& PAGE TWO Thm ' OSEGON - STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon. .WfdnMdar Moralng. October 17, 1843 W if J ii 1 c -J. :S - Hi"' " i t ! ! ii,' Lumber Strike Brings Clash; Talk Resumed i ' . - POftTLAND, Ore.. Oct 16.-W)-The AFL sat down across the table from operators today In a hopeful sign in the northwest lumber strike.: while down in- .southern Oregon calm was broken by a CIO crash through picket lines. ' Representatives of the AFL. lum ber and sawmill workers union opened negotiations with the Will amette i valley operators associa tion, first such union - operator cross-table meeting since the strike started Sept 24. But John M. Christenson, strike policy chairman, threw cold water On early armistice hopes with the statement that discussions were just in the feeling-out stage." , ., Two small non-union mills near Cottage Grove, Ore., closed yes terday by pickets, boosted wages 4r. 1 in Ion )iniif (fiHaw malrintf 19 individual plants which haj met strikers demands. CIO workmen at Cos Bay, seiz ing AFL pickets by the arm, forced them away from, two mills today and marched past picket lines at third. Girl worEers removed girl - pickets, j , But the plants struck another snag to reopening: inspectors, members; of the AFL, wouldn't re turn to work. The largest plant Coos Bay Lumber company, closed gain after an hour. The other two operated a manager pinch hitting as inspector in one case. ., ,;i i a - , Harried Bus Firm iSUU Needs Help PORTLAND, Oct. lMff)-Pwt-; land Traction company wants stag ;' gered war time working hours con j tinued, because there still aren't enough buses to go around. Presi dent Gordon Steele told city of ficials new equipment is still un available! and tires are still scarce. Huge Plane Carrier at Tacoma Commissioned TACOMA, Oct. 1.-;P)-With ap ' propria te ceremonies 'on her hang ' ar deck witnessed by a large 'group including a section of the Tacoma Sea Scout organization, the U.S.S. Point Cruz, huge air ; plane carrier, was commissioned here today. j I FIELD WORKERS SOUGHT . CORVALLIS, Oct. 18 Klam ath potato farmers are' sending ;;the state farm labor office 50 job orders aily, the office said today :in an appeal for more potato j Workeril Harvesting is expected ,-to last Until early November. . ' I ! COUGAR KILLING DEES J BEDFORD, Oct 16 A big cougar is killing deer and menac ing stock in the Upper Applegate district near the California line; j thv. county agent's office report i ed today. A government hunter has been assigned to track the ' animal, f , . I $6,000,000 FEAR CROP i CORVALUS, Oct 18 Orch ; ardists estimated yalue! of the ; 1943 Rogue river valley pear crop ; at $6,000,000 today as the harvest j'nea red completion. The crop is ( estimated at 2,300,000 boxes,, one l-of the. largest in years. Too - Late to Classify ' AUTOMATIC u water heaters. Im i ! mediate delivery. Ralph Johnson Ap- l BABY BUGGY for aai reasonable. -' Inquire 360 E. Lincoln. !' DO YOU tlAVZ a C ft late model ; elec. refrigerator you would like to t trade for larger one Ph. 0308. I you need yonr late model car ISeep Ii - and ESeep It? will Be worth the depreciation you will take between the present high market price and the turn in value when new cars are available to I yot! don't need your : late model car Sell Ii b. Vs.: Bod and place yourself in deHvery of a new Oldsmobile as soon as jthey are received from the factory. j m Dca'i Deiieve II Will Be r " Tea Lena How AtS Outer lt 415 center w. .... - - 0r 17th Year in Salem, Oregem -Come f Good Used Can" Newsmen Get Jap Temple Bell . , i Tmf J j . v-v-- ; x , . i A temple bell found In a tewn in for shipment to the San Francisco Press dob as a gift from Captain George E. McCadden. public relations officer of the -Fifth Air Force, former 8an Francisco newspaperman. Haxel Hartsog. of Los Angelea, a United Press war correspondent, prepares te christen the belt Holding j the bell (center is Captain McCadden, and helping In the ceremony, at Fifth Ate Force headquarters, in suburban Tokie,' b Howard Robbins, International News photo war correspondent, ef Oakland. Calif. (International) Seamen Claim, to Be Imprisoned in Merchant Marine NEW YORK, Oct ,18-fP)-Spokesmen for a group of young seamen who claimed to represent thousands of other youths in the merchant marine said in a petition submitted to the New York Times that they were "imprisoned' in the merchant marine without rights as veterans, and without opportunity for discharge or means of leaving their ships ex cept by joining the arme (forces. The Times quotes the seamen as saying they were forced to "go along" with maritime : unions in supporting .the longshoremen's strike, and were powerless to op pose the action. The group, many in the 18 to 26 age bracket, de clared that if they lost theif union cards in opposing the strike they would be forced to return to their selective service boards. CRIME Up IN HUNGARY I 'LONDON, Oct. 16 The Budapest radio said tonight that the Hungarian government was going to introduce martial law "because of the increasing crime rate." A Renter dispatch, quot ing the same radio, said; a state of siege had Hungary. been declared in HEADS CHICAGO PAPER CHICAGO. Oct. 16 -f,SV Lt Col. Edward C. Lapping, former ly managing editor -of the Detroit Times, has been appointed man lager of the Chicago Herald. Amer ican and will assume his new duties immediately. j. STRIKE SETTLED PORTLAND, Ore., Oct 16-(JP) A seven month old wage contro versy' ended today when 300 members of an AFL i aircraft workers local employed by the Iron Jfireman manufacturing com pany here accepted a compromise wage increase of 6.2 per cent in wages. Ii 1 p a preferred position for I ' I rhejie 613 S,,M j jtervicc" . sir w5 "4 the environs of Tokie Is readie4 R A. Fish Will Hcacl Chamber At Silverton SILVERTON Oct 16-(Special) R. A. Fish was given the homin Ac . - ation for prent of the Silver- ion cnamDer or commerce at meeting ibere Tuesday night Other nominations are: for vice president. Jack Spencer; f treas urer, . c. I b. Anderson; directors, Elmer" Johnson, . Clinton Weibe, Clifford iblmquist Tom Anderson, Christian- Peterson and Oscar Loe, Three pf the six directors nom inated wU be elected to 4tfice. ; Speaker at the meeting Tues day, night was E L. Potter, of Coryalli4 agricultural economist at Oregon State college, who was introduced by county agent W. G. Nibler. 1 T Leonard Hudson presented the Future Farmers of America with a check ffor $25 from the cham ber. Accepting on behalf of the youth organization" ." was Darrel Johnsonjvice president of the Sil verton FFA- I General Cites Jrrogress In Jew Problem WASHINGTON, Oct 16 -UP)- Striking back atvwhat .be called "misleading" t reports to President Truman, Gen. Dwight D. Eisen hower tol4 the president today that real progress has been' at tained! in j ' caring for Jews and other victim of nazi persecution. The; white house released with out comment General Eisenhow er's reply to a repor made last August by Earl G. Harrison, U. S. representative on the intergovern mental committee on refugees. who said that "we appear to be treating the; Jews 'as the nazis treated them except that we do not exterminate them." Elsenhower said everything was being jdone to encourage displaced Europeans f "to understand that they have been freed from tyran ny,-and that; the supervision ex ercised over : them is merely that necessary jfor their own protec tion and Well being, and to facili tate essential maintenance." Eisenhower said he recently raised the daily caloric food value per person for ordinary displaced persons in approved centers from 2000 to 2300 "and for racial, re ligious... arid j political persecutees to a minimum of 2500." ' klrs. Terhune Says She in Communication With Dead Husband - ; S - i NEW YORK, Oct 14.-;p)-Mrs. Albert Terhune said today that for three years her dead husband had been in constant communica tion with her from "across the line" dividing life and death. . The voice of the noted author of animal stories who died in 1942 has spoken to her from "within,' she said in an interview, in words of comfort and to direct her in an activity she never before under took writing. ftfrs. Terhune said neither she nor her husband had ever taken an interest in spiritualism. But she asserted she was certain any per son grieving for a loved one taken by death could communicate with the loved- one. UAL Gets First of Army C-54 Planes NEW YORK, Oct lM-De- livery to fUnited Air Lines of the first twoj of a fleet of four-en gine C-54 1 type airplanes for which it is . negotiating a lease Iwith the- reconstruction finance corp. was announced tonignt py WJ A. Patterson, president of United. J i r t. IBS QUALITY IS ALWAYS WORTH WAITING FOR ,:. i ' j .1 " ' . . ;-i ' . " ' i " ". Blitz Weinhard beer does, in truth, stand out. The consistency and . V i - ' ' : :! -' ' ;-:" ; : - ! quality of its goodness are certain as spring. That's why people who really know taste enjoyment would rather wait Tor Blitt-Weinhard ...the beer so good it's guaranteed satisfying. - UTZ Wl I N H A ID COMPANY t O I T I A N V WLB Sets Plan i 5 - ' ' - For Liquidation ByDec0mber WASHINGTON, Oct 18.-UP)- The war labor board cleared its decks tonight if or "orderly liqui dation" by mid-December if pos sible. .. I It will limit Its decisions in any new cases to mere recommenda-j tions and selection of arbitrators for disputes.;! After next Monday; October 22, the board wilt accept no new cases and no appeals except where both parties agree 1 to abide by a de cision of an 'arbitrator or group of arbitrators named by the board. Mayme Yoder Rites Will Be On Thursday WOODBURN Final rites for Mayme M. Yoder, who died Mon day at a Silyerton hospital, will be held Thursday from the Zion Mennonite church at 10:30 a.m. Born in East Linn, Mo., in 1895, she came to Oregon 16 years ago and for the past 12 years resided one mile east of Hubbard. She was a member of the Zion Men- nonitte church- of Hubbard and is survived by the widower, C. G. Yoder; daughters, Mrs. Melvin Wolfer, Mrs. j Edwin Hooley, Mjs. Clifford Conrad and Pearl M. Yoder, and son, I. T. Yoder, all of Hubbard. Also surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Ella Walters and Mrs. Nora Walters, both of Redding, Calif and five brothers, Harold Hostet- tler of Salem, Chris Hostettler of Modesto, Calif., Forrest Hostettler of Lebanon, Truman Hostettler of Newberg and Pius Hostettler of Woodburn. I Interment i will be in the Zion Mennonite cemetery. Bird Shooting Reported Poor PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 16.-P)- Portland nimrods, back from trip to the best pheasant country in eastern Oregon, today reported "slim picking" Bill Langley and Walter Had lock spent three days in the area and bagged only four China pheasants, half the limit "Last year I shot! the limit in a few hours, mourned Hadlock. State game commission biologists blam ed the lull on wet weather which kept pheasants from hatching early egg-settings' last spring. e.i i- & ; t m DUIributod bj ClcUon Cblx Coxs?cs7 Senate Group ,uts Request Of President : i WASHINGTON, Oct 1 HJPh- The senate . Judiciary committee sliced down to near half -loaf size today'; the broad authority to re organize the government which President i Truman had asked of congress. 9 Rewriting house-approved legis lation, -the committee put in pro- Visions that: r L No change shall be made in the status of 13 agencies. (This still leaves 90 or more that the president can shift about) 2. Any reorganization plan may be vetoed by either house or sen ate, acting alone. . The agencies exempted from re organization are the federal com munications, interstate commerce, federal trade, securities and ex change,-, traiff, and federal power commissions, the : federal land bank' system, the federal deposit insurance corporation, the nation al mediation board, the national railroad adjustment board, rail road retirement board, District of Columbia; . government and the general accounting off ice. With the exception of these agencies, the measure allows the president to draw plans for shift ing and consolidating government agencies to achieve efficiency and economy. i Any reorganization plan, how ever, must be submitted to con gress. It; would become effective 60 days later unless either house or senate adopted a resolution of disapproval ; As the measure I came from the house. It required .that both house and senate adopt a resolu tion of ' disapproval in order . to -invalidate a reorganization pro posal. . The house voted to exempt completely from reorganization only the federal trade, interstate commerce and securities and ex change commissions, and then three railway labor agencies. Labish Pastor Plans For Special Meetings LABISH CENTER Rev. Ver non, Zornes, newly appointed minister to the Labish Center and Clear Lake churches, will hold EYF meetings at the grade school each Tuesday after school. NAVY PLANE CRASHES VANCOUVER, B.C.. Oct 16- (JP)-A navy airplane carrying IS passengers and a five-man crew from Kodiak, Alaska, to Seattle, crashed! into a ditch at Sea Island airport last night but all aboard escaped serious injury. i w HAAUXT, m f m wHa"t Mail lot eler. b imJ, rforaM4 o4 low MiiwwflfMt H wrW. 1 Writtoa by SkokMf in ofewt 1600, HaaW wMM I doiia Imatortality if for oOmt mm th the wparkly atoviag Soliiovy T ka ar at to k . . . la Hiit ahiy ra coahfraa for all tint tka aiRHol f rdar m4 trmfi-f ! koiaea Ufa aft" ataiiatioM. jrj I D, Q R I O O II r.-J? c ---h. aW--aaaVfcWa. i Its funeral Service At 90 Today For Mrs. Keene WOODBURN Funeral services for Maggie Keene, who died at her home in Fairfield Monday, will be held mt 8:30 a. m. Wednesday from the St Louis Catholic church here. Interment will follow in Bel crest Memorial park, Salem. Mrs. Keene was born at Gervais. June -29, 1878'i She is survived by a son, Carter Keene, and a daugh ter, Mrs. ; Nancy Lucuc, both of Gervais; m brother, Albert Nys of Brooks and two sisters, Mrs. Carrie Fisher and Mrs. Mary Stev. ens both of Salem, and by five grandchildren, Recitation of the rosary was held Tuesday night at the Ringo chapel. Freedom Sought for Draft Law Violators . WASHINGTON, Oct 16.-UP)-A dozen i persons calling . themselves friends of imprisoned conscient ious objectors, picketed the White House; grounds today. T)v Their goal, according to Mrs. Julius Eichel, Brooklyn, N. Y., is a pardon fof imprisoned violators of the selective service cat They distributed -pamphlets as serting "amnesty eventually for war objectors why not now?" ASKS BENEFITS VOTED , WASHINGTON, Oct l&HPh president Truman asked congress today : to appropriate an addition al $928,000,000 for payment of benefits under government-fi nanced life insurance, policies is sued to service men. 42 GAUGE Pennry'a tamoua "Garmode hosierT. Full-lashlonsxl for lccstlng good fit Tall right" colors; fine quality weight for house) and street wear. One always. . ar -- T I : ill .aOBftBaMBhaBB4aBaaftaBBk a -Jl OTasuumctB saTisrTiwp F0I IT IT lAtti Cannery Will Be Established At Woodburn WOODBURN, Oct 18-(Special) Representatives from the Wood burn school board, the city coun cil and the chamber. of commerce voted tonight to sponsor a com munity cannery , a a community project and to accept the offer -of equipment from the state board of vocational education. The group' also discussed a building site for the $3500 pro posed cannery building and ap pointed Mrs. John Ramage, Mrs. Henry Miller, Mrs. Neal Butter field, James Lizesay, Mrs. Mable Grass, J. J. Hall, C. H. Arney and Mrs. Harold Picknor to an ad visory committee. Carl Magnuson, Smith-Hughes agricultural in structor at the Woodburn high school, was in charge of arrange r.ients between the city and ' the state board. Mrs. Elsie Specht Silverton, chairman of Silverton's drive for a community cannery, told of the methods used in her city to raise funds for a cannery building. Three Found Dead In Plane Wreckage SEATTLE, Oct 16 -()- The wreckage of a small navy bomber missing on a flight from Moon island in southwest Washington to Seattle was located late today 'north of Hoquiam, Wash., with the pilot and two crew members dead. Names were withheld pending no tification of next of kin. w st fV t i; 1 i 1 1 i -i