The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 28, 1958, Page 18, Image 18

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    18-(Sec. III) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Wed., May 28, '58
MOPSY
GLADYS PARKER
Dl?OP A LITTLE 6REASE. ON MV APRON.
MOM, I WANT HIM TOTHINJKJ REALLY
COOKtO THE DINNER.
I I
Top Church Officials Pay
Tribute to Late Cardinal
By FRANK BHUTTO -ROME
(AP)-The body of Car
dinal Stritch, who died far from
home but near the center of the
church he served all his life, lay
in state Tuesday night high on
Janiculum Hill, overlooking Rome
and the Vatican.
All day long cardinals, archbish
ops, bishops, priests and student
priests of the Roman Catholic
church, members of the diplomat
ic corps to the Vatican and many
ethers called to pay last respects.
The 70-year-old archbishop of
Chicago died in a Rome clinic
early Tuesday after a month of
suffering during which his right
arm was amputated and he was
truck by a cerebral thrombosis
that left him partly paralysed.
Fell late Coma
Toward the end he could no
longer take nourishment. Monday
he fell into a coma. At a pre
dawn hour Tuesday morning he
Farmer Escapes
Drowning But, Dies
Going to Hospital
PONTOTOC, Miss.. (AP)-A far
mer pinned in a water-filled ditch
by a tractor managed to keep his
head above water for eight hours
then died on his way to a hospital.
Officers found Robert A. Callo
way's tractor had broken through
a bridge and fallen in the ditch,
pinning him beneath Sunday. Be
fore he died, Calloway, 64, man
aged to tell officers he had
struggled for eight hours to keep
his head above water.
awakened, gave his close associ
ates a final blessing and died.
Cardinal Stritch was called to
the Vatican by Pope Pius XII to
be pro-prefect of the church's
Congregation for the Propagation
of the Faith the highest Vatican
Curia assignment" ever given an
American-born prelate.
The cardinal never got to the
Vatican. He was a sick man when
hi arrived In Naples on April 25.
Three days later his clotted,
numbed arm was amputated.
The Vatican's L'Osservatore Ro
mano said of Stritch that the car
dinal's work had been religious
and social as well as political "in
the most noble sense of the word."
But, it added, "It can be said that
he gave the best of his energies
to immigrants." The Vatican
newspaper recalled the cardinal's
efforts for special legislation to
enable a freer flow of immigration
to the United States from western
European countries.
Funeral Thursday
Funeral services will, be held
Thursday morning in Rome's
Church of St. Ignatius. Members
of the College of Cardinals in
Rome will attend. The celebrant
will be Bishop Martin John O'Con
nor, of Scranton, Pa.; rector of
the North American Pontifical col
lege. Cardinal Tisserant, French
born dean of the College of Car
dinals, will given absolution to
Cardinal Stritch In the name of
Pope Pius XII, whose friendship
for the Chicago archbishop dated
to student days in Rome.
Thursday afternoon, Cardinal
Stritch's body will be flown to
Chicago for final services and
burial.
Pickets i
Turn Back
Workers
JACKSON, Miss'., (AP)-Pickets
at a big lake and power plant
project turned back nonunion
workers, roughed up one of them
after overturning his car, and
struck a news photographer in the
face Tuesday.
The action occurred when seven
or eight carloads of Negro work
ers tried to get through ' a large
crowd of pickets of the Operating
Engineers Union.
The union accuses the contrac
tor of paying below-scale wages I
for men operating earth -moving
and other heavy equipment.
Norman Bergsma, photographer
for the Jackson Daily News, was
bruised on the jaw and his shirt
torn by men who took his camera
away from him.
Camera Returned
"Hey, that's a $300 camera.
Bergsma protested. They returned
his camera after taking the film.
Bergsma said he watched pick
ets charge the column of cars
carrying nonunion workers as
white man in a pickup truck tried
to lead them through the crowd.
He said a brick smashed the
pickup truck windshield and thea
the pickets turned over the secondl
car and struck at a lone Negro
occupant through the window.
The pickets righted the car and
all but possibly one of the cars
gave up the attempt to enter the
project site.
"We just don't want no pictures
up there, a man who declined
to identify himself told, reporters
after Bergsma was roughed up
Out-of-State Cars
Both Pro-Western, Left Parties Gain in Italian Electioi
ROME (AP)-The ruling Chris
tian Democrats Tuesday emerged
from Parliamentary elections with
a slightly larger piece of the po
litical pie. But Italy's extreme
left also made gains.
A final count of ballots cast Sun
day and Monday gave the Chris
tian Democrats, pro-Westerners in
power since World War II, about
License tags from Virginia, Ala
bama, Georgia and Mississippi
were seen on the pickets cars.
The union claimed the contrac
tor, Gerald Smith Co., of Jackson,
was paying less than $3.80 hourly
union scale.
The firm's bookkeeper, C. H.
Phillips, told reporters it's a non
union job and that operating en
gineers are being paid a minimum
of $2 an hour.
The lake, being built by the city
and county, is adjacent to a 23-million-dollar
power plant expan
sion project by Mississippi Power
Light Co. The power company
plans to use the lake for cooling
needs.
Union Grants
Recognition to
Organizer Unit
WASHINGTON (AP) The AFL
CIO decided Tuesday just ahead
of a National Labor Relations
Board election to extend voluntary
recognition to a union of AFL-CIO
organizers.
Previously the federation bad
refused to recognize the union
the Field Representatives federa
tion. The organizers union had
sought a labor contract, especially
protection for its members from
being fired from jobs.
The FRF brought proceedings
before the NLRB to compel AFL
CIO recognition. The NLRB over
turned AFL-CIO objections and 10
days ago ordered an election with
in 30 days among AFL-CIO organ
izers to determine whether they
wanted bargaining representation
by a union.
In the midst of the FRF re
quests for recognition as a union,
the AFL-CIO removed about 100
of its 225-man organizing staff.
About half were fired outright and
the rest either retired or were as
signed to other AFL-CIO duties.
The AFL-CIO said it was an econ
omy move.
The federation's executive com
mittee voted Tuesday that inas
much as the NLRB has ruled the
organizers constituted an appro
priate unit for collective bargain
ing, it was extending voluntary
recognition to the FRF.
Invitation Called Off
To Lady Docker, Mate
MARGATE, South Africa (AP)
Mayor Robert Barton and, his
publicity people are at odds over
Britain's Sir Bernard and Lady
Docker,
They were barred from the Mo-
nocan and French Riviera after
Lady Docker tore up a Monocan
flag in a fit of anger.
The city press agentry then in
vited the Dockers here to judge
a beauty contest. Mayor Barton
stopped it saying they wouldn't
bring the city the right sort of
publicity.
Crash Drops
Voice; Singer
Gets $55,000
CHICAGO (AP) A singer was
awarded $55,000 damages Monday
because an auto accident dropped
her voice from high to mezzo so
prano. Mrs. Ruth Bowers Gallants, 41,
testified in Superior Court that
because of her injuries she lost
her job as a radio singer and is
no longer able to obtain private
singing engagements. Her current
work as a church singer is un
profitable, she said.
The singer was hurt in a 1952
collision of a flower .truck and a
cab taking her to a radio studio.
Beds of salt, 490 feet thick, be
neath Hutchinson, Kan., produce
about four million dollars worth
of salt a year.
I burial. I
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r yT famed leg-sized lengths.
I , J;l i , .. fc ,s A pair pairs "t
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T0 Njk HOSIERY STREET FLOOR
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Vk million ef the 29 million votes
cast for the Chamber of Deputies.
The Communists and )heir al
lies, the left-wing Socialists of Pi
etro Nenni, together polled almost
11 million votes. The Communists
had 6.7 million. .
The Christian Democrats' per
centage was 42.4, compared with
40,1 in 1953. The Communists and
Nenni Socialists increased their
percentage from S5.2 per cent to
38.9.
Center parties that in the past
have aligned themselves with the
Christian Democrats the Liberals
Republicans and Democratic So
cialistspolled a few more votes
than in 1053, but still won less
than 10 per cent of the total.
The big losers were r the
Fascists, who dropped from 5.9
per cent to 4.7, and the Monar
chists, down from 6.8 per cent to
2.2.
The Christian Democrats had
hoped to win a clear majority.
They have had a minority govern
ment since their coalition with
other center parties broke up a
year ago, but no other party has
been in a position to take over,
from them. The Christian Demo
crats have been supported on an
issue-by-issue basis by other cen
ter parties.
Voting for the Senate ran
proximately the same as ' for
Chamber of Deputies. The Inte
Ministry said the Christian De
crats won 122 of the 246 Sei
seats at stake, just under a ma
ity. The Liberals and Democr
Socialists together took 9 to ass
control by the center. r 1
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