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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1956)
U.N. Truce Watchers Patrolling Suez Zone By RONALD THOMSON Nasser insists that the interna-! Thfs conditions ran head-on LONDON. Nov. 13 -A team of tionnl army have no duties in the into the stated objectives of the 1 N' lmce bwvers with Suei Canal tone, that British-i British, French and Israelis, white Jeeps took up posts In the French forces withdraw from Port) The British press called the 800-yard wide no-man's-land in the! Said immediately, and that the i Egyptian conditions "impossible." Sue Canal ion today. Thcv i ' U, N, force be confined to policing Some papers said President Nas keep tabs on the cease-fire be-Ithe 1949 armistice line between I ser was trying to dictate terms as tween British-French and Kgyp tian forces pending arrival of the new U. N. police force. Despite three days of top level planning, there still was no single CAPODICHINO, Italy. Wednes day. N.v.J4 wv-rTbe departure ff the first units f the aew U.N., police force far Egypt was stalled agaia today. A L'.N. spokesmaa said It ras unrertaia whea the first of the a e a r I y too husky young Danish, Norwrglaa and Colombia troops would climb la ta the Swiss airliners standing by fur the flight to Cairo's Interna tional airport, field commander named for tb U. N. force," composed of Norwei iansv Danes, Canadians and.Coloi bians, v A French Foreign . M I n I s t r y spokesman served notice that France, expected the police force . to occupy "at least symbolically" ,the entire canal rone, not Just the northern end held by the British and French. By me account ot tne Minnie F.ast News Agency, Egypt's na tlonal newf - distributor, President DTF ItKDOjIS The line forms on the left. Aa was expected, the public school interests are first and fore most in their request for addi tional state revenues. They got a boost from the Interim committee on education Monday. It voted four to two to recommend a boost in tht basic at at school support from $R0 to 1120 per census child. Several members of the commit--' lee were not in attendance, how ever, so the vote may not be the final decision ot the committee. Another proposal to go to the Legislative Assembly with the rec ommendation ot the committee is to create a 17,000,000 state, fund for use in school construction among distressed districts. (Various proposals are also afloat with respect to district financing. Tho Portland school board, con scious of the problem its adjacent "bedroom", districts face for lack of valuation.proposes" a county equalisation arrangement. Another plan was offered by Supt. Leonard Mayfield of Medford. Under this, a single tax levy would prevail over the state, which would be the levy of the key (richest' district. The deficiency among the less , .i.i- f..j. ti.;. .u .r i ect V7e , chZ ,.V .ti TOPIT&SS Trow-much state money would be required unoer this plan and now it would be proviuca are oi reported. For most oi its history. Oregon as a siaie comriDuieo mue ior,,nd orcnestr, praclice rooms andF,.ur ,,,, common school sunnort. Its land' .L ... "Kares i-ocnea common scnooi suppon. us lana . grant of sections u and 36 in each "" "factor . Robert D. Morrow of TRANSIT STRIKE 'VOTED'"""" SEATTLE. Nov. 13 -' Street Car L'nion members voted l.nw to 15$ today to authorize a strike to enforce demands for higher pay by the municipally owned Seattle Transit System. Johnson Says U.S. Still oeeiung roreign r o 1 1 c y . By WILMOT HERCHF.R, WASHINGTON, Nov. 1J ( -Sen. Lyndon. Johnson of Texas, discussing American foreign poli cy, said today "the real question is where do we go from here." - The Senate's pamocratic leader added that, "apparently we are still searching for a long-term pol icy and we will not be able tn breathe easily until it is found." He told a Capitol Hill news con- ference he considers the use of the , tnd rP or,erR to()ay he U.N. police forces in Kgypt as,:. m -,lmi.!n th. w k. only "a temporary expedient to prevent the outbreak of large scale, war.' " f Concerning the North , Atlantic Treaty Orianiiation. he Mid: 'NATO remains the best meth od by 'which the free nations of the North .Atlantic community can Family Car , By Wslly Fslk ' "Of course not, he snlda't dake bio a mit denroas." Egypt and Israel. Mentalist Wins $5,000 Bet LOS ANGELES, Nov. 13 paper listing his predictions dated Oct. 10, was taken from sealed box today. His were exactly the same as Associated Press results. posted $5,000 check that his Wlrephoto) Election Predictions, Kept in Locked Box, Prove Accurate I,OS ANGELES, Nov. 1.1 (AP)-A mentalist won a' $5,000 bet that be could forecast to the last digit the number of votes cast for President Eisenhower in the nation, California and Los North High Music Wins Work to Start on Fritlav- . . . i Lonslruc,,("5 J I'."?:?? Scnool wlM begin Krldayi it WM , .nnminced Tuesdav after the o-! head had been eiven the con- i tractor. 1 The two-story addition to the ' gymnasium wing to house band ! . iittu thralre is tn he comnleted L monThl by 1 Flnai awarding of the contract 'had been held up pending approvalh. uu"Z .3 L hi. 'Ui.n' of the Salem school district's bond- j . U - C-1 . ..L.l J. ... 1 ' 1 J ing program. Funds for the music ; wing were included in a $2,900,000 i bond issue approved by th. voters j last February. 1 11 i unite for their common -defeww while maintaining their independ ence." From the mood of his col leagues, he went on, he expects the Democratic majority in the j new Senate will cooperate with! . V ,. . The whip is the leader's right the Eisenhower administration I Swimmer a figures were hand-hand man working mostly behind and "seek te solve problems rath- j"ilen,. .n f'ec-ffl f 6" f1 line up votes on er than create them," i . .u ' , h . ad bcen ' pending bills but also pinch hit- Sen. Morse (D-Ore). who has I ,DedHta lhe c"uf ,a,ur2i tinsf the top spot when the lead opposed some aspects of the , Mfc- "B w" ,e?st ?ur , !er is absent. - administration's foreign policy in fore about achieving a truly hi- partisan foreign policy." He said he intends to help work one out, Morse is' a member of the Sen ate Foreign Relations Committee, which received a secret briefing on international affairs yesterday from administration leaders f High Co u By KARL R. B At MAN WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 l-The Supreme Court today wiped put state and local laws requiring seg regation on buses. It did so by affirming a deci sion of a special three-judge U. S. district court in Montgomery, Ala. That court ruled that en forced segregation of whites and Negroes on. Montgomery buses vl olaled the Federal Constitution's ' guarantees of due process and equal protection of law. In a briefi unanimous, order, the Supreme Court cited its 1954 deci sion against segregation th public schools. It also cited subsequent decisions outlawing segregation in j though he-had won a war. 44 'P Jack Swimmer, mentalist, holds of election outcome. The paper, Sns MP figures would be accurate. AP Angeles County, the County Board of Mipemsors sain to- day. - ! Jack Swimmer on Oct. 10 posted a 5.ono check with the county Board of Supervisors to back his boastr The. money and secret predic- tion were kept by the county in a f;0rrtnn Nesvl first : i ,u. . i,nWM u tk, iuir ,it .mn. I er brass container. He unlocked the smaller box and from it took Swimmer's predictions. e J""1 . f,gu:M . W0If : 'c'0 checks were ' B a,..,.,, t Blirf in 0,.tjff mil th vni thai ne WM contributing the $5,000 to charity , Xm Al)t,If, pper x . 'Vi. ' owiuiiiirr auu in miprrvisors agreed shortly before the box-was opened that the figures to be used for comparison with those in the box would be from the 9 a.m. edition of the Los Angeles Times f' Fr::!!-vv Nov-Af,w 'h p.cn ing, ir .luim v invri ntiiu OWlllI f'".,' ?J last vote with the Associated Press tallies, as printed in the ! Times edition. The supervisors put .C: J stood only to gain $5,000 for ! up no money in .k.,:, ' ; mv"' ""v, w,,cn lne l,' i POWER OUTLOOK BRIGHT PORTLAND, No.v 13 (if Bonner ville administrator William A. Pearl today told the Portland area Bonneville Regional Advisory Council that the Pacific North west's power outlook la bright through 1965. ,, r t Bans Segregation public parks and playgrounds and ; on public golf links. This affirmation left no doubt that the Supreme Court was out lawing segregation on all bus sys tems. Earlier this year some ques tion had Arisen when the court simply dismsised an appeal from another decision overturning ' a South Carolina segregation law. That left the decision in effect but 1 ' confusion ended today-as " me supreme ioiin a .iniem. Negroes .In " Montgomery-1iave conducted a long boycott of city , buses as a protest against segre-' gation. One of, the things they re sorted to was operation of a car pool to carry those who used to 106th Yaar Neliru, Ike to Confer Talks Planned By Year's End In United States WASHINGTON. Nov. 13 on President Elsenhower agreed to- i A I'.N. spokesman said Ham day to meet Prime Minister Neh- marskjold offered to go personally ru of India before the end of the to Budapest to get the t'.N. relief year to review Middle Eastern' program la motion. He Is walt and other urgent world problems. Ing for an answer. Indian Ambassador G. L. Meh- (Hungary story also on page 2.) la, disclosed --that ...IlnaLarrange- -' "r ' ments for the conference, were completed this morning duri brief call on President Eisenhower at the White House. Informed diplomats said m S ere December seemed a likely date for the talks which originally were get for last July but postponed be cause of Eisenhower's inTestinaT' ooeration Eisenhower's main aim, they' .1H will K. . ,k hv nersnnall diplomacy to improve strained re lations with the Indian govern ment.' These relations recently have been jarred further by In dia's refusal to join in a U. N. de nunciation of Rusia's military on-! .i u. u.. The prospects were that Eisen- hower would meet Nehru either at his Gettysburg farm or at Camp , David, the presidential mountain retreat in nearby Maryland. In in-! v.h... ii E-ick.' u.a .wti.,,n, i, r r i i lau icuvaii v rij pivncu vit 1 1 David as the conference site. be-jn of Roseburg. lieving an informal conference,) Negotiations for sale of the sta minus the usual big staff of ad-1 tion to a Salem group called the vierse, offered the best hope of alKingwood Broadcasting Company, beter understanding with the In-' announced last July, have been dis- dian leader. Girl, 16, Jailed For $900 Bad ' Check Spree A 16-year-old girl from Lebanon was arrested in Salem Tuesday by city police on a charge of forgery. Police said she passed about 1300 in bad checks in Salem, and $600 in Albany, Glide and North Bend.. TV.. Alk.M .n.4MAH .1.. ' r:::, :;'.u"' . rharw fnr ih oiH-, rrt i The girl was placed in the Mar-' ion County juvenile detention unit and bail was set at $1,000. The arrest was made in S a?';;" cf ft nr. f after police received a tip th rws - workmg - TraSalcnT restaur ant Police iaidJhJjaLarninJier. room here in Salem and found sev eral boxes of woman's clothin forced rhprks she cached The girl admitted in a signed statement that she used the name Evelyn Hayes when she signed the checks. Police said the girl stole a per sonalised check hoak and saving llrl .!) recover,d' , , , Mansfield Backed For No. 2 Demo Eos t in Senate WASHINGTON, Nov. IS move among democratic senators n iM.tall Cam If n n. fi nlrl nt 1nfl. u thejf ew ..,., .. won public support today from Sen. t . . i . r r - The endorsement of Mansfield .r'".. l;"T " "'I.; 1! ic leader, ceemed to pretty well assure the Montanan of getting th 1 post when the chamber convenes in January Mansfield would succeed R;n. Clements of Kentucky, who was defeated for re-election by Repub lican Thruston Morton. IKE PLAYS GOLF ROUND WASHINGTON. Nov. 13 ( - President Eisenhower took the afternoon off today for hia first round of coif in nearly two I I months. . use the buses. Circuit Judge Eugene Carter today granted a temporary injunc- tion to atop the Negroes car pool. However, a Negro leader,, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., pre dicted the 11-month-old boycott of segregated buses will end at a Negro mass meeting tomorrow nlsht. called , . r.,ii h. supreme court decision. In neiihhnrin ui..;..inr,i nu ! J. P. Colpman said his state'would i 'continue to srcrrcate Neffrop and 1 whites on public conveyance, de spite the Supreme Court order . , . ... ..... vrui piniuue annul me uec sinn i remain in eiicvi in iiini mate ami i will be the same as about the' must be enforced despite the Su- school segregation casca," Cole-jpreme Court ruhng. ; J 2 SECTIONS-16 PAGES Dag Seeking to Personally Take Kelicf to Budapest I'NITED NATIONS, N.Y., Nov. 13 urv Secretary General Dag Hatnmarskjold disclosed tonight he has approached Communist Hungarian authorities aa the pas. slbility of his personally shea herding U,. N, relief supplies Into wv-torn Budapest. Hammarskjold, who delayed a Middle East trip for 24 hours te ronorntrate aa rushing U.N. sup piles and representatives to Hun gary, talked with Hungarian For- ! eig" Minister Imre.Horvath. W,f1 --Til . S,:tugenelirm Plans to Buy J Station K0C0 ' ,. , . , , Negotiations for sale of Salem radio station KOCO to the Fisher family, operators of Oregqn radio and television stations, were re vealed Tuesday.. Application to the Federal Com- municauons commission seeding transfer of ownership from founder- owner Loring Schmidt to Salem Broadcasting Co., was made in'serutce available to the company Sa!om Tuesday. at its office building site near the The new corporation would in- Jlayesville traffic interchange north dude Schmidt, C. O. Fisher of of Salem.-. Euecne and his sisters. Jane Fisher Indications to city officials have I of Eueetie. and Mrs. Nanrv Harri - j continued, Schmidt said. The- Fishers involved In the new transaction are all children of Carl - sher. whoe recent request to activate Salem's choice television Channel 3. was denied bv the Fed- eral Communications Commission, The Fishers now onerate radio stations arPendleton and Hood,Pans complc"" lnl year- "lhily complete freedom from paraly ser, and radio-television interests at Eugene and Roseburg. C. C. Fisher, the son,-is now president of radio KUGN in Eugene jnd is state secretary of the Oregon State Broadcasters Association. He and his father said Tuesday they planned to "extensively ex pand facilities and improve the services of KOCO, when they acquire ownership. The said they ,..,, to act on their aoDlicatinn "within I several weeks." State Hospital - Doctors Given Pay Increases Doctors employed at the state mental and tuberculosis hospitals were granted emergency salary in creases of $60 a month Tuesday by the state board of control. . Charles W. Terry, state civil ser vice director, told the board that the increases were necessary in order to j-elain the doctors and to ! recruit new ones. The new salaries, he said, will be comparable to those paid by Cali fornia institutions, but below those paid in Washington state. The pay raise affects 3d doctors at the State Hospital, Falrview Home and Stale Tuberculosis Hos pital here and the. two mental and TB hospitals in Eastern Oregon. They now receive between $575 and $915 a month, plus maintenance al lowances. To keep superintendents' salar ies above the newly raised doctors' salaries, the board also voted m raise them by eliminating a $75 monthly subsistence charge now made against them. Cold Weather, Forecast Says More of the cold weather thai brought out scarfs and mittens Tuesday is expected in Salem to night as the weatherman predicts a low of 32, Last night's low was m There will be little chance ofl dealing today and clouds are fore- cast' to be fo followed by rain late Thursday on B n s es i man r said.""" Mlsissippi's - public schools, like many others in the South, are still segregated. Georgia's -Atty.- Gen; - Eugene Cook said in the meantime that the ruling does not directly affect any Georgia city but that it would set a precedent, by which federal district courts would be bound Gov Martin Griffin said Georgia i would oppose by all lesal means 'any effort to apply In his slate a h'8h col,rt n'!ip inwd at Dannin2 but- segregation,. In Florida. Atty Gen. Richard lErvih saiLtm segregation laws , ,. .... ,u., ..j KUNDIB 1651 Tho Orogon Statesman, Salem, ' TVT dx-veair Jobs to Cost 4-Lane Salem Bypass, Albany-Eugene 'Bceline9 Due More than $71 million of federal money will be spent on four-laning Highway 99E in the next six years, Oregon Highway Commission an nounced Tuesday. The estimate includes construc tion of another two lanes on Salem Bypass and extension of a straight- $338,500 . Insurance State Farm Mutual to Start Project Early in. 57 Construction of the State building to house in Salem i mobile insurance headquarters will begin early next year, probably in January. This was reported Tuesday by city officials as the City Council confirmed ' bal agreement to make city 1 been that construction would be scheduled to permit a September 1957, opening of the offices expec ted to provide jobs for at least 300 and a million dollar payroll for Salem. I Statement Received Stale Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. itself has not yet an - nounced Its building plans, although! The Oregon Statesman has re- ceived from Vice President Norval i P. Goelzer this statement: '"We hope to have architectural ! con?lrucuon '? un ,f eanM,c" spring u wcauicr wiu mum. Goelzer is in charge of the firm's Western division with offices at Berkeley, Calif. . Site Purchased - State Farm bought a Jft-acre building site from Marc Saucy last spring. The present farmland In volved is south and west ot tne j intersection of Portland Road and the Salem-Portland Freeway, bor rinS Portland Road, the freeway and the Southern Pacific tracks The ' city projects to serve that area and other industries as they, develop nearby-will cost an csti-- mated $75,000, City Manager Kent:' Mathewson told the Council Mon day. . ui mis loiai, siaie r arm ; Mutual will put up $18,000. but up to $U,300 -of its shareis ear. I marked for return to the insur ance company If other industries locating nearby pay their propor tionate shares over the next five years. City planning calls for a 14-inch water main suificient for fire pro tection as well as eventual piping of water Into parts of the Keixer area if needed there after Salem increases its water system capa city, The water line would account for about $40,000 of the total. Second A-Sub Develops 'Bugs' WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 ifi-The Navy., gave, il. .guarded indication today that it is having further trouble with the atomic reactor) I A . - -A im nuMu ""- - submarine, the Seawolf. A spokesman said some "bugs" have been found in the power sys tem in addition to troubles re ported in September with the ves sel's steam superheating ment. Great Grandma Marries at l Hilllll HI III m.M) mil mi IIHl l imw .1 i' yi m wnmil m -i p im m i , mmmm m w : 4 ff" ' rr ?- , , . r- - : . :, vTT5 -J 1 'i if' i I -nTJl: .1..:, V i tin i li T'- " .jaimniAummmmmmmi tmmmm I I M a v. . kr k. A' k- 4 ALIIMI, f. I.. i-swT. ia Jiirs. . ,, , .,,. j ' . j . ,, . ,M jj, . . . l ren living, three grandchildren and seven jfreat grandchndren, feeds wedding cake to her ,77-year-old husband whom she married here tonight. (AP Wlrephoto). , talesman Oregon, Wednesday, November I line, four-lane highway from Salem to Eugene, plus several shorter projects between Eugene and the California state line. A 12-year program, aided by Oregon's expected $642-m 1 1 1 1 o n share of a $5l-biIlion federal aid highway program over that period. 17 caci Sewer Work Voted Firm to Farm Mutual b'2 jn?wauto-1 A six-vear Dro its earlier ver water and seweT Salk Favors Shots for AH Up to Age 50 ATLANTIC CITY, Nov. 13 jDr. Jonas E. Salk today recom- mended that adults up to age 50 j take shots of Salk polio vaccine. If . they do, and if all children are vaccinated, then 1957 could be , the first year of complete or near- sis by polio, the Pittsburgh scien tist predicted. " He said this goal can be won only if each person takes respon sibility to have shots himself and get them for children and rela lives. '. Polio' Is striking hard at adults now, he warned, and one-fourth of all cases occur among persons aged 20 to 30. (Add. details, page . see. 1.) Otto John Says He Escaped -p , 1 Km llUt n fill Itl O "V-iJ.' KARLSRUHE, Germany. Nov. 13 Otto John said tonight that during his 17-month stay behind the Iron Curtain he was "caught in a machine" from which he sometimes thought only suicide could save him. The former West German Intel ligence chief testified that he agreed to become a Communist showpiece only to escape brain washing with which, he said, the Rusians would have extracted real secrets from him, "I'm not a coward, but In this situation I could not do anything else," he said. "I succeded in retaining the real secrets," he told the Federal Supreme . Court lryjng him on ,0j ,,, n) . . multiple cnargrs oi treason. ' w i vent them from robbing me of my free will through injections." Combined efforts by the. court and prosecustion failed to shake John in his claim that he was drugged and abducted into East Berlin July. 20. 1954 and that he equip- was imdff coercion until his re ' turn to the West last December. 1 1 1 1 1 t' U M ..... .1 J niiiiam nmn, i hii-iiiu Kirt i.iiiiti - " " " 14, 1956 PRICE 5c 1TDC calls for four-laning of the entire WE route from. Washington to Cal ifornia. The 9.3-mile Salem Bypass proj ect will cost $1,838,000 of the $71. 534,000 six-year total, W. C. Wil liams, state highway engineer, es timated. Soon Six-Year Job to Extend TTSnes.to Almost All of City By ROBERT E. GANG WARE City Editor, The Statesman - am flesrttnpd to lnaleaewm and Sewage disiwsal available to virtually all of alem now lacking the facilities' was ap proved Tuesday night by Salera City Council. Estimated cost of $.338,500 will be met through use of about $60,000 a year from the sewer service charges paid by sewer users throughout the city. That amount is the ap proximate annual increase result ing from the recent boost of the monthly charge from 65 cents to $1. The city administration report on five new trunk sewers and 11 related projects, as approved by the councilmen aC their City Hall meeting Tuesday night, establishes priority of the projects which af fect most sections of Salem.- This report also recommends a $2(K),000 expansion of the Salem sewage treatment plant. The Coun cil has not yet gone into the fin ancing of this proposal. Biggest single project otherwise is a $103,000 trunk sewer and sew age pump station for the Laurel Springs area and other west slope property from Mission Street as far south as Croisan Creek Road. The pump station would be some where near Misison Street and the Willamette Slough. ': The Laurel Springs project Is recommended for construction in 1956-60, along with a $93,000 system of laterals to be paid by assess ments against benefitted property owners... . .''... L..- Ton nrlorltv oroiect on tho list Is a $50,000 East Side trunk sewer this coming year in Park Avinue from Sunnyview to Center Streets, where 27- and 30-inch line would serve much newly annexed Salem area and would be designed for ex tensioneast W" Four Cornerr"i may be eventually required. Sharing this priority, would be the $12,000 worth of laterals in that area for which property owners would foot the bill. Copies of the sewer report will be printed and made available to the public, according to City Mana ger Kent Mathewson who said city officers have been getting "sewer questions" from interested citizens almost every day, His report to the Council was based on studies, estimates and analyses prepared by City Engineer J. H. Davis and City Finance Officer Howard D. Brand void. (Add. details, Page 2, Bee. 1.) AT YOUR OWN RISK NASHVILLE,' Ind., Nov. 13 - ff A --mgir-oir-a-dflrtor'r -off tee-here points to tae aoctor s parxing mi and the cemetery beyond say ing: "parking for patients." SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN UP WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 (Jft-The number of school age children leaped upward by 1.167,000 in the last six years, the Census Bureau said today, Age of 97 ...hJmaIIi.. m It K Imta mK 11. Tlie Weather ,. .. . Today's forecast: Partly, cloudy today and tonight, b coming mostly dowdy with rain lato Thursday. High to day 53, low tonight 32. (CmlU ntwif MS n No. 232 Construction between Salem and Eugene will include an entirely new road east of the present road for a 44-mile stretch from a point north of Albany to Judkins Point, near Eugene, this win coat an es timated $20,879,000, exclusive of right of way, Williams said. Two lanes will be added to tht present Salem-Albany route. Two miles of this were completed last summer, from the south end el Salem Bypass to fllahe Junction, and 1.33-mile extension was placed under contract last week for com pletion next summer.. v Also completed last summer was the four lane Baldock Freeway from rortiand to Salem. Eagene Area Projects Pre ject south f Eugen sched uled for the next six years are: Judkins Point to Goshen. 1 1-mile - conversion to four-lane freewav, $1,206,000; Rice Hill to Chenowith Park. 4.7 miles of new road, $1. sm .flofe- Mvrtl CMkJ ranvon-: . ville, 1.1-mile conversion. $-Vlll, 000: Jump Off Joe to Louse Creek, north of Grants Pass, 4.1 miles of new road, lt.9lS.000: Louse Creek , to Grants Pass,- 3.1-mile conver-. sion, $3S7.000. A two-mile section from Goshen to Cottage Grove was completed recently. Under construction is a . 45-mile stretch from Roseburg to Myrtle Creek and a 1.23-mile sec tion at Ford's Bridge, near Can yonville. A contract has been let for ,1.71 miles from Ford's Bridge to Canyonville and the remainder of the route from Myrtle Creek to Ford's-Bridge ia expected to be under contract by January. South of Grants Pass, the de partment plans to buy right of wav in the next six years for !2.t mile route between Grants Pass and Rock Point, near Gold Hill, and build 14.1 miles at an estimated cost of $8,133,000, ami buy right of way for 174 mile: from Seven Oaks to Ashland and start construction on the $l-millio project.' . v -. Tree Knocks inickirom . 1 . u.;,'. ' , EUGENE. Nov. 13 A Ire crashed Into the old Willamett Pass Highway today, knocked a truck from the road and killed the driver. ; Two persons were Injured aa the truck plunged Into the middle fork of the Willametter River. A following pickup truck ran into the tree, and the driver of that vehicle also waa injured. Dean Thompson, about 33, of the Oakridge area, waa driving a panel truck near Hell's Gate Bridge about I p.m. when the tree, fell, killing him. Dick O'Brien and his son Dewey. , were riding with Thompson. Dewey suffered a broken leg, his father lesser in juries. Injured in the pickup truck waa" Eddie Roberts, Oakridge logging contractor. He was treated at an, Oakridge clinic for minor injuries.; ' ' r "- - -- "',', Ike Economic t v . Adviser y uits $ WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 u-Dr Arthur F. Burns resigned today as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers a group that keeps President Eisenhower posK1 ed on the economic state of, the nation. The White House announced (he resignation, effective Dec. 1. It said Dr. Raymond J. Saulnier; one of threi. members of the coun cil, will become chairman. I Today's Statesman . aa Set. Ann landers 11 ......II Classified ... ... .14, 13 II Comes tht Dawn ....4 I Comics 2..-. II Crossword ..... 1 J H Editorials 4. I Homo Panorama 6, 7.....'. I Markets ..13....ll Obituaries Radio-TV .. Soorts Star Gaier ,13 II 12.. 10., .....-6.. 11... -Valley News Wirophoto Pago ..12 II Sold A Houseful! Want-Ad brings 150 calls in 6 days . ;; SAcmrira v itae Iowa. plu Hataolnt pn.h ki.tlsa fiB. Ilk f, !. . rltr irt. Ijib Kwlr -, Rookciv, Run. othr . Ilrnta. Pk. l-i. Solve problems th easy way. Place a Stateaman Wnt'Ad. ".- Ph. 4-6811. .,";,' litetro T -.-