' &mm Mm3 (Soft g1odi F peil; . - - - .... ; , , . ' '..---'.---.. " ' ' - - : : : T77 : ' -i " - : i&-styS AA Si. Jt. Jt ' ' " - New Facilities to ' Sfe;JfW;Slflia( ttltfBttEtt- 1 "J Nation 's I r ' -: : -; MUNBBB ,651 v : v J. - Defense system 105th Year Sale On Maneuvers Lt. James Todd Lost as Landing Craft Capsizes in California Surf James Rott Todd of Salem was drowned after he and five other First Division Marines were hurled into a heavy sea when a rubber boat capsized in landing maneuvers early Tuesday morning at Camp Pendleton, Calif. - Two bodies were recovered Tuesday .hut Todd was among those Morocco offers the 1002nd tale of the Arabian Knight's Enter tainment, though it is both real and tragic And the last chapter has not be:n written. In 1953 at the instigation of French colons in connivance with - the , Berbers, the French ....i :.:. : n .....l " auuuc"' descended on the palace of the e .1, c;j: ri Tj v., r. r T S to join him in Corsica. Later he and his two wives and 19 concu bines were hustled off to the wore disunt island of Madagas- car. , Installed at Rabat as his "suc cessor was Sidi . Mohammed ben Moulay Arafa who 'received the 1 support of the Berber chieftain, old Hadj Thami El Glauoi oMar-. rakech. However, as the world i well knows the Arabs of Moroc co - were embittered by . this French-ordered shift of their nominal raters.' The independence party gained adherents; riots and . assassinations : became common. The French colons urged a harsh j policy of repression 'which the',; pouce carriea oui wud aixuciues which paled the cheeks of . wit nesses. When the Paris directed efforts tion the colons did their best to thwart them and to discredit the resident general who sought through negotiation to satisfy the demands of the Arabs. The government in Paris final ly had to bow to the will of the rebellious . Moroccans. They agreed to dust Sultan Sidi Mo hammed ben Moulay Arafa and to appoint a regency council or committee to govern the country. (Continued on Editorial Page) Repairs to State Office Building To Cost 90,000 Repair of the State Office Build ing on Court Street will cost about $90,000. the State Board of Control learned Tuesday. : .When 'floor cracks appeared at that building recently. Civil De fense offices had to be moved and temporary support was given the sagging -floor above. . - The repaTr estimate came from Cooper L Rose, Portland archi tects. They attributed the cracks to continual stress and strain, not to any particular thing like vibra tion from passing trains. -Secretary of State Earl T.-New-bry recommended the' 1957 Legisla ture be asked for appropriation of the. repair, money." The temporary supports are considered adequate, according to the architects report. Parking Ramp Chase Nets Reckless Driver Jerold , Leroy Thiessen. 1067 Second St, was fined $25 on pleading guilty Tuesday in Muni cipal Court, to a charge of reck less driving. : Police said he was apprehend ed on the Meier & Frank five- level oarkine ramo after a .15- mile-an-hour chase to the top deck. rW IT YOURSELF V4-i May I cut in? 2 SECTIONS-24 IMAGES tv rx i marine reported missing and presumed I missing. Second Lt Todd, 23, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Todd, 1560 N. 17th St., was known in the Salem area for his musical activities. ' Wife ia California i His wife, the former Elizabeth Ann Gibbens, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Harvey been living with side. Califs ! Missing with Todd, to the Associated Press, Donald G. McCreery S. D.; Cpl. John Houston, Texas; and E. Morgan, 20, Orfordville, Wis. Recovered were the bodies - of Major Ralph H. Pratt, .37. battal ion commander, Oceanside; and Pfc James F. Brown, 19, Rock Island, 111. , Reach Shore ; x-iiiccu tuuusauu inclines reached shore safelv in the owr. ? , olmiin Lif I ation in a 25-nule-an-hour wind. tance from Camp Pendleton beach, according to word received here. '' Tk. A- ! I laVday fronT kSoI1 M. B. Twining, commanding offi cer of the First Marine Division. The landing ' was part of the combined maneuvers of th Uni ted States and Canada in which five -- men - were- killed and five others -injured Friday when va Navy bomber crashed iflto the U.S. destroyer Hopewell. (Addi tional details and picture, Sec 1, Page 2.) ' ., Downtown him at Ocean- fft? - , according jVV .' ; " W .werePfc. - ; , 19, Mitchell, U f- ; f Pvt Warren 3 , T J cheeks of wit- V O "I I f,r,S!i"roperty sold Purchase -of-additional property in downtown Salem by Hawkins and Roberts Building Corp. was in dicated Tuesday with the record ing of a deed for the building oc cupied by The Kitchen Centre at 362 State St , The Hawkins jind Roberts inter est with CL Corporation have al ready bought a major portion of the block bounded by State, Ferry, Liberty and Commercial streets, including the entire south half of the block. An estimated $40,000 was involv ed in the transaction with Mrs. Helen M. Grabenhorst listed as the seller.' The corporation did not in dicate any new plans for the build ing. - - 3rd Murder Trial Of Sherry Fong Starts at Portland PORTLAND ( The state began its third attempt to convict Sherry Fong, 24, of first-degree, murder Tuesday. . Twelve persons were examined and temporarily approved for jury service at Tuesday's session in the court of .Circuit Judge Alfred P. Dobson, who .presided over the previous two trials. , ' The woman and her husband, Wayne Fong; 24. are accused of killing Sherry's 16-year-old friend, Diane -Hank. Irrigation Plan Formed For Salem State (Farms A long-range irrigation program designed to increase the fertility and farm use of up to 1,700 acres ot state land at Salem is now shap ing up. The State Board of Control Tues day took action to authorize the purchase of new water rights suf ficient to irrigate 1,226 acres of land, and directed board secretary E. J. Ireland to suggest that the State Emergency- Board might jmake possible even more irriga tion, v Actual irrigation dams, canals and equipment would have to be financed over the. years to come by legislative ' appropriation or state institution capital outlay funds. The land now is in pasture or limited agricultural production. What the control board did Tues day 1 was to give the go-ahead on purchase of a right to use Santi am River water trom u. r. war ley. ' Stayton, - of - the Willamette Valley-Water Co. which now holds Th Oregon Statesman, Salem, 'Cold Deck' of if 'iw . ' . J J. k r - ) tel. r'-LP-ks .1" ' H. Ayers, . 22, h'-i Vt. 'J. vW . T. - 'ru.Vj The third sub-freezing day In a row coated this Oregon Pulp and Paper Co. "cold deck" on Minto Island with Ice as spray devices used to wet down the logs for fire protection were turned on so the pipes wouldn't freeze. Leonard Schindler is shown looking Vessel Sinks Off Newport; Man NEWPORT, Ore. tf Flames burned a tuna boat to the hull and it went down just two miles short of safety Tuesday. The only man aboard was rescued unharmed. - The hnat thp XTarne R . was taken under tow by the Coast Guard and . was off Seal Rocks. south of here, when it sank Otto Forde, the skipper, from Whidbey . Island, Wash., was res cued by Cliff Hall of the crab boat Pacific " Queen and Kenneth Thompson of the, fishing boat Norcoaster. They had seen flames from the Marne B and sped to its side. RedOfficiaVs Face Crimson LONDON Wl Jiri Hajek, Czechoslovakia's ambassador . to Britain, possessed Tuesday one of the reddest faces of all Communist envoys to the Court of St James. The ambassador, who maintains ah embassy building and a private house in London, found that some one had hidden a microphone in his office. - ' . He lodged a vigorous protest with the British foreign office, say ing he expected British officials to make a thorough inquiry and Dunish the culprits. The foreign office investigated. A government official said today this is what was reported to Ha iek: - The ambassador's office had been wired for sound. Micro phones, ; or listening devices," had m . J a 1 Deen piamea mere. -The devices were traced to a! . . 1 shop on London's old Brompton; Road. A man brought them there several weeks ago. His identity: A member of the ambassador s own Czech embassy, IDAHO POTATOES LOST BOISE, -Idaho Uft The mer cury dropped below zero all jver Idaho Tuesday, smashing records m manj jucauuea aiiu scauug mc doom of two or three, thousand acres of unharvested potatoes. . the water right - Purchase fund, would come out of a 1933 appropriation of $30,000 for the purpose. Legal work on easements and other matters has been going on since the 1933 Leg islature approved the plan. The state board at Tuesday s meeting also authorized the State Penitentiary to spend its own funds to get further water right for irri gating 100 acres, in addition to the 1,126 acres figuring in the other purchase. .That land is part of State Hospital, Fairview Home and Prison Annex grounds. Survey by a Corvallis consulting firm indicated 1,700 acres in all could be profitably irrigated. After presently approved water rights' are obtained, this would leave 474 acres needing water, according to Board Secretary Ireland who was instructed to ask the Emergency Board whether emergency funds should be considered for further water right purchase. . ,.. ,:. ... ., . , Oregon, Wednesday, November Logs Really Chilly in Coat of 3-Day Freeze Siege Due to Break Today By RUSS B1ERAUGEL Staff Writer, The Statesman ' A three-day siege of freezing weather was scheduled to break today - with temperatures soaring near 40 degrees, according to McNary Field forecasters. ; ( . . . : - Rain - and scattered showers expected to start this afternoon could cause some trouble with a low of 32 degrees predicted for tonight-" Snov'itartihg Tuesday night' was expected to continue occasionally through this morn ing. ; " Tuesday morning's low tem perature was nine degrees, the lowest November temperature on record. Previous low, set in 1935, was 12 degrees. High Tuesday was 26. ..', Valseti Shivers Valsetz, snuggled in the Coast Range about 40 miles southeast of Salem at an elevation of 1,050 feet, reported an official' low of four degrees Tuesday morning. The State Highway Dept report ed four below in Santiam Pass, elevation 4,817. Don Rasmussen, county agent, said crop damage cannot be deter mined definitely until after the warmup. Stockmen who normally can depend on pasturage until Jan uary, however, will have to re evaluate their ensilage for possible rationing, he said. Apples Last Apples still out on trees or in boxes are mostly lost, and dairy and poultry production will slump, he said. Still to be determined are losses in walnuts, filberts, fall seeded grain, berries, orchards and shrubs, he said. Low temperature records for No vember were broken throughout the state Tuesday morning. Chem ult registered 26 below; Baker, 16 below; Bend. 14 below; Burns, 11 below; Pendleton, 6 below. flviini'illtPl- jr Tf ,r. r'liai-rr "" & , DENVER I John Gilbert Graham Tuesday was formally charged with the murder, of his mother in connection with the dyn amiting- of a United Air Lines , piane wnich 44 persons. The murder complaint against the 23-year-old drive-in restaurant operator was signed personally by W. A. Patterson of Chicago, presi dent of United Air Lines. Denver District Attorney .Bert M. Keating said he would ask death in the gas chamber for the baby-faced Graham as the state of. Colorado took over his prpsecu tion from the feveral government (Additional details, Sec. 1, Page 12.) . .- The Weather Salem Portland afcer Medford North Bend Roseburc San Francisco Los Angeles Chicago New York Willamette River l. feet. FORECAST (trom U. S. weather bureau. McNary field, Salem): Cloudy today with occasional mow turning to rain by afternoon; mostly cloudy with, scattered showers to night and Thursday. Wanrtes. with the highest temperature today near 40 and the lowest lontcni near 32. Temperature at 13:01 a.m. today was 22. ; SALEM PRECIPITATIOM Slur Start of Weather Tear Srpt 1 This Teat Last Tear . Neraul .., xom 7.37 , , ,.a.oa ; . Mx. Mia. Precin, ' 2 trace a 13 trace ' : ; ia - - oa . m 20 .11 d 40 so .01 35 IS .00 i 53 4.1 trace . 62 . M . - 71 41 .48 S7 42 . .27 ' ? 16, 1955 PRICE '"ft- I f as. .'It at the weird log pile which is visible from the South River Road at Owens Street A "cold deck" keeps a mill supplied with logs during the winter months when logging halts in the woods. (Statesman Photo). (Picture also, Sec. 2, Page 7). - . Door-to-Door " Soliciting Ban Gets Setback I PORTLAND CD The City of Gresham Tuesday was ordered not to enforce its door-to-door solicit ing ban in so far as it applies to the distribution and sale of religious literature. ' Circuit Judge Alfred T. Sulmon- etti issued the restraining order a the request of attorneys for Elder Lloyd C. Wyman, a Seventh Day Adventist pastor, who was arrested last week for violation of Gresh am's "Green River" ordinance. This ordinance bans door-to-door sales without a license. The present case will be ready for trial here Jan. 15. The Green River ordinance is named for Green River,- Wyo., where it first was put into effect. J Among other Oregon cities with similar ordinances are Redmond, Cottage Grove, Silverton, Madras, Springfield and Bend. Killer Slays Two Women NEW YORK W) Two women. one nude, Tuesday were found shot to death in a blood-spattered of fice in the Jackson Heights sec tion of Queens. Police called it a double murder. "Right now it's a first class mys tery," said a police lieutenant J One of the victims was a red haired electrolysist, an expert who removes unwanted hair by elee trical devices. The other victim was a girl, just engaged to be married, who had an appointment at the office. She was found nude, shot in the left side of the head. i No weapons were . found -and there was no clue as to motive. Famed Oregon Musician Dies PORTLAND un Carl Denton, well known musician, teacher and conductor of Portland's first sym phony orchestra, died at a rest home here Monday at the age of 81 Denton, born in England, came to the United States as a boy. He later lived in Salem and, after brief return to England, came to ;f return to England, came to I , . - . ''r, f r jz-2y , ' i tland where he had made his ' ; ; ,-, f .v'lTr fl'. j., J:-'t SSr tie for the past 45 years. A i : - ' 7-.' f : ALDAhY - Portland where he had made his home Propeller Caused Airliner 'Ditching' WASHINGTON The Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) an nounced Tuesday that the ditching of a Pan American World Airways plane off the Oregon coast on March 28 probably was caused by the. failure of a propeller. . . 5c! No. 234 Frozen Spray 1 - '4 1 J i Farm Bureau Meet Hears Russ Farmer ! By LTLLIE L. MADSEN Farm Editor, The Statesman Russia's purpose is all wrong. but some of the methods used toj gain her goal could well be adopt ed by the rest of the world, par ticularly the United States, the Oregon Farm Bureau Federation! meeting heard here Tuesday. j This was the statement of J. M. j Kleiner, Russian-born and educat ed, ; now farmer and food proces sor, at Nampa, Idaho. Kleiner, who held a 300-persori audience perfectly quiet for the best of two hours, has visited nussia twice :n recent years, including this past summer." Russia expects to gain her avowed ptirpose to conquer the world and rule it from Moscow, by "turning out more . scientists. more teachers, more medics and good ones than we do." He warn ed against making our boys and girls "soft". "We say we have free education I doubt it we have free chance to go to school. How many of our children take work home and if they do, they study only during commercials on TV." ' The situation in Russia is not as gloomy as it appears for Rus sians, "nor quite as bright for us," he said, as he urged his lis teners not to take seriously any thing "you hear or read about upheaval in Russia." Ernest Wiegand, Corvallis, form er head of the food technology de partment at the state college, was awarded the 1933 Distinguished Service ' Award for Agriculture. (Additional details. Sec. 2, Page 7.) Area Where r :.' v . ' - jt ,?iS'y CORvalus jy t . nil i no . -a --i -r.j l - r ' mi.:- ? r ' i' M I . . i m CORVALLIS General area where US. Air Force is planning to locate $5,000,000 communications center is shown by large dot above designating Camp Adair. Plana call for new facility to be bunt small portion of 400 meat The area is approximately 25 miles southwest of Salem. (See story above.) Station to Bring 'Hundreds of i Personnel'; Involves 19 Buildings By CHARLES IRELAND Valley Editor, The Statesman ; CORVALLIS Plans to build a $5,000,000 Air Force communications center at Camp Adair, 10.. miles north of Corvallis, were disclosed Tuesday by the Air Force. (Map at bottom of page.) "Several hundred" personnel will be stationed at the new center, scheduled for completion by Decem ber, 1957, according to the office of Col. Paul Stephens, Portland, representative for Air Force con struction in the Northwest. The Air, Force did not disclose the "function of the new' commu nications system, but said it was officially termed a SAGE instal lation. And, while the meaning -of the letters SAGE is classified, SAGE is the Air Force's proposed con tinental defense system which is intended to increase the effec tiveness of the existing, air de fense system. Monitoring System ; It is believed that the new communications system will in some manner serve as a monitor ing system to speed up the relay ing of messages concerning the approach of hostile aircraft or mis siles when detected by radar or some other method. It was reliably reported that the telephone industry will play a major role in equipping the new center. Much of the equip ment will be electronic. One of Several Lt. Col. John W. Etter, assist ant to Col. Stephens, indicated that the Camp Adair center would be one of several on the Pacific Coast. He said others would be built at McChcrd Field, Wash., and in northern Califor nia. - He said he "thought that four" SAGE installations already were underway in the East In ."Design Stage' -Currently, plans for the Camp Adair installation are in the "de sign stage," the Air Force re ported.' Test Qrilling for sites of 19 permanent buildings was un derway Tuesday, and CoL Etter 'said construction probably would start about a year from now He said the buildings would include a general building (which prcsuinaojy wuuiu nouse vital t.l U 1 - equipment), dormitories, mess hall, motor pool and warehouse r-li v v k $5,000,000 estimated construction I cost was "conservative." There were otner , guesses trom in formed sources that the figure might prove closer to double that amount (Additional details in Sec. 1, page Z) Nevada Deer Shoots Hunter siflTH VALLEY. Nev.- Uh A Smith Valley deer got his first man. , Edward Stanley, 30, Weed Heights, was hunting near here when he spotted and shot a buck. Stanley went to the animal, placed his loaded rifle on a rock and started to cut the deer's throat The buck gave one filial kick, hit the rifle and bang down went Stanley with a bullet .in his knee. Doctors at the Veterans Hospital in Reno report the knee cap is broken but the chagrined Stanley is otherwise in .good condition. AF to Build V! '( : ,y ) V,j acres still owned by federal govern Candidate i f' CHICAGO A dial Stevenson, an ; successful Democratic presi dential nominee in 1952, Tors day announced his intention to seek the nomination again. Adlai Tosses Hat Into Ring As Expected CHICAGO Iff Confident and beaming, Adlai E. Stevenson . an nounced Tuesday what almost ev erybody already knew that ho will be a candidate for the 1936 twh- m,'n. :"" Stevenson, the 1952 nominee who was defeated by President Eisen- 4K-!hower. struck a ' "prosperity and theme in a 349-word an nouncement his aides handed re porters: ..; He said he will do all he can to persuade his party to let him lead it in a race where he' may be opposed by a new Republican nominee instead of the President because: "First, I believe it is Important for, the Democratic Party to re sume the ' executive direction of our national affairs; "Second, I am assured that my candidacy would be welcomed by representative people in and out of my party throughout the coun try; ' - . "Third, I believe any citizen should make whatever contribu tion he. can to the search for a safer, saner world." Friends said Stevenson's decision : to run actually was made months ago, before President Eisenhower was stricken with a heart attack." Despite advance planning, there, were two false starts on his an nouncement before its actual re lease. Stevenson later read his own words for the benefit of television and news reel cameras but post poned answering any questions un til a 10 a.m. news conference Wed nesday. (Additional stories, Sec. 1, Page 10.) ;. Grinder Rips Hand From Tot BEATTY, Ore. Wl Three-year-. old Oscie Anderson, helping her mother with the grocery shopping' Tuesday, was fascinated by an electric grinder and plunged her, right hand into it. Her screams brought store at tendants who shut off the machine. But they were unable to extricate her hand. The little girl, screaming, with pain and her hand caught fast in the grinder, was put into an auto mobile and rushed to a Klamath Falls hospital, some 25 miles west of here. Later the child's arm was ampu tated just below the elbow. She is the daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar T. Anderson. Today's Statesman Sec. Paga Classified J .11 9-11 Comics ..r....... II 5 ; Crossword ....,.....ll 8 Editorials .'. ..I 4 Home Panorama I 6-8 Markets - II 9 Obituaries A -.11 9 Radio, TV; 1 .H 6 Sports .. II 1-3 Star Gazer I 11; Valley .. I 3 Wirephoto PageJI i m :''. 4