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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1946)
PAGE TWO The OREGON STATESMAN. Solam. Oregon. Tuesday Morning. August 13. 1948 Only Half of Precinct Posts Represented Te ieauiine for filing of pros pective f. tcmnri Fummlltmnm and reMniueewotnei paaaed Mon day evening w4t prebsbly not more fcan half the 99 precincts hi Salem fcnd Marion cunty rep rexrMed. County Clef k Harlan JudH eeumaled last nigh'.. AltKeuyh wrrite-MM enay ftll the pola in Km preoincta for which Dohiy has filed, it ia expected th! snoft irtuoM will be filled by ppr.tmet ef tixr party cen tral committees after they are organised it llowmg tiw November lection. J add aaid. Each party should t iepreMteJ by one com ir. .M-fnn and wir rommiltee wrmMi from each precinct. Thxiffn candidates filed Mon day tcfre the deal if e at 5 p.m. They air: Hrf uMiitn - Fiel J. Schwab rid lierth Schwab. Ith of 'Mt. Argil. iint Jonot, Hubbard; Ro bed Humphrey. Angelme Happier nd Carl Z:mmermfi, all of Sub limity. Char lea A Iug1a. No. 12, Salem. C. William Hall. Ben Mr E:d w.-y, r.o. IB, .Salem; John E. I'ridd, no. 3. Salrn ! Desmu.t Itia W. Mill. Wood-j b.iri. lima C. I.tMJoixt and W. C Limkju.tt. Buttevillo. I f Secret' Army Items Slated I j For Fair Shojvjr Two top notch army exhibits wll be presented for the first tlm In Oregon 'at the state fair her, Sept. 2 iu f , Manager Lao SplU bart announced Monday. The two free ihaw will display many mill tary Heart formerly classified mi "top secret." The V-l buzz bomb will be tmon( Che item included la th exhibits, one sponsored by the army air force and the other by the army ground force. Trpopa will be on hand to demonstrate how the equipment was employed in combat. ' The displays will occupy the area formerly used by farm ma chinery concerns, which have do nated their space to the (army Lack of machinery to exhibit caused a majority of the! farm' companies to donate the I apace after having paid for their i usual exhibition areas. More than 400 army officers and men are expected to take part in the displays during the fair. DEMOCRAT REPORTS ON TRIf PENDLETON, Aug. 12--darl Donaugh. Portland, democratic nominee for governor noW on an eastern Oregon tour, aaid today he has been "receiving much en couragement recently from both democratic and republican aourc come foin us in our KOD.0DAY in f.lEJIIC S-WTt tflUod tyudlvrfttlmJtv -Conlit :oei 14 Guard Units Allocated for Central Valley Fourteen units of the Oregon National guard five of them new ones and another transferred from another area will be located in the mid-Willamette valley, a breakdown of Brig. Gen. Thomas E. Rllea's orders showed today. "The adjutant general disclosed that Salem itself Is to be retained as the home station for head quarters and headquarters bat tery 247th CA and "B" company of the 162nd infantry with West Salem also the joint home of the latter. In addition to these two, Salem also is to be home for two new units headquarters and service company I02nd ; engineers and medical detachment 102nd en gineers and West Salem is to have the new 902nd battery 6- inch gun-CA. McMlnnville Is1 to retain "A company 162nd and get the new "D" battery 683rd, but loaes head quarters and headquarters com pany 3rd battalion 162nd to; Leb anon. Silverton loses anti-tank j com pany 102nd to Dallas but gets the headquarters and headquarters company 1st battalion 102nd from Springfield. Dallas yields 162nd L" company to Albany. Corvallis and Woodburn retain M" company 102nd and anti tank company 180th, respectively, and Corvallis also gels the new 873rd battery AMtB-CA. Oregon Is to have 12.049 in the national guard three times the pre-war size and, draw to the state $3,004,820 annually in; pay checks for them. A f4.5OO.000 armory building program will be on the ballots In September to care for units in city's which heretofore were not home " stations. ?????????????? ? 7 !vr steals your V - , ' I ? I heart away J ; mM-G-Mi h rWx wise 7 stars: UOttl UXTHtotV UWIS StW&'Vj 9'i ? r ? ? ?????????? f OCE to Finish Main Biiildiiiir MONMOUTH, Aug. 12 ton structlon to finish the uncomplet ed third floor of the admlnUtra Uon building of Oregon college of education got under way here Monday. The third floor waft left unfinished when the building was erected in ,1930. The section to be built will house physics and chemistry i lec ture rooms and laboratories. Col lege officials stated this is in keeping with the policy of the college to : strengthen its j lower division science courses In order to provide a broader background for prospective teachers and; for students who plart to complete two years of work there before transferring to another Institu tion. Dorena Dam Bids Canceled By U.S. Alrmy PORTLAND. Aug. 12 -(TV The call for bids on the $9,000,000 dam building job at Dor en on Row river in Lane county was cancelled today by Col. O. E. Walsh, Portland district army en gineer. Tate action was necessary, he said, because of the moratorium on federal projects to provide time for decisions on which pro jects will be continued after Oct. 1. Col. WaUh called for the bids Aug. 5 and they were to hive been opened Sept. 9. Col. Walsh also asked the pub lic roads administration to make no awards on bids on relocation of the North Santiam highway from Niagara to Idanha around the proposed site of the Detroit dam on the north fork of the Santiam river f,. Truman Decides Against Seizing Strike-Bound Plant WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 Rejecting a recommendation of Secretary of Labor Schwellenbarh, President Truman has decided not to seize the strike-bound J. I. Case company farm machinery plant at Racine. Wis. The decision not to take over the plants was announced today by Presidential. Secretary Charles G. Rosa, who said the president felt seizure should be ordered only where the public welfare "is vital ly involved." Expansion of 4-Power Meet In Japan Urged TOKYO. Tuesday, Aug. 13 .-) General MacArthur proposed to day that the four-power council for Japan invite representatives of each of the 11 allies who .fought the Pacific war and have missions in Japan to participate in council discussions. British, Russian and Chinese delegates envincad surprise at the proposal, read by the fourth mem ber, American chairman George C. Atcheson, jr. They declined to act on the suggestion until they had consulted their governments. Atcheson said that It -would unquestionably increase the ef fectiveneas of the .council in as slstlng the supreme commander,' and make the council tops In "in ternational goodwill and coopera tion." Prive Called to Wipe Out Klan in America NEW YORK, Aug. 12-rV A concerted drive to wipe out the Ku Klux Klan throughout Ameri ca was called for today by New York Attorney General Nathaniel L. Goldstei following charges that "front" organizations such as vet erans and women's groups were being used to perpetuate: Klan activities. Deaeaber Great Northern? Emplro Cnlldcr wlica you plan a trip lXaste 0011 enjoy coss3ortablo travel orer the scenic Glacier Parli rcoto when yon rldo this fine train. Gee your Local Acent or write to C L B1SCHOFF, Trerv.. Past. Aflent 330 Amerkan Bank lldg., Portland 5, Ors. Phonot Boacon 7273 eaW sT W Pi 1B ftCTWECN PORTLAND, TACOMA, SfATTUV SPOKANE MINNEAPOIIS, ST. PAUL, CHICAGO soom ... a coMPii my wiw tunt buildm IF YOU HAVE A SHIPPTNG PROBLEM . . . wis. , S30 AjmHcsci Dank BU., Pordasd $. C A, GnrUa, AmC Caa. Fit. Au !W oa llp ym. Disease Added To Earthquake MATANZAS. Dominican Re public, Aug. 12 -(if) -A sudden outbreak of disease capped the terror of earthquake and tidal wave on this Caribbean Island to day as upward of 75 persons were Stricken with paratyphus malaria or intestinal ailments in a single camp of 900 refugees. 1 Jarring tremors continued to beat against the island, averaging two or three a day. In Ciudad Trujillo, residents were awakened by a tremor at 4:30 o.m. (EST) today. Many persons were still sleeping out of doors in the capital. Russia Seeks Straits Bases ( ISTANBUL, Aug. 12 -fJP- In formed sources said tonight a Russian note to Turkey on the Dardanelles amounts to a formal demand for bases along the straits nd proposes that their adminis tration Is a matter for Black sea powers only. Some press reports went be yond this and said Russia had Asked for at least 1000 acres of land for bases with which she would control the straits in com mon with Turkey. Russia also asked for authority to station as many troops there as she desired, to build airfields and to bring down part of her navy, the news paper accounts added. C. Le Chatterton Dies Monday r Clarence L. Chatterton, 59, of route 6, box 44SA, Salem,! died at an Oregon City hospital Mon day. Oregon City police had noti fied local authorities earlier Mon day of -their discovery of Chat terton in serious condition from an apparently self-inflicted wound in the head. ' The widow. Mrs. Hattie M. Chatterton, informed Sheriff Den ver Young that Chatterton had left home early Monday morning in possession of an old rifle which had belonged to his father. She said her husband had been in ill health for some time. Funeral announcements will be made later by Howell-Edwards chapel. Too Late to Classify WANTED: Good country heme for 10 months old full blooded German police dog. Ph. SS97. LNUCi TODAY t OPiCNS C:5 Ginger Kegers Van Jshason I "Weekend at the Waldorf AND Noah Beery. Jr -THE CRIMSON CANARY" TOMORROWl I Abbott and Costello "LITTLE GIANT" Communists May Seek UN Aid in China NANKING. Aug. 12.-4VWhiIe Chinese communists discussed dumping China's civil strife into he lap of the United Nations se curity council. Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek completed today bia 9,000-word statement of the government's own proposals for curing the nation's political and economic Ills. : Commenting on a report by the independent newspaper Hsin Min Pao that communists are suggest ing the deadlock be submitted to the United Nations, communist spokeoman Wang Ping-nan point ed out that Russia and Great Brit ain, as well as America, are vital ly interested in the matter, i Gen. Chou En-lal, top commun ist negotiator, declined to con firm or deny the Hsin Min Pao report that he had suggested sub mitting the problem to the UN. U.S. Troops Celebate V-J Day in Japan TOKYO, Tuesday. Aug. It.-iAf -Although occupation troops In Japan will cummemurate Victory day tjmorrow - - the first anni versary of Japan'a surrender of fer - - General MacArthur will wait until Sept. 2 to issue a state ment on the first year of his stew ardship. It was on Sept 2, 145. that Japan signed her furmal surren der aboard the USS Missouri In Tokyo bay. A year ago this month. MacAr thur and his staff were in Ma nila. Preparations continued, through early August, for the pro jected invasion of Japan - - while officials awaited tensely the re sults of triple developments the Potsdam declaration (allied ulti matum); atomic bombing of Jap an; and Russia's entry into the Pa cific war. MacArthur landed in Japan last August 30, and the nation form ally passed Into allied citrol September 2. Occupation troops will b in troducing American time ta Jap an when they observe tomorrow as a holiday. Ilirohito's historic surrender broadcast was made August 13, Japan time, or August 14. U. S. time. fairs office, to consider similar action in the name of all oigan Ited veterans of this county. 14 ob Lafky was fiamed representative for the VFW post which instiga ted the meeting. Local Worker Hurt in Fall ! Howard Nontell, 1391 Oxford st.. Was in serious condition Mon day night at Salem Deaconess hos pital, where he had been taken hy first aid men after a ladder fell on his back. The accident oc cur red at 11:30 a.m. yesterday while he was at work at the Paul us . Bros, cannery construction site. Attendants at Salem Deacon ess reported Nonteirs Injuries to be a broken vertabra and possible rib fractures. CONTROL BOARD KETH MEET The State board of control will hold Its first meeting In two weeks here Tuesday. All board members are expected to attend. OREGON PIONEER DIES PORTLAND. Aug. 12 -A"- The man who came across the plains to found- the nearby farminc community of Damascus, Francis Albert Bohna, died at his home yesterday at the age of 77. 1 1 NOW! f Vfir ' CO -HIT! ' THEY MADE ME A KILLER- VFW Protests Surplus Sales The government's recent lump sale of 41.000 surplus sleeping bags brought a stern protest from Marion post. No Ml, Veterans of Foreign Wars, last night. The post voted its protest and d it pat ched a telegram of its action to the national VF'W commander. Members decided also to call on all other veterans posts in the county to send representstives to a meeting at 8 p. m. today in the state department of veterans' af ENDS TODAY Fred MarMarray ta "Panlon Mv Pa-l" and ' "The Dark Corner" IBgrTJu TOMORROW! It's Raft At Ilia Beat . J ... - i ia I ' A New High in Thrills Tcxa Panhandle" with Char Us Starr ett i life i 1 f STARTS FRIDAY ( Warneryi ELSIIIOIIE THEATDE MOVED OVER TO THE OrENS :4S T M. now snovniG amwrr woousr ass) Wfsuut V m I i DAYTON rRIORITIER OREHED I PORTLAND. Aug. II -0f Vtt efaits' housing prioritise j have been granted for X homes ! to be built at Dayton, The houses will sell at 17130 each. 1 ENDS TODAY! Tt E.) CI, Roger. TIUMROSE PATir --! WtU BtU EUUU "MARSHAL Or IRENO" Opeste I II r.M. k TOMORR( Wl I,:, . MYt fi n (o-itm 4 Edward E. Hotioa UTTPprN m SOCIITl"'! KNDS TODAY I LUM AND ABNER -PARTNERS IN TIME AND -COWBOY BLUES" rilONE 1447 MAT. DAILY FROM 1 TM. j n A TEMPTING TRIBUTE TO Tl SLY OLD FEELING I (LOVE SUCH FUND ! J i i .. AT a Mfll AF.XOr. . .r" " wK. stecme . nfidM .ft RLET DH.4I4I .. m K.Merl ItStYtOOtt . e l4 A UNIVttSa fJCTUfC pirn J THOMAS GOMEZ GALE SONDEBGAARO PAY mi I INQ . PRNPa TPtlPY JXiT GEORGE DOLENZ JEROME CWW . t!4i Mf hur mm ' rrodscef by VAlTtt WWiGUt CO-ITATUREI KANE IICHKORO SMHMBtUI Im n. awe u- ARomcrtCTm simiuff j II I I XI I der-waler atom bomb f pUmmiI LUaUsUIle See Ihlss hUlory making aew rrel