t "7 o t 0 ,""0 CM ' -"I y m if tU sisi ' Co Elapse 1 ! i 3, i 1 i si I 1 Ua fJ . s s ' i o LLeiziau 7c 5'' ' (' ;0 )Vr ;1CSih Yer 2 Liglitner 'Buck Hits-'Way Into World Series 'Open er 9 fTSHar't notr: - Sfitttmaa . ixtr4 itor Al Lllhtntr s attending tl world series, ue wm lend hit com- menti en th rarres and ether "cddt aad cads" daily U To Statesman.) By AL LIGIITNTR ports Editor, The Statesman YANKEE STADIUM. . New York City (SpecisI) We came bsck here not only to see the World Series, but also to . send home odds and ends for readers. items that may not be included! in either the ndioed or TVd accounts of the classic. The Yank- ees won 6-5 Wednesday. Our first effort wes almost a fomrjfet flnn tnti icon it nM f ("I . V k . . UVt for the equipment manager of the New York Football . Giants, one Joe Pugni, we would have failed miserably on both counts. Tickets Blissin? : We supposedly had. press res ervations intact and waiting for Last week the Democrats, with their eyes ca Eisenhower, were insisting there is no indispensable man. Monday traders in stocks must have been Republicans, for they acted as though Eisenhower was their indispensable man. In fact one stock broker frankly ad mitted that this has been an Eisen hower market The line on the Dow Jones chart closely followed the electrocardiograph chart in Den ver, in reverse. The graph confirm wg ine doctor s diagnosis of a possible heart attack was followed by an abrupt plummeting' of the stock price averages. Then as the graph in Denver improved, as shown by the favorable medical bulletins, the graph on Wall street . started uphill again. Part of the initial reaction to i Cm; I H I jXQ: , tews ef the President's illness was 1 drew only 453 votes. -prompted by -fears for the future! A total of 278 voted in favor of business. Part was due to nimble J of the measure and 177 were bears who thought they could de- against, according to unofficial rive some profits out the down- returns. ' r ' - . hill slide. Much of the selling was The measure had been placed prompted more by the state of the on the ballot as a. means of im- market than anything else, warn-1 ings have been ample that credit was overextended, that stock prices had outrun reasonable expectation of earnings and dividends, that a period of market decline was over due. As is often the case market action has belied the opinions of experts for a long time. The far ther up prices went the easier it was for bad news to puncture them. Now we get reassurances from business leaders that the basis of our economy is sound. These are subject to some discount however, because the level of business de pends greatly on mass psychology and that still defies scientific mea surement Politics is a factor in American business and it is clear that the Eisenhower illness forces a reorientation of political-prospects. This halt for reappraisal of the business . outlook may be a healthy thing, preventing the boom from going through the ceiling. We were fast developing a bad case cf business euphoria. Conceivably this may prove to be the "pause that refreshes. , ,. . DionneQuint Resumes Life; In Convent QUEBEC, tBv Marie Dionne, one of Canada's famed quintup lets who left a eonvent last year to return to her iamily, has gone back to the religious order. Marie, 21, returned to the Con vent of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament here Sept. 12. She originally entered the order Nov. 3, 1953, and served six months as a postulant before be ing elevated to the rank of no vice. Poor health loss cf appetite and extreme homesickness were given as the reasons for her re turn home. She. must remain a novice two years if she is to be received permanently into tha order. One of her famed sisters, Emiiie, died Aug. 6, 1954. ANIMAL CRACKLT.3 V WARRCN GOODRICH "Tlafs Crar?a la Use mUSe lt'$ i:.::tL" SZCT1CNS - 24 PACES f ... m, ...... -.t .-J n v.- , , , . " for them the gentlemen in charge here looked UDOfl US with awe. We Jusf didn't look enough like an Indian to con vince them we were from the West - r . ... , We were on the outside look ing in just before game time when Pugni,' who was in Salem with the GianU footballer J for r 1 A -. ,,, lailkeC SUDStltUtC ' , - LrCaClS Wav to 6-5 Win Over Dodgers ? YANKEE STADIUM, New York W) A New York Yankee substitute led his mates to a 4-J Tictory ver the Brooklyn Dodg ers acre Wednesday la the first game of the If 53 World Series. Joe Collins, itility first base mu, smashed tws home runs, tne ia the fourth Inning, the ether in the sixth, to break the Dodgers backs. Brooklyn's Duke Snider, and Car! Furillo also hit home runs. " Winning pitcher was Whitey Ford;, losing hurler, Don New combe. . . . ' Thursday, the Dodgers expect to start Billy Lees as pitcher. Manager Casey Stengel of the Yankees has aoaoaaee4 that he win eoaater with Tommy Byrne. The weathermea forecast . tunny weather for the second series , game. (Additional details mm4 ' pic tares ,ei sports pages.) . Light Ballot Okehs Albany SeivenBonds - - ' Statesroaa Newt Senrtc ALBANY This city's $500,000 sewer bond issue oassed at a Wednesday special election which proving sewer, facilities and ex- tending them ' into the fringe areas of Albany, including the newly annexed Lake Grove addi tion. An expanded program, now possible with passage of the measure, would probably' include an industrial area to the south of the city. - - f ' State Forest Lands Opened AH ' state and - private forests will be open to entry without per mits today except for lands pro tected by. the Klamath Forest Pro tective Association. . In the Klamath district, there still are a few small fires. : The state forestry department announced that at midnight Wed nesday, it was opening these areas to entry without permits:- Linn County, Eastern Lane County, and parts of Crook, Wheeler and Des chutes Counties. ' , All forest areas of Clackamas and Marion Counties were cleared of entry closures Wednesday. The : U. Forest Service still maintains closures in. the . High Cascades and the Silver Lake area in eastern Oregon. : . ? . COPTER MAKES POLE FLIGHT LONDON ID Moscow radioTe ported Wednesday that a new So viet helicopter labeled the M14 has made a 5,000 mile -test flight from Moscow to the north pole. The broadcast gave no details of the exploit " , , r . Annual ICidc To'Drav CG More than 600 children are ex pected to compete for radios, cam eras and theater tickets in Salem Saturday in the fifth annual, Kids Day parade sponsored by the Sa lcrn Kiwanis Club " 1 3 recir.t years the parade" has trous-t out 600 to 7C3 entries and the number expected to be about tu sr.ir.e this year, Dr. Hay rin se n,- general chairman, said. Judging will start at 9:30 a. m. en U:a Capitol MalL The parade is tj strt. t 10:30. From the mall the route is west on C r kcta 5'reet to 111 g south on 1 ,.1 to Ccurt, and east on Court to the Cc f.td steps, where prizes will te presented. A team of Kiwanians ur.d;r the chairmanship of Dr. Henry E. Morris will ia the judg-L-;. - Prizes will be awarded ia each of five divisions fceys costumes, jirla' cc.t-.r.es, t:;s' decorated ti- Tha Oregon Statesman, Salem, Ore-orf, Thursday, September 29, 1553 I their training period, happened by. He had two tickets to Giants president jaci wara s ' staciun box; so our troubles were over. Famous Names We had a $10 seat for free, and it was quite a seat Imme diately in front of us was . Roy Rogers, whose rodeo show is playing here at Madison Square Garden. Toots Shor, the famous restaurateur here was right be hind us and newlyweds Eddie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds were within spitting distance. Ford Frick, high Poo-Bah (high com missioner) of baseball, kept get- tin? in the way, also. Having just as much rubber in our neck as the next guy, it was hard to concentrate on the ball game, spectacular as it was. (Al Lightner's comments on the game, appear on today's sports pages.). . . . , Fast Recovery Hopes Mount For President ; By ERNEST B. VACCARO ' DENVER W Mounting hopes that President Eisenhower may return to the helm of government within a" month were strengthened Wednesday when the oxygen tent was removed from his hospital room for 13 hours. - , There was no thought of his as suming the burdens of a full White HousS schedule that soon. But, barring complications, administra tive associates seem agreed he jviil be able to make any necessary decisions from the calm of his farmhouse at Gettysburg, Pa. The President will be 65 oa Oct 14. - -, t ' N Complications ' ; A medical bulletin issued at 8:15 p. m. (MST) said: "The President spent a comfort able day without complications. . - "He returned to the oxygen tent at 7:30 p.m. (MST) this evening. Newsmen noted that Wednesday night's formal bulletin was the first since early Sunday which did not say that Eisenhower was mak ing ""satisfactory progress." Asked whether that was significant. White House press secretary James Hagerty replied: "No, his progress still is satis-' factory. ' j The "key words" in all of the medical bulletins, Hagerty said, are without complications. The President's physicians have said that any complications which may develop are most likely to come during the first two weeks after the heart attack which he suffered early last Saturday. No Authority Shift Presidential advisers abandoned for the time being any further consideration of how Eisenhower could delegate authority to others as another day passed without complications. Hagerty . also disclosed that a tape recording machine was brought into the President's' room at his request and that he listened briefly to soft chamber music. Further Arms " 4 - - Cut 'Unwise' WASHINGTON tft Secretary of ' Defense Wilson was reported Wednesday to have concluded aft er a new survey that it would be militarily unwise for the armed services to cut their Spending any further this year. -; Informants said Wilson had as sured Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey and Budget Director Rowland Hughes that the Defense Department would continue every effort "look under every, log" for more economy, as Humphrey has asked all government depart ments to do. ' , i . (Story also on page 3, sec. 1.) Day Parado 0 YounnoC'orG cycles, girls decorated bicycles, and pets. First prize in each di vision 'is to be a radio', second prize, a brownie 'camera; and several theater tickets in each di vision for honorable mention. Four bands will provide music. They are the North Salem High School band, South Salem Ilirh Schc.l'taad. Leslie Junier H:;h School band, and Tarrkh Juror Ilish School band. The Rev. George II. Swift, pastor of St Paul's Episcopal Church, will give an invocation before the par- l aue. v.A noss ct raaso station jKSLM will -be master cf cere monies. The parade is in observance cf National Kids Dzy r.-or.---rei by Kiwanis clubs thro-.: ;.!-.: t the cun try. A preliminary evert in S-'.cra was a picture ccr.'.rt f r (':r.-.en-tary school stuJents i.i vhich win ners were announced Z.z:.:y. Sari Francisco Family Mnppily Rcunifcd SAN FRANCISCO Mrs. Hanna Marcus clasps her baby as she is wheeled into ML Zion hospital here Wednesday a short time after Mrs. Betty Benedicto surrendered the infant to a Catholic priest at Stockton some S3 miles east of here. At right kneeling is the baby's father, Dr. Sanford Marcus. On each side is Dr. and Mrs. Herman Marcus, the infant's grandparents. (AP Wirephoto). SAN FRANCISCO Elevea-day-old Robert Marcos sleeps peacefully in the arms of his mother, to young to be aware of the fact that he was the object of a nationwide search. (AP Wirephoto). Dread Illness Claims Last Of 4 Brothers OTTAWA, EL W Muscular dystrophy the dread, mysteri ous affliction that in effect turns muscles to fat has claimed the life of the last of the four Herlihy brothers.' .-. ; Robert, 21, died Tuesday night in Ryburn Memorial HospitaL Jemore Jr., ' 27, died March Ta. Daniel, 20, died June 26, 1953. The first victim. Charron, 18, died Dec. 23. 1943. The parents, Mr. and Mrs. Je rome Herlihy, now have only one living child. Patricia, 13, an eighth grade pupil in St Patrick's paro chial grade school who has es caped the affliction. In each case, the disease first struck , when the boys were be tween S and 7 years old. The first sign was lack of mus cular control. They fell easily at play. Next came the wheel chair and finally, bed. QCE Enrollment Sets New Record SUtctmaa Newt Berries .-, MONMOUTH Enrollment figures at Oregon College of Edu cation through Wedesday set a new record. Officials 'announced that 700 students had registered for the faU term. : , It was the highest enrollment figure in a regular session for 25 years and also was the highest since OC, became . a degree granting, institution. . , . - ' ' Sac- Pas Class; ied 9-11 5 Comet th Dawn I 4 Comics JLL 5- Crossword - LII-1: 8 EJ'.tortalt I. .4 Farm . l. 9 l!:me Panorama ..I t,7 '.arkefs !!. 8 r.jc.:o, TV - n.. 6 r;crts !!: 1-3 i ir Gazer I 9 V::ey .. : L. 12 V.'irephsta Pat -5 PRICE Portland Police Seek Mother of Abandoned Tots . . . . . PORTLAND LP A call for an ambulance started a police search Wednesday for a 19 -year -old mother. - A police officer answering a woman's telephoned request for an ambulance found only two small children. A pair of notes indicated the woman planned to take . her own life. .The police report said the notes apparently wers written by the children's mother, Mrs. Shirley Bunnel. One note gave instructions for care of the children; the other told of her poor health and warned police not-to try to findjier. The children, both girls, "were placed in a nursery. One is' five months old, the other two years. Young Driver, 15, Dies in Smasliup WARM SPRINGS tfl Patty Joy DuhiJ, 15, of Bend, died when the car she was driving left the road on a curve near Warm Springs Tuesday night and two young companions were hurt. .- State police and Warms Springs Indian Agency officials attributed the accident to "too much speed. Death Toil Feared 2tjO on Yucatan in Va!;c of Janet By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS - Hurricane Janet killed an esti mated 200 persons on the Yucatan Peninsula and neared the Mexican coast between Veracrui and Tux pan late Wednesday night -with winds of 125 miles an hour. The Neve. Orleans Weather Bu reau said the deadly storm was moving west-northwestward about 13 miles an hour and possibly in creasing its power.'Tbe center was expected .. to reach . the eastern coast of Southern Mexico early Thursday. , ? - Dangerously' hih tides were ex pected from Vera Cruz to Tampi co, about 2C3 miles up the coast. Rough seas were expected along the coast as far north as Port O'Connor, Tex. ( ' First reports from - Cheturaal, No. 184 1 r STOCKTON, Calif. The persist- - nt ' investigation of . Deputy Sheriff O i v,a 1 i Vannucci helped bring about Mrs. Betty - Benedict'! decision to return .little Robert Marcus to his par ents. (AP Wirephoto). Aeronautics Building Bids Top Estimate Seven bids, all in excess of the 125,000 authorized for. the project were opened Wednesday for a new State Board of Aeronautics build ing at McNary Field. -- Board Director Earl Snyder said the board 'would consider the bids and try either to pare the project down te the $25,000 figure or ask the emergency board for the addi tional funds. ", . Low bid, nearly $3,000 above the ceiling set by the legislature, was offered by Mills Construction Co., Salem. Clouds Rain on Weather Menu Goudiness and at least' a scat tering of rain will continue to be the weather .menu for the Salem area today and Friday, weather men at McNary Field reported, i Cloudiness on .Wednesday pro duced a trace of rain and predic tion for the next two days . is scattered light showers. Tempera tures will remain about the same, with an expected high of 65 today and a night-time minimum of 45. . '-. . . ... capital of Quintano Roo territory in Yucatan, indicated that the storm left only one building stand ing in the town of 20,000. - The death estimate came from a spokesman for President Adolfo Ruiz Cortines - of Mexico. The spokesman said the number of per sons injured on the peninsula might run to several thousand. T . As he .fpoke the season's tenth and most deadly hurricane spun across the Gulf of Campeche for the Mexican coast between Vera Cruz and Tuxpan. . Tuxpan is about 75 miles south of Tampico, where hurricane Hil da caused floods that drowned more than 300 persons nine days ago. At that time Tampico was struj;ling from under the debris of floods touched off by hurricane Gladys two weeks earlier. 5c Housewife 'Just Had to Have Baby;' Inquisitive Deputy Spots Kidnaper SAN FRANCISCO UP) A childless housewife who "just had to have a baby" remorsefully surrendered Robert Marcus to a priest in Stockton early Wednesday, nine days after the newborn boy was kidnaped in San Francisco. Recovery of the healthy baby, now 11 days old, ended nation-wide huijt. Dr. Sanford Marcus, 34, and his wife, Hanna, 29, sped in a police car the 82 miles to Stockton from San Francisco in 75 minutes for a joyful reunion with their son. Frightened by the earlier ques tioning of a sharp-eyed deputy sheriif, Mrs. Betty Jean Benedic to, 27, plump and blonde, decided to give up the baby she bad so carefully tended while police and the FBI hunted him from Califor nia to New York. Called Doctor Police were closing in on Mrs. Benedicto when she stepped to a telephone in Stockton, called the anxious Dr. Marcus, told him the infant was safe and that she was leaving it at St Mary'a Church in Stockton. Father Alan McCoy of St. Mary's answered his doorbell at the rec tory and found Mrs. Benedicto standing - before him, the baby cradled in her arms. The hour was 1:15 a.m. Mrs. Benedicto was crying. Phone Call Made Father McCoy was expecting her, for Dr. Marcus had phoned him from San Francisco. Baby Marcus slept through it all. He was taken to the emer gency ward of Stockton's St Jo seph Ho5pital, where Dr. Marcus, tieless and haggard, and tis fear- worn wife were reunited with htm. Dr.' Marcus said, it took "only a few seconds to become at least 99 per cent sure" that the child was his son, stolen from San Francisco's Mt Zion Hospital Sept. 19. ' .' , - - . Mrs. Benedicto, tearfully repent- ent,' was brought to San Francisco where Dist Atty. Thomas C. Lynch said be would ask the grand jury to indict her on a kidnaping charge. " 4 . Unconscious . Taken first to women's prison, she later was transferred uncon scious but under uard to the psychopathic ward at San Francisco Hospital after she ecl lapsed during cpt'ioning. ' . Police quoted her as saying, "lie was so sweet so sweety I had no right to him, Ij know, but I had to have him. I ? ved him. He was such a sweet Lille boy." District Attotfiy Bradford Crit tenden of Stockton said the plump woman sobbed constantly as she told of playing an elaborate game of deception upon her husband. "I just had to have a baby, I had to have a baby!" he quoted her as saying, i v Ex-Publisher - y She said she was married last ; October to Marcos Benedicto, 52, who, had published a Filipino news paper at Stockton until it dosed last December. He is a Filipino; she, Caucasian. She said that because of a cae- sarean operation she had been told she never could have a baby. When she began to take on weight "my friends teased me and said they thought I was pregnant" . . Mrs. Benedicto toid her husband she "was pregnant went to River-; side in Southern California to her mother, dieted, then returned and told her husband the baby had been born but was ill and in a hospital. ,--;--. ' : ! Then, she said, she went to Mt Zion Hospital, looked in the nur sery window at the new-born ba bies and took baby Robert Marcus because his name 'was similar to her husband's. r " Bought Toys, Clothes ., - - . Back home, Benedicto welcomed the baby, thinking it was his own. He bought it toys and clothes. His wife cared for it while she listened to? frantic radio and television pleas that it be, returned. , j ThenTuesday night she took the baby to a boxing match, , where Deputy Sheriff Osvaldo J. Vannuc ci spotted her seated with another woman. She fitted broadcast de scriptions. ; - , - - . "1 went over to them, he re lated, "and the first thing she said to me was, 'I know what you want you think I'm the woman who took the baby from the hospitaL' Shown Certificate Mrs. Benedict ;showed Vannuc ci a birth certificate from a hos pital "in Lynwood, "near Los An eeles. Vannucci let her go. Still suspicious, he checked the Lyn wood hospital, found no baby by the! name of Benedicto had been born there. Then the hunt was cn. Frightened. Mrs. Benedicto tele phoned Dr. Marcus, then took. the baby to the church. ..Meanwhile, Vannucci talked to Benedicto, who said until then he thought the baby was his own. ; "I'm sorry for that woman," Mrs. Marcus said. "She must be sick. I'm glad she took such ex cellent care of my boy and brought him back." . .: - Stanley Heads State Engineers - p ENTER cri Lewis AI Stanley, Oregon State Engineer, was elect ed president of the association of western state engineers Wednes day at the organization's 2Sth an nual convention. Association merr.trrs from 15 western states attended the con- ference here. Remoreaful SAN FRAXDCISCO Mrs. Ecilj ' Benedicto sheds tears of re morse while being questioned -after she gave, up little Robert . Marcus, who had been' kid- naped nine days - earlier. ( AP J Wirephoto). Stock Market Gains Again NEW YORK .CH A strengthen-.' ing stock market Wednesday re gained more of the ground lost ia Monday's frantic retreat. . ' Gains in key stocks ran from $1 to $5. closing a bit below, their . best for the day which ran to $5. Ahead from the start,- " prices were kicked .even higher - by - a strong rally in early afternoon. The ticker tape, which normal ly reports transactions within secv 6nds. fell, behind for more than j an hour and at one point was 3 ' minutes late. " '..),.. The quoted Value of stocks list ed on' the New York Slock Ex change regained an estimated 2V billion dollars today. This, added to' yesterday's recovery of 3',i bil lion dollars, made the two days advances a total of 5 '-i billion of the nearly 13 billion loss estimat ed for Monday. Additional market news on paga 8, sec 2.) U. S. TROOPS LEAVE AUSTRIA BRENNERO, Italy IB Ameri ca's fighting men begin pulling out of Austria shortly after dawa Thursday ' '. The Weather. Mx. Mln. Prffip, Salrra PorUand Baker Medfoxd North Bend t4 4 trc 61 49 .Oi 55 41 .01 71 11 tract t 47 .00 67 40 8S 53 trar 74 fcO .(1 70 53 .W Rostburg San Francisco . Los Angeles Chieata . Willamette River -J-l feet. -FORECAST Irom U. S. weather bureau. McNary lield. Salem 1: Partly cloudy with scattered V.zY.t showers today, tonxht and Friciav; little temperature cnanee. h:"l todav near 65. low tonight near 4. Temperatur at 13.01 a.m. today was 4i. ' $ M.TM PRFCTriTTIOV . inte Jiurt t Weather Vear Sept. 1 Ibis Year Last ear h'vmaj 2.34 1..J -