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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1955)
2 (Sec 1) Statesman, Salem, ;Coverup' Charged In Alleged Federal Power Selling Try ,; TTASHIXGTON UP) Assistant ( Secretary of Interior Fred G. Aan-by dahl disclosed to House invest! sa tors Wednesday night there had ! been "several White House can- fcrences over thus far unsuccessH ' ful eovertiment efforts to sell nub-1 " . . . . lie power to a oecrgia private utility company. " The conferences, he indicated, Girl's Return Halts Search A 9-year-old mute girl missing ' five hours .from her heme in the .- Keizer district was found about o:i p.m. v.eanesoay peaceiiuiy ) Power Co. It was up to the White; years, although Oregon remained returning from a long walk,-but House to decide what to say, Aan- the base for his work not before searching parties were dahl insisted. such disparate things as a lake being found. The conferences came to light i the Wallowa Mountains of East- Ooject oi the hunt was Connie f.8fter the committee was told car ern Oregon and a desert flea are "Holmes, daughter of Mr. and iier in the day that Brownell last named for him -Mrs. Dwayne E. Holmes, 1993, July 15 told Secretary of Interior J Funeral services will be held Chemawa Road, State police, ' McKay he was "flouting" the bwnt.re Friday. 'sheriffs officers and members of in trying to push a federal power " "the Keizer Lions Club, Volunteer contract with Georgia Power Co. ;Fire Department, Boy Scout i Troop -41" and Explorer Post 41 weie joining the search with Kei-1 zr merchants before she was j spctted'on the edge of the com-? ir. unity quietly returning to her , home Her parents reported that she appeared unharmed and appar ently had just taken a long walk. The girl can hear and understand although , she cannot talk. ' -JEE " . Americans fc'But 19' Free to Leave Keel Uima TOKYO UP1 Peiping radio said U , -Wednesday only 66 Americans re-'" ' I ' .' CSbain in China and aU but 19 x! s- RrfliV" jrycused of crimes are "free t leave, vf Y J I M-BXJ j jJthina any time they apply for de- 0 . . Warture.v - kSniH f HPtOr ZSZ A broadcast said Red China "is JUIU UCILM Jiliow examining' the cases of the 19 ( w - A 1 :Sne, y jss to-,?inis5 ( I n Acciden t J )lf V JMULCUUICv. OUU . KU1 UIIMU .vver results to Con O'Neill, British JJ3h.re d'affaires in Peiping. Peiping, quoting from the offi- V I'll VIl HlOC 1 1 1 1 l lUTWT. t23he other 47 so far have asked foriby one of tne drivers. Yit nermits Under an agreement reached in Jl'Jalks - at Geneva last month. Red China promised to release 22 cie- Ivlained Americans. The Reds si so agreed to "expeditiously examine" 'JtSlhe light of the 19. to go home. j ; Fourteen of the22 Americans jrTave' been Released, through Hong pireKilk2 nPortland PORTLAND OH A mother, and TTW 3-year-old daughter suffocated ',?in a fire that damaged their home lere Wednesday night.-" Ifh Police identified them as Mrs. ttileen-. McCormack, 39. and her tJJau"hter Sheila- - jo Firemen said both apparently -Ifawaened after the fire started, T!3)ut vere overcome by smoke be JJore they could reach the door. Jj-Cei"fe cf the fire was not immedi-JJ-tcly determined. , r - - - - - I -1 r l 11 l i to head Salem General Agency of old established Pacific Coast life insurance company. Local man with excellent references, successful life insurance experience, and sincere desire for permanent management career. i I I . Age 2840, college educated, married. Write, giving qualifications, to "Salem General Agency," care .of this paper. Correspondence confidential. I Ore., Thurt October 1 1955 were prior to delivery of a ruling Attorney General Brownell last July 15 holding that the proposed action ' flouts the congressional Din-nose" in disoosition of federal 1 power. Aandahl flatlv refused to reveal' !. . . to a House government operauons subcommittee who attended the conferences or what was discussed. : Charge Made Rep. Chudoff (D-Pa) subcom-. mittee chairman, declared "I can began sending scores of birds and only come to the conclusion 'hat j animals to the Biological Survey somebody is trying to hide some- jn Washington, D.C., for identifi thing." He said "for myself, I am ' cation early in this century. Im rather suspicious about it." ! pressed, that organization hired Among questions by Chudoff him in 1910. He was sent first to which Aandahl declined to answer j Payette, Idaho. was wnemer a conierence was ar- lee Branch, president of Georgia at the expense of Georgia electric cooperatives, .. w Obligation BrownelTs opinion stated that tne government is opugatea 10 con tract with cooperatives and other public bodies for federal power as preferred agencies under the law, even though they have no facili ties or transmission lines for tak ing it. : - 'Chudoff accused Interior Depart ment officials of "brazen , and barefaced repudiation" of the pub lic power laws and demanded they change their 4actics or resign. .Republican members of the sub committee ' called Chudofrs utate ment "bunk" and "nothing more han rknlilipal tirade" A crvine babv was the cause of : a collision Wednesday afternoon i at 19th and Trade streets, accord- ng to the statement to police Naydene Marie Kilgore, 230 S. 14th St., was stopped at a stop sign when 10-month-old David Kilgore in the back seat sudden ly yelled, according to her state ment. As she turned quickly to see what was the matter her. foot slipped and the car torched into the intersection. she taid-V. ' H Driver of 'fneher'lcar--s listed . as Richard Frank Thur- man, 525 S. 19th St No injuries were reported but both ears were damaged extensively, according to .police. fc Gra-Y Formed At Morningside A Gra-Y club is being formed In the 5th and 6th grades of the new Morningside School, James Dimit, Salem Gra-Y supervisor, said Wednesday. Boys interested in joining a Gn-Y club may leave their names at the YMCA and they will be assigned as openings develop, he added. . - 7" - 1 Conservation Expert Dies In Portland PORTLAND UP) Dr. Stanley G. Jewett, 70, who started as a book keeper but became one- o the West's noted conservationists and wildlife experts, died at a hospital Wednesday. He was stricken with a heart attack at his home here five days ago. A biologist with the federal Fish and Wildlife Service for years, he was the author of two wildlife' i, l 1-- i I I- -1 J books, ounureus 01 aruues aiw was the recipient of a number honors from colleges and scientific nrffaniTarinnc I V. " ..111 MU"U1 Untrained in biology, he was a bookkeeper in Portland when lie jje ran?ed over much of the Western Hemisphere in succeeding Cars Collide On Wet Street Two cars were damaged ex tensively in a head-on collision on wet pavement early Wednes day in the 2300 block State street, according to Salem police. The drivers were listed as Paul ! Robert Bello, 1115 S. 22nd St,' and John Wollard, 1047 Fir. . Wollard said his head and back : hurt but refused first aid, ac- j cording to officers. Otherwise; there were no apparent injuries, they said- Freighter Hauled From Mud Bank ASTORIA A tug and the steamer Portland pulled the freighter Hoprange from a shoal near the upper end of Puget Island, 30 miles east of here, Wednesday! afternoon. The vessel, from Newca.slle-on- Tyne. was headed for the ocean i with a cargo ct barley for Rotter dam from Vancouver, vasn.. wnen it went aground late Tuesday night No damage was expected because it fettled in soft mud. But a sur vey was to be made at Astoria before it resumes iU voyage. Fremont Forest Closure Ended PORTLAND m -Oregon's last forest closure was ordered lifted Wednesday. j The Summer Lake Rim on the Fremont National Forest was' opened Thursday by proclamation of the governor, Don Stickney, information officer of the U.S. Forest Service's regional office ; ling. here, announced. He said rain inj Christian Science services will the area has eased the fire danger. be held 3:30 p.m. today at ML Sttckney also reported that! Crest Abbey Mausoleum '& Cre through Tuesday, only four huner-' matorium under the direction of caused fires had occurred in the 'the Clough-Barrick Co. Fremont forest and only one cf thee had covered as much as one acre, Home-Made Tractor Kills Sandy Resident SANDY A home-made tractor struck a root and over-, turned Worfnecdav Uillina ' Arnnld t Blaser. 79, on a lot near his home j here. His son. Jack, said his father I was using the machine to pull a log free from underbrush when the I accident happened. J RIVER PROJECT URGED I ' WASHINGTON (AT Sen. Neu- berger D-Ore Wednesday urged j Budget Director Rowland R. I Hughes to include in the budget j for the year starting July 1, 1936, ! a request for $1,300,000 in addi- I tinnaf funtc fir rfoanAn i n a . IKa ! channel at the mouth of the Colum I bia River. Gate Open :45. SKew M 7 a. NOW! BOTH IK COIOII GARY COOPER BURT LANCASTER "VERA CRUZ" SUPERSCOPf - 2ND COIOR HIT -Richard Widmark IN "A PRIZE OF GOLD' SOt Phone 44713 20 1 NOW SHOWING OPEN C:4S "House of Bamboo" Cinemascope Masterpiece . And "The Man From Bitter Ridge" Wonderful Western is Color Hug for Ex-Red Prisoner I ;.. v " : i ) : It.-,.,-. - , , .v . j, ' 4 y Mr;.. ;, .Lj J - CHICAGO-lHujs of welcome almost, hide Dorothy Middleton (see end from right) too was recently released by Chinese Com munists after spending 41.? years in jrison. Greeting her are two sisters, Mrs. George Wall (left) of Alden, Iowa, and Mrs. Euth Carter. St. Charles, Ilf., and a brother, Harold, of Kenosha, Wis. (AP Wirephoto) I ' At The Theaters I Today ELSINORB "THE TALL MEN" with CUrk Gable and Jan Russell. "THE SLEEPING TIGER with Alexis Smith and Dirk Bogarde. . CAPITOL "A MAN ALONE" with Hay Millind and Mary Murphr- VSHE WORE A YELtOW RIB BON" with John Wayne. 'j ' GRAND rOXrIRE with Sett Chandler and Jane Rumell "CATTLE QUEEN OF MON TANA" with Barbara Stanwyck and Ronald Reagan. "NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IN VERA CRUZ" ' with Gary Cooper and Burt Lancaster. "A PRIZE OF GOLD" with Richard Widmarlr 'and Mai Zet terling. HOLLYWOOD -HOUSE OF BAMBOO" with Robert Stack and Robert Ryan. "MAN FROM BITTER RIDGE" with Stephen McNaUy and Lex Barker. Death Claims Mrs. Vincent Mrs. Sydney B. (Hilda R.) Vin cent, 81, of 410 N. Z2nd St., died Wfd'ncsday t the home of her daughter, Mrs. Bruce F. Pickett, 2670 Skopil Ave. She was the widow of Sydney soeiated Press office in Portland! in; 1904. They lived in San Fran cisco before moving to Portland and Mrs. Vincent moved to Sa lem from Portland in 1951. Besides her daughter, Mrs. Pickett, Mrs. Vincent leaves a granddaughter, Mrs. Richard (Jocelyn) Scandling, 930 Harris St., and two great-grandchildren,; Bruce and Janet Marie Scand- -NOW PLAYING NO PLACE TO HIDE EXCEPT IN HER ARMS I HERBERT J. YATtS RAYMILLAND, aOilaaOCoitS TMCOU CO-HIT JOHN WAYNE t. 'fjj IAU1 Clin, k wm nan u.b rl ttm tm . frMk-JOUN FORD .1 A n JOHN tQWVtf s-H t?v4 iwc o tmi V?f0 FIOHTINS tT J CAVAUITI NJpyO otm torn m4 maim ctoom OPEN 6:45 I -2 TECHNICOLOR HITS JANE JEFF RUSSELL CHANDLER Technicolor : ofan Impadcnt 1 A love! r-n tJ Drifting B ins oarge O I u Towed to Port fSTORIA Wl A derelict 75-foot barge was in port here Wednesday after being towed in from the ocean by' the Coast Guard cutter Vocona. j ' The barge broke loose in heavy seas Sunday from the motorship Tanginix The cutter, J directed by a , search plane from the Coast Guard's Port Angeles, Wash., station, located the barge and put a line on it. ; Monday the tug Salt Air, ulso abandoned by the Tanginn during a storm Sunday, wa towed into Coos Bay by the cutter Bonham The tug's four crewmen were not injured. ! i The Tanginn. the Salt Air iind the barge, with a partial load of lumber, were en route from Van couver, B.C.. to San Diego, when the tug developed piunp trouble Saturday. The next day the tow line to the barge snapped. The Yocona tried j to get the : barge to Coos Bay but could not cross the rough bar. It then pro- coeded to Astoria. Meanwhile, the motorship continued south to San Diego. TO ATTEND MEETING Frank (Scotty) Washburn of the Salem YMCA, president of the Oregon section ofj the Ameri can Camping Association, is to leave today to atttehd a board meeting of the Pacific Coast Camping Federation Friday and (Saturday in San Francisco, Calif. mssm. NOW PLAYING! CLARK JANE 1 ROBERT E- TOWEXIM 0V AU. THE LEGENDS OF AMERIU'S LAST ntOHTIEU .CIHemaSc INO HIT AUsh Smith AUxanJar Kmi Dirk Regard . -IN.j "SLEEPING TIGER"! IUUAT! f m.M TMI CUM WOIUOFTII UWUSSI Bartari STANWYCK 111 oFc I 11 sxffl i3 C. IIWIKtl II1 Poland Raises Threat in Bid For U.N. Post UNrTED NATIONS, N.Y. IT) Poland's J u 1 i u s z Katz-Suchy warned Wednesday the budding spirit . of international cooperation will be seriously harmed if Poland loses its bid for the U.N. Security Council. U.S. Chief Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., who is backing, the Philippines against Poland for the seat held by Turkey, promptly countered that Poland is not lit fori the Security Council. "Communist- Poland is clearly not a nation which has contributed to international peace and security within the meaning of the charter or ! which is in a position to do so," Lodge said in a statemei distributed after Katz-Suchy held a news conference in the U.N.. Katz-Suchy said Poland has all the necessary qualifications and represents Eastern Europe far more than the Philippines. Under Questioning, he said failure to elect Poland would have an effect on cooperation in general, would harm the spirit of Geneva, and would be strongly resented by the Polish people. These ( statements pointed tip sharply the battle ragins between two Geneva partners, the United States and the Soviet Union, on behalf of their favorite Candida: es. The Soviet Union is the only Com munist country on tlie council. Death Claims Rev. Bates, 75 The Rev. Arthur C. Bates. 75. retired minister of the Christian Church at Mill City and Silverton. 1 died Wednesday In a Salem hospi tal after , a short illness. He and Mrs. Bates had lived in Salem at 898 Rosemont Ave. since his retirement a year ago. The Rev. Mr, Bates was rninisler j of the Christian Church at Smith- fi A A KofnrA mrttri r rt in TLfill f"if s '. where he built the church in 1925. j Later he served at Klamath Falls and moved to Silverton eight years ago. He also served as a state evangelist three years. He, was born in Eugene April 19, 1880. He and Flora Byers were married at Junction Cily Oct. 29, 1905. He and Fern Dunivsn Bailey were married in Mill City Nov. 12. 1930. Since his retirement, the Rev. Bates was a member of the First , Christian Church in Salem, i He leaves his wife, Mrs. Fern ' Bate?, Salem; son, Arthur Harold Bates, Japan; daughter. Mrs. Iris Stephens, Klamath Falls; stepson, Marvin Bailey, Redding. Calif.; two half-brothers, E. L. Landers, Salem, and Lorn a T." Field, New berg, and four grandchildren. Services await word from the son in Japan at the Howell-Edwards Funeral Hom,, , The United States Motional Bank OF FOITIAHD RESOURCES Cash on Hand and Due from Banks. $151,972,420.53 United States Government Bonds 295,599,006.19 Municipal and Other Bonds Loans and Discounts Not. Stock in Federal Reserve Bank Bank Premises (Including Branches) Customers' Liability en Acceptances Interest Earned Other Resources LIABILITIES Capital... $ 11,000,000.00 Surplus 11,000,000.00 Undivided Profits 19,363,634.03 Reserves for Interest Taxes, etc Acceptances Dividends Declared Deposits ...... Interest Collected Other Liabilities e 9. rjsmsm Parking Woes Note Jump On 'Holiday' The Salem police station did! a record, business in parking tic-j kets and complaints Wednesday j following announcement by a 1 local radio station that Sunday and holiday rules would apply! on parking meters because it was j Columbus Day. Police Chief Clyde A. Warren said the announcement was en tirely unauthorized" and weekday rules requiring payment for park ing in metered zones were in ef fect because it was' Dot a legal holiday. Four i drivers who parked in one truck loading zone in the 500 block Trade street also were ap parently on ' an. "unauthorized holiday.; The cars were ticketed by police' answering a call from a busy truck driver who was not on a holiday. Scuffle for Gun Kilte Man Near j Kfojugth Falls KLAMATH FALLS A Jason Charles j 50, farm worker, was j shot fatally at Long Pine, 40 miles northeast ' o f Klamath Falls Wednesday, j Police arrested George Dumont, ; S4, and said he told of a scuffle in which Charles was shot. State policeman Dick Finnell and sheriffs deputy Alvie Youngblood said Dumont told them the argu ment was over whether to go deer hunting. The policemen quoted Dumont as saying Charles tried to shoot him, but he managed to wrest away the rifle. Charles was wounded in the, stomach. He was orougni 10 a nospiiai i .... , here where he ,died at 10 p.m. Sensational VttV Sole Sheet art not ordinary shoes Special Lists! Soft Leathers! - Lightweight! Stylish! The Hilly "Walking Comfort with Style." In soft black kid, O QC mrd. heel, AAA to C tO.IJ With the sensational Vel Va Sole Arch Restorer Built In. Our knowledge, pins proper lasts and our superior fitting ability hold the answers to your loot comfort problems. Carrying complete line LOWE'S FOOT to Model 265 N. Next Food Market Phone 4 Net Earned This sfarmnt Incfucfes 61 branches fn Oregon HEAD OmCIt PORTLAND, ORIGON Ladd & Bush-Salem Branch , State and Commercial North Salem Branch 1990 Fairground Id. University Brancb 1310 State Street West 'Salem Branch 1117 Edge Diner iranpmei or TMt tJHTTtO ITATEI M ATI 0 HAL lAMK Of PtirPUr TV PERMIT ASKED WASHINGTON Jt Parifie Television Inc. Wednesday applied to the Federal Communications Commission for a channel 16 IV station at Coos Bay, Ore. CORNS FROM THE WITH DEL MILNI YOU CALLED IT, , -:L; GEORGE Any place that wants families to bring their little cherubs down to dinner must have t manager with- holes in his head. ; : ' . I admit it and I have them. One especially ' big one . from ear U ear, . ' . ; But .honest we enjoy serv ing your whole family, v We have special meals for kids under 12 for 50c. We want to be friendly. 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M. - 5351 Fridays 73,91 6,374 J6 292,505,41 6.1 1 1,080,000.00 1,572,652.62 149,244.50 2,475,330.52 1,292401.53 $1276248.25 55,363,634.03 5 2,637.41 149,244.50 515,000.00 762,003,269.70 4,389,641.16 29,421.45 $127,5648.23 r5b ! DAN DUKTf A ftaun&hr I t j ! . -"'II I . mmiLmmmmmmL.JL ! Twe Hit Pictures for the Price of One ORIGON'S OWN STATE-nlDE BANK