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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1957)
lSScc. II) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Thun., Aug. 8, '57 f. , 1 11 ijce Asks Congress for Money To Guard Against Flu Epidemic Transfer ef Faa4s demies should occur "they could lowing purposes: nounced it expects to begin de spread Irom San Francisco to 1 To prepare educational mate- livery sometime this month. Boston in i period as short as rial to encourage people to take Millies Doees perhaps four weeks." iadantage ol a new commercially manutacturea vaccine, me guv- a goal m ai irasi uu nuuion ernment doesn't plan to buy vac- doses by Keb. 1 has been set. The chief executive also re- cine, except for the armed forces 2. Development of materials auested aulhoritv to transfer Six commercial manufacturers ; used in detecting the disease Surscon den l.rrov Biuney of aDoul IW0 million aouars oi puouc nae reported inry nun iu ,u,r .,K. vu ,,,,, mw the U S Public Health .service ai- nfalln uinos ror use against any atxxii eigni minion uosra ana- uniioinnc. oum readv has nd I here is a verv large epidemic of the disease. ble by mid September, including materials will be developed at the specinciaiiy. tne aaaiiionai aooui lour minion oruereu.uy mr luum im nuuiiu- Ihe disease ww.oou wouio De used tor me lui- mimarv. une oi uie urms nas an-i" iauuiiuijr u- .,.. -J : 'anta. j mailing m new specialists in epidemis available to work with state authorities The White House also an nounced that, in the event of an outbreak which constituted an I emergency, the secretary of the WASHINGTON. Aug. 7 i.f - A thought the amount due was down Health and Welfare Department Oil official of the Roto-Broil Corp. to Itf.OOO now ; would be authorized to use about of America. New York, testified The union lawyer said the local (wo million dollars to call 100 '..iav that-jt held back $23,000 of had received a number of post- PHS reserve officers to duty and - employes' union dues and used dated checks fror- Roto-Broil but to prowde supplies. :he money for company opera- that the bank had refused to cash :10ns. them, since the firm is being re- There was testimony, in the organized. Bt FRANK CAREY AP Scienre Reporter WASHINGTON. Auj 7 I - President Eisenhower today took step to buttress the nation's de feases against any larce -scale out break of Asiatic flu this fall or l.erov Health definite prohalnlitv of such large occurrence o( whica, as of Aug J 11.0110 persons in the l'nited Slates and caused throe deaths, presum ably from complications. The dis ease is caused b a new strain of flu rims President Eisenhower a-led Congress for SSrni .mm to en.tMe ii PHS tn ho prepared lor s;i' demies of the maiadv T.-e geon general has said that if epi- Official Says Firm Withheld! Union Dues for Its Own Use MOWT . ty QlADYl' PAJUCIt iVlTRyiNGTOiRAISO " I EVERYBODY'S TEL- EVISION RATING J 1 jpf v9o:m m t nam Tiny Japanese Widow Back With Children was testimony, in Senate Rackets Investigating Com i mittee. that the money supposedly was diverted through collusion be-lv- een union and management, but this was not nailed down Takei From Pay Jacobson. the Roto-Broil execu tive vice president, testified ' We didn't really take the air was that Bernard Tolkow, bus -iness manager of the union local concerned, took the Fifth Amend KALTH M Mass , Aii. 7 f A, tiny Japanese wid'w wjj re united Tii"srl,i with tne tvu ounj dauehters she hat sent to men- rm nine months ao in conuliance rneE tth hr rlvmj hnsharal last he knew about or had yjg the arrangement MM. Aiko Aruma Tavlor. of lues Fiftk Amendment Okinawa, wept uncontrollably as Tolkow also used the Fifth ikt embraced the girls. Maria . Amendment in refusing to sav "d Helen, 4. whether he had been a C ommu- Alko was also greeted by Mrs mst or was one , Edith Taylor. Waltham. her hus- The Senate committee dug into bands former wife, who had been the Roto-Broil situation first with earing for Ihe children since lat testimony from Irving Jacobson. One big reason it was left in the ney om the employes We just took it out of their pay The committee recognized this was verv likely correct. Nevemher Aiko also presented Kdith wi'h a container she said he'd the asne oi Karl Tavior. hn di oreed F.dith and married Xiko in lfSf when he ent to Oxinawa as a civilian emplne of the I S Army '. Taylor died in lVi as he was pnpanng tn bring ik and the chfldren to the United Slates. Edith ent for the children last year after corresponding wiin who was finding it difficult ta aupport them Aiko was aasieui to fulfill her that they be educated as Americana. When the mother and children wia.irri' each other so much. Edith 4acM to brinf Aiko to this coun- S, Edith volunteered to sponsor m and interceded with the im migration department which al lawed the duninutivt Japanese Miner to enter the country on an aaarteacy basis. that but and refused to sav whether members pointed out that dues condoned checked ott Irom wages snouiu , hae gone to the union I Data from the company's books was presented by a committee in vestigator. Francis K Lloyd chairman McClellan ' 0 - Ark j asked Lloyd if the handling of the dues indicated "a little collusion" with the local's officers "I suppose so. sir,'' Lloyd replied. president of the evecutive vice Ne Voik firm The union in ihe case was Local TVi of the torinet t'nited Auto Wmkers H. one o: the locals idem i tied by the committee as com rolled by Johnny Dio, a con victed labor racketeer the com-, mittee plans to question tomorrow in its probe of alleged racketeering-Alexander Eltman of New York. ' Tolkow i attorney, kept volunteer- ,i uig so much while Tolkow It's a Dog's Life That's Insured By New Company NEW YORK. Aug 7 if - It's a dog's life, but it could be worth 15.000 Formation of the Animal Insur ance Co. of America, licensed by New York State to write life ln- w5 surance on dogs, was announced husband s Mying mk th,t Eltm : Tuesday The firm has authorized iinaiiy pui unoer oam as a wn- capjta 0( one million dollars, ol Beu- which $300,000 is paid in. Eltman said he never knew Pedigreed dogs aged six months Roto-Broil was delinquent in dues to nine years will be insured on check off payments to Local US to an annual term basis. The limit is the extent of 83,000. He said he tS.000 for each dog. West Refuses to Isolate Suspension Of H-Bomb Tests LONDON. Aug. 7 lA-The four Western Powers on the l .N. Dis armament subcommittee told Rus sia today suspension of hydrogen bomb tests cannot be isolated from other phases of disarmament. Emphatic statements by the l'nited States. Britain, Canada and France followed a question by So viet delegate Valerian Zorin wheth er the West has imposed new conditions for suspendin H-bomb tests. Tiny British Army Ready To Seek Out Oman Rebels MANAMA. Bahrein, A miniature army Aug. 7 if , in southeastern Arabia unopposed, of British So far the war has been (ought troops and Arab desert warriors prepared today to move against forces of the rebellious Imam of Oman. Threatening in the back ground of this teacup war was a new general crisis for Middle East policy. A British jeep force, along with sultanate soldiers and scouts from the Trucial Omi.n. -moved into the village of In without opposition. The enemy is in the Imam's fort at nearby Nizwa. Villagers, forewarned of the British force's approach by leaf lets distributed from the air, waved the red flag of the Sultan of Muscat and Oman, to demon- by British jet fighters, chief activity has been ! rebel forts. The army's object is the rebel stronghold at N 'hose fe .e a British desert fortress with walls live feet thick, 12 miles northwest of Izz. Between Izz and Nizwa lie several small villages of doubtful loyalty and a barrier of high ridges and bare rock, an ideal de fensive position for determined rebels. Tourists Win Break lTTED NATIONS. Aug. 7 ( Israel is the latest of 14 countries agreeing to make things easier for tourists under two pacts drawn up ' strate their loyalty to him in his ai a i .v conference In June 1954. battle to quell a rebellion led by They pledge contracting countries Imam Ghaleb bin Ali. to waive duty fees on tourists" I I'p to now, the army has not en personai effects and cars or trail- countered the enemy. It has ad-m- vanced across 80 miles of desert QuakeDamagesTheaters MEXICO CITY. Aug. 7 l City officials are making a second round of inspection to determine how many of 21 movie houses closed since the July 28 earth quake are in condition to reopen next week. On the first round they recommended repairs. McElroy to Take Defense Job as 'Public Service' (Sry also ea aagt eae.) CINCINNATI, Au. 7 lV-NeII McElroy, a husky, personable Cin cinnati business executive, who plana to give up a 1285,000 a year job to take one that pays only $25,000, chuckled today and said. "Well. I guess you can say it Isn't for profit." McElroy, president of Procter k Gamble Co., met newsmen here only about an hour after President Eisenhower had announced his nomination to be secretary of de fense. McElroy flew back here earlier In the afternoon from Washington where he conferred with the Presi dent and outgoing Secretary Wil son. McElroy's comment on his sal ary cut came as he said: "I think this (alls In the range of what a good many people have done. When it involves personal sacrifice and serving the country, they accept the opportunity to serve. "It falls in the area of being a good citizen." Large Stork Heldiags McElroy was asked whether he would have to dispose of an esti mated half-million dollars in hold ings in PfcG as well as stock in General Electric and Chrysler. That, be said, would be decided by the Senate Armed Services Committee. He explained that his nomina tion must lay for seven days and that the matter of his stock hold ings then would be taken up when be appears before the committee. "I am conscious that 1 will be taking over a very large job," McElroy said soberly. "It is one that will take the best that any man has. certainly the best that I have. I am hopeful that the best I have is enough." Khrushchev Launches Attack Upon AHehauer By brack curry BERLIN, Aug. 7 tfi - Nikita Khrushchev began today what looked like a Russian propaganda campaign to damage Chancellor Konrad Adenauer in West Ger many's crucial Sept. 15 election. The Soviet party boss flew into Red East Germany for a one-week tour of the restive satellite state and promptly blasted Adenauer's foreign policy as "a great dan ger" to world peace. Khrushchev took only a passing swipe at the imperialist west ern powers. He zeroed in on the Adenauer government for his sharpest barbs. His words appeared directed to the 50 million West Germans who must choose next month between the staunchly pro-Western Ade nauer and his Socialist opposition favoring a more neutralist Ger man foreign policy. Khrushchev, Deputy Premier Anastas Alikoyan and Foreign fense Department, the secretary- nominate said he believed the top item "is budgetary." He declined to comment, how ever, on Secretary Wilson s views on the budget. His only comment was: "Mr. Wilson has been a fine secretary, a man of immense integrity and confidence and he has the respect of all of the people in Washington. And he certainly has my respect." McElroy said he had known for several months that his name was one of those "in the hopper" for the appointment. What does Mrs. McElroy his childhood sweetheart, the former Camilla Fry think about the ap pointment? CeeperaUve Wife "She is the most cooperative woman I ever could have mar ried." said her husband. "She al ways has been most willing to do anything that I wanted." McElroy said that no time has Minister Andrei Gromyko flew la a TTJlM Jet airliner bite Scboen feld Airport and then took a 20 minute train' ride to a masaiva Communist - staged reception at the East Berlin Railway station. The Russians got a cool recep tion from East Berlin crowds de spite Khrushchev's glad-handing. The Russian leader planted vig orous, noisy kisses on East Ger man leaders and repeatedly flashed his gold-toothed grin. " clowned during the welcoming cererftpnies, whooping in delight at the sight of a young Russian girl. He stopped, swept his right hand high in the form of a saluta and then gravely shook ber hand. Spiritless Applaase But Khrushchev received only sporadic, spiritless applause dur ing a 15-minute speech from the some 50,000- East Germans sum moned to the railway station by Communist functionaries. Despite constant radio and newspaper appeals to East Ber liners to "welcome our Soviet friends," only a thin line of spec tators gathered on Stalin Alice the main thoroughfare to watch quietly as Khrushchev drove past in an open-top black auto. Children's Hospital School Director Resigns Position EUGENE, Aug. 7 I - William A. Roecker has resigned as man aging director of the Children'! Hospital School in Eugene. James Torson. executive direc tor of the Oregon Society for Croppled Children and Adults, said Roecker s resignation was requested as the result of "as ad ministrative problem." He said "we want to make a change." Torson said applicants are be ing interviewed for the position. Roecker served for three years been set for him to take over the; as director of the hospital school, iob. If his aDDOintment is con-! which is owned and administered Mchlroy called national defense firmed by the Senate but he add-, by the Oregon Society for Crip the "No. 1 concern of the country 1 ed that it probably would be a pled Children and Adults whether you call K national de- couple of rponths. Roecker recently was made an fense or world peace." Then he grinned broadly and international honorary member of They re one and the same," he said: "Of course, if the Senate Epsiton Sigma Alpha, in recogni- throws rocks at me, I'll be back tion of his work at the hospital added. as to me proDiems of the De-1 selling soap again." school. Woodry's So. Com'l. St. IQ) fl ffl Fighter Pilot Hero Losing Disease Fight WARWICK. R I , Aug I il -Ml T Godfrey. 15, World War O fighter pilot who destroyed 36 Natl planes, is losing his battle against amyotrophic lateral scler sn tn Germany, his mother said tuaday Mb Reginald Godfrey, home fcaT a month visit with her son, said he has deteriorated consider ably since he arrived in Schwer ingen, Germanv a little more than a month ago lo receive treat ment from a medical specialist, Dr Arthur Bo.i. "John has deteriorated quite a bit." his moiher said "He can barely talk He rannot walk Both his arms and legs are paralysed. He has now inut all sense of bal ance He has lost weight. He's lost llmont eerything " Mrs Godfrey said the only rea ieft she discussed her son's con dition is to end false hopes raised at sufferers all over Ihe world by reports the said have given "er raneeus impress ions" about the treatment her son is receiving Godfrey went to Germany in search of a cure after doctors in (bis country gave him only two years ta live Godfrey's wife is In Germany Kb him. Their two Maine. sons are in Congressman Not Aware of Jayne WASHINGTON. Aug 7 -Jayat Mansfield is a Texan, so taVat she visned the office of Ipaaker Rayburn D Tex1 Tuesday ssjstjsasje sent out word for all Texas congressmen U come la IsW meet her 'JCep Posse ' D' of Waco, railed without explanation off the House (Use Me the ream, found himself Suddenly in a group pno(oraph Sft-ap with the actress With a blank expression he tuned te a friend when the flash , bafhj had reaswd popping off and ; asfcad: Whe ta the workd is Hot Mattress 'Shoots' Sleeper KAVSAS CITY Aug Br Kday sent Jsme U. the nnaprtaJ wfh a - Pui said Ran fell er uie Tyw a cigarette aeuwg the rere afire The ht fWie1 eartrMfes te a 31 raliher rnKer he kupt wilder his pillew TV fcin ewteewd k upper right Consult. Opntd . JfA", KOW.. Aug 7 u-d C"M rd rtOTta ! ae f ceasnlais to NEW LOW PRICE! O HOME LAUNDRY SAVE 70.00 Pair Now Only . . . 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