i-' t--. 1) MdtCMiuu, Salem, Ore, Sat., Feb. 11, 11)56! J. S. Armada Plans Atomic 'Invasion' olNejn-css Claim Tiny Pacific Island YOKOSUKA, Japan & - Thou-1 the last year of World War II. sands of U. S, Navy men and In one of the bloodiest battles Marines sailed from Japan and of the Pacific War, more than Okinawa Friday in a 22-ship fleet '4,500 Americans and 20.000 Ja to conduct a mock atomic inva- panose were killed. Before the ion of Iwo Jima next week The Navy announced 30,000 Navy 1 men and 11,000 Marines would take part In the maneuver during the anniversary of the bloody ficht for the island in World War II. ' The Navy said that although actual atomic weapons will not be . a a I .! '( urea, special piasuc-casea proiec-1 tiles dropped over the invading task force in the maneuver will create mushroom clouds, like those of atomic bombs and shells. . , The blasts, exploding about 1.000 feet above the 70 U. S. warships in the maneuvers and over the landing beaches will be harmless to men and equipment, the Navy said. Hundreds of carrier based jet planes will also participate. The amphibious landing, largest in the Far East in two years, will be staged nearly 11 years to the date after U. S. Marines stormed shore on the tiny island during A fti ft 4 ff tlAt. Cotton woods Every Sat. Night ffolun Affrocfion Tommy Kizziah la feson Jack Kizziah And Hit lh7 Texas Ramblers Adm. 1.00, tax Inc. Sun of KSLM 5:30-6:00 fM. Jf" ri? Quality You Can See! WHEN YOUR DINNER IS CARVED BEFORE YOUR EYES Tlie 1S9 South 11 AM. t I P.M. "Wl BAKI QUI OWN SALEM FIRE TONIGHT! StM - V.' If FRIED FRIED 1 f CIIICKEII " SHRIMP J (CHICKEN-ON. $1 00 (SHRIMP A h A-STICK) ti IOAT) mm NORTH'S 'i FIREMAN'S DALL 2 Floortl 2 Bands! Selection and Crowning f th Valentino Queen! And Special Awardsl BIO WSW Rc: lU c ivu. inline ... struggle on the beaches. American airmen btmbed the island steadily from late 1944, and heavy gun, of ;,he V. S. Fleet. pounded it from the sea The actual invasion date was f. is and it put u. srs on a base 750 miles from Tokyo. Th J 1. !.' II v. a. Eovernmeni oinciauy ious possession of the island March 14. In the intervening battle 22,731 Japanese troops were killed on the island, 624 were taken prisoner. In addition to the fleet that sailed out Friday, 18 more "larger amphibious ships.", including the Command Ship Mt. McKinlcy, are scheduled to leave tomorrow. The Navy has hinted the Ma rines will be equipped with new anti-radioactivity defense' equip- ment. . Using live ammunition, warships will open the maneuver next Wed nesday by shelling uninhabited Muka Jima, north of Iwo. DANCE T0IIITE! DAYTON IEC5ION HALL ir Music by LYLE ad the WESTERNAIRES Every Sal. Night 9:30 to 12:30 Adm. 1 00 (Tn lac.) DANCE Saturday Night Larry & His Cascade Rcr.gs Riders "Western Cane Band" Adm. $1.00 AUMSVILIE PAVILION Tone KSLM,7:1S te 7:11 Saturday Night Pit High St. Closed Sundays Fill' AND ItEAD" ?! m Lrl DEPARTMENT'S ANNUAL CRYSTAL GARDENS Salem, Oregon lidU Amm m U u.ut.. tor. n w. I A -. Alabama U. Chief Denies TUSCALOOSA. Ala. ( - With obvious heat, the president of the University of Alabama Friday em- phaticallv denied charges by a Ne-1 ttro woman student that mob ac- tion here. was a ,,clever strata-!who gem Dr to get w r .t,l O. C. Carmichael, dis- ,;icKj 4 -.,-lH .ri .vo... " .. -,Wd(1 ' in , ,,! filed in Birmingham Federal Court 1 jay by Au he ine Lucy wer JjJ SSTJiZiZ untrue, unwarranted and outrag ous." - - ; Friday. He was asked his reaction to "a legal action filed yesterday." Miss Lucy, 26-year-old Birmin nam secretary ana me ursi ;cKro ; siuueni in tne ni&ioiy ui we ud-year-old university, was excluded from classes by the Alabama Board of Trustees Monday night. The trustees' action followed a day of rock and egg throwing and rioting during which mobs ranging up to 3,000 in number roamed the college campus yelling "Hey, hey, ho, ho, Autherine must go," and "Keep Bama white." Commenting at Montgomery on the campus violence. Gov. James E. Folsom said, "There will be no mob rule running any state in stitution, any city or county gov ernment or the state government of Alabama." Morse Foe Wins Okeli (Story also on Page 1) Hood River Democra' oodyatcr ghc found hcr dead in Smith officially became a candi date for the Senate seat held by ( Wayne L. Morse Friday when his filing was accepted by toe state elections division here. Smith, who will oppose Sen. Wayne Morse in the primary, filed by mail Thursday, then had it withdrawn , and fil i at the later time. The filing was one of seven in cluding that of R. F. Cook. Sil verton Route, 1, Box 320, who is seeking the Republican nomina tion for Congress for the First Congressional District, - Also filing Friday were Circuit Judge Alfred T. Goodwin, Eu gene, for reelection; Jack Draper, Albany, for representative from the 13th District; Francis W. Linklater. Hillsboro Democrat. district attorney for Washington County; Larry Williams, Canyon City Republican for state senator from Grant, Harne7 and Malheur Counties, and Harry Grant, Port land Democrat, for delegate to the national convention from the Third District Car Crashes Snow Plow, Four Killed NORTH BEND.' Wash. UTi - A headon collision between State Highways Department snowplow and an automobile on the Snoqual mit Pass highway Friday fatally injured four persons, three of them children. The eastbound automobile and the snowplow collided on a curve near Camp Mason, 11 miles east of North Bend, during a light snow falL The automobile was demol ished. State Patrolman E. A. Eby identified the dead as: Lind E. Forsgren, 28, operator of a power substation at Doris, Kittitas County. His sons, Robert I, and Scotty, 3. Robert Mctonneu, 4, Tacoma, a nephew. The driver of the snowplow was Merln C. Larson, 43, of North Bend. North Carolina had 25,423 irri gated acres in 1954 compared with 1,083 in 1949. w , isriciAtit wi J OIT. 7y Son of Taft Foresees Ike Retirement SEATTLE if - Rohort A. Taft Jr., told Seattle Republicans Fri day night there is a possibility president Eisenhower will chrviM this year to retire from public life, "I' thl situation develops." said ln wn 01 tn la" oh, Senator va,nly uSht ,ne "nuon r.isennower soi in iv.u, i oner a plea for unity in Republican ranks m in the serious task of electing our I9." presidential candidate." "I am strongly pro-Eisenhower,' 5aid l the 55,h "nnual Spat,,e 99 ! :"W it my iainer were alive todav I am sure he would be pro-Lisen-hower." "No one who calls himself a Republican can deny Eisenhower's rl(?M tn rnnnminafinn chnnlrl ha .w .............. - and ..j know .jU , share with me the hope this will be the, cav Hi. Mid the HOP is in rnoH ' shape for the campaign because of an improved international out look and national prosperity. Blind Youth Drowns in Tub - OKLAHOMA CITY Ofi A 12-year-old Oklahoma City boy, blind and an invalid since birth, drowned decide to run again." Taft said'""1 "l ., -i kmu . lit .n ,k... i Vancouve Friday when he accidentally Wljtello. Idaho, and Isidore of Port into a bathtub at his home, his mother said. The victim was Marion David Maxwell, son ol Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Maxwell. .... Mrs. Maxwell said she had filled the bathtub in her home to rinse some laundry, then went outside to hang clothes. U'kiM. A. mIiimuiI Inu, Mrnnl. the tub. She and the boy were alone in the home at the time. Plastic Falrp In Heart Gives Man'NewLife' Medical ingenuity can be credit ed with putting a Salem man well on the road to recovery from a serious heart ailment. Ednor Farmen, 45, 1011 Elm St., carries a plastic valve in his heart following an operation per formed about two weeks ago at Good Samaritan Hospital in Port land. The rare surgery practiced for only three years, was deemed necessary after an examination disclosed a weakened heart valve. Memento of the operation is a "click-click" plainly audible with each beat of Farmen's heart. This is caused by a ball in the valve which prevents blood rushing back into the heart after being pumped into an artery. Valve Defect Farmen was an employe of Blue sgnosed by physicians as a valve defect which permitted blood to rush back into the heart. Farmen was a nemploye of Blue Lake Packers at the time the trouble first appeared. One symp tom was extreme tiredness in his lcg."- Teok 7 Minutes Planting the synthetic valve took seven minutes. He was told before the operation that the process was successful n eight out of ten cases. Signs of success are indicated In Farmen's case. Now, with the operation only i couple of weeks behind him, he is able to walk about his home. Down to 140 pounds at time of his trouble, he has gained back to a normal 180. However, it will be two or three months before Farmen will know whether he can go back to work. Dobbins Eyes Race PORTLAND OH Joe Dobbins, used car dealer who heads the campaign to compel location of Portland's sporjs-recreation center on the East Side, said Friday he may seek election in May to the post now held by City Commis sioner Stanley Earl Theatre Time Table risivoar -t.T OBI SKIRTS" lit 1 00, 4 n. Ill a!(l lo - - l AST OF THF. D ESTER -DOFS ' at 2 54 and 6 00 PREVIEW it ji CAPITOI. "SQl'ARE JUNGLE ' at 1 0, I 44 n1 10 07 "SANTA Tt PASSAGE" It I :J4, 4 i nd S.3J HOtxvwoon -TO CATCH A THILF" at 7:00 and 10 54 "THE TRAIL Or THE LONE SOME PINE ' at I IS Death Claims R. T Bisenius Butrsmaa Stmt Srrvlrf MT. ANGEL -Raphael (Bunk) T. Bisenius, a resident of Mt. Angel since 1926, died Friday -4 Veterans Hospital at ancouver lollowing an illness 01 J 5"rriU nwiur . Bisenius was a native of Iowa, Porn in me town oi cascsae icd. 17, 1897. He married the former Dorothy Russell at Omaha, Neb., Aug. 4, 1823, an the following year moved to ML Angel. For several years he was. a member of the Mt. Angel Fire Department, and, being a eteran of World War I, he was a mem ber of the ML Angel American Legion Post. In addition to his widow, Bis enius is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Patricia Kirklin; four bro thers, Alphonse nd Raymond of i Cascade, Iowa, Ambrose of Poca- land; and five sisters, Mrs. Ver onica Potts of Albany, Calif., RiU and Lora Bisenius of Cas cade, Iowa, Mrs. Filda Rupkey of Chicago, and Mrs. Catherine Cov ington of Brookfield, 111. There will be a public cita tion of the rosary Sunday at 8 p.m. in St. Mary's Catholic Church followed by a private recitation at linger Funeral Home. The Mt. Angel American Leg ion post will conduct a military funeral from St Mary's Church Monday at 10 a.m. Interment will be at Calvary Cemetery, ML AngeL Last Rites for Infant Today lutfimia Nwi Strvlct WOODBURN - Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday at Ringo-Cornwcll Chapel in Wood- burn for Raymond S. Cross Jr., infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray mond S. Cross, Aurora. The baby, born Feb. 2 at Salem, died last Sunday. Other survivors besides the oar ents include brother, Alexander, Aurora; and two sisters, Clintina and Branda, both of Aurora. Con eluding services will be in Mt. Crest Abbey Mausoleum in Salem. Killer Ponders Action SAN FRANCISCO UR - Leslie Irvin, mild-mannered convicted killer, Friday was given until Tues day to decide whether to fight 're turn to Indiana where he is under sentence of death. He is accused of killing six persons. (Picture on Wirephoto page.) Treat the Family to a Delicious At The orcijeter Housie Delightful Atmosphere - Ocean View Only CO Miles From Salem - Ocean Lake, Ore. BOYS AK'D 0IRLS1 How well do you know yoor Geography, HIstoryAHthmetlc, Spelling? Hv your pwtnt Of gutrditn gt a coupon for you wttk tt PtyltM Drug Stbro or Kty'i Apprl. Ml In ond bring it to th Cpol Tbttttr. U it th CpNol ittrting Stturdty it 9:00. i.m. If your coupon It driwn, you will bo clld on uo to tntwor qutttiofw of your grtdo cUm and trt ttrnlpg your wy up tht ltddor of tht Pay less Drug Store & Kay's Apparel SILVER DOLLAR QUESTION PARADE TO AS MUCH AS $50.00 IN CASH 1 1 HERE ARE THE RULES: , ContotttnH to bo drawn from Ird grad throwgh 6ih frtdm.jor up to 1 yaart of ag, only. : Thrto conttatant on itaga aach waak, drawn by toupona broupht to Capitol Thaatrt. . Standard tttt ajuottioni of varioua grada groupa wiH bo aikad. ritM itart at $1.00, ntt la i3 00; ntat it $5-00 nat ia $8 00. If conttitant withal lo kaao trying for top priia, ho will ba aked to raturn tha following waak te try for $15.00 priia; If Ht wiihtt to aaap going, Kt raturni tht 3rd waak to try for $30 00 prlta. If ho kaapl going, ht will raturn tha 4th waak for tht $30.00 priit. tttt thrat quttiiom will be taktd from llttlo tad School-houat (tola latlon booth on itagt. ' Ouaationt gat prograwivaly toughtr tt prlft monty mount. Ixamploi third grade Itudant would ba aakad standard 3rd grade quettiont through $1 quaitioni tt $1S hit qutttion would be 4th gradt calibrt) at $J0 it would be t 5th grade quettionj tt $50 It would be a eih grade question. ' Contettent gat 30 taconda to ant war quettiont. Conttitant cen quit it my time and take money he haa won. K he goea en and mittet, ht wilt p given enf month peas and 11 ceth If priia la $a or below; or If priia la above $S, he will gat $ cath and i moniha pati te thaatrt. Contaiiant who minea firtt round of quaationa gelt one month pati to theatre. - Whan prlte money mound to $15 and above, paranti of conttitant will be aakad to accompany aentaiiant on ataga. Contestant (united to one appearance and try for prlte. Here'! thla week's program from the Approved Children's film Ubraryi leddy McDeweH fraaleii rWea "THUNDERHEAD " ' - AliO-l Problem of Orange Oranges Added to Woes of Congress WASHINGTON (fu-Add to Con-1 cress's oroblems: How ta eet' oranges orange. n,. ir,.KU i.v tn.t ... aren't always orange. Even when they're ripe, often they're green or a mottled yellow- green down in Florida and Texas. And-a Floridian whispered around UJ BU VRU4VI iii.a So you dye oranges orsnge. Growers and shippers have been doing it almost 20 years. The problem came to Congress because the Pure Food and Drug Admm)Jfation said there was no evidence the orange dye was harm ful to man, but the couldn't cert ify It as absolutely harmless in the use of food generally. Rep. Haley (D-FIa) Introduced a bill to let the dye be used until another coloring can be found, since the present one, made of Public School Teaching by iNiuis Upheld FRANKFORT. Ky. un-The Court of Appeals ruled Friday Roman Catholic sisters can teach in Ken tucky public schools so long as they do not inject religious views into their classwork. The long-waited ruling of the State's highest court on Kentucky's controversial church - state case came in a to 1 decision. Judge Porter Sims, Bowling Green, wrote the majority opinion. The effect of the ruling upholds legality of M Catholic sisters teaching, while wearing denomina tional habits, in public schools of six counties located south of Louis ville. The Rev. J. C. Rawlings, retired Methodist .minister of Bradford- ville. had brought the lawsuit Oct. 13, 1953, seeking to have the sis ters' teaching declared unconstitu tional. His suit, filed by U. S. Rep. Eugene Siler, Williamsburg, a Bap tist lay leader, claimed the sisters teaching violated the principle of separation of church and state. The suit sought to prohibit the state from furnishing school-aid money to local districts employing Catholic sisters as teachers. Chief Justice James D. Milliken said today the particular question had never been ruled on by the U. S. Supreme Court. Search for B26 Yields Empty Sea ST. JOHNS, Nfld. OB Planes seeking a U. S. B26 bomber miss ing in the -North Atlantic returned to their bases Friday night without any knowledge of the craft. The U. S. Air Force Northeast Command here said the" search will resume Saturday, weather permit ting. The bomber with tnree men aboard disappeared Wednesday afternoon on a 1,600-mile flight from Kcflavik, Iceland, to Goose Bay, Labrador. Famous V SATURDAY1 Dwi Opti 9:001 LET YOUR SCHOOLING EARN CASH PRIZES! SON OF FLICKA Coiaf Ctrtttnt That waj what b r o u g ht , Ftoridians to the House Interstate i subcommittee hearing today, "People just won t buy green oranges. ' said J. narain reiersun of Lakeland. "We've tried it. Even ,r " U a the same time as the colored fruit coal tar, hasn't been found to be Mystery Blast Shatters ky In Texas Area PECOS, Tex. 'til - The Depart ment of Public Safety reported here Friday night a large explo sion had been observed at a high altitude about 75 miles northwest of Pecos. Travellers said it appeared to have been an airplane which dis integrated in the air. Checks with nearby air bases indicated no aircraft were missing. L. C. Bryan, department of safe ty radio dispatcher, said he had received four or five reports from local citizens and tourists. The area where the explosion was sighted is extremely-rugged terrain. There are only paths and no roads in the vicinity. Observers said they saw no fall ing objects after the flash of light. A Pecos man, Halla Bryan, said he saw "something on fire" but heard no sound. Bryan placed the scene as about 75 or 80 airmiles north-northwest of Pecos on a line between Pecos and the rugged Guadalupe Pass region.. Farmers Warned Of Freidit Rate D Hike Proposal Farmers of Oregon will receive, even less net income if the pro- i posed seven per cent freight rate increase goes into effect, it was contended Friday by Gerald Detv ering, president of the Oregon Farm Bureau Federation. The pro-; test was made in a letter to the! Interstate Commerce Commission ! and to the Oregon Public Utilities Commission. The statement was, In effect, a bureau declaration that the pro posal should be rejected or sus pended at least until the Inter state Commerce Commission has made a complete investigation. PHONE 1 4-4713 SOc Ope 4:4S iO INOt TODAYIM Tier lett Chance te Sa Interfaced ly I rMceiiimill Grace Kelly the Princea-te-tt in To Catch a Thief Ce-$terrin Cary Grant A Alfred Hrtchceck Thriller Filmed ee me Riviera where Bract met the Prince of Menace AND ON THI $AMI MOOIAM Fred MecMwrray Henry Sonde The Trail of tht Lonesome Pint At AH Time Picture Clataie Returned by Papular Requeat Start Temerrew Henry Sonde James Cegney MR. ROBERTS fdward O. Rebintea Nina Fech ILLEGAL STARTS TOMORROW I Two of the Hottest Headlines of the Year in One Great Show! Grace Kelly Wins a Royal Princel Brinks $2 Million Dollar Robbery Solved! See Them Both in a High-Tension Double Hit . Showl jptMRaTRRIRitft Mi' HHiilt tJ4lliTla-lMllii. 2ND GREAT ACTION HIT! AYA DM tree Greater Then "ItingS. . V lihmm Minaar M-C-' I i 2?i Clark GABLE ' tV 1 - T nsjM m HIM tJJJaSsSSsBsjHsMSMSSWtMSfJ '- V T t . GARDNER They'll take every time. an orange oranga He said the colorinf does not got inside the orange. "And you dont see anyone wanting to eat the peeling, do you?", asked Rep. Dies (D-Tex), a subcommittee member. "Very seldom, very seldom," Peterson agreed. When George P. Larrlck, com missioner of the Food and Drug Administration came to tne stand, he said people did so eat oranse peeling in three ways. "One Is in candy, another In marmalade, and the third is in a drink . which you probably know nothing about it's called an old fashioned," Larrick told Dies. But Larrick said it is all right the Pure Food and Drug Admin istration is willing to let the oranga coloring be used for three more years while more research, is made. 1 If' Congress agrees it's all right oranges will stay orange. Youth Cited After Wreck A Mt. Angel motorist suffered apparently non serious Injuries late Friday night in a partial head on. collision at Hollywood Avenue and Silverton Road. State police said they arrested the 17-year-old driver of a second car involved John Clement Hammer, Mt. Angel Route 1, listed as driver of the other car, was taken by Willamette ambulance to Salem Memorial Hospital. Nature of In juries" was not immediately deter mined but attendants said his con dition was "good." 1 There are 445,000 miles of na tural gas pipelines in the United States. -TONIGHT-SNEAK PREVIEW 4 GREAT STARSI THI WIST OF TODAY AND ITS RANCH SOCUTYI h n -y VJNimaScOf Jewell north -CO-HIT- 1 INDS TONIGHT Tony Carrie In "Square Jangle Abe "Santa Fa Passage" ' 3 .m .h&-,r, Ft 0 ,THE HEADLINES CALLED IT I THI CRIME OF THE CEHTUJlYr 12,500,000 BOSTON ROBSERY?'"' II:W GRACE KELLY i II VLi- r"l'--J