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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1954)
J i i 1 . ' : ", A . . s I m i ' x ! . iferfiw (Qirfnm SSs feVin ikoia Pilot a&Plan'e IS Saved ' - : PSUNB3D lC5f PCUNB3D 104TH YEAR 3 SECTIONS 32 PAGES I- ; t Tlx Oracjoa Statesmen, Sales, Ortgon, rTlwmday, September 16, 1S54 PRICE 5c No. 173 I " : 'J. .- .1 J ; uuues Jbeavesr or Talks in Germany WASHINGTON J - Secretary of State Dulles took off Wednesday night for Europe and its German rearmament problems, leaving be hind a report to the' nation that the U.S. plans to keep "powerful naval and air forces' on guard in the Pacific. ? :-. I In a departing statement, Dulles said be was .flying to, Germany and Great Britain in quest of ways to restore Gerama sovereignty and to rearm Germans in a Western defense ' ; . -j A separate 15-minute talk, re corded before Dulles boarded a plane for Bonn and London, pro nounced the recently ; negotiated Manila pact a firm defense against internal subversion as well as armed attack in Southeast Asia. The talk, for a nationwide radio TV audience, stressed that the Ma nila pact would protect young na tions, like Laos and Cambodia in Indochina, while bottling up poten tial Communist aggression ' and keeping it from spreading in the .Pacific area. . 1 ; I .t4 i 1 ! One thing he emphasized was that the agreement "will not re quire us to make material, changes in our military: plans. : These plans already, call for our maintaining at all times powerful naval and air forces in the West ern Pacific capable of striking at any aggressor by means and at places of our choosing," Dulles' de clared. H-'-! W 'The deterrent power we ' thus create can protect many, as ef fectively as it protects one.", Dulles is flying to Bonn and Lon don, where he . will talk with Ger man Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and" British Prime Minister Wins ton Churchill and - Foreign Secre tary Anthony Eden. . In his statement, Dulles in effect apologized to other European De fense Community (EDO nations which be will be unable to visit, he said,!; because he must rush back to New York City ' for the opening j next !: Tuesday of " the United Nations General Assembly. Oppenheimer Backer Resigns Atom Board By MARVIN L. AftROWSMITH , : DENVER (JP) President Eisenhower "very reluctantly" accepted Wednesday the resignation of Dr. Henry D. Smyth as a member of the Atomic Energy Commission and appointed a University of Chi cago atomic scientist to succeed him. i ; Smyth, 56, said in. bis letter of resignation that the United States has a stockpile of hydrogen and atomic bombs which, ,in the event lot enemy attack, "iwould assure this country and the free world the capacity ; j to : answer with over whelming power. ' 1 -Smyth is the! only current mem' ber of the five-member. AEC. with a scientific background , and cast the only dissentuig vote when the commission last June refused to lift Dr. Robert J. Oppenheimer'i suspension from access to secret atomic data,, ! r - .t He plans to return to Princeton university where ne was a faculty member from 1924 to 1949. A uni versity spokesman said Smyth will become chairman of the Board of Scientific !" .and Engineering Re search iri a few weeks. The summer. , White House an- i nounced Eisenhower is naming Dr. Willard Frank Libby, 4S, to suc ceed Smyth, effective Sept. 30. , In his letter. U the President. Smyth made no reference to his dissent in the case of Oppenheimer, who was declared a security risk by the other AEC members. Nor did imyta mention anything about differences with Lewis Li. Strauss, commission cbau-man. The , President left Wednesday morning for five or six days of fishing on St Louis Creek, near Fraser, 70 miles northwest of Den ver.: His only companions are his press secretary, James C. Hagerty, and : Aksel Nielsen, Denver busi nessman and close friend of Eisen hower. . ' : mum UtD LDDS The Saturday Evening Post in Its current issue has e very strong1 editorial, "If Reds Get Formosa, U. S. Will Be in PeriLf To sup port this thesis it quotes from our most eminent military lead ers: General Marshall, General MacArthur, General Bradley, the late . Admiral Sherman General Collins. -. , . .. i j : Marshall: "It would be a highly dapgerous business for the Unit ed States to have Formosa pass Into unfriendly hands.: : I Bradley: "It would seriously affect our line of defenses if it (Formosa) fell into the: hands of an unfriendly power.? ' MacArthur: "The Philippines and Japan would be untenable We practically lose the Pacific Ocean if we sxve up or lose Formosa."- ' The Post then concludes: L! . , ! rThe possession of Formosa by our Red fascist enemies would be a direct threat to oar. far-flung chain of island defenses in the Pacific . i This is indeed formidable testi mony from our most competent military authorities. To begin with, however, it blandly assumes that Formosa is "ours? now. It isn't By grace of U. S. protection the island is governed by Na tionalist China. But our public pronouncement with respect to , Formosa is that the Seventh Fleet is defending it against Red invas ion, not that it is being retained or Duut up as a base for ; (Continued on editorial page, 4) Chamber bf Commerce Presidents Confer ; i3 ... Crop '55 Controls Reduced United States Chamber of Commerce President Clem D. Johnston, who spoke here last night at a na-.tie-oal affairs forum meeting sponsored by the Salem Chamber of Commerce, is shown above (center) talking with Frank McCaslin (left), past president of the Portland Chamber, and William H. Ham mond, Salem Chamber president (Statesman Phot - r . ? By OVID Ai MARTIN WASHINGTON I - Secretary tof Agriculture Benson: Wednesday abandoned a major portion of his rigid 1955 crop production control program that had aroused sharp grower complaints in ? politically important farm belt areas. He dropped provisions , which were designed to take about 40 million acres, of about 12 per cent u r tu : - i i ... .(I! vi , uic iiauuui tivp unu vui VI the production of ; cash crops of any kind. - 1 ' The secretary announced his de cision at a news conference. He said, in reply 'to a query, that there had been no political pres sure exerted on him by Republi can, ' pongressional candidates to ease up on his control program. Benson did say, however, that he had discussed the matter - with some. Republican congressmen and party candidates for congressional seats.: r -t i ::; ;;; Farm leaders have reported that Sinks in River Father May Have Been in Plane Crasli Near Mouth of Umpqua River SUicimu New Scrvtc ' , - LEBANON A prominent Lebanon farmer was feared dead and his son was critically injured Wednesday evening in the crash f a light plane into the Umpqua River near Reedsport on the coast i Dan Nofziger, 59, of Lebanon Route 2, was reported to have been a passenger in the plane, which sank intd the river after strik ing electric lines on the shore. The plane was piloted by his son, Morns isotziger, 33, who. was sav-i ed by a fisherman as he floated in the river after the trash. ' Morris Nofziger was taken , to the Keizer Hospital in Reedsport, where attendants said his condi tion was critical. He was unable to answer questions as to whether anyone was with him in the plane; which sank in 30 feet of water. Operations to recover the plane were .suspended before midnight The Reedsport Fire Department is scheduled to . resume the at tempt Thursday morning. " ; Dan Nofziger operates an ex tensive grain farm near Lebanon. He is active in community affairs and a leader in the movement to build Lebanon community hospi tal. He. headed the fund-raising drive for the hospital about two years ago. ." ' He and his son had' been visit ing friends ; in California. Both were apparently flying back to KnowlandV Wife Rushed ToHospital Courthouse 1 Bas Relief Ready Nearly The bds relief for the Court house is nearly ready for removal to Salem, County , Judge Rex Hartley was informed Wednesday, Frederic Littman,-P o r 1 1 a n d sculptor, hopes to have the relief completed by early October memorial to the dead of World War H, it is being completed at the come of the Portland sculptor, The seven -inch thick,' 5,000 pound slab, being carved ' from marble, will be fitted into the niche in the marble-wing face of the Courthouse. Present plans axe that the bas relief will be dedicated on Armis tice Day, Nov. 1L Animal Crackers WARREN GOODRICH A Aft pea.tSe;wia,yo-r . . , M ' , OAKLAND. Calif, m Mrs. Hel en Knowland, wife of U. S. .Sen. William F. Knowland (R-Calif), was rushed to Peralta Hospital here Wednesday from ; their home at Piedmont - ? ' ' s. Senator - Knowland,. who 'ad dressed the Long Beach Rotary Club i Wednesday, , rushed ; to San Francisco by . plane and went di rectly !o the hospital, where his wife was reported "somewhat improved"-Wednesday night.' ' The Senate majority leader, was unavailable for comment immedi ately but a member of his family said Mrs. Knowland's - condition probably would not be accurately determined -until Thursday or the next day. - ; i At Peralta ; Hospital it rar ad- mitted Mrs. Knowland was under treatment, but Tsaid no diagnosis could be released yet -She has not been well for some time, physi cians said. .- v , Jury, Verdict Of 8123,407 Damages Won PORTLAND in A - Blaine. Wash., lumberman won a circuit court jury verdict for 1123,407 damages , from E. R.' Errion, Portland,; in a! decision returned here late Tuesday night The lumberman, A. F. KyneH, testified Errion had defrauded him through a financial reorganization of the company, . Kynell 'said: Errion represented himself to be in the confidence of federal tax ' officials and bad learned Kynell was under investi gation for possible tax evasion. Kynell I added that Errion con vinced him that re-organizations, ol his business ' interests was necessary' to r avoid prosecution, and that j Errion had the connec tions, to arrange refinancing. All this proved to be: false, but in the meanwhile, Errion trans ferred all Kynell's business assets, valued at some $300,000, to a 'new corporation, known " as Kynell Industries,' Ine KyneH said. - K y ne 1 1 had asked '$133,432 damages. . ' - . ., : i Errion I did . not appear as a witness, his attorneys explaining he was in poor health. I: 1 1 ; n : i -4 ni 1 1 ' V a rn foe Old Tovmsite Of St; Louis A 100-year-old ghost town near Gervais was officially, abandoned Wednesday by the County Court i Nobody appeared to contest the court s action, which ordered the vacation of that portion of St Louis immediately opposite , the Oregon - Electric Railway tracks, St - ! Louis? originally - planned some 100 years ago by French prairie settlers, never developed as was hoped. There was once a Catholic church near the town. evidently erected by the same French settlers. Only a few buildings were put uo at the townsite. None of them are standing now. i The -action vacating the site was originally suggested by Commis sioner Ed Rogers. He said the town layout complicated the fob of levy-, ing taxes on the farms -which now occupy the site. The area is west of tne presen St Louis Station. Canada Weather Office Confused VANCOUVER, B. C. (UP) The public weather forecaster made no bones about it Tuesday. He doesn t know i what 'the weather will be. 'The least said about it the be ter." he saidi "There was a possi bility t of some sunshine, maybe some clouds, ; and . maybe some rain. At least that's what his charts show. 6 It's j kind of t hard to aay.r he concluded. v: : Trend to Economic Freedom i At Stake in Vote, Johnston Says , 1 By ROBERT: E. GANG WARE ' f ' '. . . . Qty Editor, The Statesman V This year's congressional election is a crucial one for U.S. busi ness because the new trend toward greater economic freedom may be at stake. President Clem D. Johnston of the U.S. Chamber of Com merce declared Wednesday night in Salem. ' ' : ' ' ' He assured a statewide audience of 430 at' the Marion. Hotel that business had been given a "fair shake" by the last. Congress "7T Tl with the result that "there are Four Cars in Wreck North Of Wobdburn SUtesmaa Newt Service . ? WOODBURN A four-car crash on the .Pacific Highway north of Woodburn tWednesday night -molished two cars and sent their drivers to the hospital. f. ;i t. State police who investigated tne accident said it occurred after one car was unable to stop in time after 4 truck slowed down to make a left turn.: ; : t -.. The car sideswiped two cars that had slowed down for the truck, police said,- and then spun across the highway to strike another , car head-on. , .... j ; - Hospitalized after the crash was Benjamin F. Shrock of Woodburn, who was taken to Salem Memorial Hospital An unidentified Portland dirver, who was also. involved in the accident was treated at the hosoital and released. : Attendants at the Hospital said early Thursday that Shrock bad received a hip injury. Tney saia ne was in good condition. - The drivers of the other cars in volved in the crash were Henry White, Hubbard, and Harold W, HowarcL Portland. Neither was in jured; state police reported, and their , cars received only , minor damage. 1 - 1 The automobiles driven by Shrock and the Portland man ap peared to be totally wrecked, po lice said. ' Benson's 1933 crop program sett Lebanon after the visit Witnes ses saia tne plane apparently was flying low because of bad weath er when it struck the electric lines. Daughter of British Hotel Heir Kidnaped Hull Says Korea 'Not Weakened' - SEOUL Gen. John E. Hull Thursday '; said -the - redeployment of American troops to better stra tegic positions . in the Far East "is in no sense a weakening of Korea." I ; '' --y. - 1 "If there is further' unprovoked aggression od the part of the Com munists, the United States and the United Nations will come quickly to the support of Korea, the Far East commander said. "l ean not believe the Commu nists are so stupid to think they could . be successful in such an operation he i added. - - The four star general arrived here- for a brief :. inspection tour. Hull . visited Pusan . and : Taegu Wednesday. f r --.y , up several months - ago - and de signed to prevent the accumulation ! of surpluses of crops not now avail able in oversupply j had stirred up perhaps more criticism among farmers than 4 the . administration's I new price support, law;, Benson also announced the first price support rate under the new flexible system 82 per cent of parity, or the minimum, for next year's wheat crop. This means ! next year's wheat will be support ed at not less than I2.0S a bushel; national farm -average, compared with uus year rate of 90 per cent of parity or a national 'verge of $2.24. ! Benson declined to 1 make fore- . ouw crops next year. "But don't interpret that! to mean that . business ' got i any spe cial favors, because we -didn't get any," said the Roanoke, Va busi nessman and farmer who beads the national chamber.'- . - c : "Business wants Congress'; to continue to give it a fair hearing and to consider further progres sive steps in the interest of com petition and free enterprise to ward U.S. progress, the speaker asserted. , - - r'- -y . ; f Delegations from 20 chambers of commerce, from Klamath Falls to McMinnville and Newport. to Bend, joined Salem Chamber of Commerce and Salem Rotary club in the chamber-sponsored dinner meeting and . national affairs fo rum. '; : : ' ' 'J. - The forum following Johnston's talk drew lively questions and lively .answers on a wide range of subjeets-tariff support for Wil lamette , Valley cherries,, what ,it takes to attract payroll industry, the outlook for business failures, the soundness of industrywide bargaining, the problems of agri cultural surplus. ; : '. ' President Johnston urged his audience to exert their influence toward getting the best -men into government and toward electing Congress "which reflects the sober -Judgment of realistic Amer ican." , , s : ' Summarizing the - reaction i of business to recent actions of Con gress and the White House, John ston said: ; .. yi "Business has been able to op erate with more confidence. Ad ministration policies have called for releasing the creative energies ol all our people.. Factors vf un certainty have diminished.".;!. (Additional details on page 2, secL) . ; , . Salem Portland Baker Medford -North Bend Roe burr i San Francisco Chicago Mix. n -61 60 . T U 64 C9 74 59 74 Mia. 41 - 57 53 . 53 S3 , 53 54 61 54 58 Predp. JtS A jo -Trac Tre , .. .14 - J Tne .00 . JS ' M 1 New York . Lot Am eles u Willamette River. -U leex. FORECAST: (froiis JJ.. S. weather bureau. McNary field. Salem): Partly cloudy today. ; tonight ; and .Friday with scattered hower today and to night. Little chance in temperature with today'! fiich near 6S and the low tonight near 44. : Temperature - at 15 01 a.m. today was i48. : t l i.. ,1 :.vl--- SALEM PrCtPlTATIOX r Sinea -Start f Het!er Tear I ITu Tear Zart Tear Crazed Ghmman; Gets 7isli For Death by Police Bullets 1 LITTLE ROCK U A crazed gunman, (holding a woman hostage, Wednesday asked policemen to kill him and then thanked oflicers as he lay dying on the woman's porch. H. B. Long, 42, an escapee from the Arkansas State Hospital, held a housewife captive in her home and shouted to police:. - - ' "Come and get me. I want to die. . . ! ; Then he marched the woman onto her front porch. The hostage, Mrs. A. D. Lynn, deliberately fell to the lawn, land a policeman immediate ly -shot Long four or five times. This -was the .sequence of events, according to police; - - ..Lcrg escaped; from tee mental 13- people in a west Little Rock neigh borhood by brandishing a J22 cali ber rifle. lie entered a home and told Mrs. EfSe Callihan: . 1 won't hurt you, I just can" go back to the place. - Then he wandered into the back yard of Mr. and -Mrs. Lynn. II ordered Llrs- Lynn into the house. A neighbor called police. A dozen officers surrounded the bouse and called to the man to surrender. It was then Long pushed Mrs. Lynn out onto the front porch and cov ered her with a rule. Patrolman Gene Smith fired and most of the shots struck: Long. JThanks. iellows. ; '.that's r?od enouVLayt, said fzl t'Jcre fcc . PARIS iUR James Goldsmith, handsome young British hotel heir. charged Wednesday night an "un known person or persons . kid naped the daughter born in the tragic climax of his runaway ro mance with a Pauno tin heiress, : Statements , from Goldsmith and police . sources suggested the 4 months old girl may- be with, a member or servant of the Patino family. . - : . i Police sources said " there had been difficulties between Goldsmith and the fabulously wealthy Patino family over custody of the child, Isabels. The Infant's IS - year - old moth er. Isabela, died in I childbirth. Goldsmither reported to French police that the child had been kid naped from a hotel in suburban Versailles and told reporters she had been under the i care of her grandmother. Mrs. Antenor Patino. since Sept 1 when Goldsmither left Pans on a business trip Salem Man Said Victim Of Amnesia ' State tn an New Serrlce ID AN HA A Salem man. appar ently suffering from amnesia,-was being questioned here by Marion County Sheriff's officers late Wednesday night after he walked into a store and reported he had no -idea who he j was. ; Officers said the man carried papers identifying him as Warner U Gaub, 27, of 1069 Sth St. -A car registered to Gaub was recov ered in Detroit at about S-p.-m. half an hour after be went-into the adanhai store. - ! - Gaub was unable to explain how he had gotten to - Idanba or what had nappened to the car. Officers said his clothes were badly., torn and he had a large bump on his head. . 1 1 : Blame Rain in Two Wrecks; Five Injured Slick , streets and reduced .- visi bility were - listed as contributing factors in two separate collisions which injured five persons Wed nesday night, city police reported. Cars operated by FredNLarsen, 2600 S. Commercial St, and Mrs. Paulene Nichols, 1775 S. High St., collided at the intersection of S. Commercial and , Hoyt streets Mrs. Nichols and a passenger in her car, Mrs. Sadie Longland, 190 were taken to Salem States to Press Segregation Fight in Court By : PAUL M. YOST WASHLNGTON ifi The first step toward . resumption of Su preme Court arguments on' school segregation was taken Wednes day when attorneys for three southern states filed notice they . wanted to take part in the lezal debate. ; 1 . . .. Attorneys general for Florid 3 . North Carolina and Oklahoma in formed Supreme Court Clerk Har old B. Willey they wish to present their states' views when new argu ments are heard sometime in the - fan. t .. ' . . - - -; The question for debate then is how and when the tribunal should issue final orders fori desegrega tion of white and Negro pupils. Arkansas, Tennessee. Maryland and Texas also notified Willey they wished to file ''friend of the court" briefs later. The court said it was not clear whether these four also h wished to take part in the oral arguments and he planned to ask them to clarify the point If they wish to take part they will be per mitted to do so on the basis of the notices received. A spokesman for the Tennessee state administration said at Nash ville Wednesday, ( Tennessee filed its notice merely to protect me -state's right to intervene, If it fin ally decided to do so. . ; , Georgia AttVi Gen. Euuene Cook said three other Southern 1 states ' were joining Georgia in boycotting we hearings, i Bernard Sykes, Ala bama's acting attorney seneral. said , that state would file no brief because it might "legally or mor ally" obligate Alabama to con form immediately with any 'order the Supreme Court might issue. Cook said he had been authorized by the governors of South Carolina, ; AlTsslssippi and Louisiana to lay their states would have nothing to do with the' hearings. ' The Supreme Court decision last May 17 that segregation of public school pupils violates the Consti- ! tution was given in cases from : Virginia, - South Carolina, Kansas. Delaware and the District of Col umbia. The court left these five cases on its docket in calling for new arguments on how to put in tegration into effect Thus attor neys in these decided cases may appear in the renewed debate with out filing notices. ; - Court observers were Interested in - the fact that apparently only three - states hot directly involved in the May decision had- responded to Chief : Justice Warren's invita tion to all states that require or permit segregation. 1 '-1 , ITT T 1 e - Police sources said: they believe wTSt.i riv- bahv-mav hei rout. t Snain Memorial Hospital with undeter- muieu 1 injuries, nicy wcic re ported I resting comfortably early this morning. Investigating officers said ; the Nichols vehicle, a 1949 sedan, was nearly demolished and the Larsen l car received " extensive damage. . In a second accident cars op erated . by Mrs. Rose Avery, . 720 S. 18th St, : and Betty Lou Smith, 578 Cascade Dr., collided at 18th the baby may be en route to Spain or already in that country but said they could give no '. reasons for such speculation. 20-Pound Fishl Serves ds-Bait Attack Kills i Salem Angler sto Paris l ib Talk WithMendes. PARIS Ifl X Anthony Eden flew to Paris in a drizzling rain Wed? nesday and opened talks with Pre mier Pierre Mendes-France in an attempt to persuade prance to ac cept qunickly a new accord which would permit rearming West Ger many.; ; U. ? ' The British foreign secretary. SEATTLE m - So you think a and Mill.streets. Police saidIrs. - Bonn 20iuiKl fish-is :- pretty, good Anr and; two passengers Mrs. with his view mat catch with rod and reel? ;B Brown, and her 4-rnonth-oldar anA frcMnm rsn h as- Shucks, Jim Miniken uses those daughter, Linda Brown, sustained surfij(j by strengthening European mmoows tionally. for bait-hut not inten- minor injuries in the accident: A Salem fisherman died ' of a heart attack at Kernville, south of Delake, Wednesday morning after landing a silverside salmon in the Siletz Salmon Derby, v v j The - victim was Walter Simon, in the Salem Hardware Store. He had suffered previous heart at tacks and was, under a physician's care,r it was reported. ' : Mr. Simons moved to Salem from Altura, - Minn., with : his parents shortly after 1900 and. had lived here ever - since except for a few years in Canada, where he operat ed a ranch near Calgary, Alberta, after Jim hooked a 20-pound ling cod d Tl ,-hile fishing in Puget , Sound foe OllOWerS. LilOUtt salmon. He had that fish nearly to ' - , his boat when an 87-pounder of th jDXpeCted 1 OtlaV same species gulped it Then the - 4 ! " big cod tried to make otf witn its - Mnr. howra are exnected In luncn, ine ooat ana me inree men th s-i-m ,PM tndav and tnnicht weathermen at McNarv Field nre- close enough so it could be gaffed, change in temperature is anUci- l! till whereupon U spit out the little bit- patedl ' .. . . been together we have not been unity." was met at the airport by Mendes-France. the man blamed by many advocates of the Euro pean Defense Community (EDC) treaty for the treaty's defeat in the French Assembly. Eden told ' newsmen Wednesday night: "We have worked, hard and we still have work to do. - Mendes-France told tSe report ers! xou mustnot oe surpnsea ty 20-pounder which iliniken pulled aboard with his line, Drivers Die as rter about 1912. -V f ? m I "' 1 He had been retired horn the I niPirC 1 .151 C II llHt rw W U4MUVtd aMvii v ht pated. Rainfall Wednesday was .25 of an inch bringing the total lor the month to 125 inches nearly twice the normal falL able to finish. The French: premier turned far ther questions aside with a promise ; there will be an official statement after Thursday's meetings. - A French Foreign Ministry . 1 1 m 1 It M I. L COAST IXAGVK PLATOrrS 1 At San Diero 3, Oakland ? (11 Ion.) At Hollywood . San Francisco t . - i - . - NATIOXA1. LEAGVE . : , " : . f At Brooklyn m Cincinnati 4 At Philadelphia !. St. Louis S ; At New ,Yorlc-Mi!wauker rain ) Only garnet acheduled ;;; . .; AStEKXCAX IXAGta - J , M Baltfjwr. S, Botton 1 " "i DELAKE, Ore. W A headon collision' of two' graver trucks early Wednesday 1 killed -' both drivers oa the Siletr River Road, 2' miles east of the Kernville Bridge, state police reported. ' Killed were' C.?l Capps. 30, of Eugene (23 Monroe St) and Earl L. Clements, 49. Seaside. Impact of the crash . trapped both bodies in the -.truck cabs, and cutting eauipment had to be used to free them. The collision occurrea a tew miles from Taft near the Calkins traarrT tit . f ! .-! , :' cause jce erasa-,was -not ed to . continue" through Friday, spokesman said Eden had present- forecasters said.. , , ed his nlan for joining West Ger many and Italy to the Brussels pact setup under NATO as a means of getting. German troops into the! European defense bastion. Tcfay's Stst:sr.i:n SECTION 1 General news J.LJ 2,3.9.11 f fipsnf RPkr J Editorials, features .......4 Mses 9,4 -OCer . , Comes , the Dawn ; Society, -women's':.. Star Gazer Valley; news ... SECTION 2 ' - Sports -................ Farm news 'Radio, TV Comics .i Crossword . puzzle - ... Classified ads ....... ECTICN 2 -i. : 4 . 9 10 Flow Do Drain' 1-3 4.5 -5f-ll PROVIDENCE, R, L (UP) '-- Gallons of beer flowed into street drains Tuesday. Workers smashed hundreds of cases of beer that had been flood damaged by hurricanes Carol and Edna. - -; v The Pabst Brewing Co. ordered condemnation of ail beer exposed to flood dsnst?. Scae 13.CC3 cases M'cf beer wii t4 .zz-z;zi U4 4alr Wtaeww-tiita 4 ,r -; I S . I i I