Salem, Oregon, Monday, November 5, 1956 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL' Section 2 Pagi 8 Paratroopers Go in Action Nonchalantly By WEBB MCKINLEY AT A BRITISH AIR BASE 0 CYPRUS w -They took oft in the darkness before dawn, in swirls of dust, for Egypt. It was 5:01 a.m. when the first planeload of British paratroopers roared along the runway "some where on Cyprus." soared upward and wheeled south. The big, twin-engine planes fol lowed one another in orderly swells of noise until the eastern sky was lined with red. When they were gone, dawn had come on D-day. Quiet, outwardly calm, the par atroopers had waited for this most of the night. Most of them were regulars. Only 10 to 15 per cent had been in combat before, but many were hardened in the tough, dangerous battle against the EOKA underground on Cyprus. As they stood before their planes awaiting the takeoff, they checked and reehecked their gear. Some were yawning who only a few hours later would be in combat. Only a mustached sergeant ap peared in high spirits. "All right, chaps. Let's get mov ing," he shouted. "What's my name? Why it's Stanislaw Turkiewicz. " A musical name, like Paderewski." The sergeant, a 30-ycar-old vet eran of the Polish army who fought in Italy, had a book in his hand.' "AHer ail," he explained, "it's a 2!4-hour trip. Must have some thing to do." Four-engine Hastings bombers already were loaded with heavy drop equipment, jeeps, ' guns and other gear. Troops were standing beside their two-engine Valettas in the orange glare of Hares. "I'm anxious to get on with this," said 21-year-old Pvt. Mich ael Toscany, a Londoner. "I think maybe we'll be home for Christ mas." Pvt. Brian Mason, a reservist, said, ""I hope this gets over soon." "Im a little nervous, yes," he added matter of factly. Pvt. Colin Macauley, 22, of Gloucestershire, said, "This is my first real jump too. Operational, that is. I'm looking forward to it." Egyptian Dead sH3 fife SI s I ' . . 4 ;rr. - ax. a Pre-Election Rallies Set in 34 Counties PORTLAND Wl Democratic party officials report that "get- out the vote" parades and rallies are planned in 34 Oregon counties Monday night. Candidates are scheduled to speak at the rallies and hold amplified telephone conversations with other Democratic office seek ers around the state; Soviet Claims Nagy Capture; Fate in Doubt VIENNA HI The whereabouts of Imre Nagy, the moderate Com munist professor toppled I r o m Hungary's premiership by the Russians, remained a mystery Monday. The rebels announced early in the lighting Sunday that- Nagy was in a safe place. Later the Rus sians broadcast a declaration that they had captured him. No substantiation could be' found for a rumor that the rebels had slain Ernoe Geroe, deposed as the Hungarian Communist Party chief in the Oct6ber revolt. In the pe riod of its operation by the revo lutionaries, Radio Budapest an nounced last Wednesday Geroe and Andras Hegedues, who pre ceded Naev as premier, had fled the country; presumably to tne Soviet Union. Egyptian soiuiers lie aead on battlefield in tlie Kl Allah atea with military truck In background oiler fighting In area Saturday. Today British and French continued attack with paratroopers land ing in the area near Port Said, IAP Wircphoto via radio from Tel Aviv) TODAY'S CLOSE II STOCK QUOTATION (By The Associated Preai? District Meeting of Nurse Group Monday The District 3 meeting of the Oregon State Nurses. Assn. .is set for Monday night at 8 o'clock at Salem General hospital; Mrs. Byrnes, executive secre tary of the OSNA, will, be the speaker . for. the meeting. LIGHTER than leather I LIGHTER than rubber ; j ite micro half and full ':' Want that livelier, lightfooted feeling? Ask your shoe repairer .. . lor ' ("miracle of lightness" Microlile soles! 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Twentieth Century Fox Union Oil Company Union Pacific United Airlines United Aircraft United Corporation United States Plywood United States Slccl Warner Pictures Western Union Tel Westinghouse Air Brake Wetinghouse Electric Woolworth Company TODAY IS YOUR DAY IN DOWNTOWN fr SALEM IU pw SHOP pTH UNTIL Viy Best of Service Wide Assortment! 10 Acre, of Exciting Merchandi.. , 16W 100 33 100 14 24 42 Kt 73 6 170 . 75 -la 78 V, 28 !s 187 56 ',4 46 ?i 40 44 32 92 14 Ii 76 64 'A 45 56 Ik 43 86 34 106 94 k 7 Vs 58 62 46 47 31 4 78 (. 37 114 48 Vl 56 130 V) 14 A ' 53 ' 19 ',i 73 43 14 39 M 39 14 14 (4 49 n,i 127 -Ik 88 23 ' 19 V, 18 Vt 26 38 31 55 , 70 14 71 ,4 50 14 63 "1 3t ;, 82 1 62 55 '4 48 48 '4 58 i 5 'i, R" 43 7i 38 -I. 2S 58 14 30 ij 41 '4 85 H 6s. 37 '4 71 si 26 ' 18 31 "i 54 '4 46 U UN Has Scant Hope Russ to Quit Hungary Rejection Notice Just About Served Ahead Of Resolution High Court to Review Army Trial Ruling WASHINGTON W The Su preme Court Monday agreed to reconsider its decision of last June 11 that civilians who ac company the armed forces over seas are subject to military trial for crimes committed abroad. The decision applied specifical ly to two women who killed their husbands, were eourt-martialed abroad and drew life sentences. One of the women, Mrs. Doro thy Krueger Smith, was convicted in Tokyo lor the fatal stabbing of Army Col. Aubrey D. Smith. She is a daughter of a World War II commander in the Pacific, Gen. Walter Kueger, now retired. Mrs, Smith is serving her sentence in the Federal Reformatory tor wonv en at Alderson. W. .Va. The -other woman, Mrs. Clarice B. Covert, was convicted in Eng land for the ax murder of Master Sgt. Edward E. Covert. Her con viction was- reversed on a iccn nicality by the U.S. Court of Mil itary Appeals here and she now faces a second . trial by court martial at Boling Air Force Base here. Sister Douses Burning Child A five-year-old Salem boy suf fered second-degree burns of his right knee and leg Sunday but was saved from more sertous burns bv a auick-thinking sister, Salem Memorial hospital authorities said. Roger Greenup, son of Mr, and Mrs. Clyde Greenup, 368 Blilcr St., was burned when lus trousers caught fire, hospital authorities said. Roger's sister, June, 8, dashed to the house lor a bucket of water to douse the flaming clothes, the father said. June then told her parents, who took the hoy to the hospital for treatment of the burns. The trousers apparently caught fire when a piece of burning ma terial from a back yard incinera tor landed on them, the boy's lather said. WCTU Has Election MONMOUTH (Special) - The Polk county and Monmouth group of the WCTU held a joint meeting at the home of Mrs. Klgic Smith recently. Mrs. C, J. Schjoll was elected president for the county; and Mrs. Blanche Hosenstock, also of Monmouth, was re-elected sec retary - treasurer and Mrs. Hugh Rogers. Independence, was elected vice-president. Texas Drought Eased by Rain By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Steady rains ranging up to near ly 6 inches Sunday brought many areas of drought-stricken lexas their best raipfall of the year. The slow, soaking rains that ex tended over most of the eastern half of the state and into western Texas assured green pasturage for winter and poured water into shriveled ponds and lakes. Groesheck in central Texas re ported the heaviest rainfall of fi.65 inches. Coolidge had 5,2.r) and Cor sicana 4.R5 while to the north Paris had 3.66 inches and Dallas 3.24. 'UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (.TV Deep pessimism engulfed the Unit ed Nations today over the virtual impossibility of enforcing a resolu tion, overwhelmingly adopted by the General Assembly, demanding the withdrawal of Russian troops from suffering Hungary. Delegates cited two hard facts: 1. The anti-Communist rebellion, after a brief hour of victory, ap peared to have been destroyed by Russian steel, leaving the Krem lin and a clique of Budapest pup pets in-full control of the country. 2. Soviet Chief Delegate Arkady A. Sobolev virtually served notice in advance that a U. N. vote for an investigation in Hungary, much less for free elections, would be summarily rejected. The prevailing view was that the Russian grip would not be loos ened by words. The United States proposed the resolution in an emergency ses sion of the General Asseinbly last night. It contained eight sections. The main ones called on. the Rus sians to end their armed attacks on the Hungarians to withdraw their forces, and to permit U. N. observers to enter Hungary and make an investigation. An explosion of applause baited Chief U. S. Delegate Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. when he read the sen tence proclaiming that the U. N. "affirms the rihgt of the Hunga rian people lo a government res ponsive to its national aspirations and dedicated to its independence and well-being." The resolution was approved 50- 8 with 15 abstentions. The only negative votes were cast by the Soviet bloc. Among the abstainers were seven Arab coun tries. Iraq, Egypt, Jordan, Libya, Saudi Arabia,- Syria and Yemen. The delegate from Lebanon was absent. Other abstainers were Afghanis- Ian,' Burma, Ceylon, Finland, In dia, Indonesia, Nepal and Yugo slavia. The debate on Hungary and the vote on the American resolution were conducted in an atmosphere electric with tension and excite ment. Not since the debates set off by the Communist attack on Korea in 1950 and the proposal to partition Palestine in 194a has the brilliantly lighted General Assembly hall been so packed with spectators. Applause, sarcastic laughter, booing and some hisses rose as the words of the various speakers came, in translation, through, the headphones. Across the street from U. N. headquarters 1 an estimated 2,500 people demonstrated under the eyes of mounted policemen.. They carried a huge American flag and the red, white and green of funereal crepe. . Placards shrieked, "Butchers", murderers, no more compromise with Russia, exterminate the Red murderers." Meanwhile, the poker - faced chief Soviet delegate was on the Assembly rostrum, disputing the right of the U. N. even to take up the American resolution. He called it a "crude violation" of the U. N.. Charter's stipulation against intervention in the domes tic affairs of a country. He charged the resolution was designed to divert attention from the aggression in hgypt. lie said it was put up to gain time until British and French troops landed there.. He said the deposed Hungarian government of Imre Nagy had no legal status, hence Nagy's pica for aid from the U, N. was "uncon stitutional." The huge audience registered first astonishment, then scorn. They hissed and booed as Sobolev walked leisurely up the long aisle and took his seat. Lodge, following soon afterward, called events in Hungary a "sick ening picture of duplicity and dou ble dealing." He said the men now ruling Hungary, defended by Rus sian guns, arc straw men. He pointed out that these men appealed for Soviet help two hours after the Russian attack hit the Hungarians. Jn a voice heavy with sarcasm, he said: "It cannot be maintained, there fore, that the Soviet action is un derlaken in response to any re quest, for assistance. This 'assist ance' and I put that in quotes arrived long before the call." U. S. Services Bond Owners Is Revealed That V. S. savings bonds arc guaranteed by the U. S. Treasury against loss, mutilation or destruc tion is the theme of a colorful three panel exhibit on display in the First National bank and Ladd & Bush U.S. National banks here. Six mutilated savings bonds In the center panel of the display wore cut up by children for Christmas tree ornaments, chewed by a dog, mutilated by mice, destroyed by washing with the laundry, burned in an incinerator, and shredded by an irate wife. Another panel of the exhibit Il lustrates some of the excellent ser vices the Treasury offers savings bond owners. In case of floods, hur ricanes, or similar disasters that frequently occur, the Treasury moves swiftly to provide bond own ers with cash, or lo replace their lost bonds, whichever they prefer, When a bond owner dies, wilh or without a will, the Treasury will also aid the co-owner, if necessary, to protect his interests. , Fir Cone Crop Best Since '49 POltTLAND (.A Western Ore gon has harvested its best Doug las fir cone crop in seven years, foresters and seed dealers re ported Monday. John B. Woods Sr., Salem, oper ator' of Oregon's only private commercial forest treo nursery, said the crop is not quite as high quality as the banner harvest of 1U4!I but is by far the best since then. . Industry leaders said this year's crop would help reforestation of thousands of acres under the tree farm program on' private timber-land. Crown Zellerbach Corp. re ported a 1!56 cone harvest of 5,400 bushels, compared with 1,230 bushels gathered by Us foresters last year. , Woods said the harvest was excellent in coastal areas and through the Willamette Valley. He attributed a meager crop in the upper Cascades partly to an ex tremely dry slimmer. Insect dam age to the crop was light. Itecord high prices paid for this year's crop were partly respon sible for the big harvest. Washington's Bitter Battle At Zero Hour By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Washington's bitterest political campaign in many years ncared the zero hour Monday. With some 90,000 absentee bal lots issued in the state, election officials expressed the view that this big block of votes may bo the deciding factor in some close races. They must be counted by Nov. 21. The voters will make the final decision after, a rigorous cam paign which has been marked by five dominant statewide contests: Gov. Langlie's aggressive and personal attacks on Sen. Magnu son in an attempt to win the Dem ocratic senator's seat; a lively but sensation-lacking race between Lt. Gov, Emmett Anderson and State Sen. Albert Roscllini to succeed Langlie as governor; the toughest fight Mrs. Pearl Wanamaker ever has had for re-election as state superintendent of public instruc tion, with State Sen. Lloyd J. An drews as the challenger; the feud ing over Initiative 198, which would outlaw the closed and union shops in the slate; and, to a lesser degree,. Republican Phil Kvans' attempt to unseat Don Magnuson as congressman-at-largc. WAIXAERTS HAVE .C.IRL . MOLAIXA (Special) Mr', and Mrs. Albert Wallaert (Charlaine Voss) of Gladstone are the parents oi a baby girl born Oct. 22. This is their first child. Mrs. Wallaert and her parents are former Mo lalla residents. Capitol Lights Herald Voting As a further means of Impress ing on the electorate that a gen eral election is up-coming, the Pio neer and supporting columns atop the - capital will be illuminated Monday night. The illumination is In connec tion with a nation-wide program of "Lights On Votes Out" sponsored Dy the American Legion and Mu tual Broadcasting System. The state of Florid repe $14,462,673 from horse racing., ii 1956. Of that amount 96,364,851 paid by Hialcah. ; t ASTIir.lA now ccp. much mil. waics- NIW Rx MHTS HiifTamrt nnn Mrna much lavaia WIiJ ins, intiilnt, couthlnf and difficult brealhinf during recurring attack! at chilli nj taking nbw improvta. wonaer Work in MEN DA DO. 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ZfT I Land Sought For Roadway Four-hundredths of ' an acre of land is involved in a condemna tion suit filed in Marion County Circuit court Monday, The plaintiff in the case is the state highway commission which named. Bon F. and Phylis Jeanne Brandon as defendants. The complaint slates that the commission attempted lo secure the land by negotiation but an agreement could not be reached. The land sought is a portion . of the William 'Neil donation land claim located along the Salem By-Pass-.Iefferson Junclion section of Pacific Highway 9DE. The plain tiff states the property is needed for right-of-way purposes. S NEW I'OMO CASKS POltTLAND m Three new cases of polio wero reported hi Portland Monday, putting the city's 195G total at 2(i. Last year at this time the total was 04. The latest ones stricken ore all adults men 26 and 30 and a woman 21. 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