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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1958)
2-(Sec. I) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Mon., April 21, '58 Sec' Weeks Says Recession Has Hit Bottom, WASHINGTON UR Secretary of Commerce Weeks said Sunday he believes the recession has touched bottom. Business may rock along at about the present level for a tew months, he said, but should show a definite upturn by late summer. Weeks told a reporter the bust ness gloom has been pierced by Rep, Green of Oregon Returns From Russia ' WASHINGTON UFi - Rep. Ed ith Green (D-Ore), just back from an eight-day tour of Russian schools and colleges, said Sunday night there is rigid discipline in the classrooms. But when classes are out, she added, the Russian youngsters are just like American schoolkids. Mrs. Green said Russia is mak lng "a tremendous investment in education," spending as much as 11 to 15 per cent of its national budget on schooling. The congresswoman saw the per formance by prize-winning Texas pianist Van Cliburn while she was in Moscow. Never as Popular ''Frank Sinatra was never as popular in New York City as Van Cliburn is in Moscow," she said, adding he was given a tremend ous ovation. Mrs. Green - and - other Demo cratic congresswomen shook hands for almost two hours with Democrats attending a congres sional reception which opened the three-day 1958 campaign confer ence for Democratic -women. The 2,000 women from all parts of the country queued up to shake hands with Oemocratie notables, including National Committee Chairman Paul Butler, vice chair man Katie Lochheim and Senate, majority leajjer Lyndon Johnson. En Route Back Speaker of the House Sam Ray burn was en route back from Tex as and missed the party. A poster donkey at the entrance to the big reception room stood over a pink trough with a sign "Feed Me Hay and Send Ike and Dick Away." It was a collection appeal. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Gov. Averell Harriman of New York and Adlai Stevenson will address a conference luncheon Monday, marking the 25th anni versary of the New Deal. Garden Show Drew Record Downtown Salem Lions Home and Garden Show closed Sunday night at the State Fairgrounds and ,-final figures showed that over 12,000 persons viewed the three day event. It reportedly was the biggest turnout in the five-year history of the show. Winners of cash awards in the afternoon drawing, were Mrs. Ervin A. Neufeld, Dallas, $25; Malan T. . Quick, 5195 Swegel Rd. NE. $15; and Harry A. Kocher, 2560 5th St. NE. Winners in the evening draw ing were Harry J. Hess, Portland, 225; Mrs. Gerald E. Shorey, 4383 Bryan Ave. SE, (15, and Micbe Hawser, 715 Capitol St. SE, won $10. Average Family Income Placed at $6,130 During '57 WASHINGTON UB The govern ment reported Sunday that aver . age family income last year was $6,130 about 50 per cent higher than a decade ago. The 10-year increase was 20 per cent when taking increased living costs into account. The average figure was com piled by the Commerce Depart ment and was based on the total income of the nation's 44 million families and the 9tt million Amer icans who live alone. Average earnings of full-time workers in 1957 was $4,190. Family incomes were generally higher because, in more than two out of five cases, there was more 'than one wage-earner. Jordan Accuses Israel Of Armistice Violation AMMAN, Jordan! Jordan ac cused Israel Sunday of violating the 1949 armistice agreement by bringing troops into divided Jeru salem for the Israeli 10th anni versary parade. The government ordered troop reinforcements and guns to the Jordan sector of the city. The parade, commemorating the birth of Israel as a nation, is scheduled for Thursday inthe Is raeli sector. A J o r d a n communique ' said U.N. Secetary General Dag Ham marskjold had been asked to or der the parade Called off. Foreign Minister Samir Rifai also in formed U.S. and British represen j tatives in Amman of Jordan's steps to counter the Israeli troop movement into the city. The communique said the Jor dan army had been directed to Sees Rise several optimistic rays in recent days, but warned: We re not out of the woods yet. "It would help a lot if business people would stop talking about their problems and get out to do a job of selling." "Better Than I Thought" Weeks said the employment figures for March when jobless ness rose slightly and unseason ably and employment gained less than seasonally were "better than I thought they'd be." He added: "I'll bet anybody, now, that April will be better than March." The interview followed a week in which several manufacturers reported a brisk upturn in new or ders, the stock market perked up, a few scheduled layoffs were can celed, and some communities staged successful sales promo tions built around price cuts and a "buy your way to prosperity" theme. One token of reviving business confidence, Weeks suggested, is the attitude of businessmen to ward tax reduction. "Among peo ple I've talked to," he said, "those who don't favor tax cuts now greatly outnumber those who do." - Another straw in the wind. Weeks said, is furnished by ad vertising plans. "Magazine people tell me their advertising bookings for the second half of this year are somewhat ahead of second -half 1957," he said. . Notes Upturn The Cabinet officer also noted trade reports that a modest up turn in steeimaking may develop sooner than that industry bad ex pected. Two factors which don't show up on economists' charts cont uted to tne 16-Diuion-dollararop in the national production rate in the past six months, Weeks said loss of confidence and a hard winter. The miserable weather Hhat af flicted the whole' East Coast and the Midwest's industrial heart land, Weeks said discouraged con sumer buying, slowed outdoor work, and depressed the employ ment figures. Truck Dives Into River, Boys Missing KELLOGG, Idaho, un Two North Idaho teen-agers were pre sumed drowned Sunday after a pickup truck plunged into the North fork "of the Coeur d'Alene River Saturday midnight. A third youth was rescued. Sheriff Lewis Gardner said Paul Crozel, 19, and Lauren Stroud, 17, a Wallace high school senior, were missing. Peter Self, 16, clung to a branch for a half hour in the icy water and was rescued by two men who heard his shouts for help through the wind and rain, the sheriff said. "It was so cold I couldn't have held on much longer," Self said. He was suffering from shock and exposure and could not give a full explanation of how the ac cident happened. The truck, driven ly Crozel, left the slipper highway . about five miles west of Kellogg. Pacific Quake Noted Sunday BERKELEY, Calif. uTV-A fair ly strong earthquake centered about 50 miles away was record ed at 1:07 p.m. Sunday on the University of California seismo graph. Seismologist Jack Cameron said the disturbance apparently oc cured under water off the Pacific Coast because it was strong enough to have been felt sharply in an inhabited area. Researchers Reveal New Weappn for By RENME TAYLOR BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. to-A Yale medical researcher has come out with a new explanation of hormone action. It can help to arm doctors with a new weapon for preventing early abortion and send in reinforcements Immedi ately and to support these forces "with heavy weapons in quanti ties necessary to face the mass ing of Israli forces in Israeli-occupied Jerusalem." Israeli government sources con tend the armistice treaty does not prohibit parades, although it does rule oitt the stationing of large numbers of troops and arms in the city. Foreign military attaches and diplomats, who usually attend such functions, were reportedly goipg to (kip the Israeli parade. Some of them are believed to feel the parade would violate the arml- Lstice. However, foreign diplomats say they will be in Jerusalem Thurs day to congratulate President Iz hak Ben-Zvi at the official govern ment reception. Israel has made Jerusalem its capital , Princess v ; r;v.- ; PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad walks with Got. Gen. Lord Hailei at airport on arriving at Port of Spain, Trinidad, Sunday. She came on a state visit to mark the official opening Tuesday of the new West Indies Federation legislature. (AP Wirephoto via radio fromPort of Spain) Margaret Wears. Coconut r nairao ror PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (- Britain's Princess Margaret, decked out in a coconut hairdo and a summery dress, arrived in Trinidad Sunday for her calypso tour in the sun. But it was raining. Theater Time Table KLBINOR- "THI BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI": 7:00, 9:84 CAPITOL "TARNISHED ANGELS' lo:S t:00. "DOCTOR AT LARGE": 8:88 GRAND "ALBERT SCHWEITZER": 8:03. 8:41 NORTH SALIM DRIVI-IN "BHOWANI JUNCTION": Ava Gardner "JOE DAKOTA": Jock Mahoney HOLLYWOOD "THE TEN COMMANDMENTS": T:S0 A. B. Couchman Taken by Death Albert B. Couchman, Salem resi dent for the past 27 years, died Sunday in a Salem hospital at the age of 73. He was a late resident of 2011 Commercial St.6E. Couchman was born March 22, 1885, in Kansas and moved to Sa lem in 1931. In Salem, he was employed for many years by Ore gon Pulp and Paper Co. He had been in ill health for a short time. Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Sibyl Alice Couchman: two daughters, Mrs. Reed Carter, Sa lem, and Mrs. James Lambirth, Bellingham, Wash.; son, Clifford Bryngelson, Tujunga, Calif.; brother, C. L. Couchman, Glacier, Wash.; two grandchildren, Douglas Reed Carter; Oswego; and Sandra Kay Carter, Eugene; and two great-grandchildren. Services will be 10:30 a.m. Wed nesday at Virgil T. Golden Chapel. Burial will be in Belcrest Mem orial Park. Cancer Fight for fighting certain kinds of can cer. The investigator Sunday re ported tests showing that two of the four naturally occurring fe male sex hormones can interfere with growth of the womb produced by the other two. The experiments showed also, he said, that the female sex hor mones act in concert rather than individually. This indicates, that when they are administered to correct some irregularity of preg nancy they all should be given at once instead of one or two at a time. However, in other conditions they might be administered sep arately with Deneiiciai results. Suppression of a cancerous growth by the body's own chemicals would-be a boon to both, doctors and patients. The chemicals now used against cancer are poisonous to some extent and- often tricky. But if two of the hormones can interfere with uterine growth they may be able also to interfere with cancer in that organ and perhaps elsewhere. The report was made in a paper delivered before the American Society for the Study of Sterility by Dr. Joseph T. Velardo, anato mist and gland specialist at Yale Medical School. He did part of the work at Yale and part at Harvard University with the aid of Drs. F. L. Hisaw, C. M. Goolsbp and S. H. Sturgis. in Trinidad Britain's Princess Margaret t uaiypso lour Nevertheless, the 27 -year -old princess stepped from her special plane with a sunny smile lor tne thousands who had come to the airport to greet her. She is here on a state visit to mark the official opening Tuesday of the new west Indies Federa tion Legislature. Then she will set out on an 11,000-mile tour of other calypso heartlands British Gui ana, Jamaica, Briish Honduras and Nassau. She flies home May 7. She was greeted at the airport by Gov. Gen. Lord Hailes and his wife, Gov. Sir Edward -Beetham and Prime Minister Grantley Adams, who proclaimed the new federation Saturday night. The flags of the new federation an orange sun on blue and white waves fluttered all around the airport. Although the rain spoiled things a bit, it brought the temperature down from the 90s to a bearable 83. Margaret looked cool as she stepped from her plane. She wore a light dress and a pink hat atop her so-called coconut coiffure. She brought with her what was de scribed as a daringly new ward robe ot knee-length skirts and chemise dresses. Packed in with ail this was a batch of calypso records. Calypso is the fast-beat Latin music played throughout the Caribbean. Margaret got a yen for it when she was here two years ago. Scout Canoe Trip Changed The Explorer Canoe trip down the Willamette River and side tributaries scheduled for Scout Ex plorers of the Cascade Council has been changed to the week of June 7 to 13. Applications are available atrthe local council office, according to Don Kopet, leader of the exposition which will journey from Eugene to Oregon Cityi Explorers must have swimming merit badges in order to make the trip, and take two instruc tion periods in the use of canoes. All explorer scouts 14 years and older are eligible. Babies, Patients Safe After Blaze Sweeps Hospital SYLVA, N.C. I A $400,000 fire Sunday night destroyed the 40-bed C. J. Harris Community Hospital in this western North Carolina town. All 23 patients, and babies in the maternity ward, were evacuated safely. Dr. Walter J. Durr. risking his life, prowled the smoke-filled cor ridors to carry patient after pa tient to safety before he was fin ally overcome by fumes. He was not seriously affected. Rational Scout Official to Visit Harold Eby, national director of school relationship services for the Boy Scouts of America, will visit Salem and the Cascade Council May 12th. 1 Purpose of Eby's visit will be, tb meet with school leaders and the Council Organization Committee to discuss scouting in school activ ities. He will also meet with PTA and parent groups of elementary schools, Judge Joseph Felt on, chairman of the Council Organiza tion committee, said Sunday.; ffir UTiii fliT Woman Appeals for Aid to Locate Husband U.S. Authorities Deported SAN FRAMCISCO (A? - Mrs. Phyllis Heikkila, 38, wife of a Finnish-born ,52 year old drafts man, decided Sunday to . appeal to the. Finnish ambassador in Washington to ascertain the whereabouts of her husband. William Heikkila was seized by U.S. Immigration Service authori ties when he finished work Friday afternoon. He has not been seen since by his family and immigra Publishers Give Favorable Report on NEW YORK UH Newspaper publishers from throughout the United States gave generally favorable reports Sunday on much of the nation's economy despite tne recession in major manufac turing areas. They tended to favor "harder Crane Won't Battle Lana For Daughter LOS ANGELES un-Restaura teur Stephen Crane said Sunday he will not wane a lecal fieht with his divorced wife, Lana TurnCfJ over custody of their 14-year-old daughter, Cheryl Crane. The girl has been in Juvenile Hall since April 4 when Miss Turner's boy friend. John Stom- panato, was fatally stabbed in her bgdroom. A hearing will be held next Thursday in Santa Monica, Juvenile Court to determine cus tody of the girl until she reaches maturity. "I don't know how the report started that I was going to de mand Cheryl's custody," said Crane after he visited his daugh ter Sunday, "Certainly it didn't come from me or my attorney." Crane spent an hour with Cheryl and said she spoke longingly of leaving Juvenile 'Hall and going home. He said they talked about "the good times we have had in the past," and that he avoided all mention of the stabbing. Racing Car Rams Stand; 1 Dead2 Hurt ODESSA, Tex. (fl-A racing car driven by a woman spun out of control and plowed into a crowded grandstand at a stock car race track Sunday killing one person and injuring two others. Killed was Edward L. Sheppard, 50, Odessa, a truck equipment company employe. ) The driver of the car. Mary Tv- ler of Odessa, was not injured. She was competing in a Powder Puff Derby at the track called Suicide Bowl. Don Daniel, 17. and Mike O'Don- nell, 16, both of Midland, Tex., were injured. Their conditions were reported as not serious. Sheppard died at an Odessa hospital about an hour after the accident. Crash Victim Still Critical ASTORIA () George Brand. about 30, of Tillamook, injured in an auto collision which claimed three lives Saturday, remained in critical condition at an Astoria hospital Sunday. Southerners On Civil Rights Leader WASHINGTON JH - Gordon M. Tiffany's nomination to be staff director of the new Civil Rights Commission appears headed for Senate approval soon. Sens. Ervin (D-NC) and Olin D. Johnston (D-SC) said they had decided against trying to hold up Tiffany's confirmation for the $22,-500-a-year job. They explained in separate in terviews that they felt further de lays in getting the commission into operation would only intensi fy demands next year for extend ing its life. Tiffany's nomination, submitted by President Eisenhower on Feb. 20, was approved by a Senate Ju diciary subcommittee 5-2 after a hearing on April 2. ' A meeting of the full Judiciary Committee has been scheduled for Monday and Chairman Eastland (D-Miss) said that the nomination Monday's BAKE SHOP SPECIAL DANISH BUTTERH0RNS reg. 70c BAKE SHOP - tion authorities here said he had been deported to. Finland because he was a Communist in Minnesota during the' Depression. Heikkila was born in Finland, while his? naturalized American parents were there on a business trip, but was brought to the United States when he was 2Vi months old. He has resided here since, but never , has become naturalized. j- ' There was a possibility he had U.S. Economy work and harder selling," in the words of one publisher;' rather than a tax cut as the key to a solution fit present problems. Many reported good results from "buy now" campaigns. All asserted recession news was get ting objective treatment, just aa any other news. The newspaper executives were interviewed as they gathered for the city's annual Press Week. Some 1,200 editors and publishers are expected to take part. AP Meeting Monday . The Associated Press . annual meeting takes place Monday, when its recently retired Presi dent Robert McLean, publisher of Ithe Philadelphia Bulletin, will be honored. The American Newspaper Pub lishers Assn. annual convention begins Tuesday and runs for three days. Vice President Richard M. Nixon will speak Thursday night at a dinner sponsored by the ANPA Bureau of Advertising. William Dwight, publisher of the Holyoke, Mass., Transcript- Telegram and outgoing ANPA president, is one of the speakers scheduled for the Wednesday con vention schedule. Dwight offered "harder work and harder selling" as an antidote to the. recession. He said national confidence had been shaken and this contributed to a downswing. He dated this from the Jan. 16, 1957, forecast by former Treasury Secretary George M. Humphr of "a de pression that will curl your hair," if high hudgets continued. Against Tax Cutting "I think tax-cutting will just in crease the national budget, and in turn bring about greater Infla tion in the final analysis," Dwight said. "I think we've had it a little 'easy come' for too long. We have got to fight our way." Dwight asserteoMhat New Eng land is in better balance than many parts of the country, since much of its economy is not con centrated in huge employment, except for Connecticut's aircraft industry. The region was affected by a slowing down, he said, with cutbacks in overtime opportuni ties. Girls Recover After Poisoning CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. tfl Nearly all the more than 500 teen age girls stricken with food poi soning at a school society con vention here Saturday were re ported recovered Sunday. The source of the mass illness, which threw Crawfordsville , and other central Indiana communities into a state of emergency, was traced definitely to some spoiled ham salad served in sandwiches at the state convention Sunshine Society. of the Quit Fight of the former New Hampshire at torney general is on the agenda. Ervin and Johnston, who voted, against confirmation in the sub committee, said they expect the full committee to approve the nomination despite , their opposi tion. This would open the way for Senate confirmation a day or two later. The six-member Civil Rights Commission was created by Con gress last year in passing the civil rights bill. Its job is to investi gate violations of voting rights and to study laws and practices relat ing to civil rights in general. It has until Sept. 9, 1959, or two years from the day Eisenhower signed the act, to complete its work. However, Southern Demo crats who fought passage of the legislation anticipate demands next year to extend the commis sion's life. 49 dox. STREET FlOOt ST. been rushed to the Canadian bor der and put aboard a Helsinki bound plane in Canada.. United St a tt-st;alrlines representatives here said they had so such person aboard, any. of their- European bound planes since Friday. Heikklla's attorney obtained an order from a federal judge rr straining immigration authorities from deporting him. But the order Is worthless If be has already been deported. -X- Little Chance PARIS Former Premier Georges Bldanlt, 59, agreed Sunday- tOTtrytoform France' 25th post-war gov eminent. Bidault was given little chance of success. (Story on page one) (AP) Variety of j State Topics Due on KOAC Financial responsibility, farm forestry and fish liberation will be featured topics on KOAC's Tues day night slate of Oregon govern ment programs, according to Rob ert Richter, director of state de partment programs for educational Channel 7. At 6 p.m. Tuesday "No License to Kill" presents Loren (Bud) Kramer, in charge of the financial responsibility section of the De partment of Motor Vehicles. He will be interviewed by Chuck Boice, regular emcee for this weekly series. On the "Your Natural Re sources" weekly program at 7 p.m. the topic will be farm forestry. Appearing for the State Forestry Department will be Don Maus, as sistant state forester in charge of the services division; Charles H. Ladd, senior farm forester; and Ralph Yeater, farm forester. The Forestry Department is one of 13 agencies comprising the Commit tee on Natural Resources, which sponsors the series. The Oregon Game Commission's "Bulletin of the Air" at 7:45 Tues day evening, puts Ron Shay be fore the spotlight with his every-other-week series. This time Shay will present information, illus trated with film he has taken, about fish liberation. Friday at 7 p.m. the Apprentice ship section of the State Labor Bureau is sponsoring two films il lustrating their activities. In addition to these TV pro grams Richter and William Rush, cameraman for the Visual Instruc tion Department of General Ex tension Division, are filming' and editing film already taken on the State Blind and State Deaf Schools. These will be part of a fall series of half-hour programs on state op erated institutions. Woman Unhurt as Automobile Flips A Salem woman escaped injuries Sunday night when her car hit a ditch and flipped over near the Y Junction pn the Dallas Highway. State police identified the driver as Mary Highland, 812 Lewis St SE. Officer Walter Karau said the woman applied her brakes and they locked forcing the car to the ditch about 5; 10 p.m. on the rain slick highway. Jfi. 'A ' . " AH rTHTI V i 3 Days Only Sponsored by -"CURTAIN AT 7:45" c ,.:- -Ti.Lr-s.. w:il d- Tl. Honored ACADEMY. AWARD WINNER "BEST DOCUMENTARY FEATURE" YOU SHOULD ! not miss nr - - - -.t.m. . ChlMr. . 25 S I Mvht. -90 'Stanford Plans In Rnilrl Giant I w s ---- PALO ALTO. Calif, WV-Stanford University is planning to build the world's large at linear atom smasher.:, iw t -I. fichlff . executive head of the Stanford physics de partment, said Sunday me accw rnnr unuld nocuDV a two-mile- long tunnel bored into the coast range lack of the university and would generate power up to 45 billion electron volts. The world's largest atom smasher at nresent is in the So viet Union and is the cyclotron type which whips protons around in a circle before blasting them at the atomic targets. The type Stanford contemplates shoots much smaller electrons in a straight line. Schiff 's details were contained in a speech to a Stanford alumni group iJ5alt Lake City, and were made public here at a bearing be fore the Palo, Alto planning Com mission, i " " -V Project M, as the W accel erator is known on the campus, would be more than 50 times more powerful than the present 700-mlllion-volt Mark III accelera tor which ' Stanford built seme years ago. It will tie' 50 times as long and will use 1.000 giant klys tron tubes to drive electron bul lets instead of the il the Mark HI uses. Jet Crashes Hear Biisy Expressway ' LOUISVILLE, Ky-A Navy jet crashed into an open field Sunday night, just missing a crowded residential area. .The pilot bailed out and was seriously injured, ; .. r ' Jefferson County police identi fied the pilot as Capt. W. L. .Ball. 31,' Columbus, Ohio. They said he was -flying a TV2 plane from Pensacola to Columbus. NThe plane crashed on the out skirts ot tne city 'itself, but near several suburban., areas. It was only a short distance from one of the city's busiest expressways. County police quoted the pilot as saying he parachuted from the craft after it exploded in midair. Capt. Ball landed on a rooftop and was rushed to General Hos pital. county police said the "plane did not hit anything." Asked if it came close to the residential area there, an officer . said "very close . . . close enough." WOMAN STILL CRITICAL Mrs. Willard Aldrich. Vancouver. Wash., who was injured In a two- car crash Thursday on Salem By pass, remained in critical condition at Emmanuel Hospital in Portland, attendants said Sunday night. W00DBURN ffiSS ENDS TUESDAY 'Unguarded Moment' Esther Williams PLUS "Streets of laredo" William Holden Adult Student ChUd 1.2S 75 SOe ONE SHOWING ONLY EACH NIGHT! www TAI.AV B"-om. s warn 7:11 .). . . Mon., Tuts., Wed. Salam Branch A.A.U.W. IIVMIl WW III H All Three Days! 1 j ' X " : i ' ';' IS CRN Poatura At 8:00 and M0 Atom Smasher Doors Feature Open Lfd3 Starts 7 P.M. r 7:30 TfiWiTl.TriTriTsiiTrsT.il The Weather Mas. Mia. Prep, 4S .29 S7 40 .07 S5 . ,43 , 'M .m as' .oo M AM M. Aitorlt Baker Band-ncdmoM Euf-n - KUmim ruia Medford . M.uivirt ... North Bnd Portland Swam By THE ASSOCIATED PftESS Max. Mto. rrelp. A 1 J Anchoraf Albuquerque Atlanta 34 49 SB 7S IS Bolt Boiton Chleaffl riavaland as 43 ss BS 7S SB 70 41 S3 7B 78 S3 79 SS SO 95 7S S7 77 83- SS B4 74 ?1 SS 71 IS 49 47 .23 .84 .14 87 43 BS 18 33 88 SS 43 S3 81 84 70 70 48 Denver Detroit Falrbanki Farso Fort Worth Galveston Helena j Wnnnlulu .87 .oj .IS M Kansas City Las vegaa Los Anseles Mnpls-St. Paul New Orleans , New York Omaha - phoenix, SB . SB 43 ,u 81 . 34 84 44 aa Reno Sacraipento Salt Lake City San Dieso -San Francisco 83 88 Waihlnston er Bureau. McNary Field, ' Salem: Moetljr ciouay wnn acanerca snow erf and periods of partial clearinf. a 4m.u. Ml Since start of weather year. Sept, t T Sate I it Year - Normal 17.91 .w - , a.i Tide Table (Taff, Ore.) fCom piled 07 VM. Coast 4tCeo detic Survey, poruana, ure.t Hteb Waters Low Waters . Time Btft 8:14 am 4.1 7:81 pm' 1.0 8:83 am 4.T S:Msra 13 9:34 am -O S - 9:18 pm '3 8 April Time Ht. ft 31 -11:47 am 3:1S pm 13 1:17 an 3:00 pm 8 1:82 am 3:S. pm 8.3 Adults 90c Children 25c WINNER OF 7 ACADCMY AWARDS! "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR" ALEC GUINNESS "BEST ACTpR" nuuiioua tarKB.ua una MUM- ON TNI atlVIK KWAI IMNNCOOa III! lllltllM CTSfgl DOORS ivtl !: SM. ROCK ROBOT HUDSON-STACK DOROTHY JHK MALONECAfySON if .SPi... T v f 1 Tarnished Angels COMEDY CO-HIT AVA'S OiV. I GREATEST MOVIE Rp.E! , k OUt mi femuusafi Mw' Ava GARDNER Stewart GRANGER wBiliTRAVERS ABRAHAM SOFAIS k COLOR CO-HIT JOE DAKOTA leek Mahoaey ( I7 ' 48 I'm S3 54 U M 111 M "m m m A little wramer today with the hlrti today near 83; low tonlsht near 42. Willamette Riven 8.8 feet. WHAT'S IN SALEM? EL f DMWI 1 OOAROC I MUKKl 1 4TTT19 1PAVLOW 1 I f f V-,,Ciwi . wiAvtwa PPEN 6:43 SHOW 1:15 CMMiwn fceell f I o III