2 (Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sun., Oct 21, 56 -7 , '
Jordan 'Socks End to British Pact'
Br WILTON WTNN v
AMMAN, Jordan. Oct. 30 (IV
Jordanian voters, livinf in an air
of crisis, are electing a new 40
seat Farliament tomorrow expect
ed to call for an ending to this
desert kingdom's treaty with Britain
Thfe treat it a defense alliance
that has sustained poverty-stricken
Jordan line ita birth as an
Independent nation 10 yean ago.
It gives Britain three military
bases in Jordan. In return, the
British pay IS to 30 million dollars
a year for the upkeep of Jordan's
30,000-maa army, once rated the
Arab world's best; and promise
to aid the Jordanians if they are
attacked. - x '
Anti-Western elements among
Jordan's 1,400,000 population
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Special Orders For An Oeeasiens Phene 19211 -
stirred up by increased Israeli
frontier attacks and the rise of
Egypt's President Nasser as a
professed champion of Arab rights
figure to gain so much ground
that even 'moderate independents
will be under heavy fire to Join
in cutting the last formal link with
Britain. - -
The1 election raised anew the
question whether Jordan may
eventually be tucked under the
wing of Iraq, a Baghdad Pact
member whose King Faisal II is
a cousin of Jordan's 21-year-old
King Hussein, or go to the Egyptian-Syrian-Saudi
Arabian trium
virate headed by Nasser.
Slack Interest
Although the campaign appears
freer than any ever held before
in Jordan, interest seemed slack.
Election talk has been over
shadowed by Israeli raids that
have taken a toil of 190 Jordanian
lives in little more than a month
Snow-Swept
Canada Peak
Yields Youth
NORTH VANCOUVER. B. C,
Oct. 20 (it Alex Patterson, lost
six nights and six days on rain
and snow-swept Mount Seymour
was found alive today, the Royal
Canadian Air Force reported.
An air force March officer said
Patterson was in fairly good con
dition. The young Scots immigrant had
shivered alone in a cave on the
4,000-foot mountain since last Sun
day when with two companions he
became lost on a hiking trip. -
Patterson wore only light
clothes, had no food nor matches,
and withstood the worst week of
early winter weather this year.
Patterson, all but given up for
dead after a night of sleet and
snow, was found at the 2,500-foot
level on the side of a cliff-face,
A helicopter which had waited
Appointed
? i.
2 White Men, Negro
Woman Found Slain
and generated a new wave of war j n mountaintop during the day
fever. The weak caretaker few
emment of Premier Ibrahim Has
hem has no interest in electing
any particular group of '.candidates.
A third of Jordan's population
was unable to pick up Patterson
because of the rough terrain.
One of the three-man climbing
party perished. Gordon McKar
lane, 27, died while attempting to
find his way down the mountain
is made up of Arab refugees of;?" rth shore of Vancouver
the Palestine War of 1948. an em- harbf earl.er this week His body
bittered group living on meager ! brht ,0 North Vancouver
rations 'suDDlied bv the United todav- Coroner F. W. Dyer
Nations.
NEW YORK, Oct. 20 Eyvlnd
Bartels, Denmark's consul
general in New York, was
appointed Friday in London,
as administrator of the Sues igation he Mid
canal user s association
(AP Wirephoto)
CROSSETT. Ark.. Oct. 20 U
Two white men and a Negro
woman were slain on a rural road
near this south Arkansas town to
day.. Ashley County Coroner Billy
Jones said it was a triple slaying
by "assailant or assailants un
known." -The death weapon was a
shotgun.' It has not been found.
The bodies of George Wells, a
22-year-old bachelor of nearby
Hamburg, and Hattie May Wil
liams, 40, of Crossett, were found
in a car.
Fred Watkins, 45-year,-old father
of three girls, was found critically
wounded outside the car. He died
a short time later at a hospital
here. Watkins lived at Hamburg.
The Negro woman reportedly
was single.
Jones said police had no leads
on the identity of the killer. Plans
for an inquest had been postponed
until police completed their invest-
persons, is located a few miles
north of the Louisiana border in
southeast Arkansas.
The Weather
Astoria
Biker
Mtdford
North Btnd
Portland ... ,
Salts
Mm. Mln. lUia
..
ST
. M
- 17
' Chlcao
Denver
j All three persons apparently
i were shot at close range shortly
Theatre Time
Table
ILSINORI
"The Rha Creturt": 1:41, S:4J.
S:, 11:J7
It Conquered the World": 1:00,
4 01. 7 41, 10:01
CAPITOL
'The Solid Cold Cadillac": 1:00.
4:2f. 1:. 11:00
"Magnificent Rouihntcki": J 05,
I 2, 0 47
NORTH SALEM DRIVR IV
(Gatet open, 45; (how at 7:00)
"Mr Roberta." Henrv Fonda
"Satellite In the Sky"
HOIXYWOOO
"F.dcW Durhln Story": 1:45,
S:M. 23
"He Laufhed Last." J:M, 7:4S,
11:38
X..n
70
Fort Worth IS
Los Anielea SO
Miami . . -... 86
New York S3
San rranclaro . 77
Seattle SS
Spokane 53
Washington. D. C. - 1
SO
34
Jl
47
81
St
M
01
54
71
47
47
47
48
49
1.10
.00
.00
.51
M
.so
.05
.00
.00
.00
00
trace
.00
-.1
ill
trace
I Today's forecast ( from U. S. wreath
' er Bureau. McNary Field, Salem):
j Mostly cloudy today and Monday,
with showers and chance of thunder
i showers today; hifh both days 55,
1 low tonight 38.
I Willamette River: -1.3 feet.
Temp. 12 01 a m. today 53
! SALEM PRICIPITATIOV
Since Start ef Weather Year, Seat. 1
Te date Last year Normal
317 111 3.47
Airman Killed on
Hunting Trip
BURNS, Ore. Oct. 20 I -Gregory
Franklin Zimmerman,
an airman attached to the Burns
radar base, became the fifth gun
shot fatality of Oregon's deer
season.
He died at a Burns hospital last
night, several hours after he was
accidentally shot by a hunting
companion. . . .
A. 0. Pollentier of the state po
lice office here, said Franklin
Darrell Sales. It, also attached to
the radar base, told him that Zim
merman stepped into the line of
fire as he was shooting at a deer.
Cur Kent h AfofcWew
fcr tint foorf..e
Friz Winning Ham and
ROAST TOM TUIKtT
with ad the trimmings just
THE SAN SHOP "
Portland Road at Norm City Limits
For Orders to Go-Phone 2-6793
Communist Seat
Politicians expect at least one
Communist, Dr. Yacoub Ziadin,
to win a seat. He is a highly pop
ular physician. Only one Commu
nist has ever been elected to Par
liament In an Arab country. He
was Khald Bekdash, a winner in
Syria in 1954.
Moderate independents probably
will win a majority of seats, but
anti-Western elements could use
Parliament as a forum for stirring
no public opinion to force the in
dependents Into going along with
the treaty abrogation demand.
said an inquest will be held next
week to determine the cause of
McFarlane's death.
Robert Duncan, 23, who stum
bled to safety Wednesday, said he
saw McFarlane's body lying in a
t.eek. Duncan said the face was
State Seeking
Cause of Death
10 Years Ago
Daughters of
Start Trial
PORTLAND. Oct. JO - The
state crime laboratory here today
badly gashed and it appeared his ' b1"1 trvin ,0 reconstruct the
before they were found about 7 IT) T .1
am, Jones said lUlSS LCadCl'S
The car was parked on Sulphur i .
Springs road about six miles west
of here.
Watkins. a construction worker,
is survived bv his widow and three
daughters. Sherry, 14. Kla Ann, 13,
and Cynthia, 2.
Wells was a farmer.
Crossett
Forest Society f
Meet Scheduled
KLAMATH FALLS, Oct. 20
A western regional meeting of the
Society of American Foresters
will be held here Oct. 26-27 to
look into progress in pine manage
ment, i
Service Is Our Business
RADIO AND
TELEVISION JERYICE
We are equipped to service
all makes of TVs, Radios,
Tape Recorders and Phono
graphs. BYER and BECHIEl
RADIO & TV Service
2376 State St Ph. 4 9767
SALEM
companion had fallen from a cliff.
DrivercGted.
i
(After Wrecks
I Two persons received traffic ci
tations Saturday as a result of
' minor accidents, the Salem state
1 police office reported,
, Mrs. Pauline Hughes, 46, Hepp
ner, was charged with failure to
drive on the right after a collision
about I SO a.m. with a vehicle
driven by Lambert Wierda, 73,
i Yountville, Calif., officers said.
; The accident, which occurred
Counties Tell
Registration
OREGON CITY, Oct. 20 I -Democrats
lead Republicans in
voter registration in Clackamas
County 27.143 to 25,132.
In 1952 Republicans led by S61.
PENDLETON, Oct. 20 I -
State Press
death of a Wasco County pros
pector 10 years ago.
Human bones, believed, to be
those of Joe Ingram, who disap-j f1lrt Ifioa
pcard in the rugged ravines of U OU1C11 ilCar
southern Wasco County in July,
1!MS, were brought here after a
deer hunter, Mike Whitecotton, of
Wamic, found them. The skull
bore a bullet hole between the
eyes, and a lead slug from a re
volver was found in the cavity.
A rusty revolver and rusty
cartridge of the same caliber as
the slug also were found near the
Gov. Smitl
MOSCOW, Oct. 20 - Curious
spectators jammed a Moscow city
court today for opening of the trial
of three "jazz age girls" daugh
ters of high ranking military of-
town of about 4.600 ficers charged with burglary.
The case was a sensation two
months ago when Soviet newspa
pers printed stories saying the
three looted apartments to finance
wild drinking parties, weekends in
Leningrad and their Hollywood
style wardrobes.
The defendants admitted their
guilt.
They are Erlena Kuinetsova,
22, daughter of Maj. Gen. Sergei
Kuznetsova, instructor at the So
viet military academy; Alia Mak
ismova, 19, stepdaughter of Lt.
Col. Koleyov of the internal secur-
and Tanya An-
1
Gov. Elmo Smith was speaker
Saturday night at a banquet of
the Oregon Press women who
are holding their fall conference
in Salem this weekend. The ses
sions opened Saturday morning ity forces (MVDI
bones. Sheriff Ernie Mosier of. with an illustrated talk by Cam- dreva. 18. whose father just re
Wasco County said he believed it i eron Paulin, of Willamette Vni- signed as a colonel In the Soviet
There are 801 more Democrats : was possible Ingram had taken, versity and will conclude, this air force,
than Republicans registered in 'his own life. afternoon with a tour of Mt. Angel ' They said they started their
Umatilla County. i Ingram's half starved pack-1 Women's Academy. ! burglaries when they entered the
Democratic registration was re-, horses were found wandering a yis, Rebecca Tarshis Port-' apartment of former Soviet movie
ported at 11.014 and Republican at 'month after the prospector's dis
10,213, a Democratic lead of 801. j appearance. A brief search at that
In the 1952 presidential election, I time failed to produce any trace
the Democrats had a margin of of the man.
560. i
p.epub- Livestock Show
WONDERFUL FOOD
SERVED
So.OaGASEOaD STYLE -,
Entrees for Sunday Dinner
M noon H I p.m.
ROAST TURKEY
AND DRESSING
OR
SWISS
STEAK
4 M SslasW end toKtlwi a
kala yowwW H
J Cfcaka of hat wrtra whw
al m fatal
J Caffa. katl tea, arwf ar
7 Chaka af 4 staHslaas
HEPPNER, Oct. 20 Of
T 4- ! a.
about H miteMtk of Saleir on;1 027 in Morrow County; voter j OpCllS ill Portland
99E. resulted when the Hughes j r0iir.iin l. I
day.
Republicans gained 203 and
Democrats 5 since the 1952 election.
car skidded on wet pavement, ac
cording to police.
Also cited on a charge of failure
to drive on the right, said officers,
was Janice Mae Brown, 18, of
MM rvitvtr TV attar har ear
Jf collided in the 400 block of W.
i . . . ,..
waia Avenue wnn a Teniae oriv
en by Raymond Vernon Doores,
3487 Roberts Ave. The collision oc
curred about 3:30 pjn.
State police also investigated a
7 p.m. accident at the "Y" junc
tion on the Salem-Dallas highway,
which like the others was free of
injuries. Officers sid the drivers
were Emma Regehr, Dallas, and
Omar Fromme, also Dalles, with
considerable damage reported to
the letter's 1947 Ford.
All You Can Eat for (OlfOjC
( Children fader II Just AAt) .
i 'ly i " .
t r ... .
m
U 1
JOHN LAW ARRESTED
Police officers said John Law
was arrested Saturday night on a
charge of being drunk on a public
street. Law. 43, of 74 N. Liberty
St., was held under $13 bail
Prince Ranter of Monaco en
listed in the French Army in
World War II: served as a lieu
tenant; refused to be promoted to
colonel -vt
Hunter Dies
After Surgery
BOISE, Idaho Oct. 20 -
James R. McGinnis. 4, Portland,
Ore., died in St. Alphonsus Hos
pital here today following sur
gery.
McGinnis was brought to the
hospital yesterday after becoming
ill while on a hunting trip near
Vale, Ore. He was first taken to
a hospital in Ontario, Ore., but
was transferred to Boise for an
emergency brain operation.
Mrs. Irene Siseel of Portland,
a daughter, said McGinnis be
came ill while he and half a
dozen friends from the west coast
were resting in their hunting
camp.
Also surviving are his widow,
Maggie, and two grandchildren.
PORTLAND, Oct. 20 UP Wool
growers took the play today as
the annual eight day Pacific
International Livestock Exposition
opened with some 2.000 head of
livestock In pens and stalls and
more than 300 entries from seven
Western states in the wool show.
J. R. Skeen, Pichacho, N.M.,
won the grand champion award
in the wool show with his entry
of a fine fleece. Reserve cham
pion honors went to the Mailliard
Ranch, Yorkville, Calif.
Top honors in the 4-H Club com
petition were won by Phillip
Krouse, Grants Pass. Ore., and
John Zimmerman, McMinnville,
Ore.
Preliminary judging by college
and 4-H teams began in the beef
cattle, swine and sheep divisions.
land, is president of the group.
Gov. Smith's talk on "Integrity
in Government and the Press"
was followed by an informal ques
tion period of a half hour, when
the speaker was led into the Sub
jects of taxation, education, state
institutions and aviation.
This morning's program will in
clude breakfast in Mt. Angel, fol
lowed by a tour of the Benedictine
Press building and the monastery.
Rt. Rev. Damian Jentges will be
the speaker.
star. Ladinana; "just to see how
a star lives." Once inside, they
related, they stole s few things
to pay for a trip to Leningrad.
Their trial is continuing.
The Maya civilization was be
gun in iMexico and Central Amer
ica in 500 B.C. i
I f i
CONT. FROM 1:45
TYRONE POWER
KIM NOVAK
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THE LOVK
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THE EDDY DUCHIN STORY
rdJ&SiU CinmaScOPE - vecHNicovoa
. REX THOMPSON-JAMES WHITMORE
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QUICK TIMBER STUDIED
ROME, Oct. 20 -Forestry ex
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creasing the world's supply of
quick-growing timber by the use
of Australian eucalyptus. Main
use of this tree is for timber
based products, such as hard
board pulp, coarse paper making
and temporary fencing.
Dallas Molor-Yu
Gates epea :45, shew at 7:M
FRI. SATSUN.
Robert Mitchum, Frapk Sina
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George Montgomery In
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STARTS
SUNDAY
OCT. 28
, o . ' ' .'3
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