t I J f PAGEfVTO The- OREGON STATESMAN, Salctn,' Oregon, Sunday Morning October 21, 1945 ... i f. 3 i $ 1- I V . - V r StrilieIoses Chicago Hotel f Temporarily CHICAGO, Oct. 20.-AVNearly 4000 hotel patrons etrogfted along with few modem convenience lor nearly nine hours today, when ele vator operator went on strike at the loop Palmer house end soon were joined by cooks, bus . bys, maids, porters, bartenders and barbers;" l L -V : " -J. ! The strike ended as abruptly as ft started, when representatives of IS loop hotels -and the ATI, eieva tor operators and ' starters union announced -they had agreed at mid-day conference on a scale of wage increases. . i jj Under the, new wage scale, the conferees announced,' operators will receive from $137.50 to $145 St month. They previously! had re ceived, from $104 to $116.90 a month, th union said. 1 The AFL operators, who normal ly man 11 general and 11 service lifts, suddenly quit work -at-.7 a. m. (EST) today, causing what hotel; officials said was the first major disruption of service in the nearly 75-year history of the Chi cage; hostelry which- is situated a .Chicago's loop. - i dJ . S. Strike I I Thum By the Associated Press -- Approximately 425,000 : work ers idle a, result Of labor dis putes;, Monday crucial date in several work stoppages, j Major strike development: CoalApproximately -. 2 16,000 soft coal miners in -six! states expected -to,' return to work Monday as! mult of John L. Lewis' decision j to call off month-old strike. ,! Glass Union spokesman says breakdown in contract negoti- a lions means strike of 15,000 cities glass workers in 10 "definitely! expected" by Mon day, TelenhOne Services Monday set fas deadline , for Western Electric ' company at Kearny, N.J., focal point of recent wage dispute, to 1 meet union - de mands. : i V ' I " .-'' 1 -Pablie CtfliUes Three-day work stoppage of 2000 Michi gan power ! workers ended with ratification: of settlement agree-i ment by 14 of CIO union's 22 state locals.1 " K Hotels Strike of union ele- va tor j operators at Chicago's Palmer House is ended after nine hours,! during which ex ecutives manned e 1 e v a t o rs; management-union conference results b. wage increase to op erators. .Jf j Shipping Return of 135,000 stevedores to New York harbor after 18-day strike reported; shipping' tied up at Houston, along ..Texas Central j Gulf coast, .ae jJOOO striking ware housemen Joined i in sympathy walkout by 2500 AFLj long shoremen. I :'' . ' j. - Rubber Two-day stoppage which made idle more than 1500 employes of Seiberting Rubber company,- Akron, O., ended when 75 striking main tenance and mechanical em ployes voted to end walkout, which stemmed from wage dis pute. ! ; : "j- : T . ' .4 : - Carpentry Union , votes to end two-week walkout- of 4, 00O Knoiville and Clinton, Tenn, ; engineeTworks carpen ters penduur decision of waee officials on 10 percent wage increase. CHrMNEY FIRE PUT O City firemen were called N. Church st. to extinguish a chimney fire at 10:30 Saturday evening. POUCE CAPTURE BOT City ; police reported the cap ture oi Aipert snu in, iz years. escapee from the Fairview home, at 8:23 Saturday evening. t- to 254 j: f y a ' ' ' 8 V.'X L Jl JLJUI II HJUU1! II I f fl t fccacasaiiriotTj.jfcMi Select Your Personal 1 f Christmas .Cards At Our catalogs' arc complete and the best selection f - , I ). j ". .-' :; ..- "'" ; "'' r7 .-'.V'' .-',.-"'--!,'."- fit now before they are f ! Boxed AssortmenU Xmas Cards Priced From 50e to T in 33feQE3S.00ESi0re In 465 Stale St. Changes to Greet Students at Willamette U. Returning students, and; veterans who have been absent for several years will be greeted by many improvements and changes in the buildings and living halls of Willamette university when they congregate on the campus the new aemester October 25. .,.. Within a few hours after moved out of Lausanne Hall, larg est women's dormitory on f the campus, last Thursday a crey I 50 painters, carpenters, plumbers, electricians andifloor men moved in to completely"; renovate the hall lor re-occupancy j by - women . -stu- jrmy Board to Inquire Into Plane Crash SPOKANE, Wash, Oct 10-(JP) An army board. of inquiry was named today to investigate a spectacular crash last night which killed the r commanding general and deputy commander of Geiger field and three others aboard a C-45 transport plane. Geiger field public ' relations authorities said) no explanation" of the terrific crash Into -a knoll six miles east of here as the .plana prepared to land would be forth coming until the board complet ed its inquiry The field went into mourning for Brig. Gen. Stuart C. Godfrey, 59, of Washington, D. C.- 'base commander, .described, in a me morial as "the father of the avia tion engineers, and for tee dep uty commander, Col. James" W. Park, 35, of 1215 North Tacoma st., Tacoma, Wash. ' " r" " The field had been in radio contact with the two-engined transport just before the crash and no trouble had been reported, public relations officers said. 1 Deputy Sheriff Lewis Johnson I quoted farmers in the area as say ing the plane crashed into a knoll a- few hundred feet 'high and plunged into a gulch. The plane exploded as it crashed,1 Johnson said, scattering wreckage over 200 yards and setting several fires in wet brush and trees. Lease Slated For PORTLAND, Ore., Oct: 20-P)-Edgar F. Kaiser, general manager of the three .Henry J. Kaiser yards in this area, said today ihe end of the war did not end 4the use fulness of war built Swan Island shipyard and that ;his company' was negotiating for.-, lease, .of the facilities. - - " H said he hoped leases with, the VS. maritime commission and the Port of Portland could be-signed by January 1. The announcement was the first disclosure of definite plans by the .Kaiser firm regard ing any of the three war-built yards that once employed 90,000 men. "Junior Miss51 is Snikpoh Choice The Salem high school Snikpoh dramatic society has chosen "Jun-i iot iss by Sally Benson, a uni versal favorite as both a book: and a play, for their annual produc tion. The adaptation is by Jerome Chodorov, and Joseph Field wrote the script. Students listed for fin al tryouts for parts are; Pit, Boyer, Marie Lewis. Mary Jill Kitts, Phyllis Keith,' Connie Keller, Evelyn Esau, Sally Anne Davis, Donna Chastain, Jackie Johnson, Coal Coral Fallin, Leta Jean Evans; Pat Macnamara, Bet ty Twedt, Hope Jaquith, Gwenn Rust, Charlotte Alexander, Jean Doolittle, Shirley Post, Charlotte Lightfoot, Virginia Huston, Luella Campbell, Bob Klosterman, Nor man Martin, Stanley Hawk, Jim Baer, Earl Lee, Cornelius Bateson, Ray Nash, Roger Middle ton, Stan ley Johnson, J3eldon Owens, jr., Ronald Nichols, Dick. Stewart Necdhams Now- 2 picked over. $.00 ..Per Box Phone 5802 Shipyard Returning ; this week for the , opening of ; , $ the last of the, V-12 navy men dents of the university, October 24. The six-day remodeling, job should set some kind of local rec ord "for a building of its size, busi ness : manager Robert M. Ferdx predicts. When redecorated the dormitory rooms will be refurnished with complete furniture sets for 125 women In -addition to new equip ment in the living room and din ing hall. A cafeteria has been built in the spacious basement of the hall which will feed men and women from all other dormitories includ ing v local students and faculty members desiring to eat there. A recreation room adjoining the cafe teria is nearing completion. The school of law which has been housed in the university lib rary for the past two years while their quarters were being used by the administrative offices of the V-12 unit . wiU re-occupy the law building across from the state su preme . court .-shortly. During; the summer the gymnasium, music hall, science building and library have been painted and renovated. Prehistoric Lion Unearthed ELLENSBURG, Oct. - 20.P-The finding of the heel bone of a pre historic lion, indicated to' be half again as large as the finest of the present day "king of beast" was reported today by- prof. George Beck of the faculty of Central Washington College of Education here. . ' . ; . . He said the bone was discover' ed on a geology class fossil-hunting trip in the Columbia basin in Grant county i! ' t Prof. Beck, discoverer of the famed Ginkgo petrified forest, said the' find corroborates his belief that lions of the African species once existed in central Washing' ton. .:. "if. Previous indication, he said, was during Ginkgo- forest research when an Indian picture of the head of a magnificent lion was unearthed.. Stokers Agree On Settlemeiit DETROIT, Oct 20-iJPI-A three day strike of some : 2000 Michigan power - workers ended tonight, halting a threatened cutoff of gas and-electrical service to 2,000,000 Michigan residents.- The . power 'workers, members of -the CIO's state -utility work ers union," -voted by : a margin' of 568, to 363 to accept a settlement agreement in their - dispute. ' Fourteen of the 22 state locals favored acceptance of the propos at Eight voted to reject it As soon as the vote was tabu lated. Garland W. Sanders, chair man of the state utility -workers council, issued instructions to the strikers to return to their jobs immediately. Hunting for Deer, Finds Jap Balloon VALE, Ore., Oct 20.-(rVArth- ur Beam went hunting for ; deer in the mountains near i here but found a Japanese balloon. Army investigators, who confis cated ! the balloon, detonated the only bomb. All the others had ex ploded before the balloon landed, Beam kept 900 feet of rope as a souvenir. Urn mi For Garrols and Pnmpldn Day Shift - - 7 a. m. to 4 p. m. . Night Shift - -4 p. m. to 1 a. m. Special Shift - - 7 p. m. to 12 m. Long Season - Pleasant Work . Cafeteria in Plant 13th and Mill Su. t : la Cooperation With liristianYouth Rally Draws Crowd of 1400 Opening with a colorful dis play of the American flag, the fourth Youth for Christ Rally of the year, with Dr. Louis T. Tal bot guest speaker, was held in theSalem Senior, high school au ditorium last" .night. Approxi mately 1400 people were in at tendance. Dr. Talbot's message was pre ceded by special music featuring Sol Hoopii, Hawaiian guitarist playing tbe guitar. Also highlighting the musical program was a cornet solo by Ray Odegard of Seattle, a musi cal number by a- girls' sextette, solos by John Jennison of Califor nia and nd Evelyn Slipswell of Lyons, Ore. Midway in thp pro gram a Bible quiz was held with those answering correctly receiv-' ing book as gift Dr. Talbot who is the president of the Bible Institute of Los An geles and pastor of the Church of the Open Door' in that city gave the f message, "If I were a-Boy Again". .;. : r. DeVem Fromke and Elmer Heibert co-directors of the mass Young Paoples' meetings, said, this was one of the most effective meetings we have had so ffcr and it was only a sample of what is to come for the Youth for Christ au diehces."! The next rally will ne presented Nov, 3 with ,Dr. John A. Mac Ar thur, speaker for the Fuller Evan gelistic Foundation, as the main speaker. As yet no auditorium has! been secured. Students, Vets Join Pickets HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 20-()-An estimated 1500 pickets, including many college students and some ex-ervice'",men, paraded before Warner Brothers studio today in a' continuation of the motion pic ture strike, now in its eighth month. That was twice the pre vious maximum-number. After police announced that the picket line. was out of bounds for military personnel, the veterans removed the insignia from their uniforms and continued parading without interference. Meanwhile Eric Johnson, head of the' motion picture producers and distributors, continued con ferences, in . efforts to end the strike, which arose from a juris dictional dispute between two AFL Unions over control of studio set decorators.' Troop Train Car Derailed Near Aurora AURORA, Ore, -Oct 20.-m- No injuries were reported after a northbound Southern Pacific car full of military personnel was de railed here early today. . Ohe pair of wheels slid off the rails. Railroad men worked to clear the track by noon. BAK OFFICEKS ELECTED GEARHART, Ore., Oct. 20-(JP) James T. Donald, Baker, World waril veteran, today was named president of the Oregon State Bar as the annual convention closed here. James B.. Bedingfield, Coos Bay, was elected vice-president Frederick M. Ser combe, Port land, secretary, end Arthur H. Lewis, Portland, treasurer. Too Late to Classify LOST: WhiU Zircon tie-Din. Reward Sentimental reasons. 444 Union; Apt. S. , rORSALK: lfendenhaU pUno. Per fect - conaiuoo. aunogany case, szw Ph. 3180. Work "i In ! Phone 9161 Salem Canners Committee Uomen Dbchorgcd Fresswthe army air ferees at Santa Ana: . Lt. Boy W. Burns. 9X9 Judsoa U Salm. S.'sst. Raymooa i. mteehttng, route Salem. Cast. Kenneth C. new, 1T40 Lee st. Salent. x ' i Fiem: the army air fereea a4 ortland: - Sgt. Id ward T. Kufner, Salem. -Lt. Benjamin r. Evana. Salem. From the army at Ft. Lewis: Second Lt. Gordon P. UUman. From! the army air ferees At Lincoln Field, Neb.: First Lt. Rienard O. Kalaon, 1091 Elm t..i Salem. Freoa the- ana air ferees at Kelly Field, Tex.: PTC Eearl E. Noble. IBM CcaUr at. saiem. t From we navy at Seattle: Ens. Willi A. Hill. Fadrvtew av. Salem. I afaehi inist Marvin R. Perkins, 750 Bcek: iw- Salon. Lt. Comdr. Keith K. Hotcoma, 1884 SL Charcn at- Salem. Ens. Max M. Bibb, routa 7, box 188, Salem. ; 1 Ens. Lelxhton C. ralrbam. IBS N. 14th . st. Salem. , From the nary at Bremerton: Georae'W. Parton, PhM xe. Sll Mad ison t SHverton. Gln T. Cole. AOM lc.,620 S. Snd St.. Corvallis. Ernest T. Wood. Mm 1e. 1008 Pulton St., Newberg. Schroeder Was There ON THE TJSS RUTLAND Clarence Schroeder, machinist's mate, $c, 562 j Cherry st, Wood- burn, Ore., served, on this attack transport as she carried troops of the first cavalry division into To kyo bay on the morning of Sept. 2,, the day of the formal Japanese surrender. The Jutland took part in the Iwo Jima and Okinawa cam' paigns. MT. ANGEL PFC Donald J. Connelly, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Connelly.: formerly of Springfield, is at Keijo, Korea. He is a clerk1 typist in the person nel section of the capitol build ing. He was inducted in the army in 1944- He is a graduate of the Springfield high school. j ON THE USS MINNEAPOLIS IN THE PACIFIC Robert L. Lindsleyv 19, S 1c, USN, Toledo, Ore., served on this cruiser when, as part of a task force of more than 50 ships, she steamecL into Jinsen,! Korea, Sept 8 to; help occupy; and liberate the country from the Japanese. Paul; W. Tatmaa. GM tc, has received his ' discharge front the navy at Shoemaker, Calif. He re sides at 38 Salem Heights with his wife and little daughter, Diana. 7 - i Accident Injures Salem Resident OREGON CITY, Oct 2(HP) Frank N. Wood, Salem, received chest injuries, and Luanna Web ster, also of Salem suffered facial lacerations, as a result of a truck car collision near here Friday. Harold L. ShuU, Oswego,! truck driver,! said he could not avoid jthe car, approaching on the wrong side of j the highway. The sheriffs office said Wood admitted falling asleep at the wheel. nBffiffdDD0 Try This Great Product GETS WALLS . I I -'i i' '.-:.. 1 leaves w ct!y r;fj0...cf::5 c:t ifrcdr Marigold is the diftnmi wallpapcc cleaner . . . completely t moves soot and dirt, ndy, and at low cost. Leaves no smodge. Harmless to bands. Made by the makers of the famous Imperial ' WsbbU Wallpapers. See it work at our showrooms. Try It .layout owB--lioaitl ' : I '.' ..ijj-- -f ; VISIT OUR STORE tOR SALEM'S LARGEST, MOST EEAUTIFUL WALLPAPER STOCX. - i Where Selection 1& a Pleasure : Home of " :r. j Imperial Washable Wallpape mm 1 I ' VV II . 37S Chemeketa St Seguin -Family Contributed 4 ort life has been changing for members of the family of "Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Seguin of Gervais. A few weeks- nrn ; .or- , -m four were in the1 army, one a pris- fwie aneao at ?" 3r r soon- ouy one? . will remain InH , service. nv uiarence r Seguin. who en-f k. - listed in 1940,1 A v v J was taken pris-1 ; I . V oner at Corpegi-IJ dor. He wrote, wtm A his family that be was in Yoke- nama and Would soon be home. m nis letter he mentioned his weight as 110 pounds and that he was gaining fast 30 pounds in a month. The 1 American food seemed to be one of the chief pleasures of being free. He told of working in the cop per mines, having to walk down aw steps into the mine after reaching, the hilltop where it was located. It snowed 20 days in a row at one time, he said. Eldest of the Seguin boys is Ray Seguin. formerly a private first class with the air corps . and now living at 1390 3rd street, West Salem. He entered the serv ice in 1942 and spent his entire time in the States. He was I discharged Octo- Aathony Scfuln per 1. Youngest Is Anthony Seguin, who is also discharged. He served in Epgland and ? 1V Africa for two II years. iy ing jr home, it took f only, five days to come from Africa. He was f a technical ser-'Tvr geant at the time fc' of his discharge. ? x The fourth! v 1 member -of the I family is "Cpl CUrencc Serala Gertrude Seguin, who. has been a WAC for a year! She is stationed in New "Mexico in the postoffice department Todd on Butner ON THE USS GENERAL H. W. BUTNER- (Delayed) -R. Todd, EM 3c, Stayton, Ore., served on this transport; as she carried 5000 servicemen back to the States I from the western Pacific for dis charges. ' - T The Butner, commissioned in i January, 1944, ferried troops to Europe,; India and throughout the Pacific.! i" II0T1CE To Oar Patron - - We Resume Service October It - - New Customers 1 Weloomed HOIIE LAUIIDDY j 825 Madlsea St Salem IlDatin' ) 1 TO MAM YOUR HOUSE MOMC Dial 8221 To War Eff SPlSl 4Sy- A I lSlf SsBgSJBal Wm't A - Feilen on USS. Guam ONTHE USS GUAM IN THE PACIFIC Arthur X. Feilen, 23, ART 1c, USN," 1283 N. Capitol st, Salem, Ore., served on this battle cruiser, flagship of Rear Adm. F. S. Lew, USN,when she tied a task force of more than 50 ships into -Jinsen, Korea,- Sept- 8 to liberate the country from the Japanese. .About 15,000 .American sailors and soldiers, streamed ashore to occupy the capital city of Keija, 23 miles away, to the cheers of the nativee. A crowd estimated at 100,000 gathered in the vicinity of the capitol to watch the lower ing of the . Jap flag end the raising oi me Stars and Stripes. Thousands of American prison ers of war, many- listing missing. were- assembled, identified and headed for home. Pay As You Prefer In You Are Invited ! . . TO VISIT j j L Come and see the Most Modern Jewelry Store T) on the West Coast j SEE OUR BEAUTIFUI NEW SELECTION IfNf OF DIAMOND WATCHES j ( 11 THE IIET7 JEWEL BOX ) tgSt S. MsKbsdck, Manager CREDIT MS YOU DEMTAL PLATES i ,. i r : i ' , I " ' " -. 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