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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1946)
2 The Sdwn. On, Letris' Lawyer Team Caught With Their Precedents Doicn WASHINGTON. Nov. 29-iJfy- John L. Lewis's ten lawyers were caught with their precedents down today. Judge T. Alan Goldsborough started it all when he asked for an argument on three points in the defendants' brief. Could he have this argument now please? Bafflement . . . confusion . . . ten legal beads in quick hud dle. Welly Hopkins, who quarter backs the Lewis team, then said his outfit hadn't expected to ar gue these points. Is there a law library in the house? he asked. J u-d g e Goldsborough said, you're welcome to mine. Whereupon two Lewis lawyers hustled out. Another member of the clue, Edmund Burke, carried on while the two caught up on ffihxpa2fficl!i AND HIS STR. WdBMdar. December 4 Sihrerlon Armory t PJL to I JLM. DANCE Silverlan. ITov. 30 Sponsored by Lion's Club Every SoL Nile TCP. Hall Music Warn Strachan's Orchestra DAIJCE TONIGHT! Sihrerlon Armory Weedry's 14 -Piece Orchestra D A II C E! Every Sal. High! Claude Bird and His Music "Swhi and Sway" The Velvet Rhythm Way FEATURING OOSOTRT MARSHALL. VOCALIST WOODBURN ARMORY BALLROOM rTeedsurn, Oregon Old Tine Dances Tunes Yon Have Forgotten Music by PAUL WINSLOWS GANG W aHaes, Quadrilles, t sad 3 Steps, etc. Every Satardsy Nicht 259 Court Street Over Western Auto Public Welcome Admission 60c. Inc. Tax WSS3S& r Tonight Silverloa Armory 9 la 12 GLENN WOODRYS ORCHESTRA 14 14 En ferulae rs Tie Mas Fee. Tax lie Total tSe V.F.W. Victor; Club MOT Old-Time Daaciiis TOIJIGDT Veiexzzs UaU Ckarea Streets Day's Sal en nrtM Saturday. November 30. IMS their homework. The government has a fair sized legal staff, too. But unlike the Lewis crew, which take turns, five of the government men sit silent. John Sonnett does all the government talking. Sonnett also got a gentle judi cial ribbing. As the youthful government attorney tried to speak in behalf of admitting certain papers, Judge Goldsborough interrupted him: - "The court rules with you you hard better not say any more or you may say something to make me change my ruling." Bmldings Open For Inspection At Camp Adair War assets administration today offers a new group of 518 Camp i Adair surplus buildings for sale to j veteran HH priority holders, ac ' eord;n to word here from the I WAA headquarters in Portland. J The period for bids and inspec , tion begins today and ends De I cember 14. Permanent fixtures such as plumbing and wiring are considered part of a building, the sale announcement states. Bids must be listed by the individual building although there is no lim it on the number of structures for which anyone may bid, It was stated. Bids will be opened at 10 a.m. December 19 in the WAA build ing at Swan Island, Portland. . Another group of 287 surplus Adair buildings, after only four HH bids were accepted recently, is now on sale to the general public, the offering period having begun last Wednesday. The cur rent HH offering, minus build ings sold to HH priority bidders, eventually will go on sale to low er priority groups and the gen-, eral public. The 518 Adair buildings now available to priority bidders in clude 17s barracks measuring 39 by 90 feet, 80 mess halls up to 25 by 130 feet. 80 storehouse and company administration buildings 29 by 92 and 25 by 100 feet, 25 officers quarters 30 by 33 to 30 by 136 feet, and miscellaneous smaller and larger buildings. Alcatriz Guards Vary Testimony SAN FRANCISCO .Nov. 29-UP) An Alcatraz prison guard, wound- ea in tne rocky island s bloody j uprising last May. testified today i that rin1jHr Jnwnh Paul rs zer shot him cold bloodedly and while screaming curses. But a second guard said CreU-er shot him after declaring "I'm sor ry. . Cretzer was killed in the fight that followed, and three convict survivors, Sam R. Shockley.. Clarence Carnes and Miran EL Thompson, are on trial in federal court here on murder charges in th death of Guard William A. fillr In all i . j ltc IIlfTIl W n IT I killed and 15 wounded. CONFERENCE THIS WEEK , SLLVERTON The state quar terly three-day prayer conference j will be held at the Church of God, Silverton, starting December 4 at 7:30 pjn. Services continue on December 5 and 6 at 10 a.m.: pray- , service each day at 2:30 p.m. j and evangelistic services each j evening at 7:30. Visiting pastors will be the speakers. CLUB NETS $135 FOUR CORNERS The Auburn Women's club netted $135 at- the rummage sale last week. The pro ceeds will be used for school ac tivities. Too Late lo Oassifv FOR SALE: Pacific sawdust burner At furnace with coils. toO Phona 3BSI. Ends Today Evelyn Keyes - WilUrd Farker la RENEGADES also "A Close Call fee Beatea BlscsJe STARTS TOMORROW 1 . v PAULETTE GODDARD RAY 1IILLAND AittcbelsLetseBM CO-HIT! Meeting ltsee of Heated Men WUttasa . GAJtGAN PALMER RENDEZVOUS M vo.y iff ; J S jfco4 T'- Jkm aooucnoa gests Work Mines WASHINGTON, Nov. 29-0P-A recommendation that President Truman call for public volunteers to operate coal mines if miners fail to return to their lobs after a direct appeal by the president fllM todav from ScnBtnr Knn. Hand (R-Calif). Knowbtnd wrote Mr. Truman that he would "have the over whelming support of the Ameri can people if he took; the follow ing steps to end the crippling coal strike: s 1. "A direct appeal to the min ers themselves over the head of John L. Lewis to return to work while their leaders negotiated wage and other differences. Knowlarid suggested a 48-hours "time limit" on this appeal. Werk Open Strip Mines 1. A presidential . appeal "for volunteers to uphold their govern ment" by operating the coal mines if the strikers failed to return. The senator said that "open strip mines work could go on by un trained volunteers and that army engineers could supervise such operations if volunteers failed to supply this need. He said these open mihes produced 16 to It per cent of last year's coal production. 3. An appeal to all local, state and federal governments to see that law and order is main tained" and that volunteer miners are protected. Use af Pipelines 4. Immediate operation of the wartime oil pipelines to carry na tural gas and other coal substi tutes, and construction of addi tional pipelines to "prevent a rep etition of the present situation in the future." There was no immediate reac tion from the White House. 1946 Strikes Surpass 1919 WASHINGTON, Nov. 29-iJFf-A government report showed to night that the number of 1946 strikes will establish a new rec ord eclipsing the existing mark set in 1919. The bureau of labor statistics announced that 4.095,000 workers were involved in strikes for the ten-month period through Octo ber of this year. Add to this the 40,000 members cf the AFL United Mine Workers now engaged in the crippling coal strike and the total already far exceeds the 4,160.000 striker rec ord of 1919. Unemployment in State Said Serious PORTLAND, Nov. 2-P)-Loa Howard, state public welfare ad ministrator, said today that un employment is becoming ser-: ious problem in Oregon. Miss Howard told the state wel- ! fare commission that relief appli- j cations are increasing daily, and that more and more persons fail to find jobs. She cited 200 fami lies who she said were still liv ing at the Marion county farm labor camp, many of which have I not found work since the harvest ended. Family desertions are in creasing, too. BRITISH LEAVE JAVA BATAVIA, Nov. 29--The last British and Indian soldiers sailed from Indonesia today, ful filling Britain's pledges to with draw before November 30, even though Dutch-Indonesian clashes were endangering a so-called truce and the Dutch warned that serious trouble might be in the offing. ' LZ Jt it K K A I I l "CLOAK & DAGGER" 'I -rfTt jta.trn .1,- fTTi.rirr.ii 1 Also "Miselatj La4y" rtK T0I1011110T7! jy ' VV They're All Set to Love . . . And It ifiAj ZX ' A11 Set to Music ! . . . And It All Makes fSC1 f You Fccl So Young ! V - - I 5';.i:i' .':,",V"'- : I t Ha Ho. la Houatod hj Ttm ... ; I ,' J V. 2 m,w Too Ifack to Tlkf J ! "SHABOUED" -,Ul SsSll. brrr -, u ' f& 'V-.. ? - ' - i. - l 1 V t-v-t zs s trY"ii rf--TJfc m!?3Cl u3Fmmmmmmmm cmCAGO. Nov. Zt Flreaaen battU s Mass thai fallowed ae brick beidla BMstag s earar was killed. A largo sr ef the belldlaa- when It Teachers Ask Pro-American Literary Revolt ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, Nov. 29-P)-A literary revolution de signed to puncture the prestige of Shakespeare, Shelley, Keats and other English classicists in American schools was proposed today at the 36th annual meeting of the National Council of Teach ers of English. E. Sculley Bradley, chairman of American Civilization at the University of Pennsylvania, pro posed in a paper that English writers take a back seat to Mark 1 wain, .cxigar rvncn ru, ttsii- ington Irving, Walt Whitman and j other American authors and poets. Almost as startling ss Bradley's paper was one by Hardol A. An derson of the University of Chi cago which fired a broadside at methods of teaching grammar. Anderson said American youth has been confused, "if not cor rupted," by "such sheer grama t ical myths as the split infinitive and prepositional ending and a host of other linguistic idolatries which have preoccupied the Inter ests of English teachers. Sudden withdrawal of the gov ernment from operation of domes tic water services. Smith said, would have these results: Intercoastal service Most op- era tors "could not be expected to attempt operation for their own account in view of the certain prospect of large operating losses." ITA MEETS THURSDAY SILVERTON The Silverton Pa rent -Teacher association will meet Thursday at 2:45 at the Eu- gene Field auditorium. The pro gram will be given by the first three grades of the school. GIVEN nIAIL SENTENCE SILVERTON Raymon C. Good, charged with drunken driving, was fined $100, given a 30-day jail sentence and relieved of his operator's license Wednesday in justice court. ! I as If the United States spent much per capita on school lunches as England does the cost would be nearly one billion dollars a year. I Explosion Levels Cigar i F --S.,i -i1- V Caeteey eat Caamces raeat persena were repartee fnjered. Mew esw (AP Wlrepkete) Idaho Seeks Coal Held at Pendleton BOISE, Idaho, Nov. 29 -JP) Gov. Arnold Williams today act ed to secure surplus coal now held at Pendleton, Ore., to partially alleviate the "critical coal sit uation which he said now faces Idaho. The governor said he had been advised by the solid fuels administration at Seattle that 1400 tons of surplus cosl is now being held st the Pendleton army air base. Confessions of Yll ierilian Killer Discovered BERLIN, Nov. 296TVTh nazi government for unexplained rea sons hushed up the story of a German '"Bluebeard who con fessed 53 sex killings and died a Vienna prison death in 1944, per haps from the effects of the nazis' medical experiments, secret po lice files disclosed today. The voluminous story was uncovered by a German newspaperman who obtained access to the six by four and a half foot bookshelf in crim inal police headquarters which was required to hold the secret file of Bruno Luedtke who said he had killed 33 persons with knife, club and noose in s 20-year sex mad career. Luedtke, s dark beetle-browned Laborer, acknowledged crimes ex ceeding even those of the French man, Dr. Petiot, who was sen tenced to death for 44 war-time slayings which the Nazis highly publicized. Some of his victims he at tacked in the woods or fields, but usually he had trapped them in their homes after carefully plot ting the crime, and if he en countered the husband he killed him too. t DIE IK RELIGIOUS FIGHT BOMBAY, Saturday, Nov. 30 (Jfy- Two persons were killed in Hindu-Moslem stabbings Friday in BomDjy. 1 en arrests were made Factory 3 4 $ :. 1... v'f " which leveled a Oee seraea foa. ta. eT these paeaeagers en s street ear Corn Growers Urged to Enter County SliovV The ninth annual Marion County Com show will be held in the schoolhouse at Central Howell, Friday. December 8, with all corn "growers urged to enter an exhibit. Each exhibit shall consist of six ears of com for showing in either the open class, the FFA class or the 4-H club class. Cash and merchandise prizes will be given to six places in each class. Dinner will be served in the school basement by the Ladies' auxiliary of the Central Howell Farmer's union. The com Judging contest for 4-H club members, FFA members and others under IS years of age will take place at 3 o'clock, followed by a program of musical numbers, discussion on com growing and motion pic tures. LARGE BUILDING SOUGHT PORTLAND, Nov. 2 -A- The federal housing authority was asked for permission to construct j a S2O0,00O building, containing 230 apartments, on a 14-acre site in Portland, here today. I Fneaa S47 e Matlaee Dally from 1 F. M. e PnEYUE TOIHGHT! . . . AHD STABTTUG Torionno7! I 1 T j clr kl:333DiiH: winy jQ ' - m k ' yi- v .. . . ar : r - -w aaaw st TO i k LOVE - ':' - - j" . Flash t Fmx N Continuation Of Coast Ship Rules Sought COrmmJATION 14-3 P 2 WASHINGTON. Nov. 29 -P- The maritime commission urged today, that authority for emer gency governanent operation ei coastwise and intercoastal ship ping not be allowed te expire next February 23. Vice Admiral W. W. Samita, the commission chairman, wrote -e-conversioa Director John R. Steel- man .that chaotic conaeeuenrea (will follow) if those essential services are disrupted.' . Since congress alone can renew the authority. Smith's letter to Steelman was taken as a move to call attention to the shipping sit uation well before the new con gress convenes on January 3. Coastwise Trades Most firms engaged therein would "certainly cease operations altogether with (he ezpection of specialized con tract carriers of commodities in bulk." Alaakaa Services "Existing conditions make profitable com mercial operation altogether im possible. Unless substantial gov ernment assistance Is provided, therefore, it is certain that the services will be discontinued abruptly." Representatives of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil. El Salvador. Gua temala. Panama. Paraguay and Uruguay have signed an agree ment for joint action In control of locusts. UUJhrV; CeaUaaees frees 1 F. ML Eads Today! (Sat) Jee Klrkwead "Joe Falooka, Chsatp Ckaxles 8Urrett KUing- Western Trgir TOMORROW t Merle Oberon "lie loved Enemy" William Boyd "Heart of the Weal" ttirfsrirla CeaUaaees frees 1 T. M. Eads Today! SaL) Jodr Garlaad "Meet Me in St. Ixuis "Behind Green Light" Tomorrow! Gregory Feck "Valley of Decbiion" Jim Baanea "Out of the Depths" " Vove... mm "urn - rm iwckt rata wtwiaur m mo a" BaaBaaTBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBaaBBaBBBBBBBaaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBS - 1 evl7,V -MM-f - j--- a-- -w- -. ab. 'Bass aj a a V s aw Jk , o X I I.UIXlllTul 1 UHII" rw we mi ' e 11 A GIRL FROM BRITAIN! . . A BOY FROM BROOKLYN, ON THE AMERICAN PLAN! Hex Ilaxrisaii (Of "Aaaa aad Klag of Slear Pi Anna Ncsglt Dean Jsgger A YANK IN LONDON" Pitt f IU Feetban PaIeUne fllh Court ? Dan Entry of Jews JERUSALEU. Nov. "IMAVTh Palestine supreme court upheld today the right of the British gov ernment to bar the entry Into the Holy Land eg nearly 400O Jewish immigrants and. despite the threat of reprisals from the Stern gang, the government announced they would be sent immediately te Cyrus. SCHOOL VACATION FOUR CORNERS Both Rickey and Auburn schools were closed Friday for part of their Thanks giving acstioaa. TODAY at 1:00 P.M. Th. BUGS DDII1IY SOW Dig Slags Show wta Frlses Faa - Mail Breadeast Over KSLH Frees 1:M te 1:1 I Big Color Cartoons Bla Serial x Chapter It Chick Carte Detective - t Btg reetare -Evalra , WUterl KEYES PAKE EE Edgar BUCHANAN la also la "A Close Call for Beatea Btaekle Eads Today! (Hat.) Joel MrCrea - Brlaa Donlevy -The Vlrgtalaa Ia Glewlag Tecaaleeler o Marey MeGalre "Dlag Doag rTHlUaaa Pies Big Serial sad 1 Color Cartoons (Mat. oolf) Joaa Footalae - Mart ft Uveas "From This Day Forward" o Janes Craig She Weot te the Raeee Ends Todsyl (Sat.) Ray Rogers -Roll On Teiss Moen" Lee Bowman "Walks Came TamUiac Dews" f - - a. 7 K-". - J "if mi kaxeks . AND lBk Va-.U-eVzr, f '-I AIl-Amerlcaa-! N te tne. tax Welt