2-(Sec lKStatesman, Salem; Oregon, WeeL, March 2, 1955 Reds To Asked. Free Anew Yankees WASHINGTON OB The United States has made a new demand on Red China for release of 41 American civilians from their "un warranted detention" . behind the "Bamboo Curtain. The State Department announced the action Tuesday. It met an im mediate rebuff from the Red Chi nese official who received it but a department spokesman said "we n9tnr11v.hnni" thai mnre Ameri cans will be freed by the Reds. U. S. Consul General Franklin Ge- Neubergerto Back Harlan WASHINGTON jB Sen. Neu berger CD-Ore) said Tuesday he will vote to confirm appointment of Judge John Marshall Harlan to the Supreme Court despite Oregon opposition. - The senator, in a statement, said he had disclosed his support for Harlan in a letter to V. O. Stira- weis, Portland manufacturer who had opposed ! the nomination because of Harlan's "supposed views on world affairs and racial discrimination." Neuberjzer rejected Stirnweis' objections based on Harlan's back ground as a Rhodes scholar and a member of the Advisory Council of the Atlantic Union, as well as criticism of Harlan's judicial background. Of the better, the senator said: "He has had some judicial experience and far more than that enjoyed by many recent appointees (to the court). j Neuberger said seven of the eight members of the Supreme Court had no judicial experience whatever prior to serving on it. C. Gowen presented the demand to Acting Consul General; Shen Ping of Communist China! in a two-hour meeting in a hotel at Geneva, Switzerland, ? Monday. Theirs was the eleventh such! ses sion held since last June wteh di rect; U. S. - Red Chinese contacts were established during the neva conference. ' - i CnlinniBg Effort' - ! The State Department announce ment described the Geneva negoti ations as "a continuing effort" to ree Americans held oy me i Chi nese Reds. They are parallel , with the efforts of the U. N. secretary general. Dae Hammarskjold, to obtain freedom for American uiers who fought under the U. N, com mand at Korea and were captured and: imprisoned by the Chinese Cnnrimunists. ; I l The Communist official, i the State Department said, "reiterated the I Communist position that no Americans are being unjustly de tained However, the announcement; said that: since i contacts started j last June at Geneva' 18 Americans who had been imprisoned or otherwise denied permission to leave ! Red China have been released, i Hope for More i Press officer Henry Suydam said thati "these negotiations have; not been unproductive and we natur ally hope more will be released. The announcement said Sthat among the 41 civilians are two; em ployes of the Army Department included by ; the Reds in ! spy Palmer Heads Albany Schools Statesman New Service ALBANY Arthur E. Palmer, assistant superintendent of Al bany schools, Tuesday was chosen superintendent to succeed I. R. Hatseth, resigning from the post in June. i i . Board Chairman Orville Wise man said Palmer, who has been with Albany schools nearly con tinuously since 1929, was selected .from among 18 candidates. He also reported that his salary will be somewhat ; in excess of that paid heretofore. f Palmer, who received both his bachelor's and master's degrees from Oregon State College, first taught - largely vocational sub jects in ' Albany schools. He then entered administrative work working his way up to assistant superintendent a year ago. - Candy Sale Nets $2,400 A net profit of $2,400 abou double that of 1954 was made by Marion County Camp Fire Girls en theirtecent annual candy sale, it was reported Tuesday at a district board meeting. ' J. B. Monnette, ea vice-presi- dent, said 9,000 boxes of candy were sold by the girls. This yield ed a gross profit of some f" 4 unve cnairman was carl m strong. ; i charges along with brce men. . 11 U. & air Crete Works to Raise Death Car From River ir, - Izr x " - ' J X -OS" r iJfK 0 .inci Sack Given Another Month PORTLAND (UP) Convicted wife-slayer George F. Sack; of Portland has been given another month to prepare a bill of excep tions in the appeal of his murder conviction to the State Supreme Court. .-" I-. i- Sack was to have died In i the gas chamber Dec. 10, for the slay ing 6f his wife, Qoldie, but (the appeal caused indefinite postpone ment of the execution. ! t 1 John P. Hannon. Sack's attorney, now has until March 31 to prepare this bill. He also received two earlier extensions. ! GATES A rescue crew works to put a cable on the submerged automobile of Etoyle Myers, 49-year- ' old Joanna logger, after It skidded into the North SanUam River reservoir behind Big Cliff Dam east of here Monday night. Myers, apparently lone occupant of the 1954 Nash sedan, was trapped when the car flipped over into the icy water. It took the workers nearly three hours in heavy snowstorm to, brine the car to the surface. Directing the operation from the rocky bank Is State Pa trolman Robert Haynes of Salem. (Statesman mow y l nomas u. wngnt jr.j iswry on page see. z. I - . ' Tangent Seed Man Indictee! . i h - - - i i ALBANY, Ore. HI Frank' T. Glaser of Tangent, one of Oregon's largest seed producers who; had been j accused of misbranding rye grass; seed, was arrested Tuesday, He was released after posting $2,000 bail. 1 The indictment against Glaser accuses him of having delivered to Northnip and King, seed dealers, 1,866 ! bags I of rye grass -seed certified as Containing less than per cent common rye seed, when actually the seed . was substandard The grand jury actiori stemmed from an investigation by the State Department , of: Agriculture and Oregon State College, i The State Seedr Certincation Board last week cancelled Glaser's rights to - produce handle certified seed. State Penitentiary InNeeJl of Tailor The State Penitentiary is in need of a tailor, the State Civil Service Commission announced . Tuesday. This position involves super vision of the Prison Tailor Shop and instruction gf inmates in the skills - involved in the tailoring trade. Applicants for this position must have three years of tailoring ex perience and the ability to super vise others. Starting pay is in the range of 1322 to $364 a month, de pending upon the qualifications of the applicant. Hearing Set on Building Variance j - ; i Public hearing on an applies tion of Elmo W. and Eleanor A. McMillan for a variance to. con struct a home near 14th and D streets is scheduled for the March 15 meeting of the Salem ; Plan ning Commission. -The McMillans have requested approval for an eight-foot drive way) leading to the interior! lot instead of the 20-foot driveway required in the planning code. The hearing is scheduled! for 7:30 p.m. In the .City Council chambers. Four Chickenpox Cases Reported Four cases of chickenpox In Marion v County led the list of communicable diseases, reported for Feb. 19-28 to Dr. W J. Stone, county health officer, ' Other v diseases reported: two cases of dog bite; impetigo, two; measles one; meningitis, one; lobar pneumonia, one; virus pneu monia, 'one; poliomyelitis, one; scarjet fever, two; atrep sore throat, one; tuberculoses, two; whooping cough, two, and vener eal disease, two. CARS COLLIDE . Cars driven by Kittie F. Row, 940 D St. and George Hybersen, Salem pestoffice box 1035. were involved in accident at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday at the Union and North Church streets intersection, police reported. No one was injured. Barririgton Pay Report Praised The Barrington salary recom mendations are fundamentally sound, state institutional workers were told Tuesday night byj Dr, Orvai Eaton, Astoria representa tive who is chairman of the sub committee concerned with pro posed salary scales. j Dr. Eaton claimed the report's loudest critics were those j who knew least abont it, and pointed out thai the plan provides mat ap peals ty employes may bet sent directly to review boards. 3,700 State Residents At Capitol in Febnikry Approximately 3,700 Oregon residents registered at the State Capitol Guide Bureau during February, bureau officials! an nounced here Tuesday. There was a total of 3,849 registrations o: which 17 were from foreign coun tries, i ii. v" ONE GENUINE SLOPPY JOE : Only At Th CAN SHOP i Accept No Substitutes 1$ 20 Unfamiliar Words Settle SpellingBee (Story also' on Page V RICKREALL Four spellers were still in the running at a semi-finals of ; The Statesman- KSLM Spelling j semi-finals here Tuesday night when all 300 pre-; vicusly published words, compri sing the basic list, were exhausted. It took 20 new' and unfamiliar words to settle the issue. The four were, in the left-to- right order in which they were sitting on the stage, Carl Graffen berper of Salem; Academy, Susan Lewis of Rickreall, Carol Marx of Oak Grove and Linda Meyer of Brush College; Tw In Grand Finals Carol and Carl finished I in that order to .qualify lor the Grand Finals. L Here's what happend with the last 20 words, by rounds. Carl spelled "calendar;" Susan spelled "thermometer;" Carol spelled "ghastly;" Linda missed "competitor. Carl, spelled I "competitor" to eliminate Linda; Susan missed "dearth;" Carol ! spelled "dearth" to eliminate Linda. - Carl ! spelled f cynical;" Carol spelled "nucleus." Carl spelled "synthetic;" Carol missed "chagrin" Carl ! also missed "chagrin" both stayed In; Carol spelled "op timism." Carl ! spelled "unique ; Carol spelled "villain.' Cart spelled "audflle;M Carol spelled "parallel." Carl spelled "precarious;" Carol spelled "animated." Carl' .spelled "diptheria;" Carol spelled "demoralize." Carl missed "equivalent;" -Carol spelled "equivalent" and then the extra word ; required to win. "reconcile, j One Word Voided Only complication of the evening came when the top four still were in the ! 300 published words. Carl inadvertently received the word "efficiency" out of turn. He missed it and Susan spelled it, but at that moment Principal Dorothy Suing, 1 a "neutral" insofar as either Carl, or Susan was concern ed, noticed the oversight and call ed It to, attention. As a- result, the word was void ed and a new: word was called for Linda to whom, the word "efficiency" should nave been given. The new worn" "parachute' which Linda spelled was the1 one she would have been given the next time around so there was no change in the order of words. Around 150 persons witnessed the contest Piano solos were given at recesses by Rickreall students. "Swiss Waltz" Was played by Na Dean Schellenberg and "Donkey Parade" by Zantha Riemer." Dave Hoss, manager of KSLM, was master of ceremonies and Wen dell Webb, managing editor of The Statesman, called the words. At The Theaters Todav I , CLSINORK . "WOMEN'S PRISON." with Ida Lupino and Jan Sterling "THIS IS MY LOVE," with Linda Darnell and Dan Duryea I CAPITOL "BAD DAY AT BLACK ROCK" with Spencer Tracy and Robert Ryan I "THE DETICTTVE,'' ' with Alec Guinnesa j GRAND "ROSE MARIE." ' with Ann Blyth and Howard Keel "DAWN AT SOCORRO," with Hory Calhoun and Piper Laurie HOLLYWOOD "A PLACE IN THE SUN," with Elizabeth Taylor ' "HOUDINI,1' with Tony Curtia and Janet Leigh .? Cast Excellent In Willdmette Production s olons PaHike Passes Firemen Go Twice to Site WASHINGTON ( - Congress voted itself a 50 per cent pay raise Tuesday. The House stamped final approval on a salary bill which also provided increases for ederal judges and prosecutors. Acting quickly on a compromise measure worked out in conference with the Senate Monday, the House voted 223-113 to boost congression al salaries from $15,000 to $22,500 a year. ? The measure now goes to Presi dent Eisenhower for virtually cer tain approval. Eisenhower himself, as had a presidential commission before him, told senators and rep-J resentatives in January the time had come to allow themselves more money. ; Eisenhower didn't recommend specific amount The $7,500 fin ally agreed upon was the amount chosen by. the Senate last week and' retained in the settlement of differences with the House. Congress last voted its members a raise in 1946, when the rate was $10,000 a sear. . The legislation as finally enact ed retains a $3,000 tax deduction designed to offset costs of living in Washington as well as back home. -The 96 senators and 435 representatives also will be reim bursed for one round-trip home at 20 cents a mile. Vice President Nixon and House Speaker Rayburn (D Tex) - will receive $5,000 more than their present $10,000 a year. The over-all cost would be just shy of lour", million dollars for Congress alone. Increase for Judges Raises : for some 400 federal judges range from $7,500 to $10, 000, lifting district jurists to $22, 500 and Chief Justice Warren to $35,500. The maximum for U. S. attor neys goes from $15,000 to $20,000 and their assistants from $12,500 to $15,000. Atty. Gen. Brownell may decide how much each should get. ; i Salem's sooth station Firemen Tuesdays" went twice to the same building once to attend to a chimney buVning out and onc& to adjust a damper. j i The first call was at 12:05 p.m. when M. M. Lewis, 1310 S. 13th St., reported the chimney trouble in his. apartment house. At 8:43 p.m.x Mrs: Lee Myers, worried about smoke in the room, sum moned firemen again. , j , i At 9:22 firemen from the North Salem station tended to another burning chimney at the: house of Pat Izzo, 2133 Myrtle Ave. No dam age resulted in either blaze. 1 , DUNN APPOINTED j j - Austin Dunn, Baker lawyer, was reappointed Tuesday by Gov. Patterson to the State Board of Geology and Mineral Industries. The appointment has to be con firmed by the Senate. 1 Mrs. Mclntire, 81, Succumbs , 7 T - Mrs. Alfred E. Mclntire. 81, 1943 N.i Church St., died Tuesday at a Salem hospital after a few months illness. She had lived in Salem, Portland and Lelake for at least 50 years. Born Nov. 1J, 1873, in Onargo, 111., Nina Mclntire lived in Kan kakee, III., for a period, then came out west; with her parents. In 1906 she married Alfred " Mc lntire, a contractor who later be came justice of the peace at De lake. I She was a member of Knight Memorial Congregational Church in Salem before moving to Delake where she became a member of at V mi mi ine jupucopauan urarcn. &newas a member of the Order, of Eastern Star in Taft. I Besides her. husband she leaves son Eugene Mclntire of Salem, daughters Margaret Hagemann of Manhattan . Beach, Calif., and Mrs. Wilber) McCune, Salem brother Charles Dole, Portland, two granddaughters, two grand- great granddaugh- By MAXINE BUREN Statesman Staff Writer Veteran student actors. Eliza beth Winship and Robert Alfred, backed by a very competent sup porting cast, gave an excellent performance of Paul Vincent Car roll's play, "Shadow and Sub stance," last night in Waller Hall. The presentation opened a run of five nights, a part of Willamette University's observance of Chris tian Resources Week; , Playing onaitage arranged In arena "style, , giving the per- ormance intimacy not ' possible in standard theater productions, proved especially effective in this drama. ' Elizabeth Winshio as the voune servant girl gave an excellent per formance, reminiscent of her ap pearance as Electra of last year, Robert Alfred played the dra matic part of the canon with equal excellence, though with less assurance. David Finlay made a convincing dissenter in the per son of Schoolmaster O Flingsley. Two young priests were Theo dore Primrose and George -Nel son. Jean Thomas, Lois Wicker sham, .John Ray, William Hag- meyer and Barbara Ruhl were the supporting players. ; The play is an intense drama of a small group of Irish folk concerned with the visions of servant girl, the bitter school master, author of a controversial book, and the way the situation is handled by the all-powerful Canon. i sons ters. and two Arrangements are in charge of the W. T. Rigdon Funeral Home. Reforestation Projects Escape Storm's Fury State Forestry Department offi cials announced Tuesday that Monday's severe windstorm ap parently resulted In little damage to reforestation projects, although a number of I snags may have fallen. - . - Check is being made In the Tillamook burn and tome other state reforestation projects but reports are not expected for sev eral days. i GkflM0) 50c HEATED OpenS:45 "SINGING IN THE RAIN Gene Kelly Donald O'Connor TH NAKED SPUR" j Jas. Stewart - Janet Leigh i THE SAN SHOP Portland Road at the North City Limits For Orders to Go Phone 2-C798 t FRIENDLY FARM i Now Serving : DELICIOUS FRIED ;i ; Also TryOur Delicious Dinners To Gc Spec Box . ,- 95t Deluxe ...J. $1.35 Weekdays 5 P.M. to 9FM, Closed Mon. and Tnes. 2 MSes N. of Salem on Hi-Way 99-E Friendly Farm Sl-I C Complete I rfafU Dinner Sundays 12 Noon to , 7PJ. ' Phone 2-9318 , WASHINGTON Of) House members from Washington, Ore gon and Idaho split 8-4, with one absent, Tuesday as the House ap proved a compromise congression al and judicial pay raise bill. Norblad Favors One Democrat, Don Magnuson of Washington, and seven Repuh licans voted for the 50 per cent pay boost. The Republicans were Rep$. Ellsworth and Norblad oil Oregon, and Holmes, Horan, Pel- ly, Tollefson and Westland of Washington. ; Democratic Reps. Green of Ore gon and Pfost or Idaho voted against the bill, joined by Repub licans Mack of Washington and i Coon of Oregon. Idaho's Rep. Budge, a Republican, was absent or not voting. - Good Music Bif Crowd AKKSLI O WED. NITE 3 Cr sfal Gardens AT j. 7 U.S. Mayors Arrive in Lebanon BEIRUT, Lebanon tfl Mayors of seven towns in the United States named Lebanon arrived Tuesday for a 15-dav visit in the Arab Republic of Lebanon as guests of the government. The group includes Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Scroggin of Oregon. OLD TIME DANCE Thursday (light. Mar. 3 Then every other Thursday OvetW est ern Aulo Store 159 Court St., Salem. Verbeck's 5-Pc, Orchestra Adm. 50c ' 1 9 to-12 pjn. (.AY it V ThiiiM-Bord" Buffet Dinner Bring the Entire Family for "the Finest . . . Most Delicious Dinner You Have Ever EATEN! : j SERVED WED. AND SUNDAY ONfr Sun. 12:00 to 9:00 Wed. 5:30 to 2:30 Other nights of the week enjoy our special: of Steak and Lobster. I IIITIi WAGON Open Diily 5:30 p.m to 2:30 a.m. Sunday 12:00 to 9 p.m. 3170 S. Commercial St , Phone 4-7575 1 Starts TODAY! Two Raw end Violent Action Hits! 4 There weren't mahy of there bul there didn't need to be manyl T t 1 I 1 . 1 1VH ITR7rr?trrvi u 2 via j mROBIHSOHl h J bmu STANWYCK I : . . I r-r THRILL- wti-t'i n v"st f.rW Irifl O I iM,riii:f;r.iiitjiv;UvFi j II . II I I And for Your Added Enjoyment! "Basketball Highlights of 1954" - 'Near Sighted Mr Magoe" in Cinemascepel Held Over! EOS S Cent. from M-G-M presents the first great musical emaScopE Cm All NEW and in COLOR glory! JLYllIUJU ANN BLYTH - HOWARD KEEL -rrnmunn 1 nnp-:t ruuwnuu Lftififto 1 1 1 1 t 1.1 'Ifi 2ND BIG HIT guign or: 'IU5 (Hi mm - m 't JT RORY CALHOUN JO-PIPIR LAURU Cent, from 1 :00 p.m. STARTS TODAY! PTHE HEADllNES CALUD IT Hi rhi 0il trvtri shimi ZAX 4 t ) Comedy Co-Feature '! Cl v DAYS! ABBOnGOSTElLO w FRED CLARX LYKH BARI I,!AX1E R0SD::LCCM