Valley News Statesman Newt Service Saddle Club Gathers at CatesHonie atatriman Ntwa Irrvlrt SOUTH SALEM Phil and Clark Jackson were boat to the South Salem Junior Saddle Club Satur day afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Cates on South River Road, 'Ann Cales conducted the busi ness meeting and the group de cided to attend the Dalian Smlleroo on July 20, and the Stayton Bean Festival on August 4. New members elected to menW berahip were Steve Dawson. lAr lene Rybloom, Billy Trapnell, Doris Rybloom, Skip Shaw, Juli enne Larios and Janice Vang. Plans were made for the group's' fourth annual horse show August 19.. Bonne Jean Kurth and Clayton Steinke- Jr., are to be co-chairmen. Committees named were events, Ann Cutea. Cheryl Lee . Kurth, CJ?yton Steinke, Eleanor Parker, "Bonnie Jean Kurth, Lynne llammerstad and Susan Steinke; program, Joyce Cates, and July McClellan; entry, Ann Cates, Car olyn Howells and Arlene Rybloom: trophy committee, Eleanor Parker and Bob Thurlwelt; publicity, Cheryl Lee Kurth and Lynne Hammestad; grounds committee, Skip Shaw, Mike McKillnp, Phil and Clark Johnson, Gerald Kurth, Janice Fagg, and Sieve Dawson. Poster committee, Julianne Larios, Susan Trapnell, Melda Sunderland, and Cheryl Feller; concessions, Marvin Murdock. Jeff McKillop, Bill Trapnell, and Doris Rybloom. Schedules for the show were handed out. Drills for the club Thursday evenings at the drill field. , . Vnlley Ilrlefs Quota Election Committee Set DAYTON Referendum commit teemen for Dayton for the July 20 election to determine if marketing quotas will be in effect next year have been named by the Yamhill County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation committee. The Dayton people lire Adolph Schulr. chairman; Jesse Hoekema, vice chairman, and Melvin Blanch-ard. Illiteracy Fought in Latin America WASHINGTON I - The Or ganization of American States savs more than three million books for beginning readers of all ages have been distributed in La tin America to help combat illit eracy. The books will be used in 100, 000 reading centers which the OAS plans to establish throughout the 20 republics. SOROPTIMISTS TO MEET NEW YORK 11 The Ameri can Federation of Soroptimists, which represents 30.000 business and professional women, will hold its biennial convention here July 29-Aug. S. The federation's name neans '.'better sisterhood." ATOMS FOR IRELAND BELFAST, Northern Ireland i Northern Ireland plans to build a 185 million dollar atomic power station. It is expected to be ready for operation in 1963 or 1M. Utnaaia Nf wl Sf rvlt. Wlllamlaa Trch Sgt. and Mrs. Robert Arnold and children of Se attle are visiting at the Dan Ms tocha home. Mrs. Arnold and chil dren will live in Portland while Sgt. Arnold is on a tour of duty In Newfoundland. Oakdale Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Murphy have received word that their twelfth grandchild was born June 30 in Enidj Okla., to the Rev. and Mrs. Roger Carstensen. Deb orah Ann, who weighed ( pounds, ( ounces, is the Carstensens' sixth child. Falls City-Mrs. Charles Ander son's Den 1 recently treated Den 2. both of Cub Scout Pack 73, to a wiener roast in the Dallas City Park, he group is now planning a fishing trip for the hear future. W'illamina Mrs. Alice Gilson of Phoenix, Ariz., is bore visiting her daughter, Mrs. Ray Dundas, for two months. Grand Ronde Mr. and Mrs. Jess Knox of May wood, Calif., are guests of his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Quayle Know in Grand Ronde. River Plunge Ends Chase of Stolen Auto SPOKANE i A stolen' car being chased' by police swung down dead end street at 70 miles an hour early Sunday, crashed through a shed on city dock and plunged 50 feet into the Spokane River. Officers fished out the battered car not far from the downtown business district but there was no sign of the driver. Divers went down Sunday afternoon to look for the body. Officer Robert Mager followed the 1953 car through downtown streets. He said it was going 70 miles an hour when it missed a turn on E. Trent Ave. and swung down a gravel dead end road. The car was reported stolen Sat urday night from Mrs. Fred Cun ningham. It was parked in an apartment garage. Sentry Dog Captured by GI Master PLATTSBURGH. N. Y. (Jfl -Sheba was back in her kennal Sunday, her master was back on duty, and Pittsburgh Mr Force Base settled into normal routine. The big German shepherd sen try dog came quietly out of a patch of woods on the base late Saturday night in answer to the calls of her handler, Airman l.C. Matthew Bardlesy of Pawtucket, R. I., who had been summoned back from home leave. Sheba - refused to eat after Bardsley left for home last Sun day. On Thursday, she slipped from her collar while being taken to a veterinarian. Hundreds of airmen were thrown into the search for the dog, which Is trained to attack anyone who flees. But Sheba eluded them all. Bardsley arrived back at the base early Saturday night and went immediately to the -area where Sheba was surrounded. But there were too many people around to suit Sheba. She ignored the coaxing until the searchers withdrew and left Bardlesy stand ing alone in the- dark. Then she came out of hiding and Bardsley slipped a collar on her. An Air Force spokesman said the dog apparently had stayed in the section where she normally patrols with Bardsley. At first it was feared the dog had fled the base, and residents of this northern New York area were warned not to run from the dog and advised to keep children near home. The Air Force spokesman said Bardsley seemed relieved to be reunited with hi- dog.- He had feared that someone might shoot her, the spokesman explained. Now the air base has a new problem: How.iJo give Bardsley the leave he still has coming. "We'll have to make some ar rangement on leave," the Air Force spokesman conceded. But he would not speculate on how it would be arranged without She ba 's consent. Two Officials Sacked After Revolt in Poland VIENNA, Austria I Radio Warsaw reported Sunday a shake up in two ministers in Poland's Communist government. It came 10 days after the works' revolt in Poznan. The radio gave no reason for the the removal of Julian Tokar ski as minister of automobile pro duction, and Roman Fidelski as head of the ministry for mobilization. MOVIE FANS REVOLT, RIBERA, Italy iff Fans have organized a boycott against the two movie houses in this Sicilian city of 20.000. Their demand: No movies more than 10 years old. 26th Convention Of U.S. Catholic Daughters Due PORTLAND iff The 26th bi ennial convention of the Catholic Daughters of America opened here Sunday, the first in 20 years for the Pacific Northwest. Business sessions will begin Tuesday, and the meeting will close Thursday with announce ment of the Catholic Mother of the Year. The delegates will represent some 200,000 women in the organization. Original U.S. Opera Opens In Mining City CENTRAL CITY. Colo, iff -An original American folk opera, "The Ballad of Baby Doe." fea turing "Broadway and Metropoli tan opera performers, opened Sat urday night in the 78-year-old op era house in this historic mining town. It is sold out for the It per formances scheduled here. Prominent music and drama critics from more than 20 metro politan newspapers and five na tional magazines were among the premier audience. .Allen Young., music critic for the Denver Post, said most of them after an advance peek at a press preview Friday pre dicted success for the opera writ ten by Drt Douglas Moore and John LaTouche. Young wrote that the "concen sus was that the new opera was certain to be a smash hit wher ever it is performed: in the Cen tral City opera house, . for which, it was designed, on Broadway sub sequently or in the opera houses ! of the world." The production tells the story of H. A. W. Tabor, Colorado's early day silver king, ana his two wives, Augusta and Baby Doe. The opera was preceded by day long festivities including rock drilling contests by miners, fire hose cart races, burro races, and a pony express race. Rubbing shoulders along Eure ka St., which 'fronts the opera house, were such visitors as act ress Kim Novak, writer ' Lucius Beebe, singer Lily Pons and Mrs. Olga Koussevltsky. widow of the conductor of the Boston Sympho ny Orchestra. t .was noted that the "bread and freedom" revolt began on June 28 with a general strike by workers at the Stalin Railway Car Works after hearing soma of their representatives had been arrested by secret police. Other workers quickly joined the first demon strator. Tokarskl had been named to the new ministry of automobile production in April of last year. He is being replaced by Boleslaw Jaszczuk, who has been minister of electric powr. Blame Placed Fidelski got his appointment to head the machine industry at the same time as Pokarski. Fidelski is bring demoted to state secre tary in the ministry which will now be headed by Eugcniu Zew rzynski. Last week Trybuna Ludec, the Polish Communist Party newspa per, laid basic blame for the Poz nan revolt on the party organiza tions and the trade ''unions. The newspaper said these groups had lost. every contact with the work ers and failed to combat what it called heartless " bureaucracy: Move Told While the Warsaw regime was announcing the dismissal of the two heads of ministries, Commu nist Hungary disclosed another in a series of moves believed by western diplomats to be almd at reducing discontent in that Soviet satellite country. Erik Molnar, minister of jus tice, said 11,398 persons were re leased from prison following in vestigations by a rehabilitation commission. But the minister warned that the program of po litical rehabilitation would end soon, and those .sentenced on just ifiable grounds could not expect mercy. Yells for Aid In Vain After Car Accident SPOKANE (ff -A 12-year-old boy, his leg broken in an auto accident and his face covered with blood,, stood by the side of the road and yelled in vain for help from passing motorist Saturday night. Donald Culp, leaning heavily on a stick, had .made his way up a 23-foot bar.k to summon aid for himself, and his parents after their car: overturned near Chat taroy. Wash., some 15 miles north of here. Officer Edward Leaf of the state patrol said the boy yelled and waved at four or five passing drivers but that no one stopped. "A farmer a quarter of a mile down the road was watching tele vision but he still heard the boy's screams and came to investigate," Leaf said. . The farmer found Donald near collapse. His father, David H. Culp, 38, had head ruts and shock. His mother, Alice Culp, 33, who had been driving, was shaken up but not seriously v hurt. The car was oVmolijhedir . Donald was brought to a hos pital here where his leg was set. may ban re-entry Statesman, Sajem, Ore., Mon., July 9, ou (Sec. I)-3 SINGAPORE iff i The Straits ' . : ' . - - . , - Timcs reports the Singapore and Chinese who travel to Red China, bad. without a special perm't. Malayan governments this week Malaya - born Chinese between Singapore hs ni re-entry restriO It 1 1 a... m.t mm.m 11 at U MAUI rTlflV fTktTI . Will COnSKlfT Oe.ni.IIIi irTHU Ul I Pb J . Americans buy about 300 million dollars worth of phonograph record a year. LION DANCERS BANNED TOKYO (ff Japan's lion danc ers have been ordered off the Ginza, Tokyo's Broadway. By tra dition, dancers in lion disguise go from door to door at neighborhood festivals, getting contributions for driving away evil spirits. Police found the presumed lion dancers operating in Ginza's bars were lo cal hoocilums out for a fast yen (buck). 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