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Walla Walla Union Bulletin

   Walla Walla Union-Bulletin (Newspaper) - November 12, 1957, Walla Walla, Washington                               City To Be Key Center On Airways With funds appropriated for the projects work is expected to start soon in making Walla Walla the airways control center for Pasco and Lewiston Idaho Civil Aeronautics tion officials said the Walla Walla CAA communications and tenance stations will supervise and operate new remote control units to be constructed at both the Pasco and Lewiston airports Both stations they said will include radio range stations which will be remotely controlled from the air traffic station in Walla Walla A direct line between the Pasco and Lewiston airports and the Walla Walla station will be put in To Keep Contact The Pasco radio outlet will provide radio communications for aircraft operating in the Pasco area and the interphone will mit pilots to file flight plans and receive weather information at Pasco and Lewiston directly from the Walla Walla air traffic con- trol center William B Davis CAA administrator said The installations will put both the Pasco and Lewiston airports on a better basis by improving instrument flying At Pasco only a limited amount of instrument flying has been possible and it was restricted to West Coast planes which operate the radio equipment Can Use Instruments The new radio outlet will mit instrument flying by all pi- lots Walla Walla station com- operators will answer all radio requests for landing in- formation takeoffs and other communications with private and commercial and military flights at all the fields The new facilities will permit landing and offs at Pasco and Lewiston when bad visibility would otherwise prevent them 2nd Hunter Out Safely From Snow A young Spokane elk hunter hiked to safety Monday afternoon after being lost in the Blue Mountains Sunday night the second to make it out safely in a period of a few hours Wayne Domarary 19 made his way to safety after becoming lost in a storm Sunday evening in the Teepee Camp district near the Skyline Drive A search party was being readied in Dayton to leave Tuesday morning when the word came in the youth was safe A Seattle hunter Edward Stier earlier was reported safe after being missing overnight The storm Sunday night and Monday left a foot of snow in the high mountains but winds drifted it badly In places drifts were reported six feel deep Hunters were warned to be ex- tremely cautious in the high mountains The road is open to Godman from Dayton but Game Dept and Forest Service officials thought the way from Godman to Table Rock probably was drifted closed All cars should be equipped with chains and no regular enger car should be taken past Godman they advised wheel drive vehicles with high clearance should be used and parties with this type of vehicle should play it safe and take no chances Homer Oft district ranger ex- that no public agency has funds to finance expeditions to recover equipment left by hunters He said hunters would be wise to camp out of the snow area and travel to and from their hunts each than take chance of being snowed in Fred Van game district supervisor said Domarary was last seen on a ridge heading down into a canyon He evidently became confused in the storm but finally managed to walk out during daylight hours Monday The elk kill is not as high as last year for the season's ing he said While the stormy weather is expected to start elk moving to lower elevations it is coming too late to bring a big kill The total take this year ably will fall several hundred short of last year's totals the game man estimated Our 89th Year No 179 Walla Walla Wash Tuesday November 12 1957 Fourteen Pages Weather Cloudy with showers tonight and Wednesday Not much change Low tonight 42 high Wednesday 51 High Monday 58 low Monday night 44 Seasonal moisture excess 13 Solons Say Tax Builds Slush Fund SALEM Republicans said Tuesday it is morally wrong to deliberately tax the people be yond present needs in order to create a slush fund for special interests and government bureaus to grab at This attack on the Democratic tax reduction program in the Oregon Legislature was made in a letter to their constituents Republicans decided to mail it to the voters after Gov Robert D Holmes in a Sunday television talk urged the people to write to Republican legislators calling on them to support the Democratic income tax reduction plan Repply Planned Four of them Democrats supporting the lican to reply Tuesday at p.m in an equal time period provided by Portland station Meanwhile the special session of the Legislature now in its third week remained in deadlock Democratic legislators accusing the Republicans of refusing to compromise served notice that their final offer is to reduce sonal income taxes 15 per cent plus passage of two bills to give businessmen a better break in computing losses and tion Originally Democrats posed a 10 per cent reduction Republicans are sticking to their demand for a 30 per cent tax cut The Conference Committee decided it can nothing more unless either the Republicans or the Democrats yield The letter which Republicans said they are mailing at their own expense called the Democratic offer piddling They said it would still leave some rates higher than the 45 per cent tax which they condemned in campaigns last fall In answer to the Democratic argument that the reduction should not be too large because the next Legislature will 50 millions of the surplus the lican letter said the Democrats really want the surplus to finance vastly increased state spending programs they plan to have voted in 1959 Holmes and other Democrats say that if the Republican plan is adopted the 1959 Legislature will have to increase income taxes 60 per cent or more The Republicans in their letter to the people however said that if the bigger tax cut is approved the money left in the people's hands will turn over and work to expand the Oregon economy during the next two years For that reason we have stood firm on a program to effect real tax cuts It will prevent the un- necessary collection of 57 million dollars The two Democratic senators who have supported this view and thus broken the party tie in the Senate are on the team which is to give the Republican reply on television to Holmes Sunday talk They are Ben Musa of The Dalles and Harry Boivin of Klamath Falls Stroller A free ride downtown was en- joyed Monday afternoon by a ring neck pheasant which left the vehicle in the block between Spokane and Colville on Main The bird took off from the car that brought him into the business district and sailed up on the sidewalk where he was captured by Mrs Oren Gluck 1021 Catherine She took him to the police station for dis- position Although a male pheasant the bird had neither comb nor wattles reported Mrs W H Keen 242 W Cherry who called the Stroller about the unusual hitch-hiker Tickets in the names of Mrs Gluck and Mrs Keen are awaiting them in the newsroom of the Now showing at the Liberty ater is The Joker Is Wild NATO Missile Training Center Urged by Jackson PARIS S Sen Henry Jackson Tuesday ed for the immediate ment of a NATO guided missile training center The senator told the formal opening session of the North At- Treaty Organization Assembly such a ter would train soldiers engineers and technicians from all 15 ber countries in the use of siles As the Parliament members from the 15 allies met France's top soldier Marshal Alphonse Juin called in an interview for a real NATO pool of atomic arms He said each of the cipal NATO members and France in have a stock of nuclear arms The marshal former NATO commander in Central Europe France could make her own nuclear weapons and could even have her own nuclear arms loon i Juin's statements were in the newspaper Aurore against a background of com- plaints by other NATO members against the clear monopoly Only Monday night Gen a French senator called for a common program not only in re- search but in the use of atomic weapons Jackson a member of the Sen ate Armed Services Committee told reporters his proposal for a guided missile center has the full backing of President Eisenhower and the Pentagon Speaking to the NATO bly he also urged immediate ation of a North Atlantic institute of defense studies staffed by mathematicians cists and economists It would be attached to SHAPE NATO's headquarters outside Paris This proposal however has not cleared with the White Houst Raising Of Colors At Old Fort Philippine Votes Cast In Storm MANILA ffl Liberal Jose Yulo took an early lead Tuesday on the of scattered returns from the Philippines presidential tion A typhoon held balloting down in rural areas in Central Luzon and delayed the election re- sults The returns mostly from Ma nila which caught only heavy rains and winds from Typhoon Kit showed these re- Yulo President Carlos P Garcia of the Nacionalista Party Progressive Manuel P nahan and Sen Claro M Recto Party The early Liberal lead in nila was not unexpected The storm hit hardest at the rural strongholds of Yulo and nahan in Central and Northern uzon A cut down in the vote in these quarters favored Garcia political quarters said The typhoon battered 10 ces in central and northern Luzon causing floods and heavy property damage More than half the na lion's voters live on zon and Yulo and Manahan had banked strongly on these areas Recto and Antonio Quirino an independent Liberal were given chance of winning The election went off smoothly officials reported with far less violence than previous years teen persons were killed in pre- election fighting This was the impressive scene at the Veterans Hospital grounds in the veterans Day ceremony at the site of old Fort Walla Walla A Walla Walla High School ROTC unit stood at attention as the flag was run up after the last flag taken down in 1910 was brought down again Inset shows Brig Gen Richard Steinbach deputy commanding general at Ft Lewis during his address at the colorful ceremony Merchants Seen Ruined By Forgers Calif W Ten Livermore merchants say they will be ruined if the forces them to make good before Christmas on some worth of forged checks issued at nearby Parks Air Force Base An endorser assumes for a check They appealed to Sen William F Knowland Monday to delay any Treasury Department collection action at least until after Christmas Such action on top of heavy h r i s t m a s purchases would ruin them they said Recently indicted by a federal grand jury and accused of for- gery and conspiracy were T Sgt Theodore Barry 23 Louisville Ky and S Sgt Charles A Evans 30 Dyersburg Tenn both ed in Denver and Airman 2 C James R Hoyle 21 arrested at Parks Evans the alleged ringleader operated a small restaurant here while attached to the Parks nance office from October 1955 to November 1956 The Secret Service said in ington that Evans held out a aer of treasury checks from the hundreds of thousands issued to Air Force personnel on their way to and from overseas duty and cashed them with forged ments The forged checks were cashed ay merchants and banks in this area and later processed through the Federal Reserve Bank ing house Infant Slain Youth Sought LOS ANGELES St A big force of police searched the hilly Palos Verdes Peninsula Tuesday for an armed youth who fled from a house in which a girl was slain The nude bruised body of Laura Helen Wetzel daughter of Air Force Capt and Mrs Charles W Wetzel was found Monday after- noon in a neighbor's house Police said she had been smothered in of blankets in a crib THIS THANKSGIVING GIVE THANKS BY GIVING TO THOSE IN NEED OVERSEAS GIVE THROUGH YOUR FAITH Our Published at a service in with The Advertising Council WALLA WALLA Local Airman Brings Home Watch From King Ibii Saud A Walla Wallan with the good Irish name of Mike McNamara has brought home a gold wrist watch as a personal gift from Saud of Saudi Arabia and memories of a reception that was like something out of the Arabian Nights First Lt McNamara a ington State College graduate has just arrived home from years in Germany during which he was one of eight pilots on the mission to deliver the first ican jet planes to King Saud Mrs McNamara the former Ruthie McLean and their daughter flew home ahead of the lieutenant who drove across the country in their new sports car After only six of the eight planes made it safely to their Saudi Arabia destination Namara related they thought we had done something great The airmen were greeted with popular acclaim As a result they were called to the capital in the center of the desert country where they put on a small scale air show for- the king were feted and dined and put up in plush roundings The palace was out there in the desert with big neon McNamara said in describing the experience It was like thing out of the Arabian Nights The guards were gaudy munition bands crossed their bodies Gold daggers were at their sides They were men who looked like they meant ness The king took the airmen to the elaborate palace garden sian rugs covered the grass Then to dinner western style meaning knives and forks in- stead of hands Again thick and overlapping Persian rugs the ballroom until we most tripped on them After dinner there was a to make a er's eyes bulge and his nostrils -Please See Page 5 Col 2 Con Linked With Fatality MEDICAL LAKE A rel between two inmates at ern State Hospital ended Monday in the death of Clarence Johnson 42 committed from Yakima Dr G Lee Sandritter hospital superintendent said Johnson died of head injuries been hit with a broom handle by Marko Biondic 69 Seattle Biondic was received at the State Penitentiary a t Walla Walla in January 1956 and transferred to the hospital here nine months later The blow felled Johnson who hit his on the concrete floor and never regained consciousness The attack took place in the second-floor day hall of the mum security It lowed an argument between the two men earlier in the day ritter said Johnson was committed to the hospital in May 1953 as a sexual psychopath Biondic was ed of first degree murder for the slaying of John in a attle rooming house April 6 1954 in a long-standing feud over re- ligion Biondic was sentenced to hang but a stay of execution was ordered by the presiding judge in January 1956 and the elderly man was committed to Eastern State Hospital as criminally in- sane Soviets Hint Compromise May Be Okay UNITED NATIONS N Y A Russian delegate indicated Tuesday his government would give serious thought to an Indian compromise plan to get East-West disarmament talks going again A Soviet delegate dropped this hint when asked by a reporter if he favored the Indian move to most double the size of the Dis armament Commission The plan aims at getting the Soviets to threat the body and its nation subcommittee The Russian official said that if the Indians bring their plan for- mally before the General bly when it takes up the arms question probably this week the Soviet delegation would give it a careful hearing The plan would add some 10 nations to the com- mission The delegate gave the impres sion his government has no tion of standing by its demand that all 82 U N members be in- eluded in the arms posal that already has been de in the Assembly's Political Committee WASHINGTON W A witness Senate Rackets ating Committee Tuesday the un solved 1952 slaying of a Teamsters Union official in Yonkers N Y was a result of a bitter fight among racketeers and union for power over New York's garbage hauling industry Ed Doyle who succeeded the slain John Acropolis as president of Teamsters Local 456 in chester County swore he heard Acropolis life threatened by Teamster officials Joe Parisi and Bernie Adelstein three weeks be- fore Acropolis was shot down Doyle said he himself received a threat from Tom DiSalvo an agent of Local of the Building Service Employees Union just two weeks before the slaying of polis He said DiSalvo told him Four of youse guys are going to die How many died as a result of these asked Sen Clellan committee chairman One that I know the conic voiced Doyle replied Aero polis McClellan asked whether Doyle feared violence You got to die some time came the re sponse You can't live forever Acropolis described by as a tough but honest unon eader was shot to death in his apartment on Aug 27 1952 Doyle's story of the threats came at the opening of public on the infiltration of gangsters into the a year garbage collection industry in the New York area Zoos to Get 67 Penguins MCMURDO SOUND Antarctica UP Sixty-seven penguins tined for new lives in scientific laboratories and American zoos were loaded aboard a U S Air Force Tuesday The of them headed for Portland the largest collection ever to leave Antarctica and the first to go by air They were captured by Jack Marks director of the Portland Zoo and U S Navy personnel during the last few weeks There are 31 emperor penguins weighing about 60 pounds each and ing about 3 feet tall and 36 of the smaller adelies And The Driver Survived This was the wrecked car in which Keith Tillolson of route 4 was injured in an accident near the state line on the Walla Highway The pickup lav overturned amid debris of toppled utility pole and wires The driver was released from the hospital Monday after escaping the crash with only minor Injuries as reported In yesterday's A WM blamed Photo by State Patrolman Hawy Planes Loaded Ready To Fight Says General PARIS chief of the U.S Strategic Air Com- mand said Tuesday he has planes all over the world loaded with nuclear bombs ready to take off 15 minutes after any warning of Murder For Garbage Is Related a Soviet attack Gen Thomas Powers said the SAC mounted this alert Oct 1 and las kept it up ever since He was addressing a news con- at the Parliamentary sembly of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Powers said that one third of iis command would soon be in this state of alert The planes are on the ways loaded with nuclear said the balding little general The crews sleep nearby We are increasing the number of planes on the alert to one third of our effectives The planes can be off in 15 minutes The alert began Oct 1 State Hunter Found Dead Two Missing By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A missing Port Townsend er Edward McDougall 53 was Found dead Monday near his ing camp on the northwestern Olympic Peninsula He apparently suffered a heart attack Meantime searches v continued Tuesday for two other hunters missing on opposite sides of the state Forty woodsmen including state sought J W Walters Olympia in the heavily jered Trap Creek area about 16 miles south of Raymond Walters became separated day from six other men in his party as they gave chase to a band of elk Heavy fog halted search efforts Monday Rain and ow clouds covered the area day Near Yakima searchers looked or Don Thompson 26 Granger who failed to return Sunday from a hunting trip to the north fork of Creek McDougall's body was found about half a mile from his camp on the Clearwater River He had eft his wife there while he checked on some elk he had ted from the camp A young King County hunter Donald Latham Jr was found Tuesday morning in the woods about three-fourths of a mile behind his Cherry Valley home near Duvall He was wet tired and hungry apparently suffered no ill effects from his night out Hotel Fire Suit Continued Here A damage action re- from a fatal hotel fire here last summer scheduled to go before a jury Tuesday has been continued to a later date Superior Court clerk Roberta cas said Three men injured in the Col- Hotel blaze filed the tion against the hotel owners and a man who was a tenant at the time of the fire The plaintiffs are Virgil Carrigan Bradley and R L Lewis all tenants at the time of the fire Defendants are Kate H son Helen J Hyland Ruth H Huntoon Elliot H Emery and James S Holmes of Holmes Operating Co owners of the hotel and Walter Dent a tenant One tenant died in the hotel fire U.S Claimed Far Behind NEW YORK S retired chief of the Strategic Air Command says the Soviet Union has better jet bombers and missiles than the United States which he says has to make a terrific effort to catch up Gen George C Kenney further warned Monday night that U.S overseas are all in range of Red intermediate and range missiles and would be out of commission the minute they the Soviet Union blow the whistle Kenney declared that world peace can only be maintained as long as the Russians feel the cost of defending themselves is too high The four-star general gave this picture of the strength as compared to Russia's at a dinner of the Society of the organization of eran New-York City men We are years behind right Kenney asserted As for catching up he said We have got to do the job ourselves We can't rely on the United Nations or our allies Kenney was commander of the Allied Air Force in the Southwest Pacific during World War II Ship Enters Rescue Try In Pacific HONOLULU of ing some trace of the Pan ican airliner which vanished day with 44 persons aboard were pinned Tuesday on the carrier Philippine Sea and grand sweeps by its aircraft We have high hopes the lippine Sea will turn us up one of the said Capt Donald B MacDiarmid Coast Guard coordinator MacDiarmid made his ment Monday night just before taking off for the mainland to ad- dress a national search and cue conference at Palo Alto Calif We still feel there is a good survivors will be found in a he said The water is warm and the weather is good We feel we have done a very thorough search with the ment we have available but we expect much better coverage will be accomplished by the Philippine Sea The big Essex class carrier due in the search area Tuesday ned a methodical sweep of a lane from the western part of the area all the way to Honolulu INELIGIBLE SALEM are in- eligible to serve as paid em- ployes of legislative interim com- Atty Gen Robert Y Thornton ruled Tuesday Walla Largest Most Modern PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT Offers You STOCKS PRICES DELIVERY Open An Account Today At TALLMAN'S 4 W Main Phone JA Sea Page 6   

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