Red Cell Found in : Senate Staff, Solon' Declares The Weather FORECAST (from U. S. weather bureau, McNiry field, Salem): Brief morning cloudiness, other wise generally fair today and Wed nesday: high today near W, low to - night near 4S. Temperature at UA1 a.m. today was 55. SALEM PRECIPITATION Since Start of Heather Year Sept. 1 This Tear Last Tear Nsrmal 32.81 - 45.23 39.51 105th Year 'Diane Theft Series Laid to Brothers, Ages 9,13 SUtesmaa Newt Service j f SUBLIMITY Six break-ins - and several shoplifting incidents in Sublimity appeared cleared Monday afternoon when a Marion County sheriffs deputy picked up two orothers aged 13 and 9. The boys and a part-time accomplice, 1 not yet picked up, were responsible for thefts of property valued at about $800, the sheriff's r - . 1 I P w s I III III l ... 1 Imp iioal k - r. j A professor of history at the University of Oregon, William A. Willi 4m c m a? nr wit S notv and highly original explanation of the election victory of Richard L. Neuberger in 1954. He labels it an "Historical Romance" in the lead article for the June Oregon Historical Quarterly. - Neuberger himself attributes his election first to his wife, but then he musters an assortment of "issues": foreign affairs, con servation of natural resources, power, ! plus the aid of farmers. preachers, labor all of which gave him a margin of some 2,500 votes over the incumbent Guy Cordon. Prof. Williams doesn't give them, all or severally, the credit i He declares that Neuber ger was elected "by those Ore gonians who want to live the il lusion of agrarianism yet at the came time njoy the pleasures and the prestige of being part of urbanized and mechanized Amer ica.1 His contribution to the Quarterly is both an analysis of the 1954 senatorial election and a vivisection ol Oregon s social ana economic pattern. Here is what his scalpel lays bare: - "The key fact of Oregon his tory is very simple: until the im mediate past Oregon has been a backward, relatively isolated, been by-passed by modern Amer ; ica. It has been part of the last frontier of the small business man and his agrarian (Continued on editorial page, 4.) Innocent Plea FUed in Battle Over Baby HILLSB0R0 UP A man ac cused of taking a baby away from its mother pleaded innocent in district court here Monday and trial was- set for Sepf 12. The man. Charles Remington, was charged with being involved in a not. ; The court action grew out of a fight over the custody of David Martin CasteeL S-month-old son cf Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Casteel. The baby was put up for adop tion by" the Casteels three days after his birth, and he was placed in custody of the Remingtons. But then the Casteels changed their mind and went to court to get the child back. Their request was granted and the Remingtons ap pealed. ; However, . Dist. Atty. James Gardner said that the Remingtons and two other persons went to the Casteel home Friday night and seized the baby. A hearing is scheduled here Tuesday on a writ of habeas cor pus to determine which couple shall have custody of the child until court action is completed. Salem Girl, 3, Takes Drink of Shoe Polish A three-year-old Salem area girl was treated by first aidmen Mon- day after drinking shoe polish at her home. ; j . ' J - Aidmen said Kathy Ann Hunt. 4330 Toni St., apparently escaped any narmiui auer-eiiecis. &ne was ; pven further treatment by a phy sician. ' 1 ANIMAL CRACKERS V sjv WARREN OOOORICH "One more peep onta yea and WHAM! 1 : " f ' 2 SECTIONS-! 6 PAGES 9 Swirls Stormy Skirts Over Dixie I office reported. The break-ins started about July 4 and culminated last week when an axe was used to pry open a window of the William Van Handle home east of Sub limity. Lots f Items When they left they took with them: two high-priced rifles, four wrist watches, two diamond rings, two packages of fishing hooks, six boxes of rifle shells, four cigarette lighters, four fish ing spinners and a new billfold. Break-ins at another residence, the grade school, Forester's Hall and the Long movie house netted them a flashlight, some religious jewelry, a hand printing outfit, a ball pen, hammer and chisel, three bottles of pop, some sugar lumps, four cans of shrimp and a can of olives. ! Most Recovered About 95 per cent of the miss ing items have been recovered and will be returned to owners. ;M6st of it was found in an old watering truck in some trees and in an old outbuilding, the report said. The two brothers were turned over to Marion County juvenile authorities.- Peron Revolt Erupts Again In Argentina BUENOS AIRES. Argentina (JrV- The Argentine government an nounced j Monday night it had crushed a "Catholic -nationalist plot" to assassinate President Ju an Peron. Police said 50 persons had been arrested, but other sources indi cated arrests might have run as high as 200. : ;' Police and firemen used tear gas and fire, hoses to rout some 400 anti - Peron demonstrators who were -chorusing. "He must go," and "Liberty, liberty." in front of the Metroplitan Cathedral, scene of frequent clashes between police and Roman Catholic sympathizers; The demonstrators shouted, "Gestapo" as they ran. The events ; climaxed a day of demonstrations and clashes be tween police and sympathizers of the Roman Catholic Church. - Monday's announcement said the assassins had plotted to shoot Pe- I . . .1 ,rom a uremea apartment as he drove by. Then, the announcement said, the plotters planned to launch a wave of terror by disrupting power fines and communications and attacking radio stations and vital public works. Israel Cabinet vn JERUSALEM, Israeli Sector, Wl President Izhak Ben-Zvi Mor.- Way accepted the resignation of Premier Moshe Sharett's Cabinet. The resignation came as Israel's third ; ; Knesset (parliament) con vened, Sharett told that body his government will continue in a care taker I status until a new Cabinet is approved, i ;l David Ben-Gurion, Israel's first Premier who left his place of re tirement on a Negev Desert farm to become! Sharett's defense min- ister, is expected to head the new 1 government, j . I . ; 1 ! T (FleaSUre LaUllcll Sinks; 20 Perish :!;-; i I" SAINT; BRIEUC. France (A About 20 persons were believed to have; drowned Monday j when a pleasure : launch hit a fock and sank off the Brittany Coast Forty persons aboard the launch were reported saved. The Weather Max. MIb. Preeip. 81 41 .N 7 S3 " .00 43 .00 .as so oo 64 48 tract 84 . 48 .00 69 48 .00 65 64 .00 70 .00 M 1ft trace Salem Portland Baker j Medlord North Bend Rose bur San Francisco Los Angeles Chicago . New York Step Georgia Coast, South Carolina In Storm Path MIAMI, Fla. l Rising winds ! and tides Monday night warned the South Carolina and Georgia coasts that' hurricane Diane is headed that way. Waltzing west northwest at 14 to 15 miles an hour, the season's fourth tropical storm was expected to move inland a short distance south of where her older sister, Connie, crossed the coastline last Friday. At 11 p. m. (EST) Diane was centered near latitude 30.3 west and ' longitude 74.3 west or about 365 ; miles east 'southeast of Charleston, S.C. Diane had winds of 115 miles per hour over a small area near the center and the Western Bu reau Said interests in the area of; warning display should rush all preparations for the protection of life and property against danger ous winds. Extend Southward - Hurricane warnings, already up from Brunswick, Ga., to Wilming ton, N. C, were extended south ward to Fernandina. Fla.. storm warnings flew elsewhere from St. Augustine. Fla., to the Virginia Capes and a hurricane alert . ex tended from Wilmington to the cartes. Continued west northwest move ment was expected for the next 12 hours, the Weather Bureau said, and if this course and rate of for ward movement continues, the center would reach the South Caro-' lina or North Georgia coast late Tuesday afternoon or early Tues day night' "Tides are 1 to 3 feet above nor mal and will be increasing Tues day, becoming at least S to 7 feet above normal in places for a short distance south and considerable distance north of the path of the center," the Weather Bureau ad visory side. Tobacco Threatened As Diane whirled toward the coast line, she threatened the South Carolina tobacco and cotton section, now in harvest, with tor rential rains and thrashing winds. Much of the tobacco has been har vested but cotton picking is just getting under way. Savannah Beach. Ga., was or dered evacuated. Police Chief Dav id A. McCutchen said hundreds of vacationers already were fleeing 'the area. Merchants were board ing up store fronts and getting ready to leave, 20 March to Death in India BOMBAY, India W Several thousand "non-violent" Indian na-!Russia." He said. "I haven't isit tionalist demonstrators marched h hpr farm vet" into Portuguese India at a halfii J . , 1 uoxen pomts luonaay. ana were reported guards. K. M. Jedhe. president of the "G O A Liberation Committee," which takes its name from the largest of three Portuguese colon ies, said 44 marchers were wound ed, and scores were missing in the jungles. v He added an undetermined num ber were detained by Portuguese at their three centers, Goa, Dam ao, and Diu. India wants to take over these areas. ' j Goaj with an area of only 1,516 ' square miles, is on the West Coast of India 230 miles south of Bom- , bay. ji (In Nova Goa, chief port of the Portuguese enclave, an official Portuguese spokesman . said at least 13 Indians were shot dead and probably 30 wounded -in the daylong clashes between demon strators from I India and Portu guese border guards. Airman Schmidt to Divorce Wife on Grounds of Cruelty SACRAMENTO, ' Calif. Hi Air man Daniel Schmidt Monday de cided to divorce i his re-married wife on grounds of extreme cru elty, j Attorney Howard P. Welch said the 23-year-old flier, who! came back Friday from 32 months in a Chinese Communist prison; "has made (up his mind. He wants to divorce Una. UnaJ the 20-year-old mother oli Schmidt's son, says she married;; logger Aitora Fine. 21, last Sep tember, thinking the airman was dead. , , t Schmidt hasn't decided whether to seek custody of his JVj-year-old son, Daniel Jr.. Welch said. The airman met' his boy for the first: time late Friday night in a The) Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, August 1 6, 1 955 President Eisenhower Waits for Boy to 'Shoot' I I 4 DENVER President Eisenhower . k ' i "Have you got it all right bow!" Eisenhower, asked, and Larry sodded happily that he had got his shot- The scene is outside the home f Mrs. John & Doud, the President's mother-in-law, shortly after the chief executive arrived here for a work-and-play vacation. Standing next to Larry is Police Sgt Morton Gottschalk. (AP Wirephoto.) -4 Russ Ask To Visit CHICAGO UP The chief of the Soviet farm delegation, Vladimir Matskevich, said here Mo n d a y night Marilyn Monroe has been in vited to the Soviet Embassy re ception which the farm delegation will attend next Monday in Wash ington, j 1 From the context of his state ment, it wasn't completely clear whether or not Matskevich j was joking, but Georgi Bolshakov, Washington bureau chief of the So viet news agency, Tass. confirmed that an invitation actually has been sent to the -blonde actress. ' He said no answer has been re ceived. :i Earlier in a press conference. Matskevich aroused a great deal of laughter when he was asked whether he had anv comment on Miss Monroe's "oroDosed triD to vr,f.i,.,i, vnW . t by another member of the i illQWHV V IVII iimiiuvu the announcement of the invitation to Miss Monroe, adding, "Now I won't have to visit her farm," i In New York, Miss Monroe could not be reached for comment on the Soviet invitation. j NORTHWEST LEAGUE . j : At Salem 2. Spokane 4 j At Yakima 3, Tri-City 2 PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE At Hollywood 8. Lo Angeles 4 Only game played. AMERICAN LEAGUE 'if ! At Baltimore 4-8, New York $-12 At Boston 8. Washington 4 . Only games scheduled. : I j NATIONAL LEAGUE 1 At St. Louis 1. Milwaukee IS ;i , Only game scheduled. :! meeting with Una at Nevada City in the Sierra foothills, j ' ' i . Una's attorney, Harold A.f Ber liner, j notified by The; Associated Press1 of the pending divorce action,-said she would have no com ment She is living in a trailer near Nevada City, presumably with Fine. She still has the baby. Welch said he conferred with - , . . , i 1.rJSJJ aim uidi auuiuuuot luuicitin-tj will be held. Schmidt is ; staying here with Una's mother and stepfather. The attorney indicated the di- vorce complaint would be filed in California, but he would not say in what city. Schmidt just walked into his of fice. Welch said, and presented his case. - - .- '. - Marilyn WUNDHD 1651 waits patiently while Larry Modesitt, 13, right adjusts his camera. Ike Golfs, Giving Angler Lesson DENVER UPs President rhythm with a round of golf Monday and looked forward to teach ing his 7-year-old grandson how to cast a dry fly for Rocky Moun tain trout This was the first full day of the President's 1955 Colorado visit and he spent 2Vi hours at his Lowry Air Force Base office before 8,000 March In Marian Pilgrimage Statesman Newt Service MT. ANGEL Some 8,000 persons took part "Monday in the second an nual Marian Pilgrimage to Crook ed Finger largest religious trek in the Northwest. Highlight of the pilgrimage was a candlelight march by an estimat ec 6,000 persons Monday night. Ap proximately 2,500 had participated in an afternoon trek along the half mile route from the Clete Helvey farmhouse to Holy Rosary chapel at Crooked Finger. The impressive night march in which all participants carried can dies' was given an added touch by s?x lighted shrines spaced along the way. Pilgrims came from all parts of Oregon and from some sections of Washington. : ' The night mass at the end of the march "vas celebrated by Father Hildebrand Melchior, Mt. Angel, missionary pastor of Holy Rosary chapel., Father Hildebrand also gave the papal blessing. The Rev. A. M. Mayer, Riverside, Calif., spoke on the "Blessed Birth" fol lowing the mass and served as officiant during the march. Music for the evening program was pro vided by the Citizens Band, direct ed by Charles Yukl, Salem. r The Rev. Abbot Damian Jentges was officiant for the afternoon pro cession. All making the pilgrimage were given souvenir holy cards blessed! by Pope Pius XII. - An informed Source said last Saturday that Schmidt had failed to. win back his wife, but the air man emphatically denied the state ment then. j . Welch I refused to comment cn that aspect of the case. He said;!j-i r - vv th the airman would remain here un- LT VraSil IVlllS . til the divorce complaint is filed. 1 n ' .1 i xvr 4w.L .v.- i... Knrt and V nninn i mm uic meeting wun una lasi - Sdin said his wrfe rabr.yT? d h3d aibaby!McCroskey. 74, died in a hospital w uk care ot. '. 'i. I Monday night from! injuries suf- uc:,iuiacu per lor mc ay Sne has raised Danny and commented that "It isn't easy for a girl to take care of. a baby by herself." As for Fine, Schmidt- said he wouldn't do any judging of the log ger until "1 know all about the situation." f " " PRICE 5c Plans on Eisenhower; swung into vacation going out to Cherry Hills Country Club for golf. His announced part ners were former Xiov. Dan Thorn ton of: Colorado and Ralph (Rip) Arnold, the club pro. The President also visited w'th his old friend, Aksel Nielsen, a ' -M. , i r:::Jk Denver investment banker "The republican armv (IRA) h Tuesday afternoon Eisenhower , an arrny and it w511 ta):e the field wil travel about 70 irnles north-1 inst ythe Brjtish anny fc h west to Fraser Colo to Nielsen stime is ri .. Dannv -R JRA t r'gL" re 5ky fM,Un;: recruiting officer in Britain, told a fehL inaU n 'iVy Vf Ttr -l i Lon croVd Sunday, fishing' in well-stocked St. Louis . Creek.1 . The President will be joined at! ( A J IW 7 the ranch Wednesday morning by oQ- CflT'iJlCl grandson David . Eisenhower, who ! has been vacationing the last two weeks at a boys camp at Estesi Park,; Colo., situated about 50 miles northea: David, whose home is at Ft. Bel - vior. Va., near Washington, never has done any trout fishing but his! grandfather is generally regarded as an expert. So the youngster. i who calls the President "Ike," probably will learn the tricks of the wily trout in a hurry. Hells Canyon Unit to Fight Power Verdict ! PORTLAND m The National Hells Canyon Assn. decided Mon day to contest , construction (f three small dams in the Snake River by the Idaho Power Co. i James T. Marr of Portland, president of the four-state associa tion which favors construction of a single high dam! in the Snake River canyon on the Oregon-Idaho border, said that directors Voted unanimously Monday to carry their fight to the Supreme Court, if necessary. ( 1 The- organization's first move, Marr ' said, will j be to file for a rehearing of the case with the Federal Pover Commission. ! Should . that be denied, the association'- will take the matter to! courtj either the District Court (of i Appeals in Washington, D.C., cr the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals at San Francisco, he said. .'; The power commission recently granted Idaho Power a 50-year li cense: for; construction of three small dams in Hells Canyon. - " - " BftBTt iVT I SI VTrd "If rUn fered a few hours iearlier in an I automobile crash. State police said her husband. LeForest McCroskey, 71, driver of the car, told them he fell asleep at the wheel. His car Careened across the road and struck a parked car. '1 i No. 142 Irish Rebels Blocked Masked Gunmen Fail to Get Guns In British Raid LONDON un Masked gunmen defying Britain's all-out security alert against the outlawed Irish re publican army (IRA) attacked a British army post Monday in the second arms raid within 48 hours. The raiders five men : in ci vilian clothes carrying revolvers broke into the Royal Artillery Training Camp near Rhyl, Wales, a few minutes after midnight The daring band overpowered a sentry but failed in their effort to grab guns from the armory and fled in a speeding car when anoth er guard sounded an alarm with a whistle. A possible attempt to lay the groundwork for yet another arms raid was reported at Forfeld Bar racks, headquarters of the Bristol garrison, on Sunday. A sentry there said he was ap proached by three Irishmen who tried to question him as to where the ammunition was kept. The men ran away when he reported the incident to the guard room. The attack suggested Britain might be facing a wave of terror ism by fanatical nationalists of the IRA who are trying to force mer-1 ger of British North Ireland with the Irish Republic. More Guards Police increased guards around public buildings after Scotland Yard got a telephone call from a man possibly a crackpot threat ening to blow up the houses of Parliament. i Security was tightened around Balmoral Castle in Scotland where Queen Elizabeth II and the royal family are vacationing. . Prime Minister Eden's Cabinet meeting at No. 10 Downing Street heard a report from Home Secre tary William Lloyd-George on the emergency measures against any new outbreak of IRA Violence. Field Marshal Present The seriousness with which the government is viewing the raids was demonstrated by presence in the Cabinet meeting of Field Mar shal Sir John Hardin?, chief of the imperial general staff. The IRA is banned in Ireland ! f Trots9 Nimbly ! Up Mt. Hood FOREST GROVE, (UP) A hik- j ing companion revealed during the I weekend that an 84-vear-old former j Indian fighter from Forest Grove climbed Mt Hood last Thursday in fulfillment of a lift-long dream and then hurried back down in time to herd his flock of sheep. Thomas Morgan, who had lived in sight of the mountain since boy hood, said he wanted to climb the mountain to view the land where he was raised "from a new posi tion." Mrs. Harold Dyke of Maupin ac companied Mor gan on his last tlimb along with guide Dale Thomas of Timberline Lodge. Two 1 Oregon State college students, 1 Ron Reeves and Marian Swaggart. joined the party and paid tribute to Morgan's agility. A check of lodge records after the ascent showed that no fme ap proaching Morgan's age had ever registered as making the tough climb, part of it over ice. . In addition to raising sheep near Maupin, Morgan recently 'published a book locally called "My Story of the Last Indian War in the North west" : I ! ! ChiUs Fumble Football Star Ben Agajanian, star placekicker for the New York football Giants, was scheduled to speak iat two Sa lem service clubs today at the identical hour of noon, j Ben has magic in his kicking toe but even a Houdini would have found it difficult showing !up simul taneously at meetings of both the Sclem iKiwanis Club i and the East Salem Lions Club. It was all due to a mixup in scheduling A hasty straightening of the schedule will find the Giant star telling Kiwanians about football at their session at the Senator Hotel. A spokesman (Tor the East Salem Lions said they hoped, to get a speech from Agajanian at a later date. Walter Plans Probe Witness States Reds Infiltrate Labor Boards NEW YORK IB Rep. Francis E. Walter D Pa.) said Monday night he had been informed of the existence of a Communist Party cell among staff employes of the U. S. Senate. Walter said he also had heard a man testify under oath that Com munist cells existed in the National Labor Relations Board and the War Labor Board. Then was ho immediate com ment from any reachable Senate officials nor was there any com ment immediately from the Na tional Labor Relations Board. The War Labor Board is no longer in existence. , ; The chairman of the House Un American Activities Committee made the statement at a rally of the Alliance Inc., an anti-Communist group, at the Hotel New York er. To Investigate He told some 2,000 persons he is preparing an investigation of Communist infiltration into the fed eral government, and will probably begin- open hearings in February, "let the chips fall where they may." Walter told the audience the re cent Big Four summit meeting at Geneva "produced nothing." "I hope and pray that because of it the American people will not be lulled into a false sense of se curity," Walter said. The audience roared a deafen-' ing "No" when Archibald B. Roos-; evelt, president of the group, asked "Is (Sen.) Joe McCarthy out of business?'? Said Walter in his speech: "I heard a man testify that there "s a Communist Party cell in ine u- s- senate. , Clarifies Statement However, when questioned by a newsman afterward, Walter ex plained that he meant a Commu nist Party cell among staff em pioyes ot the Senate, not in the Senate itself. . ; He did not say where the testi mony was taken, ; Nor did he amplify his state ment about Communist infiltration of the National Labor Relations Board and the War Labor Board. PUCMayAsk High Court to Reverse Judge Public Utilities Commissioner Charles H. Heltzel said Monday he might appeal to the State Supreme Court from Judge Val: Sloper's de cision in the Portland Traction :ase. i The Marion County circuit judge ruled Saturday that the traction " company, which operates between Portland and Oregon; City, could reduce its passenger I service de ?pite Heltzel's order that it could not. ; j Sloper added, however, that Helt- . zc' could investigate and bold a hearing in the matter. But before such a hearing is held, the reduc tion in service would be in effect. After the hearing, Heltzel could order the service restored, but this question hasn't been settled by the courts, either. j Wrapped up in the same case is the Southern Pacific railroad's can cellation a week ago of passenger service to southern Oregon. Under Judge Sloper's ruling,! Heltzel has no power to make the S.P. resume its "Rogue River" train until he holds a hearing. . Heltzel said that under the judge's decision, railroads would be able to gradually reduce their schedules until they have entirely eliminated strvice. ' 1 , j "It looks like this will be a mat ter for the legislature to decide. If the law is insufficient it should be fixed up," he said, j ' ; . Fair Wither To Continue' ! Fair weather will continue in the Salem area today other than for some morning cloudiijess, accord ing to the forecast from weather men at McNary Field. Temperatures are expected to fall ?ff slightly with rtoday's high expected to be about 76. The mer-; cury reached 81 Monday. Outlook for beaches today is morning cloudiness and clearing in ; the afternoon. Winds ! will be light and westerly and temperatures will range from 48-65. i Today's Statesman Sec. ....III... t It Far. .1. 5-7 Classified .. Comics 1 - Crossword Editorials ...... . 3 .- 4 . 6 3 4 1-3 ,- 7 Homo Panorama..-: I. Markets Radio, TV .11 1aVfr vir ii Valley 1 1.1. . rim-m.m ' I.