... . ' Russ Say Hands Off Mid-East -r e -I I Demand U.N. Approve Use of Foreign Troops " MOSCOW I Soviet Russia as serted Monday the F.don Eisenhow er declaration oqKfie Middle East Alio w C l , , Variat;! f:'iii-t: mi ri 4 f , ahnwrj of mixd tun an4 iniw i 20 milrt an hour; h." t?rrn ture UxUv 3A-3. (rad'iol r'.fii.j an 4 coldrr ton j.it un low 22. - linrc Surt of. jathr ttar Spt. 1 Ihif Yrar Latitat Normal ' U 17J W44 ' PCUNDHD I&5I . V i 1 l I i i , A. J "cannot bufdlsttirb peace" in that area. It warntfd against any use of foreign troops there without a prior agreement of countries con-1 cerned and U.N. approval. A statement issued to foreign Correspondents at the Soviet For eign Ministry said "Any activities aimed at complicating and increas ing tension in tho reoinn nf th Middle and Near East cannot but be a matter of legal jurisdiction and interest for the Soviet Union" because the situation there is di rectly related to Soviet security. The ministry said its statement was prompted by the declaration by Prime Minister F.den and Pres ident Eisenhower Feb. 1 after their consultations in Washington. The section of that declaration dealing with the Middle East said Britain and the United States are ready to contribute to a settlement between Israel and the Arab states by financial aid to refugees and guaranteeing agreed frontiers. It recalled the U.S. British French declaration pledping joint action inside and outside the U.N. In the event of forcible violation of frontiers or armistice lines and announced a special conference of these three powers on the Middle East. Estes' Backers Boiling Mad at 'Cheap Trick' LACONIA. N. H. m - Boiling at what they termed "a cheap po litical trick," supporters of Sen, Kefauver (tVTenn) said Monday night they might go to court in an attempt to oust what they de scribed as three "phony candi dates" from New Hampshire's Democratic presidential primary ballot. . Three Manchester men Arthur 3: Savageau, Alfred J, Bouchard and Antonio Gosselin filed as delegate candidates "favorable to Kefauver" five minutes before the deadline last Saturday night. Their action upset carefully laid plans by Kefauver to limit his ticket to a "pledged," streamlined 12 number slate one candidate for each Democratic convention seat at stake in the March 13 bal loting. As a result, the primary lists now include 15 candidates wearing the Kefauver label, com pared with 12 favorable to Adlai Stevenson. Stevenson leaders have denied they had anything to do with the last minute Kefauver filings. Hypnotist Turns Clock Back to 1600s HOLLYWOOD OB - A hypno tist's purported "transformation" of a Los Angeles reporter into a 17th Century German leather worker was shown Monday on a television network. The reporter, John Grover, 49, of the Los Angeles Mirror - News, - was put under hypnosis by hypnotist-psychologist Paul B. Hughes as a test of so-called age regres sion. While in the trance, Grover claimed to be Siegfried Ottbauer, a Hamburg leather worker, and said he was born in 1676 and died in 1732. The hypnotic stunt was filmed. Monday's episode was the first of five to be presented on a CBS-TV show (Art Linkletter'i House Par ty). .... .. Oregon Notes Age 97 Today By tHE ASSOCIATED PRESS Along with Valentine's Day Ore gon will celebrate its 97th birth day Tuesday. Teachers in schools will tell how Oreonn lwim lha Volnntin. State. That will be the only ob- m value, ,v . . Am . CaU ' 1 1 taet .. It! - -: J James Buchanan signed the hill givng Oregon statehood. Word did nm reacn me new state until aDout month later. . . . . The Weather Max. Mln. Prtrlp. lalrm .. Portland ....., Baker McoWd North Bend ... BraehurK' . ' San Francisco .... Lot Angeles Chiciio 41 17 .S. ... 4Z 34 - 48 4 -i 4S-- .. M 39 37 2) 34 .19 ..JS 48" 4 12 02 trace trace .04 .-.4.-.09 ' ' .00 trace .00 htw York 44 M Willamette River 2.S (eel. "I was shot at, and It took all Uu starch out of them.' 105th Year Europe Cold 7bTumble in 390 7 Villages Buried By Avalanches In Yugoslavia LONDON UTi Avalanche dis asters - in Yugoslavia and new storms boosted the death toll to 390 Monday night in the third week of Europe's coldest wave of the 20th century. Belgrade Radio said 58 Yugo slavs lost their lives and another 19 were gravely injured in slides that buried seven villages in the mountains of southern Yugoslav Macedonia. Many , others were missing. The crash of a mercy plane add ed to the toll. The U. S. Air Force and aircraft of European nations roared out on mercy missions with blankets, clothes, food and fuel. More icy winds were predicted. The extended freeze brought ex treme hardship to millions in Southern France unprepared for and unaccustomed to such relent less cold. At bases in Germany, the U. S. Air Force suspended its own air supply system to rush aid across the Alps to Italy. Planes were called from North Africa, France and Berlin for the mercy mission. They are to con tinue the shipments until 450,000 pounds of food and clothing are delivered to Italian officials. The coldest spot in Europe was Muodoslompolo in Sweden's far north, where the mercury sank to 41 degrees below zero, fahrenheit For the first time in Lisbon's temperature history, water con duits froze up and cut off the cap ital's water supply. (Additional details, Sec. 1, Page .) Light Plane Adjusts Into Auto Trunk AKRON. Ohio Goodyear Aircraft Corp. Monday disclosed an airplane you can pack up in the trunk of your car. The craft is made of balloonlike fabric and takes less air pressure to inflate than a standard automo bile tire, Goodyear engineer Roger L. Wolcott said. The lightweight monoplane looks like a glider with the pilot perched out in front. Pilot Richard Ultn said, "The plane flies much the same as any light plane. By being seated at the front, however, I felt like a glider pilot." Company engineers said the craft was the first of its kind in the United States. Goodyear said it had no plans for quantity pro duction. It is powered by a two-cycle 40-horscpower engine mounted on top behind the wings. Thus far flights of the mono plane have been limited to Good year's testing grounds at Wing- foot Lake, 15 miles south of Akron. 1956 Mother FromLakeview KORTLAND UB - Mrs. -Marshall G. Dunham the wife of a disabled Lakeview. rancher and the mother of four children, is the Oregon Mother of 1956. Announcement of her selection to represent the state in the nation wide competition for the title of American Mother was made Mon day by Mrs. Mary Woodward, Portland," chairman of the Oregon branch of the American Mothers' Committee, Inc. Mrs. Dunham, 57, never went to high school herself but saw to it that her four children got good educations. .The. children are Marshall Gordon Jr., 32, Corvallis bank official: Mrs. R. L. Steer man, 31, bacteriologist at the John Hopkins University laboratory, Baltimore; Daniel, 19, a farmer and national president of the Fu ture Farmers of America: and Joyce, IS, a student at Oregon State College. Her husband is in poor health and Mrs. Dunham for the past sev eral years has done most of the ranch chores including the daily milking of cows and tending of livestock. Today's Statesman Sec. Page Classified .......... II. ...6, 7 Comics 3 Crossword ............ 4 Editorials I 4 Home Panorama .. I....6, 7 Markets I.. 7 Obituaries II.... 6 Radio, TV .11.:- 4 Sports .........ll....1,'2 Star Caier I. I Valley H. 5 'Wirephoto Pago JU. 3 2 SECTIONS-! 6 PACES Stevenson . e f p . t , -, y f ..." - i 1 ' f ; i - v. f , j i ,f f t - v ; A . ; .v'.l V. ;. M ,: - ..-.; , V riMBERLINE LODGE, Ore. Adlai Stevensea, left, looks dazed after (all (rem overturning snow tractor Monday. He and five others la tractor were anhurt. Ralph Wlese, Ml Hood district (ores! ranger, points to damagrd vehicle. la (rent of Stevrnsoa Is Alt Corbett, Portland attorney and head of Oregoa Stevenson tor President committee. Stevenson waa resting at the mountain lodge. (AP Wirephoto) Dejno Candidate, 5 Others ill Snow Tractor Mishap TIMBERLINE LODGE, Ore A snow tractor broke through an overhanging snow cornice and rolled over, carrying Adlai Stev enson and five others into a snow canyon... on., MLHood Mon day. No one was hurt in the drop of about 35 feet.'. Stevenson said he braced his hands on the metal sides and top of the vehicle as it started to go over. The driver, John Macone of the lodge staff, cut the Ignition swiftly as the tractor started to roll. Ralph Wiese, veteran district Lawyers in Case Hearing Summoned by Grand Jury 'Pictures on Wirephoto page.) WASHINGTON AP) Two oil company lawyers who figured in the offer of a )2,S00 contribution to Sen. Case (R-SDi during the Sen ate scrap over the natural gas' bill were summoned Monday to tes tify before a federal grand jury. The attorneys are Elmer Patman and John M. Neff. They represent the Superior Oil Co. of California. The grand jury is to hear them Description of Thief Confined To Her Teeth , LONG BEACH. Calif. (AP) Dr. Linus West didn't pull her teeth, but he wishes now he had, he told police Monday in making this report: A woman, about 40, came into his office and said she wanted her teeth extracted- But Dr. West said he was about to go out for lunch. He added that he didn't pull teeth, but would recommend a colleague who did. Suddenly the women threw her arms around Dr. West. "What I really need is affec tion," she said,, . - Dr.- West, who is 75, disen gaged himself and backed away. "I'm afraid I m not interested. he told her. He gave her the name of his colleague and she left. A' few minutes later he reached for his wallet. It was gone along with the $160 that was in it. , Dr. West couldn't give a de tailed description of the woman. But he was certain about one thing: She had six teeth in her upper jaw and eight in her lower. Quake Jolts Tokyo Area TOKYO A sharp earth quake jolted downtown ; Tokye Tuesday morning. , The quake rattled and rocked big steel and concrete buildings like leaves in the wind. Few resi dents could recall such a violent shake in the capital since the war. The quake lasted about 30 sec onds. There were no reports of dam-1 nJUUt .TV J til VruilU fcge Weather Bureau officials gAN rRANClSCo or-The long said they could not immediately of , hu(e shipbuildinij crane locate the center of the quake. i punched , hole , tne edse o( tn. Guests at the swank Imperial , mi deck of lhe San Francisco Hotel bolted for the doors wnen)0ak,and bay bridge Monday but me quaic mw u.c uumirni un- ously. The ' Imperial, built in 1922 by Frank Lloyd Wright, is almost the only major building that survived the great Tokyo earthquake. Tha Oregon Unhurt by 35-Foot Snoiv ai ' forest ranger, said Macone's ac tion prevented a fire. The party, he said, was "very lucky." Stevenson was in the front with Macone. n the rear were Wiese; Alfred Corbett, Portland attorney and head of the Oregon Steven son for President committee; Arnold Sakalyn, Portland lumber man friend of Stevenson; and Dennis Stock, Los Angeles free lance photographer. The metal top of the tractor was damaged as it rolled. It came to a rest on its tracks and the party got out and scrambled Tuesday. Case rejected the $2,500. Patman has told Senate investigators he turned over the money, from per sonal fundi of Harold B. Keck, Superior Oil Co. president, to Neff to be donated to Case's reelection campaign fund. Neff has testified he passed the money on to business manager E. J. Kahler of the Sioux Falls. S.D.. ! Daily Argus-Leader for relay t0 Case. Both Patman and Neff swore no strings were attached. Now they and probably other witnesses wiu De called on to re- peai io me granrj jury ncre the siory iney Bireaay nave related, j a ayetiai oenaie investigating committee. The committee wound up its own V,m " r . w,,nitng at the time the fire started Neii tesiuying Monoay mat tne $2,500 Case rejected was the only contribution he made to any sena tor. Barclay to Resign City Post, Manage Hatfield Drive Charles A. Barclay announced Monday he would resign his City Hall duties March 1 to become manager of Mark Hatfield's pri mary campaign for the secretary of state Republican nomination. Barclay is Salem's city pur chasing agent, airport manager and an assistant to the city man ager. He has been employed by the city since 1949. Barclay's appointment as the Hatfield campaign manager was announced Monday by William E. Walsh, Coos Bay attorney and former state, senator, who . is chairman o the statewide Hat field committee. (Additional details and photo Sec. 1, Page 8). I Bay Bridge Loses n..s wjsi. c on, was urerf ar,d damage to the span was not great. The 223-foot boom stabbed Into the south side of the lower deck, within a few inches of the Key System train tracks. Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, February 14, 1954 Mt. ESood I up a 70 to BO per cent grade out of the canyon. They walked the somewhat less than half mile to the. lodge where Stevenson . has been speech writing in connec tion with his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomina tion. "Politics," said Stevenson back at the lodge, "keep me busy and interested. I have crashed in a helicopter in the Malayan jungle, been in an auto accident on the equator and now have turned over in a Snow-Cat in 50 feet of snow." ton Newspaper Offices Burn EVERETT on An explosive fire apparently touched off from a backfiring furnace left the Ev erett Daily Herald building a blackened shell Monday night. Everett Fire Chief Frank Schroe der s,aid the only portion of the building left untouched by the flames were the business offices in the front of the one-story struc ture. Schroeder said the backfire from the furnace apparently set afire a P00' grease underneath the press in me casement oi me Dunaing. The flames quickly charred the basement, broke through the floor of the main floor and then quickly shot through to the roof, Schroeder said the tier seemed t0 -blast through the buHding." : Abe Glassberg. editor of the Daily Herald, said he believed the , 8ix employes working in the build- ai escaped unhurt . There was no mate of damage. immediate esti- Valentine Day 'fit w TtTT 1 Washing BUFFALO, N. Yf-Twe baddies at the SPCA shelter here gloomily face as te the fart that even though Tartday Is Valentine's Day they have t part Beeball (right) has beea adopted and Gloria (left) kas aai. Gloria seems to be thiailaf It's a dog's life. The twe have beea close friends for tke vast twe weeks. (AT Wirephoto). 'Old Moon in New Moon-s Arms' Sees Salem Questions Welr4 appearaace ( the mm 4rew snaay a Salem area eye U the wetlera sky Meaday eveaiag. Some BliMe-callrn tkmight II aa eclipse bat weatbermea ka4 -etker aaswer fer it. '"r Tke satellite, 4y tinnt4 frem start at aew meea phase, reflected a thia cresceal el see light ea its aader side. The ar mitly dark pertloa ef tke spkere flawed witk faiat. phetpharet-eeece-like effect Tke pkeaome m kaag lew ercr Ike kertsaa (ram abovt C:M te ?: p.m. Tke Weatker Bureaa at Mc Nary Field, departiag (ram teck alcal terms, ealle the pheaome aa "Ike eld moea la the aew maaa's arms." It was eiplaiaed tkat sack aa ccareace resalta wkea saa. moea and eartk are at a certala stage a( retatiaathip. Atmospheric ceaditlaas also eaa tribute. Weatkermea said a tnow storm at extreme krigkts caased Ike erllpse-like effect, wklek saw tke tkla cresret e( sanllgkl appar eatly skiftiag. Salem Firms To Design School Jobs Four Salem architectural firms will share in designing structures for the city's school addition pro gram, including a music and art wing for North Salem High School. Selection of the architects came at a special Monday morning ses sion of the Salem District School Board. The board had asked more time to consider the selections at the regular board meeting last Thursday after reaching. decisions on what projects to get underway this year. , . Architect Ernest Webber was named to design the North Salem addition, planned for construction in the summer of 1957. Funds for the project, which has not reached firm, plan stage, were included in the $2,900,000 bond issue voted a week ago by district residents. Biggest of the grade school ad ditions, a five room and toilet proj ect at Morningside School, will be handled by Architect William I Williams who designed the original structure. John Grimmer Groom was nam ed to design a two to four room addition for Four Corners School; James L. Payne was retained for architectural work on a similar addition at Washington School. Payne has already completed drawings for a two-room addition including renovation of basement space at Middle Grove. Early selection of architects was rushed by the board in order to get the elementary additions un derway in time for use when school opens next fall. It Is esti mated the projects will cost $300, 000. Mixed Rain, Snow Seen Occasional showers of mixed rain and snow are on tap for the Salem area today, according to weathermen. The mercury was ex pected to slide to perhaps 22 to night to the. accompaniment of clearing skies. The outlook for today includes westerly winds which may at times hit 20 miles an hour. The gradual slipping of the mercury is expected to produce a maximum reading no higher than 38 today. The area had .08 of an inch of precipitation Monday, some of it coming with brief flurries of hail and snow. . to Separate Cat, Dog Friends PRICE 5c Council Adds Six M ToM $3,750,000 Water Supply Bonds Included; Fluoridation Bill Ponds By ROBERT E. CANGWARE City Editor, The Statesman Salem City Council ordered six more special finance and cliarter chiinRe" proposals on the May ballot Monday night, in cluding a $3,750,000 bond issue that would increase Salem'l watctv supply. All the proposals so far voted on by the Council have woo places on the ballot with only money measures approved last month. Still pending are the fluo ridation proposal and two meas ures related to a fire alarm sys tem. s After the aldermen's action at City Hall last night, here the ballot list as ordered so far: Water supply bond Issue for $3,- 750,000 to be retired by increased water rates; work to include an additional, second pipeline from North Santiam, River. Sites Net Specific New Darks' acauisition and pur chase through $700,000 bond issuV. Actual sites not specified, - but Council reduced this from $750,000 on understanding a Candalaria park site would be removed from consideration. Parks operation special tax of $35,000 a year 'about one mill) to care for expanding park system. Public library improvement spe cial tax of $30,000 for one year to add equipment to present library and establish West Salem branch. Three issues approved last month, including $188,000 bond issue for street widenings (South 12th, Fairgrounds and Market); $140,000 bond issue for replacing four old bridges; $50,000 one-year special tax for airport improve ment. Year's Residence Civil service change to permit hiring policemen without present requirement of one year's Salem residence. Firemen's pension changes to in crease protection of widows and other dependents, and to make other minor changes. Of the three ballot possibilities still pending before the Council, the proposal to fluoridate the water supply was introduced just last night by Mayor Robert F. White, The two fire alarm system items were tabled until after a confer ence between officials of city and National Board of Fire Under writers. Mayor White predicted the measures wouldn't go to the ballot unless assurance came from the national board the fire insur ance premium savings would re sult. Chamber Backs- Four of the bond Issues were endorsed for passage by Salem Chamber of Commerce. In a let ter to the Council, Chamber Presi dent Elmer Berg said the chamber, following study, favors the bridges fire alarm system, water pipeline and parks acquisition measures. Berg added this didn't mean oppo sition to other issues, but the others hadn't yet been studied. (Additional Council news Sec- 1, Page 2.) - Valentine's Day No Fun For Airman Valenline FT. SLOCUM, N. Y. un-It prob ably was inevitable that Airman l.C' James R. Valentine Monday drew the charge of quarters duty for Tuesday night. M.Sgt. Edward L. Polk vows Valentine's name just came up in the normal order of rotation. 'jf -v .-v v v.. 1 '' v.. , , .. - No. 324 easures av Ballot mmor change,, including threej Death of Salem Woman Laid To Diphtheria A 56 year-old Salem woman died Monday at a Salem hospital after. a one-day illness. Dr. willara Stone, Marion County health offi cer, said laboratory tests indicated deatrr was caused by diphtheria. Mrs. Violet Fry, 1490 Hines St.. who had been an employe of the) State Blind School for the past three years, succumbed about noon Monday. -Her physician said sh had entered the hospital Sunday morning, but had apparently beea in good health as late as Saturday night. Dr. Stone said that as far as he) could recall the last Marion Coi'nty death from diphtheria occurred in 1942, victim being a Silverton boy. Dr. Stone said indications wert that most of the $6 students at tha blind school have taken anti-toxin. A check was being made to ascer tain those who might not have un dergone immunization shots. Mrs. Fry served as a bouse mother at th Bphnnl f Where the disease may hav been contacted was not known. Dr. Stone poined out that front three to five per cent of the U.S. population are carrier of the dis ease- . . Diphtheria has declined sharply and deaths from the disease art extremely rare since anti toxin serum came into widespread use. Dr. Stone said Monday that a shot immunizes for from three to five years. (Additional details Sec. lg Page 2.) Repetition of 'Perfect? Theft Ends in Jail ivainas un m Max ueorgtv Kokinda, 40, California ex-con vict, had what looked like a fool proof system to loot a depart ment store, police said Monday. but he used it one time too many. Police said Kokinda, on parole from Folsom Penitentiary, signed a statement admitting taking $2,000 in merchandise in a series of forays on the Kansas City (Peck's) store. First, the statement said, Ko kinda obtained employment at the store and thereby obtained a key to the "Will Call" depart ment. After he was discharged because of unsatisfactory refer ences, he managed to get himself locked In the store on several nights, selected merchandise ha wanted, wrapped it and left it under his own name in the "Will Call" room. The following day he would return and pick up the goods. . Police said employes finally became suspicious of his numer ous calls for packages and Ko kinda was arrested as he loaded approximately $1,300 worth of goods into a taxi at the store en trance. CM t'IGl'RE'S WIFE DIES PALM BEACH, Fla. - Mrs. Irene Jackson Sloan, wife of Al fred P. Sloan Jr., chairman of the board of General Motors and other corporations, died at her home Monday night. Today's Speller (Edltor'i Nl' A Hit al U urSt It. hflni BilklKht arh trhau! 4f ta naki op tht tta-wnrS k.tlc Hit lor irml-llnalt aa4 t!nala of Tha Ortion SUlimaa-k,tLl MH-Val-ty Sprlllnt Contra In whlrh ararly ,oa 1th- anS ath-srsia itaStau are aartlclpattni). tourist individual ideal incessant syndicate . exorbitant rhythm genius thunder recollect dehydratt misery scandal , ipnition entitle " opinion dramatic luxury . material . photograph paddlt signature" liberal whisper . frroncoui