-(Src. II) Statesman, Salem, Oip., Turs., Jan. 3, 'oQ Congress to GeF Request for Funds To Build First Nuclear Surface Ship Br FDMOVI) !.E BRETON WASHINGTON Conor's U bring asked to provide funds thitt year no that Ihc'Vorld'i first nuclear surface shin cruiner, freighter or both will go lo ea under the American Aug. Brp. Tollrfwin of Washington, senior republican member of the Hmise merchant marine commit tee, urged President Eisenhower in a letter made public Monday to renew his request for an atom driven merchant ship. Tolleson aid at least three oth er rountriei are in the race to launch nuclear powered vessels, and the United States is "un doubtedly"' behind norne of thPm. It was learned meanwhile that a Navy ship construction request to be presented Congress will in clude a, nuclearp o w e r e d light cruiser to serve mainly as a guid ed missiles launcher "Vent Aground TnUefson sought Elsenhower's help in refloating the atomic mer chantman bill, 'which went .aground In the Senate-House atomic energy committee halfway along in Its congressional course. Eisenhower originally proposed such a ship be built as a sort of floating museum of the peaceful applications of atomic energy and sent on a tour of the world. Rome congressmen opposed the whole idea. Others said a working mer chant vessel would be more ef fective. The House finally passed a bill authorizing an atomic ireighter, tut the -Senate took no action at last year'i session except to send the bill to -the jo.nt com mittee. , 1 Aski Support , Tollefson wrote the President . that, in view, of the record, "I suggest .that you lend your sup port to the House-passed bill. An atomic merchant vessel would In large measure accomplish the purposes for which you Intended the peace ship to be built." Tollefson said information ob tained by the merchant marine committee "indicaicrt' that several foreign nations Great Britain, Norway and Sweden' are present-j ly enjatcd in programs for fie declpnient, of nuclear-powered vessels." Me- continued: "What' Russia r, doing we do not know. We do' know that ahe hns seven or richt limes as mnny sub marines as Gernianv had at the outbreak of. World War it, It is reasonable to assume that she, l.ked the United Stales, is experi menting wiih alomic-powered sub marines, . "If that he true, then our mer chant Heel Is growing obsolete faster than we already fear. We are undoubtedly behind several other "nations in the development of nuclear-powered ships." Honored by Queen Elizabeth -n n S r -PolislhSailoFS-FleeRetls, Win U.S. Jobs NEW YORK (AP) Seventeen Folish tailors arrived on the liner Italia Monday to take jobs they won because of" the "special ef fort they hid made to escape the Iron Curtain.' The 17 were selected in Eng land lastnnonth bjrCapt. Jan Rrl Cwiklinski, who "jumped the Fo'ish liner Batory in L igland in 1953 and - has wriH n a book called "The Captain Iaves His 6lvp." Cwiklinski and the 17 refugee sailors will man a tramp s'eamer chartered from a private owner by a New Philadelphia firm, the Pulaski Transport Line, Inc. Liberia Flag ; The steamer will fjy the flag of Liberia, and the company flag will resemble the prewar Polish maritime flag. She will be re named thf Wolna Polska (Free Foland) and, is expected to sail for England about Jan. 15. " The oldest man in tbe rew is4 C-ief Officer Hilary Mikosza, 57, who left the Polish fre.iphler To bruk to-ciairfrasylum in Englafid. The youngest is Stan.slaw Ma tur, 21, who was a cat'et'on a Polish training ship last year when he Jumped overboard at Gibraltar and twain two miles to shore. Among Crewmea tar off the English coast in Sep tember, 1954, brough' the ship 1 1 whitby, England, and aought asy lum ' As he met the saiJirs aboard the Italia, Captain Cwiklinski said all were chosen because of effort! they made to get out of Ommunist-controlled I-oland. This ii a smalt beginning 't the fight, for freedom," he laid, "and 1 am glad to be . part of it." LONDON Rudolf Blng, left, manager of the Metropolitan Opera la Neir York; Agatha Christie, ren ter, mystery writer, and Margot Fonteyn, right, ballerina, were honored Monday bjr Queen Elizabeth II for spreading British artistic accomplishment to all parts of the world. By virtue of the honor, Bing became a Commander Order-of the British Empire (C B E); Mist Christie received a similar mirrt, and Min Fnntevn became name Commander of the Order of the British Empire, equivalent to knighthood. (AP Wirrphoto) I Wr i t e r, B a 1 1 e r i n a , 0 p e r a Manager on Honors List LONDON ufi Mystery Writer Agatha Christie, Ballerina Margot Fonteyn and New York Metropoli tarrOpera Manager Rudolf Bing were among those cited Monday of the BrtWiih Empire equivalent to knighthood. She is prima bal lerina of the Sadler' Weill Company. Bing became a Commander Or on the New Year 'honor list of der of the British Empire. Similar Queen Elizabeth II. aw..ds went to Miss Christie, bis- Miss Fonteyn, 3fi, was named a torian Cicely Veronica Wedgwood. Derae' Commander of the Order Act Requires Aliens Report Addresses PORTLAND . Commissioner J. M. Swing hai reminded- non-citi-zens that they must report their address to the Immigration and Naturalization Service during Jan uary under provisions of the 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act. The commissioner, in a state ment from Washington, D. C, urg Sweden Count Killsifc, Self, His 2' Children STOCKHOLM, Sweden on r' Po lice said! Tuesday Counj Gustaf Fredrick 1 von Rosen, internation ally known sportsman and former military 'attache in Washington, killed his w.fe and two children in their -lcepr-and therv took his own life. An army pistol was used. Police Superintendent Tortsen Akesson, said the fio year-old count Shakesperiart Actor Paul Scdfield and Sir Osbert 'Sitwcll, member of HTW famed literaryJamily... ti. it t nmrj pm. -manner apparenUy aclcd in a fit o( tem. Austrahas Davis Cup tenms team, LTary, insanity. . - also was given aC-B-t, The deaths occurred early Mon Those made barons were: Col.jd at ,he count j estale SO(Jth o( John Jacob Aftor, 6, chairman ot i Stockholm ' the Times and member of the wedj Akfn said the counli orKan. known Anglo-American family; izfr of nfxt 5ummers equestr.ar Sir Francis Raymond Evershed. Olympics in Stockholm, was fou c' 56, member of . the permanent by. , chauffeur on the balcony of Once Mental Patient Admits Killing Youth NEWARK, N J. fPi-A 22 year old former mental p.ifient picked up for routine questioning while sitting in a car with two young women admitted to police Mon day the killing of a Texas AIM senior Friday night. "I murdered that guy in Tex as," police' quoted Ronald Edward Menter Sr., 22, as saying. Menter told officers he shot Jan David Broderirk, 20, of the Panama Canal Zone, during a drunken brawl. 1 Menter said he met Broderick In in El Paso, Tex., bar last Thursdaynd they Mrurk up i conversation. They decided to drive together to ilouston in Broderick i car. Stocky Fellow f Policeyjaid Menter, a stocky fellow wearing a yellow shirt and zipprred 'jacket, signed a' state-mant-giving -tlia-jollowing.- ac counts .. Menter and Broderirk took along a bottle of whfskey and took turns driving toward Hous ton. About ID p.m. Friday, they pulled the car off the main road at Hempsted, Tex., to bed down for the night. Broderick climbed into the back seat. They had an argument over whether to stop for beer. "I ought-to shoot yon," Menter quoted Broderick as saying. There were three loaded guns in the car, according to Menter, but Broderick made no move for one. Menter, however, picked up a 38-caliber revolver and sent a bullet smashing into Brodcrick'i temple, he said. I iIxTiics Uniyn NnineH Knriglit, Kdward Clark Jr. PORTLAND - -The Orison American Civil Liberties I'nmn has elected Judah Bicrman of Portland State College as Oregon chairman.- Executive board members In clude Keith Skelton, Eugene, and Thomas Fnright, Salem. Waldo Schumacher and Charles Howard. Eugene; Dave Epps, Rwcrt Home; and Edward L. Clark Jr.. Salem, are among nem lien of the state advisory commit tee. - Police Slay Armed Man KANSAS CITY, 0H-A- 52-year nld man armed with two shotguns was killed Monday in a gun battle with four policemen. Three of the policemen were struck by shotgun pellets. Two suf fered superficial wounds on the Land.. The third waa not believed intured seriously. The dead man was identified as Leandcr Bennett, a Negro. He was struck .down by riot "guns, police said.'fs he fired upon the officers from the rear porch of his home, Sgt. Robert McMeachin, 42, who went to the scene on a disturbance call, suffered multiple face in juries when he was struck by a shotgun blast at a distance of about 40 yards. Frank Walton and James Bowe, patrolmen, suffered minor hand in juries. Officers said they fired about fO times at Bennett. They said Ben nett fired about six charges at them during the battle. Neighbors told officers - Bennett recently had been hospitalized for treatment of a nervous disorder. 3 Mill MAS 12 .' 7 4 Jt 44 .f HUtU 77 78 MM 01 MM CANClt 3RI6-If 5V45 415 uo s v i '.11-26-J4-41I 4f424i vo M'T JJ 41-55 Pr CLAV R POLLAN' K Tow Doilf Attmtf Qult n rHT Attoidmg lo ld SloM , To dtvlop menoge lor Tueidoy, nod wO'd corrfiponding to numbers ' ofyouf Zodioc b'fthngn. 31 lniru m wnicn 32 SM '; 31 J.,n 1 Bolil .14 PnfM 3S To it Holt ?; Couliort 3H Al.d 3'1 41 In 51 Thrmiyh 4? Sntk 43 To 44 (un 41 Irntofing 46 D-oH 47 Takt 41 And 49 Th 50 VVhot M Your1 52 Vou 3 Vnu 4 Murn I Don'l J Bfifi - 3 FrW, 4 Dov J Hold, ' . 7 Don't I it Ll 10 Forcft 11 A II Adonr 13 SoMl'td 14 trrai li W.th It Hoppfninj 17 Othtn) It Vou I Could ;o t 21 fm 23 On. ,, 23 Sni.b! 24 Mon 15 5i 2 Coyld 27 T."t 2 U 79 Whn 30 eitoiut 64 Try 6) W,th 6 Hovt 47 Contnlent , 6S , 6? Invilmntt 70 Hovt 71 Through 73 Spending 73 And 74 Trip 75 Thn 76 Pertnirt 77 roc 71 And 7 Oidr (0 N l Nw' ' S2 MoV 13 Pfovd (4 DCllient till OCT J3 2- 122 35.1 Koino 'ov jj 7- !, 4 68 8 1 86 Good 55 tdobluhd S5 Mointa.n 56 Harmful 16 Idea 57 Connection! 7 Ptrvsn 58 In 18 rimvU 59 Procfdurei tl PrOrt 60 HMd W Mioblf ) Advert 0)finrj lAn4IU NOV 13 . OIC JJ M b3-37-44-58?: CATIKOtN DIC 4 IAN 3-IO-IJ.74C' PI O0-7J aouAxui H-I7.JO.J3Vt' PllCit Itt P0.3J-40-J1 ki7.73-IJ 5,C r"" - - mm t ; 1 ervices lor w oman. lOt, Due on Tuesday NEWBERG, Ore. -Funeral servicej will be held hereTuesday for Mrs. Fidrj Maynard who died Dec. 30 at the age of 104. She was born in Wisconsin, Sept. 25 1R51, and came to Oregon in 1920. She spent the last few years of her life in a Mc.Minnville rest home. IRAQ REFORM PROJECT BAGHDAD Iraq has set up a committee of three cabinet min isters and four ex-premiers to study legislation for reducing brib ery and misuse of influence. The reform began with a cleanup in the police department recently 'First' Triplets Of New Year Ifyru In Pennsylvania PITTSBURGH -. Three girls arr.ved in Divine Providence Hos pital Sunday a couple of hours i after the New ear and their par !ents Immediately claimed (hem to be the first triplets of 1956. James Blazier, 26, and his wife, Rose Marie, 24, said they wert told a month ago to expect a mul tiple birth. The father added:- "Our other three children want ed a girl.. Now each can have one." The other children are James III, 4, Michele, 2, and William, 14 months. court of arbitration at The Hague and Sir Frederick Godber, 67, ('.airman and. managing director of the Shell Transport and Trad ing Co. Ltd. Dr. Cyril Garbett, Anglican pri mate of England and Archbishop of York, was raised to the peer- Also among the crewmen are two memb'-rs of the crew of the trawhr Puszciuk. who heloed ov erwhelm the captain and commiMJe arn postoffices, and joined with the commissioner , in urging the honors list became public. He had been told a week earlier that he was to become a baron. His death nullifies 'the appointment. ed all aliens to go to the nearest ! se .but-he-died Saturday -before posi oince or immigration onice 10 fill out an address report card in compliance with the requirement. In the Oreson-ldaho district, 21, 000 aliens registered last year. Swing pointed out that willful violation of the act could make an alien subject to a fine or deporta tion. He noted some 2,300.000 aliens reported their addresses last year. John W. Wilson, of the Portland office of the Immigration and Na turalization Service, said the ad- dr-pnrt cards are now avail Hiirliwavlee StallsTraffic the mansion. Tavern, Where Famed War Ficht Mapped, Burns STILLWATER. N..Y. -,An his toric tavern, where local legend said revolutionary war strategy was mapped, was swept by fire Monday and only a charred skele ton of the two-story frame building was left standing. Four residents and several tap room patrons fled the Hewitt house on the Mam street of this Sarato ga County village, about IS miles from the sight of the famed Battle of Saratoga. Firemen fought the fire for four hours. They chopped ice from the nearby Hudson River to draw wa- Chiang, Commie Talks Claimed By Newspaper LONDON .on-The Daily Her ald suggested Monday that aVcret , timber sales policies In Oregon. PORTLAND ( Ice and snow stalled traffic on the Columbia River Highway east of Portland that all aliens fill out" cards as ! Monday. State police also reported. ter soon as possible. lc and -snow on the mountain The fire, which pparently start- Wilson explained that lo comply Pas highways. ed in a chimney, first was diseov- with the law the alien must Till but T R"in fel1 over much f Western - Pred in the hotel dining room. Pa a card and hand it to a post officfe I Oregon, but cold weather was re- trick. Nolan, (he proprietor, esti- or immigration clerk. No alien Prlea east 01 ine scaae "ange. fowled the loss at $65,000. should mail his own card. Suit Names State Solon EUGENE Instate Rep. Loren Stewart, cleared last week in a mining claim suit, has been named defendant in an amended suit filed here. The case figured in recent c-n- Cars venturing into the Colum- The legend in Stillwater is that bia Gorge- without chains became strategy for the Battle of Saratoga stalled and they blocked traffic lanes for some hours. At one time about 1.000 cars were stalled on the highway near Bonneville Dam. rressinnai hearings oi ferial i"ar"ng Jan- 10- U. S. VISIT, PLANNED KARACHI JP)- The speaker of Pakistan's constituent assem bly, Abdup Wahab Khan, plans to visit the .United States and Canada after attending the Com monwealth Parliamentary Asso ciation Conference in Jamaici was mapped in the tavern. How everr some historical sources say the tavern apparently was built after the revolution ended. VENETIAN BLINDS DVIflflf Alum. Screens K I LVVA l0d Doors For Bvtrvthlnt far Teur Window SEE CI MFD 0 THE LLrlLK BLIND MAN rf PAtlmitri Dav or Night Ph 3-1328 (TrrmO 37 Cnlrr SI negotiations may be taking place ,. between Chiang Hai Slwk and the Chinese Communists. "Information reaching London," said, the labor paper, "suggests . that , secret negotiations between " Chiang and Peiping were opened some weeks a&o." " The" Daily Herald said this the ory was "reinforced'' by the arri val in Peiping of "Twogun" Co- . hen, an En)iiliman who became Earlier last week Circuit Judae Fred Reid upheld a demurrer filed by Stewart and Lawrence Chap man which said there were not enough facts to support the ac cusation of fraud, . The suit was filed by Norman Phillips -xjf Baker Tacainst Stewart, Fred Bartels, William Bartels, their wives and Chapman. Phillips contended in the suit that the Bar tels gave him an option to bu,, m.f.ii"' pro'K'rt" v.r'iou? J""i!i a gcn ral in the Chinese Army . ' . t. ... l i;.... " I"" n v b I m t. u r iiit-iiu ui iifiuj"Y t.: .. . , ... . . .. . ... ... . mm k'ow inn fiewnn tri l w- jr.e i.ira,a ' ouo.co tun-'n ' llia'l a' "I'.id" hru n o I on n i r ' Hong Kong last week "I .may be able to bring about a better un derstanding between the two." PLANE LANDS IN WATER RIO DE JANEIRO, Braia (t A Panair Do Brazil twin-engined plane skidded off the end of a wet runway at Rio's downtown Santos Dumont Airport Sunday night and settled partly in the water of Guanahara Bay, None of the 21 fwii"'i a"d ' rcw members ''vrd v-s fc-rt. The f!T" was rriv!- if t '".Hii, . 9 YEAR CUARANTECI the clai'iu riiiliii- asked that the option be set aside and that he-be awarded $75,000 damages. The amended suit which Phillips has Lied - eliminates the 'fraud charges against the Bartels. r ..I K SURGICAL , support!; "lH V ' ' ! , M. - ' ' I ll ft ' tiller. "r. ii : tn .i Kuomt ' "Ask lou Dctor" Ccpitsl Drug Store - . 40S flat Stmt ft Oner f Utwrty " f tart the New Year right! Open or add to your uvingt aocooat at U.S. National by January 10 ... you'll earn .... . intercrt from .-.-ary 1. : ' 'LEM, U.Mi; .SiTY;i NORTH .SALEM BRANCHES . I fi 7 fry DM Wut :to els j D MjI during sears fabulous cA1IjLAjC TAILORED TO MEASURE ... ( i individually tailored suits L!1!t for you alone i . . fmA : jj uu. Sri fe l l i Vhl r' u 'till r ff r tv S Wl sIH . ) II do ill ft?ltM ' J X -w Mi X Correct fit ogabardinds e worsted o all-wool flannels o handsome tweeds o sharkskins .A truly omoiing assortment of fine custom fabrics sour finest quality, but only enough fabric on each bolt tomakc one or two suits, so we've slashed prices for fosr action. Buy now during this , once a year oppot . on! Sy to $WE EXTRA! . , : ,1 V fiiMt 1 1 : III t . OPEN.TUESDAYJNIGHT-TIL-9:00-.P.M;.M.iiL 55011. Capitol-39191 BWBgjBBBMBBWgaaBBWaBlBaMMaBB j