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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1957)
Page 10, Sec. 2, Capital Journal, Fri., May 10, 1957 CHINESE OFFICIAL VISITS Industrial Safety in Oregon Studied for UseonFormosa Formosa, Oregon Have Things By ALFRED C. JONES Capital Journal Writer I He will pick up ideas also at ; Communist China has laden the San Francisco, l.os Antcles, Little! island with 10.000.000 DODUlation on ... ....... nnolr Afb Ufnr lirr,in ..rf'itnnn me nepuoiic ot unina some day ""v """ m w, aHuin mua. will use industrial safety measures wjshinS'n. D.C employed In Oregon factories and! plants. ror example, Thursday he was Thai uM h vr, iim. thn I impressed by the 'most complete" Oregon population on one-seventh Yen-Ti Lu, a native Formosan. I ' "S "i ,u'" "Th ," ;tne land And wnal ' morc' will wind tin his survcv of Wil-! , Pv"md. 90rp- Thc tr" : nly the western coast of Formosa rametTe Va ley indu t sh to accommodate. fl n (h. II s lvilS',l,al 11 h ' """I! te nr- interior is mountainous, Lu of Labor, WILL PREPARE CODES Sent here, for a five-month tour by the China Production Center. 2 OF 3 RETURN mosan nusiness, ne noieu. pointed out Oregon's safety achievements; There are 2,157,000 acres In and worker compensation program farrn5 an(j 5,620,000 in forests, with have made the stale the object of the lumbering industry Riving For many foreign visitors. mosa something in common with Lu will have the job of setting up, RAPID GROWTH NOTED'. Oregon, worker safety codes all over For- Lu made a strong point "out of , jyj.w dams NEEDED mosa. He has had that job for the his country's rapid. Industrial . past four years in thc planning di-1 growth and need for more elec-1 Woctncal power needs required vision of the Taiwan Power Co. 'tricity. Flow of refugees from '. starting two new dams, with sinim null aasiainuvu, . muni win more than double capacity over what it was before the first five- year plan, Lu said Industrial production, trying to keep up with growing population, surpassed farm production value for the first time In 1955. Wages of the average Formosan, though, are typical of thc Orient, the visitor observed. A worker would have to work all day to HAVANA tfl Two American, The lad who stayed was Charles earn the value of a chicken, teen-age boys are back with their E. Ryan Jr.. 20, son of Hospital-1 "In America, you perhaps could families at the Guanlanamo Naval; man 1. C. Charles' K. Ryan oL'earn a chicken in 15 minutes or Yanks End Stay With Cuba Re bs Base after nearly three months '.Monson, Mass. in the mountains of southeast, All the fathers arc stationed at Cuba with guerrillas fighting the. the U. S. naval base at Guantan forces of President Fulgcncio Ba- amo. half an hour," Lu commented. tista. A third Navy son stayed in thc Sierra Macstra Mountains with the rebel hand led by Fidel Castro the returning boys reported. " Those who came hack were Victor J. Buehlmnn, 17, son of Cmdr. Joseph Buehlman of Coron ado, Calif., and Michael I. Gar vcy, 15, son of Chief Aviation Mechanic John Joseph Garvcy of Watertown, Mass. 14 'GIVE IIS' Only France Holds Off Use of Suez ' LONDON Wr-Bowing to the In evitable, 14 of the 15 nations in the Suei Canal Users' Assn. arc ready to let their shippers use the Egyptian waterway again. Only Franco held out at a SCUA' meeting here last night. The French said they find it im possible "in present circum stances to recommend the use of the canal to member states," The olher 14 nations indicated they had no power to keep pri vate shipping out ot the canal They marie plain their ships prob ably will begin using the Suez toon. The association, which Western nations formed Inst summer In an effort to bring Egyptian President Nasser to terms by unified action, agreed its members could resume freedom ot action with regard to the canal. The SCUA nations previously had advised their shippers to avoid using the waterway until they could see Nasser's plan for Its operation. The plan, announced last week, calls for Egyptian op eration of the canal, arbitration of disputes, unrestricted use of the canal In accordance with the llWfl Constantinople Convention, no more than 1 percent a year In crease in canal tolls, cooperation between Egypt and the shippers (though SCUA was not mentioned tiecilicnlly) and dedication of 25 per cent of the cnnal's income to Improvements. Thc naval base said 'Buehlman and Garvcy were in good health and happy to be back home. ' A naval plane flew them from Santiago to Guantanamo Tuesday with Robert ' Tabor, a Columbia Broadcasting ' System . newsman who reportedly had been in thc mountains with Castro's forces for more than two weeks' Thc boys and their parents all refused lo see newsmen yesler day or lo talk with them on thc telephone. Announcing the youthful 'trio's disappearance in February, the U. S. Embassy in Havana said they had a craving for adventure but did not appear to have any particular political motive. A month Inter thc New York Times reported Caslro's revolutionary group had sent it word that thc Ihree boys had sworn allegiance lo the rebel movement and asked President Eisenhower not to in terpret this as a renunciation of U. S. citizenship. Os West Rips Into Move to Abolish Board PORTLAND m Former gov ernor Os West, under whose ad ministration the state Board of Control was established, . said Thursday that the bill to abolish the board is "nothing but cheap, assinine politics." The Democratic sponsored, bill would transfer authority over the state's institutions to a director appointed by the Governor. The measure was advocated by Demo cratic Gov. Robert D. Holmes. West, also a Democrat said: "The bill reflects the caliber and character of his honor. And if there is a God in heaven it (the bill) will find its death in the Sen ate.". West said the board was cslab lished to prevent' abuses of pa tients in state institutions. w" 1 mr "' ' i 'i ' . ..... . - I I ' V I II i mmm i in Common I Firemen Balk jtyaniderumes PORTLAND tfl A menacing fire was controlled here Thursday before it could release deadly cyanide fumes in an industrial area of the southwest district. Fifteen firemen were overcome temporarily by smoke and fumes in the battle. All went back to their jobs after receiving oxygen. The fumes were from lacquer and acetate stored at the Wexler Junk and Warehouse Co., 1951 S.W. Front Ave. Also stored there were four dozen cans of cyanide, but the flames were controlled before any of the cans broke. Fire Marshal Dale Gilman esti mated damage at $25,000, but the owner, Simon Wexler, said H would total $140,000. Harbor Dredging Jobs Announced PORTLAND Wl Two alloca tions to aid small boats in Oregon were announced Thursday by Army Engineers. One is $111,000, for a small boat harbor at Garibaldi, part of the Tillamook Bay improvement proj ect. The harbor, to be cut to' depth of 12 feet, is about three miles from the ocean. The other project, for $103,000, involves dredging a 10-foot chan nel in the east entrance of Co lumbia Slough, north of Portland Inspecting a map of Formosa are Yen-Ti Lu (left) of the Taiwan Power Co., and G. S. Kallenbaugh, director of the Oregon Accident Prevention Division of the Indus trial Accident Commission. Lu has been inspecting safety measures used in Oregon industry and will take his ideas back to his native land. (Capital Journal Photo) Mother Honored for Devotion To Deaf Mute Foster Child CHICAGO W A young mother, whose love in raising a foster son, who was deaf,, unable to speak, and believed mentally retarded, was honored yesterday for the "miracle of her achievement." Ten years ago Mrs. Ann" La- Vine heard a radio plea for foster homes. She was 25 and the moth er of two young sons but she of fered a home for another child, preferably a girl. She got instead a 5-year-old boy, deaf and mute. Mrs. LaVine said she believed almost immediately thc child was not deaf. "He seemed to hear me when I called," she said. "He'd perk up and look around." Gradually, over the years, she taught him to talk. "I'd take him around thc house," Mrs. LaVine said, "point ing out many things, calling them by name the way you would with an infant." Her devotion to her foster son began to pay off. Soon he was able to quit the special classes he attended and enroll in a reg ular school. He showed a notable SURGICAL SUPPORTS Of AH Kinds, Trusses, Abdominal Supports, Elastic Hosiery Expert Fitters Private Fitting Rooms "Ask Your Doctor" Capital Drug Store 405 State Street Corner of Liberty iwr Green Stamps artistic student talent. He became a good and athlete. Young Democrats Convene Friday ALBANY m Oregon Young Democrats will open their annual convention here Friday night with committee meetings. Saturday afternoon the delegates will hear talks by Ernest J. Swi gert, president of the National Assn. of Manufacturers, and A. F. Hartung, president of the Inter national Woodworkers of America. I Gov. Holmes will speak at night. For Mother On Mother's Day . A BEAUTIFUL GIFT THAT KEEPS ON GROWING BLOOMING AZALEAS RHODODENDRONS HANGING BASKET FUCHSIAS TUBEROUS BEGONIA PLANTS F A. D0ERFLER & SONS Nursery Landscaping Garden Supplies Open Week Days 8 6 Sundays 10-4 250 North Lancaster Drive at 4 Corners than 764,000 Get GI Training WASHINGTON Wl-Mnre 764.000 veterans are enrolled training under the Korean GI Hill the Veterans Administration said today. The VA said the figure will be even higher after all spring en rollment reports have been r celved. The previous high of 76.1 000 Korean veterans in training was reached last fall, the agency aid. More than half of the veterans In training under the bill are at tending colleges ami universities ine Korean veterans program continues unui r.na. JWMS PAY Hood River Man Logging Victim HOOD RIVFJl m A Incrim. accident near the Wasco-Hood Hlver County line killed Howard Busching, Hood River, Thursday. Rusching, an employe of the Willis Rros. Logging Co., was hit on the head hy a falling tree. Schaefer Corn Remedy The corn er callous should come off In 6 to 10 days. 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