Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 18, 1956, Image 21

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    Peron Predicts
Bloody Return
NEW YOHK - The New Yorx
Herald Tribune today published
a prediction by former Argentine
President Juan D. Peron that 'he
wili return home this year on the
crest of a revo:. that may claim a
million Argentine lives.
Herald Tribune writer Joseph
Newman, who interviewed Peron
at his current exile retreat in Pan
ama, wrote that Argentina's for
mer boss is convinced be will re
cover bis rule by the end of lass.
Newman said the former dictator
appears to be consumed by a de
sire to regain power and wreak
vengeance on his foes.
'Seventy per cent of the idult
population who voted for me in
the last election are still with .lie,"
Peron said. "My agents are every
where, and they are preparing for
the day. It may come any time.
There will be a violent uprisin".
Blood will flow in the streets o!
Argentina. . . ."
Terry
Speak
Schrunk
ier Here
Friday Night
Terry Schrunk, sheriff of Mult
nomah County and possible Demo
cratic candidate for Secretary ot
State of Oregon, will speak to the
Marion-Polk County Democratic
Club at. a meeting at the Salem
VWCA at 8 p.m. Friday. '
Vernon Grove, vice-president oi
the club will preside in the absence
bl Tom Enrighl, who will be on
vacation in California.
Nominations for officers and
seven members of the club's board
of directors will be received at
the meeting. An election, will be
held at the February meeting.
Refreshments will be served oy
a committee headed by Mrs. Hatte
Stanley.
SCOTTS MILLS Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Berthold, newlyweds.
have moved to Ridgefield, Wash.,
where he is employed on a dairy
ranch. Mrs. Berthold is the form
er Jean Pawnall.
Mother Must Saerafice Her
Good Times for the Child
By DOROTHY DIX
DEAR MISS DIX: Mv hunhaml Hvantlv nhlalnwl rihmrr
J had a near nervous breakdown as a result of never letting out.
I firmly believe a husband and wife should go out together; after my
" was "o my husband wouldn t go out with
me. I could have gone bowling or to the movies
f njAik I Dut Preferred to be with my husband.
now i am a 32-year-old divorcee with a five-year-old
child whom my mother cares for in her
borne. 1 am employed.
My mother complains about me going out twice
a week. I help her as much as possible is the
house, my daughter is with her father alternate
week ends, so Mother has that time free. She is
mean, sarcastic and hateful to me. I'm afraid if
this keens ud I'll have another breakdown. I can't
afford to set up housekeeping by myself. I only go out with the
girls to a movie, then a talk over coffee. My entertainment is perfectly
harmless. What can I do?-Mrs. D.
ANSWER: You put entirely too much stress on this "coine out"
business. If your marriage was an otherwise happy one, this was a
ridiculous reason to throw a nervous breakdown. A small child tier
you down only for a few (ears and almost every mother has to make
that small sacrifice, at least. Sure, it sometimes gels a bit boring or
confining to be in the house all the time, but a child's period of de
pendency is all too short as you'll learn later.
You had lots of time before your baby came; you had fun then,
surely you could give up some of it now. '
MOTHER JUSTIFIED
Your mother is justified in her attitude: she has the child all
day and certainly shouldn't be baby-sitter for week ends and eve
nings too.
You stamp yourself as an immature woman It this is reason
for a nervous breakdown. Your mother is co-operating wonderfully;
don't ask too much of her. Remember, your daughtter is your re
sponsibility, not Mother's. You-have a change of scenery in the
office, she has none.
Life may not be a picnic for the next few years, but is will pass
for a reasonable facsimile if you learnjo get more enjoyment from
your child. '
Petition Asks
Flood Relief
Problems arising out of extreme
ly heavy rainfall continue to con
front members of the county court.
Another in the scries of requests
for remedial action was presented
Tuesday morning in the form of a
petition signed by property owners
living la the vicinity of Silverton
road and the East Salem bypass.
The petitioners ask that steps be
taken to alleviate flooding of their
property and indicate that the
overflow has been brought about
by improper installations of drain
age by the county and the state
highway department.
The matter was referred to the
engineering department for study";
and report. County Engineer John
Anderson indicated that a complete
Investigation of the situation might
take considerable time.
DEAR MISS DIX: I am a bride of 24 married to a man of 36.
We have been married just a month and it is the second marriage
foi both, I have a little girl 3, who lives with us. My husband
seems to like the child but doesn't pay her as much attention as
I think he should. Do you think time will change his attitude? Pearl.
ANSWER: A little girl of 3 is the most irresistible thing in the
world except a little boy ot 3, I'm sure she'll win her way into your
husband's heart. In the meantime, don't push too much. A man of
36 who has never been around a child needs a bit of conditioning.
DEAR MISS DIX: After going with me for a year, Sarah has
suddenly changed. She thinks by going to cocktail bars, late parties,
elc, she is proving her popularity. She had always been a nice,
quiet girl, and 1 cannot understand this wild streak she has suddenly
developed. left. '
ANSWER:'- Sarah isn't alone in her idea of popularity. Many
teen-agers think nf it as synonymous with gay times. I don't think
you should drop her at this point, as your influence may help her to
recover her senses. Stick to the job of weaning her away from present
bad company.
(Released by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.)
Pilot Suffers
Fatal Attaek
ROANOKE. Va. Ml The sec
ond airplane pilot to suffer a 'atal
heart attack while in fu' in
I Virginia in a - week died pon
... i.: ,1.. k....:t..l I. I
1 entiling mc nuafmai iicic laai
night. .
He was Lacy L. Sutton, 36, of
Norfolk, piloting a Piedm-nt Ar
lines DC3 from Norfolk to Cincin
nati. He became ill between Lynch
burg and Roanoke. He took olf
from Roanoke but almost immedi
ately complained ' of sharp pains
in his chest and requested permis
sion of the tower to return to the
field.
After landing and taxiing to the
loading ramp, he was driven to
a hospital but dropped dead in the
emergency ward.
TOP RED IN VIENNA
VIENNA ' ( Prague radio re
ported yesterday the arrival of
Marshal Chu Teh, vice president
of Red China, He ame from Hun
gary after a visit to East Berlin,
NOTES ON THE NEWS
. (ft Tut Ml t4w lat . rtXV
tasat asa-a tag. II h M Vr
"Poor chap! He's from the Russian tone of the Anarctio.J
British Navy Withdraws Back
End of Cow from Maneuvers
Capital Journal, Salem,' Orc Wed., Jan. li, 195i
Blame for Failure of Comedy
Placed on NBC Top Officials
LIVERPOOL, England W -The
British Navy withdrew the rear
end of a cow today from a
land-sea exercise because she (the
rear end) is a lady. Just wouldn't
do, old boy. .
The lady Is, in fact, a naval
lady named Cassandra Cornelius,
a third officer in the Women s
Royal Navy Service, or Wrens.
Recently a call went out for two
volunteers to play the part of one
cow in a forthcoming , exercise
which will involve some 700 reserve
sailors, soldiers and airmen, W
phony bossy will -mingle with a
herd of real cows and spy on
troops coming ashore at Abersorh,
Wales.
Third Officer Cornelius, who is
33, volunteered and was assig.ied
to play the aft part of the cow.
Lt. Ronald Sutherland, a 30-year-
old bachelor, voluneered to play
the fore part. But the planners
reckoned without Lt. Comdr, Roy
Jones, commanding' officer of the
Merseyside naval division.
When the skipper heard that the
cow was going to be coeducational,
so to speak, he put his foot down
so hard it almost went through
the deck."
"Someone has jumped the gun,
Jones told reporters. "The idea
was pot submitted to me. There
will be a mock'cow, yes but it
will be played by two men. What
would parents think if the service
allowed a woman to be alone like!
that all night on a mountain 1 i
Sad front kail Sutherland: "As1
far as I know I'm still in. Only the
female element has been thrown
out."
Said former rear half Cornelius:
"I'm a bit of a tomboy md
don't mind doing crazy things. I
don't mind doing crazy things, I
would have been quite happy In
the role."
By CHARLES MERCER
NEW YORK lA-As noted here
a week ago, the first NBC Comedy
Hour failed to get off the ground.
It's sad to report, but neither did
the second.
It's sad because a lot of money
vat spent on a lot of talent in
an effort to be entertaWiig, You
may sot live by audience rating
iigurea, but the advertising agen
cies along Madison Avenue often
do.
The tost Sunday, the 15 city
Trendex survey rated the Comedy
Hour at 1S.S against Ed Sullivan's
54 6. Last Sunday's figures are
even more dismal, 11.1 against 3k.
Seldom has a show been n be
labored by the critics, but before
we raise a stick to beat again let's
pause and ask: What has happened
here?
The man placed in command of
this debacle is Sam Fuller, one of
the nicest, 'most intelligent guys
Iva aver met m television. 1
bleed for him, as I do for all field
commanders ordered to hold or
take impossible positions by rear
area high commands. Fuller is
fighting valiantly with all the
hastily assembled and inadequate
forces at his disposal. But the
superior resources of Ed Sullivan
on CBS-TV are just too much.'
There's not much seme hi blam
ing that old militiaman, Leo duro
cher , a baseball manager in civil
ian life who never had a baptism
of fire as a master of ceremonies
before his current rote. Rather,
let's track the blame to supreme
headquarters to Robert Sarnoff,
president of NBC, and Sylvester L.
(Pat) Weaver, chairman of the
board, where the idea must have
been thought up.
Little thorough strategic plan
ning is in evidence there. After
Sullivan knocked the Colgate
Variety Hour out of the war, they
apparently decided the only way to
beat Sullivan was to do somethit
much like Sullivan's program
though with less music. It's as
nwve as silencing your artillery
and saying only your infantry can
defeat your opponent's infantry.
Then they compounded the error
by moving hastily and without
adequate preparation.
When the history of this present
campaign is Titten, let's not place
all the blame ea the guys la the
field.
Shark Kills
Missionary
. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Ml
Lester Barton, S3, of Grand Rap.
fids, a miis.ior.ar' in Costa Rica
i for five years, was killed by a
i shark yesterday in a river at tha
jborder of Nicaragua and Costa
Rica.
His narents. Mr. and Mrs. Gor
'don L. Burton of Grand Rapids,
I were informed of his death by a
relayed short wave radio messsta
from authorities of the Latin
American mWon u San Jose.
Burton was driving from Grand
Rapids to San Jose on the Pan
American Highway after 'complet
ing a nine-month furlough shortly
before Christmas. He was delayed
at the border Monday by customs
authorities and decided to swim in
a nearby river with his son. Char
les. 14.
Upon entering the river; Burton
was attacked by a shark that sev
ered his right leg at tha knee.
He made his way to shore but
died of loss of blood, tha radio
message said.
I
4
I
LEAVES HAWAII
PACIFIC FLEET - John M.
Catron, radioman seaman, LSN,
whose wife lives at Salem, Ore
gon, and whose parents, Mr. and
Mrs. William P. Catron resided at
4150 Macleay road, Salem, Ore
gon, is slated to leave Pearl Har ,
bor In January aboard the escort
destroyer USS O'Bannon. The de
stroyer wL'l operate with Escort
Destroyer division 11 with the ?th
Fleet in tM Western Pacific..
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