Pa9e 2 Section 1
Q
Ceiisus Checks
Service Group
OfoBusinesses
Receipts of 574 Places
Si County in 1954
o Total $9,8950, 000
Receipts of 574 service establish
ments enumerated in Marion Coun
ty in the 1954 Census of Business
amounted to about $9',8fl6.ooo, ac
cording to a preliminary report
covering service trades, published
by; the Bureau of the Census, U.S.
Department of. Commerce.
The combined yearly payroll of
the county's service establishments
was $2,5(14.000. They reported 946
employees of whom 800 worked
fulltimc in the pay period ending
nearest November 15. Proprietors
actively employed in the opera
tion of unincorporated business
numbered 590.
Establishments providing person
al services numbered 214 and re
ported receipts of $3,107,000. Estab
lishments primarily engaged in
automotive repair, parking and
other automotive services num
bered 92 and had receipts of St..
313,000. Establishments listed as
"all other services" in the pre
liminary report numbered 268 and
had receipts of $.r),416,0O0.
"Personal services" group in
cludes such businesses as barber
, and beauty shops, cleaning and
dyeing plants, laundries and laun
dry services, garment alteration
and repair services, funeral serv
ices, photographic studios, shoe re
pair shops and shine parlors, as
well as other personal services.
"Automotive services" group in
cludes general automobile repair
shops, battery service shops, tire
repair shops, body repair and
paint shops, automobile rentals,
storage garages, parking lots, auto
. laundries, and other miscellaneous
automotive services.
"All other selected services"
group includes business services,
miscellaneous repair services,
amusement and recreation serv
ices, motion pictures, hotels, tour
ists courts, motels and camps.
Kline Views
Soil Bank as
Of Brief Aid
DENVER, tB - Alan B. Kline,
former nrosirlent nf the Amprirnn
Farm Bureau Federation, said j
Monday the administration s soil
hank plan is "a good solution for
the short run" but eventually will
lncrcaso production.
Kline n Vintnn Triiun Inrmni-
told a convention of the' Colorado
tirain. Mlllinr nnrl .w !i..,.inr
Assn. the only solution to the (arm
price problem is to take acreage
out of production.
J nis should be done, ho said,
until the rising demands of grow
ing population can take up the
slack. As for raising price sup
ports, he said: "How silly can you
Set?"
Luncheon Willi
Miss America
Won as Prize
Unmarried members nf the Sa
lem Rotary Club missed a golden
opportunity for a date with Miss
America when all of them failed
to attend a club meeting last
spring.
That was the meeting at which
Gerry Frank appeared and nwaril
ed several prizes, including a
date with the beauty queen to the
youngest unmarried Hntarian.
Inasmuch as there were no un
married Rotarians present the
luncheon date went to Don
Woodry, who was the most re
cently married member of the
group.
Woodry and Sharon Kay
Kichie, Miss America of lOM,
had that date at the Oregon Room
Tuesday noon.
DEATH PLOT CIIAIU.KI)
DAMASCUS. Syria tfi Seven
members of the outlawed Syrian
Social Nationalist Party have been
arrested on a charge of conspiring
to assassinate three high military
officers and a member of Pnrlia-
nn-,H minim, ciiiiu sources saio men mi.ing world war n. was re- state Department has to take a Administration th.-t his firm had
Tuesday. The sources said the ar- ; leased on parole Tuesday from Gallup poll of members of Con- sold the state 6-cylinder 4-door se
rested men had been turned over the I'.S. war crimes prison at ; gross everv time tbev want to do dans for as low as $1 OS''
to the military for trial. , Landsberg. something." j That car casts $2,350 retail in
Fraternity
By I'N'ITKI) IMtKSS I
A cross-section of fraternity men gangs for some charitable purpose. I
today condemned the old-fasiiioiicd they said. j
"hell week" ordeals which resulted i t'nivcrsily oflicials at such insti- -
in the death of a college freshiiKinilutions as Georgia Tech. Ohio I
10 days ago. j Slate I'niversity. Stanford. Wiscon-.
I hey said the traditional "hell sin and the I -Diversity of Puts-
week' paddhngs and "long walks" - bnrgli have taken a hand by ban-!
are' outdated, unnecessary, and . nine, freshman haling ordering
j;ivc fraternities a bad name. Some
called tlicnl Idiotic and even
"idiotic"
...iiuaiic. ;oi u,.- . ...iinu.ii ,e IruinmB program.
The fraternity spokesmen were1 Ann hazinj; rules are backed up ! iridic Thomas, the Intel -Frater-ciueried
by the United Press eon-! by stale law in Texas, where fra-' njy council president at OSC
rerning the Feb. HI death of an ' termty ordeals which inlerlere , eomiueiitcd "II fraternities would
18 year-old Massachusetts Institute ! with a ii eshnuiu's sleep are pro- j iay.v ., bl,tl,r ook ,,, lheir own
of Tcchnolony fraternity pledge. hihiled I ritual ceremonies, tbev would find
The pledge. Thomas Clark of Some Defend llaini! th.,t thc r0;u thl,v t..,n ,.kt,
Harvey, 111., crashed through res-1 Tom Denner. the Inter Fraternity ; aireadv been paved (or them"
ervoir- ice and -drowned 12 miles ' and Delta Tan Delia chapter presi-
from the MIT campus. His superi--dent at the I'niveisity of Okla
ors in the Delta' Kappa Kpsilon boma. said the fatal MIT hazing
chapter had taken him blindfolded stung "verges on pure idiocy."
on a car rifle and ordered him to
find his vay back in the ilafkjlcss.
To 1)1. mi Cuitit
Clark was to be. buried m ar his
home today and at MIT fraternity
leaders met last night to discus
plans for curbing "hell '"
stunts.
In other universities, mam fra
ternity leaders said they h.nl 'I
rh.rssod "hell week to help ,
wok." Fraternity plfdiws, In or
der la cain official admission -into
o
(Spectacular
4 f . fc
turn?- " '
i 1 m- ,-. "te.
is'. i"...v i .-. -
LOU1SV1I.LI'., Ky. Fire of unknown origin today destroyed
the Second Presbyterian Church, one of the largest in downtown
Louisville. No estimate of the damage was available, but officials
said the 48-year-old structure cost about $400,000. After the fire,
police said they found a safe in the church had been forced open
and said there was definite evidence of a break-in before the
fire started. (AP Photofux)
Demos Complain of
Not Being Informed
On Tanks
Morse Denounces
Foreign Policy
Secrecy
WASHINGTON un Senate and
House Democrats grumbled today
that the Eisenhower administra
tion has been neglecting to consult
Congress before making major
foreign policy moves like the tank
shipment to Saudi Arabia.
For the moment at least, the
issue of the shipment itself took a !
h.irk.nl ,ip IVmnrnkiiwH!""" umi.umku ui. . .. aim.-, ,,.-
M as a springboard for fresh pro
tests over what Sen. Morse ( D-Orei
denounced as "a course of foreign
policy by secrecy."
Bui Rep. Judd til-Minn), a mem
ber of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee, said, "1 think they've
consulted us on all that we have
had a right to expect.'
The evident mood of some Deia
ocrats indicated that Secretary of
Slnto Dulles might be in for a
fairly rugged reception when he
tries to explain tile how and why
of the tank deal, probably later
this week.
Heavy Dosage
Of Medicine
No I So Good
A "mcnl" of aspirin tablets re
sided in an uncomfortable short
time for a Salem youngster Mon
day afternoon, hut he was ap
parently none the worse for the
experience after emergency' treat
ment.
Two-year-old 1) a n Parkinson
somehow got hold of a bottle of
the pain-relieving pills and down
ed about 41) of them before the
family learned of it. City first
aidmen were called to check the
youth and he was then rushed to
Salem General hospital by bis
father. I'rank Parkinson, 22(55
North Fourth street.
A stomach pump uncomfort
ably but efficiently removed the
stomach contents and the young
ster was released to his father,
only slightly worse for the wear.
He was soon l.-umhing and play
ing at his home, bis father said.
GERMAN KIl.I.EH I'ltKUl)
llEini-'.I.RICltCi, Germany (,n
Kurt Goebell. 59, former German
naval captain convicted of helping
to kill seven cnpuimt I'.s. air-
Men Rap 'Hell Week'
1
u their sleeves and form work I
that "hell week" ceremonies be
icstneled to tile iraternily house
-Meyer, me flit Gamma
Delta president al Southern Metho
dist University, called the MIT in-
' culont "nothins short of barbaric."
CASCADE SWINGSTERS
SQUARE DANCE CLUB
o f Al
Aumsville Pavilion
IVIir Wf DNC5DAY
O O O
0 O
o
Fire Destroy Louisville Churclv
v
Shipment
The House Foreign Affairs Com
mittee chairman, Hep. Kichards
(D-SC), ripped into the administra
tion which he said "is still of the
19th century vintage opinion that
in the foreign affairs field the
House is an illegitimate member
of the family, and a weak-minded
illegitimate son at that."
Richards' outburst brought to the
surface a latent resentment over
what he says is an administration
tendency to look to the Senate in
consultation on foreign policy
matters. He said he knew nothing
f'.Z 7 Jt." ,, ..' "
ment to the troubled .Middle East.
"As far ns 1 know." he added.
none of the House leaders were
consulted in advance cither."
Senators Sparkman (D-Ala) and
Morse said the Senate P'oreign Re
lations Committee was ignored too,
and that Chairman George (D-C-a)
wasn't notified o( the original plans
to send 18 light tanks to baud!
j Arabia They said George was told
only when the administration or
dered the tanks shipped after a
re-study of the situation. Sparkman
and Morse serve on George's com
mittee. The .shipment of the Mil tanks
was halted early Friday on Presi
dent Eisenhower's instructions aft
er news of it leaked out. On Sat
urday, the Slate Department an
nounced it hud been decided to go
ahead with original plans to send
the tanks. Unfrozen at the same
lime was about $110,000 worth of
signal, aircraft parts and other
equipment going to Israel. The
tanks now are on the high seas,
beaded for a Saudi Arabian port.
The department said the tanks,
described as intended (or training
purposes, would not contribute to
an arms race in the Middle East.
Yesterday, diplomatic officials
disclosed Saudi Arabia has
order 18 more tanks, bigger and
mnrn hnnvilv nrmod Ihnn Ihn ones
already shinned.
In an interview, Sparkman said
the tank situation 'is a glaring
example of the lack of consultation
and proper liaison with both houses
of congress."
"In recent months," he said,
'the administration has become
more and more relucant to take
Congress into its confidence."
Morse said the administration
comes running up to Congress for
consultation usually after Dulles
has almost stumbled off the
brink."
Judd said he wasn't consulted on
the tanks deal and dicln I expect
lobe, asserting: "1 don't think the
II -wr "I
However, some fraternity simkes.
men tell there is still a place (or j Ford competed by giving special
some of the old-fashioned "hell ; discounts to dealers bidding for
week" in modern college life.
Richard Tatus of the CCI.A Phi BI'SIXKSS DPKNKD
K.lppa Sll,n,., etupter said pledges ! S1IKR1DAN Alvin H. Smith
ri. -paddled hard enough to re- ! of McMinnvillc has opened the new
n,im ,hl.m lhm ,v lm pll.dg,.s. " I Smith Feed and Supply linn in
..t Oreeon State Cnlleee .11 tr.-i.lllw buildine formerly nwnerf hv
ternittes have
fiirmeil !i I'ntnmifle.i
i to evaluate their entire pledge
DON'T FORGET WEDNESDAY
LEMON PIE DAY
The Pit'..,:
" 15?S. High
11 i. m. to 8 p. m. Closed Sundays
o -W HAKE 04 OWN NES AND MIAD" r, n
oO o
o
G .
A.
' ' 'Vow,.',
Czechs Blame
Yank Balloon
For Air Crash
LONDON Wi The Czechoslov
ak government charged Tuesday
that a U.S. balloon caused the
Jan. 18 crash of a Czech airliner
in which 22 persons died.
The charge was made in a
Prague radio broadcast which
said :
"The cause of a plane disaster
on Jan. 18, in which 22 passengers
were killed and four seriously in
jured, was an American balloon
dispatched to Czechoslovak terri
tory from a base in Western Ger
many, says ar official commu
nique." Previous official reports of the
disaster made no mention of its
cause, but Prague and other Com
munist capitals have been charg
ing that American balloons are a
menace to airplanes.
Cut-Rate Air
Freight OKd
WASHINGTON UP) The Civil
Aeronautics Board Tuesday estab
lished a new type of low cost air
freight service "Deferred air
freight."
The hoard authorized the sched
uled airlines to accept deferred
air freight when they have space
available. The new classification
was established for an experiment
al period of one year.
The lowest rate the airlines
may charge will be 55 per cent
of the minimu allowed for regular
air freight, on shipments in an
easterly direction, and 65 per cent
of minimum rates on alt other
shipments,
The new low rate will apply to
goods handled on a space available
basis. Deferred air freight cannot
be delivered before th third day
of its handling when the shipment
is for less than 1,20(. miles, or
before the fourth day where the
shipment is for 1,200 miles or
more
Minimum air freight rates are
now 20 cents a ton mile for the
first 1,000 ton miles, and l(iV4 cents
; UI " ."
ton ,1,le 15 the trying of One
iton for onc m,le-
Ford, Chevrolet Sell Cars to
California Under Dealer Cost
SAN FRANCISCO ii Chevrolet j slate business, the committee
and Ford automobiles have been heard.
sold to the state of California at i Chrvsler representative N. J.
I prices below what dealers would
' pay. representatives of both firms
'testified here Monday.
j Ed Grafton, zone fleet manager
for Chevrolet, to d the State Son-
i ate Committee on Governmental
i California and $1,855 in Michigan,
i commented Sen. George Miller iD-
i Richmond! who presided.
Chevrolet bills were made from
.the factory, often at the request
1 ' dealers, the committee was told.
! I other lk-dei-
" SPECIAL!
FRIED CHICKEN
(Chi.ktnOn.ASMik)
51.00
NORTH'S-l 170 Center
o .
o
o
Negroes Shun
Compromise i$
Buses Boycott
By RE' THOMAS
MONTGOMERy, Ala. Wi-In the
face of possible grand jury indict
ments. Montgomery Kegroes con
tinued their bus boycott with new
determination today after over
whelmingly re'Cl'ting a compro
mise settlement.
The Montgomery County grand
jury was expected to make its final
report sometime today climaxing
an eight-day investigation of the
mass segregation protest now in
its 12th week.
Indictments could be returned
under an old Alabama law which
makes unlawful boycotting punish
able by a fine of SI, 000 and six
months in jail.
With a solemn vow to "walk on,"
an offer to end the souths first
mass use of economic force in the
battle over racial segregation was
rejected at a Negro rally lqst
night.
Only two dissenting votes were
cast, said the Rev. Ralph D. Aber-
nathy, chairman of the negotiating
committee and pastor of the Negro
First Baptist Church.
The Rev. .Mr. Abernathy said
about 4.000 persons attend the rally-
Representatives of the Montgom
ery city lines and the city commis
sion previously had agreed to the
proposals submitted by a newly
formed civic organization, the Men
of Montgomery.
Conforming to "existing (segre
gation) laws," the compromise
plan proposed that the first 10
seats in the front of each bus be
reserved for white passengers-and
the first 10 seats in the rear for
Negroes.
Remaining seats in the center
would be filled by Negroes from
the rear toward the front and white
customers from the front to the
rear. Negroes woulo be promised
courteous treatment, and extra
buses would be used during peak
hours of travel.
The compromise sought to assure
the Negroes that there would he
"no retaliation whatsoever result
ing from the bus boycott."
Molalla Eyes
Jet Air Base
MOLALLA Chamber of Com
merce president, Ted Kaylor re
ports that a good share of Mon
day's luncheon meeting was taken
up with discussion of the proposed
jet air base, as reported on by
Murley Larimer.
A delegation from the (arm bu
reau of Charlie Lucht, Paul Erb
and Howard Smith of Canby,
brought in a supplementary re
port to be sent in with the report
being made to Wayne L. Morse,
Edith Green, Richard Neuberger
and Col. Banks on the matter,
telling their version of the pro
posed jet air base for this district.
The farm bureau especially
wanted it known that it had made
a report to be sent in with the re
port by the Chamber of Commerce
of Molalla. The opposition has
been light on the subject, consid
ering the scope of the matter, it
was reported.
Jim Jolly reported on the spring
opening for Molalla, set for April
21. Ted Kaylor reported on the
park situation heretofore dis
cussed and Molalla Grange also is
to take up the matter. The county
is endeavoring to seek a site near
here' for a county park.
UP TAX ON FOREIGNERS
TOKYO un The Cabinet Tues
day approved a bill doubling the
income tax for foreign residents,
with higher totals to follow.
, Rcinhard said his firm no longer
seeks state business becnuse Ford
and Chevrolet prices are below
j Plymouth production costs.
PtAN A
PRIVATE SKATING
PARTY
Aik How to Rails Money for
Your Church, School, Group
Skateland
NOW PLAYING!
Luciie BALL
DesiARNAZ
MASON
A3
forever
uarimgi
Wh LOUIS CALHERN
John EMERY
John HOYI Notoli JCHAFiR
CO-HIT .
TOM CONWAY
in
"3 Stop to Murder"
o
o
..:
i, -v; -rs. a.- Aij'iitttow: t.
a
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O
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t
OAKLAND, Calif. The wing and tail section of a twin-iet Navv
Cutlass fighter burn fiercely after the plane crashed into a hill
near here yesterday, killing the pilot, Ensign Patrick E. Har
wood of Alameda. The plane had taken off 13 minutes earlier
from the Alameda Naval Air Station. Forty-five persons have
been killed in the Oakland area in the past four days. ' (AP
Photofax)
Adenauer
To Oust Rebel Party
Retaliation Looms
For Iluinilialioii
In Ruhr
BONN, Germany W Chancellor
Konrad Adenauer threatened the
rebellious Free Democratic party
last night with ouster from his
government coalition in retaliation
for the humiliating defeat they
handed him in West Germany's
richest state.
The rightist Free Democrats
teamed up with the opposition
Socialists in the rich Rhur indus
trial state of North lthine-West-phalia
to unseat Premier Karl
Plans Formed
For Industrial
Arts Exhibit
Plans for a forthcoming Wil
lamette Valley Industrial Arts ex
hibit and information on Oregon's
vocational schools will be high-1
lights of the "'hursday Willam
ette Valley Industrial Arts asso- !
ciation meeting at 6:30 at the
China City cafe. j
Following the dinner meeting,
the group will adjourn to South !
Salem high school for a tour of i
the shops and then hear Oscar j
I. Paulson, state director of voca-
tional education, discuss Oregon
Technical institute and the Eu
gene Vocational school in the
high school's little theater.
Industrial arts teachers from
the Willamette valley schools will
attend the meeting.
A MEMORABLE EVENING
OF STIRRING
ENTERTAINMENT
"Sensational Singers Spectac
ular Show Men"
Steve Allen
"The Most Exciting Combina
tion of Voices I've Ever
Heard" Robert Q. Lewis
"I n s p i red Entertainment! A
Magnificent Performance!"
Kate Smith
The Winged
Victory Chorus
21 Ex-Soldiers
Directed by
Joseph Boris
SINGING . . .
Beethoven's "H a 1 1 e 1 u j ah,"
from "The Mount of Olives"
"The Three Bells" by Villard
Negro spirituals.
Selections from Rogers &
Hammerstein, Sigmund Rom
berg. Jerome Kern and many
others.
At
WILLAMETTE'S
NEW
AUDITORIUM
Friday,
Feb. 24
8:00 f. M.
Twkets on Sile at
SteveiM & Son, Jewelers
Prices $2.40 nd S3. 20
Salem? gregon, Tuesday, February 21, 1956
Death on a Hillside
. C
3
A,it
Threatens
Arnold, one of Adenauer's chief
lieutenants; The vote on a non-
confidence motion yesterday was
102-96. .
Socialist Fritz Slcinhoff replaced
Arnold, a founder of the Christian
Democratic parly.
The tight-lipped old Chanctllor
told the German Press Club last
night it appeared impossible that
his Christian Democrats could con
tinue to cooperate on a national
level with a party opposing him on i
a state level. He said his party's
national committee would examine
the "impossible situation" Friday.
Leaders of the Socialist-Free '
Democrat alliance in the Rhur
said they would expand their cam-,
paign to end what they termed j
Adenauer's one-party domination
of West Germany. Stcinhoff said '
similar alliances might be formed :
to topple Christian Democrats in '.
other states. 1
The defeat cost Adenauer his '
absolute two-thirds majority in the
Bundesrat, upper house of Parlia-,
THERE IS
in town where food is prepared just as you do at home. No synthetic flavors
or artificial substitutes used. The many compliments we constantly get for our
very fine food is proof that people do appreciate good home cooked meals.
If you have eaten at our place you KNOW, if not you will be pleased that
you found a place where food is good and prices reasonable.
HOME MADE PIES and ROLLS . . .
Wednesday Nite '
We feature baked Spare Ribs 95 C
(Not boiled and baked) but genuine oven baked. Our wonderful Cinnamon
Rolls served with all meals. Get the habit of eating where you will really
enjoy it. Try . . .
LEGARIE'S
453 Court St.
r A BAD GIRU )
I r-rP T MIT No. 2 4
STARTS TOMORROW!
Two of Your All-Time Comedy Favorites
In One life-Long Comedy Highlight!
iV ! JANET BLAIR
: n? m&-
O
c
o
-
9L
to .
rtimnl-rirrt" ""- "
ment. It reduced from 26 tu 21 his
iron-clad voting strength in the 38
member house, elected by parlia
ments of the nine states of West
Germany.
But he retains a bare two-thirds
majority on foreign policy and de
fense matters. The five represen
tatives from Bavaria, controlled
by an opposition coalition, are
pledged to support him in those two
key policy fields.
The rising challenge to Aden
auer's control comes as his gov
ernment is preparing to push
through now legislation to fulfill
West Germany's pledge to raise a
500,000-man force for the North
Atlantic Alliance. The North Rhine
Westphalia upset did not affect
Adenauer's two-thirds control of
lower-house Bundestag, but some
of the rearmament bills must pass
the upper house by the same ma
jority to be constitutional.
PHONES
4-4713
OPEN 6:45 20C
ENDS TODAY
Jane Wyman Charlfon Heston
LUCY GALLANT
John Waynt at Hii Best as
SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS
STARTS TOMORROW
James Dean Julie Harris
EAST OF EDEN
Dick Bogarde Muriel Povlaw
DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE
a
ONE PLACE
1 50c
Q o
.the fritermtiu, ire, orctt-.ee to roll j
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