Salem, Oregon, Monday, November 26, 1956 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Boy Not Slain By Kin; Found Dead of Cold Confession of Parents, Grandmother Voided In Weird Case HUNTINGTOnTw. Va. IB-Lit-tie Billy Beavers father didn't smother him, dismember his body and burn it, as he had confessed to police. Two-year-old Billy, missing uum ni5 cruae log camn home near here since last Wednesday, was found ripaH vpclorrtov ln.,nt. gators said he died of exposure ana nis parents ana grandmother, charged earlier with murdering him, will probably be released to day. Paul Harbour, a power company employe, discovered the body along a pipeline right-of-way about 1H miles from the Beaver home, 20 miles east of Hunting ton. Dr. Robert Barrett, Cabell County coroner, said examination showed the youngster, weighing an extraordinary 60 pounds for his age, had died of exposure in sub freezing weather. Sheriff H..D. Humphreys said the case was closed. The weird developments came after Humphreys announced. Bil ly's father, 24-year-old James Bea ver, had signed a statement say ing he had smothered the boy, hacked up the body and burned It in an open fire-place. The sheriff added the statement laid Beaver was helped by his 18-year-old wife and that both acted at the point of a gun held by his 64-year-old mother, Mrs. Virginia Beaver. The elder Mrs. Beaver had con tributed to the confusing aspects of the case by earlier making a statement that she killed Billy be cause "he got on my nerves." Neither the parents nor the grandmother can read or write much, Humphreys said. Beaver was said to have attributed his bizarre statement to fear of au thorities but Insisted he had been treated kindly by investigators. Engagement "Bad News" to The Reporters By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press White House Writer WASHINGTON (UP) - Back stairs at the White House: Great sadness prevails in the press room primarily among the single men assigned to covering the President. Reason for the long faces: One of Press Secretary James C. Hag erty's prettiest assistants, Twylia Hamstreet, is thinking rather seri ously of getting married. In fact, Miss Hamstreet has in formed Hagerty of her intention to become a housewife. Hagerty, in turn, passed the word to the reporters and photographers with this grave preface: "Men, I have bad news today." Assuming that Mr. Eisenhower will he on his jvay to Augusta, Ga., by the time this is printed or at least, packing his golf clubs for the trip the Chief Executive is not expected back at the White House much before Dec. 6 or I Dec. 7. Any trip he may make, how ever, promises to be something less than a vacation. His teletypes and long distance telephones will go with him and he'll be in touch with national and international affairs on a minute to minute basis. The White House has regarded Mr. Eisenhower'! plans for going South as a secret akin to the hydrogen homb. The reason is simple: Hagerty does not want the President pictured as a vaca tionist with war smoke billowing tip over the Suez Canal and Hungary. Consequently, any decision by the President to fly to Augusta for a few hours. or a few days is not expected to be announced j until the last moment; the last moment consistent with the latest developments !n the United Na tions, in Port Said and in Buda pest. "Baekslairs" reported a few days ago that three cats were ranging through the While House grounds in search of field mice. At the time, there was a theory that as the weather gets colder, the mice might forsake the shrub bery of the White House and move Into the mansion, itself. Howell Crimm, Chief White House usher and the man who really runs the residential section nf the place, boggled at such a thought. He claims that not even the smallest field mouse can wriggle through the multi-million dollar ramparls ol the White House. The mansion was rebuilt from cellar to rod during the Truman administration. But the three cruising cats are not aware of the infability of the executive mansion. Any cold night now, Crimm had better keep a close watch on the doors. At th morning press confer ence last Thursday. Hagerty was not on hand. Murray Snyder faced reporters instead. The question Immediately came Up- Where was Hace-ty? The answer as simple. Jim has had an aching tooth tor some time and could rot get to the den tist during the campaign. At the first possible opportunity, inter national crises permitting. Hag erty scooted off to the dentist ind left Snnler Is thug. It Was a Long Ride v. r-AK 7. Tots Poisoned By Insecticide OGDEN, Utah Ifl One little girl died and two others were in critical condition after they made mud pies w:th an insecticide which they apparently found in a container in their grandfather's orchard. Three-year-old Jeanie Peterson was dead on arrival at an Ogden hospital. Two hours later her cousins, Bonnie Kay Christopher son. 3, and Sherrie Christopher son. 1, were taken to the hospital with similar symptoms. The hos pital said their condition was critical. G r i s' f BAI.TIMORE, Md.-U. Col. Allen Ballard of Klnslon, N.C., points to the Baltimore area as he and IX Col. Marcus Hill of Cisco, Tex., view a map on which is marked their route on a 16,000 mile, .1114-hour B.iz night which ended here today. Hill It the aircraft commander and Ballard the navigator of a B.12 bomber which took off from Castle Air Force Base, Mercedes, Calif., yes terday morning. During the long flight the plane passed over the North Pole and such widely separated U.S. cities as Los Angeles and Minml. (AP Wirepholo) Eight B52s Complete 17,000-Mae Nonstop to Pole and Back Hop Flight Gives Proof Of Global Punch OfUSAF BALTIMORE un U.S. air offi cials pointed today to the awe some flights of eight B52 jet bomb ers as proof of the nation's ability to deliver a nuclear knockout punch anywhere in the world. The 14-ton, eight-engine B52s took off Saturday, four from the Air Force base at Castle, Calif., and four from the base at Loring, Maine. Exchange Club Has Third of Needed Toys About one-third of the necessary toys have already been collected by members of the Salem Ex change club in their annual toy drive, drive chairman Frank Ward, said Monday. He said his club plans to give awav more than 6.000 old and new toys to underprivileged chil dren in the area. ' The club is working through Salem schools, sororities and fra ternities at Willamette university and various other groups in the toy collection. Girls at Hillcrest school will sew 120 doll dresses which will be purchased by the club. Exchange club members will assist in making minor repairs to collected toys and cleaning them KANSAS CITY, Kan. Wl The . , . ., .. . . . About 10 davs before Chr s mns. new Kansas Turnpike recorded ,:, i i, ...ill h its first fatality early Sunday! turned over )o tne Salvation Army when dward R. Fitzpatrick, 48, : for distribution to children of an international representative ofneedv parents in Salem and the Ileal uy uuiiuiiuiiiiies. Toys can be left at Salem Aulo Parts, 356 North Liberty St., or will be picked up upon call, Ward said. 1st Death on New Turnpike Section SJ Fage 3 Fifth Graders OfTwoFaiths Plan Meeting Protestant and Jewish children of the 5th grades will be brought together at Temple Beth Sholom, 1795. Broadway at 7 o'clock Wednesday night. The program, initiated by Mrs Clarence Mann, teacher of the Sth grade Sunday School" class at Ja son Lee Methodist church, is for the purpose of getting better ac quainted with Protestant and Jew ish religious beliefs. While the project was given im petus by Jason Lee Methodists, Mrs. Mann says that all Methodist children of the Sth grade age group are invited to take part. "We feel that there will be mu tual benefit from such a project," said Mrs. Mann. Dr. Robert A. Golden is in charge of arrangements from the Jewish viewpoint. He will show Casino Burns In Las Vegas LAS VEGAS, Nev. - One of Nevada's oldest casinos, the Boul der Club, was gutted by fire last night at a 4oss estimated by fire chief Elmer Gates at $200,000. As firemen played hoses on the flames, croupiers hurriedly re moved stacks of chips and silver dollars. Money and chins were loaded into a police car and taken i lor safekeeping to the adjoining Horseshoe Club. Firemen said the blaze started in upstairs dressing rooms. The club was issued its gambl ing license, one of the state's first, in 1929. pictures and speak concerning the religious beliefs of the Jews as contrasted with those of the Protestants. The visitation is timed to coin cide with the observance of Chan nukah, or "The Feast of the Lights," when children are re warded and gifts are exchanged. Be among the first to sail the United Packing House Work ers Union at Cedar Rapids, la., was killed. The 236-mile turnpike from Kan sas City, Kan., to the Oklahoma line was opened a month ago. Fitzpatrick was riding with Kermit Fry, 47, a district director of the union in Kansas City. Fry's station wagon ripped out a 95-foot length of turnpike guard rail. The -int., A rr i cii.. Before landing at various points. nn!riH( w kirnwr, ftllt Investigators said Fry appar- I -5. fm.. ALBANIA BOOSTING SALARIES ROME U1 Communist Al bania was reported Monday to be boosting salaries and cutting prices effective Jan 1 in an ap parent effort to reduce popular discontent. There have been re peated reports of economic unrest Albania, a mountainous little Egypt Foments Arab Troubles, Turkey Claims ANKARA, Turkey Wl Ankara Radio charges Egypt has been in stigating large-scale trouble in other Arab nations, with Commu nist help. The ' broadcast also bitterly at tacked Syria for accepting Soviet weapons, imposing a state of siege (martial law) and "making troop concentrations along the Lebanese border." The Turkish radio commentator said invpstipalinn showed thai ! were Egyptian agents had played a part!011'" thc in recent disturbances in Lebanon. There have been bombing at tacks in recent weeks on French and British ouildir.gs in the small Arab republic. Lebanese army and police units have made sweep ing arrests, although reports from Beirut have said the disturbances were minor. BAGHDAD, Iraq OB Iraq has hranripri as nnnennen a Kvrian charge that this country tried to manded by Xt. Col. Marcus L.. furnish heavy arms for a coup Hill Jr. of Cisco. Tex., landed at aimed at overthrowine the Svrian : Friendship. It was aloft more than the United States yesterday, flint, hnrl- , ', , j , , , . ently fell asleep. He was charged nation of 1,715.000 on the Adriatic 1 . Tl1' n,on-stP "lghts "f I with reckless driving and driving! Sea. physically isolated horn So up .o w.uw over a while intoxicated. viet Russia's other satellites, Hum Micitn, mule man eim hours longer than any other B52 had ever flown continuously. 2. Circled the North Pole at temperatures of 65 degrees below zero, reached speeds of "nearly 700 miles per hour and main tained altitudes of "more than 35,- 000 feet, 3. Simulated drops of deadly bombloads at targets , along course leading from Maine, ' past Thule, Greenland, to the top of the world, and back by way of Anchorage, Alaska: Seattle, Wash.: San Francisco; Houston, Tex.: Miami, Fla., and Baltimore. "We had a verv successful mis sion," said Col. Donald E. Hill man, commander of the 42nd Bomb Wing based at Loring. He flew in one of two B52s which were diverted to Balti more's Friendship International Airport after being scheduled to land at Loring. The diversion, a Strategic Air Command spokesman indicated, was part of a last-minute plan to dramatize U.S. striking power. SAC spokesmen said the flights routine mission to dem- :apahility of the B52 and thc men who fly it." They said the B52s, of which thc Air Force has more than 500 among II wings, refueled in flight with the aid of KC97 Stratocruisers. The 324-hour, 17 000-mile record was set by one ol the four Castle Air Force Base planes. Its com mander, Maj. "Sam" Morris of San Angclo, Tex., landed it at Loring. Another Castle Ar B plane, corn- government, The charge was made Friday by a Syrian military spokesman. He said the government had seized British-made arms brought into his country from Iraq to enable "criminal agents to stab their country in thc back." The Moscow Radio meanwhile called the alleged arms shipment a "criminal affair" 31 hours and traveled nearly 000 miles. 16,' BACTERIOLOGIST DIES LONDON 'jP-The death of Sir Lionel E. H. Whitby, a bacteriol ogist whose patients included the late King Geroge V and Sir Win ston Churchill, was announced to day. He was 60. RESIDENCE AND LAND SALE The Stale Highway Commission will sell at public auction on the property described below together with the buildings thereon at 1:00 p.m. on December 17, 1956 A parcel of land lying in the Northwest quarter of the North west quarter of Section 7, Township B South, Range 2 West, W.M , Marion County, Oregon, and being portion of that property described in that deed to State of Oregon by and through Its Stale Highway Commission, recorded in Book 4.10, Psse 615, of Marion County Records of Deeds: the said parcel being that portion of said property lying Southeasterly of a line which is parallel to and 100 feet Southeasterly of the center line nf the Salem By Pass Section nf thc Pacific High way East as said highway has been relocated, which center line is described as follows: ( Beginning at Engineer's center line Station 344 1305, laid Station being 2131 feet North and 1231 leet East of the North west corner of said Section 7; thence on spiral curve right (the long chord of which bears South 10' 56' East) 400 feet: thence on 3274.05 foot radius curve right (the long chord of which bears South 20'27'30" West) 3320.95 feet to Station 381 34. The parcel of land to which this description applies contains 3 8 acres. The former Rex B. Morris property located on Route 4. Box 23, Salem, Oregon, at the junction of the Salem By pass and Turner Road on the South side of the highway. Buildings in clude house, garage and barn. The property is No. 18265. The minimum price which will be accepted is $3,500 00. Conveyance will be by Bargain and Sale deed and the Stale will furnish title insurance. Thi property will be sold with complete restriction of access to the relocated Pacific Highway East. Arcess is by way of the County Road, TKFMS OF S.M.F.: Cash. The right is reserved to accept or reject any or all bids. FOR INFORMATION: W. H. Haskin, Property Manager, Ore gon State Highway Commission, State Highway Building, Salem, Oregon. tint ,,m, 10S ANGELES HONOLULU MMUAItr f SAN FRANCISCO HONOLULU 'flftlMltr 20 Feel relaxed and carefres is i native on fabulous, fun-loving "Leilanl"! All 18,500 Ions art designed lor casual, vacation living on the way to Hawaii. "Leilani's" lun features Include broad decks lor active or lazy living, a glass enclosed promenade, the Lanai Kal. i terrace bv the tea. Deck chairs and hula lessons are "on the house" I "leilani" stops at Hilo on every Eastbound voyage, tool 'Alternate sailings from Los Angeles (long Beach harbor) and San Francisco to Honolulu every twelve days, fares start at M15 out ay.(iosm.ni.n.naiiipiiIM.) Ask year tranl (feat all about 'leilanl." Co the sew CAREFREE WAY to the Islands! HAWAIIAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY LIMITED PACIFIC FAR EAST LINE, INC., AGENT V 7 lfMMfc- '- ' Styled long and low -jMStf tots of GO (iVy the Instant response of Buick's New DynafloW J We'll admit it quite frankly. "New" is a word that's used a lot. But seldom has it meant so much that's fresh and different and better-than-before-as here in the newest B trick yet. Take the new styling, because that's so obvi ous even at a glance. To get it so sweepingly low, the engineers started right from the bottom, with a brand-new type of chassis construction. It's an ingenious "nested" chassis that reduced car height as much as 3.4 inches, giving new lowness and raciness to the styling without reducing road clearance below or room inside. It's a massive I-beam, X-frame chassis that'i stronger and sturdier-and permits a new low center of gravity that gives this Buick far surer, far safer readability. That's the picture on style and beauty and rugged brawn in every '57 Buick, But no uch picture can give you the feel of this automobile's new instant go. Only when you take the wheel can you appre ciate the new era of motoring pleasure and ease and safety brought about by Buick's new power-pitch response. It's instant response response set off by the hair-trigger action of a new 364-cubic-inch V8 engine and the full-range flexibility of a new Variable Pitch Dynadow, It's response so eager, this Buick seems to anticipate your every command. Power flashes to the rear wheels so quickly and jmoothly in "Drive," that the need for "Low" has virtually been eliminated, Even Dyna flow's famous switch of the pitch is seldom needed. Come try It, Come see and fed the tremen dous difference the newest Buick yet can make in your driving enjoyment. New Adranr.rrt Vnrtoio Fltih Dunnlinw li the on! Dunnflnw Huirk (jiiWi tndny. II ti tttmdmd on Romlmaitrr, Super and Cenlury optional l modctt Mire coll on lfl tptcUd. Newest Buick et -WHIN ItTTII AUIOMOIIttS AM lUIlt IUICK Will IUI10 THEM- 388 N. Commercial St. O Sqlem, Ore. YEAR-END CLEARANCE OF 1956 GENERAL0ELECTRIC HOME LAUNDRY AT MASTER SERVICE STATIONS LOW-LOW PRICES! 1 yw Choice of G-E MIX-OR. 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