- Younq. State Fair Goers . . . Mil The Weather , sTe!ey'f forecasts Clear fa elay and Tuesdayi high btk days 7M0j low tonight near 40. . . (Complete) report suf I) TCUNDBD 1651 106th Year U PAGES Tha Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oragen, Monday, Saptambor 3, l?5o PRICI S No. 160 Weather Ups arid Downs .-. - J ' - . ,.'.:; "! Canal Meet i - ... Thrills. o( a roller coaster ride were added for Sunday's - crowd at the Oregon State Fairgrounds when installation ' " was finally completed. Here one' of the first "payloads" sweeps dowi the steepest drop on the ride to accompanying squeals and laughs of the riders. Installation delays pre- " i aaim mum Longer reflection is making It clear to the British that resort - to force to clear out Nttser from control of the Sues should be the -very last step. The Labor party which chimed in with the Conservative government in the first expression of pained reac tion to the Nasser move Jus since decried use of force. At hand now " Is the August 11th issue of Tha Economist (London), whose in telligent editing fives it distinc tion 'round the world. Its lead ed itorial is entitled "Long Haul at Suet," a title which reflects the attitude of the editor who is skep tical of force as a solution of the Sues problem. rffp British feeling which flared upi.,i , , nn ch.. ,. tk quickly showed a "mood of im- patience ill tuned to face a long and tedious contest of wills." But as The Economist points out: "It l danftTOui tllinion to uo poM thai th armada can Kttla mi tra at a itrokc and rlurn homi, Iravlnf the Middle Eait rltar for tht iranauii ana . m aerta How of com mrc." Again: "la Britain In fart prpard. ftavlnf Clamped a control by forra on an ac tively nwillinf Egypt, to alt on tht lid forever, while kerplnf furUirr maaalve military atren(lh handy to aai witn tne ineviuoie wide re per cuaeioiu in tne Arab world?" "The problem which Colonel Net aer ha flunf in our facet at Sun la a problem of $ollUca and in the end will have to find a political so lution, whether or not the military adventure la tried first. That has been emphasized in The Statesman again and again. The Economist, whose editorial was written on the eve of the 22-nation (Continued on editorial page 4.) Weathermen Predict fair " Today's expected big Labor Day crowd at the State Fair will find sunny weather continuing to bless the colorful show, according to forecasters. Clear weather also throughout last year's fair as well is in store for Tuesday. opening day this year. And the ' Sunday fairgoers foupd weather "Tunnel of Love another long close to perfect as temperatures awaited state fair thriller, of the hit a not-too-warm 7S maximum, peaceful type, also got going Sun- Today's high is expected to 'be tear 80. . Forecast for Oregon beaches is generally fair conditions today. v Fire danger Ja expected to. .In crease, with ' particular danger likely in the interior because of low humidity. WILBERT . I USMMf I Vy. I i aUSQUStAOf ' f ! WWYrOEll JnMEl ' JtaW . 9 I ' 1 mm mi JQJrl' I 'iriii'J!i:0o 1 k " . 4-H Youths Crowd Quarters at Fair; A ttendance Still Climbing By LILLIC L. MADSEN Farm Editor, The Statesssij Feeling the pinch of the con stantly growing popularity of the Oregon State Fair are the 4-H Club youngsters, mora than SO of whom bedded down outside the dormitory Sunday night .because there was no room within. (Pic ture on page 8). The dormitory was built in the (Add. state fair stories en pages 2, 4 and S. Picture en page 5). early ' twenties to accommodate about 300. Sunday, 363 boys and girls registered. During the week, Burton Hutton, State 4-H leader, said Sunday, more than 2.000 club youngsters will have had some part in the State Fair: gecond dy of ,9M 0rfgon S1. rtrw ,0 . ... I... year's total Sunday attendance of 69,279 was passed at 8 p.m. when the 1956 count was 11,000 above the 1959 attendance count at the same hour. When the final count was taken at 11 p.m. Sundav, the turnpike had clicked for 78,460 persons. Parked House While the free grandstand show, staged Sunday afternoon br the Multnomah County Sher iff's Corps, played to a packed house, the combined Rodeo and Horse show drew 3,736 tor its matinee. Only 11 seats in the en tire stadium remained unsold. Last year the grandstand aqd sta dium matinee shows drew a total of 3,840. Sunday night's revue this yesr brought in 4,794, with last year's attendance Sunday night at 4,738, both being sell outs. The 1956 fair is a happy fair, keyed by Helene Hughes' Revue built around laughs, and happiest of the happy Sunday afternoon at 2.30 was the entire state fair board, when its members took the initial ups and downs in the first big roller coaster ride. When dis mounting, the officials admitted that while it wasn't a "neck breaker" it was still "quite some ride." This is the ride promised day afternoon. No Flight But for the second time the balloon failed to ascend, again because of too much wind. ' - Winners lists in the 4-H Club division ' continued to grow with Terry Farrcll. 14, John Day, named grand champion 4-H sheep showman, while exhibiting a .South down fat lamb. Terry was earlier picked champion- showman "f the senior age group and won the top award in a runoff with inter' mediate showman, Robert Riches Jri,. .Silverton, who showed Todas. Statesman Classified Comics Crossword ........ Editorials : Homo Panorama Obituaries , Hedio-TV .., Sports .... Star Gaxer . Valley Newt L. Wirephoto Pago Pago ..10, 11 12 ........10 3 -..10 ....... 12 'eaOTai.eVf 1 12 xwrh - v. IT i vented the . roller . coaster from . being used until Sunday afternoon and hundreds of youngsters lined up to try out the new ride. Installers and Fair workmen made test runs on the ride before the public was permitted on the roller coaster. (Statesman Photo.) Hampshire ewe, and Nancy Fer guson, Albany, exhibiting a South down. CbampiM Skawaaa A 14-year-old Amity 4-H girl. Sharon Smith, was named cham pion dairy showman for the inter mediate group club members. Sharon won her dairymaid honors with a Guernsey, competing against Dale Pallin, Tillamook with a Jersey; Douglas Brown, Clatskanie, a Holstein, and Carol Boeckli, Portland, showing a Brown .Swiss. - Terry Diets, M. Metiger, exhib ited a sleek U-month old Jersey Heifer to win the junior 4-H dairy showmanship. Terry won aver Stolen Truck Clue in Hunt For Convicts MYRTLE CREEK. Ore.. Sept I- Police widened their search for four escaped California con victs after learning that a truck had been stolen in this area early today. It was a garbage truck, its bed empty but. its tank full of gaso line when it was taken from the home of a garbage collector. It had been serviced and left there at night with the keys still in it. Police Chief Jame Haun of Myrtle Creek said he believed the truck had been taken about a i x was reported. If the convicts get it. They did not escape to the South, Haun said. A roadblock was maintained through the night south of Myrtle Creek, but the convicts did not turn up, be said. The men escaped from a prison work camp in northern California, stole a plane and flew it to Med- ford Thursday night. . Bear Shot With Bow and Arrow SEATTLE. Sept. I tfl B. J. Crosby, Bellevue, Wash., shot a 300-pound black bear with a bow and arrow while hunting in the Cedar River area near Maple Valley, it was reported today. Crosby used a 64-pound test bow. I New Paternity Test to Aid Debated Fatherhood Cases By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE AP Science Reporter PHILADELPHIA', Sept. 2 WUA new kind of paternity test shows promise of helping settle cases of disputed, fatherhood, a German scientist reported today. It is based upon comparing numerous inherited trajta in child and father. Including such things aa the lines in palms used by for tune tellers, and the hair growth on part of a finger. This approach was described at the opening of the fifth Interna tional Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences by Dr. Use , Schwidetsky of the Johannes: Gutenberg University, Mainz, Ger many i i, H, i Fatherhood of a child Is fre- quently questioned in' law suits ana sometimes in esses ot muups of babies m hospitals with the question then being to which par ents baby really belongs. Blood tests era useful but such 1: vnv. w V George fycette, 12, Aurora, with a Holstein ; Bonnie Lester. 10, Cor- vallis, a Guernsey exhibitor, - and Steve Dumi, 10, McMinnville, with a Milking Shorthorn. Scaler Cnampiaa Sally Mongold, 17, Eagle Point, who was named champion 4-H senior dairy showman exhibited a Jersey, the breed for which her family is noted. Judge Lloyd Forster, Tangent dairyman, who watched for slip-ups in the almost flawless performance of Jhe young exhibitors said it waa .the "rough est contest 1 have ever Judged. Competing against Sally were the champions in the other breeds, in cluding Jerry McDonald. 18, Eagle Point, showing a Holstein; and George Randall, 16, Salem, with a Milking Shorthorn. The two-year-old conservation ex hibit contest brought blue ribbons to Tommy Pagh and Wesley Todd. both of Canby; Tim, Terry and Hugh Farrell of John Day. Today at the Fair Moaday, Sept. i 8:11 a.m. Gates Open l:Mi.m. 4-H Beef Cattle, Holsteins, judging 8:N e.m. Judging: Dairy cattle. Guernseys, Ayrshire and Brown Swiss, Beef cattle, Herefords. Sheep Corriedalcs, Romneys,. South downs, Dorsets. Swine All Barrow classes. 4-H cannjng and eclothing judging contest. Band Concert Midway Act Racing, Lone Oak 10:M a.m J:0p.m . l:Up.m Track 1:14 p.m. 4-H Jersey judging Rodeo-Horse show Matinee Flower Arranging demonstration 2:04 p.m. 4-H Foods and home making judging contests 8:04 p.m. Search for Talent Show Organ concert " 1:64 p.m. Rodeo Horse show Helene Hughes Night Revue Midway Act Gates Close 10:15 p.m. 12:M p.m. tests cannot prove that a given man is the father of a given child. Blood tests csn only show he could not be the father because the baby did not inherit a certain blood type. , Anthropology, the study of man, promises to help make paternity tests more specific, Dr. Schwidet sky told the sessions held at the University of Pennsylvania. Numerous physical traits art in herited. A group of these c ' be compared between child and fath er by visual observation or by mathematical formula to Indicate relationship 1 between man and child, she said. ' j Dr, Schwidetsky said none of these methods, has succeeded In discriminating 100 per cent he- uisiriiiiineuiiK ui tween a "right' and "wrong" father when tested, but the limits of false diagnosis can be set. Care ful analysis could avoid false di agnosis with sufficient accuracy to give the method practical, ap plication, the tail Ready Both Optimism, Doubt Seen for Suez Confab ; By TOM MASTFRSOM CAIRO, Egypt pt 2 (AP) Prime Minister Robert C. Hen ries of Australia, head of the five-nation Suez committee, am'vd by plane in Cairo to night for talks with Eevotian President Nasser on the future of the Sues Canal. .. Meniies reserved comment here pending tne first meeting of the committee with Nasser tomorrow on the 18-nation plan for Interna tional control of the canal. .Just bet ore his departure in London he had vowed "we will do our best" and expressed hope "reason will ne seen in Egypt as we see it." UA Eavey IMS Henderson. U.S. Deoutv un aer secretary of state for adminis tratlen, arrived just ahead of Mennes. The U.S. representative on the Sues committee also said it" would be "inappropriate" to comment at tnis tune. Despite tension here over the presence of massed British and French forces in the east Medit erranean, there was cautious op timism lnvxairo on the eve of the talks that they would not end in utter stalemate. Sierra Cloads But storm clouds still hovered over prospects for a settlement growing out of the meetings to be gin Monday between Nasser and the representatives of Australia. line United States, Sweden, Iran ana Ethiopia. Tne Moscow radio stormed anew over what it called threats of ag gression against Egypt by France and Britain a reference to mili tary preparations in the eastern Mediterranean by those two na tlAne ' Nasser has said he will oppose any form of international control over the canal. CAIRO. Egypt. Sent. 3 On-Pres- ident Nasser said today he would go to war to defend Egypt's stand on the Sues Canal, "if attacked." Asked at a news conference whether he would get Soviet sup port in case of an attack by the west, he replied: "Naturally, if you are attacked. you will ask anybody to help you." Cyprus Bomb Wrecks Office NICOSIA. Cyprus, Sept. 1 W- A time bomb wrecked the British o 1 n i a 1 government's print ing plant today. It was the second such strike sgainst British instal lations in 24 hours. The bomb exploded in the press room, blew off the roof and set fire to the closely guarded build ing from which British authorities have issued their official docu ments and waged a pamphlet war against the Cypriot unioa-with-Greece movement. Windows in nearby buildines shattered and the explosion jarred the center of thi. capital city. The plant was unoccupied at the time nd no one was reported Injured. Like the time bombing of the Episkopi cantonment of Britain's joint Middle East headquarters yesterday, the blast was blamed by the British on the EOKA un derground fighting to end British rule and link this strategic Medi terranean island with r-rece. Tot's Trapped oot Gets rirst Aid With Shovels It took some excavating by first idmen Sunday to Jree a Salem tot s foot after he caught it in an open sidewalk outlet in the 2100 block on Market street. Terry Scott, 3, of 2023 Market St., caught his right foot in the hole about 11:30 a.m. Aldmen said they worked about half an hour with shovels to break a por tion of the sidewalk and release tha foot. Other than for bruises, the youngster's foot . apparently was uninjured, aidmen said. v ftfT, ' At Salem -!, Xuftne S-e At Yakima -4. Spokane S-S ' At Lewlatoa 10-1, Wanatchee 4-1 ' PACIFIC COAST LIAOUe ; At' Portland -7, Vancouver 4-1 At Rin Dlefo 11-1, Sacramento 4-1 At Hollywood 1-1, Ban Trancltco ' S-J ''', At Seattle 1-4, Us Anselei 4-1 NATIONAL LrAflUt ' ' i .At, New ork -, Brooklyn 1-1 , At Mi.waukre S, St. Lou la 1 At Clnrlnnatl 1, Chlraeo I At Plttabursh 10-, Philadelphia AMERICAN LKAOtie , , At Chlrasn 4. Cleveland S At W.ihlnflon 4, New YorV . At Detroit S. Kaneaa City 1 . At Boston 10. Aalumora U Woman Killed InSMtiam Car Wreck Stateamaa Newt Senflte MILL CITY, Sept. tA woman died and n man suffered critical injuries Sunday night in a one car accident about two miles west of Detroit Dam on the North Santlam Highway, state police re ported. Officer Walter Cobine'said pa pers indicated the man was Myrl Elwin Taylor, of either Su-jeak verton or Mollalla. ldcnti- J f fication of the dead woman could not be made immediately, Cobme said. The fatality was the first to be recorded over the Labor Day weekend for Marion and Polk coun ties. It raised the 1956 traffic toll in Marion County to 17 and upped the year's total in the - Marion- Folk area to 20. An ambulance- rushed to -the scene from Stayton, after the 10:30 p.m. accident but attendants aaid the woman was apparently dead they arrived. The injured man was taken to Santiam Memorial Hospi tal at Stayton and body of the wom an was removed to Weddle Mor tuary, also at Stayton. Cobtne aaid the car, a 1950 Buick sedan, apparently, swerved out of control,' struck a pile of rock on a highway shoulder and alid more than 100 feet on its top. The car was totally demolished. Police Quell Violence Move In Ft. Worth . By IRWIN FRANK FORT-WORTH. Tex, Sept f API Police Chief Cato High- tower tonight ordered officers to clcsr all cars snd persons from the streets in front of the home of a Negro who had barricaded himself against an angry threat ening mob of 150 white persons. Shortly after Hightower and nearly a dozen policemen arrived on the scene, the crowd that only minutes before had hung a Negro effigy in front of the home and had been yelling "Get those Nig gers quieted down and began moving back. The threat of violence faded quickly on completely dark North Judkins Street as the policemen moved in. They brought with them tow truck, apparently to move any cars left on the street. Inside the darkened house. Lloyd G. Austin continued to sit with his rifle. Austin moved his family into the house yesterday. the first Negro family in the block, although there are several Negro families in an adjoining block. The demonstration, begun dur ing the afternoon to protest a Ne gro family in the previously all white block, grew to a riot earlier tonight when the effigy, with a stick stuck through it, was hung from a tree in the front yard of the Austin home. Then a shot rang out from the darkened house. The nob began yelling "Get those nig gers." Most of the crowd of 150 whites were teen-agers. Volunteers ( vr HAMDEN, Conn. Boy scouts, firemeir and other volunteers search along rail tracks here Sunday seeking traces of six-weeks-old Cynthia Ruotolo, kidnaped from, her earriaje in -front of nearb department itora Saturday, (AP Wirephoto) ' . Holiday Road Toll Mounts; 309 Dead By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Deaths on the nation's high ways spiraled upward Sunday night in numbers the National Safety Council said were-, "tra gically on the beam" of advance estimates of the Labor i Day weekend traffic toll. . Aa the 78-hour holiday period went into its closing day, Asso- ciated Press figures showed at least 309 traffic deaths, 44 drown ings and 41 miscellaneous fatali ties for an overall total of . 394. The holiday period, for statistical purposes, began at ( p.m. Friday and ends at midnight Monday. Ned H. Dearborn, council president, said the traffic toll was running about 20 ahead of a comparable point in last year's La Dor uay observance in wmcn 431 persons lost their lives. The council's ' estimated toll for this year's observance is 80. It would set a record, erasing . the previous high mark of 441, set in : a three-day Labor Day holiday in 1951. Officials Hope for Baby's t Return;: FBI ' ..' 4 (Picture HAMDEN. Conn.. Scot. 2 Ullman tonight said that investigators. ajtf hopeful that an in tangible a woman's conscience may brine about the safe return of kidnaped six-weekstold Cynthia Ruotolo. " ' Ullman told newsmen that he was more convinced than ever that this was not a kidnaping for ransom. , ' That left two possibilities, he said, "One, that the baby was kidnaped by a frustrated woman who had a deep need for a baby; two, that the baby was stolen for sale, a possibility which was most remote, and one 1 : wouldn't stress." . 'Cewseieoce Warkiag If tho assumption is correct that a frustrated woman kidnaped Cyn thia, then, he said. 'The first re action of having a baby may now be over and her conscience may begin working." " - The baby was taken from Its car riage, in front of a department store where it was left by its mother, Mrs. Shephen Ruotolo. ' . Officials reported that aside from the wide search made dur ing the day in churtnes and syna gogues and the area near the de partment store where Cynthia was kidnaped, all police agencies in the case spent hours this after noon with the FBI, pooling all the Information collected, i FBI la Search The FBI officially today Joined local and state police and hun dreds of volunteers in the search. In an intermittent drizzle, search ers watched local churches this morning for brown-haired Cynthia but the baby did not turn up. The churches had been left open i the hope the baby would be left at one of them. Police in Hamden and New Haven checked scores of reports, among" them that' some baby's clothing had been found near the kidnap scene. But Police Chief Harry Barresf reported: "We haven't anything yet." Search for Kidnaped Baby - f.:i . iiniSeirDDTiesse Highway- crashes . killed two persons in Oregon Sunday, mid way through the long weekend. Norman Lawrie, Portland, drowned in the Columbia River at Sauvie- Island Sunday. An other person was feared drowned in Timothy Meadowa Lake, 41 miles east of Estacada. . Roy Thompson, 17, Canyon- iu. ! ".the flaming wreck age of his car on Highway 4), about 10 miles north of Rose- burg. ' V Russell Jotejl. 17. Sandy, crashed off, Highway 24 near Brightwood and .was killed early Sjinday.' ; ' v..; ... ; . Tne apparent drowning victim was Harold Johnson, 27, Colton, -.who was pilled into the lake when ; a noac capsuea Saturday. Six persona died on Washing ton highways in the first twe days of the Labor Day hollday.t The toll was within two of the eight deaths predicted by the Washington State Patrol for the entire weekend, Joins Search belew) ;:,! -' fAP)-States Att." Abraham S. Alaska River Yields Body of Oregon Youth FAIRBANKS, Alaska,' Sept, J W The body of Wayne Berry Jr, 20, of Powell Butte, Ore., was found , late this afternoon on sand bar six miles up the Yanert River from Jta .conjunction with the Tanana River. Berry disappeared after enter ing the rugged Mt. McKinley country Aug. IS. He had agreed to keep a rendezvous with a pilot at the McKinley airstrip on Aug. 22, but when he failed to appear search was started for him. The search was . conducted by planes of the 74th Air Rescue Squadron, the Fairbanks Civil Air Patrol and ground rescue crews. Two members of the Tanana Valley Water Rescue Unit, a vol unteer search organization, found the body. It is believed he drowned while attempting to cross the swift Yanert with a full pack of equipment. He had been on a sheep hunt. Today was scheduled as the last day for the organized search. PUBLISHER DIES ... ,., SAN RAFAEL, Calif., Sept. S U) Leo Ihle, M publisher of the San Francisco Call-Bulletin from 1953 to 1955 and a newspaperman for 40 years, died today of a heart attack at his home. J WW...,. ..ofcwjt . m.V . 4.-w Troops Given : Tank Support In Tense City (Picture wtreplwU page) Br ROBERT RINEARSOH CLINTON, Tenn, Sept. 3 (AP)-Bayonet-armed National -Guardsmen with gas masks fanned out in two columns bo fore the" Anderson County " Courthouse last niclit in si show of force that started a break up of a threatening mob. . . The mob was gone by midnight and the guard .detail ret'irned to bivouac. -;. . .. . -. L. .. Jn spite of the well-advertised presence In town ot (3 National.. Guardsmen supported br tanka and a. heticoptec. the mob of 1.50O -had gathered quickly after dark on the scene ot weeklong anti-inte- , rJ!''0 uisoroers. - J"?y7P1 prepared to use tear gas and fire hoses if sound truck appeals to aisperse failed to take effect. Taaka Usea - - About SOS of the 133 guardsmen ' on duty lined up oa opposite side of the square facing the .mob, which began thinning out some what immediately. . . While this waa going on a cross was burned in- the parsageway connecting Clinton High School with its gymanjium. , . The guardsmen moved into posi tion after jeep-mounted troops had to rescue a Negro sailor from the mob. 1 A sound truck broadcast appeals for the mob to break up as guards men prepared for possible nse of tear gas and fire hoses. The mob of 1.500 began gather ing after dark fell and slowly be came more boisterous. The cross at tha school flickered out before firemen arrived to put It out. , The sailor, James Chandlre of Knosville. had come to Clinton to see a girl friend who lives la the Negro section. .. . Face Ms -' .., v Tank-riding ' Tennessee guards-. , men with helicopter support took over the job of keeping the , peace early today in this small ; east-state town which has become a foeal point of violent Southern ' resistance to school integration. Tho town turned tense only after ' nightfall Only one incident had marred an otherwise peaceful day. . and '-that occurred three miles : from town. . A email group of determined ' segregationist met at rural Blow-, ing Rock Grammar School three miles outside the guard's patrpl area here, and drove off news- men and photographer with stones and epithets. With darkness, however, tension rose rapidly and in a short time -the crowd on mob-rocked court house square had risen to equal the 1,500 present at last night's threatening rani. . , Tourist Falls ....... On Mountain HARRISON HOT SPRINGS. B.C. Sept. t ID-An American tourist tell down a ateep bank while climbing - a mountain north of here Sunday and indications were the injured . man would have ta be left on the mountainside overnight. . RCMP did not release the man a name, he Is from Colorado. - The 23-year-old man and his wife were camping near Cascade Bay ,: when the accident happened. With companion he was attempting to explore the Rainbow Falls area : about 73 miles east of Vancouver, He came to rest about 2.000 feet . above lake level. Attempts to obtain a helicopter to fly the man to hospital were V unsuccessful Sunday. Freight, Fast Train Collide VANCOUVER, B.C.. Sept. l ift- The east-bound Super-Continental of the Canadian National Railway ' was in a collision with a string of Great Northern boxcars near sub urban Burnaby Sunday but the only injury reported '' was - a bruised arm. ' " ',,' Fireman Bruce McDonald of 1 North Vancouver was bruised when he and engineer Joe, Philon of Van couver Jumped front their diesel cab just before the collision. 'End Near' for Nixon's Father .-. . f "; WHITTlFa?. Calif., Sept. t 1ft Vlco President Nixon's elderly father passed a very poor night and hla doctor said today: "I don't see how he can last out the next 24 hours," ( 1 '"- ,' 'It' III J,