The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 18, 1953, Page 1, Image 1

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List of
Br STERLING F. GREEN
WASHINGTON m The govern
ment Thursday night disclosed for
the first time its official list of the
133 American cities which are rat
ed as probable targets of atomic
attack. It named 70 "critical' tar
get areas, including centers of in
dustry and the nation's capital
Salem
Wharton Says Capital
Facilities Marks City
' Salem is one of 193 American
cities rated as a "probable" tar
get of atomic attack, according
to the Federal Civil Defense Ad
ministration. Although not a "critical" tar
get such as Portland, the ene
my might try te knock oat the
state capital, Wallace (Back)
Wharton, director of Marion
County Civil Defense, pointed
oat.
Salem also might become an
alternate target for Portland or
a damning, spot for an enemy
plane jettisoning its bombs, he
said.
Siamese Twin Girls Survive
Surgery; Doctors Optimistic
By W. B. RAGSDALE Jr.
NEW ORLEANS (JP) Eight surgeons separated Louisiana's Sia
mese twins Thursday and a doctor said the odds "look good" that
both will survive.
"So far the operation is satisfactory," Dr. L. L. Weismuller said.
OtP
PJCDODDCa
Some lumber mills and ply
wood plants in Oregon have re
duced their operating time be
cause of reduced demand for
their products. A real jolt came,
however, with news that Weyer-
fcauser was cutting its work
week at its extensive Springfield
operations to four days for lack
of box cars for shipping out its
manufactures.
The statement of an executive
was to the effect that the com
pany had accumulated as much
inventory as. it had apace for
and would have to scale down
output until the accumulation
could be worked tff-
Other complaints about car
shortages have been voiced by
shippers along the Southern Pac
ific, frequently accompanied
with comments that the northern
lines .serving the Willamette Val
ley through the Oregon Electric
had a. sufficiency of cars to meet
aU demands of their customers.
Swinging into action for the re
lief of shippers, the state public
utilities commissioner has fol
lowed up previous conferences,
Ehone calls and telegrams with a
lunt letter to R. E. Hallawell,
general manager of the Southern
Pacific lines, reviewing the crit
ical situation and pointedly ask
ing what the SP is going to do
about it. The letter, signed by
Clifford W. Ferguson, assistant
director of the rail division of
the PUC, takes note of a report
that the SP stopped accepting
empties at El Paso on or about
Aug. 20 (when car rental rates
for foreign cars were raised to
$2.40 per diem), and that if this
had not been
(Concluded on editorial Page 4)
Mercury Dips
Near Freezing
Salem came in for some cool
fall weather early Thursday morn
ing. The mercury dipped down to
38 degrees just after sunrise.
The touch of fall fell on Cen
tral Oregon a little heavier. Bend
recorded 28 degrees and Red
mond 32.
Forecast for today and Satur
day is mostly fair weather and
warmer temperatures, but the
weatherman warned that the first
frost was not far off.
DRAFT TEST SLATED
WASHINGTON (P) Selective
Service announced Thursday its
fourth series of college Qualifi'
cation tests will be held on Nov.
19 this year and April 22, 1954.
Animal Crackers
By WARREN COODRICH
SURPRISED- IM POOPEDl '
V v,,
D's 'Probable
. . , ..- - ..; . : . ' .
Alom - Bomb Targets
- The Federal Civil Defense Ad
ministration issued the list six
weeks after Russia reported its
mastery of the hydrogen bomb
to spur the nationwide home de
fense effort.
The announcement came just
two days after city legal officers,
at a conference here, reported that
- Marion County's civil defense
is in good shape, Wharton said,
and added that there are 7200
persons In the eoanty registered
in the program.
"This is better than 7 per
cent of the population. The na
tional average is less than 4 per
cent."
Mayor Alfred Loacks pointed
oat that Salem is ahead of
many cities in civil defense ex
penditures and said "Salem had
long realized it was a possible
target because it was the state
capital."
I Although the eight-week-old girls
"are definitely not out of danger,
I would think infection is the chief
danger."
The twins soft-spoken father.
Mayor Ashton- J. Mouton of La
Fayette, thankfully said:
"God almighty has been very gen
erous so , that we could have our
two little girls perfectly normal.
"The prayers offered by so many
good people helped make the op
eration a success," he added.
Mouton and his wife waited in
a private room during the opera
tion with a Bible in their hands.
Each 20 minutes they received a
progress report on the 2-hour and
55-minute operation that separated
their daughters.
A staff surgeon said he believes
a new page will be written in medi
cal history, if both girls survive. To
his knowledge, he said, never be
fore have both twins survived such
an operation.
The girls were joined near the
base of the spine. The sacrum, a
part of the lower vertebrae, was
fused. They also were joined in the
dural sac, covering of the spinal
cord at the lower end, and shared
a common lower intestinal tract
Split Into Teams
The operation began at S:25 a.m.
The surgeons first divided the fused
vertebrae. Then they separated the
dural sac and the intestinal tract.
The team of eight surgeons then
split into two teams of four each
to complete the operation on each
girl individually.
The points of operation were
closed on both infants without skin
grafts.
The operation was over at 11:20
a.m. and the girls were placed in
separate cribs for the first time.
Mrs. Mouton looked at them and
said, "they look wonderful."
The girls, Carolyn Anne and Cath
erine Anne, were born July 22 in
Lafayette. During the delivery, Car
olyn stopped breathing but was re
vived by artificial respiration.
Oregon Airman on
Ship Returning POWs
TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. Ufi Twenty-three more
former prisoners of war in Korea
are scheduled to arrive at this
base at 7 a. m. PDT Friday.
The list, of arrivals include:
Airman 1. C. Eugene E. Evers,
Forest Grove, Ore.
Capt. John F. Dick, Kalama,
Wash.
Max.
Salem 74
Portland 72
Mia.
IS
.00
.00
trace
.00
San Francisco -78 99
Chicago 78 53
NewYort 73 57
Willamette River 3 2 (eet.
FORECAST (from U. S. weather
bureau. McNary field. Salem): Most
ly fair today, tonight and Saturday,
except for patches of early morning
fog. Slightly warmer today with the
high near 80 and the low tonight near
40. Temperature at 12:01 ajn. was 49
degrees.
SALEM PRECIPITATION
Since Start of Weather Tear Sept. 1
This Tear Last Tear Nermal
trace JO .75
McCarthy Shifts From Reds to Brunettes,
Announces Plans to Marry Former Aide
By ROGER D. GREENE
WASHINGTON W) Sen. Mc
Carthy (R-Wis) in a shift from Red
bunting to romance, will be mar
ried here Sept. 29 to pretty, dark
haired Jean Kerr, a former re
search aide in his office. "
Announcement of the marriage
plans came Thursday from Mrs.
William P. Kerr, mother of the
bride-to-be. The wedding will be
held at St, Matthews (Roman Cath
olic) Cathedral in downtown Wash
ington. , .i - ,..'4'.
- In New York, where McCarthy
is investigating alleged Communist
infiltration in the United Nations,
the Wisconsin senator declined com
ment. :
"I have nothing to add to . the
announcement, be said.'
'The ' names of the 43-year-old
bachelor-senator and his former as
sistant have long been linked ro
some cities are considering aban
donment of civil defense programs
because of "inadequate' federal
support.
The report said it "does not pur
port to include all possible targets.
"For security reasons." it said,
"certain targets that have nation
al or military significance, includ
ing the atomic energy installations,
have not been listed.
The critical targets listed Thurs
day night embrace a population of
67,750,982.
The list supersedes one adopted,
but never made public, on Feb. 4
of last year. The defense agency
sent the 1952 list only to governors
and to state and city civil defense
directors. Thursday night it re
quested that all copies of -the old
list be destroyed by burning.
The new document adds three
"critical" targets to the old one:
Binghamton, N. .Y., Evansvflle,
Ind.. and then WQkes-Barre-Hazle-ton
area of Pennsylvania which
have grown industrially.
All capitals of states, territories,
and possessions are named, but
not as critical targets unless they
are industrially important Other
cities having 50,000 population or
more are grouped in the non-critical
bracket .
Some Other Areas
The defense agency said that
while the list contains the "most
probable targets for atomic attack,
other areas might also be struck."
In a foreword, it added:
"The capabilities of modern
weapon of mass destruction are
so great that a successful attack
would cause damage and casual
ties far beyond the resources of
any area.
"Also, this list does not include
all possible targets for biological
or chemical attack. This type of
attack could be employed against
any part of the country, rural as
well as urban. '
Pleads for Defense
"Therefore, the resources of the
entire country outside the listed
target areas, as well as within
them must be mobilized for civil
defense."
The 70 critical areas are cities
or population centers classed as
standard metropolitan areas, each
having at least 40,000 manufactur
ing workers and at least one city
with a population of 50,000 together
with its closely-linked suburban
areas. Washington, D. C, was in
cluded "because of its importance
as the nation's capital."
The critical list includes Portland,
Ore.-Wash, and Seattle, Wash.
Here are other probable target
areas listed by states:
Oregon: Salem.
Washington: Olympia, Spokane,
Tacoma.
Panther Hunt
Yields Only
'Stock, Kitty
MONTEREY PARK, Calif. (JPj
A hunt here Thursday for a big,
black panther, netted two skunks,
eight rabbits, five calves, seven
horses and a cat but no panther.
Mrs. Louis Herman was the first
to report seeing the panther.
"I looked out of my kitchen
window and there he was, up on
the side of the hill, with his long
black tail waving back and
forth," she said. MI thought 4My
gosh, cats can't get that big."
Policeman Richard Brammer
found what he said were "cat
paw prints. as big as your hand"
near a park swimming pool
Searchers finally came on a
black cat, all right But it was
the domestic variety and con
siderably short of the measure
ments supplied by those who said
they saw the panther four feet
long and two feet high.
Artillery Shell Blast
Kills Two at Depot
TOOELE. Utah.l An artil
lery shell exploded and killed a
woman and a man and injured at
least six others at the Tooele Ord
nance Depot Thursday .
The 76 mm shell exploded while
j being handled in a building where
unpacKing operations are carried
on.
Mint Oil Production
Far Below '52 Mark
PORTLAND un Peppermint
oil production dropped off in Ore
gon this year, the Agriculture De
partment reported Thursday.
This year's crop is estimated at
560,000 pounds, 160,000 below last
year's total. Rust damage reduced
the estimated yield to 40 pounds
per acre.
mantically. Miss Kerr, 29. was em
ployed in McCarthy's office from
1948 to 1952 when she quit to be
come a free-lance researcher and
radio script writer.
An attractive brunette, she was
voted the most beautiful i girl at
George Washington University in
1945 while she was. a student in
the school here.' She also attended
Northwestern University at Evans
ton. EL
Miss Kerr, native of Washington
joined the senator's staff on her
graduation ' from Northwestern in
1948. As a research assistant, she
helped prepare material fc Mc
Carthy's various pamphlets and
speeches. .
Last year, during hearings on Mc
Carthy's fitness to retain his Sen
ate seat, it was brought out that
Miss Kerr did research for the con
troversial booklet on housing which
103RD YEAR 4 SECTIONS 32 PAGES
.Ne'hiru
Partner Plans
Own Case in
Assault Trial
NEWPORT, Ore. Ul Richard
E. Thomson said Thursday he will
act as his own attorney when he
appears in Circuit Court next Tues
day for a pre-sentence hearing on
a charge of assault with intent to
kill his business partner, James K.
Meuller.
Thomson pleaded guilty to the
charge, but said he will call char
acter witnesses when he appears
for sentencing.
He admitted striking Meuller
over the head with a piece of pipe
a short time before their car
plunged from the Coast Highway
and went over a cliff a week ago
and landed up rocks on the beach
at Cape Foulweather.
Thompson gave no clear motive
for the attack on Meuller. He said
only that an ''obsession hit me"
and he denied that a $10,000 in
surance policy the partners in an
automobile business had on each
other's life was a factor.
Police started investigating what
appeared to be an .ordinary ac
cident after Meuller, delirious with
injuries in a hospital, cried out:
"Dick, why do you want to kill
me."
Thomson said in his confession
that the attack occurred while he
and his partner were driving back
from Portland early last Thursday.
The two men fought, but Thom
son said he suddenly became sor
ry, quit fighting and started to
take Meuller to a doctor. How
ever, Thomson said, he lost con
trol of the car and it went off the
road and down a steep bank 500
feet a bove the ocean. Thomson
said he fell out at 50 feet, and
Meuller was thrown out 350 feet
down. The car went on over the
cliff.
Report Test of
'New A-Bomb'
Red Officials
By RICHARD KASISCHKE
MOSCOW Un The Soviet Union
announced Friday it has successful
ly tested some "new type" atomic
bombs in recent weeks. ,
It added Russia hoped a ban
would be placed on all types, of
mass destruction weapons and is
looking into prospects for peaceful
use of atomic energy in industry.
A dispatch from the Soviet news
agency Tass published in the gov
ernment newspaper Izvestia said
the successful experimental tests
had taken place.
Follow "Peace Plan"
The dispatch said that although
the Soviet Union was able to give
attention to the production of atom
weapons, the nation also followed
a policy of strengthening peace and
trying to reach agreement with oth
er countries on the prohibition of
atomic, hydrogen bombs and other
kinds of weapons for mass destruc
tion. No details were given about the
"new type ""tested.
Tass said the Soviet Union wanted
strict international control and a
"realization of these decisions" to
ban atomic weapons.
No Surprise to AEC
Meanwhile, it said, the nation is
exploring the use of atomic energy
for industry purposes.
WASHINGTON J Officials of
the Atomic Energy Commission
evinced little surprise Thursday
night at Moscow's announcement
that the Soviet government has suc
cessfully tested some "new type"
atomic bombs in recent weeks.
"The news from Moscow tonight
merely confirms our statement of
Aug. 31," an AEC spokesman said.
SERVICEMEN RETURN
SEATTLE OB The Navy
Transport Marine Serpent docked
here Thursday with 2,908 serv
icemen from the Far East. ,
McCarthy sold to the Lustron Corp.
for $10,000?
The bride-to-be formerly was a
member of the Presbyterian
Church, but has now become a Ro
man Catholic, McCarthy's faith.
The New York Daily News said
the engagement announcement fol
lowed a stormy, two-year romance
during -which Miss Kerr frequent
ly broke off their secret engage
ment. She returned his ring as re
cently as last month and they were
reconciled only three days ago, the
paper continued.
It said McCarthy blamed their
differences on . "things outsiders
said. Concerning their final recon
dlation, McCarthy was quoted as
saying: v
"She laid down a set of condi
tions to which I agreed.
I said, 'What about my laying
down some conditions? but she
said. That'- alL brother "
Levels
Picking
3 -5S.
. .. 4. 5 . . -- '
s - Ul
Weighing in their last bean backets and cashing in their chips Thursday at Oak Crest Farm, two miles
north of Salem on Wallace Road, are these three Salem youngsters. Austin Davis, yard manager, said
students harvested entire yield of 110 tons from the 18-acre yard during past three weVks. Left to
right are Vernon Meighen, who attends Englewood School; June Henry, Salem High; John Gallagher,
Parrish Junior High, and the weigher, June Nolan, Wallace Road resident (Statesman photo.)
Idanha First
In State to Fill
Chest's Quota
Idanha became the first town
in Oregon to meet its 1953 Com
munity Chest quota, the Marion
Count chest announced Thursday
after a check with state head
quarters.
The Santiam canyon commu
nity has been first in the state
several years and makes the
achievement a matter of civic
pride, said chest executive C. A.
Kells in Salem. This year the
town chest leaders chafed only at
the wait for chest contribution
cards from the county office. t
Idanha by Thursday had col
lected over $500. which was its
quota. Co-chairmen in its solicita
tion were Warren A. stoll, Huoer
Ray, T. J. Skidmore and Florence
Harris.
Elsewhere in the county each
town is completing its organiza
tion for fund drives, most of
which will start soon. The Rev.
David Ferguson, Pratum, is coun
ty chest president
Car Crushed
As Lumber
Load Shifts
A heavily-loaded lumber truck
tipped over and squashed the
rear half of a parked car about
7:15 Thursday night near the cor
ner of 12th and Court Streets. No
one was hurt
Milo F. Mills, Aumsville, driv
er of the huge truck, told police
the load apparently shifted as he
turned from 12th street onto
Court He said he was going
about 15 miles, an hour.
The car, a 1950 Ford owned by
Paul Ross Benage, 1385 N. 18th
St, was parked in the 1100 block
of Court Street The combined
weight of the truck and lumber
completely crushed the car from
the doors back.
Gasoline from the truck's tank
spread over the street and fire
men were called to hose down the
pavement
A wrecker righted the truck
and it was reloaded. The car was
towed away.
PECKS SEPARATED
HOLLYWOOD CB Mrs. Greg
ory Peck said Thursday night that
she and the movie star are sepa
rated and have been since last
January. The actor is in Munich,
Germany, making a movie.
Today's Statesman
(Tw easier reading, at the tp ml
every par, e year Statesaaasi H Utm
page a amber AND the section Ban
ker. If year paper gets scattered
areas the hrak(as table, yea doat
have t flmd the Ureas page c a
seetiea te kaow whJca sectioa yeate
reading.) i -j
Section I .,' I 1 t '
General news 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 11, 12
Radio, Television : ...6
Society, women's - -8-9
Markets l .- 10
Comics 11
Section H 1
Sports 1 1-2
AP News in Pictures 4
Section HI ; j
Food news .J ' 1-3
The Oatis Story i
Valley news :..:.:.1Q, 12
Sectioa IT . .; ' :
Classified ada J- 1-3
TPOUNDBD 1651
The Orwgon Statesman, Salem Oreaon,
Attacks
Done, School Next Job
ill-
Churchill Vacations
Along French Coast
CAP D'AIL, France (fl Prime
Minister Churchill arrived Thurs
day for a 15-day vacation on the
sunny Mediterranean coast.
Paraphernalia for his favorite
hobby, painting, was much in evi
dence in- the more than 800 pounds
of luggage belonging to the Prime
Minister and his entourage.
Die, Possible
Justice Fish
In Colorado
PINE, Colo. W President Eis
enhower fished , for trout here
Thursday with Denver Federal
Circuit Judge Orie L. Phillips, who
has been mentioned frequently as
the chief executive's possible choice
to fill the U. S. Supreme Court
vacancy;
Phillips told a reporter after he
returned to his home in Denver
Thursday night, however, that
Eisenhower had not discussed the
court vacancy with him, "directly
or mdirectly.'
"I don't think I should talk about
it at all beyond saying that," Phil
lips added. '
Earlier, the jurist told reporters
at Pine:
"I'd like to help you, but I just
can't. This is no time for me to
talk."
He made that statement when
asked if he were being considered
for the court post.
Newsmen were cautioned by the
White House not to make too much
of Phillips' presence on the fish
ing trip.
Following the death of Chief Jus
tice Fred Vinson, Sen. Anderson
(D NM) proposed Judge Phillips
as the successor. Sens. Carlson (R
Kan) and Chavez are other sup
porting, him. . ,
The Kansas and Colorado Bar
Associations recently have en
dorsed Phillips for the vacancy.
American League
At New York 1. St. Louis T
At Boston S. Detroit I
At Philadelphia 4. Cleveland 9
At Washington X, Chicago 2
National League
At St. Louis S. Brooklyn 4
At Chicago 4. Philadelphia II
(Only games).
Swigs Police Believe Missing Mrs. Maclean
Left Country for Rendezvous With Husband
0 j
GENEVA, Switzerland un Mrs.
Donald Maclean, who vanished last
Friday, appears to have slipped out
out of Switzerland for a rendezvous
with her husband,' himself missing
from his British Foreign, joffice
post for 27 months. "
The most impressive police
search in recent Swiss history had
failed Thursday night to pick up
the trail of the Oucagoborn Mrs.
Maclean, 37. and her three children
after she parked her Chevrolet se
dan in a Lausanne garage at f:30
p. m. Friday and darted across the
street toward, the railway station.
Whether: Mrs.: Maclean met her
husband in a neighboring country
or was being taken to him by
friends of the missing British spec
ialist In American - affairs ' were
questions, baffling police. V
Maclean and .Guy . Burgess, a lei-
Friday, September 18, 19S3
At
Aged Woman
Missing on
Portland Trip
Statesman News Service
FOUR CORNERS An 83-year-
old Four Corners woman who
dropped out of sight in Portland
Tuesday was the object of search
Thursday by police and her fam
ily. She is Mrs. Katherine M. Scott,
mother of Melvin Scott of 3835
Mahrt Ave., Four Corners.
Scott said he put his mother on
the bus in Salem Tuesday after
noon to visit a friend in Portland
and she has not been heard from
since.
The bus driver told Scott that
he remembered helping the elder
ly woman from the bus in Port
land. That was the last time she
was seen.
Mrs. Scott's luggage, which had
been checked on the bus in Sa
lem, had not been picked up at
the Portland depot, her family
said.
Mrs. Scott is just over five feet
tall and was wearing a light color
ed fuU length coat and black hat
when last seen. ,
5-Cent Letter
Rate Proposed
WASHINGTON Wl Sen. Carl
son (R-Kan.) Thursday tossed out
for public reaction the idea of in
creasing the intercity postal-rate
on letters to 5 cents and sending
most of them by air.
Carlson, who heads the Senate
Post Office Committee, told a
news conference that such a boost
would bring in about 330 million
dollars more revenue a year.
That would go a long way to
ward wiping out the Post Office
Department deficit he said, which
was estimated at 450 million dol
lars for the current fiscal year
ending next June 30.
The 5-cent expedited service is
under consideration by an 11
member advisory council to the
Senate Post Office Committee.
GOOD TIME TO START
LOS ANGELES in Charles
Arndt. 78, a plumber for more than
60 years, registered Thursday as
a student in Los Angeles State Col
lege. His course? Plumbing.
low diplomat who was occasionally
his drinking companion, dropped
out of sight on a trip from Britain
to France May 28, 1951. Officials
suspect that, either voluntarily or
as kidnaping victims, they landed
behind the Iron Curtain.
- Mrs. Margaret's car was the prin
cipal clue found in the quest for
her and her; children, Fergus, 9;
Donald. 7; and Melinda. 2.
She turned it over to the garage
attendant. Marcel Michel!, about
eight hours after she left her Gen
eva apartment, presumably to
spend a weekend with a friend
"from Cairo" in the Montreaux re
gion. .
After searching aU the hotels
and pensions in the Montreux area
for some trace of Mrs. Maclean,
police) were almost convinced she
had not been in that region. .
- They could not account ior the
- '"vN
No. 172
India Block I
Said Flouting
Will of World
By SELIG HARRISON i
NEW DELHI. India UP) - Prim
Minister Nehru charged Thursday
that the will of nearly all Europe
and! Asia was flouted by the vote
of the United States and its Latin
American allies in the United Na
tions action that barred India from
the Korean peace conference
. "Somehow people don't realize
the countries of Asia don't propose
to be ignored or by-passed, . cer
tainly not sat upon." Nehru told
Parliament's lower bouse in a for
eign affairs debate. I
Criticizes Approach :
He implied the United States Is
Immature. He criticized what he
called the narrow, bigoted I ap
proach of some nations to world
affairs. - i v- , ,
Avoiding a direct stand concern
ing Red China'! counter-proposals
on the makeup of the Korean con
ference, Nehru said "we have ab
solutely no desire to be there,"
but he. held that neutral nations
could help the atmosphere in the
discussion of Korea's political fu
ture... ... .').
"Our only anxiety is that the
political conference should suc
ceed and that there should be a
peaceful settlement in the Far
East" he said.
"Live-And Let Live" ' -
Warning that the great powers
are "too big to be coerced by each
other," the prime minister said
the attitude of live-and-let-live is
the only alternative to the atom
bomb.
He deplored "the narrow ap
proach to world affairs of some
countries which consider every
thing in terms of black and white
with an element of dogmatic fer
vorthat bigoted, almost religious
approach of 'either you are with
us or against us.' j
"This approach, as well as re
cent events, have made me slightly
more doubtful of any permanent
settlements in the near future,"
be said. "We . can't expect too
much when statesmen's minds
have that old religious fervor with
out the virtue of religion. ' Religion
is all right when applied to ethics
and morals, but is not good mixed
up with politics."
. ii .
Adlai's Peace
Plan Called
Appeasement
CHICAGO UR The Senate Re
publican policy chief, Sep. Homer
Ferguson of Michigan, charged
Thursday that Adlai E. Stevenson's
proposals for cold war peace nego
tiations with Russia represent "ap
peasement" and "softness toward
Communism."
Furthermore, Ferguson told a
news conference, he thinks be fair
ly well represents the thinking of
the entire Republican Party on that
It is difficult to "discover," be
said, "exactly what Adlai Steven
son is advocating, but anyone who
has read the speech will have to
admit that the old softness toward
Communism which has marred hit
wing of the Democratic Ptrty fci
still with us."
Salem Worker
To Have Trial
At Portland
PORTLAND un A 28-year-oli
Salem cannery worker will go on
trial in Federal Court here Nov. S
on a charge of refusing to be in
ducted into military service. :
Albert Stain pleaded innocent to
the charge Wednesday. His attorn
ey said Stain was willing to serve
as a conscientious objector, but
that his draft board classified him
1-A after refusing a hearing.
Stain was indicted three years
ago and has since been free on
baiL
eight hours between her departure
from Geneva and the parking of
her car In Lausanne, only about
45 miles away on the north shore
of Lake Geneva.
Lausanne is a railroad commu
nications center from which al
most any point in Europe could be
reached. Police have checked all
border points and found no trace
of the missing family.
Mrs. Maclean could have taken
a train from Lausanne to Italy,
France or other points in Switzer
land where she could continue her
Journey as she wished.
. With a British passport, she could
enter'any country.
The garage attendant, Michel!
said Mrs. Maclean appeared to be
in a hurry to reach the railroad
station. She had told him she would
call tor the car in about eight
: - .
PRICE 5c
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