DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS . 1. Shine . fi Seaport j (Algeria) . Sort " 10 Raacal 12. Language 13. Comet into view H.Not clogged 15. Fish 16. Part ot "to be'1 17. Exclama- , tion 18. Plant juice IS. Man'i name 20. Hoydens 23. Girl'a name 24. A none 25 Mother of Irish gods 2 lota 27. Lets 31. Grow old 32 African worm 81. Exrlami- tion .34 Girl's nirkname 35. Forbid 3 Gaiirho's weapon 88. Tale 40 Christmas song 41.rcbble '42 Maxim 4"!, riarea .44 Tnist DOWN . . 1. Harvlwntr Inp experts 2 Tarrly S Norse grl i. 8kin tumor 5. Loweat . deelca ' (warships) 6. Crucifix 7. Teat 8. Science of coin - 9. Gaze 11. Literary composition 15. Low island 18. Thus 19;-Dog-headed ape (Egyptr) Salem Obituaries Hlrhird K. Kourhle At local hospital Nov 1. Ijte rtrtnt fit Tnrnrr n. rn'nnl .. f .Mr. tud "Mrs. Fnrxrji Biu!.H(,. rnrr Mimvea nv hrothpi (ferv.. Plrrre and fames Bnnrhie ll nf Turner. Sisfcis. Mr. Rntf Inch. S'ayton: Mrs. Arlrne Wallace Slornr. Call!; Mr, Mar. r Xm . kirk, Salem. Services will he' 'held Weclne-dav, November 21 at I.'IO Dm. in the Chapel of tne Clnugh Karric Funeral Home. Rev. G, . Williams will officiate. lntermVM City View Cemeiery. Grace Plajnmllt lllllard At the residence. .1,13 S S4th St. Surer of Mrs Maude Presnall, Sa lem: Claude C. Hammltl. San Jnsr, . v am eerai rvirces and .Nephews also survive. Services will he held Friday Nnv. 2.1 in the Veach-F.ncland Funeral "hapel at Fuejere Ore . un der the direction of the W T. Itigdon hlunrv a. Menfcle In a loc. liospit.il Nov. in I.;,tr Tet.rtent nf tusrniv On Announce. ' rn's nf vertices i'l he n; o i.i'er. h the How cli-r du ards fu neral Home. Beuhla B. Hodce I.ate resident of 7,m s.fap St . Silrm. al a local hospi'al. Novem her li'.n. Survived hi a daughter. Mrs Jean Frown, Dai. as, (He : mo thers, Paul Smith. Salem, and Ceorae 5mith. Dtllard: and nne rrandchild Services will be held Friclav Novem ber 2.1. at 1 p m ' in the Chapel of the Virfil T Colden Co. Interment. Relrrest Memorial Park. Lillian M. James: November 19th. I.a1e resident of 4..K) S. K. asth Ave. Portland, Ore. Survived by Husband C.eore Jarnev Portland: Parenu Mr. and Mr Charle Stindland. Salem: daughters. V' Helen Grn. Portland Mrs Margaret Codey. Montana: inn. Wil Mam F'.irna'T, Irlai-o .irrrs, Mrs V:o;a F.innf. PoilUnd. Mrs F..1r.i Peanei. Portland. Mrs l-.ne Cokcr. Salem. Mrs Fielsn Hillee. Slen. Mrs read's Keattne N Dak: l"rn Ther, Floid Sundlanrt Srtiem Scr-ices mil he hA'd Wednrfcdav Noiemher 2:t at I .M P M at tee Jrnh"rn Family Mortuary. 9lt A S. F. Fos;pr m Portland. Interment. Lincoln Mem orial Park. Portland. Beatrice MrDonatd At the residence. 2412 l ee St . Sj. lem, November lH Surilved hv th'ee dauehters. Mis. F.rnina I.etl.m and Mrs. Irene Limbo, holh of Slur fess. s. Oak. and Mrs, Hannari O Brien. Sprarftsh. S. Dik . Two sons. Owen McDonald, Wthincton, DC: James McDonald. S.'lem Two isterf. Mrs. A. D Flodin. B.iprd City. S. J)flk ; Mrs. May Jones, Stur- ress, S Dak Brother. William Co an. ft Clark. S. Dak. Twenty grandchildren and 21 frrat-grand-children also survive. Services will he held Friday, Nov 2.1 at 10 a m. at S' Jnseph; CsMmsrr Chruch. un der the direction of the t'louf rt-Bar-rick Funeral Home. Interment, St. Barbara t Cemetery. Beatrice M. Krtioftetd: At a local hospital November 20trt. I.ate resident of 1 IRA Crow St., Sa lem, Survived by diushtrrs. Mrs. Fdna Morgan. Salem. Mrs, Betty Por ter, Salem, Mrs. Greta Winter, and Mrs. Lvda Martin, both of South Cate. Calif : sons. Stanley C. S- ho. field. Salrm. Dr. Murray M. Schofield. Salem, Donald L. Soholield, Satem, Gordon A. S"hofield. Sacramento Calif.: sister. Mrs. Hose Broun of Calgary, Alberta, Canada, Miss M.iude Smith. Brighton, Fngland: Brother. Bohert Smith of Brighton. Fngland. Announcements . of services w ill be made later by the Clough-Barrick Funeral Home. Grant Weslev Shaffner: At the residence Fir St , Sa lem. November 2nth. at the age of M yeers. Husband of Juarita Shaff-ner,- Salem: brother of Donald VV. Shaffner, Arthur R Shaffhcr, Mrs Florence Hart, Mra. Bertha Wells and Mlsa Grace Shaffner, all of Eugene. Ore, Also surviving are 3 Nieces and Nephews. Services will be held Satur day November ?th at 10 Ml A M. in the Chapel nf the W T. Rigdon Co. Concluding services at West Lawn Cemetery at Eugene. Bev. Gerald Em merson will officiate Rttuallstte Ser vices by the B.P O. Klks No. 33S. Clara Stewsrt: At a local Nursing Home. Late re sident nf 2210 Lansing Ave. Survived by sons, Ivan and William Halbert Stewart, both of Salem. Services will be 1:30 p m. Friday in Clough-Barrick Funeral Home. Burial will be In Bel crest Memorial Park. -Ike, Holmes Led Multnomah Vote Totals With Ease - PORTLAND, Nov. 20 m The ofileial , count, of voles from the Nov. 6 general election showed President Eisenhower received 129,558 votes in Multnomah Coun ty, compared with 115,896 for Ad lai Stfevenson. James W, Gleason, county elec ' Hons chief, reported the official totals Monday. Gov., etect Robert T.- Holme received 129,272 voles in the coun ty, and Gov, Elmo Smith got 114,--. 446. Red Wins Blessing BERLIN," Nov. 20 yff-Poland's First postwar finance minister, Jan Haneman, has been removed from the Communist party purge lists and restored to good stand-in-, says ADN, the East German news agency.' ' 0 jNO H tI -Jar(f SCAT D tjjtk h E nk)A u & ZE US SB II B Ei 5 1 Q HE Bit; l l 27. Smooth. HUilL ing u-ii tools 28. An age 29. Sun god 30. Rock (kind) 35. Flexed 36. Ordered Yrttrrday'a Answer 37. Spoken 39. Gardener' tool 40. Elevator cage 21. Deck officer - 22. At hand 25. Part of "to be" 26. Indone. aian Inland (poaa ) Lll i a; je ju " W" j j- 4-1-1 l4- -fe Falling Tree Cuts Power Along Coast PORTLAND. NovSi2() A faliiDXJxn:. atl.i.in.nl JA the Rreds port substation knocked down a. S U.OttOvdlt feeder line and dis rupted power service in coastal areas fur several hours today, j Bonncillc Power Administration: ; ofiicials said. , j j Loss of the line cut off power : lo the Reedsport-tJardiner area j ! served by the Lincoln County PUD j and the Vmpqua-Smith River sec I tor served by the Douglas County j Klectric Co-op. The disruption cx j tended as far as Winchester Bay, j Serice was restored to Central ! Lincoln Pf'D customers about 3 p m , and lo co-on facilities an hour later. The outage occurred about 1 nn p.m. France Drains Supply of Oil PARIS, Nov. 20 , Finance Minister Paul Ramadier told re porters today France's stocks of fuel oil will be exhausted, at pres ent rales of consumption, by mid- Decf-mber as the result of the closing nf the. Sue Canal. Gaso-' line stocks will last only until mid-: January, he added R.imadirr said fuel nil to in dustries will hale to bo rationed,' probably on a bf.sis of 70 per cent of the normal supplies, and that : this will require certain indus tries, particularly L'lassivare and meialworks, to reduce their out put, j The finance minister said he hoped American shipments would . sec the nation through the w inter;, but these shipments would nnt be' forthcoming as quickly as needed. ! rGruenther to Visit U OTTAWA. Nov. 20 on-Gen. Ai red M. Gruenthcr, retiring su- prcmc commander of the Allied 1 powers in Europe, will pay a vis- it lo Canada Thursday, and will be honored at a government re ception. HANDSOME NEW HUDSON Long, Low, Slim Outside . . . Wider Inside Here you sec hiish-fushion styling in the very best of laite.And you have a choice of yi stunning, new colon and color combinations. LtV" H.'a'T POWER'S UP! PRICE'S DOWN! Call Today for a Courtesy Ride in Today's Style Sensation l0Wt OimiDt by two inches thia year,jth hw" Hornet V-l looks and feels longer, lover, lovelier. WIDER other the '57 car in see it now at your HUDSON AND RAMBLER DALER SURROZ MOTORS 333 Center St. Salem, Oregon Electrical Jolt Burns Mill Worker THE DALLES, Nov. 20 W - A 58-year-old lumber mill worker who absorbed a 7,2iO-volt electri cal jolt was in The Dalles General Hospital, fighting for his life to night. Karl K. Kenner suffered shock and burns on his hands and feet early today when the boom of a log loader he was operating came in contact with an overhead power line at The Dalles Lumber & Manufacturing plant Kenner stepped, from the cab of the loader and fell unconscious as his feet touched the ground. Broadened State Loan Project Eyed REND. Nov. 20 Members of the Interim Committee on State Government told a meeting here last night that it intends to recom- j mend to the next Legislature that the stale loan program be broad-, ened to Include services affecting public health and arbitration on urban annexation and incorpora--tion problems. ! Two committee members John Misko, Oregon City, and Rep. Al Loucks, Salemoutlined some ot the committee's proposed recom- mendations tn representatives of Deschutes, Crook and Klamath communities. Misko said the committee, as a whole, believes that, as state j policy, the entire county- city ( structure should be adjusted lo meet growing needs of suburban areas. Misko argued thar urban plan-, ning responsibility should lie with the counties, while Loucks took the opposite view that cities should have that authority. Consolidated Seeks Stock Issue Okeh WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 W Consolidated Freightways. Port land, Ore. today applied to the ln!iTs1,Hc Commerce Commission for permission to issue 2."i0,00 shares of 2.5o par value slock for public sale. The slock issue is in connection w ith Consolidated s proposed ac quisition of Eastern motor car riers to give it a transcontinental trucking system. Proceeds of the stock sale would be used for a cash purchase of Motor Cargo Inc , of Akron, Ohio, and Liberty Motor Freight Lines, Secaugus, N.J. Swedish Soldiers Underestimate Italian Cooks rAPODICHINO .STAGING AREA, Italy. Nov. 20 J" Swedish volunteers for the I'. N. peace po-1 lice in Egypt learned something I Monday about eatin in Italy. The newly arrived Swedes all I pitched eagerly into the spaghetti i with tomaio sauce at their first i meal here. Many asked for second helpings. Then they pushed back their plales, heaved contented sighs and told messhall attendants "We couldn't eat another bile." Offended Italian military chefs rushed in protesting. They had pre pared meat and vegetable courses, too. "You'll eat it all," they told the Swedish soldiers iri solemn ultima tum, "or tomorrow you'll get no more spaghetti." The Swedes ate it all. a, I f THE NEW 255-H.P. V- built by Ameri can Motors gives smooth, silent, surg ing pcwer and per- formancc. - INSIDE than any car at any price," Hornet is a luxury avery way. CAA Reveals $9 Million Radar Order WASHINGTON, Nov.. 20 -Thc Civil Aeronautics Administration CAA) Monday announced a nine million dollar order for long range radar, the biggest single purchase of electronic equipment it has ever made. The order provides for 23 new installations. Raytheon Manufac turing Co., Waltham, Mass., de signer and builder of the equip ment, will start deliveries next summer. The 23 new long range radar sets, capable of tracking airplanes at distances up to 200 miles, will be part of an expanding coast-to-coast traffic control network of more than 70 civil and military radar installations. James T.. Pyle Jr., acting CAA administrator, said the new radar equipment is the heart of a CAA plan announced last April to han dle a fourfold increase in U.S. air traffic with a minimum of delay and with the greatest possible safety. 'He said the new equipment will be installed at 23 of the following 28 locations: Washington, DC; Los Angeles and Oakland, Calif,; Fort Worth Dallas, San Antonio, Houston and El Paso, Tex.; Kansas City and St. Louis. Mo.; Cleveland,' Ohio; .Jacksonville and Miami, Fla.; Benson,;- N.C.; Spokane and Seat tle, Wash.; Albuquerque, N.M.: Pboenix, Ariz.: Buffalo. N.Y.s, and Atlanta. Detroit, Pitsburgh, Indi anapolis, Boston, Memphis, NWw Orleans. Atlantic City, Denver ajid Salt Lake City. ; Girl Faces Charge in -DadjTath ST. HELENS. Ore., Nov. 20 iff Dorothy Burns, 16-year-old Rain ier high school junior, was ar raigned on a first-degree, murder charge today in the rifle slaying of her father at the family home near Rainier. The girl surrendered to a St. Helens city policeman early yes terday and said she had shot Robert Hollis riurns. 37, while he was asleep. Later she told inves tigators: "' don't know why I did it. I wasn't mad at him." She said her father had been angry because she was late re turning home. Coroner Ben Coleman said the .30- 30 bullet that killed Burns narrowly missed the girl's mother who was sleeping in the same bed. It lodged in the floor. The girl, held in the Columbia County jail, was to be transferred to 'the juvenile ward, of the Port land police department. Widespread Violence In Lebanon Reported DAMASCUS. Syria. Nov. 20 Widespread violence has broken out in Beirut, capital of Arab Le banon, and the Lebanese army was called on today to restore order. ' Tanks were seen patrolling the Beirut streets alter unidentified persons bombed the French-owned Bank of Syria and Lebanon early today. FALSE TEETH That Loosen Need Not Embarrass Man? wearers of falaa teeth have. mlVred real embarrassment be ratine their plate dropped, allppfd or wob bled at juftt the wrong time. Do not lite lu Oar nf this happening to you. Jim sprinkle a HtHe FA8TEETH. the alkaline i non-arid) ponder, on your platen, HWd fain teeth more flnnly, so they feel more comfortable. Does not aout, Checks '"plate odor" (den ture breatM. Get FAS TEETH at any drug count!. -w' HORNET V-8 Than Any Other Car '1 TWICE M STIIONO. rattle-, free construction is safer. Deep Coil Springs ride yoo three times smoother. Hoover Never Regretted Opposing U.S. Entrance Into Soviet-German War , CHICAGO,, Nov. 20 MV- Former President Herbert Hoover recalled Monday that he had opposed Unit ed States participation in the World , War ' H struggle between Germany and Russia, and said he has "no regrets" over that stand. Dedicating a new boys'" club named for Gen. Robert E. Wood, 77, former chairman of Sears, Roebuck k Co., Hoover said that Wood, with whom, he worked in World War 1 food problems-, shared with him "a profound and justifiable distaste of war and all its aftermaths." Every Step Opposed "When World War II began to loom up," Hoover said in a pre pared speech, both of us simul taneously and without any previ ous collaboration opposed every step-tf-Amcnca bmg inwiveaa that war. "I know the general, like my self, has slept better for having made the fight against it." Hoover said that Wood endorsed a speech June 29. 1941, when "I sa'd in short that Britain was now safe from German invasion due tu Hitler's dyiersiiuto his attack upon Russia. "I said the Gargantuan jest of all history would be if we should give aid to Stalin in the war'. I said the result would be lo spread communism over the world. Urged Standing Aside "I urged that we stand aside while these two monsters exhaust- ed each other; that if we stood aside the time would come when 4 U U.. r . U U 1 1 U I U , vy uui aiiciiKiu, mi mg ting peace to the world." That was our gospel. Hoover FOREST INDUSTRY PAY CHECKS 'I I- X rsftd 1 I v X )''-iil', '', i , 11 Approximately how tha avaragt wojjt aarnar spends hit paycheck Food 27 Housing 17 Clothing I . . . . . 9 Autos and transportation. ...... 14 Horn furnishings ............ 6 Medical and personal core. . ..7 Taxes (income and property).'. , 7 Recreation, savings, insurance, edocotion, etc. 13 V . .. 100 Rstimatss! traaa U.S. Bu.aau ef Labor Sutiatiea, Survey of Caaaumar Kapeadiiuraa baaaa! ear avarata snca aaraar family ef 1.4 assail aa. said "and we have no regrets." Hoover, now 82, praised Wood for his devotion during the last 20 years to boys' club work, saying the soldier-merchant's aim, "is to create wholesome men . of initia tive and character tor America's future." Ships Hit in St. Lawrence ST. LAURENT, Que., Nov. 20 up Two freighters collided in the darkened St. Lawrence River channel just before Quebec Mon day night. One was run aground to avoid sinking. the second, just out of Quebec, turned back to the port, 10 miles upstream. The German freighter Wolfgang Russ, crippled by the smash about 5:30 p.m. swung into shore near a small ship-building yard and settled aground. The, 8.723-ton Britsih freighter Asia, on it way to the port" of London whenir the collision oc curred, headed back to Quebec. The Transport Department's sig nals service said no injures were reported on either ship. The Wolfgang Russ, 2,963 tons gross, was due in Montreal tomor row with general cargo from the West Indies. The ship, carrying a 2.Vman crew, is registered at Hamburg and has been freighting between Caribbean p o r 1 1 and Montreal. ' 42 million payroll WEYERHAEUStt j ISi Train Derailed, Halts Idaho Line MINIDOKA, Idaho. Nov. 20 Iff A Union Pacific freight train de railed 19 miles west ot Minidoka today, blocking the railroad's main east-west line. There were no injuries. Passenger trains were being re routed from Minidoka to Bliss by way of Rupert and Jerome. Rail road officials said the westbound Portland Rose would be delayed about two hours with a delay of approximately one hour in the east bound Rose. Workmen expected to have the wreckage cleared away and the tracks repaired by 10 p.m. Officials said II ot the 90 cars on the westbound freight Mt trfe tracks and five of the cars over turned. All were loaded with gen eral merchandise. Cause of derail ment was not immediately de termined. Boy Killed as Family Caught in Cyprus Battle NICOSIA, Cyprus, Nov. 20 W A 9-year old Greek Cypriot boy was killed and both his parents were wounded when caught in a gunbattle. that raged Monday tween an E'OKA gang and British soldiers near the village of Niki- tas, in western Cyprus. ' Four-Bnttsh-s old! e-were-wounded. MltS. J. W. WILSOH, a aVuftw, tn., says: "I trie all aaairiaa ant St. Jaaeafe Aaairia tar CaiMrss la tk sm far my ckilaraa. Thar like Ml I'ss awa al eioaaia." I ST. JOSEPH ASPIRIN FOR CHILDKFH WORK FOR EVERYONE IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST dollars for home furnishings..." About 42 millibn dollars will be spent this year by the 160,000 people employed in this region's forest products industry to buy furniture, refrigerators, TV sets and other home ftirnishings. Although large, this expenditure is only about six percent of the annual forest industry payroll in Oregon and Washington. Food, housing, clothing, taxes and other necessities and luxuries account for the balance, making a total of about 700 million dollars a year. Buying power of forest industry paychecks is felt all through the Pacific Northwest, creating jobs and' income for almost every business, trade and profession. The industry's payrolls and business expenditures thus support about one-half of our "economy. Prosperity jn this region depends a great deal on a stable forest industry. To maintain stability, the' industry is growing timber as a crop, assuring a perpetual source of raw materials. It is also manufacturing an increasing variety of products to help provide the volume of sales necessary for steady employment. WEYERHAEUSER working in th Pacific Northwtt Statesman, Sa.emOre Wed., Nov, 21, '5fi (Sec. IIJ-U Conscience Tricks Thief CORVALLIS, Nov. 20 I Con-i science took 21-year-old, Harvey W. Gibbons Jr. to the scene of an armed robbery last night, and today he was. scheduled for ap pearance before the grand jury . after waiving preliminary hearing in district court. i typical low rates (mm Saltm ": Medford Bend........... .60 Astoria ......... .55 Eugene ......... .40 Station to ttitioii fates, not including tlx, lor 1 minutes Iter ( p.m. weekdays and ill day Sundry Ntxf rim, soy if personally by ftpnt (Pacific tlMBE R COM PA NY to build a pvman$nt forttt industry Gibbens, charged with holding' up Archie F. OeVo'" manager, 5 a motel here, escaped from cus tody last night. Shortly befoti midnight he showec up at th i motel to return $S that had been taken. Police were waiting tor him there. . 1 n JL $ .80 Telephone 1