: I , . i j . . . ! ' ' ' .'--' I- j . . " mPT .... . ' ..I - : i- ' ..--.4 1 i '!hV !' : : . I ' ' -.... CFTF' It's all right for us who rely on oil, gas or wood fuel to keep our houses warm to feel pretty snug as paralysis hits the coal mines and railroads. But it will be serious business in cities and towns and In large portions of the rural areas of the nation if the work stoppage continues long. I recall very well the similar crisis in 19 1. We lived in eastern Washington and had moved into another house and had not laid in the winter supply of coal when the strike was called. Then came a period of severe winter weath er. Many will recall how bitterly cold it was in December, 1919, II mmm thtm northwMt with heaW freezing reported even in the Wil lamette valley. Trying to conserve our coal supply we.iei ine - nsnainn tank in the attic freeze. which put the hot water heating system out or D us in ess. wiw a wiwi we hovered with two babies over a fireplace trying to keep warm. Various substitutes for coal were used. The dealer shipped in a carload of stuff off the culm banks of the coal mines but that khiimH m nutr heat than so much . sand. We tried coke but that burned up in a nasn. i an ally when in desperation we were about to resort to pulling up the board walk in the back yard or pulling down a picket fence the strike .was ended and coal soon became available. It was not a pleasant experience. Through the plains states there Is no adequate supply of (Continued on editorial page) Ukraine U.N. Delegate Shot In New York LONDON, Friday. Nov. 22-P)-The Moscow radiej declared today that an attempt was made "on the life" of Gregory Stadnik and A. D. Voima, Ukrainian delegates to the United Nations assembly, in; a New York delicatessen Wednes day evening. SUdnik's thigh was fractured. "Two unknown men armed with revolvers fell upon the Ukrainian delegates Just as they entered the shop where they were in the habit of buying fruit," the broadcast said. "Stadnik was se riously wounded by an explosive ballet fired from point-blank range. "Although the attempt was riade in the center of the city the attackers succeeded in making their escape." According to the broadcast, "in dignation" has been expressed in U.N. assembly circles over the fact that "American security organs were unable to safeguard the in violability of delegates." (In New York, Police Commis sioner Arthur W. Wallander termed the affair as merely "a stickup" and said "it was no poli tical plot." Stadnik was taken to a hospital where his condition was reported not serious.) Timber Sales Schedules Set PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 21-VP) -The first post-OPA forest serv ice timber sales were scheduled by the forest service today for next month. Some 139.44.000 board feet of Oregon and Washington timber, appraised at $684,424.43 but ex pected to bring' far more with OPA ceilings off, are involved. Bid openings: Dec. 1949,324,000 feet, mostly Douglas fir, from 1207 acres In Clearwater river shed. Umpqua National Forest; Dec. 16 8,650,' 000 feet, mostly Ponderosa Pine, on 2400 acres on Cougar creek, Deschutes Forest; Dec. 20 28, 730.000 feet, mostly Douglas fir, on 831 acres on Iron creek waiter shed, Columbia National Forest, Wash. Animal Crackers Bv WARREN GOODRICH ' "You take the melody and fU carry the cblicato." ks I I ; 2 Killed In Strike Violence WELCH, W. Va, Nov. ll.-VPf-Deputy Sheriff Harry Cyphers said two members of the United Mine Workers were fatally shot today during a dispute with the foreman of a small truck mine near here and that the foreman had been taken into custody pend ing filing of formal charges. Cyphers identified the victims as Roosevelt Thomas, 43, of Bot tom Creek, and Will Hunt, negro, of Eckman. He said Sam Curry, 39, forer man of a small, truck mine at Eu reka Hollow near Eckman, had been taken into custody in the shooting but that no formal char ges have. been placed against him. Cyphers said he was told that Curry and two other men were unloading coal from a truck near the mine and that Hunt and Thom as threatened to pull him off the truck. The deputy said Hunt was shot first and Thomas began to run but was cut down by a bullet before he had gone 25 feet McDowell County Prosecutor Richard Parsons and L. J. Brin dley, an investigator for the pros ecutor's office, were taking state ments on the shooting at the city hall at Keystone. Gas Poisons 4 In Local Motel, One 'Critical' Jay Ritchie. 72, of Coffeyville, Kan., was still in critical condition late last night at Salem Deacon ess hospital, where he was report ed as unconscious after becoming ill of carbon monoxide gas pois oning at a Salem tourist camp early Thursday. His wife, age 65, and Mr. and Mrs. Grover Ritchie of Oxnard, Calif., who became ill of the same cause while in the tourist cabin with Jay Ritchie, were reported by the attending physician last night as improving satisfactorily. Mr. and Mrs. Grover Ritchie were taken to the home of a rel ative, Mrs. Mary Ritchie, 270 N. 20th st. Mrs. Jay Ritchie is at Deaconess hospitaL : Gas heating equipment In the cabin was examined by Portland Gas and Coke company employes and was pronounced in good con dition. The two couples came to Salem Wednesday, en route to Portland and Tacoma. Grangers Ask End of Draft PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 22.-4JP) -The national grange closed its 80th annual convention today aft er reaffirming its traditional stand against peacetime conscrip tion. Citing "the shocking immoral ity prevailing in our armed for ces," the grange rejected a strong appeal from Army speakers to endorse universal military train ing. A voluntary system of edu cation and military training was recommended instead. Last action of the eight-day convention was the installation of Herschel D. - Newsom, Indiana grange master, as an executive committee member. No other of fices were up for election at this time. The grange again asked that social security be extended to farmers and farm workers. It also demanded an end to farm and consumer subsidies. One resolution opposed state hood to Hawaii. German Doctors Plead Innocent r NUERNBERG, Nov. 21. - CP) -Pleas of innocence were given to day by 23 German doctors, includ ing one woman and a former per sonal physician to Adolf Hitler, to charges that they murdered hun dreds of thousands of persons in medical experiments in nazi con centration camps. Each of the defendants, includ ing Karl Brandt, who once ad ministered to the fuehrer, and Herta Oberhauser. 35, who was a physician at the Ravensburg con centration camp. Jumped to- their feet to voice crisp "not guilty" pleas to a 17-page indictment read by Brig. Gen. Telford Taylor, Am erican chief prosecutor. Postal Delivery to Start Tuesday in Vets Colony Postal delivery service will start daily next Tuesday to the veter ans housing project in southeast Salem, it is announced by Post master Albert Gragg. Residents of the project heretofore have been getting their mail in general delivery at the post office. j MONTANANS FAKSIGHTED BILLINGS, MonU Nov. 21. -VP) Six-below zero weather: didnt alarm 88 Billings shoppers today they bought lawn mowers. In a special sale buyers purchased all but 12 of a lot of 50 mowers which arrived seven months late. ' . - "I - (!'-' ouMH.ga JAM r I : - , J NINETY-SIXTH TEAB IK PAGES Ice (Eoat f Silver Thaw' in Portland A "silver thaw" sheathed the Columbia river gorge in ice last night, and stopped street car ser vice on some Portland lines as ice glazed the wires. The Portland airport was closed at 6 p. m. as ice began, to form on the runways. A number of minor accidents' were reported on slip pery streets. The weather bureau at Salem said early this morning there was little possibility that the "freeze" would extend as far south as Sa lem. Three thousand telephones were, out of order in Portland and six inches of new snow dn the Mt. Hood area closed the road to Tim ber line lodge. 8 terms off Coast Meanwhile, federal weathersta tions warn of southeast storms to sweep in off the ocean from nor thern Washington to . Cape Con ception. Calif. " Strong to gale force winds. Winds had already attained 40-mile an hour veloci ties off the mouth of the strait of Juan De Fuca in Washington. Rain, 1.29 inches of it, pelted Salem all day Thursday and Into the night This is to continue through Friday, McNary field weather station predicted. Mountain Saads Werse Hazardous mountain highways will become worse with heavy Thursday night snows, the state highway commission said. The commission had no reports from eastern Oregon, where snow made travel difficult throughout most of the region. Eastern Oregon points could not be contacted on its radio network, the commission said. Thursday's road report: McKensie highway- - Road plowed but slippery because of packed snow. Snowing lightly to day, chains required. Geverpasent Camp --26 de crees, 4 inches new snow, total 18 inches. Packed snow from Rhod odendron to White school. Saatlaaa Saaaaait - - 30 degrees, snowing lightly; 16 inches new snow, total 38 inches. Packed snow throughout district, roads slippery. Chains required. Odell Lake. Willamette highway --21 degrees, snowing hard. Six inches new snow, snow plows and sanding crews operating. Packed snow over entire section. 8teklyea Saawaatt. Pmeifle high way - - Road icy, chains advised. The Dalles - - Snowing through out district, 26 degrees. Two in ches new snow, packed snow at The Dalles. 'Mail Earlf Plea Issued Postmaster Albert Gragg has a problem today how to say "Mail Early" in a new ana more exiecuve way. Mailing of Christmas parcels overseas already has passed its peak, but the busy domestic sea son Dossiblr the busiest in the history of the Salem pos toff ice has not yet started, tsui uragg is getting ready for it, he disclosed Thursday, and hopes to find ciuxiih veterans at Willamette un iversity to see him over the help- shortage hump. He issued one preliminary word of caution sealed packages can not be erected for narcel post unless they bear stickers (gener ally available at stores; giving permission to open them. GEKMANS EXONERATED FRANKURT, Germany, Nov. 21. (JPi - German denazification tribunals have exonerated more than 21 per cent of German de fendants in 75,361 trials In the American zone, the U. S. army said tonight. A-Power Plant Plans By HOWARD BLARES LEE Associated Press Science Editor NEW YORK, Nov. 21-(5)-The proposed atomic power plant whose diagram was released to day by the Monsanto Chemical Co. and the- Manhattan engineer dis trict shows a concrete building shaped like a cube. It is apparent ly without windows. The building is divided Into two parts by a very thick walL The thickness of the concrete walls is not given,, but at the Hanford, WashV atomic plant the walla of a very-similar plant are several feet thick and arc road of con crete. The. walls have to be very thick in order to stop gamma rays and neutrons that come from the hot uranium. The diagram shows that one of the two rooms Inside this con crete cub contains the uranium Covers Philip rJ3uiriray"tiaties 'MbCOOSMEses Wear' ATLANTIC CITY, NJ, Nov. 21 -JPy- The national CIO con vention called on American in dustry today to grant "substan tial wage increases" this winter to meet advancing living costs but President Philip Murray im mediately gave assurance "there is not threat of strikes in the off ing." A 1300-word resolution adopt ed by the convention declared in dustry was "running amok with ever advancing prices" and said it was "imperative that American industry in collective bargaining give substantial wage increases." Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach told the conven tion that real weekly earnings of factory workers had declined by 16.6 per cent between April, 1845, and September, 1946, because of increases in prices of items the workers must buy. Sizeable wage increases in the first year after V-J day "did not maintain the wartime level of average weekly earnings," Bay Area Go ToPassAFL Dock Pickets SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 21 -OP) -The bay area committee for maritime unity, composed of CIO shipping unions, tonight informed the AFL Masters, Mates and Pi lots association it would disre- FOKTLAND. Ore, Nev. 11-(yP-CIQ. lengsberemeat creased an AFL picket line today ie u lead a ship, bat were perraaded by AFL aaeasbers net te ge ahead with the work. The 11 CIO members who had started te aalead eepra freaa the Norwegian vessel .Ylagnee, here from the Philippines, left the ship after aa appeal freaa Capt. M. D. MacRae, ef the AFL Mas ters. Mates and PUeta. gard picket lines "that may be established on other than PASA vessels if they are not removed by 7 a. m." tomorrow. CIO longshoremen and CIO marine engineers earlier this week approved settlement of their strikes. Today the longshoremen were barred from the waterfront by MMP pickets, prolonging the tie-up into its 52nd day. The MMP membership was vot ing today and tomorrow on terms of its contract with the Pacific American Shipowners' associa tion (PASA). The bay area CMXJ said its ac tion was taken at a meeting "which unanimously approved na tional recommendations of the CMU, made November 19, to ob serve picket lines on PASA ves sels but not on East and Gulf Coast, foreign, or army and navy vessels." Capt. Charles F. May. West Coast president of the MMP, said its members would offer no re sistance if the picket lines were crossed. "But we won't forget it, either," he said. Diamond Stores Found in Nippon WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 -JPf-Diamonds worth $20,000,000 to 823,000,000 hidden by Japanese armed forces before the occupa tion have been uncovered in Ja pan, Gen. Douglas MacArthur no tified the war department today. They are now in the vaults of the Bank of Japan to be disposed of eventually in accordance with agreements of the Allied powers. The stones had been cached throughout Japan, and when brought into the vaults, were "in a confused condition, dirty and mixed with worthless debris." heating unit This unit Is a large rectangular or square mass made probably of graphite brick, and graphite Is the material that has been used most in Washington state and at Oak Ridge for simi lar atomic ovens. The graphite has holes bored through it from top to bottom. Into each of these holes is thrust a rod made of uranium. When a sufficient num ber of these rods is placed! in the holes the uranium begins to get hot. This start of the atomic heat Is spontaneous. No lighter of any kind M needed. The :. atoms - of uranium 235 that are splitting in the uranium rods give off atomic particles called neutrons.! These neutrons pass from the uranium into the graphite alongside the holes. In the graphite the neu trons lose most of their speed and after they have thus slowed down Ttidaj Morniag. Rorwnbcc 22. ISiS Gorge Schewellenibach said, adding: . "If the cost of living had re mained reasonably stable, the po sition of .workers, even though slightly below the wartime level, would have been satisfactory. But the living costs, as measured by the bureau of labor statistics, , rose 14 per cent between April, 1843, and September, 1946." Schwellenbach suggested, how ever, that "certain union lead ers" might pay attention to the economic "law of diminishing re turns," without elaborating on the' statement Murray made it dear In a speech that the CIO would fight for more pay, but said "we're not running around this country with a club in our hands trying to beat the American people into submission." He said employers "can avert, if they will, industrial chaos by meeting our representatives in good faith." Just before' Murray; spoke in support of the wage resolution. Eastern Oregon Seriously Affected By Coal Shortage The coal-burning Blue- Moun tain area cast corried eyes today on the threatened nation wide coal shortage. St Elizabeth hospital, the only hospital in Baker county, re ported its coal supply would be exhausted today, and was at tempting to obtain emergency additions. La Grande and Pen dleton were rationing out scarce coal, and Baker dealers ran completely out of stocks yester day.. Grade and high schools in the Blue Mountain region re ported from one to three months of coal on hand, and eastern Oregon College of Education had a 23-week supply. Communists to Lead Romania BUCHAREST, Nov. 21-CT-The communists, it appeared likely to night, may take over in their own name the leadership of the Ro manian government following the government bloc's overwhelming victory in Tuesday's parliamen tary election. An official communique said the government bloc which includes the communists, the Ploughman's front, socialists and dissident lib eralshad received more than two thirds of the 6,823,928 votes cast Final results included: gov ernment bloc, 4,766,630 votes. Ju liu Maniu's national peasants, 879J927. Hungarian popular un ion 569,631. Constantin Bratianu's national liberals, 259,306. Nation al peasant democrats, 156.755. In dependent socialists, 63,528. Geographic Pictures State Oregon ... Its natural beauties, resources and industrial poten tialities draws 44, pages of print and pictures in the December is sue' of The National Geographic Magazine. Scenic mountain and river views. crop harvests, fishing and manu facturing industries, Salem's state capitol and the Portland Rose Fes tival were among the Oregon feat ures described and photographed. Many color shots are included in the first section of this month's magazine. "Oregon Finds New Riches" was chosen as a title for this picture of Oregon described by Leo A. Borah and photographed by Ray Atke- Released they reenter one of the uranium rods. When slow, these neutrons are highly efficient In splitting more uranium atoms. The beat in the uranium rods comes from the friction of the splitting atoms. This heat builds up very rapidly. In order to con trol the heat, some metal rods are thrust into the pile of graphite. This metal is not uranium. It may be cadnium, It is a metal whose atoms can absorb neutrons. After a neutron has been absorbed it is no longer able to split any more uranium. In this way the number of neutrons Is reduced and the heat of atom-splitting is con trolled. The rods work very ' simply. Pull the rods out part, way and the. heat increases, push them In to the pile and the beat decreases. .,!--; . V0c 5c No. 204 rnnxJF mukrat We Carry Ne Club which was passed unanimously by 600 delegates, Walter Reuther, United Auto Workers president, called for a CIO "common war chest" of 810,000,000 to $12,000 000 for the use by union in its fight for higher pay. BevinClaims Red Plan Binds Trieste to Tito NEW YORK, Nov. 21-JP)-Brit-ish Foreign Secretary B e v i n bluntly told the foreign ministers council today that a Russian pro posal concerning Trieste would mean that Adriatic port's economic incorporation, with Yugoslavia. Persons present at the delibera tions said the chunky British dip lomat levelled his accusation af ter Soviet Foreign Minister Molo tov insisted that Yugoslavia should be given a share in administra tion of the Trieste railroads. These same informants said that Byrnes offered to support reduc tion of occupation troops there to a minimum essential to security. This offer came after Molotov, seeking a definite deadline for withdrawal of all foreign troops from Trieste, repeated charges that their presence would result in pressure upon Trieste's elections when the area becomes a free territory. Motov did make one conces sion in du economic pian ior i n este, dropping at least temporar ily his demands for a customs union between Trieste and Yugo slavia: Japs Offer to Dissolve Firms TOKYO, Friday, Nov. 22.-P-The Japanese themselves propos ed today to liquidate 40 more huge firms representing nearly 70 per cent of Japan's corporate wealth hard on the heels of the latest MacArthur-directed purge of war time financiers, industrialists and journalists. The proposal came from the Japanese holding company liquid ation commission, which already had taken over the vast wealth of the five major taibatsu or family industrial empires - - Mitsubishi, Mitsui, Yasuda, Sumitomo and Fuji. Bonneville Official Sees Power Lack In Northwest Area PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 2l-VP A prediction of a possible power shortage in the northwest next month and a call for immediate construction of McNary dam came before the Bonneville regional ad visory council today. S. E. Schultz, chief engineer of Bonneville power administration, told the council at Timberline Lodge oh Mt. Hood that the north west probably will have no power reserve during the December peak. "Loss of a Grand Coulee generat ing unit at that time would run us into quite serious difficulties," be said, declaring that it might even be necessary to call upon such small - generating units as those of sawmills to help meet power demand. Meyer Urges Warren Run for President SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 21.-JP) Lieutenant Governor Victor A. Meyers of the state of Washing ton today urged in an interview with newsmen that republicans -nominate , California's Governor Earl Warren for president In 1948. "Earl Warren is just as popular in Washington as he is in Cali fornia, it that ia possible," Mey ers said. ' "He baa a wonderful record and bis vote-getting abil ity is well known. In my opinion he is the strongest man the re publicans could nominate.' Wa lkou t Coin p lete; Marshals Seek Mine Chieftain T - - ' : I' " ' 1 " i i ' f" ' i i " WASHINGTON, Nov. 21-VA federal court cited John I Lewis on a contempt charge late today but he made no slightest move to call off the strike of 400,000 soft coal miners. . Justice T. Alan Goldsborough of the federal district court here issued the citation. It ordered Lewis to appear Monday, morning and show cause why he and his union should not be punished. If . convicted after a trial, the union might be fined and Lewis sent to jail, to stay until he yields. Some hours after the order was issued, it had not yet been served on Lewis, although marshals with the order were seeking ' his whereabouts. Theoretically it was possible for him to avoid the ac tion by staying at his Alexandria, Va., home, since the summons must be served in the District of Columbia, but officials said they were confident he would not do so. Te Serve Papers Tomorrow . Justice department officials said arrangements have been made to serve the paper at United Mine m a. mi .a a i Coal at a Glance By the Associated Press Federal Judse T. , Alan Goldsboreech orders John L. Lewis te snow cease Monday why he should not be pen ished en contempt of ceort cbvrges. Congressmen ef both par ties mrge special session. Soft coal seine shutdown vir tually complete as 4tO,oaa walk eat despite U. 8. flags fljrlng ever pits. At least 75s ef SMsf aa. thracite miners also alt; anion chief blames misun derstanding. Washington orders local brewneet, restores capital's wartime fact rules; ether Io cs 11 ties delay conservation Railroads order passenger curtailments for Monday un der government order; Re public Steel cats down pro ductions. Weather bureau reports eoM wave heading east. Workers headquarters here tomor row and that they "feel sure" Lewis will be available. The general expectation was that Lewis would go into court Monday battling hard against the contempt charge. If the strike continues until then and there was nothing to in dicate tonight that it would not steel mills will be closing down, railroads curtailing their, service and crippling effects will begin to be felt throughout the country. Already a "brownout" had been ordered In Washington, the seat of government, including the dark ening of the capitol dome. Ne Immediate Penalty, Monday's contempt hearing will bring no immediate penalty upon Lewis. If Justice Goldsborough finds then "that the alleged con tempt be not sOfficiently purged in other words, if Lewis does not call off the contract termination ' notice which led to the walkout he will give Lewis a trial on Wed nesday. A special jury will be empannelled which will have power to advise the judge. The jurist himself will decide Lewis guilt or innocence, and mete out any penalty. In Alexandria, Lewis' home was darkened, except for a couple of windows in the rear. He was seen to enter the house last night but when a reporter knocked late to day, a houseman said the union leader was "not available"; that he was at Washington. British Favor Arms Probe LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Nov. SI -i1)-Ernest Bevin, British foreign secretary, asked "in all solemnity1 today that the United Nations take up now the whole question of disarmament. He rejected Russia's demand for information on Allied troop dis positions abroad unless it was in eluded in such arms limitation talks. Bevin told Foreign Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov of Russia, author of the arms reduction and troop information proposals, that the British government felt the two should be "taken together, 367 Enlisted in Y Membership Drive The YMCA reported enlisting 367 new senior members in its 55th annual membership drive which closed last night with a meeting at the "Y." The Rev. Chester Hamblin, in charge of the drive, reported the following leaders among individual recruit ers: first, with 12 new members enlisted. Bob Smith; second, 10 members, Carl Grieder; third, Del DeSart, 7; and fourth, Ann Dol zelL 6. The Weather Max. 4S M . SI aftn. Proetp. n . 4 SI 4S JPl 40 jM 43 JM Salesa Portland San Francisco Chicago ss as New York Willamette itvor II foet. FORECAST (tram US. woather bu reau. McNary Cold. Salem): Cloudy with rain today and tonight. Bis beat temperature 4s. Lowest . Pa raly s i s . " 11 Wrecked in j Alps Plead for Rescue Soon u PARIS. Nov. ll-ify-A despair ing plea "It is urgent, we want to live," reported received from the 1 1 occupants of a VJS. army trans port which crash-landed Tuesday, in the frozen Alps, spurred searchers to new efforts tonight, but hope gradually dimmed of finding all of them alive. - Nearly 30 planes straggled back to their bases and reported failure in their efforts to sight the party. So far as was known the- French, Italian and American Alpinists struggling through deep snow had ' failed to reach the plane. Moun tain fogs swept into the area. Reflects Despair French radio stations at Lyon and Grenoble told of receiving the message reflecting the despair of the 11 Americans eight of whom were termed "stretcher cases" in' an earlier appeal recorded at head quarters of UJS. army forces in Vienna as they prepared to spend a third ntght in the cold wilderness battling for surv ival without medi cal attention or adequate food. Said the message, as recorded by both stations "It is urgent, we want to live." The party includes' a brigadier general, the wives of three brigadier generals and an 11-year-old girl. The plane was en route from Munich to Pisa, via Marseille. Another Message V The Lyon airport announced re ceipt late today of another mes sage, which it said was from the transport, stating that "someone on the ground" has been sighted. It could not be determined whether1 this referred to one of the ground rescue parties. , No ' other . station reported such a message. , , -, Rumors were heard also that SI second plane had crashed some-t where in the Alps, but these were discounted by both French and American officials. 10 Vallev Men Enlist in Army 1 Eight valley men enlisted anrl two reenlisted In the regular army, M. Sgt. Thomas J. Massey of thd local army recruiting office an nounced today. S. Sgt. Irvin Mur ray of Salem, a European cam paign veteran, enlisted for three years with the medical corps and T. 5th Gr. William Millican of Waldport, veteran of Pacific war fare, reenlisted for three years with the engineers. i Harry J. Schroder, box 1000, Salem, and Richard A.j Kennedy. Route 2, box 1J74, Salem, and George E. Willi, ms of 2205 S, 12th st., enlisted for three year: with the army a$- forces. Donald D. Crocker of Albany enlisted for three years with the first mech anized cavalry in Japan and Hemdon Harris jt Wood burn enl listed for three years j with tb4 army air forces. Enlisting in the regular army for 18 months, unassigned were Wyatt R. Surgeon, . route 1, bo 38A, Salem; Charles MT! Morley of Silver ton; Alden Purscll of Jef ferson. j Liquor Board to jSurvcy Juvenile-Frequented Beer-Selling Spots I PORTLAND, Ore.. Nov. 21HJPH The state liquor commission today ordered a survey fo all beer-selling confectioneries and hambur ger spots where juveniles gather. Administrator Ray Conway said the places would be "screened more carefully" when annual beet licenses come up for renewal next month. j One confectionery came up to day and Commissioner Georg Lllley said he objected to a licence in a place "where children go in and out" Other commissioners , agreed and commission inspectors were told to start the survey in time to report findings to next month's meeting. ; . : ' QUICKIES -Of eevrse rse aeere amblUees than yen, Ronald don't I always read the Statesman Want Ads!" - 1XX