Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 13, 1956, Page 20, Image 20

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    Page 10 Section 2
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, November 13, 1956
Hays Moves to
Punish Powell
For Party Bol
Ohio Solon Would Kerp
INew Yorker Off Demo
Committees
WASHINGTON W-Hop. Wayne
L. Hays (D-Ohio) said today he
will ask a prosession Democratic
House caucus to bar Rep. Adam
uayton i'owell (D-NY) from com
mitlee assignments as a Demo
crat.
Powell bolted the Stevenson
Kefauver presidential ticket and
campaigned in behalf of President
Eisenhower because, he said, he
preferred Eisenhower's stand
racial Integration. He said at the
time he was still a Democrat,
The caucus, expected to meet
Jan. 2, has the final say on or
ganizational matters among Dcm-
ocratic House members, including
Committee assignments. Such as
signments normally are made on
the basis of seniority.
Powell now is a member of the
Education-Labor and Interinr-In
sular Affairs committees. Should
the Democrats deny him commit
tee assignments, he could ask the
Hepublicans to assign him
"They took him In the campaign
ann they can keep him now,
Hays told a reporter, referring to
Powell. "I will introduce a reso
lution asking the caucus to deny
committee assignments to him."
: Hays said he presently does not
intend to include Rep. John Dell
Williams, Mississippi Democrat,
in the resolulion, although Wil
liams supported a third party
presidential ticket on winch he
was listed as vice-presidential
candidate in some states.
- Any move to punish Powell or
Williams would face formidable
opposition.
Middle East Bound
jWCJT
Q&QE
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2
..LWL 1M I' I
Danish soldiers climb rnmp Into the nose nf a U.S. Air Force
transport plane at Karup Military Airport, Jutland, Denmark. The
soldiers are pari of contingent of Danish troops that will serve
as an advance party for United Nations police force in the Suez
area. (AP Wlrephoto via radio from London)
Green Lumber
'Market Shaky
EUGENE (A The green fir
lumber market has been showing
some stability but only because nl
curtailed output, the weekly
market letter Random Lengths
said Monday.
Studs, which have had a firm
market for a monlh, now show
signs of weakening, the letter
said, and any increase in produc
tion will bring an immmcdiatc
price drop.
Retail yard buying Is reason
ably active for this time ot year
and mixed cars of green and kiln
dried lumber from large mills
havo been moving In slow but
steady volume.
Pine selects, moulding and shop
grades nave been unchanged in
the past week and commons held
to the slight firmness that has
been developing.
Only a few plywood sales arc
at $72 on the index grade, most
of them being at $67, the letter
concludes.
KOREANS HELD AS SPIES
TOKYO on- Police today ar
restel six Koreans and accused
them of spying on American
armed forces in Jnpnn for North
Korea's Communist government. I
Oregon to Get $115,000,000
U. S. Road Funds in 2 Years
C. W. Enfield Tells Sa
lem Chamber Whole
Nation to Be Changed
The new federal highway pro
gram is by far the greatest public
works project ever undertaken by
America or any oilier couniry.
C. W. Enfield, chief counsel for the
Oregon Highway Department, who
will leave here in a lew days to
be solicitor for the U.S. Bureau
nf Public Roads with headquarters
in Washington, told the Salem
Chamber of Commerce Monday at
the Hotel Marion.
Tho nrocrnm is beyond one's ca
pacily to comprehend, tnnein
snid, involving expenditure 01
billion dollars in 13 to 15 years on
41,0011 miles of interstate highways
of which 20.000 miles will ho four
lanes and 5000 miles six to eight
lanes in and adjacent to big cities.
Oregon's money will be spent on
lis two interslale nignwnys, u.n.
on. the Pacific, and U.S. 30, the
Old Oregon Trail. Both will cvon-
luallv be four lanes from I'oniann
to the Snake river and from the
Columbia lo the California line.
Oregon will have $115,000,000 avail
able in (he first two years.
Financed on a pay as you go
basis Willi additional laxcs on gas
oline, tires, lubricating oil, etc.,
the program will cost about 27 bil
lion dollars. It will nol only change
the face of America, it will be nn
enormous stimulus to American
Lad)
Bullfight Authority!
Wait for $64,000 Quiz, Girl
ny DOROTHY DIX
DEAR DOROTHY DIX: Ever since I was small. I've loved bull
lights. Of course 1 have never seen one, but 1 have rend and studied
about them.
My friend had n chanro lo see one; she didn t
like it and didn't understand it. We have constant
arguments about who knows more about bull fights.
-Maria.
DEAR MAItl.A: A lady bull-light authority?
Vou should be on the wailing list lor "The SM.nno
Question." Your lelter. which space would not per
mit printing in full, certainly showed evidence of
a thorough knowledge of your favorite subject.
Your Irienri couldn't possibly have acquired ils
equal from seeing one fight. The decision is in
your favor.
DEAR DOROTHY DIX: .My wife goes out with her tnolhcr nil
the lime, but when 1 want to go out she gels mad. We're rnntinunlly
quarrelling over this. I'm 1!) and she's 17. I'm thinking of leaving
her.-ST.
DEAR ST.: Sinre you considered yourselves sufficiently grown
up (or marriage, you should learn snmcllung about this adult game,
li s a tough one. Mutual give and lake, forbearance, and under
standing must be added In Ihe Icon-age love that inspired I he step.
Suppose you visit the clergymnn who married you anil ask
liim In lion mil the ninth spots, llr'll explain thai a wile's place is
primarily home, that her husband is entitled In the same privileges
she demands, and Hint running away will solve nothing.
economy. Using some 50 million
tons of steel and other materials
in proportion, creating at its peak
half a million new jobs besides
Ihe jobs it creates in the supplying
industries, four billion dollars will
ultimately bo spent for right of
ways alone.
Enfield, originally a North Cnro
linan who studied low at the Uni
versity of Virginia, came here with
his wife, whose parents live at Ar
lington, Va after the war. They
will now return to their native re
gion by reason of Enfield's new
position.
Research Topic
For Dentists
Denial research will be the sub
ject of a lecture to be given Tues
day night before Ihe Marion-Polk-
Yamhill counties dental society at
a dinner in China City restaurant,
by Dr. Thorn Kinersly.
Before entering the dentistry
practice in Salem recently, Dr.
Kinersly spent several years in
denial research as a member of
Ihe staff of Yale Medical school,
New Haven, Conn.
The speaker is a graduate nf the
University of Oregon Dental school,
interned in Boston, served a resi
dency at the Yale hospital and did
graduate work . in Stockholm.
Sen. John S. Cooper
Has Liberal Record
Sweden.
Surgeons Develop New Method
lo Clean Out 'Rusty' Arteries
LOUISVILLE. Ky. Ml A Wash.
Ington cloakroom story relates an
encounter between the late Sen.
Robert A. Taft and John Sherman
Cooper, who has just won a third
"short term" to the U. S. Senate
from Kentucky. .
"Are you a Democrat or a Re
publican?" asked the Ohio Re
publican. "When are you going to
start voting with us?"
Cooper replied. "If you'll par
don me, I intend to vote as I think
best."
Through his voting record the
tall, gray-h aired mountaineer
from cast Kentucky earned his
reputation as a liberal.
Cooper, a lawyer, entered poll
tics at 26. He served as a stale
legislator at Frankfort. In 1923
Pulaski County elected him coun
ty judge like his father and grand
father before him.
For the next eight years he held
that office and today looks' back
on those lean depression years as
the most important period in his
me.
Whatever my views are to
day," he says, "they were influ
enced by those years, as a county
judge.
In 1942 he enlisted in the Army
i a private. When he was dis
charged in M4fi as a captain he
returned to Somerset. That same
year he was elected- to a two-
car term in the Senate. He was
beaten in 1!M8 for a full term
Ho once served as a delegate
to the United Nations General As
sembly and as special consultant
lo Secretary of State Dean Ache-
son.
In 1!)55, President Eisenhower
appointed him ambassador to In
dia, a post he held until he re
signed lo run for the Senate
against former Gov. Lawrence
Wetherby.
Shortly before leaving for India
ho married the former Lorraine
Rowan of Pasadena, Calif. It was
his second marriage. The first
ended in divorce.
Cooper, 55, unlike his opponent
in the recent election, is not an
oralor. He talks slowly and halts
frequently searching or the right
,word.
DEAR DOROTHY DIX: I was a top-grado student unlil 1 mot
Dirk. f dated for several months, then broke oil. Now I ran t
leep or eat and my marks are something nvvhil. What can I do?
Lois.
DEAR LOIS: A prominent educator tills me lhat fruslialcd
love is the cause of most school failures. He couldn't suggest an
anlidole, though. 1 guess, like measles, it must run its course,
DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My son came home from college lor a
week end. bringing with hint a coed he bad been dating. 1 had ex
changed letters Willi her parents, prior to Ihe visit, and lliev were
,-igreenhle to it. The young people were out every night, and returm .
qiule late. Then Ihey staved up talking until 4 .in and 5 in the
morning. When I remonstrated with them about it. my son said I
had talked out ot turn. He claimed I bad embarrassed the girl
Was I wrong' They are both 17. Louise.
DEAR LOUISE: You were absolutely right. If talking was nil
they wanted, they could have gone to bed at a reasonable hour,
nnd Inlked all day. The girl's parents had placed her in your pro
tection, hence It was your duly to assure decorous conduct,'
DEAR DOROTHY DIX: My plight is unusual nnd iiglv. At Mi 1
fell In love wilh n much younger, married man ami pursued the r"
manee, heedless of consequences. My sister to,t hy nie. uiving
advice, which I didn't need. I accused her of heme an intotfmir;
woman, and called her names I wouldn l repeat Now Hie elitvp
alfair Is over, and I recognize il lor whal it was. How can I redeem
myself with my sister? Oily.
DEAR OLI.Y: II your intenlions are really sincere, admit to
your sister that you were wrong, and toll her how sorry you an
When wo honestly admit faults, nlher people are only too' glad to
forgive.
CHICAGO 11 A new surgery
method has been developed which
scrapes clean Ihe clogged arteries
in humans which cause heart at
tacks, two surgeons have an
nounced. "Rusted" coronary arte
ries were bored clean in about the
same manner that rusted or
sloppcd-up water pipes are
reamed out.
A thin, hollow instrument
pushed through the arteries cut
away plugs nf fattv material thai
had caused Ihe heart attacks,
and threatened to cause new attacks.
The new surgery was performed
wilhin the Inst two weeks on two
men, aged 51 and 52, both vic
times of heart attacks like that of
President Eisenhower. The cleaning-out
increased the vital flow
ol blood to Ihe heart muscle. The
patients arc expected lo leave
the hospital soon.
The new slop was annnunced hv
Dr. Charles P. liailoy nl Hahn
emann Medical College and
llabnemnnn Hospital, Phila
delphia, and Dr. Angeln May of
Ml. .ion Hospital, San Francisco.
It was reported lo the American
Society for Sludy of Arterioscle
rosis i hardening of the arteries!.
It was interpreted as a step lo-
1 Fa nn Youths
To (Jo Abroad
COltVAI.l.lS in Four 21-vear-
old farm youths will go from Ore
gon to foreign countries in the in
ternational farm youth exchange
program next year.
Named by Oregon Slide, the
four who will spend three months
abroad ore William Coals. Hood
Itiver; Marilyn Neill. Milwnukie:
Violet Klobas, Hend, and Theo
dore Tidvvell, Dufur.
PEN
REPAIR...
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Srnd your prnMrm lo ttornlhy Or wrMe for hrr frr lcnflrl
D-S2, "How linn rut Aro You?" ft nil msm, hf mr lo rnrlotie n
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UlU CISKS CHAIIl IAPII
415 State St. . Phone 2.-24M
6lrm, Oregon
ward a new era of surgical pre
vention of heart attacks.
Dr. Bailey' said it is too early
lo determine how much this new
method has helped the two pa
tienls. or how many heart victims
might he helped this way.
F107 Zips at
1,300 M.P.H.
LOS ANGELES Ml A second
Air Force jet fighter, North Amer
ican s F107, has flown twice as
fast as sound, The Los Angeles
Times says it has learned.
Flights were made Nov. 3 and
again last Thursday from Ed
wards Air Force Base in South
ern California, the newspaper said
Tuesday.
The Lockheed F104 Starfighler
was thought previously to be the
only Air Force craft that could
reach about 1,300 m.p.h. in level
flight, it added.
"During the campaign," an as
sociate says, "John must of shook
every hand in Kentucky at least
once."
Kentucky Republicans often ob
jected lo Cooper's voting habits
during his two previous short
terms. Vet, he is their biggest
vote getter. He beat Wetherby by
more than 70,000 votes.
As to ' voting criticism, Cooper
doesn't seem to mind it "I'll con
tinue to do what I think is best
for my state, my nation and the
world.'-' he says.
Third-Quarter
U.S. Economy
Spurts Ahead
Goods-Service Output
At Annual Rate of
$414 Billion
WASHINGTON on The na
tion's booming economy lunged
forward during the July-Septem
ber quarter, with strong advances
in production, personal income
and wages.
The Commerce Department's
November "Survey of Current i crease in gross national product
Business," Issued Monday, showed
that during the third quarter of
1936
1. Total output of goods and
services reached a record annual
rate ol nearly 414 billion dollars
12 billions more than the first
of the year. It was the fourth con
secutive quarter in which the
gross national product topped the
400 billion dollars mark.
2. Personal income rose to an
annual rate of 327 billions, up 4
billions from the second quarter.
3. Payrolls in private industry
went up to an annual rate of 188'.i
billions, a 2 billion dollar spurt
from the April-June period.
were a 3 billion dollar rise in per
sonal consumption (pending and i
2 billion dollar boost in businesi
outlays for plant and equipment
It also reported that fixed prl
vate investment reached an an
nual rati of 63 billion dollars, U
2 billions, and that govcrnmenl
purchases hit a rale of 80 billions
a rise of l'i billions.
PIG EATER JAILED
.MANILA (UP) Generoso D
Guzman made a pig of himsell
and went to prison for it today.
..... , ... .. ---
4 r.nvernment waees and sala- Judge Kuperto Kapunan sentenenH
rics rose to a 3B8 billion dollar! Do Guzman to four years in jail for
annual rale, an Increase ot about:
500 millions.
The department said major
Department's i factors in the third quarter
taking and eating a stray pig. De
Guzman had contended an old
Philippine custom made a loose
pig fair game for any hungry
passer-by. ,
On. of e iirfn
of odv.rtis.mtntt
to oniw.r your question!
ibout Mount Cf.ll AbbtA
Saltm, Ortgov
OF PRE-ARRANGED PHLuA-ITlTINCS-
It is always difficult to make memorial arrange
ments at the time of emotion and grief. Mount
Crest Abbey has set up a pre-arrangement plan
whereby you can make all arrangements for
yourself as well as your loved ones, before the
need arises. Your family can be spared emer
gency financial burdens by using the pre
arrangement plan. You can explore more fully
the particular type of memorial you desire.
We do not believe in aggressive selling ... the
decision is yours alone... we are available to
answer your questions and carry out your
decisions. Our services cost no more than other
types of burial.
WRITE OR PHONE FOR OUR
FREE INFORMATIVE BOOKLET
You art invited to visit Mount Crest Abbey. Please phone Salem
3-5484 or 3-5133 to make an appointment for an instructive tour.
No obligation, of course. Out-of-town residents, please call
collect We are opto seven days a week.
CREMATORIUM and MAUSOLEUM (J
Undtr Direction of So.m Mausoleum end Cremoorium, Inc.
PHONE SALEM 3-5484 IF NO ANSWER PHONE 3-5133 TWIN WEST ON HOYT ST. FROM SO. COMMERCIAL, SALEM, OREGON
U . -
Now8
Relief wprkerg depend heavily on tele
phone service during emergencies. And if
need be, special telephone centers are set
up for them at strategic locations.
Testing equipment even when Na
ture's not acting up is another part of
protecting your service. Telephone peo
ple guard against possible trouble in many
ways day or night, bad weather or good.
3;.'3
Your telephone is more dependable and
more useful all year round because local
telephone people plan ahead in every way
they can to keep your calls going through
Tliiliiinr flood f ijlil!T nlwnyn rnly In roll
the season when heavy rnins usually come to the Pacific West . . .
and sometimes floods, like those of n year ago. Fortunately, such
emergencies ns floods, earthquakes, and fires don't happen ottcn.
But when they do, telephone people like R. D. Burtis, above
are ready for last action. .Repair crews ca be nuMlci in om slurt
notice. Your calls can be rerouted over stand-by circuits. Portable
microwave relays arc in reserve to provide you extra voiceways.
Thousands of phones, miles of cable, and even complete central
offices can be diverted for emergency use. And we're set up to move
them fast by rail, truck, or plane. Looking ahead in this way helps
to insure your telephone's usefulness. Pacific Telephone.
The telephone
men and women
of Salem
work to make your
telephone more useful
every day
' kvllnm kit 77 Cvft it. It). 3-4101
O