t I . H The Statesman, Salem. Oregon, Saturday, April 23, 1941 Aurora City Official For 42 Years Retires AURORA, April 22-(Special)-George W. Fry. Aurora city re- corder for 42 yean and water su perintendent since 1810, retired from both jobs this week. He will be replaced by John O Drill, who will fill both dosU Drill came to Aurora last year and operates Aurora Builders iup ply company. MUSIC FESTIVAL AT ALBANY ALBANY, April 22-;P-A mu sic festival will draw a thousand high school students from the Wil : lamette valley here tomorrow. SH.VEBT0H SADDLE CLUB dahc. SalnrrJay Nighl April 23 SILVERTOII ARIIORY Vic Johnson's Orchestra of Salem Prizes for best dressed cow boy and best dressed cow girl. Best dressed child cowboy. Best dressed child cowgirl. Larges display of silver mounted saddles. Adm. 75c each, inch tax 11 oniie (DHenvood O VVoodry 10 Piece Band O Admission 85c O Students 60a DAIICE TONIGHT at CRYSTAL GARDENS Old Time and Modem Musle by Pop Edwards Oreh. Adas. Me (tax Included) Dance Tonight Ray Weidner'i Orrh. Modern and old-time Admission 60c HEIIRY'S HALL S. 12th & Leslie Orer Henry's Mist. DANCING T0IJ1TE to Wayne Slrachan's Ilnsic VFWHall Hood and Church Sta. Enjoy the Best Dance Floor in Salem DANCE Envoy Speeds 'Compromise' To Germany WASHINGTON, April 22 - (JPh An Ace American trouble-shooter, Robert D. Murphy, rushed over seas tonight to sell a "compromise plan of limited self-government to balking Germans arid thus prevent Russia from winning a big round in the cold war. The compromise was offered by the Big Three the United States, Britain and France after the powerful German socialist party turned thumbs down - on a Big Three offer for a federal German state with limited powers. In the compromise, made public tonight, the three powers gave in slightly to the socialists' demands for more centralized control of the finances of the proposed West German regime. Secretary of State Acheson pick ed Murphy, his top expert on Ger man affairs, to put the compromise across. Murphy, American politi cal adviser for the occupation, can celled important speaking engage ments in this country to make the trip. Plane Search Clues Fizzle PORTLAND, April Thir ty planes sought vainly today for an air force B-28 that vanished yesterday with two colonels and a sergeant aboard. Two clues blew up. Broken treer tops seen on Davis peak near Woodland, Wash., site of several plane crashes disclosed, on inves tigation, no wreckage. A faint carrier wave, heard by the airport tower and appearing to come from Davis peak, proved to have emanated from one of the search planes. YM Recruiting Conference for Salem Scheduled A YMCA recruiting conference to explain the possibilities of YM work as a career will be con ducted here Saturday, May 7, for college students, high school sen iors and others interested, Gus Moore. Salem YM general secre tary, announced Friday. The local session will be for the Oregon area. It will b held on the Willamette university campus -and at the YM building. It is in charge of i Moore. Prof. Charles Derthick of Willamette university and Fred Cords, YM physical director. An area YM official Is expected her to assist. $400,000 School Bond Vote May 23 MONMOUTH, April 22 -(Special)- Voters of Monmouth, Inde pendence and districts recently allied by a school consolidation election will ballot May 23 at Monmouth high school and Inde pendence grade school on a pro posed $400,000 bond issue. The bond issue would finance construction of a high school te serve the entire area. The build ing would be built ion a 40-acre plot midway between Independ ence and Monmouth. The joint school boards have i an option on the land. Construction would be complet ed in time for the 1950-51 school term. Every exciting moment of the stoge svecest I Every roie favorite start ill Tern Co way k& SS It Richard Creeawell rL. m . s J I Margaret H.mllten 1T"A1(R" Wi Color Cartoon Fua "BAD LUCK BLACKimr Wenatchee Wins Opener WENATCHEE. April 22-()-Hl-ters were far ahead of the pitchers as the Wenatchee Chiefs opened the Western International league baseball season here tonight by defeating the Bremerton Blue jackets 20 to 10. Seven pitchers went to the mound before the three hours and 15 minutes of the opener were over. Umpire Skulik added to open ing night festivities when he chas ed Bremerton manager Alan Strange and pitcher John Marsh all from the field in the fourth inning after they protested a call ed strike too vehemently. Two thousand twenty-four fans braved chill weather for the open er. Short score: Bremerton . 000 251 00210 14 2 Wenatchee .020 018 81x 20 15 1 Marshall. Halet (4). Pyrak (6), Maxwell (7) and Ronning; Bruce, Bartholomew (5), Gilson (6) and Pesut. Salem Obituaries TANS Louis Levold Ivuu. 1st resident of 3140 B JanMn St.. In this city April IS. at the as of 14 years, survivto by parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest H. r . a !m - J.t,ri T 1 1 a n it a Shaffer. Joan, Maxlne' and Carol Ivans, all of Salem; Dromers. naries ana rnj Evans. DO in ox Hicin; iicuulwicum, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Evans. Yakima. Wash.: and several uncles and aunts. Services will be held Saturday. April 23. at 3 p m. In the W. T. Rigdon cha pel. Interment In Belcrest Memorial park. LECHNER rradrick R. Lechner. late resident of S4S Ferry St.. st a local hospital. April 20. Survived by brothers, John Lech ner of Seattle. Wash . and William Lechner of Tacoma. Wash.: sister. Mrs. Anna Winter of Salem, nieces. Mrs. Jennie Wolfe of Sslem. Rena Lechner of Tacoma and Marion Potvln of Se attle, nephews. Ray Winter of Che noa. 111.. John Winter of Strater. 111.. Arthur Winter of Lacon. III., and Jack Lechner of Tacoma. Private services will be held Saturday. April 23. at 1030 am. at Clough-Barrick chapel. Interment at Belcrest Memorial park. Please omit flowers. TYRELL Mrs. Myrt Tyrell. at her home at 193 N. Commercial St.. April 15. Grave side services were held Friday. April 22. at 3:30 p m. at I OOF cemetery un der auspices of Salem Rebekah lodge. Dtrection by Howell-Edwards com pan v VVANNtlf DKUj, MUNOcan. M tamo JOCl J iriuviiLn umiiiii i MKUlUlltn lUIIili tjasM.kJcariMa 2nd Hit! John Carroll - Adele Mara in ANGEL IN EXILE" irrutrni a2L mmwm 1 JU,,W New Tomorrow! PVSSa piij ni ge svecest I j j played HIMIJJjj Mi 2nl Hit! .sBaaassaSBBSi Warner News Bevo-Seattle Go Postponed By the Associated Press Rain forced postponement of last night's Portland-Seattle Coast league contest The Los Angeles Angels edged out a 1-0 decision over Oakland's Oaks in a 12 inning thriller at Los Angeles. Bob Kelly went all the way for the Angels, giving up eight blows. Con Dempsey twirled San Francisco's Seals to a 7-5 ver dict over Hollywood's Stars and Sacramento's Solons topped San Diego, 7-2. Oakland 000 000 000 000 0 8 1 L. Ang's 000 000 000 0011 8 0 Nelson and Padgett" Kelly and Malone. ' San Diego ...100 000 100 2 13 2 Sacramento 141 100 10 2 Kipp, Seats (2), Galtef X4), Ol sen (6) and Ritchey; Gillespie and' Kerr, Plumbo (4). " j Hollywood 000 001 4-00-5: 10 3; S. Franciscb 202 210 0t 7 8 l j Paoke. Hughes (4K Maltzenber- ger (6), Salveson (8) syjd .Sand lock; Dempsey and Partee American Labor Leader Berates U.S. at Peace Meet PARIS, April 22-(P)-Donald Henderson, an American labor leader, told the communist-dominated world peace congress today that workers in the United States "will not be driven into a war against the Soviet Union." The delegates have heard speak er after speaker denounce the Un ited States and other western powers and praise Russia. Henderson, international presi dent of the tobacco, agricultural and allied workers union of Amer ica, an affiliate of the CIO, accus ed his own government of using "every device and trick to con fuse, divide, bribe and use demo cratic people as weapons against the forces of democracy In the world." County to Borrow Only 8100,000 For Road Repairs Marion county has decided to borrow only $100,000 from the state for road repairs instead of the $150,000 originally contem plated, the county court said Fri day. "We cut the request," said Judge Grant Murphy, "because after re considering the shape of the coun ty roads and this county's budget, the court decided the lower amount would suffice." The money is to be used in repairing county roads which were considerably damaged in one of the worst winters in county road history. The loan is expected to be negotiated 'immediately" from the highway funds, the judge said. It will be paid back in 1950 and 1951. PHONE S-S467 MATINEE DAILY FROM 1 Mi. PREVUE TONITE (ONE FEATURE) . . . AND I u I ii i N h H H O : T LnxIUouliv5ooo x : "FOR THE GIS YOU &?V& V-n BETRAYED, I'LL GET XTs UJ 1 YOU. IF IT IS THE Yw ? LAST LIVING i f) thing i do i Yvu rF rirvTv . : I U I fcLr O jojutY ACTOt . nmjjs thaxtb I Co-Hit I LJ:' VJ (J&r SaaTSaaatSBsV ' ''4KbsbTsSBB '4B0mr' lllWllllSaaSBaWEaaSE Stayton Couple Buy Half-Interest In Woolen Mills STAYTON, April 22-(Special)-Mr. and Mrs. John W. Etzel of Stayton have purchased a one half interest in the Paris Woolen mills from Wilbur Berry, it was announced today. Under a reorganization plan, John E. Powell will be president; Etzel, vice-president; John Pow ell, sr., treasurer: and Mrs. Eunice Phillips, secretary. Berry, who has been with the company for two years and was with Thomas Kay mills in Salem previously, will return to his home at Naragansett, R. I. Sixty per sons now are employed at the plant. 60 Flee From Portland Fire PORTLAND, April 22-(P)-Sixty apartment dwellers fled down fire escapes and aerial ladders to safety today from a pre-dawn fire that swept through a downtown build ing. The fire damaged the five-story Morrison -Park apartments and seven stores and offices on the ground floor. Damage was estimat ed at about $100,000. Eleven persons were overcome by smoke or were injured, none seriously. The fire started in the basement from an undetermined cause, and sent dense smoke throughout the upper stories. Child Rescued From 7-Inch Slot Between Walls PROVIDENCE, R. I., April 22-(yp)-Carol Ann Russell, 3, was re scued by firemen from a seven inch slot between two buildings 20 minutes after she slipped off a play yard roof adjoining her sec ond story home here late today. Playing with her sister, Frances, 10, the younger child fell Into the gap between the buildings and dropped 14 feet before she became wedged fast. Frances ran crying to her mother, Mrs. Lois Russell, who called firemen. Firemen sledged a hole In a foot-thick concrete wall and extri cated the child. She had suffered only minor bruises and fright. U.N. Vote Against Inquiry Into Trials LAKE SUCCESS, April 22-OP)-The United Nations voted today against any U.N. inquiry now into the iron curtain trials of Josef Cardinal Mindszenty and 15 Bulga rian protestant churchmen but de cided to keep the issue alive until next fall. The U.N. approved Instead an American-supported plan to invoke peace treaty guarantees of human rights and freedoms in those soviet satellite countries. STARTING TOMORROW! SILENT CONFLICT" Fox Iloviefone News Films Of Northwest Earthquake Damage! WASHINGTON OREGON IDAHO CANADA Oregon Gty to Join Fast Time OREGON CITY. April 22 -(JP) The city commission voted here today to go on daylight saving time Sunday, placing virtually all of Clackamas county on "fast time." The commission voted to con tinue on daylight saving time un til Sept. 11. The Clackamas county court followed suit. Of the county of fices, only the clerk's will remain open until 5 p.m. standard time (6 p.m. daylight saving time). Schools and offices will go on daylight saving time in Glad stone, West Linn, Milwaukie, Mo lalla arid Sandy. Only Canby has not voted to move clocks ahead. Winter's Touch Lasts at Baker BAKER, April 22-(;P)-The win ter has really hung around Ba ker's bathrooms. The city water department an nounced today that by next week the last of the frozen meters would be fixed. So many broke during the cold spell that they couldn't all be repaired at once. Some householders have gone without running water for 2Vs months now. POWER LINE BID GIVEN PORTLAND. April 22 -(P)- A low bid of $228,245 for clearing eight miles of right-of-way and constructing 23 miles of the Lyons Lebanon 230-KV transmission line was submitted by Lee Hoffman, Portland, today. 7 DEAD IN WRECKAGE INYOKERN, Calif., April 22-(P) -A navy plane missing since Feb ruary S was found with all seven persons aboard dead "today In the rugged Sierra Nevada 17 miles northwest of here. It carried five scientists and two pilots. TRADE MARK NOTICR Notice is hereby given that Lov-E Brassiere Company, a California cor poration of Los Anseles, Calif., has filed It trade-mark "PERSONAL PAT TERN" with the Secretary of State of Oregon. Ap. 23-30 My 7 TRADE MARK NOTICE Notice is hereby slven that Food Cooperative. Inc.. m Wisconsin cor poration, of Chicago, 111., has filed its trade-mark BABY SOFT with the Secretary of State of Oregon. Ap 23-30 My 7 Old Time DAIICE Every Saturday Nighl Over Western Auto 259 Court St. Jots the Crowd and Have Good Time MUSIC BY Ben's Orchestra Poblie Dance Adm. 60c. Inc. Tax ENDS TODAY! (SAT.) Edmund Gwenn "HILLS OF HOME" O Gloria Henry "RACING LUCK" Scoop! Starting Today! Sale .Airmail VFW Post to Hear Cancer Drive Talk The Marion county campaign for funds to help support the Ame rican Cancer society's battle against cancer will be outlined to Marion post B61, Veterans of For eign Wars, Monday night by Jo seph Hopkins of that post. Robert M. Fischer, Jr., campaign chairman, announced Friday that proceeds from the campaign will help the Oregon division form a statewide educational program to acquaint the public with how to recognize cancer symptoms in time for early treatment. OAKS PARK OWNER DIES PORTLAND, April 22 -(TV The owner of the Oaks amusement park, a fixture of nearly half a century on the Willamette river here, died today. He was Edward M. Bollinger, 72, who bought the park nine years ago after spend ing 44 years as superintendent and manager there. Doors open 1:00 p.m. for Hollywood Kids Club Talen Show Broadcast ever -KOCO 1:30-2:00 Stage Program - Prises Cartoons - Serial Special Matinee Feature! "LONE STAR RANGER -also -Benson's Birthday Cake - for - Suzanne Morris. Lorraine Stan dish, Sally Pessinger, Larry Em mons, Robert KIrby, Janice Gil lespie. Archie Elliott. Neil Bonn, Corky Melsinger. Clifford Yost, Peggy Huston, Daryel Donald son, Charles Hall, Rllma Mor ris, Donald Dyer, Dennis Pal mer. Eve Show Cont. after 5:30 p.m. ENDS TODAY! Plus Short Feature SSl an Ba am - 9 raTVaTV a 0 - a.T aft. SSat at .) ) IS S-SII9 M.f DC IU.1UH1.1 1 Starts Tomorrow Cont. 1:45 LUND HENDRIX aaav FITZGERALD MOMTT WOOUEY . Second Feature "Waterfront at Midnight" "r THt LITT1C HODSf IMTM "THF BIT. HITS f Hzn rr -r rT PHONE 3-3721 CONT. FROM 1 P. M. STARTING TODAY! TV0 BIG RICHARD DIX GAIL PATRICK EDWARD ELLIS JOAN FONTAINE O FUN CO-HIT! O JN A BOMBSHELL... y FROM ROMANTICALLY J MUSICAL BRAZ1U YB GTJIZAR BRUCE yj- -4 EDWAKD EVERETT HOXTON I ., BjCZ VELOZ AND YOtANDA I ' v t i t . .'-, OLOCTOON Jfcf L LATE NEWS I Mt 'l 52aSlSaWli3Ba2aS5alBs5 Potential Fuel Said Plentiful In Northwest ! PORTLAND, April 22-(P-The Northwest Fuels conference was told today that this jregion prob ably can supply plenty of fuel for expanding Industries.; Natural gas, hydroelectric pow er, coal, and atomic j energy were all mentioned as future sources oi fuel. i lets qo Roller Skating TONITE at thej j CAPIT0LA Boiler Rink Skating from 8: to 10:30 BUD ABBOTT LOU COSTELLO "TN THE NAVY" - And -f "WHO DONE IT" ..--I ' COLOR CARTOON LATE NEWSt KARTOON KARNIVAL Tsaiorrsw At lt:2ft with Reg. Show! Lstt Times Tedayt , k , Randolph Scott ! "RETURN OF BADMEN" ! William Gargan "WATERFRONT AT MIDNIGHT" RE - ISSUES! 111 S&h If Last Times Tonltet )jl nl Opens T pim. IM """Tv