Page 2 Section 1 otate Honors Lro J. AeV J. lM-tv X J IA III PORTLAND (Special)-A St. Paul Union high school student has been named Marion county's top 4-H forestry participant for 1956. Michael Koch, son of Mr. and . Mrs. ueorge Rocn, 51. raul, has recuiveu uie gum meaai 01 nonur, donated by American Forest Pro ducts Industries Inc., Washington. D.C. for bis efforts in promoting' good forestry practices and his;'airs al Sl- Paul Union hiSn skill in executing them. County Extension Agent T. 0. Larson. Salem, made the presenta tion at the recent St. Paul 4-H achievement night. The 4-H of ficial pointed out "Michael's in- Nehru Starts Canada Talks ' OTTAWA Ut- Indian Prime Minister Nehru today begins long 1 private talks with leaders of the Canadian government on a broad range of international problems. As in his Washington and Gettysburg talks this week with President Eisenhower, no formal agenda was drawn for the meet ings today and .tomorrow with Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent Gov. Gen. Vincent Massey and -Foreign Secretary Lester Pearson ' The talks were expected to Vange from the Suez Canal and ' Middle East dispute to the problem . of Soviet troops in Hungary, dis armament and military alliances. Nehru and St. Laurent planned to confer more than five hours, Including a luncheon meeting with a small group at the Canadian jrime minister's residence. . Nehru and his daughter, Mrs. In dira Gandhi, landed at Ottawa's Uplands Airport last night after a flight from New York. Pinza Gels His LJirjstmas Wish STAMFORD, Conn, (fl Singer Ezio Pinza got his Christmas gift wish being able to spend the holidays at home with his wife and three children. The famous basso was dis charged yesterday from Green- wich Hospital. He had been a patient since Dec. 3 after suffering a second heart seizure. . ruiu, aiur ui ii)f.'rn ami iiium- oal comedy (South Pacific and I Fanny), suffered his first heart i attack in August while in Italy. ! wmtWt-0OOK 60001 m .'NOmH CAPim AT NOOft- Completely Remodeled Centrally Located BANQUET FACILITIES Group Meetings From 10 to 100 People 440 State Phone EM-35016 for Fins Food... Our Menu Is Matchless Prize Winning HAM and ROAST TOM TURKEY with all the trimmings juit TUC C A 111 CU AO Th Oregon Homo of Sloppy Joo I tit )AIM jnUr A Great Sandwich Portland Road at North City limits For Orders to Go-Phone 2 6798 Completely Remodeled In Beautiful Swedish Almosphere f All You Con Eat Dinners - W Will Be 440 State St., 0 8440 Interstate, lerest in forestry and his activity in this field makes it a well deserved honor. He's been a 411 member since 1951 and this year won a coveted scholarship to the 4-H summer school at Corvallis. Koch is a member of the St. Paul Tree growers 4-H club and has served as president of that group. He is also active m student af- school. He was recently elected president of the freshman class and plays basketball and football, S. W. Robb, chairman of AFPIs Oregon committee and an official of Willamette Valley Lumber Co Dallas, said "The work of 4-H leaders and county agents cou pled with the assistance of 4-H extension foresters in instruct ing youngsters on proper methods of woodlot management is already an important factor in Oregon's growing timber supply. "And to young Mike Koch, our congratulations for a job well done. He and other 4-H forestry members represent the Tree Farmers of tomorrow." The 4-H forestry program Is ad ministered throughout Oregon by the county extension agents for 4-H club work. AFPI, donor of the award, is national sponsor of the industry supported American Tree Farm syrlem of privately owned, tax paying lands growing timber. Norblad to Urge Westerner for Rules Committee WASHINGTON HIP) - Itep Walter Norblad (D-Ore.) said to day he will urge that a westerner be assigned to the House Hule.s Committee lo fill the vacancy left by defeat of ftep. Harris Ells worth (HOre.) flis personal preference, he said is Hep. Thomas M. Felly (it Wash). Norblad is a member of t h e Republican Committee on Com mittees which assigns new GOP House members to committees and approves shifts of other mem bers at the start of each Con gress. He said it is highly import ant" that a Republican member from the Far West, "and prefer ahly from the Pacific coast, should be given a place on the all important" rules group. The committee, which includes eight momhors of the majority party and (our from the minority, schedules legislation for action in the House and can under some circumstances block house con sideration of bills. "The membership of this com mittee," Norblad said, "is made up almost entirely of members from the eastern part of (he Unit ed States and It is only fair that Ihu vacancy should be assigned to the Far West. CHINESE . TEA GARDEN Beit Chlnejt Food Good Amerlcin Food Too Special Parties, targe or Small. Call KM-29023 for Information Chinese Food to Take Out 162 'i N. Commercial SL Open 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. Saturday 3 a.m. For Open Sunday 12-8 Closed All Day Christmas Downtown and Portland I ii J .hi lei ji'jj r Jf, n m& i) (1 tV&S'd m SATURDAY - DEC. 22 li rjQc k For the Children Jr Jf iy PATI $HOP - SECOND FIOOR M Sends Gospel I uj . Gerhardt H. Wiens of Lebanon reads letters from friends and relatives In Russia asking him to continue to send Bibles. A stack of nine New Testaments, written In Russian, are ready for ship ment on (he table before him. Bibles for Russia Sent by Retired Lebanon Carpenter By DOK1S GUNDKRSEV LEBANON (Special) "Please keep sending Bibles," read letters from friends and relatives in Rus sia and Siberia to Gerhardt H. Wiens of 256 Third St. With the cooperation of members of the First Baptist church, Wiens has sent more than 250 New Tes taments to Russia in the past three months, since he moved here as a retired carpenter from California. The New Testaments are obtained at cents each from the Ameri can Bible society, and are written in the Russian language. Wiens also sends copies of books of the (iospcl, obtained in Hus sion at five cents each, nnd mis-sian-lanKiiage hymnals. The latter are more expensive, and are ob tained through a firm in New York. A request for hymnals came from Mrs. Wiens' brother and his two daughters who are exiles in Siberia. The brother Is choir lead er for a Baptist group. Wiens began to think about his project of sending information on Christianity to Russia at the time of Stalin e death, when he heard a sermon from the third chapter of Kzckiel (verse 11: Get thee to them of captivity, unto the chil dren of thy people, and spenk unto them, and tell them . . . ). When I read about some of the ministers being released, those that had not been tortured and killed, 1 began to send the Bibles." he explained. "The Russian people tried Communism ior 30 years. Now they want to know about Christianity." Mr. and Mrs. Wiens left Rus sia in 1912 with their five chil dren, descendants of Dutch Pro testants who had lived in the I'kraine since Catherine the Great opened the area 200 years ago to Dutch and German groups seek ing freedom of religion. The Wiens left when they were told to give up their children to be brought up by the slate. When they reached America, their children were 12, U, 9. 7 and two. All are now married and liv ing in America. "We really loved the Russian people," Mrs. Wiens said. "They are good; they are not wicked, just misled." Her hushand added. "The people didn't want Communism; they had it forced on them. Maybe 90 per cent of the people couldn't read, f Dog Sled Rides f , 11:00 A. M. - 12:N NOON S 1 3:00 P. M. - S:0 P. M. 'gfi n l l in i i illieuJI 0 to Captives 30 years ago." The Dutch and German colonies maintained their own schools prior to 1922, they said, with children taught their ancestral tongue as well as Russian. The Wiens learned Englsh after they arrived in America. They were members of a Mennonite church in Russia, and of the Baptist church in Amer ica. "Our first Fourth of July in America, the children ran and hid under the bed." Mrs. Wiens laughed. "They thought it was the Revolution "again." Fruit crops in Oregon remind Ihem of the Ukraine, where the climate is good for cherries, ap ples, prunes and pears, though slightly colder." Wiens asked that anyone inter ested join him in obtaining New Testaments, books of the Gospel or hymnals written in Russian to send to Russia. He prefers to re ceive the books and not money, he said, but if money Is donated to buy books he asked that it be given through a church. He and his wife have agreed to live entirely on her retirement funds and use his for sending Bi bles and hymnals to Russia. Spires in Germany j V. S. FORCES, GERMANY PFC Lloyd E. Spires, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd R. Spires, Route 2, Dallas, recently participated in "Sabre Knot", a field training exercise with V corps and seven th army in Germany. A gunner in company D of the 10th Infantry division's 85th regi ment, Spires entered the Army in January 1955 and was last stationed at Fort Riley, Kan. Dance Every Sat. Night Over Western Auto 1 Checkerboard Jamboree Will Entertain From 8 to 9 P. M. Adm. 50c ' C3 a-n mm St THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Americans Everywhere Are DoingTrue ChristmasDeeds By RELMAN MORIS Associated Press Staff Writer It is a tree of matchless splen - dor, wreathed in garlands of love and devotion. Bright Christmas colors gleam j the branches, symbols of, warmth and compassion, courage and hope. That silver bell is a! child's laugh, the holly a kindly ; act. The shimmering ornaments j were put there by happiness, and the candles speak of faith. Where is this tree? It is everywhere in America to day. Who brings these precious gifts? Uncounted numbers of people. known and unknown, of many faiths and races, from every sta tion in life. IndonesiaArmy Pulls Coup in Sumatra Area JAKARTA, Indonesia, W The army held control of central Sum atra Saturday as the result of a bloodless coup. The move climaxing months of political and economic crisis and army unrest presented a grave challenge to the government of Premier Ali Sastroamidjojo. Proclaims Authority Col. Sim bo Ion, 37:year-old Army head of both the civilian and mil itary authority in central Sum atra. He said he would return power "when the people's demand for economic improvements are met." Sastroamidjojo's govern m e n t struck back with an order sus pending Simbolon from his mil itary command and accusing him of an action "against the law and a danger to the safety of the re public." The question was whether Sim bolon would obey the order. Sim holon declared earlier he would not recognize the central govern merit's cabinet, but added he did not intend to set up a new state. Plan Delegation The central government here an nounced it would send a delegation to Sumatra to contact "people there." It made no other comment on the move by the army group. There were no reports indicating the coup was spreading to other points in the Indonesian archipe lago. There are 500 Americans in Sumatra, but there were no indi cations any of them were affected by the power switch. Communications between Sum atra and Jakarta, the country's capital on Java, and the outside world were severely restricted. The head of Jakarta's cable and wireless company said the army had delayed all out-bound cables from Jakarta under strict censor ship. There were no reports of any clashes. One report said the for mal takeover of power was with out incident. VI TREK DANCING LESSONS II IncL $1.00 admission entitles you to one full hour instruction in "Modern Ballroom" under the very competent tutelage of Mr. and Mrs. Van, our instructors. Then , . . 3 full hours of Dancing all for $1 Just be on hand at 6:00 for FREE Dancing lesson. DICKSON'S"3" H IS I '4 Miles South of Salem City l.lmlti oo 99E H Fine 1 ragrance Gifts by PERFUME SLIPPER for the fairesi of ladies holds a convenient perfume purser in your favorite Coty fragrance 2.00 r'"i us Your chokt of L'OniOAN L'AIMANT BMtRAUDI 'PARIS CAPITAL DRUG STORE 40S STATE ST. Cornrr o( l.ibfrly O WE GIVE fW GREEN STAMPS I One was a man in Philadelphia. a delicatessen owner. He bought 1 a big tree, set it up outdoors, dec- orated and lighted it, and put a ;sign on it: "This tree is for all people who are homeless or who have no Christmas tree of their own. And one was Judge John J. Walsh in Utica, N.Y.. who was about to jail a chronic alcoholic when the prisoner showed him letter from his daughter. It said she thought the man was dead. , The judge, withholding sentence, gave him some money and said: "Merry Christmas and God bless you ... I hope you get to her." Surely a bright strand was placed on the tree this week by Dr. Laurence Jones, 72-year-old Negro educator. He is president of the Piney Woods School in Mis sissippi where 500 underprivileged youngsters work their way irom grammar school to college. He came to Camp Kilmer, N.J., bringing Christmas trees and 10 bushels of pecans grown by his students, to the Hungarian child refugees there. "We have very little at Piney Woods to share with you," he said, "but jny students are deeply grateful to America ... We know it will be equally good to you." And surely a television program in the Veterans Administration hospital in San Fernando, Calif., will throw a bright gleam on the tree. There, on Christmas Day, vet erans suffering from tuberculosis Dr. Otto John Gets 4 Years KARLSRUHE. Germany (UP) The West German Supreme Court today convicted Or. Otto John of treason and sentenced the former counter-intelligence chief of West Germany to four years imprison ment. John was convicted of treason ous disclosure of "false" state se crets and treasonable conspiracy during his 17 months in Communist-dominated East Germany. The court, in sentencing John to four years in prison, doubled the maximum sentence asked by the federal prosecutor. The year John spent in various West German jails and hospitals during the in vestigation and trial will be de ducted. Dance Tonite nd Every Sat. Might Sheridan Eagles Hall 9:30 P.M. to 1 A.M. , Admission . $1.00 Western Swing Music By The Silver String Rangers COTY will talk to their families over closed-circuit TV hookup. It has; been years since some of the men saw their children. Those under 15 are not admitted to the tuber culosis wards. A group of volunteers in Cali fornia raised the money and ar ranged for the program. Who knows how many Ameri cans connected with the armed forces have helped trim the big tree? Even a partial list runs long In New York. Jewish War Vet erans are sending 50 hospitalized servicemen to their homes in 13 states for Christmas, giving them roundtrip tickets and pocket mon ey. Jewish USO volunteers are taking over from their Christian coworkers in veterans hospitals and elsewhere. This is a "thank you" for courtesies they received on the Jewish New Year and the Day of Atonement. In Boston, employes of the Bos ton Naval Shipyard planned their annual Christmas party, raised over $20,000 for it and decided to entertain 1,000 orphans instead. In Ft. Polk. La., the 845th En gineer Battalion did the same thing, and found it had enough for two childrens' Christmas parties, which have been scheduledd. In Brooklyn and New York, the navy is bringing hundreds of poor children aboard the USS Intrepid for dinner and presents, giving each child a sailor host and guide, and sending truckloads of gifts from contributions from the men to every veterans hospital in the area. 'CASH NITE' T0NITE CRYSTAL GARDENS XCORNS FROM THE WITH DEL MILNf HAVE VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS In Our GOLD ROOM , . . Everyone's invited to enjoy the gala holi day atmosphere of our Gold Room and our very special present to all our Salem friends . A COMPLETE CHRISTMAS DINNER . . . Roast Turkey with all the trimmings . . . Baked Ham ... or Roast Leg of Lamb . $2.00 adults tl An children undrr li Remember in Salem it's the Hotel Marion Phone EM 34123 for reservations - Salem, Oregon, Saturday, December 22, 1956 Man Admits Bank Robbery WAXAHACHIE. Tex. i - The Firi National Bank of Millord. Tex., was robbed of almost J3.000 yesterday and Ellis County Sheriff Burl White said a man had con fessed to the crime. White identified the man, as Yancy Abner Batie, 32, Negro, of Los Angeles, Calif., a former resi dent of Milford. White, who quoted Batie as say EAGLES DANCES AGAIN SAT. NIGHTS YOUR GUESTS ARE WELCOME AT EAGLES HALL HANIX WITH Larry X Cascade Range Riders Joe Lane now being featured "The Northwest's Finest Western Band" Aumsville Pavilion Every Sat. Nite o X 1 ELIZABETH TAYLOR ROCK HUDSON JAMES DEAN Starting Time For "GIANT"-l:00-5:00-9 P.M. PHONE ENDS "D DAY 6TH OF JUNE" Starring Robert Taylor STARTS TOMORROW! BOB'S NEW HEART AND FUN SHOW OUT-JOYS "THE SEVEN LITTLE FOYS" . ' -c" . "W - earaa. i I HAT As In The Past We Will Be CLOSED CHRISTMAS EVE lAJJU'U Phone EM 3-5050 NOW SHOWINT rOXTINl'Ol'S FROM 1 P. M. DEAN MARTIN Phone KM 35798 1 FMKSl lKMI ligj;i A 3 n-n " IJpJl N - spkciai, AnnF.n attraction for Sunday nite! Russ Morrell Will Be Featured in an Interlude of Chriitmas Carols On The Mighty Elsinore Organ! srvnw . p.m. ing he robbed the bank to get some money for Christmas, said $372 was found in Batie's posses, sion. William Murphy, FBI agents in Dallas, said federal charge, against Batie would be filed today. DANCE T0NITE! T8& DAYTON LEGION HALL Music by LYLE and the WESTERNA'RES Ivory Sat. Night ?:S0 to 12:30 Adm. 1.00 (Tai Inc.) STARTS TUES. XMAS DAY 1 P.M. .pWUMJicoLca. We Will Run A Matinee Everyday Starting Tuesday EM-44713 TONITE! "ON THE RIVIERA" Starring Danny Kay fJF GEORGE STEVENS'mam BafEWi tm Paramount PtmaM pi I 1 fam A M. - ZF?fTHin feeuno YISUVjStOH -PIUS- NOTE: Due to the Manv Requests We Will Start Running Our Daily Metinecs Again JERRY LEWIS HOUWOOD cp BUST PATCRDMtf MAXIE R0SENBUMM tultr rut ANITA EKBERjG Now Showing! 1 ft'