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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1954)
t (Sec 1) Statesman. Saltm Flanders Career WASHINGTON un Sen. Fland ers (R-VD declared Sunday that the eareer of Sen. McCarthy (R WiJ) "finds its parallel, though it roust be admitted to a weaker de gree," in the rise to power of Adolf Hitler. Flanders said that this country exercises leadership of the world during a period of crisis, and should act so that the world looks to it with confidence and support, " Instead, Flanders said, this coun try presents "a picture of confu sion in leadership to which the senator from Wisconsin has made a major contribution." " Aiming for a showdown Senate vote Tuesday on his resolution to 4 Booked on ' cenv In Polk County - '- Statesm&a New tcrrle DALLAS Four men, three of them listing Salem addresses, were held in Polk County jail Sun day night-An charges of larceny from an auto and bail of $250 each cat The four were booked following the theft "earlier In the evening of articles from a car belonging to Phillip : Laabe, J940 S. High St., Salem. The men held were J. D. 01inger,36, of The Dalles; Cecil Brackett, 32, Leonard William Bracket, and Henry S. Long, all of general delivery, Salem. According to police, Labbe had parked his vehicle near the Polk and Talbot log- dump, several miles west of Salem, and gone fishing. Labbe told officers that upon returning to his car he found two packets, some tools and. two dozen eggs missing. - He said he also spotted four 'men Just leaving the scene in a black 1941 Ford. m The men were later apprehend ed in Independence. Found -in their possession, said officers, was a Jacket, identified by Laabe as his, and two dozen eggs. The tools and one jacket were not found. , French Kill With Ambush By FORREST; EDWARDS HANOI, Indochina in French Union forces turned - the tables Sunday on the Vietminh by spring ing - their own ambush. Blazing French tanks, machine guns ' and carbines killed more than, 200 rebels 25 miles south of here. The fiery action came when a Communist-led rebel battalion, one of 12 operating inside the shrink . ing French Red River Delta de fenses in the Hung Yen sector, at tacked a tiny village early Sun day . French gunners, who bad been expecting the attack, held their fire until the first rebels were less than 10 yards away. Then the defenders cut loose with a hail of steel which made the Vietminh falter and flee. The rebel dead were counted as they lay sprawled along a half mile front. French losses were de scribed as "very light Reports from Yeng Yeng said French forces policing, the battle field later found, numerous weap ons , which the slain and fleeing rebels had dropped under the im pact of concentrated Ere. The ambush trap had been set Saturday night by French-officered forces,. Half of a large motorized column bivouacked in plain sight of the Vietminh to one side of the village. ' ' -- Then, under cover of darkness, other French Union infantry units supported by tanks and machine gunners moved into the village and set up- a circle of bristling armor in the jungle surrounding it SOVIETS SEIZE KIPS TOKYO tin The Russians have seized 211 Japanese fishermen and 32 fishing boats since spring off the Russian-occupied Kunles. the Maritime Safety Board reported Sunday. , FOAM RUBBER PHows ' '-2.73 en Mattresses .. S27.S0 up Remnants 504 up Shredded ...59 lb. SLEEP-AIRE 2002 Fairgrounds Rd. TAUMAH FIAII0 STOnES OS 8. 12th Salem 200Vietminh TilE CE5T PLACE IM SALEM TO EAT LUNCH aritlDIKR Prices Start at 65c Ik b fts Caplfol Shopping OrM Monday. July 19. 19S4 Says McCarthy's Parallels Hitler's censure McCarthy Flanders said the Republican Party in its looth year lias reached the "parting of the w s." - - r . . : Most Decide . . , ; It must decide, he said, whether to follow the path of ; Abraham Lincoln or turn the other way and choose the leadership of the junior senator from Wisconsin." The 73-year-old vermomer s new biasr at McCarthy was made in the speech he plans to make to the Senate on Tuesday in offering his censure resolution. Flanders said he was taking the unusual step of releasing the text of the speech two days ahead of time so his fellow senators and the public will have time to study it. The resolution, he explained, cannot be referred to a committee and may be voted on the day it is offered. Flanders has said he ex pects Sen. Knowland of California, the Republican leader, to move to table the censure resolution in ef fect-kill it Hopes for Discussion Before that happens, Flanders said, he hopes at least three or four hours of discussion is permit ted. The Vermont senator has dropped plans to seek approval of his resolution designed to deprive McCarthy of all , his committee chairmanships. He said he thought he had more support, enough for Senate pas sage, or his resolution to censure McCarthy's conduct as ''unbecom ing' a senator and "contrary to senatorial traditions. Flanders, the , bitterest Senate critic of McCarthy, said his recent speeches and motions had been aimed, at entiing "the harmful in fluence of the Wisconsin senator in the affairs of "the Senate, the nation and the ' world. 'Some Useful Work He said McCarthy had done "some useful work" in hunting West Germany Rearmament Challenged LONDON (fl A strong faction of Britain's Labor Party chal lenged its leaders Sunday night on the issue of rearming West Ger many under any conditions. The showdown was set for the party's 53rd annual conference at Scarborough Sept 27-0ct 1. It could aggravate a serious split al ready evident among the rank and file.-:- More than 200-odd resolutions prepared for the convention gave a ' dear indication of grass-roots sentiment inside the party fear of an armed Germany; alarm over the hydrogen bomb, and anxiety over American foreign policy in Alsa. None mentioned Communist aggression. , A, fight on the convention floor over proposals to rearm Germany seemed certain with more than two dozen resolutions tabled. These ranged from "viewing with alarm' motions to outright denunciation of the idea as a "step towards World War HI." This issue appeared the main worry of a bloc of Socialists. A majority of the Labor Party, under the wing of former Prime Minister Clement Attlee, favors re arming West Germany within the European .Defense Community and outside, if France refuses to ratify EDC. Left - winger Aneurin Bevan, whose supporters are boosting him for Prime Minister in any future Labor government is laying the groundwork for an afl-out cam paign ' to reverse this policy. U.S. Eliminates Japan as Base Of H-Bombers "TOKYO Ufl Top military sourc es said Monday that the U.S. Air Force under pressure from Japan had eliminated this country' as a possible base for atom or hydro gen bombers. The move was described as 4 direct result of pressure from tne Japanese government, which did not want , atomic weapons or H-bomb carrying planes based here. The Air Force has pulled out its big bombers from Japan and put them on Okinawa and Guam. However, bases in Japan still could play a role in any hydrogen bomb, attick against the Commun ists. . PARTITION PROTESTED SAIGON, Indochina (JW Shout ing slogans and carrying hundreds of banners, between 10,000 and 12, 000 Vietnamese paraded through the streets of Saigon. Sunday to pro test any partition of their, country by the Geneva conference. til Center 1170 tinier Si. Communists "but this has been greatly over-advertised and over estimated." While : the issue involved could not "avoid politics," the Verm enter said, "the roof and essence 'of the problem far transcend its political aspects. It is at the bottom and ts far reaches a matter of national ideals and of international influ ence and reputation." Assurance that Flanders will get some Democratic support came from Sen. Fulbnght of Arkansas. who said he would vote for the censure resolution. He said he would have backed Flanders move to oust .McCarthy from his com mittee chairmanships, if it had come up for a vote. 600 Revenue Employes Downgraded WASHINGTON m Some 600 to 700 Internal Revenue Service employes most of them in the col lection divisionhave been down graded in their jobs and face pos sible dismissal or transfer, a rev enue spokesman said Sunday. The firings will be made to pro duce a more efficient operation. the official said, and no budget ary problems are involved. The shakeup stems from a clas sification survey begun several months ago and just completed. Included in the survey were some 9,000 of the 54,1)00 revenue em ployees throughout the country. Of the group, 2,400 already have been upgraded, most of them to the position of examining agent in the collection division. Another 600 to 700 were downgraded for not producing in accordance with their salary bracket The remainder were left as they were, the rev enue . official said. It will take five or six months to make these personnal adjust ments. This will give us the advantage- of at t ri t io n allowing some to retire or resign. We're go ing to make every ffort to trans fer the submarginals to tne jobs they can hold," the official said. ' Of course, if they are not pro ducing, they will be dropped. We are cleaning out tne dead wood, he-said. Word of the staff cut came from Norfolk, Va., over the weekend. An official there said his zone had or ders to classify employes as above average, average, and below aver age or submarginal. PoliceHold Suspect in ramting Theft SAN FRANCISCO Police Sunday arrested a suspect in Sat urday's theft of a valuable paint ing from the M.H. De Young Me morial Museum. But they did not at once recover the miniature por trait attributed to the Flemish master Peter Paul Rubens. Booked at city jail on suspicion of burglary was Lloyd C. Gallo way, 26 an unemployed teamster. Inspector George Hoover said Gal loway admitted being in the mu seum in Golden Gate Park about 11:30 a.m. Saturday but denied the theft - Hoover and inspector Fred "Key worth said a museum employe re ported Galloway was . inquiring about the location of "Rubens paintings" shortly before the mini ature was discovered to be miss ing about noon. They arrested Galloway at his home. A cursory search did not turn up the portrait inches square in its frame ef Archduke Albert of Austria. The officers said they were tipped Galloway had been inquir ing in bars Friday night whether there were any Rubens paintings banging in Sad Francisco. , - - The value of the miniature is uncertain, partly because it was originally believed to be the work of Frans Porbus the younger, a contemporary of Rubens. . Study by Dr. Walter HeO, mu seum director, has convinced him it was painted by Rubens early in the famous master a career. Rubens lived from 1577 to 1640. Death Claims Ex-Professor Ai Oregon U. EUGENE (AV Howard Rice Taylor, 62, former head of the psychology department at the Uni versity of Oregon, died here Sun day. He joined the university 'staff in 1925 and was head of the psy chology department from 1930 to 1953 when he resigned to devote full time to academic work. : Active in civic affairs, he was a member of the Eugene Water and Electric Board for the past 10 years. Survivors include the widow. Hazel, and a daughter, Jean. Mill City Theatre Now! Ends Wednesday CINEMASCOPE "THE ROBE" Lodge Sees No U.N. Seat ; For Red China NEW YORK W Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge, chief of this country's delegation to the United Nation said Sunday he Is sure Red China will not be admitted to the U.N. but made a statement strongly suggesting : he does not think this country should get out if she is. . , i Lodge, appearing on the first of new i television series, "Cross roads in Asia" on the CBS net work, declined to answer directly whether he thought the United States should pull out if Commu nist China is admitted. He said however; that he would like to make one statement on the subject: 'Last month if we had not been in the United Nations when this Guatemalan matter came up. we would have regretted it very much." - He said the United States pres ence in the United Nations "made it impossible" for Russia to use the United Nations to further the Communist conspiracy" in Guate mala. ' i He said, however, that admis sion of Red China "would be a tragic thing" and would transform the United Nations into "a c -.hi. sordid cockpit" I Lodge also said he u. it was "wholly unlikely" that .o Chinese governments might si si multaneously in the U.N. although it would be technically possible for the Communists to sit in the as sembly while the Nationalists con tinued to hold China's seat in the! Security Council. i f-He said the arguments against Red China's admission would be equally compelling' in one body or the other. Lodge said he diunot think the United Nations could, on moral or legal grounds, admit a nation (Communist China) , wmcn De- leves in war as an instrument of national policy." ; Saying mat be bad never nearo arguments in favor of Red China's admission except on the basis of expediency. Lodge added: "It flies in the face of a prin ciple. They will be kept out" I don't think we will have to use the veto even in the Security Council It's the arguments that will keep them out" . . Rhee to Leave For Talk With ' t Eisenhower SEOUL ) Reliable sources said Monday President Syngman Rhee would leave Seoul Saturday for his ; Washington meeting with President Eisenhower. The sources said Rhee had changed his earlier plans to leave Monday. The delayed takeoff means Rhee will fly almost directly to Washington, where he is due July 26. - i i The sources said Rhee still had not decided whether his plane would stop in Japan, even for re fueling. j The TO-year-oH President will spend a few days in Honolulu on his way back from the Elsenhower conference, which was called to discuss new measures for unifying Korea after the failure of the Geneva Conference, r Rhee plans to take Mrs. Rhee, his Austrian-born wife, three leading; military advisers, secre taries and bodyguards. He will fly in Gen.; John . Hull's plane. Permit Areas in State Forests " 1 PORTLAND in The VS. For est Service reported Sunday that special permits will be required Monday for entry into areas of ex treme fire hazard in the ML Hood and Willamette National forests of Oregon. i Guy Johnson, Forest Service fire dispatcher, said Similar regular tions were put in effect Saturday in areas in all national forests in Washington State and in the Des chutes, Fremont and Umatilla for ests in Oregon.. Those wfao enter the hazard areas with permits ' will be pro hibited from smoking or building fires and will be required to carry fire-fighting tools. Permits will be issued at ranger stations. j Johnson said similar permit areas win be designated later in the Siuslaw and Rogue River Na tional forests in Oregon. Danube on Rampage f VIENNA, Austria W A state of emergency was proclaimed in many Hungarian towns and villag es as the flooded -Danube River continued rising all the way from the Austrian border to Budapest, a broadcast from the Communist- ruled Hungarian capital said Sun day.:::.... . ; 3SmiiB Designated Now Flaying Opea 6:45 ' "Shass" . Allan Ladd "The Qciei Ilaa" . Joha Wayne At the Theaters Today ELSINOftE "HKT..L BELOW ZERO with Alan Ladd -DRIVE A CROOKED ROAD1! with Mickey Rooney v , , CAPITOL ' - "THE LONG WATT" with An thony Quinn, Charles Coburn, Gene Evans, Peggie Castle "THE IRON CLOVE" with Rob- art. Stack. Ursula, TlUess A GRAND THE MAD MAGICIAN" with vanceni pric ana Mary Murphy '"YANKEE PASHA" Jeft Chan, dler and Rhonda Fleming HOLLYWOOD ' . -THE QUIET MAN" starring John Wayne "SHANE" starring Alan Ladd NORTH SALEM DRIVE IN. ' "FLAME AND THE FLESH . starring Lana Turner, and Carlo Thompson . i "COMANCHE TERRITORY with McDonald Carey and Mau reen O'Hara SOUTH SALEM DRIVE IN SANTA FE- with Randolph $cott -TEN TALL MEN with Burt Li.rcaster 10 Boxcars Demolished as Train Derails PAYETTE, Idaho ( Ten box cars of an eastbound Union Pa cific freight train, one loaded with dynamite, were demolished Sun day when a broken journal wrecked part' of the train in the yards here. No one was injured. Mainline traffic on the railroad was delayed as much as six hours as crews worked to clear the big pile of wreckage. The wreck tore up about 100 feet of track and scattered wreckage over a wide area. Four of the cars were empty. The dynamite-laden car did not explode. The other five were load ed with lumber and furniture which was' strewn along the right of way. It took six bulldozers, two rail road wrecking cranes, an Army tank and 100 section hands until late afternoon to clear the tracks and lay new rail. L. E. Mangum, assistant' district superintenent of the Union Pacific, said it was the worst smasbup on this section of the road in three years. Mangum said a journal on one of the cars burned in two and dropped down on the tracks. This derailed several cart and jerked the train to a halt Mangum said 17 cars were de railed when the journal, a type of bearing, burned out The acci dent happened on the east city limits, about 100 feet short of a metal .bridge over, the Payette River. The streamliner Portland Rose out of Portland passed the scene at 5:55 p.m., more than six hours late. It was the first train to go through since the wreck. P. L. Borgelthaus, Payette agent; of the railroad, said the cars were either sprawled across the wrecked tracks or lying close beside mem until cleared. . Some slid down the sides of 'an earth fill along which the tracks run. The cars which left the track began with the 40th car of .the 116-car train. The front 39 cars went on to Nampa, Idaho. , . Ex-Dempsey Fiance Weds Swiss Dentist WEST. PALM BEACH, Fla. GB Mrs. Es telle Auguste, Palm Beach widow who made headlines twice in recent years by threatening to throw tomatoes at Jose Iturbi and announcing plans to marry Jack Dempsey, was wed Sunday to a Swiss dentist. The wealthy, , 43-year-old Mrs. Auguste and Dr. Warner Teufel were married in a brief ceremony in the bride's apartment at the Colony Hotel. . N . It was in 194? that Mrs. Auguste threatened to bombard Iturbi with ripe fruit because he snubbed her invitation to a dinner party. 'The following year, she reported she lost a $22,000 diamond ring at the opera in New York. Last December, Mrs. Auguste hinted that Dempsey, whom she called an "uncut diamond, had won her hand. ' . Dempsey acknowledged the en gagement but it fell through after they met in New York and Mrs. Auguste said the former heavy weight champ got mad because she invited movie actor Kirk Douglas to visit them. The United States had ; 9.7 marriages per 1,000 population In 1853. .'. IliilVE-ltl TIIHAhih' h. fc-7829 UIIJM CAMUS. HI6MWAT tvfs GATES OPEN 6:45 ff ' Show it Dusk I TWO TECHNICOLOR HITS LANA TURNER CARLAS THOMPSON "FLAME AND THE FLESH" '- ' Also MAUREEN O'HARA .McDONALD CAREY in "COMANCHE TERRITORY" l Free to every one ' i-HOCTn CHEWING GUM i KIDS UNDER 10 FREE s PrettvGirrs Body Found In Drawer INDIANAPOLIS on The liag- erie-clad body of a pretty 19-year- old brunette was found stuffed in a dresser drawer Sunday in .the Gaypool Hotel ' one of Indianapo lis' largest downtown hostelriesJ . -Homicide Capt Robert E. Riley said she was identified as DoroiJiy Poore, former carhop for a Clinton, lnd., barbecue stand, who had come to the city to look for work. Dr. William J.- Pierce, deputy coroner, said an. autopsy failed to show the cause of death but the girl had been dead several days and decomposition may have con cealed injuries around the head or throat 1 Further tests were to be made at the Indiana University Medical Center. i The body, clad only in a slip, bra and panties, was found in the 6th floor room by a maid who was attracted by the odor. The 5-foot-a girl had been shoved into the draw er with her head turned over the right shoulder. ' W. Bryan Carr, the hotel manag er, said the room was -occupied last by a man registering as Jack O'Shea of 3149 W. 39th St, New York City. There is no such street number in New York. . He said the man ' checked in Thursday and paid in advance to hold the room througl Friday. Carr said O'Shea had not been seen since registering. j The1 same hotel was the scene of the unsolved slaying of WAC Corp. Naoma Ridings, Aug. . 19, 1943, whose body also was found by a cleaning woman; j NOW PLAYING! 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