Salem, Oregon, Thursday, January 17, 1957 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Section 2 Page 5 Tito Won't Get U.S. Bid Until Congress Idle Plan Yoncalla Hospital For Crippled Child ren KOShBUHG Plans for a1 crippled children's hospital on a 22-acre site near Yoncalla. north of here, have been announced. E. G. Hith said it will be a, project of the Southern Oregon Convalescent Hospital and Re habilitation Center for Crippled Children. A temporary building will go up in July. Permanent buildings are scheduled for completion in 1958. BUSINESS MIRROR Senators Take Skeptical Look At AF Fund Dip Ike's Financial Forecast Runs Counter to Wall Street View Solon Says He'll Oiit If Dictator Comes as Official Guest nrtaninuiun uw A congres sional observer said today the government may invite Yuroslav President Tito to visit the United States but not until alter Con gress adjourns. Th source, asking not to be quoted by name, said he thinks officials will try in this way to avoid giving undue offense either to the Yugoslav government or to protesting members of Congress. There have been reports, un- int0 a ProPosetl $1,209,000,000 cut denied officially, that Tito has al- from 'ast 'car authorizations readv been inviirH in r-nm i ik for Air Force funds. country, missihlv in Anril Both he and Sen. Jackson (D- In a House sneerh vetrrfaJW'ash,.saW interviews they are Rep. Keating 'R-NYi sa d that n o ' p" k m " President iisenhow matter how Tito s apologists "n "7 S"-' Proposals to increase official circles may fed" the Yugo- aCtuai ninJ by a" ,h s,orv- United SPta.es.r ' ,he nuestio military off.cials closely about budget plans, heating, a senior Republican The budget sent to Congress yes who often handles administration j terdav proposes a 582-million-dol-legislation. added, "If an invita- lar increase, to J17.472.0O0.O00. in lion 10 mane a State Visit here I next vear s Air Force sniMiriini. By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK l-Fatter pocket books for Americans and a pleasant if modest gain in busi ness profits that is President Eisenhower's prediction in his budget estimates for the 1J months starting next July 1. Business economists are glad today they don't have to Ruess that far ahead. In his budget message the President joins tne long list of business, labor and financial lead ers who have just made their guesses on the outlook but for shorter range, mostly. And he WASHINGTON l-Sen. Russell 5 "V. .u' v. " D-Ga) said today he is looking -. traders in the stock market whose view of future corporate profits is much less rosy. The President estimates that in dividuals will plunk out Vi bil lion dollars more in income taxes than in the 12 months ending has not b"?n extended to him. the idea . . . should be immediately abandoned. If an invitation has been proferred, it should be promptly withdrawn." Another Republican, Rep. O'Kon ski of Wisconsin, lold the House he would resign from Congress if Tito came to this country as an official guest. Other congressmen who have recently voiced objections to Tito as a guest of the United States include Rep. MeConnack of Mas sachusetts. House Democratic leader, and Representatives Mad den (D-Ind, Rabaut lD-Mich and Hoffman (R-Mich). Opposition stems largely from groups which have protested the Communist regime's treatment of Roman Catholic and other clergy men in that country. A Tito visit has hern defended, among other grounds, with the argument that other Eastern Eu ropean Communist governments might be encouraged to break away from the Kremlin. June 30. And he expects 600 mil lion dollars more in taxes on in creased earnings of corporations, His gurss on total revenue is a record 73z billion dollars, and on expenditures 714 billion. This is an optimistic picture of the future state of the economy, Wall Street has been cautious of late, figuring the rising costs are tightening the brakes on contin uing gains in corporate profits. Some indications of wnat is happening to industry is shown in the report of the Federal Reserve Board on industrial production in 1956. The board figures output in physical volume not in price changes. The board's index shows indus trial output rose four points 1956 from the year before. But some observers are stressing not so much the gain as the slow down in the rale of gain 1955's Industrial output had jumped 14 Railroad Car Firm Pay $17,535 in Taxes Property taxes totaling $17,5.15 collected from railroad car com panies were being distributed to 24 counties today according to tax Commissioner Samuel B. Stewart. The taxes are collected on tank. refrigerator and private car com panies which have a true cash value in Oregon of less than $100,000. points over that of 1954. The cautious are also watching the present slower than expected sales of new model autos, the lower than expected mt orders for steel and other metals, the de cline in the volume of new orders for machinery and tools, and scat tered predictions that the record business expansion program may be hitting its peak shortly. None of these appear to add up to anything but a possibility of a slowdown in the summer after a fairly roaring first six months. And spring could make con sumers more eager to push retail sales still higher, to build more homes, to buy more things on the cuff and pile up their savings at slower rate. Poles Scratch 2 Candidates From Ballot WARSAW l The Polish Com munist Party Thursday purged ex-Premier Edward Osobka Mo- rawski from its list of candidates for next Sunday's parliamentary election. The party also removed another member, Jeny KrezeL from the electoral list at Krakow. They were the first casualties announced in the new Polish gov ernment's desperate campaign to make a substantial showing in the vote. FIRST TIME EVER! Rural Church Going Way of Little School BUCK HII.L FALLS, Pa. Ifl The small rural church, like the little red school house, may be on the way out. Two Methodist leaders reported fn their church's Rnarri nf Mk. sions here Wednesday that urban ! hc ana olher senators want com and suburban growth means few-IP'e'e details on just what has been from both old and new appropria tions. Authorization for new spend ing, at $16.4SI.O0O0OO, would be SJ .209.000.000 below the amount Congress voted for the current year, when it added 900 millions lt Din nmnin ITicanlinii.a. nniud. ed. I The President's message said i that "the new obligational author ity needed for the Air Force pro-1 curement program for the fiscal year 1958 is less than it otherwise would have been because of the additional appropriations for, this purpose voted by the Congress last year." Gen. Nathan F. Twining. Air Force chief of staff, had testified last summer the Air Force would need between 22 and 2.1 billion dol lars of new spending authority. He said in a speech in Goldsboro, N.C., last night that the new budget will not give his service all it believes it should have. No budget ever does, he said. But he added that it "will enable us to carry through the next fiscal year with the minimum force that I consider necessary, without un due risk." Russell is chairman of the Sen ale Armed Services Committee and a member of the Senate Appro priations Committee. "I see nothing in world condi tions that would justify any de creases in our armed strength," Russell said. "There can be no consistency in a decrease at a time when we are called on to challenge the military might of world com munism in the Mideast." i Jackson, also a member of the Armed Services Cpmmittee, said bur-fatfi dhneo STOCKINGS 207oOFF Portland Sanitarium Expansion Contracted PORTLAND ifl Contract was let Wednesday for the first phase of a half-million dollar expansion program by the Portland Sani tarium and Hospital. The $269,000 contract was for construction of a five-story addi tion to the hospital. Reward Split Ruling Asked PORTLAND U Five Portland banks asked a court Wednesday to decide who should receive the $3,000 reward they offered for ar rest and conviction of the man who bombed the Meier & Frank department store in 1955. Earlier the store firm left it up to the court to determine who should get a $25,000 reward it had offered. William Clarence Peddieord, a blind chemist, is serving a 20- year sentence in the state prison after conviction for the bombing in an extortion plot. The banks listed the reward claimants as William D. Browne. .lames C. Quinn and B. Prescolt Hutchins of the Portland police Stanley N. Smoot and Roland A. Severtson, postal inspectors: Jack De.Ment, Portland laboratory op eralor; William D. Rogers, Port land, and Leonora Hooker, Glad stone. Maison Goes Before Jury PORTLAND (UP) A federal grand jury called to hear wire lapping charges brought In Port land yesterday called the head of the state police and the wife of SALE ENDS JAN, 19th Never before has it been so easy ond so thrifty to try the world's most famous stockings. All new spring styles oil o( the (amous, exclusive features . . . yours in this first-time-ever Cameo sale. Fashion forecast hosiery for how ond Springl wOok at the savings: w- .. 1 -r, -t. the Multnomah county district torney to testify. H. G. Maison, supcrtnendent at the state police, was! the first wit ness to appear before the federal jury. His testimony lasted about 10 minutes. Also called was Mrs. William M. Langley, wife of District At torney Langley. She als- spent no more, than 10 minutes with the grand jury. Inti Va once er rural church goers and coun try meeting houses. V The shift nf millions to new housing projects forces the build ing of many new and large churches in city and suburban sections, said Robert A. McKib ben and Dr. Glenn F. Sanford. Asserting that 500 church mem bers were needed to support a pastor and his family under American economic conditions, the two said it was evident "the one-church or 'station' parish is not feasible in much of rural and village America." While the Methodist Church will erect 1.500 new churches in the next three years, they said, about 1.300 small churches, most ly in rural areas have been aban doned. accomplished with the extra funds Congress voted last year. Reg. $1.65 . Reg. $1.50 . Reg. $1.35 , Reg. $1.15 , . SALE: . SALE: . SALE: . SALE: 3 PAIR $3.85 . 3 PAIR $3.50 . 3 PAIR $3.15 . 3 PAIR $2.65 , , YOU SAVE $1.10 , YOU SAVE $1.00 . YOU SAVE .90 . 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