Wash..... 20 Oregon .... 7 OSC.....21 Califs .... 13 L&C... 211 Ariz. St... 41 UCLA.. -.'.28 WSC.....0 Stanford..40lOIda.;...45 San Jose . .20 Texas..... 0 Mich..... 43 1 Mich. St... r Array . ... 14 j Ind. .... . . . 6 WU 0 Idaho..... 0 iff Uarper't Magaiiae "Easy Chair may be comfortable for tU occupant, but that comfort isn't shared by those an the receiving end of the editor's shafts. That is true for the incumbent John Fis cher a it was for his predecessor Bernard de Voto. in this month issue Fischer takes off after the National Organization for Decent and activity citizens in Marion i County recently have become ac; I quamted. He accuses the NODL of having as its main purpose making it "impossible for anybody to buy books and other publica tions which K does not like. Among them are the works of soma of the most distinguished authors now alive for example, winners of the Nobel prize, the Pulitzer prize, the National Book award." Identifying the group behind NODI, as "a little band of Catho lics" who are harming their coun try, their church and the cause of freedom, Fischer asserts they "are denying the w arnings of some of their Church's most res pected teachers and theologians." He proceeds to quote from an ad dress by Father John Courtney Murray, S. J. professor of moral theology at Woodstock College, Maryland, who offered four rules in his discussion -of Literature and Censorshin." One oenntent rule was that "no minority group has the right to impose its own religious or moral views on other groups through the methods of force, coercion or violence." Fischer advises NODL to "stop immediately its campaign of threats, blacklisting and boycott. (Caatlaued editorial page ! Thieves Raid Home Littered With Money WEST BABYLON. N. Y . Oct. II ift The flour-barrel holdup of a taxidriver and his recluse sister led police today to the discovery of a junk-packed house littered with thousands of dollars cash. Police estimated 30.000 or more was scattered through the ram shackle, brown-shingled home of John Van Huda, S3, and his sister Josephine. Every room in the two-story house was stuffed with dusty newspapers dating back to 1906, rags, empty boxes and other con tainers. Police were astonished to find money lying on the floor like scraps of paper. Some bills were worn thin from the tread of shoes. They also found coins and bills in coffee bags, flower pots and kitchen utensils, and in every pocket of 20 pairs of trousers and 10 jackets hanging in closets. Van Huda summoned police aft er two thugs entered the house and slugged him on the head. They came equipped with a flour barrel and hauled away cash est imated by Van Huda at $12,000. Van Huda said he invited them In after they knocked on the door and said they had a barrel of gro ceries collected by his neighbors because he seemed to be in such want. His sister, who police said was in her 60s, screamed and the rob bers fled. Late tonight authorities were still silting through the rubbish in the house for money. They had taken out a washtub full of cash and bag stuffed with more money. Counting was expected to take most of the night. How Van Huda and his nister came by the money remained a mystery. New Headquarters Building In Salem Studied by OSEA Plans for a new building in I partial participation by the state Salem to serve as headquarters I in certain insurance programs, for the Oregon State Employes The board accepted resignations Association were discussed here , of two district directors. They Saturday at an OSEA board meet- j were Willard Cottingham, district lng. The group al?o heard reports of membership gains in all nine districts in the state. James Daniels, executive-secretary, said that funds from chap ters in districts in the Salem area might be available to finance a new building. A stock participation program also was suggested for consideration. Appointed as a building finance committee were Al Kelley, chair man: Clarence Ecklof, Eugene; E. C. Bamford, Salem: Gertrude Chamber, Salem; and Donald Bar nick, Portland. The association's headquarters at present is situated at 330 N. Church St. The board was told that mem bership gains ranged from 13 to 11 per cent in the various districts and have pushed membership total throughout the state to 7,042. Jay Blair, chairman of the OSEA Salary and Wages Commit tee, said a study indicates salaries in most state departments are under those of private industry. .Considered by the board were retirement plans which would in clude payrool deductions for re- rJica-witt V6rh Yaar Czechs ijExpel U.S. Giil 'False Papers' Charge Hurled By Communists WASHINGTON, Oct' 13 (AP) - A Rirl clerk in the U. S. Embassy at Prague, vho is re ported to have taken an auto tour with a Czechoslovak man, cot enmeshed in an interna- ional incident today. me lommumsi government oi Czechoslovakia accused her of travelling on false identification papers and forced the United States to order her out of Czecho slovakia. The United States unexpectedly admitted that the charge of false PPfr was lruf ?enlea espionage was involved, however and blamed the whole thing on "attentions paid to the clerk by a mysterious "Czechoslovak citi zen." Seat Vienna It directed Miss Vera Margaret Osse of Yorkville. Ohio, to depart from Prague promptly and report for a duty in the U.S. Embassy in Vienna. The whole affair failed to fit the usual pattern of indignant charge and angry countercharge which has characterized the ouster of scores of diplomats from Commu nist or Western capitals during the stormy" decade of East West conflict. Some State Department officials wondered privately whether Miss Osso might have been the victim of a trap to embarass the United States, but others thought they saw in the whole thing perhaps an ele ment of romance which suddenly was caught up in the fierce cross currents of international politics. At any rate the first word of the Incident came this morning when the Prague Radio announced the Czechoslovak Communist govern ment wanted Miss Osso removed on the ground that when she trav elled in the Tatra Mountains she had used identification papers made out in the name of a Czecho slovak woman. Unfortunate Victim The State Department said "She was the unfortunate victim of the attentions of a Czechoslovak citi zen who influenced her to accom pany him on a motor trip to Slovakia during which he provided and presented false documenta tion for her." If this was a technical violation by Miss Osso of the regulations in Communist Czechoslovakia, the statement commented, it was "en tirely inadvertent." Light Rain on Menu Today Light rain is predicted for the Salem area today, according to forecasters at McNary Field. A trace of rain was noted Saturday. Temperatures will remain about the same, with an expected high of M and a low near 40. Cloud, rain and partial after noon clearing is the outlook for the beaches today. The Associated Press reported fire danger will be low. 4, and S. C. Earnest in district 5. Next meeting of the OSEA board is slated the night of Nov. 7 prior to the General Council's three-day session at Portland. Young Scientist Ends Leaves Terse Log of LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Oct. 13 A brilliant young atomic physi cist took his own life by carbon monoxide poisoning early Friday, leaving a terse account of his sensations while dying. An Inquest jury found the death of Dr. Robert G. Thomas, 33, orig inally of Pasadena, Calif., was self-inflicted. With him in his closed automo bile at a camp site north of here was a log, written in his own hand, which gave his reactions to the lethal fumes over an I minute period. Police Chief Ralph Kopansky, who found the body, said a va cuum hose ran from th car's ex- Juuitiotalha 5 SECTIONS-44 PACES Touch Light Despite Years 1 -: .- oy- ,f : i M - -X: 1- JT - ' ; " . " i .'. Ik'... ) 1 With firm grip and a light Salem, who will be 99 years from his youth. Salem Man Recalls Civil War Era By JOE WEGLARZ Staff Writer, The Statesman An occasional few bars from "Over the Waves," played on a violin, laughter at Arthur Godfrey's antics on television, and an old scrapbook filled with yellowed newspaper clippings is how Ettrick Forest Walden spends his afternoons as he nears his 99th birthday Tuesday. From a comfortable chair in his daughter's home in Salem A-Scientist Backs Adlai In Test Ban UUUM.U. uw. u ur.. c.jth snot Lincoin and 23 when Stevenson returned to his farm,, vo(ed fjr,t presidentUj home m nearby Libertyvrlle today , elecljon whe JamM A Garfi,d to draft an appeal to the nation WM elected 1880 Bn Re. nmni'n r..i 1 1 , a JtI r to back his proposals for ending tests of the dread hydrogen bomb. The Democratic presidential nominee learned of the support of a distinguished scientist as rus campaign plane, me Joe smitn His daughter, Mrs. D. E. Math Express," came down this morn-, je5oni wh0 runs the comfortable ing at O'Hare Field after a flight' household on Portland Road, said from San Diego, Calif. I her father's energy keeps her- Stevenson was told by reporters : busy. "Why, when he was 95, he that Dr. Laurence H. Snyder, dean still worked on the grape. vines of the graduate school of the Uni- in the back of the house," she versity of Oklahoma, had said that 1 said, the tests themselves might lead to ' Dislikes Rain "universal death" and atomic He came to Salem in 1940, she ar- ' said, and complains sometime That is one of the major points : .bout the rainy season. "He likes Stevenson will emphasize in a na-lsnow ind 0f,en thin(S about the tionwide television talk at 9 M 33 winters he spent in South Da- p.m. r.ai Monuay uer uic Aiiirn- can Broadcasting Co. network. ne sees nis proposal, wai me government try to find a way to halt H-bomb tests, as a major is- sue in his campaign against Presi- dent Eisenhower. "The President said he had ut- tered his last word on this sub-.. ject. It is not a subject about until we find some way to rid man kind of this menace.' 'Misa Fixh Becomes Bride of Mr. Baas ANGIER. NC. Oct. 13 -Miss. "Too often," he said, "we in Fish became Mrs. Bass in a quiet Jdulge in restrospect when we family wedding at the Angier i should he strengthening the will. Methodist church today. j We should also cherish the good. The nuptials of Marie Fish and II recall a motto of my youth and James Bass attracted national at- have lived by it ever since: 'Don't tcntion because of their names. cry over spilled- milk'." , "It stinks." the first notation timed at 1:17 a.m. said. "1 feel perfectly relaxed, better than I have felt In week!,"" the next entry said. Then: "Can't find my cigar. "Now it really stinks. "Eyes sting. "Almost as bad as Los Angeles Smog." The final words, referring to the smog, were timed at 1:23 a.m. Thomas gave no indication of a reason (or his action. It was In dicated at the inquest that he left five persona! letters, which were not made public. He was an honor graduate ef CaljKhwheriJhOadjbtiined touch, Ettrick Forest Walden, old on Tuesday, plays a melody Near 100, at 3843 Portland Rd., he watches the cars go by, No such machines when he was born Oct. 16, 1837, on a farm in Gowanda, N. Y. Recalls Civil War He prides himself on his re markable memory and still re calls his cousins coming to the New York farm on a treasured leave from the Civil War. 'T u'o e nin A.irairi.riM uh.Kam ' . ;v.uv.u "'"-u publican ever since,? he said. "I m going to Hayesville (near est precinct) in November," be said, "and vote for every Repub- lican on the ballot." fcota. 1 "Now." she airf "ther. Un'J much for him lo do Sometimes we piay a duct , sit st thc piano and he p!ayS nis viojln 8ittin(? m his (av0ritc chair. He likes to watcn television." ..uke music too," he said, Like Voice of Firestone and the ; Lawrence Welk Show." A pipe smoker, Walden likes fresh fruits and vegetables. "For breakfast I enjoy flapjacks," he said. "Got to watch my weight though: am a little over." He's been asked many times Ito what he credits his longevity.' Own Life, Sensatipn his bachelor's and master's de grees In science and his doctorate in philosophy. - The poiice chief had been asked yesterday afternoon by Thomas' wife and the Los Alamos scientific laboratory to search for him. He was employed in the division chief's office of the laboratory, one of the nation's major atomic installations. The body was found in the car parked on a trail in Camp May, where Thomas had frequently gone. Medical testi mony indicated he had been dead approximately 17 hours when his body was found. Among the survivors are two .loni, t POUNDDD 1651 The Oregon Statesman, Wife of Slav Consul Held In Shoplifting SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 13 (AP)-Pretty Mrs. Sonjc Juz nik, 26-year-old wife of a Yu goslav vice consul, was held in lieu of $250 bail tonight on a shoplifting charge, Police In spector Al Corrassa said. Corrassa said Mrs. Juznik, wife of Stanislav Juznik who has been here with the Yugoslav consulate general for IS months, was ar rested by a house detective in the J. C. Penney store here late this afternoon. In her shopping bag was $2675 worth of merchandise. Including two sheets, mens sox, towels, a sweater and five slide fasteners, Corrassa said. At city prison Mrs. Juznik in sisted it was all a "terrible mis take." Police said she spoke little English. Corrassa said diplomatic im munity does not apply to consular personnel. Her husband and Consul Sava Temcr hurried to the jail, then left, saying they would be back with the bail money. Gov. Lee in Utah Race as Independent SALT LAKE CITY. Oct. 13 -Gov. J. Bracken Lee accepted tonight a bid to run as an inde pendent candidate for a third term ; eves though he said he had been told that by doing so "I risk my political future." "But," he said, "this means nothing to me if I lose the right to continue the fight I am now making to preserve our constitu tional form of government." Lee, who often has been at odds with the Eisenhower administra tion, was defeated for the Repub lican gubernatorial nomination in the .Utah primary last month by George D. Clyde. In announcing he would run as an independent, Lee said, he is doing so largely because of ac tions he said were 'taken by Sen. Arthur V. Watkins (R-Utah). Lee did not name'' Watkins by name but referred to him as "the senior senator from Utah." "I accuse him," Lee said, "of engineering the defeat of two life long Republicans in the party's nominating convention last August in order to qualify his own hand picked candidates as my primary opponent." Lee's controversy with the Ei senhower administration has been primarily on its foreign aid pro gram. The governor withheld a portion of his 1955 federal income tax In a protest of use of federal funds for foreign aid. But the In his tax anyway by enforcing ,a lien against his bank account. ' Body Found Near Tracks At Sheridan i SUtrunan Newt Srrvlrt ! SHERIDAN. Ore.. Oct. 13 A , young Navajo Indian railroad work er was found dead beside a rail road track here last night after he apparently was run over by a train. The victim was identified as John I Johnson Jr., Bren Hall, N. Mex. i by Deputy Coroner Paul Pershall who said the man's right leg had been severed. Johnson was a member of a Southern Pacific traveling track crew which had worked in the Sheridan area for six weeks, com pleting its work the day before Johnson s body was found. A train crew found the body near a spur track. Today's Statesman Page Sec. Classified - 33-35 IV Comes the Dawn 4 I Comics 1-1 j--V Crossword .... .1. L Editorials 4 Ij Homo Panorama 13-18... II Garden ,...11 I Obituaries 33 .tvj Radio-TV . I Sports 31-32... IV i Star Gazer 3 I Valley News ..36. IV Wlrephoto Pie ..I 1 1 Salem, Oregon Sunday, Oct. 14, Aiidience, Nose Bo ill Fractured In Pentacle Play Joan Ross, woman lead in a Pentacle theater production Friday night, not only frac tured her audience but, it de veloped Saturday, also broke tier nose. Miss Ross, operator of a Sa lem charm school, got the un wanted break when she en gaged in a hilariously realistic knock - down and drag out lovers fight with her leading man, Glen Smith, In the sec ond act of Noel Coward's "Pri vate Lives." Miss Ross won't have to car ry her fractured nose before another audience because the Friday night presentation at Willamette University was a "one-nighter" only. Oh yes, the performance was a benefit one for Salem Me morial Hospital. President 66 Today; Party Held in Capital (Picture m Wirepboto Page.) WASHINGTON. Oct. U President Eisenhower and his family, minus thc two vounscst grandchildren, who were In bed. celebrated the President's 66th birthday a day In advance toniaht. The president, got a piece of birthday cake by special convoy from the Statler Hotel, where the local observance of the televised birthday party was held. . While the celebration was being shown on CBS coast-to-coast young jonnny cross whizzed through the northwest gate of the White House and presented the chief executive with the piece of cake, cut by ac trss Helen Hayes at the hotel birthday party in the presence of a host of celebrities. . The President and. Mrs. . Eisen hower, with their son and daugh ter-in-law, Maj. and Mrs. John S. Eisenhower, and grandchildren David and Barbara Anne, watched the across-the-country birthday party from the White House li brary. He spake briefly during the telecast. ' ; v " At the end. of the program, the President acknowledged with grat itude the presentation of a scroll by the birthday committee headed by Charles Percy and actress Irene Dunne. ' The birthday tribute included songs by Kathryn Grayson, Nat King Cole and other entertainers, introduced, from Los Angeles by movie star James Stewart, County GOP Paat of the contingent of Marlon County Republicans who bower's 66th birthday included group above sharing coffee ters in Salem. They are (from left) Miss Hattie Bratzel, Mrs. Douglas McKay, W. W. Chad wick, Winton Hunt, Roy Rice ,Mrs. B. W. Stacey and Mrs. Frances Scott. Republicans Here Pay Tribute to Party Leader Gallons of coffee, quarts of punch, and pounds of cake, were doled out Saturday at Salem's Republican party headquarters, 230 N. Liberty St. The nrrasion was a Irihulp In President Eisenhower who is 86- 1956 Raft Report Spurs Search for Fliers By WATSON SIMS LONDON, Oct. 13 (AP)-Mysterious SOS signals posed a riddle tonight for a big air and sea armad,a searching tho east ern Atlantic for 59 American smicemen who disappeared Wednesday aboard a military transport plane. Unsigned signals heard by both ships and atrcratt early lodav guided mercy planes to an area about 100 miles off the northwest tip of Spain an area in I which the C118 Liftmaster could well have gone down with its crew of nine Navy men and 50 Air Force passengers headed home to their Lincoln, Neb., base from duty in Britain. 'Mai Sighted' One of the first planes to arrive reported sighting two yellow sur vivor rafts of a type carried by the missing plane. The pilot at first said he saw a man aboard one of the rafts. This spurred hopes that some of the group might be found. But as the rest of the search armada turned to the area, hope dimmed. A British surface ship arriving at the spot where one of the rafts had been reported found only a dead, decomposed whale. Twenty miles away, where the second sighting had been made, ships and planes found nothing. Hampered by Fag The search at that time was hampered, however, by fog. clouds and gathering darkness and U. S. Air Force officials re fused to give up hope that one or more of the four rafts carried by the Liftmaster might yet be found Rescue headquarters said the search would go en through the night. Each of the four survival rafts could aend out SOS signals, but only if the radio transmitter was cranked by hand. 180-Foot Fall Kills Logger EUGENE. Oct. 13 (AV-A 24-year- old logger plunged 180 feet to his death today from a spar pole he was helping rig for the P.K.fcP. Logging Co., near the community of Blue River, 40 miles east of here. The coroner's office reported that Robert Jones, Vida, appar ently chopped through a steel core safety rope as he was tak ing limbs off the spar pole, to which a cable was to be fastened. Regularly employed by another firm, Jones worked today on his day off to assist in setting up the spar pole. Notes President's Birthday my .ir"11'" hi m 4iu nnnai w w r i-7 'i lift ..i."-.-!"-''- k : ; i i '. . ,.rz '' r;""-"".''"''. " - -A ' . ..,..,, , .. , u. s't"l'''Y -.-v'' J-i-'.'.-f x.i.-.tt,t'- I i I- ;)." I , ! A i. ,: 1 . . - hr . I - r , , f 14 if f - ' ' . years-old today. A late afternoon check of the guest book showed over 330 visi tors came to the Liberty Street address. Guests ranged from Gov. Elmo Smith to ardent Republican fans. TTl Tl ITT PRICI 10c , , , , , . , X X X X X m 'raw1'" way' 1 LAKfNHf ATM VIS 'f'.-': f ' f?;. (dAalfoflMC t-Oaaaw ; cm LONDON Oct 13 Map la eatet area off Spain where two rafts were reported sighted today in search for missing; U. S. plane with SI aboard. (AP Wlrephoto) West Oregon ShrinersHere For Ceremony (Piciara M page, I.) . Several hundred Shriners from cities in Western Oregon paraded in downtown Salem Saturday prior to initiation ceremonies by the Mystic Order of the Shrine. The parade and initiation was part of the Central Coast-Wil-lametet ceremonial ef Shriners held in Salem after a lapse of several years, according to Sa lem president. Paul Hale. Initiated Into the order were Carl Aschenbrenner and Clar ence Feller, both of Salem. Participating in the parade was a Salem contingent of march ers beaded by Earl Bourland. The 24-man group displayed in tricate drill orders while march ing down Chemeketa and State Streets.;-.,: -, - . (Story else Page 5) Saturday celebrated Pres. Eisen and cake at GOP headquar Gov. Smith earlier in the week designated Saturday as Ike Day in Oregon. On Thursday, a 100-car caravan will leave Salem to hear Presi dent Eisenhower speak in Fort-land. 4 l4f"54aj The Weather Today's forecast: Variable cloudiness with occasional Tight rain today; partly cloudy tonight and Monday; high both days mm 40. , (Cmplrta iart Hit t) No. 201 Ando-Frencli Plan Vetoed v By Russians - UNITED NATIONS! N. Y.' Oct. 13. (AP)-The U. N. i curity Council late tonight ac cepted unanimous! six prin' ciplcj for continued ncgotia- tions in the Suez crisis altet the Soviet Union vetoed a British " French demand for endorsement ot proposal! for international con trol.'. - '.--j..' ". The United States. Britain and France I and six I ether council . members voted for the entire res olution put up by Britain and France today. It contained the six . principles agreed upon yesterday , and British-French proposals that , the decisions of It power ' for ' international operatioc. of the ca ' nal form a basis for a settlement. . The Soviet Union and Yugoslav la voted against the second part This was Russia's. 78th veto since the U. N. was founded. Startling Saddeaneii The wlndup of this first U. N. stage in the Suei case came with " startling suddenness after nearly five hours of debate in an extra ordinary Saturday session of the -council. The council adjourned at ; 10:50 p. m. EST. l After the vote, Secretary el State John Foster Dulles told the council he regretted It had not . been possible to adopt the entire Mm: British-French resolution. -He said be assumed V, N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold would continue to use his "good offices" in future negotiations. .. . ' , . There are some indications the foreign jn 1 n 1 s t e r s of Britain, France and , Egypt may meet . again ' with ..Hammarskjold here -late this month for another round of secret talks. They held aix pri vate sessions this week and fie Ished with the get of principles an . proved tonight ,- f Principles Outlined t The foreign . mlnisleri who rushed here for the Sue. debate early this month expect to retura home shortly and no mora meet . ings are envisioned in the imme diate 'future. Christian Pineau of France will depart tomorrow eve : ning. "i t , i i. The principles approved in the ,: secret talks among the British, French, and Egyptian foreign ministers and Hammarskjold pro Vide for free and open transit ef the canal, respect for Egypt'! , sovereignty, insulation at the op eration of tho canal from politics of any country, agreement on toll! ana tnarges &y Egypt and the ; users, a fair amount of the dues to go for development, and arbi tration In case ef dispute. Women Tafec ; t To Forests -.5 On Bear Hunt GRAYLING. Mich.. Oct" 1J ttv- Led by a 50-year-old grandmoth er, M gun-toting women, loaded . for bear,, fanned Into Michigan'! North Woods today.. . f . Mrs. Mable Dingman of, rural Grayling organized , the.-, state's , first all-woman bear hunt. ; She . said she got the idea because she didn't think wives should have te 1 sit home while their husband! . hunt. During the two-day affair.' hus bands were left behind at the hunt, headquarters to pitch horseshoes,' play poker or practice archery. -The women were accompanied by eight male guides and; 14 . trained dogs. Mr Dingman said the guides will tell the women where to stand and when to shoot, i Asked about the possible dan gers of 80 gun-toting females run ning around in the North Woods, Mrs. Dingman said, "I'm not wor ried. Most of these women are se rious, experienced hunters." However, all they bagged on the , first day were sore muscles. They finally called off the hunt when temperatures zoomed into the high 80s. Shot Wounds; ; Young Hunter- REDMOND. Ore., Od. ll'ui-A. young Milwaukie deer hunter, shot accidentally, is in fair condition at a Redmond hospital. ,: State Police identified the hunt--er as Lawrence L VockrodC 1$. -The shooting occurred this mora- ' ing. s, ". J-" Vockrodt and a companion Ray' mond Blockford, It, also of Mil , waukie, were target practicing and Vockrodt apparently waa struck in the chest by, A bullet ; that ricocheted. -4- - iu