2 -(Sec. 1MWmiw, Silom, Pro , Wed.. Sept., 7, 1955 Thousands Flee Wrath of Storm ' BROWNVTLLE, Tex. If) er, but the New Orleans Weather Scores of persons fled their flood- Bureau said the squalls were Dot ed homes Tuesday night in the expected to break up until some Corpus Christi Bay area north of time Wednesday, here as squalls kicked up by tropi-' - A slackening in the squalls aV- cal storm gladys swept the Texas They returned to their homes lat- Anti-Greek Riots Erupt In Istanbul 'By ALLAN JACKS ISTANBUL. Turkey t - iolent ani-Gresk noting expiooea w is- tanbui luesaay nigni. . Tens of thousands of young Turks rcsmed through the city, smash-. ing Greek store windows, wreck- ini store interiors and overturn-, in automobiles. . The rioting erupted after a stick of dynamite exploded near the Turkish consulate in the Greek ciiy of Salonika. For more than two hours after the outbreak be- gan. mobs charged through Uie streets bent on destruction. - The crowds ettempted to set one bi? Greek Orthodox church afire but were driven off by police and fir-men. . Al the height of tfie disorder. hundreds of Turkish infantrymen with fixed bayonets moved into the center of the city. Birthplace Damaged The Turkish rage apparently was touched off by reports here that the birthplace of the late Kemal At-J atrurk was . damaged in the Sa- lonika dynamiting. Ataturk," fath-, er and first president of the Turk: ish republic, is the country's na- tional hero. I The mobs met no resistance from store owners and the police were " hopelessly outnumbered. I Istanbul army headquarters said ; it had called out one division of in-! fantry. an armored brigade and a ' number of marine units to bring the rioting under control. Armed Marines blocked off both bridges across the Golden Horn which divides ihe two sections of the cify. Thcv also threw a cordon around the Greek Orthodox patri archate on the left bank of the; Golden Horn. BU Halted I All small boats which shuttle thousands of commuters about the dty were s halted. Ferry jervice j connetung u.e ruiuii sevwu,. Wl the city with the Asiatic quarter across the Bosporus also ceased. In addition to attempting to set . fire to the big Greek" Orthodox church, crowds heavily damaged several smaller churches. Scores of minor casualties were ' reported. ' j One employe ov a Greek pastry shop suffered a serious stab wound. Other persons were seen in the streets bleeding from face and arm cuts. Most of the injuries seemed to come from flying glass The mob ripped out store furn- ishings and hurled them about the' " "w-' cobbled streets. Merchandise, from groceries to high priced furniture, i 11 1 - was stewn about the streets. side-.tQCK lVlarKet Malnutrition ICills Wealthy Portland Man PORTLAND fjp A shabby, middle-aged recluse, who had a secret fortune estimated at in excess of $10,000. was found dead ever reached, me tormer nign oi from malnutrition in a Portland $177 00 had held since July 25. hotel Tuesdav. j Trading for the day totaled I,- , He was identified as John L. 360.000 shares compared with 1. Boyd, about 50. Deputy Coroner . 700,000 shares on Friday. Tony Wrald estimated his fortune r after checking over papers in a.R n Homme Richard small safe found in the room. I m Wald said Boyd had not eaten i Rejoins U.S. Fleet properly for several months. There j were numerous empty evaporated! milk and bean cans stacked in the room. Among the papers was an un - cashed check for $2,240 issued in April by Ureke Bros., Weiser, million dollar reconversion. Idaho. There were also papers Jet fighters roared overhead as showing Boyd owned preferred thousands of spectators joined high stock in the Idaho Power Co. ranking Navy officials in recom Other papers indicated sizable ' missioning the 11-year-old flattop, accounts in two Portland banks and a veteran of both World War II and one in Salt Lake City. land the Korean War. No WHn UM lowed storm sewers to drain the ; downpours which reached almost 11 inches in some corpus Christ! Bay areas. The Coast Guard was busy up and down the storm-swept coast from Corpus Christi to Brownsville, rescuing sportsmen, warning iso lated groups and seeking distressed or missing vessels. New Area Watched The center of Gladys was cat ering itself to pieces Tuesday night in Mexico's mountains but weath ermen were watching a new area lowessure strrtching from M-x ico.g Yucatan Peninsula nearly to Florida. It had not yet formed t lU)rm area The mast blacklash from Gladys appeared to center in a mile rea from the vgst King "Ranch in Kleberg County north t(J Port Aransas a stretch of coagt including corpus Christi. Weather Bureau said the worst flf the gtorm appeared over t CorpiJS christi. n stiU was rain- jng lflte jiay nignt Dut with 1 lesser intensity wlnds reacned 55 m p h ln gusts at ljmes therf WM surpris. ingly Iittle wind damage- I . . - ' Families Flee About 30 families in Ingleside, small town on Corpus Christi Bay, fled when water entered their homes. About 30 persons also were evacuated 'in Corpus Christi itself. The flooding was blamed on the heavy rains rather than high streams. . - At least two ships were in trouble in the stormy Gulf of Mexico off Texas. The Mary Ellen, a 60-foot shrimp craft out of Aransas Pass, Tex., was feared to have crashed on the beach on Padre Island. She had two unidentified men aboard, and the Coast Guard sent crewmen by land to hunt her. While still at sea, she reported she was taking water. An 83-foot craft, the Don II was missing and the Coast Guard sought here. Hurricane Slows Down M na Hurricane M11ht in ,n of light steering winds Tuesday night and slowed to a crawl but still packed winds of 100 miles an hour. The hurricane, now grown to good size, was centered some 520 miles east of Bermuda and1 far from the American coastline! Its forward speed was only, 8 miles an hour. v Weathermen said the storm might drift along for another day or so. Then it should pick up more forward speed and move into the North Atlantic. It is a menace . , '- Hits New Higli NEW YORK 'JP The stock market moved easily to a new as being the most sun-kissed fair in I omlie was arresiea louowing in high Tuesday. ! the state's history. ! vestigation of a fire involving prop Brisk buying brought gain. rtlr-n other fou dry kairs Same'"', at Stat,0B $1 to $4 a share and a few issues ! n 1M3i m2, 1935 and B32-t&ough near K'cKrea"' went well beyond that range. ! traces of rain djd fallf in '4 and , Z""- The Associated Press average of r'32. The Weather Bureau is Ifairlv ArlpimilPr Plnns tn 60 stocks advanced $1.30 to close certain measurable rai fell ht ai, CIWUtI X IU at $177.70, the highest point it has SAN FRANCISCO Steam- lined' and refitted for atomic age! Printed last on nr; CTet, nd, French rnbassadors on the ! seaiishiing. the aircrait . carrier j decisions made m the National daily progress of the talks, or lack jBon Homme Richard rejoined the ' Security Council. , j j . of it- j fleet Tuesday after a 30-month, 4 1'smmmBmWBIBmOBtBKBWBBBBBWKVBWUUrWUBBmmtmttK. i Red Tope! No Extro Charge for Easy Credit Terms at Senior's, Enjoy Wearing Your Glonti Whilo Paying on your own reasonable credit terms.1 Q U I C tC SERVICE Classes in Ono Day mado to your Registered Optometrist's Prescription. Emergency REPAIR SERVICE for Broken Classes. Smart Styles Sff kw atadarn, ffattariaf fraatat caa fp fwm lk taarf talaal aalaffW fatkiaa aa diaJa. Ofittccd - Ut I lit 1 STATE t COMMERCIAL SaWOra Children Hurt in Crasli of Autos J ' regrr-g'rp-rA'r11' TT" " I A) . 0 r - IL lio m I a., r- ? , , n 1 1 1 n,, ' 1, tmm n it m ... Injured ia 4 Tuesday 'afternoon collision at Chemeketa and Capitol streets, the three children in picture are administered to by police and first a id men. Child at left is Bill Maple, 8; girl in center is Sharon Maple, 11; and boy nearest camera is Allen Maple, 7, all of Stlem Route 7, Box 765. None was seriously) hurt. Officer t left is Patrolman Marion Brown and aidmen are Allen Meguire, Four 1 (rear, and Charley Charlton. (Statesman Photo.) Iniurecl InC Uisidn i- 0 Of Salem Cars Four persons, all occupants of the same vehicle, suffered appar ently non-serious injuries Tuesday afternoon in a two-car collision at Chemeketa pnd Capitol streets, city ponce report. n Most severely injured, said : aid men, were Sharon Maple, II, of Salem Route 7, Box 763, and Ce cilia Young, 63, of 1400 Lawless St. Both were taken by i ambulance to Salem Memorial Hospital where the girl waif treated for lacerations and a jaw (injury and -'the woman for a lacerated knee and a1 frac tured wristi Attendants said ! con dition of both was "good." Slightly hurt were Bill Maple, 8, and his brother, Allen, 7, both! of lhom were -released after a check it the hospital. ; j Officers said the .injured (were passengers in a 1947 iStudebaker driven by Irs. Violet -Cecilia Ma ple, 'mother of the children! and daughter of Mrs. Young, j ()ther driver in nhe 4:55 p.m. accident was listed jas Mrs. Josephine t-ouis Harrell. 315 Fairview Ave. Police said the impact shot: airs. IHar rell's 1950j:Buick on toja packing smp at ine Mate riro h JLi!m Building. Damage to both vehicles was neavy, ponce reported. Oregon Fair Minus RainL Said Rarity When an Oregon State raijr fs- capes without rain it cn consider use ii in rare company! according to the Weather Bureau lat McNary Field. i j j j Weathermen pointed Out Tuesday that priori to rhis year probably only four (state fairs since i 1930 have missed" being hit by measur able rainfall. 1 j j The 195.1 fair past the! midway mart has a rhnnf Mi ininins' the select circle and may go on rpcordltrial n Polk County Circuit Court other fairs; sinc 1930, jbecauie its.lippfi West PotPll records show considerable prpcipi- tation in the first 10 days of Sep tember in each of the cases. STORIES PROBED WASHINGTON tffl The Wash- ington Post and Times Herald said Tuesday night the Justice Depart & ; . . . t i mem is investigating ine source oi two news stories the j newspaper Take on Slatt Fair, Add the visiters to our fair tat jyou may bo onttrtairiing, plus thoj kids, plus tho household chores. Tiring,; isn't lit? Lit us talc t cart of tho meals and dishts At your soryicoi 1 TUC C All CU AD Tht Ongon Homo of Sloppy Jo I Ht 5 AN JllUr A Groat Sandwich! j Portland Road at North City limits 1 For Orders io Co Phont 2-6798 Marine Wins $32,000 on Quiz Show NEW YORK m A crew-cut Marine captain with a shy grin Tuesday night won $32,000 on a television quii show by trot ting out his encyclopedic know ledge of food and cooking. Tall, handsome Capt. Richard McCutchen of Worthington, Ohio, knocked off a complicated five part question about fancy desserts what they're made of and where uiey originated. 1 Thus he qualified for a try next 1 a . m . . I week at $64,000. top prize on the : CBS TV show "The $64,000 Ques tion." If he chooses, he can take his $32,000 and quit. If he tries and misses, he loses all but a conso lation prize of an expensive auto mobile. No contestant on the show has yet tried for $64,000. Two have won $32,000 and stopped there. Paul Muni Loses Eye 1 Muni ,ost his left e'e 10 surgery Tuesday because of a tumor, but his right eye was reported normal. The tumorous eye was removed in an operation at Mt. Sinai Hos pital. The 59-year-old actor, one of the most widely acclaimed performers on Broadway and in Hollywood, dropped out of the Broadway dra matic hit. "Inherit the Wind," just a week ago Tuesday. n 1 Hf t-v ; Sale 111 lUan JJeniCS : 4-1 4 ! UiarUe OI ArSOn Statesman Ntws Srrvlrc DALLAS. Ore. Carl Omlie of Salem pleaded innocent here Tues day to a charge of second-degree arson. Judge Arlie G. Walker set Oct. 12 as the tentative date of Omlie's I MOSCOW UP West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer has made arrangements to keep the Western Big Three intimately in formed of his negotiations with ; top Soviet leaders. - 1 According to informed sources, : Itt . - T T I . T 1 I i : wesi ucrmany s ncrocn xiancn- i horn will brief the U. S.. British; SAVINGS EARN MORE at Salem Federal January 1st and July 1st, savers are paid liberal dividends . . . increasing your funds. Our current 3 return encourages thrift. 560 SUft Strut Facing Caart fTst Sa lm, Ortgei 67 Escape, j One Dead in C124 Crasli ALBUQUERQUE Ml A giant, ! four engined C124 Globemaster crashed on takeoff in a dust storm Tuesday, killing one man. Air Force officials said one other man was badly injured but 67 others aboard the plane escaped un scathed or with minor injuries. The Air Force transport, from iBises Air Force Base. El Paso Tei.. anoarentlv had sane almost the full length of the runway at Kirtland AFB when it skidded for . . . several hundred feet and nancakerf on the shoulders of the F runwav. It burst into flames abWt im - mediately. The plane was destroyed by white-hot flames. The craft, enroute to March AFB. Riverside, C a 1 f car- ried 13 crewmen. 56 oasseheers and cargo. The one seriously injured man was a member of the crew, Many of these were f vacuated from the blazing ship by medics. were treated on the scene and then rushed to hospitals. Salem. Eugene to Begin Plavof 8 The Northwest League s baseball championship playoffs between the Salem Senators and the Eugene Emeralds begin , tonight at .Eugene at 8 p.m. Second game in the best - iour - 01 - seven series win pe played Thursday night at Waters Field. . j . Salem won the first half cham pionship and Eugene. runner-up in the first half race, won the sec - J f Bill Dials, winner of 15 games i..i.. 11 tu. ct pitcher in tonight s opener. Good Music Big Crowds WED. HITE r. Crystal Gardens Ask for Your Free Priie Tickets Tonight These 4 Theatres Are Giving Away a Free Season Have to Be Present to You Are Present And Called, You Will Receive, as for Being Here -HELD OVER- CO-HIT EXPLOSIVE ACTION ... as two desperate men straggle atop tons of TNT! He'd blast his way through mountains to get what he wanted . . . and he wanted her! t Starring i Rod Cameron Joan Leslie Chill Will f "HELL'S OUTPOST" I Disney s S-witzeHand Speculation G 0 rows ver Salem Fires 1 i Speculation t p a t a firebug is operating j in Salem was stepped ! up Tuesday after the second fire, in three days struck a vacant feed ' warehouses on Portland Road. The second fire, which started S about 4 a.m. in- a building former ly occupied by the Oregon Feed Co., caused an estimated $1,000 damage. It followed on the heels of a $25,000 blaze in the one-story masonry structure last Friday eve ning. Firi Chiff Ellsworth Smith said both fires were of "suspicious origin" and at his request mem bers of the state police arson squad Tuesday began an investigation. Chief Smith said the path taken by the second lire was "almost as if somebody had sprayed gasoline around the walls and set a match i ; to i-M I ! I One of the first persons to see the Friday night blaze at the un occupied feed faid it appeared to start at jthe southeast corner of the structure. Firemen's suspicions about the fires wer given impetus by the fact that the (building, being va cant, lacked many of the usual fire hazards, j Conjecture about a possible fire bug posed one question: Why would he strike the same building twice when little remained to burn? Meanwhile, Chief Smith announ ced Tuesday thst all city fire per mits havf bee cancelled for the time being because of , hot, dry weather conditions Plane pash Kills 4 Men ATTTVAVTlOIA T im A mm nyuTg boxcar (crTshed "Tuesday luinK men ana injuring two leaving England Air T3 T" 1 i Force Bdse hei-e. mi j ; j i . i ine aeai were laemuiea rues- , da'. ngty as: I First Lt. Curtiss B. Larsen. 31. Denver, Colo. M. Sgt. Ra ph W. Elson, 31. j Newton, Jll. Airman 2.C Wayne J. Berger, I Melrose. Wis. I Tbe fourth roan was not identi- j "ed pending notification of rela - ! tives. j ) 1 The plane, cjarrying a cargo of classified! material, took off for the Kirtland Air Force Base at1 Albuauerdue. tt. M. Soon aftpr leaving . it; developed engine trou- ble and the pilot tried to crash land info the Red River. He missed it4 by about 70 ards. The crippled plane slammed into a gully, exploded and burst into , flames. Parts were scattered over four acre Rep OOIJ Preparing 1 r ) . o ror ueuaie oeries . BAKER; (ji iRep. Coon (R-Ore) is back home from Washington. He sairl he 1 intends tn Koin , nrenarinir! fnr the Hohat. cci-ioc !opening iater thU mbnth with Sen I Neuberger on tjie John Day part- ! nershin Ham Ihil! nr k 1 r i r r"- ARTH RITIS? I kov ! voadtrfull blud ra kving rtttortd t tiv life oftf bina Cripplrd ia nearly jewy (oint it, wry hdy nd wilfc WuKular MrtMN fre hd tumotoid Arthritri mitd otKr farm; of lrit(KifUm. kaiuh deform- i and wyl onklad wr . limited poc ! prohibit Ming mart fcr but if 1 ye will writ at. I will reply at anta and Ml yaw kaw I raceived m'n wonderful ralief. Mrs. Le a S. Wier 2805 Arbor Hills Drive G4 i P.O. Box 2695 Jackson 7, Mississippi Pass. You Do Not Win it. But, if Your Name Is a Bonus NOWI Open 6:45 Funniest Comedy Since "Sta lag IT." It's about 3 Convicts who take over a store to help the poor owner! nsJfBjON HUMPHREY iatoo PETE KCSART R&Y 0ST1X9V.. JOAN BENNETT BASIL jRATHBONE LEO (J. CARROLL MiCMAEL CURTiZ Plus Musical Comedy s5i eMr ayTIOHNlCOt.Ot I l . THt B10 SONC BUSmtSS MUtlCAU . tTgw' Ur TECHNICOLOR At The Theaters Today ELSINORK WE'RE NO ANGELS with Humphrey Bogirt and Aldo Rv. BRING YOUR SMILE ALONG with Franki Laint and Kecf Brassellc CAPITOL LADY AND THE TRAMP: Walt Disnev'i first hit in cinemascope. HELL'S OUTPOST with Rod Cameron and Chill Wills. - .-, GRAND SOLDffR Or FORTUNE with Clark Gable and Susan Hayward. TALL MAN RIDING with Ran dolph Scott and Dorothy Malonc. : NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IN "SHANE" with Alan Ladd. Van Heflin. Jean Arthur and Georf Stevens. "THE PRODIGAL" with Lana Turner and Edmund Purdom. t I BOLLYWOOD "IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA" with Faith Domeriue and Ian Keith. "THE CREATURE WITH THE ATOM BRAIN" with Richard Denning and Angela Stevens. Death Claims Mrs. Carter ! Itattinui News Serrlce SILVERT0N 7- Mrs Genevieve Ethel Carter, 42', died Tuesday at her Silverton home after an ill ness of several months. She. had lived here since, 1948,; Mrs. Carter was bonr at Mc Cook. Neb., Feb. 12, 1913. and was married to Chester Carter at Mc Cook on Aug. 24, 1930. The family resided in Portland for a time prior to moving to Silverton, where the husband was engaged in the plumbing business. She was a member of Eastern Star lodge. ; . .' Survivors in addition to tne wid ower are a son, Gary Carter, Portland; parents, Mr. and Mrs Roy Greene, Portland; and a sis- I M"' Pbms Ludlow- Nortb Bend, Ore. Funeral services will be held Thursday' at 11 a.m. at Ekman Memorial Chapel. Silverton with interment at Multnomah . Ceme; tery, Portland, v Portland School Enrollment High PORTLAND UT A record 61,557 ! pupils enrolled in the Portland j public schools Tuesday. 844 more . than signed up for the first day of school last vear. - The total is expected to grow another 3.000 before the end of the week High schools reported 14,779 of the enrollment, up slightly more than 100 from last year. Classes also began for church and private schools, but enrollment figures were not available. SILENT VISITOR HONOLULU (J) Japanese For eign Minister Mamoru Shigemitsuj was a silent visitor Tuesday to Punchbowl National Cemetery j grave of 13,000 Amer icans'-killed in World War II. J 50C Phont 4-4713 20 a iipuin 00 IN CASH ABSOLUTELY FREE! ENDS TONIGHT Clark a Susan Gable VS Hayward "SOLDIER OF FORTjNEw And . "TALL MAN RIDING" STARTS TOMORROW! M-G-M's IC ' MUSICAL I Groater on Wide Scraanl ft TECHNICOLOR JUDY GARLAND First Run Co-Hit- ssct Mary 2 ( -And LATEST WORLD NEWS AND j TECHNICOLOR j CARTOON1 ADD ffKJ 9T A Boy es 500 Feet at Crater Late EUGENE Uft A 15-year-old boy told Tuesday of surviving 1 500 foot fall down the steep slope from the rim of Crater Lake. t Dennis Fitch, 'IS, Eugene,: auf fered cuts and bruises, but the major injury resulting from the spectacular tumble was a broken arm. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray mond Fitch, said they started to hike down from the rim, about miles from the lodge, when Dennis suddenly slipped and plunged out of sight. Dennis said shale gave way and, "I guess I went head over heels." , He said he remembers hitting more shale and bumping against protruding rocks dn the way down. it seemed like a dream, he said, adding that he didn't remem ber losing consciousness, but must have been knocked out When ha awakened he was IS feet from the edge of the lake. His parents said he was uncon scious about 20 minutes, while they searched frantically for him. Then he began trying to climb back up the slope. The parents found him, took him to the Crater Lake Ranger Station for first aid, and then to a doctor at Klamath Falls. Dennis was bruised severely, but said he expects to be in school when it opens next week. Police Quick To Nab Young Auto Thief It didn't take state police long to catch their quarry Tuesday night after a state-owned car was reported stolen from the Shop pers Car Park, High and Ferry streets. j ' Officers said a 17-year-old Oak ridge youth was arrested on a charge of car theft after the ve hicle was halted in the Lake Labish district north of Salem. The theft of the old-model vehi cle was reported about 8:30 p.m. and the arrest was made less than an hour later. The car was bait for the first officer in sight since it carried no license plates. Police said the ; youth was lodged in Marion County juvenile ward. Woodburn Drive-In Wed. - Thar. -Frl-Sat "WAI ARROW Jeff Chandler Maureen O'Hara Pins "REDHEADS FROM $IATTll"r -Rhonda Fleming Gny Mitchell - (Children under 12 Freer- STARTS TODAY! OPEN 6:45 C 3 cir:! r rrcsa G GGH3 cir.unn jlj TUE CEA Gates Open 6:45 Show At Dusk STARTS TONITE! Both In Colorl Tho Greatest Western Ever Filmedl ALAN LADD JEAN ARTHUR VAN HEFLIN GEORGE STEVENS IN "SHANE" 2ND COLOR HIT The Story of Woman's Beauty and Han's Temptation LANA TURNER EDMUND PURDOM IN "THE PRODIGAL" In Cinemascope i erf Hf j-ijiw NU'IX VZ. U. fc y Baas v v . MSHMIHG OPTIOiNS J ' " i !