2-(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore.. Mon. June, 18. '5611, Dqri.. , Yugoslavia Still Part Of Soviet Famlly Tito Declares to Russians IOCHI, UJJR. W - Yugo alavia's President Tito told a cheering crowd at this Black Sa resort Sunday bt wu part of th Soviet family. Deeply tanned from Um hot sua and resplendent la a whit mar shal's uniform trimmed vita scar let and gold. Tito stood oa the coloonadt of tha Sochi stata the ater and said: Divide Huge TV Jackpot NEW YORX m -Actor Vbv Cent Price and Jockey BUI Pear son staled another am to the wire ait dud Sunday aifra ana weuad p spUttinf SHOO tele vision jackpot, , , Peanoa. from Pasadena. Calif. previously woa 4.m with his knowledge of art and was chal lenged for thrart-quis ehampioo ahia br Price M CBS I "The $64,000 Challenge." . The two tied last week for the title and returned Sunday night for a playoff round. Under rules at the shew, another tic meant equally dividing the money. Price and Pearson" were each shewn and asked ta identify eight replicas of famous artists' signa tures and monograms prepared by New York's Museum of Mod en Art :.t ' . . Price and then Pearson proper ly Identified the signatures. Without a tie, the winner would have woa 164,001 and the loser Pearson bow has woa a total of 196.000 by answering art ques tions. Hew much be will have left after taxes depends on his other income. The same applies for actor Price and his $8,000. j Pearsoa .has been answering quia show questions every week for I months in accumulating his Jackpot winnings. Ha said that every time hrsteps Into a phone booth "I expect to hear the suspense music and begin mulling over questions." Price said that besides being Interested la art he appeared oa vthe show, "because 1 can um the money. Who can't?" Body of Utah Girl Located ' VERNAL. Utah IH-The bruised and sexually assaulted body of a 17-year-old Utah girl, missing since Wednesday night, was found Sunday afternoon Iff a canal, 1'4 miles south of this esstera Utah ' town. , ; Sheriff Herbert Snyder said an autopsy showed Miss Norma ftodebeck. a Brett and well-liked Vernal High School senior, had been raped. "She had been choked," said Snyder. "There were black and blue marks on her neck, and a peeled spot on her chin, half an Inch wide and aa Inch long. In dicating aha had a pretty good clip oa the chuv ' Snyder said no arrests been made. - had Wreck Injures 4 on Highway 20 SUUuua Ntwt Srkt SWIET HOME Eour persons received minor cuts and bruises In a one-car accident about tour and one-half miles east of Fos ter oa Highway 20 Saturday Bight, stata police reported. Folice Mid a ear driven by Thomas Earl HcClellan, Lebanon, tailed to negotiate a turn and went over a 20-foot embankment. The four were treated at the Sweet Home hospital The acci dent occurred about 6:15 p.m., officers said. Jockey UoS. Reverses Role of 1775, Starts Training Reich Army . By HERB ALTSCHULL HEIDELBERG, Germany t Back la 1775. a German general .. crossed the ocean to train the Ar my of the United States. Nearly (we centuries later the United States Is returning the fav or. A team of American soldiers fat helping to train the new army of the West German republic. "The roles are reversed," said Lt. CoL P. E. Alban, one of three America! colonels who created the ambitious plan to help train and equip a German army pat terned after the American army. Go to any of the dozen or so Vest German training camps to day and you'll witness something that dozea years ago you would have believed Impossible. You'll aee American and German sol diers palling around together like old friends. They have really buddied up oa this job,'' Alban aald. "The personal relations between the American and German soldiers eoulda t be better.- ; One .factor evidently inspiring the well-drilled members of the U. f. Instruction teams is the memory of the superb aoldiering f the Germans la two world wars. -If there, haa to be another war," one U. S. aoldier confided, "I fed at home in the Soviet Union because we are part of the same family the family of so cialism.. "Yugoslavia and the other coun tries of the people's democracies are fighting along with the Soviet I'niorf for peace." he said. "... None can separate us." But he insisted that Yugoslavia spoke in this manner as a "friend and equal" of the Soviet Union. The crowd of about SKW gath ered under the palms and pines cheered eotnusiasticauy. & v e a ; three or four tunes, too." troops .assigned to keep order Adding te comment on "distent broke nana to applavd. within the party. Williams The Yugoslavs left from a mili-jsaid: "Dissenters can tag along tary airport, while tfte reporters who have, been accompanying them left from the regular Sochi airfield. The field Is being convert ed for use by jets, irport offiv rials said. This would give the , Soviets a first -class Jet base not far from the border of Turkey, a NATO member. . Bank'sVault Foils Thieves VANCOUVER, B. C. - An attemnt ta blast open a vault at a branch or the nana 01 nova Scotia oa Granville St. was thwarted Sunday. Burglars ripped plaster and lath la the wall af aa art gallery next to the bank. Police theorized they were frightened away by passers by before they could carry Out their plan to dynamite the bank wall. A quantity of safe-breaking Ugtls, mattresses and accessories used la the handling of explosives was turned over te police by Alex Eraser, owner of the gallery. A crowbar was used to gain entry to the gallery. Then-the in truderi "Btatry moved -'Baliitings worth 11.000 which blocked their way to the bathroom which ad- Joins tha bank building. Eraser said he found the bath room "In a complete mess" when be entered the building at 10:15 a. m. Sunday. . Heavy mattresses hung from special hooks the burglars had at tached to the outside wall, appar ently to deaden the sound of ex plosives. - A quarter-inch bole was drilled about four Inches into the bank wall and another hole had been Started. E. E. BouUelier, manager of the bank, said the entire business block of four stores -would have been blown sky-high" if the bur glars had succeeded in blasting their way to the vault, which is protected by a six-inch concrete wall and 1H Inches of steel cas ing. Twelve Powerful Fireworks Bombs Stolen in Ohio DAYTON, Ohio (II - Twelve fireworks bombs, each powerful enough to blow up the average house, have been stolen from a local fireworks manufacturer. The Montgomery County sher iff's office issued an appeal to the thievea, who apparently were bent on having an old fashioned Fourth. of July, either to return the bombs or dump them in the river Walter Beachler. president of the United Fireworks Manufacture ing Co. from which the bombs were stolen Saturday night, said each bomb had only a one second fuse and packed the punch of half ( case of dynamite, enough to blow up a,house. Vehicle Downs 2 Traffic Signs A car driven by a 17-year-old Salem youth knocked over two city traffic signs when it spun out of control st Superior and South Liberty Streets about 1:40 p.m. Sunday, city police reported. Driver was listed ss John Frederick Gottfried, 180 W. Bush St. "we'd a damn sight rather have them on our side than against us." The Gemans seem to have pretty much the same idea. Capt. Fritz Sachs, a veteran panzer officer now serving as a German tank platoon commander, said the American instructors "Know their subjects and know how to put the Information across." "We have become very close these past weeks," he said. "We have the feeling the Americans belong to us and that we belong to them and that we have been I together for a long time already." Mai. Ernest Schumacher, com mander of the first American training roup, observed, with pardonable pride, that "we feel : we are making a little bit of his tory. This Is the first time a for- j eign power has ever helped train ! the German army." I Woodburn Drive-In Sunday Monday Tuesdsy la Claesaaacepe THI TENDER TRAP" Freak Sinatra D. Reynolds Plus TENNESSEE CHAMP" Shelley Winters K. Wyaa 'Bin Enough For Disunity' GRAND RAPIDS. Mich. Ill Gov. G. Mennen Williams of Mich igan, a Democrat, said Sunday "there is room enough in the large Democratic Party for a few dis senters." But in s television interview Williams replied when asked for comment on Sen. James O. East Und (D-Miss), a leader in pro- segregation ranks: "You don't recognize these peo ple. Just like McCarthy 'Sen. Jo seph McCarthy, Wisconsin Repub lican' has been sat on by the Re oublicans. we caa sit on Eastland as best they csn MEMPHIS. Tenn. ( - Sen. James O. Eastland DMiss said Sunday that "rebellious feelings" among Washington residents is making school integration in the nation's capital a "deplorable sit uation." Eastland was en route to Wash ington after taking his family to his Doddsville, Miss., borne for the summer. He said letters on the racial issue arriving at his office from throughout the nation convinces him the South "is gaining ground public sentiment is turning in our favor." He attributed the change to in- creaseq publicity which Negro bids for integration have brought.! leading to what he called a nation ; which is better informed on the Negro-white problems. "People are beginning to real ize." Eastland said, "that we're not mistreating the Negro in the South. And they're realizing we can make more "progress with sep arate (education institutions. Men Search For Canadian Indian Giants VERNON, B. C. Hi Two Swiss-born residents of Lumby. IS mil 9l a h,r kat'A mir4A mi mn Hi-.ninr. inia'nnVH in tr.rV ! down a thhe i Inrfi.n ini 1 which legend says inhabit the, Harris Mountains. . Rene Dahinden and A n t o n , Ruesch left last week for Vsncouv er to obtain supplies on the sdvice of a game warden, prior to set ting out for the Chehalis Indian reservation. They hope to obtain the Che halls' cooperation in efforts to tribe, reputed to be hairy giants measuring seven feet or more. According to legend the Sas quatch goes to Morris Mountain, on the Chehalis reserve, once every four years for tribal rites, and this' would be one of the years. The Indian giants are said to have existed when the Spanish settled In New Mexico. A mission ary who tried to convert them called them the Karen Kowahs, meaning they walked in streams and caught fish in their hands. After the white people moved In, there was a dispute which re sulted in the tribe's being placed in box cars and shipped to the middle United States, from where they drifted to this area. Stories of the Sasquatch have circulated from time to .time. A woman is said to have been ab- f4i.ot.ul k t L. I L. -1 .J uuiiv-u uj vnrui miu iinu lor one season, finally being blindfolded anH BtPtlt harlr Ait nlri nrncnafAP I is supposed to have traded laioes wim tne trioe lor wita meat. Dahinden heard his first tales 0f the Sasquatch in Calgary, .u i j . iinr ur afmru on nrsi com ne i r - . u , to Canada. He and Ruesch, ho.hiwould m p,reer to be 8 "lan ""I'. ,nd .b0th iVth'H0rinaceUSof an atomic attack. Sasquatch legend as a challenge ! to their youth and decided to in vestigate. Neither is married. Both have extensive mountaineering exper ience. Three or four years ago a Van- couver couple is reputed to have found the skeleton of a man in the interior mountains more than seven, feet tall. Oksnagan Indian legends also tell of a tall, hairy tribe. Crash Injuries Fatal to Motorist From Sweet Home I PORTLAND I - Riley W. Thompson, M, of Sweet Home, injured In a June 3 automobile accident, died in a Portland hos pital Sunday. Thompson and his son. Riley Jr., 10, were hurt when their car struck a pole. The boy was re leased from the hospital a few days ago. W7E GATES OPEN :45 SHOW AT DUSK NOW PLAYINGI elHelen CO-BIT EST Our Miss BrooKsf Four Corners FOUR CORNERS Ground was broken Sunday for new two-story addition to Trinity Methodist Church at Four Corners. Pictured participating la the ceremony following BMrniag services are, left to right: The Rev. Joe A. Harding, pastor; John Akin, Sunday scheel superintendent; Dr. George Rose berry, district superintendent; I. H. White (digging), chairman of the church's old building committee; Leonard Judsoa (lifting shovel), chairman of the present building committee and Edward Clark (with infant), charge lay leader. Coasirurtiea will start Tnesdsy oa the addi tion, which will be located In the resr of the present church structure. The project. by 40 feet, will provide additional educational space, church school office, multi purpose room snd more kitch en facilities. fi T) 1 ' rCllCll 1 USll Search for Rebel Train ALGIERS. Algeria - The French foreign legion Sunday pressed a search for a Jong camel supply train of Moslem rebels that escaped from its clutches on the edge of the Sahara Ige of the Sahara. ;t-s r , l Troops in heiieot rhtrw'Xj yes Central the Nementcha Mountain ''elt'on'OiT,llii'otirsil south of Constantine in eastern! Vfl iitllllCl IIUII Algeria Legionnaires returning to their SEATTLE A plan depart headquarters . stumbled on the ing from .the traditional proce caravan Saturday afternoon out- dures of the American Baptist raravan Saturday afternoon out- side El Amra in the mountains Outnumbered, they radioed for help. Helicopters wheeled up re jnforcements. but the main body n( rehrl.1 and their camels es caped by night into the sandy i niH, The French said the national- ist. left 26 dead in the field. They , acknowledged some losses. The. French captured stocks of arms, supplies and munitions. Buzz Starts Bomb Scare LOS ANGELES -A menacing buzz-buzz in the baggage room at ' the Union Railroad station set off j a bomb scare Sunday. J Aiarmeo Baggage auenuams . summoned Special Agent dene suit in better coordination of Mallaly. He called for a police church efforts, department demolition expert. The Rev. Dr. Reuben E. Nelson The expert carefully opened a of New York, executive secretary package from which came the ! of the ABC. would be given broad noise. He found a battery-operat- general powers in coordinating ac ed child's toy telegraph set, with tivities of various bodies and so the key jammed into a buzz-buzz ; eieties in the convention. The prev position by another article. v r . . . 310USP IlllSnilieS po-tIail ill AbUitV tO (lope With Atom if, Which ni.iiwr.iin, uui ninirTTi fUn , "... . V ' l iL, ir.vMii t, iiisiii, uu,,, j .... - ter wish you were a mouse Uve told a recent science club meeting here that a mouse's body can withstand a much higher ra diation level than a man's and i would be "much more comfort able" in the radiation "fallout" area. CAR REPORTED STOLEN Seth P. Smith, 1026 5th St , told city police that his 1953 model car was stolen sbout 9:45 p.m. Sunday while the vehicle was parked in the lot of a down town grocery store. NOW! You will toe what this pilot THC THUTH ABOUT PLYING SAUCtRSI mum Mu mm uwi Suspense Hit PsA- ypfcflr a.. U4IUIU2 mi m Minis Church Start? KBBBlBJSJSJSJSjBSalB --i- - Korean Tot Reaches New Home After Long Journey ABERDEEN After a 1 Is getting acquainted with his new journey nearly a third of the way parents. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Bu around the world, young Duane torac of Aberdeen. LeP 2'4 year-old Korean orphan, Baptist Grolip dures of the Convention, giving more power to the general counc,! and the cxecu live sorrrrary, was laid before the ABC's 49th annual convention Sat urday. Little discussion was held, at the , time but the delegates were divid-j cd into eight groups for considera-j lion of the plan. It already has i been discussed in pre-conventioo meetings in various delegate rouPs "He has adjusted to the change The Rev. Dr. R. Claibourne j vf ry WP " Mrs Butorac said, Johnson of Waukcgan. III., told;"and h,-, Vfry affectionate" the convention the proposal would I The Butoracs got the idea of make for more efficient operation j adopting a Korean baby when they of the church and release more read thf Mperj.ncM 0f Harry of the church resource "in alHoti t relired lumberman now world never more than one gen- (aTmng m Creswell. Ore. eration away from paganism." Holt had adopted eight Koreans. He said the reorganization, ; Th Ruinrt wrni in him nA K through revision of the bylaws, would avoid overlapping of duties ' of officers and church agencies, ; permit unuy in planning ana re-1 - ent bylaws permit no such pow ers Considerable opposition to the proposal is known to exist and preliminary skirmishes are ex pected to open Monday morning. A half-hour will be given to the matter then when it will be de termined how much time will be netled to bring it to the floor for Mild! HUUI1. Opponents and proponents are agreed that the ABC historically has considered each member t church its own authority but dif- fer on whether the policy should be continued. SILVERTON Drive-In Theatre Sunday - Monday - Tuesday "CARNIVAL STORY" Anne Baiter -Steve Cochran PLCS "PEARL O SOUTH PACIFIC Virginia Mayo - Den. Morgan OPEN 7:15 START DISK MATINEE TODAY AND EVERY DAY TNI MOST ASTOUNOINO ADVINTURI (VIR FltAtfDf COCKLESHELL HEROES -TtCMNIOI.O COlVsaaM Ptcm ENJOY A GOOD LAFF i cm mi 1 New Addition on He arrived here Tuesday night after an air trip sponsored by World Vision Inc., a non-denominational religious group. Along with several other or phans, he was flown from Korea to Japan, then to Los Angeles and finally to the Sea-Tac airport at Bow Lake where the Buroracs met him. Lee is especially enthralled with a musical toy and during a brief interview expressed his pleasure in Korean. Butorac. 39, is a postal clerk. His wife, Elma. is 34. They have been married nine years. "Duane was sleeping when we first saw him," Butorac said. "My -wife and I both had worked that day. when we drove to Ta coma. We were all pretty tired." lhe little Korean came to a four-vear-old six-room home He has his own room and twin bed. set in motion the work that even- tuay brought Duane Lee to this coun'(ry PHONE 4-4713 lOt 0m 4J SOc ImIs Tmrrw Barbar Stanwyck tfd MacMnrray Thtn's Alwoys Tomorrow iKkarrf Wi4mart Dnfia Raaal Backlash DALLAS MOTOR-VU Gates open 7:00, show st dusk. Jane Russell, Gilbert Roland In "UNDE1WAIE1" Superscope and Color Second Feature Edmund Gwenn, Shirley MrLaine la "THE TROUBLE WITH HAHY" VistsVlsloa Feel Like A Big Meal? GOOD! AT MM You Can Havt (Including Choice of Entrees and Desserts) it for si 1 1 Downtown State Street Daily to t P. M. f)rgan Music Every Evening With Bill Hewitt snd Zera Rice at the Hammond Console Hoover Visits Alma Mater In California PALO ALTO. Calif, ill - For mer President Herbert Hoover Sunday paid a surprise visit to his alma mater of (1 years ago to participate in commencement ex ercises for 1,203 graduates at Stan ford University. In an unscheduled address, the nation's elder statesmsa told graduates he vividly remembers sharing a fear years sgo that he was sure they felt now "a cold, cold world." "It was not so bad, after all." Hoover said. , "It has been 1 yesri since I was in the same expectant mo ment that you are." Hoover said, spesking extemporaneously. "I re call that my mind was less on whst the able speaker wss saying than on what was going to happen to me next." He recalled that he had $20.32 m his pocket, but soon discovered that "my elders wanted to be helpful as you will find that they want you to succeed." Hoover said he had heard a lot about "academic freedom ever since" and would like to add a phrase of his own "let's stress academic integrity as well si ac ademic freedom." Pastor Falls Against Saw, Injury Fatal - BIRMINGHAM, Ala. fAPt A frail young Birmingham minister was accidentally killed Sunday in a fall against a ripsaw in his : backyard workshop. The Rev. Robert Lee Shurbet Jr , a spastic victim, was build ling handicraft items for a vaca i lion Bihle school when he was caught in the electric saw. He was dead on arrival at a hospital.- Shurbet had heeti pastor of the Rocky Ridge Cumberland Pres byterian Church 10 miles south of Birmingham since 1050. Survivors included the widow, Mrs. Eugenia Shurbet, also a spastic, and his parents. Shurbets age'wai not avail able. SPEEDING SHIPS HIT MONTREAL - Capt. J. P. DuFour. harbormaster, is crack ing down on speeding ships. The limit is knots upstream in the St. Lawrence within the port area and 10 knots downstream. Wash from speeding craft interferes with wharf construction work. kattuci NOW OPEN MONDAYS bring the n ll Ml DM OP DOwMTOW Ml 10 ACRES OP EXCITING MERCHANDISE THE BEST OF SERVICE GREATEST VALUES SO MUCH OF EVERYTHING DOWNTOWN SALEM MERCHANTS OPEN Theatre Time Table fXSINORI "UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OB JECTS": 14a. 1041 "FOREIGN INTRIGUE": I OJ CAPITOL "COCKLESHELL HEROES': I 47. 1:11. I 41 "CASH ON DELIVERY": 1:00. 4 SI. 7:M, 11:11 Noarai bali paivg in "LAST FRONTIER," Victor Mitur "TRIAL.- Gln Ford Bhow (t Duak. OLLYWOOB "BACKLASH": I t. IS M "ALWAYS TOMORROW": S 54 aidtnUTHAR TH Al TH All TT Bullets Down Two in Fight Over Woman NORWICH, Conn. (1 - Two men shot It out in a love triangle battle early Sunday. They killed each other and wounded the wo man the estranged wife of one of them. Killed in the blazing gunfire were Ralph Miller. 42-year-old power lineman from nearby Wil-i limantic, and Ralph Schnatter, 30, a Norwich shipping clerk ! whose wife, Florence, 33, was the third point in the triangle. Police quoted Mrs. Schnatter's mother, Mrs. Jennie Barrie, as saying Schnatter fired first with a shotgun and Miller promptly blazed back with about five shots from a .32 caliber revolver. Both men were hit; Miller dropped, but Schnatter only staggered. Mrs. Barrie told police that Schnatter then walked' over to Miller and, saying "I'll make , sure," fired a .32 caliber revolver he also carried, into Miller's body. Then, she said, Schnatter turned and fired the shotgun at his wife, who was running into the house. She was hit in the arm. Schnatter climbed the porch stairs and dropped dead with the revolver still in his hand. Police said friends told them Mrs Schnatter and Miller were planning to marry after she ob tamed a divorce from Schnatter. TIME FUES - Life Insurance costs loss when you ore younger. Don't let your time slip by - plon NOW for o secure future. Never again will the rates be so low (or YOU. - u Earl A. Cooch Supervisor - Salem District Telephone Salem 3-3314 family and HT National Guard Units Open Encampment FORT LEWIS. Wssh. OB ' Members of the 41st Infantry Dt 1 vision of the Oregon and Washing ton National guard opened their ! two-week encampment here Sat ' urday. ! The division commander. Brig. Gen. George S. Cook, of Seattle, said the program emphasis would ' be on night training. QUEENS CROWING NEW YORK W - Queens, tha fastest-growing of the five coun ties making up New York City, gained 44.000 new residents in the , year ended April 1. The Queens '. chamber of commerce said the county's total population, now is 1,109,849. , OOK OFFICE O "COFFEI TIMP State Employees June 15th t 16th . Y.W.CJL BENEFIT Ballet . . . June 15th ARABIAN HORSE SHOW June 23 A 24 ENTACIE THEATRE Bell, Book snd Candle June 24 through June 30 ST. PAUL RODEO AND DANCE July 1 thru 4 MOUAIA BUCKEROO July 1 thru 4 WILLAMETTE CONCERT SERIES 1950-37 Season For Reservations Dial l!2!4 1 P.MJ FRIDAY TO 9 P.M. tiwetTN ( now on sale