1 1 i , - " - , Today's Elections in 3 States Expected To Show If Administration Still Popular By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rival political camps Monday night awaited possible clues on tbe popularity of the Eisenhower administration to emerge' in Tues day's elections in New Jersey, Vir ginia and New York City. In New Jersey, which has had a GOP governor for the past 10 years. Republicans said the guber natorial election there is the first big test since the Democrats won an upset victory in the recent spe- Benson Asks States Assist In Farm Aid HOT SPRINGS, Va. Sec retary of Agriculture Benson told Southern governors Monday night the administration is going to ask the states to share more of the responsibility and financial load for helping the American farmer. Initial reaction, from governors of states- as far apart as Okla homa and Virginia, was: "Where . will, we get the money?" - Benson was the No. 1 guest speaker at the annual conference of Southern governors, many of whom have been saying the ad ministration's farm policy is dam aging President Eisenhower's, po litical popularity. The conference chairman, Gov. Herman Talmadge of Georgia, said in a speech that the admin istration ought to adopt a definite, sound farm program as perma nent as possible and as soon as it can. Segregation Issue i Talmadge also raised the racial segregation issue. He called upon the Suprtme Court to uphold seg regation in schools and leave it to the South to solve racial prob lems in its own way. Benson spoke at a black-tie state dinner attended by the gov ernors and their wives. When the administration lays its farm pro gram before Congress early next year, he said, it will recognize the need for greater state and local participation." Financial Burden He said states must be prepared to assume a larger role and new responsibilities, and "with more local action will go heavier finan cial responsibility." Gov. John S. Battle of Virginia commented: "That is tbe theme song of this administration. But I haven't seen them turn loose any tax resources yet" "Where will we get the money? Where it will be, I don't know. I doubt that any state in the South is in a position to take on a much greater financial responsi bility to the fanner." Should Assist Gov. Johnston Murray of Okla homa said he thought the states ought to assist in helping the farmer. ) "The trouble is in our state we don't have that kind of money," he said. Benson's announcement earlier in the day of his Agricul ture Department reorganization. found Southern and Western gov ernors, meeting in separate con ferences at Hot Springs. Va., and Albuquerque, N. M., split sharply on the issue. Actio Opposed At. Hot Springs. Gov. James F. Byrnes of South Carolina, who has , been supporting tbe Eisenhower administration, said he believes Benson's action was "unwise.' Byrnes told reporters he had written Benson urging him not to put the plan into effect. He said the idea was 'originally proposed by Henry A. Wallace, then secre- i tary of agriculture, and Byrnes : opposed it at the time. But Gov. Allan Shivers of Texas, also at the Hot Springs meeting, ; said he thinks the states will gain by not having to go through U. S regional offices to get technical information about soil conserva tion. Shivers Approves "On the whole. I think the pro gram of reorganization will be a good one," Shivers said. At Albuquerque, three Western : governors saluted the Eisenhower administration's stand on the soil conservation issue, but conceded its farm policy may cause political storms. Utah's Gov. J. Bracken Lee. one of the trio, had this to say about Benson's action: 1 "When a man stands up for what ,is right and is prepared to fight, ' then there is real hope for us alL" Also approving the plan were Gov. Edwin' L. Mechem of New Mexico and Gov. C. J. Rogers of Wyoming. 4- woKvnrnAsnLE! Chov;ir.3 dsss ll Get a happy Hide liu Chew Wrigley s Spearmint Com. Helps yqu on the job. rial congressional election in Wis consin. Sen. Dirksen (R-H1) said the election of a Democrat might set off a chain reaction that would give the Democrats control of Con gress next year and "tie the hands" of the President. Mechanical Brain Given Job Of Mixing Over 2,000 Colors 'J 4 ft ! CHICAGO This machine mixes and matches 2,000 colors. William M. Stuart, its developer, shows how it delivers a quart f toy colorful paint la 12 seconds. CHICAGO (P) If you've ever tried to match a paint color in home decorating, youll appreciate this. - : William M. Stuart, president of the Martin-Senour Co., has fig ured out a machine that looks undramatic but does a lot of dramatic things with color. Stuart also is godfather of a comprehensive color mixing system. Colors can be put together by formula. He called on Arthur G. Russell of the Russell Machine Co., Forestville, Conn., to build a machine that would mix paint auto matically and accurately. Russell's result is a precisioned gadget that mixes paint in a matter of seconds. It's a pilot model Some 2,000 colors can be mixed -with it The machine puts the paint together by formula. Correct proportions are obtained by a unit system of 1,000 to a quart. Only 12 basic ingredients are required. Combinations are mixed from three primary hues red, blue and yellow and the three sec ondary hues of green, violet and orange, plus a graying agent called shade-x and basic whites. The paint is mixed and pumped to containers by pistons placed at the back of the machine. When a customer orders a color, the dial-like settings at the top are used. These are divided into 1,000 unit scales and each one is assigned to a color. To get a plum color, for example, the dealer would set the ma chine to deliver 260 units of red, 30 units of purple, 210 units of shade-x, 250 units of mix-x and 250 units of flat A container is placed in the center of the machine, a lever is pushed and the ma chine does the rest A quart of paint is delivered in 12 seconds. Bookkeeping In Pentagon 'Substandard' WASHINGTON ifl Fiscal ex perts testified Monday that the Pentagon needs a better bookkeep ing system. Robert A. Lovett, banker and former secretary of defense, told a Senate armed services subcom mittee "very rich" savings could be made by the armed forces if they improved their accounting practices. "No secretary can operate un less he knows where he stands." Lovett said, adding that he was handicapped when he was defense chief by lack of adequate informa tion on military finances, inven tories and the like. Another witness, Ferdinand Eb erstadt, New York investment banker, testified that if the Army, Navy and Air Force had had ci vilian comptrollers it would have been easier to fix responsibility for the Korean ammunition short ages which were probed by an other Senate group last spring. VIce-Chairman of WPB Eberstadt was vice chairman of the War Production Board in World War II, helped write the 1947 Armed Services Unification law and headed a Defense De partment study made for the Hoover Commission in 1949. He conceded that the Korean War had slowed down fiscal re forms at the Pentagon. Directing Inquiry Sen. Flanders (R-Vt) is direct ing the current inquiry, which aims to find and correct any weak' necses in the military bookkeep ing system.' In 1949 Eberstadt drafted an amendment to the Unification Act which sen. Byrd (D-va.) spon sored in an effort to modernize financial procedures of the mHi tary ; services. Eberstadt said the amendment as originally written called for a civilian comptroller for the entire defense establishment and civilian comptrollers for the Army, Navy and Air Force as welt He testified the latter provision was watered down so that mili tary officers were made the comp teste CMiWtM twT Ike Draws la President Eisenhower 4 was drawn into the campaign when he was photographed with the GOP candidate. Paul Troast, while in Atlantic City to make a speech. New Jersey Republicans boomed the picture as backing for Troast Hi Freak Storm Hits Europe i LONDON JH Freak weather hit western Europe Monday, hur ricane gusts kicked up raging waves in the North Sea with at least four ships in trouble. The 350-ton Norwegian freighter Rimfrost with 13 aboard was un reported on a voyage from Belg ium, to Oslo, Norway. Denmark reported three ships disabled two aground and a third limping home with engine trouble. High seas and heavy rain flood ed the French and English chan nel coasts, cutting road and rail traffic. Twenty-four hours of rain in southern Italy brought new dam age to Calabrian villages already hard hit by recent floods. Pangborn Now Editor of Journal PORTLAND tf Arden X. Pangborn became editor of the Oregon Journal Monday. He formerly was business man ager and managing editor of The Oregonian. In recent years he has been general manager of a radio and television station in San An tonio, Tex. troQers in the Army and Air Force, while an assistant secre- Ltary was given the job along with other duties in the Navy. ELK & BEAR SKINNED Cut and Double Wrapped k Free Quick Freeze Service j dl Lowest Prices In the StaU House Wholesale Prices. Fancy Eastern Orsgon Whit Fact Baei Front Quarter Lb. Half or Whole Lb. 2& SM.EII HEAT CO. by the President. The White House later said Eis enhower is behind every Republi can candidate, including Troast Troast, apparently a slight fa vorite, is - opposed by Democrat Robert B. Meyner, who had the support of Sen. Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn). The picture elsewhere, in brief: New York Democrat Robert F. Wagner Jr., 44-year-old son of the late Sen. Wagner (D-NY), was the betting favorite over Rudolph Halley, Liberal, and Harold Rie gelman. Republican, in a race for the 140,000-a-year mayor's seat. Backed By Trumaa Wagner had tbe backing of form er President Truman and of 1952 Democratic presidential candidate Adlai E. Stevenson. The New York Daily News straw poll, never wrong before on a may oral election, forecast a Wagner victory by 2-1. If Wagner wins, it could help keep New York s potent 94 convention votes in New Deal hands and afffect the choice of the party's presidential candidate in 1956. ' VirginiaDemocrats confidently predicted they would bold the gov ernorship in the face of the first major Republican challenge in a quarter of a century. Powerful Backing Republican Theodore R. Dalton, who recently chatted with Presi dent Eisenhower at the White House, opposed former Rep. Thomas B. Stanley, who has the backing of the powerful Democrat ic organization headed by Sen. Harry F. Byrd. Virginia Republicans saw signs of encouragement in the fact that their state deserted the Democrat ic standard and swung to Gen, Eisenhower in 1952. If Dalton wins, it would mark the first time Virginia has elected a Republican governor in its his tory. Wind Blows Boats Ashore, Crews Saved OAK HARBOR, Wash. (l Fifty - mile - an - hour winds blew three commercial fishing boats aground off Whidbey Island in Puget Sound Sunday but the three crews, totaling 24 men, got ashore safely. The Pafco II of Anacortes went aground near Deception Pass. Her eight crewmen swam ashore and were taken to the Anacortes hqs pital where their condition was pronounced good. I , The Pajlum of Bellingham grounded near the Whidbey Island Naval Air Station. Her eight crew men swam the 100 to 150 yards to shore. They were taken to the navy dispensary, unhurt but suffering from exposure in the chill waters. Then just before Sunday noon the Deception, of Anacortes, went aground off Rocky Point, gunnery range after trying to rideout the storm. A Coast Guard helicopter took one man ashore. The seven others sloshed to the beach after shooting a line ashore from the vessel. Those who had been aboard the Pajlum were identified as Capt Vinee Muljat, Dwight Kent, Knute Grappe, Jerry Birdsay, Walt Mc- Mullin, Bill White. Jonas Thorsten son and Rudy Johnson. Deed for Property In Meier & Frank Block Recorded Deed for the final piece of property in the proposed Meier & Frank "block" was filed Monday in the Marion County Recorder's office and revenue stamps indi cate a sale price of $65,000. The sale involved the C. B Shaw residence at 555 Center St and made to the Portland Hotel, Inc., handling negotiations for Meier & Frank Co. The total Meier & Frank pur chase is bordered by Center, High, Marion and Church Streets. The 3rd Infantry Division landed in Korea Nov. 12, 1950. RENT -A-TOOL Do It Yourself It's Cheaper OPEN SUNDAYS Salem's Oldest Tool Rental Howser Bros. 1180 South 12th St Buy and Sara at Packing Young Steer Beei Vi or Wh. The Nation's Top Comics BLONDE DICK TRACT 'tZJct5r W" TT" T1 LllT , I Hii IT KEEPS ME FROM 1 ABcnJrf'D&rr - ' ' LOSING MY PLACE 3 I 1 fwUEN WE GET A UAIlVnA 1 1 twusr ABrtrrlT r-UNEXPLNEDTMACEE." "AVfJgifiSSf "$1 EXPLOSION? 1 NOU'VE TALK SO MUCH. JA I .WHAT ABOUT 1 LITTLE ANNIE B CONEY ' . 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