For . PORTLAND Vh Portland's eight million dollar sports cen ter will be built beside the Co lumbia River, six miles north of the city center,' the site select ing committee" decided Wednes day. (. -; . . , The decision, reached in a 3-2 Tote of the committee, fanned to higher heat the arguments i on where the center should be lo cated. . - j - ; , . r Critics noted that the site is only a , mile from Vancouver, Wash., - and said Portland, was building a fine sports center for Vancouver. t , The 'majority side of the com mittee, however, defended the site as the one most economical, providing the greatest space for parking, and having room for the Guard Mobilized as 8 Shot in Indiana Strike - - . -i - By IRWIN " NEW CASTLE, Ind. 0P Eight day in a march on the Perfect Circle Corp. foundry by 5,000 strike sympathizers, and 600 national guardsmen mobilized Wednesday Bight to prevent further disorders. . . . Mayor Paul McCormack proclaimed a state of limited emer gency and asked for. a guard unit Craig, vacationing in Miami, r ia.. 'sent an order through his office In Indianapolis for the guard to ;move. - " The guard unit had orders to . stop all work and all picketing 1 at the plant and to close all tav 1 ems - and places i where people .might assemble, . i le Denial I At the meeting between the com pany and union officials the latter asserted that the first shot was jucu uum uiMue uic piani. v-oiij- r- , - - -1 . f f statement. The guard unit was ordered in 'after 100 state police brought out an estimated 100 nonstrikers from the plant and confiscated a small arsenal of weapons. State police reported 29 rifles,! 9 pistols, 30 clubs and 700 rounds of ammuni tion seized both inside the plant and outside. j , ; i The furore of the big demonstra tion echoed all the! way to Wash ington, where an informed source said the Eisenhower administra tion plans to fire Lothair Teetor, Perfect Circle director, now serving as an assistant U. S. sec retary of commerce. .Teetor was formerly board chairman of the firm.; i ; Uneasy Quiet j : While the city settled to an un easy quiet, there were rumors Inat similar demonstrations might be attempted Thursday - around the Perfect Circle plants at nearby Hagerstown and Richmond, '.'lso involved in the violent 10-week-old strike. v . ' j The demonstration was blamed on the firing of 33 foundry workers Tuesdaylargely as a result of a picket line disorder eight days ago when 54 pickets were arrested on riot charges. I Qiildren Play With Gun, Lad Shot HTLLSBORO Or) Everett Lee Nelson, a 7-year-old Washington County boy, was accidentally shot to death Wednesday as he and a sister played with a XL rifle. The bullet entered the boy's abdomen. A neighbor took him to a hospital, but he was -dead when they arrived. Deputy Sheriff Roy Larsen said Luletta, the boy's 9-year-old sister, told him they were playing in a bedroom and the gun accidentally discharged when she handled it. Nelson .said the children were waiting at their rural home for the arrival of the school bus. The parents are Mr. and Mrs. Darren ' Kelson. . Hunt Season Qaims Two By THE ASSOCIATES PKESS Oregon's hunting season now has recorded two deaths one a fatal tall from a cliff and the other from l heart attack. . - Accidental gunshots have rounded 10 hunters, but none has een fatal. -' James Fraser, 70-year-old Port end longshoreman, fell to his leath Tuesday when he slipped off i 20-foot high cliff in the Steens Mountains area. A heart attack took the life, also Tuesday, of lames Jackson, about 30, Slither In. He shot- his deer, dragged it wo miles through the woods and trove home. He collapsed and died is he walked to the door of his lome. The number of those wounded Tom gunshots grew to 10 when two boys were treated for foot rounds at. Lakeview over the weekend. Animal crackers ; BY WAMRCN OOORICM Hauniagbird?' : Fatally Pacific International Livestock Exposition. . ; ' . The minority side of the com. mittee held out for. a site in downtown Portland,- where a nine-block area could be used af ter a slum-clearing program. Of ficials of the livestock show ob- , jects that the site would not be feasible for their show. The site is known as East Van port, the World War lUhousing project. The area was flooded in . May, 1948. , The committee's : decision is binding. It can be upset only by a court action, charging some illegal or improper act by . the committee. ? : . The committee voted to give consideration to the future to de veloping the downtown site, in cluding remodeling, of the civic auditorium there. - - . J. MILLER persons were wounded Wednes to enforce it Gov. George N, Knight Set to 'Battle Nixon' For Delegates C A rro iifrvm r kHiviuiiHi4l1 A V. Vllll . un VlU V . rA.,, t,- . , . , , . battle with Vice President Nixon if the latter seeks to head a slate of California delegates to the 1956 Republican national convention. Knight, in an interview, said he had heard rumors that Nixon's home state backers planned to enter their own ticket in the June California, primary in the event President Eisenhower doesn't seek a second term. 1 The governor later refused to comment on a statement by V. John Krehbiel, Los Angeles County GOP chairman, who called Knight's remarks "unseemly.'! ' "Gov. Knight by his conduct in injecting partisan, politics while the President is confined to his hospital bed forfeits any right he may have to enter the national picture." Krehbiel said. - Rep. Carl Hinshaw (R-Calif). a close political associate of Nixon, rebuked Knight for what he termed his "amazing antics," and said the governor "is something of a politi cal joke in national politics."" Acknowledging, that control - cf California's important bloc of con vention votes would be vital to any Nixon presidential plans,, the gov ernor reiterated he will seek con trol of the state's delegates him self. :- . First Choice Ike f ; ' He said his first choice is. President-Eisenhower. But if the Presi dent does not run, Knight said. he will put his own name at the head of the ticket as a favorite son and only a nominal candidate. Any Nixon plans, he added, would not deter his intentions. Ex-Secretary of Labor Stricken WASHINGTON ) Martin P. Durkin, 61, former secretary of labor, is in a critical condition from a brain tumor. ' ' His physician. Dr. Thomas Keli ber, said Wednesday Durkin had a setback nearly a month ago and has "been losing ' ground- slowly ever since. , . The Weather Max. Mia. Pretlp. Salem Portland r 39 traea . 59 . 91 64 61 . 64 . 71 , 70 71 M .01 trace trace .04 .00 .00 1.99 .02 Baker 33 42 4 38 SO 58 Medford North Bend Roseburg San Francisco Loa Angeles Chicago S4 57 New York 7S Willamette River -I t foot. SALEM PRECIPITATION Stare Start f Weather Tear Sept. Tail Tear Last Tear ; Normal 260 1.28 ; i l.U Coupl $8.56 Weekly Menu I SAN.ANGELO, Tex. (AP) A budget-minded couple trying to live on $8.56 worth of food a week is having trouble with bar becued steaks. j "Last night just as j we, were sitting down to our dinner of creamed dried beef, we could smell the couple in the apartment below barbecuing some steaks," said Burdick Myre. ' fit was tempting but my wife and I went right ahead with our ; regular menu.' " ' . ; Myre and his wife, Mary, start ed Monday on a budget menu they hope will - cost them less than $8.56 the sum a' Utah ex perimental station said - would cover minimum food requir ments. - , . . .- 1 "If it's all as good as the menus that Mary has had so far I see no reason why we shouldn't live on it an the time," -aid' Myre, an airman stationed at Goodf ellow Air Force base here. - "We've never 'had so many in vitations to eat out," Mrs. Myre said, "but we're determined to finish out the week.' ; - The Ust meal of the economy 105rh Year Fast Start First Tabulation Of Pledges Tops Previous Year - Salem United Fund solicitation got off to a faster start Wednes day than last year's over-the-goal effort. " First tabulation of pledges showed $27,164 almost $1,000 more than last years initial report , . As a result. Fund leaders were optimistic. But Chairman Ken neth H. Potts conceded the hard est work had just begun. The $27,164 reported Wednes day, much of it the result of pre campaign soliciting, amounts to about 13 per cent of the $205,000 goal for this year's support to 12 Salem youth and welfare groups and 15 state and national agen cies. . Almost Half Goal Most of the pledges on . open ing day came under the' indus trial, mercantile and general gifts divisions which together have quotas amounting to almost half the campaign goaL .-' c- But the utilities division headed- by Lawrence Flagg was farth est along in its work, with one- third of its $3,300 quota already signed In. SO Per Cent General gifts co-chairmen Or val Kennen and Sidney Boise had 30 per cent of their $27,900 quota. The mercantile and industrial re ports, about $6,500 each, showed in the percentage column at about 20 per cent of quotas. Mrs. Leon Perry, women's chairman, said approximately 700 women are already ringing door bells in the residential areas. 1 Because of overlapping of Sa lem between Marion and Polk Counties, the UF boards of both counties announced ' Wednesday that it has been agreed for Salem Fund workers to solicit the West Salem area as far south as Hoi- man State Park, west to ML' View School, north to Wallace Hill and Wallace Farm. The Salem UF- will turn over $950 to the Polk County fund. Hunter Walks From Woods, Halts Search Statesman Newt Service WOODBURN A Woodburn youth first hunter to be report ed lost since deer season opened walked out of the woods Wed nesday before a major search got underway. , John Dale Edwards, 21, was lost overnight while bunting east of Colton, about 30 miles from Woodburn. . Edwards said he and his com panion, Richard Church, 17, Woodburn, separated to hunt around the edges of a clearing and failed to make connections at the other end. . ' Edwards said he made camp for the night and walked out of the woods at 7:30 ajn. Wednes day at the spot where he had left the road when he started hunt ing. . Five searchers, headed by Clackamas County authorities, had searched through the night for him. RUSS CHURCHMEN INVITED PrrrSBURGH (fl The general board of the National Council of Churches votes Wednesday night to invite leaders' of Christian churches in Russia to visit the United States. week will be supper on Sunday night - i - , Today the Myrea had French toast, grapefruit juice and coffee for breakfast For lunch they had. vegetable soup, "lim gela tine salad with carrots, rnd ice cream. Tonight they had meat pie, pear and grated cheese salad and coffee. Bread and -utter go with all nwals. The idea for tne budget week came when Don Lipman, reporter for, the San Angelo Standard Times, was handed an Associated Press story telling briefly of the finding by the Utah experimental station. "Find a local angle," Lipman was told. u - - Lipmaa went to Mrs. Myre, classified 'ad taker for the news paper, and asked if she and her husband would be willing to test the $8.56 theory. Mrs. Myre talked with her husband and they agreed. ' Mrs." Myre made up all the menus, taking advantage of spec ials offered by local J. ctxrj stores. All . the meals will be eaten at their apartment here. Salem UF Drive Gets Testing 4 SECTIONS 32 PACES McKay i Plans to Omit In 657 Despite Vote On - - . , . - - : . -- - . ,.- - Tl Giant 'Jig-Saw Puzzle7 Like a giant jig-saw puzzle. Cartographer Frank Stone fits together , the pieces of a big map of Marion County to be nsed during the ; tax reappraisal program underway under construction ia the connty taxing . districts of the county for 400 School Principals to Approximately 400 school prin cipals are expected in. Salem in the next two weeks as the city plays host to two conventions. The. Oregon Association of Secondary School Principals will hold ' their annual convention next Monday and Tuesday at the Hotel Marion. ' A convention of the Oregon Association of Ele mentary Principals is scheduled here Oct; 17-18. . ' Problems facing junior high schools is to be chief topic at the meeting of secondary princi pals, it was announced Wednes day by program chairman Earl Hampton, principal of Leslie Jun ior High School in Salem. Main speaker will be Drayton. Marsh, principal of Culver City. Junior High School and listed as partici pants in a panel discussion are Dr. Walter Snyder, superintend ent of the Salem School District; Inr Julfs, Eugene school leader and a yet unnamed educator from Vancouver, Wash. Some 175 persons are expected for the secondary principals con vention. President Has Restful Night DENVER l President Eisen hower put in an "excellent night" on the recovery road Wednesday. The doctors said the chief execu tive, still in the 14-day danger per iod of his heart attack, awakened Wednesday "refreshed and cheer ful" after 9V4 hours of almost solid sleep. ' The President's ' top assistant, Sherman Adams; flew back to the capital to attend a meeting of the National Security Council Thurs day and a cabinet meeting Friday. He is scheduled to return to Den ver Saturday along with Dr. Paul Dudley White, the renowned Bos ton heart specialist who examined Eisenhower-shortly after his Sept 24 heart attack and who has been in daily consultation on the ca by telephone. , , : The purpose, of , White a return is to check on Eisenhower's con dition at the end of the first cru cial fortnight 40 Names Added To Yamliill Jury For Murder Trial t Statesnuui News Setrlea . McMINNVTLLE Yamhill County clerk's office has drawn an additional 40 names for the jury panel in anticipation of the trial of . Marjorie Smith on . a charge " of murdering her hus band. Portland attorney- Oliver ! Kermit Smith, in Portland last April zi. - ; The trial was 1 transferred to Yamhill County Circuit Court on a mouon ny Mrs. smitn for a change of venue. The trial win open Oct 20 before Circuit Judge Artie G. Walker, p : . POUNDBD IA5I The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Thursday, October - .' . ; inow in. the county. The map, assessor! office, will show the purpose of the program. Polk Lumber Company To Revise StateunaB DALLAS, Ore Willamette Valley Lumber Company announced We dnesday that it will close its a second shift at its new Dallas the night shift at its sawmiU here Net result will be an increase in total employment although changes will terminate jobs for . a few, the company reported. the However, jobs will be found in the sheathing mill and other Willamette Valley operations "to the j extent possible, . the. com pany added. ' Close Indefinitely The Black Rock logging opera tion! an important source of timber, for the company's sawmill here for; many years will close indefinitely about Nov. JL Ap proximately 50 loggers are em ployed there. - ! Gene Knudson, logging man ager, said the company's policy of long-range management of its timber "based on sound prac tice" requires that logging at Black Rock come to a halt Knudson cited as factors the pattern of land ownership in the area; and ' the' limited annual volume of government timber offered for sale. Supply Adequate Log supplies, from other sources are said to be adequate for the Dallas operation. , Addition of a second shift at the company's new sheathing plant here is a big step toward the I firm's production goal of 4,000,000 i feet of sheathing a month, reported Paul Morgan, resident manager. All departments on the day shift are now in operation and the plant! is turning out a fin ished product Dropping of the night shift at the ! sawmill fulfills plans an nounced last spring by the com pany when it revealed that the sheathing mill would be built here.; The changes will bring , total employment at the sawmill and sheathing plant "close to 400," the Company reported. Dean's Estate tops $100,000 ' HOLLYWOOD r) Actor James Dean left a $100,000 accidental-death insurance policy and five to ten thousand dollars in cash, Carl Coulter, one of his business managers, said Wednes day. j ; . ; . I ' : , Dean, 24j was lulled last Fri day ,? jnight; when his .German sports car collided with another auto- hear Paso Robles, Calif. A petition for letters of ad ministration was filed Tuesday in Los Angeles Superior Court in behalf of the business man agers; Coulter and William Gray. 1 Atrj. L. Dean Petty, who filed the petition, said Dean left no knows wui.. , tie said tne acci dent policy was payable to Dean's estatejand that the estate, in the, lawyer's opinion, would go to the actor'i father. The latter is Win ton S, Dean, a dental technician at- the SawteUe Veterans Hoa- Ipital here, j - "-. - . to Aid Tax Appraisers SUne is an employe of the assessor's office in charge of the map making project. New aerial maps, !pected sooa by the county and will Ion land use. The reappraisal program is a joint project oi tne county and the State Tax Commission. (Statesman Photo). , Operations New Scrvica Black Rock logging operation, add sheathing plant and discontinue BloorJ Donors One hundred blood donors, preferably more, are needed in Salem today; ' but Wednesday evening only nine citizens had offered to give a pint of their blood, j This was the glum report from Marion County Chapter, Ameri can Red Cross, which serves sev en Salem area hospitals where ill and the injured require nearly 300 pints of blood for transfu sions every month. Blood dona tions are lagging far behind, Red Cross reports. The Bloodmobile will be at the Salem .Armory from noon to 4 p.m. today. Citizens may go there directly to give blood or may call the Red Cross and make an appointment in advance. The Bloodmobile will return to ; this county Oct ' 21 for a blood donors' day at Woodburn. . 4 Wayward Parents Lose 3 Children ASTORIA un The Boys and Girls Aid Society of Oregon has been given permanent custody of three children whose mother and stepfather were jailed for mis treating them. 1 Tuesday's action by Judge Guy Boyington gives the society power to put Mrs. Dorothy Rabell's son and two daughters out for adop tion. All are under 5 years of age. The eldest was found in a small wooden cage Jast week. The Rabells were sentenced to a year in jail Friday. Adoption of 8 Needed Today To Double Oregon Family SEOUL, OH The Harry HoRl family at, Creswell, Ore., will be doubled next week with the addi tion of eight American-Korean orphans. The 50-year-old rancher said he and his. wife would raise the four boys and four girls as brothers and sisters to their own five daughters and one son, i " , In addition to the eight he is adopting. Holt will take along four others for adoption by other Americans. A boy and a girl will be adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Wil liam Collier of Portland. The 12 children range from 10 months lo I years. All are children of American servicemen and Korean mothers. v i Kathleen Cowan, a nurse from Belfast Ireland, ' has cared for them at the Presbyterian Mission 1 6, 195S PRICE result of contract flights, are ex-1 be used to check present data;, me Totters Over Africa Policy PARIS () Premier Edga; Faure s government wobbled un certainly ; Wednesday night overj French North African policies rs one of Faure's big group of sup-i porters threatened to pull its five ministers out of the cabinet The Social Republican Party, followers 1 of Gen. Charles de Gaulle, decided to ask the minis ters to resign unless President Rene! Coty gives his assent to a plan for a national union govern ment including ail parties except the communists. Since' the Faure government is still functioning, observers said there seemed to be no way. for Coty to agree, even if he favored the principle of such a govern ment. I . . The resignations of five or six ministers would not necessarily force the resignation of Faure and his other ministers. But any such manifestation of hostility would forebode certain defeat in the Na tional Assembly when a vote is held after debate on North Africa. Canada Backing Of Air Inspection Plan Reported UNITED, NATIONS, N.Y, (fl A high American source said Wed nesday night Canada has lined up behind President Eisenhower's ae rial military inspection plan the first nation to do so. ' ' , But a Canadian spokesman slid Ottawa has not formally endorsed the proposal. The -plan, put forward at the Geneva Big Four summit confer ence last July, is for the United States and the Soviet Union to trade full military information and flying inspection teams. The U.S.! source told reporters Canadian Delegate Paul Martin went all out for the proposal in the U.N. disarmament subcommit tee Wednesday. , ' Korean Tots here while Holt completed the paperwork which began last June ! FaureResi tor to WW 2'! when he came here purpose" of adopting children of mixed parentage. .. . 'At first they were a bit fright ened but now they swarm all over him." she said. "They call him 'aboji (father) a word they never had a chance to use before.". Holt said his wife and children are "very happy and most enthu siastic" about the mass adoption. He became interested after hear ing of the plight of Korean orphans from the Rev. Bob Pierce.'a leader in World Vision, a Christian organ ization which has .supported 4,000 war orphans in recent years. VI hope others in the United States will also co-operate." Holt said. "Care of such children should be the responsibility of Americans, rather thia Koreans." . The Weather; " TORECAST from XJ. S. weather 'bureau, McNary rield, Salem): t Mostly cloudy today, tonight and Friday with iof thia morning and , some occasional light rain beginning1 late today or early Friday. ' Highest temperature today near 61; not ao cool tonight with lowest near 40. Temperature at 12 M a.m. today was 39. : f - - 5 No. 193 Gabine come to From National Political Life . By A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Correspondent , WASHINGTON It now appears virtually certain that Secretary of Interior Douglas McKay will re tire from the cabinet and from ao tive national political life after next fall's elections. McKay says he is anxious to go home to Salem, Ore, where h 1 left the office of governor of Ore gon at President Eisenhower's re quest almost three years ago to be come head of the government de- partment that exerts the greatest -influence over the West la an interview, the 62-year-old former auto dealer said he hopes to leave ; office when Eisenhower's . term in office' expires, January, !, 19S7. He said that even in the event the president should run for re election he would want to submit his resignation. He said he thought the entire cabinet should do that in order to give the president a iresh start incase he is re-elected. Slight Chances In view of the recent heart at. tack of the president, most observ- -ers now regard the chances of his seeking a second term as extreme ly slight In McKay'a case, it is Mrs. M Kay who exerts the strongest pull away from Washington. D. C, to ward home and her grandchildren in Oregon. The secretary said she Aims Retire iraveis 50,ooo miles a year between . Washington and Salem for frequent family visits. Not that McKay personally has any desire to stay on in the na tion's capitaL He is not likely to be found among the sizeable group ot ex-poiiticians who 'Tiever go back to Pocatelld," as the old say- ' ing goes of has-beens who can't -seem to overcome the lure of soc ial-political life along the Potomac Would Like to Quit - , r Indeed, McKay would like to r quit right now and go back to Ore gon and take the stump-to defend his administration and his policies against the attacks leveled at them by Democrats, especially' Oregon Sens. Wayne Morse and Richard L. Neuberger. - V , McKay would like most of all to contribute substantially to the defeat of Senator Morse when Morse comes up for. re-election- next fall. He said he has no de sire to take Morse's seat for him self, for he thinks he is too old to run for a first term in the Senate, He adds that some people may be right when they say he couldn't beat Morse, but he would, love to take him on. " The secretary makes no bones about the fact that his blood fairly . boils every time he finds Morse and Neuberger flailing away at him, as they do with rhythmic fre quency. McKay rarely mentions their names without attaching the term "demogogue." "They : can question my ability, and they can question my intelli- gence," declared McKay, "but they can't question my honesty." . T Defend Name - ? J In a word, McKay would prefer to return to his home state next , year and defend his good name; against political attacks which he, feels have vilified him since he v took over as head of the . Interior . Department : , : r McKay can be expected to take an active part in the pre-election ; campaign, making speeches from ' Maine to California as he did test year prior to the mid-term con gressional elections. i But the secretary feels it his duty , to remain in office for the remain der of President Eisenhower's four- iyear term. After that he hopes to be entirely free to return home sua, "sit on the front porch and rock.; Weathermen Forecast Rain . Cloudiness will continue today and Friday vith occasional li?ht rains be3ianing late today or early Friday, according to weath ermen at McNary Field, j Temperatures will he about the same today as the '62 high register ed Wednesday but tonight is , ex- 1 jorfav's Statesman Sec , Page . -..Ill 7-9 .IV. 4 til 6 I 4 :.nu. A Classified Comics Crossword r., Editorials . Farm X... Home Panorama .. I Markets Sports Radio, TV Star Gazer Valley IIL- Wirephoto Page IV Wyoming Past JIL .lll 6 .... lll.lf 2 .... IV 5 l 9