' 2 (Sc 1) Stotasmcra, Sdoxsu Ort- Friday, Oct 2. 1953 Parents Still Awaiting Word Of Kidnaped 6-Year-Old Son KANSAS CITY (SI Spokesmen for the wealthy parents .of 6-year-old j Bobby Greenlease insisted Thursday night they still are wait ing for a break in the three day old kidnaping case. The strange quietness which be gan Wednesday at the big borne continued. Thursday after a slight Curry of activity Wednesday night which gave rise to the possibility the kidnapers might be nearing a ransom move. '- - The multi-millionaire father, Rob ert C. Greenlease, has said be was ready to put up cash needed to bring about his son's release. Hi has arranged for immediate cur rency to meet a ransom demand, day or night. Tension Mounts At the Greenlease home tension appeared to be mounting. "It can't go on like this forever," a family spokesman said. "Some thing has got. to happen." i At Oklahoma City, the Oklahoma State highway patrol reported it bad set up roadblocks on the Oklahoma-Texas line after Wichita Fall Tex., police reported a woman, an swering the 'description of the ab ductor, bad been seen heading north from there. The Oklahoma Highway Patrol also sent a plane up in the area. - Etoo Car . However, Texas Department of Public Safety Director Garrison Strawberries Threatened by Virus Disease GRESHAM Iff) Oregon's 1954 Strawberry crop is threatened by a widespread infestation of the virus disease known as yellows, a four-county meeting of growers, processors and farm specialists was told here Thursday. Observers said the Gresham area is the hardest hit with 80 to BO per cent of the strawberry plants diseased in some fields. New plantings are affected worst. William S. Averill, Multnomah county agent, said, "Crop pros pects for next - year look - slim. Some carryover fields may out produce the. new plantings." Aphids, which were thick this year, spread the virus. College specialists said too many growers do not know this and fail to recog nize; the symptoms of yellows until It is too late to control the suck ing f pests and prevent further spreading. . A three-point - control program was proposed by Averill: early, consistent roguing to rid old crops of infested plants; an area-wide dusting program to control aphids; and supplying .by processors of growers with best-quality certi fied! strawberry plants. ' An fightmember committee -to study tbcSTDblem was named iy Ralph Clark,' Oregon State College extension' Jiorticulturist who - pre- Dulles Signs Treaty With South Korea WTSHINGTON to Secretary oi State Dulles, signing a mutual de fense treaty with South Korea, said Thursday that the essential require ment for world peace and security "is the maintenance of our strength."- He described the pact, which was made at the insistence of President Syngman Rhee, as another link "in the collective security of the free nations of the Pacific. , i Dulles and Korean Foreign Mini ster Y. T. Pyuan signed the docu ment which Dulles and Rhee' had negotiated in conferences at Seoul in August It was part of Rhee price for tccepting the truce in Korea. - Dulles expressed hope for quick approval of the treaty by the Senate after Congress resumes in January. START YOUR BOY OR GIRL l. : NOW WHILE ALL chool Orchestras and Are Being Organized Salem Music Co. Offers Fine American-Made Quality Instruments en a Special School-Rental Purchase Plan For as little as !fcaw047O iAIXaeVCXSSCa 13 to. Cija IX , ' Across From tho Ehinore Theatre WORLD SERIES : ffon:, i ir:.:r TELEVISION 515 LOUNGE SENATOR HOTEL said at Austin the Highway Patrol had stopped a car with a red-haired woman in it near Wichita Falls. but that the woman "definitely was not the kidnaper." ; - In Washington. William C. Doner tv. president of the AFL National Association of Letter Carriers, said be is asking 120,000 postmen over the nation to watch for the missing child. Both Greenlease. 71, and bis wife, in her mid-40s, were attended by a physician. Friends reported the strain was telling on Greenlease who amassed a fortune as aa au tomobile dealer here. But officers said the parents managed to get some sleep Wednesday night. Wage Demand Submitted By Engineers CLEVELAND Iff) Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers repre sentatives presented demands to the nation's railroads Thursday for a 30 per cent wage boost And in the mails were demands or 37-cent hourly boosts from the other big rail unions the Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire men and Enginemen, the Brother hood of Railroad Trainmen and the Order of Railway Conductors. The four independent unions rep resent nearly a third of a million railroaders, whose contracts with the roads expired at midnight. Vote Necessary Before any of the four unions could strike, a vote of tne member ship would be necessary. A hint that the carriers would resist these demands vigorously came when Daniel P. Loonus, Chi cago, chairman of the Association of Western Railways, termed them exorbitant "They are so far out of line they are ridiculous," Loomis remarked in Chicago. All four unions ask additional benefits: They want in the perma nent wage structure at least 10 cents of the hourly increases they got from an escalator clause tied to the cost of living. Special Allowances They also want the basic boost they now asked to be applied to all special ' allowances, monthly and daily guarantees and other extras. The firemen's union : also has made additional demands for yard men and wants minimum daily wages for roadmen. Specifically it seeks for yard service men the same pay for a 40-hour week that they used to get for 48-hour week. For those yardmen, the union asks an additional 37 cents hourly making a total demand of 75 cents. ver Traffic Death EUGENE UP! Howard Kenneth Parmenter,-37, Rt 3, Canby, was jailed here Wednesday on a charge of negligent homicide, i He was taken to jail by ambu lance from a hospital where he has been -recovering from injuries suffered in a May 9 accident. Parmenter was charged in a Lane County grand jury secret indict ment in connection with the death in the accident of Sharon K. Smith, 20, of Blachly. Parmenter was driving a car which crashed headon with one in which Miss Smith was riding with Norman J. M. May. May was hurt, but recovered. The accident oc curred about 40 miles northwest of here. BUILDING AUTHORIZED Two building permits were Is sued Thursday by the city .en gineer's office Permits went to E. L. Kuebler for a garage at 1860 Beach St, $500, and Mar tin Schmidt, dwelling alteration at 1895 Highway Ave., $300. $5.00 . month flnnhv Dnvftr Bands H. C. Stevens Found Dead era Home Harold G. Stevens Sr., 58,' for mer, president of the . Marion County Farmers 1 Union,, was found dead in the garage at his some on Route 3 near Salem Thursday afternoon by a neigh bor. - J: : - ; He had taken hiswife. Mrs. Cynthia Stevens, to Salem Thurs day morning ami said that ne was going to work. He was em ployed as Custodian at the State Highway Commission building. He was found about 4:30 p.m. He was born Jan. 24, 1894, in Jersey City, NJ. In 1916 he was married to Miss Cynthia Vose in Chicago where the couple lived until they moved to their home Bear Salem in 1945. Survivors are his widow: two sons, Harold G. Stevens Jr., Sa lem, and Robert L Stevens, Chi cago; four daughters, Mrs. Doro thy I. Hahn and Mrs. Cynthia F. Keller, both of Glenview, I1L, Mrs. Ruth N. Randall, Lake Zur ich, I1L, and Miss Lois L. Stevens, Salem: sister. Mrs. Ruth Wind- f eldt, Cranf ord, NJ. and 14 grand children. He was a member of the First Evangelical United Brethren Church of Salem. Announcement of services will be made later by the Howell-Edwards Co. ; China Marks Fourth Year Under Reds TOKYO W Red China Thurs day celebrated its fourth birthday with a mammoth military parade in Peiping of guns, tanks ' and "great twin-jet bombers. Mao Tze-Tung, the peasant who became ruler of Red China, stood in the great square defore the pal ace of China's ancient emperors and took the salutes and cheers of marching soldiers and workers. p From the rostrum he heard Gen. Chu Teh, commander of Red Chi na's vast armies, read an order of the day proclaiming "a great vic tory" by "the people of our coun try" in "resisting American aggres sion in Korea." - ! A Peiping broadcast heard here described the military parade of "column on column of s infantry, parachutists, aviators, navy men, motorized troops, armored vehicles artillery, tanks and armored cars.' "Low overhead, Peiping radio said, "flight after flight of great twin-jet bombing planes screamed, accompanied by MIG fighters look ing quite tiny by comparison." Although no twin-jet ; bombers were reported used by the Red Air Force during the Korean War there have been frequent reports of them in Manchuria. Bathyscafe Damaged in Record Dive ISLAND OF PONZA, Italy m Prof. Auguste Piccard's bathyscape was reported Thursday ; to have been damaged in its . nearly two- mile deep dive Wednesday and probably will not be used again this year. The Italian corvette, Tenace which accompanied the diving boat during its record descent of 10,339 feet off Ponza Island, brought back the report. The nature and extent of the damage was not disclosed. Piccard was resting Thursday night from his nerve-straining ex ploit He will be on hand Friday when the bathyscafe is hauled into drydock. Willamette U. Money Drive Hits $201,460 PORTLAND The Wfflam ette University development fund has jumped to $201,460, Portland area captains of the drive ceara at a meeting Thursday. ; The university is trying to raise $500,000 to match gifts for erec tion of an auditorium-fine arts building and a women's residence hall - . - The Salem area report climbed to $134,490, Portland to $50,785 and other points to $16,185. ' Another meeting will ' be held here Oct 20 to bear further cam paign reports. The number of power shovels and draglines in use in U.S. sur face coal mines has more than trebled in the last decade. C0TT0NW00DS Wed. Oct. 7 --An m&mna! - Scout Leader ! i W. W. McKinney, Salem, elected president of Cascade Area Council of Bey Scoots Thurs day night. Council Elects New Officers At Conference W. W. McKinney, Salem attor ney, was named president of the Cascade Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, at a fall plan ning conference of the three county council Thursday night in the Marion HoteL McKinney. council vice presi dent last year and holder of the Silver Beaver Award, succeeds Albany lumberman F. L. Thomp son who has held the presidency for two terms. Thompson' was awarded a trophy for his services. Officers Chosen Other officers' elected- were Norman Frees, Salem, Elmer Oppliger, Independence, .and State Senator Ed CardwelL Sweet Home, vicepresident; and F. L. Thompson, treasurer. Elected to the national council were f. L.; Thompson, w. L. Phillips, Salem, Gardner Knapp, Salem, and Hollis Smith, Dallas. Secretary of Interior Douglas McKay and Gov. Paul Patterson were named to the honorary council and national council. New Members New members at large and executive board members were installed in their offices. Following a report of last year's activities by Gordon Gil- more .council executive, the con ference broke up into six discus sion groups to map plans for the coming year. unaer oiscussion was con struction of a new dining lodge at Boy Scout Camp Pioneer, near Marion Forks, and an intensive training program for all unit leaders. - The council announced that it hoped to increase membership this year by 280 boys and 14 sew units. . , t , ; GameViolation Fine Lodged Against Men - Two Salem men were fined total of $70 by Marion County District Judge Val Sloper Thurs day after the pair pleaded guilty to game violation charges. Alfred E. Meithof, 22, of 434 S.1 Cottage St, and John Emery David, 34, of 810 Bellevue St, were charged with hunting pheas ants in a closed season, which brought each a $23 fine, and with hunting from an auto, $10 fine each. The men were arrested at their homes Tuesday after police said they had been seen hunting near Gervais. PERENNIAL PARROT FREMONT, Neb. Mrs. Roy Lambrecht has a parrot she thinks Is at least 117 years old. "My grandmother got him in Om aha and had him 55 years,' she explains. Then her daughter had him for 45 years before giving him to me. I've had him for 17 years, and now he's beginning to show his age. But I think he'll probably outlive me." All Types AH Professional Instruction By Top Teachers In Tho Dancing World. Fox Trot Waltz Swing Rumba Samba , Tango ' Mambo ' Two Step (J)UJ .Per Hour Now Classes Now Forming k In All Typos of Dancing Studio Open 10 A. M. To 10 P. M. ' 474 Ferry Street Phono 4-4962 First Indian State Gets Red Blessing NEW DELHI, India MV-The In-1 dian republic's first state to be carved out on language lines, Tel- ugu-speaking Andhra. came into being Thursday. The Communists I backed the drive for Its creation, Prime Minister Nehru, who re-L sisted 'until Gandhian leader- Potto None carried identification but Shiramulu fasted to death for the gave their names as Alfredo Ber state cause last December, presided nal Lopez, Salbador Morales Ez- at the inaugural ceremony in Kur-l nool. the capital, 800 miles south of New Delhi. , Chandulal M. Trivedi was sworn in as tne state s governor. The dean of the Telugu Politic- lans, 84 year old Tanguturu Praka- sam, Decame tne cniei minister oi a five-man Cabinet. Called .The Ion of Andhra, he leads the Democratic parties that have banded to keep in check a 41-man Communist block in the 144-member Andhra Legislature. Nehru's Congress Party will be represented by 43 deputies. The birth of the state has created general outcry from six other major areas of India - a nation of 14 languages and countless local uiaicv ir rcut wui ui uie ""s Nehru fears this would mean balkanizaUon if not a breaking up w vwunj. iik uuuu vwuuuu- msts, pointing toward piecemeal conquest, nave organized lor 20 years along language Hnes. They have concentrated" their strength in key regions cutong across the boundaries drawn, with- out regard to race sor tongue, when the British ruled India. In Andhra, Red leaders expressed hope for fu- ture jams through lurking factional troubles among their opponents. Spanish, U. S. Alliance Hit By Britishers MTRGATE. Eng. (A The Labor Party Thursday attacked the mili tary alliance between Spain and the United iSates, but rejected left ist demands for withdrawal of American military forces from Britain. The party's conference voted con tinued support to the NATO plan of collective defense against possible aggression. A foreign policy resolu tion drafted by moderate leaders was adopted without a record vote. It said: "The Labor Party believes that close cooperation with the United States of America is vital to Britain and the commonwealth as a whole." ish-IrnerS wrangling. oSbl seat, a woman delegate shrilly de clared American troops here were damaging British life by their Coca-Cola, comic books and con traceptive Influence. Attlee s remarks, however, tend ed to ' smother ' the most extreme anti American outbursts. He re minded delegates that Russia start ed the cold war.. - He axso expressed neuei mat. "as time goes on, it will be found Im possible to keep the peoples of eastern Europe under the iron grip of the Kremlin." Referring to the recent snarls in relations with the Umted States, At tlee said: "We deplore the witch-hunting campaign in the United States We should also guard against making hysterical outbursts against hte United States." At the same time he was parti cularly critical of U. S. refusal ot Hail Strikes Washington Banana Belt? TAC0MA (A Out across the Tacoma Narrows bridge, where residents chose to believe they live in the Pacific Northwest's "banana belt," they looked out of their win- downs Thursday afternoon and then looked again. In a half hour shortly after noon, up to 2 inches of mixed hail and snow fell on a wide area in the Gig Harbor region. A strong wind caused eight-inch drifts in places, according to Rass Paulson, Pierce County district road supervisor. of Instruction Tap Ballet . Toe Acrobatics Modern Character Baton Twirling And Others 5 'TfetbacW Arrested Here ByCiiy Police Fiven men who said they were from Mexico were picked up by city police Thursday afternoon as they jumped from a boxcar in the j railway yard near 14th and Oxford Streets. They were arrested on charges of vagrancy and are being held for immigration authorities. panza, Andrez Ramirez vasauez. Eulfrano Tovar Rhmaz and Guad- elupe.Valadez. All admitted they entered this country illegally, tw I uce reported. The ierouo had no money and said it had been two days since tneir last meal, I , 1- n. ' i-ii MOPiT V Ifirlrfit ,Tw-,v. T i' T 1 i IjOUllCCS 3CK t i T7 ' T I11UU1 JUUS&CS 1 1 . " YORK W A moderate advance headed by aircraft in the stock market Thursday more than retraced the losses of Wednesday . Th iovtant nf ihm train wavn't very gieatt between 1 and 2 points at tneoest, and the market was one narrowest of the year. Th Asc-afoH Pr, .,;-. of 0 stocks advanced, so mt at ura in! t h f in mt w, day. The industrial component of the average was up 990 cents, rails up 40 Scents, and utilities up 10 cents, it There were only 994 Individual issues toaded, the third lowest to- tal of the year. Gainers at 502 held better than a two to one edge over the 231 losers. There were two new highs and 18 new lows for the year. volume came to 940.000 shares, the same as Wednesday, nearly a half million below the daily .aver age so far this year. P O Receipts Lower Than r . Last Year's Receipts at the!. Salem nostof- Cce last month totalled $65,297, or $13,847 less than September of a year ago. Postmaster Albert C Gragg reported Thursday. Total for the first three-quar ters of 1953 is $684,522, a $10,071 gam over the . same period in 1952. Receipts in the three-month period ending with September came to $209,535 this year, com pared witn . sziz.376 last year. Gragg reported no excitement I VTf,l 35 Cent Now Showing Open 6:45 ' IILI" Technicolor Leslie Caron, Mel Ferrer Technicolor Co-Hit -"SCANDAL AT SCOURIE" Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon STARTS SUNDAY! 1 Regular Prices! ; Plus 16c for Viewers TKS21S TOtTYE am 3DLMENSION CARTOON "Big Break" COMING SOON THE MOON IS BLUE" DALLAS DRIVB-IN THEATRE GATES OPEN 7:00 SHOW AT DUSK Phone 3841 , STARTS TONIGHT Jean Peters, Jeffrey Hunter in "Luf-e of the Wilderness I Also "High Lonesome" S1EVERTON DXIYIN THEATER mmm Phone 3-3456 Gates Opeh 6:45, Show at 7:15 NOW SHOWING , Hyrna toy, Jean Grain in 'Belles on Their Toes' ' I Also --: , "Red Skies of fMontana" Death Takes 87-fer-Old Woinan Mrs. Euth N. Parmenter, late resident of 375 Candalaria Blvd. died Thursday at the age of 87 years. She had lived in Salem for seven years. She wis born in Mercer Coun ty, I1L, June 11, 1863 and a short time later moved to Mead, Neb. In 1883 she was married to An drew Si Parmenter who preced ed her In death in 1946. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Clarence Wilson, Salem; grand daughter, Mrs. Stanley Walcott, Salem; land a grandson, Jack Wilson,' Redondo Beach, Calif.; also four great grandchildren. Services will be held in Lin coln, Neb., where Mrs. Parmenter was a member of the Christian Church, i Now Playing! 3-Dlmension I Fernando Lamas Arlene Dahl "SANGAREE" ; Wfld BmEBiott "The Homesteaders' I rttONK S-S47 Now! 50c Till 5:00 SCOOP! r.lARCIANO - Vs. - LaSTARZA I Roundly-Round Fight Pictures! Direct From Ringside! Also on Screen Tony Curtis Janet Leigh in 'fHOUDINI" Color by Technicolor - and -Jeff Chandler . . Uprising" Color by Technicolor ! starts TOiionnow! :m HET VEINGS HERE'S A PICTURE THAT'S ' GOT ACTION ON AND OFF THE FIELD I r ; 1 1 - l ( 1 ) i era I 2ND Imsm j : PLUS- ' - ' FRIDAY. ONLY- V ! EXTRA SPECIAL 7 HOUND BY ROUND IIABCIAIIO ' FIGHT n THE mm cdw 3555 S. Commercial Street On 99-E South of Salem NEW HOURS SUNDAYS 2 P M. to 11 P JL SATURDAYS 4:30 PJS. to 5 A3L I WEEKDAYS 4:30PJkLto2 AJkL SPECIALIZING IN rhinriCA nnrl LARGE Orders To Submarines do not carry doe tors, and all medical duties, in cluding emergency operations, are carried out by pharmacist mates. - PMOMsa-a4er . r tBoys and Girls! Tcmbrrowv At 12:301 ANOTHER GREAT : FREE I. G. A. SH07I Simply Bring 3 IGA Food Ubels ' . For Your Frto - -' AcUnisst6nl ', See ... Commando Cody nVar-of the Space Giants Also f "H0UDIHI" and "GREAT SIOUX UPRISING" , In 'If ...... . . DnivE-i TiiEATtte Ph. 2-7829 UHSa 6AtBlia Kt8AT ttC GATES 6:30 e SHOW 7:00 NOW -THRU SAT! 2 TOP COLOR HITS! 1st Feature .George Montgomery "JACK McCALl DESPERADO" Ann Sheridan Sterling Hayden "TAKE ME TO TOWN -pic OUR BIG ALL COLOR CARTOON CARNIVAL "SHANE" IS COMING! ' LAST DAY! -CrulslnV Down The River" and "Mission Over Korea" lU ST THE FIGHTING, LOVING STORY OF AMERICA'S SPORTS HERO! " ,IXIESC!lwHi3SAiirmi tuxu Exa iss to. uirvua BIG HIT! A' Eaglil,JL1CT.I:; -'A vs. LASTAI1ZA PICTURES v . o m NEW OPEN SEVEN DAYS ' A WEEXI Amorirnn Fnnrfc I I PARKING AREA Go - Phono 2-21 17 ADM. $1.50 Tax lnc !