat
ural laws.
Faith Necessary
This faith defines our full view
of life. It establishes, beyond de
bate, those gifts of the Creator
that are man's inalienable rights,
and that makes all men equal in
His sight!
In the light of this equality, we
know that the virtues most cher
ished by free people love of
truth, pride of work, devotion to
country all are treasures equally
precious in the lives of the most
humble and of the most exalted.
The men who mine coal and fire
furnaces and balance ledgers and
turn lathes and pick cotton and
heal the . sick and plant corn all
serve as proudly, and as profit
ably, for America as the statesmen
who draft treaties or the legisla
tors who enact laws.
Leaders Serve
This faith rules our whole way
of life. It decrees that we, the peo-
ole. elect leaders not to rule but
to serve. It asserts that we have
the right of choice of our
vork and to the reward of ourJ
own toil. It inspires the initiative!
.hat makes our productivity the
wonder of the world. And it warns
that any man who seeks to deny
equality in all to his brothers be
trays the spirit ox tne tree ana
invites the mockery of the tyrant.
It is because we, all of us, hold
to these principles that the politi
cal ehangs accomplished this day
do not lmpry turbulence, upheaval
or disorder. ' Rather this change
expresses a purpose. of strengthen
ing, our dedication and devotion
to the precepts of our founding
documents, a conscious renewal of
faith in our country and in the
watchfulness of a Divine Provi
dence.
Enemies Godless
The enemies of this faith know
no god but force, no devotion but
Its use. They tutor men in treason.
They feed upon the hunger of
others. Whatever defies them, they
torture, especially the truth.
Here. then, is joined no. pallid
'argument between slightly differ
ing philosophies. This conflict
strikes directly at the faith of our
In ihs Jackpot!
"When Adam was im the Gar-
Alone and on the prowl;
lie made a famous sacrifice.
Ilia first without a growl!"
"IVSsfs Ccc!:h
cf ri:I:!jrcn's?5
Tcr.!:!:l c 6:30 P. f.l
VTidnMHt. Imttarr 11.' 1933
S
fathers and the lives of our sons.
No principle or treasure that we
hold, from the spiritual knowledge
of our free schools and churches
to the creative magic of free labor
and capital, nothing lies safely be
yond the reach of the struggle.
Freedom is pitted against slav
ery: light against dark.
The faith we hold belongs not
to us alone but to the free of all
the world." This common bond
binds the grower of rice in Burma
and the planter of wheat in Iowa,
the sheDherd in southern Italy and
the mountaineer in the Andes. It
confers' a common dignity upon
the French soldier who dies in
Indochina, the British soldier
killed in Malaya, the American
life given in Korea.
Linked by Need
We know, beyond this, that we
are linked to all free peoples not
merely by a noble idea but by
simple need. No tree people can
for long cling to any privilege or
enjoy any safety in economic soli
tude: For all our own material
might, even we need markets in
the world for the surpluses of our
farms and of our factories. Equal-
far, we need for these same farms
and factories vital materials and
products of distant lands. This
basic law of interdependence, so
manifest in the commerce of
peace, applies with thousand-fold
intensity in the event of war.
So we are persuaded by neces
sity and by belief that the strength
of all free peoples lies in unity,
their danger In discord.
To produce this unity, to meet
the challenge of our time, destiny
has laid upon our country the re
sponsibility of the free worlds
leadership. So it is proper that we
assure our friends once again that.
in the discharge of this responsi
bility, we Americans know and
observe the difference between
world leadership and imperialism
between firmness and truculence
between a thoughtfully calculated
goal and spasmodic reaction to the
stimulus of emergencies.
With Confidence
We wish our friends the world
over to know this above all: we
face the threat not with dread
and confusion but with confi
dence and conviction.
We feel this moral strength be
cause we know that we are not
helpless prisoners of history. We
are free men. We shall remain
free, never to be proven guilty of
the one capital offense against
freedom, a lack of staunch faith.
In pleading our just cause be
fore the bar of history and in
pressing our labor for world peace,
we shall be guided by certain
fixed principles.
These principles are:
1. Abhorring war as a chosen
way to balk the purpose of those
who threaten us, we hold it to be
the first task of statesmanship to
develop the strength, that will
deter the forces of aggression and
promote the conditions ox peace.
For, as it must be the supreme
purpose of all free men, so it must
be the dedication of their leaders,
to save humanity from preying
upon itself.
In the light of this principle, we
stand ready to engage with any
and all others in joint effort to
remove the causes of mutual fear
and distrust among nations, and
so to make possible drastic reduc
tion of armaments. The sole requi
sites for undertaking such effort
are that in their purpose they
be aimed logically and honestly to
ward secure peace for all; and that
in their result they provide
methods by which every partici
pating nation will . prove good
faith in carrying out its 'pledge.
2. Realizing that common sense
and common decency alike dictate
the futility of appeasement, we
shall never try to placate an ag
gressor by the false and wicked
bargain of trading honor for se
curity. For in the final choice a
soldier's pack is not so heavy a
full and just burden as a prisoner's
enains. ,
3. Knowing that only a United
States that is strong and Im
mensely productive can help de
fend . freedom in our world, we
view our nation's strength and se
curity as a trust upon which rests
the hope of free men everywhere.
It is the firm duty of each of our
free citizens and of every free dti-
sen everywhere to place the cause
of his country before the comfort
of nimscIT.
Ne Bally Tactics
4. Honoring the Identity and
heritage of each nation of the
world, we shall never use our
strength to try to impress upon
another people our own cher
ished political and economic insti
tutions.
5. Assessing realistically the
needs and capacities of proven
friends of freedom, we shall strive
to help them achieve their own
security and well-being. Likewise.
we shall count upon them to as
sume, within the limits of their
resources, their full and just bur
den in the common defense of free
dom.
9. Recognizing economic health
as an indispensible basis of mili
tary strength and the free world's
peace, we -snail strive to foster
everywhere, and to practice our
selves, policies that encourage pro
ductivity and profitable trade. For
the jmpovenshment of any single
people in the world means danger
to the well-being of all other peo
ples. p ' '
To Strengthen Bonds
7. Appreciating that economic
need, military security and politi-
MM i:k
peech
Television Records' Inaugural
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TelevlsIoiLJn the Salem area was better in. some places than ethers
Tuesday (see photos on page 1). bat thousands mi persons watched
the Presidential ; tnauxnration ceremonies regardless. Tp photo
. shews President Dwight Eisenhower delivering his inaugural ad
dress. Below, Vice President Richard Nixon takes the oath ef office.
Morse's Objection Gives
McKay Extra Day's Rest
By A. ROBERT SMITH
Statesman Correspondent
WASHINGTON If s been a
long time since Wayne Morse has
given Douglas McKay occasion
for a peaceful day. It will likely
be longer still before it happens
again.
But today, Doug has Wayne to
thank for the extra winks of
sleep he can afford this morning,
for the opportunity of resting his
weary feet and oft-squeezed right
hand.
Mcay can use the rest. He was
tired when he climbed out of
bed inauguration morning even
though he thought by nightfall
he would become secretary of the
Interior. He was dead on his
dogs when he and Mrs. McKay
called it an evening early this
morning after dancing on display
at both sections of the inaugural
ball.
For between the start and end
of the big day the McKays and
other bigwigs in the Eisenhower
administration moved through a
killing schedule.
cal wisdom combine to suggest re
gional groupings of free peoples,
we hope, within the framework of
the United Nations, to help
strengthen such special bonds the
world over. The nature of these
ties must vary with the different
problems of different areas.
In the western hemisphere, we
join with aH our neighbors in the
work of perfecting a community
of fraternal trust and common
purpose.
la .Europe, we ask that en
lightened and Inspired leaders of
the western nations strive with
renewed vigor to make the unity
of their peoples a .reality, only as
free Europe unitedly marshals Its
strength can it effectively safe
guard, even with our help,- its
spiritual and cultural treasures.
Race Equality Heeded
g. Conceiving the defense of
freedom, like freedom itself, to be
one and indivisible, we hold all
continents and peoples in equal
regard and honor. We reject any
insinuation that one race or an
other, one people or another, is in
any sense inferior or expendable.
Te Use U. N.
9. Respecting the United Na
tions as the living sign of all
people's hope for peace, we shall
strive tovinake it not merely an
eloquent symbol but an effective
force. And in our quest of honor
able peace, we shall neither com
promise, nor tire, nor ever cease.
By these rules of conduct, we
hope to be known to all peoples.
By their observance, an earth
of peace may become not a vision
but a fact.
This hopethis supreme aspira
tionmust rule the way we live.
We must be ready to dare all
for our country. For history does
not long entrust the care of free
HUD 0VEU
Glamour! Laughs!
Spectacular Water Ballets!
So Beautiful They Defy Description!
They went to church with the
Eisenhowers at 9 a. m., to the
White House reviewing stands at
10, in formation to the Capitol
by 11, where they were joined by
the Truman cabinet members at
11:30 preparatory to the inaugu
ration ceremony.
After witnessing the main
event which saw the presidency
ehange "hands, the McKays
lunched with other cabinet mem
bers while in -the nearby Senate
chamber Wayne Morse delivered
his coup de grace, objecting to
immediate confirmation of the
cabinet.
That act delayed confirmation
of the McKay appointment and
prevented McKayfrom reporting
for work this morning as head of
the 61,000-man interior depart
ment. But his day of peace will end
whenever the Senate has - dis
posed of any further objections
Morse may raise today; and be
fore this day is done, McKay may
be installed in office.
dom to the weak or the timid. We
must acquire proficiency in de
fense and display stamina in pur
pose. Asks Sacrifices
We must be willing. Individually
and as a nation, to accept what
ever sacrifices may be required
of us. A people! mat values its
privileges above its principles soon
loses both.
These basic precepts are not
lofty abstraction, far removed
from matters of daily living. They
are laws of spiritual strength that
generate and define our material
strength. Patriotism means
equipped forces and a prepared
citizenry. Moral I stamina means
more energy and: more productiv
ity, on the farmland In the fac
tory. Love of liberty means the
guarding of every resource that
makes freedom possible from the
sanctity of our families and the
wealth of our soil to the genius' of
our scientists. "
So each citizen plays an indis
pensable role. The productivity of
our heads, our hands and -our
hearts is the source of all the
strength we can command for both
the enrichment of .our lives and
the winning of peace.
Ne One Beyond Recall
- No person, no I home, no com
munity can be beyond-' the reach
of this calL We are summoned to
act in wisdom and in conscience;
to work with industry, to teach
with persuasion, j to preach with
conviction, to weigh our every
deed with care and .with compas
sion. For this truth must be clear
before 'us: Whatever America
hopes to bring to pass in the world
must come to pass in the heart of
America. - . : ,-
: - More ,, than an : escape from
OPEN 8:45 P. IL.
... Jf.
Ike Parade
Punctuated by
Whoops, Yells
WASHINGTON in They liked
Ike with a million - throated ac
colade .Tuesday.
In wild screeching rebel yells
and cowboy whoops . and hollers,
they rolled it out along the dense
packed parade route from Capitol
HOI to the . White House: .-
"Yeee-a-a-a-a--a - ay, Ike!"
That was the keynote sound for
the hours long inaugural parade
which Dwight D. Eisenhower led
down historic Pennsylvania
Avenue. : then reviewed from a
stand in front of his new White
House (home. -
The pageant itself was. in ex
travaganza form, a slice -right out
of the ; complexities that make up
America bathing beauties and
r Bible lesson on wheels; the doves
that represent aspirations for peace
and the nation's most lethal arms
for protection against peacebreak-
ers: and a whole train of floats
helling i a story that could happen
only in America: Eisenhowers
own rise from simple beginnings
to the most powerful office ' on
earth, i
Dwarfing even the blare of 62
bands,! the thundering cheers for
the new President boomed across
the flag bedecked city and cas
caded by radio and TV networks
from Coast to Coast. .
20 Lean Tears
After 20 long, lean years, the
Republicans were back in power.
And the crowd, liberally sprinkled
with Democrats, really poured it
on in a tumultous greeting to Pres
ident Eisenhower and his Mamie.
Riding in a gleaming white open
car beside Mamie, the 62 - year -
old - President stood bareheaded
most of the two mile parade
route as he flashed his famous
grin and waved first one hand and
then the other: to the massed
throngs. Mamie hugely enjoying
the whole show, smiled and waved,
too.
Sometimes the shoving, jostling
thousands almost got out of hand,
threatening to break through the
cordons of steel helmeted troops
in olive drab lining both sides of
Pennsylvania Avenue.
And before the day was over,
Dee himself was lassoed by a white
clad cowboy named Monte- Mon
tana who rode his prancing steed
up to the White House review
stand and called out to Eisen
hower: ,
"With your permission, Mr.
President, may I throw a rope
around your head?
Loops President
Secret Service men frowned
darkly. But Eisenhower, with a
grin, rose obligingly to his feet,
and Montana, on the second try,
looped his lariat over the Presi
dent's head from , a distance of
15 feet.
The crowd loved it, setting up
a big cheer.
Crowds Net Se Big
Old tuners said the crowds
weren't as big as they have been
on some past inaugural days, but
Police Inspector Robert D. Chen
ault, a veteran of 29 years on the
Metropolitan police force, had ah
explanation:
"It's TV," he said. "Why buck
an the traffic when you can sit
at home and watch in comfort.
The big parade, was late, in get
ting started. It was scheduled to
roll at 1:30 p. m. It finally got
under way at 1:30.
On display was the giant of the
nation's arsenal the 85 - ton
"atomic, cannon', capable of fir
ing atomic shells 20 miles. The
280 millimeter weapon, described
by the Army as "the most devas
tating "artillery piece" in its ar
senal, was borne by two front-to-back
trucks 84 feet .apart.
Darkness began to come on be
fore the long procession of more
than 50 glittering floats, bright -uniformed
bands, marching, con
tingents and three : highly Repub
lican elephants was more than
half past the White House review
ing stand.
The night closed in and the air
became colder, some of the crowd
began to melt away, but Dee and
Mamie stuck it out.
death, it is a way of life.
, The peace ' we seek, then, is
nothing less than the practice and
the fulfillment of our whole faith,
among ourselves and in our deal
ings with others. It signifies more
than stilling the guns, easing the
sorrow, or "war. ,
More than a ; haven for . the
weary, it is a hope for the brave.
This is the hope that beckons
us onward in this century of trial
This its the work that awaits us
all, to be done with bravery, with
charity and with prayer, to Al-
mighty Ood. ' -
. Centin
' Jaate Bwaasll
In Trseolo:
' "MONTANA
BELLE
" --
Bowery Boys
"NO HOLDS
BARBED"
Con tin aona
: Helen Hayes
Van Heflia-
"My Son John
, . -
EstellU
TROPICAI.
HEAT WAVE f
Open 8:48 pan.
Dana Andrews "
Snsan Hayward 1;
In Technicolor -"Canyon
Passage
Truman Leaves for
Missouri
Emotional
WASHINGTON (JP) - Harry S.
Truman started home to Missouri
Tuesday night after an emotion
packed sendoff marking the end
of nearly eight critical years in
the White House,
A throng of several thousand In
Washington's Union Station cheer
ed him to the echo and called him
"Harry." as crowds did in his
fighting political campaigns.
In reply. Truman declared in a
voice in which ' happiness seemed
to mingle with sorrow:
"In all my career, and it has
been a lone one, I've never had
anything like this happen. I will
never forget this if I live to be
a 100 and that's what I expect to
do."
Old friends. Democratic sena
tors, employes under his adminis
tration paraded up to the private
car to shake his hand and wish
him good by.
The press was so heavy that
Dean Acheson. Truman's secreta
ry of state, had to have help from
a railroad official to get past a
redcap guarding a gate to the plat
form where the Truman family
held farewell open house beside
their private car.
It was the new ex-President's
second big demonstration of the
day. The first came within an hour
of the Eisenhower inauguration
ceremonies that made him a plain
citizen. Like the trainside affair
it was as warm as anything in
Truman's long public career.
We Want Harry
Repeated chants of "we want
Harry." "we want Margaret' 'and
"we want Bess" rang through Un
ion Station as the Trumans board
ed the Baltimore and Ohio Rail
road's National Limited on the
way -to Independence. Mo.
The crowd sang, "For He's a
Jolly Good Fellow."
It sang, as the train pulled out,
"Auld Lang Syne."
Several of .the women who went
aboard the train kissed Mrs. Tru
man. At one point the former First
Lady blew her nose and looked as
if she wanted to weep. But she
didn't.
Some of the women kissed the
ex-President. He looked, pleased.
Margaret Truman was aboard
the train but left it Just before it
pulled out.
Watched Inaagval
From the Capitol grounds where
he had just seen Republican Dwight
D. Eisenhower sworn in as his
successor, Truman and his fam
ily rode to the Georgetown home
of Dean' Acheson, his secretary of
state, apparently unaware that
anything special was in the offing.
But upon arrival there he was
greeted by more than 300 of Ache
son's friends and neighbors gath
ered in the street.
"We want. Truman." the crowd
chorused and Truman, obviously
affected, by the tribute, responded
briefly. '
There was a broad smile on his
face as he told the group:
"May I say to you that I ap
preciate this more than any en
Gas Company
Files Suit in
....
Bridge Mishap
HTLLSBORO UR The Portland
Gas it Coke Co. filed a $58,840
damage suit in circuit court Mon
day because a gas main was
broken when the Tualatin River
bridge fell last falL
The suit was directed against
Edward A. Freeman, Oswego, and
the two drivers he had hired to
move his lo- hoisting truck. The
hoist struck an overhead bridge
girder, and the structure came
tumbling down.
A 10- inch gas main, which
crossed the river on the bridge,
was snapped. Interrupting service
to the Willamette Valley.
It was the second suit against
Freeman and the drivers. Earl
Ayers, Canby, and Howard I.
Johnston. Aurora. The earlier suit
was , filed by the State Highway
Commission, seeking 121,885 as the
cost for construction of a tempo
rary bridge over the river.
5
Starts TenUht Open 1:45
Shows Start :0t f 41 P. If.
t:3nj
FtCTUnSS!
Cecil RImmes
f
2
Y
I I I ll
Vl III
Following
Farewell
thusiastic meeting I ever had as
President, or as vice president or
as a senator.
"This Is the greatest demonstra
tion any man could have. I'm just
M-. Truman, private citizen.".
Portlanders
PORTLAND (J! Portlanders
generally were pleased with Presi
dent Eisenhower's inaugural
speech Tuesday. Religious leaders
and labor officials in particular
voiced approval.
The Rev. Michael J. Gavin,
president of University of Portland,
said he was "deeply impressed
with the religious tone of the
address and by his firm dedication
to the service of the citizens of
the United States."
The Rev. Myron C. Cole, pastor
of the First Christian Church, said
the President demonstrated "the
thoroughly democratic and Christ
ian manifestation of leadership."
James T. Marr, state AFL secre
tary, said the inaugural address
was a good speech containing
sound advice.
State CIO Secretary George
Brown added that President Eisen
hower seemed to pledge to continue
the program and principles of the
previous administration concerning
foreign affairs.
Hundreds of Portlanders. includ
ing many school children, watched
the inauguration on television. A
number of high schools borrowed
television sets for the day's activi
ties. At schools where plans to
borrow sets fell through, officials
reported a .higher percentage of
absenteeism than usual.
Flood Relief
Crews Form
In Calif ornia
SAN FRANCISCO W Relief
expeditions were being organized
Tuesday to take food and supplies
to residents of several small iso
lated communities in remote,
mountainous country in extreme
Northern California.
They were cut off from the out
side world,, and from each other
by slides and. floods that' had
slashed across the Klamath River
road north and west of Yreka.
Meanwhile, coastal regions that
had been swept by floods were
digging out Tuesday as the waters
subsided. But the damage toll was
great in Humboldt and Del Norte
Counties.
Marvin Krel of Areata, Chair
man of the Humboldt County su
pervisors, almost lost his life Tues
day as he was hit by a fallen
power line while inspecting some
of the highway damage, which
may run as high as one million
dollars in that county alone. '
U. S. Highway 99 Into Oregon
was blocked Tuesday by a big slide
at Dog Creek, north of Redding.
The California Automobile Associa
tion said the road, on of the main
arteries to the north, may not be
cleared before early Wednesday.
MMABV
Ike Speech
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FOP EDUimDS'czd lib OH-Tincra
Eisenliower
Starts Fasliio
n
in Hats
By RUTH COWAN
WASHINGTON U4 PrMn
Dwight D. Eisenhower began his
wmie xiouse tern, by setting a
new fashion trend rolled brim
nomburgs.
The social furore he st im K
that break from formal traHlHw
stole a bit of the spotlight that us
ually centers on the finery of fem
inine figures.
But it is MTKWM tK nw Mi
first lady, Mamie Eisenhower, will
inuuence styles, sue Has a natur
al flair for wearing clothes.
Ike rot in th first HMr w.
ever. It was probably because, re-
cenuy out or military uniform, he
modestly feels less conspicious in
a son nac
With his decision to wear a hnm.
burg when he took the oath of of
fice, high silk toppers, traditional
headpieces at such ceremonies.
folded up like Hitler's troops did
under the assault he directed a a
Allied supreme commander In the
Second World War.
When Harry Truman and Her
bert Hoover, the country's two liv
ing former Presidents, were in
stalled in office they wore the cus
tomary high silk hats.
But Tuesday when Truman rode
from the White House to the Capi
tol with his successor, he too was
wearing a homburg. Hoover, giv
en a piace or honor on the plat
form, also had one on. So did Vice
President Nixon.
Secretary of defense-designate
Wilson wore a homburg.
This style hat. liked by Britain's
Winston Churchill and Anthony Ed
en, long has been popular . with
diplomats Many chiefs of foreign
missions at the : inaugural cere
monies were wearing them.
Though Dee did steal the fashion
spotlight right off the heads of
some of the most attractive wom
en in the nation, all is not lost.
It was noticed how many prom
inent women wore hats in "winter
white."
Mrs. Eisenhower had on an off-
white profile-type close-fitting hat
when she. went to church services
that began inauguration day. Mrs.
Nixon wore a modified white pill
box hat with her gray suit And
black coat for the ceremonies at
the capitol.
Mrs Harry Truman's hat too
was white.
All hats were , close-fitting or
small maybe a concession to the
crowds.
Mrs. Clare Boo the Luce, former
Republican representative from
Connecticut and now mentioned as
a possible ambassador to Rome,
had on a cherry , red "beanie."
Oregon Poultry
Council Elects
Conrad Burmester
" "
PORTLAND Un The Oregon -Poultry
Council, holding its an
nual -meeting here, Monday elected
Conrad Burmester, Portland, as
president.
Other officers: Charles Brewster,
Portland, vice president; Harry
Rohe, Portland, secretary -treasurer;
Barry Brownell, Milwaukle.
Roy Matindale, Portland, Harold
Davis, McMinnville, and Fred
Cockell, Milwaukle, directors.
"The. group passed a resolution
recommending that state approp
riations for turkey shows be com
bined into one fund and that only
one . turkey show be scheduled
each year in place of the present
two shows. -
Mend
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