Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1956)
Capital jijJouf b :v MOSTLY CLOUDY with showers tonight and Tuesday, a little coaler. Low tonight, 42, high Tuesday, 60. 2 SECTIONS 28 Paget uoS8J0 J 68th Year, No. 246 Salem, Oregon, ' Monday, October 15, 1956 VWieT'owIon U.S. Court Backs GE In Firings Refuses to Review - 5 th Amendment . : Discharges , WASHINGTON im - The Sik preme Court Monday let stand a General Electric Co. policy of fir ing employes who plead the Fifth Amendment at public hearings about Communist affiliations. - The United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America ' and John W. Nelson, president of the union's Local' 506 at Erie, Pa., asked the tribunal to review and overturn a lower court decision upholding the policy. The Supreme Court refused to hear the case. ' Quizzed by Senators ' Nelson, an employe at General -e Electric s Erie Works and other employes at the Erie and Schenec tady GE plant were suspended after using the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination when questioned by Senate committees. GE's policy is to suspend work ers for 90 days if they claim the privilege, followed by dismissal unless the workers answer the questions fully. The union and Nelson first sued in U. S. District Court here, charg ing the employer had breached grievance and discharge provi sions of the union contract. The District Court upheld the employ er, ruling that discharges based on the claim of the Fifth Amend ment privilege were firings, for obvious cause. . ; Rebuffed In Appeals Court ' I The union appealed to the. V; S Court of AnDeals here, where the case was dismissed on the ground the union complaint was a matter for exclusive, primary action Dy the National Labor Relations Board. The union then, appealed in vain ; to the high tribunal! ' ' ' In another action Monday, ' the Sunreme Court agreed ' to review the convictions of Henry W. Grune wald and two others for conspiring to fix criminal income tax. prose cution cases. Convicted with Grune wald in U. S. District Court in New York were Daniel A. Bolich, lor mer assistant commissioner of in ternal revenue, and Max Halperin, New York attorney.. . ; Customer and 'Clerk Thwart Loan Hold-up PORTLAND Ifl A customer and a clerk foiled an attempted holdup at a savings and loan association branch office here Monday. A man who appeared to be holding a gun in his pocket walked up to K. C. Eldridgc, a customer at the Benjamin Franklin Federal Savings fr Loan Assn. branch ' office on N.E. Sandy Blvd. Eldridge said the man handed him a sack, and told him to fill it -with money. Eldridge, protest ing that he was only a customer, was told to -get the money any way. 'V . Meanwhile, Ken Lien, an em ploye, telephoned police. The man tried to force Eldridge and the employes into a corner, but Lien and Eldridge : grabbed him and threw him to the floor. They held him until police arrived. The man had a six-inch bolt he used to simulate a gun in his pocket. Police were holding the suspect at the scene. while they investi gated a stolen car found nearby. Freak Winds Rake Florida MIAMI (UP) A freakish late storm which already has taken one life battered Florida to day with gale force winds ana heavy seas. But the 67-foot shrimp boat Ike, tt-hir-h hnH floundered in the storm for four days, was found safe this morning anchored 30 miles off the coast at Fort Myers. The Coast Guard plane which found the Ike said the two men aooara apinuon- I., ivarft unharmed. Forecaster Paul Moore said the storm more of a nor'castcr than . frnnira! torm "may have lost a little of its punch during the night." At 9:30 a.m. the main force of the storm was in the Day- tona Beach area. Ike to Speak InHo WASHINGTON tfl President Eisenhower Monday expanded his wt Coast campaign tour, which starts Tuesday, to include a major address at Los ' Angeles' Holly wood Bowl Friday evening. Thf decision lo visu n- geles and add one day to the trip . ..... L. nAn..i.in. :.5m.i far California's 32 electoral votes. President I'y .... i aa 1 1 MBt'i iirii wwwwMnMwtfi'l-i"iiniiimMiiii(iiiiiBi w rT"" WASHINGTON President Eisenhower, telephone to his ear, poses at a telegraph key In the White House today as he signals the official start of construction on the billion-dollar Upper Colo rado River reclamation project. The secretary of the Interior, Fred Seaton, sits beside the president. Elsenhower's signal from the cabinet room touched off explosions lor excavation at two sites Glen Canyon dam in northern Arizona and at Flaming Gorge dam in northeastern Utah. The president talked by phone with Sen. Arthur Watkins (R-, Utah), who was at the Glen Canyon site.. (AP .Wlrephoto) , British Ship Picks Up Pieces of New Searcli Builds Up in Area Where - Debris Found ! LONDON tfl A British tanker reported that it plucked a yellow raft and two aircraft wheels from the Atlantic Monday in the search for a U.S. transport plane miss ing since Wednesday with 59 men aboard. U. S. 3rd Air Force headquart ers, which made public the report from the tanker Navicella, said no sign of life was noted in the area. ' '. . The' raft had 'American mark ings, but there was no positive County School Boards to Talk Laws in Salem Matters of importance in the field of education will be dis cussed during a meeting to be held in the Little Theatre of South Salem high school at 8 p.m., lues- day, Oct. 23. Attending the conference will be members of all Marion county school boards, according to Gard ner Knapp, president of the Ore gon School Board association, who will preside. The Droeram will include a dis russion of Drooosed legislation to be handled during the 1957 legis lature. This will consist of a new county school bill, reorganization and school financing. Reactions of the directors voiced during the meeting will be pre sented to a subsequent conference of the Oregon association to be held in Eugene, Nov. so. Jim Turnbull, of the state de partment of education and ad visor of the legislative interim committee working on educational measures, will lead tne discussion the night of Oct. 23. IKE TO SPEAK 3 TIMES Mrs, Eisenhower to Accompany President By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Eisenhower will be accompanied by Mrs. Eisenhower on his visit in Portland Thursday, GOP national committeeman Rnhort T. Mautz rcDorted after i-nntsrrin? with the White House staff, I Mitchell also urged the election The President will give a brief of Douglas McKay, GOP candi talk at the airport shortly after i date for the U.S. Senate seat now his arrival at 2:05 p.m. At 2:50 o.m.. he has scheauiea an ap ppeur- ance at a GOP party workers' rally at the auditorium. And in the evening he will speax ai i:m p.m.. in a nationally televised talk The Eisenhowers will spend Thursday night at the Multnomah Hotel and will leave for Denver the following morning. There were these other political ' developments in Oregon mer' the i.r than son Twr&nn attended 'a birthday anniversary party forjeused The Orcgonian of making I the President at the bisennower Signals Start ii i m r v. . ii i Lost Plane report that ' it came ; from the missing C118. The raft, partly de flated, was found some time alter the wheels were spotted, and about eight miles away, the tank er. said. .. " ' Finding' of the wheels spurred flagging hopes among the search ers. "It gives us new hope that there might be a dinghy or dinghies in the area with survivors. RAF officer said in Cornwall. "A new search is now being gradual ly built up around the area in which the wreckage was found. A high speed Royal Navy launch was dispatched to the tanker to bring in the wreckage. The U. S. Air Force announced -earlier Monday its search for'sur- vivors from the Liftmaster would continue indefinitely. Numerous investigations have been carried out after planes or ships reported picking up distress signals or sighting life . rafts, flares, wreckage, dye markers and other objects. ' ' All the reports fizzled out. A gigantic air search, involving more than 10ft planes, an aircraft carrier and other Navy ships, was ordered to continue despite the failure to locate any trace of the missing plane or survivors. Clouds Bring Rain Threat By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cloudiness and occasional rain were expected in Western Oregon Tuesday as a Pacific storm front moved southward from washing ton state. Light rain dampened the Oregon coast, with variable clouds and light rain east of the Cascades. Temperatures early Monday ranged upward from 32- degrees at Burns, lowest reported to the Weather Bureau. Lakeview re ported 33, Roseburg 34, and Bend 37. Pleasant fall weather will con tinue for the next five days in Western Oregon, it's forecast. to Portland headquarters in Portland Satur day. Secretary of Labor James P. Mitchell spoke, praising the ad ministration's accomplishm e n t s and questioning if the country would be as well off had Adlai Stevenson been elected in 1952 1 new by Democrat wayne morse. .MChay jumped on morse ior comparing tne fcisennower admin istration's first budget with what McKay called the "phony budget estimates" it the outgoing Tru man administration in 1953. Mc Kav said that the budget for national parks had been doubled i despite Morse's contention that "the first thing McKay did was to cut the budget for national parks by four .nillion dollars." Morse, sorakinc at loieflo. ac- ''baseless attacks" on him in a on Dam Dam-Starting Blasts Fired By President WASHINGTON (UP) Presi dent Eisenhower by remote con trol today touched, off dual ex plosions that marked the start of construction of the $1 billion Up per Colorado . water storage proj ect. At 2:37 p.m. EDT the President, sitting in the cabinet room at the White House, pressed a golden tel egrapher's keyT The impulse he transmitted set off simultaneous blasts breaking ground for - the Glen Canyon Dam in Arizona and the Flaming Gorge Dam in Utah,' two of the principal storage dams in the big project. ' The work he set in motion will take several decades to complete, the Interior Department said. The President, before touching his hand to the telegraph key, termed the upper Colorado project a good-example of what he calls his administration's partnership program of conservation and pow er development. The project was too big for any local or state group to handle, he said. Ike Authorizes Start on Atom Merchant Ship WASHINGTON Ifl President Eisenhower Monday ordered gov ernment agencies "to proceed as rapidly as possible" with design and construction .of America's first atomic-powered merchant ship. ,, "I am confident that the ship will be the forerunner of atomic merchant and passenger fleets which one day will unite the nations of the world in peaceful trade," Eisenhower said. His statement was issued in connection with a White House ceremony at which a go-ahead construction was authorized. The ship will be a combination vessel designed to carry approxi mately 100 passengers and have a deadweight cargo capacity of 12,000 tons. Construction was authorized by Congress during the last session. The ship will have a service speed of 21 knots and will be about 995 feet long and 78 feet across the beam. The spending limit set by Congress is 4614 million dollars. Thursday recent editorial which told of his activities in behalf of two Port land men to clear the title to tract of Southern' Oregon forest lands. Morse said there was nothing improper about his actions as he contends there was in the AI Sarena case. The editorial had compared the two cases. State Sen. Robert D. Holmes, Democratic candidate for governor, accused his Republican opponent Gov. Elmo Smith of "doubletalk" about taxes. He said that Smith had sponsored and voted for the state ballot measure which would bar a vote on "a sales tax passed ; by the Legislature." bucn a bin would make mean ingless Smith's statement that he would veto a sales tax unless it were approved by the voters, Holmes said. Smith accused Holmes of "false- (Continued on Page S Column 6) Shots Kill 2 Hunters In Oregon 3rd Dies of Heart Attack; Season Toll at 15 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Accidental shots killed two Oregon deer hunters over the weekend, and a third died of a heart attack. The latest victims were George William Quarles, 24, of Stanfield, shot while hunting near Baker: Glenn -Allen Burkett, 32,- of Port land, shot near St. Helens: and Carl Frederick Schacfer, 51, of Hermiston, heart attack victim. Total Deaths at 15 These deaths brought' the Bun- shot deaths to four three killed in the field and one while getting ready to go hunting., They put the total of hunters who have died of apparent heart attacks at 11. One missing hunter, soueht along Klamath river south of Kla math Falls throughout Sunday, turned' up safe. He was Adolph Quescy, 17. of Rogue -River, who became separated Saturday from nis companion. Roy Flrca Shot Quarles, member of a hunting party near Baker, was killed out right Saturday afternoon by t bullet from the gun of Jack Lewis Ackerman, 14, of Baker. The state police report said the boy had fired one shot at a deer but missed and was reloading when his rifle fired accidentally. Burkett was killed Sunday when shot in the neck while stalking near at. Helens. Coroner Ben Coleman Quoted Thomas B. Golden, Burkett's hunting companion from Portland, as saying he saw what he took to be a deer and fired. It Burkett. . Langley Asks : Arrest of AG For Contempt PORTLAND W DiSt. Ally. William M. Langley, facing trial on charges of malfeasance and conspiracy to permit gambling, Monday accused Atty. Gen. Rob ert Y. Thornton of publishing "prejudicial material" in the voters pamphlet for the Nov. . 6 election. Langley filed an affidavit in circuit court asking that Thornton be arrested for contempt of court. The district attorney said the voters pamphlet contained por tions of conversations, transcripts of which figured in a grand jury investigation of vice and corrup tion, ' "No matter where in the slate I might be tried," Langley said,' I would be unable to find a juror who had not' been told that I was guilty." The voters pamphldt is distributed to every registered voter in the state, and jury lists are picked from .registered voters, Lanzlcy said. Secretary of State Earl Newbry said in Salem that Langley re quested that no more pamphlets be distributed until the matter is settled. Several thousand copies already are in the mail. Thornton declined comment and said, "Anything I have to say will be aired in the proper courts. "- The district attorney s suit said statements in the voters booklet "constitute contempt in violation of state law, misbehavior in office and willful violation of .duty" on the part of Thornton. Hungary Reds Restore Nagy To Top Ranks BUDAPEST m Ex-Premier Imre Nagy has been restored to full membership in Hungary s Communist Party. His "rehabili tation marked another major step in the dc-Stalinizallon cam paign in Hungary. An advocale of more liberal government policies and an im proved standard of living, Nagy was booted from the premiership in April 1955 and expelled from tho party seven months later. Matyas Rakosi, the old Stalinist who headed the party at the time, accused Nagy of rightist devia tionism. Rakosi was deposed last July 18 in a de-Stalinlzing move. Nagy, now 59 and a leading I Communist Party liberal, has been rumored on the way back inti favor for months. Some ob servers expect him eventually to resume a leading role in the party, perhaps even the premier ship, if the trend toward liberali zation continues. PolilicalTV By The Associated Prrss Political talks Monday, Oct. IS, reported by candldatrs or their representatives: Sen. Morse, KOIN-TV, 6:M- S:4S p.m. Adlai Stevrmon, KI.OR, ls:30- 11 p.m. GOP panfl Inrludlnr Doug McKay, KPTV, 10:30:11 p.m. Nixon m Labor Backing; Kicks Doorbell Ring Nets $5 for Stevenson LIBERTYVILLE, 111. Wi Adlai E. Stevenson launched tho "dol lars for Democrats" drive Mon day - by knocking at the door of a man who called himself "tho other Democrat" in Libcrtyville and collecting $5. Stevenson drove into Liberly vllle from his farm, where he is putting the finishing touches to a major speech he will deliver over nationwide television Monday night on his proposal to ban II bomb tests. He worked on tho speech oyer the weekend when he and his ad visers decided at a two-day con ference that the H-bomb and Vice President Nixon would be their primary talking points during the final three weeks of the presiden-' tial race. , Solicits Salesman Stevenson did his fund soliciting Hit the home of William G.. Wells, 74, a retired baby shoe salesman. "We're 'covering the neighbor hood," Stevenson said. "We're covering every neighborhood in the country." Wells smiled, held out a ?5 bill, and told Stevenson: "You came to the right place, eovernor. Stevenson pushed Nixon nigncr on his target list as the campaign entered the critical closing weeks. A top campaign strategist told roDorters the Democrats had found ' sufficient public ' feeling nomntf ' Niynn tn make "him -a ' prime issue." The Democratic " presidential nominee will - strike ' out again to night - in a nationwide ABC radio and television address from Chicago on another of his ma jor issues, a proposal that ways be found' to halt 'the testing of giant H-bombs. The time: 9:30 p.m.; 5T. To Outline Reasoning Aides said Stevenson in his talk tonight will, outline the -reasoning behind his' insistence that the country's best hopes for peace lie in finding ways to put a slop to the testing, of H-bombs and per suade Russia lo follow suit. Egypt Cheers Veto as Doom Of Suez Plan CAIRO fUP) .' Egyptian gov ernment sources said today direct negotiations with Britain and France on the Suez Canal dispute probably will start the end of this month in Geneva. ' The. sources said Egypt would exert every effort toward success of the forthcoming negotiations on tho basis of the six principles en dorsed by the United Nations Se curity Council. Egyptians welcomed Ihe Soviet velo of the Angto-i1 renen rcsoiu tion on Suez as heralding final set tlement and said the resolution practically put an end to the pro posed canal users association plan or any other form of international contwl of canal navigation. But in New York Britain was reported lo have asked the United States to help get the users asso ciation begun at once without awaiting for committees In London to complete the detailed operation al setup. This would be a move to have the association collect tolls which now go lo Egypt. Israel Warns Iraqis Not to Enter Jordan JK.RUSALKM Wl Tension gripped the Israeli-Jordan border Monday as a result of reports that 3,000 Iraqi troops were poised on Jordan s eastern frontier ready to move in to support young Kihg Hussein's shaky government. Israeli Premier David Ben-Gur-ion, in a speech lo Parliament, declared his country reserved freedom of action if Ihe Iraqi army enters Jordan. The Israeli Forcien Ministry in a pointed statement obviously aimed at Brit ain warned against support for any such move. Israel feared entry of Iraqi troops would pose a danger of at tack against her. mere was specu latlon that Israeli troops might mount a counterpush 1 hove her border back to a straight line ne tween tho Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea, where there is now a big Arab bulge. ; The 70-year-old flcn-Gurion re- -1 Sights Off 4 FIRST TALLY Repu blicans Push Ahead in C-J Poll Republican candidates for presi dent, U.S. senator, member of congress, novernor and secretary of sUte received commanding leads in the first count of Capital Journal straw votes cast at its business office counter from Thursday afternoon to the end of the week. Two local clubs went more strongly Republican in or ganization polls. At the business office counter the vote was as follows: FOR PRESIDENT: Eisenhower 82. -Stevenson 48. FOR U.S. SENATOR: McKay 74. Morse 55. . ' FOR CONGRESSMAN: Lfce 40. Norblad 89. ' FOR GOVERNOR Holmes 44. Smith 82. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE: , Hatfield 96. . Rwnetlnnd 30. Two organizations also -took out ballots and sent In the following noils of their members: : K.C. Bridge' club, Eisenhower it. Stevenson 8: McKay 23, Morse 7; Lee 5, Norblad 24; Holmes 7, Smith 22; Hatfield 25, SwccUana 4. The Sojourners club, Kiscnnow Ihterihi Group Backs County Charter Plai Unit Meets for 2 Days to Finish , Laws Draft ; By JAMES D. OLSON ' (Capital Journal Writer) Discussion of the final draft of report to the J 957 .legislature by. the legislative interim com- ittee on mcai goverin""i gan Monday morning " :ontinuo tnrougn a iwu-ubj, ing in tho State Capilol. pity Commissioner Ormand K. Bean of Portland, chairman, said iht rinn in tho leneth oi tne re port a summary of the commit tee's - recommendation , should probably be prepared for general distribution. .. . " Charter Plan likco Th rnmmlttee members reaf firmed their approval of recom mending a constitutional amend ment which would permit voters of a county to adopt a charter similar to that available ior in corporated cities. This approacn.io uring to fringe areas located ouismo the limits of incorporaieu chics was favored over another sug gested plan of mandatory annex- During the past year ana a nan the committee has held 14 public hearings and data concciea in these areas was used in compil Ins fht rpnnrt. It was notcu ny aiam aenaiui Paul Gcddes of Roseburg that Ihe fringe area problems differ in Ihe various parts of tho stale. Portland, he pointed out had its nnnulation problems, the coastal areas are confronted with I h,tvu dimmer vacation popula tion, the Willamette Valley and Southern Oregon having an in flux of population located just ncwed the Israeli plea for defen nivn arms from the United Stales At U. N. headquarters in New Vnrk Jordan ca led for quick dis cussion by tho Security Council nf a "most serious" situation alone the border. The Council may meet Thursday to discuss the Jordan complaint that recent Israeli reprisal raids, in which scries of Jordan irontier posts have been wiped out with a large loss of life, are a threat to peace. In London, British Foreign Of fice spokesman said the govern ment of Prime Minister Eden has advised Israel that the dispatch of Iraq troops tn Jordan would "contribute to stability in a trou bled area." The British are reported lo fear that King Hussein's Jordan re gime is in danger of collapse from pressures from extreme Arab na tionalist elements hacked by Egypt. Jordan Is holding nation wide elections next Sunday, GOP Dollars cr 34, Stevenson .4; Mcnay ra, Morse 5; Lee 3, Norblad 32; Holmes 4, Smith 31; Hatfield 31, Sweetland 5. Total of all the votes follows: Elsenhower 138, Stevenson 60; Mc Kay 130, Morso 67; Lee 48, Nor blad 145; Holmes 35, Smith 135; Hatfield 152, Sweetland. 32. The ballot box will be on the Capital Journal's business office counter through Saturday, Novem ber 3. The seal will be broken ana tho ballots counted each Monday morning. An invitation has been extended to all organizations in tho Canital Journal circulation area to secure these ballots, which cover the first five contests on the ballot, poll their members and re turn the results lo the Capital Journal for nubl cation. Ten thousand ballots nave Been printed of which more than 7500 are being sent to the colleges and h eh schools of the area, more win be printed it neeaea. urganiza- t nns w sning to pou ineir mem bers are invited to secure ballots Irnm the Canital Journal. Results of individual polls will ho announced as received, only the business oifice counter box held till each Monday. A cumula tive runnine total will be kept with high school; college and other polls kept separate. outside the incorporated cities and Eastern Oregon wlttt very few fringe area problems. Discussion Planned Dunne the Monday afternoon session the committee planned to discuss portions of .the report dealing with annexation- prob lems as well as public health problems confronted by the fringe areas in western Oregon. Attending tho meeting Monday morning in addition to Chairman Bean and Senator Geddcs were State Representative Al Loucks of Salem, John P. Misko of Ore gon City, lor slate representative nd County Judge Raymond A. Lathrop of.. Josephine county. Car Struck by Train;2Hurt A Washington couple were hos pitalized shortly before noon Mon day when the car in which they were riding was - struck by a switch engine at 12th and State streets. Taken to Salem Memorial hos pital were Mr. and Mrs. v. x,. Opsahl. Longvlew, Wash. Mrs. Opsahl, 69, suffered a back in jury, cily first aidmcn reported, Opsahl complained of chest pains, they said. The car, driven by Mrs. J. J. Hansen, Mill City, was severely damaged when the train pushed it across the intersection and into the new protective curbs along the 12th street railroad tracks, it was reported, Mrs. Hansen, daughter of the injured couple, was not re ported injured in the accident. Pastor Threat Brings Charge PORTLAND (UP)-Harold Wil liam Hepburn, 42, Gold Beach, was. held under S500 bail today on an extortion charge. Hepburn was indicted by the federal grand Jury on a charge of sending threatening letters to a Coos Bay minister. Tho indict ment charged that Hepburn de manded that the Rev. R. H. Rus sell Day him $1500 or he would moke public alleged amorous overtures to Hepburn s wile by the minister. C. E. Luckcy, U. S. attorney, said Ihe Rev. Mr. Russell denied making any such overtures and took the letters to the Coos county district attorney, who . in turn gave them to federal agents. HUNTER CRITICAL SPOKANE tfl Henry R. Mc Laughlin, SI, a .Sunnysidc, Wash. hunter who accidentally shot him self in the abdomen, was reported in critical condition at a hospital here Monday. Weather Details Mixtmnm yesterd'ay, M: mlnltnnm tnday, 5ft. Tout 24-hour precipitation ia: for month: .50 normal. 1.31, Sra mi nrarlnltaUon. 1.3T: normal. Z.14 Blvtr hultht, -S.l Url. (Rtpoct by U. S. Vfeatmr Bureau.) Gains Adlai Drive Dayton Cheers Wildest Yet For Dick ; By HERBERT FOSTER " United Press Staff Correspondent EN ROUTE WITH NIYON (iro Vice President Richard M. Nixon predicted today the Republican! will get a bigger share of the la bor vote than in 1952. . . 7'-. wixon, in a strenuous slumping tour of Ohio, said In .ni FifcPr?d fr delivery in Toledo . nmenca s wage earners are nothing to risk their jobs, their high wages and their security and their peace by changing from the ' Eisenhower leadership to a Stev enson administration which offers only a return to the Truman poli cies. . . . . . The vice president said ih n. pcrats in -1952 -tried to create the impression the GOP . would bK hard times and a depression. vj ' "union American wage earners now know that the Re publican Parfv nnrfot. ntutokt ci: sennower is the party ef high env. '",' r mgn wages, real secur- mm peace, ne said; . ; : Biggest Crowd yet V Nixon Sot his mist imlhi,.L.t:. welcome so-far in his second tour from a crowd, estimated hv nri - officials at nearly 2,000 who SI". Dayton hote'. ballroom. j "uuPng, cneenng throng fi led every seat, packed the side. maies ana. more persons stood la the lobby of the hotel when offl- . t.oia woum let no more persons upstairs. , . ; , Nixon told the crowd tha Demo- ' cratic campaign , is "on the-down ' graae. He said the Democrats hit their peak at their Chicago con- VAnllnn ..111. i, . ' ........mi - iney inrew in ? everything, including the kitchen : sink and part of the sewer," . Grueillnc Cimulni tim ' Dayton was the firsts of seven' 7 speeches and two news conferences' ' in Nixon's tour barnstormin across Ohio; by plane and auto. He -i then flics to Toledo and llanmx. ; transfer , to , a smaller plane for : a flight to. Defiance. returns - tn Toledo for his regular plane, and flies to Warren and Younestown. completing the tour. .' , Beck Pledges GOP Support WASHINGTON (UP) - Dave Beck, president of the Teamsters Union, predicted after, a White House visit today that "a great many union members will vote for the reelection of President Eisen hower. "I think the best-interest of the country will be served-by the re election of President Elsenhower," Beck said.- ; Beck .said the country is pros perous, the administration , prog ressive, and the President's , team fricndly-to labor. , . PTT to String Hawaii Gable SAN FRANCISCO (UP) -' The ': Pacific Telephone and Telegraph ' Company ,has disclosed plans to lay the world's longest underwater cable to connect the West Coast with Hawaii. A PT&T spokesman . said tha 2100 nautical mile cable will be laid between Point Arena in Mendocino County and Koko Head, Oahu. ' The cable laying operation will begin next summer and - will last into, the fall. . ' News in Brief ; 1 For Monday, Oct. 15, 1956 NATIONAL 7, Nixon Predicts GOP Gain : ' in Labor Vole ......Sec. 1, P. 1 Adlai Rings Doorbell . In Dollars Drive Sec. -1,. P. 1. LOCAL Oregon Turkey Growers : . ( ; in New Plant :. Sec. 1, P. S ' Day-Old Car Burned In Accident Sec.,l,"P. 5 STATE ! r Shots Kill 2 Hunters, 3rd . ' - ' Dies of Heart Attack Sec. 1, P. 1 FOREIGN ' Egypt Sees Doom of ' - Suez Users Plan ....Sec.. 2, P. I - SPORTS Janet Harman Repeats at Match Pin Champ ..Sec. 2. P. 1 C. of I. Next Willamette . ; Foe Sec. 2, P. 1 REGULAR FEATURES Amusements Sec. 1, P. 2 Sec. 1. P. .....Sec. 1, P. 5 ..Sec. 1,' P. 8,7,8 Sec. 2, P. .."...Sec 2, P. 10 ..Sec. 2, P. 12,13 .....Sec. 2,-P. It Editorials .. Locals Society ..... Comics Television.. Wnt Ads ... Markets .... Dorolhy Dix ...... Crossword'-Puzzl ....Sec. 2, P. 14 .....SeciVP. S