l-Th tatemom Salem Orl, Justice Douglas Terms Labor Democracies' Hope of. Survival' PORTLAND, Ore, Nov. 24-G!p-Justice William O. Douglas of the . TT c dtrvrttma Cmiri tnrfav ninwH lahnr n fh rfmAiraHM' iKlAf hope for survival in a world fraught with fear." i He spoke at the national CIO convention. s Delegates gave the longest ovation of the convention to the Jurist wno iracea me growrn oi roe wonas his, ana roe rise oi laoor. Justice Douglas concluded his talk with: "Today labor, better roan any other element in our society, can weld the democrats of the world . Into a group within its power to 1 guide western civilization, neither to the right nor" to -the left, but ' down the broad middle Highway I, to abundance' to security, and to peace . CIO President Philip Murray ' called the speech "history-mak-" ing. He added, -it will ring . throughout the land and its effect will be felt everywhere. Douglas told the delegates, "these are fateful days for all peo pie of the world. Powerful ideo : logical forces are pitted against each other. There is an increasing " polarization to the left and to the : right. But the great middle group ; In all nations are the democrats Mirhty Contribution "American labor can contribute , mightily to the fusion of the var , ious democrats groups of the world into a harmonious whole. Ameri can labor can teach class-conscious groups the folly of class warfare. ' American labor can spread the faith In the American way that I builds a classless society without J exploitation of any group. Labor's rise in the last two gen 1 era t ions saved workers from "in . dustrial serfdom," he said, and added, "the human welfare state f is the great political invention of i the twentieth century, He said "but while labor was the prime promoter of the new human welfare state, all groups in society farmers, business and the rofessions were its beneficiar s." Earepe Labor Persecuted He asserted that while Ameri ; can labor became free, European ,: labor was persecuted and became 1 suspicious of all outside their own I class. "Out of this arises the Impor- tance of the fact that American la- bor carries good credentials to I western Europe. Doors tightly ; closed to all others may open at Its knock. Words from American I labor promise to find quick accep- tance," Douglas continued. "American labor can help Amer ica understand that Europe under the political management of social ' lsts is not a continent turning com munist but a people struggling for things that are precious to men everywhere . .. we need them and they need us. if totalitarianism is not to rule the world. 1 Picture Yourself 1 4s 1 a Christmas Gift For the "members of your family and your thtiiaat frind, you are the only person in the world who can give them a certain gift they'll cherish your portrait. Giving your photograph is an intimate, friendly way; of saying "Merry Christmas." Phone 3-7830 and Make Your Appointment Now KENNELL-ELIilis - f - - Artist Photographers 420 Oregon Bldg. Evenings by Appointment Hot Rolls - Roast Turkey and Dressing Mashed Potatoes - Giblet Gravy - SWeei Potatoes Creamed Peas - Cranberry Sauce - Stuffed Celery Olives and Jello Salad :- : Choice of Dessert Pie or Ice dream ' Sl.35 M GROSS'S COFFEE CUP 2370 Fcdrgrotmda Road 1 Salem Oregon Tharadfly, Noirem-ber 25. 1948 State Offices To Move into Old Houses Three state offices will move next week into temporary quar ters in" North Capitpl street houses within a block of the new state office building where the offices eventually will locate. Secretary pf State Xarl T. New bry said th houses recently ac quired by the state are in good condition and are being converted into office space with a minimum of change. J The state i auditing bureau will move into Uhe former Turner home at 355; N, Capitol st The assessment and taxation di vision and part of the state income tax division of the state tax com mission wiH move into the old Worth home! 37$ N. Capitol st, at the Center sh eet corner. Space vacated in the state cap itol will be required by the legis lature when it meets here In Jan uary. f u? Willamette U. Speakers Gain Contefet Finals Willamette university speech students today; had gained the final round of competition In five events of the 14th annual Western Speech association tournament in Seattle. i i Willamette is represented among 100 college students competing in debate and speech and participat ing in a Student Congress discus sion of current ' events, according to an Associated Press dispatch from Seattle Wednesday night These Willamette finalists were listed: Thomas BartLett of Salem, in junior men's extemporaneous speaking, and in after - dinner speaking; Jack! Gunn, Monmouth, in junior men's extemporaneous speaking and impromptu speak ing; Robert Sayre, Beaverton, in senior men's impromptu speaking. In addition ja Willamette debate team reached the finals. i Si Thanksgiving Dinner Uenu Three Courses Fruit Cocktail H To Mothball Fleet 2) - .- z'- I KAYONNE, N. J.. Nov. 2-The now a part oi we u. o. Auanne reserve iieet mowiDanea si Bayonne. N. is moved by a bevy of tugs back to Bayonne after a routine overhauling at the New York Naval Shipyard in Brooklyn. (AP Wirephoto to The Statesman.) Families Gather For Annual Thanksgiving Feed By tta Asaocutad Press America prepares its feast of harvest today in a Thanksgiving day ceremony that observes roe custom or 327 years. As families gathered for the holiday, transportation lines reported heavy travel by rail, bus and air. Extra facilities including special put into operation. In Washington. President Tru man will spend the day working at his desk, but will take time off for a family turkey dinner at Blair house, across from the White House. Mr. Truman has no plans to at tend church or receive visitors over the holiday. Yesterday, Mr. Truman received his seventh Thanksgiving turkey present a 35-pound live Oregon master torn turkey, presented by the Exchange club of Salem, Ore. Te Watch Parades iApproximately a million people are expected to watch giant par ades in New York and Philadel phia, with Santa Claus taking a prominent part. Elsewhere there will be football games and other forms of enter tainment. In Seattle, the Boeing airplane company gave 25,000 employes a four-day holiday. New Americans A number of new Americans will sit down to their first Thanks giving dinners in America. j They are among the thousands of displaced persons arriving I in the country under the new D. P. law. ! One turkey of all the millions being led to the chopping block apparently will escape the usual fate. This turkey is Darline, a North Windham, Me., house pet. Dar line, 15 years old, has nothing to worry about, say Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Connolly, who own her. In fact, while the Connollys tit down to eat some other turkey to morrow, Darline will eat turky right with them. Pre-Induction Draft Exam Set PORTLAND, Nov. 24-(;p-Pre-Induction examinations are set for December 1 to 17 for men needed to fill the Oregon draft quota in January. The quota is 164 men. Maj. Gen. Thomas E. Rilea, se lective service director, reported the number to be examined would be 668. He said there was a high rate of rejection among men called for November and December quotas. Exams will be conducted at Portland and Eugene, with eastern Oregon men going to Boise. The 78 inductees due to leave in November are to be sworn in next Monday and Tuesday. De cember quotas will be sworn in December 28-30. Permits to Cut Yule Trees Sought Applications for Christmas tree cutting: permits are flooding the State Forestry department here, Nels Rogers, state forester, an nounced Wednesday. . Rogers predicted that the 1948 harvest would be the largest in the history of the state. Most of the trees cut will be used locally, he said, although shipments to' Cali fornia, Kansas and Hawaiian is lands will exceed 200,000 trees. Price of the trees to purchasers probably will range from 75 cents to $4 per tree, Rogers predicted. THAIIESGIVniG DnniEn tSTJZZL. $1.50 GOLD ARROW RESTAURANT 159 Fairgrounds Road I - J!2Tf 1 35,000 - ton battleship North Carolina. Across Nation trains and flights were being Cliing Tackles Mediation in Dock Walkout By Th Associated Press The government's top mediator tried his hand Wednesday at breaking the stalemate in the East coast shipping strike negotiations. Cyrus S. Ching, director of the federal mediation and conciliation service, conferred with union and management representatives. If the j parties are unable to make prog ress by themselves, Ching said, the service will "make proposals' to the disputants. Earlier, the AFL International Longshoremen's association said it was standing pat on 11 demands. Spokesmen for the New York stup ing association said they were un animously resolved to make no new offers to the 65,000 striking dock workers. The strike had tied up 249 ships in five major eastern ports. Thou sands of railroad and truck work ers serving the ports have been laid off and some sugar refining operations have been shut down in Philadelphia. Airline Pilots Strike Ends WASHINGTON, Nov. 24 -6P- Settlement of the 9-month-old National Airlines Pilots strike was announced here tonight. A joint statement by National Airlines, Inc., and David Behncke, president of the striking Airline Pilots association .said the pilots will return to work under condi tions which prevailed before the walkout began several months ago. The dispute over dismissal of a pilot, which caused the strike, will be submitted to arbitration under supervision of the National Media tion board, the announcement said. Color Movie Monopoly Ends WASHINGTON, Nov. 24-0P- Attorney General Clark today an nounced the Eastman Kodak com pany has made an agreement which he said will "open the col or motion picture industry to com petition." The agreement was a consent judgment ending an anti trust suit against the company. The attorney general said the judgment was entered this after noon by Judge William C. Mathes in the federal district court at Los Angeles. Clark said the judgment enter ed by Judge Mathes required Eastman to license all of its cur rent patents for colored motion pictures to any applicant on a royalty free basis, and to furnish such persons with the "know how needed to use the patents. FOB FMENDLIEB HMaMMtf MMHMi wrirf it wwii ' w 1 i my-m mm i I Msg? e3tf$&Q&s 520 N. BUS DEPOT Doctor Dies From Polio, Family Struck PORTLAND, Nov. 24-,P)-The polio death of a 38-year-old scien tist and infantile paralysis cases of his wife and son were under investigation today. Dr. Birdsey Renshaw, a Univer sity of Oregon Medical School re search scientist, succumbed to polio last night. His wife is hospi talized With polio; his son. Tom my, 6, is recovering from polio; and his 3-year-old son. Bruce, has had an illness which might be a sub-clinical (slight) case of polio. Two Children who live in the same Portland West Hills near the Renshaws recently were stricken with the disease. Dr. Thomas L. Meadow. Citv Health officer, said the bureau was investigating to see whether there was any common factor con tributing to the polio attacks. I feel it is a coincidence that two families in the same neigh borhood happened to get polio at about the same time," he said, however. Questioning showed that the two families used different sources of milk, shop in different places, and send their children to differ ent schools. Meadow said the Renshaws ap parently contracted polio from their son. It is not certain where the children of the other family contracted the disease. Atomic Bomb Said Treatment "pVw T nnlrjmin i --- w jlv iiivvlllld By Howard W. Blakeslee Associated Press Science Editor NEW YORK. Nov. 24 -UP- The atomic bomb in Nagasaki gave one man a good treatment for his leukemia. It did not. however. cure himr This healing effect of an atom bomb is reported todar in the American Journal of Sureerv bv Dr. Austin M. Brues of the Uni versity of Chicago. 'One of the professors of the Nagasaki medical school," he writes, "who was suffering from chronic myeloid leukemia, and had not been responding well to radiation therapy, enjoyed pro longed remission us a result - of the radiation received at the time of the blast. Ths professor got a big "dose of gamma rays from the flash of the bomb, the same rays that caused an estimated eight to 15 per cent of Japanese deaths, also loss of hair for many people and temporary sterility. These gamma rays are exactly the same as the X-rays which the professor had been receiving and which had failed to help his leukemia. The bomb rays, however, were much more penetrating than most X-rays or most radium gamma rays. The professor was in the Nagasaki medical college, which was only a few hundred yards from the point where the bomb went off. He was close enough so that out in the' open the rays would have caused his death even if concussion and burns failed to kill him. The building walls shielded him from the full force of the bomb's gamma rays, and at the same time by sheer luck gave him just the dosage which helped his leu kemia. X-rays and gamma rays never cure leukemia. The rays make a patient feel better for varying lengths of time, and the bomb did this for the professor for an un usually long time. Fishing Vessel Dashed to Pieces ASTORIA, Ore., Nov. 24 -UP) The 75-foot fishing boat Good News, which collided with a tank- er off Cascade head Monday night, washed up on the beach two miles north of Gear hart, ore- toaay. i Kenneth A. Webb, marine in- surance surv eyor, said she came i ashore in ten thousand pieces the biggest intact piece a 40 foot starboard section. The Good News' crew abandon ed the boat three hours after the collision. The four men were taken aboard the tanker. Approximately 20 per cent of gainfully employed people in the United States are engaged in ag riculture, forestry , and fishing combined. RELIEF AT LAST For Your COUGH Creoaaulsioa relieve prompdr because it goes right to the teat of the trouble to tvrlo koca and expel cerm ladea phlegm sod aid nature to soot&e aed heal raw. tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membrane. Tell your druggist to tell you a bottle of Oeoaulstoa with the uBoerttsndiag you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back, CREOIYIULSION f or Coujhs.Chest Colds, Bronchitis BUS SERVICE High, Marion at IHl Phone 3-3815 Canyons of pnow f " " i. -raeW . v i. a ' i " r f i - ' 4 1 1 ! it' - i i - , . . ! " m ' '' "- : . M ' r i fr -. - ,. . ... t. t 4 HASTINGS. Neb Nov. 24 One s c t trm hirh drifts of snow alter Nebraska buzzard, The scene Is ion High way 8. about 29 miles east of Hastings, Neb., the last major! highway reopened te travel after the storm. (AP Wirepbote to The States man.) Breaking It To Him Gently ! I SIOUX CITY, Nov. 24-(P-Abe E. Saddff, who operates a theater here, early today received a tele phone call at his home from a por ter at the theater. I can't work down here today. Mr. Sadoff," said roe porter. Why i not? "I can't see." ' "Whyi can't you see?" "Because of all the smoke. "Smoke? What smoke?" "Why, the smoke from the fire." Thatl was how Sadoff learned his theater was one of several downtown establishments hit by flames in a $1507000 fire. Chinese Claim Reds Repulsed NANKING, Nov. 24-;P-Gov-ernment warplanes flew back into the battle of Suchow today, and press accounts asserted the new communist offensive was thrown back on both the east and south. Newspapers reported recapture of the anchor city of Suhsien, 80 miles south of Suchow. Despite this and a rash of other 1 optimistic dispatches, many ob servers believed the government still was losing ground in the bat tle for the Suchow-Nanking nerve center of China. (The communist radio reported no new gains but dismissed gov ernment claims of victory "dur ing the Past few days" as "hallu cination.") $4,685 Stolen by Portland Bandits PORTLAND, Nov. 24 -(At- Eta Frances jHillman, 45-year-old mo tel ownfr, was robbed of 94,000 in jewelry and $685 in cash today by a trip of red-masked bandits A foufth man waited in a car, while this three forced their way into the motel and ransacked Miss Hillman's room. Their handkerchief-made masks were so crude that at first ' Miss Hillman took It all as a Joke and tried to j yank one mask loose. "Do a you are told," snapped one of the men, "and you won't get hurt" Power Renewal Causes Fire in Musgrave Home WEST SALEM, Nov. 2 4-Th stoppage of electricity here to night didn't bother West Salem's Mayor Walter Musgrave quite as much as when it came on again. One hot plate was apparently left on during the outage and a 10 pound sack of sugar was7 tempor arily placed on top. Shortly after the tights came on, Musgrave dis covered the sugar ablaze. Damage was confined to the sugar sack. MATINEE TODAY Shew Centtnaens From 1:45 CORNEL LINDA WILDE-DARNELL 7 ANNE KIRK I A BAXTER-DOUGLAS V ANN DVORAK rius Cemedy Feature "LINDA BE GOOD" Elrse Knox, Marie Wllsen, Jena Hubbard -V. -. ,J ; 'Dim - way traffic moves through lt-foet deteriorating9 ituatioiim Berlin Feared PARIS, Nov. 24 - (fl) 4 Reliable sources said tonight Dr.jJuan A. Bramuglia of Argentina is making an urgent appeal to the Big Four powers against any moves that might heighten tension lit Berlin. Bramuglia is current president of the Security council. Hi was re ported anxious to guard against failure (of the latest attempts of the six "neutral" nations on the coun cil to mediate for a lifting of the Berlin blockade. I The 'informants said .Bramuglia was deeply concerned over recent reports: of a ''deteriorating" situa tion in Berlin! itself, and by grow ing pessimism in western quarters over chances :for a settlement. He plans to meet again tomor row with the five other neutrals- China, jBelgium, Syria, Colombia and Canada for a study of replies' irom roe Dig powers xo a Question naire on currency problems of Ber lin. ' It is on the basis of these replies that the six powers hope! to work out a fomula i satisfactory to both sides for lifting the blockade and introducing Soviet currency for all of Berlin. i The three western powers agreed today to! submit to neutrals of the security council a secret British French plan for Berlin currency controls that was drafted more than two months ago. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, American military governor in Germany, de clined to sign the document last September 7, when negotiations were under way in Berlin on the ground that the proposed control mechanism was defective, French sources said. : Prowler Enters Market,; Leaves Goods Untouched A prowler went to a lot of trou ble to enter i Erickson's market, 3000 Portland rd, Tuesday night but apparently left the place empty-handed, city police report ed Wednesday. The hard i working burglar sucked boxei to reach the roof, enlarged a hole big enough for a man to crawl through, i climbed down a a ladder into the refriger ator room, tore a board loose from the wall to unlock the door to the main store and prowled the office. Nothing was reported missing or out of place, j - J CONTINUOUS HOLIDAY SHOWS TODAY! And! ion rwciw -jKmm wm. teaum bake Extra: Bog Bonny News NOW AUn Ladd Deana Seed i Beyond Glery" nd Key Kegers and Trigger la Eyes j ef Texas' ... j Portland May Suspend Auto Test Order PORTLAND, Nov. 24-P)-Port land will not scrap its automobile testing station, but may suspend compulsory . features for private cars. The city council today turned down an ordinance calling for abandonment of the station through which all cars in the city are required to go twice yearly. However, by a 3-2 vote, the coun cil approved partial suspension until April 10. This nifnemlan mutt Ks tnrnr DO rated Into an ordinance Kfm-a It is effective. Unless there is I a unanimous vote, 49 days would be required to put the ordinance through. i " The suspension until next spring economy and possibility that the legislature can be prompted to enact a state-wide testing law. Taxies and emergency vehicles would be required to have test station aDnroval even unrior ihm suspension. Private cars could be inspected at the owners' option J Man Hurt in Polk Wreck Narcisse Lafhnnr 75 fair- en to a McMinnville hospital Wed nesday mgnt arter he was injured when struck by a car four miles northwest of Rnnri highway 14. state police reported. Lnance was struck by a car uwven Uj Anay i-yie uumore, Dallas, as he ran across the road in iront or his home. He had Just gotten off a bus. state nnlir oM Gilmore told nolle he wa hiinrt- ed by lights of the bus and did not see the man before the car struck him. it LaChance sufferm nmVM ii and minor injuries In the accident. Snow full In f Via trnnliki t).,til changes to rain unless it falls o high peaks. - , - i NOW SHOWING!1 Opens :45-8tarts 7:15 Donald O'Cenner -Marjorle Main "FEUD IN FUSSIV ' AND A FIGHTUf i Bob Mltchnm . - Barbara Hale "WEST OF FECOS - COLOR CARTOON LATE NEWS!. ' Ml t . f 'JK'Xv' Mat Daily from 1 T. M. NOW SHOWING! , fMatt AX8T srvsa i . FUN CO-IUT1 ira eftfrv ..4 n. irw rYt t 9n!rrrti:iiB(Hio COLOR CARTOON -NEWSl CenL rrem 1 F. M. NOW! THUIXSt A Ce-IIit YeuTl Level New! Cent From 1 F. M. EAXTCR MOLDIM t- mrrs ftiNoiX Gene Aatry TWILIGHT ON BIO GRANDE I AT THXSI J V TKZATBISIj f -i mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ii . -J7 5 1 .8 4