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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1949)
! ! ! : I , 4 ) ! ; : . ' - i k i j i ' . ' Proposal Wouid Add Story to C o lir tl M pu se Discussion of a newly-proposc; girl? would femaih at lour. Ac- luvenile detention department which would add a story to 'the - i new Marion county courtho jse monopolized the courthouse build ing, commission meeting here Wednesday. The too-floor Quarters would reauire construction of only a t partial story. Much of the space would be devoted to a solarium aimilar to that at the new Oregon state treatment hospital. This would expand fresh air and exer cise facilities for the juvenile. - The plan also would separate! Juvenile from the jafl and re-! move the "stigma of convicts" from them, a one member pot It. Both jail and juveniles would te on the top floor if plans re-, jnained as they were. Under plans suggested a matron would have quarters on the top floor and be available for call wit.Ji women prisoners below. The new plan would: acid a gixth floor, including the base ment, to the new courthouse, II would enlarge the quarters for housing juvenile boys to 14 or 16 as compared with a capacity of eight in earlier plans. Space foe ' OtP 033ID0 - Children used to write in copy books: "The sun neer sets on the British empire." Now the sun doesn't rise on the j the United Slates does not, ratify The administration had pro ih RntKh emoire: but the British . the North Atlantic security treaty, duced a bill, known as the Thorn- flag still flies round the glooe anq , the British king is still the sym- j bol ef a unity of nations. A few , days ago Britain went through ; another of the ' metamorphoses ; that have enabled it to survive as political going concern. The ; ties that bind were greatly re laxed and some were severed as with Ireland; but Britain has: shown a remarkable adaptability i to change, ever since the AmerJ can colonists smacked George III in the snoot and got away with .t. The latest change in relations with overseas one-time segments of the empire was the adoption of -Commonwealth of Nations' as the title of the countries which r recognize the king of Britain a ; the "JTtnbol or me irrr -tion of nations. No allegiance to the king is required. This change was made so that India, now an inde ;. j . ...KIiV muld still be uriiuviik - p - -i : ; a member of the e lately Trian1 nf course lately aetered the last tie: Africa under the r.,t-h descendants) and South Africaners i it restless. But bv the .rephrasing of language fn -Hhe. Statute of Westm-nster -hirh transformed the British empire into the British Common wealth of Nations, a continuity of relationship, tenuous though it be. ; .-rved Canada Is tndepend- .r.M An-tralia and. New Zea- i t.nd but they still profess allegi- ance to the . , . (Continued on Editorial pagel Woodworkers Sign Contract Several shops in Salem that are pot members of the Wood oik Employers association have signed 1949 wage agreements calling fo 17 l cents an hour increase, r U VanSwearmen. executive secre tary cf the Salem building trades council, sasi Wednesday. Still idle are about 100 members f Mlllmens local" Mil employed at four Salem firms belonging to the Woodw oik Employers associa- tion. Dmsion. or the nrm j niminr millworkers closed April , le " following a strike by AFL millworkers at a Portland plant. Band FuncLDrive Tops Half Mar,k Leaders of the parents organi: atnn for Salem high school bahd and orchestra said Wednesday half the $1,500 goal has been attained and a tag day will be held Satur day to further the campaign for nds lo send the music groups to i a state contest'tn Klamath Falls. Bind and orchestra members and their parents will meet at 7:30 tonight in, the school cafeteria to snake the tags for the Saturday so licitation. Animal Crackers By WARREN GOODRICH .t commoaanon mi we new jau .-i were set for 60 men and 10 worn en. Interim - waiting space for mental case was reduced from six to room for on man and one woman. ' ; j ' ! Sentiment prevailed among members thai the; new story can be added without exceeding the building estimate of Sl.500.000.lt is hoped that floor"" pace can be J held to 1CK7.000 square feet and building co-ts to about $12 per square 'foot. Grant Murphy, Marion counjy judge, requested that rough esti mates be secured as soon as pos sible on the building s cost. Minor changes in plant were ; made on Recommendations to i Architect Pietro Belluschi by the ; county clerk; assessor, recorder treasurer and. county judge. Re- ; vised plans will be submitted to ; all county official?. Belluschi is studying the pofsi- ; bihty of preserving the godries of liberty now atop the court house tow er.j; he-laid Possibility of -incorporating a clock in th. i new structure also is under study v the architect .said. Dulles Warns Senate Pact Vital to Peace I WASHINGTON. May A-JJ't -ijohn Foster .Dulles told senators j in effect today that the decision ; for war or peage is in their hands. Dulles. American delegate to the United Nations, testified to the senate foreien relations committee that "war is highlv probable" if Under the 'constitution, treaties must be ratified by the senate be fore they become effective. Dulles reasoned that failure Ct the United States to ratify the pact would be regarded by some of the other 11 signing nations as a repu- aiation 01 trie American attitude ; yesterday. This would have re toward mutual defense, causing ! tained some major features of the them to chance their plans. . ' Taft-Hartley act. notably the 80 Out of thai would come a war," , day injunctions to stall off "na he asserted. - tirl emereencv strikes." lie dsd not specify what nations he thought would revise their se curity precautions in the event the United Statef failed to ratify the treatv. 1 Dusting Rate For 1949 Set $3.15 Per Acre The Polk County Dusting Co operative has established 1315 acrff a 49 crop Ousting rr,arKes. Charles Ross, president has announced Ross states' that this charge in ' luries the cost of dust delivered to the plane and the application by airplane. Surplus funds at the ciose of the ;year"s business will be refunded to members of the cooeerativ e on an av erage basi In 1948 growers were refunded 66 cent 'per acfe out of the original $3 60 charge, Contracts for dust application haif been let to . Joe Card and F.van Flsasi -of Dallas and Ace Flving service at ;Sa!em. Ross rerr.ihd all Austrian pea and hairy; Vetrh ; growers that grower contracts iiare now avail able. 'Contracts may be signed with any cf the diten tois or at the county extension ffice in Dallas Director?! are Chjarles Ross. Dal las. John , rjickenison. Indopenri ene Wesley 5Thnk Willamina Cerald Freeman, j Ru ki eall arid Wiley Gardner. Dallas. See Farm Pajies 6 and 7 Frost Forecast w O 1 A in Salem Area f Local frosts are predicted for tonight and eai ly Fi iday mornir:-' i in the Salem ares bv the V. S weather biueau at : McNary field ! Tern pe rait lire? aire expected to. j rise KiKber tooay to about 68 de grees. A low reading of near 34 degrees is expected ti(?hv te weather bureau : reported early this morning ' The anticipated;; 17.5 foot crer-t for the Wtlarntte river at SaVem failed to materialiie. The waters crested late Tueiav at 14 4 feet rd the nver continued to fall all day Wednesday. Smoke, Gas Thwart Attempts To Rescue 4 Trapped Miners GIRARDVII.LE, Pa , May 4-.,JP ; Not a sound or sign has come -Smoke and ' gasflumes tonight ! from them, Eire cut off the mine's drove back;; rescue workers at -; communications system. Voices tempting toi reach four miners j rioh't carry beyond(the first level, trapped, S00; feet 'iinde-eround in ; 300 feet below the surface, a burning anthracite mine. Several rescue workers, wear- Four larg fans were in operA . ,s6to, its and ga, masks, Uon attemptiftg to clear away the wm dJWn the 1 , , . They reached 500 feet bHt smoke Merrtber P C crew st.d ,hem by ready to go intq the mine wrth, brQke t , h a fog noble r attached to a fire m ,. ,f tnrvm nf Mmtti I help dispef-s the smoke. j A member; cf ; he crew said earlier tests' ihowred a monoxide1 coritent ef te furties a high a 10 per cent and thathisualW ore-half ct or per cent proved fatal. "we haient the; least idea of, whether the men" are dead or t alive," said the cornpany sookes- ' man. We ire just hopine. j The miners were; trapped short ly before last mwinleht in the No. .5 colliery of the Giibertson Coal company, : twp mJes from this astern Peifraylvania hard coal commuoitj. j - 83th YEAH DtSfl ff : j Surprise Reversal Junks Wood's Bill . By Narrow Margin WASHINGTON, May 4-,P-The Wood labor bill to re-enact most of the Taft-Hartley law was junked today as the! house sent it back to committee by the hair's breadth margin of 213 to 209. "This Surprise reversal of yesterday's vote by which the house accepted the bill, 217 to 203, was hailed by Trurnan democrats as a tactical victory. w But all sides recognized that the victory was tactical only. It left the Taft-Hartley act. bitterly de nounced by President Truman ' and labor unions, still on the recognized that the statute books. ;On the senate side today toe Taft i(R-Ohio introduced bill to "retain the best features of the Taft-Hartley law." He safd it; would preserve 22 important provisions while m a k i ng 28 changes. Today's tense vote in the house was the climax to months of maneuvering and bitter fighting as-lesinsxi measure, to repeal i the Taft-Hartley act and revive the Wagner act with some chang- , Deciding that this measure had no chance- in the house. Speaker Ray burn produced a compromise . . j The house rejected even compromise yesterday. Then it approved the Wood bill, sponsored I by Rep. Wood (D-Ga) and backed ' by a strong coalition or nortnern ; distance southeast of Han- republicans and southern demo- , kow. crats. Previous reports .had said most But the vote for.it was not fin- j cf the officials of Kiangsi pro al. Overnight Rep. Priest (D-j Vmce already had fled from Kan Tonn). the democratic whip or-,' chang. assistant leader, worked feverish- : Reliable reports to Canton, in ly as did other administration - South China, said Gen. Pai Chung men. Tho i result was today's re- Hsi, commander in central China, versaLi announced amid cheers j from the administration side anl J solemn alienee from the other 1 camp. Firebuc Fireman Savs Sirens Sooth Heart Cool Nerves ! SEATTLE. May 4 -fPi- A for mer volunteer fireman has con fessed he set four fires in a partly built high school building be cause the sound of the siren soothes his nerves, county de tectives said today. Detectives Gordon Sandell and Harold Wfeland identified the man as Richard (Ace) Brundage. 22 He was arrested and held with out charge. The detectives quoted him as explaining "Whenever I am lying around not working, my he'Art starts act ing ud. I cet nervous and lose consciousness . . . The sound the siren cools rov nerves." of Milkmen. League Of Women Voters Ask Milk Price Cut PORTLAND. Mav -i.- Milk distributors here and the Port land Iacue of Women Votet today asked the state director of agriculture to speed steps to re duce consumer milk prices The Portland Milk Distributers association aM there were enough grade A milk producer to! assure a 1C0 per cent supply. The milk men said it would spur coti su mot Jon. The women's league said the public is charged1 more than else where and called for an immed iate -hearing on the issue. unrtergrpund. Four miners, par- tiallyercome by smoke and gas. reached the surface safely. But four were trapped as dense smoke collected in the damp, dark tun nels. Officials reported the fire halt ed! operation of all water pumps. This raised, the fear the entombed T..a men may; crown in tne rising waters. Trapped are William Keilv, 49. and Joseph Wowak. 34. both of Shennandoah; and Raymond Eye. 3J and William O'Brien. S3, of Gir ard villa. If PAGES : ' ( Communists Press Central China By U A.ociatl Presa Chinese government forces were reported preparing Wednesday to : abandon Hankow before the grow- ing peril of a communist envelop ment to the soUtheastwhicn tnrea , . 4-,i..-iihat antral China o. j A cmmunist broadcast om Peiping Announced the cap- . ture of Loping. Only 80 miles northeast of Nanchang. The com- i munists said government soldiers ! were in flight before them and that I most of the nationalist 68th army ; --possibly; 20,000 men - - was f The fall of Nanchang. Kiangsi j attack the railway frona Hankow ! tQ South china. Nanchang is 165 ! east of lhe raiiway anj an would move his headquarters from Hankow to Changsha within 48 hours. Changsha. capital of Hunan province, is .w mues sou in oi rianKow. Travelers from Changsha said the hard-pressed Pai had sent three divisions; of his 200.000-man forces south ; to prevent Gen. Cheng Chien. governor of Hunan province, from; making peace with the Reds I ' General Cheng has been repre- L.u" faV,nn P80! deal ' house-approved funds m paren with the comimunist similar to ; xhesm inciut e thatby which Peip.ng was surren- vs and harbors-Columbia dered . i t ,i-;n w. Hankovc faced imminent isola- , tion without the advance of Red columns. . , Sheridan Church Sued for Sll 0.000 By Former Pastor . SHERIDAN;) May 4 The Rev. George B. Forrester, former pas I tor of the Chjistian church here, j is suing local church officials for $110,000 damages, a court filing in Portland showed today. Forrester resigned the pastorate last winter alter a dispute with church elders. j In the suit against five church officials, he main tains his telephone was discon nected, the basement padlocked so he couldn't get fuel, and repair of frozen water pipes was re- jected by the elders. , ward hold in the river tug Mar Forrester asks $50,000 for in- garet Ann was damaged bv fire jury to his reputation. $50,000 for late today -at a moorage in the Dunitive damages and 510.000 for j Willamette rS-ver. iriury to his credit standing in ; . Sheridan. Babv Recovering From Head Wound PORTLAND, May 4-P)-A thi ee-year-oldiirl, shot when she got hold of her state policeman father's pistol, w;as recovering in a hospital here today. Karen Lee Wadsworth, daugh ter of State Policeman William Wadsworth, was flown here by chartered plane from her Medford home. She was shot in the head late yesterday! while she and a 4-year-old cousin played with her father's pistol.) A grandmother. Mrs. Emma L. Wadsworth aO Salean. met the plane here and rushed Karen to a hosottal. Attendants said today the tot was not inj critical condition. STTTmmTFTT!!t j 17113 t J t f I IU J I i 11 Max. . M . S2 . 5 . 1 M-a. 14 37 5 PteHo J.3 'tin Portland 5n Frincuco 4 New York S3 Willi wit river 14 4 feel. FORECAST 4ff-n V. S. weather bureau. McNary field. Salem 1: Mot! clear todjrr n& !touht. SIialKly warm er todav wttte hirhru temperature Beer S oecrees: lowest toniht Bear 34 w-ttH tct-mi frosts, condiuooi iairoxDie lor Im artivttiee oea. SALEM P BXCXP1T ATIOH (Sept. I te May II l Tfcse Tear Last Yeas Xarmal atM a.a POU NDB I Tb Orecjon Scrlem. Doelkaidl Soft fiw RHsiy 31 3 Amity Marks 1 , N cipt ; - . tv "hi". I si 1 iii -it- " i ii Ji'f - ii iii n ii y NEW YORK, May 4 United States Ambassador-at-Large PbUip C. Jessupf. second from right) an Setr let Deputy Foreign Minister Jakob A. Malik-shake hands at the conclusion of a conference here to day to end the Berlin blockade. Britain's Sir Alexander Cadogan (left) and Jean Chauvel watch. (AP Wirephoto to The Statesman). Efff orts to r n. a. ueiroii rrojeci Fund Included In Senate Study WASHINGTON', May 4 (JP) Federal funds for flood control and river bank protection on the Willamette river and the Detroit TreserVoir were included in the $87,605,800 earmarked by a sen ate appropriations subcommittee todayv Oregon would get the major share1 of appropriations approved a total of $70,521,500. Biggest single item was $40,000,000 for I the McNary lock and dam on the Colurhbia river near Umatilla. Breakdown on the projects, with , ,h. arIT,'v .,ir:- wt, rh,.,, ,.f low Vancouver. Wash., and Port- ' land.:$lfir.H00 ($111,000): Yaquina Bay and harbor. $35,000 ($24,000). , and Depoe Baf , S442.00ti (none). Flood control Detroit reservoir, ' $11,300,000 ($8,408,200); Willa mette river (bank 'protection) $500,000 ($372,100); Dorena reser voir, $2,924,000 ($2,175,700); Fern Ridge reservoir, $208,000 ($154. 800). The subcommittee's report goes next - to the full appropriations comnjiTtec where amounts for in dividual projects stand a chance of being decreased. After senate and house differences are adjusted ' the b 11 wili be returned to both ' chambers for final action. The bill also includes funds for pro- i jects : in Washington, Alaska and Idaho. FIRE DAMAGES Tt'G PORTLAND. Mav 4oJ,A frlr- ISRAEL INVITED TO V. X. LAKE SUCCESS. MayxA-itff,-Israei was invited today to come to the U, N. tomorrow and state its claim f-r membership. New York Couple Expected I Triplets, Got: 2 Boys, 2 GirL NEW YORK. May 5 - P - Quad - rupletsf-tw o boys and two girls were born to a Bronx mother , possible fourth one, it bow led me late today. ; over anyway when I heard about Lebanon hospital, where they ; it.' He added that he was "ab were born, said the mother is solutely delighted." Mrs. Ethel Collins. The hospital j h and Mrs. Collins were mar said "everything's under control." , rjed in 194 1 . He served overseas The odds against quadruplet ; wjth the Coast Guard during the births is one to 551,271. An aver- viar. age of about three sets a year are j 0spital authorities said the I?, alLve in th Vr!.51; ! four babies came from three am- iy. now wooaeriiu. ir. - una said wrten toio ox tne roui Uo'e births. The babies were placed In in incubator and were reported, 'do ing well." The father said the babies will be named Andrew Ray mond kEd -ward Charles, Linda Carol and Barbara Ellen. Mrs. Collins was admitted to the hospital about two weeks ago. An examination indicated that ahe might bear triplets. The hospital said, but the possibility of quad ruple tss' was considered remote. Said the father: 1651 Orecoo, Thundery. May S. 1949 End of Blockade Conference Head Off . V sn ft Tower tins Pisa's Tower Has Competition From Hubbard City Tank HUBBARD. May 4 (Special) Hubbard's 100-foot water tower is six inches out of plumb with a definite slant to the north, ac cording to a recent survey by engineers Groff and Clark of Sa lem. City fathers of Hubbard order ed the survey after speculation arose over whether or not the April earthquake had any effect . on the water tank. The survey did not establish the fact that the earthquake had caused the tank tower to lean, but further inspec tions will be made from time 'to Time to aeiermine w nexner inr tower will continue to go off cen- ; ter. Ingrid Rejoins Husband. Ends Italy Romance r i ROME. May 4-C-Ingrid Berg man said todav she will return her physician husband. Dr. Peter A. : Lindstrom. after completing the 'film '-God's Earth." The ash-blonde Swedish st;.r. putting at ur.easy rest reports of a romance between her and Roberto Rossellini, Italian director-partner in that film, cabled her statement ftjom Messina. Sicilv, "for the protection of my family." The family is made up of her self, Lindstrom and their daughter. Pia, 10. The statement was issued through the Rome office of Rirtio-Keith-Orpheum, tWe company which is backing the film. Miss Bergman aid not explicitly deny Rome newspaper declara tions that she had planned to divorce Lindstrom in order to marry Rossellini, but' said she ard her husband '.'discussed and clari fied our situation." She said she fanned to join Lindstrom later in . their native Sweden or the United aiaies. & 1 "Despite the reservation which , had been made that there was a . Uc sacs the membrane en-be- closures that protect infants fore birth. This meant, they added, that j two of the babies are identical i and came from the same efeg. ' They did not know whether the ! boys or the girls were the identi- : cal pair. Hospital sources declared a con- . suiting physician said, after the ' third child was born: Wait minute, there s some thing else here." - A moment-later he added, "its a fourth, child." PRICE 5c Strike Fail i TV .iitsuuouuiia Slated Before Noon Deadline DETROIT. May 4 Ford and the CIO United Auto Work ers failed tonight to head off a strike of 65.000 workers set for noon tomorrow. Another last-minute conference was set for 9 a.m. ( a m. PST) tomorrow, three hours ahead of the strike deadline.- ! Union leaders said no f rogress ' had been made toward settling a . speed.Vpsdispute at the company's sprawling Rouge plant. TV,. , 'fi-;, ,. Q settled" at tod.iv's sessions ft , that tomorrow's parlev w a called at the union's request A Rouge plant strike would di- rectlv affect 6S.000 workers but jsince ft manufactures manv pa it I v ital to ojjerations in 48' other j plants across the rvitiori. the im-: pany said its othe: fjctories would j be for ed to close in two weeks . or less. I John S Bueas Ford v ice pr esi dent In charge of indiiti i;d 1 1 In tions. headed, the company nego- ; tiation at the e't" . e:ith-hour con- ference Secretary-treasurer .Emi! Mscy led the union delegation UAW President Walt r Kcuther did not attend despite Bi'gas' In vitation. As the' fplks opened the UAW held fat to Reuther's 'charges of company "double dealing. bad faith and sjeed-up in iolajiyn of contract." Bugas. denyirfg any quickening of the assembly lir.e pace: said he was not accusing Reuther of bad faith. Almost lot by the unexpected and 'bigger Rouge plant develop ments was a scheduled walkout of 3.500 workers at Ford's Lin coln-Mercury plant here. THiUJ also is set for tomorrow noon and stems from a similar speed-up dispute. Silverton to Host Portland Chamber SILVERTOX. Mar 4 WSpecjal) Sllverton., chamber of Com- merce entertained 50 visiting chamber members - from Portland today with a tour of the city, and a ' luncheon at Silver Falls state park. The visitors arrived at 11:30 a.m. and inspected . Silverton . nlants before leavine for the' Dark. i Welrrvmin thm . ur V irtr ' Runvan. Silverton chamber ores- j ident. and Glenn Briedwell. chair- man of the reception committee. The group returned to Silver ton at 4 p.m. by way of the Waldo Hills district and went directly to ML Angel where they were guests of that chamber at a special banquet. - BANDIT ROBS STORE PORTLAND, May 4 -OP)- A slender young man described a 4 extremely nervous held up the Pacific drug store in midtown to night and fled with about $200. Our Senators tfca 4-3 Lcxi 16-6 VvV VV vvi No. i Cold War Eased by Decision ' 'V ':!' By Francis W. Carpenter . NEW YORK. .M.v 4-iA- Soviet Russia and the wet-tern powers agreed today to end I the Berlin blockades) May 12 and to discus currency and other ' German issues at m council of foreign ministers meet ing in Pans ftlay 23. ) These decisiuni wer rep'itet in oinciai official and -unofficial ciina re after envoys of the Soviet Vn i. France. Britain, and the Urn f- here ion, i ed States met behind cloved dei r a lor an hour and a half. ! The dates were n t officially-an-nounced but a source in touch with 4the situation-said ;hev werearreet upon and .will be announced in a communique tvqgrx the four-pwer capitals tomorrow at 8 . m. t4' a. m. PST). j , i. The British were said to i l.ve urged the Riisj;itH !o rnd' 1t.ir blockade May , ..with the vmlim pow ers listing their otuiriter-b1o k ade .at the same time. The: Rus sians, who originally Ranted a 1 date in June, replied they could tu t do so because there was not en ough, tim to i-otify their lco.1 commanders.' vi M.iy 12 finally j was agreod upof:. I 'j The conferehce of the four: pewj er envoys wjs tr-e first time all I four "powers h.id met on the pr4 b lem jsince their ambassadors filled to find air answer last summer. 1 Trie Pans meertng wkll be the seventh session, of the round I i'f foreign ministers, formed in the closing days of. the .second V 1 war.! The last rnet:rig w as in Li n don from Nov, 25 to Detj-. 1 5 U47. At that time the mmstets did ru t even agree on wha: to talk atxut and general fJer CJ Marshall, then . secretary of jate. broke up the meeting with a suiestion th minbiters adjiiunt. ..!..) '. .- The Soviet Union shortly after wards began its restrictions in Berlin and the western powers stepped up their moves Jto set tip a western German g iverijimenl. The Berlin block a -ie finally waa put on by the Russians last Jvt,m 19. The, w est'eri ;'Aers quickly retaliate! with, a c "inter-Wrx -kri4 and ; w;th the avi.' rt The airhfi has t Ast 'b bou , 5 ) Amerit ah and Britisi Iies ari rvir" tyiis $ 1 .(. 000.000 from the L. S treasury, i i The rmiet y !-i.e goes bat k V beftire the ..broek j.Je. jThe o I tried to agiee v-.'h Russia On tre ' money t' u.e in !5e'!irt. They could : not agree so the Vst inslituted the.! western zone ' B' mjrkjin Berlin, h This and othec f j.'t'ra; made the ' Russjans angry- i they retalia- : ted with the full V. x-ka-je In June. The reasons geiri bv the Russians ; were' that contM-; ere necessary to pfevenj inf i!j ai'n qf western currency into their rone, of Br- j lin and of Germany. ; Actifally, j some western lfa iers : said, the; Russians hppedto squeeze the western powers O'j? of Berlin and : usedithe currency is.iue as an ex cuse.: Latvian Asked To Take State Hospital Post The State Board of Control, by long distance telephone, Wednes day extended an invitation to Dr. K. Apinis, Latvian eye specialist j and general practitioner; who wall displaced from hu native Latvia -j by . the Russians and then by the Germans, to come to Oregon. j i He would be aigned to a poMt-j Ion on the medical stiff of Vte j eastern Oregon state hospital at: Pendleton. Dr. Apinis is now em ployed as a civilian with the American army Of occupation ir Germany. ; Dr; Donald Ware, eastern Ore- rgon state hospital superintendent. said ne was advise'l that T)r. Apinis desires to come to Oregon. Both Gov. McKat and j State Treasurer Walter NPearson agreed that Dr. Apinis wauld prove a valuable addition . to the eastern Oregon state hospital medical ftsff. Iti evenly his repy isi; favorb'e. Dr. Apinis and Ms wife woulTre brought here as displaced persons.: Daseball Scbzc s .-- 'Wnl. lateraaUewal At !lem. 4-. ' Victoria At rBemertow o.JSwne S At Yaim 9, . Van"viv! 4 "1 At Wenetcrwe . Tacorats 9 " Caatt I.caa! -At Oakland 1. Wort.rvl !g At Hollywood 4. Seattle' At Sen Duit ta rraoctera 4 AaMtlcaar Leacae ! At St. Lou , New.yfk !' At ClereUrvd 4. f" U'V'lo! I A ; Clore 1. 1 WTin'oi At Detroit , Boot on I ij - Mat'eeal ': -V 'ee At s New York It. fituburjh 4 At BrooSlyn 9, C n-::i k i -At Beet on 4, Chic! At PhiUdelfa.ua 1, St tawta i ; . 'I.I I ft I r--,. :.'-; ' I .1; I S j M ; : 5 j , v ' . 4 - I , ; ' ; ' j . ... li.M ' '!; ;' : I-