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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1955)
2-(Soc. IVSratosman, Salem, Or., Friday, Juno 3, 1933 59-18 Senate Vote Gives Approval to Foreign Aid Plan . WASHINGTON I The Senate Thursday Bight passed the entire 14 billion dollar foreign aid pro gram President Eisenhower has asked for the year starting Juljrl. .-The vote was 59-18., Tor the first time since 1930, the Senate failed to remove so much Sweet Home Mother Finds Missing Son TJKIAH, Calif, (Jt Mrs. Thelma Stockett. 47, Sweet Home, Ore., found Thursday the six-year-old on she has accused her divorced ftusband of stealing. f Sheriff Reno Bartolomie slid Senry Stockett, 49. was held on the child stealing charge in Palo itto where he had refused to tell Jnyone where the boy, Frank Paul tockett, was. 1 Sheriff Bartolomie said Stockett, who divorced his wife in Mexico fa January, 1952, lured Frank Paul Into his car at Sweet Home May 18. The father and boy disap peared. ! Mrs. Stockett learned a member of Stockett's family would appear fit court at Palo Alto June 1. She found her husband there and he was arrested on . her complaint Wednesday. : f She learned from" one of Stock ott's family that he was living 'somewhere around Ukiah. Mrs. Stockett arrived here this morn ing and asked Sheriff Bartolomk's aid. 1 In a check of stores and banks Stockett's. Sherwood Valley ad dress tamed tra in a Bank of America credit application.-' Lt Curtis Hollingsworth took Mrs. Stockett to the Sherwood Valley school where they found Frank Paul- ' Candidate Billy Graham Predicts Small - Paris Meetings . PARIS, France Ufl American evangelist Billy Graham, who launches his first crusade in a pre dominanthr Catholic country here next week, said Thursday he hopes to encourage more Frenchmen to to church and read their Bibles, The , North Carolina preacher stressed that Catholics are invited te hii 4 revival meetings, even tiough the meetings, are sponsored by Pr:Ustants. V; Vt"1- . Fresh;: from a seven-week; cam ' pfcign in Britain where he preached to millions, Graham said he was counting en only three or four thousand persons a night at his Baria meetings. But he predicted ti newsmen that even if only a fw thousand come "it will have an effect on religious life." 'Graham vigorously denied he night be leading an anti-Catholic crusade. The Rev. Jean Paul Be spit, chairman of the French Evan gelical Alliance which is sponsor , iitg the Graham campaign, said -that if any of Graham's French converts indicated they wanted to join the Catholic church they would be encouraged to do so. Sfc Helens Mill Plans Reopening ST. HELENS, Ore. - St Helens' two largest . industries, closed by a strike since March 31, announced Thursday they (will at tempt to reopen Monday. The management of Fir-T e x Insulating Board Co. and Western Idsulated Board, Inc., said they hoped to reach an agreement with the AFL Lumber and Sawmill porkers Union by then. If not, they will reopen anyway, Le announcement said. as one penny from the global aid authorization bill which Eisenhow er on April 20 called "an indis pensable part of a realistic and enlightened national policy ..." The bill now goes to the House. Soundly defeated in the Senate were a score ot amendments 10 chop millions of dollars from vari ous parts of the measure. The money itself still has to be voted in a separate biH. Direct Aid The measure authorizes $1,595,- 000,000 in direct military aid to friendly foreign nations, more than half for Asia, and the balance in variety of economic assistance programs, including a 200 million dollar development fund for the "free arc" of Asia. Already authorized for the new program was an additional 122 million dollars in defense funds, making the total precisely the $3,530,000,000 Eisenhower recom mended. Sen. George fD-Ga). chairman of the Foreign Relations Commit tee, mustered a comfortable ma jority .to beat back most amend ments, including efforts to cut the overall total, to compel the admin istration to handle a specified por tion of economic aid as loans rather than grants, and to send the measure back to committee. Fight Planned Sen. Ellender (D-La), author of defeated amendment to reduce the total by one billion dollars, served notice he would fight for reductions in the forthcoming bill which will tarry actual funds for the program. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee made only two or three changes in the measure as recom mended by President Eisenhower and ail were upheld in "the Sen ate. One stripped from the bill a sec tion which would have empowered John B. BoQister to fire up to 50 per cent of top-grade employes in the Foreign Operations Aministra- tion (FOA). FOA expires June 30 and Hollister will head a new eco nomic aid agency in the State De partment starting July 1. Sens. Knowland (R-Calif), the Republican leader, and Capehart (R-Ind), sought to reinstate a soft er provision in the Senate, but that went down in a tie vote. A tie de feats an effort to alter a bill. Llmltatioaa A second change by the Foreign Relations Committee pinned spe cific limitations to the 200 million dollar Asian economic develop ment fund. WASHINGTON UP) Pacific Northwest senators split 4-2 Thurs day as the Senate passed by a 59 18 vote and. sent to the House the SftrbOUon dollar, foreign aid au thorization. The voting, on strictly party lines, found Republican senators Dworshak and Welker of Idaho joining the minority. Democratic senators Jackson .and Magnuson of Washington and Morse and Neu berger ot Oregon voted with the majority. Olympia Official Switching Parlies OLYMPIA (UP) State Land Commissioner Otto Case said Thursday he was leaving the Re publican party and would seek re-election next year on the Demo cratic ticket v Case, dean of Washington office holders, said he was changing parties because of his conflicts with Gov. Arthur B. Langlie and Attorney General Don Eastvoid both Republicans, over adrrunis- irauon ox uie puouc mna depart ment. I - I -v f -o -V - I -J I , X II Charles C Edwards who will ep- pose Gus Moore for potltioa ea Salem School Board. Petitions for School Board Posts Checked Petitions for Gus Moore and Ed ith Brydon. candidates for the Sa lem School Board, are now being checked for verification of signa tures, according to Connell Ward, clerk-business manager for the Sa lem district. Moore will be opposed by Char es C. Edwards of the Howell-Ed wards Funeral Home. Moore, chairman of the board this year. will be succeeded by Harry Scott as chairman. Mrs. Brydon is a candidate to serve out the unexpired term of Mrs. Fay Wright. She was appoint ed to the board following Mrs. Wright's death. John R. Moore, secretary of the AFL Retail Clerk's Union, has an nounced his intention to oppose Mrs. Brydon. but his petition has not been filed as yet. Ward said. Stork Wins Race Twice WORKER ELECTROCUTED VANCOUVER. Wash. (-Martin M. Waleske, 20, Vancouver, was killed and another man severely burned Thursday when a piece of farm machinery touched a high voltage line northeast of Vancou ver. Q. Do you want thaAC0RNS FR0M THE best Southern Stylo Fritd Chicken mon-f y can buy? y WTM oel milne A. It may bt purchased for only $1.50 for a full dinner at the Oak Room Hotel Marion, Salem. Phone 3-4123. MADRAS, Ore. (UP) The ioke about people racing the stork to the hospital isn t so funny to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mclnturff, Jr.. of Madras. They have made the hurried. harried jaunt twice in one year. and both times the stork won. Not only that, but the two, children were born at almost the same spot. On May 31. a dash from Madras to Pioneer Memorial hospital in Prineville 38 miles away was cli maxed with the birth of a girl. Aletha Louise, on the outskirts of Pnneville. On July 17. 1954. the Mclnturffs were in a hurry to reach the hos pital. A son, Tommy Joe, was born on the same outskirts of Prineville. Mother and four pound, three- ounce daughter are doing fine, Hammarskjold Encouraged by Release of GIs UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. Secretary General Dag Hammars kjold said Thursday he is encour aged by Red China s release of four American aviators. He added he will not rest or relax his efforts until 11 other American' fliers are! sent home from Communist Chi nese jails. The 11 Americans still held may be a more difficult case. They were convicted by Peiping of alleged espionage against Communist Chi na. The four fliers released earlier this week were not charged with anything at the time Hammars kjold talked with Premier Chou En-Lai in Peiping last January about the IS fliers. ' Hammarskjold at a news con ference, refused to be drawn into row about who gets the credit for release of the four men. ( He was asked to comment on a statement by V. K. Krishna Men- on, Indian diplomat wno recently talked with Chou, that the fliers were released at the request of the government of India. Hammar skjold smiled and said he had read that with "some little surprise." He said Menon will tee him on his arrival at the U. N. June 9. U. N.' officials claim Hammar- skjold's efforts were responsible. Hammarskjold refused also to discuss Menon's suggestion that one reciprocal way for the United States to decrease tension was to express regret that a plane carry ing Red Chinese diplomats to the Bandung conference was destroyed by sabotage. He questioned Menon's further suggestion that tension would be eased by permitting more Chinese students to return to Red China He said 'tis information is that all who had applied for exit permits had been given them. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., chief U. 5. delegate to the U N., and Gen. Nathan F. Twining, Air Force chief of staff, called on Hammarskjold and personally thanked him for his efforts to free the men. California Lad Located Safe 1 YREKA, Calif, tf! Bobby Davenport, 7.. lost In the moun tains since Monday noon, turned up at the Oak Bottom ranger sta tion Thursday, the sheriff office reported. He was reported " in pretty good shape." His mother just happened to be at the station when he wandered in. Bloodhounds had been flown in from Oregon in the search for the which he disappeared and repeat edly returned to a point on a tur bulent creek which plunges out of the Marble Mountains into the Salmon River near the tiny com munity of Somes Bar. Long Illness Takes Life of B. W. Wilmot Bernard William Wilmot. 70. 840 Market St., died Thursday at a Salem hospital he entered a few hours aerlier. A resident of Salem for 18 years, Wilmot was born Nov. 18, 1884 in Springfield and lived In Eugene and Portland before moving here. Ha had been ill about three years. Hi leaves the widow, Mrs. Inez Wilmot, Salem; son Orval Wilmot, Areata, Calif.; sister, Mrs, Bessie Hyland, Salem; two brothers and two half-brothers, Walter L. Wil mot. Mead, Wash.; C. W. Wilmot, Phoenix, Ariz.; Ermyle E. Buell, Spokane: George C. Buell, Boice; four grandchildren. Services will be 2 p.m. Monday at the Virgil T. Golden Funeral home. Burial will be at Hestlawn Cemttery. At The Theaters ' Today EXSIXOBB THI MAGNinCENT MATA DOR" with Maureen 0'Hr and Anthony Qutnn. -TREASURE Of RUBY HILLS" with Zachary Scott and Crof Mathews. CAPITOL ' "SON OF" SINBAD." with Dale Robertson. Sally Forrest, Lili St, Cyr and Vincent Price. "SEMINOLE UPRISING." with George Monlf ornery.' GRAND "THE BRIDGES AT TOKO-RI. with Grace Kelly and William Holden. "FAR COUNTRY with James Stewart, Corinne Calvet and Ruth Roman. NORTH SALEM DKIVK-IN - "MA Sc PA KETTLE AT WAI KIKI" with Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride. "SMOKE SIGNAL" with Dana Andrews and Piper Laurie. , HOLLYWOOD "JUPITER'S DARLING" with Esther WiUiams and Howard Keel. "FIRE OVER AFRICA" with Maureen O'Hara and MacDonald Carey. Keizer School Ayvards Made Statesman News Berries KEIZER Earline Boardrow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. Boardrow, North River Road, was named recipient of the Keizer school scholarship award at eighth grade promotion exercises Thurs day night Eighty-one students were promoted.' The citizenship award went to Larry Franklin Banns, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jake Schmidt of Harmony Drive. The scholarship winner is selected by the faculty, while both faculty and students participate in naming the recipient of the citizen ship award. BROKEN PELVIS Charles L. Taber, upon whom push-truck load of storage batteries rained Wednesday, sustained a broken pelvis. Salem General Hos pital reported Thursday. Taber, 30, 228 Patterson Ave., was wheeling batteries into a boxcar at the Gould-National battery plant when the flat sheet between car and loading cock . slipped. Taber is in "good" condition otherwise. Technicians to Lose Status Of NoriMis : W L' M V WASHINGTON WH j Sergeants and corporals are going jto be more like they were in i the! old Army days, come next month. ; Starting July. 1.1 sergeants and corporals who are ! leaders of sol diers will be entitled to those hon ored and traditional designations. There will be no more technical sergeants and other -specialist rat ings bearing the titfe of sergeant and corporal. H i f ' The change has I been arranged to restore the prestige of : troop leaders. It means that technicians thereafter will be called specialists, the lowest ranking, being designat ed specialist third; Class and the highest master specialist The master specialist and the master sergeant will; get the same pay, even as the; .troop leading corporal will draw; the! same sal ary as the specialist, third class. But the technical men will lose the privilege, which; mushroomed during World War II.: of being called sergeants arid cc-rporals. Insignia for the i sergeants and corporals will remain unchanged. The specialists Willi wear sleeve patches displaying a spread eagle and stripes to indicate: relative rank, resembling those won by the Navy's petty officers, il Vi : I It TrafficFines Draw Blood9 Three men found guilty Thurs day of traffic offences had all or part of their fines; suspended by Municipal Judge ! Douglas Hay provided they contribute a pint ot blood each to the Red Cross blood bank. - "The bank is getting about half what it can use locally," Hay ob served of his motives later. "I figure it won't hurt the city of Salem," said he of the $12.50 in fines denied the city's coffers. The two speeders were required to pay half their jS10 fines and the one jaywalker was not re quired to pay any of bis $2.50 fine. Large, Crisp Head jj LIMIT " Heed California Whites K SPUDS lb. LIMIT PC Ho. 1 Fruit Bananas o) lbs. for iSiaiSiSSiiiSZiii : Our Fish War Not Caught With Bait or lures. Thay'ro a NET Result (And Much Fresher Than This Joke : ine dan onop a great sandwich Portland Road at th North City Limits fee Orders to Co' Phona 2-670tt I Gates Open C:45 Show at Dusk It's Two Croat Shows That The Whole Family Will Enjoy! "MA AMD PA KETTLE AT WAIKIKI" Starring Morgorie Main Percy Kilbride 2nd Big Hit Dana Andrews Piper Laurie In "SMOKE SIGNAL" ! Also Kartoonascope Four Cartoons In Cinemascope lac BMBBW1S NOW PLAYING! V &OUOUS COLM Msnins " MAUREEN O'HARA ANTHONY QUINN at atmmw mum' , -Exciting Co-Hif- 50c Fiona 44713 20 C -jupntrs DARLING Ctaeaaaseepe - Technicolor Esther Williams ( $ Howard Keel J Mart e Gower Champion J . Technicolor Co-Hit t "FIRE OVER AFRICA , : Maureen O'Hara "- - yepon14 Carey HOLLYWOOD KIDS CLUB MATINEE TOMORROW - 1 to 4 P. M. 1 Hour of Cartoons Pins SERIAL - "GHOST RIDERS , 1 OF THE WESr Special Matinee Feature: 'CORKY OP GASOIINI ALLEY -Also-"MAGOG'S EXPRESS" 50c Till 5 JAMSS A. USCHKACtl THE BRIDGES AT TOKO -HI TECHNICOLOR ndHit . '1. . iir! m Take the Family Out to a Movie TONIGHT! PIX THEATRE W00DBURN, ORE. Thurs. - Fri. Sat. i In Color ! "TEN WANTED MEN i with Randolph Scott ; ALSO : "CANNIBAL ATTACK" with Johnny Weiamuller STARTS TODAY CONTINUOUS FROM 1 P. M.I 1V I' On of too aoecfocotof MHBk f So sooriof slot of oml f irol - L j . . , ; HOWARD HUGHES presents DALE ROBERTSON - SALLY FORREST iiii.m.wNrMwiirv i f V rittM by AUBREY WIS 8 ERG hi UCR fOLUXFEN 7W -. WAR1 BLANCHARD V) lUf WrittM fef AUBREY W1SICRG fi JACK FOUXXfEN i V 1 ft SVPJ9SCOPE WORDS OF TERROR ECHO ACROSS THE WEST THI WIST? GREATEST SAO MINT Of bCR1U Catrtt MONTGOMERY kfdUUUVJLiLal a coiuwrA nenm Plus: CINEMASCOPE SHORT THE NEW HORIZON" Gates Open 6:45 Show at Dusk! FOUND! WV'JSSSSn TRIBE! N craalwrcsl UacMar4 tif hi MVIf t k m it s m s V LOST 17. EAR! n I- . - n f V COLOR S.a NEW HIT! IALF-WATTOHEU" hUwd by MATT FREED Fiimsl by tk. ssi tin. Va. I IrsotU I c "Alollawt Attradiaa - II ()() ecu Whaf mm Buy jewe SHORTENING VITA FOOD DOG FOOD ARMOUR CIOVERBIOOM CHEESE SWIFT'S EROOKFIELO CHEESE SWIFTS CHOPPED BEEF LARGE 46 OL TOMATO JUICE UR6E 4o OL Pineapple Juice TASTY FAK CREAM STYLE 3t w -. fflrlW 2 ; W CORN TOMATO SOUP "i" MAINE SARDINES Lean Tender Smoked J(0 0 Picnics ib. nj)n) Home-Cured Fresh Frozen T (5t vKwUJ By the e 111 lb plece Pork Liver t-jav-' 14. Sliced Sanfiant Skinless Wieners ib. 3 Pounds for $1.00 Attend Our Swift Magic Meal Cooking School June 7th North Salem High School Aud. -Ask for Your FREE Tickets At Our Stores SAVING (ENTER Vi Milt North of the Underpass SALEM At the Foot of the Bridge WEST SALEM PRICES GOOD FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY