; Pace 2 Section 1 2 Tax Increasing Pay Of Legislators I Still in Doubt ; Emergency Clause Is ! ; Snowed Under hy 100,000 ''PORTLAND (UP Oregon vol- erf yesterday rendered clear-cut 1 dc visions on .six of seven initiative and referendum measures put be , fore them on the state ballot. Only on the issue of doubling ,'th? salaries of stale legislators did f there appear In he any doubt of ran outcome. Those opposing (he increase were holding the edge as 'returns continued to come in and 'tlv measure was trailing by a JlitUc more than three thousand votes. l The emergency clause measure, considered crucial by both parties in the stale, was being defeated ,b; a heavy margin that approach ed 100,000 votes on the basis of stilt incomplete returns. That was th! widest margin turned in on any of the seven issues as Ore-1 gonians apparently accepted Ihe Democratic argument thai (he measure was a Republican tactic t. enact a sales tax "by the back !doo"." The three -cent cigaretlc lax ' '$ole was a repeat of a familiar refrain. Oregon voters wanted no part of a tax levied against its . cigarette smokers and dumped the proposal by more than 40,000 votes. The proposal to permit Iho state ' to accept gifts of stocks of private ..corporations won easily, going in , to the stretch moving ahead. A ' margin of some 54,000 votes made " it almost a "no contest." The ' mc.-i.surc had no organized opposi-; tion. Sporls and loiirisf-minded Ore , gonians agreed with wildlife and conservation orgnizations who . claimed that commercial fishing 'should be banned in all coastal ' streams south of the Columbia river. "Yes" votes were well ahead. Commercial fishing and ! cannery interests opposed the measure. ; Voters liked Lite proposition that the Legislature should decide the ' qualifications of county coroners - and surveyors. Ihe measure had s an advantage of more than 24,itoC votes and next session of the Leg- islature will probnbly result In a Z law requiring surveyors to- be ! mirveyors and coroners to hnvc jome background in their field. i A 2fi,000-vote margin was holft- ii in.; firm in the vote to change ine j constitutional limit on salaries of . stale officers. Top state officials ' already are paid far more than the stnlc s founding fathers ' deemed necessary nearly J00 years ago. Voters yesterday legal I Ir.od Ihe practice. i Three Towns ' Okay Fluoride ASTORIA (UP)-Threc Clnlsop county towns expressed the np nrnvnl of (lunridntlon o( their city wnler supplies in hn 1 lot iiik yes lerdny. All three towns alrendy had fluoridation hut measures were placed on the hallot to elim inate the treatment of municipal water supplies. The towns were Astoria, dear hart, and Warrcnton. Commissioner Itrpiihllcnn Rny Rice, veteran Marlnn rnnnty cnmmlsslnnrr, wnn another four year lerm TiKMlny. rirtcJitlnjt rhnllencer rntrirk McCarthy. On the basis of Incomplete un- i 1 V j: Wjf t Leads fllrlal returns Haiti Hralrel has J narw rrigf in Turn Enrlght In Itir rare for Marlon (onnly dlstrlft allornty. 1 o Measures Defeated; 4 Other Proposals Adopted vrTF FQR U.S. SENATE Q Democrat Leading O Republican Leading iDllflfncumoenf This is how the vole for U.S. Senate shaped up at 7 a.m., EST, today. Of 35 Senate races Involved, Democrats appeared sure winners In 14 and led close races In Pennsylvania, South Dakota. President N.Y. Lead; NEW YOltK wi President Ei senhower piled up a plurality of approximately 1,500,000 voles over Adlal Stevenson in winning New York's 45 electoral voles. The Republicans also gained a seat in the U.S. Senalc as Ally. Gen. Jacob K. .lavits defeated Mayor Robert F. Wagner of New York City, Democratic - Liberal candidate, by some 450,000. Returns Wednesday from 11.071 of the stale's 11.152 election dis tricts, with traditionally Demo cratic New York City complete, guve: r-or president Eisenhower 4,2tl0,:i01; Stevenson 2,731,5(1:1. For the Senate Javits 5,11711,150; Wagner 3.240.932. Juvils will succeed retiring remocrallc Sen. Herbert H, Leh man. Wsgner had Aspired to follow in the footsteps of his father, the la'.e Sen. Robert F. Wagner, spon sor of the Wagner Labor Rela tions Act and oilier New Deal leg islation. 1 The mayor carried New York City by almost 450,000 votes, but could not cope wilh the upstate outpouring of Republican, ballots, In contrast with Wagner's run In Iho city, Stevenson carried the traditionally Democratic strong hold by only 62,004 voles. The count was: Stevenson 1,814,525; Eisenhower 1,551.021. ' And upstate, Eisenhower took cily nfler city and district alter district by larger margins than he did four years ago. Unofficial returns Indicated the voters approved a 500-mllllon-dol-lar. bond issue for highway con si ruction but had defeated a 100-million-dollar bond issue to en courage private construction of middle-income housing. Eisenhower s plurality in New York Stale In 1052 was MB.000 voles. Wagner conceded defeat at 1:22 a.m., after leading much of the time in a see-saw race. He sent a wire of congratulations to Javits. Democratic leaders appeared to accept the Democratic debacle philosophically. No Democrat need be discour- Mamie So Happy She Weeps a Bit Hy PATRICIA W1C.GINS United Pitm Staff Correspondent i WASHINGTON U'P - Mnniicl Kisonhowcr, though blinking hack; lonrs, whs piobnhly the happiest j woman in a jam-packed room of! wildly chi'oi'iiiK Kqmhlieans here; Tuesday niiihl. As President Kienhowor elo-j ilftently closed his brief victory j statement and Ihtmdermis apnliuisej broke loose, Ihe bright-eyed first lady turned lo Mrs. Richard M.j Nixon and murmured, "It makes : me venk inside," A moment later she wnsihlink-i inn back tears as her heaminR husband look her arm to escort 't her back to the While House for another four years. The first lady wait radiant from the moment the presidential party entered the cheering auditorium of some t.fiuo happy Republicans. She came through the door first, then tinned to wait for her broad- ly-Eiinninii husband and they en tered as the "team"' that I hey have heen lor the past (our ye;us. Mrs. Kisenhnwer. who wifl be celebrating her finth birthday just n week from today, earned a briquet of two doren "Mamie pink" carnations. She wore a full skirted electric blue net gown with blue sequins around its scoop neckline. Her blue satin pumps matched her gown. She wore her Shattuc's PRIME RIBS Senate Race Results and Trends Piles Up 1.5 Million Javits Beats Wagner ,.,., I " Knid r.nv. Averell Hani- man, who hod lost out to Steven son for the Democratic prcsiden- Mark Wins Republican Mark Hatfield ot Snlem defeated hli Democratic opponent Monroe Siveelland Tuesday la gain a four year term as secretary of state. AG Repeats Dcmncrntlc Ineunihent Knherl Y. Thornton was returned as Oregon Attorney (leneral by state voters who elected Mm over Re puhllrnn Curl Francis. favorite pearl necklace and on her wrist was. an "Ike" bracelet. A Cabinet wife earlier described Mrs. Elsenhower as a "wonderful hostess" in the hotel suite above the (iOP party in the ballroom where officials gathered during the evening. Resides the officials, Mrs. Ki senhover's mother, Mrs. John S. Pond wennng an "1 like Mamie" button Mrs. Eisenhower's sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. tieorge (iordon Moore, and the Eisenhower's son and his wife, Maj. and Mrs, John Eisenhower, were on hand. Slay Young! Go DANCING T0NITE! CASH CRYSTAL GARDENS ADMISSION 80C LYv w Oregon, Colorado, Kentucky and seats and were lending In a close Map) liul nomination. "The Republican party is not anything like as pop ular as President Eisenhower.", Harriman predicted a Demo cratic recovery in state elections in 1058. Mrs. ' Franklin I). Roosevelt. widow of the former President, told volunteer Democratic workers it was "important to be a good loser as well as a winner." Eisenhower supporters appeared to lake their victory mattcr-of- factly. County Court To Pick New State Senator Speculation Given as To Successor for Mark Hatfield As snon as Mark Hatfield's elec tion as secretary of state, which now seems assured, becomes offi cial and he resigns, the Marion county court will appoint his suc cessor in the stale senate, It is likely that Ihe Marion county Republican central committee will moke a recommendation to the county court in the very near fu ture. Among Ihe names mentioned for Ihe Marion county senate scat are State Reps. Robert L. Elfstrom and W. W. Chndwick, Al Loueks, former mnvor and member of the legisla ture, and Salem Mayor Robert White. Whoever is named will serve out Ihe remainding two years of Hat field s senate term. STARTS TONITE Thii Shovy Only Adulli 90c Student! 50c Children 20c ALSO News it Cartoon The "Epic Grandeur ...A Spectacular Movie!1' -LIFE PARAMOUNT PRESENTS 0 ' Jkffiffl HEPBURN mm HENRY VllrolliWri FDNDA MEL 1 1 Lii ii t 6ASSMAN "IOM" iffliMidiii) nS'mwii M I S S?JHH THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Nevada. Republicans won 14 Illinois contest. (AP Wircphota Clyde Elected Utah Governor In3-WayRace SALT LAKE) CITY (fl Utah voters gave President Eisenhow-! cr the state's four electoral votes in a three-way contest in yester day's general election. They also re-elected a Republi can U.tS. senator and the two Re publican rnngrcssmen. Eisenhower's lead over Demo crat Adlai Stevenson was approx imately 2-1, a wider margin than he won by four years ago. Sen. Wallace K. Bennett defeat ed Democrat Alonzo F. Hopkin, a veteran member of the Slide Senate. , George D. Clyde, at 58 seeking his first public elective office, de feated Democrat L. C. Romney, a Salt Lake City commissioner, and Gov. .1. Bracket Lee, running as an independent after he lost the Republican nomination t o Clyde in the primary. Returns from 607 of the state's 1,0.10 voting districts showed: Eisenhower 135,769, Stevenson 71.119. For governor Clyde 80,205, Romney 67.250, Lee 58,640. U.S. senator Bennett 112,528, Hopkin 91,608. Powell May Quit Demos NEW YORK Ifl Rep. Adam Clayton Powell (D-NY), newly re elected Negro congressman, says he might quit the Democratic party. He supported President Ei senhower for re-election. Powell said last night he in tends to vote as a Democrat in the organization of the new Con gress. Rut he added: "If the Democratic parly be comes the party of Easllandism, I cannot stay in it." Greatest Novel Ever Written... Now Magnificently Board Accepts Morse Ballot Dver Challenge EUGENE (UP I A Eugene election board yesterday, alter due consideration, accepted the challenged vote of Sen. Wayne Morse. The right of the Democratic senator to cast his vote in the election was challenged by Wood row Smith, Hood River service station operator who made an un succesful attempt to win the Democratic party nomination from Morse in the May primary. Smith maintained a six hour vigil outside the voting place yes terday until the senator showed up to cast his ballot at 2 p.m. Mrs. Pearl Pallette, an election judge, listened to the challenge and administered the election oath to Morse as required by law. Aft er the challenge was issued, the board considered the challenge and' decided that the documents submitted by Smith in his conten tion that Morse was a Republican rather than a Democrat only proved that the senator had changed his party, registration. The events took place in the crowded kitchen of the M. J. Gleason home, the voting location for Friendly precinct. Smith explained as he made his challenge that "he didn't have it in for Morse he merely doubted that he was a Democrat." Smith had earlier made several unsuc cessful legal attempts to establish this as a fact. New Judge jm William McAllister, Medford judge, who won a spot on the slate supreme court Tuesday, de feating circuit Judge David Van denberg In a write In vote. Reelected Siff Unander was again elected state treasurer for another four ypar term Tuesday. He had little opposition from Wiley Smith of Portland. ;p 1 Young New Senator BOISE Boise attorney Frank Church and his wife smile last last night after election returns showed he defeated Incumbent Republican Herman Welkcr for U.S. Senate seat. It was the 32-year-old Democrat's first bid for national political office. (AP Wlrephoto) . Church Tops Welker In Idaho BOISE, Idaho (UPMDemocrat Frank Church, 32, a political neo phyte, piled up a surprising near 40,000 vote majority today to oust Republican Herman Welker from the U.S. Senate. Church won despite a heavy Rhode Island Veers to GOP PROVIDENCE, R.I. Wl-Presi-dent Eisenhower has won Rhode Island's four electoral votes in a landslide that may have placed a Republican in the governor's chair for the first time since 19.18. Complete unofficial returns gave Eisenhower 220.9G2 votes to 160. 507 for Adlai Stevenson a plural ity of 62,455. Eisenhower beat Ste venson by 7,642 votes in 1 952. Republican Christopher Del Ses to got 190,021 votes to 189.754 for Gov. Dennis J. Roberts (D) in the battle for governor a mar gin of 267. Rut 11,000 absentee votes remain to be counted. The final decision will be de layed, however, as ahscntee bal lots will not be counted in Rhode Island until Dec. 5. Both the state's Democratic congressmen, Aime J. Forand and John E. Fogarty, won re-election. Fogarty defealed Republican Thomas H. Needham, 104,673 'to 95.856 in the 2nd District race. Forand won easily over Samuel D. Ramsay IF), 95,553 lo 75.513, in the 1st District. THIS PICTURE PIAYS ONLY ONCE AN EVENING AT 7:50 P. M. DOORS OPEN 7:00 P. M. Alive On Ihe Screen! Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, November 7,. 1956 hy 40,000 vote in favor of President Eisen hower. Church was running for1 major political office for the first j time. j Returns from 744 precincts out i of the stale's 893 gave President Eisenhower 139,077 votes to Adlai E. Stevenson's 86,590. V'elker conceded his seat to Church at 12:25 a.m. today after the new senator picked up a lead 0 about 35,000 votes in the three way race. Former Sen. Glen H. Taylor, who ran as a write-in candidale, conceded earlier. The senate vole, wilh 744 pre cincts reported, was Welker 86,485, Church, 121,844; and Taylor. 8.891. Idaho's two members of Con gross won reelection. Democratic Representative Gracie Pfost was 1 wading Republican contender Louise Shadduck. 46,942 to 39,012, vith 307 out of the first District's 4C1 precincts reporting. Miss Shad duck conceded. Republican Rep. Homer Budge led Democrat John Reynolds, 77, 714 In 51,794 with 4.17 out of 492 precincts reporting. Reynolds con ceded. Four years alter the British Museum placed Ihe shell of an Egyptian desert snail on exhibi tion, a snail crawled out. It was hungry. STARTS TODAY !A MILLION DOLLAR DOUBLE-CROSS I EXPLODES ...IN LISBONI Whr life l quick and lov l luddanl S RAY MILLANO MAUREEN O'HARA CLAUDE RAINS YVONNE FURNEAUX . NATURAMA TRUC0L0R " FRANCIS LEDERER t If lind. Darnell . Dal ReberKon "Dakotalncident" TONITE If You Want Don't The Funniest Crew of Hypochrondiacs You Have Ever Seen! Ballot Fraud Charges Stir TowninOkla. STILWELL, Okla. 11 Reports of ballot stuffing and illegal ab sentee voting today rocked thij eastern Oklahoma town which only last summer saw its sheriff elect and sheriff kill each other in a post-primary election gun duel in the county jail. V. S. Dist. Atty. Frank McSherry Muskogee, Okla., said he had re ceived reports that an unidenli-' fied candidate for sherifl passed ballots to friends he knew would vote for him, urging them to slip the extras inlo the boxes. The Adair County Election Board here threw out 87 of the 414 absentee ballots as being ille gal. The board is to complete its tabulations today. HELD OYER! The .Upposite Sex CIMEMISCOTI iiiHETKOCDLOl I I. ii. , '';' inoun.i Leslie Nieisen iv-t-v r Ml Dsl i- J J UCII IMOIIdlUvl Agnes Moorehead Charlotle Greenwood Joan Blondell Sam Levene PLUS ROUNDUP OF RHYTHM At 1 P. M. 8:o5 A Real Laff Miss 4il- LJW-DGWN jf.N f'iK: OH HUMES! joan Collins &sM BoimvJRAY V ann Sheridan MA ":; ann Miller Ik LJ n