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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1956)
2 (Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sat., Jan. 7, 1956 Hue Lake Praised AtCa niicrv Meeting y LILLIE L. MADSEV Farm Editor, The Statesman rORTUND - "We could Just i well he eating great big beau tiful plastic ornament as some of the canned peaches processors have offered consumers in recent years."" Poppy Cannon told sev eral hundred canners here Friday, Miu Cannon, small, dark and meticulously groomed, is food edi- Ex-Truman Aide Cleared Of Disloyalty WASHINGTON (JH - A special loyalty board Friday cleared Wil liam Henry Taylor of disloyalty charges which have bung over him for seven years.- Taylor, 41, was a treasury ex pert in the Truman administra tion and is now an American mem ber of the International Monetary Fund. .,: 1 . Hall Fairbanks, secretary of the International Organizations Loyal ty Board, announced that on the basis of new evidence the board has reversed a June, 28 finding that there was "reasonable doubt" of Taylor's loyalty. Taylor himself said he had been "completely cleared." Temporary Bridges Replace Fallen Span Transporting Plan of Cabinet 'Neglects Air' WASHINGTON fl - Sen. Mon roney (D-Okla) charged Friday a Cabinet-level report on federal transportation policy, praised by President Eisenhower Thursday, completely overlooked aviation. Honroney, chairman of the Sen ate aviation subcommittee, said aviation is an extremely import ant part of the U. S. transportation picture and no general report on transportation would be complete without it. However, a Monroney query about an "airline protest" against the report brought to light the tact the . Air Transport Association (ATA), composed of scheduled air lines, had not expected or wanted aviation mentioned in the report It said that subject had been cov ered thoroughly in another report. .Bill for Plane - Sent to Soviets WASHINGTON I - A $724,947 damage bill was presented to the YT7 Y t:: .vh! Woman Hurt In Car Crash tor of House Beautiful. She was flown out to serve as one of five members on a canned food mer chandising panel on the second day program of the 42nd annual convention of the Northwest Can ners Association. The convention closed Saturday noon at Multnom ah Hotel, with Gov. Paul Tatterson as luncheon speaker. Registration topped 1.000 by Friday noon. Miss Cannon had nothing but the best to say of Blue Lake beans and purple plums, and the work of the Associated Blue Lake Green Bean Canners and Purple Plum processors of the west. If all pro cessed foods had the qualities em bodied in these foods there would be no canners' problems, she be lieved. Top Product Testa "Taste fragrance and eatability should be the top tests of the pro duct," Miss Cannon sard as she asked food processors if they were "getting so concerned with figures and quantity production that they forgot they were selling food. Be ing photogenic and being big seem to have taken the place of flavor and fragrance." The food expert also suggested that "less age in canned vegeta ble and less youth in fruits would imorove both products." Harold H. Paeger. director of marketing bureau. Can Manufac turers Institute, New York City, wis panel moderator. Jaeger said there was no such thing as a "pat" answer to processor prob lems and that no promotion was a cure-all. "You can't spend enough to sdvertise your way into success. Advertising is important as an introduction then you have to go to work and sell Jaeger summed up. Merrill Elected Norman W. Merrill. - Salem, who Thursday was elected presi dent of the Northwest Canners Association, gave the canners' viewpoint on the panel express ing the thought that the food processors had been so nusy processing that they had neglect ed merchandising until recem years. Quality, ne aaaea was oi top importance. Another speaker, Truman Graves, Seattle, chairman of the National Food Brokers' Asocia tlon, told the group that while national label canned foods are important, csnners should de velop their own packer labels to on a market-bvmarket basis to sain sales' security. . The panel stressed the trend in the country, toward "eating Out" as they stated that 25 per cent of the value of foods con sumed in the United States pass ed through the restaurant busi ness, and that an average of 78 million meals were served each day, in the nation's restaurants. Many of those attending this convention are also members of the Northwest Frozen. Foods As sociation, which opens its annual meeting Sunday. 1 III i J. i Emergency Loans Available for 5 Oregon Counties WASHINGTON - Five coun ties in Oregon and 37 In California were designated by the Agricul ture Department Friday as emer- LONDON UP Red China shunt- :gency loan areas under its (arm ed aside Friday U. S. State De-:ajt program, partment efforts to speed up the j The Oregon counties, all hard hit release of 13 Americans-still in by last month's floods, are Coos, Chinese jails. ! Curry, Douglas, Jackson and Jose- A government statement oroaa- phine. Reds Scorn U.S. Plea to Release Yanks VANCOUVER, Wash. Two Bailey Bridges, rushed from Fort Lewis Friday are pot la place across Salmoa Creek ea U.8. Highway M, six miles east of here. Original spin collapsed during heavy rains Wednesday. (Story on Page 1.) (AP Wtrephote.) Prosecution -j In Abbott Case Airs Surprise OAKLAND, Calif. I - The pros ecution exploded three surprises Friday at Burton Abbott's trial for girl murder two 'in the courtroom and one outside. Two women witnesses testified they saw the 27-year-old defendant in the Oakland area shortly before Stephanie Bryan was kidnaped in nearby Berkeley and several hours after Abbott said he already had left on a fishing trip to Northern California. Outside the courtroom the dis trict attorney disclosed that a jail mate of Abbott's is being ques tioned about a cell chat in which Abbott purportedly voiced ""very incriminating" comment regard ing 14-year-old Stephanie's abduction. Department Friday for the shoot' ing dowa of a U. S. Navy patrol; plane by Russia fighters last June over the Bering Sea. Total damages -including -In Juf'- . ies to the 11 American crewmen, were assessed at 11,449,893, but the United States had agreed to accept Russia's offer of half pay ment because of "special circum stances." involved. The plane; a two-engined Nep tune, was downed in flames cn June 22. ' " " Russia and the United States blamed each other for the incident. Secretary of State Dulles accepted Russia's offer to pay half the dam-, ages while "not condoning the il legality of the Soviet conduct" Adlai to Become Disc Jockey for March of Dimes WAUKEGAN, HI. - Adlai E. Stevenson will be a disc jockey for a half hour next week, radio Station WKRS said Friday. The candidate for the Democratic presidential nomiaation will play - records on a hail hour program for the March of Dimes, Saturday. Jan. 11 The station said Stevenson will Introduce records requested by listeners who pledge money to the March of Dimes. - SUUuui Ktwi Scnrlr RICKREALL Alice Waters, 4. B8S N. Commercial St., Salem, suf fered apparently minor injuries Friday evening when a car veered from control and crashed into a tree on Highway 22 about two mi les west of Rickreall, state police reported. The woman was taken to Bartell Hospital at Dallas for treatment of facial lacerations. Attendants said her condtion was "good." Police sua the car was driven by an unidentified man who left the scene Immediately after the 9: IS p.m. accident. The vehicle, a 1946 Chevrolet coupe', was demol ished on the front end. $300,000 Veneer Plant Planned In Portland Area Roseburg Blasts Admitted by Boys ROSE BURG UP Sheriff Ira C. Byrd uid Friday a powder house theft and two explosions which shook the area Dec. 3 and S have been confessed by five boys, aged 14 to 17. Pilots Group Elects Officers Theatre Time Table KLSINOai COUNT THREE AND PRAY" at 1 00. itf, Ml and 10 M "LOUD Or THX JUNGUV at l.Ot, :1S and !:2S CAPITOL LUCY GALLANT it J OS. S 4S and IMS "NOTORIOUS" it 1 00, 4 a and S3S BOLLYWOOD "TO KHX AND BACK" at 1H and in si ' TIMALI ON THI BEACH" at S 14 Unification of terian Presby Warren Merrill, over-all director of the entire association. The entire association plans to own five aircraft and have a mem bership of 72 pilots by spring. The Salem organization already is the biggest of Its type in the North west., . Flight No. 2's membership cur rently is limited to 20 but plans call for an increase to ?l when a second airplane Is obtained. Churches Eyed PITTSBURGH OP - A plan Is underway to unite the Presbyterian Church in the United States and the United Presbyterian Church in the United States. The announcement's made by Dr. Ralph W. Lloyd of Maryville. Tenn., and Dr. Robert W. Gibson of Monmouth, 111., following a two day meeting. They said they didn't know until Friday that revisions could be made in time for sub mission to the general assemblies of the! two churches in 1JH. If the committees, the general assemblies- and -two presbyteries Police Report No Leads in Cab Holdup Detectives reported no luck Fri day in tracking down a bandit who took about 150 from a Salem taxi cab driver in a Thursday night holdup. One suspect was question ed but later released. Victim of the robber was Har vey Lefever, who told officers he was forced to hand over the mon ey after "an object like a gun barrel" was thrust against the back of his neck by a passenger in the cab's backseat. The robbery reportedly took place in the 200 block of S. 20th Street about 11:30 p.m. after the passenger ordered Lefever to halt the abrThe bandit Jumped Into the cab near the intersection of N. Liberty and Chemeketa streets. Lefever told officers he was or dered to stand under the light of a power Sub-station at 20th and Ferry streets until the robber could make a getaway. Lefever said the holdup man claimed to have a" partner nearby "who would shoot" if Lefever left the spot. The cabby reached a telephone and notified police about 12:43 a.m. cast by Peiplng Radio said the Mao Tie-Tung regime would deal with the Americans when and how it saw fit and "no foreign inter ference would be allowed." Scorning Washington's charge that Peiping has violated a Sept. 10 agreement to free all Americans "expeditiously," thei statement laid: ' " "Americans'"" w h o offended against the law in China must be dealt with in accordance with Chi nese legal procedures, and no time limit can be set for their release." The toughly worded declaration dampened hopes in London that the Chinese Reds would smooth the wsy to a Far East settlement through prompt release of the re maining Americans in prison. U. S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles has made it plain that release of the Americans must come before the United States will enter into any agreement with Red China on other issues dividing the two countries. The Communist broadcast re newed Peiping's demand for an early conference between Dulles and Red China Premier-Foreign Minister Chou En-Lai "to discuss relaxation and elimination of ten sion" in the Formosa area. It called for a speedy end to the Western embargo on shipment of strategic goods to Red China. The Farmers Home Administra tion will extend loans to farmers who have suffered looses so 'they can carry on normal operations. The interest rate Is 3 per cent. Such loans usually run from one to five years. i - v Harney County, Ore., also vas designated by the department, as eligible for'its emergencyTlvcstoek feed program, under which farm ers may obtain certain feed grains at a reduction of.lt a hundred pounds during the disaster period. City Pumps Used In Salem Sectors City pumr rr' 'n operation Friday in West Salem and in Myr tle Avenue and Columbia Street sectors'. An all-night rain required the move. 1 The cily engineer's office said all pumps had enjoyed a respite, the previous night after a , battle against the weather and accom panying high water. Trouble generally eased off llse where in the city Friday, Salem's newest aviation group elected officers and looked for ward to purchase of an airplane at a meeting held recently. The group. Flight No. 2 of the Salem Pilots Association, named Al Bressler as president. Other offi cers: Ted Cusick, vice president; Clyde Ruthledge, secretary treas urer, and Bill Swigart and Tat Holland, trustees. Bressler is a flight instructor and a former crop-dusting pilot, while Cusick is commander of the Salem Civil Air Patrol Squadron. The parent Salem Pilots Asso ciation will in the future be known as Flifht No. 1 to distinguish it fr6-TWwnfr6upannOunfed psir-tmnrttrrnne'mtea-stater' approve the plan, the two churches will unite in a combined general assembly in Pittsburgh in May, 1J58. A three-way merger was ap proved by both churches in 1954 but was defeated by the vote of the presbyteries of the Presbyter Albany Woman Dies In Mexico Accident GUAYMAS, Mexico (jP -"An automobile accident near this small fishing and resort town killed Mrs. J. A. Kaufman, Al bany, Ore., Thursday night. Her husband was injured critically. Details of the accident were not available. DANCE . Saturday Night Larry & His Cascade Range Riders 8-Piece "Western Dante Band" Dancing 9:30 to 1:00 Adm. $1.50 AUMSVILLE PAVILION Tune KSLM 1:15 to 7:30 , Saturday Night BAIL FORFEITED Lola Jewell Kyle, Salem, for feited $250 bail Friday when she failed to appear in municipal court for her trial on a charge of driv ing while intoxicated, city police reported. DANCE 4 I UNI It! mvf (Southern). The revised plan proposed Fri day omits the Southern denomina tion, the drafting committee said. ATOM BOMBS FEARED TAIPEL Formosa UTv-Air Force Secretary Donald A. Quarles Satur day hinted that Chinese Nationalist jet fighter-bombers might handle atom bombs if a new war begins. Oregon's 1955 Road Toll Dips Oregon's 1955 traffic death toll was 400, or 21 fewer than in 1954, 1 Secretary of Stats Earl T. New-! bry said Friday. . , He said Oregon was one of the few states having a decrease last; year. The nation as a whole had a ! ( per cent increase. Most of Oregon's improved rec ord last year was caused by a big reduction in December, when 33 were killed, compared with 83 in December, 1954. . . The worst months were October, with 41 dead; July 43, and August 42. PHONi 4-4713 INDS TODAY Of IN Hi , Tk Ira itory tt A4 Murphy AiMfki'i Mt DrtW Har TO HELL AND IACK Cinmcop and in Color Co-Hif Join Cnwfofd Joff Ctitndlor FEMALE ON THE BEACH. DAYTON LEGION HALL Music by LYLE and the WESTERNAIRES Every Sat. Night 9:30 to 12:30 Ada. 1.M (Tax Inc.) f I Gun Wielders Interrupted The West Salem scene was en livened by . some gun-brandishing late Thursday night. City police said nobody was hurt and no charges resulted from the episode, which involved a group of youths. Officers investigated after a re port that two youths were seen waving pistols after getting out of a car near the Willamette River bridge in West Salem. When ques tioned, the pair said the guns were unloaded and had been used mere ly to scare another party of youths, according to police. The gun-wielders, reportedly brothers, said it all started when one of them, in the company of a girl, had been annoyed by the other party- of youths while in a car in the Popcorn Hill district. Treat the Family to a Delicious ami uuv mur At The Famous Delightful Atmosphere Ocean View Only 60 Miles From Salem Ocean Lake, Ore. ( OPENING TONITE 4 4 i t a 4:00 P. M. to 11:30 P. M. The "DIFFERENT" Way to Dine Out Portion Cut Steaks and Pan Fried Chicken Family Style 2625 DALLAS ROAD Formerly The Blue Note i S - INTERMISSION- If , i i , 1 ; Bill Bartlett and Corrine SCI Tat 1 kKtA M 1 So"nn; Dance Team VTI . . IDIOM'S"-1 CrySfolGnrdCIIS MllesSouth Salem City Limits on ME jj PORTLAND un Lumher Co r- The Dwyer announced Friday it . will begin building a green veneer plant in March, with the idea ef expanding it Into a plywood plant Uxtrr The original plant will cost about $300,000, President Anthony J. Dwyer uid. It will be put up in the southeast section of the city. r-r- 1 n wo .... : 0 If I, L. 4 - r - , ;-!':4.4..;.i..teM$ ENDS TONITE Heflia JMUsV MjtjaliLsmjM.m I ENDS TO f J i ( J I , Y 1 l-J 1 Vaa He I -J Lf- I I I I I . 1 la nd STARTS TOMORROWI Pray" Also "Lord of the Jungle" - 4 V c1.I;H:JmO;W1 1 V'$A3M'-:'' if -. . L I aWaw sm. W PALANCE WINTERS 0 CO HIT A Wendorfvl Now Idea FOR JUNIORS Age 12 to If Yearsl Only 50c for Admisiion Prict to tithtr Thtatrt upon showing Studtnt Body Card I Stortt Sunday at Both Thtatrtt. STARTS TODAY! P.M. Continuous From 1:00 IT COULD ONLY HEN IN TEXA8 1 , Vx r. etofy moat ,L iPCIv 1 amiaTna poopltlii iF! 8 fV A Amerteatodayl ic- "V , 7 : v I " - 1 CUIRE TREVOR PIUS -qtw mm mm RITTER Stery ef h loldest Deception Two) levers Ever Daredl . STARRING -Cary f Ingrid q Claude Grant r Bergman "T Ralni ' "NOTORIOUS" Enjoy a Delicious .. . mi mmm at your friendly SAFEWAY . 0 2575 South Commercial Street SATURDAY, Jan. 7th, 9 a.m. to 12 Noon You'll Feast oh These Favorites . . o PURE PORK SAUSAGE Saftway't own frtsh purt pork. You'll lovt it. o SUZANNA PANCAKES - Enjoy a chery stack of light and tendtr Suzannas. o SLEEPY HOLLOW SYRUP Topptd with plenty of real Maple Syrup. o NOB HILL COFFEE Enjoy Coffee at it's finest . . . You'll notice the difference. o SUNNYBANil WGARINE You'll notice the difference . . with Sunnybonk o CREAU- CROP EGGS . . . ..... "AA" Large Eggs .. candled and graded.