Wednesday, Anruat 5, 1853 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Salem, Oregon Par I Governors Sidestep Power Fight on Snake Seattle UP) PrifUn v: hower heard both criticism and praise of federal power policies at the national Governor!' Conference. At no point did the governors make any reference to the cur rent fight between advocatei of public and private power over the development of Helli Can yon on the Snake River be tween Idaho and Oregon. TARGET ! I- ' Egyptian belly dancer Dawlath Soliman shook. off the effects of a bullet wound received during a pre-dawn performance in Munich's Bongo Bar. The manage ment of the German night club said she was wounded by an unknown gunman who escaped on a motor cycle. Dawlath, who calls herself "King Farouk's fa vorite dancer," was hit in the shoulder. (AP Wire-photo) Power Of Subject Meeting Seattle W) Secretary of the Interior McKay and Pacific Northwest public power repre sentatives discussed possible new power projects the gov ernment may start during a BO-minute eloied-door meeting bere Tuesday. Members of the public power group said before the meeting they hoped to take up the con troversial Hells Canyon Dam i'sue with McKay. Larry Smyth, McKay's public rela tions representative, said how ever, the subject was not dis cussed. Smyth did not disclose which potential power projects were considered at the session. Public power representatives at the meeting were Elmer Mc dure, Portland, Oregon grangemaster; A. Lars Nelson, St. Johns. Washington grange master, and Gus Norwood, Vancouver, representing the Northwest Public Power Assn. of Public Utility Districts, Mu nicipal Power Plants and Rural Electrification Administration units. Dorothy Lee To New Post Portland Iff) Mrs. Dorothy McCullough Lee, former mayor of Portland, left for ihm nalinn'i mnital Wednes- di to become a member of. the Federal uoara or i-aroies. She was confirmed by the senate last week to the 110,- 600-a-year position. Her husband, W. Scott Lee, who works for an oil company. also has been transferred to Washington. He and their two children will Join her in about a week. The sidestepped the contro versy now pending before the Federal Power Commission be. fore the Federal Power Com mission but touched on such Items as tne Tennessee Valley Authority, mining, natural gas, oil, and soil conservation. Gov. Frank C. Clement, Tennessee Democrat, declared his state is not satisfied with the administration's treatment of the Tennessee Valley Au thority. Eisenhower listened atten tively but made no comment. At the outset of the round table discussion, Gov. Howard Pyle, Arizona Republican and panel leader, said the admin istration is "ready, willing and able and determined "to oversee natural resource prob lems with a "minimum of dis cord and a maximum of bene fit" for the public at large. Gov. Paul Patterson, Oregon republican, told the confer ence there is a definite place for public and private devel opment of water and power. The big question, he observed, is just where to draw the line. Patterson said the Northwest Power Pool may offer the key to the problem on a long-range basis. All watts developed by municipal. Rural Electrification Administration and private projects are thrown together, he said, and tapped by all users, whether public or private. He suggested that local areas should be allowed to develop smaller units with the federal government taking the lead on multi-purpose dams. Corvallis and Salem Divide Corvallis and Salem divided top honors at this week's first tournament of the local Elks Duplicate Bridge club. Jack Shepard and Dale Hutchinson from the college town were high east-west, while Mrs. Paul F. Burris and Mrs. Charles Newsom won on the other side of the boards. Others getting points in the 15-table meet included Mrs. F. C. Lutz and Marguerite Drysdale, Mrs. Leona Taylor and Mrs. Walter A. Barsch, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Lewis, Mrs. Arthur S. Binegar and Mrs. Dewey Howell, Walter M. Cline and Charles Tam bling, Mrs. C. B. Bentson and Mrs. Harry Wiedmer, Mrs. Myrtle Watson and Mrs. Frank R. Mohlman, Mrs. Lucetta Mc Coskrie and Ellis H. Jones. In the summer series Mrs. Elsie Day, continued in the lead alter four weeks, while Mrs. C. L. Newsom and Wal ter M. Cline were not far be hind. Three tournaments re main, but the Friday evening affair this week is reserved for the first August master point Others gaining points in the series games also include Mrs. Jose Morltz, Mrs. MeCoskie and Mrs. Arpke, all of Corval lis, Mrs. R. F. Baxter, Mrs. Ward Graham, Mrs. Roy Toke rud and Ray Ward. Leaps 53 Feet To Save Boy Greenville, S.C. () A gal lant mother defied injury and death when she leaped into a 53-foot well to save her IB-month-old son, who had fall en in it yesterday. Mrs. Thelma jumped down the four feet of water her son Teddy. They were pulled out by firemen and po licemen with a hose roller. Mrs. Eshleman said she was preparing to wash the porch. "I had taken the cap off the well and had gone to look at the chickens when the older children came around the cor ner and said Teddy had fallen In." Eshleman well into to rescue She said she remembered nothing about jumping into me well. The child was scratched and bruised, but otherwise unin jured. The mother also was uninjured. Scio Man Does Well on State Vocational Plan Monticello, Thomas Jeffer son's home, has 35 rooms in three floors and a basement. The benefits to be derived by former servicemen and servicewomen through the pro gram administered by the state department of vocational education is well demnostrat- ed by the experiences of George Butler of Route 2, Box 219. Scio. Described as "typical graduate of this training plan" as set up ty state law which now Incorporates veterans of the Korean war, Butler reviewed-his four years of train ing during an Interview with Garth Rouse, veteran agricul tural instructor at Cascade Union high school, Turner. Before he went into the army, Butler lived in Sublim ity and helped his father in the production of strawberries and cane berries. A product of Iowa, the father found it dif ficult to adjust to Oregon farming conditions but gave his son all the help he could. After the war George farm ed with an uncle in the Silver ton district, but subsequently moved to the Linn county farm he is leasing. Shortly thereafter he enrolled in the veterans agricultural class taught by Charles Fulton in Salem and then transferred to Cascade Union hfgh when the course was Installed there. Butler feels he has learned a great deal about the Grade A dairy business and is cur rently building a dairy on the place he purchased near Mar ion. He continues to operate ine leasea tana. The seed business has pro vided Butler with an oDPor tunity' to take advantage of the knowledge gained through his class work. However, through farm management classes, he has learned to shift his crops with the tide of profit and loss and is placing more emphasis on other farm products this year. Shop courses, states Butler, have been of benefit in the maintenance of farm machinery- and scientific farming methods including the use of fertilizers and weed spraying are paying off. "I learned a lot at night classes, but got more from the field classes," Butler sums up. 'Sometimes I was a little skeptical of some of the prac tices that were taugiit but when we got into the field and could see with our own eyes the results that were possible and talked to farmers and learned the mistakes that were made, it really soaked in." Dick Haymes Linked With Rita Hayworih Hollywood (ff) An attor ney's disclosure todsy that crooner Dick Haymes wants a quick divorce gave Impetus to gossip romantically linking the singer and actress Rita Hay. worth. S. S. Habn, attorney for Nora Eddington Flyna Haymes, said conferences are continuing as she and Haymes attempt o agree en divorce plana. Ee said a financial arrangement has) tentatively been agreed upon. Haymet and Miss Hayworth, who divorced Moslem Prince Air Khan in R.na last Jan. 1A. have been dating steadily. Stl NEW STORE AD (Pages 8-9) Mod TT A Sxsoe LEON'S TfiA KlrrMf atiM hU In Salem . . . 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