Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 13, 1956, Page 2, Image 2

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    Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, November .13, 1956
Paee 2 Section 1
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL"
Mexican Vessel Fires
On U.S. Shrimp Boat;
Captain Badly
Gunboat Tries
i To Collect
Tribute
BROWNSVILLE. Tex. fP Hie
shrimp boat Pcscador of Browns
ville radioed from the ("iulf of
Mcit'co las' night it had been
fired upon by a Mexican gunboat,
seriously wounding the captain,
Tom Wilson.
Radio reports of the shooting
were heard all along the Texas
Gulf coast. Brad Smith ol radio
station KHGV at We.ilaco, Tex.,
said he hc.ird the radio operator
on the Pcscador plead for aid
from the Const Guard, asking.
"What shall 1 do, what shall 1
do:"
The Mexican gunboat was Iden
tified as the G28. She had been
mentioned in complaints last
month by the Texas Shrimp Assn.
which claimed she had stopped
Texas shrimpers and demanded
money or gifts not to capture
them.
Several incidents have been re-
can gun boats and Texas shrimp-
ers. The Mexicans have claimed
the Texans were -fishing in Mexi-
can waters, which the shrimp boat
cantains have denied.
u'ii.n r.ai
on the Pcscador and a nephew or the International farm ioutn tic aoaea mat Hungarian au
r ii,. ..aninm rarfinr.,) an arcnimi Exchange group arrived aboard thorities were quite capable of
ni the in,.wnni in inhn Sanins Ca.
rinhas of Brownsville, owner of, worked throughout the summer to
the shrimper, late last night. The promote "peace through under
account was given to Smith of i standing on a people to people
KRGV. j basis," a spokesman for the Na-
Wilsiin said just before midnight tional 4-H Club Foundation said,
they were still anchored about 120 j The foundation, which sponsors
miles south of Brownsville with i the IFVE program along with the
the Mexican gunboat anchored Cooperative Extension Service,
about 75 yards away. He said they j helped linancc trips ol 125 dele
had taken the three-man crew, in-1 gates to 50 foreign countries in ex
cluding the wounded captain, one
at a time to the G28 and demand- j
ed that they sign a blank paper.
Wilson said Ihe Texans refused.
He said the Pescador was an
chored at about sundown "when
we saw the gunboat coming up.
Our sister ship, the Joyce Carin
has, was anchored nearby ... We
saw the G28 stop and board an
other trawler ... We started our
motors and started to run farther
out into the Gulf.
"The gunboat . . , finally caught
up with us. She fired three shots.
One bullet hit the cabin door
jllet
md then struck Capt. Tom
pon in the back and another bullet
apparently hit him lower down,
apparently around the kidneys. . .
He stopped and they came
aboard.
I
believed from I
. in-
Coast Guard Vice Adm. Alfred
r nifhmANi rnmmnnHoni nf t h .
service. Hep. J. Vaughn Gary
Vai and other Washington o,,
cials were on the Coast Guard cut -
ter Sebago, which left Brownsville
last night to take over direction
ol the operation.
The Washinston officials were In
Brownsville to hear complaints bv '
the Texas Shrimp Assn. about
Mexican gunboats.
Marine Faces
Cruelty Trial
PARR1S ISLAND, S C. '.f-Ma-rine
Pic. Frederick A. Ronton. 19,
of New York City is scheduled to
go on trial by court-martial here
tomorrow on charges of mistreat
ing recruits at this training depot.
As a junior drill instructor.
Renton allegedly caused recruits
to heat other members in their
platoon and struck several re
cruits himself.
One recruit accused Renton of
Inflicting a sralp wound that re
quired medical attention
Floor Scorched
In Utility Room
Fire destroyed some clothing and
irnrrhed the floor in the utility
room at Ihe home of Mrs. Doris
Sandwick. UNO South lfith St.. Mon
day evening, city firemen reported.
A temporary clothesline pulM
loose from the wall to drop the
clothing on a portable electric
heater, firemen sa.d. They were
called about 7.35 p.m.
POLK Jt MI'S TKAM
KREFELD. Germany. .!
West German sports authority
announced TucmIiiv Mariam Her
da, a member ol i'fland s nation
al ice hotkey team. jump'Ht the
team to slay m West (iernuny
after playing in i game here last
Meek
TYPHOON OH' til AM
Ct'AM. r a typhoon named
Kiren formed Tuesday about ;f5
miles west of t'.uam. the V. S.
Fo.e"'r;;'K i
porieei Naren was mning west
at 11 miles per hour with winds
of 75 miles per hour
Starts Wed. Nov. 14
Teenage
Rebel
Hungary's Reds Bolt
Door on UN Inquiry
Flatly Refuses to
Let Observers
In Nation
UNITKD NATIONS, N. V. The
Communist
"""""" . "'"" j
, nient's flat
refusal to let U.N.!i(, he new Assembly.
0 b s c r v e r s inside the war-torn
62 'Envoys in
Jeans' Return
From Abroad
NEW YORK (UP) Sixty two
ambassadors in blue jeans
rom '" today
'rom five months of living with
'a, 'milie in 22 European,
U.'ddle Eastern and African coun-
trls- . ,
The 36 girls and 26 young men
the Queen Mary, They have
change for ISO foreign farm youths
who came here this year, he said. !
All the "farmer-ambassadors"
are in their early twenties and;
are "4-H Club graduates," the j
spokesman said. Many are col
lege students.
The delegates are scheduled to
so to Washington Wednesday to
report on their trips to the State
and Acnculuire departments ana
the embassies of the host coun
tries.
Counties, OEA
. '
Iii Tax Huddle
PfiiiTi ivn in The n nf
PORTLAND t - The Assn. of
Oregon Counties opened its an-i,n
Oregon Counties opened
nuaJ ml,n nej:e Tl,"dy wi'h a
con f crence on Oregon Kducation
iD-'AS5n;,5 ns 10 01 me
counties' money one of the major
! P", o( n?nlr0" me o""""":
i 0LA ""j1,0 Pr""!"
' ","e chc-duled to con er in the
jUMcrnoon. Presumably the county
"" ' P'isuaue me
lucation group to set up jonie;
JZSZWJZ .1 .1'" 1
hen,"?"r 'l '','" !
Islature ith a proposal that coun-
ty money be allocated to in-
i-r,.ciw! iwImi-nl innal pnalc
Carl Hill of Douglas County is
retiring president of the 0fcC '
group. Ralph Petersen of Lane is
in line to succeed him if normal
advancement ornredures lire (nl. i
lowed,
Burglary Tr
w- i
L rk
I 1 Ul Co 1 (111111 L
!
An attempted burglary of the ;
Halton Tractor Co., 2355 Silvertnni
Rd., apparently was a failure, city
police reported Tuesday.
Officers said the break-in at
tempt apparently occurred Sunday
niRht but was not discovered until
Monday afternoon when an em-
P10 - ""''1 broken pane
a little-used rear door. The pane
was broken near the lock but the '
.door was still locked when the
broken window
was discovered, i
officers saul.
Nothing is m;suiii, company of
ftcials said. Kntiy was apparent
ly nut gained, officers stated.
The building is a block from the
Capital Tractor and Equipment
company where burglars unsuc
ceslully attackeil the safe over
Ihe weekend, polite noted.
l-ipUrnpal Hishojis in
l't'iiiisvlvaitiu Srssion
POCONO MANOR. Pa. '.r - The
Episcopal House of Bishops Tues
day is expected to consider Ihe
creation of a new missionary dis
trict ol Central America.
II created, the new district
would embrace Guatemala, F,i Sal-
- . Honduras. Nicra.u. and
Cr.i1ji Rica
The Housp of Bishori twKn Its
wcfk-lonfi session here Monday.
i Now Open
M
M lunoS OiMf
H 112 SI
ti JUWTS
l.i hi
I
Injured
country posed new problems to
day for the day-old 11th General
Assembly.
Word of the Budapest regime s
rejection of U. N. efforts to inves
tigate Soviet tactics in crushing
the satellite's freedom bid came
par(,d , give bigh priorily ,0 ,he
Hungarian and Middle fcast crises
The committee was expected to
have little trouble getting the Mid
dle East situation docketed on the
agenda, but Russia and Czecho
slovakia, both members of the 15
nation steering group, were cer
tain to buck efforts to bring in
the Hungarian question.
Istvan Sebes, acting foreign
installed government, noti
fied Secretary General Dag Ham
marskjold that the Hungarian sit
uation was purely an internal af
fair. The sending of U. N. ob
servers was "not warranted," he
declared.
Sebes said Soviet troops were
sent into Hungary because his
government had asked for them.
making ' their own decision on
holding elections.
This rebuffed decisions by the
Emergency assembly to ask Rus
sia to pull her troops out of Hun
gary and to call for free elec
tions In the satellite.
The U. N. emergency Assembly
gave overwhelming approval to
U. S. proposals to place priority
tags on both the Hungarian and
Middle East crises in the regular
session. The nine Soviet-bloc na-
tions voted against the move to
debate Hungary.
The Assembly, faced with 73
items for debate, rushed through
the business of organization yester
day. In slightly more than two
hours It elected a president,
named seven committee chairmen
and appointed seven vice presi
dents. It also elected to membership
three new African countries al
ready approved by the Security
Council Tunisia, Morocco and
Sudan.
Prince Wan Waithayakon, Thai
land's foreign minister and a U.N.
president
ine usual squanote over seating.
of Red China did not take place
f
lne Penlr-B "-won.
Record Soles
Show Crosby
Still Has It
XEW V0RK lup,Bin. Cros-i
who "ondering onlv a
couple of weeks ago whether he !
.. ,,, . . , .
had another miliion-copy record!
u" ,or . ... . . .
, T tn" Kd Su',,van hoP'"S
' hf ha5 200 r,dm8 m ,nt 01d
"r"'",er - .
The record IS True Love. a
platter Crosby cut with Grace !
Kelly. The song, currently rocket'
ing up the best seller charts in i
tne trade papers, is trom me mm
"High Society," in which Crosby
and Miss Kelly starred.
ii was only a lew wccks aao ma
London paper quoied Crnstn- a
saying he thought he was shppin;
It was only a few weeks 2o that
as a singer.
"Well, you know how it is." said
Crosby. "After you've been in this
business tor 30 years, you begin to
feel maybe you've had it. That's
what I told the London paper."
SHIP KRKE OF MI D
PORTLAND U'P'-Thc freight
er Lewis Emery Jr. got stuck in
ine mua iran r nmv
Vancouver. Wash., last night but
was freed two hours later and
continued its voyage downstream
in the Columbia.
BOX OFFICE
O
TICKETS
NOW ON SALE
Willim.it Cn.tl Stti
Rovach t Rgbovtky
Th.Mdar Ntv. IS I II WL
FMt Arti Awrfrtrt
mil Ainin
B'NAI B'RITH
rilslNil
'Stan of Tomorrow'
AUIIICtN 1IOION HAU
).,,. r N... IT, I 4 r. M.
Portland Sympohny
IIIHI S..u
Stort Hours 9:30-1:30
fvery Day
For Reservations
Dill 4-3334
K1
7 THE
fJATION
jCJULiAff rv-
Hungarian sympathizers, protesting recent Soviet action In Hun
gary, parade near United Nations headquarters wearing armbands
and carrying placards. Tall structure is the Unitecj Nations sec
retariat building. The U.N. General Assembly was to meet later
In the day to discuss the Hungarian and Middle East situations.
(AP Wlrephoto)
HEAT WAVE UMBRELLA
Fires Might Protect
Cities From Fallout
Bv FRANK CAREY
WASHINGTON ijTI A Milwau
kee doctor offered Tuesday the
theory that a city might help pro
tect itself from radioactive fallout
through the heat of bonfires,
smudge pots and home and indus
trial furnaces.
Dr. Herman A. Heise, a special
ist in allergy, said research on
hay fever pollen in the atmos-
phere suggests that the hotter the
1 city is, the less chance there is
of fallout particles descending on
it
His address was prepared for a
manlino nf tho Snnlhern h Ivtntf
i,k
, Southern doctors wh.
hpir mvn vale airp,.
Lv,.alinn Thev met i,
anes as an
avocation. They met in conjunc
tion with the 50th anniversary
meeting of the Southern Medical
Assn.
Dr. Heise said that for the Dast
decade he and his wife have been i
makin
in aerial studies of pollen regular quarterly dividend of 75 i T. Ja7X L. m ' I mPrc(ss'" "' " Egyp , the ed
itions. They found, he said, cents on common shares, payable 1 iuesda ' "e.as M- I ministration plans to rely on the
rondi
that "when the cround is warm
and the air is cool." warm air
currents rise and cause pollen and payable Dec. 27 to holders
mold spores to congregate in a of record Nov. 23.
kind of "haze layer" some 3.0O0, Shores granted under the stock
abov. ..rth (dividend will be entitled to the
These are conditions, he said '
wnicn constitute gooa news to nay . vi,,,tuu noa f-.i,u ,
fever and asthma sufferers. December. 1955.
But he said the finding also pro- Th,'! ?y ,rT'ieJi "ine
vides a possible tip-off on how- tolmon,h earn""'s el 1.762,601 on
minimite the depositing of fallout:"1" of $651,631,522. equivalent to
particles from atomic bombs.
Under ordinary conditions, he ;
saicJ
city makes its own um-
brella to help ward off fallout be- j
ENDS TONIGHT
THE RACK and JUBAL
With Paul Newmand with Glen Ford
STARTS TOMORROW-FIRST RUN
I A 1
WE CHALLENGE YOU I I
to stop talking about r
it 24 hours alter n tf J
you see it! ' I I
ten Rebel &
mr-
PLUS
Filmed in Oregon!!
PILLARS OF THE SKY
Starring Jofl Chandler
Picket United Nations
.4 r
cause a city proper is five to ten
degrees warmer than the sur
rounding countryside."
But he said intensification of
sucn mai uy pcupic iui unit; uu
their furnaces even in warm
weather and opening their win
dqws, plus lighting of bonfires,
dump fires, and keeping industrial
furnaces at full blast would con
ceivably add to the protective ef-
'feet in the event of an atomic
' attack
And'rural areas, he said, might
,,miviu.c iiiiu u.r scmng.
! up
line of brush fires on the
winriu'arri sine nf Inrm-iriiia farm.
-
IPC Declares
Slock Dividend
NEW YORK in
International
Paper Co. Tuesday declared
Dec. 17 to holders of record Nov
23, and a 3 per cent stock divi-
December cash dividend. A 5 per
5.58 a share. This compared with
1955 earnings for the same period
of $58,181,018 on sales of $591,489,-
305, equal to $5.27 a share.
h trw-vj tevf
witnt Km
Vf
-7J
PrisonGuard
Asks Mileage
After. Escape
SANTA FE, N. M. W A pris
on guard whose car was used in
an escape attempt from the state
penitentiary has sent New Mexico
a bill for the mileage.
Prison guard Jose A. Vigil was
kidnaped and driven 250 miles by
the escaping convicts and was
tor urea lor noi prevenung me
escape. The state Prison Board
Monday said it had received
:milcs the convicts covered
nKii5 ciaim lor payment lor me
Miniature Train
Wreck Injures 6
TAMPA, Fla. W-Six cars of a
miniature train at an amusement
park overturned last night, injur-
I L" J. d""sJnlJ'.e.chili peiparty has the duty to cooperate
gasoline-powered engine and two
rm.irf it. . ...k..
. rr. ' .' "
-r ,,um.
Williams. 23. saini
i the train was moving only 3 to 5;
miles an hour.
PATRIARCH DIES
CAIRO, I - Anba Yussab IIL
suspended Cootie tEevntian
chnstlan) Patriarch of Egypt.
Ltniopia, Jerusalem. Sudan and
STARTS
Like No Other Picutre Since "SCAR FACE"
And "LITTLE CAESER"
ttvrini Sterling
cMtmiai COLEEN GRAY V1NCE EDWARDS
i JAY C. FLIPPEN MAtt WINOS0H .
RilliiH Itvt Uallt4 Arttift
Scott Rrady
Audrey Totter
In
' THE VANISHING
AMERICAN"
Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! Get Your Tickets Now For!
The Big 2Yx Hour Stage Show
Capitol Theater, Friday, Nov. 16th
Tii-kcH Now on Sale at Our Botnfflre
M-tMlrll
Due to the Length
Play It Only Once
aWORLB'S CRUUST HHKl J3?
MOV m THE SCREFJI! rSyX
SIKHS! j..-. ,"i',
TOLln1!". yV.!
rrrrrr fSS.
KB
fThls Fngstement Onlv! Adults
Sen. Morse Thinks
Bi-Partisan Foreign
Policy Now Assured
U.S. Placing Full
Reliance Upon
UN Moves
By JOE HALL
WASHINGTON HV-Sen.
Morse
(D-Orei said today he is more
optimistic than before about;
achieving "a truly bipartisan tor
eign policy," and that he intends
to help in working it out.
Morse, who nas been critical ot
the Eisenhower administration on
some foreign policy questions, told
newsmen of his more hopeiui view
after attending a secret briefing
yesterday on the international sit
uation. He was one of U members of
the Senate Foreign Relations Com
mittee at the session with top ad
ministration officials.
The officials included Acting
Secretary of State Hoover; Allen
W. Dulles, head of the Central
Intelligence Agency; Arthur W.
Radford, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff; and Arthur S.
Fleming, director ot the Office of
Defense Mobilization.
Most committee members left
the session close-mouthed, al
though some said they heard lit
tle 'more than "what you read in
H.. nanerc" Rt Qvrt nf ih.jsayng 3u,uuo soviet voiumeer
Democrats said it appeared that alrmeP "n? rJnn.?e lxPf'.s hA
the administration was placing ISone into the Middle East in the
full reliance on the United Nations IP"' 1" days by way of China
to meet every emergency "situa- ant across India. ,
tion now flaring up abroad. I u- officials said the govern
. That attitude reportedly would,'""'' had "o information to sup
'extend even In meeting the situ. Port such a report. And they said
ation that would arise if, as one!'' would b almost impossible for
senator put it, the Russians were! such a 1,r8c number of Russians
to move "10,000 or 20,000 volun
teers" into Egypt.
But Sen. Fulbright (D-Ark) said
any such Soviet move should be
met by U. S. military action. He
predicted President Eisenhower
eventually would make it clear
that use of Soviet forces in the
Middle East could not go unchal
lenged. U. S. reliance on the United
Nations was further emphasized
; with reports that the administra
tion has told Britain and France
it opposes any meeting of the Big
Three heads of government over
the Suez crisis at this time. Mur
ray Snyder, assistant White House
press secretary, told newsmen
yesterday there are "no plans at
the moment" for such a confer
ence.' - Morse said that In the past he
had felt the Eisenhower adminis
tration wants a truly bipartisan
foreign policy and the Democratic
He said Democrats "should not
k. ...kk.. .1 (. .k. .J.;
i '"h ,",c -""'
mio,,, ,,u auuuiu uc oiiuncu
to pive .heir ineas in advance1
rather than be St old of decisions
onlv after thev are made.
"But once the policy is set." he Pick. 67, headed the Army En
asserted, "we should all get be-!ineers from 1949 to 1953.
hmd it, and that s what I intend
, in dn "
Sen. Mansfield (D-Mont
said
i the meetinc left with him the
NOW PLAYING!
"MAVERICK QUEEN"
"DR. AT SEA"
THURSDAY!
BCTJB
TfO DeCOItSlA ,
for Your Entrrtilnmrnt
Sfe the Life Slorr of t Rn
llorst, turh ai cltAtion
HELD OVER!
1
of This Show We Will
Each Evening at 1.J0
Of.lii dents 51V rhlldreii (V
m
w-
United Nations for a short-term
solution but "there doesn't appear
to be any long-range foreign pol
icy." He added:
"The purpose seems to be to
reach immediate objectives, and
then to start looking to the long
range plans."
rhnirman Reorne lD-Ga) made
, it clear after the session he felt
; niierlee was the best policy.
"j think the situation over there
- can wmi be worked out" if
"a 0 us don't say anything that
will make it : more difficult,"
I r, en me said
I .
Capital Denies
30,000 Soviets
In Middle East
WASHINGTON (UP) - U. S. of
ficials today denied a published
report that 30,000 Russian "volun
teers" have flocked into the Mid
dle East recently.
The denial was prompted by
a copyright dispatch from the
Washington bureau of the New
York Daily- News. IP quoted a
"highly reliable' source" here as
to be moved into the region with
out -being detected by the United
States.
Officials said limited numbers
of Russian technicians have been
in Egypt teaching Egyptians how
to :use Soviet weapons supplied
to Egypt. But these technicians
have been there for some time and
the total does not approach 30,000,
; they said.
General Pick
Seriously 111
WASHINGTON IA1 Lt. Gen.
Lewis A. Pick, ret., who was in
charge of building the Lido Road
in the China-Burma-India theater
in World War II, is ill with a
"serious abdominal condition,"
Walter Reed Army Hospital an
nounced Tuesday.
Pick was. admitted to the hosni-
tal Nov. 9 after exploratory sur-
: Onrv 1.x n.rhrm.J ,1 Ik. Tl C
:7'T""r '".""'"
. r , ".a, v,o
luesciavs announcement Bflve
'no details' concerning Pick's con-
i dition.
ELECTRICGENERAL
BLANKET SALE
New
loW fcri
Automatic Blanket
with fomeui G-E
You're never cold-
now
never too warm with
G F. Automatic
only
Blanket! Come in and
ed tod.iv. Iiouble hed TiB s',e
sue $24 95.
LAY AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
PAY AS LITTLE AS 50c PER WK.
INOPERATIVE G. E.
NAN SAVES YOU
Z.-K" Green Stamps-Open
i ijj.ii i.utj. jiJMirrn
-
365 N. COMMERCIAL
REBELS AMBUSH BUSES
ALGIERS I Nationalist . re
bels ambushed two buses east ot
Oran Monday night, killing seven
Europeans and kidnaping an un
known number of Moslems. The
dead included six soldiers and one
civilian. Troops began a wide
spread search for the rebel band
of about 50 men.
- : :
ACORNS FROM THE
WITH DEL MILNE
IT'S
BUFFET
TIME
at the Marion Hotel
Coffee Shop every
night from 5 to 8. And
what a buffet it is
Three main entrees,
with Roast Baron of
Beef heading the I j 1 1
. . . end a whole raft
of delicious side dishes
You can really stuff
yourself cuz we don't
care if you wear a path
between the food and
your table. Th price?
1.75
$1.00
for adults
fer children
under 12
FREE PARKING
t the Marion Cir Park
Remember in Salem-it's the
HOTEL
MARION
Phone 3-4123
Sleeo-Guord
$1995
BLANKETS EXCHANGE
MONEY AT MASTER
Mont Fri. Til 9 P.M.
' -
V,
. -' "t