The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 28, 1956, Page 4, Image 4

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    k 4-(See. I) Statesman, Salem,
; Oreso ntatesman
"ho Facor Sways Vs. So Fear SltaH Awo
- trai rim uta. nt x. mi
jn .' Statesman Publiihing Company
7 CHARLES A. M'RAUUE. Editor & Publisher
fubfttrwi very morninf BuunM file m
f' t: . r M Mb ut au n rUnhm ajtau
L-
t fcnttnro at Um potloffu it hlrr., Ort At Mcoita
' tUM matter untf act f Cong rtM March 1. 117ft.
mtmmmmm mm, mi i i i mi mm
. r Mentor Aasc!ate4 frtta
, tot AMMiatr PrvM U cnUtMtf axclimvtly M th nM
: ,. fuf roptiaUeatitwi at mil loral news anntJ la
thia fmnnt
Admiral Ernet J. King
It is given to few people in history to play
the vital role that marked the career of Ad
spniral Ernest Joseph King and few could play
it to well. Hii death thii.week, nearly a
decade after the physical and mental exhaus
tion of World War II bereft him of his health,
a haf brought renewed Interest in his illustri
twu service and well It might.
Admiral King, an inlander (Ohio) by birth,
'was destined by disposition and drive to
achieve the fame his nearly 60 years in the
5 U. S. Naw earned for him. A Naval Academy
Appointee in 1897, he was dispatched on the
U.S-S. San Francisco during the Spanish
American War, later (1901) was graduated
fourth in his class. The academy's year book
said of him: "Temper? Don't fool with nitro
glycerine." But the temper was ' channeled
into the toughness, the discipline, the dedica
tion which his positive personality demanded
of himself and of everyone under his com
mand. I
A staff officer in World War
was successively in the surface fleet, the sub
marine service and in the naval air force-
learning to fly at the age of 48
couraging advice that he was too old. In 1933
he became chief of the Bureau of Aeronau
tics, and seven years later, less than a year
before Pearl Harbor, he was made com
mander of the newly-created
His subsequent career is well
two weeks after the Japanese struck, he
was made commander-in-chief of the U. S.
fleet, and engineered this nation's
strikes against the Marshal!, the
the Mariannas with the remnants of a feet
twhich for the time being could
than sail against major odds in desperate at
tempts to keep the enemy off balance. Within
'.three months he was made chief of naval
1! operationsthe only man in history to hold
two such jobs simultaneously.
The admiral credited the men in his top
command for subsequent successes and ulti
mate victory at sea. But it .was his broad
! strategy, his skill in having the
I; the right niches, and his insistence in know
ing exactly what they were doing
(he did not try to dictate details,
. results. He relied heavily on the
; of his commanders and his trust aid off.
!; Often decorated (two DSMs and the Navy
Cross), Admiral King ran a taut ship, 'tis said,
but only as a principle. Not known for eon
J dilation (he insisted at Yalta that the Japa-
nese could be beaten without assistance from ,
j; Russia), be still had a firm name for fair- '
! mindedness. His friendliness didn't get in the
. way of his duties, and yet there such in
stances which brought him to the bedside in
; San Francisco of a namesake, the late AP
; Photogrspher Ernest J. King, who then was
convalescing from a breakdown occasioned
' by long service as head of the still-photog
raphers pool in the South Pacific theatre of
war.
Admiral King's retirement from top com
mand (though not from his active rank as a
five-star officer) had left him out of the lime-
I light the last decade. But his
tility and accomplishment will be
; light of history a long time.
The first auner-hlchwavs are
,'. to be ready until 1958 but we
; Is going to wait for them. They'll Just be
!; handy to have at the time, not
delay mat trip lor.
!i West's Willingness for Peace at
By JOSEPH ALSOr
WASHINGTON The more
you study the Middle Eastern
crisis, the more you suspect
that the essential preliminary
of the Soviet intrusion in the
Middle East was
. y0m. t the famous sum-
I mlt meeting at
? f V Geneva, with
all its adman s
hopes and glor
ies. Tentative dis
cussions of 'he
crucial Soyiet
Egyptian arms
deal had of
jjaarpb Abf . course been
opened in the
month or two before the Sum
mit. Yet before boldly probing
for the very vitals o( the West
era Alliance, the Soviet leaders
must at least have wished to
know how the West would re
act They got the answer at
the Summit.
The President of the United
States and the Prime Ministers
of Great Britain and France
went to Geneva with the singu
lar purpose oi proving that the
great powers of the West were
passionately, unshakfsbly dedi
cated to peace at any price.
There was no better way to en
eourae the Soviets to take any
cold war risk they chose
Ia addition, it is now known .
that President Eisenhower actu
ally mentioned the Soviet offer
to sell arms to Egypt to Bul
ganin and Khrushchev. Ac
cording to authentic report, the
President was airily told that
this was "Just ordinary commer
cial : transaction." Apparently
this piece of arrant nonsense
was not treated with the con
tempt and -indignation it de
served. So the Soviet leaders
left Geneva with complete as
surance that they could safely
stick a ihiv right Info the most
vulnerable point of the Western
Alliance
." ' -
, Eveai thee, eeergetk actiae
anil ht well have prevented the
Mi
Ore., Thurs., June 28, '58
I, the admiral
against dis
Atlantic Fleet.
remembered
early Naval
Gilberts and
do little else
right men in
even though
that brought
responsibility
ability, versa
in the lime-
not exnected
doubt anyone
something to
Preceded Russian-Egyptian Arms Deal
worst from happening. Egypt's
President Gamal Nasser had
asked far a small quantity of
American arms long before he
began hi talks with the .So
viets. His sole concern was
then to get some arms any
arms at all la satisfy the army
an which his power depended.
All competent observers in Cai
ro agree that Nasser did not
foresee Ibe volume results that
the Soviet arms deal would pro
duce. On this point, the American
government had received a long
series of frantic warnings from
our Ambassador to Cairn. Henry
A. Byroads (who is now, ap
parently, to he made a scape
boat) These warnings were ig
nored The American arms
were withheld The Soviet -Egyptian
arms deal went through.
Thus Nasser emerged as the
predominant figure in a great
ly strengthened Arab national
ist movement, made independ
ent of the West hy Soviet sun
port. Thus the Soviets took
the first long step Inwards cap
turing Arab nationalism, and
using this nationalist move
ment is the Instrument to strike
at the vitl Middle Eastern
sources of the
Western
a nee.
The American reaction to
these tremendous developments
was uncertain to sav the least.
After the fall of Glubb Pasha
In Jordan, however, the British
reaction was violent. The Brit
ish cabinet decided that Brit
ain would use troops in the
Middle East, if this were need
ed to save the oil that ts Brit
ain'! lifeblood.
Wisely or unwisely, they prov
ed their resolution by ordering
the fight for Cyprus.
Such was the situation when
Bulganin and Khrushchev went
ta London. It tan aw be re
vealed that British Prime Min
ister Sir Aathaay Edea and
A Bold, New Plan
Washington County in Maryland is to con
duct a teaching experiment amazing in po
tentialities for. the educational world and
Startling in its possible impact on the teacher
shortage. The experiment is simple, if anything
electronic can be called simple. It is based on
having one - teacher provide instruction to
classes all over the county on a two-way
closed-circuit TV hookup.
tot instance, Miss Brown of the 5th grade
in one school could be tuned into 5th-grade
classrooms in a score of schools, ask ques
tions, respond to raised-hand queries, con
verse with pupils. Each class could see Miss
Smith, and vice versa, but classes could not
see each other.
The idea, at first, sounds a bit fantastic.
How could order be maintained in rooms
without teachers? Well, monitors, not quali
fied as teachers, would be an easy answer.
No claims are being made for the project,
which is backed by the Ford Foundation.
Sponsors have said "it is impossible to evalu
ate the end result.'' But at the end of two
years, Washington County and its 47 schools
and 20,000 students will know the result and
to what extent the plan is practical every
where. At least $1,000,000 is being bet that
the result will be good.
Certainly wide-spread adaptation of such a
plan would relieve the teacher shortage. But
John Bauer. Washington County school super
intendent, is inclined to believe that as a
whole the teaching profession will benefit,
too from the challenge thus presented and
from the higher salaries which a curtailed
personnel might permit.
It is a bold, brand-new plan and we shall
await a verdict on it with keen interest.
A new story recounts that "only" 3,268,640
new cars have been delivered by the Amer
ican auto industry this year. As compared
with the 1955 first-half production of 4.095.
151, perhaos the word "onlv" is all right. But
for ?ny other place in the world, snd for any
other year except those quite recent, the
3.288,640 new automobiles would still be unbelievable.
Seventy-six Multnomah County residents
were killed in traffic accidents last year, and
117 died in accidents in their homes, but
elsewhere in Oreeon the figures were re-versed425-269.
We don't know whether that
indicates Multnomah's streets are safer and
its homes more dangerous than in other parts
of the commonwealth but it certainly shows
more care is needed in both categories.
Editorial Comment
TRAVELER ABOVE THK BATTLE
t1. N. Secretary Genercl Dag Hammerslijold has
hid occasion in line nf duty to know'quite a number
o( Russian officals. He has crossed the Communist
trail in several parts o( the world, including Priping
and the' capitals of the Near F,ast. This week, how
ever, he Is setting out on a new journey that will
take him to Warsaw, Prague, Belgrade and-i city
where he ia said never to have been before
Moscow.
Clearly Mr. Haramerskjold cannot go as a nego
tiator, for he has no negotiating powers. He cannot
make trade agreement!, because he ia not a gov
ernment and does not represent a government. He
cannot contract for military airplanes, tanks or
dams, for he would not know what to do with any
of these if he had them. He can go only as an
agent of rationality in a world that often seems
insane, an ambassador of goodwill in a world that
still struggles with a discouraging amount of ill
will, in theory, at least, Mr. Hammarskjold should
be just as much at home in Moscow as he is in
New York or his native Jonkoping, Sweden. But his
employment has made him a citizen of the world,
or of that grtat part of the world which includes
the seventy-six members of the I'nited Nations.
In spite of the recent success of the Arab slates
and their Russian friends in preventing the Secur
ity Council from recommending a "mutually
acceptable" settlement in the Near Fast, the
Secretary General thinks that "progress" has been
mr e there. He doesn't plan In go there nn this
visit, but may drop by in October. He is certainl"
one man we can all wish well when he goes on
these errands i New York Times i.
Any Price
Foreign Minister Selwyn Lloyd
used Ihe strongest tone possi
ble in their discussion of the
Middle F.astern problem. They
flatly accused the Soviets of an
intentional attack on an area
of vital British Interest. They
warned they would fight to
avoid losing the oil. Khrush
chev and Bulganin only replied
hy hintine that thev might agree
lo limitation nf arms shipments
lo the Middle East if the British
would abandon the Baghdad
Part whlrli they know was
impossible.
The upshot was deadlock In
Cairo and Damascus, the Soviet
ambassadors subsequently told
the utterly false story that the
main theme of Khrushchev and
Bulganin in London was the
Soviet blocs determination lo
ghe solid support to the Arabs
atainst the Israelis This was
hardly less than an incitement
to Arab-Israeli war If the
Kremlin chooses to take that
risk, such a war will he a clear
gain for Ihe Soviets if the Is
raelis are defeated, for that will
amount lo the defeat nf the
West And it will also be a
clear gain if the Arabs are de
feated, for then the Arab na
tionalist regimes will almost
surely he supplanted in the end
licby' Arab Communist regimes.
AH the same, in his recent
visit to Cairo, the new Soviet
Foreign Minister. Shepilov, did
not take the final step to bring
on an Arab-Israeli war. He did
not take the Arab position on
Israeli's proper frontiers. Sheoi
lov'a caution suggests that Brit
ish firmness, despite Its some
what desperate tone, has made
the Soviets at least think twire
about the risks in the Middle
East. And this in turn suggests
that a firm, clear and united
Anslo-American Doliry, if it
can ever be worked out. oiav
yet save the djny in this critical
area,
(Copyright Its.
Naw York Htrald Trtbunt Inc.)
y
"Yes, dear! . . . Yes, dear! . . . Mind rutting it short, dear! . .,
There are peple waiting to PAY me for listening to them! ...
U'tnlaued from page ant.)
develop such power. Later the
Korean War gave fresh stimulus
to all military spending, and the
Air Force has claimed and re
ceived the lion's share.
After the military budget was
prepared, which carried the ap
proval of the joint chiefs of staff,
advocates nf greater spending for
air got busy. Articles such as
those by the Alsop brothers which
told of the rapid progress of So
viet air and -missile development
frightened sentors as well as the
Dublic. Air authorities were
quizzed by the Senate committee.
Predictions of grave risk within
few vear were freelv offered i
,inl unned nn ereatlv our i
work in aircraft and weapons de
velopment.
This alarm, however, does not
leu ine wnuie sioij unnntiois
think they can make something of j
J ...
an issue over an uurgeu tauuic
to provide adequately for air
power. They see a chance to em
barrass Secretary Wilson wno cer
tainry has contributed plenty of
Darrass,meni. at-naiui ayniiiigiun.
formerly sccreiary inr me nn
r orce is ?n hii um, nr
also a Democrat and a possible
cannmaie inr i resmeiu. n; mmx-
ton invited firing hy Tru-;
man for ov erreaching administra-i
lion policy. That politics was i .1 rp
factor may b seen in the factilJCatll laUCS
that 43 Democrats and S Repub
licans voted for the air Powrri'TV ,1 ,, 1,,
boost, and 37 Republicans and I LE'A"I0?"llclI"
Democrats voted against it.
Senator Byrd. one of the op- I ItVMin I'Iicf
ponents. told the Senate the Air v 1 1 lm 1
Vnrrm now haii S20 million in un
spent appropriations. Other testi-!
mony has been offered that funds
for research on atomic weapons
and suided missile have been
adequate f his 80th birthday.
The Senate is just 'to liberal Armstrong who had made his
with our money. Instead of being home recently at 405 Division St .
more conservative, it is m o r e J" ln Nebras
generous than the House-perhaps ,"pnrrs,1ded 0e1bnraskh8 anhd
because its fewer members can North Dakota until 1910 when he
make more speeches and pro- came lo Portland where ho en
claim to voters how responsive Raged in the grain brokerage busi
thev are to "popular demands." ness.
The country will have to rely on In 1925 he moved- to the Rosedale
Ihe House to hold down the for- district south of Salem where he
eign aid appropriation and to re- owned and operated a pear or
view with a critical eye Ihe billion chard. He was also an employe
dollar boost voted bv the Senate of Portland General Electric Com
for improved aircraft Pny in Salem until he retired in
1942.
Time Flies
FROM STATESMAN FILES
10 Years Apo
' June 28. 19 Hi
Fire culled three city blinks
tan
industrial property near the heart
ol .ucuiura. aesirujing six inm
packing and lumber companies
valued at over $1,000,000. I
23 Years Ago
June 28. 1931
Wiley Post and Harold (laity,
around Ihe world fliers, armed
at Fairbanks, Alaska Despite
slight damage to Ihe propeller
the two fliers arrived from Solo
mon, Alaska, in two hours and
55 minutes.
40 Years Ago
June 28. 1SI6
At a big jubilee held by the
Moose lodge in celebration of the
election of Miss F.slelle Wilson
as queen of the Cherry Fair. Ihe
queen-elect chose as her maids
of honor Miss Verna Coodcr and
Miss Rosalie Bach.
Kclter Knilisli
BY I). C. WILLIAMS
1. What is wrong with this sen
tence1 "I have aflecled a change
in my business, and I will he
away for awhile''
2. What is the correct pronun
ciation of "forehead ",
3 Which one ol these words is
misspelled'' Symbology. syme
try, symphony, sympathetic
4 What does the word "fals
ity" mean''
5 What is a word beginning
with en that means "surround
ings"? ANSWERS
1. Say. "1 have EFFECTKD a
change in my business, and I
SHALL be away for awhile " 2.
Pronounce fahr-rd. and not foer
hed. 3 Symmetry. 4. The qual
ity of being false. "The falsity
nf Ihe statements made him dis
trustful." t. Environment.
With the testimony universal
that the threat of war is. less
imminent now than it has been
since 1948 it certainly seems
strange that we have to increase
niir-s spending for military purposes.
Death Takes
O.W.Larson
Oscar William Larson, 1915
Broadway St., died at a . Salem
hospital Wednesday. He was 74
Larson, a retired hardware
clerk, had been a resident of Sa
lem for the past seven years. He
was born Mar. 18, 1882, in Clin-
,, Ic.wa
.: ' '
w3
a member of the Odd
Feilows Lodge at Harrisburg.
Survivors include his wife, the
former Selma Bloomdahl, whom
he married in 1907 in Los An-
. . hlr Urc V'J Pnn
Salem, and two brothers.
j,prj
and Albin Larson, both ol
Funeral arrangements are
can- i ; ihe Virgil T. Golden
, h(m,
CP. Bert Armstrong,
dale orchardist for -many
before his retirement, died
nesday in Salem one day
Rnse
vears Wed
short Surviving are his widow, Clara
H Armstrong, and two sisters,
Mrs. Ella Gillhain, Portland, and
Mrs. Minnie Kuhn, Newport; also
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be an
nounced later from the Virgil
T. Golden Co. mortuary.
Coggin Again
C I .
I gf I If IPIl I
A
At Willamette
The Frank A Turner award,
given by Ihe Willamette t'niver
sity law sihool In the student
maintaining the highest sihool
standing (or the entire year, went
for the second consecutive year to
Richard Cousin of Coos Buy
A junior law student. "rsgin
atlended the t'niversity of Oregon
prior lo enrolling at Willamette
lie is a member of I'hi Helta Phi
legal fraternity and served as a
captain in the marine corps re
serve. Mrs. Rcbo,
70, Succumbs
Mr Almira Ruth Rebo, 2B4.'i
Brnnks Ave, died at her home
Wednesday afternoon. She was
70
Mrs. Rebo, who had resided in
Salem for the last two years,
moved to Aumsville in 19.16 from
Montana She was born Nov. 1.
1885, inlolden Gate, Minn.
Survivors include three daugh
ters, Mrs. Dean Henderson, Sa
lem; Mrs Leonard Worle. Hub
bard; and Mrs. Peter Fredrick
son, Turner; two sons, Keith
Rebo, Salem, and Wayne Rebo.
, Aumsville; a sister. Mrs Laura
White, Walla Walla, Wash.; a
brother, William Mcintosh, Am
herst, Mass.; and 11 grandchil
dren. Funeral services will he held
Friday at 2:30 p.m. in Ihe chapel
of the W. T. Ri-Hnn '" '
home. Interment will be at Aums
ville Cemetery.
Salem Pair to
Tour Behind
Iron Curtain
A 12-day visit behind Russia's
Iron Curtain is ahead for a young
Salem couple leaving Friday for
New York to begin their unique
tour. '
- Richard and Joanne Scott will
see Leningrad, Moscow and Kiev
as part of a Lisle Fellowship tour ;
through Europe. On an air trip
'!Z?:,:
,i L ,.;. hv ... of'
Stockholm and Helsinki. After Rus
sia will come visits to Vienna.
Frankfurt, Bonn, Cologne and
England.
Scott, pastor of the First Meth
odist Church of Lynns for the past
year, is the son of Mr and Mrs.
l'rrry W. Scott of Salem with
whom the couple has been living
ru-cntV A Salem High School
graduate, Scott has attended
lamette and Southern Method
universities. Following the summer
tour he will return to the I'niver
sitv of Chicago to work towards
a master's degree.
The couple started discussing
possibilities of the trip a year ago
when it was first announced by
the fellowship and arrangements
were completed last December.
Both have participated in activi
ties of the fellowship, a human
relations study group.
While the Scotts are thinking
primarily of their approaching tour
of Europe, they are also thml:ing
ahe;ld to other summers. In con
sideration is a Lisle trip to Japan.
Meanwhile they are busy packing
and studying up on Russia for the
jaunt just ahead. '' - "
Detroit Dam
Bids Led hv
Portland Firm
PORTLAND Bigoni Roofing Co.
Portland, with an offer of $9.53S,
was low of four bidders when bids
were opened by the Portland Dis-I Berlin Pvt. Horace G. W'right
trict, Corps of Engineers, for re- house Jr., 26. whose wife. Mrs
roofing the Detroit Dam powar-' Beverly Wrighthouse. and mother,
house and control house on the Mrs. Marie A. Wrighthouse, both
North Santiam River i live in Falls City, Ore , has been
Government estimate for the assigned to the 6th Infantry Regi
work, which includes insulation for : mem in Berlin. An ammunition
the powerhouse roof, was $10,690 bearer in the regiment's Company
The Corps of Engineers decided L, he arrived overseas in Septcm
to advertise again for bids for mis- ber.
cellaneous mechanical, electrical;
and architectural work a' Detroit i Grafeawohr, Germany - Army
Dam and Big Cliff reregufating (: urM I. Ketchum, son of
dam on the North Santiam River. Mr and. Mrs. Lloyd Ketchum. De-
B:r's opened .lure 21 were re
jected because they were too hiuh.
The new bids will he opened al 2
p.m .luly 19. Completion lime is
l.V) calendar days.
Two Pickers
Hurt in Falls
Off Ladders
Two Salem cherry-pickers wcrel:a,j; 1ur'" T "I n
!, , ci r.i u ,i'(reek Naval Amphibious Base.
taken to Salem General Hospital
Wednesday morning following falls
from ladders.
Mrs, Lois Schamberger, Route 5.
Box 8;, received a dislocated left
elbow w hen she fell about 8 30 a.m.
while picking in an orchard near
her home, city first aidmen said.
Mrs Girta Meadows. Route 2.
Box 212. tumbled about 10 30 am.
while picking cherries at
t h e
Wheatland Cherry orchard, 5280
Hoodview ltoad, Willamette Am-
btilance Service attendants report-
ed Mrs Meadows received possi
ble chest and back injuries, at
tenda-'ls said
A&wult Counts
Against Two
Men Dismissed
''harges of robbery by force and
iiuirme, not armed, against two
southern Uregnn mrn were dis
nnsvod in Silverton justice court
Wednesday
freed were Paul K. Prihlde,
F I k I i) n. and Orval Ixe Dodd,
Scottsburg.
Charge against Ihe third man,
Adam Kreiter ,Ir . Portland was
reduced to simple assault. Bail
was .set at $2.')0.
'1 Ik tnrce w,.e accused of beat
ing and taking $12 from Frank
Allied Heaver. 22. Dewryville,
early Sunday morning after fore
mi; him into their i ar.
when you
must take
medicine . . .
HAVE YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED AT
m s ii's-sflii
Have the assurance that jour prescription contains
the finest, treshest pharmaceuticals; that skilled
pharmacists fill your doctor's orders with precision
care; that they double check their results to absolute
accuracy. You can be sure of all of this at Meier &
Frank's Salem, where you can enjoy prompt serv
ice and charge account convenience. You pay no
extra charge for this quality and service.
PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT STREET FLOOR
Phona 3-2211, Ext. 332
Governors'
To Back
ATLANTIC CITY I - The
4flth annual Governors' Confer
ence declined Wednesday in a row
over federal aid to endorse the'
1 program of President Eisenhow-
er's White House Conference on
Education.
In i story wmdup session be-
(,jnj ciosc doors, the governors
als0 Mppe(j the Supreme Court's
decjsion ,tate anti-sedition
,aw5 mt invoIvcd , nurry of
...
The governors also eased Dem -
ocratic Gov. C. Mennen Williams
of "Michigan off their executive
committee, of which he has been
Military Roundup
Thomas Paulus
Graduates in
fCC' O 1 1
I llflPPI NpIiAAI
VflillCl UvIlUUl
I Corps, Korea Army Pvt.
Thomas C. Paulus. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Conrad W. Paulus. 866 Oak
! St , Salem. Ore, recently was
! graduated from First Corps Non
commissioned Officer Academy in
I Korea. A 19j4 t'niversity of Ore
gon graduate and member of Phi
Delto Theta fraternity. Paulus is
a machine gunner in Company A
of the 7th Infantry Division's 32rd
Regiment. ! ln "nal political saivos aoig
the conference sidelines:
Tokyo - WAC PEC Mary E. ! Gov. Raymond Gary of Okla
Brown. daughter of Mrs. Verley i honia got out a formal statement
E. Rrown. Newherg. Ore., is a contending that the candidacy of
member of the (1059th Army I'nit Gov. Averell Harriman of New
at Tokyo Army Hospital. An nper- York (or the Democratic presi
ating room terchnician. M i s s dential nomination "was advanced
Brown arrived in the Far East 1 greatly" during the gubernatorial
last August. sessions here.
I Gov. Orville Freeman nf Min-
Munlch, Germany Army Cant. !.... nrsHirJH . tJii. jt!i r
Ray 'R. Aebischer, son of Mrs.
Emma Aebischer, 1SR0 Jefferson
St., Salem. Ore . has been as-
. signed to the Southern Area Com
mand in Germany.
troit. Ore . recently completed 2.V
day field training tests with the
inth Infantry Division in Germany.
A 19S.1 Detroit High School grad
uate. Ketchum is a squad leader
in Company H of the 87th Regi
ment. Norfolk, Va. R a y m o n d C.
Riche. son nf Mr. and Mrs Harry
I.. Riches, Salem, Ore., Route 5.
Box 403B, was one of 95fl Anna
polis Academy men completing
two weeks amphibious warfare
training with 5fl Royal Canadian
V -. ... . J , . i
Norfolk. Va.
Stricken Depulv
Kesls Comfortably
Herman Doney, Marion Cnun'v
sheriff's deputy, was reported to
be resting comfortably at Salcn
General Hospital where he is
under observation, his
family
said Wednesday night
Doney was taken to hospital
Mnnd-n mornina following a sud
den illness at home.
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Conference Declines;
Ike's Education Project
member (our times,
any chance (or the
chairmanship.
Instead, the chief
named Gov. Thomas
' of Virginia, a Democrat whose ro
j litical views are far removed
from ""e of Williams, as their
chairman. The understanding was
tnat wxt vpar's meeting will go
10 Williamsburg. Va.
AlmMlout s,,,,
I In what was described as a
; highly acrimonious session, the
governors tabled a proposal tn en-
dorse not only the While House
Conference renort nn education
but the Eisenhower-sponsored
study of higher education.
The While House report recom
mended federal aid only for states
which it said must have such
help.
The segregation squabble and
the crack at the Supreme Court
were tied together in a single
resolution.
lonicrence memners saia tne
rej(i)fl4on was aimed mainlv at a
Supreme Court ruling that stale
aftti-sedition laws intrude on fed
eral domain and are invalid and
at decisions including water
rights.
Also in the closing hours of
their conference, some of the gov
ernors divided over the adv isabil
ity of pushing ahead full speed
' on peaceful development of atom
ic power.
.. . ... .j,
, Po"tU' M . Jd.
Stevenson will capture the Demo
cratic nomination and go on to a
Take Aonf
wmi. a aaaam
Sporo glottal era mora Impertont to yeur plow and
SAFETY . . . rhon the tpoe tire you etvry for your earl
They're the moil effactiva "good time inturance" we
know for anon who wean glasses.
CPtOMETRIST
Convenient Terms
422 Court Street Phone 3-3091
(f '
... 1JI . ill 1 i:,-iif vftiih.
Who's asleep? Not this baby... nor his
mom or dad! No, thry won't be caught napping
when opportunity comes along; because every
member of the family has a savings account!
If YOU HAVEN'T STARTED YOURS, W! 1
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or mora wa allow the use of a safe deposit box for ona
year rent free.
mm
CHUCH
and out of; November victory with the help
conference ; of the farm belt. Freeman
plumped for Sen. Hubert Humph
executives t rey of Minnesota as a vice prcsi
B. Stanley ' dential running mate for Steven
son.
Eiecutive Cammitlre
The new executive committee
includes, in addition to Stanley,
Govs Robert K. Smylie ol Idaho,
Charles H Russell of Nevada, ,loe
Foss nf South Dakota. Theodore
R McKeldin of Maryland. Lam
Dwinell
of New Hamnshirr Kr.
res' W. Mcail""1 .-!.-,,
Freeman and Abraham Ribieoff
of Connecticut.
In the final news session of the
conference,- Gov. Freeman dis
claimed any ambitions to he the
' Democratic vice presidential nom
inee. He said' he is a first term
governor trying for another term
with a program he hopes will im
prove his state
tfurrson&talrsmaa
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