(?) ) (0 (?) (j () () (?) () 2 The Newi-Reriew, Hoieburg, Ore. Thur. Oct. 25, 1951 W () 0 0 Catholic Priest Renounces Vows, Enters Marriage N. Y. City Port Still Gripped By Dock Strike I (Continued from Page 1) ! In methods on the job of one I man. A spokesman for the CIO SAN FRANCISCO UP) A Ro- International Union of Electrical man Catholic air force chaplain, Workers said the change would recently returned from Korea was cut the wage rate on the job 25 honeymooning today with his 24- to 30 percent. The company em- year-old bride. ploys 12,000 at the three plants. He was identified " by the San UKr.nfcKIr.s An agreement Francisco Call-Bulletin as Lt. Tho- was reached to end the 24-day mas J. Mitchell, 34 of Nw York, dispute that made 5,000 workers discharged as a patient irom inc "c "u uiMupieu proum-uun at hospital at Travis air force base the hug Anheuser-Busch brewery near San Francisco last Friday, in St. Louis. Details of the agree- A Travis spokesman said the must between the company and priest was found to be free of psy- local 187 of the CIO Beer Bottlers cho-neurotic symptoms. : union were not disclosed pending A Reno justice of the peace, ratification by union members at I..wrine 1 avmon. said he Del- a meeting. later today. Three other formed a marriage ceremony Lojiis breweries nave there last Friday night for Thomas ''ut down but there was no im- J Mitchell and Pauline Zaina of mediate indication of how the Ikiah, Calif. Lavmon said Mitch- agreement will affect workers in In ...... i. ...,rii.. ,.iii.. ann those plants. The dispute at An- made no mention of military sta- f uor;Blls as, ''Lt !n. tus. A Travis officer, who asked not lo be identified, said he was ac quainted with Mitchell, and that: Later Salmon Trolling the priest, while in Korea, de- ,3 , cided he no longer could keep his Season Recommended vows of celibacy and could not in ,. , ,, .. od conscience perform the du- PORTLAND - - The sil tics of a priest. ver salmon trolling season off the , , ., ,. ... : coast should be conducted la'cr An pmciai m wie m i in the year than at present, the Catholic archdiocese said a priest Jacj(j(, 'mrine risherc, commis. ! oy manyinB, auiu.i.n...., u..u , decided here. ; Hon of a bottle inspection point involving 47 employes. Li A MODEL OF THE REAL THING Francis Cardinal Spellman (center) talks with Lucio Savola beside replica of St. Peter's Basilica at Italian Fair in New York. Scale model was constructed of wood and metal by Savola and his father and took five years lo make. be excommunicated church. from the The commission asked Washing ton, Oregon and California fish- rtn air lorce suoKcsinaii ' ,. jnniani. t Ahn. th ff. Washington, D C, said Mitchell sh'nre ' t Ju, f.0ct 3, will be released from the service. At prosent ,he 8easo'n js June.15. The air force spokesman Is also quoted in a news item In the Port- Oct. 1. Six Arrested In Raid On Eugene Card Room EUGENE (PI Police raided a downtown card place Wednes day night and arrested six pcr- The commission also said it was sons in gambling charges. The arrests were made by a de tective after he had entered a card game at the Idle Hour club considering more nrotectinn for land Oregonian as saying Lt. offshore chinook salmon. Under Mitchell entered the service as a consideration is a proposal to chaplain last year from Rose- make trollers throw back Chin- and cafe. He called waiting po- burg, Oregon. i ooks under 28 inches. The present , lice officers who collected cards. A check with the local Catholic ' minimum is 26 inches. rectory reveals that there is no - record of a Lt. Thomas .1. Mitchell ...... . . . having been associated with the Million Pints Of Blood church here. i Pledged By Elks Lodges Ashcraf t Gives Double Stamps Perry Ashcraft, of Ashcraft Jew- chips, money and other evidence, Garrett D. I'urkerson, the oper ator, was freed in $201) bail. Ed ward Robertson, described by po lice as the houseman, and four pa trons were freed in $25 bail each. Htlf IllllfUnDT Tl- ,t ' 1WU Wet'KS UllU, UIJIICC II1UUC U Elks lodges throughout the na- i!imilir raid at a Eugene residence tion will pledge 1,000,000 pints of 13 gambling arrests were blood for use in the national cmcr- maoe- gency. I Howard R. Davis, grand exalted I N0 CLUE TO HUNTER ruler of the BPOE, made the an- PORTLAND M) Search nouncemcnt here at a testimonial I .r, nmiinnoH Mm hunf tr.r eicrs hi juo ouuin jacnaun 01., mi- unmet m iu uunui ui ui.t nume Qspar Williams, elderly deer nounced today that his store will lude' Williamsport lodge, No. 173. - hunter, missing' from his Bright give double S & H Green Stamps ' "avis said he will meet on Fri. wood home since Sunday. He for cash on all iewelrv mirchases , Iny wilh Sectary of Defense failed to meet his son as planned for cash on all jewelry purchases Knbert A Love, jn Washinj,,on after an af,ernoon 0f hunting on until and including Dee. 1. Some j to present the official blood dona- the shoulder of Mount Hood, and lair-traded items are not included, turn pledge of the 1,600 E L K S ' searchers since have found i lodges in the united States. clue. Last minute Christmas shopping is difficult for the shopper. For that reason, Ashcraft's offer these double Green Stamps to encourage earlier shopping. This also allows the store an opportunity to give more careful attention to packag ing of purchases. These jewelry purchases Include uch items as diamonds, diamond rings, and stone-set rings, costume Jewelry, necklaces, pearls, silver ware, etc. Stamps will also be given for cash deposited on lay awayj. (Paid Advertisement) CORRECTION In an advertisement for Montgomery Wards yesterday the Incorrect store hours appeared. It should have been printed. WARD'S STORE HOURS 9:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. mi mTii'M-il itr 'II Vl?"1' 'i!- ztA Does a better job of heating I ,. than Ony stove on earth! M H j 1 IIL M ' M 'PATENTED M AUTOMATIC OIL or GAS HEATERS . j n: ki '. .i n h r i 1 h i 'i m a w i ii r mii Hi fQXtS TO THE BOTTOM OF THE COLD ttOOR PROBLEM : V- T flKOXEY BACK f BURRftNTlE j 'NKA Tttrpholol MAN-MADE WINGS Navy re search drawing shows one-man r o c k e t - powered helicopter the Navy is testing for military use. Neares't approach to real wings, the machine weighs 100 pounds and can propel a man straight up faster than in a plane. It was in vented by Gilbert Magill of the Rotor-Craft Corp. in Los Angeles. Propellor Severs Man's Hand, Snaps Collarbone KAIILOTUS, Wash. (.?) Joe Robbins, an oil company dis tributor, was seriously injured, Wednesday, struck by the whirl ing blades of an airplane pro peller. His right hand was severed, his collarbone broken and he suffered Pelton Dam Plan Gets Nod From Federal Examiner PORTLAND UP) The Ore gon state lisn commission anu 1'ortland General Electric com pany are in disagreement over whether construction will begin soon on the controversial Pelton dam. A federal power commission ex aminer Thursday approved PGE s license application for the dam. The firm then announced through Ralph Millsap, its public rclatons director, that only one step re mained before construction could get underway: approval by the power commission of the examin er's reeommendaiion. But John Veatch, chairman of tho state fish commission said, "It is a question of whether the fed eral power commission is begger than the state . ." He said construction of the pro posed dam would amount to "con liscalion of public property by a private concern" and would be a violation ol state law. lie sam there would be trouble if PGE went ahead with its construction plans. He explained that the fish com mission already has a fish hatch ery on Uie Meiollus river above the Pelton site. This hatchery will be useless if the deschutes is dammed, and that amounts to con fiscation, he said. Veatch added that state law re quires PGE to build a hatchery and convey the title to the state before work can be started on the project, "Until this is done, the state cannot grant a permit tor con struction, " he said. He explained that he opposed the dam because it would, in his words, completely knockout the salmon conservation program now underway in the lower Columbia river fishery. Some $20,0u0,000 in federal funds have been set aside for this conservation program. The Deschutes river is one of the key streams, he said. Says Power Board Superior But Millsap said PGE had com piled with state law. He quoted the power commission examiner as saying that it seemed illegal for a stale commission to halt the project by edict when the stale severe lacerations. He was taken legislature had refused to pass a bill banning Millsap said the state legisla ture in 1049 turned down a bill which would have closed the De schutes to hydro-electric projects. Millsap added that the commis sion examiner seemed to have no rather than the state had jurisdic doubt that the federal agency tion. He quoted the examiner as saying that a number of supreme court cases had established that the power commission had juris diction over navigable streams. to a Pasco hospital Witnesses said Robbins was walking on the landing strip here and was struck by the blades of a small plane taxiing after a land ing. The accident happened at dusk. Truman Signs Bill To Up Salaries Of Employes WASHINGTON .n Presi dent Truman has signed legisla tion increasing salaries of 1.100.- 000 federal "white collar" cin- j The Deschutes is navigable, Mill ployes by $300 to SHOO a year, i sap said. He also signed another bill in-J He said PGE's offer to pav for creasing salaries of most postal ; a fish conservation program a"t the workers by at least $400 a year. I Pelton site still studs. This pro- Pelton site still stands. This pro- struction of a $4,000,000 re-regulating dam to maintain the stream VERSAILLES, France I.V) I at lls natural flow; (2) a cash Former Queen Marie Amelie of settlement of up to SI .000.000 to Portugal died todav. She was SO. , Pa' fr the cost of building and The widow of King Carlos I, Ma- equiping a hatchery at the Pel tie Amehe fled from Lisbon wilh ' ,on s": 3) a $100. WW yearly pay her son. King Manuel, during the j "u'nt 10 maintain the hatchery, revolutionary coup of 1010, when He said the dam. when finished, Portugal w as proclaimed a repub-; would produce 120.000 kilowatts ol power. It will take trom 18 months to two years to build. The firm also has asked FPC for authority lo begin preliminary EX-QUEEN DIES TRUCKER KILLED EUGENE -U'l Kermit Mar- - .ii-iftWaiiiiiiftimmfrtiii nf wi 'ftjSjSi.icfekA..,' v. "If your Siegler Oil or Gal Healer doesn't deliver more and hotter heat over the door than ANY comparable size heater regardless ol make or price, you get your money back." tin, Ji, r.ugene, died Wednesday ; drilling for construction of a pro of chest injuries received when he posed companion dam eight miles was crushed tieiwecn a truck and upstream from the Pelton site a blinker at the Lane Gravel Co. ; This project, the Round Butte He was a truck driver for the com- dam, would produce 225.000 kilo pany. i watts. tried The factory representative from the Siegler Stove Co. will be in our Jfore from 10 A M to 6 P M Friday October 26th., demonstrating the lootlcis, smokeless Siegler Oil Heater. Be sure and see this amaiing demonstration. CARTER TIRE CO. 0 00 THIS SPACE RESERVED FOR i IT. f,i! 444 N. STEPHENS PHONE 3-7344