r j TIic Weather Today's forecast: Continued mostly fair with tarty morn Inn fog today, tonight and Sunday; increasing cloudiness Sunday. (Camplctt rrport put ) rf . . - H PIQUNDIP I&5I 106th Yoar 2 SECTIONS-14 PACES Thi Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Saturday, Oct. 4, 1956 PRICE Sc No. 193 n Ex-State Policeman Charged in Fraud r V. V CalHIMIWMMHIW At the Saturday deadline for voter registration Reared, .crowds stood in line at the three registration windows in DtP rocpQca If the "proof of the pudding is the eating" then by the test of use the .Salk vaccine against pwlio 'in proving fts virtue. According to the V. S. fjews and World- Report the total cases in the United States during the period Jan. 1st to Sept. 15th averaged 22.935 for the years 19'iO-M. Last year the total was 20.147 while this year, the first year for the Salk vaccine the num ber is down to 10,726. Other statistics are given in the magazine's report on the vaccine in its current issue., A survey of 14 states showed that for children who had been vaccinated the ratio of cases was one for -12,500 chil dren. For those who had not been vaccinated the number was one for 1 fWI rhilHrxn TV10 fWarl thil attends this disease is overpfts' - sible paralysis. The survey figures show that among children w h o had been vaccinated 446 were listed as paralytic and 612 non- paralytic, nut miv an wine Key figures: Where the children had had three shots of the Salk vac cine only one parlytic case is re ported for every 226,000 children. For those who had had two shots the ratio was one for every 61, 700 children, while those who had had but one shot showed a ratio of one case for every 6,300 chil dren. Another item of importance is the report that no cases of polio were blamed on injections of the vaccine, which shows that the initial trouble of its preparation and distribution seems to have Continued on editorial page, 4.) Sea Claims 2 Fishermen NEWPORT. Ore., Oct. 5 if-A storm which'has battered the Ore- gon Coast for the past two days capsized three fishing boats and drowned two fishermen. iney were jacs murpny ana iacK bawson Doin oi Newport. Herbert Marsh, 41, of Portland, was rescued when his boat capsized. Junior High School Plans Nearly Ready, Board Told Prospective contractors will get their first look at plans for Salem's two new junior high schools late this month, in time for bidding on the projects Nov. 19, the Salem District school board decided Fri day. Architect W. I. Williams reported Family Car By Wally Falk li Hliall tavkiph ai VAN InVflnl LA tbwgt-for'i 2oTill?"r Lines Form to Beat Vote 1') fata it m ' ' t- Adlai Views Series With Little Fanfare By JAMES DEVLIN NKW YORK, Oct. 5 - Private citizen Adlai Stevenson at tended today's World Scries game amid much less fanfare than surrounded President Eisenhower at the Series opener Wednes day. Stevenson entered Ebtxts Field through its oil ice door and went under the stands to a front row bov seat near the BrookK n Ike Declares Third Term Ban Unwise WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 (-Pres Ident Eisenhower said today the constitutional amendment which president "from a third! ars term "was not wholly wise. He dropped that comment into a news conference discussion as tttwhclher this constitutional bar, ; which became effective in 1951. might lessen the influence of a ' president in his second term, j Kisenhower discounted the idea. (saving: "I don't believe that a presi dent's influence of his party is lowered too much, for this rea son: Certainly, whoever is the as pirant at the end of two terms for president will want that presi dent's support, and will want his blessing." Eisenhower did not appear to be talking about any possibility that he might want to try for a third term, assuming he wins and serves a second. But he did not discuss that question specifically Eisenhower remarked first that his views on this ban "are not as strong as some of the people who were so terribly anxious to get it into our Constitution." Then he added: "By and large, the United States ought to be able to choose for its president anybody that it wants regardle ss of htnem oeburf ET regardless of the number of terms he has served i TRACTOR SPILL FATAL SHERWOOD. Oct. 5 (fl-Rolland E. TnomaSi abmlt 62i wa5 kiiied outright today when a tractor hea Bennett Field, bowed 19-14. was operating overturned, pinning him underneath. plans and specifications 98 per cent complete and promised to have final copies in the hands of board members and school of ficials by Oct. 19. The schools, already named Waldo and Judson Junior Highs, may be bid on separately or to gether. They have a common plan. Waldo will be erected near the Washington Elementary School and Judson will, be erected on Jones Road in the Liberty-Salem Heights ar - School board members also took steps at their special meeting yes terday to get construction- of a $100,000 music wing at North Sa lem High School underway t h i a year. They ordered final changes in Architect B'rnest Weber's plans, preparatory to an Oct, 25 bidding on the project. This wing will in clude a little theater, band and choral rooms. Financing of all three buildings will come from a $2,900,000 bond issue approved by school voters last winter, In other action Friday the school board rehired Mrs. Mary Swigart Peterson who had been on leave from Richmond School. She will j no tach at Keiier to fill a iVt cancy. Registration Deadline rv J the courthouse Friday. The clerk's office in the courthouse will be open until 8 o'clock Dodge, s dugout. There was no public announce ment of his presence. There was no throwing out of the first ball Only when photographers crowded in front of the box did the crowd realise he was present. He was applauded as he posed with Gov. Averell Harriman and other officials and again when he donned first a New York Yankee cap and then a Dodgers cap atop it. An aide said Stevenson didn't Stevenson, an avowed Chicago White Sox fan, said beforehand he simply hoped the better team would win. But like Eisenhower, he showed marked leanings to ward the Dodgers. Brooklyn Dodgers Post Second Win In World Series BROOKLYN, Oct. i Iffl-The Brooklyn Dodgers took the New York Yankees' pitching staff apart piece by piece today to win the second game of the World Series In a rout. The victory gave the Dodgers a 24 edge In Ike best-of-seven set and made them 9-5 favorite to repeat as world champions as the series shifts to Yankee Sta dium tomorrow. (Add. details on sports pages.) Vikings Tied, Saxons Lose; Ukes Lick Ducks North Salem High was tie and South Salem licked in football; games Friday night. North Salem, playing at Lebanon was held to a 6-6 deadlock by the Warriors, and South Salem, playing Eugene High ivicanwnuc, at ios Angeics me UCLA Bruins sqeaked by previous ly undefeated Oregon, 6-0, before a crowd of 32,097 in Memorial Coli seum last night to notch their 17th straight Pacific Coast Conference victory. It was the Bruins' seventh I straight victory over the Ducks. (Add. drlails to sports section.) 76.000 ALCOHOLICS IN CANADA WINDSOR, Ont., Oct. 5 The Rev. J. R. Mutchmor, secretary of the United Church of Canada's Social Service Board,' says there are 75,000 alcoholics in Canada. Kidnaper Arrested 14 Hours After Tot Stolen (Picture sn Wire photo Page) CHICAGO, Oct. 5 l-The kid naping of 1 -month-old Ronald Jose"' Bucher was solved today, less '' an 14 hours after he was taken from his crib. He was re turned to hie parents unhf rmed. The child was found with Mrs. Gladyj By num. 24, in her apart ment four miles from the Bucher flat. Mrs. Bynum told police, "I wanted a baby so much, I just took one." She was taken immediately hp tore the Cook County grand jury which r ortedly -amed her in a true bill chargii.g kidnaping. A bizarre aftermath of the case l develop whan a. .oman who, saw a picture of t baby's father, "4 tonight to receive registrations. Near Record Seen in Voter Registration A near record number of Marion County voters will have registered for the .-Nov. 6 election before the poll books are closed at 8 o'clock tonight, it was indicated "riday as hundreds of late registrants jammed the county clerk windows. "It's too early to tell yet." said Clerk Henry Mattson, "but from the way voters have been regis tering here aild over the county I thim we'll come close to or equal the 1952 election record of 50,500 registrants." Nearly 500 stood in three long lines Friday to register. Another last-minute crowd is expected to day when the clerk's office will be open from D:30 to 8 p.m. Poll books will be closed tonight until after the election. y plaee in Salem where voters can register today. But there are i-bout 50 registrars scattered around t h e county to register those residing outside the city. Voters living in West Salem are to register at Per son & Wellman Drug Store, 995 Edgewater St. Testifying to the interest engen dered by the election is the un usual large number of applications for absentee ballots coming into the clerk's office. No official tally has been kept, but clerk's deputies estimated party affiliations of the later regis trants to be about equally divided between Democrats and Republi cans. Fire Blackens 40 Polk Acres Statesman News Service DALLAS. Ore., Oct. 5-A brush and grass fire raed over 40 acres of the P. P. Hiebert farm in the Orchard Knob district near Dallas today before it was brought under control by the Hiebert family and rural fire district-crews. Before it was stopped, the fire posed a serious threat to adjoining timberlands. Major damage was to a large shed on the property. The shed was half burned. Hiebert, who was burning off grass around the shed, said the bl: - broke out of control just be fore noon and spread into the larger acreage. 79-YEAR-OLD SCHOOLBOY NEW YORK, Oct. 5 - Maj. Richard R. Vincent, 79-year-old retired army officer, is tackling school books lor the first time since 1885.. Determined to earn a degree in history, he has enrolled in Columbia University's School of General Studies. Thomar, Bucher, i gasoline sta. 1 attendant, in a newspaper, named him as the husband who deserted her and their five chil dren 22 months ago. Mrs. Joan Paterinios, 27. told states attorney's investigators that Bucher was Tomas R. Pater inios against v' m she obtained a nonsuppurt warrant two months ago. Confronted by Mrs. Pa'erimos at the state s attorney's oifice. the father of the kidnaped child ad mitted his real name was Pateri rr.os and that he as the father of Mrs. Paterimos' five children. He said he had never legally mar ried Mrs. Bucher. Authorities said j ho would he booked oa ftonsuppftr' charges. 10th Arrest in Plywood Mill Investigation PORTLAND, Oct. 5-A for mer Oregon state police officer was arrested today and ac cused of taking part in fraudu lent promotion of a plywood and nardboard business, be coming the tenth person arrested in the case in -three days. Roland Montgomery, 40, Hood River, was taken into custody by I R. A. Severtson, a federal postal; to the U.S. marshal s office here, inspeiloi.. Montgomery, brought to the U.S. .marshal's office here, formerly was a state policeman stationed in Hood River, Severt son said. Montgomery was re leased on $2,500 bail. The inspector said Montgomery has been accused of selling nvm bershfp shares in the Mt. Hood Hardboard and Plywood Co-operative. Postal Violation A veteran state policeman, Lt. Richard C. Williams, 60, was ar rested yesterday on charges of conspiracy to violate postal and j spciirines iraun laws, w imams i nas tasen a leave ot aosence ironv mc state ponce omce at mii- The eight mPn face maxjmum "'i'- - ! punishment of life imprisonment. H. G. Maison, superintendent of j Seven of the defendants were state police, said at Salem the j convicted of armed robbery ac charge against Williams is the first j tuai pwHeipation in the nation's time a member of the state po- largest cash robberv. lice force has been indicted. j The eighth, Joseph F. Mc Gin A socially prominent clubwom- nis, 52. was acquitted by directed an here, Mrs. Lee Davenport, 77. verdicts of armed, robbery and was among the four persons ar-; breaking and entering but was rested yesterday. When brought j convicted as an accessory before into court today, Mrs. Davenport the fact of armed robbery md be said she had no part in the deal- j fore Ihe fact of breaking and en ings. tering. High Regard The accessory convictions carry The widow of a Portland real j the same penalty as those of ac estate operator, Mrs. Davenport ' tual participation, said she had the "highest regard" The other defendants convicted for Edgar R. Errion, 60, arrested ! were: Anthony Pino. 46, Vincent ponce ottice at Mu at Seattle. Errion, arrested Wednesday, was accused of mail fraud and vi- olatuih of the Securities and Ex- change act Late yeslerdav -Frederick Alan Wright, 42, 725 N. Capital St., Sa lem, was arrested on a conspir acy charge and jailed in Portland. He was released today on $3,500 bail. ' Arrested at Portland yesterday were Dwight HoldorL 33, Salem logger, and James B. Carr, 67, Portland, accused of conspiracy, the; were freed on $2,500 bond each. Salem Men Arrested Arrested Wednesday at Salem were Glenn R. Munkers, 65, Arch ie L. Bones, 68, and Charles W. Williamson, 70, all of Salem. All were charged with taking part in membership sales in the co-operative. Munkers' bail was set originally at (30.000 but today Judge Solo mon granted a reduction to $10, 000 cash. Munkers posted that amount and was released. Bones is held here under $5,000 bail and Williamson has been freed on $2,500 bail. At a Securities and Exchange Commission hearing here last Aug ust, a government attorney said $650,000 in membership shares were sold. But the SEC charges that only $250,00 remained when the members took over. The co-operative has built plant near Estacada, Ore., and it has been operating about a month. Fair Weekend On Forecast HuntM anrl other outdoor ven turers can expect mostly fair weather over the weekend, accord ing to forecasters at McNary Field. While clear skies are likely to- prevail, there will be increasing cloudiness later Sunday. Weather men said the outlook also includes some early morning fog. Temperatures are expected to remain about the same as Friday's range of 35-70. Outlook tor beaches is fair weath er through tonight except for morn ing fog. Winds will be 6-12 miles an hour. BREAKING SHIP REACHED ANCHORAGE. Alaska. Oct. i-A rescue ship has reached thejner, 21, son of Mrs. Helen N Eng tanker Dulcinea which is breaking istrom. 810 N. 16th St., Salem, up on the tiny Aleutian island of! Another crewman, radar observ Buldir. The tanker's crew of 12 ; er. 2nd Lt. Henry Weiss of South is reported .uninjured and still iOranee. N. J.. was badlv iniured. aboard their vessel. Today's Statesman Page Sec. Church News 6, 7. Classified 11-14. Comics 8 Crossword 11. Editorials 4 Home Panorama 6 Markets 11 Obituaries 11. Sun. TV ...... 3 Sat. TV 8 Sports 9, 10 Star Gazer 5 Valley News 3 Wirephoto Page 8 . I .11 II I . ' II II I I .. . I Scientist Gaims Blood Te,st Shows Mental Illness STOCKHOLM. Swede. Oct.-1 Ifl A scientist at the Nobel Institute of Medicine announced today the discovery of a blood lest which he said will determine la six minutes whether a person Is mentally ill. t Dr. Stit Akerfeldt, 26, describ ed his test In an Interview fol lowing a government grant ef 1,006 crowns about $600 to con tinue his research. The scientist said it has been found that when a certain chemi cal reagent Is added, human blood serum turns wine-red with in six' minutes In a test tube It the person la mentally tick. The test also registers the grav ity of the menial disorder In different shades of redt 8 Convicted in $1 Million ' Brink's Theft BOSTON, Saturday, Oct. 6 W -Eight men were convicted by a Suffolk superior court jury early today of taking part in the $1, 219,000 Brink's robbery on Jan. 17, 1950. and Mmles o deUberr"i be- ... r.i,.--i- u. ,..-' fore returning its ven st 1:57 , m (Frm J. Costa, 41, Michael V. Geagan, 47, Adolph Maffie, 44, Henry Bak- er, 49, James I. Faherty, 44, Thomas- F. Richardson, 48, all of Greater Boston. Albany Plans New Lights On Route 99 Statesman News Service ALBANY, Ore., Oct. 5 New mercury-vapor lamps will soon brighten up the route of Highway 99E through Albany, city officials reported today. Two streets leading from down town Albany to route .99 also will get some of the 131 new lamps. They will cost $40,000. A contract has been signed with Pacific Power and Light Company for installing the fixtures and the job should be completed in De cembcr, the city reported. The highway lights will extend from Waverly Lake tc Queen Ave nue ip south Albany. The other lights will go up on Ellsworth and Lyons Street. Both are one - way streets. 80th Anniversary Observance Set For Oregon U. EUGENE, Oct. 5 Iff-A Chart er Day program next Tuesday and Wednesday will observe the 80th anniversary of the founding of the University of Oregon. TJr. Lee DuBridgc, president of the California Institute of Tech nology, . will address a convoca tion Wednesday afternoon. At this program Ihe university will pre sent to three men, as yet un named, citations for notable serv ice to the state. Salem Jet Flier Dies In Georgia Aceident A Salem Air Force jet pilot was killed Thursday night when his F94 jet interceptor plane crashed near Lakeland. Ga., the Associated Press reportod Friday. 51 Dead is 2nd Lt. Charles V. Ben- The plane was stationed at Moody Air Force Base near Valdo sta, Ga. Lt. Benner was commissioned as an officer in .June, 1956 at Bryan Air Force Base, Tex. He also re ceived his pilots wings at the same time. His mother said he was m;irried iSept. 1 in Climax, Ga. ' He is survived by his mother, j Mrs. Helen Engslrom, step fa- ! ther. Lawrence I. Engstrom, both I in Salem; father Byron Benner, Rosalia, Wash.; widow, Mrs. Ella 'Doris Benner, Climax, Ga.; sister ! Mrs. Stanley Sherman, Portland, Ore., and two half brothers and a half sister. Funeral services arc being ar- , . langctLby ,..W.J...RitdQaJlortuax (Add. details oa page 2.) Bad Conduct' discharge Lifted by Navy Secretary Prison Confinement Reduced . WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 Secretary of the Navy Thomas today lifted the Bad conduct discharge facing SSgt. Matthew CMcKeon for the "death match" of six Marine recruits t Parris Island, S. C, last April. 7, Thomas also reduced McKeon's court-martial punishment from nine months confinement ; to three months-leaving him about four weeks to serve and set aside $270 fine. The secretary upheld the! drill sergeants eduction in rank to private, notinc this would involve "a much more substantial financial loss" than the fine. The bad conduct discharge was the severest penalty imposed in the Aug. 1 sentence by a seven man court that convicted Mc- Keon of negligent homicide and drinking on duty In remitting this part of the sentence, Thomas said, ' For htm I believ'e that the real punishment will be always the memory of Ribbon Creek. . . . Disciplinary March The 1-year-old career Marine from Worcester. Mass.. ordered and led a night disciplinary march last April S into marshlands at the Parris Island training depot. Six of the 74 members of the pla toon drowned in Ribbon Creek. Thomas affirmed the court's opinion that McKeon "failed te ex- r cnnifil ear fat the r. ty of the men entrusted to him" and, in upholding his reduction to private, said "just one lapse re sulting in such serious conse quences is just one lapse too many." However, Thomas said a, bad conduct discharge would "affect his entire future life and rehabili tatioi." and seemed "inappropri ate." Rights Considered The Navy secretary said uch a discharge would wipe out most of McKeon's veteran's ights and benefits after excellent military service of 11 years including com bat action in Korea and World War U. 'I have therefore decided. Thomas said, "that he " all serve confinement at hard labor for three months. This, together with the approximately six months of Drevious confinement and restric tion, will to U.praCical purposes carry out the court t sentence." Rear Adm. Chester C. Ward, Navy judge advocate general, told reporters that McKeon's three months "confinement dates firom the time the court-martial sen tenc was announced, on Aug. 4 It-Enter. Brig , Ward said McKeon will now have to leave his ho.ne near the Marin Base, where he has been living "in the status of arrest" with his wife and three children, and serv the rest of his time in the Parris Island brig. Hs confine ment period will end on Nov. 4. Albany Pair Wounded in 'Quick Draw' ALBANY, Ore. Oct. 5 WR-James Ryan, 20, who was practicing a "quick draw" with a .22 caliber revolver, wounded himself and his crippled 12-year-old brother to night when the gun accidentally discharged. Officers said Ryan told them he was target shooting from the door way of his home in North Al bany. He said he jerked the weap on from the holster, but the gun caught on his belt, spun and dis charged. The bullet passed through Ry. an's hip and then through the el bow of his brother, Pat, who was seated nearby in a wheelchair. Pat is a l.i of muscular dystrophy. Both youths were taken to the Albany hospital where their con dition was described as not se rious. Air Force 2nd I,t. Charles V. Benner. Salem, was killed Thursday in a jet plane crash near Lakeland, Ga. Photo shows him in 1953 when he began basic train InJ. y 1 m - - l""' . ' iv - ' , ... , lif ' -V -) . . Rare Surgery Revives Albany Tot's Heartbeat ItittMiua Nwi Irrvtr ALBANY, Ore., Oct. J An Albany surgeon restored the heartbeat of a four-year-eld toy when hit heart stopped beating during an operation ition here, it be- f tame known today, The boy was Ronald Beamer, and the' surgeon was Dr. Elmer Jones, both of Albany. . Ronald's heart stopped BeaW Ing Wednesday during a tonsil lectomy at an Albany hospitaL The doctor made a chest iad Second Albany Con Nabbed By Police Near Coos Bay . r r k Ft til: u23 ERNEST GIBSON .: Albany Convict Capturedi United Fund Pledges 11 60 Per Cent (Picture oa Page t.) United Fund pledget continue to be turned in at a steady pace and a noticeable increase is expected sometime next week, "campaign chairman William H. Hammond, said Friday at a meeting of volun teer workers. Hammond said yesterday that the drive now stands at 60 per cent of the $227,800 goal or $137, 41t. , i Reason Hammond anticipates an increase is that state employes were paid on Friday and pledges will begin coming in next week from we big Salem high schools, North Salem, and South Salem. Campaigners also heard Bernard Mainwaring, Capital ,'ournal pub lisher, who praised the UF board and Salem's citizens for the ex cellent job they were doing. The long awaited totem pole was also unveiled yesterday with the top spot being occupied by Jack Frisbie, utilities chairman, whose division has now pledged 98.3 per tent of $8,690 or $8,530. (Add. details oa Page I.) Adlai Quells Booing Yah Student Mob NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 5 I Adlai E. Stevenson quelled 1 pushing, pulling mob of Yale stu dents tonight by appealing to their pride as Yale men anev Ameri cans. Alter talking before 3,000 stu dents at a Democratic rally in Yale's Woolsey V '1. Stevenson en.erged to say something to an other 3,000 outside. The combined crowd of 6.000 some shouting "we want Ike" was jettirg almost tn unruly fnr the police to hand.e. When Stevenson was presented as "the next president of the United States," thr-e re many boos amid the -rplause. "Surely," Stevenson said, the students of Yale don't need a les son in manners from a Prince tonian." Stevnson attended Frinceton. ' "I'm glad to see there is more than one point of view," Stevenson added. "The two-party system is the es sence of democracy. . . . "And don't boo that, boys." Rose Festival' Dates For '57 June 12-16 PORTLAND, Oct. 5 ( Port land's 1957 Rose Festival will be held JOne 12-18. Leith Abbott, president of the sponsoring asso ciation announced today. . He said that no decision has yet - ; betn made on next year's stadium Toor" Ion and massaged the bd'i heart for approximately twt , minutes until the heartbeat resumed. , . Dr. Julius varca, anesthetist Tor the tonsilectomy, said it may have been th first suc cessful application of cardiac massage in Albany history. He said heart stoppage "of that na ture" occurs once in every 5" QOo to 10,000 operationt, The bey's condition Friday was reported "sood." : ; -- - ; COOS BAY. Oct, I W-Ernesi . iieroy uinson, zs, escapeq Aioany prisoner who evaded a large posse on Cape Arago near here, was cap tured by police today as he tried to nap in a stolen car. . Only one of the four men who escaped from. the Linn County jail in Albany Sept. 7 remains at large. He is Earl Junior Bonney, 32. , Gibson was exhausted from his . three days at bay in the brushy ' wilds of tape Arago State Park south of here between Charleston . and Bandon. ' State police Sgt. Homer X, Snider and 4:00s Bay police made the capture. They sata iiiuson surrendered a loaded 3$ caliber pistol, offering no re sistance. Evadek Pence ' Somehow. v Snider said. Gibson . sneaked out of the Cape Arago, orusn ana supped by police lines, stealing a boat to cross slough. Then h stole car at Empire and drove here. " An alert resident, Chester C. Rankin, heard of the car theft.' Rankin spotted the car and called police. , "The manhunt, started in 1 this area Tuesday when a Bend taxi- cab driver. Loyal Van Tfyke, was dumped from his cab on Seven Devils Road. Van Dvke. identify. ing a picture of Gibson,, said the convict hired his' cab for i trip to Eugene but made him drive to the coast. Driver Tied , " ' ' l' ', Van Dyke said he was tied un and left beside a road, but be got loose and alerted police. Upwards of 75 officers took nart in the search, and a bloodhound -tracked the fugitive through dense brush, A state patrolman fired one shot at Gibson Wednesday, ' The shot missed. In Los Aneeles. meanwhilo tin. lice announced the cantur nf James Arthur Patton, 39. Long Beach, Calif. He was another of ' the four prisoners who escaped from the Albany jail. The body of Dan C. Ott. 43. wai pulled from the Willamette River at Salem less than two weeks alt er the escape. The coroner said Ott drowned. 20-Acre Area Added to Salem Annexation to the city of some 20 acres In a Northeast Salem suburban sector was approved Fri day byj residents of the area. The vote a) a special election favored the measure, 12 to 6. . The annexed area is south of 1 Silverton Road, east of Lansing Avenue and has Ha- el Street as its north boundary. The City Coun cil had approved the annexation, provided residents voted favorably, after a petition was presented by ; A. H. Rogers and other property owners in the area. The 18 persons voting in the election held at Valley Tractor Company, 3310 Silverton Rd., com prised about half ot the approxl- mately 35 residents eligible to cast ballots. Last Chance! The deadline Is here for those who wish Ho vote in the Nov. 6 election. - " If you have moved since yea voted lfst, or If you failed to vote at either the last gen eral or lasi primary election- or if your name is changed, you will need to re-register to assure getting your ballot. The voting requirements: Age 21, citizen, resident of Oregon 6 months nd be ing properly registered by 8 o'clock tonight. The Mar ion County Clerk's' office in the courthouse will be open until that hour. If 4 '4;