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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1957)
t-(Sec. I) Sttfman, Stlfin, Ore.. Mon., Oct. 21. 57 Sr'a Denies Arabian Report King Saud to Mediate Crisis LONDON, Oct. 20 The. Saudi I without even mentioning Turk-1 Syrian. Turkish and Saudi Arabian Arabian radio announced tonight i ish-Syrian crisis. officials at the U.N. in New York Syria and Turkey had accepted , Officials in Ankara laid they . had not yet heard of the media- an offer by King Saud to mediate could neither confirm nor deny the Middle East crisis which Ms-1 the report, althoufih one highly cow and some Arabs claim is ! placed informant said there were threatening a new war. But tha Syrian radio in Damas cus later declared Syria had not accepted any such mediation of fer. TTje broadcast, which further complicated a confused situation, give no further explanation. There also waa no Turkish con firmation of the Saudi report. Turkish Premier Adnan Menderes was In Iimir, in southern Turkey, tkm he made a mlitiral sneech I rumors Menderes had received a message from Saud. There were indications, too. that Deadlock in Little Rock Crisis Stays LITTLE ROCK. Ark , Oct. 20 ur Tha fifth week of integrated classes Will begin at Central High School here tomorrow. There are no signs of new developments that might affect the racial crisis. Gov. Orval Faubus was expect ed to return to his' mansion late tonight after a weekend in north west Arkansas. Aside from speculative com ments by soma of the persons in volved in the situation there has been no solid Indication of a break in the deadlock that keps federal troops in this city. They are here to protect nine Negro students who now are at tending the previously all-white S.OOO-pupU high school. Coast Guard Searches for Lost Sailor HAMILTON. Bermuda. Oct. 20 III Tbt U. S. Coast Guard launched an air and sea search today for Melvin L. West. M. and his 15-foot outboard, Tha Impos sible. Wast Is overdue on a MO-mile oceaa voyage from North Caro lina to Bermuda. He set out at 1:35 a m. Thursday from More head City, N. C. and hoped to make It here in 40 hours. He had enough fuel to run his J0-horse-power motor 70 hours. Tha Coast Guard sesrch was called as Increasing winds up to 30 mph kicked up the waters around this Atlantic island. Chop py seas and winds have prevailed sine last night. Seven Coast Guard planes. took off and the cutter Rockaway set out to sea. The search was or dered by the Sth Coast Guard Dis trict at Norfolk. Va. Visibility was good and the weather clear. Fishermen in 35 to 40-foot crafts were out today, but they radioed back the ocean was too rough to go more than fiva miles from the island. Islanders have been alerted by radio to be on the lookout for West on the chance he may have dropped anchor off some remote shore. Network Balks On Talk Critical Of UAW Actions out wsr." Scientific research in Russia "is done on a colossal scale," she said. She said Russia "understands He has m radio transmitter in : the value of scientific research" his boat but did take a receiving ; tetter than the United States, and SOI TH BEND',. Ind., Oct. 20 i Clarenre E. Manion. director of the Manion Forum, said today he had been unable to reach an agreement with Mutual Broadcast ing System on acceptability of a speech by Herbert V. kohler, president of the strikebound Koh ler Co. of Kohler, Wis. v Manion. former 1'niversity of Notre Dame Law School dean, said "as a matter of principle" he refused to prepare a substitute program for the weekly broad cast at 7 35 p.m., EST, tonight. The recorded speech by Kohler. hose plumbing fixture plant has been struck by the I nited Auto Workers since April S, 1954. charged there had been more than 800 acts of violence and van dalism in the Course of the strike. Manion said the network attor ney's principal objection in ruling the speech unacceptable apparent ly was a reference to a fatal as sault on a nonstriking Kohler worker and refusal of Michigan officials to extradite the alleged assailant. Manion said his forum agreed to pay for matching radio time for the UAW to reply to Kohler. Kohler also agreed to indemnify Mutual for any possible damages but only if his speech was car ried in full. Manion said he expected about to independent radio stations scattered throughout the country, to carry the Kohler speech. The recordings had been distributed separately to them. lion report. The Saudi Arabian broadcast, monitored here by the British Rroadcasting Corp.. was in Arabic from the Mecca station. It said: "In order to promote confidence and -peace and foster the bonds (,.' fraternity and neighborliness between Syria and Turkey, his majesty King Saud has offered to mediate. The two countries have ac cepted this mediation and official delegations will arrive in Dam rnam Saudi Arabia) within the next two days." Convoy Takes Troops to Syria Guatemalans Vote; Results Due Today By Al.VARO rONTRERAS GUATEMALA. Oct. 20 tf -Guatemalans made their choice among three presidential candi dates to succeed the assassinated Carlos Castillo Armas in a nation al election today. They also elected M deputies to Congress. That is half tha total number. Results of the balloting, expect ed to total about 500.000 may be known tomorrow. In this capital city soma 0.000 voted while armored cars and jeeps patroled the streets. The government warned it would act sternly to put down any subver sive outbreak inspired by Commu nists. Leader of Revstt Castillo, who led the molt that ousted the pro-Communist Jaco bo Arbeiu Guzman regime in 1854. was killed July J by a pal ace guard subsequently described as an admirer of communism. The guard committed suicide. These were the candidates for the presidency: Gen. Miguel Idigoras Fuentes. 62. who lived in exile during the prftCommunist Arbenx regime. Miguel Ortis Passarelli. a 49- year-old lawyer who served j,. f -j..-., . . . . . , .,:... '-,;.' . .J '.' Ml ' t - "'.', v.. . - ' " . : - v 7 ' - ! ' ' ' - I ...-i 7 1" -.l m-r ,.,sJ - ) J in CAIRO, Oct. 20 This is part of the convoy taking Egyptian troops to Latakla, Syria, ac cording to the caption received with this photo released by the Egyptian army. The Egyp tian troops were landed in Syria to help defend it against what the Syrians claimed was an impending invasion by American-backed Turkish forces. (AP Wlrephoto) Navy-Marine Men Exercise Off Okinawa president of the Supreme Court and minister of government under Castillo. He is considered the offi cial or government candidal. Vomer Reetar Asturias Quinonex, SO. former rector of the Guatamalan Univer sity and former minister of educa tion. Gen. Idigoras Fuentes charged on election eve that progovern- ment elements backing Ortiz Pas sarelli were plotting to falsify results. No disturbances were evident today. Under Guatemalan taw all men over It must vote whether they TOKYO, Oct. 20 (JP-A four-day joint Navy-Mariri war-at-sea ex ercise is under way off Okinawa. , It will end Tuesday when Marines i make a helicopter "vertical envel-1 opment" assault on the island for tress. Ships of the U. S. 7th Fleet be gan the atomic era war games yesterday about 200 miles off Oki nawa. A Navy bomber took off from the carrier Bon Homme Kichard earning a simulated "is land - buster" nuclear bomb to as drop on a remote spot of land Theater Time Table KLSINORf TANTASJA": 7:0. 10:14 "HIRED GUN": CAPITOL (Continuous from 1 P m.) "PICKUP A LUCY": 3:10. 4:47, 10:24 "THE STRANGE ONE": 1.31, I OS, l:4S HOLLYWOOD "JOHNNY TREMAIN": 7:00, 10:18 THE BIG LAND": 8:41 Nikita's War View Honest, Says Eleanor NEW YORK, Oct. 20 -Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt said today she believes Soviet Premier Nikila Khrushchev "is honest when he says that war is unthinkable." She appeared on NBC-TV's "Meet the Press" program. Recently returned from Russia where she interviewed Khrush chev, Mrs. Roosevelt said: are literate or not. Women over Khrushchev and other Soviet lead- lg may vote if they wish provid ers "have made up their minds' in they can read and write. tney can win wnat tney want un set Prayer Vigil Due Against Nuclear Tests the Soviet scientist is entirely sep arated from politics. Mrs. Roosevelt said she would like to see the United States have some communication" with Red Bomb' Damages Negro Home BIRMINGHAM. Ala.. Oct. 20 IP An unoccupied house which a nearby The Marines are from the Sth Regiment that recently left Japan for a new duty station on UKina wa. They will demonstrate the newest concepts in A-age warfare completely different from the is land-hopping tactics the Marines used in the Pacific in World War II. Jordan Voices Complaint on Plane Attack newsmen in Red China as "just nonsense." The former first lady also said WASHINGTON. Oct. 20 (i-Six pacifist and peace organizations said today they will hold a Pray er and Conscience Vigil here next i in the Congress momn againsi ine tesiinx ana pro duction of nuclear weapons. They said they will demon strate daily in front of the White House. Joining in the announcement were 37 individuals, some of whom took part in a similar vigil i last Aug. I at the atomic test site in Vv arii Flven nf the Nevada demonstrators were arrested for! MISSIIA TKST CKNTER, Cape edging onto the test area. jCanaveial, Fla.. Oct. 20 i-A The announcement said the vigil jyangucrd rocket with only its ... . . . . n i firt c t la r at ainoinaa mav Kak nl will run irom wov. i 10 uec. 1. . nlrv A r i n rwnt v.,r. i "et beln ld NR")eS. cv. .aj-a tk.i .u.. 'l hadn't heard a AMMAN, Jordan. Oct. 20 A government source said today Jordan has complained to the U.N. truce supervisors that an Israeli jet fighter plane attacked a Jordan civilian airliner yester day. Jordan is also considering diplomatic action, the informant said. The American pilot of a Jordan transport plane said in Cairo an 'Israeli iet fired on his craft five Jordanian (lull hi wa, damaged heavily by a bomb, and plane went on to Cairo. (In Jerusalem, the Israeli army mimic i uiiiiiiuiiiiat ium whii nru v- u. J . j a : ii am in v.. ...o China. She deplored the State He- '"m,ly .fTi ! times as he flew over partment bar against American " L.!hS2i i territory. None of the last night. Two other houses in the same. poor. She added that this in cluded the Democratic leadership U.S. Plans Test of Future Moon Engine anything of the previous bombincs because if I had. 1 sure wouldn't have bought the house." said Mrs. Cleo Prince. Mrs. Prince said that while she was cleaning the house prepara tory to moving in a white man told her she wouldn't be happy if she occupied the house. Poodle, Pal Save Owners DALLAS. Tex . Oct. 20 issued a statement saying the Jor dan plane was ordered to land aft er being spotted by an Israeli air force craft over the Nesev Des ert 20 miles inside Israel. It said the Jordan plane refused and es caped across the border. Israel also lodccd a complaint with the V. N. Mixed Armistice Commis sion, i The official Jordan account of the incident said: The airliner, with H passengers and four crew men, was on its normal daily flight from Amman to Cairo when it was attacked over the town of Aqaba. Jordan. The plane sent an SOS and Jordan land forces at . 1 Aqaba drove off the Israeli jet A ' -.1. i ; Hoover Says Reds Aim at Yank Youths WASHINGTON. Oct. 20 Of-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said to day the Communist party in the United States has taken a "re newed lease on life" and is mount ing a major campaign to influence American teen-agers. Hoover, writing in the current issue of the American Legion ma gazine, said the Communist party is starting an expanded propa ganda campaign through the use of secret members in civic organi zations and church groups. The prime target of the cam paign will be youth, the FBI boss said. He reported the Communists plan to develop youth leaders with the aim of placing them later in labor unions, particularly in such heavy industries as steel and shipbuilding. Another Communist objective. Hoover said, is to organize public opinion against continuation of nu clear tests. He said the party also has min ority groups high on its "priority list of infiltration targets." Plans also call for participants loft 'omorrow ,n attest of the d itle' black dog named w!Lh und..f?i.. in the vigil to call on public of- ve ,de being developed to carry , X.cert wX. st rawoVrryl, ''f f.!.l anri elercvmen seekinz 1 s satellite into an orbit ,.,. . .. . ter and fired on t support for their position. milfs the earth. Coordinator of the vigil is La- T'" ,,rln- "h'lh 'PPffred im rence Scott, a Baptist minister mment twice Friday, would be the who was the first ot inose arrest- " r;"" 1 I" . apartment building ,k. v...H. rfmnnsiratinn trials. Official sources said test dp"""" .'"TT. He and the others were arrested 'tuies would be resumed Mon . ... k... TViov n . art. aj iiiiMvni htit u-r fined i.y)n and sentenced to six months in a faster trmpo in the ballistic ,ail. The sentences were suspend- ml!-sl1 Program were observed . last niqht on the sprawling test Groups sponsoring the call for ' .wni'r. usually quiet over the the Washington vigil are the Rap- 'kenri: tt Pacifist Fellowship. Fellow- P" ,Alr to-; ship of Reconciliation. Friends Jhnr through a static test on its Teace Committee of the Philadel-; f,rlnC P uing excitement .n Phia Yearly Meeting of Friends. ! " quarters. In static trials, the Nonviolent Action Against Nu-nsincs and other components of . tt.iiv.ni War Resistersi" . ! ers returned la- blonde French poodle named Hen-: Z'Z, ' ,, .- ry, today were credited with sav-l ing the lives of their owners in a fire which swept through a Dallas artment building. Firemen said Susie apparently was the first to discover the blaze. Ine Iirst signs of what mav be , . , ... ... AlW, inns mas rxiliiaicu at iw.wn'. Mrs. Kay E. Lucke. Susie's mis tress, said she was wakened by the dog "tugsmg at my covers and barking furiously. I smelled. smoke, opened the bedroom door. craft fire. Death Takes Mrs. Spoelsfra Rain Floods Locales in New Mexico By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rain squalls broke over the New Mexico mountains last night, flooding towns and sending tons of rain-loosened .boulders onto highways. At least three deaths were re ported in New Mexico. Two more persons were killed on rain-swept hiehways in West Texas as a slow Soaking drizzle blanketed much of the Southwest. Huge rock slides blocked U.S. 6 the Santa Fe-Taos highway in northern New Mexico as boul ders tumbled from the towering walls of the Rio Grande gorge. Police said several motorists slammed into massive rock slides. Billy Graham Butted Three Times by Ram MONTREAT. N. C, Oct. 20 Evangelist Billy Graham was butted three times by a ram at his mountain residence near here and today was confined to his bed with a possible fractured knee. Graham was knocked 50 feet down a rocky mountainside by the ram yesterday. He suffered nu merous cuts and bruises. The ram's first blow started Graham down the hillside. The animal followed him and struck twice again as the evangelist tumbled along the rocky surface. Graham, ax in hand, was ex amining his flock of three Suffolk sheep when the ram went into ac tion. He didn't use the ax, his secretary, Jim Moore said'. "I turned the other cheek," he quot ed uranam. Moore said Graham would prob ably be taken to an Asheville hos pital tomorrow for an X-ray ex amination of the injured knee. But Graham made plain through his secretary that he would be at the Polo Grounds in New York City on Oct. 27, "even if I have to be carried there on a stretch er. The evangelist is due to leave his home Wednesday for New York for a series of small meet ings which serve as a followuo to his New York crusade of this summer. Membership in Oregon Noted CORVALLIS. Oct. JO A 20 per cent increase in Ore eon church membership during the past five years was reported at the 11th an nual Oregon Town and Country Church conference held recently at Oregon State college. Ringing doorbells instead of church bells" was credited for much of the incresse by Dr. Mark A. Talney, Portland, executive dir ector, Oregon Council of Churches. Churches are no longer waiting for people to answer ,the church bells but are "carrying the church to the people" through contacts and visitations, the church leader said. Some churches are adding an extra service and others have re vived Sunday evening services to meet the increased attendance. Dr. Talney reported. He added that youth programs of churches are particularly gaining. n hile church membership in Ore gon, as elsewhere in the west, has traditionally lagged percentage wise behind the rest of the country, conference speakers said Ihe pic ture has some positive aspects. Membership Lew la Past Membership in the west has been low because churches have con centrated upon being religious in stitutions, said Rev. Gene W. Car ter, Berkeley, district superinten- dent of the Methodist church. The i former midwest minister snd theo logy teacher said the idea that the church is also a "community cen ter" is waging a losing battle east of the Rocky mountains. Rev. Carter stated that churches in other areas are now learning what the west has long Ven forced to realize: "churches must learn to justify their existence solely as religious institutions since all other roles have been taken over by community agencies. Th Weather Max. Nla. f rtp. Bkr 0M Bod-lttdmon , " -J0, tuna H 40 09 KJimath rlls,- .. 00 Mrdford S5 SO .00 N.wport S 3 North BrnS w Portland s S .no Silts st , Jl Br THS ASSOCIATED PRESS Four Killed In California Plane Crash MM. Mia. 42 IS Prclp. T .01 Anchor. Albuqucrqua 1 Atlanta I Bow , Boston i Chicaf a j Cl.v.land Detrnlt Fairbanks Farfo I C.lv.fton I Hcltna Honolulu Kanaa. City Lat Vasa. Lo AnfalM Miami Mnpli St. Paul New Orleans Naw York Omaha Pho.ni Reno Sarranimto I.H 1 mitm fifV San Dmso ! San Franriae OS SO .02 Washiucton Todav. foracat ( from IT S W.ath r BurMiv-NtfcNarr Fl.ld. Salami: Patch, of mdMilns (of. otherwise fair lodav and tonlaht: variable hith rloudineaa Tuamtav. Th htfn today 66 to M. low tonlfht Sua, the hifh Tuesday M to M. Willamette River: IS feet. Temp. 12:01 a m. today: 42. SALKM PaBCIPITATIOM llu start af weather y.ar Sept. t Ta Sat La Year Naraul 3.01 2SS 347 2 58 4 SS S3 41 51 OS 52 tl 53 12 50 51 01 M SO ts 09 42 42 30 43 40 35 37 28 33 $7 M M 30 5 sa as 30 S3 4S 33 S2 31 4S 40 01 SO 43 BAKERSFIELD. Calif.. Oct. 30 Four persons were killed in an airplane crash last night 10 miles southeast of Bakersfield. The wreck was not found until ; this morning. Z Dead were Hans Lawson Linde, - 47 pilot of a four-place, wartime " i Cessna trainer; his wife, Eleanor, .os t2: their son. Hilding Andrew 1 Linde, 22. and a woman tentative Z ly identified as Kathleen Moore, -' 24. of La Cresenta, a Los Angeles t suburb. Linde operated a Bakers- field construction company: I The plane apparently dived into the ground at high speed. Causa of the crash has not been deter j mined. Tide Table (Taft, Ore.) (Compiled by U. S. Co. it St Geodetic Survey, roraana, uresoni Oct. 21 Huh Water Time Height 10:34 a m. 7 0 11:22 p.m. SO 11:13 a.m. T.I Salt Water For Drinking Study Planned WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 lAV-The search for an economical way to make salt water usable for drink ing and irrigation will bring sci entists from a dozen countries here, next month. The Interior Department an nounced today an international symposium to exchange informa tion on saline water conversion processes Nov. 4-6. The depart ment's Office of Saline Water and the National Academy of Sciences are sponsoring the meeting. ' Countries expected to be repre sented include Canada, the United Kingdom, France, the Nether lands, Algeria, Spain, South Afri ca, Italy, Iran, Australia and the Soviet I'nion. The Interior Department for five years has been seeking to learn how to turn salt and brack ish water into supplies for agri culture, industry and human con sumption at acceptable costs. Secretary of the Interior Seaton announced recently that the work Woman Accused Of Manslaughter By Illegal Abortion PORTLAND. Oct. 20 Ruth Barnett, Portland naturopath, was arrested late yesterday on a se cret indictment charging her with manslaughter by abortion. She posted $5,000 bail and was released. The indictment accuses the 49- year-old woman of performing an illegal abortion in September, 1956. A charge of conspiracy to com mit manslaughter by abortion, issued last August, also is pend ing against the woman. Car Reported Stolen . - Stateamaa News Senrlc KEIZER. Oct. 20 -Theft of a black and cream 1950 Ford from Berg's parking lot was reported to Marion County sheriff's office about 10 p.m. last night. The car registered to Harold S. Handley, 6540 Lake Labish Rd.. reportedly had been left with the keys in. deputies said. and southeast of Albuquerque Albuquerque, a City of more than 100.000, also was deluged by heavy rains. While rains and even some snow fell in the West, it generslly was fair and dry over the Eastern part of the nation. nad the hole living room was ruth at. died Sunday in a a- ahlazc." she said lem hospital at the age of 72. t pstairs neichlws Arthur Mills' Mrs. Spoelstra was born Nov. and Monty Barber said Henry 25. 1884. in Wisconsin. She moved gate a similar performance. The from Montana to Gates about 33 two apartments were gutted by! years ago, to Mill City three years Mrs. Minnie P. Spoelstra, 1210 Marian AnrlprCOn Cheered by Huge Audience in Burma League and the Women's Interna-!1""1 ,0 determine whether they thf blale Five Mhf.n WPre dam.i lalfr d 0 Salem about y.ar ...".... d . h f. are functioning properly. . , lionat League for Peace and Free dom. Faffier Becomes Bachelor in Error, Wife Stepmother AIX-LES-BAINS. France. Oct. 20 uT An error by the town clerk hers has made the father of four a bachelor, his wife his stepmoth er snd his father a bigamist. The foulup came to light when Louis Cloeckner tried to establish his right to an identity card.' A check of the records showed( there was no registration of Louis' mar riage. But the records did show that .Louis' father, Augustus, w as msrfed hi 1947 to Louis' wife. Officials said it will take a court Judgment to straighten the sing out, are functioning pronerl Unofficial sources indicated the static test results of the 1.500-miie intermediate-range weapon, com petitor of- the Army's Jupiter, were satisfactory. aged. No one w as injured. Ex-Top U.S. Red Recovering From Brain Hemorrhage NEW YORK. Oct. 20 - Wil liam Z. Foster. 77. former chair man of the Communist oartv in America, was recuperating lu&ay i bfe. Chiang Re-Elected By Kuomintang TAIPEI, Formosa Oct. 20 i.f To no one's surprise. President Chiang Kai-shek was re-elected director general of the Kuomin tang party today. He has held the job since 193S and in all likeli hood will hold . it the rest of his ago. She 1 Spoelstra, who died in Salem in IMS. She leaves one son. Jack Spoel- RANGOON. Burma. Oct. 20 A huge and enthusiastic audi ence cheered American contralto was the widow of Heins: Marian Anderson for 10 minutes sfter a performance here last night. Miss Anderson Is on a Far East- stra. Salem, and two grandchildren. ! em tour sponsored by the U. S Arrangements are pending at Vir- j State Depart menU-and the Ameri gil T. Golden mortuary. I can National Theater Assn. from a cerebral hemorrhage at his home in the Bronx. Simora Gerson, legislative repre sentative of the party, said Fosetr suffered paralysis of the right side The party'' congress authorized Chiang to appoint a deputy direc tor general, a new post, and he is expected to name Vice Presi dent Chen Cheng. That WJtild con- of his body because of the attack i firm the vice president- iv his gen Ust Wednesday. 11 also affected jerally acknowledged position as his speech. . Chiang's political beir. REGULAR MEETING CANNERY LOCAL No, 670 WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23RD 2 P.M. and P.M. HALL NO. 1 -LABOR TEMPLE ' Please Be Present E. 8. BENJAMIN. Secretary s-lnrtriuater. rasraHed down on I n progressed to a point where Estancia. a farming community of P'1"1 plants can be built to test 1,000 east of the Sandia Mountains ",,u re,,ne "ooraiory resuus. Dallas Boy Hit by. Car Stateiman New. Service DALLAS, Ore., Oct. 20 A nine-year-old boy was injured when truck by a car near his home in Dallas early Sunday evening. Dal las police reported. Taken to a Dallas hospital with lacerations of the face and arms was Stewart Knight, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Knight, 1102 Hayter St. Hospital attendants said the youth was resting comfortably late tonight. Police said the boy ran from behind a parked car and was struck by s car driven by John Nachtigal of Dallas about 5 p.m. There were no citations issued, po lice added. DOOKb urfcN 12:45 PJM. yicTOt MATURE ANITA EKBERG PICKIIP QuBMAScoPtif COllIT W DOORS OPEN MS PJM. Walt Disney'? 'ft mmm Nat Stcltcvrjiiy Adults 50c Children 20c DOORS OPEN (:4S Wslt Disney's "Johnny Tremain" la Technicolor Hal Stalmaster, Liisno Pattea and "Th Big Land" In Teenicolor Alan Ladd, Tirginis Maya Edmond O'Brien A if ACTION CO-BIT V jC:l.lMAS:Olt l1rJ:hl-l Closed Mon.-Tie.-Wed. flSHSP Closed Mon.-Tues.-Wed. 12 11 a.m. 11 57 am. SS Low Waters Time Heisht 4 II a m. 0( ( OS p.m. -04 I OS am. SI p.m. -10 I SI a m. IS Cities League Opens Today PORTLAND. Oct. 20 W Tht first of an . expected 900 public officials registered here today fot the 32nd annual convention of tht League of Oregon Cities which opens tomorrow., J. W. Barney, city manager of Hillsboro and president of tht league, said 100 municipalities will be represented. The opening session gets under way at 10 a.m. Maryland has a town called Sil ver Spring, but it really is a suburb of Washington, D.C. Sputnik Interest Wanes GLASGOW. Scotland, Oct. 20 Scientists at three big observa- S 4S p.m. -i J lories here didn't even bother to look up when Sputnik flitted over Glasgow last night. Astronomist John Coats said, "Nobody's inter ested any longer." announces a new way to go places In the , Rocket Age... COMING SOON ...TO YOUR OLDSMOBILE QUALITY DEALER'S