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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1954)
: -! "i AyAx' m K ) : ' : ' ;" 1 kf Aza,-'-:- ':xx - :- - M r: t'i S ' 1 :r- A- aAa. x :;A:x - ' ' - 1 ' t - ! . . v':-. K ' - '' ' .! ." : i . ::" ' " , ' I -1 .-' ' .i 'j : -'ill- - ; ' . - ' V '"' .". . " ;"' I 1 ' " ' ', " i ' ((liS if (a " mTtp (fii fulfil ('Si S "si" "i (Sifflii si tiT : - : 'A.aaA "J-:;ii' ' j -- :.Tv:-ii n ' '-fAA : - pqundhp 1651 I :; x ... : . i-; r; 1 ' -f FDR Jr J 'Loses Candidacy Bid ! 104TH YEAR Salem Said Facing x - !'',v f -j : ; ! ; ; .rf Home Lot Shortage : 'By ROBERT E. GANGWARE ' ! - City Editor, The Statesman ''A Salem apparently has fewer residential building sites, than even the most worried citT olanners figured. l i - ,il Lots and tracts in residential uer oii, cuy manager j. rranzen reported to Salem Planning "Commission Tuesday night i X. l t I i j! And City Engineer J.I H. Davis added that about 300 city lots a Over in Washington some of the "partners" are at logger heads. The newly created , Wash ington Power Authority, a state agency, wants to build a dam at Priest Rapids on the Columbia, but the Grant County PUD got its bid in first. The latter has ob tained a temporary injunction to restrain the state agency; from proceeding with its venture. The case for a permanent injunction will be argued in October.; ! h The Washington Authority launched itself with considerable fanfare some months ago, mak ing noises like it intended to be come the great power wholesaler and. sell power to local public bodies and private companies. It put something of a chill down the banks of Oregonians who were afraid of "Greeks bearing gifts." There has been some calming of fears since then as the role of the state agency became more nebu lous. . ' ' . 1 s Recently though the Oregonian ran a series of articles which in dicated that by the late 1960s Oregon might be left! high and i dry as far as sharing in energy from government plants is con cerned. Under the sacred prefer ence clause public bodies and co operatives are entitled to the first call on such energy. Unless there are fresh starts in constructing generating plants the growth in demand from communities sup plied by publicly owned facilities would suck away the juice now being supplied to private utilities. Since Oregon generally -i li (Continued on Editorial page, 4) Conventions In Salem to j Bring 3,000 j Fall conventions will bring at least 3.000 persons to Salem, it was estimated Tuesday byj Salem Chamber .of Commerce. I The chamber has listed 11 ma jor meetings" that will draw but- of-town delegations to Salem in October and November. Addition al meetings are expected to be .... . a a listed as some have not been called to the chamber's lion. i atten- ' Biggest convention attendance in prospect will see an estimated 400 to 500 come for four of the special meetings, those of Knights of Pythias grand lodge of Oregon. Oct 10-11; Oregon Republican Clubs, Oct. 15-16; Oregon State Nurses Association, Oct 26-28; Oregon Association - of Elemen tary Principals, Oct 11-12. Other conventions scheduled:; : Oregon Association! of Secon dary Principals, Oct 4-5; Naza rene Church state convention, Oct 20-21; Oregon State Button Society, Oct 26; Oregon i Well Drillers Association.! Oct 29: State School' Boards Assn., Nov. 5-6; Northwest Odd Fellows Assn., Nov. 6-7; Oregon Association of Hospitals, Nov. 8-9. .1 Couple Mix Love. Crime NEW YORK J When the well- dressed young couple selected the engagement ring a few weeks ago, they left a $100 deposit on it Tuesday they came back to jew eler Max Feinman's Brooklyn shop to pick up the ring aided by an automatic in the; young mans hand. i j " ' The happy couple also took Fein man's wallet with $280 inside, and at $35 wrist watch along with, the $900 ring. : j Animal Crackers Y WARRIN OOOORICH ' !i 'It's an air condition Nothing's la &&J&l&i A. "V-X 2 SECTIONS 20 PAGES zones; but still undeveloped, nuni- year; are being used up" on the basis of permits issued for home construction. What's more, planning commis sioners pointed out, the 812 va cant Spaces counted by city police in a survey this week include ap proximately 300 vacant lots on Candalaria Heights and in the new: Laurel Springs subdivision, both: in the highest-priced build ing area. ' ;-; , jj v Franzen's preliminary report concerned plans of the, city ad ministration to get behind two proposed charter amendments in the coming election. Annexation Policy The City Council is submitting measures which would make pos sible a "pay as you go annexa tion : policy under which all or part ' of the costs , of sewer and water lines could be assessed against benefited property own ers. At present all sewer and wa ter improvements are at the gen eral expense. ;' Vice Chairman Robert K. Pow ell, who presided over the com mission last night said the 812 figure is far less than he had anticipated and he had long con tended that Salem needs annexed property to permit orderly res! dential development r II Desirable Lots - : The city manager said he would estimate that only some 200 or 300 open lots would be consider ed desirable for home building, in addition to the; Candalaria, and Laurel Springs area. Even with scattered lots avail able.: the city faces the difficulty that most real estate developers want , to build in tracts suitable for several homes, declared Com missioner Vera McMullen. ill, Franzen told the commission he is preparing a brochure to in form voters of the intent of the November ballot measures. 1 1 Included will be a map show ing the annexation which city planners feel Salem will need within the next few years. ' I This area Is tentatively bound ed by Browning Ave. to the south, either the bypass highway or Lan caster Dr. to the east and lines to the west and the north which are about half-mile from present city limits. (Additional commission news on page 2, sec. 1.) Nine Leap From Diiabled Aircraft? None Injured SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. JB Nine airmen parachuted from a disabled Air Force C82 cargo plane which 'crashed land burned Tues day night in the rugged San Ber nardino Mountains. . Several hours later the nearby Norton Air Force Base said six of the men had been found, ap parently none seriously injured. Search was on for the other three ! A i rescue team from Norton reached the crash j scene and re ported finding ' no bodies. ! I i IThe plane was based at moux Citv. . Iowa. It had landed late Tuesday at Norton for refueling and then took oft from Hill acb. Ogen, Utah. ' - S r Hop Driers Grain Priers to Save ' ' . . yy-rt ' ; I ' ' ' '' ' By LILLIE L. MADSEN : j ' Farm Editor,. The Statesman ; In the face !of a lot of changes. it was found' this week m Wil lamette Valley farming that ne cessity is still a pretty good moth er to invention. That's how come hop driers are being turned rapid ly into grain driers. , I' ! From less than a week's try it looks pretty good, Bernard Kirsch. manager of the !Mt Angel Farm ers Union Warehouse said Tues day. -I ' . t - ; . ' ' t "Th train looks cood. Moist ure content is where it shottld be. We have only the germination to test and to me this doesn't look as if it could be hurt. WeH know more in another week I or 10 days. Bight now we know that it's : better to have grain dried even artificially than not at all," Kirsch explained. fi So far as could be learned in a quick check Tuesday, Carl Ertelt of Mt Angel was among the first to try the experiment Also he is one of the biggest hop-drier grain drying operators. He not only has converted his own hop drier into one for drying grain, but he has leased the large Morley drier near Silverton. Herman Goschie, between Silverton and Mt Angel is also drying grain a la hop drier. - i -h U ' M The grain is spread about 112 inches thick in the kiln and dried at approximately 110 degrees. Depending somewhat upon the moisture content when me grain The. Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, September 22. 1954 - ' j 7 . r- ""-t-- : .-T ' On hand for the start of work on ment Store 1 building, au V. McHeon, S43 Union St and his Chihuahua dog Subie" are shown at one of the "sidewalk super intendent' windows which surround the excavation waiting for Threats Make Two Schools Close Doors By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Telephoned threats of violence led to the closing of two public schools again Tuesday at Milford, Del., and a strike of white stu dents continued at Madison, W. Va. Elsewhere in the South the segre gation situation ! continued . calm, with! no incidents reported. , At Milford, Dr. Raymond C. Cobbs,' school superintendent, or dered the schools closed after re porting telephoned threats of i vio lence if -Negroes were allowed to attend classes in the previously all white high school. . . . Delaware Governor J. Caleb Boggs declined comment on the situation. ; i . ! Scboof doors were shut Monday after the school board learned of a protest march planned by. anti-in- tergraoonists. Plans to re - open them were abandoned Tuesday. Five policemen guarded the school and -tension was reported mounting in the Southeastern Del aware community. ' Harry E. Mayhew, one of . the four members of the school board. resigned, but did not discuss the reasons for his action. There was no immediate decision as to wheth er 11 Negro pupils would be al lowed to take up their high school studies. ' , Autumn Arrives ? Earlv Thursday, !i Clouds Due Today ; Autumn will make Its arrival official at 5:56 a.m. Thursday. A touch of rain for that day is in the official forecast from U.S. Weather Bureau men at McNary Field. Meanwhile, cloudy condi tions are predicted for today. - (The early morning Thursday tiine is what's in the weather books as the autumnal equinox. Fall rains got off to an early start this r month, with figures showing an accumulated amount above average for the first three weeks of September. Being Converted Into is brought in, it takes from 10 to 12 hours to dry a kiln, each xiln holding around 20 tons. A number of other mechanical driers, built for grains, have been and are being installed in the Willamette Valley in the past two weeks. Among those com pleted or upon the verge of being finished, a rapid survey Tuesday showed, were those at Donald, Amity, Derry, Dallas and Mon mouth warehouses. There may be others as well. Most of those built for grain drying take from 25 to 40 ton per day. Costs vary from $4 to $8 a ton. This, the operators as well as the farmers admitted, "eats a big hole in an already small profit" Har vesting is $6 an acre. There's also fertilizer, seed and acreage rent the latter figured in taxes and interest if the farmer owns the land. Since most warehouses in the alley are now handling the grain by bulk in storage bins rather than in sacks, the moisture con tent must be considerable lower or the grain will not keep. Experi ments ' have ' shown that barley with a moisture content ' above 115 per cent or wheat with a moi sture content above 14 per cent cannot be stored safely. In the old method of handling grain in sacks, grain could dry out better in storage. Both C. M. Brownell, manager of the Valley Farm en Warehouse at Silverton, and Kirsch taid Tnea - 'Superintendents' All the new Meier Mt Frank Depart Plans Laid Paper Mill at Albany Plans were reported underway Tuesday night for the construc tion of a major industrial plant which, will manufacture pulp, paper and cardboard products on a site four miles north jf Albany. The Willamette Valley Lumber Co;, which haslits headquarter in Dallas and hasj holdings in sawmill and logging operations at sev eral places in thejvalley, was named as the firm which is considering setting up the plant s) .' . ." William Swindells, manager of the company, refused to comment on the reports, but several other sources said the negotiations for buying the; land and i calling for bids on ; the plaint were nearly complete, j 130-Acre Site The company Was reported to have an option on a 130-acrd tract owned by Floyd Fisher. The land is located along) the old Salem Albany highway about four miles north of Albany.! Fisher said the land had not yetj been purchased but that negotiations are now un derway for 41 sale.' .;. i " ,' A group of civic leaders in Al bany have been Involved in find ing the Site for the plant The Willamette Valley Lumber Co. al so examined sites near Lebanon, Sweet Home and Corvallis before selecting the Albany site. C. V. Wilson, representative of a San Francisco pipe contracting firm, was in Salem Tuesday to make a study of labor conditions here. Information gained in the study will be used in letting bids for construction Ivork on the pro posed plant I j Union Jurisdiction I Wilson met with Salem labor officials, whose unions have juris diction over construction work in the. Albany: area. Dillard W. Burroughs, business agent of the Plumbers and Steam fitters local said. Wilson repre sented a company which was con sidering placing 4 bid on the pipe contract for the null. ' ; He said the San Francisco firm was evidently interested only in the industrial plumbing for 'the pulp operations in the plant and would probably kubontract the bid for sanitary plumbing with a Salem' firm; if Should bf chosen as the pipe contractor. ' (Additional details on page 2, sec. 1.) . p Valley Crop -:y-$- I i 1 day that since the heavy rains of a week ago, no gram, other man kiln dried, had been brought in meeting the required test Low est sample reported Tuesday was 13.96 in barley. v j Farmers bringing in grain with too high a moisture content have to take it home gain, the ware house men reported. None of the warehouses at pres ent, so f ar as could! be learned Tuesday, were taking igrain tmder government load. The risk, the warehouse men reported, was "too great" They feared that grain now being harvested would not meet government specifications. Prices on barley quoted Tues day ranged from, $42 to $45 a ton at the warehouse. Ben Newell. Marioh County ex tension agent, said' Tuesday that a large r percentage of both bar ley and spring planted wheat was still in the fields unharvested. Damp early mornings have made harvesting ' almost impossible be fore noon. Early evenings make it impossible to work after dark as the straws again "toughen' so that they do not give up the kep nels. -;- I . . . v. While harvesters are working "every minute 1 possible, esti mates were Tuesday that consid erable Williaroette Valley grain will remain unharvestd so far as combining is concmed. What is left in the fields will probably be "harvested by fcattle, hogi tnd kheep. PRICE Ready for Construction work to beun. Not much hannened. be the end of the week before &een (bought His tiny dog was diggings,, however. (Statesman Photo). - i for Major U.N. Rejects of By ' FRANCIS W. CARPENTER UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. IB The ninth U. N.f Assembly as its first business Tuesday overrode Soviet demands land: shelved' for 19S4 any action oh the tensions-rid den question of seating Red China. The vote was '43-u. It was the third straight year the Assembly had taken such action, i Tuesday's vote was virtually the same as that last year, -when a similar proposal jwas approved 44- 10. Denmark switched from the affirmative to the negative to ac count for the single additional vote against the proposal. . i ' Vote Years Ago . The vote two years ago was 42-7. Britain and France joined the United States in) urging postpone ment of action, even though Bri tain has recognized the Red ! Chi nese government The British told the Assembly this was not the time to' consider the I question. The roll call was on a proposal by Henry Cabot j Lodge Jr., Amer ican delegate, to put off the issue for this year. The Assembly con vened Tuesday and is expected to adjourn in December.. . Voting Against A The nations voting against the Lodge resolution were : Burma, White Russia, Czechoslovakia, Den mark, India. Norway. I Poland. Sweden. Soviet Ukraine, Soviet Un ion and Yugoslavia. Abstaninin? were Afghanistan,- Egypt, ilndones is. Saudi Arabia,: Syria and Yemen After this decision the Assembly elected Eelco N.iVan Kleffens, for mer foreign minister of the Neth erlands; as president for this year He received 45 Votes. Prince- Wan Waithayakon, foreign ' minister of Thailand, had withdrawn from the contest but got 3 votes Twelve countries abstained. j Newbergj Garment Factory to Close NEWBERG W The Superior Garment Factory plans to close its plant here Nov. 1. The firm has employed 60 persons on an annual payroll of $100,000. " f if The owner, Thomas's. Harrison, said the work would be taken over by . the firm's Portland plant He said i difficulty and expense of transporting materials to and from Newberg were responsible for the closure. i : Kit! v?fi;ggl t f Max. .'83 Mia. 4 ? 33 - Preelp. Salem Portland 33 1 . 7S ' S3 66 M C9 30 , .02 JOO :m- .05 J00 trace 4 Baker Medford i North Bend Roseburf , ,. San Francisco. ss : .. 4 I : 13 I . " 60 " St ' I S ieet New York Los Anceles Willamette River . FORECAST (from V. S. weather bureau. McNary field. Salem: Mostly cloudy today, tonight and Thursday with some occasional lijrht , rain Thursday, uttle chance in-tempera ture.' iHifhest today, near 70; lowest ton 1 gnu near 44. Temperature at 12:01 ajn. today was w. .. . , SALIM PHtCTPrTATlOX Sine Start tf Weather Tear f ept his Ttai las Tm Koraal L38 Admission No. 17S thoueh. Workmen said it wnnM viewing would be worthwhile., Mc- Impressed with thej size of the Salem School 1 .f .1 . o . . T uistnct BUYS J 24-Acre Site A 24-acre site for a future grade school or junior high school for Salem has been purchased by the Salem School District northeast of the city, 'Superintendent Walter Snyder said Tuesday. The site, for Which no immediate plans are in the making, is located on Satter Road just east of Lan caster Drive and north of Silver ton Road. Price fojr the property was $15,600, Snyder Said. Purchase of the property brines to four the numberj of school sites now owned by the district but which do not have school buildings. One is. the - site for the proposed Candalaria area school, planned for early i construction. Sketches of the 12-classroom building will be presented to the board for ap proval later this month by archi tect James L. Payne of Salem. Two other sites, designed to take care of . predicted ! expansions in East Salem and West Salem, have been purchased but no construe tion plans have been made. One is on Royal Street between Center and State Streets near 20th Street, the other between Patterson and Murlock Streets some six blocks north of the present West Salem grade and junior high schools. Completion of the Candalaria school is exoectedito relieve the pupil pressure on both McKinley and Salem Heights Schools, and on the year-old Morningside School which, is taking pupils now from both the latter schools. When the Candalaria school I is completed, pupils now transported to Morn ingside: from those districts will return to classrooms at McKinley and Salem Heights, ; Robber Ashed To Call Police CHICAGO (UP)- Tavern owner Albert Tunick made a mistake Monday when he leaned out ol a second floor window and shouted to a man below: I ' "Hey, there's a I robbery going on downstairs! Call the police! "Yeah, I know." jcame the quick answer. "I'm one of the robbers. Get your head back inside or I'll blow it off." . 1 When police arrived the robbers had departed with $2S of Tunick's money. . f . 5c IW ! n1lll ill'" li i i t j A-Board Member Favors Atomic Power By JAMES F. TOMLTNSON ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. (ffl -Thomas E. Murray, a member of the Atomic Energy Commission, called Tuesday for the government to step up its use of the atom for peace and start by building a pow er plant in Japan, first victim of the atom age. , . The federal government, he told the CIO United Steelwork ers con vention, -should develop practical electrical power from . the atom and help power hungry areas of the world. j The hydrogen bomb has given man the "dreadsorae power of the world destruction,"! he said. But it can also give him! the richest of "material blessings" , By locating an atom power plant oa Japan, '"the only land engulfed in the white' flame; of the atom," Murray said the i United States "would demonstrate to a grim skeptical and divided world that our interest in nuclear energy is not confined to weapons." He noted that our government aow is helping Belgium to build a nuclear power reactor, and said that should be only a start toward building, reactors in other foreign Ianca. - To IT IT Marnman' By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 'I - - Tir - -; ... i The "ranning scared" Republicans send their principal campaign attraction into the political fray Wednesday as President Eisenhower starts a four- slate speaking tour in the At New York Averell cratic nomination for governor early. Wednesday after a heated state ' convention battle with Rep. Franklin D. Roo sevelt Jr. 1 . - I " i Wildly cheering demonstrations or each candidate preceded the balloting, which did not being until after midnight Tuesday. Harriman got sufficient votes for the nomination at 1:07 a. m. (EDT) Supporters of the late president's sou failed in their hope of stam peding the convention. Harriman, 62, ' wealthy former New Deal diplomat had . entered the contest a heavy favorite with the backing of the most influential Democratic state leaders and Tam many Hall. Roosevelt came into the ball im mediately after Onondaga County's vote pushed Harriman's total over the 510 majority mark. Shakes Hands He ' smilingly shook hands with party leaders on the platform. - Paul E. Fitzoatnck. the conven tion's permanent chairman, inter rupted the roll call at that point 1 L I L to introduce rtooseveii as a great American." In his appearance before the convention, Roosevelt said: 'On behalf of my many friends, I would like to suggest that the nomination of my old friend, Aver ell Harriman, be . made unani mous." Republican national chairman Leonard W. Hall, repeating that his party is "running scared," re ported to Eisenhower Tuesday that prospects are good but "a hard fight" is needed to retain Republi can control of the congress. 'I don't think you should con duct a campaign any other way," be told newsmen afterwards. Conferred With Ike I Hall and other party leaders con ferred with the President at the summer White House in Denver as Eisenhower prepared for his three- day swing into -.Montana, Oregon, Washington and California. Four speeches are scheduled dur ing the three days. (Story on Page 2, See. 1.) - Republicans are counting heavi ly on Eisenhower's prestige in the Nov. 2 election, and some reported ly have asked the President to take a more active part in the cam paign. ' !" But Hall said Eisenhower plans no change in his tactics.. Hall said the President will make a nation wide "get out the vote" speech by television and radio Nov. 1, but has only one other political engagement beyond this weekend. Eisenhower and Vice President Nixon will address party workers from Denver by radio and tele vision Oct a on "national pre cinct Day." The President s tour takes him today to Missoula, Mont, for an airport speech; to the Oregon -Washington border for dedication of McNary Dam Thursday morn ing: and to Los Angeles for a ma jor political address in the Holly wood Bowl Thursday night MED FORD M) Medford's population has increased 1,739 since the 1950 census to a new total of 19,044, the federal Census Bureau reported Tuesday after conducting another census here.. NATIONAL LEAGUE ' 'At Brooklyn 2. New York 5. . At Milwaukee 0, Cincinnati S. At Chicago 4-3. St. Louis 3-2. At Philadelphia-Pittsburgh (rain). AMERICAN LEAGUE At Hew York 3, Washington 1. At Cleveland 7, Chicago 9. At Boston 4-4. Philadelphia 3-3. At Baltimore 4. Detroit 3. Plant for Japan The world, Murray said, faces a dilemma symbolized on the one hand hv the hvdroffen bomb tests in the Pacific and on the. other by the nation's one atomic power en gine at Arco, Idaho. "We have on the one side, frus tration and world destruction;, on the other, creativity and a com mon ground for peace and cooper ation." I : ' j Murray said there is an ever growing and dangerous unbalance' in the fact that the atom is "far advanced in the weapons field but is "not yet very far down the road to peace." For that reason the nation should take the lead in pouring "the energy- of the atom. as soon as possible, into peaceful and constructive paths. : Murray warned that the mount ing stockpiles of atomic weapons in the United States and the Soviet Union by their very existence car ry a "delayed time fuse." "The i mechanisms of delay . in this fuse cannot be trusted to last indefinitely." he said. The government and not private industry, he added, must tackle the widespread. building of atomic power plant. VV est. j Harriman won the Demo West Germany : Requests Full ; Sovereignty . U By ARTHUR GAVSHON LONDON (J j Chancellor Kon- ; rad Adenauer has asked for a y quick Western Big' Three declara-i tion ending the occupation of West 3 Germany and granting her full i sovereignty,- Western officials dis- ; closed Tuesday night. ! The German leader's call was the day's dominant development; in ' . the ; tangled maneuvers that sur- , round free Europe's search for a , means of rearming West Germany in the light of France's rejection '." of the European Defense Comma-; nity (EDC). , ; A London nine power confer- ence on the key European problem " gets underway Sept 29. . i Informants here said Adenauer's call is expected to be high on the , - agenda for decision at the London f ftarley. It was Sept. 2 that he first j put the pricetag of "full and undi- minished sovereignty" on German military support for Western de-J tense iines.- : r ; Adenauer has promised and im-t mediate counter - declaration, in return for his requested Big Threej declaration. In it he would volun-, tarily cede certain rights to the three . occupying nations the United States, Britain and France.; Small Home 1 Owner Bilking; ice Told : INDIANAPOLIS W - Wide-' spread bilking of small homeown-' eti byADy-bynlght contractors ofl Federal Housing . Administration! home improvement loans was de-f scribed before the Senate Banking) Committee Tuesday. j ' The practice, as outlined by wit-; nesses at hearings before Sen., Homer E. Capehart (R-Ind), com-j mittee chairman, showed this-gen- eral pattern: -j- , s 1. . Fast-talking salesmen would- approach a small homeowner with; a proposal to apply siding or roof-; ; ihg to be paid for with an FHA-f backed "Title I or home improve- ment loan generally wiUi. noj down payment and 36 months to, pay. . . :.' ! 2. The salesmen would . teu tne; homeowner they-would use the( completed job as a "model" home! and would pay the owner a fee ' usually $50 for each sale made! from showing the completed job.j i 3. As' an added inducement the salesmen often would offer to pay! several hundred dollars in cash to. the homeowner for signing the con-J tract for the job. : t 4. An FHA loan would be ar-, ranged, at double or more the ac- tual cost of the project and partj of the money would be turned over? , to the homeowner with the expla-i nation the loan also could be used, to meet payments on stoves, Hi frigerators and other appliances. ' Generally, a dozen witnesses. brought out, no fees were paid for) : any sales made from demonstra-t ting the completed Work. It oftenj was .of inferior quahty, they said. and complaints to the contracting; i firms i brought statements they were not responsiDie ior wnai. their salesmen said. Placards to MarV Salem's Car on McNary Train i The Salem delegation to the dedication of McNary Dam by President Eisenhower on Thurfrj day will be able to identifytheir car on the Union Pacific special : train by placards in the windows . of the car. - I A full carload was insured by the sale of all 48 seats through , the Statesman-Journal business office. ' j This train will leave the Port land Union Station at five a.m.' tomorrow morning, and return to Portland at six p.m. ; f. Today's Statcsr.rn SECTION 1 i General news ..2, 3, 4, 5, i Editorials, features ... i Soaety, women s ; Star Gazer ....... SECTION t Sports'... 1 Comics Radio, TV Classified ads Valley news Crossword puzzli Pract hi ... 1, 2, 3 1 ; 5 .-7. 8, 9 . - ... 4 i . . i ! :-.-''-V.- i i