2-(Spc. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Thurs., Nov. 21, '57
Management, Labor
'Graft Laws' Sought
' By JOHN CHADKWIOK
WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 -'
legislation to help labor and man-
agement protect themselves
""against the odorous minority n(
unscrupulous men in hoth camp"
;as nroposed today by Sen Ives
1K-NY.
Ives, vice chairman of the Sen-
tt Rackets Investigating Commit-
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today M to S4
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Court Frees
Little Rock
Men in Riot
, LITTLE ROCK. Ark., Nov.
(a Fourteen men and youths It
whites and three Negroes ar
rested during the week when
racial tension was at its peak in
integration troubled Little Rock
"Here freed of misdemeanor
charges In Municipal Court today.
" Six of the white men were taken
into custody near Central High
School, where street rioting on
Sept. a and, to a lesser degree,
on Sept. 24. led President Elsen
hower to direct that paratroopers
and federalized National Guards
men be used to protect nine Ne
gro children who had entered
classes under court order.
The other defendants were ar
rested in two separate incidents,
neither involving any injur' -,
'hich occurred some dista..,:
from the school but were appar
ently related to the racial feeling
prevalent at the time.
After a hearing. Judge Harry C.
Robinson found five of those ar
rested near the school innocent of
disturbing the peace, but he de
clared: 'The way I look at it you
didn't have any business out there
at the school but apparently
didn't do anything, so I'm going
lo pardon you with this admoni
tiondon't go back out there."
Brother of Salem
Women Dies
Harold Thorpe Pemberton, 51.
brother of Mrs Helen Mills and
Mrs. Gurnee Flesher of Salem,
died at Hot SprirTgi, Mont, it was
learned here Wednesday
Born in Jordon Valley, Ore., July
St. 190$, Pemberton had been as
sociated with the electrical division
of Grand Coulee Dam.
Another brother, Paul, survives
In Portland,
.Young Republican Club
To Note Heritage Day
. KLAMATH FALIJ!, Nov. 20
The Young Republican club
here will hold its first annual
Heritage Day Saturday.
Speakers will include Secretary
of State Mark Hatfield and State
Treasurer Sig Unander.
Wife of Oregonian
Sports Editor Dies
PORTLANDv -Nov. 20 uH - Mrs.
pCate Dallam Gregory, daughter .
f a pioneer Washington newspa
perman and wile of L. H. Gregory,
'sports editor of The Oregonian,
died here today.
Adults sue Children -Uc
New Showing Opea 6:45
"Curia of Frankenstein"
Filmed la Warner colar
and
"X The Unknown"
Y Woe't Forget It!
(But You'll WUk Yen Cauld)
Thea '
Tf Relax Yau We Have
"Vivt) Cuba"
Claematrooe Technicolor
Evemeae Wants ta See Cuba
tee. made public four bills he
plans to introduce when Congress
reconvenes in January
The measures, all amendments
to the Taft-Hartley labor Rela
tions Act, are designed to insure
democratic eleciions in labor un
'ior., prevent misuse of union
funds, end picketing practices
aimed at extortion, and outlaw
payments throush middlemen to
employes or union representatives
intended to interfere with union
Jerganiiation.
i
'Corrective Purpose'
' Ives said these measures, along
with two others he oifered at the
last session of Congress, were
part of a program that he de
scribed as "'corrective, not puni
tive" in purpose. He said he prob
ably would advance additional
proposa's later.
Ives, who also is a member of
the regular Senate Labor Commit
tee, said in stalement that the
measures are "solely my own."
The special committee, under
the chairmanship of Sen. Mct'lel
I Ian D-Ark i, plana to aubmit legis
lative recommendations later. Sec
retary of Labor Mitchell also has
said the Eisenhower administra
tion will propose reform measures.
Ivrs said he had deciccd that
plf cing labor organi'ajions under
the antitrust lfs, as sugted
bv some '.enMnri and others,
"would not be feasible."'
By Secret Ratio!
One of his proposed bills would
make it an unfair labor practice
for union oflicers to be elected
or other union affairs to he voted
on escept by secret ballot.
A second hill would provide
criminal penalties for failure to
file the financial and o'her re
ports which labor unions are now
recuired by law to submit to the
secretary of lahor. The reports
pl.'O would have to be made pub
lic Ivci said the inadequacy of pres
ent filing requirements has
"helped to make it possible for
J unions funds to be misappropriated
ana misuses in sucn spectacular
fashion as the select committee
hearings have disclosed."
Fund Drive
Collects $2,550
Marchers for the Marion - Polk
County Muscular Dystrophy Asso
ciation collected more than $2,550
Wednesday night as 400 volunteers
made house to house solicitations
in Salem.
The drive headed by W. M. Bart-
lett of the Marion-Polk County was
conducted from 7 to p.m. Area
leaders said th average donation
from residents was f 1 50 a person
Tunds from hour glass cannis
ten placed throughout public
places will not be collected until
Dec. 1. The goal of this year's two-
county drive is $5,000. Of funds re
ceived, 75, per cent will go to the
national headquarters in New York
for research. The remaining per
centage will be used in locaLchap
ters. HOUSEHOLD ARTICLES TAKEN
Mrs. Mary Marlcne Yaw, 1550
Fourth St. NE, reported to police
early Thursday morning that two
household articles valued at $15.96.
were stolen from her home during
the past week, officers said. It was
not known exactly when the theft
occurred as Mrs. Yaw was out of
town during this time, officers
added.
. IH rl TODAY
NOTHING ELSE IS AS MUCH FUN AS
' r F iX WARNERCOLOW
fV i? WARNEHBlOS.
1 JLJIII 1 BROADWAY'S TERRIFIC tki
B0YJ -
OY ML
--John Raitt v Carol lmtwtffa
it BIG, ACTION t'O-FEATl'RF.
With
FF.LICIA
FARR
GLENN FORD
Beck Insists
(He Will
Keep Office
SKATTLE, Nov. 20 un-Team-ster
President Dave Beck, reiter
ating that he'll stay in olfice until
eligibility of his elected succes
sor is settled, announced today
. he has summoned union officials
: here to discuss organization prob
lems i Beck elaborated on a previous
j statement, made in Washington
I after a union board meeting Oct.
131. that he would continue as head
of the 1.4tm ono-member union un
( til courts rule on James Hoffa's
. status.
Hoffa was elected Teamsters
president at the union's national
meeting in Miami last September
but his claim to office has been
challenged in federal court.
"By a prrcedent of long stand
ing," Beck said. ":he president
stas in office until a successor
is elected and qualilicd It is
something oter which I have no
control.
"I'ntil the court approves the
I last convention decision or ren
ders a decision that will force a
I new convention, I will hold office."
If the courts rule against Hoffa
taking office it will take at least
j so day to call a new convention,
I Beck added.
i About 40 general organizers and
other officials of the union have
been called here for meetings to
morro'v and Friday. Beck said
th"re was "nnlhing unusual" about
I thp meeting?, adding ihev ". ntild
I center on organizational problems.
George Beaty,
Salem Area
Native, Dies
George Bcaly, linn Mill St.. na
tive of the Salem area, died Wed
neday evening at a Salem hospi
ta'. Beaty was born north of Salem
Feb. 20, 1885, the son of Frank and
Josephine Pugh Beaty. He lived in
and around Salem all -his life;----'
A retired carpenter he was a
member of St. Paul's Episcopal
Church and was prominent in the
Odd Fellows.
Survivors include two daughters.
Mrs. Aileen Clodfelter. Portland,
apd Mrs. Josephine Thayer.. Eu
gene; one brother, Otto Beaty. Sa
lem; five grandchildren, and one
srent-grandchijd.
Funeral services will be Friday
at 3 p.m. at the W. T. Rigdnn mor
tuary. Chemeketa Iodge No. 1
lOOF will hold ritualistic services
Salem Hospital
Board Appoints
Nominating i Group
A nominating committee of Co
hum Grabenhorst. Ralph Skopil
and Asel Eoff was appointed Wed
nesday evening at a meeting of
the board of control of Salem
General Hospital.
Nominations for hoard officers
for 1058 will be announced at the
December meeting and voted on in
January.
Bids Asked on Bridge
jOver McKenzie River
I PORTLAND. Nov. 20 - Bids
I today were asked on construction
I of a 144-foot concrete logging
bridge over the MCKemie River
in I anA fnnntv
The bids were asked by the U.S.
Bureau of Public Roads.
0VE$fAJAMA - 8IRl7
SENSATION IS ON. THE SCREEN!
'.
-VAN HEFUN
Solon Dies
V e' ?
BETHESDA, Md., Nov. 20
Rep. Augustine B. Keller
(D-Pa.) died today In a
Bethesda, Md., hospital.
(AP)
Cancer Kills
Pennsylvania
Legislator
! WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 I -Itep.
Augustine B. Kelley iD-Pa),
74. veteran legislator, died of can
cer today at Suburban Hospital in
nearby Bethesda, Md.
A specialist on education and la
bor legislation, he was in his ninth
term in the House.
i Rep. Kelley 's death means that
five vacancies in the House of
Representatives . will have to be
filled by special elections in the
next few months. Four elections
will he to fill seats formerly held
by Democrats; the other will elect
a successor to a Republican.
Counting three vacancies al
ready existing and two more to
occur before the next session of
Congress starts Jan. 7, the House
lineup is:
Democrats 230. vacancies 4; Re
publicans 210. vacancv 1 .
One of the Democratic vacan
cies will be filled in a special
31. This
ft to elect a successor to the late
Democratic Rep. James B. Bowl
er, who died last July I.
Another special election has
been set for Jan. ( in Georgia to
pick a successor to Democratic
Rep. Henderson Lanham. who
died Nov. 10 in an auto-train colli
sion.
Rep. Karl Chudoff iDPa will
create nnother vat-arc vhen he
resigns in early January to as
sume a Philadelphia municioul
judgeship to which he was elect
Nov. 5.
The vacancy in the Republican
seat will occur Dec. 1, effective
date of the resignation of Rep.
Sterling Cole, of New York, who
recently was named director gen
eral of the International Atomic
Energy Agency.
The world's highest suspension
bridge spans the Royal Gorge of
the Arkansas River west of Canon
City, Colo. It is 1.053 feet above
the river; was constructed in 1929
at a cost of $250,000.
JUDY TYLER
MICKEY SHAUGHNESSY
0AN JONES-JENNIFER HOLDEfl
ACTION CO-HIT
M 6 M
f iwnti 0tNTU !
VAN JOHNSON
MARTINE CAROL
HERBERT
V1LV GUSTAVO ROCCOy
liC mtMascOt 4 CCXOI A
OOOKS OPENi 6:45 P.M.
icf f aJir ,aj5
t
0
RICHARD WIDMARK
RICHARD BASEHART
FABULOUS CO-HIT it
tzrra
M9CA
E0onte(arlo
-4 IKMNNAMA
Dulles Says
NATO Forces
To 'Fight Back'
CHICAGO. Nov. 20 iv-Secretary
of State Dulles said tonight NATO
forces would "almost certainly
fight back" without waiting for a
declaration of war, if attacked in
the field.
The decision would be made on
the spot by field commanders.
Dulles told a news conference.
The secretary was here to ad
dress members of the Council on
Foreign Relations at a dinner
meeting.
Dulles said that Adlai Stevenson,
now a State Department consult
and, "will be on the federal pay
roll a long, long time."
Stevenson last week agreed to
advise President Eisenhower, and
Dulles on formulation of policies
for next month's NATO meeting
in Paris.
CHICAGO. Nov. 20 MV-Adlai E.
Stevenson, who has been acting as
a Democratic consultant to the Ei
senhower administration on for
eign problems, said todav that he
has not been asked to attend next
month's big NATO meeting.
Stevenson made the statement
to newsmen after he and Secre
tary of State Dulles arrived at
Chicago's Midwav Airport from
Washington in a U.S. Military Air
Transport plane.
Driving Charge Made
City police arrested a Phoenix,
Ariz, man on a charge of reckless
driving following what police term
ed a 75 miles an hour chase
through Salem streets early Wed
nesday morning, officers said.
Clarence B. Reed was arrested
about 2:30 a.m. in the 1500 block
of Capitol St. NE, after police
clocked his vehicle traveling north
on 12th St. SE, police reported.
Reed was released on $75 bail.
FAVORITE
"CINDERELLA"
and
"MOTHER
GOOSE"
CHARACTERS! :
'The Parade of the Rubber Giants"
ALL NEW! Many Bands!
MAKE IT A
SPONSORED
Prohibition
Era Gangster
Up for Parole
(Picture an Ml
SPRINGFIELD, 111.. Nov. 20 (
Roger Touhy, Chicago prohibi
tion era gangster, won a sentence
reduction Wednesday that puts
freedom from prison within reach
in another 21 months.
Gov. William G. Stratton. act
ing on recommendation of the
Illinois Parole and Pardon Board,
cut 27 years from Touhy s 83
year term for kidnaping. It makes
Touhy eligible for release in Au
gust 1959 instead of 1968.
Touhy, 59, has always 'main
tained in his long fight for free
dom that the kidnaping charge
was a frameup and that he was
convicted on perjured testimony.
He has been in prison since 1934.
Stratton Said Touhy's sentence
seemed ."extremely harsh and out
of proportion" in comparison with
those given for premeditated mur
der. Touhy, once known as "the Ter
rible," originally was sentenced
for kidnaping John Uake the Bar
ber i Factor. Touhy has claimed
that Factor faked a kidnaping to
escape extradition to England.
In 1934 Touhy received an ad
ditional 199-year sentence for tak
ing part in a break from. State
ville Prison. -That sentence, how
ever, was reduced to three years
by Stratton last July. '
At an executive clemency hear
ing last month, Touhy's wife, two
sons and a sister appealed for
his early release. They said the
family would finance a fishing
tackle business for him in a South
ern state.
Hit Pedestrian
Remains Critical
Attendants at Salem General Hos
pital said that Benjamin Kerlee,
72, of 425 20th St. NE, injured in
a auto-pedestrian accident which
killed his wife, remained uncon
scious and in critical condition
early this morning '
40 GIANT BALLOONS
Jt
v. .... Jmw .'-
- " ' ' vs.; iY '.''..' " "' " t
fy
aw- "''Tf
BIG DAY FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY!
BY SALEM CHAMBER OF
Theater Time
TaMe ,
BLSINORK ;
"TIME LIMIT": 19, 10 '31
-THE MONTE CARLO STOItY "i
i , -CAPITOL
"JAILHOUSE ROCK": 7:00,
10:2.
"ACTION OF THE TIGER": l:S0
GRAND
-THE PAJAMA GAME": S 47.
"3:10 TO YUMA": 7:00, 10 2S.
Hotxvwoon
"CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN":
7:00. 10 :M
"X THE UNKNOWN": :0O.
Group Forms
Coordinating
Plans Unit
A sub-division committee of the
; Marion County Planning Commis
sion was formed Wednesday by
the commission to coordinate plan-
ring activities with the city of
Salem.
Action on subdivision regula
tions presented by the Mid-Wil-
lumette Valley Planning Council
was deferred for further study.
These regulations, approved by
the Mid-Willamette council, pro
vide for subdivision regulations
within a six-mile radius of Salem
and must be approved finally by
the Salem City Council.
Another business request that a
small tract of property near Liv
ingston avenue and the Salem By
Pass be made into a playground
was turned over to the city park
board.
A hearing was set for Dec. 2 on
s request to change the name of
Russell-Gaffin Rd. to Holland Dr.
BATTERY REPORTED STOLEN
Robert Lee Bryan, 4 Ford St.
SE. reported to police that a bat
tery, valued at $19, was stolen
from his car Tuesday night or
early Wednesday morning, while
Iher car was parked near his res
idence. 7.
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COMMERCE
Girl Sets 11 Fires in Hotel
Just to Watch Excitement
NEW YORK. Nov. 20 -A 12-year-old
girl, daughter of night
club showgirl, told police today
that she set 11 fires within 15 hours
In an I Inner West Side hotel. She
.said she liked the excitement that
"She seemed to be a happy child
and doesn't seem to be fully con
scious of what she has done," Fire
Commissioner Edward F. Cava
nafh Jr. said.
The commissioner did not reveal
the child's name because of her
age. She was committed to Belle-
vue Hospital for mental examina
tion, and a bearing was set for
Dec. 11.
The fires last night and early
today spread panic through the
Hotel Briefield on W. (3rd St..
although the over-all damage
came only to about $1,000.
The little girl li' ed on the
seventh floor of the 15-story hotel
with her grandmother and an
uncle. ,
Th vnnnffslpr said she acted on
.the spur of the moment in setting
I . i r: f : .... :n mam stff th
ine mat iiir m iwm
hotel lobby last evening. The ex
citement it created led her to roam
River Days Board
Discusses Deficit
Plans to eliminate a deficit of
about $1,000 were discussed Wed
nesday night by the executive
board of the Willamette River
I Days.
1 The group took in $13,000 at the
I celebration last July and spent
I $14,000.
1 Methods of erasing the deficit
I will be considered at the Dec. 5
meeting of the board.
rm
Tl
PARADE ROUTE:
Watt on Chemaketa
from Capitol Mall !'
to High Street,
South on High to State, I
wott n State to liberty,
north on Liberty to Cen
ter, oast on Center to
Capital, north on Capi-
tol to Union.
:J-vl v.jf ,i ' ''?
' ii,
-a aiiljwap.. aS'aai atftai aw-.a
the hotel from top to bottom set
ting fire as the went.
The girl wai at it again this
morning. She set Art in a trash
can ouUide ber apartment, then
telephoned an alarm to the hotel
desk.
ACORNS FROM THE
W WITH Mi.aM.NI
Yeil
Yail
yai!
In aniwaf la Aa many Inajuirita,
wa will afaia havt ur laacial
7Hinkj ivlna Ctltbratian in tha
Gala) laaml Flowara . mutk
. . . and a eemplttt dinnar with
(II th trimming! far $2.00! tat
ter mka rasarvationi now!
Kamembar in Si lam fc'a tha
Hotel Marion
Mi-.a-iiayi. t).taui im
o
rii