1 Si. i So Sal am. Red Assault Beaten Back, Chiang Claims TAJPEH, Formosa ) The Chinese Nationalists claimed their troops and planes beat off a Com munist amphibious assault Friday on a tiny island 72 miles west of Formosa. . But possibility oLanother at tempt was seen in reports of Red crafi remaining in the general area. ;- First reports were that the Reds. In five gunboats and swarms of junks, succeeded in landing on tiny Wuchiu in Formosa Strait but were beaten off with many cap tured. Friday night a Nationalist De fense Ministry communique . said 2,000 Attend Church Youth Conferences Portland's First ' Assembly of God Church won the attendance trophy as the 11th annual state envention of Christ Ambassadors drew to a close Friday night in Salem at the Evangelistic Temple. Christ Ambassadors is a young people's organization of the As- sembly of God churches. Some 2,000 attended the three-day meet ing, which had its headquarters at the temple. The Portland church, which al so won attendance honors last year, had a delegation of 120 pre sent. They now receive perman ent possession of the trophy for having had the most persons pre sent two years in a row. Featured speaker at the . con vention was the Rev. Dean Dun can, president of Southern Cali fornia Christ Ambassadors. The Rev. Mr. Duncan spoke twice Friday at 10 a.m. and at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. David God win, Dallas, Tex. youth evangelist, spoke at 2 p.m. Friday. At the evening service, Bob Williams, artist, painted a picture from the Biblical theme, "His Eye Is on the Sparrow." The painting stowed Christ looking at a sparrow. Williams also appeared at the first service Wednesday evening. Some 1,000 attended the closing service Friday night DANCE Every Sot. Night 1. 0.0. F.Hall In Falls aty :r Sponsored by . jThria Link Ledg . Music by Jack Kixiiah and His Taxas Ramblers - They can be beard am ' -I.O.CO, 5:00 - 5:30 Every Saturday Eve ; . - Sa Nito Larry & His Cascade - Range Rulers AUMSVILLE PAVILLI0N Wosfom Dane land" turday mm 2 Floors! Bands! i Price 74c DANCE To Th Smooth Rhythms Of Bill DeSouia's 11 -Pc. Modern Band CRYSTAL HELD OVER! Saturday Night, Nov. 27 ry.fc.. n i Mn,ir Mm ltT-rfn"- i-"'' " ' " ' 1 J i -.' -r.". a. - I- aaaai.ialH iiiiaMaTi ai ,mS Presented by Salem Civic Players Blind School Auditorium : 15 P.AA, Tickets Available at the Door Or.. SaU Norw 27. 1854 the attack was repulsed and the attackers fled toward the main land. It made no reference to a lancing or prisoners. " The attack on Wuchiu, a mile long, half - mile'- wide island IS miles off the mainland, was the first amphibious operation by the Reds since they began boasting last summer they would "liberate" Formosa. Friday night's communique gave this terse version' of the action: j 4. i.M - vorrfav th. five Communist gunboats and many Junks converged on Wuchiu ducers wno are memoers oi me from the west, south and. north, pool. About 4 a. m.. the attackers . Effective Jan. 1 all quotas win were repulsed by the island de- re-allocated on the basis of four fenders and the Nationalist air low months' -production for each force There were earlier reports producer. These new quotas are thai the actual fighting lasted an remain in effect for 1955, unless hour ' more milk is needed, an assona nt - i- . .,xLi . tion spokesman said. Nationalist planes started a I diUona, milk ;is andeit March at dayuht for the JReds membe wishing to increase their ".i S2 - Lfr. Ln Vfh Jr be leased ued boats nc more than 30 other .. M Mw grade A pro- craft, presumably junks. are admitted Reds on me ooau ana junss fir miiumm at W - ttvincr 'V 7 " ?4T t " - planes but without success. The communique said "The sit- ..tk. wnrhin i Anita. and we have heightened our alert- 3 Some Official quarters saw It . . .... was not quite clear whether the RedS actually intenoea 10 occupy Wuchiu or m'erely stage a raid for icr lnieiiigence purposes. v a it 1 Pre renorta nrecedinff the com- J munique version aid: The Reds landed from motorized . L , i,,. ,1 Zr fire frim SoaS The NSonllisT deS sault but counterattacked with the support of Formosa - based wr planes and erased the beachhead. Nationalist warships also went into action. Some Taipeh quarters thought it possible the Reds might have been interested in seeing whether their assault on a small offshore island would, provoke any Ameri can reaction. India, Egypt E nvoysdiintea By President WASHINGTON ) Elsenhower Friday announced diplomatic shift involving new am- I Doasauora wij imua ana cgypi i anu a new assisiani secretary oi state for Middle East affairs. uc cuonges ar uwaaioneu oy me long expecrea reuremem 01 Jefferson Caffery as ambassador in Cairo. aM mmwm . me wmte House hasn t dec wed whether to submit them to the Senate for confirmation -when the chamber reconvenes in special ses- sion Monday or to await the next session of Congress in January. Henry A. Byroade, the present assistant secretary for Middle Fact affair. h-. Koon nnmiiiiM tn waH rnrfr r,r v si. len, ambassadorvto'lndia, -has been ien, amoassaaorvio inaia, lias neen chosen to Uke Byroade'a place here. .A successor for Allen as am b'assador to India has not been announced, but the educated guessing was that .it would be Sen. Z XS3 71: lnhn vharm o a PAAnA id lr i f.fTT rrr: Crj;;; i:;: ,VT1 . . . .. r. . uvu J" iT- Others mentioned for the Indian post include Chester Bowles, a Democrat who formerly held the j job. and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, vaiiery, a nauve ljouisiana, ends 43 years as a distinguished Foreign Service officer. A major oeveiopment during ms tour at Cairo has been settlement of the British - Egyptian dispute over the Suez Canal.. "mm DANCE To Th Old Tim Musk "" Of Th Crystal Gardens Old-Timers GARDENS Dairy Co-op Closes Pod. To Producers PORTLAND j - The Dairy Co- operative Assn., the state's largest nSL supplier. Friday j announced that no mole grade A milk pro- ducers would be admitted to the co-od dooL The co-op, operating now without the benefits of .a state milk con- trol law. said that 'grade A pro- ducers who now are members of n.- n.,.n wam MnKm. to hold quotas assigned by the now defunct Milk Marketinz Adminis- tration. There now are 705 pro- Tha riwin' hnnrrl f directors 1 Z i wl .wl aiitt appruvcu a prupuaai uj uic Qrezon Milk Producers to request a preliminary survey of this area th. u s nm.nt f AwL culture to determine if a federal niiia. liiomcuiig viuci wwu.u I i,i 11 j.j i u neeueu. Board members saw that if the maraei van we Maumu m ciing. present price level. It willbebet- he so-yearld Hiss, like Rem- Am a fAiiAiQ AfrtflF " . l lne 01 e "TP ouneun l.rricx S'r gi fNov 1 is L announced pool lor Nov. 1-15 were announcea P' for Nov- 1JS were at H78 a hV ! 62 West Market Best, Turkey growers Told 'Oregon turkey growers will have to depend on their own mar- kets for the sake of economy , ranking State Department assist Charles Norton, Portland, said here ant, spent his last day in prison Friday night Norton is president jn routine fashion. He turned in his of the Northwest Poultry firm of jrab clothing, the odds and ends aaiem. . Norton, speaking before 230 mem- bers of the Oregon Turkey Im- provement Association ai jnayuow-1 er HalL advised them to cease , W to compete with eastern i ne assemoiage n : t a. a ii a. Aa cos of shipping gives all the eastern erowers The downward trend of the mar- i aei on DOta onus ana eggs recriveu tnorougn attention at tne lau meet- ine of the group. It was pointed out that growers J a. ?A A. fl A. 1 averageu aoous au cenu prwu per bird this year, compared with ant birds to the east on Rnington. aminer way upneia cnarge oi --r; ' r. . T.r M-nt i h . laSin advanuge to the Norman H. McCabe. special P"!22! 5." " vw s i7s7n Ma"teo CuVty average profit of between 1.50eov ju Grnndr. Va.. and Robert and $2.00 last year. - a survey reieasea to ine group I snowed mat eleven -million more l005 01 f s storage naUonaUy this year as I compared to last year. It was pointed out that while l3 season' crop showed anm- " - 7 ,7, . was slightly I vi case udwuuciujr down in Oregon. OVUIIUIIK sates WW rVUUTMKI r? "kJ' period, but they kWy llOTC VWU VUOVfc I by the drop m prices, it was re- . 1 aker Norton opined that Ore- on growers, m tbea- fight to eoon- I omize. should concentrate on their markets on the west coast in Canada and in Alaska. I aAfcd that imrtition trwn moraia grower was oecmung r . . . i . an kKreasngiy . important factor. Six Burned To Death in Idaho Wreck BURLEY, Idaho W Six per sons were burned fatally early Fri - v day when their parked car was hera Route 3; campbeU Brothers that it was entitled to certain in SjK rammed by anofter machine. Painting Contractors, by Wayne formation from management on , r j a , . ' vvFh. ft nWhi tn1 Eugene c. ampoeu. iou w. TAer.JJSaLem ""V o v j v . a vb., r j . were nuspiumzea. inc iruta " er, Walter Granville, .31, of Port- ; land, was unhurt. ina, was unnun. Sheriff LePage Layton said Gran- ille had parked his truck when Sh ville visibility was severely hampered by a dust storm. The death car parked behind the truck. Its flames were whipped, away from the truck and the other car by the strong wind. FREE ADVICE . DeQUEEN. Ark. (Jl ' The flood of comment on segregation in public schools brought this admon ition from columnist J R. McKin - ley of the. DeQueen Citizen: "u there's a newspaper somewhere which hasn't quoted your reaction to the segregation decision, tele-1 the Marion County district attor phone the editor right now and de-1 ney's office for .removal of the boy mana your ngnts." EVERY SAT. Brief Freedom -1 Due to Convict Freedom will be short-lived for a convict who is to be released today from theh Oregon State Penitentiary. - "l rr.""."" u uul "i maa ""f of "f0? Coun & Shriff d.ePuty B.ish 7" ed a chargej of obtaining money by false pretenses, by Del N? County, Calif., authorities Extradition papers have not bee completed there and of J"1? sh office here to hold Bish until the Papers are ready. ..'' B,sn w"1 ? lodged in the Mar- ion County j an. Remington's Death Links t Third Convict LEWISBURG, Pa. tfi - A third convict onlv 17! Friday was P? . . " victefl perjurer -William Iteming- ton in Lewisbure Federal Peni- tentiary " .-...!.-.. Leanwhile, prepared for the re- lease OI AlZer HISS. Que lO receive z . . . . ms freedom 'and DegUVtne restrict- Ud life of a parolee Saturday morn- If a. z A. I t I I mgion, was convicieu m perjury m testimony he gave during m- vesUgations of Communist conspir- BC '"-f Umted .?tates: . , ... Remington, one time aide in the Remington, one time aide in the Commerce Department, died in the - , . a savage Destine at tne nanas Ofltorv technician went to the house. , three fellow prisoners now accused vj me vi uiuiuu. . He was struck on the head with a oriCK wrappea in i soa. i ... . assault was committed in Rem ington's dormitory room. m. . a I tie attacK, coming so soon oe-1 lore tne time see tor hiss release, ..a. . . I . . . .i a ea u wwespreaa specuiauon in me iwo were somenow connecieu. ut acung Yvaroen rrea . a. - 1 Wt HTML! for s0 thinking Wilkinson said Hiss, former high he won t need in the outside world. "just as In the military" Wil kinson said, "there is a lot of this checking out to be done I The charein of the third con- 1 Cagle Jr.. of Chattan- I o phia office of the FBI, said Cagle i admitted that he and two Other convicts "nlanned to ransack Rem- hnrtnn rmm on Nov 22 and the assault took place while- there in l (Remingtons) room. Th- others. Georee Junior Mc- rjarl Parker. 21. Washington, D. 1 q were charged with murder the day Remington died. Businesses nrl TVT ameg I nrr, -m Af I Y liU VXIUIliV Assumed business names filed I ... . . - . with the Marion county Clerk's omce this weeK mciuae: was ram in,i mm I - - a. : V.T . n . u . K n w i uuuai uauw nciauum dvuu a- i as iu uuaaiuic uwure i m i .. .... .1 tiahit-antc ti miu Hiair li.R. intCEi(Ki ivixon vnii in vie nrwi. I crawl- in AftnfcVA a th MhilsatflaVl. I wv nwufrvamva u u a w aa 1 erl- I Gayle's Needleware ana Girtlgooa iaitn. ivrviewmg meir con- Shop, by Gayle L. Ryan, 407 Court St: Burton Bros ys. Radio and - Television Renair. bv V. K. and ww w- va ..a nci n m..arar r a a j. ounon, iu diuui ou cprvw tr n m Mnnre sim Moore nonesi naaio ana i v Route 4; Par-T-Pak Distributing Co.. by Ernie J. Scharf, Port- land " Riverview Cafe, Mehama, by peter u. uoumiu, Airrea it. Phelps and Arlene Phelps, all of Mehama: Raymond Branch and Son Equipment Co., Mehama. by Raymond and ! Gerald Branch. both of Mehama. Oregon Ceramic Mold Co., by 1 cam and Thelma Henderson. Sa- 11 Campbell, 745 Jefferson St, uene s urocery, 1 urner, oy I ugene a. ana vrace 1 auowij, - hoth of Turner. -mj- j Y nil in n 21 P1 11 O AUUlu f CAAA& mi f- jmi lneit uiarge , A ifi-vear-old bov. oarolee from the ManLaren I School for Bovs. Woodhurn. is hn held in Belling - ham. Wash., on a warrant accusing I him of larceny of an automobile I Salem. I c 1 The car. a 1954 Oldsmobue, was - 1 taken from a local car agency 1 Nov. 16. The auto was loaned for I a demonsteauon ride and not re- I turned, the complaint states. I Papers are being prepared by Ito Salem, COTTONWOODS NITE RAY EV ARTS and His RYTHM RANGERS Featuring Arid on Fiddle Meet Your Friends and Swing ond Swoy Royi Way. Defense Rips Lab Methods In Ohio Trial CLEVELAND . Defense at torneys for Dr. Samuel H. -Sbep-pard ripped and tore Friday at police evidence obtained through test - tube methods in the home where his wife was beaten to death on a dack, stormy night last July. They centered their fire parti cularly on methods a police lab oratory technician used to identify human blood stains. The state accuses Dr. Sheppard of battering his wife Marilyn to death as she lay in bed. He asserts the crime was committed by a bushy haired marauder, who also attacked him and twice knocked him unconscious in the fight Henry J. Dombrowski, "test tube detective" of 11 years ex penence in the Cleveland police laboratory, was the witness Fri day as the trial neared the end of. its sixth week, v Under direct examination, using photographs, the state mapped a trail of blood from room to room in th Sh-nnarn horn. U. rr.il " "w V7 i u i Led even our to the garage, where DombrowsKi saw he found a blood stain .Tins could be the basis for the loiaic 9 luuicuuvu uiai a uuauj L.s j j ,t u i n - j cmreu miruuer ui uw the sctne as rapidly as possible, inu uuiu uui uc uugcicu around the house and then Jone ttit tha CTaa Defense attorney William J. Cor- rigan swiftly gan picking and Probing at Dombrowski s testi- monv. He wanted to know the exact dates and times when the labors - , . who went with him, and whether ine was oneiea - as to wnai evi- dence to look for. . I 0v .-j .V.P flMin h- ..v to see the notes Dombrowski made Via wnf ttlMrV TV AmMiv A , 4V, . j r s 1 U UC IfLUk AIUUJLa at ilC Vt kbVU V i .h-f .. mAtA "ca i uivuuvcu uiciji uu vuiiiitau wv I V V4 WlOt flCl UUUCIVI. W now are am j fel on monrv t. -nrret" I J waa .ivuivijf .w. 1 be asked on numerous occasions, I nrait Pitnntina Unidiri laCllCC Charge Upheld For Unions o vt niMnm im xt. ami riuuTUMA i ainst the Oregon Coast Opera- I wl ASOn- "nu Ulm ""muucvw 1CJ wperators Aasn, David F. Doyle, the examiner. recommended that the companies la a. a a lata oe oraerea to oargain in good laitn and that they stop refusing to I write into a contract the aide I agreements which were made in the course of bargaining. i mvu wnn neani tne at Nortn uena last June, saw tnei"r?wua acvcueu..vcr employer negotiators nai used "many device to frustrate the i sincere etiorts ot tne unions to bargain." a lie lwu uiiujiia. uiie il vuaja nai and one at Reedsport. asked for pay increases of 15 cents an hour the industry ourry increase. conduct of the .Uttvat ce, Doyle said: "The I i aj nPoye reprenui cer- uiu. pomv. rr"f duct to the most charitable light, must conciuae mat on occasions I.. l n: l li they were arrogant, flippant, arbi- a tpifu nn vnnwvirifmi now arvivi. ' "V fwj uvut vi mho""" open - mindedness. sincerity, pa- I tience or tolerance that mark the conoucx oi a represeniauve wno Lnegwiaies wiin equals in an nonesi effort to resolve different mutual I it""iciu. I Tbey "evinced in the bargaining bad faith amounting to a rejection I of the entire concept of collective I bargaining and a rejection of ail duty to bargain in good faith as required by the act," Doyle said. He upheld the union s demand which to base its wage requests, The lumber operators were given 20 days in which to .take .their ap- peaj to the national board. Sheriffs Aide Gets Brand New 'Deputy A "star" was born Friday. I though not the type worn on .the snirt of its father. The star is a boy, born to Mr. aild Mrs. Orman GlldOW. 605 N. 1 lotn St. Th rather as a Marion I County sheriffs deputy, in I The boy is named Bennett GU- I dow. Mother and son were re- I ported doing fine at Salem Memo- on I rial Hospital At The Theaters ... ' 14LSINOM "THE LAST TIM I SAW PARIS" with Van Johnson and Elizabeth Taylor. T1U GAY Short i CAPITOL "WHITE CHRISTMAS with Blot Crosby. Danny Kay, Rom mary Clooney and Vera Ellen. -VISTA VISION VISITS NOR WAY- GRAND -BROKEN LANCE"" with Spen cer Tracy and Richard Wldmark. "SIEGE AT RED RIVER" with Van Johnson and Joanna Dm. . HOLLYWOOD "KNOCK ON WOOD" with Danny Kj lanny Kiye. "PINOCCHIO." NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IN "DISTANT DRUMS- with Gary Cooper. . . "DAWN AT SOCORRO with Rory Calhoun and Piper Laurie. Money Ready For Projects, Latins Told GTTrrivnTVWA BraTiHat TS 9H?A??A J' TIjT? wu nations Friday the World Bank and S-JXf ZrTS SSTSam will be , . i loaneu ii ner svuiaera iieiKiiuurs . - ' 7" oVerbv assisUnt secre- 1 iv,, 1 . I a nrooosal to fix a minimum of one K;iii . . American eco'nomic develop- ment with the United States the ment. with the United States the bizeest contributor. . He snoke as the hit defeat 1 . v.ir ,k.. ciujjku iu iiau Wcu euuvuur I m;)ta t h. r I uuucu vl uic tuHtiuiicinau Ajv.r homic Conference on the auestion of whether the United states is I oiin .,mi. u.iumi. .-j I vuuu.u vvvinuiiv jiiu .uu Driee aunnorta to tha Snnthem Hemisphere. , . I Am tew Iw4ra ttiiQeantnaa rUsa 1 IV! ftS A 1VV KUatSUIVCCdi UJG I tt-k.j c... i nrm:. uiicu umlits. uuvuku nuua miu l I atmna rj stiu tw..h I VU& VI UT k7V aWkSl UilCUha reiterated iU stand that iU own mnnnn mM i Mttvi. u mv. .hW.ww w peg prices for everything the world produces. Just before Overby spoke, dele- applauded President Arturo Mascbke of Chile's Central Bank when he urged the American na tions to set up a new inter-Ameri can bank to finance economic de velopment south of the Rio Grande. "An inter - American bankinz system." Maschke said. "wohM be an efficient and aoecifk mech- i aoiain ui nzso lmliu America a eco - I j ,- . . ,. ,. , nonuc ocYeioprneni ana ua its in - Tillamook Gty Law Overruled j By Liquor Law . I- uuuui wiuimaaiin reK I " t -uh ucuu. witn sensed oispensers. That, ,ra y""" uiu imuucu I "7n ' "V7"7 Alwrney nerw Robert Y. Thornton. a . . L..":. "OTUrJ..irora. I . . tTT" , JLfw 6 "3 St IJLrS J& Sti 'SSSfZTTS Mtting ,jn, by Senator Warren Mc- Mininee of Tillamook mulW OI AUlaUUOOK, . I SHEWFFS TO MEET . PORTLAND - The annual I meetings of the Oregon Sheriffs ! .vicgwu uuuh. i "tuw wu hero i);t j j J.9 BING DAW CROSBY -ME B0SEMART VERA- CL00NEY-E1XEN MMtMEn naarn ooum WaaaainM'taaasainal Also "Vista Vision Visits Norway" NOW PLAYING ilL (td-l-JlirT 1 Miles SOjOtk f Salem Vity Limits Ml I Climbers Set Up Mountain Rescue Squad Given Impetus by a series of climbing accidents last fall on ML Jefferson, a Salem mountain rescue squad will be organized Thursday night under sponsorship of the Chemeketans, the city's outdoor group. v The new organixation will be a counterpart of such famed North west mountain rescue units as the Portland Mazamas, the Hood Ri ver Crag Rats, the Eugene Obsi dians and the Seattle Mountain eers. The need for a Salem organi zation of this nature was made doubly clear last fall, said George LaBorde,' a Chemeketan official. LaBorde pointed out that when ML Jeferson mishaps killed one climber and injured three others, the only recourse was to call in rescue units from Portland, Hood -River and as far away as Seattle. "Our proposed organization," added LaBorde, "will concern it self mainly with climbing acci dents on ML Jefferson, ML Wash ington and Three-Fingered Jack. It was exnlained that thene three flJvVvi -f5fi.i r.f fr.nn-tw ma m,,taTn. I the frequently climbed mountains I atuii a 11 mAiinhinu,, .aVl i iuwuuwuikh, uvt w- inff limitad to Chemeketan m bers. Plan for th new trrAiin riroiicrht I ous quarters. S. T. Moore, district U.S. raneer at Detroit and involv. ed in many a rescue operation in the area, heartily approved the mnvA m,m nnnw.4 the area, heartily approved the move, it was reported. Marion County Sheriff Denver I Ynunff has nrnmised the nrani. I m m m I zation full enumeration of his nf. r - - Uice, said LaBorde. That would inciuae iwo-way raaio equipment I Both Moore and Youne are I " Slated to attend the Thursday or- ganizational meeting at the Chem- I He-Deil. 3604 Statfi S1L. itaTtinff I - -w w w I at 8 urn. AT T 11 mixon neciaer Claims Attack, i Asks $150,000 SAN FRANCISCO WV-A damage suit for $160,000 was filed here Friday against Vice President Richard Nixon. 1 w uivuui u ,uun I 1 , o in- v 1 ft v- tmutisw, wu suit, filed in superior court; charged assault and battery. The complaint alleged that Heavey was assaulted by 12 persons "without cause or provocation" while Nix on was making a speeech in San Mateo High School's auditorium on Oct 29 in support of Republi can candidates. Heavey was reported by news- man ' at 41i riH 4a hv atiAitfAul I UJKU HIS . " T Ml I1IUULCU - i mmi it- .tv i - Jiing. i Heavey's comDlaint chareed that u persons , "there and then battered his person by grasping I puUine and tueginz. causing the plaintiff sundry bruises to his back, arms and neck." Tl As a result, the complaint sUt- d- Heavey "suffered grave and evere humiliation, embarrass- ment and am. including shock toM - "d ous system. fTtaa 11aacravl M ft iT fa ti wlVaa, aavw- JSTIS .7?' a upN; i , , I -J SI,srm .f .11 tima Minn mtt. jtaaw rt vi aa aaa vi I hvj vui w (ui in the course and scope of their employment," and were '"under the supervision" of Nixon. Con t. Daily From 1 Tonight and Every Saturday! BONUS FEATURE NIGHT Each Saturday night after our regular show, we will present an extra feature at no increase in prices! SEE THREE FEATURES! Be Here 8:30, See the Regular Show, Plus Oar Surprise Picture Tonight! TONIGHTS BONUS FEATURE STARS HOWARD KEEL DOROTHY McGUIRE " STARTS TOMORROW! jhM-A ? tf , xy aaitt JOHN VAYIIE JOIIH AGAR imrjat.fKgnnata 1 B7CIIC KKU Accident Victim In Fair Condition ' Mrs. Minnie Smith. 65. of Port land, was reported in "only fair" condition Friday night at Salem Memorial Hospital, where x- she was' being treated for iniuries suffered in a Thanksgiving Day aiga way accident The woman's husband. Rav Thurston Smith, 70, was instant ly killed in the accident, which occurred about eight miles south oi Salem on the Pacific highway. Smith's body was removed to ortland, where funeral arrange ments will be made. HELD OVER! , OPEN 5:30 ' 'Knock on Wood' DANNY KAYE Plus CEASE FIRE" Hollywood Kid Club Matin 1 1 to 4' P.M. Today Last Chance to See "PINOCCHIO" 6 Cartoons 3 Stooges J ALSO BENSON'S BIRTHDAY CAKE FOR: Therese Schaf fers, Darrell Davis, Glen Van Derhoof, Teddy Danen, John Danen, Sharon Panger, Billy Shepard, Carol Boehm, Bar bara Van DeMark, Aretta Mc Naught, Daniel Fontanini, Monty Faver, Vernon White hurst, Judith Franz, Bessie Baker. (. NOW PLAYING! J) Gary Cooper In 'Distant Drums1)) )) -Also- Rory Calhoun Pipr Lauri I. NOWI Regular Prksf The Last TlmeIS&vl Paris m Elizabeth TAYLOR VaniOHNSON-WalterPIDGEON Donna REED ADDED THcGAY PARISIENNE" -Also-News Cartoon Ends Tonite Spencer Tracy . la "Broken Lance" Also - The Siege at Red River" p.m. Robert TAYLOR; Janet George LEIGH-RAFT rnnnrPT Steve ruimLoi &5U Annt RJL'IOS I" (( "DAWN AT ) ( SOCORRO" ; ) tL.A M . .. - .-. DO 0P