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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1957)
Page 2 Section 1 C. C. CHEERS Byrd Assails Budge t Boss, Asks Ouster WASHINGTON Wl Sen. Byrd (D-Va) Wednesday called (or the replacement of Budget Director Percival F. Brundage. At the same time the Virginia senator plugged for an eight to nine billion dollar cut in President Eisenhower's pending $71,800,000,000 budget. Byrd conceded, however, that he does not expect all of such a reduction right now. Applause interrupted a speech . Kuss at Meet Barred From Visiting Dams SAN FRANCISCO (UP) - A delegation of Russians attending world congress on irrigation has been refused permission to tour California's vast hydroelectric projects. American officials said the rea son is that the Russian govern ment will not let American engi neers inspect similar projects in Russia. The delegation includes 11 scien tists and engineers from Russia, together with an attache from the Soviet Embassy In Washington, Vladimir Lobachev. Visas of the 11 Russians expire next Monday, when the tour begins. W.A. Pcxheimcr, head of the Bu reau of Reclamation and incoming president of the International Com mission on Irrigation and Drain age, said it was his "very infor mal understanding" that the State Department "desires some reci procity from Russia." He said neither the Bureau of Reclamation nor state and local agencies involved in the lour ob jected to Ihe Russians going along. "There Is certainly nothing sec ret about the dams, canals and pumping stations in the Central Valley Project," Dcxhelmer said. W. E. Blomgrcn, head of the U.S. National Commltleo to the Con gress, told Lobachev he would have to ask the Slate Department In Washington to extend the Rus sians' visas. Blomgrcn said the matter will have to be straightened out by Thursday. Otherwise, the Russians will have to forgo the tour. He said the Russians had been Vvery cordial" about It all. LEGALS IN THE CIIICUIT COUIIT OF TUB mm iir iihkwun, rnn TIIK COUNTY OK MARION Probata Department in. ISflftS CITATION m nil Mailer of tin Katale of Jtu'' nl"b jiai.Ij, Deceased, TO: PHYLLIS H. wi.Hlfih IN THE NAME OF THE STATE yjr untwin: you are ncrcliy re quired to appear within ten (101 dava from the date of the servl"? of this citation upon you If aerved In Mar lop County, Oregon; and within twenty (Jot daya from Ihe dale of ervlce of Ihli citation upon you If aerved wllhln any other county of the) State of Oregon, and If nerenn- lly aerved: and within twenty-eight 1281 daya from the dale of the first publication of thla citation If the ame be aerved by publication: or If aerved outilde of the State of Ore gon but within the United Statea. then within four (41 weeka from the date of aervlce of tills citation upon you, to ahow cause. If ahv exfata. why the above-enlltled Court ahould not make an order for Ihe aale of the hereinafter deacrlbed real prop erty, aa prayed for In the petition of the Pioneer Truit Company, aa administrator of the eatale of Jose ph ine H. Hall, the above-named dece dent, why aald petition ahould not be granted and said order and 11 cenae should not Issue and why aald real properly should not he Bold at private aale. That aald real properly la more particularly deacrlbed aa follows, to-wlt: Commencing at the Northeast Cor ner of a tract of land deeded to Joaephlpe Hlbbard Hall, the deed thereto being recorded In Volume 1M. Page sio, of the Marlon County. Oregon, Records of Deeds: thence North 5 chalna to lands of Gertrude Hlbbard Currle: thence West along the South line of Ger trude Hlhhard Currle'a land .H.ltt chalna to Kast line of Counlv Itoad: thence Soulh 2S' West along aald Kast line of Counlv road 5 24 chains, more or less, lo the North ( west corner of aald Hall tract; thence F.ast nana chains to the place of beginning, ami continuing I7.GM acrea. more or less, all In the Dona tion l.antl Claim of King Htlibaril and wile, in Township 7 South, Pange l West, Willamette Meridian: and Also: Beginning at a point on tile : llllihard and Kan line of the King III wlft Dona t ion Ijwh. Claim 10 I'liaini Kant anil 24.67 chains South of the corner of Srctiuna is, 17, 20 and fl. In Township 7 Soulh, TUnge 1 Writ of the Willamette Mrrliilan, Marion County. State at Urrifiu., aid beginning point belli th Southeast corner of Mrs. K. I.. Htbbard'i land; thenr West along the South line of Mrs. K. I,. Hlb bard s land M.flX chalna to the East line nf the County Road known as the Cranston to Salem and Silver ton Itoad; thence North 2V East 7.1S rhatns along the East line nf the said County Itoad; Ihence Fast Si M rhalns to the East line of Ihe King Hlhhard Donation Land Claim; thence Smith 7 11 rhalru along the East line of said Dona tion Land Claim lo the nlar nf beginning, containing 25 00 arm of land. In Tnwnahip 7 South Hinge I West of the Willamette Meridian . RAVE AND EXCEPT the pruntsei described In dred from Ci forge E, Hall and Josephine. H. Mall. hui band and wife, to Finland Kuenri and Tillie Kuenri. husband and wife, dated December 23, iMt. and recorded on January 1. IP42, in Volume 26. on Pare 631, nf the Deed Records for Marlon County, Dreenn. WITNESS, the Honorable Val D ! Rloper, Circuit Judge, and the seat of the Court affixed this 19th day of December. 1SS6 , H C. MATTSOM. County Clerk. Bv 1' M. Oldenburg. Deputy Dat of First Publication May I, 1957. Date of Last Publication Mav 2i, 1157. MOTOR-VU-Dallas Cites open 6:45 Show at Dusk "Every Wed. Il 11.00 per car" Parkor Second Feature Ana Sheridan In "COMB NEXT SPRING" Color by Byrd before the United States Chamber of Commerce when he demanded an end to the "squan dering" of public money and said Brundages removal would be "very helpful." Byrd, who spends much of his energy pushing for economy, told the businessmen at their 45h annual meeting: "Next year we may be so for tunate as to have another budget director a budget director dedi- cated to economy instead of apparently dedicated to finding new ways to spend money on the present budget. 5-10 Pet. Cut for All In his prepared text. Byrd dc- dared almost every agency could safely take a 5 to 10 per cent cut in its administrative and overhead costs, He said that if Congress would cut the spending budget for the year beginning- July 1 to 1955 levels, it could reduce taxes $6,355,000,000. "It Is possible we cannot reach tne 1955 level in the coming year. he said in a speech pVepared for tne annual meeting ol the U. S Chamber of Commerce, "but we can work toward that goal, Calling Eisenhower's proposed $71,800,000,000 outlay for the liscal year beginning July 1 "the most irresponsible budget submitted in my day," Byrd said Congress' goal should bo a return to the (i4,600,000,000 spent In the year ucginmng juiy l, 1U54, Also Could Pare Debt 'If that level could be reached, the Virginia senator said, there also could be a payment of two billion dollars on the national debt, Byrd, who heads the Senate Fi nance Committee, broke down his tax reduction proposals this way: Lower incomo bracket an in. crease from seoo to 1700 in in come lax exemptions, saving all taxpayers a loiai ol ROOO.OOu.ooo. Middle East bracket Revi sions in bracket rates with a con sequent onebillion-dollar tax cut. High Incomo bracket Reduction in the muxlmum rote Irom 01 to 65 per- cent, saving 225 million dollars. 2 Pet. Corporal Cut Corporations Reduction In Ihe present maximum of 52 per cent lax lo 50 per cent, an 830-million-dollar reduction. Small business A "complex amendment" he did not explain which would cut 500 million dol lars off the tax burden. 1 Excises Reduction of a billion dollars "in the most burdensome excise taxes." Byrd said as far as he is con cerned any tax cut will "depend upon expenmture reductions suf ficient lo assure a balanced budg et." Holding out little hone for a tax cut this year, Byrd said an over all reduction would he "nrefera- ble to negligible tax cuts in little nibbles." He said he thinks almost every agency of Ihe government can re duce its administrative expendi tures by 5 to 10 per cent and still function effectively. Power Crews Co 011 Strike CI.EVKI.AND u - The Utility Workers Union struck Ihe Cleve land Kleetrie lllumiiiolini! Co Wednesday, but the cumpnny said it would try lo maintain service to its 520,000 customers with su pervisory personnel. The company provides electric power to n 1.700 square mile area on the Lake l'.rle shore. Including Cleveland and 137 other commu nities. 'fhe J.fiOO members ol the un ion's I.ocal J70 walked out alter a series of emergency meetings arranged by Mayor Anthony J. Colebrezie failed lo settle word ing of a Job assignment clause in the contract. Woodburn Drive-In Open 6:4S Stnrts 1:15 Wed.-Thurs.-Frl.-Sat. "FOREVER DARLING" Lucille Rail IM.l'S "BACKLASH" Richard Wlrlmark Tuesday Is Buck a Car Night UK1 , oriN a .5 HELD OVER J MGM Comeiti Cjckaie! SRFfinnv Drnir LAUREN BACALL l 'DESIGNING WOMANJ DOLORES GRAY Crfifnafpt featwrtH April tn ertwfal Obtain Marriage License SAN FRANCISCO William Wallace Meln III, 21-year old rielr to cattle millions, and Isolde Constantinl, 24, a German Immigrant who once was a cook in his home, took out a marriage license here today for a marriage bitter ly opposed by the heir's wealthy parents. Their romance began at the Mcln'i luxurious Woodslde, Calif., home. Young Meln,, on leave for 20 days after boot camp train ing with (He Marines, and his fiance obtained their license then slipped away without saying when they would wed. (AP Wirepholo) Texas Rains Abate; 60 Oil Wells Awash Rv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rains in the storm and flood! stricken areas of Texas appeared diminishing a little today and some easing of overflows of many major streams was indicated. The floods, however, were de scribed by a federal civil defense chief as "a disaster of great pro portions." The flooded upper Sabine River reached its greatest height in history and overflowed at Glade water In the cast Texas oil fields. Some 60 oil wells halted pumping. The Sabine at Gladewalcr at 39.05 feet was nearly 14 feet above flood stage. Flood threats appeared easing STARTS IHlHIil'HJ Aleut SafJiia Clinton LADD LOREN WEBB pu s SELECTED Gates Open 6:45 P. STARTS 03 Tonifes "BUCK" Nile $1 Per Car Loadl ! ! 1 rTTJFt?y I ... -I ,.'! q I 1 " lW t 71 on the Colorado, Nueces, Guada lupe. Trinity .and Brazos rivers as rains abated after two weeks of nearly steady downpours. Thirteen persons bave drowned in tbc Tex- as floods and hundreds of persons have been evacuated from their homes. Showers were fairly widespread during the night -but rainfall was light in most places. The main belt of precipitation extended from northeastern Texas and Oklahoma eastward across the Gulf Coast states. The heaviest downpour was at Apalachicola, Fin., which reported i'n inches of rain In six hours. ' TONIGHT! srptoss COLOR by Ol UUXS SHORT SUBJECTS M. - Show Starts At Dusk TONIGHT! GINGER ROGERS MICHAEL RENNIE THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. House Votes For Full-Time Parole Board Four-Year Term Bill Defeated by 37-14 Margin By DICK HUMPHREY United Press Stall Correspondent Gov. Robert D. Holmes' legis lative program got a boost late Tuesdav when Ibp Hm 36-21 a bill to set up a full-time, pain parole board ol three mem bers. The bill now goes to the Senate. ReD. Norman Hnwarit Portland Democrat and a sponsor of the bill, said a full lime board would be able to conduct more inter views at the prison and get more men out on parole more rapidly. Howard said it was much cheap er tfl KlinPrvico a YYian nn na.nla than to maintain him In the state prison. The three board members would hp natri sit onn onoh a u, rn. 'our-year terms under House bill m. estimated cost ot the parole and probation program would be S40.000 a year. Four Year Term Loses Defeated by the House 37-14 was Senate joint resolution 22 which would have provided a four-vear term for state representatives in stead of the present two - year term. The resolution passed the senate by a narrow margin. Rep. George Layman. Newbere Republican, said the advantage of a four-year term would be more continuity In the legislative proc ess, but said that it would also remove representatives from con trol by the people. -Layman said that if the bill were enacted, only about a quar ter of the representatives would change every two years. Opponents of the bill including Reps. Al Flegel. Roseburg Demo crat, Robert Bennett, Portland Republican, and Vernon Cook, Gresham Democrat, argued that Ihe House was responsible for appropriations and should be re sponsive to the will of the people donnm.. fair uinalhoi nro vailed in the Northeast part of the country and in most of the far Southwest. IH:1-I.I.1 50c ANYTIME PHONE EM 2-8284 STARTS TONIGHTI Eddie Debbie Fisher Reynolds A Jll. SONQSI fuiuipne Menjou TV ICHNiCOIOR" V Plus 1st Run in Salem StVAMPWDMEK w A WOOINH HOI- HOOUCTlON WINDSOR MATTHEWS EMUND, U1K ttlaXI NOW SHOWINGI THIS IS THE CLOSEST YOTTI EVER TO I ANYO LOVE I without' being vua 1 of the lover I JUOY HOLUDAY RCHARD CONTE - SALVATORE BACCALONI Plus Western Advrnturt A TerrlfylnK l(end Of The Old West "THE PHANTOM STAGECOACH" -:z . ffir 10 f TV- .o7 J W Schrunk Indicted 5th Grand Jury Mess'; PORTLAND M Mayor Terry Schrunk, indicted a fifth time in a continuing vice investigation, lashed out Tuesday at what he called "the whole grand jury mess" in Portland. 'Indictments are being used to persecute and intimidate public officials and respectable citizens" said Schrunk, calling for the Oregon Legislature to investigate the latest grand jury to probe into the vice situation. That grand jury, the fourth to take up vice charaes in the last year, has indicted Schrunk five times. A number of other indict ments also have been returned, including some against men in the district attorney's and sheriff's offices. The chairman of the Oregon Senate Judiciary Committee said at the state capitol in Salem at he plans hearings in which prin cipals in the Portland vice inves tigation will be called. The aim will be, said Chairman Warren Gill, not to get to the bottom of the vice controversy, $1.5 Billion Sought For Military Bases WASHINGTON m The De fense Department asked Congress Wednesday for new authority ' to spend $1,561,338,000 on military construction, including nearly 64 'i million In the Pacific North west. The requests for the Northwest include 10 Washington State proj ects totaling $56,848,000, two in Oregon costing $5,627,000 and one in Idaho at $2,022,000. For the Northwest the biggest allocations sought are $25,438,000 for the Puget Sound Naval Ship yard at Bremerton, $13,132,000 for Larson Air Force Base at Moses Lake, and $9,433,000 for the Whid bey Island Naval Air Station. Rep. Pclly (R-Wash) said the Whidbey project is the first sec tion of a carrier repair site. The new construction bill is $450,945,000 less than the total asked for the current fiscal year and $581,2118,000 below the amount K 1 but to determine whether changes are needed in the laws governing grand juries. He said Schrunk, Dist. At(y. William M. Langley and Clyde C. Crosby, Portland Teamster Union official, will be among tne wii nesses. All have been indicted here. Schrunk. accused in the latest indictment of conspiring to get two women to blacken the char acter of racketeer Big Jim Elkins, Homcs an(j Thornton are Demo said the recent indictments are 'als diverting attention away from the main issues. "If the technique succeeds, Portland will be delivered back into the hands of . . . Big Jim Elkins." the 44-year-old mayor asserted. Elkins, 55, is the Portland rack eteer who leveled charges of cor ruption against Schrunk, Langley, Crosby and others in testifying earlier before the Senate rackets committee in Washington, D.C. Schrunk and the others say Elkins is trying to frame them because they will not protect his activities. voted by Congress. Slightly more than half of the total asked is for the Air Force. Nearly a fifth of Ihe total dollar amount is for unidentified proj ects at unspecified locations, and a sixth of the request is for se cret work" at home and abroad. Among- the states, California tops the list with projects total ing more than 155 million. The Northwest projects: Oregon Klamath Falls Mu nicipal Airport, $1,209,000; Port land International Airport, $4,328. 000. Both are listed as Air Force projects. Pope Counsels Labor VATICAN CITY Ifl - Pope Pius XII Wednesday called upon worker's lo spread the Gospel as the best means of fncreasing so cial justice in Ihe world. IT STARTS TODAY At Every Safeway Store in Oregon and Southwest Washington QBGEHB GEO eaS3 (uj Gfefe9 Step right up, ladies and gentlemenl The greatest value show on earth opens tomor row morning at the Safeway store in your neighborhood. You'll thrill at the tremen dous array of reduced prices. You'll have fun saving like never before. Yes, follow the crowds to SAFEWAY, the big top of food savings) Salem, Oregon, Wednesday, May 1, 1957 Time, Flays 'Whole! Gill to Quiz Officials ! nnt mv intention to pull either Elkins' or Schrunk's chest nuts out of the lire, saia Mm. a Republican, in 'announcing plans for the state Senate committee hearings. Gov. Robert D. Holmes also said he will discuss the charge of persecution with Atty. uen Robert Y. Thornton. Thornton is in charge of the Pnrtlanri vice investigation. Both Earlier Schrunk, who was listed as a pemocrat before he was elected to the non-partisan mayor's office last year, had been indicted on charges of taking a bribe; of perjury when he denied taking a ribe; of conspiring to obtain wiretap recordings in a raid, when he was sheriff last year, on the home of an Elkins,' employe; and of copying the re cordings. The latest charge involves state ments by Katherine Weeks and Marv Childress that they had seen Elkins use narcotics and take prostitutes' earnings. Thev repudiated the statements In a hearing of the Senate rackets committee last week, asserting local officials had coerced mem into making the statements. Langley. two of his aides, and Sheriff's Deputy George Minielly have been accused of being in the conspiracy with Schrunk. Elkins and an employe, Ray mond Clark. 33. meanwhile are on trial in U.S. District Court here, accused of wiretapping. The prosecution is presenting testimony of a scries of techni cians and officials in an attempt 105 Cash Prize Ask For Your Free Ticket DANCE! TONITE! CRYSTAL GARDENS 7 lo link the two lo tape recordings! wnicn aiiegeoiy were seized in a raid on Clark's home last year. The prosecution says wiretapped I conversations are on tne record ings. Federal District Judge William East held a night session Tuesday in an attempt to speed up the trial, which is being conducted before a jury. Elkins also faces a number of state charges, returned by an earlier grand, jury. They include charges of bootlegging, extortion and receiving the earnings of a prostitute. BOX OFFICE Ti TICKETS NOW ON SALE twfi uiut5TvItTrriTSlTToIu5 WILLAMETTE CONCERT SERIES H56-57 SEASON SALEM SENATOR , , IASESAII SEASON TICKETS WILLAMETTE U. THEATM DON JUAN May 1 t 3, Thuri. frl. 8:li M Saturday, May 4th BARBER SHOP QUARTET CONTEST SALEM SADDLE CLUB . HORSE SHOW May 4lh and Slh BOY SCOUT EXPOSITION Saturday, May 1 1th PORTLAND SYMPHONY SEASON TICKETS 1957-58 SERIES BIRDLAND STARS OF 'S7 Portland Auditorium Tu.i., May 14-7 1 -30 P.M. Ctrlifiad Gtmologiit JEWELERS-SILVERSMITHS Slora Hours :30 la S:1S i v I