Page 2 Section 1 Nixon Comes Out Strongly for U.S. Financial Ike and Dulles in Accord With Views NEW YORK i Vice-President N'xon urges financial aid to Brit ain as a result of the Suez crisis. Nixon, speaking last night at the 42nH annual National Auto mobile Show Pinner at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, also said Rus sia's savajerv in Hungary means a m?jrr rirfeat for world com munism, while the United Slates' s'.and in the Middle Kast has saved the United Nations. Referring to the monetary plight of "our friends in Britain," Nixon said: "I believe it Is in our interest as well as thCTs to assist Ihem in this hour of difficulty, and I am conl'cenl that there will be i-Irons bipartisan support in the Congrfss for granting eh assist ance." At Augusta, Ga., President Kisenhower's vacation headquar ters, White House press secre tary . James Hagerty said the President did not see or clear Nixon's address in advance but "we knew he was going to made speech.' Concerning the President's ap proval or disapproval of Nixon's stand regarding financial aid for Britain, Hagerty said: "if there were anything in the speech the President disapproves of, I don't believe the vice presi dent would make it. The vice president knows the policies of the President. Hagerty also said that Secre tary of Stale Dulles was "con versant" with the Nixon speech in advance. Nixon's address, made before 1.SO0 leaders of the automobile industry, was his first major one since the election. The vice president made no di rect reference in his talk to Brit ain's request last Tuesday that the United Stales forget about an flMnillion-dollar interest payment due later this month in lend knse settlement. Noting that this nation had not supported the attack upon J-'.gypt by Britain and France, Nixon said that "Now is the time for us all tn recognize that recriminations and fault-finding will serve no purpose whatsoever. 'the caut,c of freedom could nuffcr no greater disaster than to allow this or any other Incident to drive a wedge between us and our allies," he said. The test of strength of an alii ance or friendship, he said, is what happens in times of ad versity" as well as good fortune. "It s easy to condemn your enemies when they are wrong. It takes courage to condemn your friends," be said. Concerning Hungary, the vice president said the Communists may have won control there, but 'in the process lost the war for domination of the world which I hey are so fanatically trying to win." I Nixon said he was convinced j "that the events of Hungary will p-ove a major turning point in the struggle to defeat world com munism." China to Curl) Industry Plans y HONG KOW, in - Communist China, mindful of unrest sparked hv poor living conditions in other nations, appeared Friday to he on the verge n. slashing its ambitious heavy industry pl;uts. The Communist regime last Sep Irmher unfurled a blueprint for a new five-year plan that gave pri ority lo heavy goods over con sumer products Rut recent events indicate the Red leaders arc changing Iheir minds. Teiping now seems to Ke cau tiously preparing the populace for postponement of its oft-repeated dream of a mighty industrialized China. The Chinese leadership's answer to events in Poland and Hungary appears to be to beat a hasty re treat from lolly go;tls of tripled steel production and doubled coal output in favor ol more rue and radios for China's millions. KKY M.MI.Kt) TO SANTA LAHAMIK. Wvo. A local youngster isn't taking any chance that Sanla CI. nix will et stuck in the chimney. Among the letters in a special box for S.uitii's ni.iit at the l.anunie post oltice was one which contained the usual re quest for tovs and the kev to the front door of his parents' house. ROB'S m EKo .'JtomcMmiTHom. WMitMFOOOtS 60001'' A High Posts Due Forllerterand 'Jock' Whitney Governor Expected to Heplaee Hoover in Stale Dept. WASHINGTON UP The names of Gov. Christian A. Hcrler of Massachusetts and John Hay (Jock) Whitney were linked speculation today with important! posts in the Kisenhower adminis tration. Although neither appointment appeared Imminent, rumors listed llerter as likely to replace Her bert Hoover Jr. as undersecretary of state and Whitney as a lively choice for U.S. ambassador lo . Great Britain. Whitney, a millionaire sports-, man and financier, reportedly I has indicated he would be willing to take over the ambassadorial post now held by Winthrop W. Aldrich. Whilney himself could not be reached for comment on the re port. Herter conferred in Washington i yesterday with both White House and Mate Department oihciiils' concerning his anticipated selec-1 tion for some administration post alter his term as governor ex pires Jan. .1. i Hoover, whose prime interest is engineering rather than diplo-1 macy, has let it he known he ' would like to step out of the Slate Department to return to his private business interests in Cali-' forma. I More time may elapse before a new ambassador in chosen. Al drich. 71, has given no official . intimation that he Ians to retire from the post to which Kisenhow er named him in l!if;t. There had been speculation Inst month thai both Aldrich and C. Douglas Dilhon, 1'. S. ambassador lo France, whoulcl relinquish their posts soon but Dillon told news men atler talking with Kisenhow-, er in Augusta, Ga., yesterday that! i he is returning to his post for an ; indefinite period. ! "In Ihe present situation there." he said, "it is impossible to talk of any change." ENDS TOMORROW! MARTIN SirTHk I'llM Cartoon World Newt Hollywood Kids Club Matinee Every Saturday 1 to 4 p.m. THIS WEEKS SPECIAL FEATURE Jungle Jim's Wierdtit Adventure 'MARK OF THE GORILLA' Pon t MtuThls F.irltlni Fhowl! DWil Attention U rltrthrtiy Pirtlet Help to Point From Nixon NKW YORK Vice Presidrnl Klchurd M. Nixon uses his finger to make a point during conversation wllh General Motors Presi dent Harlow Curtice at National Aulo .Show dinner In Waldorf Aatorln Hotel Thursday. Nixon, principal speaker at the dinner, called for (he United Slates to give financial aid to Great Britain to help her out of difficulties stemming from the Middle Eait crisis. (AP Wlrephoto) Lumber men's Plane Landed on BOISE, Idaho Iff "It was quite an experience," commented one of four men Thursday whose airplane was forced down by a heavy snow storm and made an emergency landing on a mountain road. j But John Aram, outgoing pres ident of the Boise Payette Lumber j Co,, added: "We have no I scratches, no bumps." The four men were en route I from Boise to Ogden, Utah, Wednesday afternoon when snow- clouds dumped more than a foot of snow on Northern Utah just as they were coming near their destination. Lloyd Kason, the pilot, and owner of the Northwest Flying Service at Boise, brought his twin engine Piper Apache down through the clouds onto a road at Pro montory Point, on the shores of the Great Salt Lake. Aram, who is now assislant to the president of Weyerhaeuser Timber Co. at Tacomn, Wash., Kason, and the other two, Robert B. Ilansberger of Portland, in coming president of Boise Payetle, and A. K. Montgomery, vice pres ident of the Boise lumber firm, had to sit in the plane through the night. Kason periodically ran the engines to keep the cabin warm. The plane's radio could re ceive hut not send. "It was a horrible feeling," said Aram alter the four had success fully taken ofl the next day and flown to Hurley, ihen to Boise, ' to he in Ihere, hearing the news over the plane radio about the search, and worrying about how our families were taking the news." They saved emergency food rn tioiis in case the slay were to be longer and ate "a little bit of candy" during the 20 hours they were stranded. Aram had high praise for i thebCCjt i TECHNICOLOR . Britain Utah Road Eason. He said he "made a fine landing and a perfect takeoff from a mountain road." I Penney's SALEM, 10 Reasons Why It Pays To Shop Penny's 60 (ia. 15 Denier ISylon Hose 2 r 1 Scoop 'tin vp 9 If . , . thuy'rt mttty ihr AO gauge 13 den. or, tnen full fihiontd! Slim dark itimi. Spritig iliadei. fl1 i to 11. MAIN FLOOR New Shipment Just Received! 1 Women's All-Wool Coats Flffirx. twrfris, rurls, othrri . . . milium lined. SF.ro Ml FLOOR Tremendous Special (Vul's All-Wool Flrecfa., rhfrka. milium llnril. SKCOM) Kl.OOR Special Purchase! Machine Washable Chenille Lone Kobes Awortcd rotors. Slim 10 lo IK. DOWNSTAIRS STORK Special Purchase! Boy's Cotton Sport Socks N ? I ft n rfinfotr d, luortrd pattfrni. Ith In U. MAIN ri.OOR THE CAPITAL JOURNAL' 3 Plotters in Riesel Attack Found Guilty Face Uj) lo Five Years, $10,000 Fines When Sentenced Today" NKW YOrtK i Three con victed men were called into fed eral court today to be sentenced for conspiracy in the acid blind ing of labor writer Victor Riesel. Up for sentencing were; Leo Tclvi, 26, brother of the slain Abe Telvi, 22, who allegedly hurled sulphuric acid in Riesel's face in the early morning dark on a street just off Broadway last April 5. Gondolfo (Sheikie) Miranti, 37, the alleged "finger man" in the attack. Demenico (Nick) Bando, 47, one of the intermediaries. Guilty verdicts against the three were returned late yesterday by a jury of c:ght men and four . women after fW minutes of delib eration. The three could draw sentences of up to five years in prison and fines of $10,000 each from Judge William B. Herlands. They were convicted specifical ly on charges of conspiracy to ob struct justice by helping Abe Tclvi flee arrest afler the attack on Riesel. An over-all indictment charges eight men with conspiracy to ob struct justice by attempting to in timidate a prospective witness Riesel from testifying before a federal grand jury investigating rackets in the garment manufac turing and trucking industries. Riesel, whose column is syn dicated nationally and who has denounced labor racketeers, said of the verdict: 'This vindicates in part the long fight many of us are making and will continue to make against cor ruption and racketeering." Riesel testified for the prosecu tion. The government contends Abe Telvi was slain because he upped his fee for the acid attack and ; because scars on his own face ! left by the attack made him a j marked man. A lfi-ounce bottle of honey holds the essence of two million flower blossoms. OREGON omen's Orion Wool 1M1. Skirls SET 88 Slifi 10 to 18 pUidi wilh bag pUafi Hitched to tha hip IWie, cut genarouily full. Thy ft all lide-i'opc-r itvlei that you can waih In youf machine. 65 Olon, 35 wool. SKCONI) FLOOR Oiilv18 Value! I Coats 8K8 11 88 Sirs 7-11 3-Gv Onlv 3 4 Pairs for 'Mr.GUuVof Bouery Dies At Age of 81 NKW YORK ii "Mr. Glad." who played Santa Claus for down-and-out denizens of the Bowery for the past 30 years, will be buried today. But only his death reveals the real name of the jolly, silver haired man who so long played his part in spreading holiday happiness. j "Mr. Glad" was reajly Alfred Richard Rodway. founder and i chairman of a Manhattan food l brokerage firm. He died last Mon . dav at the age of 81. j His wife Grace disclosed yester day it was her husband who passed out change and sandwiches and coffee on the Bowery along ; with this message: "Cheer up, old fellow. Every I cloud has a silver lining. Keep up j your nerve and everything will i come out all right." I During the 1920s, Rodway's wife ' said, he underwent several ser i ious operations. "His illness and ; his interest in other people," she I said, started him on his annual ' philanthropic pilgrimages. Rodway lived in Garden City, N.Y. Cuban Planes Attack Rebels HAVANA, Cuba m-Cuban air force planes hit rebel ho.doi.s wilh bonbs and machine guns early today in southeast Cuba. An army communique said three rebels were killed and two taken prisoner in the joint air-ground action. The air force was called in after army units tracking down the rebels asked' for aerial as sistance. "Three different objectives of the factious group were machine gunned and bombarded," the communique said. The action occured in , the Niquero region, near the site where a rebel force landed Sun day. The size of the insurgent force has been extimated at 40 to 100 men. About 1,000 govern ment troops have been pursuing the revolutionaries in mopping up operations. The army communique said the rest of the country was calm. Un official sources reported that sabotage had occurred at several points. Remember! Starting Monday, December 10th, We Will Be Open Every Night Til 9 P. M., Except Saturday, Until Christmas Men's Wool Flannel Jackets 8 TOO 1 SifM 36 to 46 Mtn'i 100 virgin wool (linnet jaxkofi . , . a luporb Pnney vlu! Fully tailored wilh rayon lining, pad dd ihoulderi, tlanlc want intern. MAIN FLOOK 2t"xl(r Aviseo Kavon Scatters 85 For Tw wondor-wtatinf Avht$-ay tartar for (51 New ' P L- " motif. Non-ak-d. M echini washable. DOWNSTAIRS UTORK 16 Go Free on Bond in Racial Disorder Case 1 Remains in Jail as Clinton Parleys on School Opening CLINTON, Tenn. - Sixteen persons made bond pending trial and a 17th went to jail yesterday as federal court wound up the first phase of its action to halt racial disorders which closed Clinton High School. The Anacrson County School Board scheduled a meeting with faculty members and law enforce-1 mcnt officers today to plan re opening of the school Monday. It was ciosed after a flareup of vio lence Tuesday. Fourteen men and two women from Anderson County have been before Federal Judge Robert L. Taylor in nearby Knoxville in the last two days on charges of crim inal contempt of court in the inci dents. The 17th. Joe Diehl, a farmer, was arrested and convicted of contempt for handing out "inflam matory literature" which com pared the roundup of the other 16 wilh Communist action in Hun gary. He was sentenced to 30 days in 3ail. "He may not know as much as he should know," Taylor told Diehl's court-appointed lawyer, "but to compare an action of this court with that of the Russian government and the Hungarian peoples he knows better than that." The other 16 were charged with various threats or acts of violence or other activities tending to inter fere with integration of Clinton High in violation of a court in-; junction. Taylor had issued the injunction Aug. 29 and made it permanent Sept. 6 when violent demonstra tions followed admission of 12 Ne groes among 800 whites ai Clinton High under Taylor's desegregation order of last January. Taylor said he would .set the contempt cases for trial within 10 days. Those arrested here included W. H. Till, chairman of the An derson County White Citizens Council, and several others idnti fid as being active in the pro segregation group. Men's Leather Komeo Slippers Pannay't fin laathor romoo ilipport art idaal for tndoort, outdoor waarl Rugged Hitch down comtructpon, composition soles, rubber heeli. DOWNSTAIRS STOKK Feature! Dacron Filled Pillows Comforter HO Diiro'H'ft-MUe! ftrliew t'a n y t n cover eJtrfteeJ In I 4 e flak ail lump parted, tvtr-flufy 'n lit. Wrt. pat'ei Salem, Oregon, Friday, December 7, 1956 Airmen Stranded AlSouthPoleBase By DON L'V I MCMVRDO SOUND, Antarctica P-Fngine trouble stranded the' io-man crew ol a I'.S. Navy plane at the South Pole today. i The crew had down to the two-j mile-high polar plateau with sup plies for a 2.1-mcmber Seabcc task force building a base there for International Geophysical Year observation. The fliers took their polar delay philosophically. Before starting their reOair job. they broke out sle-ping bags from their survival kits and turned in at one of the three shelter huts the Stances have built in the last two weeks. equipped Navy Neptune with two jet and two propeller engines, une glM The .."Green Stomp Way ot Ilfllll 1 1'nk Sale'5 0ny Exclusive Men's Store M$!$8$ Ijjk Giving !i:K Green Stamps Challenging Dream a of Today's Changing Morals' E5S3nHT3BC3SaaBaWKn ROBERT TAYLOR Burl IVES Ourles Sir Ceitit HARDW1CKE Mary ACTOR EL1SA8ETH MUELLER -PLUS- -Wifh-Cornel Wilde Jean Wallace Note-This Is Not "Just It's So "Hot" That No Now! I A B tr k WjS THE BAZOOKA lfJ BOUNCERS OF THE I FOULED-UP COMPANY I . jUrjjf) CALl-ED "FRAGILE JALK, PALANCE 1 Cnr.lE AIDrnr Xm LEE MARVIM . sobcdt RICHARD JAECKEL BUDDY EBSEN And For Thoie Who Enjoy Skin-Diving and Under-Waler Thrilli - Don't Mist This Exciting Ce-Hitl HEY KIDDIESI Don't Forget Our Kiddies Matinee Saturday At 1 00 P. M. Special "JESSE JAMES vs. DAITONS" CHAP. 12--THE SEAHOUND" jet engine failed as it tried to take off. The mccnanics win nave rought work repairing or replac ing the crippled engine in tem peratures as low as 30 below. Crew members are Lt. Cmdr, John H. Torbert. North Kingston, R.I.. pilot: Capt. Douglas L. Cor diner. Washington. D.C., com mander of an air squadron in the Navy's Deep Krce'.e polar opera tion: and Maj. Stan A. Antos, Buffalo, N.Y., both copilots; T. BATTLKSIMPS MOTHBALLED PHILADELPHIA W-The Cali fornia and Trnnessec. two of eight battleships attacked at Pearl Har bor 15 vcars ago, were moth balled today at Ihe Philadelphia naval base. STARTS TONITE! m COBURN ItHltH IMi UMlTtO MTItH STARTS TONITE! Another War Picture" One Dared Film It Till "laaal tr,,,r i.JAs ""I DrKnl fnwaas 4t L V. J IUUU g1 NICHOLS