LleporS: Claims (U.S. Bombers. TJilove 4o A ir Base in Tu rE.ey ISTANBUL, Turkey (P) The U.S. Strategic Air Command has moved unannounced into a new front line bomber base at Adana, Turkey, reliable information said Friday. The SAC base is only 25 minutes flying time from a Soviet fighter air field. The informants said U. S. planes already have staged training flights from North Africa bases to Adana's 12,000 -foot runway of I'm no Walter Winchell (I hope); but here's a hot tip on a stock. It isn't on the market yet, but probably will be in a few months. It's the stock in Ford Motor Company. As Winchell claims for his tips I'm justTetail ing information gleaned not from insiders but. from the public prints. The whole story was told in the column of that politically oriented magazine U.S. News and World Report, issue of.. March 18th. The tide is so complete that it carries all the earmarks of authenticity although it quotes none of the officials of Ford . Company or of Ford Foundation, chief owner of Ford stock. That Ford stock would be offered to the public is really not news, for such an offering was forecast some months ago. ! According to the U.S. News ac count the present shares out standing, nearly 3,500,000, have a value of around $S00 a share. Of the shares Ford Foundation owns 89 per cent, all non-voting. The Ford family owns 190,347 non voting shares and 172,645 voting shares. The latter carry full con trol of the Ford empire. Ford Foundation wants to diversify its investments, so over a term of years it plans to sell off portions of its holdings of Ford stock and invest the .proceeds in other ways. Since a price of $600 a share isn't popular the plan under con- ' sideration calls for a ten-for-one split of the shares, making a to tal of nearly 35 million shares with a value of around $60 each. Ford Foundation would make an initial offering of four million shares. Earnings last year were about (Continued on editorial page, 4.) Modern Ways Invade Land Of Pakistan By LILLIE U MADSEN Farm "Editor, The Statesman If travelers V want to enjoy the "quaintness" ef Pakistan, they should go to that country soon. Modernization is coming rapidly. That was what Miss Naushaba Husain said Friday as she was riding through the "so very beau tiful" country from Salem to Waldo Hills. Miss Husain was a guest of the Salem Chamber of Commerce Friday, together with her father and mother, Syed Itat Husain, consul general for Paki stan at San Francisco, and Ma dame Husain. "We came to San Francisco in 1953. We are eager to get back to see the changes. Even in those two years, letters indicate, we have modernized much," Miss Husain said. 17 Per Cent Literate Only 17 per cent of the people of the country, which is only 7 years old, can read and write. Education for everyone is one of the first concerns, according to Miss Husain, who had her Bach-' elor's degree before she left home and has been working to ward her master's at the Univer sity of California at Berkeley, and will enroll in the school of jour nalism at the University of Ore gon for this spring term. "Industry is very backward," the consul told at the luncheon arranged by the Chamber of Commerce at Marion Hotel for the visitors Friday. "Seventy-five per cent of the people are living on an annual income of $80. What can they do with that? There is hanger and misery and good soil for communism. That is why we are hurrying education, mechan ism, and better standards of liv ing." Horses, Oxen ' While tractors were now being brought in from the United States the majority of farmers were still using horses and oxen, the consul said, adding, however, "that the farms are smalL Very ; imalL So a few farmers go to gether, get a tractor and use it ts a community project This x works very welL" . The Husains came to Salem from Seattle Thursday night They will leave Saturday again for San Francisco. Sixth Nuclear Blast Delayed LAS VEGAS. Nev. I The sixth nuclear blast of. the spring test series was postponed again Friday. It had been tentatively sched - uled for pre-dawn Saturday, but the Atomic Energy , Commission said weather conditions are un favorable. A weather briefing will be held Saturday to determine whether conditions will be right on Sundayv I heavy - impact concrete, The Strategic Command, which would carry the burden of the so called massive retaliation in the event of Soviet aggression, is mov ing hundreds of maintenance men to Adana. The sources which cannot be dis closed said the vanguard of SACs Adana base group began moving in two months ago. It is understood 600 maintenance personnel will be stationed at the field in the north east corner of the Mediterranean. SACs new base in Turkey is 1,300 miles closer to the Soviet Union than Wheelus Field at Tripo li. Libya. Until now, the Libyan field has been SACs forwardmost base in relation to the Soviet bor ders. (The U. S. Defense Department in Washington said "No fighter or bomber units of the U. S. Air Force are stationed at Adana, Tur key, the U. S. A. F. does have support elements stationed there. Aircraft of the U. S. Air Force Strategic Air Command of the U. S. forces in Europe have landed at Adana on training flights as they have at other bases in the NATO area. (The department declined to make any elaboration on its state ment.) Mild Jaundice Epidemic Hits Falls City Area Statesman News Service FALLS CITY A mild epidemic of infectious hepatitis, (yellow jaundice) was reported here Fri day. The Polk County Health De partment said the spread of the disease appears to have crested. One doctor said there were "19 or 20" cases among the 160 pupils at Falls City Elementary School. He said the epidemic apparently was confined to grade school pu pils, i Most of the cases here have been mild ones, the health de partment reported, with one child hospitalized briefly. Symptoms were described by health author ities as "similar to those of the flu." They said recovery usually required several weeks. Medical authorities report that hepatitis is usually spread by food or water, as when children share a glass of water or eat from the same fruit A visit of the Red Cross blood mobile, scheduled next Wednes day at Falls City, has been can celled because of the hepatitis epidemic. School was closed here Thurs day ' and Friday because of the Oregon Education Association convention. Father, Son War on Deer CHERRY GROVE, Ore. U) Leslie Lee, 58, and his son Friday began killing a herd of deer which they said had been damaging pas ture land on their farm near here. Lee, and the son, Everett Lee, 31, had been given a permit by the State Game Commission to kill 10 deer. But they said they didn't plan to stop at that num-1 ber. They told reporters they planned to continue killing the deer "until somebody stops us." They contended that the commis sion should have hired more herd ers to chase the deer off the Lee farm which is 12 miles west of Forest Grove. The herd has been estimated to number about 400. Inside five of the does shot by the Lees were eight embryo fawns. Roseburg Man Holds Wife at Gunpoint for Over 23 Hours ROSEBURG iSi An unem ployed construction worker sur rendered to police Friday after holding his estranged wife and four other persons at gunpoint in an ordeal that lasted 23 hours, state policeman Joseph A. C. Hay stead said. Arraigned on a charge of assault with a dangerous weapon was James Darrel Fanty, 28, Indio, Calif. Justice of Peace Ward Watson of the Sutherlin district set, bail at $1,000. ; Released Wife Haystead said the man finally threw his gun through a window and released his wife, Dorothy Alice Fanty, 21, from her two- room cabin after police had plead ed with him through the night. Haystead quoted Fanty as say ing he went to the cabin at 7:15 a.m. Thursday after brooding be cause she had refused to give him custody of their three little daugh ters, aged 2 and 3 years and 10 months. The cabin is near Oak land, Ore., 16 miles north of here, Haystead said this apparently is what happened: . Fanty found Mrs. Fanty with the children, a girl babysitter from the neighborhood and Mrs. Fanty's landlord, Alvin Maurice Crockrum, 31, who lives in the area. 104th YEAR Start of Salem's 1,000 Bush Planting of some 1,000 rose bushes Bash's Pasture. Mayor Robert White set the first bush, under the direction of City Manager J. L. Franzen and Walter Wirth, superintendent of parks. There will be 49 beds, one bed for each variety of roses, donated by Peterson-Dering of Scappoose. Pictured are Eugene Crothers, president of the Salem Rose Society; Mayor White and David Cameron of the Salem Park Commission. (Statesman Farm Photo) Site Bought For Church in South Salem Statesmam Newt Service SOUTH SALEM Land-clear ing will start Saturday for a new Methodist Church near Morning- side School, the Rev. Robert Mc Ilvenna of the sponsoring Leslie Methodist Church reported Fri day. ' 1 The church has just acquired title to a four-acre tract located one block south of Morningside School on the east side of 12th street, the Rev. Mcllvenna said. He reported the tract was pur chased from Wayne Loder, Sa lem, for $6,350. , The new church has been named Morningside Community Methodist Church. The pastor said plans call for erection of Sunday School facili ties and a fellowship room first "We expect to be turning dirt in April," he added. Chairman of the new church committee is Clarence Stacey. (Additional church news on page 7, sec. L) , Film Studio Signs Gobel HOLLYWOOD (JB Paramount Pictures Friday signed TV comic George Gobel to star in a movie this summer. . , Practically every studio in town bid for Gobel, winner of a televi sion Emmy as the medium's out standing new personality. ' Gobel will star in "The Lady Eve," with shooting scheduled lor July 5. Fanty drew the gun, which he had purchased in a Los Angeles pawn shop before hitchhiking here, and told them no one was to leave. Mrs. Fanty's sister, Mrs. Jerry Blaylock, became worried when . " m i a. sne am noi appear lor wotk ai an Oakland arrow factory at which the two were employed. Mrs. Blay lock called at the cabin after i pjn. She persuaded . Fanty to let the babysitter leave with the chil dren. Officers Plead Mrs. Blaylock' called police later, At 7:15 p.m. state policemen, sher- rifs deputies and Oakland and Sutherlin- town policemen arrived at the cabin and began pleading with Fanty to give up. While he talked with police Cockrum sneaked to safety out a door. Fanty held the gun at his wife's head and threatened to kill her, then himself. Hours later, at 6:05 a.m., he sur rendered his gun and was arrest ed. Mrs. Fanty, unharmed, went to the home of relatives to rest Fanty told police he and his wife had been separated if in months. vHe went" to see - her Wednesday and she turned down his plea to give up the children. he said. 2 SECTIONS 16 PAGES r V h) w li m 'mm got underway Friday to start Postal Battle to Ban Greek Classic Ends ; .. WASHINGTON (VP) The word went out from the Post Office Department Friday to let "Lysistrata" through. ' A collector's copy of the ancient Greek classic ran afoul of Post master General Summerfield's "clean up the mails' campaign last fall and was impounded by the Los Angeles Post Office as obscene. Then began a legal battle. Counsel for the man who had ordered Glasgow Set To Welcome Billy Graham GLASGOW, Scotland W) In dustrial, grimy Glasgow, which builds ships and exports Scotch whisky, is getting set for the emo tional and spiritual lift of receiv ing American evangelist Billy Graham Saturday. Bagpipes will wail welcome and. although the evangelist might not particularly approve it, his health is being drunk in hundreds of pub lic houses in this City of a million. He is the one subject of conversa tion. His coming is an event of vast-public interest. Graham arrived at the English port of Plymouth early Friday and was greeted by a hymn-singing crowd of 300. He then motored to London to take the overnight train for Glasgow. , There were , signs there will be a demonstration rivaling Graham's reception in London last year. Monday Graham will start his six-week revival in Kelvin HalL IkeVHigli wnv J Plan 'Jolted' By Sen. Byrd WASHINGTON W Sen. Byrd (D Va) delivered Friday what many legislators considered a jolt ing blow - to the Eisenhower ad ministration s highway -. building plan.- He said it would give .the federal government , "dictatorial control" over roads, and that a proposed 21 billion dollar bond issue amount ed to financial "legerdemain." The program would be financed in part by bonds issued by a gov ernment corporation. The bonds would not be counted as part of the federal debt. Byrd urged, instead, that road- building be expanded by allowing the states to collect the gas tax. Salem Portland Baker Medford North Bead Roscburc San Francisco Chicago new Yor Los Anceles Willamette River 0.8 feet. FORECAST (from U. S. weather bureau. McNary field, Salem): Mostly cloudy with chance of a few scattered sprinkles this morn ins: partly cloudy this . afternoon followed by clearing tonight; cooler with high near 49 today, low tonight near 26; mostly fair Sunday but only alijrhtly ... warmer. . Temperature at 12:01 a .m. "today was 38. SALEW PKECtPITATIOK Since Start of Weather Year Sept 1 This Tear . Last Tear Normal 3211 I7Jt3 ' 11.85 Max. Mia. Preclp. I M 11 M , 54 36 XI H 44 17 .00 I 3 17 .00 , 51 34 . .00 58 2S .09 68. SB . .00 I 40 28 DO . I 39 27 .17 75 48 .00 - POUNDDD 1651 The Oregon Statesman, Rose Garden i t - ;'t t 1 Salem's Municipal Rose Garden , in the unexpurgated edition by mail from London went into U. S. Dis trict Court here and asked: "By what right would our post master censor, the ages? "By what authority does he translate sex into six, light into darkness, literature into obscenity, 'Lysistrata' into 'pornography'?" Friday the Post Office Depart ment, after winning one prelimin ary legal skirmish, decided to call it quits and let the book go through. It acted, solicitor Abe McGregor Goff said, on assurances "that the book in question is not for general distribution and is intended for de livery to a collector of rare books." Said collector, or at least his agent, is Harry A.lLevinson, Bev erly Hills, Calif., book dealer who raised the rumpus! in court. Illustrations Cited! Anyway, it developed, the Post Office Department's chief objec tion to the edition being mailed to Levinson's was not in the text but in the illustrations. Department officials commented that with similar pictures even "Little Red Riding Hood" could be barred from the mails. "Lysistrata," written by the Athenian dramatist t Aristophanes about 411 B. C, deals with the story of a group of Greek wives who end a war by refusing to have relations with their warrior husbands until they quit fighting. RAIL STRIKE CONTINUES NASHVILLE, Tenn. un - Rail road and union representatives broke up a three-hour conference Friday night with the announce ment they would "hopefully continue-negotiations at 9 a. m. Sat urday toward settlement of the Louisville & Nashville railroad strike. "" Measures v Laws By HECTOR L. FOX Associated Press Writer Public welfare legislation to broaden relatives' responsibility, let thi awed and children of wel- fare families keen cart of their earnings, and strengthen the state's claims against estates ot deceased recipients was introduced Friday in the Oregon Senate. This package," much of which was recommended by an interim welfare study committee, is de signed to correct some abuses, to generally strengthen the welfare program and to hold down state and county costs where possible. , The House and Senate will meet again at 9 a.m. today, beginning regular aaturaay sessions, ai lii other bills would add the senior a.m. the Senate resolutions corn-; memor cf the State Unemploy mittee wiU conduct a hearing on ment Compensation Commission to a proposal 10 exiena uie voie 10 18-year-olds. The 15 welfare bills were intro duced by Sen. George Ulett (R), Coquille. chairman of the ways and means subcommittee on .wel fare. Three of them ask Congress Salem, Oregon, Saturday, March Plains Started to Give 6,000 Marion County ; Ch Faure Wins Reprieve for Government PARIS W Premier Edgar Faure, fighting to stay in office long enough to push through the arms-for-Germans treaties, won a 10-day reprieve early Saturday just as he seemed about to fall on the issue of tax dodgers. Gravely, Faure had told the Na tional Assembly he would resign if it heeded a small businessmen's demand for abolition of roving in spectors who check on frauds in tax returns. But the deputies appeared to fa- vor the small businessmen. Then in feverish negotiations a compromise was worked out which gave the government until March 28 to work out a settlement on the taxpayers' demands. Before then by March 25 the Senate is scheduled to complete France's ratification of the Paris treaties handing guns back to the West Germans and sealing, the French-German accord on Euro peanizing , the Saar territory. Only hours before, Faure had narrowly beaten down efforts in the Assembly to force an immedi ate new debate on the Saar. He won by five votes. The Saar, German rearmament, tax collectors, the budget and eco nomic power to rule by decree all became involved in the parlia mentary snarl. Bonn Unner JL 1 House. 0 tehs Rearmament BONN, Germany ur West Ger many's Bundesrat (upper house) approved Friday the Paris treaties to arm 500,000 Germans on the side of the West. The vote was 29-9. It completed the parliamentary ac tion required in Bonn. Also accepted was an agreement with France to Europeanize the coal-rich Saar Valley. All the treat ies now go to President Theodor Heuss for his signature. The Bun eestag (lower house) approved them Feb. 27. The ratification bills were sent to the President Friday night, but he announced after a 90-minute conference with Chancellor Kon rad Adenauer that he would study the constitutional situation before signing. The. President's office said early signature was not to be ex pected. Forecast Says Cloudy Today The Salem area basked in more sunshine Friday but the forecast for today calls for most - ly cloudy conditions and some'(Jf JiscnllOWCr scauerea rain, accuruing 10 weathermen. However, forecasters note that Sunday should be mostly fair. Temperatures will be slightly cooler today. The State Highway Department advised motorists to carry chains at Timberline and Government Camp in the. ML Hood sector. Icy spots were reported at Wil lamette Pass. to Bolster Welfare Introduced to ease restrictions on earnings of children and aged persons, and to pay-social security benefits to permanently disabled persons re Lgardless of age I : Two bm would iv state : -"J-'s f. ""11" ua-,c Anotner wouia require a mamea daughter . and son-in-law to help r support needy aged persons. They bow are exempt The proposals would let elderly persons and children of welfare families keep the first $10 and one third of their monthly earnings. Ulett said this would encourage needy families to engage in sea- ! sonal farm work without losing j weifare benefits. the Public Welfare Commission. let the commission subpena wit nesses in welfare heaning cases, appropriate $200,000 to pay for deputy district attorneys to prose cute fathers who won't support their children, and provide stiller 19, 195S PRICE 5c ildr en Polio SEots Paper Maintains Churchill Plans to Retire in 2 Weeks LONDON (JfiThc Daily Ex press said Saturday Prime Min ister ChurchilT wiU r e t i r e in about two weeks 'if present plans mature." Basing its prediction on "well informed opinion,? the Conser vative newspaper said the 80-year-old leade? will hand over his office to Foreign Secretary Sir Anthony Eden in the first week of April. Churchill will be leaving about then to spend the Easter parliamentary recess in Sicily. It will be his first real vaca tion in 18 months. Chirchill is a close personal friend of Lord Beaverbrook, owner of the Express until last year when he gave up techni cal control of the paper. The Express said it was be lieved Churchill would stay on in the House of Commons as an ordinary MP. State Worker Survey Chief Called to Salem The Oregon ways and means sub-committee Friday summoned Carl Robinson, vice president' of Barrington Associates, New York. to a conference here on his firm's controversial state employe salary ! and classification schedule. Robi son is to arrive Wednesday. He was summoned in a tele phone conversation in which Sen. John C. F. Merrifield, Rep. Orval Eaton and Civil Service Director Charles Terry participated. Members of the salary sub committee will await Robinson's arrival and a conference before making a decision on what course to foCow so far as the Barring ton report is concerned. , Sen. Merrifield, who compared the report to "50 pounds of jelly on the floor," told Robinson the initial work on the report was satisfactory, but that evidently the Barrington staff tried to hurry it. The result, he said, was confu sion. " Decision to summon the Bar rington executive to Salem was made following a Wednesday con ference called by Gov. Paul Pat terson. Those at the conference in cluded Senate President Elmo Smith, House Speaker Ed Geary, Sen. Merrifield, Rep. Eaton, Phil lip Joss, civ'l service commission chairman; two rf his commission ers, V. B. Kenworthy, The Dal les, and A. C. Newell, Salem, and Civil Service Director Terry. Complaints of state employees have been loud and long since the Barrington study was released earlier in the session. J Man Charged in Attempt Oil Life i a WASHINGTON m A Quincy El., man was charged Friday with trying to break into the White House March 5 "to shoot the Pres ident." The man, booked as Henry L. Layfield. 54, was formally arrested upon his release from a hospital where he had been sent for ob servation after White House guards seized him. Into Senate jail penalties for persons convicted of abuses. The Senate Education Commit tee tabled by 5-2 vote a proposal for , an advisory council of doctors for the Oregon Medical School, I .J. . .Vf Zl Fihu. " 01 mgner nxiucauon opposed it. There is another medical society bill asking legislature to reverse the Board of Higher Education's decision to admit paying patients to the new teaching hospital at the medical school. This bill is in the ways and means committee. The House completed legislative action on a bill designed to pre vent natural gas pipeline com panies from selling at . retail to Oregon consumers. This gas would be handled by existing gas utilities. The House passed and sent to the Senate two measures to abol ish the Oregon Flax and Linen Board, and to remove the offices of county surveyor and coroner from the constitution. (Additional legislative news on Page 3, Sec. 2.) vv No. 357 Action Awaits Reports From Salk Vaccine Detailed plans for possible ad ministration of the Salk polio vac cine to 6,000 Marion County children who will be eligible to receive it if it is licensed, are now being worked out, County Health Officer W. J. Stone an nounced Friday night Vaccina tions would begin in mid ApriL Vaccine this spring would be given only to those eligible chil dren, first through the fourth grades, whose parents sign forms requesting it, Dr. Stone said. The forms will be distributed through the schools beginning Monday. If reports on last year's Salk vaccine administration are favor able, it also wiU be available for private practice at about the same time, Dr. Stone said. Tests Studied The test run on the vaccine is now being studied and evaluated at the University of Michigan by Dr. Thomas Francis. If his report, due next month, is favorable Dr. Stone said he expects the vaccine will be made available within 43 hours. At the same time, he warned that parents should not "jump to the conclusion that the current planning indicated the vaccine already had been proved effect ive." Know in April - -Until April," he said, "we will not know if the vaccine is effect ive in preventing paralytic polio." Plans are being made now, he said, because vaccination work must begin immediately if and when the license is granted. If it is granted, the program this year would not be a test but the first use of a newly-established preventive measure. The polio vaccine will be fur nished from a supply being pur chased by the National Founda tion with March of Dimes funds. Without Charge If licensed by the federal gov ernment it will be made available to State Health Officers without charge for the child vaccination program. Supplies also would be distributed through usual chan nels at the same time. If the Francis report on last year s tests is uniavoraDie, ana the government does not license the vaccine, the program will b abandoned. Dr. Stone said. . Concessions Of Yalta Pact Upset Chiang WASHINGTON I - Chiang Kai- Shek "hit the ceiling" back in June 1945 when told of conces sions granted to Russia at Yalta; a high American diplomat recalled Friday. , The concessions which aroused the Chinese Nationalist leader's wrath involved rights in Manchur ia and were pledged to Marshal Stalin by President Roosevelt. The diplomat who told o( Chiang's reaction had personal' knowledge of 1945 events but de clined to permit use of his name, because of his present official po sition. ' T He said Chiang took the position that the Roosevelt concession vio lated either the letter or 1 spirit of assurances which the United States had given Nationalist China ' previously. Miss Gilles Installed To National Position CHICAGO m The 1955-5 , president-elect of the - National Education Assn.'s department of elementary school principals is v i i ' y- te 1 She was installed Friday at the : nriiwinaU annual convention here. 1 r r : . Today's Statesmen Sec Page Church ' I , ... 7 ' Classifieds . H 4-7 Comics . ... ...... t.u 8 Crossword II 3 Editorials l.- 4 Home Panorama I. ...... 6 LegisUtiv ll. 3 Markets JI 4 Sports '.. ..i'.l,2 Star Gazer I - 8 TV, Radio (Sal.) I.; 8 - TV, Radio (Son.)ll 3 - Valley :..-. L 3 World This WeelL.II 8 ;