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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 31, 1958)
Rt? SOGCOCfi UCDQDOCR la M eave to th Van TWi MxM. Pratt at etrwaf pie the ratkxetal Irao tMMrit Ml. Tm peaeV tog Ml wtom has hit support calls par a Bir i si af Uw rt fsrst unit at On argtag f Secretary f atat Hi im wM gtv 0 rMf sxscuUv H to redne tonfl by At mt real par yr. n routes th ri aaast" Klaellaa MWVtdad k Ik pTttsat . Th rYaaldts was totaad hi ale apai by Aalal Democratic ee itidato ta IM, lysltr Sesa ftarbnre. Th araw ants that drpc4ag tk pratTee wwuid mi aaratca treat, east JMal th toreica fkla ha btparuaa swpeart It has btperUaea eppeaittos. Party Uaae ar a kfar rigid a tortff aujuaa. Darnecrau from tk SouLk ara mar torlfl-ssladed stor to til aallh) kcatad than; aad these riprwiilng nil bnparta mult ccenpaU with local pradurtioa art likewise can ing for protection. Many FUpubh- I frf i mil naw lhaa lor- moms amieeir Mep coson I tab Yaar II rxoa Tka Otei Sal, Or MaWay, March II, INi nuoi Sa 114 NEW YORK (AD - Capt lath Cuthrt suddenly threw bat lows wngined trsasport plana into steep, paaeonger jarring diva Sunday about 75 mile from New fork i arsnohty saved tk ftvee af at least a Sanaa ay Tk facts the limit: Laat yaar aur exports, k casdinf military shipsnraU. had value at (H I bUUe. Our irnporta iCiWaiii a Edaartol fill 1) Sand Kills Boy; Road Toll Three By. TEX ASSOCIATED PUSS Hlfbway accidents kind tares persons ia Octroi vr lha wek ad and a fourth died ai a Mad afnbaakmaal fnl1tna1 a tht Orcfoa coast . Fred Cllbtrt Booat. Jr., It, No tarti. was trapped under the Mad at ha played with hit brother, Cant Joacph House, IX, aa dunct overlooking Netarta Bay . Sunday aaormni. Tbo yousf er bay hw lha Mad camiBi aawa and kunpad clear. Adulta vera summoned quickly, but they duf mora lhaa aa hour befar finding the older boy'i body. Beatdea me parenta, three prothari and threa lifters narviva. One af tht highway laUUUaa ao currad Sunday. Canadian Election Set Today aad la yaara h ' rrank Bardlnr Jardaa, S7. af, (TBrlaa ht-Jeaephiae Caonty, waa lilted inatantlf whet tit car bit th ilda af a smalt hridfe. aUd ded (ram lha road between Cart Juactioa and O'Brien, and over turned. The Bar. Donald Fowler, 27, of the Natarena Church at Hemlock, u muea aoutk of Tillamook. thrown hia death from aa auto mobile Saturday aa ha drove hit year-old ton. aflckey. la a Tilla mook hospital. Leaaa Central Me ktt control of the car II mllee from Tillamook. His wife escaped injury, but another son, Dennis, S, waa cut and admitted to the hospital along with Midwy, who had tonsillitis. Earlier Saturday A. L. Harring ton, Portland, was killed by aa automobile as be walked across a street southeast of Portland. TORONTO tfWPrkne Pialanhotar'a ftaeerraUvt party waa ttiwagly farered day to defeat ttte LJberak ktoBtUa aattaanl eUctiea mtlau la newer. As th hard-fought campelga hawtver, Uberal B. Fear) analatilnid alt party wuld wia back the rule loot laat Juof after XI efflce. Political exports almost without esceptloa picked the Conaerva- ttrea to win. The latent public poll reported a substantial Increase prt-Ceaaarvathrt aentlinent th 157 election. Both the experts and th polls wrong laat June, wbaa the Cons arratl vet staged their and they could b wrong again. The major party leaden ended their arret) weeks f campaigning uojraay atgnt and are awaiting th balloting hi their bam dis trict. Under Canadiaa law, a political statements may be car ried aa radio withia hours be fore aa election. A record number of mora thai mWkm persona is eligible to rota. Polls will b open from ajn. to p.m. Th weather h been fine ever moat of Cana for the laat few days and. if it continues Monday a. heavy rota is expected. Cache Found; 2 Quizzed in Idaho Blasts - Three Perish In Explosion At Texas City (PMare aa page f.) TEXAS CITY, Tex. ID Three men were killed when a thunder ous explosion wrecked a two-story brick building at the Union Car bide Co, plant in this coastal city Sunday, . , The blast was in the section where liquid oxygen was made. : Dead were 1 V. Crider, as. La- marque, Tax.; R. E. Stooer, SS, Texas City; and H. P. Smith, 17, Houston,.. I There was Be fire and no fumes following the blast, which sent a single puff of black amok rolling over the city. The blast was .ia what was called the Undo Air B-Ga-Production Unlf ia the southwest corner of the big plant. Plant Supt. T. A. Wilker said the building was a total loss, but made no estimate of th damages. IDAHO FAUl Idaho 01 - Po lice questioned two brothers Sun day about a series of mysterious blast that aroused this southeast Idaho city last weak. Prosecuting Atty. E. W. Pike identified them as Mente D. hfoore, tl, and his brother Dennis, 30. both of Idaho Falls. He said they art being held on arson charges, filed in connection with th destruction of aa insured au- aome tim ago. They arraigned Saturday. "Of course these two boys have been questioned concerning the explosions," Pike said. "That's all I can tell you Just now. He vu asked about it after newsmen noted Pike and police officials spent tht day with the tw. Late Sunday night. Pike an nounced that officers found a cache of explosives containing about 196 sticks of dynamite and 12S dynamite cam and fuses. He wouldn't say where the explosives are found. Two Army demolition experts and federal officers began exam ining the explosives to see if the cache could be linked with the seven blasts that shook residential areas and damaged four cars here last week.- ; aboard wbaa eawa Chemical Difference Found By ALTON L. BUIgSlfl AP lajsete Beswrtor BUFFALO. N. T. (AFV-A young aurgeoa who lost his own torn to leukts&U mxvted Sunday a promising advance against m. Cathrto told aaxherWa be rW gV. flrwl. . rUr rlnUl iffmnr. I "7 Vort treaa cancers and IxaKhy tiaaua. Cancew contain soma mysteri ous "X" substance that normal bead aa. ceils doe fto pat lh Kailaaal Aarttoa DCS B hi th first Urn sack a chatnt- Into a suea eSv tar aaessi m ral alfleroaca ever has boas tost Psiiiism snrswtoS kaM the Ihougk B toag has beaa aulas. Haad ksggag hsnfataei wns srem avaraeat racu. Km tna km la to aantoB thk " dUlereaca. aerkaaw lor a areas- Ta n-yavtai OeXnm wttar tbreafh axaiast caocer. I" af 14 years ftytog strrloa. eav to drugs deauraedll : ' - "TT .TT-"! rmtoll tha -- Al UWIM At. I part, 11 pamsagars ckiraasl lal - Rocket Trip to Moon Not So Fantastic - - - B to sill eaacers wtthaut healthy tiaeuea. kO(M Baowty Bey It antoht alv lha kav to al0 WllSSti after acda againat cancer, ar to toad- Gria oacliaa to loaaurr Bl toe rartlnartrra hmim mm maa. pUaa, which waa toeumed toi af doom to caarer cwlla. "TV" "T" in new oaa aetves to the cancer eeus damaging radtotiea. The birldant ecrarred ever Dr. Grace. M. aaaouBcad the J"" ffedinr to acienc writara viahlnf " anew, i puou as in vayie Korweu Park Metnorial during aa ciety tour. Three Grace' car of Intersection. Amertcaa Cancer So- saarth. :sfA czzuZ Marquis th atoed. Since thea he has ' . - - Kevenged. Ina "X" material has been de- tocted ia about half of human to- T I i 1 1 lMWI mors M far eiaminad, Dr. Grace aid. PARIS if) Th Marquis Just what B Is is not yet kawcuevas got vvngaanc ea the field ziJ'mS if? iJ of. honor Sunday. Ha nicked ballot toriaL 111 ' i i . i 1 1, i . . ' . ' . ' ' ' ' - - '' t "I ,!l ' ' . . WAnGTON-JWamilesj of rocket trips to bmm. with ar wttkaat kmauas. ward to a ronaldertd fantasy. Nat aa nowadays with rTldal Wasalaglaa Ulkiag af sack things sertoasly. Htr AF Artist John A. Carttoa sketches earep0a af "karsT laadlag af racket assid msea's startew craters Jrwss aa earth which Is coartaJemtly claa for ar tfaUc parpssea. (AP) Storm Balks Attempts to Help Skiers YOSEX1ITE NATIONAL PARK. Calif. fAPVSfcvm clouds rrachiiic four miles high Sunday balked all aerial efforts to aid four student skiers stranded at 11.000 feet m the High Sierras. Om of th marooned four b believed seriously fU with pneu monia. Warrant Officer . J. Coooey. Army helicopter pilot was standing by at rrrsno, how-f Sen Ufar ea the with aa epee. Thea kissed and made Bp. Th duel looked something a ballet written by Liter staged by the 71-year -old marquis. But B satisfied all th require ments el honor, according to th dueling cade. Duels ara forbidden, and this Charlea D. Fraxer. Orecoa'a first one was supposed to be State's First Purchasing Agent Dies Norblad dPolitical By A. ROBERT SMITH WASHINGTON R takes a good broken-field runner thee days to set from th hallway f the House purchasing agent, died Sunday at 1( Plants and aa army f Urflc building to th hwer aane--zZz.zr?L. TJT-T aewspaper photographers and re- torn f Reo. Walter Norblad. nsneate, un tjm w. umi,uj tk. l.ls mil - .i mM wm r,.T"pr'" one aussten ano ma vuuwr Mm mw nonor as ua ruiage tuara au mmi . k. . .tw mi h. w i at ( t . I ; j . . i - I ry V k i nw vvm nwmnw mi s mtm former Oregon officials. When Oswald Wast was gover- Of Oregon from Iin-lllJ. be the munih a haara ta tamarlt a purchasing depart- -rn tim an m mtm Mi ment for the atato and arpointedlft,- , T T ahmaroms.-tostardr i DOUiJUrilS Ufar ballet, had don a UUK - 'Tr ¬ eating with th ariginal script. I SAX DIEGO. Calif. UrV-rederal Ufar learned to liandl a sword I customa agents Sunday a a cadet ra Cxarist Russia, He Barbara Ann Burns. 20, daugnter I AO Bis Cewrage Aa they prepared for the dud, I Police Book Daughterf; Ha was born at SheJb Cawatr. DL, ta March Is, U60. Ia lStl came to California and since 1892 had mora or less continuously made his horns in Salem. Fraxer was a commercial traveller by oc cupation and covered a territory ranging from Alaska to the Mex ican border during the early 1900a. During the First World War. Fraxer waa a food inspector oper ating between Canada and Rose burg. Survivors include a sister. Mrs. C. A. BlsselL Oakland. Calif. Arrangements of services are pending at Virgil T. Golden Mortuary. The Weather Today's forecast. Mostly dowdy with occasional showers this morning. Rain lato tonight. High 64; low 44. (Complete report pas t) advanced, prancing about like th bauet master ha Is. Th marquis. a novice with, dueling hardware. was not quite so fancy. The first exchange with th epee. a dueling weapon., with a sharp point but no cutting edge, was un easy. Things pepped, up in the third of thq two-minute rounds. Flicks Forearm Then in the fourth, the marquis flicked- Lifar'a forearm. A thin trickle of blood appeared. The seconds ordered a halt, The marquis beamed. The 53-year-old Lif ar took his defeat with a grin as his seconds daubed the blood on his forearm. . Then they became friends again. Each kissed the other ea the cheek. The 10-day feud was ever. Readies Survival or a battery of electrically -pow er typewriters that clatter away from early morning notil early evening. t If ht can xlgxaaT hit the ekar of the doorway to the to ner office, he finds Oregon's eat Republican member of Congress Iliad a heavily ladea desk brisk ly aigning "Walter Norblad'' to stacks of letters aa fast as his ea- kvged offico staff csa produer them. His eeet ia off. his tto to loos, he's hard at B. Fight for at Polls a presidential agency, Is thinking of locating an air research test center. B would employ m to M federal employes, plus sever si thousand who would be sent there from private industry to test, ex hibit and work ea new aircraft equipment for improving safety of uylng. A plum such ss this la recessioo- rhB Oregon , would figurs to lm prov Norblad' re-etoctloa chances ia th tough earnpaiga aa which bo is sow embarked. of Yetere Th ttdpienUlaf .CUi.' frrerUh of the late bajooka-playing comeH dtaa Bob Burns, on suspicion of failing to register as a narcotic addict en leaving or catering the United States. Miss Burns, from North Holly wood, was taken Into custody when she returned across the Mexican border from a weekend visit to Tijuana. She was booked at county jalL A federal law requires addicts ta register. Customs agent Clarence Spohr said that Miss Burns admitted she had been an addict 4xit declared the had taken a cure la January. She was not under narcotic influ ence when questioned, Spohr said. But, ha added, examination by a physician disclosed hypodermic needle marks on her arms. On the Brighter Side ' o John EricksM Noon Holy Week Service Today at Methodist Church The first noon Bohr Week service win be held today at First Meth odist Church from 13:30 to 12:58 p.m. It is open to the public. The Rev. Brooks Moore of First Kethodlst Church, will speak oa Is He Welcome?" North Salem High School Choir, order Howard Miller, will provide special music. Sponsored by tbo YMCA and YWCA. the services will be held noons Monday through Thursday. Israel, Syria Fight With Tanlcs in Brief Flareup toe JERUSALEM tf) Israel and Syria fought a battle of and mortars Sunday la a ; flareup aa the border near Huleh iwclamsUoa ares. c- la Damascus, as Army spokea "man warned regular forces of the I United Arab Republic of Egypt . and Syria would intervene "to re pel the aggression by fores,1 . - The Syrian spokesman did not t mention casualties. The Israelis said some Syrian casualties were sees being carried away. 1 : The UJ. Armistice Commission I arranged a coast flro after th I tw sides had biased away for 75 harg4 th t wtth gad from strongholds near the hue son when Israeli laborers moved in to start work. It said th laborers had UX approval to i ter the area. Aa Israeli army spokesman said Israeli tanks opened Ore oa the strongholds but later th Syri- t fired mortar sbaBs that hit Tuba village, east of the Huleh re clamation project Th spokes man said the- tanks cnad sor direct kits oa th Syrian fortifica- 14 Th Syrian spokesman said the Israeli tanks shelled tw Arab villages and that Israeli troops fired aa Syrian villager. Be said th Syrians iwsorted to mortar fir whan the larsaUt ignored a tolsasaa Org ilttBTaraTn, it- 'S'.,' 1. XT- - I 4 it. V S i 1 i Art Gallery in Bus Aa art taaseam with a medldne show flavor Is how Jack K. Everty, U Market St. NE, describes Us Volkswagea has art gallery. Everty, a meaaber of tka Bash Maseixa art eajsalttee. Is shew, wrepar lag a sUsplsj ta his has. Ba pats aa aelgaharhatg srt thrrs assst aarrplaea sajtlaM la B iaiiattd cSart i iaw. fulXj work slaaa ky TOiaetta Vsllej artists, - production ar tbousaads of mis tered voters., mostly la the first congressional district, who Nor blad hopes w&l return him to Con gress for another, two-year term. his seventh. Ta soma SSiW Oregon house holds this past week Norhlad's staff mailed the tabulated result of a questionnaire oa IS public is sues which the congressman asked their opinions oa earlier this year. The mimeographed tabulation Is topped' by a large picture of the smiling congressman who win be 90 rears of ags before general election day and figures be is in the race of hit career from chal lengers of respected strength st the ballot box. They art Philip Hitchcock, the Republican who gave Douglas McKay a hard race for th GOP Senatorial nomination in 1956; and Attorney General Rob ert Y. Thornton, a Democrat, who would like to give bis party a dean sweep of tbo sUte's six member delegation ia Congress. COP Betes to Bid In Norhlad's drive, for re-elec tion, the Whit House and the Republican-run agencies of the fed eral government ara doing what they can in the customary way to help a congressman of their party Norblad is frequently tipped off on important decisions of the admin istration before they are made public, so be can announce them for Oregon. Otherwise Norblad ia not modi fying bis legislative methods of the past. He still makes virtually no speeches oa the floor of the House and introduces few bills. Those he does introduce are usually similar to bills sponsored by another con gressman, to whom he leaves the leadership in pressing for action. Personally. Norblad ia now en deavoring to obtain a SIS million payroll project for Corvallis, where the Airways Modernisation Board, ' StoiiVABate In California, South Oregon By TBI ASSOCIATED PRESS The sudden storms that hit in Southern Oregoa and Northern California calmed down Sunday, The prospect was for soma snow ia the mountains of Oregoa with scattered showers at lower eleva tions. A rainstorm is expected to move from sea Into northwestern Oregon late Monday or esrly Tuesday. Highways in the Klamath Basin again were open Sunday after being . clogged briefly by snow a a d accompanying 60-mile-an-hour winds Saturday. The northern California coast waa hit by a whirlwind Saturday near McKinleyville. The storm swept through a five-mile stretch of th coast before moving back out to ses. It demolished two houses and tore the roofs off five others. Trees and utility poles toppled, but no deaths were reported. at aver, hoping the ceiling would lift enough to let him fly t Yotemite Park heedqiiarten. Coooey said he then would ba within 20 minutes lUgbt of th snw-pud camp af th four students a ML LyD. 3S from the Yeoemito Valley floor. He i a would be ready for rescue hop with th first break. envy Sierra Aa Air Fore attempt ta drop paramedic learn Sunday balked by th douds af a heavy Sierra storm. Tw af the four mareoaid ford students are girts. Lamb, 31. af Ortoda. Calif.. Margaret Meyer, 31. of Swattl and Mix Roberts. 31. of Newnah, Wis., stayed with ailing William Pop. II. af las Frandsce, whsa twa other ccenpaaion hiked out for beln. . , . Aa were won by fatigue aa a croaa-country ski , hike started eight days ago. They had been kit by frequent mowntsia storms. Boh Symons, Bishop. Calif., pilot of a small ski plans, flew ever the Mt Lyell sit lata Saturday and said th student had not stamped out any message la the snow. " Meeaage Drd H dropped a message instruct ing the students to stamp sot th letter "O" ta th snow fcT tnsy ia seed of oxygen bat they did not answer. A ISmaa land rescue party struggled through deep snow to ward th students but they wort not expected to reach them until Tuesday. Originally there war six la th student party but when Pop be came in twa of them, Bart Hooley and Mac Allen, left the party lastj Thursday and returned to Y mite for help. , Hooley is from Reno. Nov. AOea attends the Uni versity of California but Is a member of the Stanford Alpine Quo. Both were suffering from Demos Set To 'Save' h Farmers WASHINGTON HI : w arranging a MMv-tb4arra-' K desnaetratioa la Csagreaa to greet aa expected veto by Presfe dent Elaenhower this week f bill freetJng crop price sappsrta' for ens yaar. Although a presently hat Uttla hope of verridlftg a veto, liaata Majority Leader Lyadoa B. Joha nna af Texas has kept aides at work la efforts to una an a bmx mum Democratic veto the sa lt apparently Is Johnson's belief th Democrats can oemsnstrst ia such a vote they are lb farm-' frteads and that aVpufattcsas siaume th major share af any political blame accunng ka the death af a bill aimed at beep ing supports at 1957 levels er higher. ' ' ' Elsenhower vu reported draft ing a conciliatory message to Congress, possibly offering soma alternatives to aid a farm econo my that at least temporarily ap pears to ba somewhat ea the ap- i mi Today's Statesman fag Ann Undors a Classified 10,11 Comics 7 Crossword .. 10 Editorials .. 4 Homo Panorama 6 ObHuartos , S Radio-TV . 7 Sports , Stor Gsxr 5 Vlly Nws 6 VYirophoto Page 7 Your Income Tsx , S High of 64 on Area Forecast Showers will dominate the weather in the Salem area today with temperatures warming to a high of St degrees, U. & weather men at McNary Field forecast this morning. There will bo periods of partial clearing by Tuesday, they sunea. Brisk winds swept the mid- valley Sunday night but no damage was reported. Occasional showers and sunny periods are expected today at Northern Oregon beaches, As sociated Press reported. Idaho .Aiitp Crash Fatal To 6 Persons vSALMOK. Idaho,. IfWThd hsaoV oa crash of tw aiitomobfles kfltod sis persons Sunday and critically injured two others, .. -j , ?t, . The dead rochidtd the proprkv tor of a Burning home and three elderly patients whom hS bad taken out for a drive. Another patient waa among the critically hurt. ' "' i The accident happened ea a curve tome eight miles north of Salmon, a mountain town hi east central Idaho not far from lbs Montana border. All the dead and Injored from SateHxtf 1 Stat policeman Jim Perkins identified the dead in one car as William H. Sflbaugb, 74.. the Sal mon nursing noma operator; and patients Gertrude - Cockre&V It: Josephine Trowta-idge, - 70, ana Alios Kirtley. 70. Another patient. Flora CasselL SS, had both arms and legs broken, Perkins said. " ' Ia the other ear. a woman and her 12-year-old son were killed and twa other children were In jured, one critically. - The dead Cecilia C. WalcUL 33, aad son Raymond.' . t .. Pope Gives Palm Sunday Appeal to Prevent War VATICAN CITY UP Pop Pius XII told a great gathering in St Peter's basilica an this Palm Sun day, "May God prevent the peril of a new war ... terrible and disastrous for all humanity.' Th pontiff spoke to 30,000 mem bers of Italian families who have relatives still listed sa missing in World War IL The aodienc was the main event Jn the Pope's activities on Palm Sunday that ushered in the Holy Week observances in Rome. Early in the morning the pontiff received a decorated palm from Msgr. Canisio Van Lierd. sacris- of Vatican City, otner palm were gjvea to the Pop by high ef- Odals f th Vatican coat and the Ramaa curat. Tha Pop recalled that at thsjrsaSy aloos." outset of World War II be warned. "Nothing to lost with peace - everything can b lost with wsr.1 That warning was not heeded. be said. "War broke out. with its ruin, its disregard of rights, dispersion of families, and the explosion of hatreds and violence,' ba said. The dead return to dust for ever, mingled witn the eartn on which they fought and felL We do not know whether the missing are living or dead. "Death is not the end. but a transformation of life. Even the missing are not entirely alone, for those who have faith. God knows where they are. God sees them and knows whether they are ia need, aad none af them it Politics on Parade . . , Wfio's Running for Whit in May Primaries . Cottar's Note: Ta Oregwa Matosamaa's eschnrfve PaCUieaL Parade series I writsm by ar far toe wndwtate. It la srieintil -as a pablie aerviee, witness cwat tr abngaaea, aad aaay er aaay . accord with Ike editorial peUclea f Oaa acwsswper).- t not be la ED GILMORE ' ' ' Candidate R) for -' County Commissioner (Polk) , , I, W. E. (Ed) Gilmore, as a candidate for county commis sioner of Polk County, submit the following facts as m qualifications: I was born ia Tennessee in 1908, coming to Oregon at the age of two years. My par eats died before I was seven years old. liv ing with my grandparents, J. A. Fletcher of Jacksonville, Ore., I attended grade and high school there. I was employed as foreman of the Han ley ft Elliott ranches in Jackson County.. Did county road building and street work la Medford. In 1928, was married to Virginia McRa of Medford; have two daughters, Louise Jones of Gold Beach, Dalorii Kahler of Eugene, one son, Eddie of Honolulu, Hawaii; only rela tive in Polk County is Robert Fletcher, Falls City - u 3 In 1938, moved to Falls City, was employed by J. A. Inf. lis Motor Co., for Vk years at Dallaa. v j I Subordinate grange membership was transferred from Central Point to Falls City. Served as grange master for twa terms, then later transferred to Rickreall Grange. Helped organize the first Cub Scouts and later became Scoot mas ter for Lions Club. Served as first aid instructor; am chair man of first aid water safety in Polk County, for-1 yemrsv"5 Have always been Interested in the welfare of out youth and will continue to wort to help thea become better citizens. If elected, I wjft do my duties to Ua be ai rej ahcay. V Ctextt 4V v 1 4 jw-, V5i.- .V: