2-Sec D-Statesman, Salem, Eisenhower Farm Assistance Plans Sent to Congress By EDWIN B. HAAKIN'SON WASHINGTON Cfl - President Eisenhower sent Congress Wed. nesday a program to help poor farmers. Sen. Russell D-Ga promptly and caustically said it might ' bring some relief in four or five generations. On the other hand. Rep. Hope (R-Kan). top Republican on the j -r New Reserve Project Gets Solon Backing Bv RUSSELL BRINES WASHINGTON UP The House Armed Services Committee Wed nesday endorsed a new billion dol lar drive to expand the military reserves but rejected a plan to draft youths into it. By a 31-5 vote, the committee approved a bill -designed to carry out President Eisenhower s pro gram to build up the trained re serves to 2.900,000 men by 1960 on a volunteer basis. The measure is expected to go to the House next week. In ' the compromise bill, the i Pentagon got committee support for the firft use of limited com pulsion in history to require re serve training. But it failed to get 11 ttiA 4iithnriti7 militof-v cnnl'H. men said1 they needed to enlarge reserve units, particularly those in the Army. Main Provisions These are main provisions: 1. Tapping a ,new manpower source, the Pentagon is authorized to accept between 100.000 and 250, 000 volunteers a year for six months training and another IVi years of reserve duty. v The volun teers, between 17-19, would slice 18 months from active service re quired by the draft, adding tha time to home reserve training. The Pentagon sought authority to use the draft if there were in sufficient volunteers for the mini mum number of trainees. The pro posal met rising congressional op position and the charge that it would open the door to Universal Military Training UMT). A sub committee removed the draft pro viso from" rewritten bill, and the full committee decided against it. Could Be Recalled - 2. Reservists who refuse to main- V O 111 1111111111UI11 11 dllllH ui 1U -1 1 ly drills and summer' camps, or the equivalent, could be recalled a srHv crvlf fnr a maximum of '45 days. The committee en dorsed this provision 32-2 after Secretary of Defense Wilson said the' new reserve program would ; be meaningless without. The Penta- gon proposed subjecting negligent reservists to a discharge other than honorable, but committee members called this too harsh. 3." The President is authorized to recall for active service up to one miftion reservists, without cpn sulting Congress, in any presiden tially declared emergency. Con gress withdrew this traditional presidential authority in 1932. Meanwhile, the House passed by voice vote and sent to the Seriate a measure authorizing a 250 mil lion dollar program in the next - three years to continue building more armories throughout the na tion. Multnomah Court Ruling Reversed The Oregon Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that an injured employe's recovery under the state's employers liabilitv law does not bar recovery under a private insurance policy. The action reversed a Multno- . mah County - Circuit Court order that set aside a jury verdict of $850 to Plaintiff Marvin S. Schweigert in his action against the Beneficial Standard Life In- . surance Co. baler near Harrisburg, received j a suosianuai amount oi money from his employer in an action under the liability act. Thereafter, he made demand on the insurance company for payment of hospi tal, surgical and medical bene fits. ' n uiuvi.iivii in me iwiii-y ex empted from, coverage anv loss for which benefits were provided j w ith a streamliner in a -tunnel here in any workman compensation or j Wednesday, employer liability act. Or a subsequent encounter with The supreme court reasoned the officials and the parents to that Oregon's liability law pro-1 whom they were referred for fur vides for no monetary befTents. i ther "action" , A parent whcT has expressly consented in writing to the adop tion of his child need not be served notice in the -adoption proceedings, he Oregon Supreme Court ruled Wednesday The opinion, written by Justice Walter J. Toozeaffirmed Judge Donald E. Long of the -ilultno-malr County circuit court in the case of James Edward Whetmore against Benny , J. Fratello and .wife. Whetmore, who had executed a proper written consent to the adoption of his child by his di vorced wife and her present hus- band. -Jiled suit to declare null and void the adoption decree. . j A fire station half a block fron Whetmore filed his suit in , the tunnel was called and a fire Multnomah County. The adop-: man started a fast run for the tion was entered by the Cpos entrance. Railroad officials, their County Court. Upon Judge Long's dismissal, Whetmore appealed to the supreme court. Whetmore claimed that, notwithstanding the written consent,, the statute requires that citation be served on a divorced parent who -does not have custody of the child. Ort.r Thurs., April 28, 195511 Ly (House Agriculture Committee, "What delights me in reading the message of the President is that something is going to be done right away." Eisenhower's special message supported a series of proposals by Secretary of Agriculture Benson. Eisenhower said they would help open wider the doors of oppor tunity to our million and a half farm families" who make less than $1,000 a year. Benson himself, in another statement, said the plan is to help these families with "new educa tional techniques, supervised cred it, vocational training and the pro viding of employment informa tion." 'Destroys Hope Russell, one of the most influ ential Democrats on farm legisla tion, studied it for several hours and then said the Eisenhower mes sage "practically destroys my hope that any real attack is to be made on this disgraceful situation." He said in a statement that the administration proposals "might bring some relief to the fourth or fifth generation of descendants of the present one and a half million underprivileged farm families, but it cannot, by any stretch of the imagination, be considered an im mediate effort to solve the prob- em. Among Benson's specific recom mendations were: "Launching of pilot operations in not less than 50 of the 1.000 low income countries during the com ing fiscal year." He said expert ence gained in these operations could be expanded later on a na tionwide basis. Now Ineligible A special fund of 30 million dol lars for the Farmers Home Ad ministration, a federal agency which makes loans to farmers un able to get credit elsewhere. These loans would go to part-time farm ers who now are ineligible. Appropriation of new money for research, soil conservation, the Agriculture Department's Exten sion Service, and the like. Also, for the low income farm areas, the program calls for in creased technical aid. state expan sion of vocational training, strengthening of the U.S Employ ment Service and inducements to industry to expand. House Speaker Rayburn 1 D Texas) said the proposals ap peared to be mostly an expansion of programs originally passed by Democrats over Republican oppo sition. He said Republicans at one time denounced these programs as "so- i cialism" but "they seem pretty popular now." rr . Wrt, 1)1 I FUCK oCllt tO Free Small Finger PORTLAND un The city's big disaster truck, acquired originally for possible World War II enemy bombings, roared, siren screaming, through the downtown district Wednesday. When firemen got to the origin of the call a bottling company office they found a stenographer, Mabel Hescock, with her right index finger caught in a tabulating machine. ; Sffe had been trapped along for 13 minutes before her screams attracted other employes. The finger was freed by a crowbar and a screwdriver. Fractured Leg Suffered bv -Man Richard Martin, about 60, 930 Broadway St., suffered a frac tured leg early Wednesday in a ; car-pedestrian accident at Chem- eketa and said police. Commercial streets. After city first aid men bound his leg on splints, he was taken to Salem Memorial Hospital by Willamette Ambulance. Police listed the car driver as Vergil Joseph Hack, 1435 N. 16th St. Narrow Squeak With Death Leaves Only Sore Bottoms (?) EVERETT. Wash. ( It's still unknown whether they or a sizable number of policemen and railroad ers were most scared, but it's an even bet that five youngsters will not soon forget their encounter The moppets, all boys and aged 14 and 15. deviated from the straight road home from school to scuttle quickly into the Great Northern Railroad s 2.440 foot tun- nel which undercuts this city. Police Called Someone saw them enter the big bore and he hastily called police, calling attention to the scheduled arrival of the Empire Builder in a few moments. The cops soon had all radios squawking for other cops to rush to the scene to 1) get the boys out of the tunnel and 2 stop the train, i if possible . W7i rmriorace Bomb-Murder Charge Today PORTLAND ur A man and the woman for whose love, he said, he killed her husband, will be arraigned here Thursday afternoon on first-degree murder charges. Circuit judge James M. Craw ford set the time Wednesday for hearing the pleas of Victor Lau rence Wolf, 45, and Mrs. Marjorie Smith. 34. , Wolf has said that he wired a bomb that blew up a car and killed her husband, Kermit Smith, 35, Portland attorney, last Thursday night. He insists she asked him to do it so they could get Smith's $21,000 insurance and go away together. But Mrs. Smith has maintained she had nothing to do with her husband's death. She said there was nothing between her and Wolf and that Wolf and her husband disliked each other. Changes Attorneys Mrs. Smith changed her attorney Wednesday. She notified Judge Crawford she would be represented by J. Elliott Busey instead of John Patrick Hannon, whom she en gaged Tuesday, and Hannon announced his withdrawal from the case. She explained to the judge she had designated Hannon in the mistaken belief that Busey. her attorney for years, did not intend to handle the case. Busey indicated 'he will ask Thursday for a delay in pleading. explaining he needs more time to prepare. Wolf has not yet engaged a lawyer. The court may appoint one for him. Early Trial Sought Dist . Atty. William Langlev indicated at' a conference wih Crawford be will seek an early trial date. Meanwhile, an expert said pussy willow stems and broken stem sections from near Ridgefield, Wash.; produced by the state in an effort to strengthen its case against Mrs Smith, "match con clusively." The pussywillow stems were found in the Smith home. Wolf said he picked them for her as they plotted the car bombing on a picnic. The expert who compared the cuts was Stanley MacDonald, chief of the Multnomah County sheriffs office criminal identification bureau. MacDonald. however, is the only expert who has looked over the pussywillow evidence. He said he would study them further and might send them to Oregon State College for analysis. Chilly Women Await A-Test SURVIVAL CITY, Nev. un Seven . shivering women dressed (like goblins were all set to run from radioactive fall-out. five min utes after Wednesday's scheduled A-blast. Twenty-seven men would have been right with them in hastv abandonment of a dust pit called a trench. And these same seven women and 27 men are ready to go through it all over again at 5:13 a.m. PDT Thursday if weather permits the twice-postponed test to be held. Mission 'Sought to Strengthen Defense' TAIPEI, Formosa to A U. S official said Wednesday the mis sion of Walter S. Robertson and Adm. Arthur W. Radford to For mosa was to strengthen not weaken defenses in the- Far East. Nationalist sources insisted that neither the assistant secretary of state nor the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff suggested withdrawal from the offshore is ! lands of Quemy nd th Mataus- IKE CRITICIZED CINCINNATI un - Sen. Joseph R. .McCarthy (R Wis.) Wednes day night declared President Eis enhower is the first president to "abandon" American uniformed men to the enemy. hair standing on end. said it was too late to stop the train. Officer Ed Downey arrived at the tunnel mouth just as the big train roared up and on. Hate to Look Everyone hated to look into the tunnel after the train passed but they had to and they did. Picking themselves out of a muddy ditch into which they had thrown them selves were the five boys, scared and dirty but unscratched. Cops and firemen converged on the quintet from both ends of the tunnel and bustled them off to ju venile officials. They got a stern lecture and a ride home to their parents who were advised of what had happened. ' It is not known whether the youngsters could sit down to sup per with the same speed with which they laid down in the tun nel. Now Shewing Open (:45 "DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE" Spencer Tracy, Lana Turner, Ingrid Bergman Cemedy Co-Hit "RICOCHET ROMANCE" Marjorie Main, Chill 'Wills 1 llwMfl 50c Phone 4-4713 20e Lass Wins WV V - ' .-- - rww. I i jT,-s I ...... Katherine (Kay) Ruberg, who graduates from North Salem High School in June, Wednesday was presented a four-year scholarship to Willamette University by the Salem Rotary Club. Presenting the award was Edgar Pierce, scholarship committee chairman. Immediate Start on Gas Pipelines Due SEATTLE W Laying of the first pipe of the 1,466-mile line ...u:u t i , th. Pift . th. -f0W Willamette University the Pacific Northwest from the ui.vi v ci. nn. Southwest s San Juan Basin wa3rh.wlar,h!p by the Salem RoUry promised immediately Wednesday, after removal of the last financial obstacles. The construction program, C. R Williams, of Houston, Tex., presi dent of the Pacific Northwest Pipe line Corp. said in New York, calls for putting down 40 miles of line the rest of this month, 123 miles in May, and maintaining a fast schedule for the rest of the work. Earlier in the day, the Securi ties and Exchange Commission at Washington, D. C, had permitted the company's registration certifi cate to become effective. That meant approval of the financing plans. Federal Power Commission approval had already been ap proved. Signal to Proceed The agreement for the 163 mil lion dollar financing, Williams said, is the signal for Pacific io "proceed with the laying of pipe from the Southwest at full speed." The line will run from the com pany's proposed natural gas pro cessing plant near Ignacio, Colo., to near Bellingham, Wash. It is to be completed the latter part of next year. Company plans, as registered with the commission, call for of fering for sale to the public 237,000 units consisting of one share of common stock and one 5H per cent S60 interim note. Each unit is to Je offered the public at S72 hich, minus $2.45 for underwriting discount and com mission, would net the company $19,960,8.10. Caa Bay Stock Pacific also will offer to holders of its presently outstanding com mon stock an opportunity to buy 1,549,100 additional shares at $1 a share on the basis of 2.221 shares for each share held of record at the close of business Wednesday. The company said the bulk of its financing will come from $93, 200,000 in 44 per cent first mort gage bonds to be sold to certain institutional investors and $26,800, 000 in 3ft per cent unsecured prom- lssary notes obtained from banks. The first mortgage bonds will fall due in 1975 with the promissory notes maturing from 1958 until 1962. ACORNS FROM THE WITH DEL MILNE You Know, ladias ... I think ifs yoor own fault! Yep! After much study and con templation I have come to the conclusion the female sex is rather dumb. Here the husbands work 5 days a week and what do the gals do? They sweat over the stve on Saturdays and Sundays, too just cui they aren't smart enough to say, "Listen, Buster today you take me out. It's my day offr But just to show my heart's in the right place I've arranged a bang-up send-off for you gals. A special feast to start off your 5-day week campaigns! It's a MOTHER'S DAY BUFFET real nice and fancy with all the trimmingi to be served in the Oak Room from noon on on Mother'! Day May 8th! ; Prices are right, too! $2.00 for adults 50c for children! Make it f t family affair! Remember In Salem - tfs the HOTEL MARION Phono 3-4123 V ' Scholarship J Salem Girl Presented Scholarship Katherine (Kay) Ruberg, North Salem High School, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clar ence E. Ruberg, 1783 Saginaw St., Wednesday was awarded a Miss Ruberg, a high school senior, plans to prepare for a foreign service career. The Ro- tarian scholarship will cover full tuition for the four-year curricu lum starting next September. An honor student at North Salem High. Miss Ruberf is sec ond vice-president of the student body and treasurer of the Na tional Honor Society. In 1053 she was named winner of the state high school women's debate division at Pacific University. She won first-place honors in the 1954 women1! debates at Linfield Col lege. She is a member of the Na tional Fcrensics League honor ary, past president of the junior class and former secretary of the Drama Club. She is also active in the Horizon Club and Girls' State. 4-H Spring Show Opens Here Today The Fifth annual 4-H Club spring snow opens 8:30 a.m. to day at the Izaak Walton League Hall and continues for the same 8:30 .m.-9 p.m. hours Friday and from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.na. Sat urday. Judging of exhibits starts today. At 8 p.m. Saturday the three day event will conclude with the style revue and awards program at the State School for the Blind. The Izaak Walton Hall is at 501 S. Cottage St. ' NOW PLAYING iei FUMMfi ieiitt nemo At IN 79 tXHOWl WOUNCfl NOW PLAYING! TWO ACTION HITS! XIXX DOUGLAS JEANNC CXAIN CXAHUE TRZTOB 2ND HIT Actually Filmed In New Zealand! JHJL. as YW'IIll mm TKUCOLOR M nut hatch mm EM CO:HIT Jt's a Laugh Explosion! Mickey Robert .Rooney Strauss "Th Atomic Kid" c JACK HAWKINS GiYNtS JOHNS At The Theaters Todav ELSINOBE "MAN WITHOUT A STAR" with Kirk Douglas, Jeanne Crain. and Claire Trevor. LAND OF FURY" "With Jack Hawkins. CAPITOL "TIMBER JACK" with Sterling Havden, Vera Ralston. "THE ATOMIC KID" with Mickvy Rooney and ElainDavli. GRAND ""THE SON OF DAVY CROCK ETT" with Bill Elliott and Iris Meredith. "THE SILVER STAR" with Ed. far Buchanan. NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IN "THREE RING CIRCUS" with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis: "DESTRY" with Audle Murphy and Mri Blanchard. ' HOLLYWOOD "DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE- with Spencer Tracy. Lana Turner and In grid Bergman. "RICOCHET ROMANCE" with Marjorie Main and ChU Wills. Steelworkers Ask Pay Hike For 600,000 PITTSBURGH UP) The CIO United Steelworkers Wednesday hold the basic steel industry a force in the nation s prosperous economy it wants a pay boost for 600,000 members employed In steel producing plants. David J. McDonald, president of the 1,250,000-member union, said notices were mailed out Tuesday to 96 basic steel and mining firms." Just how much of a pay hike ; the i'"ion will ask will be deter jnv '" its powerful 170-member W -licy Committee. That gr. 1 be called into executive sess . later probably next month. The wage talks will attract great interest because steel finds its way into almost every phase of Ameri can life. The steel industry hat hinted that any pay hike will be offset by a price increase. And if the price of steel goes up appreciably, it could up the cost of automobiles, refrigerators, bridges thousands of things. The wage talks are permitted under a reopening clause in the basic contract signed last year. That pact a two year agree ment gave workers an hourly package boost estimated by the union at 12 cents. Steelworkers now earn an av erage of $2,33 an hour. The reopening clause does not permit discussion of such subjects as a guaranteed annual wage, shorter work hours or working con ditions. McDonald already has said these subjects will not be brought up. Bid for School Work Accepted Salem School Board accepted Robert D. Morrow's low bid of $58,675 on the Richmond School addition Wednesday afternoon. The bids were received by the board Tuesday night. The addition will consist of four classrooms and is schedule! to be completed by next fall. J&JrrJ NOW! TcW," ALSO UMIT FOR A GUNMAN'S REVENGE! NOW PLAYING! In Vista Vision , . DEAN MARTIN JERRY LEWIS in "THREE RING CIRCUS" 2nd Technicolor Hit Audi Murphy Man Blanchard in "DESTRY" Fenced in Playland Far the Kiddies STS "SN OF I (INDIAN SCOUT) J! ALSO IUCHANAN 1 f Gates Open 6:15 U Show at Dusk 'A Vandals Attack Graveyards ffM IT j L i! WOODBURN Vandals were responsible for placing these gray markers in a sand pile at the Engineer's Sand and Gravel Co. oa the Wheatland Ferry road. The markers were found by Deputy Sheriff Roy Lamb, who took the picture. Grave Markers' Rightful Place Object of Search lUUtmti Ntwa Strvlra WOODBURN A funeral home here is faced with the &sk of trying to find the right place for about 40 grave markers removed Irom S Luke's and Pioneer cemeteries, near Woodburn, by vandals. The markers were ' discovered recently by a Marion County deputy sheriff in a sand pile near some old animal bones, 2V miles north of the Clear Lake Store on the Wheatland Ferry Road. The markers were turned over to the Ringo-Cornwell funeral home by the sheriffs office. DIVORCE ACTION MIAMI, Fla. (Mh-Police watch ed Herman Larsen, 22, burglar ize a hardware store and seized him when he came out, his arms loaded. Larsen explained: "I went 1 4.1 . A V 1 J A and figured this would make her divorce me." i . i jr- . v.v; '.it-." i KtuitA ... .-. .-Ki . . u. a. v.'MacajanMHB wmi.n .... s tn-fc v J. Wayne Green, eminent TrlchologjsOWSonstrated causes of baldness and how it- can be prevented. . How to Have Hair For a Lifetime To Be Demonstrated Here By Famous Trichologist Offers Written Guarantee An exclusive Interview by Steven Bright WICHITA (Special) J. Wayne Green, Director of Rogers, inc., Hair and Scalp Specialists, ex ploded the "myth of baldness" today in an exclusive interview. Baldness is unnecessary, cost - ly, and a plague to mankind," says Green "No man need be bald. No man need sutler tne stigma of premature old age that is forced upon him because he is losing his hair. The Rogers meth od of hair and scalp treatment can prevent baldness can turn colorless fun into healthy, grow ing hair can make you look youthful again." Demonstration To Be Held lm C lam fwm a n . J.Ti,ir ZtioA n, has collected hundreds of testi Th,l "yi,"il0?!ryumlthI-d.-0i monials of his ability to develop home treatment for the hair and scalp will be demonstrated in Sa lem, Oregon. Friday ONLY, April 29, at the Senator Hotel. Trichol ogist James Pierce will conduct the private, individual interviews from 12 noon until 9:04 P.M. on Friday ONLY. There is no cost or obligation, and you need no appointment. Reason For Paldness "There is always a reason for baldness," continued this nation ally known authority. "Hair can not grow through a scalp that is infected with dandruff, excessive !oiliness, or extreme dryness. A scalp that has .never been exer cised cannot be expected to pro--d u c e healthy hair." Men, and lyes, women, too, walk the streets i today, completely - devoid of na 1 ture's greatest ornament hair. Simply because they were not taught the basic rules of hair and scalp hygiene while they were growing up. "The simple answer," emphasized this expert, "is that children should be taught the same simple basic rules of hair ' and scalo hygiene that they are taught for the proper care oi their teeth. If this were the case. baldness would be a rarity today! Heredity Not Involved f Trichologist Green dodged no issues. He quickly took up the most widely spread theory of baldness heredity. "Mankind's un-realistie belief that baldness is hereditary stems from a misinter More Violence In Long Strike ATLANTA (J! -.''While there were new indications Wednesday of a settlement in the 45-day strike against the Louisville and Nash ville Railroad, the walkout of like, duration against the Southern Bell Telephone Co. was marked by re newed violence. An explosion wrecked Southern Bell's dial exchange in Greenback, Tenn.. Wednesday night, knocking out 400 telephones. The Tennessee Highway Patrol said it was search ingrfor a black coupe, reportedly seen speeding away from the build ing seconds before the blast which the patrol said apparently was caused by dynamite. Two persons were injured slightly near - the small building. The hornbill, an African bird, has nesting babits in which the female walls herself up in a hollow tne yZ unhl the little birds are ready to fly. Pd. Adv. pretatioiL of the theory of gene- tics. Theory does not state that anv person, must be bald because baldness "exists in the family. What it does say, is that in some ! families, a tendency exists to- warda an undernourished scalp." j The purpose of the Rogers Hair ana :caip cunic is to xeacn me methods of strengthening the ' weak scalp and nourishing it to a healthy, vigorous condition. "A healthy scalp will grow hair if it is not already completely bald," assures Green. . Is There Hope For The Completely Bald? . In his travels' throughout the United States end Canada, Green weak fuzr into healthy, mature hair. All of his clients have start ed with a private examination. hair and scalp analysis, and a diagnosis of the disorder. Green is quick, howevert to tell a hope less case that he cannot be help ed. "We strongly advise," says Greer, "that no oerson who is completely bald hold any hope whatsoever of regrowing hair. If there is any fuzz at all, we can restore a-healthv scalp condition and the hair will grow normally again as nature intended. Offers a Guarantee "Rogers, Inc., America's Fore most Hair and Scalp Specialists, offer a guarantee to any client who enrolls for treatment If he or she is not completely delight ed with results at the end of 30 days, the monev invested will be sraciouslv refunded." pledeed Green. "We must have satisfied clients. We must re grow. hair. After all, it is our best advertis ment" . Is Your Hair Healthy? If you have a' scalp disorder, or if yon are worried abont year btir, call Trichologist Jamee Fierce at the Senator Hotel in Salem. Oregon, Friday ONLY, from 12 noon -to 9:00 P3L The public is invited. The examina tions are private and open to men and women. Yon do not need an appointment and yon will not ho embarrassed or obligated la any way. . .