. 1) SU'.r.snun, $icm, U.S. Presbyterian Chief Gees Moral During Korea Travels Warm reality of moral abtin dance in the cnld reality of physi cal poverty of Korea was described nere luesaay mum Dy ur. lauiio Wright, moderator of the Presby-iit trrian Church in the U.S.A.. re- ..n.. . .. i H-MU.Y luuiiiru M..1U ."u. j Christian missions in the Orient. Wright, Portland pastor and first j Oregon man to hold the top na- in intelligent revision of our giv tional post in the church, was'ing," Dr. Wright emphasized. guest .speaker before some 300 per sons at a meeting of the men's dub of the First Presbyterian Church. In graphic, but poetic language, Dr. Wright reported on his travels Fringe Areas Said to Face Health Danger (Story Also on rage 1.) Fringe area drainage and sani tation troubles which have led to ne request for congressional in vestigation of housing approval ere the -basis of strong health department support for long range planning Tuesday. A joint statement by health de partments of Salem and of Mar ion and Polk counties labeled the suburban situation as potential ly dangerous to health, and ex pected it to become increasingly worse if steps are not taken to control indiscriminate housing and huslnei develnnment in the fringe areas. J Biggest threat, the statement aid, is in inadequate provisions for sewage disposal in fringe areas which do not have sanitary ewers. This situation is doubly dangerous in some areas because of the population'! dependence on wells which can easily become contaminated by surface or sub surface drainage. Fw Surface Control "The flooding of property, roads and the surfacing of septic tank effluent has been due large ly to poor surface drainage con trol and waterlogged soil condi tions," the statement said. j "In areas of very sparse de velopment where soil conditions are suitable the disposal of sew age may be accomplished satis factorily by the tise of septic tanks and leaching trenches. As the population density in such areas increase, however, exper ience has shown that individual installations become troublesome and hazardous due to verload- ing of - the soil with domestic ewage." " "With the expected Influx of population, resulting from pos , aible industrial and military de- -velopment, problems of surface .drainage and domestic sewage disposal will be aggravated," the health departments Mid. Seasonal Rains "Seasonal rains and poor storm water drainage contribute to the . problem. Unless community sani tary sewers and storm water 'drainage systems conforming to master plan are provided for the growing fringe areas, the in 'cidence of defective individual sewage mount. disposal systems will The use of individual sewage disposal systems should be limit ed to land areas where soil characteristics and sub surface formations will permit satisfac tory operations within the bounds of the individuals own property. Residential Lets "Residential lots of 6,000 square feet or more in such areas may be satisfactory for individual ewage disposal facilities, provid ed a public water supply is avail able. "Some of the " circumstances that make the use of individual sewage disposal system inprac tical are soils with insufficient porosity (ability to absorb or hold water), underlying clay and hard pan or rock, high water table, periodic flooding, subsurface con ditions permitting effluent seep age to underground drinking water supply ..." Charges Multiply Against City Man A Salem man, fined $250 and sentenced to 10 days in Jail Tues day in Municipal Court on plead ing guilty to driving while intoxi cated, was served there with a Municipal Court warrant for driving while his license was suspended. He was fined an addi tional 8100 and sentenced to an other 10 days on pleading guilty to that charge. Police said Abe Combest, 1400 N. Summer St, was apprehended early Sunday morning on the first charge in the 800 block Center SL JUMBO i FRIED SHRIMP $1.00 Peg Dotea LEHMAN'S SEA POODS 995 8. Cem'l. Ph. 2 44l aTTj hlJODAIl GIRL I ' WsWrABAD Ore, Wed, Feb. 15, '56' Abundance icM.maiea cosi t.an man. j Tuesday w ith a warning that Com- ih,..h.i m, ic ,!?ne-sl0,7 rnu. MM Front 'munism has embarked on a new throughout the I .S. and the Orient ;st $a,soo; James Roman, house offensive "for which our eovern n his capacity as moderator of alteration. 30 Electric St.. $1,000: C.T . '1 !Z the church He urged Americans reeaiuaie. 10 una oui wnaihop alteration, i37 N. High St., is that feeds the hunger in j 700- W G Wilson earase ami men's hearts'" and o share it with m II,. .,ij . 'inu.- "Intelligent appreciation of the effect of our churches will result frt nt nitr hiimhc ti-ill i-ncilf Powerful Faith He told of finding powerful faith in God among the Koreans, de spite the - devastation of their homes, of finding a hunger for in formation and leadership among the Japanese. He said he was encouraged bv the realistic approach of the church In Korea, and the Koreans' capacity for religion. "They are not taking it all out in emotional ecstasy," he said.. They are pro viding for widows of rnrtTediBloomfieIo pastors, building churches and schools and recreating bodies and souls in such things as the ampu tee training program. ' Toured Churches He said he was encouraged, too, by his tour of churches in the U.S. We are giving better and singing better, he said. "Everybody's building a church." he said, re porting church population growth everywhere. But the effort was not compar able to what could be done, or what was being done in the for eign fields, he indicated. He voiced admiration lor the way the church is- tackling and solving its own problems in Korea. "I only hope they do it fart enough," he said. . Four Cars Damaged in City Mishaps Four cars were moderately dam aged in two rear-end collisions Tuesday afternoon in Salem, po lice said. Drivers In a collision shortly after 3 p.m. at Court and Summer streets were listed as Regina Ma rie Blecha. 2244 N. Fourth St.. and Alfred J . h n- Menter. Silverton Route 2. Box 174. Mrs. Blecha said her car was stopped at the time of the accident because the engine had stalled, according to police. Drivers in another collision shortly after 3:15 p.m. in the 1100 block Center St. were listed as Louis Frank Singer, Salem Route 1. Box 301, and Edna Alzoa Ken dall, 319 Maple St.. Dallas. Singer told police he had stopped behind a car that was turning into shop ping center lot, they said. , 2 Escape Injury In Auto Accident Two Salem residents escaped se rious injury when the car in which they were driving overturned three times on Highway B9E a short dis tance south of Albany, state police said Tuesday. The driver, Melvin G. Propp, Jr. of 895 N, 14th St., was not hurt. Miss Helen Elva Ward. 1775 S. Liberty, a passenger in the car, is reported te have suffered a frac- tured right wrist and several; scratches and bruises She was taken to Albany Gen eral Hospital. 343 New Members Join Y in Drive A one-day drive brought 343 new members into the YMCA, Ted OgdahL campaign chairman, reported after a late count Tues day night. The figure compares favor ably with the 422 members gained in a two-week drive a year ago. High point man in the basketball-theme drive which started with a rally breakfast Tuesday morning was Bob Carey with 18 new membem RED FLAG RAISED LONDON OB - The Soviet Union expedition Monday formally raised the Red flag over its Antarctic set tlement at Mirny where Soviet sci entists will winter, Moscow Radio said Monday night. NOW PLAYING! POOLSTA.SISKAS 2ND HIT MRICST I. VAUt . IN GOD'S 3 YEARS I 3 IN THE I iwfyMMin awttrt-w fay uvl fcwiii.1 i n IhwU Six Biiildii." (Permits Let Six building permits vre issued i by the city engineer's office Tuev i 'day after a three-day weekend.' They were taken bv: f Glenn J. Baillie for a new one- Mory nouse at urn .. nth St.. Walter Zosel, i nai II iim- . Killlt' Bllll n- III I V .J - : store room alteration. M3 A St.. 1 i.... ... ... . . ."-; aiaason wrecking lo., nousc ani rarace wreckine SjS I'nion St y StcrnConcert Of Enduring Beauty, Polish By STANLEY BUTLER Asm. Prof, of Music, Willamette University The! Portland Symphony Or chestra, with conductor Theodore and Isaac Stern as'. violin soloist, gave a concert last evening of enduring music by Bach, Haydn and Beethoven. . i Stern brooded over the Beetho ven Concerto in tones of aching beauty. This was a haunting per formance of reverent communica tion. One also remembers mo ments of light-hearted tender ness as melting as a child's smile. Let us quickly add that vio linist Stern can also soar power fully as he rides over the crest of a phrase. Ves, there was vir ility as well as gentleness in this performance. There was the illusion of effortless balance be tween extrovert virtuosity and inward musing. Sympathetic Agreement Conductor Bloomfield molded the Orchestra io sympathetic agreement with the soloist's in terpretation. This was high art, for Stern's reading struck me by its unique spirituality. The concert began with a creditable performance of the Bach Fourth Brandenburg Con certo. The courage of the young conductor in attacking this dif ficulty work is admirable. None of the parts can be hidden in music of such transparent tex ture. One ventures to guess that now and then the cellos and basses, knew they were lagging. Of the solo performers - in the Bach, the flute work of John May was commanding for its clarity and brilliance. Yet ideal balance was lacking among the two flutes and violin. ' Toe-Mufflca Wdwlnds During the first movement of the following Haydn Symphony No.' 97, 1 was cavilling over the too muffled woodwinds, as they dueted with the strings. But soon the in fectious humanity of Haydn's mu sle began to pieroe through. I hap pily shed my critical acumen and I was grateful to Bloomfield's sure trip. What eloquent colouring there was in the slow movement! The movement had deeply felt harmo nies and unexpected developments. The Menuctto began and ended with stolid peasant measures, and so was a contrasting frame for the enchanting and familiar trio. No thing v-as lacking for me in the Finale of the Symphony. 40 U.O. Alumni Attend Saldll Meet About 40 University of Oregon alumni attended the first annual Oregon Alumni Institute meeting m Salem Tuesday night in Marion Hotel. They heard talks by Dr. Edwin Bingham, history professor; Dr. Donald Swinehart, chemistry pro fessor; John McKay, assistant foot ball coach; and Bass Dyer, alumni secretary. Dick Burns of Salem was in charge of arrangements. Frith ikinMt1 Fresh Fillet of I FreihQeep Sea Fresh By the Piece SOLE CRAB COD SOLE .oy f ifn'C. FRESH COLUMBIA RIVER SMELT lAcllai Asserts U.S. Unready For Red Drive SEATTLE .f Adlai Steven- son ram. ,0 lms fateway to Asia Tne offensive, be said in a speech at a $25 a plate dinner, Krea anrf the death of Stalin norea ana me oeam oi aiaun. has been in the making since- "With many government .depart-j ments with conflicting ideas m - volved, our government is unpre - pared structurally and it is divided philosophically between those who favor and those who oppose more liberal policies," the man vho seeks the Democratic presidential ,t nomination said. The new Communist "cold war he said, has taken the form "aid, trade, arms, good will mis sions, technical missions, . student propaganda" ,"- And while this is going on Stev- .urn wii , enson said, "people in high places in our government shout ... v-i- j to neutrals you ve for us or against us.' " r i . . " - a Final Rites For Tompkins Due Friday (Also see story on Page 1) Funeral services for Morton Tompkins will be " p.m. Friday in Hopewell Community Church. The familv reauests that, in lieu of -lltr,i, v,. mt m hi!ca of Baldwin Long Island. won'.ft flowers, contributions be made toicountlT. in 1928- Th'y r A"" a memorial fund for the State Grange Juvenile Camp. Tompkins, Grange leader and former state legislator who died Tuesday at the age of 71, was born March 7. 1885, at Oregon City He and Maud B. Wilson were married in Oregon City Aug. 8, 1903. He Joined the Grange at Mc- Minnville in 1922 and became its master, then overseer of Oregon State Grange, member of the State Grange agricultural committee, and State Grange master 1942-50. For many years he operated the family farm on Grand Island Besides his widow, he leaves two i sons, Joseph V. Tompkins, Salem, I and Russell Tompkins, Eugene; daughter, Mrs. Lorene Reierson. Portland; brother, F. B. Tompkins, i Newberg; two sisters. Miss Vernal Tompkins and Mrs. Kmilv Folsom. both of Portland; and seven grand children. State Slates Auto Auction Forty-two vehicles ranging in age from a 1940 half-ton Chev rolet pickup to a 1953. Ford 2- door sedan will be placed on the block at the first oral auction by the State Department of Fi nance and Administration Satur day in Portland. The auction will begin at 10:30 a. m. inside the former location of the Oregon Liquor Commis sion, 2505 S. E. 11th Street at Division St., Portland. The 42 passenger cars and trucks may be inspected Thursday and Fri day from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m., and Saturday from 8 to 10:30 a.m. Successful bidders at the auc tion will be required to deposit 10 per cent of their total bid until the terms of the sale are complied with. CARS DAMAGED The front nds of two cars were damaged extensively in a collision about 8:20 a.m. Tuesday on wet pavement at Garnet and Nebraska streets, police said. Drivers were listed as Normin D. Wagnier, 4625 Verda Lane, and Fredrick William Carnett, 1158 N. Commercial St. SALMON Lb. IT THE PIECE SALMON lb. 216 N. rxESlMOlUMBIA IIYlt TN TH Bicycle Race Hurts Boy, 7 A seven year-old Salem boy in a bicycle race with three playmates was injured Tuesday afternoon in a collision with a car. David Rain Jr. required several stitches in his chin and also re ceived treatment for knee lacera tions, his father, Sgt. David J. Rain of the Salem Police Dept., said. The car, which had slowed al most to a stop in turning a corner at Wild Wind Drive and South High streets, was driven- by Howard i nkvli. U'IL-OP 111; U'lnnlo 1. . invtigatlr,c officers said. Tne 'bi ,r WM dama rf cxtcnsivcly ! tnrv saj(j J ! " ' r lliti o .jUUUILT ff 1115 $6 1,000 Sum ,0i Quiz Show NKW yORK t A second S?,a'!an:b?rn shoemaker made-good .u- : -i I : I !; ."'LT"7 ,T "LT.n. i iicsuay muni, iviicnaei uriia noc- ici aaa ....tL i : :t: a i , ',$64,000 with his intricate knowl- L-..J.. -t ..... r-y utr""- Delia Rocca thus bettered the j ZZT,Jl y I lZrki f went before him on the CBS show "The $64,000 Question." Gino Pra-i to, who was with Delia Rocca Tuesday night, had stopped at $32,000. Delia Rocca, in an almost tear fu) explanation before he answered the complicated payoff question, pointed out the striking parallels between himself and Prato. Both Bora la Italy Both were born in Italy, in the same year. They came to this can citizens. They , are shoemak ers. They both love opera. Delia Rocca, who puts on ama teur opera productions as a hobby in the Baldwin High; School audi torium, said a 4-act opera should have four parts. Only three parts in his own drama had been played, he said, and therefore "I want to P1 lh tourth with the coop- eration of Gino Prato." Consolatioa Prize - - - If he had missed the question, Delia Rocca would have lost ev erything but a consolation prize of an expensive automobile. For. the big Pri". the contestant has the privilege of bringing along an ex-1 P01"- Dell" Rocca chose Prato, i and fhey conferred with lively ges-! tures in the glass. -"isolation booth" the television stage. Dell Rocca sailed through the complex question, ending-by nam ing the occasion of the debut of "that immortal conductor, Arturo Toscanini. Scolts Mills Pigs' Deaths Not Caused By Poison Wheat i PORTLAND UH - Federal Food and Drug Administration officials reported Tuesday there was u6 connection between , Portland's missing poison wheat and the death of two pigs at Scotts Mills in Marion County. About 30 tons of wheat, believed poisoned by benzene derivative fumigant, was scooped off the top of 25 cars of government-owned wheat and piled on a dock here. Some of this wheat was reported stolen last week. FDA officials warned that the wheat was poison and not fit for animal nor human consumption. Meantime farmer B. G. Brickley, Scotts Mills, reported that two of his pigs had died after eating some newly purchased wheat. T 1 PHONE M71I lOt SOc Op :4a Nw Playinf Van H.fH-J...a WMdWrf COUNT THREE AND PRAY Walt Dnnay'i . AFRICAN LION Fresh Seafoods t and Poultry Com'l. fh. 3-4424 Pclton Dam Opponents Appeal Plan PORTLAND i.f Opponents of Pelton Dam appealed to Gov. Elmo Smith Tuesday to use hir influence to stop construction of the proposed Portland .General Electric dam on the Deschutes River. They presented petitions bearing more than 5.000 signatures, which. tbey said, had been collected in 10 days. This has encouraged them to consider an initiative measure against the dam, they said. They asked the governor to sup port legislation in Congress to give states authority over such rivers as the Deschutes. PGE won a license for the dam from the Federal Power Commis sion over opposition of the state Fish, Game and Hydro-electric commissions. Federal authority to license the dam construction was upheld in federal courts. t ' The governor said at the meeting he w-nted time to study the situ ation before taking a stand on the . . . He was urged to be quick, for h Ham nnnniwnli u-anf (a ctnn 'at dam They had heard concrete w,. u. j .,. "a' ",um"' 27 Saved as Hotel Burns SPOKANE Wl Firemen were able to lead and carry about 27 occupants safely out of a burning downtown hotel Tuesday night. No one was reported seriously injured in the fire that struck the Colonial Hotel (at Main and Post). Some of those rescued had to be carried down fire ladders. There was no immediate report on the cause of the fire or an estimate of the damage. Flames could be seen from many sections of the city. AFTER WS P J " C0UU) wii f i il 1 Vi,f.''X'.V" ."- JJ I- If: f!!Z ...y .. 1 1 I HI YA KIDS! BIG 3-UNIT SHOW! Theatre Time Table FLSINORE "HFt.rV Or TROY" it 1 Ofl and 1(1 37 "TWINKLE IN CODS EYE" at 9 2S. CAPITOL "DAY THE WORLD FNDFD" t 20 and 1117. "PHANTOM FROM innoo LEAGUES' at 7 00 and 10 02. HOLLYWOOD "COt'NT THREE AND FRAY" at 7 no and 10 M. "AFRICAN? LION" at Ml. UF Donation Average in Salem Gains The avenge United Fund do nations of Salem residents was'rnmmpnt higher than the per capita giving of residents of the West as a whole, according to a report pre sented Tuesday afternoon at the Salem United Fund board of di rector's monthly meeting. The per capita donations of Salem residents, was placed at $4 86 as against a per capita giving of $4.79 for persons throughout the wesf. The board meeting also heard reported that United Fund col lections in Salem of 1955-1956 pledges are about $7,000 over the pfevious year. Between October 1, 1955 aqd Jan. 31, 1958, $74,049 in United Fund money had been disbursed according to the report. Cash on hand as of Jan. 31, 1958 amount ed to $75,075.77. JOIN THE CASCADE SWINGSTERS SQUARE DANCE CLUB Aumsville Pavilion Clyde Charters, Instructor EVERY WEDNESDAY 1:00 to 10:10 tM. Sfc!acht4-$1.00Crl Mnknliia Carat AvaiUkI SHOCK AFTER SHOCKI THRILL! CHILL UPON CHILLI SATURDAY MORNING 1 - "COURAGE OF LASSIE" 2- 3 COLOR CARTOONS 3- "SILVER DOLLAR QUESTION" Earn Up $30 Cash in New lAlabamaU. Group Wants Negress Back Tl'SCALOOSA. Ala. Cfi A stu-dent-faculty group Tuesday urged the University of Alabama to re 1 admit its first Negro student with out further legal action. Petitions circulated on the earn pus said that the "exclusion o( Miss Autherine Lucy from classes which resulted from mob violence should be terminated." The Tuscaloosa News said the appeals were drawn up by i previ ously unorganized group of facul ty members and students. The (leaders could not be reached for The 26-year-old Birmingham wo man was barred from classes for safety reasons Feb. 6 following in creasingly violent demonstrations against her presence on the cam pus. FOl'R FIRETRl'CKS CALLED Four firetrucks answered a call Tuesday afternoon to 775 Ferry St. because of its location in an area of valuable business, state, uni versity and apartment buildings. Damage was confined to one da venport in the apartment of Mar ion Lyons, firemen said. The blaze apparently was caused by a cigar et, they said. Good Music Big Crowds 0 WED. NITE Crystal Gordons STARTS TONIGHT! THRILL 9:30 A. M.I On Stigel Gamel Fori D)v C!j1