Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, July 21, 1956, Image 3

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    Salem, Oregon, Saturday, July 21, 1956
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
Section 1Pagti S
Nevada Flash
Flood Leaves
Four Missing
Six Injured, Part
Of Reno Covered
By Water
RENO, Nev. -Four persons
disappeared in the churning wa
ters of Galena Creek last night
following a cloudburst and moun
tain flash flood.
Six other persons were injured
as scattered floods covered a sec
tion of Reno, closed highways and
wrecked automobiles over a wide
section of western Nevada and the
California High Sierra.
All the missing persons were
lost when Galena Creek cut a ra
vine through the Mt. Rose road
between here and Lake Tahoe.
Steel Parleys
To Keep Going
Over Weekend
Industry, Union Remain
Silent on Progress
Of Negotiations
PITTSBURGH OB-For the first
time since the nationwide steel
strike began July 1, union and
industry negotiators called a
weekend bargaining session today
in an attempt to reach a contract
settlement.
However, the negotiaors quickly
poincd out that the Saturday
meeting in itself was no indica
tion of progress. They said it
would be just another effort to
eliminate obstacles.
Neither David J. McDonald,
United Steelworkcrs president,
nor John A. Stephens, top industry
negotiator, would comment on de
velopments in yesterday's one
hour and 20 minute session.
Both sides, however, denied re
ports the industry had made a
new offer. They said there has
been no change in positions held
when 650,000 steelworkers struck
90 per cent of the nation's steel
producing mills.
Joseph F. Finnegan, Federal
Mediation Service director, met
with the principals for 10 minutes
after the session and also de
- dined to comment. --:
McDonald has ...rejected an in
dustry offer of a 52-month con
tract, saying it was "too little and
too long." The industry valued the
hourly package proposal at 17 2-3
cents during the first year. Mc
Donald said it amounted to 14
cents.
The strike has idled more than
100,000 persons in related indus
tries, chiefly railroads and coal
mining.
The National Coal Assn. esti
mates about two million tons of
coal production is lost each week
the strike continues. The associa
tion said a similar amount of steel
production is also being lost.
Athey Pleads
Killing Guilt
HOOD RIVER Wi James Bel
ton Athey, charged with man
slaughter in the gun shot death of
an employe last month, Friday
entered a plea of guilty.
Haskel Morrison of Oklahoma
City, Okla., died alter being
..A-A fi..n lima, in a riicnilte
at a farm labor camp near Park-jAniin 19-year-old son of Prince
4.1. Morrison was working in a!Aly Khan, wrecked his fathers
crew headed by Athey.
Circuit Judge Malcolm Wilkin
son of Wasco County ordered a
nre - sentence investigation for
Athey,
Ariz.
whose home is at Elroy,
Defense Counsel's Mystery Trip
Delays Court Martial of McKeon
By BEM PRICE
PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. W) A
mysterious trip by defense attor
ney Emile Zola Berman left the
court-martial of Marine S. Sgt.
Matthew C. McKeon in weekend
recess here today.
McKeon is on trial because of
the tragic night march he led into
a swamp here April 8. Six of the
74 recruits on that march
drowned.
Berman asked for and got yes
terday a cancellation of today's
scheduled session because he said
he had to make a flying trip in
connection with the case.
A defense spokesman declined
to say where Berman was going
and whom he will sec. He did in
dicate that the mystery trip is in
connection with potential testi
mony or evidence in the case.
The story of the tragic march
that McKeon led was unfolded
from the stand yesterday in the
command-crisp voices of marine
combat veterans and the hesitant
Inn.l nf VOUth.
Th Mcclnn saw McKeon's sen-
!.. i.-mi inctrnrtnr describe himi"vcs. sir.'
a "outstanding'' and the court
hold that marine training methods
f ihn nasi rnuld be introduced
In evidence.
wrificallv McKeon is charped The vounu marine also offered i tors to conduct marches into the j short sleeve shirts for the surn
uiVh moliintarv manslaughter. I the opinion that the discipline; swamps and "boondocks." He mcr. Cpl. Walter Early first ob
1...! nf reVruils and drink-! among Platoon 71 "was not good." said, however, he had never donejjected. then got special permission
tno on dulv He is not cnargca,
however, with being drunk.
The flood also closed a nearbv
section of U.S. Highway 395, the
main north-south route through
western Nevada and eastern Cali
fornia.
Elsewhere, heavy' rainstorms in
western Maryland, West Virginia,
Virginia and Pennsylvania caused
local floods and one death a 5-year-old
boy drowned after falling
off a water-covered bridge in
Charlottesville, Va.
Matt Wachwoicz of Sacramento.
Calif., was found only slightly in
jured five miles downstream from
the point where Galena Creek
washed his car off the road,
said Wachwoicz sought unsuccess
fully to save his wife and two of
their, children. Another son, Fred,
10, was .'ound near the scene with
only minor injuries.
Also missing in the same area
is William Boyett of Reno.'
lhe search was hampered by
near freezing temperatures, which
came with darkness, and waist
deep mud.
Higlrvay patrolmen and sher
iff's deputies reported the roads
in the flooded areas littered with
abandoned cars and huge bould
ers. At least three cars were flung
into the trees in a ravine.
Treated at Washoe Medical Cen
ter for minor injuries were an Arl
ington, N.J., family, Mack Res
nick, his wife and 12-year-old son,
Charles, and a Reno man, W. J.
Barbash.
The violent thunderstorm which
lashed the High Sierra with bril
liant lightning and dumped cloud
bursts on precipitous watersheds
closed at least one pass over the
Sierra.
Water cascading down the
slopes of Peavine MoiTntain north
west of here overflowed irrigation
ditches and carried silt to the
doorways of downtown Reno gam
bling casinos.
The same flurry of mountain
storms dumped a clcudburst on
Sonora Pass in California yester
day afternoon.
The division of highways closed
the pass after two hours of heavy
downpour had sent Cloudburst
Creek, east of the summit, roar
ing out of its banks and covering
State Highway 108 .with four feet
of water.
3 Oregonians
Meet Violent
Death Friday
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Three persons, two of them
youngsters, met violent deaths in
accidents in Oregon Friday.
John Ray Phillcy, 10, of Rose-
burg, was killed outright when he
was thrown from a logging truck
as it plunged off a road.
He was a passenger in the
truck, driven by Jack Hindman.
which ran out of control when the
brakes failed north of Roseburg.
Hindman stayed in the truck and
was not injured.
James Richard Kcrcher, 14, of
Central Point drowned in an irri
gation ditch three miles north
west of Central Point. The boy,
who could not swim, fell into 15-
feet of water when logs he was
playing on rolled over.
Frank Lee Vaughn, 61, Grants
Pass, was killed by a rolling log
while working in the woods west
of Rogue River.
AI,V'S SON WRECKS CAR
NICE, France tfl Prince
red Alfa-Romeo sports car Satur
day but escaped unhurt. He was
returning from Monte Carlo to
his father's villa at Cannes when
the car hit a parked automobile
and piled into a palm tree.
If convicted, the 31-ycar-old
father of two and his wife is cx-p-cting
a third could receive a
raximum sentence of perhaps six
years and a disnonorablc dis
charge. The first of lhe survivors of that
grim night in the mud and water
to take the stand was Pvt. Earl
Grabowski, 18. of Kearney, N.J.
The youngster told of coming
back from evening chow and
smelling alcohol on McKeon's
breath. "It could have been beer
or something." he said. The gov
ernment says it was vodka.
When McKeon broke out the pla
toon for the disciplinary march,
Grabowski related, "he told us we
were going for a swim."
Grabowski then recounted the
march across the rifle range.
"When we came to 'C range
we made a column left . . . Sgt.
McKeon said 'watch out for sharks
and snakes' or something like that
. . . he told us 'follow me'."
Berman asked, "there was a
considerable amount of kidding
around, wasn't there?" The baby
faced blond marine replied softly,
; Berman then asked:
"What kind of a drill instructor
was S.et. McKeon'''
I "A R00 onc- "'
uraoowsKi saia ine mami minis" nu muni imuj ui ui
I about two feet straight into thelone who had.
; r-'k , .... s.
f (
KS 1
B .-..J-n.-..yf,..J.-u-J:i ---Jy,,.'...,;. fI, ,. . r..r--f
AURORA Opening of Aurora's centennial celebration Friday v
night wan marked by an historical pageant presented on an out
door stage near the city park. Upper photo shows crowd seated
- on hillside to watch the program. In lower photo Elias Keil,
grandson of the founder, is shown playing a Strauss waltz for
entertainment of the audience. (Capital Journal Photos by Mike
Forbes)
Growers Okay '57
Wheat Restrictions
Assure Selves of
Same Priee as
This Year
WASHINGTON WI -Farmers
have voted for the fourth consec
utive year to allow Uncle Sam
to restrict the production and
sale of wheat.
They approved in a 36-stalc
referendum Friday an Agricul
ture Department proposal de
signed to restrict next year's crop
so it will not add to a rccord
brenking surplus overhanging
markets and crowding the na
tion's storehouses.
Virtually complete, unofficial
returns gave 228,839 votes for fed
eral marketing quotas and 32,767
against.
This was a favorable majority
of 87.5 per cent, which is far in
excess of the necessary two
thirds. In a similar referendum
a year ago producers voted 77.3
per cent in favor of quotas on
this year's crop.
In approving controls, farmers
assured themselves of a national
average price support of $2 a
bushel on next year's production,
the same as this year. Under
farm law, the price support would
have dropped to around $1.21 a
bushel had the quotas been re
jected. water, turned right for about 30
feet on a course paralleling the
bank.
There, he related, McKeon or
dered another column left and
moved again on a course parallel
to the bank. '
"That's when I dropped into a
hole." he said. "That's when the
panic broke."
The khaki-clad young marine
said he next saw McKeon on his
right and, swimming.
The rest was a story of men
grabbing each other in the dark
ness and struggling for survival.
Grabowski was followed on the
stand by another survivor, six
foot, 18-year-old Pvt. Melvin Bar
ber of New York City. Barber
said he was a non-swimmer and
identified three others whom he
classed as non-swimmers though
they had had 10 hours swimming
instruction.
Barber told of the march Into
the marsh and of what McKeon
said beforehand. "He told us the
ones that could swim would drown
and the others that couldn't would
be eaten by sharks."
Before the two survivors ap
peared, S. Sst. Edward A. Huff
of Chicago. 111., a combat veteran
of Korea and World War II. said;!" ofliccr.i in nibiirhan Lincoln
It was customary for drill instnic-i
Crowd Dots Hillside to See Pageant
k
The Pacific Northwest slates
voted overwhelmingly, in favor of
continued federal marketing quqo
tas on next year's wheat crop,
late returns showed Saturday.
Washington state wheat farmers
voted 6,030 in favor and 1,690
against, a 78 per cent majority in
28 of the 39 voting counties tabu
lated -.o far.
, Oregon voters in 32 of the 34
wheat-growing counties were 1,783
for and 214 against, a favorable
margin of nearly 90 per cent.
Idaho farmers voted 1.065 for
and 657 against, a 65 per cent
majority. -
Body Found in
N.Y. River not
That of Peter
NEW YORK W-Search for kid
naped Peter Weinberger continued
today after an autopsy showed
that a child's body found in the
East River was that of a new
born baby.
The body was found by a barge
captain yesterday.
The city'9s chief medical exam
iner, Dr. Milton Halpcrn, said
that the unidentified victim was
"between three and seven hours
old" at the time of his death.
The Weinberger baby was 32
days old when kidnaped July 4
from his parents' home in sub
urban Westbury on Long Island.
He would be seven weeks old now
if he Is still alive.
Mrs. Morris Weinberger, moth
er of the missing child, said "I
am confident I will get my baby
back. I know my baby is alive."
Rescue Gels
To Be Habit
CHARLESTON, S C. I - It's
getting automatic. Richard Hart
of Charleston gets into difficulty
and L, E. Cribb of .lames Island
comes to his rescue.
Last August, Cribb saw two men
jump into the Ashley River from
a burning trawler.
He commandeered a boat,
ripped a piece of wood from a ,
truck to use as a paddle and saved
the badly burned Hart.
Yesterday, Cribb took his boat
out into the Stono River to help
a stranded trawler that had run
out of fuel in midstream at night
fall. "Imagine my surprise," Cribb
said, "when I pulled alongside the
disabled Sea Spray and found i
Richard Hart aboard." !
UK'S TOO TKNDKU
DKTROIT ii-When follow po
'r received permission 10 wear
I He sunburns easily.
M
ft
tin ,
sssd
HC Viewed as
No-End Issue
By Neuberger
WASHINGTON Ul - Hells Can
yon will be a political issue in
the Pacific Northwest during the
coming campaign "and for many
elections to come, Sen. Neuber
ger (D-Orc) said Saturday.
Neuberger pointed out in a
statement that only two Republi
cans voted for a bill to authorize
a federal dam in the Hells Canyon
stretch of the Snake River along
the Idaho-Oregon border. The Sen
ate rejected the measure Thurs
day, 51-41.
He said also that "all 11 Repub
lican senators from the Far West"
voted against lhe bill and debat
ers called attention to opposition
from the Republican governors of
the three Pacific Northwest
states.
"I will not venture predictions,"
Neuberger said, "all I will say is
this if the people of the North
west still favor undertakings like
Bonneville and Grand Coulee they
will have an opportunity for many
elections to choose clearly at Uhe
polls between friends and ene
mles. , . ."
2 Chiefs Vie
For City Job
MIAMI, Fla. il One police
chief at a time is the goal of city
fathers of suburban Hialeah Gar
dens.
They hope a circuit court hear
ing Thursday will unscramble the
current situation in which two men
claim to be chief.
: A majority of the council told
Gircuit Judge Grady Crawford
they fired Mayor J. A. Grimsley
as chief and directed him to ap
point a temporary successor. They
complained that Grimsley
slraigntway appointed himself.
Furthermore, said the council
members, Grimsley still main
tains he's chief and won't . turn
over badge, car or office to Wil
liam J. Gcronimo Jr., whom they
appointed m me job yesterday,
Brooks Burn Burns
BROOKS A small barn on the
Sam Ramp farm near here burned
Friday causing a loss ol approxi
mately J.1O0. Ramp said the fire
apparently started by spontaneous
combustion in a quantity of new
hay. The building was not insured.
Salem Meat Co.
ieefl
Demos Stress
Farm Distress
In Colo. Talks
Adlai Preferred; Keef,
Averell Keep Up
Vote Quest '
By GORDON G. GAUSS
BOULDER, Colo. WI - Three
Democratic presidential aspirants
swinging through the West in
whirlwind drives for national con
vention voles, lashed out at
the Eisenhower administration in
speeches to Colorado Democrats
during a two-day meeting.
They emphasized distress in the
farm areas.
Gov. Averell Harriman of New
York came here to speak today
after declaring In an address yes
terday: lhe Republican party.
always dominated and preoccu
pied with the interest of big busi
ness, has turned its back on the
farmer." '
Adlai Stevenson, who holds the
majority of Colorado's 20 votes at
the Chicago convention, said the
President and Agriculture Secre
tary Benson . have watched the
farm depression expand during the
past few years with philosophic
calm.
Sen. Estes Kefauver declared in
a speech last night that the Demo
cratic sponsored farm bill was
"intended to lift agriculture out
ol the doldrums in which Elsen
hower and Benson have plunged
it.
"President Eisenhower," he
added, "was against that effort.
He vetoed the bill.
Harriman, on a five-state tour,
came here from Great Bend, Kan.
are victims ow what he called the
broken campaign promises and
brokn campaign promises and
shortsighted farm policies of Ei
senhower..
'In a little less than three
years, farmers and ranchers have
lost more than a third, of their
net income," he said.
Stevenson, after keynoting lhe
Colorado Democratic convention
left for Cheyenne, Wyo., wlteie
he spoke last night. He had a dale
in Tonopah, Nov., at noon today
for a meeting with stato Demo
cratic delegates.
In Cheyenne, Stevenson said a
'farm depression" is gripping the
United States. He said he learned
on a recent visit to Maine that
two out of three farms in that
state are being abandoned.
Kefauver arranged to move on
to Cheyenne for a meeting tonight
with Wyoming national convention
delegates.
Although 21 of Colorado's con
vention delegates, each with half
a vote, told reporters they fa
vored Stevenson, neither Kefauver
nor Harriman gave up the quest
for votes.
Harriman Invited all delegates
to a breakfast, Kefauver met with
the delegation shortly after Ha
election was completed.
The Colorado dclegaion goes to
the national convention un
pledged, although delegates can
stale their prelcrcnces. Stevenson
forces assumed control of this
group, electing National Commit
teeman George Rock, a Denver
banker, as delegation chairman
Rock has been an avowed Steven
son supporter for months.
Harriman has 2'4 Colorado
votes clinched, on the basis of
statements to newsmen, and Ke
fauver is assured of one vote.
1325 So. 25th St.
ieef k17 j
Youth's Body
Found; Rites
Held Saturday
The Marion county coroner's of
fice Friday alternoon recovered
the body of 18-year-old William
Parks, Newport, Ark., who was
drowned In the Santiam River
Monday while swimming there.
Nine-year-old John Caywood,
Jefferson, sighted the youth's body
on a gravel bar in the river about
a quarter of a mile down stream
from the bridge at Jefferson,
where Parks had been swimming
when he disappeared. It was sight
ed about noon and police informed.
A deputy in the Marion county
coroner's office returned the body
to Salem and graveside services
were held for young Parks at the
City View cemetery Saturday af
ternoon at 2 o'clock with the Howell-Edwards
chapel In charge.
The Marion county sheriff's of
fice has been attempting to locate
the parents of Parks who report
edly are picking beans. A check
was made in the Hood River area
Friday night by the sheriff's of
fice and they were given the infor
mation that the family was in the
Gresham area. Tho boy's mother
earlier this week called the coro
ner's office, but she did not leave
an address.
Clara McKee
Dies at Amity
AMITY Miss Clara McKee,
82, who lived most of her life
on a farm three miles south of
Amity, died Friday after a long
illness.
Miss McKee was born in the
Sola Hills district Aug. IS, 1874.
She was educated in the public
schools and at Bethel College. In
1801 Miss McKee moved to the
farm near Amity purchased by
ner parents, John W, and Mis
souri McKee.
Surviving aro two sisters, Mrs.
Maude Masters, Amity, and Mrs.
Lcda lams, Myrtle Point; and
four brothers, John and Lee Mc
Kee, Amity; and Elmer, Salem,
ind William McKee, Portland.
Services will be at 1:30 p.m.
Monday at Macy and Son Funeral
chapel, McMinnville. Burial will
be in Bethel cemetery.
Death Takes
Hilda Spence
WOODBURN Mrs. Hilda
Spence, 53, died Friday after a
long illness at her home on Rt,
1, Hubbard. She had lived in the
district since 1946 coming to Ore
gon from North Dakota in 1942
She was a member of the Hub
bard Gospel church.
Mrs. Spence was born at Joicc,
Iowa, Jan. 9, 1903.
Surviving are her husband.
John, Hubbard: five sons. Dean.
fohn, David and Richard Spence,
Hubbard, and James Spence,
Portland; and two brothers, Tel
ford Anderson, North Dakota,
and Ernest Anderson, Portland.
Services will be at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ringo-Cornwcll
Funeral Chapel, Woodburn. Bur
ial will be in Belle Passl ceme
tery.
Bank Robbe
IV
Guilt Pleaded
ByOregonian
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. WI -
Marvin E. Frederickson, 20, of
Gold Bench, Ore., Friday pleaded
guilty to being an accessory in
the $28,000 robbery of a bank at
Starke, Fla., July 5.
Frederickson said that Clinton
Emil Wlthington told him of the
robbery plan about two weeks be
fore the July 5 robbery.
frederickson and Wlthington,
who has not yet come un for a
plea, arc sailors stationed at
nearby Cecil Field.
Mrs. Mary Ann Reid, 24, plead
ed guilty to receiving stolen
money.
Slevcnson Keeps
300 Waiting While
He Changes Pauls
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (JR - Adlai
Stevenson's speech to Wyoming
Democratic leaders last night was
delayed half an hour while the
1952 presidential nominee changed
his trousers.
On his arrival here from Bould- i
or, Colo., officials noticed the !
trousers were torn behind the ;
right knee. I
Stevenson, apparently previous
ly unaware of it changed in an
upstairs room at a hotel while
about 300 persons waited in a ban
quet room.
Phone 3-48581
Actress to . Wed,
Give , Up Career
SAN DIEGO, Calif. Wi-The par
ents of Maria English, 21. Holly
wood movie actress, said today
she was giving up her film career
for marriage. ..' ,' .-
Mr. and Mrs, Arthur II. Eng
lish announced their daughter's
engagement for an August 19 mar
riage, to A. Paul Sutherland,
young San Diego businessman and
son of A. J. Sutherland, bank
president.
Miss English co-starred with
John Veland in "Hell's Horizon '
and had leading roles in other pic
tures. i
Adams Funeral
Rites Monday
Evelon Stoddard Adams, who for
25 years before his retirement 13
years ago was a machinist at f ro
ducers Cooperative Packing com
pany here, died Friday at a Salem
nursing home.
Adams, a Salem area resident
for 43 years, was born November
9, 1874, at Pittsfield, 111. On com
ing to Oregon he settled between
Silvcrton and Salem and worked
on farms there for a number of
ears. He moved to Salem about,
.921. -
For the last 10 years Adams
had made his home with his
daughter, Mrs. Frank Way, route
2, box 522. He Had been at the
nursing home about six weeks.
Surviving besides the daughter
is a brother, Clarence Duane Ad
ams, Seattle, Wash., and four
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
the W. T. Rigdon chapel Monday
morning at 10 o'clock and will be
conducted by a fellow member of
the Christian Science church. Inter
ment will be In Bclcrest Memorial
park.
Death Claims
Clair Thomas
Funeral services will be held In
Portland at the Ross Hollywood
Funeral home Monday afternoon
at 1:30 o'clock for Clair Thomas,
former Salem resident. Interment
is to be in the Willamette Na
tional Cemetery, where military
services will be held.
Thomas, who died Wednesday at
a Portland hospital, had been ill
for several years.
Born at Collnx, Wash., January
1910, Thomas resided In Salem
for six or seven years prior to
World war 11 and attended baiem
high school. During World War II
he served with the 41st Field
Artillery. Thomas was a member
of Portland Post No. 1, American
Legion.
Surviving are four sisters, Mrs.
Ruth Baircy, Salem, Mrs. Phyllis
Lewis, Mrs. Alberta Fein and Mrs
Mary Scott, all Portland; and two
brothers, Dana Thomas, Portland,
and Charles . Thomas.
Mock Raid Spurs
Work on Shelter
LOS ANGELES UV-The mock
bombing that theorltically
"killed 696,000 persons in metro
politan Los Angeles had at least
one concrete effect.
James J. Andrews, a telephone
company worker of Inglcwood
hastened to the Inglewood City
Hall to obtain a building permit
for a concrete bomb shelter in
his backyard.
Mid Willamette
Obituaries
Mrs. James Ruby
SCIO Funeral services for
Mrs. James Ruby will be Monday
at 2 p.m. at the Scio Baptist
church.
Mrs. Ruby passed away
Wednesday evening at the Leb
anon Community hospital, follow
ing a long illness.
Rev. Gerald Manlcy and Rev.
Elvin Fast will officiate at the
service. Jost Funeral Home of
Lebanon is in charge.
Mrs. Ruby is survived by her
husband. James Ruby; three
daughters, Cynthia Cody; Laur-
ene Ma lone; Viola Ruby and one
son, Ray Ruby.
Be
TRUST
YOUR
DRUGGIST
is msm
fl
CAPITAL DRUG STORE
t Locations to Belter Serve You
Main Store: 405 State, Corner of liberty
Prescription Shop: 617 Chemeketa, Criffln Blrlg.
WE r.lVK ORKEN STAMPS
OUR STORE IS AIR-CONDITIONED BY FRIG1DA1RE
SHOP HERE COMFORTABLY
Annie Hysler,
Longtime Area
Resident, Dies
Funeral services 'will be held
Tuesday morning at 10:30 o'clock
at the W. T. Rigdon chapel for
Mrs. Annie Hysler, 1865 South
12th St., who died at a Salem
nursine home Friday. Concludinf
services will be in the City View
cemetery.
Mrs. Hysler was born Septem
ber 16, 1880, in England and
came to Oregon and to Salem in
1911. She was married in 1012 to
Pcrley Hysler,-who died in May,
1954. Mrs; Hysler was a member
of the First Methodist church.
Survivors Include two daugh
ters. Mrs. John Church and Mrs.
Oscar Phillips, both Salem; a son,
Kenneth Hysler, Portland; two
brothers, Harold Isherwood, Sa
lem, and Norman Isherwood,
Yuba City, Calif.; a sister, Mrs.
Phyllis Tucker, saiem, ana iu
grandchildren. '
2 Italian Girls
Drown at Beach
VENICE, Italy W-Two Italian
girls one 15 and the . other 13
drowned off a popular tourist
beach here yesterday when cur
rents swept them out into . th
Adriatic Sea. A police launch res
cued a third girl. . . : : , '
"First reports said 9 or- 10 vaca
tioning children had been caught
in the current. - .
Deaths
Evelon Stoddard Adams
In this city July 20th, late resident
of Rt. 2, Salem, at the age of 81
years. Father of Mrs. Frank Way of
Salem. Brother of Clarence Duane
Adams of Seattle. Wash, Four grand
children also survive. Services will
be held Monday, July 23, at 10:00
a.m. In the Rose Chapel of the W. T.
Rigdon Co, Concluding services 'will
be at Belcrest Memorial Park. Serv
ices will be conducted by a fellow
member of the Christian Science
Church.
Kalhy Marie Alt
At Anacortes, Wash., July 19, at the
age of 7 years. Daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Alt of. Anacortes,
Wash, Services will be held Monday,
July 23rd at 2:00 p.m. in the First
Baptist church under the direction
of Howell-Edwards Funeral Chapel. ,.
Rev. Ben Owen will officiate. Inter
ment,. Belcrest Memorial Park.'
Paul F. Carter , t
At a local hottnltal. Julv ISthL lata
resident of 2210 Electric Ave. Sur
vived by 3.aaugmcrs, Mrs. Bonnit
Norman, sail Laxe uuy, utan, Mrs.
Betty McCune, Santa Clara, Calif.
Mrs. Iris Mayer, Salem; 5 sons, Rich
ard R. Carter, Atwater, Calif., Robert
V. Carter, Kent, Wash., Leslie F.
Carter, Salem, James L. Carter. En
glewood, Calif , Joseph L. Carter,
Roslyn, Wash.; 2 brothers, Henry E.
Carter, Tangent, Oregon, Carl
Carter, Richland, Wash.; 20 grand I
children, services win d nem Mon
day. July 23rd at 10:00 a.m. la th
cnapei ot me uiougn-namcit v,a
nev. J , oiannara will oiuciaie. in
terment, Restlawn Memory . Gardens.
Annie Hysler
In this city, July 20th. Late resl
dent of 1865 S. 12th.' Mother Of Mrs.
John Church and Mrs1. Oscar Phillips,
both of Snlcm; Kenneth Hysler of
Portland, Ore. Sister of Harold Ish
erwood of Salem and Norman Isher
wood of Yuba City, Calif.,, and Mrs.
Phvlis Tucker of Salem. Services will
be held Tuesday, July 24, at 10:30
a.m. in the Rose Chapel of the W. T.
Rigdon Co. Concluding services will
be at the City view cemetery,
William Parks
Late resident of Newport, Ark., at
Jefferson, Ore., July 16, at the age
of 18 years. Graveside services were
held Saturday, July 21st, at 2:00
p.m., at City View cemetery, under
the direction of the Howell-Edwards '
Funeral Chapel.
Benjamin J, C. Patron
At the residence. 328 S. Pine St.. '
of Albany. Ore.. Mrs. Elma Jones of
3 daughters, Mrs. Catherine Felkert
of Anbany, Ort., Mrs. Elma Jones of
Eugene Ore,, and Roberta Larsen of
Salem: 2 sons. Paul L. Patton of Port
land, Ore., and Don B. Patton of Sa
lem: fi srandchfldren and 3 great
grandchildren also survive. Services
win De neia won., Juiy zj, hi i;ju
.m. in tnc uiogn-uarricK cnapei,
'he Re '. Shcllhart of Albany will ,
officiate, Ritualistic services by Pa
cific Lodge no. 60 a. f. & a.m. in
terment, Belcrest Memorial Park.
Mary Swayne
At a lorn I hoso ta . Julv 18th. Sh o-
ment has been made to Medford,
Oregon, by the Clough-Barrick Fu
neral cnapi tor services ana inter
ment. Everett Halley
Late resident of S72 Red Hill Dr.
at a local hospital July 21st at the
age of 63 years, survivea Dy sisters,
Mrs. Ruby Endres ot Salem, Mrs.
Mary Bailey also ot Salem and Mrs.
Chloe McBride of Sllverton, Ore.
Brother Fred Halley of Mt. Vernon,
Missouri, Frank Halley of Washburn,
N. Dak., Earl Halley of Tacoma,
Wash.. Joe Halley of Salem and John
Halley of Burlington, Wash, An
nouncements 01 services win do
made later by the Howell-Edwards
Funeral Home,
Two Ways To
Safeguard
Your Health
Turn to your doctor In time of Illness. Then,;,
to get the full benefit of his knowledge and
skill, turn to us to fill his prescription accu
rately and with the greatest of speed, using
only the finest, freshesf drugs.
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