The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 29, 1955, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    2-Sec Statesman, Saloni,
Typh
Main
oon
TOKYO to Tvohoon Louise
i . , au m Maw ut 0.mjt
the year s wildest storm, drove churned toward typhoon ..weary .proposal for the John Day Dam en
saaisht at teeming Southern Jap- Kyushu, the ' southernmost of Jap- u,e Columbia River, Sen. Neuber
an Tnursday with winds of IX an's four main islands. ger (rxjre) asserted Wednesday
Jn'!e an hour and lashing rain. J Louise was moving north at nine oigt in the third of 10 i public
ine migniy norm swucnea w.mues an now. .-.
northern course, missing the
jjudge Rules
Child Theft
(Charge False
! PnnTtjvn m - A indie
Y'2jnev dismis-ed as "uniusti-
k-T a father's charge that an
rotive atency here was guilty i
f "child theft- 1
! Circuit Judge Virgil H. Langtry
icid he could not "place any
crsdence" in the testimony of i
C-rlwartryingS'
ot to ?S3 . C
I j ,i ii , .
'Humble had made the accusation u,c
8 inst the Cathol'c Services for.w,ds f1" "JJ"-.: , . .
Children organization. He had
f-xi the ch-rren with that
a Ty when he was living here
L' m-i
' In his court attempt to regain
ShS , bVwM I hi Thad told the
agency be did not want the
cYidren placed for adepUon. but
tW it.. .nr ,hn,,itiv
- .v wTu. a !
I- UBiuuuin in,.!,,-
" - Z I.., v" "ir ' ' ZZT '
tons legal. He complained little
... a. if htm
.The agemr asserted it had made.
repeated efforts )o find Humble.
.The jude raH he found discreo-'
arses ' in Humble's story, and
fed that the chiMren told h'm '
rjv'did not want to go back to
their father. - , - .
' ''
Blaze Routs
oyes of
Salem Firm
; An overheated loom motor
caused apparently minor damage
Wednesday night at the Asten
Hi'l manufacturing firm in West
S-lem, firemen reported. Heavy
smoke forced some two dozen !
ertoloves out of the building for ,
a time.
Cotton yarn strung to the loom
reportedly was damaged in the
10:15 p.m. fire. - A firm spokes
man said it would take at least
three days to re-string creels
feeding the loom and get it back
In operation.
. The yarn is used in manufae-
j .i4- r -
fjrms. ' :
birds' Kaitar 1
Systems Out?
'James Hoffman. 630 E. Ewald
Ave., was - mystified- Wednesday
when he found two dead pheasants
in his front yard. The birds had
no apparent injuries.
' Curious about cause of death,
Hoffman phoned state police and
game officer was sent to the spot
After investigation the officer said
the pheasants apparently hit Hoff
man's house in full flight and
broke iheir necks.
Roseburg Bypass
To Open Saturday
' ROSEBURG I The $4
Pacific Highway bypass around
Koseburg will open officially Sat
urday. . Instead of motorists going
.through Roseburg. they may pass
the city on a 9 "4 -mile-long free
way The route saves about a half-mile
of travel and is expected to save.
at least IS minutes in driving time.
FIRE DAMAGES CAR !
Fire caused an estimated $73
damage Wednesday night to a 1934
Olds sedan owned by Hugh Luby,
133 Culver Lane, firemen reported.
The 8:25 p.m. blaze, believed start
ed by a cigarette, reportedly dam
aged both front and rear seats.
The vehicle was parked in the 100
block of S. Winter Street at the
time.
TO FREE PRISONERS V
" : VIENNA. Austria Roman
ia's Communist Parliament has
decreed that all "foreign political
prisoners and Romanian war crim
inals sentenced to terms below 10
years" will be freed, radio Bucha
rest" said Tuesday.
NOVYl Opan 6:45
- )0b) ClMMetttffjfj
mmiia muml -M,
.
nmnru.imire v Al
PLUS
Rirard. M.ntalbaa
Anne Bancroft
Emp
Oro., Thursday, Sept. 29, 195 J
Threatens
Japanese Isle
'huge U. S. base on Okinawa, and
Japanese weather observers saia .
Louise proDawy wouia siam who j
Kyushu about a. m. Friday, and
then roar into the Japan Sea.
Storm and flood warnings have
(been posted. "
Much I of a recora rice crop on
the island has yet to be harvested,
Kyushu, about twice the size of
New Jersey, has been racked by,,, ..,),! th n nm
most exactly a year aro a mighty
fleyastatea grain - neavy
P13"" f10 tsi.
n?n i?!,"" . t'u. '
I !tion. tor wrmmg
PPuk". Jsha aLo has some
heavy industry. The atomombed
tr Nagasaki is on lU southern
Okinawa.' where 30.000 U.S.
servicemen, includi OOO family
members are stationed, escaped
aLS, "
battiefM wh-re the U. S. Air
Force and Coast Guard maintain
tiny omts. was not so forrtmate. I
Lorn, then churning up m
mile and hour wind,, flattened
the base Sunday. The 0-mn
garrison, which crouched to tun-
nels dug by wartime Japanese de-
fenders, escaped without serious
inhirv
I
? , j . ,.
Meanwhfle, a second storm gath-
mfUl . . t. i Jl
weaker bureau said it had not.
yet reached typhoon status but
wa" b'in2 UP- ' t J
ine lypn00" warning center at
Guam Mld th Sit? weaker K-.
connalssance Squadron had tocat-
ed the second storm, with winds
of 70 miles art hour. 230 miles
nortnwest oi uuam. i
The warning center said the
storm was moving northwest at
10 miles aa hour and would be
450 miles northwest of Guam at
9 a. m., Friday. '
The Air Force does not classify
a storm a typhoon until its winds
reach 75 miles an hour. If the
storm builds up to that figure, it
will be named "typhoon Marge."
TV
J( JJamaCTCS
-
room oi
a
Salem House
Fire caused considerable dam
age Wedaesday -night to a bed
room at the residence of E. F.
Underwood, 1339 Plaza, firemen
said. t
: The . flames, confiied to . the
bedroom, 1 reportedly 'destroyed a
mattress and beddiig, charred
one wall and burned 'a hole in a
floor. A relative of the family,
said to be occupying the room at
the time, escaped uninjured.
Friemen said a defective cord
on an electric heater was a pos
sible cause of the blaze. The
alarm was turned in about 10:50
pjn.
Burglar Raid
Nets Nothing
It was wasted effort for burglars
early Wednesday morning- when
they broke into the Copeland lum
ber yard, 349 S. 12th St City policei
reported nothing apparently aws
taken.
Detectives said entry was believ
ed made by climbing on the roof
of a shed and going through, a
second-floor window of the firm. A
sliding door was opened to gain
access to the main office. Report
edly overlooked in the burglary was
a small amount of cnanee in a
! C0UI office
I T-i V f Ml : J
Gates Open C:45 Shew At 7
NOW PLAYING!
JANE POWELL
HOWARD KEEL
, "SEVEN BRIDES FOR
SEVEN BROTHERS"
" ' . In Cinemascope
" And Technicolor
Also
EIROY HIRSCH
"UNCHAINED
-' EXCLUSIVE!
FIGHT PICTURES!
SEE IT IIOV Oil FILM!
row (SEHSQ!0
SUM
mm
ffloa aurnrwa
m Mm CMaWnaV COSTBf
-Alse-
JAXU1 I '.VjIT
STTTfAXT f'
-eaamajceai '
HCMMCOIOS f
CO-HIT
V.1Z3 MPrrt kcuy
Solons Toss
Verbal
During. Debate
PmDLETON Ul Private -Hit
It fata 'aM HaahinH ha foif nApeKin1
debates scheduled with Rep. Coon
(Re) on the proposal. .
i My flatly that the private
'aunties authored a bill and gave
it to Rep. Coon to Introduce, and
I challenge the congressman to
deny it," said Neub'erger before a
crowd of 1.000 here.
Coon, who introduced the bin in
, hi, rebutuL
m wouM
allow local
interests to put up 173 million
doIlar for tt "SlO-millioiwlollar
federal iittu receiving in return
mt dam-, power for a 50-year
M jMst one privately
ned Oregon utinty has an-
nounced willingness to do so.
Tha Him flhtr "flashMi nn
nrnbahle nower rates from the '
dam. which would be built between
Oregon ana wasmngton on me i
'middle stretch of the .Columbia. ,
They also argueq over we ouis
preference clause.
Coon said power could be sold:
mm nr nw.tt hour.
Neuberger asserted it would be! SPOKANE Coburn Graben-
much higher U private otUiUes hont. Salem realtor, Wednesday
per. ,f was elected president of the
Neuberger. who advocates fed-'Oregon Association of Real Es-i
-ril Mnstructlon and oneration of Uta Boards, and Al Isaak. ehalr-
Uh t.m .m rmn'i hin 1
. "-V ,
wouia oisregara tne preierence
clause that gives public agencies
first claim oh power from federal
dams In this region,
coon said the preference clause
favori gtate of Washington .
because of the many public utfllties :
He said it gives Washington ,
78 per cent to Oregon's 24 per cent
0f federal oower in this region, ;
eOTiainini that most Oregon resi-
dents are served
by private
utilitiea
The debaters move to La Grande
Thursday night,
PVIan Arrested
After Wyeck
A Salem man was arrested on!
a drunk charge Wednesday night!
after his car was involved in an
accident at Marion and Cottage
streets, city police reported.
Officers said Mrcus Theodore
Madsen Jr., 130 S. High St, was
booked on a ' charge of being
drunk on a public street after
a vehicle struck the rear of an
other car. The other driver was
listed by officers as Eimunt E.
Koehler, Salem Route 9, Box 18.
Madsen was lodged in the city
Jail and $23 bail set ' :
Ex-Doctor Buck
Pleads Guilty-to
Abortion Deaths
PORTLAND ( George H.
Buck, 68, of Portland, pleaded
guilty Wednesday in Circuit Court
to three charges of manslaughter
by abortion.
Buck, formerly a licensed doctor.
changed his plea from innocent tol
guilty after the opening of his
trial. His license had been revoked
by the State Board of Medical
Examiners in connection with
earlier activities. He was charged
in this instance with performing:
an illegal operation on a 38-year-!
old woman. - " i
Judge Paul R. Harris sentenced ;
Buck to three years in the county .
jail one year
on each of the
charges.
NEW REGIME RECOGNIZED .
MANILA UH The Philippine a
Wednesday recognised ; the new
Argentine government of provi
sional president Eduardo LonardL
50e Phone 44713 20c
New ShowingOpen 1:45
"flAMCB HI THE RAVr
Donald O'Connor, Martha Hver
it Francis, the Talking Mole
Co-Hit i !
in Technicolor with
Dana Andrews, Piper Laorie
NOW PLAYING-
-ADDED
Vista Vision Visits
Tht Sun Trails"
A Colorful, Romantle Short
Subject Shewn in Ail the
Gtories of
VISTA VISION!
Also
"Stamped City"
1 A Cinemascope Short -
la Technicolor!
Elected
if
I
I
!
cent of Oregon Association (
Real Estate Boards h Cobnrn
GrabenhorsL The Salem real-
tor was chosen at the regional
conference of realtors Bpo-(
kane Wednesday.
Realtor
T ' . . J
11 CW I I CMUCHL
. it
I If Vfotp I Mif
Vfl OUllC UI11L
- ,
man hf th .Caiam Ttnard nf nL
......
The election was held at a
meeUng of the Oregon Associa-
tion the oast vear. Aa nreaident.
he succeeds Ralph Walstrom,'
Portland. Vice president for the
lour-state region, muonai asso-
elation of Real EsUte Boards, is
Lee V. Ohmart, Salem.
State associations meet in con-
necUon. with the regional meet-
inf every twee years, in tne
next turn virt thm tta rwfm.
tions will meet in their own geo-f
tranhical areas. Site for the lfls
Oregon realtors' meeting will be
chosen by the board in January.
It wis held in Klamath Falls last
year. Salem was last host in
1937. . .
g?t AT I
UttlCeT SOUS
.
O TJ
law MX
jinaways
.The sharp memory of a city
police officer resulted Wednes
day night in apprehension of two
Walla Walla, Wash, runaways.
The officer spotted a car li
cense which looked familiar and
halted the vehicle. In it were
the two boy runaways, ages 14
and 13, who reportedly had bor
rowed the car from a Walla
Walla friend about a week ago.
Information from Willi Wall
authorities had put city police
on the alert for the car. The
two boys were held for juvenile
authorities of the Washington
city.
NEW! NEW! NEW!
A HIGH-FIDELITY TABLE-MODEL
RADIO UNIT ... by
"TillFUWIW
Beautifully Finished Cabinet and Chassis
by European Master Craftsmen
O 3 Speakers O Built-in Antennas
O 17 Circuits O Rot.tlnf AM
O FM-AM- O Fhene Input
O Short and Long Wavo O Recorder Input and
O Noisa Suppressor Output
O Separata loss and O Flywheel Driva ,
Treble O French Walnut Finish
NOTE:
In This Unit, Radio Worthy of Classifying oi "Hi-Fi"
EXCLUSIVE
Another
SEE and
Cecil "Hi-Fi
Phona 4-3289
Federal Road
Plan Includes
Salem
WASHINGTON UF The Bureau
cf win! MWui eone&uiy nku
announced general locations of
route vi. the national syeni of
interstate highways into, . through
anu arounu itu cities or uroan
areas in the nation.
line new routes to'be built with
federal aid to the states, supple
ment tne original 37,uu mile uuer
state networ designated in 1947
to connect ine nauon s principal
cities and industrial areas.. -.
Approval ot tne new : general
routes' location completes desig
nation oi tne 0,ixmue national
system authorized by Congress in
toe i eoerai Aia Highway Act of
itie Bureau of Roads, in an-
nouncing the route locations, era-
piiasjxeu Lie nave uiu iar been
uetermined in a general way only.
r'euerai assistance lor Improve-
ment of the national system of
interstate highways wilt amount
to 173 million dollars in the cur
rent fiscal year, ana 175 millions
in the next fiscal year, beginning
next July 1. i
Additionally, a federal' funds
amounting to another 175 million
dollars are available in each of
these fiscal years for the urban
portions of the primary federal
aid system and 31a millions In
f W the enure primary
nt
Prt " th prmia system.
Additional routes designated in
tat0- through and around these
urban areas.
tJw
Idaho- Pocatello.
MonUna Butt and Great
r"J M - ff p . .
Oregon - Eugene. Portland and
Salem.
Washington - Seattle and Van-
couyer
fiD -.
VjUF VyiOUp
A
lnc Sftri tj- rr
-- - ftwrax mc
Rni PrAninntc
i U JL 1 CiIXIUiS
Plans for area precinct work
were mapped out Wednesday night
at a meeting of the Marion County
Republican Central Committee ex
ecutive group.
The county has .been divided In
to 17 areas and each area will
have in it about seven to 10 pre
cincts.
Area chairmen named so far are
Mrs. W. F. Leary and Mrs. Wini
fred Pettyjohn. Seward P. Reese
and A. A. Whitman, Mrs. Kenneth
Sherman, Mrs. Larry Osterman,
Mrs. George W. Dewey Jr., Lewis
Judson, Mrs. Denver Young and
Mrs. Stanley Watson, all in the
Salem area; David Reid, MiQ City; j
Harry Humphreys and H. J. Rowe, 1
Stayton;-Leonard Fisher, ML "An
gel; Henry Ahrens, Turner, Win-j
ton Hunt. Woodburn; Ralph Yerg-j
en and Mrs. Dorothy Lester, Au
rora, and Olaf Paulson. Silverton. 1
Work in the areas will begin in .
mediately, the committee report-
ed, and a school of instruction will j
be held soon after Jan. 1 for pre
cinct workers.
-
After 3 Years of Searching We Found,
to
HEAR at
Fames Co.
442 North Church
, (Across from Meier i, Frank's)
iter,
Grandson of, ' J
Solon to Wed
t - '
;; (Pictures on Wirephoto Page)
PADUCAH, Ky., tfJ-Sen. Alben
W. Barkley D-Ky) and Mrs; Bark
ley, Wednesday announced the en
gagement of the Senator's step
daughter to his grandson.
The date of the wedding of Miss
Jane Hadley and Pfc. Thomas H.
Truitt was not disclosed.
' Miss Hadley, 20, is the daughter '
of Mrs. Barkley and the late Mr.!
Hadley, a railroad attorney who !
died in Missouri in 1945. j
Truitt, also 20, is stationed with i
the U. S. Army in Germany. He is j
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Max j
O'Rell Truitt of Washington, D.C.
Mrs. Truitt is Barkley 's -"older ,
daughter. Before her father's mar-i
riage in 1949 to Mrs. Carleton S. !
naaiey Mrs. Truitt served as
Barkley's official hostess in Wash
ington when he was vice president
Miss Hadley's mother expressed f
great joy over the betrothal of her
daughter to her husband's grand
son. -
"It really makes it a family af
fair, doesn't it," she said. Mrs.
Barkley said her daughter is now
in Washington.
State Highway
Tl T"
JACKSONVILLE, Ore. (AV
Francis Frank) -ToaVeUe, 85,
Jackson County Judge in 1913-19
and a member of the State High
way Commission in 1935-39, died
afhis home Wednesday nijrht,
One of the state's first advocates
of good for autobues.
i. ... i
uUdi first unit of the
Pacific Highway in Oregon be
tween Medford and Ashland.
As county Judge he promoted a
movement for a half-million-dollar
bond issue to build the unit and
otepdaugl
yito grade the highway over the
ISiskiou Mountains.
A native of Kansas, he came
West at the turn of the century.
TouVelle State Park on the banks
of the Rogue River north of Med
ford is named for him.
No costf pipes or registers to install or clean f
I &b
VPAnrmDiiUTOMATic ! ! Jy
OIL I1EATERS
Hi l.i . " ii'
.ir c
Stylet Is not $ tpm foiftrtiit mitt
htti up tis tliimy mien Vi ctffim
hnki yon h I'm In
Skiltf h not i mini htfm
fhnl lth txponsko InsHllitiont-
SIEGLER Is a revolutionary
method of WARM FLOOR
HEATING in every room!
JUST LIKE A FURNACE . . . BUT
WITHOUT COSTLY, DIRT COLLECT
ING PIPES AND REGISTERS!
At The Theaters
Today
ELSINOKB
"LOVK IS A MANY SPLEN
DORED THING" with William
Holden and Jennifer Jone.
"LITE IN THE BALANCE" with
Ricardo Montalbaa and Anna
Bancroft -
CAPITOL
To catch a rarer" with
Gary Grant and Graca Kelly.
, . ! ' CBAND
' "THE MAN FROM LARAMIE"
with Jimei Stewart and Arthur
Kennedy.
"PETE KELLY'S BLUES" with
Jack Webb.
NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IX
"SEVEN BRIDES TOR SEVEN
BROTHERS" with Jant Powtil
and Howard KeeL -
"UNCHAINED."
. HOLLYWOOD
"FRANCIS IN "THE NAVY"
with Donald O'Connor and
Martha Hrer.
"SMOKE SIGNAL" with Dana i
Andrews and Piper Laurtc.
Six Youths'
Arrested on
Liquor Count
A 14-year-old girl was placed in
Marion County juvenile detention
quarters Wednesday and five other
teen-agers appeared in . Marion
County District Court on charges
of illegal possession of liquor.
All six were arrested by state
police about midnight Tuesday in
a car on the outskirts of Salem.
James Clifford Seagrove, 19,
2063 McCory St.; William Hugh
Mitchell, 18. '955 Union St; Car-:
lene Ann Shaffer, 19. 640 Union!
St.; Richard William Ammel. 18.!
Albany; and Betty Jean White, IS.
Turner; all pleaded guilty to
charges before District Judge E.
O. Stadter Jr.
Judge Stadter . suspended im
position of sentence and the five
were released. : The 14-year-old
girl was given a preliminary hear
ing in juvenile court. t
SEVEN PLEAD GUILTY
NEW YORK im Seven per
sons pleaded guilty Wednesday in
a case testing's government's;
right to rule citizens off the streets)
during a practice air raid. An ;
eighth defendant was freed. !
V
m n tn mm.
HOWARD J. SiVlALLEY OIL CO.
SALEM'S COMPLETE Oil HEATINO SERY1CI
1405 Broadway
ChiclteiiCnnn
Yields$6fid0
In Quarters
ANCHORAGE. Alaska WU-Alas-ka
Railroad special agents did
some digging in the cellar of a
chicken coop four miles south of
here Tuesday. , '
They found something besides
chicken feed. too. They found
$5,000 in quarters.
.-Later, they identified the cur
rency as a shipment which disap
peared from a Seward Anchorage
railroad train Sept. 4. Thomas J.
Estabrook, 43, Anchorage, veteran
Alaska Line railroad conductor,
is charged with the theft
The agenfs said they believed
the cash pouches were tossed off
the train as it neared Anchorage.
Some registered letters' are still
missing. The people on whose land
the chicken coop is located knew
nothing of the theft and the cash
was buried .without their know
ledge, a spokesman said.
The currency and the -letters
were being shipped from the Fed
eral Reserve Bank in Seattle to
the National Bank of Alaska here,
WHEAT "MEET SET
UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. (
Secretary General Dag Hamars
kjold said Tuesday a U. N.-spon-sored
world wheat conference will
meet in Geneva Oct 2S to con
sider renewal or replacement of
the present international wheat
agreement .
Cottonvoods
One Nile Only
Sat., Oct. 1
Formerly Bank Thompson's
Band Leader
Admission 1.50, tax lacL
o
1
Phone 3-5606
- ... i
--7...tjLt l rTrnaiiTMt'il I HI. s v II
Csi- 111:1
4