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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1956)
' 4 (S.c. I)' Statesman, Salem "Vo Fflt-or Suwyi ' tio fear Shall Awe." front First Statesman, March 28, 1S51 Statesman Publishing Company . CHARLES A. SPRAGUE, Editor Publisher Published tvi North Church rf morning. Buitneu office MS SU Salem, On. Telephone 4-M11 thttrtd at the pottofflc at talem. Ore., aa ateonl -elate matter under act of Confma Mates a, llit. " ' , Member AtMclated PreM . Tba A undated fma la entitled elutively te tha teat (or republication of mil local aawa printed m ihli nowtptper. - . Ups and Downs of Prices - , A financial paper reported: "One d7 there wasn't enough copper to go around, the next day there wai a lurplui." : i; ' ; The truth of that certainly ihowi up in the price of copper. Early in the year it went as high as 50c per lb; in London, because of high demand and curtailment of supply by strikes In copper mines. Then of a sudden the price broke. This week the big producers in America slashed the price from 40c to 36c per lb. . Shortage had been succeeded by abundance. , ' 1 The same rule applies in housing. If there are 1,000 families who require housing in a town, and only 909 house's, there is a short age, and rents and prices are firm. If twd " families move away, there will be a surplus of one house, and in theory at least rents and prices weaken though as a matter of fact neither is very flexible. . .We are Inclined to think that the slump in housebuilding now is due to the fact that the immediate need hai been pretty well met at prevailing prices.' Lumber is doing what copper did, decline in price which in time will curtail production or stimulate demand to effect an equilibrium. Tr Producers relish the price Jumps, but they wince-under price cuts. But, as Mortimer Snerd says, "that's how it is." measures Nos. 3 and 4 ; Measure No. 3 on the state ballot will simply clear out some deadwood in the state constitution. As originally drawn the salary of the governor and secretary of state at $1,500, the state treasurer at $800 and justices of the Supreme Court at $2,000 per annum. These salaries are merely historical fiction now. The courts have ruled that the sums ' mentioned were not maxima and they were raised years ago.; Tha proposed amendment would repeal this provision which leaves the fixing of state officers' salaries with the Leg Islature where it is now. J';;1 '" -,-; Measure No. 4 amends one section by re moving the offices of coroner and surveyor from among the county offices listed in the constitution. It revises another , section by providing that the coroner and surveyor shall possess such other qualifications as may be prescribed by law. The effect of this apparently is to permit the Legislature to erase these two offices, or if they are retained to prescribe the qualifica tions of incumbents. We like this amendment. These two minor offices ought not to be listed in the constkv tution. For our part we feel the office of cor oner could well be consolidated with that of. .the district attorney and that of the surveyor with the county engineer. In any event the Legislature should have authority to set up the qualifications for surveyors and for cor oner if that appeared necessary. ,, The Statesman recommends approval of Measures 3 and 4. Dry Those Tears Jason Lee, candidate for Congress, sheds tears over the reported 500,000 farmers who have left their farms in recent years. What about the 500,000 before that, and more too 'Blood IBdtlVJn L Nationalist By JOSEPH f . : ,VI STEWART ALSOP 1 84 WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 The tragic and terrible blood bath in Hungary has now very publicly - reveaiea int. r "'real inner weak- nest of the'Na- tional Commu- i nlst" movement' in the Soviet Union's Euro pean satellites. ; ' , On the one 'hand, the polish ' and Hungarian drive tor free a o m frem Kremlin ; domi-, nation U a great popular move- ment, sustained and born along by a strong surge of popular opin ion. Gomulka m Poland had the people squarely behind,' him be- 1 cause tie naa . Wiuwu ue m,mvi opposed Krem-j hn domination; and for this, same reason. , Imre- Nagy int Hungary " had the people be hind him too. at least until ha turned the J ,k craft on them. But although Gomulka and Najy have been dissident Conv musists, long out of favor and even in danger of their lives be cause of their nationalist tendeo c s, they are still Communists a l the same. And the surge of which has carried them te jwwfr is not omr na- tionalistic. It is not only a surge cf opposition te tba rule of Pa. 1 -A and Hungary from the . -:r.!:n in Moscow, ft also tend very strongly to become aa anti- CVmmunist aurge. i -?-'' It is hard U 4i tb la IMdapest from this distance, I- t the America e4TWalS bejei t d ta form aa opintoa are r r b-"' i"S that N'afT was . , in we bbovb- , a ae took Ore.; Sat," Oct' 27, .56Ul over the years? Progressively, due to Im provements in farming and machinery, fewer people have been able to provide the food and fibre requirements of our growing pop ulation. This means that the marginal farmer either gets a 'bare subsistence, or he quits farming to enter industry! million of farm .youth have done., ;i. .; . . If Jason restores these 500,000 to farms either they will return to a substandard liv ing, or they must be paid to grow crops for which there is inadequate market at com pensatory prices, or they must be subsidized directly. These alternatives are not pleasing either to the families concerned or to the public. Jason should dry those tears. No Onus on Judge J 4 The current dispute over the use of umple ballots by supporters ol. Justice William Mc Allister, candidate for write-in election to the state supreme court, should in no wise prejiK : dice the case against the judge himself. . In Polk and Curry counties, it seems quite : obvious, too much advantage was taken of the apparent loopholes in the Oregon law by some of the judge's over-zealous propon ents.' His name should not have been stamped on sample ballots for distribution in county clerks' offices. Such activity was contrary to instructions from s McAllister's headquarters from which the stamps were sent In Marion County, apparently every effort was made to conform with applicable statutes. Extra ballots were ordered and paid for by the McAllister committee after it was agreed to have them plainly designated as campaign literature. If the dispute leads to clarification of stat utes governing sample ballots, it will have served its purpose. In the meantime, there is no onus on Judge McAllister and his write in campaign can proceed. Will He Be a Child Poisoner? Residents of a North Salem area are alarmed, and justifiably so, over the recent poisoning of several dogs in their vicinity. Their concern stems not to much over their losses thus far, though their family pets are sorely missed, as over the danger to their children. It is a real danger, too. It is pos Spreads poison tot are endangered That, apparently, is what is happening in one of Salem's nice residential districts. We hope justice is swift and sure. Editorial Comment Norblad for Congress This newspaper recommends the re-election of Rep. Walter Norblad, Republican candidate for re election as congressman lor the first Oregon dis trict. ' Rep. Norblad has been a competent congressman in his 10, years of service at Washington and has done good service for his district. He has gained , valuable committee seniority In a decade of House ' of Representatives membership. Rep. Norblad, a native Astorian who was reared and educated here, is a valuable man in Congress for this community, for he knows its interests and needs as well as any man possibly could. Although now making his residence near Salem, Norblad can still call Astoria his home town, for his parents still live here. We doubt if Rep. Norblad's Democratic opponent, Jason Lee of Salem, is able to offer the same scope of service to his district and to this community that Norblad can. Lee is without experience in public office, and has not served the sort of legislative training period in the state legislature that gives the voters a chance to measure his skill in lawmak ing work. He is an unknown quantity, and why trade a competent and experienced workman for an un trained novice? (Astorian Budget) Hungary Threat to New Leader's Power in Country , aver the HungarUa premiership Um students aad workers fat the ; Budapest streets were not merely shouting far "Natlonal-Comma-Blsm". They were actaafly ihoat- Ing for bo Communism at all. Thus the new government with Nagy at its head, strongly Na- tional-Communist as its make-up appears to be, was Just as muck threatened as the prior Hungar- ian government headed by Erno : Gero and Andros Hegedus. There fore Nagy called in the troops, actually including Soviet troops, , to restore order in the capital and to Insure his government s authority. The very fact that Nagy or dered this bleed bath easts deabt aa iha future course Ma garerw meat will take. Will it, a will K net eenUnve to Bra ap to the NaUeaal - Cemrnnnlst prafeaalaaa that erUuuujr woa Nagy. popu lar inppert? It win hardly he easy far Nagy la Hungary, after sing , the t Red ; army's guas against the Hungarian people. Yet eve far Gutnulka la Poland, wfetra" he has thss far main tained eutnplete mattery , ml tha ttlaaUea, the future eaa hardly be tokea far granted. - The. plain truth is that new , Vttoh and Hungarian govern- ments are altogether different, and in aa altogether basic way, from the Yugoslav Communist government which they are seek- big to Imitate. Marshal Tito and his comrades are not recent im ports, after alL They are the for mer leaders of their country's , vartime resistance, la wartime iney fought aiae ny side wiin ue Yugoslav masses. This very nativeness, this local origin of their power wai what made it possible for the Yugo slave Communists te defy Stalin, , it also gives Tito's government a ; special kind of security at home which Polish and Hungarian "Na-: ' tional-Communist" governments f " cannot hope to enjoy. : , ; t The new fellah and Hungarian ' eraa... .... - wr.-VcaaM -tt-T(ttiB ait sible that whoever has been putting out the . poison hasn't thought of the more terrible l "ner uurra consequences inherent in- his activity. And yet again, maybe he has. A dog poisoner has Democratic Leadership always been on the lower rung of the social p.. , p strata. He's on the very lowest when he UI me ra81 indiscriminately so that tiny Hungarian Cemmunlats, whether af the aatlMaUst or the Stalin stooge braid, were rlglnaMy carried ta newer la the baggage train af the Red army. Unlike TUa, they are tenaplraeuily Im ported articles. The aaestloa mast always be la .their minds, aa the events la Hungary have ew M hideously Indicated, whether they eaa maintain their power without the Sertet backing which was the first sowet tl that pewer, Gomulka is clearly going to try to do so. He has already indi- cated he wants the Red army to leave Poland. Despite the blood bath, the betting still is that Imre Nagy will also make a bold at tempt. Abandoning National-Corri-munism at this moment would be too stultifying, too inconsis tent and probably too dangerous. Even Nagy, even after the blood hath, - can hardly change hi course. . But la the eyes af the masters af the Kremlin, the difficulties that bora ahead af Camulka and Nagy M!t ( vtrj Important Indeed. "Suppose they try aad fall." the Soviet leaders must saw be saying to themselves. "Suppose that iaatead af Na- tia CammuBlat governments, Mtftmitu but .till closely linked to us, we are eventually faced with Palish aad Hungarian geveramenta as hostile as these we knew before the war." The possibility exists and can not be denied. No doubt it was the thought of this possibility that eaiiaMj th Knvirt UaoVra In come up to the very brink of using military power to restore urcu muuui la nHW, no doubt, for this tame reason, the Kremlin regarded Nagy'a need for force in Budapest ai a heaven-tent benefit And for this tame reason, one should wait to forecast the final ahape ot Soviety policy. At least until Gomulka hat led hit planned mission to Moscow and returned to Warsaw without undue mishap. ; ffniivpi - fgu K'rYo',k H.r.Id tnbiirTilJ GRIN AND BEAU pan. aW S " ' ' ' 5ak ijj ,(The term, 'lower and longer,' refers to the body lines ... NOT the payments! . . ' Safety (liter's Rate! tetter, far The SUteimaa't Safety Valve column are (ivan prior eeailderaMoa II they are Informative ana are no( more I baa Ma werdt la kaitk. renena attack! an ridicule, well at Heel, art la ke avoided, but anyone la entitled to air hctlefi ana opinions aa any tide of any aoeitioa.) The Statesman is in receipt of numerous letters from residents of other states, and more distant cities in Oregon, their contribu tions prompted by their interest in the election. Space limitations prevent our using all the letters offered, and we feel preference should be given to local writers. Also we will have to deny space to "repeaters" in the remainder of the campaign. No letter is ac- cepted unless it is signed and To u,e Editor: On the night of Oct, rd in his speech in Madison Square Gar den, Adlai severely criticised the present administration's leader ship. Let us take a look at the Democratic leadership in the past. During Cleveland's leadership I was employed at 50 cents per day from seven a.m. to sundown. Mrs. Socolofslcy was employed in a Michigan shirt factory at 40 cents per dozen. Good horses were worth $25 per head, milch cows $1S to $25, fat cattle 24 to Vi cents per lb., fat prime hogs I'i cents per lb., fat hens $2.50 per dozen, eggs S cents per dozen, butter 5 cents per lb., corn 10 cents per bushel, wheat SS cents, oats 17 cents per bushel. During Wilson's administration, first world war, 100,000 casual tieswar prosperity only. During Roosevelt's administration, sec ond world war, worst depression in our history, 100,000 casualties, billions war debt, FDR on Hiss' advice gives Stalin $12 billion, 600 ships, all satellite countries allowing Russia a free hand which resulted in the slaughter of 200,000 men, women and children and the displacement of hundreds of thousands into slave labor camps. During Truman's administra tion, Korean war, 140,000 casual ties, the largest national debt in our history, situation in govern ment management so bad Tru man had Herbert Hoover revamp the whole system. Communists honey - combed the government selling secrets to our enemies. The chairman of the Adlai meeting boasted the largest Crowd in political history, or 20. 000. The crowd greeting President Eisenhower in Portland was 100, 000! The above article is the leader ship Adlai it Co. promise you. By their fruits, not promises, we know them. Mr. and Mrs. David Socolofsky, 1625 Center St. Editor's Note, Friends of Hoover's will be glad to learn at this late date that it wasn't his depression after a II. Stop Signs at 14th St. To the Editor: I'm not a taxpayer and per haps some will say it is none of my business, but I feel that the preservation of life and property is everyone's business. I just saw the eleventh col lision at 14th and Court since May, 1955, in which three and possibly four cars were damaged, ft strikes me that It is about time there were atop signs put on 14th to help cut these acci dents down. There are stop signs on 14th at both State and Chem eketa, but Court, carrying heavy traffic night and morning re mains a hazard. I've been told that it takes a petition of the residents to get it, but why? There was no petition floated for the one-way grid sys tem. Dick Johnson, 14104 Court St. net FlSninE in Streams Te the Editor: If anyone it undecided about how to vote on the issue "pro hibiting certain fishing In coastal streams" they should go to the coast tome evening and watch the net fishermen operate in the Coastal streams. From tlx in the evening to tix In the morning . these nets are strung very nearly across the n una; n j fiTui i j aiTUKS itie ins O! man arm wur wiiiiuKursB rtveri ttTicfyWsImouidoTc IT By Lichty & wmmmmm Valve steelhead going up stream to spawn. (I understand they're sup posed to be halfway across but what I saw were more like Vi of the way.l Periodically, throughout the night, the nets are hauled in to remove the fish. Sometimes the catch is good, sometimes poor. 1 have seen a net pull in a half dozen fish, and 1 have seen them get thirty in one haul. These fish are mainly female salmon. They are full of eggs and are within a relatively few yards of their destination; their spawning grounds. The answer to the rapidly decreasing salmon runs lies right here. Each salmon from the river at this point rep resents hundreds of salmon that will never be hatched. It almost seems unbelievable to watch the future salmon be wiped out through the netting out of these fish about to spawn. The net fishermen, if they were to view this objectively, would see they are only destroying their own future livelihood. Net fishermen claim the price of salmon will go up if they are stopped. It seems to me that price of salmon will go sky high if they are permitted to continue for nothing raises the price of a product like scarcity. Actually these nets are guaranteeing its future scarcity, if not its elimi nation. Vote yes if you are inter ested in keeping salmon in our streams and ocean. , Walter Kandel. 4159 N. Overlook Terrace, Portland, Ore. n , rreaohment And Practice To the Editor: It appears to me that most of the sound and fury of the politi cal oratory during the closing weeks of the campaign must be aimed at that segment of the population which has not yet made up its mind, and when it does, expects above all that the candidate of its choice will be consistent. Now let us see Just how the Democratic candidate practices what he preaches. Mr. Stevenson claims that the Republican administration is a government of big business, then reveals that his portfolio of stocks, a personal investment in big business, has made him "al most a millionaire." He's n o t quite sure just how much he is worth, but he professes to know all the answers to domestic and world affairs. This is consist ency? Mr. Kefauver, his running mate who has bellowed so often in the interests of truth now informs us that Ike's administration is en dangering the world's vertical stability with thermo-nuclear ex periments. This is truth? Nothing more needs to be said regarding the consistency of the great political chameleon, Wayne Morse, who has been on every side of every issue since we first made the mistake of sending him to Washington. His only unchang ing characteristic remains t h e niuslacltt- wiiii'n fails even to fil ter the hot air with which he empties the Senate chamber. It will be hard on his neighbors, but in all fairness to the country at large, we Oregonians have the I responsibility of returning this man to his former home in Eu gene. If you haven't yet decided on! the candidate of your choice, 1 think this over. J. E. Morgan. 4085 Cherry Ave. j Government a Referee To the Editor: Sometimes it gets rather irk some to us of the Republican Old Guard to be constantly told by the editorial staffs of some of our papers what we believe and that we want to get back to some thing in the past. We feel that we are far more able to tell what we believe than the editors. We believe that our citizens, left to their own devices will go forward r that big government . can do little but throw monkey wrenches Into our industrial ma chinery; that the inventive gen ius of man and our willingness f . T at J - ....; ' 1 i TP 00) CUD (Continued Irani page 1.) fourths of receipts go to road construction and for reforesta tion. This money is now being used to complete the principal roads in the Smith river basin tributary to the Umpqua near the Coast, Under the plan for bureau of land management roads (the bureau manages OkC lands), the one who hauls timber over the roads pays a fee to help amor tize its original cost plus a fee for maintenance. On the federal roads managed by the forest service, the maintenance fee only is collected, if I am correctly in lormea. uther users such as settlers along the route or rec reationists are not charged. The OkC roads built or soon to be built total 142 miles with a total cost of over $10 million. The national forest roads in Oregon represent an even larger invest ment. These roads are very expen sive because usually they are in rough, mountainous terrain. For instance the cost per mile on the I Berg G. Baglcy, 45, a grain ele Quartzville system in Eastern vator assistant superintendent, Linn County was over $86,000 per ; and Carl R. Veach, 15,- drowned mile. Costs in the Smith river .in the surf at Long Beach, Wash., system were nearly as high. There rock for surfacing comes from the extreme ends of the system. To the landing on Smith river rock crushed from Umpqua river gravels is barbed, then hauled in big dump trucks in tandem for spreading. At the mountain end on Roman Nose, a rock dike affording a magnificent ... - ""' whole basin, a material for sur-; overlook of the crusher grinds farina frnm fhat nH Tap ic plenty of rock in between-rock DPlte. strong undercurrent, cliffs had to be blasted away in aU ,KJrls reached shore safely many sections - but it is sand- "eeP . woman AauMfr and stone, suitable for base material Ml$s eacn but too soft for surface wear. Bagley. fully dressed, waded out While the roads are expensive they are built for permanence.! The heavy loads of log trucks . . would quickly wear out a light' base, so the specifications call for some two feet of coarse rock base, then some 18 inches 0f crushed rock and fines. After the harvest of the virgin crop' the roads will serve for manage ment and then for subsequent timber harvests. In Smith river the government will not build all the roads. Spur roads to get to tracts sold will be built by timber purchasers. The main system will not be com-, pleted until next year, but some! cutting is now in progress under i early sales. 1 The first selling will be for PENDLETON, Oct. 26 m -getting out salvage Umber, that Palmer Hoyt, editor and publisher whirh h hlmvn Hnwn in .tnrm. ! of the Denver Post, will return back in 1951 and that killed by,nere 'morrow for an open house jtion. bark beetles. On these sales mar- at ,he newspaper that gave himj keting has been thrown open to ' hls f,rst afler graduation from i - . all bidders. The Smith river svs-!eol,re- fllPtTI rlmLlIl tern connects with the Siuslaw .? Pendleton East Oregonian " forest roads which offer rnnner. ' tions to Lane county mills. How ever the hauling advantage is clearlv with the roast mills nnrl that i.i where most nf tha tirntw will be milled Hoyt 'a,r hecame editor and Toll roads became an anachron- f The . 0re8ontian at Ism in Oregon years ago - the,Portland MoTt 0,n t0 Denm- last was the Wilson river toll road to Tillamook. Now under pressures for timber and lack of public funds a toll road system is being revived. The timber has to pay the freight. Better English By D. C. WILLIAMS 1. What fs wrong with this sen tence? "Tom never told me that that was Ruth's and Jack's home." 2. What is the correct pronun ciation of "satiety"? 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Gossamer, goddess, gondolla, gorilla. 4. What does the word "prev alent" mean? 5. What is a word beginning with sup that means "haughty"? ANSWERS 1. Say, "Tom DID NOT tell me that that was RUTH and Jack's home." Only one possessive form is necessary when there is joint possession. 2. Pronounce sah-tie-i-ti, accent on second syllable. 3. Gondola. 4. Most generally re ceived, current, or practiced. "This was the prevalent opinion." S. Supercilious. are the reason for our present level of existence. All that we ask of our govern ment is that it be a referee to prevent injustices and that this nation be permitted to go on "un veiled" to a brighter future. Iewis Judson. .1000 Judson Street. 'drffionGtattjiuui Phane 4-SSU Si kacrtptioa Rates By farrier la eltleai Dally only 1.8 per ma Dally and Sunday $1 45 per mo. Sunday only .IS week T By mall Daily 4 Sunday: (In advance! In Orefon $1 10 per mo I ISO tlx no 10JO year By mall Stneay only: tin advance i Anywhere In Vt t SO per ma ITS six ma 1 00 year In U.I. outddo Orefoa .. 11.43 per mo. Memker AnOlt Bareao of Ort illation Borean af Avertl1n ANPA Oman NewiMoer Peellikert Aaenrlattra AtvertlelM Bepreaontatlvett Wtrd-flrlfntn Co. Wett Belllday Co New York Ck trace Lebanon Plant Official Heads ., Douglas Fir Unit TACOMA, Oct. 28 IB - B. V. Hancock, executive vice president of Cascades Plywood Corp. of Lebanon and Eugene, is the new president of the Douglas Fir Ply wood Assn. He will serve out the term of Howard Garrison, Coos Bay, who resigned after leaving the indus- Charles Snellstrom pf the Sncll- strom Lumber Co., Eugene, was named a member of the board of trustees of the trade promotional organization of the Western fir plywood industry. He replaces Robert Kelly, Portland, who also resigned. . Futile Try to Save Children Brings Honor PITTSBURGH, Pa.. Oct. 26 UB- A Vancouver, Wash., man who gave his life last summer in a futile attempt to save a drowning girl was honored by the Carnegie Hero run1 Commission today. last June 24 A bronze medal will be sent to Bagley's widow. She will also re ceive $80 a month death benefits. The commission's citation said Miss Veach, a poor swimmer, was surf-bathing with a group of other girls under supervision of a wom an who was a good swimmer. They were caught in a five-loot They were caught in a five-loot breaker and went under brieny ,75 fcet from shorfi ' ana ,ne oma,n cml l n,m summ?n ,h. Coast Guard as she: startM swlmn8 toward the etla Chat Itnft dniinkUa ' . " , , . , ,mc. reached shore safely, with the aid ?f ,,hree other a&le?. was seen approaenmg miss veacn, who was by then 450 feet from shore. Their bodies were washed ashore 13 davs later. Pendleton to Honor Editor Palmer Hoyt w111 welcome visitors in the new win welcome visitors in the new building it occupied Oct. 1. Hoyt. who was with the newspaper from 1923 to 1926, will speak at a noon luncheon Time Flies FROM STATESMAN FILES 10 Years Ago Oct. 27. 19K Snow which started to fall in a number of Oregon mountain passes continued, with the result that snowplows were pressed into action. Six inches of snow fell at Santiam summit with more than three inches at Santiam junction. 25 Years Ago Oct. 27, 1931 A large number of Salem girls pledged at Willamette University this fall. Following is a group of some of the pledges: Velma May, Gwendolyn Hunt. Hattie Ramp Ruth Chapman and Claudi aBan tin. 40 Years Ago Oct. 27. 1918 Miss Dorothy Patterson enter tained with a Halloween party at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Patterson. A few of the guests were Har riett Griffith, Pauline Dick, Mar garet Griffith, Rulh Barns, Ken neth Wilson, Paul Staley, and Frank Deckebach. -ejB- Tkoatea C. tarifht, anew with kit VasaT I m It Mm I t i ... , . k 4)v FoeTejaeBjaBBaapaajJtp p"JoW Ce'Bl fttW eao4aTAM-eTtto)Bf faj CoBBjBe' OBtonletrt 4n mtoee. Me wf kaoele aa private teiee wttte in offke. Hie opponent (Miei Hattie trotteM teaareea aptieo to tahe private eaaet, InrifKt a Navy vet of WW1. treeWe of WiHametto U. Cellefe af law, hat keen a tpeiel Auditor Attorney Oeaerel of Oreooo, end practket lew hi kit own effke hi Salem. d. pol. adv. tletl Eorighl Committee, Martha tibenihedo, Setly 5010 tobindilo, laTtm. Political Parade . . . i . - - i - , -.(.. McCarthy ts Rlet for Marian County Commissioner f . ft 4 ... t Li I Denver Young1, 54, native of Okmulgee, Okla., resident of Oregon since 1903 and of Marion County for 21 years; attended school in Spring field, Ore.; formerly in cer amic tile business in Port land (1921-1935) and Salem (1935 1942); deputy ' sheriff 1942-44; first elected Marlon County sheriff In 1944, re elected in 1948 and 1952; married; one daughter and two grandchildren; Republi can; address Route 3, Box 656, Salem. Adlai II-Ban Wins Backing mar rirvn I II illl'ti M)K Ul 1UIN 1 NEW YORK, Oct. 26 CP-Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt aid today Adlai Stevenson's proposal to halt H-bomb tests was a start toward the salety of trie worm, Stevenson. Democratic presiden u , norninee( has said his first ... . . order of business, if elected, would be to seek world agreement to halt such tests. bers of the Southern Oregon Radio The widow of the late President Club, a local "ham" organization, said "there may be a risk'" that Pround of their amateur status, any agreement might be broken and anxious in guard ii. i'np radio but expressed hope the risk would men turned doun an nf'rr of a be taken. midnight in.irk at the newspaper She told an ABC television audi- office in the 1M2 presidential elee ence that the most important in- tion. lest it be thought of as com stinct of the human race is self- pensation. preservation and "therefore we . have something to count on." She expressed doubt that the Soviet Union wanted to engage in an H bomb contest any more than Americans do She said President Eisenhower and. other Republican speakers triea to confuse the H bomb ques-: pit a 'lY'o.l JH jjlTJll Wltll Motor Trouble PENDLETON, Oct. 2 - . Three Marine Corps pilots flows and Bonneville restored 300, stopped here today when one of a 000 kilowatts last Tuesday. The flight of three planes developed remainder was to go on the lines engine trouble on a cross-country at midnight. I navigation fiiffht Rnnnpvillji caiH ctnrncf, roifr. The pilots were flying ADts, sin-!voirs are building up enough to gle-engine propeller driven planes maintain the interruptible load on a return trip to Miami. They through November. Inierruptible had flown from there, landed at power is rut off in periods of Salem and were en route to St. shortage. The plants made up the Louis on the first leg of the re-'deficit through purchase of steam turn trip. 'generated power and other encr- A plane flown by 1st Lt. George gy, G. Cusack, West Palm Beach, i Fla , developed minor engine trnu-! ble. The other two pilots were 1st TJ I T f Lt. J. W. Hendnck of Salem and llLllIMl UeVe 1st Lt. H. F. Witter, Vancouver, Wash. They hoped to resume the flight soon. Albanv Radio V Station Adds New Manager ALBANY, Ore., Oct. 26 -Warren Stoffer, 43, has been ap pointed general manager of radio station KWIL, Ralph R. Cronise, president of the Central Willam ette Broadcasting Co., said today. Stoffer, who has been commer- cial manager at the station, sue - ceeds Phil Waters. Waters h a s resigned to become manager of a I new radio station, KYNG in Coos Bay. J .-.- :!sr iWrj;.u run VtUkr fJT A I family, wilt be a fwR rime Dfctrict Attorney, '. -v , , , 1 r--- - .. : ' K , S ' (pa-"" . t : f-;-vcr ) ki Sherman V. Burrls, 47, native of Des Moines, la., resident of Marion County for 14 years; attended school in Des Moines, took drafting and engineering courses at Detroit; former auto sales man and trucking contract or; recently with Boatwright engineering firm In Salem; ran for sheriff in 1918; mem ber of Court Street Chris tian Church; married, three daughters; Democrat; ad dress 434 S. 17th St., Salem. Short-Wave Kadio To Speed Kelurns From Election GRANTS PASS, Oct 26 i Josephine County election returns will be speeded to the public via short wave radio again this year. Amateur operators lorming four mobile teams will collect returns from outlying precincts (or relay to collection points. Other trans mitters will be located at the county clerk's office and the Daily . . . Courier building The radio operator are mcm- Interruptible BPA Power Flows Again PORTLAND. Oct. 26 u - Tba Bonneville Power Administration said today that interniptibie fed eral power curtailed Oct. 1 was to be restored at midnight to 13 industries in the Northwest. The agency cut off sno.OOO kilo watts to aluminum plants and other industries as low stream flow reduced power generation. Rainfall boosted Columbia River Mtinl fiWil Dies in Crowd EUGENE, Oct. 26 UP A re tired University of Oregon pro fessor, Jesse H Bond, died last night at a lecture program on the campus. Bond, 75, was a professor of business administration from 1928 until his retirement in 1947. He was stricken while in the audience awaiting a lecture by Herbert Morrison, former deputy minister of Great Britain, 1 prime ItALPH E. NEWMAN, JRs Law tumty rtttnm imyv "YITISAKS ARE VOTDIG FOE DOUG McEAT BECAUSE... At a veteran of two world wart and member of the Amer ican Legion, Veterans of For eign Wars, and Order of tha Purple Heart, Doug McKay knows first-hand the problem! of retertns, and will sggres tively work to help us." Yiti D0U6 McIAT Senior N AW.. Mek U SnatOT Cm, W. L aiiOfevViBtiflaayLiaJaavaBa 0.l,..l,,,. M y rQOiSWK-. - i J - c