The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 21, 1957, Page 12, Image 12

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    12-Statesman, Salem, Ore., Monday, January 21, 1957
GOP Already Jockeying for Knowland's Job
Br JACK BEIX
WASHINGTON, Jan. 20 HI -Backstage
jockeying already is
under way among Republicans to
line up support (or Sen. Dirksen
of Illinois to succeed Sen. Know
land o( California as the Senate's
COP leader.
Although Knowland will not step
down from the leadership post un
til the end of the session next
year. Dirksen's friends already
arc laying political lines to land
the job for him.
These colleagues apparently are
preparing to fight any effort that
may be made by all-tut Kisen
hower supporters to put one of
their number in the post as a
means toward carrying out the
Fight to Curb Wage-Price
Line Seen by Ike's Aids
By STERLING F. GREEN '
WASHINGTON. .Ian. 20 l-Ad-mimstration
officials predicted to
day that ' President Kifenhower
mil call for a national effort to
hold the price-wage line against
inflation when he sends his annual
economic report to Congress this
week. But they said he probably
will omit his 19.)fi request for con
sideration of a standby credit con
trol law.
The recommendations are ex-
Father Burns
After Wife,
Baby Saved
DECATUR, 111.. Jan. 20 -A
young father died in his blazing
apartment today after seeing his
wife and baby drop to safety from
a window of their second-floor
bedroom.
Another tenant, a 70-year-old
woman, was seriously injured in a
leap after an explosion in the
(basement lifted the two-story
frame house partly off its founda
tions, and sent flames racing
through it.
The body of Vernon Leon True,
z.1, was touna in ruins ot tne com
pletely destroyed house three
hours after the blast., which Fire
Chief Lyn Martin attributed te a
gas accumulation in the cellar.
True s wife. Judith. 20, told po
lice Sgt. Albert Schwalbe. that she
was' awakened by the blast, and
roused hrr husband. They took
their 6-weeks-old son, Kevin Leon,
from his crib, and attempted to
descend the stairs, but were driv
en back by heat.
"My husband cleared glass frag
ments from the window, and I
dropped Kevin to some men be
low." Mrs. True said. "The men
fJrged us to jump, and said they
would catch u., but Vernon said
he was too heavy, and would go
to a porch window to get out. I
jumped, and they caught me."
Mrs. True and the child were
caught without injury by center
Hal Fuson and other members of
the Millikin University football
team.
pocted on Wednesday when the
third and last of the major presi
drntial messages goes to the new
Congress.
Kisenhower can be expected to
forecast further advances in na
tional production and income to
new peaks in 19o7, administration
advisers said privately, but at a
possibly slower rate of gain than
in the last year.
They indicated the President
will re-empnasize his plea to in
dustry and labor unions for "rea
sonable" pricing policies and
wage demands, so as to thwart
what he described in his State of
the I'nion message as "the thief
inflation.
This week's message will show
that consumer prices have
climbed almost 3 per cent since
last year's economic report, while
wholesale prices have advanced
more than i per cent.
In the same period consumers
have boosted their total install
ment debt to successive monthly
records. But the rate of increase
has slowed and one administration
official said that the question of
power to regulate down payments
and the length of installment con
tracts "is not an active subject
now.
Wedding Bill Hiah
PARIS, Jan. 20 an French
cewspapers estimated the Count
of Paris spent about $30,000 on
the marriage of his daughter.
Princess Helene. to Count Evrard
de Limbourg-Stirum of Belgium.
Nixon Says
Congress to
Support Ike
WASHINGTON. Jan. 20 liFVice
President Nixon today predicted
Congress will pass President Ei
senhower's Middle East resolution
"substantially in the form that it
has been proposed."
"I don't mean no change! at all
be made." Nixon said, adding that
neither he nor President Eisen
hower is necessarily "wedded" to
the exact wording of the resolu
tion.
But he said both the standby
military authority and economic
help proposed m the resolution are
needed "to create a really sound
peace' and for this reason he
said he does not believe Congress
will put too many restrictions on
the disputed economic aid provi
sion. Nixon spoke in a radio-television
interview with Rep. Keating iR
NY). The program was filmed be
fore Fridaj's Moscow-P e i p i n g
declaration of "a n y necessary
support" to Middle East peoples
against "aggression and interfer
ence" in their affairs.
Dear Ann Landers:
Husband Worries,
Wife Gone at Night
Dear Ann: I've been married four years to a girl who is 22.
I'm 38. When we were first wed I didn't think the difference in
ge mattered. Now I'm nx so sure.
She doesn't work and we have no children. I don't know what
she does all day. It's a cinch she doen't clean the house. My
shirts go to the laundry and she hates to cook. Every night
she sends out for pizza or spaghetti.
But I didn't marry her to cook and clean, Ann. .This isn't
the problem. She's started to run with a bunch of divorced girls.
They call themselves a sewing club but I've never seen any of them
hold a needle.
Last night my wife came in at 6 a.m. and she'd been drinking.
She told me the girls had been celebrating an old Norwegian
custom called the "Hook Rug Festival". Have you ever heard of
hooking rugs until t oo a.m.? Please tell me what you think. ALFY
No, I've uerer heard of the aid Norwegian eastern ( hooking
rugs until I a.m. .Why art ak her If she's heard ( the aid
Amerlcaa custom of earning borne U sleep?
This girl wants te eoiejr the privileges ( marriage without
accepting the responsibilities. A villi to a marriage counselor
eould be a rduraltoo for your wife. Insist she make a honest
effort to lite up to her marriage vows. She ea start hy preparing
a decent meal. Anyone who raa read eaa cook.
Dear Ann: I'm a 19-venr-uld sophomore in college and have
been dating a 17-year-olri high school girl. She's wonderful in
every way but there's one thing that irritates me terribly and
may break us up.
I was raised in a home where smoking and drinking by tern
ajers is frowned upon. My girl friend s background uf entirely
. different. She smokes a great deal and her mother has olfered her
cigarettes in my presence. Whenever I see a cigarette in her
mouth !t destroys a litlkf of what I (eel for her. She says I must
accept her as she is or not at all.
Am I narrow-minded and old-fashioned or do I just plain
have a screw loose on this subject? Please tell me. HANK
There may be more involved here than )usl the lowly weed.
The cigarette has prohohlr brrome her symbol of Independence
and she's using It to defy von to bend her will.
She has the right to tell you to aerept hrr as she is or not at
all. And you have the rl-ht to lakr hrr up on It. Some Individuals
are willing to drop a habit tn pirate a lorrd one. Apparently
she considers this an atlrmpt to curtail hrr personal freedom
and resents it
Since you find hrr smoking surh an Irritant, belter grt a girl
hose, background Is more like your oau. Sooner or later this
romance is bound to go up in smoke.
Dear Ann: The answers to other people's problem's seem so
simple when I read them in your column. Maybe you can do
the same for m
I have four children in school and a husband who wears a clean
white shirt to work every day. My laundry is starring and I do
it all myself. I have nine room house and the family is ac
customed to seems it clean. ' could gel through my work nicely
if it weren't for the next door neighbor who comes over every
unjle morning to visit.
This woman brings sweet roll with her and asks if there's
any coffee around Then she start to jabber and before I know
she's off-ring to fry eggs for lunch in my kitchen. She's a nice
person. Ann. and has done me a great many 'avori hut I think
it's brassy the wav she romcs in and takes up my lime. What
can I do without insulting her?-MRS STICK
The first think you ran do Is make certain this neighbor
doesn't da you any more 'lavors " Apparently you're Indebted to
.her or shr wouldn't feel free In lnipos a regularly. .
Next yon can greet her with a map, vacuum sweeper or
, broom and Invite her to pitch In. Explain that you simply must
get your work done. After a few days of this routine, she'll
probably stay at home and da her own work.
(Copyright 1MJ, fiold CntirpUM. is)
I President's program to "modern
ize" his party.
In this connection there has
been mention of the names of
Sens. Clifford Case of New Jersey,
Bush of Connecticut and Salton
stall of Massachusetts.
Saltonstall, who has been named
by Sen. Thye of Minnesota as his
personal choice for the leadership
job, is chairman of the Conference
of All Republican Senators. He
may want to retain that post.
Bush is a frequent presidential
golfing partner.
Case had Eisenhower's fervent
support in his 1954 race for the
Senate. He has been a consistent
backer of the President's program.
Dirksen was named party
"whip", or assistant leader, earli
er this month in a move initiated
by Knowland to give Midwestern
era representation in the leader
ship lineup. In this role, Dirksen
sits in on White House conferences
with the President, whose nomina
tion he opposed strenuously in
1952.
At that time, Dirksen was sup
porting the late Sen. Robert A.
Taft of Ohio.
Since Eisenhower's first elec
tion, Dirksen has supported the
President's proposals generally,
but has differed with him on some
major issues.
Asked about Dirksen last fall
during the election campaign, Ei
senhower laid at a newt confer
ence that the Illinois senator had
once been "known as an isolation
ist" but had become "a very val
uable lieutenant" for him.
Knowland had made it clear that
s leader he thinks his primary
responsibility Is to Senate Repub
licans, rather than always to car
ry the ball for what the President
wants.
While Elsenhower has been
warm in hit praise of Knowland,
the Californian's opposition to
tome proposals hasn't pleased
some of the President's associates.
There are strong signs that if
Dirksen attained the leadership,
he would follow the Knowland formula.
Linda Darnell
To Wed Flier
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 20 IB-Ac
tress Linda Darnell and airline
pilot M. R. (Robby) Robertson
have disclosed they will be mar
ried, ahe for the third time and
he for the first.
The 33-year-old actress told
friends of the engagement while
working on the set of a television
film. Robertson, M, confirmed the
announcement Saturday after com
pleting hit American Airlines Chi-cago-to-Loi
Angeles freight flight.
Miss Darnell said the wedding
probably will be in February,
when her schedule will give her
time for a honeymoon. She said
she wants a church wedding.
Her previous husbands were
cameraman J. Peverell Marley
and Philip Liebman, a New York,
brewer.
Women on Okinawa 'Liberated'
By ROBERT PR0S8ER
NAHA, Okinawa, Jan. 20 11
Women s rights have won out over
feudalism and Okinawan women
celebrated emancipation day to
day with victory parade through
the streets of Nana.
Carrying small paper flags
bearing the Japanese character
for "celebration," 1.000 women
marched along International
Street to observe the establish
ment ot a new civil legal code.
Under the new code, which
came into effect with the new
year, ' any Okinawan adult can
marry or divorce without the per
mission of the head of his family.
The new law also gives the wife
the same easy access to divorce
that the man in the family always
has had.
Under the prewar code, men
under 30 and women under 2S had
to obtain permission from the
head of their families before they
could marry. The old law also
forbade any couple under 25 to
Lawmaker Advocates
Whitman Home Shrine
SOUTHER HUNTINGTON, N.Y.
Jan. 20 W A New York State
senator says he will Introduce a
bill in theJLegislature to make the
birth place of poet Walt Whitman
a historical site to be maintained
by the state. Sen. Elisha T. Bar
ret said he has been assured the
bill will have bipartisan support.
The Whitman home, built about
1810, has been maintained by pri
vate funds and a yearly grant of
$2,000 from this Long Island town. I
obtain a divorce unless the action
was approved by families.
Under the feudalists family
system, parents ruled their chil
dren and husbands ruled their
wives. The head of the family,
usually the oldest male, decided
where the family would live, what
its members would do, when and
whom the young members would
marry and when to have children.
The husband, under the old law,
could divorce his wife if she
stepped out with another man.
The wife had no such rights in
return. Now either party can ob
tain a divorce if he or the haa
been abandoned for more than
three years, when one party to
the marriage suffers from an In
curable mental disorder, or for a
variety of reasons lumped under
"incompatibility."
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