Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, October 19, 1956, Page 2, Image 2

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    Salem, Oregon, Friday, October 19, 1956
I
m
00:
mm
Farm
For
4-11 Leaders
In County
Honored
By (XAUDE STHU.SI.OFF
Canitnl Journal Sprclnl Wilier
The annual Marion County 4-llj
Leaders haiifjuel had a distinctly
lorcisn llavor last nishl as II farm
families were hosts to Inlcrnation-
al Farm Youth Exchanges during . "" families interested in acting
the past year were presented with I as hnsls should "PI t0lhe c"?"ly
special recognition certificates hy W"1" "". Mrs- GlM'n Mld
Mrs. Winnilred Gillcn, state I.F. Howard Runkel, professor of
Y.E. director.
Portland Cieneral Klectric com-
pany sponsored the dinner served
at the Senator hotel to 250 leaders
of 4-H club work in the county.
tos:s Listed
Marion county farm lamilies who
hne iioste loe loreign visitors
are Mr. and Mrs. Perl Bye, Cen
tral Howell; Mr. and Mrs. John
Cage, Middle Grove; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom DeArmond; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Eggiman, Central Howell;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Gavettc,
North Sflntiam; Mr. nnd Mrs. .lake
Gilmour, Jefferson; Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice Heater, Victor Point: Mr.
nnd Mrs. Alfred Hofman, North
Santiam; Mr, and Mrs. H. H
Ralphs, North Santiam; Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Rolling. Donald, and
Mr. and Mrs. William Trindle, for -
mcrly of Eldriedge.
Mrs, Gillcn said that although
Ihc program is small, the stale de -
parlment believes it s the most
ellectivc of all in producing titer-
national good will. So far, Ml for-
eign youths have come to the
U.S. and 125 have gone from this
country to 50 foreign lands.
Following the work-visits last
summer, exchangees from other
47 Buildings
At Camp Adair
To Go on Sale
Forty-seven frame buildings and
structures' at Camp Adair, near
Corvallis, Oregon, are to be sold
by the Corps of Engineers, U.S.
Army, for removal from the prem
ises, Colonel R. ,1. B. Page, Seattle
district engineer, has announced.
Sealed bids will be opened at 2 p.m.
November 2R.
The structures vary greatly in
i7.e. ranging from a large two-
story dormitory wilh three wings to
small storehouses and utility bmld-
lft5. Purchasers may bid on one
or any number of buildings.
The nrouerly may be insnecfedi
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
regular
working days.
Elvis Presley Hangs Shiner
On Service Station Manager
By B!I,I, CRIDKIl ,
MEMPHIS, Tcnn. (Jft-A aprvico!
nation mnnagrr iportcd
heaut
ol a black eye lodny, souvenir of a i
brisk (1st flsht wllh Elvis (The,
Felvisi Presley, the teen-agers'
rock 'n' roll idol.
The. fisticuffs flared yesterday
when station manager Ed Hopper
became Irate hecause a crowd
drawn by Presley and his $10,000
car was blocking business at the
gas pumps.
Presley. 91, Hopper, U, and a
late comer to the fight, station
attendant Aubrey liruwn, 21, were
free in $.V2 bonds, all charged
with assault and battery nnd dis
orderly conduct.
Asst. Police Chief Hrtms Mc
Carroll said officers already on
Ihe scene broke up (lie light and
reported that Hopper was trying
to unlimber a small pocket koile
at the time.
Presley, home fur a few days
from his rock V roll tours, said
the trouble started after be drove
his glossy, white Continental Mark
II Into Ihe downtown station nnd
asked Hopfer to check the giis
tank for leaks.
A crowd began lo assemble,
blocking traffic. Hopper finally
asked Tresley In move on so the
station rould get back to normal
business.
A witness. Harvey Hull, told
police that Presley, seated in his
nr siemi.0 autnoranhs. ncreeit to i
nmv on mil delayed to oblige
Mger fans. Huff said
H0pppr
slapped Presley on the
the head nnd snapped:
"1 said In move on."
bock of
Army Motes
-Year Term
To Deserter
BKHL1N to Pvt. Philip K U'"K". i"P"g I't'y b-
Morand of Dallas. Tex., pleaded ; l,aiulal lndrn i Uie men and
guilty Fridnv to a charge of de-! Wu"M, h rve (be stale. Most
serhiig to the Communists, nnd 0' (,ltl" have lo maintain their
was sentenced to five years .m-mv" l,n ntl at the same luue.
pnsonmrnt ; maintain a place of residence in
The sentence was Imposed by,'1"" d"niK the sessions,
a U.S. Armv court-martial, which; This personal financial sacrifice,
also decreed a dishonorable dis-;'"' bmkers of the measure de
charge. : dare, deprives the stale uf the
Mornnd. now 42, admitted de-
Sfrtine from his unit in Lint,
Auslria on Nov. n, I'Hfi and turn-;
ine himself over In Russian of-
ficlala In Ihe Soviet rone of Aus- Likewise, it is pointed out, many
tria. legislators with invaluable exper-
Last Angus!, he decided the irnee have refused to seek rr rlec
time had coma In leave Common-i lion because of (be burden placed
Ism. He fseaped and fled to Abjupon them and their families,
lifd-neeupifd West Berlin, where! Kvery session sefi some valuable
he turned himself over to Army member whff has not returned be
authorities. cause of this reason.
Families
Hosting Visitors
crainlrios summarized their im-levelling, said the U.S. had mauV'
pressions of U.S. as: H children tremendous strides but "progress
here have more freedom than based on materialism is only nor
abroad. 12) U.S. children respect izontal; to he constructive, pro
their parents less lhan in other gress must be vertical as well."
countries. 3 1 Americans are very, Munkel said that TV is passive
hospitable and surprisincly inter- and 1 there is no substitute for
eslcd in learning of others. (4), books. Minimum reading should
Americans work loo hard, they include a daily newspaper, a week
should learn to relax. 5) Religion ly magazine and at least two solid
Is a real part of American life, j books per year, he said.
which is a surprise.
Another Program Planned
Another I.F.Y.K. program will
be carried out in Oregon next sum-
speech at Willamette university, ;
who was principal speaker of the
Egypt 'Can't
Do Any More'
About Parley
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. W1
Egyptian Foreign Minister Mah
moud Fawzi, heading home to re
port to President Nasser, says
Envoi has already made written
proposals to settle the Suez crisis
land is ready to start negotiations
.with Britain and France,
I The Brllisn and Fr,ncn g0Vern-
mcnls have insi,od thnl Eml
:has come up wilh nolnint, ..
crce as sMMe couni0r to
,h(,ir dcmand for n,ernationni
contro o( the ,,trnLnRic wnicrway.
Rrili!,h prim0 Minisl(,r Kd(, .nd
French Premier Mollct In a joint
statement this week called for
such a counterproposal.
Fawzl said In an interview that
If everything Egypt has proposed
"is not sufficient to start nego
tiations with, we are entitled to
wonder bow could anything, In the
view of those who make the alle
gations, suffice to start ncgoia
tions at all."
Diplomats at the V.N. said they ( has Insisted right along that army
understand that Fawzl, British reservists will have to stay In uni
Foreign Secretary Sclwyn Lloyd i form until the Suez Canal dispute
and French Foreign Minister
Christian Pineau may get togeth
er in Geneva with U.N. Secretary
General Dag Hammarskjold in a
week or 10 days for a second
round of talks.
DUKE VISITS ISLAND
WAHK, Seychelles, Ml The
Duke of Edinburgh arrived Fri
day on the royal yacht Ilhtannin
ai.inis loneiy irminn ucean isianu,
colony where Britain has confined
exiled Archbishop Alakarins, the
Greek nationalist lender of Cyp
rus. The duke is on his way to
open the Olympic Games at Mel-j
f bourne.
Presli-y, nnd 1M pounds
J"Pfd from the car nnd crossed
right that set Hopper 15-10. 1751
hack on his heels and cut a half-
inch gash at the corner of his left
oye.
Huff said a policeman nnd an
other man broke up tho fight nnd
then Rrown. M and 220 pounds,
moved in and also drew a Pres
ley right.
"He Just barely did hit me In
the left eye," said Brown, who
wns unmarked.
"I asked him three limes lo
move, in n nice way,' said Hop-
77'; ItAI. LOT MF.ASl
Boost in Legislators ' Pay
Again Comes Before Voters
Another Salmon
liU lief ore
Electors
Hy .MMKS D. OLSON
Canitnl Journal INiHIIcnl Kill Ire
Measure No. IS would amend the
constitution and increase
i salaries of members ot the leais-
latitre from $wn a year to $1,200
ft V01,r' llus nieasure, contrary to
one voted down several years ago,
keeps the voter in charge of legis-
lative salaries and does not give
the legislature authority to set its
own salary.
burden 1'olntrri Out
Proponents of the measure-am)
i there is no m amed opposition -!
(Hunt out tli.it as the business ul
the stale becomes more complex
ittie duration of legislative sessions
services ui many able community
lenders who
either unwilling
"I" wiaWe to
den.
bur-; h
Cited
Achievement pins were present-
ed to 20 junior leaders and 213
auult leaders by T. It. Hobart, field
man for the U.S. National bank
who makes the awards, Mrs. 'I her
esa Dehler, Kldriedge, has put in
32 years of 4-11 leader service. She
is closely followed by Mrs. Willow
l-.vans, Keizer, with 30 years. A
J,, j,, ;car, o( leadership
has been given by 18 persons in the
county. There are now more than
300 active lenders in the work.
- T. W. I.owery of P.G.K. wel
comed the guests. Howard Eggi
man, president of the Marion Coun
ty Leaders association, spoke In
appreciation of the banquet.
Burton Hutton, State 4-H leader,
acted as master of ceremonies.
Mrs. Allen Benson of Hayesville
was chairman of the banquet com
mittee. She was assisted by Mrs.
Tom Pomeroy, Keizer; Mrs.
Edythe Smith, Rosedale, and
Margaret Krug, county 4-H agent,
Eden Promotes
Antony Head
Defense Chief
LONDON ffl Prime Minister
Eden named a new and younger
defense minister today and at the
same time brushed aside com
plaints about the handling of re
servists called back into uniform
because of the Suc7. Canal crisis,
ISdcn promoted 50-year-old War
Secretary Antony Head to the post
of minister of defense. Head, who
succeeds Sir Walter Monckton, 65,
with. Egypt Is settled.
Monckton was named paymas
ter general and remains In the
Cabinet. Ifc asked to be released
from "the constant and mounting
strain" of the defense office.
John Hugh Hare, minister of
state for colonial affairs, was Ap
pointed secretary for war.
The government announcement
of the changes made no reference
to the numerous complaints of the
handling of the reservists. But
Mend's elevation was a clear sign j Western powers should take to
of Krien' confidence in him and word Egyptian President Uamal
was expected to strengthen Uic I Abdel Nasser.
minister's hand against Labor
party criticism when Parliament
resumes .sessions next week.
per. "He'd
move,' but
say, 'I'm fixing (o
he didn't. The last
time I told him he started to get;
out nnd I shoved him back In the Llovd is said to have proposed
car. He slartrd out after me." j that such lolls be held as blocked
Presley said Hopper "reached funds not to be paid lo Egypt un
intn the car and hit me. He pulled til there is a final settlement of
a knife on me when I got out. I hit; Ihe Suez controversy,
him. The redhead I Brown swung Failure tti resolve these differ-
nl mc nnd missed nnd then I hit :
him.
"I'll regret It as long as I live."
he added. "I'm sorry 1 went In
the place. 1 can take slurring re
marks, but when somebody hits
you It's a different story."
HKS ('A)
Legislative sulurles in states
surrounding Oregon vary consider
ably but most are higher than in
Oregon. California pays $5,000 a
year with $14 a day expenses dur
ing the session plus mileage;
Idaho pays $10 a day plus $5 a
day expenses during the session;
Nevada pays $15 a day and $8.00
a day expenses and Washington
pays $1,200 plus $15 a day ex
penses for not to exceed (0 days.
Any fish bill is controversial and
such is the case in connection
with Measure No. 7 which would
prohibit fishing for salmon hy any
means other than hook and line
south of the Columbia river.
Sportsmen and conservationists
are behind this measure, which
would ban practically all commer
cial listiing lor salmon or stcei
liead in coastal streams soulh of
the month ot the Columbia river.
Kiwi s and ba s specifically
banned by llus bill to commercial
lislung would be the Tillamook
Buy and uatm emptying into
Tillamook Bay. Nehntem Hivec
Si leu river; aiiuna river; Alsca
river; and Coqudte river.
KuTpllnni Made
Two excepting me made in the
bill, first, commercial harvesting
of chum salmon on the Tillamook
Hay lor a thirty dny period to be
selected by the State Fish com
mission between October 25 and
December 5 of each year vumld
permitted
Second It would permit state or
federal agencies lo use commer
cial gear necessary for taking of
tis'i in Ihe affected waters for
authoriied scientific study.
Projkments ol the measure de
clare its passage would aid In Ihe
repletion of salmon runs In eoastal :
streams and deny that II will if-1
President
President Klsenhower, a grandfather himself,
took lime out at Portland airport Thursday to
shake hands with 10 young girls wearing "McKay
Hop" hats. More than 5,000 people were on hand
U.S., Britain at Odds
On Suez Canal Tolls
Bv JOHN M. HIGIITOWER
WASHINGTON Ml The United
States and Britain are reported to
have hit a new snag in trying to
work out common policies for
dealing with Egypt in the Suez
Canal dispute.
This one concerns the payment
of tolls for ships going through
the canal.
However, some diplomatic offi
cials say that at the heart of the
current disagreement Is the basic
issue oi now lougn a unc me
The specific problem of whatjpec(s lo deduct the amount of The strikes were reported
the newly organized Suez Canal ;monoy accumulated by the canal Thursday hy Dcr Tag. an inde
Users' Assn. should do nbout ship i company from whatever compen-1 pendent West Berlin newspaper,
tolls is in active negotiation be-t sation he may eventually agree to 'and bv the League of Free Jurists.
twecn Secretary of Male Dulles j pay tho company for its national
anil British Foreign Secretary jm assets.
Selwyn I.loyd. Dulles has maneuvered ever
Dulles is described as advocat- since the crisis arose to avoid a
ing that any money paid to the showdown with Egypt while Brit-
users association by ships going,
through the Suez should then be'sions would nave prelerred tOiMaedebure no miles from Berlin
I uirnen over 10 r-gypi lor use oi
Ihe canal less, of course, any
association expenses for pilot serv-
ices and the like.
ences is hlnmed for the lack of
action hy Ihe U.S. government so
fnr toward having American ship
owners pay canal tolls to the
association Instead of to Egypt, as
lllpv nrr now Hnind
i Dulles' proposal in effect would
prive any individual from making
a living from netting salmon. They
point out that only 167 licenses
were Issued In 1955 to commercial
fishermen on these streams and
contend many of these were taken
out hy men who are engaged in
other pursuits and enter the com
mercial fishing field only as a
vacation.
Opponents of Ihe measure, the
commercial fishermen and pack
ers, charge that the measure is
"an attempt to regulate Ihe man
egement of an important natural
resource upon a foundation of self
ishness and emotion rather than
upon facts."
They point out that manage
ment of the Chinook and silver
salmon runs of the slate, the spe
cies involved in this measure, is
exclusively entrusted by statute to
the Stale Fish Commission.
The
coin mi
they aiuue.
have
.harply
limited commercial
mhing operations in this streams
ami claim operation of the limited
commercial lishing now permitted
does nut endanger the continued
existence or possible increase of
me supply ot these dsn.
If Fish U Your Wish .
We Have Your Dish!
Halibut Steak...
(with ill tht trimmings)
TUT C A II CUMS Th
I fit JAM dtlUr
Portland Road at
For Ordtn to Go
Greets Young
-h l f r v
carry over the present American
practice of paying money to
Egypt. But it would enhance the
prestige and authority of the users
association by making it an inter
mediary. The British and French are
now paying tolls to the Suez Canl
Co., which Nasser declared na
tionalized last July. The company
is holding them in a blocked ac
count pending an ultimate settle
ment with Nasser.
Nasser has not objected to this
nrrnnifPmpnr .it it ho in
!not preventtiPBritish and French
i .ships from using the canal. Amer-
lean officials say he simply ex-
am and h ranee on various occa -
iuiue ink issue.
Camera Club
Plans Showing
Salem Camera club members
have invited the public to attend
their second showing next Wednes
day at the First Methodist church
of the prize-winning non-color
photos from a national contest.
The demonstration Includes 50 top
I "nun-is iiuiu i:r.tu mm 10 uuin ihm
year's contest. Harvey Thurhvell.
black and white photo chairman,
wilt talk at this part of the show.
A special color photography pro
Ki';im will be in the (orm of 35 mm
slide presented by color chair
man it. K. (Iron. The program will
start al H o'clock.
Naturalization
Classes Planned
Two special naturalization
classes will be held Friday and
Saturday nights at B p.m. at the
YMCA, Claude Kells, instructor,
announced lodny.
The classes are for potential
citizens who will take part in citi
zanship tests Monday and Tues
day here, Kells said.
Regular citizenship classes at
the YMCA have been going on for
the past month. Tonight and Sat
urday's classes are special for
those people who plan to take
tests Monday and Tuesday.
Meeting of Hop
(Jrowers Delayed
A meeting of Hop Growers nf
Amt'vu'H. sdu'iliiM for l'ortlnnri
Snltirduv. h;s tu't'll postponed
untl ,,n , ' i, . meoi ding to word
Iced In Salem Thursday from
I'eter llradley. Klk llrove. Calif.,
president of the association.
the Mivember meeting will be
; held at Multnomah llulel with
; growers from Oregon, Washington,
(Idaho and California In attend
. . V ?
85c
J j
0'gm Horn of Sloppy Jot
A Or.il Sandwich
North City limlti
Phono 2-6798
Admirers
to greet the President at the airport In his first
appearance In Furlland since Decoming president.
(Capital Journal Photo)
East German
Press Denies
Labor Restive
BERLIN UPi East Germany's
Communist newspaper tried Fri
day to squash reports that thous
ands of factory workers are strik
ing for belter conditions.
The Red press termed the re-
t ports complete lies, and said they
were invented to prevent under
standing between East and West
Germany.
The official Communist Party
mws pautr weura uvuimiiihiiu miiu
!,he rcPrts were Pror tnat Wcst
German "militarists are trying
lo h,ndt'r unification.
a West Berlin nnli-Communist or
ganization which claims it has a
larllung network of contacts in
East Germany.
According to them, the strikes
! C(nter in the industrial city of
Two thousand police were report
edly rushed into the city from
Kast Berlin. There have been no
reports of violence or arrests.
The Telegraf, another independ
ent West Berlin newspaper, said
Friday the Central Committee of
the Kast German Communist Par
ly has been called into special ses
sion to deal with the strikes. The
Morgenpost, another West Berlin
paper, said the party's chief the
oretician, Fred Oelssncr, has been
sent to Magdeburg.
YoiillisNominalcd
By Norhlad for
Annapolis Exams
Representative Walter Norblad
has nominated the following young
men to take entrance examina
tions to the U.S. Naval Academy
lo till 1957 vacancies:
Principal, Joseph B. Mueller,
Kstncada; first alternate, dames
M. Snell. Salem; second alternate,
Lonny M. Newbrey, Tigarcf; third
alternate, Neil L. Morfitt, .Jr., As
toria; principal, James Mel. My
ers, Corvallis; first alternate. Dale
A, Patrick, McMinnville: second
alternate, B. Gary McBride, St.
Helens.
.lames M. Snell. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry W. Snell. 1WX1 .letter
son St.. will graduate from North
i Salem High school in June. The
academy examination will be held
March 27, 1PS7 and the two suc
cessful nominees will enter the
school in July, 195T.
ance. At this meeting an organiza
tion under consideration for .tome
weeks will be completed according
to President Bradley.
M
WHtaSTHSfOOttOOOPI'
Doug, Wayne Trade Accusations
As Thev Talk on Same Platform
J r,,r,i from vot-; income was 7 ahovo the nation-
.. ...o,.-r.Tcn niiFSS
jiy jiir, ft.-n..v..r. .
rii.mncr.it ic Sen. Wayne Morse
and his Republican opponent. b iml shmM disqual.fv Mc
Douglas McKay accused each other didale fnr the Senate
of lacking political morality fa th"' L-nite(J states." Morse said,
Thursday as they spoke from the "'. y(m won.t (ind me duck
same platform. ; 'vote 0n any issue."
It was the first time that the ; who spoke first, said
two candidates have appeared to-! ,' senator has done
gether sines, they opened their )o nt world peace . . .
bitterly fought campaign. i js always invariably wrong on
Vafh enntre fnr in minutes on ..." .int. neace or war.
the suhieci. "Resolved. That the
interests of Oregon would best be
served election 01 a 'm-inm-lican
or Democrat) to the United
States Senate."
They shook hands and smiled .McKay said,
for photographers before the talk, ; The meeting, attended hy an
but each scowled several times overflow crowd of 350. was ar
while the other spoke. i ranged by the Portland Women s
Morse said that McKay, who Forum. . .
then was Oregon governor, had; In other political d"?'"1''
sent him a telegram in 1952 urging! stale Sen. Monroe Sweetland,
him to vote to ivcrride President Democratic candidate lor etit-
Truman's expected veto of the
tidelands oil bill or, if he could
Woman and 3
Children Die
In Gas Blast
, 1
H ERR IN, 111. (-TV-A mother and,
he. 3-year-old son and two other
children were killed and nine
other persons, including three
t children, seriously injured yester- drop in Oregon's per capita in
; day by an explosion at a bottled conie cnud he blamed on "ad
i gas depot. 'verse Republican administration
i The blast and a flash fire spread policies "
flames over nearly a block, de- i He saia- the state's per capita
suuying nve nomes. witnesses :
reported four or five separate
explosions.
Doctors at Herrin Hospital said
some of Ihe injured were not ex
pected to live.
"There are a lot of them we
won't be'-able lo do anything for,"
one doctor said.
Policeman Waller Lowe said six
of the victims were in a yard near
the depot when the first blast oc
curred. The flash fire covered
them with flames, he said. Others
injured were believed to have
been in their homes.
The explosion occurred at the
depot on the west side of Ihis
southern Illinois town from which
cooking gas is distributed in small
tanks to customers in Herrin and
rural areas.
Police Chief Roy Cole said Hen
ry Scheffler. 50; operator of the
depot, was filling the small tanks
from a large tank truck when a
j leak apparently developed.
I "The area was filled with es
caping gas," Cole said. "In some
i manner it was ignited, the tlow
I kept increasing. Then one of the
small tanks blew up and that set
' off the others."
FIRST RUN -ENDS TOMORROW
I A motion picture ,
Iso daring
you'll loyi
"HOW DID
THfY DARf
MAKE ITI"
b
JAMES MASON BARBARA RUSH A.JKf
n tt-ttttttai . -v ". ;1 1
ON THE SAME PROGRAM
I: if
'uJj
"Guinness is
wildest pranks. The fun
prows steadily more hilarious I"
i Alec
ThEaJykfflers !
. t""1"' KATlt I0HKS0N I
HOLLYWOOD KIDS CLUB MATINEE
EVERY SATURDAY 1 TO 4 P. M.
THIS WEEK'S FEATURE
SINGIN' IN THE CORN
Starring the One and Only
JUDY CANOVA
And Don't Forget . . '.
ONE HOUR OF CARTOONS
Adults and Children Only 20c
Special Attention to Birthday Plrti
STARTS SUNDAY
TYRONE POWER
MM INUVArx
VICTORIA SHAW
Gay and H.ppy
'not do that, 10 i"-""
lnt' ., ,,,., and what
ii
"...i'-m. ir Morse says he would
... , dehate some issues, on the
two mosi important uou.
time-political morality and world
neare. he is strangely silent,
tary of state, accused nis mi
1 publican opponent.
State Sen.
consistently
Mark Hauiciu, oi
,.t;n, u.i.h those who would de
stroy . . . the 'Oregon system' of
government-full participation by
the people, in decisions of their
government."
He said that Hatfield voted for
Measure No. 1 on Ihe November
ballot, which Sweetland said,
"would destroy the power of
referendum of legislative tax
measures by the Deople . . .
Scn Rjcnard Neuberger, who
as Decn campaigning on behalf
of Democratic candidates, told a
Klamath Falls meeting that a
Dallas Mofor-Vu
Gates open 6:45, show at 7:00
FKI. SAT. SUN.
Robert .Mitehuni, Frank Sina
tra, Olivia dcllavilanri in
"NOT AS A STRANGER"
Second Feature
George Montgomery in
"ROBBERS ROOST"
. Technicolor
Rain visors for your car
on rainy nites.
EAGLES
DANCES AGAIN
SAT. NIGHTS
YOUR GUESTS
ARE WELCOME
. AT EAGLES HALL
vL
off on one of his
- CooK Wofld Tl.5un
Guinness
lciN.5eope TE:10,
rmmrmm mm Mm
- .
. ...
Second Fe.tur,
W TtCHNtCOlO
rmmmmmm Oil
nl average In 1952, but by 19M
n had ueclined to $ln below the
national uvuingc. c oum uregon
farm nc-im" had slipped 27 per
cent since 1952.
He told a Medford meeting that
"an avalanche of high-priced
nronaganda financed by sourcci
hidden from public view" was be
ins used by opponent.1! of Morse
"to smother his record as a great
senator."
Woodburn Drive-In
Friday Saturday Sunday
"MAN WITH THE COIDEN ARM"
Frank Sinatra
Plus
"ESCAPE TO BURMA"
R, Stanwyck It. Ryan
Open 6:45 Starts 7:15
NOW PLAYING!
At Salem's
F.nlertainment Center
The BEST H
iHINGSInilFE
ARE f REE
lorting
Cordon MacRAE Dan DAILEY
Ernest BORGNINE Sheree NORTH
COLOR k, o. lv.
-CO-HIT
Hey Kids!
Don't Forget!
Special Saturday
Kiddies Matineet
Randolph Scott in
"STRANGER WORE
A f.UN"
No. 5
"SEA HOUNDS" and
COLOR CARTOONS
Hev Mom! Don't Forget!
In At 1:00 P. M.
Out At 3:00 P. M.
Continuous From 1 P, M.
THE ,,
1 1 rt rt
MILE 'i
FLIGHT -.
THAT
ENDED
HALF
WAY I
ROBERT RYAN.
ANITA FKRFRfi
v 'X ROD STEIGER '
CO-HIT-
Outside the Law
STARTS SUNDAYI
'ItBiXJblOVOU
nBnTTTKr
3
wism ut Mcsww wot ituocm
Pl.l'S
ncHNieoLO
nJH.fMURPHY
I THE BEST OF fC'S
-far U-
f M i
I t
Gates Open 6:451
i mjr vm"W
1