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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 17, 1956)
2-(SfC.I) Statesman. Stkn. Ore.. Tbun, My 17. 56 Indonesia President in U.S.; Pats Babies, Kisses Old Lady rrtrfart wwptiti rut) Washington Indonesia'! rcesident Soekarne received a rousing official welcome U Wash ington Wednesday and he promptly made It the livelier by mingling with the crowd U shake hands, pat babies and kiss ant old lady aa Um cheek. The Modem neutralist kader delighted bis freetert, inctudinf President Eisenhower who asked hlra to tarry at the White House lobg er tbaa called for by the offi cial schedule, la all the two chiefs of state sprat more than twa hours to gether, part of the time la private conversation. ' . The magnitude of the Soekarne recestioa impressed veteran ob servers, who termed it the biggest la years (or visiting dignitary. U. S. officials obviously are hopeful 8oekarno will get a favor able impression oC westera life, which ia viewed critically by many Indonesians after JOO years of Dutch colonial rule. The recep tioa also appeared to be a move to counter Russia propaganda and wia friends among the East's nn eommitted peoples. Troopo Ltao Street More than 2.300 troops lined Grand Jury Date Still Undecided, Thornton Says PORTLAND W Atty. Gea. Robert Y. Thornton said Wednes day he still had aot decided whea a grand jury would be called to bear evidence in the vice invests 1 gatioa here. I Thornton, his staff, and state , nolir hav hM athTin avi-' dence to present the Jury. Gov, Amnesia Victim, Family Reunited downtown streets as Soekarne was Elmo Smith ordered Thornton to driven from National Airport to begin the investigation after The 600 Expected in Salem for Three Conventions Friday , . i ". '.Three conventions expected to draw upward of 600 persons opea two-day schedules here rriday. (Some 200 art duo for the State Special Education Teachers Asso ciation confab at the Hotel Sena tor and a Ilk number will be drawn by the annual Northwest Athletic Conference'! sessions hero Fridsy and Saturday. Par ticipants Include coaches, offici als and aa array of athletes who will vie In the conference's taring sports tournaments. Approximately 130 are expee- tea lor conveniioB oi we sun ICe serve Officers' Association, which oeena Friday night at the Hotel Marion with sessions of the Kate Council and various com- tirittees. Gifted Children iTbe Special Education Teach- - . , .i . , - St Association is compruco oi ooa concerned with teaching of .e iceptlonslehildren. This In- etudes gifted children, the back ward child and crippled ehil djren. Special Education Depart ment of the Salem Mhool district wall serve ts hoot for the conven tion. I A Saturday night military ball al the Hotel Marion is to lest tiro the1 convention of the Re served Officer! Association. Ear lQr Saturday members will elect officers and act on various reso lutions. Special guests will be Ifavy Cmdr. G. W. Waldmsa from Seattle Naval headquarter! and I Wgh-rsnklng representative from KJxth Army headquarters la Saa Francisco. toraea'i Groaf Tbt Reserve Officer! Associa tion for Ladles will meet la con junction with the men, honored guest being Mrs. Carl Heine, na tional vice president of the ladies group, r Member! of the Salem Wom en'! Army and Navy League will act as hostesses for visiting ladies, who will bo guests at a Saturday luncheon and fashion show at Meier and Frank store. Msrlon Chapter of Salem, beaded by Carl Cover, will be of ficial convention host Memorial Day Parade Voted Out for Salem the White House. Soekarno, accompanied oo the drive by Vice President Nixon halted the motorcade on historic Pennsylvania Avenue. He left his limousine convertible to mix with the crowd oa the sidewalk. The visiting President, appar ently unaware that officials were waiting oa a nearby reviewing stand to present him with the key to the city, shook hands all around lor a boot 1! minutes. Soekarno, dressed in military garb and carrying a swagger stick. Impulsively stepped up on the curb at one point to plant a kiss on the cheek of an elderly lady. The crowd applauded. BaahfeJ Bey He also beckoned hi! 11-year-old ton, Guntur, to shake hand with one very bashful boy about 4 years old. Conscious at last of the flag draped .reviewing stand, Soekarno found it dominated by a 15-foot-high color portrait of himself. At the White House, Soekarno and Eisenhower talked animated ly during a formal state luncheon attended by 45 top ranking Ameri can leaders from all branches of the government and the 15 mem bers of Soekaroo's party. Soekarno, on his noon arrival from Honolulu aboard Eisenhow er's personal plane Columbine III, said he hoped his 11-day Ameri can visit will lead to "real under- Oregonian published a series of copyrighted articles, asserting Seattle gamblers had attempted to set up a vice syndicate here. ILS. Rejects Trading of Oil Information WASHINGTON - The Com merce Department Wednesday turned down aa American firm's plan to swap information with the Russians on drill bits used In oil wells. Secretary of Commerce Weeks based the decision on national; security. He Mid the Russians! stood to gain ' more than they: would give. The department did not identify the firm in its formal announce ment but a spokesman confirmed speculation by reporters that it was Dresser Industries, Inc., of Dallas, Tex. The firm had asked for a license to send the Russians technical data on "the design, production, assembly and operation of rotary rock drill bits." In return, it was to get Russian data on the assembly on a Rut- 1 ,.. . . - -. "- Estes, iFaj-ne Miss Plane In Portland ; (Story alee em Page one.) PORTLAND ufl Sen. Ertes lfefauver'i flight to Washington to vote n the Niagara power biu Wednesday started by misting a plane here. -: " . Thi radio failed oa the plane Kb and Sea. Morse took from Jugene to Portland, aa they could not report they were late. They Sere Just approaching the Port ltd airport whea the United Air Lines plane, which bad waited for them, finally took off. i The senator! waited nUl 1:0$ a!m., and took a Northwest Air lines plans to Washington, 'Sea. Kef stiver bad to cancel aa appearance la CorvalHs because of the trip to Washington, but the rent of hi! Oregon appearance! planned for Wednesday will be carried out Thursday. S Ho is to appear at Portland, JBUweukl and Oregon City before noon appearance hi Salem, with brief motorcade atops at Canby, Aurora. Hubbard and Woodburn U the afternoon be win speak at '4 Salem'a-tr, Day parade is apparently a thing of the past . The parade wss voted out of this year'i observance at a Wed-' nesday night meeting of the Sa lem Federation of Patriotic Or ders, it wss announce 1 by Har riott Belcher, president Main reason for abandoning the parade was difficulty in get ting sufficient participant!, par ticularly veterans, Mrs. Belcher said. Plana for the coming Memorial observance Include a Sunday night service at the First Con gregational Church, which will feature massed flag and candle-' light ceremonies. Ceremonies on Wednesday, May 30 Memorial Day will In clude usual service! at the Civil War Monument at Pioneer Ceme tery and Legion Circle at City View Cemetery. Wreaths will be laid on the Doughboy 'i Monu ment following 10 a.m. services on the west step! of the court- bouse. At 11:13 a.m. a plane and boats will drop flowers on the Willamette River la tribute to those lost at sea. standing jsndiendshipJadwrAil'l? - mm- T- r - ' . . . 1 lift Ia AA fllrKjk JtVlllB r heUnited Static and Indonesia. Salem Roman's Club Rates High At U.S. Meeting KANSAS CITY (It -The sweep stake! prize of f 10.000 ia the community achievement contest of the General Federation of Women's Clubi Wednesday night went to the matron's club of Abbeville,. Ala. Prize Jioney of $60,000 for the various awards was provided by the Sears-Roebuck Foundation for International, national and stste winners In the contests. Honorable mention in group B went to the Junior Woman's Club of Salem, Ore. Approximately 2,000 women's organizations competed in contests divided into three categories group A with less than 79 mem bers; group B with more than 75 Redmond and The Dalles, stop In I members, and international La Grande for dinner and speak I awards for winners from foreign OJ rendletoa at !: p.m. i clubs. r i i i i i i I; w m 4 i , ' , , ' - j . : I - - -. . ; , . " - " ' ; Two to Close CampaignWith TV Appeals PORTLAND W Douzlas Mc Kay and PhU Hitchcock will wind home early Wednesday. Be wai op their campaign for the Repub-, Ucan nomination for senator with Friends said Snearley had not television appeals to the voters .been feeling well recently. Thursday. I A frequent candidate for public Both men, after touring the state j office. Snearley had sought to in previous weeks, concentrated on become mayor of Portland or a the Portland area, which has about county commissioner in campaigns a third of the states voters, locating back JO years. He some- Demo Candidate For Multnomah County Post Dies PORTLAND UR -Walter T. Snearley, a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Mult nomah County commissioner ia Friday's primary, died at his times ran second in the races but never won. Jeanne Crain Charges Mate Guards Tell Of Pen Riot at Walla Walla WALLA WALLA - Two former State Penitentiary guards Wednesday . described how an opened door and a razor-sharp slop bucket lid let to last sum mer's stormy prison rioting. Harold Ennui, a dismissed pris on guard, testified he walked through a door into Wing No. 1 on the morning of July I, the day of the riot, to call a prisoner to disciplinary court. Another con vict Jumped him and held a knife at his throat, Ennis said. The prisoners then swarmed through the open door to gain access to the control room and the nerve center of the prison, Ennis said. He testified Wednes day before Superior Judge Glenn L. Bean In the trial of convict Charles Lambert, accused of kid naping and fomenting riot. The kidnaping charge carries a pos sible death penalty. Another former guard, Tony PAllis, said the riot ignited when two prisoners, .armed with a razor-sharp bucket lid, seized him and said: "March straight ahead and don't look back and you won't get hurt." Pallis is now working in the sewer department at the penitentiary. He said the incident sparked the full-scale rebellion involving some 1,000 convicta and 11 hos tage guards. Another guard was similarly trapped by convicts la ter, Pallis said. Lambert, 25, is the first of 19 inmates to go on trial on various charges as a result of the prison uprising. Another inmate is on trial at the same time on the less er charge of rioting. up to 40 turbo drills of various sizes and types. "We rejected this application primarily because we wish to avoid any action which might serve to weaken the voluntary system of international strategic controls," Weeks said. He said the American firm could still get data on the Russian drills, or some of the drills themselves, but only if this can be done so as would disclose U.S. technical know-how of a highly important security nature. The whole issue of East-West trade is a touchy question in Con gress, and has figured In debate on foreign aid. The Senate Inves tigations subcommittee has criti cized Eisenhower Administration officials for their refusal to make If . public the details of a 1954 inter-! j)i (ITIJICS 10 national agreement relaxing some curbs on trade with Russia by non-Communist nations. One effect of Wednesday's an nouncement by Weeks, whether intended or not, might be to soothe the feelings of members of Con gress who demand the tightest possible controls over trade with the Communist block. EAST MEADOW, N. Y. Charles Sleter, 11, Is kissed my bis daeghtrr, Barbara, S, a happy smile ever fare el Ms wife, Flereece, as be leaves the Mradawbeoek Hospital la this Leag Islaad remmaaity Wednesday. Sleter, aa amaesia victim, reaalted with his family Sunday after being Identities" thraagh kis fingerprints la Army flies by New Orleans police, recovered bis memory after shock treatments at the hospital. tAP Wirepbote) Adlai Ends Sweep Through Oregon in SearchQfJotesi plnw ssu nl stevenson ds it I where forests and waterpower are COOS BAY, Ore. i Adlai major keys to prosperity. Stevenson Wednesday wound up He discussed the freight car his effort to win Oregon's 10 shortage and warned of the danger Democratic national convention : of depleting forest resources. votes. He left for California to resume campaigning there for that state's June i primary, uregon uemo crats will vote Friday, by write-in, on whether Stevenson or Sen. Estes Kefauver is to get their support for the presidential nomi nation. In this final day of his Oregon campaigning, Stevenson spoke Stevenson said there is a great need for the government to finance forest access roads into 0 & C timberlands of Western Oregon. Visits University He came here after a breakfast with University of Oregon students at Eugene, where Tuesday night he and Kefauver shared a plat form before a campus audience of 5,000. While Stevenson headed again of conservation of natural . for California, Kefauver was in resources, one of his constant Washington, called there hurriedly themes in this timbered state Theatre Time Table LsiNoaa SERENADE: 7:00 and t 43 GOLDEN TOMORROW: SOS. CAPITOL THI CONQUEROR: 7:00 ind 10:30 FURY AT GUNSICHT PASS: :20. NORTH SALEM DRIVE IN MY SISTER EILEEN with J.n.t Lfigh and Jack Lcmmon. THE LOOTERS with Rory Cal houn and Julie Adams. SHOW STARTS AT DUSK. HOLLYWOOD HELL ON FRISCO BAY: 7:00 and I0 JO. THE MAN WHO NEVER WAS: !:0S. the final week. McKay spent Tuesday in the Coos Bay area he had to cancel aa earlier, appearance there be cause of a sore throat but was bock in Portland Wednesday. Their final primary campaign appearances will be on television broadcasts Thursday night. Hitchcock announced he had ar-;TVr.l Ta . ranged to debate Sen. Wayne V ltll JDCatUlU Morse, who is expected to win c? Democratic nomination for re-elec- ' , Avrn rc , tion after the primary resu.t, are! StJSSS vi . j ii. ulher estranged husband with non- Morse said Previously he would su wit) feg her unlil be willing to debate the winner ' unconsciouS; threatening to of the Republican nomination, disfigure her and with "humilia-, Hitchcock made public an ex-1 ting- reutionships with other wo cbange of telegrams with Morse, men wi.iwCh.nMHrIe,,aid h TW 1 Tl red-haired beauty filed an u2 1J. . ' of amended complaint to her divorce u i 1 I- i , acUon of last month. It was in an Hitchcock 1 1 telegram to Morse swer , cmpia 0, m,nuf)M:. will not debate on your attendance record . poor Morse's telegrsm said, "I havenm no intention oi oignuying witn a debate the personal attacks against me which you and McKay have resorted to in your primary campaign. The people of Oregon will answer those attacks for themselves at the polls in Novem ber." turer Paul Brinkman that hia wife's original action was "uncer tain, unintelligible and ambigu- One Escapes Crash of B47 Miss Crain said she purposely had left out specific actions in the original complaint for the sake of the couple's four children. She added that not even her closest friends knew the details of the break-up of a marriage once con- sidired one of Hollywood's hp piest. The amended complaint accused Brinkman of non-support since the marriage in 1945. A former actor, he became an electronics manufac turer after his marriage to Miss Crain. She said he lived off her earnings. Lawyers Argue Admission of Tape Recording PORTLAND Attorneys Multnomah Poll Tuesday night to vote on the , , Niagara power bill. He will be llOWS 1 iiySlCiailS back Thursday for more vote- , seeking, but Stevenson has rested J" OT F lllOridatlOll ms case nere. i The appearance of both candi dates at Eugene climaxed their Oregon effort and brought a sum mary of their not widely dissimi lar views. Stevenson touched on many of those again Wednesday as he called for conservation of resources with wise use "in the interest of all the people of this Humanitarian Programs country, not just a few." The "great humanitarian pro grams" of social security, slum argued Wednesday whether a tape platoon into the creek there. End 'Cropped' Head Haircuts SAN DIEGO. Calif. urv-It will be popular-style crewcuts instead of cropped heads for Marine recruits as a result of the Ribbon Creek tragedy. Marine MaJ. Gen. David M. Shoup said Wednesday. Shoup is the Marine Corps' new inspector general of recruit train ing, a post created as a result of the drowning of six recruits at the Parris Island SC.) recruit train inir Hpnnt Anril ! A drill instructor marched nis , v ' srn- 1 rkff-, atnon into the creek there tial to their continuance. IlKH S VlIt rt'll lO NEWLYN, England (A - An American B47 Stratojet bomber caught fire and crashed in the Atlantic Wednesday 12 miles off Land's End. One crewman parachuted 34.000 feet and was rescued with only bruises on one arm. A second air man is missing. The body of the third member of the crew was recovered from the sea. The rescued airman. Lt. Wil liam F Hair nf PI Pau T was navigator of the six -jet-atom Beck in nis jurisdictional squab- bomber. He sa d he n anp's skin, i u,r """J. pm j per gave orders to parachute after j one of the engines blazed up. Beck Backed By Teamsters CHICAGO Four trade di visions of the International Broth erhood of Teamsters Wednesday supported union President Dave Tractor Mishap Kills Youth, 15 PORTLAND A postcard poll of Multnomah County physi cians showed them in favor of fluoridation of the city water supply by a S-l margin, the Wednesday I SPOKANE W! - Thomas J. The poll showed 379 doctors for v,inHr,m it ,..hi j .u n.ln,M.tun 71 affaind u... Mindrtip, 15, was crushed to death fluoridation and 73 against. More Wed d j h h mlmhSJu? earned L'Zl! " ,raCt0r " hi P"nt '" cTdhe'U! "said. " ! ? IIL,,1 father "haul rock, after School and ! -"vision, of the AFL-CIO. The Teamsters contend that all truck driving and warehousing op erations should be done by mem bers of their union. This, in ef fect, means the Teamsters want to take over the work of members of other unions who now perform such work. Meany has backed no-raid pol icies he said have been taken by most AFL-CIO unions. At the current trade division conference, four of the big Team- over-the-road, pprnr hnutino nH h.lth 1 neanng June u on wnetner to f,rrj. .m. ' citv cartase. warehouse and build aids were initiated by the Demo- i Pu' ne m,tttr on tne Nowmber drove home jn a jck nd , jg trades - voice support of cratic Party, he said, and he Da"01- called election of a Democratic recording could be admitted as evidence in a trial here The state attempted to introduce There will be more regard fori At breakfast Wednesday at the the dignity of the recruit," Shoup Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house. said on his first visit to the recruit where he was guest of one of his strong student backers, he said he Walking Voters Anyone needing a ride to the boy followed on a small tractor. I Bect Together the lour divisions When the boy didn't arrive home. ! claim 830 000 membfrs the father went back along the : James R- Ho,ta- Detroit, an in road and found his son under the j '"national vice president of the teamsters, saia ne expectea tne 11 other trade divisions in the union to follow suit. considered some upward revision polls' on election day should con- tractor, sheriff's officers were told. Yound Mindrup was a student at Cheney High School. Senate Committee Okchs 'Record Farm Money Bill' ; WASHINGTON (II - A Senate! ajhpropriatlona subcommittee Wed nesdsy approved a record-break-Idg firm money bill which would ptovide mora than two billion dol lars for the Agriculture Depart ment and lit agencies In fiscal , IfcW. , -.j-, .,:?..--I Approval vaa voted at ia ex efrutiv session. Chairman Russell H)-Gi) told reporter! afterward! tee subcommittee accepted most of the Increase! voted by the House Monday and added lome of Its ewa. j Among the Senate boosts was a? IS million dollar increase In ag ricultural conservation payment! r farmer! thi! year under exist ing propams. jThis vss a forerunner to the rfjuch larger toil bank payments which may begin neat year and . v(Wck may- rua io as much aa tjjoo.ooo.ooe annually, - ik bill setting op the soil bank PtotTim and containing other new farm legislation was waiting to be called up the Senate floor Thursday. ' ' Sens. Aiken (R-Vt) and Holland (fFla laid they would make a-last-ditch effort to reshape the $11 Jo meet President Eisenhow '! specifications. fcThey will concentrate on ellmi- natlng or modifying a section pro viding for mandatory higher price supports for feed grains and corn , grown outside the commrr cial corn belt. The feed grains include rye, oats, barley and grain sorghums. The money bin okayed by the approprlat 1 o a i subcommittee Wednesday goes before the full committee Friday. It covers op erations during the II months be ginning July 1. As lt cleared the House, the measure carried fl,M3,O00.0O0 in new funds plus authority to make about 360 million dollars worth of new loans to help farmers get electric power, telephone service and general emergency credit. Mamie to Help in Restoration of Ike's Birthplace the recording as evidence that ! here- .. . ,, Marine recruits traditionally named his sister-in-law Mrs have had their hair cliPPed ,0 ,ne in GI 'ducation benefits to be;tact the Marion County sheriff's I DRUG STUDY SCHEDULED Joyce Keller as his accomplice n XB9 as thc,r !nltlatlon lmo Da,s1 ProPer ,0 meet "Vln cosls t office. I WASHINGTON - The Vet- iwuiiit. nriium im.c unm. inuic iimj am .cici.ns ic-aujuij snerin Denver Young saia weo- erans Aaministrauon announces , Wednesday to cut in ha t Presi' the bombing of the Meier k Frank department store a year ago. FOREIGN AID TRIMMED WASHINGTON - The House Foreign Affairs Committee voted "skinheads." Later their hair has ; to civilian life. She .by trial, accused of aiding j said there' en too much obscene language by non commissioned drill instructors. The 10 weeks of basic training Peddicord. Peddicord has confessed the bombing in an attempt to extort $50,000 from the store. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison. He refused Tuesday to testify against Mrs. Keller. The defense objected that the nesday that several parties have 1 Wednesday it is undertaking a I dent Eisenhower's request for au- He told the students, as he has phoned the office and volunteered large scale cooperative investiga-1 thority to allocate 300 million dol- recording could not be introduced. ' g0jng t0 go soft will be lengthened to 12 because the present schedule doesn't allow recruits or drill instructors enough sleep, the general said. But he declared the Corps isn i The state said it was a recording made by police of Peddicord i confession. The arguments will continue in COLLISION CAUSES DAMAGE If anything, he said, the physical training program will be tougher. court Thursday. DEN1S0N. Tex. W-The First Lady will have a hand in the DOCTORS TO BE DRAFTED restoration of the birthplace of her husband, President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The Eisenhower Birthplace Foundation has sent sample of wallpaper to Mrs. Eisenhower for her selection of patterns to be used in the restoration of the two-story frame house here. The Eisenhowers hsve prom- ; ised to provide some family fur- 1 niture for the bouse which is be- i ing restored to its original design at a cost of about $15,000. The funds were raised by the Foun dation from over the stste. WASHINGTON -The De fense Department Wednesday an nounced a draft call for 380 phy sicians during July. All will be assigned to the Navy. Two cars collided about 4:40 p.m. Wednesday in the too block of North Commercial causing minor damage to both vehicles, city po lice reported. Police listed the drivers as Orville Kay Hatfield, 1134 Shamrock St., and Sylan A. Mauer, 2011 Maple Ave. MLLLS OTM sbsSaSkOB aaaAanaJaalSaat sat Sajaajl , ; aaajsjaaBj fjtaanaaaj earvepeaasw W sfnvjni "Iraki), Unci" h4KON flATUItt- h MOaissictrslMHr fc ' - -K X!j tf Fittr SILVERTON Drivi-ln Theatre Wed. Thar. Frl Sat. "STRATIGIC AIR COMMAND J. Stewsrt-J. Allysoa , Plus THRU HOURS TO Kill" Dana Andrews Donas Reed Woodburn Drive-In Wed. Thur. Frl. Sat In Cinemascope "GARDEN OF EVIL" Cooper Hsywsrd Wldmsrk Flat "PUSHOVER" Fred MacM array PHOMI 4-4713 ! Mi NOW PUTIN -AlaaUOd.lew.eXli.laau Hill m Frisct lay" The bSaSarht fry of M tr CfrMIT CMm WM bris tkakaan "Th Man Wht Nivir Wot" The) (fr (ftyttt twMtafy Imm WerM War 4 Wt aN (real Gates Open 1:43 -Show At Dusk NOW FLAYING! - A Girl Rush of Langhi And Love! Janet lolgh Jack Lorn men "MY SISTER EILEEN" CO-HIT High la the Gale-Lashed Rock ies They Staged Their Strange Show Down! Rory Calhoun Julio Adam "THE LOOTERS" told many audiences in the state, j to give rides to those needing mat wnue larm policies mane up , transportation. the most Important domestic issue, the one of transcendent import ance to the country is the manner in which our foreign policy is developed. PROF LOSSES PROJECTOR Loss of a 35 mm slide projector containing three valuable slides was reported to Salem police Wed nesday by E. M. Dickinson of the Oregon State College department of veterinary medicine. Dickinson told police he lost the projector fol lowing a meeting Tuesday in the Senator Hotel. He valued it at about $60 to $65. TONIGHT IN PERSON AMERICA'S MOST VERSATILE DANCE BAND IU i ii vtvviu. wm- mm vass ' AUMSVILUE PAVILION 9 P.M. to 1 A.M. Adm. $1.50 Inc. Tax NOW! t TOP HITS! IIIWIIHIII' 'IJJ!!PM'III rirn FLUS rerrinc"WeslerrHltT asaj im42i0e.2JCI7 TaC3 tion of the value of new tran-liars in foreim aid funds as he quilizing drugs for mental illness. I thinks best. NOW! TOF MUSIC HIT! Wanmcm Bo MIKNT mm Hid the quivering excitement of ames M. Cain's rt best-seller smmi .WARNcreCoysR r i JOAN FONTAINE mm, mi V I SMI I HENRT Mm, FLUS " A Look Into the Bright Fntare "GOLD TOMORROW" Also CARTOON Thanks to our now customers Who call our food sublime. And thanks to our old customer Who know it all the time. THE SAN SHOP The Oregon Homo of Sloppy Jo A Groat Sandwich! Portland Road at North City limits For Orders to Go Phono 2-4798 bring your friends and enjoy Coffee And' Time A "come as you are" hour each Thursday 9:30 to 11 A. M. featu rint Coffee and light snecks InformatTriodolihg of Dayfirhe and Sport Clothes OREGON ROOM-STREET FIOOR Mi m j glsinmps sad CeJsr