The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, October 02, 1953, Page 1, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    -.S 1 i-"--' r- i - .-" :" -. ' '' ' i ! .. -.., mm- m mm n , , , .
Clinton Quits State
Civil Service Post
it rifii M i;' I ii ill f iiiir iiifiiii - j- kii-i P-.1 i -- r I ill iiii ii r -J i iiiiii-i
State Civil Service Director
James EL Clinton turned in a let
ter of resignation Thursday be
cause he said his job "was becom
ing too much of a personal prob
lem for me to bear.
' Clinton said he actually would
leave his job about next April He
said he had no "definite" plans
for the future, other than to get
into "seme other line of work."
He said he fa not quitting his
job through bitterness or hostffl
: ity. .- -i ' - .
I "I believe," he said, "I can
v achieve greater job satisfaction in
other employment This job (of
Civil Service director) has be
come too loaded with responsibi
lity and grief. For my own physi
cal well-being I think I had better
get out now." :--,
In a letter to Philip A. Joss,
Portland, chairman of the State
, Civil Service Commission, Clinton
made some suggestions for a bet
tor civil service system in Oregon.
Clinton plugged for a higher
salary for the man who succeeds
him. He said his department does
n. have adequate funds to oper
ate. The,' civil service merit sys
tem, he advised, should be placed
in the state constitution. The last
State legislature should have ap
proved a salary raise far state
employes.
"I believe," said Clinton, "that
Oregon has one of the best civil
service programs in the nation
one of the top three or four. I
Jets? Guns Terrorize
Pennsylvan ia Town
FARRELL, Pa. (j5V-A U.S. Air Force F84 jet plane terrorized
this western Pennsylvania town Thursday with an accidental burst
from a machine gun that sent bullets crashing into buildings and
autos and whining past pedestrians.
OtP
blMJUJJS
WDQuQGa
"7
Editor Robert W. Ruhl of the Med
ford Mail-Tribune can't figure out
how it . is that Harris Ellsworth
goes on getting re-elected in the
Oregon lourth district wnen ne was
running at the same time as Frank-las
lin D. Roosevelt, "both were miles
ahead of their competitors wnen
the votes were counted." The mys
'tery to Ruhl is that with their po-
litical Views so wide apart both
! would win in a poll of the same
Voters. And he can't figure out
why Ellsworth continues to be re
elected in view of bis voting record.-
. r - .
Ruhl offers the explanation that
Ellsworth ia a , "nice guy" . . .,
conscientious, friendly (at 1 e a s t
when campaigning) and inconspicu
ous.' He is at the same time
"1000 reeular . Ruhl cites as a
second reason: "Apathy indiffer
ence both nublie and political.
I do not feel able to add much
to the. analysis offered by Ruhl,
except this that voters often face
two ways. It is a familiar fact that
voters at one time may oe neu
bent for liberalism, and at anoth
er time they may be equally strong
for conservatism. What is less often
recognized is that they may in
cline both ways at the same time.
Thus, they wanted Roosevelt re
turned to office, either in apprecia
tion of past services or out of the
belief that his program was desir
able. At the same time they may
have wanted to "hedge their,
(Continued on editorial page 4)
'Phone Gut Off
Hits Mill Gty
i Mill City telephone service was
cut off for about three hours
Thursday morning, according to
Elmer Ferglund, Salem manager
of the Pacific Telephone and
Telegraph Co.
' The interruption was report
edly caused by a vehicle knock
ing down a pole in the Lyons
area. A repair crew from Salem
restored, service to the commu
nity. :
Bloodmobile Gets
137 Pints in City
The Red Cross bloodmobile col
lected 137 pints of blood at the
regular drawing Thursday at Sa
lem Armory. About 150 persons
showed up.
Yesterday's total was some 17
pints higher than last month.
Animal Cracker
Cv WARREN GOODRICH
DENTIST
CAM 10CATI TKCUtlt;
. ' Vw' tj ,)
: Stfiflr ' M
y
LJ.:Z
James E. Clinton (above) who
.announced his resignation as
state civil service direct!
'Thursday. .
hope these suggestion will make
it better." ;
Clinton said he has had contro
versies with state officials over
the merit system, the civil service
payroll and "political appoint
ments," but that most of these
have been settled.
(Additional details on Page 7,
Sec 1.)
Police Chief Jonn j. stosito saia
there was considerable property
damage but no casualties.
He said the plane was based at
the Vienna Air Force Base near
Warren, Ohio, and had been on a
routine flight 1 , .
"Something happened to one of
its machine guns," Stosito told a
newsman after a conference with
Maj. A. F. Martin Jr. of the Vienna
base. An officer at the base said
controls for the firing mechanism
apparently tripped accidentally.
Resident said the plane passed
over the community once then
circled a few times.
The 50 , caliber slugs struck 12
automobiles, setting two afire, and
29 business places and homes.
Mrs. Joseph Frank was ironing
a bullet tore through the' wall
of her home and landed at her
feet She collapsed and was placed
under' a doctor s care. ,
Twelve persons standing in front
of the gate of the Sharon' Steel
Corp. plant narrowly were missed
by slugs that tore into an auto,
setting it afire. rv
The steel company's employment
office also was sprayed by bullets
that narrowly missed office work
ers and punctured a filing cabinet
Another bullet crashed through
the roof of a truck. Four more
slugs hit a feed mill and still an
other went through a window at a
bakery. .
Flax Growers
Claim Record
JEFFERSON A world's re
cord for fiber flax production was
claimed for the Jefferson area
Friday.
Edward and Clause Ammon
produced five tons of flax straw
per acre on a seven-acre field on
their Linn County diversified
farm.
Oregon State College author!-
j ties said the previous high yield
was AVt tons per acre. The re
cord was achieved with the Cas
cade variety flax developed' by
the OSC experiment station and
released in 1945.
Mamie to Launch
Atomic Submarine
WASHINGTON ( The Navy
will launch its first atomic sub
marine next Jan. 21 with Mrs.
Dwight D. Eisenhower as sponsor.
The launching date was disclosed
Thursday when Mrs. Eisenhower
accepted an invitation to christen
the revolutionary new vessel now
building at Groton, Conn. It is to
be named the Nautilus.
The Nautilus will be the largest
submarine ever built by this coun
try as well as the first vessel of any
Kind to be driven by nuclear power.
TAX CHECK SUCCESSFUL
PORTLAND m Results have
been "very successful" in a door
to door check to uncover delin
quent taxpayers, Ralph C. Gran
quist, Oregon internal revenue di
rector, said Thursday. .
DDIS OF INJURIES
HEPPNER ) Automobile ac
cident injuries caused the death
Wednesday of Archie McCowan,
55, Heppner. He was riding in a
car that was hit by a truck Mon
day. v .
hH N: m Alii 'Mil
, 'Max. Min. Pre&p.
Mien . m 47 jsi
Portland 60 48 . ?S
San Francisco 6S 37 .01
Chicago 79 .. 50 J
Nw York SO ' S7 S
Willamette River -1J iee.
FORECAST (from U. S. weather
bureau. McNarr field. Salem)
Hi rtly cloudy with scattered show
ers today with -increasing cloudi
ness tonight High today near 57 and
low tonight near 43. Temperature
ai i oi aunn. was 4 aefrees.
SALEM PRECiPlTAT10r
Since Start ei Weather Year Sept.
This Yea
Last Year
Normal
S
144
103BD TEAR
Pact Witt
Relief of Cold
War Tensions
Aim of Studies
By D. HAROLD OLIVER
WASHINGTON U) Adlai E.
Stevenson reported Thursday that
President Eisenhower is very
much interested" in the idea of a
non-aggression pact with Russia as
a means of relieving tension in Eu
rope. .The 1952 Democratic presidential
candidate had lunch at the White
House and said afterwards Eisen
hower was giving close study to the
possibilities of an East-West non
aggression agreement; along with
other methods of abating the cold
war. , :
See.. Dulles Present
Stevenson proposed a non-aggression
pact in his recent Chicago
speech and brought the subject up
again when he called on the Presi
dent to report on the world tour he
took earlier this year. Secretary of
State Dalles also was present at
the White House conference.
"If Russia were unwilling to ac
cept the proposal" Stevenson said,
"it would be rather apparent that
her peaceful professions arerft as
sincere as they might seem." K
It. would put the Russians on the
spot with respect to their intentions,
he added. He then went on to say
he thought Eisenhower feels some
what the same way about it
At Stag Luncheon
Stevenson spent half an hour with
the President and Dulles, then sat
down to a stag luncheon in his
honor attended by the President
and 16 other high government offi
cials, i
After eating with "great re
straint" what he called a very fine
lunch, Stevenson conferred with the
President in the latter's office for
another 15 minutes.
Small Gains
For Burglary
Of Post Office
LEBANON, Ore. 141 A burglar
got only 75 cents from a teacup
in the attempted burglary of the
Lacomb Postoffice, -eight miles
north of here. .
The postoffice was entered
through a window and a fruitless
attempt was made to open the
safe. Sheriffs officers, state po
lice and William Andrews, postal
inspector from Eugene, investi
gated. '
A week ago Dick's Grocery
across the street from the post-
office was robbed of $1 and a pair
of nylon stockings.
Several hundred dollars, was
stolen in the burglary of the post-
office at Crawfordsville, 20 miles
south of Lacomb.
Mailmen Seek
Help in Fighting
Route 4 Jungles'
This is National Newspaper
Week but if the postal depart
ment had its way it also would
be Keep the Mailman Dry Week.
Start of the autumn-waiter
rains has disclosed just how luxu
riant a growing season we've had
sidewalk shrubbery has all but
taken over the sidewalk in some
areas, and tree branches spread
over walkways a? just the right
height to topple a top hat,
So what happens to the mail
man with his umbrella and mail
sack? He's getting wet, all wet.
and Postmaster Albert Gragg is
sued an appeal Thursday for a
bit of trimming of that foliage."
Whether a dryer, happier mail
man would bring happier mail
wasn't disclosed.
DAUGHTER FOR ESTHER
SANTA MONICA, Calif. UR
Actress" Esther Williams, who is
Mrs. . Ben Gage " in private life,
Thursday gave birth to a 7 pound,
15 ounce baby girl in the Santa
Monica Hospital '
Kuw Farouk
O -
To Callows
By EDWARD POLLAk
CAIRO, Egypt in Ex-Premier
Ibrahim Abdel Hadi, who rose to
power and riches under King Fa
rouk I, was sentenced Thursday to
die on the gallows for "high treason
and conspiracy with a foreign pow
er against the security of the state."
. A special three-man court, set up
by President Gen. Mohamed Na
guib's revolutionary government in
mid-September, pronounced the sen
tence on the pale, 57-year-old form
er Saadist Party leader after a
three-day trial, held partly in se
cret Then, in a two-hour session held
wholly in secret the court con
demned Ahmad Mohamed Awad, an
Egyptian electrician, formerly em
ployed by the British garrison in
the Suez Canal Zone, to death by
hanging on similar charges of trea
son and conspiracy.
Though the details were not dis-
4 SECTIONS 44 PAGES
lEte Dtm voC.es T-IH1
Law i.. SM.es oim
NEW YORK (JP) The great port of New York lay paralyzed
Thursday as President Eisenhower invoked the Taft- Hartley Law
against a multi-million dollar East Coast waterfront strike.
At best, however, the strike of 60,000 longshoremen was expected
Boyer Resigns
AEC Position;
Nichols Named
WASHINGTON UB Chairman
Lewis L. Strauss Thursday an
nounced the resignation of Marion
W. Boyer as general manager of the
Atomic Energy Commission, effec
tive Nov. 1.
Boyer will be succeeded by Ma.
Gen. Kenneth D. Nichols, 45, a long
time expert on atomic weapons and
former chief of the armed forces
special , weapons project. '
Boyer, who took the post for a
three-year term on Nov. 1 1950,
is returning to private business' He
is a vice president of the Standard
Oil Co. of New Jemy.
Nichols, now on duty in Washing
ton as the Army's chief of develop
ment and research, will retire from
military service on taking over the
AEC post
Court Tests
Of Induction
PORTLAND m A test case
on the - refusal of Jehovah's Wit
nesses to be inducted into the
armed forces may be taken to the
high courts as a result of sched
uled trials here of 15 or IS Ore
gon members of the religious
group. - : : '
. Federal Judge Claude McColloch
said Thursday 'the trials on
charges; of refusing to submit to
Induction will be heard consecu
tively in late November and early
December.
Defense attorneys will be Hay
den C Covington, New York, chief
counsel for the Watchtower Bible
and Tract Society, and DeHmore
Lessard, Portland. Assistant U. S.
Attorney James W.. Morrell has
been assigned to prosecute the
cases. "
Covington has represented the
Witnesses in many other cases
including those involving refusal
to salute the flag.
Thursday two Witnesses from
Albany, Ore., Kendrick Mclntyre,
22, and John F. Koepke, 26, under
indictment for refusing to submit
to induction, pleaded innocent in
McColloch's court.
, They were indicted after they
refused to accept the classification
of conscientious objectors. They
asked that instead they be desig
nated 4-D as ministers.
Six Millions Sliced
For Oregon Forests
PORTLAND 11 Oregon, and
Washington received nearly 9
million dollars as their share of
national forest receipts for the
year ended June 30, Regional For
ester J. Herbert Stone reported
here .Thursday.
He said a check for $6,029,382
has been sent to Salem and one
for $3,434,618 to Olympia. Under
federal law the states disburse
such receipts for public schools
and roads. -
FRANK MUNN DIES
NEW YORK l Frank Munn,
57, former National Broadcasting
Company singer known as "The
Golden Voice of Radio," died
Thursday at his Queens. Village
home. '
dosed, high officials declared last
month that there was a plot in
spired from abroad, to overthrow
the government and restore Farouk
to the throne he lost July 26, 1952.
: The foreign power has never bees
publicly identified. Unofficial spec
ulation has centered variously on
Britain, Russia and "an eastern
Mediterranean country related with
NATO." The British Foreign Office
said last week Egypt had assured
it that Britain was not Involved.
Hadi and Awad were the first to
be tried among about two dozen
persons rounded op for hearings
before the court headed by War
Minister Abdel Latif Baghdady.
There is no appeal from the sen
fences, but they are subject to the
approval of Naguib's revolutionary
council, the governing power.
Hadi was indicted and convicted
on six counts, of which the con
spiracy charge was the first
Law Expected
Aide Condemned
by Naguib Court
PCUNDDD 1651
Thm Oregon Statesman,'
to run into next week at an esti-
mated cost to the shipping industry
of $1,500,000 a day. Ports were idle
from Maine' to Virginia. .
The White House set up a board
of inquiry, giving it until Monday
to report back. Then the way would
be clear for a strike-ending court
injunction. -Laonched
by ILA
' The rackets-ridden ILA kicked
out of the AFL only last week
launched . the strike at midnight
Wednesday to back up wage de
mands on deep water shippers. The
union's very future was at stake.
Its leaders promised to return to
work if and when there's an injunc
tion. "Until that time the strike will
continue," said Patrick J. Connolly,
ranking ILA official since President
Joseph P. Ryan was hospitalized
a few days ago with an illness.
Await Injunction
Connolly said the Federal Media
tion Service called from Washington
in the afternoon to sound out the
chances of the ILA returning to
work at once without waiting for
an injunction. ,
. "I told him we would not return
to work until an injunction is is
sued." the strike leader informed
newsmen.
Work Military Ships
By land and by sea, ILA pickets
roamed the desolate 350 miles ef
New York piers, where bustling ac
tivity had given way to eerie quiet
and sun-splashed loneliness.
Only military ships were being
worked. . .
ILA pickets by the hundreds pa
trolled the port of New York in
packs, alert for any attempt by
rival AFL organizers to breach the
strike front. .
Bridge Traffic
System Open
To Full Tpsts
The newry paved approach of
Marion Street bridge leading to
West Salem was opened at 9 a jn.
Thursday and police reported
traffic flowed without incident
Although removal of the Edge
water Street approach barricades
opens the twin bridge system to
full traffic use, the State Highway
Department reported there are
still some finishing touches before
the job is completed.
The new Center Street bridge,
which carries eastbound traffic,
was opened Sept, 23. -
Until opening yesterday of the
Marion Street bridge approach to
West Salem, Wallace Road and
Dayton, traffic for those points
was routed via the Dallas-Inde
pendence throughway.
No Indication
Of Slump, Says
Administration
, .. . y
WASHINGTON t The Com
merce Department reported Thurs
day "the pace of industrial activity
is being maintained" in the United
States despite the predictions of
some economists that there, would
be a slight slump this fall.
It cited as evidence the unem
ployment figures for September.
The department's Census Bureau
estimated there were 1,246,000 un
employed persons in : the country
last month, compared with the post
war record low of 1,240,000 in Au
gust of this year.
Civilian employment in Septem
ber was placed at 62,306,000. This
compared with 63,408,000 in August
and 62,280,000 in September, 1952.
"The decline in employment in
September was due almost entirely
to the usual withdrawal of students
at the start of the school term,"
said Secretary of j; Commerce
weeks.
"It is significant that unemploy
ment remained practically un
changed." - l
Spice of Life
BANGOR, Wales un -- Mrs. Sar
ah, Owen of Caernavonshire under
went a throat operation Thursday
and said later she enjoyed the ex
perience. She is 105. ! ; "
Downtown Days!
"Downtown Days," a merchan
dising promotion of i the Salem
Downtown Merchants' Associa
tion, presents special offerings
f or today and tomorrow in a sep
arate section of today's Oregon
Statesman. It Is regarded as possi
ble that the event will be placed
on monthly basis. '
Salem, Oregon, Friday, October 2, 1353
Cascades Get
Snow
Ram in Valley
It snowed Thursday one mile
from Salem straight up.
Although the flakes turned
to rain long, before they bit
ground in the Salem area, snow
was reported in the Cascade
Mountains above the 5,000-foot
leveL !
Winter's touch was felt lo
cally Thursday. Temperatures
hit a brisk 53 for the high
mark.
And rain pounded down on
the mid-valley most of yester
day rnnning up a total of .61
inches at the McNary -Field
Weather Bureau.
Wednesday fall of one inch
coupled with Thursday's total
brings the water mark up to
2120 inches since beginning of
the weather year Sept L. Nor
mal fall for the period is 1.56
inches.
. Outlook for the weekend is
more of the same. Scattered
showers today are predicted to
give way to heavier rain Sat
urday. Sunday looks damp too,
says the weatherman.
Heat Remains
In Central
Section of U. S.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .
Summery weather paid another
call to the mid-continent Thursday
running temperatures into the 90s
from Texas -to the' Dakotas.
Fort Worm, Tex., had an after
noon reading of 95 degrees; Miles
City, Mont, and Pierre, S. D., 93,
and Springfield, HL, 90.
Afternoon readings in the 80s
prevailed from the mid-Atlantic
states to the Missouri Valley. .
' Helena. Mont un Miles City,
in eastern Montana, reported a
maximum temperature reading of
93 Thursday, highest ever recorded
in that city this time of the year.
The U. S. Weather Bureau in
Helena said the previous high Was
91 on Oct 5, 1920.
Thermometer, readings varied
considerably elsewhere in the state.
Missoula reported a high of 55
and Cut Bank 56.
Drummond reported an overnight
low of 29.
Pratum Youth
To Face Trial
i i .
Raymond Wallace Satterlee,-17,
Pratum youth charged with, man
slaughter will stand trial on the
charge, it was decreed Thursday.
Marion County Circuit Judge
George Duncan denied Saterlee's
plea that the teen-ager be turned
over to the juvenile court Trial
date will be set later.
Satterlee was indicted by the
Marion County grand jury recent
ly following the death, Aug. 4,
of a playmate, Kenneth Cross, 4.
Both boys were living in a foster
home at Pratum.
14 DIE IN BUS CRASH
ASUNCION, Paraguay UB A
passenger bus went out of control
Wednesday and smashed into a
building, killing 14 and injuring
more than 20 of the persons aboard.
Faulty brakes were blamed for
the accident, the worst of its type
in the city s history.
WORK TO CONTINUE
PORTLAND I W Work will
continue on schedule on The Dalles
Dam through 1954. Brig. Gen. E
C. Itschner, North Pacific division
engineer, reported Thursday.
Flurry
Neighborhood Posses Seek
Slayer of Young Dallas Mother
VI.
. j
DALLAS UR 1 Dallas husbands
bought guns, two started a neigh
borhood; posse and police threw
everything they had Thursday into
the search far a rapist slayer who
killed a
night
With I
young: mother Wednesday
almost her last breath,
C Parker, 29, gasped Wed
Mrs. H.
nesday night that it was a Negro
who attacked her and left her dy
ing, her throat slashed, under a
creek bridge near Dallas' munici
pal airport Love Field. She had
been waiting for a bus.
Said the passing motorist 'who
picked ber up as she stumbled onto
the street: "It was a bloody, stomach-retching
crime. None but a
mftHma-t could do such a thing.
White1 women have been report
ing seeing a nude Negro prowler
in Dallas for weeks. One woman
was injured critically in a brutal
attack ion Aug. 3L . -
The I murder cf Mrs. Parker
aroused Dallas-
PRICE 5c
(Guards! : (Spins Quel.
03 jotieiig of An-i-Keds
Dii POW Enclosure
- '
PANMUNJOM (Jf) Anti-Communist prisoners in the Korean
neutral zone Friday staged their second mass breakout attempt in
two days and two were killed and five wounded by Indian guards.
It brought the total casualties in the breakout attempts to 3 dead
ana 10 wounded.
The Indian guard force command
said two Chinese were killed and
five wounded in Friday's riot by
500 PpWs in Indian village.
A spokesman for the Indian cus
todial' force confirmed the break
out try and said quiet was restored.
Break from Compound
In Thursday's incident, a North
Korean anti-Red POW was killed
and five injured when 500 prison
ers rioted at the sight of Red Polish
and Czech medical inspectors in
side their stockades.
The; Indian spokesman said that
Friday the Chinese broke out of a
compound shortly before noon de
manding that the Indian command
er return a prisoner being taken
to the hospital for medical treat
ments The prisoner had tried to commit
suicide with a razor blade, the
spokesman said, and needed medi
cal attention.
Demanded Return
Five other Chinese POWs who
had gone on sick call with the
prisoner demanded he be returned
to the compound.
Whan the Indians refused, they
rushed out shouting at the
500
prisoners in the compound.
Theispokesan said Indian guards
repeatedly warned the Chinese to
stop climbing' over the barbed wire
in a mass breakout effort.
"First we fired one shot in the
air
as warning, he. said. "That
had no effect so the guards fired
six more shots. A total of only
seven; shots were fired."'
Guards Insured
Some Indian guards were injured
by prisoners attacking them with
stones, sticks and tent poles, an
Indian statement said. It did not
give the number.
Before the 60-minute demonstra
tion ended, guards hustled away
five inedical inspectors including
two doctors from Iron Curtain coun
tries. They were escorted to a ''safe
area away from the compound,"
an official release said.
Surprises Diplomats
The reports of the shooting caused
surprise among diplomats at the
United Nations in New York. They
had been assured only Monday by
India's delegate, V. K. Krishna
Menon, that the Indian guards were
unarmed. ' y
The 'flareup of violence graphical
ly emphasized the latest breakdown
in truce machinery calling for "ex
planations" to prisoners balking at
return to their homelands.
Originally set to begin last Satur
day, the explanations were post
poned! until Thursday and then de
layed again for an indefinite period.
Many; prisoners objected to forced
attendance at the interviews.
Order Drop
Lops 50 Off
Dallas Rolls
DALLAS Jobs ended for ap
proximately 50 men at the Ger
linger' Carrier factory here Thursday.-!
V, O. Williams, manager, said
a backlog of government orders
had been filled and the night
Shift yrz being discontinued. The
company had been working three
shifts! for more than five years.
The" firm, which manufactures
fork-lift trucks and lumber -carriers,
I still has over 200 men on
its payroll, Williams said.
Williams noted that the cur
rent slump in the lumber business
also was a factor in the cutback-
He said no further cuts in per
sonnel were anticipated.
Gun: dealers reported their sales
were as much as 10 times the' nor
mal number. One said he had 30
customers lined up waiting to buy
firearms at mid-morning. Another
said he hadcustomers waiting
when he opened his doors for busi
ness.
Two; north Dallas men announced
the formation of a neighborhood
protective association "to protect
our homes.
Cash rewards offered for inform
ation leading to the conviction of
Mrs. Parker's slayer rose. The Dai
ly Tunes Herald of Dallas and
radio f station KRL together of
fered $1,000. ,
The Dallas Morning News, radio
station WFAA and television sta
tion WFAA offered $1,000 each. The
Terrell Tribune, published about 35
mites least of Dallas, offered $100.
The ; Dallas News, with a ' 1500
contribution, launched a separate
fund for the support and education
of Mrs. Parker's 4 year old son,
Joe Bin.
No. 186
Yankees Whip
am:
Mantle Herd
NEW YORK on An eighth' in-'
ning home run by Mickey Mantle
ir "?2U?r on b-:i .?avA
the New York Yankees a 4-2-victory
over the Brooklyn uodgers in
the second game of the World Ser
ies Thursday. ' ' , ; ,
The blast, which broke up a 1-1
tie aaa a -Itcjer's battle j2;.re- l
Ed Lopat of New Yprk and Preach
er Roe of the Broos, gave the Vs.
kees a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven
series.
Friday the scene shifts to Ebbets
Field in Brooklyn, home cf the Aa
tional League champions, where
tie Dodsers will try; to get back
into the series.
Erskine to Start
. Carl Erskine. who nitrfiMf nn
inning and gave up four runs Wed
nesday as New York won, 9-5, is
scheduled to pitch for Brooklyn. Vic
Raschi, who has won five and lost
two games in past series competi
tion, is to hurl for New York.
-.mine won one game and lost
one last. year in the series with tha
Yankees. Both are righthanders.
itoe limited New York to only
five hits during the warm, sunny
afternoon Thursday, and until the
seventh inning it appeared to the
uuwu oi oo.bb mat ne-might even
the series as Brooklyn led, 2-1. .
Home Ron by Martin
Then he threw a home run ball
to Billy Martin to lead off the sev
enth inning, and it landed in the
left field stands to knot the count
at 2-alL
Bauer singled with one away in
the Yankee half of the eighth, and
after Yogi Berra filed out, Mantle
slammed his game winning blast
into the lower left field seats, 10
rows no.
Two bases on balls . and two fly
balls had accounted for one tally
in the first inning as the Yankees
scored without a hit
With two away in the ton of the
fourth, the Dodgers got their only
.runs. Gil Hodges and Carl Furillo
singled, and 'both scored on BD
w uuc uuume into me leit neid
corner.
(Full details on Suorts, pages 1-3)
Truck Plunere
Kills Couple,
Injures Son
ROSEBURG U) A man and
his wife were killed and their
young son injured Thursday when
their truck plunged 100 feet .into
Elk- Creek canyon from Highway
227.
Killed outright was Albert O.
Weekly of Myrtle Point His wife,
Ethel May, 44, died about 10 min
utes later. The son, about 9, was
taken to a Canyonville hospital
with minor injuries. .
The Weeklys were en route to
Eastern Oregon for deer hunting
when they missed a sharp turn
on the Tiller Trail highway, about
60 miles southeast of here. Coroner
L. L. Powers said.
The truck was hauling a .Jeep.
Cordell Hull to Mark
82nd Birthday Today
WASHINGTON CordeS
Hull, who left the office of secre
tary of state nine years ago an HI
and exhausted man, observes hit
82nd birthday here Friday.
Hull ran the State Department
from March. 1933, to Nov. 27, 1944,
longer than any other secretary.
He lives in an apartment betel,
takes - daily auto rides into the
nearby Virginia countryside.- and
keeps up with world affairs through
the newspapers, radio and televi
sion. Today's Statesmsn
Section 1 !
General news i;2, 6, 7, 10
Editorials, features
Society, women's .
Section 2
Downtown Days
Fashions
General news .
Sections
Sports . :
Associated Press photos
' World This Wes
Markets
13
:'.4
!
7
-8,
Classified ads
Farm news
10
Section 4
Food news
Valley
Radio TV
orooks Ag
4
k a
....... .1-U
2,4,6,8
mm.
io-n