(cfiS (?Qn?$ !fi) 1 tf No Substitute! U is You'll find no newspaper ' earn give more real satl&fac' tkn than your LOCAL' JIORNIXO P.1PER, -with its WORLD NEWS land HOMK COMMUNITY NEWS. r n i Vfratlier Pair today and Monday warmer Monday. Blar. temp. Saturday 01 mln. 44. Rata J04 Inch. II I r .6 foot. North wind. P8UNDQO ftSSl ueictttth year Salenv Oregon, Sunday Morning, April 21, 1949 Pric 3a newsstands So No. 22 I V ii ndfc Tli r v m .m- m v a a V . . . : J& .N. II III. V-w , T,. Tj.- - II III ii 1 1 Hal Eas: "Paul flauserM Column Ever since Zetta Schlador, the Sllverton modiste and " bowler, was elected mayor otMarion county's a e cond city - on a plat form of dolling nn tha SllTrtnn gendarmerie we . have .had an - In terest in the 811 . . i " We heard not long ago that the Silverton c o p peri had their new u n I f orras raul H. tatutry Jr. and; then that Mayor Zetta. her goal "accomplished was going to ' leave "off mayorlng for lesa stren uous activities. So we decided we had 'better see the Silverton po llce'force while its' uniforms were mi I TT - ttd mr a n rf tri K'raia ttv t tn at ap v i a w muu vuv ar nKo uuiwuo tUK ahiny. - - r : - Yesterday we set out In search of the Silrerton police force. This is the first ' time we have ' ever looked for a police force, the sit uation usually being, Jnst the op posite.: .' - . - - ' i Seventeen miles flew by and there. we were going up McClalae street, looking to right and left for, a uniform.- Not a policeman was in Rls-ht. W oheved the traf fic laws anyway and came to a full stop at Center street before turning, rolling over the bridge and onto the main drag . called Water. There were, a lot of people fitting around and rtvrrtirg around, but none of them were policemen. , i Well, we thought, there must be a baseball game and all the cops are down at McGInnis field dodging pop bottles. So we went down to McGinnis field and found au. was qiuei, uut i wnue we weren't looking something had popped up hard by. It was the new Silverton high school. The high school was locked up, but one of the janitors, Mr. Xier mo. let ns in and took us around and we found out that the Silrer ton high school is the only one we know of around these parts to hare two auditoriums, a big one and a little one. The big one dou bles in brass as gymnasium and auditorium. Mr. Lermo showed us every thing, even the girls' dressing room and we didn't find any po licemen. ' I We rolled back1, water" street -and stopped to use up a bit of Sil irerton'a two hour parking limit. We stopped at the fanciest place on the street and had a coke in a beer glass, which la the antithe sis of the Salem restaurant which serves beer "In "coke glassesi Dodged a couple of cars and crossed over to the corner which the Ames hardware company has been holding down for some years now. Walked in and found you could buy most anything you wanted from Mr. Ames, but didn't want to buy anything, so walked out again. There weren't any po licemen there, either. We went up to the city hall and found IJ1 Maden, The States man's correspondent and posy ex pert, running the library . on the second floor. We asked her about the policemen and she said they were modest, so modest they wouldn't pose for pictures in their new uniforms. 4 From there we toured around the alleys and aide streets and saw lots of flowers, but no police men. So we thought they might be hldiny out in the park, but the park seemed pretty desolate land not quite ready for the summer picnic business. We went back down town past jwhere Mayor Zetta Schlador;; is closing out her women's, wear shop. Things looked pretty busy, so we didn't think It wise to both er her by asking her where her cops were. After all a mayor can't keep tab on every vanishing policeman. We musel a while and thought I shouting "Help,. Police:' but thought better of it and went lionie. thinking that that's the ;way with policemen, when you .want one one's never around. Shorthand Title Is Won by Salem COR VAL.LIS. April 20. P- .Franklin high school of Portland took four first places In the 18th annual state typing contest at JOregon State college today. j Salem high won the state shorthand championship for the second consecutive year. ; Tigard won first ta the radio shorthand contest and was runner-up in championship typing. -'. . - The third place team ' trophy 'went to the girls' polytechnic team of Portland. Salem's win- Florence Nelson, state Individual champion, ! Adella Frey, Ruth Cherry and Mary Virginia Hat field. Tigard waa second and Al bany third- , i 1 Other results: Individual short hand: Won by Florence Nelson, "Salem; Jean Wahlgren, McMinn vl tie, second; Doris Engstrom, Tigard, third. ; ; ' . ' ' " " - - i Census Accepts i RIehren's Claim " ! TT 4 fJ. T oo X1I8 ige is x-s-o f CHICAGO, Apfll lO-D-Sayed llehren told a census, taker that ne was xzs years oia. i r.porsra W. Schreech. director 'of the census lu this ana, re ported , that. Mehren presented i books and documents as evidence of his long life span and ttat tne astonished enumerator Inscribed 128 on the official form. He related that he bad lost his birth certificate la Alexandria, Ey2t. about UUL tears ago. j J Pick Liberals, Advice of FDR I To Democrats Avoid Sticky . Fly Paper - in November, Warns ' Young Bourbons T Name, p Mentions no 5 no Third Term Hir in Georgia Talk' ; By DOUGLAS B. COB- y WARM. SPRINGS, G? i P)-Pre8ident - Roose& & again tonight that his . ,ty choose a "liberal pair of w idi- dates" and at the same time wad ed into the republican opposition for "seeking to frighten the coun try by declaring the present ad ministration : "is deliberately try ing to put this nation into war." It was an out-and-out political talk that Mr. Roosevelt made by radio to a. series of couutry-wide dinners- of . Young Democrats' clubs. And while it carried an ob vious bid for r continuance "of the new deal, it offered no tangible clue to the outstanding political question of the day: Will the pres ident seek a third term? Asserting that America faces this year much the same kind of campaign as it did In 1932 and 153 6, the chief executive added: "It seems to te very obvious that if the democratic party is to defeat the republican party next November we must nominate a liberal pair of candidates, running on. a liberal and forward-looking platform." Yiits Isolationism of one Candidate Not once did Mr. Roosevelt men tion names. He came closest to it, when he said: "I am not speaking tonight of world affairs. Your government is keeping a cool head and a steady hand. Wo are keeping oat of the wars that are going on in Europe and in Asia, but I do not subscribe to the preachment of a republican aspirant for the presidency who tells you. In effect, that the Unit ed States and the people of : the United States should do nothing to try to bring about a better or der, a more secure order, of world peace when -the time comes.'', - v Of the campaign itself, the pres ident said he was sorry, speaking as an American, that a campaign which should be pitched oir "a level of Intelligent argument," had "fallen into such low estate as early as this." - . Voters Are Tired of . Alarmists, Belief - And, speaking as a partisan, Hr. Roosevelt voiced confidence (Turn to Page 14, CoL 3) Marjorie Boon Is State Head of CE Salem People Participate in Program; Services Scheduled Today DALLAS, April 20 Members of the Christian Endeavor society, in ; the Oregon state convention being held here, elected Satur day morning as president for the coming year Marjorie Boon of Portland, and as vice-president, Kenneth Stuart of Tillamook. Sunday morning the delegates, numbering over 1000, will attend church services. In the afternoon Albert Arends of Spokane, region al ; vice-president of the interna tional society, will Install the new officers. Arlene Johansen will lead in ; a worship service and an ad dress will be given by Dr. Clar ence Klrcher, - pastor of ' West minster Presbyterian chircb. In Sacramento, Calif. ' A communion service will be held at :30 p. m., with Dr, W. h. ; Van Nuys, former field secre tary of the Presbyterian board of Christian education, followed by Hi (Turn to Page 14, CoL 6) Human Skin Case Is Closed Not-True Bill Returned ; Sajem'a "human akin" case died. quiet death yesterday when the Marion county grand Jury exonerated Orln McDowell, ir.i and William Parker of a charge of unlawful use of the remains of a deceased person. The Jury. In Its first report after several weeks of intermit tent, meetings, returned three other not true bills and five true bills, two of which were secret. . In finding Parker and Mc Dowell Innocent of any criminal act, the grand Jury placed an effective quietus on a bizarre story which came to llht early last month when authorities at Napa, Calif., identified the con tents of a package sent to a tan nery there as human skin. Keturn addresa on the pareel waa that of a Salem tanning concern, and I authorities here were asked to l investigate the soarce : of the contents of ' the package. ; - ' r i', , -'f ; ,. Brief Interrogations by Sgt Farley Mopan of the state police disclosed that the skin had ap parently been obtained from the waste' can in the anatomy labora tory of a Portland dental coHege where Parker is a students Ac cording to later reports, tho skla had, Leea est Jfcj JUa jQ Mc mm FamUitMee Before Ohio's "ising 'Waters lootl Stage Is Reached at Pittsburgh but no : . Damage Forecast Nearly Third of State's Rural Area Is Under - Water ; Record Set PITTSBURGH, April 21.-CSun- day)T,)-Mnddy flood waters spilled - from . Pittsburgh's' " three rivers early today as they rose to 28.3 feet at the "golden trl angle.."; but forecasters expected a quick drop with little damage. Fed by prolonged rains the Allegheny and Monongahela, which meet here to form the Ohio, surged up rapidlv Tester- day. But the rate of rise slack ened as the 25-foot flood stage was passed and Weather Observer W. S. Brotzman predicted the crest had been reached. It would take a "lot more rain" to "cause serious damage here,"' he said. MARIETTA, O.; April 20.-flV riooas gripped the unio valley from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati to night and turned southern Ohio into a maze of lakes, isolating entire towns. Thousands were homeless. . Water rose menacingly around Pittsburgh's "golden triangle," downtown business area, poured past merchants doors in Mari etta, pioneer Ohio river city of 15,000, and climbed three-tenths of a foot an hour toward a tenta tive crest of 5 8. or 69 feet at Cincinnati. Cincinnati's flood stage Is 62 feet and the anticipated crest would be tar below the record of 79.89-foot stage established In . the disastrous 1937 Inunda tion, t ' Severe damage: la not eatsed unless the crests" exceed flood ullage by 10 srH feet. -- Thousands of residents In Ohio river valley lowlands fled their homes or moved to second floors. A Marietta merchant moved out stock. At Pomeroy, O., a general exodus began in expectation of fire feet of water in the main street by morning, ; Marietta Mayor Earl D. Schob proclaimed a "state of emergen cy" as water reached 39.9 feet, nearly four Jeet above flood stage, and continued to rise three-tenths on a foot an hour. Highway de partment workers assisted in evacuation of 95 families in the city's flooded area. Nearly a third of rural Ohio was Inundated. The Hocking val ley experienced its worst flood since 1913. Among the towns com pletely Isolated were Athens and Logan. Roads were closed at S3 places. The- Baltimore and Ohio rail road experienced track washouts In Ohio and West Virginia. . Gov. John W. Bricker mobilized state agencies to aid flood suffer ers. The Red Cross began setting up food kitchens. : Carter Continues To Elude Search Fred J. Carter, 34-year-old trusty who escaped from guards quarters at the state penitentiary Friday night, la still at large and no trace has been found of him him since he left Dewey Hamm, Salem man he forced to drive him to Portland, it was reported last night. . Carter commandeered Hamm's car and forced the Salem man to act as his chauffeur by threaten ing -him with a knife. Dowell in Salem, who was to have it tanned locally. Disclosure of the transaction occurred when the local tanner sent the epider mis to California In preference to handling it himself. - . U Charges brought against Mc Dowell and Parker under a law passed in 1878 "for the promo tion of medical science' were re viewed in a preliminary hearing before Justice of the Peace Miller B. Hayden, and the two youths bound over to the grand Jury. Witnesses before ' that body, ac cording to ' yesterday's v report, were Elmer Grlepentrog, proprie tor of the local tannery to which fee skins were first taken, and Sgt. Mogan of the state police. Other true bills returned by the grand jury 4 charge Jerry Wills and Roy White, both of Silverton, ; with " statutory of fenses, and John Howe with pos session of copper bonds allegedly stolen from Oregon Electric rail way tracks.'''";' - i Not true bills exonerating te persons named were also re turned , with . respect to Ralph Shepherd, possession' of stolen property; , Henry J. 'Thompson, non-support; and Vernon Lynch, doing an act manifestly tending to cause a minor to become de- TWENTY FIVE DIE INMRECKI V f. -r'". J?4 arae Debaters Trip Fund Is Short Salem High Squad Has 3 Days to naiseZOOi Donations Sought Too plucky to admit defeat bat becoming Increasingly anxious as the deadline approaches, four Sa lem high school dbeaters yester day made plans for the three final days of their campaign to raise enotrgh funds to epresent Oregon at the national debate tournament in Decatur, I1L Thursday is the day set for the speakers to entrain for Illinois if nearly $300 can be raised Mon day, Tuesday and Wednesday. With nearly, every source except private donations exhausted, the "if" is becoming increasingly ser ious. "But we'll surely find, a way to raise the rest," Emogene Russell, members of the squad, told a Statesman reporter yesterday. Emogene has special interest in the trip since she will not only en ter the debate contest but will also enter the extemporaneous contest. She won the right to en ter this contest by taking first place in extemporaneous speaking at the statewide tournament held at Willamette university March 8 and 9. : The three boys on the squad,' Jack Hayes, Zeral Brown and Don Burton, are equally . ."convinced that their goal is obtainable. Because they realize many per sons would like to see Salem, and Oregon, represented in the na tionals tournament, - members . of the squad hare made arrange ments with The Oregon Statesman that any contributions may be turned In at The Statesman office for the squad. This wi'Ji enable many persons to cooperate with the campaign that might . other wise not know where to nend con tributions. , Latest contributions to be re ceived are 5. from Douglas Mc Kay and $5 from Hawkins & Rob erts, Inc. Canadian Seamen Call off Strike TORONTO. April J 0-(The Canadian seamen's union called off its strike lata today and agreed to submit Its Quarrel with Great Lakes ship operators to concilia tion. Labor Minister Norman A. McLarty announced. McLarty said a mediation board consisting of an impartial chair man and one representative each of the union and the companies would be " established at Ottawa Immediately.:: Meanwhile, the seamen agreed to return to work at ones and the companies said they would pay $7.50 monthly wage Increases, whicb they previously had rf fered. , - ' ' Neither side Is pledged, how ever,' to acecpt the mediators findings. , $ : Widotv of Judge Sibley . . Dies in Portland, 67 i PORTLAND, April 20-(.T-Har-riet Bronson Sibley, 7, widow of Polk County Judge Joseph E. Sib ley, died hero today. Mrs. Sibley was a lifelong resident of Polk county, CD 1 ' . , t The known death, toll remained at era pried through) this mass of broken, twisted wreckage, result of the derailment of the New York Central Shore Limited train which went into a ditch near little Falls, NY. One hundred passengers were Injured AP Telemat. Wreck's Toll Still 25 .RQtMf$J$e f creased Three Believed Missing, . Some of Injured Near Death; Disaster Cause not Established Though Speed Was Above Rating LITTLE v FALLS, N. Y;, April 20. (AP) Rescue workers pried tonight into tons of twisted sleet-covered steel. once the New York Central's ing; possible additions to a known wreck death toll of 25 per sons. . ';!'' ! Traveling 59 miles an hour, the New York-Chicasro pas- Soap and Tobacco High 85 Years Ago General Store , Records In ; Murphy Building Show T Eggs at 20 Cents 1 ' Eggs were 20 cents a dosen, butter 36 cents a pound and spec tacles 75 cents In Salem in 18S5, old accounts found in razing the old Murphy block at Commercial and Streets show. j tNo Indication as to the name of the general store for which thevaccounts were kept are given on the tattered, but still clearly legible records. The accounts were found by Ralph L. Harlan,' con tractor who is wrecking the build ing. ..r . . ': ;.r ., ' The price paid for a bushel of wheat, the accounts show, waa approximately the same as paid today, 75 cents. - j - Sugar came high' at 20 cents a pound and tea was a luxury at 1 a pound. A plug of tobacco cost 20 cents and soap was 26 cents a "liar. Among customers of the store in 1856 Ihe heaviest purchasers were the q.nartermaster .depart ment, Oregon Territory, and the Washington : Territory, which made one purchase of 3864.21. The Marion IJouse, famous hostel ry of the time, was also a good customer. .- i-.- . .. The accounts Include names of 'h (Turn to Page 14, Col. 1) Alfred Whiteside Injured; Doesn't Remember Cause Alfred Whiteside, Turner, was treated last night by . the Salem Hrst aid crew for head lacera tions. It ws reported that White side, his head bloody, walked into a downtown service stauon aooui 3:80 o'clock. . He remembered only that he was -walking on Front street and was struca .on the"head..--- -.-...?.'. i The crew "was ftlno ; called to treat Ceorre Cook, age 6, of 425 Locust street, for bruises and abrasions suffered when he stuck his right t foot . Into the front wheel of a bicycle through, the wheel forl s. V ? Ialo Smith was glren first ttld for a " cut on the nose and a shoulder Injury suffered when hit t Commercial and Chemek eta streets by. an automobile drivn by Irene lien of Dayton, vn o OFFAST NEW YORK TRAIN 1 r i-L r S3 Saturday night a rescue work - proud Lake Shore limited, seek ?senger train last night Jumped the track at a 6 -degree curve, the most abrupt on the . system, and crashed with terrific and death dealing force into a massive stone embankment. i I Three hundred passengers, most of whom were asleep , in Pullmans" on the l$-car train, were hurled from their beds into an Inferno ' of shrieks, hissing steam and the groans of the dy ing. ;-v it- - : The bodies of 23 victims, most of them badly mangled, had been Identified by midnight. . The iden tity of two others was unknown. Railway employes continued to search the twisted isteel cars by the flickering light of torches for others. st . j ,',-,-rj ' Approximately 100 others went to hospitals with broke bones, eats and bruises, and physicians feared ! some of - them ' may - be added to the 'death roll of one of the nation's worst railway dis asters. Examination! -of wreckage! still is incomplete, ! and Coroner j Fred C' Sab in said: he expected (Tarn to Page 14, Col. 2) Statesman Cooking School's Theme Is "Song in Kitchen ; a gong In the Kitchen'' will be the theme of the cooking school which The Oregon Statesman will conduct for the housewives of Sa lem and vicinity cn May 1, 2 and 3. . -,.',1 ' j Miss Barbara Miller, home econ omist who wiU conduct the cook ing school, says, "This Isn't going to be just 'another cooking school.' no Indeed! There will, of course, be many new and nnnsual ideas for planning menus, enter taining and home I management, but primarily we want to find the way to put song and laughter in the kitchen.. With the help or sa lem housewives, we will hunt out and drive away all the old drudg ery, and ' bugaboos that have haunted the kitchen for years. U What if you do have to cook three' meals a day for 365 days a yearT If you have to do it, let's get together and plan ways to make it a gay and happy Job. ; "And the whole secret," contin ues Miss Miller, "is to put a song inth kitchen," r , , v (! Mlns MUler is a trreat believer in what she calls "kitchen psy chology.' ; - . ; ;:! : '.'How,' she asks, "can yon pos sibly expect light dumplings when yon make them with a heart as heavy as lead?. Beat a song Into your dumplings they'll probably pop right out of the pan In sur prise! . .'!' - aim - . ,, v ... , . . . , t I A O Italy Revives Claim on Sea Possible French Entente linked up f Rumania7 Gets Concession -; ROME. April 2 -(Author itative fascist spokesmen renewed tonight their insistence upon free dom from British and French con trol of the Mediterranean as a necessary condition of lasting peace. . These expressions coincided with word from Paris that Pre mier Reynaud had announced that France was seeking a "Mediter ranean, entente" with Italy and Spain. - Although, apparently not direct ly evoked by Reynaud's statement, the fascist expressions indicated their attitude toward an under (Turn to Page 14, CoL 3)-7-' Cdudy President, Social Workers PORTLAND. A p r j 1 2 O.-OPy-The Oregon conference of social workers renamed State Relief Ad ministrator Elmer i Goudy as president yesterday. j .Others reelected were Robert Lang, vice-president, and Grace Brubaker, secretary-treasurer. New directors Include Mrs. Mary - Merrlek, ' Mrs. Hlllmann Luddemann, Mrs. Marguerite Thomason, Mrs. Esther Rodlnsky, Clare Johnson and Major H. A. R. Carleton. all of Portland; Mrs. T. W. Edmunds Newberg; Carl Sandos, The Dalles; Mrs. May belle Romtg, Baker, and Mrs. Irene Lundell. Pendleton. "Laugh when the cake falls and cover it up with a grand caramel sauce and give it a French name. - "When, hubby brings his -old college pal home on wash day, without a minute's notice, tuck a piece of parsley on the hash, pow der your nose and laugh it off!" Miss Miller will cook dosens of dishes for use In "every - day" menus,- as well as propound some interesting ideas for entertaining and "company"-, meals. She has many-helpful abort cuts to tell to housewives, to hedp speed up the time when the kitchen will be a place of song and thinks" will move along easily .and happily. . The school will be conducted from 2 to 4 o'clock each afternoon at the Capitol theatre. r-- .... - -'. r -BARBARA MILLER !; if A Norway British Attack DaneAirdromc azis Taunt Germany in Claim " Army fs Transported With no Life Loss - Norwesians Sav Combine i.y now Fighting; Some ; I Gains Reported By DREW MIDDLETOX ' LONDON, April 21-(Sundayl-(JP) British wafplanes "surc-s-fully raided Aalborg ' alrdrotte in. northern Denmark lat nlht, the air 'ministry announced, In ab effort to cut off German rein forcements by air to Norway. ?. ,The raid, first reported attack on Danish soil since the German occupation April 9, came as Brit ain and Franfce continued to land troops, along the Norse , coast to help stem the nazl Invasion. Great Britain reported succtos ful operations on land andj'-a and In the air as she taunted ! r many with the declaration , that an ainea iignung rorce naa i-m transported across 400 miles of North sea and landed on the un familiar Norwegian coast without the loss of a single life. The vanguard of the allied ex pedition, consisting of two lirlt ish divisions and one French, iA reported pushing southward through the snowclad mountain terrain, toward the German out posts, while the main allied body continues to assemble unham pered atbases along the coast. Transport Sinking ' Story Is Told f ' The admiralty and war .office. In a joint communique, j branded as "quite untrue" a German claim that a transport had been sunk. (The Germans claimed to have sunk one transport after having scored direct hits w 1 1 h h-vy bombs on three transports and allied cruiser.) ' . i ' 1 The army 'gave the royal nary full credit for the success of the transport operation. Warship guns kept covered landings while royal air force planes overhead scanned sky and pea for nail bombers or warships. The allied force wss believed to be at least partly inechnlzf-d and equipped with 1 heavy artill ery. To reach what Is reported as a rapidly-forming German line running east from the seaport of Trondheim, this force must penetrate a craggy and difficult terrain. The French troops which have landed In Norway and are taking part In the operations, according to" a c o m m u ni q u e from the Vronrh tifirl! rnmmtnd. nrobablv I n r l n H ' nm of France's rrackJ. - T- mountain llgnters. i, STOCKHOLM, April 21.-tfRun-day)-(5)-Britlsh, troops hTe penetrated to eastern Norway and are participating with the Nor wegians in flUhtlng the German, invaders, the Norwegian army re ported"early today in a communi que from "somewhere in Norway" (Turn to Page 14, Col. 1) Japanese Jo Buy Oil From Mexico MEXICO CITY, April lO-iA)-It was learned authorlUtivoly to day that the Laguna Petroleum company, a . Japanese firm, has signed a S 3, 00M 00 contract to purchase Mexican oil, gasoline and kerosene an action which the , ' Mexican government w a a awaiting before replying to a United States suggestion to arbi- 1 trate the petroleum controversy. It is understood' the government would consider Its economic peti tion greatly strengthened by a contract with the Japanese and would make much of this point In replying to the suggestion of Secretary of State Cordell Hull for aettlement of Mexico's seisure of the vast foreign-owned oil industry.'- , An official source said the re ply likely would be a firm rejec tion Of the arbitration proposal. Gemmell Will Go On Senators9 First Road Jaunt Salem's In tho baseball swln, with its entry this week In the Western International league, and The Oregon Statesman as usual Is abreast of the news the new Salem Senators team will provide for local sports fane. A Ron Gemmell, Statesman sports editor, will be there when the Senators open the league seanoa against the Spokane, .Wash., In diana at Spokane Tuesday til;!; t. Don't mhis bis firnt-band stori. a of the Senators' flret frames I The Statesman Wed new! ay, Thurs day and Friday mornSnss. Mr. Gemmell will return to r l.m Friday to rr : for tl 3 Senators first lion ratnc, at George E. Waters rsuk f e n ' of April 30, sgahut Va;,: . rirpins. Held by N