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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1956)
5 ( If: if f 1) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sat, Oct. 27, 56 cgon Woman Steals 1 i"1" Auto, Dies rHCHNIX Aril., Oct. (D -An Orr;on woman wti killed to day hrti she wrecked a city car the had stolen from a parking lot GOP Bigwigs At Medford , For Nixon Br THE ASSOCIATED FJLESS (Star? 1m page one.) Most Oregon Republkaa office aeeker wer at Medford Triday (or the campaign vixit of Vict President Richard Nixon. Gov. Elma Smith and Douglas McKay were among the several hundred who welcomed Nixon when hit plana arrived at the Medford airport. : Other party leadert and candi dates were at the rally held later in the evening at a Medford school. Democrats were active else where in the state. Sen. Wayne Morse, seeking re flection as a Democrat, told a Eugene audience that the farm support program has cost less It a year per person In the past a years and that this la less than the indirect subsidies given te magazines by giving them postal service at less than cost. - Morse is opposed by McKay, lllmaa Raps McKay, Cmw Al Ullman, Democratic candi date for the congressional post held by Republican Rep. Sam Coon, said in The Dalles that "Coon and McKay helped roll out the plush carpet for the private utilities during the past J4 years while we In the Northwest have seen not one, solitary new federal multi-purpose power project start ed." -' Monroe Sweetland, Democratic candidate for secretary of state, said that if he la elected "loose practices by county clerks in vio lation of Oregon election laws would be halted." Charles, 0. Porter, Democratic Candidate - for the fnnoYMainnal post now held by Republican Rep. Harris Ellsworth said "Al Sarena has now become the Republicans' election mine and it would not surprise me te learn the state GOP party, hurt by the truth of the timber-steal from our Rogue River National Forest, is financ ing the mining operations." i Porter said the granting of the mining patents te the firm was a "giveaway" of timber re sources. failed U Keep Pace Sen. Neuberger, campaigning In behalf of Democratic candidates. said at Roteburg that Orecon has failed to keen pace with national economic conditions in the four years that Pwihlirani have oc cupied the V,...;e Kouse. He said that the per capita in come in Oregon was $97 higher than the national average in 195, but that this had dropped te $10 below the national - average by 135S. ; . . State Sen. Robert D. Holmes, Democratic candidate for gover nor, spoke at Eugene Friday at a Candidates' Fair sponsored by the Eugene League of Women Voters.- -i- '. ;:. . Charles K. McWhorter,. chair man of the Young Republican National Federation, said at Port land Friday that President Eisen hower will run as strong. If not stronrer, fn November at he did in 121 The New York attorney as in the state boosting GOP candidate. .'.....-;''; The Weather Mas. Mln, Bala Aitarla ZJm Biker . ,. JiMifort , North Band Peruana Sio Ohlcais 3 .1 M .(17 41 . SS l.ltt .13 ei m .as Dnvr .h m m 71 4J i M H SS i M ..S H M - SS " 49 .m .4 SS . M .41 as . M 40 M Tort Worth .Is Ania Miami , , Nw York n FtmcUc , Scattla . WMlUnffton, D, C. Tod'i fortrart tnm V. I. W,. tW iturtou. UcNtrr rtM III.,,;. 1 Partly cloudr with arattarid ahow. ra ti.. cltaring toniht, moatlv fair eunday: hifH today aaf, 10, on1r tonnht Kith Jaw nr SS, winanwna Rivar: ) 04 tui. itmp. a.m a.m. today 41. ; 'SALEM MRrmTATlOW ! Start af Wtathtr Taar, Stat I ': -.Manual s.4 . a ss --4.1S rr:ic "! ( aJ f OLD TI.V.E DAI.'CE 'Oyer Watt Aute , 219 Court Si, - Sat. October 27 Imsn't Cr&titrt H i j.I fi , - , r iliw t 1 F ." ron.a 1 in Crash In downtown Phoenix, police said. Officers reported that Mrs. Fern Coatney, 46, of Milwaukle, OreH crossed the center line on a street east ef Phoenix and slammed headea into another auto. Four persons in the other car were injured, three of them critically. :T --v. , ; Mrs. Coatney'a body was identi fied by her husband. R. B. Coat ney of Klamath Falls. Ore. "I can hardly believe it," the bus- band said. "She was a good wom an, deeply religious. She didn't drink or smoke. She must have been out of her mind." . Coatney said his wife had tome "mental troubles" in the past. He said he and Mrs. Coatney. who had been working a a house keeper la Milwaukie, came te Phoenix by bus Thursday to visit with her religious friends. He Mid be became separated from her at a bus depot following their arrival. Ha did not see her again until he identified her body at a mor tuary. - . . it Falls; 4 Killed NEWVTLLE, Pa.. Oct U Aa Air Force CUI Flying Boxcar smashed into the side of a moun tain near this central Pennsylva nia community tonight killing all four crew members. A spokesman for the Olmsted Air Force Base near Harriiburg said the craft crashed into ' the mountain, exploded and then burst Into flames. . : The spokesman, Harold Hicker he), public relations officer at the base. Mid there were four men aboard the craft and all perished. Hickernel said the plane appar ently crashed in a light rainfall. It was en route from Smyrna. Term., te the Olmsted base where it wss te pick up cargo and return to the southern base. Ike Extends Southern WASHINGTON. Oct. M un - President Eisenhower once again extended his campaign plans to day, and added a stop la Tennes see to his planned forsy Wednes day into Texas and Oklahoma. The Tennessee stop means El senhower will visit next week aa four Southern states he captured from the Democrats la 1931 Tennessee was one. The others were Texas, Florida and Virginia. Eisenhower is making a flying speaking ' expedition Into Florida and Virginia on Monday. Byrnes Kejects Both Adlai, Ike COLUMBIA, S.C., Oct IIU James F. Byrnes, who served as secretary of state in the Truman Cabinet, tonight rejected both na tional party : presidential candi dates because of their racial inte gration views. . . The 77-year-old retired states man came out instead for the South Carolinians for Independent Electors, a dissident Democrat group which rejected the state party's loyalty to Adlai Stevenson. Byrnes supported President El senhower in ltr-'Mr EAGLES HALL Halloween Dance Octobtr 27tK 9:30 b 12:30 P. .I Admission $1.00 par Parson "Proceeds to Dam) Runyan Cancer FuneT W a da.iA.aai i itv ana i rtairm Air Transpo Trip I' ; - I ) II t s", - i -mm it . - 1K f . . - i f W UUJi . t J - ...-trt 1 s'ss i ii I I .rii ini"r rn i Is- a . m .(laktW mm . I gaa . .M El , I TSZ Sf n-l . Qiinese MobT Fights Go On In Singapore SINGAPORE. Saturday, Oct. 17 lv-Chinese mobs battled police and troops across Singapore is land today in the third day of anti-government riots. By last midnight, eight Chinese rioters had been killed in bloody clashes and at persons II ef them Europeans had been, Injured. The outbreaks began Thursday when police .moved to break up a strike of pro-Communist Chinese high school students protesting the government's ban of their student Union aa a Communist front. . . Frenzied gangs raged through the city and its suburbs Thursday night and Friday, asMulting Eu ropeans, charging police units and attacking public buildings. Briteas Beatea v British servicemen were beaten and knifed. Cars belonging to Britons and other European resi dents of the British colony were smashed and burned. Military ve hicles were destroyed. ; Rioters' weapons were stones and empty bottles. One group threw bottles filled with acid at a police car. At some points barricades were built serosa main streets to halt private cars so they could be set afire. Most roadblocks were knocked down by armored cars of army units summoned from the campaign against Communist guer rillas on the mainland of Malaya. Shrieking Make Soldiers on foot and In Jeeps broke up shrieking mobs In the narrow alleys of the Chinese quarter.- , - British air force and nary heli copters dropped 1.000 tear gas bombs oa the rioters Friday. - A government spokesman said the disorders shifted today from the center of the city to rural areas on the north side of Singa pore Island. A curfew was clamped oa the island. Welfare Office Consolidation Wins Approval PORTLAND. Oct M W - The state Public Welfare Commission today aooroved a reouett bv the Multnomah County Welfare Com mission te consolidate its five of fices into one central office. The county staff will be reduced to 141 from Its present strength of 161, the commission said. New office space will be rented for the central county office." VANDAL! THROW EGGS Vandals smashed em at-aW her house twice within the past two weeks, city police were told Friday Bight by Miss Eleanor Roberts, 70S Howard St. The wom an said eggs were thrown against ue side of her house oa the night of Oct, II and agaia oa the night m ucu u. Friday, Octobtr 26, 1956 - Dtar Tom: Just thought I'd drop a lino to lot you know wo aro ro-oponing tho din ing room ovtry ovtning ot tho Hottl Marion. Thoro novo boon tuch darn big v crowds in tho Oak Room sinco wo got . our now chof - wo ntd tho oxtra '.............' . .... ., , . tpaco. Of court, .wo can givo tho ; public bottor sorvico, too, by strving popular-pricod dinnort and short or dors upstair, ovory night from 5:00 " . . . p.m. on. - Lot tho old gang know, and wo'il oxpoct to too you II IVU Physicist Advise Halt to Nuclear Tests Testing of nuclear , weapons should be stopped, believes a Wil lamette University physicist. Dr. Robert L. Purbrick, head of the physics department, said Fri day that even without exploding H Bombs there is a certain amount of radiatioa that the body receives from cosmic rays in the atmosphere. He agrees with scientists who said that increased radiatioa re leased from detonating nuclear weapons, no 1 matter how small, "can be dangerous on a statisti cal basis." Give Mutations "Even a normal amount of these rays result on occasion in gene mutations or what is called freaks ef nature." he Mid.- "Doses of more than average radiatioa are expected to show up in. gene mu tations at least in the second generation with 'increasing fre quency." Scientists are also concerned with a radioactive explosion by product called strontium. Strontium, he explained, "falls on plants, animals eat the plants, people eat the animals, and the result is believed to be bone cancer in humans." Dr. Purbrick, a Manhattan Pro ject scientist, worked on nuclear reactions which gave rise to the first atomic bomb. He expressed concern that not enough emphasis had been given te industrial uses of nuclear energy in the United States. "We have reached a point." he said where two hydrogen bombs can destroy New York. There doesnt seem to be much reason to make bigger ones." Crtieal ef Secrecy He was also critical of the sec recy curtain that surrounds test ing of nuclear weapons: "After all," he Mid, "the first atomic bomb was not produced by Ameri can scientists, but by men 'from all over the world." Dr. Purbrick added that facts about the hydrogen bomb's basic reactions are already known out side of this country. "We are not keeping the secret from anyone but the American people," he said. He stated that the people should have the facte on the effects of the H - Bomb, "because that is where the best decision on whether to test and use these nu clear weapons will be made." Driver Faces Drunk (Count Two men were arrested, one on a charge of driving wnue intoxi cated, after a car was halted east of Salem late Friday night, state police reported. Officers Mid Pete Patsan Graves, M, Portland, was booked oa the intoxication eharge. They said Robert L. Morris, 22, of 1193 N. Sth St.. wu charged with allow ing an unlicensed person to operate a vehicle. Both men were lodged in Marion County Jail. toon. D.I Dr. Robert L. Purbrick, Wil lamette University physicist, says testing of nuclear weap ons is dangerous and should be halted. O&C Timber Land Value Said Falling PORTLAND, Oct. M If) - The volume and value of timber sales from O&C lands is falling behind' last year's, the Bureau of Land Management reported today. Virgil T. Heath, BLM Oregon; supervisor, said sales of green and salvage timber for the period July through September this year totaled 113,009,000 board feet with a value of $3,789,304, com pared to 122.(24.000 board feet valued at $4,297,114 in the same period of 1955. Heath said the average selling! price per thousand board feet in 1 1955 was 135.04 compared with 133.53 this year. Here is a listing of green and salvage timber sales in the five O&C districts for the first three months of 195S, showing Volume of cut in board feet and value: j Salem: Green 40,500.000. $1,335,-1 644: salvage. 11.177.000. $665,26. j Eugene: Green, 9.120,000. $321, 155: salvage, 5,813,000, $228,965. j Roseburg: Green. 23,372.000, 1797,383; salvage, 1,595,000. $47,- 415. Coos Bay: Green, 1,235.000, $35, 564; salvage, 1,790,000, $59,584. I ENDS aawawaswawaaaaw-a-awaajiaBm TYRONE POWER KIM NOVAK s-rP i MX THOMPSON JAMES mm VICTORIA SHAWaaiaaiMaiaaiaAwnM.aaiaatawaaaa Starts Tomorrow (Cont. WTMMIN!-as men seldom see them! A show you'll enjoy to the last hair-pull! Ba M W v j m M .Jay aaar- v m wvr m js I J?- n,,H U,i,H ft" Hi'""' Mlif Leslie Jean inty-uu X Plus Firsl Kun ROUNDUP m JILL HALEYI COMETS THE CREW CUTS GIVING OUT WITH "CIAZY 'BOLT TA BABY" C1AIT MAN CRAZY" "STBAIGHT JACKET- AND A SPECIALTY Political Telecasts By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Saturday, Oct, 27, schedule of political talks reported by can didates, their representatives or the stations. Morse, KBES-TV, Medford. 1:45- p.m.: KOT1-TV, Klamath Falls, S:4S-0 p.m. Judge Backs Negroes' Try To Keep Vote CLAYTON. Ala., Oct. 26 l-An AUbama circuit Judge today granted 22 Negroes the right to intervene in , a suit seeking re moval of their names from Bar bour County's voting list. The ruling by "Circuit Judge George C. Wallace came after former Gov. Chauncey Sparks warned that the court action was "a typical case for the NAACP." Sparks said the suit seeking to strip the Negroes of their voting rights without a chance to be heard would be inviting the feder al government to' step in. The Judge put oft further con sideration of a mandamus petition seeking removal of the Negroes' names from the voting list until next Wednesday. He instructed counsel on both sides to prepare written briefs giving their ver sions of how the law applies. Woodburn Drive-In Friday Saturday Sunday THE IIRDUM IEET George Gobel Plus itxAiuor C. Colbert B. Crawford Open 6:45 Starts 7:15 DALLAS MOTOR-VU Gates opea 1:43, shew at 7:00 Dana Andrews, Linda Cristal in "COMANCHI" CinemaScope Second Feature Jane Russell, Jeanne Crain in "Gentlemen Marry Brunettes" CinemaScepe Xaia Visers for Yonr Car TONJTE! l0"Meo Ttooto I WHITMORC aiai8MiefenO STItUOWtCK Ana From 1:45) PjH a Ann aT aTtl.il II Ml II til II T aTlliil lll.i.l Oooosite Sex' Nielsen Jeff Richards Agnes Moorehead Charlotte Greenwood ' bloRdetl 52m Hmy bni$ Art Mooney Dick Shawl Jim Backus '.Bill Goodwin Kanm -x.Clare Boothe Pasternak Short Subject OF RHYTHM "SHAKE, RATTLK AND BOLL" "I'LL REMEMBER APRIL" PtT.T "HAPPY CO I I'CKY" Member Dues To Pay Union Vote Drive WASHINGTON. Oct. 26 OFV-The AFL-CIO Mid today it plans to use "educational" funds from mem ber dues money to pay for a closed circuit television "get out the vote" broadcast to labor union rallies in 27 Industrial areas on Nov. 1. The program, estimated to cost about 130.000, will feature ad dresses by AFL-CIO President George Meany, and co-directors James McDevitt and Jack Crowell of the AFL CIO Committee On Political Education. An AFL-CIO spokesman said the main purpose will be a last min ute appeal to "get out the vote" on Election Day. He Mid he sup posed the fact the AFL-CIO has endorsed the. Democratic Steven-son-Kefauver ticket will ie men tioned. The cities to be Inked Include Indianapolis, Akron, Albany, NY.; New York City, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, Detroit, Los Angeles, Washington, Philadel phia! Rochester,. N.Y.; St. Louis, San Francisco, Oakland, Calif.; Louisville, Pittsburgh, Minneap olis, St. Paul, 1 Cleveland, Denver, Portland, Ore.; Seattle, Milwau kee, and Dayton and Toledo, Ohio. Cottonwoods Every Saturday Night Jack Kizziah and His New Texas Ramblers Adm. $1.00, Tax Incl. Dancing t to 12:30 Now-At SalenVs Family A MOTION PICTURE NOT FOR WEAK HEARTS OR SLOW MINDS! Questions -Havt You Lived Before? Will You Live Again? What Can People Be Made To Do Under Hypnosis? See It For Yourself! I 1 UlUUJUll SUNDAY YOUTH ON 'ifZ uwmm fpktX9ef S ; THE ' jfj- ' U. iAfi 1 WUCKC0NN0M if 1 1 tgSS ENDS TONITE: "SOLID G01D CADILLAC" Theatre Time Table ILSINOal Xlddia Matlnae In at J:00, out at S.0O "Bandlds": StU, S:4S, 10:11 Klaa Balora Dying"! 1:13, CArrrot. (Centlnueui from ) a.m.) "Solid Cold Cadillac": 1:00, 4J1. 1:41. 11:00 "MirnMcant Koufhnacki": t.ti, I M, 1.41 . NOBIS! SALIM DSrVI-lN (Calaa tpta, S:S; show al 1:00) "Conf Croaalnf ." Gears Nadw "Mohawk," Scott Brady BOLLYWOOD "Iddjr Duehln Btorj," T:00, : "Ha Laulhtd Lait, S:M On the $10 million dollar suspen sion bridge connecting Michigan's upper and lower peninsulas, west era cowbells are used to warn workmen when cable-spinning ma chinery is in motion. DANCE .L T0HITE! DAYTON LEGION HALL Music by LYLE aad the WESTERNAIRES Ivory Sat. NlgM -.30 to 12:30 Adm. I.M (Tas Inc.) AUMSVILLE PAVILION Music By Larry and His CASCADE RANGE RIDERS Sat. Nites Dancing at 9 P.M. CONT. FROM 1 P. M. W WW ft y V ' AT LA5T...th prooea in iTaming mystery that has hypnotized ' 1 men's minds since time began - N X i ...REINCAnNATlON! fj mm ey llli!!iii,Q)lw" Egypt 'Rules' Jordan Army CAIRO, Egypt, Oct. 39 UR Pro-. Egyptian elements were reporter today to have taken complete control of Jordan's army. . The last top ranking pro-Iraqi officer, Division Commander Gen. All Hayart, has been given two months leave and is not expected to return to active duty, authorita tive Jordanian sourcrsln Cairo said. 1 Humors reaching here from Amman, Jordan's capital, said Hayari had been placed under house arrest, but that could not be confirmed. Slay Young! Co DANCING TONITE! CASH prize; CRYSTAL GARDENS ADMISSION S0t Show Center ENDS TONITI "BANDIDO" "KISS BEFOR! DYING" 71 -sj O 1 V screen , v i - - i"ii TLUS- flWHAVKH SCOn SXADT RITA CAM NEVH.Lt BRAND Mi NOW PLAYING! syfifme'rl