The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, December 27, 1946, Page 2, Image 2

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    1 Tke
Scdom. Owqon. Friday. Doc nbor 27. IMS
Solon Urges
COP Qique in
Senate Split
' WASHINGTON. Dec. 16 -6P
An ope challenge to plant of
top ranking republican leaders
for organising the fvext senate
same Uiny from Senator Clyde
Reed (R-Kas).
Reed teid a reporter that these
lans would set up 'something
ike an "oligarch" by "splitting
hT! fT ST1 a
Or ENS C:4S P. M.
KMW TODAY! (FRL)
Deoavia Mergae
"Tws Gays Frees Mllwaokea"
Om Maaoen
"GENT MISBEHAVES"
w! Cms. Shew!
R abort Walker
"Sailor Take A WUo"
Edward Arnold
"COME AND GET IT"
OPENS C:4S P. M.
NOW! THRILLS!
"TARZAN AND THE
LEOPARD WOMAN"
Johnny Mack Brown
TJNDEH ARIZONA SKIES"
up the plums among too few
people.'
"There has been a lot of dis
satisfaction among senators over
these plans." Reed said. "Seven
other republican senators have
been in to see me.
He said he would ask ail 51
republican members of the next
senate to pass upon the issues
involved.
Reed referred to a tentative
agreement under which:
1. Senator White (R-Me),
present senate republican leader,
would become majority leader
and chairman of the new com
bined interstate and foreign
commerce committee.
2. Senator Vandenberg (R
Mich) would become senate pre
siding officer as well as chair
man of the foreign relations com
mittee. 3.. Senator Taft (R-Ohio) would
retain his chairmanship of the
republican steering committee
while becoming chairman of the
labor committee.
Reed said he had made a ten
tative check among republicans
who will sit in the next senate
and had been promised a "lot of
support" for his demand that no
senator hold two important
place.
Willkie's Widow,
Son Get Estate
NEW YORK. Dec. 26-Pr-Wen-dell
Willkie left his entire net
, estate of $559,922.24 to his widow
, and son, according to an appraisal
! filed today with the state transfer
tax department. The gross estate
was $849.316 67.
The 1940 Republican presiden
tial candidate, who died October
8. 1944. bequeathed his personal
effects and income from 75 per
cent of the estate to his widow.
Mrs. Edith W. WUIkie. and 25
per cent of the residual income
! and contingent remainder inter
I ests to his son. Philip.
J??L. Lao Corcey - Bowery Boya. "MR. HEX""
TODAY!
(JUL) CO-HTTI Akin Curtis "Flight to Nowhere"
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STARTING TOMORROW!
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FREE HATS AND HORNS
6 Wtimatum
Discounted by
U. S. Officials
WASHINGTON. Dec. 26-ffV
The state department said today
latest information indicated that
no official Soviet "ultimatum"
was involved in last week's en
forced departure of an American
naval vessel from the Russia -held
port of Dairen, Manchuria.
A despatch from William H.
Newton, Scripps-Howard writer
representing the combined world
press, reported the refusal of
Russian military authorities to
permit an American business man
and two correspondents to land
at Dairen from an American ves
sel which hurriedly left port two
hours after the expiration of its
authorized 48-hour stay. Newton
spoke of a verbal ultimatum by
Russian military officials.
'Garbled' Report Cleared
After obtaining clarification of
a "garbled" portion of a report
from Consul General H. Merell
Benninghoff at Dairen, a state
department spokesman expressed
belief that the Russian "ultima
turn" which sped the vessel's de
parture was not "in any sense a
fist shaking affair.
The spokesman, Lincoln White,
department press officer, told re
porters that Benninghoff had ad
vised that the Soviet official in
charge of the docks had granted
a two-hour extension of stay to
to the ship on his own authority.
Beeaaae Nervous
Then, becoming nervous, this
official told the ship's officer the
vessel must leave or he could not
be responsible for the conse
quences. White expK ined that
this apparently meant that he
simply didn't know what the re
action of his superiors might be.
The vessel, the LC-3 1090, went
to Dairen on a routine courier
mission carrying diplomatic mail
and supplies to the U. S. con
sulate there.
Today's explanation appeared
to close the Dairen incident so
far as the state department is
concerned.
Portal-Portal Pay Suit
Total $665,125,000
WASHINGTON, Dec 26W-FV-
Additional portal-to-portal retro
active pay suits seeking a total
of (88,375,000 were filed in fed
eral courts in five cities Thursday,
bringing the total amount sought
in actions already filed to more
than $665,125,000. The portal -to-portal
chains total is expected to
surpass $1,000,000,000 within a
week.
Yenan, China's communist cap
ital, had 10,000 residents 10 years
ago, but grew to 50,000 during
World War II.
Salem
Ice
Arena
Public sessions every nito
but Monday
Afternoons: Friday.
3:30 to 5:30
Saturday and Sundav
2 to 4
610 N. Capitol Phono S868
U. S., French
Split on Saar
Issue Grows
BERLIN, Dec. i-iJ?)-A r French
American dispute over French
initiative in the rich Saarland
widened today, the Americans de
claring that the French already
regarded the Saar as a unit apart
from their German occupation
zone and demanding again an
explanation of reecnt actions
there.
Lt. Gen. Lucius D. Clary, dep
uty U. S. military governor, asked
the French about a report that
the big Robert Bosch electrical
parts plant was removed from
southern Wuerttemberg into the
Saar.
Second Inqairy
This was the second time the
Americans had asked about the
plant. In a meeting of the Allied
oontrol authority's coordinating
committee, Maj. Gen. Robert
Noiret, Clay's opposite number,
replied that the French did not
feel obliged to report to the other
occupying powers on "removal of
a factory from one place to an
other within our zone."
The dispute political parties
here charged that this, in effect,
was a change of frontiers and an
"amputation of the Saar from the
German economy." German lead
ers said it was a step by the
French toward annexing a Ger
man territory rich in natural re
sources. Said Stripping Industries
The dispute over reports that
the French were stripping indus
tries in other parts of their zone
for the benefit of the Saar first
arose a month ago when the Am
ericans asked the French about
the Bosch plant which produces
magnetos, dynamos and electrical
equipment. When the French de
layed in replying, the matter was
brought up by the Americans
again in the coordinating committee.
Cigarette Currency Upsetting
Economy in Occupied Germany
By Richard Kasisehke
BERLIN, Dec. 26-(JP)-U. S. occupation authorities had under
study tonight a directive to prohibit the private importation of
cigarettes into Gennaay by American personnel as a means of
stamping out the "cigarette standard" on the black market and safe
guarding the German economy.
A recommendation made to Lt. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, deputy
military governor, by a special
investigating board, would for
bid the importations, now run
ning at a rate of about $100,000
a month.
$12t Eer Carton
The committee reported that
the sale and barter by Americans
of cigarettes at inflated values
ranging up to 1200 marks ($120)
per carton of 200 was setting up
"a currency competitive to the
legal currency," discrediting the
legal currency, resulting in "mal
adjustment of ration goods and
legal processes," "taking valuable
out of the economy without re
placing them" and inducing "un
dignified" trading for personal
reasons on the part of soldiers.
A second recommendation of
the investigators, which already
has been accepted, as to eliminate
cigarettes as an item of exchange
in any barter center sponsored by
the army or military government.
Ban Effective Jan. 1
This ban goes into efTect Jan
uary 1 at the Berlin barter shop
where today the volume of cigar
ette trading was between 200 and
300 per cent above normal as tra
ders rushed to swap their cigar
ette stores for cameras, chinaware
and furs.
Similar barter shops are sanc
tioned in Frankfurt and Munich,
Quake Casualty
Total at 3,251
TOKYO, Friday, Dec. 21-iJPt-
A Japanese home ministry spokes
man said today a finel check of
Saturday's disastrous quake
would be made and might in
crease the current casualty total
of 3251 by at least 100.
The home ministry's last fig
ures were 1289 persons killed,
1800 injured and 162 missing. The
! U. S. army's last count reported
I 1108 killed and 2542 injured,
j Only two points remained iso
i lated, Katsuura on the south
j coast of Wakayama peninsula,
I and Hata, in southeastern Skiko
! ku.
but most of the personal cigarette
imports have been going to Ber
lin where the market has been
biggest.
The investigating committee es
timated that 90 percent of the cig
arettes traded by Americans at the
barter center eventually reached
the black market, where Germans
exchanged them for articles oth
erwise unobtainable.
AVC District
Conclave Set
For Portland
An Oregon and Southern Wash
ington convention of the Ameri
can Veterans' Committee, World
War II veterans group, will be
held at the Benson hotel in Port
land, January 19 and 18, it was
announced by Phil Dreyer, Port
land, provisional chairman.
Invitations to speak have been
sent to Charles Bolte, national
IT
Open 6:45 P. M.
Ray Milland
Olivia DeHavilland
"The WeU-Groomed Bride"
.
Joel MeCrea - Maureen OUara
"Baffale Bill" - Technicolor
Fined for Driving
While Intoxicated
.Milton Larson of Silverton, who
had the misfortune to drive his
auto into a parked police car on
Portland road early Christmas
day, was fined $100, given a 30
days suspended sentence and his
driver's license was suspended for
one year in Alfred Mundt's city
court yesterday, when found
guilty of a charge of driving
while Intoxicated.
Too Late to Classifv
Christmas Tree Fire
Causes Scare in Hotel
CHICAGO, Dec. 26-OP)-Flames
originating from Christmas tree
wiring caused elevator evacuation
of 25 guests from the top three
floors of the Blackstone hotel on
Michigan avenue tonight, but
damage was' confined to one room.
Richard Jacobson, 51, a pub
lisher, suffered burns on one hand
in attempting to extinguish flames
in his 14th floor suite of the fash
ionable hotel.
DAIICE
Every Saturday Night
Silverton Armory
Music by
Glenn Woodry's
15-Pieee Orchestra
Tern Each, Guest Vocalist
chairman of AVC and -author of
the New Veterans; to- Brig. Gen.
Evans Carlson, marine hero in the
Pacific and an AVC member, and
to Norris Helford, Los Angeles,
Calif., regional director.
More than 100 delegates from the
12 chapters in the area are expect
ed to participate in the two-day
session which will include formu
lation of a state constitution and
election of state officers as well-i
the drawing up of ft statewide pro
ESaiseK ILeais ficjaie
With Sensational Ilevz
Hydraulic
Kaiser Dish Washer
ONLY ONE MOVING PART
PRICE
$105.00
ON DISPLAY
For Immediate Delivery
YOUR KAISER-FRAZER DEALER
Teague E'loior & Implements Co.
PHONE 7001
355 NO. LIBERTY
DAIICE!
Every Sal. Ilighi
Claude Bird and His Music
"Swing and Sway"
Too Velvet Rhythm Way
FEATURING
DOROTHY MARSHALL.
VOCALIST
WOODBURN ARMORY
BALLROOM
Woodbnrn, Oregon
SPINET PIANOS
are here
Its Christmas every day with a new
Spinet Piano
Also good used reconditioned pianos:
Story & Clark, small upright
Irving, upright, reconditioned
Player piano, metal tubes, guaranteed,
50 music included
Trade in your old musical instrument on a
new or used piano.
Terms available on all purchases
jAQurra music co,
136 So. High Salem, Oregon
FOR SALE: Ued wuhinf machine,
! good condition. S40 481 N. Winter.
J ' TOR RENT: Small tore. 44 N7 Coml.
-t0 x P'-R-r-
I THAT U tt IN
i 5ETtTeS EVES y:
t ?
Wj et
Bette DAVIS
, PaulHENRHD
IJJiabde RAINS I
fi
co-feature:
The Bamsteads Are Back
"BLONDIE
KNOWS BEST"
TODAY!
Watt
HAPPY
C0."J2DY
musical
CO-HIT!
"UDI THE RANGE With Red Ryder
Aldaa Lane as the New Red Ryder
Ia
-SANTA FE UPRISING"
Extra
Leon Enrol
Comedy ...
-Twin
Has bands'
PIKSGLY MHGG LYc
i y
FOR fEALTHFVL-
Hi-Ho
lib.
Carton
Crackers
270
SUNSHINE
CHEEZ-IT CRACKERS
-os. pkg.
15c
Frozen Strawberries BirJ7. 490
Frozen Peas Birdseye pkg. 290
C" II" Franco American 4 C
opagnein is-o. tin iz0
Snider's Catsup 12-oz.. bottle &4V
Cream Style Corn H&D 2s . 170
CALTOIIE
Fruit Cocktail
JUICE
rs tin 240
46-oz. tin 590
Small Peas Pictsweet 2s tin 200
Cul Siring Beans lhmi"r, , 160
Post's Bran Flakes r,. PkI. 1 1 0
All Bran KeUosjg-'s 16-oz. pkg. 200
Peanol Boiler ". 320
Llinced Clams Snow's ...15-oz. tin
Creme Honey sioU5 . ...16-oz. carton
f Maison Royal Grenadine
dyTUp 16-oz. glass
Luncheon Ilea! Rath's 12-oz. tin
Corn Beef Hash
480
670
490
430
Newark
.15-oz. tin
320
Sheiford's
Plnienlo
Chevel
Cheese
pkg.
I 1JTT.TTTB J I fl l 0-
eager 90333
lis
U Yon Like GOOD HEAT
TOY OUD I1ABKET
We Feature Grade A Beef and Veal
'Tor Ileal to Eal We Can't Be Deal
Mission
IIACAHOm
or
SPAGHETTI
16-oz. M lSC
cello r VidjgJ
'jfJLL 1
IB
IIorLh Capitol at Ilarket