Tl- ' The Weather ; 'V "FORECAST (from U. S. -weather Bureau. HcNarjr field. Salem): . Mostly iair today. tonight and Tri day with early morning tot. Warmer , today with a higa sear 70 and low tonight near Si. Temperature at 12.-01 lil today Was 44. , . . . . . salem nrtmrhr iov -Sint Start f Weather Year Seat. 1 Ibis Tear - - La it Year . s KornuJ L35 - ... 12S .99 If YYC Me ge "to mganpi tarn Eden Get Notes : . : - ' -; ' .. PCU N DO P 1651 105th Year 2 SECTIONS-20 PAGES The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, September 22, 1955 PRICE 5c No. 179 Foe of Peron Artillery General Lbnardi to Rule lorariiy; reron a till onahip Marciano Knocks Out Moore to Keep Crown By BRUCE HENDERSON BUENOS AIRES (Jfy Maj, Gen. Eduardo Lonardi, a longtime foe of Peronism, Wednesday-became Argentina's new No. 1 man. But late Wednesday night his. formal installation as provisional president wax delayed until Friday. '(Picture on Page 5, Sec. 2.) A peace agreement was reached 'Wednesday between. the vie torious rebels and the loyalist junta which took' over when Juan I Peron was ousted. The agree ment provided for Lonardi, rebel commander in the Central Argen tine province of Cordoba, to head up a new government The state radio first announced that Lonardi would be Installed as provisional president Thursday,1 but a subsequent broadcast said be would not assume his new post until Friday. There was no ex planation for the delay. , Holiday Delayed : t The later broadcast also said Thursday would be a working day, i instead of the . holiday previously j announced. The radio added that the holiday would be observed on HKD Q3JLH Part, I Smith stiver Access - - Road System . . 1nn1 in CYro tfnn hin hari1 a great deal about "access roads", f3- ... . - i . . in connection with their major! The loyalist junta which took industry, forestry. Steadily the "ver ' central government in -timberline- has receded into ; Pen wake surrendered to the, the mountains. Now the major ebeta Wednesday under a near L.u v v laCTeemenL So far as rsn hi Am.' sunas are inose neia oy me jo- -- . - - : ernment and by large private the surrender was un-; f corporaUons. They occupy the u"l" wcrc, 8,sns higher elections. Timber on the j11 members of the junta, includ lowlands has very largely been injwmrof Peron s supporters, re cut This means that roads have'mam 'actors to be reckoned with. J - A ir Traffic Survey In Salem Promised CAA Check IMay Reinstate Tower 1 An. air traffic survey, which. may result in re-establishment of the Salem airport control tower, has been promised for Salem, it was reported Wednesday. , , i " . Rep. Walter Norblad said he has been informed by F. D. Lee, administrator of the Civil Aeronautics Administration, Washing ton, D. C, that a traffic survey, is to be made here, "as soon as possible.' No date for the survey has been announced ' here. Charles Barclay, Salem airport manager, said Wednesday he knew nothing of the proposed survey. - He said he would probably discuss the matter with a regional CAA rep resentative next week at a meet ling in Yakima, Wash. -I Norblad several weeks ago re quested the CAA to consider re 'establishing the control tower here following a fatal air crash at McNary Field, Lee's answer to Norblad reads in part: "Although we must withhold any comment as to the possible cause of the accident until after the investigation has, been com pleted,, we have .requested our Los Angeles regional office to conduct a traffic survey at Salem as soon as possible." State Hearing Bars Press; Probe Starts to be built into the timber stands before the trees cai be hauled out to the mills. - However, building roads into the mountains is very expensive. There are narrow valleys, steep ridges, rushing rivers to contend with. The main roads have to be heavily rocked to carry the weight of loaded log trucks. Even the spur roads into the woods nave to be surfaced if they are Same Age as Perea Lonardi is a veteran artillery man the same age as Peron 59. He . has , hated Peron for years, friends- say.T and in 51 retired from the army amid a dispute over the abortive proposal to make Mrs. Peron the vice-president. . Bomors as to Peron's fate were a dime . dozen Wednesday, but the best a va Cable Information was that the deposed dictator-president to carry much tonnage. Who will remained aboard the Paraguayan buud these roads? Where the timber is privately owned in big blocks the private buuds bis own road. owner gunboat where he - took refuse Tuesday. i No Confirmation , .c Nothing could be found to suo- Whm the eovernment in. the PT oroaacasi neara in we Um- sole owner it may buUd the ;fd States (over the Mutual roads within its domajn. Diffi- Broadcasting System) saying Pe- culties arise W i e when ownership ron wag m reD1 nanas ana NEW YORK Challenger" Archie Moore goes to canvas ii sixth roand after heavy pasting by world heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano. Marciano won by a knockout la ninth round. (AP Wire photo). (Story and picture oa Sports pages), i : ; .t J. - ..'--" North Marion County Fair ens lodav Op ' SUtesnaa Newt Serrire , WOODBURN Featuring more exhibit space than ever, the North Marion County Fair will open here Thursday. . ' ' . ; . Two Indians Again Rich From Timber PORTLAND OfV A fraud case, exposed by a newspaper three years ago,' ended happily Wednesday with $1,175,000 for the two nearly penniless Indians who had been victimized. That was the price their iimberland brought In a sealed-bid sale conducted by the Indian Bureau. The same land was sold, through machinations of a since-convicted Indian Bureau official, for $135,000 in 1951. - f . . . . , , That first sale ;was cancelled, t-. - - i -i-v and three men served prison sen-; MOFtlariQ aJ Exhibits wiH be judged following ( XWX .fter the exposure. Reporter j patterns are mixed. Obviously a single road system 1 should be laid out to take care of all the timber in a drainage basin.. But where there are numerous pri vate owners or where the gov ernment owns part and private interests own part then the busi ness, of getting them together for construction ' and use gets complicated. What is developing is a dual pattern: in some instances a gov ernment agency builds the road. In other instances a private party (Continued on editorial page, 4.) Suit Eyed iil Transfer of TJoss' Convict face trial as a war criminal s An AP reporter went aboard the gunboat in Buenos , Aires harbor. A Paraguayan officer said Peron. was aboard under the protection of the neighboring country "per haps ' a , bit uncomfortable but safe." " , ' .. . . The 'announcement of a peace agreement said the two sides had reached complete accord, with the loyalist junta accepting the points stipulated by the rebels, r Prison gates began opening for scores of persons Peron had jailed on ' political charges. The leaders of the June . 16 revolt were orderd freed 'immediately. Two- federal judges ordered the release -of all political prisoners they were hold ing for trial number unspeci fied. . .,. , The state 'radio was, broadcast ing warnings to government ; em ployes not to ' destroy any public property.' n .:-'' . -' ; V mg Pe- the a.m. deadhne for bringing : w u Turner of The Oregonian i T? - ' " . . - d would then, to , the fr. dind received the Heywood Broun ' JiVaCUatlOll tO P13 thUubLl tT'1 ..4 P T; ! award from the American New , Halt Traffic Reports were current here Wed nesday that suit may be filed in the Marion County Circuit Courtat tacking the constltutlonallty, of a 19S5 legislative act under which warden Clarence Gladden transfer red-Donald "Punchy". Bailey from the Oregon State Penitentiary o Alcatraz Federal Prison near San-Francisco.- ' Z. " . Name of the attorney slated to file the suit was not revealed. ' Gladden branded Bailey as a trouble-maker and said he had oc cupied a maximum security cell for several months. He was listed as one of the leaders in the peni tentiary riots here two. years ago and was recognized by many of his fellow" convicts as "boss" of the prison. ' The suit, if filed, will chrz that Bailey is being deprived of prison privileges, ana an op.-i , tunity to appear before the. state 1 narnl hnant a ciiH nf Yi'im transfer.. This, it will be empha sized, is a violation of the state; constitution. . , ; The 1955 legislative act. permit ting the transfer of penitentiary prisoners to other penal institutions was requested by. Gladden. ; - Intercliange at Hayesville Now Partially Opened A 'portion of the interchange on Highway 89 E at Hayesville was opened Wednesday; It -per mits southbound traffic travelling via the Salem bypass to go under neath the road carrying north bound traffic,"' thereby - eliminat ing a stop and relieving conges tion at the intersection. . Highway officials emphasized that the move did not yet Involve use ' of. the new - Highway WE north of Hayesville.,- : ? to iram ine exmciu w.u p QuM m l933 for bis :HieoA -SL 22S I of articles exposing the fraud. and under canvas at the National Guard vehicle park. Eight extension units, six garden clubs, five Grange units were pre paring -booths at the fair Wednes- day"i - ' v'v ' ; r 1 . A free talent show is scneuuiea at p.m. Thursday at settiemier Park. The fair will end Saturday night-.- Saxons Share , bt Top The SouthSalem Saxons and Corvallis '11 led the first poll ot the season by the Associated Press to determine the state s top lugn school .gridiron .power, it was an nounced Wednesday. ; . ' - ; High school football coaches over the state are polled. Marshf ield was', third and the . balloting thus put i the state's co-champions of 1954 South Salem and Marshf ield well to the fore again this year. (Additional details on sports pages.), : t , tt V;..l-t'-'..V- ' Not Present . - x , Neither of the Indians. Jasper Grant and Harold F. Thornton, attended t h e sale " Wednesday. Grant sent word he could not leave his job. He has been working as a bean picker. . The men convicted of fraud were Clyde ;W." Flinn, the Indian Bureau , area 1 realty officer; , Fred Marsh,- Lebanon, Ore., timber buyer, arid John C. Blanford, Port land attorney.; 1 ' 1 The .747 acres of virgin timber land brought bids .rom five ply wood firms Wednesday with the Evans Products Co. of Coos Bay the- winner. The Umber is near the coast in Southern Oregon. CoaservatorshlBS Named - Neither of the two is likely to eet'much money at' first Grant ran through about $27,000 in four months when money from the since-cancelled fraudulent sale was turned over to him in 1951. ' Conservatorships then i ..were established for the two men. Indian Bureau officials said money from this sale probably would go to conservators to be' named by a Portland . judge. Baseball Scores AMERICAN LEA GUI ' At Chicago 7. Cleveland 3 .' At Detroit 10. Kansas CHy 1" T At Washington 3. New Ybrk 7 At Boston 7. Baltimort S (13 inn.) NATIONAL LEAGCK 'y " At Cincinnati -14. Milwaukee 5 ' ' At New. York 7-1-Pittsburch 2-3 At St Louia 5. Chicago 1 (13 Inn.) Only fames scheduled. - Sheriff Dep s . . . .. The Portland ; business district will be closed to in-bound traffic next week during the city's evac uation test, the Oregon Civil De fense Agency-said Wednesday. The test, lasting one to two hours, will be held on Sept 27, 28 or 29i Motorists headed toward Port land will be given leaflets telling them to stay out of the test area. At more distant points from the city, state police will distribute maps showing how to by-pass the test area. More than 200,000 persons will be moved ' out of the Portland central district during the test Investigation of the reasons for a secret bearing on a Roseburg man's challenge of a State Unem ployment Compensation Commis sion ruling was underway in Sa lem Wednesday after the Roseburg News-Review protested the barring of one of its reporters from the session. V, -, ' The reporter said be was denied access to the hearing in Roseburg Monday by M. F. McFarland, ap peals referee for the commission, who be said- told him -state law gave him the right to declare the hearing "confidentiaL" Hearing was on an appeal by Ernest M. Kolberg of Roseburg against: what he called a change mine. established practice of com puting state unemployment com pensation benefits in which he was being supported by the Roseburg Carpenters and Joiners Local 1961. W. A. Callahan, SUCC commis sioner, said Wednesday he had no comment on the secret hearing in the absence of other members of the commission .including Chair man T. Morris Dunne. Dunne and Silas Gaiser, administrator for the Commission. are attending a con ference in St Louis. ' Callahan did say, however, that legal advisors for the commission were conducting an investigation of the so-called "star-chamber" session from which the press was barred. v , Dogs Hunt for 2 Lost Women Near Portland PORTLAND W Bloodhounds were ordered out Wednesday in the search for two women after their automobile had f been found on Larch Mountain, southeast of here: The women, Mrs. Bernice N. Sharkey, 75, a semi-invalid, and Mrs.! Aver a E. Ferguson. 53, have been j missing( since Sunday. They said at the time they were going for a short drive. ! The dogs followed a trail taken by sheriff's deputies. It - led a quarter-mile to Nesika Lodge, j owned by the Trails Club. There ' was an unlocked door there and bedding and firewood were inside, but the lodge appeared not to have been entered, i. - . -,-.. The dogs also went 200 yards farther to a lookout point The lookout point is rimmed by a stone wall ! and a chain barrier. One cf the searchers, however, said he could see a broken tree limb and rock! slippage .on the steep slope Ibelo. as if something had plunged ,. Relatives said they believed the two women had gone, berry pick- tog. ; , , . X . State Junior College Plan Under Study utv lestitv Z Admitted Kidnaping Negro Boy (ANIMAL CRACKERS V WAalN OOOiK'M , 9 II- - "Gee," an the ether paps have teasl Way cu t 11 , f SUMNER, Miss. J-FH-A coun try sheriff and his deputy said two white' half-brothers "admit ted kidnaping a Chicago Negro boy last month . but denied in the' same statement that they killed the .lad. - - Over vigorous defense objee .tions. Sheriff George .Smith tes tified at the murder trial of Roy Bryant. 24, and J. W. Milam, 3, 'that 'he -talked to Bryant about "the abduction of 14 -year -eld 'Emmett (Bobo) TilL "I asked him about going down and getting - the little Negro boy," Smith told a hushed courtroom, "and he said he .went down and got him to let his wife identify him.. His wife said it wasn't the bey and he turned him loose." - Throe days before young Till Os West; Wife To Celebrate 58 ' Years of Marriage PORTLAND XS?) Former Governor Oswald' West and his wife. -Mable. will celebrate their 58th wedding anniversary - Thurs day :.4 , As part of his observance of the occasion., the 82-year-old Democrat said he will visit the state prison at Salem. West, who was governor from 1911 to .1915. inaugurated an Losing Battle With Burglar RENO, Nev. IP William A. Powell of Reno admitted to police Wednesday that he's losing his bat tle with a burglar. Powell, whose tool shed has been rifled twice in recent weeks, de cided Tuesday night to sleep in the shed, armed with a pistol , and an automatic shotgun, in an at tempt to catch the burglar. ' , But he stepped outside for a few minutes. ; ' ' When he returned, the pistol and rifle were gone, along with an elec- i - i . ... inc. gnnaer. v Jackson County - Tree Assessment Ruled Invalid The State Tax Commission, in a decision this week, declared void assessments on . Jackson County commercial orchard trees. The decision was based largely on procedure technicalities follow ed by the county board of equali zation. Orchardists contended .the at tempted assessment was arbitrary. discriminatory and unjust and that advance notice was not given. The tax commission held that the board of equalization is without au thority to increase; the assessed value of any property on the tax roll without giving the person in volved at least five days notice Hearings on the issue will be held, starting, early next week, ugc-emai ' A special committee, represent ing both the State Board of High er Education and the State Board of Education, , will be named to study the feasibility of establish ing state-financed junior colleges' in Oregon, It was announced here Wednesday. A - M ' The proposal came from ..Dr. I John Richards,' chancellor of the State Board of Higher Education. At the last session of the legis lature a bill amending the cur rent junior college law was ap proved ;by the House but the Senate committee, on ' education felt; that additional study should be ' made before the - law was amended. 1 The committee, .upon" comple tion of its study, would file its report and? recommendations with the 1957 - legislature. ; v , A number of Bend citizens, in cluding several ' educators, ap peared before the 1955 - legisla ture and urged an amendment to the current junior college law providing for more financial as sistance from the state. - ; . The present law .permits set ting 'up of junior, colleges, but the greater part of the cost is borne by the' school districts. Diplomats Study Dispatches; No V Details Revealed WASHINGTON Cfl Soviet Pre mier Bulganin has sent a personal message to President Eisenhower. The Soviet leader also had rushed a message to Prime Min ister Eden in' London. Dispatches from there said it dealt with dis armament . : A copy also was understood to have been addressed to French Premier . Edgar Faure. - ' "- Informed officials here who dis closed Bulganin had written Eisen hower declined, to say what tha message discussed. - , . The message to Eisenhower, in formants said, was sent through the State Department late Tues day. The department quickly trans mitted 'it to the President at his vacation headquarters in Denver. Bulganin' s message was believed to concern Big Four efforts to achieve a workable world disarm ament plan. ' Disarmament Tepie v' " London dispatches which report ed the Soviet Embassy had de livered a message to Eden said disarmament was the main topic. The United States, Britain ' and France are reported - virtue ily deadlocked with the Soviet Union on the disarmament problem dur ing current talks by a United Na tions subcommittee in New York. Aerial Inspection Harold- E. Stassen, the Ameri- can representative, has pressed the Soviets at this meeting to agree to Eisenhower's proposals for ae rial inspection of each other's mil itary installations and an exchange of military blueprints. Russia, while not specifically re jecting the proposals, has called for dismantling American bases overseas, withdrawal of troops from Germany and steps to im prove trade and cultural relations between East and West - -: ' - Parley U Ead The disarmament subcommittee has been planning to wind up its talks in New York Thursday. - v When a Soviet envoy hurried to No.- 10 Downing Street with the message for Eden there had been speculation the Russians were ex pressing new interest in the "Eden plan" for disarmament. This calls for a limited disarmament-area along the line separat ing East and West in Germany. A gradual reduction in troops oft either, side would follow, a system of arms control developed. ' ' First Frost FTC Ethics Code Given to Makers Of Cigarettes Assessors Meet At Bend Today , BEND m Samuel 'Stewart, state tax commissioner, and Rep. L. ! U' Stewart, Cottage Grove, chairman of the state House Tax ation Committee, will address the annual meeting of the Oregon state assessors' convention here Thurs day: ' . ? '.' " ' ; ' ' Presiding -at the meeting, which niu Waneri9 ia Tslie M. Ross. Deschutes County, president ofj the assessors association. : Reported in Valley Areas Warmer days and colder nights are forecast for today and Friday in the Salem area as the -first frosts of the season were report ed in the Willamette Valley Wed-. nesday.v . . At least one icy windshield was reported to the U. S. Weather Bureau - at McNary Field Wed nesday morning as -the tempera ture skidded to a scant four de grees above freezing in the early morning hours. - - The temperature dropped to 34 degrees at Eugene, only two cold digits from the freezing level, to list, the lowest temperature on record there - lor this time of year. - . ; . . 1 - Temperatures in Salem today - ace expected to push up to a high of 70 degrees this afternoon, ; three degrees higher than Wed nesday, and then to plunge to a chilly 35 tonight7 v -"- Patches of. early morning . fog remain on the-forecast,' The fog will prevent .- temperatures from dropping to', freezing ; in . most local areas, tbe'4 weatherman said, but pockets which retain cold, air may see low -readings : during the next few nights here. Mimmums in the high valleys of central Oregon dropped far below freezing early Wednesday. 1 A reading of 20 degrees was re-' ported at Bend, 24 at 'Redmond and 28 at Klamath Falls. WASHINGTON ! Cigarette' honor system at the prison which manufacturers were handed a sev- Stolen Baby Hunt- Fired by Ner Clues, Reward Offer ' was ' abducted from the cotton- field shack of his uncle Aug. " 23, he had' allegedly made in- decent -remarks and- gestures to .Bryant's pretty 21-year-old wife, : Carolyn. ' : ; ." -? .Smith : was followed to the 'witness stand y : one. of -the 'deputies, John E. Cothran. He -said he questioned Milam about ' the disappearance of young TilL ;"I asked him if they- went 'about and got the boy" Coth ran continued. 1He said yes but they turned him loose." - . .The .defense in cross exami- nation1 sought to show tt Bryant and Milam were misled into their statements -rn casual chats.-with authorities which the . defendants considered confiden- - -tiaL , . ' ' was ji . forerunner to tne present parole -system. - . t The. Wests were , marriea at Salem in 1897. ' -' vi Today's Statesissn Classified Comics Crossword . Editorials -J Farm Sec. ' Pag ..IL-: 7-9 !l 5 ..llw- - Home Panorama L Markets ! II- Radio, TV IL Sports H Star Gaxer ......... I. 10 6 ! t Valley .., II ,.31. Wirephota Paga ILl' 5 ; en point code of advertising ethics Wednesday with a warning thaU it will be diligently enforced by the Federal Trade Commission. The FTC code forbids any claims as to the effects of cigarettes on nose, throat, nerves or lungs; any representation that cigarette smok ing ' is medically approved, and any claim that one brand contains less nicotine than others unless the difference is provably "signifi cant."" -" '. , , TURKEYS SMOTHER BEND ( More than turkeys smothered to death oyer the weekend when they became frightened and piled into the cor ner of their, pen at the Bernard Burke ranch north of here. It was not known what caused the birds to panic SAN FRANCISCO (41 . New clues one a blanket and re wards of $3,000 stepped up the spreading search. Wednesday for a four-day-old baby stolen by a "bux om blonde woman from a hospital maternity ward. Fears for the life of the breast fed baby, son of a hospital doctor, increased. -Hundreds of. police still sought desperately for the: woman who took the child, presumably be cause of a "mothering urge.". The little blanket of a type used at Mt Zion Hospital where, 6-pound Robert Marcus was taken from his filled baby's, bottle of milk, with a -nipple. . ." r -- - A check, of blankets used at Mt. Zioa turned tip one that matched closely the one found in San Jose. Police began ringing doorbells, in the San Jose area while police in San- Francisco continued . a ,30 block house-by-house check around the hospital. .: More than a third of San Fran cisco's -1,700 police was, assigned to- the case.- . v ; Friends and relatives of the dis fraught parents. Dr. and Mrs. San ford Marcus, collected 44,000 to offer as rewards. The money was added to $1,000 previously posted Russians Send V Flood Aid to U.S.: WASHINGTON m The Rus sian Red Cross and Red Crescent, societies have contributed $23,000 to- the American- National t Red Cross to aid sufferers in the flood -and hurricane damaged sections of the Eastern United States. crib Monday, was found in San Jose, 50 miles south of San Fran-1 by the president of the hospital's cisco. It was picked up in a yard i board of directors 1,700 only four blocks from, a bouse!.; The child's mother, who already where a buxom woman carrying a baby stopped Tuesday and asked to have, a bottle of milk heated. Another possible clue was turned up in a clump of bushes in a San Jose parking lot by George Adams, a taxicab driver. It was a half- NEW STORM FORMS - , - MIAMI, Fla J . The tenth tropical storm' of the season. named Janet by weather Bureau forecasters, blew up Wednesday night in the Atlantic Ocean about 350 miles east southeast of Mar tinique French West. Indies. . The Weather Salna Portland Baker Medford North Bend Roseburs San Francisco Los Angeirs had undergone 'the-ordeal-of her parents and a brother , being put to death in Hitler's gas chambers. was in a state of near collapse nvr !.-: nl her habv onlv two days' after birth. (Pictures on page gg- it sec. 2 . - 4 - aVUlameUa &iv ! Max. Mln. lrrri, J M . . 67 ,41 , . .00 U 37 .00 ' M 37 . .00 t4 4t .00 69 34 .09 8" 4S M , 75 . 2 J 79 ' J4 , 7S - ST -jr If