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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1955)
1 i 2-$. IMUtesmm, Salem, Ore., WJ.f October 19, 19$ fi Ike Hears Report on His Ca ttle and Hogs Berle's Claim Starts Feud With Gleason NEW YORK Milton Berle By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH jsenhower obtained by telephone , touched off a transcontinental D ENTER ( Convalescing , and then relayed personally to the feud Tuesday with Jackie Glea- President Eisenhower, looking fort President, also told of flowering son and was quoted as saying he ward to traveling to his Pennsyl- quince and Norway spruce trees had turned down Gleason's vania farm next month, got a wei-now being planted along the lane 11-million-dollar Buick television come report Tuesday on how the heading from the highway to the contract cattle and hogs are doing there. family's country home on the edge "I thought he only stole The trees were a gift to the chief I denied he was Buick's second executive from his cabinet and Re-, choice. "I guess he s- going in He also sun bathed in a char for the first time. The farm report, which Mrs. Ei Forest Service Said Falling Behind Needs PORTLAND UH Recreational facilities of state and private forests have been expanded to meet growing demands but the U.S. Forest Service has fallen behind in meeting recreational . needs, the Society of American Foresters was told Tuesday. John R. Vanderzicht. state parks . the President's private plane, Col- director for Wash:ngion. saia uiai umDine ill publican Party organizations all over the country on his 63th birth day last Friday. 24-Hanr Recess The news from Gettysburg and the President's first venture into a wheel chair since his Sept 24 heart attack came as he took a 24-hour recess from cabinet level conferences at Fitzsimons Army Hospital. - ' He will resume them Wednesday whep another bedside discussion of foreign affairs is scheduled with Secretary of State Dulles. The secretary, who leaves this weekend for the Big Four foreign ministers conference starting in Geneva Oct. 27, arrived here Tues- j day night from Washington aboard the number of visitors to national forests in Oregon and Washington He was accompanied by Li vine ston Merchant assistant secretary had increased sharply in me past oi state tor European affairs, and '15 years but that supervision of Dillon Anderson, presidential aide recreation had declined. jon national security matters. He said the region's forests had i Item f Business grossed 38 million dollars in the One item of business was presi last fiscal year, yet only $204,000 ( dential signature of a proclamation was .allocated 10 recreauun. HTtto Help Large industrial forest owners , tion aoproved by Congress on April have been developing recreation 17, 19o2. for stealing glory too.' Gleason was backed up by Myron Kirk, vice president of the K u d n e r Advertising agency, which handled the TV contract for Buick. Said Kirk: "Jackie Gleason was the first and only man approached to do a weekly series of shows for Buick. As for ever offering Berle a job or a Buick renewal, we never approached him at any time. In a copyrighted story, TV Guide quoted Berle In reply to Kirk: "Sure, they'll deny that I -was offered the contract because they're a big organization, but let's not get too dirty. But if they want to play curty 1 can play dirty, too. Those agency guys back there in New York have charcoal gray hearts." After TV Guide quoted Berle on the subject, the comedian could not immediately be reached for further comment He is on the West Coast At The Theaters Today iLirxofti :. SYVT.X CITIES Or' GOLD with Michael RennJ and Anthony Quinn. "PEARL OF THE SOUTH PA CIFIC" with Virginia Mayo and Dennii Morgan. CAPITOL i "BLOOD ALLEY" with John Wayne and Lauren Bacall "kOBBEll' ROOST" with Caorga Montgomery GRAND -HOUSE OF BAMBOO" with Robert Ryan "and Robert Stack. "RACE AT DAWN" with Ran. dolph Scott and Mala Powers. ' NORTH SALEM DRIVE-IN "STALAG 17- with William Holden and Don Taylor. "THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA" with Ava Gardner and Humphrey Bogart. HOLLYWOOD SEVEN YEAR ITCH" with Marilyn Moproe-and Tom Twell. "NEW YORK CONFIDENTIAL" with Broderick Crawford and Richard Conte. ' Crash Victim's Rites Pendin J - y- . mm .. i . at-signaung uci. zo as a national ; -m -r -a day of prayer in-line with a resolu-1 f fall llPVCVPl to m 1 a -am. aam ' areas and state parks havebeen both increasing and improving, he added. . "Private lands will have to help carry, the burden of the already nver - crowded public recreation areas." Cramer Adams, public He added "All of those whom we have revered as leaders throughout our h'story have been wont to turn to Almighty God in thanks for His providence and in suppliance for His guidance," the President said. relations man for Weyerhaeuser Timber Co., told the conference. Casev E. Westell Jr., of Filer City, Mich., said that overbrowsing of young forests by deer was a national problem. . He said that iifht of the nine national forest "It is fitting that we of this gen eration, who are the heirs of their handiwork, should emulate those inspired builders of our nation and should turn our hearts and minds to things spiritual." : Earlier in the day the President regions report deer herds are too j signed another proclamation desig large and in most cases, there are nating Saturday as National Olynv not" enough deer killed in hunting pic Day, calling attention to U.S seasons. -jf j participation in next year's Olym- Bear Damace jPc Games in Australia and Italy. J. Burton Lauckhart. biologist for i In another action, Eisenhower the Washington State Game De- designated Pennsylvania and Mas partment, reported that bear j sachusetts regions hit by the week damage, which has been extensive j end flood as major disaster areas in some districts. may be under, eligible for federal aid. control due to hunting and trap-; &:,: - w c ; wfAr JKiwaniansHear rlUllU . OCUIltluti , mil.""' the Oregon Game Commission, said that the best way to avoid damage to fish from logging was nvn-a 9rflll location O f l0K2in .....;,.-. !cade Meats. Inc., told Salem Ki- Th conference on recreation . wainians Tuesday of the growth! was one of five held by ihe for-;01 packing business from i 40 . th. final Hav of their : employees with a payroll of $65,- conference here. Registration rose ' 19 l employees and. a Meat Firm Chief Push for Aid To Korea Tots WASHINGTON W Sen Neu berger D Ore) said Tuesday he would sponsor legislation next year to provide government aid for Korean-American children fathered by American GI's and left behind in Korea. The senator said in a statement his interest in the problem had been aroused by Mr. and Mrs. Har ry Holt of Creswell. Ore., who last week brought eight of these chil dren to their home. Neuberger sponsored a bill this year which enabled the eight chil dren to enter the United States. The senator said Holt had told him "many such youngsters face utter neglect and even starvation in Ko rea." "World Vision and similar or ganizations are doing a magnifi cent and humanitarian job in their orphanages'Neuberger said, "but they definitely should receive some Statesman Newt Service (Story also on Page. 1) SILVERTON Services for Or- rin Franklin Wasson, 61, who! j : i f. i . i - urea juesuay.m an auio acciueni at Hazel Green, are pending at the Ekman Funeral Home. He lived at 413 Oak SL here. Wasson leaves his wife, Mrs. Clara Wasson. in Silverton; three sons, Earl, Wilbur and Ray Was son, all of Velva, N. D.; two daughters. Mrs; Lois Ashby of Malta, Mont., and Mrs. ' Joyce ! Carrier, Redlands, Calif.; and a brother, George Wasson, Spo kane, Wash. PoWeivDeal Investigation Planned Soon WASHINGTON Rep. Chud off D Pa announced Tuesday a House inquiry roup is .going to find out "whether there .'are any special . "relationships" between private power companies and the Interior Department. . Chudof f (announcement of the committee's!, plans, to- be carried out probably next year, came as the subcommittee voted down a Republican imove to give the pri vate utilities a public hearing in the current 'inquiry. The vote was on straight party lines. The 1956 investigation, like the current onej will be made by the House government operations sub committee, (which Chudof f heads. flep.- Fascell D Fla), another subcommittee member, said one thing that ought to be determined is whether ithere is "a concerted effort" by jhe private utilities to push their ! power policies within the government. i Agreeing with Fascell. Rep. Daw son (D-Ill) said "there seems to be a steady; pattern in which the small power companies are used as a cat's paw to pull the chest nuts out of the fire for the bigger companies.'! Dawson didn't elabo rate. .1 ! Services for Mr. Weathers Set Thursday ! Services for Gilbert , Weathers, 62, of Hubbard, who died Monday at a Salem hospitalwill be 2 p.m. Thursday in the Virgil T. Golden Chapel. Burial will be inBelcrest Memorial Park. Weathers had been a farmer in the Salem area about 20 years. He moved to Hubbard three years ago. He was born Jan. 24, 1893, at Jop lin. Mo. - ' 1 He leaves his wife. Mrs. Anna Mae Weathers, Hubbard: two daughters, Mrs.. Ruth Gerard, Lakeview, and Mrs. Esther Staf fard, Eugene; ten sons, Joe and Wallace Weathers, both of Salem; Ervin, Kenneth and Wilbur Wea thers, all of Lakeview; Basil Wea thers, Hood Riven Obert and Dil lard Weathers, both of the U.S. Navy; Gordon Weathers, Eugene; and Alan Weathers, Hubbard. Three brothers, Charles Wea thers, Los Angeles, Calif:; Frank Weathers. Winfield. Kan.; and Wi ley Weathers. Gervais; three sis ters.. Mrs. Retta Beyerly and Mrs. Lissy Haws, both of Portland; and Mrs. Esther Willard. Salem. ARM BROKEN Norman L. DeLapp, 13, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen DeLapp of 1210 Chemeketa -St.. was taken to Sa lem General Hospital after a frac ture of the right arm received in football scrimmage Tuesday after noon at Parrish Junior High School, first aidrnen report. Woman Treated For Stab Wounds Stateimaa-Newf Service DALLAS. Ore. - Mrs. Frank McGuire. 21, was taken to Bartell Hospital Tuesday for stab wounds in her breast and thigh, hospital attendants said. Her condition was good, they added. She and her husband are itiner ant prune pickers, reports indicat ed. No charges were filed Tuesday. Aiitomaion - 'Essential for Goods Needs' i l - WASHINGTON W! Two elec tronic manufacturers Tuesday pic tured automation the Increased use of automatic processes in in dustry as essential to meet the nation's growing demands for goods. .. A union spokesman, while de scribing greater automation as probably, desirable in the long run, cautioned that it may bring many problems to workers displaced from their Jobs. The view that a growing popula tion will demand more goods than the! nation can produce without Increased reliance on automation processes was voiced by Don G. Mitchell, chairman and president of 1 1 Sylvania Electric Products, Ind., and Robert C. Tail, vice president of the Stromoerg-Carl-son Co., a division of General Dynamics Corp. "t not only do not even remote ly fear that mechanization or auto nation, will cause unemploy ment," Mitchell told a Senate House economic subcommittee, "but; I am concerned about the strong probability of a labor short age! in. the years ahead unless the rate of mechanization is in creased." . v : 7 Employes oi Phone Firm Reject Offer - SEATTLE W A wage increas of $2 to $3.50 a week was offered 7.000 employes of the Pacific Tele phone Co. in the Washington-Idaho area Tuesday but quickly turned down bv a union snokesman ai .'definitely not acceptable." The offer was for employes la the plant, traffic and accounting departments ho are' seeking new working contract! to replaca one which expires at midnight Sun day. They are represented by thai CIO Communications Workers ol America. - Arne Gravem, international rep resentative of the union, said the offer is "somewhat less than the union has accepted in other parta of the country." Gravem also said other company proposals amounted to an unac ceptable "no-strike clause, without benefit of a union security clause.' A strike vote now is being taken by the employes. Negotiations art continuing on a new contract. , OCEAN LAKE TRIP Several members of the Golden Age Club will take a chartered bus to Ocean Lake Thursday, leav ing from the YWCA at 9:45 a.nu The regular meeting will be .1:30 p.m. Friday in the YW. Truck Kills Corvallis Sailor in California WILLOWS. Calif, tfl A sailor from Corvallis. Ore., was killed by a truck on the highway, two miles north of Willows, early Tuesday. He was George Herbert Brad shaw, 18, who was walking on the right side of the road when struck by a truck driven by Paul Brum ley, 32, Chico. Brumley was not held. NOW BUYING FILBERTS AND WALNUTS (later) Top price p'd on each delivery at SALEM NAVIGATION CO. at Corner Trad and South Cottage St. I want all my old customers and as many new ones as possible to contact mt at once as prices art very attractive. H. R JONES Phone 2-3153 j Buyer for Rosenberg Bros, and Co. YdW In lSt uDSMS Ted Chambers, president of Cas-!L"T: .Jf ZzVil V.L" 1 JWrrHrrT i : ,r tV to 1360 Tuesday. $41,000 Plus Man Missing KELOWNA. B. C. Police throughout British Columbia and at IT S. - Canada border points Tuesday were looking ssf or a 28-yer-old assistant city hall account ant who disappeared and left J41, 000 worth of cheques in his car. Missing was $6,000 in cash. The money was part of tax receipts collected at city hall Monday morn ing and Tuesday afternoon. Jack O'Neill, the missing ac countant, left to make a regular bank deposit before noon, and his absence was not noticed until sev-r-t hours after. Ralph Hermans, proprietor of the Cariboo, Air Charter Co.. told po'i', the youth chartered a plane for Vancouver shortly after z p. m. City officials said O'Neill, for merly of Vancouver, was fully bonded. He had been employed at city hall since July, when he en tered on three months probation. Officers to Interview Women for Army Duty Capt. Richard L. Henry, opera tions and training officer for the Orecnn Recruitine District, and 1st Lt. Bette C. Starr, WAC re-j cruiting officers for the Oregon Re-; cruiting District, will be in Salem Monday to interview prospective applicants for the Women's Army Corps. ' rnmnlpfe detail on new fields of opportunity for women in the Army are available from the office of the U. . Army recruiter. 149 N. Lib erty St., in the Capital Business College offices. NEW STORES SLATED The Candalaria Investment Co. Tuesday was granted a city build ing permit to erect one-story retail ' store buildings at 3ta ana jo . Liberty St. Cost is estimated at $19,000. Everett Tallman was grant ed a permit to shake a dwelling at 779 Breys St.; estimated cost. $500. MAN TREATED DALLAS. Ore. Jesse G. Mack of Sheridan was treated and re leased Tuesday at Bartell Hospital for a flesh wound received when he accidentally shot himself while hunting, hospital attendants said. $436;000 -.payroll this' Vear. The kill this year was 31,000 hogs and 4,700 cattle, he said. President Bill Hammond presided at the regular weekly meeting of the club in the Hotel Senator. Missing Salem Lads 'Found in California Charles Raymond Warren Jr., 1935 Lana Ave., and Bobby Gene Oden, 1790 Fairgrounds Road, both 13, were taken into custody Tuesday as runaways at Marys ville, Calif., city police said. They were being returned to Salem; by their parents, police added, j The boys were reported miss-j ing Saturday and believed at the time to have been in the com pany of a Salem soldier based in California, police said. LOGGER HURT DALLAS. Ore. John Reynolds. ! 55. of Sheridan, was taken to Bar j tell Hospital Tuesday following a Hogging accident in which his right ! arm was broken, hospital attend ants said. BLEACHERS BROKEN Salem police answering a -telephoned complaint found bleacher seats at the playground at 15th and Pearl streets scattered and broken. The complainant, said the damage had been done by a group of boys. THE ONLY Completely Automatic HEATING SySTEM NOW COSTS YOU LESSI TO OWN: New WESIX Wiredheat Baseboard and Wall Furnace auto matic electric heat not only bring you the only truly automatic heating system available anywhere, but crxti less to purchase and install than other systems which can't nearly match its perfect comfort. TO OPERATE: With low cost elec tricity available for electric heating in the Pacific Northwest, the superior efficiency of WESIX Wiredheat means that you can operate your system for LESS than the cost of any fuel suitable for automatic heating! I POD ' 'l-- a wi with K1ALLD(1iX1cl? "THE FRAME OF LIGHT THAT'S KINDER TO TOUR ETE$ WALLET LOST Bill Beard. 160 S. 15th St., re ported the loss of a wallet con taining $56. When last seen, his small son had been playing with it, he told police. FIRE ALARM FALSE Salem firemen from the main station called on a false alarm Tuesday evening to 1565 Trade St. STRIKE THREATENED NEW YORK Union flight engineers for he United Air Lines said Tuesday they would strike Saturday in a dispute over job se curity. The company said its opera toins would continue with only mi nor curtailment. United employs 458 flight engineers. NEft&S WW HAtOUGfiT S kinder -ioyoureyeS At you havt troublej reodinq these 2 lipes? 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