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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1956)
Capital jLJouraal THE WEATHER. PARTLY CLOUDY tonight. Sun day. Little change In temperature. Low tonight, 38; high Sunday, 62. 1 3 SECTIONS 24 Pages r 68th Year, No. 245 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, October 13, 1956 ZZ:,"sToZl Price 5c Six-Point Suez Plan Favored V ' Security Council Likes Proposal On Waterway By BRUCE W. MUNN l United Press Start Correspondent UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (Url Western diplomats said today the U.N. Security Council will un animously endorse a six - point negotiating formula for the Suez dispute which virtually drops Anglo - French demands for in 1 tcrnationallzation of the waterway. The formula was agreed on by . the foreign ministers of Britain, France and Egypt Friday and sub mitted to a closed session of the council Friday night. - A resolution endorsing the prin f ciples was scheduled to be put be fore the council when it meets in public scsson this afternoon. The council was prepared to meet v again tonight if necessary to clear the way for future Anglo-French-Egyptian negotiations, possibly in Geneva next month and probably on the ambassadorial level. French Back Down Agreement on the principles came after France dropped its adamant insistence for intemation al control of the 101-mile water way linking the Mediterranean and Red Seas. Britain, according to : authoritative sources, shifted its position earlier with proposals for ' sanctions if Egypt rciusea passage to ships of any nation. The principles were formulated by Secretary General Dag Ham- marskjold who won agreement . from British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd, French Foreign Minister Christian Pineau and , Egyptian Foreign Minister Mah- moud Fawzi in six secret sessions In his office. As released officially by Pineau, . council president for this month, , after the council had been inform- ed of them, they read: s- . l- i. u ? meet the following requirements: l. mere snail oe iree anu ujeii transit through the canal without discrimination overt and covert. (By way of clarification: This principle covers the same ground as the corresponding principle of the Constantinople Convention (of 1888): That is, it covers the tech nical as well as the political as pects with which point three be low is also concerned.) Respect Of Sovereignty "2. Egypt's sovereignty shall be respected. ... rm.- -I 11... O. inC optimum ul uic lanai shall be insulated from the pol- itics of any- country. "4. The manner of fixing tolls and charges shall be decided by agreement between Egypt and the users. "5. A fair proportion of the dues shall be allotted to development. J- "6. In case of- dispute, unre- solved aflairs between the Suez Canal Company and the Egyptian government shall be settled by ar bitration with suitable terms of reference and suitable provisions for the payment of sums found to be due. Blind Children Share Cake With Ike Ik " , II' R' - . L I "Si Roberts, Bros. Management to Change Here A rhanee in comDanv manage ment in the Salem area was an nounced Saturday by Roberts Bros., Oregon retail trade store chain. Leonard Krcmen, manager of the two Salem Roberts Bros, stores, will also assume active manage ment of the local Lipman store Monday. John Arilon. former manager of the Linman store here, will take over management ot tne KODeris Bros, store in Corvallis. where a major building program is slated earlv next vear. The management cnanges nave resulted, officials explained, from recent purchase by a corporation headed by Roberts Bros, officials and Portland Lipman officials of the two Oregon Lipman stores. Kremen has been manager of the Roberts store in Salem for the last 10 and one half years The company explained that con solidation of three Salem stores under one management does not mean closing of any ot the tnrce. Pendleton Man Highway Victim JOHN DAY m Arnold Heed, 56-vear-old Pendleton miner, was killed on the highway between here and Canyon City Friday night when he was struck by an automobile driven by Russell Grif fith, 22, of Seneca. Grant County Coroner carl uns - (? TBI - m; Children at the state blind school had a cake party Thursday afternoon, and there was more than enough to go around. The occasion was President Eisenhower's birthday, which actually is Sunday, for which local Republicans donated cakes to the school. At left, Mrs. John Cochran, president of Salem Club of the Oregon Federation of Republican Women, serves some cake to the children while John H. Carkin, chairman of the Marion county Republican central committee, and Mrs. Pearl Short, school worker, assist. (Capital Journal Photo) . Blind Children Receive Ike Cakes Birthday Party For President Held Here "HanDV birthday. Mr. President' was chorused from large groups of children at the State School for the Blind and the State School for the Fraud Charge Placed Against Salem Resident Deaf. Friday, About 50 cakes, all made by local Ike Says He Rims Executive Democrats Charge Refuted by President By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Democrats charged yesterday President Elsenhower is not lead ing his party or tho country, but Eisenhower told the nation via television he is fully in charge of his administration. Adlai Stevenson, the Democratic presidential candidate, said last night President Eisenhower is "either unwilling or unable" to lead the Republican party. In con sequence, Stevenson continued, national policy "has become stalled on dead center." He said Vice President Nixon is the par ty's "new head." Harry S. Truman, Democratic former president, said "the nation can't get by with a part-time ires ident." Truman predicted a de pression if Republicans win the Nov. 6 election. President Eisenhower, asked di rectly in a nationally televised question-and-answer session last night about this recurring Demo cratic accusation, replied: If I am not running the execu tive part of this government, then I am the man that is mostly fooled in this nation. Earlier ycslcrday, Stevenson charged Eisenhower has misrep- sented him by saying Stevenson wants to stop testing atomic weap ons. Stevenson said he was con cerned only with "hydrogen weap ons. Eisenhower's statement that he's firmly in charge came in an unusual mass television interview, with questions put by a variety of administration supporters. Aides said the show was entirely unre hearsed. Druing the exchange, Eisenhow er declared himself against uncon trolled "big business," but upheld Searclie JO e3n3 t No Signs of Life Raft But Nearby Shriner Warms Up Cycle for Parade ,., ', ,u ,., y... his policy of using successful bus !"".S" in VMf mvvrnmvnl tion of "Ikes Birthday rarty ," ""- - - were taken to the two schools Fri day afternoon by women of the Salem club of the Oregon Federa tion of Republican Women. Friends and workers for Presi dent Eisenhower .nationally spon sored the project of taking birthday cakes to hospitals and children's institutions. President Eisenhower had re quested that at any celebrations marking his birthday the cakes be shared with children. The local youngsters were very appreciative of the cakes and so were the superintendents of the schools. Many of the cakes were decorated with "Happy Birthday, posts. The White House yesteraay an- onunced two more campaign speeches by Eisenhower a ma jor radio-TV address Oct. 25 from New York and an airport talk at Denver uct. la. st youuiL S3? ' t I -u.rr. PAINTS' CLE CORPS- I VL,' .y i ' ' " " V - ? Nixon Attacks Adlai's Stand PrniHnt Nixnn SAturdav called on Adlai Stevenson to admit what Nixon termed "his error in play ing politics with America's na tional security." Nixon resumed his criticism by naming Stevenson and former -President Truman in a speech prepared for a rally here. .. He hammered agair at Steven- son's statement on ending the draft when national security per mits and on seeking agreement with Russia to end H-bomb tests. Nixon said Stevenson could not have made two statements in - the field of foreign policy which would have been more harmful in discouraging our allies or in encouraging our potential enemies." col'l said Reed apparently was arrested Herbert Haas and ac- walking with the traffic but near the center of the road. Griffith said he didn't see the man until after the impact, the coroner said. Griffith was not held. Reed is believed to have a sister residing in Pendleton. Ike." and all were in birthday de- PORTLAND Wl More arrests , Cor. Mrs. John W. Cochran, prcsi- were listed by postal, inspectors i dent of the women's group, and Friday in a mail fraud conspiracy I other officers of the club worked involving sales of a battery addi- j jn delivering the cakes Friday, live and a nylon preservative. I Many olner cakcs wcre taken to Bart Grant, Salem, was arrested the countv gop headquarters for in Kansas City, Mo., on charges the jnformai "ike Birthday" open nia. Later 'he underwent surgery of man traua ana conspiracy io house there through Saturday. to correct the hernia use the mails to defraud, said Postal Inspector R. A. Severtson. Grant was held under $5,000 bail. Authorities in Los Angeles Marine Corporal Given Sentence PARRIS ISLAND. S. C. UP A Marine corporal today faced re duction to private and two months jof hard labor for assaulting a re cruit who lailca to say sir. A Marine court martial Friday refused to hold that Cpl. Richard J. Billc, 21, of Erie, Pa., slugged the recruit, causing a hernia, but found him guilty of simple assault. Billc was charged with striking Pvt. Donald Hamisfar, 20, of Nor walk, Ohio, last Aug. 23 the day before he was hospitalized for her- British Court Will Decide Child's Future LONDON Wl Chubby Little Tanya Chwastov's future as a citizen of the United states or so viet .Russia was before the Brit ish High Court today. Tanya, Vh years old, debarked with her father from the Russian ship Vlacheslav Molotov yester day at the order ot the uruisii court. The ship sailed for Russia without them. Her father, Alexis Chwaslov, 58. a refugee who went to the United States after World War if, had planned to take Tanya to live in the Soviet Union. He acted over tho protests of his divorced wife, Mrs. Helena Dieczok oi Detroit, 24, who wanted Tanya to grow up as an American citizen. Mrs. Dieczok threw a block in her former husband's plans by getting a British attorney lo file suit to hold the child here. Both the United Stales and Rus sia claim Tanya as a citizen be cause Mrs. Dieczok has become a U.S. citizen while Chwaslov never was naturalized. Nearly 1M0 Shrinera Invaded Salem Saturday from all parti of the state (or their annual Central Coast Willamette ceremonial for Initiation of new members. A parade was held at 1 p.m. and here Al Dlerlckx, cycle corps lieutenant from Portland, was warming up his vehicle early this morning while other Shrlners In the back ground unload ceremonial equipment at South Salem high. (Capitol Journal Pholo) Hunt Still On For Missing Aircraft LONDON 11 Search planes Saturday spotted what at first was believed to be two life rafts in the Atlantic area where a giant American airliner vanished three days ago but one of the supposed rafts later proved to be -a decomposed whale. The search planes crews radioed they saw no sign of life on or near the objects in the ocean off Spain. No Sign of Life The plane vanished Wednesday with 59 men aboard on a flight from England to the Azores on' a return trip to the United Statos. An earlier report had said there appeared to be a man on a raft. The report of two rafts had heightened the searchers hopes for several hours. 100 Planes Search ' One hundred search planes from three continents scoured tho North Atlantic in one of the greatest searches in aviation history. The raft report came from an area off Spain where planes had been sent to investigate weak SOS signals. . The SOS signals were similar to those that would have been sounded by a hand-cranked radio in a rubber life raft. The transport, a military ver sion of the four-engine DC6 civil ian a I r 1 i n e r , vanished late Wednesday after sending out a routine radio message giving its position on a flight to the United States via the Azores Islands, ' Stevenson Pleased Over West Prospects Political TV By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Saturday, Oct. 13, sched ule of political television pro grams, supplied by candidates or their representatives: . President Eisenhower Birth day Observance, CBS Network, KOIN-TV, 10-10:30 p.m. cused him of conspiracy. He was released on $1,000 bail. Harding L. Casey, former Portland resi dent, was arrested in St. Paul, Minn., and Wilson B. Gothergill, 38, Garden Home, Ore., was ar rested at his home and later released on bail. Postal inspectors said all four wcre associated with Clarence Peddicord in a business deal in volving the fraudulent sale of distributorships for various prod ucts Peddicord. now serving a 20- vear Drison sentence for the ex tortion bombing at the Meier c Frank department store here IVi years ago. was indicted on the fraud charges, Cloudy Skies ; For Weekend There were cloudy skies for the valley section Saturday, but the forecast savs nothing about any rain for the weekend, just more clouds. ' Temperatures arc dropping slishtlv, the minimum Saturday morning being 38 following a maximum of 60 for Friday. It appeared football games be ing played this afternoon would get by "without showers. For the beach areas the fore 'east calls for partly cloudy skies and perhaps some showers Sunday. Weather Details Vuimnm yfilri1r. : minimum tfiAty. 01. Ttal 24 hoar pr-tptM-ttn: .11; fur month: M nrmil. ton precipitation. U?: nnnnl. 1.52. nxpr hrifht. -2 lt. Rort j V, Wrathcr Hat-tan. 14 High Schools, 2 Colleges Take Part in CJ Straw Vote Fourteen high schools and two colleges in the Capital Journal's circulation area have agreed to conduct straw votes ot their student bodies on the five top contests of the November ballot and will receive approximately 7500 ballots for this purpose. Cooperating high schools are North and South of Salem, St. Paul, Dallas, Silverton, Mt. Angel academy and prep, Salem academy, Lebanon, Molalla. Woodburn. Amity, Willamina, Dayton and Stayton. Colleges are Oregon Col lege of Education and Mt. Angel. An invitation has been extended to Willamette. Central high of Monmouth-Independence asked to delay the matter pending a straw" vote of its own. The schools will take the vote on ballots furnished by the Capital Journal, which will announce the results as they become available. Meanwhile any organizations within the circulation area are invited to poll their members on ballots to be furnished by the Capital Journal, count the votes and ad vise the newspaper which will publish the results. Visitors to the Statesman-Journal business office are being urged to deposit their votes in a ballot box kept on the counter. These votes will be counted Monday morning and announced Monday. This will be done each Monday until election. Ten thousand ballots have been printed for this proj ect, believed to be the largest of its kind ever attempted in this area before an election. The offices upon which the voles are being cast are president, U.S. senator, U.S. representative, governor and secretary of state. Cannery Waste Odor Control Gets Study Meeting Held on United Grower Situation Planning for a project to control cannery waste odors on South Lib erty road began at a meeting Fri day of United Growers olficials and Marion county authorities. . The meeting came as a result of complaints of residents of the area that ditches carrying cannery waste to Pringle creek wereun sightly and smelly. A. H. Randall, .cneral manager of United Growers, operator of the cannery, said his firm ?:anied to SP Continues Shasta Trains SAN FRANCISCO (UPI The Southern Pacific will continue ils regular daily schedules for Shasta Daylight streamliners pending a review of an application to make the runs tri-weekly during winter months. Claude E. Peterson, vice presi dent in charge o( passenger traf fic and public relations, said he believed the winter schedule was "a necessity because ol Usnlj travel, which resulted in the loss of J3.0O0 per day. I He said, however, that the rail-j road was deferring lo the Oregon and California Public Utilities! Commissions in delaying plans to start the tri-weekly service this coming Monday. The railroad has proposed, un der the winter schedule, that the Pnrtland-S.m Francisco sireamlin ers would be trimmed to three times a week in each direction during the light months, while still maintaininz daily service from June Ihroueh September and dur ing the winter holiday periods. find the best method to take care of the situation. t. G. Lcrmon, county sanitarian, reported that his survey of the area showed that (he odors were apparently under rcosonnhlc con trol for the type of operation presently used. The problem of odors associated with the operation goes hack to VMi and is normal, according to Clarence Cuyler, associate sani tary engineer of the state board of health. Marion county planning techni cian David Boker said the main problem was that the plant was "out of character" with the gen eral neighborhood and that the conflict in land use will still exist, no matter what remedies are used. The meeting was held In Baker's office under the leadership of the county planning commission. The main suggestion arising from the initial meeting was that United Growers employ an engineering firm lo study the problem and sug gest possible solutions. SoldiersDfown Crossing River FT. LEONARD WOOD, Mo. W High Hopes Piit On II-Bomb Views Hagerty Says No Pressure PutonPowelV WASHlNGTOrr' (UP) ' While House Press Secretary James C. I bomb tests itlck as a malor Issue. I At Chicago's Midway Airport, I SlaunniAn tnTA howinlM. ha nrltl devote a nationwide television "ogeriy loaay Dranuea as cora- lalk to his differences with Presl- P aml w's, slas '"I"" dent E son lower over : H-bomb '"rK "cBr0 CHICAGO m Adlnl E. Steven son came home Saturday from an Intensive Far West campaign feel ing "very pleased" over his pros pects for carrying the five stales he visited. Stevenson pinned high hopes for a Democratic victory Nov. 6 on making his proposal to ban H- Ike Extends Portland Stay PORTLAND (UP) President Elsenhower's visit to Portland next week underwent a change of plans late yesterday that will ex tend the length ol his stay in inc Rose City. Instead of departing immedi ately after his Portland speech lor Washington, tho Prcside-t will Two soldiers drowned Friday stay overnight in Portland and night during a river crossing ' leave Ihe following morning on training accident on tht Big Pincy Ihe presidential plane Columbine River. ior uenvcr. The victims wcre Pvt. Tracy Al Denver Mr. Elsenhower will D. Sills, 19, Longvicw, Tex., and make a speech at Ihe airport, one Pvt Stanley Stringlicld, Wnkc-jof two additional speeches added field, Va. lo his campaign schedule. The oth- fnni inr-Ir Thnmnson. a nulilic I cr addition is an address from Ma- Information officer, said the men clison Square Garden New York on in the company had constructed : Oct. 25. The Presidents Denver a footbridge ond had made ono ; visit will be the first since he sul crossing of the bridge. He said .fered a heart attack there In Sep the two men apparently fell from'temher last year, the bridge during the second trip ; The presidential party will stop over the structure. 1 at the Multnomah hotel here. tests. The program will bo car ried from Chicago at 0:30 p.m. if.vn Monday over ABC. Stevenson was asked about Ihe progress he was making in the five states he visited this week California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana. "I feci very pleased," he said. But, of course, this is no occa sion for over-optimism." As to how much he might have accomplished, Stevenson said: Like an actor, - 1 m afraid 1 haven't seen enough notices yet." Candidate Questioned Stevenson also was asked about his statement tit San Diego Fri day night that Eisenhower is "an aging President and the future belongs not to him but to "his young, anointed and ambitious vice president Mr. Nixon. htcvenson said he. could not elaborate except to note that El senhower celebrates his 06th birth day next week. A reporter want ed to know if Stevenson thought 68 loo old to run for President. He replied: "No, I didn't say that." Children at Amity Petition to Keep 'Trick or Treat' AMITY (Special) Children 10 years of age ant .vonne- have declined Invitation to the an nual Halloween Party, under Ihe nonsorshlp of the Commercial Club and Instead are making a bid to return to Trick or Treat. A petition car-ird br Ihe youngsters going from door to door It gaining numerous sig natures from the townspeople. The children pledge that lliey will observe the white cloth sig nal from such hornet as do not with to he di'turbrd on Hallo ween night. One reason stated hr the chil dren for this action Is. "The parly is planned for the high : school pee group a I children just don't have any I fun." Road Program Head Sees Big Challenge ALBANY, N.Y. WV-Bcrlrnm D. Tallnmy says his new ioh as head ol Bn all-out, nationwide highwny conslrudion program will be "a terrific challenge." President Elsenhower appointed Tnllamy yesterday to direct the federal operolion that has n bud get of M billion dollars most of It for a 4l.(xX) mile network ol inter state highways. The new road boss Is M. silver haired, husky, married and the fa ther of one son. also an engineer. Tailamy is a 1925 graduate of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute of Commerce Weeks, who called White House pressured Democrat ic Rep. Adam Clayton Powell into endorsing President Elsenhower for rcelction. The Negro leaders referred to the trial of one of three members of Powell's staff who have been indicted for income tax evasion. Haecrlv emphasized that he commented in his role as a White House spokesman. Powell is a Negro congressman from Harlem. A statement Issued by Negro Democratic leaders in Harlem said "as recently as March 2 of this year, he (Powell) had the courage to accuse Elsenhower of dodging the civil rights Issue, passing the buck and trying to wash his hands, like Pilate, of the blood of innocent men and women in the southland. The statement also said, The people of Harlem regret that the White House was able to apply sufficient pressure upon.. .Powell at the time of the trial ot anotner of his personal staff, now pending in federal court, to persuade him to completely change his convictions." Ihe new hlghwi.y boss "one of Ihe Burned Woman Little Better A ynune Salem mother who was critically burned earlier this week was reported "slightly im proved" at Salem General hos pital Saturday. Mrs. Clara Jean Miller, 27, Is still in critical condition, how ever, hospital authorities said. She was severely burned Thursday morning when her clothes caught fire as a small heating slnvc backfired at her home at 603 South ISth St. She attempted to extinguish Ihe flames with bed clothing and then ran down the street to Football Scores By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ohio State 26, Illinois 6 Michigan 48, Army 14 Michigan Stale 5.1. Indiana Harvard 32, Cornell 7. Princeton 34, Penn 0 Yale 33, Columbia 19 . Syracuse 27, West Virginia 20 . Penn Stale 43, Holy Cm.. ., Brown 47, Dartmouth 14. Maine 20, New Hampshire 7 Colgate 48, Rutgers 8 Lafayette 32, Albright 7 greatest builders world's roads Tnllamy was n familiar figure in the field during early thruway construction as he gradually walked Ihe recently completed 427 mile main route between New York Cily and Buffalo. At one time he headed his own engineering company and later was chief engineer of the Nincora frontier planning board and slate demity public works superintend ent n( j neighbors, who extinguished the miming cimoing. Rennhliean onetime New York He was nuDlic works cniei irom public works chief and, since 19.10, i 1948 through 1954 under former Ihe guiding lorce behind the; Gov. Thomas fc. Dowry world's longest loll superhighway -the New York Slate Thruway. He's an accomplished handyman al his Bowman Lake home in up state Rensselaer County, the base He re signed when the Democratic ad ministration of Gov. Harriman took over. While public works head Tailamy directed a record pro gram that cost nearly a billion F,nm uhi-h hn irt fichev nnH tnkes I dollars snowshoe hikes in Ihe winter, trout me pay on ine new jon win !l-shei in Ihe soring, swims in the ! "n m f 'w. lies rere-veo. ! summer and hunis in the fall. ;000 as Thruway authority chair- 1 Tullnmv'a finnnjntment is sub-i man. nil the smaller jed lo Si-nate rnnlTmalinn. He'll' Tallamv Ihe pay wasn't a serve al Ihr "'eMire Ol ine rresi- lacinr: n uie riiflm-nwr i uw dent and will report to Secretary I ing the Job that Intrigues nit." Sore Throat Stops Estcs LINCOLN, Neb. (Pi Son. Esles Kcfanver cancelled his four Ken lucky speaking engagements scheduled for today and tried to shake off the sore throat and cold which he aggravated with long hours of touring in the dust blown farm country. The Democratic vice presiden tial nominee last night reluctantly made the decision not to keep the Kentucky dates after his advisors had insisted th.H the linal three weeks of the campaign starting next Monday were too important to ienDnrdizc. The Kentucky schedule was a Innoh nne. wilh talks set for Pa- rincah. Ma'-field. Hopkinsvllle and News in Brief Saturday, Oct. 13. mt NATIONAL Ike Says He Is In Charge of Administration Sec. 1, P. 1 Stevenson Plcnsed by Western Response . Sen. 1, P. 1 LOCALS Three Hurt In Early Crash Sec. 1, P. 7 Ike Visit Spurs GOP Sec. 1, P. 2 FOREIGN Six-Point Tlan of - Sue?. Favored .... Sec. I, P. 1 Search Continues for Downed Plane Sec. 1, P. 1 SPORTS Both Salem Teams Win Sec. 2, P. t Ole Case Signs for 2 More Years . . Sec. 2, P. 2 REGULAR FEATURES Amusements . Editorials .... Locals Society Comics Television .... Want Ads ... Dorolhy Dix Sec. 1, P. 2 ... Sec. 1, P. 8 ... Sec. I. P. 7 ..Sc. 1, P. 4-5 ... Sec. 2, P. 3 . Sec. 2, P. ! Sec. 2, P. 6-7-8 . . Sec. 2, P. e Madisnnvlllc, Interspersed with i Crossword ruwie ... cc. t, r. i motorcades. , IChurch Sec. 2, P, 4 " --: ;