The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, February 21, 1954, Page 1, Image 1

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Pedestrian Injured at D owntown Intersection
' POUNDBD 1&5I
1C3RD YEAR 3 SECTIONS 32 PAGES Th Oregon Statesman. Salem. Oregon. Sunday. February 21. 1954
PRICE 10c
No. 328
(MiSt tNlral torermn tri
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'Heretic'
Pastor
Ousted
Kniinilm look on inxiouslv as a pedestrian Is loaded on a stretcher for transportation to Salem Gen
eral Hospital after being struck by a car Saturday at the Chemeketa and Cottage Streets intersee
; Th viptim. C V. Richardson. 541 Statesman St, sustained fractures of the left shoulder and
left knee, the attending physician said. Driver of the car was Joseph Flyod McCoy, Marion Route: 1,
box 96. (Statesman Photo.) if - f
I i
Violent Deaths Claimed
Sack's First 2! I Wives
8 I
PORTLAND W)-A 57-year-old man whose third wife died here
this week in puzzling circumstances was identified Saturday as a
former Chicagoan whose first two wives died violently.
A Veterans Administration medical record, disclosed that George
F. Sack, now known as an apartment housef owner here, was the
same George F. Sack or Sacks the name was spelled both ways
wnose nrsi jwiie aiea in a lire, ana
3EP
MEEDS
UiiilD3i
Bethany Girl
Wins Honors
For Spelling
Bethany Marianne Harvey,
an 8th-grader who likes to ride
second was killed by a I horses and collect glass orna
ments, is cnanv
Greer Williams is director .of
public relations for the American
College of Surgeons, so when he
says, as he does in an article,
'Unjustified Surgery," in the Feb
ruary Harper's Magazine, that
"some of surgery's best exponents
... are openly telling the public
that a lot of commercial surgery
is being done, mainly to enrich
doctors wife split fees and build
up big practices by this unethical
method," the laypian is disposed
to sit up and take notice. Further
he reports that at least a third
of our major surgery is done by
MDs who fall short of the accept
ed standards of training set up
by organizations of specialists. But
he qualifies the significance of that
by saying that "some of these un
qualified surgeeas are honest, reli
able men! some highly qualified
ones .are not." (He does not ven
ture an opinion on whether it is
safer to be operated on by an
honest but poorly qualified sur
geon,' or by one who is well quali
fied but dishonest).
The split fee business is indeed
a reprehensible practice, strongly
condemned by medical societies,
but which persists in spite of such
condemnation. The evil lies in the
encouragement it gives the medi
cal practitioner to turn over cases
to a surgeon, and for the latter to
operate without adequate exami
nation as to the need. Another risk
lies in the fact that where a money
consideration is involved the first
doctor may refer the patient to
an inferior surgeon. J
How can the patient be sure
that an operation recommended
by his doctor is necessary? He
can't; he must rely on professional
(Continued on editorial page, 4.)
Tables Turned on
Election Winner
HAGERSTOWN, Ind. Grover
Slonaker of Milton is an honest
Democrat who pays his election
debts, eventually, but he's a hard
loser. .1-
Mr., 4nd Mrs. William F. Mc
Cluneu of Connersville, : stalwart
Republicans, had a bet with Slona
ker on the Eisenhower-Stevenson
race in 1952.- When Slonaker tele
phoned them, 15 months later, that
he was ready to take them to din
ner, they accepted with pleasure.
Only hitch was the dinner was
served at a Hagerstown Demo
cratic rally.
Daily Speller
whose
Distol bullet .1
Both deaths were in Chicago, the
first in 1923, After the second in
1925, Sack I was accused of first-1
degree murder. Defended by Clar
ence Darrow, he was found insane, ;
but won release from an Illinois
mental hospital in 1932.
Wife's Bodi Found
He married a third time here
in 1952. The body of his latest
wife, who was 56, was found under
a clump of J brush across town from
his apartment house two days ago.
There were no signs of violence,
but a preliminary report from the
coroner said there was "some
evidence bt poison having been
administered or taken."
Sack was booked as a material
witness, arid after lengthy ques
tioning in- i which he refused to
discuss details of his background,
he was released on $10,000 bond.
Out of Reach
He went! to a hotel, where he
remained Saturday, out of reach
of reporters.
In his f Career Sack has been j
questioned I about the mysterious
disappearance o f two o
persons.
pion speller j of
I Bethany School
l-i and will coin-
wv J f Pete in a semi-
r"ty f li'iaia flic
V Sta t e s m a n
kslm . contest
' , at ML Angel,
Friday night,
V March 12. I
, -',.0i Marianne, U,
- is the daughter
Marianne Harvey of Mr and Mrs
L. R. Harvey of Silverton. Her
teacher and principal is Mary
Ayres. '
Barbara Olson, 14, and Alice
Ferguson, 13, both 8th - graders,
were second and .third, respec
tively. Barbara is the daughter
of Mr and Mrs. A. O. Olson Sil
verton, and Alice is the daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Fer
guson, Silverton.
Certificates will . be received
by all three winners.
DETROIT ( The Presbyterian
Church, in an unusual action, Sat-
urday unfrocked a 59-year-old min
ister on a charge of heresy.
The Rev. Claude Williams was
convicted of heresy by a special
commission of five ministers and
four laymen of the Presbyterian"
Church of the United States of
America.
The commission tried William
on charges of "heresy and the
teaching and preaching of commu
nism but it dismissed the cnarge
involving communism.
Williams, who served as war
time industrial chaplain of the
presbytery of Detroit, now lives in
Helena, Ala.
Stands. Unfrocked
Williams had been named by
Rep. Velde (R-Ill), chairman of the
House Un - American Activities
Committee, as one of a half dozen
ministers who were trying to in
filtrate the ministry with Commu
nist ideas.
The accusation was seconded by
J. B. Matthews, then secretary of
Sen. McCarthy's Senate Investi
gating Committee.
Williams said he would appeal
the judicial commission's verdict
to "the highest courts of this
church." During the World War II
period, he served as a chaplain
working with CIO unions and at
tended many union camp meet
ings. Said Pro-Red
The Rev. Henry J. Walch of
Plymouth, Mich., chairman of the
judicial commission, said: "In the
layman's terms, Mr. Williams
stands unfrocked. Our action was
one step short of excommunication
which would have deprived him of
the right to belong to the church."
Dr. Walch said the charges of
communism against Williams had
heen "dismissed on technical!
Eniwctok v Airport
Reported 'Closed
To All Aircraft'
) HONOLULU UnA unusual
ly reliable source said Satur
day a message hat gone out
that "Eniwetok airport closed
to all aircraft" for about 36
hours, starting Saturday night.
; Eniwetok is the advance base
for H-bomb tests which-the
Atomic Energy Commission
said would take ; place this
year.
, Whether the message sig
nalled Imminence of exploding
the world's most powerful
bomb could only be specula
ted. The message said the airport
would be. closed from 3 p.m.
! Feb. 21 Eniwetok time to 10
ip.m. Feb. 22, 7 p.m. Saturday
to 2 a.m. Monday PST, the
I source reported. '
1 There were two other possi
l bilities:
1. The shutdown could her
! aid the arrival of some super
I secret equipment.
2. It could be a normal shut
j down of the airport for drill
or repair purposes.
m
! 1 f .
D to
fUl
n
Aegises hi $mkmmi
Ex-Private
India to Seek
Cease-Fire in
Indochina War
By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER
UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. WV-
India was reported Saturday night
preparing to start a move for a
cease-fire between the French and
Communist-led Vietminh forces to:
end the long war in Indochina.
India's plan is expected to be
disclosed in New Delhi Monday by
Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.
The move apparently is being
timed, to get attention at the Ko
rean peace conference being ar
Detective Said
Iii Hollywood
SAN FRANCISCO Ufi .San
Francisco Dist. Atty. Thomas C.
Lynch asked Los Angeles police
Saturday to hold for questioning
Rockerick J. Wilson, believed to
be ; the author of charges against
U. ! S. Chief Justice Earl Warren.
Lynch said the Wilson who wrote
the charges appears to be a for
mer San Francisco private detec
tive: and press agent who was in
dicted by the grand jury here Nov.
26,' 1952 for subornation of perjury.
Lynch, who talked by telephone
with Ast. Att Gen. Warren 01
ney in Washington Saturday morn
ing,! added that Wilson, who has
been missing since the indictment,
has been located at a Hollywood
Hotel where he reportedly heads
an organization called the "Cali
fornia Defense Society.
However, late Saturday night he
had still not , been apprehended.
The district attorney also identi
fied Wilson as an associate and
tipster of Jimmy Tarantino, for
mer gossip sheet publisher recent
ly: convicted of extorting money
from night life figures by threaten
ing to "blast" them in his maga
zine, "Hollywood Night Life."
Senate Group Quick to;
Approve Confirmation
M -' . . :- : l f
By GARDNER L. BRIDGE ?
WASHINGTON VP) A Senate 'subcommittee, hurriedly
approved Earl Warren for chief justice of the United States
Saturday after the publicizing of "unchecked charges against
him produced a stormy roar back. jf
President Eisenhower stepped into the row with a state
ment that Warren is "one of the finest public servants this
country has ever produced.
i t r c...:4MA.lMHJ
vot a censure of admoniUon V Four conference in Berlin,
to Wilhams on this ch arge and conference is being
"..Jiheld mainly as a Korean parley
to Williams.
Dr. Walch said the heresy charge
involved Williams' "beliefs about
the deity of Christ." He 'said the
commission found Williams "eva
Britons Ask
Billy Graham
The President volunteered his
comment at his Palm Springs
Calif., vacation : headquarters
shortly after a Senate judiciary
subcommittee headed by Sen.
Langer (R ND) voted to recom
mend confirmation of Warren's
appointment to the nation's No. 1
judicial post.
Langer, who ordered a public re
cital of 10 unevaluated accusations
against Warren late Friday, was
still at odds with members of the
subcommittee this time over
whether Saturday's vote was
unanimous.
Vote in Dispute
Langer said Warren's confirma
tion was recommended "by a ma
jority." Sen. Welker (R-Idaho),
who attended the closed-door ses
sion, said the vote was unanimous.
The nomination, which has been
hanging fire since Eisenhower sent
it to the Senate on Jan. 11, now
goes to the full committee, also
headed by Langer, the eight Re
publicans and seven Democrats on
i the full committee are scheduled
to act on it Wednesday.
Asked what would happen to the
charges read into the subcommit
tee's record Langer said
with Red China as a participant.
but it also may range over the
Indochina situation as well. Red
China is a . chief source of supply
for the Vietminh forces of Ho Chi
Minn against the French and Viet-
To Apol
osize
I . i - J 1 1 J
sive on tne suDjeci ana conciuaea ; nam armies in Indochina
that the minister s views opposed I .
the authorized doctrines of the;
.church.
Following are 20 words from a
list f 1000 which will form the
basis for semi-final and final oral
competition in The Statesman-
KSLM Mid-Valley Spelling Con
test for 1954, in which S3 schools
are participating.
occupied shadow
jury ; outline
cream notify
solemn jewelry
business zoology
singular organ
comment apology
solo " ' solre
personal ' reward
credit await '
One was J. C. Young,-55, who
rented a chicken ranch to Sack in
Washington state in 1939, and then
disappeared. There were no clues,
and Sackfwas released after a day.
Seattle I police also questioned
Sack that year about the disap
pearance! jof a Monroe, Wash.,
housekeeper, but he was npt held.
Under Observation
By 1940 Sack had established j
himself pn Portland. That year
Veterans! Administration records
show hd I went to the Veterans
Hospital I at Roseburg, Ore., and
there refnained under observation
for 29 days. He then returned to
Portland; to resume a life out of
the public eye until his third wife's
body was! found in a vacant lot.
Dr. George L. Wadsworth, man
ager of the Roseburg hospital, said
the medical registration number on
Sack was identical with that of
the Chicago man.
Phoned Police
Sack ielephoned police Tuesday
nigiu iu report ins wue iiussuig.
He said 'she left home on a shop
ping trip that afternoon. Her body
was found, two days later. A resi
dent of the area told police be
had seen a car park there Tuesday
night, and had seen the lone
occupantj carry something heavy
into the; vacant lot. He wrote down
the car; license number, but did
not gal to the vacant lot to
invesigate. j
After the body was found, he
turned he license number over to
police. Sheriff Terry Schrunk said
the license number was that of
Sack's tar.. Schrunk said, however,
that Sack denied using his car that
night, j I
The febroner's indication of poi
soning f is being investigated in an
autopsy.! The sheriff said it prob
ably would be Monday before a
laboratory report is ready.
The (sheriff added that in ques
tioning here Sack told him his first
wife died in a fire. and the second
was shot to death, but insisted the
bullet i was, fired by a Chicago
holdup man. Chicago police said
a taxicab driver was equally insis
tent at i the time that there was
no holdup man: that the shots
tame? from the back seat of bis
cab, inhere Sacks and . his wife
were riding.:
His third wife was the former
Goldie : Goodrich, a teacher at
Great! Falls, Mont, 24 years.
j; v.,i
QUAKE RECORDED .
NEW .YORK ID A single shSrp
earthquake was recorded at 1:53.34
p. nu: (EST) Saturday by the Co
lumbia I University , seismograph
statiotuThe station estimated the
earthquake occurred approximate
ly 750 .Tililes jwrth of NetriYork
City, -probably-in -Canada.
been j j-j ri
emus! japer Says
China Given J
Atomic Bombs
LONDON UFi The People, a
left wing mass circulation Sunday
paper, reported Sunday that; Rus
sia claims she has given Red
China a stock of atom bombs. .
The newspaper said Soviet For
eign Minister V. M. Molotovitold
U.S. Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles in a private talk at the
Berlin conference that the Soviet
Union was sharing its supply of
atomic weapons with China. :
The People gave no indication
in its story as to the source of
its information. It said Moldtov's
"purpose was to prove China has
every right as an atomic power
to take part in talks on the Eisen
hower plan." I
Women Hurt
Attempting to
See Libeface
MIAMI, Fla. tfl Several wom
en fainted, many were bruised and
a small child suffered minor in
juries Saturday when an estimated
10,000 women struggled to get a
glimpse of pianist Liberace who
was attending opening ceremonies
of a new branch bank.
Traffic was tied up for blocks.
City and county police had to use
j all their strength to protect them
selves and the weaker members ot
the crowd.
A veteran police sergeant, asked
to estimate how many people were
there, snapped:
"Damned few. But there are
about 10,000 wild animals there."
The pianist and his brother,
George Liberace, both of Holly
wood, Calif., greeted the women
from behind a bank counter. 1
Woman Found
Fatally Shot
PRINEVILLE HV-Mrs. Dorothy
Ireland, 54, Saturday was found
dead in bed in a Prineville apart
ment house which she operated.
Police said the body was re
ported found by the woman's hus
band, Jap Ireland. She had been
shot in the chest with a revolver.
InrAcl i itntinn rt tka eVi jirvi t rt ie
All V CSUCdtlUll VL kill, OHWLUIC IO . , , . . .. . , . , , .
continuing and police have asked
for aid from the State Crime Lab- u UH
LONDON UPi American evan
gelist Billy Graham's scheduled
revival mission to Britain kicked
up a storm Saturday night in some
sections of the nation's Socialist
Labor Party.
Laborite Geoffrey de Freitas an
nounced he would raise the issue
in the House , of Commons. -
The Daily Herald, official Labor
organ, claimed that Graham, in
announcing his plans, had insulted
Britain in general, and socialism
in particular. The newspaper called
on him to apologize "or stay
away."
Billboards all over London have
carried announcements that the
evangelist will open his revival
March 1 at Harringay Arena, a
giant sports center comparable to
JSIew York's Madison Square Garden.
The Herald found objectionable
Man Reports
KiUingWife.
Touring Clubs
HOLLYWOOD W Police said
Saturday night they had from 35-year-old
Francis Albert Rybar the
story that he -strangled his wife
and then went on a tour of night
clubs. " ' if
Rybar stepped out of a Sunset
Strip night spot at an early hour
Saturday and told two highway pa
trolmen to "shake hands with a
murderer," the officers reported.
They said Rybar also told them
he was the son of a wealthy Pitts
burgh, Pa., hotel man and liquor
dealer. i '
Two hours earlier the body of
Rybar's estranged wife,: Mary, 45.
had been found in a motel. Detec
tives said she had been strangled
with a towel.
DeL Sgt T. Buckley said Rybar
tw h 1 h ;u ,t ik- gave this account of the slaying:
iiv t ui au ah tne luc u. Luc t i.i . .
full committee wants to do any-' .Me naa .heen cheating on me.
tning with them.
oratory.
Cigarette Fire
CaUvSes Death
More A-Cannon
Arrive in Reicli
FRANKFURT, Germany tff
The U. S. Army said Saturday it
had bolstered its punching power
in Western Germany with six. more
atomic cannon. This brings to at
least 12 the number now stationed
behind the Rhine River, i f
An Army spokesman said the
cannon arrived on Jan. 1 accom
panied by the 265th Field Artillery
Eattalion. He gave no other in
formation. , is
Silrm
Portland
Baker '
Medford
North Bend
Aoseburg -
San Francisco
Chicago
54
41
57
55
59
61
58
54
4(
47
30
42
49
45
38
SO
33
ill
;.2i
:.oe
,.Ot
M
.00
.00
BEND A cigarette was
blamed for the death Saturday of
W. R. Singletary, about 30, a
railroad telegrapher.
Firemen said the cigarette
started a fire in the apartment
davenport where Singletary had
i fallen asleep. Fumes apparently
overcame Singletary, who recently
moved here from Hutchinson,
Kas.. and the following flames
killed him.
New York .
Willamette River 9.4 feet. t
FORECAST (from U. S. weather
bureau. McNary field. Salem):
Showers today with some partial
clearing this afternoon. Winds diminishing-
today with, a high of 50
52. MosUy cloudy tonight with a low
near 42. Mostly cloudy Monday with
Intermittent rain and increased wind.
Temperature at 12:01 a.m. today
5SALEM PRECIPITATION I
Since Start of Weather Year Sept. 1
This Year Last Year Normal
34.81 - 23 60 27.89
Among other things. Warren was
accused, by various critics of fol
lowing the "Marxist line," of ap
pointing dishonest judges when he
was governor of California, and of
having been under the control of
i a liquor lobbyist. ;
Part of the transcript of Satur
day's subcommittee meeting was
read to newsmen by the official
Teporter.
It showed that Dept Atty. Gen.
William P. Rogers told the sena
tors that "most of the first four
charges" against Warren came
from Roderick J. Wilson, who
"now is a fugitive from justice."
False Affidavit -i
Warren OIney, assistant attorney
general in charge of the criminal
division, told the senators the per
jury case involved an indictment
returned in San Francisco on Nov.
26, 1952 charging a false affidavit
was made in connection with an
automobile' accident.
Wilson's charge that Warren had
been under the control of a "notor-
i iatte 1 irittnt" 1 KJ-t i c-fr f nrf fit Ka urirl
v Jhere will always be an Eng- other accusations, were set forth
land But will it always be the in a ,etter to Burr McCloskey of
Eng and we have known? j ,-0 who turned them over M
"When he war ended, a sense j ings subcommittee,
of frustration and disiUusionment Q1 to,d senators Mc
gripped England and what Hi - aosk 33 year old native 4f Ak
lers bombs could not do. social. 0hio. had a long record of
ism with its accompanying evils , association with Trotskyite organ
shortly accompUshed. fictions, including some that have
. i England s historic faith fal- been iabeled subversive by at.
tered. The churches still standing tor ; ;
were gradually emptied. . .self-! '
appointed spokesmen assemble
daily in Hyde, Park, and from their
folding platforms they address the
crowds. The voices speak for
atheism, anarchism and a score
of ideas; but most forcefully they
speak for communism."
going out with other men, for sev
en or eight months. I just couldn't
stand it any more. ... I kissed her
tenderly. . Ithen I strangled her
with my own hands. I finished off
the job with a toweL"
The dead . woman's son and
daughter by a previous marriage
found the body after Mrs. Rybar
lauea to Keep a bowling date.
Man KiHed Running
Into Path of Car
PORTLAND (Jl A man identi
fied as : George Smith of Lake
Benton, Mich... died here Saturday
from injuries suffered when struck
by an automobile.
Police said several witnesses told
them he ran into the path of a
car ) driven by Marie Burgin of
Portland. The accident occurred
on Hjghway 99E near Milwaukie.
Moscow-trained U.S. Photographer
Confesses Filming 'Pumpkin Papers'
By RICHARD P. HUNT
' ALBANY. N. V. W) A Moscow
trained American photographer
Saturday confessed after 15 years
of silence that he had filmed the
famed "pumpkin papers" that led
to the perjury convictions of Alger
Hiss. .
, Felix A. Inslerman, now a 44
year old draftsman living in Cam
bridge, N. Y., testified before Sen.
McCarthy (R Wis that he had
photographed State , Department
documents for the Whittaker
Chambers spy ring in 1937 and
1938 although not a card carrying
Red. - - 1
' Sitting as a one - man - Senate
investigations subxwromittee, Mc
Carthy ended a two - day:, public
hearing here by ordering two em
ployes of the General Electric Co.
plant at Schenectady thrown out
of the federal courtroom, :
The two, Sidney Friedlander and
Gordon Beigrave, both - declined
Friday to say whether they were
Communists. They were tossed out
Saturday when they demanded to
be heard. f
McCarthy called the hearing as
part of his investigation of alleged
Communists at the UK and other
defense plants. Inslerman once
worked for GE as an electrical
engineer on a guided missile pro
ject . '
i Inslerman's confession came as
a surprise, since he twice had re
fused to testify about his role in
the Red underground. i
He said he had photographed
documents from "some time in
late 1937 to !tbe late spring or
summer of 1938. : j
: . Chambers, : a confessed ex-Courier
for the Red underground, led
FBI men in 1948 to a hollow pump
kin on his farm in Westminster,
Md. and produced microfilmed
copies of 47 State Department doc
uments. . .. ,:.''
The "pumpkin papers' were the
main prosecution evidence in Hiss'
two : trials on charges or perjury.
It was testified then that the films
had come from a leica camera
owned by Inslerman.
Arkansas Areas
Spurn Federal
Aid for Needy
LITTLE- ROCK, Ark. () Proud
Arkansans tired of the old jokes
about their poverty are letting
it be known that they can take
care of their own by spurning fed
eral aid for hundreds of farm fam
ilies caught in an unusual wave
of seasonal unemployment.
Within two days, two counties
in East Arkansas have made ar
rangements to get along without
the outside assistance they origin
ally sought. Three other counties
with needy have handled the prob
lem by themselves from the start.
Poinsett County Judge Sid Smith
said Saturday that organizations
and individuals in that county had
made plans to provide jobs for
the needy on a local basis. He
asked State Welfare Commissioner
Daughter Born
ToGetz'Wifc
Crash In j
Brideg
LOS ANGELES ! A baby
daughter was born Saturday to the
wife of Stan Getz, saxophone play
er arrested recently in Seattle
where police said he tried to hold
up a drug store for narcotics.
Getz was in the prison ward of
General Hospital, where the child
was born. Doctors said the shock
of Getz' arrest and his sentence
last Wednesday to six months on
a narcotics charge caused his wife
to have the child prematurely. The
baby weighed four pounds, six
ounces. 1
I hope some day I can make it
urcs
f v.
Mother of
room
i
Statesman Newt Serviea
SILVERTON A Woodburn
woman was injured here Satur
day in a two-car collision as she
was going home from her son's '
wedding, Silverton ' I police re
ported. 1
Taken to Silverton Hospital
was Mrs. Anna Erwcrt, Wood
burn Route 2, who sustained
bruises and lacerations of both
knees and concussion. Her condi
tion was said to be good Satur
day night
Mrs. Erwert was riding in a
car driven by James T. Anderson,
2120 Jasper Way, Salem, police
said, when it collided with a car
driven by Corey Granger, Sil
verton. The accident occurred
at the intersection of N. Water
and High Streets. 5
Mrs. Erwert was returning
from SL Paul's Catholic Church
where her son, Harold Erwert,
was married to Miss Alice' Ann
Sthamann of Silverton.
Hiss, 4 former State Department j a. J. Moss to remove Poinsett
official, was convicted of King
when he denied having given docu
ments to Chambers. , j
Chambers was the main prose
cution witness against Hiss, and
Inslerman's testimony Saturday
appeared to confirm parts of the
ex-courier's story about the Red
anderground. j
McCarthy said be was anxious
to get Chambers and Inslerman
together to compare notes. Mrs.
Chambers, who said in Westmin
ster that her husband had suffered
two heart attacks in the last two
weeks, declined to disturb Cham
bers for comment :
The FBI declined comment on
Inslerman. Apparently he would
be free from prosecution now be
cause of the statute of limitations.
from the list of counties receiving
federal and state aid.
Today's Statesman
SECTION 1
Editorials, . features .4
Sports ,....6.7
Radio. TV 8
Crossword puzzle ....... ........8
Classified ads ........... 9-11
SECTION ' i, j ; " ' .
Society, women's 1-8
Garden newa i......-.....10
Valley news It
Our Valley
SECTION 3 , . ' , ,
Full-color comics
Prospects for
Sunshine Seen
Prospects for some . sunshine
were forecast for today by weath
ermen at McNary Field but low
clouds are expected again tonight
and Monday. Mild ; temperatures
are scheduled to continue. ,
Increasing wind along with in
termittent showers is the weather
picture for Monday, they pre
dicted. V .
The Oregon Coast Highway was
all up to her and to the baby." Lstill closed early this morning by
a sude at jetty creex in TiuamooK
County, state police reported.
Getz said.
The child is the couple's third.
Traffic Instruction Folder
Being Prepared by City!
A printed folder of traffic in-1
structions including a map of
the one-way grid will be dis
tributed in a few days to drivers
and pedestrians as part of city
police efforts ; to expedite ' traf
fic. - ; i
The, tentative title of -the
three-page pamphlet is "Drive
in Salem the Easy Way."
Prepared by city officials, in
cluding Mayor Al Loucks and
Charles Barcjay, the folder em
phasizes these points: ; .
Drivers are permitted-to make
right turns after, stopping for a
red light They also may turn
into a one-way street after stop
ping for a red light: : .
Pedestrians should . stay . on
the curb until the ."walk" signal
flashes and then! once started
continue across the street even
if the "wait" signal goes on. The
lights are geared; to allow foot
traffic to cross safely. '
The folder points out the
-walk" lifiht is starting .light
Purpose of the "wait" signal
is to prevent other pedestrians
thus bottlenecking vehicles. '
The pamphlets; are expected
to be ready fori distribution by
the end of next week, Barclay
said. -
Mayor , Loucks said, the pam
phlets would be distributed not
only by patrolmen on Salem
streets, but at: public places in
Salem and in f nearby towns
through their ; police depart-ments.