Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 16, 1957, Page 13, Image 13

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Salem, Oregon, Wednesday. January 16, 1957
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL
Section 2 Page 3
Pakistan Bids
UNBanTroops
From Kashmir
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. w
Pakistan called on the Security
al of all foreign troops from Kash-
I,he Rovernmcnt asked
ha a U.N. police force be sent
to keep peace in the Himalayan
slate Pakistan and India have
disputed for nine years.
Pakistani Vorcisn Minister Ma
lik Firoz Khan Noon, in a 9 500
word statement, told the council
there is no other way to solve the
dispute.
He claimed that more than half
a million tribesmen on the Pakistan-Kashmir
frontier arc clamor
in? for a mass movement into the
disputed state to win for the Kash
miris "their right of self-determination."
Britain's grant of independence
to ,ndia. in 1947 left Kashmir, a
Hindu, plumped for India but Pak
istan refused to recognize his ac
tion. Parts of the state are now
occupied by both Pakistani and
Indian troops.
Noon said Pakistan wants to
see a plebiscite held to decide the
State's futlirP. as rppnmmnnrla!
by the U.N.
He charged that India "has re
peatedly and consistently flouted
all reasonable proposals formu
lated by the Security Council or
by its mediators and is taking
steps to integrate Kashmir into
the Indian union.
IlolmesUndecicled
On Clemency for
3 Doomed Killers
Gov. Robert D. Holmes, who
recommended in his inaugural
message that capital punishment
be abolished, said Wednesday he
hasn't made any decision whether
to commute the sentences of three
men scheduled for execution.
All three men have appealed
their convictions.
They are:
Billy Junior Nunn, convicted in
Jackson County for the sex slay
ing of a 14-year-old boy.
James Norman Jensen, also
from Jackson County, convicted
of killing a housewife with a ham
mer. George F. Sack, Portland, con
victed of the murder of his wife,
Goldie.
OSC Enrollment
Rises 11 Per Cent
CORVALLIS Wl Winter term
enrollment at Oregon State Col
lege Tuesday was 6,602, an 11 per
cent increase over the compar
able day of 1956, the registrar's
office said Wednesday.
Tuesday's enrollment peak rep
resented a 650-student Bain over
last year and was a one per cent
boost over registration for the fall
term.
House Gets Dope
Penalty Measure
A bill that would impose stiffened
penalties on persons who sell nar
cotics to minors was introduced
Wednesday by Reps. Fred Meek,
Portland druggist, and Joe Rogers,
Independence.
Present law provides a, maxi
mum fine of $5,000 for convicted
narcotics peddlers. The proposed
legislation would add a maximum
prison sentence of 20 years for a
first offense, and a maximum of
40 years for a second offense. It
also would bar probation or pa
role on either conviction.
Hungary Expels
N.Y. Times Man
VIENNA (UP)- The expulsion
of the New York Times corre
pondent John MacCormac from
Hungary." It asserted his dis
Radio Budapest.
The radio, in its midnight broad
cast, said MacCormac was or
dered to leave Tuesday because he
gave "untrue information about
Hungary." It assertee his dis
patches on recent incidents at
Csepel Island "did not meet the
facts."
Radio" Budapest did not 'say
when MacCormac would have to
get out.
William Juza
New Assistant
City Attorney
William Juza, a 1956 Willamette
law school graduate, will take over
duties as deputy city attorney
Thursday.
A long-time Salem resident, Juza
passed his bar examinations last
year. He is a graduate of Salem
high school and the University of
Oregon.
Juza will replace Warren Eckles,
who has been handling the office
duties and Tom Churchill, who has
been doing the trial work. Eckles
is leaving for a position in Seattle.
The new deputy city attorney is
married and desides at 1605 South
Summer St.
Powell River Boosts
Newsprint $4 a Ton
VANCOUVER, B.C. W An in
crease of $4 a ton in newsprint
was announced Wednesday
by Powell River Sales Co.
M. J, Foley, company president,
said the increase will take effect
March 1, 1957 and will increase
the base price in New York to
$134 a ton. Several other major
Canadian firms have announced a
similar increase previously.
, TODAY'S CLOSE
New York Stock Quotations
By The Associated Press
Admiral Corporation 14 14 Loew's Incorporated 21
Allied Chemical 96 Montgomery Ward 38 ',i
Allis Chalmers 34 ' New York Central ' 33
Aluminum Co. America 90 M Northern Pacific 41
American Airlines 22 Pacific Gas & Electric 50
American Can 41 Pacific Tel. 4 Tel. 128
American Cyanamide 73 Penney (J.C.) Co. 804
American Motors 5 Pennsylvania R.R. 21 Vz
American Tel. & Tel. 175 Pepsi Cola Co. 21
American Tobacco 76 'i Philco Radio 16 ?i
Anaconda Copper 68 Vi Puget Sound P Si L 25 Vi
Armco Steel 59 Vi Radio Corporation 33
Atchison Railroad 25 Vi Rayonicr Incorp. 31
Bethlehem Steel 185 Vi Republic Steel 53
Boeing Airplane Co. 59 Vs Reynolds Metals 55
Rorg Warnr 43 Richfield Oil 67
Burroughs Adding Mach. 38 V Safeway Stores Inc. 66 Vi
California Packing 42 St. Regis 43 V.
Canadian Pacific 33 Scott Paper Co. 60
Caterpillar Tractor 91 Ti Sears Roebuck & Co. 27 Vi
Celanese Corporation 16 Shell Oil Co. 85
Chrysler Corporation 66 Sinclair Oil 62 VI,
Cities Service 65 Socony-Mobile Oil 55 Vi
Consolidated Edison 44 Southern Pacific 45
Crown Zellerbach 55 14 Standard Oil Calif. 46
Curtiss Wright 46 ' Standard Oil N.J. 57 i
Douglas Aircraft 6!) Vi Studebaker Packard 7
duPont de Nemours 184 8 Swift & Company 39
Eastman Kodak 87 Transamerica Corp. 37
Emerson Radio 6 Twentieth Century Fox 25
Ford Motor 54 ! Union Oil Company 57
General Electric 55 Union Pacific 29 'A
General Foods 41 Vi United Airlines 39 Vi
General Motors 41 Vt United Aircraft 88 'k
Georgia Pac Plywood 27 United Corporation 6 Vi
Goodyear Tire 76 ' United States Plywood 34 Vi
International Harvester 38 United States Steel 66 Ik
International Paper 104 Warner Pictures 28
Johns Manville 47 4 western Union Tel. 19
SeU'Top" - - ,S2 Chouse Air Brake 30 V,
Libby, McNeill 13 V Westinghousc Electric 5o
Lockheed Aircraft 55 Vi Woolworth Company 44
Washington's
Chief Sworn In
OLYMPIA UPi Albert D. Rosel-
lini, Washington's new Democrat
ic governor, Wednesday echoed
the words of his predecessor and
called for a balanced state budget
with no added taxes.
Rosellini was sworn into office
in a colorful ceremony attended
by members of the state Legisla
ture, state officials in the execu
tive branch of government, and
black-robed members of the State
Supreme Court.
Chief Justice Matthew W. Hill
administered the oath of office in
the House chambers in the pres
ence of the state dignitaries.
Rosellim succeeded Republican
Gov. Arthur B. Langlie who made
his farewell appearance before
members of the 35th Legislature
Tuesday. He presented them with
a balanced state budget which, he
said, will require no new state
taxes.
'Cat'Burdar
Gets Liberty
REDWOOD CITY, Calif. Iff)
Dr. John Francis Riordan, 35, who
admitted he was a "cat" burglar,
went free Tuesday.
. Judge A. M. Cotton dismissed
burglary and vagrancy charges
against the prominent doctor, for
merly of Hammond, Ind.
Judge Cotton explained he acted
on a compromise motion by de
fense counsel and because Dist.
Atty. Keith Sorenson "has admit
ted in open court, that he is un
able to prove an essential legal
element of this crime-Mhe intent
to steal."
Dr. Riordan, $15,000 a year anes
thetist at San Mateo County Com
munity Hospital, was arrested in
December. He admitted he had
prowled a neighbor's house be
cause of a "compulsion."
Two psychiatrists likened his
condition to that of a person who
had suffered battle fatigue.
2 Ship-Jumpers
Put Back Aboard
PORTLAND iff) Two alien
seamen who Sunday jumped ship
here Wednesday were flown to
San Francisco by the U. S. Immi
gration Service to be put back on
the Finnish freighter Korsholma.
District immigration director
Ernest Hover identified the men
as Vaino Paasonen, 39, a Finn;
and Alton Ulm, 37, an Austrian.
U. S. Spending
Fixed at $416
Per American
WASHINGTON MV-The record
federal peacetime spending in the
next fiscal year is going to cost
every man, woman and child in
the country an average of $416
each.
At the same time, each person's
share of the all-time record rev
enue to be collected with amount
to $427 each. The extra $11 each
makes up the expected surplus
for debt reduction.
These figures represent in
creases per capita in spending
and tax collections for the third
straight year.
The new budget sent to Con
gress by President Eisenhower
calls for $71,800,000,000 in spend
ing and collection of $73,600,000,000
in -revenue in the 1958 fiscal year
beginning next July 1. The Census
Bureau estimates the population
next Jan. 1 will be 172.500.000 per
sons. The population at this mid
point of the fiscal year is used by
the government in figuring aver
ages. The new average of $416 for
spending will be $10 higher than
the $406 for the revised estimates
for the current fiscal period. It
previously had moved up from
$394 per person in fiscal 1955 to
$399 in fiscal 1956. That means
an over-all jump o: $22 per person
in spending over the period 1955
1958. The share for each person in
the amount of revenue collected
has moved up even more sharply
$59 since fiscal 1955.
Computations showed the aver
age taxes for each man, woman
and child was $368 in 1955. It
jumped up to $409 in fiscal 1956
ended last June 30, will edge up
to $416 in the current period and
amount to $427 in the next fiscal
year.
Court Rebuffs
Fiunes Appeal
WASHINGTON IB The U.S.
Supreme Court Tuesday refused
to hear the case of a group of
Washington state farmers who
claimed they suffered $875,000 in
damages from aluminum plant
fumes.
It was the third denial the farm
ers had run into. The first was in
1954 when District Judge George
H. ioldt at Tacoma held their
claims were not justified. His de
cision later was upheld by the
U.S. Court of Appeals at San
Francisco.
The farmers asserted fluorides
in aluminum plant fumes had
caused $350,000 damage to ani
mals and $525,000 in other prop
erty damage. The Reynolds Met
als Co plant at Troutdale, Ore.,
and the Reynolds plant at Long
view, Wash., were named in the
suit.
Seaton Halts
Laud Lottery
KPHRATA, Wash. 1 The
Bureau of Reclamation said Wed
nesday scheduled land drawings
at Mesa and Conncll this month
for Columbia Basin farm units
have been postponed indefinitely.
Drawings for 131 units ranging
in size from 63 to 140 acres were
set for Mesa Wednesday and Con
nell Jan 23.
They were postponed by order
of Secretary of the Interior Fred
Seaton to give the department
time to study testimony given at
the land limitations hearings in
the basin earlier this month, the
bureau said.
Almost all the witnesses at the
hearings said land limitations on
the irrigation project should be
eased. The law now prohibits
ownership by a family of more
than one unit. The units average
about 75 acres.
Funds Listed
For Numerous
Ore. Projects
WASHINGTON Ifl These Ore
gon projects are among those pro
posed in President Eisenhower's
budget message:
Army Engineers' construction:
Chetco River $200,000; Columbia
River at mouth $1,150,000: Ama
zon Creek $446,000; Multnomah
Drainage Dist. No. 1, $500,000
Pendleton $400,000; Willamette
River bank protection $300,000
Cougar Reservoir -$6,1)70,000; Hills
Creeks Reservoir $4,800,000; The
Dalles Dam $19,000,000.
Army Engineer's small author
ized projects (tentative list : Co
lumbia River between Chinook
and head of Sand Island $227,000.
Army Engineers' planning proj
ects: Rogue River harbor at Gold
Beach $21,000; Blue River Reser
voir $100,000; Columbia River lo
cal protection (Umatilla River)
$16,000; Holley Reservoir $100,
000: Lower Columbia River bank
protection (Beaver Slough) $40,
000; Green Peter Reservoir $225,
000. Bureau of Reclamation con
struction: Crooked River project
$850,000: Rogue River Basin proj
ect, Talent division $6,041,000:
Wapinitia project, Juniper di
vision. $400,000;
National Park Service: Crater
LaTtc, roads, trails and markers,
$112,100; Annie Springs develop
ment, S139.600; headquarters area
development, $177,500.
PINEAU PLEASED BY TALKS
PARIS Wl French Foreign
Minister Christian Pineau Wed
nesday told the French Cabinet
he had an effective and friendly
talk with Secretary of State Dulles
on French-American relations.
Pineau, just back from the United
States, was reporting to Premier
Indian Freezes
To Death in Car
LEW1STON, Idaho W A man
was found frozen to death in a
ditch near his stalled pickup truck
about two miles southeast of here
Wednesday.
William Badroads, 45, a Nez
Perce Indian, was found at the
bottom of a small embankment
about 8 a. m. on the old Lapwai
county road. He was dead on
arrival at a hospital. The tem
perature was 8 above.
Sheriff Bud Huddleston said Bad
roads was released from jail Tues
day after serving a sentence for
negligent driving and drunkenness,
Graham Raps
Mid-East Plan
FORT WORTH, Tex. W -Billy
Graham, world-famed evangelist,
Tuesday night questioned t h e
United Stales policy in the Mid
dle East in an address before a
Baptist conference.
". . . with the Eisenhower Doc
trine covering with a shield the
Middle East." he said, "the Amer
ican people must now ask them
selves this question 'Do wo have
the moral and spiritual qualities
to protect an Arab nation in the
deserts . . . when we didiWt have
the moral and spiritual qualities
to protect the Hungarians T
Asked Graham:
"Are we willing as an American
people ... to start a third world
war to protect a bit of sand and
some nomad tribes , . . when we
were not willing to start it in or
der to keep Communism from
grabbing all of China?"
These are the most dangerous
and critical hours in the history
of our race," he snid.
Guy Mollct and other Cabinet col
leagues on his conversations and
activities in New York and Washington.
Langlie Sadly
Bids Farewell
To Legislature
OLYMPIA Wl Gov. Arthur B
Langlie presented the 35th Legis
lature with a balanced budget af
a farewell gift Tuesday.
With tears welling in his eyes
and emotion choking his voice, the
outgoing Republican chief execu
tive, ended a public service ca
reer that started 21 years ago on
the Seattle City Council.
He said the budget that will bi
presented in detail to the Legis
lature Tuesday afternoon "is the
largest in the state's history."
He did not say what the total
1957-59 budget would be, but he
indicated it would call for approx
imately 651 million dollars from
the general fund, 104 million more
than in 1955-57.
He said it would be balanced
without additional taxes and add
ed: "If there Is one point that I
would stress more than another
to this Legislature. . . it would be
this: Do not spend more money
than the state can reasonably
anticipate from existing revenues,
and such additional income as you
as legislators find it necessary to
create. ,
Oregon Youths
To Go Abroad
CORVALLIS Wl Four Oregon
residents this summer will visit
Asia, Europe, the Middle East
and Central America as repre
sentatives of the International
Farm Youth Exchange Program.
Oregon State College extension
leader Winnifrcd Gillen said Ted
Tidwetl. Dufur, will visit India;
Violet Ktobas, Bend, Austria;,
Marilyn Neill, Milwaukie, Israel;
and Bill Coats, Hood River, the
Dominican Republic.
1O0.000TH REFUGEE LEAVES
VIENNA Wl The 100,000th
Hungarian refugee to leave Aus
tria for resettlement boarded a
plane Wednesday for New Zea
land. There still are about 73,000
Hungarian homeless in refugee
camps here. Austria says it can,
not afford to support any more,
and the agency that has been pay
ing fares to other countries is run
ning out of funds.
Don't buy a "peal.'' Going back for service and extra stops at
eas stations soon onsets the apparent advantages,
in in
Buy the automobile you want. If you want Command Perform
ance in a car "step on" a Studebaker or Packard and feel that
supercharge? go to work for you at any Speed.
"7 bought a Deaf
Enjoy Twin.Traction with drive at both rear wheels on ice, fa
snow or mud. j ;
Enjoy command stops with Studebaker-Packard's air-cooled
brakes, j J j
Enjoy the prestige of the car that is different I
bought a Studebaker-Packard?
Sheridan jCragun of Yakima,'' Washington,! wanted sports car
performance plus lojw as consumption. .He also w&nted a car.
his family would enjoy, h got everything he wanted in a
Studebaker. Here's the proof: V I j
"A gas-stingy Studebaker Hawk, piloted by its proud owner,
Sheridan Cragun of Yakima, Washington, topped all other cars
competing in the Yakima Valley Sports Car Club Economy Run,
The Hawk, equipped with Flightomiitic, earned its victory by
. attainingphenomenalib2.8 ton-miles pergaDoniS.g actual
'miles per gallorA
Included in the RujTXwete practically afl"rnakes of foreign sport
cars. J
"Competing cars brgaii the test at Yakima and drove through
Vantage, Wenatchee, Cle Elum via Blewett Pass and back again
to Y'akima. Cragun was accompanied on the Run by his wife,
'and two children.'
i 1
Studebaker-Packard
CORPORATION
f I . 1 , v- - -
IZZi
amw ri"-""
1 t 1 ' "':' -
mmm ill in pnm m Ill " . I
X III
i V
4
' II I
"v f'r ' . " '
V
Ur,,lMiilL-v ,.ji.
i
-"-i n in Miiiii i nff
OLYMPIA
The more perfect the fidelity, the greater your
enjoyment of music. The more perfect the brewing
water, the greater your enjoyment of beer. This
is tho secret of Olympia's ever-growing fame and
- , , popularity. For tho raro artesian, watcrusbd ia the
' flows from Jteearttf No wotiderinoro and
more discriminating westerners now serve and
fnjoy Olympia with pleasure!
"IT'S THE WATERMJHATj MAKES IT SO REFRESHING