The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 26, 1956, Page 1, Image 1

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    t
2 Guard Pilots
Fall to Deaths
MTiifiPiiiBiri
wtmm
BOISE. Idaho Two Oregon Air National Guard pilots or i gun
nery mission jumped to their deaths Monday when the jet engine of
their FWB fighter-interceptor plane quit shortly after takeoff.
Maj. J. B. Blair, public information officer for the 142nd fighter
interceptor wing at Gwen Field, identified one of the men as the pilot
of the plane, Capt. Wallace L. Parks. 34, Portland.
PDCDDS
When Eisenhower was president
of Columbia I'niversity he inaugu
rated what is known as the Amer
ican Assembly. I'nder university
auspices a group of people were
invited to Ardcn House, the former
E. H. Harriman home in the
S:
mountains near New York Cit
to spend several days in cone
traled study of important public
questions. Those invited came
from varied walks ol life, political
affiliations and places of re.M
drnce with the common character
istic of interest in government and
capacity to make some contribu
tion to discussions. Several of
those Assemblies have been held,
rid their published reports have
given an index to the thinking of
informed Americans on many cur
rent issues.
This year the experiment was
tried of having regional assem
blies to consider the general topic
of state government One for the
Pacific Northwest was held in
Spokane June 21-24. It drew to-
gcthcr for the four days some 50
.icprcjentative citizens of Washing
ton, Oregon. IdaJw and Montana.
They included professional people
i chiefly lawyers1, some public ol
ficjals, educators. ,, labor leaders,
businessmen, club women. In
working they were divided into
three groups. Each group was giv
en the same set of questions for
each session. They worked through
four half-day sessions, then as
sembled Sunday morning to ham
mer out a summary of their views.
(Inly three 'speeches" were heard
at the evening sessions. One was
by Thomas Stewart, Juneau liiw
yer. on Ihe draft constitution re
cently prepared for. Alaska, one
by Frank C. Moore of New York,
who was controller under Gover
nor Dewey and for four years
(Continued ta editorial page. 4.)
Truck Flips;
Pair Injured
lutrimin N f wt Srrvlr
WOODBl'RN A sawdust truck
went out of control Monday night
on the Woodburn-Molalla highway ,
near the Pudding River, struck
utility pole and overturned. Two
Dersons were injured.
Stale nnlice investigation of the
crash continued into the early
morning hours, with details not ail!
assembled.
Salem Memorial Hospital re
ported admitting as emergency pa
tients from the accident Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Robison. They were
still under doctor's care with no
report of the extent of injury im
mediately available.
Non-Swimmer
9
12, Drowns
MADRAS. Ore.
old girl w ho
12 - year -
COIlldn t swim
drowned Mondav afternoon when
a raft overturned in a (arm pond
near here
She was Beverly Ames, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs Marvin
G Ames. Madras area farmers.
She was playing with two com
panions in the pond on the farm
of Earl Watson when the mishap
occurred.
NORTHWEST I.EXGtT.
At Yakima 13. Salnn .1
At Tn-Clty 5, Euiifne 4
At Wenatchf 2. l.i wistnn 5
PxrlHC COAST I.F f;l'K
Al Vancmnrr S. Porlland 4
Al San Uirso 2 Sacramento 9
OnI K.tnirs M-hrflulpfl
N TIOS l. I KAI.I i:
Al Piooklvn .1. ChlraS'i ?
At Philadelphia a. Milwaukee S
At Pnlslnirt;h I. Cincinnati 2
Only famrs scheduled
AMFRK AN I.FAGl'K
At Kansa City I New York 9
At Detroit 3, Washington S.
Only games achrduled
WILBERT
"This Is my lost warning,
Cronpo. If you don't stop spoil-
Ing Wilbert I'm going to 1st
yew hove him!"
:.-.v;.:-.y- ?s7, .
He said Parks was a caretaker
for the Oregon Air National
Guard
He identified the other man as
2nd U John G. Kominoth,. 27. of
Bay City. Ore.
Blair said Parks radioed that
; the engine of the plane was giving
out. Moments later the men
jumped from an altitude of about
200 feet. Blair said one of the
parachutes opened partially and
the other not at all.
Air guardsmen from throughout
the Pacific Northwest are here
for summer training.
British Judge
Shot in Cyprus,
i.u Lcaiu
I check out of Walter Reed Army
NICOSIA. Cyprus ii T w n1 Hospital about Kriday or Satur
gunmen Monday shot a British oilV. 8t ,ne sam' lime postponed
write who had nassed six rlenlh talks with India's Prime Minis-
sentences on pro-Greek rebels. He rr Nehru which had been ar-1
was ih a dangerous condition Mon- ranged belore his illness for July
day night. 7-lfl.
justice Bernard V. Shaw, c.i, Th'y had planned to confer at
sulfered head and throat wounds Eisenhower s secluded mountain
The gunmen shot him while hc!lodKe at Thurmont, Md.
sal between two Turkish police1 The President agreed with Neh
bodyguards in his car as it stop- ru'j suggestion that he might not'
ped for a signal light in busy Vic- be sufficiently recovered in time,
tona St. The assassination at-.to go ahead with the talks on
tempt occurred shortly after 1 p
m in Ihe teeming Armenian quar-
,pr 0 tnp 0i,j war( t.l(.
The tun ncvnilanlc nr,.c,mH iama trip by the
be pro-Greek Eoka underground
workers, fled as Shaw's body
guard opened fire and pursued
them .They leaped info a small
car and escaped.
At Nicosia general hospital a
doctor said Shaw has a chance
but emphasized that his condition
was dangerous. i
A Greek woman was fatally'
wounded by troops who cordoned
off the area in a search for the
gunmen. She was struck by a bul
let aimed at her husband
died in a hospital later.
She
McMininice
Won't Seek
Senate Helm
PORTLAND ( - Re-election
campaign plans will prevent State
Sen. Warren A. McMinimee from
sepking the presidency of the Sen-
1 ale at the 1957 Legislature, the
Tillamook Republican announced
Mondav. I
McMinimee said he could not
. take time "from mv work hnlh tn
campaign and to make contacts
necessary
to plan with members
lm R "r me coming session. -
Only Republican senator nnwi
(actively campaigning for the pres-
idcncy is Warren Gill, Lebanon
j attorney. ,
Playwright, Miss Monroe Won't
Saturday;
i
ROXBl'RY. Conn Arthur
Miller said Monday night he and
Marilyn Monroe won t be mar-
ried before Saturdav.
, The playwright talked to a group
of reonrtcrs outside his eonntrv
Marilyn,
S3 $ ti S'
U Li C ; k
I ' 'Li.
ROXBl'RY, Conn. Playwright Arthur Miller and actress Marilyn Monroe snuggle for photographers
j jlwn 0f n, country place here, where the couple drove Sunday night from New York City for
I a vacation before their marriage. Miller'' mother said there will be NO word tor a few davs about
plans for the wedding, since the
lOorh Ytar
Panama
Confab
Bids Ike
President to
Kest First at
Gettysburg
WASHINGTON' - President
Eisenhower decided Monday to at
tend a July 21-22 Panama City
conference of the American re
publics after a period of conval
escence at his Gettysburg farm
starting this weekend.
But the President, planning to
schedule. On the other hand Ki-'
senhower concluded that he will
be v eil enough to make the ran-
end of the third gan. of Monmouth, Oregon Demo
cratic stale chairman, announced
u'5
Monday afternoon the President
stened to music and napped.
Twining Sees
Supersonic
Russian Jet
MOSCOW Top American
and British air generals took a
jeep tour of liirssia's tightly guard-
ed Kubinka airbase Monday and
were -shown a new twin-engine
bomber which they were told
could fly faster than sound. The
U.S. Air Force does not yet have
a supersonic bomber.
Gen. Nathan Twining. U.S. Air
Force chief of staff, seven of his
aides and s party of British,
French and other foreign military
men invited to the I'SSR to see
its latest aviation achievements.!
traveled in a motorcade to Ihe
airbase 40 miles outside Moscow.!
A party of American newsmen
ho ,ried 10 ,rail alon8 wrre
turned oack ny missian olliccrs
M mlles ou,slae Moscow.
r - t .iion nnun., i.
WASHINGTON Robert
Hiimphrcvs was sworn in as a
t'.S. Sen. Monday, succeeding Ihe
late Alhen W. Barkley D-Ky.
Beauty Visits at Fiance's Home
home here after returning from
New York.
Miss Monroe is visiting Miller,
his molher and Miller's two chil-
dren by another marriage j
When rennrter akrd Miller
Arthur Snuggle
r
j
couple is "worn out from i strenuous two weeks. (AP Wirepholo).
2 SECTIONS-! PACES
Resigns
PORTLAND
Howard Morgan,
above, resigned Monday as
state Democratic chairman to
join the national campaign
staff of Adlai Stevenson. (VP
Wirepholo).
Morgan Quits
Demo Post to
Aid Stevenson
PORTLAND
Howard Mor-
Mondav he has accepted appoint-
mcnt In I hp mtifin;ii rntnnnipn
staff of Adlai Stevenson and will '
not seek re-election at the state
party meeting next month.
Morgan said his new duties will
begin July 1. He said Stevenson
had asked him to work in his be
half in some of the Western and
Miri,. ,.ci,.rn ciot.c anH "ihi will
include Oregon, where, at the re
quest of both candidates, I shall
work for (iov. Stevenson and Sen.
Wayne Morse as well as lor the
rest of the Democratic ticket."
Possible successors mentioned
include Chct Lowry, Washington
County party chairman, and Bob
Boyer. Jackson County chairman.
Lowry announced earlier he would
be a candidate while Boyer has
been asked to run by some Demo
crats but has not made up his
mind.
Gunmen Collect
From Club, Bank
MINNEAPOLIS - A stocky
gunman with a blue scarf pulled
un around his fare srooned iid
about $25,000 and escaped Mon-
dav after a noon-hour holdup at
the suburban Plaza State Bank,
. ;
CINCINNATI iff) Two gunmen ,
L 1.J nc 1 nf
ll.iut-u i. (JdiliiilS 1NU l-lllii)r ui
the Sportsmen's
the Sportsmen's Club into a din-
ing room Monday and robbed the
Icafe of an estimated $13,000.
about the wedding, he first said
it would not be this week Then
he allered Ihe statement to say
"not hcfnrr Saturday."
Where would the wedding he' I
"I haven't made up my mind
Happily
If.
The Oregon
Illness
Fatal to
Admiral
King Dies of
Heart Failure;
Kites Pending
PORTSMOITH, Ml ifFleet
Adm. Ernest J. King, 77, who
commanded the world's mightiest
sea force in World War II. died
Monday at Portsmouth Naval hos
pital after acute heart failure in
duced by high blood pressure.
In failing health since a brain
hemorrhage in August. 1947, the
wartime chief of Naval operations
was stricken early Sunday.
Still on Active List
King, still carried on the Navy's
active list, came here June 5. fol
lowing his custom of recent years
to spend the summer residing at
the Naval hospital to avoid the
heat of Washington. Winters he
spent at the Navy's medical
center. Bethesda. Md.
King's death left three five
star fleet admirals Leahy,
Nimitz and Halsey.
Death came at 2 45 p.m. King's
son, I.t. Comdr. Ernest J. King
Jr.. was at the hospital. Comdr.
King flew here Irom Washington
Sunday after his father's condi-
l'n was adjudged critical,
Tentative Services
The Navy said in Washington
it has tentatively arranged funer
al services for Adm. King at 1
P m- 'r-ui rnaay.
Washington National
June 29, at
Cathedral.
A spokesman said that final ar
rangements must await word from
the admiral's family, but that it
was understood that it was- Adm.
King s wish that he be buried in
the cemetery at the Naval acade
my at Annapolis, Md.
Further details are not expect
ed to be available until Tuesday.
Hound Bites Hand
That Fed Traffic
Ticket to Owner
NEW YORK on A woman
motorist's dog Monday bit the
hand that gave her a summons
for improper driving.
Patrolman Marion De Lauro,
2". issued a ticket to Mrs. Ida
P"1"'1' for olnS the wrong way
on a one-way street.
She asked him how to get to
Pennsylvania Station, and he said,
.... nAf....J in Ai-rJinntinn a
nr KI ami t u , AH.a,,al,u,,, a,,. . , . , . .
hunting hound in fhe back seat'.. . , . . ,, . '
reached out and grabbed his right'
index finger.
Wed Until
yet." he said. "It probably won't
he here because it's too close to'
the main road. You fellows 're
porters and photographers i will be ;
all over the place."
Miss Monroe remained in the
house all day. while reporters. .
photographers and some sightse-1
ers galhered outside She joined ;
Miller on the lawn Monday night
and posed fur photographers
Asked if he and Marilyn intend
ed to stay here the rest of the
week, Miller said he didn't know .
and added that perhaps they
would move further away from
New York, which is about HI miles
from here, lie gave no hint ol
where they'd go
If the couple takes out a mar
riage license in Connecticut, they
must wait live days before using
it, unless Ihey obtain a waiver
from a probate judge. So far Ihey
have made no visible mines to
ward Ihe marriage that they an
nounced lat week would take
place before July 13 Ihe day
Miss Monroe leaves fur London.
Clouds Slated
To Follow Sun
Salem's summery day Monday
brought out a hot sun and an 82
degree thermometer reading, but
this probably will be followed by
some cloudiness today, the V. S.
Weather Bureau station al Salrni
airport reports.
"Perlect weather" prevailed al
so along Ihe Oregon Coast Mon
day. There, too. Mime clouds are
forecast lor Tuesday.
Forecasters saw a possibility ot
light showers in Salem by Wed
nesday. COP Clambake
Sel for July 1.)
SKASIOK 'f Republicans are
planning a ebmhake and political
raMv here .Inlv 1"
The alla'r is uunllv vpun-ored
by Ihe Oregon Republican Clnds
and Ihe Multnomah County (lOl'
nrgani7ntiun Some I IKW are i-x-
pecteri In attend
A special 20-car passenger train svi.rv pn:riplTTlos
will carrv Ihe Renuhlicans from ln irt of wihfr far s-pl
Portland to Seaside.
FOUNDOD 1651
Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, June 26, 1954
ritish Okeh
Tests
WASHINGTON By agree-1
mcnt with Britain the I'nited
States Monday got the right to a
S.00O mile track in the southern
Atlantic Ocean over which to test
guided missiles.
New Test
V -VS'' V"
fc C"WiV . -.V , . ir . m i mum i
MS-1 -
. 3 J ASCfKSlOW I j
jLwi A-iy . . . ,SIMD Si
PATRICK AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. Map shows location of Ascension Island ia the South Atlantic
with relation to Patrick Air Force base In Floriita. Britain today agreed to allow the I'nited States
to fire test guided missiles from Florida over British Island possessions to Ascension Island, some
5,000 miles. (AP Wirepholo Map).
Averell Gets
Boost From
Gov. Chandler
ATLANTIC CITY I - Averell
Harriman got a strings-attached
boost from Gov, A.B. (Happy)
Chandler of Kentucky Monday as
i he and supporters of Adlai K.
j Stevenson skirmished backstage
to line up Democratic governors
' behind their Presidential cam
! paigns.
i While nursing Presidential
j hopes himself, Chandler made it
; apparent at a news conference
I that he was ready to dicker with
Harriman about second place on
.1 " ' V ,
tion in August.
And. in a whirl of political de
velopments at the 48th annual
conference of the nation's gover
nors. 1. Gov. Phil M. Donnelly of Mis
souri trumpeted a note of dis
couragement in the direction of
the Harriman camp with word he ! lRlr('a on waler now " us
believes former President Harry1!""1 wl" 'ac Sa,cm citizens for
S. Truman will he unable In con- 'he first time on the water bill
trol the state's delegation to the
Democratic national convention
2. Gov. Frank Clement of Ten
nessee was engaged in a round
of political maneuvers that could
knock some of the main props
out from under the remaining
hopes of Sen. Kstes Kefauver of
Tennessee to capture the presi
dential nomination.
Fire District
Gains Okeli
A fire district for the Wallace
ltoad area north ol Wevt Salem
was approved overwhelmingly by
residents Monday.
Seventy of the ?R ballots cast
wore in favor of lormation of Ihe
lire protection di.tricl
Fire d. rectors were elected for
the district They aie Margaret
Hurlmi, with .Vi voles, Houaid I,.
.Irnks, .Vi. Mollis U Huntington.
4R, Glen Martin. 44. and Kmmct
T Rogers. 43. Deleated candidates
in the close election were Carl
Fisketinn. 30; Bart Smith. 30, and
T .1. Means, 29
The district, covering both sides
ol Wallace Hoad Irom Orchard
Hcichts Hoad north to Ihe north
rdge of Rogers Homcstiads and
cast to the old Willamcllc Hiver
channel, piobably will contract
w.lli Salem lor lire proleilion ser
v ii e. lingers said.
The Weather
Min
41
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Niulh lli-ncl
Rnsrhlll H
Srfn Fr.mi-i'ii
I.m Armi-U-s
rnlCflt?"
Nfu Vol v.
W iltinirtw
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(I n -
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i .il j
In
Temnriliir
Thli Year
I t Year
Nnrmal
I MM
11 21
IS 19
Over
Missiles are fired from test
center at Patrick Air Force Base
in Florida. Until now the missiles
could be fired only 1.000 miles
under agreements signed with the
British in 1930 and 1952.
Route Okehed for Missiles
City's Water Prices
Boosted; Starts July 1
By ROBERT E. GANGWARE
City Editor, The Statesmaa"
The price on garden watering- and on commercial water use la
Salem will rise abruptly, beginning next week.'tht City Council de
cided Monday night.
But the city's minimum water
using under 360 cubic feet) will
being.
Salem aldermen voted unani
mously to put into effect a new
rate plan designed to boost water
revenues by $110,000 a year in or
der to pay off the long-term bond
issue for a second major water
supply line from the North San
tiam River.
Review Possible
The rate plan passed Monday
night may not be the final an
swer, Mayor Robert F. White de
clared. After the heavy water use
season of the next few months, it
will be reviewed to see if the
additional revenue is sufficient
and is fairly apportioned, he in
dicated. I'nder terms of the new city
rate law. the new charges will be
,""' receive in juij.
Lose tow Rales
For householders throughout Ihe
city, the principal change will be
in the elimination of the low Irri-
cation rate which for years has
been in eltect during summer
-. i I i ..,;ll
monms. mis means me inc
go up from 5 to 15 cents a hun-
died cubic feet after the first 500
cubic feel
In general, this feature will add
up to a doubled water bill in the
three or lour irrigation months
lor householders who use a lot of
evlia water outdoors in the sum
mer. Over the year. Hie waler
bills for most residential users
ill probably average out al some
where between 2 7; and S3 50 in
stead of Ihe present $2 to $2 50.
water olficials have eslimalecl.
Small Concession
Industrial users will pay heavy
evtra water prices, too, especially
the canneries 111 summertime
I i;i In 1. -ers w II pav 7 instead
of 5 rents a hundred in Ihe high
brackets ller 500 000 culm feet
a month 'which largest numerics
use-, the rale would he '. cents,
this concession having been made
In the council last nighl after a
vliiilv aimed at bringing the big
industry water rate increase clos
er to 25 per cent than the 40 per
cent originallv outlined in the two
( i.
vc;
:.r-ill cialer rate proposal
1 Additional
2, Ser. l.i
Council news.
(iales.
Faor
MillCilv
Merger
Of HidiSehools
,,0i Stxlrsman Nfi Sfrvue
'"'! M1U, CITY SchiHil voters of
'Z both (iates and Mill City voted
mi ; heavily in favor of a union high
school district Monday
no Mill City favored t h- merger 114
'"' to 2 and Calev voted f 24 lor the
"" ptopoval lolh 1 1 -t r i it -i had pre
it viol .Iv ca-l l.ivoralili- voles on the
ir al; i i 1 In;! a thil il pi opcisi cl pal
',','( ! -'o alley h.id at that elee
; tain volr'l to slay out The new
ele I lot; ! neit w a- nei-cs.il
i Voters in Ihe two di.slncts Mun
: day a!-u appiovcd the proposal to
I take over MJI City High School
1'nrnnrrtv for the union hich
dis
I r- t - ' J - " -
I trici.
PRICI U
- U
Possessions1
The old agreements permitted
' the- missiles to be shot over the
British Bahamas.
j I'nder arrangements completed
in Washington Monday, the range
jis extended to Ascension Island,
rate of 11.20 a month (for those
stay Ihe same, at least for the time
Salem Video
Firm Asks i
TV Channel
WASHINGTON I - Salem Tel
evision Co. Monday applied to the
Communications Commission for
TV channel J at Salem, Ore.
I At the same time, the company
asked the commission to vacate
i the channel 3 construction permit
! held by Salem Radio Station
KSLM. The petition said forfeiture
I was warranted because the permit
jwas issued in September, 1953.
I and no station has been put
the air.
on
i j
is owned
I Salem Television Co
by C. 11 Fisher, vice president of
KVAL-TV at Kugene, Ore.
Storer Broadcasting also is seek
ing Salem's channel
its Portland outlet,
operating on I'HF
3 for use oy
u '. T
m iv recently aavisea me com-
I mire inn it nnii rnnt rani A In mif
... .--. ... "". i Hofman, 61-year-old faun neater,
chase the Salem channel. provid-ihad wo) inf1uonw over Juliana
ed the commission will permit Hs;h , to a(far 0f state
r,nt n. In I'Arl anfl
Kxcursion Hoat
Proposed for (lily
A Willamette River excursion
boat was proposed to Salem City
Council Monday night
Councilmen referred to the city
manager a request from Richard
I. (' Panek, of Willamette River
Trolleys, for permission to estab
lish such a boat service with
loading privileges at Wallace
Marine Park
In another tjgn of increased
marine activity here, the alder
men adopted a Iraflic code apply
ing to the marine park, with one
way routes set, parking specified
and special area reserved for
boat trailers
Embezzling
20-Year Term in Prison
Milll-'OI.K. Va Minnie
Maii-;um. who stole more than a
million dollars from her employer.
, was .sentenced Monday to serve
j L'O years in prison She will be,
'eligible lor parole alter live years j
The .Vi year-old defendant, a!
plump spinster whose formal edu-
cation ended in the seventh grade.!
was sentenced to 10 years for em
bezzling $1 ,(W2 .8 I'.i and 10 years
for lying to the stale corporation
commission in her financial re
ports. i
Corporation cour' indue II Law
li-ece Btilloc k speci'ied lite two
sentences arc to run consecutive
ly He imposed sentences ol two
vears each to run concurrent
with the :o vc . ers. on eight indict
ments alleging forgery, two allcg
- i ing false information and one al
'lcing embezzlement ol J17.000.
N. 91
vilDSSDUe
S.tM mile la the South Atlantic
roughly halt way betweea Africa
and South America.
ft will be possible, aa Ah- Fore
spokesman said, to test hilly long
range fuided missile, such as th
"Snark," one of the newer weap
ons under oevekwrnent.
Each missile which leaves the
launching area in Florida trav
els down a flight corridor aver
aginj 40 mile ia wkhh, Irom 1
which all ship and planes have
been cleared ta advance.
All alocf the way the flight t
observed by radar, by f d
watchers en island stations and
where possible by camera-eauiD-
I ped observer planes.
Fewer to Destroy
A safety officer at all times has '
the power to destroy the missile
if it fives any Indication ot get
Ung out of control.
The extension of the range lim
its from 1,000 to 5.000 miles car
ried the implication that the t'HV'
ed States is nearinf the time x.Iiet
1 1 it will be testing missiles of much .
! ?reaer age thanr these already
tried out. ..
Navah Tested
In addition to the Snark, the
Navaho is another intercont'ne-'al
missile .which has been -ut
through its paces at the te f
ground at Cape Canaveral, Fla.;
Both the Snark and the Navaho
have ranged up to 5,000 miles. -J
Two agreements were signed
by Secretary of State Dulles and
British ambassador R;pf M sk
ins. Besides the Aseens on island
I cement there was em extend"
I,."- ml..n. .. i Puni
Hko to St. Lucia in tlx- Wind-;
ward Islands, roughly 400 miles.
Dutch Royal ::
Couple Said; :
Fighting Again
AMSTERDAM Ml -The Gh
man weekly Der Spiegel at Ham
burg, first to publish the disputed
report of a rift between Queen Ju
liana of The Netherlands and her
husband, Monday carried a fresh
account of friction ia the royal
household. ,
The news magaiint said Prince
Bernhard. Juliana's husband, was
threatening to leave the Dutch
royal court and take twa of hil
daughters with him unless his
mother received an invitation to
the June garden parly on hit
birthday.
A high source at the royal pat-!
ace here said this story was "non
sense." The report appeared as front;
mi eei her snlaxhed Dlcture of'
! Juliana and Bernhard smiling hap!
' Pily together when they were- Join-
prince Margriet, 13, and..
17-vear-old Princess Irene at a
sports festival Sunday to raisa
funds for the Dutch Olympic
I team
he royal family's
first
Der
appearance together since
SpjeBe ciajmed that Miss Greet
I . ...... '
L
nd thai the queen and her hus
band wrre about to get a divorce.
That report of Der SpiegcJ was
denied by government leaders and
palace officials.
Today's Statesman
'age
Classified 14-15
Sec.
.11
.11
II
I
.. 1
II
, H
II
. II
I
.... I
...
Comics 11-
Crossword 13
Editorials 4
Homo Panorama 6-7.
Markers 12
Obituaries 12
Radio, TV 11.
Sports 9, 10.
Star Gazer 2
Valley News 3
Wirepholo Pagt 11.
Minnie Gets
Three other indictments char?-;
ing embezzlement of $2.R84.000;
were dropped on stale pros. Lin- .
wood Tabb's motion.
Miss Mangum demonstrated
great skill at juggling the books
of Commonwealth Building and
Loan Assn to conceal defalcations
of almost three million dollars
that toppled the institution into
ruin
At her trials last month the state
produced witnesses who testified
Mis Mangum stole the vast sums
ol money during the past 22 years
and gave much of it to hr rela
tives and friends.
A score of these relatives and
'ricncls are now being sued by the
f Heral Savings and Loan lnsur
- ; ance Corp. lor more than a million
it contenas miss Mangum gave
them from her employer's fundi.