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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1956)
CI apital Mjj omnial THE WEATHER MOSTLY FAIR and cooler tonight. Increasing cloudiness Friday, with occasional rain by late afternoon or evening. Low tonight 42; high Fri day, M. 4 SECTIONS 36 Pages 68th Year, No. 231 Salem, Oregon, Thursday, September 27, 1956 tntered u mcoi natter at Salem Russians Take Tito jf . ToSoviet Surprise Trip for 'Vacation' Stirs Speculation BELGRADE, Yugoslavia IJ1 .1 rresiueni mo leic inursaay wun j Soviet Communist Party boss Ni- Mia nnrusntnev lur a surprise visit to the Soviet Union. Tito was accompanied by his wife Johanka, vice president Alek lander Rankovlj and Djuro Pu car, chairman of the State of Bos-nia-Hercegovina and a member of the Yugoslav Communist Party Politburo. ' .' . Like Khrushchev's equally un expected trip to Yugoslavia, Tito's latest visit to Russia was de scribed as a vacation. The offi cial Yugoslav news agency Tan jug said the party left the mili tary airport of Batajnica on a spe cial Soviet plane and will spend several days resting on the Black Sea.' coast. - '. Khrusky on 'Holiday' Khrushchev arrived in Belgrade Sept; 19 and got a private offi cial welcome from which all out siders were barred Officials in sisted, his visit was only a holi day, but most observers believed he came to strengthen further the renewed tics the .Soviets have been forging with Tito. Tito and Khrushchev spent sev eral days on Brioni, the Adriatic isle off the Yugoslav coast the Yugoslav president favors for va cations and privacy. There was speculation, that they talked at length ' about the world situation and relations between the Yugo slav and Soviet Communist Par tics. . Try to Firm Ties The current Kremlin leaders have made extended efforts to strengthen the ties between Yugo slavia and Russia. Khrushchev and Soviet Premier B u 1 g a n i n came lo Belgrade in June, 1955, to make peace with Tito for Stal in's having thrown him out of the Soviet-led Cominform. Last June Tito made a triumph al tour of the Soviet Union. V. M. Molotov, who had played a lead role in the Soviet campaign against the, Yugoslav leader be tween 1348 and 1955, was relieved of his post" as foreign minister on the eve :o( Tito's June visit. " ; I Tito's Sudden Jaunt Baffles U.S. Officials WASHINGTON ifl State De partment officials were amazed and bewildered Thursday by the sudden trip of Marshal Tilo of Yugoslavia to Russia with Soviet Communist Party Doss (ViKita v uauiucv. Yugoslav Communist leader could wreck the prospects for continu ing U. S. aid and close friendly relations with Tito. The Yugoslav aid program is now under review and President Eisenhower is due to decide by Oct. 16 whether it should be continued. Scheduled for future delivery. if the President decides to go ahead, are scores of jet fighter planes. The exact number has not been disclosed officially. News reports of Tito's visit to Russia caught State Department officials completely by surprise. The surprise was heightened by the fact that there had been indi cations la diplomatic reports from Belgrade in the last few days that Tito was annoyed by Khrush chev's sudden visit to Yugoslavia beginning last week. Tito is aware that the future of U. S. aid to his country is now up for decision and that any substan tial evidence of tighter relations between him and the Soviet lead ers would jeopardize its continu ance. X-2 Crashes, Pilot Killed EDWARDS AFB. Calif. (UP)- rhe world's fastest experimental airplane crashed tooay within two minutes after it was released from the belly of its B50 mother plane, the Air Force announced. The pilot was killed. , Thepilot. Capt. Milburn G. Apt, 32- Bulfalo, Kan., was on a rou tine indoctrination flight when. the accident occurred at 9 a.m. PDT, the spokesman said. The plane, dubbed the X-2. crashed at the northeast corner of the base reservation and the pilot's body was found, in the cockpit of the aircraft. Cause of the crash was not immediately known. The XI, a stainless steel high altitude research plane, recently was flown at an altitude of 126,000 feet. On a separate flight It reached a speed of 1,900 m p h. Weather Details Vulfnum YMtrrdir. 1: miRimnni tir, 4:. TaUI 24 -hour precipitation: trirr; for month: J3; normal, 1.21. taia prrriplUtleB. Ji: normal. 1-M. Klrvr h'.fht, -11 iPtU (Report ft? V I. WMthtr Ihi.) SPORTS QUEEN DIES Cancer Ends Life Of Babe Zaliarias (Further Details on Page 1, Sec. 4) GALVESTON-, Tex. (UP) Babe Didrikson Zaharias, ' the greatest woman athlete of modern times, died today, the loser in a- heroic three-year bout with cancer The end came at 5:28 a.m. PDT in John Scaly Hospital, nearly six months, to the day after the Babe entered' it for the last time on March 29. Dr. George A.W. Currie, hospi tal administrator, said that the Babe's husband, former wrestler George Zaharias, and two of the Babe's brothers and one of her sisters were at the bedside of the 42-year- old . former Olympic champion and first lady of golfi f uneral plans were incomplete, but it was learned that Mrs. Zaharias' body would be cre mated in Houston and that final rites would be held in Beaumont, where she and her Norwegian parents made their home since the Babe was three years old. The lone illness, which the Babe and her doctors once thought they had defeated after an operation for rectal cancer in 1953, caused the Babe to waste away from a husky 140-pound bundle of athletic perfection to well below 100 pounds at the end. The great woman athlete died in her sleep, with her husband at her bedside. He cried, his hulking Ji5-pound frame shaking with sobs after the months of waiting. - it had to come, he said. "and it was merciful.. .quiet and peaceful. She took her last breath peacefully, like, say, she took her Churchmen's Help on Tribe Problem Asked Governor, to Seek Interim Study On Indians ; Oregon- cliurchmen were told Thursday in Salem they could solve the Klamath Indian problem if they stop just talking about it and get to, work." The advice came from A. Har vey Wright, state director of In dian education, at a meeting spon sored by the Oregon Council of Churches and the . Willamette Uni versity sociology and anthropol ogy department to study the Kla math problem. Wright, addressing the 200 per sons at the meeting, said in pre pared remarks, church members should help the Klamaths get jobs and training. "This problem can be solved," he declared, "if the church peo ple will lend a helping hand. It will require time, money, energy and patience." Wright suggested as a starter (hat church members take young Indian delinquents into their homes to educate them and give them a good environment. He also announced that Gov. Elmo Smilh would ask the Legis locture to create an interim com mittee to make a complete study of the entire Indian situation. Its objective would be to lind a way to give Indians their freedom, while protecting them and the county and state governments. No conclusions were expected from the all-day meeting, called to study problems created by fed eral legislation to free the Klam aths. Taxers Tie Up Dickson Fluids To Get $1,800 ALB AMY (Specif) Earl Dick son, Albany grocer, was actually penniless Tuesday, save for what he took in over the counter at his store, Dickson's Corral. The defeated candidate for gov ernor of Orejjon was barred by the U.S. Internal Revenue depart ment from his every bank ac count. Even his safety deposit box at the Community branch, U. S. National, was sealed. Wednesday Dickson s plight was much improved. He was given access to all his resources, save for about $1,800 extracted by the internal revenue dep 1ment to satisfy the last ?maining portion of a $3,600 income tax claim which Dickson has been trying to per suade the tax bureau to wipe out by accepting coupons, which he asserts some of the large suppliers have refused to redeem. Accounts frozen were commer cial and savings deposits in Al bany and savings deposits in a Portland bank. Tuesday's incident was a devel opment in Dickson's "Koupon Kru sade." started several years ago, to direct national attention to the practice of big produrers of mer chandise in issuing coupons (0 be credited by purchasers on articles ! nova, have applied for visas which of the same nature produced and j will be granted. More than $100. sold by the same producers. 000 worth of tickets have been sold Dickson maintains that coupons i for the ballet performances due to are not only a nuisance to retail ers but are fattening the wallets of coupon-issuing companies inas much as only about 10 per cent of the coupou they issue are ever redeemM. JiV SLEEP BABE ZAHARIAS first one. She just finished off. "It's been a long fight and a hard one. The Babe fought so hard, the only way she knew how to fight, not just with her body but with her heart and mind." George said at midnight the Babe stirred, blinked and smiled at him and said, 'George I ain't gonna die.' " He said those were the last words she spoke. "She went to sleep again then," he said. "She was worried about me because she could see I was so worried about her. "From then on she went down hill. Her breathing became weak er and more labored. Finally, she just stopped breathing. The game's all over now." Dr. L. S. Cressman, head of the anthropology department of the university of Oregon, said: ' tnc Klamath Indian faces a crisis situation, one that is emo tionally disturbing and caDable of production of all kinds Qf anxieties. anu..iears. . . He said the, Indians need re assurance that they are not being victimized, and that the people of the surrounding community must neip provide tnu hope. "It is necessary," he said, "to maintain the self-respect of the Indians, to help him to be proud of his tradition, and never to put him under pressure to deny his proud racial heritage." Groups can be assimilated into a society, he said, only when they are considered equals. Such assimilation, he said, can't be attained when there is discrim ination in jobs and housing. 'Flossy' Pours 6-Foot Flood OverNorfolk NORFOLK, Va. (UPl-Hurricane Flossy sideswiped the Virginia coast today, flooding some areas of downtown Norfolk with six feet of water. Radio Station WCMS said the flood was as bad as the deluge of last April when a northeastern storm grounded two freighters and caused the burning of a water front pier. A flood peak of 74 inches of wa ter was reported at 4:15 a.m. EDT. Flood damage cannot be esti mated at this time, but water has blocked off all traff' to downtown areas since 1:30 p.m. Wednesday. Flossy's winds were reported blowing over the city at a steady 35 , to 50 miles per hour. The weather bureau reported the center of the hurricane as halted by a dome of cold high pressure air off the North Carolina coast. Storm winds pushed northward as in the woods, the forestry de fer as southern New England. jpartment says that hunters who High tides were reported three feel a little apprehensive about lo five feet at ve normal from 'getting lost should turn in an Cape Hatteras, N.C. to southern: old sock before heading for the New Jersey and two to four feet j timber. above normal from New Jersey to "We'll file a sock o a back Provincctown, Mass. I yard clothesline," said a for- ifBritain Won't Drop Russ Athlete Trial LONDON Britain disclosed Thursday it has turned down a Russian request to drop a charge of shoplifting against discus thrower Nina Ponomareva. The Russians have indicated they would cancel the sold-out ap pearance in London next month of the Bolshoi Theater Ballet un less their Olympic champion was cleared. However, a British Foreign Of fice spokesman said the Bolshoi dancers, headed by Galina Ula- open at Covent Garden next Wed nesday. The British want Ihe Rus sians to turn over Nina for trial. The Foreign Office announced Minister of atale Anthony Nutting formally advued Soviet Charge VP Calls For Race Equality Louisville Speech Urges Moderate Solution LOU"VlLLE, Ky. W Vice President Nixon said Thursday "law and judicial decisions alone" will not solve the problems of inte gration, but education and per suasion" would bring the solution, "The extremists of both sides of this question do an irreparable harm to the great objective which all Americans of good will seek," he said in a speech prepared for delivery at a University of Louis ville convocation. . In what was billed as his first "major" speech on the subject of integration since he started his campaign tour more than a week ago, Nixon reiterated the views he gave a news conference in Houston, Tex., Wednesday, Progress Made A major goal of the Eisenhower administration, he said, is "the realization of the Amerl c a n dream of providing, equal oppor tunity for all our citizens regard less of race, creed or color." "We have made progress to ward this goal," he said. "We have recognized that in the long run education and persuasion rather than compulsion are the most effective weapons in dealing with this problem at the national level. ,..-.-! - "Our goal can best be achieved through evolutionary rather than revolutionary means, he added. The cost of economic discrimi nation against the nation's 17 mil lion Negroes, he said, runs into billions of dollars annually. ; Need Their Skills . "In a highly complex world in which technology may decide the course of history," he added, "we desperately need the scientists, the engineers, the other skilled personnel that our Negro popula tion will produce if they are given an equal opportunity for education with others in our country." Woman Flees After Knifing City Divorcee A Salem woman was cut four times with a knife wielded by an other woman Wednesday, city po lice reported. Mrs. Jessie Day, 1396 NorlH Commercial St., said a woman she did not know came to her back door. When Mrs. Day went to the door to see what the other woman wanted, the woman slashed at her face with a knife, Mrs. Day reported. The initial slash opened a small wound. in Mrs. Day's check and she then suffered three more mi nor cuts in the arm as she threw it in front of her face to protect herself, according to her report. The woman yelled something at her about no', marrying a man and then fled eastward, Mrs. Day said. She is a divorcee, Mrs. Day said. Police said Thursday they had been unable to find any trace of the knife-wielder. Sock-f or-Saf ety Call Directed at Hunters The "Socks-for-Safety" call is sued . Wednesday by the State Forestry department had drawn a blank Thursday morning, but officials renewed the request for the approaching hunting season. While actually a tongue-in-cheek campaign to stress safety d'Affaires N. A. Roschin the due process of British justice must take its courr. .'utting said the British government could not in tervene in a rr .er "in the hands of the court." The 27-year-old feminine athlete war arrested and charged with steadiing five hats worth less than $5 on Aug. 29, while in London with a Russian team lo compete in a British-Soviet track meet. The Russians called the action a "dirty provocation" and called off the track meet. Nina, released on bail, failed to appear in court to face the charge on Aug. .10 and a warrant was issued for her ar-i rest. The woman is believed in hiding in the Soviet Embassy in London, w.nch has diplomatic immunity from March. iri iKe to step up campaign; Portland Speech Forecast Word on Tour Of NW Due In Week By JAMES D. OLSON Capital Journal Political Editor President Eisenhower is ex pected to be in Oregon in mid October and give a major address, probably in Portland, the Capital Journal learned from an authori tative Portland source Thursday. All plans arc not yet completed, it was said, but an announcement as to the date, time and place of the address is looked for from the White House within a week or ten days. . To Help Doug, Langley Leading Republicans in the state have hoped that Oregon would be included in the President's politi cal schedule, first because it is known that he is anxious to see Douglas McKay, his former Secre tary of the Interior, defeat Sena tor Wayne Morse. Second is his desire to scethe entire Oregon Republican ticket, including the three . Republican congressmen, win on November i. Moreover, the President Is like wise anxious to have Governor Ar thur Langley of Washington defeat Senator Warren Magnuson and very likely realizes that Langley is up against a tough race, as was indicated in Washington's primary when the incumbent Democratic senator outdistanced Langley in what amounted to a popularity contest by more than 100,000 votes. ' Would Enthuse GOP There is no question but that President Eisenhower's appear ance in Oregon will enthuse the Republican ranks and doubtless do considerably to aid M.Kay in his tough battle against Morse, as well as help the others on the Republi- cf; ticket in this campaign.: No information was rvailable as to where Eisenhower would speak but it Is assumed that he would choose Portland, although it could be Corvallis or Eugene, where fa cilities for handling large crowds are available. It is quite possible that Vice President Richard Nixon will make a second fall campaign ap pearance in Oregon and there has been some talk among Oregon Re publicans on requesting Tom Dew ey, former New York governor and twice Republican presidential nominee, to como to Oregon dur ing the present campaign. Dewey Might Spur 'Em Dewey made an outstanding talk at the Republican convention in San Francisco, some declaring that it was the best speech of his noteworthy career, Should he come he might dole out some political medicine that would be most un palatable to Senator Morse. California Republicans are en deavoring to have President Ei senhower make a major speech in that state, according to Earl Behr ens, political editor of the San Francisco Chronicle, and it may be a swing by airplane along the entire Pacific Coast will be worked out, including Oregon, Washington and California. estry official, "and if the owner gets lost, the dogs will have a ready-made scent to start out on." This is the second year of the "Socks f o r-Sa-fety" campaign, which last season brought in a bundle of socks, a lot of national publicity and a pair of black stcpins A few cautious hunt ers even added a compass to their packs. "Even those hunters who leave both socks at our nlficc should take a few precautionary meas ures before plunging inlo rug ged country," warned the forestry-officials. Staying in one place when lost, taking along waterproofed clothes and a candle, and staying wilh companions were named as 'important things to remember. I Being careful with campfiros was also stressed. The official said that any ock, efl by the hunters should definitely be a Utile soiled. "Last year one of the hounds sniffed a clean sock and led a search party straight lo a laun dry." Rain to Move In Tomorrow Fsir and cooler weather to night will be followed by in creasing cloudiness with light rain Friday, In the Salem area and northern Oreson. South western Oregon will be mostly sunny Friday. High temperatures for west ern Oregon are expected to be B2 lo 72. with low Thursday I night between 35 and 45. o i President With Mutual Security Group I v . i I i ' aai 1 Girl Chased For 4 Hours By Possemen GRANTS PASS (UP) A 14- year-old girl was captured by a sheriff's posse in brushy hill country west of here yesterday aft er a four-hour chase in the best wild west tradition. The girf, who recently moved here from Los Angeles, was stopped for questioning by two deputy sheriffs when they noticed her riding what turned out to be stolen horse. Deputy Paul Shelton said he let the girl ride off when she pulled ft revolver and threatened to drop him on the spot. During the chase that followed, possemen in cars were little match for the girl and her horse in the dense thickels and officers were reluctant to shoot. Shelton finally captured the girl when he advanced into a dark woodshed where she was hiding. She no longer had the gun. United Fund Daily Report Goal $227,800 Collected to Date ..$ 67,847 Percent of Total ...... 30 Today's Report 8,532 Do Your Share MSUUTORS SHOT BP A Asks FBI to Check Vandalism The frdi-ral bureau of Investi gation has been asked lo help In slopping repealed acts of dan gerous and eipenslve vandalism in power lines In the four-mile stretch between Salem and Che mawa, Bonneville ower admin istration officials announced Wednesday. During the past two and one half years, llnri. en have had to work under "hot line" condi tions or by prearranged power outages to replace 39 high vol tage insulator strings due to damage from rifle fire, District Manager L. A. Moore, reported. Damage lo the 113,000 volt transmission lin between the Salrm Alumina plant on Cherry avenue and Chemawa has run over $1,000, Moore estimated. Customer service is threat ened by Juvenile and olher marksmen using Ihe Insulators as targets, he said. Even chip ping el Ihe porcelain Insulators WASHINGTON President Elsenhower shares a laugh with UMW President John L. Lewis, left, and Benjamin Falrleas, former U.S. Steel chairman, sealed beside him at the White House today as ' members. o( a new citizen advisers on mutual security committee , posed lor pictures at their lirst meeting. Standing from left are . Richard B. Dcuprce, Proctor and Gamble board chairman; Jesse W. Tapp, Bank of America vice chairman! Colgate W, Darden, Jr., Virginia U. president i Whltelaw Reld, New York Herald Tribune board chairman. (AP Wlrephoto) , Ike Refutes Charges Of Appeasing Peron Milton Defended; Loans Made by Democrats WASHINGTON (UP) Presi dent Eisenhower today stoutly de fended his brother, Milton, against charges by Democratic presidential candidate Adlai E. Stevenson that he had figured in appeasement of ex-Prcsldent Juan Peron of Argentina. By way of counter attack, Mr, Eisenhower declared that Demo cratic administrations, not his ad ministration, had loaned $130 mil lion to the Peron government. His eyes flashing, Mr. Eisen hower said he had ordered the State Department to prepare a full report on Dr. Millon Eisen hower's efforts, as the President put it, to. promote belter friend ship In the Western Hemisphere, He said the Stale Department report will be made public wilh out comment when it is complet ed, President Rankled The President was clearly rankled by Stevenson's charge in a campaign speech at Miami that the Elsenhower administration had anncased Peron and that a mem- ibcr of the President's "personal family assumed a special, If In formal, responsibility for our re lationshlps with Argentina." Stevenson said the Eisenhower administration had "made loans to Peron and Peron In turn piled up balances of more than $1001 I P ran cause a "flashover" during rainy weather and cause a pow er outage. "If a conductor were burned In two as a result of an outage and dropped to the ground or on other low voltage power line, lives of people in the vicinity could easily be jeopardized," Moore said. "Families living near Ihe transmission line can help prevrnt loss if both lite and property by reporting any In stances ot Juvenll . or others firing at Ihe Insulators or struc tures." Persons observing any acts of vandalism are asked to get In touch Immediately wilh local aiithorlllrs or call the Eugene District Olflre collect, Telephone Diamond 5-031 1. As damage to the line Involves destruction lo federal pron-rty, such vandal ism Is subject lo heavy fine, lm prlsoavsent, or, both, Moore pointed nU ' f million in Switzerland for the ben efit of.. .Peron." Records of the Export-Import Bank show that the Eisenhower administration offered to lend I he government or businesses of Argentina million while Per on was in power but that none of the money actually was trans mitted. The Export - Import records shows that the Truman admini stration agreed to loans totalling more than $130 million for Peron s regime or Argentine business firms. Of this, about $101,700,000 (Continued on Page 6, Column 1) Appeal by UN Ends Shooting In Jerusalem JERUSALEM Ifl An uneasy calm hung over the' Israeli-Jordan border today after a brief new flareup of gunfire in this divided city. A U.N. cease-fire appeal brought the short blaze of automatic weap ons to an end last night with no casualties reported, It came less than 24 hours after a bloody Is raeli strike Into Jordan set off i round of intensive talks among Arab leaders. An Israeli army spokesman said (he gunfire continued inlcrmittcnt- ly for about an hour and was the worn oi snipers in me joraan-aa- lorn, shooting into the Israeli sec tor. He claimed there was no fir ing from Ihe Israeli side. U.N. truce observers reported that both Israeli and Jordanian forces immediately obeyed their call to halt last night's exchange in Jerusalem. Hut Jordan author ities hinted that large-scale Arab counteraction might be in the making unless the U.N. Security Council moves to stop such raids as the Tuesday-Wednesday over night attack in Jordan s llusan area. Boy's Derby Racer Stolen A 12-vear-old Salem boy Thurs dav reported Ihe theft of his car, Marvin Smilh, 12, 5505 mage Dr., said someone slJe his Soap Box Derby racer Irom his home sometime early this week. The racer shouldn't be hard to identify. It is flamingo colored and is lettered In blacK wun .varvins name and the name ol his spon sor in the Derby. Oregon Pulp and Paper company supervisors. Marvin says he would like to got Ihe racer back as he Intends to rebuild it and race it in the 1957 Salem Soap Box Derby. Sharp Replies Hit Adlai's Charges By DOUGLAS B. CORNELL Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON Wi - President Eisenhower said Thursday he is going to make two or three mor major campaign speeches than he had counted on. Eisenhower told a news confer ence, however, he Is not going ts do any barnstorming, and not go out whistle-stopping. He didn't say when or where the extra speeches, beyond the fivt -or six he originally contemplated, would be made. As for why he is stepping up his campaign pace, Eisenhower said it Is simply because so many rep- -resentations have been made to . him by good friends. No Health Question He said he found himself lit. tie weak about not accepting. And, Eisenhower said, as far ' as he knows there' is no health '. question involved at the moment in increasing his campaign pace,' Even now. Eisenhower said, h it not going to do one-tenth as much as people want hin. to do, It was a wide ranging news con ference, developing mostly around political questions and issues in one lorm or another, but wilh dashes of foreign affai.s sprinkled ' ; in. . Eisenhower, garbed In a- gray business suit with a vest and wear ing a dark blue necktie with two white elephants on it, was unusual ly late showing up for him. Ha . was Vh minutes behind schedule. The President started off with, a tribute to Mrs.. Babe Didrikson Zaharias, famed woman athlete who died early Thursday. - Everyone Saddened ; ' ' He lauded her last gallant flint against cancer and said that every one feels sad that she had to lose this last battle. With that, Ihe President opened the conference to questions and . the political drumfire started. After a first question about step- . ping up his campaign activity and his reply, the President also had some sharp comebacks to cam paign statements by his Demo cratical rival, Adlai E. Stevenson. . High spots of the conference: ' Leadership Eisenhower said ' that he would rather let associate! over Ihe years speak out oh the -question of his leadership. He said one of the things he treasures is a few paragraphs on that subject bv former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, who, he said. knows him better than some ot his critics. Eisenhower was speak ing in response to- an inquiry about a statement by Stevenson in Kansas City Wednesday night consistent rejection of the posi- live responsibilities of leader- : ' ship." Defends Milton , Brother Milton Elsenhower was even more emphatic in com menting on Stevenson's contention that Ihe administration, through the President's brother Milton ' appeased the Peron regime in Argentina. On the mailer of loans to the Argentine, Eisenhower told news- ; men with some heat , not to come -to him wilh that. He said it was under the Truman administration . that 130 million dollars in loans to the Peron government were authorized. That was in 1991, he said, and it wasn't a Republican . (Continued on Page 6, Column 3) News in Brief For Thursday, Sept. 27, 1M . NATIONAL Ike Announces He'U Stop Up Campaign . Sec. i, r. I President Defends Brother Milton Sec. , P. 1 Dogs and More Dogs Sec. 1, P. I , Blind Children Treated To Buggy Ride ... Sec. 1, r. 7 , Food Conference v i Report Sec. 2, P. 3 ' STATE Ike Will Appear ' in Oroifon Sec. 1. P. 1 FOREIGN " Tito Makes Surprise Visit to Russia .Sec. 1, P. 1 UN Appeals Halt Jerusalem Gunfire ..Sec. 1, P. 1 SPORTS Babe Zaharias Loses Fight With Cancer Sec. 4. P. 1 Braves Ahead, Need 3 Wins for Pennant ..Sec. 4, P. J REGULAR FEATURES Amusements ....Sec. 1, P, 2 Editorials Locals ... Society .. Comics ... See. 1, P. 4 Sec. 1, P. 6-7 Sec. 2, P. 1-2 , Sec. 3, P. 10 Sec. 4, P. ....Sec. 4, P. 3-4-5 Sec. 4, P. 3 Sec. 4, P. Television Want Ads Markets Dorothy Dix Crossword Puzzle Food ...See. 3, P. 19 .JU-Set