tUc 2-StH4Slm, Salem, Or., Monday, May 16, 1955 Mayor Greets Torclibearers at Council Fire r T 'A Ihowm With the Salem-area Camp Fire Girls Torchbe'arers at Saturday'i Grand Council Fire at South Salem High SchoJ gymnasium is Mayor Robert White of Salem, back row, center. From the left, the girls in that row are Itancy Cornwell, Bonnie Jean Korth, Betty Lou Bart, Jean Ha worth, Zola Peterson; middle row, Shirley Marks, Susan Caspell, Kathy Doner, Betty Self, Jean Minto. La von Heider, Judy Baker; front row, Ann Ha worth, Jacqueline Graber, Janie Roberts, Lynne Johnson. Silage Day Planned On Jefferson Farm By LILLIE L. MADSEX Farm Editor, The Statesman been planned for Wednesday at the Orval Rowie farm on Parrish Gap While grass growth has been re- ad three raile northeast of Jef- tarded by chilly weather in the1""": Willamette -Valley this spring, this past week has given it consider able impetus and cutting for grass silage will soon be at hand. As a forerunner to the grass silage making, a Silage Day has Illinois Youth Charged With i. . v Fatal Shooting RALEIGH. N.C. UH Richard Kluckhohn, 21, Evanston, 111.,' text book salesman charged with mur der in the bizarre shooting of an Arlington Va., government work er here, will face a preliminary bearing in city court Monday. Miss Bernice SeaweD, 43, a placement i officer with the Vet erans Administration, was wound ed fatally Friday as she stood in the rain with her sister in a park .ing lot waiting for an attendant to bring their car. Officers said she was shot with a slug from a German Luger pis tol, fired from a hotel room occu pied by Kluckhohn. Kluckhohn was arrested 31? hours later in Chapel Hill, 30 miles from here. ' Kluckhohn has made no state ment but his attorney, Howard Manning said Saturday "It was a case of an 'unloaded gun' .... as accidental as an automobile acci dent." He said Kluckhohn was not aware of the shooting until his ar rest. Manning said he will ask that the charges be dismissed at, the hearing, -j . The boy's parents. Dr. and Mrs. Clyde Kay Maben Kluckhohn, both members of the Harvard faculty, arrived here Sunday and visited their son in jail. Kluckhohn's fi ancee, Ellen Waldron. 21, of Chi cago, also flew here Sunday and visited him in jail. Kluckhohn is employed as a text bock, salesman for an Evanston book firm. Dr. Kluckhohn said "We are con vinced that it was an accident, more than ever now that we have come here we are convinced that it was an accident. j Klamath Falls i Persons Cited For Gambling KLAMATH; FALLS l Klam ath County's two top law enforce ment officers led a raid early Sunday at a cafe on the outskirts of Klamath Falls. Two persons were arrested and a quantity of : card playing equipment was .' seized. j , The raiding party was led by Disk Atty. Frank-Alderson, Sher-J iff Murray Britton and State Po lice Sgt Earle Tichenor. Other police surrounded the cafe while hese three entered and ordered coffee. Then. they walked into a back room and found six men playing poker, they said. Armed with a search warrant issued by Dist Judge D. E. Van Vactor, they seized two card ta . bles, several decks of cards and a quantity of poker chips. . Mrs. Billie Lee Langford, 31, cafe operator, and Dave Ardie Alexander, 36-year-old card deal er, were ; arrested on charges of ; "playing a gambling game, Each posted $230 bail They were ordered to appear in court Monday morn ing i to answer l the charges. The other five were released after making statements to police about the game. - i The sheriff said $79.50 in cash ' taken from Alexander will be held as evidence. - "1 -.- - Rowie's 50 acres of permanent grass and legume plantings will be ready for storing at that time in both upright and trench type silos. , Demonstration Planned The demonstration has been planned for 10 a.m. and the Jeffer son Lions Club Auxiliary will serve luncheon at noon at the farm. All machinery distributors and dealers are welcome to show their machinery that is adapted to mod ern hay and silage making, re ports Ben A. Newell, Marion County agent vho is making ar rangements for the day. Some of the machines, promised for the day include new hay chop pers, swathers, loaders, and rakes, all of various makes. High Protein Grass silage stored early is high in protein, vitamins and total digestible nutrients, Newell said Sunday afternoon in announcing the meeting, and urging other grass farmers to get ready for their silage chopping. ParC of the Rowie dairy set-up that will interest many livestock people, Newell believed, is his "green chop" program used for the past two years. Pastures are cut and hauled to the cows in stead of the cows being brought out to the pastures. Last season, pastures were cut six times and taken to the cows. Everyone who is interested, in the making of green grass silage is asked to come to this meeting. ECONOMY FIRE BREVARD, N. C. (AP) After taking bids on the razing of an outmoded house on the campus, Brevard College took a cheaper way out and had the building burned.' Cooperating was the fire department, which used the flam ing structure for a fire-fighting demonstration. Man Starts Solo Cruise Across Ocean HONOLULU m Florentuio Das, father of eight, started alone Saturday in a 24-foot homemade sailboat on a 5.000-mile cruise to the Philippines despite U.S. Coast Guard warnings. As a measure of confidence, Das took along a motorocycle "to tour the Philippines." Five hundred friends saw him off. f "There's nothing to worry about,' Das said. "Out there I'U feel like a king." The Lady Timarau carries 120 square feet of sail on her 16 foot mast. She also has two 23 horse power outboard motors, water, fuel and three months' food supply. Das, 37, hopes to make the trip in 45 days by sailing south to the equator and then west. The last man to attempt a solo trip to the Philippine from Hawaii was Ira Sparks of Peru, Ind. Sparks, a carpenter, sailed Jan. 11, 1924, and arrived May 25 but later disappeared on a trip to Singapore. Judfre ReiectS Freefinm Plpn niiryf0mTone Firc Hydrante Rwult of Official Compromise Hunger-S triking Finn Twins SAN FRANCISCO LB Bluntly refusing to "fall prey to the idiocy of the moment," a federal judge Saturday denied - freedom to the Los Angeles "Finn twins." who are on a hunger strike at the fed eral prison in Springfield, Mo. -Federal Judge Edward P. Mur- Anti-Colonial Expected in Saigon Sector SAIGON. Indochina (UP) French troops sealed off Saifon's European sector Saturday and warned all white residents to stay indoors because of expected anti colonial demonstrations. French Expeditionary Corp3 Commander Gen. Paul Elv or dered his '40,000 battle tested troops, backed by 400 tanks and armored cars, to smash any tempt at anti-European violence ' The demonstrations were called for Sunday by the South Viet Nam revolutionary junta or committee. The eight man group also was ex pected to call for immediate es tablishment of a republic. The junta claimed the demon stration was not aimed against the French. But blaring sound trucks circulated through Saigon and the streets of adjacent Cholon calling the two million inhabitants to as semble in the market place at 9 ajn. Sunday to mark their hatred of colonialists and - their puppet emperor Bao Dai. phy, who acted as trial judge at the "citizens arrest" trial of 41-year-old Charles and George Finn in Los Angeles, ruled here late Saturday it would be "unheard of in the annals of our history" to vacate a prison sentence because prisoners refused to eat. ! The widely-publicized case grew out of a dispute of a government surplus plane the twins bought from a ,Kern ' County school district. The Finns made what they called a "citizens arrest" of U. S. Attorney Laughlin Waters in Los Angeles in January, 1954. No Crime' They were sentenced to a year in prison for conspiracy to prevent Waters from discharging official duties, and for forcibly impeding him in their performance. Sentence came after the twins, who j insist they have committed no .crime, re fused to accept probation. I Last July IS the twins ended a 23-day jail hunger strike in Los aW Angeles when they were freed on $1,000 bond each pending an ap peal. . . U. S. Judge William C. Mathes awarded the twins the surplus C46 plane last Dec. 9 and ordered the government to pay the Finns $15 a day rent for the plane from the date it was seized, Sept. 21, 1952. Pleas for clemency for the Finns come from high sources. j Probe Asked NAVY ENSIGN ON TOUR RABAT, Morocco (J) Two U. S. Navy ensigns have set off in a" little 36-horsepower Volkswagen truck for a 90-day tour of 25 coun tries in Africa, the Middle East and Europe. They are John P. Leehmius of Erie, Pa., and Stew art J. Carlson of Tulsa, Okla., both on leave after serving 18 months at Sidi Yahiamroc. . SUDBURY, Ont OB A two tone aint job is in store for this city's 370 fire hydrants. The board or control wanted traditional all red models. The fire chief wants all-yellow, saying that color would be easier to spot at night The city council compromised on red bases, yellow bonnets. ' UALITY U. S. Senator Thomas H. Kuchel (R-Calif.) announced he was ask ing Federal Director of Prisons James Bennett to investigate the case and report to the Justice De partment on the twins condition. James Roosevelt. Democratic representative in Congress from the Finns home district, appealed directly to President Eisenhower, "respectfully urging" immediate executive clemency. j . Rep. Joseph F. Holt, (Rep. Calif.), among others supporting the twins, said he intended to "find out who originally started the ac tion against the Finns" and their airplane. . '' . aaiem, vregon t" ' rennet t. - v v ' ' ' . a vv - r " ' 1 The New Look . . . Pink Background Pongee Prints (ol5) eJ(2) yd. New Pongee Prints in oil new pink backgrounds are a luxury blend of acetate and pima cotton look, feel like silk! Hand washable. 44-45". MEZZANINE MACHINE WASHABLE COTTON DENIM YDGE. Terrific, because you sew these denims into sports togs, fashions ... home decorating needs, too! They're Sanforized . . . pop into your washer, wear like mad, look trim and smart everywhere! Buy in solid colors. MEZZANINE yd XT TV Appearance Nets Jail Contract ROSEBURG (UP) Tom J. Umphras of Roseburg, Ore., has been awarded a one - year "con tract" as a result of his recent appearance on a Los Angeles television program. Umphras appeared on a Los Angeles television program with an invention he claimed would alleviate smog. During the show he mentioned money troubles at Roseburg, and Los Angeles police were waiting for him by the end of the commercial. Umphras was sentenced to a year in the state prison Friday by Douglas County Circuit Judge Judge Carl Wimberly, after he pleaded guilty to passing spurious checks. . 10 DAYS ONLY AUniUERSACV SPECIAL mm ElEORIC MM Only ilifeJeJ Less King Size Trade-in OPERATION PET DOG BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (AP) To give peace of mind to John ny Green, 11. the-Army exhumed the body of a mongrel dog. John ny feared one; of several dogs destroyed by the Army tu his wiping pet. It wasn't. - 95 .; Cherry City Electric OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P. M. 339 Chamtktta St. Phen 2-6762 In change there Is opportunity )f I ,7 i 5 i ft K i '' 7 y , ... ; W 7 i 0"Dfl"Lfll?SQDff,, but It'c changed a lot In recent yoaro I Th ere are a number of reasons behind the cur rent trend to do-it-yourself." Among them there's been a big movement to the suburbs in recent years more than half of America's families now own their homes ' more of us have more free time these days many jobs have been made easier for the amateur Here are a few of the results: over half our fami lies have taken up "do-it-yourself." 11 million homes now have workshops. Sales of portable power tools have soared twentyf old in eight years. 35 million women make their own clothes. TDo-it-yourselT gives the opportunity to im prove one's living and to feel the solid satisfae-' tion of creating something useful or beautiful . with ones own hands. Here is another significant example of the extent to which we are doing things for ourselves. 93 million Americans are using life insurance today to provide for their own on their own. They are doing this, of course, with the help and advice of their life, insurance agents. ... One of the main purposes for which they use life insurance is to guarantee money for the family in case of the father's death. And they ara also using life insurance for many other things to cover the mortgage ... to assure money for the children's education ... to help , build an adequate retirement program. In fact, more than half of all life insurance benefits are now paid to the polkyholden themselves. Today, life insurance is Americds most popular form of thrift. ,1' 9 .?0X' lj. Institute of Lite Insurance Central Source of Information about Life Insurance 4S8 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YOBX 22, N. I. ' '- - " " ' - ,'