The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, December 27, 1945, Page 4, Image 4

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That OZZGOX STAT-LAIt. Calexa, Ofqaxx. Thar-edoy Morning, Dkmomt 27, 1S43
Wa Topot Stcaii I; Wo Fear Shall, Awt N
From Tint Statesman, March 28 1831
TOE STATESMAN PUBLISHING '. COMPANY
CHARLES A, SPRAGUX, Editor and Publish
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press It exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all
bwi diepeAchea credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.
- fkUWHEH
v 'j. - .x-"
..",
On McWilliams' Trail
The trial of the near two-score persons
tharged with sedition came to an abrupt end
with the death of Edward Ekher, the trial
judge. In Washington months ago and has never
been revived. Little has been heard from the
principal defendants since. But it Is not to.be
expected that the big shot pro-nazis would sur
render their ideas even with Hitler's defeat.
Bo it is not -surprising that Joe McWIUiama
who was one of the most offensive of the pre
war agitators for a domestic fascism is caught
working in the same lines as before. How he
was located in Cleveland and .how his goose
there was cooked through the skilled work of
i newspaper reporter Is related in a recent
Wsue of Editor and Publisher. The story is
worth reproducing, and is as follows:
Ct.IVT.LAND. pec. 11 A reporting Job by
Regal. Clecsis! Ptm. wtth follow through by the
Scrlppe-Howard Newspapers, hu resulted tn smashing
the Nationals party ,n Ita oresent form.
On morning last June, Seaal rot an enonymoue ,
phone call in the Press editorial rooma telling hira -that
Joe McWIUiama was ttiWiwd it HoUl Sutler
In Cleveland under the warn of I. William. Me
Willlama ooenrv preached fascist doctrines from eoap- .
box an the Terkville sscttoo of Nw York, ran for
Concrete tn 1M and later waa Indicted for sedition.
Seal t caller said the Press had better do omethtns
about McWtlHams pretty quick or the cellar and
mm frtenaa would let McWIUiama In an alley and
Mass care of him"
Segal told hta caller to indulge In no hoodlumiam ,
Mmolf while he would try to find Mc Will Lama end
determine hta builnena In Cleveland.
The uiM mornina another "Up" came to the Press
City editor. Lnuia Clifford, that an unidentified man.
registered at Hotel Cleveland waa In town to aolicit
find from Industrialists for former U. f. Senator
Robert It. Heynolds" Natlonallat Party.
RmiI went to tn StaUer lobby and after a four
hour wait waa rewarded by seetne McWllllams. whom
he reroentred from pictures. He followed MeWllliame
to Hotel Cleveland.
Al the Clava'and. McWil'iams was met by s Urie
and bulky gentleman with whom he drove off In a
tt ear. Seaal (ot the license number of the cor
which he checked In New York and found had been
twied to Rue 8. Malone. s woman. Further check
ahowed ahe la the wife of 3. Victor Malone. He found
Malone ree-teteved at the Cleveland and learned bo
We the representative of Reynold.
The next dav Segal followed McWtlllama to Hot
Cleveland. Uc Will lama and Malone left the hotel to
" board afreet ear. Segal followed them In an auto
mobile to the end of the line and aaw them enter
the off kcea of a Cleveland Industrial plant.
During all thai shaoowing of McWOlkmi. Segal
noticed a little man In a brown autt a Leo on the
trail. He thought ftril It waa a bodyguard for "Hand
nme Joe" but later concluded it waa an TBI man.
Tha waa never determined.
During the next week. Segal continuously followed
Mr Williams end Makm. on the rounds to the offices
of executives in big Industrial plant.
In a manner which cannot be diactoeed he obtained
a liet of ahneet all the fectorte they vtaited. He
tnterylewed U.e aem Industrial lata they had solicited
for monev and found they sought large contributions
to the Nationals Party with promises that the new
party would weld th dissident elements of both
major political parties In the north with southern
Detnocrata into a new party.
The new parte, they promised, would take all curbs
off business, suppress labor, atop Immigration, see
no aareementa were ptade with foreign nation
especially Russia - - -
Thev attempted to frighten these Cleveland business
leader wtth stories about Ctommuntst activities and.
depending on the man they Interviewed, pitched their
mIm talk on antl.reltcioua. anti-racial, anti-labor or
stwne other prejudicial grounds.
Segal's investigation concluded, he wrote four it or lee
el! of which were paved on Page One of th Preaa
toward the end of June.
Resitting that the racket waa killed in Cleveland
hut would spring up In other places. Editor Louia
B SelUer of the Press, sent Seaal out to follow the
storv on a national scale. He wrote tlx stories
syndicated bv th Scrtppe-Howard Newspaper Al
liance In July, as result of which Reynolds ceased
publication of the feattonalist Record and fired hta
nvmev raisers.
Carl Vme of Indianapolis was dropped as president
of the Farmers Oulld and recently Bishop Toolen
of the Catholic Diocese of Mobile. Ala., suspended
e priest, the Rev. Arthur W. Termtnielle of Annie
Son Ala . nationalist propagandist.
The Bishop suspended the priest for refusing to
obey an order to stop sending out literature which,
"we considered detrimental to the church and to
the unity of the country. Segal had exposed the
Rev. Termtnielle s activltle.
Many deniat and protests have come to the Press
end ScTipps- Howard offices but In no case has the
rgsntration been, or felt, obliged to publish any
retraction or th letters of th proteetanta.
JUnal has sane fallowed up rrts exposes of sub
VeriMve grnupa and individuals
All of this resulted from following up an annony
mou telephone tipj
What la 7ell-Drcssed I.
Mrs. Stanley Mortimer, an umpty-umph soc
ialite of the east, has been named the best
dressed woman in the world. A mighty fine
title, we'd say, and one of which we expect
Mrs. Mortimer is quite proud. And so far as
we know, the missus well deserves it, and may
all her Christmases be as bright.
But who picked her? The New York Dress
Institute. The institute may be all right,. too,
and all the little instituters. But have they
ever been outside 5th avenue in New York?
How could Mrs. Mortimer, in pure attrac
tiveness, stack up against an Oregon girl in
neat pinafore, saucy hat, well 'fitted if econo
mical coat, walking to the corner grocery, a
fleck of rain on her pink check and a quick
good-morning smile?
And the Duchess of Windsor who de-kinged
? a kingdom! She was fifth in that list of well
dressed women, and a well-gotten-up one, it
might be said. She dresses as befits her so
' called "station in life." But if she looks any
nicer than many a woman we've seen this holi
day season right here at home, we've yet to
see a picture that shows it.
This little dissertation isn't meant to bring
out any moral like "beauty is as beauty does."
;It's meant to say that the New York Dress
. Institute can look out of its window' or peruse
its charge accounts to its heart's content we've
got our own ideas of what well-dressed means,
JT-l"1' 'JTjeaaaaeg; ii pm iil i . . m
--rr- : afl trr. f - - . . .a iii a-
he aaeaaeataaa? wttk TWWkaaSsstae
mm ouQLg
Housing Lack
Drives Boi
ToPoi
Sticking to Their Ship
News Behind the News
By PAUL. MALLON I
(Distribution by King Features Syndicate, Ins, Reproduction in whole
- or in part strictly prohibited.) V
WASHINGTON, Dec. 28 A
German artist died at 78 in a
and it doesn't run to any more diamond ear- -small mountain town in Europe.
rings, furred trappings, or be-jeweled necks or
arms than can be shown by our more modest
and unostentatious women.
I had never heard of her, but a
national liberal weekly which
guides the polit
ical thoughts of
Aimless Weapons
What to do with a storm-bound, disabled or
otherwise unwanted airplane especially if it is
a few thousand feet in the air and travelling
a couple of hundred miles an hour is going
to be an increasingly important problem as
the number of planes increases in civilian life.
The question already has been brought home
to the residents of Chillicothe, Ohio, where a
twin-engined army transport craft crashed after
flying pilotless for 900 miles from the heart of
Nebraska, where its crew bailed out. Fortunate
ly, the crash was in an open" field and no lives
were lost. But such good luck couldn't always
.obtain.' ;
It is difficult to see how there ever could
be a complete overcoming of the hazards from
a stricken plane, but to the limit of a pilot's
ability a plane that has become no more than
an aimless weapon should be headed toward
a quicker and more controllable landing "that
is possible by setting its instruments for a
further sustained flight.
so many Ameri-
cans, observed
her death along
with taxes, the
full employment
bill and such
things, saying
she was a "silent
We Can't Blame Them
The expressed sympathy of the general pub
lic with the GI desire to return home apparently
has led to dangerous ground. There certainly
should be no condoning of the march of 4000
men on the 21it replacement depot at Manila.
Not that any blame can be attached to vet
, swans for their longing for the homeland.' They
have served courageously and well, and it is
a proud nation which is welcoming them by the
hundreds of thousands. But there is nothing to
be gained by dumping them on the mainland
so fast that facilities cannot handle them. And
the commanding officer at Manila, while per
haps too blunt, is right In declaring that "you
men forget you're not working for General -Motors.
You are still in the army."
Distasteful as it is, the fact remains that by
the very necessity of discipline and control
an Individual loses a great deal of his indi
vidualism in the military. For at least the
"duration and six.' he is subject to the orders
of the war department which may or may not
feel free to publicly explain actions that, on
the surface, appear out of-line to the best in
terests of the men involved. Mistakes, too.
have been made and will be made. But the
shooting is over: our men are comparatively
safe in all parts of the world. Our own im
patience to have them home should ' not be
such as to inspire still further their own natural
Inclination to rebel against continued absence.
The armed services, if they can't or shouldn't
bring the men home any faster, could render
distinct service by keeping them busy, thus
decreasing the. pressure on the military and
providing some other emotional outlet than
what amounts, more or less, to peaceful revolt
gainst things-as-they-are.
We want our men home, too, but we don't
want an under-mining of the great organiza
tions through which victory was won and must
be maintained. .
Interpreting
The Day's News
By Russell Brines
(Substituting for James D. White)
TOKYO, Dec. 26.-iirVPremier Kijuro Snide
hara's cabinet clearly is unwanted, but it probably
will remain as an Interim administration until
late winter.
The Shidehara cabinet has taken ' more body
blows than those which toppled its predecessor.
The public has a general lack of confidence in
its ability to solve livelihood problems. It also,
had stood under a series of directives from General
MacArthur, the most important of
which eliminated military pen-1
sions and recently imprisoned
Prince Morimasa Nashimoto'.
It still is too early to say for
certain how long the cabinet will
i
I
J. D. White
With the veteran's administration reaching
out for. more doctors, and many of the latter
finding work with the army and navy agree
able, there will not be as swift a recovery from
the lack of medical assistance as may have been
anticipated with the war's ending. It still be
hooves jpecple to keep out of the hands of doc
r tors by staylr.i well. This advice is always re
ceived Letter after the holidays than Den
remain, but indications are that
politicians will retain the groggy
group In office until after the late
January elections. Then. ' the first
party government In nearly 20
years is expected to be inaugu
rated.
Last Only a Xfeath
However, any successor govern
ment would have only one month
In office before the election results would force
another change.
Meanwhile, finance minister Viscount Kelso
Shibusawa has the inside track for the presidency
of the dominant progressive party a potential'
springboard into the premiership.
Seven members of the house of representatives
- said the progressive party soon would settle ' an
internal fight for the influential presidency.
Shibusawa, 49-year-old former governor of the
bank of Japan, is the main voice of a strong
group advocating young leadership.
The party once made overtures for the leader
ship to former premier Prince Fumimaro Konoye
who recently committed suicide, and subsequently
considered the retired Gen. Kazushige Ugaki, ?.
Shibusawa supporters-say that Ugaki also is now
out of the picture.
The progressives claim 270 seats in the house
of representatives, a dear majority. Because their
political machine is conaidered too strong for the
opposition particularly among the untutored
electorate the procressives are expected to retain
their leadership.
Normally, the party's president would be named
premier after the general election.
SaMeeseie riaameel
Joji Matsumoto, minister without portfolio and
the cabinet's constitution expert, said that in the
future premiers should be recommended to the
throne by the retiring premier.
Recent elimination of the office of lord keeper
of the privy seal and so-called modern elder states
men former premiers of whom all but two have
been imprisoned necessitates a new technique for
selecting the government.
Matsumoto has said that if a cabinet were
forced to resign because of opposition of the diet.
the bead of the opposing party automatically would "I tlgvre ear
be named premie
if , voice of protest
i) l as ass iisf ...
raw MaJioe wreicneaness ox
the lives of the common peo
ple." They did not say she was
a good artist. They said she was
"widely known" for her political
position. They did not mention
any work of hers as being su
perior artistically, only that her -canvas
had some distinction in
anti-nazism.
Earlier, I had seen the last
play of one of our leading play
wrights, the one who worked on
Mr. Roosevelt's speeches in cam
paign times and, also on war
propaganda, while continuing
his pi ay writing art on the side.
He always - got his jobs mixed,
but in his last play he finally
demonstrated how silly your own
war propaganda can sound after
the war is over. He wanted to
prove- newspaper editors are
fascists, and he had some racial
issues (fostered by the bitter)
mixed in with the plot, in ac
cordance with political formula
of war days, but not even his
utmost liberals could stand it.
War Ended To Suddenly
The war ended too suddenly
for him and the play he had be
gun to write months back.
No good art is political art. I
venture to say politics corrupts
art. The very nature of a dom
inant propaganda purpose pre
vents political art from being
good art in every canvas, play,
book or sculpture conceived for
political purposes, the political
motif inevitably leads the artist
away from superior craftsman-?
ship and true artistic concep
tions. His message rules his pre
sentation. Books like . "Uncle
Tom's Cabin" may carry excit
ing war messages and have great
propaganda effect, but in this
GRIN AND BEAR IT
e. j f
4 i5-
,, ata a"
- .eWsda-svi t-sr"' n ar
will Judge it also that In quality.
The trouble is the small portion
of superior art is obscured by
prevailing political judgments in
the great mass of production. In
my home town I have Hopper,
Burchfield, Bohrod, Speicher,
Lucioni, Mattson, Chapin and
James, for whose work I have
paid my hard-earned cash
which shows what I think ' of
good American art today. I will
buy others when I can get them.
Decent Mix With Politics
A few weeks ago, an Ameri
can artist, N. C. Wyeth, was kill
ed by a train and a few para
graphs noted bis death. One of
his last works was a spring
house with pale stones and green
grass which breathed a spirit of
receptive coolness. It was a.
beautiful thing, perfectly done,!
yet publicly unmentioned and
un-advertised. I will bet you it (
will be hanging in museums,
when this German woman's "
work is in the basement. '
There is soundness in art,
but not when they try to mix it -with
politics, as they are doing:
today. .... ,ri J
The Literary
Guidcpost
By W. G. Borers
THK SHOHT NOVELS OF DOS
TOEVSKV, wit introduction ay
Thomaa Mann (Dial; $4).
In these ,TB00 pages are these
six novels: "The Gambler."
' "Notes From Underground,"
"Uncle's Dream," "The Eternal
Husband," "The Double" and
"The Friend of the Family."
The earliest is "The Double,"
published in 1846, and the latest
"The Gambler," written in 1867,
They range in mood from the
farcical and hilariously funny to
the sublimely tragic. They tell
of love, cuckoldry, jealously,
matchmaking, greed, crime, vice.
gambling, hypocrisy, perversity,
petty evil and tremendous, cos
mic evil; they tell of humanity
degraded, repulsive, magnificent.
Or rather, they don't tell it,
they are it You don't read Dos-
toevsky, you suffer or delight
with him, you blush, cringe and
cower with his characters. I'm
not sure that his books can be
called likable. They create a
strange, mysterious tension, like
walking on the brink of a preci
pice or living over dynamite.
There's no rest or peace. There's
only a terrific strain constantly
drawing near the breaking point;
there's a merciless succession of
D'"l ''Li- blinding and awesome revela
iy JLlCllty tions; on page after page gates
are flung open before your as
tounded eyes with the crash and
thunder with which the gates of
heaven and hell swing wide.
In their scope these are not in
a class with "Crime and Punish
ment," or "The Brothers Kara
mazov, but it seems to one who
thinks this Russian incompara
bly the greatest novelist of all
that they plumb depths as black
and awful. -
Mann's praise of the matchless
Russian is equally unbounded;
'After recalling . Dostoevskys
nerve-shattering escape from ex
ecution and noting the fearful
epileptic attacks which interrupt
ed his creative work, Mann
speaks with an enthusiasm and
eagerness uncommon to him of
the "titanic novelist's "epic mo
numents" and "colossal dramas."
' This volume introduces the
Dial's "Permanent library" of
the best short, or lesser known.
works of great authors. There
couklnt be a better choice.
case as all instances present in
my mind, they represent such in
ferior artistic quality, as to be
fit only for burlesque in retro
spect Politicians, for their pur
poses, may make books, plays or
paintings temporarily famous by
promotion with the view of in
fluencing political judgment of
the people for their purposes
but art must come from the soul
of man where inspiration is root
ed deeper than the shallow poli
tics of any day, whatever it is.
Judgment Dominated by Politics
This is why the Russians have
produced no great art, in my
opinion. Their judgment in all
lines is dominated by political
considerations. Freedom of ex
pression is impossible to newspa
permen, citizens or artists.
In our own country, the pre
vailing art leaders ; continue to
estimate contemporary, and
past art on its political mess
age. Critics of the great news
papers and magazines have bit
ten more than the average citi
zen on the bitter political roots
of this era, and judge accord
ingly. Sales distributor centers
cater to these political whims,
and thus the whole dominant
group in art has led the people
and the country hi to its own
false values. This is as stupid
a situation as when the Louies
of France and Similar artistic
tyrants denied prominence to
Millet, Renoir and other great
est artists of all time, denying
their works the prestige of the
best salons. The next generation
will denounce our own present
day art faddists as thoroughly as
we denounce past falseness and
corruption.
Three Artists Ranked as Great
There have been at least three
great American artists, and yet
in my time there has never been
a complete show of their works.
Eakins is probably the greatest
. His works rank with any world
immortal anywhere (they were
disliked in his hometown Phila
delphia in his day). - Winslow
Homer and Grant Wood, I would
rank next Not one did a politi
cal theme. There were many con
temporary painters who are like
ly to be known as great Today is
perhaps th greatest art age of
all history. In bulk production
it surely is, and I think the future
(Continued from page 1) the
activities of the Watch and Ward
society, and primitive judicial
rulings on censorship, Boston is
a center of 'liberal thinking and
maintains lively International
interests. Not as cosmopolitan
as San Francisco it is by no
means provincial. , The British
would., feel better there . than
elsewhere in this country.
New England is credited with
heinc Intensely conservative
remember Maine and Vermont
In the 1936 election? Yet on
cent -political issues New Eng
land has been singularly ad
vanced in its thinking. It ar
' dently supported aid to the
allies even before Pearl Har-
bor. Now its senators like Austin
of Maine, Aiken of Vermont and
Saltonstair of Massachusetts are
staunch , supporters of a world
organization to preserve peace.
The political atmosphere of New
England wOl be cordial .to the
United Nations idea.
Of the climate, however, the
less , said the better, especially
at this season of the year. The
New England winter is still as
rigorous as it looks on a Currier
& Ives mint Icy gales still
sweep in from the North At
lantic; and snow " piles deep on
the highways. Winter is no time
for any UNO assembly meeting
' in Boston. Delegates from Saudi
Arabia would have to doff their
flowing robes for red flannels
and : fur coats.- Representatives
from Central America and the
inevitable protesters from India
would wear out their teeth from
chattering. The meetings should
all be summer sessions. The
summer climate of New England
is qujflr agreeable; that section
is in tact the vacation spot for
the people from the sweltering
cities of New York, Philadel
phia and Washington.
When the score is totaled,
Boston (after San Francisco)
should rank very high as a site
: for the new Geneva (and better
: luck to it). The location of the
buildings would need to be out
! side Boston, some place say. like
i Wellesley or Brain tree or Ar
lington. The British might ob
ject to Lexington; yet it must be
admitted that the . cause which
was born in Boston and bap
tized at Concord and Lexington
has shown great powers. The
United Nations organizations - it
self is but the true flowering of
the old New England idea of
liberty with justice. -
ird
rtland
The ' "GI department 1 of the.
state ; unemployment corn pen sa-
tion, commission, now wua vw
commission in the old high school
building, will move a targe. una -
of its tabulation macnines
Portland within the next two
weekv according to a fMimmssioa
spokesman. - ".,
Salem's housing sftortage, ptus
the unexpected number of claims
pouring in. are the main causes
for the move, the spoajesman
said. Experienced tabulation ma
chine operators, brought here for
the huge task cannot find living
space, he stated.
The GI department is a gov
ernment agency within the, state
compensation commission setup
which pays veterans readjust
ment claims. To date the claims
have been twice the amount ex-
Dected. 70.000 claims per week
having been coming into the de
partment, and it is expected tnai
by January 1 the weekly average
will rise to 80,000.
Public Records
Rotarians Hear
Frank Bennett
At Luncheon
"A father can have no great
happiness than to have a success
ful son," Frank Bennett citj .
school superintendent, told sever
al dozen sons, of Rotarians at the
annual father-son luncheon meet
ing Wednesday noon.
Speaking to fathers and their
sons,, who ranged in age from 4
year old Larry James Leighton,
son of Scout Executive Lyle
Leighton, to sons ; themselves
members ' of Rotary, Bennett re
assured them all upon the ques
tion of Santa Claus.
If the salt of their being is used
to savor that which is around
them, if the light that is within
is used as a beacon for others to
follow, those persons and what
they have done will be remem-
bered, the speaker- said.-
"Nations - do not -make - people
great, people make the nation
great," the speaker said, and cit
ed outstanding examples in the
persons of Abraham Lincoln and
Oliver Wendell Holmes, with
their contributions to the' nation's
history. . .r .r
iYern Esch., Salem hum school
senior, sang two songs, It' Might
as Well Be Spring" and "Dream
ing of a White Christmas." Harry
Johnson introduced the speaker
and the singer. .
CIRCUIT COURT
Naomi Bamrick va Clyde" L. Ham
rick: Suit tor divorce chareinc cruel
and inhuman . treatment aaka that
maiden name of Naomi Campbell, be
restored to. Diaintm. MirriM Auc
Z9. 1938. at Elko. JNev.
Florence Salon la vs Joaeoh James
Sa Ionia : Suit for divorce charging
cruel and innuman treatment asks
that maiden name of Florence Van
Heaa be restored to plaintiff. Married
pnl 21, 1949 at Middleton, Conn.
Donald H. Voelach vs Carlene Voel
ach: Application to place on default
aivorc aoccei. '
Henry Elmer Jarvev vs Dorothy af.
Jarvey: Suit for divorce charging
cruel ana innuman - treatment
custody of four minor children. Mar
ried Jan. 21. 128. at Las Vegas. Nev
Klma K. Yoder vs Paul R. Yoder
Suit for diyocce charging cruel and
inhuman treatment. Married June 14,
lMi. at - Vancouver, wash
Glen O. Rickard vs Lucille M. Rick
ard: Suit for divorce charging cruel
and inhuman treatment asks tor cus
tody of one minor child. Married
Sept. T. 1842. at Medford. Ore
Durward Ballweber vs William
Peerenbooan: Plaintiff given 10 days
to file a amended complaint and
aeienaani riven rive aays to answer,
PROBATE COURT
Blen CarL estate: Feb. 4. 194S. date
fixed sor hearing on final account of
Mantoa A. (Jarl. executrix.
Iola GJeoaon. estate: Jan. 2. IMS.
date fixed for hearing on final ac
count of Orville R. Gleason. adminis
trator.
Lulie Adolph. estate: Jan. 28. ltMS.
date nxea lor neartnar on final
count of Dorothy Adolph and Aide)
Astalptt, administrators. .
w. h. mien, estate: Final account
of Harriet M. Etuen. administratrix,
aooroved.
Starr r. Ryan, estate: Order closes
estate and discharges , William Ryan,
executor.
Jenne V. Brian, estate: Sunole-
mental final account of Valerie Bone-
steel, executor, approved.
Loyal Hamilton Powers, estate: m
William Thielaon. Anna M. AstiH and
James Garvin appointed appraisers.
Dorothy L. Pawers. estate: H Will
iam Thielaen. Anna M. - Astill ami
James Garvin appointed appraisers. .
Charles Wesley Pierce, estate: Mar.
tha Elisabeth Pierce appointed ad
ministratrix and Roy C. Ferguton.
Rev. Walter Fredrick and L. D. Hoff
man appointed appraisers.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
APPLICATIONS
IS. V.
tr Wwrc.iac
2-?
atomic experlmeaU will take S years te flahh 1
year mt aetaal work, aaral 2 years testify htc befere Senate esaUttees!"
GREEK OFT TO UNDON .
ATHENS, Dec. 29 -(JF)- The
Greek government said , today
mat Vice Premier Emmanuel D.
Tsouderos and Minuter of Sup
plies George Kartalia will leave
for London Dec. 2S to continue
discussions on measures to stab
ilize the drachma -and other re
construction problems with the
British government.
Scout Honor
Society to Meet
About 30 scouts of the area are
leaving Thursday for the annual
meeting of the Order of the Ar
row,' national camping . honor so
ciety, at the coast guard unit of
Camp Meriwether, scout camp on
tbe coast south 6f Tillamook.
Feature of the three-day meet
ing will be the granting of the
second brotherhood honor of the
society to the following: Lawrence
Hobart, troop S2, Silverton; Glen
Kleen, troop J, Salem; . John
Thompson, Explorer troop 17;
Tom Ulmer, scoutmaster of troop
14, Salem; Richard Easton and
Ted Roake of ship 12, Salem, and
D. L. St. John, Gervais. ,
The election of officers will
also be held. Present officers are
Frank Deckabach, Richard Eas
ton, Bob Wagers, and Robert
Schaschtsick. Scout leaders going
on the trip are D. L. St. John,
Verne. Merrick and Lyle Leigh
ton, scout executive. .
S. am.
Tex., and Delia L. Stand-
Russeil MUholen.
Houston. Tex., ana
ridge,- It. cannery n worker, Salem.
Leonard A. Neal. 23. professional
baseball and Stella Lulay. 21. stenog
rapher, both Sublimity.
Edward F. Weaver. It. U. S. navy.
Salem end Arleea Louise Fetters. IV
srodent. Independence.
Hubert ju Taylor, carpenter and
Mabel Teal, teacher, both Fall City.
na ucn. zav zarmer, silver
ton and June Martin, IS, clerk. Cald
well, Idaho. .
Otto Ilillman Family
Here From Chicago to
Spend Holiday Season '
Mr. and Mrs. Otto A. Hillmen
and two sons, Ronald and Jerry,
of Chicago, a - spending the holi
days in Salem visiting at the Phil
Littke home, 1864 N. Church; Mrs.
Littka is sister, of Hillman.
The Hillmans formerly lived tn
Salem, leaving here in 1930. Otto
has been engaged in . the stoker
business in Chicago for a number
of years. At present he is head
of the ' Hfllman Engineering Co.
and the Seal -Temp. Co., and
chairmen of the Chicago Stofcer
Dealers association, a trade asso
ciation. .-.
STlavEIIS
; f Rings Fee Mea
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A Bold Black Onyx
Stevens flawless diaw
mounting. - w
gold
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