2-(Sec. I) Statesman, Safcm, Ore., Sun.. July 29, '58 f To Aid Natives in Indochina . Br RUSSELL BIERAICEL Staff Writer, The Statesman (Pktare oa Page 1.) "We're Just four guys who think the natives of Indochina should ba shown how Americans liva and wa art young and egotistical enough to think wa can carry it off." That, in a nutshell, Is the rea son Dr. Thomas A. Doolejr and three young friends, one of them from Salem, ' are going to spend (he winter In Laos, a kingdom in Vnrthu. Inrinrhina. livinf with native tribes, treating their dis eases, showing them Disney mov ies and feeding them American Canned and packaged food. Young Dr. Dooley, who intro duces himself simply as "Tom Doolejr," is rushing today from Man's Body Pulled From Car in River. EUGENE l Tbe body of an Oakridge man, Edwin E. Tatom Jr., about M, was recovered early Saturday from an automobile (hat plunged into th .north fork of the Willamette River on mil north of Westfir ... . A West fir logger. Bob Burns, discovered the car at 1,30 a nt. in six feet of water at (he bottom of a fO-foot embankment. - The parking lights were on. ' Sheriffs officers said it was not determined whether Tatom . was the only occupant. The mill pond of the Edward Hines Lumber Co. immediately . downstream was drained to further search efforts. Governor Smith, Other State Chiefs Back Eisenhower SAN DIEGO, Calif. Gov. Elmo E. Smith of Oregon and three other Western governors and their wives arc weekend guests at the month-long civic Fiesta del Padflco. t rridsy night, t b t governors agreed at a press conference that President Eisenhower would be renominated by acclamation at the Republican national convention in San Francisco next montn. ' Attending the conference were Smith, Gov. Robert E. Smylie. Idaho, Gov. Charles N. Russell, Nevada. Gov. Goodwin J. Knight, California, and Gov. Samuel W King, Hawaii It's Fun to Dine Out ci::::ese -uk mm led (sluts faatf totl AssartcM fees' Im Special Parties, Largo or Small. Call Z-M2J far laiamatlan Chlaeso read to Take Out 1MH N. Commercial St. , Open I .as. to S ua. Satarday 1 urn, 4 i . .... ..- 3 LCCCCCO (Home Made) DGG GDGAD 1272 Stat Strwt Wo Faalu.e K$H quality law FrUao IVeryday A Gallon-05c . 2 for 1.65 All Harare 'tar Tsar favor - Also Diabetics rrotra Psssart Special 'Order For All Oceasiaaa Tksao MIN soay dinner Prima lib ' Rooot of Beef .; ' Roast Oregon Turkey Oilla, Oanharry ItM, fear Cm Caia Mm, . WMaa x CM k.p,l. Umt- Air Our Mtnu is a Gourmat's guide to Suparb Dining! For your Sunday Dinntr . PRIZI-WkNNINO HAM AND ROAST TOM TURKEY QP with oil tho trimmings uet 7 J THE SAN SHOP a2Z5r. . i ' Portland Rood at Norm City limits . . For Orders to -Hone 26783 . j. WONDERFUL FOOD ' Served In AI3 CONDITIONED COMFORT Entrees for Sunday Dinner 12 noon to I p.m. BAKED PREMIUM HAM ROAST LEG OF VEAL with calory dressing "' Can lal (children undor lOjuat 44) ,30 Salads & relishes to help yourself to Choice "of hot ontrao with all tho fixin't ,Coffoo, Iced Too, Orange or lemonade Choice of 4 delicious deiterts an energetic 30-hour visit in Salem to a dinner engagement with actor-producer Kirk Douglas this evening in Hollywood, Calif. Shepard ta Jola Misslaa Here, he visited Salem'i Denr nis Shepard. who will be a mem ber of the four-man mission to the mountains between Communist China and coveted Thailand. . His dale with Douglas' will de cide whether the actor and the doctor can come to terms on film-, ing of Dooley's best-selling book "Deliver Us From Evil", of hit experiences as a Navy medical officer in Viet Nam in 1954-55. The isue.i not money, although a good price would be accepted gratefully to aid financing of the expedition. The actor wants to jfii up the story a little with soma fictitious excitement and an important role for an interesting female figure. "He probably thinks it would add interest for the public,? vol unteered Shepard. "Well, It would." laughed Dooley. "There's no doubt about it. But 1 am not going to give an inch. Other QaestWas If the actor and the doctor can agree on the story, there are other questions to be decided Douglas wants the tall, handsome doctor with a slight St. Louis drawl in his soft voice to portrsy himself in the movie. That is out, Dooley said firmly, because Uk ing the role or even staying with the company to advise during the entire filming would mean that ha could not spend the full mon- aoon-free season, September to April, in the villages. Tho moun tain roads are impassable about six months during the summer, he explained. Dooley's "Operation Laos" was conceived while he was tho only doctor at Haiphong Evacuation Center while 600,000 North Viet namese fled Communist aggres sion. Its purpose Is to counteract Communist inroads in Laos by giving the native tribes the medi cine and treatment, along with American friendliness, which made the corpsmen almost legend in, North Viet Nam. Many of the natives they will deal with have never seen a white man and none of them have ever seen a doctor, Dooley said. Dooley received the U.S. Navy Legion of Merit and South Viet Nam's highest award for hia work at Haiphong. Trae lasaressiao His assistants, Shepard. Nor man Baker ef New Hampshire and Peter Kessey of Texas, were selected from among "hundreds' of corpsmen he knew in the Navy aa best suited to make friends with tho -natives . while , giving there a true impression of Ameri cana, Dooley said. . He pointed to Sheeard's embroi dered vest and the "hot rod" at the curb aa examples of posses sions of an "ordinary, energetic young American." The men are all mentioned In the book which recently was condensed in Read ers Digest magaiine and read Into the Congressional Record. Shepard is 24 and the other two are younger. All were with Dooley at Haiphong. Shepard may be an "ordinary American." but his aim is high. A premedical student at Oregon State College, and technician at Salem General Hospital, he plans to enter University of Oregon Medical School on his return from Laos. His wife, the former Msu ryne (Chirk) Nichols, plans to re main in Salem while he Is gone. The "corpsmen" are to meet Dooley, who will go on ahead, in Saigon about Sept. 1. They will return in about a year, Dooley said. The mission is under the aus pices of International Rescue Committee to avoid taxes, al though it receives no funds from the group, Dooley said. Medietas Daaated Several large manufacturers have donated medicine and equip tent, and food has been given by the U.S. Navy and Meals for Millions Foundation, he ssid. Money comes from sale of "De liver Us From Evil," a Research Corporation of New York City grant, lectures by Dooley, and in dividual contributions. The group will spend about three weeks, with each tribe, pitch' ing their tents in the village or as nesr as possible, and return to the capital, Vientiane, for new supplies after each visit. They will work closely with the friendly Laos officials, seeking to strengthen allegiance to the gov ernmeht and to promote the popu larity of the Laotian Public Health Department among the tribes, Dooley said. Dooley, 29 and unmarried, plsm to continue writing as well as en tering private practice on his re turn from Laos, but he hopes hi "mission" will be the forerunner of many similar private expcdi tions to the arrs. No-Rain Indian Dance Halted By Thunderstorm WARREN, R.I. Wi - Members of the Warren Indian band (none, incidentally, Indians) went out Saturday' and performed an In dian ceremonial no-rain dance. seeking good weather for Sun day's once-postponed New Eng land drum corpi festival here. They had just about concluded the dance when the skirs dark rned and the band was drenched by a sudden thunderstorm. There will be no no-rain dance preceding Sunday's festival. . 499th Offer Tops Timber Tract Bids ROSEBURG U - In the year's most spirited bidding, Woodsrd Lumber Co. of Cottaga Grove out lasted two competitors and won a 14,400,000-boardfoot timber tract on the day's tnoth offer. Dropping out at the 497th and 498th bids Friday were Bohemia Lumber Co. of Culp Creek and Lilligren Logging Co, of Disston. Wondard's winning offer wsi 1709.100 for the Umpqua National Forest timber appraised at iw, IS. Douglas fir and pine appraised at 129 JJ a thousand brought S5I.U. ' a Power Line Badly Burns Ely Woman KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. in A power pole crossarm plunged to the ground near Bty Saturday aft ernoon, dropping a high tension line on a rancher's wife. She was badly burned. Attendants at Klamath Valley Hospital here said Mrs. Laura Martin, 45, was in critics! condi tion with second and third degree burns. Her husband, J. Martin, gave sheriff's officers this account of what happened: Lightning from . an electrical storm Friday night apparently left the wooden crossarm smoldering. Embers dropped to the ground snd started a grass fire on the Martin ranch. 45 miles, east of here. When the blaze flared up Saturday afternoon, the Martins soaked burlap sacks in wafer and ran to extinguish the fire. As Mrs. Martin stood beneath the power line, the cross arm broke off and draped the hot wire ever the woman. Martin managed to pull her away, unconscious, and she was taken to the hospi tal. He was not injured. Roving Horse Returned to Area Home A runaway horse captured on Salem streets early Saturday morning was back at home Sat urday afternoon. Salem police observed the ani mal In the too block of North Cottage Street about 4:30 a.m. A chase etsued and the horse was caught in the 600 block of Ferry Street Officers hitched the horse to a post at o parking lot on Ferry and South Church streets. The mare waa removed to Gillespie's auction barn later in the morn ing and wss picked up there by its owner, R. C. Blakely, 665 Cum mlngi Lane. Dionne Twins Go on Display In Incubator SPOKANE l - The Dionne twins, following the family tradi tion set by their famous quintuplet cousins, went on display In a hos pital incubator Saturday. The tiny girls, born Wednesday. are the daughtera of Herbert D. Dionne. first cousin of the Canad ian quints.. The sisters weighed less than four pounds at birth. "I guess I was supposed to have five at once and make my doctor famous." ssid Mrs. Dionne from her hospital bed. "but I guess I surprised him with twins." Until Saturday, the twins were known as "A" ant "B". but Mrs. Dionne finally decided on the names Cathrine and Christine. The incubator sisters showed normal loss of weight after birth but now. have begun to gain and scaled in' Saturday at three pounds one ounce and three pounds one and a half ounce. The Dionnes now have five chil dren. Including two other girls. The grandfather is Herbert J. Dionne, a Spokane baker who is a brother of Olivia Dionne, fath er of the quintuplets. His son also works as a baker. FBI Mixes Sexes .V I In Suspect Capture "IfjprWW'jj' ftmMHfWr jppiM.WlffrtA&t' i'WffHfifKff siSapaaBaeajMswjpsao . ' . n. ' '' ' ' V i, . - '): . : A ' f "- l: V 'A',. -V- :.f : :' V w :: A s . ' V ' J I "'V y 1 7" INDIANAPOLIS Nebady was snare auprlsed thai FBI sgeata whs arrested "James Waddell," above, ear theft aid forgery charges, then leoad their 140-amiad prieeaer was a wsmaa. Shirley Jeaa WaddeU, U. AP Wirepkoto.) INDIANAPOLIS I FBI ag ents thought they got their man after an eight-month search, but ",he" turned out to be a woman. Leonard Blaylock, agent in - charge here, aaid the FBI learned only after her arrest Friday that the crew-cut youth with horn rimmed glasses sought for forg ery and auto theft was Shirley Jean WaddeU, 25, originally of Cincinnati. We hadn't the slightest idea she was a woman," Blaylock said. "Nobody did." He said the Hoot-I, 140-pound Miss WaddeU had posed as a man. using the name James M. Wsd- dell, since last October. She was charged last Novem ber with transporting a stolen car from Miami, , Fla to St. Louis Theatre Time Table axaiNone (Continuous frsml 1 am.) "PAnoNiata-! 10, 4.1a, 7:Ji "BIACH COMBERS': I SI, 0:11. I IS CAPITOL (Continuous from t p.m.) "TJlIBUTt TO A BAD MAN I i m. rr. to os "storm riAR'i ras, m, 111 NORTH SALKM DRIVB IN (Gatt epn S:4S Show at Duik) 1ND GREATEST SEX," Co. Nadrn "DESPERATE HOUR S," Humphrey Bogart HOLLYWOOD'. "MAN IN GREY FLANNEL SUIT": 1:15. I 3S. S OS after renting it with a forged check. An attempt to sell it to an Indianapolis desler Thursday led to her arrest, Blaylock said. The FBI said Miss Waddell probably would be removed to Miami under a federal warrant tor arraignment there. Sightless Man's Seeing Eye Dog Becomes Blind LOS ANGELES JI - For 13 years Jeanne, a German shepherd seeing eye dog, has led sightless H. P. Trusty, a design engineer, to and from his business appoint ments. Then Jeanne went blind. "She was crowding against me, Instead of leading me," Trusty explained Friday as he wiped a tear from his eye. "I had sensed that It was coming. Then, when she lost her sight she seemed twice aa close to me as she had ever been before. "I took her to our veterinary. He put her to sleep." Cars Crasjh Near-Silerton SUtauaaa News Itnlcs SILVERTON Two cars re ceived moderate damage in a col lision on Highway 211 one-half mile north of here Saturday, state police reported. Officers listed drivers as Chaun cey Blair Bunke, Molalla, and Keith Edldron Sheythe, 47S 8. 17th St., Salem. Sheythe was charged Train Smashe Car Young Driver Unhurt . BERKELEY, Calif, I - A San ta Fe locomotive smashed Satur day 'the convertible in which Ca rol Ann Nord, 19, of El Cerrite was taking a driving lesson. Trapped In the crushed ma chine, Carol Ann escaped with ml nor cuts and bruises. with failure to signal for a turn, police said. No Injuries were reported in the 1:45 p.m. mishap. Bones Place Man Age at 20 Million Years ROME Ian An American scientist searching (or traces of a pre-man said Saturday that bones already found push the beginnings of man kind back "15 to 30 million years" almost twice the age previously estimated. Dr. Hrlmutt De Terra of Colum bia University, New York, told re porters a section of jawbone has been found, along with bones from the fret and hands of Oreoplthecus, the oldest dawn man ever known. It had been thought from earlier nnaings msi ne uvea 10 minion years ago. Dr. De Terra said ad ditional bones found in an old lig nite mine near Pisa place the age of the man like creature at 15 to 20 million year. New bones are being found weekly. Miss Universe Said Adopted Child in Story OMAHA i Miss Universe of 1957, Carol Morris of Ottumwa. Iowa. Is an adopted child from an Omaha Institution, the Omaha World-Herald said in a copyrighted story Saturday night. The newspaper said It learned the story about the 20-year-old beauty's background while prepar ing a biography. In giving her background to publicity agents of her movie studio she listed her birthplace as Omaha. Miss Morris wss named Miss Universe at the recent contest at Long Beach, Calif. The World-Herald said the Rev. La Verne Morris and his wife were serving the Christian Church at Oakland. Iowa, when they sought a child from the children's home here. They lived in Oakland from 19M to 1941. The adoption never was a secret among acquaintances in Iowa where the Morris family lived, the newspaper said, and the Rev. and Mrs. Morris told Carol about it several years ago. The newspaper Mid it contacted the Morris' and confirmed the re port at the hotel where they are staying in Los Angeles. Chicago Fruit Wagon Horse Turns Racer CHICAGO W You'd never think to look at him that Tony, the fruit wagon horse, was a sprinter. But look at the record book the police record book. Something happened Saturday at Damen Ave. and Taylor St. Nobody knows what. But, tn a twinkling, Tony was off and run ning. The" shafts of the fruit wagon were left behind like a seven-ton starting gate. Sa was Tony's boss, fruit peddler Frank Russio, al though he tried manfully to over take the horse. At the first furlong pole, Wol- cott Ave., Tony, settled down to his pace, the asphalt if, Taylor St. making a firm, fast track Tony was puffing a bit at the quarter mile, Wood St; but he was game. He ran inio a sloppy track ap proaching Paulina, with such ob structions as traffic and confused pedestrians. Nashua or Swaps never faced such conditions. To ny's pace broke, and he quit try ing. He was cooled off by two po licemen who pabbed his flapping reins and remonstrated, "you arent ramus, old timer. Cause of Dallas Boy's Death Undetermined SUIfima Nwi Sirvlre DALLAS, Ore. Relatives of Randy Derkson, Dallas child, re ported Saturday that cause of the boy's death was undetermined. The child, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Derksen, died at a hospital here Friday. The relatives said the death was not caused by a fall as reported previously. Douglas Off To Explore Arctic Area SEATTLE Supreme Court Justice William v. Douglas new north to Alaska Saturday to ex- nlnr nu nf th tcnlAtpd and little- r " - - visited areas of the Arctic wilder ness. The m u c h-traveird associate justice and Mrs. Douglas left for Fairbanks on a Pan American World Airways plane. Sunday they will fly to Ft. Yukon on the Arctic Circle and then go by chartered plane to a spot in the Brooks Range, northeast of Ft. Yukon. "We are going to meet Dr. Olaus Murie somewhere in the Brooks Range and stay with him a week or 10 days until he comes out," the vacationing jurist said. "Our pilot will know where to find him, probably on some gravel bar." The 87-year-old Dr. Murie, of Moose, Wyo , Is a xoologist and president of the Wilderness So ciety, a privately-financed group dedicated to preserving public lands in their natural state. The trip into the Arctic of which he is a member is financed by the New York Zoological Society. (Douglas' story also aa Page 24, See. S.) 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DALLAS MOTOR-YU Gates Opea l:M Shaw Dusk Bert Lancaster, Anna Magnanl In . "THI ROSE TATOO" VistsVlsloa second feature Rory Calhoun, Piper Laurie In "DAWN AT SOCORRO" color Woodburn Drive-lit Sunday Monday Tuesday Walt Disney's "THI AFRICAN UON" Plus "HIT THI DICK" (Broadway Musical) Open 7:1S Rtarta at Dusk N. W. IIAOUI BASEBALL DOUELEHEADER T0NIGHT-6P.M. -WATIM AK- SAIEM SENATORS fvvi IEWISTON BRONCS Grandstand 73c leathers 50c PHONI 4-4741 20c Cent. 1:45 SOc limited Engsgoment-S Days Only-Start Today ' ' ""Tw7aiM ! ""'LfliTl GREGORY flOl iniM'ro inure ivmirir mom Jr tuff". ;? Tit. ;Ar? l. J ' LOU a? m w CiniwaSiocC r L W5. Jfil Plus News snd Short Subjects Wonderful Family Entertain ment. Our-Thoater Is Fully Airconditioned. STARTS SUNDAY AISAUM'S MM11T INTUIT AINMINT CIHTIR CONTINIOUS SHOW FROM 1 P.M. 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