r Page 2 Section-1
Amity Doubles
Supply of Water
; Springs Added
r. To Resources
I . By Engineers
Torrid Weather
Reserves at
; ' Dallas
Hits
AMITY Assurance of an ample
supply of spring water became a
reality this week when Water Com
missioner Cliff Wolf, turned a
valve and into the main line of the
city water main that doubled the
J flow of spring water, the main
source of Amity's water supply.
The enlarging of the Matthews
'r-"spring, to catch spring water thai
previously was beyond the range
of city leased property, was a pro
ject started nearly two years ago
' by the city council, under the
chairmanship of J. C. Johnson,
t, 'who started negotiations with Ancr
''"Matthews, on whoso property the
springs are located.
State engineers were called in
'for consultation, right of way to
the sito was arranged for, and leg
- al aspects lo protect the Matthews
and the city of Amity were stuu
" led. Purchase of digging equip-
ment ordered at a special city
:.' council meeting in June, completed
' the arrangements. The new catch
p laining walls were set up and u
corrugated iron building erected
over the water supply.
l: The springs which feed this ba
sin arc the Matthews spring and
the Breeder springs. From the ba-
- sin the water flows into a main
inline along the Hopewell highway,
" ', west into Amity. When pressure is
L;.good this feeds into lateral pipes
;":pn either side of the highway. At
" the city center this flow is met in
the summer, by water from the
. two city wells pumped into a line
" mm, inn nnct dm onmhiniiH Knrinf
then going into the reservoir.
The reservoir has a quarter 01 a
t sure . of water flow f r o m the
springs determines whether reser-
1-atin fnr pltv llsprs.
Solons Break
Deadlock on
Housing Issue
WASHINGTON W A congres
sional deadlock on public housing
was broken Saturday when a com
cromise bill holding new construc
tion to 35,000 units a year for the
next two years was cleared for
House action.
The compromise was sent to the
floor bv the House Rules commit
tec under what chairman Howard
Smith (D-Va) described as "the
tightest gag rule that could be de
vised.
The House will be given on op
portunity lo consider the matter
.! on a "take It or leave it" basis
with no opportunity for amend
ment.
Before the committee acted to
hrpnk Ihp housing loeiam it
' it would act.
This included an open under
standing with Rep. Woleolt H
Michi, chief foe of the measure,
that the Senate also would have
to accept the House provisions or
nothing.
Woleolt assured the rules group
that if the Senate "loaded up" the
' public housing section of any bill
!1 passed by the House he would hi
lt back into the rules committee
lo prevent it going into eontorenco.
' of the session would almost cer-
. . h, c , ,,.,t ,
Ex-Con Caught
In K.F. Case
KLAMATH Falls (UP) - A 21-year-old
rx-ennvict who lend po
lice on a !IO-mile-an-liour chase for
10 miles was arrested by slate
last night near (llcne, Ore.
John Francis Jennings began his
wild run front the police in a resi
dentinl nron nl Klnm:tth F:tlU
took the highway to Olenc. about i Known origin caused damage esli
eisht miles suulhwcsl ol Klamath i mated between $10,000 and $15,000
Falls, whoro he ran a roadblock. Mo Muncll and Sherill Logging
Later he was stalled by n freight I Machinery and Equipment Co.
train al a railroad crossing audi here last night.
veered off into a deadend road
where he was arrested by police,
Jennings was released from Ihe
federal prison at McNeil Island
last ivovemorr. rrevious to tttal
he had sorted time in prison at
El Reno, Oklahoma.
Uascliall Scores
NATIONAL
Pittsburgh 100 0O0 0034 6 0
Cincinnati 101 100 OOx 3 7 1
Friend, Face (Si and Shepard;
Lawrence and Bailey.
Home run Pittsburgh, Cle
ntente, .
AMHHK'AV
Delroit 010 010 100-3 II 0
Boston 002 102 22X-9 14 I
Hocft, Mnslerson 17) and,
House; Sullivan and White.
Home runs Detroit, Kalinc.
Boston, Williams,
Whistler Said
Cruel to Wife
DALLAS IB-Mrs. W. L. Black-
erby won a divorce because she
said her husband whistled all
night on Iheir honeymoon.
Was it a sort of wolf whistle?
asked Dist. Judge James K.
Kvetts. "A wolf whistle might not
have been out of order on a honey
moon." Mrs. Blackerby replied: "It
was just plain whistling. He would
sit in the rocking chair by the
bed and whistle. And sing, too.
No particular tune."
She said that her husband ap
parently wanted lo aggravate her
because of a minor argument.
Cruel treatment indeed, ob
served Judge Kvetts. "Divorce
granted."
Power Is Big
NW Business,
Pearl Asserts
ION15, Wash. W "Power
business is the big business of
the Pacific Northwest" and it will
lake a tremendous investment to
keep it operating efficiently, the
head of the Bonneville Power Ad
ministration said Saturday at the
dedication of Box Canyon Dam.
"Power needs of the Pacific
Northwest over the next 20 years
will require an estimated capital
investment of 7 billion dollars,"
said Dr. William A. Pearl.
"It is obvious that the federal
government alone cannot assume
this staggering responsibility.
Therefore, projects such as Box
Canyon are particularly Important
in seeking an answer to our poor
development problems."
Box Canyon was built by the
Pond Oreille County Public Utility
District on the Pend Oreille River
here where it flows north toward
Canada. The 17 million dollar
dam, with the whole project to
cost on estimated 20 million dol
lars, will produce about 60,000
kilowatts of power. '
The dam will form a 55-mile
reservoir stretching upstream,
south into Washington.
Construction, begun in 1952, has
been marked by court controversy
A complicated suit between the
PUD and original contractors for
damages totaling more than 8V
million dollars, is still being
hoard.
Clarence C Dill, former U. S.
senator from Washington and now
counsel for the PUD, said a state
supreme court decision on Box
Canyon had paved the way for
other PUDs to participate in the
power development of the Pacific
Northwest.
Tlie state high court ruled in
m2 that , puD coud issuc
hnnfla . nllv fnr , dam nd
lenuld sell surnliis Dower outside
Hie county.
PUD dams in Washington now
produce about 3 million kilowatts.
Dill said, equal to six Bonneville
dams
Other dedication events at this
small northeastern Washington
town will include dances, dinners,
boat races, lours and special
church selrvccs.
Recess Taken
In Niinii Trial
MKDFORD Ml The first
degree murder trial of Hilly Junior
Nunn was m recess Saturday, but
the weekend was reported used by
court oflioals to hear purported
confessions, including a tape
recording.
Circuit Judge Holicit K. Ilanna
Friday cleared the courtroom Fri
day for the start uf the tape
recording, The jury was nut to
hear it without his prior approval.
Niinn is charged with strangling
Alvin William F.acrel, 14, alter a
sexual assault against the boy at
Tubs Springs in Jackson County.
Jury selection occupied most of
the lirst week of the trial and Die
lirst witness was called Friday.
Fire Sweeps
Eugene Shop
KIKtKNK il'PI - Fire of tin-
Ihe flames swept through Ihe;
'machinery repair shop, leaving it!
nearly a total loss, and caused!
' further damage from beat and i
smoke lo stocks of longing equip- j
nicnl and supplies in Ihe main part !
ol Ihe building. I
The building was less than one j
year old.
TRULY-DIFFERENT
SPACIOUS
QUIET
k INDIVIDUAL
9
You'll see the latest ideas in home design an decoration,
the finesl workmanship, the best in planning, at PARK
DALE today.
SEE THE Cl.ASSIl IKI) SECTION FOR COMPLETE
DETAILS
Furrier Found
Guilty in Fake
Store Robbery
SANTA MONICA, Calif. -
Convicted of staging a fake rob
bery at his Beverly Hills fur
store and filing a false insurance
claim for $248,000. Albert Teitcl
baum has been ordered to appear
'July .10 for sentence and proba
tion hearing. His lawyer, Isaac
Pacht, will argue a motion for a
new trial ul that time.
A jury convicted Teitelbaum
late yesterday after deliberations
since Thursday morning.
The 42 - year - old Teitelbaum
maintained that four gunmen
bound him and an employee, Al
Stan, and escaped with 277 fur
pieces last Dec. 27. Police brand
ed the story a hoax. and claimed
the furs never left the store.
The Los Angeles County grand
jury indicated Teitelbaum March
7. Singer Mario Lanza was among
witnesses who testified for the
furrier. Among other witnesses
for Teitelbaum, were actresses
Joan Crawford and Joan Caul
field; Doro Schary and columnist
Louella O. Parsons.
Teitelbaum is liable lo impris
onment of one to 10 years on the
fake robbery chargt- and 1 to 3
years on the insurance claim
count. He is at liberty on $5,000
bond.
Ontario Man
Crash Victim
ONTARIO, Ore. (UP) Fran
cisco Montiel Yebra, 24, of untar
io, was fatally injured 11 miles
north of here last night in a one
car accident on Highway 30. He
died this morning in an Ontario
hospital.
Hiding with Yebra was Gregorio
Hernandez, 48, also of Ontario. He
through himself on the floor
boards and was not injured.
Police said Ycbra's car went off
the right side of the road and
skidded for 138 feet in a ditch.
then bounced back n the highway
and rolled 210 feet before it
stopped. Yebra was thrown from
the cor.
Jurors Hear
PinballMcn
PORTLAND Ml The Mult
nomah County grand jury invest!
gating newspaper charges of vice
and corruption in Portland, wouna
up its seventh week of hearings
Friday by taking testimony from
a group of pinball machine own
ers.
Ally. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton,
who is conducting the probe on
orders of Gov. Elmo Smith, said
earlier in the week that the in
vestigation was drawing to a
close.
No definite dale was announced
for Sheriff Terry Schrunk to take
a lie-detector test. He agreed to
the test earlier saying that he
wanted to disprove accusations
which oilier witnesses had made
against him.
Scaton Halts
Land Leasing
For Crop Use
EMERGENCY PRESS CEN"
TEH, Operation Alert (. Secre
tary of the Inlerior Sealnn an
nounced Saturday no more federal
land would ,be leased for growing I
of price-supported crops which arc
in surplus supply.
The order does not alfect the
100.000 ijcres already under lease
for agricultural purposes.
Seaton's action follows a May
21 directive by President Eisen
hower that leasing of federal land
should be "consistent with the ad
ministration's program to reduce
price-depressing surpluses and to
bring agricultural production into
line with markets."
DELIGHTFUL DINING
Redmonds On The Hill
9SS9 S. W. laiUt-Ph. Chury 41576
PorlUnd
1 Complete
T. Dinners
, Tv $2 25
Rtauiiful toungf
Off to
f .. ' IF-
a.
I i - i Tr"-" '
f
WASHINGTON, July 21 President Eisenhower waves his hat as
he boards (lie presidential plane "Columbine III" last night for
a flight lo Panama for a three-day conference with oilier Western
Hemisphere presidents. (AP Wircphoto) '
Johnny Carpenter Will Be
Emcee at Mary s Peak Trek
CORVAI.LIS Johnny Carpen-
I,,,. PnrllftnH rotlm annmmpnr u-ill
be master of ceremonies at the
10th annual Shriner's Trek to
Mary's Peak Aug. 5.
Carpenter's selection was an
nounced by Charles Biddle of Cor
vallis, Trek manager.
The Trek is staged at Mary's
Peak, just 27 miles west of Cor
vallis on the Philomalh-Waldport
highway. Events begin at noon.
The Trek is a family outing spon
sored by the Shrine clubs of Ben
ton, Linn, Lincoln, 'and Polk
counties.
All profits go to the Shrinefs
Hospital for Crippled Children in
Loggers to Be
In Lakcvicw Show
LAKEVIEW WI The Lakcvicw
Roundup this year will feature a
lumberjack field day.
Albert Herbert, forester for
American Products Corp. and
chairman for the event, said chop
ping, hand bucking and power
sawing events were on Ihe sched
ule for the Roundup, to be held
over the Labor Day weekend.
DANCE
iuimiic: m
DAYTON
LEGION HALL,
Music by
LYLE
and the
WESTERNA1RES
Every Sat. Night
9:30 to 12:30
Ailiu. 1.00 (Tai inc.)
AUMSVILLE PAVILION
Wester SAo
' f-teO-yWr"
jtki
7
STUBBY
'If v V V.U 1 " .it I. ru- :30 to I9..1(l ff
r
fKCt: Am.,i,.n and u
.
S" TV. .'. NO
DICKSON "
Hi Mllfn South of Salem City Umt
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
Panama
. ,
Portland. A receipt is given for
each $1 donated. Donatioas may
An average of $14,700 annually
has been turned over to the hos
pital the past 10 years.
Slogan of the Trek is: No man
stands so straight as one who
stoops to help a crippled child."
Biggest prize to be given away
at the Trek will be a 1056 Olds-
mobile sedan. Other prizes are
Westinghouse refrigerator, . 7'.i
horsepower Johnson outboard mo
tor; Motorola television set, Wyler
wrist watch, Lawnboy power mow
er, brazier and hood barbecue set,
weekend for two at Welcome Trav
elers motel with dinner at the
High Tides Supper club; Ocean
City spinning reel; four tickets on
the Tradewinds, two chairs. West
House ladies jackel, electric iron
and purebred Mexican pup.
a
&Jk Want to
l Meet New
'A Friends?
- SATURDAY NIGHT
Otnce.
tew
vs
:30
ricnkll t-
-BOP" vry St.
CHAROI I. - J
A
I 1
ill Crystal Gardens I
Tax f
Incl. I
Room I
on m H
Bridges Denies Split
Wi tli Ike on Hoffman
'Healthy Thing to
Have Difference
Of Opinion'
By JACK BELL
WASHINGTON ifl Sen. Bridges
(R-NH) said today "it's a healthy
thing to have an honest difference
of opinion, even with President
Eisenhower."
He said this in discussing with
a newsman his opposition to Ei
senhower's nomination of Paul G.
Hoffman as an Amercan delegate
to the United Nations.
Bridges, chairman of the Sen
ate Republican Policy Committee,
was one of 16 Republicans who
voted "no" yesterday when the
Senate confirmed Hoffman's ap
pointment. The vote was 64-22.
Twenty-seven Republicans and 37
Democrats supported the nomina
tion. Several of the Republican sen
ators who spoke" against Hoff
man's confirmation made it clear
Mitchell Files
Protest About
Road Location
MITCHELL, Ore. Ml -Residents
of this town say in a peti
tion the state Highway Commis
sion was at fault in the disastrous
flood that wiped out half the
town's business section July 13.
The petition asks the commis
sion not to rebuild the highway
until an independent engineering
firm has surveyed the stretch of
road passing through the Central
Oregon town.
The 100 signers of the petition
said that the commission nar
rowed the channel of Bridge
Creek when Highway 26 was re
built through Mitchell two years
ago.
The narrower channel was not
able to handle the runoff from
the sudden cloudburst that broke
over the surrounding hills and the
town's business section was wash
ed away, they said.
The petition says that the high
way was built in such a way as
to moke "catastrophe inevitable."
The population has increased so
rapidly in America that there are
now about seven times as many
Americans as there were a cen
tury ago.
OPEN NEXT SATURDAY
7:00 P. M.
Cash Prize Daily 111 Score
B&B Bowling
3085 Portland Rd. Ph. 2-4438
CHINESE
TEA GARDEN
Best Chinese Food
Good American Food Too
Special Parties, Large or
Small. Call 2-9023
for Information
Chinese Food to Take Out
102 'i N. Commercial St.
. Open 5 p.m. to 2 a.m.
Saturday 3 a.m.
Our Menu Is Matchless
for fine Food
For your Sunday Dinner . .
PRIZE-WINNING HAM AND
BAKED TURKEY ...
(with all the trimmings just 956
THE SAN SHOP
The
Portland Road at
For Orders to Go
SUNDAY DINNER
BAKED HAM
With Candied Sweet ,
Potatoes
Sour Cream Cole Slaw
Hot Roll and Butter
95 Utttk
Capitol Shopping Contir
SUNDAY DINNER
SALADS GALORE
with
POT ROAST OF BEEF
BAKED VEAL CUTLET
Served Smorgasbord Style
To help yourself to:
30 Salads and relishes
Choice of hot entree
with ell the fixin's
Coffee by the Silex-Full
J Choice of Dessjrt
AIR-CONDITIONED
k 440 Slate Street Air Conditioned 12 Noon to 8 P.M.
n.vmawumiaBiSM.'rBiisv
they felt he was soft on commu
nism. The New Hampshire senator de
nied that any serious break with
Eisenhower was involved in the
sizable GOP Senate opposition to
the man credited with having had
much to do with Eisenhower's de
cision to seek the presidency in
1952.
"This administration has sent
several hundred major appoint
ments to the Senate for confirma
tion and I have voted for all but
three of them," Bridges said in
an interview. "That makes me a ;
99.99 per cent supporter of Eisen- i
hower and that s a pretty good
record.
'II is a healthy thing to have
an honest difference of opinion, ;
even with the President. 1 shall i
continue to support practically all
of his nominations but 1 reserve
the right to oppose any I do not
think should be confirmed." I
Besides Hoffman, Bridges said !
he had opposed the nomination of
Charles E. (Chip) Bohlen as am
bassador to Russia, and Robert '
Bowie as assistant secretary of i
state. Both Bohlen and Bowie
were confirmed. i
Bridges told the Senate yester-1
day Hoffman had associated with
"questionable characters" and
had made statements susceptible to
"double interpretations" and had ,
criticized congressional investiga- j
tions into communism and sub
version. !
Chairman Schoeppel (Kan) of
the Republican senatorial cam
paign committee and three sena
tors seeking re-election this year
joined Bridges and others in op
posing Hoffman. The three arc
Butler of Maryland, Dirksen of
Illinois and Young of North Da
kota. Sen. Wclker (R-Idaho), also
a re - election candidate, was
"paired" in opposition to the nom
ination. Dirksen, who is campaigning as
a staunch Eisenhower supporter,
said in a separate iilierview he
voted against Hoffman for "per
sonal reasons" that he didn't
want to outline publicly.
SILVERTON
Drive-In Theatre
Frl.-Sat.
"PAGE AT DAWN"
Randolph Scott
Plus
"THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY"
Edmund Gtvenn
Open 7:15 Starts Dusk
NQRm.CAWm ATHCO&.
WUeR THE fOOQ $ GOOO!
Oregon Home of Sloppy Joe
A Great Sandwich
North City Limit!
Phone 2-6798
ROAST OREGON TURKEY
Drtuing, Cranberry Sau, Sour
Craam Celt Slaw, Whipped Pol.
toai and Giblet Gravy, Hoi Soli
and Buttar.
4 95'
Air Condiliontd
Cues) Check
Dinner for Dad 996
Dinner for Mora 99t
Dinner Sli 44f
(Under 10)
Dinner lor Junior 44
(Under 10)
Total lor 4 $2.86
1CM4
IP
-IAUburgo
A
Salem, Oregon,
Planes Collide
On Takeoff, 4
Die in Illinois
GRANITE CITY, Hi. Ml - Two
small planes that took off from
separate but converging runways
at Lakeside Airport collided last
night, killing four persons, includ
ing two St. Louis business execu
tives. The victims were Arthur J.
Braucr, president of the Braucr
Brothers Shoe Co., his daughter,
Woodburn Drive-In
ENDS SATURDAY
"KING OF KHYBER RIFLES"
l'his
"THREE HOURS TO KILL"
. STARTS SUNDAY
"GOOD MORNING MISS DOVE"
Plus
"SOLDIER Of FORTUNE"
DALLAS MOTOR-VU
Gates Oitrit 7:15, Show at Busk
(iiant 100 ft. Screen
KNDS TONIGHT
"70,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA"
"BID DAY AT BLACK ROCK"
STARTS TOMORROW
Walt Disney's
"IHE LADY AND IHE TRAMP"
Cinemascope
Second Feature
Clark Gable, Susan Hayward
"SOLDIER OF FORTUNE"
Cinemascope
NOW PLAYING!
CO-HIT
Paramount prtiinti
PAUL DOUGLAS
JOHN DEREK
t Mr
Ernest Truex -w
Richard Shannon f
ENDS TONIGHT!
"TO HELL AND BACK"
"TARANTULA"
STARTS TOMORROWI
AMUSING
One of the Funniest Pictures About
Devils Island That Was Ever Released!
Humphrey Bogart Aldo Ray
"WE'RE NO ANGELS"
GATES OPEN 6:45 -
f CONTINUOUS
NOW PLAYING!
THE KETTLES START A
BOOM IN
...and the
mv. -..i . i i: ... il m-'?r,
V howling with 12
y ': MARJORIE MAIN
- td ' A f- "T" I II IfN I II U Ik ll-i I
.-:.' n k I hi
Mt UNA
1 All Nt"
Saturday, July 21, 1956
Becky, 15, Albert Johnson, 41,
chief engineer of Ihe Continental
Boiler Co., and his wife.
The two planes collided at an
altitude of about 150 feet.'
"They were so close I couldn't
tell whether either pilot tried o
avoid a collision," said Jerry
Adams, 18, a mechanic at the air
port. "They more or less tore
apart when they collided."
GOES TO CONCLAVE
SUBLIMITY Mrs. Clara Ncal
drove to Portland Monday where
she attended the three day Post
masters convention held at the
Multnomah hotel.
I PHONfl
4-4713
Opan 6:45 50c
ENDS TONIGHT
"Paramount prcttntt
CCtCfl EY
TECHNICOLOR
Spectacular Co-Fcature
"5KABENGA"
Filmed entirely in Africa and
filled with excitement!
STARTS TOMORROW
Continuous from 1:45
Sterling ltavden Yvonne
DeCarlo
"SHOTGUN"
Fast Outdoor Action in Color
' Plus
"DIG THAT URANIUM"
The Bowery Hoys'
Best Comedy
CONTINUOUS
FROM 1 P. M.
That
ERTAIN
CREELING
TECHNICOLOR
hi, PEARL BAILEY
. fcttj Vtfl rnfccri It BOtHU HKM
0niM nn CUftl - fen w4 farm) kf j
mm nmm mt urn uuli m
WiYJP
Don't- Forget!
4 Kolor Kartoons
For Kids From 6 to 60
ROCK HUDSON
Miss CORNELL BORCHERS
CO-HIT!
SHOW AT DUSKI
THE OZARKS
hills are Tx. Ill
mi I ixi ij 1 1
MERKEL TED da CORSIA
Paramount praatnH""-
j -ALSO- . I
j The Story of Jaeade :
: ... The Last of the i
i Maverick Killers! j
Data Robertson i
"A DAY OF FURY"