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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1956)
C aoital it iloiirna THE WEATHER PATCHES OF fog tonight and early Saturday morning, becoming most ly fair during the day, and in creasing cloudiness Saturday night. Little change in temperature. Low . tonight, 35; high Saturday, 10. 2 SECTIONS 20 Paget 68th Year, No. 238 Salem, Oregon, . Friday, October 5, 1956 Cntered as second ell matter tt 8alem. Orel . . T ,, f Dodgers Win 2nd Game of Worm series, 13-8 ; . - JL - - - . New York Fumbles 6-OLead Snider Hits 3-Run Honier and Berra Grand-Slams BROOKLYN m New York blew a 6-0 early lead Friday as the battling Brooklyn Dodgers fought back to grab the second game of the World Series, 13-8, in a wild contest that gave the Na tional League champions a 2-0 lead in the series. - A cro -d of 36,217 including Ad lai Stevenson, Democratic candi date for President, watched the hectic contest, as the Yankees sent a record total of seven pitch ers to the mound. The. subway series shifts to Yanked Stadium for the third gan S '.urday, with C.jm Labine or Carl ., Erskine the prbbable starling hurlers for Brooklyn, and "'. (Play-by-play on Page 5, Section 2) either Bob Grim or Whitey Ford for New York. A big second inning by both the Yankees and the Dodgers hign lighted Friday's contest, played under sunnv skies and in the rec ord elapsed time of 3 hours and 2R minutes for a 9-inning game. The skr'.h game of the 1947 series between the same two clubs at Yankee Stadium required 3 hours, 19 minutes, as Brooklyn won 8-6, Yogi Berra was the Yankee hero in the top half of the sec ond, as his 400 foot homer over the screen in right with the bases loaded put New York ahead 6-0. However, tne uoagers bounced right back and tied the score with six runs in the bottom half, high lighted by Duke Snidcr's three run blast over the scoreboard. Don Larsen started for New York, was knocked out in the sec ond, and Johnny Kucks, Tommy Byrne, ""om Sturdivant, Tom Mor gan, Bob Turley. and' Mickey Mc Dermott followed in order, at tempting to stem the Dodger bats. Morgan was the loser. - Don Bessent, third Dodger hurl er who came on tn the third inning and held the Yankees to seven hits, finished the game, allowing only two runs as he earned his first World Series victory. WORLD SERIES' Second Game 1 New York (AL) 150 100 001- 8 12 2 Brooklyn (NL) 061 110 02X-13 12 0 Larsen, Kucks (21, Byrne (2), Sturdivant' 13), Morgan (3), Tur ley 15), McDcrmott (6) and Ber ra; Ncwcombe, Roebuck (2), Bes sent O) and Campanella. , y-Bessent. L-Morgan. Home runs New York, Berra. Brooklyn, Snider. S-J Pledges 2 Percent of U.F.'s Quota For the third successive year the Statesman-Journal building's companies and. employes have subscribed more than two per cent of the United Fund's goal. Al Offenstein, chairman of the plant's U.F. chapter, announced cash and pledges totalling $4, 584.50, amounting ts $28.50 more than two percent of the $227,800 goal, which was only 55 percent subscribed Thursday, Last year the Statesman-Journal contribu tion was $4,367.50. Included In this project are the Statesman-Journal Newspa pers, employes and company, the Statesman Publishing com pany commercial printing plant, and the Salem Engraving com pany, all located In the build ing at 280 North Church. "When we accepted this two percent quota we knew it was considerably " more than our hare, for we are nowhere near two percent of this community," Offenstein said. "But we had done It before and we conld do no less than try. Through the generous cooperation of em ployes and employers we have succeeded again, for which we are thankful." United Fund Daily Report Goal $227,800 Collected to Date....$137,411 Percent o,f Total v 60.2 Today's Report $ 10,644 Do Your Share The Duke's a King in Flatbusli Vl ) r" " if A B47 Crashes In California Potato Field RIVERSIDE, Calif. ffl r-A six jet B47 bomber crashed and ex ploded near here Friday, and a witness said the flames "went a good half mile in the air." A B47 normally carries a crew of three but sometimes a fourth is aboard. Officials at March Air Force Base near here, where the bom ber was stationed said they did not know how many were aboard fhe plane. March is a B47 base. The scene of the crash is about 18 miles southeast of here. ' A witness of the crash. Bob Hewitt, told a reporter: "The ex plosion rocked my house and the flames went a good half mile in the air." The plane went down about a mile from Hewitt s farm home, which is in a district that is part of the runway approach area for March AFB. Hewitt said the plane crashed in a notato field, a mile east of highway 395. He said he heard no noise that would indicate the big bomber was in trouble as it went over his house. Area Ballots On Annexation Residents of a proposed annexa- tion district joining the city on the northeast are Friday afternoon voting on the question whether they will become part of the city. The district, which has about 30 registered voters, is bounded on the north by Silvcrton Road, Lansing Avenue on he west, Ham el Street on the south, and the cast boundary is 211 fect west of Beacon Avenue. Voting is from 2 to 8 p.m. at the Valley Tractor Company, 3310 Sil verlon road. City Officials Will Try to Keep UAL and Add Local Airline, Too "By STEPHEN A. STONE Capital Journal Associate Editor CMv and Chamber of Commerce; officials, after hearing arguments bv competing airline officials Thursday, decided to insist that the trunk line service of United Airlines remain in Salem, and to favor a supplementary feeder service if approved by the Civil Aeronautics Authority. As between Southwest Airways and West Coast Airlines, both of whom want to enter the Salem field, the Salem people will take no sides. Their position w 1 1 1 be made known to the city council which may decide to intervene In the' hearing scheduled by the CAB in , Washineton December 10, Hal Sweeney, speaking Thurs day for the higkest authority of United Airlines, told a confer ence of Chamber of Commerce, City of Salem, and airways offi cials that it a feeder line is per mitted to operate ere, the same EBBETS FIELD Smiling broadly, Dodgers' Duke Snider, comes home to welcome from Peewce Reese, I,, Junior Gilliam, 19, and club batboy after belting three-run homer over right centerfield screen In second Inning of Series game. Reese and Gilliam scored on belt which was Duke's tenth In Series competition. ( AP Wirc 'photo) " ' ' " ' -" . ' Chicago Baby Found In Kidnaper s Home CHICAGO Wl A young wife who told police she wanted a baby so much that she stole one from his crib was arrested Friday and 2 Newport Men Drown as Boat Upsets in Surf SEATTLE (UP) Two fishermen drowned Thursday night when their boat, C-Scamp, capsized while trying to cross the bar in heavy swells at Yaquina Bay, Ore., the Coast Guard here re ported today. Jack Murphy and Jack Lawson, both of Newport, Ore., vanished beneath the waves when the C Scamp went under only a few (eet from a Coast Guard motor-life boat. Coast Guard headquarters here reported fishing boats in the area had been warned by radio not to attempt a crossing of the bar. The C-Scamp laid off the bar for moro than 2 hours when Mur phy and Lawson apparently de cided to risk the crossing. Reports from the Coast Guard motor-lifeboat said bot'. men were thrown clear when the steel-hulled C- Scamp went under. Float lin'es, rescue lines with kapok balls attached, were tossed to the two men. One of the men was unable to reach I e lines and the othe- grasped a line for a few seconds before being carried under. order from the Civil Aeronautics i Board will make United and its trunk line service abandon the; Salem airport. Denial Made Max King of San Francisco, speaking for Southwest Airways, and Ernest Code of Seattle, for West Coast Airlines, denied this. They said they had applied to CAB for certificates to operate here because the additional serv ice is needed, and that they want tn cooperate with United and sup plement its service. The two feeder lines are competing for this local operation It was a direct clash between the existing trunx line 3 J " ' feeder line interests, and now. city authorities will decide whe ther they will intervene in a hearing before the CAB in Washington, starting December 10, and, if so, whether they will support the feeder line argument or contend that United alone should operate here. It was ob- named in a. true bill charging kidnaping. ' Onc-month-old Ronald Joseph Bucher was snatched from his crib Thursday night. The baby was found unharmed Friday mornine wilh Mrs. Gladys By- num. 24. Within a few hours the grand jury took action. The baby was found in the base ment apartment of Mrs. Bynum and her husband, Charles, in the same Southwest Side area where the infant was abducted. I wanted a baby so much 1 iust took one." she told Capt. Pat rick Decle. Mrs. bynum ana ine habv were taken by police to con front the infant's mother, Mrs. Lois Bucher, 21. Mrs. Bynum's story affirmed that she and Mrs. Bucher met in a store Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Bynum said she had worn a ma ternity dress and padding to make her friends think she was expect ing a baby of her own. She was not pregnant, she said. ' A house-to-house canvass by po lice brought about a quick solu tion of the case. Two of. the searching officers, Detectives Joseph Corcoran and Edward Cagney, got the lead when they knocked on the door of Mrs.- Norbcrt Kowalski, who re membered that her husband had told of taking a sick woman with a child home Thursday night. Weather Details Maximum yesterday. 64: minimum today, 35. Total 24-hour precipita tion: trace; for month: trare; nor mal, .33. Season prerlplUtlon, .XI; normal, River height, -2.1 feet. (Kepnrt by U.,S. Weather Hnrrau.) vious mat local lniercsis no noi want to lose United Airlines i . Sweeney mentioned the CAB hearing docket which consoli dates 25 applications in various parts of the northwest into one and then splits the one into two. One of these applies to the east ern part of the northwest and the other the western portion. Swee ney based his argument on i paragraph in the letter which puts Salem with Bend-Redmond and Klamath Falls in Oregon and Elko and Ely in Nevada. In all of those places but Salem. United has petitioned lor permission to ja. '!, .'., ,; aoanoon. u a- soon as United petitioned !wiH luncheon guests at various as soon as uniica .Piiioncn, , lo aoanoon inose points aouin west and West Coast petitioned for authority to operate in them and include Salem. New Lines Proposed King of Southwest said his lines, originating and termini tContinued on Page 5, CoL S) Ike Views H-Halt as Says 2-Term Limit On Presidency 'Unwise' WASHINGTON (UP) President Eisenhower said today it would be foolish for the United States to stop H-bomb testing without getting a foolproof agreement with Russia and the rest of the world to do the same. Mr. Eisenhower set forth his po sition in a news conference state ment replying to Democratic pres idential candidate Adlai E. Steven son's proposal to ban H-bomb tests. The President ' also said he has found it necessary to intensify his campaigning to clear away what he called the underbrush of oppo sition misstatements. Concerning H-bomb tests the President declared that the Amer ican purpose in conducting such experiments is to develop clean bombs which will not create a widespread radioactive hazard. Russia Could Gain - . He said that if this country stopped testing on its own, there would be nothing to pr.'cnt Rus sia fro.n going ahead with Inborn tory development work and achieving tremendous advantages while the united .Slates stood still Any such unilateral action by this country would, he said, be foolish. t)thcr highlights, of the Presi dent's news conference: 1. He said on the eve of the U.N. Security Council debate on the Suez Canal that ho still is convinced a peaceful settlement of the crisis is possible. : First to Use Nrgro Troops 2. He spcrifi-altf rcplie- . to chargei made by Stevenson in New York Thursday night that this administration has been mak ing "Johnny come-lntcly claims" in an attempt to "seize partisan (Continued on i-'nge .5, Col. 4' Injured Man Lies in Ditch During Night An elderly Saiem man who ap parently lay injured in Shcllon ditch in Bush park most of Thurs day night, was reported in a state of shock Friday morning at Salem Memorial hospital. Sam Roth, 73, of 1670 Yew St., apparently fell into the ditch some time after 9 p.m. while returning home from downtown Salem. He fell in near the footbridge east of the athletic field. A passing woman noticed him Friday morning and called first aidmcn shortly after 8 a.m. Aid men transported him to the hos pital where he was put to bed in a stale ot shock. X-rays were scheduled to be taken Friday aft ernoon. The ditch in that area is relatively shallow but extreme ly rocky. School Expels 130 Students MOXEE (Yakima County) m- Moxcc High School officials Thurs day suspended another 100 stu Foolhardy dents, leaving only about 90 of!Mrs Ka Doris Bcnnt.ti Valdosta! an cnruiuni'iii ui sun aitcnu ing classes. The students suspended Thurs day, along with 30 suspended Wednesday were dropped 'from classes for leaving the school grounds during the lunch hour in violation of school rules. The students have been com plaining about the lack of lunch room facilities at the school which made it necessary that students cat in two shifts. B-E Day Set For Nov. 26 Monday, Nov. 26, has been set as the annual Business-Education day in which the Chamber of Com merce and the city school system cooperate. , On that day it is the turn of the chamber to be host to the teach ers, and lt is expected that around 500 teachers will observe the inner working of many Salem busi nesses, iney win ne in groups ana will uc iuin.ii,-iii gurni.i a, vuiimin, - .!""" - Fred Remington is chairman of the committee making plans and he is being assisted by Miss Hattie Brat.el as vice chairman, Mrs. Agnes Booth, St. Elmo Massen galc, Ted Jenney. Ronald Hudkins, and Mrs. A. A. Schramm. Linn Escapee Captured. Napping in Saturday PS , ' 'A. W3 - f - it a AIM Young Larry Zellcr, S07 Norlh 20th St., Is one of the Capital Journal's star junior dealers. He's typical of the thousands of young newsboy-businessmen who deliver the notion's papers every day, no mailer what the weather. Saturday, Oct, 6, Is Salem Pilot Crash Victim LAKELAND, Ga. Wl An F94 jet interceptor plane, from Moody Air Force Base at nearby Vai dosla took its pilot, 2nd Lt. Charles V. Benner of Salem, Ore., to death in a crash near Lakeland Thursday night. Radar observer 2nd Lt, Henry Weiss of South Orange, N. J was badly injured. Both rode the plane to earth in a wooded area just outside the city. They were evacuated to the Moody Base hospital by helicop ter. Benner is survived by his wife, and his mother and father o f Rosalia, Wash. A board of officers was named to determine the cause of the crash. 2 Jets Disappear In Olympic Wilds PAINE AIR FORCE BASE, Wash. Ifl Two F89D Scorpion. jets vanished together, possibly after a collision, over the rugged upper Olympic Peninsula region Thursday night. The Air Force reported four men were aboard the two planes, but there was no indication wheth er any of them might have had a chance to parachute. Ground rescue parties headed imo ine area rnnay wni e air ana sea craft joined In the wide search. , planes and helicopters flew over the brush and timber covered "last frontier" in good weather Friday without finding any clues. They found no confir mation of reports that fires had been sighted Thursday night, Coast Guard and Canadian hcll- Is National Neivsboy Day j i i r National Newsboy Day, set aside by President Elsenhower to honor these sturdy youth. The Capi tal Journal salutes Its over 128 city Junior dealers and 50 area Junior dealers. (See other pictures Sec. 2 Page 9) (Capital Journal Photo) Clubwoman, Officer Accused in PORTLAND Wl A prominent Portland clubwoman and a state police lieulenant were among nine persons accused Friday of com plicity in a plywood deal that cost investors thousands of dollars. The arrests were on secret in dictments stemming from a two year federal government Investi gation. . Charged with conspiracy to vio late mail fraud and securities fraud lows ore Lt. Richard C. Williams, second In command of the Milwaukic, Ore., state police ollicc, and Mrs. Leo Davenport 76. She was named Portland's woman of the year in 1954 by the Portland Women's Forum. The are free on $2,500 bond, They wero among five arrested hero Friday.1 Dwight Holdorf and copters one of each joined air nlanes in the search. The Coast Guard reported two of Its vessels and four Canadian tugs also were participating in the search on the chance the planes or parts of them might have fallen into the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The two planes, each carrying a oilot and a radar observer, dis appeared southeast of the little In dian community of Ncah Bay, at the northern tip of the peninsula. The two fighter-interceptors, at- . , hc(, , ,h ,2,st Fighl.ntpr. ;.,. Sn.nHr i Paine AFB t nrar Kveretl ifi ih,.ir ! at ,5. 55 D.m: on routine patrol mis- sion. Seventeen minutes after roaring into the sky from Paine, the Air Force said, the two Scorpions dropped from radio and radar con tact simultaneously. Tho two craft wero flying at 15,000 feet, Gar at r I I Ct 1. f A' 4 ''V Ply Fraud James B. Carr, both accused of conspiracy in the case, were freed on $2,500 bond,- Frederick Alan Wright, 42, was held in lieu of $5,000 bond on a conspiracy charge i i' Four others were arrested Wed nesday night. One was Edgar It Errion, 60, arrested at Seattle on charges of mail fraud and-viola tion of the Securities and Ex change Act. Bond for Errion, who olready was under court order not to handle plywood securities in another case, was set at $30,000, The others, arrested at Salem arc Glenn Munkers, 65; Charles W. Williamson, 70; and Archie L. Bones. Wl. Bail for Munkers was set at $30,000, foe Bones at $5,000 and for Williamson at $2,500. Tho nino are) accused of partici pating in sales of memberships in the Mt. Hood Hardboard and Ply wood Cooperative. A hearing was held on the matter last August by the Securities and Exchange Com mission. According to an SEC attorney about $650,000 worth of member ships were sold, but only $250,000 was left when members took over. The members finally built a plant, which has been running month, near Estacada, Ore. Power Shovel Kills Worker VANCOUVER, Wash, m Wil fred J. Bobbitt, 36 Curias, Wash., was killed wnue wonting on power snovei ai a un.u.. ymjt vi I. 111111:3 I1U, .1, W .".H ver Friday morning. Coroner Paul Mylan said Bob bin, an oiler, apparently was struck by the shovel while he was working over tho tracks of the machine, He was kiued instantly, Coos Imrd ot Jbour n r . i . 111 L.A. COOS BAY Wl Police Friday: ..ur.u.vu utttb uciujr uiuauil, &yt. after the hunted man had escaped'; a police trap on Caoe Araoo and stolen an automobile at Empire. Of four prisoners who escaped from the Linn County jail at Al- hanu Gnnl t . mains at -large - He - is .Earl J, Bonncy, 32. . ,. : .. ; Gibson, . who' earlier had been iittHHu in a urusn-covorca acre, on CaDe Araeo. ;was nnhhnri with.; out incident as he tried-to nap in. a stolen car here, said state no..- ' lice Sst. Homer. C. '.Snider... S,. Passed Road Blcek : " '' Joined forces to make the capture. nftot nihann enn,t.A... L.J , ' ed out of the Cape Arago brush . and made his way . past police lines. Snider said Gibson also . managed lo get around a road., block up the highway, by stealing ooat 10 cross a siougn. Then he. stole a car at Empire and drove iu uiis pay, .. , . r There, however, an alert rosUv dent, Chester C. nankin; who had,,, ncaru oi tne car thclti sighted the car and nhnneri .noli tuhn rlnA in at once. . ... . , CnMM . t J ,!! J! A ... Vs he was arrested and disarmed. , MntnOT n ft rcihtnn Vtari - oer pistol. i- :. .:-.: i ; ; :f: ninnapea nena man -' . ' Gibson had kidnapped a taxicab flrlvrtr nnrlv ttno wnnb n, o I ....a nn at UL1IU, At gunpoint he -fotccd the driver to head toward the , coast from Bend,, and then; had bound the driver and left him beside a road of here. The driver mnnairod to,' free himself from tho bonds, and alerted, police, who closed In on the area. ; ' A stale patrolman sighted Gib- ' son in the brush Wednesday and , fired one shot at him before Gib- ' son disappeared again. The shot '. micwri f.nfnp nnllna tnnnA ,,,! Gibson had spent the night nearby- ...... Patton Caught In L. A. ; Meanwhile police in Los Annelcs announced the capture of another member of the "our prisoners who ; broko out of tho Jail at Albany. ' He is James Arthur Patton. 39. who like the others was facing a life. .sentence. Ho was spotted at nis witc s home several days ago, but police allowed him to remain . free, hoping one or moro of the -j other escapees would loin him. Patton was taken Into custody Thursday when he and another man drove to Manhattan Beach. . The other man later was re- ' leased. , , , , , , . Another escapee, Dan Ott. 45. was found dead in the Willamette River at Salem several days after the escape. He had drowned but police have not determined how he came to drown". , ,., WASH. CONVICT ESCAPES PENDLETON (UP ) Llovd Eu gene Enfield, 24-year-old Washing ton state penitentiary inmate from Beaver Creek, Ore., escaped from the Walla Walla institution at I a.m. today while walking to work with a bean picking crew.. . . News in Brief For Friday, Oct. S, 1951 NATIONAL ' Iko Says H-Tcst Halt Would Be Foolish . Sec. 1,'P.l Chicago Police Quickly Find Kidnaped Baby ....Sec. 1, P.l LOCAL , , , Day in the Life of a Newspaperboy Sec-1. P.8 City Officials Seek 2 . , Airline Services ...Sec. 1, P.l STATE . ... '' Linn Escapee Caught at Coos Bay Sec. 1, P.l- FOREIGN Allies Ask UN to Back Lon don Plan on Sucz-.Sec. 1, P.l. SPORTS ;. Undefeated Eugene Plays : 'j South, North Goes to Lebanon See. 3, P. 1 Oregon Women's Bowling Tourney Opens Hero l - Sec. 2, P.l Willamette Prepares for . Pacific ...Sec. 2, P.2 REGULAR FEATURES ' Amusements Sec. j, P.2 r.:. 1.1 C 1 n A CUIIUIId! Od. a Locals Sec. 1, P 5 Society . Sec. 1, P.6, 7 Comics - -Sec. 2, P.4 Television .....Sec. 2, P.5 Want Ads ...Sec; 2, P.7, 8, 9, 10 uorotny uix acc, z, r. o Markets 1 Sec. 2, P.5 Crossword Puzzle ....See. 2; P.5 Farm Pago c Sec. B, P.3