Mamie Shows Off Ike's Gift fOUNDBD 1651 105th Yoar 4 SECTIONS-32 PA6IS The Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Monday, December 26, 1955 TXKl 5 No. 274 , n : " I h ; I J WASHINGTON Mamie Eisenhower displays her Christmas gift from the president (old medallion In the form of a five-pointed star encircled with holly wreath and hearing the engraving: "To Mamie." On the reverse side is this inscription: "For never-failing help, since 1916 in calm and in stress, in dark days and in bright. Love Ike. Christmas 1955." The president designed the medallion. (AT WirephoU). (Story, page 2, sec. 2). I should like to be one of the first to buy the invention described by James Reston, head of the Times bureau in Washington, in his col umn in the New York Times of Dec. 18th. He calls It a "uniquack," and says it is a "comparatively small device" that can be attached to a TV set. It is used to test the accuracy of political statements. It is sensitive only to politics, and as long as the telecastcr sticks to the truth it does not function. But let the speaker start to deceive the listener "the screen gradually turns to a light pink-sort of blushes." Then if the politician fails to heed this signal and get back to veracity "the pink flush slowly turns to a darker red until, in an extremity, a bell rings inside the machine." Reston admits the machine has some weaknesses. It will become emotionally disturbed "while audit ing some particularly outrageous bit of nonsense." For example, when Harold Stassen said Presi dent Eisenhower could wait till June or (Continued on Editorial Page. 4) Inmate Wins 'Battle' to Stay In City Jail A persistent prisoner appeared Sunday night to have won a ''battle of nerves" against Mu nicipal Judge Douglas L. Hay. Released from a sentence for intoxication with all other city jail inmates as a Christmas pres ent Saturday noon, he was back in again (same charge) Satur day night. So the judge let him out again Christmas morning. He was in gain (same charge) that same afternoon. Nana Bryant, Actress, Dies HOLLYWOOD un-Actress Nana Bryant, 67, who spent 50 years in show business, died Saturday m her apartment after a two-month Illness. 1 Miss Bryant was known to view ers of the television show, "Our Miss Brooks' as Mrs. Nestor, owner of the school in which Miss ' Brooks Eve Arden) taught. Miss Bryant portrayed the role until she became ill in October. New well start yv on . . Hey, cut that eutl You're no , anore lam than I ami" - Englewood Church Bid on Council Docket An Englewood church's build ing plan will pop up again before Salem City Council Tuesday night at City HalL The aldermen will be holding their business meeting then, be cause of the Christmas legal holi day falling on the regular coun cil meeting date. Englewood Evangelical United Brethren Church needs special ', Hope returned Sunday from Ice permission to build a Sunday . land where, one of hi aides said. School addition up to its property 1 he was hanged up in a fall while lines at the rear of the church entertaining U.S. troops, location at Nebraska and 17th .nni.-an for Hnw told thU Streets. Some neighborhood re sistance has been encountered and the Planning Commission has recommended against the church plan. Meat Inspection A new item before the Council ... . i n a will be a bill to propose compul- sory meat inspection in Sa em. i.ong in preparation, mi mil is sponsored by Alderman P W. Hale. Most of the bills before the visjbe effecU an(j did not men council will itemize the routine 1 unn the fai. - . street assessments, following, rh. rnmHian nt t an -. through the 1955 paving program at property owners' expense. , YMCA Variance Several recent actions of the Planning Commission will come up for review, including the re rent variance permit to allow the YMCA to build an addition with out the required off-street park ing spaces. The Council also will consider an unfavorable report from the iaie ttignway ueparuneni on a receni proposal irom lower vne- may ble , ick b meketa Street business firms that o miik t grocery two-way traffic be restored west! Agriculture Department of Commercial Street. Myi experiments in England and Denmark on deep freezing whole ri t i) milk have been successful, r lrC UlllllOr 1 aillC In England, a department publi t.ii in i rri . cation said, the frozen product has KlllS It) 111 1 IlCatCr been kept in plastic bags. The Na tional Research Development Corp. TAMPICO, Mexico ( A false ' has patented the process, crv of fire set off a panic in an In Denmark, the frozen milk has old movie theater here Sunday and 13 spectators were killed in a rush for the exits. Nine of the dead were children. Many other persons were in jured. The theater had a capacity of about 1,500. Refugee Scientist Solves 'Atomic MetaP Production Problem at Lab WASHINGTON W The story of how a refugee scientist played a key role in research which led to commercial pro , ductioa of the new atomic metal tirconiuW was told Sun day by the Bureau of Mines. Zirconium is now a vital con struction material In the field of atomic energy and in atomic powerplanta like the one used in the nuclear powered sub marine Nautilus. The Bureau . of Mines calls It "the metal with the bright atomic future." Until last year the , Bureau was the principal supplier of sirconium required by both the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and the Navy. The metal was made with a process developed by Dr. Wil Seven Christmas Babies (All Boys) Arrive in Valley Seven bundles- from the top of Santa's pack were delivered by stork in the Mid-Willamette Valley on Christmas Day. And all were boys. Two landed it Santiam Me-' mortal Hospital, Stayton: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clarkson, Stayton, and Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wiege, also of Stayton. And five Salem couples were on the list of Christmas par ents: Mr. and Mrs. Warren Thiel, 320 E. Ewald Ave., and Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph E. Sher wood, 666 Catterlin Ave., at Salem -General Hospital; Mr. and Mrs. William Dodson, 1950 Market St., and Mr. and Mrs. Duane Sanford, 5380 N. River Rd., at Salem Memorial Hos pital; and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Maupin, 2441 State St., at Dallas Hospital. Salem Host to Inch of Rain On Christmas Maybe only Junior, who want ed to try his new Christmas bi cycle, noticed it, but Salem was treated to more than an inch of ajeady rain, on Christmas day. TheWillamette River contin ued a steady fall, however, down to 18.8 at midnight, although several areas were reported still inundated. ., Downtown streets were pretty well deserted, except for an oc casional policeman. Free park ing was available in front of any darkened store or restaurant window. The forecast for today and Tuesday is more rain, a south wind with strong gusts and some what cooler temperatures, Mc Nary Field weathermen said. Strongivoman Drops Hope On His Head ( Picture on Wirephoto Page) LONDON Comedian Bob story: During a performance Saturday Kev- B trongwoman Joan Rhodes lifted Hope to her shoulders. Suddenly he slipped off, cracked It i a karlli tn lh rtl at fewi ft if Vl I ilia ucau VII mc uiainri sit, vut nd h(Jrt hj" k A iondon - octor treated Wm mmt..rrj &,lnAav .j-M guest star on a British commer- rinl TV nrnirram H chnu'H im gagement after the show and news- men were unable to check the ac count with him directly. Frozen Milk Kept in Plastic WASHINGTON I - You soon been placed in block form pack' ages of plastic and metal, and has been used successfully on ships. Even after three months storage, the Danes were quoted as saying, the milk is as fresh as when it came from the plant. liam I Kroll, a metallurgist .who fled from his native Lux embourg before the Nazi inva sion of World War II. Dr. Kroll served with the Bureau as a consultant but left in April 1953 and now lives at Corvallis, Ore. The Bureau now has turned production of zirconium over to private industry and Is work ing on ways of increasing the metal's usefulness. Commercial production of the metal climaxed 10 years of in tensive research and experi mentation begun at the Bu reau's Northwest Electrodevel opment Laboratory at Albany, Ore. . Back in IMS few people had ever beard of lirconium. It waa little more than a laboratory curiosity then, made ia small Christmas Flood Refugees Toward Southwest Oregon Streams Rise Again 6 Dead, 5 Missing in Flood Sectors (By THC ASSOCIATED PRESS) Steady weekend rain again was causing minor flooding in Southwestern Oregon areas. Two creeks in the Roso Iwre region spilled over their hanks causing several fami lies to leave their homes and another creek was being sandbagged at Sutherlin Sun day night. Heavy rains also were re ported in Eugene. Elsewhere in the state, thn flood and storm situation which claimed the lives of six since last Wednesday, was generally improved. Five other persons were re ported missing in accidents related to the storm and flood. Independence Farmer Feared Victim of Flood llitrimi, Netri Srrvlrt INDEPENDENCE A farmer in this area was feared drowned Sunday when his tractor was found in a deep hole in flooded low lands near the Willamette River. The missing man was identified as Lee C. Pope by Independ ence Police Chief George Utley. Pope was described as a bachelor about 70 years old who lived alone on the Marion County side of the Willamette luver, a muei south of Independence. - UUey aaid aeighbi' fiwind the tractor Sunday when he went to the missing man's house. He found the missing man's dog alone and "very hungry," the chief said. Found la Hole The tractor was found some SO feet from the house in a hole tour feet deep. The chief specu lated that Pope met with accident on Thursday when flood waters were rising fast in this area. The water was receding Sunday. The chief said Pope had driven his tractor to Independence on previous occasions when the Wil lamette River jumped its banks and threatened to isolate his house. Cut Up By Holes The chief said1 the road to , Pope's property was "all cut up by holes caused by the flood" and the missing man may have been starting for town on his tractor again when the presumed accident occurred. Utley said he doubted that the body would have been carried out to the channel of the river, several hundred yards away. He said he understood Pope has relatives in Springfield but none in this area. i The Marion County sheriff's office was called to investigate. The Weather Mix. Mln. Prrrlf. Salrm Portland Bakr Mrdforrl North Bend S I 4ft J .SI 4) IS 4.1 41 4.1 41 Vt 20 Ml 4S S4 M .00 01 J 49 J70 trace trace tract .00 nose hurg 11 San Francisco SO Lrm Anielea A3 Chicago 40 New York . SI 3 Willamette River 1SS feet. rORECAST (Irom U. S. weather bureau. MrNary field. Salem I: Cloudy with intermittent rain to day, tonlaht and Tuesday: southerly winda with few guita at li mllei per hour. Huh temperature today 47. low tonight 3S. Temperature at 12:01 a.m. today il 3. SAt.FM PHH'IPITATIOM Slnee Start W Weather rear, Sept. I THIt Tear Lait Tear Normal 17 S3 , 14. 7 l M quantities by a slow nd costly "iodide process." , When the Bureau metallurg ists started looking for a way to produce the metal in volume, they turned to a titanium mak ing process developed by Dr. Kroll, which he had patented in both Germany and the Unit ed States. Extracting and melting of both titanium and zirconium must be performed in a vac uum. Both will burst into flame during certain stages of produc tion unless handled carefully. With the knowledge that the, ' Kroll process of using molten magnesium to extract titanium from its compounds was suc cessful, the Bureau obtained Dr. Kroll as a consultant and began trying to adapt that method to zirconium. Among those missing was Lee C. Pope, 70, an Inde- C-iidence area farmer. (Story low). . Others reported missing in cluded Elmer Ionaril, 25, and his brother Richard, 21, of the Hood River area, miss ing in a Columbia River Ixiating ascident. and Fred Halo and Bill (leer. Grants Pass, the pilot and passenger in a light plane that disap - pearcd in a Rogue River Valley flight Saturday The dead are: Peter liar- ns, l.j. Brooks (story Ir-Iow); Cecil Connor, 37, Milo; Bert (.ladnev, 21, Pendleton; An- t il liowmmen, Nehalem; Vic tor Flury, 38, Roseburg; and John E. Clifford, 73, Oak ridge. (Additional details, sec. 2, page 2). Labish Flood Waters Yield Body of Boy talFman Nrw Srrvlra BROOKS The body of Peter Harris, missing 15-year-old Lake Lahish area boy, was found Christmas morning in flood wa ters about half a mile from his home. The discovery capped in tensive search and dragging op- erations conducted after the boy failed to ' return Friday night from an inspection of some traps. Death of the boy was the first fatal accident in the Marion-Polk area to be attributed to flood conditions resulting from last week's storm. The young victim was found about 9:30 a.m. Sunday by three searchers including the boy's, father, August J. Harris. Others in the party were two neighbors, Otis Phillips and Charley Earls. When discovered, the body was in some four feet of water on onion land owned by Don Cum mings and close to the spot where the boy's overturned boat had been found earlier. The water, an overflow from the Little Pudding River, had been estimated at nearly 10 feet in depth at spots at time of young Harris' disappearance. (Additional story, Sec. 2, Page 2.) JAPAN TO LIMIT BUDGET TOKYO m The Japanese cabinet decided Sunday to limit its fiscal 19S8 budget to 1.03 trillion yen (about $2,e6 1,000, 000). The proposed budget is slightly lower than last year's spending which totalled $2,734, 000,000. in Albany By the time the AEC became interested in the metal as a construction material In 1948, the laboratory at Albany had a pilot plant already operating which was capable of producing about 3,000 pounds of zirconium sponge metal a year. ' As demand .increased, the AEC and the Navy 'cooperated with the Bureau of Mines under the leadership of Capt. (now Rear Admiral) H. G. Rickover in expanding the Albany plant to a point where more than 280,000 pounds of the metal were produced in a single year. Private industry began pro ducing zirconium with the Kroll process In 1953 and by last May, had Increased capacity to the point where the Bureau plant was put on standby. Rivers Recede; Toll 29 Worst California Disaster Since 1906 Earthquake By BUD SPRtlNGER SAN FRANCISCO - Christ mas sunshine blessed large sec tions of flooded Northern Califor- j nla Sunday" as rampaging rivers (receded and some refugees went Dac 10 lnclr mw na SMl P'aslFr' ed homes. t Pictures Sec. 4. Page 2, !and Wircphoto Page.) After a week of torrential rains, an estimated 29 persons were dead in the state and possibly 50,000 homeless. Damage was estimated conservatively at 100 million do! lars. The San Francisco Chronicle quoted Sheriff G.S. Carpenter of Sutter County as saying he was certain there were an additional Zi deaths in tne xuDa uiy area and possibly more than 100. The sheriff was not available for a con firming check. .It was the worst California dis aster since the 1006 San Francisco earthquake and (ire. Figures I'nkaewa Figures on the number of dead and homeless were not solid. Com munications still faltered. Families and whole cities of persons were scattered. There was no way of counting those missing or possible flood victims. The Weather Bureau said the sun shone, at least part of the day, all the way from Fresno and Paso Rentes In the south-central region to Ukiah in the North. There were clouds and light rains at the two Southern cities and heavier rain in Eureka. A threatened new storm was not as serious as anticipated. One of the few remaining criti cal areas was near Stockton, a city of 70,000 on the San Joaquin Riv er. A fresh levee break south of the city flooded 20 square blocks of the Corona subdivision to six feet and some 400 families fled. 1.SM Return The new breach, however, low ered water a foot in a part of Stockton that had been flooded ear lier. Half of the 3.000 persons who fled the early break returned to their homes. Families returned to Marysville, a city of 12,500. Marysville, pro tectetL by levees, was evacuated before Yuba City just across the Feather River but was nev er flooded seriously. Yuba City WAS. Visit Homes Yuba City residents visited their homes Sunday but police, fearing looters, ordered them out of the city between 5 p.m. Sunday and 7 a.m. Monday. There was no elec tricity or water and the sewage system did not work. Water receded from northern section of Yuba City, leaving mud marks as high as six feet on some walls. In the southern part, the water still was at window level. The rivers receding were the Stanislaus, Tuolumne, Klamath, Eel, Russian, Yuba and Feather. (Additional details, Sec. 4, Page 2.) Auto Industry Inquiry Near WASHINGTON (AV-Sen. Mon- roney (D-Okla) announced Sun day a Senate investigation will start Jan. 10 Into automobile bootlegging, "wild credit" and other alleged abuses in the mo tor car sales industry. The public hearings will cli max an eight-month background probe by a special staff of the Senate Commerce Subcommittee. Gunshot Breaks House Window A window broken by gunshot was reported to city police Sun day evening by George Van Bur en, 285 N. 21st St. He said he heard the shot a moment before the window in his house broke. Investigating officers found a 23 caliber short slug on the win dow sill, apparently having been trpref" by the, window shade after being slewed by the glass, they said. AIR TRAFFIC CAINS WASHINGTON (A1) The Civil Aeronautics Administration (CAA) estimated Sunday that U. S. domestic, and international scheduled airlines carried about 42 million passengers this year a 19 per cent gain over 1934. State Holiday Dead At 6; U.S. Toll High Traffic Fatality Record 'Nearing' (By thc associated mess) Earlier Ivan A. Wcr, 40, Six persons died in Christ- Newberg, was killed ia a mas holiday accidents in Ore-" tree topping accident " gon ami two others were missing. Traffic accidents claimed the lives of four. Donald Hugh Wilkonson, 20, a sailor on leave fronvthe San Diego Naval Base, was injured fatally when an auto mobile plunged off a high way near Carlton and hit a power pole. Harry Edwin Conllin, Sa lem, was killed Sunday in a two-car collision on Highway 99-E. (Story below). Earlier Charles j. McCall, 53, Gervais, and William C Hiscoe, 47, Portland, were killed in separate traffic crashes. The body of Peter Harris 15, of Brooks, drowning vic tim was found. (Story in column 5). That raised .the miscellane ous accident death toll to two. Two-Car Crash on 99E Kills Salem Area lYlaii A 69-year-old Salem area man became Marion County's 12nd traffic fatality of 1933 in a two-car collision about 9:30 p.m. Suadasj on Highway B9E at Chemawa road. - " .' .y :?' .' v Harry Edwin Conklin of Route 2, Box 404, Was declared deafl on arrival at Salem General Hospital, apparently from bead in juries. His wife, Mrs. Anne E. Conklin, 64, and her lister, lira, Love Conquers All in Race Across Nation LOS ANGELES im - It took a lot of trans-continental doing but a preacher from Oregon and a sympathetic marriage license clerk conspired to give a soldier and his New York sweetheart a Christmas Eve wedding. Ptc. Donald Campbell, 19, of Fort Ord, talked long distance the other night with fiancee Janice C. Clary, 18. of North Stockholm, N.Y. They decided they wanted to marry Christmas Eve. Here's how they did it. Camp bell took his health examination on the base. The bride-to-be took hers at home. Campbell contacted the Rev. J. Whitcomb Broughcr, a Baptist minister of Portland, who was spending the. holidays here with his son. , Dr. Brougher took the youth to the marriage license bureau where the clerk took the license home with her. The bride-to-be's plane wasn't due in until hours after the close of the bureau. The minister and the soldier whisked the girl to the clerk's home and got the license signed by both parties. Then back to the Biltmore Hotel for a wedding cere mony. The couple Is honeymooning here until Thursday when the Campbells will go back to Mon terey and an apartment near Fort Ord. Denver 'Warm' On Christmas DENVER ( - This mile-high city, only some ID miles from the eastern slope of the Rocky Moun tains, celebrated its warmest I Christmas Day on record Sunday. ( Residents walked rbe streets in shirtsleeves as the thermometer ; climbed to 66 decrees. The previ- ous all-time hijh nf 63 was re- corded Christmas Day. 1940. ! Denver's wasn't the highest ; reading in Colorado, however. At Trinidad, in Southern Colorado near the New Mexico border, the j mercury soared to 71. Today's Statesman Sec. Pago Classified IV ... 3 Comics III..- 10 Crossword IV. . 3 Editorials I..., 4 Homo Panorama . III . ..1,2 Obituarios III..- S Radio, TV ; III 11 Sports IV 1, 2 Star Gaxer I. 10 Valley ... 11. 3 Wirephoto Pea -III-. 10 Home A plane with two persons aboard was missing in the Rogue River Valley area of Southern Oregon. A pilot's report of sighting By TBI ASSOCIATED MESS The Christmas traffic death toll climbed steadily early Mon day toward an almost certaia all-time holiday record. At 1:34 a.m. (EST) the high way toll was 433. Fires seek 44 lives, miscellaneous acci dents 49 for a total of iZt since p.m. (local lime) Friday. The Natieaal Safety Coaoefl had predicted See highway deaths. The present record Is U4. a fire on the south bank of the river Saturday night spurred search parties Sun day. The missing men are Fred Hale, pilot and manager of the Grants Pass airport, and Bill Goer, also Grants Pass, Sadie Mitchell, 67, of Chemawa. were hospitalized for observation and treatment of appar-, m ently minor injuries at' gC? Salem General where 7" they were taken by Willamette) Ambulance. - Driver of the other car waa listed by State Police as Homer Alfred Mitchell of Portland, no relation to Mrs. Mitchell. Hi injuries did not require treat ment, police said. Heavy Damage Both cars wero extensively' damaged, police said, the car driven by Conklin, hit broadside, coming to rest, after throwing out all three of its occupants, ia a nearby field. Another car was damaged to the extent it had to be towed from the scene in a rear-end collision as traffic was being slowed at the accident scene. ; Motorist Cited ' Lloyd Duane Fountain, 806a Lone Oak Rd., was cited for fol lowing too closely, police said, A car driven by Nellie Mae Mariott, Woodburn, received comparatively minor rear-end damage, police said. Minor in juries apparently did not require treatment, police said. Conklin's death was the 42nd of the year in the combined Marion and Polk County area. . (Additional story in Section 3, Page 2.) v Cold Spreads 1 South, East By THE ASSOCIATED PRFM The beginning of a new cold wave spread south and east across the mid-continent Sunday w h 1 1 1 some cities in Texas and along the Gulf Coast basked in record warmth' for any Christmas DV. Temperatures dropped1 sharply in the Southern plain states. At Oklahoma City, Sunday's high was 48, just 37 degrees cooler than that on Saturday. . Dodse City, Kan., reported a high of 44. down 44 degrees in the same period, and Fort Worth, Texas, listed a hiah of 83. a droo of 28 degrees in 24 hours. ' - ' i kalti I iitL- S Cm t i ti a V-Il n v - w'ult,u,s A Iia ..,-....-...- ... num.inrui.io vr me irm someone stole from the parking lot at the State Board of Health Sat urday night was no ordinary ve hicle. ; It contains $10,000 X-ray ma chine used for giving chest exam inations in schools and industrial plants throughout the state as part of the anti-tuberculosis campaign. SAILORS HELP ORPHANS ; YOKOHAMA, Japan W) Crewmen of the U. & passenger liner President Wilson have pre sented clothing and candy to needy orphans of Yokohama for the sixth consecutiva Christmas, ( I 4i