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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1954)
500,000 Korean Families Live in Misery lilt'.' ""Wiittm t ViM-im tette. - i 1 1 'iT.T?aas;--:- . :- I. "3 - b. is the only kind of shelter now available to 500,000 Korean families, as the result of war's de struction. Gov. Paul Patterson has declared this week as "Aid to Korea Week" in Oregon. County to Operate on Budget of $2,618,915 Marion County, for the 1954-55 fiscal year, beginning July 1, will operate on a S2.618.915 budget compared wjth a current bud get of $3,056,877 for the year ending June 30, it was announced Wednesday. Actual comparison of the budget for the coming year with the current year is difficult, county bookkeepers explained, because the budget for the year just ending 'Aid to Korea Week' in State Proclaimed 2. u.j i l . : -i ,j .:il I gums of money collected and 1 1 r Mjt vfri I fiif pent for the new $2,0'X).000 JLKC 1 UIIIL UUL county courthouse, "Now that the courthouse is paid for," they said, "the budget for the coming year will start us once again on an 'even keel'." Total Levy The total levy in the new bud budget is 51,360,000 or just $3, 393 under a 6 per cent increase over the same item in the old budget The regular levy under the old budget was $1,286,220. In addition to this, however, S250, Oppenheimer Case Still Open WASHINGTON President Eisenhower, pointing out that the case of Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer is not closed, declined Wednesday to comment on a special board's 000 was levied outside the 6 per finding that the famous physicist cent rimitation for courthouse a security risjvi construction. There will be no similar "spe cial levies" this coming year, which reduces the overall budget. There also was a $686,250 fund accumulated for the court house construction in the old budget which ha been spent. The regular levy of $1,380,000 for the coming year shows an in crease over the same item in the current budget because of in creases in the three funds which make it up. These fundw are: General. $954, 670, compared with $842,750 in the old budget; Maiket Road, $140,800, compared with $119, 700, and County School fund, $264,730, compared with $248,770. Added to Borden Adding tahe county's financial burdens in the coming year will be the approximately 20 addition al employea hired to man th? new courthouse, plus several items of equipment The new employes in clude maintenance workers, tem porary elevator operators, secre taries, jailors, matrons and oth ers. Estimated revenue for the new budget is placed at $975,915 and expendable surplus at $283,000. The new budget was shaped by the county budget committee last week. But official tabulation of the various items that make it up was not completed until Wednesday. Adm. Boone to Head Academy ANNAPOLIS, Md. CP The new ly appointed superintendent of the Naval Academy is Rear Adm. Wal ter Frederick Boone, who started his fighting days as a midshipman in World War I. The 56-year-old native of Berke ley, Calif., is at present a member of the Strategic Survey Commit tee of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington. He is a veteran of both world wars and the second Nicaraguan campaign in 1926. Blast on Sub Fatal to Two PORTSMOUTH. N.H. UP Over haul of the submarine Sirago con tinued Wednesday despite a pre dawn explosion in her main ballast tank which claimed the lives of two civilian painters and seriously burning a sailor. A board of inquiry- was con vened by Rear Adm. Charles B. Momson. commandant of the First Naval District. Snake Coaxed Out of Chair BRUNSWICK, Ga. t Miss Fannie Lee, whose broadcast ap peal Tuesday for help in locating a pet snake brought hundreds of tele phone calls, coaxed the five foot python out of an overstuffed chair in her apartment Wednesday. She credits a caller offering ad vice with locating her pet, believed to have escaped from her apart ment four days ago. Edward Cohen, Brunswick chemist interested in snakes, locat ed "Python Pie" Miss Lee said, when he sat in an overstuff rocker that "bumped back" at him. Eisenhower said at his news: conference that the Oppenheimer case is going through a quasi judicial pfocess set up by the Atomic Energy Commission. Until they have finished that completely, the President said, he doesn't think he will have anything to say. Oppenheimer took the same attitude in Princeton, N. J., where he heads the Institute for Advanced Study. Oppenheimer told a reporter: "I know you are here for a comment. I have said this thing is not properly adjudicated yet. I have told the public all about it before, and I have nothing more to say now." Earlier the scientist's secretary, Mrs. Katherine Russell, said that Oppenheimer felt that since he had made public the board's ruling, the next move was up to the AEC. Oppenheimer's attorneys have asked that the customary review by the AEC's personnel security board be waived and that the commission itself give the board's "findings its immediate consideration." Permit Issued For Wrecking Grant School Wrecking permit for tearing down Grant School, 880 Market St., preparatory to construction of the new building, was issued Wed nesday by the city engineer's of fice to School District 24CJ. The school is scheduled to be finished sometime around the first of the year and arangements have been made for pupils to at tend classes this fall in other temporary quarters. Two construction permits were issued, one to A. M. Foster, erect hobby house, 1925 Garfield St., $500, and one to W. L. Miller, erect dwelling, 1137 Seventh St, $7,000. Alteration permits went to Lynn Smith, 1270 Chemekta St, $300; H. S. Thorp, 1059 E. Rural Ave., $50; Carrie Hurst, 297 S. 23rd St., $50;; ;0. Van Houten, 1024 Edina Ln., $100 and Mrs. L. W. Lepley, 1311 Saginaw St, $5,200. Governor Paul Patterson his . proclaimed Mry CP-June 5 as '"Aid ' to Korea Week"' in Oregon and : is asking all contributions to Ore gon's shnre in a nation-wide furd rpisinc campaign undertaken to offer immediate assistance to mil lions of displaced, sick and or phaned Korea's, mailed to your own local postmaster. A goal of $10,000,000 has been set for the national campaign which is appealing for contribu tions on a "person to person" basis to offer assistance to a stag gering figure of human misery which includes nine million home less, a hundred thousand orphans and over three hundred thousand widows. The campaign was instigated by ; the American-Korean Foundation ' at the request of President Dwight D. Eisenhower' as the I initial step in a lorg-range pro gram of relief and rehabilitation I lor Korea. : According to President Eisen i hower, the United States' armed I forces in Korea have contributed i $13,000,000 to aid the people of that country. "The appeal for additional funds being made in this country ( is to supplement this assistance on a warm, inendly, people to people basis," he said. President Eisenhower added that there is hardly a military unit in Korea that has not adopt ed a hospital, orphanage or par ticipated in some social welfare project because our armed forces have seen first hand the terrible suffering that the Korean people have had to endure through three years of war. The governor has appointed Donald C. Sloan. Portland, chair man of "Aid to Korea Week." All contributions should be sent to "Aid to Korea," care of your own local postmaster. Stevenson to Address Demo Eugene Rally PORTLAND CP ' Oregon Demo crats announced Wednesday night that Adlai Stevenson will speak at Eugene in a state Democratic rally July 10. Appearing on the platform with the Democrats' 1952 presidential candidate will be the party's candidates for top offices in the state, including author Richard L. Neuberger, who opposes Republi can Senator Guy Cordon in the contest drawing the most interest. Howard Morgan, state Demo cratic chairman, said Stevenson plans to spend several days in Oregon either 'before or after his Eugene speech. Also to appear there will be Donnell Mitchell, Willamina, candidate for 1st district represen tative: Albert Ullman, Baker, candidate for 2d district represen tative; Mrs. Edith Green, Portland, candidate for 3d district represen tative: Charles O. Porter, Eugene, candidate for 4th district represen tative; Joseph K. Carson Jr., Portland, candidate for governor; and Norman O. Nilsen, Portland, candidate for labor commissioner. Morgan said the state central ; committee will meet there that day in a biennial organization : meeting. The Democrats also announced two other meetings. Mrs. Katie Loucheim, director of women's activities - for the Democratic national committee, wifl speak at Portland June 19 and at Bend, June 20. Stertearacm. Salam, Or.. Thurt., I una 3, 1954 (Sc. 3 S Staylon Firm Dissolves Partnership Statesman Ntws Service STAYTON Dissolution of their partnership as owners of the Herrold-Phillippi Motor Company, effective June 1, was announced Wednesday by Orville Herrold and Roy Philippi. Philippi has assumed the full responsibility and the firm will be known as the Philippi Motor Com pany. No change in operating per sonnel is anticipated, they said. The Herrold - Philippi Motor Company was organized in 1946 in a new plant at 1094 First St, and has been a Ford agency since its inception, dealing both new and used cars as well as a repair shop. Herrold annuonced no immed iate plans for the future. He and Mrs. Herrold and family have been Stayton residents since the beginning of the organization. More than 200 different species 61 insects are found as pests in human homes. John Day Dam Plan Arouses Opposition SEATTLE Senator Cordon's "partnership" plan for building the ; $461,000,000 John Day power dam ' and giving Oregon priority on its electricity "appears headed for stormy waters," the Times said Wednesday. I Ken Billington, executive secre tary of the Washington Public Util- j ity Districts Assn., said the Oregon 1 Republican's bill is sure to be an issue at the association's semi annual meeting which starts Thursday in Olympia. Copies of the proposed bill are being studied here by public and private power interests. The Times said the bill provides that $164,- 1 000,000 should be advanced by area sponsors, which might include pri- vate and public power groups. The Army Engineers would build the dam on the Columbia River, 28 miles upstream from The Dalles dam. The initial installation would produce 1,100,000 kilowatts of pow er. The Times said the plan was urged originally by the Portland ; General Electric Company, which was reported ready to advance most or all of the required down i payment. The Oregon preference provision would give first call on the power to the state's public and private power agencies and industries. U.N. Tribunal Denies Wallach Reinstatement UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. Cfl The U. N. said Wednesday its ad ministrative tribunal has refused to reinstate Eugene Wallach, an American, because he refused to tell either U. S. grand juries or U. N. questioners whether he had Communist Party links. Wallach was a verbatim record reporter who joined the U. N. in 1946. He was fired in 1952 after he refused to tell U. N. officials whether statements on his appli cation form were correct. Wallach appealed his firing on the ground that refusal to answer questions on alleged Communist ties did not constitute misconduct under U. N. staff rules. Reds Lose Cattle MOSCOW (JP) Pravda and oth er newspapers report that the So viet Union, engaged in a massive campaign to raise its livestock population, has had large winter livestock losses. Pravda does not estimate how great the losses were, but charges that most of them were due to neglect in providing fodder and shelter for the cattle. The livestock population ln some categories has slipped be low prerevolutionary levels. Prav da says, some authorities have displayed inertia and neglect on the job. There were insects on earth more than 250 million years ago. SEE THE All NEW SILVER JUBILEE DUO-THERM Oil Console Heater at CAPITOL FUEL CO. 198 & Commercial Ph. 3-7721 YOUR CLOTHES LAST LONGER WITH PROPER BLEACHING It's thescrubbin' and rubbin' that wears out clothes on washday! When you add Pt?RF.X Liquid Laundry Bleach ro your wash water, far Uss washing action is necessary. 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