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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 20, 1958)
Lutheran Leader in Salem, Stroke Strikes Cardinal Prelate Stritch Receives Last Rites of Church Creek Fishing At Issue No Stocking Plan May Be Reconsidered aternau ttjura POUNDHD I6SI 108th Year 2 SECTIONS-! 6 PAGES Tht Oregon Statesman, Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, May 20, 1958 PRICE 5c No. 58 Poisonous Toads Killed After Attack K ,' '-'.1. t If 1 kit"'' .! I fv .1 N M 7 i SflJ Opei Dr. Franklin Clai Fry (right), titular head of 70 million Lutherans, talks with Rev. L. H. Steinhoff, Portland, pres ident of Pacific Synod of Lutheran Churches, as the two arrived for the synod's convention here. Lutheran Conclave ns; 750 on Hand Drawing Power of Religion Singled Out By JERRY STONE Staff Writer, Th Statesman Despite the idolatry attached to science in these times, ever increasing numbers of persons are turning to religion, a world protestapt leader said in Salem Monday as he arrived for a convention of the Pacific Synod of Lutheran Churches. "The realm of science has con tributed wonderful and construc tive things," added Dr. Franklin Clark Fry, president of United Lutheran Church of America, head of the Lutheran World Federation and also chairman of the powerful central committee of the World Council of Churches. "But those who think science is a kind of escalator to peace, pros perity and everything else the heart desires they will find that it falls short of complete fulfillment." Dr. Fry, who only recently was CUT OT)QjT For five years Charles de Gaulle una Biwu in uic wings, witnessing . . i p: it,. f.,mwinnc anH .tnmhiircc nf 1 saluted ,n 8 T'me magazine cover actors on the stage of French pol itics, waiting a "call" to power to set things straight. Last 'Thursday he broke the silence of recent years by announcing "I hold my self ready to take over the powers of the Republic." Yesterday he came to Paris from his country home and held a press conference at which he repeated his readiness to lead France out of chaos. But the government has refused to Invite him to take over. And the workers staged a strike of sorts to show their opposition to. his return. Only in riven Algeria does he have a strong and vocal following. There the French army has joined with French solons to hail "Vive de Gaulle." France's political woes are many and grevious. Its party fragmenta tion prevents developing and pur suing a unified policy, though the government manages a marked consistency in spite of the frequent overturns of cabinet memberships. Haunted by the psychological trauma of its 1940 collapse, it was worn down after, liberation by the revolts in Indochina and North Africa. Now Algeria is the rack on which la belle France is' sorely drawn. There the French appear to be fighting a war they can't win, (Continued on Editorial Page 4) article as "Mr. Lutheran" and who is subject of an article appearing in the issue of Coronet magazine appearing today, will be a featured participant in the 58th annual four day session of the Pacific Synod at St. Mark's Church. Some ISO delegates from 61 dif ferent churches in Oregon, Wash ington, Idaho, British Columbia and Alaska were on hand Monday for opening convention program which included afternoon business session, dinner and evening com munion with host pastor Rev. John L. Cauble as liturgist. The con vention runs through Thursday. Today's agenda will include or ganization of committees, officers' reports, nominations of officers and evening ordination service at St. Mark's Church, with Synod President Dr. L. H. Steinhoff preaching. (Add. details on page 2) ROME (AP)-Samuel Cardi nal Stritch was felled by i stroke Monday. He received last rites of the Roman Catho lic Church Monday night for the second time in three weeks. A blood clot in the brain im peded the speech and partly par alyzed the right side of the 70- year-old American prelate. His right arm was amputated April 28 to check the threat of gangrene arising from another blood clot. Given Extreme Unction The cardinal received extreme unction also before that operation There was a question in Roman Catholic circles as to whether the last rites should be given again after Cardinal Stritch suffered the stroke. A priest explained the sacra ment cannot be received twice for the same illness. He said it was decided to administer the rites be cause the cardinal had been re covering from his first illness, but now for the second time is in dan ger of death. Crisis Expected Today Doctors expect his condition to reach a crisis Tuesday. Cardinal Stritch was able to to drink fruit juice and water. His personal physician. Dr. Ralph Ber gen of Chicago, said the cardinal's condition was stationary and 'there is nothing we can do at present." The Weather Today's foretsif: Mostly sunny today and Wednesday, xcept patches of early morn ing clouds. High 82, low 50. (Complete report paf 1) Stassen Bids For Governor Post Today By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pennsylvania and Maryland hold primary elections Tuesday with widest attention being given to Harold Stassen's bid for the Republican nomination for gov ernor in Pennsylvania. Stassen, former governor of Minnesota and more recently an aide to President Elsenhower, is bucking the Republican state or ganisation. Its support went to Arthur T. McGonigle, a pretzel manufacturer, Stassen also Is fighting off charges he Is running in hopes that, as governor, he can hurt Vice President Richard Nixon's chances of winning the GOP pres idential nomination in 1960. One of the voters, at Gettys burg, will be President Eisenhow er who plans to stop off at his country home there en route to a speaking engagement in New York. In Maryland, most interest was stirred up by the contest for the Democratic nominee for senator. The four major candidates, James Bruce, Thomas D'Alesandro, Clar ence D. Long and George P. Ma honey, all predicted victory. In the Republican contest for the senatorial nomination in Maryland, Sen. J. Glenn Beall had only token opposition for renomination. ' - v- , .' .s rfv-7- w U,s 4C-:- w : u 'i Vv 'V-. r .y I ) if . ::&fll v i St 1 4V f ;5r,3, t -In il iW'ti fill i i-mMMMiaja 1 3? I lili tl'tlii'ltllttliiim i"ilhi De Gaulle Poised To Control France Renounces Role of Dictator, States He's Again at Disposal of His Nation (Picture on Page 3) PARIS (AP) - Gen. Charles de Caulle declared Monday he is again at the disposal of France to bring order out of chaos. He renounced any role of dictator but said he would require extraordinary powers if he took the helm of government. The towering gaunt World MIAMI, Fla. This warty, yellow-brown critter held by Frank Bliss of the SPCA baffled everybody for a time until a University of Miami zoologist Identified It as a poisonous South American toad never before seen In these parts. The two shown here were killed by a resident after one of them leaped at his wife. Another Miamlan reported that his dog died after biting a similar toad. (AP) Lung Infection Fatal to Ronald Golman of Films On the Brighter Side . . . John Ericksen I . r,t n't '' t 9 f By BOB THOMAS SANTA BARBARA; Calif. U) -Ronald Colman, 67, whose gentle manly manner set the standard for class on the screen, died Mon day of a lung infection. His wife and co - star, Benita Hume, was at his bedside when he died at 5 a.m. at St. Francis Hos-1 pital. He had gone there Sunday morning, suffering a virus lung infection. His health had been del icate since a lung operation a year ago. Few in Hollywood knew of his illness. He had retired from film- town glamor to lead the gentle life of an English squire at his ranch near Santa Barbara. Jack Benny, on whose radio and TV shows the Colmans often ap peared, expressed Hollywood's shock: "I am deeply saddened at the news' of Ronald "Colman'a death. He was a great actor, a great gentleman and a great friend.' ' Star for SS Years Colman remained years, probably star for 35 record . . .the swashbuckling hero "The Prisoner of Zenda." of Forecast Says Mostly Sunny Mostly sunny weather is ex pected in the Salem area today and Wednesday except for patches of early morning clouds, McNary Field weathermen said early this morning. The high temperature today will be near 82 with a low of SO fore east for tonight, they added. Mon day's high was 80 degrees. Associated Press reported that the Northern Oregon beaches will have low clouds this morning and tonight and sunny weather this afternoon. movie business. He drew star bill- Lite Ends Woa Academy Award The climax of his film career came 10 years ago when he won the Academy Award as the Shake spearian-turned-murderer in A in the Double Life." Strangely, that seemed to send him into a decline. For several years, he and his wife starred on radio in "The Halls of Ivy," a comedy about a college president and his onetime showgirl wife. Colman was born Feb. 9, 1891 in Richmond-on-Thames, the son of a silk importer. After serving with the English army in World War I, he came to the United States with $57, three clean collars and two letters of introduction. After scoring on the New York stage, he was signed for movies His first marriage to Mrs. Thel ma Victoria Maud Dawson ended in divorce in 1934. He married Miss Hume in 1938 and they had a daughter, Juliet, now 14. D.L.. DAk:Mf U nine, A Although motherless, these three baby robins are getting D3Dy KODInS neipea the best of Cire. when cats caught the mother bird, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elchlepp, 1065 5th St. NE, took over feeding chores and, from the looks of things, are doing a better than average job. NORTHWEST LEAGUE At Trl-Clty 2, Saltm t (Only fame scheduled) PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE At Vancouver 4, Sacramento I (11 Innings) At Phoenix S, Seattle 7 (Only famet scheduled) NATIONAL LEAGUE At Cincinnati 3, Milwaukee 4 (IS lnnln(i) (Only fama Scheduled) AMERICAN LEAGUE (No fames scheduled) SANTA BARBARA, Calif. Screen actor Ronald Colman, 67, who died here Monday. (AP) County Tax Millage Cut Said Probable By RONALD REEVES SUlf Writer, The Statesman Marion County's tax millage will probably be cut one or two mills on next year's levy, County Judne ing from the moment he appeared Rex Hartley said Monday as the with Lillian Gish in "The White county budget committee started Sister" in 1923 until he made his final film, "The Story of Man kind," last year. Handsomeness, polish, intelli gence, an inner glow of optimism a three-day session The cut from last year's 18 mills will come about despite increased departmental requests if property assessment remains at its present and good will these were the level, Hartley said. qualities that contributed to his The total of $3,991,604 in requests durability. His clipped, nasal, arti- will be balanced with amounts culate voice helped him bridge the left over from last year's budget gap from silent films to sound and 1 jng and non-tax revenes. became his trade mark. D jte the apparent cut in tax Above all, he was a gentleman, millage, committee members ex- But he could be a man of action too. . .the idealist adventurer of "Lost Horizon". . .the dashing le gionnaire of "Beau Geste". . .the pressed concern over the lower economy and widespread recession when departmental increases were requested. War II hero spoke out at a crowded Paris news confer ence. Then he returned to his village home to awsit his country's decision. His statement brought a slight easing of tension in France. Some thought it appeared De Gaulle might come to power through con stitutional means in the crisis arising from the Algerian rebellion. Allied officials in London sug gested he had lowered his price to boost his prospects for assum ing leadership. Moment Has Come De Gaulle told almost 700 re porters he thought the moment has come when he might possibly be of direct use once again to France. Standing ramrod straight and speaking in a clear, firm voice, De Gaulle said he is ready to serve "if the people wish, as in the preceding great national cri sis, at the head of the govern ment of the French republic." Shrugging aside a question on public liberties, the general asked: "Have I ever attacked fundamen tal public liberties? No, I restored them when they had disappeared. How would you have me, at 67, start a career as dictator?" Weakened Country De Gaulle said France is a weakened country struggling in a world of great difficulties and dangers. "But there are good cards in France's hand for the future," he said. "These cards open the per spective for a tomorrow - which will really be a French renais sance." De Gaulle was asked a general question on what he would do in Algeria in the Nationalist rebel lion situation now complicated by the French military colonialist rebellion against Premier Pierre Pflimlin's Paris government. "I envisage the case where the French people might ask me to act as an arbitrator, he replied He declared Algeria must be kept from separating from France "something which Algeria does not want, nor France either. Instrument of State 3 Perish On Roads; Toll 127 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Three traffic fatalities re ported Monday brought Ore gon's highway toll for the month to nine. There have been 127 traffic deaths so far this year in the Associated Press tabulation. The victims reported Monday were Mrs. Albert tiossllng, 38, Canyon ville; James Boyd Smith, 50, Pendleton; and Alva John Stoneman, 29, Lone Rock, Ore. Plunges Off Highway Mrs. Gessling suffered fatal in juries when a car she was riding in plunged off Highway 42 near the town of Days Creek early Mon day. Her husband, the driver of the car, and Iris Royer of Tiller, were injured. Smith was killed outright when an automobile he was riding in crashed into the rear of a grain truck near Pendleton. The driver of the ear, Thurman Arant, was injured critically. Body Found in Creek The body of Stoneman, a Brown- lee Dam' worker, was found in Pine Creek near Halfway Mon day. He apparently was thrown there when his car ran off Pine Creek road. Two passengers in the car escaped unhurt. Killed Sunday was Mrs. Violet Frickey, 37, of Cplton. She died In a Silverton hospital after a one- Icar crash on Highway 211. (Add. details page 11) "As for the role of the army," De Gaulle said, "it is normally the instrument of the state, and thus it should remain. But first there must be a state." He declared the French political party system "is not solving and will not solve the enormous prob lems confronting us." De Gaulle came to Paris from his country home 150 miles east of the capital to make his second public statement in recent years. He left political ferment behind him in Paris! To demonstrate its opposition, organized labor slowed or stopped Paris subways, buses and produc tion lines in factories. This was in response to a call by the Commu nists, who depict De Gaulle as striving for one-man rule. Cook Booked After Slaying; Wife Stabbed Marion County's young Mill Creek fishermen may have won retrial Monday night on the State Came Commission's de cision to quit stocking the Creek with 3,000 catch-size trout yearly. More than SO Izaak Walton League members and others met in the Salem clubhouse to protest the commission's sudden decision last month to cease planting the creek because it is reserved for anglers under 18 years old. J. H. Van Winkle of Oregon City, chairman of the Game Commis sion, said, after hearing the pro test, he would make the matter a special order of business and in vited club representatives to the meeting this Friday in Portland of the five man commission. Compromise Offered He was far from hopeful, how ever, that the commission would change its mind. Some suggestions were offered that a compromise be made, leaving the creek open to young sters six weeks or so and continu ing the planting. Invited to explain the commis sion's philosophy. Van Winkle said that while he favored allotting some fishing areas exclusively for juveniles, the idea was "dreamy in theory, but in practice doesn't work out." Not enough kids use their privi lege and most of the fish are wasted, he said. Sometimes, he added, young sters are not always prepared to be good sportsmen and he said In several cases in Portland, youths went wild, kicked fish out of streams with their feet, used nets and salmon hooks. Kids should be properly supervised, he said. Use of Money Questioned He said 20 per cent of all legal- size fish planted go into areas "not paying one nickle to support the cost." It is also wrong, he said, to use money provided by the sale of fishing licenses to stock streams in which everyone cannot fish. This was the main reason, he said. for halting the stocking. "If It's right for Salem to have a creek set aside for Its young sters, then it's right for every other community he said, and if you're going to-have that you're going to have to dig deep because it'll cost plenty." He suggested that taking a boy out fishing is far more important than saying, "there's the fish, go do it yourself." (Additional details on page t) PORTLAND Wl Judith Violet Braley, 42, suffered a fatal stab wound in the heart at a rooming house here Monday night and a short time later, police arrested her blood-spattered husband and booked him on a murder charge. He is Harry William Braley, 38, a cook in a restaurant at S.W. 13th and Washington Streets. His wife worked as a waitress there. Officers said that the stabbing occurred in the rooming house where the Braleys lived and that he ran out of the place yelling to the landlady that now you can call the cops if you want to." She did and Braley was arrested as he was entering a nearby tavern. Officers recovered the knife from a tavern roof where they said Braley told them he had thrown it. Sen. Kennedy Visits Salem rogue villian of "If I Were King"! (Add. details aid picture, page 2) Nixon in Better Spot Than Ever Before For GOP Presidency Bid, Kennedy Says By DON SCARBOROUGH Staff Writer, The Statesman Vice President Nixon left South America egg-splattered and cursed, but in a better position than ever for the Republican presidential nomination, in the view of John Kennedy, Massachusetts senator. (Picture at right.) The popular young Democrat visited Salem briefly Monday aft ernoon following a Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner Sunday at Eugene. Asked at a press conference if he thought Nixon came home a martyr in the public eye after his ill-received Latin good-will tour, I Kennedy said the experience defi nitely ,'helped him out politically. Himself an oft-suggested presi dential aspirant, Kennedy added, "Nixon conducted himself well. I think it's helped him." Kennedy has been asked the big question so often "Are you run nings'that he can turn it aside In his sleep, and he did it awake several times Monday. Obviously a little tired after sev eral days of traveling and talking, he replied neither yes nor no to various shades of questions con cerning his White House ambi tions, i "There are rumors you're going , f I; to be a candidate for the Demo cratic nomination," a reporter asked. "Just where do these rumors come from. Senator?" "I don't know," he answered with a touch of fatigue and humor. "There are a lot of other men being mentioned, too, you know." It's too early to say much, he added. "Have you noticed any ground swells of popular sentiment here?" he was asked. "I didn't come to Oregon for U. S. Sen. John Kennedy of Massachusetts talks politics with that reason," he sidestepped, "but fellow Democrat Robert Y. Thornton, state attorney gen only to give my talk in Eugene." eral, during the young senator's brief visit In Salem. (Add. details ea page I) (Story at left) (Statesman pnoto.j Forest Fires Doused; Huge Blaze Slowed By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS All lightning-set forest fires in Oregon were put out or brought under control Monday, forest offi cials reported. These included two blazes in the Siskiyou National Forest in South ern Oregon, four in the Umpqua National Forest and two in state timber near Grants Pass. Meanwhile in Washington State, cool, quiet air with a rising hu midity slowed progress of a forest blaze in Snoqualmie National For est and raised hopes the blase would be brought under control by Tuesday. The fire has burned out approxi mately 800 acres of largely second growth timber in the forest fires of North Bend, Wash. Spread along a six mile front, the wind scattered flames threatened a 2,000-acre segments of the forest. It was the biggest of a number of fires in Pacific Northwest wooded regions. Portland School Selects Indian Girl for Princess PORTLAND - Wilson High School Monday selected an Indian girl, Gretchen Freed, as its prin cess for the Portland Rose Festi val. Miss Freed is the granddaugh ter of Dr. and Mrs. Henry Roe Cloud. Mrs. Cloud was named na tional Mother of the Year in 1950. Miss Freed lives with her foster parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Pnndle. She is 17 years old ana proud of her Indian ancestry. Today's Statesman Pag Sec. Ann landers 6 I Classified 13-15 II Comes the Dawn ....4..... I Comics 16..... II Crossword 10.... .11 Editorials ....4...v. I Home Panorama ....6... I Markets 13 II Obituaries 12 . II Radio-TV 16 ... II Sports 9,10 II Star Gazer : 6 I Valley News 12 II Wirephoto Pag 16 II