The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 30, 1947, Page 2, Image 2

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    1 Tbe Start nan, SaUm, Oregon, Tuesday, Sept. 30. 1947
I mall Avers West and South
, Need Building to Benefit U.S.
EUGENE, Off, Sept 2Mf)-Th necessity for equalization of
fre ht ratet in the aouth and west with those of the Industrialized
esst founded here Monday night by former Gov. Ellis Arnall of
Georjui. i- t 1 : ! ;
' Addressing an audience- of 1,500 on the University of Oregon
csrr.pus, Amalt asserted that he
Ton fk oily expects" a favorable
supreme court decUUm within a
few month on suit brought by
the stiil of Georgia to , compel
freight rate equality. ' i"
The' Lberal governor gave no
svir.'t of his future political am
bitions. However he put forth a
broad prtgTsm for American self-"
improvement, saris in effect that
POKTLAXD. 8et. Xt'-T)-Tt
ill be a; Dewer-Trnman
rr fee prestdeat with Tm
snaa winning re-elertien. ' Kills
O. Anult, efeverner of
Gertia, predicted here Udsy
fta a a- en rete speak-(
tag eagageaaeai' at the I'airer'
alt r el Oregeav
oofy in cluninc our own house
can we let up ourselves a urt-tx-mple
for others.
Sijnt points of his speech included:
1. State's, right The federal
government has not "taken them
over"; the -states have . lost them
by failure to exercise them.
2. Reclamation and power pro
jects in the west and south would
benefit all of America.
' 1. Industry should be decentral
ized. The west and south should
no longer be "colonies" of the
-'Imperial' east
Although asserting that he de
sired to stay clear of all Oregon
political issues, Arnall told a
Questioner that in principal, he is
against the sales tax "because it
upsets the principal of taxation
by ability to pay." 1
, Arnall also went ,on record In
favor of internationalism, lower
ing of the voting age to eighteen,
and more planned action by state
authorities.
Taft Decries
Continuing of
Hisli Tax Rate
MOSCOW, Idaho, SeVSMAV-
College presidents. Sen. Robert
Taft (R-Ohio) said today, should
"stay put of politics.
The Ohio senator, stumping the
far west to sound out his political
chances for the 1948 GOP presi
dential nomination, denied later
STEVEDORS RETURN
BUENOS AIRES, Sept
Buenps Aires' 9,600 striking stev
edores voted tonight to return to
work tomorrow and end a Ueup
which has halted all ship loading
operations in this crowded port
since Saturday.
'i rfsti rl sd
FHONE mi BOX OFFICE OPENS f :5 P. M.
STARTS TODAYI
ov ft
-A
m' m 11' - . '4 JM
i v i At "irr. a i cam
CAY CO-FEATURE! '
n) host ef
rtU ns) tcreer
favorites!
J
3
2 CiKiOHM ARCHCRN MM$g?&
MOT
PLUS! NOVELTY REEL LATE NEWS!
0 .
that the utterance ma d,f
facetiously before a luncheon au
dience was directed at Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, who will
assume the presidency of Colum
bia university the first of next
year.
The college president Incident
popped up at a luncheon this noon
in Pullman, Wash. Dr. Wilson
Compton, president of Washing
ton State college at Pullman had
introduced Harlan I. Peyton, re
publican national., committeeman,
as "state chairman."
Taft then arose to correct
Compton, remarking, "Dr. Comp
ton is a college president and col
lege presidents should not know
anything about politics quite
properly so, I think."
Speaking to republican audi
ences drawn from this agricultiuv
al area, Taft Attacked what . he
termed "the deliberate spending
philosophy" of the administration
rand the continuation pf high taxes
through presidential veto of re
publican tax-cut measures.
"The present burden of taxation
is itself a threat to a free econ
omy," he said at Pullman, and
added, "I don't know when the
president thinks we can reduce
taxes."
PORTLAND, Sept Zt.-OSV
Senator Rebert Taft "prebably
-will net" enter Oregon's presi
dential primary election next
May. This statement easne from
Taft himself as he left here last
night for Spokane;
Schusclmigg Hopes
In Marshall Plan
MT. ANGEL, Sept. 2M-P)-Kurt
von Schuschnigg, the last chan
cellor of independent Austria, told
Catholic fathers of the Benedictine
abbey here today that Austrlans
view the Marshall plan as the only
hope of rehabilitating Europe's
economy. .
He said he had little fear that
Austria would become communis
tic, but that his native country
was handicapped by delay of al
lied powers to agree on adminis
tration of the occupied zones of
Kurope.
niRSIIBERG RATE RESTORED
NEW YORK, Sept 29-i?VHar-
old E. Hirshberg, whose navy
court , martial conviction on
charges of maltreating fellow
American prisoners of the Japa
nese was set aside by a federal
court has been restored to his
former rating as a chief signal
man, the navy said tonight
Mat Dally From 1 P. M.
How!
(ll'ftfiiltitH) (Mm
-ICE HAYBt'M SMKS
MAftTHA STEWART REGINALD GARDINER
OtfMM kr LLOYD MOON
kf GCORGC JESSEL .
j - CO-FEATURE!
ALBERT DEKKER
"THE PRETENDER"
Airmail Fes News
ENDS TODAY! (TUES.)
MnU Hale
"Last Frontier Uprising"
Frank Sinatra
"Happened In Brooklyn"
From Alaska by Canoe, Jeep
T-m TOf
t , .a a.
if
OPENS :45 P. M.
TOMORROW! (lac)
GENE AUTRY
"GET ALONG LITTLE
DOGGIEST
Warner Baxter
"Crime Dra Manhunt"
CARTOON NEWS'
-
I
Trucks Build
Auto Output
DKTROIT, S)t: 2 - (P) -
The nation's motorcar industry
may turn out 5.000,000 vehicles
this year, but if it does the mark
will be attained because of the
highest outputs of commercial ve
hicles in its peacetime history.
As it jtfinds up nine months of
1947 production tomorrow the In
dustry will already have turned
out more than 925,$P0 trucks and
coacnes wun no indication or a
let down in this manufacturing
activity.' j
In passenger car prospects the
situation is much different. The
Lfactories will compete nine months
or stop-and-go production tomor-
rsttir S.iU m (.nl 1 4 t ktc
iSSOO passenger vehicles assembled
in United States plants.
Few of the car manufacturers
are optimistic enough to believe :
thre will tx no assembly Inter- !
ruptions . during the next three
months."
CLEVELAND. Sept. Zt Clyde HeasHt (left) and Bill Delber. both of
Cleveland, 0 haal their dnffel bags eat ef the canee in which they
arrived In Omaha, Neb (rem Ltrinxston, Ment, via the Yellow
atone and Mlaaonrl rlversi They started from Fort Robinson, An-
eherace, Alaska Lia jeep and switched te a eanee at Livingston.
,(AF Wirephete te The, SUtesman.)
Gorge Traffia
BacktoNorin
PORTLAND, Sept 29 - (tf) -
Railroad a rid highway traffic were
back to normal in the Columbia
river gorge today after week end
rock slides wrecked a train, kil
ling the engineer, and blocked
the Columbia river highway.
Repair crews cleared away the
wreckage of the Spokane. Port
land and Seattle pasenger train
near Wlshram, W.ashv The en
gineer, Oscar Lyle, of Vancouver,
Wash., was killed when the train
early Sunday piled into rocks
Washed down a normally dry gul
ly by a cloudburst
On the Oregon side of the riv
er cloudbursts washed mud and
rocks over several roads, all re
stored to normal by today.
JAP SHIPS TO BE SCRAP PD
WASHINGTON. Sept 29 AJPi-
The army announced today most
of the operating warships which
the JJnlted States got from the
Japanese fleet will be sold as
scrap. An announcement said that
an agreement made by state, army
and navy departments providM
for the sale to be made in Japan
by Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur's
headquarters.
WATERFIELD DEADLY
PITTSBURGH, Sept 29 HTrV
The Los Angeles Rams geared Bob
Water-field's deadly aerials and
unerring kicking to a crushing
ground attack to grind out a 48-7
National football league -victory
over the Pittsburgh Steeiers be-
fore 35,658 here tonight.
LI-G-ll'i DIG, IttW HIT!
The asadsosse daao
lag star of "Anchors
Aweigk" roaaim
the ffixl wtlh Am body
ltManhtll It's that lap
happy love-ad-Ufc
howl
pip' aV
7
End Today - Opens 1:41
x TerUous Holiday
with
Pat O'Brien - Alan Hale
Edgar Bnchanan - Andry Lang
Fsaatre Ne. I " ,
If Glroat to B Young?
with
Leslie Brooks - Jimmy Ltoyi
GENE KELLY
MarieLIcDonaM
CHAJUS FHTLLM trtwa
WIXKIKblR THAITEH BHKST03
A 6BX60HT UCAV1 rWnenon
PLUS
- Exciting Co-Feature
('mm
STARTS
THUnSDAY!
Red Tape Hit
In CAA Work
For Airports
PORTLAND. Ore. Sept. 29
Changes hi the civil aviation laws
must be made by the new con
gress to eliminate "bottle necks'
of red tape in the nation's airport
program. Paul Morris, national di
rector of the airport division of the
civil aeronautics authority, said
today.
Speaking to the northwest avia
tion planning council, Morris ans
wered criticism of the federal air
port aid program by aeronautics
directors of four states.
Morris said his office has done
"everything but break the law"
to encourage the program, but that
72 final airport applications have
reached his office for a program
which called for 900 airports.
W. H. Bartlett of Oregon, com
plained that none of the airports
built in the state have been with
federal assistance under the CAA
program.
Chet-Moulton, Idaho director,
said many communities have tired
of "red tape" and either built
fields with their own funds or
given up the idea entirely.
' The four state officials agreed.
however, that "loral lethargy" as
well as lack of local funds had de
layed progress of the CAA plan,
Jack Mifflin, president of the
Oregon Aviation association, said
the pessimism regarding thexin-
dustry s outlook was not Justified,
He said Oregon has more planes
per capita than any state but one
and that the Oregon industry's
volume has increased 400 per cent
in two years. He blamed the pres
ent lag in sales and activity to
over-expansion last year:
A plan for interstate cooperation
in search operations will be work
ed out as the result of the council
discussions.
Public Works
Building High
WASHINGTON, Sept 2S l.-P)-
Public works construction in
creased more, than 75 per cent in
Oregon the , first six months of
this year, compared with the same
period a year previous.
The total was 115,871,000 this
year, $9,585,000 the first half of
1948. Of this, $10,666,000 was on
highway work; $3,435,000 on non
residential building; $1,207,000 on
sewer and water improvements
and $563,000 on other contracts.
FAiuiEns msuruiuei: ghoup
Ado - Track Fire
YOUR financial seewity deserves eennd
preteetlea. Get the best ante r track In
surance available and enJoyV the savings
f a "continuing- form", non-assessable
policy.
I
8 Ccnr! St 3 x7
Salem. Oreron
Pksaa 5S51
BILL OSKO
Dist Mgr.
Living Cost Probe
In Portland Set
PORTLAND, Sept. 29.-;PHThe
congressional cost-of-living hear
ing opening here Oct. 20 will cov
er three fields: food, clothing and
home furnishings, the department
of commerce said today.
Food producers will testify on
the opening day. Testimony on
grocery, clothing, and home fur
nishing prices will be heard the
second day, with wholesalers, re
tailers, manufacturers, and pro
ducers testifying. Consumer
groups and labor representatives
will testify next
Ends Today
Spencer Tracy
Katherine Hepburn
In
"Sa of Grass"
- Abo -"7
Were Saved"
Tononnowi
lift $
11 i la,' J
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m& meet shouj,
f v-i;fp to mi ' 6 m
I wfth JOHN LUND B!UY DI WOLFl
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