2-($oc. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore, Sat., Jan. 14, 1936 County Hears 3-Point Program for Solution Of Drainage Problem Marion County officials, blamed fnr the area's drainage problems during went extensive flooding, heard Friday of a three-point pro gram to clear up the "aggravated situation Drainage standards fnr subdivi sions, formation of drainage dis trict! and county authority to take necessary corrective meai arc were suggested as solutions in a report to the Marion County Court by County Engineer John Ander son. ' Rapid growth of the suburban areas, now estimated to have 'a nnnnlatinn ftf mm ?i AOO nrann hlsmerf hv Anderson fnr the ! sources, including steHm genera- Short Power Supply Seen IiV Northwest rORTlND - The Tarific Northwest may have a power shortage of l.in.nor) kilowatts ny 1965-W, the Bonneville Administra tion said Friday in its year-end report. It said a in-year look, based on no additions to construction plans plus a bad season fnr stream flow indicates possibility ot such shortage. Bonneville said all available re- Theatre Time Table n.siNoait ' FAST Of EDF.N"; 106, I M, nrt Id 47 BATTLtCR Y": a 23, id I 14 IAHTOI, -THnFF STRirFS JM THF. $I'N"; I no, !?, 7 t. nr in ..TO "A I.AW1FRS FTRFtT"; S ft -SS, ni ft Oft HOLLYWOOD T NDF.ftWATI n 1:10 nd ie 1 ' PASSION " AND KF.VFNGE "I ft na Dead Missionary's Notes Explain Plans (Story aUo on page oniO I 'I like you'. She tried tn give him PORTLAND James F.lliot.'a machrte, but he was gone. One the young Portland missionary lone wet footprint on a board and who was captured and killed by 'some mashed grass where he took Aura Indians in Kcuador, had told off into the jungle were all she his parents of his plans to convert 1 ever saw of him, the Ma2cs to Christianity, His father, Fred F.lliot. Friday 'We would like to reach thii tribe. ..these people are killers... let reporters read the final letters thfy d "tJn'v much as a worsening drainage situation. Utile Regard "Most of this fringe area devel opment has had little or no regard for proper drainage. A great deal of the fringe area li on quite level ground which originally had. only a few small drainage ditches to aerve for drainage. Originally, when excessive rains caused wa ter to flood these lands, there was Ike Forces Surprised in New England CONCORD. N. H. I Two in dependent maneuvers surprised the Eisenhower ranks Friday as the candidate filing period fnr New primary opened with a flurry of activity. First, a weekly newspaper pub lisher filed as a delegate candidate "pledge" to the President ! re nomination. This waa In direct con trast to the atrategy of Eisenhow er's organized supporters, who planned to file a complete slate of "favorable" candidates. Then, a backer of Sen. Know land (R Calif i jumped into the delegate contest with a declara tion that "we must find a winning substitute arid permit Mr. Eisen- nower w reure 10 m weuysuurj velopments to provide proper- drainage and to have an adequate tion and importation of power from British Columbia .Utah, Idaho and Montana, should enable the North west Power pool to meet its firm power requirements through 1 WO RK After that, however, a swift in crease in power shortages is fore seen. One of the reasons, the report Eleven Men Indicted in Brink's Case (Picture on Wirephoto'Page) he had received from his 211-year old son. One of them told of the son's first contact with the Aucas. He and fellow missionaries hid left the settlement of Arajuno to attend a missionaries' meeting, leaving behind Mrs. Marylou Mc Cully, wife of one of the five miss ing evangelists. Letter Rrvealed The letter said: Friday morning on the radio word for God in their language let alone a word for Jesus. BOSTON i A Suffolk County contact Ed McCully and I were grand Jury Friday speedily indict ed 11 men--one now dead fnr the million-dollar Brink's robbery of six years ago. . The 19 Jurors, including three standing by for Marylou in Ara juno. She was there alone with an Indian sen ant. She sounded scared. "The Indian who was staying with her had gotten up early and said is a population growth of 42 no particular concern." Anderson per cent from 1940 to 19S4, increas- Inff rinmtir riitnmrc from 700 "As these areas are developed 00 to more than 1.200,noo. And with homes and commercial' build- Bonneville estimates that in the f enn 0 T2 "h i "V- ings. the rate of the surface water .next 10 years residential require- " thw-'n kITcL mf i. strw.it iw 'menu mv he trir.li.rl W.nse nf 0 Kecfc, 47. the leak in the case paved areas and 'septic tanks .1L continued Topulatinn growth; TheTf FBT tracked bpeff Thursnyards from Ed's housed Ed and contribute to this increased rate. ' extension of lines and use of more by arresting six of the group (Nate (Nathaniel Saint-another of Carefully Plan.ed ! electrical applicances. in rapid succession. - the missing missionaries i flew out "If ill subdivisions had been I In addition, the report said, exist-1 , J,ne c,h, ,w" 'h i there in h,,'r7y' n?lnln more carefully nlanned in advance as ine companies forecast a demand ;FBI M .,1'21.8 1,'..but t" 'ndict- waa seen of him, Marlou Indian , ... ... mad niaAl tha fieviii-A att w i a . tn rfrainic and had a master fnr 27.2fM.IW0.WI0 -kilowatts f n r :' f" " drainage plan with which to con- large industrial loads, comp form, then the problem of flooded the present ld,4O0,ooo,ooo. homes and yards would not be with j us now. There are numerous evi dences where homes and yards have completely erased what slight drainage the fringe areas have had before development was made." Anderson asked for regulations to be included in subdivision de- farm and live out his alloted lift apan." And late in the day another Knowland supporter also filed. Dulles Backs 'Brink of War' Ike Tactics WASHINGTON ( - Secretary of State Dulles replied to critics Friday by reaffirming his claim tnai ontw-oi-war moves ny the Eisenhower administration checked the Chinese Reds in For . mosa, Indo-China and Korea. Dulles officially endorsed views to this effect which Life magazine attributed to him in an exclusive Interview, ' Dulles, after reading the full Life article, said through bis press of ficer that remarks ha la reported .to have made in It "do not re , quire correction from the stand point of their substance." . These remarks by Dulles have roused a storm ot criticism from British newspapers as -well as de nunciations from Democratic Sen. Humphrey (Minn) who termed them "a distortion of history." Deaa Acheson, former Demo cratic secretary ot state, joined the foreign policy critics, caution ing against conducting foreign af fairs by "hucksterism." Acheson did not mention the magazine ar ticle. - , Freight Rams Train, 19 Die STOCKHOLM. Sweden JP - . A 28-car freight train and a speeding two-eoseh passenger .tram crashed hesdon in central ' Sweden Friday, killing 19 per sons. , Several school children among the casualties. The trains were scheduled to , meet at Stalldalen, a mining vil lage, but the freight whipped outlet for their drainage. He said his office would recommend that a greater role be taken by county government In the problem, in the meantime providing engineering and legal services for the forma tion of drainage districts and the establishment of master drainage plans. The court took the proposals un der consideration, but postponed any action until next week. Refugee to Make Home In Mt. Angel Oregon Beer Distributors Open Meeting Some 300 persons from throughout the stste gathered in Salem Friday for the two day meeting of the Oregon Beer Dis tributors Association at the Sen ator Hotel. Opening sessions. of the meet ing were held Friday afternoon at the Senator Hotel and talks and business discussions are scheduled this morning. Feature tonight will be a banquet at the Marion Hotel. Speakers for the conclave in clude R. D. Hirschhoeck, official of Hamm Brewing Co., San Fran cisco; Rue Lund, Blitz-Weinhard Co., of Portland; Arthur .Ayrault, Heidelberg Co., Tacoma; William F. Whitely, Portland, executive , . : ooo the tntal generally used in de scribing the daring haul which oc curred the night of Jan. 17, 1950. Brink's was reimbursed by pay ment on insurance policies. The indictments charge breaking and entering, armed robbery, con spiracy to steal goods from Brink's and putting persons in fear with intent to rob. There were 46 Indictments in all. with 148 counts and 10 alleged offenses. and William H. Bailie, state liquor control administrator. Willard Marshall, Salem, Is president of the state association. Fields Merck, Salem, is chair man oi tne meetings arrange- menu committee. PORTLAND 1 - Five European ' wcrttarr of the state association refugees arriven rnaay w Degin new lives in Oregon. They are Hams Hermanas, 27, from Lithuana; and Mrs. and Mrs. Johannes Krueger, both 29, and their two children, I and 2, from East Germany. Hermanas was met by his step father and his mother, Mr. and Mrs. Vladis Sateikas, Mt. Angel. He will work temporarily at the Mt. Angel Abbey where the Satei kases are employed. . Krueger will temporarily operate chicken farm at Mt. Angel. All five were sponsored by the Oregon Catholic Relief Service. 1 of Eacli 6 State Drivers Fined for 1955 Violations One out of every six automo bile drivers in Oregon paid fines last yesr for violating stste traf fic laws. Secretary of State Earl T. Newbry said Friday. Newbry said he has received records of 129,064 such esses from the state's district, city and justice courts. The figure wss up slightly from the 1954 total. There were 4-495 of those eases referred to the Financial Responsibility Office for further action, most of these being for drunken driving, which results in suspensions of drivers licenses. through at full speed on the line r 1 novprtllllpnt ;to Kopparberg. Reports to Kop- LOCai U(J erilllieiU Hearing Planned Oregon GOP Group Seeks Ike on Ballot PORTLAND 11 - A Young Re- publican committee will circulate petitions in all of Oregon's coun ties to put President Eisenhower fin the May primary, Paul Kerri gan, a Keed College student,' said Friday. Kerrigan heads the com mittee. The signatures of 1,000 registered Republicans arc needed to get the President's name on the May pri mary ballot. His , consent is not necessary. Police Probe Murder Case Lacking Body NEW YORK UB - Police Friday were faced with the classic para dox of crime fiction a homicide case without a body. Sixty detectives were assigned gone out. He almost ran headon l ir ? . , l"ce11,1 into a naked Auca man standingj1' -ye-old Jac with a lance in his hand iwPal 1ucllne Smlth' victim of bunled aoortion .. .. Her body was dismembered Christmas Eve into more than SO pieces, police said, and these were wrapped in gay Christmas gift wrappings and dropped in trash containers in side streets off upper Broadway. Miss Smith's lover, 24-year-old Thomas G. Daniel, and a friend, Leo Pijuan, 46, are held on homi cide charges. Pijuan is accused of the abortion and Daniel is alleged to have assisted him in the opera tion and dissection of tht body of the pretty blonde girl. jf tAUSUI S. Aia ji p 2- H4 28 01 MINI 1 ' o.. rl t v ivn l i v MAS 1, a ACS 031-24-41-47 - 67-72 . J YT 3- 4-n-a MV2741-7I CANcra HAT U J. lift 34 42-5387 uo 14. 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The purpose, Eisenhower said. is to help keep the nation assured wanted-to kill the Auca on sight, but Marylou took his gun away and cried out a phrase that means Ex-Teacher, Held in Morals Case, Freed BOISE, Idaho Cfi John Calvin Bartlett, 38-year-old former high school teacher, became the first of 18 Boise morals probe defend ants to escape a jail term Friday. District Judge M. Oliver Koelsch placed him on probation for six years, saying "you appeal to me as being a proper subject for pro bation." He ordered him to con tinue psychiatric treatment. Eight other men have been sen tenced to terms ranging from six months to life on charges involving sex offenses with young boys and other adults. The others remain to be prosecuted. One of them, Alma Farnworth, Flood Area Probe By Copter Eyed PORTLAND A helicopter will be used by Army Engineers to inspect bank revetment damage from recent floods in the Willam ette River Basin. They have invited bids for rental of a 'copter to look over banks of the Willamette and its middle and coast fork, the Cala pooya, Santiam, South Santiam, Molalla and Clackamas rivers. Move Starts to Add Fluorine to Portland's Water PORTLAND IH A new move to add fluorine to Portland water as a dental health measure began Friday. Encouraged by the stale Su preme Court's decision upholding a city's right to add fluorine to its water, the fluoridation commit tee ef the Community Council met with representatives from other organizations to plan a campaign. A possible poll of water users on the subject was discussed. that "this highly important and j 31-vcar-old former office manacer. sensitive work is being efficiently I pleaded guilty Friday and Judge conducted." The President appointed the "watchdog" group in response to a recommendation-by the Hoover Commission on government organ ization. In a report last June 29, the Hoover Commission sharply criticized U. S. intelligence agen cies for "lack of adequate intelli gence data from behind the Iron Curtain." Dr. James R. Kitlian Jr., presi dent of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was named chairman of the board of consultants estab lished Friday. Killian served on two presidential boards created by former President Truman, one on management and the other on com munications policy. parberg said brakes of the ; freight, laden with iron ore, bad ; failed. . The Stalldalea station muter sounded the alarm after failing ia a desperate attempt to halt the ; freight When the freight thun- dered in he daahed to a switch : with the aim of derailing it, but arrived a second too late. jCrcswcll Man Imci by Log i DRAIN ( - Roger Bates, 28- year-old Creswetl logger, was fa- tally injured Friday in an accident " on the Smith River road M miles west of here. A rolling log struck him, crush ; Ing his chest, Coroner L, L. Powers said, sates, employed by the Wool riey Logging Co., Drain, died in an ; ambulance en route to a hospital. :: 7 w At Eugene Meet EUGENE ulV A hearing wiTi be held here Monday by the Legis lative Interim committee on local government. Problems of city gov- ernment and suburban area serv ices in Lane County will be discussed. The group, which plans a series of hearings, will report its findings and make recommendations to the 1937 Legislature. . Miss Atom Age to Get Uranium Ore GRANTS. N. M..(JB - Any good looking gal who owns a bathing suit and has a place to keep ap proximately . 11 -tons - ef - uranium ore, stands a chance of being cho sen "Miss Atom Age of 1956." Grants Mayor George Dannen baum has announced that the win ner of the contest will be given a truckload ot uranium ore. House Built on Store's Roof Under construction on the roof of the Salem Meier & Frank store is a model home which the firm said will be used for advertising purposes. Cost was set at about $13,000. A permit for the project wss Issued Thursday by the city en gineer's office. Another permit went to L. F. Burke for construc tion of a $230 carport at 625 N. 20th St. Koelsch scheduled a further hear ing in his case for Jan. 27. Farn worth remained free on $2,500 bond. Judge Koelsch told Bartlett a psychiatrist had informed him his problems could be remedied and that he was not "of the aggressive type." , Gas Thief Gets Probation Term f Ronald Louis Thompson, 22. Me hama, was fined $25 and sentenced to 10 days in the Marion County jail Friday for theft of 10 gallons of gas. The jail sentence was suspended by Marion County District Court Judge Edward O. Stadter Jr. and Thompson was placed on probation for 90 days with the conditions that he remain In Marion and Polk counties and get a job. Public Defender To Represent ( Extortion Suspect SACRAMENTO W - William J. Ellis will be represented by public defender Robert Cole when he is arraigned here Tuesday on a charge of attempted extortion.' Authroties have said Ellis, 27, admitted trying to extort $10,000 from wealthy lumberman George Steiner by threatening the lives of Steiner and his family. Local officers were informed by Pnrtland nnitm Thiirutnv ihathiiu do not plan to press charges against Ellis for his possible part in an unsuccessful extortion at tempt against banker E. C. Sam mons In 1954. Ellis admitted discussing the Portland extortion plan with two other men, but told police he backed out long before Sammons was approached. Orson Welles Breaks Ankle NEW YORK un - Orson Welles, who returned to Broadway Thurs day night after a 10-year absence, was temporarily incapacitated Fri day wsh both of his ankles injured one sprained and one broken, j Only a . week ago, the star Ml from a ramp backstage and brone ; his left ankle. Nevertheless, he j opened Thursday night in "King i Lear" at the New York City Center j Theater with the left ankle in a 1 cast. - j A spokesman for the theater said ; that after the show Welles, who had some difficulty walking be cause of the cast, stumbled over ! a prop backstage and fell, sprain ing his right ankle. . j DANCE Saturday Night Larry & His Cascade Range Riders l-Pieco Western Dance land" Dancing 9:30 to 1:00 Adm. $1.00 AUMSVILLE PAVILION Tune KSLM 7:15 to 7:30 Saturday Night . Cottonwoods Every Sat. Jack Kizziah And His New Texas Ramblers Adm. 1.00, tax inc. Good Music Big Crowds Sat. Nitc Crystal Gardens DANCE S TAHITri to I vlll I CS DAYTON. LEGION HALL Music by LYLE snd the WESTERNAIRES Every Sat. Night 9:30 to 13:30 Adm. 1.01 (Tax Inc.) N Treat the Familj to a Delicious At The Famous ottfjester $ou& Delightful Atmosphere Ocean View Only 60 Miles From Salem Ocean Late, Ore. CONFERENCE SET BAGHDAD un The Asian Bagh dad pact nations .Iraq, Iran, Turkey and Pakistan will hold a security conference here Jan. 17, PHONE 4-4713 tilth U4ty-Opn MS Jmm RwmN OilW tUd UNDERWATER Swywmtf TmIm1U AIm Caml WiM Yvmm D Carl PASSION AND REVENGE lcMf MtiM in CUr StwK mrrw Ct. 1:45 Rm4IbN SfM-Swrwt Twcktr RACE AT DAWN Un, CvW-liara U44 THE VIRGIN QUEEN ' JUMSO FRIED SHRIf.P $1.00 perDosen Lehman's Sea Foods tS I. CmmmkUI tiM I444S mmmmKmmwmmmx.mK 4 f.' 1! IV Miles galea. City UmlU 30 to 1130 II Seen Jl Last Day Three Stripes in the Sua" and "A Lawless Street" TOMORROW DOORS OPEN 12:45! THE 1 .nrrr t ry 4i houtwooo riMu f 1 I I I i ' i f ROMANTIC, ADVENTURE ml tfw ewtar rim ef the werUf x . daf ,1 l ' .! j PI tn, wELIA KAZAN'S w JOHN STEINBECK'S ran WMNUIMS. fMllOVfMnliulll! no mm m m mm s JWASMgICQLeS) tCtt H IY MCCKIW. PAULOSBORN EUA KAZAN . - . I I VIS "rSTl ill J II n '.I in 1 a ,tw r4M I --- ' f g i " rv vr QnbmaScopc nail I - I m.M. VAN 4ALU0 KQNA ftrFKlM-XINrv (llWi. Hurt fitirvr HEFLIN V RAY uncou usst-tu HONifi-DiiiifiTHY mm-m tmm acMtHHM ar LEON M. URIS e.en it RAOUL WALSH caicMti music av m t.....t . sr5i ... ; 1 ytytjte centlnoon. - J from 1:00 fJf.