Salem, Oregon, Friday, February 15, 1957 Page 8 Section 1 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL' Dynamite Wrecks Negro Restaurant, 2 Hurt in Clinton Explosive-Laden ;' Suitcase Blows Up in Street CLINTON, Tenn. WV-A dynamite. laden suitcase exploded in the heart of Clinton's Negro section last nislit, wrecking a restaurant and slightly injuring a Negro woman and baby. The dynamite charge, which witnesses said was placed by a white man who raced a'"ay in a car, also heavily damaged other Negro-owned properly. The blast was the area's eighth, and by far the most destructive, Bolilen Shift, 2 Other Envoy Changes Eyed WASHINGTON Wl The Eisen hower administration reportedly is planning to shift Charles E. Bolilen, U. S. ambassador to Rus sia, to another diplomatic post. A change in ambassadors to Belgium and the Netherlands also is said to be in the offing. Diplomatic officials said Llewel lyn Thompson, now American ambassador to Austria, may suc ceed Bohlcn, who has hecn at his Moscow post for nearly four years. Bolilen some time oro asked for a change of assignment and he reportedly has been offered an other post. He is due here Feb. 21, presumably to discuss his new job. Informants said President Ei senhower has decided to nominate J. Clifford Folgcr, chairman of the Republican Finance Commit tee, to take over in Belgium. He would succeed Frederick M. Alger of Grosse Point, Mich. Folger is an investment banker here. Officials said Phillip Young, re tiring chairman of the Civil Serv ice Commission and a native ef Lexington, Mass., was in line for nomination as ambassador to the Netherlands. The present U. S. ambassador there is II. Freeman Matthews, a veteran career dip lomat. Matthews now Is in Wash ington for consultations. He ex pects to return to The Hague be fore resigning. since Clinton High School admit led 12 Negro students under a fed oral court order last fall. In the absence of concrete clues, however, officers still de dined to speculate as to whether integration of the previously all white school is connected with the series of explosions. Police said the suitcase, which contained "several" sticks of dy namite, was placed on a concrete sli.b across the street from a res taurant where several Negroes were eating. The Negroes said they saw a white man stop, leave the suitcase, jump back into his car and speed away. The blast caved in the ceiling and inner walls of the basement restaurant. The woman, identified as Emma Simmons, suffered a knot on the head when hit by falling plaster; the )l-montli-old girl, Jacqueline Gallahcr, was cut by flying glass. Neither was believed seriously hurt. Also damaged was a nearby sandwich shop owned by Steve Williams, father of a 21-year-old senior suspended from the inte grated school on grounds he struck a white hoy and threatened others with a knife Feb. 4. Jim Loggans, reporter for the Clinton Courier-News, said the plate glass window was blown from the front of the sandwich shop. He said Williams' homo was one of about 25 or 30 Negro homes in which window glass was shat tered. All were within n 100-yard radius of the blast. Two cars owned by Negroes were damaged. They re scared, they re bewil- dred and they're mad," Loggans said of the Negroes, One of them said he's going back to North Car olina. One man said, 'I can't un derstand it. We're living in the United States, hut we've been in timidated and threatened until we can't stand much more.' " Embezzler Gels 2-Year Probation PORTLAND m -Federal Judge William East Thursday placed Al bert Henry Boss, 54, of Roseburg, on probation for two years. Boss was accused of embezzling $300 from the South Umpqun Fed eral Credit Union of Conyonville whero he was employed as treas urer. Small Bov Trouble ' "V I ill kiii1 1) mWmmvSXiMHAtt Unmkhm rm';nm..iu , LONG REACH, Calif. Officers Dave Hughes (left) and Jim Ilucklc struggle with G-ycar-old Virgil (Pinky) Anderson, .stuck fast in a trash barrel behind his home, yesterday. He hud been sent by his mother to dump trash in the barrel, but for reasons best known to himself he got in too. The officers struggled for some time, then removed one of the boy's rub-ber-solcd shoes. That did the trick, Pinky came right out. (AP Wircpholo) LaboritesWin Tory Seat, See Vote as Trend LONDON Ml The opposition Labor parly wrested a House of Commons seat from Iho govern ing Conservatives yesterday in the first by-election since Prime Min ister Harold Macmillan took of fice. Labor leaders claimed it in dicates how the whole country feels. L a b o r 1 1 c Nioll MacDermott defeated Conservalivo Norman Farmer 18,51(1-17,400 in the North Lcwisham district of London. Miss Leslie Greene, an indepen dent, got 1,487 votes. The election filled tho vacancy caused by the death of a Conserv ative, Sir Austen Hudson. He de feated his Labnrite opponent by 3. 230 votes in a two-man race in the MM general election. In his campaign MneDcrmolt stressed the blow ho said the Con servative government dealt Brit ain's economy by the attack on Egypt when Sir Anthony Eden was prime minister. However, most observers felt the Conserv ative defeat was due mainly to an unpopular government-supported rent decontrol bill in Parlia ment. II was the first time since I'.i.'il thai the Laboriles had taken a seat from the Conservatives in a special election to fill a vacancy. No seal changed in 10 other such by-elections. jNYuberjtcr iNolcs Stales Ilirllulav WASHINGTON Id S,. v,m borger ill-Orel, taking note of Oregon's With hirihdnv mumer. s.iry. praised the stale (or it s eon tiihiitinns to giiveinnienl reform He said in 1 ho Senate 'I'hursdiiv his stale led the way Inr oilier slates In laws establishing u. inilialive and rolerendiim, 'direct eleclimi of V. s M-nalnrs slale minimum wage bus anil maxi mum hours legislation for women and children in imlmliv, Oregon became a slate Krh 14 IBSfl. Ike to Extend Georgia Stay Until Feb. 24 TIIOMASVILLE, Ga. Wl-P res ident Eisenhower is enjoying his trip to south Georgia so much he is going to stay longer than was earlier indicated. , He may not return to Washing ton until about Feb. 24, two days in advance of the start of con ferences there with French Pre mier Guy Molfct. When Eisenhower arrived a week ago today, it was said he probably would stay 7 to 10 days, lie is the guest of Secretary of llie Treasury Humphrey, James C.Hagerly, While House press secretary, says the Presi dent already has decided to re main "beyond Sunday and into next week." He says no specific date for return has been fixed. Yesterday Eisenhower got in another 18 holes of golf and later brought down three more quail. That has been the patter every day but Sunday golf or hunting, sometimes both. Just about every day he tackles official papers flown from Wash ington. He has conferred by tele phone at least once each day with Secretary of State Dulles on the Middle Fast situation. WENNER-GREN INTERESTED Northern B.C. May Get Midas Touch VANCOUVER, B.C. Vfl Brit ish Columbia is agog over the prospect of a vast new industrial empire being opened in its re mote northern interior under the golden touch of one of the world's wealthiest men. The proposal has been brought officially before the Legislature., Estimates of the possible eventual outlay run as high as a billion dollars. The backer was identified as Axel L. Wcnncr-Gren, 75-year-old Swedish financier, now in Mexico City. Provincial Lands, and Forests Minister Ray Williston read memorandum of agreement to the legislators yesterday. In effect, Wenner-Gren offers, in return for the first chance at mineral development, timber stands and hydroelectric projects in an area more than one-tenth the size of the entire province, to build a 400-mile high-speed monorail railway from Fort .Me MAN OF MANY 'TALENTS' Teacher Exposed As Ace Imposter While pelicans scoop fish from water; they don't dive as do the Brown pelicans. AUGUSTA, Maine I J) A per sonable young schoolteacher who quickly won the affections of a Down East island community was identified by state police yester day as a fantastic imposter who once posed as a Canadian surgeon in Korea. Ferdinand Waldo DeMara, 35, a native of Lawrence, Mass., was held on a warrant charging cheat ing by false pretenses. The charge stemmed from his role as Martin Danniel Godgart, an instructor of "superior quali fications" who taught North Hav en youngsters English, Latin and French, instituted recreation pro grams, organized a Sea Scout unit and won praise from his col leagues, superiors and the island population. A Martin Godgart teaches in New York and attended Wagner College there. Slate police said DeMara had Wagner listed on the Maine teaching certificate they charged he obtained fraudulently. State Police Detective Millard Nickerson said DeMara gave a "full statement" admitting be was the same man who. as Dr. Joseph C. Cyr, served with the Canadian navy and performed del icate surgery despite only elemen tary medical training. DeMara, nearly six feet tall and weighing over 250 pounds, told po lice he went to remote North Hav en 12 miles off the Maine coast because of its isolation. He said he "half and half" ex pected to be unmasked. Only a few of the island's 415 residents claimed any suspicion of DeMara, known as "one of the best superintendents the Bap tist Sunday school ever had." Those who did, including Mrs. George Merrian, wife of the is land's Baptist minister, said they were alerted because "Godgart talked a lot unlike traditional ly light-lipped Yankees. It was this trait that led one is lander to recall a magazine story on DeMara and asked state police to check on Godgart. Police said DeMara s career includes simultaneous Army and Navy hitches, resulting in 114 years in a Navy prison for desertion. He also has masqueraded as a zoology professor at Notre Dame Institute in Alfred, Maine. H studied at De Paul University, at tended theology school in Grand Falls, N. B.p worked as an ac countant at a Houston, Tex., hotel and posed as a doctor of educa tion to gain employment in the Texas state prison system 1955. Sir Harry Scott, until recently head of Scotland Yard and one of England's top detectives, says newspapers have been one of his strongest aids in tracking down criminals. is CHEAPER! PORTLAND GENERAL fTlTjj IICTRIC COMPANT''VttiK Leod, B.C., to the Yukon border, Williston said. "There is every indication this corporation means business," Wil liston added. "Already three sur vey contracts have been let total ing more than three million dol lars." As illustration of good faith, Williston said, $500,000 has been deposited with the British Colum bia government. , Prince George, 465 miles north of Vancouver and in the geograph ical center o! the province, would be the gateway to the develop ment, Bernard Gore, managing direc tor of the Wenner-Gren British Columbia Development Co., said that if the development is carried through at least one pulp mill of not less than 100,000 tons annual capacity would be built, also saw mills, hydroelectric power uniU, townsites, roads, hospitals and schools. The memorandum of agreement by Williston said surveys are to be completed by the end of 1358, and construction of the monorail railway started not later than April 1, 1960. The Vancouver Province said the cost of the entire project could be near one billion dollars. Capt. Browne Rclircs PORTLAND l.fl Police Capt. William D. Browne, 60, retired Thursday from the Portland Po lice Department. 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